PAG.‘ Si}; - CHARwrrisiuwiv (tile, r LOVERS CAAUGHT lN THE SEETHING TURMOIL OF THE WORLD'S DANGER . ZONE! OIL FOR THE PAT O'BRIEN JOS r P H l_N s _HUT-CHIN,SON J s AN M u | n lNCA5TOFiOOO‘s' a» ..-....-c¢—.--_._.->. which opened yesterday at Prince Edward Theatre, is heralded as both a most powerful drains and a stir- ring ‘ document. The novel by Alice Tisdale Hobart, upon which the picture is based, and which was one of the best sellers, is a most colorful delineation of the life of American pioneers in China, who fought flood, fire and famine, as well as peatil oe and bauditry, to carry on for‘ American firms whose business they carried. Mrs. Hobart spent years in China, as the wife of an American busi- ness man, and got her information in collecting her Clltl and nve years in writing herlvivid atory. The scenes for the moat part. are laid in the Orient, including the snow swept plains of Manchuria, Peking, Shanghai and the torrid interior. f _ Jane Austen Tale Herald Tribune: ' _ | "E| TODAY and WED. PRINCE rm. 10cm. ALS . and TOPICAL TDAY and WED. 3.15 -- 1.00 —- 8-45 Eve. 26c, 32c, 37c. warm‘ Mot. 1lc,26c. Eve- 26c, 32¢. 1min. IRENE Jouor-cunm Mme. lrcne Juliet-Curie, above, laughter of the late Pierre and Marie Curie, of radium fame, has bcen awarded the Nobel prim for chemistry for creating a,mcre eco- nomical substitutq; for radium. Ifcr husband also shares in flee prize. Her parents won the Nobel prize in 190.: for physics and the mother won again in 1911 for chem y. Avoagc .aim values per head of shccp, swine and poultry in 1934 increased over th;sc of 1933, cattle alone showing slightly lower values. Milch cows decreased in value from $31 to s?’ per head, and other cat- tle i-emmlcd unchanged at $17. Sheep increased ‘rom $4 to $4.18; swine from $8.89 to $9.86; and poultry from 56 cents to 59 cents perhead. t..." iilnlmim toi- Dandruff Professional Cards u canon s BENTLEY W. E. BENTLIY, l. C. J. A. BENTLEY, K. C. Barristers and Attorneys-std.“ MONEY T0 LOAN Office: 180 Richmond Street. ,- MacGuigan & Trainer Mark B. MneGulgln, K. 0. I C. it. Olnft Trainer, B. A. lien-uteri, Solicitors, sic. _~ MONEY TO IOAN Office: Over Provincial Bank. Richmond Street. Charisma-vii. N ii. F. MacPHEE, a. A. NOTARY. Go, EAIBIITIB. SOLIOITOD, If-lly Bllldtlll, OIAIIQMIMIII “Feather In Her Hat” At Capitol There have been good pictures and great ones, but for sheer humanistic warmth hIlCl soul-satisfy1118 sentie- nesa. Columbia's picturization of ‘I. A. R. Wylle's noted love story, ‘A Feather in Hel‘ Hat." which opened last night at the Capitol Theatre. tops them all. _ And this is one instance where perfect casting and subsequent 1161'- fect, performances materially aid in making the film something of which to be proud. Pauline Lord, Basil Rathbone, Louis Haywflfd, B11119 Burke, Wendy Barrie, Victor Var- coni and others act as though 11119! were not on the screen at all, but in the heart of London, where the action takes place- _ Miss Lord's Clarissa Phipps leaves nothing to be desired. It_is always apparent that she is enioylnl; the role as much as the audience, which is considerable. Rathbone, as G18 ruin-soaked but geflttel Cflplflln Courtney, whom she gives shelter so that he may rear her lower class son to be a gentleman, ncquits him- self only as so experienced an actor might. Louis Hayward. the son, b8- comes, through his performance. e decided threat to Hollywood's cur- rently favored juveniles. Billie Burke. playing the actress to whom Clarissa sacrifices her son so that he may live with the upper class, does her best job to date, con- tinually distrssed and flutteril- M185 Barrie, with whom the son falls in love, makes every man in the aud- ience envy him: that is sufficient praise. And Varconi, Teutonic and bewildered, does his pert to a tum- OPERATIC TENOR. SIIOOTS . 500 LBS. OF BEAR, MEAT Five hundred pounds of bear fell to the rifle of Lauritz Melchior, Metropolitan Opera tenor, W116" on a hunting expedition in New Brunswick with Richard crooks, e1- so a tenor, according to the Fish and Game Department of the Can- adian National Railways. On arrival back in New York with the bear, he invited his friends to a party in which bear steak was one of the principal dishes. The opera singer bagged two deer and some Woodcock in addition. Use Mlnnrdh for Bruins Christmas Seals Tuberculosis Christmas Seals are in the mall. and members of the Gyro -Club will be calling on the Charlottetown business houses next week. IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND These Seals Provide Money: Al To an --’ ‘ campaign as to ways and means of controlling Tuberculosis. 1, was the book that he had read. That Mr. Gordon, one of and Prejudice" is proved by each performance. Jane and Lydia to illustrate story of their suocesful man- their chase for husbands “vulgairefl agree were I a braver bookworm. But as Miss Adrienne Allen and Miss Helen Chandler impersonate Elizabeth and Jane at the Music Box, they are just nice, provincial 18th-century belles, eager to be pm- pei-ly mated. Jane may be suspected of stalking Mr. Bingley too sedu- lously, undetericd by flagrant humiliations, but Elizabeth, while open to an ~“oifer" from the proud. prejudiced and prosperous Mr. Darcy, submits to none of his frigid insults. Perhaps it is Miss Allen's way of acting the role that makes “Pride and Prejudice" more inter- esting than skeptics might expect it to be. She gives it a slightly modern touch by which liflizabetlfs relative independence and her gift of sharp, ironic wit are softly em- phasized. If you are not a "Janito" you may not know that, a contro- versy has raged-and,.no doubt. is still raging-as to whether there were mercenary flaws in lillizalbethb character. Complaint has been made by a few destructive critics that she was strong in her resent- til she saw the aplendors of Pem- berley, his country house, a, sight that caused her to weaken and re- new her passion. That libel is scotched by both the play and the performance, and you believe with Mr. Walkley and other indignant partisans that she would have married Mr. Darcy (Colin Keith- Johnston) “as willingly without Pembcrley as with lt." Certainly the Bonnet girls werg willing. Another tidbit about the play: "The superficial finery of the per- iod covered some of the most wretched manners and foul per- sonal habits known to history. One of the greatest trials of hostesses then was the habit of guests who perlsted in wiping their face on the table cloth at dinner. Thg nap- kin had not reached it ascendency. "Then there was the‘ matter of washing. One society lady of the period was thought to be almost pretentlously fastidious because every fortnight she washed her arms all the way up to the elbow. People used very little soap and a vast quantity of perfume and lace lo- tions, and the, haughty upturned noses of ancestral portraits may be that way for the excellent reason that almost every one was a little ‘high.’ SIZE 0F LOAF COUNTS IN DOMINICAN REPUBLIC The baker in the Dominican RA- public has his own method of bak- ing bread. Proportions are “ ‘ ed and the dough is allowed to rise for a greater length of time than is the ‘ in Canada. Twenty- four ounces of dough is expected to produce sixteen ounces of brood. whee-res‘, in Canada, only eighteen To conduct clinics throughout ‘ " and Fill. a MATHIESON ma. Boll n. n. mamas. out t; Berristerl e Solicitors Holley to Inna _ g v on Block. chulotietsmtnni PALMER & HASLAM ~ wrist-rs... ‘A. J. _ . '1 BABEISTIIS, he. ‘ fink of Not! ‘will Chamber! Y, Charlottetown, P. I. I. T0 LO c ‘ill t .m:fll11 . For the examination of indivi- duals who have come in contact with T berculcsis cases, particu- larly children, with e view to preventing‘ the spread of the disease. I'm- the supervlslon of active OI‘ '11!!! BANATORIUM that ll. oz-suoii ossns AS CANNOT BI AOOOMMODATID IN Till 11181111111011. . 5. For assistance to the Gyro-lot- erian Boys’ Camp . For ouistance to Crippled Child- ren suffering from Bone Tuber- indumm ,,,,,.,,.,."“t.“"-.-,,t?.‘,it°,o cunn- clses of TuberculosisOUTBIDI , tion of thepublicin, uinlhbr the . for m‘), "1 ' W“ m” °’ T“"°" hi... a» make e pglflnfl or °“ m‘ In baking, sufficient wood is burnt for each batch and the cinder: are then banked up inside walla o: the‘ oven, when brold is put in to bike. The baker moves the breed about the oven .00 5‘ to “Oil For The Lamps 0f China” “Oil for the Lamps of China," NEW YORK, Nov. 24-403.)- Percy Hammond writes in The, At the first Broadway perform- ance of Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice," F.P.A., the local Samuel Pepys, took a straw census in order to determine what proportion of the audience had ever read the work. Out of 20 persons interro- gated he found but one, Mrs. Alice Duer Miller, who could boost oi’ the achievement, although Harpo Marx, her escort, suspected that it the most active of Broadway's “Janites’ as Mr. Saintsbury called them, has made playgoers conscious of “Pride the Mimic Box'a booklng-oflice. Figures released from that busy till show a prodigious interest in the play, with takings in excess of $2,000 at Miss Jerome has condensed the ~ novel into compact stage-form, erasing from its list of characters some of the superfluous Bennet sisters and retaining only Elizmbeit; hunt. Madame de Steel, if I am not too scholarly, found them and an impression with which I might ment of Mr. Darcy's arrogance un- l “:.&"l'm“"° rs~tcii I s ab and nee-evil; The Prince Edward Pat O'Brien has the leading role, that of an American fired with en- thusiasm to malt; 80d with his com- pany, a grea o concern. and to bring light to‘ China by the way of lamps and oil. Josephine Hutchinson portrays the girl Pat marries and who, in the end. saves him from being cast aside by the-company in wnose aer- vice he had spent e lifetime of work. Jean Muir and John Eldredge play the roles of friends of Pat and Mrs. Hutchinson, who, ‘ broken on the wheel of adversity. Lyle Talbot also is broken by the e- - ' at first hand. She spent many years lif Arthur Byron hasthe role of No. l Boss, who ands his life when ordered to a minor position. Don- ald Crisp is one of the odicisls who dim in a swamp. Henry O'Neill is the new boa. Broadway Praises _Pigs GrownHere Can’t Be Counted WINNIPEG, Nov. 24—(C.P.)-— Miss Cora Hind, agriculture auth- ority of the Free Press, writing from Belfast says: The third day of my stay in northern Ireland, R. A. Wrny. whose business is the lic- ensing of bulls and boars, gave up his regular job to drive me round and a great day we had. Itwas a lrlorious day to begin with and the blackberries in the hedges were just at the right stage of ripe- ness, which always helps some. Our first call was at the farm of A. A. Mcduckian, Cloughmalls, Count‘ Antrim, who'has the larg- est pg farm in the British Isles and possibly in the world; anyway it is large enough, as he has be- tween 5,000 and 6,000 pigs, he never knows just how many, as there are sows farrowing every day and every day there are pigs being shipped. The farm is only 150 acres. and on it is raised green feed for the pigs and all else has to be bought. One trembles to think what his feed hill must be in a year. . We drove to G. Chesney's place at Ballynaiie Portglenone. This man has a most remarkable oom- bination of producing industries; all seem perfectly managed and all doing well. Here is a list: He has a nice flock of sheep-not large, but good: 1.000 D1552 1,600 1811118 119K153 greenhouses that produce 40 to 50 tons of flpe tomatoes annually; a box factory when the boxes for eggs/and tomatoes are made; a great egg cold storage warehouse which in one section alone held 1,- 000,000 e588. We were taken up a hill to get a better view of the valley which the lowering sun shining through the NBS nude them seem almost transparent. From this hill was pointed out to us the place where the late Tim- othy Eaton was torn, and in an- other direction tlie little village where he learned the grocery bus- iness which was the start of the T. Eaton Company. ' Ill MEMCBIAM MR. RODERICK MacLEAN MlcLEOD Recently the sad news came to Valleyfield that Roderick Mac- Lean MacLeod had been killed by a bull on the Exfnoor Farm, West- on, Maas, of which he was fore- man. Mr. MacLeod had decided to move the animal from the pen to the born. As he was about to tie the animal in the inside corral the- pcle snapped and he was crushed into e corner. After being struck three times he managed to edge his way to the door. He jumped through the opening and hurled the door shut behind him, thus preventing the bull from getting out. He was rushed to the Newton Hospital where he died on Novem- berul5tli, the day following the The late Mr. MacLeod who was a son of Alexander M. and Mrs. MecLeod was born in Valleyfield East in 1897. In 1915 he enlisted with the 105th 0.21.1". and attained an enviable war record. For some time he was instructor of Can- adian troops on the use of the machine gun. Returning home from France in 1018 he worked for a time on e government dredge, and later on ships of the merch- ant marine. He hnd been employed at the Exmoor Form for more thanmixie years. He leaves to mourn his sudden and tragic peas- ing, his wife. three brothers, Al- exander 1",, on the old home. Mal- colm. Boston, and Angus in Maine; six sisters, Mrs: A- N. MscPher- son, Bellevue, P. E. 1., and five in the Unitbd States. One brothel John was killed in Vermont about thirty-three years ego. floor to give a uniform brown to the loaf. The United Statca- sup- plies the greater portion of the flour . Canada» accounting for 10 per cent, according to the 1n- duetrisl Department of the Canad- ian National Railways. The Dom- inioen loef, like that of Cube, il extraordinarily light in weight for its sin sad unbebed dough from Canadian flour. although of high quality. will not stand up end pio- duoe es large s loaf u desired by the trade. not». lot lo Blame For the Children’: Colds Despite Ill n. mothers can a» the kiddies will run out of doors not properly wn too much clothing 011' get overheats and cool o! ed up; have ; get the r feet wet; kick o! the bed- do e done tillage the mother cannot Ielf ‘thabsttie in dosforing children ‘s colds in give them something they will like; something fun, and this the Norway Pleading, Y _ The Christmas Seal Campaign » Fain/few, P. F. L. November 10. 1986. P. A. Creelman, M. D. Chairman Gyro Club Tuberculosis Seal ‘Sale Committee, Charlottetown. Dear Sir:- I would like to take this oppor- tunity to compliment the Gyro Club on the splendid work they have done in connection with the great prob- lem of tuberculosis in our Provence- Although we still, have e, high death rate I feel that if this woriqwhich has been so well begun, can only be kept up, in a few years our death rate will be decreased and one way to do this is to help with the sale of Tuberculosis Christmas Seals. The money received from such sales is not used in connection with the Provincial Sanatorium, but is used for educational purposm as to ways and means of controlling tuberculosis, for the conducting of clinics for diagnosing early cases, for the supervision of active oases who are not in the Banatorium ee well as examination of those who are or have been in contact with the disease. ' With these thoughts in mind as President of the Women's Institutes of our Province I would suggest that each and every member of our Institutes pctronizeihe sale of these seals and so help on this splendid work. I remain, Yours truly. A. C. MMMILAN, esident Pr . Provincial Women's i titutes. Few Fairs Observe Livestock Rules Old Stars Make Command Program LONDON. Nov. M-JCPJ-Half an hour from the end the com- mond variety perfonnsnce at the Palladium before the King and Queen and 3,000 of their subjects, was drifting into boredom, says the London correspondent of the Man- cheste Guardian. "And then came the tum which was to set us all singing and cheer- ing and send us homo happy. Stan- ley Holloway came before the cur- tain and announced that some of the great ones oi‘ the old music- lin-ll would be presentod to us. The curtain went up, and them they were, 3'1 of them, men and women, drawn up across the stage, some in evening dress and some in their old costumes. The youngest was 60 and the oldut, who sat on a, chair in their midst, was 94. He was Frank Bertrafn. Chg original hand- bell zinger, who once performed before Queen Victoria at Ocbome. “One of them, Miss Alice Lea.- mar, came forward and began to sing ‘Her Golden hair was hanging down her back. It was c ghost of the old voice, and for a moment the house sat dubious and half em- barrassed. Then, the grand old comic power, undimmed by the years, took hold of us, and in a moment the whole house was sing- ing, while the old playm shuffled end danced on the stage and Mr. DOMINION COMMISSIONER IS ASTOUNDED AT IRREGU- LARITIES-GUELPII AN EXCEPTION TORONTO. November lib-The Provincial Winter Fair at Guelph, Ont. one of the biggest show events in Cnnridn. was held up t1:- dsy by George B. Rothwell, Do- mlnion Livestock Commissioner, as one of the few fairs which rlld not ignore livestock regulations Mr. Rothwell appealed to the 12th annual convention of the Canadian Association of Exhibit- ors to “clear uo a, situation that in some cases assumes the dimen- sions of _a. rocket." He was joined in his attack against unethical showing of cattle at fairs and ex- hibitions by Hon. F. C. Biggs of the National Livestock records. "I could tell you the names of fairs and exhibitions in Canada that ignore regulations in regards to registration of livestock and closing dates," Mr. Rothwell said. "The only name I am going to mention is that of a fair which has on estimable record with the National Livestock Records at Ot- tawa. and that is the Guelph Fair." The federal Government during the lost year has been holding back grants to fairs and exhib- itions where the entries were found to be irregular, he added. "In some cases we were astound- ed with the irregularities," declar- ed the commissioner. "It is up to you men to protect the majority of the exhibitors who enter their animals on an honest basis. In some countries the Government can bar an animal from the show ring if the certificates are not pro- duced and found in order. “We can't do that but we will use the one weapon we have t", stop the abuse, and that is I holding back grants." Mr. Biggs said thousands of ani- mals have been led info the show rings din-lug the last few years which had no right to be entered in the class they were in and, in some cases, should have been bar- icd from the show. The guilty parties. he said, were not only farmers. "Some of the biggest breederain Canada have gone wrong when they reached the fair," he charged. Canadian Scenery Gets French Diploma MONTREAL, Que, Nov. 25- Agiong the men! groups of scenic im- submitted from ver- vious countries for en exhibit in nhctomohs of Canadian more " " which proved of lively interest and which included views al Exhibition Photographic Art held recently in Mroehoiie has granted a diploma to the Canadian National Railways for their exhib- it of Canadian scenery. The di loma, was promoted t a , Ilnlrl Wufllt Ill! the company st Paris. In connec- tion with this 081115"?!- France were a number of artistic ‘ Bertram sat singing in his chair. _ “After that it was a riot. The new cosmopolitan variety had been swept out of sight. and we were beck and at home in the old music hall that some of us never knew. Arthur Reece sang ‘songs of the Sea.‘ Miss Kate Carney, 50 - years married, walked on to the stage sorzeous in a red dress and a hat- ful of ooloiod feathers. And, finally, Harry Champion, '10 years old. sang ‘Boiled beef and carrots.’ and ‘Any old iron?’ and danced and chuckled like a boy. And the audience yell- ed and adored them all. "In its way this was the last of the Jubilee celebrations, and the King and his subjects were able to recapture together for i, joyous half-hour the grand lust/y English music-hall of 25 years ego." Halifax Po rt A rrivals ARRIVALS: mllegunvor, from U. S. ports. Lady Rodney, from Bermuda. Baxter Dick, from local harbour. Mary Currie, from local harbour Acfl-difln, from local harbour. IAILINGS: Lady Drake, m n. W. Indies. Ulva, to Bridgewatar. Baxter Dick, to local harbour. Mary Currie, to local harbour. Acadian, to local harbour. VESELS IN BIRTH! Mary Currie, berth Acadian, berth. 1M1! Drake, loading. "flady Rodney. discharging Lillegunvor, bunkering. Baxter Dick, bunkering. Barge No 2, berth. Ulvs, discharging VESSELS DUE TO ARRIVE: Nov. 30—Rco, from Halifax. Nova If, from Halifax. Kata Pinangn from Fer Iisst. fl-Marlis, from Halifax. IO-Nova Bcotie, from Boston. Ionarf from Fernfield, from Halifax. Lady Nelson, from Bermuda IF-Man. Rclltnent, from Montreal Boston City, from Montreal. Colborne, from Montreal. M0711, from Greet lakes. 8M0, from Greet Lebes- crd Keleo, frmn New Y rk Dom. Shipper. fremhalifex. John H. Lewis Resigns From Labor Council .4....,..¢~u~u-<.... - , Aristooraoy of Australian Cattle On Display e. l NovnMsnn 26. was '_ .1 ~kII4J=€I7 k 1n , m with the drooping horns and wide- set eyes, are members of Austral- ia's cattle aristocracy. Also they am reported to be gentle as lambs. and look it. They were pic- tured when "on parade" at the recent Royal Agricultural show at Melbourne. Dealers Sell Car To Match Ashtray TORONTO, Nov. 24—(C.P.)—1t isn't all beer and skittles to be an automobile salesmen, as dealers at the National Motor Show testified. revealing the ecoentricities of pros- pective buyers that had to be sooth- ed before actual sales were made. Toronto people were no exception to the rule. One dealer told of a prominent Oakville citizen who always insists in having his car painted with his racing colors. Another remembered a sale that he had made to a Tor- onto womsn who had paid out a small fortune to the factory for the construction of a special front seat WHlWBy and steps so that she could take her, Pekingese dog out driving with her every day. Then there was the prominent Toronto broker who brought in e deep purple ashtray and told of his wife's devotion to that apecial color. He saw a new car and liked it. But buying it was just out of the question until ithed been sent back to the factory where special artslts could bring out their paint- pots and turn out a finished job in the same deep purple hues that adorned the ashtray. Another den. er i membered a Montreal woman, who tipped the scales at nearly 30o and was anxious to invest in a new car. But so fat was aha that. try as the dealer could, not-a single model could be found that, had a door lame enough w allow her to enter the machine. A kpgclgl 30b that would fill the bill was neces- sary. United Mine Workers one-sentence letter of resignation yesterday to President William Green and left Washington with- out further explanation. There was no doubt in Labor circles. however, that the resigna- tion was another step in Lewis’ 1011B 118M to force the Federation 1° 0188111!!! moss production work- ers bv Industry “rather than by "B"- Thfli 15, he would have workers in the steel indus in single union, rather thtgi tn: machinists and other groups in separate organizations. ‘That fight has become increas- ingly intense since the Federation's Cincinnati convention of 1933, Feeling mi so high it the Atlantic 51W, N- J-, convention last month that Lewis and William Hutches- 0", President of the car-pent“; and one of the croft union lead- "l, wetland in a fist fight on the convention floor. ____‘_._ bulls, ' Modistes, Thrive l: Despite Rivali LONDON, Nov. 25—(C.P.)-rml large number of French dress- mekers who have migrated to Lon. don, 0r set up e. second business ii London since the imposition of dut- ies apparently has given a stimului to British dressmaking instead cl supersoding it. There no severe/l, new houses oi British 0118111, some of which wen established before but none oi which lied really come to the from in a cosmopolitan sense until thy arrival cg the French competitors The lead given by Lady Alioi Scott in selecting an English dress- maker is likely to be followed, tht mom so that her dressmaker mada‘ a reputation for himself at an early date. He was bold enough some years ago to bring his dress- es over to Paris in the middle 0i the dress shows them, and his ex. ample has been suhsequentiy m1. lowed by other British designers. ‘ BOMBAY, mms, ass ' NEW nunaan rec-roar _ Bombay, m India, has a new mo‘ ber factory which will devote itself, primarily, to pmducina rubbcrj shoes or sandals, bicvcle tubes and tires, also carriage tires. The raw product is being obtained from the _ states of Travancoio and Cochin, in South mdia. A Japanese expert ii in charge of plant operations at present but it is the intention to employ only Indians after they have become better acquainted with the processes. The new plant is capable of turning out 1,500 pairs of sandals a day‘ according to the industrial Department of the Canadian National Railways. This J makes the fourth rubber ‘factory in " operation in India today, three of which are engaged principally in soled shoes. For Kidney and Stop Getting Up Nights ful waste from kidneys and bladder irritation that often causes scanty, burning ange. Ask your drugglat for n in cont box of Gold bfednl Hanrlom Capsules-a splendid nufc and harm- leu diuretic and stimulant fur lVl-flk kidneys and irritated lliillliitlf‘, 11c- loine of kidneys trouble lifl‘ lvnrk- uchel, puffy eyes, log cramps, hurl ole! he suro tn got ‘w. (he gl-nnluc for weak kllIYIPyS-“flilhi ' from Ifesrlcm in ilnlland. SMOKING ' TURKEY We are manufacturing finest leaf grown in Chaotic-Southern Ontario Barley. In its preparation only the but ingredients are luod. You will find if a sweet wholesome snacks. TRY IT. RIVAL PIPE A "Purina of the Price" nuclei a lucnoisolrs c tobacco from the" TOBACCO Bladder Trouble the manufacture of canvas rubbcr- Here's one good way to flush horm- stop and emnrtlug par ‘ ml aides getting up nights, comr- >‘_\'n||\- -‘ ZOIIQIKLIIIIIIIQDKZIT V1211“ ‘lillilliilia! :9