____ -. .--y-;-_._-..- ' Bells manifesto which was never mentioned. __ {RAGE rotm in ciiiiiioiifiiiwii GUARDIAN IIOIIIII DI"! (‘IIIIPI 1R8!) “.00 pel Jenn (lollyvrndi II ldrnnrvl 11-“ III YGII (—l||U‘¢ ll llyllce, |I Olin-In. Ill ‘$60 IoI U. l4. A- WED~Eea2532§e2§se9- 'l'l l l‘) l"().\' l.\' l) YSTR Y lii this issue we begin the publication of a ser- ies of letters from Hon. A. E. Arsenault on the fox; industry. These letters are the result of thought and study of the whole situation and are written with a view to point out at home and abroad the possi- bilities 0f the, industry and, particularly, some of the means which should be adopted in ‘order to der- ive the most benefit from the business. The keynote of the letters is co-opcration and the advantages of this will be apparent to the reader when he care- fully studies the situation in the light thrown upon it in these letters. The fox industry is essentially a Prince Edward. Island one, born and nourished here. lt has spread, to other provinces and even to foreign countries and now we find ourselves competitors with thosv- whom we started in the business. That we should lose our grip upon it would be a calamity"; that we are able to hold our grip upon it and that we have advantages over our competitors, if we choose t0 make use of them, no one 'an doubt for a moment. The aim of these letters is to point out how we may hold our grip and how we can best utilize the natural advantages we possess. We commend these letters to our readers and would strongly advise that they be preserved for future reference. Mr. Arsenault has. been and is in close touch with the business, he has a facile pen and he is sufficiently well known both within and with‘- out the province to be safely" depended upon in aiiy- thing he undertakes to write or speak about. Tllli l’.l'l‘lll(l'l‘ lhlibliS .\ (‘ll.\l.l.]'].\'(il'l Any consolation the Patriot may find in as- suming that there is no indignation in the province not only over the int-roastid taxation but the brok- en promises of the party whosecziuse it upholds, it is welcome to. The near future will settle that ques- tion. i In its yesterdays issue it throws out the follow- ing challenge: “We again challenge the Guardian to show where iii the Liberal manifesto issued by Mr. Bell appeared ziny statement whatever that there ,would be no increase in taxation.” This is the challenge of the bully and the cow- ard. The Patriot knows, and it was repeatedly told in the House and by the Guardian, that “Mr. BelPs manifesto” was never mentioned at a political meet- ing during the pro-election campaign, either by Mr. Bell or any of his candidates. It knows that Mr. Bell's manifesto cut no more figure in the election campaign than the well known cartoon “Bringing up .i"ath.~i"' did. It is what the czmditlates solemnly told the people at public meetings and in private canvas; what the Patriot published from day to (lay in its colinuns that misted the people, not Mr. Tllli SYIELIMIC .\.\'l) Tilli ‘l{ll)l(‘l'l.()l'h'. l “In these beautiful June days, when the trees arc lgetriiining dressed in the glory of their summer foliage,” and so on, through three columns of sense- less and sentimental gush, mingled with poetry wor- thy of better association, the Patriot sheds matidlin tears over “the discordant note” that has crept into this June symphony through the Guardian s cxllos‘ ure of the trickery and dastardly conduct of the Bell (loveriimcnt, for which even the Patriot has not a word of defence to offer. ‘ . _ That there is a “discordant note" the. Patriot well understands, and not only a “discordant note, but a whole howling chorus of indignation from one end of the province to the other. The “honourable members of the government who have increased their own salaries by $1,100 each and provided fat offices for their heelers throughout the province mziy find some comfort in gazing Uhrough their new found increases at the Julie glory of the budding trees and the beautiful flowers and all the rest_of it, but the question that has been asked the Patriot for weeks past, will not be answered by_ an idiotic smile at the June flowers. That question is why did Premier Bell deliberately suppress the Auditors report and the minority report of the Public Ac- counts Committee which flatly contradicted the financial statements presented to the country and to the legislature and on which they founded the present system of taxationTThese are the things the people ivant to know tipon whom this unjustifiable and unpardonahleaaxation burden is being heaped in order‘ to increase the salaries of government oili- cials and create fat jobs for government heelers. An occasional rhapsody on the beauties of June may conic in all right from the Patriot when June beauties ‘are in order. At present the glory of the fo_l- iage ziitdntivc flowers is eclipsed by the increase in taxes, by the broken promises and the generally un- paralleled conduct of a government which came in- to power on false pretences and is staying in only un til the people can afford the time to gather themsel- ves together and demand their resignation. Hands off the treasury" is now the slogan throughout the countrv and the only hope to avert a calamity. Should the present aggregation, with their ideas of the val- ue of promises and of the needs of the ])i‘0VillC€_ as compared with their own needs for higher salaries be permitted to wallow for the next three years in the revenue they would create with their new taxa- tion onlyjrnikin would result. CURRENT (0MMENT The farmer has been busy wiih his plough turning up the soil. with burrows crumbling it into smooth- ness and wlih drill and diligent hands planting the seed from which, anticipating the harvest of promise. he expects to do his part in feeding the multitudes. lii his Eiaborii he is not free from perplexi- ty, for times are strenuous and his mind must act in unison witii muscle in working out the problems of industry and liic. What will the harvest be is the question, more important now than [ever before in his experience. in volume shall ii be limited, medium or abundant. 1n price will it command sufficient to dlschmge the obligmions undei which he is struggling, nnd pro- vide for ilie financial requirements of his home? ' 1 Not for the-meagre things re- ‘iqulied to keep body nnd soul Io- Igcther. Vliill to enable him to Like that Dart in our community life which calls upon him for sacrifice and imposes the duty of contribu- tion. if his thoughts rim in the right groove. his church, his ischools. the public hospitals and icharitles of the land ire fixed ii-lizirgcs upon his bounty, and in illPSQ things the great majority of our people have always generous- ly responded to the culls of duty. |i\\'illllt?\'0l‘ uncertainty may exist as llu the harvest income, flit-Fe is no doubt us to the lncreising demands ,upon his purse. lio realizes unre .h.in ever before the value 0f a mod education for his boy and girl, and more than ever before ho mus". ‘lip into his‘ pocket to provide for itliis. Churches and hospitals and orphanngme need enlargement nu‘. luiprovi-mculs which .ii present hiKh costs arc sure to prove nu increased lax upon the benevolence of lilo puoplie. And the land will net-d" mori- ploughing and sowing and scratch» lug to l‘i|i.\'|3 lilf‘ stiff sum; which the iux gatherer of the Bel: (lovcriiiuciit will be sure to dillltllltl. it will be unlike any olii' r of ills cuninbiiiiiiiis. in that it will be a conlriiiutliiii cli- _ lorcwi L-y violence after they had by promises mud pledges, lulled liliii into the belief that they would protect hiiii from tzixaiions which were ilenounccd as \lll"l’l(‘(‘lll,‘(i and tiilirngcoils. lls- may he puzzled to know what extra crop to plant. and hhrvcst and market to satisfy .tho tax collector. On one thing he ilt‘('d cxL-rclse no extra thought; ‘and that ls that it will call for the .illl',",i‘.~il, quantity that the Govern- incnt can make it, for the present year. and with the assurance that nicn using crops will be required liil‘lll'.\'i.§'01ll‘i1llli the years to come. if ilie present aggregation ' ‘rtlfiiii the reins 0f’po\vcl‘.'"“"' " Sniurilaiys Patriot has rambled from Toronto to‘ Newfoundland. "roni thcncc to New . Brunswick, llllli tili:ill_v to lii" "llcad Sea“ i;i lf‘lilll(';-;.~s search alter “rcil iicrrilli-K" lo driw llCfllrzi the truck of its pursuors. Fishy; arguments of good quality might be procured iro_m its maritime fish grounds if it ‘but: iiliily lJi-iitlliii l Guardian Readers Furnlohod by W. I. LIIIOI “MY NEIGHBORS ROSES" -qoov ‘Allan The roses red upon my neighbor's v'nc Ari» owned by liliii. lint they nrc 'il.-:o mine, ills ivzis the cost. and his tho labor. i110, l llut ininc as well zishls tho joy. their loveliness to view. 'l‘hu~.' bloom for me. nnd are for mo. us fair As fur tho man who gives them all his cure. . Thus i am rich. beciunaa u good mun grew A r-isoclud vino‘ for nil his neighbor's viow. i know from this that others plant for mo. And "what they own, my joy may also be; So Wily ho selfish. when so much l'iiii.'s flnc is grown for you. upon neighbor's vine‘! —Gruber. your Th". author of those beaullful verses ~licd recently in New York 1('iiy. .1ir. Gruber was n iuwyei l who became rich in deeds of kind- nens and love to his fellow men. Al his funeral the crowd was so Rreai Ilia! the police were forced l in clo-ii- the doors of the Church. " 111111“ of these remembered him for i ills “l urilies quietly bestowed upon them. ilr. Work. during the solemn 1 rend Mr. Grubens "My 1 servim. ' Nciilhhork-i iloses." while standing i besides his lifeless body. W. S. LOUSON- m1: cinnamon-crown (IUAIIDILI tact to apply them. but it could 811810 in the “Dwd Sea" until ll was us dead ns the reputation of the Bell Government before it would fiiid any form of piscatoriai life. \\'hi.-iher tho editor of the Pflb riot felt Hny cold chills creeping down his back,_ when reading ihouo passages which resembled the ghost-like spirits of his own cdi- ioriuis of a iifediku plcturo of u shameful pusl. the language quot.- ed rcflccls ii. us accurately as in a. perfect niirror. it was that kind of talk that filled its columns for days and wrecks and months. But has the ‘Pfliflfll nothing bott- cr ibnn its Roichfords Daily argu- ments to offer in defence of its Government? Whgt has the scurr- ilous language either of its own selection or of u Nt‘\\‘f()llll1li.lll(l niwvspupcr got lo do with ‘the dercliction of duty of the Govern- ment of Prince Edward Island‘! Docs ii expect by quoting foreign nonsense l0 draw the attention of our people awn-y from serious sob- cr issues? if it docs it has nindc a Trove inisttiite. While it knows there is scribing tiisconitnt cliko in Ct)ll1l'.l‘_\' and city against the "gflVOTIHIltHLS legislation," it wp can _lenr:i ii is being more and more eouimixndetl." \\'e have no call to llll:\\'tl‘ such liimsciis i; -;-\'er_v ninn \\'il\l rcrds it Knows i". io he untrue. it hangs its faith again upon ilie emptiness of tho Liberal hlailiifcslti. ll might as wci‘. refer to a chapter in the Koran, or an excerpt from ilie Phllusopirv of Confucius. 110th of these had near- iy as much relation to ihe election contest Jis the discarded Manifesto. it is thi- pledges and liroinises lllilfit‘ io the people on ilii- pint- iurm and in the giri-ss, on the floor vf llic li-gislziiiiri- and in public hails throughout the cniiiiiry. by the whole Liberal contingent, that ire pillorlcil lo lili‘ public gaze. it s passage uftii" passage, chirgc Lificr charge nnd promise after prolnisc. publislii-il day lii ulid ilziy ‘llll in tho columns of the Patriot. that the peopli- are afler. ii is no: ‘ho iiiiioi-i-nt Lilli iniiticiious Manl- ii-sto, which l|i'\’(‘l‘ lllll any 0:11.- any good or harm. lull tlu- words uliil phrases and sentences which were ‘Jilifllll lo ill" pi-opli- lo iiiisltaiil and ilUL"‘i\'t‘lll1'lll. that llt't‘.t‘.liC_V and honor combine to condemn. they udmii that 1111')’ [iromiseil l’) "carry on the publii: service" with ilic existing revenue, and fliscover- ed otherwise. if then they believe, is the evening l)l"p§‘l\ ill slurcs, that lilo "government enjoys flic con- iiiir-ncc of tho pcoplc." \\'llY NOT 811113111‘ 'l"lii<Jlil t‘ii.\.\'(ll€l) l'(i~' l.l(‘Y 'l‘() 'l‘1lll:'. l'li0l'l.il~j l-‘Olt Al'- PROVAL? ' Amongst other things says tho Patriotdht- "wise expenditure oi‘ the pcoplcs‘ inon<-_.-" will elicit "the nccncrzrkrxprcssion" of “the pcopli-s‘ satisfaction." Just think of ii! “Wise expenditure" by the llell government. A government that shows an actual deficit of $57.- 38605 in less than four months. ind an inert-as.- oi ibo public iii-b: to that nuiouiit. as compared wiili a deficit or (l"ili increase by lin- "onservatives of only $50,757.28 ln almost tight _Y.i‘.ll'.~'-. should close its mouth torcvi-r, and conipiwl its org- .lll also to close flown. and in bo- czimi- 21:: dumb as it is in rclzitltin to THE SUPPllldSSED AUDIT- itls‘ ANI) hiii.'\'()lll’I‘\' illCPOlUl‘ 0N THE PtlBLlC ACCOUNTS. WlHICll DLSCLOSE THESE FACTS. ' in colitrndiellim of those oil ilishi-il oui ussliriIiici-s, that lin- country is contented and wrapt up in Pfllllillvliililiillll of the Govern~ Iilciits.‘ 'l'.1\.\'.\’l‘i()Z\' lclzislxition. wi- have the pronounced cull from two large representative. meetings call» ini; for resignations, one of them asking llls llonour tho Lieuieiiant Governor lo dissolve the house. 'i‘hcsi- were in; (lpposiiioii meet- iiii-ts. but in linlli lili‘ majority were once supporters oi" the ilcll (low i-rnmcni. And these \\'(.‘l‘t‘ both iiii- zinimous in their demands. not one dissenting voice. 'l‘hesn resigna- 111111-“2 Pilllvil for by those \\‘illl:"' right it is to usif. hive iioi hot-n tendon-d. and tho ileuiaud for tilt-in has not been wltlitlrnwii. And add- i-d lo ihesi- thcri- is tilc rumblings in the country indicative of a po~ 1111C“! \‘111'1-111i11ilkc, against Wilicli the puny hand of the Pulrloi. nnd -i111111‘1‘1'l1i;vs of the Goviriinicii! will not prevail. i‘ 5i IDNEY flippantly declares that “so far a4. which l am sending in for publica- tion on the Sliver Fox Fur Selling Association, l propose to put forth a number of arguments to show that is it absolutely necessary for the FoiRanchers of this Province to or- ganize and co-operate if they want to assure the future of the foxi ranching industry. For many of these arguments 1 do not claim credit or originality, most of "ihem are taken from the publication's of Vélnillar organiza- tions to that which we are inaugu- rating here. Among them “The California Associated Raisin Com- pany" and "The Prune nnd Apricot G_ro\i.'ers of California." Although both of these organizations have only a fiw years existence“ the mzignificicnt success that has (frowned llieir efforts should be a lesson to us and encourage us to siinilai‘ efforts. l invite all lllflfll? who are inter- (IO-OPERATION , $11';~—ln the series o1 letters gunize the growers could succeed, A without n real paid in cush capiiuif, 10c Straight A Pleasing Smoke-Rich andiMellow ' csicil in Fox lfaiichiiig lo follow these letters, and if they do, I fi-eli satisfied that if they are not ul- ready convinced they will becoinei converted to the idea of co-opera-i Tion in one of the island resourced; in presenting the bill for. incur-l poration of "The Sliver Fur Sell-l inc Association of l‘. E. l.” in $110 ‘Legislature. I said that the future Accordingly in 1912 leading Fres- no business ‘men nnd vincyurdisin started what 'Wfl5 then known as‘ the "lMlllion Dollar Company. l‘ need not go into the details of ihc RATTRAYS system followed, suffice to say that it was much along tho llucr. which oooavoo-o-v w Lorraine l; a province ii is proposed to follow in orgunlz- 1 and that Gel-many l of Gui-inn," ins The Silver Fox Fur SellinB As- . v ruled by Keller Bill i-lan 17111111110 socintloii. > or that Germany Ausiohenm m‘ At that time raisins were aell- Thin column lo open for the 1y. form the 'l‘rii>le Alli? and ' lng at 1 3-4 to 2 cent! be; pound i1'x°'"lol'1°flua1zlo;vvi‘Ilicflfi nil takes time and encr an“; m“ with few llllrchflscrslni that price.‘ “L T2? chlthfkflzt: part and they Should f: szligiit-ir T110 "OD 111 £11111 Y"? W“ 35-009 Guardian doe: not nocell- n- l°1 ions. 25.000 of which was marketed lrliy endoru the opinion; Further on, 11mm,“ m through the organization and 00,- i llgzlgeelnlad by_ Ito corru- ing statement in ITEM‘; aamulm‘ 000 tons outside of the organiza- 1’ ii costs pgr mm“ a _o “'11 Wlni (ion. Tho average prlcepaid by rQ-oooo-ooooooooooo-ovooooa erq salon!‘ mph“ mlmllghiiiteach the ltalsin Company was $00 per v- ' s v $20.10 u tram. H, pm _“ 511111ol . .. ' ' l ion, average price by outside liuy- d7 that the child niilxiiilli-the m: ors $45. . _ ‘cti, if ll ililll not bot-y, inviaezrii. lt is interesting to note that. the ‘ " " - ‘ cach your, woul i . . it 091 1917 crop was 163,000 tons, 124.000 TINT‘ H1" 1""'°111‘1'11 U119" 1111 them throulzh cilliulgotuuuugh r0191“ of which was handled by the ltnis» llilt‘l'p1ll"i;')rolililr _mt ‘fllilar issue M M211’ Nilw Jusi illliigig“! i, m“ in Company and only 30.000 by Ir ‘Ellhtacil F. Vt iiilll-“likiil l1“ pulling n p“). or gm mm" I c111. fllllSllli‘ purchasers. and the average ma] OHDU“, ‘Jllxrxm ruzfrhyflmtl dngs. iclze (who had never ilfflli cu:- . h - ., 112 1 s . . out Se; I , ll ntt price to t e grower u is 5 know, unless the irony used mo) u" 111v $20.00 saved eacii per ton, the effect being that not only was the quantity of raisins produced doubled but till‘ prices was also nearly doubled. The crop and price qf 1918 5h0W0tl n like re~ markable result. Another important factor so good that tilt-y have not caught, on. First. the writer classed our lcachirs no n lot of- "vipers." and then weni on to say, “we show? has our confidence in them by entrust- 1 w“ 5'01"‘ 11.1’ not liavii success of the Fox llanching in- been the improved quality of the dnsiry depended on three things. product. Through standardization and careful and intelligent handling children." That alone should have i shown that the writer was not in namely:- 1. (foopcration with a view of‘ eouirolliiig the oulpul of Silver Fox Fur. 2. The proper grading of ililch fur with u view of marketing us Prince Edward island Fox only the beltt-r quullly of such fur. I'.. Ailvcrtislug. the Silver Fox l~‘ui- through the host class of ash- ‘zin Journals andl magazines, to create. a greater ilcmand i0!‘ 10X furs, especially the Prince Eilwflrd island article. llciiilvrs will ltilully keep these in mind Willinl reading this nnd future ziriich-s on this subject. in ilie present article l will now proceed to give a short history of "The California Associated Raisin ('lliilli'lilily" and its history is that of nil similar organizations. ’l‘h'is (‘oinpany which (zumc into existence in 1912 was organized be- cause past history had convinced lilt‘ raisin growcrs of (‘ziiiforniil ihat the industry could never im- eome stabilized or profitable through lndiviilual efforts. The first attempt at organization look place in 1802 but just as our i-fiort lii 1914,.ii came lo naught ilirough lack of proper support and for want otnTircL-sisiirfciifihilf m i ' During most of the twenty W111‘?- that elapsed froin that time until 1912 the gi-mvcrs sold as iil(li\'l(l\1' dis to the packers. As loni: as the ifrowirs sold iii this way a stable market was impossibly‘. Specula- iino by packers élfltliflllfiilflfll brok- ers caused prices lo fluctuate every season. if the growers attciiiplctl to 501i, as they‘ generally dlil. wlicn a fnir price was oiTcri-il .ihe bottom loll out of the market alto- gclhcr. There were hundreds of raisin brands but no brands big enough t0 be nationally advertised. No packeror grower could unilcriaki- an advertising cauipnigii siriillt‘ haiulcil. Lillie zillclllill was made at staudarilizing so that the con- sumer as u rule could not toll what hc WlIsdZPIIlIIi-Z. Afici- repeated unsuctretasfui nt- itillllils at orgunizalipn. leaders in i-o 'l]ll‘l'illlVl' lll(‘-Vi‘lll_('lll!§ had be» come convlnctd that no print to or- dnys the most prized of nil remembr- The day 0f all bride's photo- uiices-tho graph. .Homo Portrait: 1i)’ iPl1°1"¢- mont lliE 000K STUDIO J. A. S. BAYER PHOTOGRAPHER TELEPHONE 192-J AMATEUR WORK LEFT HERE FOR EINIBHING, WILL GET CAREFUL ATTENTION SEND FOR OUR PRICE LIST Ti. Lilli M all nu amateur amoral on received fruh ovary week. Moderate Prion Personal attention to Ph nphy i l >0 Amateur gluction. earliest when lic referred to the y teachers as “vipers” for ii such i ‘was the case, would wi- parents eh- truat (iur’cliildri-ii with them’! I should say not. . To make the lettcr“so us not to ilecelve the public ho stated tha: the teacher was paid 55.278 cents > pcr hour for their work, and to , make the thing more absurd on tho face of it. he gave the hours of service that the teacher worked the qualify, of the puck has been‘ greatly improved. 'l‘hq growers also fro-operated, through more care in the cultiva- tloii, in the harvesting and curing the friiii. ' li was early realized that ex- tensive advertising was necessary lo take care of the increasing pro- 'l‘hc need of a nationally known brand was also‘ apparent. “m” 111° “5111141/15111" 111111111 111 each (lay. wtok, iiioiilli and your. raisins 110 W911'1“1“w11 111 11115 V1111” counting the actual hours that ince. school is supposed to all, and. no doubt purposely, tiinitting the tllllu the teacher has to remain afici- school hours to assist some of the more backward pupilg who pulp-r cannzit. or will not. learn their lessons at home. the iinic spent in .~cllilll,' will‘ correcting: oxiiiiiiiiutiun qiupers at home. revising ilic pur- tlculiir subjects being taught iii, been hoped for. The Company now 1m. mm.’ and rowing up current 911011115 111111111111)’ 13181‘ M11115 1111101111- events, so us lo impart to their I 111111 1° 1111111‘ 1111111 5211111100 i101 F0111‘ ‘scholars the imporlaiii events that § A big eastern advertising firm W115 01181188111 tosupervise n Nation n1 advertising campaign. Adver~ lilting 6bztbourdya tisements were inserted in the Saturday Evening Post. the Ladies Home Journal and other nationally circulated publications. The results were more than hiid 101‘ 1111V9111Z111E 81111 50 1111' 1119 111‘"iarc Liking pine" from (lav to day" 111111111 11115 110011 110001118 PM"! W1111 for, willie ancient history-ls laugh! the production. , and niiiy he necessary current‘ 111 111V 1111111 11111911‘ 1 W111 ‘11111Whisiorv to my mind is of far more 1111119 111° 5111110111 1110113 other 111105- importance and cvcry teacher Luilvlso readers io..suve flit-sunr- 119105 115 1110i’ W111 W11l11 11> 111111 day and impart what he or she has them again when l have flillfllfltllicllfllufl of important tlililgs that , ‘he scrim" 1111119011 throughout tiic world. Any , l am Sir, ctc.. 800d lcnclicr should not stick to text bookifthat they know to be A. E. ARSENAULT. ‘wrong. For illstlillcu they would 951lo- inot teach children that ~$1101114~take~a~few~- inH-iaites-eaclr —— 1i! u ieacher an“ _» » ____ (ffuiilinuiril on page sigh“ .;; lug them with the care of our "“”““H»+¢”,,, BA BY l Chick Foods T119 1'01)’ best feed [up 1'11""! 111111 Brewing chickens. Calf Meal (Royal Purple brand) i; perfect substitute for young calves. Scratch Feed F01 P01111111’. n spacial mix- w,,¢~“...,,___ turc of whole clcun grain. Feed Wheat‘ Tho best nnd cheiipeit Poultry Food on the market. WHOLESALE AND RE- i ’l‘i\ll... lowest price. Carter 8t C0. Ltd. AQ-Q-AQQ-‘ivvonoo-o-m-y, 015W" w-4w~+w<wowwwww K7 TEN DAYS SALE _ We must reduce our stock, and to _ do so we are offering our entire stock of inen’s wear at big discounts. Here's your chance to save money on your clothing. 10 p. c. Discount On all" suits, overalls, jumpers, pants, raincoats. caps, straw hats, panainas and on all orders left for suits. Every article in the store atfrom 15 per. cent discount. Artistic Photo rnphu Gharbttshwn, . I. l. BRUCE’S Evenings ' . . Evenings 9334-6-7-31. _ v _ H, u . . . . g4 15 p. c. Discount On all felt" hats, shiits, underwear, neckwear, 2101/08. belts, sweaters, trunks, suitcases, club bags, etc. JUNE 7TH TO JUNE 17TH 10 per. cent. t0