Z _ ._. ...d...'...:.;_1'._.n.1‘:...::..l._-.:..._‘ "Mme... .. .... si 4y, ailsnim rnaiecw-moaeqoet-asrcr-ue. .1. um.- I-I- YIQPIIIIGUIO, LLIIIIOUyI-LL UIIDdA-IIIIIIIIImD-LO- ' Gditegaudllanagingflisector-I-I-Iurnstnlhll. Associate ldlterf-Irolk s= Walker. and D. I. Carrio- lorlllgllallvfioaadedllfl)ll.aoplfriarflnal Hell's»!- ll-llpegyaariinadvngeo) lalloltoiialalaandll todllliel- zmrrr rscrlcs net leading traducers of the llaollillan Government are at- tempting to snake capital of their ownvglaring neglect or cowardice in the Legislature. _ During the last session Mr. J. P. McIntyre insinuated that he had in- formation which, if insisted upon. would compel the leader of the Gov- ernment to resign "his seat. This threat was nothing more than black- mail. offered by one who was ‘wil- i" ling to wound and yet afraid to . strike." Neither-he nor any mem- - ber of the Opposition made any charge, or any motion calling for an “I investigation on which a charge "l could be based. Such was the ‘J proper course open to him. But he was evidently afraid, by preferring ‘i charges, and courting their invest- q igation and disproof, that he would " himself be forced to resign his seat. " Now that the campaign is on and the Government guns are hammer- ’_ ing the flimsy Opposition arguments . and mlstatements inic splinters. the McIntyre insinuations are be- ing revived. Mr. LePage, as was to be expected, is the first to voice them. Having now no seat to lose and no sessionai indemnity to risk, he "gallantly" declares that the Pre- mier should resign! , _ The people of the Province may judge for themselves the merits of the Opposition case, when such cowardly tactics are resorted to. "Kill Macmillan at all costs" is the word that has gone forth to the _ mud-slinging brigade; and they will ' certainly do their best-or worst-to do it. “Tl-As man Mschllllan," who has achieved more for Prince Ed- ward Island than any Premier since Confederation, who has brought the Province through the worst depres- sion in history and is recognized throughout Canada as one of the ablest men in public life today-he must be “rubbed out," in the inter- ests of the Liberal party. Such is now the Liberal campaign. Is it one which the people of this Provincewill tolerate and indorse We do not Ohhlk l0! " —‘ A HOPELESS POLIC One of the most important planks in the Conservative platform is the! assurance of continued co-operation with the Federal Government in re- ference to public works projects in order to relieve as fully as possible unemployment in the Province. y _ 'I‘his. the Premier explained in announcing his party platform, has been the Government's policy I0! ‘the past four years, ‘and on -this policy it is being bitterly attacked by the Opposition. No recognition of any M9011!!!)l1- ity of tiding the DWI-lie 0V9!‘ “W . present world economic conditions appears in the Liberal platform. On the contrary. thblr Policy is drastic curtailment in the public works dc- partment. It is a Policy. "him 5° government, in this country °1‘ m any part of the world, is at W501" ' attempting to follow. ' As the Premier pcrtinently asked: “What hope does such. a policy halt out to those who are out of Gilli"!- rnent, who feel the pinch of hill times?" ancsr Ar "ASKIli/G” l "A51; and ye snail receive" is l maxim which certainly 4°“ n“ Glilily to Liberal politicians when in office in this Province or at Ottawal six-Premier Saunders, in his letter to Premier Mackenzie King on Dec- 17, 1m. asked for subsidy inc!!!" ,cn the unausworabl Emmi m“ the Province. under Liberal rule. "has mt prosper“! "i" W" " have the other Provinces of Can- He elm-Iowan this MW‘ ' ' mud; that we were upcom- m‘ lam, mm condition" financial- ¥ f w.” mm; years; that our farm- " wmineoccperateplishtzthat ulnar, rum n. puss. replied: “Your time and mine mightuwenheeoI-radI-Hfl". there being any noccscity t0 lull- piement the details of the memor- andum." ' Mr. Saunders and Mr. Lea were unanimous (for once!) in declaring that all during their administration they "never stopped asking" the Federal Government for Jlnanoial until that terrible mill. Bennett. cameinto power; when Mr. Mc- Intyre speeded post-haste to Ottawa and received 390.000 for 11110111010!- rneni relief. ' ' But it is to Mr. Thane Campbell that-we owe the reminder of the most remarkable example of Liberal “asking" and getting nothing. At the Tignish meeting the Liberal deputy leader scoffed at the Mac- said: "Why. we asked for $438,000!" To which statement Premier Mac- Millan replied that while Mr. Saunders was away at Ottawa, pre- Board (which had no jurisdiction whatever to deal with it.) Mr. Lea. as Acting Premier, “assisted by one of the Campbells," was presentins in the Patriot newspaper a state- ment of claim for three and a quarter million dollars. “Of course," added the Premier, "the result of all this bungling and lack of oc- operation was just what you would expect-they got rethink!" EDITORIAL _N07_‘E.‘_S l Mr. Reuben Macdonald is not only an editor but a politician a8 well, entering the lists as a BIOS- pective candidate for Georsewwn- Hence he is not entitled to the re- spectful anonymity scrupulously reserved for editors per el. The leaders and boys at the YM. C.A. camp at Canoe Cove will be “at home" tomorrow aflemwfl B115 evening to parents and friends. It will be their field day and promises in be an unusually enioyahlaone to those having the interests"or"the‘ rising generation at heart. "Be sure your political sins will find you out," is being sadly exper- ienced by Hon. W. M. Lea and his colleagues. The callous betrayal 01’ the Island's interests—though then Liberal—‘ Mackenzie King would not give "a cent" to »T0i'y lim‘ vinces. which the other two Mari- times then were, is without parallel m the political history of the Dom- inion. m. LePage would scrap all sov- ernment cars. but give an annual allowance to those who invested in them. rm ccucazue, w- MacPhec- on the other hand pledges mime“ to abandon ofilcial autos entirely and not provide a cent alloWuui-‘t- What a haPDy mmuy they maim- with Jonas at the throat of Lea and MbcPhee at loggerhcads with Campbell on strike. with a platform all his own. Hon\ H. H. Stevens has circum- ggflbed his party by constituting its executive three business men .5” Montreal, Toronto, and Hamilton respectively whose chief claim in distinction u their opposition W chain stores. Chain stores may. or mgy not he objectionable, according as to whether one is a competitor qr patron, but one thing is certain. farmers do not disapprove or them. The mt that no farmer. fisherman or other primary producer is °11 m‘ first executive _of Mr. Stevens new “n; would seem to indicate that it is the interests of the individual mummy m4 mt the mass of con- sumers that Mr. Stevens has more immediately at heart. We are living in strenuous, anx- m timcs with the future, ill the words of um Baden-Powell "an impenetrable fill". Yet he?! If l" in this province» illhtinl W" ‘M political straw- when mn-fetetemen should be devoting ail their mill’. i 5 5 e § § e. relief. They got not one redcent l Millan Government for obtaining only $150,000 subsidy increase and‘ seating this claim before the Audit 0 i to gold and that any hasty reval- LePage-not to mention ‘Ilianc ' ‘my its use u. may Notes By The Way Now the great food industries of the United States following closely the example of the textiles. have revolted in the courts against the New Dears processing taxes, from Inc., largest milling company in the world. and four other concerns ob- w!“ a . . . y _ _ orders in Iiedaral court at Minneapolis against further collection of the _A.A.A's pa L, takes, and scores of other suits are to be tried in other parts of the country. The, Duchess of Kent made her first ofiiclal speech in England and it consisted of “I have much pleas- ure in declaring the exhibition open." Only nine words yet they constituted a beatiflc contrast to the lengthy outpourings which too frequently bore the crowd on other like occasions-Brantford Expositor. In the speech which Lord Tweeds- mulr made in his native countryside, the valedictory note is unmistakable. It is natural that. in setting out upon his new career, the future Governor-General ofCans-da should feel the sadness of farewell; but in this case the sadness is deepened by the reflection that “all is not well with Scotland." That is a con- clusion which, however well founded in fact, no Scotsman would accept from any but a brother Scot; for however "the steamroller of pro- gress may be flattening out many of the pleasant features of the landscape,“ it has had no percep- tibie effect upon the Scottish pride of race. That is the last thin; which Socialist internationalism shall put under its feet-London Morning Post. It need not be anticipated that the police will go out to look for trouble in connection with any sit- uation that may arise in Regina. The police prefer peace to conflict. When the police act in a situation such as may arise in Regina they act only on the instruct‘ons of the civil authority. If the police are de- fled the State itself is defied. Those who attack the police. even verbal- ly, especially where the police are acting purely on the instructions of the civil power, at once place them- selves under suspicion o: being ad- yocates of force. violence and arm- ed revolution-Regina Leader-Post. It is easy to foresee that Peking. already deposed from its eminence by Nanking ‘and reduced to the status of a decaying provincial capi- tal, will decline still more in im- portance. The latest crisis in its history can only confirm the im- pression that the maintenance of the British Embassy there has become an anachronism. The centre of Brit- ish dipiomacy in China should be at the heart of China, at the new capital of Nanking, not in the an- cient city of the Mongols of the Ming dynasty, and, last of all, of the Munchus. The old capital has become at once a museum or past glories, and an exposed and defence- less border city.-I.ondon Times. The day of long speeches, says Sir Francis Floud, is “definitely over": in Britain. Not so in Canada where! the people, the British High Com- misioner thinks, have “an amazing patience." Sir Francis is wrong about it. What he accepts as pat- ience is Just the resignation of utter exhaustion. Canadians suffer ion! speeches, not gladly or patiently, but because they can't help them- selves-Halifax Herald. The whole tenor of the Chan- cellor's speech shows clearly both that the ultimate objective of Brit- ish monetary policy is the return nation or the pound sterling would be in the highest degree unlikely. It is no use "in try to anchor a ship if the anchorage is always shifting." It would be futile, as both Lord Bradbury and Mr. Chamber- lain said, to attempt to bring about stabilisation until we can see some prospect of stability of conditions after stabilisation has taken place. —London Financial Times. -—~i——@ \ Paraguay and Bolivia, whose quar- rel has been a nuisance to their neighbours for years, have at last stopped fighting, Although the tot- a1 of 250,000 killed seems small when measured by European standards, the-Gran Chaco war has been a bloody and a costly business. Each country lost one-eighth of its whole population, for each deed soldier £400 was spent, the bill amounting to £100,000 000. Now for the victory parade in both Paraguay and Bol- ivia. And, after the parade, the war memorials. _ Manchester Sunday Chronicle. There ls no need to deny that in the United States, up to the pres- ent, the possession of large fort- unes has bestowed great powers for good or evil upon their owners. The ostentatious displays of some American millionaires have been characterised by shocking wasteful- ness and have offended grossly ular candidate should be the am or last w speak It a campaign meeting. Little protest has been offered. 01' exception taken to the abandon- ment "of the bill providing that till alternative vote system should be applied t0 Saskatchewan 1nd not elsewhere in the Dominion. What- evermaybesaid infavorofthe alternative vote plan-and a I004 can can b; made out because l! prevents on election o: minority csndidetee- a u‘ impclsfiiio to luv‘ which huge benefits are paid to far-. ' mere. 0n Saturday General Mills, ,. 11m CHARLOTTETO; i: y ' y i0!!! mil-ski 1'00 MUCH uoum more“ ram arm swflsao mus y yoirs it was believed For many and taught with the result weakened by this body Wcth. tonsils, testine might fection causes more cases than other one cause is so disbeileved) the slclans then began removal of teeth, tonsils bladder for all cases of rheumatism Witching for the cause of causes first," teeth, tonsils, tl-sm. but that .—-that were to Dr. Ralph phia, work first to Point Pemberton, out that intestine is due dlvldlifll. and rheumatism or arth. ritis was one of the results. Dr, Pemberton also blames too {finch liquids" for causing 50mg or ° sYmPWms in these “arthritic" Patients. Recent studies show that the swelling of the 50ft ‘issues which accompanies, chronic arm.’ rltis, resembles a low grade Qdgmgr. water in the tissues. That it is only Rood sense to cut down on liquids in addition to cutting down on starch- es is seen in the extent to wmah water is drawn from the blood skin °T “he! places where water is stor.’ ed 1n the body. and is found m the region of the Joints m ‘patients. them“ This water aboutthe ints - 111B Swelling and pain if noffifii. lessened in amount by cutting down an the liquids of the food. but the ‘Vie? mfiy be drawn away from the 1° L! by W108 dOWH. the application c!‘ heat. and later by exercise. 7 As stated once before in discuss- ins rheumatism “the available evid- gilice sussests that at least par-b Q1 e siifiness and Pain in arthritis 181 tiiljille to the excess fluids confined w n the mb _ ing the Jointwe “n” ‘mmmd ________________ against the laws of good taste by their crude vulgarity. It, must, hilwfl/el’. be saidtliat many Amer- icans of Brest wealth have used it 101' hlshly commendable purposes, such as the endowing of llnivergltleg and the building of churches and hospitals. Whatever criticisms may be made as to the amassing of for- tunes by the Carnegies or Rockefel- lers, it cannot be denied that a large part o1 their hoards has been laid out to good advantage-Bel- fast Telegraph, Started By Stevens (Mail and Empire) In viewing Mr. Stevens‘ declara- party we agree with Premier Tasch- ereau of Quebec that third parties in Canada never got anywhere themselves or did any good to the country. Their history is that they bloom, blossom and. fade away. They have their moment and cease from being. That was the case with the Patrons of Industry, with the Uni- ted Funnel-s of Ontario, with the Progressives, and with other move- ments which temporarily sought the limelight, only to disappear before the onset of public opinion. Mr. Woodswonh himself has admitted that the 0.0.1". has no chance of winning the coming general election nnd he speaks as if he suspects Mr. iiievens of designs to take over his organisation and put him out of business. The prospect is that Mr. Stevens may do the Liberals as much harm as Tie will do the Conservatives. As long as he was under the party banner there were a lot of Conserv- ritivés who felt like giving him sup- pm-t. Now that he is an out-and- out rebel against the organization, the old party loyalty will inspire many Conservatives, formerly fav- tbeoolahgfeaaraieisatiili-llliiy that eating too much meat was the cause of rheumatism that many suffering rheumatic cases‘ bgtfnléne gumm- no ea enough of building food. When it was shown later that infection of gall bladder or in- be the cause of rheu- matism (and the evidence that in. Now it is a rule in medielng when .. an w- ment to look for the commonest and infection of the m 511d Bali bladder are c commonest causes. However re- search men found that 100d was a actor in causing or increasing the Symptoms in some cases of XfIBIImg- it was the starchy f°°d$""i7'°ti"0e$. bread, sugar, pastry blame and not meats. Philadel- who has done much research on rheumatism Whig? of the of the action o1’ the stcmazimfid starchy food for thattgiariiogufilifrl: New Cave Of Adullan ' tion that he intends to form a new k Peace And “Pflciflsllw , t.“ l. speech u of the Church Lads’ Brirude- N0- thing." he declared. "could b6 m0" absunithln rosupmwtm "Balm o1 me hgining in discipline is to Willi! Ono to fight." This thOIWBh- reasonable and imPI-Xflfl "MM may be commended for considera- tion by all who stall find a diificlm in distinguishing between the and the means to do ill deeds.‘ Per- haps it may even be pcmitloil to close the flow of conunent, much of it more entertaining than illiunin- ating. that was so unexpectcdlypao- vided by the good-tempered and sensible reference to critics of the ofiicers‘ training corps mode by the Prince 0f Wales last week. What provoked the reference was the 0m‘- ious view, much more widely heard than held. that disciplined physical training is a form of "nli1itarism"or conducive to it. The Prince con- hownvmcmllz: fessed himself mystified that, cer mlluflty of Phy- the systematic and gall tain people, sharing the wmanon and. in Britain, the universal ab- borrence of war. together with the knowledge of “the appalling distrem - to the whole world" which it would bring. should seek to concentrate their hatred of war upon “any form of healthy discipline and training." Among those who do not emulate the Prince's power of discrimination in this matter is Mr. Lansbury. and both utterances, it must be said with respect, are masterpieces of in a genial and unexceptional vein of expostulation. Mr. Isnsbury says that he believes in discipline. but it must have nothing to do with “shouldering a musket or playing at soldiers." Detestation oi’ the cadet corps is graven. or perhaps tattooed, upon Mr. Lansburys ample‘, heart. He wants them abolished. and doubtless it makes no difference to hrlm whether they are voluntary or not. There is moral peril in famil- iarity with a uniform. a rifle or the drill-book. Mr. Lansbury did not say what he proposes to do about the_ earlier and universal stage of contamination in the nursery; nor did he explain vi/hy. if all military training is a danger to the peace mind. his campaign for the abolition of thearmed forces of the Crown has not begun. In short, he exhib- its the usual self-cont. -" "M" of the high-speed “pacifist" and that very attitude of mind which’ the Prince described as a mystery. The avenge citizen is honestly baffled by its wilful irrationality. It is potent in the first place to every unwarped intelligence-a mat- ter of ascertainable fact-that O.T. C.'s boys’ brigades, scouts and the like do not turn out "war-mongers." The British. it has been remarked, are a warlike but not a military na- tion. ‘Iihey have the will and the capacity to defend themselves and to defend a principle effectively if need requires it; but they (and their soldiers. too) have a notorious antipathy to the doctrine that pat- riotism always wears uniform and that the march to glory is inevitab- ly through destruction. Never was this antipathy stronger among them. The conception of dis- cipline presented by an annual camp or Jamboree or a public schools’ field day is as remote as it could well be from that worship of force which "anti-milltarists" have imported from abroad for their own purposes and seek to fasten upon a perfectly healthy activity with a normal and nccesary place in edu- cation. Tlic whole campaign of the recruits from any and every quar- ter. Coming at the present juncture his announcement suggests that he also wishes the support 0f the Communist-led relief camp’ trek- era. There is no doubt that he has had- quite a following amongst the less well informed elements of the coun- munity. I-le gained favor in some quarters by insisting that Parlia- ment should pass legislation which would be beyond its powers under the British North America Act and lead only in disappointment if plac- ed on the statute books. It should be added that thus far Mr. Stevens has been unable to a. nounce the oo-operatlon of any really promin- ent people in the country. A new party has to have strong leadership before it can make progress. This is about all that can be said about the fonner minister's departure at the moments-It maybe that he is manoeuvring for some objective still undisclosed. Liv Stock Spray Milk Cows, Hogs and Poultry. One application repels insects in I2 to 2i hours. ' y ll ‘ to human or ani- mal life when used as direci- _ at . coconuts/is i v ~ A '=“_T7ae Hdlierdashery " SPEBIAI. sun slur Twice he has recorded his‘ dlssenti nmddle-headedness: though offered x - Cleon doth not forget the gentl: lootste Ill 0f Scylla, a little maiden Who rcturneth not unto her fath- er's dwelling But walketh the long descent into ' the silence i 'I‘ired and alone. - n Itbodocles. whose body veiled the sun Hath fallen into shadow Under the grasses III Plato's passion troubled 'I‘i.mon’s soul no body followed beauty u» the end. Bunlight mu across his earthy bed. —Translated by Edward J._O'Bricn. small but pertinacloils cohort which has chosen to inscribe "holler than thous" upon its banner rests upon ‘a Mtion of its own inventing. It is the more mischievous because, while i_t bickers about things which have no importance and no relevance to the ization of peace, it im- pedes or dim-acts a steady and uni- icdvision oftherealgoal. Itisan oflshoot of the belief that self- righteous gestiiculation in one coun- try will somehow mesme mo the un- heeding Continent or the still less impressionable East. The belief is notably held by persons in whom the emotions have usurped the seat of the intelligence. They compen- sate their impatience with the dif- fioulties and delays of true peace- making by contrlving and chastising figments of militarism at home. Thus they provide a comfortable outlet for hearts which, whatever their capacity for sound or foam, are certainly too full for sense. ' Plannersl-And Averbury , (Vancouver Province) People who despair of the ” ota,‘ ‘ , ,, under the institutions of democracy-their Latest favorite in horrible, examples is apt to be NIB-A in Ham-would do well sometimes to take a back- ward glance over the road travelled by humanity. They might get a more hopeful idea, for instance (although it is just possible that the idea they would get would confirm their skepticism.) from something that Rt. Hon. W. Orin- sby-Gore. First Commissioner of Works in the British Government, has been telling the people of 1mg- land about their ancient memorials at Avebury. In a wonderfully in- teresting article in the London 'I‘lmes, Mr. Ormsby-Gcre pleads for the preservation of the "chief sanc- tuary of neolithic England," built in the Stone Age. years ago. It is a fascinating story, one. it would seem, that the archaeologists must have been keeping too much in themselves. Where the Bath Road goes by, that the Romans built, in what is now the Parlia- mentary Division of Devices in Wilt- shire, is the little village of Ave- Defhfllio 4009 abouts, Saxon or Roman names like Hackpen and Bilbury and Waden and Badon Hill. attest the antiquity of the human settlement there. Badon I-lill is the traditional scene of the twelfth and last great battle of King Arthur. where "All day long the noise of battle rolPd " - Among the mountains by the win- ter sea." y 'I'l'la.t was about 520 A.D.. but mod- arn Avebury is built within the “largest megalithic stone circle in the world," built by our ancestors of the Stone Age, probably not less than 4000 years ago. _ If they could do what a First Commissioner of Works. four mil- lenniums later, describes, the plan- ners ought not to despair. democ-‘ racy or no democracy. Modern Ave- bury is built within the great circle o1 stones put there by those dimly- realised people, who had no metal to fashion into implements. who, before the Bronze Age, dug their fosse-ways with picks. made from the antlers of the wild red deer, and shovelled the chalk of their barrows with the shoulder bones. 8 ” . they raised those three great circles or giant stones. the outer circle three-quarters of a mile in circumference. the stones, many of them still standing, as much as twenty feet above ground. And there were avenues of similar great stones (sarsens) leading to the barrows of Overton and Sil- bufy. a mile away. Mr. Ormsby- Gore approves the dictum or another authority: "Avebury. is to Stone- bury. All the place names there- . Friday 8r ally low prices. Suit at .15, .1 415i» s18. our" We are cleaning» up our bigl stock of» New Suits at exception- If you need ‘a you dollars and give you your. choice of the finest line of high‘ grade Suits in the city. ' Come early and select your $15.00, $16.50, —MEN'S WEAR- Saturday Suit we can save $18.00, $20.00 ‘ a cunmonr Mr. Tcaloillyl: BRA HMIN i i Use Best Quality TEA ORANGE“ PEKOE EMPIRE TIA loid only in red airtight bkgs. none: or hengeasacathedraltcaparish church." This was the work of men who have left only these memorials of their existence upon earth" and such as these. They had dogs. cat- tle, pigs. sheep. but no horses. They worked with implements of flint and bone. They were removed from the machinery and power sees by the stretch of four thousand years and the invention and development of innumer ‘-' c», riments in the civilisation of mankind. Yet they were capable. as the archaeologists believe. of planning and executing, perhaps over centuries, "the chief sanctuary of neolithic England." and perhaps they made the capital there. by that circle of stones at Avebury. They had “an organised and inspiring religion, and had so~ quired the essentials of civilisation." "If we think." says Mr. Ormsby- Gore, "of the labor involved in the whole Avebury complex injmodern terms of mun-hours, we are‘ forced bury that pie-historic man. nearly four thousand years ego. put forth his mightiest effort in Europe; an effort comparable with that of the Egyptians in the Pyramid age." Well, it ought to be worth thinking of for the dispirited planners. Floods In The West (Winnipeg Tribune) Since 1981 Western Canada has grown unaccustomed to high water. &N’s" BRIGHT cur SMOKING TOBA cco’ comes DOWN THE STRETCH WITH n" HAS -.rsssrnvsss. ~ ~ ~ ~ THAT "MAKES a to'the conclusion um 11-. is at Avo- FLAVOUR AN D WINNE _ Every Store in the‘ l lilekiy llggljiitqisen removal W. K. Rogers Agencies Limited - am National Railways _. and City Ticket Agency Canad now located in NEW CURRIiE BUILDING—181 Queen Street aiiiiiFS%Z-1%H%EZ%*M%E%S%H%E but the present season is pro the old saying, "It never rains it pours." This is a welcome change. Even the damage from floods. which for- tunately has not been very exten- sive, is accepted as a small price N pay for a great turn for the better. If meteorological history repeats itself, this is probably the first of a cycle of several wet years. It foi- lows the leanest cycle of dry years which the West has experienced in a generation-a cycle which reduc- ed many fsrmers to destitution and brought a new realisation that rc- current drought must figure in any long-range plans for agriculture in a considerable section of the prairie west. . March Of Silence (Windsor Bill’) Alawhasbeen peasedat Essex hlis. New Jersey, making it illegal for a duck to quack. a rooster t0 crow and a dog to bark between the hours of l0 pan. and c am. Owners whose animals or fowl dis- turb the peace may be fined from $5 to m. while complaint had only been made about a canine prowler, the masters and ducks were included "lust in case." You can go and live in Essen Pulls, NJ. if you want to, but no! for us. We want to keep our d0! andwowlnthirntobelillivy. THE LEADERS. Rrrm "LAST? stockof H&N’s "The Smoothoet g - Smoke” i