on...“ -.su>riei».-lvvrr-"*""”* _ . a"rm-sass:-'a-:......1.¢s-s-=:- ‘~.-.:u'.~..'=.".sm-M-fiz-woz- ..:_--..-.».-.=-_-~ -. (.r¢;.-'n' - -' —'""~" u|'1|:v4"”fl'i-Il ~<~.-;u=i r» IE‘IDQ"EJZEE n4 r. Y’. 3i ._......_..___¢< 1 PAGE FOUR TIIE BIIAIILOTTETOVIII Glllllllllll Inning Dull! (Iilllod ll II?) {lesbian Llout, 00L W. Ohulu, l, Vino President: J. L Bus“ IJJ. louohryi “out. 00L D. A. lull-non, 0A0. lilllol and Iannll g Director, J. ll. Dunn“. IJ-I. lllodnh ldltnreu Fruit Wnliu, and Linn, Ill A. Inuit, IRON-VJ, (On Lulu Iorvloo) SUBSCRIPTION IATK § m] i; y, 5, l, $4.10 pu- your: lI-ll for I Iollll 31,2] to: 8 mouths: We for one month Olly Delivery lI-W pol your IUJII lo! I nullll llJl for 3 month-i 00o (or one non! Q Ill] to other Provinces 1nd UJA. “All Ill 7Q! lotus-day Weekly: 82.00 var IMP; UL“ l" l IOIMI- 50o for 8 months ‘Ibo Charlottetown Glurdlln III, be Obhllld l! Inullnl‘: Nun Annoy, Than lquuu, New Ink; Old loath News Agency, Corner llllk and Washington Bolton Iotronollun Nuvu Alency, I24! l-‘ul It. llentronli J. line I66 Bu; 8t. Toronto; New" Stand Chou-u but»: Ottawa; Wolfe’: News Blond Bradbury, 0am llnb Iobneeo Shop, Mountain, N. B» - “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than ’ the Weakest Ink.” WEDNESDAY. MAY m, 194s The Potato Black Market How the "black market’ is adversely affecting the Prince Edward Island potato industry is told in an article in the current issue of the Monetary Timpg, The article gives dealers in this Province a clean bill of health in the matter, but states that in Canada tmlziy; “one of the most glaring cases_ of black inarlcct activities" is in potatoes. “Whole- salers,” it says, “claim the root of the trouble i5 in New Brunswick, but from there it spreads to the wholesaler and thence to the retailer, both of whom staunchly maintain it is impossible to sell at ceiling prices without a i055." One large importer of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island potatoes is quoted a5 stating that as a result of his refusal to purchase from N. B. shippers and pay a ‘_‘b_0fl115"_0f 05 high as $200 a carload over the ceiling price, he is able to obtain only small supplies from Prince Edward ]51;md_ “I find the P. E. I. shippers fair and above board," lie told the il/Ionztury Timex. "It's the New Brunswick shipper I 113W’- ifmlbli‘ with. I know for a fact that with Montreal willing to pay through the nose for their potatoes they are receiving seven carloads to each one sent into Toronto," he said. _ These are serious charges, and call for drastic lction on the part of the enforcement authorities. A favorite dodge of the leading members in the vicious potato circle, the Times alleges, is to beat the ceiling by paying the farmer extra for the potato sack and in some cases buyers give "farmer expenses" to obtain produce for black market sale. One city customer, anxious to ob- min potatoes for his evening steak, was charged '43 cents for a half-peck, (seven and one-half pounds) which works out. at $4.35 ccntsfor a 75-pound bag. It sounds almost nonsensical to mention that the retail ceiling price on domestic potatoes is now $2.47 for a 75—p0und bag. _ "When retailers are halcd, into court-—as in Toronto recently—and plead they did not know 1 about the ceiling price and are fined only $30 or one month in jail,” says the Monetary Times, “it obviously pays the black marketcers to pay up and continue in their depraved business of sabo- taging the country's war effort. A leaf out o1 the British book of control over black markets would perhaps make good study for our magis- kates, it is suggested, In London a. short time ago a food dealer was fined $1,335 and six months’ hard labor for alfempling to sell canned fruit above the official prices. A man found guilty of buying eggs from a retailer with whom be was not registered was fined $380." Meal Rationing The attractive and informative advertisement 0f the Wartime Prices and Trade Board with reference to meat rationing must have been read with more than ordinary interest by both men and women. It brought directly home to each and all of us the fact that the war affects us vitally, and that we must be prepared to go without some domestic luxuries in order that enough necessary food be preserved for use of mir- tmnps, both at home and abroad. After all, we {IYC not ziskcd to make any sacrifice in our ordinary way of life; all we are required to, do is to curb our zippetities, uot to eat too much meat, so that there may be enough left to go round. lt will he up to the housekeeper, Mrs. Wife, tu 50c tn this, zuid ful’ the home provider, N1". llnslmml, not [u grouse but tn look pleasant \\'llCll >L'I'illl[)(‘fl of beef at zriealtimcs. 'l'imcly cniplizisis ivzis placed by Dr. Steel on. lie shortage of teachers zit the closing exercises of Prince of \\':ilcs (‘tillage last week. This is not :1 prnviiicizil problem alone, at least 5O fur as male teachers are concerncrl; it is evidently Canadzi-ividc. as may be gzithrred from the following comment by the Tluronto Globe and Mail: “If reports arc true the war already has de- pleted to :1 very serious degree the ranks of the male teaching prOfcssion iu Canada, and threat- ens to make llic inroads upon it positively calami- tous unless iviscr and more farsccing policies are adopted. A democracy cannot hope to func- tion effectively for the provision of good gov- ernment and general prosperity for its citizens unless the great majority of the latter have been gupplicd in their youth with a reasonably sound education, which has stimulated their intelli- gence and equipped them with varied knowledge. Admirable and efficient as many women teach- ers are, a strong leaveu of male teachers is indispensable for the provision and maintenance of a first-rate educational system and even be- fore the war Canada had too small a contingent of trained male teachers of high calibre. "There is general agreement that our educa- tional standards need grcat imPY°V°m°mi bl" there must ensue a deterioration if the cream of our male teachers. a class of men whose high intelligence makes them realize the gfllvll)’ 0f the issues at stake in this war and therefore schools to serve in the fighting forces or under- take some other form of wai- work. In the broad interests of this nation's future they should be restrained u far as is possible from such course. Before this war ends it may have taken a very heavy toll of the generation of young Canadians now in their twenties, and it is im- perative that the generation of young people now maturing into adult life should receive the best possible educational equipment so they can speedily take the places 0t the lost victims of the war. But the requisite equipment will not be available for them if the personnel of our teaching profession is seriously weakened by withdrawals for war service; and a wise steward- ship of the "nation's interest would ordain that male teachers should be regarded as key men whose work was an essential national service." '- EDITORIAL NOTES -= Aberhart-is the only instance iii Canadian his- tory where a non-political preacher preached his way into a Prime Ministry. i l I I The Kinsmen were the first organization to hold a convention here this year; many more would be welcome. w s1 u m Do we recall how we laughed at the Ger- man's slogan of “bullets for butter?” Now w!_ ourselves prefer “bombers to beef." v =0- u n: The double service to and from the main- land is welcomed once more, and we trust will be largely taken advantage of. i 1F I Ill Sir V/illiam Sidney Smith, British sailor, died this date, i840; served in the French wars; was imprisoned in Paris from i796 to I798; successfully conducted the defence of St. Jean d'Arc when besieged by Napoleon in 1799; promoted Admiral i831. ##1##‘ Real gratitude. A group of survivors who were brought to Sydney, C.B., last year after their United States mercliantman was torpe- doed in the Atlantic have sent cheques totalling $340 to the Red Cross branch there. An accom- panying letter said the money was intended as "a token of gratitude" for their treatment by the people of Sydney. n- a n: n- Dr. Harold E. Welsh, M.L.A., of Ontario, who was drowned recently in a boating accident while fishing on Lake Opionage, Algonquin Park, was victor in the Hastings East by-election in I936, which ended one of the most bitter elec- tion battles in the history of Eastern Ontario, an election which brought out the heaviest poll in the history of the riding. The defeated Lib- eral candidate at the time was Dr. Harold A. Boyce. Dr. Welsh was re-elected at the pm- vincial general election in 1937. The other vacancies are Cochrane South, Huron Bruce, Kingston, Lincoln, Toronto High Park, Tor-I onto Bellwoods and Fort William. a- v i: n‘ A reduction in the wheat acreage of the Prairie Provinces by slightly more than I7 per cent, is forecast by the Winnipeg Free Press in its first crop report of- i943. The "Winnipeg Tribune in a report released simultaneously said the wheat acreage would show a. decrease of I 5. 5 per cent. It forecast an acreage of 17,498,000 acres, the smallest in 23 years. The Free Press said reductions in Manitoba would average about i9 per cent; Saskatchewan i7 per cent and a little under I7 per cent in Alberta. The Tribune placed the reduction in Manitoba at 18.5 per cent, Saskatchewan 14.3 per cent, and Albert; 16.2 per cent. All three provinces reported in- creased coarse grain acreage, with the acreage seeded to oats the largest since 192i. a w m u Mr. Charles Warren, former assistant At- torney-General of the United States, in a lengthy letter to the New York Times proposes that the crime definition be set forth in the peace treaty, that the names of the principal German officers, military or civil, who have been guilty of crimes against the laws of humanity, be listed, and that “the armistice or treaty should by its own terms adjudge them guilty and should determine their punishment, without the need of further proof or trial.” The surrender of these persons should be a. condition to the signing of any armistice or treaty. Mr. Warren's point is that any pun- ishment, to be effective, must be obtained through direct affirmative action by the victori- ous powers and not by resort to the law courts after the war. He finds a precedent in the course pursued by England, Austria, Prussia and Russia in dealing with Napoleon. They made formal agreement. He recalls that after the last war, by recourse to the law courts, the war ciminals escaped punishment through technical- ities stressed by counsel. r r 1- n- The U.S.A. army public relations office an- nounces ihat eight songs may no longer be sung by the men as they march in formation because "in a. general wav the restricted songs might be interpreted as slurs on women and on the courage of soldiers or as drinking songs." The proscribed chanteys were listed as follows: "Oh, My Feet Hurt", "When the War Is Over", “How Dry IAm", “The Moron Song”, "Around Her Neck She Wears a. Yellow Ribbon", "Par- ley Voo" (‘Mademoiselle From Armentieres’), "Roll Out the Barrel" and “I've Been Working on the Railroad.” Some of the forbidden songs contain recently composed and presumably salty lyrics sung to traditional melodies, as in the case of "Oh, My Feet Hurt", which is render- ed with the undercurrent of groans implicit in "The Song of the Volga Boatmen." "The Moron Song" stems from the epidemic of “Moron" jokes all slightly off-color, which have appeared in the manner of the “Little Audrey" craze of a few years ago. Lest the men become downcast at the prospect of marching in silence, the announcement prom- ise that a new song book, presumably replete with well laundered and siarched numbers, "will be issued shortly for use in the song-teaching p him prisoner and kept him prisoner under a‘ (London). lloytos By The Way Thus mouths shoe Ibo Prime Minister and the President last met at Casablanca — and 11 they can Micah the meetings once every three months with us much effect, they'd" better make is a habit. -- ‘i/‘nnoouver Province. llr Samuel Roam pyn in an ad- dreu 1n Madrid that the British Em- pire 1s once more 3 "great nulltary power." Let's hope we have learn- ed our lesson sufflclently so that. Ini- tun speakers will be able always to say that it is "still a great mill- tary power." -W1ndsoi- Star. The (Defense of Warsaw ranks with that of Madrid. Both were primarily the achievement of work- ing men and women. Warsaw’; 1m- provlsed defence, born out of the spirit and tradition of its people, was an act of magnificent heroism. Thus Warsaw became a battlefield of the People's War. -Unconquer- ed Poland. It’: nlmnlt Impossible to buy rub- ber- golf ‘balls 1n most parts o! Rhodesia now. s0 s. firm 1n Bul- awayo has started making them out of wood . . and with very satis- factory result-s- The wooden Rolf balls have mesh markings just like the ordinary ones, and you can izet a. ISO-yard drlve out of them. ~13. B. C. Bulletin. The United Nations are to set up an organization and administration to take care of starving Europe when that unhappy continent‘ is lib- erated. ‘Ihls 1s going to require the highest degree of cooperation and generous assistance from all the members that are capable of sup- plying foodstuffs. Already the Can- adian government. 1n a fine spirit of humunftarfunism 1s glving the Greeks thousands of tons of wheat to help them in their distress. — Providence Journal. Mr- Ilsley 1s surprised that the Prloes Board had application for 209,000,000 pounds of sugar for can- ning when ndt more than 100,000,000 pounds had been used for this pur- ose in other years, The explana- tion is really very simple. Nhuw thousands of homes not in the liab- 1t of preserving frult applied for sugar, hoping m do for themselves what the canners had been doing for years Anrl, probably most wo- men applied for more sugar than they expected to get —qu1te sure they would not: get it all but hop- ing thereby to get the maximum. at whatever it might be set. -—0tnwa Journal. Germans are now seeing movies of fortifications prepared to fend off a United Nations invasion of the con- tinent. Such pictures obviously me supposed t0 be good for German morale. Possibly they are. One wonders how many Germans can see them without being iemindec. o-f other pictures shown a long time ago by boastful Nazis. These films were designed to impress helpless peoples with‘ what Nazis had done to Poland and might, co to anyone else opposing them. The new pic- tures indicate the present need of Germans to think m re about what ‘run confirm ‘This Absurd ‘ Impostor” (Winning nee Pull) i-chout nut 5111130 m.wd we: sew-Isa}; Hi1“: l’ ' 0f viii-g of Mussolini bulbs In!!!» with general agreement that his career 1s about w enter upon its 111ml phase. Th W111 . at his people deal with him before he falls Into thehnndsoftbeAlliesm raw be the genlml airplane. 1011i but a ltthiiould bethls’ 1:12:41 be left e judgmen o 006. the!‘ need be no doubt about the Justina that will be meted out to him. Th9 refeienoes to him which nboimd 1n Mr. Churchill's speedws we 0X- pllclt on this Doifl. when the German armies om- ran Greece Mussolini, whose earlier efforts w this end had ended 1n humiliating disaster, associated himself and,h1s troops with this Axis achtovunent in a ld pro- clamation of triumph and victory- Churchill, 1n an address to tho House of Commons dealing with the disasters of Greece and Crete, and the desperate situation which. the British faced by reason 0! ‘chem, took a, moment on! to speak a, word or two about the Italian hero. His remarks upon that oc- casion were in these terms: “I tum aside from the stony W“! we have to tread. to indulge a ino- ment. of lighter relief. I duress? you have tend, 1n the newspfltwfs that. by a. special proclamation, the Italhn Dictator has congratulated the Italian army 1n Albania. on the glorious liiurels they have gained by their victory over the Greeks. Here surely is the worlds record in the domain of the ridiculous and the contemptlble. ‘This whipped Jackal, Mussolinl, who to save hi8 own skin has made all Italy a vas- sal state of Hitler's empire, comes frisking up at the side of the Ger- man tiger with yelplngs not only of appetite-that can be under- stocd-but even of triumph. Diff- erent things strike different people in different ways. Butt I am sure there are a great many millions in the British Empire and 1n the United States who will find a. new object in life in making sure that. when we come to the final reckon- ing this absurd lmpostor wlll be abandoned to uubllc Justloe and universal scorn." Churchill's unshakaible confidence in one of the darkest hours of the war that. there would be "a final reckoning" on the right, side, makes this a very notable passage. The "final reckoning." so far as Musso- lini 1s concerned promises not to be long delayed. Another reference to Mussolini ‘by Churchill 1s being recalled these days: that in which he said that. "one man. and one man alone.‘ was responsible for Italy's participation in the war: and the inference is being drawn that the elimination of M-ussolirif would make possible a rapproche- ment between Italy and the Allies. This deduction goes beyond the ac- tual content of the words. which had to do with the origin of Ita1v's attack unnn France, a decision for which Misscllnl was primarily N- snonsihle. But much has happened since then: and the fate of more than the “absurd lmoostor" will be involved 1n the final reckoning. victimized peoples lght. do to them. In any event, 1f there 1s de- bate about warguilt ttils time, these pictures with chronological annota- TlOII-S. ilould offer decisive evidence- —Chr1st1sn Science Monitor. 0n May 13 the following Selected Bern appeared on the editorial p.138 with the notation, “Author unl- dentlfiedz" “I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, that I can do or any kind- ness that I can show to any fellow- creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again." we are grateful to a subscriber who who has identified the author 01' the above passage as Sir John Lubbock o London, England-Toronto Globe and Mall. With much glee Rome announces that Italians were the last Axis , tnp Boche, surrendered on Wednesday. while Messe, the rank- ing Italian. held out for another day. Obviously Rome wanted 11: made clear to the world that those "invincible" Germans scamoered off to the prison camps ahead of the much abused‘ Italian forces -Am- herst, News. 500ml of tiny little (Greek) 1s- lsnds arc now held by small Ger- man detachments, who must be fer! mostly from the atr and have never really succeeded 1n lfminating na- tive opposition. Even 1n Crete -— oonquered at such a heavy price b)’ crack German parachut-lsts - guerlllas still hold out, although the Nazis, now fearing an Allleri attack have poured 1n troops. Yet time after time the Nazi press admits that Greek patriots are still pctive 1n Cree. Though the Nazis are try- in! hard to link the islands around Greece into a flrm belt o1’ first-line defence they are operating on truly volcanic ground. That goes double for the Greek mainland. -_W. F‘. The Great Western Railway’: ex- periment. of selling not baker. pota- toes at Paddingwn station has proved so successful --20,000 were sold 1n the first three weeks -thiit 1t has been extended to refresh- ment. moms. throughout the whole of its system. A girl put on trains running between Exeter and Ply- mouth w sell baked potatoes from an insulated container and sold more thfln 1.000. Restaurant pro- prietors and the public are respond- ing well to Lord Wooltonb call for the serving and eating of victory Oomposed of ‘shlpsaverd’ or such foods as potatoes and other vesewbles. dried ess. and cheese. - London Tlmes. Every bullncu man constlntly has the experience of receiving letters ban-tn; o BCTBWI at the bottom which serves only to arouse the curiosity of the addressee as to the mm: of the writer. There are many signatures whldi are corn- pletely illegible, end they lead to annoyance and embarrassment. One cum-int. compel corr ‘ write their names so that. they may be read, but 1t would be good busi- ness on me part. of these scrawlers to clo something to remedy the eit- uotion. The obvious course is to have the name typed 1n on the lei.- who goes 1n for floiu-Miea and hleroglyphlcii can continue tn in- dulge his strange fancy. but at. least those he addresses will not have to engage 1n a r, easlng contest. every troops to fight 1n Tunisia. . Von is Today Melbourn piccolo cull ft m Ithe former, and Bey ey uses the w‘. When this is done, the man Canberra (Exchange) On an early autumn day 30 years agm-March 12, 1913-Lady Denman wife of Australia's Governor Gen- eral, stood on a gum clad knoll, drew a. card from a case and named the Australian capital clty of the future Canberra, says nn Australian News letter of the Empire Press Union. Lady Denman saw only brown plains, browsing sheep. a few farm- houses, the willow-lined, meander- in-g ilne of the River Molonglo, and the turquoise sweep of the rugged Murrumbidgee Range. Today, from the same knoll, one can see some fulfillment of the vision splendid of a city beautiful planned by the early Federation- ts. A stone's throw away the sheep still browse, but now across the lawns of gleaming white Parlia- ment; House, the brown plains have been clothed with milllons of trees just now beginning to glow with the gold and scarlet and nisset of another Autumn. They define the winding avenues that lend beauty to the eye and awe to the strange motorists. Through them you glimp- 5e the red roofs of 2,500 homes that house 12,500 people, chiefly the families of public servants. ‘Itiere are some public ‘buildings of notable beauty, a noble war me- morlnl, a modern hospital, but many others, including administrative of- tioes-stlll ‘temporary’ structures after 30 years-and, because of dea- perate housing shortage, some tene- ment. cottages 1n which the first construction workers lived, as bad as a city slum. Canberra has been the victim of the 1830 depression, of hesitant gov- ernments, and of petty state jeal- ousles that hampered the original plan to transfer 1-111 Commonwealth departments there. But foundations have been sound- ly laid. Twenty million pounds glneerlng works, homes and build- ings-and the city pays interest on the capital. The detained plans now ready en- visage an expansion costing many millions of pounds, with n POW]:- tlon of 20,000. Chief lines of de- velopment being considered are a housing scheme, transfer of central secretaries of Federal departments from Melbourne, engineering ser- vices including is second water stor- age scheme, ii town hall and omi- structfon of two new five-storied administrative blocks. instead of one originally contemplweu. when Lady Denmim named taho city, she called fl; CAN-Era, Ind this started an argument which still the correct pronunciation of the mime. ~ when the duke of York (now King George VD opened parlia- ment there 1n 1927. the then Prime Minister (Mr. S. M. Bruce) 1n- slsted that. Lady Denmarrs un- elation was correct. and that 1t was wrong to use Oim-Ber-rs. ter. ‘Hie other states lint curse the place. FOR GIRL WElGllT-LIITIBS LONDON. May 1M —(CP)—W1fl1 women taking on more and more jobs ln war factories the Labor Mlnlsli-v ls considering boductlon of flllllllzlllftflS 1o help factory girls who have tn life henvv weights. In some fncmries physical training 1n- have been spent on these roads, an» . bursts Into spasmodic flame as tn 1| POST-WAR PLANNER u fun ‘*1 rsmum willbe it...“ nltcrtlsewnr-usomem overdue. But I'm no robot. Whatever our post-war plus, I still want m use hard work rewarded and dividends paid on bruins uid initiative. I want the privilege of going into business for myself if I choose. Above all! want my kids to grow up where success depends on work, native hbiliiry and enterprise." Canldl hi1: grown m rich nationhood through the courage, resourcefulness Ind initiative of individual citizens. These qualities must bcpreserved in the challenging days shad. Whit is PRIVATE ENTERPRISE? l: in the 11mm] desire to make you: awp way, ur ability will trike you; In instinct the: has rought_to this continent the highest ' standard of life enjoyed by any people on cai-zh. lt is the spirit 0f democracy on the march. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA m . FARMERS W Ill Illllrlllonrof h“ “QM; ' 10mm,“ * Fol IUD‘! (m on“ I llllo mun fanifi,_“"'°'lhli u. o" Pill! to ev lone of _ "7 4' rlm- wifffnfififiilfi fungi-lav? "f" ‘h’ "I llul OEIEGAN l ll ' who“. “aaumlgslrgliit ofor some mm s2 iuuikh, u‘: what you IQQIIIQ n on“, QIMIQAN BEL "f" “iiufilzsr W TIIE 1W0 M1108 t I DOMINION COKE. ‘i yourself chew of War-ZS Years Ago Today (By The Cumulus hols) Pal 00 l ...‘f‘i1.i§°id°“...;.b’.'.‘3°1l‘€.. t. Adunello region captured try Ital- I'll: nerl and 12811115 h t rt T seized. Bri turtle tnrpodoed and sunk in ‘he Medttorrlnenn; 02 officers 5nd men missing. - KIDNEY Plllfi i-nnsls them to offer their servicd. 1'3" the phase of the training program." . time they open a letter. —W1ndsor 3hr. struclors try out each Job before womenareaskedwtnhotbmon. COAL We handle the following high grade Coal OLD SYDNEY SCREENED, ALBION NUT and ALBION ROUND also Lowest prices. Prompt deliveries. W. D. GILLIS o CO. PHONE 176 in your chores. Good work deserves a reward. Reward with a comforting l-IICKEY l. NICI-IOLSON'S BLACK TWIST" CHEWING "Hunnyono else bndwordof hkn?" gig: this tide. Not with this Nor any tide, l. INVERNESS, ion-in i?§t'.'i.il°t'.i'é"" °’ m’ "°' M” ~ or, a u ‘think um nun come Not with this wind blowlnl. and this tide, l wtm. what lzlghllilkwhlitg lallaorviiril,‘ and e. "Oh, dear, what; comfort can I 11nd?" None this tide, "Went he d“ no‘ shame his kind- Not. even with Hint wlnd blowin], and that tide. Then hold your head up all tho ore This tilifle, ' And every tide; _________________ BRAVE WELSH onus CARDIFF, Wales (0P)_ 1n n Welsh war factory m a gm, ish output record fm- ma]; bombs-while a German l bombln! uie district. ‘flier; iiium to be eivaou ted ii action bombafell ‘M? tiiedeiiiyal: wear- nnd worked at. tn 1 bench ma tin 11m. H °' How“ Are Your Eyes? II on u-o h vln symptom of btnln -l.nead‘nchu. mm on: or dlnineu — consult s lpoclllllt. At you service with sun of experience and a thorough refnolln: service. Call in sud discus n! difficulties. Wrlh o1- nhono til lppolntmenls- 6. F. llutcheson; I’. G. IIUTOIIESON G- I‘. HUTCBESON ilizé afloat-its» \-———-——-— “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC ” W. K. 806E111 Agencies Ltil. Phone 540-541 . Profmioii al Gard: -ww- Wis-Lead £0 Bentley w. n. BENTLEY. K. C- I. A. nun-run. K- 11 Blrrlsten and Afl°l'"""'l‘ Luv noun T0 110A" 1M Prince Street ll. F. MIBIIIBALII ennui-ea smirk" mum nun 811W" Olurlomian __.__-'-————i" M. ALBAN FARM“ n. 11.. I-l-l- m Egg-gag’ 5,1“: u0tiI!J°_L"-‘L~‘¥¢' ALEX WTGMHIEW" Because he was the son you And iave to that wind and that tide! ‘ "*" ~--ouaiu<1 Kiifllns- b011, blowing BAIIIBTII. somiciroll‘ _ 0mm u Greet Gum l"; I’, In” lo [All ,