-- ~‘- wow THE GHARLOTTEWnvrqflguhunlhn‘ _, _ __ A AUGUST 6 1931 rfli-i ‘n- —, -~-—— — I ‘ "r ‘ -" r" ‘ _ - ___“ " ' " W“ _____ _‘_________‘____. .-;—111.'l5111i'{1i.i1!L___“""'“" 1"“ "H" "”“’ . . lane's rmous s can use; I .~ - . K1 l'rr-"1""-“ ‘ The difference between estlmat- ‘ ed cost and the actual cost is well illustrated in connection with some four Canadian _ canals. The: ' estimated cost of the Rideau can- al was £169,000 and the Elli-URI 0051i ,£693,449 ($3,467,245) the estimated‘ ‘ilnnnglnl lllrrrlnr~.l. It. “urns-ll n» l-z-ln-m-rnmu with." nun u h. (‘urrlo mrmlm illlili $5.1m nu your uh anvmu-o) delivered. m: n. (‘unullu “m llnllred smo- TuulispArLhuousjff-oil931; (Sydney Post) ‘ Federal questions are evidently playing an important part. in the Prince Edward Island Provincial Elections,‘ which are to take place on Thursday next. Liberal speak-l‘ ers having made verbal attacks on the Bennett Govern-- A lnrnlnl nail! “M, nn- "u" nnpnfln e_l ‘mm FULL FAMILY. PROTECTION On To Victory.’ l Before this issue 0f The Guard- ‘an reaches many of its readers, t0- lay's election will be well un- ler way. The Conservative party leader, his candidates and sullllflfl- H's who have been in close contact with the campaign feel confident that the victory will go to the party with a platform and a policy-the party that is in line with the pro- gressive Conservative administration It Ottawa, that has already obtain- ed a subsidy increase of $165,000 under an adverse federal adminis- tration and can be depended upon lo press vigorously upon a friendly administration for n final and com- plete settlement of this most vital question. On this issue alone, if the electors consult their bcst interests as we feel confident they will, a Conservative Government under the experienced ‘leadership of Hon. J. D. Stewart will ‘be in power in this Province for the next four years at least. The success of the Conservative members of Parliament from this Province in arranging for the car ferry “Prince Edward Island" to be repaired at Charlottetown instead oi‘ being sent to Saint John or Hali- fax, as has been the case under a federal Liberal administration, is but an indication of what can be accomplished for this city and Province by the united efforts of two Conservative Governments. working in co-operation and har- lnony. There is every indication of an exceptionally large votc being polled in today's contest. Interest through- out the Province has been centered on the election issues for several weeks, and the meetings have been very largely attended. It must not Abe forgotten that it is the duty, as well as the privilege, of every elect- or to poll his or her vote. The Conservative leader and his candidates have done their part in presenting, fully and convincingly, the issues before the electors. Their campaign has been tremendously successful, and it now devolves up- on Conservative party workers and believe in responsible and economical govern- electors generally who ment to insure a, record vote and the return of the second Stewart Government with the mandate of a sweeping majority. The Parliamentary Session ' ‘The first regular session of Par- liament since the general election of a year ago -prorogucd on Monday. But for the Bcauhnrnois inquiry- which has resulted in Government action that, it is confidently believ- ed will be adequate to the exigencies -~and the fact; that the Govern- ment's unemployment and agricul- tural relief plans were unavoidably delayed due to the difficulty of sec- uring complete information upon conditions actually prevailing, pro- clifflcult position of having to bridge a deficit of seventy-five millions _without imposing too heavy a drflg lupon the country's buslnes, already suffering from the world-wide de- presslon. Mr. Bennett submitted a list of some two hundred tariff changes, designed to strengthen the primary as well as the secondary industries of the Dominion, and the WlSd0lll_ShOlVn in the selection of commodities and in the adjustment of duties. has been manifest in the remarkable unanimity of public ap- proval; fndccd, it may be said in this respect the tariff changes ef- fected during this session have had no precedent in the long list of tar- iff revisions made by other govem- merits, Conservative and Liberal. - In the House of ‘Commons, the Premier was criticised on the score that he had introduced a rich man's budget, and this complaint served the useful purpose of eliciting a statement showing something of the actual conditions which the changes are intended to rectify. For ex- ample, Mr. Bennett informed the House that of 22,742 concerns with an aggregate capital of $8,442,229,- 400, no fewer than 15,327, having an aggregate capital of $2,683,431,999. were not accessible for taxation in 1930, having sustained a net loss of 598063.567 and these corporations paid out in salaries and wages the great sum of $388,659,062. The net gain of the 7,415 corporations who were accessible in that year was $403,428,323 and the corporation tax paid by them, allowig for‘ exemp- tions of $14,830,000, was $31,087,866. The capital employed by these cor. Dorfltlons amounted to 35.758.797.420 and they paid out in salaries and wages 5859520940. The total net gain of all these corporations, those which were taxable and those which tax paid as stated was 531.087.1365, leaving a balance for shareholders of $274,276,890. This was the total net amount actually returnable to proprietors on an investment of nearly $8,500,000,000. These figures illustrate graphically and emphatic- ally the serious industrial condition which the budget measures were de- signed to “improve and which the new trade treaty with Australia, whose terms were communicated to Parliament during the session, will help to correct. The debate on the tariff board legislation was protracted by the Liberal Opposition whose Tarifi Ad- visory Board, created by order-in- council, had gone out of office soon after the change of government The new tribunal, as provided in the Act, and as explained by the Prime Minister, is to be a fact-finding body, and is to hold office for ten ycnrs. It is to consist of‘ a chairman and two other members, and the in- tcntion of the Prime Minister is that it shall be patterned upon a court of law. ‘The Prime Minister intim- ;atcd his decision to turn thc were not. was saosscavss and the‘ lcost of the Welland Canal was {$30,000,000 8nd the actual cost ,'$l25,C00,000. The estimated cost of lthe Panama Canal was$l50,000,000 land the actual cost $600,000,000. .The estimated cost of the Beau- iharnois Canal at present is a few ‘senatorial seats! the actual cost iwili probably include more than ‘senators. A United States writer says: “The World War left Germany |prostraie. Not once since the war ;has Germany been wble to pay ireparations out of o national surp- ilus. Invariable it has had to borrow ‘the money. 1t is this extended bor- rowing coupled with the prolonged industrial depression, that has caused the present crisis. Never- theless, the indemnity of the l8- 70's is worth remembering namely one billion francs on the spot and ,four billion more within three | years. The French have never for- gotten it; and it is that fact which make them unwilling to grant con- cessions to Germany now. The at- titude mfy“ be blind and stupid, but it is at least easily under- standable." l Sidney Holland‘ Second Viscount Knutsford whose death was re- ported the other day in London at ithe age of seventy six was known ifor many years as the prince of beggars. His bogging campaigns were taken mainly to help benefit hospi- tals. It is estimated that in the ‘course of thirty-five years he rais- |ed as much as thirty million dol- ilars for the London Hospital alone. ‘When he undertook this work the London Hospital was in a bad way. iThcre were six hundred and fifty ‘lpatients, one operating theatre, no Ipathologists, no clinical laborator- ies; and most of the nurses, who were grossly underpaid, lived a Box-and-Cox life with one bed ‘shared by two. As a result of his lwork, London Hospital is now the largest and best-equipped institu- tion of its kind in England, with o, flourishing medical college, lab- oratles, a nurses’ training-school, lconvalescent homes and equipment ‘for all modern forms of treatment. In seeking from Parlfiflfent ex- ccptionally wide powers for un- employment relief and the main- tcnance of law and order, Mr. Ben- nett took the ground, as he has done before, that Canada should never be in its present condition. Endowed as it is with great natural resources in proportion to its popu- lation, ft should always be better off than any other nation, and it [would have been better off to-day ‘if only it had enjoyed for some lycars past a proper fiscal policy- the policy which has now been giv- 6n it by the present Government. ‘That policy, the Prime insists, will lshortly begin to show larger results, ‘and in thg.l0ng run it will place ‘the country on a comparatively permanent basis of prosperity. His view, of course, is, and it is held by ‘an increasing number of people, lthat the average Canadian cannot help but benefit if Canadian fac- tory and farm labor are consistent- I _ly protected against foreign com- ‘petition. We've seen some women swim- mers who, so far as we were con- cerned, could just keep on swim- ming, but we've also seen a lot 01 wall-flowers who evidently limited their exercise to walking on level ground, and who managed to keep their school-girl comlplexions in a sunlight and about the different these rays really do. Dr. D. McCLskey, New York, re- minds us that sunlight is divided into three general divisions. First, the Hertzian light wave that is so long in its wave length vib- rations that wireless telegraph mes- sages are constantly being sent up- on them. We cannot see these waves. These are often called the infra-red wavesnnd cannot producesunburn. The second group of light rays from the sun as the ‘luminous’ group, which the human eye can perceive in the colors of the rainbow, namely, violet, indigo, blue green, yellow, orange and red, the wave lengths being the longest in the red, and shortest in the violet vibrations. These are the heat waves of the or- dinary incandescent electric lamp, but cannot produce sunburn. The third group are the actlnlc light waves. These might be divided into those that produce only sun- burn, because of their low penetra- tion power, and those which produce a deep penetration, namely the X rays. In speaking of the rays that pene- trate just a short distance and cause sunburn Dr. McCaskey says that the cells of the skin are mark- edly stimulatcd, the little blood ves- sels immediately beneath the skin are dilated or made larger, and the four symptoms of inflammation are present. These symptoms are pain, swelling, redness, and heat. This is Nature's method of pre- venting these particular rays from penetrating any deeper, as millions and millions of dark granules are formed which provide a. defence against these actlnlc or quartz light rays. This is the reason that in treating patients with these rays to stimulate circulation, and i;~ ‘T0358 number and quality of red rn-puscles in the blood, that the dose can be grad- ually increased, beginning with one to three minutes and working up to twenty to thirty mlmzlls, as more and more of these ,-__ mules are formed. Remember then the different kind of rays from the sun, that two groups do not cause sunburn, and that of the third group, the actlnlc rays are beneficial, by causing an increased activity of the skin and tissues beneath it. These rays can be obtained from "sun" lamps, but as there are differences in these lamps, let your doctor guide you should you desire to purchase one. ment, Conservative campaigners have replied bypointing DIFFERENT RAYS IN SUNLIGIIT You are reading so much about kind of "rays" that‘. come from the sun, that you may wonder just what cent speech” in Parliament. piece to any Tory Provincia week.” far as giving money from this ernments ls u ment as it exists today, I might Some Hon. Members: "Oh!" any Tory Government. Mr. Bennett: "Shame!" Mr. Stevens: “Shame!" Mr. Mackenzie King: “Do my Mr. Bennett: "Yes, shame!" Mr. Mackenzie King: “What Mr. Stevens: “You ought to ury to any Tory Government tn employment purposes. with these today, I would not give them a It is fortunate that Mr. this rule and made it work the other wa fort in Federal issues for Liberal campaigners. Mr. King's five cent speech will live to point a moral and adorn a talc in many an election yet to come. to the Prime Minister's comprehensive measures for un- employment relief, which they have contrasted with Mr. King’s attitude when he delivered his celebrated “five A few days ago the Charlottetown Patriot, which sup- l ports the Lea Government, attempted to argue that Mr.' King had never said that he would not give a “five cent piece” for unemployment relief to any Tory Government. “The Opposition speakers," said the Patriot, “have re peatedly declared during the campaign, that Hon. W. 1.. Mackenzie King said that he would not I Government. “Mr. King never made such a statement. He said he believed money voted for unemployment relief should he distributed by a non-partisan commission, the very thine: Mr. Bennett advocated in the House of Commons The Guardian answers this bold denial by printing the full text of Mr. King's remarks as reported in Han- sard on April 3, 1930. The report is as follows: Mr. Mackenzie King: “May I conclude what I have to sly‘! So federal treasury to provincial gov- rned, in relation to this question of unemploy- be prepared to go a certain length possibly in meeting one or two of the western provinces that have -Progrcsslve premiers at the head of their governments- Mr. Mackenzie King: "But I would not give a single cent to hon. friends say ‘shame’: Is therel to be ashamed of?" be ashamed of that." ‘Mr. Mackenzie King: "My hon. friend Is getting very indignant. Something evidently has got under his skin. May I re at what. I have said? With respect to giving moneys out of the fe eral treas- thls country for these alleged un- govemments situated as they are five-cent piece.” Bennett has not seized upon The Public Forum Thhulnnnteqnhrtbe alw-unbvunupohunu aquarium-ashram. no Uha-rlottetownlhardllniou not neeenartly eadono the uplnbrlololrelpondenh. I DEMANDS PUBLIC APOLOGY . Sin-I wish in your press to deny a. spitefully false statement made by the Hon. B. w. Lorilee, Liberal Candidate for Second Queens. At a meeting at Emyvale (Hall. Mr. LePage made the statement that 25 gallons of rum for election purpos- eswere seized in my house at Bay View. This statement of Mr. LePage’s ls absolutely false and it is my inten- tion, unless Mr. LePage publishes a public apologyjdmitting the falsity of his statement, to issue a writ for slander against him and to have his statement proved false in a Court FROM "THE LAST VOYAGE’ Before me there -Love, human", I of Law. I am, Sir, etc., ARTHUR SIMPSON. ~gon telling me, what an unpopular man Allan Stewart, his opponent, lwas, he put his foot in it. Mr. Stewart has been too good a friend to me "when I needed one" for me to go back on him now. E. T. ‘loses my support on Aug. 8th by not ‘letting well enough alone. »Mr. lStewart also canvassed me, but did tnot belittle his opponent, and, when we parted, I had the feeling of having come in contact with some- thing fine and good. He is of the material that goes into the building _up of true citizen- ship, a man of sterling worth, whose word is his bond. It can be truly said of him “Once a. friend, always B. friend." Franchise voters be not deceived by loquaclous mountebanks. “Choose not the man from outward show The feather floats, the pearl lies low’ E. T. is sure one featherweight. On August 6th he will find out that his popularity will be as manifest as that of one leetle oderiferous quad- ruped at a strawberry festival, and that information comes straight from a prominent Liberal worker. Bay View. ‘ SPRING SHOOTING r i Sir:—In regard to the opposition shown by officials and others of Quebec towards the request of the P. E. Island Government for a few weeks o.‘ spring shooting, I think and divine |that those people are very selfish. Th,“ can exalt an wggknegg lnlh They, and all the other provinces pow-c,- __ iof the Dominion, have deer and Whispering, but with such fulimmoose and other same. while We that even 1 ‘have none of those. As far as the Might can on mve w guide mo, I~iand is concerned the Govem- while Isang |n1ent might as well prohibit the or those who caught the puroellcoilue of sec-mas 111511811111’ 1111-! promemcanfil-u porriblc for the ordinary man to One from another, each crying asflget 8 511M "l? 59°59 he" l“ the m. we“; down open season. The Government may for I am, Sir, etc., LABOR UNION. King £1? Senate Reform (Ottawa, Journal) Perhalps Mr. Mackenzie King will be wishing these grey days that he to the matter of Senate reform. I-le said that he would change it improve it. Said that he would appoint to it men thinking- of of his own way of men committed to the prusuit Liberal principles and ideals. Let him now behold his workl Or the lack of it. Perhaps somebody with more de- termination and more real public give a five ccnl lasi y. There is no com- had given more than lip-service eral or provllwlfll 80116111111906 rel)‘ features oflered special form of moderate cost. policies in one . ilyndman & PROVINCIAL NIAD OFIICI ~ A Life Income for Your Wife! An Education‘ for Your Children! A “Clean-up” Fund to Pay 0|} Debts, These are‘ the three valuable protective The Great-West .T h r e e - W a y Family Protection Policy . . . . features embodied only in this 1 a large amount f i ' ' within reach of 316 gslelragltacemfily? Ask for complete details. It will place you under no ob _ elmunorrarowx, r. s. I mouseAT-wssr S U RANGE COM m? by life insu , n is alcatllllflllyantliu: -' - - a Plan that gives COSI ligation. 00., ltr‘ MANAGER LII-TE. PANY -- wmvunc. A-G time is not the tweedle-dum and tweedle-dee of Parliamentary pro- cedure. but adequate unemployment relief, readily available and freely administered as need may arise, by the Federal Government. If Mr. King does not realize that consti- tutional hair-splitting in such a crisis leaves the people cold, he is ‘a bur-blind politician and a hope- less case as the leader of a great party. ' ' Costly Legislation (Financial Post) Recently at the lmuual meeting of the Canadian Manufacturer's Association, W. 5- 14°15“. K- 0-- chalrman of the 198181511111? mm‘ mittee, pointed out that 1119 111ml‘ ber of parliamentary bills introduc- ed in Canada this year was 1.1113- Ahd even this indiuded only mo” of the Federal parliament that h"! been introduced uP 15° the “me mi spoke, The number no doubt is W811 over 1.200 by mw- Cflnflrlb “"11 ‘l population about eqlllvlllenl W that of Greater New York or Greater London, has ten legislative bodies. Mr. Morden pointed out. I1; is a real handicap to Canada. that therB should be so many governmeiltal bodies. n, makes it difficult for manufacturers and other business ofggnigntlong doing trade on B- national scale to keep in with 811 the new taxation and all the 11W rules and regulations estlbllflhed by legislation. Mr. Morden gave a hint of what might give partial re- r lief when ho pointed out‘ that in the United States some of the State legisatures now meet only every two years. Practically every new act put on the statute books of one of the ted- rcsents a new way to spend money. Mounting legislation means mount- ing governmenatl costs and these in turn mean increased costs of do- ing business. Most legislation is the result of a demand by some group ih the body of politics. Most of us have the habit of dismissing prob- lems that arise by saying “There ought t4; be a law." It is this habit that is chiefly responsible for the so that he could harvest his crop -_ of.’ collecting, and besides m Chlnaware, had hunting and "m. ing equipment valued at $6,000 ' ._______._ 13 UNLUCKY FOR PHEASANT NORWICH. N. Y., Aug. 5_(U,p_~, -The 13 eggs which Mrs. Dim Skinner's son found when he mowed down a mother pheasant we" mindful of the ill-fate attached t4 that number. Twelve hatched intl healthy baby pheasants when Mrs Skinner placed the eggs lnlfl | stove, but the thirteenth chick wal dead. SENTENCE DELAYED FOR CRO! MONROE, La., Aug. 5—(U,P,)_ W. H. Jordan, farmer, was given | delay in serving a 60 day sentence for violating the prohibition law planted at the time of his sentence. For Aching, Sore And- Sweating Feet In summer the feet ache, persplre and feel damp and uncomfortable. n‘ YOU WANT REAL roor COMFORT use Penslar . Tread- Easy Foot Powder Dust a little Tread Easy in the shoes, sprinkle some in the stockings. It absorbs mois- ture and checks perspiration to a large extent. Try lt- Sprlnkle top cannlsters 25c. Like everything in 1n Pennlar Family Remedies this Foot Powder ls of the highest qual- ity, liberal quantity and rea- sonable price. E. A. FOSTER CENTRAL DRUGSTORE spirit will have to take up the task rising burden of taxes throughout To one that waited, crowned with as well leave them all the, rogation might have lukcn place’ P01110110 01 Finallcc W91‘ 11° 9- 511°‘ Weeks ago without harm to the country. What the groups lackcd in serious argument, rays the Montreal Guzcite on this point, they made up in loquacity. and an apparently irrcsiibic in- clination to indulge in a filtilc penchant in this regard l‘(.‘.iiilt(‘(l in o. waste of time that would have been discrcditahle in any circum- stances and was doubly so in vicw 0f advantages to be ljilillctl from the expeditious trllnsaeiiun of public business. Three noteworthy subjects with which the House nlld Senate were called upon to deal were, the bud- get, the tariff bill, and the relief measure. The preparation of the budget occupied a ‘longrr time than usual because the conditions were unusual. A complete revision of the tariff was found to be impossible in the time at the Prime Minister's disposal-tho burden falling upon him as acting Minister of Finance: and, in addition, thcre were impor- ,ccssor; but he will leave the Dc- Qppogllion‘ partment reorganized and strength- cncd, with a permanent senior of- ficlal to be known as Financial Comptroller. A much closer check will be maintained upon the expen- ditures of the various departments and the Government will have a much more accurate idea from day to day as to the actual state of the national finances. Of particular interest to the elec- tors in this Province was tho re- estalliishlncnt of the vocational and agricultural grant, discontinued by the King Government, and the in- crease by 50 per cent in the federal payment of Old Age Pensions. Iirlitorial Notes Today's the day. ._.i-_- Stewart is going in! Vote for a return to responsible and economical Government; for the party that can and will secure tant taxation changes to be consid- lsatisfactory settlement of our ‘"11 the Government being in the subsidy claims at Ottawa little box, who couldn't hold a candle to some other girls we've sccn wielding a tennis racket or trying to get out of a. bunker. A1111 tho worst of it ls that most of them eventually get fat. So, come to think of it, if what we have to choose between are dimples and muscles, we'll vote for the brawn, It has the admirable quality eff more permanency, whioh, in woman, is a lot. Mr. King's record during the past session has been an all but amazing one. Hardly a "policy which he cxpounds in office has escaped his condemnation, and his whole attitude has been marked by 9, propensity to fllld Ifllllt, 1'0- gardlcss of what was being P10‘ posed. It is conduct of ‘this sort, a com- plcte lurk of fixlty of principle. that brings a lar;> section of the public to a cynical belief that pol- itics is just a game, that it ls a field for the opportunist, and that in politics it is not courage and principle and capacity that count, but a slick cleverness and an abil- youth and joy, ‘Take thou the splendour, carry it out of’ sight Into the great new age 1 mustnot know Into the great new realm I must not t. r ‘ -Alfred Noyes. TURTLE TRADES“). " " UNLUCKY TORONTO, 0nt., Aug 5. (U. P.) -If you manufacture goods bear- lllg the likeness of a turtle as trade markc, change your tradcmnrke be- foro trying to scll in China, ad- vices Col. I. M. Cosgrovc, Cana- dian Trade Commissioner 8f- Shanghai. In China, the turtle 18 a "bad joss" character and an in- sult, gays Colonel Cosgrove. One firm which shipped goods with that trademark to China were "stuck," according to him. seem dense, .10.)! make many fum- ity to blow hot and cold as circum- stances may dictate. It is all a great pity. And U10 fooled. Democracy may at times blcs, but in the end it has a curious, uncrring instinct for what is sound. Lincoln's famous scntancc about day as it ever was. Yankees, who according to report8| shoot them in and out of season,‘ some using swivel guns that kll1 and wound from twenty to one hundred in one shot. Another thing, if it is to protect the Canada goose this treaty was made Wlth the United States, why not have the daily bag limit five geese in- ‘stead of 25? Another matter I Ywould strongly urge on the GOV- iernment is to have the open seas- on for shore birds, that ls, sea. ducks and all divers from Jan. 1st to March the 1st as that is the time of year that the-poor people along the coast could get some ducks to eat when money is scarce t9 buv o"‘~~ Wrvis of mo". I am sir, etc. ISLANDEB POPULARITY INDEED! "O wad some power the giftie gie us Tae see oursels as ithers seeusl It wad frae monie a blunder free us An‘ foolish notion: What airs in dress an’ gait wad l:a'e us, An c'cn devotion!" Auld Rubble said a whole mouth- of Senate reform. For the task, or need, is there. There are good Sen- ators, and able, and there are things to be said for the Senate. But there are also things against the Senate, and against certain Senators, that cry to High Heaven for change, and the statesman who tackles tho Senate and purges it of its manifest weakness, will have a high score to his credit with the nation. Mr. King’s Pointless Points (Sydney Post) Mr. King has made another major political blunder in raising technic- al objections to Premier Bennett's en- larged programme for unemplo - ment relief. His argument is that to empower the Government to spend such sums as may be neces- sary for this purpose, without speci- fying the exact amount. will be der- ogatory to the authority and pre- rogatives of Parliament. His counter proposal was to vote n sum certain. "a \. if it should prove insufficient, to summon a special session for ful that time. If Mr. E. T. Higgs , “wad parade: can't." folly and futLlity of the thing 1§Ithe imrrsslbllity of fooling all the] In his canvass, he asked for fr‘ that. ultlmawly. the P11111111 15111 people aLl the time is as true to" support, which I promised him a. such further appropriations as may he necessary, In all this the Oppo- ‘Fon leader exhibits a contrnctcd use of proportion. The con- thc country. COLLEGE ours IIIGII RATING RIPON, Wis, Aug. 5—(U P-\—- For the second “vs year. Ripon College's R- 0. T. C. unit has been given an "excellent" rating by the War Department. This is the highest honor that can be wen by the college reserve officers corps. The course is in charge of Capt. Glen R. Townsend and Lieut. Paul C. Serff, both graduates of West Point. _ \ RATTLESNAKES INCREASE CONCORD, N. 1-1., Aug. B--(U.P.) -Thcre was a time when rattle- snakes were considered virtually extinct in New Hampshire. But now the state's population as regardsl rattler; apparently is very much on‘ the up grade. State Forester John‘ Foster has received reports indicat- ing that rattlesnakcs are numerous in many sections. IZEIRS IVILLED CZIINA DOGS r 5T. LOUIS, M0,, Aug. 5—(U?)- Two ‘grandsons of Walter Ceere Taylor. late wealthy drug company head, have been left a-ctlllectlon of V270 Chinaware animals, 170 cf them on fm-mqf “m”, Bu; when he ho- cern of the oeoole of Canada at this dogs. Taylor bad a lifelona hobby l p Sole distributor for the ‘Prov- ince for Dr. Ffrench’: vermi- cide Capnllll- 1135 Nujol m Nujol . ............ 69° $1.25 Plnkharnl Comil- 9“ $1.00 Beef. Iron & Wlne.. 59° $1.00 Enos Fruit Salts we 50o Philllpu Milk of M35‘ m 'nesln....... ......... ~39 80o Clllfornll syrur F1" 4 ° 50o l-‘rnitatives . we 15o Fruitatlvel .. m Aspirin Tablets "l" m A.B.S. a c. Tablets .- :91 50c (‘hues Nerve F0011 -- ° Mall omen um» Pwml" Attention Tile 2 Mllls 149 Great Georfl 5m” ' Phone I15 i v i 1