do.‘ \ urbane “the best commission the 'iiiislii.uni-:rown iiuiinnimi _ Inning om: (Founded ism - Panama's i. ca. w. Chester s. an.“ Vino Incident a. u. Burnett.‘ r. .|. i. hector J. ll. Burnett. F. J. l. T“ lIIM-In wit. 0m. n. A. blacllnnon, o. s. o. ~~ Anochk limiter Fr a: ant Walk SUBSCRIPTION BATES . IMO p: your (In advance) iicuvusd to City .0l-I0pcryou tfiiadvauccyinaunulhx mum 15-00 let you (In advance) lulled to Canada um u.8 ,,_ Ilnbcn Audit Bureau of Circular-ton: "Tlw Strongest Memory la Weaker than thewlfeakeif lair”. THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1938 Weighed In The Balance From all quarter_s—even from its own party followers-the King Government is getting criticism for its failure to grapple successfully witluthe unemployment problem. The other day in the House of Commons there was read into Hansard a summary of the findings of thc recommendations of the National Employment Commission set up by Mr. King shortly after his election to power, and the manner in which these recommendations have been dealt with. Oppoite several of the Commission's most im- 'portant suggestions appeared the notation “No Action" or “Partially met." Few recommenda- tions were approved in their entirety, some were rejected altogether. “The thing that impresses me most," said one member in reviewing the Commission report, “after having paid $300,000 t0 secure advice from Minister of Labour could get in this country, we find that the term which occurs most often in the third column is "N0 Action”, or “Partially met." I want to suggest that if we are going to bury this Com- mission, we might inscribe on its tombstone the words: ‘No action,’ partly as a memorial of its short life, and, second, as a monument to the masterly inaction that has come as a result of its work." Perhaps the unkindest cut was the quotation. by Mr. Woodsworth, the C.C.F. leader, of a statement made by Prime Minister King on the night of the general elections, October i4, i935. What a commentary on the government's “mas- terly inaction" was this eloquent peroration! These were Mr. King's words: “In the new era which dawns today, the strug- gle for the rights of the people will, in the realm of economic liberty and security, be carried on as never before. Poverty and adversity, \vant and misery, are the enemies which Liberalism will seek to banish from our land. They have lain in wait at the gate of every Canadian home during the past five years, and their menacing mien has served to destroy the souls. as well as the minds and bodies, of an ever increasing num- ber of men and women and children in our land. We take up at once, as our supreme task. the endeavour to end poverty in the midst 0f plenty, starvation and unnecessary suffering in a land of abundance, discontent and distress in a country more blessed by Providence than any ‘ __ _,other on the face of thc globe, and to gain for individual lives, and for the nation as a whole, that ‘health and peace and sweet content’ which is the rightful heritage of all." This was a stinuniiig up, in eloquent terms. of all the pre-clcction promises made by lVlr. King and his supportcrs- Nearly three years have passed; time enough. surely, to ask, as Parliament is now asking. what the Government has done, and how much longer it purposes to mark time before tackling in earnest this “su- preme task" for which it was elected. Short-Sighted Economy Recently it was pointed out that in this Pro- v-ince the cost of maintaining Government House, except for the comparatively insignificant item of repairs, is borne not by our taxpayers but by the Lieutenant Governor himself. In some other provinces maintenance costs have run to several thousand dollars annually, and on May Ist On- tario becaiiie one with New Brunswick and Al- berta in closing their Government House as an economy measure Commenting on the Ontario Government's action in this case, the Fredericton Gleaner says: “New Brunswickers-the more elderly ones - can recall the arguments for economy which ac- companied the decision to close the stately resi- dence in \Voodstock Road. Fredericton, which had sheltered many distinguished visitors. It is about fifty ycars since a quarrel between a pro- vincial Premier and a Lieutenant Governor ended in decision to close Government House Hardly had the change been accomplished before ' the people to whom it had been presented as a fine piece of economy observed that it was they who were suffering. The upkeep of the of- ficial residence and the employment of a staff had entailed the expenditure of certain sums which were distributed quite largely in the farm- ing community. With the closing of Govern- ment House such distribution ceased. The argu- ment was that this amount was to be saved to the Province. But alas the saving was never apparent. Even with the burden of Govern- ment Hoiise removed. debt mounted. and it has continued to mount ever since- Anyone can safely take ii bet that the people of Ontario ,____ never will see the saving produced by this action ' M’ on-the part of the Hepburn Government. It also can be foretold that Ontario will experience being in awkward situations, inst as New Bruns- wick, through lack of \an official residence for . entertainment of distinguished visitors." British Cfvil Service jlarold J. Lflfilfl. i tish labour ‘of the examiners slfln it; British" r, servl that m!‘ _ The British Civil Service was one of the topics discussed in Washington recently by Professor of the London School of Econ- omics. who besides the role he plays in the Bri- has served for years as one for those who find their way _ Mr. Laski ek- _ ‘ d: ci servants in caught 7 r absolutely divested of politics, mdtthan would life in a sawmill”. he has security as long as he docs his job, with a pension after it. ' Half a dozen of Mr. Laski’s colleagues are members of Parliament, with combined terms running over 35 years, and never in all that time ha: one of them received a lelter from a constitu- ent asking for a job- The service is a four-branch hierarchy, says Mr. Laski, divided roughly on the education standards of the entrants: The lowest-“writing assistant" — group earn perhaps $20 each a week, and are recruited from those leaving school at fifteen or sixteen with the equivalent of a part high school training, The next is the “clerical" group who have the equivalent of full high school training, and left school at sixteen or eighteen. These two classes together comprise the vast bulk of the service. with 450,000 members. Of the entire British service, 80% get less than $20 a week and 70% get less than $25. The third group is the “executive" class. There are only 4,000 in it; while on top of all is the “administrative", of whom there are only 1,000» Members of the “executive" class have continued school t0 eighteen or twenty years. But it is the administrative group which is the pride and glory of the British civil service. They are picked by written examinations and inter- views, and are drawn from the keenest intellects of the best schools and universities. There is great social prestige attacked to these higher posts, and the career service is the reg- ular destination of many of the most ambitious young Englishman. The pay by transatlantic standards is commensurate with the importance of the post. Mr. Laski estimates that there arc about I00 posts that pay between $5.000 to $10,- 000; eighty paying from $10,000 to $15,000; and twenty-one at $15000- To the ability. intelligence and indefatigable energy of this group of competitively chosen men, Mr. Laski ascribes many of England's greatest social reforms. Their departmental knowledge is greater than that of many Cabinet Ministers who come to power politically, and they guide and mold their course. "Overruling" i His Excellency the Governor-General of Canada, Lord Tweedsmuir, draws attention to the form of prayer used in the Church of Scot- land before the opening of Parliament. Writ- ing in the Rotarian Magazine, he quotes the prayer as running something like this: “Bless, O Lord, the two Houses of Parliament now as- sembling and overrule their deliberations for the people's good." Commenting on this, he 0b- serves: “Overrule, mark you, not guide or direct, the assumption being that they are almost certain- to do wrong.” His Excellency thinks the words should be taken as a parable, a guide of life. “\Ve dare not overvalue authority, since we know it is our creation, but we dare not undervalue it. because we realize its supreme practical need- So we obey it and we pray for it.” ’ J‘ Editorial Notes I" One of the first fruits of the Anglo-Italian agreement is a hugh order for Canadian wheat for fall delivery in Italy. v r is m What Ontario and Quebec cannot understand is what Labour Minister Rogers is going to do with that $40,000,000 he says he needs for relief purposes. n- a v w So the laps are going to be conscripted after al. We were told Nippon would never follow Germany's lead in the matter of compulsory military service, but apparently needs must when the Chinese drive. w n: i- v It is doubtful, sefils the Globe and Mail, that the recent by-electbn vote in Edmonton East was pro~Social Credit as much as anti-Gardiner, since the Federal Minister of Agriculture is growing in unpopularity. * i I The welcome rainfall on the Prairies is bring- ing joy not only t0 the wheat growers but t0 business men generally in Toronto and Mon- treal, who foresee money pouring west to east instead of east to wcst as for the last two or three years. a v m v- Evidently Mr. Bennett got Mr. King on the raw when he offered to submit evidence to prove that Mr. Rogers was spending money like water in his own constituency of Kingston. Mr. Ian Mackenzie has been doing the same in Van- couver. Alas, Mr. Dunning is not doing like- wise in Queens. i i ll IIon_ P. M. Dewan, Ontario Minister of Agri- culture, advises the farmers to invest in agri- cultural machinery co-operatively, buying and operating tractors as communities. Economic conditions demand it, though he regrets the pass- ing of the day when the farmer took pride in driving to town behind a team. Then of course carbon monoxide is not a very good substitute for stable fertilizer- : a v u The reason why Henry Ford has invested $8,- 000,000 in Canada in development of business in‘ Saint john, N.B., Windsor, Ont., and Van- couver, B.C., is because he is satisfied that the justifies it. So states Mr. Wallace R, Camp- bell, President of the Canadian Ford Company in the current issue of the Toronto Stock Ex change Monthly B‘ulle‘tin.. i a Mr. R. B. Bennett declared in the House of Commons that “the great evil we face today in political patronage. is run by the Liberal Party executive, and men life do not fit a man for public life fundamental soundness of Canadian business the administration of unemployment relief is One Park in this country are dismissed from their positions and other men put in their places for the purpose of en- abling them to circumvent the law. That is the ‘mm reason that administration of relief is failing." Turning his attention to the Minister of Labor (Mr- Rogers) Mr. Bennett made little of his academic career as fitting hlm for public life. "After all,” he aid, "the results of an academic any better lions lffT-IIE vuiv '11» 1M: w: Gcrmsn In New m! lull: school; nu fallen on W per cent since the Nu. came into power. Our kid» [CB4 that 1! "WY are beard speaking the 1108M“. Hitler Wlll came over mu liberate them. -Ne-w Yorker. Fllhlnnable ladlca. why not have ‘your little dog tinted to mach YOur dress for special occasions? ILady has d$oovered process gun»- imtepd harmless to me most del- lcatc animal. prettiest pastel shad- es lmaglnivble-Inndon telegraph. The perfect pun ls lllll to have had its origin in the House of Com- mons. An Irishman made e state. ment which called from an English opponent one cry. “'I‘1'e6$0n." The Irishman replied: “I would have the honorable gentleman know that what Ls treason in England pe- oomes reason in Ireland-because of ‘$1118 aibisenteefh-Edlnburflh Dis- Pfl < . It is nonsense to think folk do not dance these days. or these nights. 0f course they do, But has their dancing zest, 1n 1t that was in the dancing 0g earns;- daiys? Is 1t merely slldderlng which neither tlngles nor L; sprightly, neither exhlblls grace nor gives freshness Has it, lost something? Is there the glee in it that made dancing gtlve the 10y that yielded health? -Wlnnlpeg Free Press. Charles A. Beard remarked the other da that what ls going on ln Europe a poker game between the heads 0f the nations: "The players have few ol-ilpg m; gmd ands, and they are so shaky from fear that they cant see what ls on the cards." And when you sop to think that, even the least scared na- tions are malklmz gas masks to sup- ply all the lxthabltants-lncludlng babies, of course, since babies have become prime enemies of the ag- gressors warfaie—ycu realize 110W shaky they all are The fcur suits 0f the Apocalypse seem to ‘llifiemtelée favorite cards-New ym-i; The picture of nlne pmvlnclal sweepstakes each occurring several times a ar ls not one to contem- plate wl h easy complacency. Once "ch Drovlnce was well set up ln the swee ke business, the element. of competition would, no doubt. come info play and if Pilnce Edward Island gave more in prizes than any other. as it. could well e/fford to do, it would ably ge’. the largest share of he nation's sweerpstalte dollars. Times Montreal The jaywalker ls no parsimon- ious soul. Intent on savmg seconds The apparent striving to save time ls merely the outward and decep- tive explosion of inner urges that have their roots in the urest lndl- vlduallsm. The jaywal er resents reglmentatlon by red fight. and scorns the surrender of freedom for security. Will he. who 1s ready to stake his life in defence of the inalienable right to dodge trueks. blanch and hssltate at the thought of losing four seconds? The way to keep aywalkers from Jaywal-klng is to orbld them to cross at intersections on the green light They thefre bound to do lt.-—-N€~w Work Post. Magistrate Jones has announoed that any motorist caught, driving with a dirty license plate will be fined $3 lf he appears before him. He issued this wamlng when a man appeared before hlm charged with driving with a dirty front plate on his car. "The police are finding it. hard enough to read the numlbers on clean atet" he de- ole-red. Other IDBJSUHIIBS nulght very well do the same. 1n vie-w of the lndlstilnetness otf the present license plates it will certainly not. help matters if motorists are per- mitted to drrlve with them be- smeared with mum-st. Thomas Times-Journal. . “Nina upright pianos and a. baby grand" have been stolen from the premises of a haulage contractor in London and a member of the firm is reported as having said, “we think it was the work of scmebsdy familiar with the business," And, when all ls said and done. l: does hardly sound like the result of a passln temptation arriving with lrreilsti le force in the bosomt of an otherwise honest cltlzeri. Not. many people are moved to steal just. one piano on the spur of the mo- merit; to make off with ten of them, - Financial Government (The followlna ls from the ln- troductory part of the brief pre- sented b Premlcrif-lepburn on be- half of e Province of Ontario be- fore the Rowell Commission on gJgvinlnioii-Provlnclal relations, May May I arpress a long, doe note of discontent? The first not cs the Premier of this Province received that a Commission had been ap- pointed to investigate the relations of the Provinces with the central Government came at the breakfast table, from a morning newspaper. I was preplexed. Perhaps, I should have surmised something of the sort was around the corner from something the Prime Mints- ter had said a year ago ln the House of Commons. My attention ls frequently called to the Right Honourable gentleman's speeches, but somehow I mlssed that one. and, upon enquiry, I learned that the Premier of another Province had also missed it. But surely the Provinces are not be penalized for lnattentlon to the Hansard of the House of Oom- inorm; surely the objective of this Commission bears so directly on the affairs of Provincial Govern-i merits that all the Provinces should, have been consulted aboutthe ap- ' oolntinent of this Commission; and I suspect several ~ the Provinces this Commission had emerged from the contemplative stage to reailty. the Premier of Munllnba appeared before the Commission wlt thick volumes expressing views and pro- posals, “arrived at" (he said) "after long and careful inquiry." And I said to myself: "How long has this thing been going on?” Manitoba Budget Speech The answer came from an un- expected uarter. The Budget speech of t e recent session of the Legislature of Manitoba let the cat out of the bag; lri fact, sev- eral cats. The members of Manl- toba‘s Legislature were bold (and I thought, with a boast) that. active work ln preparation of Manitoba's case beore the Com- mission had commenced almost three months before the terms of the reference to this ‘Commission had been made public. The Min- ister went on to say: “On June 3, 1937, I attended l. conference at Regina at which the Governments of the three Pralrle Provinces were represented. At this conference we soii ht to find a. basis upon which pro lems com- mon to the three Provinces could be most efficiently and economic- ally analyzed f0. resentatlon to the Rowell Comm ion." . . . Not the least significant m of the Regina conference was the employment of two professors of American universities. and one them "an adviser to the United States 'I‘reasury"—to assist 1n pre- paring u case against the Cana- dian Treasury. Mr. Chairman. When I learned these things, my perplexlty turn- ed lnto somethln else. The mat- ter went. deeper han dlscourtefi? to the Province foi" whose affairs. with my colleagues. I Hm IBEPQYI‘ slble; ln fact, it. went to depths and widths I hesitate to describe in words before this Commission. The matter I have been discus- sing has several folds 0f canoe. For one thing, it the manner in which P0 business is conducted (and per- haps throws a sldellght on the de- cline of democracy). Let me stress the point, for lt bears directly on my position before this Commis- slori. Several months buck. while 97°‘ arlng for a session of the Lexis- ature, a copy of the evidence taken before this Commission at Winnipeg was laid on my table. A- you will recall, slr, included in those brlefs were two - t! Rendered; one for Sillfiolliwo l! ear, for the period 1931-36, and. he other. for $58,000,000 a year without. time-limit. Since then, I seem to have been rwelvlng, al- m 3i; daily, copies of other briefs submitted to this Commission and ‘what. am 1 now t! SB-Y HD0119 them? I confess I have not read most them. To read them was impossible wlthln the time at. any Premiers disposal; and yet, I sup . most of them concern. in so respect. the business of this Province. Further-important as ll; ls-this Commission ls not. the only One launcmd upon us. The other day I received the thick Report of u Federal Commission that: had ln- vestigated the textile field and m)’ Province ls intensely interested in nine upright and one baby grand, ls a blt too much to be put dow-n to kleptomanla or sudden lmpulsed, Still. the man who stole the whole , ten sounds a promising subject for ‘ psychological treatment. The first‘ question that the professors mght put to hlm would be whether music runs in his family-Manchester Guardian. Lord Elphlnstono made a surpris- ing statement in Edinburgh the other day, when he _ tho the population of the Unit- ed Kaigdom ls 4.000.000 greater now than 1t was ln 1914, there are 2.000 fewer merchant. ships than there were in 1924 He expresed dls- quletude in regard to the present service-the second line of sea de- fenoe—M the annual meeting of the Edinburgh Navy Le . Wlfle they welcomed the addlt one to th Royal Navy, they were, he confess- ed. very much perturbed at the comparative fewness of the number of vessels comprising the merchan- tllc mini-true. He hoped somethlnii would be done shortly by the Government to remedy the un- satisfactory static of affairs. As an offset, lt ls likely that th average ship these days ls larger and more modem than those of twenty four years ago. Certainly none will dispute the need of mer- chant-ehbps. During the Great War so many were sunk that due to reduced world there ibuknoi th slil rds b th cop e pyu usy e decode or tiwm-Stratiford con Harald. Irompre-wardayntothc - cmlsjusta arterofsocn ry, and tihatnur$erofyears incrh the average llfe of an neuter ltncr. why lo mug famous ships are no! . - Burelcy, the posltlon of the Brltlsh mei-chuntnlfl be l5 ° That ls the reason n. textiles: I had barely opened the pages of that Report when I re- ceived another Re rt: this filme- from a Federal oinmlsslon 0n Unemployment; and I am told an- other Commlsslon, at Ottawa. 1s ln the throes of giving delivery b0 stll‘ another Report. ~ Of course this Government ls concerned over the rfilfifeflfifi w this Commission; and particularly over the Account Rendered at the instigation of the Regina. Confer- ence. I say. particularly. for lf entertained, about half of those many millions a year would have to be taken out of the y half-emptied pockets of the people of this Province. 1e‘s money ls not. eo by millions that my 11 of the Regina lconference not broken down |ln the telling one (.11 well imag- Jng b, very, very serious situation ‘might. have arisen within Confed- r lon. le iiiiiui it ls the considered opinion of this Government that ls Commission should not have lbeen gppolnibd’ by Order-ln-Coun- ell; the dlgnl of this Commis- slom-tlis grav ty of its mission- warranwd a lntment b? 0 Parliament o Canada. only I NW weeks sip the c Minister of comm. eld tahdp 03‘ ellidmrl 3th: certain comm 011 n0 Ordg-ln-Couricll (ll- ue a license was clear- Council, ars, the prac- tice); it was con ndfli "Ill fell‘ tlons with s forclcn power deserv- ed Parliaments act. on. The Pm- vlnccl are entl ed to no less ic- e case had in; the structure of Confederation should not have been ca! a “:0 crc the tlTf ' n whiten d ld were consulted. For shortly after _ lid. “niiyrwitiinii- LION!- thcr to lay that mat concern» Ontario Liberal, Premier - Raps Federal Policy 0 f By Commission creme. I hold that should not n reference runs, have empowered I as you!‘ i z in ‘ohdlm iiiefiiiimmiii on o e econ i: a one heels of Confederation." If there change ln Confederation futon) ft can be bro h by renewed con er- enees of e representatives of the people and with unanimity of ap- proval. It follows that the Province of Ontario ls not before this Com- mission either as an applicant or as a defendant. Is our vision blurred at home? I do not, for a moment sugg there ls a formldably deliberate la to destroy our parliamentary ttutlons‘ I do say: were the azl-i m take stock of our 198B they would find lltlcal ideals on such store. i..." r o about?’ men of 1 politics in lttle left. of the which they plac llliljat TRY T0 FIND CAUSE 0F DOW BACK PAIN When pain occurs anywhere We first. thought ls naturally to re- lieve the paln for the time being and look for the cause lBi-er- In the case of an acute abdominal condition, when appendicitis is ed, no pain kllllng drug of course is given as lt would lilde or mask the symiploms. ‘That, patients ma be satisfied sometimes to cont nue to take medicine or other treatment to re- lleve pain, lnzteud of trying to learn the cause of the pain, ls the warning of Dr. Ernest E. Itfyers. New York,‘ in Physiotherapy Rie- view, aspeclally in cases of low back pa n “Conservative (or waltlxig) treat-c inent in low back quently. not because the treatment is wortihleess but _becuaise ii. is wrongly chcsen for the individual ere. It l.s of little value b0 the patient t0 have a prolonged course of diathermy (or other me‘hod of applying heat). massage, and ex- ercise. to find after many weeks of no relief that the underlying cause was infection. or some peculiarity about. the bones of the spine." Thus in men an inflamed con- dition or! the prostate gland at the neck of the bladder can cause low W In men and women some of the side and sometimes the back bony projections of the spine bones have shapes that vary from nor- mal. causing trouble when any ex- tra load is carried or when a jar or fall occurs. The joints in the low back region connecting thé bones of the spine with the hip bones also get suainecl and some- l-lme‘ 8911111166 o!‘ Slightly separat- ed, due to a fall or other injury. A cvmmfln wB-Y of getting this strain ls 0o "take s. mlsstep. swing fli- t! 1101f bail or ofher object and miss 1t. or to mt a heavy dbject 11f men there is a history of an injury, rest and heat followed by a properly fitted brace. Li the umber treatment. Sometimes the weight of a. heavy brdrudlng alb- domen can put a strain on these lolnts. If there, ls no history of an lnlury and the pain in lower back persists. the source of infection slwllld be rouzhi- teeth, t-nsns, Slmlses or elsewhere. It is a mistake b0 be satisfied to have heat treatments or take paln ‘l-‘llevink drugs when scme infec- tion ls to blame. Besides. more ("Home due to infection will occur if it ls not removed. OUTIDOK N01‘- lb b6 whquered by these head- long days, But toagtilipd .i-ee: m keep the mind On llfefs deep meaning, nature's a tltu c Of loveliness. and time's myster- ious ways; At. every thought. and deed to clear am Out of our eyes. considering only What inaii, what life,‘ what love, “mat beauty ls, ‘Ihlsfstollvc. and win thennal ‘thou: amine. iii fortune. and hush human Beak, down the soul. at moments blind and dumb With mills’; patience-there Many wrest voices from life's outer see. Hours of sti-anse triumph. and, when few mun heed. Murmurs and iillmpsea of eternity. —Arclilbald Lompman. JUST T00 WILLING ‘I'm. England (OP) — Discussing a woman's statement (disputed) 1n the police court that. shs hul been kissed flve Alderman J . Harvey offered to contest. to de- wn possible. He f?‘ ‘i i i? sit ‘ iifilil illfii-i H even the senior partner » falls fre- ' For Cubs aged from “They have always stood HOPE FERRY MAY INCREASE TRADE PICTOU, N. S.. Mav 4-—Inoreas- ed trade between Plclou County's industrial districts and agricultural areas of Prince Edward Island is envisioned as one result of a new ferry service which ls to be opened between the Island province and a location near here. Under plans for the ferry, three round trips daily between Wood d. P. E. 1.. and Plctou will be be chosen with a view‘ to provldlni accom- modation for 30_ vehicles and will be able to liande heavy trucks. "The exlstlnn seyvlce between Pic- tou and Charlottetown requires a day for tine round trio. and the run between the two points ls about 40 miles longer than the new route. with produce from the Island will be enabled to come to Nova Scotla. discharge their load and return with coal ln a few hours is present plans materialize. Construction of port facilities at both ports would start shortly, re- commendations to the federal pub- lic works department stated. MASKED NURSES MARC? LONDON -—(GP) -— Contendlng they are overworked and under- nald ,a unlt of nurses 1n white tunlcs and with black masks over their eyes, marched London steels until stopped by truffle police. 105, GRAVES GAS MASK OROYDON. England -<01=w Mrs. Ellen Fletcher on her 105th birthday said she would like to wear a was mask "Just to see what it feels like." COFFEE What do the neighbours say? Check your ex- perience with theirs. Each day we give you exactly what some oth- er _Maritlmer took the trouble to sit down, write and mall to us. Tlicy are simply sincere expression: of opinion by ‘people keenly inter- ested in Coffee, In the same way a you are. Allleflfl, P. I. L :..'i"""*'-""£.'i m .....:- gé._.g"'-v..'.. n: m.."“.-.'.:i~.:t'i..?" T" izPfiiiii-dii“ mun- ; i Dr. ffrench's Nermicide Capsules ’ _, N0. 2 Slu (Round) ' l supreme over all makes of Worm Remedies." Those words written by Mr. Edward Fromm, director of the greatest Fox Ranching organiza- tion in the world, whose breeders number 14,- 000 represent a conclusion based on the em- ployment of nearly half a million Vermicide ~Capsules during the intervening years since he first tried them in the year 1911. N0. 2 Round Vermicide Capsules come packed in Boxeeof 25 Cuplnlce---$l.00 Boxes of I00 Capsules - — — “$.00 Boxes of 500 Capsules — — -- .1800 Please order your requirements without delay, You need them now E, A, FUSTER-Bentral Drugstore Sole Authorized Distributors for the ffronch Animal Remedies for Prince Edward Island For Vitalit alwmJS ule BRAHM ORANGE PE KOE ~~vc_\--._ -_--.. 3 weeks to 3 months the tut and they fluid IN TEA FRANCOT FAMILY NEW YORK, (OP) -Sald to a man of steel wtlli a. velvety smlll General Francisco IPranco. 45. 1n- surgent. leader in S ln's drawn-out clvll wsr, as a you" attractive wife and nlne-yea-r-O daughter. GOLD THAT TINKLES miiw YORK, (or-l Wit-h necb- laces news: t ailgliinghoppdai-e mow’; In one o n go M wegar with -say a youthful black ffeta afternoon frock trlmm with lingerie cuffs, _._€____---—-- LORD HAWK]! RESIGNS g (By The Canadian Press) LONDON-lard Hawks l! W‘ slgnlnir as treasurer of the Manle- bone Cricket Club. a paost he he! held slncc 1032. n. ewiaecwi Lord Cobham wiii be 0x09054141 =8 his succwsor. FOUND One of lhe belt imvvnhlb" known for SMUT ON GRAIN FORMALIN A cheap but thoroiifhl! d: sit-iv. I , In order t0 gllpfofiripiopcrl! treated have before 0m Int tn ve 40 l‘ lqu qfpwabl. Fdllrdlrwlriril! query order. ‘"1: solo at THE 2 MACS DRUGST ORE » 10 Croat Georfl 8m" All Mall Orden Given Pr”?! Aflellfloll llfifl WI BICXDMMIND HAO S Special IlX. 315 00o uvu on. any," ' $00!» couromm ciairlii" m“ ti": mgrxfi". "ti, ill i Ill