l’ -\G l? FOUR FINE ‘GHARLDTTETDWN GUARDIAN President-W. Chester ll. Alrllun. ser-rrtuy-Llout. Col. D. lfidnnr and llunngrr—d, B. Burnett. Vlro-Prosldent-J. ll. Burnett. A. sruruonoo, u. 8J0. Assoc-rat: lunar-D. K. Cutrin. coho pQr yrur uh lrhullrr) mulled ngrnin‘ lluiiy ifnundul mm 85.00 in (‘nnula and (lulled our». per your (in ulhunfl‘) delivered. THURSDAY , SEIYIIMBER 26, 1929 SIDETRACKED AGAIN In The Guardian's news columns yesterday there was the report of a tour of "the Maritimes" of two 0111- cials of the C.N.R. Colonization De- parti-nent, Messrs. E. H. Gurton, East- ern Manager of the department at Montreal, and R. M. Pym, superin- tendent of the Juvenile Immigration Department of London, England. They are reported, at the conclusion of their tour at Moncton, after visiting sections of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, where Danish or Scandinavian settlers had been IJIKICCd, to be par- ticularly pleased with their trip. Mr. Pyrn’s vhit, we are told, "was for the Purl of inspecting facilities and oportunities for placing jouvenlie settlers on the land in the Maritimes, and he expressed himself as well pleased with the opportunities afford- ed the youth of Great Britain in this section of the Dominion." This is very interesting and encour- aging news to th¢ people of Nova Scotia. and New Brunswiclctowhich parts of the Maritimes the welcome visit of Messrs. Gurton and Pym seems to have been confined. That Prince Edward Island is also s. full-fledged Province within "the Maritimes", and as such is entitled to every consid- eration on the part of the Canadian National Railways in the matter of immigration of jouvenile or other de- sirable settlers, seems not to have been considered by the omcials who planned the present tour, The oc- casion is not the first in recent months when Prince Edward Island was coolly ignored in the matter oi important official visitations to "the Msritimes." Why this should be s0 is a question which the Provincial ’Government ought to bc able to ex- plain. we have many vacant farms in this Province, and the opportuni- ties for settlement should be asgood as in our sister Provinces. The Fed- eral Government. and the Canadian National Railways have shown a laud- able disposition to help those who help themselves in this matter. The fact that the Government of this v Province hrs no: yet taken the trouble to organize an immigration and colonization bureau or bcstirred itself in any methodical way to at- tract immigrants or to retain the few who come here, may account for . the seeming partialiiy shown to our sister Provinces of Nova Sootia and New Brunswick. The advantage oi having "two Governments in line" be- did not tell you the Wh-‘llo trum- All those beautiful machineswhich you saw from the windows oi your train, borc a small inscripfllm which you were unable to see-say- ing simply: “Made in the United States.’ In this inscription may be found the reason for bread- lines in Edmonton-in Winnipeg- in Saskatoon-An provinces where every year millions of acres of land are covered with the best Wheat in the world. And the terrible night- mare of these bread-lines will con- tinue as long as this small inscrip- tion is found on our farming im- plements—"Made in the United States." HEADS AND TAILS. An alleged increase in the number of convicted drunks in Ontario is given by the local Liberal organ as an alarming evidence of the failure oi the Ferguson administration. An actual increase in the number of convicted drunks in Prince Edward Island is given by the same organ as evidence of the success of the Saun- ders administration. The Charlottetown police court re- ‘rcord for last August of arrests for ‘drunkenness was the worst in the re- ;corded history of the city. there be_- fing twenty-eight arrests for drunk- ‘ enness during Exhibition week alone, i‘ whichlis more than the combined ar- 3 rests for drunkenness during the great iExhibitions held at Toronto and 0t- tawa this year. The crime record ‘of the Province during the past year also shows s igreater increase per capita than any iProvincc of Canada. In the case of Ontario, increased ,1 convictions are evidences of increased ilawlessness. In the case of Prince iEdward Island, they are evidences. of increased eflliciency in the adminis- itration of the law. “Heads We win. tails you lose!" I EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘ Alleged smallness of indemnities ‘seems to have no terrors for parlia- ,mentary aspirants in Ottawa. l i There is slight probability of the ,i-iouse of l-iohenzollern crumbling for ,lack of funds, The former Kaiser it; reputed to be one oi the wealthi- est mcn in Europe and the family ss- isets are said to exceed $125,000,000. , One of the leading provincial high- lways in Ontario is named the "Fer- tguson Highway" in honor oi the ’Premier. How long will it be before rue CHARIDTTQTQWN quhigpiha Notes By The Way Tho Centennial Clulv of New York is preparing n list of 100 of the "most useful men in the world," an obvious- ly difficult undertaking, but one of possibly considerable public interest. As in the case of the Hall of Fame. there will be no doubt many dis- sentients from any list that can be compiled, and objec ions may 0-- expected this‘. undeservlng names have been approved and more de- serving ones omitted, It is 0i interest to Canadian readers to know that Jack Miner, the natural- ist, has been iniluentlally nominated as "one of the hundred." The number. of his friends and admirers in Canada is countless. His name has been placed before the Centennial Club for recognition by Bernard 'I'homas Hughes, n world-known and famous newspaper man. ' Few men are more worthy of liign honor and dlsrinctioil in Canada than Mr. Miner, not only as s lover and trusted friend of the birds, but as s humsnitorisn and a. man greatly use. ful in his day and generation, A new metal called Bohnaliio is be- ing extensively advertised in .t:=e United States as a substitux for iron. Great are the claims put forward to fur-her introduce it. Balms-lite is really an alloy, and its cheif claim is that it is 62 per cont lighter than iron and serves almost every purpose served by iron. I‘. appears that aluminium, now well known in almost every kitchen in the land as the: material of which light-weight vessels and oontiiiners is composed is I. principal oonstizuenf of bohrmlite. "Iron must go," it is claimed, be- cause the new alloy has high uniform hardness great density. strength, and ductility, and u liready used in tremendous volume by scores of iesd- ing msnufscvurers in America. For steamships, railway cars, trucks, buses, automobiles and aeroplanes 52x2 great reduction in weight of all their metal parts would mean an immense saving in the cost of transportation An electoral reform proposed by Professor Ramsay Muir is attracting attention in England. "If I were s dictator," ' he says. "I should enact that no voter should be placed upon the register 0mm on n. personal application, to be made m‘. a fixed time, not in the heab of an election, and that every voter who did not use his vote should be struck of! the register, and be ro- quired to make a fresh personal sp» plication." - c , Th"? Provisions seem to be based upon common sense end g due 1'0» zflrd for the welfare of "‘ tho nation. They maintain the right oi all adults do vote, and tend to exclude the slack and indifferent, who do not take the? responsibility seriously and =wa-|id save us from the domination of the wavering mass who now deiermin our future. ‘ The Liberal Globe. of Toronto-ior- Wflllely it is not the greater globe we all inhabit-wobbles in it; cows;- in the Ontario election. A litiils WIIC-l 8E0 it Oondfllnllod Mr. Sinclair as a leader of tihe party and odvlsod the provincial Liberals to get rid o; him They did 1W3 live hccd to its advice Now The Globe has taken Mr. 8L1- cl-air to its bosom again and 31v" front-page prominence 0o all hissay- 1113s and doings. . ______.. , , 1,. By Isms W. Barion, M.D. TREATING THE MIND FOR INDIGESTION I often think it vmuld be s. good thing for the patient, and the doctor also, when a patient who has been suffering with “indigestion” for a con- siderable tinie asks for treatment, the doctor would treat that condition as being very serious and needing care- ful attention, So many oi zhese cases have been in the habit of going to a doctor, and ii “rellef" is not obtained in one or two visits. go on 1o another, They take the medicine suggested by one doctor for a short time, try something els: recomlnended by a friend, and thou 0n to another doctor. Now the very fact that the patient consults flze doctor for his dyspepsia or indigestion shows that he needs attention, whether that attention is given to h‘: niind or his stomach. The doctor therefore instead of "proving" to him that he has neither cancer or ulcer, that stomach Juice has right amount of hydrochloric acid, and therefore there is nothing wrong with him, should make com- plete tests 0i tLc work oi the stomach and intestines. " This may cost time and money, but it is the shortest ,the cheapest, and the most urilsiactory way of treating these cases of "chronic indigestion.” Very often although‘ there is no cancer, ulwe-g tuberculosis or other such condition, there is a delay in the emptying of the stomach, perhaps in the time the food takes to go through small int :s"'ne, and a long delay in the large intestine. Now from the doctor's standpoint. as there is no organic condition, he is apt to tell the patient there is noth- ing wrong with him, give him perhaps a suggestion about food or exercise, and the patient u dismissed, Now this patient is in real need of full and straightforward advice about his living habits. His diet should be carefully out- lined, definite exercise prescribed, and if necessary measured by the doctor for an abdominal belt that will 511D- port the organs until he gets 801116 strength from his abdominal exer- clses. This uhh-diotciy does away "with drugs, which in his case have b11911 “psgtflng him physically and men- tally. . You can readily sec how “brilliant? results can be obtained in these old cases of indigestion, if a. little more thought is given to the Patient- THE LAND WS LOVE n; mam: LIIGII r i rrra tr urkravic conumny Q. What vuls Company? A. The lilackinnc Company was organized in 178i, apparently a: the same time as the North Vlest Com- pany, and composed of much the the Mackinac Manufacturing In the Maritimes (Canadian Pacific Railway Review.) Wide attention has been drawn in the last couple of years to the regen- eration of the Canadian Maritime Provinces. That there is a new spirit energizing all oi the territory's varied activities ls made evident in count- less ways. Today the Maritime Pro- vinces are much more oi a force tobe reckoned with in Canadian economic progress, advancing in a manner which will unquestionably take them far. Among the phases of activity. in the Muritimes sharing in this pro- g gross is manufacturing. In the five years between 1922 and 1987 the capi- tal invested in the manufacturing industries of the MaritimeyPro- vlnces increased by over 20 per cent. and thelgross value of production by approximately 12 per cent... and if is since that time that the real stirrin- lation to industrial activity has been experienced so that progress at a more accelerated rate can be expected. There is a greater volume of manufacturing capital in Nova Scotia though this and the sister Province of New Bruns- wick run neck and neck in the value of manufacturing production. In 1927 there was invested in the 1,100 manu- facturing establishments of Nova Sco- tia $128,155,040, these having s. gross production value oi’ $74,458,297. In New Brunswlcks 872 manufactures s. total 0f $99,087,327 was invested, but they accounted for s. gross production value of $72,666,665. Prince Edward Island had 291 establishments re- porting with s capitalization of $3.- 081504 and s. production value of $4,493,628. In the year 1927 the three Maritime Provinces added $13,761,805 to their manufacturing capitalization. In that year a total of 39,088 per- sons found employment in the various manufactures, being paid $39,297,914. The leading industry of NewBruns- wick. which is also the most valu- able in the entire Maritime area, is sawmills in which there were in1927, 233 establishments engaged, capital- ized at $20,555,201, with s. production value of $11,835,035. The area of Cape Breton furnishes Nova Scotiirs most valuable industry, rolled iron, steel ,icn. Since then w- Nine Instead Of One (The Vancouver Province) "Ill-link of nine provinces instead of one," nod. n. n, Bennett ursed int Young Conservatives,‘ in Vancouver in his address on Monday- It was good advice, foo. It was Dy thinking of four provinces instead of one that the Fathers of Confedera- tlon created Canada. sixty¢W° yeah ago, out of a handful of distinct and often quarroiling entities. To a cer- tain extent necessity supplied the im- petus which resulted in Confedera- tion. But from some or the Father." camethe inspiration and from others the practical experience which ‘went into the founding of the new Domin- ihave added PW" vice to province until now, instead oi the original four we. have nine. And we are probably not finished yvf. I‘. wasn't easy, in those filth?! "Y" away days of 1885 and 1866, when tile fabric of the new Canada was bolus pieced together for the men who had taken up the task to think 0i four provinces instead of one. Two cf the provinces had been msether i-hfl-"l separate and then together again: but tho union had not been a happy one. The others had been separate for along time, and it was difficult "30 look upon them as ever being abe m achieve a close unity. Yet with stern necessity driving, with MBGcss kindling Celtic imagination pointing to the great destiny ahead, with Macdonald and Tupper and BT-‘Wl! evolving practical methods from rifle depths of their experience and patrio- tically sacrificing personal inter-ass and mrong antlpathles, and vicn Cartier resolutely holding his Joni- patriots to the bargain he deciuei desirable, the union was effected. Today l0 is nine provinces instead of four that we have to encomrflii when we think of Canada. But we have had more than sixty Ytars oi practical experience of Confederaiion and most of us have known no ‘lher condition of affairs. It should be in- finitely easier fo' us to look umn Canada as a unit than it was for our fathers and grandfathers. But Canada is a country of enormous distances I r 0J3 Elmo... THE HAPPY TRAVELLER. Who is the monarch of the Road? I. the ilappy rover! Lord of the way which lies before Up to the hill ano over- Owner of all owncath the blue, On till the end and after, tool I am the monarch of the R0861! Mine are the keys 01' morning, I know win-re evening keeps her store Of stars for night's adorning, I know the wind's viild will, and why The lonytlzrusir hurries down the sky! I am the monarch of the Road! My court I hold with singing, Each bird d gay ambassador, Each flower a censor swinging; And every little roadside thing A wonder to confound a king, I am the monarch of the Road! I ask up leave I01‘ living; I take no less I seek no more Than nature's fullest giving- And ever, westward with the day, Diarrhoea Mixture An excellent preparation m; tho rsllcf of grlpphg plln "g other symptom; attending bow. sl disturbances, particularly those known as summer com. plnlnfl. " ll lbllllllkly lgfg gnfl m“. talus no onllfos or narcotic; We know it ls n rellsblo you. edy thlt works quickly u"; have no hesitation in rocom. mending It. S5 CENTS BOTTLE. E. A. Foster CENTRAL DBUGBTOIE J . Special situation and one given to dispensing 9mm’. I travel to the far sway! "m"- —Isabel Eccicstcne Mackay in "Fires or D_.,1,_w,,,.d_-- 6 Dunn-F 772a Newer Mode in Ranges, APEX RA N GE A new genulns cast lrou Range of improved dnslgn. first you will find lo b: a visible expression of tho [Md lash that you show in your 110ml: and all of if; appointment; a" ' 4 fl-s Bo ..---.e Hardware 0o. Ltd. "THE FRIIENDLY HARDWARE STORE" .1 l: a w PHONE 757. 123 QUEEN STREET. oooooo-ooooooo-o-oooooovooyo and varied interests. Geographical divisions and racial divisions, too tend to throw us into different camps! and cotcries and centre our attention ‘ On the group rather than on the who: 3 products, etc.. the five establishments capitalized at $25,107,583 being res-‘ Donsible for a production value of‘ $9,870,155, ranking this as the second Maritime manufacture. Butter and cheese leads in Prince Edward Island with a. production value of $1,143,554. In New Brunswick pulp and paper making ranks second with a, produc- tion value of $8,934,580 and in Nova Scotia. fish curing and packing with products valued at $6,051,407. ‘The greatest industrial centre in the Maritime Provinces is Saint John, N.B., with 129 manufacturing estab- lishments capitalized ht, $33,437,539 and s, production value of $28,000,757. Sydney, N.S., centre of iron and steel activity, follows with 29 establish. merits capitalized at $42,367,891 and 3 Production value of $16,988,479. Dartmouth in the same province. a lumber and pulp centre, is a closs third with a capitalization oi $18,- 008,628 and s production worth $13,- 331,084. Halifax ranks room. with $31,003,880 invested in its manufact- ures which have a production value of $13,069,438. Moncton. N.B., is an important centre of manufacturing Anthracite Coal So, it is still necessary, sometimes, m, make the effort to. think that there ls more to this great Canada tliar there is to, British Columbia or Ontario or Nova sccila. Bu‘. the e!- iort is well worth making and the uf- j tener we make it, the easier it will, become. and the router i‘. will be for] Canada and the nine separate pro-i vinces of which the Dominion is cm - ‘ bowl- ‘ oooooo-oo-oovoo-otyvvo B R A H M I N T E A iS THE FINAL CHOICE ' A Tea Full of Strength And Fine Flavor; Sold only in Red, Airtight Pqckag kkkkkkk k _ The Handicapped Boy Halfway through High School and forced in turn bread- winner-many a promising youngster has been imply-handi- capped through life by lack of education. kkkkkkkkkk k kkkk kk k k kkk k. The bigger prizes in irlmost every walk of lifs usually fall t- the men with university training. Why not make certain now that your bcy will have an squsl chance with the rest? For a moderate premium you can purchase a Oreat-Vi/cst Life Educational Policy that will provide funds fcr his university education, whether you livs or die. Full particulars will be mailed you on request tn Hyndman Es’ Company Ltd. - The Oldest Insurance Agency In P. l. I. Provincial Mangers — The Grout Wolf Lilo ca lolmown we shall have a “Saunders” or a "McIntyre" highway in this Pro- vince? comes negligible indeed when the lo- cal administration persists in 5183p- ing on the Job. with a capitalization of $7,633 8J1 and: a production value of $7,350,483. Eight centres, Annapolis Royal, New Glad. 20W. Truro and Yarmouth in Nova Scotia, and Bathurst, Edmundston, Fredericton and St. Stephen in New same firms cnri individuals, although each contained members not in the other. It operated almost entirely in United States, territory from Cahslzia in the south in the sources oi the Mississippi, and by why o; st, Peggy's Co-operatlvs Government, now es- talblished in Saskatchewan, is 801118‘- thing‘ of a noveit ' in Canadian Gov- ernment aifairs. Under Premier An- derson and his colleagues, it appears to be numerically largely Conga-mg. For the householder who wants. clean coal, low in uh and high in hon values 41s ecornmend Welsh Anthracite Coal. A. Pickard f? Co. A Western exchange features scar- ioon of the "Manitoba potato" up in , .. .' E 11.5.11. v , . ;- ,3 . _». - l! Brunswick h f ct i :- - . MADE i‘\ TH an aeroplane’ soaring jubmnuy mm ma“, m makkup, hm we "e w“! J rive did s. cows dcrab‘- trad. in auction a1 "V? ma?" a "T"! P 0‘ p , _____ u __ L, m, mm,,,,,,e_ m, ,, °°'u“°n‘ Bpanishlmui-unnu, which at that l’ "es n the" of 82-000-000- PHONE no , I r the blue sky of high prices, while but Jun ,,c°_operac,___e',, And i‘ cm "m, extevldqd “gm, to the Missouri, and Campbellton. Mllltown and sack- . ‘ q ‘i, Why- B55“ U"? Libi-‘ml Pm“- '“'°| a distract/rd housewife below is cali- operau" government “my be . vely or w” so rznlmejv The Macklnac ville in New Brunswick and Charlot- _ ' ' f Conservative speakers going dbouttheyi mg, “Haw Irish, c-mon down] B3 good 0m, d, we gnu}, i; mgu_bc_,ér;,g-_ Company operated through all of =3-°“’“- Prime EdWBYd 1'11""! Value-S i . ' ‘i country talking on the need of atar- , reasonable,” Marimba consumers the Lima], have 1059, m, moon-j“ Wisconsin, northern Illurois, Iowa and “tween 51-00990‘, "d ‘3-000-090- '—— Is the Spice ‘of Life RENEW SHABBY FURNITURE OR CHANGE ‘THE COLOR T0 BLEND WITH YOUR OTHER FUR- NISHINGS. ADD COLOR AND DISTINCTION TO YOUR ROOMS AT SMALL COST WITH most of Mznncmtu, After Mschinak was turnsd ore: to the Americans, the company continued to operate under the clause of Jay's treaty re- lating totho fur trade. In 1811 John Jacob Astor bought out the interests of the Mackinac Company and merg- ed it in the 50ml: West Company. The opera-‘icris of the latter organiza- tion were suspended during the war of 1812-14 and in 1816 it was rc- crgsnised as the American Fur Company. which they had held so long; sullen‘. angle of tho situation.’ ii ii! lwllfly Wm" m? wullm’ i5 5°§may feel that way, but if the Prince “f9 prmperous? One very sued reflsvfldcdword Island potato takes n joy may be found 1n the fvllowins sme- ride in the air this year, no one in ment from the ifldevindcfli Cami‘ this Province will begrudge the m- lian Farmer: mer his well-earned profit. "At present time the Western Provinces are employing hlllldwd‘ 0i thousands of laborers for but ii! months of the yesr—from May ‘v0 the end of October. In November this large army of farm laborers is sudd-tnly thrown into unemploy- ment, and this condition remains until the following May. At first 0n being tlnown out of work the farm llborer is amazed-What has hap- pened’! On h‘: arrival in the coun- try in April or May, passing throng‘: the Western Provinces by train on either side he could see thousands of ecras cf the finest agricultural land. and at the larger stations his attention was drawn by the numerous farm implements to be seen-plows. hcrrows, discs, trac- tors. ‘etc-all of the very best. Nat- urally, he dreamed of n happy future; he thanked God ior bring- ing him out of the house of bond- lgs-in the Old Land. into the glory Whooping Cough ls dangerous and must be treated promptly if serious complications, such u. bronch- ial pneumonia, hemmorhagos and hurt affections no to be avoided. The speedy control of cough- lng spells and spurns is most essential. At tho suns time the flu-on and bronchial tubes Inst In slur-ed of phlegm and muoqu mam: which onus dhlrcss in the day time sml slsoplonusss nlurlghl. MAC’! WIIOOPING COCO}! . REMEDY ls so compounded from pure drug. and chemicals with the and In vlow lo chock the ruck- lng cough, bring up tho phlegm, control the infection and soothe "IQ inflamed respiratory lobes rmocc Your ennui/cot Mac's Whooping coon, pom. o0. 80 Cents Per Iofllo. Though manufacturing in the Msri- I time Provinces does not loom up as if‘ of outstanding importance in com-i parison with the rest of cohodo, tho ' three provinces accounting for but , 4.4 per cont. of the Dominica's total productivq value. it is becoming in- creasingly significant in the general activity apparent in all phases of the territory's life, in ths elaborate port development, new hofel construction, growing tourist tramc, swelling agri- cultural plédllitthil. and increasing population; In 1928, according to authoritative statement, seventy new industries of substantial proportion; established in the Maritime Province; and there were additions to eleven others, the whole representing an 9g. nenditure of 88,800,000. In the pro. sent year thsrs has been much col. dance of new industrial activity with a reorganization of the steel indus- m. new pulp and paper mills srsof» ed, and fish curing and Picking and fruit canning pllntl established, and As the plohuoizo III "Nova atom. draws nearer the question whether Premiernhodcs may or may ‘not ibi- low ii: with a poiivcal election becomg; of increasing interest. The tempts- tion to dissolve the iegtoldium will b6 strong and the extensive changes o!- rczdy provided for in the represent-s- vion of the different ceramics would justify, if they do not make ‘itch- ligatory as well as desirable. I The smashup of an expensive Gov- ernment-owned car on Monday night at Southport, reported in the press. gives rise to considerable speculation as to the cause of such an accident. It serves also to bring forcibly to public attention the increased expenditures which have been made in this con- nection. It is understood that no fewer than seven cars have been pur- chssed by the Government spurt from auto trucks, of which three have been lcqu Ten new suin- mobilss for tbs Obvcmmonl. in one year is purchasing It a r508 almost equivalent to that 8100.000 order ‘for road mlchinery. Evidently this dul- of out kind is by educating public opinion by persuasion rather ‘than b-r coercion.” 1 Premier Ferguson addressing a Con. servstlvs convention st Elmvtis on’ Saturday ins‘. quoted Pnlident Hoover in sirpport of education an: moral Illllldii rather than 006N191: in promwton oi iomepnnce and ‘sobrloay. President Hoover said in portz- ~ Ever strict‘ the adoption o! the Prohibition Amendment tooinsny pacts have some to roly wholly upon thtsirong arm ottho low to sutures Williams. imam MADE INQALL THE NEW FASCINATING * SHADES. Illinois" KID N EY * Sale Price 40% Discount ity of 01800 be allowed to bl run on tbs road st night and ai- ln tin now prosperity which has coma . to the Harman. of "tho" Promised Land, and out momma: ninth ' "hub A Mk h to build mods plans for s. glorious ing in quantities tends to make tho m “m. “mum”, h- e” u‘. "m m "Wmmm" 7"‘ "M" "7 up tho slim no p” q h” “w”, bf-[nglng o,” m; Government Hum“ a m“ m‘ vmm n m. mama“ or by the government of Nova Scotis to h“ h. h" . . family and starting s new life. _ I .1 . .. “n f decide as to the feasibility of esfab- _ ~ ' Why movlalm nozthénkthihw-mw m~'"°~’"'"°'~ °""""" "l" ‘W14 "’“““::,?““'“. . . °i '. llshlnl dour mills in that province. 0381's 8|! wQrO Ollllny i Olhld is th t 0 t w - . Vi} h-l- , ' ' . ~ “u.” lawn?” ‘l’: the" we“; Y". L reliable car which 000% ill U10 710111 "m vhf “N”. , ,1. v u.nqhouflm' 1. mwiubuwflu" _ _ . door immigrant, we are using every you thousands of brand new agri- cultural fmplomsnts; but when wo guml. "w. norm gob y‘ room‘ sluud-firldsdllnlll wmnfnhvfli ‘ an»