t t -' i iff. _ 'Ii _'Iii "i i l .i I: 1,, ai' _.ig -`.». ii .ci .Yet iii pi ,x ,I .i _ ‘ ri) .Y i if :fi .:;.-..,.‘ »...-._-_ '_ 1' _ i;|_. _ ‘IAPRIL `i, i9i8 V, A rp- ,___ _ 3 ' : ‘_ M _ 1 _ \~'~_ - _ 4 i _ ¢ \ ' i eHAnLo'rrn'rowN- on i _ . ARDIII 7 ' \ PAGE Four f- v _ __ 7_5, - ‘__ _ iliw tiliaiiiiiliiliitiii Guiiriiiiiii Morning Daily (founded 1891), $3.50 per year, (Deliv- ered) in advance; $2.50 per year (mailed) in advance, in Gannon, and 38.00 for U.S.A. __-_-_-_-_-_-V-_-_-_-_-_-_ _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-,-_-,-_-_-_-_-,-: ,-_-_-_-; _-_-_-_-,A A _-_-_~.-_-_- :_-_-_-_-_-_ .-_-_-.-_-_ _ _ . _-_-,- .\lO.\'_D.\\' .-\l'lllL lsl.. 1918. ~_-_ - ~_ .~ -..~.. ~, --._-_~_-_-:¢ -v_- ~_ __ -_-_- _-_-:_ _ .-_- -_~.»_ _ u- . _-_»_~ -_.~.-_- -_~_~.-_-_-_` i~o'i‘_\'i'oi'uic1ss ' Oiii‘ coiresponileiit, Mr. J. I). l.ivii_ig-| stoii, whose letter on the potato situationi appears elsewhere in this paper, takes a somewhat skeptical view of the represent-_ ations made through the press with refer-,‘ ence to the quantity of potatoes in the Un-' ited States and Canada. He assumes, that the motive behind these represcnta - tions is "to cut down prices, tliereby oblig-, ing the fariner to have to dispose of his po- tatoes at a loss." It is to be regretted that any one should take this view of the situa- tion aiid we feel quite sure that the view is not shared by inaii_v of our fai'iners. Speaking for the Guardian, the aim oi, the press has been to place the situation fairly and authoritatively before thc peo-\ ple, and so enable them to decide`for them- l seles whether to sell or to hold for higher prices. The Food Control I?»oai'd thorough- _ ly caiivassed the situation last fall in the United States and (_`-anada and aniiounceci p that there was more than a suflicieiit quaii- _` tity of potatoes on hand to supply the mar- I ket in botii countries. The Board express- -_ ed the opinion that it would be inadvisablf i to hold potatoes until Spring in the hope oi' getting still higher prices as, owing to the ~ known quantities on ha.id it was iniprob- i able that prices shoulil increase. The _advice it of the Food Boaril was to feed the market “ steadily, to avoid shortage and abnormally inflated prices and also to avoid gluttiny ‘V the market and so causing ai slump. Thi ‘T continued interruption in traiisportatior_ ._ during the winter caused shortage at the ` principal centres with the result that pi'ic- es ruled abnoi'mall_v high in the larger cit- I ies. It was pointed out by the l"ooil Contro Board and through the press that the pric- ` es ruling during the period of interruptei transportation could not possibly be main- tained in the Spring when the railways ti " all centres would be available. The pres: placed thesematters fairly and fully bef.o.i-1. the public and if' Spring prices do not come up to t-lie expectations of those who helcf in expectation of a further rise, it is scarce- ly_fair to lay the blame upon the press. Looking over the market quotations since last fall it will be admitted by all that potato prices maintained a reinarkablt p steadiness in view of' the conditions. This li steadiness is unquestionably due to the fact i that the Food Board, through the press y kept the people thorouglily posted on prices both at lime and abroad. li' _ Potatoes are iio\v being rushed to the " market. The price, as we write, ranges around sixty cents, and wearc inforined that there ai'e quantities ill in store .1 throughout the province. llast fall the 1, 'JZ ,Q price ranged around 'Io and 80 cents, but , a great many refused to sell, at this price hoping for higher figures in the Spring I l"i°oni present indications we fear, as wc feared last fall, that this hope will not bf realized. The present rush to the niarke* I is not going to help matters for the farmei as we are not the oiil_v producers of pot- V atoes. Ontario and Quebec have largti quantities also, and they, too, are getting into the market. ; It is quite probable that sixty or seventy 1 cents a bushel will not siifiicieiitly remun- crate the fariner for his time and labor at ‘ the present cost of laboi'. and other things _ that he is obliged to provide, but he still has the situation iii his own hand; he can feed his potatoes to hogs and cattle and at 1 the prices ruling for these, he can possibly make a better market for his potatoes than selling them at sixty or seventy-five cents. | There is no danger of glutting either the pork or the beef market. A farmer wht q raises large quantities of potatoes inform- ed us today that he found it very profitable to sell his potatoes at_ seventy-five cent: last fall and while that'pi'ice ruled he woult il not think of feeding them in large quanti- ties to his stock. If prices should fail~mucl below that figure he was quite satisfied ti feed them to his hogs, a load of which he , sold in the city yesterday at 211/_» cents pei pound, which he considered a good market or the potatoes used in fattening them. It would be a comparatively easy mattei for the press to minimize the reports of the Food Control Board and to point out to thi -5 farmers that Spring prices for potatoes , have always ruled higher than fall prices. il but it would have been exceedingly unfaii A to the farmers. We have at all times en- deavored to place the situation before our readers not as we would wish it to be but as it actually is, and we have not been mis- taken about the potato situation. It is use- less to expect the government to do any-‘_ i_ _ ~ ', thing to maintain high prices _for potatoes. The demand and the supply will regulate tliat_ All the government can do is to assist in ti'aiisportation and the extraordinary Tiieasures adopted by them this year iii making winter shipment of potatoes possible has done more to maintain prices; at a high level than anything ever done by 'l`lll‘l l"()X !\l.`Sll\`|'ISS We note by the last issue of “The Black Fox l\lagaziiie,” that our American cousins Tiave organized a l"ox Breeders' Associa - tioinsoineivhat along the lines of the P. E. Isl:-ind Association. The headquarters of' die Association is in Boston, and a number if the Eastern States are represented in -;he lixequtive. Among those present at the orgaiiiziiig meeting were Di'. C. How- -ird Dalton, son of Sir Charles Dalton, and Nlr. John S. Thompson of Boston. _ Among the specified objects of the As- :oeiation are “to disseminate and exchange iiforniation among ~ the members,” “to iiaintain a registry of foxes bred in captiv- ity that come up to a required standard of excellence," and to do any and all things iecessaigv- to promote, advance and en - iance the character, standing and interest if the Association. ‘ The Americans are fully alive to the im- iortance of the fox industry and they inay 'Je depended upon to push,it_ They know, he value of publicitv and we may rest ai- U) iains in advertising the industry. We in Prince Edward Island, who are the pioii- ‘ers and the creators of the fox industr/, 're waiting for someone else to do our pub- icity work. They will do it but for their iwn. not our, benefit. Unless we wake up, iull together and boost the fox business. 'ithers will' reap where we have sown and iur Island fox business, which should be he first in the world, will takesecond 'ank. Our Fox Breeders’ Association must iot leave its work to be done by one or wo; all must work tgether and help if we 're to maintain the first place, which we -re now holding without ef'l`ort. li() Y l".\ RM HKS _ Tliroughout. the United States prep-ara - _ ions are on to make the most of boy labor his summer as a means of making up the :hortage of help on the farms. It is pleas- int to see, too, a tendency to secure ofiiciai iiiperi-'isioii over all this activity, so that iy no chanceshall there be any improper exploiting of the youngsters, in the name if \\'ai' saving, for private profit. Many :lare that when the youngsters are not too nuch inclined to pranks they make better vorkers than men who have had no farm xperience, being more adaptable, and often nore interested in their tasks. Indeed. nany youngsters are now looking forward fui tliei stud ' in a riculturai schools as 0 . . _ 5, g k _ i result of' interest aroused in farming on- i business basis as a 'possible career. When _ 1 boy goes in for farming seriously, he is' very serious about it. He stays right on 'he job every hour. According to the New; York Tribune, “the champion corn grower' if Indiana is a 15-year-old boy, a junior in iigli school with an ambition to become a :hemical engineer. Last season he made me acre produce 140.2 bushel of dry shell- éd corn at a cost of 11.3 cents per bushel, in unprecedented achieven ent in that itate. In 1916 he made an\aci°e yield 85 bushels, but in this he was beaten by a hundred other Indiana boys. But with his iwn seed and his previous year’s experi- ence he bettered his first year’s attempt by iiore than 60 per cent., and gave Indiana 1 new record. The record acre corn crop if the United States was raised bv a South record corn crops of America have been raised by boys under 18.”--Boston ex-` change. _ NOTES was very nicely solved in the United States last summer. Potatoes have been plenti- ful, at fairly reasonable prices, during thc ,winteix They have been so plentiful that the food commission has advised their greater consumption in order to save (bread.-U. S. exchange. 1 Mr. James A. Whitman. Field Agent ol' the National War Work Council, recently returned from France, said in an address WllNilEiliUl EXPl0|l UF ll. NANNA,-V. 0. &HOH f‘1ie is the ri-iii hero ofthe Western . _ _ ‘ _ .,` _ ' Cauailinii arniy," says the London cor- thlb Ol ‘Intl-UL“9l govelnment’ respondent of the New York Herald in reference to Lieut. Robert iiuiiua. V. C.; and while it ii-i u difficult not io say impossible task to pick out the rent lieroes in an uriny where they ure so nu.uiei'ou.~i, no vrorihi oi pi.ii.~'c seein cxlriivugnnt when up- plloil to the wonderful giillnntry iinil intelligence displayed by Lieut. ilnniia in winning the Victoria Cross. -shut him. using his lust bullet. und then attacked the others witii his' buy- onet. lie killed two. und thi-.ii. us un- -othor u,ppoarei1 ifppareutly frbiu the sky. he dashed his bruiiis out with his butt. Alone in German Trenches lie continued to advance down the trench_ 1'rcsont1y ly heard voices and saw tho mouth of ii dugout. llc was witlio_ut uniniunltion und had no bouibs, but he spied ii (lcrninn boinli and this ho hurled liiio the dugout. killing or wounding every Gernian thoie. lie moved along a few feet .iurtlier and saw anotlior iluizout. lie hunted iound in_iho trench and got [|55 ,.,q,pm in me opinion 0( (gm He,-_ hold of ii couplo more bombs, which ald's correspondent, was “one of the most thiilllng of tho entire war. ii' not or all tliiii-.“ The worilii ot the oiilclnl ri-coril are almost us enthusiast-ic, for after describing the incident they con- clude: "This most courageous action iiisp1u_\'eil courage anil personal brav- ery of the liigliest order at this niost critical inoiueui ot llio attack. wus responsible for the capture of ii inosl liuporfaiitv point, and but for his daring action and d‘eteYiniuud iiiiiullliig of a desperate situation the :itlach would not have succeed- ed. ills c-iitstuudliig ga1laiitr_v, per- sonal courage and/ determined lead- ing of’ his coiupaiiy' is descrviiig ol' the highest possible rcivaril." Out to Kill Germans ilaiina's font was perforiued at iureil they will spare neither expense nor vini_i» niiigi-, .infant ~.»i_fiim_ iit- was at the time sergeniit-iiiajor of tho 20th (Vancouver) Initiation. lie had enlist- ed as ii. private and liiid' won his way to be ehinf iioii-coin. b_v steady- brav- ery. lie had fought. at thc Somiuc anil St. E}lols_ All to-lil. lin had been "over the top" 2;! times before this eventful day, and it is said that he hail no notion- that he would ever coiui: out oi the wal' alive. Yet his irish lineage kept liliu from taking ion gloomy ii. view of the position, and his one determination was to getyas many Germans as possible before ihoy get hini. Near 11111 70 was ii stub of trench in the enemy line, hardly visible. but ltiidivii to be ri nasty point, and thc 29th were told to take it. So the battalion orawh-<1 out on No i\ian's 1/and and' luv there for two hours wlillo the artillery got in its work. linliiiown to tiieiu the Gerinuns ln the opposite irencii had also crawled out ou a similar oiranil. and when the op- poi-iiiig; burragcs' lifted ihorc was ii siiilduii fierce conflict in the open. V The Germans quickly had ciiougli ot' it and buckcd up to the trench stub which was po-we'rt'n.li_\' defended by bnrbcd wire, and ai terrible niacliine gun- ou the piirapet diclinated tho t‘auiuiiaii ranks_ Of the G50 nieii who went over perhiips twirthlrirs rencliied the eutiiiiglenicnis in 1`ront_ oi' the ’armei's who have used boys in summer dc- _ irieucli stiib_ but iniiny 'fell thcie. the ;;iin pliiying upon thi-‘iii like ii hose. lliiiina. liowc-vcr. pliuigcil ahead, ivornicd his way through the entangle- iiients, and hurled ii boiub ut. the gun. Luckily it striu:k. nnii the gun was siinttirred and the crow killed or in- juroil. Iiiiiina was nlone_ All his coin- riidcs sci-nied liillcil or wouiideii. ldv <~.r_v oiliccr was down. The rest of the battalion had svijupt on. lliiniia junip- ed down into thu trench. und' in a sec- ond suw ii number of Pi‘\nisiai\ Guards tidviincliig. They rushed hliii, but as DAILY SELEl1Ti0li$ F01! Gllllllilil READERS Furnished by W. 8. Louoon , THE SEA IS HIS The sea is ills: lic niado lt. Black gulf and suiillt shoul, long Leagues of Atlantic roll; gal-Olina boy 12 years 01d_ Neal-'ly all the Siuall strait and coasoless oceiin lie badcs ouch one to be. 'i‘-he seas is I-iis: lie mndo li- And 1}rltn1n keeps it gee. _ ily pain, and stress and striving Lloyond the nnllon's ken. ily viglls stent when others iilcpi, ily lives of many iuen; The potato problem, take it all around, Tiiwiisii nts-his of iiwriii. through duwnings r Biiicker than miiluights be This sen that God created, llrltuiu has kept it free. Count nic the splendid cuptuiiis ' , ° - Who sullcd with c0t|i'n30 high To chart the perilous ways unknown Tell mo whore these inon lla! To light n pnih for ships to come They uioorcd at Doaii ilian'ia Quay. The sen is Goii's. lie made it-- Auil these inen made it free. _in New York the other day “The stories circulated here at home that our soldiers' 0 "m°'"'"-' “r E”‘"""" _ abroad aresuccumbing to disease liquor gi’:°i,:lr,Ki,hTfii:¢udldiuiliiil it-on N and de'ection are art f t ’ I 0 5 thee l<`ro|u barrlorcil blgiit to whore the lie threw into the dugout. ilu re- marks, "'i‘l1ere' wns no more noise in this dugout." Soon iil`ler\\‘iirL".-i llanna cnught sight ol' a number of Cana- dian soldiers iroui' another cnnipany. and as there were no ofiicers any"- wlieri-. about he took chaige of them and lcd them through the iintii-i: trench' in a "uioppiiig-up" expedition, and the position _remained in the hands ol' the Canadians. tlianks to Bob Hanna, a couple oi' years before u lumbcriuck. V Saved Many Lives iiannu had accouipllslicd soiiii-lliliig more than the sliiuglitcr oi’ ii score or two ol' Germans. lie hail siivcii one battalion, perhups two. The (Ili-i‘niuiis who were killed lu llic riii‘.:outs had linen left ihcri: to opn|'uti- iiiiiizliinii guns ol' the think anti' in thc ri-nr of tho (fniiailiaii battalloiis as they swf-pl hy. The iiupetuoslty of the Caiinillaiis had carried those who Iiad gone past the objective. naiur-1`_v, the little .stub !rencii»--where ilnnna alone had halt- ed-too far. :ind had it not been 'lor him they would have been destroyed by the hidden niiiclilne guns. ilad he gone on with tho others maybe uouo_ of thcui would cvei' have not bnck._s-0 that the number of lives he saved by his pluck anti' quick witteduuss uiiglit_ be estiiiiatei? by the hiinilreds_ I.le’ut.| lianua weight only 140 pounds. and he must have seemed .ii mere boy to thel stalwart. Prussian. Guards oi the flityl flith iieginieut, ivhoni he niet in the trench. But his tougiincsa and quick-| ness oi hand auil oi eye niuilo thcni easy victims. Lieut. llauna, V. C.. al., the order oi' thc Govorniuent, has sat .for his porliuil. which will be hung in the Nu’ti_ouai Gallery. As tho lloriilii nays: “lt will reuinln for a now race to roll up a single record to overshiid-I ow that of iianiia_" " IIUMMANIIIR Willll I i IS iXilNiRlllll Freed from Blame In the Halifax' Dis- aster 1-iA1.11<`A.\'. March 25.-Tlic court oI’, inquiry which investigated tho cir- cumstances lending up io the fatal illoni. Blanc-lmo collision, exoncratcd Coniniander Wyatt l’roni any direct- responsibility for the catastrophe and Mr. Jii-itlcc Russell instructed tho Grand .lury lust night tliut the evid- ence taken ut the preliminary exam- lnntion did not _luutify the irlul of the naval oiilcor on u charge oi niiinslniigli- ter. ` YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED ' BY REV_ T.B.LlN8COT'i', D. D.; ‘ (Ali rights reserved) ;_ A i'All‘l'JN'i‘_-1'iircnts must bo God to their children before they uro old enough to think for ihcinsulvcs; you must uinke and enforce righteous laws. Unless you nrc iight yourself you cannot truln your children right. The book the ciiild reiiiiu first uiiil last, generally obeys is what you arc, and noi. what you any. Your res- ponsibility is great, as tho future of your children depends upon you_ By l the grace of God you can niiiko theiu whatever you will. U ri # AN .\.TliL}:J'i‘E-'1‘horo is nu iuornl uierit whiitovor bccnuso you tip tho scales nt 210 pounds and are six feet two inches tall in your stockings. 1 frequently meet, a little mnn who niuiit be at least forty years ot' nge und in X good health, who is only thirty six ‘ niches tall, rind other things being eq- ual. he is morally nieritorloiis as you ure. Your unusual physical powers do und to your responsibilities, as you are expected to ucomplisli ‘work coni- mensumto with your gi-cnt strength. blame due to those who excel in eith- er physical or intellectual strength; everything depends upon the use *which men make of these unusual qualities. " 's 'e\x-ive 'ti' ii " ' _tho iii Lon vu il 5 ids nw y he I, There is no iieccusar-y praise or _ _ _ \.» lioisicln cow, “lsinuii Aggie di: 1{o1.‘-' broil and owned at “iilvci'sii1c," who luis recently niude a steven-day li.t).l\i. |ri~coi‘d ol' liicrll) Off' 577 lbs. milk and nearly 20 lbs. butter. _ She is also entered R_O.1’. (yearly rc-l coril ol' perforiiuiuce) test, and has given over 15,200 lbs. uiilk in the first 30 days. Shia is a most persistent iuilker uliii could not be dried before l'rosiicnliii:. so was not in proper cou- dillon io do Iicr best. She is not only a licavy niiikcr, but a .show cow _oi high nr<1i-r, wiiiuiiu: from a. cull' up all over the _\l:i|'ilii|ie Vriiviiiccs wlicr- ovcr siioivn, being ii ilaiigiilcr of that i;ri~ai proiliii>in_-1 :intl slioiv bull “iiiii l1r_>ol¢i-i' Iliiiis Vale." ai bull wliicli had few ciiiiiils lu Viiiuiila. ln the sliow ring his iii-.li`i-r>-i iiivariably iiiaiii- ii clean swci-p; iii socl.ioii for #get ol` a sire, his oil`s=priii:.'.. iinve been ire- queiitly lst and also-13uil_ At liali- fax, out _aizaiiist all i-oiiipiititors, best.- liie has iiccii iicccpti-ii in ilu- ailvniicedl rngisli'y tor bulls. by thi: proiluciioii ol' his ilaiigliicrs. No bull in the lllari- tiinc l'rovliici-s. llv`iug or diinil, has as niany iiicli recoril ilaiigliters in the li. O. i\1_ and li. 0. 1'. i`or their age ns thc, live followiiig reiroiwis will slioiv. All but thc first iiieiitiiiiicii are by lieii`ci'.s in two-ycar~old class iiuil include: l\li1k. Biittcr Minnie Vale oi' Victoria, 15,568 700.25 At 14 yours oiil Noiiie_imoi FIERCE AIR FIGHTINGCONTINUES (Special to Tnc Guardian) i.0Ni1().\', lliarcli 28.-'1"1ie contin- iiiiiicc of fierce air iigiitliig in thc. but- iln urea is shown by tho report of iii.-riiil operalloni~i, if-isueil tonig fl. The stood lst. 2nd and Zlrd in the show ring, und lst and Lind in dairy test. I thc liivcrsitle entry in :Z-year holler' class 'also whining ist in both riin; anti dairy test, ull by a good murglu Our winning cow in the grade class! also won the daii'_v lest for grades iicr i int percciitiige lu-ing 3.8 aiui 4.6 for; cinch or tho two days. The whiiiiiiixs itrliisii report says that on Wellnes- iliiy 24 Goriiiau machines were brcugiit down ln uir lighting niiii_ nev- i-ii were driven down out ol' control. Nliietei-ii llrltisii iuueliiiies are miss- ing. 'i`1ie i-‘reuch shows' that 42 Gor- iiian airplanes and six captive bnloons ii-cie ilciitroyed in oiii: tiny. ot this hi.-ril go to show tho grciitl value of ouc good bull, an nearly alll _ the abnve aiilniuiii ineiilioiicd wort- | ` \_\ \\ \ \ \ ‘ K ` _ I sired by liliii_ One good cow is valu- able in ii. breeding herd. but only luis; ,,;__ Q a _ I DODI) 5 ’/ ”`“"l”"_*' lone i-alt in ii your, while the sire ilu-S inaiiy calvi-ii. and lniproveiuont cuu be oiituiiu-d much more reiiillly and cheaply through the sire than the dniu. Our prize winning herd nt liall- liik, 1916. cousistcil oi' lila. Rooker Zuds Vale" and 4 daughters in iiit1k,- it iiiosl. uniform lot that were the sub- ject ol' uiucli favorable coniiucut us ii livini.; tcsliiiioiiy of the great vuliic oi ii reall lilgii cliisn sire. ilu was no uceiili-iii of iireciiing, his sire "Noi~c\:iui Vale." and izruiiii sire "Count Noroeiin i’osi:h" being two of the most noti-.il show bulls lu t‘unnr1a_ while hlii duni und four neurost fciiiiiic uiicei-itors lind nil big oiiiciai recoriis. and wcrc iar|.:e, -slvnlglit. 'niugiiiiiceiit speciincus ul' the breed. ‘ /é;;\\\\\\ -x _ A F 2;] l l \~ `\T€~>\\\_\..\\\ I KIDNEY ,P Ls\ .Q l\ _ " \l\\\\\\[]|§, l -B .LR_,Hi5éi.Ui;__i;i,_;T_Y,.,-5, 5,.-q_‘,. ‘ri~., '*',f-»-+»§"5~=i,§,-C” iiilr 1 , ni. -itil-1' A MH.; x | LY v/ -ff | /.-i./-W _.f/_v/,.,,,,., , ,.,.,,_,,,,,__,,..,,,.,,.. .,,,___. _»,¢ ;///1//,-/,<~,,,.,. -_,, _-,,~-,tw __-/V .-.,-, ,_----,,-,V ,_ .. .. . - _ c sv .ta ’ -i\"iil'i wiinii into 'flb I f[ in lilo. _ li 'ou are inariied or \f~¥<¢_\-f how easily and* co “"°“|¢“ .Q Ti-lr. Omnsr Iusunmcn Aaeucv __________ '"°5 55”” ___ fl 'V _lli_\N, are alive-is-' io time to sccuio the sw/ 1( you uro young. roincmb rtlinl nt. this tlnio you get B lower roto for the best livestiueiit you can 'make - -V 4 ' i - ._;.;'-.i _ion in; youngei'--iviiiio you ' , '?.»|`|~z iiiiii” rotoctlon ol‘i'ci'od by lli’e ,H i. - -_-1 _ "` ini-iuraiici-_ |. _ ’|i hii ‘dependents who look to f . , . ` you 101,,-gyms im- tliein ge our rules today und see ili- ii _nu iiiiy buy the protect- 1 I _ _ \ _'im lun your :rusting oios expo ion to provide lor them. l, t 9 _ HYNDMAN of CQ. Lin. ___.__' -_ __ - 4 .5_s>_-_bi_oiia¢n'§i_,_ ’_i3_.gi~t0it¢t9_»~n,Pi_i ' J , p _o he subtle pro . _ _ _ , _ _ German propaganda which is spread in this wi... it-it-limit .vt-i»<»i»'~ emit-i Suitable for this Spring Weather, Mahogany and n Metai_in Ladies’ High Cut country for only one purposa That pul._ Aye. but let ther-io liragg-iirtii lciiru B031; Lemhgr and Neon” S°]e3_ ' t 1 h f ““°"’ "°“‘ “‘° "°"“ ’“ '°°i For Men and Boys Mahogany and Bla k with N Soles in newest lasts. pose is o a arm t e parents o our boys and The neu is 0od‘s-in Britain, l’,O dlSC0llI'1;1’ge m0l'€ Am€1‘iC8.1lS fl‘0m g0lI‘lg Britain Simi keep 1; fi-e¢_ ,. Hoieproof Hosiery :lik and Lustre Q tg Fr9,nce_ __ | _Aumo|_.S “awe mmm; airy. lieok,_ond white. wni- guornn- _ 'o- ' 4 l I I i _ . i