bati jnsi 10X)! PAGE FOUR TIIE GIIAIILOTTETIIVIII GUARDIAN torts av m: luv The strain of political life is ieil- I. IQIJPW e Irealden0—W. Cheater lee Editor and Managing Director-i. l. Burn!“- Aaaaelata ldltora-Frank Walker all I). I. Currie n "d. llorning Iiaily (founded Iii-II) “JO per year (In advance) de ve use per year (In advance) GRADE CROSSINGS crossings demanded by the public u Canada and United atom. ruasnar. nncnmn l. l"!- something that would help us to good since the arlntlns are»; I become and keel! civilized. and The cost o! elimination oi grade‘ m", w u“ h nlmmu. expression‘ is one of the problem just now fac- ing railroads in the United Biatel, as in Canada. The Public Service Commission of New York State has made public a list oi I70 railroad grade crossings which it has ap- haa been perverted to the lowest ities debated until the family that regularly listens to most of the flapdoodle it exudes runs danger garities." For a few scattered hours eac proved to be considered for elimin- week" Dn Degbmt udu,‘ some indi- ation in 1932, at an estimated total, vtduul or wrporution one“ 50mg w" 0f 072-039-000 BY 1""- m" ‘m’ auperlatlvely good instrumental 0r'the Cabinet Ministers and those same thing-bad news, misiortune,'t h lu-ought about by the com- m" °f 3"“ “mam? eumkmmm‘ 01111989111 ""1550. 0'1‘ "19 “wulhts M ammted with "m" L‘ me tn?‘ nnxicty—all have an effect not only ‘brlflleadeflfilibfl of cloudbursts and the: mil-St b6 Plld b)’ the Ylllfmids °°n' aninternationalflgure andiscontent m” “dmaw ma“ in the street ' cemed, 49 percent. by the state and with mouestcmdit gm- tho ggntl-ibu- 'kn°ws “me of‘ 1 percent by the county in which “on But the” hmgmmmus a“; the the work is dme. At a recent hcar- ementhnh The mdio public i, now ing before the commission on a ten-‘ “hm to hhten to thousands of gully tative list of new projects for i932, urging! u, huy u“ w,“ 0g mgfchan- the estimated total cost of which due‘ nnd whut not‘ ull‘ t; you please was placed at $28,000,000 aiwmelliin the "public interest, convenience for the railroads protested that the‘ and neggggityj’ Dr, DeFol-est points Commander oi the Canadian ex—‘ companies were in such serious fin- the only why h, h solution of the peditionary forcgs A’ ‘ t ‘h ancfal straits that they would notmmhlem when he say,‘ u, conciun Bayer: a- $0111 F “m: ‘w; be able to continue costly grade Ion, crossing projects as heretofore. The new projects now approved call for an estimated expense of 810,000,000‘ less than in the tentative programntion of their sponsorship. Advor- The list includes forty-eight new projects and 122 projects carried; ed and where it i3 nut forcibly over‘ from the i931 program, which, been under consideration this year but now de- it was stated, have lermined upon. ' The estimated cost of the new pro- lects is 816,771,100, and of those carried over from this year's pro- gram, 854,067,900. It is stated that the 193i projects remaining unde- termined were carried over into the 1932 program in order to preserve the commission's jurisdiction. Fur- ther hearings on such projects will be held during rear. ' I SUGGESTS REMEDY In a letter published in a ‘Ibmn- to newspaper lvllr. W. DfLighthall, honorary president of the Union of Canadian Municipalities, suggests a means of checking the large num- ber of motor accidents, fatal and otherwise, which disfigure the sta- tistics of the country. He points out that many of these accidents occur at street intersections and contends that at such danger spots foot passengers should have the right of way; that, indeed, in all cases of lnjury or death the absolute pre- the motorist. Hc argues that this would be only fair, as the motorist has only to check his speed sufliciently on approaching a crossing to pre- He notes that there are not enough po- lice available to safeguard D049!- tria-ns at more than a few corners 1n any city, and puts forward the proposal that every citizen who sees an offence committed by a motorist should thereupon become invested with the powers of a constable for the Pllflwees o1’ Prevention and ar- rest. lib‘. Uflithaii is persuaded that aeha-ugeinthe lawineachof the provinces is imperatlvely“ required to this end. He feels that with such legislation on the statute books the Iatalitiu and iniurlea at street cor- gq-u would be reduced to I bu“!!! sumption should be ‘ ‘ pent __a_ccidents of any kind. u their present number. SCATHING CRITICISM t 11-.- ‘vl scathing ci-itioimi of the gross uiai pur- poses has been made by nr. Lee De resent, inventor oi the vacuum tube and "Father of Broadcasting." We quota from his statement recently abuae oi radio for wmm published in a contem, change. liatea : "visitors from foreign coun- tries must wonder if we're entire- lly crazy when they listen to ‘radio's nightly caterwauling and flagrant offences against good Possibly they wonder, as ll do, why anyone should want to buy a radio receiving set. or, hav- ing bought it, how they can bring itaetp. sky 6X- It is applicable to this country as well as to the United ‘ "Direct advertising is out of place in radio, anyway, though worthwhile s p o n s o r e d pro- grams should be permitted men- tising belongs in publications where it can be. read or disregard- rammed down the national throat —or ears. The American public has bought more than twenty mil- lion radio receivers and is surely entitled io get something from , Ylec-Preaideat-J. l. Burnett retary—Lleat--cel. II. A. Iarllllol. D- 9- 9- ing on those at the head oi adian affairs today, Premier R. B. Bennett is off to Europe sent there on the advice of his physician land,‘ ‘_ friends to obtain souls little respite , ~ dutiw. - Every Canadian will be pleased to through cable despatchcs from Emgland that he is rapidly regaining hL! hel-lth and that he look at the darned thing! Radio ‘a "mm" Wm‘ ‘m’ m“ °1 strong from his arduous learn caption in limgland that an to. Senator Gideon Minister oi Labor is in THF CHARLUFTETUWN GUARIUAN What fibbp 0f .- inure Bu jumes W. Barton. M,D KEEPING AN EMOTIONAL BALANCE Can- _ a 'men and women are unable to l. $10M 0f m9 demgei commercial use and its posibll p_rial Statesman is lustl& 12th:‘: ‘ze how ‘he mind in less tortufztelcurate m that the high It ls unfortunate that some of our; minded and ‘tron: hound date than the first and second ver_ Concerning I The Deluge (Montreal Carmel i m", hug cropped UP Whit 55 called a third and new verslfin of the deluge, this time advanced by l Biblical and Semitic lalliual?” 0‘ Yhh, Unlvtuuity, The interpretation t, bu“ upon a study of the ear- n" ind lum- documents referrinB to the flood. llw 11° ing, it is believed, of a later and more ac- -water mark dividuais not so much to do in the period is placed at five "mum" the o! infection mun m diseased vuh hospital taking a rest and under- ismmy going medical treatment. Hon. C. h H. Cal-urn. Secretiry of state has I Everyone has experienced what The amended thesis dlflerfl way they behave mentally, and phy- duration instead of the flirty dBYS mentioned in the 3°01! °f Genes“- from happens when bad news arrivesprevious accounts. it is said, in that been ordered to the West Indies durmg meal “ma No mo" food mime great flood n depicted not as for rest and recuperation. burden borne by the Prime Min The bunt and tempting food. every organ in the body. Now although your heart works Mann‘, Gene,“ _|_ |;_ E Sea), away, and your lungs also when you commander 0f thl cannhun are asleep, when your mind is at Cavalry Corps during the Great perfect rest, nevertheless a play, a WM‘ has written a book h‘ which picture/an accident or other things, lchawlnglcal an altercation be_ will cause your heart to beat almost he recounts ‘ween General s“ Sam Hughes ' twice as fast. and your breathing be- beglnning oi the war. soldiers came to blows over relative merits of the Canadian This and South African soldiers. story recalls an incident in life .01 the late King Edward d ingla visit to Germrny. It is s that during a, review of the troops that the Kaiser called for a duzcn picked men, and of his Uhlans, then turned to King Edward w the query: and General “Do you think you could find a dozen of your Guards come much faster. This shows that your mind can ai- fcct the rate. at which the processes work in your body. Anxiety, deep the iixnixv miillllrs at n time. the ur- aid 1th ccsscs.’ wanted despite the previous hunger-Rh; result u; continuous rains, but Yet this very rather as an overwhelming catas-l on the stomach but on practically tnundutlun 0g the sou, The “foun- , . |talns of the great decps" were‘ ‘broken up and the lfllld Eubmefgffd by a tidal wave Ol’ ailillllllllz dlmen- t Zion. Futhermore, we are told that this view is supported by the ar-l researches of Prof. Leonard Woolley, who directed the ‘excavation in the Mefillpfllflmlfl" ‘Valley ' That there are various and ex-‘ tensive traditions of a vast flood Study m. concentration m. otheriwhich have left their indelible 1t was but the other day an ex- mental or emotional effort can actnmark "m" the literature or the pert’ astronomer uaily stop the digestive processes for E150. every Person Who ha! H1000 within the calculations o! modern ‘any study oi this deluge episode is when, thu individual gets mm_‘fu1l-y aware. ‘Tradition, broadening dyed million “light years" distant tally upset easily and often, then an dOWXI lmm Drwedent V? Plecedem: from our little planet, ciicct upon various organs becomes “hi8 ll-‘l Blfllllflcance- It stands 5m‘ outside this circle there 8TB 11185565 almost continuous or permanent, ‘some truth. The flood story can}; nebulae which suggests that had and he is unable to do himself jus- hardly be dismissed as a monstrolli ‘kwe only more insistent lnStrl-lmfllll-‘l ticc at home or at work. These ln- myth. Over such recitals the dii-‘thls ulterior gluudy envelope would dlviduals are not only the ‘failures’ lfjculties regarding time and space burst into u galaxy of stars the in life; they are often the ‘suc- intrude themselves "D011 u"! mmd- fellows of those already brought iLet us remember, however, that if th beld l d ti f d , ‘ bLfcfns‘ pgymlgngmon° auff who would beat them?’ King Dr. L. Alkan, Berlin, says that the the awesome smpe o; the thing muhileu and dlggugflng toilet uu- Edward paused, then quietly ailments caused by these emotional narrated presents u stumbling cessories," observed: "I don't know but I zlisturbairces sire due to the ‘restiess- blush‘ the textbooks o; the flstrQno- SHA W'S FAME George Bernard Shaw's claim to fame is dismissed oontemptuously in the posthumous biography "Ber- nard Shaw" written by Frank Har- cot of textiles socistes during the early years o his career. Han-ls, who died recent- ly, was prominent in literary circles recognized as an sound critic. This is Harris’ sum- ming up": “In biographical dictionaries a ‘ thousand years hence Shaw will be mentioned as, ‘Shaw, Ber- nard, subject oi a bust by Rodin. Otherwise unknown.‘ " Shaw may well reply that the same biographical dictionaries a thousand years hence will probably contain even scantier mention oi Harris’ name. EDITORIAL NOTES "By the way," comments the Ottawa Journal, "we didn't notice the name of the Hon. Charles Dun- ning among those at that Liberal pow-wow. How come i " Mr. Mackenzie King, comments an exchange, is being provided with a committee of twenty to keep the leader in touch with Liberal opin- ion throughout the Provinces and to handle the party finances. In the next general election there will be no sugar-daddy in the shape of Heauharnois. Bo far as disclosed Senators McDougaid. Raymond and‘ Haydon were not present at last‘ week's eonciave of the faithful. In Germany it is expected that the unemployment peak will be England has been learning actull isolation town. . is about be seven o’clock in the evening hours earlier in the West. hours oi social relaxation" whom the parents have no c band moved their job is to provkle children with social standards.” This comment Fortnightly appears in Review, reached in February with a figure of 0,500,000, and that it will aver- age 5,000,000 throughout the winter. By that estimate, Germany is worse off than other countries in an industrial way. The Fathcrlands organizing efficiency has been ada‘s unemployment will handled much more than the corresponding problem credit of the Bennett Govcmm that it has not followed the acknowledged in the past, but ii does not seem to be equal to thel present universal emergency. Thirty-five pure-bred Ayrshire milk cows from Ontario and thc' Eastern Townships of Quebec herds‘ are on their way to China, and will themselves to listen to the hours i 0f diseonant hOOQY that P0"? from It "when I first visioned’ radio broadcastln! I saw a. sreat instru- mgnhlity to spread QdIlCItlOfl. m4 plaque for us all: Dedbly the greatest influence for Iulllife lied will win favor there also. ion and left unemployment to ment has no concern." hit In be glad that difficulty, struggle, and tuil‘ hi!!! f0! Iranied that they will dukness of right with wrong. It square ourselves u) give satisfaction.‘ Canada's wheat 1-‘ 0 Rivet thing to have a moral and flour have achieved fnmc in the nature md it I‘ a great “m” ‘n-quut o’ that which "Wk" "lrnfil “mi 3nd w" 0mm mu n mm ‘ha,’ h" “ve_‘wh!ch to fight to mrikv ii rue and‘ii'lelll. and to the . dempti lstrong. Pray not. than. for magic first which makes us beautiful, mm of which to drink, u", is impossible- Events thousands of miles distant may have more important influ- ences than happenings in the next sent out after midnight, which, "allowing for difference; of time, will Eastern Grnada. and two or three Our thus taken into full consideration. "When a child becomes assocht‘ ed with a group of friends with trct, th; situat'on is as false and hazardous as if the wife and hus- in different social circles. Yet this is the situation in multitudes of families where par- ents do not recognize that part of their London. "There is every prospect that Can- successfully the United States. and it is to the ample of the Hoover admlmstrat- dsnit with in haphazard fashion, as a matter for private charity °i-ity_ 1t W55 ‘with which the Federal Govern- politics. The and debates. be followed by a consignment of “mo” hjghways to worth are fmqon Feb‘ British Columbia Holsteins. Thegg 22"“; ‘t’: "‘";°:‘?°'“°' fine animals are to be used for me in m very nanm,‘ is a wartto breeding burrow and ll may he fare or self with sci‘, of light with way made smooth; think I could find hill’ a dozen ncss’ of the successful and the de- who would try." ‘pression of those who fail. Many persons are equal to such stress, but in the nervous or neurotic person can- recent months says the Boston ‘not adjust himself. mist that What hgplzien: iltomstalztiwhich manifests itself in despair smgle paragraph in the cosmical’ A catastrophe such as the deluge As a means a goo ea wor - l - ‘ llli llttl = - ‘ngmm ‘n Lancasmre‘ The ‘my ienvy‘ anger or honor in some‘ or in treatise and a m 0H Yell" e ‘.s not so monstrous that human lm This lack of emotional balance in India threwfltestless hastes in others, causes a i . , _ _ th uynds or men out of 101m ‘disordered action of one or more oi m’ ‘m: or Shaw! most intimate as no: they are being taken back "U10 organs-heart, stomach, and in- f because the Chinese bomn (intestines, gall bladder, the skin, duct- iess glands, and so forth. This dls- ‘ _ iipfiifpfifioiittlf gsctlzgsfd °rd°r°d action may gradually chance In“ membm- 1°“ by “h” R‘°h‘“d' m‘ fifllklenillg “lid “Mbmsm? i‘ . ' . , h I d I th B k f n nun“, o‘ a century ago and was ‘on is an fight in theory‘ but the the structure of the tissues forming 5°“ t e °1m e1’ ° e a" 0 still remains true that many of the exceptionally modern world is so complex that an organ‘ mers and geologists must amlefl?‘ equally beyond the bounds of rat- nal credence. For geologists tell ‘us that the span of our known his- tory as human creatures is but as a Jewish religion, cannot take a the vote being 21 to 5. The Eng- |Montrcal, fought fcr Hart, but m. Paul Romanoir. an ‘inert 111i |for Biblical coloring, for the habit seat nor sit nor vote in this house," Mysterious Night! when our first l parent knew Thee. from report divine, and heard thy name, frame- ' This glorious canopy of light 811d blue? ' Yet ‘neath a curtain of translucent dew, Bathed in the rays of the great set- i ting flame, Hesperus, with the host of heaven. v came, And lo! creation widened in man's view, Who could have thought sucn dark- ‘ ness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Suni or who could find. Whilst fly and leaf and insect stcéd revealed, That to such countless orbs thou niaclst us blind! Why do we thcn shun death with anxious strife! ‘ If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life? —J. Blanco White more than the odd tick of the clock. announced that Magans there are stars three hull- aild that within human view. Now a "Pght" years means that a light-THY travelling at the rate of a hundred and eighty-six thousand miles per second must be multiplied by 11$ many seconds as there are in a year. First do this little sum. Then multiply it in turn by 300.000.000— g1 1i you can. aginatlon cannot conceive it. Allow ‘o! primitive folk localizing what may have been general, for all their ‘quaint’, gossip, wonder, magical w material he- 'Did he not tremble for this lovely‘. i i l | _'_: LMBER 1. 1931 on the sea, on land, peril of flre and lightning, of automobiles, of accident, of sickness. In our modern life we are surrounded by ' perils, and that is why we employ the system of insurance to protect us financially. We are in a position to provide a complete insurance service, and welcome your enquiries" for advice and information. HYNDMAN o ca, Ltd. The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E. I. Charlottetown Lower Queen Street, [T IS ‘HARD TO EQUAL THE FLAVOR AND AROMA OF i BRA HMIN TEA TRY IT Sold only in Red, airtight puckages.‘ ablcst experts concerning these some of us inherit these nervous P19!" Bedflfd, “l? 119W)’ lea-dill‘ 0i long-range ccsmlcul strokes are oi 111169. rights than the native born (ignor- tendencies and almost always have i‘ the campaign against the governor. fopinion that the “cradle of Oili‘ to fight or control them if we are to arsed that 1f- w-‘a impossible far a ‘i-aoo" ikecil our mental or emotional bal- dlaturaiized citizen to have more Tigris and the Euphrates, and that lies somewhere between the at some period between the Paleo- lf we would just remember what ing altogether that Hart had been iithu; uuu Neolithic chapters in the Prof. Cannon oiI-iarvard, and other A“ 13mm" bmflcasflng serflccicsearch men tell us about the ef- "° be inaugurated by the tfects of the emotions on the whole British Broadcrsting Corporatlbnfbndy‘ n should Strengthen our e1. A high-power station will be built‘ at Daventry, Eng, which will give‘ a daily programme of twenty-four hours to the whole Empire. The forts to get real control of our emo- tlons. A Notable Centenary conception is magnificent. It is hard m “Slim” the ‘muymg (Fred Williams in the Mall and effects oi a progamme mainly of Empire) Britfhhnew: a‘r“\d“Br‘ltlsh zintertiin; Th“ year is the hundredth Q1526 izrnmghiui n“: $3)‘; anniversary of one political de- The broadcast for Canada will be in 1831 that Lower Canada granted poiltlofll equality to the Jews. The demand of the early Jews in Can- ada for civil rights is one of the romances of our history. A few weeks ago I told about the first Jewish settlers in Lower Canada and their share in the develop- ment o.’ British institutions in this country. They had early proved their fidelity to their new country by flrr-nciai aid and military service in the defence of Canada against Arnold and Montgomery; later they were to do their bit as soldiers in aiding in the defence of Canada in 151214. But the first stage in the struggle for civil equality came before ti-r-t. In 1807, Ezekiel Hart, born at Three Rivers. was elected to the Assembly of Lower Canada i01- Threc Rivers, his native place, receiving 50 votes to 41 for his nearest opponent. When the Legislature met on Jan. 29. 1808, ‘he went to Quebec, but declined to ‘take the oath in the srme form as ,the other members and insisted UPOYl M! rlBht to be swom in the Jewish fashion, which 1mg dons, The next day he took his goat among the English-speaking min- B fiery period in French-Canadians and Sir JrmesiCraig, the gqvgrnof. were waging a bitter war. They in 5T3 011 ‘ the be in ent 6X‘ be this ls a‘chailenged the constitutionality of world whose angels are named l Hart’! ll0sition, and, after bitter a resolution was adgpfgd £0 which asserted that HTt. professing the but let us the conflict and pledge ourselves to the con- o.’ nctetml. W! ‘filed-Mash Wells. born at Three Rivers). Thai; end- lcd the matter for the year. Another election was held in ‘MW. 180B, and Hart was again elected for Three Rivers. When the Legislature met April 1o, iron, ihe took his seat with the English ‘minority and was allowed to vote; ‘but nine days inter, Mondelct, one of the Montreal members, secured passage by 24 to 12 of a resolution declaring that Hart was the same person who had sat the prevjollg velopment in our history- It was 5351MB 1011001941 by another whichlslnce this Suhmergence declared that he wns di5qun1l,‘ied_ 'Then on May 5 Bedard moved the 'same resolution o1 expulsion as be- lroi-c. This he followed by the in- troduction of a bill to disqualify Jews from sitting in parliament, Its third reading was fixed for ozrricd had not Sir James summ- firlll‘ dissolved the Legislature, tell- 1118 the members of the assembly: "You have dissipated your time 1n P8881118 acts which appear to be, unconstitutional infringements of,‘ the rlehts o: the subject and re-‘ Dugnant to the very letter o1 the statute of the Imperial Parlirment‘ under which you hold your scatsI 0nd t0 have been matured by Proceedings which amount to the der-‘eliction oi the first pflnglples u; natural justice." H!" Wlthdlew at the elections which followed in October; and there the matter rested until 1829.; In that yor- a bill was introduced m the 5539mm? t9 8W6 the Jewg u" "BM w keel» resistors of births marriages and deaths. It wal, Passed practically unanimously,‘ but royal assent was refused. An amended blll. passed in 1930, was 90110 l0 Eflkland: this was assentcd' ID JIII- 13, 1531. 0n March 16 following Mr. Neilson, u, member: for Montreal, introduced u, bill: whereby JGWS were "granted the’ Pflvllaees as those‘ fill”!!! b! other subjects oi His Majesty in this province." This "being passed bcirme in time William IV, c. 5'1, and is regarded ‘as the magna charta o.‘ the Jews of this country. It may be wunh ‘noting that while Paplueuu huu ‘sides with Bea-rd in mo he laupported the 1e ‘ ‘ ‘ on of twenty much aggriev- ed because when the rebellion broke out the Jews did not aide with him uuu hi; allian- ' Mal’ l5 and it would have been‘ history of the earth there occurred {u "zoological break of the first ‘magnitude? 'I‘he words are those ‘of Sir Wililuln Dawson, the well- ‘known former principal and vice- chairccllor of McGlll University. l-le ‘said: "It seems also certain that the main determining cause of the . Ichange of geography and p0pll-‘ llation was n subsidence or submer- ‘gence of the land, bringing the sen for a time over the whole or the greater part of it, the has not been restored to its origin- ul extent, large portions of the Paleanthropic lowland of Europe, and probably also ‘of Africa and ‘Asia, being still under the sea." ‘Does a deluge give us the clue to ‘oyster shells embedded in the rocks atop of many of our hills? As to the time element, which plays hob with many of our estimates of Bible narration, any student knows that "forty" was used to indicate ihe completnes of s. cycle, and was not meticulously used as the archaeology cannot be spelled with Think About Xmas Gifts N O W NOW 1s run TIME 1-0 MAKE YOUR. SELECTION AND navr: US r-u-r 1-1- sway FOR YOU l! you are undecided h t you intend giving h" wthai, Year we would advise you to look over our asgngtmgnt o; ‘Kcrawniv’ Toilet Sets, the finest makers of toiletware in "l9 WWW; also Ausco Toilet- ware, Premier. Griifon, p143, ll "l quality that you want, then you will make no mistake in 0119051"! these makes. w" W"! these sets in Rose- "IPAYMWP. Pearl - on - umlwh G"""°"'-'\mbfI‘. Maire and Green; and “Kuystonuh-i "u" est creation. Black-on-Peurl All at reasonable prices. ' sat: ova WINDOWS and you will find ih "l6 I"! Y0" have bbtlflfiiik-‘rlfl; for. THE 2 MAGS . PHONE 315 and that , land _ uiumerlcal climax o! tour tens. And f‘ nHUQ-lnfillcfthnt Sbewnotcd.‘ "their Tmpi-‘tasslons and their‘ best folk who gave us their vcrson tifjuiignlclit. Do not we modemigtu the deluge spoke or wrotu according do lilc same? rwr. ..-v-__r_. ans» - _. PURCHASER/S BONDS HAVE CASH VALUE ANNOUNCING . our: NEW Cash Purchase Plan A SIMPLE, SELF-WORKIN G PLAN THAT ! SAVES YOU MONEY ON EVERY CASH PURCHASE. tuav.... 3%.?’ ' N December 1st we are introducing a. per- manent new system of CASH SAVING. For each and every 25c. you spend in this store, on and after that date, you will receive a CASH PURCHASERS BOND. You can then use these BONDS in this store just the same as money. We will redeem them, At Their Full Face Value-at any time -in any number-on any purchabc. These BONDS mean an additional Saving on prices that always represent ihe highest values obtainable in quality of goods, and of‘ service. There are no strings-mo conditions. Just make sure you get your BONDS—then cash them here whenever you are making purchases. NO THRIFTY BUYER CAN AFFORD TO OVERLOOK THE WORTH-WHILE SAVINGS THESE BONDS OFFER. _; FENNELL s CHANDLER HARDWARE MERCHANTS " i Phone 87. 155 Queen Street. k CASH PURCHASER/S BONDS SAVE YOU MONEY ir-‘rflha 53s: run/t, w» ooc BISCU ‘ leg. trade Mari Highest Class Foxes With Superior-Felts Result from regular feeding of lMran o..ii.s” IVIANUFAC'I‘U‘.{ED BY IMPESAE. fill, LTD. Box 4-16 (T31 Pfi2tn".'li, P.E.|.‘ _ ‘.-...-_..1-_J.._. h: i, ‘ 9752-10-31-121