$k_ filllklllllIliTilttll cuniiinii ',' lorululbullylleauded III) receiving the summaries,’- says Mr. Morden, “as- sumed that they came from the Government. Mr. King says they did not. The mystery re- _ _ Pnaldeut. Hens-Col. W. glitch: IiJIrI-ure mains a mystery. Who did write th_em and dis- , wmyglfuukcog n I‘ uett. 03%)‘.- tiiriigufifiistthsm? The one clear fact Lt that, they . - l- lilflfilu .' . . . . "n" w‘ u. Duff“ J W The significant fact is that this bogus sum- SUBSEIgTION $138 t. u” u.” Qt l vance IGIX sue perms’. u» advance; iii-lies u. n; mica ISM per year (in advance) mailed to Canada and U; - Ieluben Audit Bureau cl Olreuhtluua “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.” FEBRUARY ll, U88 lllHVLh\X, A Liberal Protest Again the Mackenzie King Government has been taken to task by its leading party news- paper in Western Canada, the Winnipeg Free Press. The Free Press cites two recent orders- in-council fixing values for duty purposes of .certain textile imports. The general tariff on bedspreads and counterpains of artificial silk and C0ll011 is 35 per cent, plus 4 cents per pound; the tariff rate is to be increased, in ef- fect, by fixing the value of these goods at 32 cents per pound. The general tariff on towels and woven fabric of terry cloth ranges from 25 to 35 cents ad valorem, plus 4 cents per pound: this tariff rate is being virtually increas- ed by fixing values for these goods ranging from 34 to 80 cents per pound. The Free Press cites Mr. King’s own pre- election pledges guaranteeing the entire aboli- tion of “executive tariffs, such as arbitrary values, exchange regulations, dump duties and the like." “Perhaps," it says, “it will be argued that there are special circumstances that justify a limited use of the device of raising the value for duty purposes of goods that are imported. But that is conceding the principle. How can the Liberal party criticize any future Conservative government if it returns to the frequent use of fixed valuations as a means of ‘providing higher protection?" "Incredible Inactivity’! , " ‘Saturday Night,” whose editor is a Liberal and whose editorial attitude certainly cannot be ' construed as being aiiti-Liberal, makes the fol- lowing comment with regard to the likely issues in the next federal campaign: “Foremost among them will be the almost incredible inactivity of the Government in rela- tion to unemployment. Even if Mr. King had not made a point of it in his pre-election ad- dresses, it would still have been the obvious duty of the Government to secure s. reliable registry of the unemployed, the lack of which is one of the chief reasons for the appalling un- intelligence of all our efforts to deal with this situation. The Bren gun contract is also fair- ly sure t0 be a major subject of discussion, and even the Broadcasting Corporation may give the Government some trouble. But the most serious charge of all, though one which it is difficult to reduce to exact terms, will prob- ably be the charge that the complete impasse between the Dominion and the Provincial Gov- ernments in everything relating to the regula- tion of industry and the reduction of unempoly- ment, which reduces Canadians to the plight of having to look to constitutional amendment as their only hope, could have been avoided by a more tactful and at the same time a firmer manner of dealing with the premiers of the pro- vinces." A Lone Wolf While Mr. Camillien Houde, the mayor of Montreal, was at one time the Conservative leader in the Province of Quebec, he has long ago severed his connections with the party. He denounced repeatedly both the Duplessis gov- ernment and the Bennett administration and dissociated himself publicly from both of them; and it is well known that at the last may- oralty election of the city, of Montreal he re- ceived practically the solid support of the Lib- eral party who hailed his victory in that city as a triumph of the Liberal cause. v It can be truthfully said that in his recent utterances on the attitude of mind of the French Canadian people,'Mr. Houde spoke with no authority from either political party and, in fact, does not express the views of the French Canadian people as a whole. On the contrary, his views as expressed in his recent address have been generally condemned. Misleading The Public One of the mysteries connected with the Bren gun scandal is the origin of the misleading sum- mary of Commissioner Davis's lengthy report, issued to the press at the same time. Prime Minister Mackenzie King denies-that the sum- mary came from his department. Mr. Homuth, Conservative member for Waterloo South, pro- duced the synopsis in Parliament and charged that if it didnot come direct from the govern- ment it svas issued by the National Liberal Fed- eration. Mr. King thereupon expressed incre- dulity. “There were all kinds of guesses by journalists as to what was in‘ the report,” he said, ,"but-the report was delivered to me personally and was in my possession, and no one outside saw the report. ‘I am sure the judge of the Supreme Court did not give it out; I know I idid not give it 0ut.' Ilfwas in my possession un- -fil sent to be printed, Any reports that appeared in the press were purely conjecture r they could not have been taken from the or‘ 'nal." . Here are the facts, as stated by . H. Morden, Ottawa correspondent for the Montreal‘ Star: i The reporfwas handed to the press on -Friduy, Jan. rjth. ‘Copies of the report were ‘ vhanded out in {confidence ‘some: hour's before it tabled in the House, covered by a release re_stri'ction_ for the hour at which ‘it would ildid on the: table. I mary, published broadcast before the report could be studied in detail and entirely misrepre- senting the Commissioner's finding, was used as a political smokescreen and was obviously pre- pared for this one purpose. If it did not come from the Government or from the National Lib- eral Association, where could it have originated? I‘ Editorial Notes I The Massacre of Glencoe, this date, 1692. e a a a Hear that the Ladies’ Aid of the Y.M.C.A. are to provide hot meals for children of the un- employed. e e e e Although since last summer we have had precious little of what Pope calls "the feast 0f reason and flow of soul", it is to be made up to us between this in and Lent by a succession of lectures by outstarlding authorities. i I Sober, sane people everywhere are wonder- ing what sort 0f Minister of Defence we have in Mr. Ian Mackenzie who let his tongue and temper run riot in the House of Commons the other day. If that be Prime Minister Mackenzie King has to rely upon, no wonder the country’s affairs have drifted into the deplorable condition they now are. - n. a m s Due to the flag over the public buildings bc- ing hoisted half staff yesterday, the alarming rumor spread throughout the City that the genial Provincial Minister of Agriculture had “passed in his checks"_ Fortunately the rumor was unfounded. It turned out that the Presi- dent of the Council, Hon. B. W. LePage, had suddenly awakened to the fact that His Holiness the Pope had died two days ago, and gave in- structions to signify the fact officially. I U n I Of the United Kingdom’s 47, ,ooo in- habitants, there were 95,750 persons who in 1937 paid taxes on incomes exceeding $10,000 a year, according to the latest official statistics for the year 1913 and the years 1924 to i937, just published. The 1937 figure is higher than in 1924, though fewer people had more than $500,000 a year. In 1924 there were 133 in- comes over the $500,000 figure; in 1937 only eighty. Peak year for high incomes was 1929- 30, when 108,891 persons had over $10,000 a year. Then 141 had more than $500,000. Over the years 1924-37 the incomes up to $25,000 be- came more numerous, those over $25,000 less numerous. i i i i So perfectly had a ten-year-old boy forged a doctor’s handwriting ~0n a medical certificate by adding the words "extra eggs and milk for twenty months," that Magistrate Frank Powell, in the court at Greenwich, near London, was in- credulous. He called the boy, Raymond Herd, up to the bench, gave him a pen and asked him to copy a sentence from the certificate. “It is "No one could produce a more accurate copy." Asked why he had added to the certificate, Ray- mond replied: "I was playing at doctors.” His mother, Mrs. Nellie Herd, had been summoned for pretending she held a recommendation from the Public Assistance doctor for extra nourish- ment. She explained that she did not know the boy had added the words complained of. Dis- missing the case, Mr. Powell said: “Your son is a most remarkable child with special gifts, but you must bear in mind that such gifts can be put to a criminal use." ' e e e e In Surgeon Extraordinary Dr. Loyal Davis goons, Dr, I. B. Murphy. He was a pioneer in surgery and met with much opposition from the medical profession, but by sheer ability he be- came the most famous medical man in America. This was his famous appendicitis diagnosis: “First there is pain in the abdomen, sudden and severe, followed by nausea and vomiting, most commonly between three and four hours after the onset of pain. Then there comes a gener- alized abdominal sensitiveness most marked on the right side and more particularly over the appendix; next there is an elevation of tem- perature, beginning from two to twenty-four hours after the onset of pain. The symptoms occur almost without exception in the above or- tion the diagnosis. If nausea and_ vomiting or temperature precede the pain I feel certain the case is not one of appendicitis.” a a a e The two chief causes of hesitation in the re- vival of trade are both political. At home the investor continues in general to lack the con- fidence as to the possibility of a return on his investment that would lead him to finance new projects or expand existing ones. Investment activity is a vital key to domestic recovery. Its continued stagnation is to a certain extent of course beyond human control. It is in part the result of high taxes that are the inevitable fruit of the depression and the measures taken to combat it. But it also appears to reflect a skep- ticism as to the ‘soundness of some of the Gov- ernment's economic policies. Tjie other political factor is the fear of s European war. Although the influence of the United States is now so the pacemaker of the non-totalitarian econo- tle less; vulnerable to lnternationalgpoli turbanoes than. the nations of Europe. awn. would radically ‘change its economic alright, and in unpredictable ways. ' The mere continued threat is sufficient to breed, uncertainty and hesitation not only in lmerniitionalti-sde“ tions butilw tb aid le ' ‘ 6 a . gallantry“ use, hniiiess- J ,Ii1¢ continues, and wlilveoiitittne en, s = “ ‘ f is!» soon as munltlon mealtime- l preparsxlonsletupymereimhn 0i out ofyworlo. . " the type of MinistryWhB midst 0! Plenty- identical," remarked the astounded magistrate. » tells the story of one of the most famous sur- BBC der; and when that order varies I always ques- ‘u great that, for good or for bad, it ‘has ‘become “m” mies of the world, the United States is -i,_tse:f* lit- - » In general baa never cared for the long sermon. Queen |victoria is a case in point. She issued no orders, but. she present- led the Savoy oiispei with e pulpit talus whose sands were timed to trim out. in eighteen minutes. Many a preach: must have eyed that glass with considerable nervous- ness In the course of his sermon. -Man.cheet.er Guardian. oamaa has bad is ‘over- nors 532ml since at?‘ becelne __a_ the fourth of these. former governors general and only four survive. Rideau Hall ladies eight are shill living. Princess Louise much the plildest of them. --Vaneouvei: Pro - ce. “pertinence tried on sea- sick paasengers while on cruise to the West Indies proved that ad- ministration by inhalation of 100 percent oxygen gave relief to them, bringing tttiem from their beds, ending that. dizzy feeling and pennlttmg titiem to retln food. It would appear that. the dlsooverey is not yet 100 percent, efficient, but the announcement should be enough to raise the hopes oi thou- sands who. unlike Britannia, have not yet learned to rule the waves. —i..ethbrldze Herald. The country does not oi ‘employment or prevent quantity of money in a itself create want in Create enough money and everybody will be in want or on the verge of it —a.s in Germany in the unchecked l flatlon days. It is the use to w lob money is put, or the failure to use it, that make the difference between general prosperity and widespread distress. In Oanadn. as in the United States, money is now plentiful. and relatively cheap. But. it is not. being made to work as it could and should. And where money is idle men are also ldle.-- From the Edmonton Bulletin. l‘ 0l1nflll0ll 0| --- vlflllfllfllllly organizations in some Protmant churches of the United States. similar to the organization which has been in existence in the R0- man Catholic Church for a num- ber of years, recalls the local bit. of humor which resulted when a branch of a similar society was very distant. 985i»- from the country was common rig n the new society and said: "That society is n SW01? m!" up and he has fed a. couple of new calves. too." -Llndsa&' Posi- In lee; than 80 years’ time hand-forged Sheffield scissors and precious stones. It. was stated at a. recent. meeting of the Society for the Preservation of Old Sheffield Tools that there are no more than 20 craftsmen in the city - the youngest over QO-eapable of mak- mg hand-forged scissors, and there are only 50 w B0 pocket-knife forgets-none of - ‘There ls still an appreciable de- mand for hand-forged articles, the secret. of their superiority belnfl that the more steel is hflmmflffld‘ the better it becomes. the 11w‘ and more durable its cutting edge. A hand-forged pocket-knife blade is hammered probably 100 times 1n forging. whereas a drop-stamp- ed blade is hit. only once -— a heavy pressing blow. —Industrifl1 Britain. ‘My ideas are a little ad- vanced, but I still keep u)? the old Chinese customs and I try to live up to the virtues of an old- time Chinese lady," said Helena Kuo, of Canton, a young Chinese writer who is visiting England for the first time. "We have three obedlences and four virtues. When ou are young you Obey F0111‘ 1B- er; married you obey vour hus- band; and when he passes away ygu obey yoin- son. A must beautiful. She must. be good at needlework. She must be good- tempered and faithful. That islihe traditional Chinese woman. But 1 ought. to ten you, added Miss Kilo, "I am breaktn the code to- night, because "a C lnese lady is not. supposed tn be talkative. - Ldstener. first. group of young farm- ers who shovelled 12 miles _of road bet/ween the Woodhaui dis- trlct and Eiglnfteld, tn order that. a boy stricken with appendicitis mlgm get to a London hospital, are disposed tn mflke Hint. 01 their achievement. They are much too modest. Actually it was a great lece of work, characteristic of the est features of Canadian man- hood. The h _ young farmers were not, slioveliing ior pay, but it. may well be doubted if paid work- ers ever made snow fly taster than did they. A young life was in their hands and they vzere de- tremlned that. it should be saved if their brawn and vigor could do it. They were working in the dark moat of the time. When it. was over, aevei-al had to walk two to five miles through the snow to et back to their berries. One w ed l2 miles backi-Wlndsor Star. ~ Light haa been ahed on a question that never ceases to puzzle men-how women can wear Summer-like clothing in Winter and Winter-like clothing in Buni- ger l rt 3'.lf.2"....l'.%l. ° why women can ' move about. in bare necks and sheer silk - Inge in mid-Winter and fall t0 eon- trsct pneumpzla la because tn have a nee thlokn of wlia lie catnip "thermal ins tin: ties- uea" an men possess. same protection which . them to’ a of a Jack knife in Lindsay in the not. flOB 1B r5386 t0 A ygung ltgdy Fabrenh 111i: enimcorriziowu A ovum"... tltiisf:2:52:13‘;¢.'.f;i.';.i’:;..f:t’ifl.l:§ il-arss av IIIE vniv ilflijat A l0. ‘IX Ill - APPn;n.u A HEATED SOL I TION T0 LIINING OP NOS! DRY FORM ,Ol‘ OATAB-‘I-H We were taught as students that when catarrh developed Plat the moist or mucous stage and finally reached the ‘dry’ stage. there was nothing much could be done to stimulate the lining or mucous membrane of the nose into renewed life. As this dry form often gives a ‘vacant’ appearance toghefaee and ls accom ‘ y a bad brestzti, many of these pat- ients develop an lnferiofty com- plex. While the use o certain solutloiu and oils gives temporary relief, most. forms of treatment have been unsuccessful. A coupleof years ago I spoke of a ent oi.\'lned form of treatm by Dr. C. K. Gale. New York City, in ‘Archives of Physical Therapy, Xray. Radium’, Chicago. Dr. Gale's method for the treas- ment of ozens—4.lie dry form of catarrh-consists of the direct ap- plication of heat to a large sur- face of the lining or inucousgmem- brane of the nose for prolonged periods. Into the right. nostril a rubber applicator of special design ls laced which has been filled wi barium so that it can be seen by the use of the Xray. It extends the entire length of the nose to the back of the throat and upward beyond the level of the middle of the three turblnate bones. When this rubber bag or tube is blown up it. touches the middle and outer wall of the nose. "If instead of barium the appli- cator is filled with a heated solu- tion, a heat effect by direct con- tact over the whole surface touch- ed by the bag will be obtained. Suction 1s first applied which col- lapses the rubber with tne “ ‘ " solution. The applicator is made of very thin but strong rubber and when inserted into the nose has the appearance and thinness blade. It. has no shape but takes the shape its balloonlns’ action makes in tine nose. The temperature of the solu- 125 decree! Dr. Gale treated four cases show- ing the ‘classic’ signs and symp- toms of dry cetarrh-drylng up of Paw hasn't. cussed since he Joined mucous membrane. emu. and the very disagreeable odor. Within u. week the cruists ‘-' anie reduced, the odor disappeared. and the pat.- lents were markedly improved. of this I aim speaking again _ m method as sufferers from th d pocket knives Wm be rare an form of catarrh are so ofteri dig couraged and ashamed of their affliction. FROM "THE CHURCHYARD ON THE SANDS" My Love lies in the gates of foam, e last clear wreck of shore: The nelceo sea-marsh binds her ome, The sands he: chamber door. 'I'tie lrrgynalrull flaps the written s .5, The oX-blrds chase the tide; Arid near that narrow field 0i bones Great ships at anchor ride. . 1110118 the belfry walls, The tempest does not reach her shade, lrhe rain her stlenl. hells. —J. B. Diflhbley, (1831-95) _.____._ __________ _> Tfinllvson was not the to the Dirty that her spoiiese naiiniiiliii 11D all by himself, and which m, (and everyone else) considered u. knockout. After dinner the guest,‘ Played such pleasantly ' 100110115 Barnes as ‘musical chairs," to me accompaniment f0 penis of laugh- $81‘. and there was also a dance “littlest- in which the Grand DllOh- ess danced a most graceful mm»- Pref-fill"! 01' lhe mazurka, out, the Drlze went foithc ‘nost and Mrs R956" H3525 Smith for an jm: lgrvmiitu pas deux to iii.- lube o; Sidewalks of New york» The brizes Ere awarded by Lord Ten. son 1d __ . ‘ciao Argamfggllly.) San Fran- '- ATTENTION‘ Swine Breeders Mac's Pitworm Tonic Powder " W"! thmulhly emu-i. all llfiéfflwnl“ 42"?" Price 35c_ts per lb, Don't a .0rder s; m... a; cm? -=---»P~ Phmllis. 7 In peace the swallow’; eggs are laid , King George The Sixth warren-ran "Victory or Weetmlnater Abbey." ~14!!! Horatio Nelson. ' Itiaimooleibletorelatefna waapleyedbythelboyalrleetin the World Wu‘ of 1014-1018, but ft la sufficient to remark that the national conflict threatened to de- ei-‘IW he foiroel of civilization. The . Mlwllee sitter: it orauuaed and carried out the ‘carious _, brmldit [the huge eapedftlonary forces hun the Unifted sum with the loss of only bwo hundred "V"; it guarded the waterways throughout the world and protect- “ed the merchant ships against the submarines; it blzcked the Belguim coastal bases which were used by the Germanabnd this wved mil- lions of people from a. slow death from starvation. But all these “‘ ementa would never have been accomplished l.t the British NEW had not won the great naval bottle of Jutland where Britain re- tained the mastery of the seas and t-‘he German fleet could not leave its base. v One of’ the ships which engaged in this Brent 1mm was the Coiling- wood and one oif the men serving In the battleshipa turret was Prince Albert who lied Joined t-he crew only a few weeks before this important engugeme ‘. He was wdsnedto "A" 12-inch. fore-turret and in time surroundings he spent that historic day and night when the balance of Dower of the world's nations was at. stake. Anyone who knows how bemtl ‘T m cpel-QL ed will inform you mm; duly 1.. "16 ship's turret requires a very strong nervous system because the men in this close, steel confine- ment do not know what is going w ml they merely follow out the orders which are given b0 them 17.7 the officer who is in control o! the Bflnnery. The latter di- rects the operation through s tele- “ ‘ syetunandjustiissoon as tberanseofflietsrgeelsdlsoov. cred. the turret crew arrange the shot of the huge shell. Kim; Gwlte the Sixth has al- ways retrained the little white en- sign which the Col flew in the battle ot Jutland and more there is no doubt that it often re- minds His Meiesrt-y of his duties aboard the battleship in this great. and decisive naval engagement, when the Golllngwood fired no less than eighty-four rounds of ammunition. The young Prince was mention- ed in the official despetches for his remarkable bmveiry under fire. HOWVH. his progress in the Navy was onoe age-tn interrupted when the, old gastric trouble recccured and he was forced to receive treat- ment. on hospltl ships at scape i (continued next week) (Relprodalothi Prohibited, 1989. Eduwtional Ibaltures Syndicate) Schoolmasters ' (Exchange) "Charles Lamb's contemptuous opinion of sctioolmasters," com- ments The Manchester Guardian, "ooeaslonfl-lly finds its modern parallel. One of the characters in A. G. Street's readable novel. "The Gentleman of the Party", ‘Soon you will b; leaving the Varsity, and, I suppose, yo_u'1l be huntln for a job, and no doubt you wil get cum-any youn pup wing a degree can become a ach- u. . King Carol of Romania has different ideas. In a recent, inter- view he was asked what tiewould wish to be if he were not. a Kin . Without hesitation he said, “ schoolmaster." For own son be has planned a school in which eleven boys join Prince Michael each morning to share his studies and his reflections, and. when the time comes. his holidays in, the country. Prince Michael's school. fellow include sons of peasants, the son of e. solicitor, the son of a minister, the son of an officer. the son of a pensioner, the son of a mechanic. and. last. one Saxon and one Hun arlan representing tttie minorities n the country. Irrigation For Garden Of Eden the Tigris the region which alto of the Gard- . t“ ha: shfll 050T‘ ' n1 about statement the exact. role that- Pflwm‘ and hope of the Alllee In those dark days when the inter- ivystem that cubic yards of etmcrete required for says: ' \ . v l SYMBOLS OF SECURITY I During the post fen years, CHARLE_S P. FELL ENIPIR I H S l) I2 A N I. K l N c s 1 U N n. n. McINEILL Brunch Manager ‘Ilbe scheme has involved the con» etruetiion of a barrage 1.500 feet 10118 across the ‘Tigris and a. canal two and a. quarter miles long and m feet wide. with a. lied regulator i0 writ-Ml the flow of water down t-be Gharraf river. The barrage has flfty-s-x sluice gates. each 20 feet wide, which oonluol the waters of the Tllfrls and a navigation lock mtg? lptielpasfige of the filver c p ween andlasrah. y B“ dad O O O The construction of the called for the excavation ol’ canal regulator has seven sluice Elites, each also 20 feet wide, and also a small navigation lock. Work in December, 19st, with the construction of housesfor- the European staff and other build- gan in June, 1936. after the Winter floods had subsided. and the fact. that as many as 2.500 Arabs and Kurds were employed day and night in removing excavated ma- terial and in placing over $0,000 the barrage will g1 l 131$- sion of the scope life tiibmiindirirtak- 8 ‘ ' in . Four overhead cableways. each half a mile long and capable of carrying loads up t/o ilve tons, in addition to a number of cranes and locomotives. were used to mans- DOrt and place in position th necessary material. I O At the end of November, 1936, the extensive rains, which caused so much damage in Anatolia. pro- duced the hit-rhea flood ever known on the Tigris at) that time of the —A gain of 24.77% over i937- JBN‘. and one that ids; Dlocedented rapidity. Th‘; nvnagltlbggt the entire works were in. Ow-in ditdoua that 000 cubic yards of material. The mer. lmllllllfi? 13. 1939 th‘ C l. - living policyholders and beneficiiarieosmolivzlig3zildfifidlldg L. r. aovil General Menage; ‘ F LIFE C 0 nl P A ~ y n~r..;;_|° I79 Kent Street Charlottetown, P. E. |, result . causing serious delay 8 t0 tgedvgroybrelifflcult m1. a. tn, the contractors buiif°fiffjfl size model of the river near m, Works. and from experiments were alliéewbgriorecsst all the stages of program The completion of m, dltiona. the temperatures varying ‘from freezing point in Winter to in the shade in sum. DRUNKEN DRIVING Bermuda -(CP) - HAMILTON, Manuel Mello, Hamilton ccschm was fined £6 when h lead lfimfffié‘; “a gglgahsqgéggg guilty to being dflinke “liar.- n The actual constructional work be- “huge”! "‘ hm“ “d mmlai" The ‘Ildag-lstrate said it was a "bad case. ‘ cmuvirimrs LABOR LONDON -—(CP) — One-time holder of the British heavyweight “Bill? title. Dari McCorklndal South African who suffered spins 1n- lllry in I904, is now a builder's laborer here at, 56 shillings ($12.72) weekly. SEVEN COME-VICTORY MELBOURNE —(CP) -M. Francoise (United States cyclist) and W. Guyatt (Australia) rode their match race geven times 0n I board track before Guyatt was de- cided winner. Kfién MlnariPa In the home. l _ llrangie Feline Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: l Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea | For a. Delicious Cup of .--,--_-_--~i~¢; €.____________ -—- ~ (Mndm ‘limes. Beshdad Oor- sport and amusement. NO h m ondent.) W In“: “mini: e Kut Barrage irrigation scheme, which was completed to~_ the i“. - WORM a a ~'i~i~'!'~“=-b,-i*r.-i..:"~"" s “mil-- \ o\ HICKEY’S BLACK a TWIST l 10c felt-ER" iniv and others get a kick out of fishing through bacco Is mentioned the choice i! One Brand." CflliwjiN-G" . TOBA(3C‘0 . Some folks prefer skat- But. when Chewing T0- It narrows down “T” WW4 __+ v ,_______ IT’S A ~QUESTION OF PERSONAL TASTE These crisp winter days offer opportunities for FIG i100 n» 193s Annual an...» Revea] P. » Another Year of Substantial Pmgm: i Insurance in Force - Increased to $37,917 317 Z A5593 - - - - Incriesed to 9,4QQ,]23 I Policy Reserves- - Increased to 3,534 14° I . Surplus for Protec- " l tion of Policyholclers Increased to 567,716 New Insurance Paid i , for and Revived - . Increased to 5.537.850 l‘ has necessitated four .1 W815’ hard work under trying m...