' "'-"“§I,!:'g'§q:? unr-v-nev-‘wn-u-m PAGE FOUR m: GIIABLOTTETOWII aunnnuu Pnnldnnlw-W. cucu- s. leLnn, n-r. Ilse-Incident, a. n. Burnett, ma. a lenrutnry-Ulnt-Col- D- A. Inollnnon, D. I. 0. lditor 1nd Imaging Dinner-J. I. Insult, I- J- I- Auoclnlo Editori- Ill l-‘rnnl Walker nnd D- I. Currie and United Staten jirornlng Dally (founded I381) li-OO pa! you (ill NIYII“) “UVQPIU led ll “.60 per you (in ndvnllll) snvnnrrsuvo nnr-nnsnunrrvls var-run swarms-rm Beokwl ‘m! Building, New York Cit!- Bnildlnl. KIM" lag, Allnntn; llonndnuck nufldlns. Bin Frnnvlmn Phllmdellihin. d: Special Ann” Ina, New I-ork Con lfntnrl Clty. Wlllnnghhy ‘lower Building, 6mm». om- nuiu llll N0- llth I!!!‘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 17. ID88- L. o. AS PROTECTIONfST Tho latest convert t0 the D0116!’ o: tariff protection for British ag- rioulture u the m. non. Davifl moyd George, war-time Premier ‘m; (onngy ubcml chieftain, now leader of a minority FWD °i “Lloyd-Gems Liberals" in the British House of Commons. The reason for Mr. Lloyd George's change of heart on the tariff Q1195‘ tion u his own experience M a f“- mcr. A speech which he recently delivered on this question has created great 5m- in political circles in view of the err-Premier's former advocacy of Free 'I‘rade. We quote his remarks from the Inndon Pub- lic Opinionl "I believe we are a ions’ WHY from having reached the produc- tion of which this country is cap- gble 1n agriculture. I believe that we have hardly scratched the land as far as arnail holdings and allot- ments are concerned. "There were only '7 per cent of our people on the land. The near- est 1.0 us, Belgium, had 20 per cent. while Germany had over 30 per cent. "If we put an artra 500,000 fami- lies on the land it would bring us up to i0 per cent-half of the next lowest in the world. Is that impos- Iible? “I can understand a Free Trade policy for agriculture, so that the farmer can buy cheaply when he Ielln cheaply, but I cannot under- ltand the policy which is neither one thing nor the other by which the farmer is placed 1n the posi- don of having to compete in some of his most essential goods against producers from abroad selling their cutter, mutton, and lamb, their fruit and eggs, very much cheaper than he can possibly produce it lere, while at the same time every- thing. he buys is taxed. “Phat. is an imlrlossibile policy." In a. Sunday Times interview, Mr. Lloyd George explained his policy n greater detail. Hc said‘:- "I do not want tarlfls. I am a I Free Trader, but I live in u_ coun- n-y, nmong an electorate, which by ‘ m overwhelming majority put in ‘ power a Government they knew was _ in favour of tariffs. Therefore, tar- lfls came-but not in the right way. l | “Yorkshire folk have a motto ‘All or nowt,' and for this reason bhat is my motto. I'm a ‘no-wt’ man ' myself. but as the country 5B!’ 0th- erwise, let them be thorough about I. the ‘all.’ “Take my own case. Here I am n fanmer with land that needs 100d in the form of chemicals and ma- chinery if 1am to get the best out of it. These I have t/s buy-—and find they are taxed. But I buy them and use them. and in consequence my yield is incresaed. But that yield I have to sell cheap because it is in competition with produce enter- 5_ ing our ports free. It is a piece of yous injustice to every farmer in ___ our land. "Far better to become wholly Protectionist than to have that sort of thing-it is not ‘fair do's.' If we are to have tariffs, follow Joseph Chamberlain's policy, with lberal preference to the Domlnions. “when I pointed out," adds the Sunday Times interviewer, "to Mr. Lloyd George that so far he had merely condemned, and asked him his own policy, he replied:- "Back to the Land should be a State movement. The State should advance money in the same way‘ that a. good landlord used to put up buildhgs for his tenant. "Any other industry can go to the City for its development. Fann- ing cannot. Here I have 250 acres -my neighbour has 40. How can we promote a company and get the community to support us in the wI-y all other industries can? "No; farming is too indviduailstfc for a public issue of shares. but it _ wants capital just the same. The aemmmanuaitfnaznasm uoul u: non-noun w 841mm "I should tnin and maintain experts to give adv-ice on 1.11 agricultural problems. "We have better men in agricul- trn-e and hortiouilture in this country than in any count-fl’ in the world. Use these men, I say, for the country's good. “Itooktbeldviooofamanin Kent about my fruit trees: to that some man come growers from Brit- ish Columits. California, and all parts of EIIXOW- Let his talents be available to all our own farmers. “Another mun in Aboryltwyih knows about the reconditioning of land; another in Surrey about soils. Use them and train others. The ex- perimental Nation at Rnthnmsted is doing good work, but its scope should be increased and increased. “Having fostered the experts and disseminated their findings, the produce should be advertised, so that everybody in the country knows what the countryside is do- ing. “Dietetic values of hozneglown produce should be stressed. I am of the opinion that a man living in Great Britain gets more benefit from food produced in British soil and brought to fruition in the same air as that in which he h"mself lives. They are indfgenuous to each other and ‘blend’ better. “That; said Mr. Lloyd George, ‘is my plan!" I ISLANDER PRESIDES It is of more than passing interest to note that the chairman of the fifth biennial conference of the In- stitute of Pacific Relations now sit» ting at Benn, Alberta, is a Prince Edward Islander. With Sir Robert Falconer’: career as an education- ist all our readers are acquainted. Speaking at the opening diruier of the Conference on Monday night, Sir Robert made an eloquent appeal for unceasing eflort to understand causes-economic, social and racial —which create suspicion and fear among nations. Almost inevitably, this year, much of the Bani! Conference will turn upon a discussion of Japanese ambitions in Menchuria. The Mon- treal Star suggests that if the Jap- anese delegates can enlighten the rest c! the world u to their real in- tentions they will be conferring a general benefit. Another thorny problem which will have to be tack- led is the question of Japanese in- dustrial competition, e.g., in textiles, made possible by exteremeiy low coats of production. These and sim- ilar topics will be discussed at Banff, and it is profoundly to be hoped that the various representa- tives may reach a fair understand- ing of each other’: point of view. If they can bring home a fair know- ledge of Pacific problems and dis- seminate unbiassed information they will be doing a real service to a world which looks upon the Pael- fic with a somewhat jaundiced eye as the possibl cradle of future wars. EDITORIAL NOTES The Royal William, the first ver- sel to cross the Atlantic under her own steam power, set out from Pic- tou on August 1'1, 1883. The Com- memorative five cent stamp issued by the Dominion will be put on sale on Friday. Another Prince Edward Islander has achieved distinction for him- self. This is Mr. Ffillton C. Under- hay, of ‘Bay Fortune, this Province, ,193f Nova Bcotil. Rhodes Scholar. who has won the highest possible mark for jurisprudence at Oxford University. Mr. Underhay is one of the many P. W. O. students who have "made good" in their subse- quent university courses. ci$l1\-I Although the world b assured by President Roosevelt of the United ‘States that the political changes in ‘Cub; hgye been entirely constitu- - 3- -— ->-—-——f:r:-w ':"."‘:'-" ‘ \ AUGUST‘ 11. 193s vNo race can live witlwnt national pride. Only on that condition can sacrifice-Isa Nouvelliste Rivers.) In the inflation bill, adopted in the dying noun of the late session of Congress, m. Roosevelt was au- thorized to expand Federal Reserve credit by not more than $3,000,000,- 000; to inflate the currency in cir- culation by ls much u 88.000.000.- 000, and to devalue thegold con- tent of the dollar, by as much as 50 per cent. The President has not yet had recourse to the exercise of this authority, and it may be that even now he may use the powers of inflation conferred upon him to a. Imited degree. List October Chicago discovered that in the three previous months more of its automobiles had been stolen than new cars registered. For the fullyear there were 34,246 auto thefts in Cook County (Chicago and environs)—nearly 100 a day. As worst auto thieving city in the Un- ited states, Chicago enjoys the highest 17.5. theft insurance rates. In San Francisco it costs 75c. per $700 to insure a. certain popular car, in Washington 95c. in Boston $1.70, in Manhattan $3.06, and in Chicago 59-18 a year for $1,000 of insurance. Since it ls now, says the Baltimore Sun, our declared intention to let nothing interfere with the efiort to raise domestic prices, what .a pity it is that we are still unable to aban- don our sentimental and legalistic view of the war debts and treat them realistically as one of the most to deal with. Had we consented to revision of the debts in time, the drift downward of American price levels might" have been largely checked. Action now would remove a factor contributory to deflation. But it. appears easier to talk about cheapening money than to go to the trouble of educating the Am- erican public on the effect on pric- es of nourishing this international tapeworm. And in politics the simplest course is often the only 1m. possibleone. Atlantic Monthly: What the Am- erican peopie in their present ‘oe- wiiderment most need is precisely what youthful minds could contri- bute. We have an overabundance of well-balanced administrators, and members of national commissions who consume vast stretches of months in an effort to conceal their be- fuddled thinking and then arrive at last at the startling conclusion that muc-h remains to be said on both sides of the question. We have an over-abundance of solid caiptains of industry and banking who oooi-headediy invent high- sounding terminology for newly- devised dishonesties. We are curs- ed with level heads. We need in- flux of lopsided youth. The social order must be reconstructed by somebody who believes something, by somebody who has some enthus- fmn, and not by the perfectly bal- anced men designed by their ac- cumulated habits of life to be chief ‘barbers and head waiters. Sailings from the port of Church- ill will be doubled this year. 'I‘wenty ships are to carry grain from the northern port to the Livepool and European markets. They are also re- ported to be bringing in a consid- erably larger quantity of package freight than was available last year. It is a slow but reasonably satis- factory rate of growth. There are a number of Canadian ports on which large sums of money have been ex- pended in providing facilities for grain trade, and which have been much longer in the grain shipping business. which handle no more than the 5,000,000 bushels which will g0 out vis Church this year. In selecting teachers for the pub- lic schools the New York City Board of Examiners considers the person- ality of each candidate as well as scholarship and technical know- ledge. Members of the board, how- ever, are not satisfied with the way they appraise those elusive quali- ties which enter into an indivfdualb Personality. It may be that the ex- aminers will devise a. machine to measure the expansiveness of the smile of e candidate; but how to gauge the winsomeness of the smile? P lity as disclosed in dress may be rated; but how can it be told whether the candidate wen-rs party clothes or everyday at- tire‘! Manners emress the man; but isn't there a certain amount of Jekyll-Hyde in everybody and wouldn't the dqplorabler Mr. Hyde be submerged 1n any formal test? -—_-__._ country is 21M intended, the other nation! will strongly suspect that the successor to Mechanic will re- main in office at the will of Wash- it affirm itself, impose itself, make. itself respected. Practically every not of national pride is an act of (‘Ihreei THE CHARDOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NotesBy The Way Mediaeval Sailors’ Yarns What £00 of K ; ' Q0111‘! , a, 1 w. u-a». MD. CHILDREN BELOW NORMAL MENTALLY mum Alexander. in ‘The Navy") Sailors are a conservative race, “d nqwherg u this attitude of mind ‘more marked than in their capacity for aolnnins I vm- W1’ the tall tales of modem tars are equalled, if not outshone, by those of their medieval predecessors. many of which, thanks to the monkish ohroniclem of those dnyI. have come down to us, delightfully embellished by pictorial 800011195- niments. At first night n monar .7 may seem a rather curious source of information on sea lore. but it must be remembered that a. lam! proportion of men holding impor- tant positions in the shipping world were (lhurchmen (the Arch-E bishop of canuterbury, for example; being the head of the Cinque Ports= Fleet), while the monks were the gccrcditcd journalists and book- makers c: the day. Like. our pres- ent day reporters, they were a1- ways keenly on the locus-out for spicy anecdotes, often more enter- tainlng than accurate, while their methods also were peculiarly m0- dern. ‘Ilhus if Roger of Wendover, for example, had nothing but stric- normal mental ability. hires for some sailor bishop, to This means that while the idiot_,Richai'd of Devizes or another he and the next above him, the imbe-‘fwould rank as a "man right W01’- cile, may need special care in an in- shipful," while yet a. third would 1t ls very gratifying to see the change in the treatment of what areycalled mental defectives, that in individuals whose mental ability is not up to normal or 100 per cent as it were. Formerly they were simply thought of as "crow." and the best treatment to be separated from their families and everybody also, as some of them had instincts that made them unsafe to those around them. However, careful investigation‘ shows that there are large numbers of feeble minded persons whose be- havior in the community is not any worse than that of persons who are not classed as mental defectives. Nowadays they rank these de- fectives from the idiot up past the imbecile and the moron to those of THE PERFEGI‘ LIFE o It is not growing like a tree In bulk, doth make Man better be; Or standing long an oak, three hundred year, To fall a' log at last. dry. bald and “N; A lily of a do! Is fairer far in May, Although it fall and die that highw- It was the plant and flower of Light. In small proportions we just beau- ties see; And in short measure life may perfect be. -.Bcn Jonson. Cuba's New President (Montreal Gazette) The flight of President Gerardo Machado from Cuba was in the na- ture of things, for the people have been struggling against his domina- tion for some time and he retained power only through the support of the army. When the arm turned against him his disappearance from the political scene was inevitable. In their demand that Machado take a holiday, his opponents declared that they had had their fill of dic- - e fiThe Department of Health and Education is desirous of RESUSCITATING and DEVELOPING Industries and Occupations for the benefit of the Province at large,’ and for that purpose is sponsoring and supporting The Handicraft Guild of Prince Edward Island Every opportunity for instructing the rising generation in handicraft work will be taken ad- vantage of; and at the Provincial Exhibition visitors will see an excellent display of handi- craft work. Enquiries regarding the work of the Handi- craft Guild should be directed to THE SECRETARY, HANDICRAFT GUILD, Charlottetown W. J. P. MacMILLAN, Minister of Education and Public Health ‘J {— Charlottetown Business College Offers to young men and women the benefit of Practical and ‘Experienced teachers giving INDIVIDAUL INSTRUCTION in Actual Business Practice, Accounting, salesmanship, Auditing, shorthand, Typewriting, Filing, ‘ uensia and Secretarial work. All necessary subjects for n first-class BUSINESS EDUCATION are taught; the urn-necessary are eliminated, thus shorten. ing the time to complete the C arses. stitution, the next higher mentally, the moron, may be so helped that he can return to his family, and to the community, where, under or- dinary supervision, he may lead a haPPY and useful life. The whole thought then is that instead of thinking of these de- ‘DOtent deflationary factors we havel fectives us diseased or dangerous in- divlduals, that we think cf them n; having just a little less mental equipment than the rest of us, and by giving this amount of mental equipment an opportunity to do its best, progress may be made in their development. , , , , Dr. W. C. Sandy says that as most defectives will continue to be problems to the community, per- haps a menace if not cared for, an actual asset if trained, it means that there is urgent need for early dis- cover of these cares, correcting any physical defects, special training for certain cases, and removal of un- suitable cases to institutions. In many cities now there are classes for those who are not as bright as the normal child, and the teachers in charge of these classes are specially trained for tins work. The thought then is that when a youngster doesn't seem to be able to keep up with his class, when he seems unable to concentrate, on when there is definite signs that he is not as old in his mentality as in his body, the parents should not be ashamed to recognize this, and should give the youngster every pos- sible chance to be his very best self, even if this best is not up to nor- mal. According to the almanac, the weather about now ought to be “hot and sultry”—we should be having “dog days." They generally are supposed to come 1n August-sticky, steamy. dull days, very uncomfort- able for man and beast. The an- cients, who took most of their fore- casts on all sort-s of things from the stars, crediting or binning v ruthful noise and she-SUV W119" those orbs for good or bad condi- tatorship and they insisted that his successor must be neither a. general nor a politician. The new President of the big island republic is Carlos Manuel dc Oespcdes, who is describ- ed as a shy and scholarly diplomat whose father was Cuba's first revol- utionary President. fhere will be plenty of scope for his diplomacy, for the situation has been a dis- turbing one for several years and a comment acidiy upon the incom- patibility of see with an “e" to sea ‘with an "a," 1f he could anyhow vmrk the pun in Latin, for, one and all, they dearly loved a play upon words. But one of their chief interests was the discovery, not so much of moral tales, which were hard to come by in those wild days, but 1°!‘ W15 w Whmh i‘ m°ra1 “Md be mere change of presidents of itself imflflled- and m“ “a was a ha?‘ will not suffice to restore order and py hunting ground for these. Such, give satisfaction to a public m“ very marvellous things were wont‘ has been so resma one thing m i" MVP“ there- wwrdl“? t° “her favor of de Cespedes‘ occupancy of 509°" "i" “Wed it‘ ' the official chair at favana is that more mcmdilfle the tale’ the "m": the revolutionists seem to hnve ex- mipresslve the 17mm’ hausted their spleen in attacking qflwrem" n0 mm‘ welwm" Machadds immediate supporters Piece of luck than the visit or a 4nd rejoicing in his flight. The new Saibrim hi5 ‘lwnastery could b" President may be able to capitalize m1 a mm!‘ busily engaged may“ this development and s0 rake his um“ a 35H”? whwh was a‘ very position secure for the present. Popular mm‘ of “gm "Edmii There have been nearly nine years dealing Mm the habits of ammals of unrest in Cuba, chief evidences of and the m°'a1s_ t0 be deduoed which were strikes, student rebel- thereflmn- Th“ we “e Md of the lions, assassinations and dissatisfac- ne‘ m“ H’ 155'" tion generally. For most of this period Machado was in office, for it , was in 1925 that he waselected. He i met the disturbances with force and his regime gradually became a dic- tatorship. Possibly he was uot to blame for this, because it was his duty to maintain order by means of the soldiers when the situation got out of the hands of the police.‘ Cuba is known as a one-crop country, su- gafbeing the great industry, with about 80 per cent. of the national income coming from that source. ‘That industry virtually collapsed in 1925, prices falling lower and lower as the years passed. Consequently. economic and social conditions were sadly upset and the suffering led to grave unrest. Machado sought to offset the sugar losses by engaging in a. campaign of public works on a grand scale. One of the works was the building of a central highway linking Iup Havana with all parts of the island. This construction cost $100,000,000. Another undertaking was the erection of a National Cap- itol at a. cost of some $20,000,000- “ . . . a iittio worm and grleveth men sore. It scapeth and voideth peril by leaping and not by running, and spareth not kings." The moral for the king?» 13 6b" vlous. Then again. there was the cat of whom we learn that:- “ . . . the time of love bring- eth, hard fighting for wives, and one scratcheth and rendeth the other grievously with bitinB 911d with claws. And he maketh a he pwoffereth to fixht WW1 another, and falleth on his own feet when he falleifi out of high places.” But sinners, on the other hand. are reminded that when they fall from grace, it is only to alight up- on their heads in Hell. lit is then easy to upprwiate the pleasurable excitement of such I writer when news was brought to the Scriptorium that a sailor had rung the Guest House bell and asked for a meal. Fbr assuredly tions and influences, blamed Sirius, the dogstar, for all the miseries of this particular season. The Romans figured that the rising of Sirius, which they called Canicula, in con- junction with the sun on July 28 was preced ‘ and succeeded by twenty very dsagreeable days, forty in all, in which dogs were likély to go mad. this rover of the seas would beable, to tell of far more thrilling- "beasts" than fleas and cats. An "interview" was the recogniz- ed honorarium to be paid by all travellers, whether by land or sea. in return for monkish hospitality.‘ And this hospitality was apt to be, unstinted both in the matter of, food and of that very excellent slel for which the monks were noted? far and wlde. mcidentglly it may 1M be mentioned that: the xznr on, ax Factor our ale oasks today has come down ° from the time when the 5t.‘ An- $013190’ drew’: Cross it represents was the; trade mark of denoting at one and the same time‘ the origin of the ale and a. sacred oath as" to its freedom from any, kind of adulterartfon. s No one would be nrore apprecia- tive of hi1’: lavish hospitality than, l. sailor coming flresh from the ter-i ible hardships and scanty fare whichfeli to his lot in the Middle] Ages, and he may therefore be} forgiven if h's gratitude tool: the. Beauty Aids Created by Max Factor, Holly. wwfl’: mike-In» Benius. who m- many years has been chief cos- metlclan to the screen and stage profession. Mu Factor preparations are in a largo way responsible for the splendid complexion of these celebrities. Some of our liner Include FACE POWDER I | l Fgmvnnnoy CREAM form of highly-coloured adven-i SKIN AND TISSUE CREAM turea Ind incredible details of, "W0" CREAM "monste a of the deep," beside! ROUGE AND LIPSTICK wmh w, modem m “W” sink into insignificance. ~ , Oredullty being the keynote of i the times, we can picture Roger of Hoveden listening thrilled and Hgnpo to that wondrous tale of the These preparations are made from the purest ingredient in correct color, harmony shades to blend with individual complexion coloring. And is delicately per- fumed to pious the most fu- tldiou tute. The peculiar ad- "horrific monster" which, accord-g :::‘"..'..':"‘l:"='.:l;'::.; m v t» "W- "m" "lln under most trying ,§,,,,,',',',_,,',: more than the usual supply of beam, in order to seize and devour} a sailor who had blasphemed the! BIAQOG vugn. "Ana tau," adds] that trusting old chronicler, " he, and many others saw with their. very own eyes." Visit our store and sec this line of toilet preparations of which we are sole agents. TIIE 2 MAGS DIIUGSTOBE In the illustration the Captain. i “M” “i” m“ °‘ "Wmi-Yi ‘x . tv-nawrwnv-w - V‘ ' "i ‘ ’ the monnstriw, ' Execution of this y-olramme neces- sitated the floating of loans in the. United States, which keeps a fath- oaths, is depiceted scurrying into the cabin, determined at least to be the "last to leave his ship." reminiscences of Jonah made the whale the favourite and source of moral warnlngg, and the tale of this mammals enouvnities spread with a rapidity worthy o1" modern jour- naligtic enterprise, though as in all similar tales, the name of the im ventor is unfortunately unknown. ‘The whale," we an wild, “is tho largest of all fish. 1t looks like an island when it is afloat. When he is hungry he gapes and out comes a. sweet scent. by which numbers of fish are drawn into his mouth. When the whale clo- ses his jaws he sucks in all these fishes. But it is only the little fish he thus ensnares, the big ones he cannot seize. (Note this one item of accurate informa- tion.) The whale abides at the bottom of the see in fair wes- ther. A storm causes him to come to the surface of the sea. Sailors, seeing it, mistake it for an island, and out anchor and land upon it. To warm them- selves, they light a fire. The whale, feeling-the heat, dives down to the bottom of the sen. and drowns them all." The 8511M, having ‘thus brought his tale to a tragic conclusion, the matting “d mouung» md wmflmonk proceeds to draw the moral. "The Devil is like the whale. Ho tempts many to follow their sinful lusts and in return they find ruin. It is the weak in faith, the little men, whom he thus be- gulles. He who listens to the De- vii's lore will rue it sore. He who puts his trust. in him will follow him 00 dark Hell. i’ 345. You will save Tlmc and Money by Consulting L. B. MILER, Principal Charlottetown erly eye on Cuba's progress. ‘Ihesethe investments from thnt quarter loans added to the burden of the national debt and made the firan- ciai situation worse to that extent. While interest had to be paid on loans, revenue did not rise as ex- pected and the last state was worse than the first. Of late there have been signs of stabilization of prices for sugar, but the promise of im- provement came too late to be of any service to Machado. The tax- payers were queezed dry to pay for public works and the military estab- lishment that was employed to keep them from expressing their feelings too forcibly. The unrest became more pronounced and the killings began. All the signs of revolution were present in Cuba and Washing- ton felt constraind to give advice through its new ambassador, Mr. Sumner Welles, who suggested n. holiday for President Machado. The Cubans have gone farther than this in compelling quick flight and the Ma-chado exile may be lengthy, if not permanent. ' Fear of intervention by the United States probably had a lot. to do with the forced departure of the dictator. The big neighboring republic has a tremendous financial stake in Cuba, being in the neighborhood of $1,- 500,000,000 according to financial information as presented in Th: New York Times. Washington, like- wise, is politically interested, foi Cuba's independence is tho result o! the United states’ action in drivim the Spaniards from the island. The Cubans fully realize this, not havin| forgotten that they were given op portunity to set their house in order and then encouraged to create their republic. Intervention having bee! avoided in the present instance, it remains for the Cuban Congress ta resume its functions in relation t| Machadds successor, who rooms to have gone into office on a wave of popularity. Whether his appoint- ment be provisional or otherwise. the wish will be general in thil hemisphere that Cuba's latest up- heavai has exhausted itself. TRAFFIC DELAY Anything wrong in front, mate? said one driver to another in a long traffic wait.‘ Yes, the coppefs gone to lunch an’ left 'ls ‘and ’up. DURING ‘ EXHIBITION WEEK We Would like your Business. We sell everything in Men's Wear except Hats and Shoes, compare our prices and you will be convinced. McLELLAN BROS. 2 it i‘.