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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1916)
WAITING FOR THE END OFTHE WAR “Then Take Advantage of the Opportunities in Canada.” (Contributed by W. J. White, of the Department of the Interior, Ottawa, Canada.) « 1 Etroiled into a bank in one of the cities of the west a short time ago and the bank manager said "after the war. the Canadians should be pre pared for a great influx of people. The crops that the western Canadian farms have produced in 1915. and the wealth that the farmers have nad thrust upon them by the high price of grain, will make farm lands valu able and farming remunerative. After the war is over there will be thou sands go to Canada to engage in agri culture and many other industries tnai will certainly prove profitable. Condi tions will be wonderfully good. The advertising that Canada has had dur ing the last year or two by its magnifi cent contribution of over iiaO.000 men to fight for the Empire, the wonderful 6ums it has given to the Red cross and Patriotic funds, the excellent showing it made in subscribing over double when only iu millions of dollars was asked as a war loan, the brav ery, courage and hardihood of the sol diers who have fought the battleE in Flanders, it is just wonderful.” and my enthusiastic banker grew eloquent. One might have thought he was a sub sidised booster for Canada. "But, he said "they wou't go until after the w ar ” "Well, now, Mr. -, why wait uu til after the war? If all you say be true, and you have saiu nothing yel of the wonderful bank clearings of Canada today, nothing of the fact that the immense grain crop of Western Canada this year has given to every man. woman and child in that coun try, over three hundred dollars per head, why wait until after the war After the war. under such conditions as you have pictured (and which are real) land values will go up, prices will increase. Advantage should be taken of the low prices at which these agricultural lands can be had today. They have not increased any as yet and excellent farm lauds can be had close to railways in old settlements, in excellent communities for from rii teen to thirty dollars per acre. The climate is good and will be no better after the war.” “What about conscription, though? Is there not a danger from conscrip tion, and should 1 advise any to go there now would they not have to face it? Then too, there is the report that there is a heavy war tax on lands.” 1 was surprised to learn that these old yarns, stories that I thought had been exploded long ago. were still do ing duty in many parts of the United States, and that a gentleman of the wide learning of my friend, was in clined to believe them. “Conscription!” I said. “With Can ada contributing 250,000 men voluntari ly enlisted, why conscription? There is no conscription in Canada, and neither will there be. It is not need ed. In any case no legislation could be passed by the Dominion Parliament which wouid impose military service upon people who are not citizens of Canada, either by birth or naturaliza tion. SettlerB from the United States could not become naturalized British subjects until they had resided in Canada continuously for three years.” 1 quoted from official documents. “In the first few months of the wai 1 clearly stated that there would not be conscription in Canada. 1 repeat that statement today.” "And then as to taxes.” I continued, quoting again from official authority. "All taxes levied by the Federal Gov ernment take the indirect form of cus toms excise and inland revenue du ties. It is untrue that farmers are paying direct war-tax levies and no intending settler need hesitate to come to Canada on this account. "Official denials should convince you that all apprehensions which have been making some would-be-settlers from the United States hesitate to make a change while the war lasts are without foundation. With these misunderstandings cleared up. the present war conditions even become an added inducement to settlement in any part of the provinces of western Canada, inasmuch as war prices and keen demands for all manner of farm L products afford the farmer a special | opportunity to make money." I was glad of the chance and pleased to have him state that his views had altogether changed. X could have continued, and told him of the fortunes that had been made in the season of 1915, out of farming, wheat growing, oat growing, barley growing, cattle raising, dairying and mixed farming. I could have told him of an Ottawa (Canada) syndicate that had a yield of 130 bushels of oats per acre from their farm at Wain wright and from 60 acres of wheat field they threshed over 60 bushels per acre. These yields while phenomenal, were repeated in many portions of western Canada. It was interesting to inform him that the average yield of spring wheat in Saskatchewan was 25.16 bushels per acre; Manitoba, 26.3 bushels; in Alberta, 36.16 bushels, and over the three provinces there was a total average of over 30 busbelB per acre. "The Immense crop that has just been harvested has put millions of dol lars in the bands of the farmers, and the work of distribution through the regular channels of trade has already begun. Millions of bushels of grain are still in the hands of the farmers, which means that there is a vast store of realizable wealth that will be stead ily going into circulation, benefitting the thousands who are dependent In A directly on the baBic Industry of the XC province for their livelihood, v “The mock prosperity that rested on the Insecure foundation of Inflated real estate values has passed away, and In Its place the corner stone of the conn try's sound financial future is being built “The trust and mortgage companies, the large implement concerns and the wholesale merchants all tell the same story today of marked improvement in their business. The farmers and others are meeting their just dues and paying off debts that in many cases have been long overdue. Collections are better today than they have been since the most prosperous days of our history, and obligations are being met freely and promptly. “Now." said, “why should they wait until the war is over?" And be agreed with me—Advertise ment About the only difference between repartee and impudence is in the size of the man who says it. To keep clean and healthy take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regulate liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv. Behind the Scenes. Juliet—Packson sa\s he is drawing full houses. Romeo—Only on his own deal— Judge. I Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends all Stomach misery in five minutes. Do seme foods you eat hit hack— \ taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, I sour, gassy stomach? Now. Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's ■ Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There ' never was anything so safely quick, so 1 certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stom ach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear. You feel different as soon as “Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes—your stomac h gets sweet.no gases.no belch ing. no eructations of undigested food. Go now, make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large fiftv cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from any store. You realize in five minutes bow needless it is to suffer from indiges tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv. Got on His Nerves. "I understand you have moved your office.” "Yes. I had to get away or suffer a nervous breakdown." “What was the matter?” “I was next door to a painless dent ist and I couldn't stand the yells of his patients.” Helpless From Kidney Frouble Obtains Permanent Relief I was afflicted about five years with kidney and bladder trouble; there was j one year during this five years that I was not able to do anything; in fact, I was : helpless. I tried several doctors and ; several remedies, and my family doctor advised me that I would have to be op erated on. I was then advised by a lady I friend to try Swamp-Root: after using ■ ■•even bottles of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root I was restored to good health and have not been bothered with kidney or bladder trouble for the last ten years. 1 cheerfully recommend Swamp-Root to others for kidney or bladder trouble. Yours truly. MRS. J. R. TURNER, 212 West Dalton St. Hugo, Okla. Personally appeared before me this j TTth day of February, 1915, Mrs. J, R. Turner, who subscribed the above state ment and made oath that the same is true in substance and fact. J. H. FINCHER. Notary Public. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You SeDd ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., ! P'inghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot j tie. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable infor mation, telling about the kidneys and blad der. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fiftv-cent and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Adv. Taken at Hia Word. Sarcastic Father—Julia, that young man Smiley has been here three nights in succession, and it has been nearly midnight when he left. Hadn't you better invite him to bring bis trunk and make his home with us? Innocent Daughter—Oh, papa, may I? It is just what he wanted, but he was too bashful to ask you. Hell be delighted when 1 tell him this eve | ning. FALLING HAIR MEANS ! DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE i _ Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottla of Danderine Right Now—Alao Stops Itching Scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy hair Is mute evidence of a neglected acalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. There is nothing so destructive to the hair aB dandruff. It robs the hair of its luBter, its strength and its very life; eventually producing a feverish ness and itching of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die—then the hair falls out fast A little Danderine tonight—now—any time—will surely save your hair. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton'a Danderine from any store, and after the first application your hair will take on that life, luster and luxuriance which is so beautiful. It will become wavy and fluffy and have the appear ance of abundance; an Incomparable gloss and softness, but what' will please you most will be after just a few weeks’ use, when you will actual ly see a lot of fine, downy hair—new hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv. What a wonderful old world this would he if the men who think they know it all could only prove it W. W. VENABLE, ORATOR ^wm,m ■■ Although the tradition that new members of congress, like children, should be seen and not heard, is not respected now as it was in former days, rarely do freshmen of the house make such an impression within a week of their arrival as did Repre 1 sentative Venable of Mississippi, a young man recently elected to suc | oeed the late Representative Wither spoon. Rising to answer an attack by a ; Texas Democrat upon the president's advocacy of preparedness, young Ven able delivered a speech that placed ! him at once among the great orators of congress and earned him the plaudits of Democrats and Republicans i alike. One of his illustrations, empha | sizing the benefits of preparedness, is still being repeated in the cloakrooms. It has been my pleaure during my | lifetime," he said, "to be intimately anu personally acquainted with two aogs. une ot them was a little rat terrier who hau a little tail curled over his back like a corkscrew. “That little dog's life was one long sad wail of misery. He was kicked by every man he met and whipped by every dog he ran across. I knew another ilog, a magnificent gentleman of his raie. His great head reared itseif above his shoulders as the head of a lion. He was thewed and sinewed like a gladiator, and his curved forelegs and stanch haunches spoke of tremendous strength. He lived his life respected by dogs and men. I owned him for live years and 1 caressed him when I felt like kicking him. Why? He was a prince of the house royal, a gladiator of his kind and he ! was prepared. "As a result, he lived his life in peace, with all his institutions intact and his personal and property rights thoroughiv respected." i ftfCREARY QllsTS PUBLIC LIFE After thirty-two of his seventy five years spent in public service, James B. McCreary, who recently re tired from the governorship of Ken tucky, announces that he is through with public office. Mr. McCreary served six years in the Kentucky legislature and was elected governor of the state in 1875 when he was thirty-two years old. After that he was elected to the house of representatives, where he served twelve years, and then was transferred to the other end of the capitol as a United States senator. For several years after the expira tion of his senatorial term he was a private citizen, only to enter again the political field as a candidate for governor, and he is the only man on record who was twire elected gov ernor of Kentucky after a long lapse of years. “I look back on my first cam paign lor governor with a great deal or pleasure, said Governor McCreary. J "It was that campaign that probably gave to the United State Supreme I court bench one of its most respected and valuable members. My opponent in that fight was John Marshall Harlan. Net long after the election I had the opportunity of recommending that President Hayes appoint Harlan to the Supreme court bench." SAVES INDIAN BABIES_ A unique baby-saving campaign launched by Cato Sells, commissioner of Indian affairs, is attracting the at tention of statesmen. educators, churchmen and philanthropists in every part of the country, for. Mr. Sells declared, on the success of the campaign depends the survival of a race. Commissioner Sells sent a circu lar letter to all superintendents and other employees in the Indian service, urging them to do their utmost to save the lives of Indian babies. Three fifths of the North American Indian babies are dying in infancy on account of neglect of ordinary sanitary treat ment and lack of food, says Mr. Sells. He declared that the Indian problem cannot be solved with Indians, and says that the race will become ex tinct unless the United States awak ens to the necessity of improving the conditions under which Indian children are Dorn. lie directs the employees of the Indian service to make thorough investigations on the reservations to which they are detailed and spare no efforts in teaching the doctrine of baby saving. Tribal funds are to be used in formulating the work, if necessary. 1 Cheddo Miyatovich. Serbian diplo matist and poet, who visited America on a mission from his country declares that until hope is dead Serbia will not die. “Our friends speak of our nation al tragedy,” says he. “We are grateful for their generous sympathy. But oui tragedy has not yet seen our tears nor Bhall it ever see them. “Our women suffer silently; our men die silently; we bear our sad bur den silently. “Yet our tragedy is illumined by the light of hope. We lost, in honest struggle, all the territory of our king dom which we raised up from ruins by faithful love of national inheri tance. by the self-sacrificing efforts of generation after generation. But in this the darkest hour of our country's history we have not lost faith in God and his justice; we have not lost faith in ourselves, in our allies or in hu manity; we have not lost faith in the perpetual progress of the world, moving ceaselessly onward, though some* times through bitter rivers of blood, sometimes the ruins of national reputa tions and of once-vaunted civilizations.” ORIGIN OF WHEAT UNKNOWN. The growing of wheat has so long been a principal occupation with man that its geographical origin is unknown. The Egyptians claim it originated with Isis, while the Chinese claim to have received the seed direct as a gift from heaven. The belief that it originated in the valleys of the Euphrates and the Tigris Is more generally accepted than any ether. The most ancient languages mention wheat and it has been feund by the archeologists in the kitchens of the prehistoric inhabitants of the Swiss lake region. It is gen erally agreed that at the lowest estimate wheat has been a faithful servant of mankind for six thousand years. Reports on forest fires in northern Idaho and Montana say that 35 per cent are caused by railroads, 26 per cent by lightning and 10 per cent by campers, the remainder being due to burning brush and miscellaneous un known causes. FOR THE BREAKFAST TABLE Preparation That is Well Worth Try ing—Both Nourishing and Economical. Ingredients—One breakfast cupful of Egyptian lentils, three onions (medi um size), one heaped tablespoonful of curry powder, one breakfast cupful of water, one and a half breakfast cup fuls of rice, three ounces of butter (or margarine). Method—Wash and soak the lentils in plenty of water for some hours, then drain. Next take the three onions and mince them as finely as j possible, meanwhile letting the butter | (or margarine) melt gently in a frying j pan. Then add the minced onions and ' fry until they are a golden brown. Next take vour curry powder and mix it in gently with the onions, allow it to fry gradually from 10 to 15 min utes. moving it all the while with a wooden spoon in order to prevent it from burning. Now add a breakfast cupful of water and the lentils. Let all simmer slowly until it appears tc have the consistency of thick por ridge. Then add the pepper and salt to taste, and serve hot with some dry boiled rice in a separate dish. Method for Boiling Rice.—Wash the rice three or four times in cold water, then place it in a saucepan with plenty of cold water and put it on the fire j Allow it to come to the boil quickly. When sufficiently cooked it should be soft enough to crumble when rubbed between the finger and thumb Wash well again, this time in hot water to prevent the rice from getting chilled, then strain it and put it on a dish with a clean cloth over the toil. Place it in the stove to dry. and serve with .he curried lentils when ready. I'se warm water to sprinkle starched •'loths and the effect will be twice as satisfactory. A painter's brush may be used to dislodge dust from cracks and crevices about the house. Try removing mildew by soaking in a weak solution of chloride of lime, then rinsing in cold water. Elasticity is restored to rubber by cooking in one part ammonia and two parts water. Smoked ceiling should be washed with soda water. Salt will remove the stain from sil ver caused by eggs, when applied dry with a soft cloth. To remove stains from tableware a little saleratus rubbed on with the fin gers or a bit of cloth will remove stains from cups and other articles of tableware and tinware and marbleized ail cloth. Rust—Wet with lemon juice and rub with salt and lay in sun. Cooking Sausage. If sausages are cooked on a plate in the oven they will not be unpleas antly odorous. An old platter will do. and they will take from twenty min utes to half an hour. Prick them and arrange side by side. When the fat has fried out pour it off and turn each sausage and they will be far drier and crisper than if cooked on top of the stove. Spread the drained-off fat on slices of crustless bread and brown them in the oven or in a hot frying pan, or choose a crisp apple, peel and cut in rather thick slices and fry in the drained-off fat, and serve on the same platter with the sausages. Mincemeat. Boil a fresh tongue and chop fine. Chop fine three-quarters of a pound of meat, two pounds of seeded raisins, two pounds of washed currants, one pound of mixed peel chopped fine, one pound chopped figs, two pounds best brown sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg to taste, a pinch of mace, one of salt one pound of shelled and blanched al monds chopped fine, and juice ol three lemons, three oranges, the grat ed rind of one lemon, one orange and four pounds of chopped apples. Mix well, put in a covered stone crock, moisten it with a little brandy. Apple, Corn Bread Pudding. One pint of corn or brown bread crumbs, one pint of chopped apples, one-half cupful of finely-chopped suet, one cupful of raisins, one egg, a table spoonful of flour and a half a tea spoonful of salt; mix with half a pint of milk. Boil in buttered mold two hours or bake one-half hour. Serve with sauce. Sauce—One tablespoonful butter, one tablespoonful flour and one cup ful of sugar; mix sugar and flour and cream with the butter. Add two cup fuls of boiling water and cook until it boils. Flavor with lemon. Home-Made Breakfast Food. I take all my stale bread, whether wheat, rye or graham, roast it in the oven until thoroughly brown, grind it in the food chopper, using the coarse knife, and have then a very delicious breakfast food. If possible, I use some rye bread with caraway seeds in it This gives a flavor which my folks like very much. If put in a tin can, such as coffee comes in, it will keep crisp and fresh for a long time.—Good Housekeeping. Halibut Rabbit Melt one teaspoonful butter, add a few drops of onion juice and one ta blespoonful cornstarch mixed with one-fourth teaspoonful paprika, then pour on gradually one cupful of milk, add three-fourths cupful of soft cheese, cut fine, and one cupful cold, flaked, cooked halibut. When cheese is melted, add one egg, slightly beat en, and one tablespoonful lemon juice. Serve on crackers. Novelty Potatoes. Chop very fine one quart cold boiled potatoes, put them into a saucepan with one cupful cream, two table spoonfuls butter, salt and pepper, set on fire, stir until hot, then turn into a baking dish. Cover with bread or cracker crumbs and bake brown in oren. Hot Gray Hairs but Tired Eyas make us look older than we are. Keep your Eyes young and you will look young. After the Movies Murine Your Eyes. Don’t tell your age. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, Sends Eye Book on request. Hope. Knicker—After prison leform. what? Bocker—Perhaps some Jay they will reform the home. CLEANSE THE PORES Of Your Skin and Make It Fresh and Clear by Using Cuticura. Trial Free. When suffering from pimples, black heads, redness or roughness, smear the skin with Cuticura Ointment. Then wash off with Cuticura Soap and hot water. These super-creamy emol lients do much for the skin because they prevent pore clogging. Free sample each by mail with Bo-’k Address postcard, Cuticura. Dept. L., Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. Fooiish Bill. "They say Bill married on a shoe string.” “Yes. and now he's on his uppers."— Boston Evening Transcript. Your First Thought Should be of Your Health WHY NOT? it is a priceless posses sion and deserves utmost care. One of the greatest drawbacks to health is a weak stomach, but this can soon be corrected by careful diet and aid of HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters It is a reliable first aid ALCOHOl..- 3 PER CENT. ■ jjuvi A Vegetable PrepanilionibrAs .jvHd siniilatingtheFoodandKegula ,*»«£■ ting the Stomach* and Bowels of ■ 0 5! -.-r—1 _ - —= Promotes Digest ion, Chccrful ir e ness and Rest.Contains neither Opiiun,Morphine nor Mineral. rtjJ Not Narcotic. ;«rK Jitap* afWDcSIVm PfTVfE/ti : v Pumpkin SAMd - Alx Spnna * \ QocktlU baits s § Vt AsukSpuL- I 5« ftfSZZZLsoi£,.> HlJJ hirmSntl/ I , > * CJanJiad buqar 1 !0®J Him/rr^rMA rlaro^u 4^’ ..— 'fflf Apertrct Remedy TorronsTTpa^ ;?»•-® tion.Sonr Stomach. Diarrhoea. 1 Worms. Feverishness and. Loss of Sleep. ifloQ Fat Simile Signature of °Qw< • •j ^ the Centaur compact^ •Jolt: NEW' YORK. - V- _J Exact Copy of Wrapper Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Thirty Years CASTORIA TMI CKMTAUM eOMNNV, NCW TO** OfTT. Not to Be Thought Of. “Charley, dear.” said young Mrs. Torkins, "1 sometimes think that wom en ought to volunteer to go to war, just the same as the men; and yet—” "And yet—what?” “No woman would admit she had reached the age of military exemp tion. The sacrifice of life would be too great.” RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To hall pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box ol Barbo Compound, and M oz. of glycerine Apply to the hair twioe a week until it becomes the desired shade. Any drug gist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and re move* dandrufi. It is excellent for falling hair and will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not color the scalp, is not stick; or greasy, and does not rub oft.—Adv. Not Indulging. Youth—Love is Intoxicating. Old Bach—I'm on the water wagon. —Boston Evening Transcript. To remove superfluous hair send your well-filled mattress to be done over by a tricky upholsterer. In Upper Circles. “Was Mrs. Frittersby satisfied with the alimony awarded her?” “No, indeed.” “Wasn’t it large enough?" “She declares it wouldn’t be suffi cient to maintain her poddle in the style to which it is accustomed." FRECKLES Now It the Time to Get Kid of These Ugly 8pots* There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othine—double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine—double strength—from your druggist, and apply a little of it night and mnrnlng and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than one ounce is needed to com pletely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine. as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove frecklea—^ Adv. His Status. “What a funny sort of fellow that young surgeon Is!” “Yes; he’s a regular little cut-up.” A New Remedy for Kidney, Bladder and all Uric Acid Troubles Dear Readers: I appeal to those of you who are bothered with kidney and bladder trouble, that you give up the use of harsh salts or alcoholic medicines and' in their place take a short treatment of “Anuric.” I have taken many of Dr. Pierce’s medicines for the past twenty-five years with good results. I suffered with kidney trouble for some years. I recently heard of the newest discovery of Dr. Pierce, namely, his "Anuric” Tablets. After using same I am completely cured of my kidney trouble. A doctor pronounced me a well preserved woman for my age, all due, I believe, to Dr. Pierce's aid. MRS. MELINDA E. MILLER. If you suffer from backache, lum bago, rheumatism, get “Anuric” now. After Grip Winter Colds— Bad Blood You are pale, thin, weak—with little vitality. Your liver is sluggish and the bad blood causes your stomach muscles to lose their elasticity and be come flabby—then indigestion. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov ery, purely vegetable and free from alcohol or narcotics, is the great and powerful blood purifier of today. Ex tracted from American forest herb* and roots. Contains no alcohol. In gredients printed on wrapper. Taken as directed it will search out impure and poisonous matter throughout the system and eliminate it. t'~ The Wheat YieliKfyiB Tells the Story Western Canada’s Rapid Progress ItffkPvPv avy crops in Western Canada have caused NT ords to be made in the handling of grains Kf J ^ A Dy railroads. For, while the movement of these Jif E* U dB heavy shipments has been wonderfully rapid, the wf^4|va^ ■ S resources of the different roads, despite enlarged » rBVflM J S; equipment* and increased facilities, have been strained as never before, and previous records have thus been broken in all directions. ■ The largest Canadian wheat shipments through New York ever known P are reported for the period up to October 15th, upwards of four und a I quarter million busbela being exported in less than six weeks, I and this was but the overflow of shipments to Montreal, through which E‘ point shipments were much larger than to New York. f Yields as high as 60 bushels of wheat per acre are reported from all I parts of the country, while yields of 45 bushels per acre are common. | Thousands of American farmers have taken part in this wonderful pro- B duction. Land prices are (till low and free homestead lands are easily secured B 9 v in good localities, convenient to churches, schools, markets, railways, etc. B j There le ns war tax ea toad and ee conacriptlaa. # Write for illustrated pamphlet, reduced railroad rates and other ^_ information to Superintendent Immigration. Ottawa. ^|r V.V. BENNETT Keen 4,Bee Bldg ..Cmaha.N ek. X . IWRRU 1| c- /y\g|L. VCJk Canadian Government Agent jiAA.-wl