-. c”. u. u. ........~.. .l.- . . w. w» ..~ dw...-_,.-.l-=~. f... -..-.._.....=..._..c_ .............._._. .. ~ Filth: rwuIwmflwmmnm toss’ Shoufillisil QlTlho ltcry-telilng such ‘as tho pict '8 THERE any form of alnusement , "older than story telling!“ From the cradle to the grave we hear- itories-and like thenl. Before you "were able to toddie, you were heur- gpg about "This little pig went to market, etc.," while mother gently pulled each toe as a matter o! illus- trating her story. Hundreds of thousands of juvenile otory books nro sold every ycar and the ones we love most in our young- ~ er years were those translated into pictures, because they had a human appeal. All through our lives we re- tain our interest in picture stories. It is this appeal that takes us to the movies and causes us to look ihrough the pages of daily newspa- pers and magazines for pictures that Oell stories of human activities. '. But when it comes to snapshots, io many seem to forget how much they enjoy looking at story-telling pictures. They pick up their cam- eras and just shoot, seemingly satis- led to get any picture at all, as it was in the old days of, "You Press The Button And We Do The Rest." frhere is a better way to take pic- (ores. If you want some good laughs look bver some of the pictures you have taken. Unless you are an exception, and. let's hope you are, you will prob- ably ilnd a picture of Uncle Louie standing as straight as a plumb-bob line, bucked up against a tree or the garage door, and appearing to be facing the firing squad ready to be shot at sunrise. It Uncle Louie can't do anything else, the chances are he can read n newspaper, so why not have him do that. You will have a picture that tells some sort oi a itory at least, nnd is seasoned with that human interest touch that jhould be in every film you expose. You go out on a picnic with your picture that crates nsi-lntsrastrAvoid ollif poooo ' uro to tho right. friends. What do you do? Tho choncesjorsthat‘ you lino up the girth-Jon snap~~tho camera and again have lust another picture when it would be just as easy to have the crowd enjoying the lunch and perhaps one member busily on- gagedin theact of "exterminatinf a luscious ear of corn or doing a "boarding house reach” for the po- toto salad. , If you were making movies, would you take foot after foot of film with your actors doing nothing? 0f course not, and it isn't a bod idea. to think 0t your “still” camera as a movie camera filming a drama. Got action and meaning. This means that you should think fboforo you shoot. ' Look at the two pictures above. Bill is evidently a sailboat enthusi- ast. Dad wanted to" take his picture with his newest host. so without giving any thought whatsoever to the story-telling angle, ho had Bill, who is too young to know better, pose with his boat in front of an anti- quated automobile. You can't sail a boat by holding it in your hand and what has the car to do with it? Tho picture to the right tells the story for the host is in the water whore it hslonga andJiiil-isabout to "shove off." In case you have never given 11.13191! thought .20 this before, inst take a look through a newspaper or magazine ‘and notice which please you more-pictures of people moro- ly-looking at tho camera or pictures of people dolng- lomething humanly interesting and significant. Chances are that the story-telling pictures will be your choice, and you'll malls up your mind that hereafter that’! tho-kind youth "aim to take. Good luck! " ' . .. 1°31‘! FAN Gull-DER.- immli HIJSBANDRY Klontinued) iAnlnml fat 1n the bodies of your fiffle is formed from both the fat Ind carbohydrates in their lfeed, lid also, probably from the decom- tion oi’ the protein ‘in _ feed, h the two iornlcr sources are by far the most. important ones. Bless facts will guide us in the ypeparation oi’ our fattening ration. In selling our finished cattle for beef. we are dependent upon a-dis- lnriiinating market that will select Ire best and pay aDrémillin for the lnost desirable klnd oi‘ animals. It l our business, then, to study the market demand and supply some- lling that will command the high- Ist price. ‘_ A feeder may have an opinion of his own as to what is the best; beef, Qg-rhe should not be guided too much by this. What the market .. ls of more <‘-0n5?!l1.1.¢!l!‘».€...l9.¢?.. Lin! because the purchaser will al- Mays insist upon being pleased be- lore he buys._ ‘ ' . - The day oi‘ the-big, over-fat steer, with a carcass full of tallow, has ionic by. and the small carcass of the well-finished steer, with fat onough to give the "meat s good Ihsvor. is in demand. ‘ Baby beef, so called because 1E i.{ rsroduced from calves ovcr one year no. which have becn- fed on milk horn their mothers until within a few months 0f the time they are alomhtered, or. in some cases, right up to that time. is in strong _dc- hand on many of our markets. ‘ 1 People who have hcunething that is ‘put the baby iiliiiiiiiii idtiiififiiii i ' i punt is f... _l nxcnhnnsr roaultst-iut-lthlwlslflllll.» - ,- = y, Orion. now being booked for J ' beef stage. It may be beef from an animal from 15 to 20 months old, grain and concentrates to give the meat a substantial flavor and it Will be 99$ lllc veal s . inst like _"'- ' " m‘ [Babrbecf has quite r clientele," however, as its purchasers know that. at least it will not be "tough" and the points and cuts are small and consequently, light in weight,- and so suit many of the pumhhaers. It". sometimes looks in beef flavor, flout is juicy and ‘tender and so satisfies a large number of people. Agriculiurlst. Runners i Set " " "For d" Grind‘ (AP. By Guardian's Special Wire) BOSTON, April 1'I—A total of 207, intluding,six former winners and 1B Canadians, were assigned numbers tonight/when the Boston Atiflsticwassociation closed its - en- try list for its historic April 10 -nm'athorr—from— i-liopkixlinn -to~ its Back Bay, qlubhoupe. -~»Ds.ve Komoncm-oturdy Sudhury, 01st,; mirle ozipntcr. who‘ led the field horns l‘ "your. “drew the primdpohone and the five other former winners, the veteran clari- enoe D. Demar, who will strive for eighth victory ‘in this long dio- tinm: classic "Friday, Bill Kennedy, Leslie Pawson, holder oi the 2.31.01 3-5 record, Jimmy Henigan, and Paul ‘Debruyn found numbers "in the first 10 reserved for them, as downtothoyoaroao. tho ~41» ammo: "Baron!!! t lbut it. will have been well fed on‘ . Bmund ma mono sages orliiolnota ) " - 11a lat ill-union: 3m some o" the more remarkable occurrences “'33P. Mm: known as m» "nopmuayfi filo named m would: wlm ‘one w. ligglléhbilrfdcfl becsml unnu- so related in’ e m!" m a torso. matior-of-fact ‘ "Iirllv- Mshtlns with tho "welsh" of Oountypcvcn still continued at ‘ "intervals, but the natives Tput such a resistance that ti; w“: p; "Ensland" was never mugmy subdued. Almost every you now‘ has ito quota of fighting; but for economy of spam. most of this is Omitted in those notes. "an. m. The ‘venerable insert. about this time converted tho monks Q! 19m to the righrfaithfln the restriction of Boater, and the w- clesiastitai tonsure." (The oomph- ers 0f the Chronicle‘ do not a pear to have hoard of -.i.he Syn of Willi-bl’. in 6M. whet-exile some mat- ters up for consideration; and b01118 decided in favor of the Rn- man Church. ihbfoimdly influenc- ed tin after-history of England.) “AD; ‘I'M. ‘This year the North- umblono banished their King Alf- Nd. from York at Easter-tide . . ., ‘Ihis year also annealed in the heavens a red crucifix, after aun- Sei; Tho Merciens ind thompn of Kent fought at Otfcrd; and wond- erful olfDents were seen in the land oi the South Saxons." (The old chronicles were quite conversant with comets, which they referred to as tho “oomeis-stsr," or the "Hairy-star." 1i: to diflicuit to so! what tho "red crucifix" was: oer- toi-nly a comet is never red.) "AD. 7B7. This year King ‘Bortrie (of the West Saxons) took Edbilrga the daughter of 08a (King of Mercia) to wife. And in his. days came first three ships of tho North- men from the land of robbers. The reve (Sheriff) then rode thereto, and would drive them- to file King's town: fcr he knew not what they were; and them WI‘ he slain. Muse were the first ships oi the Danish men that sought the land of the English nation." (Those few words introduce the invaders who ravag- ed England for more than 220 years, till cnut united the mslish and the Danes under ono crown in 1018.) “AD. 783. This year csmo dread-- ful forewarninls over tho land of the Nor-thumbnails, terrifying the people most woefully: those were immense sheets of light rushin: through the air, and whirlwinds and fiery dragons flying across tho armament. These tremendous tok- ens were soon followedvby o. great famine; and not long Eiter . . . the harrowing inroads of heathen men made lamentable havoc in the church o! God in Holy-island, by rapine and slaughter." (By tho light of ~modern~sciencc wewnay-"s-sfely conclude that this was a maximum sunspot year: the aurora is often scan as far south as North- umberland. The famine which fol- lowed, is also a mark of such years especially in ancient time. It should bo remembered that most of the old nation, were in-armualldanger of famine during. the early "months of the year when the winter stores were nearly consumed: and this portly explains their rejoicing at the Easter season, with its promise of s. nowcmp. None of the vog- etsbles which we store for winter use were known, but coarse grains were grown andstoriafi, though not in great quantities. In most years, however, game (and " especially game) was plentiful. The m! 9!..1»l!fll.lllI-Y§9 (It. F» . Island) is typical of the inns. s of the "heathen men": the vestmenu and church vessels bcirlfthe ct‘- traction.) “AD. 861 . . , The heathens now for tho first time remained over wlnwr m n» no or. flibslwt- 111.1" same year came three hundred__a.nd fifty ships into the mouth or the Thames; the crew of which went upon land. and stormedfihntcrbury and London . . . end- then march- ed southward over the Thames int/a Surlcy. Hex-c Ethelwulf nndlills- son Ethelbald, at thchead ofthe West Bsxonarmyl . . made thogrestest slaughter of tho hoathenormy that we have ever heard reported to the present day." (There is a kind of fetrlifiilve Justice ‘which “Weitflflis. nations. in which the hand of Him who soysi-"Iw/ill repayE-m-oonstsnt- 1y seem In this case. theSaxcns suf- fer even as they made the Britons suffer: it would seem that the l" Ivoims wmund... p lst-hcsoaofltooh not p;- captnrlng one of the crew. They searched him and found newspap- J)‘. booty. and sail for mlrope as peace- ma“: ht "mus... d: fine gimme n:a°ts' counsel.) bundled icsvcl, and ten kildotklns of Welsh. ale; onohorso also" ouch Y6". and thlrl! lhillln and one nighthmexlbtgtainmxcnt. ‘ct s pad "boll! m t for charitable u o! ,"‘, i" ‘um .“A.D. soc . . . Itholwuif mm everlasting And Nheiwuif was MM. than of mn- $53M“! that o m born 1n Noah's urkz" oic. (right bee: to Adam.) This ls the longest school- ugy given in the Chronicle, and it is one on may! didn't know about 5m! who lnocculunt of the Arkl _ A roast-assays livery onoo in awhile. somcthing about-this misdemeanor gets into llW-;BQWVP.I.~P°EI-.QWIIW. u. me cbsmui. my. "accompanied by the evolution of host." I remember, 1mg llckvlns" to" boar a lozai luminary lecture 0n “legalities not generally known," and be sold that action could ~31! token trespass it- self: tho local a was for dam- ams done. If you wore on soothers property (he said) and tho owner came at you for trespass, all you had to do was ho put your hand in yonrpockotand oifertopayfor any danlagoson the, spot. _'l'he damage might have in be orbitrated on, l! the pantie; could not agree. Int then, A Otnadlan farm paper of this very montlfsdssue, informs a correspondent that “Going upon PTQWW. PWPWWJVithout permis- sion of the owner is" an oifonoo, and" stile fact ofwarning signs be- ing roasted or not posted makes no easentiardiflcrenoo. Nor is it noo- easary to damage property before one may be prosecuted. and con- victed andpunishod for trespassing." It would be of value to the sen- ernl public to know which of these opinions is right. Sportsmen, I note, come in for p. share of cbloquy in this matter, and thoirdeienders claim that they are, in general, ovnsidcmtc. This is probably true. but there are ox- oeptional ccaos. Tho writer happens to know of sportsmen Why drovo across a newly "lowed out" hay- ileid in a wet fall: and a picnlo purty-oonstructodo most efficient ilredplape of 1RD stones in the mi die‘ _of s pasture field. The stones had to -he carted of! Before the field could be ploughed, and didn't ‘the owner snicyths task! If permission to so over mother's propertyfl sought, there are few indeed who would refuse it: and this is the con-cot way to go about "trespassing" whether for sport 6!" recreation. g QN (‘ISLAND STORY" we are l-cminded, in that dellihk. ful column-cf ‘fBooks, . , and iviusio," that theme is a. set of the , Edwardylsiand Magazine; on tns-‘suemr ofthe Public Library. Among the many interesting feat- ugeggoi , ho "Magazines isIa isiraic story; w ethm- truo\.or fictitious it is hard to say. Anyway. the reader will find it in Volume II (year i900) comnrcnclrlg-=r.t" page 243. It. runs something as follows: In the year 113B, a ship manned by French pirates attacked a Brit- ish vessel, but was beaten ofi after era which told them ‘of s number of armed vessels that. had been de- spatched against". them. Calling a. council they decided to go to Prince Edward Island. bury their guns and ful traders. Their captive over- heard their plans, and writing them douzngn clmlhll. committed the. paper to the waves, in an empty wine pottle. The flask, found its way ashore, into the hands of tho auth- or's grandfather, buVup to that dllte (1900) no 'one,-he says, had been able to read the cypher. It was given in full in the Magazine, and after a little study it yielded its sec- mt to the present writer. . The first, line of the cypher reads "Frenclr-sioop‘ L‘oi(g)le;' Gulf 8t. Lawn-chime, Mdy. i0, 1738]" and the plaice wher the. booty was bur- ied is Bellow River, s-slnail stream in Inirfl. Thereason that this cyphor is hard to decode is that it makes use of three alphabets, as it wm. First. all vowels written in capitals must be taken at their faca value: “A" mesng/‘s-J’ The - Miler letters of the c her must be sub- over his kin nucl- u» honor of ‘ CONNECTED WITH TIIILY NOTES 0N TOPICS‘ Silpozr F01 Fdrmbrgr; A one of the top snowmen at tho Provincial silver 11bit Exhibition. We remember distinctly seeing him at the iacp of tho table last fail in oneoftllolargecmlfnot them est, pup cialaos Judged. His is almost puro ‘Poplin, ‘kept pure, that il with vary little-sdnlirnuo from obmr sources. The put two weeks have boon very favorablo mm a fox ranchers standpoint and tho reports of lou- es which camo in‘ so frequently prior to that are being sum-soda! with more optimistic news. We hear of ‘a litter 0f inn, the authenticity of which wo are tracing, oi two sights in widely separated parts of | the province, and wo know than: are s. lot o! level: and sixes are very common. After all, nature‘ seem; to havo a way of balancing up and pmhcbl at the and of the season production will average about. tho aamo per PM!‘ as other years.’ Dlgsessing for l. moment to pigs and cattle, we are reliably inform- ed that there has boon aofimll 10i- es in his litters. ‘rim-a are also u- porto of poor fertility among cattle, some herds having very few calves this spring. Tracing the co tion between feed and production we wonde ed 1f it might be possible coat. If he is right then a great many of us must be wrong, as tho moot of us have out down our mil meat and increased the tripe during the breeding season. nasal-es writing in i... Fur ‘Trade Journal. state; that he o!- perimeniod with feeding once, Marlo from tho ‘ nnbmarlno family and not to ho i confused with the Inferior Iueul typo which growl above low tide. Richest noun-n of calcium. whoa- 1 phonic a iodine lor maximum , reproduction am! far growth. rd: mane“ recommend cle- fourlh haapblahsl to oaoh fox For further information, ASTERFAT LiHlIIiD IJALIFAK.N.Q rowed many ideas from ‘the Gm- lens, used. the whool of Nemesis as gtogiillapllélfid orinamern: on their H . in W!’ no the mg- llsh Wheel of Flor-tune" has ooms ‘down from that people. ' »Ti1m. ‘Fortune, turn thy wheel and lower the proud: . sunshine, Turn thy wild wheel thro’ Thy wheel and thee we neither love sfltuted'by' either ‘the first letter to guilt remains to be oxpiotod, though did young Johnny Kelley of Ar- lhizton, Bill McMahon oi Wor- cester, and. Alex-Burnside of ‘Ib- developed i m to lasbe for good beef usually want . n . The 18 Canadians entered 1n- ciude s. six-man team of the Mon- arch A. 0. of, Tbronto. the offending generation is gone. The Dane; at lengtirwhitercd in the very spot when chcisiionsfirst . landed, and stormed the chief towns as the Saxons had done four hund- red years before.) mm they ‘new nau|ht of thooloinl" tidinha,‘ as yet.‘ and we got-ouailmsseriof s. shrewd transaction by tho Abbot of nec- hlmlhad; u "ho iuoeroumewvrthe lands in the prance- tho hierarchy. in A_.n as is in have the land, with hi! "domino ohtbc ~ lffo to . of the hflthfih d!!! twelve lblds oi- coal. (coal was kn in tho 10mm‘ tilpaal- six u. provis- mo“ ma 0h- . W001i. who righir or the third" letter-to the left. Possibly the captive had in mind; ioi-puliioltnc- plrstulf, they ' iefooptcd his manage, but seems" tohave puzzled everybody elsealso. However. a pirate story a. map, wouldn't to the damn wulfrcd. y, fgflpflw c: storm. and cloud; -n0r hate." _ sings Erlid in the Idyils of the King. History is full cf Non-tools. The Danes we have Just load of, a cruel h. vindicutivo and turbulent rldo, m invaded and conquered tho south- em part of old Northunrbria, wore all but wiped out by tho Norman Willi lint! tbcurang people h! the sword on fomim. auuhod "Io sy- aurvoy- was mods o! the country. "for than was nothing loft to would. l In tho lino of Norman Kinll. for it. to store its food. It in more likely m m it. up whoa fed and therefore there is no from ma. no spoiled in; 0o once a day alter tho of aeptomber. ‘Personally adults hlo Iivon us will! However, there lo one thin ssltcs taim command and it is al samo magazine, hooays: "I boon oenso that they mods their at it, because many of them not so fortunately located the wild." food, nowastld __._._- wo have found that onco a do; feeding for results, more so than twice a V . I would like to emphasise and do not keep your adults ca borderline, particularly if they in earthen pens. If the fore; do not get sufficient nourishment the por- most 01100 Inanarticlobymd. thoTl-cppcrandrurilalnn impossible in brill‘ Qhllll they not down. Fl call a large numbor of fur today who years ago woos iiy mppors. They‘ may not professional NIPPON in hi.“ tlfl as to make enough to keep them. I know Q n II "Foxes tongues were c a glcsi; drllicsoy by Nero and other early Rpmsn Enrperora." last sales samples oi ranch bred mink fetched hllhor prices than lull Institutes. A. iiiimila s. co. Wholesale and Retail _ SEEM new, m" srocx I Number-poo Early, Lalo, ‘Allike, White, Alfalfa r m. no " T. ,. , . . i1 .11" W" Q! ' Benn W33. " c“: 23:“ m "Unfit; . ask ;_i:llid "Mnndschcuri ' Barley: he reports all wall at“ noon. oidadthlt Moog“ U h l= Bill! what; "Poss; Vetchos; Long. wirrkac’: m . ' ,,,,,,l lglgi? ,i"l;,§""“- “Errol, who 3°31‘ ms” ‘Zflfi u’ h. 353515?’ I loin '1' ip ‘lrYesllowesGlgbrz "Jill ‘Ylilimk m.» weird sou m: m: f: ......_.." . “m” lnteraiozgto" Mango! Seed- Jumbo and 01:3 §“§§°ul"§?. '21’; '3.‘ °' “ “““'i.;“.‘ai‘.‘.'.“£,fi§‘”,g, m“, sufir am sud. in of which wears m» not .. ca: we... an; ucmm“.,"r.l“d " -“ °""" °"" li l an,“ h“, p, M, om, w“ h, mm,» m ‘bu, "All fresh stock which wo bought from re- _or r ho says tho will om 3 liable lfllohllh. By the way. our friend Matt, or foods only so much aswiiibc iillon-l, . " . _ more dignifiedly speaking, mum- ed pg in a reasonably noon an: CALL AND SEE tho high quality of our Seeds zinc-loll: scream ml... ..; ml w w»- b-o» ‘"'¥*"¢- l n» pm oovoral years ho has ban twenty-four hourl- KO a!» blllflvfll SPECIAL PRICES to Farmers’ Clubs and 1 . #I‘L Charlottetown m "nu "snail" . -llk. mink from Mr- munch. OI‘ Imdun, when a parcel o! Plllolfl, Columbia ranch would! cl“! V! b61107“ M b0 accord the fur season of lOM-‘Sl. We are indebted to Lowell W. goods industry, whicninclildes har- ness, saddlery, trunks, bags, purses. It!!! bolts. British TRYTIII “mm . r u m n Rm lieu Tiliycr Lcnsa limml" c, ran »= l»- ~=~l “well. ~°°““'-== s“... "m"""y“"‘“l '*‘°“hd °“' _Wofituplnlatoatstyieol mews-lest; n; --~--+--~ a m” m“ "'7 1°”? m E W ‘TAYLOR scion ‘- Anyone . ' - ' . will w“ locum up to °'“"°“”°" will aocuro information that will be uro brooding 0p- that the substitution of large qusn- others who were professional trap- , tltos of ataanh m u» ram of po- who afterwards devoted all “hf, tatoescrot-‘tlorfoodsmaybethomrtimsicfilrfarming. “wgmchw, '_ ‘éiiii°'.i.“°.“wiii?iiu’fi.°“?n °i‘...'“.n°°" "‘ i: M "1 “l” °' RESTING TIRED feeding straw. which pibdbohly l... m wholo history of fur fann- sum In‘; 2w 11;! m: not tho necessary vitamins‘. in: hlnres on tho errerlenw and ""- ° ‘W Y‘ EYES knowledge of different trlppolranl "n I54 "mm" 11m" " muouormyourvlnmlnoiuwbwkwthelmsc-on» wmhlwslllilllmmnjaut l u". gem, o; 19mm", Mo, o,- wmh ‘Dalton who spout a largo part of “mud h . d?! “I: _ I'll i Juice, very much more likely to be m! m9 hull"!!! and tripping and on yo - . , - In the lumi- than tho rel-um. no who m mainly for - ~ - d -,t - ""5" Y" “W is‘ the time of the year when n; o Mlbllbhmelli o! the sum m. in- that cum knnwflagiibofiy pour: will! PM! Min: nomsslry to reed Vitamin o audit. Nimr- Tlw Memo-aw. "' "Wm Y‘ " m s a l‘ than. flu mo! mm than hos a mal purpose in the diet. Do N"! W111i“. W110 55mm“ k agt “:5 not. ‘moynood flops-man- not food too heavily, about one-half" "1 ll" 31W‘; "-51" 9! 51'" 7°‘ m‘ “m, ,8 “m,” ml hols of corrosive 1mm. iiolspflnnfill m: vwo would b0 on mmvmiwviln v vfi”_up_ Th” mini: u, mild,“ “um m we hlulaletterfromVifiqDoug- " " d ' _ - . “mm” h“ °"° "F" "'"“"“ 1w. Menaser of and’; Hill mm Elnsmlel ‘Ilmmm- I l!" M °M°"°' W“ mmm’ i‘ “ m?“ ‘i’ " “"3" ‘Wihfim "1 Fox Ranch near Winnipeg. In it he <31 Ncwflilflorliri‘ wishes i.“ 1°“ m“! _ - tho cycl- Do not unawar- qnotodthnmmcrksofagroot Wm?’ 31"‘ ~ c» . tiyochcthlaanvlco. Mithwity on dogs. was man um wlm- w» h» mo no»: IM mglgggggzlgggws"; e . not bolicvo m fcodinz misc wpm- WW» WW1 W W“ "PM Ml" “L m, “mm,” Katmai. $2,; . ~ nant females, but thought trlpeo n" “mm” °r 8mm‘? n°'m*' 94b m,‘ u,“ 1933' by m’, Ge Fm-HIIMIQKYII very valuable food later on. parti- Ohm“- "m "Fm" 1° Him? m“ “in,” mmuaheous~ laugh" ' " .' @115“). m giving the dog a good they d0 NC/rhsve toPAY TAXES. OPTOMIIBIUI.‘ ‘J. S. TAYLOR Other farm products in tho chaps of goatskins and pigskin; wore also used in smaller quantities. ‘AAA ‘Iihe early barbarian kings al- ;¢---—-~ “~- - - ~- ~-- u ways wore garments of LION sxm 4. " as a mark of their mowers and" 1; . -" ‘“ “' w” . ,. “°"“°“' " FERTILIZER and PUTATOES Ola Lillcland. Norvili. wfitlnl b0 1 v . I the Black m: Magazine, says that 0 - _ Amcricanilxjx are ma! x "" " » . willing to us experiences . . ior the benefit o: thclr brother 1i . 0w row-Mm- "Ill W"! "1 ‘WW’ 1' "° "'° "M" 0 h; you your choioo of tho two but mixtures known.» as, breeders than are his on. 0 . . tho Inland FINIIG!‘ c». Ltd. Brllkl, and the Aibatroa amid H” ‘w? fflaflmu‘ “ ”d"'°,;’,§,°°,'§,“ I. mums from name a poun orway an e - , breeders over there are very much ’ o l,‘ f‘ ‘u n, “n, l w," guflogmpm interested in finding a substitute. ‘ma: fn¢°°'m:':,:,"°,,’,, Q,‘ ,,,:.:,'..,,. “m, h... m. The Y°X mm" M" W" ""1 4 t of u» Illand Fertiliser Conspony mo. We an only magazine and ‘lost year held their 0 ha,“ h, “m” yuan",- y, m. “mm who cm haul m “"2"” “l 9:1“;- “lbfflnil; l}: i! aallo mm Charlottetown. We 1m. been handling your omen remea a o. ,1“. dTul-nl andwiththolowpri ourmorzln Denmarkiustacfosothownynlolt i: asgrtataoourhandlingchatrgo. Whynot ll "F? “will I: bu; your Io ser from us? Got our terms before buylnl 0 ‘uI'\jfl§ .3 The British Fur Trade. Journal “ I » ' in a. recent, mu. lays: "flqasdinl " We will accept start Saturday April ma, Potatoes. the ranch bred mink. it is too soon x 185181.90“ variety at ct pflco at the roll!!! "l"? ahjiiigp go gnclitjmm_ on gig, t; shod, from parties who still owe us for their I931 crop mor - er B11 ‘i. 1'6 D0 11B romn .- 0 Ill“ ing blind to facts. "may authorities J ‘ ' ‘ now for-sec the time when a larso percentage of tho furrcfiorodmt x Au » our auctions will s. noon mo. so i: ~ ‘ fa Bil F0 ll mod that‘ -' uraaliesdverun ‘in-SE? it sums ‘E . Charhttetown as if min will soon follow suit. As. o ' " our corrolpondont polntsoutaiithl ‘--*‘A-*,-*‘~*“ - M- ~ ‘ ~ ‘ * e Mwcoonf I--FW-“"‘E".‘.“!‘ aoomeooooo 00 o4 ~<+»¢+++~Maa»“.+»+»“.l+. The sale loforrod to was the i-LB. ornamsx a C A P S U L E S ‘W! lwlns all! the Imam: w 769' 701ml. D . 0140f‘ W?! 0' adult foxes. efficiency our culmination round and " i SPRAMEX ‘bthlnstworlfcraunoollclcni UoILIamnaUImJIM “m! p, ‘ fiésnziiasnéwiiu " ' di to bfiI-“aimuli lllttér. some was n- 6! W936i‘ .. 5'. and‘ Noceazitas. ' s‘ ‘ 3 the inevitability ‘of the the j ..rcuiunticu;~_mq m»: ‘limbo! :1‘ King pas nom- Mun to‘ conic sum; u: the hiltcriam. " - l gm mo: _ 0108mm“ to "(M V, " 11:39 HM"! was fir." - ' I nntumrkhwhst pool ‘Accqyfiwo subatomic.- Ol‘ I . NEE!" " ‘ w y _ “t, . -. a liiuifimui? ‘#42153. ‘m’ Priaoo Edward Island ' ambitious and a. F3: Supplies» '1" ‘U.I'l ' madman. us. 1. Eiiili.‘ IIINIIT 00KB“! Charlottetown. P. n51. » ,5 1 lied tho mu mun undluld - ' ' ‘I d ' ‘if d IMPERIAIZ llunlf oil-gowns! at’ stminstm Drlivcnd was; fibinhlngmdi: _ ‘ ,‘i°;l‘a .xb¢¢lrw$,y $51,“- (“dialo- ,1,,, V,,,,,""M,,,,,,,,";,g,§;;,4; ,.,,_,, y w o‘ "i; nmougpeuicorluuleeuumpa mum-w is» 1- 29"" M2,? ,,,,,"*°°,, #"-"'-"-'~"'??r.? mo.» cosh-w 1' ‘"1 . 3 > . . F . , . 1001,1140: ~ ‘ - , ‘ l_ ' _ 30W .. p. .1, i ‘h q ‘afllluln up and i...