‘ ‘E, “oiislitonelowli Glililllllllll ...._..__-..- Inning _ Illll! flonndod mm us» Incident-W. Cbeltu a. ucriuc. IMPOIIPY_-I4|IIIL Col. n your (in advance) malls‘ In runes and Ilultefl stlvnnui illllos one vet! tin Vlce-Prssidehl-J. B. Burnett. l. . A. unkind». n l. a Idltor and Iqnua|~_J. B. Burnett Associate! ldltov—l). l. Currie. SATURDAY, MAY 25, "19129 1 rm: PEOPLE'S HEALTH him speak. says the Toronto Globe. | were enthralled, and received a new The strong plea made-by Dr. An-' conception oi the force, dignity and derson (l-ialton, Ont.) in the House If Commons on May 17th for pro- vision in the estimates for a federal ' fell from his lips. ‘praise to bestow upon any states- , beauty of the English language as it This is high health institute of research is de-lman of modem times, but the foi- aerving oi more than passing not- heaith activities of the Dominion‘ and make them very much more effective it would act as a clearing‘ house for the Provinces, particularlyi with relation to epidemic diseases._ At present there is no method by‘ which he various activities of ti...‘ Provinces can be brought together‘ 'af_ld the information developed in‘ one Province communicated to the. others. Dr. Anderson pointed out‘ that in 1917, when the Military Ser-‘ vice Act was enforced, n. little overl $0 per cent of the men examinedl were rejected because of disease, and‘ that of the number rejected almost‘ 00 per cent were found physically‘ unfit because of preventable diseases.‘ ‘lowing extract from 1N- ,'I‘his institute, which would be ' speeches indicates both his Imper- ltltiohed at Ottawa, would focus the iailsm and the charm of style that lw", durum m, Wu.‘ “m, out o; w,‘ one of hi5 madehim for years the most idol- ized public speaker of the British Isles: ' How marvellous 1t all isl Built, not by saints and angels, but the work of men's hands; cemented with men's honest blood and with a world of tears, welded by the best brains oi centuries past: not without til-e taint and reproach in- cidental to all human work, but constructed on the whole with pure and splendid purpose. Hum- an. and yet not wholly human, for the most headless and the most cynical must see the finger of the Divine. Growing as trees grow, while others slept: led by the faults of others as well as by the character of our fathers: reach- ing with the ripple 0i a resistless tide over tracts and islands and continents, until our littleBritaln woke up to find herself the foster- mother of nations and the source violin-ran of united empires. Do we not hail 1n this less the energy and fortune of a race than the supreme direc- tion oi the Almighty? This, surely, is a severe indictment‘ against the public health activities? sf file Dominion. We are spending‘ this year $2,450,000 in caring for the health of animals, $1,530,000 for the‘ improvement of live stock, $130,540: -———-—- for mines and geological survey, $2,-; The statement by President Hoov- 003000 for scientific work in connec- , er before o recent meeting of the As- lion with our fisheries, $l.300,000 for‘ sociated Press that "1ife and property immigration societies, womtns hos-l (in the United States) are relatively tels, and coiltlngcncie: and a grant: morc unsafe than in any other ci- of $1,000,000 for tltc empire settle-hiilized country in the world," ‘has Wncnt scheme, making a total of $2,-l el-zcitcd a. good deal oi comment in M70000 to bring people into thisl the American press. A striking illus- oountry. And for the health oi the‘ tration oi what President Hoover people of Canada how much do we, may have had in mind is contained spend? in the following extract from “Time," "This year for the laboratory of .hyiiohe we have an estimate of 8100.000: for the control oi vene- real disease. $100,000, for quaran- tine. $240,000. Quarantine proper- ly belongs to the Department oi Immigration. The appropriation is largely spent in connection iviih that, although sonic of 1:, I am sure, is spent in connection with quarantine station". for otlicr pur- poses. That makes a total oi 8490.000 for the hcalih of human beings in Canada. It is silrely a re- _ fliction on the intelligence of the Duninion parliament that such a situation exists today. Millions for the health ofanimals. millions for bringing imlnigranis into Canadarf anifmillioils for mining and flsh- 1 ink, but a paltry five hundred ' thousand dollars to improve the ‘ l l CIVILIZATION York: The North German Lloyd liner Stuttgart docked last week at a Manhattan pier. Purser Emil Re- mer had a $6,400,600 gold bullion shipment to deliver. Gauntleted, cartridge-belted policemen swarm- ed up the gangplank. Others. arm- ed with‘ sawed-off shotguns and sub-machine guns, stood about 1n anxious readiness on the pier. The heavy gold was stowed into armor- ed trucks, ominously loopholed. The bristling caravan, like a par- ty of Forty-miners crossing Indian territory, moved of! warily toward Wall Street. l-iis transfer receipt in his pock- et, Purser Remer grinned broad- ly over the Suttgarts rail and said: "When that gold was delivered to me at Bremerhaven. it came in an ordinary express wagon. All it needed to protect it there was one man sitting beside the driver." condition of health of the people." Ye: we have brilliant Icppntiunlh- ies ffor scientific investigation in Can- ada‘, if we would unlyavail oursclv-L es ‘of them. The National Research’ Council has given 344 scholarships‘- M1199 persons who have shown so»: Says the arahttord Expositor: e11! adlptabilliv for scivntific re-~ "When vcriioc arrives at that Post- lbéfbh- All 111011551118 number oil al conference in London he should EDITORIAL NOTES WI.‘ "llil/QT-imefl. immed 10 medl-‘BL to fire Postmasters with enthusiasm.“ and other solencas, but year after‘. Y6“ i113)’ 8° 1° 111B 13113911 5W1¢5l Justice must be done. In Kitchen- and the universities of that coun- e1- the Maglgtfatg mg fined the irv1_lre‘_ii11=d with Canadians Whey Mayor a dollar and costs for allow- have bcsn trained here. This. lwr-‘i 111g his dog to ruh at large-and his have. is the mo“ diswureclnz feel-j Worship had to promise that it lltl_¥,~l1l. They have been forced to‘ ‘vould not occur again, take ‘that step because we do notl Mrs. Herbert -Hoover has set an i u. monthly journal published in New _‘ w“? men is brine turned out in‘ be asked to give sh address oh how‘ NotesBy The Way The ways of Uncle 8am are past jinding out. There is something both comical and tragical about them. Just now he is professedly, and only that way, strong for Prohibition. It was not always so. During the War allCmada was under Prohibition‘ and fairly dry. The United States was wet. And in those days a lakeful of booze wassmuggled into Canada from the Sta-tea. That was before the 18th Amendment and the Volstead Act were passed. Presto, change! ‘Seven Canadian Provinces are now in the wet col- umn and the 48 States are in the dry column. The flow oi “liquid fire and distilled abomination" is now in lthe opposite direction, the rum-run- [tiers across the Lakes being, as they ‘U. S. citizens and Uncle Sam is ‘calling out to Canada to stop it. Why ‘days when Canada was being flooded ,with the stuff from U. B. distilleries land breweries? Like the silent Mr. iCoolidge he "didn't choose" to do so. l Uncle Sam is strong for "Freedom 50f the Seas"—-that is, of a certain ‘lsort-the sort that gives him a right {to seize or sink any foreign vessel ‘iauywhere on salt water regardless loi the three-mile or the twelve-mile ‘limit. Tile "I'm Alone" was s case ‘didn't he “stop it" during the war‘ ' rue dHAR first I001». . at flours lilo-Aw son-din l INSULIN . I l l feeding. The idea behind this treatment was that the body processes-digestion and so forth—shouid be stimulated to action, and the brain given-a lest, This helped many cases, but the re- suits were much more datisfactory where the individual was treated as if he had no brain, or rather ls 1f he were an animal, in the control of s guard or keeper. He was made to est and rest es with Dr. Mitchell's treatment, but he was also forced to exercise. And so, sc- cording to his physical strength he put in the whole day eating, exercis- ing, resting, and then doing it all over again. crmmo lvsuvous cases wrrn 11R"! 05° Dr- W911‘ 11515011011 W55‘ The advent ‘of the Bolsheviks to able to'help a number of “hex-volu" cases by the use of rest and forcedi i l.~9J‘TET°W"'Qll./_\RP.!£\“‘ ‘ THE 11mm TE PAPERS . 0F COLONEL HOUSE a... Friend And Adviser of President Wil- * son‘ Recounts in His Diary The Great Events Of The, War In Which His Country "Was Concerned. , tcopyrtgntl ' l I would offset the harm, Leaving outl the iii feeling-which it would create in the Bolshevik Government it DOW" 1Y1 3115510 W” 115ml" 1114116 would arouse the Slavs throughout end to brim! dmkflllllfl "P011 Gfl- Europe because of the race queszion many, since the contagion of social 11 1°1- notmp; elm rebellion soon touched the German Alfmtlqngggly Yguf; troops on the Western Front. Butl l; M 30115;; for the moment the pacifist deter- l minatlon of the Soviet leaders was] Th‘, 91131951,”; mm, a m-onp mrsnsalated into immediate German ‘1y 0pm,“ m tho suggested Japanese ,profit at Brest-Litovsk andensbled {gxpedlflon g; “out I; 1g ukgly ma; lGermany to concentrate her mllilary in; pcllovod, on wlm, m, 5131,, De. cilore in the-WBBI- T0 U18 Allie!“ fpartment regarded as solid evidence. mI-fllflof whom assumed that the that the‘ Japanese themselves were Boishevik revolution was the work of tho instlgators of the plan for m 1g. German pro _ nda, it seemed of vgglon o1 511,315; mg they wished ‘the first importance to reconstruct the expedition to be exclusively or [i118 E8519?" W011i by Sending in an overwhelmingly Japanese in order to iexpeditionary force which might ser- ensure an occupation of tho Marl- lve as focus for the mobollzatlon of time Provinces. 1 CHAPTER l5 In two, one and half-pound cans-whole, ground or fine pound for , ' 0G‘ use. FIAVOUR QUALITY . AND Aaolus/ (Ihase £1 Sanborn’ SEAL BRAND COFFEE S anti-German elements 1n Russia. Such a development Mr. Wilson They tended to underestimate the constantly endeavored to forestalli You can see what happened. The work gave mm an ‘puma and essential factors that had compelled Russia to make peace and they be- 1111 point. Shot and shell did the work ‘ih the Gulf of Mexico. That fatal lh- ‘I ;cident was followed by an attack oft ‘his coast guard on a millionaires lyacht in sight of the Statue of Lib- erty off New York, and upon a Nor- wegian fruit vessel far out at sea. l The South African treaty with tGermany giving the latter an equal preference with Great Britain was referred to in a speech by Hon. J. H. Hofmeyer at a luncheon given in lhis honour in London some weeks Iago. "Mr. Hoimeyer is a former lRhodes Scholar, has travelled lthrough a large part of the Empire {and has much to say of his great ad- ihriratiori for British institutions, al- though, as he said, he has not e Tdrop of British blood in his vcihs. lWe quote in part, what he hed to lsay of the German treaty to the very idlstinguished company before him: I want you to look at this matter from a different angle from that which you ordinarily view it. Five ; years ago there came intopower in j South Africa a Government which owed its elevation to some extent to a. wave of Anti-British, seces- sionist, republican feeling. There were fears in South Africa and in England as to what the result might be. The position of South Africa and the Empire was felt to be a delicate one. Think for a moment -the worst thing this Government has done from the point of view Y of your ideals has been the prefer- ence clause in this German treaty, and that clause is not immediately effective. It is in the nature of a contingmt possibility. it was not an act but a gesture. 1n the words of its official apologists it is a piece of window dressing. ' But please don't forget to view it in relation Q what was feared five years ago, and remember that it is the worst thing from your point of view that has been done by a Gov- ernment believed to be hostile and antagonistic to the tie with the British Empire. If you do so you 1 will agree there has, indeed, been great progress. That progress and advancement I cordially welcome. It may be regarded as indicative of the supreme achievement of British Imperialism in recent years, as an- other manifestation of the genius l which British statesmanship shows l from time to time. l l l l I l t l t I Place names ‘should beehort, they he ate heartily. He ate so much that he felt sleepy after eating and wast allowed to rest for an hour. He then worked or played s, hard game of some kind, had a shower p lieved that with Allied assistance a fighting front could be reesiablished land the Bolsheviks overthrown. The French were the most vigorous “mm l‘ mo“ n“ md ‘time mcreliii their demands for military inter- vention in Russia. They raised the food. problem at various times during the cmplodrthem. We are content that, our scientists. either as individuals‘ or universities, should work in a duuilbry way. When a Banting arises with an epocoh-meklng dis- covery for the relief of humanity we acclaim him joyfully, and are proud to call him s fellow Canadian; but what have we, the people of Canada, through our Federal Government lone to assist in the great work to ti»... he devoted himself? There are ltili many worlds to conquer in the ‘ have to be ivrittcn so many times. encouraging example for the women ‘The name o! my one o! a down f” of Washington, for, although she is ‘mom counm" m Europe can be the wealthiest woman who was ever ‘lspened Wm, g1; g9 dim lemgfg, mistress m the White House, she lEngland, Ireland, Scotland, France, can‘ n. Spain, Italy, Germany, Russia, "hir- kcy Greece Norway, Bwsden, Poland are examples. The names of our Pro- vince and capital city are absurdedly long. It takes eight/sen letters to Nothing has been heard oi late ‘spell Prince Edward Island and thir- with respect m the plans for the ‘teen to spell Charlottetown. The 1n- fm, wmch m i? ‘dian name Abegweit would do very _well for the Province and Cher- wore the same gown at a re ceptlon that she wore at her hus- band's inauguration. new car ferry, i. pr. Anderson. for the estab- propriation of 03,500,000 hi! b6!!! placed in the Estimates. It is to be hoped that plans will b! P19911111 and tenders called in sufficient time to enable tho steamer to be ready by 1930. ' Ililm of medicine and surgery and ‘ arm: is tint of all the great hccd of ‘consolidating our position with to the discoveries which have 1 e in the past. The sugges- .____ Home form of Government control of redid, to make it more distinctly oahcdua orllritish, and Alter from tile must mutt of arcaecutlns fronts: United Itetes with ftseoa- stquent"propsg' ' ends and are being considered by the Oompiliomof uacic s: esltlfll- “IIeQobrNriL-oliairmcaof 99m- ‘lisltwnm bah maaeeat tan ma- ’ 111d ‘oedema new fans would 0f a federll health institute should commend itself ‘l’! .a, llotte tor the City. 1t is hot hem- ssry to remind the world every day that our chief city is also, a town. Long nam while tedious to write arenot necessarily offensive. In that regard Ontario has one piece name that beats all others to a frame. It is "Bkunkb Misery." In a round-up of 100 traffic vio- lators in Detroit recently an oflicer of the Recorder's Court found l1 per cent mentally or physically in- ferior. Of that 100 examined three were found to be seriously bandi- eepped physically, seven were de- fective in hearth; and 101111000 in vlion. Forty six were seriously han- dicapped ayalcchoiism. one m in‘- esoe, another has so. gpilpptlcteil- dlqpdwtwelve were denim u ‘t. .'.>i .‘ m, . ,1 The food made good rich blood, and the exercise gave strength oi body. The brain got the benefit of this fre-‘ quent changing of pure blood, and; came back ihtc astute of health. Butfwhat about folks who are sick in body, patients with tuberculosis for example? Here again ‘Banting’; discovery of insulin has been able to"give_help. Dr. H. G. Zelter reports his exper-i ience with forced feeding and the use of insulin in the treatment oi ten cases of tuberculosis -of the lungs. The duration of the treatment was from three to four weeks. The results proved that insulin is a valuable help to the forced feeding of undernourkh- ed tuberculous patients. ‘There was a definite increase in weight of the patients. It affects all the building up and tearing down processes of the body, by making it possible for the tissues to useup the starchy foods more completely. Now this doesn't mean that folks that are well should take insulin to get foods used up more completely. If you are well you should go about your daily round of life getting enough work or exercise to give you an appetite: enough food to keep your body well nourished, and enough sleep to enable you to feel fresh and alert - in the morning. In fact you shouldn't have to think of any of these three things, they should all be done with- out any thought on your part. “I HAVE LOVED FLOWERS THAT ' FADE" I have loved flowers that fade, Within whose magic tents Rich hues have marriage made With sweet unmemo led scents; A honeymoon delight;- A Joy of love at eight, l That ages in an hour;- My song be like a fiowerl v l I have loved airs, that die Before their charm is writ Along a liquid sky - = Trembling to welcome it . Notes, that with pulse of firs Proclaim the spirit‘: desire, Then die, and are nowhere: My song be like en alrl l 1 1 . Die, song, die like a breath, l And wither as a bloom; Fear not a flowery death, Dread not an airy tomb! Fly with delight, fiy hencel "rwas thine love's tender sense To feast, now on thy bier Beauty shall shed a tear. -Robef_t Bridges. ._-_. Mlulrtl’! Llnimnut for Chipped Hands feebleminded. Little wonder that such drivers kill people on the streets and highways. ‘rum should be a strict examination into the quslifcatlons, character, habits, men'- tai and physical fitness of every per- son who is permitted to ‘drive a mot- or car. We have little ornothingofthe kind. Strict investigation alight show ' that the percentage of unfit ‘car drivers here is not greatly different fromwi-tatitisiabetroitflithflrfr‘ rodt oTelsgrsln intimatbs that the city is‘ about on W! "W- é lnterallied Conference at Paris. in late 1017. On December l, Clemenc- eau discussed with House the possib- ilities of intervention and urged that upon him the desirability of a Jap- anese expeditionary force. Previous to the resolution, he said, the old Rus sian Government llad been unwilling to solicit Japanese military aid. But Russia‘s withdrawal after the 391. shevik revolution, had changed the revolution has changed the situation, Russia was out of the game. It wasthe moment for Japan to take her place. Colonel House ‘was then and always cPPWed to military - intervention in Russia. He did not believe that s . Japanese expedition or any other would serve to build up a new fight- ibs front against Germany in the Em- The flshtirig spirit of Russia" be insisted. was burnt out; the in. dusirial organization of the country, so necessary to continued war, was shattered. The Bolsheviks were in Control. not because of German gold, but because they had satisfied the 0111? real demand of the Russian peasants: the dlstrlbuiion of land, 5 Jl-lllnbse Expedition Colonel House to the President. New York,, February 2, i918, Dear‘ Governor: t I have never changedmy opinion that it would be a great palm"; mistake to send the Japanese troops lo Siberia. There is no military "VI-mike that I can think of that THE LAND we Love ‘BY FRANK 15153 and this determination on his part underlay American policy as regards l i119 Fl!‘ EH1. I 9011c)’ warmly en- l dorsed both by the Department of l stats and by the military leadersl But the European Allies constantly "lied Japanese intervention, Late in "b11181? Wilson took up with l-iouse lhe conditions under which he might safely approve it. Under continual pressure from the Jvench and the British, President Wilson wrote a memorandum in which he withdrew his objections to the Allied note requesting Japanese intervention, although he 11111 not so so far es to join with tho Allie; 1n making the requests. The note was not formally circulated but its con. 1911i! were pretty generally known to the Allied Ambassadors. to expense. a. single loss. Colonel House to the President 1- I 1111111! 1i L! n y under the T circumstances for the note to go to the Javanese. but before it is sent, the Allied An-ibassado should be billed ioretiier and it should be Pointed out where this venture may lead, (a) The lowering. or even loss of our moral position which will un- dmlblfidls have the effect of dulling Profit” policies consult Offices Get Your Fishing Tackle ' In 0rder For Our stock of Fishing Tackle has been eomplsmy 371mm“ and we know we can supply your every need. You will libaly b. making your first trip on Friday next for the "Fluny Follows" u‘ get busy and see that your tackle Ls up-to-dah-Dolft leave It till _ the last minute. you are certain to overlook something then. We carry everything in Rods, Lines, lleell, Casi-l, flies, 0g; . nooks, Floats, Slnkers, Baskets, etc. Sce our special Steel Rod at $1.00. CENTRAL E. A. FOSTER biwcsmn Mail orders for Dr. Ffrench's ‘iermicide Capsules given prompt attention md post paid to any address, FALSE ECONOMIES Scrlmpin; rations to cut down feed bills doesn't pay. Neglecting buildings and fences to save expense merely adds All the insurance money that might have been paid through years of immunity from fire is outweighed by But the most false of all "false economies" ls to forego the protection of life insurance to save the small maul premium. (Memorandum) Lack of Life insurance may spell financial disallow for . your family; Life insurance is NOT an expense-the prem- Marcl-l 3_ 191g lums come back to you with profit if you live. For particulars of Great-West Life “Protection with Hyndman o. C0,, Ltd’ Provincial ManagerwThe Great-Welt Ufa Lower Queen Street 24th. Sunnyside . , Charlottetown the enthusiasm 9f our people for the war, in exchange for a. vague and nebulous military advantage. (b) Suggest that at the same time this statement 1s delivered to the Japanese they should be requested to make a statement of their reasons for this action and policy in reygrd lo Siberia. This statement should be mlde slob! the lines of the Presid- ent's note so that their positions may be favorably contrasted in the eyes of the world with that of Germany. (Continued on Page 111 \ lumber. li not I am afraid he will get a dose of the same medicine that it. was anticipated the school teach- ers might get ln June next, and not the hoped for "Well done good and faithful servant, lake another four years in office," but instead “You unfaithful servants of the public! ‘THE ST. LAWRENCE WATERWAY Q. What is being doueio clear the St. Lawrence \‘,:i'.erv.':.y of ice? A. The project of clearing tile St. Lawreme waterway of the sea of ice, ‘through the thermit process invented 1 by PM. Barnes. is of interest to the “m” “m "° Wm‘ whole Dominion, ina'.mu.h as 11,; mm . u‘ the pmlongmg o‘ the season ot-‘BIHZC during the year i928 is not Thg Publig Forum four years in office building imagin- l ' ary bridges in Kingston, go home Eh“ "h": “nap” m‘, "'°_ and ‘work your farms!" I have heard M. “flab” i‘. ‘hunk Th, the remark made, “it. is Kenslngton u 111mm“. r '1“ (lugs Bridg One young gentleman spoke . not. ueeeser“; ‘ ree the l opinions of correspondents. . __._i___..___.__ i KINGSTON amour: up saying "Just imagine coming from Kensington ‘.0 New Haven for one bag of cement.“ fn~ concluding I will say i have had occasion to pass over Kingston bridge many limes during tho year and am in a position to know if this lumber was used on this bridge during the year i928. My answer is No. t I am, Sir, etc., iid Sirz-The information asked for a reference to 5100.76 charged up to Kingston npplgmqn m spring and Fan‘ since yet forthcoming. The item appears 11,, dlgw-yey-y by m3 m,“ Goldschmldtf in the Public Accounts on page 141 1n 1595‘ [hm-mm a mlxmre o‘ powdmu’ as iollowsz-Cement, _ $1.80, lumber. ed slunliilum and iron oxide, has b88111 515MB‘ TM“ ‘150-76- T51” m‘ am‘ used in welding with great successlm" “$19G Wu‘ “lmb” '1 “m P" and its tremendous heat-generating"h““d'°d 1°" ""1 m9 lmmmt °1 ability has become well known. Prchl 111mb" m“ “"15 b9 Pllfchbsed Barnes, who 1g connecmd Wm. M33 would be about five thousand three G111 Unlvgl-glty‘ h“ had mam, opporj hundred feet. Just imagine Kingston tunities of demonstrating the effectlafld“ Wm‘ 5 ‘Pm °1 1mm 3 1° 1° ' of his process of utilizing thermit asI 1°“ “H”! W‘ 110ml" 0! 111mb"! an 1c; golvci-lg, and h“ “efletfllf my memory serves me right at threatened ice-jamming catastrophe"!!! present moment, and I think I 1n Qcvoral lngbgncgg‘ The Domlnlonf can sey it without fear of contradic- ooverrimeht has voted cocoon toi- the 11°11- f-hb brldse w» built by Ms‘. PUBLIC COTTON CRISIS AVERTED LONDON, May 23.-A truce has been called in the Lencashire cotton dispute, and master spinners have withdrawn notices which tomorrow ivould have thrown 200,000 workers out of employment andclosed every mill in the county..The masters changed the workers at Alma Mill, Oldham, who had been on strike nine weeks, with breaking their agree- ment, and ordered a general lockout. .».-=-n=-.~'-: WWI 01 suerdinz against ice-ob- structions in the Spring. lllllllllSvl r-KIIJNEY i"! it‘; '1fl%'¢>l lJoha Mscrsdyen in the year i017. Mr. MePhee took‘ much credit to himself and his colleague for the num- bfl 0f bridges that they were instru- Wmfl b1 Murine for this district on thrfloor of t House during llament. l-fe also’ The workers mode counter-charges, NOW TASTE THE SWEET FRESH FLAYOR OF BRAHMIN TEA Sold’ only in Red. Hygienic. Airtight Packages. . ,',.@. hut during this week-end turmoil!" isfsctoi‘! m both vat-nu m 119*‘ ed. KEY ‘MEN 'lneveryinditry than mend-Ir key mm it will! fllellfll "I" and money 0O Millet-If 0M1 could In replaced. » It is common cello 0s at"! the vain offiflek union by life insurance. In we quote? _/ ‘ known for The 2 Macs F0 ulvo A One of the best ynvenbtfvu SMUT or RUST on GRAIN FORMALIN‘ A cheap but thorolllll! 031* lvs remedy. Grain ‘WWII. would be wise to act #0571171; in order to hive IIID I.‘ porly treated before eowivl- ‘ One pint to every 40 Ill‘- of water. Full directions kl"!- wlth every order. For sale at DRUGSTORE 140 Greet Gown 5m“ All Mail ore en Given has?!‘ Attention. 44-