1 JUDGE THIS STORE By the Quality of Merchandise. By the Value of Money Paid. By the Service Rendered. We wish to stand in your opinion exactly upon our just deserts. Not upon what _we did a year ago-except as it proves what you may expect to-morrow-but al- ways upon what‘ we -do for you day by day, as you trade with us now. .\'()\\' TIIE “THRLD GUI-IS l.\"l‘() l-‘Flth’! 11111111: .1111: 1-0.\-1-so1-" 11121111. 1111:.\1'-1-\' 1x11 SFAIRI-‘S o1- 1~".\s1-1x.\'1-1x11 s-1-1'1.11:. Certainly the styles were never before so artistic-so graceful. And prices a1-e quite as moderate as anyone. dared hope. Come and see the special exhibition all this week. Sf ' .\ ll F5. $12.00, $16.7“), $18.50, $24.00. I"'.' I’. t “ATS. Special prices $H-'l.0(|, $90.00, HIiL-NLUII. $175.00, $2155.00. ~ 3| lil-‘l-‘fi. Special prices $12.00. $113.30. $114.50. $31.00. PI. l ' fill (‘0.\'l‘h'. $414.50. .\ I)I-Il.ll1iIl'l'l-'l'l. (‘(ll.I1IC("l‘l()\ ()I-‘ .\'I'I\\' SILK IlLUYSI-IS. These are the very latest models, just picked out two weeks ago, and quite dif- ferent in styles as well as fabrics, from those you have seen before, this season. There are models in quiet styles for business, or other conservative wear, and there are the very dressiest kinds, for most important service. Silk blouses with frill collar and cuffs $195. - Silk blouses with high necks. 155-95- Special Voile u-hite, $3.85 to $11.98. all sizes, high and low necks with lace trimm- ings. ’ Geoi-gettes from 111111.110 111 111111.110. '1'0'1‘111.\'(1'1- so SMA 111‘ AS .\ (‘LEVI-IR 1-‘.\1.I.s1'l'l‘. And never were Fall suits for women quite so smart and clever as they are this season. The old severity of the tailored suit has disappeared entirely. The new lines arc soft and graceful, with pleasing draperies, crush collars, slashes and pleats. Then ev- ery model seems so individual and distinct- ive. You'll see how very becoming they are when you try them on. SPLENDID SUITS FOR LADIES from $111410 111 11175.00. A few moi-e ladies dresses $12-93- S'I‘()(‘I(I.\'(1‘1S 'l_‘ll.»\'l' ARI-I A. PLbL-LSYIll-l 'l'0 LOOK .-\'l‘ AND '|‘() \Vl'l1\l{. We always look at stockings fou1- ways when we buy them. so do you. These-- How will they LOOK? How will they FEEL? How will they WEAR? What do they COST? _ Of course, stockings must look right, or you wouldn’t want them at all. Next, they must be comfortable on your feet, or, you could never enjoy them. These two things you can deride when you buy them. The others you must depend upon us to decide. I We know whether you are getting the best that the money can buy. We know that you are. We know whether they will wear well or not. We know that they will. Or they .wouldn’t be here at all. Now it's high time to buy them. This . is the safe store for stocking buying. SPLEAN DID VALUE IN’ LADIES Cash merette stockings at 75c a pair. Patons Ltd." / 111111 cinliirno-i-i-u-i-own Euiiitnmn ‘r111 ciiinionizinwu 1111111111111 . ~ ~ em 11119111.... .1..-:1.1.--.-11s.2----- Q - -- -,_ _ _ --_-__-_-= _-_ .-—?—:-'-_i_r~.—r:..— 11.1111‘“°""E1‘31'1'1 21111381’ 11°11’ 1131'1t-.°.°1?."<>.'£§£.."‘.'..'I1"15'.31lI398??? MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1920 u Tlll-I .\'I-J\\' IYURLI). A European writer, dealing with labor condit- lions and unrest, makes this statement:.“Workmen ,-in every country are stiffering from profound unrest lwhich seems to be founded on a fallacy. They were lso constantly assured during the war that they would lsee the birth of a new world that they are, naturally, jirritated to find today that nothing has changed ex- lcept a rise of \ 'ages, which is insufficient to compen- sate for the increased cost of living, and that they must endure the same wage slavery as before." . We all remember how we predicted and believ- led that when the war was over p1-e-\\'ar conditions iwould be improved. It ivas a foolish" hope; we had lforgotten that the debris of war must first be clear- ed ailray, that the wastage of wai- must first be made good before the new world created by the war would ,be a better world, before it would be as good a world as it had been. ' - We had forgotten that the impoverishment of a ‘country, whether by war, byfire or other catastrophe, lcould not possibly result in higher standards of com- -fort until the losses had been made good by work, by| gsountl finance. by co-operative effort and rigid econ- lwmy. The farmer whose buildings are burned to the iground may hope to replace them bybetter and more ‘can only be realized by hard work, by prudent man- lagcment and by the most rigid economy. g During the W111‘ waist-s were high, cxteessivcly high, for the wdiik had to l-c done whatever it (eost hut in too many cases the wage earnei-s forgot that a reduced production must inevitably result in re- nluccd wages, foi- the fuinlout of which ivatgcs are dc- Ii-ived is work; there is no inexhaustible fund of pro- ,fits behind work, the only fund is goods and the ‘goods must be produced if the wages are to be, paid. destroying the products and the means of production of many previous years. _ . Statisticians tell us that the division among the whole population of the surplus products of industry, after wages and capital replacements have been p1-o- yided for, would under normal conditions make very little difference to the individual. Even before the war the national income was insufficient however divided, to pi-ovde the whole o1" the community with ~11 reasonable standard of comfort. a , The sooner we realize it the better. the only pan- lacea for better times and greater comforts is work iand hard work, work that will increase the national dncome and that income is the national output. We lhave been clamoring foi- more pay and shorter hours of labor; weare only adding fuel to the flames of piational unrest. France has realized this and. as re- gcently announced in our news columns, the labor 11n- iions of France struck for longer, not shorter, hours 10f labor; they demanded and were granted, a nine lhour day instead of theintii-mal eight hour day. .\ (‘LA-SS I.\' I.I'I'I-IR.\'I‘I'IRI'I. It is very gratifying" to note that a c-lziss in lit- leratnre has been organized in connection with the Y. W .C. A. The class will be conducted by Profes-l gsor Steele of Prince of Wales College and, we under- lstand, is open to all who desire to join at the nominal ifee charged to defray ordinary running expenses. ,~The class was organized last Friday night and will be lheld in the Y. W. C. A. This is a distinct stop in the 1-ight direction and we are firmly confident will be the success it deserves to be. In past years in this city considerable attention ‘was devoted to literature and other cultural matters. Unfortunately we have allowed ourselves to drift down the stream, to follow the path of least resist- ance downward to amusement and intellectual ne- glect. Many will, we feel assured, take advantage of this opportunity to revivify their neglect ed serious thinking and we hope to see grow out of it other classes along lines akin to study and thinking. We may not have realized it but too many of us have discontinued real thinking in the past few years and few greater msfortunes than this could befall a people capable of thinking. This class in literature is a beginning, or rather a resurrection, fo1- our literary instincts once lived in this city and men and women did exer- cise their intellectual selves. We shall be (lelightetl to record the growth and the success of this class. It could not be placed under better dii-ection than that of Professor Steele and we feel assured he will find abundance of material. * 'l‘II I‘) l§().\ RI) .()l*‘ (‘())I)Il‘lR(‘li One thing appears to have been made clear by the recent sugar incident says the Ottawa Journal. It is that the Board of Commerce has lost the confi- dence of the public and ought to be abolished. The Board seemed to have been born under an unlucky star, Launched at a time when “profiteering" wasl man, passed for a time into desuetude, thenlost its vice-chairman and finally its sole surviving member. ’ That it did not lower the cost of living was not to its discredit; that was and is beyond the power of any tribunal; but it failed to even control prices or to lo- cate the profiteers. For five years we were not only not producing, but, upon everybody’s lips, it began by losing its chair-l , CURRENT COMMENT "H1111 editorial on (ire Tariff _q11e91ion in Thursday's (iuuril-iain was certainly an P)'1“°P9"9|'-" “Those glib 1011811911 11511111018- bolh o! ihe Liberal and ‘Srerar schools. have 1111 farmers worked up 1o 1111- belie! that the duty on agricultural implements ls the whole ililngfl- so remarked an ll!- |e|1|g¢n¢ Qupq-[YB Couniy farmer. The), u," U5 ma, 1119 ‘Parlil on agricultural implements has been mullipLrilig 1lllI*IIOll1ll1'(’5 in (‘unu- Idn. AT THE l-JXPENSE OP THE l-‘A-Rll-BRS. "rliis ispll-intv What 110111 thc Liberal 11nd United Fa!" nn-r press. 11nd Ihrrir itinerant agi- tators 111-1- ielling 11s repeal-wily! llen- is 11 simple rl-i inn-resting qucsllon in“ niauliciiiulics 111111.11 we \\'1111ld illu- Ffliill‘ 0i 109511 Wild" 111-res 111 11111-11 o111. 11 is min-e 1o the polni 1111111 1111- slander o1‘ ihcii‘ uppoiiciils, which 1111') $0 ll'i‘<l\lf‘"l- 13-1-115511 oul. l1‘ inillioiinircs have grown likc lllllfillftltiilila‘ in (‘unadn under 1111- 111-0110111-1- influence oi one and 11 111111‘ 11111111111 dollai-s 111 1111111-5 1111 agriculiiira] implements,‘ 1I()\\' .\i.\.\'\' .\l!1.I.lON.~\IRi-I l*‘.-\ll All-IRS l‘ll) .\ l-"II-"lllz-ICN .\llLl.IU.\' DtI-LIJAItS OI“ I’1l()'l‘Ei"l‘l0.\1' OX FARM l‘l1(l1)l't"l‘S PIlOPAGATd-l .-\.\IO.\'GS'I‘ Till-I 'i‘II.-LI<IRS OF THE SOIL? Surely if the 'I‘:11'i1'1' is making millionaires at 1111s rule, 1111- 1'111-111c1-s have ihe advuningc _1e-n 111 o111- 111-1-1- i111.- manufacturers. 11101-101-1-11 i1‘ i1 i.- so increasing ihe I wcziltli 01‘ our people, both iurinlng 5111111 indusii-iul, isn'1 it afier 1111 1111 ‘comfortable buildings but he knows that his ho1)es:““""“i""'-" "W" “m” "’ "“"“'-' ‘l 11111 l0 11111111111- 11111111. As our 1:11‘ inc-r lricnd 111l111y1- YPIPTIW-tl 1o, ‘puts Ill, 111.111)‘ 111' 1111-111 l111v1- actually 111111011111-11 1111- l1--1l.~1 that 1h1-s1- (Ill: ltit-s 1111 1‘111'111 iiiiplciiiciils 1101111111111 1'11 111» 1111111 oi‘ 1lu1i11l1l1- 1-1-r1-11111-s. I -11 w»- 1-11111-111111-1- 111111 11111 coun~ 11-_\' i< s11 1-s.-1-111i11ll_v 1111 ugijii-iiliiir- p11 0111-, this is 1111 error, which any 111111 n01 conv -s11n1 uitli iht- facts ‘would 1111111r11l1_v 11111 into. ’l‘hc fuel. 1111111. only 11 MILLION AND A l1.-\l.l1‘ 11111111111 o1‘ duly is imposed upon 1111-111 couipuicnt, OFT 0i" .»\ TU 11511. l1l<I\‘l<2.\'l'E U11‘ ONE lllTN "URI-Ill A.\'1) FIFTY 151G111‘ M11.- LIOXS, :1 sum uinouming 1o less "1'-H1\.\' 0N1.‘ Pl-Jlt llii.\"l‘ 011‘ THE 1\\'1l(;1.1-j, will c- Tltl-llily 111- -.1n 1-y1-- openci- 111 1111- 1l1-111111:_11g111- agilgiturg ".1111 i1'1'~-s;,o11si11l1-. press stlflllblPfS. 'l'hen 1111011111- surprise to unin- ‘iornicd pcopli- is 1111- 1111-1 111111 over - Sl.\"l‘1-;E.\’ 0111,1110)! DOLLARS ,\\' f) R T II 01" ltlARill 1l.\‘ll"L1~J.\1E.\"l‘S WERE .-\11.\l.l'l‘- Ti-lll I.\"1'O t'.\.\'.»\I).-\ IN ONE Yl-Ikll (19191 FREE OF I)I"I‘\'. -'|'l1- s" goods. loo, 1-n111-1-1l into c111“ l Daily Selections g 1 Guardian Readers : Furnished by W. 8_ Lounon. voav-ooo-o-overovoaoooo-ova NEVER TOO LATE. 's 0. S. i '1‘o save l1’ we have hiicrto been syn-nd-tliliis. I 'l‘11 ho honest l1‘ we have been dis- - honest. I To he careful and 11111101111111; 11' we havdbeen slovenly and slip- ‘ shod. I ' To h1- considtarale and 1111111 i1’ we have been tIIOIIgIIiIPSs 11nd crucl. To form lhe huhlt o1‘ looking for 1111- good in (illiers inslcad of‘ lhc had. To give an encouraging word in- sli-zui o1 crllic-lsni and blame. To love instead o1! resenting 11nd ILIIITIZ. To be generous if w1- 11111-0 been 1111-1111 and sllngv. To forgive ~11’ w:- liziv1- i-r-cciveil link-ind drcatiiicni from others. T11 rlmllll-tilc 11' \\'t‘ 11111-1- 111-1-11 iii 1111- wrong. TODAY. 11111 once I pass this way, .-\n1l lhen—no more. dlut once-wand then, Door Six-lugs 1m 1111- l1ing1-s,-- (lpcns .. .. . Pluses. - .-\n1l~ no more l puss this way, Sn while 1 muy. \‘1'l1'h all my might, l wlll essay, Sweel comfort and (lclii-zlit. To 1111-1 1111-1-1 upon thi- Pilgrim W111- l-‘oi- no mun lifuvcls twice ' 'l‘h1- Grenl Puihwny, 'l‘l111t 11111111111: ihi-ouizh (Iflrknosfl 11p to Light- Through night. —Jolm Oxenham. the Slleni 11141111111 1111111 artlclel o! Qauadlau 111111111, upon which all o! these man ufnclurera are pictured as havlns developed into bloated millionaires a1 the farmers expense. Again tlils '1'111-111 has been wildly reprelenled as crushing the fanming industry o111 111 existence, \vl1h a loud of taxation so great that they can scarcely stagger under 1t. And peo plo looking loi- something to gi-oucli about. luiup at bait wlili o111 a moment of investigation. B111 what are the facts? The‘ wheat growing provinces, Albei-ia,Saskatchewan and Mani- ioba, represent one ienih oi’ 1hr duty puying population o1 the Do- minion. ‘Phclr portion oi’ duty on farm inipleiuents would, therefore. bi- 111 tiie vicinity of $150,000. ln u-heui zilunu last year lhcy had u crop of abuul $100,000,000, 111 ivhicli a $200,000,000 surplus was sold 1o1~ cxpori, 1-‘1-0111 111111 1111- p111- ii-y duiy of one halt‘ o1 one per ceni, deducted’ to pay customs d11- ty on their equipment is porn-air- L‘lI as crushing 111cm out of busi- nrss. Just imagine-one half cent 11 bushel on wheat woi-ih $2 1o $3 described as a ruinous and slag- g1 ring iaxulions This is exclusive o1‘ 1111 lhcii- other grains 11nd pro- ducts, which i1 included would further cut [Ills small figure I11 half. 1n the common sense view. ilie objection on its lace, is too ri- 1iiculous to be cnteriziineil by in- tclligent thinkers, wlieiher of ihe 1'11r1n1-1- or indusiriul class. .\'o1' would 111v farmers ht- CJYYIHI away by such childish nonsense l1’ i1 11-1-1-1- 11111 1111- those agitators, paid 1'01‘ by 1111- big when! siu-culuturs, whose business seems to be 1o dis 1111-1 farts o1’ 1111111111 niid duly, l0 dislrzicl. iho lnrnicrs of the coun- 11-_\', 111111111; 1111-111 to 11111111 1111-111- ~‘-I\\1.'1 1111- viclinis o1’ cruelly :11 1.1111 1111111111 111 indusligv, As uizuinsi 1111s duly 111' 1i 11111111111 111111 11 111111‘ dollars 1111111 by 1111- 1111'» consider his extensive offsciiliig 11111-'1111111g@.~1, the o1.1"1‘co.\111: or THIS SAM-E 'l‘.-\ItI.l-‘l~‘. ln 1910,- ‘ubout one hundred million dollars 11-01-111 of poi-k, 111-1-1, lambs and orlicr inenis was product-d in (‘ana 11a. Nolivitlistanding an IZVUPAE.‘ duly oi‘ $5 per barrel, over tweniy’ million pounds of 1l101ll~;'\\’1:1‘\‘ shipped inlo (‘11111111a. 11' the Fniicd Stun-s can scll 111111 qllilllllly of fresh and sull meats in illls coun- iry, after paying $5 a bu1-r1-l duty 11nd llien sell at 11 lower price 1111111 11111- 111111111, product, how much Wtllllll our fairniei-s meats 1lrop.in priu- it’ lhis duty was reiiioveil and 1I11_\' \\'L1‘e given free duress 111 0111- niiii-kcisi’ A child can figure (‘ontinucd on Page S. ' O'OQ-OOOvoQQQ OQQ-Qva v 0 - o O-Q - ' 1111 11111111; 10111111 dllcuulon hy correspond- entl of queotloni of inter Charlottetown Guardian duel not g lrlly ondoroe the opinion: cut. T he a i (‘lilo column In open for lflv expreuod by Ito corru- pondcnt . x . -~ ~vvwvvvowooawfifiwwv+w ATTENTION PRESS COMMITTEE “"77 Sli-.—.\ meeting of’ the 'I‘e11cho1's of the Province was held in 11.111- P. W. (‘allege Hull during EXIII-lll‘ lion wot-k, but no report ~01 such 1-1- on his farni lflllllblllslll. 11-1 11s _ moi-ting 1111s yet appeared in 1111» newspttpci-s. Will tho Secy. of 111111 ineciiii-i; inform the public who‘ were the officers elected what dc-l clsion was arrived alt re holidays nndl oilicr mntlors of‘ business it-rkinsuci-l 1-11 111 said nieel-lng, 11 11m Slr etc. TEACHER lElll-I SHE GOES AND THERE SHE GOES Sir: ».1\ icw 11113-11 111:0 1111- P111- riot i-onluineil nrllclcs copicd 11-0111 1111- "Itectirder" and 1111: "'1‘¢-i1- graph" and also a statement 111111111 111' .\lr. McKenzie King that 1111- Llln-riils and United Farmers 111-- y1-1- conlciiiplnlcd I~‘1‘1~c 'T1'111l1-. ()1 c1111rs_1- not. Only a few weeks 111:0 x 1 \ $1.50 to $2.00. We continue are sold o11t. '@ ©©©@©@ta©c~ iooooecooe <1 @ ,__,@@>e@@@@ o Iii‘ low prioespleaso you or lzirgc assortment interests ;,o11 haw a look at our stock oi b- ots and shoes. H Just received and ua y large ot of Ladies, Men's and Ch'ld ' ,1 1 _ . _ castor, fawn, brown, black, etc, l ren S ‘pa s are)“ taupe Child's corduroy long leggings in white, red, 010., (to, Ladies’ Slippers 45c; Ladies’ brown boots $4.95. Melfs high grade boots at $2.00 to $4.00 discount. IGOFF BROS LTD. 11? 1111:1111-51- as, 1. =1 Farmers Record. - "AND a Account Book c1v1z11 AWAY 111121: 1o new subscribers 1111i old subscribers renewing their subscriptions before 1nd oi cunt-111 year. 011ly limited number available and first comeis will have _tl1e pieiereiice.‘ ‘ COr-utdnts INDIVIDUALS, account will, INSURANCE, BILLS an ' PAYABLE d goings INVEN'I‘ORY, general INVENTORY, residence LIVE STOCK INFORMAJION MILK, BUTTER. and CREAM ACCOUNTS IUORTGAGES, BILLS and N()’1‘l-.‘$ ltECl-JIVADLE ().-\'1‘S, cost ol’ (1A'l‘S, sold 0r {e11 tlltvllAltll and FltUYl‘ .\11s1‘~1<:1.1.1\.\:no11s 1-11011171-11; 1'—'1'lll11'l'R Y, breeding record POULTRY and EGGS 1112.11 l-Illll-JS 1111- 11.11111 ANIMAL},- lll-Ihll-JUIICS, lillllSl-JIIOLD Sl-Jiill 'I‘I-IS"I‘ING‘ Slll-Jlil‘. cost o1’, 11nd 1111111 S1111) llldCUlll.) 'l'll1\<"l‘()lt 1015110111) \\'lll~.‘A'l', cost of‘ \\'III'I.\'I', Slllll u!‘ IHI .»\l'TO RECORD BANK, account with BLANK (‘OST ACCOUNT BREEDING, record 0t (‘ALEX DAR (‘ASH REUEIVWJD (‘ASH PAID 0L"? (I.-\'l"l‘-l,k.‘, cos! of t‘AT'1‘LE. sold 1‘0.\'1‘RE’1‘E PROPOIVFIUNS CORN. cost of CORN, sold or fed DAIRY HERD, cost oi’ l-IQITIPAIENT A('1f0l3l\"l‘ EXPENSE ACCOUNT, Iiuuscliuld l<‘.\l{l\l LABOR, rl-uurd ul’ til-INI-IIL-U, INF()lt.\I1\'l'I11N GHSTUYFIUN 'I‘1'\lil.l-.‘ HAY, cost of HAY, sold o1- fed HUGS, cost of IIOGS, sold llf/Iitil-jh‘, coal. of, 111111 \;11I1I Send your renewal at once and 11111 i111 lree copy oi Farmers Record AND ' Account Book Ch’tow1i lilltllfllljllbmsullSgvtllliplltllll Dept. .; 1111- I'£lll'llJl 111111 an 111i»- $111111? "lt1-1-11r1l1-r" 1irii1clc ironnany 1111111s11-y 111111 could n11: 111:4 iinigiiilfvlni;711211111- should ho 11llow1-1l 111 ‘n 1111; ln-aiiiics o1‘ Fix-c ‘ 'l‘1-.1d1-, All 110w in the 111cc of 1111.-s1-1l1>1-lar.i- this is poor cuiisoluiioii 110w 10,lio11.~1, airlit-lcs 211111 the Libm; iliose poor l-‘rcr- 'l‘i'zi-le suckerslplalioi-ni plank can those palm-g who \\'1-r1- pi-ziiing ,1111w pi-oieciion 111111 .\11-. King deny thai 11193-1,’ ' loivci-cil pi-odiictioii 11nd 101111- ilie 1-‘1-1-1- ’l‘1-11<lers 11nd 113W Dream,’ 1111-11 011' 1111- farms. All the wind i1 i-lglii up I11 1111- 11111. Bu; 111111 expended around the 1111-111 lcgisla- 1Il('_\' find 111111 the people 1m lt- lurc, pi-luizliing I"l‘1‘1‘ ‘Trade, Il£l.\"Il"1‘1l1lIl(‘1I 1o pay-no nticniioii 1o ‘o- 1-11 losi. 1111-11- nonsense, lliey change like .\11-. King would want 11s in l11--.1l11- 1-11111111-11-011. li1-v1- 111111 1111-1-1- 111-yer 1121s 1111_\ ‘l'l11-_se pruplv 111-e boosting M1. 1-111111-1111111111011 111' l<‘1'1-1- 'l‘1"-.11l1- 111 K1111: 11a 11 izi-vai 1ir.~1101-, Sure 1111* liilrvYfil 1111111111111, while 0111- olllliing! 'l‘l1:11‘..- all riglii, B111 1911111- 1111.- pliiuks in 11 is 111 p111 zigricu‘. iNuilonal Pai-iy organs rclnember 1111-111 iinph-inciils, u-liicli form 111c ‘ no: 111 ‘most 11m highly iiiiy oi’ their largo hulk o1‘ 11111- 1i111n111'11ctu1"1-.<. spcakoi-s, s11 that when they 001111- 1111 1111- 1‘1-1-1- IIHI. .\ir. ll. J. ;\lc.\lil-‘111 sin-alt 111 1111- 1111111-111-1 111111101 11111 who spuki- in 1111s province 11 ins-lance. thcy- will not fall below lcw ilays ago in 1'11\-o1- 111‘ 1111- Unit» t‘.\111'1'1:1ll1l11, 11111 rise 111love i1. 1-11 Funnel-s pi-eachcd l-‘rcc ’l'1-.11lcl .1 11in, Sir, &c., 1111111 and leri 111111 111-1-1111-1-11 111111 (_‘R_-\P,~\[][), Fire Insurance II a matter of vital lmpofl- ance t0 every buiinggg mayp Risk: placed with first clan companlen at mlnlmum rates. Iiyllllllltlll 81 C0. 69-61 Queen 51., Ltd The Olden lnnurnnco Agcn-oy 111 P g, 1, .4 priced at a lower profit than over an 11n11s- cloth or ielt $1.60 to $3.25. @@o©@@o@@@@ m" dim" day Prices o_n several lincsrunlil all 0 THE FAMILY BOOT STORE ("T111 "P351116 1151(1))