52 .s, _- .,~ , -we-npf -N ..__..~¢-,n...¢._.._.-\~,.._ ...._-.»:;.=..=.~...; ‘i:°_--"3-"_*'==-=- , _-;-c l '7_»\¢1‘» _ g _ _\ _ _ _._ . .._ _.. o1»»'si~4uw ' ' wi _1i~»-.s-;- ` "` 'Fictions-w. ca-een a rumen vlnirnnune-o. I. human _ . lol-rotary-Lint (‘-al. ll A lull sou D I. 0. _- Miter and luanr--J. It ltunavn saau=s¢o.ld|tn~l» I. Currie uni- up sunmi num in _onus uw: anna nan gui... Dolly (founded 087| 05.0: or nu ilu dunno) allotted _ MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1930 uur.f_'-i.. ~, -Y - "That Hamilton Speech _ 1-Ion. charles Stewu-t's explana- tion of his Hamilton speech is dis- missed by the Moncton Times as a hail#-splitting one. Whether he said the Government would consult the "people" or the “people‘s reprasenta- tives" in the event of war, the result would be delay. if the Government declined in act on its own responsi- bility it would be just as easy and would require no more time to take ii vote of the people than it would to summon Parliament and take a vote of the people’s representatives. And in use-of any question as to Cana- da's participation in a foreign war a direct vote of the people would be more emphatic and more binding than any vote in Parliament where the_peopl§’| representatives would be build to a large extent by par- ty considerations. Mr. Bt/ewart’s statement, as report- ed. was said to be comparable with a statement made by Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighelras Conservative leader in 1935, which at the time was inter- preted ss is concession to Quebec and used against Mr. ltieighen in Ontario and other parts of the country. The parallel stops with the fact that both speeches happened to have been made at Hamilton. What Mr. Meigh- en said was that, should a situation arise such as that of 1914 he would, if in office, decide without delay as to the action Canada should take. His Government would be instantly commit?/ed, but no troops should be despatched from the country until the will of the people in the matter had been ascertained. In the mean- time, the Government would be pre- .parhig to assist the mother country ll'-il!'l¥ 'would stand or fall by the de- an the pcus. in-_ ivioigiicirs in 1925 was most unfairly used against him, and possibly Mr. Stewart was one of his detractors Certainly, the present Minister of the Interior ran as an opponent of the Borden Government's war policy in the election of 1917, when the Allies were fighting with their backs to the wail and threatened with dis- aster. " _ It might be just as well, the Times slllgests, if public men refrained from saying what they would do or would not do in emergencies which do'not threaten and never may arise. There is biminess of sufficient importance _ln this country to engage the eamest attention of _ali the members of the Government and all the members oi Parliament, Liberal or Conservative. - - Somebody Snoring _ Distance, complains the Vancouver Province. is still a great divider ir Canada, It separates the Maritimes frcmsthe West and both from Ontario and Quebec. "The native of eastern C_s__nad_Il who settles in British Colum- bio soon begins to feel that he is breathing a different atmosphere. If is a Canadian atmosphere, he knows, but it is not the same as that he has k'nowm"cAi1 will acknowledge the jus- tice of- this observation; but hark to f.l'.i|.atatement following: “Similarly inthe liaritinias, they still. after six- byelri, refer to a native of On- ii§i'i,P,_qr Quebec as a 'Canadian' as distinct from a 'Nova Scotian' or a 'yogi prumwic1¢ci-.- » saucy than it does in British Colum- other province- It means llll! h' 'we hope the Vancouver Province will pu-t ol the Maritimes, st, the word 'Canadian' means ex- thobominlcnoicsuads. have onumber or people whauoutaricsns r.he'cmuiu'».§isih¢ aheasmovinoesuiasoia bnttborrlnesxdiqarv llesthlilttarexpros- _N_*¢¢_l1l|lll vlsveutmtira iiiourli- vuaicie she who rant. I 0 friends got a fresher viewpoint of the Maritimes? We are really not so backward as it amuses them some- times to imagine, To use an expres- sion common bi these ports which not consider too parochial, the next Maritimer that newspaper catches distinguishing bctweou c. ‘canadiur and s ‘Nova Scotian' or»a» ‘New Brunswicker’ it should put salt on his tall. If he were captured alive and shipped back home be would fetch s good price on the market as a museum exhibit. British Em ire Events P According to the United Press six momentous events involving the con- tinual and external peace and secur- ity of the British Empire, and each of them constituting a possible turn- ing point in the nation's history, will take place in 1930. _ First comes the five-power naval conference in`Lond0n, opening Jan- uary 21. Limitation of armaments and freedom of the seas, two vital factors in the Empires liie, are to be considered at this parlay. The second event is the Imperipl conference, at which representatives from every dominion will discuss such important questions as the po- sition of the Privy Cou.nci1’s judicial committee as the Empires _“Supreme Court of Justic__e," fr`ee trade within tha Empire, imperial communications and emigration. Then comes the Simon Commis- sion's report on India, a supremely important matter in view of the in- dependence campaign furthered by the Indian National Congress. Fourth in the list is the report of the Palestine commission on recent riots in thc Holy Land-md the future status of the Palestine mandate. The next important event will the Egyptian Parliaments decision on the Anglo-Egyptian treaty. which. thus far, Egypt has refused to ac- cept. 5 Finally, the British Parliament re- convenes January 21, facing a year of potential difficulties in connec- tion with the budget, unemployment and much unfinished legislation. In church matters, one of the out- standing confezences of many years wui bc held in .iuiy at lambetb rai- ace, where 370 Bishops will discuss the Church of England’s doctrines in their relation to modern conditions. And in this year Great Britain and south africa win be iiuxcd wither by wireless telephone, a new air- plane service and dirlgibles. The air- ships R.-190 and R-101 will be flown to South Africa, India and Australia. And Still Dissatisfied I _ As the Dominion Cabinet. is now constituted, the portfolios of Extern- \ » _ _ _ _ _._ _ _ _ _ I ++7TfTiW-img* A f=Uf\gBl>Y'\.N Form ` , _ . _ 1% ciunlorrrrowii cunnului ii~°e=3’1ysTh= 'Wo' ' _ '_` -_ __ I »In¢Isefar_u|lllsirmansi-scoa- ‘tmuioc their seiriiii roi- mining sir- inen, some of whom have been mis- sing for months past. A despatch from Fail-banh.'Alls_kl. under date oi January 8 tellspt search than go- ing on between Fairbanks and Nome In this case tho. Canadian rescue party are searching the northern wiids tn find Canadian airmen who were looking for a previously lost party of Canadiandliars of whom no tiding has come for over two mouths. Never before the flying age was more courage, humanity and endur- ance shown, or had more heroic res- cues of lost airmen been made than in._the past few months in the far riotth, All too often these brave ef- iorts have ended in failure or in the death of the searchers, butalways if one 'party falls, more volunteers are ready to risk their lives and cou- tinue the extra hazardous venture in the frigid tempests of the arctic. Estimates of the value of Lise Mari- time potato crop of 1929 are as tol- lows compared with 1928: New Bruns- wich $8,260,000 against $2,372,000, Novo Scotia $4,513,000 against $1,968,000 the previous year and Prince Edward Island $6,388,000, against $2,568,000. The 1029 potato crop of the three provinces made a total value of $19,148,000 of which our little Island Province produced a fraction more than one third. The two larger Maritime Provinces have an area 24 times as great as this Island but they fail to produce twice as much as we do in potato value. All honor to our potato growers who produce so much value from`tubers grown beneath the surface of our fer- tile soil and the best oats that are grown in Canada as welll The great work of the pioneer fur farmers of Prince Edward Island must never be forgotten- They taught the people of their own province and of other provinces, states and na- tions a new and valuable conserva- tive art and industry whichhassince become world wide and of incalculablc benefit to all. At a time when ad- vancing civiiiatlon had swept off, the earth the buffalo and the beaver. the foundation of the Canadian fur trade. they showed the way by which fur-bearing animals of all kinds might be not only conserved but mul- tiplied under domesticatlon. ' Gold taken from the mine is never nurtured and wma- the bottom is reached that is the end. Ca-nadB'B splendid forests are being turned i-\\f»° pulp and paper or burned where they _ stand and not in a veneration C211 new forests be grown to be of any practical value. Hence the import- ance of conserving other natural re- sources. This our fur farmers have done and are doing and thanks to the pioneers ,the annual fur c!`0P gi-awp in-the ranches is increasins. from year to*'year throughout Cana- i I da. _ Prince Edward Island r>e°i>1¢ “fe few in number but they have in the _ fur farming indlwtfv °°1\f¢\’\`¢d “P°°l their :snow Canadians 1 b°°° which any other community of like num bersdnay 'be challenged to combeiif with. 1|, was ; 'noble impulse of benevol- ence an humanity in the heart of| the late senior nr. Jenkins that ics him to institute and suPp0ri the| Coal Fund fm' the poor of Charlotte-\ to-.vu as be did. Equally it was greatly to the creditlof the 'late Dr. S. R. provide for its continuance after he this uotcwci-thy pubuc charity ici- ai satin, runways, Finance, Azri- culture, Pensions and National Health , . _ . ` Editorial Notes "l‘hsworid.saysapniaqonewspap- e-,i»ac¢lodn¢nuhiaidc¢ig.`n-is muirin|eou9i¢o.aateaoyu'sa_|tiii tuiainaoueisaaumoiiicsgo. ` , flllrwnbol i Mica 1 ~ ffmiu=u»°_m\‘¢‘- ‘__1¢\w-mu mia uihua miles 'wus \ . i.,.# ..*-\" ,..__ '.__- mms in;.t ‘i '=' "7€“~""""Jhi." do |uaun` in i me"°" m“"°'“"°° md mm 'Y' divine -l\=“°fY and F°bf“°»fY~ S°l“°f arc their names-chap; xaisbek, _ _ Wm "° '11 W-mm|‘*‘°'°d by Mm' _large families cr comparatively poor F,” yu-.h,1,m¢‘(wh°m w check _ some ofthe ccstottbe raw materiel. MODERN TONIC were representing western consutu- _people uve in cold dweuiuga where' H0 ym¢.¢i.i,.g now stairs along.) The dividends go sarcu the barter," _ A _I . cies 'rbc no rtmeuzs or 'n-me -only one Bra in the kitchen cookinc Kuomihcbun, -'nut isnt that batter for UNM* en . pa _ _ _ ,M c,,mm,,.,,_ N,u,,,,,, R,,,m,,_ mm supplies heat. charitable per- . xuomiuulug- than-not io_bave So far the usually cold season has been comparatively mild, but this _ _ _ ' _ nhl. HD. ‘ ~ r I have spoken before about the use or a tinfeamera which enabled the physician to set sixteen views of the interior of the stomach. Thus the condition uf the lining of the ltonlch could be seen, _ Now when food leaves the stomach it goes into the small intestine from which the useful parts are absorbed into the blood. This tube which is about twenty ice: ion; is coucd neauy into the abdomen. It is not possible, at present anyway, to insert a small ca-mera inyo the small intstine, and yet iatis mmt imporant that the physician should know thc' condition of thc intestine,-whether the food goes through at regular rate of speed, or whether it seams to be slow at some points, ln fact almost stop, and at other places to hurry along, giv- ing the absorbi-H8 surface of the in- testine little or no, time to withdraw the nourishment irornthe food as it Def-ees alone. However, Dr. G. B. Pesduera has devised a method that enables him to detect anything that may be wrong in the small intestine. The fine tube, about as big around as a slate Pencil, is swallowed by the patient, and aftériit gets down mst the stomach into the small intestine a semi-'liquid mixture which will show up black, 'is poured slowly down the tube. The X my screen. the iluorscope, is placed in front of the abdomen, and the physician can then watch' the now of this black simetance. As it flows hecan see lub# how the musclar coats of the intestine are doing their work, whether “ they an contracting on this material, (as they would on any food) in A strong or weak manner. Whether they are contracting recuhriy ui iorcins me material along. _ Tbcntbcwavuiecoiisczthein- intestine are lying, and as the abdo- men u kueudcd or massasegl by the physicians hand. whether _ these coils are freely moveable, _or whether they seem to have some con- Siricticus or coustriciiiig binds in- terfering with the flow or food. If anything does not al-*Peer *D be normal at any pointarrx nv plate or photogra.p_h_can be made and the condition studied later _ By this method the entire small intestine be studied in half an.-hour. Now when you remember small intestine absorbs all, the good from the food_ that is Na.t1n'e's way of giving you 9,11 the nourishment for your body, you can understand how imP0l‘l<8-nt it is that it be-doing all its work properly. ‘ This exact way of learning just what it is actually doing is certainly worth much to physician and patient. or/121501/Iwi. s vAN'rasrA oN A canvass GONG Immemorial Cathay- _ Land of porcelain and lacquers, Chow-cliows, inandarins, and crack- Jenkins to maintain it as he did, and' em _ » Where the slow-worm lanterns hid passed away. Now a grandson of| _;,w,y__ V the worthy fcimder has re-opened Haw refmedmld how enughigneg Are your fiercest warrior clansi ` *U9 P\'°°°“¢ Wmwf- i (Wu Pei-fu, whom nothin!! 1118319' ened, Painted butterflies' on fans.) ein illfd-1! 5° °’¢P°°i¢d W °°“u““° "strokes on a melldious gouz" tw ,~t"Int¢n-Iwiofiulii 3 ` ' Crusade’ _.1- l`0 . ‘ him the unity of all the Qlnldll, be u aibqucue cu subpci ` “And Canada knows mon about that than maxima does." be said in canada. canada sets the wise? sons,~who can afford to do so will probably 1 ,mn mem wi-qpgi "Much Thltswhst I Marina and Fhheries, with Hon. R- Noi-slum Chini lisa baaiusuilering Through-g~|,byripi.h gg muy nmdui-and, a minute: without port- | from intense °°14”wd it is oitiablete as a willow-racism pim, .I .-, A ~ f »_ ,om Th, Mmm umm, mm, _read in the pres decpmhcc ¢but|»;-ucimm, wupicm, army readers, ‘ THE LAND WE awmwuku. vu 'nh P“"”° Wm" md um' ‘" "m M gladly cope-ibuic toward keeping the iisbmaut. causes owes s suit Heil mmm" ‘mm °““`“°‘ q“°b°° -1'" one.i'ire supplied with fuel. ygg ggumy you, present gm; of hor industrial edlclsfnoy and mod- Jusucc, saa,'sciiciwi- ocumi .___ MQ" ,m,,`,,,,,,,,, cm, cm. pi-gnu to the Uaiwi sum. _, _ .1 _ | i ilumdrods of people have been fi-caan Mp;-ph in picturesque array; 3, gpm [Jul erofthefntarionisgivenintho Sometimes its decrees defy. llil and lmpire than would be con- ‘ Kuornlnchim, -' - "oyadbysnoteinthisco1umntho preasn ¥ E t Y ____ assi 5*? i§§§.*i§Ei§§§ gi __ 3 §§ §3 2 E¥;g§E!§§§§ iiiiiigitéit 5 5 “tht I f _ .__-._--_ United States. would and llbddtlliho _ __ E i E E Kuomintsng-~ _-, Miva dw which ia which:-wiio imown-I not t ri . _ -ilaeflecrnoalntliefanddl f1'UlllN€WBl'llDl'13klDdl»hDu|ll||l~i _ , _ __ - ~ ' -wdblthmpohldqu _ ygljg ,ggggdgyg _ Wi' of Nltibnll @1611!! fl'm~-N6Vl` _ JT pug' evurdgy 1, _ ‘ ‘ Glfll °°°“*~_ ' ' -_A nmwhet dillmnt annum oi Li cminum and ohm rdbxwu ___ U'-“Fi ~, _ _ Prince Edward Island has all the tbelpeeoh given recently at Bamii- gm Hsi..ghu-i, ohm; }1gp¢h.|m'|_._ ton~by_Ron. Charles htewsrt, Minis- ggmgumn any "ppm-e _ Q.. s a .9U_“#|“\ 'Tberowlsa I ~- - ...vt ta., s\ ll .i To convince England that it is time mm., W 1°" °b°“" °“ ln.”-9"°mm.’° md°' "Here was a-new angle. Ou-rel a hc buried his own party politics. aut Quebec .guy _‘mum out __.'._;m h° °°“m mt “"7 “h°Af°‘°wm“`““°° economic dictation from thelnstion he was nineteen years ot ag_a he has th" created R°m,y_ md mix ms been a diplomat of Quebec, publish- ov" mm Indms m.Cmml_ ing a newspaper in Eilllish in the _ "In . mutter of “mann nhmcw, heart of a largely French commun- he _mi ,,R°t“_y_ un me moving pu? ity, a Protestant newspaper often in tu" is one of the ‘t mud” in opposition to all' the' Catholic press tm Amman imwcfeon the wm_1d_ °f hu °Wn, dw' Frm h-I5 °m°° Wm' Britain has no such drive on Ameri- d°W h' °'*“ M” "0 C_‘°“°" ” °f` ca. Canada so far has' no auch drive “ll '° “G” 5"’ th' 3"” "’ on the simpire. rt is time canada had __.l¢_-_---~ U.` B. Capital invading Canada » _ (continued on an 9 "ClllrGrih"ii\- But even England is bmetrstid now.” ‘ _ _ TiddeMr.‘Ci1rtwil .8 _ from it u no Ianni.; om-urn' 4 ' _ _» _ of_Cansds being-an export if _ of her own and of American capital rosario other pam or the umpires" "No, because the branch factory and tlia chain store are spzeadipg out# ' c or america aio with mind ‘~*“¥‘“*“= B"‘“'~ ‘“ " I '1""°“°° :fa motion pic£um.n:miac: is um ’ , Exchange). - ; _ I-ion. Frank Cartel. newspaper \”°P"°‘°"' 'md m°‘“‘_’°’ °.’ *"‘°"""“‘ plant its cupiisi mywhcn to cap- lative Council of Quebec. silent two mn. every PM at mo Emp!" .K u days in Toronto recently, forthe muué muh” ' 'em "°-'°“ °“"‘ “° *“‘° ‘\’°“" W’ “aut you bcusvc in niciuubip with W” in E“K“°‘ ”°'°_"° _”° `°“'_*‘° me muud smear You 'uc ». notar- here. He had a mission. It WB-S mn__». uw-hy_ I 'ot my 'hole mm inter-_empire trade. As usual With of ` mission w mama from ._ Rm liim. he had no merely personal in- “ry m3pu,.u°n_ We hive ‘ Fatah, trest in the question. Nogovemment, club m _Quebm I found fourteen in society or board of trade sent him Lmdnm I Wu one of me mn to 'ten W°°k‘ t° E”31“"d 'um 9'” °x' have doubts about Rotary applied P'“-’°- H' “’°““ ‘°’ th' “’“° -’°""" to oi-out autism. But there it is. that several times before lie has un- ‘wa Englishmen _om moth" dei-taken ci-ussdes on behalf of sin- b nm mm” no 6 ger community than his own poi- sgnm.. z m s nz And `how does Rotary apply tp 1 ." ginning with the two Csnadas of his- I t,,5|d you ‘mama numhmm of tory, is a nation able to hold __t.l_;e_ pv- thm" _,I had my mum” .8 one °°T‘;_f___d‘;:‘:“u;”: oi? t':;°°':§d _;‘uk'_ ‘might expect. I went on why own in- et yo- 33”; 1;; “mm '°“‘ ° emi; hw , gre by thc ueuop out bu gained md _ _ WMP “___ mm"°‘°“I __ wwlmm scams most or au curious from in Y . . mm Wm proximity to the Uui:¢a_._si».ae». 1 "’“°“ ““" Umm °“°°'f in _I fait than r had a muiam; as an “P “sm” C°'md‘°' M‘d°' °- ~__d ` independent Canadian I knew some beam' "° mln ° me" by"'°d things, from experience, about Cans- “nmn "h° bin” “1°'°°'Mm°'m ` dianism that most Englishmen are 5°‘d"“'“‘°'m°"°' only beginning to and out." Not a Pirthan Islas "For instance-what?" “Tho Am- I f°‘“‘° m“'°°°"m°‘ "M it merican high isriir against Canada "‘-" ’°°”"‘ “ th' ”°"" H’ 1°” 9 me country whose natural market is i““““""°°° “M " “bl” "'“°"°° “im across- the border-ihavs one thing." i"P°“' “°"°"" “°"‘P’“’°' °“""‘“°" Usually it has been 'roi-ics here and ‘P°°°“°" ‘°""°"*"1“’ °"“ 'md °"‘°’ in nigiaud that have preached inter- people's. He needed none of thami Imperhmm in mde_ Here was B H°‘°°“1d h"° mlm” m°"' °r mm natural free-trader even more no- !F°m memmy' H° mud' He mud' dent Now and then'Ihad to remem- gpeskered. He flung cold arguments ber _'nm wh” polmm amp” Cab into the melting pot of enthusiasm. Nl W" mr elwmni He saw the picture or _mnpire com- - _“I md' ' `en I hd no m°dt,"“ 'p’°°°"1°”l`°¢ "er tm .nm government*-mani1§te." he said al- pire; a grand parade of~tbem across ' »,, , canada noi-th or the min §;°':°;:;'_n'fn°;f_'t henceforth known _ss the southern purine 1”- d this nm' Tm. is I' b°‘md"y M emma' matter for governments, commercial- Tw°m’y°nv° yea" “W sk Gam." ists patriots and odnsumers." Foster, back from a Chamberiiin- _/But mm,t England my number prcphganda. tour of Great Britain. or emmmic- and trade °rn_m“_ “W “‘° °°“¥ °f th’ Z°n"°'f.°“" "M iiciui" "she'..ruii or them. mach d°““°1°”" °" th’ ""`m‘°°rm md wants a different thing. 'rhey never ‘°°“ P“"°"°“' 9"” 31”” ” th' get tozeuir. sig men with tides go "°”‘.‘“‘°1’- 'nm L°“"°"‘°'““'°° im' into thus ussocuiiom. what do they pemmm 1" nm' °m°"' Mcmm' do? I met some of these lords. I "wi" “°° “°"'" h’ this them that in the-humbic opiu- "Tm wrd 1° mtg m mnmiciwu ion of I. Canadian none ofthe ex- such ss it never knew. Csuadsis mm¥_m_‘mmu°m' md* elm fm” th’ °“° 9°“”".y mmf' x°m°°m°d' *mt on the problem. I even said to some only for-_her own autonomy in trade, -of umm _Au mb” _ Caimmn to but °n ‘°°°m»“ °t~th° I-bpm". ~ .\ avoid' 'tha issue. Don't worry about - 3° P‘“"‘°""“'°"‘ °i'°‘»°“' °' °“’°' emma we hav. american capita: sitio_n.Tbemlinf\ctonwhlshIhld mdmimm” wompmtmai *“"’”‘° ”""“‘° “ ”°°'° ”°»"1°'"~‘ not wmt about on _suture or uic ovar,_was that the Uniteddtates an mph. when me Amman iuwm “t mm” u” '"’t_dnvm" (u°“Wr" trol. not only of ilnisheifproducts, ““ .°“_"" “‘“°”' “""°°" A ‘“‘”°'9° I but ofoui- buic nw mmiun om- yea_rs ago it was England: before the ad. hu mt undeveloped n“;m\_°u_ W5' _W 'm éummyl mv it 1° th-ei But the American isufntfielist howl Umm sum :more about most of than than the / _ ' '""°`I° "`.1'..$..f‘f’*..I.‘°lI.°°i..."i'.`.i”'Z __ VIN OL irq, E; y* ‘gil iii' £525; ' 5; to _.du . _ ’ _ . _ ’l!yns¢p't sp-\o-‘\lo- iaialledll sensual ' hlb1"~ HQ* O?x9“ OOO if' A.-E. MacNei1 £9* Co i ' v ' Tauiitén ma collectors cf 1 _' ` ‘ Business and Professional Accounts, Income - ~ Tax Returns Prepared Prowse Block _ . 127 Grafton Si I _ Phone’ bio. 1139 9000 *O4-O-¢940>¢¢.‘ Formerly with B. F. Keith Circuit Prof. Oscar M. Emanuel -Teiléher of Violin- Eiementary and/Advanced Students _` Houn:9a.m.to,8pm. 'mi queen sims cbuicmicwu. r is 1 about rosa-L. ` Cvar Bea.r\lon’s Barber Shop. ..... ‘ \ - \ O-9990 ' _ \ E`. R. BROW l46'Richmond St.; Charlottetown Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness ‘ s r and Plate Glass Insurance ' I' at Lowest ‘Rate - Good Strong Stock Companies -_ 'Agent at, Sum/merside, Lloyd Lewis ' - 37th. ANNIVERSARY SALE- . _ _ v Wonderful Chance to Buy Special prices`oi‘i?ered on the finest range of ~_Ladies’ Fur Coats in Prince Edward Island _Get your Coat today-they are moving out fast. . ~ Moore fs’ McLeod Ltd A Lovely Coat . i MJAISUARY 13 Q w»si€»~vo»~°t~r°a»r'sm~i»1»»oc-vi-_ V 1 L ` e-oaooooooyoeooodooooeeeelioeéoo - » »¢¢¢o,e»eoeeo»,,, ~ = . \ ---¢¢¢¢;;;¢»~-¢-A- \ I ' _ 1 _ _ |||¢|\e_l|s Tins bsfic leaf and rbi tlongest cure give you thcmoot lastlngand ` jdolicloua chew when _you ask for H Q N llllnck Twist; Youll ihave the time of your life trying to chew the _flavor out. _of _this line tobaccoc OX*O . 9 E-, PARKMAN __ _i uavl soul ms axaunrm um canals nrrmax _-_._l- - \ ,_ _ .»:__/ _ _ _ _ _ ,, _ . 1. , __ , ,Q ‘ _' __ I _ ...».u.f»i.....i{ _ _M . _ -_ _ , f.~»:»..~i_»_1' .»s.~_.~. 1...; ‘n ;i‘.~tP.q='. "'~'; - ~»_‘» `» . titties its ooohfvtlom il 'sal