. a ~ rye-h;- all.“ . .. ..__.o._ .-....‘..._.,. .11; OWN GUARDIAN “OGUST Z1 I933 New Empire Era at (Mail and Empire) 1 c 1 t that the agree- Proosacumuae ments, reached at the Ottaiws Im- i I i 0t PAGE 1 . ‘it - l "' THE GHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN rroniileiit-N Chrnllfr a. McLuro u-r. Vice-s resident. a. IL Bur-u!- 3-4-1 l flecretury-Lienh-Col. u. a. Miwlflnnnfl. "~ Hi0‘; L Editor and llunuglng Dhlreo tor-J. B. Burnett,“ m-"h _, ihhljiriilio rliiltnru- trunk Walker 1nd fl. . may“ u e a l lurnlng Uuliy (founded mm $5.00 per your (in ndvnn" Q V l’? 54.50 per your (in inhunve) m-ileu in Lvisnniln bull“! W“! Auusivi-isisu icei-iihsicsrsuv rwirizu BTAThS-‘fhe lict-knlill so"!!! Anne: l“. N" 7°" c“ g] ll iitliiv- \us\ Kori: Elly hellrrul Mulorl Building, Detroit. Inter-tn; h um“ (in... (Hy. uiuoughuy THUG! uuuuiug. Chltlllli Glenn BI!" B: Arifvlivu- Monudlluck uuiiainr. B" "hhm"? “a M“ w“ 5"“ hiiaueiphiu. NotesBy The Way “The Haberdashery ” 0n several occasions of late there has arsen a world-wide con- viction that Herr Hitler, of Ger- irmny, is riding for a fall. His cam- paign against the Jews seemed an insane move. But he has survived it. ‘Ibday, however, it scents as though he had taken the one final. fatal step. He has initiated at Bre- "' slauaruie forbidding theuse0! flwe r t .1: {r stints on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST as. 193! .v_§]‘_ perial Conference last year, and‘ ‘a ‘Lpndoll, have inaugurated a new to the colonies as well as to the "- N_ s_ ELECQyON , ‘Admiring crowds visited the main powder or rouge by “hmmh Any m8 m“ he“ Wm be more wars’ it thyomy of Sh. Philip Cun11gge-1_,35- fore the diminution cf the Nova ‘were displayed. There was also keen that 10W“- B12884" men m!" he taught 1n our Schoqm No; ma; new colonial era." arvuhd- Muswlmi will“ “We 81"“ tention" should be a part oi every the proportion of the United“ Klhflw The result of 2O yearfnurch for recently reemnned at the so-cali-l ed little Imperial Conference i 7 - i‘ and progressive era for E1114?“ ' B; [um W. BctoniMD. “we, The benefits resulting accrue __ . HEALTH AND rosrvnn "on" CAPSULE f Mother Country and. self-governing Although the entire world is hop- Dommmns" we have n‘ on the w‘ »- _"—' . . ;buudmg in wmch me horticultural’ “Tmmn “m5 it is prohibited ‘rm will be unfortunate if the ordinaryMY- 5mm“? c‘! 5mm for the: As was generally anticipated he's iculturai and industrial exhibits attending Nazi demonstrations in - - ‘Colonies that “Ottawa. started a r , 8'1‘ physical or military cirill is not - I l. 500ml MEH-‘QWYP: m“ mmhvétm‘ ‘interest shown in the magnificent alvjrgtiiz ttllileilrvitrjiffJqifxl ; nunmry Ulctc‘ shank; be mugm’ n is Nmmikailhle ‘Tats, Tliispnillgi Hogs’ sheep’ Goats’ Poultry’ Government ivciit down to dcfcat abdmplfly o; hmdgcmfr, work, shown '51" "h? 11111111116’ Dvsiflon of "at- the 81"“ 1B1 P!” c‘? - °° Dogs and FOXQ‘ the provincial election hyiterbday. under the auspices of the Provincial h“ cousin m Berhh h hi“: 0h that physical exercise period whether m_ dom.‘ export trad. 80mg to the; c i d t een. ' . , After the el ct on a e a branch of the Canadian Handicraft 901m, doors or huh . colonial Ehwphe h” jncreLgd by ‘I ‘worm destroy“ d,“ "my do“ 111K1- cmlhidprable trmme “Cs” '.Guild, to which more extended re- What do we find in the posture or over 6O per cent, though the tre- , ‘h: work through the registration nrrallge- ‘ex-awe g5 made elsewhere in today's Wm‘ u" United 5mm “H”! "5 the position in which our boys andmendous slump in prices has re- g _ ments of the Government failing to lGhudlam Another new ‘eatwe present nationallstifinattituiire‘, undtz 31,15, young men and “Dmen, stand’ ‘duced purchasing pqwe)‘ end the ‘Fh-Ecnv! __ ‘A’: n , . . - _ , .~ . commend “m, to the mm“, 0,, which ‘firmed attention w“ the the presvn exper e ere Sit, or walk? While r haveht com power of Oolcnal Governments to. warms”: position. As a matter of fact there was nnthmg sr-riousljv amiss with the urrangcmeiits, but the Liberal Op- position, for lack of better material. found in tbcm a convenient stick with which to belnbcr the admin- istration; and they used i! to some tune. As time went on, it befiflmv evident that the new FYflllClLSE Act and the registration arrangements were not so bias-k as they 21nd been pointed; in fart :‘"it their’ We" a great den! bet’. realized. But by his tiff-B B. STEM’- deal of [he ciumngc had been done. Today’ which L, “Prince County other nanon has eve,- shouldered, and in Great Britain are not entire- 'I"ne I.ibc.. .s had got broadcast and gci1e?aliy' ilCCyllllffd among the un- thinking that the Harrington Gov- urnment W215 cndcavoring to "put one over" with an endeavour to steal the cicrzion. As the campaign progressed the effect of this propa- ganda weakened, and the Harring- ton Government's POEIWW Eflillfd m strength. It is not too much to say that had this comics: hsted another fortnight 0r three “Mk5. B Feat deal of the mud that had been so plentifullv used to bespattcr the edministrafion wnufci have been wiped off, and 11w record of the Govemzncrt: srcn in its true light. with the coitseiyiczxt result that its chances for rc-ciecticn would have been mutcriilly improved. However, the (lac was cast yesterday. find in B- rcxiucvci Lt-gzeiuture of from 43 to 30 meats the Hnrrinilwn GQVQmmEM was able to save only (light. 11191114" in; those of tzvo Ministers, Mr. Har- rington anri Afr. Black, whzfe one 50st,. Victoraa remains in doubt. Mr. MacDonald, the new Liberal lender, is c. man of much ability and an orator of no mchn order. He has been heard more than once ln this Province and has a STEM many friends and admirers apart alto- in most people; lltk likelihood oi’ the eanbargo Exhibit °1 “d” ‘mm the new against Canadian farm products |Prince Edward Island Library. The being lowered. The only hope for ‘various improvements made in the Canada lies in impflfial °°'°Der- ,gr°unds and equipment m,“ ma; ation. A development of trade with- ‘year were also noted and commented Ictrjgiecymsséreéloiibléiese Iupm ma“ fawrably‘ tions seem the only way out. 0n the whole, it may be asserted __ jthat rarely before has there been 'The position of Great Britain in Igregier or better quality of exhibits the Persian Gulf is unique in world jin competition and on view. Wm!“ Wmwut “mm? a’ “ma” I With a continuation of fine l shores. or even possessing one of weather there is therefore every m; barren and mhospitable islands reason to anticipate unqualified suc- as a base’ She h“ m, generations cess for the Exhibition this year. borne burdens there which no !Day"’ at the Fair, should draw re~ except m ‘he capacity M s°v°"|‘ , d eign; she has undertaken duty. ‘cord crowds to the gmun 5' without dominion: she has kept] and keeps the peace amongst people l who never have been and are not S. A. TRADE PROSPECTS her subjects; she has policed walt- ———— era over which she has no formal The benefits of the agreements 31111101193; and 51w has kept ah ;entered into at the Imperial Confer- open market in those distant ports, eh“ at Ottawa a" gradually being equally to all the merchants of the realized by Canada. This country vwfld‘ and our sister Dominion, South Af- Not w many yea" ago l.‘ wasl rica, are now on the threshold of a predicted 1h many quarters that I substantial expansion of mutual the little fellow in manufacturing trade and great improvement in our WM doomed. Wlseacres declared relations generally. q-hls L, the that the small manufacturer would opinion expressed in an address in be emmnated by the glam 00mm“ ation; the small merchant would Montreal recently by Dr‘ P‘ R“ 3°’ go down before the chain store; the tha, South African Trade Commis- smug 35mm- w“ b0 he mppremd sioner. To develop her commerce by the large grain farm run on with m, cape’ Canada gm- years mass-production lines. But the de- has maintained a wade Commiy presion has proved that the little sioncr at Cape Town. So successful 221011212233: tiprfigsfatsfiaTigni has she been in this effort that at econmmc forces m“ his mg the coming of the depression, in brother, i920, her trade had reached a total o; about $13‘000,Q00_ 111m at ‘he It was csfmaied that duilng the Imperial Conference these relations, strike h‘ the British °°a1 fields in I m first time were “wed on a 1924 more than the equivalent of a. °r e ' p million work days were lost in two more permanent basis through the mohthi During the great linltion_ definite esreemeht slsned for a WY- a1 strike" of 192s the direct loss to loci of five years. British trade amounted to £200,000,- Abnormal commercial conditions. 00° and the busimss of the entire such as prevail at present, had eaus- t3? mliiziyzjéferg g2’; m:le of ten-ltory on either of its » fairly erect position. whereas 80 out , parts of the body under a. strain or ‘mai position, may give plete figures for boys and girls, the ,flgures for young men and women, ' divided into fourciasses, are as foi- law's:- A. Those with a good posture- about 7 per cent. B. Fairly good-B per cent. C. Poor-Em per cent. D. VET)’ burl-ZS pcr cent. This means then that only 7 in every 100 carry the body erect, and 13 in every 100 curry the body in a. ' of every 100 curry the body poorly or very poorly. Docs posture affect health? Physicians in the United States ly in agreement as to whether bad posture causes poor health or poor‘ health causes poor posture. As a matter of fact this point needn't worry us, because the real point is that poor health and poor posture very oftcn go together. “Bad posture may put certain cramp them so that the blood sup- ply to them is poor and they are un- .piace their orders on Government account. That ability to trade with Britain has, of course, been great- ly increased by the policy of pref- erence passed by the British Gov» ernment and carried forward through the whole Empire at Ot- tawa. This movement vras set on foot by the offer made by Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett at the Imperial Con- ference of 1930, and put into effect at the Ottawa Conference. Speak- ing for the Imperial. Government, Sir Cunliffe-Lister recently said: “Before the Ottawa. Conference, while Canada gave certain very val- uable preferences to the West In- dies and while New Zealand gave certain preiercncs, the rest of the Dominions and India gave no gen- eral preference at all to any of the Colonies. As we were able, there- fore, to nqctiate at an Imperial Economic Conference for the Ool- oniai Empire as a. whole, it was possible to make agreements, wide in their scope and invaluable in their details, which would have ‘been impossible to achieve at any able to do their work effectively." "A deep chest with good air cap- acity mny not cleanse the blood, cramped position." down in the abdomen that there is! interference with its nerve and blood supply.” “An intestine, which formerly did its work well, may lose the tone of its muscle wall when there is con- stant stagnation due to its position in the abdomen." In other words the organs in the chest and abdomen, and this is really where we "live", cannot work in o. cramped position. So if we can get children and young adults to stand or sit “tali“ or in the position of “attcntion", better health and a better outlook on life will be attained. other time and under any other conditions. There are the detailed properly or sumciehuy h. held m a lpreferences set out in the schedules _ to the agreement. More important "A stomach which is capable ofiwen W” m‘ “tabnshment M m9 doing its job well when in the nor- {Principle that from then onwards Constant all the Dominions and India. would trouble when it has saggctl so farimflke the" Preference!‘ Empire-FINE and extend preferences to the whole of the colonial Empire. 'I‘hn.t. I think. meant the completion of a. partnership of very real value and it should be of increasing value in the future. The stimulus which has been given by this new policy has not merely stimulated the mar- ket, but has stimulated the Colon- "Tal producers themselves to engage in research and to make their own production more efficient." The benefits accruing, extend to many colonial products. Empire- grown coffee obtained a great ad- vantage at Ottaiwa. Research in Kenya. and other coffee-growing parts of the Empire has been stim- ulated and prices have been main- Hlsfnrlhooboolihfulliolttillid IEIICIPSIIIS. WISH-l. - ; NEMA WORM CAPSULES‘ JOHNSON and JUHNSON Cor. Kent and Prince Street The Quality Drugstore A ‘Test 0f Books (London 'I‘nith) . Even if everybody read the latest novel, it would still be an inade- quate test of its popularity. A more real test is to take the number of modern books we wish to possess rather than the number of those we merely wish to read. And it is here that contemporary literature is at a. discount. The number of books that are purchas- ed as opposed to those that are merely borrowed is small. Probably at no time in the hist- ory of English literature were so many books published whose pop- ularity was purely ephemeral and whose purchasers were exclusively circulating libraries. It does not follow that many people do not derive a. great deal of pleasure out of reading modern fiction and 20th century nee-historical biography. At first acquaintance these things are more attractive than the for- biddingly fat volumes of the Vic- torians, just as Gershwin is at first acquaintance more acceptable than Beethoven. But popular music soon polls. and the books that authors write in our day have precisely the qual- ities of the easy and tuneful mu- sic that grows wearisome with re- petition. Yet we can at any time during Exhibition Week. in new tweeds for Exhibition. MEN'S New Fall Hats for Exhibition Our Fall Hats are now in ready for your approval -New Styles, New Colorings, New Prices- You’ll be proud to wear one of our new Hats, they are swell. Priced . . . . $1.75, $1.95 and up to $5.50 Smart Arrow Shirts Every “Arrow” Shirt is Sanforized and guaran- teed not to shrink. Arrow Shirts are perfect fitting and shown in either plain or fancy weaves with at- tached or two matching collars. Priced $1.50, $1.95 up Eastern Caps New Fall Caps made by Eastern in very smart at .................................... $1.25 and $1.50 Boys Eastern Caps 85c, $1.00 and $1.25 A Hyde Park Suits Large showing of new Hyde Park Suits for Exhi- bition Week. Hyde Park Suits are in a class by them- selves for style, fit and patterns. See the new Hyde Park Suits before you buy a suit. Priced $18, $20, $22 and $25.00 Henderson & Cudmore i tweeds Swell new patterns have not. They contrive to be boiih restful and enthralling at the same time. They drive our worries away while we are reading them. We do not yum/p up every moment to put on the wirelem. They have some- how cr other, for all their pom- not talent but energy that is lack- ing. The modems never seem in give either the time or the effort that their predecessors gave to what they created. That nobody in any walk of life works so hard as they used to do is a point on which Bother from Imlitics. 1t will be for ed, m. Botha. said. a. area ln Can- hardshkm In “whet were they “limd i" a Yehllvell’ hish level- read Dickens or ‘Ihackerfl-Y, W“ mbxny» h ‘Mimi’ "h" 18 831W Worker of the older semen- mm no“. to justify the pmtgorm on adian exports to South Africa, and successruh The Preference granted by Great Macaulay 0,- G;bb0n_ Qnce we have 1051i; I8 tzbzlutell: as 21c brilliant t.on by hand or brain is agreed. In.“ the min- vice verso, during 1932. Dr. Botha, ' 3mm“ t‘) the 5"!“ “dusky °5 the startd, the many volumes before °°°11P5 ° e ° 11155 1'5» And literature more than any- wmch Aim has been: was. the 1m however cited among the benefits Italian aviator who set a new Brmsh West mam‘ Malmtms ‘W1 us do not scare us away. andwe Pam? m“ 1‘ beam“ “m” ""118 e15“ betray! the specious and cipai p ank of wi c ' ' ' ' mediate introduction of the Old Age P511510“ Scheme, notwithstanding (my, no means had been provided for it during the prcscnt year. The people have taken .\fr. ‘MacDonald 5nd his supporters at their word gm}, 01d Age Pcnislons would be granted forthwith. How they h" 50mg to accomplish this will be lwaitcrl with interest by (Timid and 10c alike. In an unsettled time like the prcs- mt, a period of grout unrest and un- certainty, a Government in any country inkcs its liic in its hands ln 39mg to ihc clvi-‘uivrilc. The ordin- . . . _ . | - , ,_ -———-———--~——--—-_. iirywotm- d... u... W‘: w m“ m" ma“ Gowmment om“ in Canada. Prim“: mmmhuifm’ Xiho‘ finding ‘ ‘Z3212: ‘lgizlzlllfgvcnptds/ivillwy ma‘ "°‘°I"m< The weenie or Bumm- _ . no urc 0c muc or cm, give up e v l h . ‘an. not, u-OUMBqhRkerS b b sons or cutters for ilic distress in _ the Th‘ I _ _ u are . 4 struggle and drift into the s wou d best hcal my ill, h d ax which he finds hlnlgolf. It ,5 sub Inns would I buy- appy an unwsrlikc. Sir Samuel Factor (lcicnt for him that the Govern- ifient in power at lhc time is‘ a means in an end, mid hc argues that _ sidcrlng Indian reform. Si s - ' Web-thy i’ could not bf! worse. any- many or everything fiewhmfnd w 815° m cream a surplus M wealth Fun" c ucl's plan would adlninisterrlauziirrila. Beauty Alds m] H mm ms A Change. This establish the purity 01 wfmflh which would quicken the trade of F~———h by Rn executive consisting o; a Crested by Max Factor, lloily- Y’ speech, the Nazis are even censoring their neighbors, r me nose) Governor representing the crown Woods make-vi» xcnlus. who for doubtless hml a good (lcrll to do with By more chance was Burma ' ma"! years has been chief cos- thc chringc-ovci" in the hlvfiwffltfl from Conservative to Liberal in N0- Va Scolia yesterday. derived from the agreements. shiP- “Yorldys rem“! by flying a plane up" ments of raw sugar, wine, dried and :32 fir; ixfltig 112:2’. mfg“; canned fruits to Canada. 0n our hanging upside dawn two hows pert, we are experlencingauincrease without a 50111.“) Wk to!" we're in the export of lumber, agricultural bored stiff by such performances, machinery, automobiles, automobile W0-—L1hd5l1y 906t- parts, tinned fish and other commo- dmes" “For five years at leash" de- absorb more population at this time clarcd the Commissioner, "we are seem to us one of the many fab secured against sudden tariff chan- moms which haunt the political ges that have previously upset our m'nd. The mcro people, the more calculations.“ Evidence of the fact Work; the more work. the more that our sister Dominion is seriously “'°a1"h_th“t is w 5M5 if m” fmc" The idea that (ianada. cannot DREAM-PEDLARY If there were dreams to sell What would you buy? Some cost a passing bell; Some a light sigh That shakes from Life's fresh crown Only a rose-loaf down. If there were dreams to scll, Merry and sud to tcli, And ihc cricr rang the bcll, What would you buy? A cottage 1011c mid still, tifying ca/pit-al and the directing 1 _ cndeavoring to promote trade re a minds are them to organize things‘ ticns with us is seen in her estab- What paupcrizcs a new country is towns. It‘ settlers could be organized in productive communities they Ishould be able not. only to pay their iway, and live by their own, but EDITORIAL NOTES ‘ In their efforts to "purge" Ger- lishmcnt, this year, of a. South Af- a stream of u'n(tirt\ct(id and m. , With bowcrs nigh, L’ Shadowy, my wocs to still, i until I dic. Such pcnrl front Life's fresh crown -Thomas L. Beddoes. Burmzfs telephone spelling. For a. long time, , -— when it was necessary to spell a,‘ gnegmwygdi misfit?!“ ‘lhe 9°?‘ name, operators said "D for David," '52:“; rt: “ark oghe r53; "s 1°’ mmuer’ and "z ‘or “ma” gold mines, abandoned for many rias." joined with British India. Gnogra- mhically and by race, it is a distinct icntity. It is true that its population :0: ten to twelve millions includes Fiji, has saved the industry in those colonies. The preference has assist- ed the market and sugar producers "have become more active in devel- opment and research work. The > British banana preference, which after the Ottawa Conference was stabilized at two shillings six pence a hundred weight, hr] proved of enormous value. So has the preter- cnce granted on this fruit by Can- ada. Jamaica, the Cameroons and Fiji have been the chief colonial beneficiaries. New and wider Em- lpirc mnrkcis have been developed ‘in Canada and elsewhere for orang- es, grapefruit and other Empire- gown fuits. ‘Hoare; Secretary of Stnte for India. ‘has presented a scheme to the ijcint parliamentary committee con- wlth a Counofl of Ministers. The Legislature would consist of two Houses. The Upper House. of thirty six members, would be chosen ha]! hi! the Lower House and half of never lay volume vi. down without inevitable sadness attributes to feeling the which Dr. Johnson the end of anything. For thesa- “Utltflfs of yesterday absorb us in spite of ourselves in a way that the modems ricver man- age to absorb. We can come back to them again and again. ‘Their morality is obvious, i-hcir history is inaccurate, they ncver say in one word what could be put in three, their complacency is absoiutdiy maddening. All those drawbacks they undoubtedly possess; from all those drawbacks our contemporar- ics are cngagingly frcc. l And yet the older works have a enduring quality that the others Society mctician to the scrccn and stage profession. Max Factor preparations are in a. large way responsible for the splendid complexion of these celebrities. Some of our lines from Fielding to Dickens could in- vent and tell a. story, while the mo- dems seldom take the trouble to produce anything beyond a nous- tic introspection which may h; due to pre-war Russians or post- war conditions. Whatever the rea- son, it makes the book disturbing for the reader, because it goes along in‘ nervous jerks that are anything but soothing. If, ,on the other hand, a modern writer produces a biographical no- vel, it: is usually inferior to the kind of thing that Fielding and Smollett did two hundred years ago. It is the sifpshod. These things are noi altogether the fault of the contem- porary writer. They are the fault of the time he lives in. To write as Macaulay wrote, or Dickens or Thomas Hardy, who was the last of them, a man requires a back- ground that is spacious and secure. But such a background no longer exists. The uncertainty and rest- iessiess of modem life are reflect- ed in modern letters. A man withf out csnfidence in the future can feel no confidence in his future or in himself, and such confidence is essential to really great work. J: The)’ ha" been ‘mtrmted years. Emllloyed miners in Wales. Elm“? besides the Emma” pmper’ non-official persons nominated by include |not to use Jewish names for this who actually hold steady Jobs in the {hm these “her “m5 “m mt “km the Government. The Lower House A GOTQSVTA RT ram: rnwmzn _- Ipurpose, but to say Jnstead, "D for @0111 mines. With which they BIB It” u“? m“ Indian‘ Th“ EM‘ m‘ would be a popular body, eiihough ' The directors and promoters of the Provincial Exhibition and Driv- lug Park have reason to congratu- late themselves on such an excel- um; start made at tho Exhibition yesterday. Tho wcnihcr xvns mag- _ ‘ _ , 1 th t, th b! to h d mlnlon, The F359, 1mm“, coloring. Ami is delicately per- njflcent, the attendance was larsc, in Cuba, there seems to be little t: woikersfilyrcatiialllyiillthaeald tbs" ‘radon doubtless had great between two buttons en your hum,‘ h, please ‘he mo" m“ the livestock and agricultural class- doubt "m; h“; status as munch] m- - sleeve and hold another similar‘ iidlous taste. The peculiar afl- gs made an exceptionally finc show- ing, while the horse 11161118 M"! Deutschland," "s ‘m. Siegfried" and famllar. conicmplate going oh “z for zeppelin,’ ,strlke because their demands have been rejected. ‘Iivs seems to be an- ?‘ other case oi’ mcn deliberately mak- It seems unlikely, says the Mail mg tmuble fm, memclv“ and Empire, that Machado will be _._ extradited. Whatever he has done Farmers in Ontario are complain- i the h i‘ f th i , fugec will be admitted, and Eng- 82d the igvéinzingilafiite rwiilror; llsh-spcaklng nations do not yield heard fight up h, the time when 11D 1101mm“ YEYHBBEB fBBdUY- 1H 150t- harvesting is over. In the mcantimfi vaudeville were up to the most op- ilmlstic expectations. The judging in the forcncon and nflcrneon was flltnessed by lame "Ovid-i Wm? m1’ lowed keenly the selections made by the judges, and commented with ‘great interest on the points scored. nI-p fused to surrender a couple of Irish- iwm seem t‘) “M” haPpny “Smmm imen who had murdered a‘ landlord the task of doing nothing under ' b hind the shelter of a hed e ‘he direct "net pone“ The 55cm mm ° g ',and industrial re-estsblishment of Th° Ameflm" "m" Md "l" w" this class of workers will be mom. a political offence ugly. difficult and lengthy. som years ago the United States re- cities are full of jobless workers . ditlns, however, have permeated the country and are largely the traders, IBurma has an area considerably larger than Germany or Franco. The rcccnt cxpcssion of feeling in Burma WiiS for Burma to be in- cludcd in the gmrnposcd Indian DO- FOUNDATION (lREAlll SKIN AND TISSUE CREAM LEMON (‘BEAM ROUGE AND I-IPSTIUK its 130 members would include cer- tain representations for minorltes and special interests. In order to perform this trick, you must wear a coat with buttons on the sleeves. Place a small coin Those preparations are made from the purest ingredients in. correct cnior, harmony shades to blond with individual complexion influence in this regard. It would suit industrial Britain far better if Burma were not so included. Lan- cashirc, for example, secs no reason why tho markets of Burma shcuid The turned over grails to the In. dian mills. Burma, itself, L5‘ not a manufacturng country. For Burma as a separate country, Great Britain is npparrntly willing to go far in the way oi constitut- hcsive qualities nf the Face Pow. tier make it "Slay on" and "cling" on umicr most trying conditions. Visit cur store and see this line of toilet preparations of which we are sole agents. Lcoin in your hand. Then announce‘ [that you will drop the coin from, ysur hand into your sleeve and produce it from the outside of your Tsicevc. Bend your arm and drop the A |coln down your siccvc. Make sev- eral magc passes with your other hand and sip the secret coin from! its hiding place lmtween the but-! 2 l tons. Ycur chums will be very pus-l DRUGSTORE m‘ ~i