PAGE FULIR tin-z GIIAIILOTTETOIVII GUARDIAN m» ' _ mu; (Founded In m1) Authorized as Second Class Mall, Post.‘ 08100 - Department, Ottawa. Presldent, Ian A. Burnett; Vice-President. WHI- B- Bnrneit; Seep-Tress" G. M. Burnett; Editor Ind Managing Director, s. a. Blllnel.“ AIM-elm mum. Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tlln the Weakest Ink.‘ WEDNESDAY, SEPT. l1, 1946 _\Vhen ‘Polio Strikes! $15!?!“ The National Foruidation for Infantile Paralysis, New‘ York, advises that if polio- myellitis breaks out in a community the fol- lowing suggcsticns should he followed: Avoid new contacts. 'lir_v itot to mingle with crowds ituncccssarily. (Sc/tool: and ofh- lf gHI/Ifrllllg fthzces", lwztietrr, may remain open.) \\'atch these symptoms. Headache, unex- plained fcvcr, a cold, even upset stomach may be the first symptoms of infantile paralysis. Call votu- doctor immediately if any of these synmtoiiis ztppcar. Expert medical care may help prcvcnt crippling. licutcitilicr. Curry ou your normal act- ivities. lnfztutilc paralysis cannot be prc- vented but fcw of those stricken develop seri- ous illness and, with good care, the majority will make satisfactory recovery. Also remember that quick action prevents crippling. _ lune through Scptctitbcr is the danger period- wheu the following personal rules should be followed: Don't get arm-tired. makes you an easier victim. .~l:'o.itl chilling. Don't stay too cold water. Keep £18011. Wash hands before eating. Keep flies and other insects away from food. Help ken/t your COHHIIIHIfIy clean. \Vaste and exposed garbage may be sources of infec- tlon. Don't swim in polluted waters. Avoid removal of tonsils and adenoids prior t0 and during polio epidemic season. often Extreme fatigue long in Cattle Situation The number of cattle on farms in Can- adareached an all-time high last year, ac- cording to the June 1st survey by (he Donn“. ion Bureau of Statistics. The Estimated i0,- 759.000 head was more than 25 per cent high- er than the pre-vrar number. lune Ist esti- mates for this year are not yet available but it is generally calculated that the cattle popu- lation is still ovcr i0 million head, The volume of cattle slaughtered and beef produced in I945 was also the highest on rec- ord. Inspected cattle slaughter was more than double I939—1-3I3,84o hcad compared to 872,- 574- During the last six mouths of I945 over a million cattle were handled by inspected pro- cessors. The largest numbered slaughtered in a week was 58,505. Inspected slattghtcriitgs for the first half of I946 have been below those for the same Period in 1945-4163986 head compared to 734,416, or a decrease of 9.5 per cent. If esti- mated numbers on farms are reasonably in line with the actual holdings, it is possible that marketings in the last six months may be equal to 0r larger than a year ago. Under contracts with the United Kingdom Canada has had an outlet for all surplus beef since i944. In 1945 a. total of 193,534,000 pounds of beef was exported. the maiior por- tion going to the United Kingdom. In addi- tion, canned mcat exports provided an outlet for a considerable portion of beef. It is cal- culated beef exports in terms of live cattle were (‘quivalent to 647,000 liqid, The present bcc-f contract with the United Kingdom terminates at the end of I946, but the British .\linistr_y' has itidicafcd a desire to take our surplus in I947 and possibly I948. Contract negotiations are now tinder way. How long Liilllilfla can hope to sell to the United Kingdom is citiestionable as beef from Argcntiua, Australia and other sources costs the British less and the quality generally is more desirable. Canada cannot hope t0 re- tain indefinitely her present position on that market. Lower costs of production in other surplus cattle-producing countries, as wcll as other factors, ntake it difficult to meet their competition. It is also reasonable to assume that lower quality beef will be cut off first, unless a depressed price is acceptable. As prcvinusly indicated, a considerable éuantity of beef was used for manufacturing canned meats. the major volume of which was shipped to UNRRA. It has now bceu an- nounced that _UNRRA will cease to function when present contracts are filled. Present in- dications are that plants will have filled Can- ada's quota on or before December Ist. Un- less other markets for canned meat are found. considerable quantities of manufacturing beef, used in its production and derived from can- ncrs and cutters and plainer quality cattle, will have to be exported to the United Kingdom in the boneless form. i The Departments of Agriculture have Jtcommendcd a policy of culling herds and disposing of inferior stock. This advice ap- i and colleges cattle occurred or the market was draggy, it was the poorer quality and not the better cat- tle which suffered. This was indicated by the weekly published Dominion Market Reports and daily market comments appearing in the press. p EDITORIAL NOTES = It was a case of "hail and farewell” visit of H. M. C. S. Donnacoita II to Charlottetown last week. it 1k Students have begun to leave for schools on the mainland, where, for thc most part, they will remain till Christmas. N‘ * i‘ H‘ 1k it BOth agriculturalists zntd wur vctcratis have had a good and profitable time in the City. They are ever welcome. i 1|‘ Fl‘ ‘l! lVhat puzzles most men these days is, how Carl U. N. h0pe to get anywhere by arbitra- tion instead of war, when trades unions and industries within the respective tiations fail to profit by it? it!!! Stock gamblers, especially on tnargitis, are finding, as many of their predecessors have in the past, that the way of the financial trans- gressor is no less rough and tumble than the transgrcssors in other FCSDCISIS. 1K >lt * * Que thing tttust be said on behalf of the Jones Government, it knows how to cater to the comfort and convenience of the best pay- ing portion of its ieviinue producers. >l< >11 Battle of Mzilplaqtict fought on the Hel- gian border this date i709, when the British forces under Marlborough, and the Germans under Prince Eugene inflicted a disastrous defeat on the French under Villars and Bottfflers. u m x u- Cbntrary to reports that a. few Canadian servicemen still serving overseas are likely to remain there at least "four or five years", the Department of National Defence announces that repatriation of all Canadian serviccnten is expected to be completed by the end of the cur- rent year. a- n- w m A number of German synthetic food pro- ducts are expected to appear on world mar- kets before long, according to Business Wash. These include a meat substitute made from cheese and sugar-mill by-products; a butter substitute made from weed seeds; an artificial honey and a dehydrated butter. All these products were successfully developed dur- ing the war and have attracted the attention of international food experts. =1- : n: m \Vere there to be a Domiuioti-vvide strike of farmers, this is what would happen: In- dustry, including farming, would cease, Satan would, find plenty mischief for idle hands to do, anarchy would follow as the night the day, then revolution. After that farmers would have to return to till the soil for a less profitable return than ever before. Strikes ticver pay in the long run, the constuner always gets it “in the neck" where the unoffending chicken ex- periences it from the farmers wife. ' 4: it: 4- >0- “To be, or not to be", is the question of the launching of the Car Ferry Abegweit. Tlt.c son of the President of the shipbuilding coni- pany said it would ndt be launched till next summer. Mr. LVIacNattgltt, Ml’, says it “should be" ready for service early next spring, "provided that all itecrrsary tnatcrial for her conrtrttction be available tc/icn aweded.” That is the rub! Mr. MacNaught, being a shrewd politician, merely hastens t0 help Ihe Ioncs candidate out of a, dilemma in the present by- election. lklkklk The British Chancellor of the Exchequer is keeping an eye on fur imports. It was sug- gested to him that a considerable quantity of dollar exchange is bciiig expcndctl on import- ing furs and that he has itistificd this policy by reference to the possible export trade in fur clothing, whereas these exports do not amount to more than one-hundredth of the value of fur imports. Mr. Dalton agreed that the hope is that the fur trade will, in a reasonable time, yield a substantial profit on foreign ex- change. "If it docs not," he said, “I will stop it." 4- 4- * * ' Some Cocknevs do not llllflCfSlilllfl the King's English when spolccn by Scottish sold- iers. Mrs. Hughes, who ran a popular canteen back of Westminster Cathedral, told an inter- viewer that during the war she served hun- dreds of Allied soldiers who scented to find no difficulty with the tncntts and to make their wants tmderstood. lint a fc\v days be- fore they shut down they bad a custolner they couldn't tinderstantl. All the staff had a go at him, without sticcess. Nothing on the menu corresponded with the souudts he made, And at last, Mrs. Hughes (leclarcrl. it lurncrl out to be “broad Scots" and what he wanted was a bed for the night. n: w- v A controlled tractor operating exactly as if operated manually has been ploughing Uni- ted Kingdom wheat fields recently. The trac- tor is thc ordinary small type fitted with the Queen Bee apparatus Itscd for controlling pil- otlcss planes. It was itserl Io plough a I4-acrc field in Southern England. In one corner of 4K pears sound in view of the facts available at fhe moment. Prior to the closing pf the Iinltcd States’ market it was not profitable _ under the existing tariff duties imposed on live cattle and beef to export the poorer quality of llmtock to that market, either as live animals “pr dream! Product. _ I F I ersjplbntlln: on reducing their pr: "y... and improving the‘ T 4 the better cattle are advis i . ’ - early in ‘the fall. Althou .1 v ‘U’ of reasonably‘ promp v White killing the field stood the transmitting van. The tractor was pushed into position and then be- gan to move by itself. lt ploughed tcn fur- rows, cach 65 feet long in IO mimitcs. Left and right turns were madc pcrfcclly. This suc- ,cessftil experiment tyas the result of consider- able radar research which has been carried out by the Royal Aeronautical Establishment at Farnborough, Kent. Ploughing by radio con- trol will, if generally adopted. mean a tre- mi-z CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way Posh! mcognltlon of World Wu II co-operatlon between the Allies Is presented In the recent Norweg- Ian stamp paying tribute to Can- ada's "Li-ttle Norway," where Nor- wegian fliers were trained after the German Invasion of Norway. Picturing n pilot and s mechanic marchtng forward with the figure of a VI-klng In the background, the red stamp bears the coats of arms of both Canada and Norway. "Llt- tIe Norway" was located In n Te- ronto suburb. -- Christian Sclcnce Monitor. The Preacher Ecclesiastes spoke to a different generation, and in different times, as the woman found out who appeared before the magistrate at Eastbourne re- cently charged with wasting bread by feeding It to ducks on an urtifbc- IaI lake. In our time of near-cut- Ianing those who cast their bread upon the waters run the risk that It will be many days before hey can return to fInd It. -Glssgo\v Herald. —- 0 A young bride from the west In vlew of recent publicity about alleged seizure n1 alft. parcels from overseas. the Board of finale Issue the following statement: Ur-ier the Import of mods (control) o"- der, all goods hocght Into this country must. have an Import II- cense. A concession Is. however, made concerning unsoIIcIt-d gtft parcels. Under thIs concession such gift parceLs are allowed wtttz- out. an import Jcense providing they fulfil the main requirements that mt more than one per month Is sent. and that no parcels total more than 11 pounds gross weight and do not Izouraln more than seven pour-is of foodstuffs or more than two pounds ot any one foodstuff. —— U. K. Tnfcrma- tlon Office. The National Wool Growers’ Aa- sociatlcci has asked the Civilian Production Administrator to per- mit the lengthening of skirts by two inches, Administrator John D- Small has said no-ori the ground that. this lowerlng of the hem line might cost the national economy 50,000,000 yards of fabric a year. Frankly, we haven't noticed any standard sklrt length to begln wIth. We think the ladies are somehow circumventing Administrator Small. On the other hand. we doubt that there would be a rush to lengthen skirts even If the wool growers did get their way. Our opinion Is that the whereabouts of the hem Is dictated entirely by such things as the prevalence of nylons, the mechanics of getting in or out of automobiles and particularly the contour of the IndIviduaVs lower extremities. —- Detroit Free Press. The mustard crop ls being hur- vested, and It Is s. good "I00 this year. It. represents new crops on some 20,000 acres —taken out. of wheat production. The canning crops are being harvested — and these with potatoes represent an- other 20.000 or 30.000 acres taken out of the acreage In graliis and alfalfa which we were forced to grow under Irrigation a, few years ago. Of course we have 30,030 acres of sugar beets under IrrI- gation too. This for H18 first time tomatoes grown under lrrl- gatlon In this are: are being shlp- -ped_ commercially. We don‘! knuw much about tomato-growing yet but we'll Ieazn. Just as we learn- ed to grow sugar beets. A flower producer near the city is shtpptnz "glads" daily all the wav from Vancouver to Wtnnitlteg 90m M! bulb fairm, another new commer- cial venture. - Leihbrtdge Herald. Just when a. person should be most alert, he is likely to be over- come with drowsiness which can be fatal. Driving a motor car has that. effect on many people. and It constitutes one of the chief haz- ards of the highway. ny sugges- tions are offered to o ercomi: this tendenc to doze off while tit the wheel. ulte the worst one w; that an attempt be made to flght sleep- It ls invariably a losing battle, and our accident records have far too many entries caused by those who refused to give In to Iassitud-r. but insisted on going ahead despite the danger signals, Actually, there is only one unfailing cure for this menacing sleepiness. Go to sleep. Flnd n place where there Is suffic- ient space tn park completely off the roadway, stop the cur, relax In the seat and have a IIttIe nap. Usually ten or fifteen minutes will suffice, and you will be ready to drive on, quite refreshed and alert. But under no circumstan- ces try the toolhardy system of fighting to keep awake while you continue to drive. -Windsor Star. Robertson, a small town In N18. W., has resolutely repelled an m- truslon of modernism Into the proceedings of its Agricultural So- ciety. These Johnny-Come-l-ntelles wanted to fix a set day for each monthly meeting-something never even suggested before In the years of the Society's existence- but a large majority supported the ancient practice of assembling on "the Thursday of each month nearest the full moon." This ar- rangement was made when the so- cIety was formed when there were no efficient motor cars wIth glar- inf headlights to go tearing over bl Ilard table roads In the dark- ness. In those days members nad to thread their way In buggies or on horseback along bush tracks which wound an erratlc way through scrub and over hills and over dale, and ‘they found the light of the moan a great. help- particularly goln home. The moon ad not. seen ft to break faith with the society. so why should the soclety break faith, with the moon‘! - From Australian News, a How to get the hngglnou out o trouser knees Is one of the hom s Department of Agrjcultur explain that trousers ba the fabrlc has been stretc ed an that shrI-nklng wlth steam Is cure. Lay the trouser Icz flat. the Ironlng board with thr part uppermost. Lay a wool cIu cotton cloth on top. Press gent v, so that the steam garment. Keep ting the loose fa rI-c Intu place tII the fullness tIIsn _ rs. press the entire 1e o er! untII almost ry. Leave trouser leg In position oirtha fcw minutes until It In r In- Navoi- press wool 0e: Into t.- mendous saving in manpower, since one skilled an mid; 6 tractors simultaneously. ' because thll msko and o . _.-..-..4 PUBLIC FORUM This column h open In tho illlcunlon by our» spoiuhnh of question ll lnhnlt. Th0 Charlottetown Gun-flan does no: noon: ll; endorse the nplnlon cl xrrupondontl. l LE1’!!! OI’ APPRECIATION SI-r,-In June last I Issued u pr0-. clamation requesting property owners to observe “Brighten Up Week" a: “a time to be particular- ly devoted to the beautifying of homes. I appreciate the action of the large number of home owners throughout the Province who have brightened up their properties and made them more attractive, more valuable. and If this work ls con- tinued by everyone In Prince Ed- ward Island we wlll eventually become known as one of the best appearing and most beautiful provinces of the Dominion of Canada. _ I am, Sir, etc. J. A. BERNARD, Lieutenant Governor. Government House, Charlottetown, Sept. 3, 1946. 2ND PRINCE BY-ELECTION Shy-The forthcoming election In the Second Dlstrlct, of Prlnce for a representative to replace the late Hon, W. H. Denul-s has brought forth an exceedingly Intensive drive on the part of the Liberals to elect their man and they are pretty scared over the outcome by the lock of things. The people of this flne District are asking ques- ttcm and wanting answers to the many rumors that are flying around thick and fast. One of them is that Hon. G, H. Barbour who now represents this District has sold his property here and bought the farm of the late Hon. Walter Len In Victoria and now has no vote In his own District, It would ap- pear as If he does not intend to pay much attention to his old Dls- trlct and leave 1t alone like he has during the past several years. Ru- mor also say/s he would look with favor on s nomInatIon In the late Mr. Les’: District. The Liberals have also brought Into the District Mr. Orville Dnrrach asslstlitg In their organization. Darrach was an organizer for Mr. Watson McNaught who had about the lowest major- ity any elected candidate ever had In Prince County. This bye-elec- tion will probably be a Liberal loss thls time. There are some ugly ru- mors floatlng around regarding a supposed telegram read by this organizer at the last Liberal Fed- eral Convention. Personally I have nothing against either the Literal or Conservative candidate In this bye-election but I really do think that a little more opposltlon In the local legislature would be a good thing and might be the means of cutting down on some of the dictatorial attitude of a good many members of the present local Gov- ernment, and this goes for the Premier too. Those who attended as observers the Conservative and Liberal Conventions must nave been impressed with the forthright statements Hon, W. J. P. MiicMil- lan made regarding the proposed West Point ferry service and pav- Ing the road leadlng to it. As for me I gm voting Conservative this time because I don't think it right for one man or one political party to have if. all their own way for such a long time and a good prod In the ribs In this bye elec- tlon would do them good and wake them up to the fact that after all the people are now going to have something more to say than they have in the past. I am, Sir, etc. ELECTOR 2ND PRINCE AN OLD HUNTER PROTESTS Sin-A few days ago I saw In your paper where the duck shoot- Ing season was postponed fIve days, or until September 25th. I would like to know the reason. I have been duck shooting every year for over 60 years. When I first started the season opened on September Ist and the game assoc- iation had It postponed until Sept. 15th as there were some late flocks which would be quite pin-feathery. Fortsome reason, or to suit some Individuals, It was postponed again until September 20th. which date was; suitable and falr to every- body. Now the 25th of September nb- so-lutely deprives the farmers and their sons (who have ponds and marshes) from getting a shot at sll—as ducks start leaving the fresh water ponds about the 18th of September to go to the salt water, and do not come back, and by the last c-I’ September there is rarely a duck to be seen in the fresh water ponds. where they vrere hatched. The farmer sports- man Is unable to get a duck at all tinless he goes mlles from home to where the ducks have congre- gated In the bays, which Is suitable or some gunners, who live neat the east end of the Island; ant unless the season I-s put back t QUICKIES over thls section-and a molsten d. moving the Iron from slde to sl el ren n: and p t~. Trumpet With Uncertain Sounds (Globe And Ml“) , ; “you; clement of h cansdlnn Bur M- tsiiiglgflgwhn hiiriicllfcig of the rebuff of Its Civll Liberties; w uphold It ls true mat-in v0! n! datlons the commltiteel rectlianmenc! g _. 1 t was. . fr}: fiiiiiyiiniofo the wmlwbm’? which m; resolutions were.“ use“; Neverthelesm ‘l1’! endnelv” g the sgpfltflil? the effects from 1e u‘- "cuuses“. more Ihanla (‘new 8 - ' ' ve- ISTKIIQQUriiiIIZ-litidiisiefifivtfo delete the entire preamble from 1h; hgelffiiif was offered by senfltlifh ‘ehe “d; Halg of yglftlnllieflhw ' a : mllwliili we should do Is accept the TPCOIIIIIIPIIKIBIIOIIS c-f the coil}; mlttee hut not the recitals. Don let usitake W" i" l‘ Wlmcal a” gument. . . ." ' By their vote, It l! evldent fhn! the majority of the lawyers pr?- ent concurred‘ wlth that Sen I- ment. In so doing, however. I all?‘ sgg-igti-c»n_ almost unavoidably e _ the Implication that the Govern merit could not have acted other than It did. but that It would be well It It did not do It again. To hold that 1t Is partisan poll-t- Ics for an Independent 011M113!‘ Ion such as the Canadian Bur As- There WB of the day Is an extraordinary fallacy, The Governments action In regard to the esplvnnse Inquiry 15 by no means an evidence o-f artisanship. Criticism of that. D01- icy throttghout the country h“ assuredly not been conflned to 0p- positioct supporters. Only In the Bar Association has the sI-Iflbest- Ion been advanced thllt Such crltlclsm smacks of poIItIcs. Indeed the surpassing Importance 0! U19 Issue Is that if the present Govern- ment ls allowed to flout_ the nat- l0n's funrlumcmlal liberties, there \vill be nothing to prevent a later Government, of whatever stripe, uslng slmllar methods In n tlckllsh situation. x x x Though the Bar avoided basing Its constructlve recommendations on the recital of a sFeCifiC case, there can nr>_no quarre with Its “uncompromkmg support of the rule of Isw". and of Its strong disapproval of "any action by Government, or by any Individual or organization which Infrlnges In any degree the free- dom of the subject under lhe law." In calling for changes to strength- en the Canada Evidence Act; for the discontinuance of the practice of aPPoIntIng judges as Royal Commissioners to “Inquire Into the conduct of persons suspected of having committed crlmlrml of- ferises"; and for the wIthhoIdIng of reports by any such commis- slon untll after the persons sus- ected had been tried b the court n the usual manner. t e Bar As- sociation was obviously working from the specIfIc Infringements of the espionage Inquiry. Its Inconsistency in begging off the hint of criticism of the Gov- ernment In the preamble, only to lmply It In the recommendations. gives its volce an uncertain sound on an Issue where It Is the duty of every citizen, especlally those professionally associated with the law. to speak clearly. As Mr. RM. Willes Chitty put it very cogently, “Even if the State Is In direct per- ll. we are still a democracy, and must adhere to democratic prin- ciples In protecting the State. If we adopt totalitarian methods, we kill democracy by becoming total- itarian ourselves." With the a1- ternative so clear, there can be no argument over the posslbllity that clrcumstances justify exce tlons. With human liberty. It Is al or nothing. September 20th, and one hour be- fore sunrise and cine hour after sunset, there _ls going to be a lot of grevlous disappointment to the farmer gunners, who allow city sportsmen to tramp theIr fields and property after Hungarian Assoclatlon socizitlon to criticize the Government . SEPTEMBER 1V1, 1946 - lwsfl A VETERAN BLIND Though he 1s blfnd. 111cm do Mt- tieat as A thin? apart. Please try to tinder- s m That he has everything another has Except his sight. Impressions are first-hand , ' From every other sense, so lend hIm eyes; If you can then be pull. life will be gran And every day wtll blossom with surprise. He knows the sun Is shInInS-hfi can Its genial rays of health wing down rom space. Try not to let a pltylng tear-drop Nor utter unrequested soothing words. He smells spring flowers! Lead hIm to thelr place And thrill, as he does, to the scngs of bird-s! --WIIIlsm D, DeCoste. Canadian Army. (Formerly of Charlottetown.) Secretary For Commercial Vice- President of leading Cait- adian radio and electronic manufacturer situated in Montreal. Excellent work- ing conditions, benefit plans, cafeteria, 5 day week, top salary rate. Only ex- perlenced stenographer wil- ling to accept responsibility should apply. Give full par- ticulars of education. En- close snapshot. . R. C. A. VICTOR COMPANY LTD. 1001 Lenoir Street Montreal ' ea Across the loveliness of your sweet V ‘Professional Barth 'NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel. 589 P1). Box 0e PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Minoan-opium‘ and; mg Qlgquh". concert programs correspondence. typlii: and bookkeeping, HELEN GIDDEN Telenlfona 18904. Apt. No. 4. Connaught Aptn, Pownal Street. __________ IIIorrell and Company Chartered Accountants f1 Elflqh Trust Building Charlottetown XVVQ-QQ 04% _________%_ n. R. UOANE s. c0, , Chartered Accountants l l3 Grllto SI . C“ rlolfielowiie“. m», mo I Randolph W. Manning, Box M’! C.A. r§©§§. QQ-Q-Q l McLeod 8t Bentley i 9 o _ Law l t W. E. BENTLEY. ILO. J. A. BENTLEY. RC. Barristers 1,54 Prince Strict i +o-o-o++-o+o-o++oo+o-o-o+~w voovvoeoooovvm-OQQ-O-O-O-QQQ Charles R. McQuaId B.A. Bun-later, Sol-loll“, Notary, Etc. Eulei-ii Trust Bulldlnl. Cha Iuttatown Phone 1111 0 > +o+0o< and Attorneys“ Ill’ \I k ‘I Partridge. I believe this will result In | ~lot of farmers prohibiting hunting on their property at all, even poachers will have flve day longer to steal into ponds an lakes and taI-qe po-t shot; at gh ducks before the law-abltlln sportsman can get out, I would like very much to s the season put back to the 201i]: which I consider an Ideal due and fair to evetrybody, I am. SIr etc. m! ow nihvwaa. -_..___i. RECONVERT AIRCRAFT PLANT STOCKTON, Durham. Englan —(CP)-— The £3,000,000 ($12.00 000) aircraft salvage plant at ncn by Eaglescllffe Is being taken m] if f- Br )1‘ d by the Nuffield Organlzation f manufacture of motor vehicles a power-farming equipment, __________ ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. Sept. (CPI-Matthew G. Bailey. m, d 00mph Bailey. 415. were drown d today when their canoe ovei-tu - ed on the main waters of Bows - ers power plant on Deer Lake. thIrd member of the party w rescued. l By Ken Reynolds “I m the nrihnn with a I50 “It towel b IV. n; Ilsa! punt» Want nit-Lint I '4'... brings out the full beauty of your natural complexion colorings. . .gives your skin that soft, satin-smooth, star-like look ofdoveliness you have always wanted. Telephone 315 The 2 Macs 149 Great George Street Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island Wvcarry a complete line of Trusses. All sizes. llotice to House Holders Insurance that. was ade- quate In 1939 most likely does not cover 1946 values. Per- mit us to check your cover- age to ensure desired pro- tection In the event of a loss. Phone No. 540 or 541 W. K. RIIGEIIS Agencies Ltd. Marine Insurance EV"? Rlfllt - Every Kind Largo or Small 0m» super-suntan" Llfe - Fire - Casualty -' FREDERIC A. LARGE BARR-IBTEB. ETC- Phflllpl Bll-lldlllfi. I11 CIR-HOD Qi- Phons 1MB P- 0- 3°! W CHARLUTTETUWN. P-E-L BELL 81 MATHIESUN B. R. BELL, M.L.A., D. L MATIIIESON. LLB». LO. Attorneya-at-Law COLLECTIONS I50 Richmond Si. Charlottetown P.E.l. llll. W. R. lllllbllll Clilropno‘ PI liner Grndluh Charlottetown 201 Prlncu Si. Phone IMI PALMER 8: HASLAM A. J. RASLAM, B.A., LLB. BARRISTER. ETC. Bank of Nova Scotln Chambers Charlottetown, P. E. L MONEY T0 LOAN Phone 85 IEO. Box ll H. F. McPHEE, B.A., KC. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER. SOLICITOB Rlley Building Chiu-lnttelowl l EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Queen 5k- Phon- I956 Eve ‘ ,.= By Appointment Planner Residence I018 O-O-OQ-O-OQ-OO-OQ-OQ-O-QQOOQOGOY DR. A R. SMITH DENTIST 170 Grafton Street Office Hours: 00o l2—8l0l Telephone 2284. ALEX W MATHIESON BABRISTEIL SOLICITOR. ETC. Olfloai O0 Great George Mono a u» C J. A McGUlGAN. B.A. NOTARY. ETC. IABRISTER, SULICITOII OUBRIE BUILDING M. ALIZAN FARMER B.A.. LLB. MONEY T0 LOAN RARRISTIIR. SOEIECETOR. ETC- CIIAELOTTETOWN Canadian Rank of Commerce Bldl GAUDET Ct HASZARD llorrllton Callahan. Nouns: l!“ MONEY ‘I0 IJOAN ‘I"#IEMN‘$H%"ELII mnlllan Bull ol Commute! Olnrlollolnwn P l. l B. F. llutohoson & 80H onomrirtusrs “SpecIaIIau“ In the fit- ting of glasses for Ill! correction of ~.cular de- ma." Grafton Street Street ollectlua