" ”MAXlMs\ 0F A A MERCHANT --__ body KNOW that you have‘! gylall. You have goods or service for somebody: do Mr. and Mrs. Some- >%// . copies" - near, byiveryilolly M/lxllvls ‘ OF‘ A MERCHANT inu- DonTenvy the competitor who starwd advertising first; catch up ’ J , .' with him! i: j GoversPrincelEdward Island Like the Dew A ma] Subscriptions Delivered QSJIQ -- - . l ,_ _ Canada and U. B. A. $4.50 \ - "~ i. CIIQ-RLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, AUGUST o, 192s chasm... ounrdlu r» oiui Inning Guardian, fouled 1H7 With Industry, port. SYDNEY MINES. N. 3., Aug, 4__ Over the hlilhWfl-YB 11nd by-ways of Cape Breton, Hon. R. B. Bennett, continued his summer speaking tour today. Leaving Inverness this morn- lng the Conservative leader spoke here tonight and at Baddeck late this afternoon. At both places Mr. Bennett emphasized the import- ance of the steel and coal indus- tries of Nova Scotia. He also visited the resting place of Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, on the Bras D'or Lakes This island of Cape Breton, he declared tonight, should be a teeming hive of industry. Your coal and your steel industries should be prospering. There is a great demand in every part of Canada. There is an earnest desire that Canadians should not be dependent on another nation for coal and steel products. 4 illilllslzis: IMPDRTANBE or sun AND coll INDUSTRIES Island Of Cape Breton Should Be Teemin _ Conservative L eader Tells Big Audience At Sydney Mines.- Gonservatives Sta nd For The". Immedi- Brings Suit Against Federal Reserve Bank lSpecial to the Guardian) NEW YORK- Allg- 4.~Sult for an injunction against the federal re. serve bank of New York was begun W118i‘ 1n the United States district 90"" by Frank G. Rauhle of Buf- “110- N- Y" who seeks to" restrain the bank from enforcing redlscount rates. Rauhie claimed the rates are D1111 of propaganda undertaken in Sllreading false reports of a "money shortage." Rauhle charged that these rates were fixed deliberately to restrict the credit available for ll K5 ali ‘. ll i lllill llllllllllal Attainmerifiof Econo- ate Implementation 0f The Duncan Re. "v TIAQIM ‘ _ tion chieftain spoke tonight was " crowded and amplifiers conveyed . l . , l -—Agrlcu1ture must look to itself for 1 ' ' . ,lts salvation or it will become "a St. MichaeTs (Iathed- his words to an audience which ga- thered outside tlle building. A band headed a procession of automobiles which escorted Mr. Bennett to the theatre. Dr. L. W. Johnstone, Dominion member for Cape Breton-North Victoria, said the only desire oi the new leader oi the Conservative par- ty was to serve Canada. Canada. Dr. Johnstone said, should be in a much better position than she was with all the natural resources which she possesses. I wonder, Mr. Bennett asked, ii men and women reillly understood how great a position we should oc- cupy in respect to coal. This wllole island of Cape Breton is underlad- en with coal. For the year ended Mr. Bennett proceeded: We im- ported illto Canada over sixty mil- lion dollars worth of coke, anthra- cite and bituminous coal for the year ended May 31st last. Why should Canada have to buy sixty million dollars worth of coal from another country?" Conservative members, hc con- tinued, had pressed in the House of Commons for implementation of the Duncan report in September. in respect to those _two major indus- tries but the only answer they had received from the Ministers-of Fin- ance was that they were "whlners." ‘The theatre in which" the opposi- Announcements, Coming Events, ' " Meetings, Etc "ROBIN HOOl-DTLOUR now pro- turable in Gingham or cotton bags. All Grocers. 'I-i4-tf'. "Buying hogs, sheep and lambs, at Emerald Tuesday forenoon, Aug. 7th. Everett Haslam. ' 6854-B-3-3i I “The Conservatives of York Poll will meet in York Hall on Monday evening August 6th at 8. P. M, C. T. Ferguson Sec'y 0880-B-4-2i "Fredericton ice-cream (Women's institute), ‘Allg. 7th. not fine, first fine night. social If G909 "United Church W. M. S. Ice Qream Festival Wednesday, Aug. . in George Shaw's Field, Brackl , Point. Next fine evening if rainy. flB38-.—3—2—-6~7 "Reserve Saturday, August 11th 101' the big tea party at St. Peter's 0813-84-81. "Come to the ice cream social ‘Tuesday. Aug. an in aid of Buil- iww United Church at Willard Kelly's. Bunbury. 6892-8-4-3i "Don't miss the Lawn Party at‘ West. River Bridge on Monday, Assure om. csoi-a-s-zl. "Come to the tea and festival on 5t _Eugene's Church grounds; Cove- hml- fills. I. Good tables. music, "limo. and fishpoiid. ‘ 0864-8-3-41 _"Come to the Ice-cream Social It Springfield Lot ti'l on Monday Allsust (1th. under the Ausploes of 8 Women's fihltitute andniunior, Cross Society. If not fine on sday- , s 087ii-8-4-2i ‘przzmitgiitk Dramatic ‘will: 00m B ll Ml‘. Bobbs ' lifmmfld Protes- ‘Mt Eratlislznage onuMonday even; - ll . ‘ not fine wil meant it firs-y 'evenfng. Ice "mm will be sold. r. eeds m Bit] 5 ate. ’ - of orph 8062-84-21 1mm filmy will be "The 15m held at at; marines on ThlirldI-Y ilmlnmA _teln."rra usual soon . . ." ‘" m. 't ildiselsiiofit... T ‘i’ hi“ ferret theda .~ "m eels l _ show. Special Vernon idly, French River lrlday. May 31 last $5,000,000 worth of coke $30,000,000 of anthracite and $25,- 000,000 of bituminous coal was im- ported into this country, he said. _wny. he questioned. should this large quantity be imported? There can be no rcnl development in industry in this country unless there can be certainty of stability and unless men who invest their money are certain of the protec- tion of Just laws. The government has disregarded tlle recommenda- tion in the Duncan report in regard |l.O the amelioration of conditions in the steel industry, he said, _ So far as the Conservative party is concerned, Mr. Bennett stated. and we represent a larger majority of the electorate than tlle Liberal part) does. we propose to keep on agitating for the carrying out of these recommendations and when another government takes the place of the present administration whe- ther I be leader or not, I am certain that the Conservative party will give effect i.o the recommendations in the report oi the Duncan com- mission. -- v {Qt-w- Premier Kingl . Leaves For West (Special to The Guardian) O'I'I‘A_WA, Aug. 4.--'I‘he Prime Minister, Rt. Hon. W. L. MacKenzie King left Ottawa last evening for a tour of the‘ Western provinces. The Premier will pay a visit to his con- stituency in Prince Albert. Sask., where he will open the Prince Al- bert national park. En routc he will address a meeting at Brandon and another at Davidson. Sask. - {O-&-___._ 14th Anniversary Commemorated (Special to The Guardian) BRUSSELS, Aug. 4.-The ioul'-_ teenth anniversary of the invasion of Belgium by the Germans was commemorated today by a salvo of 21 shots flred by all garrlsons. Bells were rung and sirens blown throughout the country. i-{oa- The Bony ins]. (By Brliilih United Press) LONDON,_Aug. 3.-The bones of Irish people were better than those of tho English," said Dr. Reginald Larkln, police surgeon, at a Camb- erwell inquest recently on Mrs. Em- ma Katherine McMahon, aged 8i. who died after a fall down stairs at her home. The doctor said that despite her advanced age a fracture of the col- lar-bone which she received in a fall last September had united per- fectly. , When the coroner expressed sur- prise the ‘doctor declared that it was a common thing with Irish people. "I think the diet has a lot to do with lt," he said. “Then get the beneflt-oi the calcium in potatoes. and this keeps the bone structures strong." . "Owing to rain Church of Enil land picnic at Crapaud will be held today-Monday the 0th. Same pro- gram of attractions and good thlnlls to eat. i a” show. Orapaud Tues- Wednesday. Borden investment. tic sweltering in the third day of g heat wavethat already has taken several lives and caused numer- ous City two deaths occurred directly attributable to the heat: in Boston and vicinity. three; in Providence, p, 1,, two, andin Erie, Pa, one. drowning while attempting to es- cape the intense heat, while light- ning was reflllonslble for others. reported dead 0f the heitt ln the Chicago district yesterday before a torrential riln lowered the tempo 14 ature an degrees from a height of d f ‘.94. mark ‘established the u , 0h 0i‘ U 0 881'. Hunter “w” tonight w heggvlelrctlif ther dostlls were drown- “men fiver. lngs, the other eight were due to "—-'*--*{-O-} ral Among Build- ings Struck — Ex- tensive D a m age (‘ausedby Idloods. (Special to the Guardian) TORONTO, Aug. m-Raging up tlle city shortly before three o'clock yesterday afternoon and continuing intermittently almost till mid- night, the worst electrical storm lll the history of Toronto accounted for one killed, three persons injur- ed and extensive damage to power lines, light and telephone circuits. Eleven buildings, one St. Mich- ael's Cathedral, and another the Gerrard and Carlaw Hydro Electric Sub-station, were struck by light- ning, damage to the latter place being the means of plunging the en- tire district cast of the Don River into darkness for almost‘ an hour, and suspending street car operat- ion in this section for the same time. The life snuffed out; by the light- ning was that of fifteen your old Dorothy Kennedy, of- Dixle, who was struck while standing on a ladder in‘ the barn of her father. The el- ectric bolt struck thc cornice of tlle barn, went straight through and ran down the ladder. striking tlle child on the head and knocking llor to tlle floor of the stable twenty feet below. Death was instantaneous. The heaviest damage locally as a result of tlle lightning was suffered by the Carlaw Avc. Hydro sub-sta- tion while the Walker House lost a $1,000 sign when it was burned out by a bolt and 1'10 King Street West. a four storey vacant brick bulldln , was “touched" for a loss of o $500. The most damage. however, will be that incurred as a resultof the devastating nature of the rain. which flooded basements in all low sections of the city, and completely ‘inundated business premises in the down town business section lying south of King Street. The King Ecl- ward Hotel basement kltchen was "washed out" when water rose to a height of between ten and twelve inches, as a result of water in the choking sewers backing up through the floor outlets. _.4_ -----» - German Girl ,. Won Foil Title AMSTERDAM, Aug. 4 -— Helene Mayer, 17-year-old German girl fencer, won the women's Olympic championship in foils today, em- erging victorious over a field of the best blade wielders of her sex ill the world. Terrible Suffering In Heat Wave And Many Die NEW YORK, Aug. 4—The Atlan- seliboard states today were prostrations. In New York Several lost their lives through l. rise absolutely, and that the group the ear of anyone within range so doubtful. Peace-time uses have so lllHlNlll PllT. mic Stabiiity and a Higher Standard of Living, Important Need of Agricul- ture, Dr. Fay ‘De- . clares. . (Special to the Guardian); WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass, Ailg. 4 lame dog whining for special aid, Dr. C. R. Fay, Professor of political economics at the University of .~'1‘or- onto, declared today in an address before members of the Institute of Politics. This, he said, ls clue to several reasons. Majority power, he said, is perm- anently ill the hands of industry and commerce. Another, he sald,ls the impossibility f'or farmers to maintain a standard of life com- pared with that of the towns un- less their production per man is constantly growing. This means the replacement of man power by ma- chines, wherever possible. Agriculture, hc said, is not one but many industries, each having its own marketing problems deman- ding solution, whereas governments can only legislate for the mass. I‘. measure of farm relief which aids one section, he pointed out, mill’ bl‘ of negligible interest to another, it may be directly hostile to the in- terests of another if, for example, its purpose is to maintain the price of certain products which a second agricultural section uses as its raw material. International price control isfor- midablc and difficult, lie said. In external _.t.rade, he continued, a stringent tariff would not tirllll? 1m immediate remedy by prohibiting foreign trade as imports can take the form of "purchases of foreign securities by United States citizens. of other remittances abroad and of tourist expenditures. The important need of agricult- llro, he said, is not that it should set the pace to the rest of the nat- f-on, nor even that its members should increase in wealth as fast as‘ the ranks of industry and commerce but rather that as a group oivln- dustries it should attain comparit- lve economic’ stability. that the in- dividual standard of living should consciousness of agriculture should achieve content. This latter, he said. probably was the greatest need oi all, and could be best at- tained through co-operation. New Death _ Ray Horror (By British United Press) LONDON, Aug. 4. - Details of 11 sensational scientific discovery that may revolutionise warfare have appeared in one of the Lon- don papers. According to the story. me" ‘ma animals can be struck dead by‘ i1 sound wave too highly pitched l0!‘ the human ear to hear it. "An ordinary quartz crystal elm be made to produce sound waveo to the number of hundreds 01' thousands per second," said 0- scientlflc authority, explaining the new discovery. "Its pitch is so hlsh that it is far beyond tlle ranfll! "f audibility. It sets up vibrations m powerful that they shatter the blood corpuscles and produce in- stant death." So far this new death ray has‘ not been tried on a human ballot-- But its eifectsshave been studied on anlmam In ithese experiments death was as sudden as a. violent- electric shock." These high-frequency waves u“! called supersonlcs. To what extent they can be used for war is still far been directed to substitutlnfi them for, machinery in the manu- facture of emulsions. An emulsion is a mixture of.oil and some other CREW or SEAPLA NE LA FREGATE Wireless Operator Cadou. Lieut. Pauiiu Paris, the comma ’ rlrht, landed at Hort-a, in the Azores, after completing a, l coo mile m; gate. the seaplane. ' . find Relief Pilot Mai-rot, shown, left to ht from Brest, France, in La, Fro. lllH llfllllllllfi Will HE [Ell Sllllill-El] Western Provinces ing that British Harvesters be Tak- en Home W h e n Work of the Har- vest is Completed. (Special Ito the Guardian) OTTAWA, Ont, Aug. 4—It is still tish laborers will help in the west- ern harvest. The chief obstacle in the way is the attitude of the gov- ernments of the three prairie prov- inces. Apparently they fear there will be left to their care through the winter several thousand of these imported harvest hands and are demanding an undertaking that thrashed the surplus labor will be taken home. With this qualificat- ion the governments of the western provinces are prepared to cooperate in placing the harvesters, and in addition securing winter employ- ment for as many as possible. Dem-and Undertak-' [track events." possible that several thousand Bri- when the harvest is reaped, andioricfln team in the saloon of the Suggest Rich Food ' Spoiled S t at e s Team LONDON, Aug. 4. —— Under the iull page streamer headline, "Sec- ret of United States Olympic fail- ures," the Evening Standard today prints the following: “Lavlshfleedlng, it is suggested has led to the undoing of the United States team in the Olympic games at Amsterdam, where at the start of today's sport they were still without a single victory in the The article then continues: l "A comparison made by The Ev- Ienlng Standards special corres- pondent at the Olympiad between the two luncheon menus provided today for each team disclosed nearly as striking a contrastasthe failures of tlle United States team in the field and the successes of the Brit- ish representatives: “Brltain-Beef tea, fried tender- loin steak, green sglad, mashed brown potatoes, compote of rhu- arb. “United States-Hers dbeuvre. cold meat, soup and eggs, entrees and vegetables, dessert. "Meais of the kind indicated above are being taken by the Am- liner President Roosevelt-a dark, depressing and stuffy apartmentfl One member has put on more than l5 pounds since he left New York. All are said to be discontented." V"A DANGEROUS EXPERIMENT" OTTAWA, Aug. Ii-President Tom Moore, of the Dominion Trades and Labor Council believes the bring- ing of 10,000 British laborers to Canada. "for the western harvest is a dangerous experiment. Mr. Moore said: “I believe this will be injurious to the men and will certainly not in the end benefit British emigration to Canada. “These men cannot earn enough at the present period to justify them coming here. If they remain they must be a charge during the winter on various municipalities, or dis- place domestic labor, making it. o. charge. . I believe an intelligent organism‘ tion would find sufficient labor in Canada for the Western harvest and it could he supplemented from the United States. The United Sta- tes labor would return home at the end of the harvest and would not add to the annual winter unemploy- ment in Canada. Certainly to bring men here from Britain H few months before winter is courting trouble. LATER LQNDON, Aug. 5.~(Canadian Press Goblin-Successful u lus- ion of negotiations with the Canad- ian government for the sending of ten thousand men to the Dominion to assist in harvesting operations. was announced yesterday by Rt. Hon. L. C. M. S. Amery, Secretary of State for the Dominions. Em- ployment exohanges throughout the distressed mining areas will be op- cn on Monday, although it is a bank holiday, to facilitate the enrollment age oi the reduced steamship fares to obtain several weeks employment fifteen s... in Chicago cruoAoofAuc. fl-Fiflteen were "shaklllil rower" waves could be utilised there. ____#¢-o>-i- lngredlent; and the tremendous of supersonic 2,000 PERSONS DROWNED (Canadian Prasrl) SHANGHAI. Aus- t-fihlne“ reports from Tainan state that about 2,000 persons in the towns of Ankau and Linchuin, central Shan- tung, have been drowned in a flood caused by. the overflowing of the a tributary of the Yellow River. The area has been - Jllness aggravated bylthe he» and experiencing an unusually heavyl 6913 excessive humidity. _ - ' l s larur. rain . .hd~ l=rom~ in the Canadian harvest fields. It was chiefly for the benefit of the miners. Premier Stanley Baldwin announced on Wednesday that the scheme was intended. The offices of shipping agencies also will be opened on Monday for the purpose of making bookings for the tempor- ary migrants. ‘ Gay Neckties Gay necktles which still are con- servative ,are made of either red or sulphur yellow with tiny horseback riders sprinkled over the surface. of miners who wish to take advant- l Good Reception On Board Alaunia \ MONCTON, N. .13., Aug. 4. — "Congratulations. Splendid recep- tion. Programme commenced to‘ the minute", was the terse advice received from the young ambassa- dors of ‘Empire party on board the S. S. Alaunia. of the Cunard Line now approaching Quebec of the re- ception of the special broadcast from C. N. R. A. last evening. ~ Messag of welcome by the Prime Minister, Hon. William Lyon Mackenzie King and Sir Henry $0M: Fours ‘ll-ilNi/x 4m: ArraoAcll 4c EAsY SfREcT lb {llaouall WALL s1‘. TORONTO, Aug. 5. -— Maritime. moderate to fresh northeast winds. partly_ cloudy and rather cool. Toronto, fair . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 88-68 Montreal, cloudy 72-00 Quebec. rain . . . . . . . . .. 74-56 Ci rlottietown, cloudy . 62-5’! Halifax, rain . 63-53 St. John, cloudy . ca-ao ton, clear .. 94-114 New York, fair . . . . . . . . . . .. 110-72 High tide this afternoon at 2.50 and tomorrow morning at 2.40. sun sets this evening at 7.24 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.40. Last quarter moon Wednesday Aus- 8th l. p. m. Bumrn ‘“ tide eighteen minutes Good Wh later than Ohlflflt eat l; Thornton. K. B. E. President Can- adian Nationai Railways were heard heartily as were the vocal and instrumental selections. The young ambassadors crowded around the instrument and as the strains of the Maple Leaf Forever poured forth from the loud speaker the Canadian passengers on board stood at attention. The arrangements for the recep- tion of the special programme on board the S. S. Alaunla were made by wireless operator Warden" and credit for the splendid reception is due him. The party will arrive Quebec Sunday, August 5th and aftera sight seeing tour oi the city they will leave the same day for the Maritimes, arriving Mone- ton Monday morning, August 6th and then proceed to St. John, Hall- fax, Truro, Plctou and Charlotte- town. Triplets Triple Wedding Scene (By British United Press) BRUSSELS, July 30.-—Boom, a little town near Antwerp, has just celebrated in worthy manner, an event the like of which is extreme- ly rare, Triplet sisters-Josephine, Philomene, and Maria Boeyrnans- who had just reached their major- ity, were married, and no wedding was ever surrounded with more ceremony and gaiety. The triplets are daughters of working-class people, and have nine brothers and sisters living. Six oth- ers have died. On the morning of the wedding they walked over roads on which silver sand had been sprinkled to the town hall. Then through the gaily decorated streets they were accompanied by their grooms and members of tlle four families-the husbands are not related. The civil marriage ceremony over, the Mayor of Boom, in a. happy lit- tle speech, presented the town's congratulations and marriage gifts. Then appeared more triplets, the unmarried daughters of a banker oi Ecckeren, who had come to ofler flowers to the wedded trio. Mines. Magnus, Van Linden, and 'I‘roch, whom Josephine, Philomena and Maria had now become, then led their husbands away to the de- curated and overcrowded‘ church. where the nuptial blessing was giv- on in the course of a solemn Mass. Then there was a wedding breakfast, during which the couples were the recipients oi all sorts of presents. Afterwards the public joined in the rejoicing, and, special permission having been granted by the authorities, there was music and dancing for the rest of the day and all the night. So much alike are the triplets that during their courting days each had been mistaken for one oi her sisters. iO}——*‘__ Ruined Abbey Lives Once More (By British United Press) LONDON, August 4-History, not artificial pageantry. was unrolled the other day in the placid, leafy meadow park wherein stands the hoary ruins of Waverley Abbey, a. mile outside of the ancient town of Famham in Suney. It was unrolled with ceremonial, the richer in effect because of its essential simplicity. Cowled and corded monks with shaven crowns, mitred abbots, m. ters of’ charity in their flowing rob- es and caps moved through 5 p“- orama of modern sunshades and motor cars. An aeroplane gran“; overhead as a reminder that mi; WM the Nt-hrnot the 12th century. Amid the ruined fragments‘ of WIWQTIQY Pontifical High Mass was celebrated for the first time since the dissolution of the monllflg Make (flood Message ‘Re c e i ved From the Ainakura. Would Indicate that the Polish Plane Marshal Pilsudski, Which Started fon the United States, Had Swung Around and was Returning to Europe. (Special to The Guardian) LONDON. Aug. 4.~~A pouibility that the Polish trans-Atlantic plane, Marshal Pllsudski, which started for the United States early yesterday has swung around and is returning to Europe was suggested today by a message s ceived from the British steamer Amakura. The Valentia wireless station re- ported receiving the following mes- sage from the Amakura: "5 a. m. Greenwich meridian time (1 a. m. Toronto time) 4620 north. 2.40 west aeroplane approached from the westward circled the ships at a distance of half a mile, height 600 feet. and disappeared northward, flying very fast. No signals." If the message received from the vessel should turn out to have been garbled and the Polish plane is con- tinuing her voyage to the United States. the machine should strike the North American coast sometime about dusk. At 2.40 a. m. G. M. ‘I’; a biplane was reported sighted by the Norwegian tanker Aztec. Thus slightly more than two‘ hours after belnq siBhted by the Aztec the plane appeared to have been sighmd by the Amakura, having prop-gum in a northeasterly direction. So for as known there are no aeroplanes in the region mentioned by thetwu ships except the Marshal Pilsudgki In the original message sent by ‘the Master of the Aztec the phrase ‘in the direction '75 degrees" was used. This could be interpreted as indicating that the plane was fly. in: nortll by cast. The Polish plane carried no wireless and messages from ships offered the only method of gauging her course and posltlorp LATER. LISBON. Portugal. Aug. a-sulr. majors Idzikowski and Kubala, the ‘Polish aviators, were rescued a hun- dred.miles off the northern coast of Portugal yesterday afternoon by the German steamer Samos and landed this morning at Lelxoes, the outer Port v1’ Omrlo. Pottugal. Engine trouble forced the biplane, Mai-gm] Pilsudski, to descend near the Sam- os whose crew effected the mam], of the aviators. Later advices from 0 p; um lihflt both of the aviatggsl- W311 ifliured when their plane was forc- itig to come down on the sea, gm] milillzmthey had been conveyed to the m ry hospital at Oporto when BY were landed from the Samoa. This despatch also said thug um Diane had been towed to the port by ‘he SW08 Blthoush it had been lrreatly damaged by its forced des- cent. _. i? foundation b 4 400 Years :30}, Henry “m” Waverley, th 1 “m” Ibbeys ‘lnogneiitcglmfi fflilltlidfid exactly 800 years ago,’ mm Wlihti: mark this eighth con. FY a. with the consent of Major and Mrs. Anderson the pre- sent owners of the Abbey gmuaq‘. ége ceremonies of old were reput- There was no attem t to organ or instrumentalpmuslgwluill: Dlain song of the chanting mum; in the Latiny of the Saints aadtho fiilfir°'crilii“rdi“m'",slhmm° °“’ a the tradition. LLLLAAA “ - — ‘ r u Condensed Specials RATE-leper "m. m; eaohinoertioninthiaoolumn.’ AQQOAQQQ ‘C8010! OOBNIL BB!‘ 750i stall-fed cattle. Saunders, Rew- some 6r O0. r 54¢; '10]! PRINTING or 173g} description. cheaply and up“. "Olllly executed. Guardian Oeu- tral Job Prinififl. Phone “I. ‘YOU WANT 000D INVHAOP“. Prices 00 for 20c; 100 for ; aso for 65c: too for aim; for I188. Postpaid. ' Office, float-dim Job Printly.