""1, tuw i Qluw“ l | r .‘A.k- i PAGE FOUR rue clunlomzfowu ousnnun s» olden! w clrsstl-r s llcLurs u-r Vlce-Prelilllllt. J- ll- 9111M". lf-J-l re — . . , . lierretnry~ LleuL-Col. l)- - J. B. Burnett, F- J- l- Ednor “m, ummnn‘ lerrltltuxzker and ll- ll. llnrrln a) $5.00 u (in ndvnnco) delivered "all," ,,f",l.',’,,.“l“r?."::fisr‘r:¢; msneupl: guis- and United saws l n ADTEKTISIXU BEPIHJSESTATIVEB N h t - ' "— h l! i-lt 1th S eclll Agency lnc._ ow Yor en trnlugullrdlilgl aFciIEETIrk-‘(lity ilcrllru! Mvofors Building, Detroit. Internal . - . Anlnrllsln Ei\ltur1— l} llfll , lianllun City. “Wllnuglllty h: Aiilinlul lilonadnnt-k Building, ha PI-lla-aewhifl- __ nwnsnsv, serrrzrlnen 1. was. A. llnrlilnnon, ll. U. U. Tuuor Building, call-as»: Glenn B11110 n Frans-loco; HM No. 65th Ell‘ /"4~ .A P. ‘E. I‘ ACLEVEJIEAYT ‘convnced in their hearts that they lwere entirely misled and that it is According to statistics, there are P1 1a useless and even pernicious activ- million tuberculous cattle in Ems- ity. rt would ‘not be jumpins It‘ 10nd: in other words 40 D61’ 06111» ‘vcild conclusions to believe that i119 of milking cows in England suffefiNazls have crushed swutini L“ from the disease. Sir Frwefick ‘Germany. If this be accelbied 1i will J-lpbday, Principal of the Royal Vet- lube‘ to those strongly convinced of urinary College, is Xvslwlflible mrlthe healthy effect o! scouting 0X1 this statement and he adds lhnt an ‘yqung mlrlds and bodies, a. devasta- investisat-ien 95 some 11200 “M” 0f Iting commentary on Nazi-ism. human tuberculosis shows that 87.5 sturdy palrlotlsm and loyalty‘ per cent. of infections in the neck icommcnls an exchangg, are prom- Notes By The Way It ls now announced that rud- ium “needles"-made in Canada- are ready for use in the treatment of cancer cases in hospitals. The hitherto almost prohibitive cost 0f radium, and the scarcity of the world's available supply, have great- ly restricted its use. and it 15 116W M. great lmportanoe that tht Dom- inion can now produce its own radium. 0n August 1 persons employed by a given number of Canadian firms had risen in number by 104,000 odd to 804,000 since April l last. Some 24,000 had been added to payrolls since July l, not. counting harvest hands. In the Province of Quebec. for the first time‘ since April. 1930. for the first. time in three long years of depression. employment improved over the previous year's figure for the corresponding month.‘ When this year's figures start ad-' glands of children up to five years imam features o! the Scout splrlh old and 61.3 pcr cent. of those be- {while ‘ “tending the hand of‘ tween five and ten were due to bo- [friendship w the Scqufls of other; rine bacilli: in 476 cases; 0f bone lpeoples‘ each national scout orgam: and joint tuberculosis, 28.7 per cent. “Zaflon p‘ gasses a sane nationalism‘ of children under five and 23.1 per, cent between ilvc and ten were due [goieiezjnntrgiimspeseaws the extreme ‘All these in- l to this sslnc cause. fections," writes PZ'Of0$<Ol' Holiday. “were preventable. if only the source vanclng well over those of last yearfi that is the upturn. ' I sus and If there are any sceptics who wllll question the efficacy of the im- munization treatment for diptheria their attention is drected to the fact that. in the city of Ottawa, the Mclllclml‘ senllmenlally exagger-innmbey n: cases remrled to the purposes. The first. second. third i . i r . and fourth Dominion censuses were latcd inter-nationalism, nor any of iBoard of Health in eight months of THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Story Of The Dominion Bureau Of Statistics (Note: This is the first of a ser-iweu as with thou of the om“! ies of articles dealing with the and Statistics Office. nepa-rwlenlfl work of the Dominion Bureau of interested in production often paid statistics which will appear in the scanty or no attention to the std-i Bulletin, issued“ by the Bureau) tistics of capital, labour. WISN. 0W- , Over new policyholders SEPTEMBER 7, 1933 20,000 from time to time. These will em- brace the activities of the Bureau which might have been collected at the same time. and set out its responsibilities. While Canada, under the French regime, has the distinction of hav-_ i In those circumstances the 0111-: cial statistics of Canada were. found so inadequate and confuslmi ing men the first organized Wn- that the Royal Commission on eta-j sus in the world in the modernl fl5t1c5, which was set up 1111912 fol sense of the term, the 1111M’! 5mm‘! investigate the situation, advised tics of the scattered British colon-E strongly ln favour of n pflllcy or! ies wh ch now constitute the DO-r Qgntl-gllzatjon of the statisticalf ymi111011 11°19 SCYBPPY "id mwmflseryices of Canada. This centrali-l parable. Just prior to Confedera-‘i zation was Bu; lnw ggfecl; by the ‘l 111m. thrre W15 11 revival of inw-‘statisties- Act of 191a and 1n the lest in statistics under the auspices. Subsequent yam-S me Domlnlon‘ of Hon. D'Arcy McGee, then Min-‘Bnrenll of glnglsglcs n5 lg now ex- ister cf Agriculture of the Pro- 19,5 was consllluled by the trans- vince of Canada. and his interest m. from val-loll; Dqpnrgmengs of‘ in the nrattcr was probably a rea- the l-ollowlng branches; the gen-‘ 5°11 ‘"316’ U19 Sublet” °f “Hi9 Gen‘ sus and Statistics Office, fisheries‘ Statistics"‘ was 11111011! statistics, mining statistics, fores-l these “PXC usivalv wished" 1° 111B try statistics, dairy and food sta- NEW D°min1°n Gi-‘Vemment by tistics, water and electric power the British North America AC1 and statistics. the statistical branch of‘ luter placed under the Department the mllways and Canals Denny- ' f Agriculture for administrative ment‘ the wade sllntlsgtcal bl-nnchl grain trade statistics, live stockl statistics, prices statistics and em- every year For many years more than 20,000 men and women have joined the Canada Life's great family of policyholders annually. Group insurance policies would greatly in- crease this total. Each individual in tbislarge number has received person- - a1 service from a Canada Life ' representative. This requires a widespread organization and a great variety of services and plans. of origin (the tubl-rt-txlous cowl was effectively dealt with." The foregoing stun-hunt is litter- estlng by vmy of contrast io the sit- uation prevclilzng in this Province, which for several years past has been a diseusc-free cattle area. Our freedom from bovine disease should oe emphasized on cvcry occasion in connection with the Island's dairy industry. ' I It was under the ticpirllrlcniul direction of Mr. J. H. Myers, Z\f.P.. then Minister of Agriculture in the first Stewart Governlnellt, that this great forward step was tukcn ux*.<lcl' the Restricted siren Pluzl m: defined and placed lll ciperation by the Do- Tlte farmers of the Province were tirade acquain- ted through the press, lay circulars and at public meetings with the na- ture of the policy, and in n short time cm almost ‘unanimous vote was recorded in its fnvour, Prompt ap- plication vans lnudc by thr- Depart- ment of Agriculture t0 Otiuwa. nncl tn a short time upxvurds of thirty veterinary inspectors arrived with mstrurtlrlns t0 l)‘."lC"£‘(l at nncc with minlnn Government. t the Work. Acvordlltg tu the provision of the order lll council governing the ll0ll(‘_\'. truesporinzzoll of the in- Jthe slinking bade-door doctrlnesi1931 W“ 245- 1" 1932- 179i and 1"! insinuatcd by Communists to mis- lead wall-meaning people into de- livering themselves bound and de- fenceloss into the hands of enem- ies lurking and ready to strike. The Scouts stand for a oommonsensef m, analwls mule by ll“ insubiavlscn in the ln-actlcal and manly approach of‘ i ~ . ' l all problems‘ a readl-ness to belpopulation of the United States at, “h” M Firm“ “r frzendly but not oppremed, andl certainly to play the game towards others and not to seek their op- pression. This spirit. apparently is not volcnt enough for the Nazis. SEEN IN PERSPECTIVE The New York Times offers this dlspassionate comment on the rec- ent provincial polling in Nova‘ Scotia: “At Tuesday's election of members of the Nova Scotia General As- s'enllbly' the Liscrals, who have been the outs since 1925, beat the Con- servatives by more than 2 to l. Poltical meetings of both sides were crowded. The contest was supposed to be so close that. bets were as scarce as hens teeth. There was a fury of enthusiasm and headlines in the newspapers, but there ‘seems to taken by tempsrary organizations. rbut in 1905 a permanent Census d983, 6'7. Reduction of the eight-l l , H , ted lmonths, tom from 246 in 1931 ‘Gland Statst cs O ice was crea , ploy-ment statistics, while four newt‘ branches were created dealing with public finance, internal trade, vital 1'19 in 1932 and 0'7 in '33 is some-- thing not to be explained away as accidental or spontaneous. once company experts fixes the‘ 170,000,000 in 1970, which is nearly. 150 per cent. greater thanthe pros- l ticsj railixay F-(‘aiisncsf- Wining 5m‘ cial. ihdustrial, mg checked mt pmmlallon_ Th5 is predicated tlstlcs, fisheries stailstcs, forestry and genera] activities and wmll. on the birthrate. which has been steadily declining. and also on the: assumption that the U.S. govern- ment will never again let down the immigrafion bars. The U.S. motor tnsnufactunng in- . after a long‘ wrangle. The employ-z ers ‘retained the right to hire and: flre as they may see fit regardless‘ of organization among employees. Iti is evident that the "code" which President Roosevelt insists upon. is lgofng to have considerable varia-Ir ltion. aoccvrding to the industries mi which it applies. and that ulill not work for harmony. At that Henry Ford is still a “hold-out." ‘rlu-oe hundred armed Chleagq dustry came under the "blue eagle“ C police set a ‘trap for seven lcidnapi which may be regarded as the pro- slatlspcs and educallon‘ l-especglve. gcnitor of the Dominion Bureau of ly‘ $ifliisiicsr The new Bureau also fell heir to Subsequent to Confederat-ionuime smtlstlcal Mllvltles o; the war.‘ various other statistical offices haditlme Fuel Controller and the Domini“ Gmmm‘ Board of Commerce. Under the men's service as subordinate bran- terms of the Stallsllcs Act‘ ",5 Departmemsi mandate now embraces all official: mmbly i" respect °f trade ‘baus’ statistics "relative 11o the commerw social, economic statistics, immigration statistics, trons 01th,,‘ people;- criminal statistics, etc.. but these‘ In order that Slallsllcs mayl statistics. as well‘ as thc statistics serve departmental requrlremenls‘ colleccd by provincial departments as well as those o; general pullcy‘ in the course of their administra- mmlllnel-y l5 crealed under llle 5°“- “TYP 05V" fmmd 9° be ‘lime ‘ Statistics Act for dose collabora- incompamble with each other as . llon boll, between the Bureau and‘ the several Departments of the Do- minion Government, and also be- tween the. Bureau and the more important provincial executive de- partments. The history of the Bureau since its creation has furnished 1ndubi- table proof. of the expediency of l < ‘Thousands oflndividual pre- miums aggregate many mil- lions of dollars annually-j money that is to grow and be returned, sooner o: later, to beneficiaries or to policy’ holders themselves. During the past "three years the Canada Life paid out over $77,000,000 in this way. In the same period it added over $45,000,000 to its assets to provide for future liabilities to policyholders. Canada Life Assurance Company Established 1847 B‘ example, the estimates of the yield of grain are all the time be- by the receipts of grain at the elevators, while the annual statstics collected on agri- culture are checked by the compre- hensive and elaborate investiga- tions of the decennial census. Thus the Dominion Bureau of Statistics aims to have. on almost any subject which comes to the at- tention of the Government and people of Canada and which lends itself to statistical measurement, the most accurate available statis- tics. In brief, the final objective of the Dominion Bureau of statistics is the creation of a nation-wide ect covering all the more the policy it reflects‘ Among the i phases of social and advantages “Jwlng {mm the ieoonomic activity, and relating ; adoption of centralization have been a realzatfon of the econo- mfes which i.t permits in respect of staff. equipment and in the elimi- nation of duplication. Further, large scale operations have made B! I W Bar-Ian. MD. ‘LIVING A LONG TIME WITH . HTGH BLOOD PRESSURE these to the general background of nature and history in the Domin- ion. A numerous series of weekly. imonthly. and annual reports is is- sued for information as to which either as a whole or on any partic- the Legislature, and has the bles-iHauseof Commons. Should 11$ sing of Mr. King. Sinclair is their ‘Mr. Sinclair both be elected to the forgotten man. But in the Legis- Legislature at the next eleotiom lature Mr. Sinclair ls leader of the there must be s. ahow down and I Liberal group, is recognized offi-‘definite settlement. cially as Opposition leader. He and. Mr. Hepburn seem to dislike one Immigration Official: “And what another heartily, do not ext-operate do you plan to do now that you're in at all, and if either one ever were‘ the United States?" to form a government there is, Immigrant: “Anytllinijo corn on nothing more certain than that the‘ honest living.” ‘ other would not be included. "Well, you'll make good. Thom so far Mr. Hepburn has done his‘ isn‘t much competition in your line leading from a. safe place in the‘. of business." Use Brahmin Tea Refreshing as only fresh, pure Orange Pekoe Tea can be. “ sols only in rod, sir-tight pachiel. U pew The kidnappers walked ‘m0 It have been carefully estimated it‘ took me $50000 package of do , thulli m every fiKJOfDBfJDIe dle an. coy “m-mey and walked right on‘ nua. y as a resu 0 diseases asso. Ipectors from plucc tn place was a responsibility that rest-rd with the farmers. Rccngnlzlne the hnrdiahills and probable delay than would re- sult from the zlppilciltion of this provision, the Provincial Govern- ment azrced to nssunle this mspon- Hblllif,‘ and provided the transport- ation. The Zll‘l‘ill'lg('lllt"l‘iS made were extremely Sflllflkififlfy and the test was completed Wlillltl tavclve weeks. When n iinnl (‘ll(‘('iillli' have been no pivotal issue. The-Lib- erals accused the Government of spending too much money without i accounting for it on power develop- . ment. and the building of big paper i mills. 1t hadn't kept its promises. !But the reul trouble was unemploy- intent. In the hope of jobs, we are told. thousands of persons went to Wile Lbcral meetings and voted the ‘Libeal tzcket, though no rich spoils nrvait the victors. As in so many ensrs-in the United States. the "lns" were blamed and punished." Dastancc. remarks the Sydney‘ Port-Record on the foregoing com. ment. often gives the shrewd ob. server a ltctter perspective 0f the brittle than any o.’ the combatant; can vision. The New York paper has pictured the s-tuation qrith {all- accuracy. Its size-up of the case re. Calls George Bernard Shaw's more comprehensive statement that, 5n these days the electors never vote for anyone or anything, but always fliflinst someone or something. up hurl ‘been made vi thnll only .59 or slightly over one-half of one per cent of the cattle of the I Sulase- queniiv :1 retest was nlutle ill the lnferirrl herds when only three (hr:- eased animals were found. i was u w: Province were ctmtlemnctl From a public health standpoint nione. the carrying out of this ])(lil(‘\'_ us Dir. Myers stair-d in hi. report i0 the Legislnttlre in the following your, well be mos’. mnv tonsitit 11:11 the important and " rcnchm: in benefits; etc? . pie. Now that the opportunities for en- tering the British dnlrv and cattle L\_\ lifii by our PW- markct have been enhanced us a EDI rcstllt of the ‘imperial Conference TORIAL NOTES agreement: sqrrttial emphasis should Thls from me Montreal Gamma‘ 5e placed . the fact that this Pro- "Thc Royal Commission on Banking at its Charlottetown sitting learned l that only a small proportion of the i ten thousand farmers in Prince Ed- vinre. since 1025. has been entirely free of bovine llll70ffill0<ffi. orlties. Serbia got a slice and be- came Jugo-Slavla. Runania obta;h_ l again without a scratch. No wonder crime flourishes in Chfcago and criminals laugh at the law. The remedy for kidnapping is not hang- ins. but a‘ standard of police em. clency that will make the capture '71 kldfifilifpfifs a Strong probability. Now the chances are ten to one in YBVOP of the kidnappers, and desper- ate men will take the risk, Austrian problem and to what ex. tent can it be solved without tump- i erlngz with the war treaties? Aus- "Yfl-Hilngary was carved up, This W“ (10119 with the best of intentions. the liberation of restless racial min- “i 8 Bvodly sirarc. Poland took a1’ b" R513’ also. Czechoslovakia “"19 in") being. Then what was left 0f Austria and Hungary was placed ‘ under iiwflrate govemmcnts. Aus- tria found herself with s industrial capital, no l-lofls and a‘ lttle countrynslde, mllgll of l; mountainous, to take its manufac- ture. She is tell-heavy. ' large Downe has been described as the: "shyest village" in Kent. rt is rloti quite so far from a railway as lei w“ i“ Darwin's day and a hus now connects it w;th lxsndon: but l; l5! Still remote. Darwins 01d homo Lsf now a museum in which you may‘, Rea the study where he wrote "Tho 0758111 of Species." and just out-i. side the door of that room the esp-i Who will flnd the solution of the ‘ cl . elated with high yet all physicians know that cer- tain patients may live many years in good health, despite well mark- ied high blood pressure. l Why is it possible for some indi- vldua's with very high blood pres- sure to live to n. good age whereas others live but a few years after ‘ the high blood pressuze is discover- ed? Dr. Edward J. Stieglirtz, 1n Illin- blood pressure, 1 col-d and possible the economical use of ex~ pensive electrical tlabulating ma- chinery. while ccntral library, re- administration systems have also promoted economy. Even more important perhaps is the fact that. the Bureau has brought all the chief statistical of- ficers of the Government. into close touch with each other and has favoured the bringing together of comparable statistics as in the fields of production, trade, trans- portation, prices, etc. Thus in the s Medical Journal. states that‘ the cause of high blood pressure is' anlthing which injures or irritates the muscle wall of the blood vessel and thus causes these muscular or elastic fibres to contract than the normal amount. ‘ Now ‘there are a number of, filings which will injure oriirri-l‘ trite the blood vessel, therefore thef treatment. depends upon just whati is causing the trouble in each par- ticular case. As some of the causes can be removed or their effects lessened. and others cannot. you can see that some cases are likely to livc for a long time and others live but a few years. For lIlSZPHCC something may be simply irritating the blcod vessel. and its musculnr walls tighten Ln an effort to overcome it, just as waste material from the food in thr- intest ne irritates or stimu- lates the muscular walls of the in- testine t; tighten and thus push is wastc outward and downward. In this case there is no real da- mage being done to the wall of the blood vessel and when the irritat- . i more “ da, n-ot only are the possibilities of error reduced to a minimum by the constant checking up of the statistics in one field with those in another, but the interpretation of statistics is greaty facilitated. For ON MALVERN HILL A wind is brushing down the clover, It sweeps the tossing branches bare, Blowing the poising kestrel over The crumbling ramparts of the Caer. It whirls the scattered leaves before us Along the dusty road to home, Once it awakened into chorus The heart-strings in the ranks c! Rome. There by the gusty copplce border The shrilling trumpets broke the existing stafistical system of Cana- ward Island find it necessary to mo,“ Jar in which he kept hgling substance is removed. and no mum ' ‘more, or at least very little is pre- SCOUTS AN!) HITLERISM; ...-.. *~‘ i borrow moncy- The Island province ‘is also notable in that it has had lrovmcd upon the 13¢ y Scout, movcsbut two divorces since Confedera- ment in ("Wrmnny bunnnpn {he lion. Its people apparently are as movement makes for inlernation-lhllppy i" "19" indufiifm 116 111811 ml, Null home lifc." Chancellor ll tlcr is swirl in have slism and Lntt-rffrfis efforts to siccr tllc G<rman youth‘ A" 11 mt ‘ow-r and Imam" mi Tt-‘Sard to NIRA in the United Stat. es. Popular vow- has pIOVldfid the 3.2 to fill i'r.'- first requirement. but the reslanrr- on of Raymond! Many‘ A” 51"” “CTN-fir? of State.’ “t” '1 1011K rcrztcst with Cordell: "lm- 5°¢1~Yan' or State. indicates movement in a milltrnstic dircfi" Evidence of the beneflc al effect tion. Whfit 15 kflown denniiffil‘ 15! of the Empire trade agreements is? that at the Boy Scouts Jflmbortfseen in the fact thatcansdavr bacon tn 0611911’). 31111891?- Gfnm" B"? exports to Great Bntain for July scouts were conspicuous by thvlilun this year totalled 52.130 cwt. as‘; absence. ‘fcomparcd with 31.133 in July, Iss2.‘ gllorctofnre Grrman Scflulfl ha“? and 1.648 in July, 193i. Of hams,‘ peg-n enthusiastic partiopants. It Canada exported tn the British‘ “gyms impossible that those (nous-i market 21.548 cut. in July th's year nouting a year ago should how be oorfoomndi‘!!! 1114mm 1416'- YWI’ N14 Whit teamwork ilas not been do. velopea to the mtch that was u.-.’ Mted- Ickies. Public Works Ad.‘ ministrator. has boldly gtnged m.” is too much "zed fapn" i I 4.665 in July 1931. 1n Until: n,-l.-,,,l,‘ imports from Canada on July the. Year numbered 6.166. valued a‘ £104, this country W0 years ago. i sent, the blocd pressure comes back to normal or near to the nor- mal point. If however, the blood vessel is so injured or damaged that the mus- cle or elm-tic tissue is replaced by hard fibrous tissue then the blood pressure will be high and must continue to remain high. The thought then is that where the elastic tisue of the vessels ls simply being irritated causing a sort of spasm, then by removal of this irritation the biood pressure should be reducrd and the llfe spun h" about urinal. infection ii".."n tr-cth, tofislls. gall bladder or inf. shim mfv hr- f‘r ffflllccg But: when the: infection has last- ed for 1cm" tmc and the elastic l ll‘. n" fr" ta] and plly5lml_ 1S lkclv to or serve life. The beaten warriors left the battle Dead on the The leaves whirl in the Wind's riot.‘ Beneath the "eaconh jutting spur. m“ ,_ ‘ ‘I ‘ ‘ l Quiet are clan and chief, and quiet ands of Gcnnans rvhn lwlicved in n5 compared with 20.724 7°!‘ 1hr- | 227' o’ 55°“ 4011519 U"? 51117911’ 771-111? i is ‘amwp i no m“ wt care-l cenmflm and signlm.‘ ' | halt, The Roman line, the Roman order, swayed forwards to the blind as- ssult. Spearman and charioteq and bow- man Charged and were scattered inf/o spray, Savage and tacitum the Roman Iular subject application made b0 the Bureau will bring prompt res- lponse. A Dally Bulletin is publish- ed which summarizes in conven- ient. readable form the reports is- sued on that same day, and at the lend of each week a. Weekly Bulls- ]tin is issued which combines the references of each day. Mr.Hepburn’s Position (mtslwa Journal) When the Ontario Command of lthe Canadian Legion was voting. its thanks for services rendered its re- solutions committee proposed votes of thanks w the Prime Min- ister, to Mr. Kng, to Premier Hen- ry. Someone asked that the name of the Opposition leader 1n the Legislature be included and the name of Mr. W. E. N. Sinclair was added. A proposal that Mr. Mit- chell Hepburns name be added. instead o! Mr. Sinclair's, was voted down. The incident calls attention again to the curious situation in the Li- beral leadership in this province. Mr. Hepburn heads the Liberal- Prog-ressive combination outside TIIE FAMILY IJBIIG SALE! Chock this list over caro- fnlly and note the remarkable savings. 50c Bottle Phillips Milk of Magnolia 48o 26c Baby's Own Tablets 22o 81.35 Bottle Buyer's Aspirin Tablets . . . . . . . . . . 98o 25o Box Buyer's Aspirin Tablets . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98o 35c Sloan: Linlment .. 32c EXTRA SPECIAL Hewed upwards in the Roman way. There-in the twilight-where the cattle . I Are lowing home across the fields, I clansmens wicker shields. u-Joilllhlofloltl- $1.10 Box Evening in Paris Face Powder, 50o Bottle Por- fume and 25o Llpstlck,,nll for the price of . . . . . .. $1.10 3 Packages Kotex . . . . .. 74c Z Tins Dior Kiss Taloum 25c $1.00 Bottle Nujol 50c Box (lln Pllls 39o 50o Box Dodds Kidney HID . . . . . . . . . . . . 39c 25c Bottle A. B. S. A: C. 17c Telephone 315 ll Unable lo Come to store. THE 2 MAGS, Address MY NAME l8 ........--.......-.o Phone N0 ..--....--.-.. Conhstsnh started at once. MAIL IT TODAY ! PRIZE CAMPAIGN DEPARTMENT HEADQUARTERS The Gnu-flan, Charlottetown, P. l. l. Telephone 402 IIIFUIIMATIBII GDIIPON GENTLENIEN: Kindly send me receipt books for taking subscriptions: to my local paper, Tho Charlottetown Guardian, and full clo- hlls nlntlvo to the Irco ofler of valuable Cub lwlfill to N made in the great profit ‘ -' _ campaign. osssus:s-nuseso.easeosocno-slosnsoooloollnlosoooboq should enroll Till-IRE WILL BE N0 IDBERS Stroetflo. their names now and l!‘ 80nd for receipt books now and M ll early start. You can make good money each week- EVEIIY ACTIVE MEMBER PAID CASH EACH WEIR