ur- ‘\ LAALQQQAAQA n A vwvvvvvvvv v-vvv Iii not .>._ 73w"; canbe Canadian Sweefmeat WAR ‘BOOK FROM THE PEN RECENT MUCH-TALKED-OF | OF CANADIAN AUTHOR l ‘LONDON, March 10.-llt was a .‘Canadialll after all who vvrotc "Tilt: ‘Pomp 0i Power,“ an anonymous rcuenl war hook whose gem-rill ico- noclastic tollc and bitter attack on Lord Bcnverbrook and his Calla» ilian staff at the Ministry of infor- mation ill particular, cnrilcll much publicity. Laurence Lyon. formerly lzllvyci" in (‘anada alld later a nlenlilcr of the liirltisll HOUR.‘ 0t‘ Conlmons, is tile author. Wright. in a review today of “Tin: lPatll to Peace," another Lynn book. Mr. Lyon was engaged in propu- ganda work for the British and lFrencll Governments and during the war wits put lll DOSSQSaI-OII by the French of co idcntinl docil- ments Wlllull enabled ilim to coll- tribute a new viewpoint in llis posi- war writincr". lin ‘his latest book ho gives zilmcst the only correct published account of the battle of Cambrai. and has incidentally this to say of Cunadai-l (Jovcrllortlcll- cral: I “General Byng used scvcn ilivi- slons. ~lll a single movement. flit-l‘ arrived almost at the suburbs of Cambrni. ‘The ilbscnce of ilecess. 5y forces behind the ilitnck launched by Byng was not. tlic fault. of the latter." Mr. Lyon docs not. how- ever. divulge the reason for his hostility’ to Beaverbrclok. CHILD SMOTHERED BV STRANGE CATS DONIION, .\larcll 10-All inquest has just been licld on the lil-lvecks old child of Norman Stacey, of Ruxwell, tlllssex, The mother said she leit tile cllild asleep in a per- nnlbllllltor in tile porch. Wilcn sho wcnt. to it later two strange cats jumped off the baby. wllicll died before the (lot-tor itrrivcil. Dr. iHenry said death was due io as- pllyxin. caused by the anlnlais ly- ' you wax-wraillled and sealed lo states Captain Pcterl. What we, have eaten and how ii is “agreeing with us” m a k e s a l l i h e difference in the world. In work or play, WRIGLEYS gives {he poise and steadiness that mean success. only helps digestion, but allays thirst, keeping the mouth cool and moist, the throat muscles relaxed and pliant and the nerves at case. ,WRIGLEY’S ls the best that made and comes to WHY U. S. CAN NEVER as SUPREME ON SEASilmd will“ "°‘ ""8 “""'°"' “'9' GPI=NE\'.»\. that the Hal n; tsoilsideiriilg llisp ' t-rnnlellt-illvilt-ll s ucrluircvl llill'-| __ lug illc war, recall ftlrillcr Premier. ll.l(i_\'il (‘lixzrgt-‘s prcdictlilll that tliei iilnitci! Status .\li‘l'i'lllll‘il . could ilcvcr ciluill lllc l3rit.ll. 'l'llu .\lail and lfinlllirtl rorrcspoilil cut iravclll-il witll llinl 'Jll his s-pc tlic clluilccs of Alli .11 supre "kcll ilboili cltu ousting England nlacy of tlic ~ as. llc said: um Britislii-i" is at born sa... 1 ericnn is not. the Am f! merchant lTiiiFlllO. acy." <po>i- ~~ POOR HUSBAND GETS band of .\ill'5-. Smilll Nctv llriglltrln Assembly Rooms. lic will also ilcsigil (llTNSCS wllicll tlic lllullilgcniciit will prcscllt as prizes. lic says that until llc ob- tained this L'lll]ll(l_\'mi‘lll, bc bad only an urnly pcllsillll ill‘ $2 a lvcl-lt on which to livc. .\lr. Smith Wilkinson tlCClZiP-‘S his will‘ first cilgilgcil llim a. com- panion to her son, and lllli‘. wllcn the sou died she asked him to lake the boy's placc. Afterwards thcy agreed to marry. Mrs. Smith Wilkinson gone to South Africa. "Sllc in‘ coming back ill a lllolltirs has 110w time, l bellcvc. but l shall not re- ing cn tile child's face. irfvub-aveww~l..w._ .. .J*7'-‘~/I"' ‘ ‘ join llcr." v ‘OQ-O-OOQO-OOQOOO-QFQO-OOOOOQ-O AAAQAAAAA v vvvvww Let us repair it RIGHT. We also make Cilesferflélds and_ We re make and lea. Scrape and p ture. k‘- v a OOOQOOOOOO-O-OQ-QO-OOOOROO-O Now l. the TIME t <5 l ' 4‘ ; p and reupholster your furniture. We_ can do it-and do slip covers for parlor suites-- recover mattrl-s» ollsil old furni~ Choose from our big new stock of furniture coverings. ial prices when lsame are used in our We give ‘spec- .‘_ 6 ’l‘llil.<e who ilavtltlle sea-faring instinct arc not suffici- ciltly llunlerous in Anlelicn t0 man l1 have not the slightest fear of Aluericilil suprem- JOB AS A DESIGNER LONDON, .\illrcll lll,~——'l_ll(‘ llliH - Wilkillsiiil, lllC wolllall wllo ziatilllisllcil Iholldilll lust yczll" by her illlzuszlnrls ol cil-‘tly \ll'l‘$.“l_'~‘. - sccurcd an cngilgo- nlcnt as dc Danse at the i-larly durillg the 10f the world. western Guardian -vv: ARE ‘IE-TAKING pota- toeu at our collar on mild dlyl, at highest. market prioel. M. Kannedy MONTREAL, “arch 10.—Alarm- lug increase of diabetes cases in the last few years were indicated by Dr. i. M. Abinovitch, of Mon- treal General hospital in an address at McGlil University. if diabetes increases during the next forty years as it has done dllr- ing the past forty years. it will rival tuberculosis in its menace to the rat-c, and if it increases simi- ' following forty years. it will rival the total deaths ul le ‘There are over a miilioll diabetics ill ‘North Aemricu. declared Dr. Abinovitcll. That diabetes greatly" affects mor~ tnllty statistics was indicated by figures given by the speaker, show- ing that mortality from all diseases combined had greatly diminished during the last forty years, but. l" with respect to diabetes, the re- verse was tlic case. Allen's treatment 01' starvation had been applied until it was (lit-i covered that persistent slarvatiol: had not the power to rid illabelic." of sugar, but insulin treatment had proved successful in the treatinc-lt of this disease. Charlie And la LOS AJVC-ELES, Calif. hiarch idiot _Po'a N(‘_L’l‘l. Polish motion pic-it“ nilullccd she had broken off llcri engagement to lllarry Charlie Chap-I or effected. “ "The whole trouble came zlbout. silt» continued. “through h §lutv~| nlclll published in a ltewspapel‘ that he said this is zlway trom emotional affairs climaxes of sentiment. "So, of course, I broke the gagement. en- W "h 1n__r|-l,.> rppoytlllim and 1 have taken llllll back- ‘iillllllilslflliltlll isi g u. the (;U‘e_I'“ROYAL" CANADIAN lrlne. cial lruill from Lui-t-rln- til 7."l'lll.'iilll-":E1cf‘ wiiell llc was ill S\\'liZ(‘T‘l1li1‘l for ail‘ ~ , holiday ill tlic slimmer of 19201119331 Ea“ad' "Aln-sricirs bid for aillvtllllzltey‘ of‘ tlic seas will lull because she will find lncll*f.;i" her ships. _Tl16 .-And_ 5m 0g course, l lbelicvctl cl AIR FORCE lN FUTURElr llllc Department 0f an Air Force. _ »-4-o->——~ ~-- 'POPE'S GOLDEN ROSE FOR SPANISH QUEEN from). lllurcll 10.—-P0ll€‘ Plin- ill Mnv will revive one of the oldest customs of the lloly See wllicllfcll i111.) discard illnrc than twenty‘ years ago, when he hands inc tlol- deulRose to the Quccn of Spain. (The Golden Rose made up of a cluster ol’ roses and buds on ollc stem, all of solid gold, in tlletinlc gone by was givcu elicit year by the Pope to the Qllccn who (luring the year had performed illc most to lllakc up the iliifcrclltwe in szil- " ary demanded by Eddie lloush, star outfielder of the Reds, and that offered by the Cincinnati Baseball (llub was suggested today by ll. D. Minoes, ll merchant. when he snld he would put lip $100 and requested 100 other men to (o tlic same. Polish has not signed with tile Reds to date, because 0i’ a salary difference. Relish held out until tho middle of last season. because of a salunv difference, before hc slgllcil. {Oi-in- NO COAL EMBARGO WASPIINGTON. March 10.—-(‘oll- ditlons governing the supply cf an- tllrncitc cnzll do not warrant the laying of all embargo against the export of anthracite to Canada. the interstate Commerce Commission llnclnrcil today in n report to the Senate.‘ ' field and a i u rll ed 2nd. 1913. lill, screen comedian. early tllis,h_,u_k_ and 1W1 H“, morning. lllade another aunouncc-| mg mm H“, awn“. lllfllll lllfll 4* l‘9°°"°lll“'ll°" "ml lmwltbing but tlic bumpy‘ roads and lauuliiiil: burial. ""1"? Nlccc batteries, in tiling hilt tlic white tiust us wc filllllll’ flllll lleilvvfiii landscape. Four Years Alter Bl 5 6°" Brlmflbul‘ a2 m"! 1mm lng the stroke of zero hour when Clrwll F- 5- 3"“! c-M-u-n the attack on the Canal du Nord America Halls “j ‘f’, h, . lliiilfllii 'l'.‘?.§‘€;..“'§.§$§ “£15.95? Million Diabetic ..‘.S::.'."'"‘" “ " ' " EZZ.""".“.°E.JI.‘Z ::t":..":t.ii.°tii: Sufferers -~>"*""“‘“*”‘““* iill‘.“...'“°..l.‘Z§f..l.’2Zi.“‘°nYL‘.§.'L.l‘£ The village of Feuclly is onlyjuat being restored. When we redoin- ed me lgrry and brought it back through the village. the road was so bad that we feared we should have to abandon it altogether. How- ever, we kept on taking l1 lllm to the right. till at lust we reached the wide Arras-Canlbrui road and sped ollg it at a good rate. we came to the cross-hold which‘ We turned up this and climbed the hill on which the village of Mollchy Stands, ill, too, is being re-huilt. but l5 still very ruinous. From the high grninld we obtained a splen- did view of all that wide battle- aoldlers‘ monument there reminds lis of the 22nd Bat- tuliuu which illnally captured the place and suffered so heavily in do- n will be a long time be- fore the beauty of the place is re- stored but the glamour of war will 'givc it distinction ill the ages to PORK‘. v From Monchy we made "our way back to the main road and, paga- ing through Vis-en-Artois came at We dowil the one which was our jillnpillg-tiif pluce on September -lil front of us on that tillten this place at 4 tfclock in the l(lli_\' was tlic Droucourt-Queant line |wllicli we hull to break through. Makeup.\\'i~ t‘lll‘li(‘ to the SPO! WIWPB. With 'ltllc lllen oi‘ the 2nd iBrlgade. ll had \\‘0rk getting the place into shape ”—” lt-l-osscll ‘the road on the morning again. ll saw the courtyard where Something of the old I had nlade _ my heart as Ithought lure trugcdicnlle. who last night ail-Mr m“, 3.10pm“,- (lay when, across 311g to M011Cll_\'-lBt?i‘0llX. g so. st to the Dill-y cross-roads. that ilay. rill conic to tlic fields wi- bad seen the crowdsll li-t our men flll ‘their bottles. ‘We (lcrnlull prisoners being sent lll-‘okcll trccs llo\\' told the tale oi‘ tlll- sunken road we went, pastthe ‘war iluys. -l was dcicrnlilled to get to Cogni- Cllarlic llail said he was 100 pom‘ t0 court, so we continued our way to be married. Thu-t newspaper Sillll lielldccourt, tlicn _ turning to the a workday “Wild left made our way slowly. for the and llc had to stay busy and k001i road was ill bud condition, till We ilfllllcanlc to tlic village which We hadl ‘captured on September 2nd. Therei as no doubt that poor old Cagni- But last night ‘Cllzivllc court bull ill-cu ill the wilr-zone. came to see me. lie 5W0" '_Q."'“il§ slrilglzllilg bravely t0 00ml? til-road arc broken and half dead. in that be had never said such n ‘t ‘lnl-llilC‘ again. bill ‘Flllli and desolation He said he had talked tor no news arc oil l'\‘t‘l‘_\' sltlc. pang!‘ at all. He said he loved mc.|nlind tlic dressing station by the road whcrc the wounded were gath- "eil on Fll't‘it'll9lk~‘ until sent back iii llorsc ambulances which thread- ed iiu-ir course through the crowds of linlbvrs and marcllilll: 'lllen, pass- ' tlic wily lnaily dead bodies pious deeds for tlic cllurcil.) _ ‘_' "llll llfllllD- A jnhabitams m; we em red the Neither 1'lus X. nor BencdlctXV. low lllilkP-ll l?" ll c "’ll'(l(_‘i'l Dtit town At l“, we ‘Vere 820w“ ma sent the Golden Rose to any queen. "'ll_l'l""_“l‘ " "'1 101W!!! now hotel of pretentious appear- The last time it was bestowed was “olP “ml ‘ uvllich Mme and’ m, entering‘ found m“ by Leo Xilfl. who conferred it upon glllllllli _l>_‘l _ ll" ~ _\"1ll ill"! ,n-1 tho lullcli llour was long over. it Queen Amelia, of Portugal. Prnvl- "iv lllllli till-ll ire-ts _ ll. lwmnd be son“, time hero" we ously he had given to the then I l“'"‘“l ‘lllwll vii" 1'1"‘ "Jlcoulil have a special meal coqkefl Queen of Spain, Marla Christina. lllllifillllsfllllll‘ h1g0? Fm‘ us. "l'!lc waiter seemed rather <0>i~~~ 1 4 ’ . la c SI ' curly find crlt lf"‘llll(‘l t liil t FANS “CHIP m" SALARY ;l‘*;"ll"\l""l'l-' H" srhlvmlicr 27th - :i'r WHPl/l. iiv 'll(l1i if“; slag; "r0 SATISFY so. ROUSH l? W’ ““ "l‘°-“‘-‘"“l ill" Cllllfll l!" up however wc ‘lci llllll s mov. —* "mil dim“! MS “M” a 11°‘ lull and iii-nib- irwi n sllfilllllloiiil CINCINNATI. Nlafch l0.——.~\ fuuil p ‘l l" ilalil. On cucll side 0f men] 1n a lal-gi. .||n;,,’_._,,m,n wmch 1mm” m" lilfil Kfvilt iililiifk were behind 11s. spcd ()ll\\'i1l‘ll, marred the We camc to tlic top of the hill joy of advanc-lu-lllcll bad been our dressing ata- lerrltory. NO-[flfllh to which if. myself, had been \\"c recalled to _ 'l‘llt- pcasilllts who QTTAWA, ‘March itt-"flle titlclzll-o. now building illcir houses anti "Royal" has been coilfcrrctl lI.\' llll‘ lll"'l'.\'lll‘i; to gct their homos ready, lKlilg upcn the Canadian Air Fort-c. ltllllll‘ lllllP of illc great anti fierce [according to an anuounconlcnt brlllulnzrll PflltillOilh‘ which swept over National IJe-‘Paglllcililrt ill lhai grim fight. ' This service will uccilrcl- longed to gci out and look ilpsome be known ill fnlurc its» tllcf-i the old places, but. it was al- lrcurly long past our luncll time and we had to think of poor Maurice who, bravcly" and tinconlpllllningly, was navigating the lorry over the ilaulageil roads. WP nits-sci‘- tlic rilined Chateau \\'llI‘I‘l‘ ll hail spent a night with the 5th Siege Battery. (iuilncr was much interested when he found tlic llolnc of ills old unit, ulld we were ‘forced by old associ- ations in make a short pause and enter the building. No gramophflng now played the "Aicditation" from Tllfll-i. allll through the empty win- dow.‘ thc sunlight slrtvanlcd on the riililcil tiled limit‘. cellars wcrc - We once The Underneath the l‘ 11°" n" an attempt at splendour. down which the aunkonrood ilipl n» the vnnre and than. in u» lido of the lmlk. to m! mat dvlllht I found the entrance: of the old dug- out where the 1st Brigade and the m, Battalion had been quartered on me night of Sept. 26th, unit- just as we had left them. The village of lnchy is being re» built. but only a wooden hutwitb a cross on it takes the place of the -filie old church. We took e photo- graph of it to the delight of some men wllo were building a house nearby. They were pleased to think that Canadians had not. forgotten them. Wu then crossed the wood- en bridge over the Canal. The lat- lnr, however, was a disappoint- ment. it is now completely dry and almost filled up with earth and rank weeds. We found it hard t0 imagine the difficulties which our: rounded our crossing it on that early September morning when it. was the Germans’ front line. i suppose that. some day it will be dug out once more and barges will curry their freight on its pleasant waters through the green country- side. We skirted the town o! SIIDB- lez-hlarquion, from which no long- er machine-guns poured their dead- l_v ill-c. and, having regained the Arras-Uunlbral road. turned down it. past the place where the 1st. Divi- sloll had made its advance. till we came to a mud road leading up to Haynecnurt. The 5th Battalion had ilfternoon of September 27th. iMany o1‘ tlic uld ilouscs were still stand- lug and the inhabitants are hard ot a German prisoner ilriuk the water of a well to see if ,thc encnly had poisoned it. before lpusstlil the ‘building, 110W 1i! P111115, l‘.'|i'l'l\‘tl on a stretcher. Then along plilra where i1 was hit, till we came to lCpiilChy. During the battle it \'-'ll:~‘ taken by the British Division oil our left. ‘it is still in a ‘half- ruillcd condition but is reviving. \\'c turned down the Donal-Cam; brat road. once our front lincnand looked eastwards where we had pushed forward and held on grim- ly ill the outposts and shallow |il‘(‘ll(‘ll0.~'. Ail tho trees along the the ditch on the left. night and (lay, our men bud held their ground, \‘.'llll0 the German artillery from (Ylmbrai, and flRiOhlflE-Bllll tire flnm concealed batteries made tho neighborhood a veritable death- truli. Under these lflelds of rich i Tfillllillhi llaVfi IIBVH‘ null from those fields many a brave soul has gone into‘ the presence of ills lliilkcr. We sped down the way ill Silt‘ll('t' thinking great thoughts and flllcll with that strange sense 01' lOllPllliPSS which haunted us all through ollr visit to the front. lit was llulecd a curious sensation to cuter the city of Cambral. ‘Ihad been kiloi-kcd out before the Cana- dians took itill the war, so it was my first introduction to the city, the towers of which l hild been Ilooking at when il was hit. We found Calubrnl fllll of activity. The centre of the town has been badly dflmilglltl lll‘ shells. but a good part of it has fnsczlpefl with only some of the scars of war. We had great difllculty ill finding a hotel. for in the central district the streets un- der repair were closed to traflic. We had. therefore, to follow up 80MB llywlltrs suldcr the directions we had rcccivcd from one of the l was quite new and lllflllillilll with Wle had travelled a long wily and the luxury of a smoke and comfort- lable chairs made us reluctant to resume tho journey, bu; we had ‘o get back to Arras in time for the lAmiens train that evening, so we ‘jcnrcfuily. ‘it had done yenmgn from numerous joltings, were lng their sharp edges, but, the v9. hicle_ itself had the same patient, dogged. determined aspect it had —-----_0Q ' v wt I i ~ . , -,, <. - wines. Thin proposal is contained ‘ ‘ worn when we had embarked in 11in a circular letter of the commin- ~ - i. . _ , at. Poperinghe. lit had been n [and friend to us, and after leaving at Ari-as that evening, had to curry Maurice on to its old home. I Alfter paying a rather largo bill ‘for our lunch, we started cfl. Tim's WI! mains. so in spite of the (out of a gallant young Quobecer, a at lDouai in the war, had always done bel- best to minister to the comforts of the lBrltish, prisoners there. sent money to the people in Tilloy, so Madame told the little‘ boys in the street to give us a parting sal- ute as we mountédthe lorry on our return. someone who Quebec and who, amid the ruins of her old home, is cheered by the thought of those kind friends over- seas whose boy's grave she tends grain lics many a gallant lad whose turn brought back ‘old memories. been found. Mull)’ is the time if have walked along f‘. or gone over it in my side- car. among the fields, the line of our old trenches and the white chalk] gun positions. ern station, we bid farewell )went out and examined our pgm-Ilifontréalby the old friend. the light lorry, vol-y Commission. fin return for a con- mervice and we had not. bad one the | puncture. Ffhe blocks of cemenyers. the communion iou- fllflllrflllls w usrce that. they will era the fingers with rinlu. and at "l0 llillb i-ihqcutli the sinewa at the viristn-Jtofling. mulltry u. the Germans must have seen it. At certain parts of the road, W110!!! U161‘! Vere vlilfllea or cross-roads, the shelling 11nd been very heavy and the rold was still anybody on the journey. and flint wide region of green far-m- ianda, dotted here and there with- the red-tiled roofs of reviving vil- lages, llookad to us veryjoneily. Something has (one from them never to come back. Activity. courage. danger, and the shadow of death have vanished like tile thin air which passes into the summer sky. Only in memory did ‘ in bad repair. We passed hardly‘ lve feel the surging of those great thoughts which come, onw and then. out of the past, at tile call of music. Ono place, however. we could not pass. it was the little village of Tilloy.’ When we reached the cross-roads, we turned up it and made our way to the Chateau. The cellars of tho old Chateau were once in No Man's Land and here Colonel ‘Peck ofthe 16th Battalion made his home in lfront of our front line. A very-good home it was, with its deep recesses and comfortable passages. To our amazement now we found a large. new, atnne house standing on the 01d 81101,. The garden is in ruins, but the building is almost finished and will one day ‘be a comfortable home. in a wooden hut in the grounds and superintended the building op- erations. Sha received us moat kindly and showed ua about the place. She ‘has preserved the large German dug-out, built of con- crete, which adjoins the Chateau. It will bo a good souvenir in times 10 come. and. no doubt. will remain intact for many years. Scrambling through branches and fields of thlsties we reached the road which took us. to the British Cemetery where we found the grave college friend of the Gunner's. 1t had been decorated by our kind friend. who. ‘luring her residence Friends in Quebec have it was delightful to mwt linked us up with n France. Every inch of the road on our re- The lady who owns it lived - series of the loveliest saw. for street wear. Cocoa, ley. , only here. We saw hers and there, which marked the location of our. lBefore ua against, the western sky lily the city of, Arras. At the door c-f the big pimp. I Maurice and sent him home coils! Iflllled- Then. entering the build-- in; now tilled with people of ali.s"'“"“'““ ~ descrllitluhs. we ‘bought our tickets to Amierls and took our seats lna.‘ comfortable railway carriage, 1e“. ing behind us for a ‘time the grim memories of the Arrus we hadlAlbflfllbfl C091 known. _ ST. MARY'S ROAD W551‘. ‘Following is the standing of st, M"?! R080 West. school for the month of iFebruilx-y: Grade IV. an, 1, Stella McGuigan; 2. Hubert Mc- ‘Kearney; Grade .l‘V., Jr.. 1, sat-liq MoCarron: 3. Mary E. McGuigan. Grade ML, an. 1. Howllm McKen- Iley; Grade 1If., jr., 1, irene Mc- Glllsfln: 2. Grace Hughes: 3. Ber- nand Hustler; i. Ellen ‘Mtfluigali; 5, Mary McGuigan; 6. Dennis Roo- ney: 7. Vloiettil. Rice. Grade 11., an.‘ 1. John McGulgan: 2. ‘Hubert Muflulnn. Grade 11., 1n, 1, Luci]- ia McCarl-on. Grade 1., 1, Martha Mcfilllsflll: Z. Harold McGulgan; 3, David Motiuigatl,’ w. ALUE WELL llr vnzv MAKE 100% PROFIT MONFDRiEAL. March 10.-—An ar- rangement liuviuz its its result. con"- trol of the prices of wince to- the nubllc is offered the reptnuranta in Quebec Liquor ‘lfllflloll. often Dor- cont. on salon by lnmiaaion to the permit hold- wallta tho ro- ll" chew“ mm than loo no- cent. over the not coat. to them o1 tun slon to ‘keepers which was received by the latter today. ---_qoq>_._ Modern edudatlozl too often cov- ations furnished by Johnson and Ward lllembers of the Montreal Stock Exchange.) ,3‘ This morning we want to introduce," The freshest, smartest, newest of models l developed in Crepe, Vclvette, Taffeta, ‘ cotine, Poiret; Twill, dresses for indoor n; The colorings include Nagy,‘ Almond, Koran, ‘ 1 Pearl Grey, Old China, Come ian and Pan. As to the stylesr-ithe low waistline is shown prominently, sleeves are shown in long and short lengths, skirts come in panel and flared models, and you will be interest- " ed in the uneven skirt feature. Skirts are somewhat longer than last season. These lovely dresses are better than a - thing we have been able to sell for $30llil to $35.00 for the last three years. While the styles are the very smartest, the values are unrivalled,,and 1n addition, these lovely dresses at $25.00 are shown $25 each Moore 8i liicteoii l.tii_ S§9E§E.9:.'.'2"5l.$?.£°nlif~. dresses that you eve. 1 i Black Sand, l gér brown, Iiian ' Scotla . i 120%, _ vll-lllf ~ 4% miter‘ l out: May 4s July 44% Se col-n 77% Brompton 42 _. . . Dell Telephone .... .. . 121 Abltllbl .... .. 73% . 11'! Laurentide Pulp . Cimapian General Electric Canadian Stenmlbb 00m Canadian Steamship lPfd . 69 Dominion fiddle iMontreal raw... [Winnipeg Electric National Qi-cwories . Atlantic Bolu- Atchiaon Am. Cur and Foundry . Am. bncomotivo, .................... .. 134» American Smeltlng and Retin- ing ................ .. 65% Anaconda Copper . . lCanad-ian ‘Pacific Railway 146% New York Central . .‘ 97% Cuba Cane Sugar 17!’. Crucible Steel 81% international Paper . Kelly Springfield Mex Petroleum international Mar. Marine Press Steel Car ..... .. 54% 1937 Victory BANKS Bank Royal ..... .. Bank Montreal 21s l 2am iii Egmlilmii YEMN T KEV 4S HUI BRINGINtl IIP FATHER- ‘l=° ‘can... ' DNMITIR cmvew 54% ‘ Reading .............. .. 7814 Southern Pacific . . 92% ‘ Studebaker 120% Union Pacific , 141 Utah Copper 7a U- S. fitael ....._- 107% MONTREAL EXCHANGE 1984 Victory . 103,75 1838 Victory . 106,15 .. 108.10 ’ HALF an WALL ambit-brill. Herc are real WI‘ take odvanillo of film you min to aavn nffllllll- u b flair-ll Pl" for ‘atrial? "lm- do‘ Room,‘ Iodnoom an I an. done ‘ub lll "l" f“ , * with and without - _ but. all at uracil! HALF grain Now randy in our N" Piper Diplrlmunt. " ufl’. ,0‘ .11‘; In" l: ‘ ‘what WIM- u‘ small coat will writ" cuter 8i Cir y "ll..'.‘.'§""°