PAGE FOUR = r t r111: llillllllilfl ETUWII GUARDIAN Morning Daily (Founded llfll l » u. T: Residual, Mont-Col. W. Chaalor S. McLIu-e Vice President. J. B. Burnett, FJJ. lecrctary, LlnuL-Coi. D. A. Mrwlilnnon, D.S.0. ddlior and Managing Dircckc, J. B. Bumett, I-‘JJ. Assoc-hie Editor, Frank Willa: SUBSCRIPTION BATES 85.00 per year tln udvunoe) delivered to City. $4.00 per year (in advance) mailed to P. E. lslmd $5.00 per year (in advance) mailed to Canada and U-S. Members Audit Bureau of Circulation: “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.” FRIDAY, DECEIVIBER, l6, i938. Liiiéifi s Resolutions The fatuotis misstatements appearing in some rcsolutiotis pussril zit recent Liberal inectittgs itt this Province lend colour to the suspicion thzit tho following" incidcnt related i11 the New Glas- gow Earlcrn (Jlirouiclc (Liberal) is by no means unique: It itppezirs that nt the lust Liberal meeting in New tilzisgon" thc thrcc cstintublt- gt-ntlcntcn ap- poiutctl llLlllt‘ lTslllllllUllb conunittcc rctircd with due stilcinnity to pct-form their arduous task. The meeting imagined the committee sitting in deep thought and silence, pondering word by word the rt-sulutioiis they wvrc to bring llilCk. llav- i111,’ complctt-tl tht-ir lubotirs the thrcc gctitlt-ttictt, zilntost zit tho point of 111011121] UXlliillSllUIl, return- ed and the eldest of tho group in clear tones con- veyed to the waiting audience the wording of the masterpiece. It cxprt-ssi-il :1 rcncirzil of confidence in Rt. Ilon. \\'_ L. Aluckuuzic- King and his govern- ment. A similar expression was conveyed to Hon. Angus L. Matcdonald and his associates. Laudatory comments were madc upon the local Liberal representatives. Then came the final lOliCll~—lllC mcnt of the resolutions report — which wound up in a blaze of glory "dated at New Glasgow, Dec 41/1, i935." “The audience,” says the Clzranicle, “greeted the resolutions with a roar of applause. It ivas evident that the cotlltnittcc had snitthctl from the urchivcs a sct of resolutions about three years old and presented them without even reading them over." They probably would have gotten away with it had they not forgotten to change the date. Our New Glasgow contemporary concludes: "The incident goes to show the utter folly of these resolutions, and a legal gentleman to whom the story was related, recalled that-"when a new judge came to Pictou to preside for the time, he was welcomed with an ancient resolution com- piled by the late \\'. A. Dickson, LLB, half :1 century ago and which has done duty ever since, there being merely a. change in the name." 1-91“ ~ The King-Hepburn Fued Non-partisan opinion throughout Canada ls wcll sunrned up in the following editorial com- ment by the Sydney Post-Record (Independent): “The maladroit spccchcs made by Hon. Nor- man Rogers, Minister of Labor, and Hon. C. D. ' Howe, Minister 0f Transport. at Port Arthur, Ontario, Saturday night seem to have so ac- centuated and widened the breach between the Hepburn and King Governmcnts as to render reconciliation impossible. Premier Hcpburnk angry retort,——his declaration that the King Min- istry has proved its ineptitude and univorthiness of re-clcction,-is precisely the reaction the un- wise addresses of the two Federal Ministers might have hccu cxpcctcd to produce. And the sting in Mr. Ilcphttrifs statement is the basis of fact he cites in its stippurt. The King Gov- ernmcnt has given Czttiada the tnost drab kind of routine administration, after reaching power by pledges of radical rcfortns in unemployment rc- licf. social security lznvs, 11nd progrcssivc meas- urcs of national ltolicy. In its rccord to date it has provcn itself definitely inferior to the Gov- ernmcitt its members assailed for incapacity 3 yours zigo zmd hclpcrl to ilcfcat because of al- lcgwl failure in giro thc people worthy stand- ards of public service. “There was neither excuse, justification nor good politics in the chztrgcs the two Federal Min- istcrs made zigninst Premiers Hepburn and Dup- lflsfils at Port .i\rthnr. Thc accusation that the two Provincial lcztdcrs hud “conspired to dis- ri-t-tlii and dciczit thc King Government ivas thrown out ivithout .1 shred of proof in its sup- port. Th: zilli-gzition that Messrs. Hepburn rind Duplcssis wcrt- Zlt‘lllfll(.‘(l by personal ambitions to win llftWQl‘ for themselves at Ottawa, was a more i1npt1tution_-—thc figment of the imagina- lion of n pztir of suspicious, panicky politicians. The complaint that the l’rovincial Premiers were in lvztgtir to frustrate the work of the Royal Commission mi Dominion-Provincial relations nus porhzips thi- 1110s! ill-advised thing that em- anated front the Port Arthur speakers. For everyone kll0\\‘s.—llns known for over’ a year;- thztt all prospects of tiseful work from that Com- mission were ncgativcd from the outset, by rea- son of its partisan pcrsnnttel. Its tttircprcscnta- tivt- character is due to the lack of foresight of Prcntier King in not tihtaitiing 011 its personnel , utcmbr-rs of all thc major groups in Parliament. ‘- No siuglc political party will ever be allowed to rewrite the constitution of the Dominion of Cutntdu. “Especially petty and foolish was Mr. Rogers‘ gratuitous suggcstioit that Premiers Hepburn t. and Dunk-ssh were ‘rt-adv to make overtures to Dr, R. j. hlztltizm, the Cnnscrvativt- leader, with '" the same nbjcct of using Provincial forces and political tirgzinizzitimts to control the National (iovcrnmcntf This sitggcstion was made with- out a scintilla of cvldt-ticc in its support. The terrors of the coining Dominion election seem to have unhzilanvctl completely the ‘Minister of La- bor's polilitrz-l scnsc of proportioit. “Mr. llephurnIs come-hack was easy. And it ivas ruthless. ‘I'm going to risk this simple ques- tion,’ he said i11 his stntcmrnf i11 rt-ply: ‘What hrts-thc‘ King Government, in its three and a half years, dotrc to zicscrvc the support of those who elected it i11 1035? lt’s a strange mental attitude for llowe a"! Rogrrs the two Mari- , timers retircseittiuq Ontario in "he Ft-deral Cabi- net, to takerwvhén they (gel, lik: the lords of p creation, that they are above criticism.’ While denying the existence of any political conspiracy between Premier Duplessis and himself, Mr. Hepburn threw out a broad intimation that if the King Government desired his active opposi- tion in the next election it would assuredly be forthcoming. ‘if Ottawa wants t0 shirk its res- ponsibilities’, he said, ‘and to try everlastingly to saddle us with them, and if they want to make an issue of it, I'm prepared to go on the hustings and fight them to the limit.’ “This whole incident, with the sequel of poli- tical events certain to follow it, promises to add spice and sprightliness to the Dominion election campaign of I939. In its immediate reactions, it cannot fail to detract from the prestige of the King Government, and to create the impression that it dreads the forces which are likely to be arranged against it when it faces the country.” I’ Editorial Notes .I' June Austen, novelist, born this date, I775. »- : w v- Therc is always an end in wreckage t0 a ship left t0 the direction of the wind. The ship of State is no exception. x w w m Tontorrow should be the real Christmas mar- ket, though two others intervene before the Day fD. Gays you: vcstigation have come to the conclusion that the whole world is growing warmer. This may ac- count for the heat engendered between the Mac- kenzie King and Mitchell Hepburn governments. n- u i: a As the year cnds there is a steady increase in that iudisposition which necessitates application for doctors’ scripts. Its an ill wind blows n0- body good, what is bad for the patient (or is it?) is good for the “Prohibition” government (or is m). Iklkii October imports of canned and preserved fruits totalled $140,362 compared with $143,710 m apples in cans _or other airtight containers ac- counted for a. total of $56,315, of which $35t~ 756 came from the Straits Settlements, $7,448 from Australia and $7,469 from British South Africa. » u n: n u Premier Aberhart is claiming the expansion of Alberta all the way to the Arctic Ocean. The extension would double the size of the province from 248,000 square miles to approximately 500,000 square miles and add the gold and radium mining areas, fisheries and fur producting dis- tricts of the present Northwest Territories. Then there would be an excuse for monthly $25 divid- ends. u u a a Advertisings artful aid has made scrambled eggs popular for breakfast in restaurants as well as home in the United States. The Presi- dent told undergraduates of the University of North Carolina. in a recent address that al- though they “may have heard for the past SIX years that I breakfasted every morning on a dish of ‘grilled millionaire’, actually for my break- fast I am a devotee of scrambled eggs." A boom in scrambled-eggs-forJbreakfast eaters —-—_ alarming to pastry dealers~was reported im- mediately by metropolitan restauranteurs as a result of President Roosevelt's announcement. 410*! The U.S.A. Government is welcoming the new treaties to stimulate their foreign trade which has been showing an alarming decrease in the current year. From the most recent foreign trade statement it appears that, in the ten completed months of I938, excess of merchandise exports over imports, $960,131,000, was the largest since 921. Not only so, but the export surplus for t e period, during the three years from I935 to i937 inclusive, never exceeded $100,000,000 and once, 1'11 i936, went as low as $18,783,000. This piling-up of credits on merchandise account has gone some distance to explain this season's pre- cipitous falling sterling exchange. The rush of European capital to the United States, during and aftcr Europe's September “war scare", was the chief explanation; but the heavy “trade bal- ance" in U.S.A. favor accompanied it. The ex- port excess is mostly attributable, not to increas- ing exports as compared with I937, but to de- creased import trade in the same ten months. The Commerce Department reports that arrivals, dur- ing the period, of goods purchased abroad were less by $I,038,83I,00o than in 1937. This im- mense reduction of foreign purchases resulted partly from import of grain. But it was largely also caused by much smaller purchases abroad of crude material for manufacture-a necessary consequence of the severe reaction in the United States’ own manufactgring production. a- n- Here are a few typical cases illustrating the need of the Chlidmas spirit. Mrs. R., a widow, had five sons-“fivc of the finest boys in the world.” She took in washing to bring them up decently. One died in the World War. An- other returned ill from military service and died a few years later. A third gladdened his moth- er's heart by becoming a priest; then he, too, died. A fourth is ill with tuberculosis. A fifth, married, the father of four children, has tried to help his mother out of a laborers wage, though hardly able to provide for his little ones when winter comes. Take another case, that of the S. family. After many months out of work Mr. S. got a job. A little later he collapsed with a paralyzed left side. Mrs. S., ill with worry and overwork, needs an operation, but has to stay at home and, mind the little ones who other- wise ivould be foodlcss as well as toyless. Take a third case, that of Mr. and Mrs. P., and four little ones, once well-to-do and used to gracious living, now pennilcss because of Mr. P/s long- contiittted sickness. Take a fourth case, that of Eliza K., born here long resident in U.S.A. now a more m- less destitute widow in her na- live land with five little ones dependent upon her. Who of us can say that with the same handicaps we could have avoided the same mis- fortunes, or that we could have endured them with more fortitude? These are our neigh- bors, for whom, in common with many others, the appeals for the Santa Pals and the Dispen- ary are now being made. Soviet scientists after prolonged study and in-_ September and $95,501 in October, r937. Pine- l‘ rn_t:_ cnstztorrtzrown culutnwv llllTES BY TllE WAY Leaving ulrlo nil petty differ- ence: And havlnz in mind only the greatest good to the greatest. number should be the will and wish of every tncrnber of every board, organization and institu- tion in Canada, In Ontario, and in Oshawa. ‘Due common ground of "service" would wipe out. a lot of Jealousles, n lot of suspicions and a lot. of unwanted and undesirable recrlmlnatlons, and mske for u smoother running municipal ma- chtrm and a lot happier one. -- Oehawa ‘limes. It may not be anyone’; blame, but with coal lmportations into Canada on such a large scale with no month of the year seeing less than a million tons coming into Canada from foreign countries, it would seem that the solution must be found in the imitation of this importation rather than tn any mere relief measures that do not 3o to the root. of the trouble and cannot be more than temporary palllatlves. —Atnherst. News. According to The Brockvule Recorder, the remains of men and women who died of accident or disease during the butldtng of Rldeau canal Works at Jones’ Falls have been strewn along the road. between that plaice and Elxln us the result of an old burial plot having been turned into a navel pit. This means that human skeletons were unearthed and no attempt. made at. re-intei-ment. It. was a. decidedly callous thing to do. It. would be interesting to know whether the road was built by the government, by mutitcipalifies or contract. Presumably no tomb- s nu marked the graves, but 1!: must have been well known in the absence of monuments that hu- man remains rested there. Burns wrote of "man's inhumanity to man,” and were he living to-day might; write of man's lnhumanw to tho dead. —Renfre|w Mercury. The world probably agrees that flogging prisoners ls a brutal piuushment. but. there are many who believe, and the majority of pollce officers are included in this number, that brutal punishment the only "language" hardened criminals can understand. They dread the possibility of floggtnga more than they dread years in Jail and, for this reason, the flog- ging is probably more of a de- terrent than the prospect of Juli. Society in inflicting this type of punishment on criminals, mitzht be exacting s. cruel repayment, but the criminals have no thought for society's welfare while car- rylng out; their lawless professions. Flogging. for use in general types of crime, is too severe but, for more serious types of crime, 1t might have a proper place in tne punishment of hardened crimin- als. —Llndsay Post. There is a certain small boy who pursues u hobby which, for some reason or other, has made a. great. impression on us. He collects locomotive numbers. There ls nothing particularly tangible about. his collection -he merew copies down the numerals which he sees on the fronts of locomotives, copies them down info a small rod leather note- book. Each entry is followqd by a brief identifying note, as for example: "2457-Katonuh station, coming back from the country.” ls not necessary that he ride on the train pulled by the loco- motive in order that the number be eligible for his collection. In fact, he doesn't even have to see the number himself —~frlends re- port numbers and he enters them in his book with eager care. Numbers which he gets from outside sources he likewise iden- titles with a brlef note: "1956 - M.r. Dodd, who went to college with Pa a and got drunk and had to s y all night." This boy, ll seems to us, has the makings of a first-rate collector. Someone tried to fool hlm once, gave him a bony number. He smelled a rat. nstantly and erased the number from his book, pending a checkup. -The New Yorker. The carriers have been losing ground ln respect or their physical properties. Mr Dunn teditor of “Railway Age") says that they now have 13,000 fewer locomotives, ,O00 fewer pascnger cars and 00,000 fewer freight cars than they had nine years ago; that, all their facilities huve deteriorated because of drastically reduced maintenance. Meanwhile may have refrenched more drastically this year than tn any previous year. Mr. Dunn says that. they have reduced the number of their em- ployes to the lowest level in forty years, the total being 735,000 less than tn 1929. This can only mean of course, that in the slruizttle to keep wages nigh, union leaders have kept them high for the bene- fit of favored works only. For the less favoured who have lost their Jobs—-three-quarters of 1t million of them-this must seem it Pyrrhic victory. -Ne1w York Sun The death rate from tuberculosis has been reduced to less than one- thlrd what it, was at the beginning of the century. One way tn which all may have a share tn the heulth crusade ls by buying and using n- an: sale or which go directly support o! the work. Though the oust of these special stamps ts very small, tn the aggregate the sum raised tn this wnv amounts to quite an effective contribution. There is no form of Christmas gift-giving which is more in keep- lnB Wltih the spirit, o! the season. or which brings a sonar‘. of greater satisfaction to the purchaser.- "Ha gives twice who gives quick ." Prompt payment tar the souls a da to the worth of the contribution. --H1tmllton speztator. . In democracies the public in- stinctively regards the general strike as an unfair weapon of la- bour and can be counted 1m n: side with government: against. its use. General strikes ln thts coun- try have been ltmlted to local affairs, such as those involving Seattle and Ban Francisco. But the rocult hu been the some. They hove been suppressed promptly or have-troptdly peter-ed out because the Golvernment had the moral and m terlol support of fir! citi- nenry who resented both their own uufferfnu and discomfort-s in the circumstances and the threat implied bo their political institu- tions. A given group of authorities may bmunpopular. but morn un- popular by for ts an effort to thcm by direct action. ‘I110 xonml mike 111 never n more rm- tslt urinal worktnv condltionl. it is a defiance o! the democratic Ohrltm ls, ltsf std s asses recp roxagliaagotthw - New York au-ald- - PUBLIC FORUM and us! fnmll timG-hettori-nnbldetio meal the world as brother to r ted %S lion for- ms perneou more close tohlsraceandnliglonuid rob ynootherrwehuhedtn we such continuous. cruel treat- ment from all the so-callodfihmt- more remunemtive than at prose €vfeellflgthe will be e at their 0 rlcea (e f0 are so deep. that the “bi-Id B- f ill l5 ‘ W132‘ °ll J51. l0 Bib t? their follow men lhe mo. . little day- has...“ ~r*.t1i,......~=~ v»- Y 0!‘ . settled condition of era.) we m ht extend our kg an syrups. ytntlioae, who throng no fault: of their own have fallen on evil days. pp, InmSIrI-kptgqn l ' Khlmqfilfl. --_-_i_-_ FISHERMAN’! COURSE AT S. D. U. Sin-Avery tactical course for fishermen has uat been concluded wt St. Dunstan-k University Throughout. this courao it has boon the aim of the University to give the fishermen knowledge which they can use in their every-day work. Modern methods ln fishing were discussed in an interesting '1! cod. was taught b . Everything posslbe was dong to make the practical part of the course a. success. Other interests of the fishermen span from the actual catching and processing of fish wem not by may means neglected. Marketing of f was t - . Co- operative selling of fish ucta and (Ito-operative buying of sup- plies were advanced as possible remedies for maniyghof the present problems of our f ermen. As one of the boys put it “we know fairly well how to catch fish, but. what We do not. know is how to get a fair price for our fish." After all the flatter-men cation u sufficient! large amount of fish and would receive a masonable re- turn for their labor if they could but gcl: a. fair percentage of the retail value of their t. ‘Ilhe for-cm which will brtng a- bout the condition of a. llvlng wag‘! for fishermen have: been outlined to us in this course. These forces are: First Credit Unions which ev :ntua.lrliy will main: the man in ependent of the "Truck System" l. e. trading fish or labor for supplies or sear and which will give hlm the onportunlty of owning his boat and Tit-re semnd force for tho re abllltatlon of the fisherman L! the forming of marketing and consumer oo- operattves w lch will insure that. the fisherman shall sell his pm- puct at a falr price and buy his supplies at a Just ‘price. " ‘ the Co-operatlves with their tn- sistence on cosh busln fisherman out o! the tenacious grip of debt. and out of the en- slavement of "Small 101m" or- ganizations. The third force in th recovery is the establishment of Improved and modem methods in processing fish and fishery pro- ducts. Though a culmination 0f ull three forces the fishing indus- cun a self supporting and prosperotn lndua‘ y even for the ftshmnert, In the course at 5t Dunstan’: gradually a al. Utilo by lit. this came to us ems. or disc. ooopera. ve p the solution o fiu-otrgh wish to wltocatnetlofitulzgmwn’ to tve us the benefit. of eir knlrwdu. I gtarivteh aéofld that as new s e era-opera vo had within it. the salvation of the fisherman from poverty and want. But here is the sad part. Out we ‘rum ‘tar *2...‘ '" wee I u pu n: pro- fiazn into ration while even at e same fme we were studying ftphtng and um r knwleduv. the experience, or the 001111186 to but this- 01-01mm imp efficient operation. 0m we after a few weeks ltudy of tho oo-opera- giunnav t, Pitts ‘ fr-I‘ Y. I r v /i r égterymtiorm as havgnthe Jews. That y possess an mlndals uolarudvvoflikfnc-Lff. howuvm‘. farmers 0f P ill. cm learn any lesson them 11n- ~ M108. whereby farm can me if if’; coIZLQmii/rzot. SANDY BA!" How many aeons slnoe tho cosmic mot-n first broke 1n thunder on your cmacon sham? shouldered rocks. mun-breasted druids.- md your t sh 2mm sglglggfanewseldonkx temple- Whose eallien pihzrlrriage the tem- pst mocks? Ah. none can answer, mr no mortal 0f wistful springs that came with bud and sap, Of ardent summers with their chaston . Of augtmn bearing fruliznqe in her v ' with tum s we s - Bu: till“ .“gf.7iW-—G0d' angu- print. remains. _| l RECOVERY FROM APPENDXCI- TlS WITHOUT OPERATION I have spoken before of vlaltln u friend and ftn him sic l with appendicitis. Although noti his physician, he asked me tn feel the ‘tightness’ across his ab- domen. There was no questlo about. the condition being an acute appendicitis and that Na.- ture was "walling off" the up- pendlx from other orgam. I wu greatur concerned and told hlm that if it. were myself or any mem- ber of my family an operation would be performed at once and that if he clidtft. telephone his physician at; once. I would. His wife and himself were opposed to operations and told me so kindly but, firmly. I scarcely slept, that night as I believed I should have tried furth- er to persuade them to have an operation. I culled the home ear the next. mornlng and bhn pollen answered 1f himself and said he was feeling better. I culbd again and ho told me that a ‘strange’ thing had happened. He felt a aud- den desire to empty the intestine and when he dld so the waste was composed of pus. The appendix had burst. into the bowel and the pus passed out instead o! getting into abdomen and causing pori- wnltls-Jnflaxrunatlon. While this case ls unusual. many similar cases have been record- ed. Do cases of appendicitis re- cover without operation? Yea! Many individuals have recovered from one or more attacks. LILEAIEBHIBY ——Kat.hryn Munro. ‘On the sown shore of Nova. Scotti. . DEQEMBER 15- Wn ‘ .V_isit The l Q. Z1115 l l I M P 0 R l‘ E D S I L K S Smart am stoves GU16!» lined “min, §=rt-'-nlEi~.r.:*-.i‘l.C-- ‘Ll Boxed Hiulox Ball! 81.00.M;¢¢||. “l Swim-den and Tie Bola nov- W not. Tie and N boxed 88o. "rm" 5W?! slllllenderl 50o to $1.00. Roleproof boned Hosiery in Wool. Silk and Wool and Silk 50c W 81.00. lll[lllll nma mule Mm l0: $1.50 and $2.00 and hundred: of Miler gills. 4 Gift Shop S All Gifts Are the new Boxed mrn- —l -|¢Z5= ‘U-l-n GIFT Dressing Gowns For Christmas gift giving w,- uhow scum very special sin" Dns I which no‘ “Mllilflllll values. Gowns a % l0 119M115? ‘iililr tiiriieu" Wool Drooling Gowns in plain N! I Wine d f . Mfg priced 5:25 toaglc l Ben/con Cloth Dressing c, .":.."::..: ...r:.'::"..:" Fri’ '1 II gout 1600"“; use, ' 1 one giggles ifi numEil-lmili-hvfl iiruuuisou a nuns: rted Lhtr dour c §°P° .. ‘Y "l" “mm, CQYEEEQFLQQQIJ" tlve plan. go ahead and begin practical application of the pro- gram without; some assistance and guidance? It Ls too bad that $1.. Dunstmra University has not. the means or opportunty of consolidating and advancing the splendid work which they have begun. by sanding out. fieldmen who would guide and dir- oct us in our first. stops in bring- rogram into o. reality. ough cannot thank Dr. Mur- phy and his band of faithful work- ers too much. still I feel that, without some further guidance and assistance which can be extended both to the course students and to all fishermen. the fruits of this course will gradually be loot. I P. Gifts of Cltarm FROM YARDLEY or tonoon, w‘ I/uilltr‘ i i r wl a amount of peritonitis on the first. to fourth day of the disease. All of the patients recovered after ‘medical’ treatment. Among four- teen patients under ‘medical’ treatment who had acute appen- dicitis and the peritonitis was widespread, only five recovered. Thus in a series of oases of acute a pendlcltis with a small amount. o writonltls all the thirty-four cues recovered without operation, whereas in four-teen cues where ribonms was widespread, nine of e fourteen dlec. _ . What ts Prof. ‘Steers advice? Should operation be performed when so many recover without it? As the physician cannot tell, in its satisfying tang. You ‘ll find luii Ills flux you OI OUGMIII- b-irz tales 1 1 lorna'l5y IO: Par BLACK ll YES $|REE ' l I Q Llldil Milk winter weather our wbacco l3 at m; v21‘) but. More than aver you relish its distinctive lift/Ci? Sold everywhere in this province.’ HICKETS cnsvvmo Matiufactureri By 1 1110111511 in lllfllillLSbllt Hr llilll AH IGI‘: P MEN'S WEAR Italy of the American Medical lu- tho early stages of acut- ri-ipr" soclatlon stuns that. Prof. Bloc: cltls, int what; is likely to l1: of acute pen, . Sicca states, "It 1. ...1 vlmbie to operate whenever pus bible in the first» hours of ncu appendicitis as the death rm - tahen nothing or very slight." Don‘ delay if your physician advtt operation. - IMINK a. musitiiiii For balance of December v will pay 10% advance ova former prices. J. D. JENKINS. L250-l2~l3-5i ; l ~v Fig IO: TWIST . 111L111!"- Eli.