PAGE SIX ‘MATINEE 3.1: - m. 37c. N .r For the sake of a woman ‘no loved-he took be shame of ‘x. i gPl-‘IINGE EDWARD ro-nAv / THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN IGHT 7 & 8.i5—'.'6c, 42o, 52c. TWO WOMEN LOVED HIM! A ..\ in C BE- R eMHK3 PRQDucr-on --w- i" r/r. THE par";- I . EVENING CAPITOL / 1.9T MATINEE sis-ice. zoo. RI S Fe Traili common l c acrrox mums rrcnrs am: run i SERIAL I ' i7‘- .38’ AND EUGENE rrrs COMEDY "B" c HA Bl? ‘IGBAB-tfloizc. EXCITEDIENT AND TllRlLLS, FIGHTS, ROMANCE. Ci France Prepares For -~ 1,, Elections ,~. -::: (By George Hambleton, Cana- dian Press Staff Writer.) i PARIS, Mar. 3l—-(Canadinn Press Cablel- France is prepar- ing for battle at the polls. Premier Andre Tardieu fircs the opening gun April 6. Parties and groups from the extreme Royalist right to the extreme Communist lcft nre organizing. discussing, stating their programmes. outlining their policies. Huge posters decl: bill- boards from Brittany to Savoy, and under it all a feeling of dis- quiet, allayed somewhat by results in the German presidential elect- ions, yet still obvious. To the Canadian accustomed ,to more or less straight party fights, the scene as it presents it- self is one of bewildering tangle. Parties, groups. and independents cross, re-cross, divide and sub-di- vide. A party with headquarters staff and platform bears one name in the country. In the cham- ber its elected members may and frequently do belong to a. group bearing another and quite differ- gnt name. Tho republican federation, lar- jest of the parties of the right and right centre, is known in the Chamber as the Republican De- mocratic Union. The Republic Fe- deration is now endeavoring to or- jgrioizo a group m the Chamber to bo known under its own name. _ The Republican Democratic Al- liance is represented in the House by several groups, all with a dif- i-ferent name. The largest is the Jeft Republican group. But the left Republicans do not belong to the official left—those advanced groups which’ may also be clas- sified roughly as Liberal-Labor) to the Communists of Marcel Ca- chin. The left Republicans are a central group. 63 strong out of a dotal membership of 112. It is to this group that Premier Tardleu himself belongs. v ‘Thus, to the outsider at any rate, names confuse and giving to them what might be termed a Ca- nadian political significance, often ..mlslead. Back of this troubled and com- wplex scene is an effort to close ranks, to narrow down the field of battle, for the French elector him- I-Qélf is often confused by the mul- titude of programmes and policies which frequently differ in little more than detail. Among Repub- lican parties of the right and cen- tre are these efforts particularly in evidence. At the instance of the Republican Federation, the Repub- lican democratic alliance and oth- er central groups have reached an understanding which provides: 1: That no opposition candidate ' ill be placed in the field against ~ retiring member who voted with the Laval-Tardleu majority in the Chamber. ' 3: Association of every effort to secure a common candidate for the first ballot. 3: Where a common candidate cannot be obtained before the first ballot, observance of strict disci- pline in the second ballot in favor of the most favored national can- didnte. The only right or central group which has so far held out from the understanding is the small group of the popular democrats. The position of the popular Dc- mccrats, it is understood. is that while favorable to the general idea they wish in certain circumstances ‘f preserve their freedom of act- .-_~"' ~ . prawns-own» Eleanor Boarliman Also miEiii-Ylfilio us s e CARTOON with Lupe Velez iarles Bickforu gt TlltlARdpllbllCflll YCGLHSLLOD and also the Republican Democratic Al- liance and associated groups 0t the right and ccntre expect to have at least 550 candidates for the 612 constituencies. Inihe remaining (62 constituencies whore they have {no candidate, weight will be throxrn against the extremists of the lcft. 'I'lic1.' will support the In- £depcndcnt whcrv- xiv» Inricponilcnt li-comcs nearest i0 their views. If . modernit- r:id.c.ii~s.u.i.iiir; .s oppos- ccl t0 n Communist lll."_‘.' will ncl- vise support of the radical-social- ist if necessary i0 (lcfcut the Coin- munist. _ The plan docs not propose any fusion of parties or groups. Each party or group will fight under its own banner and with its own pro gramme. But the programmes generally do not vary greatly. And behind all parties and groups of whatever shade, provided they are definitely anti-socialist and anti- Communist, will be thrown the weight of the National Republi- can propaganda organization - the organization whose great pos- ters now decorate billboards from the grand boulevardes of Paris to the remote Commune. Further, effort is apparently be- ing made to take a leaf from the notebook of the National govern- ment in the British general elect- ions and organize a form of cou- pon election without coupons. It is suggested that associated parties of the right. and centre, while re- taining their own group allegian- ces, should call themselves Nation- al Republicans and make the fight a straight one between National Republicans on the one hand and a left, cartel on the other. But French political tradition is against anything that approaches division of the country into two great parties. It favors retention of central groups . as a balance against extreme swings one way or the other. And the coming weeks will show whether efforts to link the right and centre groups will stand the stress and strain of actual cam- paign. Veteran Recalls Good Old Days InNova Scotia HALIFAX, N. S., March 3l.--(By Moses H. Niekerson)--More than seventy years ago on the south shore of Nova Scotia inspection of pickled herring was instituted by the provincial government, which never had heard of a fisheries dc- partment and minister. Brit that antique ministry had its eyes open and its wits awake. There were townships then iri- stead of municipalities, and each of those divisions had a ‘flrh “spect- or," as it was said for short. He was generally a fisherman himself, quite old in practice and very particular in his work, employed only about three weeks in the year, when the fall net-takes were to be packed and shipped to Boston or Montreal -for there was a schooner coaster from Boston to that port as long as I could remember. During the rest of the year the inspector followed the populnr vocation. My uncle, Watson Nickcrson, nn apt and jolly fellow, was one of those fish inspectors, and a militia colonel besides. We were glad to sec him come on his regular rounds to our fishing stand, with his brand- ing irons all ready for business. As boys we had to build a wood fire in the open, where thou irons were heated to burn the lettering on the llbarrel heads: “No. 1" and “No. 2", {as the case might be. But first the lira-specter watched the packing, and lhe would not let a ragged or rusty lflsh go into the barrel to make up :tlie regulation 200 pounds. The 'b:u'rels were all made in Lunen- burg, and cost only sixty cents, or three shillings; for the pound ster- ling never had dreamed of skidding eff. To get in the required weight ‘I119. packer often had to mount the bar-sol and stamp down the con- tents. I The inspector was paid by the government or court of sessions-J forget which-five shillings a day, which passed for a dollar with us then. The province was just turn- wos quicker to reckon than pounds, shillings and pence. ' ' finished, the barrel contsinérslwt-re laid on the sides, and the‘ nextday called it. That is to say: a sniall side of the barrel, and strong pickle u-as carefully poured into the open- ing until the bubbles were seen. ‘Then a little cork plug was driven into the bung, and the lot was ready for shipment when the coasting schooners came along. A number of these schooners were employed from early spring until and from ports mentioned above. and from ports menttioned above. Other shipments of the kind were made to the West Indies, but ‘ trips were made by} the big lo y owned boats, operated as fish g vessels during the busy summer banking season and as freighters when the summer was past and the harvest ended. In this way Yarmouth, Pubnico. Harrington, Shelburno and locke- port were built up, almost to their present population. In contrast with the present situation, the rising generation in thosedays found- effi- only fishing but captaining ‘thfe brigs, barques and ships thatlslid down from the Shelbumannd Yar- flag and convey valuable cargoes the seven seas. Even my native Cape Island, not ten miles long, with mastless coast waters since the advent of motor- power, had in those days no less than three shipping stations, Clark's Harbor, Newelton and Centrcville, where bank fares were brought in by several vessels at each, washed out, sun-dried and shipped to the West Indies, mostly in the same craft, which brought back salt, mo- lasscs and tamarlnds as return car- goes. The vessels were owned operated on shares. The workers were the transporters, and every dollar was saved to them. The coasters were little hookers, which carried between supply towns on the coast, outlying islands and so- questered coves, wherever there was a fishing community. The freight- ers were large schooners which plied for the most part, between the sea- board settlements and Boston, not hampered then with tariff toggles; for Nova Scotia was self-govemed and enjoyed a reciprocity exchange trade with the States. From 1854 to 1860 foodstuffs and fish were duty-free, and there was an aver- age customs duty of ten percent ad valorem on other needfuls, house- hold and vocational stuffs. In loading the outward freighters the men had their quotas of fish weighed and set down to the credit of each mun, who handed the cop- tain a memorandum, a list of ar- ticles he wanted brought from Bos- ton‘. This class of carrier was en-‘ titlrd to a freight charge which was extremely moderate. The fish car- goes sold in Boston, the captain lumped the separate memoranda values by adding together the items of the some kind from each on the list. Then the wholesale purchase was made to cover the amount on mg the decimal system because it After packing and branding they were “pickled ofl," as they= " nugur hole was made in the upper . is only one Way to grow the sweet - » ln ds to d l pxoyment m the home not“, not: v once room eve op and two mouth launch-ways to carry the. not only over the Atlantic but over. wholesale prices: plate beef, five cents a pound, brown sugar four cents, lard twelve cents, and so on. I call that-the pinnacle of fair trade. The next cargo of flsh was dis- posed of in the same way, settling the Boston bills for each trip as the accounts became due, to the mutual profit of all concerned because the Boston firms had easy collections, the Nova Scotia shippers were sup- plied at wholesale prices even on a few pounds of tea, and the cap- tain bad the use of the spare cash for the thirty days of grace and often did_a little speculating on the side for himself out of the uncalled funds. who shall say these were not "the good old times?” . gi-Ealllfl "Dry seasons such as have been experienced for two years previous to-i93i were‘ grievous discourage- ments to growers of sweet peas. There is no_ reason to believe drought years will continue and therefore noreason to believe that as good‘ met ‘peas as ever were ' grown cannbif-‘bé grown this year. The swbet 'p'ea' must ‘have cool, moist soil for its roots and fairly cool weather for_the development f0 vine and blossom. It is not a plant for hot weather months and V? it jipjirvvlve drought and dry atmosphere even with copious soaklngpgf the roots any too well. Early flowering Spencer varieties should be planted in the states which have late spring. Being a cool weather plant, there pea. That is in the cool time of the year—spring, to bring the climax of bloomin early-summer before hot. weather .sariously.. sets in, Each inches. apart is the minimum. If each vine is given ample root and top room it will produce double, even quadruple the amount of bloom of the crowded vine and of finer quality. Sweet peas can be transplanted readily. The safest method is to start them in pot, boxes or frames and move them as early as possible to permanentuluarters. Paper seed boxes arranged so that each plant may be moved with a minimum of root disturbance are excellent for the purpose as are also paper pots, The soil for sweet peas should be deeply dug and well enriched and should also be well drained. The plants should be set in depressions, say labout six inches deep, that may be filled in as the vine mounts up- ward so that the roots may have a 6001 slowing medium as the tem- perature increases with the season. Give the vines support no soon as first tendrils are formed. Sweet peas are usually grown for cutting. There is no finer material They are also of the greatest valug for garden decoration. A fine method is to grow them as pillars in the garden, in circles three to five feet in diameter and to a single color. As soon as their blooming period is over the vines can be scattered over the space vacated by the sweetpeas and in a few weeks another display of blooms will rc- suit. The sweet peas has been develop- ed into a remarkable series of col. orl and types. In ordering seed, se. lsct those varieties catalogued for garden use. Do not try to grow neenhouse types in the garden. __.___._.___ State aid amounting to $210,390,- 000 has enabled the erection in Czechoslovakia of 35.800 btllldiilgs, which provided 99,251 apartments, in the last I2 years. Study your tongue, drefnrcs a French scientist, who declares that if it is long it denotes frankness; if bmad, expansiveness; if narrow, thirty days. At the horns port e JbiDlHrwtl-iistallycfsoodsit Start SweetmPeaAsla. CENTRAL CIIARIIIAI ISLANDEB DEAD-Mrs. Edwin L. Head, City, received a telegram Wednesday conveying the sad news of the death of her brother. Arthur G. Phillips, who died in Worcester. Mus Banal: nfvaa AND slums’! United Church of Canada, Serv- ‘ces Sunday, April 3rd are as fol- bws: Bells River at 10.30 LII. At the close of this service tho Sac- rament of the Lord's Supper; Eldon, at 3 p. m; bHpB-ratnry service at Belle River on Friday, 7.30 p.m. Rev. J B. Skinner, pas- tor. VISITING CHARLOTTETOWN- Mrs. (DrJ M. P. Harrington, of Brldgewaten-NS, arrived in the city Wednesday evening on a visit to her mother, Mrs. Essory. Mrs. Harring- ton recently returned from a trip in San Fernando, Trinidad, where her husband has been practising den- tistry for the past year. While there she met a number of Islanders, in- cluding Mrs. W. S. Stewart and Miss Nora Longworth. ANNUAL TEA AND SALE-Time Iwas a very large attendance at the annual lea and sale in St. James Hall yesterday under the auspices ,of the Ladies Aid who worked with a will to make it the great success git undcubtedly was. The fancy work flables, refreshment and candy [tables and the Guild table were all Qargely patroxfzed. The tea tables were kept crowded from five to seven. Quite a number of the mem- bers of Legislature attended and the Boy Scouts were also present In a body to enjoy the many delic- aces so lavishly provided. .____.i__ PERSONALS l , Mrs. Jane Carver left for Abney. P E I , Monday moming. She had lbeen here for some months but poor health has forced her to re- turn home.-New Glasgow News. Miss Myrtle Rose, daughter .01 Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Rose, Al- mont Avenue. is a patient at Aber- deen Hospital, having undergone operation. Miss Rose is doing as well as can be expected. Her many friends trust she may make a speedy recovery-New Glasgow News. - Rev. R. Hensley Stavert has re- _. turned. from Toronto where he had been attending the Annual Meet- _i_ng of the General Assembly's Board of Sunday Schools and Young People's Societies of the Presbyterian Church‘ in Canada. Chicago Water ‘ Diversion Treaty Under Discussion orrrawa, 0nt., March 3l—-_(By The Canadian. areal-senator cas- graiifs motion calhng for an exam- ination of the treaty covering the Chicago Water Diversion, and a general study of all treatfes with the United states pending complet- ion of the st. Lawrence Waterways agreement, was further dlscussed in the upper chamber of Parlia- ment yesterday. Senator Casgraln took issue with Senator Melghenb btllef, expressed 111 the firevious debate, that Senator Casgrain labored "under a succes- sion of misapprehenslons." True, Senator Meighen had the aid 0f one of the greatest galaxies of engneers and was associated with "one of the greatest hydro-electric projects in the world," sa‘d Senator Casgraln but he believed his own opinions and information were cor- rect. As Canada was about to conclude a treaty with the Unted States it might be well to look at other agreements, said Senator Casgr-ain who reviewed various treaties made in the past. The Senator himself had, on one occasion, an inter- vew with President Roosevelt, who had said that the St. Lawrence was the United States outlet to the sea and the Hudson's Bay was Canada's outlet. The Senator having pre- viously made a speech in opposition to the Hudson's Bay route entered into an argument with the Presl- dent on this opinion. Sena‘ Lynch-Btaunton said there seemed to have been a mis- apprehension in some newspapers as to Senator Meighen view of the treaty sit " . The impression he had gathered from some of them was that Senator Meighen had said it was no concern of Canada's whether or not the city of Chicago made any diversion of water from Lake Mlohgan. his own view was that senator Meigherrhad not ma this, but that there was no treaty stipulation of any lr'nd between canadifand the Unted states touch ing rpooiiicduy the ohiom dlvm- ion or any other diversion. (Senator Meighen later agreed that this was his view) Senator Raoul Dandurand referr- ed to the nine foot canal under concentration; and if long and wide, a weakness for gossiping. _, I oomn-uotionbythodhicwounit- would... Opens Princes Chamber DELHI, mm Il-Amid brilli- ant pageants-y, nerd wllllngdon opened the elovfllfli annual session of-tbo Chamber or Princes which will decide whathor to brim nail" mum mm with their ammo.- oousubjccts into flu profiled All- mdia lllcdcrltlcn. m o, carefully worded OW"! l" m. n-ioous. Lord wiuinoiw =4- mitted the difficulties in theicil). but said it was a source of Punt satisfaction" that ‘they hill 81"“! indicated vulinanw i9 "W" tho scheme. The Princes them- selves are still undeoidedrhflflfl- and deep seated differences of 0- plnion among them is etpwml l" be revealed aux-m: the wmln! week's deflatio- , Th; vloeroys speech was chifly notable for the pledge that i119 PR‘ ggnfl mpg-aphid 0! GOVCU!‘ ment would not allow delay 1n l!" constitutional pwirw of 111d"- “Your Hlsbneui, N811"! l5 We“ as 1 do.” said the Viceroy- “that the forces of will"! “mm” l” an end in themselvw. and thflt I have only adopted them 80 II W produce conditions in which we amp be ab], go proceed with the details of the great constitutional changes impending. It is in the firm belief that we shall before long be ableto lnauaurato a new great country that I am determin- ed at all costs to secure and main- tain pesceful conditions under which alone such progress can b9 made." To ‘the Princes’ delight Imd Wll- lingdon revived the traditional cer- emonial of state opening, drivllll from the Vicroy's house attended by a bodyguard and with a gold umbrella over his carrlase- Th9 scene insldc the building was bril- liant with the full dress Prlncfll and “the colors of their memorial bearings emblazoned on the wall against the dark background 0! panelled woods. In the Viceroyhs box sat the Marquis of Iothian. Lord Eustace Percy and J~ C. 0. Davidson, cha'rfl_'lan_ oi‘. the flirt? principal committees sent t0 India by‘ the round table conference. The committes are busy"!!! Delhi considering their draft reports, the first of which, Lord Percyborrfi- nance, was signeddstc air mailed to Iondon» " " Near Crisis In Peace Negotiations (s, Morris J. aarrln. Associated Press Staff Correspondent) SHANGHAI, March 3i—~(A.P.)— Peace negotiatons here approached a crisis tonight after a skirnfsh between and Chinese forc- es at Chlawangmiao earlier in the clay. Chinese and Japanese military leaders still were far apart 0n WW9 terms. A Chinese 5110366111!!! M"! the parleys might reach a crifcal stage tomorrow,- whm they are to mendatians for either side to be GlBCIISBGC-r The Japanese said the Chinese were driven to the south slds of soochow creek in tbs skinnish at Chiawangmlao. The Chinese had built defenses along the north side. The ' objected on the ground that the Clfness warp over- stepphg the limits of an ultimatum served on them last month. A military sub-committee of the peace conference failed to lBres 0f! an armistice protocol. Thieves, who apparently had on- tered by a ladder found leaning against a bedroom window, siolo jewelry valued at several thousand dollars, from the residence of H. B. Brant, a banker, at Nufleld, Eng- land. ary anti-lot. Tho United States Supreme Court decree permitted l.- 500 feet diversion now, with a rs- duction to 1,500 feet’ by 1088, Would the owners of that canal be content to do without that water when the time csniftfllmlt them to 1.500 feet. It might be advisable for the Canadian Government to obtain treaty an undertaking that the do- croo would be obeyed. ’ Senator Meighen could nah-J“ bow Canada could issue-any uninv- u to ths’ nine foot canabas- I!‘ sffootlvo instrument union -- the United Stains made the observance of the decree of the Supreme Court a treaty obflttlon and so [In Canada an international contract- ual right to call for the emanation of the treaty. It would be valuable to Canada if such a suggestion could be carried out. ' The debate on the insurance bills was postponed until tomorrow. Sm- ator Mcisbm stated that hsbopod to bring the last of the tum b‘!!! down 0n Friday of next week. Tbll _bill_ would deal with‘ the Brimn aliflloloign mus-sacs 0M0“!!!- - era of constitutional history in this » or», ' to evacufations or ‘fighting slmes. be resumed without definite recom- inltlng remarks on the art of writ- from Washington by convention of vvvvv ‘if 1 i§§o51ii$ “i AJIEAEIGEND,’ _ SPECIALS I ROLLED ROASTS. cur FROM CHOICE Asria BEEF, 1c oeurs PER LB. PICNIC HAMS . ' SUGAR CAURED * .' 14 cams PER LB. i Just Received a IWM‘ 9"“ ‘M ‘, _ SCALLOPS HALIBUT 3 TRIPE BLOOD PUDDING PORK PATTIES OAT MEAL PUDDING ass PHONE 351 it H.‘.._‘._.x¢m4xx;.xx xxx vww ' n’ SHANGHAI TRADE BEWG [ D pun the action really‘ occurs mostly in‘ the minds of the people, and has to bo held together by mood and char- acter and. the subtle relations ‘of the people concerned. It's horribly dif- flcult, for if I lost the feeling for a minute, everything goes to pieces; its dead. Everyth-‘ng in it has to mean something-all the material objects. I mean, they must be des- iribed only if they evoke a personal emotion, a y-a primrose by day's work if it gets in this story. . the river's brim has to do a full . Fffty percent of the art of writ- ing consists in keeping out words and sentences that are just stand- ing around gaping-not doing any- thing." And to think I knew that gal when she sold her first story to a Sunday School paper-and got a dollar for it-and as a consequence was so excited she couldn't sleep night's," says Grace Duckhart, oi this city. who received the letter in mow YORKN’. Y., March ai- Degplm the military opersfons a- round Chapel and Woosum’. 11¢" shanghai, the rest of China still carries on “business as usual," ac- cording to a report to the local de- partment of commerce office from Commercial Attache Julean Arnold. Shanghai. While shanghai hostirtiu are in- terfering seriously with n-ade in the lower Yangtze River, yet in China disruption of trade in one section of the country often accentuates that of other sections outside of the mne of hostilifles. Mr. Arnold stated. “Thusnrome of Shanghai's trade ‘g being temporarily diverted to other channels," comments the New York Maritime Register of March 0. "However. hostilities are ‘being continued. and so long as there is no immediate prospect for G st’ . cessation. at least ‘l5 percent of the que on cargo bound for China is ,___________ "lftilllfitlel" W114" "--'=ll°"="- uxrtoaua wm. morons work continues to be badly dislocated, of course, because ‘of the scattering of workers indldent . mummy. 5., urn-oh Sir-OOP- tain John B. Noel, F3115" explor- or-lecturer, will lecture hero tho n latter part of this month under the ‘- auspices of, the National Council of Education. Captain Noel will illus- i trato his lee“ with motion pic- tures and stills. Tho address will be divided into two parts, tho first part dealing with the "Epic of Mount Everest," and the second with the Indian city of Kishmir. .____.__..__. STREAM FLOW IN THE _ nmarrmm raovmcris Many industrial plants are inactive, and probably 50 percent of the Chinese shops clcsed in the inter- national settlement are still closed. "Preliminary estimates indicate that 597 factories. and workshops have been destroyed in the Chapel district, and 388 in the Yansutepw district. with a coinbinediatalloss of 100,000,000 Chinese dollars Chin- ese dollar Mexican equivilent at normal rates or exchange to about 24o inUhltod States). The estimated number of flotory workers thrown out of employment t! set at 200.000, together with about 140.000 handi- craft workers in the military zones. The number of people having evacuated tho woes is set at about 600,000, it was stated. ..__.__________. THE SECRET 0F WRITING ‘rho Dominion Water Power and Hydrometric Bureau of the Depart- mcntiof the Interior roportstnat the month of Janu y wll unusu- ally mild in tho Maritime Provinces and that, as most of tho precipita- tion occurred in the form ofrain the run-off was above the long term average. In Nova Scotia the nin- oifwas about 80 per cent. above the January mean and was heaviest fol- lowing rains and thaws during tho middle of the month. In New Bruns- wick the run-oi! was about likperu cent above the January mean with ' low flow during the first four or five days of the month followed by high fiowes as the weather turned milk and rainy. The Laprsau river in southern New Brunswick "as ‘ swept clear of ice on January ‘I and remained free for ton days-an un- usual circumstanoes at this season. _____.__.__.__._ Motion picture upmtors of Aus- tria are complaining that, d134,; taxes, less than two-fifths of their receipts are left to pay rent, wages, lights and other necessary lxponsca. animator roouiou _' . v ‘of _ l Charlottetownflllsiness Office 9 b w» wish o announce um o. Friday. Aprlibtbobahuss offlosofthoOompaay . VANCOUVER. B. 0., March 3i- (By The Canadian Pram-Isabel Paterson. a former Canadian who is one of the most suoessful of the literary women in the United states today-also made some very illum- "Ths way to learn to write-is to keep on writing. one‘; first novel Generally turns out to be a perfect example of what a novel ought not to be, and is useful as a horrible example. But it has to bo written Ind got out of the way. My f'rst novel was unbelievably awful. And when I tried to write short stories they were simply non campus mon- tis- ‘may began nowhere and stay- ed there. . . The thing I'm writng now is the new technique, in which will In transferred u. m’ how Telephone Building on tho corner of Queen and Fitzroy _ Streets. n, W11! l. l» ' ' ' _ uaqrhorahpu» callatlhonowbnllllng‘ 1‘ tornyrongaeoonaiomuoiuaaioonhu ' ‘ ' business mailers. ' raisin-Turmoil: co, Lin.