ii t 1 _l Zi t: '.1 .if _ to ig., ` vw- ‘ttf ~$)| .- __ ii tt s ._i~;, -' e .i §`% I if! 4 , » i . ‘. . »»s.».~v -i it ____ iii it ii .,. on .‘§'. _ ` 1, _ li, iii 'iff 1 _.-5 5% I i i ';-fé _ "“~"‘°“'s...."° °i‘.°.';1't‘t...’£°'a:i.*... L ..Y..‘°.?....""‘l‘i»'.*i'i.'“»'_'_"‘*“_ ;i-»`rts;v»ii°e'_ew~ °f_w°»° '~ e ' ‘ _ldxior and Hankel-J. li. Barnett. Aaaaalala lathe*-D. K. - mm. 'mdnmmed in pgwaplpolfl _4!___._ __‘ pn your (ll advance) mailed In Ohlisdl all lillial _ _- D! ilk, $0 diilnln ' -A . . Daily doaacod url) lo-N vel' vel! (ia advance) van-¢_. or www' of Qonomgs r-----~ i tgieemsat between the nstioariii W’ surprise" _ t:'r\= uw FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,_19;9_ _- i Mu ___y_°§“°§°§n__v,,,°,;‘?,§,°°{;,,,§f P f A _' 'C iiut it is sisoussodsna acvccsioti by producer reape but small pi-odti prominent _ataiealnen 0! 1 ‘ aatieoelitiel- Br_.eeme~eme :e°° coming to gasoline, the chronicle m tm mn hu _ii "rua 'raarrr qvasrrou. \, _ '.f_Whilc our people are generally well haformed with reference to our tariff l'¢_llt.i0ll.s with the Unified States and other countries, it is well, once in a while. in obtain the viewpoint of otlicrs who have made a special study odrthequestion and are in a position ihvaxlirees authoritative opinions. For this muon our citiaens generally will look forward with interesttothe _forthcoming visit cf Messrs. W. E. 'himmon and W. E. Rowe. Members 0! Parliament for Ontario, and Mr. yif. G. Ernst, M_P., Lunenburg, N.S. ldmsrl. Tummon and Rowg are both practical farmers, with a wide know- ledge of tariff facts and figures in its bearing upon the agricultural pro- blems of' the country. Mr. Ernst is 'one of the rising young members of the House of Commons. I-le is a for- mer Rhodes Scholar, and during the war received the Military Cross and _hor ror distinguished sorvioe in the field. He has won his spurs in Par- liasnent, and is regarded as one of ;rs'_most iiriiiisui members. Those ‘gentlemen will speak in the Strand Theatre on Tuesday, September 17, when all will have an opportunity of them. On the following even- ing they speak at Alberton, on Thurs- dlyevening at Summcrside and on ‘liiday ahemcon at Georgetown. The tariff is more than a party is- It concerns the life and the mcspcrlty of Canada. If this coun- _try is ever to attain the position it ill entitled to among the nations of the world it will have to adjust its _tariff to suit the requirements of its own' producers and not for the bene- fit of the producers of other coun- our neighbors to the south, at present the most prosperous nation in the world, are making drastic ad- iiistmehts in their tariff with the “libelous view of shutting out compe- _titioh 'whore it affects the agriouituroi interests of their'country_ whatevtu- wisdom of this course. it is liatoly necessary for the welfare of_ my country that its producers be pldocd on at least an equal footing with outside competitors. _ ' In view of the effect upon me farmers of this Province of the pend- Ing tariff changes in the United Btate|..‘it is of the utmost import- ance that our people be thoroughly ltliormed on the whole tarin situa- _licn. The visit of Messrs. Turnmon, Rowe and Ernst will afford a welcome opportunity of obtaining additional light on this important subject. The meeting. which takes plsoo in char- tottetown at s p_rh_, on tho 11th, wiii not interfere with the meetings scheduled for that ddy of the Cans- dill1'Good Roads Association, as there will bono evening session of the`Asscci.ation on that date. -- in cosr or aasqhmu. ` “' f- ____ The Halifax Chronicle calls atten- tion to the fact that the Maritime ?l’°Vi1\°¢l I-N plying more for gaso- than Quebec, Manitoba, Ontario. and the New England ststss, shd it aikawhy this is ic, without being abil \o“iind a very satisfactory ans- Nwa Scotia, it nys-and the might well apply to the` ldaritime Provinces-has got- » habit of expecting to pay _foraimcat everything she buys do hefndlhbofl in tha more Bhe buys her seeds' lerselv mmf mud. of acural. to V her pinball. IVIIUN' lnihbm afllcatk ` . |44 _ffeiiiht is 6c»r"e»» _Nil illldid 'at hem own ron' ass-rmseainerr. _.her it ti 5 cents; at Windsor. Ontario, they are 28 and 31 cents; at l..ondon'tl_\'ey-are lei*-S. with I. lli¢htiy,emailer_*gallou, they are no sudo: cents. _ 'rho pi-loo in Halifax has stood all along at 35 and 88 cents. `_ _ For some reason which it irrathcr dimouit to discern," ths ohrouicis llilces the blame for the increased is not the Provincial' tax. for .tha tax is tha same in Ontario 'ae' in Nova Scotia.” By the same reason- ing the price in CharlottetoWn,w_hich is even higher than in Halifax-_-being line, and 40 cents for th0‘,-better quality-'ls attributable to the Saund- tituds oi iudinerehoo to thomattor. In our sister provinces. ofcourse. est themselves in everything that concerns the taxpayer; and to ‘find reasons and remedies for inequality of prices wherever they exist. In Province the Government _has _fallen down so hopeleuly in every _depart- ment that no such expectation dish. lottieiown which seems in be than in any city in lliaaterii Canada. will probably remain what it _ii 'uh- tu our sitioeus tsirs tho mat_*5r'~i° ________...___.s . fact th t DB Y the boiled potato." It recalls badly a reliable article of diet. "!'iaky`ll\`d steaming. it fell gently to -pieces at tho touch or a roi-ir . _ . 1t_|imi>i¥`_ _est olcomargorine becamg ___quii_.e tocthsohio when absorbed .by this most delightful of _edlbiB-" i '- » _ "nut this," sighs ths.ciiose."f'is' su or the psst. 'rho ooiisc potl- -to of today-even when' servedin the- most pretentious surround-" ings-is a pitiful-looking article of diet. 'soggy' is the worditiiat seems to apply by way of das- cription. Dump and apologetic.. .tho only spirit manifested by this __ vegetable-said to be favore_d_'i1Y g I a spirited race-is a. mild deter- _ miriation to relist the advancoy of either knlfs or fork.” -_ _ - Readers of the _Ciiobe, however. should not despair. csrloads or prime quality Prince Edward Iisland»P°¢\' toes will shortly be on their way't4> Ontario, and the boiled D°i»lf0»"W° predict, will again come into_ its The "spud," and the _"i¥‘i\li'l>i'i§"`Wm again be hailed as dna fellows* to meet at table, and when till! hd" disappeared good dilution will _'Iii' upon appetite. Whatever. be lille QW' tocratic company in which WNY. themselves on the bill-of-fare.” they win rstsiu their price or iwiioe-'_f'1'i\e' Ontario epicuro wili thin so sshsmoc io uw "B°ilM»s°t°t°¢l'f to the hsushtnst. et'-waltei‘l»§'\\\4 chefs will vie with each oth" paring the homely sistorsio sore which they =9'§!iY.‘ to more faalsiol\ll>le'but_l¢l|l~__Y_*l'i,\.! dishes. i lDl'I'0_lUils' N0‘l'lf»` ` ' _...__ _ Hana in mc' new car er-- ' “Ni architect is horsemen' faf of »'nudei\ys¢ ainiia says that in Ontario tho ;£"::;ut_ (m:“.d?'::',°me;mn¢ of costs za cents; the serif: gas sl. 'At moms* uscossary in Mwifeel the i>rioss_ srs _ai aacss os-dsr.to_oountsrbsisaos the iuorsss- osuts; st 'rorooto they its _as-.aussi ms~do_ti_simoes_.oz thvunited States inworld affairs, but this is discoun- te`nq,nced_ou~’every side. _ is pecpled by about 20 dif 2° ‘md 31 °°‘““ "“”° 1” “'_“°‘9h“' 'isrsat nations with s total popuistiou of’_sbout__`41o.000.00°. -epeekinz mlvy dictseut fisasuases sou oonstitutms the largest body-~of modern civilisa- tion-`in~sny' of the greatlsnd divis- ions of' tha" globe. -It is obviousthat 'any agaeement - to-_` establish -uniform customs tariffs throughout so- larse ai1d‘thi.ckly’populated-an aredmust price in usiirsr on tus nhocopaov-_ oss 'vsii'-yx diniouit.~iz‘aot aa impea- emment. although, as it admits,x“it li_illB`i_5“k- ` ` _ More-_ra_in_is still needed in and about chfgriqttetown. as the thunder- storm of ’l`u"s'.`sday nicht brought only a'sho_rt`sh`ow'er.'Electric storms began esriyf isst spring: sac 'navs rseui-rea 35 and 36 cents for low priced gaso- !?°9“°n°i_Y' f'i"’°“'h_ .tm “mm” and' early fall, but ' have ‘ done less damage than in _former-years in pro- portion to their* number. This Prov- °" °°"°'“"‘°"*' °*` “i 1°’-‘i °°iii‘ ‘ff .moo .lass suffered' inéoihpsrsbiy isss uisn ‘other rrovuices rrom. tho wins- s'pread_ drought in North America, but Governments are expected 'tofinter-' m2i'°lfl_11\__i,l t0__1l11_ ‘lilo Weil! `a`nd`reservoirs, and no__ doubt it will ‘oo;h's.'Ineeo_t pests thst multiply in dry weather are reported doing dainace _tc_tl_i`s .turnip and vegetable crops' iinsouisjgiocsutiss, ”'ovsrt_i'ua lu' 1 saskatchewan _f'boi_las§i1l for l°rexnles-.King‘f accord- to' issii hi is And so the price of gasoline in _Th°= __ _-_ md mpm' W ° goea_;on to say.. Saskatchewan is the h`av`e_xi_'to` wh_ich__Premier King drifted tofqiifd_ _a seat. Two of his fellow- _r_nin'istei-s, Mr. and. Mr. Motn‘e'rwe1l.;ooms 'f!rom_' there. Bask- atchgwan once captured by the Op- ds. d insilt ` ii all __ _ _ _ - _ _i _ _ their own hm ul __ _pos_ltlon, and the__notorioius Liberal °"P“‘“““°“' _ ‘ "machine:-wrecked, the ottawa Min- istr_y_`_'_ni_iglit well woi_'_ry?_' _` _ We also note that the Mall .and :rua aoman rcnro' _ l pm d,m.,m,~,,,_,in, com, --- ~~ 'nisiiuitlou to nougpr. Anderson, the The Toronto Globe deplores _the 'p¢w`___p¥1g-ig Mirage” gg gungchawm, a “some tr ed haiwefalleni who_jfor`_flye years past _has fought a 'battle against _ the; Gardiner _ ‘ww Qovarnment, at. firstf almost alone me “YS when the mn” wt. with _.little assistance from the party l1_`_5_l,uPbortsc. _'rms' m`sy_ hsvo. its sd- vantlge ncw__that‘he is___in power. He waged tns`__b`attle against the Qov- yearned for butter and even the rank- _dmtiient in' _lnindependont lpifit. llld injdoi_ng_'s_o _he _won .the support of the Progressives who"now maniully stand ‘sy ' _ ' Dr. Anderson has _won popularity throughout tus Province hy_hisfgust to _`e¢i_\\catiou.:_Six"yearaibsfcre ha. became leader his book. "’I‘h`e Education of the New Canadian" mat with a-well-deserved reception by the people; and espaeial1y_ "among the many immigrant families when par- ants,wcrs of alien birth. The book that his heart wal in the fight place, that his sympathy went out to _Britiah~bcr_n and alien-born alike and did much to make them feelfat home' _and to make tha linglish s_ sseonc mother tunnis to blood. "We doubt” Mail and ltmpire, "if' any been better rlffiplred _ oi sdministsrinz ei leeksfehewaa than was brhis professional ac- hil ‘shady the mind know! _.ef °4“°_*° the great and 'I9 Canada. ‘_ ' _ . _ at Qours ru., go. J.- FOOD BTBAT CAUSE ` lllll. All-MINT! There was s. time when meat was blamed for many human ailments- canccr, heart disease. kidney, rheuma- tismandmanyforms of akiaail- ments. Tbattccmuchmeathaahada had effect' upon the kidneysor some individuals is true, but_ many of the ailments for which meat .was formerly blamed are now thought to be due to vegetable starchec and Iruiia. " One skin specialist stated recenly that ‘sruitsrisas and vegetarians lu applying their teories withthc grow- ing child, arelittle ahorto! crim- inals." He tells that while well rip- ened oranges are a good safe food, that orances in the fresh picked state are the greatest' oderiders in the way of skin reactions. Now what about food _and skin ail- ments? ` Asa matter of fact mostskln ail- ments can be traced to certain foods eaten, not because there is anything wrong with the food itself _but because the patlent's tissues' react unfavor- ably to the Particular food. For instance one of the _best foods known, the tomato, gives rise to more skin in-itatl/on than any other known vegetable. _ rho potato, another valuable :ood likewise causes skin infhtion. and until it is removed from the daily dict, some obstinate skinailment re- fuses to clear up, . Perhaps the worst offenders are certain raw fruits._ Now nearly everybody thinks of raw fruits as ideal food-food in a nat- ural stats with all its food values, its vitamins, its roughago - and there- fore man‘s i_>c!t food. ~ This is all true but nevertheless you have onlytc look aboutyou to sea a member of the family, a friend, or an acquaintance. who' cannot eat raw fruits without an attack of urticaria. or "hives" as it is called. _Stewing these raw fruits seems to be sufficient in many cases to over- ocms this tendency to skin irritation. The thought then in any chronic skin ailment is to try to discover Just what food-vegetable, cereal, fruit. eggs, and sometimes meat, that may be the underlying cause. A little baking soda, taken daily. often countcraots the aoidosis set up by some foods. _ _ ' .l___-.-_1-- _ . , 7' V M” 0 e ‘ _ ca*ZlQm/noi. woman sri sranhlonr _ On a. starred night Prince Lucifol uprose. :fired of his dark dominion |W\ll18 the dead .~ Above the rollinl ball in cloud part _ screened. Where sinners hugged their spectre \ M WWW' _ Poor preytohishot ilto! prldewere. those- _ - And,now upon bis western wing i\° _ ' 1401124. New hu huga.buik o'er Afric'a aaadl careened, Now' the-_ black planet shadowed Ai-_tic snows. ‘ amine throus'h'wiaor mass' tint ' pricked his soars with memory or use oid revolt #Nm a Awe; » Be reached a_ middle height, and at ‘ the"atarI} ' Whiehire thcbrain of heaven. he Arounifthe ancient _track marched \ ` an me ' - <5., mgyfofuisaiursbie law. -' -_ f` --deerceillaradith. THE Milo _ _...J-~~._ , v__~ _ _ ... _ "°“" _I-I _ “"-“' ' _ -“~--Mr-~-~ --~-~-~~ --- ~ r ~ --ff ~-~~--»_---»-------»»-~--~---W _ ‘_ ~-»-»--- -»-- --- - ---._-__--Y---------~---»~--~»---~----»---~ ~ _ _ _-. ._ _,_ _, I . _ ._.,._.,,, _, ,.__ ._.,._._. _ _ _..._ _ ._ _ ._ _ .,, ._ - ,~. _ , . , _ __ ~ _'._._i._ .___ _*L_ V.__;_»_.5.___W_ _.___ .v.___~_¢ ,-,.._ |{i'¢_P_,’_fi;-{'_l~¢r,.,,¢~.i..lt..;u...*_§._..i~.-v»\;,>.., _'i*. , - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ._ ciisnmrrrrowu cum i iliissisvrtscwsv ~ The Public Forum? dlsousaicabrearraspoudessta cfguaaiians-oflssloraat, 'Tho ubarlattatawnflnsdlaadcel not naealarlly undone the_ l__op|sueasa|sosr¢s»oads_a\s. _CHILDREN CIGARETTE! ' ___- Bir,-While there is much to com- mend the work of Rod Cross nurses and medical inspection of schools. one cannot help wondering if any influence is being exerted in order to chock the terrible inroodl ofthe cigarette 'habit upon the health of the young. If one may Judge by out- ward appearance, precious little is being cousin our midst murder to cheek s habit which is bound to des-_ troy the health and morals of youth. On every side we see growing 'boys -in some cases very small boys-`and even girls, indulging in the pernicious cigarette habit. and apparently we have» no health officials. _teach- ers or preachers, to _guide them aright. Of course those who are addicted to the habit can do little' to check it, as their example speaks louder than any words of warning they might possibly utter. I w. o_o nothhey. Professor oi adu- Viii°. Que.. writes as follows in a rc- cent issue of the New Outlook: _~ Mr. Charles F. Emerson, .Secretary or Dartmouth college. has issued statistics 'showing thatin 1896 each student of the graduating class of Dartmouth ‘College was asked to state whether-vor not hasmoked, and that the longevity of the members of this class is as follows: Smoking stu- dents. 49 years, 9 months (average): non-smoking stiidents. 59 years, 4 months. Difference almost ten years. Dr. W. B. Beaver. of Yale Univer- sity, has recently madevan investiga-_ tion of the effects of making on schooiboym and issues tnrrollowing tive rate of development of school boys; Non-smokers: weight, ion; growth. 100; cheat-girth. 100; .lung capacity. 100. Occasional makers: girth, 82.6; lung capacity, 72. Hab- itual smokersrweight. 00.6; growth, 80.6; chest-girth, 78.8; lung capacity, 58.4. Chief Magistrate Crane, _cf New York, states: Boys who use cigarettes seem to lose all sense of right, de- cency and righteo\_|anes|___I-Iota.,-Georga_» Terrence. ` formerly Superintendent oi the niiuois atsto iwormstery. makes; the assertion that cigarettes are not the effect of crime. but the cause of crimes " ' Judge Defiacy, of the Juvenile Court, Washington, D. C.. writes: There is something about the cig- arette habit that weakens and un- nervea the boy. It destroys his mem- ory. impairs his othe-r-'cognitive fac- ilities. robs` him of his power cf at- tention, caps his will power, and de- priveshim of initiative; he becomes tremuloul and timid and fears to do tho u_siog_hs would." The results of the examinations of the Protestant high schools of the province of Quebec are being issued to-day._I liavethe results of only one of these schools before me-one of the larger' schools-and I note that 60 par cont. of the non-smokers have passed the examinations, ‘and only 8.8 per cent. of the smokers 'have plued. liducaticniats have accumulated an enormous amount of facts and statistics such as those given above but-Judging from our editorial you an not acquainted with them. ros- _albiy scmeof your readers ‘may not be either, and for that reason 'I tnlet that you vdll sec your way clear to publish some. or all of the above. I have heard from time to time le=_\°i~_ve1_'r awaeune»d_ Mme oritioisih or the ohui-oh, ty scucs-_ ticaista. forritrlack cd lupport-in' tbeiight 'which educationista are making against the cigarette evil. “ _ ~ I am Sir, etc.. _ _ _A LOVII 01' CBILDIIN -_r.oim'oie. _seat 11.-an r.s|ss_s\ _ suse s~s_u_¢_s» o_sssss_¢¢ .§_'___ Niiie*1r¢.¢»°»e_\°l~-I¢f_l_°\°.- ealhelau al lcemmia -lei-------------i-"‘__"Wfi ° i ' - kept. Sir James cation. Bishop's University. Lennox- 'Lanc 'rrust-or nsiaadlias materi- _ " 3 ii _irhrums into“its` iittis osttsse iu__whidh".i.‘ it' is was bom__in xirrismuir been puréhalcd `f _ l`>1lblic._sa the -h trious wriisi-s'oi §§§§;§§» § us. in London. and _ rare tribute to the living writer. _ moved his country alternatelltotearl and laughter for twenty-dvo 1'5"; f 'rho xirriunuir oottese m1cht_ N, cherished almost al much, as the home or Margaret Qailvy. - Blrrifl mother. as forthe author He' has freci! acknowlcd8°d'liil_ debt 'i0 that woman of scul.'i|-'¢\ll_i_Dli»i°'llln4.1 mirth. At her knee he drank _in stories of the older Kirrnomuirf and crested the “'l1iruml,'f. _ beloved _bl hosts of readers. ' Ono dl¥_l_hl'll1_vt was busy inaking a rea rua. aadvto get rid or the boy she t°1d.hime°°ri°l andsent him ct! to write hs was back. reading the`in_t_o bisgno-' ther, and the future course of `theboy could not then be doubted. ; The Bmies were very poor. but on was enriched by the purohaao;of six thrcepenny bits they.°05*» Willa* mn' sty there was about tnc'vur°1_1“°-the show they made in the welt_i’o°n\ _ . . Neighbors eamoin to see the_b°¥ sus the chairs." xt would be spore- priate to adapt to tbi|_~incident_ the these auld _Sootia'a _grandeur lofiiill isoontheboynadgrownupand was off to Edinburgh University. when he had kit lasotundandiein ed the staff of the Nottinghamneal, his real fount of knowledge develop- ed. no beam to writs tho "auidueiit ldylls." drawing on life in Kirriemuir. resented bythefolk at l_\m\e.blca\l_lc thrumawcrethe fageuds of thread tbeolothfromtheloorn _ _ nection with-the stories. Awdman rieinuir was resentful, and calledtlia budding author an' “impident stillin his prime. wasmcrq accurate inhis' judgment. and wrote taolkrriez “I am proud to think you are adopts-‘ mau." London wasjilready taking Barrie's sketches of Thruma and cali- ing for more, which were compiled with the great aid' of _Barrla's mother in her copious letters of gossip and impressions. He wanted to go- to" London to work. "I wrote to the edi- tortolckiflshouldoomltolloodoh. dated London paused to make a hom to Never-Never-fandto eseapegrow_ ` ing up. and erected a monumeotto him in Kensington Gardena, where iam-is hsd isropsht task tho rsirios. But over these conquests' of the out- sideworldltooditiieapiritoflir-_i riemuir-Thrums - and the ful days with mu-gsret ogiiv_y._oae more of the wcrld's gnaat mothhrl. » 'rho in-ish_ aoiaisrs sod ssiioéi' ally reduced rents of all qx-service msn oeupyins its houses. _ _ ‘ sixty u°ismas°r§_sTtiis'j'v~i-soon so-` ciety of Engineers recently made a two-thousand-mih Your iswelldeservedbytliesnanwhchai- ` . rf. ~ _.f " _ » e 1 ' s _ .. s~»- , _. d11u5r§§§h§§i§ihd` . ‘tif%xd§@Ph&hiEé‘_ 'f°'l"‘““°-"'ui‘°so°'.'3iis “Js.isa¢*°i‘°°° -_‘_ ' ~ “.,..°lf~,.1:.~.:=._'.°.._f.i.':.fr.-i.~i°§».»»....i . "`ali. lf.ackhad'died '=-.._....»'-i...‘°.">.r..':==i<‘-= ”° use soriiiuvii-.gi..s_ss.i_s_'y' *i1\°i1°°‘~’°°5i¥_ F, lines of Burns: "From scenes like » ,=__f'it _ _ _.. HY;,?1, I _ _ _ -i. V' z f.~/3 _ _'<..*»*"'~'?.’ff' ~ ` `»":,’f, \ Vi. \ .,,_""v'/i‘iZf.‘;_f-ii' _ ' rmcmamresucwthoeemoers.l_!°cmed“,.h,um,_,,_d_,,,,,,,, _ _ e s___W__,____.f._ -_ _ i.,_;,5i:___ : .Q _ _ . . 1 ".. /_JZ/" E .left after the weaver had cut away _ -_"/_ 'v " . ' _. _._,-I './P3! ' Weilht. 94: growth. 01.1; chest- Mméet ogwm proud mmm .N _f -. fi ‘f _ _ -i » , was, feared tp reveal' her'aou'a"con-` A i "'/,` _.J}";,i\ I' _ .¢‘_ ~ "~.__\' ~;"._'s§_ _ '__ who-kept a aweetmcat shop in xir- _ "_ _ _ _ __ _. _ _ ,_A ,_ .3 i ii siustshot." Robert Louis atovshsou. __ __ __i __ ___o._ si. ' ‘H . ‘fv'_`_T".~\` s.. _,_ ,_ ‘Q = J- " ';,,‘f» ;r.i:;‘f ._ ,- .- _ .ls V '{"”li'§i __ ._ _ '“_?_ *&cs“ _ __ _ __ _ _‘M . i .»:i:.f':°_i":.':~.'.~.:'-.its . ‘__ i _h‘ V '_:_./jr 5 ,v_‘\_ liecysihebiie down,il\¢ "" _'iii " " °“ 3°" ’ 2 -1 , - "‘ Ilavoilr up when you ask for _ ,r_ _ "gg", j ~ - - --` , ._ _ no ssia iuo.-1-so .1 wont." ' 1- _. _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 'rhs rest is iiwrsryhisiory. story ' glowed story, play followed ' _ __ ' _ _ & _ _ _ _ _ e jo ous laughter of children an _ ‘ '* " _` ‘ _ _ thvtsfrs oi soutiiusutsi out _ iv... siusuv his ie umm- *#4* cfPeterPan.theboywho'ranaway A ` ° I _ _ _ T719, _ Newer _'Mode' in Rafnges' i Olin talk (io. Ltd. -5 3%; :Er 3 5 “Ill 'M _§P . »\ r . I, _I ` r