race your: ‘I'll OIIILITTETOIII GUIIIIII THE cnmzcorrergww GUARDIAN ‘°"°'"‘“ liotss n; nuwiy l-‘srm Problems The taxi business and the restaurant busi- Iorllng Dally (handed In III) l: UQILOQLIECIIIMILIJLIQ Indians: l. l. Barnett. IJ-l- loerosuoiryr Liens. Col.- D. L. Anubis Ilka: Wall line“. l-UJN-I. (On all" Bonito) ‘The Strongest Memory is Walker Tim the Weakest Ink.‘ like the rest of us, are feeling the pinch of r shortage at the time when ther the greatest demand for their serv _ a a a- v 4,__ (Royal Bank 0f Canada a helicopter was flown h! a demonstration. Canada will probably supply close to l 000,000 eggs to Great B of about $30,000, cler Canadian m Ilolhno 0.8.0. a-ussnsnouiiheieraa be! th d aaolaoutslua ty o“ ‘ma ritain this year at a cost and pray for the 000, half of which is a gift un- utual aid, S. C. Barry of the ment of Agriculture told This war has brought into a ight the need of r agriculture. Armies, navles and air wmllln"l mm "m" l forces in wartime. even more than ons ls punishable by death. I nmav. JULY s1. use Huge Beef Market Agriculture Minister Gardiner has announc- the consummation of a new contract with lllQ Jlflfled Kmfldom. This provides that the British market will absorb not less than 100,. 000,000 pounds of Canadian beef at steady prices. Since s. prime steer weighs anywhere 50m 1.000 to 1,200 pounds live weight, the contract means the removal from the domestic market of at least 100,000 head of cattle. This ensures that, while there will be no need for beef rationing in Canada, the spectre of a sur- plus of live cattle vill be banished and farm- ers may count upon a good market for their [Ioducts at satisfactory prices. The contract is for a miiiirmim of 100,000,- 000 pounds of bccf, but .\Ir. Gardiner seems confident that additional supplies will be pur- chased by Great Britain. Thus, the final total of shipments may he three or four times 100,- 000,000 pounds. In I940 the United Kingdom regained her position as the chief market for Canadian pro- ducts, which she has held since i932, with the single exception of the year i939. In terms of value, Great Iiritain takes nearly’ half of all the producegxportcd by Canada, while the United States takes slightly less than 40 per cent. Roughly speaking, Canada has sold $3 worth of goods to the United Kingdom, over a long period 0f years, for every $1 worth she has bought from Britain. Less than 2o per cent of our imports come from the “other Country, as against between 6o and 70 per cent from the United States. Now that there is an opportunity to con- solidate wartime gains, it is urged as most iiii- portant that Canadian farmers maintain the quality of their products. Long-term contracts will tend to guarantee inflated agricultural pro- duction against sudden and drastic curtailment of orders. \\‘c have been trying for years to obtain s larger share of the British beef trade. Shipment of processed beef, which is provid- ed for in this new contract, gives Canada an advantage over Argentina: we can lay down beef in the United Kingdom in l0 days, which means that it is fresh beef. Shipments from Argentina involve an ocean voyage 0f 30 (lays, so the product of our chief .competitor must be frozen. , In addition to taking Canadian beef. Great Britain has contracted to take a billion pounds of Canadian hogs, a quarter-billion pOunds of Canadian cheese at least. and the equivalent of 96 million dozen eggs. This means real money in the pockets of Canadian farmers and gives point to the recent statement of Lord Beaver- broolCs Daily lixgircss that Britain will be doing business at the same old stand after the war. Biggest Provincial Cabinet The C. C. F. is to have in Saskatchcivan the largest provincial cabinet in Canada. The cah- inet is to consist of l2 men, each with a port-~ folio. Ontario also has a dozen ministers. but three of them are without portfolio: other prov- inces get along with from five to nine. Actually mort- thnn one-quarter of the C. C. F. members in the Saskatchewan House are to be cabinet ministers. getting $5,000 a year in addition to the sessional indemnity of $2,000. The Liberal cabinet had eight members at $5.000 a year, so there is a net increase in cost of $12,000 a year in salaries. But that is a small item in the bill. As the Ottawa Journal points out, four new departments have to be organ- ized. and these departments must proceed to spend the public money to justify the inevitable set-up of deputies. assistants, clerks, inspectors, and so on. To be fair, the C. C. F. does not preach economv-—in fact thrift is not much discussed nowadays on the political platforms. Socialism promises a rz-orgtiiiiziitioii of society. however. and if l2 men are necessary to socialize Sask- atche\vau——omitting the farmers at that-one wonders what sort of a cabinet Mr. Coldwell would find necessary were he to take over Par- liament Hill. Airborne Troops Once the baitlc is joined the tactical use of parachute battziiions includes the capture of bridges and .' ' ds, cutting enemy communi- cations and n; ports and beaches. They may also he llrfltl to create a diversion in order to confuse the enemyg or may constitute guard carry with them radio sets, weapons, ammuni- after they have landed. Heavier equipment is ling; ball, l-‘ll'°PPe‘l b)’ Swill-ll? ‘llslllmllvfly ¢0l0llY¢<l Pam‘ by name~was a keen sportsman and athlete. chutes. An airborne force is self-contained. with He bad been awarded lhg Boy 510mg V.C, at lls 13W" illllllelyt 53pm". 5lllllill$ illld ll¢lll 3m" ii years of age for life-saving at sea and later lllllin“ "lllls- TF°°P Cilrlefs ¢lllPl°Y¢<l i" lll¢ was a representative of Britain at the Boy Scout Horsa and Hadrian, while it has recently been Jamboree in Holland. Hi5 difficulty ovgr the revealed that the Hamilcar, the tank-carrying football was mentioned m Barringlon Dalby, Elldcl- l5 ""'“’ l" "Pelallflll- Alllml" "MP5 a"? the well-known sports commentator of the p transported to the scene of action in gliders grammh H, made enquiries and \\~' by pilots of the (‘ilider Pilot Regiment, who are volscy, the Alpl-jnglaml volunteers from the army, and who take part and managfl- of {be Millwall Football Club, of. l" laml llgllllntl Wlle" llley have lallflfll lllQlF fered to give the last football in his possession fllfcffill- liadles “ml flvclllll‘ limll Wllll all‘ because he had a rather special feeling about lads in Gibraltar-he has a son serving there. side combatants and wearing the same uniform Home Gum-d duligs pfgvenfgd My, Voisey front with the addition of the “dog collar", padres mming to the microphone to "present" the ball our i" tlwir Pouches first aid Outfits and rom- himself, to Miss Gilbert did it t... his behalf. But iiiunion sets. _R. A. M. C. airborne doctors land the problem wasn't entirely settled even then. fully equipped t0 olKT-"ltt. dud all "Kditlil Sub- She has got the ball, but how to get it to Gibraltar plies including blood transfusion sets are specie is another puzzle to be solved. No doubt she borne forces and paratroops. Trained along- coiiference. In i939, 000 eggs to Britain. the present level of Can- ht possibly extend through supplied only iz,ooo, Barry estimated that adian production mig i946 and into r917. s been great progress "slpce the first across the wondering earth." That was in the Neolithic go, but more advancement for fighting and heroism he death can help-German captured near cherboura. Roosevelt is still hunt- Mr. Ross Macdoiial Ont., saw fit t0 war the tariff on farm an international movement to lo as an isolated attempt to bribe He foresees that the c4 d, M.P., for Brantford, 'il Mr. Ilsley that taking off two centuries than in ceding thousandrof years. _Farm- ing is a complicated business to- day. The same basic problems as afflicted the first cultivator-the need for sun, rain and fertile soil in the right measures -, still ex- ist on every farm. but in addition there are riddles associate the War We Thought was End War and Make the for Democracy" seems he ease in a mouthful und perpetuate a couple of slogans that t and choice 25 years 8'0 -—Ottawa Citizen. wer tariffs, but Iaberaliazn. and because! of its historical roots this l20-year- old journal has a right to a hear- lng when it speaks foi- the Mari g up the Federal poll- aal outlook, it. coneliiides that the Liberals will get Prairies as a result, and are go- t of seats in Ontario —— includ- liliood. the Brantford seat. Mr. arest thinking Mem- and comparative standards of liv- lng. An encyclopedic definition of agriculture mentions merely pre- paring the soil. sowing seed. re- moving the crop. and the raising and feeding of cattle and In today's practice, the farmer's worries start earlier and continue later than these opera- l-fe must decide what crops to plant, using his best Judgment of the probable demand of coin- plicated natlonal and internation- nl trade in which millions nf other farmers are competing. and the crops are garnered. he must market them to the best advant- This complexity of farm life is recognized by urban dwellers. who are taking greater interest than ever before in agri- cultural conditions. draw their livelihood from indus- try realize that a large prosperous rural population would p basis for widening national pros- Word o! a rich fish came last week 0m Cape Town. The flsh is the f an extract 81'.) times richer hon the best cod- commonly called the by South African fishe bafaro (Polyprion Am thlmbleful of its liver oi vitamin A to supply a for eight months-Tl I like a mind that is a field. W119" l smtwbiédfi s hillside stretch o1 A mix?‘ gihillagoefllfi. keep its nets a mingotnwia-snt been wflvlllfld W election is there.» and not in the Central Provinces. With something to say about the [géty the Maritlmes have been bers in the House. Mr. John MacCormac, the Canadian journalist, in “The N points out that U. N. R. R. that in any territory under cupation, the armies will do tory freed from enemy occ ermnents will insist on doing their own relief. All that the U. N. R. R. A. needs is a small staff to co-ordinate shipments from the coun- tries which contribute. Mr. H. H. Lehman and his cohorts of pink theorists, now numbering 40o in Washington alone, are unnecessary, and will soon vanish from the ‘I ew York Times" A. looks like a flop; Allied military oc- the relief. In terri- upation, local Gov- ent tendency in Ot- iss Maritime claims as sentiments of frustration. have," it says, "even by n pr ent Minister of the present. govern- ment being tenneéid Eirt the Mnrltlmcs rp-ulated by foolish There are many folk who can still look wit! Lm t. iare-Confederationl some minds are litlée a 111W“ -.' sm .da.llv nded. -——~ - l , well-roiled with not Manitoba are ciifdlt- elm “m”: equal to dams elsewhere lch cost thousands of uild and maintain. The beaver, too, works without. or concrete, his only tools, W62 s Thoughts trained to shape quota-I Set in pruned hedges, with no Babs in sight. Give me a mind 0n which nld trees : . 08 i. l should be proud to have him on her Where free brooks run and core- coat of arms, and Canadians might his efficient industry. r day's and any on disregard that sentiment Mose at this time of day the e Muritfme Provlnc as n combined butt y. they could solve tending nroblt-ins better “A story from the front says that n. Eisenhower always keeps a prayer book on his desk wherever h is increases the country‘s respect for him, if it could be in- creased. Most great American zen- erals include a prayer book or Bible or both as mighty helpful in the the right. They can talk all and mystery weapo it beats any mys- wcapon all hollow." — Dave Boone. in the New York S perlty through enlarged outlets for the products of urban Many of téiese urban dwellers visit farming country in spring and see gardens of young vegetables, or in fall. to admire the wide fields of grain. They are overcome with a longing for a kind of peaceful life which appears very ideal to peo- ple accustomed to the high tempo and complicated standards of ur- bnn society. But. when these city people enquire into the facts rurnl life, they find that the trou- bles of city experience are simple ews, despite recent statements by Mr. (Pod-bout, that had Mr. King not played datig- crous party games, for ivhicli the c now suffering, and had he imposed the draft r service anywhere at the time of the fall of ‘rance or the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Mr, Godbout would have given his wholeheart- ed support. Now anything may happen in Que- bec. Mr. Godbout may be defeated. There may be a Government made up of Duplessis and Laurendeau supporters. Or Mr. Godbout may be returned despite the gloom of many of his we shrill set about e mny be more In fyD c statement than meets y M1050 death. injuries. and properly l-llflfl damage, but its death and lrijuryl toll would be greatly reduced if! tcyeiyone took some simple precau-l ans. gplilatwgtretches no fi "What we want in England is an 1L5 View is not l" be confused aristocracy of talent." Butler, president 0f th Edllcfltiml. at Oxford. destroy all the old stand- llnk uo all the dlffe education. I hope I link up all the sch ioned public schools or ype of secondary schools, one vast family. I do not want tap places reserved for certain people but reserved for anyone who lent to carry them --iut. basis of the whole idea Education Bill." —— London Sketch. will suggest puttln" tl anti-British scntl and in distinct contr ec. the sons of those ern Provinces have rnlld colors in this war with be faced in farming. They discov- er, indeed. that they are becoming more and more involved in shoul- derlng a share of the farm load, Iinstead of being able to enter the b wide open spaces and drop part of the urban burden. The farm prob- lem refuses to stay on the farm. because the prosperity of agricul- ture is so vital to the whole na- a storm comes . Houses, barnsl and other buildings-the bigger the! tter - are good shelters. but s are not The British Navy rather prides itself on its bearded officers and ratings. Canada was fol- lowing suit until the powers-that-be intervened. A recent memorandum issued in the foundland Command asked captains to encour- age their men not to wear the facial adornment. The order stemmed from a post-inortem on the sinking of the Canadian destroyer Valleyfield, which disclosed that at least two of the victims might have had a better chance of survival had they not been wearing beards. water mixed in with their whiskers and choked them. Anbther consideration has been that, in a last gamble, the enemy might resort to and the navy holds that itls breathe in a res 0 BS O [)8 ___—_—_ so r "unis llzhfitni deaths that “_ T _':'=' t cur each year in the nation would _ be avoided if golfers and picniokers’ - be" f“ eheltermeagugfg; agntslgydwg: FOI’ FOOl Alllllblllll CONSULT h .v i tlom and their liom that will be niarke l the days to ccnic feelintz of neglect and if ever it was Justine d not. only because been called upon to H. transparinilo elanri with valor a s torm waiting for??? to blow over. Canada's Farm Lance n you're fldyng Mom m a swab‘ in d ed h I 5,524: ages}. H- 1- A- BROWN "l." s a s e c , I ‘ lltllphlnz is" cisneemedfgiwelrciif Oflhnpedlc In all Canada there are 3 1-2 million square miles of land. pnd only $0,000 square miles“ are ‘P0- tcntitil agricultural land’, accord- h ing to the Canada Year Book. Ii. is a fallacy to accept low popula- tion dcnsity per square mi prime fziclo evidence of Ere t ab- sorptive capacity. such as physical environment. cli- topography, lpcation. sociological surroundings must be considered. Canada's “great open reduce. under the merely m“; physical test of land adaptability. to half n million square miles, of which 211,000 are already lh U59- The Department of Interior divided Canada into three broad The Sassenach. or even the Can- y favor leaving Gaelic who like to speak lt, and may suggest that it has no con- lOn with English anyway. But would be a wrong assumption. nk back to scme including Shake- speare's, with their quaint chorus- lines such as “Fal. 1a la!" or "Tuornl. crnment has liiid an cp- er before, to cs- lflme scale in the make up for the t an economic lag. ' recoirnized the iiccc i =6 s i. h r» ‘n: r. . -. 5 wit} :1: amp" 3.’;‘.‘....‘.’§.‘°“ d“ Pllllllsslllllal llfiifllt t chance entire length, e sudhHlS-Fl £1 to a a s yes an pes the kitchen or cellar, arid shun H & hi ....."..i."..ri.::t...""e::s an l l CimFpfrq-i" Li; eVilllldOW or door. artlcu-i CHARTERED ACCOUNTUNTS Iieep away from wire fencesJ wires of all types. metal objects 011d 0106s <11!!!‘ ns a storm. The. H 1-» difficult enough to pirator without thc stifling ef- uff," say the uninform- ed. But wait a minute! "Pal. la for instance. originally meant "Wel- poet, died this date i796; his fflllle" and 1°’ "day" he was twent_y-five years of age, and for sometime afterwards he and brother Gilbert stuck to farming Ayrshire, but misfortune attended rts, farming did not pay. Yet, "it was at il/Iossgiel", says W. Healey, "that the enormous possibilities in Bitrns were revealed t0 Burns himself; and it was father died when nonny, nonny" comes Gaelic for “Hail to the moon." The any. seems to be that what dismissed as nonsense can some- mes be traced back to good sense. —Sydney Post-Record of tihe Liberals and and unproductive. there is a margin, and the dec ion ivhether to bring Efirllil" ll‘ under the plow often depends upon it the question of the return, which SB tosses the problem squarely the lap of marketing. Reduced to its simplest terms, a farm ls a chemical plant, develop- ed by capital represented by land. machinery and live stock. This es- tablishment takes a few raw ma- ituess why this rnre ll A good many grandparents are squeezing some solace out h having a chance to see en's children every dny Normally these old le would be fobbed off with a r grandchildren on Sun- at Mossgicl that he all his best and strongest work. The revelation once made he - - - wrote masterpiece after masterpiece, with a rapidity, an assurance, a command of means, a brilliancy of which make his achievement one of the remarkable in English letters." period were written "Halloween", “Holy \Villie's Holy Fair", “Scotch Drink", Deil", the poems to "The Louse “The Mountain Daisy", 0f iniperishable fun, sa “Epistle to a Young F “O Life! how pleasant‘ in the army's rays the hills adorning! Cold-hausing Cautioifs n0 one fully understands. turns out ham and est-ZS. ‘W108i. cheese, potatoes. t beefsteaks, and the other foods which enter into the needs of hu- man organism and cater to its pal- . To measure the pwdlwtlvlty of soil has been t: M810!‘ Billfifl‘ ment of laborator es by the Dominion and by PYOV- Those interested in the de- velopment of Canada realize that many failures in farm Setl-Itmelll are due to the niacin: u! caller 00l- onists upon land that is worn will or rocky. or poorly situated. ay afternoon or occasionally on a week night when a sitter was need- But now, with the father over- seas, arid the mother at some war . in many families it's up to parents to look after the arltimes have reasons fori When Sir Harry Met His Lassie Jolly Beggars”, 1118011118 on Tuesda evening. July 4th Z th h cui-ritiui-i wifiietilii iiiitiiidgmiliii “"“'""""~‘\"-“-‘*‘-U-‘\-'- si i e l unison. Roll "Offlllflnd members, which w d b . .,..,_.' A "3535: §,,,',~',',>,\§.'.d“l153"=l°'-1= ti» ll. F. AllOlllBiiLll inutes of lst ti and annrzvedin sileevif causes-sir Account-a no lantern Trust Bull Bin; Charlottetown - ll s 1'ei1re-' in tn l wvwwv-rs-wm 011N115 and glibiinp: and flies siiartinagr oggblngg a big bass buted among m b . ' ale of remnaniin reiiisslizgd‘ aucrileliilf '—_ e 22.22.. in "i" All" s ng of a mother who works on the night shift. a arandmother who sometimes hag difficulty remember- lng that it isn't her baby, and a grandfather who makes excuses to e during the day to say why-coo" and get his tn- d babies have a way of sui-vi he old people. although loud- y complaining that they are being run ragged. are growing up with a aby again. They have that howl- g. tyrannical evidence of their very home with them. — rd “Address to the and many another gem riend", he moralizes: (Janadlan Development Canada is a younE COlHllTY- “d its land has not been tilled with the some intensity or for the some length of time as that of European Q a in O 5 rs o 5 E m a» rs P" w ‘J n. i re u E u: i: I sun-r Like school boys, at the expected warning. to joy and play - - - Perhaps it may turn out a sang, Perhaps turn out a ll‘ land for agriculture near Port. Royal, N. 5-. l" 1606, so this Letter is being iwb- d lished about the 335th anniversary of that great event. When Chill" visited Hochelaflfl llfllfll’ the Olly nf Montreal) in i636. he found ex- tensive fields around the site of the Head Office 0 Royal Bank of Canada planted to corn, and the Indians were STOW" lng benns, pelas, and cucumbers in t l l ar ngs. glliailziuiiiiteiiegt that the earliest Pub‘ lic notice of farm lands open for settlementtpxppearelgrin 1682. 01ft!‘- r m" tiggpot. Joiin River 1n New 1t. was under circumstances such these that the size u! Milly of our readers will no doubt remember a. time when they took f how they were tgld it tasted. the better it was for them. en got no sugar-coated required to take a oil, they were obliged to swallow it with none of its gffensiveness re- tust as Mussollnrs victims were obllked to take fortunately, in less herot rln. one took quinine (we did), and the re- medy appeared to be worse than the ease. for one never seemed to be the bitter taste out of Then he suddenly riveted on a girl in her ‘teens-she reshness, and Wig small- y faahioned.‘ Silo Jengvth home-made m bonnet tied with The most surprised nvin in Gibraltar the other day was probably a 21-year-old L.A.M. serving with the Fleet Aii Ann. His dearest wish came true in a near-magical fashion ivhcn he was told over the air that a football had A relative of his wrote to the producer-Joan Gilbcrh-of the BBC programme "Hello Gibraltar” to say that he l" “"8" l°l'¢°>' ‘ll flllllnlll" "001" lllolllllll llll had tried by all means, both locally mid else- in gliders or transport ziircraft. Paratroops “bu-l; l0 gel a football fol- bis "gang" at the Pointed as follows: Sick, Mrs. sensitive face, a well and a mass of soft glistening curls. Hairy Lauder could not stop looking Q soon sought a formal intro- before long told her in h way. I'll lo’ ie as long ‘Iliey were married in a llbr the balance o! h been obtained for him. Naval Station on the Rock, where he'd been for dis K5011. and fiveryllllllg "ecfi-‘BYY l° lllPP°fl lllfim two years, and he‘d become desperate about get- OPEN BEADOWS l dwflslht- tions neatly mended. Ma: [factor Max Factor ow er less heifers gran: Where bzirs are down in green, un- l -———- A d iluardedt. ‘iiitiadqiliild-it throng/h n eoversa s .!'~ I summer days. —Adin Ballou, in The New York , Times. filial - -s - _._ ._ ,__ 45° _“"" " _ oxema ant: Oil - ‘i now T0 AVOID any _ _ J35. and 323 LIGHTNING "M" ———— — — 3- MA and most important safety dw that many of the .=-;_—-- w. ber D. McCann, Westinghouse _ e. lightning sfiemhpiovtzuitiiis tram .V BIS 5R0 W en S3 fl 8 . 1n 8 hlith filigree elafboratorfiz ‘wivhiliil . 5 ° mfilPm-i 0 it! Great George Street‘ llghtn bomb dd lh t of h t ' gguzliliifcigstreakgd harmliasslii, to in: HMRLOTTETOWN" all“ metallic ob their therisope Coosea lironfclc. place near the centrenof a room. I58 Grafton Street. Charlotiietan, 155F110 buildlnaa and modern tii dto oonduot lghtnlng "to the W l. BENTLEY L13. ““'____________ s a BENTLEY it C-"‘L§§QINITI\JYI%MEN'S Barristers lliil-‘RIIOPIIIEJI-Il- The Carleton Women's Institute l“ "*"°° 9"” et for their regular monthlyl ..".._._"- _ _ , ttees were Robert Ca uth d . . , -——" ilesple. rbroxiiiiismfnhfrlbfrstllgdolii nmgyzifhflggilgalttllfmlnsl Lunchalntlnllllgsljlliahtcalngas Maclificlkdin. mdslllthugm “loam d“, P, m Thomas Madtlieken and Mia. Erl: U’ ' s‘ R" m “l Thomson .r.:-.i,~r -= "i- ‘fiie"iii"““-'b»fi-fih = “P - l- °°l' In promoting "go o leetion amounted to 56 cents. A m; plvlslon be odwlil‘ Armvg delicious lunch was served. M t- “an m" fng closed with "The King." u Geneiilalulifnclazulzhtoii. It appears that the L.A.M.-Davies, Gamma! w“ a" m‘ Valance. the little S termined. Each‘ separation 131d u," u, and there was no n the great Cmned ing him to perfect his son and costumes. listening ‘ hearsals in their plain i ‘ , l be! rose to popularity cod. All through the life of ‘ ‘ . the plain lit/tie sweet- ourly-hetided girl that. sto open-air that Sunday was to encourage him success. suaiain him f trial and difficulty om coal dust to gold clear and cultivate. In law? d! with bald prairie to work. standard size was set at I80 acres. still later, in a reign of machin- ery and railways. many quart-er section farms proved to be t small for profitable production. A the same time, the ambltioh farmers has often led them take more land than the properly manage. Eeonome auth- orities say many a farmer would gain by applying his capital and l labour to a smaller iii-ea. Aband- d oned farms bear witness to over- Jtpansion as rnuch as to exhaust- on of the land. There were, 32.500 abandoned d arms in Canada, grass or bush. Other farms. still producing only a frac- heir capa (To be continued) convfieivr accassoiw Sea. snails. equipped with a "band about its taste. but most. unbelievable today how much infrequently taken the: wholesome re- ething else was not addition to net it out of m. Who does not remem- le who had lost all theitr h el used to think that. the thful was the enjoyable. the healthful was the nauseous o; ‘otherwise objectionable 8 f notball team trainer th lies to many things other t ds and medicines. All pleasure as more or less ques- It Was wicked to go to e. to read novels. to dance. ids-San Francisco Argo- t 14-! the little salvation lassie. by Sir l-farrv fmidei-‘s sid EXPLOSION CAUSED DEATHS ‘IOWYN. Wales —(CP)— sons of John Evans, south Me rangin from nine to l3: were killed lh k d ally packed to withstand the shock of loading. will find someone to imlse it. w" of teeth are able to bore hole; "haw" Wlllle they were uluyl Great Wars was killed sa elm. f Be good to yourself Tu irirei,‘ FINI CUT h In“ w ca.“ “N. Bullet caps were found g one kfor rolling your oum lMX FAOTOII HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY AIDS Max Factor Face _ __ 5c Mlx Factor Panes Up — — - - -_ ._ Mu Factor Llpstlo ._ _ ._ _ _. _. 5 Max Factor Rou| Max Factor CTIdT - ~ — — — - 15¢ Ma l‘ t P an: $53.12!.“ —-—-—-——-’-'5cantl Foundation - 75¢ Max Factor Malreu ll-lquld) — 75c and $1.35 1701118)": Sun Tan Lola: "' _ _ - — _ - —- 50a l LIQUID STOCKING l DE Ill’ . No-Hoz - .- -- ._ _ Dewey's “S Secrets Dllrfllvn Les Do - - is,» TllE 2 MIOS 149 Great George Street pdangerlng pgrwng ‘ u -- 1- Thunderbolu i in Wmillfl-"l-i. The tops aéid sides of Mcbem‘, c? Benl-lley