1 . IHYBiFWPZTD flu-al‘ l l |il t. . ‘lulu- light-n by the Yiiitcd States statistics: PAGE FOUR run CFlARLUlTETflwTV "MWYW? The Charlottetown ‘Guardian President, LleuL-Col. 1V. Cheltor l. llcLnrl YIPP-Pffllhlelll, J. B. Burllltl, I‘. J. l- Bei-n-tury. LleuL-(ful. D. A. lllelllnnnn, D. l. 0. Editor nml almiuirlng Director. J. B. Burnett, I‘. J- l- \!4IlI|‘llllfl Editors, Frunk Walker and D. B. Currlo. lfi ll’ Prl nets Dally (founded IBM) $1.00 per your (In advance) | lll (My. $1.00 per year (In nuance! will"! i‘ i-uiwin-a 1.1111111. 84.50 w: your (In nrlvnflfll Mulleil to Canada and United Staten WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14. 19st U. S. Market For Potatoes The l'i:it<wl .\'t.'ite~" is faced with l short d0- tjnqit‘ arpplflt- oi‘ ltotatoes this year, WfllFSlbIR. (i. .\. .\'i*\\.ii \.\'. Assistant 'l'rade COmmISSIOHBF in _\'<w York, iii the Conitnereial Intelligence ban-ital. l)<]<'|l'llllt'l1l of Agriculture reports 51,1“! _~_i 'IlllI<‘I' I tslitiltilctl Only gfLsfll-OQO hn-iiiK w I be ilHlilfllllC this season for a ziiarltit iv i ifrli the ilt-itiand is sufficient to al- b,“ ppn-i dilt- .'iiniii;i] priitlttclloll Of 341,000,000 j.,-_,_;,,-1.- i- _\ ili>\\' i-xpeettwl that the late crops in pot tiii-priitliiciiig areas—l\lait1e. :'n New York, and the Red River iii- zibtiiit I; per cent less than aver- iirtioii in other districts is even ftir- iiiiriii.'il. l‘i..'ll"lr\' potatoes have been \<i'\' s:ili<l:irt<i1'y' prices. The {riviltirtiiiii of rertificd 508d POlRlOt-‘S l" tl-n lRnn-i] State. illlfllig the past few years has r - ~ fjirmiixi bushels, of which the ilicd nearly" 5o per cent. t:,,. i1!‘ ,,- m, or: i States producing certified seed ,,.q__;,... - r ‘uiesota, North Dakota, and .\- -v ‘i . ‘wit; i ltd‘ rent of the production in the t‘ consists of Green Mountain atid . s and these. in conjunction with from the Red River Valley area. w r-inipciiiiiiii with Canadian certified iiiiti----~|iriii.~ipa]ly from Prince Edward ' - lziiter liriie a fine reputation in the ttis m..t-i..=i and over a period of - d ~ biped a demand which ensures _ t ll‘- t"<"ii1t in oi‘ {is much as 15 percent above rlit» lli-li"i\<'l level, lbesi- potatoes move into such kieiiiri-s as Long Island. New jersey, Virginia, and the Czzroliiias. Import statistics for seed potatoes from Can- ada as piiblisiicil by the United States author- ities differ ciitisiiltrably from those. quoted in (‘aiiarlirin rt-tiiriis; liiit as the operation of the tariff cpiota is IlC]I(‘ll(l(‘l"|l' on Utiiterl States fig- ures, these will probably be of greater interest to (jilllftilzflll sliitipers. In i934 imports from Canada znnoiinted to 15,276,499 pounds, and in 193; to (u/qquyg- pounds. illn- nrw- tariff on certified seed potatoes be- came effective on January i, 1936, and since that time there has been a heavy movement of certified i id [iotatoes from Canada into the Tinted $71111‘; The following are tlic monthly imports up to the end of _ltil_v 0f this year, as januarv; lil iir-wiirts; February. 402,000 pounds; March, II.§R_=.I . pounds; April. 8,135,968 pounds; .‘l~.i, i.ii‘i,",t<5o pounds; lune, 997,968 pounds: lililf, 1.500 poiiiiils. . liiiriiig the past season Canadian seed pota- rois were sold at about $3 per i5o-pound bag. 'l‘i:i= price remained firm even after the lower rate or’ duty of 4; cents per ioo pounds came in- to rf on .\l:irch I. 'l' r,ti.il;ti' oi’ domestic potatoes available fiir ccrffiiraii/iti this year may be somewhat poorer than lIlFl»_\'€{tl'. In North Dakota, State authorities have been obliged to create an emer- gency grade, or “Red Tag” classification, to cover potroes that do no quite fulfill the con- (llllfills !lt‘IllZlll(l('(l by their first grade, or “Blue 'l'ag" classificatioirlt is stated that this second class ivill coiriply with all the requirements of the first grade with respect t0 disease, but will allow a certain percentage of misshapen sizes, growth cracks, hollow hearts, etc. ' Press Observers Say Roosevelt Mir. Noun/ix Rlaclaton. Ottawa correspond- eii: for tlzr- Mail and Empire, now visiting ' Jiiiigviaz. reports that the \Vashington press, o-ml of the premier newspapermen of the Fi-iii-s oi’ :ill shades of political opinion, are lll"lll:illi*ll< in the conviction that President Roosr-ii-lt will be. re-elected. The general esti- Hlillt‘ vats that the. President would have from 715 to votes out of the electoral college of 33F FRY. ":\/iiiiitiei'll\'." writes neii-spaiieiiiieii --or a thoroughly representative er ctiiin of ilir-m—may be wrong. But if ti; are wrong. it simply means that the most expert opinion available on this major United Sims t-iillllCTll situation, which, from long ~ ~. ‘-I't bis full of all sorts of improbable pos- ' i. nil-taken. For these Washington d1 lt'1‘!.~' are trained observers. They are masters of the intuitive art of sizing tip public l (inmate that the papers of fully - :~i. wi:h ivlinni l spoke were supporting Piiiiiiiitis. n. \\ Ii ll they told me. accordingly, was t Yi-i- iuriiirt-ii-‘e. but their opinion. And it 1-. u: 1i7l.!ll'll‘i"'ll<l_\' agreed that Roosevelt WOUIG‘ be Tf"*ll'll~ il." l \‘.ili bi- llllPfv-llllfl, after the returns are in, in (lliib up iiii the atvltrilcy‘ (if ihlS prediction, acriiii-"t iTii "l'lik'itll"ll\ of a l./\.\'l'l0.\' swing as rtciiiwlii] in llli’ ~llJl\\' votes. Editorial Notes 'lli<- ‘i -~\i - qiit a fright. ‘Z- d‘- d‘ lloiiils»); rtiizillvil llll‘ (it-tuber gale 0f I915. 'i~ d‘ is Mai pounot-e are now ltoused though many f;i"ll" rs :ii"' ollll 'll ll. v lilti~t Iifiitlllvllttll in St-pteiiibcr totalled i8,- R; i111 i» I‘. on iiii-i'1-:is<- of i4 percent over last vi ii‘. l‘-i~ iiioii during the first right months vi iiqii- ainoiiiiii d to ozehiaxxi llis., an increase -if tt\l z" ii lllill"tll lbs, or i4 per cent. '1‘ + d‘ 'l .1 ~ at» nlziig lllf‘ :uiiiiial Alaritiiiie Officers’ lllt ll:i_\ /lllllll‘l' at Saint john, N. B., 7.4 ll-'l_\ will hear something worth The t-liief speaker is to be Sir Andrew tip ivhal-J. Mn. MscLzon, “6oo‘ -———~ klacpliail, who will reply to the toast to "The Canadian Expeditionary Forces.” 9|? ili 9k Production of creamcry butter in September amounted to 28,606,000 pounds compared with 27,239,000 a year ago, an increase of 5 per ccnt. Production during the eight months ending September zimountcd to 2o0,;"84.000 lbs. as compared with 194,624,000 in the same period of I935, an increase of over 6 million pounds or er cent. 3 p ¥ if 5K lVliat are the Province and City going to do to mark the Coronation? Elsewhere they are busy raising funds to commemorate the event; one municipality decided that the gift Will take the form of the establishment of a King Edward Coronation Playing Field Area and Recreation Ground for the youth of the city. Could we do better? Let us get busy anyway. ' fi 5K llé lf 8o per cent. of the tourist motor cars from abroad entered Canada through the Ontario border cities. and 2o per cent. came from Ha- waii, Canal Zone, Puerto. Mexico and Central America, that did not leave many of the 5.000.000 foreign tourist cars to come to the Maritime Provinces via. St. Stephen, N. B., and Saint john, N. B. if ¥ ii Women in the pulpit and men in the sewing circle seems to be the future of church organiza- tions. The United Church have, after prayerful consideration, decided to admit women to the- Miuistry; while in Chicago a group of church male members have decided to form a knitting, club with all women barred except the instructor l —who, under the new dispesation, may be the minister. One married man showed up for the first workout—which in itself is significant. ¥ 9|! ¥ Mayor Gerry McGeer of Vancouver is having a swell time in London. He has been the guest of _ honor of all the Mayors of London intinicipali-i‘ ties. He has been the guest of honor of the Lord ; ‘Mayor of London at a banquet at ivhicli all the * leading bankers. and Mr. Neville Clianilierlainl (fliaticcllor of the Exchequer, were present," and lie has been the house guest of the Lord i\lzi_vtii~ of London, Sir Percy Vincent for three whole days. After all this, Vancouver should recover its lost position in the financial world of London, but will it? That of course, depends on Gerry's l reaction-not the bankers‘. 9K 9K if A correspondent in Johannesburg writes: "Ice hockey has come to South Africa. A great rink, has been built at the Empire Exhibition and lllCl public here is anxiously ivaiting to sec the new‘ game. Crack teams are coming from Oxford and Cambridge Universities to play in a tournament. Four local clubs have been formed. Two of them contain, for the most part, Canadians who are working in the gold mines and in city businesses ' and who have played the sport overseas. The third team will comprise Continental players and the fourth local men who have been getting into trim by practising on roller skates!" ilélfiélé The woman minister of Angelus Temple is born unto trouble as the sparks fly upwards. She has had diputes and lawsuits with and over mere men; noiv she is at loggcrlicatls with her daughter, Roberta, liccaitsc she allegedly w-aiited to marry the Temple Lawyer, .\li'. lactib Moidcl. The latest difficulties at the Temple reached a crisis when Miss Sample, .\li's. .\l:icl'hcrson's daughter by her first husband, refused to obey her mother in acknowledging the authority of Mr. Giles N. Knight. business manager. Satur- day iveek, Mrs. hlacPherson and hcr son, Rolf, who with Roberta comprise the Temple board of trustees, met in Roberta's absence, declared 1\Ioidel’s contract as Temple lawyer terminated and hired i\lr. Willedd Andrews in his place. Mrs. Kennedy, Mrs. MacPhcrsotfs mother, sides with her granddaughter in the dispute. i l l! A Quebec City Magistrate in disposing of a case where women were fined for being found in disorderly houses, declared the police author- ities were not proceeding in the proper fashion -—thcy should get after the proprietors of the houses and the tenants who ran them. This cv- idently appealed to the students of Laval Uni- versity, who, to the number of 100, raided a number of disorderly houses on Saturday night, breaking doors and ransacking rooms. A numb- er of the youths were injured in the free-for-all that followed, and three of them were arrested. They pleaded not guilty to a charge of disorder- ly conduct, maintaining their action was neces- sary to compel the police authorities to dis- charge the duties incumbent on them. The blag- istrate, whose criticism incited their action, re- manded them, rcleasgngsktliem meantime on bail. 9K A comparison between Nazi and Conimtiuist religious "intolerance", to the advantage of the former, was made the other day. Out of the “confusion and antagonism" in the German re- ligious situation has come tlic convicton that the church is vital to the state and that the “spir- itual privileges in the church are of vital im- portance to the welfare of the citizcns.".it was stated at the World Lutheran Convention in New York last week. One tangible result of the religious agitation in Germany has been that the church is now forced to act in a more unified way, although its practices must be more "con- servative" than those followed at first. It was al- so explained that since the formation of the Cotincil of the Lutheran Chtircli in Germany a year ago, there has been more religious freedom than at any time during the history of the third Reich. The council was formed after tlie gov- ernment informed tlic church that it could ob- tain increased recognition and freedom of action if it adopted a more gradual and con- servative program than before. On the other hand. in a statement issued to the committee by the Martin Luther Bunrl of Erlangcn, (iermanv, it was announced that only eight Lutheran pas- tors arc still actively engaged iii the ministry iii Russia today. as compared with more than 20o at the end of the Czarist regime. 'l'liirt_v-niic pastors are permitted to live there. but liavvl been forbidden tn exercise their pastoral office. and forty-six ‘are in Soviet prisonspor concentra- tion camp: Notes by the Way Historically the new Bol-Illfllk purge ls more important thin former mass executions 1n Russia. It. mails the end of the Bolshevlk party; only Stalin survives from the old guard. It marks, too. the final triumph of Stalin's nationa- list; policy. It means that the out- side world has less than it had ex- pected either to fear or to hope from Soviet Russian-New States- men and Nation, London. Sir Percy Vincent, reporting on his recent visit. to Canada, pays handsome tribute to our country. “Canadians have lii a, few score years accomplished miracles," says the Lord Mayor of London. "I re- turn filled with an impression of a. vast canvas on which they have as yet, with all untirlng energy and splendid craftsmanship, but sketch- ed the outline of a great and beautiful picture." Now there's the right kind of peregrlnatlng Im- perlalistl-Windsor Star. Major- Ian Hay assured an audi- ence of business executives lii Lon- don tliat the human advertising vras the iivoi-1d's best: way of selling value-‘for-money goods. He tn- staneed the case of a Western American small-town clothier, who made a fortune from the sign: The cheapest. Pants ln the World; Walk right. ln, folks, and buy a. pair! One dollar per leg; Seats free!" "People," said Major Ian Hay. “ivatit t-o be told when a. good article comes on the market and an itiielligciit, system of making that fact as ividley and as quickly known as possible is a public xiecessity and a public boon."- Strand Eng. Journal. The United States, like Canada. has freedom of the press 1n a quiet full and tangible sense. Neither country shuts Gown on what ls called radical opinion. Communist papers aroalloived to publish and circulate freely in both countries so long as they do not preach violence. A inuzzling of press op- lnloii would run against the de- mocratic grain in both nations. This whole continent has been cradled in an atmosphere featuring individual liberty and the largest possible right. of expression of op- inioh. Curb the press and you get. a fairly, solid groundwork for autocracy. A desire m fetter the press is one of the first symptoms of dictatorship.—R.eglna Leader- Pest-Ex. Herr Hitler-this man who has no personal friend.» and ivlshes for none, who regards women with scorn, and fit. for nothing but the production of cannon-fodder, who who neither drinks nor smokes nor eats meat, who reads no books,- Herr Hitler ls not. a human being. We do no‘. know what to call him. He ls an apparition of strange portent. He 1s an enemy of the human race-mt the entire human race, including its German repre- sentatives. One thinks of the Em- peror Caligula of Rome. whose 1n- sanlty made hlin so blood-thirsty that lie said he wished the people of Rome but. a single neck, so he could kill them all by a single blow; one thinks of the Emperor Hellogabalus whom the people ev- entually threw down the city's sewer; one thinks of all the mon- sters of history and legend, and one shudders at the thought of them. But we doubt 1f one of those monsters of the past was ever as great; a thieat to the welfare of world as he who rules tn Berlin.- San Francisco Argonaut. i. Canada, lllre the other three Do- mlntons, Ls over-governed. It has nlne provinces and every province has a Legislature. The national Government at. Ottawa has a. Prime Mlnlsfcr, a Cabinet, a. senate of 96 members and a House of Com- mons of 2A5 members. The ntne provinces have ntne governors, nine Cabinets and, all told, 514 members of the legislatures. A1- toggthct", it takes 864 elected peo- ple to govern Canada-one for every 2,540 families. We 1n Great Britain, with four times as many people, have only 615 people in our House of Commons. Why doe; Canada have 249 more? Plalnly, the national Government of Can- ada and the nine Legislatures are more than four times too large. The bureaucracy, too, should be cut down by at, least 50 percent. Here you have the main reason why Canada has slowed down, and Ls mu:li less prosperous than Great Britain. Last February there were 1,080,831 Canadians receiving un- employment rellef. Also, 156,944 farmers were receiving ald from the Government. Perhaps our Camidlan' readers can have this article prln‘erl tn Canadian papers and Magazlnes-Efflctency Mag- utne, London, i Qlljat but? at I flours _.'!!"'w-'9"‘._-'Ln rnr: m-rznuoeivcu QUOTIENT l. Q. or THE menu: MINDED There ls a great different between having a mental ailment such as illusions, delusions, haliuctnatlons— seeeixig or hearing things that. do not exist, obsessions, depression, dementia pi-aecox-persistent. dream mlity. Thus those with a mental ailment may actually have more ‘brains than the average "normal" individual but. becausetbey have these mental klnks-obcasslons. delusions. a. persistent dream state- they cannot ta-ke their place 1n the community. But the mentally de- ficient haven't as much brains as the average normal individual. Most. cases of mental deficiency are due to some defect. in the ,l1fe forces or life cells of the parent or parents Perhaps 80 to 90 percent of the caries are due to some defect in ti. parent. In others the life cells of the parents have been healthy but. the growth of the brain has been interfered with or arrested by some cause. The degree of intellgence of men- tal defectives is measured by var- loiis tests. What. is considered iior- mal intelligence is graded for the age 0t‘ an infant up to the boy or girl of l6, after ivhicli age ft. was found itliat there was little informs‘: in itatlvc intelligence as disting- ulsltcd from knowledge. This ls called the I. Q. or intelligence quotient of the individual "Inas- much as the average child of scven has the mental age of sweii, his I. Q. is 7-7 or 100. If however the child of seven has a mental age of four, his I Q. is 4-7 or 57 and so -"As native adult intelligence is l‘ reached at sixteen years of age l that age 1s used 1.11 determining the I. Q. of iidu1ts~a peron of 16 or any age over sixteen who has a mental age of eight would have an I. Q. of 8-16 or 50. Generally spealcng an adult hav- ing an I Q. of '70 or over ls not considered feeble mixidrd but any- thing below 90 ls really subnonnal. Noyes "Textbook of Psychiatry” divides mcritalfy deficient perscns into three group; The mos; highly developed feeble minded are known as morons and have a mental nge between seven and twelve. Those of the next. lower group are kitoivii as lmbeciles Wll-ll a mental age from 3 to 6. ‘The most, defective are idiots, whose mental age is tivo years or below. While the mentality of the feeble minded cannot be increased, the majority of morons are honsst. sober and industrious and if trained are capable of supporting or partly supporting them-elves. Imbeclles can do certain tasks but can never support. themselves whilst ldlots can perform no useful work " BRONZED GRACKLES The wind has blown these birds, a noisy throng Into the elm. Arid from their perch they flute Shrlllness to sky. They will not. be here long; But now they line the limbs llke heavy fruit. This the lncredlble. Beyond be- llef, The dazzled elm betrays the rauc- ous tongue. With an old wisdom wonderful and brief, Tlielr strong togetherness ls fiercely sung. What moments for the tree from ' which they strike! " Here they held it. all in a black swarm; And I am silent, their llke- Such swinging eager dots, such a. winged storm. " -—Danlel W. Smythe tn the New York Times. wondering for \\\\\\\‘ bonus” "m. "AcnAcui p1‘; "i. ‘we n04!“ r‘ y no 1 . state. and having a deficient men-J PUBLIC FOR UM ihhcollnnlnocnlu lhl qlillnl o! , i4 Olnrllfldoin Ounllu dons Ill manually, adorn Ila opinion 0| cnrnapnlultn ‘P. B. "DUG OUTS" Sin-Is 1t true that. the hard worked carpenters and labourers at theProvlnclal biilldlng may be threatened with trench feet and lumbngo from the cold ground in their dugouts 1n the basement waiting for flve o'clock daily to be released from their suffer- lngs? I am Sir, etc, ' i CHARMYITETOWN CONGER l l GETTING OFF WITH 1'1‘ , l i l Sun-There ls reason for honest and law-abiding citizens who love this beautiful clty, to be somewhat ln a. “valley of humiliation" on account. of the continuance or rob- l bery and burglary. Li: 1t not high time to strike at. : the root of this momtrous glowing f evil? t ‘ Now, bandits and robbers do not lplunge from decency and honor l into crime. They begin small. They lptck and finger and do small dis- honest deeds at first. They grow up gradually to full fledged bandits. 1.01: me give an instance of how they learn. , Oin Friday last, on Grafton 5b., layoung lad was bringtnglnaheavy, two-horse load of tumlps. They were piled high ‘on the truck. A icmwd of boys just out. of icliool lmade a. mid on the load and one {succeeded in climbing on the truck. lHe threw and kicked down the tur- nips to the‘ crowd below. The lad driving could not. leave his horses to protect his load for rear or a collision. This took p‘ace not. far i from the Guardian office. Now was that anything but highway robbery? And this was done by children out of one oi- more of our City schools! In my ichooi dnyn the teachers were responsible for the conduct of their pupils, not only 1n school but on the way to and from, school, and teachers warned the children to be decent and respectful on the public road or elrewlhmte. ‘flint good old habit continues I trust, Ln most of the oounti-y schools. As there were many witnesses tt. could be found out who thore bays were and from what. sahools they came. What: ts the good of a know- lledge of the “three R's" 1f the Iyoung are not taught also civility and honesty? I1 not. an honest, decent (but. l unleltered) person a better ivset. to 3 the city than an educated thief? I am, Sir, etc. AN ANGERED OBSERVER. ______________ - MOTOR ACCIDENTS Slr,-—"Observe:r‘s" letter in a re- cent lssue of talks open common sense. We have the worrt recogni- tion of truffle laws Ln this pro- vlnce of any on the oontlnent, and llkely the whole universe. Your Own Private Safe Your will, securities. deeds. insurance policies, and almi- lar valuable papers, should never be kept at your home or oflice, where they are subjected to the risk of losa through fire, theft or care- lessness. These documentl, together with articles of acu- timental value, old letters, birth and marriage certifi- cates, should always be kept in your own private Safe Deposit Box. You can rent a Safe Deposit Box at moat branches of this bank for as little an 1i per day; larger boxes cost slightly more. THE I ROYAL BAN OF CANADA OVER 100 BRANCHB IN CANADA AND 30 OTHER COUNTRIES w A. e6 \"\\5\‘ Spill“ Correctly he says it. ls not the fault of our City police or R.C.M.P., the bert of their type, the mouxitlea particularly whose efficiency. and I10 respect. for persons. menaces their continuance 1n office. And correctly he places the blame 0n the proper shoulders when he gives the lion's share to law ad- ministration. In England, the most. thickly congested traffic in the world, there ta the minimum percentage of crime and accident. And why? Be- cause there, law is law, judgw are judges, enforcing officers do their duty. Baronet or pleblan have an equal chance. Even those employed by Royalty are found in the docks side by side with earl or bnronet and the commonert laborer. And all suffer the equal penalties. No political wire-puller dare interfere to fomtiall or stay tihe hand of Justice. ' Arid because of thls, because they know the law will be app1led,l com-tier and plebhin are compelled to respect, and they do respect the law. We are toldtotemper justice with mercy. It. 1a right. It 1s n western ideal, but. too often interpreted as tempering Justice with racketeering. Human sympathy usually goes with the under dog and Judtclal officers are human, but they are also guar- dians of a most sacred responsi- btllty. It. Ls not mercy to whitewash offences. It 1s creitlty, for it en- courages the offender to mater violence. and worse. 1t encourages others to disregard law and Joln the lifts of law breakers. If our laws against reckless drlvtng and drunken drivers. had been rigidly enforced tn the part, there would be less accident and loss of lffe 1n the present. I have travelled considerably, and for many yearsgover highways with more than a hundred times our local volume of traffic. The Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea USE B RA H MIN \ Orange Pekoe Tea average speed I would estimate at (Continued on p000 '1) Announcement JUST ARRIVED A i COMPLETE LINE MAX ElACTOR SOCIETY BEAUTY AIDS Max Factor preparation: are In m very large way res- ponsible for the splendid complexion of the Hollywood Celebrities. Some of our lines Include FACE POWDER. FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN AND TISSUE LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are made from the purest Ingred- lenta In correct colors, har- mony ahadcs, to blend with individual complexion coloring 1nd In delicately perfumed. to please the moat fastidious tutu. It‘: peculiar adhesive qualities minke It “stay on" and "cling" under moot trying conditions. Vlslt our, store and look over lhls line of toilet pre- partitions. MAIL ORDERS PBOMPTLY ATTENDED T0. THE 2 MA CS 140 Great George Street PHONE 315 BULBS BULBS UBIUQQDD1F We have just. received direct from HOLLAND our annual supply of DUTCH BULBS- These Bulbs have been tn- g apected at port of entry "'5 are free from disease. Choice Flowering g Bulbs EYACINTHS, (Double all! Single.) TULIPS, (Elrly SlnIll-l TULIPS, (Early Double-l DARWIN TULIPS. (l9!!! gum) Double and SIM"- NARCISSUS, Extra llfll h . EuIlAsFI-‘ODILS, 5:22: W" Bulbs. c‘ CROCUS. Choice M“ (hr-go bulbs). FRUSIA, (Mixed colnrI-l oanamuus n11 of the above EXT!" LARGE t» rntsr SIZE- Send for our blllb Ital M" fully. an mini; n LowEST rrucrzs. Garter 8t 061T Limited