PAGE FOUR HIE GHARLDTTETUWN GUARDIAN l‘rualdonl—-\\. Cheater s. aicLura. u-r. Vine-President. s. B. Burns". Y-J- 1 Sncreiary-Ueuu-Col. U. A. liaelilnnou, ll. S. U. Qdltor and Iaaaglng Dlree tor-J. B. Burnett. 7- 3- l- Aaaimlufa Fran k Wlaiker and D. B. (lurrin 00 (In adv cc) delivered "g,',,‘;",,,:’“§',’,,,, “,1:“1;‘£_,§§§}’ Jf“. p.35.’ 631.. ..... 8Z1...» emu FRIDAY. QUIOBEB 5. 1938 TIMELY WARNING The current issue of the Quebec Omcial Bulletin of the Roads De- partment has some timely advice to motorists, which is equally applic- able in every Provnce. Nearly every you, says the Bulletin, in the few weeks following the fall openllifl 0f the schools, there occurs a series of aocide ‘va to children which bring sorrow to the families of the vic- tims and are a source of harassing regret to those who have caused them, even imoluntarliy. It is of course mostly in the towns that this class of accident is fre- quent. More often than not the schools are situated in the vicinity of streets, if not on the very streets themselves where traffic is dense; rarely do schools powers play- grounds where the children can congregate before or after the hour of opening and closing of class. The children therefore pass directly from the classroom to the street or vioe versa; and with their habitual \nd natural carelessness, their de- drejor fun-making, they are much given to forgetting the‘ lessons given them on the subject o! prud- moo. It remains therefore for the mot- rmrket is certainly not due to any efforts which the late Mackenzie King Government made during its nine years of power. The manner in which our farmers "benefited" by Mr. King's policy may b9 ill!"- trated by the following Canadian Press item of Feb. 20, 1930. It is dated from Washington, and reads: "'I‘he Senate today went through the agricultural tariffs from cheese to chicory and boosted rates on more than a dozen farm products." l That was after nine years of fruit- less Liberal overtures and was but one of the many tariff increases on Canadian ‘asrlflllf-“Ifi PIO- duois impvflod by the United States during the Mackenzie King (regime. Today, as our contempor- ‘ary says, our farmers have access to ‘the United States for their potatoes and turnips. There is therefore no point in its agrument that the Ben- inett policies closed that market, or that the protection of the home limarket and the extension of Can- ‘adian trade in Bknpire channels. which the Bennett policies admit- tedly achleved, have been anything -but beneficial to the agricultural trade of this Province or of the Dominion in general. ' NAVAL ARMAMENTS -.k :1‘.r¢~~ . ,._...,~-..._., .. a. M“, -_._ THE UHAKLUITEIUWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way Expulsion of four German cor- respondents by the Foreign Office press department in Moscow will from Germany, on the ground that persecution and unjustified discrim- lnatlOn directed against the writers has become intolerable. The expul- sion of the Germans, it was ex- plained, was not to be ascribed to improper conduct, but was intend- ed as a. reprisal for the treatment accorded the Soviet correspondents in Germany. ' Complete compilation of indmt- rlal statistics prepared by the Bu- reau cf Stafsbics gives 246.000 as the number of wage-eamers- who have been added to Canadian pay- rolls since the first of April. This represents a ratio of gain exceed- ing that of any other leading country, not excepting the United States. which is experimenting so hopefully with Presidnet Roosevelt's NRA. scheme of restoration. While none of the larger Powers seemingly is yet prepared to go so far as Canada and llipport the principle of restricting manufacture On The Klondike Trail Of '98 A FIRST-HAND ACCOUNT 0F A MEMORABLE ..__-. ._._..?._ ficurs increase markedly the tension be- ADVENTUBE tween the soviet Union and the (B! 511"" “N755 3'5"’ Nazis. The new development, which 7-3-3) is described as a "rupture of press relations," has followed the wlth- w drawal of Russian correspondents M my my" the" w“ . mum, conducted by Rcv. Mr. Marsh. we stopped there a day. slid were trest- od very kindly indeed. We made a start from there once nwre for the mouth of the McKenzie, kewing in as close to shore as poelblc. in case of a storm. One day W6 618m- ed in the distance the smoke of a steamer, and shortly after a Hudson Bay company tug hove in sight. with a long string of boats in tow. The wind had started up, and they made for shelter in the lee of an island. We followed suit, and arriv- ed among them. There we were de- tained by the weather for three days. The people we met there had come from all parts, some booking passage back on the boat, having all the gold hunting they wanted. The weather breaking clear, we got under way once more, soon arriving at the mouth of the MloKcnsle, and as we did, down came clouds of mosquitoes, nearly eating us alive. then bull dog flies, “from bad to worse." At length we got through l . l B; Ianaa W. Bclalalb. | HEADACHES FROM 100 MUCH STARCHY FOOD l You may be having headaches 'regularly and as many headaches . come from the eyes or the food you l have your eyes tested and find that they are below normal. The eye specialist tells you that the loss of acute vision is not very great, but that it might be sufficient to cause you headaches. Your headaches disappear for a short time but return and you an ‘now at a loss as to their cause. l Knowing that constipation is often ' a factor you establish regular intes- tinal movements but you still have headaches. Dr. A. Maitland Ramsay, 1on- don, reminds us that the eyes are afiected by whatever the blood stream carries to them. It is now known that infection from the teeth is the cause of partial loss of eyesight in many individuals due to the poisons being carried to the eye. That certain food stuffs affect various parts of the body ls seen in of the steering of a vessel. following lthe way some fresh fruits, straw- them’ berries particularly, will cause large Stave, is a BC. llileotrfc powerhoupe chant of Death." of arms and muni-hion to state- owned establishments, the Domin- how far it was to Fort Providence, 1on3 policy is certain to be lriflu- he told us "head dc line!" sixty mil-l ential. Unquestionallaly it will ma. 911 i319 dfly when the world will de- straight that distance. By this timey En“ one or m; greatest body l1"? i710 will? do F809 to the "Mcr- our boat being consderably lighten- The first thing we sighted was en , lumps to form on the skin. Indian in a canoe; we asked him Tomatoes, one of the best foods because of their richness in vita- i mins, cannot be eaten by others, for es he called it, the river running‘ me same ransom . builders known, cause an upset in cd up of its load, we dlwflrded the many individuals whether eaten lOBB. and by 11188118 0f the QB-Tfi- raw, cooked, in cakes or ice cream. without a staff. It is fullof gener- ators and dials and switches and gadgets, but it runs itself. The crow which looks after it is miles away sent by means of electric impulses. The powerhouse is g. huge and ela- borate robot. j ,;, aura-ably , '. .. ..-'.’»..;x»f';.. .' v e l-rcwaabuiltmoreorlellintlw form of a man. He would obey orders and do a number of marvel- lous things. He was almost, i! not quite, as clever and adaptable as "Rosie" Mao's mechanical stenOS- rapher who is playing so lawman} a part these days in the drama of: “Tillie the 'I'oiler." So far as we’ have learned, however, he did not eat old razor blades. and that. of course, must be regarded as s defect. When Wiley Post flew round the world a month or so ago, he had with him in the plane a robot which relieved him of part of the physical wort of flying. This was a mech- anical pilot. It was not built in the form of a human being, but it per- formed some of the tasks that might have been assigned to an ae- slstant and it didn't suflbr the fat- igue a human pilot would have suffered. The mechanical pilot. ha. body w“ all; . my o; 115117; gl-qm comparatively new on airplanes, in the Bleclrlc em Th, eye respondg not new on ships. It can take charge lmmnlly and m“, m, dom- open, The waitress passes throusli- the the course which the human pilot llgm 8mm,‘ the eye “m, “d m, h“ m d00l‘ a closed. a robot is at work. At the head of Stave Lake, where seemlngly’ m, wmld l,“ pasggd the waters of Allouettc Lake come through m, madhlm, we, and, wml- down from the higher level to the out qulle “all”: ll,‘ l‘ well lnw the age of robots. The machine multiplied man's capacity, enabling him to produce a hundred or a thousendfold. It brought him com- forts and amenities and "goods” which, without the help of the machine, he could never have en- joyed. It enabled the poor man of the twentieth century to enjoy ORDER Radio Peas Heinz Pickles room. when a waitress with n loaded tray approeohu the door, at stave Flalls, and any orders are In a thousand houses in Van- the Mint Sauce orint to take care for their sakes. !‘h tori “i020 n, of? o? ixpprlgachmg own aaunaments, and having made ' ‘cu ry a Le m“ oqgreatcr sacrifices than any other h ht th h,l "Y1 wvin "i. c girel: atre enteringlnatlon in m,‘ respect’ Great firm ea ~ n‘ SC 0o ' O be “mum has entered the Disarmament than ever on the watch, to g-lowl Having taken the lead in scaling n, naval mnlmmm lncenwms made much better time. We had were up for renewal now they would not stand a chance, and with Japan and m sleep at night’ and u we wlthdruwlng “om the League n had no mosquito bar, had to keep looks as mough the one phase of a smudge going and lace up. the dlsmmllnlenl whlch has Show“ any tent the best we could to keep the real achievement will A» by the mosquitoes away" one night’ we Slap“ camp en route for our meals. —sugar, candy, pastry, cakes-are And now it is found that starches couver, ‘great and small. there are ‘ oil or 38-! furnaces which work not handled well by the body iflautomatically. The owner moveg a eaten in very large quantities and pointer on the wall to the tempera- eye trouble followed by headaches fill-e h, requires and the machlne may Tesul" does the rest. It is a robot. In the “Adults who wmlllaln °l h"d"kltdhens of certain ultra-modem privilges which the kings of Middle Ages never even dreamed of. But the machine, in its perfec- tion, brought also the menace of unemployment. It was not the ma- chine itself that was at fault, but man neg‘ ‘to exercise control such ‘on the we“ o’ his can And to be lConforenoe at Geneva with the "My t0 Put on the brakes at the IllElIV/cct sign of danger. The same larefulness about his driving ought to be observed whether in town or lmmtry. Though manifesting thcm- lelves in a different way, the risks IN really no less in the country than in the olty. The motorist can hardly plead lngorance of the pres- ence of schools for, in town as well as in country district, the presence of schools is clearly indicated, the notoristls attention being drawn to the fact by plainly worded signs, Pllccd well in view and at a reas- onable distance away. INANE CRITIEISM It would tax our contemporaryk hlonuily to make more misstate- Ilnh h a single editorial column Inn it oucoeede‘ in doing yesterday. first it quoted The Guardian as having stated that if the Bennett Government went to the countf! "it would certainly be defeated." No ca‘ statement ever appeared in Ihe Guardian. Next it quoted Premier Bennett as promising to "usher in an economic millennium." Mr. Bennett made no such promise. It then attributes to Hon. Dr. Mac- Milla.n, Acting Premier, a statement which appeared in its own columns as a Canadian ‘Press item, in which I-Ion. Dr. MscMillan is nowhere quoted. The item in question had to do with the Provinces application for unemployment relief. An en- deavor is made to show that the re- quest for such relief was an admis- sion that conditions are getting worse instead of better. Cur con- temporary forgets that in the first year of the Bennett administration the Lea Government also applied for relief. Its own contention at that time was that there was no unem- ployment; but this was flatly con- trsdicted by Mr. A. E. Maclaan. MP, and Mr. J. P. Mclntyre was equally emphatic when he went to Ottawa looking for the money. The next contention advanced in yesterday's Liberal organ is that be- cause our fanners anticipate selling their potatoes and turnips in Uni- ted States this year, therefore the Empire trade treaties are valueless. That is not the opinion of the new Liberal government in Nova Scotia, which is sending a trade commie- lioner to Great Britain to take ad- vantage of the opportunities opened by the Bennett Governmmt in the British market. Nor is it the opinion of our bacon and poultry producers, who have obtained sub- vtantial preferences as a result of lest year's Imperial Conference at Ottawa. The fact that our potato growers ‘avowod purpose of pushing the icause of peace still further. The hope of British statesmen is to compose exising differences between Germany and France and thus to pave the way for vast internation- al economies in offmsive weapons on land, at sea, and in the air. On the eve of the Conference, ‘British Minister! asked the ‘United ;States Government if it could see ‘its way clear to postpone the laying down of. large, six-inch gun cruisers during the life of the Dlmu amcnt Conference, or at least pending further discussions. The reply of the Wiashingfmi Administration is that it cannot see its way clear to delay ship construction or to suspend the laying down of s/ny protected ships. Ever since the Washington and London Naval Qonfcrcnces, the cam Govonunent has nought to prvvail upm the American authori- ties to build seven-thousand ton light cruiser: rather than ten- thoueand-‘ton cruisers. It has tried to lit fin Washington Govern- ment to am in line with this pro- gram of liznitstion. The British have insisted that seven-thousand-ton, cruisers an large enough a s» the‘ patrol work and police work desired of them. The United States naval authori- ties have alwaye maintained, and still maintain, that they must have ten-thousand-ton cruisers because thq/ have not as many naval bases in different parts of the world as Great Britain. The answer, com- ments the Mull and Empire, surely is that the British Empire is a world-wide llimpre, to which the sea-roads are as vital as are rail- way: to the Unitad States. The American Republic, established as it is aetridc a vast continent with broad oceans on either hand, has no such need for sea. armaments g5 the Briiteh Isles and the daughter states and dependencies. EDITORIAL NOTES Among other dismissals for “polit- ical partisanship" by the new Lib- eral Government of Nova Scotla is that of Miss Ann Allen, superintend- ent of nurses at the Kentville Sen- atorium. The dismissed nurse had an enviable war record. Winner of the coveted Royal Red Cross, high- est award in nursing, she was pre- sented with the decoration by King George. She was mentioned by su- Dou,‘ Haig in despatches, and won the Mons Medal, the British War Medal, and the Victorymedal. The Canadian legion has demanded Miss Allen's reinstatement and the government has consented to an in- vcstigatlon. I170 access to the muted States A. board as soon as existing treaties expire. Nobody denies the right of deplore the choiceof an inoppor- tune moment to start doing so. The London Morning Post be- comes impatient at the fuss caused over Great Britain's trade with Ru-"ls- Thai newspaper points out that the purchases Russia ls able or llillllns lo make from Great Britain are in the firs-t place relatively in- significant. The threat that if Great Britain cuts down Russian imports thelatter will not buy from Great ‘Bfllaln is “a snare and a delusion." The Post observes: "Russian trade l! Homing more or less than an ‘tho hands of Moscow. The Russian foreign trade monopoly places its orders just wherever it happens to suit the momentary whim of a Rus- ‘lm “"1841 Wllfy- If we must have '- lmdfl I-Emement with Russia, let it be on the stringent tenng whlch we are in an excellent pogltlgn m dctaie; and let 1m see to it that our dictation i; guch u l0 Sea“ W953! f0‘! 011i‘ boot customers, who on a sand bar, and on account of“ ache’ which _ persls“ all" they‘ the heat‘ we got up ln the momlng have had their vision corrected, are‘ me Unlled states ‘w so ahead and recline like boiled owls. Ibulld warships. Nonetheless all will or three outfits camped for dinner, eighty years old, panning out some o; gum and about a pound o; ‘not! the body that may have something instrument of political blackmail in a amounts of starclies-sugars-in the diet. In children inflammation of‘ the eyelids may be traced to eat-l ing too much of this one kind of‘ food. Many of these children offer‘ feeble resistance to every form oi gravel at; the edge of ‘b9 stream, infection, and it i5 possible DIRK‘. it He shovecd us three or four colors‘ ls the way starches are handled in ‘often found reacting to increased‘ At Fort Simpson, at the mouth cl the Leard River, wo saw two with an old "Forty-niner," over 0g all 51295 he h“ oblallled’ I no“ to do with their lack of rcsistancei iced he hadn't a tooth m his head l" “llmenw- i when he lauglml Hls party started Remember, starches and sugars up the Llard, shortly arm with the mm l” “m” ‘Wm’ d” m ‘ti?’ old fellow on the sweet» heat and energy. It is Just possi e A, Great Bear Rivet we made however that your headatzlrhes 11(1):); . our next stop, there being several be iuel tobggt n8 Xxllgifdlemn y l outfits landed at the time. Here I made the acquaintance of a marfleaving the m,“ outfit wlth- Lloyd named Birley, he wit! IlWWmK l!" and Bell ho bring over the pass. W“ l“ hw- “i4 "skins m if lLloyd and 1 tracked the boat up m I did“ think 1i WWW l» the clear ‘Destruction City, through practi-l thins for dlzkinl; golclrsmd it sure cglly dead water, to the foot or’ would. It had a blade on it about the "plug, and owl-ed the stuff: W? ‘eel l°fl8- 8°11" of llwm hMViiu the m1. Then we proceeded: queer ideas. cans specially made down to mo mouth of the Rat. On with double bottoms for holdingour way down we passed m cum; Kold- ‘They must. have been boundifrom Chicago, who were proceeding f“ ‘All 3°14 °T "TY" M11191 up the river, and the first greeting‘ add “mik- we got from the man on the sweep w‘ ‘M’ “u” ‘l’ n)" mfllllfl was “Hello, you know me, my name restaurants, photo-electric cells, or kuarding the door fnto the d'nlng and Fort Good Hope, making en- quiries as to channels to be taken, to avoid getting into any blind sloughs. We made a stop also op- POsite the mouth of Gravel River, are our own klth and kin in the liinsplre." 5°11“ roll: will. on their m1: ‘belief. In Illl of the typo m“ lllxht, can hardly b0 distinguished "m1 their parents, like the gwflitg, which grow so strong through the 1m: days spent in the nest m» My will cross the sees vzithlu g few den arm taking n» air. mm chicks are fed by their parent; m. til well albe to fish for themselves; you!!! eagles stay about their “out; for ten or twelve weeks. Young lilllflfllhon are the slum chlldl-m 0g M"! mid- llld Spend three weeks in B dlrk, dank bank hole, the foulest of all bird cradles. Yet when they exchange their bod of l-lsh bones ml. the beauty of the river scene they RN as brilliantly lovely as Lhgly parents, living flashes of emerald 811d azure. Fwd!!! opinion in the ma” |; infected with the ides. that the m- dlB-n Qllcstion-the most difficult and complex that statesmmnglllp h“ had to deal with lri modern tmcg- is merely one of a single pegplg ruled 591x151“? 5nd WPN-Bsively by "will" people. who intend w maintain that rule despite all pl-g- tences to the contrary , , _ me mlflfillllfls of American opmion m particular ias been such as page; filrnishes 11c mendaclty and mal- lifllty 0f i‘ a extremist Indian Pregg B"! lRYHPll’ responsible for ell th‘s. It remu- for Canadian ram“, and m" Y" Producers and exporters l° m‘? lull advantage or the m. some distance up the Make-rule from Rat River‘. Hare we found nvo Iboets landed. and they were making Preparations for dinner. W. mm over to where they were gathered around the cook fire, and in the conversation going around, mention was made of the scarcity of fresh meat, and what s treat a nice juicy moon stock would be, another re. marking that a moon's nose prop- erly macaw! was Quito a delicacy. All of n. sudden, a fellow yelled out "moose in the river," and sure enough there was, and gush a scramble for fire arms, and than for oars and a boat. About ten jump. ed into one of the boats. They had 0am, boards and paddles, and oi! they started after the moose, and such a wild pefformancc of seq. mflmlillb was never outdone by any outfit in the world befbre, 1 m sure. 0n Batting about thirty feet off the moose, they gun-ted flying wml rovolvens and they had buck fever sobadthcyoould not hit him even at ten feet, and to cap it all there was s fellow on the opposite shore, with a rifle firing as well with like results. The great mercy was he didn't kill some“ ‘, in the boat. Anyway the moose plJOd within thirty feet of him, cllrrfoed the bank, and the last we eolw washls rear end disappearing, and with it our hopes of some fredh meat for dinner. _ After having something to eat, we m°nd°l15l>r¢=lcrred markets npcnedto ‘ct under way once more for rm them in the United Kincdcm IilldlR-llfl‘. passing Arctic Red River, Othor parts o! the Emlllfn by upland shortly after arriving at the Imperial Conference of m: you‘. lizliloiiih of the Rat. Here my partner is Applo, I kept a store in de al- leyway in Chicago, I'm de Schwaper man." He woe quite a. character“ Later some one stole n. box of dried‘ pearahehadmdhesizspecteda fellow by the name of Manning of being the guilty party, and had- them cell a miner's meeting to try the case. I-‘fe himself wBs prosecuting attorney. He bad lvmnnlng up be- fcn the court, and put the question to him, "Did you see my bears?" “Nc," Manning said, "I did not sec your pears." "You did not see my bear-s, you‘re alright, you good mans," e0 Manning departed fully? exonerated. He apparently came from an interesting neighbourhood in Chicago, as he mentioned the, 0M0 of a, butcher adjoining him who ran out of material for sous-l age meat, and to keep his custom? ers supplied, ground up his wife‘ and made some delicious sausagcl out of her. After leaving this outfit, we shot- ly reached the mouth of the Rat," where Lloyd had e camp partly mllde. W! flnl-lhod it, and after rig-l 81h! "D some fish racks, proceeded‘ to place nets acroav the river, toi catch fish and dry them for a trslnl vf dose they had. We ma a smell‘, Punt. and when we saw any fish‘ land in the net we would take them out, clean them, split tblem and hang them up to dry, keoplng g smudge going to keep the mes away. We got quite a variety of fllll. the salmon and rainbow trout being quite plentiful. We would oook what we needed for ourselves la a reflector, and the pan we with oil. they were so rich. We liv- Bd lllsh, for a while. in fact, I never Ito so much fish in my life before. (To be Continued.) ______._____.__ ‘"11’ Dwpic rise to thezr opportun- l "lid I agreed to separate and I join- itlce in this regard the mcst d m. 'd in with the fellows I met at Hay cult of our national prof." s will Ytivcr. Thrcc of the party had gone be gradually soiled l n rlhcnd, light, for Dawson (my, I Whey butter was manufactured as a side line at B3 New Zealand fac- ioles in 1932-33, 1,787 tons having bccn expflried. WORM them in. would be swtmmingl over it and its products, or control as he did exercise was for "electric eyes." have been 8B9 "P- selfish rather than common ends. So, to many, what promised to be a great good came to be looked upon as a danger and a curse. There is no use railing against the machine, however. We have passed the machine, and come to the robot. This contrivance, too, is capaible of bringing much good or much evil. Guided and controlled, it promises to relieve mankind o: its drudgery and free it for better things. They are even robots for , the fanns, and some day perharps the farmer may become, like the engineer. a reader of dials and a mover of switches. But what is to become of the human race, relieved from the spur of action, A leased from the discipline of toll? The author 0f "RJJZR." the inventor of the word "robot," though not of the thing itself, visualized the de- struction of civilization. Everything “The Haberdashery” Dacks’ Shoes are proved values. Known the le n g t h breadth of Canada for appear- and ance. Splendid wear- ing qualities and real depends 0n how man employs his foot comfort. Try a pair of those famous OCTOBER 6, 1933 The Age 0f RObOlB ' ‘ (Vancouver Province) 389 0!‘ 390 v at u» 0mm Inhibition. lathe Q last days of August. i!!!" W" " contraption on view known as “Brio . the Ihibot." Eric woo an automaton. YES WE HAVE GEESE-IIIIGKS-QIIIOKEII-FOWL for your THANKSGIVING DINNER Also our special in ROAST LAMB f Fore quarters at ELEVEN cents Forequarters Boned and Rolled at 12c per lb Don't be one of the disappointed EARLY String Beans Tomato Sauce THE ROAD TO SHITHERY The road still leads to Shottery mu back, Between the chcckered fields the! Shakespeare knew, But now no lovers leave the tourist track To linger for a little, passing through A bacchanal of flowers amid the grass still beckons to the lover and his maid, But sweethearts do not tarry ae they pass, To lay their heads together in the shade. Few wander through the fields, and none remain, But Beauty walks with quiet foot- steps there Midsummer magic in a country lane Still weaves a spell upon the drowsy air, And when the poppy and the haw- thorn bloom The dust of Shakespeare stirs ia Stratfordb tomb. \ -Abel Meeropo \ new assistants. He can use them to build a heaven on earifh, or he can turn them loose and encourage them flINAR 0'5 ‘KING or mu" t Men's Shoes. Priced $8.50 Sold only by HENDERSON 146 Richmond Sh, EIR.BRK)W/ Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis ii Charlottetown l 8: GIIIIMURE MEN’S WEAR $1.00 Bottle Nlsjol . . . . . . 89c 3150 Bottle Fellows Syrup $1.29 3100 Bottle Beef, Iron and Wine 50c Box Gin Pills 89c 80c Box Chases Nerve Food‘ ll: HICKEY 8. 50c Jar Ponds Cream .. Bo iii; 35c Tlns of Talcom 11c l Pint of Essence of Vines: .........-..-.-..-.....-.. iii 8 or. bottle of Wampolel Mllk of Magnesia Ale TllE 2 MAGS 149 Great George Street I I I L NICHOL s/ou s