i~nnusr~ - u PAGE FOUR ‘rrre crriruorrrsrovrr GUARDIAN 1r THE CHARIJOTTETOWN GUARDIAN IUTE$ BY TIIE W“ what lzeafenss iii Schools PUBLIG FQRUM humuvnztzzsrfigagdhéiiziiiil:ZIE§I;EEEZ:E,E.§I. inn“. ‘u. I Education creates a better control I ‘ ‘I (menu's) eighth‘: halimvxleet: ‘ . £01111 (If; 9on1‘? The problem of thousands of school teachers who are hard of_ hearingis beginning in receive st- tention oi public school officials in the United States. At a conference of the Federation of Organizations for the Herd of Hearing at New York, Dr. Horace Newhsrt, oi the .. mum‘ “w”, moo,‘ mmthere is an article on Mother's 'Day" and “Motherlnl Blinder" ::'.2".~:.:::.::;:*:::-.*=..:~..:::2 --»- w» i» ~ ~1- - . .. been traced back to ancient times." K9 d a k “t tion. What per cent of hearing md mtarmce u ma“ to the m,“ . gftfixzg]: ‘tglfiimy l teach" M. to Mother churches. These visits i l B v i h d brought families together on the ' _ ' Yel ow ox- er c rorne an Dr‘ Newhm w“ o‘ querying 4th Sunda, in Lent, andlgave rise Kodak RI," ‘ pialn-your size lS here. men and women oi national repu- m b m l custom m“ - r tstlon on this question to get the t° mo er- c“ u ' KODAKS price $5.00 up. y ie oi te ch rs a o’ tic in or paying honour also to the earth‘ CAMERAS $215 Biid 53-75 ' " w‘ a e ' ° “’ m“ ' ly mother, sothat the day took the lezrsévzlriiilzalm me-e-ae-thlzt“: m" name "Mothering Sunday." There Let us help you in choosingda Kodak for Camera ° - ' -- ' t lots o un. - m m“ of hen," i’ not’ “one was no need for another Day in for 900d pw ures an _ ,5 e o o ers." ewoeis a fair basis for judging a teacher Pr!“ I M m Th h l & ter than the part. The true and fitness for work. flea ' , a lent Mothering Sunday of mid- qs teacher may have a hearlngjlzfit embraces a" that the May, Tm; qUALn-y 9511351031; s‘ °‘ 25 °' 3° p" “m ‘M’ °*' "Motherd Day" has to offer, and "Dlrrwmlnr I“ rumble 511m 1581-" . oeptlonslly, even s. materially great- Con," “m” in"; Ken; 5a.,“- f iutoroll. The ZL-liiififill ofluurdllll does sod uocesurii! ""1"" u" opinions oi oorrssvondents. . _ Associate ic-muru- Frank ivsruer und n. a. cnrrls ‘ l. | l ounded llllil 56.00 er year (in udvunce) delivered ' > r ”'§I§o"',.?'§.'..“(ru pdvsnce) mnllerlnin Canada snd United Staten ADVERTISING RE PBESENTATIVES UNITED STATES-The Berkwith Spool-l Agency Iuc._ New York Con. in! Building, New York City, Genrrli Motors Building, Detroit. Interlilil ulidlng, Kansas City. Wllinnghh, Tourer Building, Chicago; Glenn Build ... . - - _ s... 1- , No. 06th Slrrei. of thought. The thinking man ls forever plsnnng shead. He takes‘ wntmr 0g his faculties and makes them do his bidding in methodical manner. More and mON he 1160011198 .- wwrii hinge". Tia“: ghfg: 0,1...“ W-Barionjlb. in mas ring emse e. ‘d Tmmsmm w“ " m’ "' contagious force in human llfeu- WHY "F" "LEWIS 53W"- , ,, ATISM l FRIENDLY WISHES Q we M Mmh- m m» we b: we w- vr- r - "Moreover, the changes affecting >George Linn Kicflef 1°!‘ m‘? chm‘, For many years heat in various the vurlous classes of the population “in 3°11"! indicates m“ °h"1'°h_ forms has bcen used in the differ- mve been on the who,“ m the an“ 1119111310 .- W! Pflwm W" 13 ent types of rheumatism. The heat ection of s. better busines cqulll- yea", o‘, and has lbeenbe “mini? mm the pain and seams m “loosen largey snce epress on gan. up“ the 10mm brium, due to the agricultural im‘|1s flgured that the growth in 1932.: A5 a wnsiderable number o, sub pmvement. The farmer is gaining the total net gain, was 929,262, bring j fem“ with rheumatism “flared not only because the prices of hls'1flB the Bclufll menlbelshlil 11D to-mqre with cord hands um {at products are better, but because.50'o37'2°°' r than those who were not afflicted, they have advanced more than the‘, ‘fiearch Physician‘ m" "W d4!" ,, covered that the temperature of the hi h . . . pm“ o’ the t n“ e buys 5km 15 below normal in these cases. Dre. Lillie M. Wright and Ralph 1,, Pembertou state that the temper. Moi-news us! _.._- srr,_m your paper for May 13th hliudelphln. Put it in yourpoclret, or automobile and it puts your trip in pictures. ,' Our esteemed Nova Scotian con- temporary, the Sydney Post-Record. gives favorable editorial publicity to the observance on Dominion Day of Prince Edward Island's Diamond Jubilee as a Province of Canada. It notes approvinglyr that the event was celebrated with acclaim in the Island press, and quotes from the messages of Premier Stewart and Premier Harrington in commemor- ation of the event. It concludes: The dependable film in the The struggle for bread in Russia has now reached an acute stage. Al’. other questions are superfluous. It is war between the Government and the peasants, and this yesr's BAPilIsT CENTENNIAL "No area of the Dominion oi commensurate size, population and resources, has surpassed Prince Edward Island in its con- tributions to the national life of Canada. No other Province has been more consistently loyal to the Dominion. Canadians every- where‘ will unite ln extending to the Island Province the best of 100d WlSIlGS for ever-increasing prosperity in the years to come." U. S. BETTER TIMES The NutlonarCFBank of New York in its July review oi economic and business conditions is more op- timistic than at any time during the past eighteen months. It says: “The upward movement of bus-rWfl-i a lness has continued during June {the pioneers of a century use: without interruption. At this time ‘bull "WW did their be“ Wm‘ the of the year bu5l11e5g men "many small means and unsuitable equip- expec, a summer recession to be ,ment. . . . They possessed no wealth w,“ “nae, w“, bu, mt, m, ,5 so zand but little education, but they a- vlgorous that seasonal restraining libwnded m “ML wurage “d deep influence‘ mus ‘m, have had no eh conviction; and these qualities they fect. Operations have been stepped printed deep m the minds and i eral interest. Baptist church edifice st East Point serious undertaking for The pester and conzresulim o! Spring sowing will be a-perhaps the East Point. Baptist Church are to be congratulated upon the spirit is. 1X1 the 111°“ literal seme- 5'3"‘ of devotion snd enthusiasm with which they are preparing to com- memorate next week‘s centennial anniversary oi the establishment oi their church in that district. Ex- tended reference to the centennial spears elsewhere in today's issue and will, we believe, be read with gen- As recorded in an historical booklet prepared for this occasion, the building of the first the-decisive battle. The population ing. More serious, the soil itself is impoverished, choked with weds; at least 'l0 per cent of the livsetock have been killed to eat or died oi starvation. This year soldiers and ‘policemen will, if nece y, drive ‘the peasants into the fields at the end of s rlfiefas they have long been accustomed in the North to drive political prisoners to cut timber st the end of a rifle. It la an important stage in the evolution oi Soviet Russia into a. huge and centrally organized slave slate-‘rhe Fortnightly. In the recent experience 0i the United States nothing has been so singular as the contrast between the nation and its elected rulers. The public offices came to be dom- inated by s temper of illiberallssn, which would not be considered Am- erlcan". The Secret Service attained up stcrrdily in the industries, and heart‘! o! their children", Again, despite mo increases m Output and we are told that in 1875, when s. Bhlpmms their unnncd order‘ movement was started to erect e. are n01 ding M very satisfactory larger snd more modern church " edifice at East Point, the work levels. In most lines the backlog is. l mic Ho kc _n d‘ t i "proceeded as ways and means ll C ll 6 l b p m S an ac or e5 would be provided, so that there gcxng for some time, and little is would be no debt on the house when now heard of the expectations of a it w“ completed." The” comments ‘ummntlal sflmmer decline’ which are significant for all of us today, were entertained in many quamrs showing as they do, how the foun- a month or more ago. On the con- rdation oi successful achievement trary, as the season advances with l w“ we“ and “my mi the men's continuing good the time in which a recession might be looked for is correspondingly short- ened. Wlthlri a. few more weeks the! More than two hundred snd .crops will be moving, and conslder- lseventy million visits oi adults and ing the improved farm prices there ‘children to public recreation areas is reason to hope that the Pall rise ‘last year showed s marked gain in trade will be s substantial one,:over precitlis records and reflected I PUBLIC RECREATION bolstered by s greater farm pur- the increased usefulness of municipal chasing power than has been pres- play facilities in time oi unemploy- ent in the past ycar or two. I ment, according to the Year Book Stock prices have advanced since ‘of the National Recreation Assoc- thc first of March by some B6 per l iation, just issued. This figure rep- Wfli and build prices by i5 per cent, resented attendance at only 7327 according to representative averages. ,of the total of 12,684 directed play The recovery in the value of the areas reported by 1,012 cities of the stocks and bonds listed on the New IUnited Staets snd Canada. York Stock Exchange up to June l The attendance at outdoor play- was fifteen billions of dollars. Thicgrounds, reported at 235,632,558 by is much more than a sentimental 516 cities, was thirteen millions influence on business. It has added more than the similar attendance a degree of power which no Amer-l can oi the older tradition could contemplate without dismay. It was the day oi the detective. President Roosevelt has re-establlshed the rolder American ways and the ef- fects are noticeable on all sides. The Rooscvelts belong to the inner circle oi s. democratic aristocracy. They can be unconventional be- cause of what Americans always re- ‘fer to as background. They began sture of the skin was below normal in 62 per cent of arthritic (rheum. atlc) patients measured on the base |er defect, and still do excellent| work,” Dr. Newhart said. In such a case, he explained, the °f the 1111891’ mll- They state that loss oi hearing would be offset by the tiny 0r end blood vessels in the teacher's fine character, per- much, very much more, besides. Let r us go a-mothcring on the right day. I am Sir, etc. C. PENSWICK SMITH, (Founder of the M. S. Movement). these patients contain lees blood sonality, and teaching ability, and-June n’ ma’ t ,rto the fact that some of the“ vantageous. Such a. teacher's suc- n _! lblood vessels are actually grogeq, o,- cess, measured by results, may be m“; Sunday Movement Wm ‘In , se d a l aflet about th beautl-Z ,that they sre smaller- gmn norm“ greater than the success oi others g1 63mm‘ it "Motherlngnoto my l Thus they found ma; the bloomwlth normal hearing. I cases than in normal persons. Drs. Joseph Kovaes, Irving S. Wright and A. Wilbur Duryee, New Yorkjstudied 80 oases oi chronic rheumatism of the joints. Tlhey measuréd the flow of blood 1n the little vessels and found the number of blood vessels less and the flow of blood slower than nomial 1n the majority of cases. They were unable to say whether the disappearance of a number of the blood vessels is responsible for the changes in the tissues or whether the chafiges in the tissues cause a decrease in the school teachers ‘in the United States, or 27,000, have s hearing loss sufficient to impair efficiency in varying degrees. Dr. Newhsrt advocated a. periodic hearing test‘ for all teachers, to protect against insidious onset oi hearing, loss. Tactless Truth (Ottawa Journal) There is the iellowvwho prides blunt subject is one of the and are lighter in color than in acquired skill in lip reading and ffotfiilgetzlgmstmet’ ,normal persons. This may be due use oi a modern hearing aid if ad- g ' P.S.-Tha Secretary of the "Moth. ‘ , one who writes for it to 25 Regent "b"? w” “W” a“ m" ‘mquemr By mnmmiv” “Lima” “t 1°“ Street, Nottiushnm. England. ‘ly interrupted in these rheumatic rm" P" w!“ °t the 680-000 Public Weather Folklore (Montreal Gazette) The cynic who dubbed discussion of the weather the “small talk" of farmers had less discernment than wit. The weather is no trifling mat- ter. We grumble albout it, marvel at its moods, which are no more freakish than human nature itself, snd wind up by confessing that the few things that baffle our scrutiny. Suppose t‘ Brahmin Orange Pekoe ‘Tea ' per Canada. Il-Ils forces were quick- ‘himself 0n being a plain, vessels. by expressing their dislike of secret service protection, notwithstanding the narrow miss oi the assasslrrsf rbullet at Miami. What are the impediments to world recovery? ‘They are the pres- ent chaotic condition of the cur- rencies, the weight oi war debts, and the high tariffs which obstruct the channels of commerce. Like the three furies of the ancients, these are the authors and abettors of modem mischief. The conversation oi President Roosevelt and Mr. MacDonald seem to have centred around stabilizing currencies. A person who contracts a debt or s. nation which floats a loan should not be placed in the unjust position of incurring the obligation in one monetary value and having to dis- charge it in another. If, as reported. ' the two statesmen are in agreement on this question, it may be hoped that they will next proceed to grap- ple with the two other iuries. l0 Purchasing power not only be- rreported by 566 cities for the p"- cause some of the profits have vlous year. Attendance at indoor been realized, but because the rise centres also rose materially. The increases the ability of security own- ‘greatest increase in participation was Icould have in fact secured from Whether or not Mr. Runciman Germany better terms than he did, he had s strong case on the gen- Will find that he ls humble still. “Ti-ll D3195 against s northern sky Have wisdom I could profit by. Q "The crave, sweet songs the hm ma tlsm ? “use Pain. but interfere with the movement of the joint. For those who are unable to set to open up a. little wider the blood increase the flow of blood. The in- creased flow should remove deposits 01' Prevent formation of more dc. posits. ‘ MEASUREMENT “who measures man beside s bur number or size of the small blood The temperature of the skin was lower than normal 1n more then half of these arthritic cases. This explains why rheumatic or arth- ritic patients often complain of numrzness and cold hands 911d feet, 0f what use is this knowledge to sufferers with old or chronic rheu- It means that those who are able to get mug an, able to move doesn't believe in sugaring the pill. the“ 10mm. can increase me blood The persistent and relentless truth- ilow and help remove dams“: teller may become, and often does about the 101mg wmch not may become, a far more objectionable man with no frills. If his new neighbor has a. wart on his nose hs says to him, at the first op- portunity. "What an extraordinary wart that is on your nose!" He warships truth, but makes it a singular unpleasant god. He goes about looking for truth in its most disagreeable forms. He would rath- er tell you that your dog has dug up his prize dahlia than compli- ment you on winning s prize with the same pet at the dog show. He we did happen to know all about it, this circumstance would still leave us conscious that we have no controlling voice in the distribu- tion of atmospheric influences. Some eminent scientists, Herschel, ‘Abcrcromby, Marrlot, and others, have paid considerable attention t0 the data embodied ln the folk- lore of farmers and rural habitants concerning weather signals, and have concluded that this obser- -vanoe of sequences is worth notice. {It may be a mixture of sense and nonsense, but popular proverbs so deeply rooted and long cherished may also contain a modicum oi person than the 5mm,“ and fact. Dr. Abercrumby came to the chronic prevaricator. As between cmlclusim that M’ least ‘me mm‘ the man who tells the truth when he who lies gaily because the truth feelings, there is presented a quan- dary for the serious student of so- cial conduct. Science of Ladders (The New York Sun) The first man to connect two upright poles with e. series of hori- zontal rungs may never have known that he hit upon a. great invention. He may not have called his device a ladder, though the dictionary traces s. connection with the word "lean." The first ladder was simply something its maker devised to climb to or descend" from the mouth of his cave or the door of his dwelling above the ground. Nobsly knows, moreover, how many of the early makers of ladders dred of these msx'm.e were trust- _ —S0m€tlmeg bgcaugg-qfl hum, and worthy; that is to say, they tallied “m” ‘t mm“ “m” he“ m“ ml’ ‘with much of the evidence elicited _ might be unpleasant or cause hard by meteorologist! WW1!!! ihtll‘ 4955615 about the joint, and thus 'course by s different route. lfolk who do not know what lsobars The and synchronous charts mean, but prefer expressing themselves in neat couplets, have plenty of these dltties in mind: Hills clear, rain is near; rain before seven, clear be- fore eleven: red sky and morning grey bring forth s. fine day, red st night, sailors’ delight; red at mom- lng, shepherd's warning. There are other weather tokens indicative of stunn, and also such fine weather prognostications es "seaweed dry, birds fly high.” A heavy dew means a hot day. A little whirlwind of dust is herald of s. coming shower. The feather-pattern in the clouds portends a Windstorm. When stairs "streak to the eye," look out for stcnny weather, and when by day m FOR PEl<FEQF TEA FLAVOR -usr~:- ' Sold Only in Bod Airtight Package; onies from Greet Britain. He to Col. Beverley Robinson n letter on May l4, 1183, admitting his mil- take and expressing his reglet for hsving joined in the revolution. 8e said: “Whenever I think seriously upon ‘ the situation of this 0011119?! I 0N1- not but bewuil my folly in the part which I have acted. There was a | time when I firmly believed that a separation from the Mother Ooun- try would be the greatest blessing to this. But, slssl experience-too late “variance-hes oorwinoed. me, Ins well as thousands of other! how very erroneous this opinion was. Whether I shall live to see the sc- oomplishment of my wish ctr not, I can't tell, but it certainly is the greatest wish ofmy heart to leave my posterity in the enjoyment of that mild government which this unhappy war has deprived them oi.’ If there are any persons in Oa-n- ade. today who advocate a revolu- tion in favor of communism or the mm theories, they should history end take warninfby experience of others. osuonurr In Later Days (Mall and Itmpire) In 1037 William Lyon Mac- kenzie orgimlzed s rebellion in Up- 1y defeated and dispersed. He and other leaders escaped to the United States. Later he took part in a filli- busterlng attack organized st Buf- falo agalnst Canada. This mid was conducted from Navy Island on the Niagara River albove the Falls, near- ly opposite Ghlppawa. Those who participated in the rebellion were pardoned and permitted to return m Canada, including Mr. Macken-l zie. In 1949, after Mr. Mackenzie had been pardoned and had been' tted to enter Canada, he wrote to nsri Grey, British coionrsi see- retary, admitting his great mistake and expressing regret in the follow- ing words: , "A course of careful observation during the last eleven years has liuuy satisfied me that had the vl- olent movements ln which I and many others were engaged on both sides of the Niagara. proved ful, that success would have deep- ly injured the people of Canada. whom I then believed I~wss serving m, mu, 3.1,, u. m. at great risks. I have long been $"h'f‘,‘,,{k'f' sensible of the errors committed a '*"""' dilflflfl that period. No punishment flu-kd-‘Qmq I," that power could inflict, or nature .__r_.____e_-_.i-—‘i§ sustain, would have equalled the re-, I N A R D l groin I have felt on account of? , much that I did, said, wrote and ‘published. There is not a living ,me.n on this continent who more lslrncerely desires that British gov-. ‘ crnment in Canada may long con- tinue." ___ r Among those colonists of the thir- fist“é”fl‘..°liiiff. n" N“ ugh“ Your Eyes a man who became quite famous in ‘the rebel forces, namely, General An examination might be of great benefit to you. Putnam. He was one of the most E. W. TAYLOR active relbel officers against the British forces. After the war was . J. S. TAYLOR ~ OPTOMETBISTS over, however. General Putnam re- South Bide Queen Square alized when it was too late that he had made s. mistake in joining the rdbel forces and assisting in the separation of the thirteen tor-l y. athletic leagues for twelve lpqflg rifices in return for greater gains, which ladders have been brought Us to 0mm‘ d dm I, . . _ _ _ appears the filmiest cross-current ‘I c ’lll crc- n connection with facilities offering eral issue As he rightly pointed brooks sing broke their necks by careless car m a brazen sky. expect me and or Over the three months since water sports. Municipal golf show- 1°”- m“ °Y the main reasons for_ Have themes they learned from Pemry- It h” been 1°“ t0 i“ ‘an’ a drought mprovmen, began the mdusm a1 ‘ ed I demise m patronage] whhh u i olurt chairs: over to Protection wss every spring, ty engineer; oiéttlgedttéwentietgi :12. . , activity shows an unbroken expan- attributed to the reduced income of a we a mud be m A hen" b“- tury ma e n c" an er __' , _ l gaining position vis-a-vls the outside; "And there is reason h . “milieu” 5 W171i?" °l pr°f°und | sum. with the exception of con- Players as s whole. _. worm Bu, almost any bargammgt thrush w 3 the whnuflc mqumn important fact remains that of the c struction work and lines particularly Individual players enrolled in of this kind will involve some ssc- ‘ Picien for 50118 g" man,“ h The complicated reasoning by thousands of persons who meet I ikbendent upon construction snd um dnsth a’ injury by failing, fewer are , - like] to t bl 1 E equipment, operation, m “new”, "mum; 13-74,“; mo“, the” and the balancing of gain and loss, ‘let ms b, humble, men’ berm‘ under the ey: of enginteers, w. theyvmw 131M505‘; fiteglmi: fium , . am eo es, e y soce es r the highest iii about two years. iifld sports basketball showed the lars- as a ,‘,f},’,,,f'§',°”,f,’j“ M genial?" minis?‘ hm’ ‘mm’ m m" "’°°""i andothe “r3332... Gwazmment is in- “d “ ‘h’ Md“ 1"" W" "M0 s in some industries, notably the t“. est relative increase. from 122 ' prom c °n °r°' ' , in strict accordance with proved .2361,” the Government n e b rdicated in the June mdustrial '4' '5 tiles, it is necessary to so buck to [players in 1931 to 24-1369 in prs¢- gain is going to nu. an m?“ n. "snd ‘u; t}, t m Standardization in en article by “"“d°"'d‘~ ' on e ' fr; the b°°m p" 1°C‘ "° find ti" WITIPI-r- “@113? the Mme number of cities in the part of the sectional inteyrest I With thrushcs ivorglsrhte‘ aemnjdsihng pray the chairman of the “ 1 oom- Wm- mo. The ggmg 1g pqpu)" mo“ which feels itself adversely gym.’ v ed n7’ mittee on safety code for the con- , “Th, ,5 m “L men the ho] m. “L” struction, cure and use of ladders ' s u N B u t ‘s e most impressive younger unemployed men st re- m ‘d1 ‘I w e process w , me remember seed and sod um," American standards Am» fr lhOWlilg or business recovery gvgr creation centres. , p Y ‘*1 m") dl-Wedll- firlticism l Reveal the prophecies f0 God!" rc-Bflon procedure s: made in a comparable period m m! but year some two thousand mm regrigcl-tlytfiesmat; vfiere it up. l qsr-thur Wallace Perm}; um’ convenun-ce M m mum ,, 121g painful, irritsti: cheats Ii e rasmadea I ' oilun-urnrnsy gregy d‘ country. 0f course these increases “"6184 "minim If!" wen! bad bargain. but it ought not to be advance of the meeti u” the Md" ‘uthomy’ . m” 10o ‘owned b, "mm" ~ c‘ in production and trade are gener- maintained than five years before, directed against the .2‘ _ 5 mbsequenv enmmauglns. lnfd the; represents the frequency index oi "4 "i"! Plllfihaslns carver at an en- although the 1932 wst of ptiblic ‘mpnm l" any barsainizrgst all.- question of currency stabllrzstltg: lloebtime awldm“ m’ ladder. p" M s wurazlus rate. The industries s" recreation was reported st four Land” mmi"! %- was a second serious limitation of ma" 1,,“§,j$,"‘f§',°°,‘,,’;”,§“,.° , I!‘ , _ - r yo giving more employment snd in ‘million dollars less than that of u h gamma“, untomlmh "In, Llxineonstructive power of the oon- 9d on accident records for the first I ._ ' _ , I r ' u, many cases at better wages. Fir-em i192’): eight millions from that of m, united states, a, the om“, o, m’ seven months, indicate an index of Th]. ‘Mpg-gun; h“ l, gum-- -A ‘better. COIJICCO lildyfir mo April to May there was an incl-cuss 1930. Through the use of relief the World Economic conference de- 26. or a reduction in the rate of coughs’ sifeateuvinl the better cure__th‘t accounk’ bar of 5 pcr cent in factory employment labor, many cities found jt @0315], clined t0 participate in any pllil for Mada: $121811“ ‘m; the u“ ye" n m u‘ w n fur {In popularity of our _ and of 11 per cent in payrolls, u. last year to improve and develop ; itllfiltalbilizatlon of currency, which peg,” wmmftgfn in,’ l mm bu: “"51"! 90 "w Department of Labor, Mmtloh ems without cost. live‘ “um had bee" “lllvfleallv devising standards for ladders re- "P" u” W" u‘ u“ u‘ |_ snd these figures contrast with the hundred and fifty-four new play f-gzhiedt l? lmlhnrst and mo“ m?“ m“ it h" wnw“ u" mu‘ mmthisfirfie: ’ ' b‘ a, , . Ac» usual seasonal movement, which i; _areas were reported opened for the solution of which .:.ucr:n;2er3§:'th:- r ‘Mon closely “me the “few code o! "ll-bum an b. "mm". 5° downward. During June further in- fimt time in 1932. Volunteer rem-es. key to most, if not all. of the other w“ “wed and h” found ma“ Price only lie per bottle ‘ . . , u, e '.. ,, creases undoubtedly have occurred, tion leaders numbering 9280 ans- prwlm“ o’ m“ “lemm- The "will 1'32? 23121301 lilisnpoecg d "A l’ V’ m, snd according to pllbllshQd estlmltfl Wcred the call for increased lesder- of m’ United 5mm u’ “n” "it says the chairman, “involve sugstl- 2 , 3,, ‘~rr b the - question of war debts to have an .. ' » - ' ' I y American Federation of shiP. such unpaid directors being omcm place m u] f y “m”? ‘unable permmfin“ find‘ rr DRUGSTO“B Labor more than 1.600.000 workers reported by about fifty more cities “time t e con erence pro- “d5 for reqummems which and", v v \ 6 I kph“ m. m‘, ' Y B!‘ wen a very ions we!’ in ,, methods." mi; may“ the pfgblgm- s49 Great George Street I ' .' g" ~£~ .\.._._““r _ ~