PAGE FOUR "raaldalb-W. Chalk! l. Iclcaro, l. I. Vice-President, I. l. larlltt, I. I. l. L !aeretary—l.ieut-Dol D. A. Iaatiaace, D. s. .0. Editor and Managing Director-J. l. Burnett, I. J. l. Associate ldltcra—I'ralk Walker, and D. K. Currie. Morning Dally (founded Ill?) “.00 psr yaar (Ii advance) delivered. use pl! year (in advance) mailed u. Canada and unites States. TUESDAY, JULY 15. 1935. ;,. 0.400111 11v 111s‘ .401: Unable to hold their ground in political debate, the Liberal can- didates are being reinforced in the local Liberal press with s. campaign " "of. misrepresentation which sur- passes anything hitherto attempted _ in a, political campaign in this Pro- " vince. Misstatements of the wildest and most ridiculous kind are beins paraded under big headlines, all cal- culated t0 stampede the,electors in- porters have strictly complied with this requ‘ ‘, the reasons given be- ing of loo great importance to be ignored. . The Liberal leader, however, has not seen fit to comply. His deputy leader, candidates, and supporters have followed suit. Not only are they dragging this matter into the political arena, but they seek to show that the income tunes paid by these non-resident companies under the Domicilcd Companies Act», and to voting against their own interests. accredited to this Province. are be- An amusing exposure of this cicll- ins peid by the people o! this Pro- ' trap, as it was employed by the vince, and that these amounts more Liberal organ in the last election than offset the $150,000 subsidy in- campaign, is made in Saturday's re- port of the Yonic meeting. The re- creese obtained last year by the MaoMllllsn Government. This argu- pcrt begins: "Stormlly hostile to the merit. entirely false and misleildinfl. Liberal candidates in 1931, the vil- was used by ivlr- ‘mane A- Camp- lage of York chd citizens from the bell at the Murray River nicotine- viclriity made the Liberal cause of Of such arguments is the whole 193s their own last night and echoed where-l campaign composed. Their the sharp change in public opinion," etc, etc. etc. case must indeed be hopeless when the acting leader-a lawyer, a What was the Liberal orga-rfs re- 35°53‘ 531°“?- "l EPAIWYIWY port of the “stormlly hostile" recep- Gilmrai-Wiih 11111 kmlwhdde 0i’ the tion given the Liberal candidates at ilcil- "id °i the dim!" w the York in i931? We refreshed our re- Prilvinwl 111mm‘ "i discussing collection from the Patriot files, and them ct =11 Bi the prwhi- time im- find the 193i meeting thus descrlb- scrupulously di-iWie cud Mireille- ed, under headlines even larser 5°11“ them m’ Piflmw 9mm“! and ‘more imposing than were dLs- played last Saturday: "TORY SPEAKERS TENDERED A HUI‘ RECEPTION AT YORK, OPPOSI- TION CANDIDATES AND THEIR APOLOGISTS ON THE PLAT- FORM WEIRE ROASTED ON ‘PHE POLITICAL GRIDIR/ON. MEET- ING WAS DECIIIEZDLY LIBERAL IN TONE AND 'I.‘HE LEERAL CANDIDATES WERE LOUDLY ~‘ And now our contemporary, for- “gettirig its 1931 campaign, seeks to “contrast the attitude of this election with “the stormily hostile" reception which the Liberals encountered at York four years ago, and-which it then brazenly misrepresented to be _ a great Liberal triumph. The same old type. The same old tripe! What price Liberal sincerity? EDITORIAL NOTES “Dog days" atlast and at length. The names of two Conservatives who are not overly friendly to their party at present, have been men- tioned as Federal candidates as Re- constructionlsis. But the party has yet to be formed and the slrieiws of war provided. Today we enter upon the last lap of the Provincial elections. From now on canvassing will be the chief business of candidates- meetings are of secondary import- ance as the policies and records of both parties are familiar, and no convert is likely to result further- platform oratory. The per- sonal touch is what will now prove from ~ ~-- most effective. " - 'A HOPELESS POLICY Hon. Mr. Stevens has named his “We must always bear in mind party the Reconstruction Peril’?- ~4hat no matter how large or small ' a Province may be, a certain Gov- form of fifteen P13"!!! nothing that one or other of the "and varies with the size of the parties has not offered. is a P5118- ----~i'rovincc only m dcgrccw-m-Prc- cea for “Majrrlment machin y is neee y ‘luctionists. But the plat- contains existing troubles. Mr. »' “filler saundel-s, in letter to Premier Stevens also has decided to take " lkMaskenzie King, Dec. 17, 193e, the first step to dictatorship-no pleading (unsuccessfully) for per- Rieccnstructionist can be adopted a iic..m1g,g1on u, infgrvlew My, King s: candidate without first receiving ‘fOttawa. on the question of subsidy Mf- Sikilfllfi IPPPOVBI- The present leader of the Liberal cation was written. party was Mr. Saunders‘ chief lieu- flsht. 8nd the '\‘"$‘eng_nf, g1; the time m1; oommunl- shall lead the Liberals. Mr. Thane ‘ Thg ppggem Campbell has neither the exper- Hon. W. M. Les. is out of the question is, who ‘deputy leader, Mr. Thane Campbell, 191100 H01‘ iniilillluilfl 59°35"? 1°!‘ ~ was Mr. Saunders‘ legal assistant. ' Today these gentlemen are sp- politlcs; Mr. IePage has got in bad through insinuating in a Herald in- .. pcaling on a platform of stripping terview that he was the legitimate 'Guverrunent machinery to the successor; while Nlr- Maclntyive bone, and throwing hundreds of friend-i 11186 that he i! the 1083111 people out of employment by dis- Liberal lecder- If none of these vi themselves to the rank ----' o1 , ...c..t re- lief work. This l5 the and file, the Party may have to go Qnly lmgypreiption outside the Provincial Liberals and that can be placed on their present seek leadership from Federal Lib- policy of milking revenue and ex- erals, and in this c-nnecticn, M1‘- pendlture meet. For it is obvious Peter Sinclair's name has been that to get unemployment money melliiilned- from Ottawa, as the MacMilian Government did to the extent of The consumption of butter in nearly a million dollars, they would 011W‘!!- ill 1931 W" “ilmflwd '4' have to expend p, mom 319,191,000 lb. and in m4 this had I .. with the terms laid down by the increased to 385.010.0011. the per »Dominion. They could not get it cepiie conservation in 1W1 being i and sgve it to balance uic budget. so s-i lb. and last year clmcci 31 It is given for the specific purpose lb- The oimadisn people m smell o: expending for unemployment consumers of cheese but in the last ._.,.,.“1lg1, “g n m”; b, guyprgmghg- few yea-rs the consumption has in- "yineial treasury. we by appropriations from the prio- creased slightly. The quantity in i931 was 36,305,000 lb. and in 1934 _ This is the policy followed up all it had risen ic 89.4194100- thfl P" the Provinces in oil-operation with cspita bQi-iil Ollliii-li’ 3 1'7 15- "id the Dominion Government. It is the list W" l» Wm "m" I'm“ m“ policy which is keeping this country The consumption of one hie M"! _--, on its feet, until economic condi- decreasing. In 198i the q ... tions justify a cutting down of this was zrnliciiw down and ih m4 ve-l} money and consequent saving in it had dropifld to 2411.10.00) 6°"!!- ._. -w‘;‘ blic expenditure. ._t in’ "Inspect to unemployment relief sr The per capitaili ll beilll 343" Theabacucaofany rcfcroncein dosenandIIstyearQZI-L V0599}! THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way If the wealth of the Nation wan in lump sums and exclusively in the hands of persons who had amassed it by illegal and reprehen- sible means, it might be possible to invoke confiscatory taxation and accornpliih. some small redistribu- tion of wealth. But in our intricate iiMr. Leak _Stdtementi_ A Furtllerlndictment Of Liberal Insincerity interlocking system of economics, if your crusader for social increase starts out after some arch-fiend in creating untold havoc to the econ- Charles Lamb's famous essay final- ly discovered that it was not neces- lil-Yy to burn down his house every time he wanted roast pork, but San Francisco Argohaut. of 8i drivers who were involved in three or more accidents, many of them "of a serious nature." from Jilly, 1934. to April. 1035. several had ‘figured in four accidents with- in a spa-c: of six months. One of these. after participating in two collisions and "side-swiping‘ a park- ed car, cllmaxed his adventures with a crash in which two persons were killed and six injured.—-New Oriearrs Picayune. There is something incomplete about the story that Sir Mbntagu Norman has pledged the, British treasurys equalization fund for stab- ilizing the currencies of other coun- tries without consulting the treas- ury. It would be out of the question for the Bank of Enzland so to use the treasury’s money without con- sent. Very likely the time will come and it may even have arrived when the power and stability of British currencies that falter in a. fixed re- lationship with the pound. There is change when the various currencies have found their proper relative level. The international bank can do a great deal if the Bank of England is behind it, but the latter will hardly use public funds with- out the concurrence of the British government. Ill Cllllldll. third parties have been a study in failure. The Grange and Druryism in Ontario; the Pro- gressive unrest to win a. few battles, they have never won a campaign, fell as rapidly as they rose. The only Dominion which has a naval force of any size is Australia, The Commonwealth has four cruis- BPE- TWO of these, the Australia and the Canberra, are modern and of 10.000 tons. In addition it has six destroyers and the seaplane carrier two R. N. cruisers, the Dunedin and After six days’ silence on the subject of the revel- hilm“ 1°11" 11° invefllblr ends by litions in the Saunders-Robb correspondence, a statement om, stmc, appears in yesterdays Liberal press, over the name of stabilizing. ‘lll-‘rhof “zhigicsgmtlaoyupoi: Mr. W. M. Lea, purporting to give an explanation of his misstatement in the Legislature charging that the Con- servative Premiers of Nova Seotia and New Brunswick had failed to co-operate with the Liberal administration the superman at Washington have of this Province in pressing the Mackenzie King Govern- ll°i Y“ “ii-med this simple icct- ment for subsidy settlement. The claim advanced by Mr. Lea is of the most flimsy s Mineoia dispatch to the New and ridiculous kind. lie-says Mr, Saunders’ letter, stating York Tlihes reports the discovery that “ON MANY OCCASIONS” he had “DECLINED T0 CO-OPERATE” with the other Maritime Premiers, was written “some months before the matter was finally rc- ferred to the Audit Board.” This is the same precious Audit Board which expressly stated it had no jurisdiction, to make any final qssesslnent, and into whose department the Maritime Claims question was pigeoniioied by the King Government in the dying months of his administra- iion. ' After being refused the co-operation of the Liberal Government of this province “on many occasionsf-AND MR. LEA DOES NOT DENY THIS FACT-was it any wonder that tho other Maritime Premiers paid no atten- tion to any subsequent request this Province made for co- operation before a. Board, which they knew was incompet- ent to deal with the matter. Why should they not treat such a suggestion with the contempt it deserved. They knew from past experience that the Liberal Government of this Province, like the Liberal Government‘ at Ottawa, was simply playing politics, and that the whole proposal finance W1 be used i0 keep other was just an election-hour bluff. Did the Lea Government have any faith in its own a ma, desire m, stability o, c,“ claims presentation before the Audit Board? Let Mr, Lea’s record speak on this point. He says the Island's case ‘was presented on May 10, 1930; but he neglects to state that prior to that, on Jan. 21, 1930, in accord with a request from the Board, Premier Saunders filed a memorial con- taining a “model budget" in which claims for the amount of $438,000 dollars were detailed. While Mr. Saunders was at Ottawa. and ON THE VERY SAME DAY ON WHICH THESE CLAIMS WERE FILED, MR. LEA, OVER HIS PROVINCIAL SECRETARY AND movement o, m“ the ACTING PREMIER, published his notorious “pamphlet” cor. under Mr. Woodsworth-thcir of claims to the amount of THREE AND A QUARTER story is the scme- Using temporary MILLION DOLLARS ANNUAL SUBSIDY INCREASE. The publication of this ridiculous claim statement in the Liberal organ was of course seen by the other Mari- time Premiers, who were also aware that the brief filed before the Audit Board claimed only a seventh of this amount. WERE THEY‘ NOT JUSTIFIED IN ASSUMING THAT THE WHOLE SUBJECT 0F OUR CLAIMS, SO FAR AS- THE LIBERAL GOVERNMENT 0F THIS PROVINCE WAS CONCERNED, WAS BEING TREAT- Albatross. New Zealund pays for ED AS A JOKE? OWN NAME AS rusuc FORUM """.'.'E~..¥"i‘ m "'7': DE?! ._._.. g Gin-Mould I tmbass in aflng you to mhliah some tone flout 1n July 181s we entered Confed- eration without a dollar cu provin- cialdobitThatfromthatdsteto the present. sixty-two years, our whole existing debt has been created. The net funded debt. pate 0 of Public Accounts 193i. amounts to $8,621,871.20. The admitted debt of the Lea Government, when resigning in i081, of $1,041,000 bank overdraft, and about $200,000 paid bills. showsadelrtofamillionanda quarter dollars in their four year term of omce. . This amounts to more than a fuilthirdofthoentiredebtoftbe Province, accumulated in the whole sixty-two years of debt build- ing. The- query is.-Ii'- the Lea party can create a debt in~four years amounting to more than half as much as all preceeding govern- ments managed to roll up in the remaining 58 years, how long would it take the some financiers to put the Province into the hands of a the Dlomede. Canada has four de- simyers. The Royal Indian Navy possesses no fighting ships. It com- prses a number of sloops-one of which, the Indus. is entirely mod- em-and a few armed tvansports. South Africa is the only Dominion which has no kind of naval force. Until B- yecr or so ago she did have two armed trawlers for ‘training purposes. but these have since bggn returned to England. Democracy, as Mr. Besaett points sentials of Parliamentary Democ- racy" is simply a method or reach- ing political decisions. Whatever tatorship is another. he has just seen again what dic- all parties but one, the punishment merit and people-London Daily Herald. deaths or injuries occurred. In vir- signal, or driving on the wrong side very few cases perhaps. was the re- lessness or ignorance on the part of drivers of motor cars is at the bot- cinneti Erlquirer. gard to a man of mystery and rom- stance from the opposite extreme been hundreds of rumours that (is was alive, and only two or three months ago a claimant to the name appeared. For many years people believed in the United ltatos that John Wilkes Booth was alive. and- By lame: W. Barton. M.D. °"° 1" his “cells-ht hock. "The Ih- HEART DISEASE any HAVE N0 SYMPTOMS those decisions are whether they ulglficndfidfriiuuictofi oécfifafi; are for or against economic equality, discomfort or even the conscious. is irrelevant to the problem of how ness e1 the hem-t whgggoeygr_ This 1g they shall be reached. Democracy is so true that it may be said that one method of reaching them. Dic- heart disease is a disease without The prior symptoms. When there are symp- question for every citizen is to de- toms it is when some other organ ode which cf these two methods he has become involved and the heart prefers. If he wants new evidence, disease has existed for a long time. What, then are the signs of heart tatorship means; the suppression of dial-it? oni as the heart is able to do of dissent as treason. the imprison- i“ W"! PFOPQPIY. execution of decent Bltns- A villi/B mill’ 10 r o , fi$ii”§“2...fiti.§i°‘§§ £3! .'2°..f“°‘J L"; y," m", we" ha", 9M’, or the muscles of the heart maypebe ooo automobile accidents u. which fiifigifligtfiiafdlvnv 1i: lgietalil-rtt l’ 0WD ‘ O tually all these cases, one driver or circulating m“ bi°°d "M" i" Y1° another was at fault. It may have Sglggntifllgniizs ‘muble 55 3" "4 the bCEll 1' ' too much speed, o failure to P112263‘ htgywrahthe kgmitatauglw oftheroadoran ofascoreof ‘°' e" 53mm errors. But a mistake was made. In lglggéegawgsbgshfh; ‘£33? ‘a: sponsibillt definite] fixed. Yet we n“ “ u‘ m‘ m‘ “d m” b°°°m° cannot esgape the Isct that care- fgzllliinlmg gegigégr gfiignslggn pressure is made over the liver. tom of nearly every accdent-Cln- fitgeyigfifizhmlbgggfiafi erness over e ver are t The easy credulity of people in re- helm.‘ 3.03am this clear and simple in once is nothing new o: unpreced- _ criicd in the world. m fact, such ,§’,§’,‘;‘:,,,",';“',j',,°; fifgl’; $211 rumours and beliefs are about as old ghguld gnaw ‘bout m, m,“ o; M history itself. There are many hem-e diggggg Th", up to m, “m, people today. for example, who be- the g iieve Lord Kitchener is alive and swelling of the feet and tenderness that he did not go down with the ov er the liver-occur, any troublo ill-fated Hampshire. Jesse James that exists in the heart can only still rode in the imaginations of foundbyancxamination whichmay many thousands long after he was reveal iacti that dead and buried. to choose en in- the abov signs. Now thcrecan bapaln of course oi’ human experience: aincc Charlie in the hflrt Mimi in _ Ross disappeared in Philadelphia's heart aillillfl suburbs many years ago there have Wll- iiilflffltililfll‘ 5 turbance. This occurs in angina pec- toris of which I have frequently written. The point then is that the heart may have considerable trouble with- in it and there will be no signs or symptoms. The thought then is that an ex- amination of the heart by your phy- sician will reveal that you have heart trouble or you haven't. If you have heart trouble your physician can outline a course of treatment and a safe method of living. If you have no heart trouble it is worth while knowing it. WILD DUCK Twllisht. Red in the West. Dimncss. A glow on the wood; The teams plod ironic to rest, The wild duck comes to glean. 0 souls not understood. What a. wild cry in the pool; What things have the farm ducks seen Thai they cry sc-huddic and c r Only the soul that goes n’ Efller. Eager. Flying- Over the globe of the moan Over the wood that glows, Wings linked. necks sstrain A rush and a wild crying; A cry of the long pain In the reeds of a steel lagoon In s lsnd that no man knows. —John Mssefleld. The New York Central rcilr-oce‘ was hailed recently upon its mm. pletion of seven years of operation without a. passenger fatality result- ing frcm train accidents. The ccn- gratulations that were given. the mad were well deserved, but here in New England is a record that tops that by a great deal. The Bos- ton and Maine rail ‘ has l0 conaecuti passenger fatality resulting from train accident. During that time the road has operand nearly 11000,- 000,000 passenger miles. This is a record for others to shoot st-Bcs- ton Post. \ Supposed Good Vision Often Defective years without s I "Newfoundland Commission?" I am Sir, etc. FINANCE!!- WHEEE IS A FOAL BBED Sin-Reading "Down the Beck Stretch" notes in Saturday's Guard- ian, a party from Montague wants to know if a mare sent to the United States from the Maritime Provinces and bred to a stallion ‘there and the foal was born inlthe Maritilnes if the foal is eligible for Maritime Bred racing classes.‘ No: And for this reason the foal is not Maritime bred. The above query from the Montague horseman calls to mind the fact that it was decided several years ago by the National Associa- tion of Trotting Horse Breeders that the place of breeding of any animal of the horse kind is the locality where the dam is mated vith the sire. This conclusion was reached after mature deliberation and con- siderable discussion, as stated to the writer several years since by the late Wm. Russell Alien, who at the time that decision was made was en officer of the above-named Associa- tlcin. Bill Bharen, 2.04%, the fastest trotter ever bred in Canada. was bred on Prince Edward Island but foaled in New Brilnswick. . . I arm-Sir, etc, g J. M. NICHOLSON‘. Charlottetown -_ " ‘ BOODLUMISM Bin-The Patriot lgivee, front page prominence to’ the following: lscotedctffmilirlun Lewis ‘ P. Tenton came to the platform as a Conserativs apologist, butthe audience became impatient with his long tirade about New Zealand butter and jeered, stamp- ed and hootedhim back to his seat again. It is not only deliberately false, but also a shameful slander upon the reputation of the clean Liberals of Clifton. Knowing that Hon. Mir. Myers was to speak that evening l had not the remotest thought of taking part in the discussion. Attending meetings, which is my undoubtod right, to learn at first hand if there was Justificatiorvfor the stereo- typed flair heiidings of the Liberal organ, 1 was theme as a spectator. The chairman asked if any Con- servative wished to answer Mr. Stewart. The call Wanton" came vigorously from almost every part of the hall. Courtesy demanded my response. In doing so I explained that‘ I would only refer to one matter. (not a provincial issue, but used by Liberals.) the "rnilk checks." I received as gcod. i1 not better hearing than the average speakers, with as few interruptions, said all that I intended to say, and resum- ed my seat uninfluenced by any imaginary "jeercd. stamped and heated.“ as stated by the Patriot's special paid prevaricator. That m.y argument stung to the quick is not fication for slander or false- After the meeting I was repeated- 1y congratulated by clcan outatand - their community, which was always llpun flies "P 6m ‘ , I ‘tYa- The Great-Wes Thrift and tire Canadian homes. Educational, Retirement Annuities. IIYNIIIMII 8i Provincial Lcwefy Queen Street, BRAHMIN TEA ICC laid only in lad cirilnc n». ‘Financial Suefeessnwfilors Dependent __'i'han linen opacity ' ' .."‘€?=€Z" e is the Champion oil ardlen of thousands of There is a “Great-West” Policy to meet every need-Family and Business protection, Income or Pension and Consult our nearest Agent or write or cull on 00., umrrn Established 1872 Managers - Charlottetown F I use OIANGI P10‘ . GROWN in Liberals. upon the wciirlcy of m; argument, one larso dlirylilflfl saying it was connrmedin his own experience. and all Pmifiliin! m“ those disturbers did not belong to Clintitm. 3m brouBhiF gflsfrgvxigfailf; ide or e urpcse- DEIICVG for. zmlmlsh illdiiimm“? Liberal. the main audience gave re- spectful attention to every speaker- Thc same 81118 W" l‘ w" River. in less number. but under restraint in a Conservative strong- hold, in larger number at the Clifton meeting, and I tcwfllliflfld the same faces at Granville, but also under restraint o: strong Con- servative influence. This practice of engaging ds- turbers to prevent discussion was attempted by Uberais in the 19,11. campaign. A gang of about twenty. organised ‘in Charlottetown. infest- ed near-by meetings. In, Cornwall it met disaster. A num‘ of clean Liberals protested to headquarters. that this disgrace visited upon "peaceful and law abiding, resulted in s number c: respectable Liberals refusing to vote at that election. The Guardian also protested, and the gang was disbanded. ‘ when the ballots are counted tho Patriot will again‘ learn, as it did in iBl-l". that false" flare headings, slander reports, and rowdy rioting are not election winnbrs. I am Blr. etc. LIWIS P. TANTUN LET SURVEY JOB FOR PRIZE ACTOR (Canadian Press) ‘ LONDON. July iii-Douglas Mat- thews, to whom the Madge Kendal sented recently at the Royal Acad- emy of Dramatic Art. “woke up one morning to find he had acting in the blood." That was two years ago. when he was working as a chartered surveyor. There had never been an actor h his family before. Mr. Matthews told a reporter. He became a sur- veyor because his fathcr. was one. That was at Lewes in 1029. When a friend 0f his sister founded an am- ateur dramatic aociety he joined it and threw up his safe and com- fortable Job to attend the academy, In his first term he won s scholar- _ ship. That settled the matter. and i since then his career has been a progressive triumph. He won every prise at the Academy, including the Bancroft Gold Medal. . ‘ {heaving ‘lest February. he tookthe first train to hisfirst professional job with the hridhton Repel-ton! Company. at present he is pinyin: in"'l‘he Mask of-Vlrtue" at the S. James’! Theatre.‘ shamanism-s snons LASTED so seasons McCormack, . who claims to~be the oldest player in the genie, has had the one mask in his 00 years of service, and the same slices. haveseeh fldseasons. He began taking an active part in thespprt in 19M. Fromhisfhnt McCurmack has been in the mask and can still hold his own with the younger brigade. He has played 004 games. In the early days he was dis- qualified for three matches bo- cause he took part in twopamd with different clubs on the senile young actor or actress-was pre- prlse-the one most coveted by the d, 7. A_AL_AAAAA x Lkkk A r ility, But Elmira Ml. Stewart Arrives in Charlottetown Parcels carried at L-WBO-B-II-tf. ‘ ' ' ,8our,is l M0 curls 10.30 Arrives In Elmira Bus will stop on signal at any point. Service _ 0h’town Headquarters Old Spain Tea Rooms, Ch’town Cox Hotel, Souris loaves 1451mm Charlottetown 4.10 “ -- 3-10 " Mt. Stewart .......... 5.00 " 8.85 " Mo " .. 8.55 “ ‘I: 9.15 " 6.80 ............ ‘LII Minimum of 25c. “““ Axkuml MIPS liair ilcstoror I parati hich tcrcl. hazengmcm zndbeautiaa the r. a delicately perfumed u.- 1 n‘ '1 was. ailerons can rum. to rrs carom/u. cocoa An" excellent hair me ion- tneslroenclng a rich and abundant growth of heir. Get s battle today It cents. MAO! I10 wont I0!!!)ll- Ihe 2. time Prleisiitllllsiiliiv BLUE BUS LINE, SCHEDULE ‘ Itsézstaass EFEEEEEEEE ~ i- .......'