Ontario Reformer, 7 Mar 1922, p. 11

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

g Rha to ah fi cto VV (050 to nh a et, Sak ha A noe AT EAE Te TATE ney ne AMAT A Ao A ASS EAC i Bei i Foe Camel . OSHAWA, ONTARIO, 'THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 10227 | PAGE ELEVEN: = Ha os oc ----T rr ------ -- -- ella SE SL aa ------r So -- id i ofa oie ] fii heen postponed and the gathering| the union does not invelve a dipe| Worked on farms in Perth and near-{ chener, in Waterloo County. Pre- World Events| «i'w: operamin-apri to-at-Genvomatle dNiunce, nor was ito con-{ by eounties. Phe Canadian Prem-|mier Martin, of 'Saskatchewan, was i Swi i eg of, A remarkable communication | tracted for teasons of. state, All| ler, W. L. M, King, was barn at Kit-| horn at Norwich, in, Oxford County, was issued at the close of a confer-| reports agree that the whole wed- " h - hint oh but was taken as a ehild to Exeter, | the federal agrarian opposition, Whe in Huron, and he married -a Perth horn at Molesworth, in Huren, 13 county lady, Mr, Cravar, leader of |18 an impressive list, ¥ (Continued from, pags 8) ¢ *griguing. gues against the government are ntinuad by ostensible supporters, signs of dissatisfaction are erally confined tog wing, ot the ative party Inthe Oealition, {kD is the government party. This Mg is in favor of returning to the ight party system, It is looking Bir Charles Younger, chief gov- pment whip, as its guidé, "Other nservatives are very much - op- il to Younger's-activities." They ¥ that if Lloyd George does resign will form a new party to which "If belong the progressive elements ong the Conservatives, the Lib- als now in the Coalition, and per- ps some of the Independent Lib- ils who now follow Mr. Asquith d Viscount Grey, Ansten Cham- rain, head of the Conservatives Unionists) in the government y, is himself opposed. to any nge and it is to him that the mier has addressed a letter ur- £ that there must be an end to Thé result of the by- tion in Bodmin, Cornwall, may ¢ added to the disgruntiement. A eral won there a seat held hy litionists in the last election hy ajority of 3,000. . This reverse wing the recent triumphs of the r party in hy-elections, has na- ally renewed the talk of an early eral election. It would be had the British Empire if Lloyd rge was to step out of office just and he compelled to give to tion contests the time that he uld devote to preparation for the nomic conference in Genoa next th, which will mean so mueh to fold world lands. | . * * ] ! / DiMculties in the way of the Kcon- fic conference of the allies have in smoothed away. The date has : a : ain Piel [0 HT jy 1 | Il Show You ow to Increase Your Profits If you'll talk over with me the vantages Toronto Stable (Hl ay ence between Premier Lloyd George and Premier Poincare of France, held at Boulogne at which the pre- liminaries of the Genoa conference were discussed, The meeting he- tween the two lasted for three hours and it may be surmised that there was some frank talking particularly on the part of the British premier. In any event many obstacles to the Keonomic gathering were removed and the communication referred to ahove breathed the very essence of brotherly love between the two na- tions. The two premiers it was as- serted "feel particularly convineed that no differences of a political character will stand in the way of the two nations working together in full mutual confidence for the ec onomic reconstruction of | Europe and the consolidation of pedce." On one matter there will be some cur- fosity in Britain. It is contained in a clause of the communication which declares that the premiers "entirely agree on the political guarantees to he secured in order to avoid any en- croachment either on the rights of the League of Nations or upon the treaties signed in France since the peace, or upon the rights of the al- lies with regard to reparations." Thig probability means that so far as France is concerned she has made her last con ion in resp to ar- rangements with Germany, and that she may have some agreements with others that some of the allies coun- tries that some of the allies might question. However all Burope is looking toward the conference with more confidence and hope than was previously the case. L » . It is hinted that the visit of Hon, W. 8. Fielding, Canada's Minister of Finance, to Washington, has to do with the attempt of the government to make effective the Reciprocity pact of 1911. This report will be viewed in varied lights according to the political earnings of the men who are interested in it. It is not like- ly, even if it were still on the sta- tute books of the W@nited States, that the pact as agreed to in 1911 would become effective as it stood then. There would probably be a demand for modifications from the United States where there has beep | some important changes in the tar- iff Jaw of late. Perhaps also there | might be some changes here if the United States wanted to reenter' into | important negotiations. The renewal of the pact, or an arrangement on simjlar | lines, woud be a matter of import- ance irrespective of political | ties or fortunes. In its broader | sense the idea seems to be that it! should be possible to reach an un- derstanding for the free passage of farm produets from either eounntry, or for at last merely nominal du- ties on some of them. - * NM t will bring to your mm. Toronto Stable Equipment ) desizund to save you labor, the stable cleaner, keep pur cattle healthier, more con- wed, more profitable. | 4 4 ' | celles. As ome writer A. it Let's talk this great moro pu . the eat over. Toronto Stable Equip- | {76am of the ages, the marriage of =ot indudes Stalls, Bull Pens, ater Bowls and Litter Carriers. H. J. OGDEN Dshawa M Ontario ! the hearts of the people of the Em- | tion of the world, like the marriage i Ia From the sentimental point of | | view there has been nothing to tomch pire and of a very great outside sec- of Princess Mary to Viscount Las- a brave commoner to a Princess of the blood has come true. The pub- lic has followed every detail of the | event with sympathetic hearts, re- | Joicing in the fact that a beloved | Princesse bas married a man of her own nationality. Indeed this int bas been stressed by many British commentators who are thankful that special price. Hogg & Lytle : How much Ground Peas, Oats and Corn do you want at | We have a limited quantity at this ONTARIOS BREEDING GROUND ding ceremony was a delight to the eye and the senses and (hat the bride and groom seemed to be most happy. A feature of the event wap that by means of wireless vessels three hundred miles off the British sopst, heard the wedding music as played in the Abbey. There will be records in moving pictures and of other kinds that will be eagerly fol- lowed or listened to for years to some in conneetion with this cere- mony. LJ * * If there is to he a world wheat corner, there are no signs us yet that those who e¢laim to be origina- tors of the idep have advanced very far with their project, Canadian and Ameriean interests are credited with the scheme for a corner too gigantic one would think to he suc- cessfully put into actnality, Some British papers take the project ra- ther seriously. They attribute in- creases in the prices of wheat and flour to the mere suggestion of auch a corner. Australians are algo supposed to he interested in the plan while Argentine is pictured as fight- ing it, the latter, it is claimed, no attempt- ed corner could be a success. If the corner is formed its operations must be carried through before the] Indian wheat begins to arrive in the British market sometime in June. It has heen estimated that a speccessful corner on the alleged lines planned by certain interests would net $35,-| 000,000 in profits for its operators! which is a fairly good reason why failure of the attempt may he predic- ted. LJ » * Ottawa sends out revised census figures showingethe total population of the Dominion to be 8,769,489, compared with 7,206,643 in 1911, or an increase of 1,562,846 This is pot gratifying to many" who had hoped that Capada would show a population in the neighborhood" of} ten millions. Bat it at jeast does! show growth. At the same time it capses reflections as to the future. There is talk all ready of steps to renew immigration on a somewhat wider scale than has hitherto heen) the case, but with more diserimina-| tion than in the past. This is a more! question than that of mere numbers. Masses of people do not always mean that a country is| growing in the right direetion. If} the wrong classes are being brought in and cannot be properly assimi- lated, educated and trained in good par- |¢Mizenship, numbers are a detriment! an not an asset. Based on the cen-| sus figures quoted the next Parlia-| ment should have 245 members in the House of Commons. or ten more | than the number now there i (Copyrighted, British & coloniatt Press Limited) | MICHAEL'S MOTIVE | london Sunday Pictorial Mieh- | ael Collins is chiefly to blame for! raising the Ulster boundary ques-| tion is an acute form. He has plenty! of courage, but is hardly a man of} iron. When De Valera came back) trom Paris the other day breathing) vengeance against the British Em pire. Mr. Collins thought it neces- sary to claim half Ulster for Sinn Fein in order to "keep his own end up." | Yet Mr. Collings must have had gomething to go on when he advanc- ed Nis preposterons claim, and th») mystery of mysteries still is: "What | did the Prime Minister tell him dur- ing the peace negotiations?" On this) vital point Mr. Lloyd George has thrown no light whatever, though! he evidently said something - which meant more than the transfer of a parish here and there ] A TREE FOR A TREE When a forest administrator says. that he hopes to see the time when a tree will be planted for every tree cut down ou mon-agricultural land' he does not mean this literally. What | hie means is that when am acre of | forest land is cut over that acre should be planted or seeded at once to bring on another crop. If this is; done by planting it will mean that! five or six times as many trees will he planted as are cut down, because to induce helght-growth forest thoash are planted much closer together, than the Mature trees stand when | eut down. The trees that do not! reach maturity are either thinned | out and used for rails or fuel, or) die off because the trees that have | forged ahead have shut off their sup ply of sunlight. 1 x Toronto Star: The election of! Wellington May as Liberal ma on] gives Perth County its second op- position leader. Mr. Hay, of Lis- iowel, in the Ontario House, Mr. Meighen, of Anderson, at Ot-| tawa. A little group of adjoining | counties in Western Ontario has! and) given many leaders to Canadian pol- itical life. Premier Goeenfield, of | Alberta, an Englishman by birth, | Without the co-operation of]. mm FOR STYLE and QUALITY AT A LOW PRICE, LEEDS LEADS] THE DAY OF LOWER CLOTHING PRICES IS, HERE! ' Grand Opening and Public Reception To-morrow At 13 Simcoe Street South IFREE Don't miss the opening. Flowers for the Ladies, Cigars and Cigarets for the Gentlemen. Come Early! Given With Every Suit Ordered Made-To-Measure From Newest Spring Materials At Our Special Price Just think of being able to order a fine depend- able quality Spring Suit at $22.50, and with it get an extra pair of trowus- ers, free. We are open- ing our Simcoe Street Store because we feel we can give greater values to all men. Ow policy is "Not cheap clothes at a cheap price, but the most dependable qual- ities at the lowest prices at which they can be produc- ed." Small profits and big business is the plan we will work under. OUR GUARANTEE --It goes a great deal further than the average "Statement of Satisfaction." We can afford to make it strong. We are not backing up someone else's guality and workmanship. We are not taking any chances. We are backing up our own. Leeds gar- ments are made by our own tailors, under our own careful supervision. We check every detail of the work, stitch for stitch: seam for seam. The Leed's triple inspection system replaces the usual double or single in- spection. This means triple sureness--triple certainty of value. We can sell these clothes under the broadest guarantee, because we KNOW they are right. : TEFL REASONS WHY WESAVE YOU FROM $10 TO $15 ON EVERY SUIT from Maker to Wearer WE Guarantee Fit and Workmanship WE Carry the Largest and Best Selected : Lime of Woolens in Canada WE Axe Wholesaile Tailors--Not Agents Values you will be astounded to see! Suit from smartest mater- ials at our special tailored to measure price of -------------------- A visit to Oshawa's new- est tailors will save you money and bring you supreme clothing satis- faction. We are opening with a wonderful dis- play at pre-war prices. All Shades, All Patterns, All Styles. In Coming You Will Not Be Obligated By Looking. Extra Pants made of same mater- ial as suit, if desired. See Our Windows Fu oe men Se oe Su Oshawa Store 13 SIMCOE ST. South Open Sat Evenings

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy