I 1: I v I. r s. P0 V1 an (t: r11 B‘ |~t (I y? i: i. f’. bl ‘ l n‘ n. I11 F1 F: ‘c 5. . 5., b. v Y?) s, ”";“‘1'R-'7.“L'L" "1‘.*">Qa::au|r~:~ "weevil-vi. ~. Fears"? PAGE FOUR__ ____ TIIE BIIIILIITTETIIIIII GIIIIIIIIIAII Inrnlng Dally (Ioulod ll III‘) Indian: Llout, 00L W. Chutes l, lloLah Vlao Prolldonll J. B. llunotl I-JJ. Iouotary: Uout. 00L I). A. Inn Illtll, ||.l.0, Idltor and Ian I 5 Dinosaur. J. I Burnett. IJ-l. lllinhto Bllltn .1 Frank Wallor, and blunt, Ill l. lune», lt-OJLVJ, (0: Anal" lnrvln) SUBSCRIPTION IATII l1 lull la P. I. I. 0M0 per your 82M for I loath: I13] for 8 monthl: I00 for nu mouth (my IoIIvuI-y 05.00 par run 88-00 for I mouth our for I moathn 00o for an: month Q loll cu other u avlneon and U.I.A. IIM par you Ilturdny Woolly! N.” W! H!!! ILW l0!‘ I llflllll- Nh (or I month: n» c...- " ‘ In: bl ‘ n Rowling's Nun Agency, Tlmn flqunro, New Iurlu 01d loath New: Agency. Corner M1111 and \Vllhll[!nh Bunion Intrupulltun Nun Agony, ll“ Pool It. llontrenli J. fine IM Boy it, Toronto; Nun Stand Chateau Lnurloli Ottawli Wolfe's New: lllnnd llndbury. 0111.1 Bub Tobin-m D1109. llounlnn, N. B. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Th; the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, JUNE ll, 1918 Watch Magna Carla Day All signs jioint now to the imniiiieiice of n mighty Allied inuision, with Pantelleria as the prelude. 'I'he plans, of course, are a closely guarded secret, but Prime Minister Churchill has intimated that thc great moment is ap- proaching. The oppressed peoples 0f Europe are waiting to strike off their chains. No one can say with ccrtaintyi when the real offensive will be launched, but guesses are permissible. A valued stibscriber has stiggested to The Guardian a date likely to have been given very careful consideration by the Allies in this connection. That date is Tuesday next, june 15, a memor- able anniversary for democracy. It is Magna Carta Day. Magna Carta, as every schoolboy knows, was the document signed by King Ibhn at Runny- mede in 1215, binding king and subjects alike to obev the laws of the land, asserting the su- premacy of Parliament, prohibiting punishment without fair trial 0r justice from being denied, delayed or sold to any man. This great "palla- dium of English-speaking liberties" is venerated as much by our American neighbors as by our- selves. Sincc i907 June 15 has been celebrated by the International Magna Carta Day associa- tion in the United States, emphasis being placed on the common heritage of English-speaking peoples, their harmony of political thought and purpose, their championship of civil and religious liberty and their common devotion to popular government. g What better day, in the whole calendar, could be chosen as Liberty Day for enslaved Europe—- for the launching of the imminent British-Am- erican invasion of Hitler's stronghold, and the beginning of the final phase of a war in which we are pledged to set all nations free! This of course is mere guesswork. But it will be interesting to follow events of the next few days with a view to the immense dramatic and psychological possibilities of Magna Carta Day. Mr Power's Confession The most outspoken member of the King Cabi- net is Hon. C. G. Power, Minister of National Defense for Air, who for this reason is heard in Parliament with all the more respect and confid- ence. An example of Mr. Power's frankness occurred the other day in discussion on the War Appropriation Bill. Mr. Fraser (Peterborough West) referred to an item for carrier pigeons. Mr. Power assured the member that the service had lots of carrier pigeons. Mr. Fraser then reminded the minister that in April of last year he had asked for information on this point, and had been turned down. Then, on Aug. 5, a Toronto paper published nearly a full page of information about carrier pigeons. Mr. Fraser wanted to know why, in the circumstances, the information he sought in the House had been refused. Mr. Power's answer was illuminating. He said: “Someone must have just told me I should not; that is all. We have certainly given a lot of publicity to it since. I do not know why I said that. I might have had a reason. Some of my officers must have told rne it should not be disclosed, but I cannot understand why I agreed with them." This raises the question as to how much more information has been suppressed for equally ob- scurc reasons. One must assume the reason in this case was unimportant or Mr. Power would certainly have remembered it. When officialdom dictates to the people's representatives what and Tins cnaaburriripwiv ogai_z__i_>_iaiv ___ ‘UNI? 11.191; these instructions to be carried out. This information links up with Prime Min- ister Churchill's reassuring account of the grow- ing success against the enemy submarine men- ace. The new Allied submarine weapon is a hugli new Liberator bomber which can range over a thousand miles from its base, and carry sufficient weight of bombs at that distance t0 blast the subs iqit of the water. May, Mr. Churchill reports, was 1h most successful month the Allies have had in their warfare against un- dersea craft, and the first week of June was “the best ever." Last month the combined build- ing exceeded losses by more than three to one, while “for the first time our killings of U-boats substantially outnumbered the U-boat output." The Germans themselves have conceded a 50 per cent drop in their sinkings, as between April and March, and a still further reduction in May. It is safe to guess, therefore, that the U-boat campaign is not going any too well. It is, of course, too early to assume that we have the submarine menace licked. Mr. Churc- hill warned against making easy assumptions of that kind. Yet it is interesting to compare the German claims of 850,000 tons of Allied ship- ping stink in March, 415,000 in April and 372,000 in May with actual sinkings in the spring 0f 1917, when the U-boat campaign of World War I rose to its highest peak. April was the worst month of that year, with sinkings of 840,000 gross tons. Then the improved surface convoy system began to work. Sinkings declined to 551,- ooo tons in May, rose a little to 633,000 tons in June, dropped to 495,000 tons in July, and there- after declined till an average of 256,000 tons per month was reached for the year 1918. It is possible that what we are seeing now may be the first effects of a combined system of surface and air convoys which, coupled with other meas- ures, will once more be the prelude to achiev- ing complete naval supremacy. - EDITORIAL NOTES — Prince Edward Islanders can and will do their part in the Greek War Relief Fund cani- jiaign. Now is the time to show our sympathy in a practical form. m 4 is n- Farmers in Ontario are in the depressed classes these days. With the exception of about four days there has been rain for six weeks. liven high lands have been flooded, and in one section where water is seldom seen in summer, boats have been floated in farm yards. a 11 it 1- The Belgian government in exile has honour- cd Canada through Defence Minister Ralstou by presenting him with the Croix bililitairt: Beige. This is in appreciation of the opportun- ity of training Belgian recruits in this country. The reason why their training centre is being closed is significant: the supply of Belgian inan- power in Canada and other parts of the con- tinent has been exhausted. w a 4 v Sir Henry M. Stanley, journalist and ex- plorer, born this date 1841; while a member of the staff of the New York Herald he was commissioned by the proprietor and publisher, Mr. Bennett, to proceed to Africa to search for Explorer Livingstone, who had been missing for a considerable time; he did so, after a tedi- ous and trying journey through “Darkest Africa" he got in contact with Livingstone and subse- quently went exploring on his own account. I l $ I Prime Nlinister Churchill told Allied air- men in Algiers "we had Corporal Hitler to help" in the 'l'unisian campaign, in one of his many im- promptu speeches during his tour of Tunisian army camps. "This self-made and self-unmade man has added sauce to the goose you have caught, killed and eaten." the Prime Minister added. He told the audience: "Whatever cam- paigns follow willltnot overshadow this one." w Out of the mouths of babes and Pouliots sometimes come words of wisdom. Here is how in the House of Commons, the member for Temiscouata. summed up the nature of our pre- sent administration: “This country is run from the kitchens of Rideau Club, the pantry of the Prime Minister’s office in the East Block, and the House of Commons is nothing but a. cafe- teria." It is all the more effective when we bear in mind that "cafeteria" means each patron "help- ing himself," only. s a n a This is a memorable anniversary for the well-known local firm of W.W. Wellner, Ltd. It was established just three-quarters of a cen- t11ry ago. The present proprietor, Mr. Lloyd E. Wellner, a son of the founder, has carried on the business with increasing success for the how much they shall be permitted to know, with- out even having to account to the minister for its reasons, there is an end to democracy. Cen- sorship in wartime is of course required; but it is the duty of the ministers to see that where Parliament is concerned, no interference of this kind is tolerated except where absolutely neces- sary. Hon. Cyrus MacMillan, who is Mr. Power's parliamentary assistant, will frequently be called upon to answer for his chief on the floor of the House. It is to be hopcd he will be guided by Mr. Power's frankness in this case, and where any sin of omission or commission is laid at his department's door, state the facts bluntly and briefly. If, like Mr. Power, he doesn't know why he did or said something obviously at vari- ance with his subsequent actions or statements, let him make the same open confession and skip the alibis. It will save Parliament a lot of time. Beating The Sub Menace So dangerous do the Germans find the aero- plane as an anti-submarine weapon, that it is 110w rcponetl from London that orders have Ht-t-n givfl] (ierman U-boat captains not to sub- merge when attacked by a plane, but to stay on iiii- surface and fight it out, endeavouring thus to destroy as many planes as possible. It is further reported that German submarines have past several years. Four wars have occurred in the seventy-five years since the store first open- ed its doors. It is today one of the most popular and up-to-date establishments of its kind in the Maritimes. The Guardian joins with the firm's many friends and patrons in extending best birth- day wishes. n a a n- Good news for radio fans. Sir Edward Ap- pleton, secretary of the Department of Scienti- fic and Industrial Research, has disclosed the results of an experiment that took 11 years to complete and which may solve the problem of radio fade-outs and make world-wide broadcast- ing after the war loud, clear and certain. With a fellow-scientist, R. Naismith, he devised a radio method of measuring the electricity in the atmosphere 6o to 16o miles above the earth. They found things of interest to the scientist and of importance to the ordinary man with a radio set. The long experiments confirmed the fact that the electrical character of the upper air varies with sun spots. Sun spots, believed to be electrical effects, appear and vanish in an 11- year sequence. World-wide radio depends on the reflection back to earth of electric waves by the electrified layers of the upper air. The Ap- plcton-Naismith tests showed that the range of short wave lengths available for long distance broadcasting varied substantially with sun spots. The two scientists have plotted the variation and soon will be able 1o say what wave lengths arc reliable for broadcasting at different times dur- been allotted a very considerable increase in their anti-aircraft armament in Order to cnablel Jug the 11-year cycle. llotos By Tho Way A sclentht utlmatu that a bee travels 43,770 mlles 111 gathering s. pound of honey Yes, and the con- sumer travels Just as far from store to store trying to find the same pound-Peberbomugh Examiner. 0n this continent the word “hul- kt" (literally a Iltt-le ball) ls being used to describe not only the pro- gectlle, but the whole loaded car- rldge —'a live bullet." 1t ls a use not as yet sanctioned by the utc- tlovnarles. but no doubt 1n due course 1t will be. -Torcnto Star. We will know that the war I: over when we will be able to so into a. fruit store and ask for a banana. crate to use u a waste paper basket, And none better was ever tirade for the purpose. Wliy. oh why couldn't we have secured one long before now to handle all the free reading notices which pour into the office day after day month af- ter month, and year after year.- Accordfng 1o 1111c Highway ‘Raffle Act bicycles must can-y a headlight and a reflector on the rear mud- guard after sundown. This law 1s persistently floured, w the great danger of cyclists and the annoy- ance and inconvenience of motor- 1.11s. We think that the local and Provfnclal police should take action against cyclists breaking this law whenever they are found. 1n order that serious accidents may be pre- vented. -Peterborough Examiner. A new portrait of Hitler, painted by the Nazi artist Kurt Schmltt which was to have bran shown 1n a Berlin gallery 111 May, has been withdrawn -_ to be repainted. It de- picted Hltler flntt/erlngly as a healthy, fresh - faced, well-fed Fuehrer, confident. and apparently without a care. It was realized that this aspect did not conform to Go‘)- be1s's recent propaganda describing Hitler's careworn face rcflectinvz r11» sufferings of his people. Sn Kurt Schmltt has now 1o 11111111 1n the lines of worry and anxiety before 111s picture can be exhibited. -Len- don Dally Sketch. It Is sald to be probable that there will be Japanese in 111.» Niagara District within a short time, engaged as farm heln . . There 1s. for instance. One 1rd 1121115 31211211. A vow": Jan yvltfl has been round about Beamsvilte for a year past 1s nurturing the Idea of acquiring ten HCNS in the district. If the time ever comes when Japs gain n foothold. or control of the fruit growing industry 1p ihe Niagara Peninsula, a5 they did 1n the vezetab": industry in Britifln Columbia, there will be no more t m1l1"m nlus "INCH" 1am obiwt ‘rs reached 1n this historic county - St Catharlncs Standard. From Southern Franco. a French- woman writcs cf how s11;- 5st :1 bait for a German official - an Jtrm- fstlce Commission offlror Sh!‘ l‘v".'1 in a hotel 1n a large town, ni occupied the apartmcut izz-xt in His bathroom was ncat, ‘o 11'" 111g room. When slis- hoard 11in in the bath slic turret‘. on H1." Cu" man broadcast fro London. Un‘1l the end of the bro . .. there vras dead gllence 1n the btthroom. W11~n she switched off, thcre canto 1110 sound cf water running out of the bath From that day onwnisds 1h." German took 111s bath n‘ the same time- the time of the BBC 11""'S In German. No word “'11s over said about the matter, and no "tion was taken arzalrst the Frorichxvnman. _ BBC Bulletin. A friend wfhn knows the people concerned assures me fiat this storv 1s true. Ari elderly man. 110w bedridden. 1s living with his son 11nd daughterdii-law 1n a Yorkshire Dales town. 'I'h1nk11111g to save 111m anxletv the couple decided not to bell him that there wns a war on. As he ls deaf and no render they have succeeded 1n their kinrllv plan. But recently the old man caller! frs dauqltter-lrrlnw to him with a wor- ried look on 117s face. "I snv. Mary." he said confidentially, “has Sand cut down your housekeeping money lately‘! If he has, you must lel me give you a blt more. It's no use your trying to deceive me You're not keeping the table you used to do." -Leetk Yorkshire Post. By the appointment of General Eisenhower and General MacArthur as Knights Grand Cross of the Ord- er of the Bath K111i: Gmrge VI ex- presses once more Brftlsh apprecia- tion and admiration of the military sk11l and achievements of those 11- luatrlous soldiers The Honorable Order or the Birth, founded in 172s was instituted 1n 18115 1n three 0185503 "to commemorate the sus- picious termination of’ the long and arduous contest 1n which the Em- pire has been enraged The United Nations are carrying on a far more terrible war against a despotism many times more mallgn and de- structive than Napoleon's. Let us hope that. 11: will not be 10o 1on1! be- fore the Order of the Bath and 11s two new honorary members will be able to celebrate the auspicious ter- mination of the contest 1n which we are now engaged. -N’ew York Tlmes Balbo ha-I 250.0011 men In Libya (In 19401 ‘Ni-e Duke of Aosfq nod 250.000 1n Ethiopia. And Wqvell Wavell had ‘a few thousands of men and a mere handful nf nuns. He had no tanks worthy of the name of tanks and old Bombay tv-ansnnrt- planes as bombers and Gladiator biplanes as fighters " The one 110m- wiu that. the French 1n Svrln and North Africa would he short? en- ough 1o create an effective dive-r- afon: instead of that the news come that France was out of the war. And there could be rm refnfnrce- merits from homo. for the flower of the British army had been ventured 1n France or escnned without a tank m- a gun or lorry from Dunkirk. There was Ohlv n1»- thlnv for Wwvell tn do -bluff the enemy into thinking he was 1M strnnwr than h. was. He. did It hv nffvrlrlnq We attacked on b110, Eflvotlan frown-r. h» exgcyyfA-I (ma! n? Qhoea flanking movements that “'-‘"n~=w has since made so familiar. W» m1 to HM! Row-Md h» (m1. In ‘Rav-"lq hn v01: M Tobvuu he cot. flrwltu fn gen-viva, p1 may mm...» w... 1~=~ twain. hm 4f Wave" Md been rlrlv- an hanlr m pm»- i» man p. y... n! ‘he ~11": be ebnnlrl h'""‘ ‘"9" "11"" mum. 110V" been nn m Aim-win. no .--¢,.-~. u yo“... m pgvvfiyrp "r "Wlvvflftnnle w" rrowmlr" victory Ir Turflala, ' w-"on Rmcfflfm‘. Tiniris n. Tricks The blnebonnetnii state flow- er of ‘Texas. , ymrtunityi to seek peace. - encouragement The Word Of A British Admiral Montreal Guottn) “Tbs French Float 1n Alexandrla has siven 1n to the Brlthb." Bo speaks the German radio. with 1t: usual snarl. The fleet 1.10s not "given 1n." If 1t hu joined with 1.11s font of Hitler 1t. has doneso int-balsam spirit. which actuated . i P11110110 commanders of the ii....n larger French fleet at Toulon to sink their flue ships rather than pennit them to pass into Axis control. The ves- sels at Alexandria were 1n no such extremity but their officers and their crews had the lame hatred o! the fnvader. They have learned tn trust the British over a 1on3 test- ing time. The sto 1s mterest-lnl and there 1a B morn Since 1940 one battle- ship, four cruisers. three dust-roy- ers and a nunizer of smaller vessels have been moored In a Brlflah P0" Alexandria. They have remained there under the simple assurance of Admiral S1r Andrew Browne Cun- ningham, Allied naval commander- in-chief 1n the Mediterranean, that they would not be molested. They would have been of enormous value to the British during the dark and doubtful clays of the German drlva against Egypt, but a British admiral had given h1s word. What Hitler would have done, or Mussolini, 1n llke cli- tnnstances 1a no matter of gueswork. They would have taken these ships and used them-even against the French people. The development now announced 1s scarcely surprising 1n view of this history These Frenoh officers and sailors learned whom tih could trust. They had no more 1 an the W011i o1 a British officer, but that word had proved sacred. The fleet now joins the Allies of its own free will. The moral? If Britain's word can thus be relied upon In condi- tions of extreme and deadly urgency 1n time of war, the nations which are depending upon Britain's ro- mlse c! freedom and fair dea 111g and national integrity after the war have‘ nothing to rfar. The word of l1 Biltisn admiral would be enough. GaribaIdi’s Curse ‘ (Exchange) ‘_‘It‘ ever England should be so “clrcumstanced as to require the “help of an ally, cursed be that "Italian who would not step for- ward With me to defend her.” Do these words ring these days 1n the ears of Benito Mussolini? He knows them. who said them, and Lulcdocctision upon which they were sa They were written 1n 1854 to Mazzinl, the Italian patriot 1n Lon- don by Garibaldi, and were 1n ac- knowledgement of unforgettable services rendered by England and the English people to the cause of Italian liberation, Is the word "unforgettable" 1n- appi-opriate 1n view of all that has hfiDi-icueddn the past eight years? Not. 1t 1s clear, in the cpmioii cf Churchill. His reference: 1n hs 5113931113 1o Italy and Italians re- vcnl 111s abiding 1.1.111 1.11. e ‘e 1e of Italy. apart from meg:- b:rs of the Fascist hierarchy’, hzite 1112 war with Britain, and are am;- 151111’ lwkinz forward to an op- For their to this end, as Churzhill said 111. Wnshlngt: ., IIICLiIOKIS bcdi of the sank and the carrot. are being employed. How PeopIQTAre Misled (Ottawa Journal) The Tcrctiio Financial Post, a newspaper \'.'111c1i ouglit to know kzttei; opens an editorial on “Can- adians zixi Frce Trade." with this: ‘Aftzr the war 67 percent of the Canadian people think that there should be frce trade betwen Canada and the United States-that all pro- ducts and merchandise eras-ting the border either way should be free ol all tariff and customs duties. “Such 1s the finding of a recent Gallup poll by the Canadian In- stilutc of Public Op1n1on_" Now the clear impression given by ths language of the Financial Post is that this socalled Gallup pOII 100k H D011 of ALL of the people of Canada, and that 6'1 percent. of 111cm voted as indicated. It. says “g7 percent of the people of Can- a a." Now what are the facts here? Well, the main fact 1s that; the Gallup poll dldntpoll all the neo- ple of Canada (only 40 percent. o! them voted In the last general elec- tlomnor half the people of Canada. nor even 1a tin" fraction of them. We doubt whe er 1t "polled" one percent. of them, Consequently, and inevitably, the results of this p011- "67 percent o1 the people of Can- ada" -are absolutely worthless for reaching of a conclusion upon the subject. dealt with. Worthless and misleading, Over a Period o! n year. and after some investigation. The Journal has was "polled" by the Gallup poll. costed in the street by a young 1mm certain questions. The replies, given offhand, were riot signed. Apart hgijird of anybody else being "p011- f-lwse week-to-week of the Gallup poll. are just so much, ABSOLUTION The anguish of the earth absolves our eyes T111 beauty shines 1n III that we can see. War Is our scourge; yet. war bu made us wise, And, fighting for our freedom, we are free. . Horror or wounds and anger at the B. And loss of things desired; n11 those mus pass. We are the nappy legion, for m know Time's but a golden wind that shakes the grass. There was an hour when we were h to part From llfe we 11m ed to share no less than o era. Now. IlIflVInfl claimed his heritage of a r What need we more, my comrades and my brothers? ~8l0t1fr1od Saloon. met but one citizen of Ottaw h ‘mnmumeh! l‘ ‘mdfmwfld- ‘My “ w ° are likely to create 1n m, public This particular gentleman was ac- mm‘! “be dlmemlm“ 01' T811111)’- who asked what he thought about mfnktfnghxuzffkatcgmfliflnm rvtvertta meeting w111 be given b the Dis- Wllflflll matter. had to be sulbimaag- Sackvflle u. n. Ymm 1111-5. We have never met a ed “uppmsed ' mnn (or woman) who was "polled" ha“? °" *1 "Hy fraction of the by the Gallup pol], or who had ever fifnfhlwe" mfmlffll-lv false and , wmt 1t all sums w 1 r “m” W" 1' “ken . {Yams ‘amt adlan minimum or Pub] Canadian; believing 1n m]; m. that, Wat ls that? When was this "Instl- or wanting this or that, on the basis u e orgmflnd? And Why Where are its headquarters? who are m, Itlgfmy-“Fhey are hooey, and w...” fnfilrfrzlaghi Operators? in at;_ because. unlus thir ' m "e cum‘! "B him-t _. ....-.---,~,-—-___-_._________°_ gé-ivlélépgxnneggoegtyifiqyt-i ,3 a f", feature services? e uymg or Lfvfngtls Gallup non business look- thoritfes. It mischief ‘i 114111114:rxlllllillllll;,,,' ? Conditions in Greece today shock the world. Men women and especially CHILDREN are dying from starvatiori by the thousands, but still the noble Greeks will not bow their knees to the Nazi opprossor. Canadians are now asked to 'v t- and medicines to alleviate the awfulgsueffmtirligythgtsgniakihg place. It Is a Mosl: Worthy cause The local campaign is being sponsored by the Charlotte. town Rotary Club and we heartily endorse this believing it to b: one of the most necessary and urgent causs. S. A. MacDONALD Contributions are to be sent to: Mr. Arthur Belcher, Manager Bank of‘ Montreal, Charlottetown Professional Gard: McLeod (‘é Bentley W E. BENTLEY. 1L c, J. a BENTLEY. 1c c, Vllarrfstern and Attorneys-at. Law MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street M. ALBAN FAiRME an. 1.1..a. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. g1" Canadian Bank of Commem 51 MONEY T0 110.5111 ATcx w. MATHIESU BARRISTER. SOLICITDR. Ofllee: 90 Great George 81ml Money to lnan collect! Morrelland Company D. F. ARBHIBALII Chartered Accountants gum-n Trust Bulldllll Charlottetown rdUVVt-fiwv-nnm-s-“ta? MATCHES SINK snir T IDNDON, — (C?) — The Bil Submarine Unbending. back 110111 Mediterranean patrol, reported ~ men used a box or matches to s an enemy submarine, whose fr! “N taken to the boats 11w "‘ in your chores. Good worI. deserves a reward. Reward yourself with a comforting chew of I-IICKEY 8t NICI-IQLSON'$ " BLACK TWIST" CHEWING reception and dance were held this evening. Conference sessions W111 open tomorrow morning. Main address of the 11y a Gallup poll, pufpgrg. twmd-y trfct Governor. Harry . McKfel because 11s results, nun»; and Sllpplyfng mum " Ila. II. J. IMBIIII OFTOMETBIBT llltlllllio. I’. l. l. °"'" “$1193 " ~ '* incidentally, we m gold u," m“ the "c - Opinion " ‘ ivlaterpronf .- J not tub 011 iliuaranteiil harm -‘ tiaslly removoi Ii II 11118111. not. be g b d yd a ea to soap and Wm Ballad’: m. by appointment by t)" flPlJmDflate au- bn‘1l'<'i§°r"5’°r""' l5 l- wllme of grave a An You TPWbM WIIII LUMBAGO ROTARY CONVENTION or BORE BACK ‘f w. I we have one "I we . riinigdlu to offer. film“! QAQKRITE TABLET$ m. nu effective 1°’ 'j,tm hunt: Soiltlcl. N¢"'","' ~ Mlplcnlaghglllwgldi’ 01,11,110 l n, nma _ lreztmentl full 4° "uh [flea 500 b" M‘ rue two 111°‘ f. m Great 03m; sgfsm’, ~ VG Mm origination. g Your Eyes‘?" Kidney Acids ,<,;§;:.,g3"_ Bob Your Ros ;_!p¢6IllllL ' Al your service with "in pd of experience and q lhornch "i, ‘rofrlcllnl cervica- dhonn "II " Call In and ’. dlfflcnltlu Write or nhono for .» appointments- G. F. llutchsson I‘. O. IIUTCIIISON G- I’. IIUTOIIION favorite randy. m; Pills j