l lowed rthe lelicthy (hydra-day 1v- ‘f ports s1 ca, legislative sews on the 1'~ grooming himself for the hustlngs. ‘ leader-fond the inember from Rus- ' bee'a position . pame pourtesy extended to the Gov- 2 i i l ii t . ' ‘ Itieiuarwhw- ‘Blllllifllllllllllll cannons _ . , , A , . , __ LnlHW ‘Ohaitw a uotaiwlrl- Ilarlnllllnl. an. h Secretary-Lian -Co| II A Iaellauou. 0.1.0 . nit» and Managing Director-J I Durant. I‘ JJ. j IIIIIOIIII Idildra-Prllk Illhr and D l. cnrrla. Dublin Irish Indbpendent: ycarthei ‘ ofmarrisges “fining Duly IIIINIIOIIWIU W in you (in advance) deilvqcl. .50 per year (in advance) mailed In Canada arurllnlted Mates. SATURDAY, MARCH 10. 1935. {LONG DEBATE Guvqzdian readers who have fol- : sxq well as to motoring. Draft EAddreas, will scarcely stand .111 nedd of editorial interpretation pi’ the} speakers’ remarks. The de- bate, which began on March etb. is still in Prvsrcss, havingbeeu pro- tracted unduly by the tedious ex- mgipyj; into the gieid of Dominion politics by the opposition membe This Elfilghfl be excusable on gm p“; o1 m, Larabee, who, as one o! the nominated Liberal can- didates for the County in tho next general contest. was presumIl-bly pect good will from others." and during each season are wit spots made unsightly, streams mad other kinds of rubbislnand unnec stances it is due to sheer careless I ness. To check such sets. But phat about ti." °Pll°im°n citizens would. no doubt. be taco? {Is it true. as Mr. .1. a. Mac- Donald suggested, that Mr. Lara- is insecure and that there are designs under way to giafplaht him‘? Be that is it may. ma Opposition can scarcely com- plain the latitude given them by I» Qeakcr, though Mr, fIhaue A. Qasrmbell was loath to have the to preserve the destruction which it involves. crmntit suppurttrs, and. objected ‘uqqinusly to the curtain being lil- gd, (up, tor a few moments, on ‘n; jmgwrable Literal convention mid in Charlottetown! 1t ii over a week now since the premier challenged Mr. Lea to say whether he wanted a Royal Com- mission to investigate the Govern- ment? bond transactions. The Op- position leader's refusal on that oc- casion’ to accept such an inquiry, arm- fhis boastful statement at a Divers‘! meeting last fall that i: sl- aetedghe would have this matter “investigated? effectively diapered of tire issue so far as thinking people; are concerned. But there is anoth§r element to which the 0p- position is apparently not above savoring, and Mr. Cox was the chosen instrument yesterday for re- peating the insinuations. Challeng- ad bygthe Premier, Mr. Cox cut a humiliating figure, being forced to admitf that he hadn't a shred-u! pooghvith which to "back up" his abatement-s. "I was only thinking"- an alibi which might be offered for any slanderous misstatement-was the only one the Liberal member imd give. Mr.;l..el=age‘s neglect to inform the Altorncy General 0f "lllmmiP tion"§whlch he professed w have aboutirecent liquor conditions, and hi irresponsibility when his own Government appointed a. bootieggor to enQorce prohibition in his own distridt and under his own nose, so to ‘sagas, were brought out in the toured of Thursday's debate. ‘Ihef’ Government members and supporters bod ample material with whichito defend the administration, and we an putting it mildly when we any that they used it to excel- lent It is significant that sei- the most part the Opposi- tion, and not the Government, has been ‘on the defensive. This was avlderitly in the mind of one of the Uberal members, Mr. J. A. Camil- bell, o; the Fourth District of Kings. who oiprxsed disgust at the length to which the debate had gone. and said he was only spcaklflil WWW“! Qvcrybbdy, apparently, was doinB S0- when me opposition members get tired ‘b: their own eneechmakinir- what hiust the country be thinking o; thorn! TOIJNTRYMCOURTESY EDITORIAL NOTES land. r ...-.__,- more than summer time. out reminders of his birthday to- happiness throughout the year. "Do you remember?" in today's Fox Notes,‘ recalls some interesting rcminlcencea of bygone days in fox show competition. With a commission to probe the alleged laxity of enforcement of the prohibition law, some valuable in- formation under oath would appar- ently be obtained from Mr. La>age and fvir. Rigs. ‘For ntra ‘v31: a5 the other all about tlu wholesale. Th8 is from ‘mommy's Globe: “Potato prices were pegged on the Montreal Dairy and Produce Mar- ket today at prices averaging 10 cents a. bag higher than previous quotations. Associations of dealers have been formed in various cities to bring about higher and uniform prices, it was learned. Quebec No. 2 Whites became 55o to 00c per 80- pound bag and Quebec No. 1 Moun- tains 05c for similar quantities. New Brunswick and. Prince Edward Island No. 1 Mountains sold for ‘l0 cents for flu-pound bass. This price is confirmed in yesterday's market report. Previously the price ranged from 60-660. The sudden and unexpected iii.- ness of Mr. Bennett has, and is still, musing s. great deal of anxiety taiesmen at Ottawa and and assurance was given by l. spee- Stevens had found a. clot of blood on the Prime Minister's heart. word which Dr. John A. Ollie, the n, ni-dor in preserve the amenities Ii the? countryside in England. pat- rols are to be organized this W81‘ b" thq Council for the Preservation of Rutal England. The duly of thc Countryside Wardens, o5 they i" harmed, will be to persuade, educate and l§clp the public to keep the various rural resorts unspoilt The wardéns will be volunteers and will work in rec-operation with a num- ber of other organizations. ,- V; Maijliy, the duties oi the patrols ‘m m of an r-ducative character, Ind it; is hoped to attain the desir- q 05sec by; persuading the uubr 11o to bbserve a courtesy tode. This includes, among other requests, the roilowingi... - Pieqn dime gates. molt iniure fences or anythinl be g to others. “only an hour," and that the heart condition discovered by Dr. Stevens had developed sinrc. In the Federal estimates for this year appears an item of $200,000 to assist in promoting the tourist business. In explaining it Dr. Man- ioii, Minister c! Railways, who also has charge of ».the new bureau. said that in 1929 the tourist in- dustry was worth $809,000,000 in Canada. In other words, the sum of saoopoopoo was spent by tourists coming to this country. Owing to the depression the return; in 1933 fell t9 $111,000,000 on the lam! balls of calculation. It is estimated that in 1934 the tourist traffic increased about 25 per cent. over the pn- Ma a point of burying litter or vious year, and there is good reason it away. to expect another increase during _ you go, leave the place as the coming year. ' you uhd it. - Avbllf cirvinfyouruiame ‘or in- A heated controversy has been go- i"! 91!"! T9199? PWPIP"! W" the. action of the Hepburn-Roebuck Government" in boycotting the lieutenant Governor. The Mail and hpira pirbiimea a aharaetsristio ‘etampis aimed "Ontario Lionel." . ‘Where inof- bllla ‘tis folly to be who." ' that the members of the ' an" annual m; ma»: Iii i» mat ,_ rowing crops such as. has. civvvr a; fiihtqam someones livelihood. 1310mm spoilt if laid not. - "out 3m Irfijel. "which applies to walking and cycling as The Golden Ruls which the or- ganization desiru to have observ- ed is, “Good will to all, as you ex- It. would be a good idea, says an exchange, if some voluntary organ- iaation were instituted m this m country. mach summer sees ‘brongs of visitors proceeding countrywards, nesscd‘ an epidemic of fires, beauty the depository for empty tins and eatery damage caused. In most in- many only too glad to co-operate. They may be somewhat diiildent tointerfere on their own, but if such a movement was organized and they could show they were acting with some auth- ority and with public support be- hind them, there would be no heal- tatlon in exercising their influence beauty of the countryside and to discourage the ‘lbmorrow is Erin's Saint's Dary- tiwt great gift of Scotland to Irv:- The old Car Iibrry Prince Edward showed her metal in negotiatin, the pessago in an hour-only 20 minutes Mr. Joseph I’. O'Brien has sent moi-row, wishing his many friends about the retail bootleg trade, and‘ politicians generally. First reports were that he had developed a cold, lalist that otherwise he was all right. But it was learned later that his own medical adviser. Dr. R. S. Question; concerning the reassuring Ibrorrm heart specialist, gave last week. elicited (the observation that Di-{Oille was with Mr. Bennett for consl United States of high percotnage 0i’ 6i with 62. e Dr. Iirnst M. Hopkins, of part- mouth college has been to Euro made him question the deanocracy of this continent. "You gothrough foreign countries," he says, “and see all the population reglmented in a sinslc epeclfic loyalty to e. definite government; and come home to find thousands of different forms of loyalty. giving lip service to the theory of liberty, Notes By The Way _--$‘_i& .. r sonata IJJ u“ cele- brated in Germany was 121.000 more than in 1932, This is a rema-rkebie increase daring that the mar- riage rate formerly in the Reich was higher than in most other countries. In the Saoistat the other extreme has been reached. It appears from higher than in any other country, and that Illa-Princes take place at a comparatively late age. This per- ‘ of males unmarried at the aces 35-30 years was so in 1936,09 compared with 45 for, Germany and iamiandwaies, ansserorthe milk ‘_ ' Sweden oamo next to the Boerutat with a unmarried males. Northern Irehnd following P9 and what he has seen there has Culbertson Expoes System (New York Herald-Tribune) Ely Ciulberteon, who says he has greatest lsinl and publicity organintiou in the world. told members of the Sales Executive PUBLIC FORUM Illa alan- la open for the discussion b: vwrllblllvl" a] qnatlall al throat. The lharlafletaiu Guardian in: no! , nuclear/III endorse the Ilillivl" “fill- ‘Life Insurance is Club ofNew York at a lur “ the Hote Bavlenffif-Dt themGoxvntamraiotC that ti: You ‘cm ~ fear aoghtbo also pteaenthotltiolis De persons OBTAIN of his wn ‘ and chan- this country at each-age is much ‘u’ mu actor :1 hlrwife. ‘VITAMINS IN THE COMMON . ' FOODS ' His talk the absorbing in the detail with which be outlined the intricacies of his publicity methods. He told sales executives that the only way they really could sell was through an undo 13 i8 only during the past ton o; fifteen years that you have been and reading about vitamins. Common ‘foods such as bread and are now having vitamins put into them and are sold at one or ewo cents more Der loaf or quart. Now there is no question but what this bread and milk are worth, to children particularly, much 11101-3 Frankly, Mi‘. f‘ ‘ ‘ that he wasinot the cocky, smart- aleck. conceited and rveady-to-fight a/t-tlie-dmp-of-a-liat person he has the price charged because vit- tried to mains the public believe 11mins are so necessary to the grow- himself to be. heartily. I610. in! child. his wife was not the shy, diffident, As you know, vitamins are not m . foods but are body regulators ——help W "Slime and strengthen, where pizblioizeilove. He satdit was all "Wee-SW the srowth and devielop- a stunt to make them one ma" °1 £118 bOdY- As they are sup- of the best- coupln in the illlodinthe foods we eat itisof WWIrLG-‘fld badaetout WW” important that foods con- to e the name Oulbcrtson sy- mlgmfl the-W vitamins be eaten nonymous withoontraot. - If we in ed .‘"*" see s: maria‘: m“ “new f“! tionsheleaiviedthemass mind. It ,Wlnt. “ many have a mistaken conception of liberty. They confuse it with license, which is a different thing altogether. ‘Iirue liberty does not mean doing what you please, but freedom to do thing's in e. reason- aible way. It is the privilege of going to school, not the privilege of play ing truant.—-Ha.rnil.ton Spec-tater, One advantage the Indian boy and girl have, The old magnificent stories of this land, despite long use in school books, seem rmver to have lost their splendor and frwh- ness. Every generation revels in them. Europe is less fortunate. The corresponding tales of the Hebrews have become staled for youth. Simi- larly the old tales of the English are “his ," school work, not friends for the leisure hour. 'I‘hat is why so little is known about them. Arthur and Alfred are not so vivid and in- spiring in their land as Rama and Sits. and Arjuna. and the other great Indian figures are here. In some countries of lihuope there are legends that in living force are little behind those of India, but they are few. ‘There- fore what the Indian boy gets from the stories native to him the Euro- pean boy has generally to get from made-up stories about soldiers and sailors, pirates and smugglers, and other characters, in keeping with the exeprience of his people's hard- fighting adventurous past-Cal- cutta Statesman. The lnceuant obtruslon cf pills, booth-paste and corn-cure adver- tising over the radio has aroused in- I veirtmsann rowraiiiosaraon the market subject to remote control, a wire extension with a wooden disc and a button. so that a person may recline on a. couch at the other side of the room or in an. easy chair and whenever the speller starts his spoof you can press a button and he is silenced and when he is through a. lifted thumb allows , the program to proceed. When - body is doing it the opposition to national ownership o! radio will vanislh-‘ibronio star. Lord Snowden slys that Britain’ increases in her military and air forces are "tragic." Tragic they may be, but what can be done about it? With Russia boasting a. Red Army of 900.000 men.‘ with Mussolini talk- ing oil Italy having an available array of 9,000,000 men, with Germ- any re-athiirig, and with the Unified States and- Japan voting hundreds of millions for armaments. is Britain to sit idle? She tried harder than any other nation for dis- armament, Balg-aria has hilrrled a complaint against ‘mi-key to the league of Nations. I'm-key has countered with an assertion the; Bulgaria is doing what she has iwcused ‘ma-key of doing. It is the old Macedonian question revived by trouble in that region. In acute ilorm it began in the eighties of the last century and has fie-red up periodically ever so often since then. It might be re- gardedag the foundation of most Balkan troubles, national and inter- national. It has been the cause of nun-ivy nuirdcis, massacres, ris , tortures and actual wars, It is in part a struggle between Christianity and Islam; but it has gone for from its original religious meaning and is riddled with secret moieties and baokstair politics. Greece, Bulgaria and ‘Ihirkey are chiefly involved, but Albania. and Yugoslavia chip in. while Rurnania, though not strictly speaking one 0f the Balkan coun- tries, has been implicated. Since about 500 B. C. Macedonia has given plenty of trouble, except for the 450 odd years Turkey held it so rigor- ously 1n subjection that it had little chance to assert itself. Who are the powerfufiand‘ souroful of the earth? Those who early become most depende upon __ m4 oourleslcs of life." The writer of the letter adds, “I used my nom do plume of Ontario Liberabwiaicli after this, or at the next election, will be anything else but Liberal. I'll vote dead against that —.-- -—- Hepburn and his party. Bu is a false alarm; a white elephant, and the Liberal party ought to con- sign him to political obfivim. He his put the hibeairsn Liberalism in’ Ontario." Another \.va pondent re- calls the fact that it was Senator Hardy and the Beauliamois crowd at Ottawa who forced Mr. Hepburn! leadership (tn-the provincial party at the famous fixed convention in ‘lbrontc. The convention was under senator Hardy's orders and voted lilel a flock ofsheep. The writer ma. m» Liberal dome hatched 0B lit ifly dbtllifll!’ ~ .~ ‘K o! i W“ 171511)’ now thinkytiriafirllltam have been overstreseed, that a5 our ancestors lived a lmig time and also was his wife's idea that he apply this knowledge 0o contract bridge, he explained. ourselves without knowing anything mash we; h“ go {mud g gyp “W” mm" "WY “law be so 1m- he explained. t took Pmm‘ "m" “"- . Then we to sail Vitamins are important; they am w‘ necessary to health and life but the 1113191111? O! 1m get all we need every- day without knowing anything ggizglélkfitldlllst FI-‘OéIsBPDEH-B tlhat we 9i’ 0 regular that wntain all the vitamins. y "DP- Jel-ll B08911. Professor of Nutrition, Kansas State Agricultur. a1 College. says: “The most prim- tlcal general rule for increasing the vitamin content of the diet .15 to t!“ lflrger amounts of whole milk, fruit-e and veaetabies along with butter, whole grains and eggs." Some other "general" rules are: 1. A quart of milk daily for children and a pint for adults. ‘Phat is if milk does not constipatc. d‘; Some raw food at least once a. 3. Two cooked vegetables (aside from potatoes) daily, one ofthem a leafy vegetable i; possible. 4. Salad at least once a day. 5- Plenty 0! 0811s and butter; occasional use of liver, kidney or other organ. 6. Use of whole ducts. was an opportuniw. to gain intellectual parity. wit/h their hue- band. ‘Ilhen we appealed to the husbands. We worked on (moi;- fear instinct. We mods-iv; almost. tan- tamounttoahameriottoplay con- tract. Finally, we appealed tp tilic gambling instincts of both. Anteri- oans an natural “ , applied the bvrakos to . thereby gaining social armoval and s1; the some time the opportunity for gambling." Then he went tnto their publicity methods-methork which have built the business into an organization whose payroll barges between s10,- 000 and $15,000 a month. The or- ganization has 4,000 teachers over the country, all 0f whom sell Cul- bertsom. lessons to their pirplis. Eaoh is a salesman of Culbutlon ‘bridgeandeachpays tioayeer for the privilege. Irmteed of ne- ceiving "e royalty on his books Mr. Culbertson fo ’ " a publishing company and paid the piahltefic I ceridts for every copy the publisher so . He built up his wife's nanie so that she 1mm for atsdry ziempapers overly day. He gets publicity by writing for magazines, and the magazines pay him for it. He gets publicity by writing and appearing in moidon-pictum shorts for a large company. He has tied grain cereal pro- 7. When butter, eggs, and fresh ' fruits cost too much for the pocket- book it is important to use more rriilk, canned fruits, leafy grains. vegetables, liver, and whole _ 1mm "susszx" his amortization in with big bun- mosa. One firm circulated 8,000,000 I "W" Bel between the pixies pamphlets about him and it did B“ I “"11"” 50am w; not cost hini a cent. He said he , Nor I never come on a. belt of sand ithmight the company wu misc-t in But my home is there. Al"! B10118 011° Sky the line of the . >50 noble and so bare. tying up with Mm. Romantic Glencoe (Sydney Post-Record) Another largo Scottish estate is to be put upon the market. ‘this is scarcely an historic family hold- ing, since it is the property which the late Sir Donald. A. Smith, first A lost thing I could never mug Nor a broken thing mend: And I fear I shall be all along When I get towards the end. Who will there be to comfort me, Or who will be my friend? I will gather and carefully makg my friends Baron Btratlioona, Canadian High o‘ the m9" M u“ 5W5" Weflld- Commissioner and during the They watch the stars from silent 39¢;- wm- mg gpqngo!‘ or thy folds, They stiffly plough the field. By them and the God of the South Country My poor soul shall be healed. I; I ever become a. rich man, Or if ever I grow to be old, I will build a house with a deep atch To shelter me from the cold, And there shall the Sussex songs be Strathco Horse, purchased in his native Scotland. The property 1n- cludee the residence which he built, with its seven reception rooms, seventeen family both-come and seven bathrooms. Them are other houses and lodges on the seventy-five square miles of land which stretch from Argyllahire in- to Perthshire. Like others of the landed nobility, the present Lord Btrathconn wishes to dispose of his real estate. Within its limit _is the scene of the tragedy known as the “Massa- 'cre of Glencoe." The valley of Glencoe is bounded on both sides by almost perpendicular moun- tains, mnro than three thousand feet high, and is traversed by a mountain stream, Osaian‘: "dark torrent of Cone." After William of Orange came to the throne, the situation in the Highlands was a W118. And the story of Sussex told. I will hold my house in a higli wood. Within a. walk of the sea. And this men that were busy when I was a boy Shall sit and drink with me. —Hilaire Belloc. .;'__.1;"_:; themselves. Long ago the poet ox- messeo the idea that we build the worry to the government. The ladder by whichwc climb! And each Highlanders, no longer actively round lifts us to a higher plane of hostile, refused to lay down their vision and of understanding. The arms. In accordance with a pro- morre weread of the ideaandachlev- clamation, however, all the- chief- mente of others. and the more we tains made submission and were ate with those of a. higher pardoned except Ian of Glsnooe. nxntal plane than ourselves, the Be allowed the prescribed timeto pass, and the evidence that he had offered to take the oath at lbrt- Wiiliam was suppressed, probably deliberately. ‘through royal care- lessiivss, the bug's name was ob- tained to an order to extirpate Ian and his MacDonald clan, and this was carried out through subterfuge by a rival clan under the leader- ship of Campbell, of GlenLyon. described as “the chiefest and $311139“ fomentor of trouble in Many sensible resolutions were pcssedat the recent meetingofthe» Nova Sootla Fish and Game Booieg in zaelifax, but the one aiming xieeatiiearehreameimenaoe Character is higher than men intellect. We rise upon its solid rounds. day by day in a higher Joutofthe na no. l which we were born do we emerge and thei- tbe character which we are. tmm every evidence of beauty grandeur with which we are en- at birth. do we-acquim the to be eomebod y, better more influential. Each of a "unique." What a pity ever-y human being is o the privilege of do- according to his nature and to the true lama of life. world about the bind tbatris pulled teat its neat cantata l E 5 880- reputed birthplace of Olaian. tradition, Oasian waaa Gaelic theaonofnmagrvatwarflu. maianisaaidtohavebeencarried away to "the isle 2E tilt" éfigng; can. raxas , Bin-I received “ tlon forms ‘ for operator's license and registra- , tion for the year of 1035 and in looking over the list I find that tbe~ majority of the farmtrs have oars from 2,500 to 8.000 lbs. ‘line? have to pay from thirteen to six- teen dollars before they can oper- aie their cars. I was speakinx *0 some of them and they said they would have to lawe their car in _ this as they have not the money to pay for their license. Now. I think when the funnel-s have been so hard hit lenis. Lower Queen Street MARCH 16,195, Good Property to 00pm good pro r1 go . __- keeps families from want- one” y o“ ll dance in old age. Information as regards Protection for policies for the Children, Policies, and Annuities. Let us help to solve your Insurance prob. "'.°l'.“" 8 I Y = b ' 11w Home. Euwefiilhtiii Endowment or Pension indvpen. IIYIIDMAII i& 00., immzn Provincial Managers-The Great-West Life Charlottetown with the dellression these last two you-g the government should give the farmers some consideration. I would suggest that if the govern- ment would re’ the license to about half the farmers could af- ford to operate their ears. Hoping the government will take this into consideration and have it IKU I I am, Sir, etc, I‘ Buy the y Best TEA Brahmin Orange Pekoe Ceylon Small Loaf A~ Scouting Stands for Service FROG MARKETING" NOT ROG MARKETS" Oirr- m the Guardian, issue of iidardi 8th, there appears another of these "anonvm " con- trtbuirtom. with which. our news- paper pages halve imfortunately been rather liberally adorned dur- ing the pest few nwntlm. Ilbis time it is commie: our effort to extend thatwi". the better e/n- to market their products effect, invariably a. deluge -o<f time advice is offered through the press, ostemibly in the interest of the “poor producer" and issued as a warning against fimthor encroach- ment upon hisliberty, individ/ual rights, etc. These contributions are muallyaignedlnwchaway that ti: unwary may be led to believe that their sponsors belong to this; calculating in the preceding . a keeper" 013$ o; stancm is fair acorn-ate is i“ r yuw," who“, We“ March 1924 a ca: of hogs loaded at hardened sense 0t responsibility for their brother's mlvation, is only unseeded by the extreme Umidity displayed age-tract novel-Tins in ‘he secured was 0c per lb. dripping point. This car MOM/mall» and sold 0o per 1b., difference of 3c per lb. mu prlom. We are satisfied tint numerous does not require anything like Scotland Yard intuition to see that the piuwnse is "spottyfi Witnes tin facility with winch before h undo to the exact price received for a favr oaroalaes of dressed pork thirteentoflttcmyearsagoltiscer- tainly refreshing to acute e. “prio- dsoer" so obviously methodical in befillngdeizailed ’ olhisbusln- mes tremotions that he can thumb over andcnt data with such ac- eumoy and ease. men again please note the ntaffter of price; 15 7-Bc pwlhljustiimegintgwlthnorket u. nalgtgdmnrvbgifioh it “H, m“ ~,‘,""’°h°“,°.. “""°'*i ‘W011!!! have bBen to Ni‘ ‘ ‘ "‘ tosoveoieonowevemtsnowsaeeh mmwfihmfl" "fw- besgaiiflmhendenclesonchepart 151°81'94- throug tihemsdvutobe lured awayflrctntheirideaisand again thieiroy ofthe speculum. We feel that the ardent ofmarketixigddgestgrlvenahouldbc sutficiogrriutlttgmiuatifythcetsfdemenstn made waruilnsini . laments rqaorior- got the idea; Your . It was - evidently then, during the period of nus-ket- ing tion, when better op- portunity became available to the femur, that the podldon o! the "small packer" became miteaiabie, and his eventual demise canned. If he could not exist, emfliinl at these "utterance" remain, substantial and e really under obligation to "Producer" for giving infer-fruition notoowideofthemarkinmaldng ,, ,, m» ems w who a we unanimous? “can”: “M, "w" dguuiifi 'e':omemed nothing to provent any buyer from .. - .. .. purchasing “dressed hog!" It 0M . ‘“°“""‘“ m‘ h" time the price Damn,“ “ mmdemftly mmpm°d Inability to do so mas his deem. He quotes buyers paying as i-ao _____________________ have translated the Oesian epics into English. The tales had an im- mense sale and were translated into the principal European languagesbtniuoh in Macphersorfs - .v denounced him and there were many incredulous. On Maopher- aon'a death and burial in West- tliiriltor Abbey, with perhaps more ratification than in the case of Old Parr, the controversy flamed alien, in e IDII “COMING! with fill ' |.§\x z-vuuemnlslbhrnd-KMQJHIGW (L. ‘mw aerhulfilnesflamaui-ivebtltitfl kfiiiéifi MMYS Condition Powder . Pu- lloraea 5 Cattle. Tum no the Imam. cures all shin trouble! and gives p, {any coat 0d hair. For swel. legs, Purifying the Blood and as an lradioaior a mans I in an mama; Remedy. moswmrarauaomm forrhanorbeaathrrprsm sonnets. i- Alidobutrflnliavae CCIUGIIIBHWBIM‘ Relieves Coughs, leans, Infidel-n and all m. faction of the Longs of iior. eel. 11$! “emissi- fn the gent of Iornray XII (lilo!!! llfllllly u. mm a». The Two Macs henchmen: a Specialty. Elli d Qpflhnuitol extension workup and field organisers, such condtflucus hem vanished and we mu flonvc. movelnmt. Iihe fact of the minor is, flint the fairnes- 51013133‘; ivns i "cog in the irhcci" an rmllbe he did m! ft. Ckgonkriiion. has liven him a new WWW" and ha now insists on taking a Legislature all _ 0b ted, MI- iaw "me opposition ti; o’ m” swerinl and Mahatma Bracken. ih! Ills! ‘flten, had to come in rescue and explain W‘ l |. \: i‘ v-ils) lirfiUl ' ' . I .. s i l!‘ ~