re to Sustain Production eld or Factory Threatens National Collapse. SE FAMINE CONDL rIONS IN RUSSIA. _ CREAT DROUCHT 8M Ottawa, â€" Ont.â€"The apple â€" crop; °¢ throughout the Dominion, though seriâ€"| F2 ousiy affected by recent drought, is[Of still likely to average better than last ) th year. Reports received by the Deâ€"| °T partment of Agriculture indicate that| O Winnipeg, Man.â€"Nearly $5,000,000 is the total of new incorporations in the Province of Manitoba during the past week. Among the new companâ€" ies incorporated were the following: Radium Holding Company, $75,000, Winmipeg; Building Investment Co., $100,000, Winnipeg; Old England Bee Co., Ltd., $40,000, Winnipeg; Viectory Account Corporation, Ltd., $200,000, Winnipeg; International Tractor Co., St. Boniface, $1,000,000; Parlee & Co , $100,000, Winnipeg; and Peerless Groâ€" cers, $100,000, Winnipeg. Edmo»n ~, Altaâ€"With harvest s!illi a week distant, Clark Bros. of Bremâ€" ner pulled samples of Marquis wheat! over four and a half feet in length. The heads are long and much of the) grain fully formed. _ The estimateds yield of this field is fortyâ€"five tbushe!s' por acre. Rye in this district is yieldâ€" ing forty bushels to the acre. l Regina, Sask.â€"Four dollars a dny‘ will be the standard harvest wage inl Wes.ern Canada this year, according to an announcement by the Provincial Employment Bureau. Labor officials from the four western provinces reâ€" cently meot in Winnipeg, when this[ subject was discussed. | leas. rory Cal season of !921 Edmon! ~, 2 a week distant ner pulled san over four and The heads are grain fully fo yield of this fi per acre. Rye ing forty bush Dawson, Y.T.â€"Plans ars under way here for the construction by Yukon and Federal authorities, of a network: of highways, which will greatly enhance devolopment in the north country. It is planvred to join the Alaskan and Yukon road systems at an early date. Investigations are being made by the Government for the construction of « five hundred mile road from Camp Mayo to the Fort Norman oil fields, following an old Indian trail. Vancouver, B.C.â€"It is predicted that the movement of Canadian wheat to Kurope, via the Port of Varcouver tion. With this lack of permanency has followed lack of incentive for farm improvement and for the addiâ€" "Farms have changed hanrds, and thus a means for continuing good farming practice has been wanting. There have been no traditions posâ€" sible with a shifting farm occupancy. Whole families have moved from country to town, and there has been a similar want of rural social tradiâ€" "Our educational and social ideals have declared that overalls do not go with dignity and respectability, and that education is a means of escape from labor," said Prof. J. B. Reynolds, President of the Ontario Agricultural College, in an address delivered at the Imperial Conference of Teachers‘ Associations. He went on to say that the unâ€" settled condition of rural life in Canâ€" ada was due to the social stigma that had been cast upon farm labor. IMPERIAL CONFERENCE OF TEACH ASSOCIATIONS HELD AT T( Instead of the member for a part of Ontario rising in his place, there rose a delegate who said he was from South Africa, from New Zealand, from India, or from Britain. Teacher problems were discussed from the point of view of men and women from all over the world. Nor did it detract from the impressiveness of the scene or the tone of the debate that half the delegates and the speakers were women. and coming from all parts of the Britâ€" ish Empire, should have assembled in the Legisiative Assembly Chamber at the Provincial Parliament Buildings. Where are wont to sit the representaâ€" tives of Ontario constituencies are sitting teachers of the youth from Britain and all the great British Doâ€" minions and many of the colonies. Delegates from All Over the Empire Discuss Matters Vital to Welfare of the World-fmï¬unl Ideals Are Sending . _ Children Away from Country, Says Prof. Reyâ€" nolds, O.A.C., in Notable Address. 6 A despatch from Toronto says:â€"It seemed a fitting thing that the great parliament of teacher delegates meetâ€" ing under the name of the Imperial Conference of Teachers‘ Associations, , HAvE Y00 seen | MY ‘ l DeRBY AgoOND l Jivmie? & inam rpoe Canada From Coast to Coast al, will be at ing the winter Montreal, Que.â€"For the first time’ in its history the Society of Chemical! Industry, will hold its annual meeting | | in Canaca, convening here on the last; | three days of August. In recognition| iof the talent which has developed on! | this side of the water, the presidency‘ | will, this year, be passed to Canada, | in the person of Professor R. F. Rutâ€" St. Johns, NAd.â€"An agreement bas been reached between the Newformdâ€" land Government and the D‘Arcy Exâ€" ploration Company, a subsidiary comâ€" pany of the Angloâ€"Persian Oil Comâ€" pany, Limited, to prospect and survey unoccupied lands (Crown) within the next two years. The consideration in the agreement in the event of the sucâ€" cessful working of oil is that they will pay to the Government 12% per cent. of the value of all cil obtained by them at the casing head. Their opâ€" erations must be continuously carried Frederiiton, N.B.â€"Officials of the Department of Agriculture report that crop conditions in the northern part of New Brunswick are good and that there is every evidence of an abundant harvest. Grain is exceptionâ€" ally good; timothy and clover appear to be fair; several fields of barley are all ready for the harvest; hay is about 75 per cent. normal; and the apple crop will not be as heavy as in preâ€" vious years. versity Halifax, N.S.â€"During the past couple of months fishermen on the Atlantic coast have been busily enâ€" gaged in catching mackerel. During 1919 Canadian fishermen caught 230,â€" 770 ewts., valued at approximately $1,500,000, of which 74,897 barrels were put up, valued at $1,038,000. In 1920 only 142,347 ewts. were caught, and 26,144 barrels packed. the apple crop in Prince Edward Isâ€" land, New Brunswick, and Quebee will exceed the heavy yield of last year, while Nova Scotix and Ontario will register slight declines. British Colâ€" umbia expects a crop some 10 per cent. better than last year. When Lord Byng opens the Canâ€" adian National Exhibition, Aug.. 27, he will be following the precedent set by every Governorâ€"General since Dufâ€" ferin. Prof. Reynolds said that a developâ€" ing industrialism had become a formâ€" idable rival to the farmer in the labor market. "So much so, that at the present time there is no economic basis of wages in any industry except in farming. On the farm, the tendenâ€" cy is to pay what a man can earn. In industrialism, to date, the tendency is to pay what organized labor may deâ€" mand, and, by means of economic privileges not shared by agriculture, to pass on the costs of production to the consumer. Such conditions demand of the farmer business ability and economic knowledge not required in Canada forty years ago." "These facts are mentioned as conâ€" stituting the real problem of agriculâ€" tural education. Each new generation of farmers has to be taught the prinâ€" ciples of good farming, with little aid from a {arming tradition. Each new rural generation has to be taught to live in the country with little aid from a rural social tradition. But in spite of all, if Canada is to maintain a stable and durable civilization, there must be maintained on the farms the best known practice, and conditions of living in the country must be mainâ€" tained satisfactory to those who are intelligent enough to farm well, and generous enough to live well, and pubâ€" licâ€"spirited erough to maintain unâ€" exhausted the soil‘s store of fertility." rural utilities and rural improvement and rural beautification lag behind. Country schools have not kept pace with townâ€" schools, and couniry churches are dying of inanition. tion of household converiencesg Thus M.D., FR.S.C., of McGill Uniâ€" rmngin mecommerbsannsmnorey " No \ PIDpN‘ PoP! WHY DoNTCHA WeEeAr Yoor NICE BEAVEL Ns fee The Community Sing in which all people in the grand stand join w.ll be repeated at the Canadian National Exâ€" hibition this year. . The University of Toronto has reâ€" ceived several requests for these rural tutorial classes and is endeavoring to supply the demand as fully as its finâ€" ances will permit. In this respect, as in many others, the university: is hampered for lack of funds; but, should the Report of the Royal Comâ€" mission on University. Finances be adopted at the next session of the Legislature, the provincial universityi will be able to dot the province with rural tutorial classes to the immense benefit of the young men and women on the farms of Ontario. There were 1,152,000 people at the Canadian National Exhibition last year. Having heard this report the two Brampton clubs voted unanimously for a similar class there, to commence in October, and requested the Univerâ€" sity of Toronto to furnish them with a professor to lead them in their study. These young people realize that eduâ€" cation will fit them to do their work better and also to employ their leisure more profitably. In Peel County, as in the province generally, the pursuit of pleasure is being superseded by the‘ pursuit of knowledge. And, when ini search of means for obtaining knowlâ€" edge, the people of Ontario turn na-' turally, and rightly, to their own proâ€" Â¥incial university. i â€" _ On the invitation of the Junior Farmers‘ Institute and the ‘ Junior Women‘s Institute of ‘the Brampcon district, the Director of. University Extension, University of© Toronto, went to Brampton to: confer with these two organizations regarding the formation of a rural tutorial class. At the meeting there was a delegation from the two ‘Junior Institutes at Streetsville who reported on the sucâ€" cess of the rural tutorial class held in that district during last winter. The report given was a highly onâ€" thusiastic one; the attendance had averaged twentyâ€"six for the whole season; the subject studied was Engâ€" lish Literature; the professor sent out by the provincial university had been‘ so thorough, so painstaking, and so successful that the class insist on hav-l ing him again next winter. We shall, I hope, bring to the duties of pzace the comradeâ€" ship forged in the war. (I shallâ€"indeed be happy if T can reély on the support of all Canadians in the same way that I relied on the cordial coâ€"operation of those men that Canada sent to represent her in the days of stress." t aff, § â€"now, as citizens, we shall strive to;:maintain and advancs it. To that end we of the British Commonwealth will believe that the interests of no class, no party, no nation, may override the comâ€" mon interests of all. , ie * A despatch from Quebec says:â€"At the luncheon tendered him on Thursday at Quebec Lord Byng, the new Governorâ€"Generâ€" al, in vibrant tones, told of the hope with which he enters on his Canadian duties. _ He said: "I venture to hope that I shall receive from all citizens of Canada the same sympathy and confidence that was given so ungrudgingly by those gallant Canadians with whom I had the honor of serving during the war. . ‘"Since then we find ourselves in.altered cireumstances ;then, as soldiers, we were doing. our best. to defend the Commonwealth University Tutorial Classes. THE "REIGN‘" OF PEACE .. John Bull:~ "I think it‘s coming, Pat; I felt a few spots on my hand." Pat: "That‘s right, John, an‘ sure, how welcome it would be!" Unity of Effort in Peace as in War REGLAR® FELLc(GSâ€"By Gene Byrnes w (o% #6 i Nt 4 Ainamaith > > *Â¥ Ni Ne tre 8 o onil t oo on pepieny .4. 2 0. Adianla it neinsiten s 05. his arrival at Ottawa. R. B. Maxwell Dominion President of the G.W.V.A., was chosen by that Association to preâ€" sent Lord Byng with a gold badge and A despatch from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., says:â€"Col. J. A. Currie, M.P., and Archibald M. Campbell, of Perth, geologist, who were in the city recentâ€" ly, reported the discovery, 100 miles east of Sault Ste. Marie, of a deposit of hematite ore at a point 37 miles north of Spragge. They had spent some weeks in the locality before disâ€" covering the deposit, which is said to have been first noted when Herrick, the surveyor, was running a:; line through the section in 1857, and has since been lost sight of. \ The grain crops, with the exception of ‘oats, are reported excellent, deâ€" spite the deficiency in summer moisâ€" ture, but the shortage of forage has compelled the butchéring of much live stock. * Hematite Ore Found A despatch from Brussels says:â€" Rain fell throughout the greater part of Belgium during Wednesday night, relieving the drought of several months past which has been complete except for a few showers. ae Rain Relieves scroll of honorary membersï¬lp on TS Teo ~~ HeT 17â€" paAN FoOR aAa BEAVE! 7 HéET~ hok t Hogeyâ€"60-30-ib, tins, 14 to 15¢ per Ib.; 5â€"2%â€"1b. tins, 16 to 17¢ per lb; Ontario combâ€"honey, per doz., $3.75 to $4.50. n t Lsme f Live poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 80¢; roosters, 1¢¢c; fowl, 22¢c; ducklings, 30c; turkeys, §0c. . Margarine~â€"20 to 22¢. ‘Eggsâ€"No. 1, 42 to 48¢; selects, 46 to 47¢; cartons, 47 to 48c. _ . > Beansâ€"Can., ~handâ€"picked, bushel, $2.85 to $3;.primes, $2,40 to $2.50. Maple productsâ€"Syrup, per ‘imp. gal., $2.50; per 5 imp. gals., $2.35. Maple sugar, lbs., 19 to 22¢. . _ Cheeseâ€"New, large, 24% to 25%¢; twins, 25 to 26¢; triplets, 26 to 26%c; old, large, 33 to 34¢c; do, twins, 84 to 85¢; triplets, 34% to 35%4¢; new Stilâ€" ton, 27 to 28. _ 3 Butterâ€"Fresh dairy, choice, 33 to 85¢; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1, 40 to 42¢; cooking, 23 to 25e. _ _ Dressed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 40c; roosters, 20¢; fowl, 30¢c; duckâ€" lings, 40¢; turkeys, 60c. _ o to $1.17; No. 2 spring, $1.15 to $1.20; No. 3 Spring, $1.12 to $1.17; No. 2 goose wheat, nominal. Peasâ€"No. 2, nominal. Barleyâ€"Malting, 69 to 72¢, accordâ€" inï¬to freights outside. uckwheatâ€"No. 3, nominal. Ryeâ€"No. 2, $1.15. Manitoba flourâ€"Firsi pats., $10.50; second pats., $10, Toronto. Ontario flourâ€"$6.90 to $7, old crop. Millfeed â€"â€" Delivered, Montreal freight, bags included: Bran, per ton, $27; shorts, per ton, $29; good feed flour, $1.70 to $1.85. _ Baled Hayâ€"Track, Toronto, per ton, No. 1, $25; No. 2, $24; mixed, $22. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 Winter, car lots, $1.20 to §1.25; No. 3 Winter, $1.17 to $1.22; No. 1 commercial, $1.12 Ontario oatsâ€"No. 2 white, 50 to b2c. Manitcba barleyâ€"No. 8 CW, 79%¢; No. 4 CW, 75%¢; rejected, 70%¢; feed, 69%4c. All the above in store Fort William. :ï¬erican cornâ€"No. 2 yellow, 79¢; nomihal, c.if. Bay ports. . Manitoba wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern, $1.80%; No. 2 Northern, $1.76%; No. 3 Northern, $1.67%. Manitoba oatsâ€"No. 2 CW, 50¢; .No. 3 CW, 48c; extra No. 1 feed, 48%¢; No. 1 feed, 47¢; No. 2 feed, 45¢. golds, reds and blacks of the uniforms of the military officers present, the sombre tones of the uniforms of Preâ€" mier Meighen and his Cabinet Minisâ€" ters, who are Privy Councilliors; the scarlet robes of Cardinal Begin, and the variegated tints of the ladies‘ dresses. In the meantime those present on duty by virtue of their offices and those by invitation had gathered in the Legislative Council Chamber, where the ceremony of swearing in was to take place. The scene was one of much brilliance. Against a backâ€" ground of vivid red, the color scheme of the chamber, there stood out ge The administrator of the Governâ€" ment of Canada and others to officiate LORDâ€"BYNG OF. VIMY. INSTALLED: â€"â€" _ _ AS COVERNORâ€"CENERAL OF CANADA A despatch from Quebec says:â€" With the air vibrating from the firing of guns from Quebec‘s ancient citadel, the sound of whistles> from â€"river craft, the ringing of bells and the applause of a large crowd, Lord Byng of Vimy, Canada‘s new Governorâ€" General, landed Thursday morning at King‘s wharf, proceeded through the beflagged streets to the Provincial Legislature buildings, and was there eworn in office with a pomp and imâ€" pressiveness which probably have never before been equalled in the hisâ€" tory of the Dominion. A band played the National Anthem as His Excellency came ashore. The Governorâ€"General, who wore a genâ€" eral‘s uniform, stood smartly at the salute while it was being played and afterwards inspected the smart guard of honor on the wharf. Behind an escort of cavalry the General and Lady Byng and their suite proceeded in carriages by a roundabout route to the Parliament Buildings: Lord and Lady Byng received a series of ovaâ€" tions as they. passed through the crowds, which His Excellency ackâ€" nowledged by waving his hand, while his wife bowed repeatedly. A dense throng had gathered at the Parliaâ€" ment Building, and here again he reâ€" ceived an ovation. M Impressive Ceremony in the Quebec Legislative | * ~<â€"*Marki Another Epoch in the History of +s L " hm + .m Toronto. _( § h wWhAaDpa Yyoâ€"s Z7z care! ThE _/ >2* ar aveERS DEAD |â€" s Weekly Market Report TORONTO ’ Choice heavy steers, $7 to $7.75; | butchers‘ steers, choice, $6.75 to $7.25; | do, good, $6 to $6.75; do, med., $5 to { $6; do, com., $8.75 to $5; butcher { heifers, choice, $6.50 to $7; do, med., + $5,50 to $6.50; butcherâ€"cows, choice, $4.50 to $5.75; do, med., $3 to $4.50; canners and cutters, $1 to $2.50; butâ€" cher bulls, good, $4.25 to $5.25; do, com., $3 to $4; feeders, good, 900 lbs., Light steers and heifers, $3.50 to $4.50 per cwt.; Good fieshy bulls, dairy type, $3 to $3.50 per cwt; light, comâ€" mon ones, $2.50; canners, $1 per ewt.; cutters and med., cows, $2 to $4. Best lambs,, $8; com. and med., $5.50 to $6; sheep, $2 to $8. . _ > $3.50 Oats, Can. West., No. 2, 49c¢c. Flour, Man. spring wheat pats, firsts, $10; strong bakers‘, $9.80. _ Rolled sats, $3.25 to $38.35. Bran, $27.25. Shorts, $28.25 to $29.25. Butter, chaicest creamery, 40 to 41c; seconds, 38 to 39¢c. Eggs, fresh, 44 to 46¢; selected, 43 to 44¢c; No. 1 stock, 36 to 38¢; No. 2 stock, 80 to 84c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, $3 to $3.25. hos 9e ‘ Milkâ€"fed calves, $6.50 to $7.50; com. drinkers and grassers, $2.50 to »o PA EP _ Hogs, select, $14; light spring hogs, 812‘t.o $13; heavies and roughs, $10 to $11. LCOy Â¥C °V T54, SCCCCCS, §700, SOC 9e $5.50 to $6; do, fair, $5 to $5.50; milkers, $50 to $70; springers, $55 to $75; calves, choice, $10 to $11; do, med., $6.50 to $7.50; do, com., $4 to $5; lambs, yearlings, $7 to $8; do, spring, $10 to $10.75; sheep, choice, $5 to $6; do, good, $3.50 to g«.so; do, heavy and bucks, $2 to $8.50; ho:; fed and watered, $14 to $14.50; do, cars, $14.25 to $14.75; do, £.04., $13.25 tos$6103.75; do, country points, $13 to $18.50. Lardâ€"Pure, tierces, 19 to 19%c; tubs, 19% to 20¢; pails, 20 to 20%c¢; prints, 21 to 22¢. Shortening, tiemes, 14% to 14%e¢; tubs, 14% to 15%2; pails, 15% to 15%c¢; prints, 17% to 17%c. long. Smoked meatsâ€"Hams, med., 40 to 42¢; heavy, 30 to 31¢c; cooked, 60 to 65¢; rolls, 27 to 28¢; cottage rolls, 30 to 31¢; breakfast bacon, 33 to 38c; special brand breakfast bacon, 45 to 47¢; backs, boneless, 42 to 47. Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, 18 to 21¢;.clear bellies, 18% to 20%c. The instastion ceremonies comâ€" pleted, a salute of nineteen guns from the citadel shook the building. There was for a moment or two after they had been fired a solemn and tense silehce, testifying to the effect upon the gathering of the dramatic evisode in the country‘s history which had just been enacted. Women in Europe outnumber men by fifteen millions. "Over Here," an allâ€"Canadian sneeâ€" tacle, will be the feature at the Canâ€" adian National Exhibition. The scene will show the Rockies, Halifax and the grain fields and will be 800 foet in the installation having taken their allotted places, there was a short pause, broken by the announcement that the Governorâ€"General had arâ€" rived. His Excellency and Lady Byng entered the chamber preceded by repâ€" resentatives of the militia, air forces and navy, the Lieutenantâ€"Governor of the Province, and aides de camp to the Governorâ€"General. After the Goverâ€" norâ€"Gezeral had takem his stand on a dais, Mrs. Meighen presented Lady Byng with a, bouquet of white roses. Lord Byng‘s commission as Governorâ€" Genéral was then read by his military secretary, Capt. 0. P. C. Balfour, His Excellency immediately afterwards taking the oath of allegiance to fllel King and swearing to "well and tmly"‘ exerncise his office as Govemor-Gen-1 eral and subscribing his name in the oath book. He was next handed the great seal of Canzda by Thomas Mulâ€" vey, underâ€"Secretary of State, which,f according to custom, he handed back to Mr. Mulvey "for safe keeping." The proclamation of the Governorâ€"Genâ€" eral‘s swearing in ordering the Gov-‘ ernment of the Dominion to continue was ready, and after His Excellency had.signed it it was sealed with his privy seal. The ceremony ended with the playing of the National Anthem by the band in attendance. 1 COsnadian Nabona! Exhissstion | grounds comprise 2C4 acres and ex» ito»d for about a mile along the water ‘ front. a | pared with £774,018,788. Much of this | decrease is attributed to the coal | strike, and there is evidence that | trade is now on the mend. i This ought not to be. Farming in the best sense of the word does not consist altogether in the bushels of wheat or corn we grow or the numbor of tons of hay we cut. Decper than mny of these things, and nover to be reckoned up in figures, is the heart | life of the farmer. Character « ounts; ‘and this is graven deep in the soul | by al ‘we do and say and think |\ Burgical operation or pinâ€"prick, al { have their bearing. Woearing overal‘s [like a man will bring a mon a crown \ just ms surely as wearing the purol \like m knave will cause the !» forfeit his scentre. A despatch from London says;:â€" Bome remarkable figures, showing the falling off of British trade, are pub lished by the Treasury, The July imâ€" ports were £80,757,174, compared with £168,126,786 in July of last year. The exports were £43,172,399, compared with £137,451,004. For seven months this year the imports were £652,348,â€" 038, compared with £1,195,819,850 in the correspondiny period of 1920, and the exports were £412,067426, comâ€" There is no royal road to wealth, either along country lanes or city pavements, unless we toil and sweat. In an orgy of extravagance, a great many people have forgotten or ignorâ€" ed this fact. They are beginning to pay the piper now. If ever there were a time when the world needed to work and to love its work, that time is "And when come the smell of flowâ€" ers, and the tread of soft steps, and the crunching of wheels out in front, make the ceremony short and the epiâ€" taph «impleâ€"‘Here lies a man.‘ " The Canadian National Exhibit prize list this year totals $850 practically all for agriculture, "Deafen me to the jingle of tainted money and the rustle of unholy skirts. Blind me to the faults of the other fellow, but reveal to me my own. "Guide me so that each night when I look across the dinner table at my wife, who has been a blessing to me, I will have nothing to conceal. Keep me young enough to laugh with the children. ticket on the square, and that in earnâ€" ing it I may not stick the gaff whore it does not belong. "Teach me that sixty minutes â€" an hour, sixteen ounces one p» and 100 cents one dollar. He‘lp ; live so that I can lie down at : with a clear conscience, without a under my pillow, and unhaune the faces of those to whom 1 brought pain. Many a man will lift like a hero all day out in the field and come in at night to find fault with the hirci man, because he bas not done this or that, and to say the sharp, hbitter thing which sends his wife and litde ones away with a quivering lip. It is entitled a "Busi Prayer," but in these «< farmers are business mer much as those who live ar cities, it is appropriate for countryman alike: And yet, many a man misses wear ing a crown of success just because he knuckles under to the constant jabâ€" bing of the rin of annoyance over litâ€" tle things, all unimportart in themâ€" selves, but part and parcel of the day‘s work. There are men who are brave enough anJ strong encugh to lie down on the operating table and undergo a major operation without a word of compleaint, but who lose themselves absolutely under the pinâ€"pricks <f everyâ€"Jay life. There is no greater sign of weakâ€" ness than to lie down vanquished when things on the farm do not g» just as we would like to have them go; and there is no more sure ind‘ cation of real strength of manhood than to be able to stand up agsinst these peity siings and arrows of fo tune. The Need and Valvo of V ta. A new novel from her pen will soon be published. Nellie L. McCiung The famous author, who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alber British Trade on the Mend. Strong Enough to Endure may earn my moal M Te ave it