t 1 _ it 1" té' t ~ a .st ti A T 1 t 1” ..~_.. »§.,., l 3 [_ t ti ,I t T11 ty- `.,»;,t t t it » i it 5. s t t s aa . i at ; 7 L6 . ,_ l,’$‘_f’:~‘ .t qyq-w»-~t_ -Q ,_ s. ._ ,, _.ptr- 1 ‘ f t ,Is F: .-xi .~ ' t <11-Q'-` , - 'lr (.5 _ - AGE FOUR \ 5;. _ ' _ _ , #M _ _ MAY 11. 1920., 1 fy. t .- '11-|`. A. A. buisn. |-"Que-¢. J. tt. u-»»¢n. lima ne renun- _D. K. Currie. Auoclttut Einar. r .v_ _ _ .- __ ~ _ -_ I Ionu; nttny tt.-ntiff num uw ner nn urfllnndi in nvmqatt 11.3 per 71-nr (-nllrd. In Idvunro-. In (Jllulm and U3-H0 la! U. K- A- `””`”`° -°"_ ' ' '“' ” " _ _ ` _ Y 1‘1111l'" 1111113’ W1111 1110 1110151 l11`01\111’~'t,|,e ,,.,.mS me Amps will |"w0_“,lgi'nittiitise ends. Une mtty mt-ntion _ ag contpllint-nts and unrt-set'vt-tl ttpiupon Tu|_kL_y Wm not bo mwaled Km, }|uss,.m_ (;,»,m,| gp,.,~,.,q- 0, .g-T-t=m__ ___- Y ~~° * ' Jprovai of their popular seltetnos of' for a ‘ew days' Muslaplm Kemal Mecw_ n ,]h.,,(_, ,|,,,,,_,,n,|"n, 0| t ' . .. . V A _' _ ' M' ' _ I _ un ' . . - .1 . , ' ' _` ' ' tl I \ll( lt \l0l!\ BIRDS Dl~( l§iI0\ In view of the question which has arisen in the provincial legislature over the Migratory Birds Treaty between the United States and Britain it is interesting to itote that the question catne up recentlyl in the Sttpreme (`ourt of the United States. Ingivlitg, the 'opinion of the court, Mr. Justice Holmes said in part that this was a bill in equity brought by the State of Missouri to prevent a game wa1'den of the: United States front attempting to enforce the Migra- ory Birds Act ofJul\' 8,1918 and the regulations made by the Secretar_\' of Agriculture in pttrsuance of the satne. The ground of the bill was that 'the statute cttitttottttowtt ttuittntitt' ° ° CURRENT COMMENT '|`[y|||g '[0 Rgvwg l I ..T.“‘;::;°:.':.:;';.‘;";.:°:;;: ;f..._::;t l`l1e Arabian Empire a scientific survey ot public opin-i \ _ T hm' F“"'"e"s me °"°w““"g im°_ms, Although the complete details of "‘x‘"1°” P“"1’l°` °“ the street on Pasha has not waited to denounce the toutes ot ttavel and titltetevemurem “Hmm whnm he holds A88 met tue entttplutt-tl with the mens lponqmle lm “bout mel) dlmstm me “nd "nh “w“"mg “n umm' that has belnllen the Neat Fast in ' M 1° Tlmw "wh T\NGlm‘E cluding the inttssttcres of the Ai- -rtttitude at the polls. The lax bill: memuns and me pmgue_ ue "__ is such “ benemmlun mm wuenlntains one otithe most irreconcil- 'he pe°1’l" 51'”“k in the lanwage "[1 able ot' Britt\ln's enetuies and is re- lte ballot, the Government and its wgmzed as thaheud or me Tul_k_ °:“1)1'“"“"" will bo 'riu'"1’h"m|y ish Ntttionallstlc titovt-ment. This “rt-turnt-ti wltltout tlet-iinlnation.". is 3 more "mbmuus mnwnwm “ms 51"""“"U' ln" Colm `]"'su'r' tltait tlte name implies, since wltat ,. nm “mwhow or another mow; lt uittts at is nothing loss than tltc ' _ ' '; uniting ot all Turks and .1\t-abs on l'l""S"n_' voice” mn I0 much omlrtliexzoittitton platform ol' .\loslem urs. \\ itat wt- tio lit-ai' has at closeri umi_Hm_0pBun so,m“rny_ His Cm" _~t-:at-titliltint~e to the runthlin;-,s, not must not be umh_l,_`_sliumled; his t it tlistaitt but tt itt-:tt-by and most , h;m_(_d 0,- “|l4_:u,_0m,m,s_ and (_Sl,c_ t. was an ttttcoitstitutional interference with the rights »'t1llNwnlI\g lhunqhr or dis°‘"""""1 -11-111' 1110 Bt-11isit.wttu have brouttitt dattt done .ind thteatened under that authority iii vaded the soteteigtt right of the state attd cotttta vetted its \\ill tttattttested in statutes The state also, alleged a pecttttiztry interest, as owtier ot' the wildl birds witltitt its borders and otherwise. A motion toi dismiss was sustained by the District Court on the' ground tltat tlte act of Congress was constitutional. The State appealed. ' -The judge explained the history of attd the reas- ons for tlte treaty between the United States and Great ltritaitt, proclaimed by the president on De- cember S, lillti. The treaty stated that tnany spec ics of birds in their annual migrations traversed malty pat'ts of the United States attd of Canada that were ot' _tg't'eat value as a source of food and itt destroy- ing insects iitjttrious to vt-getatiott bitt were in dang- er ot' cxtertttittatiott tltrottglt lack of adequate pro-| tectiott and agt'eetl that tlte two powers would take, or propose to their lawntiakittg bodies, the necesssary nit-;tsitt'es tor carrying out the treaty. The above men- tiotted Act \vas accord_ittgl_v passed on July 8, 1918 to give eil'et-t`to the treaty. This Act prohibited the kill- ittg."'eapttti'ing or selling ot' any of tlte migratory birds ittt°lutle;l in tlte terms oi' tlte treaty except as pertttitted by regulations compatible with those terms. The question before the court was whether the treaty and statute were void as an interference with the rights reserved to tlte states, The cottclud- ing paragraph of tlte discussion sums the Whole case up as follows: “Here a ttational interest of very nearly the first magttitttde is involved. It can be protected only by tial iottal action in eottcert with that of another power. Tlte subject matter is otily transitorily within the State attd has tto pt-rmattettt habitat therein. But for the treaty attd statttte there soon might be no birds for any powers to tical with. We see nothing in the Cott- sittttion tltat compels tlte Government to sit ‘by while 2. t`ood sttpply is cut _off and the protectors of our for~ ests and our crops are destroyed. It is not sufficient to rely upon the States. The reliance is vain, and, were it otherwise, the question is whether the United States is forbidden to act. We are of opinion that the treaty attd statute must be upheld." , reserved to the state attd that the act of the defett- ,S um, ,My ,ww ,,,,.m,,e,, us mm. l .tltiltli 'l‘ll.\N s\'.tll’.\'l‘ll\' Nlililil-Ili. If the taxation measure now' slowly passing through the legislature has no other effect--after it has got through with the taxpayers--than develop- ing the sytnpatliies of the militant legislators it will not have been inflicted in vain. The sympathy ex- pressed by the Liberate members for the poor tax- payers whom they are obliged to thus afflict is really pathetic, often sufficient to bring tears from the eyes even of a politician. They would, they declare, make the tax lighter, if they could; they would take off one of the three different poll taxes, if they could for they know how heavily these various burdens will fall up- on the poor, but etc., etc. If, instead of this maudlin sympathy, some member on the government side of the House would explain to the “poor taxpayers” why it was necessary to plunge so heavily at the first jump, why it was necessary to make the tax burden so extremely heavy, it would be more highly appreciated by the taxpayers. This has not, so far, been explained. No estimate has been given of the revenue required, no account has been given of the financing, the con- tracts entered into, or the jobs let by the government during their four months in office. No idea has been given of the new ofiices to be created that will necessi- tate a tax of such proportions as is proposed. They have given only one estimated guess, the extra expenditure on schools and that has been shown to be something like $70,000 too big and they haye not contradicted it. Some explanation on ‘these points would go a long way fttrther than the wordy ;ymtp:_tth_v, the “dentists cottsola-tions” that “i't won’t ur . ‘A I-Rt<:t»..\tttxo 'rtiit i-‘.\tt.ut~:its roit 'i‘.\x.t'|‘toN “Preparing the farmers for taxation". This was the favorite headline in the Patriot previous to the last election. Every move of the Arsenault Govern- ment was translatetl by the Liberal organ as a “prep- aration” for additional taxes. Had the organ prepar- ed the farmers for what its party has since imposed, instead of imposing it without preparation, as they have done, the Liberal party would today be enjoy-` ing th_e co_mfortable shades of opposition instead of the blistering “seats of the mighty," which they have 'made red hot for themselves. he mg dlmcnny' “E one re"mrk"1'1crashing down the 'i‘urltislt Etttplt-rt, lit- trap anti have us by the tltruitt.l _________,_i_,__~_________ \itulht-l' asks what will the people' |07 will Hwy go ln in ,,,,,,_,s ,md art- so insensitive lu dt-ct-nt~y ttntl _,huh ,hem Ou, by bmmy fm.,,,,-_yi ltonor as to violate tht-ir most sac- ;,-,,,.,,m,,,,.|5- we H,-,. nm “ying invrt-tl pledges and proittises to the pm. ,-,,.m,,w,.|H,,n l,,.,.i0d ,md Um. mp, people will not ltesltttte to contittlt vztitced civilization and respect lot'|11“* 1\11`111¢‘-1` 11110'-'11i' 0|' 011811 11011' law and lawt'ttl ttiethotls ol' action' ““‘f0» 111111 *\11SW\‘1' 1110 \'111€1`S W110111 Wm n,.u|,~,,|i,_,. ,hp ,|,,n._:,.,. 0| ,, they doped and duped, “Wltilt we ,p.,,,,,nS|m|i0n 01- ,ms m,|u,»,,__:ltttt'e we'll itolti.," l’ei'clt:ii\ce tltcrt- 'l'ltere is tlte constitutional methodi 11111)' 111? 11 1111111011 111W W110 W0111<1 .ind the people should he given full: l'1'*’-1'€1` 10 l11l1‘S\l0 the course ol' ltott~ ,,,,,0,-mngly ,O ,.x,.,-,.|S,. HH. ,-ighlsl or at the request ot' their constitu- ot :t ttet- govt-rttittg t~mttitttinit_\'_1¢‘111S~ SUC11 111111111 f‘\'1'11 1111101 11 -1-|,,.y |,,,\»,, me ,.;g|,| ,O ,|,.|,.,.,,,me§ transient t'ever.~te, bitt their action l|,,.,,- “Wu R,-,.,,| lmhlic `q,,,.,_,|;,,n__,§ would build l'or tht-ut it tttonumt-itt ttitd no ptirt-t~l ol' atlvonttirr-rs t'an|‘11'111\l101`ltélltlhie l`iiutt-. with impunity set aside tht-it' dt-c-| ~"~~ ' i:'.ioits_ in ittttttistttltt-able lttngtitti-t-1 "Tito “'l`axution :\1fl." 11l1111`1 1111111 -_md in ,,w,.,.|,in,; |,,;,j,,|-ities tppyt any question ol its lit-ini-_ tit-edt-tl at ,.,,|,.,t _,mr |,,,- ,, |,,m,| ,,|- ,,,,|m,»,,|tttll, has many lt-tttut-es whit-h :tit- |wi,,|,.,,;_ pm my ||,,. p|(.,,,~|_\- lipnnfqti cititiit-tl ln iliiquity. The t'oliiitit-t'c- pt.ttt~y titttt wtttt tttttl tit-tortt tttettt 1111 1-'twcllet' not 1'c»-111-111 in the .\utl that pttliry was dlattiotricall_v l11`11\'11\(‘¢* F1111 C2111 1111 l1'1‘1l\1\*1111)' 1111 t»ppost»tl to the' 'l‘AX.1\’l‘ltiN mess 11# rrlltlotrcs sf-llltls solids l`t'vcl.\' itow ht-ini; dished otit to them. W11110111 1117411111111- /\ 11111 WHS 1111* ' ...__ lpottetl on these hy the late l’eter'tt 'ppp |,,~,,|,,.,~ c,,n,,|;|u¢pm,,| m¢»|||.1tiovernitteitt, which was taken to otl tit for tht- ttovtwntttent to ttppt-ali the court-t and the case went to the people. You t-ottltl not and tttuaaitisl the r.<>\'e1'nittt-tit both on legisltttlvp- body in the ctviliztal trial and appeal. lt wits in essence wot-itl totitti' wlm wottttl ttttntt ot'|=»'u unitoiiulur that lt was 1'-|1111-1011. pursttlng any other t-out-st-_ littt Now the outside traveller is to be t|,(,¢.,¢. pmtiett ,tm f-ontmttttd by lett severely alone. Hut the Cout- statt-sttten ,anti tltat kind ol' titatet'<'11\r‘1‘C_lt\l 'l`t'ttveller wlto is one ot our tttt ts t't>rt~tatt to ottr tit-tt tzotttttttr cltlzt-ns. who lives :tml stir-iris his ation. You couldn‘t Und it semb- itioiit-_v tttttottitsl us and wlto in ltis_ tance oi' sttttestttttnsttip in any part ttcrsoit and t»rotw1'1i' 111111111 itttrl lit' tit the aggregation. Ut' course, it and contributes .to the building up would result in disaster to tltt-and u|iltc\°l1 01' 11111' <'11\11111`Y. 11111111 (-ir(-|,>_ and they are not disposed lol bt- taxed to tht- lllne ol' $150. Could 'ttlopt ||||g yttt-lhtitl ol' suicitie. llet- htiitttirl l'.1’nitis t-ont_'<-i\'t- it raiilter ter await the otficial execution at, lnittstice to tltost- tttvii wlto art- ot' tht- prt-scribeti time. No tnattt-r 'by sut-lt value to our t~otitittunity'.' Why what method they got tht-re, they put this alittosr ptoltlliltotgv iittpos- art- in possession anti do not pro ltion upon them to tlrlvt- tht-ut out pose to relinquish until lite;-y are o|` the l11'0V11lL‘<“.’ aoutpt-lied io. _ l [ ~_Y.._ _\ law :tbitling people, no mattt-r` Ot' course it is not politic tor ltow severly their rights are tram- tho (lovt-rnmt-nt to let out the ptari ¢m_ must not in tim ctmstltu-, whole truth about the tax on Fat-tit tional way. The fact that they ltnvfi; Laitds, any iitore than to let out tlte been tttost sltaittc|`ul|y tleeelved will! lttcts its to' the t-ountry’s ilnances. nm ,./muse tmpmp,-;,t|y on their; it ls it butchers rult- not to ttgilatte part, anti no matter ltow great tht-` thc H1001( 100 11111011 .1051 1101011’ 1110 indignation, let them exltiblt thel slaugltter. It sometimes spoils the best quality ot’ manly citizensltlpq meat. l'nder cover ot” the old war t-ven when their rulers tall, .\feet-1 lax. (not n0W in l`01'c0-- 1119>' 111' 10 ings have been suggested, to be; claim their halt per cent rate does called in the various constituent--‘not atnount to double llte present les, where the public could com-t lax. ’l‘liat is not`so. The actual anti mand their representatives to act! only tax now collectable on it $6,001) tpon ttte mttnttttte given to them or! t'tit'in is $12. N01 it farllrirte more. in default to resign and seek st' l'ntlt=.t- the new TAXATION ACT tnandttte to accord with their pres- ent course: There is ti strong tfltanee tltat most nt' thcnt would tiely the demands ol” their constitu- ents ln this respect.l’olitlcittns wlto i Daily Selectitinsmmi . Guardian Readers Furnished by W. B. Lcllioll ooo-ooo-o-oo-0-ooooa-‘Q04-O0-4-O OUT FISHIN' (By E. A. Guest.) ”A teller isn't. thinkin' mean, Ottt llsttln'; _ His thoughts are mostly good an' c van, Out flshln.’ ite rloesn't knock his fellow men. Or harbnr ttnv arutlges thf\n'; A fellow’s nt his finest when Out ilshln.' The rich are comrades to the poor. All brothers of it common lure. Out ilshln.' The urchin -with tlte pin nn' string (‘an chunt with utilliontilro an' king; , Vain pride is it forgotten thing. 0\lt iishin.' A ft-ller has no time fer hats, ()ut il:-hin.' He ls-int eager to -be gr:-at, tlut flshin.' He isn‘t thinkin’ thoughts of pelf. Or goods stacked high upon it slit-lf, ilut he is alwavs lust hlmstelf, Out flsltlnf A fellt-r'a glad to bo n friend, _ Out .flahin.' A ltelpln’ hand ht-‘ll always lend Out tlshin.' The hrntltr-rltootl of rotl rm' line /1n' skv and stronin ls always fine; Men trnttte real clost- to (iod's de- sign, Out nshin! 1 tlte rtttc is $30. Not tt iarihing less. A positive indlsptttalile 'in- creiist- ol` $18. I I t t ,___ _ s Hut this does not cover the act- ual increase. Farms hitltcrto have been taxed at very low valuations. They ntust now be assessed at “their ACTUAL CASH VALUE." The Assessor itliall not “adopt its tt critt-rlon ot' value tht- price lor which the.sttltl property would st-ll by auction, or at it t'orced sale." That would not be blg enough per- haps for taxation purposes. it must be what the Assessor considers the actual cash value. Then tho fnrntor must ittuke.tt return as to its itclttttl value. und il' he wlltully underval- ues his property to the extent ot' it ten dollar blll he becoittes liable to it penalty ol' "not less than twenty tlollttra and not exceeding one lttiiidrt-d dollars,” and in ndditiott "one ltundred per. cent." adds-d to his tax bill, with luiprlsoninent i`or non-pttyntent. The Governntent claim is that this increase will only ttntount to about $50,000 on l`nrm lands. llut let any eoltttnott 'st-nse school boy higure it out. Our ,island is called the “Million ucrtt It`arnt." Lands have been selling nt l'roni $400 an acre riownwmtls. Av- erage one million acrt-.s at $50 tin at-re and you have $50,000.00tl. This ut one half ol' one per. cent. ri tux ot' $25tl,tllltl. Every fnrnter ln the province has u lair idea of land vitlut-s. If our iigurt-s, either of quantity or value are loo ltlph, then cut. both down to the lowest point and see where the tax bill lands. Instead ni' double the prett- ont taxes it can easily mount itp to five times what the tarmer pays to- day. .Ar:tli, as with lfttropt-:tit nations, it nobody is tn danger ot' under- - _ estimating. Tlic-re are no other lac- ' ' ` tors ot' lmportttnce in shaping al- fairs in Pttlnstlne. Mesopotamia and Syria that exist independently of lllustnpha Kt-mul, biit which he is t-iitletttioi-ing to eltitpo to his own Bargains Mnltontt-l Emil Fel-.il his son, who has been pioclaitttoti l\ing ol' Sylia, and tlit- ntoveitlt-tit to rev- i\t- the old \|.ibi.tn 1`niptte _ Arabs and Nationalism What, promises to bring Musta-_ phn Kemttl's plans to nougltt ia the lact that the Arab is without it sense o|` nationalism. lit- lacksit as coitiplt-tely as tt Quaker htcksi it-i'ocit_v. The .-\ritb is as rr-tidy to die lor his religion as any man; but ite has it hazy itlt-:i about his own nation. llis brotltt-i' is his fel- lo\v-liollt-ver. ~ llis t-nf-tity is'his brother who ht-coiitt-s tt Cltrisllan. This would seein to indicate that the Arabs might. work ltartitonious- lg, with the Turks who are ol` the saute l'altlt, bitt the fact is that the .\ralis hart- long htttt-tl the Turks _ __>_ as their opprt-ssors. 'l`ht-_\' never `___-- ""1 ackno\vlt-tlge Tttrltislt so\'t-t't-lgnity _ ily in .\ralii:t and intlt~etl it nt-ver was e-stablirtlietl as i'e;:urtis sonic ports anti tht- t-.hiet sltrittes. The ltlnterland rt-ittainetl lit tht- ltands tit' tht- vrantlering Arabs who paid ito taxes anti tttlntittt-tl no law save that ol' their t-ltit-trains and their rt-ltgitiiis supt-riors. it wits lit-cattse tht- t\rabs. are at heart \vttntlt-.rt-rs that tht- grt-:tt Arab t-tttplre totintl- t-ti ity .\l:tltontet began to disinte- gritit- allttosl t`rottt the liittt- ol' its liirlh. Thr-lt, as ttow, rt-li_t-,lon and ttot itzttioitttlity vrttr about tht- oul.\’ intt-rt-:tt tht- Arab sltaretl with all other Arabs. .\ ;@1L@)©©)©©@©@@ C5 dawn Praise for Allenhy ’.1\lt4nut|tot'it,\' uitolt sticlt tttztltt-ts is lltilip Marsltttll ilrowtt, titwttessttt- _ ol ittteritational law in l't'ittt~t-ton . Catalogs Lett for FREE Distribtttiott. Act Quickly if you wish to tttatie sure of Secur- l'i\i\'t-|‘:tity. lit- has :Apt-nt ::t~\ci‘a| . _vt-:ir:: in the Nt-:tr i-last, part ot' the 1) tltttt- tit the .\|tt~-rit-:tit t-ttilta:ts_\' at ,I Cttnslititlltitiplt- :tittl tltt- rt-at iritli ltortl Ailf-nhy in l':tl<-:tliiit-_' lit hiv I opinion one of tht- tititest strtiltt-t: til` 'A1 v tliplotttttt-_\' in tht- war was that ol` f‘) tht- l!t'iti>:lt wht-it iltt-_v twtist-tl the .-\i':tli.-= zirilittst tltt- 'l`titl<~z: tltv ttto~'.t ltrillittttt tt-:tt ol' :iruts ol tltt- war was Allt-lili,\":: t':tiit|t:tl:-tt. :tittl l.ortl Allenby lit- t'c;-,:t|'\ls as lin- i-i't-:tlest _ gt-tit-ral dt-vt-lttpetl in tht- \vai'.\Vltt\t lit- tltiuhts is wlit-tlit-i' tht- spirit ol' 5)) .\'t'altian liationaiirtiii wltirlt the ltritisli wt-rv :tltlv to t'itt¢:t- in ortlt-r to ttlrn thu .-\|‘iihs :tvitiitsl their lout: tt|t|i|'t-ss10rtc1'11» T111-ry ¢11~ further atdvancoll ract- politicallyi01-111115 11113 1-119 T“"k- “lm” dum' than the itelcltburing Arabs. 'l`ltt-_v,1‘l1C95 11@1W991'\ 3111111" “nd Fran" are not noiuatls; tht-y itntlt-rstand|10 1'1l1‘111e1` 111911' ends- "nd “re ST' tlte setttimt-itt ol' ttatiottality, ttntl,1`1111< UP me Arabs 1° d“’"““d that while it they are to hart- any l<}ti1"]°V°"y 1110111159. explicit or httplietl, opt-an nit-ittor tht-_\' would pt'et`ei',11111d0 by Uriluill, shall be currictl France, they have an idea that they : 0111 10 1118 letter without regard might thrive best independently. 1° French 1111919515- The SM Remo So they are using the Mitltoiiietan 1 9011179191169. however, shows thu! .\i':tbs as 1.-:twtts in the ganit-_ 'i‘lte_\'iB"1m1” and Fmnm are nm to be appointed the Arabian Feisal as tdlvmed- and it “sms Hkely that their king, and lett the develop» -the whme c°n51’1"a°y in A51” Minor will fail. Iletore an answer in the negative can be given it will be necessary that certain condlctlnt: 'clttittts be-. tween France and Arabia shall be settled. N0 fewer than tour docu- ments or ti't-alles were concluded between Great Britain and Arabia and Great Britain and France l'rom lill5 to l9l8. tirt-at ~Britaiii, ot` course, would be willing to accept. :ttty cottiprotitise arrivt-d at by the other two parties to' the ttgrt-t-- ments; but supposing that Arabia th-tttztnds tltat (irc-at Rrttltttin shall ttilill one protttist-_ `wltlch I<‘t~aitct- may insist runs contrar_v to it proutlse Britain made to France? ln the nnnl document one notes the words, "spltet-es ot' influence" in- stentl ol’ “zones," which appeared in the former. The recent prnclum- ation ol' Syria as an lntlttpf-ittlcnt nation, with Emir Felsal as king, contplicittes matters, for 'Syria was ttllritetl tn France. The Syriana, np- pttrontly, are not sttttshetl with any status short nl' iittlt-pt~ittlt~nt-e. lltit llritairl :intl I-‘rant-e ttgrt-t-d that Syria should ht- l~`r<-tit-lt, :tml in lhc ettillt-st rt_t'_i~t-etttt-nt ht-tween lirltaitt .anti Arabia thcrt- is the re.-tt-i'vittlon "except wht-n Llrltltlti was not tra-t~. tire and tube. tube. , .._\`\\\\\ 1 lt __` Q 1 5 boobs 1/ EKIDNEY \\\\\\ Chevrolet-Ford-McLaughlin-Briscoe Second Hand Cars 1...). .ii -_.__?_?.__.. 1 Ford Touring, 19.18 Model, thoroughly overhauled. 1 Chevrolet F. A., 1918 Model, used only one season. 1» Chevrolet Four-Ninety, 1919 Model, with spare I Briscoe Special, 1919 Model, with spare tire and 1 McLaughlin Light Six Touring, 1918 Model. These Cars are all in perfect running order and can be seen at our Auto Showrooms. . -4" - -' ""“~-'~*'=‘ t t -Q » 4 90000000000-0° ,:>-oo-<::::::_ t o tr :::1»-oo¢::__ t _n___.._.___._.____._.t i,,; __,_,i._i..`l..t.-`.~ ~ A. Hott iss. co.- 11) 1 \ T/ »t,,\K\|\D\rs;§ Otsf( p, _ 1- F. - 55 L1 1 --<1--."-.~~. 2; fc =t"t'it' -‘uid . .",_z Q... ¥2_ l11 ? 5 I J ' = `+m h»M»m +»»»N*""" ,.4 . 1 ._..:*»tt.,...--'-'.1f‘»'fr ' ~ Studebaker and Chevrolet Dealers 1 -tt itotit/tit's. `