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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-02-28, Page 4.11ZIttAfgit,-4P: 6.3 s Yqti1923e • Nrs stnniVY, tfiE mACHINF,s UFACTURED, BY EOTH*coitioANIO,` ream, SeParatOrs all, WE IAYA PEW OF, THEE sMAdit ifile- '4,7 S* 0149N0 ac e ESONHANIi - vaw, ON: TIMM, rees tr.t. •t- T$C9ft,PQRAIT,4; 11.085 apItat-atiir leieiYe;.:70;q0-00-07. Ow. 1252Brineirea , r, Offers Good Baking Facilitie Merchants, ' Manuf adturerte and , farther; etc, Saving Deptirtments at every Branch REID, MANAGER, LUCKNOVII 'BRANCH. .1: or reamery, REAM BUYTNG STATION ighiest cash prices •paid for ane and Eggs, We guarantee 'service and satisfaction to all our/. atr "s ire a' trial ,yed let Us prove a you tliat'ive' are a worth While arket Cecil Mullin, gr. Lucknow Branch Phone -63. ee a Monument •The' Jaicierieeis , garble and "Griiin. ite a large And come. e tockee-the most; ' beautifu1'. s gne: to choose from in Mare iotch ands:Catteadiaii- Granz- f.Malie a SPecialty' of Family oininents and invite your in- Pn. eriptiens neatly and prompts , donee _CaU.ssantlee-us estiefore-placint-- our' order. ' ROBT. A. SPOTTON, ••Lticknow. Ontario. Until ,,,we area permanently settled • :gee W. J. Deludes tommem•mommonittasigoom eslAielcriow L. 0. L. No. 428..ineets in Ilieireledge room evert 'second •Thei- of• the inonth at 8 eit!cle,ek, p.m. Varlwr; •1 - o sea 1/43 qt, GtU!LH ul,grice eiv4Aoit ere and There , Althonghl Ale Canadian Pacific• Railway' has .yet issued no foreCast of ./construction contemplated for -'1924, the fact that it has-adered- 50,000 tons of eteel,from the Algoma •• Steel Conipanys of ,Sault,Stes Marie, seems to indicate that, its program • 'will be .extensive. According le ne statement' recently' • inside.by the on. Charles McCrea, :Minister of Mines ,for the Province • of 'Ontario, 85eper cent Of the world's • nickel suppler: Jai being taken out in • the vicitrity of,Sudbury, where/there' •• is an ineXhaustible. supply of this metal. • • - • •c,• . . • Alberta's hiitter' production' last year ,• Weis .13,500,000 .Peunds, or • 2,000,000epothedselnioneethafiAa-4922; --"seecierdifier-te'rePoits presented at the annual • irieeting of the. , Alberta Dairymen's Aisociatioa. :It was 'not. • io longegto that Alberta was Using ' butter imported from New 'Zealand.' The Year 4923 was a favorable • one izi the, building' and 'esinstruee etirin activities . Of Canada,' and re-, • hums show an:advance of about 10, per cent: Ire1922 the total eipendie setures-inethie-•regard were .$315,000,- • 000, ----and- in '..-1923 $345,000,000; an. • increase of .430,000,090.e Exports of Pulpweredfioni Canada • for 'the: year '1923 'amounted', tO • 384,230, cords; compared :With ,1;011,- 232' for 1922;1. an increase' of '372,898 e cords or 451:per.eent. The 1928 fig-' urea are equivalent to about 900,090 tons of ne*Elpeint, the netimentevehieli- „esein-beeenianufactueecl,efeoni, that amount of'. wood. Ie.:. • . • ' 7 ss • ' E. Ussher, General 'Passense ter 'Ttaffi'e Manager; ' and E. J. Hebert.' •Firet Assistant General Passenger Agent, of; the Canadian • Pacific Railway,have been preiient!, ed With Medals' by the French Goys. • ernment, ifistecognition of their' ,ser- vices the French Exhibitioa train • in ?Canada', in •,192L - The 'medal 'take' the 'form On Small stands: . Attention has been •drawn once More by airship, experts. in London, • Engiensi, to the fact 'that' the only Tknolin aupPly Of helium, tee hr the • British Empire exiiita in the 'Prey - ince of. Alberta; that, 10;0'00,000.feet , of this gas' is going to Waste "ao-; „ !Wally in` this 'province and that the possibility of:establishing_ an air- ship. bese at tome future' date in Al-. berta is being 'discussed. 8 Tathidifie•fielierfea"Preifiieffen Oar- , _e_ing_1923,LiSeeitimated-to-bes-worth- i s400loo,o00: At 'the, beginning of- ifouies WORKERS , I . Henry _Ford elenloys, 162,792 men n his majOr :inOustrie,s,,, it wvas. an- •eiounteed by. ehe Fold •M�tor coni - perky. Of this"' . e r, '121,214 are • eserriPloyed, reanpfactutieg plants in aUnited State,With the Highland • „spar ;ant. ae total of 68,285 !beiins employed there's' Employees eeta..1.11.M?8e,P-n,d.„.?Ace-' ' "323 are employed 'American' bane c Are inereaee ef*-- 14;000 rnore Men at the, River , Rouge Plent over ....last year is reperted,..There.sares.41, SlQeinploycere there as 'cornpared, with 28;000 in'•Jenuary, 1923; More than 12,000 are -employed"' in the ." foundry alone, On "the D, & L rail- road, 2,525 are en-iPloyede in the;lo •...veal mines there arc 2,282; at ilia - , 'Ford trade school ;720,. and at ,the lieriry-Ford-lhospitalsee700e-e-e—sese " the yealirit was not thought that anYthinr Bice this mark would:, be reached, for the Fordney -tariff had cut deep* into eiporta to the United 'States: But as ithe. year Wore on the demand,' and 'prices generally im- proved; thus giving fishermen along ,the Atlantic coast. especially ,a much • better ;Vac • „• •• Offielai figures reeently issued' show that •the. Dominion of Canada is the greatest single contributor to the Wireatsupp)y,of,._ timAyerld. She” itindi'Secend, onlY eo the • United Spites' in automobile exports. • Her flour exports are far ahead of'the palmiest War years and are rap- idly gaining, in the:foreign-markets: Canada's •miner!, foreat, agricul- tura', and fisheries indristries are now. valued at $2,420) 000 000 , , or $252,000,000' higher thana year.ago.' • British, p immigration during the nine. months ended - December, tot- alled , 64:127; 'compared ?with 28,525 in the dorrealiondinc pepea. oLthe. previoirs-y.eal7iiif.-inereise of 125 Der •cent.. Immigration from the United Stritei was 17,282, compared with 18.982, a decrease of nine per cent. Total linmigtation for the nine-month period'of 1923 was '124,- 680, compared With 60,247 In the same peelod in the previous year, an increase' Of 107; per 'cent. The iteeedn sir/el:led "head's lo not : burst is heNtuso totialle have tlikk. skulls:I, , • , eat 'Watching a rno.ilee seems the Otlinitte in 'close attention until yeit ohserve Mane `watching a widov- „ , . , • „ 00 durt that' ilol.Postalong get i; the est results,. yeti must bill, blir 4$00. N i Published ,trierY TburadaYeriOrning • - at LucknoW,.011tani0. 4,;,'' D. Mackenzie, Proprietor ' • and Editor ' T.01,1,EPAY, FEEETJARY 28th; 1923 eess-eWQ,P0.14,1z,A. Q •ITK-SPI 114-, -tqiidlaYs '. .-'- ,., 0, tnr. .'094,th ,,..Bruee, is 0 get10.0 ef"::•X*4111cor4rair4wattlieeer§iloln'..:, 0P4 40 open, 1' ,c the. nitintate." Anil ; of thhiele, ii.tif dosaWay. 'With the "Can', :adian, Eense._ •ef Lords." as, OurDorn: been call4 1 e • ''' •. '- . Nr,;:Rhidley . iviit: ask ,en -govern- -- meat -tee note tienethaynep*Iat-Patlia: menteen, ea apapnd, the liritishels'Iorth Amerita Aet that therelecteee. of c*, ada :can either teform, or abolish the ' upper chamber, and .he peop,oees' that , . ,, . , • the elector S be:. giyee an. 'oppor eanity to %decide' the fatee Of the Senate at •the...next general -election, by vOting. for or against it continuance;.. ' ' • •.,,,lt ..mayr be said , Without 'hesitation _ that, the"-SeneteeneVeHtretifietittreee' istance'; 'it costs, the eountry e: great. deaf ' every. year, and it has Mine eolne herrn. It is questionable if, it...ever did_ any tootle:, •• • 'e, ; what cease, be'. expected" 'of it? Its merl'berasare appointed by the gov- ,eyninent of the day, d appointments inveriabli,ere .made •rewerd for past party services. Preegientyl men who have been srejeetect ley the elect- ors are given ,a Seat in the Senate for "In defence :of the Senete it is said that .all tountriga have two -c amleer go+liments. Well that is just Where ,this" young:country has a. ehe*e. 4 .•• step ahead. and show-•-theeetheWthete a cOnntry canget alOng all eight with •a al.e-ehline.ber'..government. The ewo!- charrilier idea- o'riginatect 4zi .the .divi- sion of society.into , elle Cornmen.pea- • ple and the aeistockatsee The .aristee criits , always insisted. on having the dominant' hand in- goveinment; they must haVelliejr House of Lords, "or Senate to .held, the ,Co'nunenore in rer- otraint However, he VQM111011OTS., axe` the tentesentatiyeas of the penple; and , when they do what • the people; think ia iWrong' they will, have to ans- Terelaor it. But the: Lords. and .the Senates ,can do ;kw they please- or :they may dp nething, and like' the , New York City, bo.se, insolently :ask: What- are you -going to d� about it? The }rouse Comb:ions in. . this .ceuntry Britain, is not the wild creature' the. aristocrats., assumed, it natutallY would • be, and -if it Were 'the Senate is :no fit ' ineerTerii3nt to re- strain itT.Pablie:ePliiion 'IS The true brake on the -2', government, machine, and the merither 'of parliathent gener- , • ally has his ear to•••the-t.iround ' A.WaY, with. :the uselesa.'and expen- sive Mr; Findley," P; de- . 'Serves 'credit for introchtsine his re.: sellutioneetindeeethen-itsseomerstrpetfers- diOcuSeiOri in the I-Ioyse it will.he,well worth witching" e' . • - • , . PittoHIBITIQN IN THE A. eating. eon, V"ari40,,, realil04 :pp to be a battnr n,,e•i4,k; 14,41! than the4arictot The 41.4010'.4eaf7 geAleci.k bounday lineii,T,faietee, dry'ses20e Per cent wet. The s ,tettersethat hove long .beedennder ,state'PoNbiticia laW ttre.dileSt.; Kan- sas :bad. states ,prothibition for' ever •egreP44Witli the' Pe'vernhient he watlki Ate.piii4iii'OP, ? ‘-,,p•ot fair ; :10P when he agrees ,withTtlie, Geeernment, I •he is ot 1eadinganQposition, PLEANINO UP.AT OTTAWA 30 Veer$. hefere the federal law eeine It is said that Dr, ,Reland for et 1111.9 fo!ce.,7:01.47:44.7:419911.17:-Et-m.er--go42- 'an.le:14!..w'-t#ff...:*n*:tT4Yff!Ee7-'4tp'ie, It4Featialtari0 r.t" - - yeare'eeie)nare.; Mid' till 20 !gtesi§taptt.yirio :means that for some. PR44,1.:444,,aggti..40IIKILwilkei4F+0,4740.414: g.„„dOge.r,,tivat42",,h,v.hile greatly, I ferdiablY. with'. its neighbetee-eVoie oyer -Manned , e • , , remit, and NeWhaintish ire, -Whiehe are Phe idlers are being hunted out of up,'. Per ePiit wet, Main' lartebe ex-' ether °departments as Well, so posed to, the Atlantic "bootleggers on Would seem that for the, time being the--„east7and , the (anadian b'60t-.° TcOilorny and Efficiency appear to be eleggees, the 'west SQ 043-11.4-lopg,‘ the:watch-words, " standing-prolfibition. law tninste he'ecreese , m evresinse hense'.e.eleatingereor- .4-je*.C!=*':,v-iltbeconaiderable:selrYill0-Pewere eeffice-scleanindesit-PPeal'astoelseethes.r : The dro,uth ,of Utah and, Idsihn (only suit of some 'effeCtive,;worke b.y Mt 5 per "ceilt, wet)." May perhaps, Grattan O'Leary a ieurnaltst.,•who af- etribieted to the iefleences:of Mormois.. ter. doing some . investigating about agleepta. eg 'th,ht, sect being,' 'he ,government 4offiees; Published ,'n . • • . . sober .peteplee, - , leries'af 'articles. he: MaeleeireselV,I, age- , Theaveitage•alLOver the eointtrjr. ,zinp a' few Weeks ago.. The, eabstence, 384e.% failure of the law'. Whether ,of these artiele.s'.was widely rtublished or net that may be.regarded as a sue- 'n the , newspapers of. the: country . • .. , . . .• . • . ....cesseeacheuelle-sudge-forehimeelf-Thee tha7e-exposure roused, 'a map with ite, figurers is as. reliable ai good tleal of „ indignation among the Could be made. It was prepared by. business men: and fariirars who have Mrs- 'Mabel• Walker Willehrendt ass! been. at their 'wits.' end to meet' their ieterit attoreey„ General of the United -Obligations,: States, and is based on reports to the , The •GoVerrineent at, once. Paw that United States Dep. of, jnstice. • something Must be, done, and every department.head, was told t� . get busy end.. cut tiOnin expenies... It 'a • . Mr. Price, treasurer in al.:14Adssattih,74feast*117°.11'lltah'ofeef,aatf, lindeiesepehof7afre9i;ta-'°geffrnPthlitie:?aly'reZtes5:: Mr. Pertensore, governailent,, shockeil' ott,eage:tunsptr,3,e_i6,111.77ite,wai e,nkou nwcihde„na, in his and short ‘ta ft i rineiya;y: 11. beey. oio,rte' of o t,evaoiii,le af, finnan ern,inian. d,ailars; and -direct- short of, ineneY; they are .*niA•entitlect lir 'charged ,the'. shortage to the late to a very)great measure of eympethy. „4,-v..4,,,,p0;icGe.,0y:fx.imneou:er:eirit4ere,6;e:6n, N_ doubt most, if,,7et all ..,6f tn.e7. di'aereditiriehisePredeCeeso•r afice their busked4heir721LaYill Inakihg-life" for . represeritaiiire M • pailiameat able until ,he get Sernething. for thero. In any eventelf they were .not doing, a 'fair elay'e work for a fair ley's 'pay as othee 'Workers.; have .ten TAKING FROM THE MANY . ' AND 'GIVING TO THE FEW e THE U. F O' 'DEFICIT and be likely has put. the worse pew, sible. face on the finances of the pro- vince. However, there 'is ,a measure .of truth in the 'statement, Mr Price Would hardly ventuie upon 'the: damaging , annotincement • of it could be disproved. Many thlitiughout the:, ,•irrovince :muse haveebeen deeply disatipOined 'by' the late government, and in 'no feature of its' activities naore .than in , NIL -REDFRONT-.1fARIYVYAR • Spacial Price. on -Potato • Pots atch ur Window a . lmpERTAt WAR.E-THAT. TWO COAT . 06 Olio GRAY Irrg poTikTo POT, wan.R. .110Y,,EAST, 6.40, SIZE, $1.19. '‘ • cANAry. WARE--ritAr • irillit*-Co•A•T. ,pRANI17E, SPECK -LED, wItym ;-'07iNINArAirs7LoOlcs ..NICE AND CLEAN;IN THE :oAT,'SIZE WHILE THEY 'LAST, , WE ARE ALSO AGENTS -FOR 'THE BUCKEY E--- THE ' WORLD'S -FOREMOST INCUBATORS AND BROOD1BRS yoti. ARE THINKING. OF. BUYING 'AN INCUBATOR :DR BROODER 'TB1$ SPRING, CONSUI.,T• , US 13EPORB. • PURcilAe, ING. ' CROSS -CUT SAWS-ehEA DER PREMIER IMPROVED RACE •• . AND PHILADELpl A ,LANCE, WE.NAE ...ON "-HAND 'eALL THE7 TIME. • • : . , • , TRUE SET 'AICE=TULLY GUARANTEED. • A ,GOOD' SELECTION OF , SECOND, GROWTH tuckozty...Aic- HANDLES. '' • • Hinr., J. .8. Issonss ministet of lends and forests, , addreSsifig the niern- ite_hatielling 'efethe, paban,sanania's.,,,..jw ‘,., bers.. of the •OntariO Jand..Vrveyors- was unfortunate in the period Miring • at :the -1r annual. dinner re -e'en -01;7-5V iv-hich" ' it, held: offiPei far it. was neee,s- . f•er°' 916.• prediction--•th:i'teieehessi:Piel:ees; tseeety •-e time of heavy expeeditdres; sent plans of..the,oi4nist hilt • after ;erery...._.*ccuse - iA matte, • it to bonus the iron ;ere industier t Nete must ha recognized , that the iliuiy. stuvicessfullY . iconsumnated, : as ':he 'eeneveci they "would, and if :the 'pre., 3.74;;; eN7ISteebiltlillitalisa;tlieevemr most inefficient : yineuil. bonnees. were ;simplemented Government, 'there would .15e pre 'With'''s.irnilar. grants:'W.the• Federal proyinee. That it should hay' e" been :suele, is all the more astounding when_ 'tis eieniembered that .the chief .plank sently viretneesed .the7greateet en -of .:ite-'-platforin Was 'economy, -Ind. of '4evelaPmell'af-nlining''''"-alileflY‘ that defienciation. of the two old Par-. ..i!1 iron, in the hisOrY of this Pm.- - • , tigireaeftiv. as', Chiefly for wastefulness ''and• . vir.i.ce.". • . • • „There you haVe 'It .again: Rob the PEE OFFICIAL OPPOSITION'? , There las been quite a scrap on • , einee the, 4:sztOing ' of the Provincial' vieeeincinatrY•*" ' • : ' "." Ieerliement at Toronto over the lea- " We Would seat -like te-seSIE the Tar-- dership. Of the `Opisoilition '.'. • • •ners cif".7,0Iitiffiriltid the Weet-libif This arose out of their beMg three . political parties. in the parliarnent,, „ „Now. is • prohibition really working' either One of which is prepared .to. Out in the United States is cjue,Se' form a ,gevernerient when it has the tion which • greatly' interests every rieacessarer parliamentary support , Canadian Whether a '`wet" or a ., .nuniber the U. F..0. Parey "dry." 1\jaturally there.: are widely :!..oines..-second, lent Premier Ferguson :different steiles_going,esome _ seeing.. send'his,.assoCiateain.the.:goyernerient. that the lair is:a success .:and 'othere have 'seen recognize the Liberal' saying that it ..ie a feilute. The man Party 'Eta the "official opposition?! who says that the law is a failure i; That is they ' have given the Liberal suspected of being a "vvet,'''while, the leader. and ,his f, °flowers seats 'in the man. who aays- aexele, a snccess house ;just oppo.site those occupied by thought to be prejudices ire its .,favor: the cabinet ininiSter, and the 'Liberal* Perhaps •there es' an element ' of leader being :thus recognized will be :treth What' eaele 'hee.' to; says. fdX. ,efititledete-the-45;000-.Whielfegifec'th- , evidently there are 'wet spots eatid tlie leader of the 'Opposition. dry spot SPote, Jecogritzing_..a., ofthe ' Oenosition pa iney_euLepecial Sal ier eatiny• to enrich the' few -take from the• enduseriee that are •eelf sOpport!' ng and give to those that are not; It laenteipoeeel that •the Proriereitil.' and Federal :Governments bonne' the iron hee 'like' the idea of having money' from them by process of taxa - 'eon and. handed el:Ter to men wh� are engagedein iron ore mining., or yin) may,, engage in that :industry, fiend .the smile gaiestion may he put to to every other business 'man in the country , • • The bonus money which will go to the iron ore .industry will not Come out of the air. It will come out of the pockets Of the tax-pasrere,. It is quite -evident that 'to the ex- tent that :the iron ore indu'stri'es iwili e benefited, other 'industries', which mnat put -up ----the- rnoneyewill' -be ;ins- iured; • and these will be injuretilinore than the bonutied industry will be • In -the. Literary Digest of Feb'23 . . . . . t benefited, far „there!wilt be, waste in there is an instractiv.e, 'anci. meaj Jfl-. is about the most stupid- aritineeni, nt the transfer,, besides the waste_of-IITT teresting map of the. United States. that:a. parliament ever made. It pies hot in anindustry natiirally uepro- The map ie used 'to illustrate :are 'art: voile in the' -Doininion Parliament • as . icle entitled, "WhysWeAre' 384' per i'Ewil as 'in the provincial, gives ShoWing the •eXtent ":i6 ' i;vhi(4; view that politics is a game with the cent.. Wet," and :On each :State are fie M is ' the , oetcosne of the absurd M.JO7onT14;E:uANOiterlt, STErtAlitt ic ,1148,1rs the prehthitiett law is not , being en- eoyemerit offiees as a prize to be ' foreed; in that fstate-in , allot words fought for accrieding ! to , recognized , IIA-rndliailiedizeaatnintinne.nataf I inin.snii!latariaifafnie' and the ' the per cent to Whieh ,it„i.S. wet. To „eules by .two oppesing partieS, Patlie- fuether:•finPress• the lesson, the map atent is not viewed' as a body of 'cit- gelatione re one Of theemost laudable shaded, dark' to light;:the shading : izens chosen to govern the country; eailetivaill of the Ontario Mdtor Lea - being in proportion to the degree ,of , but es a body ne,cessarily dierided into , , moistflrO. , rs - n yang ;.s -.-- OSO' --w o, ,- that• - - -- , esee-erseeeeeeeeee;- There ' ie. a • Wide verietion, from •, are ' in, 'and those ,Whoe.Waet 'ela get .,711.9tiens iii neither. prasetieal net Kansas which which is 5 ,per 'cent wet' to in -the _government and the0 ' nirable.: ' .. • : • . • :-Louislaria whieli is. 90 ', ' ' ' . teen It assumes that the 'political ,, Lniformity o. courteoue treat- -Here/are 'figures . ullich. illustrate Organization -winch is :representd-in "niell-t-11!6ided' atia"ei78' *lien. 11154" conditions, Utah, - Idaho and Kermess parliament but .does' iletrconstinite a, l'i:g e7ties and town,, nravinaea and are,the dryest states, 'each being onlY enajority iS 'necessarily oppesed to the''set.at'i itilii the 's€,eadaTdizatfeil of -me' whereby. ,rule'S , peculiat to a' 5 per cent, wet, •Geartria and Louis Government party. It is not expected, le"s ' - are made known to the hints are the Wettest -,90, pee eent, to assist the majority parte but t community nen a is 7,51, Alabama 25, South Car- oppoee .and obstruct it, and for le' I ,eurst is dese ving of •much more- . , . el-tentiert than has been, givers it gen. Olinit,, part 15 and part GO; •North ing this opposing, ObstruetineeS arts.; ,• ,„ se_es , es s 1 . Cartilirear part 15',•iiifd-pitr t•-70rVit•-I- Vm Inns paid;"$00Tiri-the -'prii4Aiie '"7...„,:"7" '''"u 'eat'. aCi• 7. girlie, and , Wet • ;91rgiiilia 36; Ken-, and $9,000. le the Dominion Tionee.... l'". 'I'm • ' *.ie advnaata anital'allY''' it:wise 50;'' Tenneisee 16;:indiana 40: • One would. think that our :states,4 ,lt.-04.0'1, "we ;chi not ti.rorios6 ilav^ 11 traffic rules ideritiCal lif all Ohio 20; New 'York part ,69 aad part: ale h roplci htive seen that . there '" " owns Such 'a process :Is ' hot, . Only 95; Pennsylvania 10 41ateiliehtiseats vin4la develoP. As a matter' et feet 4 75; Main 20; Ntichieen50; :.'IllitioiS no, parliament ever is squarely di'vid. imPraati6a1 • but,l'indaidj'abia' for 'tire 65; it/Mellow ty.„:„,: (1 'Colnsado 15; Neb- .ed 'into two parties. " There alwaYs 14"Ism 01(4t "lt through emi'erinie11 railm I 0 ,X Da' - , 0; 8,, Dal 10 have been a fetis free, lances, And be - +4461 ill traffic tegtilatiee aan: inY'' 'C'al ro, '; . - , ni I 'I! $15", southern ,sides the Oppoaltjon. does not always 'Oh"' ;16061ThatitifE' 6. ISOgi6i'sive 5y:stern ii'e, dvised, Any ,inOtenelat who If , "I, . opPose, Sometimes It; or rierty Tot it, tev,rt er.d ionPidn'.% the qii,bleet'OPen, ' A.' ..,' - •••ow; -1 ,, haws that the SOPPorta., the' 4 GOVerrinont ifiartk, ,lis r'nattl,;: and her,. What u,ionkl the teatlit :Oi the Optos- -1"51'43'''PA` It tha"tilfle t4t6i' 1-tifin is ovointfOiloO, air! that 'to. . itlilo think if, ,an th0,44$ that he $00agtdiso it lt .tii lOWar lta atarid;k 'fitabie. •• , • se e Tile, Modern 'Irolittg. MAY, n,c)t, know how ' to shoke. •the fuiartee but Ott IcgclIYI IOW tfu'ottiike' tho • , I E 86 PORI The Store Where Your , Money- 'Coes the 'Farthest . Phone 66... • nr.de , • I tIns.atea. i.e. reteei. es ,. 'thee.' • inot!,,i Lho niat_lerinilarityesof_ealleateles,L, '• sOrt nnifera. ,,,..mararnyeinefT.inp_rcievilltnactiesiethCeree_naldvtame...211_,.: Emile ones and a standaedized: forin ear.ely:peasible, but anificatien. bf.f,he 8e7rleina,oat3rori:ewgehslleinin192mlainait.aebeate,,,:otf . .7 per 1,009' of. ies nro,00n pormlia;. ‘wa tion7• Eepthoried steamship travel 'from Canadian ports ports •via :Canadian :Pqe. eeific steamships' is heavier at the -.present time: than ,for s'everal' years 'Mast at this seaSon;saelteCeet .report • -deeTteites. Bookings in sorne•instancee haire.run as high as 7.0 per 'cant in4. crease over those ,•of lest. veintsr• . According to a. reeent official c3ral 011t of every 100..people ,in • .Canada 51;liv,e on farmse The 7614.7 000 fatins . iri . Canada: eiepresentna . • 'gross 'worth or.ono,noo.o'oo or 'oboot- $10,000, per farm, and prOduce,.'arr • 'annual -eevenue of 'nearly .$1,500;000, ....an-Aterage-inceineLper-farni-of %la ,Yearlv. • O.f 7. acquainting' the touriit .the peeuliarities ,oi ,else local yules. At the: iain higheyay -.entrances to cities' Luld,•tOlyris , there slitio14 be Posted ,on .3igns .of eharactere., areef Mit ,aectirate',ieetriictions as to ethe---details-siefethe aminonit'yYs-rules.e Parking relation _stienS. .should he. Placed -Where e mokoriete' ,are 'accuse- •oinecir:t6. looking for thele,, and. fire • taYdrants. Sliould'bear the local inetrue eeloris for clearancee: • • e0nlees every city, an .ttnyn on, the.. continent' has, streets' -,of the Seine . . essidtheintersestionS 'of the slime form anelerebieditrelifi Irtre-Ter-iiite; niiif�nnjt eoietraffie°„eailee 4111 :eev-, er be possible,. • -se -certain"- pleeee it. is- -obeions , ail 'officer in tinting; in ether placeS. that it is not logical to pass around'. . " trirns are .hetter, aiadesin 'front ef eims:Oneseeae .eireCts prohibited': ...eft turns vary conditions, arid, cannot be -Made ,identical throri-e ,shouta City; letealeriee the Corainent,i .10 matter 'how' ideal Sueleari,arranges.' eight- be grossly' impraCtiCal eheee teents,ilri :New ,Yoric,Or'.17 A:rig-01es, and els0Where. ' "There is e'llealthy rivalry' anions; „Ries in MY effort to arrive at eorne 1 • nereem-actical means ef 'speed:rig up .raffic With 'safety. and of ingepaekifigee and - elleeld ;be_ en- , . - . 00brage.d. But not at .the eXpense uie ino.torNt, re!'!is embarrass ---ellyeeOss'M71.. • arid-a-ffiliatel elubs eke "-the POSition „ thet • no todrist hould be" obli ed to Worry its toerbet ,..1,y e• 'should e do ' rivipg through r trange towns. he inetenetiees shonhr e given -him Where and -,'when he ir ccutonied telook for them, In lothe, ords, he shoUld be giv,en every op. ottunite 'to co-operate with the cite 'fidlOwng out its traffic filMiEts, ,8 a in `tUniformity. of conditions is ut erly impossible unless:we Ore to re clesi.grl,-,,..11,•;Pitis,13,411ko—Ptiregoternai,. formity of. leetil rules" is ocifirillsy. he: Possible.' 'When or mhe're park' will ever remain the priyilege Of the •local. authorities, 'jest as laws differ, anionF „provinces, and states and ordinances' among: cities, Time limitations'or niethede, of narking Should be shoWn by proper sieerS, "Bets ,uniforrnitY of tourist educa- tion is eiSeetial Joe.s.afety,.....ande,fure. 'therinere is practicale It is, spited; frig. among those eitieS which appre- ciate the fact that 'sefetY and simpli•••• fication • result from ' helping, the etraniser.' But the situation demands mota-then ceuetesy on the pert •of the 'traffic offieers., There should he unifOrin• Syetem of enlightening the tourist; 7 •• • "We are .worhing towardthIs goal hi, the belief flint it will enaile (Ity to n(14,' 41', regulation's ht" ••tlite,1 vithait in any ineenvenielmnt the tonriat " tt• • -From-the 'opening Of' •the crop • year, September 1st,. to; the offici al - , closing of navigation, December; • 12th, the Canadian Pacific RaLevey- • reported the heaviest marketing .of grain .since the inception of the road: ' Cars 'loaded by . the company -alio :created a' record for the season, hav- ing :numbered 116,232. Grain mar- keted 'topped the, 200,000,000 bushel mark. • , Thiety-seien per cent of all auto- mobilei in Canada • are" owned. by 'farmers. Ownership of the balance, according to recent statistics, is made up as, follows: business men and brokers, 16' per cent; ealestnen. • and trayellers, 16 per cent; profes- 3iona I men, 8 per •cent; laborers, • 4 Jet. cent; contractoess and livery men, , I per cent-- eeeli, and seniseelleneetne, arid occupation stated, 13 per tent.• ' .e...Wheri„ the , Canadian Pacific- liner . . "Empress of Canada" left New York -ori-sjanuary Seth for .her ggeat round -the -world slie was the • f i rst Canadian vessel -ever to corn- :nence • such a voyage carrying a regular bookstall in ,the cliarge experienced attendants,. in •• addltien.- a-free library: The atoek iltfdes nany excellent. recent books' on .ravel, which will ,enable passengers • o prepare. theinselves for the for- ' :ign lands they will visit, as Well as i)eslt.arkgrieownnuniaubtehroroof: npvcla by .! the Of the Vital' wherit esiported freni "T4;1911',9(Irlailehels., by .foretlic-reateree anada eN9Yeinbere-encireMitingeetosss- ': vtarr V"Filelhwteeneiktd4i3teh8e15'11,3119i1t,ebuiCslii'nePs". •!lie United State § wee second larg- eit•eimperter of ...Canadian • wheat, :airing 9,010,143 buthele. Italy came taking '4,013,152 bushels, and • 3reece next, with 2,066,480 bushels,. rhe exports of Canadiare wheat to ' France during this period, amounted ' 'to 1,328,368 bushels,and ,to Delg:urn .1,075,216 bushels. Those to Gee•- _„,many-totalled4-129;320-tinfiera-- • In the keenest Competition, ern - bracing entries from all important agricultural districta of the NOrth American continent,,Albexta farmers wnaotni.o.n4a3l.partioz:isc' aatnathgerariencensth,04wn.t.ear-t • Chicago, Two grand chanipionall!P$ --wheat,. Major ' G. IL L, 'Strango` and oath,' J. W. 13iglandP-4erit"te the province. Major Strange also first vth white field pees and IfNti rut, mnteamrlelkoeurvvJth i: 17, Brother,sors,0vere,iteoefd 13. mrlik4,0 It:10004f .110 VIII IAA keon , Strenge's isueeess ,is Itspeelelly , -tt ; ,