i iiiiiuitu I " '~'"—"._._.._._J.;‘;.1;... " -- _ _..---. - ieiuvinu Fraulein-w. chum s. usual-q. l. l) lid-Ito: s-nd Alsnsllng Assoohto Editors-hush I. Becretxry-d-louL-Col. D. A. Ilclllls Director-J. l». Iloe-Irosldost-al. l- Bsrlll D- I. 0- flflfl Wsllneullhl-Osnh - Ilornln‘ Dsily (founded m!) sue pa you (ls slvssoo) delivlnl- sun p» yen-r (In lllvnlwl) lulled ls Cusln and THURSDAY, STATESMANSHIP ‘It cannot be too frequently re- _= peeled that Canada. is very fortun- lte in halving a statesman of the calibre of the Rt. Hon. R. B. Ben- ‘ '- nett at the head of affairs at this ‘ crisis. Usually what Mr. Bennett| says and docs is authoritative and essential. 1n his speech on the bud- get reported yesterday Mr. Ben- nett sets emphatically before the thulking world the situation as it was, is, and is likely to be. He ex- pressly charged the Leader and leading members of the Opposition with sinnlng against the light. They know the actual conditions and yet insisted upon pretending that Ulslklltltot APIILSLIUI- mth-clvinn. pllvins up to '4" more or lass soonomicslly isnvm" "man in tho street”, who hi! neither time nor opportunity <11 studying the intricacies of the new epoch in which we sre' now living. and to which we must perforce ad- just ourselves. THEN AND NOW It is a for cry from the primitive theatre of snakcspeareu time to the magnificent structure which was officislly opened by the Prince of Wales at Bmtford-on-Avon lest Saturday in honour of the great dramatisvs snniverssry. ‘The new Bhskespesrs Memorial ‘Theatre is the present epoch is the some ss dcsoribodbysnsmericsnexpsrtu ithe pre-war epoch. They are can. stantly uttering shibboleths along old party lines, and making charges against the administration of de. parting from the "use and wont" of old time party days. In no other (part of the world save Canada are the old party lines and policy ad- liered to. rt is safe to assert the/t If the Liberal Party were in s posi- lion to choose a. new leader it also [would show some initative in do. iveloping a policy in harmony with changed conditions. m. King and s number of hi; follower; him; bee: to the possibilities of free trade and the disadvantages o1’ protection. Sir (Arthur Salter, one of the leading political economists in the world, who has held a foremost place as a high official of the League of Nations in the capacity of General Secretary to the Reparations Com- mimion, was formerly a staunch lfrec trader. To-day, as the result of this practical experience, he is s protectionist and has written a book entitled “Recovery; the Second Effort", in which he sets forth that notwithstanding philosophic prin- “Prbblbl! the but mechanism in the world today for transforming tho printed pages of Shakespeare into action snd much." Elsborsts wing stsges with special machinery for quick scene-shifting srs in- stalled. The theatre, capable of giv- ing unobstructed view to sn sud- fencs of 1.000, opens on terraces and promensdcs, and adjoining are CHM. smoking moms. and recep- tion halls. Compare this now with the con- ditions of theatrical production in Shakespeare's time. rains, in his History of Iinglisb Literature, has given s vivid account of s scene such as must often have confront- ed the dramatist and actors of that, dsy. We quote: "On a dirty site, on the banks of the Thu-mes, rose the principal theatre, the hexagonal tower, surrounded by a muddy ditch, on which was hoisted a red flag. The common people could enter as well as the rich; there were eixpenny, two- Pellnv. oven penny seats: but they could not see it without money. If it rained. and it often rain; in Iondon, the people in the pit, butchers, mcrcers, bakers, sailors, ciples and tendencie; no country at the present time can afford to be without tariff barriers for the pur- pose of negotiations and inter- znptional dealings one with another. Beginning with these premises, that tariffs are thus necessary for the purpose of recovery, he suggests as means to an end a set of national mmencics kept approximately stable in terms of prices and of one another by the oo-operation of Central Banks under the leadership of the Bank of Intemntional Set- tlements and of the League. m credit he empasizes the necessity for international collective control over loans to foreign governments and public authorities. On this point he makes the interesting as- sertion that with the exception of loans recommended by the League of Nations and the Central Bank, the bulk of loans Of 1928 to 1928 to public authorities in debtor coun- tries would better not have been made. In commercial policy he re- commends working for gradual equalization and mutual reduction of tariffs and a remoulding of the "most-favored ilations" principles In order to permit reglnal pacts for reorganization. In economic organi- zations he looks to a development of cartels, of economic councils, and of the public coroporaticn to gtrengthen collective leadership; and give a bass for voluntary plnnllng. Ho insists on the nccd of devolu- itlon in Government to get rid of the many unsuitable duties which have been la'd on central govern- ments and to make the central machinery the ultimate guardian of public interest, supervising and directing satellites or provincial authorities. The prospeom of peace depend 0n strengthening the col- lective system against the alter- native system of armaments and nllianccs; and he believes this could be done with the oo-opers- tion and support of the United States, under the Kellogg Pact. Mr. Bennett realizes all this and his policy and practscs are tending towards their realization. But the‘ smaller minds of the Liberal Op-l position want to ignore the new conditions and tircumstsnccs, snd apprentices, receive the steaming rain upon their heads. . . While waiting for the piece, they amuse themselves after their fashion. drink beer. crack nuts. eat fnrlt, howl, and now and then resort to their fists; they have been known to fell upon the act- or's, and turn the theatre upsi e down. M other times they w dissatisfied and went to the tav- ern to give the poet a hiding, or toss him in a blanket; they were coarse fellows, and there was no month when thecryofclubsrdid not call them omit of their shops to exercise their brawny arms. When the beer took effect, there was a great upturned barrel in the pit, s peculiar receptacle for Bcnersl use. The smell rises, and then comes tho cry, ‘Burn the juniper’. They burn some in a. plate on the stage, and the heavy smoke fills the air. . . Aibove them, on the stage, were the spectators sble to pay s shilling, the elegant people, the gentle- folk. ThQQ were shelter ’ from the rain, and if they chose to pay an extra shilling, could have a. stool. To this was reduced the prerogatives of rank and the de- vises of comfort; it often happen- ed that there were not stools efioulh: then they lie down on the ground: this was not s ifme to be dainty. They play cards, smoke. insult the pit, who give it them back agflin without stlntlng. and throws apples at them into the bargain." such was the type of ludience which first greeted "Hamlet" and “Othello". Such was the atmosphere tin which Shake-suture lived and ‘worked-for he we; an actor and manager as well as a dramatist. The new Memorial Theatre st stratford, one wouldiimsgine, givu enrolncusly greshr scope for artis- tic ,.l'0dllOt' . Yet it is doubtful if, with all their paraphernalia, mod- ern producers will succeed in add- iing one iota to the srtisitc value ,of shakespesreh works. Certainly Ino author is less dependent upon auxiliary slds than the one who,,tn his own sovereign right, stand; es ti" wettest poet of all time. EDITORIAL NOTES There are few institutions more deserving of public support than the Chsrlotetowri Free Dispensary, which has had s particularly heavy cull upon its activities during the past winter. The annual meeting 0f t!" Dlllwnssry takes place this Wlfllnl at 8 o'clock in the Board 0f ‘rrsde Rooms, when reports will be submitted and routine business ‘will be disWledof. It is to be boiled that cifsms will show their are constantly reitersting paxtvlsppmiatkm by s lsrse lttcndsnco. Globmssortof‘ Ill H25 Hosp worth l0 cents ling st 03.50 s hi! in wc cm recall tbst not lnsny months sgo Russia was dumping soap on to the British market at prices lower than the cost of pro- duction in Britain in sn effort to ruin s British industry. Russia is not nearly es smut s: she figur- ed she was going tic-be. News comes from Shsuihsl that during the recent Gino-Japanese unpleasantness, the Scouts kept up their tradition of service nobly. No less than ninety were employed as messengers, guides, telephone operators and orderlies. They are said to have been drawn from troops of many stions; British, French, German. Austrian, Rus- sian and Jewish. The Scouts are right there when a job needs do- ing. The proposal of Mr. Alfred l. Smith. Democratic leader in the United States. that the world war debts be scaled down and their - " postponed for I0 years, in his own country and abroad, than any utterance by an Ameri- can public man since the Hoover moratorium went into effect last July. In 1910 Mr. Wilson appealed for rc-election to the presidency on the ground that he had kept the United States out of the war. He was elected in November of that year, was formally installed in March, and declared war on Ger- many in April, 1917. It would not be surprising if history should re- peat itself with respect to the war debt question, which is the greatest issue which has confronted the United States since the war. Whe- ther Mr. Hoover or Mr. Roosevelt wins out next November, an inter- national conference on the war debt questio will likely be the first important event for which the incoming ministry will make pre- paration. According In the Dominion Ani- mal Husbandman, the present low price of oats and other feeds, in contrast with the higher cost of gas and oil required in tractor op- eration, combine to indicate that the horse is gradually regaining favor as a medium of farm power. He predicts that the next few years will sea a revival in horse breeding and the use of heavy draft horses on the farms in Canada, k th east and west. Cshfed despstches from English papers approving of the suggested 20-year moratorium by ex-Gover- nor "‘Al" Smith will not strengthen him as a. presidential candidate with the tail twisters in the United States. After going for nine weeks with- out pay, civic employees of the City of Chelsea, s city near Boston, have received ther salary cheques in full. The amount paid out in wages was $212,400.48 The First National Bank of Boston came to the rescue of the municipality and advanced s. loan at six percent. Many of the Chelsea employee had been hard pressed for funds and They were beginning to despair of over being paid, when the loan was negotiated. Dally new things ere cropping up concerning the gold standard and the value of gold. One of the latest oddities in this connection is the discovery of a colmterfeit coin of 1868. It was an imitation sove- reign and was found in a parcel of old coins that had been brought from hiding to change into cash when Great Britain went off the Bold standard. Acid teats revealed this particular coin to be made of platinum. During the reign of Queen Victoria platinum was only worth about one third as much as gold. Now it is worth many times more. The old counterfeit coin had become worth more than the sove- reign it was supposed to imitstc. A. I’. Phillips. chslrnlsn of one of the leading tobacco firms in Great Britain, said during the course of his address at the annual meeting of his company: "Canadian tobac- co in the opinion of myself and my associates is equal to the finest raw leaf tobacco in the world. It has all the pleasing characteristics of United States Virginia tobacco." This new channel] of Canadian export is clearly marked for great future develop The annual envelope collection for the carrying on of the work of the Dispensary will shortly be taken, also b0 nude to this flDDcal. En- velopes will be left on Saturday, April 80, and collected on May 2, thus sffording to all our citizens the opportunity of particpsting in iii hi; will has stir-acted greater interest. both] had to get credit from the stores. serious matte that the British Health is doing all in itrpower, educate the people as to its. and treatment. Its report hsdbqm adopted by the International-Lag. guo Against Rheumatism. ~ Rheumatism is divided into, three classes, viz: _ (sh-Rheumatic rover, (b) Mus- cuisr Rheumatism, Lumbsgo, and Sciatica. (c) Chronic Changes in The Joints, which is usually known [as Arthritis, or inflsmstion of the |loints. ' - It is agreed that the most-com- mon sources of trouble sre mouth land teeth. throat and tonsils, sin- 'uses (caverns adjoining the nose). appendix, gall bladder, and lugs intestine. In addition to the dsmsge in the Joint which often only shows itself a considerable time after infection begins, there are often some gen- eral symptoms of ill health pro- sent. The blood becomes thin. anaemic. as it is called. there is loss of weight, loss of appetitc, and rapid heart. Now despite the old idestthst once rheumatism strives, nothing can be done about it, something can and must be done about it, if life is to remain worth living. Just as with any other ailment, there must be e cause, snd the first thought is to find thst cause and if possible remove it. Some- times there may be more than one cause for the trouble and sll mus’ be found and removed. According- ly the list of causes mentioned above should be remembered as the search is made. Dr. Miles J. Breuer, Lincoln. Nab, advises that the list of causes should be kept 0n hand, and each one checked off as it receives attention or investi- gation. The removal of one or two of the causes while others are al- lowed to remain present and active will almost always result in failure to relieve the trouble. The removal of the cause will prevent further spread of the arth- ritis dnflamation) and take th burden off the patient!» .1 ’ system. Naturally. after removinfl the cause of the trouble, the first thought is to build up the putiontb resistance. Diet is important and should contain__p1enty of eggs, milk, fruit and Kroc/n vegetables Getting rid of wastes is equally important, and all four organs that get rid of wastes should be kept active (a) large intestine by moans of small doses of Epsom or Rochelle salts (b) kidneys, plenty of water (c) skin. by hot bfithl. and hot packs, (d) the lungs, by fresh air and 800d ventilation. Surrender To Crime (San Francisco Chronicle.) No one can criticize Colonel Lind- bergh for calling in the giwzfitcrs to help recover his baby. You or I or anyone else under the same circumstances would take any possible means. No blame to the Lindberghs. The blame and the shame fall on the People of the Uniwd States that the Lindbergh: should have to do this. The peoplc of the ‘United States have failed colonel Lindbergh and his wife, have failed every other American whose child is kidnapped. Nothinl before has happened to prove so completely how supinely the American people have delivered their country to crime and crimin- als. The local police at Hopewell. where the crime was committed, were c. dead letter from the start. The state police of New Jersey were impotent. The Federal Govern- ment is helpless. It was eccss y to summon the underworld. to beg its gangsters and racketeers for help. to promise them safety and immunity in the operation. America has alrreudered to crime. Home yours ago, sud not so long at that, the efficiency expert and the business doctor were very prominent in many fields. There was hardly a calf-respecting under- taking that did not bsve s survey made of itself by one or the other. Now that depression has set in, ,where are they? If ever there was 'a time when n little bit of ""ex- and a generous response shouldperting" would be spur-wilted. it is nowDut-just at the time when the man who thinks he knows the rc- medy, ai-iouia be falling others. he seems to have dropped out of sight. ‘Ploy is as enentisl to a child s practical way in the hen. ‘ ‘ work the Dspenssry h carrying on. And _ ers and Iibidinous ~- ‘More! World} Goethe (fThs Bookms-n" 1n the Winn! n» Times essayist. in I was and, intricate lesdor on the Centenary of Goethe. quotes a prime which. stun by Carlyle in the esrlior stiles of translating "Wilhelm Moisture". no not» about beinl busv trons- lsting that novel: "A book which I vei- sell, but which I am determin- odtoprintsudfinish . . . .1386 is poetry in the book. m4 FIN!- prose forever. When I mad of Pili- and their sorry pssteboard apparatus ‘for beautlfyinB Bud cnllvcnlnl u." I render it into grammatical Enslilh-With I Y6!!- mg. mild and charitable as that of a starving hymns. The book to be printed in Winter or . Nomortsiwilleverbuflwflil! it. Nimporte. I have eugsged with it to keep the fiend from waving on my vitals, and with that .5019 view I go along with it. Goethe [u the mated serum that has liv- ied for a century, and the greatest aasthathasiivedforthreafeould sometimes fall down and worshiP : at other times I could kick I out of the room." The Times adds that probably genuine read- erl of the great German experi- ence the same persons! feeling. It is years since I read and hated it, in spite of the chapter on the "Beautiful Soul." In hi! M11098 to William's “Apprcntlwlhlb.” i024, and to the "Iravels", i880. Carlyle is not so frank. Moreover.‘ he had become thrall to Goethe. He says, in passing, that barring a few p and sentences. “not fit for English task," he he! tried to keep to the German, exactly ss it stands. “The history of Manon runs like a thread of gold through the narrative." The Times essayist takes four recent English books on Goethe as occasion for discourse. one bolus Professor Fairleyk Study (Messrs. Dent) which wins the encomium. “limited but valuable." I propose to begin reading it tomorrow. It is Goethe as Poet that Professor Fairley of Toronto University dis- cusses. In his “Reminiscences.” which happilyc" "P141394 in “Everyman”: Library" End ouzht to become s staple “seller”, Carlyle records his debt to Goethe. Writ- ing to Jane Welsh in ADI". 1533- hesays that Goethe's “fccliflfl 8m various as the hues of earth and sky, but his intellect is the sun which illuminates and ovorrulcl thcna. . Jnisoneofmffln- estdaydresmstoseo himcreI die." As s matter _ of fact, tho Life of Schiller, Goethe's eminent oontsin, f. was Csrlyleb first translation from the German. Be had, in 1822, contributed an article on “Faust” to the Edinburgh R8- visw, but did not consider it worth a place in his Collectcd works. His first letter, wth a presents- tion of “Wilhelm Member's Appren- ticeship." to Goethe was written in Edward Irving's house, London. on Juno 24, I824. That was the b0- glnnmg of the Correspondence which we have in the volume edit- ed by Charles Eliot Norton of Har- vard (MaoMillan). Goethe was seventy-five, hale and vigorous- and Carma W88 twenty-nine. Af- tcr his martian. Mm’ Carlyle mt him a purse made by herself. Bhe read him in the German. and h" criticism was: "flab Goethe i! I ma“; genius than Schiller. though he does not make me my): FOX RAIIGIIERS Your Attention ;__- Now is tko time to dogs WI! fir! bulls for worms snd yesr, more than em, You should do your. utmost to save them. ' DI. ITIIENOBB VIBMICIDI CAPSULES N08. 2 AND J is. n. rosrsn (INIIAI: DIUGITOBI owe-pom“ ashis foodf-llrl. ThomuA. ldll~ i I‘ -'¢ wwv I ion the golden loud“!!! Bjscousoshetlsdtolfl. Ifsctioould choose sooler ‘Itwouidbeclothedsstbqr '- lovenoitwhichlamsurcwillhc-z - ~ t Ilovethc bhlc-Irl! i115.- pecsuu her eyes was blue. Rb-deepsndheaven-tsndcr jIn meanins and in hue. I love the small wild r0868. Because she used to stand Adoringly above them And bless them with her hand. ‘rhea wore her boon companions; But more than sll the rest I love the AW“ m" Because she loved it best. Soul of lmdilfll "PW"! How loves encbsntment clings. With sorcery and frown”- About fsmiiisr things! The Man At The Helm monsfll the the most All ‘pends tivo of the U. M. W. began more than six months ago- oontlnued till the camber, when they were halted by a deadlock. In such a situation. . the logical and expected thing was the setting Board under the putcs Act. This was the recourse used by the railway workers and other largo bodies of employees for the settlement of their wage dif- ferences with their employers, and it is in fact the only means pro- vided by statute for the determina- tion of such disputes. But the ‘U. M. W. executiv would have noth- ing . to do with i GAIDIN. IAGIO _ Jlildsrissn. Board, end turned-to the Provin- cial Government plaint that they could get nowhere with the ComPfl-W. andwith In appeal for Deplrtmcntsl action in i the defence of their interests. The case was of course one in which the Government could IIEI-IQOUS HEAI-THI-‘UL ’ . EQQ IIICAL gssrlsrvmo Ills Isl cMGdl‘ Wind rue CANADIAN unseen Maui couuuv. us. quarters to supply ~the necessu, funds, and Mr. Kennedy, the p". sons! representative of Proud”, Lewis. hss strongly advised m, convention to ssnction a w“, contract in the terms of m. nun. can sword. ' what the outcome will be m... withths oom- accomplish ability of u» International l: A With his hand on the throttle of a. huge railway engine travcllins It fifty miles an hour at dawn Yester- day near Iiondon. suddenly answered death's sum- passengers knew nothing of what had happened in. engine room. ' The fireman leaped into command of the en- gine, and the train was brought to s halt. When passengers must have. realized, as so many travellers have, to what an extent their safety depends up- ononamamliodthisfiremannct known the engineer's work, no one knows what might have happened. ‘rrsins nowadays m provided with automatic de- vices aimed to guard against w- cidents, but in the final analysis everything depends and nerve of man. . Ocean travellers are ever con- scious of this. Everything depends ontheman atthe helmand afew associates, and finally on the offi- cer in command of all. handled the staunchest vessel is in constant peril. The man at the wheel of an own and other lives in charge. moment's carelessness, an error of judgment,‘ n weakening of new". and the wreck may come. No one else in the car can do anything. on the driver. The ‘ ‘ mechanisms invented bf man still ncedmsti"! firm suidins hand- ‘ the engineer spread. on the brain Ifbadlv hashis A s mfiivrlty was recorded against S. Colliery The heated discussi in the U. M. W. convention at New Glasgow over the question whether the mi- ners should accept the wags scale under which they have been work- ing since the middle of March. l8 an example of how collective bar- gaining should not be carried on. Negotiations between the Coal Company and the District execu- nothing save through negotiations, and negotiation had sircsdy been lflwflwossforweeksbuthadfsil- ed. Hon. m. Black. pcting Pne- mier at the time. conceived end carried out the-idea of referring the matter to a Royal. Commission, headed by Sir Andrew Ewe Dun- can. . . . ‘thereupon s! curious situation arose. ‘rho Comp“? screed st once to accept the finding of the pro- posed Commission as binding, but the U. M. W. executive would give no further assurance than that they would be guided by the fe- commendations of the Commission if the! should find them satisfac- tory. Arbitration was thus started with one side committed befom- hand to my sword that should be made. and with the Othflllldd eb- solutcly free from anysuch under- taking. Both sides worm-however, agreed that the Commission had been selected in good filth. Ind that it was as fsir snd capable s tribunal as could have besnchc- sen for ‘the task. When the Commissionmsdpits report the Compln! accepted .16. and the Union executive, after-ina- ture deliberation. rswmmcnded its acceptance to the colllery workers. In a subsequent referendum vote the awe-rd. the mainland cohicries and those of New Wsterford and Sydney Mines being-for acceptance, while the Glace Bu! district lulled up a. heavy adverse poll. The new six weeks cant-on March m-una the miners have been working un- der the Duncan scale ever since. Such is the situation confront- ing tho New Glasgow convention, which has been in session all week. Obviously there are only three sl- tarnatives before the delegates.‘ The first is to accept the sword; the second to work under the wage scale it has established without any contract; and the third-ism go out on strike and earn no ws- ges whatever till the issue hss been determined by a trial of endurance between the Company and the men. schedules however went into force In in doubt’ at the moment, but the thing which stands out in strong relief is tho entirssbesnco ofbugi- ness methods in the Union's n. lotion to the whole question. I! g -Union is to be an effective organi- xution, it obviously must apply common some rules to business matters, and observe some proge- dure in collective bargaining which will be ‘binding on an its members. Unionism in this province has been greatly weakened by the de- lnyflmcertaintv. conflict. and dis- sent-ion which have characterized the UrM. W. in its handling of the oolliery wage question since last October. ' DOMINION OI‘ CAN PROVINCE OI‘ PB! IDW‘\A3D ISLAND In tho Probate Court 22nd George V A. D. 1081 In Bo uuuto of flora Herber- son, lets o! Brsdslbsns in Omens County in the slid Provlnco, decen- Qd, tutate By the “onenrsble Harold Leon- ard Palmer, Bnrrogdte, Jndn of Probstc, be. '&e., _To the Sheriff of the County of nuns County or any Constable or leer-ate‘ person wituhin ssid Counly. l rse g. - WHEREAS upon resdfn the peti- tion on filo o Angus stbeson of Brsdalbsne sforonl . Farmer. the Executor of the shove named lllsfsts praying that a citation may be ls- sued for the purpose hereinafter let forth: You sre therefore hereby re» quiredao cite all ersons interested id Estate o be and appear before ms st s Probate Court c be s o Court Bonn in har- in Queens County. in the lncs on Wedne der the dsy ofJuno next com ng at gbc of eleven o'clock fnrenocn o! the" same (is! to show cause if y they can why Jlio Accounts of the Illfl liistste should not he pnsud snd the Estate closed u prayed for in lsld petition and on motion of James Johnston Esq. Proctor for said Petitioner. And I do hereby order glut a true copy hereof be forthwith publllbed in some newspaper published in Charlottetown ' sfo tin weeks from the date hereof sud that s true copy hereof be forthwith posfed._ in the f in bl places respectively, hnl- of the Court Hones in Char- lo-tetown sforessid in front of the School-house in llrndalbsne afore- d slid in front o the School- bonu in Elliott; in (moons Count! aforesaid, so that sf} persons infor- elted in the slid llistste ss aforesaid may have due notice thereof. and were of Dc- 1.1,. An effective strike has been ful- ed out of the question by-thsin- (lldJ I. L. PALMS!!- - Ind of Probate- 4-28-Tlinr-4I ——=i up of s. Conciliation Industrial Dis- Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price; 50c per lb. Sold only in m Airtight Psoksgu.‘ a Conciliation lljuse Eieaningi Necessitiss ‘ 3W!!! City. (Wall Paper Glunemzsc. tin. Tiffany's Silver relish, 25c. Pure French Cuille soap, 10 lb-bnrJI-W: lntbansse. Apex Moth Cake, 25¢. Moth Gss (New Clothes Ssv. ‘ or), 65c. Csmplmr, Ceda- and Lug. dier Flakes, 15o. pkg. Moth Begs, 15o. $1.00 s l,” Lsrvex (For M05?!) ‘ Yonvlile Floor Wax, Mo. Formaldehyde Fmnlgahog l osJIo; i on, $1.00; s m,‘ ".50. THE 2 MAGS lll Croat George Street All Isl! Orders Given Prompt Atlantic! wwvr C“ t Trusty as ‘an old friend-At never .. toilette lease with its’ siting