._~, arson roim THE ciiiuniiuuwu only wuiii rerun liioow rum WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, _1920 'l‘ll.\'l‘ FAR“ PRODLWFTKS in’ "PER. i Hon. JQH. Bell in his place in the House made the statement that the Canadian Farm Products, Inc., (of which Mr. J. E. Sinclair, M. P., is President) held $5,000 of farmers’ notes for seed sold by them un‘ der the Greater Production campaign 191819 and that these notes should be turned over to the government who, after collecting what was collectable of them and retaining their own, would return the balance t0 the Canadian Farm Products. This would insure the government against any loss while leaving the Canadian Farm Products in the hole to the extent of whatever was uncollectabl-e. As a matter of fact there was only $1,500 in notes held in the first place by the FarnrProducts_ the bal- ance being ordinary book account. It is a well known fact, known to Mr. Bell and his colleagues, who behind closed doors were con- senting parties to the transatcitm, that this money, $2,500, was advanced by the Dominion Govcriinlcllt. to be duplicated dollar for dollar by the province, for the purpose of meeting whatever loss might be in- curred in providing seed grain for farmers. The dis‘ tribiition of this seed g "ain was entrusted to the Can" adiaii Farm Products as the largest farmers’ organ- ization in the province, thoroughly reliable and with the most ample means for distribution. The Canad- ian P‘arni Products purchased and paid for the seed and (iistributcd it among such farmers as needed it, the whole transaction zunouniing to between $12,000 and $14,000. Of this zllllOlllli. about $4,900 is still un- collected, of which about $4,600 belongs jointly to the federal and provincial governments. We have no doubt that the Farm Products would consider it a happy relief if the Hon. Ml‘. Bell or his department of Agriculture would undertake the collection of the amounts due and relieve them, the Farm Products, of the responsibility. Mr. Bell knows all this, has known it since he sat with the Public Accounts Committee before which the whole transaction was fully explained under oath and published in the Journals of the House, yet at this stage he returns to it in a manner that not only throws a slur upon a leading institution of farmers but puts a serious impediment in the way of collect- ing, the accounts. Mr. Bell's political instincts are certainly peculiar but not “past finding out.” M ll. Kl N625‘ ])l'lFE.\'(‘l'l Hon. W. L. McKenzie of Commons the made a statement of his war record,” a labored (leteiicre ' against alleged charges by political opponents. For his defence he took as his tex-t a statement made by someone, somewhere, that he, Mi". King, had in the hour of crisis deserted Can- ada and served the Standard Oil millions. The Ottawa Journal points out that in his defence “Mr. McKenzie King entirely misses the point ‘of public criticism against his war record when he submits personal rea sons which prevented him from playing a combat- ant’s part. The indictment against him is not on that count at all. A man of over forty years of age, an ex- Minister of the Crown and without military training, his place was not in the trenches», and nobody expect- ed him to go there. What was expected, and rightly expected, was that he would not try to keep others from going to the trenches and that is precisely what he tried to do. “At a time when Passchcntlaele had decimated the Canadian ranks, when Ludendorf was thunder- ing near the suburbs of Paris, and the cry was for men, and still more men, to stem the German tide, Mr. King fought with all the power that he could summon the only policy that could answer that cryn This, therefore, is thestain upon the Liberal leadci"s King. iii other day. The the House war story. and while the defence which he offered, in Parliament absolves him from a charge of person- al recreancy-a charge made by no one of conse- quence-it docs not release him from a day of reck- oning which he is bound to share in common with others of-his party in due and proper time.” Tll Ii \\'l'l.\ T lllflR The man with a grouch declares this.the worst spring he has ever experienced; he did the same last spring and the spring before and all the springs that he has ever lived through. The spring this year is generally speaking, like all the springs that have gone; the man with the grouch is also the same as he always has been. The trouble is that once the snow disappears in early Ap- ril we immediately assume that spring is here and that summer is close upon its heels. We forget, in our haste to anticipate spring and summer, that our springs are always cool, rainv and snowy until sum- mer comes along the last of June or the first of July, and we forget also that our cool, showery Aprils arc just what have made our Island so productive. _ The cold weather holds vegetation in check un- til all danger of frost has passed; the rain and snow saturate the earth with moisture so that when real- summer comes, the moist, warm earth will be in the best possible condition for rapid vegetation, Weather. predictions are proverbially uncertain but we shall missgur guess if this is not one of the most favorable an most promising springs we have ever experienced. There is already enough moisture in the soil to feed vegetation well into the summer and by the 10th of May as usual possibly a_little ear- lier, seeding will be general and in soil copiously moistened for vegetation which, as usual also, will in a few days clothe the earth with the carpet of living green that has given our little province the name of the Emerald Isle of America. _ lax" would be abolished. This pro-‘every European language u w", , . ,. l. . x ' ' seeks death, and in thousands of voices chants her own funeral mass!" o , Protege of Gorkyw s So wrote Andreyeff, the one-time . time revolutionist. For Androyeii’. in Moscow. centre of Bolshevisiigk‘: m?) “manznémxaftllgeagfggliigy i a re e e s power in Russia, has been erectediof the Romano“. while w“ a People do not like taxation, prln- l cipully because it is an expenditure . nut under their control and loo of-' icn the funds are diverted from‘ their proper purpose. This dislike has been intensified by the Liberal filling‘)???crgeaofgzlglzzlgzftijntrfZyoung journalist in Moscow, with educational campaign in whlCll the)’ ‘Ibmel. reel ms h“, Ingram, W°rskionly' a few short stories to his were taught that “further taxation wow“ his (lemmas, Septemgel, wasjcredii. Andreyeff had become a is unnecessary," and that there is ipmiege or Gorky, and was stepped n-vehement denunciation of Boi- . ample of revenue for every purpose whevmn and Leonid Andreyewa in the ideals of the revoiutionista. il-ie was one of a little band of writ- of government, and that the "war ‘us 0 so h" been tranmnad in = . . . w‘ _ iars, of whom Gorky was a leader, guspected by the Czar’s agents of Twila; w“; atlgreeazl: m ‘hie "or; fan appeal for the salvation of his l l l m v8 ‘mow of the \ ' ‘ ry. ey a con ence n e- , .. . p0 i ng e o l‘ ' ~- _ Liberal promises, and they return-jgllllllzfigcliiiid lgszpleifleiifjm or tgiifiovernment. But, if Andreyeff ev- lf-the wea-tllliler says a weal.‘ of 0d lll€lIl lo power with this clearinlghtmare of me rule of Lemuel" gave m‘ support ‘many Huck _ t ram you.wl- keep Fnllg-and fir}, 1n a and distinct mandate, to increase land Tronky_an appeal from fliniovenient, it may be flillumed "m" \ Paton raincoat. SOOtCh MaflKlntOshl-‘js the teachers w as thsvrvrhmhied-iiiinger which his warnings haiiim“ "Ymmis Fm“ "e ‘_‘"°_““_*' “"1 , fully guaranteed come in the cele. “ml l" 90mm“ ‘he "m1"? 9t mejbeen unable i0 avert. With all uie=°'°‘“” "lea m anmhel [mm o brated Davies makeat province without further iaxaiionqufl M m5 command_“nd w“, oliGovernnient to succeed that which l lie was ever opposed Tln- Govcrninciit has no authority ‘ms day iind u more powerful girrm“ ended‘ u, g0 003.0,"; 1mm and H» they have :0‘. eloquence than Leonid Andreyiio that slate in which waver’. Ivan '~ l rai-zciiaatorreirown coluznuiu ' - \ - as i at \ and $30., in colors brown, tweed mix. tures, fawn, etc.‘ ' / 1 WL. discovered that they were mistaken, in his own Czar." And, more bit» or Iiizit lhcy have misreprJc-ntcd or iuid iho issues falsely before the. l>"°ii11‘. there is llic one plain and; i-zizisiiluiionzii course before iheiii._ iefi-ho had sought to snve his peo y pic froiu their own folly. And then,i in i917, his pleas iind warnings un-‘ heed, be wrote bitterly of the ex~i li‘(‘l‘.li|_\' in which Russia had been‘ ll_ by unurchy, says the Loujsviiloi mid that is after adopting a polic diametrically opposite to that upon iUQuriQr-Joui-nnl, udiirh they». were ciccicd to dis- solve tho legislature and submit, their subslliiiicii measures in ilici “To crown our innonilny," hel (‘Ulllllfy for approval at un f‘ll‘t'llflli.’ltiiiiil, "everything ihat is alive in! Will they foiluw llic constitutional Russia is striving toward disunion’ course’! ,as if driven by a mysterious con I ‘trifuuai power. One county which 'l‘ll"l'f‘ is 0m‘ lfllltilhflil‘ BXCPDLYO" ijhas u supply of oats refuses iieod lo this. in one purlicular the pco- Hr; a npighburini; cminiy, and the pic have amended their mandate/lipid}; ymmiip unggwn, in other l" ill!‘ 0m‘ \\"<\)' ill which they could {places llic ‘local committees‘ huvo reach it. By a unanimous voice at abolished private property, have public meetings they have outlined iseized the iandb, as has been per~ nn improved educational policy and jsistently urged by the Bolsheviki, ilfililOfl)’ paid teachers. For this have confiscated implements. seed,. purpose. and-for this alone, iheyllivesiock. Every Ivan is his own have with drawn their mandateguler, and u dozen lvnns make up igninst taxation, and have authoriz- a Vendee! And here is Finland, de- cd the government l0 impose aniflnileli‘ [and lJTUBQUPlY Dfllclflimlfll! (‘fliiltflllflllkll tax. Only [his and ills separation.vl-ienceforili we are nothing more. llui the money thus HIWYPU’ fl ‘P95090191! neillhbmfi’ Ami (ggliegigd must be “pony and Qxfllffl‘? is also [Tkrainia hinting at cluslveiy devoted to the purposciFonlPlhlllfl mm‘? than flulfllmlliy- for Which ii was collected, To adopt 51591111» '09- has a “lmnge I001‘ i“ it as a 5000p n91 m gather in funds her eyes. Who else‘! Who else de- ful‘ u general carnival of cxtravn. tests Russia so deeply as to de- gante Wm not be 1019mm,‘ f0,» a ‘niand immediate separation from moment. If they imagine ihe coun-'he"'“fr°m he‘ who is diving? G0 ‘o’ if)’ Will stand for a tax measure oflclub hm‘- ‘tear to shreds ‘he dec- $100_000 m. $150,000 m“ m which a repii imbecile, pull the keys from 000,0. $45000 h, w m, [mm myundei- her pillow, plUXlllQy all you wuphers‘ and the remainder placed ‘can? Rejoice, your niurauders, . ,, - ‘ - ' oit- in the general “crib to meet thefmaleis m stolen goods deep crs oi llic dead, honest loons, rev- rziiiis of the hcciers, they are living _ H ’ H,‘ d Hmqcg, undor the influence of an elaborate f€iilmoniit i Eéfyozilioes (‘£29, ‘Ink, ‘MG . .. _. i \ i_\' pi _v - - . | illusion. lhey \\ili not l)( Dtrllliilvtltherselt? why preserve her and to sicul llic cliildrens bread and r _ m‘ her Sahuukm when she cast ii to the dogs, Lei them now} mm up i i Every Ivan a Ruler . take notice. - f 'l'lici't- was a pronouhred spirit of: ' i pi-ulylirwzy in My] J_ [)_ Stewart's 1'4». llliii!‘ lilVPSilllPiliS ill PFODPPiy 0i . iiirirks in his zuldress on liie speech iblllldiligfi 014")‘ klml W" m“! 0'" “s i‘ from ihc ’l‘hronc. Reviewing lheifllmlllli; expense (ilifltgflihl? l0 11"‘- govcrnnicni boastings 0f their pros. single year. ii‘ ii ivcrc so, and the peciive educational programme, he 1W8‘? hflrfmvint! 0f the Dfllliilliml Otl QOVPITIIIIPTHS W??? SO big resurrected flint ever present ghost I IIHDPPIH] of the accusing past, where. iii l911.4'0h"i1‘li will" ihe Liberals‘ (ievoied friendship iohvflfllil 5110i‘- islic not perish on her wziy to ihu ‘inf-crates her own flesh, blindly, ilcficits .i|l(=)’i Bui to get neareri terly than ever he reviled the iloni- unofl‘ uutocrucy (lid he denounci- zinurchy. l I “in an evil hour our Russian lib-i oriy was bor|i." he wrote soon iifieri the revoluiion_ "Ayouthfui bride! decked with white flowers-quay wedding feast!" “Telling them Off. And again, in 1917, in CfillSiiC ir- ony he addressed tlic men who had overthrown one despot lo take his plaice in oven inure (lESDOilU rule. "You gcntlciiiim of the Provision- al Government," lil‘ wrote, “persist in proclaiming tragically that ‘with- out authority tlierc is no responsi- billly;' keep standing by the road- side ivilh extended palms begging the giasserby for a peuiiyworlli of powder-just a pennywortli, for the sake of Christ! “You gentlemen of the council oi the Executive Committee, do not for an instant remove your eyes from the Government, guard close- ly these ‘bourgeois’, scan minutely’ every regulation-beware, they may 3 deceive you! i "You parties, multiply and subdt‘ vide into fractions and Slll)[l‘ili3liDXlS,1 firmly and scrupulously observe-i every shade of your tenets, 2nd,} pray, do not forget to hate cachl (iilier! , All Are Guilty. , “You soldiers, distrust the offi- cers, they are all traitors! Do not obey llic Generals, they air all: Judases! “As for you. bourgeois, flee toi llic iii-lined iind the Caucasus, and‘ if you can obtain no railroad tick-i ,ei. hung up your shutters, put out‘ _ the llglilsniid tremble. i "i accuse no one," he confinueilg "And wiioni, pray, slinil 1 accuse; when all nre guilty? Whom ‘shall- wc raliasiise when we are nil criiiii inals? if that which l dread with; moruil anguish comes to puss manyi will be our accuscrs and execution-E era. We sllilll not unto the sevenihi r l. l i i l i l, i i i i z / o ‘.7 igh Prices and come to Patons for your ready- to-wear suits, coats, shirts, odd pants, ties, sox, collars, and cuffs. prices. oys who are well dressed insist on their clothes ‘being stylish as well as good fitting. No need to wear overals with suit prices such as Patons quote. Think of it. 150 Siuits at$9.98 all sizes to fit boys from 6 to 16 years. i. Thou Motor Inleather selling at duick sale Coda: teachers was shown by tukiiigawziyiholll?‘ if 111i‘ tehwhing of the Lih-ygenprauon exhaust “w cup M m‘, um" “llpplemenls- Th?" 13f” Mien" ‘mil-v i” Fond)“; an“ an ‘heillllilliilv which llie oulrngcd and in-i. mm cninpilign in tlie Patriot and inroiwsed nix invrcfl-se-H and all the Edumun‘, ‘WM Wm prose“, ,0 “s3. throughout Print-e and Queen's "Auzuielitolion of revenue" scligm-l .. _ ___.- conning particularly’, where they es which they slvc promise "f. 11ml = ,,,,,,“”.,MH,,,“,,“ killed ihc teachers‘ rcftirtiiiduin by iniicr all economics which they sol z an open and pilfslslvlii. hostility ifliilpfllllly‘ pfdflliwd are welded into’; I 'i‘iicy (lcnouuccci that pienescite aciion. il gives us llic positive ns-i with all the energy they could inus-isiirance that they will have an ndi fer. and illPlI liypncriially (‘lilllll Jiliilflfl deficit at the (".1050 of their; themselves it dcniorruili: i ! Thin column la open for the dlscuulon by correspond- ents of questions of Inter- est. The Charlottetown board. in some of the Western |NQREQSE T0 Proviucog they receive tho same salary for doing the shine chur- ers, rural or city, should fuiihfuily servo their country. and not iiiur- the pziriy. ,initizii year of ivlialcvcr 1iorlioii of: "\\‘liul could he niorc cieinocraiiicdhc $250,000 road loiin they Illil)‘ iiinii to submit. an important measg succeed in spending, ure in the will and (iccision of the‘ people?" "For a party 5g rich m Iiig headlines -in the Patriot in- pmnflses and so Zinlpty in pen-Orwitroduce a declaration from A. B. iiiaincn you czin never fiilfl fheiricupp“ M‘ P" M [he Reform Huh WHHL» m“ “p00,, won, “my p“, luncheon, Montreal, attributing 01mm 4i“ili(.‘ cause of the present unrest io __..___ ,1lie defeat of Sir Wilfrid ilauiicr Th" dkiirioi objected to the Gunr- land his party in iillfl’ for stretches dian eiiiiiinaiiiig capital outlay when 10f imagination this beats even ihe figuring the (excess of (ixpenditum {unprecedented records of lsiiind ovrr receipts. It is u specious kindrLibc-ralsism. Let us look up the of argument, but nnf sound in logic, ‘evidences. The biggest unrest, the it is not the custom of either govern- ‘most extensive and prolonged slrik» nicnis or private individuals to esti- .98. railways, steel works, coal min- ing and in almost every industrial "branch, involving millions of lost capital and labour has occurred in Q6000 D4OQO-OO ylhc [lulled States, because “Sir 2 i. ;\Vllfrid Lnurier and his party" were i T . idefcated in Canada! in Germany i {the National Assembly were forced iwoand-n-quziricr billion xloliars to quell u general rnilwuys strike, just because the Borden {Government was returned in 1911. For llic sumo reason in idnglaud, v jio vole Furnlohod by W. a. Lemon v OO-OQ- SPRING i zini coining. i am coining. hear llic sniiih wind blow; , You may see ihc crocus blooming, inzitinn under lleuven have has] dmmd“ l“ "mg “nllght strikes nnd ilisiurbancti. and riot row; Pussywiilows now are bonding. o'er ‘BM bmodahod‘ But l" Canada’ ‘hi’ lhc trouble according lhc- bcris where violets grow; 1"“! 0i’ h" And lili‘ warmest ivinfl is lending to Mr. (Topp, there has been, admit. 32:‘ “We” t" ‘"0" m" telily some strikes, but more o nPbce and loss of unrest than in I am coining. l am raouiing; 'e|'g tho {any other part of ilie northern "Wm"?! 5'91" i8 K0116. hemisphere. The local Liberal or- You ma- se i . . on‘ n"? Lirlfiugobggsicfiulfilerffit guns ropuidiion for stretching is lawn; in serious danger. ("urious cotyledons folded the early planted pea, And the newer berries molded the Christmas holly tree. round V And the "reason why there was mllless unrest in Quebec was because the Liberal party llllfl not I am coming. I rim-coming, over hill '10s! their‘ llrip over the Dfiihhllllfl" Aumwillildfi’? lilalfzi i oi’ the province." Quite a oonst. 0,1,} ,,,,,._5:,’;.°sc,,f,‘:§}';°,",':|'n‘;°" 1311i is u notaoro likely um it is 0 the 103.005 mcanmuonfll ma, doibecnuse Quebec is closest tn 0i~ _ 131F011!!! the fbreezen ring, tnwa and more in t uch with and Oer ihe marvelous creations naiuraiunqer the bmflsn |n%m-qbe 0| o," tenders io the spring. "gem", a Husheyjsplendid and tactful government’! ilrclunil and about every civilized, i stand they had taken on the School I Guardian does not nocen- i’ arliy endorse thcroplnlona i l expressed by its corres- pendants. O-§O I-OOQ§OO i i Sir,—~The question of higher" sal- I arirs for teachers has been dis-i‘ cussed pro and con in your col- lumn for some linic‘, iind a great ideal of useless talk has been iii- ‘dulged in, and wo are today where ,we were two years iigo on the lverge of u strike ivliicli nothing lshould avert as the teachers will grcccive no raise until next year. {They will have waited two years .i’or nu increase of $50 or $76 per gaiinum when ill the menu time ‘board has zidvunccrl at the rule of $50 pcr nnnum ‘in some places. {l um glad that the Government has taken a stand on the school ques- tion, and has decide to increase ‘Vlhe Teachers’ salar es They are ionly doing their duly as constit- 'utional guardians of the peoples’ interests and the education of the rising generniion is the greatest interest nt stake at present. No doubt the lite of 80 or 100 schools iis trembling in tlio balance and some of our teachers wish that a ,‘Dnvid would arise in the 'i‘ench~ wrs‘ linion uud champion their cause and lend it In ultimate vic- ;iory, llilii strike down the Goliath oi’ injustice flint sinlks our land. ‘Some lime ago un ex-ieiicher criticised the city teachers for Question. 'l‘hey couldn't have done otherwise and uiaiutziin their dig- |nity and self-respect as this is a istruggle for jusiice iind cqiiuiity, land had its origin in tho necessit- Tles of our disorganized school sys- ,icm. While the Union lasts we have highly gratifying prospects laprcud out before us for the next», iyear; beyond that well not seek: ‘to penetrate the veil, This in a noble cause and every! person who h-as the welfare of ris- lng future generations at heart should identify themselves with ;thiii movement. i Ex-teacher criticised the policy of teachers in reliiiion "to School Board-a and Government. iDid he insinuate that the tench- l March 301i], e present system in first clans mur nor complain ‘bencalh ohastcniug rod? Or should ihev iisc- to the occasion. and lake urins against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them? peure says: “To be ornot to be is the question." The teachers must i lltlild ilie minimum salary asked Convention held in 1920 or lower the Status of the teaching profess- ion in I‘. E. i. The time is oppor- tune for teachers to present their demands to the Government. Oiii' cause is just and we. need not humiliate ourselves in order to gain our objective. ‘in regard to the clamoring of other govern- ment empioyeos and officials for u raise in salary ‘has no parallel with the Teacher's grievances as we are all awcrc that there are very few government employees in the Civil Service of our island receiving less than $600 and if the leach- ers complain after they have reach- ed that minimum then the Lib- eral Government cnn afford to ig- nor" their claims. i have one tuuit to iind with llic scale of wages asked for by the Convention iieid Mnroh 30th and that is that lady teachers have hiid n lower estimate placed on by the ‘their’ services than in their con- frares in the profession. The lady tenchors of P. E. ‘island never had better opportunity to remedy this injustice as they are in the major- ity. Our la-te Superintendent Dr. A. Anderson advocated "Equal rights" for teachers. Under the male principal receives about $88 more from the Government. ii con- z-ider this a grave iniualireo us they don't pay $88 more for their INTERESTINPG ' This little Ad spelks loin..." than a full page: 4 The entire stock ‘of boots and shoes of a wail known wholesale firm, who have gone ncss has fallen into our hands and a; we already carry one of the iurlelt clock‘; on P. E. l- W warehouses much overcrowded and have marked a. lot of lines, (cape chilly heavy and mediilm As Shaker’ actor of work. All the lady teich- crs of l’. E. i.‘ require is morn‘. courage. At the Convention held in the City of Charlottetown Maren 30th a great many of the delegates‘ expressed their opinion that if the .- teatiiiers’ salaries were raised the result would be efficient teachers iind better schools. Pfifllylii. me to express my opin- ion in re better schools and quali- fled teachers. [think the tench- ers of P. E. l. are well qualified for their positions, and could do superior work if placed in congenial surroundings; the maj- ority of the rural school buildings in the Province are not in keeping with the dignity and high calling of the teaching profession. A poorly equipped school house which is not even kept clean nor sanitary has u tendency to lower the inoroi tone of the school. and has a demoral- izing effect on the teacher's work. Sometimes the teachers are con- tending against fearful odds. The faithful teacher is a martyr to the cause, 1n the-Western Provinces the Government compels the rule- pnyers to erect suitable buildings. ~ ln order to raise the standard of education in P. E. i. I would-sug- gest that the public school in- spectors appointed nhould hold higher diplomas t-hun tho teachers. in tholWestern Provinces the High Sohool inspectors are almost with- out exception collcge graduates. ~i Thanking you Mr. Editor foi- youi‘ vaiuulble space l nm Sir, die. umou ‘reaches Sir:—~-i have been cniculaiinli wliut the increase on the aivcraflt will be to each teacher from ill! Government's Education Bill. A; shown in my letter yester- day the bill provides for un er pcndlturo from tho Provincial f?‘ venues of $295M To be provided by the Districts 3937' Total $ 24772‘ Last your the Government W!" for teachers‘ salaries $15345! Districts provided 54915 _,_,, $218371 increase $29352 Divide this among 584 teacher! and we have $50.26 or for PM" touching day (210) less than 25* or for each day of the year 14c. Now let us see how the Ml scale works out. Expenditure from Provincial Y? l $2521 venues , To be provided by the 0 Districts - ' B55 vrilou ’ ~ ; 833i Cost inst yeiir" m‘ increase $1195“ Giving.’ an lncreuau pcr tench!‘ of'$204 or 97c u day for each l“ china" day or for endh day °H year of 57c. h, r Surely ho-qo‘ considers ill! Mint ariidiint ofdncrense is 81°F’ slvo. l um, Sir 620., J. D. Shmnn. -€—<6%-—-‘ Mlnard’; Linlmentquras ""5?" \ \ 4i __¢ w: iiiiabiili ‘oqdll at prices we are convinced cannot be duplicated anywhere in either n wheloule or refill Ill’- corn pianos, LIMITED, ~ Wlut we ohf-cuuot but The olden fifllil,bt}b Inigo-at uiQ may: yariodpvgopk, 'g§c9q't_i_oi_ip!l,l,y‘;9pd_ nryigenivg_%-liliffftiv-"gd,