' . grand." -. ?AGE Four: TliE cluruorrsrowll llullnnlul Morning Daily (Founded ln 1887) Authorized n Second Class Mali, rest Office Department. Ottawa. ' Prelldell. lln A. Burnett; Vice-President. Wm. R. Burnett; Stay-Tread, G. M. Burnett; Fditor nnrl Manuling Director, .I. R. Burnett; Associate Editor. Frank Walker. _ “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” WEDNESDAY. APRIL l6, 1947 "A Bali ilay’s Work” Noting the straight party division in the P. E. l. Legislature on the tax agreement bill, the Sydney Post-Record says: "Ju~t before the vote was taken a Pro- gressive Conservative amendment, which should have received the unanimous approval of the House if the members had been on their toes for the preservation of the Pro-Alice's rights, was rejected after the Speaker, backed by some of the Ministers, had vainly tried to rule it out so as to prevent the awkward show-down which ensued. This Opposition resolution simply oa- serted that the agreement with the Dominion should contain a clause declaring that its ac- ceptance and execution did not involve any sur- rcrder of Prince Edward Island's rights to com- pensation for the Dominion’: failure to imple- ment the terms of Confederation, or of its rights under the reports of the Duncan and White Commissions. This very sensible and prudential step to safeguard the future rights of the ls- land was rejected by the Jones Government and its supporters in the House, who voted to a man against it. It is easy to see how this ill-con- sidered vote may prejudice the lsland Prov- ince greatly in the years that lie immediately ahead. For it is impossible to construe logically the majority vote on this issue otherwise than as an admission that the agreement just ap- proved by the House wipes out the last vestige ot the Island's claims for redress for Ottawa's default in carrying out certain of the terms of Confederation, as well as every hope of future benefit on the port of the Province from the Duncan and White recommendations. It was a bad day's work for Prince Edward lsland when the Legislature was so short-sighted as to vote deliberately to make this tax agreement a bar to all future claims against the Federal author- -- 1| A Fisherman's Yarn rr Is appropriate enough at this early sea- son to recall one of Kipling's experiences with the fishing rod. in the course of which he cast fly in the Yellow- stone River in the National Park—would that ‘our National Park possessed such an asset. His host was the caretaker, known as Yankee Jim. He was a picturesque old man, says Kipling, with a talent for yarns that Annanias might have envied. It seemed to Kipling, presumpti- ous in his ignorance, that he might hold his own with the old-timer if he judiciously painted up a few lies gathered in the course of his wander- ings. Yankee Jim saw every one of his tales and went fifty better on the spot. "In one point,” declares the author, "he did speak the truth—-as regarded the merits of that particu- Iar reach of the Yellowstone. He said it was nlive with trout. It was. I fished it from noon till twilight, and the fish bit at brown hook as though never a fat trout-fly had fallen on the water. From pebbly reaches, quivering in the heat-haze where the foot caught on stumps cut four-square by the chisel-tooth of the beaver; past the fringe of the water-willow crowded with the breeding trout-fly and alive with toads and water-snakes; over the drifted timber to grateful shadow of the big trees that darkened the holes where the fattest fish lay, l worked for seven hours. The mountain flanks on either side of the valley gave back the heat as the desert gives it, and the dry sand by the railway track, where I found a rattlesnake, was hot-iron to the touch. B_ut the trout did not core for the heat. They breasted the boiling river for mv fly and they got it. I simply dare not give m bag. At tit-e fortieth trout I gave up counting, and I had reached the fortieth in less than two hours. They were small fish-not one over two po:|nds,—but they fought like small tigers, and l lost three flics before I could understand their methods of escape. Yc gods! That was fishing, thcugh it peeled the skin from my nos-e ill strips." Still Fits Iillllld _ The Winnipeg Free Press recalls that ,lt is '|ust a hundred years since Ralph Waldo Emer- son made his first pilgrimage to England. His words then could be uttered with o startling timeliness today. Emerson's first statement on on English plat- form _wos to apologize for eating its food "in this time of gloom and commercial disaster, of affliction and beggery." He complained that in the industrial Midlands "the night and day“ f are too nearly of o color", that "the fine soot or block darkens the day, give white sheep the color of black sheep, discolor the human saliva, contuminte the air, poison many plants and cor- rode the monum-ents and buildings.“ Emerson knew England for "a cold, foggy and mournful country, where nothing grew well in the open air, but robust men and virtuous wo- men, and these of a wonderful fibre and en- durance, that their best ports were slowly re- vealed; their virtues did not come out until th-ay quarrellod; they did not strike twelve the first time; good lovers, good haters, and you could know little about them till you had seen them long, and little good of them till you had seen them in action; that in prosperity they were moody and dampish but in adversity they were England, he said, "sou a little better in a cloudy day, and in storm of battle and ‘ it) rho has u iocrgt vigor and a pulse like He was on his American tour, | i l l the l \ u cannon." A century has not changed the weather of the English countryside or the weather of Eng- land's spirit. - EDITORIAL NOTES p» I fimplaints are receiv-ed about dogs jump- ing on pedestrians, and also rushing furiously at passing cars. Owners should take notice. i i i‘ i Why should. Edsell worry? Estimates, wholly unofficial, place Ford's fortune at ony- where from $200,000,000 up to $500,000,- 000. O t I I it Premier Jones had been a City Council employee he would have to retire next year, and Mi. Linkletter wo_uld have been retired seven years ago. Lioking ahead to next winter's snowfall, Montreal has decided to purchase 35 new three to four-ton trucks with 35 snowplows of o type that may be attached to the trucks. ’ K i ‘k I Unless immediate steps are taken to en- courage large-scale planting of trees there will be a world lumber famine within the next few vcors, Viscount Bennett declared at a luncheon recept-on in London last neck. 4 * i ‘K 9r The City Council has had a sort of wind- fall in contributions from the Federal treasury via the Prcvincial treasury. But welcome os it is, it vill not by any means put the Council's finances on the basis they have a right to be. At present they are the headache of the Coun- CillOfs who take their duties seriously, and all oi the present Council do. a w Rrv. H. R. Pickup told Montreal Presbytery that E00 Canadian war brides who came to Canada had returned to England and nearly 11,000 ;r~e still overseas. Some of them, he de- clared, do not know where their husbands are, some 1f the husbands have written that they dur-‘t want them, and some of the husbands al- ready lad wives in Canada when they married. fi i 1’ I Tl-e promoters of the West Point-Buc- touche ferry are determined to go ahead with their scheme provided the necessary finances are forthcoming. They are not enamoured of the suggestion that the proposed ferrv should be replaced by the resumption of Summerside- Point ilu Chene service. I fi Mr. Henry A. Wallace, as ex-vice-President ofl the Ur ited States, is not a Communist, but b-e-, longs to that heterogeneous politicaliy-mindedl bocy Lnown by the out-and-out Communists as; "lcllov-travellers." He is actually not of their! numbe‘, but does not mind being one of thel crowd following in their wake, shouting words of encopragement or derision as the case may be. 'lh‘ey were to be found also nearly 2,000 years ago, when the ideologies of Barabbus and Crlrist were at stoke. 'I i w o It is reported that the Federal Old Age PEIlSlOII Act to be introduced later will boost the Federal contribution permanently to $10 and possibl/ widen the scope of those eligible for such nensions. The wartime order-in-council providing the $5 Dominion contribution could be rcszinced when the uct was endorsed by Parlia- m-ent. - I I i I Anatole France, greatest figure in recent French literature, born this date i844; in i876 he turled from poetry to prose, the pure mirror oi con-lemporary French intellect, wit, and urban- ity. tfis philosophy appears to be purely nega- tive and agnos-tic, and taken as a whole his wo-k is the largest contribution to humanist criicism since Voltaire, contributing v-ery large- ly to the present religious, political and social decadence of France which culminated in its capitulation to Hitler. He and his fellow phil- l oscphers sowed tores of disbelief and scepticism ; the notion reaped a whirlwind of disillusion and clilaster. I o a n Fcr the post five years, United Kingdom scientists hove been experimenting with the mass prcduction of fish in o man-mad-e sea in the hope of bringing more food to the empty tables cl Bri ain and the Continent. They ore speed- ing u|- nature's cycle by fertilizing the soo- woer with chemicals. The results have been, drt-nlaic. Some fish are growing at t_wice their naima rate, and sometimes even more quickly.‘ A loci. on the west coast of Scotland has been da-nm-ed off to provide an enclosed experimental area, and the water is fertilized by the continual» odlitii-n of nitrogen and phosphorous, which cause the small sea plants on which fish feed to grow in greater abundance. In the fertilized water, fish reach a marketable size in three yecrs instead of the normal six. Once opera- tions can be extended to a really largo field, it is’ uxpccted‘ that the fish market will be doubled. . W R i I i i I I B-lsiness people are bringing pressure to beur upon the Minister of Finance regarding taxatiln. President C. L. Burton told shore- holder: of Simpsons, Limited, at the annual meeting that there are two fields of govern- ment policy in which it is vitally important that nn immediate change to a peacetime basis be mcdentaxation and price control, "which as presently applied are holding back initiative in buz-inels." "Income tax now yields more than 50 per cent of the tax receipts of the Govern- mcnt af Canada," he said. "This form of tax, its apalication and administration must not be allawei to continue to be a retarding influence on the level of notional income. High individual incomo taxes result in higher prices, as they create demands for increased wage rates which bring about higher unit costs. Not only door this mducu our ability to null abroad, but it shrinks tho real income of the wage corner. The general uffoctgis a distortion of the national structure blob IOQIIIUII full employment." THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _ lotus By the Vinyl Nu more inapproprfutq fiflug n; speech could have been employed than talk of "handing" the 09m. 11111111515. The seolulsive per-sans mul- 1y either escape a brand entirely orl adopt so many as to confuse the onlookes". - New York Sun. . _ 1 A great deal more hflnkneoa would-be desk-able in Rpsstan- American relations. Both countries have been guilty of provooetionafl If they were Milling to base their rvlofions on o mutual recognition of that truth. ti. might. be found lliilb the fears and suspicions prompting their moves and court- tefmoves against each other had men groundless in fact. -_ Detroit Ncvrs. Hitler ordered thousands of tons of granite from Sweden which was to have gene into the building of a 111x130 monument to him in Berlin, -‘ l‘ wizmilig the war, and now the g1 ti? is being sold all over the world for much more airliner)‘- and pellet-purpose, notes The Niagara Bails Review. The Japanese also were overly-optimistic and so a Jqsanese nmmnlem, celebrating their "great" victory of Hcmk Kong. has been demolished. It is ufloilflff‘ renlindcl- of the lolly of putting up statues to people until you lilitnv wlilCli side, n-hicit individual has won. . A thought. that. must often come no [10110113 of middle age, and be- iyond that. is the severe nervous ‘strain to which pcople are subject- lccl by conditions as ‘we hove them flociuy. A few generations ago there wvcre hardships. too, but life div-is jless complex then, and the 111E115 iElDIl tribulations (lid not; lLflCCL ll"! lhunilzn physique in- the $111119 Way las they do to-clay. The change I185 _been brought about by u numb»: lot things. Among them are the more rapid 112cc at wl110l1 BVBIY- tiling is travelling. kcencr compe- ifition- resulting in the survival of ithe fittest. and the influences of ithis highly mechanized age. - Chatham News. " l Spelling the difference bclwuflfl ‘ltigh Q1- 10w production. the distinct- ,ien between worsted and Woollen lClOlli never has been so lmfiilnflnl- iWVorstA-d" is the tame given a hard- lfi-ilisit cloth l:y William the C011- Iquoror in 1066 when he observed lthe Britons making it. He had 1115i vmrsied the Britons, so Winm-slcnlly- he called the cloth “worsted? Worst- lnrproved Land Surveying in P.E.l. thorn u. report tabled in the Q vuauc FORUM This column la open to the dlaeu-luu by corro- Ifllllfllvre») upoadentu of question: d interest. The Charlottetown T" Guardian does not manur- ondorao the o n of “"3"” M “"5 xrrelpondentu. p The field work done tn connec- tion with the Provincial Survey ffivfi5v9lllv shows 7-10 miles of traverse com- pleted and. M6, monuments plum.- ed. Thll shows the work in the ‘first District of Kings oomlplet- ed. In the Second District of Kings the bulk of the field work has been finished. Considerable work has also been done in the Third and Fifth Districts In Queens County. in the Font Au- gustus District, the field work ilosl Assoclalmn. been completed south of the Hills- horoug-h River The whole of the Belfast District has also been done. The field work for this survey, involves the determination of the‘ true meridian by solar observatlonl nearly every day the sun is visi- ble. Iu taking these observations mutil to less than one iwaif min- ute. It might be said in passing through the years the stones might have been disturbed but. a‘ check an the cast and wast line established in the year 1846 shows| the north and so-ilth stones. necessitates n tremendous amount of office work ‘n calculating, ad-' justinig. checking and rechecklng the various courses. The stand-l ard of accuracy aimed at. is to keep the error to a maximum of one‘ foot per mi-Ie. In some cases this has been considerably homered.’ For instance between East Point; light. house and Souris light house,‘ the traverse was 10.91 miles long and the i-iusixlg error wa5 less than a, yard eslch way. l Between Soul-is light house and the Geodetic monument at Fort. Augustus, a distance of 49 miles, the closing error was four yards for the “x" coardinatcs and 3 1-2 for the "y" coordinates Between- geodetic monuments at Fort Augustus and the monu- ment c-n Lock Jones‘ farm near Pownai, the distance Was 18 1-4 miles, and the closing error was "x" 1.06 yard. .1 lld “y" 0.04 yards. From Pownai t0 the monument of Caledonia, a dis- tance of 30 miles, tile error was for the "x" coordinates i-2 yard and for the “y" coordinate. 4 i.-2 PROPERTY MARK!!!‘ RISES . ltr.—That was u high price paid ‘for real estate 1n Charlottetown. {The two-and-a-hulf storey building on lksher Street purchased by the, , Government for #15500. was sold by ‘tender in the year 1032.10. $1,590‘ ‘by the PJLI. Grass Seed Growers I am Sh", etc‘. iFRANK MULLALLY Souris East. SPRING AND SUMMER 1N THE COUNTRY S11‘, ~- Once more Call of stronger than ever before. by the lirzill while a slick burns on tire. No one can write of the real joy} a very accurate right angle wvh at coutitry life, especially m sunk, lmer and to those of us who spend The amount of field work done a long win-fer in the city. Life hem away from the away from the smoke plants, a wonderland no cars or anything them in daily play. Here we will woke morning to the song in the trees, and a glorious sun- rise that will licic the morning dew from the clover a; it's frug- rance fills |he pure ab. Hero we will, watch tile ocean waves come m and lick the‘ shore with it's mighty lcclgue and tl-li bot-k iii-lo the nloulh of the open sca Yes, we will at limes watch the mighty and angry sea rush in lo spend it's strength against: the banks and fail back into the tosslizg sen, and in the evenings we will sit on the bank and ‘MHCII the passion of the golden sunset waste and fnde at the close of lm- other day, then we will in thoughts to Lmeirrupl 1n the early Geodflp. rmrvei at the wonders the hep-l piness life really holds for us. We will again and again listen i0 the song of the rolling ocean and in the cool off the evening the lovely the aim is to keep the error in uzl- 51111112 3605011 “P9115 11D. slid the the country comes to us Herc that. ii 1‘0i.lgll cheek on the ilhfil- my wife. dnusluer and I are set- tio-n of the three stones placed in 11-118 settled for the summer months Victoria Park ‘m the year 1820 to deep in that 00untry that will soon be in error by about "fifteen mir- be green, and in what will be our utes. Al. first it was thought that 51111111191‘ 1101110- I type 'lhese lines, of the old oil hlmp, the open- rushing trafficq from the big‘ for children, l." "rxvonr" CANADA'S FINEST ~ APRIL 1o, 19147 Professional Bards DI. 0.8. NOBDLAII) Veterinary Surge»; Mount Edward Road Charlottetown, 2.13.1, Phone BM PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER hfllneog-raphing and: and cirenln‘ mnoert programs, communism“ typing and bookkeeping HELEN GIDDIIN Telephone 1890-! Apt. No. 4. Corusurrghl Apia. Formal Street MORRELL and COMPANY Chartered Account at; Eastern Trust Building g i l l i l l I l CIGARETTE l Phone I447 - Bu: S44 \\ Charlottetown B, M. SEARS. CA. Resident Partner SXRKXg-y NEIL W. HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOJJNTANT Currie Building Charlottetown Tel. I636 P.O. Box 452 THE POOR TRAVELLER l I came to a roadside dwelling. With great eaves low and wide, t of the birds Adkins my Way to fhe village, And they bade me step inside. hveiI-ICCIIIIQ and cheer they gave me.— We're comrades loving and strong; And they bade one wait fin" sllpyar-r, l But I could not stay so long. ‘ Nothing I brought to the irons-o, But idle garb of ruddy and tan, Suited for pleasure or lwear. Befttting a roving man Nothing I brought 1o lite Inn But the traveller's cloak I wore; And that, when I came away, 1 needs must drop by the floor. -~Pliss Carmen. O-OOQO-O-O O #0 Q§+§§44 Old Charlottetown (And our.) ed cloth is mode from longer 101114911 and CCTHDPG woollen llbffis- hwlsled 3-11,, yam; and then woven into a vards. When these erro-rs are dls- Splash m ‘he “laves- Mo“ ‘mm iributed along the whole distanle ml"? ‘We I109‘? l° Wald‘ m“ hm‘ l ‘he error pm. mlle 1s w“, Smfl-‘L ltarvt full moon Casi. it's relief-item I LOT SIXTY-FIVE iimmll" "ma 610th inch as sciggiiTile ahove instances inrlit-uu- the “("5055 ill“ like f-‘l “m” m“? H“ l‘ l‘ ‘mmbm. “m” ‘is ‘(have “e9 Ytllllfl of the vflriolls Geodetic Stu- 11111111111111 $1111 Sumo my 51W 111111 1S P-‘ile-"iilll? lmklllir I” mms 1.0m egaugpgd lhfoughoul, 11,5 "Wilcre is lill lliis wonderland, all _ _ _ ‘ ' " i-nd, was Ofigiiiilll)’ granted to1 H1115 “"1911"- ‘lolh- (‘-1 m: 0mm this Fiery he writes a-boul“? It's ‘hand, is mode cl shorter wool 1111195 ‘n-oi Pllliittltlf‘ lcr worsted 311115-- ,\\‘ovm ilx-lli twrcds. shellrvds 31111 ‘llkifllifls, it has n soft, flcecy IOOK- Woslicns oflrn make a out‘ at“, ‘penrnme. but nrrnt as aura-lily 11-‘14 rcloiiv lileil‘ press as urll as wcrslcrie-l ---\Vnli Street Journal. ; ya’ ever hour lilozlt thcyttme, A ll'[‘ Eusc W05 a Izrlby smart Wei-l. silo once offered to look alter the year-aid baby of some friends ‘willie the family welll rot u walla. ‘Wvhat \Vlll you do if she GILES ”l ,thoy asked. "Do? I'll sing to her". ‘said the resourceful Dusc. "I hovel lief; of tricks to entertain- babies." When lhc parents returned they- lfa-und the baby sitting quietly in her lcp-wlnge, her eyes fixed with u hypnotic stare upon the sofa. Tlhe:e -lay the great actress, her head wrapping, her mouth opeln, her eyes shut. She was snoring — rflamurly. gsflwrflllffly snoring. Slowly she op- ened her eyes. “Shh". she Sald- "T1 I stop for u. second, she'll Cay. Then she explained: "I song for: her; I, irionced for tier; ‘i’ made fares at her;' I tzClfid the whole o! ‘Paolo anal Francesca’ to her, and she hated ll ‘till. But the snoring - from the ‘first faint. sign - she loved it!"- Hoiiuvood Reporter. Did A delegation from the British trench cf he Inter-Parliamentary |U"ion has been i0 Helsinki and - (‘n part in celebration; of the liclh anniversary of womctfs, ,. ilchisc, rays The Manchester ‘Gilnrdinlt. Wuliqm Tcolilng, the s nicr rnembn". has ielumed with ill feeling that Finland is slrufllsllngl .1. l Province. Thl-y act as an infallible check on the accuracy‘ nl‘ the sur- vey. Last November h sol-tron of the lot line born-next ic-is No. 42 ‘and No. 43 WES re-estalalishcfl, and and oheckrrl out very closely with known points. I O During the first two year's of the survcgv it was rlillxull obtain office staff, and qucntly the ofliicc Work behind the work done in the lICld. yNow this condition has been lzlrgc- (itcds more will enjoy the similar ifisl-‘nllis llimlihlh” _ had re_ 1y overcome. and the bulk of the blessing in the Spring and Sum- E11T°Dfi 01' 81K PBTbO-‘IS 8-5 not n million miles away. No, its here on the Island, this garden of Messrs. Riollerd Wright mild Hughl Owen on Ayrrii 8, 1860: The con-_ Ill-Lppiiiess, east and west, north rifle" cl ll1<‘.‘~'1’111‘-1 10 111050 111'", south Hex-circus will enjoy '.‘.|'[‘ ns follows: Tile!‘ worm the happiness this suznlner and i" F13’ 3 1M 0f 4 Slim?- ~~ can“, 00 ac:cs. t Oflly a few mile; from our homes 1119 111111 161115- 011 9"‘!!! 1 In the city. We ilave collie early this spring. consc- nvc love so wcil and who're we hope TWT5011 l0 (‘Vefygifm "Ff?- Y‘ “aged “m1 God-s help ,0 mjoy 911 mi»,- of urinch in fhLS DPOpOJIOD ltappiliess, with a wish that inm- and were lo settle the lownshipl within ton years from the date of, to come to the part of the country 11v‘: grunt, in Lhe yrroporiion g as mf-Cawi/iovéevss o _ “e .\ be settled in tour years. with Pro- Comflneni of field work has been completed. mcr that will so Jastay slip away. sided l" the Amerlcun °°l°nle5 for and coordinates established for the various monuments and other calculations are made in the r-f- lice discrepancies in angles or_ distances are sometimes discover- ed. This necessitates going over, certain parts of the work againflfillers In Ymll‘ Public Forum rhisjlater by his sons Frank and Normand although. by mathematical calcu- ati-ons, these erre-rs can usually he localized to one particular sec-‘ lion or course in the traverse. For, instance it might mean the ve-, chaining of four hundred ylmts of roadway between known points. Plans are being prepared show- ing the location of lhc moun- ments. These are shown in pain, that two monuments are us- ually shown in one plan. For the I Firsl. District of Kings 4-5 plans WBFE IIGCESSBIIV. a o A start has been nlade to obtain copies of working plans in tile Registry Office. It ls ‘hoped that copies of old and mutilated titans of surveys can be made. There are a large number of these plans in the Rcgi-sbiflv olllvc contain-nil I om. Sir. etc. WALTER A. O'BRIEN. |poE-nl5 on the travel-seer When the Bfislg], p El HELP FOR THE) HELPLESS Sil',-I noticed with pleasure two morning; ll) referring to i-lolll- ing parcels for Britain. and (Ii referring to the postage ‘on food parcels. There seems to be no argument or misunderstanding about the necessity in the United Kingdom for clothes; as one of my corres- ponrienls in ro-mforlable circum- stances, saiy: “We ilava given and given and given to the relief of war devastated Europe. until v.0 have little left except the clothes we stand in; and we can not hope to buy nlore because of the coupon syslom; if one buys underclotilcs in one year. one has not coupons enough to buy any outside viothcs and this in the coldest winter of our lives; ho\v I wish I had scale 0f the Rflflfl shirts I used to lhraw away m the Charlottetown Airport. oven if thr- collars worr- frayed!" | at least two Wars antecedent to the’ date of the grant. They were alsol to reserve a globe lot o! 100 ucrcsl lfor a, minister and a. i-oi of lhlflyg acres for n schoolmaster. making in, all 130 acres. The teem subsequently, boned by Hector Medic-an, and} ‘was the glebe lot. for Lot 65. i l It. was not an easy mailer to‘ secure a foreign Protestant populat- ion, end the proprietors found that they could not realize their ex- ‘pectatlous. although it 11085 1191 appear than they set themselves really in earnest to carry out the conditions. on which these Vt-IIUGDIQ Inn-rig. had been almost gratuitously bestowed on mam. Being burdened with quit: rents they sold their lands. The purchasers concemcd item-l selves but lit-lie with the or} W1 eandilicns Qt’ the grit-xvi, and :15 with must qr the other townships whole affair was looked 1111011 many as o, ialnd speculation, the! grand object. of which u-as to secure‘ the greatest gain with the ieastl trouble n-na UNDTF-Isc- They 1111M 1",‘ bring out any settlers, nnrl the qull i 1mm; falling in arrears, the Lot . . , ' - 'l lnl-rt in ytllfllli rtfiwcll T"!‘llR1m€Tll.fi_l'.\~‘;':U}:i1t\lzglflilgfolirlltghlgilfigflikcflfilnfggcl W" m Canada who are so Con" w“ ‘Old h.‘ Hm '0 Captain PM.“ dvl"mlr""‘li W‘ ‘(mix-ills fufiliziii- ti) preserve lhese orilzinol dvrv-l furlalbIv rather ' than ittlfllualel-Yri-iififitz‘BDCI Mf- Cmnbvicso T1“ 11'1"‘- ifltl-I°0i“lnl“rii.iilli.‘Idllidlllllini mews 1w 111111" ravioli-v“- "."‘1.1-1o11w<i-'1-an we new our 1111115 o1 11w w» 111 "is mid“ 0‘ kfl tcole him into fl, corner i? discuss pérniglfiojamreeymgrfllélllgke aixilaisg, igholhsdgfiftiseslliforffé glsbzfifigfiielr ngagnghxegr ilgffihgéigs‘ m ‘mlwrmm lfuesfion‘ lsfliihfr: at. the present limo. Iall the rest of the world got. ready resulted in the whole Lot being YG“Q',I,§,,,II;,I’P,,:, ‘quit ofmidfdeik A very simple 11111 very Pffwivc n; rl-efend itself, Bill were IN’)! mid m a mm- trifle. matches to be slapped?" he asked. 1i =“'“?~"’l°“ l” m” mdeml“ ‘yum ""14 ' "Tom N! n was expl-rmed lilubFinnisti football ~pcols are based on British games, Inna the Slate, which has a monopoly ‘worth millions of marks u year. tears n serious loss of revenue 1f there lore insufficient games to keep the lpools going. The profits from P0015 in Fiirdinnd are used to build Blhlelll? stadiums and tilnying fields. , I The United Nations Trusteeship iCouni-il- was mullt ‘ rule o! ,pl‘0':edurc on Th in the Registry 01'1"? he! "n suited in g great saving of time and effort in the searching of.) rifles, supplementary indices have‘ been provided for the Wholv PM“, iod from 1900 to 19118 (M111 m now being extended 11p lo 1946i in which further sub-divisions of each letter of the alphabet are made, according to the third ei- fer of each name bczinning with g2_5() rm- postage! one could send M11 such letter. Formerly, 1f a name. mower mod parcel for [he $159, cii. such as Hrmway were boinrr check- Ag jar food parcels, the postage is amoutrage Your correspondent‘ speaks of 400' for a 2 lb. package. I cannot visualize what I conic‘ put in u 2 lb package-I found it "so difficult to keep under the 5 lh civilian package of war cans of anything sank the pared. The maximum weight now to: a {and parcel, is 20 lbs. and ll C0515 and surely the Postal Department led. every name listed tn the “lTw-nuid get, along without that rev- ‘Oarl Bcrcmdscn. of Nmv Zeaiand. m“, 11nd to be serulinizert Now, an“? In compmc ngfggmefll wrth llgn CBlrnCSl. investigator, diccovo .. the searcher turns to the P569 your former correspondent, service lone proposed rule which he Slld “Hm-- ma usually has to cover clubs, and hundreds 0ll1°°Pl¢»l*k lconlain-ed "somewhat terrifying im- ipIlCPIlODS." Under the draft r1119. I imcmbcr of lllr- United Nations which has proposed an item for the llflflldu‘ shall. be entitled to have u WW1!" |senlatlve present who "shall be ihcarxd“. Sir Cori ,Thal. lmagunlgc, he said. "W316! "B" iimp-li-eatlan there that the gentle- jnfm in question must speak whether; |he has anything to say or not. ' ;And he implored: “If any person. ‘present. at this body has mthmtl lto say. than clearly the moot l,“ than ong-[Qhlh of the en- lri-es that would appear 111 11w general index. The saving of time will natur- ally result in reduced wit; should also increase efficiency. MI wgrk, and the chance of overlook- lnlr any entry in very sitxhl- sruunsfmbau outrun ,why the Postal Devan-meat sv-"lfl, not send food parcels to the Un-y liter! Kingdom now, and for a per-‘ llfld of time, at least, free of posh, l‘ age? Surely there to no need to go IIIIA) detail: as to why w! drew bwk. an neeerso y effort can be put inbo would do this. it is self evident lo ‘intelligent. people, isn't. ti? Th9 cost of postage has the general effect of making many generous" hearted people put off 1hr.» aendil"! of a parcel until some future do): ..-next, week, next montm-whcng they will have fewer appeals to, efficient Bind kindly thing to do is A new hedge-trimming mach!" meet-and so the aendinz oi the, lto refrrln from paying it." A! 1 can lrl-m a half-mile of hedge in parcel h p“, o" |ndfl|np,|y_ The‘ _Wlt2ld0i3 of words. we can agree only to heartily with the mun from down under. Too often the flow o! words tn this sorry world turns into p. morass amid which tihe best of deeds eventually toimder. —.Nolr York Has-aid an hour. IOBII TRAVELLER A lingie blood cell makes 8.000 round trtpu lbrouzh 1M Q “a need ts urgent. and the time to make it possible lo lend help to our ain folk is now. And may I. in conclusion, refer- to another matter about which I hear luch foolish statements all} "l m: like to send parable l0- yems. 3 render of coupons for above "af- . cause of customs duties. P11111101"- etcl" ‘There is nc- duly "11 l°°d parcels to United Kingdom. There i-s no duly on parcels oi‘ used glqlhlng to ILK. There ls no sur- cell Let. us take advantage of this week's drive under the BUSPICER- of yor MacDonald and Oily c0115’ Arrangements have been made to transport parcels free in care of the potato hont due Charlottetown April N. Send anylhlnfl V1111 6111‘- spare to the City Building Wed- nesday, Thursday or Friday this week. Bee how good you wl-li feel to have helped the othfi‘ (EIIOW over a hurdle whtoh~ was none oi his melons! - I am. Sir. etc. A GUARDIAN READER. \ nourish KIDNEY PILLS H. R. DOANE & CO. Chartered Accountants ’ 53 Grafton Street y > Charlottetown LC’, 65- comprising 21900 acres of! oooovooooooooooobosoooo i |Bloney to Loan. | OO-QO-QO-OO-QOOOQOQO-OVQ-O-GOOQ - o¢+oooo+o+o++v>o+v+e¢< o‘ MCLEOD 8r BENTLEY W. I. BENTLEY. K.C. J. A. BENTLEY, K.C. Barristers mid Attorneys-at, Law 154 ‘Prince Street ovvrrovvv 040+ ...”‘.".'.Q.QOQQQQ§QQ.‘ -;+o++0+++++o+oo-o+¢+4+w> - Phone 2080 Box 247 i Randolph W. hlanntng, (LA, fi-&O§,§-O 0-0 O6~6 O 0-6 Q ________ 40400000004 o-o-o-vo-eo-vooowoo o» oooo 04o»- EYES EXAMI N ED AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Queen Stu Phone 1956 : Evenings by Appointment Phone: Residence 1013 l. A. McGUlGAN, an. T NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR CURRIE BUILDING M. ALBAN FARMER an, LLB. MONEY T0 LOAN BARRISTER, soucrron. arc. t (50.4 ,. l c, 4i MATHESON and PEAKE y‘ a. w. MATHESON, K11. $ n. n. PEAKE, 5.11., pun. ' i ‘it Barristers, etc. Collections. - Money to Loan if 00 Great George Street l -, Charlottetown obidfvir- ‘ DR. A. R. SMITH DENTIST 115 Grafton Street Office flours: ti to 12--2 to B Telephone 22M Joovoovoooooooovoovvov: i CHARLES R. McQUAID § , i .,__ h’), N_ f‘ Barrister, Solicitor, Notary. Ito. Eastern Trust Butldlnl. Charlottetown Phone 1711 |hal >oo-0¢04<04oo0o0<><0-+O+¢4 .| Li“ ¥O+§-O-0-+9§9 A. Waitilen Gautier. LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phillips Building ill Grafton St. (inflections. BELL & MATHIESON Barristers, Solicitors. 04% R. R. BELL. M.I..A.. o. 1.. MATHIESON. l-L-B. l-O- Attornoys-ut-Luw LOANS 0N any nun H11 PROPERTIES ‘I l 150 Richmond St. "~' Charlottetown, IKE-I- PALMER 8. HASLAM a. .r. IIASLAM. us. l-b-B- asanrs-rurc. are. Bonk of Nova Sootta Chamber! Charlottetown. 185.1. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone as r.o. no: 1i -_--_---—-_—i-—- H. F. McPHEE, B.A., K-C- NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTEB. SOLICXTQR m!” Bptlfllng Chit-lotto“?! GAUDET l. HASZARD Barristers. Solicitor-I. soul-Ia. l" Canadian Baal: of Commerce Bill moan 'ro was " GILBIBT a. oarmum. p.41. l-I-l Canadian l: of Commerce l"! cm tannin. P.I.I- Frederic li. Largo, illi- IABIIBTER. SOLIOITOR» ~ NOTARY ' M!!! Bank of Canada Chamber! Charlottetown. IKE-I- uooouaor to GQTIO I‘ M! "0' on. vi. n; culsoll Chiropractor Palmer Graduate Charlottetown m Irhu or. PM» 1°“ c o ¢++++o4++vo+>¢+o+a #4