.,. ".,e...-. q. .4. sflhfiwx .. x- ;_-..‘.‘@~ -'-i-.-¢. ‘ . ____ .,,, _......._ .. :§zl:==a=~=-__ Ii ~< ‘. ritoltrooa» a FIIIE IIIIIIILIITTEIIIWII GUARDIAN Itodlalb-Wrflalllll- Isftelaal aeuaauuume-araaawaluepahammounu I m" gap. yea: (Ia advance) one nu (l-‘Jdfll and cums Stataa. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY '19. 1931. Iii-Ill!’ Dill! "-80 The British Dole ii By a 1111101"? c; Qlvotol. the ant Isl-l Labcrflovernmentsucceeded this week in passing legislation for the eon-owing of an additional $100,000,000 to be expended in doles. The dole, or unemployment insurance, has now become one of the critical elements in the Labor Government's position, and the situation to which it is giving rise is viewed with "increasing alarm. During the next financial year, open- lhg April 1, 1t o estimated the dole will cost the British taxpayer between $250,000,000 and $275,000,000. By 1032 thus will have been borrowed from the British Treasury, for the purpose of the dole, some $550,000,000; a debt which, as the report from Lmldon points out, will entirely upset the equilibrium of the budget on the _ basis oi existing taxation. The British Treasury deals rather curtly with the suggestion that the ‘ existing debt should be written off; announcing that “the money which has been borrowed must be repaid." The only question the Treasury is concerned about is whether it should be repaid by fund, or by the general taxpayer. The Treasury wants its - money back. Undoubtedly the dole originated in perfectly good intentions, and per. haps its introduction could not have been avoided. It came into existence when the demands on the unemploy- nwlt insurance fund exceeded the _ fund's resources. To make up the de- ficit the Government made loans to ik msurance fund, in the hope, pre- sulnably, that better tlmas would cqne and unemployment insurance be able to take care of its own obll. Qtionl. Instead of this happening be dole his rolled up the debt which is causing the British people so much concern now. 'Unemployment insurance, insofar as it involves the appearance of s. dd: system. l! something to be stud- ied very carefully. 1t may be agreed that unemployment ls a national ,. blem which has to be met, but a. system which involves the pos- sibilities of the dole as it has worked out in Britain givs rise to difficulties of its own, as grave l-ls those it is sup- pied to allay. The First Cheese Factory ' From the early days \'.IlCll filzt the French Colonist: prepared their “fro. mage raiIlne," to the present iimc, the manufacture and export of cheese has held an important place amongst Canadian industries. The first mod. ern cheese factory to be established in this country. according to the 1n- land Revenue Review, was built in Ox- ford County, Ontaliio in 1864. Shortly afterwards factories were established in other parts of Ontario and also 1n Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotla. By the year 186B Canada was exporting six million pounds of cheeseyrhis output rapidly increased until by 1904 Canadian cheese exports amounted to 233,980,710 pounds. Since that date, however, exports have de- cllfld. PU‘ the fiscal year ended lfarch 31, 1930, cheese exports total- led 92,393,700 pounds, valued at $18,- 271,004." OI this amount 83,156,200 pounds valued at $16,224,694 went to the United Kingdom; and 6,780,700 pounds valued at $1,498,833 to the United States. Other buyers of Can. adian cheese include Newfoundland, ths British West Indies, China, Ger- many, Cuba and British South Africa. Our Fur Trude With England Before the war the chief market for Canadian furs was ‘in England and that position has been regained with- in the last year. In the interval it was for a time held by the tmited Stiles. Oi the $5,100,000 of undressed flu exported to the United States and the United Kingdom in 1914, nagland received $8,000,000; in 1919 out of the $13,300,000 worth exported only $3,700,000 went to the British market. In the year ended ln June, lateral-I» Visa-recalled l-oel-Il-A-Iaallaaemlkle-II- Iaaalha Evans was 80 years old; “an extraor- dinary age" comments the Toronto Mall and everyday life and the manifold ad- vantages of Canada as a trade cen- tre are portrayed in this publication. order of value of raw fur pro- duction for Canada‘ as a whole but in several of the provinces it yields place to other kinda of fur bearers. In each of the Maritime Provinces, the silver fox leads; in Quebec and British Columbia the beaver is first; 1,. » the. Northwest Territories, the l-IeI-IIIIII‘ delivered. and. Qngland.’ Moreover. in‘ the 12 anonths which ended in June last, out of total exports of undressed furs val- raw furs in the year just mentioned were less than half her exports, being valued at $7,516,885. Over 80 per cent. of these imports came from tllo Unit- ed States. ‘ Experts in Billingsgate Between the culture represented by the Chicago Civic Opera and the hec- tic civic campaign now under way in that great American metropolis, the contrastlis“ strange and startling. Talm for example the following ex- change of compliments by the clvlc candidates, as reported in the Mon- treal Gazette: Mayor w. H. (BIB Bu!) Thompson having referred to Judge Jolln H. Lyle, his principal opponent, as a “chimpanzee? the judge retal- iated in kind. Reading from a care- fully prepared statement, ha referred to the mayor as “Jlmbo, the Flood- Relief QuaclW-a reference to Missis- sippi flood relief charges-and assert- ed that the people have "grovm tired of this blubberlng jungle hippopo- tamus defending his gangsters and crooked contractors and lazy, blood- sucking jobbers," atc. He also asked: "Did you ever see a lurching, shamb- ling imbecile with the flabby jowls of a barnyard hog whose diseased brain didn't defend its own lunacy by snarl- ing at others?" Judging "from these exchanges ‘it would seem that Chicago has a come- whht difficult choice to make m its election of a chief magistrate. Editorial Notes Lord Beasboroughs family name, Ponsonby, is pronounced Punsonby, with the accent on the first syllable. There seems now no prospect of ued at $17,187,399, the United King- dom took $9,453,322 and the United States $6,972,456. Canada's imports of \ ii It has increasing! keep up her payments as llrccd upon Britain cannot possibly do this unless she receives what is duo her from her war debtors. And she is not lecel ' anything like what is due to her at the present time. Unless she can re- cover a substantial proportion of the enormous amounts she lent during the War, all the good will in the world will not enable her w repay 8,11 she borrowed without ‘collapsing eventually beneath the terrific bur- den this debt repayment entails, par. tlcularly when to that burden is add- ed all the others. involved in the un- employment situation and its attend- ant difficulties. In face of the crisis of Russian overproduction, Stalin will barely have a single way of averting the p0- lltlcal cataclysm of which his own Government would be the first victim, says the Quebec IIEvenement. ‘This will be war. We must not forget that, be- fore the reorganization oi his indus- trial effort, he raised and equipped a. formidable Red army of several millions of soldiers. An ambitious pol- icy does not fashion so formidable a weapon as this without having the intention of using it some day. It obvious, says an exchange. that no matter how resolute she may be to ‘hilt CHARUOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes by the Way . Eula-L BILIQmM-D. a sinuous m-rraa consti these poisonous wastes in it. one spot. does not appear that sufficient atten- tion has been paid at Geneva to this problem of world peace. The industries which were granted higher protection at the emergency session last year have increased their production, taken on many new hands and distributed millions more too low in the abdomen and drags on valuable food stuffs info the blood. This accounts for the fact that many of these cases are found in thin in- dlvidauls and in a relatively large in salaries. ‘rhese millions, of course, have been put into circulation and have contributed proportionately to relieve the trade depression. Exper- ience has now proved that it is pos- slble to give an industry the protec- tion lt needs without the increased tariff imposing any greater burdens on the consumer. All that is needed is to arrive at a ‘ agreement with the industrialists that they can only increase prices at the loss of their increased protection. Govern. ment, therefore, have the best reasons to go on with the "revision of the tariff and to impose all necessary safeguards against the importation of finished articles which can be fur- nished by national industry. As the duties of his office have con- tinued to enfold him, the Hon- R. B. Bennett, Prime Minister of Canada, has become less and less a popular public figure. Nothing could show mom clearly the magnitude of the tasks on which he is engaged, or how the Lea Government taking heart and opening the Charlottetown and Cardigan districts for those by-elec- tlehs. The Legislature will therefore meet with two constituencies unrep- resented. Last wool; saw the fiftieth anniver- of tlle Christian Erldeavor So- clciy. From its lnclplency ln Port- lanrl, lvlnlne, in 1881, the society has grown to 80,167. societies scattered cvcl- the world, and has givena new meaning to the word Endeavor. Out of the 753 prLntlllg and pub- lishing plants ‘reported in Canada in the 192s census of industry, 29's were located in Ontario; 135 in Saskatche- wan; 76 in Alberta; 67 ln Manitoba: 62 in Quebec; 61 in British Columbia; 31 in Nova Scotla; :1 in New I-lruns- wick, and 4 in Prlucc Edward Island. An English exchange announces the death in Surrey of Mr. John Evans. who had an original lvay of greeting his friends. It is said that when he met anybody he knew he always said “Good morning. Are you happy?" Mr- O b Empire, "ln the circum- stances." "Canada. Hoy En Dill," or "Canada Today," is the title of a handsomely prepared booklet, written in Spanish and published by the Canadian De- partment oi Trade and Commerce, for distribution at the British Empire Trade Fair at Buenoshires in March. Every important feature of Canadian ci fr al The muskrat stands first in a. us p1‘ 130, however, Great Britain took slesoomo out of the total b: $39,023} v .fl Ihlih llfillt FIN V0134 5"” .I?°"‘“°°.' I. white for; and 1n the Yukon, the lynx. In Ontario and the Prairie Pro- Pr lheee the milmet - ‘in - of-chlef lm-l growing up between Mr. Bennett and the public. While this seclusion sep- arate 111m from the people generally, it also indicates an attitude on his part that will be appreciated by all thoughtful persons It is action that is expected from him; and his silence, which has become the outstanding surprise in Canadian politics, can only mean that Mr. Bennett is at per. sonal-grips behind the scenes with tlle practical issues whose solution will determine very largely the for- tunes of Canada during the coming months. Eolshevlsts and communl is of the worst type have been admitted to Canadian citizenship through lack of proper safeguards. If this is tue the powers that be should take immed- late action to prevent a continuance of the ubuseoNo foreigners should be given Canadian citizenship unless they have been clearly demonstated to be free tlle to the perpetuation of British and Canadian institutions. verse economic conditions last year New Yorkers bequeathed $36,985,308 to altruistic ends. This ls $10,000,000 more than was set aside for this pur. pose in wills fyled for probate in that city in 1929. In addition more than $50,000,000 was given by living donors for schools, hospitals, children's agen- sell-sacriflce of a man who devotes himself to the task of getting rich," says a writer in The New statesmen, London. "To do this, he must abstain philosophy, the delights of careless existence, the delights of extrava- gance, and the delights of self-indulg. cnce. I envy him his riches, but not make his sacrifices. I would rather be or, but I would rather have small private means and freedom to do what I like than be eltlfer of them." titled to the title of Honorable are definitely set out In a few cases the ilege, comments Canada, is enjoyed by _the lieutenant-Governors of the are "honorables" they are always honcrables." In cases of provincial cabinet ministers the "lacuna-able" is overweight is a liability, its reduc- tion should bs very gradual so as to avoid this danger from dragging of large intestine on the small irltes- tine. about the need of a surgical opera- tion in some cases. . umber of individuals who at one time had the proper amount of fat in and amongst their abdominal organs, but for some reason-illness or fol- duction-have lost too much of this fat and the large intestine has drop- ped too low in the abdomen. ' she so 1t has been found that u these individuals are "' ttened up" somewhat, and while this fattening process is going on, an abdominal support or belt is worn. there is rc- lief from constipation, from the pain of the dragging on the small intes- tine, and freedom from absorption of the intestinal wastes. The thought then is that while Too rapid reduction has brought thoroughly he is engrossed in them, than the wall of seclusion which is The-statement has been made that I the priceless advantage of B f Soviet tendencies and of ideas hos- vEvery year the sum of philanthropic H equests grows larger. In spite of ad- th In th es and homes for the aged. I0 There is something noble in the of om many dellghtsJ-the delights of l his riches would tempt me to to rich man than be a world-conquer- ad ID The categories of those who are en- e ls sanctioned for life. This priv. an ovinces and the members of the ivy Council of Canada. Once these v When I consider Life and its few A wisp of fog betwixt us and the A call to ‘battle, and the battle done Ere the last echo dies within our A rose choked in the grass; an hour The gusts that past a. darkening The burst of music down an unlis- Ye old, old dead, and ye of yester- Chleftains, and bards, and keepers of Loose me from tears, and makeme l-low each hath back what once he y GETS- 81111‘ ears; of fears; shore do beat; tenlng street, wonder at the idleness of tears, night, the sheep, - y every cup of sorrow that you had, 1 " ‘ see arlght stayed to weep: REDUUHON OI‘ WEIGHT OFTEN You read and hear ‘a great deal about stasis, or partial stoppage of the movement in the large intestine and the wastes therein You are told that when this occurs together with , that there is absorption oi these wastes into the blood, and so every cell in the body ls built up to some extent from this blood with You have read of how a famous British surgeon has taken out parts of the large intestine because of the “kinks" in the bowel which caused a partial stasis or stoppage and thus caused the blood to absorb a great amount of the waste located in this Now it is generally admitted by the majority of physicians and sur- geons that there can be, and often is this absorption of wastes into the blood. However many research men are now oi the opinion that in many individuals the large intestine hangs the small intestine about it, thus in- terfering with the absorption of lowing some rigid system of fat re- ramble all over the premises, cannot allow that and keep the birds here for the other fellow to see, but you can sec thousands from our. oblookatory where you will be privi- lcged to go. Remember, experience has taught me my best lesson. one is kindness without firmness is a total failure, another is, you cannot do anything (orthe ‘public nor have any- thlngfqr- the public unless you can control the public. tion, ‘namely, Sunday recreation- Please don't. think I am saying this The Public Forum nu column u owl hr ills. ' discussion by correspondents I of questions of interest ‘Ilih j Charlottetown Guardlnu does "not necessarily endorse the opinions of correspondent. (Holland-lotto) 1s suuoav T0 us: A oav or RECREATION on OBSERNANCI (Qflllla Packet and 'I‘lmes) the M u mm!“ Sir,—While lecturing in London Ontario, Thursday evening, Jan- uary 23, the question was ‘asked. “Are you going to have your place open on Sundays this year " I replied as plainly as I could, but for fear that there might possibly be some who did not catch my whole meaning, 1 just ask the privilege of answering the question through the pres so there cannot be a nil-Blinder‘ standing. The facts are, I am only a grown up, underprivileged boy, and the core of my heart ls with the same class of people. As proof of this I carried on for over fifteen years without a fence in front of my premises, but as the trees I had planted grew. the place became more and more attrac- tive and more and more-Npeople gathered here, especially on ‘Sunday, until one Sttday in April, 1925, there were over 5,000 people here. This fact will give you a, flash of the problem I began to sec I, was facing, especi- ally as I had to be away from hmne the greater {part of my time, lectur- ing to get money to feed the birds that are also oorlgregatlng laere. This left Mrs. Miner to entertain and try to explain to the well meaning- but thoughtless public as to how it all happened, and so forth. Finally the dear soul's health failed and she collapsed and pent two winters in the hospital at Preston Springs, On- tarlo, under the care of Drs. Hagemlers Bros, and while we fully expected to give the balance of our lives to the public, yet, we don't want 1t all to happen in one year. Please take this fact into con- sideration, my home is within one hour's auto drive of about two mil- lion people, the City of Detroit. Please look at this, nearly two- thirds as many people as there are in our vast Province of Ontario. Just think it over yourself, and I am sure you will see why we have to have restrlctionsJit/itv family ‘and I have decided on this, that our place will l» kept open as during the last five years, namely: from Alprll the 1st to 23th, except Sundays. This is when birds are at their best, so please tell your friends there are absolutely no Sunday visitors allowed. Lot me advise one and all who want to oorne between April 1st and 20th, except Sundays, to come early in the mom- ing one halfhcurbefore sunrise, if possible. Thereisgood odation at Kingsville, which ls only five min- utes distance, or if’ Kingsville Hotella full, Leamlngton isunlyfifteenmdn- utea distanoeTo see these geesecome 1h from the lake at this cheerful hour‘ of the day is a sight you will take home with you, but 1f the morn- ing proves to be foggy and geese do not com in, please don't blame me. While here, please do not" expect to light ls ever, manoeuvms are engineered uh der the direction of the Com underground policy which brougb manifesto issued by the Thlni In- slppearanoe of a, daily proletariat: newspaper in Great Britain at this time places a new and powerful welj- pon in the hands of the British working class in its fight against capitalism, rationalization and the Socialist-Fascist Labor Government." In spite of formal assurances extended from Moscow that the seditious propaganda of Bolshevik comtplexion should be checked, it is evident‘ enough that this part of the bargain has not been observed and that the Soviet officials have a plan of campaign which not only holds the Labor Government in slight regard, but, if carried out will utterly frus- trate any hopes of trade relations be- tween the two countries being im- proved. And this was the main motive and understanding on the British side when the ' resumption of dip- lomatlc relations and the new trade agreement was signed. What has been the actual result? 111m pledges are not worth the paper upon which they were written, The Soviet authortles have launched a five-year proganlme of economic WWII-y. whlchmeans the undersell- market of the world. It ‘also include; the British Isles, and this movement most serlolnly exerting it; pregglu-g upon those basic industries in which the British working classes are most vitally interested. The Marxian 1301- shevisfs make no concealment of their ultimate design to smash the capitalist controlled markets pf the Wvfld. and have betalzen thenlsclvce to a Communist economic formula to effect a world-wide 1.. olut1pn_ ‘This mlwh is amply and definitely P-nllmmlicd by the Bolshevik Journals, "Id WWI-W depends lI-‘Oll the reports of outside onlookers upon Russian affairs. NW 1°!’ my life, it is a miracle of thirty years, which to relate were not a history, but a piece of poetry, and "P1110 sound to common ears like a Iflblc- For the world, 1 count it not an inn but an hospital and. a place not to live but to die in. '1‘he world ' that I regard is my self; lt a the microcosm of my own filling that 1: can cast mine eye on; for the other, . I use it but like my globe, and tum it mum symetlmw --for my. recreation. Me" thlt 100k upon my outside penis. ing only my condition and-myfortune do err in my altitude: for I um above All" -- hi! shoulders-Sir Thomas Browne. ~ ,;' a We now come . to the real quea- ..__-__. ._...__.... ____ _____, When the Russiaaievolutlon took“ place thirteen years ago there were‘ ltbose who hailed the event as the’ downfalfof ‘lbs-Idem and the liber- ation of the Russians from . an in- tolerable yoke oi-oppxession. It was assumed that the traditional outcry against the lilurcssive twctlm of the Russian bear was all a thing of the past, for a new regime had sprung into existence almost overnight. Yet is as muoh- in the political spot- albeit its tactical munists. It was a Soviet stroke‘ of the Labor-Sociallstg Britislr Govern- ment of 1924 to grief. Yet, five years afterwards, the MacDonald Adminins- tration made another gesture towards and installed Sokolniklff he Russian representative in London while a new trade agreement was indited which was as good as any opening the Bolsheviks could desire. For the ink of this document‘ was scarcely dried when in the Daily Worker appeared a reprint of the Pll fancy, their youth-theln time of stress and struggle-they succeed, they die; they are buried and remain liberate. And this death and resur- rection goes on forever. there is nothing either new or old; there is only the rising and falling ii.- allowed only during office, and is dropped when the wearer goes out of office. This holds good with regard mlnlon, members of the Senate, the speaker of the Dominion House of Commons, the Chief Justice of Can- chiei justices and judges of the su. preme courts in the several provinces, and the speakers of the provincial legislatures- Speakers of the Senate however, be recommended to the Gov- ernor-Gsneral for his Majesty's per- mission in retain the title of "honor. able" after three years of office, as may also the above-mentioned chief iustlces and Judges 0n retirement. because I want to, "no, no,” it is be- cause I apparently have to ask one and all; After your wife and you have worked hard with your hands 5,1], yflul- life to build up a home, then come home from Sunday-school and find as high as thirty-five people, some perfect strangers, in your home, and possibly a ball game nicely start- ed outside, just what would you do? IS that kind of education going u, build up our lovely, vast Canada? Readers, way back in the seventies my father came to Canada and bought andeventually paid for this old homestead containing one hund- red acres, woods, water and all, yes, he paid, but ‘remember, there w” one thing he did not buy nor pay money for, and that is the Christi- anity and civilisation that was al- ready established here. Now, my dear father was not considered a real Christian man, but there ls this one thing I do know, he did love his family, and I am absolutely certain that he would have brought dear mother and us, ten children from Ohio if this Christianity and civilis- ation was not already established. During the last twenty years, I have bought this whole plantation on ex- aqtlymthe same terms as_ father- omer his sight, David his little ladi -Lizette Woodworth Reese. ___._______ Ideas are born; they have their in- ey grow senile, they nod. they sleep, their graves for ages. And then ey come again in the garb of youth, slaughter and slay-and inspire and In Time the infinite Tide-Elbert Hubbard. _._._ .i.~__ the Solicitor-General for, the Do- a, the Judges of the supreme courts d exchequer courts of Canada, the d of the House of Commons may, Chrlstianltyls not mine to dispose of, but by the help of God I am going to hold fast against Sunday recreation Sabbath Day observance, Christian- bought it in the sixties, and thl|_ place than I found it, I will s'ell out and get out of the dear, dear- land that helped me up, and in closing let me offer g suggestion that Iam absolutely certain would be for the bettenncnt. Let us common, work- ing. people combine our Influences and ask our Dominion leaders" to frame a law giving usfive ten-hour working days each weekend Satur- day for recreation, and let us keep, Sunday as our ancestors did in mak- ing our Canada such a desirable place for us. For remember, if we lose our lty will deterioate and we will lose the very soul of our vast budding nation, and we will go down, down as all other nations have when they forgot God. JACK MINER. llulllll». H E ll N FQ t tel-national. It ran as follows: "The Insuranc Assets I I’ HD1419!!!" l! U501!!! fiiw. flavoured rich "spawn. A Ted,“ . . u: 4 than any Prince Edward is '1‘he NEW L_. c.“.s__lul'1"i_=r< ingly light in operation. o in Force Manager's “glmose Great-West and enjoy Protection ruin, pm", 1 (Sold only luh-‘eal-anught -. ,_._.i-.e-_, _,_ _> ... , othcr- _ ASK FOR nliltlonsrlzarlolr Soulis Typewriter-If: C0., Ltd. Corona Portable Typewriters ‘find 'Addin ...-- HalifazgN. " Local Representative-H. M. Simpson, $8 SI-ICQI-fiIIIIIOII-CIOWII: . ‘ - $014,009,,” land Branch (mice IIYNIIMAII 8f 00., LIMITED llllllljlzgz-z- Dlokages) ’ very-quiet and exceed- l-las-ntoreilme-savingfeaturg g Machined,‘ 1 Zllflimm ing of British commodities in gvery . I116 411111111118 oi Russlanproducta in ' rest is. not =AxAx x' for rather than l will knowingly and oonscie lously make Canada a worse i i z z i "mull 'i‘bf!" it ls only ozrcagtli creature's‘ ulTc ' greater titan all the ‘rest oijth verse. Nay! it is IGYQZQILPIIIK and tl hingf-Anatolo FiZI-XIIIB‘. .- ‘. 1.: ' qn. x‘. l -. _1‘ y. People I who health use Penslar ZMXIH‘Y Cold Breakers “became, _ they, ._ contain no noetanflldemr other; ‘They are, packed in eon lent tin boxeafitlisffalfp‘: being printed _ou_,_,ea__c'h_'~: _ You should keep'-iliem__ at all umee. 0st‘ p‘ sue ravine’ E lnsureAyouraeif IIPIRIC- ma. _ I suggest-that you try Penalare, l Wlaiielrlne and Spruce Bai- ' lam. Sold In two shes, plain er laentholated 15c and Mo. 5.]. FIISTEII,‘ Central Drugstore n" 6o o ewvowoonwnw- '“ - . arr." e cnrth fallout the barren, inflnitgily of - wdrl c quickest wayio I ‘ it coldiis, we bcllevcfib translatable T‘ LAXATIIIE; ~00Lll ,_ Barll#a=i&i a {tputdoor men‘ are t’ unanimouseyoucanl beatiafosaflarvourand , lasting goodness. it" I fiHli-IY-ING tse~ vb‘ ‘*1 afgggill Qf,"s’a7nd_'il\; w. l l xx x _.. u; y the use 9 . l ,.,.".".,‘.l'".‘.'.'.' flue of '1' ' All for OTHER TOILET Iloub ant Face Powder .,u.;;li;.?.;,',"h... Pow e. ‘l . Yl-emliélk}; 'i~'..'.'."l'>2.'wler . Bier-Kiss l-‘aee Powdcf» 31» k3 "uxrua SPECIAL .. Renaud’: dflflftidr" ., box of POW u’ of Sweet Pea Peril-m‘ $ an oua WINDOWB 19 The, 2 I‘ A H" .311 In! no .....-.----- Powder 1|“ . large jar of mnlllllnl "m; ' h} Travellettc alcunu ~- w ‘ . 1 .- » SPEC