i ` < ll, f ,, ‘. if il 1.-a_s-.,7 t l; lr r. ,i ll; it bi; 'L ,, - i t» . ‘li . 1 5 _ t il.. :gt l .»a féij __: 'Ti -l t , ¢.:,.:. :In- ?.r ' v ; _'-1-:v4'.Yf .2 iii f; Ltttgif .ills ` “it lil lt. .gl '~l` l' .`i el, . 11.' .lit iilgrf ii ,fi[r‘_ 5 _. W tl , _ 1_5 '3 ._ W _` li . ,,, .c. _s_ ...T ,1.'.J“. . ,_.,'.;;_.~ _-r-r¢\>>»~f...vg~`4v§`4‘.§1»,_. ,,»,- 3, wt. ,,.,, e -.~ 1' 5 ll it il. ,,_ it .i _ _ , . 1- ._ _ l t = 'fi - ll-1% .~.\~, ...ef . .<,_ .- _..-_.;; is-fr .,~.-. 1-. ssl, .\>.f,....._-..>..`~:......_.» . :lt 2. lift .rw- _ 3 _ f I it _ . tl Y, ,,,_.,..~..._ - ;_'T_ l‘ :,¥ ..; 'ii il. _ _ll ._ `~ It .~1 _.l .r _ - SA'l‘UlUAX,‘DlClHlll»l3| 1915 `_ lx l' I 'usluygnp' "‘i'-uisauonub ""u¢iini»aua»_s. . _ T Si"§i>2i`¢éi{"£l}ikl totality"-n'\.e".if'¢`<5.itif¢1y iwitiihii occupation, neither going tosschool nor going to \vork.` n "' ' ...,.i ' - ._ Bursting Throu l’i_An _Open Door . 8 On a inemorable occasion the R1. HON. Aiirnun Mr1oul:N described Plum: Mrmsrcn Kl`No’s vigorous assertions that he had forced constitutional concessions_ from the ,Mother Country a_s merely the pretense of “bursting 'llrough an open door.” There was no door to oair ingress, and no opposition of any kind by the Mother Country, which had come forward moretllan half-way to explain to MR. KING that what he demanded required no concession as§it was already common to all the common- wealth of nations. _ Similarly it nlay be said of our distinguislled prospective member, the HON. CHARLlss A. l)C'NNlNc, that in coming here with able slip- porters to help _his claims, he has already been llle_t more thatl half way; illdeed, from the illo- ment of The Guardicnfs announcement that the l"ii_1ancc Minister had “made a dicl ¥ BK 9l€ - A grocery messenger boy in Toronto was making deliveries Christmas eve whe11'he was held up by two men, onc_of \vl1oni pressed a reyolver in his face. Without a l11oinent’s hesi- tation thc boy dropped his parcels and let the gunner have it hard onthe left car. They fled, he reported to the police, and shortly afterwards two youths, one with a swollen ear, were under arrest. “The swelling car" was evidence suffic- ient_ ` .\la, .»\. li. l\lACl-l5AN, l\’I.l’., will hardly feel flattered at thc left handed coniplimeut paid him by the Patriot in its write-up of HON. ]. E. MicllAUn`s cabinet qualifications. It says the Prime Minister had to surround himself with "intelligent and influential men,” hence, Nova Scotia and British Columbia having already been allotted portfolios, there was no alternative but to select MR. MICHAUD of New Brunswick ‘for Fisheries. Poor Prince Edward Island, and unfortunate MR. MAcLl-:AN", to be thus ignored and scorned in thc house of their supposed friends. Toronto will have a three-cornered fight fbr the lnayoralty in the New Year's Day election. Arrayed against Mayor SIMPSON seeking rc- election, are Controller SAM MCBRIDE, who served as Mayor ii1 1928 and 1929, and for- mer alderman, -and HARRY W.. HUNT. They have previously made unsuccess- ful bids for the mayoralty. Nine have been nom- inated for thc four places on the Board of Coll- trol. Controllcr McBRn>r.`s associates on the 1934 Board are seeking re clectioli. They are Wlr.i.1Alu 1). Ronnlns, RALPH C. DAY and WILLIAM _l. WAnsw0R1°ll. Three of the others ‘are former Controllers. They are _l. G. RAMS- ‘ DEN, _]osl:l'H 'l`Hol\ll>soN and ALBERT E, HACKER. Tin Buck, Communist leader, \vho was a can- didate for Parliament in Winmpcg North at the Federal election two months ago, is seeking a place onthe Board of Control. The other can- didates are HARRY B1zAol.|-:v, Neil. MACMILLAN and BEN J. M1Li.1~;ll, former alderman. as ale as _ The artificial breeding of oysters may bring new help to England's “native” industry. For more than 15 years the Ministry o'f_Agriculture aild Fisheries has been attempting to secure re- liable breeding. Now, at last, results which are regarded as definitely encouraging have been se- cured. The secret is bilieved to lie in the “dict” given to the young ysters. The commercial grounds for regarding artificial oyster-breeding as _potentially profiitable are that the majority of English “natives".are now _reared from foreign oysters, imported young; and that the importa- tion‘is sufficient to suggest that an appreciable expansion of the English- industry is n practical possibility. This yeat’s suoceu has been achieved at the Conway research station of the Ministry in North Wales. Out of rather more than 4,000,000 oyster larvae, atleast 150,000 "settled" This was in an 8o,ooo gallon tank, and it is be- lieved that if more states, tiles and .asbestos sheets had been provided`for the oysters to settle on the success achieved would have been. the put three years. no even greater. ' While supporting in every png. I0-i-l`l\1f@¢lf\1\’U\8 Industrie! in ,this wlllllfy. the Irish Independent has submitted that, ln order towobtaln an adequate and remuneratlve market for the output of factories the nmlnrltv or the azrlcliltural industry is a pre-requisite. Uufor- lllhhllely. agriculture has, through a wholly abnormal cause, been in B 5°l‘|°US1y depressed condition dur.. mg the Dist three and a half years. Bo great has been the fall ln the Prices secured' by farmers for their live stock and products that many of them find lt. impossible to make ends meet. _ . The goods pm. duced by the manufacturer have to be retalled by the shopkeeprs, md 11, as is admittedly the case. the pin-~ Chasing power of the funnel- ana. H8I'l¢u1tu.ral labourer has been Sfeatly reduced, the effect must be 8 diminished demand for goods. In the Free State fifty-three per cent °f all the persons returned as at work are engaged in sgr-l¢umL~¢_ About two-thirds of the employed D0P\llBl'lon are producers, and of these €|8l1ly per cent me engaged ln Hgrictllture, while roughly, seventy per cent, of the citizens reside ln rural areas, ln. Cludills vlllaers and ,the smaller towns. The Dull of the 'Irish Free State has passed a death sentence on the elcfrbive body. .lust as the Dail ls. and eould claim to be as responsible and as responsive to public opinion as the other Chamber. 1n fmt Under the Sysfcm of proportional representation the senate was probably more' representative of the popular will. ‘ . The sturdy independence of the American farmer has been a legend ever since the fight at the bridge at Concord. It appears now that this trait still flourishes undlmlnlshed;' for is not Mrs. Paul Fitz Simons, the former Elsie French Vanderbilt, going to plant potatoes in uril`mlted nuantltles on her estate at Newport, R.I.. and defy the AAA to put her. in _lull for lt? She Ls. She says so herself. She ls inviting her friends to .vlslt her in _tall next summer.. The AAA will not lead America to Socialism ls a Newport dowager can help lt. It makes a. stimulating plc- t1u'e .One can see the great lawn at Newport. with the parental man- sion rising for a backzround. Out comes the lady ofthe manor, in picture hat and Paris frock; trail- lng her,' the head gardener bearing potatoes. flanked by the first, second and third assistant garden- ers. The expensive soil ls turned, in go the-spuds-and far off' there ls weeping ln the Kremlin, no doubt. It Outlht to be ii great dav in the llfe of Mrs. Fitz Simons.-NEA. In another ten years, or maybe it wlll be twenty or even thirty years -that is but it short time tn the his- tory of nations-there may be rm international army. at the call of the League of Nations, an inter- national poltce force, whlle the armies of lndlvldual nations will be dissolved or at ‘-'east verv materially reduced. Is it teo much to expect that such will be the case? No, we thlnk not. The nations have come to an abliorrence of wal' and some- thing like the above could make lt lmpcsslble.-Clinton News-Record. Sli' Samuel Hoare today ls almost a tragic figure. He won general pra-ire by h‘s conduct of the India bill. and as Foreign Minister he raised Brltain’s prestige and his own reputation by his stand at Geneva in behalf of the League Covenant. What possessed him to make so tlisantlc a blunder as the Laval-Hoare peace proposal after record of success? _ We do not believe the Hitler lov- ernment tn Germany ls going to get Very far ln trying to set up a Nazi religion The Roman Catholic church and thc Protestant churches of Germany-most; of them of one denomination - have started B vigorous warfare upon the "new Dllsanlsm." as they term lt. We don't belleve Hitler will change a. r-sl'glon which has held so many millions of German people for 'so many hundreds of vears as easily as he imagines.-Wlngham Ad- vanos-Times. .One of those pleasing- items of news that often creep into the papers and pass more or less un- noticed cczurred the other day when the Record announced that though 300 boys had been playing rugby at the collegiate there was not one serious Injury in the season now closed.-Kitchener Record. By way of London comes word of lmpol-tant reductions in Aus- tralian tariff. They include 141 de- creases under the British preferen- tla.l tariff. 12'! decreases ln the general tariff. This. for li country like Australia. where protectionist sentiment has been strong, ls signi- ficant. It reveals, it any rate. that so far as British countries are con- cerned, a deflulte tide ls runndxig against ta.rl.ffs.-ottawa Jounnn. The eomlng rcglotrntltln of lm- employed will be incomplete .unless lt includes the horde of transients who drlft or no Hcked from muni- cipality. and who beg from door to door. Many may be worthless or un- employable. but how are oltuem to discriminate bttvleon the flt and the unfit., the fmposters and the helpless victim; of misfortune who deserve 1 ‘helping hand? Any iw- emplwmmt ‘policy witch overlooks this lane clue will be 1 failure.-7 Dt. Pnmhr Aherhnrl, u0dnnln|_ s crowd at Ottawa. mode an lm- enled-lar amor onfrheolmdlm Pr-eu, A ‘news-gathering orlmlu- tton which is mounted avurywbln by thinking people u uno which malls any effort to ratio* ml! M sible way the efforts to establish' "~ '¢--~-- va --1--vw, was uv mvwvu _ at lt herself.-Vancouver Bun. ‘t ' _ , I-mu .Ba-|»».lt|.0 Mona osrls ron x.mu'lN' 'nm nom! ~ It would seem that all over the world practising physicians and re- search workers ln laboratories are learning more and more about the great value of calcium-llme-to the body. lt- has long been knowxfthnt lime' helped to form the bones and that when needed the bones would give up some of their llme to the blood and tissues, and that sufficient lime ln the foodstuffs prevents decay of the teeth. ' Later it was found that limo re- lleved pain tn cancer, helped to ooagulate the blood. healed old vurh oose ulcers, prevented certain skln ailments, and relieved nervous spasm. And now Dr. Grant Preston, Har- risonburg, Va., tells ua ln~the Vlr- glnla Medical Monthly, that lime ls of great value ln disturbances of the eye and nose. I-Ie finds that the tone of the llntng of the blood vea- sels ls mpmvemd the strength of the cells ln r ing harmful or- ganisms ls greatly increased-by the use of llme. Bleeding of the delicate tissues ln the eyes .ts prevented by injecting lime into the veins. Dr. Preston points out that ‘the lining of the nose and throat are often starved for lime and so are unable to perform their dolly task of keeping. the moisture which cov- Senate 'Yet the S°““t° WHS R-“I ers this llnlng ln proper condltlon. When this moisture on the llnlng of the nose and throat ls ln normal oondltlon lt can prevent harmful organisms entering into the blood even lf these organisms are actually into the nose as often as every ten minutes. ' _ This means that lf there ls insuf- flclent lime in this lining moisture ailments may be set up tri other parts of the bcly. Among the symptoms that may arise due to insufficient lime tn the body are an unusual susceptlblllty or tendency to colds; tiredness and lack of endurance ln children and young adults; sallow complexion; swelling of the llnlng or covering of the turblnate bones ln the nose; soft teeththat hold their fillings poorly; tingling and numbness of the hands und’ feet. Dr. Preston reoomniendsgthe use of some satisfactory preparation of lime, regular daily use of vitamin D, sunshine, and also extract of the parathyroid gland situated below the thyroid gland ln the neck. This extract has to do with the lime carrying power, of the blood. If we would remember to use milk or cheese every day most of us would get all the llme we need. I lNSCR.l]"1‘ION FOR AN OLD BED The wlnd‘s on the wold And the night ls a-cold. And Thames runs chlll 'Twlxt mend and hill. But. kind and dear la the old house hcre And my heart is warm 'Mlclat \vl.nter‘s harm. Rest then and rest, And think of the best. ‘Twtxt summer and spring When all birds sing In the town of the tree, , , And ye lle ln me And scarce dare move Lest the earth and its love Should fade away Ere the full of the day. I lun old and have seen Many things that have been Both grief and peace And wane and increase. No tale I tell Of lll or well But this I say: Night treadeth on day, And for worst or best Right good ls rest. -Wllllam Morris. Britain And The Suez Canal (Ottawa Journal) This week we heard one of those glib United States radio "com- mentators" tell ~how Britain “owned” the Suez Canal, proceed to draw conclusions from such ownership. _Brltafn doesn't own the Suez Canal, doesn't even control tt. Con- trary to too common belief. the majority of the shares of the Suez Canal are held by Prenchmen, with Fi-eiwhmui a majority on the Canal‘s board of directors. The British Government holds 45 percent of the Canal'| shares. That, ordinarily, might mukg for control. but inasmuch as the laws under which the Suez Canal wu set up provide that no alnlle shareholder, no matter what his holdings. cm have more than 10 votes on ltl board, control remains with the French. And the French, the countless Frenchman and Prennhwomon who hold the majority of the shares, have I. good investment. In 1984 they paid 85 percent., with the price of mares rlstnz to 01.800. Buatncn In the early put of 1085 wusnotao good. and with uu- nounooment of the Italo-llthfoptnn war |tiuosdr°pPll¢_lllmueti,ut0_0. On the other hand, Italian war nip- pllu gang t»hr0\1`lh~ the canal. plus 300,000 troops paying two dol- lm I. head, have swelled ostnlnll during noon! mouths. _ th own fam tligiun any “imma l\0~vm_mh~ Informed". that hll vu “ull vmn'1¢." ES FQ get hifi ggi; _ iii e 3 l -f l'l'¢l1\ 11811!!! lelwliru. luuumi lu over the most flamous dairy regions between the Great lakes and the Atlantic: over eastern butter makers who have carried 01! rlbbonl your after you until they was seemingly nothluz to lt. Ou crenmery from Gladstone. Manitoba, scored 003 on one lroupof oreamery butter, L ftp pztthat would .seein fairly hard to So let our eastern butter makers look to their ohurlm. We surely cannot let mp sort of thing zo on, with the na ural advantages we have and our lohg_st.s'rt in export- ence. Also the arm-chair “fsrmers" of the east who follow agriculture with pens and typewriter; and have, for years and years, been telling the western farmers to "zo fiito mixed farming," daii'ylni§tc., might make anotoofthlsbiis es.slnToronto and tum the heavy gum of their own lnexpertence in another direc- tion. If western farmers go into dalrylng ln a much bigger way than' these Manitoba men have done we emstem eowpunchers may as well tum to something else altogether. Lord Tweedsmuir On Public Speech (Exchange) Lord Tweedsmuifs addtcss be- fore the Ottawa. Canadian Club on public speaking was n charming thing. But it was also B very sen- sible thing. with its chief value tn the fact that Lord Tweedsmuir, a master of good English, and havlng heard many famous speakers, knew what he was talking about. There are some who, themselves incapable of speaking two consec- utive sentences while on their feet, profeu to despise orstbory and all orators, Lord Tweedsmuir, who has read history, would never do that. I-Ie knows that the story of oratory, moving men singly or ln the mass, ts largely the story of freedom; that from Perlcles to Lincoln, and on down through the ‘kneatest of classical orators alnce, the spoken word has been the principal agency in achlevementl and consolidation of liberty. Lord Tweedsmuir remarked that these were bad days for the orator. What, he meant was that the orator was essentially is product of his age, of an age when the range of the human voice was the llmlt of a speakers appeal. Today. with broadcasting, Mr. Baldwin probably reaches ln one speech more people than Mr. Gladstone addrered throughout the whole of his life. And broadcasting, of course, de- mands a. different technique Not- withstanding this, Lord Twee..’trnulr doesnt think the reign cf the orator over. - “You will never quite do away with the reign of the personal or- ator. You wlll always hi-ive Parlia- ment; you will always have the,ef- fect produced by certlan public meetings held at a. key moment.” Coming to ‘ro other classes of speech, the "excessively prosaic" manner, and the “mixed style” of argument and emotion, Lord Tweedsmuir was equally sensible. There are those who, all for what they ca‘l the “conversational style" ln speaking, think such a method easy of achievement. It lsn`t. Lord Balfour, cited as an example by Lord Tweedsmuir. did achieve lt, but between Balfour, subtle, pene- trating, witty, master of his sub- ject, and the halting, commonplace, pedestrian English of the average "conversational" speaker, there was nl world of difference. The point of the thing ls that there is danger ln simplicity, too. The danger of its being confuged with drsbness. The speaker who knows and can use’ the inevitable word, who can marshal sentences logically and correctly, wlll. lf he knows his subject. always speak pleaslngly. But a mere shunnlng of rhetoric ls not enough. There` ls Mr. Lloyd George. Mr. Lloyd George tg not, strictly speak- tng, im orator; not an oratvr ln the sense that Chatham wus, or Bright or Gladstone. But while he avoids the "proud full sail,” or is incapable of tt, lt Ls not "simplicity" nor s ‘conversatlonbl style" that makes htm great. It ls his ability to wrap up a truth tn an Image to speak ii. shining, vlvld phrase. So with that much over-worked virtue-brevlty. Brevtty is n fine thing, but lt ls not an end ln lt- seI'. when Lord Curzon delivered his famous address on "Eloquence" before the students of Cambridge University, he a_y:_arded the palm for modern Etngllsh eloquence to Lineolrrs speech at Gettysburg. It was A speech of exactly 104 words, uttered in two minutes. Unfortun- ately, not all of .us uc Ltncolns, nor do the subjects we have to deal with always approximate Gettysburg. There an subjects which, complex, demand conslderlblg exposltlon, in which one hrevlty, 1 fetish with no many, becomes relative. . ‘ Libraries - Old And New _ . (Contributed) Many of our older readers. el- peolally thou who om |00! book ‘forty or fifty years, will remember th, school libraries, of thou day# These llbru-tei._wei\ usually donat- ed by some phlloiitlu-opts! in-the community and were well fntdldid. ‘Hwy bid their llttk diy- and Whitt they lasted wore no doubt IW!!- elated by many children lad their parents. Neoaunrtfy nm mn- imlmuona ‘nie mon. !_ew'tn number and sutlldtmt only nu- the ammimiw our '_ the vnu fu'-'. demand IJ .uw -_ functioning ts." .....°~" at wh.. 'f the ti_~_»..tr_i-_.\tt*.<,\\‘.*.\,'°\1',All¢v An -1 |\'- r---.~.--v--_= I ii 1 has made possible' such adian Homes. _ » The Great-West Life ‘ l|YllllMAl| & Lower Queen Street, _llalf sa _iMi||inn_ Dollars ` 'Every day, Life Insurance dlshursea $500,000 to Canadian _hom`es."Every day, ltfhelps to keep homes together and families united; No wonder that Canaillanlwomen appreo-,'_ late the value of Life Insurance, and are grate-. ’ ful to their loved ones whose far-sighted thrift for themselves and their cl\lldren_, ' - The Great-West Life ls. the Champion of Thrift and the Guardian of thousands of Can- the Life Insurance in force in Canada. Provincial Managers vital _financial security, carries one-tenth of all B0., uulrrn - _ Charlottetown .tts contlnulty for as the books are read they 'can be exchanged for new ones so that there ls a fresh con- tinuous supply Of books always within reach. The Camegle Lib- rary now has branches tn many -parts of the provlnoe and books are available through the branches to all the rural schools. The growing fondness of child- ren for books has already been noted by many. For example, four children in one family. the young- est -_'our years and the oldest eleven or twelve, vlslt one of the branches daily and sit quietly by a table, each reading his or her own fav- ourite book. The young- est, who of course la unable to read, ls just as busy pondering over the pictures and no doubt longing for the time when he can read the wonderful stories that the pictures suggest. He ls thus developing a fond.ne.ss for books which will form it part of his character and which will remlan with htm as long as he lives. The older ones although still young have already acquired o love of reading from which they derive both pleasure and profit. It is a mistake to think that children too young to read are idly and curiously looklng at pictures. They ers studying them. bulldln-g their ovm stories around them. drawing their ln'erences from them and thus learning to thlnk and to form their own conclusions. To them the fpicture represents something real and life like. It ls also 9. mistake to think that time ls wasted by children lookins over or reading picture or other books instead of studying their school-lessons. It ls far from being wasted. The pldtures and little stories enable them to think and thus help them in studying their school lessons. The young mind, ns well as the young body requires cal- istlienlcs or exercise. confined to the strict left/er of the school les- son, the mtnd becomes narrowed and dwarfed just as the bod ls cnfeebled without exercise. 'rheiioed to understandlny ls` not a straight lbie between two points, the cradle and the grave. Young and old alike must wander at times to pick way- side flowers along the by-pltbs, over hllls, over craqs and even throuizh bog and dltflculty in order to dis- cover what lles beflde the main road. ’ Opera & Democracy ' (Ottawa Journal) When New Yo:-k’s Metropolitan Opera lauolled upvn its, flfty-first season this week under the man- agement of our own Edward John- son. Canadians naturally were proud. Yet the thing which made this opening memorable was not the personality of Johnson. nor even the crowd which jammed the big yellow house on Broadway below Times Square to its roof. It was the continent-wide interest which the event evoked. the fact that lt meant something to mllllons u long _loluney from New York. In other words, grand opera from being the possession of the rtoh linked with soclhl prestige and fat banksulls ln New Yorlr._hn.s be- come the possession of ua all. The Metropolitan ltself may still draw the bulk of its financial support from a select group, very solidly based on Wall Street and en- trenched ln the inner citadel of social position and high finance. But grand opera lleelf, for its life and popularity, now appeals to a vnwr and more dispersed audience. hu become 5 port of the cultural set-up of u continent which hu rewhetl the stage of general moon- nltlon of the value of sometg? thstusedtobelefttothe few o had len-ned to like it or found lt cohvenlegnt as is social nllyfnd MM- _ While New Yo`rk'li bpm' 'muon (curtailed to fou~rt¢en.weeh by the detection slnoethedepresslon ofblg _m\:torlbei1r)'w¢s~wdtln¢-to-begin, BUYING LIVE' AND °lJ¢1‘8 was going on and drawing vast crowds in places as remote and Widely watt/emd as San Francisco Sl IDIHS- Chicnso. Kansas ony' D¢f»1‘°1l. Cleveland and Rochester: More than that, and perhaps more important, singers of open. were on the nlr and radio fam; from the Arctic otmle to the cull: or Mexico, tn cities, lawns and villages all over Cunada and the United States were tuned in. Further: film versions of operas were-and A-\*e-‘packing houses that used to depend on the rfisular run of canned thrillers to pack them tn. Never before in the world’s history have so many people had the privilege of hearing the best ln opera. _President Benes (Exchange) l The selection of Dr. Eduard Bones to succeed Dr. Masaryk as president of Uhenoslovak:la~ts Q rendnder that one of the smallest countries ln ‘Eu- rope has produced two of that con- tinentfs most eminent stallesmen. Benes and Masaryk have worked ln harmony together ever since Czechoslgvaklu was assembled out of the fragments of the crumbling A\i.st.ro-Hungarian Eipplre after the Great War. ' They succeeded in revlvtng the national splrlt of Old Bohemia. which had been almost subdued by centuries of submlsltm to Austrian domination Now their country is Europcs eastem bulwark of democracy. Around surge the tides of Austrian, German and Polish dlotatorshlps. but the Czechs are unmoved They have shown A high degree of ad- aptability and have come through the depressotu under democratic izovemment. better than most of their neighbors . The fate of democracy in tlvf small nations of Continental Europe depends to a great extent on the fate of democracy ln France. That country ls the only greatbulwark left on the continent which has withstood the fascist flood. with the exception or Russia. which, haf* evolved a dictatorship of its own. Dr. Benes has worked closely with France ln the past, and lt is re- izarded as the architect of the Little Entente-Czechoslovakia. Ru- rmmla and Jugoslavlu-desilmwld no an eastern counterpolse to Ger- many. . ._. _.__-- Dll. L. B. EVAIIS of London, ing. Noted Physician treated luc- oolsfully md obtained per- manent sure! of Stomach Condltlom, such en Indigen- tfon, Dyspepslp. Sour Stom- ach, Heartburn, Gastric Dlx- tnu. We aloha have the lole -rights on this furnotu prel- orlptlon, and _ have received mmwrous testimonial: from sutlndcd pnrohuen. ` Try I bottle. T .lusr Amnvui. ~A shipment of Moab Holr Beltorer. lt will restore Gray llolr to ltrnptursl color. An excellent mu- ma tonlnc ‘lv ‘ and lnvlgontfug all -the [lands and ,nerves of the hair and scalp. Promote; a new uid Abundant lrowih of hair when lt ll falling ont. Amos no worm rownrln `l7.'$°..°.f..f.'$°l.f'°‘-“" '?l‘i“l°‘lii§ reomnmandod rynalf landfill Agfmlcu-tau. 1 THE 2 IUACS _ Poutrnvij DRESSED' POULTRY AT OUR- WAREHOUSE DAILY. PAYING HIGHEST MARKET PRICES. ` . s tiG<.>n_ _Stvrvsé Ltd- , . < ,.., . . ._ ,,, . 1 ' 1 f » ‘