HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-08-30, Page 4MOR Gm. MARRY Al 21
. THAN AT ANT OTHER AGE
, A
Government eiqk, as tnli
of statitittcs -as a Christnas turkey is
of dregra-pg„ i not alwaYe ,interesting.
. It May be 'etree se itformative,_end
!tan Who a...Ita` after a rePlitatm.'1
like: a' *talking; elieltclolieeliao rnaY pas:
ture'therein, end fintithe eedder Much
hia011.4tig. "
• For all of that, we eontendthat• ,
most blue Logics . aed statiseic.s
uninteretithig. To that:general,denim;
Mattel" Mal we hasten tit• Mahe, One
'excention, and: that is to the gineerti-
Ment'retiirite dealiniwith tharriages,
births and deaths- Particularlt
• ference tit marriages title book pleats-
• up semany ponsts that are constantly
heinfiedragged •into ant.travereies that
weepaime fees moment,hitti Watie into
the calm depth s of intinessive figures'
Says •Stratford Beacon-Herti,Id. ' •
How often have husbands 'and wiee.S.
argited about which would be. theefirst.
. • :to g� Seempering around ,looking for,
another mate in ease:one of the par-
' • ties to the original contract passed
We imagine most wonted have e
lingering suspicion that their hus-
bands would be casting about for a
second wife just as soon as they could
decently .: de so, and we know there
are men.who are quite certain that
their :Wine have high hopes sond
Now let's Settle the thingeWe shall
look in the book and:see. These fig-
ures are for the year. 1926 and are
Slow in corning out owing to.the fact
• •that the etatistklans mutt de "a great,
deal of statisti'clanizing before thee,
Can present their eepoite °
Of the men who were Married in
, the year 1926' it is Shown that 7-4 Per.
'cent were widowers, while . of the
e,
brides 5.3 per cent were widows.; So.
it's no nee argoingeany more. It has
been 'Oeffidally., established_ that men
are more apt to go eruisin.g the sec-
ond time con,the metrimonial sea.'than
the winnen: „ • '
Theite figerei also.foite a eabstane
tial grouncling 'foe that'should not be elightly set to one side
•
• TheiaShomeaseplaineaseielearaent,thee
end of a main's note. that there are
certain,'years in which' a gar] has bet-
• 'ter chances of getting inieried than
at any•other-time.• '
• ;it's all right to tit the idea
. but here are the 'figure:se right het*
• on the desk, beating pport thein the
•seal. and the superscriPtiot. ef the
'registeice-ge_neeal of the'provincei
The. brides started off fairly 'young
' in :1926. Of 23,632 of them some. 1,909
were mended when they were hut 18
years of'agee a trifle senthg, we
• seine, but \that's 'what the records
show. At 19 the figures increased to
• 1,949, while at 'the age of S201 there
• were 2,029 beide;
• The highest point reached *as it
• : Age 21, ' When there were 2,247 who
• -.Went:forth:to join the precession:
.,, Now notice this:That et 22 there
__were -2,052e -at-23..-theefigari IS 'Ahern -
to 1,909, and -front -there on there is
a gradual falling aWayellere are the
. figures showing -the ages'at which the• '
• brides' • _ •
Age No. Age No:
.18 . . 26 • • -.1177
...2247 . 28 784
19A..,....../1949 27 • ....k. , 892
.21 29. Tce 646
,
22 • ..2247 30 1.. e• 526
. .. 218
24 .,...."..1582 . . -137.
25 . .1274 : 45 , 97
All otWhicliahOws that 'a girl's hest
chanites are up t� the age of 23 or.
• 24. After which -the chatices of point-
• ing with pride to some -Mall and ex-
, claiming "My husband!" begin to thin
• . ' out rather. sharply. Ladies may think
,
their chancee are just as' good at 27
or 28, but the work of the' statistician
is all against 'smelt • a belief. ,
.IU LlicKW„T SvilrEC*111[14,RsDAY, At/ GUST 30th ....4928. •
• TE• •
E4110KNovitTINFL
Now, how about, the bridegroom's?.
• Allow for the feet that they Ad not
cutimuch of o' swath at the wedding
• yet they are 'seri' necessary things t�'
• have 'around; in fact; no Weddiog is
a complete success without .oWe kit;
• They seem to ran loose longer than
the ladies. While there, are 1,900;
• brides .at the age of 18, there were
',only 226 bridegrooms eche whispered
•"I' will" at that tender ege. At 19
• there • were, 502 grooms,' and '4,949
• the age of 30 there eitere 997 grooms
• It. ruts the one all through. . At
• the age of 30 there were"97 grooms
and only. 562 brides. A.ppleieg the
card -index' system, to the/ grooms
• foOd the following :restate regard -
'leg, the. number who married at
• itgest el • '
• 'Age , ,' Age • No,
18 . . t 226 .26 'I , 1675
19 ... . 502 . 27
20 , al 7 • 28 . .. .1272
21 .4342 29.-
' ... • .1762 ,30 , 997
. • .1982 ' as 402'
; . .17544: 45 ........ 159
Published1:11:01ndaT .7nOrning
at leteltnevio OntnriP•
A.. D. MecKenzie,r, Proprietee
'"'• and •Editor. . • ".
•TIILIESDA f".../AIJOUST
ARE.*,!.3,..BARBARIAN§ STILL ?
• . • 7.-e
ThIS questioii"issuggested by an
oireiele Whiek npeered.i*.aes.
handier ot"The Canadian Red Crowe"
article kid to de with "Danger-
PtisReigate'', Parthe-iereetaeese, and
eliMteleed soeim sierprieeti for the mai.
. ,
liViag *ler 'fee* °tenni/fillet 'Crowe"
That &nee fotks ui OILS :riTiliZed.,113141
,ittie Rot tO0 ,filis".01110rfiti front the'
wild people Of :Africa. ots Horne° in
their ideas 'of beauty, and, their ideals
to; Whet- is .ntatet eoutneendable .W*11.
Nieman :being' is sersetieses suggested
uy the profOonof paint and powder
in evidence, but anything that can be
.doue with pitat, powder d lipstick
is 'child's 'play whet' covitpareil to the
tricks resorted to be her ladyship in
the "centres of. civilization:I:end' as
New 'Yorke for .ixatiraple
-"Legislation te !.siee
the effects of :4raneic 'and artificial
• efforts to make tlientselies beautiful
adcoda,ted by Die ,Clhateks"Fea'abet:
chief dermatologiet, Green,paint
Hitktale Britoklyte New :York," says
The 'Canadiait :Red Cretia."
'Sliinepeelinge ficeeliftinge piratie
injectiimie,',to'clienge.the shape oef the
lose .or the Olistinate cure of a chia4--
.these Singe,. the doctors . fine, are
.oemg none and. more indulged in
the 'beaty 1t. ,fidlowers, to their
lira:Aerie and deipiteall the Warn -
tags :of Ilie:-.41-Qiiil-profes-elitie
•
, he question. Waft discussed; form-
aley. an •inforaselly, tite . recent etedi,
Carienivenitoa ta Athintic City, where
tedeerere tele'to indicate that ther
• type. of :heenity 'ettltisee is 'eetcting
.treat tell front its.followers, „tit de-.
.roemities; nflaatatton, skin diseases
one sott aad atiothereeeteti, death.'°
"Ji 'import Of his, snegeetions 'that
legislation" 'ought tet. passed aree
ttaining 'deretetee'Of the beauty, parte
Dr. Pabst refers to law enacted
ay. Premix. deragiied . to restrain Certain
barbarous' races" somewhat
eintilai &Cis' resorted( to, in their enie4'
'eked pursett of what ..they consider
• If 'all .teportsare true; perhaps the
••, tench. legislators Could .fied in. their,
'telored Paris some fiesubjects':for
he sod of 'law they Se.readily enact
-thee-barbitiaits Of NortheAfricee.-
..
Well, .are we to conelude that the
ladies of • .Nevr •Iforh," idle, 'rolling in
-weelthaindasatiated with eyerything.
'that'. Motley can 'buy, •who. resort to
enueli the same peaCticee it 'their
frantic desire for Merephysical hear-
ty as le the Wild women of "Darkest
• •
Vries," are really superior is wisd-
ae, and culture to these wild women?,
• ,
'
• CHIME AND .THE,BOOTLEOER
•
Thes&. etetistics shotild be enhght-
ening. TUVE why. they are Printed
here. Not at all to eilerm the young
tidies; but .rather in a. calmeande.de.e
liberate manner to point ota to them
• their eoltien opporttinitv is tight it,
tonnd .the twerite. mitt., arid that
shortly atter. that there is at .onkind-
-ly d#eiitie itr.the fignres.
Figures. we know -t 'cod;'cod;m
eo.
"tha.
ifileatettringeeehetetheyedo-etigrett.
. . that Men like to take their brides
young and ,then theu theta ateiti the
way in which they Should. g�•
•
' 000
' MART NOW 'ITKE OTHER GIRLS
• Longlegged sheep tbet 'cap rut
• 46, hont have been discOvereil
in: the Itimalayas, *hitt leads one to
cdiactude thst it 'meld take Net
'1.131-illatah
OS? asTh
as foneWse increased.. dereloPe
went
im means- ofe. enramenicationt.
'hard „roadso and the. high -Powered
autonlohiles 'seeking' the: get'awaY
easy; and organieed crime eiltieh en -
:Aides the Insderewntla to matte liberal
'contribaittoae, to campaigas
as. eiert .11 powerful hint/ince in
polities.,Anether, elinee`'they "give ie
the. delay inikPlikekesraost sPeeki
, . .
of erimiseals; due, 'in fact
to leitien4. and Oiatei:ukg of, pallOpti
i.uages;.:‘
Another witiwort*tit findiag
'the fortis of organized•iime ItiVe
at been leatarldll glen. gthen.eik no!,
.atirectfid by ale prohibition. amend*
sent, elth.ougli, he' prarically eeera,
inc ,. Of: these enaataitaitiief (eLties of
ever ,one. kindred tlitoutiada. thasente;
•meat 'of..the tWeople is for the winst'
ean oPPOsed....le the •enforcement of
hose Ilai4n, and there is mere'Or less
adiserten: intexicat,
ing liqoure eeiolatioi of the law:"
LE.AGIIE ,AGALIST
"PROTECTION"
„
Lie-mtners°1jegaeanitzi:etiroletani4.4"9w";--ttittlibe"hC:ad;I:
• ittarteet at Ottawa, has issitedeleafe
eteapositig farther *crime* in the
Milt'�a imports.
''Outside Cif eute; laratetee :political
eirganilatiOns -as-we
'chow, the first ..organieed
, opposition
teeeprOtection elide in s.this. country,.
"'The whole, long-de,awniont Strife
. .
ever Protection and • Free.' Trade, .or
•tariff and low *rife has been
%tie between producers and Consumer's;
• . . . .
•
--poducers striving .1.0 have 4 mono-
poly of the keine , neitkee, and colt-.
esumees *rising- to ;bur -where they
•'tied it Mostetirofitable to 'buy, .
produeere .(titatt is the producers, of
.hings..inade in stills .'and factories
4ifeilrestertsy-kiteeeelengebeeenemoreor
less Organized.2with ',TOW t� 'having
the .goveretnent peerentathe
inipor-
ation Of articles iltieh compete With
their liteor linee.of products. ,
'The "kinsMiteraa ;being, the • whole
Of the '..People, even
e -e e
thierbeenliti tioteh prates:0in from fOr-,
agn competittion, lute* nest -been org-
tniied: to defeed'thernseeles against
njustice and hopellitima Consequent -
those 'desiring' "protection" .alveays
eave had great enflnence with govern-
• ments. But it appears that . at test• :
consumers" have (it least to .some
: extent) orginieede in Opposition to
Turther protection to industries
n forer :Of leaving Markets as free
es -possible. -e I-
• In the - leaflet it has issued it SayS
that, /since:the war. ."87 Countries in-
creased their' tariffs; oneeracmtry has
oWered its taeilf---„Canade,"..
• It then prokeedalo slow that Can-
. .
7ffii-ethe one Connie), that has !ower.
its etairiff" since'the weneeit:' the;
•nOSt•prosPerOus country in the world,
...It appears to be tipthatakis' Coen -
'tett. hes.,seetuelly. "made greater' con-
nerciet Ind industrial .progress" since
the war than .any other 'country. Itis
•;aidtoe', oe ithat appears good end'.
teity,.' that the, pe011e of Canada' are
•on the telialeebetter off,' enjoying i
higher average of comfort and wealth:
han.the people Of' any ether 'countrye
"No., other- imitate: :eyes approaches'
;t in proeperitY tOday", says the Coh-
;inners League.
e The League .subinits efigeree in
proof of this, and the statement:like,
le is true. Hut so leen$ t'ectfiweter
into ils4 'making of Oks'perity.. that
that*. is difficult id offer a full
. . •
Planation. E�wever, 'the eircumetanees
,\does *tore 'this: . that the failure- of
Canada togo' in' for, Lucie:eat' tariff
.as did the 81 Other, countries 'did not
prevent Prosperity.'
Argumerit ae.to Protection and Free
Trade Seems futile. The arguments
yea faeoe of proteetion'tO honieindst-
• ,ry are tei siMple and apparently so
sound that' they. have found facie-
Prete-lc/By all oter the world.Tet
ltrotectten" i.s • cine of the ,greittest
humbugs that tier has been e`mit
Peer" teen the • world.. If , a ciatittre•
nate emade progrese neter proteetioe
it has .been in spite 'of pireteition and
•not beeier.esof it. Bea the world Still
belie:res. taltrotectiott, The world *leo
believes and always lime henevect. that
!peens of contninnicatien .between
diff
.ereut parts of the world is an adiane-
flee over the peck -horse ot the wagon:
',7traineethatethesesteameship-is.-hettee
•thee the esetioe vessel and that the,.
motar boa IL)etter than the'hOrie-
dreeen drev, Vet all . these'Improve.
• This is ,the heading, of' an •article
which' appearect in a reCent;'nuinber
if4S; The Literary, , Digest..The first
sentence of this article reads: "The
• ipider in the Centre of 'the Alerieen
web: of crime is the 'bootlegger."...
..ThiS is the conclusion reached by
etpable men atter,careful investiga
in thinking of the erime in the
[Jailed- States one muse •tentember
that although ;frequently •a 'good cit-
• tree is: the. victim, the greet bulkof
the trivet occurs among Members of
t Vicious chissL.-one had man' killing
`inother.
• One' inVestigator reports that ;be
diScevered, that the ear** majority of
majorcrimes in :the cities are coma-
n tieted' by ."professional. criminals."
The Professional criminal, We mai' cop"
cledee is the man who makes hit
living b crime, cominitting theft and
murderwithout thought of ehangine.
These knows•how to elude the .Police.
and When they are caneht'they know
how to bribe Police officers. 'jail off -
kers, Chart. officials; :and when
Tidedthey latow' how to get at the
parte ..beard, end be experience be
come adepts naime'
These professional
sionelle need a lot , of money with
'which to beibe. °Edits or to pay a
high priced laWyeee Regarding this
the ineestigatoe foetid thet"in. some.
elthoneleentote etabtatotity.- eof • -the
Large .eities organizations of &jai-
intds are =Janie., fintiared :by:eite
profits of bootleeging that' the
genntene thagt and hitithers used hy
'these ortanizatioee to precent attacks
of-- ilia ckere and to-- -suppress colue
,teetitiora, 'are often used for enrPteees
'if extortion:and to influence electione
by ..terrorisnte and that mate murders
holdups end ,other major' critic; ere
centneited . iiy them. .
Another ,coniclution is 't1tit the
profit's of hootleeging are ofteri used
to, bribe officials and to purchase
Orqtritin frain eorniPt nelitieianeel
tinpirtant lofilig•
4P4 1100,40-1•4•04.141 Ohl 00 01101
,
the truth. The United States has long
been thehest example Of free tradethe
world bee ever see. Never befOre did
.80 nialty. . people: scattered ,.. over so
wide and varied a teeritery, trade -so
freely, it is eke immense free trade.
't'ilthiti the United Staeesthat elias
madeet proseerots;, Mit the slitt.all a'
motid of 'trade' thateer protec(ive tar-
iff his, Prevented with. Silken', France,
•Germane„anclethe rest of the world;
WHYMERICA IS MUliDERER'S.
t• PARADISE., *r:
,
7fiVthat 1ie diaovery of 'a'
woman's bode in /erooklYtteluie. added'
anOthei to the eiteolved *writer inyse:
•teeir-S'. of New 'Yeek,..i.„ Het:that can-
einents, to grow ileepite'tite goading of
,be '.'Poltee ,by the, newspapers, . and
#ccasjonally a drastic snake- up in
'eel*. parts of the force. .the sup,'
rior•ollicers. Comparisons with. the
records made by-,Scotland:Yard are,
inevitable. and ..w,e'• .OhOulcrthink• that
t-anYhodsr wanted to -get,',%, Whack
Aith ,,a New, York • cop's • Stick, he
would merely have to say "Scotland
Yard" and await results. ,Last year
accercling to the annual.teport of 1Pol."
ice Commissioner Warren there Were
278. homicides in-NeW 'York, for which
..,Aght men Were emitientned to death
persons sentenced 1.
terms iti• prison .for varying degrees
of -murder, and 184 persons either
-qic4nitte4..or_ not -arrested.: .The. report.
fails to .say how many muirdera•
noined, unsolved. at the end of the
,,-ear „.• but, stiles that,-4rrests'_were'
naire• in 82 per ent..:the cases,'-
•,ehe.fignere are not li o give the
lepartment anvtheaa e -
but
ehey show ' neeerthel , at : there
af4eage--q:33eS'..,6f-Tcrtirder
•;c0Ted at the, end at. the 'Yeate
in the • same •period there were 28
• nurdere in London, aridin eeery.eaeC,,
police brought the murderer to
trial. Twenty •Were' :.convicted and
hanged, seen were cottanieted to pen-
al servitude and one eoniniittedesui-
,adeelhe police: Work here was 100
-ter' eent perfectl.In ' England_ and.
Wilei ' 1927 7tliete Were '113-aiiiite
•Iees :of. *hid) ,Onty three iefitain un-,
•etilvedeniyeteries today.', There have
aeert earieus,eiplenaitions of the ,dif-
ferenee between the work, clonebe.the
Ainerieaneild • nighsh peficee tattieg.
hem as 8 whole: The latest advance,
.far 'as New' York city is. cene
eserned,eiwaa';"be the ' NationglaCritne.
:i....Otranissiori; which. Jarned. the low
• ,..nfen,ottha!itesfolt.ofp.thceo,kinxtdri misioner wena,irr*berns:
the officials and public .opiition are. on
efused ,to give 'any ' epieieteeleit ' Dr. he side of prompt aw eeforcerriene.
'Norbertiiminlor.oLisedt,ersaeeid;...tahretoit4e4
ththee. States,Uatnilieterd*ay_
;they ate
••••ign population,:' the, getig- code ...and ,.
Igee. tegewlilnicoraklleipetoeinniadaen. trxibiuers:mkottief • FAIR LIVING TIIE STANDARD
• eiffieult .than that of his I..or.clott cob'
league. He seines that ih,Ertgland.
the pepeletion i: not °ray. henutigert,
eoes, bute has a. netional'ternPerame4t
iich The tisnsess;talheE
tioeli.tylaw;o
eghitidinroge
instinct
n.s:
'1•O•inaintain law and. order. 'and, to a.
lan a..zaitst.then.
gnhintrelfwithl..ttle Pclice either.
"No Englishmen,"
.-teys..Dr.--Leciereze.'"woulta...dreem•,-of.
refeSing • to tve eeideece"no mile -ter
.enhethee he. as ,a gang member or
apt, Ile eknows bee win
tretect hien after h tes.timony it
. . .11 a policemen is. attack-
ed. Which is very rare; the haestand,..
?rs will L'orne to his assistance. In
New Yorke On 'the 'Other hand; the
•eangster's code' prevents hint . from
;teeing .teetenonte e gangster who,
le shot :and' knows :that he is gitirig
to die With rarely tell the police who
shot bine He. depends '•on 'the, gang
,ge7tting. the name who killed him, If
; 'policeman in New York pickeeup.
• ean the byetatidere,Will come•te the
assistance, and take Part .In
,lain ,
beating the ,the
ov.eeopee These' etatements
ereprobably flue, bet •they tioehot
tYbok C
eeter°itnegisuslesPe4luat
ion of New
abiding' than. the • himiogeneehs poPue.
of•;Englied. If .the' criminate: so
.freqbeirtle- have HJewish, or
Polish names where; is th,• evidence
eaemeeeeeee,..„
Modern farming meape tractor farming with_it Ill.eCOR.
'ell ICE -'0$ERI,Np • TgAcTo..i..Qtrt I 'T;• hy saving. time "and, mon-
• e ete They are built 'to:teat end a' school, 'boy etin' opeeete them.'
N0 working part, : exposed to Ara, or etinet ,ere are iw trouble
ineklne eprockets or .chains, werhieg perk enclosed.' Hun-
dreds- of 14)4o -date alnier' jnOntario .are' Iteepitiet their bop;
.
.at hemesend their ..woekup to Nclitidul'e with the Mcconnieketeeere
ing Traeters, Plows, and other 'maehinem, Of th. saline Mahe.,
• '
. . ... . ........ ....
• !It
,F
414111
-11.41:71'1"Z".L1-,-."'"›.--e..tar,•41PAIIIrAIV/Otall111111\111M1V
I .
4,5
aeee-eeeeesee..e...,
. .
. The .NEW bieC(1121VIJCRTDEERING. dItAIN BINDER conee':4
bitesethe beet mechanical featureOf the old McCermiek :and
Deerine hervesters,. light hydraft and coovenient to operate; It
.
is alai ab with eitherth llle('ormick or 1).eerinee KnOtters,
Terenty.t iniprovements. huilt into .the Hemitton-made Binder-
niakeit atore-deldralilFthanefelemerifee'de-, .
FOR PARTICULARS CALL AND SEE •
..ANDRpw
• :it•GENT . ..LIICKNOW
•
iaw ie' frenied .for the 'purpose. A
• condemned murderereee. appeal but:
frtherapp-earZ-tsiteill-he_heardJ/14.41eciided4
ithin;thrcse weeks • 'and if the veriliat'
• ta net eiVerable to'hi ni be dies at the
etel' of thattime Judges, todeare ie-.
,moved ..froM politics. Iri shore, ',the:
English system is geed becauee. ail'
Mentes i ' -traffic and AranePortatinti
,
tend to defeat "peetecbon. Perhepe
it- is because of:these •Improvements
in transportation .that• the 87 corm -
tiles •inereeseee their, ,tereffs- they
'i %tented tit defeat thee toed that the
.improved means Of itatteportation
, had- brOUght. • ' :. -
It seems 'se simple; "The totted
'States has alwaye+ been a high pro-
tectionist eountes' and. the rnited
States hie ilaig beep the most 1:mea
'-
l-"trans country iti:ittiti 11,4441.: That is
• T,Ili OP( ila *4\410 t'lliafits -tti
-hat the, Peles!and .1t.aliaris :When .at
home 'provide anirder sthtisties corn-
eareble With • those of New York:
• There it ..a great, Jewish populatioh
in London; why is it laW,abiding there,
while in New York it is likely' to coal,
e.sce- into. criminal 'eeitge 7 .
' f Polities frequently enters into ;the
matter in New; Vork, for Dr. Lederer
.says that in, recene,years there were
sit.,le.a.st• twe minders which' agitated
thed City' and occupied great space in
• the, newspapers Which remain myster-
ies only •so far as the "general public
• is coneerneci• ,:The police kite* the
murderers, -but they else , know that'
'e.Oterietion.SMS, tlOral pO.Sible•and to :
ering the.deiers to'trial would re-
v 1 'candal in high" -ilaces. Political'
pressere was brought opoie them not
to make" arrests;,[apd 'no'arrests.were,
made. Such pressure, would be impos-
sible in London; Where,- as is only too
well.known, tbe police 'seein to Mahe.
e •soicieliy of arrestina titled persops
• in Hede• Park and disgracing them;
with, eery little evidence to .'eo. upon.
'The London' Police DePartenent is en-
tirely. remtreed from .poiltics. 1,Ord
Bytig, the 'new ,bead of the force, has
a eatery cif ,about $20.000 a' year. in
addition to'll„is pension. Who could
bring 'pressure to bear Is, non him? The
getempt to rio eo could easily Wreck,
a geeernmetit. The New. 'S'Ork. coin-
:4miss1onef •onthe other hand 5,., ustial.
.ly appointed as a reward for poIitial
ectivitee and his ,salare of 10,090 a
.. year 'is net- large -enough:in- Dr.' I...ed-
eter's opinion to atireCt. A' hien who'
has made, t life it-11dt of palite,werk.
Other words. 'tither he . nor ' the
:rniers' in lower rank' are 1.-• be consider-
ed, trained linen in the European 'sense ,
ef tile. word at all. . , ' •
Ainericat deteCtives depend toe I
greatly trice the stool-pigern and the i
third, degree. 13tit. When, it -tan be.
'illon-ii in the coiirt that exidente was e
thus. Obtained feei judees will ateept
4+ unless corro'borattri. Ir Eriglandl
there are he -stool-p,teeorts. end 'I the '
halite are hot ant.noritod to granta
inutunity ,to :withesses who rnay• an- 1
.P1**7 Itir tIle 'Creiwn. .Juste ' worke1
moo riditly it EingIgnit bequlie the
A
• . .
It is. refreshing to hear the eon -
plaint voiced that producers are fOrm
_Mg a. monopoly. an exile ing more
than a lair market price.,It is so un- MORE PROSI'EltOliS THAN EVER
Jewel; so incongruous, that it ie scarce-. • ,
gresee .Wheat. can :enjoy life and
. .
ulie
standayds -of as.• the aver.,
.-agesrinan-in,pther,O.cuPation
•, . •.
.•Jt is ilitTicuft te...fied• fault. with ,ea •
.Objeetive:er ae motive such as thet;
and only, cenfidenee in theeseabilitte
of ,the;. n e el: eel n , organ iiatiee • t
ehielt he 'heloaged., Would 'Irteitiee ' a • •
nein .,to. ma,ke ,sucli: a , etateniett.,•
different are. the' question
.and. answei1s:what• one II-sue:11.y
. .
„hears! :.1116,......cens,,ey...e; • very etrong
-euegestiarathateternier,e haese expep-
tictrial.eoWere.if, they will but gettoe
getheeetiad.uee theni•--eFaraters:Ad-
vocate. •. • .•
:y taken, seetously,
One Of ,the best' aegtimehts in fayor
-ef-ehe .Wheat Potilie the Waiilliat-it
raising, prides and•inilicting htrdhip.
,s.n :the' consuming pepulation of inp•
pottingecountries. -That complaint is•
half eight:and. half tvronge. There is
:no • doubt but what the Pool has in-
creased the returns, o, producers;
but the breed eatere of Great."Beitaiii
are getting their daily. 'loaf just as:
cheap as when Western farmers were.
reeeiVing lessthan a eollae a bushel.
It is the Wheat trade tied the .distri-
butors ‚who are Wailing.; .not the eon,
Atlhe Alberta Institute of Cieep-
eretione Dr. H. EeErdeion; Professor
•Of Rural Eeonomics. in the lenivereity
oeCalifornia, asked; "How far de you
fellows •propose to go
wheat price keels? ieYbut
jective?" • ..• ."
: To this Lew' Hutehtson,„ a Pool
dir-
etor, reriliede "We propose -.0 -cease
our. efforts .to .raise prices 'for wheat'
"Theeperied,betWeen..1.9e0.eand 49.14
e ro camAda!,..`gol4n.
eeys the 'Ottawa' Journal, and A, Con-•
•tinnes.:', But .,Canada'S 1,1osperitY-:.1.ind
gro *the iii-thoseeleare were as. an-
teing' in,,Cemparisoneeith opr.rate u'
tirogrees new, Between 1900 and 1914 .
deeelopmeat, of; water power,- for- eee
keele; was.:eoinparativelyerivialeOtir`
great pulp and paper •industry Was ,
but. in, 'its infancy; etas 'nepes.. were
i„tridevelopedarid yieleing•little; our
trade but a•bagetelle.in Comparison:
withettedeY. In' all ef these fields,-
'sinegrowth has been all hut .
.marvelous.' Our forests,' to -day :are,
,producitig::, wealth heyorid • anything..
We dreamed of; -Mir metee ere ,aenong '
the'richest in the world;:powee is our.
.setsond greatest •industey; oui trade,
LV tralliC,' bank :depoeits. re en
ues ',insnrance polieiee-everythirig.:
:that denotes .eepansion. and /.preeper-
bot h : tor the ./state and: the treli-
eidtell-haee groWn •with bewilder-
alst.as soon ,as the average man, who speed..
'
'Phone No 10 is at Your Service
i
We Sell for Cash -We Sell Cheaper Than The Credit Store
Roofing Material
-.Many people iti-dae are
they will' use to tool' with. , W
lea at simples of Brantford
gest what you should Use.
ef Ashpliali Shingles. '
at e less to make zi deteeion as to what
'e 'would: beglad to haye you call i,o
Itoofieg :led we Will exOlain'end eug-
ilelow. we 'set before you two classes
• / ARROWLOCle.-Fer Barns, • tairages, or any out
eThey it* securely locked, iue a•Mco appeariince, they,ate fire proof
• and reasonable price; ' • • •
. :The Colors -Reit (i'rcen „Ind Blue Mack are fadeless, thee add-
ing beauty to the buihling.
. .,etepERTILE--For 111111‘-.--',l' Lotzkeel',SItiegle, .eith I rills-
nente, Beauty, Streng le Sire lasist. nit-eliteget all; these m Brant -
'ford Supertik eletes, besides deith e thiekness ail over yetiaroof and
. , . .
triPle, thickness, olee 18 per teett of the roof. .11'eight 210 lbs. per
Square., ..,Colors --Red, (item* ..ind Illee Meek; '
• • . ...
' ASPH A LT . _4.'41) IN (I-4Fo ,it in one.I.,:t id 2.1 2 'ilistO 'the weather
and ' g In. long -Tile- Ned . i tt ' eitler" ge leg:tile a pine ta ece Of red,. hriek, '.
. This is'ilie material tot freate liteuseeeeet takes them warm, .
.-
tritpreees the appearatice..and Yeti. get 'away from paintin.' Weight ,
200 lbse per quare. , -
•
ROLL' ItOOFIN hod.
s
-Lime • Plaster • Cement'
Sash Printed and Glazed •
Wriv;,1Sitirdie 82 Son