~ In itaylum for PAGE FOUR‘ TllE BllAll LOTTETUWII GUARDIAN Morning Dolly (Founded i881) ‘resident LleuL-Col. W. Chester S. McLure Vice President J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Secretary LleuL-Col. D. A. Macliinnon. 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director J. B. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Editor Frank Walker SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 per yeur (in advance) delivered to City $1.00 per year (in advance) mailed to l‘. lblslunfl $5.00 per year (in advance) mznicu to banana um: U-S Members Aucut bureau of circulations “T ha Strongestillerliory-idwllealrer me Weakest lwrlk.”_ THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1938 Newfoundlands Progress Four _\t*:u'.- ago Xcwfiniinllzmd, rcduccd t0 dire linnucizil t-xlrc-mitics, >ui'r(~i1<lcrc\l ll: auton- Oiny Lillil ztcct-pit-(l Zl KiUlIlIlIlS-lttll (iovcrnincnt appointed by ilu- gonsrtiiiit-iit of flit: United lxutglluiu. .\lllCC lll:tl time, it is conceded by all L)l).\t'l‘\'\‘l'> lhnt the cuuiur_v llils been milking sound l>l'¢>f_'l‘t'~~. lluw this is lit-mg LICUJlIIPllSlICLl is nuic-l lll 1i rust-tn i-~ut~ ul thr hinzuicinl Post. The \\i'll( l", .\lr. .\\iriii;iii .\. \\ hitc, covered the liouwll Llniuni-dou hctiring in LllltflUllUlOWll for the sumc paper. lle lllls spent sonic titne in Xcivfoiiiidlzitid. zuul his impression of the pres- cnt lllillblfllll nud c-(‘uniuitic JHISlIlLJll and general outlook" is tlt-cidt-tlly" optimistic. \\‘c nou- out- siguificzuit continent. “Rehabili- tation oi the ccoucnuy" of 1i country such as New- founcllzitnl," says .\lr. \\'htic, “is essentially a long tcrni prupflsitiuti. Since the earliest days its ccotioiny llIlS been based upon the export of primary products, the (lctnatid for which varies with world conditions outside its control. Its large itidustrics have been of a seasonal nature. To alter this situation is not an easy task. The problem in a lltll~§ll8ll is to assist the people wherever pl-s-ihle to obtain a itiore secure means of livelihood. less subject to fluctuations front outside sources. This necessitates an increase ln the wealth of the island through expansion of existing industries and the establishment of new ones. It involves an examination of all resources to see if it is not possible to raise a greater va- riety of products and also to provide a large part of Newfoundlanchs own needs." Evidently Newfoundlands hard-headed busi- ness Commission Government shares the view expressed in the resolutions adopted at the re- cent National Conservative Convention at Ot- tawa, with regard to the importance of building up home inrlustries. Parental Obligations The dlltttl Dominion Bureau of Statistics has pro- an intcrcstitig monograph, based on the Cfillslli returns of 193i and supplementary data, dcztliug with the cash outlay involved in the rearing of children to what is called the age of independence. The total cost of rearing a child until his (or hcr) eighteenth birthday. the llurcan finds, is about $5.700, of which 77 per ccnt is spent 0n his physical nccds. Io per cent for health and rccrvzition. i3 per cent on education. To feed a child to the eighteenth birthday costs, it is estintlltul, about $1,550. Clothing costs $300. and shelter $2,000. llenlth, recrea- tional and social costs add $500 to the bill, and education about S750. Nowadays at lcast great numbers of young persons are still fzir short of “the age of in- dependence" on their eighteenth birthday, and for the parents of such the cost of raising them ls proportionately higher. Parents who send their sons and daughters to tmivcrsity can add to the total bill an average of $550 for each year of the higher education. All of which. suggests the Uttawa Journal, makes it very clear that the parents who raise children to be decent and uscful citizens have done something for their country, 5,- ‘ti’ __________.___ . Dominion Day On Monday . ‘if the Dominion Day holiday were changed from July I to the first Nlonday in July, it would doubtless meet with very general ap- proval. The cclt-bratinti on a Friday this year must have suggested to many the desirability of the change, which would make possible the greater etijoymcnt of a long week-end. There could be less objection to this change of (late than there was to the proposed changing of Armistic Day. Because of the deep senti- mcnt conhcctcll with that (lay, it is almost sacred to many people and they prcferred keeping to the exact (lntc. While Dmuiiiion Day is our national nnnivcrsnry and 11S such is suitably ob- scrvcd in various wzrvs, it is also ititctttlcd as a joyful outdoor hulidziy of the summer season. The [ileasurc and hcalthfulness of the oc- casion would be increased for a great number of people if it were on a Monday, enabling them to spend the long wcck-ctid in our ideal vacation fields where the woods and water are always calling, or tn make excitrsions across country; to visit their friends. The Financial Post regrets that, on the recent Dominion Day, while some employers closed their plants or offices on the Saturday morn- lng “in thousands of retail, commercial and in- dustrial establishments. the Friday holiday was largely wasted because employees were forced to come hack for a full nr half-day on Saturday." The Post strongly favors the first Monday in July for the cclchrntinn of Dominion Day, and one of its reasons is that “it would permit equal opportunity and employment for all."v ' “ Jewish Refugees The International Refugees Conference, meet- ing at Evian-lcs-Bains, France, expects soon to be able to establish a permanent organization t0 assist the emigration of persecuted Jews from German territory. Just where these unfortunate people will be located remains a problem, ‘moeraey is playing a merciful role in offering many of them, \ _ brutally forced out of "their-horm- mt that accommodation for all to take up their resldeitceeiee- more being lie so but the number" where is very difficult to provide. The cruel campaign of prejudice and lies, ae- c°mPanled it times with savage violence and Shameless 5P°1_13l1°1b by which Nazi-controlled states are‘ seeking to rid themeslves of these un. warned _citizens—so many of whom have made distinguished contributions to the cultural and material progress of the land of their birth——is accomplishing its purpose. Those coming un- der the influence of this calumnious propaganda a"? Willing to believe anything, and are bemguold what the authorities want them to beltevemregardless of its truth or probability. lfw-bflmflg i5 in full swing in countries which boast most loudly of their enlightenment, and it 1S for ‘the rest of the world to make sure that the vicious sport is not permitted to intrude. In democratic Christian lands, where freedom of the individual, regardless of race and colour, IS supposed to be guaranteed, the least that can be done is to meet malicious falsehood with the truth and defeat intolerance with the spirit of frur play. According to a mortiing newspaper, one Toronto preacher, expressing lllSmSJ/lllflfllll)‘ with the plight of the tortured people. is urging them to flee from the wrath to come. telling them that they must either accept Christianitv or he off to Palestine, in order to escape nn ap- proaching doom. Surely, this grievous qncs- lion con be dealt with on practical lines, with- out private interpretations of Rihlc passturcs bc- ing dragged in t0 complicate matters. It is a question of justice and common-sense. l‘ Editorial Notes I‘ Spanish Armada entered English Channel this date, i588. a a n: a Germany wants to know what's all the todo about in Paris. n: w u n- Saskatchewan River discovered by Anthony Hendry this date, I754. u n- : a- Lord Tweedsmuir was installed as Chancellor of Edinburgh University yesterday, a 4 4 w Corrigan must blame the bad example of Nelson with his blind eye for the blunder he made in mistaking Ireland in the East for Cali- fornia in the \Vest. u w m n: Andrei Alexandrovitch Zhdanoff, secretary of the Communist Party's central committee, Leningrad party leader, and generally considered Joseph Stalin's “political heir" has been elected president of the Supreme Soviet (Parliament) of Soviet Russia. He will soon realize how un- easy lies the head of even a Bolshcvik who at- tempts to wear a crown. ‘I!!! Sir Edward Beatty is to be in London only ten days, yet found time to call for contracts for three new Atlantic liners. Interviewed, Sir Ed- wardsaid: "In the view of the Canadian-Aus- tralasian line it is essential that the ships should be of a type that will enable the competition of foreign lines to be met effectively and that they be constructed at a cost which will permit at least the prospect of profitable operation." t x w t Prince Edward Island is to have competition in its prospective calming industry from Mexico. Plans are under consideration by the Nicxican Government for establishment of a national co- operative canuing industry, but owing to the large cost required for necessary equipment it is not expected anything will be done about it until after the country's present financial strin- gency has been relieved, according to a Mexico City report to the U.S. Department of Coin- merce. n u t n: Who was the genius who thought of it? Hughes was monopolizing the front pages with his great feat of circling the globe in 3 days, i9 hours and 7 min. Four hundred engines of the make he used were ordered in one day. Then, out of the blue, dropped Corrigan with his flight to Ireland in 28 hrs. in an old plane with an old engine. All the world marvclled. Hughes was displaced from the front page; and people want- ed to know the kind of engine with which Corri- gan did the trick. m m x Here ls how the New Deal helps the U.S. farmer and the poor. The purchase of up to 52,000,000 pounds of butter has been authorized by the Agricultural Adjustment Administra- tion. Purchases will be made by the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation over the pres- ent fiscal year cnding on June 3o. i939. Butter bought will be distributed to needy persons un- dcr the program recently formulated to pro- vidc more adequate nourishment for those on rclicf by the increased use of existing food sur- pluses. n: n- u m A I a Western storekeeper, Leon Gahart. you can't kill a grasshopper by freezing. Farmers sat in Gahztrfs store and argued whether the untisuztlly cold Spring weather had destroyed any of the millions of young grass- hoppers that agricultural agents said infested Southeastern Colorado. Gahart captured sev- eral ‘hoppers and put them in his refrigerator. Several hours later they were taken our. frozen stiff. Gahart put them in the sun and a few minutes later they stretched their legs, rolled over and hopped away. av u u Alberta Social Credit Government are pre- paring a plan for issuance of tax remission slips in payment for road work. The remission slips would be used for payment of taxes and be acceptable by merchants for groceries and other commodities. For every two days a man gave road work against back taxes, he would work one day for which he would draw pay in the form of tax remission slips. The slip would be accepted by the Govemment for taxes, royalties or payments. The slips also could be used for purchase of groceries. feed for livestock or oth- er pitrposes. Credit houses or "treasury branches" might be opened in the provincial electoral constituencies to facilitate circulation of the remission alipl. A lot will depend. of edurse upon the ctr-operation received. While the plan is under consideration. no date has yet baefind1withbnmn£f¢¢iuw~ .-' - ‘w... llflTES BY TllE WAY 0f rill the things you wear, your expression is the most important. The next time you catch e glimpse of yourself in a store window or a counter mirror. skip the glunog at. your hat angle and check up on the expression just below. Then decide ii’ it isn't. worth u Little “m; and effort to exchange that look of grim determination for some- thing u little more appealing, _ Janet Lane 1n Collieri. iThere are eight 11mm h, u“ head. All of these cavities com- municate through. small openings with the interior of the nose, The four pairs of sinuses are the im- trums. the frontals, the ehmotd, and the spnenoid sinuses. Many cases of sinus trouble are caused by allergy. Allergy is the sensitiv- ity of the nasal mucous membrane 9°, cermln 1°T918n particles in the air inhaled or to certain foods. House dust, orrls root, feathers, dog or cat hair, etc. may act a; 1;- ritants. —Facts. A new type of buck caterpillar, described as resembling the com- mon tent caterpillar and as equal- ly deStrllfltlve. has invaded farms in this area '15 miles north of Ot- tawa. It has damaged corn crops. Farmers said they had not seen this type 0f caterpillar for 24 years “m1 We" aPDrehenslve for present 5111111111“; CTOPS- The caterpillars are so numerous farmers found it useless to use ordinary sprays or powder to combat them, and have appealed to agricultural represen- tatives for aid. Unbreakable glass was invented 1n AD. 34 by an unknown glass blower. But the marvelous inven- tifm. 01” d1SCOVBYY. or whatever it little good. Also his secret was Drflmptly lost because crusty old Tiberius Caesar, fearing the effect on his gold. had the glass blow- ers head chopped off.—Dlgest and Review Crossing Fifth Avenue g1, 571,]; 3"?“ 11111913’. we were caught in and had to wait beside the traffic cop. He was holding a. piece of DRDEI‘ which, 55 wg after a little craning, was a mime- OBYBDh copy of Polonluss advice to Laertes: finGive thy thoughts no tongue, '31" ham’ unproporttotrd thought act. Be thou familiar but bv no mean; vulgar. A new era. i th _ ly___New Yoikgrl. e W85’, evident Great Britain turned to the question of her Empire defences today, with emphasis upon Gibm- altar. The Committee o! Imperial Defence is reviewing “the whole queition o_f the strateglcal posi- tion of Gibraltar in the light, or recent events in Spain 3nd the Straits of Gibraltar,” Sir John Simon, Chancellor of the Eixchequ- er, told the House of Commons on behalf of Prime Minister Cham- berlain. Questloners cited "wide- spread anxiety" over reports the]; Germany and Italy were estab- lishing strategic positions in S aln and that foreign guns hgvg gem placed in positions menacing the historic Rock of Gibraltar, guard- TEN GOLDEN RULES OF THE CANCER EXAMINATION may be called, did the inventor, mldstream by a change of lights ' discovered ' Because cancer stands near the top as n. cause of death, all over the world scientists are working hard and long to discover its cause, and cancer organizations are rais- ing money and spreading every- where the knowledge of the symp- toms oi cancer in its early stages. There is another branch of work on cancer which has been growing steadily that is not well known or l appreciated, and that is the ‘knowledge physicians everywhere are gathering and passing on to one another. Thus Dr. Frank E. Adair tn Southern Medicine and Surgery outlines to his fellow phy- sicians ten gclden rules of the ex- amination for cancer. 1. Examine the lips, tongue, cheeks. tonsils and back of throat for persistent ulcerations, the l. larynx (where vocal cords are ‘locatedl for L-lnnrscncss, and the lungs for persistent cough. 2. Examine the skin of the face, ‘body. hands, and feet for scaly. ibleedlng warts, black moles, and | unnealed scars. 3. Examine every woman's breast for lumps or bleeding nipples. I 4. Examine tissue beneath skin ; for lumps on the arms, legs, or 1 body. 5. Investigate any symptoms of persistent indigestion or difficult swallowing. Palpate (examine with fingers) the adbomen. 6. Examine the lvmphnode sys- _tem for enlargements (glands) of the neck, 1n the armpit, and in ] the groin. l '1. Examine the uterus for en- largment. tearing. bleeding. or new growth. Using both hands try to determine the condition of the ovaries. 8. Examine the recltun and de- termlne the cause of any bleeding or pain. 9. Examine urine under micros- cope for blood. i0. Examine the Lones, and make an Xray of any bone which has a boring pain worse at night. l believe that nnvone undergo- ing such a thorough examination for cancer, whether or not there 15 B Single symptom present lump. sore. bleeding. pain, indigo;- tion or other-veil] leave the phv- sician's office calm In mlnd, know- ins that at the present time any- way. cancer has not made a start, and also that practically all cases of cancer in the early ‘stage can be cured ing the entrance» to the Mediter- raneon and the "life line of Em- Dlre to the Near and Fur East. At the same time it. was disclosed Britain is negotiating with her 011191“ 8113f. Portugal, to alleviate the latter-s concern over delayed arms shipments and to counter Germanys offers to supply arms. Quick-sand. contrary to popular belief, does not suck a victim down into its depths. Quick-sand mere- ly holds its victim. Quick-sand l5 a mixture of sand and water. The density of quick-sand is greater than that of water, and and will support the body of a man better than plain water. Swimming in quick-sands is out. of the question. It ls difficult for a person to walk on it. The pres- sure of our feet cause us to sink in, then when we try to lift one leg out we double the pressure on the other. While quick-sand does not suck, it does not flow readily into a void, so that in trying to lift a foot a partial vacuum is formed about lt-and this vacuum has the effect of holding. Scores of Toronto citizens hive been the victims of the "unorder- ed merchandise" racket. Scores more will be victims if the "bite" on the bait that is carefuly pre- pared for them. If you get. a. letter telling you of a parcel waiting you, let, the warning bell tinkle in your brain. Better to be suspicious and investigate than to “fall" for the scheme and get gypped. In this first letter there is no men- tton of‘ the $1 for delivery. It all seems very authentic. So you use the stamped envelope and verify that you are the right party. ‘Then you get a second letter, with some more "build-up" about the parcel. It thanks you for your courtesy in supplying the information, and suavely asks you for the money to cover mailing the parcel. lt‘s nur- prising how many persons fall for this second letter and send off the dollar. At. least that's what the police and "racket-busting" agenc- ies think. They have plenty of complaints from persona who part- ed with a dollar and eventually re- alized that the parcel was imag- inary. —Globe and Mail. At 11.30 p.rn., Monday, July ll, thousands of Wlndsorites and Detroiters will cease to be "sea- faring" folk. Al that hour the in- ter-clty ferries, in continuous operation for more then three- quarters of a century will warp into their whervea or the last time and thenceforth leave crou- rlver transportation to the Am- bassudor Bridge and the Pleetwey Tunnel. Sound bulimia tense doubtless directs the exit of the Detroit and Windsor Co. Just the name, the pus of the ’ cc will commuting Dill! to “lee engender many a hurt Until i929 the opportunity u foreign country for e nickel" exerted m etlo influence over millions in a United Slater and Canada. There were few better travel rlognns than that one. ltd few which struck a more taperin- tve chord in the bosom o the travelling public. Come however. an bri . a than ti.» tunnel. In the face of ltcull turnatlle recipis. the on it out for almost u decode. businel -¢ ‘no NIGHT on THE DOWNLAND Nliht is on the downlimd, on mg lonely moorland, On the hills where tne wind goo; over sheep-bitten turf. Where the bent grass beats upon the unploweu poorlad And bheflpine-woods rear like the su . Here the Roman lived on the wind. barren ion y, Dark now and haunted by the moorland fowl; None oOmes here now but the peg- w only, And moth-like death in the owl. 139M"! was here on this beetle- dronlng downland; The thcpught, of Caesar in the pur- e c p time From the palace by the Tiber in the Roman townland To this hind-swept- hlll with no name. lmiely Beauty came and was here in sadness, 311W B11 fl thousht on the frontier 0t the mind 1n the camp of the wild upon'the march o.‘ madness, The bright-eyed Queen of the Blind. Now where Beauty was are the wind-withered lzorses, Meaning like old men in the hill- wind's PUBLAC FORUM lffilnfi"? gnuuonlgfl ‘:1 alll-fillafililil n: u- l:::."::.::.'.':" "" """"' “ THE OTTAWA CONVENTION Sirr-Tlze Patriot is learning. It is reading the Ottawa. Citizen. a b‘; Liberal paper, one of the ‘l0 papers whose reporters handed to heir l “ the truthful records of the zreat convention from their tables in front o. the platform. If w it keeps on e will have more of truth and em of fiction. if has learned, though tardll I, that there was a. "second ballo and that Hon. Dr. Manlon was el- ected leader with democratic pre- cision. And its eyes have been o - ened to the fact. that in 1919 e Hon. Mackenzie King was elected Liberal leader by a skln-of-tthe- teeth majority gained by a. "stir up" of racial and rehglous feel . in Quebec against Hon. W Fielding for his independent sup- port of the Borden war measures. Of course ll; does'nt say so. To get out ot the hole it tries to blame the ‘itinpcent Tory; e. worn out. exped- ien . It has learned that, Dr. Manlon was Quebec's choice. and no doubt, in secret shedding o. sllent tears that Quebec is lost/to their fuf-ure dreams. In arithmetic the lessons have been faulty. It 1s poor deduction that twice 400 nisxes 830. Sued was never cope ‘ onlzen, nor any of the other 70 papers. Nor oi. .. ,, r mg and responstlxllly p.oc.~a.. that. uebec had "400 de egatrs,” “One undred per behind Manlon." That figment. of illusion ls one or its day dreams. Quebec was entitled to 400 delegates, it. was, like other provinces well rep- resented, but the secret of the gods has not been divulged as to who voted or how they voted, and the Liberal organ into their confidence. psubllsnes what is eon- trary to fox: . There seems a dearth of know- ledge of even local political history. That a very large conventLn of the National conservatives was recently held in Charlottetown, wherein Hon. W. J. P. Mach/Lilian was unani- mously appointed leader in this Province comes to the Patriot an sensational news. That he "led" as such at Ottawa has brought it. ex- citement. In less than two years i. it fails to learn earlier it. will (fla- oover that he is not. only leader but also undertaker with bender atten- tion to the obsequles of those dis- cordant Liberals now scratching each others eyes and squabbling tn the death. It. asks where were Messrs. Mc- ure and Mtvers who were “surely Canada, over 200 committee. And it would also have learned that. not only MeLure and Myers, but every delegate was not onl entitled, but. privileged. it they wished. to speak for the Island and for Canada, and that all re- gpeets they aid not. (all in their uttes. But. the Patriot is learninz. It: kindergarten already brings im- provement, am: with diligence it may know something reliable to entertain its readers with in respect- m that, greatest of Canadian poli- tical conventions. un Sir. ow. LEWIS P. TANTON USING HORSES ON LONG TRIP (Canadian Press) EC, July 20 — Three horse-drawn caravans bringing three families who had never be- fore seen u city or travelled on o train recently arrived from St. Amelie. Man, 180 miles northwest of here. The party—Mr. and Mrs. Firmin Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Delorme. thlaelr baby girls aged two and one; rs. and Mrs. W two-months old daughter-left their homes because they couldn't make a living on their farms. They are bound for Toronto. Eash caravan is equipped with an old auto chassis, rub er tires. SPYUIBB. canvas to and walls and a. front veranda. A1 contain bunks, tables, chairs and clipboards, one boasts a sewing machine and an- other s battery-operated radio with aerial strung along the canvas roof. The men plan to look for work along the route east to buy food and other necessities, but even if blast; The flying sky ls dark with run- ning horses, - And the night is full of the past. —John Masefleld. The Luck Of The Irish (Halifax Chronicle) The outlaw flight of that brash young Irishman. Douglas Corrlgan, as captured popular fancy’. the (luring flier surprlseu New ork ci- fleials by hls sudden take-off for “Caluforntafl He surprised thzm still further by heading eastwards. He then surprised everyone by landtn» sauely in Ireland. lwany assume that, an Atlantic crossing was h goal but the surprise of the Bald onnel airport attendants was harc- l_v greater than the surprise of air- men on this side of the water. it scented impossible (that he coulu make the flight successfully in hi: old crate, the door of which was fastened with a pleoe of hnywire twisted around a nail. There is much of the romantic about his flight. He wanted to fly the Atlantic and he did despite anti uuted equipment, official lor- bidd , and the hundred and one obetecee that make Atlantic fly- ing even under the beat of - ticns, a risky business. By all the rules of mortality. good eon ucl, or whet have you. Corri- . of course, should be an object or censure. He flew the Atlantic in e that bu! no bueineuso {for e lsndina field. ‘Q18 flliht. without. offli. l . in globes! m mine w! the mu King!‘ hffnlotedituiel en Q mu in Inllnd. uni e a butith - ‘he? 11°!"- Kisteadv employmentl iln1""lt'.~; u great do)‘ l-. That is the eneral ieactlon. Everyone knows rrlgan shouldn't have done it. but he did. and the 1>°Ylsh audacity of the venture has something refreshing about it that wmmflnds respect. Reaction of news apermen m me 1118M. as news o1 Ls landing in Ireland came over the press wres, was a combination of amusement 811d 5611117811011. but perhaps that is because newspapermen hav:n't mum sense of morality or good conduct anyway. me ,._ cmuzurrrmowu, GUARDIAN ,, __1__=,_____==' JULY 21'. ms Better SUITS Plllllill Tll llLEAll $20. $22-51» its. When we advertise better suite we mean suits made by makers whose name on the label means something. Whose suits are smartly modelled by ltlglrprlc- ed designers, suits that have hand-work at all points where hand work is essential and made from cloths imported from British firms with a ‘Z5 ‘20 ‘Z8 ‘Z2 ‘32 ‘25 Dress up in the best you'll get longer wear, a better fit and more real satisfaction. Hyde Park and Fashion Craft Sulfa Hyde Park and Fashion Craft Sulfa Hyde Park and Fashion Craft Suits Other Special Suits $14.50, $15.95, $17.95 i CD % i. CD —w Z Z i 2° ED % i- E Z MEN'S WEAR Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use IRA HMIN Orange Pekoe Tea their wives are not. worried. “We'll be no worse off than we m? on the tam." Mrs. Marion __.______?___. BUMPER PROFITS (By The Cunudiun Press) HUDDERBFIELD, England-Pro- fltls lotallinll £5,536 ($21,680) cnme to Huddersfield Town rower foot- ball club last season, the cup fin- alist; reporting their best. eeuon financially since i928, ‘ CUTSIJORES A9911 Minced‘! I wnhu our p0 non i damn. Any wand kl: quickly ult- lt: no. liven’: noting bdtwl fiassy Stomach: RELIEVED you hove an! Mound: trouble nth irnmedlutely. Eunhflstanseh’ Matter]: t u were n o r- l Evens, no d En llsh Phili- iun of which we he I111 IVI! t have u» and lince u I received nnmerolll timonlula from utlsfleil II‘ ohuerl. Try I. bottle todfl. Pflfl lboentu. I #*# SPECIALS lint urrlved for" meat of Blthhig cm Beach Ban mall“ "l Buthi in all w!" rengin ‘fro?! - 20c to 15f Beach Burl in lue. Tl! or Itoee - — 31-‘ i, Fred: it Jellltl. _ _ _8unr Fry” P" u Moira rmil Mule 01ml ute|—--——39cl’er1l ilfofessionfiiaril: _-.._ ll. F. AlllilllBALll Chartered Accountant 3-" an’ I tehmon .....I‘.{.‘ .1222‘... THE 2 MAGS .. DRUGSTORE McLeod 6. Bentley W B. BENTLEY. It. C. J. A. BENTLEY. If. c. 0. It. BENTLEY Li. B. Bu-rutcn and Attoru mt-IAI MONEY T0 l. AN 14o Great Georl‘ 5W‘ mu Orden Beeelvo mm‘ Attention. l l v ..__ , fiiltlffl’ l llllellolson » The Canny Judgment Oftioulndluthhuienuppnm tobacco. It he m-vivod MflfilllldbWIIlNlldlIO. 7n l c a I 1's BLACK twin-r cu I wine when; ‘Inna-puny 0N‘ N