v . .ri.i".~rrr.-lr=éraf..i.r.=jli.,_m'w " PAGE’ roux IIIE oiuiaonrrnvni summit radians-w. m... s. ls-Lue. u. r. Yleotnaldaat, a. a. Burnett. I‘. s. ~ """“"'““" -. .. ._ . ll "aa-"urxirrrmwrmr-arrasu- "- _wanu_usnar. auous-r u. 19;;- ceremony on Friday afternoon, at whichitishopflitherewillbea large attendance of all ‘ ‘ rested in the development of our Island home. From the site of the cairn, which is constructed oi Island cob- ble atone brought down from Eilcrs- lie, there is presented perhaps the finest view to be seen on Prince Ed- am vs rms narvccn The intensive heat wave has not only. been detrimental to root crop! and late grain but has multiplied enormously the danger oi forest fire. Two such fires, in different scctio of the Province, are repor- ted Ln today's Guardian as having‘ rad-urn; Director-J. lsilnaatt. I. a. r. ‘aw ulllltero-Iralk Walkard . C THE TOWN GUARDIAN l- l. 0. l delivered- aul Ulkd Illkl. rwereproaecuted andthe caused ' In the meantime, be emphasized that fires of do“ of fire damage, which fire-fighting always entails. THE BIG FAIR The big Provincial Fair is now well under way, and this afternoon, which is a, half-holiday for many of our , the attendance pro- mises to be one of the largest ~in _Exhibition history. Yesterday the attendance was large for an opening day and the horse races and thril- ling vaudeville acts, as Well as the fine exhibits in the various classes of farm products, livestock, handi- craft, etc., caused much favorable comment. So, too, did the splendid evening programme. The new light- ing system installed for the arena and vaudeville platform proved a big improvement, enabling the horse show and entertainment features to be seen very effectively. The gor- geous fireworks display at the close oi the evening programme eclipsed expectations, and thrilled young and old alike. i The attractive appearance oi all the exhibition buildings and equip- rnent-spick and span in fresh coats. oi paint and whitewash-was very favorably commented upon by visitors to the Fair yesterday. The Association has indeed spared neither pains nor expense to make this year's show an outstanding suc- cess, as all concerned hope and con- fidently expect it will prove to be. THE BRITISH WAY Just now, with Mussolini rattling the sabre and uttering dire innuen- docs against Great Britain for ven- turing to interfere in the Ethiopian question, it is timely to recall a poem by the late sir William Wat- son. The poem, entitled “Hate: to Certain Foreign Detrsctors." sums up nicely the British attitude. Sire. if the truth muat needs be tol We love 50° . And yet, my masters, you may wait d. not you that rail and Till the Greek Kalends for our hate. No spendthriits oi our hate are we. Our hire is used with husban- We hold our hate too chcloe a thing For ligiht and careless lavishing. We cannot, dare not, make it cheap! For holy uses will we keep A thing so pure, a thing so great As Heavens beulg-nant gift of hate- Is there no ‘ ‘ sceptred Wrong? No torturing Power, endured too long? Yea; and for these our hatred shall Be clolstercd and kept vlrginal. AN HISTORIC AREA The unveiling of the cairn at Hol- and Cove on Friday afiornoon at lour o'clock, which calm, recently erected by the Historic Bites and ~' Monuments Board oi Canada com- ‘ memorates the work of Surveyor General Captain Samuel Holland, will attract attention to the wealth oi historical associations connected with the Rocky Point area, where ‘the Government of the Island was “carried on, and where the fisheries laud bu-ouaht under cultivation years be- fore the primeval forests had been removed from the ground which 5 E 5g s re. .l., "§§?§§§§s$a l .n; 55%.. property damse- lt should are easily started in periods oi drought, when the shortage oiwater makes them exceedingly difficult to fight. even where there is fire fighting It‘ equipment. It is the duty of every l? citizen, at such times, to exercise the greatest precautions. A lighted match or‘ cigarette butt dropped carelessly might result in thousands not to speak oi the danger to human life ward Island. The ferry steamer leaves Prince Street wharf at 1.30. 2.30 and 3.30 o'clock, while the drive around from Charlottetown by North River, Clyde River and West River bridges, a distance oi twenty- three miles, is one of the most en- joyable possible. EDITORIAL NOTES Big day at the Exhibition today. optimism is the key note in ag- riculture today. I-Ialf-holidays are nearing their end-make the moat of them. The production of creamery but- ter in Canada in July amounted to 37,110,468 pounds compared with 36,501,933 in the preceding month and 35,148,698 in July i934. Perhaps when Bret Ham's Truthful James remarked that "for ways that are dark and for tricks that are vein the heathen Chinee is peculiar," he also had in mind some politicians in election time. What is Jungle Law? The sur- vival of the physical fittest, the subjection of the weak by brute strength. What is the Christian Law? “A bruised reed shall he not break, the smoking flex shall he not quencW-the protection of the weak by the strong, the helping oi lame dogs over stiles. It is now ofliclally admitted that an auto is part of the machinery oi a farm. In a Farmers Creditors Air ngcment case in Edmonton, (Alta), some of his creditors Notes By The Way That Italy and Ethiopia will be at war before many moons is now almost a certainty. This news has attracted the attention of many who seek adventure and it ls claimed that many from Canada will take part in this conflict. The experience oi war is not pleasant, in fact it is a blood. revolting ex- perience, and it seernsyto us thatin our ao-cailed civilised state such conflicts are ‘ecidedly out of place. _Wars are destroyers, not only of life and wealth, but oi the moral character of nations that are an- gaged in the conflict. The sooner the world reallres war is a sense- less thing the better it will be.—Ex. General Smut-s has mentioned a side of the Halo-Ethiopian affair on which little has yet been said. Possibly the less said the better; that it is not by any mew Out- side the bounds of possibility for it to develop into a color conflict. lil- volving other nations and races. That color does not enter into thfl dispute is at present apparent: but it is easy for the issues to become confused. It were well therefore on evefy occasion when color is intro- duced to the discussion in any form to emphasize the fact that it is extraneous to the P0111“ M l5‘ sue-Ex. Rome has heard the complaint that an Italian consuls car was halted by Ethiopian soldiers “with injurious words and attitudes." This is rather too thin for saneral use. The world at large is not. perhapS, very reasonable and 108l- cal, but still it will not expect the lowly Ethiopian to smile every ti!“ Italy hits him with a. knobbcd stick-Memphis Commercial Ap- peal. Whatever be the faults oi demo- cracy, and they are multltudinous. the world has as yet shown us no heme;- way, and it is infinitely pre- ferable to what is takinB D1809 l" every country where dictatorship holds sway. Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown. Nil the 01d saying, but uneasy lies the head that wears a dictatorship. for every ill and misfortune is laid to its door, unless. as so often hapPefl-‘i- public unrest is turned upon acme scapegoat: in Italy, Abyssnia; in Germany, the Jews. , Just recently about 90.000 perflohl at three dog tracks and one horse race meeting in Massachusetts bet a total or $956,343, the Bostontrack alone accounting for $633927- T1115 is a record for a single day- AP- parently the New Englanders have plenty of money to play with and their famous "conscience" overlooks gambling. thought an automobile was a lux- ury for a man with debts of over $11,000, but his counsel observed that a cheap car is a farm neces- sity nowadays. and Mr. Justice Ewing, chairman of the board. agreed with him to the extent that "a man has a right to bu)’ ally- thing he wants, if he can pay for it," and in this case, since the debtor wished to retain the car, he will be allowed to. “At the same time," added the chairman, "a lot of good farmers have got along,and are still getting along, without automobiles.” One of the best boosters of Mr. Bennett's Ottawa agreements is the Liberal Provincial Minister of Agriculture gfor Nova Scotia, Mr. J. A. Macdonald. It is his con- sidered ‘ ‘ , the minister states, "the time is ncw ripe" for a strong forward movement. Production oi hogs and eggs especially should be raised, he asserts, and attention should also be given the dairyihg industry. One hundred hens to every farm and tripling of the number of hogs now raised consti- tute the ministefs objectives in these directions. He may “reason- ably assume," he says, that dairy- ing will be looked after in any event. "This year," he declares, "the market for essa and hogs is decidedly stronger, and for butter somewhat stronger than for several years. Business men are pretty well agreed that we are on the road to financial recovery. No one can guarantee the future, butsigns point to at least a maintenance oi present prices with reasonable prospect of further advancm." Hon. Mr. Weir, Minister of Agri- culture. has returned from the wea- tera provinces with very encourag- ing news c! the progress of rehab- ilitation plans in the areas which suffered ao severely from drought. The Minister is enthusiastic, and. apparently. with reason. cirricual! enough, the Bennett Government has madeno very marked effort to acquire legitimate political capital from what is one of the most im- pcrtairt constructive. undertakings standing to the credit of the ad- ministration. Few enterprises in which the Government has engaged rank lather in importance than the pinned attempt to guard the southern areas oi the three Prairie Provinces against the recurrence of ruinous droughts. The idea orig- inally putlforward that a general escduafromthesediau-iataahoirld bearrlngadwaseeonomieailyuri- sound. Aeeerdingtoliswsirztlaa spplicatltaicrwateroomervation nuurlIrMllttaod are still llhthloloaofthewat- oauuuittayat Italy's press campaign against Great Britain would be amusing were it not dangerous. It is like the conduct of a boy who. havinfl failed in boodwlnking a. bigger boy when he desired to have his own way in dealing with a third and smaller boy. hurls insults rrorn a distance. The chief accusation is “hypocrisyfi Particularly have Ital- ian newspapers discovered that while Britain seeks to withhold Italy from Ethiopia. she is “orien- tating herself" to a. policy of col- laboration with Japan at the ex- pense oi China. This interplew‘ tion was given reports that Sir Frederick Ireith-Ross, British fin- ancial expert. would confer with Japanese economists this autumn. It is probably based on something more subtle than that, and is an attempt to sow discord between Great Britain and the United Sta- tes.—l3bz. As a result of the withering at- tacks made in. his writings by Charles Dickens and oi the repre- sentations of social reformers, the vicious practice of imprisonment for debt was suppoied 9° h!" been put an end to in Great Brit- ain nearly a century ago. And it will therefore come as a surprise to many people to learn that up to the present. in England and Wales, about 20,000 people annually have been going to prison for failure to meet their pecuniary obligations. 1...... WI-"aq-u... no. VABICOII! VIINS SOMETIMES RETURN AFTER INJECTION 0E OPGB-ATION e When it was discovered that var- icose veins could be injected with various substances which them to shrivel up, and that itwas no longer nelasssry to undergo op- oration and remain in hospital for two or three weeks. it was a great boon to many sufferers. caused nonetheless it must be recognized Lately it has been found that just Is in the case when operation 1c performed, sometimes these var- icose veins return, much to the dia- appointment oi patients. However though this was some- what discouraslrls. a method which combines the operation and the injection is now being used which dues not require that the patient enter the hospital as it can bedcne ill ally well equipped surgery. A test is first made to we 1f the valves in the large vein on the in- ner side of the thigh are in good shawl that is will hold blood. This is done with the patient standing, and pressure is applied with the thumb of one hand on the lower end of this large vein. The blood ls then milked upwards and i1 the vein remains collapsed it shows gal: the valves are in good condi- Il howl!!!‘ the vein fills from above it shows that the valves are in poor condition. 11 then the valves will not hold the blood from running back down the veins of the thigh and leg it means that the vein must be tied oil’ as high up in the thigh as ssible. and the patient returns later to have the veins lower down injected. When the valves are holding, however, the injection with one or other of the substances is mgde without it being necessary, g3 g rule, to tie oil’ the vein up above, As soon as the injection is made a PM! ll placed over the puncture and the needle withdrawn. The pod is bound firmly in place by adhes- ive tape. Injections may be re. peated every two or three days. DY- W- M- C°°l>er in Annals of Blllaaly reports 20a cases treated in the above manner without a. single case Occurring again, The point then is that the injec- tion mcthod is still considered best, but that as there is a tendency for some varicose vein; u; return, the above teat is now made and when necessary the upper part o1 the “Fae vein first tied and injections made later. Trade And Commerce (By Exporter) Those who laugh at predicaments have been frequently amused at 1,1,9 visage of Hon. Mackenzie King as he frequently straddled the fence on trade and economic issues. in the last session oi Parliament he Save many exhibitions of dexterity in these soul thrilling stunts. In every one of the "Reform" is- sues introduced his crutch contac- ted with the top rail in cat like watching. When opportunity seem- ed ripe he Jumped down w the op- posite side, to give battle to the in- vading legislation. Then, when 110131118 time came, with vaudeville activity he vaulted to‘ the other side, TO VOCPE FOR. 'I'l~lE OBN-OX- IOUB MEASURE. 1'16 ll 110W encased in a more ex- vlllll! spectacle. Because the end oi his performance is not yet in slant we may be premature in corn- mcnllns upon it. This exhibit is a combination of acts, the plirpggg or which is hidden. even from his fol- lowers. With agility and spirit that would do credit to a Japanese Juggler hi. lumps the fence from side to side, than Perches Ofl the top, then in desperate somersaults from side to aide again, and none can predict his final landing place. The Manketing Act is his new study. Only a few days ago he is» sued the oflicial command-Hands of! the marketing bill: don't dis- cuss it. Our first wonder on re- ceipt of this order was ,Why? We opined that it was because of the changes in provincial governments. The Act in itself he semi-occas- ionally admitted to be founded {or the benefit of better agricultural Great-is the sun, gnd wide he goes Through empty heaven without repose; v And in the (ilue and glowing days More thick than rain he showers his rays. Though closer still the blinds we pull To keep the shady parlor cool, Yet he will find a chink or two To slip his golden fingers through. The dusty attic, spider-clad, He, through the keyhole, maketh glad; And through the broken edIe oi tiles. Into the laddered hayloft smiles. Meantime his golden face around He bares to all the garden ground, And sheds a warm and glitt look Among the ivy'a inmost n . Above the hills, along the blue, Round‘ the bright air with footing rue, To please the child, to paint the _ rose. The gardener of the world, he goes. bert Iouis savanna. there have been nearly I00 cfthla applications. while in laakatebewau ‘yafl the numbers reached M00 and in Alberta approximately 2.10s. i s m.‘ Kw) nu-i- ' and sale. The question was one of administration, and Conservatives being in control in some provinces, it was transformed into a sandbag to belabour political opponents. But now the scenery is changed, Liberal governments are facing the firing squadrons. If it is wrongly administered it now strikes at different targets. Then "hands off." Don't let the enemy turn your own guns against you. Again I say "hands 011.": But before this first edictfs ink has had time to dry, we find s sec- ond and different one launched. Now, per his speech at Wingham, Ont., he favors "Compulsory regula- tim of the marketing of natural products." Oi course this "muat be approved by parliament": and of course further it must be A Liberal parliament. Not by Conservatives or any other political sect. He then mounts the topmost wrung of the fence and in a spec- tacular imitation cf an indian war dance, attuned to a newer song, he denounce: as "a wolf in sheep's clothing. gave power to manu- to establish d trade," it helped Premier Bennett establish Holland ’s Own The Guardian is indebted to Prof. D. C. Harvey, oi the Historic ‘sites and Monuments Board cf Canada, for the following interest- ing letter by Captain Holland des- cribing his survey work on Prince Edward Island in 1765. The letter. it will be noted, is dated from Ob- servation Cove (Holland Cove) where on Friday. Auz- 28. at 4 p-m-. a cairn to the memory of Captain Holland will be unveiled: Observation Cove, Near Port Joy 4 March, 1765 Dear sir. Since the last letter I had the honour to transmit to you all our communication with the Continent has been entirely cut oiI. the prep- arations we are obliged to make for our winter quarters employ u much of our attention in the Fall of the year. and it was not till the 8th of December that ,we could enter the House I built under the great in- conveniences of wanting many ma- terlals and being xposed to the bad weather which commenced near a month before we were able to fin- ish it, upon the whole it has been more comfortable than I could have expected, in a good measure owing to some stoves I provided at Que- bec and the great plenty oif firewood near us. The cold here has been as intense as in any part of Amer- ica I have seen though with sud- den intervals of rain, and soft wea- ther. This circumstance must make it evident to you that the climate is not so agreeable as that of Can- ada, the air there, though extreme- ly sharp. being generally clear and serene after the winter is well set in andthe fails oi snow over. In this place the snows are frequent. attended with thick weather which makes astronomical observations very diflicult. At other times when it has been clear it has been at the same time so severe as to oblige us often to quit the teiliscopes, to pre- vent the ill consequences of being struck by the frost. The journal I send you with this will more clearly show you the nature of the climate. Agreeab‘e to the intention I for- merly wrote to you on the 15th of February we sot out upon the sur- vey in four parties (it not being practable sooner). Lieut. Robinson being with me we finished the North East River, with all its branches. I myself surveyed the carrying place to Savage Bay, and St. Peters on the north side of the Island int the last mentioned place. I detach- ed Mr. Robinson to survey towards the Bay of Fortune eastward and from thence to proceed to the Three Rivers. since which time he has re- turned by water, though not with- out difficulty, being in distance about twenty leagues and the great- est part of the way covered with ice. He has finished the carrying Of His Ardirous Laboars In Surveying “St. John ’s Island ” pose to. pursue in the survey of the place from the end of St. Peters Bay with the River and Harbour of Fortune. the Grand River about nine miles in length and the Three Rivers. I. accompanied by Lieut. Pringle, have finished the Harbour of St. Peters, the sea coast and harbours of Savages, Tmcadie. Great and Little Rscico as well as the carrying place from Tracadie into the North East River. I was in hopes to have continued my work to Malpack but the rainy weather bclilllnlng rendered the ice unsafe to depend upon so that the scar- city of provisions, and the imprac- tibility of getting an additional sup- ply should the rivers break sud- denly determined me to return for our habitation the 17th of March. I presume I need not represent to you the difliculty which attendsour going from place to place, having no other conveniences than sledzes. drawn by dogs. Mr. Wright has surveyed St. Pet- ers and the Governors Islands which are situated on each side oi the entrance of this harbour, that river discharging itself into this bay called the West River from whence he proceeded through the woods to Malpack and finished the east side of it and the carrying place to Bedec of which place he a'so finished the east side and join- cd his survey of last autumn when the severity of the weather obliged him to desist. Lieut. Haldimand I sent to survey the North River of this harbour. and afterwards Point Prime (upon the coast); the first of those he completed (but the latter in attempting) he was affected by the frost and has been ever since incapable of service though nowhl- most recovered. Our parties have been obliged to be very small as I have but icw men. Three for each oi us with a French guide, and a seamen that I have got from Cap- tain Mowatt makes‘ our numberfive for each party. With these we shall be able I hope, before the boats ar- rive from Halifax. to finish the _ ‘ t part of the Island exclus- ive of the soundings which muat be taken in summer; by the experi- hideoua monstrosity, then swallow- ing it ala delicious vtand. is a feat familiar to the Liberal leader, and r Description ence I have acquired he" 1 F“ oonvinoedthatagrcatpmiittm service must be carried on in the winter during the moat moderate weather, or the sprill8 and 1e11- Bad r been previously acquainted with the nature of the Island (time and convenience favouring me) I could have nearly finished it by this time. by a proper dlstribllllflll of my deputies to dlflerent parts. where each might have been not any great distance from his Milw- tive habitation and where the communication for provisions and other necessaries would have been by that means easy. This would have prevented one of the UNI-Ml? difficulties and inconveniences we have sustained and which I pro- west aide of the isle of Cape Bre- ton from Cape North towards the Gut of Canso. This as there are a number of large bays and inland work makes it absolutely necessary to attempt doing as much as pos- sible during the time which the rivers and lakes are from. Our travelling equipage consists of a sledge oi a foot in breadth by six feet in length, upon which arc our beaver skin coats, a buiifalc or bear skin, a blanket, canteens and about eight days provisions each drawn by a single dog which we have pur- chased for that purpose from the Acadianc. but as the chain men TWENTY FIFTH ANN] VERSAR Y Twenty Five years ago I took over the oprletorsblp or me Central Drugstore from Mr. A. W. Reddin with Whom 1 was chief clerk for the previous ten years. Thh wed we are celebrating the Anniverau-y “PGIIIII 0B9 Qllt B810” In QIIIQI‘ to ‘h; qu- pnnm. the opportunity oi celebrating with us and taking advantage o; otl-rohexcellmt bargains that are being offered on Lin; rm on. Notonlyarewegivingdlscountaonflekensisi-m _ erllcs and Toilet Reparations but many other um, :2, being reduced for the benefit of the customer. i This Sale has been announced by radio for some dlyl and particularly in a special program over O J. C. Y. on Mmdsy evening last. We would like to meet all our friends and custom", during tbs week end for it will be to our mutual “ha,” t: if you accept this invitation to visit our store u; 1h“ e. ~ Every courtesy and consideration will this occasion as in the pest. Wlth g, b0 llwwu you on E. A. FOSTER CENTRAL DRUGSTORE not being able to carry their pro- visions which the rest of the party are obliged to do, I have found it a‘ ‘ ly necessary on that ac- count and in order to receive pro- per information to hire an Acad- ian for each of the gentlemen. A letter from Irord Oolville which I have received gives me great sat- isfaction. as I am thereby assured cf I-lis Irordshipfls inclination to for- ward the business, by providing me with boats and every other neces- sity in his power. I-lc has wrote to Captain Mowat who upon an eclai- rissment with me seems now to be better acquainted with the nature cf the service he is sent upon. My endeavours during this season of the year will I hope, convince Their mld-‘llllpa that there shall be no time lost in completing the Is‘and and by that means proving how much I have the service at heart. in which I am cheerfully assisted by the gentlemen under my direg- lion. Lieutenant Robinson is again departed for the Three Rivers, and will endeavour to do some mo“ business on that side of the coast with the help of s, canoe m1 the boats will arrive from Halifax. I have requested or Lord Coivllle , l° 01'4" me one of the armed cut- tera which are stationed in the Gul- 0i St. Lawrence, to receiveonbcnr‘ Lieutenant rraldlmand in order i 5111'"? the Magdelan Brion. r Bird Islands, which I hope will ". finished by the time we have dr- "l" Plwe- The maps of the whr I wish to transmit to Their 1m. ships =8 "for as Wssible. r ill: PWPWB $0 Sclld a set of plum o the survey of cm“; by a ma‘ o. two thousand feet to an inch with an index by a small scale. It will will-sin alxtv two sheets. -* Having round the great expedi- tion and convenience of the plan table in theeurvey oi harbours and l, rivers preferable t9 the Theodolite i or Circurnferentor I have wrotg h) FARMERS While attending the Exhibt. tion call and get the following Remedies. ivrAcs no worm rowmm A very elective remedy In the treatment and ogre or wq-ma. A sure cure. MACS CONDITION POWDER. ron noasss AND carru: Tones up the system, rgmgd. ies all akin troubles and gives a slow! coat oi hair. For- awelled legs. purifying u", blood and as an cndicator of worms it cannot be beaten. LIVE STOCK SPRAY Prepared epcclslly for Milk My, Qumbefllnd to provide me with three for the ensuing season, one for each-of the gentlemen; I ought not to omit the offers of assistance I have received from His Excellen- cy Governor wilmot, and there be- ing many surveys in the hands of his provincial surveyors, as well as in the possession of my Lord Col- viile (which were lately made by Mr. DuBarres). of great service to me but as I have no authority or power to make such Cows, Cattle. Horses. lloga and Poultry. One application repels Insects in l2 tn 24 hour's. Harmless to human and animal life when used as dtr. ected. MACS BLOOD FOOD FOB PALE AND THIN PEOPLE One oi the greatest remedies in the treatment oi Rheuma- tism. For those who have lost their appetite Mace Blood food will prove a reatoratlyn. MACS FILE OINTMENT Gives quick relief In all cases oi internal and external piles. Brlllll instant relief. We I. soul: be cured "Wit an opera on b using thee Pile Ointment. y IVAN I STOMACII MIXTURE one which none but followers of the great Mackenaie King canmccom- lish. pNot long ago, when denouncing the Hon. H. B. Stevens, he used the earns emphatic ‘hands oil." This timeitwastobininelothertban to adopt his drastic "price spreads" restrictions, was a high handed In- terference with . Iet “dot eat dog” in trade and commerce was the Liberal What when are tthtraflsudsonwiththemail- fist when Conservatives. are at Bands oi! when stag: We In ll» only llfllsltore u. ' Canada having thll Ilfiotlp. tion of Dr. L. B. Evans, noted lngllsh Pliytscisu who ob. tamed permanent runs or Stomach Conditions, nob as B10751. Heart- burn, etc. T u. ZRUSSIB 0 ale yogwheareua- iortunateeuolghtebaveh wearouewecanglveyeuper- ‘Mfillffllrwebavealarge WlllflII-io-latehuseaa. The 2 the: iilflreattleargaltllet Mali orders hequy pa. tmdodte. <7‘ an application I could wish trig Their Lordships would be ppm to procure me their assistance. 1 beg I may be favoured with i114 good opinion oi Their lordship; and of your sir. as my “grim, and diligence may deserve my with respect. Sir You most obedient and humble gr. These would be vant SAMUEL HOLLAND John Pownal, Esq. USE BRAHMIN TEA Uptown Office 153 Great George Sf. l"or Delivery illlllllifi AUGUST and SEPTEMBER Our Cash Prices are as followsi Cartage extra. Springhill Screened .. . . .. $ 5-50 Old Sydney Screened . . . . .. 9-09 Albion Screened . . . . . . . .. . 8-59 Bayview Screened .. 7-75 Inverness Screened .. 9.00 Albion Nut and Stove . . . . . .. . 9-00 Yorkshire Stove 19-90 Standard Slack r. .. ..... 4-75 Springhill Slack 6-50 6.50 Old Sydney Slack HARD COAL American Scotch Welsh _ Sold in any qusntltv- . a ey-iai-pieieano-ear-CO- Pnomr 240 Uptown Office 158 Great Georse Si’