e-‘Qhesc preferences after the war. PAGlljgllg A nus . cunntumrnwn aunnmn Morning Dally (Founded lu [$81) Anlhorlwd _u Second Clno Mall Post OM00 Department. Ottawa President: w. f“ ‘ s. Molar!- M-P- , Vice-President: J. B. Burnett IJJ. Secretary: lieu! Col. D. A Mmliumon. 0.8-0. Bdllorsnd ‘unsung Dlrecml: n B Burnett. FJJ. Aloclate Editors: Fnnl Wolker and In s, Burnett The Guardlan may be ihtalned at: llnb looncco Shop, Mourlon. N. I. Tho New; Shop, Manet-m N B. George McLean. Plcluu N B. Wnllmr’: Whzle Snot. n sum s1... noun, us. Metropolitan NGWu Agency, I248 Pool 8L, Montreal United Cigar Stores Chateau Lanrler, Ottawa Ont B. Alfkcn, Lord Elgllfs flotel Olhwl, Ont. J. Fine, 354 Bay St. Toronto. Ont Wolfe's News Stand Sotlbnry. OIIL Old South News. Cor. Mill III] Washington 50.. Boston llotallng’; News Agency, Time] Building, New Yolk “The Strongest Memory is Weaker TAM the Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY, APRIL ll, 1048 Canada-Wide Welcome All Llanaflu cxtciids a heartfelt welcome to llis lCxcr-llcnr_v Field Marshal Viscount Alex- .'n1<lcr, our new Govcrntlr-Uciieral, and his fauiily, whose arrival at Halifax yesterday was the llCCZlslHll for an almost tmpreccdcntcd dem- onstration. lt was as Commander in the Middle East in 104: that Viscount Alexander was knighted for his brilliant leadership. Tiwo years later, at fifty-three, he llCCillllg Britain! youngest Field Blzirshal. ln the meantime, as Commander in the Blediterrzmean, he came to be known and esteemed by our Canadian fighting men as well as those of other Allied armies. No happier choice of (‘rovcrnor-Getieral could have been made, and i1 is no \\'0llLlCl‘ that the arrival of Their lixccllcncics in Canada should be a mat- ter of such great interest and enthusiasm. Out-Of-Work Veterans It would appear that the proportion of un- employed war veterans is very much greater in Prince Edward Island than in other Prov- inces. Here are the figures, as of March 31 last, of ex-service men and women, by Provinces, who are in receipt of out-of-ivork benefits. The information was tabled in the House of Com- mons recently in answer to a question by Mr. » Diefienbaker; and it is a sad commentary on the foolish broadcasting of the Liberal member for King's County that we have no jobless in Prince Edward Island: MALE 1,288 5,120 2,751 7.067 12,163 6,818 FEMALE 9 3O 19 3's s4 72 ~ 36 2s 61 Prince Edward Island Nova. Scotia New Brunswick . . . . . . . . Quebec ‘Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan 3,827 Alberta. 3.592 British Columbia 4,239 ~ 46.865 339 A total of 1,291 unemployed veterans in Prince Edward Island, as against 7,139 in the rut province of Quebec and 47,204 in all Canada! These are shameful figures, when we consider the magnificent record of this Prov- inm in overseas enlistments, and in everything pertaining to the war effort. Premier Jones, let us hope, will take these figures with him when he goes to Ottawa for the adjourned Dominion-Provincial Conference. He will find them in Hansard of April 3, PIEC 54°- .--.--.-.--. Atlantic Fishery Requirements During the recent Legislative session, very little was heard from Government benches with regard to the fisheries industry. The Speech from the Throne contained only a brief para- graph on the subject. It was noted, of course, that the industry is in a more flourishing c011- dition than it was before the war, and Mr. Mor- rissey and other members made special refer- ence to requirements of fishermen in their own (listricts. llul no one seemed to have studied the report of flu- ihlvisorv Reconstruction Com- millcc on this subject, which recommended among other things a Provincial Department of Fisheries and a tlctziiled survey 0f fishery‘ requirements, including boat harbors, break- waters, fish piers, salt fish storage, canneries Ind cold storage for boil. ' In the Nova Scotia Legislature consider- able attention is bciug given to a report of a sim- ilar but much more extensive nature on “The Canadian Atlantic Sea Iiishery." This report, by Mr. Stewart Bates, was prepared as part of" the monster Dawson Report for the Nova Scotia Government. It stresses this important fact, that thq industry "entered the war in a depressed stale, xvith outmoded equipment in most 0f its branches. The war has loaded it with cost inflation that may make its future difficult, without having compensated this with any build-up of consumers’ preferences for fish .01 with any modernization 0f product or equipment such as might have built up Its effici- ency ls probably no greater than before; its costs have increased significantly; its product told on the North American continent has, if - mythinfg, deteriorated in qualify." This condi- tion, in-Batcs says, applies particularly in the fresh and-frozen trade and it has been the fault of mo one. The result was inherent in For ‘JMRLQTTEIQWH. ¢vARP'AN. the industry there bu almost reached the present maximum physical exploitation of these ilmivs- - - ~ the East coast, however, only one species is at é comparable stage of ex- ploitation — the lobster. In most species. like cod, hake, pollock, and cusk the eastern indus- try has not yet exploited them to the limit im- posed by the fish population themselves. In short, our fisheries, so far as the Maritime Provinces are concerned, is not near the limit that conservation of fish species dictates.” This is something in which the Maritimcs are jointly interested, and which should ‘be tackled by our three Maritime Governments in conjunction with fishery organizations. It should have been discussed in each of our Legislatures this year, and a day, or several days, might profitably have been devoted to the matter in the local House. ' Anglo-Egyptian Treat) No clearer indication could be given of the United Kingdom Government's desire to fos ter Anglo-Egyptian relations than the decision of the Foreign Secretary (announced in the House of Commons on April 2) himself to lead the British delegation which will take part at an early date in discussions in Cairo between the two Govtrnments- regarding the Anglo- Egyptiau Treaty now in force. The attitude is underlined by Mr. Beviifs coincident announce- ment of the composition of the United King- dom delegation, which includes the Secretary of State for Air (LOrd Stausgatc, formerly Colonel Wedgwood Benn) and H. M. Ambas- sador in Egypt, Sir Ronald Campbell. The Government have also appointed/Sir Kinahan} Cornwallis, formerly H. M. Ambassador to Baghdad and at present head Of the Middlel East Secretariat in the Foreign Office, as poli-l tical adviser, and Sir Arnold Overlon, head of the British Middle East Office in Cairo as economic adviser. Commanders-in-Chief of the Naval, Military and Air Forces in the Mid- dle East will act as ltlilitary advisers. Among the Service advisers is General Sir llliles Dempsey whose appointment as Commander- in-Chicf of the Middle East was announced on April 2. Naval and Air advisers are Admiral Sir Algernon Willis, Naval Commander-in- Chief of the Mediterranean, and Air Marshal Sir Charles Medhurst, Air Commander-in-Chief of the Middle East. London commentators consider that the soundness of the groundwork formerly laid, and the wisdom of the two countries in negoti- ating the I936 treaty, have been fully (lemons- trated by the turn of events the war took in the Middle East when happily—th0ugh there were many anxious moments—the populous areas of Egypt were saved from war and cs- sential strategic objectives such as the Suez Canal were denied the enemy. The delegations when they embark on their discussions will therefore have a background of good work and sound results behind them, and will address themselves with confidence to the task of negotiating a fresh treaty which will crown the work of the past, and at the same time con- form with the present conception of a world where collective security under U. N. O. is the goal towards which all countries are working. —EDITORIAL NOTES- Thc American Civil War began this date 1861. 1i i i 1| Mr. Brackerfs outright denunciation of controls any longer than absolutely necessary, says the Lettcr-Rezriew, is of course, economic- ally sound. Politically, it seems quite well, fish-speaking nations begin to realize that con- trols arc simply Communism; cannot be recon- ciled with libcrty or progress. 4- : u u The minesweeper "Bisson", recently launch- ed at Lorient, is the first French naval vessel to come down the ways since the Liberation. The 67o-ton vessel was begun in I939 but ship- yard workers managed to delay its construction so long that the Germans were never able ta make use of it. a a- a- 1v The Governor-Gcneralk flag, approved by King George V in I930, is symbolic of the posi- tion of the Governor-General as the King's per- sonal representative. It is officially described by the Heralds’ College as “On a blue field, the Royal Crcst—the Imperial Crown proper, there- on a lion statant-guwrdant or, crowned proper- subscribed ‘Canada’ in black on a. yellow scroll." =0- 4 =0- : ~ Various steps are being taken to increase Uritcd Kingdom home fish supplies, c. g., the steam trawler fleet was increased from 465 last year to 750 now. Fish supplies have already increased to 162,000 tons during the period 1st January to 16th March, against ninety-one and a half thousand imth: samelipcricd last year. Approximately 4,000,000 yards of textiles declared surplus on the termination of clothing contracts for the armed services are available for trade distribution on a national sale, it was announced over the week-end by War Assets Corporation. The greater-proportion of these textiles is made up of linings, sheeting, ham- mock canvas, duck: 22d £0111: cambrics. Following are the Governors-General of _hlm prestige and experience. timed. since there are signs that all the Eng- l, Canqda since Confederation with the date each _ assumed office: Viscount Monck, July 1, 1&7; Lord Lisgar, Feb. 2, 1869;-Eorl of- Dufferin, June :5, 1872; Marquis of Lorne, Nov. 25, 1878; Marquis of Lansdowne, Oct. B3, 1833; 10rd‘ the nature of the trade. | Ill-brakes a striking point in the unequal i t" on the Canadian east and west- fir,» Canadian fishery on the Pacfv dominated by four species, salmon, her-l grand oilcltards-all of which an of - d, lone, June 21, 1940; Stanley of Preston, June u, 1888; Earl ofAb- crdecn, Sept. 18, 1893; Earl of Mintlo, Nov. 1:, i898‘; Earl Grey, Dec. 10,1904; Duke of Con- naught, Oct. 13, 1911; Duke of ‘Devomhire, Nov. 11, 1916; Lord Byni of Vimy, Aug. n, lnutmi. there um NotesBy The Way Avon Castle It lllnnv , p anceotrll lax]: of Egmonb, which m! 0100.000 to build 1c o, ll t0 become an hoteLl The present Earl of Egmont, aged! 82. ls n rancher ln Canada. When he llved ln the castle before the war he used only three rocms.—‘ London Dally Mull, Among other things on It: gus- wvry attends, the Wisconsin Reu- taurant Association, ln convention. at Milwaukee, this week moved tc' boost the aboundlng Wisconsin pea.’ Five hundred delegate! adopted n resolution which was lent to Presl- dent Truman. It asked that Nov. l5 be named as National Soup Du , flit‘: nuflnn 81pm p“ lgoupYbek? Q aoasou.-ew or or. nld Tribune. p That long o-n-o-n-b you hear, that wave of relief you feel no“ - lng throughout the English-speak i lng world, comes not because t e‘ Iranian crfrls has dissolved, the Rulslnn riddle dlsalpated, or Fus- clam departed from Spam and Ar- gmitlna, says The Christian Moul- tor. No, none of these. But Wln_ ston Churchlll has just said, ‘Thls' ls mel" That roar of tr umph, those i shriek: 0f ale». those lfted headl. those shoulders squared -- whence. and why? wlllons, otherwise free Ind proud, who have too long felt secret shame, can now face the P1111818 Bye to eye, and even sneer a blt. Winston. too, says, “This 1s ma]. oodllom- The naturalist, Darwin, I5 m. ported to have estimated that ten tons of soil per acre passed an- nually through the bodles of earth. worms and that they bring up mould from below at the rate cf three inches surface depth in l5 years. A farmer ln New Zealand observed that ln a green and ex- panding patch of pasture the gran was of superior oualltv. On lnves-l titration lt was found to f-ontalnl larze numbers of small light cot-l cred earthworms. Worms were transplanted to other areas with the result that such land has near- ly double the sheep carrying ca- pacity of the pasture as compared. with the land that is barren of worms. —Farmer‘s Advocate, 5 f-Ollfiflk bass singer arr-Iver‘ In, a small western town a few hours} before a scheduled concert appear- ance. On checking the auditorium.- staze and what-not. he discovered that due to wartime exigencies the "rand piano had failed t» arrlveJ He and his accompanist canvassed‘ local sources and were lucky to flnd a fine instrument, the Qnly flaw being that the Dlano mm been - tuned to orchestral pitrh—u half; tone higher than the comfortable norm of concert. “l can use this olano," the br-isso sald_ "hut lt w!“ have to be lowered n little." He was assured this could be done. How lt was done was found ln the Hole which greeted him upon hls arrival at the concert hall: "For- got to ask new much you wanted —-the piano lrvwered, but figured a couple of inches would be enough. Sun- hafed tn saw off her 11mm- tifullv shaped legs-but anything to please such a fine artist." Musical Courier. A serious rural problem ls the lack of doctors and nurses to care cl for the sick and ailing. The days of the family doctor are zone, and "19 Young medical practitioner ap- parentlv prefers even the strenuous competition of the city to u wide country practice that will bring The family "Vi"! 30 to 40 miles from the nearest doctor finds ;he ex- pense ln summer and the distance m winter. with roads blocked, a real problem; the_ result ls often unnecessary suffering, lengthy 111. ness suffering, lengthy lllnngg and sorrow that medical sklll could have prevented, We are a ending mllllons of dollars annual , na- tionally and prcvlnclally, for the Welkbelnl. hflpplnesa, yes, and the folly of the hale and hearty. In "l6 Orgy-if spending we might well afford to make provision for the comfort and safety cf those who live n more sparsely settled dlstrlcts. and brlng to them the benefit of medlcal sklll and nursing. -Guelph Mercury. The ma! of Canada mly be belt understood by obtaining a general lden of its attitude to what lt sets out to perform as an accepted duty to IL: readers, the community, the nation, the Empire and all human- lty. Every newspaper regards lt- self an the holder of a publlc trust to be discharged to the beat of its ‘nblllty. To do this lt trlep to lnt tho truth as 1t known it wthln lbnlts set by the law and public policy, alert to expose folly and wAOIIIdOlHK, yet striving to be courteous and considerate. Bearlng then Ideals ln mlnd, a newspaper may lultly claim liberty to prlnt or refule to print accordion to its j gmem, ever realizing the re- sponsibility which rests upon lt u a unit of the fourth eltufa of the reulm-"more important than them alli" -6llnt John Telegraph-Jour- na . Lonl Woolton states n very olnor truth when he says that produc- tion wlll not increase lo long ll a large proportion of people's wage: ll taken by the tax gather- er, and so long u what refinalm can buy them nothing ‘n the shopl. The Brltllh people do not llve In the tradition of Indlun nestles. ‘they flnd no advantage In scourg- m; themlelvei with nulls, however recommended by lending Whltohall faklre. It l: more than tine that s little common nenu wu l lied M such mlnlstm to our way o llfo. Thev wlll find that to tAke some of the goodly we u; ow exam. luK and out them in the alums hm at reuonnblvnrlm would very "fibril? pnv Mizh dlvltlcadl ln the form of vastly Incl-cued produc- tion. and therefore vntlv looms- "ll lupnlles for export lflflQhTlfll ll n process known a orlmln: the numn. a nrrwu n? cnuulnd affect no nlmnln. mu It lg mam» 0M0. own m-Ialm whim." 419 n we!!! M "ndermnd lt. -- Inndol ' Dally Moll. , In nib ' "Hill-v lg nnffllemlnmflfigigfly n“ ream to “i notonbvhhv awry»! n“ a ,_ fulfill.‘ . a . m» .:v....'."'."ll':'fi."- M defend Itself film! 1".""~'l'-'v.~».. 4t i i i- w l:- w-i "flfgbblll; I . w; 1921; ViscountWVilllngdou, Oct. a, 1926; Earl i h, Agrll 4, 1931; 131mb Tweed:- ov. g, x935; Ymount . --.; . 1 ~41 i=1 :f':"g_l=:.*".:..:. 300 Reform In’ iWesl Alli!!! (Bung-mud mformltlon Offlm ) 0E Brltllh Went African Colonies are ln a proceu of conltltutlonal chunll toward: more nelf-xovernment. New oonltl n: are b91118 P" for tho-two lamest colonial. m" zen; ma the Gold Coast. 0nd I wm Afrlcun Council mores-Huh»! all four colonies hos Juli held l" first session, , In these clrcumstanoel the term! o! office of the Governors of three molt lm crtont Colonies have been extend tlll the end of n yell‘. The Governors are Sir - thur Richards, Nigeria. 51!‘ 51m Burns, Gold Coast, Blr Hubert Stevenson Slerra Leone. The rea- lon for this ls the need f0? I continuity ln pollcy ln the next el hbeen months while the larfl ac use‘! of congtlllautlonal reform no eng execu e . In framing the proposals for Nl- erla the Governor had three ob- ects: Firstly, to promote unity 1H Nlgerla, secondly, to provide wlth- ln that unlty for the diverse ele- ment: whlch make up the count , thirdly, to secure greater partlc- tlon of Africans ln the discussion of thelr affairs. Nlgerln ls one third the size of British Indla 1nd as big n Brlt-aln, France and B81811"?! together, with a population double that of Canada. The plannln! i0!‘ such u country must be on a largo scale, quite different from the planning for a Colony of the us- ual size. O O The Nlgerlan Legislative Coun- cll instituted in 1922 has hitherto consisted of thirty official and twenty-one unofficial members. Of the latter, ten are Africans and four elected. This Council's legis- lative powers do not extend to the Northnrn Provinces — three "mar- ters of the whole territory -u/h0se highly organised Moslem Hausa Emlrvtes have dlrnct relations wlth the Governor and the Executive Council‘ though manv matters wlthln the Assembly's competence are of common concern to all the provlnces. A more unifled form of Govern- ment ls now necessary. The new constitution wlll bridze the zap between the Lcrzlslntlve‘ Council and native local authorltles throughout the country bv estab- lishing reglonal councils, These Wlll be based on native authorltlcs In the three groups of provinces — Northern (well organised Moslem negroes), Western (also mainl- well organised but not Moslem and Eastern (tribes based only on family or klnnhlp groups) _ and wlll consist of a House of_Assem- bly ln each izroun plus a Home of Chlefs for the Northern Provin- ces. . I O O An even Breater advance ls being achieved ln the Gold Coast where representntlon wlll be on lines more familiarly European. There, too, the northern or hinterland province of Ashanti i5 being brought for the first time lnto the Colony’: representative system The proposed new Legislative Council wlll consist of eighteen elected unofficial African members, clx of- ficial members and only six unof- flclal members nominated hv the Governor to represent the Europ- ean community. The Jolnt Provin- cial Councll wlll be composed of all paramount chiefs who with the Confederacy Councll of Ashanti wlll send representatives of the provinces to the Legislative Coun- l. Llke Nigeria the Gold Coast has made all this progress ln self- Government during the last thirty years startlng from the introduc- tlon Into the legislative Council of the unofficial members mmln- ated by the Governor. In both these constitutions the Governor retains reserve powers to give ef- fect to leglslntlon even though not passed by the Council lf he ludtzes ft necessary In the interest of nub- llc order, public falth or good Gov- ernment. Bllls also require h‘< as- sent before becoming law. These powers preserve the ultlmate re- sponslblllty of Brlbaln for the Col- ony‘: affairs. The bulk of the leg- islative work, however, wlll when the new constitutions are finally agreed on fall on the shoulders of the Councils chosen by the African peoples themszlvtzs. . The new West Afrlcan Council ls the successor of a four Governors’ Conference begun during the war to plan jointly such resources as palm oll, groundnuts" tln, rubber, manganese, timber and cocoa as well as ports and alrflelds. Whlle the development of these widely . separated colonies (seventeen hun- dred mllés from Nigeria to Gambia) ls now being continued on their own lines by methods most sult- able for each the necessary con- sultation fa obtained by perlodlc conferences of Governors meeting under the chalrmonshlp of the Brltllh Secretary of State or hi! do uty, while the permanent nec- re riot works at Accra, capital of tho Gold Coast. Matters of coni- mon concern discussed at the flrst meeting ln January were higher education of Africans, clvll nvln- tion, bulldlng research. cocoa re- search and economic development 1n general. It lhould also be mentloned that the Brltllh mandated territories. the Cameroons and Tozolnnd, whlch have been designated for Unlbed QUICKIES (MtdrrudlnlTMNfllT Plhnltmdduotllenolnthomhld tho Softengitifilodhyflionimbnnd- 1 lluézuigilllhtlf-Qhlhllllib 0 Follows the south whd and the 51 tcdWlnfl. Winter-agents :1: mouth and Heoveiififlimf-Llewqilzvlrt. llh mltdfll. AM. lélnhflw tandeiuileu, mun hkel o1 sucaultffiinuwund by I BMW" n: mum-it. "‘° 732°21- lZ"§.-""'“' '°"" “° The blociblrds ca“... the rumwl. Phantom: villlbiifs now, Ind uncon- me nifdid of mm Brenna llke the flooded field. —A\fln mu m m u n: Hgruold ‘Hlbllne. n o Civic Affairs (Charles R. McQuald in " c- lore", offlclal bulletin of the C ur- lottetown Gyro Club). A clvlc corporation may be Ilk- ened to a joint stock company ln which the Mayor and Councillors correspond to the President and Board of Directors, respectively, and the cltlzen tax-payers to share- holders who have bought off ninr- gln and on whose shares an nnnuol call ls made. If the groper relo- tlonshlp ls malntalned etween the administrative body and the bulk of the shareholders, the business piou- pers, and the firm pays dividends; if the co-operatlml ls not there, then the trend is downward, and, not only wlll dividends full off, but the annual call may, of neces- slty, increase. The dividends which the clvlc corporation pays one good govern- ment and munlclpal Improvements. What constitutes these two com- ponents ls, ln certaln respects, a matter o! opinion, and ln which the voice cf the majority will ul- tlmately prevall. The unfortunate feature ls that this consensus com- munls ls all too frequently un- available and those ln the ~eufs of the elect have no plllar af flre with whlch to guide themselves ln their trek towards the better city whlch they hope to attain. The Voice of the People ls silent. The Mayor and his Council must, by some mysterious and psychlc ro- cess devlne what ls ln the mnds of the mute electors, and trans- late lt lnto action. If ls only at election time that judgment ll passed and they learn whether or not they have succeeded ln ac- compllshlng th.ls Phsnomennn. About two months ago, Chur- lottetown held its biennial clvlc e1- ection. For a short time orevloul tn the day on whlch polllxlg took place, there was an unusual flurry of interest created, and as a result, we had on:- of our best election: in years. Contests were held ln every Ward, an unusual thing, and lt Wu generally accented that the Corin- cll now ln office is as representa- tive u slate as could have been ob- talned. But now that the casting of votes ls done, are we to lllde back luto that lethargic state indifference for another two wln- ters? The men whom we have el- ected should not be obllzed to feel their way blindly, but should be guided by the advice and, ,lf need be, the crltlclsm of those who el- ected thom and to whom they are responsible. That ls what we out them there for; they are wlllln: to do their part, are we? to be hoped that tonight every Gyro wlll see his duty and be In attendance at Clty Hall, not as a member of the Gyro Club of Charlottetown, but u an intercit- ed tux-payer who ha: the Iood government of hll community Zi_i_______. Nations ‘h-usteelhl are odmlnlo- tered as part of h gerla and tho Gold Coast respectively and thul enjoy the benefit; extended to those colonies. One reason for the political ud- vanceo now belng made In Welt Afrlcn ls the active part than peoples took ln the war, Based on the flne record of Welt Aft-lean regiments, a great West Atrlcln arm of nearly two hundred thou- san , including forty thousand qualified tradesmen, wot rolled. They fought with great nuccell In‘ Burma and supplled thoullnd: of pioneers and troo for the llld- dla East and Nort Afrlca. Their economic resource: were also high- ly developed for the war and then developments éemaln to be und for rpoaea pence. The troll of a r travel has brought Ill t on remote places much nearer each other and the world. By Ken Reynolds , ofbm hating in bunny and use. _ 11a Cludonndllnnuaurl show... anus Tnpultc with maul bud. _ lad. bloc, block. nu. Al 810.41. Ilndalnl Pond! 0.06. * (Prim: befall lain Manq/amril Ta.) i‘? ' ‘ Bu! naturally Wntertnnfsl And, who isnT all can when l: comes to bearing about ‘i Wsterinlrfo wonderful pens for Easter giving! 11. 1956 cums unv- Mid --~i:’s So trim, so slim a = z so streamlined-every pen features Wilson-man's famous One-Stroke Filler, lnqunduct Heed, and Hood-Ground Point to givl smooth performance for every hand! It's easy to see why, when choosing a gift for him- or for her-that Waterman‘: is the ultimate choice, Your dealer will be pleased to show you a wide variety inlbzautifnl Pens priced as low as $5.57, with Sets from $5.95 and up. Write: up t0 3 Iinualu! Waterman‘! Ink ll ALL INK . . . nothinl added a - o l5! l bottle. foremost ln_ lrll mlrid. ' The lnvltatlon l: a standing one. not only for this month but or all the months to come. Your attend- nncg wlll bo- a recllted. Don't forget that. a cndny morning quarterback‘ hu yet to wln_l foot- gnmc. ' onnnn nfurss INSTRUMENT m: cylllnlbnl u t?» oldcattkndwll Udall tnunon mode 0 - :14 was used u only n10?! 3.0. ’ . Wales -. , Wonn zunshlno 4n told-Much n- lulled ln mlnv ‘bothlnl oil-Nu Fm art 1 mlklng gu- 1mm wubnowntito the Ramona u only uthqynu- ‘N. ‘ - - - Professional . Bard: i’. z. Charles R. ‘lllcquald on. GAUDET-cr nu-ruuoglalnlun-nduflu In rem-eastern. "r cumin" In: d‘ oohami mu i autumn-bran. surf.» w. procure, flu new, pnvl fit typo; whlch rlqul (I flttllllll I Ill ill fume-L. ribbon-covered 3a»: pom nun-n um! , olpuioncod in uflulflbrf“ "nuance-win. 11m: 2 . rues DIUGITOK- > 1U? Grunt 00M]! Strut e ~i°r:-...2:.:- '-"."‘"