wT, The Guardian Covers Princes Edward tsiand Like the Dew Published every week-day morning at 165 Prince Street Chariettetown, P.E.I,, by the Thomson Company Ltd fan A. Burnett, Publisher and Genera) Manager Frank Walker, Editor Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association Member of The Canadian. Press Member Adu. Bureau of Cirenlations Search offices at Summerside, Montague and Alberton Represented Nationally oy: Thomson Newspapere Advertising Service @% King Street West, Toronto. Ont . #40 Catheart St.. Montreal 1030 West Georgia St:,. Vancouver ES Ae Provinees and United States $122.00 per annum. PAGE 4 BED whet The Beechwood Project With the formal opening on Dominion Day of the Beechwood pro- ject, our sister Province of New Brunswick has made a big forward atep in power development, Begun in 1954, the project has cost New Bruns- wick and the Federal Government an } i | ; j ; } d | se) } } || St. John River 100 miles north of | Fredericton, it is 1,600 feet in length | and rises 100 feet above the river bed. | During the four years of construction 47,000 cubie yards of earth, 130 | eubie yards of rock were excayated. | Gonerete representing 1,200 railway | ¢@ar loads and 4,153,000 pounds, or | BO railway car loads of steel were > 2m. { ms % af | operation. Long recognized as an ideal site for a power dam, Beechwood started | as a purely provincial project. The || St. Laurent Federal Government gave # its blessing and some technical as- » sistance, but no cash. The Diefen- "baker Government was more gener- -;| ous, and last October New Bruns- ~ -wickers heard from the Queen herself | — at the opening of Parliament that | _ there was to be financial aid from | Ottawa. This came in the form of a _ $29,500,000 loan at reasonable rates. _ In a message read at the Dominion : _' Day opening ceremony, Prime Minis- : ter Diefenbaker said his Government _ was happy to cooperate, “believing at we do that it will make an important contribution to the development of the Province. It is our hope that ef- . forts such as these will bring about , .& marked improvement in certain || provinees which haye not shared ('< fully in the prosperity of Canada, . | through no fault of their own.” — i Meanwhile it has been shown at | Ottawa that expenditure of $18,619,- » 000 for power development and trans- / 4 {mission lines in New Brunswick and } 4 ; _ Nova Scotia is planned by the North- ¢ em Canada Power Commission in the’ wurrent fiscal -} of oe of ! ( ti j i & 6 ( ( ; (March 81. The Commission, whose 0 field of operations originally was the q Far North, was made agent of the ¢ Federal Government in carrying out ; _the policy of aiding construction of q _ thermal power plants and transmis- q d 4 (| 1 3 4 0 gion lines in the Atlantic Provinces. ; A total $8,211,000 jn capital expendi- |: tures is planned for New Brunswick and $5,408,000 in Nova Scotia. Major items are $3,287,000 for a thermal || plant in East Saint John, N.B. and | $2,286,000 for an additional 20 kilo- - watt thermal unit at Trenton, N.S. We welcome these signs of pro- /gress in the Atlantie region. eS oO. . | new opportunities in which we hope to share, and in which Canada as a | whole will benefit, directly and in- | ‘directly. ; The 49th State | For the residents of Alaska this _ year’s Fourth of July will be a special _day for rejoicing. They will, with q other Americans, celebrate another 1 birthday anniversary of the nation. | They will also celebrate Alaska’s | entry into the Union as the 49th State. It will of course, be several ‘months before the formalities are completed. But that is a small matter. The action of the Congress is, for all practical purposes, already effective. Soon, the new state of Alaska will elect two Senators and one represen- ‘tative to look after its interests in Washington. It has been a long fight. More than 40 years ago the Alaskans atarted their agitation for statehood. Their hopes were blocked, in the main, by © conservative Southern ‘Senators who feared that a new State ‘would be one more hindrance to their campaign against civil rights for Negroes. Some Republican Senators from the North opposed bringing Alaska into the fold because they feared that the new State would fol- low a Demoeratic pattern, as it has done almost consistently in its terri- torial elections. But, at long last, simple justice has triumphed over political fears; and soon the Sover- eign State of Alaska will take its proper place in the legislative coun- eils of the nation. It will also, of course, have its own State Govern- iment with’ all the trappings. The name “Alaska” comes from CD oe OA beh CO ee Oe 2.2 By Carrier Charlottetown, Summerside 30c per. week, By Mail elsewhere in P.E.I, $9.00 per annum. Other THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1958, : estimated $29,500,000. Spanning the- ' of a friendly nation. Up to 1867 it 1) é | used. The plant will have a capacity of 135,000 horse power when in full | _ MacLean and a number of interested ‘groups, including the Newfoundland . |. they have purchased in recent years. year ending, next of Commerce in Jamaica ‘stated that. _ ment has come from Federal author- are being made for a new organiza- They | / spell new industries, new markets and Scotia is also directiy involved. In- land’. And a great land it is, to he sure, With an area of more than 580,000 square miles, it will be by far the biggest State in the Union— more than twice as big as Texas, which hitherto held that distinction. It is great in other ways, too. In minerals, timber, fisheries and other natural resources the new State is very rich and will be even richer as further developments take place and communications with the rest of the Republic are improved. As a military base, it ranks high; and its agricul- ‘tural. potential is considerable. In- cidentally, its climate is not nearly as severe as is sometimes thought. In fact, many of the coastal areas have relatively mild weather the year round. If geography determined the des- tinies of peoples, Alaska should be a part of Canada. That possibility be- ing now out of the question, Cana- dians can be thankful that it is part “was under Russian domination. It changed hands at that time for a consideration of $7 million. It now re- mains for the Canadian Government to.consider granting Provincial status to Alaska’s Eastern neighbours, the North West Territories. Incidentally, the population of the State of Alaska is roughly the same as that of Prince Edward Island; al- though the land area is 300 times as ; large. The difference is that Alaska’s * population is growing by leaps and bounds, while ours is barely holding | its own. ee Salt Fish Industry —. Reports from Ottawa indicate that a new marketing plan for salt fish may be in the offing. Discussions have been ‘going on ‘among Trade Minister Churchill, Fisheries Minister Fishermen’s Association, Nova Scotia representatives of the salt fish in- dustry and the Newfoundland. As- sociated Fish Exporters Limited, commonly known as NAFEL. The only official word from the meetings was conveyed to reporters by Fisheries Minister MacLean who | stated “we are studying the whole problem of the salt fish industry in relation to exports, production and quality”. It is known, however, that importers of salt fish from the At- lantic region are much_ perturbed over the inferior quality of the fish Only a few weeks ago the Minister fish going from Newfoundland, par- NAFEL, which markets virtually all salt cod in Newfoundland, was a “cartel” and should be smashed by the Federal Government. At the same time he intimated that Jamaica will turn to Iceland for its requirements. ‘Although no official pronounce- ities, it is believed that arrangements tion to replace NAFEL — some sort | of government-supervised co-opera- tive marketing plan. While New- foundland is the Atlantic region’s chief producer of salt cod,’ Nova directly concerned are the other two Provinces; for, of course, the better the market for salt fish; the less pressure is applied on the fresh fish industry. It is important that steps be taken to insure a high quality pro- duct, that being the chief factor in any marketing plan. EDITORIAL NOTES Canada is. doing fairly well as far as United States dollars and gold re- Serves are concerned, At the end of May, reports’the Bank of Canada, the reserves stood at $1,897,500,000, com- pared with 1,875,000,000 at the end of April.’ * x * Karly in the week Prime Minister Macmillan visited General de Gaulle in Paris, to talk over “important is- sues”. On Saturday U.S. Secretary of State Dulles will arrive on a sim- ilar errand. Both visits are in keep- ing with the general’s announced in- tention of strengthening France’s voice in allied councils. He is saying in effect, “if they want to talk with me, let them come where I am’, * * * The death of Alfred Noyes, British poet and writer of ballads, at, the age of 77, is another reminder that the “old-time” poets are fast disap- ° pearing from the literary scene. There are very few of them left. Modern poetry, with its intentional vagueness and, in many instances, meaningless- ness, may be intellectually stimulat- ing to some; but for many it cannot take the place of the gentle rythms and the pleasant rhymes in which the ticularly, was a “disgrace” and that chem trough thud auMoUk inter CAN'T KE ARR a em a nn OTTAWA REPORT OTTAWA — The Hon. George Drew, our High Commissioner to Great Britain, has just made a routine visit to Canada, to confer with’ Prime Minister John Dief- enbaker, and to discuss diploma- fie and trade problems with gov- ernment officials. | Ottawa, where he had known eight vears of frustration and re- _ jection as leader of the Conser- vative opposition on Parliament Hill, had an unusual, unexpected but well-deserved tribute to offer to him. + pee A group of senior civil Servants to entertain as their guest | of honour the visiting Mr. Drew. The host, George Canty, had until recently been a Liberal worker ‘for Paul Martin, when he was Liberal Health Minister. The whole group had formed Canada’s delegation to the International Conference on the Law of the _ Sea, held. in Geneva, Switzerland, ‘this Spring, when Dr. Drew had been their chief. The reception was arranged to express the yery sincere a jon “which they had all formed for George Drew, while he was so ably leading national conferénce. | CANADA MAKES YARDS True, our delegation lost out on Jand and a few other countries we attempted to obtain world re- cognition of our claim that all A Well-Deserved Tribute By Patrick Nicholson Special Correspondent For The Guardian gathered in a private home here’ one point, when together with Ice- | fish, up. to:a distance of twelve miles from the shoreline, are the. exclusive property of the adjoin- |: ing country. Previously fishing limits extended only three miles out to sea; beyond that distance, the fishermen of all countries en- joyed the freedom of the seas to keep What they could catch. But other countries would not agree to that proposal, especially after the U.S.A. compromised down to the last Canadian fish, as some- one put it. ; Although we lost on that point, Resources Minister Alvin Hiamil-) ton told me after his short visit to the conference, our delegation achieved tremendous gains for Canada on other points, notably the recognition of the ownership of the Continental shelf, up to a depth of 100 fathoms,-or 600 feet, of ocean water. : . The Continesital shelf is. that area of the world’s surface which, although permanently submerged beneath the waters of the ocean even at low tide, is. nevertheless “ covered by water so shallow that | it is obviously an extension of the! adjoining dry land mass. At some point, the shelf breaks away, and the bottom falls to a great depth to become the bed of the ocean proper, Off the British Columbia coast, the shelf extends only between 50 and 100 miles. Off Nova Seotia and Newfoundland, in the area of EP ITAFLOAT) {Grand Banks, the shelf extends the Atlantic Ocean known as the for 600 miles, with only shallow water above it; then it falls sharp- ly to give the Atlantic a depth of up to 12,000 feet. : In the Arctic Ocean, among the huge islands, the shelf is as yet unmeasured, but is suspected of being very large indeed. LIKE GAINS OF WAR Jt has. been guessed that the gain of under-water territory to Canada through this international | agreement may be about one ‘million square miles. This is equi- valent to adding one quarter to the area of this huge country. But, as Alvin Hamilton told me, that is clearly a guess, and not even an educated guess, at this stage of ignorance about the Arctic. - The significance of this great acquisition of territorial rights adjoining our coasts is that our portion of the Continental Shelf is believed to contain immense mineral resources, which are now protected against raiding by for- eigners. Off Nova Scotia, we have for years been mining coal far out beneath the Atlantic Ocean. But ghose riches in coal may be peanuts to the wealth in oil te be tapped beneath the Arctic Ocean, just as further south the. Gulf of Mexico is yielding im- immense oil fortunes. ‘ment of George Alexander Drew. Had he acquired one million square miles of new lands for Canada by military conquest, his name would be written large in our history books, like that of his conquering namesake Alexander, the Great. Future generations in. Canada will reap a rich harvest from his, magnificent achiey- ment. 4 THE ACADIANS OF P.E.I. (Continued from yesterday) ‘In the spring of 1754, 8000. bu- sbels of wheat, and 1,000 bushels of peas and oats were sown. Louisburg now looked forward to getting its supplies from Isle Saint-Jean, instead of being ob- liged to send seed there every year as had been the case in the dians continued to come in large numbers, In April 1755, the Com- mandant, Denis de Bonnaventure was transferred to Louisburg, and was succeeded at port Lajoie by Rousseau de. Villejoin. : 1755 CENSUS 2 In the year 1755, the abbe de Tlsle Dieu, viear general of the Bishop of Quebec, had a census taken by the missionaries then in the Island.: The following is an abstract of these censuses: Mission of port LaJoie (St. John): Men 127; Women 126; Boys 277; Girls 233. Total 763. This did. not include about 20 families too far away to be enu- merated. Total 100 persons. Point Prim (St. Paul): Men 50; Women, 55; Boys, 100; Girls _ 113; Total 318. St. Louis (At Scotchfort): Men, 113; Women, 114; Boys, 2; Girls 220; Total, 678: + Parish of Malpee (Holy Fam- ily) including Bedec: Men 60; Women 62; Boys 134; Girls 100; Total 356, Parish of St. Pierre (St. Pet- ers, including Savage Harbour) No details are given only the total of 750 persons. This census also gives the mis- sion of Trois-Rivieres. Men 16; Women 20; Boys 34; Girls 31. Total 101. ‘ \ Total for all the parishes and missions. . .2901. LARGE INFLUX Immediately after this census was taken a very lange number of Acadians arrived in the Ishand after the fall of the Fort of Beau- sejour and the Expulsion of 1755 from Nova Seotia. Commandant Villeloin, an able and conscientious man, had am exceedingly difficult problem on his hands, These refugees’ came late in autumn, without warning and without resources. Between the last. months of 1755 and the following spring some 2,000 re- fugees were thrown upon the hands ‘of Commandant Villejoin. late Mr. Noyes was a practised artist. _ Influx Of By J. Henri. Blanchard, LU. D, past. As a result of all this, Aca- | They came from Beaubassin, Co- | Cagne, Peticoudiac, Shediac, Pis-' The four-mile limit was measur: | Refugees iquid, and Cobequid,. From Cobe- quid some had come over and settled at Point Prim during the two years preceding the Expul- sion of 1755, but now the whole village moved over to Isle Saint- Jean by way of Tatamagouche, When the English officers ar- rived bearing the expulsion ord- ers of Charles Lawrence, not a single inhabitant of Cobequid could be found; they had all crossed over to Isle Saint-Jean. Commandant Villejoin had to send the aged and infirm’ to Canada, but some 1400 still remained, and poor Villejoin had nothing to feed them with. : By the year 1756, the popula- tion of, Isle Saint-Jean had in- creased to more than 4,500, and two-third of these people had. to be fed at the government’s expense. We read that of 87 Acadians who had crossed from Cocagne. in 1756, 16 had been expelled by the English in 1755 and Janded in Carolina. They with 4 others had made,their way back through the forest to the St. John river and from there had passed on to Cocagne. The poor fellows were destined, to he expelled once more in 1758. (Can. Archives, 1905, Vol. 11 Appendix H, page 118). ' (To be continued) Iceland's Fishing Claims - Winnipeg Free Press Trouble is brewing between the United Kingdom. and Iceland, be- cause Iceland has given notice that in September she will begin to keep all foreign fishing boats at least twelve miles off her shores. This is a dispute in which Canada is interested because, in extending her offshore fishing limits to twelve miles, Iceland is doing something that Canada would like to do. But Iceland is making the move unilaterally; Canada would prefer to extend her fising limits in cooperation with the other countries involy- ed. For many years the rich fish- ing grounds near. the eoast of Iceland have been fished by trawlers from Britain and other European countries. ™ these fish- eries: are now to be denied them —as they will be by the imposi- tion of a twelve-mile limit—their catch will suffer greatly. As a result, Britain has sent a note to the Icelandic Govern- ment saying that she will nefuse to recognize the twelve-mile limit and will prevent any unlawful attempt to interfere with British fishing vessels ‘‘on the high seas.” ed from baselines drawn across widely separated headlands. Within the newly-enclosed areas all fishing by foreigners, and trawling and seine fishing by Icelanders, was forbidden. The United Kingdom refused to recognize the validity of the new boundaries; and between 1952 and 1957 a total’ of 28 Bri- tish trawlers and 34 ships of oth- er nationalities were arrested and fined heavily for being in forbid- den waters. Icelandic vessels we also from time to time, arrested. In retaliation, Britain imposed a ban on the landing of Icelandic fish in the United ‘Kingdom, The dispute dragged on for four years before it was settled -in 1956. But it broke out anew at the international conference on the law of the sea, held in Geneva earler this year. Here Iceland made it clear that she wanted at least a twelve mile limit and probably more, CANADA’S SUPPORT vessels surrounding the rectal _livés are probably more suscep- That gain is largely the achieve- | ‘degree of conservation for our Surgery Best In Most Cases By Herman N. Bundesen, M. D. Because of false modesty, hem- ornhoids, or piles, often are neg- lected until they begin bleeding | excessively or the pain becomes unbearable. Since in most cases surgery is the best method of removing either internal or external hemorrhoids, you will have te see ‘a doctor eventually. So why wait? ENLARGED VEINS... ... ... Hemorrhoids are enlarged veins which form on either the ‘inside or outside of the anus, the muscular ring at the bowel outlet. To give you a better idea of what they are like, you can com- pare them to varicose veins in the leg. a Internal hemorrhoids may bleed, or they may’ protrude. Sometimes they do both. The external type are generally no- ticed by a sudden painful swell- ing in the anus, The swelling can vary from the size of a pea to the size of a cherry. SUDDEN ONSET Very often, hemorrhoids corne on with a sudden, sharp sting- ing pain after lifting, roughing or Any condition which hampers proper flow of the blood in the aréa may help cause hemor- roids. This means that persons who lead exceptionally sedentary tible than more active indivi- duals. So are rétail clerks and others who are on their feet for long periods each day. SOME CAUSES 4 | Frequently, hemorrhoids are. associated with pregnancy. Con- stipation too, can be a contrib- uting factor, as might the ex- cessivé use of cathartics and Jax- _atives. Hemorrhoids may affect the general health, and then again they may not. Sometimes the amount of blood lost over a pro- longed period is enough to pro- duce anemia, é While internal hemorrhoids sometimes disappear by them- selves, more often they require medical treatment. Some oint- ‘ments may relieve the pain tem- porarily. Some electrical treat ments are helpful; some are not. And some patiénts report goo] results when. certain medicines are injected into the hemorrhoids. But in the vast majority of cases surgery is the most effect- ive treatment. QUESTION. AND. ANSWER T.P.: Is there any way that the growth defect from polio can be corrected. especially when one leg is shorter than. the other? Answer: In adolescence and childhood, an operation is now | available in which, in the nor- mal extremity, a nail is put bone in order to slow the growth so that the growth of. both legs can be equalized. well as Iceland and Canada, % was opposed by many European |. countries, the United States and the United Kingdom, The pro- posal failed to win the necessary two-thirds majority and was not It has since. been suggested by Mr. Ferguson Brown, Conserva- tive MP for Vancouver-Kingsway, that Canada should do what Ieeland is doing; that is, declare a twelve-mile zone without con- sulting with other countries. But, as indicated by the Iceland-U.K. dispute, the disadvantages of un- ilateral action of this sort might well outweigh the advantages. Certainly it would arouse deep resentment among many of our friends, including the United Stat- es, Britain and European count- ries. In the circumstances the wiser course of action would, therefore, be to continue to seek through compromise a solution that would provide the necessary fisheries without inflicting sharp damage on the fishermen of oth- er countries. ; . a NOTES BY THE WAY © The instalment plan is the only known method to get some peo- ple to do things on time. Kitch- ener-Waterloo Record ‘All Araks are brothers,” pro- claims Egypt's Nasser. The trou- ble is that he seems to want to be his brothers’ keeper.—Brant- ford It's a funny age all right, When you think that with our advanced. state of existence we each of us must work hard- er and longer to provide food for a family than did the primitive cave man who had an abundance of game at his very door and had only to go out and kill some of it, it makes you wonder, —Kingston- Whig-Standard } i If the mountain lions, or cou- gars, are living in numbers in Northern Ontario, the Départ- ment of Travel and Publicity has a new lure for U.S. hunters. Nor- théerners become used to liv- ing with bears, wolves, deer and moose. We are not so sure we take kindly to the idea of moun- tain lions moving into our area.: Let them find their way back to British Columbia where they are supposed to be native.—Sudbury Star : - Protectionist pleas are often ap- pealing. They deserve full consid- eration. But they should never be considered apart from the whole national interest. Too often high- tariff advocates look only’ at pos- sible injuries from competition; they give no heed to gains from increased trade. These. include not only lower prices for conzum- ers but expansion of exports, which are best paid for with im- ports. Beyond that is the very practical value of freer trade in uniting and strengthening the economic defence of the free| « world.—Christian Science “Moni- | , tor f OUR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY—FIVE YEARS AGO (July 3, 1933) The Prince Edward Island Lib- rory Institute opened yesterday morning with an enrolment of 38, a record registration for a Cana. dian summer library school. The |. course consists of three parts ad- ministration, reference wor k, book elections and children’s libraries for the first part; clas- sifying and cataloguing for the second and illustrated public lee- tures in the evening. Prince Edward Island's first air accident occurred last even- ing at Summerside when a plane being flown over the Exhibition Grounds crashed to the ground. The craft was a monoplane type and it appeared as if one of the wings broke away from the plane while the pilot was over the grounds. TEN YEARS AGO (July 1948) Yesterday afternoon directors of the recently formed Potato SI Advisory Associa-| tee nilien by President William Hughes of Souris waited on the Executive Council to outline the aims and objects of the new as- sociation, and also to ask the Gove: t to assist in obtai- ing officials to carry out the fune- Mr. Bruce C. Hill, M.C. and Canadian Bar, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Mr. Don Morrell,. the executive sec- retary were the guests of the Summerside Board of Trade yes- terday at a luncheon meeting. In his address Mr. Hill dealt with the economic and political prob- lems facing Canada today, and the part which the Board of Trade might play in assisting to. plea solutions ta these prob- ems. : The Age Old Story T send an Angel ‘before thee, to keep thee in the way, and te bring thee into the place which I have prepared. DEVELOPMENT GRANTS LONDON (Reuters) — Britain provided more than £18,000,000 in grants for development and re- search projects in her overseas territories in the last financial year, an annual report on colon- ial development said Tuesday. SMOKES FOR CANADIAN MILITARY PERSONNEL serving with the United Nations Emergency Force in the Middle East Canada, represented by Mr. George Drew, supported the pro- | posal that a country should have’ exclusive fishing rights within twelve miles of its coast, He The “high seas’ by this defini- tion include those watens between the twelve - mile limit and the present four-mile limit that Tee | land imposed in 1952. THE FOUR-MILE LIMIT The countries have been quar- Pointed out that a twelve-mile | fishing limit has been imposed on | Canadian trawlers since 1911 for the protection of our offshore | fisheries. It was only right that the same restriction should relling about fishing rights since the foursmile limit was set up. | Before 1952 the fisheries limit | around Iceland was three miles, | measured from low water mark. placed on trawiers from other | countries fishing in waters off | the Canadian coast. The proposal: had the backing | of Norway, some Communist! countries and most of the new nations of Africa and Asia, as $1 sends 400 EXPORT CIGARETTES or any other Macdonald Brand Postage included Mail order and remittance to: OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT MACDONALD TOBACCO INC, P.O. Box 490, Place d’Armes, Montreal, Que. This offer is subject te any change in Government Regulations, CUDMORE'S DRY CLEANERS 120 Kent St. Phone 4922 Grade A Medium .... TT has been decided hy courts that poker playing by wo men is no crime. Other judg Stratford Beacon-Hearld past, believes the Hamilton Spe tator. We believed the day of spittoon — pardon, cuspider < was past also, but there are sti two fine polished brass one standing sentinel at the Senat Chamber.—Ottawa Journal js There is another French crisj brewing, if that is the right word ing which temperatures fell to 3 degrees below zero, killed 9 many vines, with the result there is a serious shortage wine, particularly of the vin or dlinaire.—Manchester Guardian The four billion candle-p being used to illuminate Niagay Falls at night is not a waste ¢ power. It increasés the attrac ve ness of the falls for the touris trade as well as those re on both sides of the border, | are a feature of first magnitud giving a panoramic view of thi falls at. night never seen in past.—St. Catherines Standard One million dollars was lost b careless lottery winners last year according to a -Jabanésé The bank, which runs the lott for the government, said the ets become void unléss winns claim their, prizes within a from the day the winners ap drawn. Among the prize ' tickets apparently thrown were one for $11,000 and se for $5,000.—Japan Times, To With one beat of his wings the gravel path MAXIN selves, but to try to make th Our paying price to f ducers tor wngre eggs delivered Charlo town teday ise Grade A Large ‘nue $ Grade A Small ...... Gude B cae Arata Cassa (Cragke ) ee a For quick payment ant prompt return of cases, ship your eggs fe cIMITED Charlottetown IF YOUR GUARDIAN DIAL missed. ; and. a paper will be delivered right to your door. Special delivery service available between 8:30] a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or 6561 | ED'S DIAL 173 Great George St. For the Fastest Service te Ed’s Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill ef those whom we serve — the goal for which we strive!” TAX!’ =| 656] Charlottetown 7 have held it isn’t even pokerly The day of the toothpick jj Two successive poor seasons dun pe ee ae eee PE EAE maa Pa ae a at = ee ee ee a oe ~~ Bete OA Pt ne, |