-... .. -,,-.,T_...,,...-a-.».1mr- Our main industrial concern l . ‘PAGE roux I P. ' ry-l-lnaa 43o] Idltor IIO lanogllg Dlrntoh-nl Til rIRIIIRLOTTETUWII curling! halldalr~I. mo... a Isl-IN. iconic Burnett. sum-ts [dilute-Incl warn qaa u u. cat-u}. liming our; (hauled mm ll W a» u]! per rear- (ln advance) arallad you‘ (ll ulvafle) delivered. l-n CIIMII Ill Ollkl lbhl. THUl-SDAY. MARCH II. I935. BRUCE STEWARTS ii The King George V BllverJubilee Cancer Pillild. One letter contain- ing $1, the minimum amount ask- uere is the foundry and engineerlnl works of Messrs Bruce Stewart and Do. Ltd. During the past year this firm distributed in wages no less than $39,100.45. the works being in operation all the year round with the exception of a few weeks fol- lowing thc Christmas holidays when necessary adjustments to plant and repairs were being carried out. Not- withstanding the dull times else- where, Bruce Stewart's were able to finish the year with a small pmfihand with $12,000 of contracts booked for the current year. This firm is of outstanding value and advantage to the Province, as it is our mainstay and insurance against breakdown in other crganizlions, such as the water works and elec- tric system. It is noteworthy that this is the Silver Jubilee of Bruce Stewart and Co., it having been organized by the late Bruce Stewart and Mr. Andrew MaoNair in the year King George V ascend- ed the throne. The wish of all will be that the business will continue to prosper, and in the next twenty five years double or triple its out- put and employees. MILK CONTROL According to press despatches the operations of the Ontario Milk Control Board which has been ac- tive for less than ‘a year, has re- sulted in the farmers of Ontario benefltting to the extent of $2,500,- coo in actual cash. At any rate this is the estimate given in the annual report oi the Board of Agriculture tabled in the legislature. During the year, it was stated, meetings were held in practically all important milk rne-rkets in the province. Officials conducted an audit of the milk distributors in the prin- cipal markets of the province, and of mil distributors‘ books was arr-arsed for at. the and of 1m in an effort to determine actual dilirbuflon coat, but no Ullfl‘ the DIR Control Act, it unplanned, all persons except and peddiers who sell iziillilii i: have been WNW“. 5% V" m‘ ported. lfld the arm-new he" eliminated or minimised a number of unethical practices that were to the detriment oi producer and dis- trlautor. muoueh the WNW" a lb-ccnt to UC-Ceht bvr blind!“ pound increase in Pfl" 9° u“ producer was obtained. along w-li-h the establishment oi a uniform system oi purchasing milk in a market, the elimination of "b0041- iq" milk, and the elimination oi severe price fluctuations due to price-cuttinl. The report Mill l" some instances I. slightly increased wise go the consumer was consid- ' cred necessary- “It can be noted that in no u?" ‘Q5 m agreement approved which called for an increased Pr!“ W ti" customer unless the producer M- wnq benefits equal to or greater than um price increase," it was stated. The board considered there was an excessive duplication in distri- bution services and felt that thll overlapping of cervical 935°“ l toll on both the producer and can- sumcr, but no-dafimta conclusions have betn made on this .------_-——-"'"Q. CANCER‘ IUND ‘there has been an may from alLm-cr Canada to the j must be "m iacbaa with of W ed from each family, says, "This is g noble cause and my wife and I. although our contribution is ax- tremely humble, wish you every success." Another brief message accompa-yiua l. donation came in the form of a prayer: "May the Al- mighty preserve the generous who give to prevent cancer." The chartered banks of Canada have agreed to waive charges on cheques sent for the fund. All monies received by Lady Bessbcr- ough are sent to the bank for de- posit with the following endcrsa- tion: "For deposit to thc credit of Her Excellency the Countess oi Bessborough, in trust for ‘King George v Silver Jubilee Cancer Fund for Canada." Cancer, even in its advanced stages, is an arrestablc disease, Dr. Charla A. Dukes, oi Oakland, presi- dent of the American College oi Surgeons states in a. bulletin just issued. Dr. Duke; says, however, there arc but three reliable ways to treat the malignant disease-by X-ray, by radium or by the sur- gical knife. "There are no secret cancer cures, no aerums nor injections of value," he adds. "Cancer is a disease, personal to the individual who has it, and can- not be transmitted in any known way to another person," Dr. Dukes says. “Even if you have neglected treat- ment until the disease is well ed- vanced, still it may be arrested. More than 1,000 advanced oases, in one clinic, were treated during the past three years, and definite ar- restment was reported in more than 800 cases. "In the early stages, the cure of cancer rests largely with the indi- vidual. Prompt and adequate aur- gicai attention is the very best in- surance for the cures and against the spread of the disease.“ In view of this, the Fund so nobly conceived as a Royal Jubilee commemoration should command universal support. EDITORIAL NOTES K-was always "up to Canada" in accept reciprocity. according to ard- ent Liberals. Now a Patriot head- ing tells us New England is oppos- ed to reciprocity. Can a. house divided against itself stand? We have the r-iesident and Secretary of the Potato Growers’ Association taking diametrically op- poaits action regarding the Market- ing Aet. llveryone is looking forward to the speed racing at the Forum to- morrow night. It is a novelty here. and will create an excitement and enflruaiaanr greater even than in the fastest hockey. The special at- tractions are such as to make Pri- day evening a rod letter day in sport-something to be anticipated with acct and looked back upon with pbesure. Ion. Mr. Sharp ia not flamboy- ant h oratory like his Liberal pf!- dgueflcm gl Minister 0f Public Works, but he can alwayl "deliver the goods," and one has a sense of confidence in acceptilll W111i 11¢ says. Be is also a. ahrewder and much better debater than Mr. 1M. and when it comes in a controversy you may back Hr. Sharp every time. He never challenges unless he is sure oi his ground. Although the Boy Scout and Girl Guide Rally here is booked fol‘ July Saturday d, the Chief Scout and Chief Guide, Lord and Lady Baden Powell will arrive on Wed- nesday. July a. "rhey will be w- gomplnled, by their two daughters. and will be the guests oi the Lieu- tenant Governor and Mrs. DeBlois at Government House. The Chief Scout intends trout fishing every day except Saturday. On Sunday he will go to church, and on Monday leave for the mainland. According to a discussion in Par- liament, the Militia nevlftiwii B" ialued a circular to oflflfl 911 u" “fighting topic" oi dream suit tin. It says there is a med of uniformity among army officers "in viaw of the many difielcnt pltmflfl Ill" of men's mucus.“ first the tirmuat: N _, square ends "with the sail! of ti!‘ bow nrusiit and var-turf army headquarters than" stipulated the tie andaand thiunalhonanwfa incbelabould be twicstbcamof tlra collar-an officer wearinf I road-users onc’s next es. Such a habit has been instilled Notes By The Way ' Speed-limit legislation may or may not be supplemented by other compulsions, but of itself it entire- ly overlooks that the avoidance oi collision depends eawntlally and orderly behaviour on the roads by all vehicles and all pedestrians which will result from a. particular and imPOIts-llt habit. That is the habit of revealing continuously, not ermsmodically, to all near-by ‘ tended movement-always and in all plac- and now exists on the sea, in the air, on the railways-evcrywhere where moving, self-willed entities travel. The only exception is the road. Hence the crashes. There was one man who. though it is probable that in the fashioning oi his own plans he had neither Sollsht nor had any recent contact with the S. A. loaders, was by his whole history and tradition a pos- sible point oi crystallisation for S. A. opposition; a man, moreover, who still had a. serious following in the Reichswehr: a man who alone could become the bridge between 8A. the Catholics, and the former ‘Prado Unionists. That man was Schlelcher. So Schleicher must dis- appear too. And with him those who worked around and with him as far as they were accessible. That is the real significance of the blood bath of June 30. Each year the importance of the schools bulks larger in the life of the boys and girls. The Canadian child of today spends more than night years of his life in school, whereas his parents spent less than six. His school life is about half as long again as theirs and on the day he starts to school he may ex- PWF W Spend there about one-sixth of the remaining years of his life. —‘1\eachers' Bulletin. ' ' Greece is one of those countries that seems to delight in faction fights unless the whole land is thrffB-tened by a common danger. The ancient city states were con- stantly at war with one another, and if Homer gives anything like a true picture of- the heroic age, it was the same then. Absorbed by Rome, overrun by the barbarians. subjugated by the Turks, in fact under foreign domination for many centuries. the Greeks reached free- dom with British help, their genius ior civil war unabated. During the past seventeen years they turned out a king-or rather the Allies did it for them-in favor of another, called the first back. ousted him again. installed a. third for six months. set up a republic, establish- ed a dictatorship, again returned to a. republic, tried a. coalition of all parties except Communists, went back to party rule under Venizelos and his Liberal; who were soon up- set by the Conservatives, against whom there is now ... revolt. Sel- dom have these changes been ef- fected without blood-letting. Greek is constantly meeting Greek. All the worst features of the ad- ministration of criminal justice in the United. States arc being repro- duced in an aggravated form in the spectacular trial at Flemington of the man charged with the mur- der of the Lindbergh baby. There seems, however, to have been one new departure-the addition of trial by radio to the more familiar process of trial by the newspapers. Soon aiter the opening of the case for the pro- secution the leading counsel for the proximately 3i inches long." 0f course, what applies to omcers ap- plies to gentlemen generally. Some one at Ottawa has discov- ered the direct coat of five ycars oi depression to the Canadian people has been $663,698,339. The figure does not include the indirect loss to the country's Jizenshi, through loss of emplcyme it, r ’ ‘ hours, or wage cuts. 1t is simply the out- of-pocket cost to Federal, Provin- cial and Municipal Governments of meeting the demands for relief im- poled. by the economic conditions since i980. Upwards oi so per cent. of the total cost, it is significant to now. haa been borne by the federal treasury, when the Bennett min- istry came into power, it took over a4 its chief heritage a. national clump which world forces were al- ready‘ accelerating to cataclysmic tempo. 'I‘he miracle of the period has been, in the opinion oi admin- istrative circles, that the federal authority has been able to both support the burden thnmt upon it and, at the some time, maintain the national credit. ‘lbstimony to the invaluable ser- vices rendered by Mr. Bennett has been given by I. Toronto contem- porary which does not always see eye to eye with him. "While owing to world conditions," it says, "Mr. Bennett's success has not been so great u we could all wish." yet, it argues, "he has this gratification that Canada has made greater pro- gress in that direction than any other country in the world. as at- tested by figures released some time ago by tha league of nations at Geneva. He has been assailed with vigor and viruiznco which he has seldom paused to combat. He has pleaded guilty, not with much contritenesa we cusxtct, to neglect of party interests. There are um- ala, not a few, who have fmilf acknowledged it as a Godsend tblt. at this ennui perm m world hil- tory, ha ia at the helm in Canada. in thl but few weeks many more have come to a full realisation of the tremendous consequences that depend upon the health of one fundamentally on that form of- MAN WILL BE MADETIEADY FOB. ALL TIIEFgHANGES OI As we see the fair or red hair, the blue or brown eyes, the tall or short stature, the quiet or stormy dis- position of the parent handed down to the child, we cannot but feel that heredity has a great deal _to do with the way we live our lives. And yet welfare workers, physic- ians dealing with “nervous" pat- ients, research workers on mental subjects tell us, from their vast ex- perience, that environment — cir- cumstanoes, opportunities or lack oi them, home, business, school - all have much to do with the way we live our lives. It would appear however that as humans we have been overlooking‘ processes that are going on with!!! us that have nothing to do with heredity. Dr. G. H. Parker, pro- fessor of physiology at Harvard re- ports that a. chemical substance is produced in fishes which changes their color to that oi their surround- ings, and that this chemical sub-- stancc is produced by thc nerves, and not by the will of the fish to change its color. In other words something oi which the fish-is not conscious enables it to change its color. Thus the fish is not likely to be seen by an enemy that might at- tack it, or by some smaller animal that it wishes to secure for food. Speaking further about this "un- conscious" power oi animals, Dr. Wm. A. White, superintendent of St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington, says. “Man has unplumbed-un- known or unmeasured-possibilities that will enable him to adjust him- self to any eventualities and will make possible all the progress that is latent-existing but unsolved — in the present discoveries o; science. While there are some difficulties he- twecn the rnces of mankind they are Very Sim-ll. and will be swept away as all these new discoveries are made use of by mankind generally." And it is our unconscious mind, our organ of vast unused possibilities, in which these developments for man's progress are going on, The thought then is’ that while heredity is important. nevertheless it has equipped us only to meet what our forefathers have met in life. But within us are possibilities of which we are unconscious that will enabfe us to meet and make use of all the new discoveries cf science. Surely, no matter what our rel - ion, we can look confidently into e future, knowing that there is a "friendly forci!" within us or watch- ing our llvcs. accused-m lawyer of so much d“- tlnction that he has been briefed ltl over a thousand murder trials- went from the court to thn micro- phone and broadcast a speech in which he declared his belief in the innocence of his client, and reveal- ed the linn the defence would take, his Sugkstion being that the kid- napping of the baby was planned by 6911-111X! Pefsflhs inside the Lind- bergh household, but hep-he was 80°11 "Wish to say-members of the family. l-le merely reserved for the court itself the disclosure of the actual. names oi those whom he 3,1- leged to be the guilty parties. A New Y°Fk "P011 mildly describes the lawynrls wireless talk a5 “um- ishing-"according to English ideas!" American ideas are rather different. and the Judge who l; hearing the case does not appear to have token any notice of the m. cidcnt-The Truth (London) It may add somewhat tothe im. pression that has recently been built up in the United States-es- pecially by the work of federal pol- ice-that kidnapping is not g healthy occupation. The secondary and more important result is a ver- dict of guilty against the Ameriggn public on the charge of cruel, m". bid and dangerous curiosity. It con- firms e. judgment held by the pm- Die of many countries whose cul- ture Americans look down upon, m" "451 by ballyhoo arouses little Bl-lfllrlse 0r shame in thc United States because Americans knew no higher standards of Justice and of journalism. It is a. challenge to every individual to establish standards for himself and to defend his own thinking against emotionalism and Dmllflsanda. _ Boston Christian Science Monitor. lmwyi. ASTHMA For instant relief from Illlcml. a good night's sleep and‘ fredom from u... tenu- ous malady. Get a trial pack- age of the Great New British Remedy. Astonc Asthma Tablets Many aaifererrin this prov- ince have obtained wonderful reaultafrom this remedy dir- lng the peat aix months. We can recommend it from the knowledge already at our dla- posal. Trial also m. Alan in $1.00 and 50c packages. "PlN-LYPTIJ!" POI OOIJOIIS An cxociient ’ remedy neocr fails to glva relic-f. * an" ma». at. roster rue cnaawrrarowu cusxotah ' y Higher University ' Standards i (Winnipeg ‘tribunal » Beginning next year, eximination of students at the University of Manitoba will be conducted under amentlrely new system. One ex- amination on the work of both terms will be held in April. and the Christmas examination will be held simply as a of defor- mining the progreu made by stu- dentl. . The - maximum mark for the Christmas will be 35, while the maarimuru for the April examin- ation. which is to be the determin- ing one‘, will be 66. The student's mark for the Christmas test will be added to the mark of the April examination to determine the final standing. 1n the April examination the student will be hold’ responsible for the‘ work of both terms. The new system, according to university officials, is a step to- ward the single examination ayfl- tem, inwbich examinations are held only at the end of each year. This differs considerably from the system current in many United States universities and colleges where there are either two or three forms in the year and atu- dents are examined at the end of each term. It is an approach to the practice in British universities, where honor students are custom- arily examined only once at the conclusion of a three years’ course. BothAmerican and British aya- tems have their advantages and disadvantages. It is easier to retain knowledge in ona's head for a short than a long period. If the defin- ition of a university's purpose is accepted as the extension of cul- ture to the greatest number, than the American system has definite merit. But if the object is to raise the standard of scholarship-a process that naturally results in weeding out poorer students-the British system is more effective. The new system at ‘toba is standard of scholarship. It is in the nature of an experiment. Uni- versity officials see no reason, howevw, why it should not suc- coed and the probability is that it will be retained for some time, if not extended. , The Mechanical Eskimo (Manitoba Free Press) Penetrative communication has brought about a change in the habit of thinkinil of the North- Wst Territories only in terms of forbidding space. Distance in its modern equivalent of time has been bridged by the am ,.‘ an audible intercourse has been ai- forded by the radio. The vastness remains. but those resident within it are not isolated as they were shortly ago, and those outside "ln civi- are being taught to be less ignorant of its people's char- acteristics and its physical features. The area of 1,530,000 square miles is nearly one third of the entire area of the Dominion, but it is not any longer the impenetrable hinterland most commonly associated in- men's minds with the Bad Lands. It's 14.- 000 ‘“ ‘ are "“ o ‘ nor sub-normal. The outsiders go- ing far up into the North have been lifting corners of the veil that has concealed its features and have been probing unlmagined qualities in the brains of the Ebkimos. They have been what has been hidden in the expanse thought to be destitute because said to be barren. They have, in a rough and ready way, been following the course taken by the Soviet I-‘wssians in their scientific attack on Arctic regions which have transform- ed into a systema iaed scientific la- boratory. The diacovenies due toboth efforts are of iiroalculable signific- ance. but none is more. ifiieresting, and none possibly more surprising, than is the revelation of the quality of the mind of the Ibkimo. The Eskimos may be primitive, but their mental characteristics are testified to by Major D. L. McKnead of the Department cf the Interior. In the little we have known of these people, we have, perhaps, sought least to gain an insight into their mentality. We have been content to minimize. and oven ignore. an ability we had neither perceived nor admit‘ ‘. But the Eskimo may be pecularily endowed. for Major Mc- Knead us in an address delivered necéntly at Montreal by predictix; that the Eskimos may yet become is: best mechanics America. Their progress in many lines might have been conjectured. but that they are giftod mechanically must assuredly have been the last oi our expectations. A people reasonably understood to be tho lean mechanically influenced of pehaps all peoples in the world. sin-prise ua when sad to display re- markable mechanical faculltiec. Major McKnead says their type of mlndisoiahlghordenwitha distinct mathematical iondency, and he forsees that if the Eskimos be given a sufficient decree of ed- ucaton, they may produce great mathematician The opinion ‘may be challenged. butitcaimotbedlsrniaaedaathe In pparently aimed at raising the t9 wnvrsa‘ soxo or was ' IVIIGBIINB When the winda Through the w range , Stripping bare their branches, We stood up unchanged. Still changed, but lonely For the leaves withdrawn, Winter long we're mourning so: the glory gone, autumn Sombre, sad, and silent, Through the woods we go, Winter pilgrims caring Naught for wind and snow. Patiently we travel The long road to spring, Till we hear her‘ voices Borne on wind and wing. Till we see the patterns Magic April weaves; Hear the young buds breaking Into whiapring leaves. Feel the ichor stirring Root, and branch, and stem: Hear the woods rejoicing And rejoice with them. -J. O. M. Duncan. Elixir Of Youth, (Ottawa Journal) Startling tales of longevity are current oi late. Statistics seem to be proving the impossible, and Me- thuaelahb long tuwhallenged record pibiy is imperllied. Among the many who have refused to welcome old age is a woman physician well past the hundred mark. And she, it seems, is all ready to go a-lccturing through the land if audiences can be lured to listening posts. And she is not blazing any trail. Fellow cen- nariaaie are stepping out briskly in all directions—eme'rg~ing blithely from a lifetime of obscurity into the spotlight of fame. ‘Ihey dance, they nwtor, they fly, and trip around the world, pausing between to discuss the formulae that keep them flourishing. Whatever they do is ‘accomplished gully-regardless of the handicap in any given situation. Searching for their secret oi happi- new one is forced to thc conclusion that the enjoyment of “borrowed time" depends largely upon a capa- city to regard, existence as some- thing of a. 101cc. Among the oldsicrs nowadays only the pesslmists seem to find life unconquerable. The majority resent the tendenw to gauge usefulness by years-e good thing for lt is a. e absolutely ' ' i- when d dealing with those who have crossed the three-score line and are revel- ling in what lies beyond. Age largely is a matter of mind. Some uniortuxiates are born old and never know youth, some attain age, but the happy ones escape it no matter how long their race with time. In the contest with the yea-rs the light-hearted win. Contentment, combined with a healthy curiosity concerning tomorrow. seems s pre- requisite. Given that anyone may de- velop his own anti-age serum. To be ‘ua it must be self-adminis- tered. Its main-its all important ingredient-is laughfer- The power to smile at mac's own misfortunes- to minimize them in contrast with the burdens others bean-is to hold the world in one‘s hands. War Clouds In Greece (SydneynPost-Reand) Greece is once more in the throes of political revolt, the result oi those deep-seated party differences to which the country has been sin- gulariy susceptible since tho abdic- tion of King Constantine in 1922. Although at this writing the up- rising may not have the full signifi- cance of a revolut on, it has the symbols of ag-raveintemdrebelllon. A harassed Government has de- clared martial law, suspended parts of thc Constitution, called out naval reserves and mustered all the mili- tary classes on the mainland. Tho cause of the insurgency is obscure, but such reports as have passed the cursors point to meuthcrios Veni- selos as the rnainspring-cnd to his island home in Crete as the cradle- oi the political revolt. At the age of seventy-one years. the former Premier. believed to be in perman- ent retirement at Canes. is evidently a force mu to be reckoned with. and it is feared by the Government 1n that he is bent on returning to ‘Athena to dictate who shall be Prime lidinisier. if not take the of- fiw-irirrrselh- There can be no ques- tion of his sustained political strength. He has penformed many great services for the Hellenic state; he is. in 1m. the creator of modern Gmece. but whether his interven- tion in an attempt to return to the helm of government today would be to the advantage of the country, it ianotpoceibloyettoform an en- lightared opinion. Crescendo 0f Marvels (The Commonwealth, New York) Some items in the week's foreign news have a Ripleyoaque quality that quite pull in the shade the live a discovered in a New York manhole. Queues have been. mttlawed in Shanghai, where the 00C the Intrusive nations develop- and slab-Arctic qsaiorsbnocvanwclmriiflf i» 1gpzcollafalwtridwaaratbw fill.’ r cam-sat. nxufllroll l , r < a ‘i. v ___ 14, .13.. ‘i? FRAGRANT, RICH i MELLOW! “THE sznoomssr SMOKE” SMOKE” I-IICKEY & NICHOLSONS BRIGHT CUT SMOKING TOBACCO y’ now nman wrru wax val-art m muaa racsrmass PACKAGE Buy the Best TEA Brahmin Orange Pekoe Ceylon Small Leaf Scouting Stands for Service E. R. BR 0 W Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness‘ and Plate ~ Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis i; . 146 Richmond St., IANKOF creditors. _._.___.__ P. C. IO! 8!. Fuahrerk speeches is being broad- cast will draw a jail sentence in Berlin. The executioner of Berea- lcnqwrskiiledbywhatappearto have been very na.lf rs, aitc exe ' _ his functions only once, topaoventhisdoingsoagairaiwo ancient women of Belfast, aged ‘i0 and 10F stood off robbers attempt- ing to enter their dwelling; and an Autrian of Innbnick wounded him- self, perhaps mortally, so that his Job might be liven to his friend. However, the real "top" is London's mail service now. it is said that in that fabulous city.a letter-can be sent and its answer received on the same day: that i. letter put into the regular poet at 5 p. m. will be received four hours later; that a Jet- ter nailed before noon will he in expected _ up shortly at thejhiflly Iaatituta. which It itill ml f0 i110 Mitch Ind fl!" on industnas. IOIIIIODY OIIIATID ....._...... llrgimd - in- pendulum, batman of Iagiaac rm yuan Ila d. iaoeait war-n- “a Kn so B'A'IQP'A"C'G'A CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT , ' MEMBER OI CANADIAN SOCIETY OI‘ COST ACCOUNTANTS COMMISSIONER FOB TAKING AFFIDAVITB IN Till SUPREME COURT OI‘ P. l. I. P. l. l. BIPBISINTATIVI ‘IIII CANADIAN CREDIT MEN'S TRUST ASSOCIATION. LDIITID. NOVA SCOTIA BUILDING OIIAIDOTTIIOWN. I. I. I. Accounting system opened Ip and mind- lnbor caving ofltoo methods installed. out Accounting instituted u. wit‘ Ibeelal requiem"- llunthly, quarterly and anneal audits. Balaucaalracisauohofltalrllnudocfulllh lnoonsTaxretrrrnawriitenlpandlilcll- financial arrangements made between debtor and Limited liability Companies lnnerpcratrd. . sway by even- 1 a i l ; t Charlottetown prepared. i mucosa mt WILL SEEK TREASURE uanam - a diving expel" ogggnjged by Manuel Mulfo. I P“ iah military engineer. is filll“ geek Spanish gold which i135". m m: Bay of V150 Sui" 1'3’, treasure yalieons Sunk l" 1 ' ' z on. t. a. Eliilii of London. Elit- N rt- ‘ u t eatcd M- fillly is; ‘llllthlneil W‘; manant cares of WW‘ Coaditlonl. h 14' mam” m: Sour Stom- qmuc Dll- ' I preccrlptloz. IYOOINC ll an. u Ivan swmwh “i” . taro. We alone have the ‘m Ml thla roacrlllil" “u I200 m i: h!" ‘mhd numerous timnlale m“