l; i 15* TIIE . t tflllllLllTTiltlvfll GIIMIDIMI ‘j flanks] Dilly (Founded Ill Ilfl) zLl Lfiol-Wch ter-KMtiI-uro "i. "wfsil. llisst: a. v. 13:11am r44." so ' '; -‘ DJLMtseKlnnun “mt”, um“ “biracial-t J. n. our-ism. F-J-l snk Walker and Llent. lsn A .V.B. (On Actlvs Service) “The Strongest Memory i‘ flwak" Th" i the Weakest Ink. WEDNESDAY, mzc. 29. I943 The Rocket Bomb Again this tuck the RAF mill Lllllwfl Slam?’ hottihers were reported to ltarc struck at uiys: tcriotis targets iii the Pas de Lalais area_0i France, blasting for the fourth 0r fifth ttttie a strip of territory now termed the “ROClfCI tjun Coast" in tlte belief that it harbours tn< Mhltntiott. of tlte taunted new Mill 303ml weapon" According to a Lreriiititr report, ruc- ket guns ltaye actually been used tn a Chattnel duet between a [iffrlllafl convoy and British lottg-rziiige ltzitteries. 'l‘|iere is ntucli speculatlitni lll lllllilllllll “W7 tl.c l'llllI<It'L’\l \\t‘ill)tlll. Scientific experts are usu- ally divided in opinion, and the ballistic experts are m, QxL-plylitqp 'l‘l1ey do not agree as to the putotttjtltir of the rocket llttllll). Nevertheless. ,;,\-_c I, 1_.,n.l,,tt \‘\tl'l'c‘.~]\tl|l\l1'lll, the weight 0t .,~,.tpi11'i,- t\|l|l|lti]| \l‘(.'lll.\ to taitot" the \'1t\\' llllll. “hptiiqt or not the Lierniaiis hate actially de- veloped an effectite long-range rocket bomb. sitch development is highly probable at some tiine or other. The rocket bomb is propelled llltlll it.» oun tail. so to sitczik, and the view is that stitii propulsion tuay gain uuineuse nio~ ttienttiut and therefore distance, as the fvfihel bomb attains stratospheric altitude. \\e are told a rocket motor weighing four ottnccs, and nu lti-r-ret‘ than an egg, could send a l.t lb. bumli :0 tuiles in less lllilll 70 seconds. One Utétiilfll‘ scientist claimed before the trar to have con- structed a rocket motor which developed 200 h.p. This might send s 50o lb. bomb 2o miles. But Uertuanfs problem is how to propel a to-mn bomb 130 miles. lt might be dotte, but with wltat degree of _aiin is uttcertaiti. \\'hat is certain is that it has not yet been P059515- Otherwise the Get-mans would have done more than talk about it. Closer Empire Relations Practically every CaniidilflJlYl Pl" Flmllclal Post, will agree with the contention of Lord Bennett, that the revolutionary Changes lllal hnve taken place in the world of transporta- tion and communications, call for consideration q} prepent Empire governing machinery. Up to the present official contact between Britflm and the Dominions has largely depcndfid Oii periodical Empire conferences and occasional visits of high officials. With Ottawa new loss than I4 _ll°\l_l'l lwm [moon pd g corresponding reduction in travel- ling time with the other dUlTIlIIIOIlI and colonies, Lord Bennett srgues that the Old Pl'°¢°_d“" l5 pot flexible nor speedy erwiixh w COP: with P"- ssot problems. Recently the Post salted a If“? °l l'°l>1’"°ll' htive Canadians vdriether they fpvored the "nomination of s representative body to fortitu- lute British Commonwealth policies on rnattcis of common interest.” While the matority re- plied that more frequent consultation between member's of the Empire was not only desirable but now quite feasible, several believed that ex- isting machinery, namely the parliaments of the various countries and parliamentary committees could and should handle that work. _ It is a fact, though not always recognized, @1131 git present means of transportation and CflllllillllllCallflflS, the calling together 0f a {Irwin of latnpire statesmen, in London or elsewhere, involves less physical difficulty than that of s provincial caucus 50 year! IKO- And 1f W! R0 back s little over a. century, we would find that sunte members of a. cottntrv council lost more tizue ionrncyitig to their littk: tneettngs than would their grandsons today in flying to Lon- do'1—0r to Ottawa, Pretoria, Wellington, Carl- berra, since the Commonwealth has more than one capital, Conlrolliitg [he Locust People of the Middle East had for cen- ttirzeg accepted locust depredations as fatalisti- " lr a~ ~T\ll(l\liJl'lllS and (lrottghls. ltt the lilnt Ptlllbl cycle, i930. an estimated 53.750000 dint age was done to Middle East crops and people wcre ltroitgltt to starvation. Discovered by Bri tisli scirrtttists, those cycles move in a series of decades; therefore, i940, when the British Mme/l a Middle Eastermcampaign, was thl beginning of a new swarming cycle. Hithertd the countries of the Middle East took purely local action against locusts, but locusts havl no respect for national boundaries. The area nrer which the locust swarms must be treated as .1 u-hnle: the British therefore are able til bring advantages never before known. Th1 brain of world anti-locust work is Anti-Locust Centre. London, where the wrorld’: expert! forecast lncttst tnm-etttrtit. Under London d3 rection MESC set up tuobilc anti-locust units London forecast chief locttst breeding areas as Arabia and Baluchistan. British locust of- ficers inimediatelv proceeded to Bahrein 0n Persian Gulf, jedda on Red Sea, and Central Arabia, to most inaccessible districts, where cars had never penetrated. R.A.F. recon- naissance, and Army Camel Corps showed where locusts were breeding; their directions were followed by Pioneer Corps who by rush- ing military transports to danger areas with poisoned bait destroyed untold millions of lo- custs. British authorities spent £30,000 in lncitst destruction in Persia, Arabia, Ethiopia, in addition to local government expenditure and saved crops worth millions. The locust can be. permanently defeated if international organ- ization is undertaken. This has been started bv m; Rritish with rraiottal conferences in Cairo, Tlhflflfl lfld Nairobi» ‘mghhngh _, ,. ffiwfthflijnss .s. w EDITORIAL NOTES .-. The January thaw was ahead of scliciliilfl. and now the lengthening thus are witlt us. i U i l! Mayor Holman is being rcqtiisitiottrd to num- illillt: for a third term at the lif-‘llttlilly ¢lvl¢ election. n a a u The IZ-sided Canadian nickel of chromium steel, to be issued in i944, will be white and shitty, easily distinguished from copper coins. The previous iz-sidcd nickel, of copper and zinc alloy, resembled a copper coin in all but shape, and was s confounded nuisance to handle. u is a u - Here is Sir Bernard Montgomery's (new Coiutmittder-in-Chief of the Mediterranean) idea of a perfect soldier: "At his best he is be- tween 23 and 30, led by a company commander of about 35 and a brigadier under 4o. He can lire on bully beef and biscuits indefinitely, sleep wet iu ditches or on the moor, march till he drops, then titarclt again. \‘Vheti he is complete- ly exhausted he will again titarclt. And their he will fight." i i U i The itiistfilie of trio tuany of otir reformers says zi ClllllC|ll]lt\I‘lll'_\'. is their propetisitv to put tlic cart before the ltorst‘, to coitccrn themselves with superstructures instead of with founda- tions. The only foundation for social security —ihe only real forni of social sectirity —is Cllle lll“\‘lll('llll itilis. \\'itltout that. without iueti and women working at the production of itealth, meaning more national income and more pur- chasing power, there can be no social security for anybody. Social security has to be bought llY national income. By the creation of wealth. lillill is why Jobs and work uttist conte first, so- cial secttritv plans afertvards. It is a case simply of there being no magic trick to distribute in- come which does not exi§t_tQ pull ourselves up by our bnotstraps. I i i i The Qttau-a Journal, discussing the proposed chfm-l" l" ll" Kmfl Government descredits the report that Mr. Ian Mackenzie will bewme Clerk of the House,butsayssh0ulditbeso,his successor more than likely will bg D1 Ajqfmm of South Renfrew. “Dr. i\IcCann," it says “has Pee" a 200d member of_Parliament, competent glmflw HOA-tsc gar out of it, and,_besides. he has Ion" G t_ reshold of a Cabinet post for so v t‘! ¢ 8S figuratively wom out the door-ntat. If now, when the storms are gathering, he should get an eleventh-hour promotion, no one scold Objfltf, and no one be hurt. especially if e went to Pensions and Health. But we wouldn't want to bank on it." n: n- ‘: w St. Catherine's Standard discussing the use of the editorial "we" says inter alia; "The just; fication for the editorial ‘we,’ which can rump. ably be made at times, lies in the fact that lute‘ represents sort of a consultative opinion agreed “PM h.“ (‘Omllflfltlt staff members of a news- Daper when policies are in the balance, and 25C‘: f0 he ‘formulated as a matter of ‘public ser- lolmlafsf“ ATWQUWY. lfirsonal |Olll’l’l3.ll5ll1. once so virtle m‘ Canada has pfffly “@1120,” out" WHOM‘ - ~ sllflper is an institution, not a ~ _ Organ, and when, (which is as rarely. iswposstble in _a well-conducted newspaper), the “m o‘; rrnresertts all those of ti... s...“ f! and ultose \‘l(‘\\'S coincide with thos e the newsp oer expresses, u v- s s William Ewa ' i born this date iiiogilitssiriiil»grittitshuiitihiiiiani the outset of his career as "the risiniv (hope 2i t.ie §l€l'll'._lllll'JEll(lill_Q Tlsrieg," but me,- became 1i lirce Ilrader and aligned himself with the lvlllgi? 1Y1 I366 he introduced a Reform Bill which was defeated, bitt the succeeding Tory Government, led bv Disraeli, brought in house- hold suffrage which was adorged; shortly afterirard Gladstone resigned the leadership of the Liberal Party, but emerged again to make a protest against the Blllfiflflill ELYOClllQSZ l"! remained in power practically until loseph Chamberlain split the Liberal party. _ over the 11-15}, qucgtiott; remained in opposition utitii 1892 when he becarrgle Ignite hlfinfitciél for_tlite fo rth time; u on t e ousc o 0r 8 111K’ in; his Home lgule Bill he resigned. and dlfll It l-lawarden in i908, being buried in Westminster Abbey; he was described by Arthur J. Balfour, Conservative Leader, as “the greatest nieuiber of the greatest assembly the world has ever seen". m u u a This is how General Smuts sums tip the pre- sent sitttatioti: We have moved into a strange world, a world such as has not been seen for hundreds of years, perhaps not for 1.000 Years- Ettrope is completely changing. The old Fu- rope has gone. The map is being rolled tip and a new map is unrolling before us. \Ve shall have to do s great deal of fundamental think- ing and scrapping of old points of view before we find our wsy through that new continent which now opens up before us. Just look, for a moment, at what is happening and what will be the state of affairs at the end of this war in littrope. Three of the five great powers ygill have disappeared. That will be s unique e- velopment. France has gone, and if ever she returns it will be a hard and long upward pull for her to emerge again. A nation that has once been overtaken by a catastrophe suclt as she has suffered, reaching to tihe foundations of her nationhood, will not elsily resume her old place again. We may tslk about her as s great power, but talking will not help her much. Wc are dealing with one of tilts greatest and most far-reaching catastrophes in history, the like will be s bitter and s long one. France has gone and will be gone, in our day and perhaps for many s day. Italy has completely disap- peared and may never be a greet power again. Germany, at the end of this wsr, will have dis- anneared perhaps never to emerge again in the old form. The Germans m a great people with great qualities, and Germany is inherent- ly a great country, but sfter the smllh that will follow this war Germany will be written off the slate in Europe for long, long years, fisftsr thatsuqwogljgsgbsgginn of which I have never read. The upward climb Into The Irnduitrlal Front (Hamilton 9000mm) As we sir-lute our filming men and women with reverent. pride at. the closs of s yen;- thst; nu brought. us so far along of victory. let us rxanslder, in fit. tint: humility. another army —an army or more than s. million. an army of men and women. of young and old — a nrmy of e industrial front. Theft- uniforms are smock; and overalls, their tn- slgrua the numbered badges of the war plants. Their weapons are calipers and gnugu, pencils and typewriters. Dicks and shovels. ers and ates. pneumatic drllls and weldfnl torches. Thulr 08111941811! In 1008M 1n the murk of factory srrioke snd the fantas- tic lore of open-hearth furnaces, ln t e swift bustle of the office anti in the Dretznant silence of the laboratory, tn the caverns beneath the earth and in the ahlpyards by the sea. ‘rhelr battle sounds are the clatter of rlvetfnl guns, the htunmlruz of turblnes. the screech of saw. the roaring of mlne skips. the clsngorous din of shops and foundries, the rhythmic pounding of great machines. This ts the army that mined the ore and felled the timber and harnessed the waters, shaped the sLeel and drew the brass. built the ships and. fabricated the planes. made the Runs and am- munition. swuntz the trucks and carriers down the assembly ltnc. Thls l; the annv that mastered the craft. of KruDD and Vlckers ln a country that. had never made a gun. This is the amiy that. t-ltietted the plates cf naval craft. ln yards that had never sent a fight-lug ship to sen. This ls the army that. concentrated with dell- cate accuracy upon devices so novel 1n creation and so secret in their magic that their very names were famtllar only to the few. This is the army from shop and tarni that mustered the alchemy of explosives hitherto unknown, ln the great shell-filling plants where death was locked ln s drop of liquid and annihilation lay 1m- piisoned ln s. pinch of powder. There was a place and need for eveiiv strength and sklll. for the generalship of shrewd brains. for the power of hrawny droulders and the craft. of nimble fingers. 'I‘here was n place and need for every bound of metal. every foot of timber. every unit. of water- power, every tool, every machine. and every factory that. could be adapted to the manufacture of munitions and supplies or war, Almost every human and ma- terial resource of a Dominion that had found its strength for the first time was drawn and blended into production on a Blzantlc scale. Its Magnitude (St! mthsrines Standard) The official story of the Am- erican Eight Bomber Command for the first. year in Brltalti ls told in a : “Target, Ger- many-" The information given ls a revelation to the layman: the nusiznltude of the effort is lali‘. bare. And this is only the Am- erican contribution on top of a still V0510!’ organization of the RAF_ and the RCAF. It ls prosaic reading. as compared to the hero- lsin of the airmen In combat and tn transit, but it tells of an or- tlanlzntlonal effort never before knotwn in war. Here are some 8C S! labor to make an airfield for fifty bombers: $5,000,000 of money; 640-000 Sqtiflte yards of concrete. It takes fifty bombers (heaviest on a field generally to get. twenty into the air-because the others are either under repair or in re- serve. It. takes fifty such fields to launch a 1.000 pl an rs . _ takes 60,000 men, all hltzhly trained specialists. to launch 1,000 planes st a. target. It takes another 66,000 men be. hlnd these—the men of compar- atively sedentary clerks. parachute Dockers, truck drivers-to keep functioning ‘the 60,000 who keep 10.000 men tn the slr. It takes the manpower equival- ent of ven divisions to send 1,000 Dlsnes over a target. at. one time. And that. ls only Dart of the gorlffty-rmgt%erp thin: vast, grana- Mlddls Wesmuto ldie Atisntic‘ sili- bosxd. thence across the Atlantic, thence to British depots. the goods moved bv truck and by r511. Consider the taxpayer at lit-mm mo. 8s a contributor to this g“. Bantuan plan of destroying the angina’? fd u... oons q, u, . can Eltzht Ally-Force tn aBrltAaxiiterls onlv nart of the show. The Al- lied force ln the Central Mediter- ranean is muclt larger. more di- verstfled and also more remote from base supplies. The whole thln staggers or aklnstlon even defies the rrff of one's 1m- THE STING 0F DEATH "I5 8411. then fair?" Nay, love. come now. Put back the hair m s "L: Bin so fleet. r an ee May p0 hls ways?" Nay, ove. his breath C1 s round like death He s akes desire with llqufd mo. "In Btu Death's stink?" Ay. stirs he Hf; golden win: Darkens man's u: And when Death comes. fin site and hurns A chaunt. of fem mom's ears. "How slsvvth Bin?" First. By its own self chld: Then the maddened braln Is mourned pain . To sin as ore And more and more. m ova-more. Jrederfck Goons soon. IXPOII 00!‘!!! f ormally accounts for 00f ee - n about. '10 per cent. of Gustcmslsk snub. It. inkes 1.500.000 maxi-hours of M Dursults, like Th I convict-ton should be qusdrod. ‘Tl-IE cnannrrrmowu cuanoum '(IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII FRITZ WEISSLER PUBLIC FORUM fi IIDIIIIEIOID OKI“ rssslllisslcnnll Ilia! 11111111111115’; ANOTHER NEW YEAH aim-Ag we come to the c101? of another year many‘ 91 u! W t stop and look back nown the road of the nest and for a brlef moment. ses once more our m- 5w]: moss covers closfnsc for ever. No bower on earth can erase what we have done from the 9880s of Tlme 1n s your now spent and gone into eternity. would thls not. be s mod time to lay our plans for a new year now startfntz and make a supreme effort to fulflll those Dlmis? Unless we make xesdy for the new year with it's many changes. we wlll keep on in the some old furrow. the same old way. some old rut. Too many of us spent. last Yeti!‘ or a good part of lt. in useless talk- ing about. what. should have been done. T00 many of’ us fought. the war over our whiskey glasses one. Too many of us spent valuable time tn drunkenness, ln stumbling nnd lunfz morulntl sleeps while others carried on. Countless hours have been spent tLSQlESn clattsrlnz about other gteopleu Jobs, other people's pay. c. Too mam’ tlmes we fslled to attend church ln the mornings and evenlmzs because the services were a; the wrong hours to suit. our s w. We had other flung, to do. sleep, and stories to listen to. Who ls golntz w get up Sunday mornfnk b0 attend church? That's for old People. not us. Too many rlsht ln this city net up early 0n the week day morn- ings to have s lonler day to do nothing. Let us now u we look back see tlseweak links, res where we are desc wrontz. see for a moment where we have been fools. and Sirflyéd front our flresldes follow- lng a trail that ls crooked, a way of sin and shame Lhst lends us down into that. everlasting pit of Torture. Then we must. turn snd look the other way, look w the east for the sunrise of a new year. re- solved to spend lb in the light. that God has caused to shins to light the way. olesn or hurt, mtg to our little homes. Let “B all Wine our slates clesn and welcome the sunrise or use new year as never before in this trvliul use. and put at least l-hls one vear on the Book of Time as a new year honest and clean. I am. Slr, etc, WALTER. A_ O'BRIEN. Charlottetown. P.E.I. Scots Wha Hae! (Globe and Mull) Out. 1n Vancouver the Scots have won s. not-able victory anci peace R1805 nkaln. John Silherland Was the centre this controversy. Sutherland Dlflys lhfl bagpipes. and one day some mouths ago he wem tnto action with his pipes on s. public street. Two policemen ordered him to move on. John continued to blow mustc—or at. least what the Scots insist Ls musle. So the 1mm. boiled cops ran him in, charged with obstructing truffle, and the gPeruwas sentenced to six months l! . ‘Ilhfl Dlplng of the piper ln s wublle place dtd not enter int/o the legal picture-the charge was ob- stiuetton-but. oovlously the sects of Vancouver saw behind all that. ‘grey spld télietregl glssuethwes ‘the r o a co tar e when and where it suftgd hlmfxited t0 deny hlm the rlzht was equiv- alentt to denouncing haggls as sometbhinz unfit for human food. So theyscots- llned up behind the Diner. raised a fund for an appeal of his sentence. and tn due course ipeisuaded s higher cotutr, that the Sutherland was c free mun, bu still not. a happy one. He his: suffered the indignity 0* urns While performing the traditions; Ill-es 0f a true Scot. and somebody must pay for such outrageous treat.- ment. llhiur lt. was that. he sued for false arrest. and mslfctous prosecu- tlon the t/wo conotalbles who hsd arrested him. T0083‘. as we have sold. peace reltzns again. The city of Van- couver has acce ted responsibility for the acts of l agents, has tul- mltlted in effect that the went. too far. and has paid But. erland $50 ln damages In prttti-fple at. least. this seems to establish the rlgln, of a piper to give an inform- al concert. at. any siren‘ corner tn Vancouver. even lf tt draws a crowd which blocks truffle. and the Scots will my this ls no titers than simple justice. what. the Vancouv- er cops say ls another mutter. POSTHUMOUS DECORATION IQNDON —(CP)— Nearly three years after ms deed, Osp. Grotnses has received cm- posthu- stlon for challenging a crulaer with his one-gun merchant ship so that other ships tn the eon- voy mlsht escape. xzirs ut- irsm rrrorn menu-mo. ' sn 4o?)- Ohsrles Parsons. sf er fish 108 101‘ tiw y tlosaelusdogfrombe- gtetrlqgtrrsciyed ah ordered by shab- h Court. to cancel order was refused. marmnas‘ KIDNEY Pitts t r ‘W Q t /\ y M | r~1 Hint"... w‘ ut-uw r t. inn" I BVQT. In I10 DUWQI’ 011 G81‘ QU- Buying All Kinds 0F Furs a! W. Chester S. McLure’s Ofliice fr/IIIIIIIIIIIIIII I F"?! person who h I i v IJIIIQIIIIIJIIIIJ DU. 11,000 EB. M. l" 30,000 II. M. ALBIITON l- OTIARY :— POBTAG 5 :- RICIIMONIM- KENSINGTON :- ALBANY:- Also the follmvlnl icce led. Ten ers to be addressed to the undersigned and msrke LIIMBITR.” l OIIARLOTTETOWN. Prim-r Edward Islsnd, 2'1 20 311 35 710-81. DBIAITMINT 0F PUBLIC WORK! AND HIGHWAY‘ PI-OVINCI OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND TENDERS FOR LUMBER EAI-ID TENDERS will be ooclved 4 this Dunn-uncut uslll noon ligands)’, Justin." 10th, 1944, for: supplylil: the fol wlnl n prices st, mlll sites. ta: s" iz" izi-o" m hi: 4"’; It": tenor- ait s" x s" x mar 15,000 us. m. s" Plank. random tenslhl 50 pa. 4" x l2" x 10-0 lml 10,000 F.3- M. 4" Husk. random Mullins 50 pen. 4" x l!" x I010 loll 10,000 F3. M. 4" Plank. random lengths 50 pea. l" x l2" x 1650 long 10,000 I-ZB. M. 4" Plank. random lengths 25 nes- 4" x l2" x 16-0‘ long 15.000 EB. M. 4" Pllnll, rlllflum IQIIIQIII 30,000 RB. M. 4" Plank. random lengths 200 ma. 4" x l2" x 1140" long 15,000 I28. M. 4" Plsnk, random lenlthl 100 Del. 4" x 12" x 16'4" long l6 riel. 1'8" x l2" x 25M! long 240 Iln. H. l2" x l2" nnl less this! 1P4” loll I 20 Del. 8" x l6‘-0 Ion z . ., . 30 soft wom! piles 20-0“ long. not less than 8 " st small 2M- tut ' lie lock o tisr-dwootl, tenderer to rutruffiwitishiriurliri it itiirttigrr-Ftii’ Is tshasnnsi I. he l be sound and Ilroperlrml “m rllnailtsles may lender-fort the whale or an‘; norlélfipssftllefi;_glk (L. u. MMMILLAN) mum Mlnlsfnr o! Public Works ml Highways. December 21st. 1943 .4.» lllmbfl. QWI‘ .. In,‘ | _ 4” ‘Plank nvg-nltf‘ on; sml not less than U" wille- Also the following lumber for Prince County. Quotation nrlces ll planes Indicated snd also prices F. 0. B. mlll sites. TIGNISIH- Quotation prices I203. mfll sltlt led. No wane edge llllllb" E. R. Brow Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sic/vie” and Plate Glass Insurance Gross, his country's htzhest deooiw, German, mummies, ts not. giving up 1th h his f tl to man): H‘! apnl cs on Northern lights hsvo been seen n mt Sl 41> at Lowest Rqte Agent at Summer-side, D- 0- Stewart Charlottetown _ 144 Richmond St. &Sonl CAN"! BE‘ BEA T. When you hold sll the cards you have no worries. Aml you are just its certain about our tobacco. No other brand can but lt ln quality, or flavor HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST SOLD EVERYWHERE “EAST POINT T0 NORTH CAPE HICKEY and NICHOLSON Tobacco Co. ' Ltd. Charlottetown 0r. Evan's Stomach Mixture i ‘mh trolls. sn tmwst'§'§n'§.t§h§,{'§“;,h tlo of Dr. Evans’ sgomw; itzlxtfilre and see how quid“, sylngntraritesiiev‘ s." “mm!” r. va lure take’: atwmi. ‘EL not only prevent; nu b“ s‘ {eats from gas but it ‘PM: i! I10 IIIIIQ Q- D '4 dl i ‘tutti? loda;..yj"flczrdga_ “u, MAUI SPECIAL 11.x. u" Codcuvor- on Extract ‘m; l‘ esote and Guise»; Competing An lid I °l "m"! um . In]! ldApt-ed for Mrflslgiltt and Irritating mun“ and bronchial ffcctlons, n lllllnlsly relieves fh . estlon and thereby elitism la tonlo and flesh nruducln: ro rtles 0o bottom hnmtd, ate effective. It ls s valu- "MQ "mid! In Chronic Bron. ohlfln. In Jeep lgglq] cough, also acts as a "Qneral tonic: Price $1.00 s Bottle. HIE TWO MAGS 140 Great Georg; flh-g“ i“ "rim-r i If. J. MllBflll orrosraruis‘: Illllns mid Sgaplylng on“, l‘ Monti-nu. r. l. I. Office Haitian“ R 1g m h flolldays cut. In uppotntmm, Olllee Connected Illh DRUGSTOIII ll you on havl symptom If strlln - h aches, soro eyes or dlzllneu - consult s specialist, As your servlec with years of experience and s thorough lelractlnl lervlco. Cull ln and discuss your difficulties. Write or nhonu for lflllfllntmenu 6. F. llutcizeson AND SON I‘. G. IIUTCHESON O. I‘. IIUTCHESON “COMPLIETE. INSURANCE SERVIC ” e W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 Professional Cares .._.r_~....-... McLeod €i Bentley W. E. BENTLEY. l. C- l. A. BENTLEY. II. O- Ilrrhtsrs and A torsion-st- LII _ I84 Irina Street llorrolland Company 0. F. AIIGIIIBALII I I Ohnrtored smut-nu l linden m» amiss UIIIIQINIOII i _ , M, ALBAN FARMER I. A.. LLB. IAIIIGTER. ROLIUITOL Cnnsllan Blnl of 00mm"!!! MONIY ‘I0 LOAN I. X W. MAIH": Iolsly h lnsll “mm”. '&‘r'.‘l?'.'s""c.23"lr°£"4-*st5‘5"