. . 5' at. ; . , f J ~ u , I _. J . . , . j i‘ ' . ls _' s s l- ‘r E . s l” i ll i y. Y.‘ ‘a a t: i 3 “"s""-l'G-'A‘9='ir‘ *".‘-“-":~= scrz~srg =L‘¢-"§:'5"-‘.-.’~‘E$E“"i"‘” TT“ r = u wrrssaf/zra r2‘ "u ‘:- =.:=. _ scrap. PAGE FOUR Tomahawks and Kittyhswks. THE BHARLDTTETOWH GIIMIDIAH lbs-ling Dolly (Isnnlel in Ill?) Presidents Lions, 00L I. Obeeisr l, Isl-Ire Vies Presidnlr J. I. llnrlett I L , n. s. sssssl Aleutisns, ss disclosed recently. The carry 5o men and s. jeep, with all equipment. a massive air-cooled motor. eti- snd latest, Burns". IBJLN-VJ, (0! Active Iorwlrw) BUBUCIIPTION IITI n. s. use psr you; IIM ler I Ionihn drives it. One discovery made by the Canadians is that Canada is not alone in the difficult problem of civilian supply and organization. n; ism In r. [L2] Inr I nlonihsy I00 for one nsonih City Delivery “.00 psr yssrs Il-Oll for I months IL?! for I monthlt No for oso month By lull to other Provinces and UJ-A. 86-00 per sens Inlnrdl! Weelsiyr $1.00 DIP VIII! IIJIO In! I months. u“ '°' ' "°"'“' men place the need at thousands. Many thous- ands of aircraft workers travel to work by private motor car, some of them coming for miles. The gasoline shortage is a. great danger to this situa- tion. Then the U.S. army has taken upwards of 4o per cent of men from aircraft plants. The personnel problems are a continuing headache. The outstanding fact is that the United States has reached s production level that outstrips anything ever attempted or achieved in history. That is what most impressed the Canadian par- liamentarians, who saw some of the sources of U.S. industrial might that is weighing havily in the scale of victory. Mains of The Press The Chnrlottetown flnsrdlnn nsoy be shtninod ll llolsslllnfs News Alsnny, Times ilnnnre, New Iorhs 01d lonth News Agency, Corner ldllh and Washington lonloni Ietrupolltars News l oy, 124! l-‘ssl It. llontrenls J. Ilne l“ Buy 8t, Torontm News Stand Ohntons lnnristr Ottnwn; Wolfe's Nsws sitsnd luslbnry-Dnts Huh Iohse-rn tihop, hlolwion, ll. B. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY. JUNE l0. 1M3 Rural Amenities 'l'he importance of agriculture in our economy nas never been more obvious than at the present time, when food is recognized as a veritable munition of war. Emphasizing this point, the Royal Bank monthly letter notes that at the recent International Food Conference held in Hot Springs, Virginia, methods were diSCHSSfll of ensuring an adequate supply 0f food f0!’ all in the post-war world; yet in every industraliz- ed country in the world the trend during the last fifty years has been away from the farms. Thc percentage of population in rural areas has de- creased steadily. Whereas in Canada at the be- ginning of the century 63.5 per cent of the ‘total population was engaged in agriculture or living on farms, in the census of 194i this percentage had declined to 45 per cent. A number of fac- tors have contributed to this change, including greater efficiency and mechanization of agri- culture which enables a smaller number of per- sons to produce the same or even a greater agri- cultural output. The attractions of higher wages in industrial pursuits and the severe agricul- tural depression of the '30's were also pafllall." responsible for this exodus but the importance of actual living conditions on the farms has not always been given due weight. The standard of convenience in rural communities m Can- ada, as in other countries, is considerable below that of the rest of the population. _ There is scope here for post-war planning on fie part of all the agricultural provinces in con- junction with the Dominion Government. A number of tentative programmes already mcor- porate features that would improve living con- ditions on the farm. The Manitoba plan for "rural electrification, for example, would add to the amenities of farm life as well as to the ef- ficiency of agriculture. “Could not some other plsns," suggests the news letter “be expanded to incorporate features that would provide neces- esry arneloriation in the conditions under which so many inhabitants of our rural areas _ live? Ins-sly it is not beyond the skill of the engineers who are planning for such work as the power ind irrigation projects on the Saskatchewan River to extend their plans to include the pro- vision of running water and other modern con- vsnisn es in rural homes in the adjacent areas of the Prairie Provinces. It has been suggested that the washing and sanitary equipment now in use in Canadian war factories should be sold abroad sfter the war. Perhaps it could find In equally valuable use nearer home." _ In ma; Island province. agfiwltwal Improve nsent is linked inescapably with the problem of butter transportation. Better transportation will only be obtained through better representation of our interests at Ottawa. One instance of this fact would make it Ittikingly apparent. Two full years after the sinking of the "Charlotte- town" we are still waiting for the plans to be completed for another steamer; after which, we are told, we shall have to wait another two or three years before the boat is completed. To expect wise post-war planning for agricultural improvement from governments capable _of such gross neglect of our vital farm interests, 1s to ex- pect the impossible- l0,000 Planes a Month A one-day conference on wartime public rela- tions problems, sponsored by the Illinois Manu- facturers Association, and attended by nearly 500 public relations officials, was held recently in Chicago. Editor and Publisher reports that newspapers were hailed at the conference as es- sential to any company's public relations pro- gramme. The confidence of the press was des- cribed as “a precious asset to any enterprise and we must guide ourselves in such a way as to earn and hold that confidence." Speaking from the standpoint of management Whipple Jacobs, president of Belden Manufac- turing Company, declared the interests of busi- ness are identical with those of a free press. “A free press is a powerful bulwark of the free enterprise system," he said. "Once you abridge the freedom of the press-the freedom to critic- ize and to take issue on any and all questions— our entire system of free enterprise will be on the downhill road to complete regimentation.” He advocated that paid advertising should be continued during the war, even though the manufacturer has nothing to sell the public. He Warned. lwwfiver. against the backfire of over- advertrsing--describing the latter as the kind of advertising that consists mainly of bragging about the company's war effort. - EDITORIAL NOTES- Because of the low sugar quotas the“ now threaten to be sharp gluts of certain fruits. These Will be of short duration, but one of the minor farm problems this year will be a way to pre- serve Canadian crops which ripen quickly and disappear as rapidly. - l Q I I Complaints have been received from many parts of the Province respecting the bad condi- tron of the secondary roads at this season. It is true that the spring has been late, but dragging seems to have been neglected to a greater ex- tent even than last year. The attentiqn of the new Minister of Public Works is called to this mall". which is of more than passing import- ance to our fanners. s s s s Amendment of the Farmers’ Creditors’ Ar- Yallgemenf Act to restrict operations of the act and to pcmnt the right of appeal is recommend- °d byfll} Dominion Mortgage and Investments Association. In a statement entitled "Abuses of Qrblfffl-ry Dcbt Adjustment," the association Flt" 4° Sample cases where boards of review in Western Canada are alleged to have been more than generous Wllh‘ICf:dCi;S' money e Laudatory sketches of the careers of the new Parliamentary assistants, including Hon. Cyrus MacMrllan, appear in the current issue of Can- adian Business. The writer claim; that 0m- Queens County representative would long ago grave had a cabinet portfolio were it not for the act tlisst Hon. I. L. Ralston, Minister of Nat- wml {ffnfl- ilrcsdy sits for s Prince Edward Island riding. It is recalled that he did have s P°flf°ll° 1M8 38°- but that was before the Ben- nctt landslide. A group of Canadian members of Parliament, numbering 5o, visited two great aircraft indus- tries in Buffalo recently. Buffalo is the fighter- plane capital of the world, for nowhere else are fast pursuit planes made so quickly and in such numbers. About 75 per cent of U.S. supply of 1 i i I nil)’ declared war on Great Britain snd 17'3"“ ‘hi! dam» 194°; the French Government left Paris for Tours; Germans advanced go. It is the plane. for instance, thst Canadians sre flying in the Commando is the giant U.S. army transport plane that will The P-47 Thunderbolt is s big fighter, with It uses s four-blad- ed propeller, evidence of the grest power that The Curtiss- Wright company needs 1,000 women each week in its Buffalo plants. Its advertisements for llotss By The Way ._._... Aerial toothache is reported to be TIM World wonid be better if all of us spread around the sympathy we have for ourselves. -Klngst.ou Whiz Standard. .i____ the latest Problem. This ls not to be confused with the aerial headache from which Germany and Italy are lllnfillll- —New York Sun. A substance has been discovered which keeps sharks away from men adrift at ses. It might also be s ails-Infection for widows against heart.- snd high-pressure stock sales- men, —Wlnnlpeg Tribune. l! yon walk you weer out leather; if you ride you use up needed rub- ber; if you sit down. MoNutt wants lb know Why u aren't m the shin- yard. -—Detrot News. Hitler, it is said, is working out the details of a. “European char- ter." Its foundation stones would be murder, fraud, theft and slav- ery, -Ottawn Journal. Some armchair snd typewriter strategists keep insisting loudly that the Allies must deal with the Jap- anese at. once. It does not seem to have occurred to them that the Al- lies have only so many soldiers to d0 several jobs and that in conse- quence, the Jobs must be done in turn, not. simultaneously. What most. of the critics need is a course in one-und-one-nmke-two arithme- tic. —Brnntford Expositor. Since church bells in Holland have been requlsltfoned by the oc- cupation authorities tobe melted down for German war industry, many belfrles have been fitted with klaxon sirens which wnil the hours and half hours. The villagers of Bergambact. however. went a step further. They equipped their belfry with a circular saw to strike the hours. As a hammer hits the saw, the sound ls electrically amplified. announcing the hours with u. "rrigtit- ful metallic din." -Netl1erland5 News. During one advance of our troops, Red Army man Bystrikov w: wounded by a 50mm. mane. The mine, which failed to explode pierced his right shoulder and crushing the right shoulder-bone lodged between‘ the muscles. There was no one available to decharge the mine. Commlssar Mordlnov, of the Fzcld Medical Hospital, decided that the matter could not. wait and instruct- ed the surgeon on duty, B. Pakh- man, to operate at. once andyrc- move the mine. This perilous opera- tlon was safely complctcd, -Russiax1 Ebrsbassey Bulletin. After he had applied to the War- time Priv" and Trude Board for permission ,3 sell a manuresurcader to a. customer. a farm machinery agent. at Norwich, OnL, received notification that by return, mull he must state he specific use for which this customer intends to use the machine." if. is not true that his reply was that the farmer neod- ed the implement in order to lave his family i0 church, comments 1o Brcckville Recorder and Times. The question may seem foolish, but no doubt some of the W. P. and T. B. officials don't. know the difference between a manurespreadcr and an fcecream freezer. - Winchester Press. “l sometimes have a feelini! —ll\ fact, I have it. very strongly -:\ feeling of interference. I have a feeling sometimes that some Zlllll‘ ing hand is interfering. I have a feeling that we have a Guardian bc~ manpower issue. ma! Selective Service. The Minister obtained the port. to the House bu ssnd Munition ‘Thursday Opposition Leader Gray- don had objected _ of debate on the Air Ministers se- port to discuss labor s on the farms because such s could contribute nothing to s. solu- tion of the shortages. but would delay the report of the Labor Min- ister and discussion of the whole But Friday Mr. Kins reported the House that he hnd consul rib Ministers, and decided is G the Minister of labor follow the Defense Mlnlstors. Mr Graydon objected to this ss not be- lng part. of the original, though in- formal, agreement as to the pro- cedure reached in the House. He argued lt would further delay the manpower debate. The Prime Min- ister then suggested that Mr. Howe report ahead of Mr. Mitchell, but that nil discussion of his report. be postponed until bhe House had fin- fished discussion of the Labor Min- ister's statement. Mr. Gruydon objecebed to this also, not without reason. The choice that the House could agree to an in- definite delay of the manpower is- sue, or it could proceed to debate it over the undlgeswd report of the Minister of Mamltlons, War produc- tion is closely identified with man- power. The unqualified statements of Mr. Howe could provide cover for the Minister of Labor b0 hide his embarrassment, There would be no chance of coming back to Mr. Mitchell during the subsequent de- bate on Mr. Rowe's statement, since by lhc rules of the House. "a sec- 0nd debate cannot take place on a question once it. has been discussed and disposed of " The quotation is from Mr. King M. Graydon refused to provide the Minisler of Labor with such cover Hr oblrcted to both proposals, and argued for procedure as originally planned, with the Minister of Labor following the Defence Minister. when the IIPHCIPT of the Opposition refused Kim: announced that Mr. Howe would precede Mr, Mitchell. His de- clsion was made easier by the sup- port of C. C F‘. Socialist Leader Caldwell who, not particularly 1n- Lercstei in manpower problems, ap- parently has hopes of flushing out n scandal in shipshaw power de- velopment financing from Mr, Rowe's report. The delav of the manpower debate ls '0 be ricvlered. But if wisely used b.v the Onoosition it can have ad- vantages. Certainly MTJHOWG 5110111.] be n useful and authoritative wit- ness as to the failure of the Selec- tive Service machinery to functlqn MCOMIHE lo the all-important for- mula of "the rlizht labor in the right Place at the right time." In no malor or important industry has cause we serve a great cause, and that we shall have the Guardian so long as We serve that cause faith- fully." It is Mr. Churchill speak- ing six months ago Until now the speech hos remained a secret But just. Ba it. stirred lJll audience of miners last October. so it. will stir those who read it today, For it is the story of this country's deliver- ance tn 1940. -i.ondon Dally Ex- press. Three hundred million trees, from one-year-old seedlings to three nnd four-year transplants, are ready in the great nurseries of the forestry commission for creatlnz new woods thoughout Britain in the years af- ber the war. An official of the for- estry commission said that whereas before the 75,000,000 youns W895 were 131% each year for afforesa- tion and reforestation purposes it. will be necessary in future to raise many more. He revealed that plans to give the nation a. total acres of forests and woods of 5.000.000 acres are being considered. There are in the country 16.000900 acres of rough and waste land. None of it is use- ful for agricultural purposes, and fighter-planes are tirade in greatly-dispersed fac- tories in the Buffalo area. The planes that the visitors saw were the P—39, or Airacobra fighter, built by Bell Aircraft Cor-, poration, and three models built by Curtiss- Wright Corporation, the P—40 Warhawk, the P-47 Thunderbolt, and the giant C-46 Com- hiando. None of these is a factor in the great air offensive waged on Germany st present. That is a job for the big bombers, such as the British Lancaster or the Boeing Flying Fortress. But the planes seen in production in Buffalo pro- vidccl a graphic revelation of the sources of Am- erican air power, in a war being determined in its shape and possibly in its final outcome, by stocks are held in the Maritime Province; and sir power. The visitors saw plenty to show as a result of transportation difficulties durin the truth of the assertion that U.S. aircraft pro- the past winter shortages have occurred in g ductionhow exceeds-that of the entire Axis. The number of district; of the (jentml province, production of American planes of all types for According to the Government report on farm- military purposes now proceeds at the rate of ers’ intentions to plant there will be p, gli h; 10,000 per month. Single companies produce increase in the potato crop this season but notgas I volume of aircraft equal to that of the entire large as would be necessary to meet the increas- industry in Cflllflflfl ed requirements. Substantial increases are re. Not long ago it was said the airplane could ported from the Maritime Provinces Farmer; ncvcr be produced on moving assembly lines, in Prince Edward Island report an inerea“ of 5 like nulonwhilcs, But Bell Aircraft is making per cent, while in Nova Scotia and New Bruns- Airzicubras (small, fast cannon-equipped pur— wick the increase will amount to 10 per cent A suit planes which have been in action in West- substantial increase is also anticipated in Que- crn Iiurope and If in the Pacific) on moving bcc and Alberta, with smaller gains in the other assembly lines, Wllll a great flow of parts and Western Provinces. A decline in anticipated components reaching the assembly bv overhead plantings is reported from Onfario- the Caflll carriers and cranes. 'I'hcy take shape before one} crop may he as much as 25 per cent lyélgrv nor-mi] (jars, a wrilihle production miracle. but a larger crop of winter varieties will pafli. wards Paris and crossed the Somme; British Adflllhllfy announced the loss of the aircraft carrier Glorious", two destroyers and s. trans. .port ship; British and French troops withdrew 5mm Nmway- 811d the King and the whole N°rw¢glifl Government retired to London where they announced they would coritinue to carry on as the legitimate administration of their in- vaded country. s s s s _ P°fat° °Y°P Prospects for r943 are discussed m the monthly letter of the Royal Bank. Total holdings of potatoes in Canada, it notes are lower than those of last year but the bulk of the substitute for quinine will become It office of the British High Commis- sioner to Canada to advise guest children who have areaohed military age to enlist in tfhe forces of this country. Some of visitors are reaching that age, and their position becomes one fol- eeri- ous consideration. They would, na- turally, be welcomed info the ranks of our fighting services. majority of eases, little persuasion on the part of the High Commis- so f , according to reports to the Amer can Chemical Society, has been found to equal the i short quinine or its synthetic substitute, atmbrine, as s. malaria fighter. It is lntrl ng to envisage the possi- bility that some unknown, perhaps working alone in a secluded labora- tory, may provide the solution which will affect the lives and health of millions. The discoverer of a new famous. --From me Boston Post. is s. friendly gesture for the these long-term I In the sloner‘! office will be necessary. These diiidrven have comported themselves well. They have come to love this country, and they have shown all the qualities of good Can- adian citizens. Everything about. them suggests that they will be only too eager to do anything possible for the Dominion, and it is doubtful if many of them will hang back for a moment from joining up, once they become eligible We have been happy to have them with us, We shall be sorry to see them go. and those who do march away 4n the uniform of their adopted country will carry with them the snms poor! wishes and high tropes as mu lavish- J C to be told why her comer grocer cannot provide her with potatoes for he!‘ family's needs will have to be satisfied with o. rather involved ex- planation. It has les, the fact, that, are entrlely depleted, and s. conflict 3. iretween the ceiling price on pg“. toes for domestic consumption and hi? Open market price for potatoes £311 can be certified for use g5 ket thoroughly puts it thjg my. "Theheurrent due ewhat. h and Qu: M10130], s ort Ontario and to the fact $3133 litglngegicelved are barely guf- wholesslers who have contract; to sfdem-ble percent f eh mlflm be certifigiilaeons seeleednoch dealers are still holding Ptlxljeskin tilt?‘ hope of selling u. r- s a s a m rather than efor ‘ti-Kills Ho?" a‘ seed Its laiigiiltzr with the dsnelrq llflit o the spra , And soyeld the sly with tiny eiouds 0 0V8, And sen-t. you follorwlns the white And crowned your h5g4 “fly {gn- cies. nothing wo Stray nbugiyrrom um old sun ef Betnsnplllgghwlth s. new foolish quiet 50 lltshily I played with those dork memor es mer a es _ Plays slgltmgnlgly. hour with s etrsnqs And 811??"- klflss turned to a little Sclsctlvc Service been able to pro- vgde the right labor as it was need- Those Vanished Potatoes (Ottawa Journal) The Ottawa housewife who wants to do with priorit- local grown stocks One expert who knows the mar- shortage i; m9, b91118 entirely sold, that Maritime ghlp- the requirements of is sou "~- M . i... -- - g -__ 5mm bub city has been siren s an.“ ‘Iwofieniii: re, One of the most inieresiinx T690717 that storage stools are oen- Brie , scientific hunts in the history or siderabiy higher t/han s yenr age Price for Punebusllty-John Mae. modern medicine is under way. which has led to the mmypegon Neill. Hundreds of scientists throughout that potatoes are being heid for g, Qlrollne MeOsbe-Tescher. m; nation have embarked on a huze higher price. Our nuthqrjry "38"" ——i———— programme of search for qulnllw these figures are not realistic will Doc's or 5.4T“! subetltume, the extent or the work be disproved by s more reliable’ esl- ~1- belng indicated by the fact that culation to be issued short y, LONDON —(OF)— 74101‘! ‘Ihfll more than one per cent of the na- Whafg-yer stock‘ the“, m" be in 2,500,000 do: lloe were issued Men's supply of ducks are being used Canada, and or course they are u" m Briloln durlfll Y!" Olldfid as guinea pigs to take test doses for consldemble "e m Prim” mw-zrd Mud; 3L 1941 all sorts of drugs intended to com- Island and ‘New Bmmwm! - ___i__ bat malaria. None of the drugs tried ' - A um’ x mum“ QOUNQIL and back su - . Whether _—*——_-___ ONI: DAY Ibdayd! have been hs/pfly. All lie BY held the memory of you, and waves of pee, ust as a child, senssni the III:- m x’ are fired ofngld‘, mm w." lltilqlilerdléllasdobleeen betrsyed and The Warhawk is the latest of the line of ally offset (his rcducyiorh ed on our own boys. —Windsor Star. Munitions Minister Howe and mt. I woul which the Prime Minister gave was to take the bait, Prime Minister War-ZS Yelars I We“ - l n» tofm- mwnor i: "° wishful" to the interruption The whole valour- Many More The Gre-ek contribute to this \ Mr. Arthur Belcher, the end of the seeding will bring this stock out of storage. if it. actu- ‘ally is there in the quantity sug- gested. is a question the experts would rather not try to answer. In the ion: run it is not unlikely that whatever stocks there may be available will be barely sufficient for priority requirements and that. little will be left. for the ordinary house- hold. Potames will be scarce until the new crop coma. CAVENDISH SCHOOL The following is the report. for the month of April and May. Grade X.—1, Clernmie Simpson; Ethel Moore; 3, Jennie Moore. r VIH.—- , Illgylcl MacNeill; 2, Chesley, Clark; 3 Va Graham. Grade IL-l, John MaeNelll; a, Alley Gra . Grade V.—i, Herbert Moore. Grade IV.—1, Charles Gallant. Grade I11 Bra-i, Eric MaeNeill; il, Wllilu‘ Gallant. Grade III. Jan-l, Vivien Sim - son; 2, Preston Simpson; 8, Hero d Simpson- Grode IL-l, Bessie Moore; 2, A1- vtn MscNeiil. Grads I.—1, Gordon Gsiiartt‘ 2, Gordon ai-sbsm; a, Morley Ciro- LONDON —(OP>- Blr A. Roms- sws-mi Muldsllsr, one of Indls's representatives in the War Cab- inet, and Sir Azirul Huque, High Commissioner in london, have been appointed members of the Viceroy! Oouneli. Ago Today (l! Tb Osnsdisn ' JUNITZIO.’ He.) he 00d ooun r-sttsch between Ooureeiles l!!! R i1. Ail-sir sllsht sdvsnes near Mor bitter mould. —d\\lD9It OUR BRAVEST ALLIES ‘ No greater example of heroism was shown in this Wav- than by the people of Greece in resistingfirst the Italians and then tHe Nazi invaders. Literally thousands of Greek children and adults are starving at this moment. If It Were Not For Canadian llharity Prince Edward Island gave the Russians $17,000 WHAT ABOUT THE GREEK CHILDREN? We warmly indorse this appeal, sponsored locally by the Rotary Club of Charlottetown. Contributions are to be sent to: Charlottetown MGDRE a. Museums IIIIIIIIII11141111111101.1111]! '15; _ Greek nation is now paying for its deeds of Jill I i; Thousands Would Have Died War Relief Fund gives all of us a chance b. noble cause in aid of our gallant Allies. Manager Bank of Montreal, g g l — PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND — NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA wooo ISLANDS, P. E. 1. - cartoon, N. s. M. V. “PRINCE NOVA” “The Connecting Link Between These Provinces” l (DAlLY-SUNDAYB INCLUDED DURING MAY AND JUNE Will Leave Wood Islands Will Leave Caribos 7.00 sun. M” u; 2.30 pun. 4.80 pm. H LUNCHES SERVED NOIUHUMHERLAND mruzms, umrun CHABLOTTETOWN, P. l. l. “Dugfliowlm Professional Cards LONDON- (or) - Qllldnn aren't the only persons pining m u mum of mlfiilaguergiggldiersihGrgvqn- McLeod Q Bentley 1555061,“. g, co,,,,,f,g,gfo, ‘M0221 w l. summer. l. c. I. A. BENTLEY. K. O. lsrristers sud Aiiornoyl-sie Lsw Soldiers, have been hit s stiff blow, but knocked out. They are still col- lecting. I MONEY T0 LOAN 1H Prince Street iiorrelland Company ll. F. AHCHIBALD s ‘ Aeeonntsnh Ilstern Trnst Bnildlns Charlottetown itlatsryrooi . . {will M rub off _ iiusrsstssi isrslsss EYES [XQMIIEII skfsslly nsmi with mo , “m” cusses mm J. S. TAYLOR Are Yon Trosbled Wm‘ onouurrusr nusmsoo m, one oisscx r again? qrfrfmm s . ‘in rr so we hove one of the besi I mssbbesiifsriiiiiisn“ remedies to offer, nsnseiy, __._. .. _ g 5A6 K R" E u. r. McPhee 5.4., n.0, T A B l‘ E T s ssnsrlbl-i-Tsiusoficnos ....""'-"r... an "'” '~""""' °"""“"“" Insenisr snd other forms of PALMER Gs HASLAM '"""""‘“"" "“°" s. s. sssmu s. s u. I- trestnsnts fsil se reseb. 3 m“ lira mew-e "~'".~.'.-...':...'-s-r"' 1n: mo uses --- -=‘°""' '° w" BELL 6 MATHIESON l0 Greet George Street. NONI! ‘l0 LOAN "-" Miv...<.=::.::- "rm