'1 w-‘w-wv‘ ass...“ PAGE IUUR The Charlottetown Guardian Prnldrnl [Jenn-Col W Oink! I III-II’! Tilin-Prenldonl. J. B Hum!» I J l on-..“ um. cot n. A Ila-mun. D- I- I- luiwi said Illlllllll Dir-run I I Burnett I l. I tun-disk Editors Fruit moan lid ll- K CIR‘.- t Dull u udrd rm. lam on 1m (In MINI") “Jill-Ti. v. Tltynnlllil 0n you tln ndvunra) mulled on hum cit-mu llllllltl ‘.00 rm nu (In dull!) lallou in Clnuun and United lllbl Q TIIFIPDAY, APRIL H, 1931 ~ f Hepburn xcores Over King T1“. principal stibject of discussion m_ both Caiiztdiaii and blliivrl Slates tit-\\'>'P3P9rs 15 the defeat of the C.I.t).—-L'tiiiiiiiittce of Industrial Organization, or Fascists. at Oshawa, The Montreal Curt-tic. which tisually is quite pro- Maclcenzie King zutd aiiti-ilepbtirn is distinctly the reverse over this episode, the political sigiii- fjcance of which for Canada as a whole it docs not seek to minimize. , .\lr. llt-pbtirn, says the Gazette “is still r-lle man of the ltour. Utit for his resolute refusal to deal directly or indirectly with the Lewis emissaries in Oshawa the automobile strike m that citv ctitthl not have been settled on terms 5n1i_.-[;,,~7_,.,-\- it, cl-tttadiztnindustry, satisfactory to Canzulian ‘tidy-i or sati-"ftictory to Canadian public opinion, The l.t‘\\‘i§ agctits, naturally, are laying rlztim to \\i;;i'. they are pleased to call a (lc facto ftutllfllllltlll of the Lfniit-d Automobile \Vorkers iillllillllotidll it of tlle Comtiiittee for Industrial Urgziiiisatu-it. ‘It would be too much to expect these gclttlvtlicn to itdtiiit defeat. Nevertheless the LfllJ i. has inc-t with its first major setback throttgli the terms of settlement agreed upon be- tween General Motors and its employees directly, ind with nu mention of C.I-O. in the agreement. It is quite possible. of course, for thc C.I.O. to contend, ‘as it is contending, that the strike which it spoiisoretl has been successful in that important concessions have been made to I118 lmployees, but there is no reason to doubt the company's statement that ‘it was prepared to grant these same concessions in negotiations which preceded the strike. "Certainly it was prepared to grant these or similar concessions very shortly after the strike was called, provided the C.I.O. agents were not party to the negotiations. It is a matter of record that at one stage a satisfactory settle- merit was imminent and that the conversations broke down only because of Mr. Hepburn’s dis- covery of an attempt at back-door particiption by C.I.L)_ representatives. At no time was it impossible or even difficult for the company and its employees to get together through the friend- ly mediation of Premier Hepburn if the Lewis element could be kept out of the picture- It is to the company's credit that it stood firmly by ‘the position taken by the Premier of Ontario, a. ltttsition which industry in this country general- ly must take if it is not to be dominated by_a pJztical labor movement directed from the Unit- ed states by an outlaw organization pursuing tiutlzttv methods. "Alitclicll l-lcpburn has won a great victory {or this country. It is not to the credit of the Dominion Government that he has won it singlt-handed. Indeed, the Dominion Govern- mciit emerges from this episode with few so oor as to do it reverence. It did not give Mr. ‘lepbtirit the backing which he should have had. Three days before the strike was called in Qs- hgwa the Department of Immigration, according to the Globe and Mail of Toronto, renewed a rmit which enabled Hugh Thompson, the Eecwis strike agent at Oshawa, t0 rcmiilfl l" Ca"- lda for an atlditiorlal thirty days.” The Globe and .\.lail quotes Frontier Hepburn i, gaying: "l advised Ottawa months ago re- garditig the activities of this mail arid I warri- ed them then that his activities \v0tll(l culminate in the t“y1'l‘-l‘lll sitttrtttrtit. llut they took no ac- film. lii fzicl illt'_\‘ rvllrwtvll his permit for thirty day; just 11mm- d:i_\’- lit-flirt: the strike was called". it u... l\(‘ :1. zlul in. llcpburn would not ruzikc t1 . ~ . :11 it it tt-ert- not so, the Ottatva 1pm,, _;, . t-- H Hum‘ than inactive; it has “gaunt. .1 __ ~ ~~ .3!~ility' for the presence m‘ a - - Y|1‘) titillt.‘ intn this country n. m. i, f»: wt orgzittizatioti and re- lll't‘il"ll n. i" l r . st: of disrupting rela- ti~it< lt-‘tzt ll t-i. 1. and employees iii an lit‘ it" wt it'll it l tll‘-ll'_\'. 't',,- Ill til-z; in llott fillltlll “was ftilly inform- ,,1 t . t- i . t|'l itt Oshawa and as |.. d t - ti t. t .- .l i~-".~.~ in the striltc, That i.~~t.t~. a- i‘. - <.' n. d ftlznl put it rm Wednes- ;1;,,- jW-lv ti.‘ "wt" til‘ not Caiiridiati people m- tt- bt- d". l ‘m. tln- l-‘ziscisui of John 1- Liw. -~»i ‘l... t j i '|"t.<- tpit-stioti of hours, tt-ttgts and uni n; twlllllllllllfi} introduced as a lmttkc-crt-r-n to ltide the real purpose of the stop- agt- (‘wild lllltl‘ lt_».-ti <~‘lll<'(l at any time and no i ‘i-lv nun the disputc...Prob- Oliljvi‘ tlill l’ lenis lll‘i\‘.'t‘l n tlll t 1's and employees affecting intertial Oi*ll'.tll'l1‘.> may not be of great public concern. iliut the intriitlticlioii of Fascism un- der foreign direction is of serious import to Canadian people. It is because of this menace that Pia-tiller llcpbxirit has taken up the battle in bcltzilf of the ptililic at large.” ~ The public have Mr. Hepburn to thank for the defeat \\'l’1lt‘li tlic C.I.O. has stistaincd and it l; no faith of theirs that they cannot extend the tame gratitude to the Ottawa administration. The Stale And The Family At least mic child out of every ioo in Michi- gan is a “problem case” severe enough to re- cngniml by his s~i~ ml teacher, working without rlrt- aid in‘ specialized test or expert advice. dates llic hlicliigan Juvenile Delinquency _In_- ‘v-nt-tlion Servicn 0f the University of Michi- I vucli iv-‘ls the finding in a GCIIOSCC-LZPCCI’ ctitnlty survey, exclusive of the city of Flint. The survey was made from the first to eighth grades and uncovered sixty-two problem chil- ..-... n. v lwltwslwww raw-w; > .\% dren. Ratings were made merely on teacher's observations. Had more exhaustive tests been conducted, it is believed that the problem child rate would be found to be at least 2 per cent. and probably more. Lack of recreation and religious opportunities were marked among the group, it was found, while the children came from homes averaging six members. Placement of a trained psych- iatrist in the area and improvement of oppor- tunities were recommended to prevent future and worse maladjustment!» Most of the problem children were in the fifth and sixth grades, received low marks atid were at least one year behind in their school work. The survey showed that, of the total, 63 per cent. were truants, 56 per cent lacked responsive- ncss in class, 5i per cent. were given to lying. stealing or property destruction; 5o per cent. showed utter disregard of school rules and 37 per cent. were sullen, sulky and iiiclaticholy. All of which indicates a sad and regrettable absence in the United States 0f real home life. and the tendency of the age to look to the State to supervise and direct family affairs, both morally and physically, I Editorial Notes 1 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The WI! The chairman of the Retell committee of the New Ensiw Qourmu has stalled that the recrea- tion business 1s the ud largest tndus‘ y in New England. In I 110mm; you", vacatlonlsts 1nd titmrlsts spend “NLOW-OW l“ m“ section acwrdl-BS W m“ ‘isthmus’ which do not; seem to be U00 1118*!- Moreover, he pointed out. that forW cents out of every dollar 5P6“ bl“ these visitors goes for food and aoornm ’ trons. The rest of the money 1s for clothing, gasoline, etc. This gaming summer, with people more well-to-do and with more leis-tire. should be g record-breaker, as far as the number of visitors to New England goes. Arid New ms- land 1s prepared and Zlad to 816M them-Boston Post. Twelve newspaper men lo- compariied the German Foreign Minister on his trip to Vienna. It is hard to see why. When tweye American or British or French or Scandinavian reporters cover any public event 1t will result in twelve separate news stories. dtf- fering from each other tn per- ceptible degree. But. when twelve German reporters write o story nowadays or for that matter L203 German reporters. 1t results 1n identically the some story written Kut, r916, alas, a blow to British prestige, I i FF Once more the Island rapid road transit is iii operation between here and Suinmerside. IF 1V 1‘ It is just possible the compulsory retirement of Sir Andrew‘ .\l:icl’liail from his chair in Me Gill University was the last straw to break Prin- cipal Morgaifs back- ! U l A census taken by the C.D.N.A. indicates that every morning paper, and quite a number of evening papers will publish as usual on Coro- nation Day. i! ‘ll Ii Mr. J. Walter Jones, M.L.A_, announces that he has gone to Ottawa, and will be absent from the Island several weeks. Can it possibly be that he is to act for his friend, the Minister of Finance, who is attending the Coronation in London? a a m The “Baker Millions” racketecrs have received a substantial set back in Philadelphia where six men were convicted on charges arising from an alleged Jacob Baker estate fraud and one was acquitted by a jury in the-United States District Court. The government charged the men collected "thousands of dollars" by crin- vincing persons that they were heirs of a Jacob Baker, who died in Philadelphia in i839, leav- ing an estate which they estimated was worth as high as $300,000,000. r n- n- It does not necessarily follow that what Mr. Geoffrey Dennis recorded in his recently pub- lished book on the Duke of Windsor was wrong simply because His Royal Highness considers it libellous. Under British Law a man's char- acter is protected, even if imprudence and erratic behaviour lead him to offend against good taste or what is considered the public standard of nor- mal behaviour. For instance, one of‘ the legal standards for behaviour here is absolute teetotal- ism, but that would not warrant Tom Dick pub- lishing the fact that Harry, in the secrecy of his bed-closet habitually indulged in a “night- cap" if the publication was to serve no useful purpose but merely to gratify a public craving for gossip and scandal about the otherwise good living and respected Harry. a at is ltlajor-Gctterzil the Hon. Hugh Havelock Mc- Lean, K.C., V.D., LL.D., U.E., who command- ed the Canadian Coronation contingent that at- tended the ceremonies at the crowning of the late King George V and Queen Mary, in I911, has received a special invitation to attend the Coronation of Their Majestics King George Vl and Queen Elizabeth." Although deeply appre- ciative of the honor accorded ltint, General Mc- Lean rcgrets that it is unlikely he will be able to accept. The General celebrated his 83rd l birthday last tiionth, and on this occasion the role he played in i911 in expressing loyalty and l respect to King George V was favorably recall- ed- General McLean is a fortiicr Llfilllellillll- Governor of New Brunswick. i. at it Premier Aberhart is a staycr all right. He told his cuiistittlcnts at Okotoka that lie would “stay in office until kicked out. There is no other \\':l_v to get me otlt. I am not going to tender by resignation to any little group in any hotel room." (lnstirgetit members of the Social Credit patty, during the recent session of the Alberta Lcgislalitrc, held nicetings in a down- town Edmonton hotel where they planned their attacks on thc Government). “I am not out lterc talking for a job,“ thc Premier said. “I went into social credit because I thought it my (llll_\'. I am going to stay with it iiittil I am kicked 0ut——bttt I will lizire to be kicltt-tl out first." There may lie tilllCl‘ Preniit-fs of the same way of tliittking though tiiuius the word with them, say lIepbtirii of lliitariii, not to conic too near honic. a a o At the final public hearing of witnesses on President Roosevelt's bill to enlarge the Supreme Court, the last witness was Mr. Jacob Gould Schurman, of New York, former Ambassador to Germany and president of Cornell University. Mr. Schurman, pointing out it was natural for the political views of the court to change grad- ually as succeeding Presidents made replace- ments, said that the addition of six new justices, combined with the short life expetancy of the present members, made it likely that President Roosevelt would have a majority of his own appointees on the court. with deplorable effect on its tradition of independence. tChairman Henry Fountain Ashurst of the Senate Judiciary Committee. bringing to an end the hearing which began forty-four days ago, predicted that prob- ably a month of executive sessions would be re- quird before the committee would be ready 1o by the prison-New York ‘nines. a recent visitor w the ml b‘ nd. whose grandfather had serv- i there as a missionary, reports ‘izir. natives now trained in surgery xcel white surgeons in the facility hey show in removing appendixes ii-‘ln other forum of surgery. There sumo mans: m T0 LIVI wrrn orinm morn some weeks I80 the daily papers carried c news item telling of the establishment of a. "beauty" par- lour 1n one of the institutions ire-IUD! mental patients. It was found that. the patient! rooolvlnz facial and hair treatments began to take more interest 1n life. 1n their surroundings, 1n their daily duffel or chores. They became more tidy in their dress and about their IOOITLS- I have molten before about the New Jersey state institution when a. patient, confined for two years. had some infected teeth removed and within two months was able w leave the institution "lg he: right mind”. The luperlntenderit promp- tly had o. number of dentists, 1mg and throat, and other specialists ca. amine the patients thoroughly, 1g- movo Infection and within I you or W0. ff 1 remember oomectly. had been able to ll-IOW 40 percent °Y "l! Pit-lento to return to their homes. Dr. Mary G. Bohmeder 1n speak. lng of the work at the Elgln stats Hospital. 1n Ollntcal Medlctne and 51118611. sham:- "For snumber of you; 5.... ._ a con t s h t, p especial attention has been direct- .»*...... ..§§°..§i...1‘l2 $3.22!; ed www- wm-ii-i or Physical filllflery and the Rockefefler smote-supports 1t. are sent over all Pacific islands and dying off because of white men's diseases. ls now rapidly grmtncL-Toronto Star. Summer tourists to Gaspo pou- irisulat will be interested 1n the claim of Col. Wilfrid Bovey. l m_ , defects which my contribute to the natlenfls inability to adjust himself N ti d tors ta," wgtem w others and tothe world tn gen- s. population Hal‘ Th” “m” °‘ ""14"" Specialists have been called tn to assist 1n this. A chlropodlst comm. tn twice a week to make the feet more comfortable; a prootoiogist (one who treats the lower bowel, piles or other coridlttoris) comes twice a week; a. nose and throat specialist and a. kldney and bladder nlnlns zblttaerns-ss strikes have no . seize Canadian scientist, that the "Vin- land” of the ancient Norse sagas luy 1n that vclnlty. Evidence, 1t. is held. exists that the climate of Gaspe was much warmer at the| specialist once ‘a. week; n, skin specialist every two weeks; a gland specialist specialist 1n women's ailments is a once a month. A Permanent member of the. staff lrme of the Viking voyages, and, Minor operations are performed by that 1t hinted suddenly colder after the middle ages. Excavations made near Cape Farewell in 1921 revealed, according to Prof. Paul Norlund of the National Museum of Copenhagen, upon whose testimony Colonel Bovey bases much of his rea- soning, graves with wed-preserved 14th century costumes 1n the per- manently frozen sub-soil. The lcy strata apparently saved the frail woollen cloth from disintegration. Moreover. this material had been perforated by grassroots, indicts.- ttng that there had been a, sudden climatic change. checking the an. nual thawing depth at that point. Professor Norlund believes that; there W118 an advance of the Arctic lcecap after the middle ages that Bccounts for the climatic change. Prior to that time there was no reason why the "grapes" mention. ed 1n the Vlrfand saga should not have grown in that latitude.- Manchester Urilori. Tokyo ls l0 remote from Madrid. the capture of several Japanese of- ficers on the rebel side 1n a. recent cotintclboffenslve by lloyallsb forces will probably receive little or no publicity 1n Japan. Evidently the bestegers around Madrid were badly surprised when the Spanish defenders broke through to the point where they captured officers of high rank. including Japanese generals. —Otta.wn Citizen. The right to strike ls not to dis- pute at all nor the principle of collective bargaining. But; 1t 1s perfectly clear that if negotiations are to be free and without lasting more right: to occupy company property than a, company would have to thg homes of employees, Force ls a dangerous weapon. and when the novelty wears off pubic opirfion in the Unlticd Slates will not sanclicn its use in industrial disputes-Ottawa Journal. Vardqn was in his prime at. the end of the century; and students of the times have never been able to decide whether it was he or Mr. Balfour that made the English a nation of golfers. It was a real achievement for the nations had lived for centuries side by side with no more sign of golfing tn- fectlon than of a spread in the taste for hlsggls. But Mr. BalPur came to power. and Vardon was l phenomenon that could yo} b; ignored. and the miracle happened. It ls on‘y fair to Balfour to recall that he also brought the philosophic spirit which is most fitting to the game. Mrs. Dugdale tells us how, when he foozled, a shot. he did not. as the tqwe; breeds do, break his club; and apostrophlzc the heavens: he tum- ed his baok. gazed for a. few mo- ments across the Firth of Forth to the distant shores of Fife, and, reassured as to the real import“ ance of golf tn the scheme of the‘ universe. turned again to the watt. ing ball-Toronto Star. The astounding fact shout the human body is that 1t will stand so much abuse from a mind that; no often asserts no control over its charge. On the other hand, what s sepctmen of power and ex- ample ln the mind that has its body ever under perfect tmitroll From the latter we vtow the lend- ers arid the makers of history. It is well often to think of that wise $111118 that he who controls his own spirit. ls greater than tho one who takes a city, bgcaugc it; who takes a city. takes somethl 1, that doesnrt. belong to hlm.- Your list of annuals should be made up as soon as possible now - report the bill to the floor of the Senate. try o few new ones this year. the staff and others of a more serious nature are referred to the University of Illinois Medical Practically all these institutions School." have a. dentist on the stuff, usually Elvin; full time to this important DB-rt of the body so often the seat of infection. Now while you and I are think. lng what a. wonderful thing this 1s for these mental patients-clearing their minds and enabling them to b°°°m° a Dirt of the community BEB-ilh-We should remfnd our- relves that perhaps some 0g om- ow-n inability to get; 510x18 wit), people. thlnklng ourselves Wight" i111 the time, and our periods 0: “blueriess" or melancholy may be due to physical irritations or 1n- fecttons of which we are unaware. Paging All Premiers It ls curious that when an indus- try is pwspennc. the public first hear of 1t through Ottawa press de-sniitches. to the effect. that the Government will get that industry 1f 1t; doesn't watch out. It 1s equally curious that when an industry falters in its output, we only know of it through an 1m. employment increase. For then the Government takes cover. When two years ago m; gold mines began w make “big money," the Government put. on dual tax. Blilm. and decreased depletion al- lowance, and by so doing we lost. the capital resource of one of the richest men in Canada. As the industry continued to prosper. Government leaders began to boast of the industry's progress, lslfbllef they themselves were respon- Now. when tens of thousands of investor's have been literally wiped out through mlue share losses, the public have nobody to cock an em- to for adv ce except the president of a neighbour state. Silent as the tomb are our own leaders who in recent months en- couraged by "radio talks" the 1n- vestmenl; of world and home capt- tal 1n our mining enterprises. Prime Mffilster Mackenzie King 1s, of course, the logical leader to look m. He knows the mining sltustlon Lu Canada. better than you know it or I know it. A word of reassurance on behalf of this our presently greatest exporting industry would undoubtedly steady the people at home and abroad. ‘Ihefmtls, therowasuraldo clcvll! Iillueered mid, on on in- ternational scale against the [old share markets of South Africa. and Canada. The llblclllfilfid rumour that the prloo o! gold would be reduced came out -- y on the four great mining share markets of the world. It was no coincidence, that! Next comes a foreign labour scare --a.nd all but Premier Hepburn and halfndoun mlric managers are afraid to face 1t. ‘flint ls something, surely, with- ln I Government's sphere. Any- thing, 1n fact. 1s within a Govern- ment's sphere wlilch has a tend- ency to steady the stampeded pub- lto during a market. crisis, especial- ly when there is no basis of sense or fact to lL-TKD. NEURITIS On din b on m1‘..*..t€=....."~ i! H. a was “II PAIN” lJNJJZIENTl m... a SUNSET m m: MOUNTAINS A single step. that freed Ill tram the skirts 0f thclglmd vapour, opened to my v w - Glory beyourlall glory our soon = By Viking sense or by the dream- lngsoul I The appearance, instantaneously dlsclwcd Was of a mighty city-boldly my A wilderness o! building. sinking fu- And self-withdrawn into o bound- less depth. For linking into qilendour with- out endl By earthly nature bu! the effect been wrought Upon the dark meta-ma at the storm Nowpaclfledonflumondonllie coves And mountain-sloop! and simimftc. whenunto , The vapours lad needed. um; ‘Iridi- station under l ocrulun l? Oh, was an unimaginable sight! —Wordswort.h's "Excursion! Decay May Face (New York Herald. Tribune) Western civilization is on tno threshold of a new on, according to a. monumental study of t-bo pm 2,500 years Just completed by Pro- fessor Plttrlm A. Soroktn. Harvard university sociologist. with the aid of a score of American and Euro- pean scholars. Evaience of decay 1n tho type of cull-tire that nu don-mated we European world for the last 600 years was foima in the pxomtnatlou of social movements of mom than two mlllemnla. World wide chaos and violence were interpreted as symptom: of a transitional crisis to an indetermin- aw age ahead. Some of the conclusion: of Dr. Soioklrfs survey that. afford a oom- parlson with Oswald Spenglerb epochal treatise on "the decline of the West" are: War will not. disappear. Should revolution coins 1t. will not be bloodless. science 1s already 18881118. and the trends of the past ftvo centur- ies are being reversed. Art. is 1n revolt, and beoomln: 1n- creustngly abstract. Modern man has 6,500 fowl chances of dyllg peacefully 1n bod than his ancestor of the thirteenth century. The bloodiest periods 1n all 111s- toiy has been the twenty-five you-s since 1900. Professor Borokm, now forty- elght years old. who is regarded ll among the world's leading sociolog- ical theorists. came m the United States in 1923, after being first con- demned to death and then exiled by the Communist government of Rus- ma. Professor Borokin declares: "The organism of Western society and culture seems to have not. merely a. number of local or super- ficial ailments, but to be undergo- ing one of the deepest crises of 1t: life. ‘rho crisis is far greater than ordlnutly supposed; 1ts depth is unfathomable, its end not. yet 1n sight. "It. ls the crisis of a culture that has dominated the Western world during the last ilve centuries, n. cul- ture now 1n its over-ripe stage." In this sense we are experiencing one of the sharpest turns on the histor- ical mad. declares Dr. Sorokln. Mbre than two hundred thousand works of art were examined from twenty-five points of view. The charted results show that cubism, “Surreallsm" and all the othgr "isms" of modern art are a revolt age. list literal photographic art, with its emphasis on the senses. The field of science offers ad- ditional evidence that we are re- versing the trends of the past five centuries. Professor Sorokln de- clares. Hts staff's investigation of the discoveries and inventions of the last twenty-five centuries re- veals that the Western world ls not advancing mechanically as rapidly as tn the nineteenth century. "Toward the close of the fiftie- teenth and during the twentieth century there has occurred a slack- ening in the rate of ‘ crease. and in some periods and 1n some selen- ces even a stationary state or us. cllnc 1n the absolute number of dis- covefes and inventions,” Profeuor Sorokln states. In the field of wai- and revolu- tloris. B02 wars and 1.615 lnternal disturbances during the last. 2.500 years were analyzed. The bloodiest periods 1n all history was found to be the first. quarter of the twentieth centuries. In other words. the over- ago mm of the thirteenth century had 6.500 more chances to die Western World ' 29. 1937 ‘-......-.-_Q or Vitality aiwauu ISRAHMIN ORANGE PE KOE TEA Incowmuunonccbumaon uuiloyllntclytlslnlnthcynclngo I IY|N|1 . curl Carnation You with d h: plenum: Ivum-Puhkpooltloa ruuwilfll (llfnyooOctrf k-nlllnropepnpcrod ' mvnloomolgfllllnfluxofvldcmu vfiyt Sfllou diofastBIpnuqorloIu-cool Dos-bum and Mont chips. Enjoy Cun- glllkliru" . l dim Pacific mrvlcemd ailsine. . . going “film II-llvygu l t bySLEwrcnceSeawIy-the"59%Laa Egg-gas” Ocean route. - m. i’ irequcnl idling: from Nomad and luau, i. QucbectoBrldsh and Continental pom g1" t..Ccbin,TourlstundThirdClus.Alk Mnng. about low-coat, nll-expean can: "Yum" llfliilmifionxmbulir h” 511i” Wrlh H. O. IAHK 131$ BI“ nmiim Agent, ssmfronn, n. n. maximum LIME ' -rr nitmcsyrua , CLOVER” Orders an now being boob! for immediate and Spring delivery. Write for prices deflated your station Brookville Manufacturing 00., Ltd. Brookvflle. Si. loll 00-. I. B. u. o. s. spams, Mano!!! fully In bod than bu his do- soendant 1n the twentieth. 1t wan ‘Wnd- hen for shipment to Dilb- FUEL cos“ OUT onwrtitom 1.200 miles nor-tho! GRANDE PRAIRIE. Alta..—(CP) z ' —'.l'hem wlllbeno fuel bills for Twf- ' light school. near this Pelwc Rivet town 800 miles northwest of Ed- monton. next. year. Every man 1n the district. Joined 1n a wood-gath- ering and splitting bee. noommiir dRIEIGJJKA-(CPN-A lpsmol own.- e yliPollookwa-sresouedhalf- crazed with pain in an unusual “of: Q1?‘gm?"fi°d' accident near here. The dog was ‘ "gum; m; ; ‘uffiwql i“: lYBPPEd when a spike of a. barbed “m, Namath,‘ P wire fence penetrated its ear. Many q‘; . M, |0_d., hours passed befor tn lrrml‘ ' mesbwughtui e B in a lioxoffilablolllk. DR. L .. AVANB "Yo! have any trouble SPRING TONIC BLOOD PURIFIER Mac's Blood Food A combination especially y“- iuhlo in the ‘ catment of lholo diseases where their. "Mn h tnccablg t; 3,11 m. Dover-thud condition of the blood- BLOOMING NORTH with your stomach suds u indigestion. dygpqlgig, wu- l stomach. heartburn. pstrlo , distress. etc, then don! delay ~ selling n bottle of Dr. Evan's utomlch "é mm“. lately. ~ Evan's Stomach Mixture I a llffilfllillllvn of Dr. L. B. vans, noted English Phy- slclln of which we have the Mo rllhts to Ind llnco loll- EDMONTON-(C P)-- Growing "will 111 the far north does not begin until July. but: growth is re. BAGKAOH E OFTEN WARNING fir.” "" “,3? "" '15,‘? lfjfi lZftfL§§ili."°ii'Z$' “fifitifi Wyn. Don't hi] In bond this nrii- "hi-lei!- la ho lnporhii. Tlh prompt action Try a bottle. fo-day. Prloo ..i cents. TWO HMS Mall Order! Prompf-ly Attended f0. For over fifty years, "BLACK TWIST" CHEWING has been a favorite chewing tobacco g farmers. Thales! tzig-rown in Ontario where Qsvcdwfll elpe allyniitedfor owing the fluent, tobacco. The leaves are cugd and pooelud right hero on the ltiland by our famous method: which add extra flavor and nifiural goodness. Try "Black Twist" (lliow1ng—then go but to another brand if your taste will let 7W- .