"fl is eoarey_-.-.-.q.-.a-.~ii-;i~éb.ee-.u~e_;z.--.-_ L _‘__ _ g _ a 5 ‘ stéiiéésnir ......=L-Q.._g1 ‘ r01 lie‘ PAGE FOUR. ’ lJUNE 2g, Iiotes By The Way Tho campaign you on braveiyl Linn! Iprohibltlonlau like Mn Johnson, K- C., shouting the praises of "two Governments in l‘ne", tak- ing a drink when occasion offers. strong for prob-lbitlon, giorying in the taxatfon of everything tangible and intangible. And the political pat-sons. horrified at any provincial government getting prof-It from dinner-that's “blood money" to their pious souls-but the Govern- ment at Ottawa takes it in tens oi‘ millions and: that's all right to them! Isn't it funny? Condem- ulng t-he brewers and distlllers and IIIE [ZHIHIIITTETIIWN Bll-AHIIIIN Ilolhlt-W. Ollfil l. Ill‘!!!- VIoo-Pnllnfl-J. I. Barnett. [gantry-Ill Gal. D. A-Iullllll D. l. 0. Illtol all Iallgor-J. I. Ilnlnlfl. Auoollto ‘Editor-ll. K. Curb. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1927 town, there were over a hundred , places in the city in which lltlllm‘ T would perhaps not be too much-was helm; jllggfllly 501d, some of it to suy that no more logical or con-l boofleg" some moonshmm some vlnclng address has been heard luhomedlrew. and a" of it “rotten:- Charlottetown than that deliveretlpbut being bought and consumed daYVWEILIXIEgeIOL b: "lllll line with lllllé , l _ - 0V ll cen 8 ' in the Prince hdlard Ftlllleztreflilal-‘and night. ls there any llosstblliiylfld and new‘, :0“, 132.: ‘n 223:1; 5mm“? "'5'" by ‘ rs‘ ' of the 00ml)" "lid" ("°"'e"“me" daughable‘! But don't mention the fairness to those who might differ Gonna‘ wing any more denloniaczillword “hypocrisy” for pity‘ sake with her as to the best means of than m“? Lama; 5s slandermg and -per-secug_. dealing with the liquor traffic, her what is i, that imvels these pouring these worthy men. quiet, dignified and logical reasonswxcal prohibmonms lo ignore the‘ s: we mm from that to i MRS. HOWARD FALLIS. for abandoning her almost life-long demon we have and pom, Wm, teariweak of ‘axaflon in ‘which Mr- fldherellce 1° Pmmbnim‘ and “eemand trembling to the imaginary lliifllohuson glories and Mr. Saunders. ing a more reasonable tnethod, fullyqmou under me proposed measure nfihis leader, seems ibound to bring ls i, thnupon us al-l. Mr. Saunders and ‘his prgan condemn the repeal of the Poll tax. l: is a TaYr assump would not be Dragging the mauelhme N959“ demm‘? They “gm m tlOll that they wpuld like to have 1°° si-"WEIY 1° "Y ‘ha! n° reasowlktlou". and evelyfllll? e199 kn°ws~ l” it. restored, and Mr. Saunders will BN8. lflil-lllilllled ma" 01‘ “Pmflllfi; party politics? Certainly the tem-lhave need to restore it should be them igever get into power. He is corn- “ mlttetl to give $40,000 which we Cbnvinced every fair-minded manzcovetnment Cqnu-Q]? and woman who heard her, and it‘ they don-t km,“- of me gxigtence of who heard her can conscientiously;perance zeal of many of vote for so-called prohibition nextiwe“ steeped in the party dye, _ - , ‘now receive from railway taxation Saturday‘ The politician whoseiil a" outcroppmg o’ rehghms m-to the city and towns. He would partylsm is impenetrable, who can tolerance and me nanowness of lake me ‘Honey now received by see nothing in the coming electionlume mmds ma; cannot see from the vendors and use i, for the em bl"- Dflfly 8am- Wm ‘"119 7°” Party-lolly viewpoint but their own? Thlslforcentent of Prohibition. These right or wrong, but many consclen-flanerl together Wm, ignorance n: two little deductions would deplete tluus Liberals v11 leaving the Tlle- the conditions existing here underime “"9"” ‘l! ‘he P'°"i"°° t" atre Monday night were heard {Otm-ohjbiflo“ would appear to be nIrgzlgeisuzinliysfigfioffie ysizcglh‘ Bl" say that Mrs. Fallls‘ reasoning was powerful factor 1n their campaign , absolutely irrefutable and that it and they are embeliishing n all with Mr. Saunders and m. partly are -wns no use denying the flit"- thflt scrlptualiquotatlons, none of whichFfmmififli l0 blillg ill the Mfliell- Drobibition was a failure and that even touch the hem of the garmentizoestxggugttills: Agingzimflfére 1:: a better method 0f Ofllltrfll might of either prohibition or Governmenfibeen estimated at szomooo" of be Yflllllli- . Colltrol- They t9“ 115 °5 the evils which they would "pay half, leaving The ifllllle. She fileflfiy 5101611. lyllll of intemperance, which no one ones-line people of this ‘Province to "pay not Ibetween the "wets" and the [ions and they cooly predict that -the other half which would be $100,- "drys," between temperance and all these evils shall come in underooo‘ T° a“ "h9g9 M'- Saunders “'3 Heaven knows we are not “dry" prohibition. G vernment Control subiimely ig ‘committed and also to the expense 0 I ' The province is notoriously "wet." of taking a plebiscite on prohibi- norant or pretending to be ignorant “on two years hence‘ This mom the liquor traffic notoriously uncon- trolled. Prohlbltion has failed here of the fact that we have all these 8y’ rm. more than 900000 in u". f0 lntemperance. under l evils andmany more under our Dre- must be found somewhere and sent system of pretended prohibi-Wlllehflw- alld there are n0 other and elsewhere tion‘ “'8” 11m“ by bofmlying or taxa- tlio . check it. The question now is, can, They see nothing but the word. n it be controlled. can» it be-even purl-prohibition, and around it a halo of Q|d u", hid on by ‘he 3:,“ tially checked’! righteousness; they forget that thoGovrnment and wholly or partly We have been told of what Pro- halo is whitewash on the "whitsdl milyeti by the SWWBFI Gfllltllll- hlbitlon has done for the United sepulchre" and that witilin it is the memdnzzgtlzil ‘rSmrma f‘: i“ ‘the ' lcase e1 ax an - e rel uc- . - 1 States. Mrs. Fallls quoted Rev. DIZIPOHGIIIILSS which is poison ng ended ‘and tax, ‘m new mm" to the ex_ Parkhurst, of Madison Square polluting the moral atmosphere ofitem m, 3200mm mu.“ he flevfsed Church, a life-long prohlbitionlst, our province. gang 135d om The Stem 18w 01-119. now in his eighty-seventh year, as’ control or to Consistency is a large factor lncesslty makes this imperatilve. Pos- having admitted the failure of pro- hibition in the United States, and the "terrible conditions" resulting from it. The United States, saldprofessed. Our political prohlbl-‘by ‘the ‘Christianity. When this virtue is Iwantlng we have grave doubts as to the quality of the Christianity isibly there may be some new thing. tangible or intangible to be taxed. iThere 6's not-hing surer than death land taxes, but much has been done , promise-keeping Stewart Mrs. Fallls, is being held up to us tlonists, many of them at least, are Government m reduce our m,‘ bur. as an example to emulate. help Canada. if it descends to the level of lawlessness prevailing in the United States." The conditions in this Province today are known, they are not only unsatisfactory but extremely dan- gerous, dangerous especially to the young who sce without wondering at it because of its commonness, the daily violation of law cf every kind. The problem for the electors to solve is how to grapple with the evil, how to change the condition. Evaryghovaest elector knows prohibition has not helped and can- not help matters. that in the nature of things prohibition is but a cloak to hide conditions as they really are. Figures will be given us to show what prohibition has done for the United States. but, as Mrs. Fwliis said, “figures can't lie, but liars can figure." We know, and everyone who raadsflfnows that prohibition in they-United States has failed as it has failed In Cana- tln. The thing now. is to try an- other way, a way that is succeed- ing in our sister provinces, a way that will succeed bore if given a reasonable trial, and everyone who knows Premier Stewart Imows he wlllcarry oufhis promises.’ " uursrvtnlrio “m! __omon. . ' P-@*-' ' E moat extreme of our political prohibitloliists are‘ fond of try- ing to frighten us, "yticularly the women, by declaring‘ that Govern- lnbnt Control manna "the unfetter- .In| of tho demon rum." if this be lo It now becomes a nutter of choice u to what kind of demon we prefer. It would be diilcult to guanine a more rnpaoions demon of rum can‘ we new at present undu- prohibition, According 01' _,_i€~;pp.ljm git; of Charlotte- t that ~ |prohibltlon ls the only way of sal- vation, but they should be honest enough to analyze the whole situa- tion and try to understand it, try to find if there ls any virtue in tho other method. Anyway, it has now become a question as to which de- mon we shall have. the one we know or the one we don't know. The one we have now and which we know is certainly not in the good graces of honest men and wo- men today. -.-<-0>-- EDITORIAL NOTES. After looking through The Pat- riot, a few evenings ago, a lady remarked, "its getting more ridi- culous than ever." That's the truth! We have now in our midst an army of political parsons who have no vote arid who pay no taxes in this province. They have come to take part in a political campaign against the Government and to tell us how we ought to vote. They tried this in Ontario and failed. Shall they win out here‘! We think not! Our political prohlbitionists are fond of quoting authorities who have. spoken or written in support of prohibition. These authorities may have been quite sincere, and actual conditions as the political persons who are at present scour- ing this province. The authority to guide up here at this juncture is the condition brought about in our own province and under our ,own eyes by prohibition. The "lid" was lifted right hero in Charlottetown and men and women saw tor them- selves corroboration of the state- ments made four yearn ago by lend- ing ciorgymon that conditions bore "Mitt lift” hi!!! by Iilllledunder prohibition “were worn than w", u, n, . m _ ‘w: ,- -...- aQ-JJ-olt . , . also may have been as ignorant of| "God probably sincere in the belief thatidens and further reductions are lpronllisetl whet! the government l ‘gets a renewal of power from the |peoplo at the polls. The Government trust the people. Anti never bcliorc had the people -better or clearer reasons to trust. "their government. And never bc- ilfore had the peoble stronger or clearer reasons to fear a crushing burden of new Ior restored taxation ‘than just now, if‘ they should ‘be so lhlind and foolish as to entrust the lgovernment of lithe country to Mr. Saunders. But of that we have no fear. Trusting the tpeople as the government does and as we do, we trust in their common sense. But we w: m our readers. be they citizens, farmern, thinner-men, lalborers or professional "in tlhell‘ calllugs. that a. heavy load of taxa- tion, grievous to be borne, twrlll fol- low should‘ a Saunders Govern} ment be placed an power. Mil‘. ‘Saunders has committed himself, very foolishly, as we think, quite needlessly too, bu-i. most irrevoc- aibly to a pol-icy by which at least $200,000 wvill be, lost to the Provin- cial treasury, than» can only be made up by new taxaixTlo-n. This is emvmlng. put true. Dow-n with such a. policy! Smite it hip and thigh! LBury it once "and forever as deep as that we'll on Governor's Islandi! » Men and mm». ofqPrinoo Ed- vmu Inland! sortable people n vie believe you an, we refuse ho be- lieve that you will vote for such irtlter and costly foolishness, If ‘ electors could be found ho rvote tbs/May and bring the Saund- ers policy into fume they would rue tho day that they ever heard the name d: its author. vm for it and if it carries you'll deserve vnhot you'll get and ply for I. door- Iy. Two harm-ed thouland do)!“ of additional one: hauls over your heads and those of your oHdron. n a i=- mm view. at a a: sour _ "We, u» "' u", in» .1. from CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDlANf ‘ I u Byjpul w.kb.u-D- SLENDER GIRLS One of our health magazines is bemoanlng the craze for slender- negg that nan swept‘ over the coun- try. 1t is pointed out. and rightly too. that the growing girl needs all her strength as she approatvhefwoman- hood, and that if she cuts down on her food intake in an effort to keep “sllm." then not only her health at. present, but her whole future health is endangered. "Observers are reporting in- creased tuberculosis rates among girls in early adult life. due large- ly to reduced vitality caused in turn by lack of proper diet." Now what about this’! Unfortunately it is only too true. and our girls seem to rejoice at the loss of a. pound. or the reduction oi‘ one eighth of an inch from the ankle. Now that the majority of our middle aged folks are too heavy. that overweight and protruding ab- domen are only too common, must be admitted, but middle aged folks have attained their growth and strength and are in a. sort ’of stat- lonaly condition, whereas "the functions of growing girls must ho maintained at all cost, and If instit- ficient nutriment is provided, the difference must be made up from such reserves as are available." And growing girls cannot afford to draw upon their reserves, be- cause every ounce may he needed in the days that are to come. What is the result‘ of this under- eating? These girls feel tired all the time. sore throats and colds are frequent and an otdlnary ailments hangs on. Why? Because tfood is necessary not only for heat and energy. but also for growth at this time. This is t-he reason that the grow- ing girl or boypneeds its much, if not more food ban the parents. You sec the surface of the body is almost as gloat in extent as that of the parent, thus lequlritig as much food, and in addition there is the food necessary for growth. However, fortunately to be fash- ionable for the coming year, a little more weight must be carried, be- cause as mentioned before, Florenz Zelg.field states ‘that he does not want such “slendet" girls for his two or three years. This announcement will likely have. a greater effect upon our girls than all the talking that parents or health specialists can ever give. They will not be afraid to eat now. i? ~b-§-O ‘A Daily Selections F0 a Guardian Readers June 22, 1927 ‘DH-E LAST ENEMiH-God is unto us a God of salvation; And unto Jehovah the Lord beiongeth escape from death. Psalm 68:20. PRlAY.ER:—O God, blessed is the man whom Thou choosest. We shall over ho satisfied with the goodness of Thy hollso. "WOMAN" She's an angel ln truth, n demon ht - fiction, A woman. the greatest in all con- tradlction; She's afraid of a cockroach, she'll scream at a mouse. But she'll tackle a husband as big as a house. She'll take him for better, she'll take him for worse, She'll split his head open and then be his nurse, And when he ls well and can get out of bed, She'll pick up a teapot and throw at his head. She's faithful, deceitful, keen-sight- ed and blind. She's crafty, she's simple, she's crush she's kind. She'll lift a man up. she'll cast a man down. She'll tear him apart and make him a clown. You fancy she's this. but you'll find she is that, ' For she'll play like a ki/lten and bite like a cat. in the morning she will, at evening she won't, ' And your always expecting she does, but she don't. --Vfnco'nt- next you will decide the question. Bring this crushing burden upon yourselves and you will rue the day till the end of your iives. We have warned you- 'so beware! Alk Mr. Saunders or any lup- pvrthg candidate of‘ his, how he or they pmpos in make 300d the $200,000 which the would mort- gage away and note their answer! 0200.000 morw of taxul And you know and we blow till-t. tbo olifle inl ectimuq of our Wbillttlon ll 1.000 loss than lnnlfll. ' " More than that have no. Fewer poo pie to ply‘ incl! Divide $200} 000 among the fewer taxpayers and ft run: up 0o 81.80 per head, or 811.60 per family c! five, Then think it our and lly you Wllllf. that amt of t-nm. You don't show us he has been tising the past" O-O-O-O-C - Confederation And- After Sixty Years 0t‘ Progress CONSERVATION OF CANADIAN WILD LIFE ‘tThe wild animal life of 10-day is not ours to do with as we please. The original stock is given to us in trust fol tho benefiy both of the present and the future. We must render an accounting of this trust to those who come after its." --"'l‘bc Sportsman's Code Etllics"-— , .\ great many of our citizens" have heard about the conservation‘ of wild life, but probably only a few oi‘ them could give the essen-l tlul reasons for this conservation, it has been estimated by competent‘, authorities that the annual loss tol Canadian agriculture through in- sect depredutions is $125,000,000 an- nually. and it is well known that birds are the chief natural factors which tend to keep Insects in of sects were to increase without any tmtural conttol there would be prac- tically no vegetation on this con- tinent in a very short time so it is quite obvious that the protection of our birds is essential from the point of national economy- llcre are some of otlr very useful feathered friends; For the protec- tion of trees and foliage-Warbler, chlckadee, phoebe, downy wood- pecker, aerial insect destroyers- whlppoorwlll, swallows and crows. Destroyers of 1odents—owls and hawks. i Ills Royal l-lig-hness the Duke ofl Connaugllt, when Governor General. of ‘Canada, took a very real interest? in the conservation of Canadian birds, and personally saw that nest- ing boxes were distributed through the grounds of Government House similar to those used by tho Ottnvfti improvement Commission ln Rock- cliffe Park and the Donllpion Gor- ernment at the Central ‘Experiment- al Farm. It is impossible to oven approxi- mately estimate‘ the value of our wild animal life in dollars and cents ‘but it is well to remember that moose, for example, not only tur- nishes our Indians of the northern woods with meat but provides them with clothing as well, The buffalo within the limits of the last cent- ury llas been reduced from millions to practical extermination; total ex- termination ln fact if it had not been for the excellent wild anitnal| ‘conservation accomplished by the| Dominion Parks Branch of the De-' Dnrtment of the Interior.- Canadlans have excellent reasons for being proud of their national parks, which comprise a"total arcs of nearly 9,000 square miles, and are absolute preserves for wild life; hunting being totally prohibited within their borders, and fishing al- lowed only under strict rcgulutiotis. Banff is especially an ideal spot for the animal lover, as excellent nut- ural paddocks have been construct- ed ,in this vicinity where buffalo, wapltl, mountain sheep, goat and deer are confined for those who wish to see these animals in ideal surroundings. An excellent motto for every hunter and sportsman is: ——"No species of animal should be destroyed at a greater rate than l0 can increase." One of the most, encouraging signs at present ls the increasing number of nature books being pub- lished, and it is thought that our future citizens will recline more fully each year the priceless asset that “Wild Life Conservation" is to our country. ' Q FOR SCRAP BOOK _ A scales Truffaut/lav QUOTATION. FOR BOOK LOVERO WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22. A countryman between two law- yers is like a fish between two cats. —Bon]. Franklin. At the Play-A bad plot is simply a row of stakes, with a character impaled on each-characters who would have liked to live, but came to untimely grief; who started bravely, but fell on these stakes, placed beforehand in a row, and were transfixed, one by one, while their ghosts stride on, squeaking and gfbbsrlng through the play.- Jobn Glllworfhy. TO THE TERREBTRIAL GLOBE. (By n. Miserable Wreich.) Roll on, thou ball, roll on! Through pathless realms of space Roll on! What though I'm a sorry case?" What though l cannot meet my bills? What though l suffer toothache’! ills? What though f swallow countless pfl-is? Never you mind Roll on! Roll on, thou balL-roll on! Through sens of Inky air Roll on! It's true I've got no shirts to wear; It's true my butcbe '5 biii in due; - It's true my prospects all look blue- But don't let tbarunsottlo youi Never you mind! ‘\ Roll on! (It rolls on.) ' . zrlor Frootlitos. and Chflblsinn. -—0htlblaial com from undue ox- Douuro to slalb and cold and fro: lent preparation II Dr. Thom check; in vfact if these injurlousallr‘ F rlday and .Sahirday . s. in. McD0NALDfS7 . " , Boy's khaki Windbreakers . . . . . . ., 31,93 Childremsfancytophose ....,-..;.,,_.,.. .. . . . . . . . . ..,_-39¢ Fancy Dress Crepes . . . ; . . . . . . . .,,._ Yard Ladies"CottonHose......................, 2 (51:33,. Ladies’ Wool Bathing Suits.............‘: .. .,, "$235 Baby’sRubberPants .,.'_'_ 29¢ Women's Umbrellas $139 25 dozen Ladies’Silk Hose,all_sha'd_‘es ..... . . 98c ‘ Young Men’s FancyTweed Suits .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1250 B0y’s Cotton Jerseys, all sizes .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33¢ Men’s Balbriggan Underwear . . . . . . . . . . . 69¢ Each 25tLadies’SampleDresses $9.98 ‘I Ladies’DimityBloomers 43¢ Frilled Curtains $l219,Pn,i1-_ 5dozen Ladies’ French Scarfs . . . . . . . . . .'. . . _ ,?_'$1_9g Men’s Cotton Hose, brown and black . . . . . . . . . #155113“ Men’s Khaki Windbreakers . . - $248 Men’s Work Shirts £39,: Men’s Athletic Combinations ; . . . . .. . ' _ _ 93¢ ..$1.69 g Ladies’ Fme Cotton Bloomers . . . . . . " .394,- Boy’s Fancy V-neck Sweaters . . . . . . . . . . . $119. Men’sFancy StrawHats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1433 Ladie.s’ArtSilkyHose 39¢ Children's Rompers 79¢ Ladies’ Shadow-proof Slips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , , __ 95¢ 50newLadies’Coats $9.98 New Prints, something new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . 24c Yard" NewFancyVoiles..........................45cYard l NewRayonsjustreceived ; . . . . . . . . 60cY-ard ‘ Boy’sSuits.2pairPants $5.98 , B0y’si0ngKhakiPants 98c 7 MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED- POSTAGE PAID. ‘ S- A. Mc DONALD , w , r §~&§&O-Q§-QO-§->-OO-O# Household Scrapbook . GODFREY. anally coltrtilthTwi 6% Fim Mortgage IS-Year Sinking Fund Gold Bonds \ !—W.,l. Gilbert. ' bite from the icy wlndl of vfnto . , In the treatment of either an excai- ‘ D0- Qwngfl of c nicdetallon Building, corner St. Catherine Street g .34 meant co w Arm» Mmlmi By ROBERTA LEE w1+vvw+ov++o4ovv+++¢»» m dew-bands a exeeotivllllly stratu- T!" Sprinkllng the Clothes "M9153; Ernest PitLlt Co. at $33.5? and An lmPtoved way to sfnlnkle the n" “mud b Jglsoawntufifiggtttf clothes is by ltsing the spray of the '“ "MMM 9571'?” n‘ 1 - is “Humid a lawn hose while the clothes are Ne! 706°!“- llbfl"! 30% “."n:£',‘§"' still on the lino. iloll the plnln 3191mm" '5'“ "h m m ' Ready aurketabilig is alumni by the operation of the very substantial sinking fund. _ w, ma,“ ma; for a safe invmment at the attractive prim of Q and could Inland. 1545i '"' "n75 I _ wpiuyw duqiflive circular. - (A. Mackenzie &' Co. Limit C. S. Perth‘, Member,‘ TorontoSloclt Excluum 67 Yong: Sh; - Toronto A. E. MAONEILL, Representative ‘ Box 431, Charlottetown. _ \ gggapy -w,|uN_E'R$- g in a rerwllfimt "l" ' form, wen- YW". ° ' e mood ' _. 019095 lllltl place them in the husk- et. The siarched pieces may require a little more sprinkling. Such ct Powder A good and cheap ant-hot powder for dresser tiruwcut can be mutlc by mixing ‘A, ounce oi invention flow- BFB Wllh ‘é lelllillotmlttl of powder- ed cloves. When sweeping ., l . l R l1 "i-‘W-‘ilialler is soaked in wai- er, unfolded and llIilCCfI in the can. ter of the room, 1i. will absorb u 576M quantity of the dtlst when cleaning. . MR8. GGLDMpN save; ~ Cheelrluzl-ncvza ‘is iianllfildl a habit, andlitisonsimlhityouwiilnovnt- have to linemk- it lo we gnwt amt? dotomtrihlovpintptlicksofbtiiatitim 31mm smoother of pain/y, annoy- BIIOEB. ' OO-O-‘OOOOPOO-OID-Ovo-QOQQQQQ DAILY LESSONS 1N ENGLISH ' By W. L. Gordon ‘O-OOO-OQOO-O O-O-QQQ-QOO-OO-O 400i wlonns orrlaw MISUSED: Don't ray "I shall give it to whom- ever wants lt." Say "to whoeiver." omen MISPRIONOIJNCED: des- tine. Pronounce the i as in “tin,"_ not as In "time." OFTEN MISSPELDED: penllen- v _ tkgyiqgtgg the ni and ti. _ ' '1", ~ MS: enmity, nlm it , , c i‘ hostility, bitterness, dissehsiorfia y *- ~- - ' WORD STUDY: V"Use a word ' three times and it is yptirs." tun u; I l“ increuev our vocabulary by masfar- § in; one word each day. Today's word: EVNCUATE; to abandon Possession or withdraw from. "Th; Q"! WM not evacuated until defeat became imminent." .‘ ' ..___--_- ___._4-0>i-- lSattilsllacio-ry nleaullts have follow- ed experiments in wbbotn c-uiltiva- tion dn ltlalialalnl Somali-land. A new um» lock ror watts doord records the time whnu a slots II opened. and closed andl by with», It mutton not Whither you are an amdlur 0:10am» - f.‘ "'17.'°'Z'.'£‘.'; Si.‘ .3’... ova o g A . r _ a good Clutch nit/bikini}; supplies. M; __ t“. ~., “THE. ,.ENSI.GN” ‘I'M but on tit Jnaritot... We mm them at p?‘ from l‘ ~ ‘ - ' KI [l N EYI loan-lo Oil. la it counteracts the a. "t a. -" ~ - “Fahd-tn " Tai'0“pe§h'p ‘i