I cilflllortnowll ' sullnnlllll __- ed ingenuity a/nd determination in kcepl-III production going despite air raids. The Ger- man aircraft industry managed to keep Dm- uction flowing and in 1944 delivered more tian 39.000 aircraft of all types. This was bet-- Morning Dally ll-‘onndnd ln llfl) Prculdw. Ueul. Col. w Chester s. Mauro V-w-Presldenl: J. B. Burnett. IJ l. . Secretary: Uent. Col. l). A. Mnclflnnnn. 9-5-0- Ituwl and Managing 0 Lowrance A Burnett. ll..(.‘.N.V.lL t0n Active Service) the Weakest lnls.‘ THURSDAY, Novnitmnn 1s. 1945 . J. ll. Burnett. FJ-l- Ellllufi; Frank Walker and Host. Ill V “The Strongest ill-emery is Weaker Tlull tcr than double the i942 delivery. Where strategic bombing did pav off was in the attack on synthetic oil and gasoline re- fineries. Shortages of gasoline, and lack of trained pilots which could be traced to lack of fuel for training schools, eventually ruined the German air force. The attack on chemical- plants created a shortage of vital explosives for all kinds of ammunition. The continuing assault 0n communications, particularly bridges and canals, denioralized Germany's whole nroduc- tire system. Islanders All Prince lidwilrtl lslzliitlcrs ‘\vill)l tlalieDDlldfl in the lilct that ‘ILIPJI-(JCIICIYI. . ‘.,_ ewaif. Reconstruction IJcpartmcnt representative m London who is to be associated with Lltillls" (ienernl Maurice Pope as Cfillfltllflll representa- i ' l live at the vcrv llllpurltllll preliminary Repara- i tiolls (onion-lice lll Paris, is a ilatlve of this Province. .\laj.-‘cnerzll Drivar is a son of the late Mr. and l\ rs. lames Dewar. 0f Mvlllafllle» 311d attended Montague school as a Youth before removing to the mainland. lle enlisted in the ranks in “lurid \\'ar l, 1h‘ also did another dis- tiiiguishoil Prince Edward Islander, Maior- General Ii. G. Wcelts, who was recently in charge of administration at Canadian head- quarters iii London zind has lIOW been made responsible for post-uni" military organization in Canada. i\Iaj.-General Dewar was a class-mate at Montague of Lt-Colonel C. C._ ThOmDSOH. M- C., and was later responsible for designing the attractive badges for the Prince Edward Is- land Iliglllaritlcrs —- the regiment which C01- Thompson commanded at the outbreak of the war. It is also worth repeating in connection with Gen. Dewar's latest B-Dllolfltmml ‘hi! LieuL-Gerieral Pope who will head the Canadian delegation at the Paris conference, though not himself an Islander, is a grandson of I-lon- , l/Villiam H. Pope, Colonial Secretary of Prince i Edward Island at Confederation and one of or: honored Confederation Fathers. ___, _ Hugh Meat Shipments ,Dl.l.l’ing October alone, i5 shiv- ‘dwell of Commons bill to boost members’ salaries by $2,000, free of Income Tax. And the aggra- one, cannot be voted down by thelScnate, ex- cept on some technical ground. played a. leading role in designing new ma- terials, discovering new dvcs and manufactur- ing fine cloth. special display by the Wool Council, samples produced by the British Woollen Trade were shown. displayed. Thesfi. warmth, are a quarter lighter in weight than similar materials. so soft that they can be rolled into a small ball, were also shown. Spectators gained the pression that research work carried out by the Brithh Woollen Trade has succeeded in prO- ducing lighter, brighter and better than was the case before World War Two. In addition, entirely new, shades have been dis- covered. l-EDI IURIAI. NO [ES- “A vibrant, free and living I’rcss is a great Anglo-Saxon heritage; we must defend that heritage against all that assail it," says Senator Charles BiSl12D,‘OIE1\VEl. The Hon. Mr. Ilsleys’ claim to be iiide- pendent of Parliament and responsible to the King rims contrary to that of the Prime Min- ister's who insisted that the King, then repre- sented by Lord Byng, had no right to inter- fere with the prerogatives 3f Parliament. The Senate is not included in the llouse vating part is, that the bill, being a financial Iii! During the war Britaink woollen trade Proof of this was given at a London International where more than 20o new Four new Scotch plaids though equally were retaining Handmade woollen shawls, im- materials _ [Votes 3y The be o khmai... e nlpeg Tribune. an ‘ nrmed morning the lpstiel." They were not deterred The only WBIB references to their that form of corre implication II fairly certain wouldn't be cnught. n t o h l b ‘ , liarlotlm: “£51.13 llllilsfetcmd m ls retroactive. -— Two bnndlts told their victims, ln hold-u ye that they ‘dldn't wn uverllon They slm ill ill! h! made neve l ctlon. but. they‘ from the crime. that-they thlt they d_o not respect the ability of Vancouver" police force. 1f the had thought that there was n chance o flndlng fgre a o the lash would have them thlnk twice guns lnto the rlhs of the Do you Imow what the “reporter” means? asks Hahn, wrltlng ln The Review of Literature. to, but ten. a long time ago. A re tells you what he sees and You u defiant about it. what he when he is guessing he leaves that out o his story be- spokesman for the not in one thlng only: Wrltlng down what he sees and hears. Tetney, a village near Grlmsby. furrow. And being a gooth work- man, this was done. Morris WAI- ter Holden, a land worker, came next dny to drain the field. Nell" the extrn deep furrow he found 100 coins. They~were Anglo-Saxon silver pennies, buried ln the field 1.000 years ago by n Tetne mun who feared an attack by anllh marauders. The coins were of e time of Klnssslidred. 946 to 9 ; King Edwy, to 959; and King Edglr 959 to 975. They were con- tained ln n piece of chalk which had been gauged out to hold the coins and flattened at to for the ltd. At on inquest at Gr msby on the treasure trove, it was decided that Holden was the finder. , e vfillll get a rewnrd.—London Dal y s . i! themselves - “if stern faced judge, their four made before poking tnxi driver and his fare.—-Vaneouver Sun. iyou have of course forgot- rte: earl. I-fe is simply honest without find- ing it necessary to be cockaure or He may know thlnks, privately, but or deducing cause it doesn't h long there. new not is military ex ert; he's not a people; he's a political expert. Hes expert Herbert Llngnd a plowmnn. of l; was told to make an extra deep Canadian ports with 6o million pounds of bacon and beef for Britain. In the same month the Meat Board cleared or booked no million pounds for the same purpose. As an indication of the litige amounts needed to maintain ship- ments. the Board reports that a single ship now loading at Montreal will take 10,700,000 f; pounds, another 6,500,000 and that a ship to sail late this month will for a full load. , _ It is not suggested that these huge ship- Britain here. Much of it ward in any event, but rationing has made it I possible, to exercise greater control over dis- ‘(ml trihution and as a result supply and shipping »- space can be better related. l The size of these recent meat shipments ‘ emphasizes the huge number of livestock now l being sold for slaughter and the national dis- aster a packing house strike would have been just at this stage. It Was Decisive A special committee of civilian experts, which moved into Germany behind the advanc- ing Allied troops, hits issued its report on strategic bombing. It has found, after the most scnrcliing study, that air power was de- cisive in the defeat of Germany, despite many important failures. ln virw of the tremendous load of bombs dropped on Germany, 2,700,000 tons, civilian casualties were surprisingly light. The com- mittee put the number at 300,000 killed and ‘ 708.000 wounded. This is roughly equal to one death prr tcn tons of bombs. On the other haild, more than 7,000,000 were made lionie- less in the destruction of 3,000,000 dwelling units. This was a fifth of all the housing ac- COllllllllilfllifill in Germany. The committee called the R. A, F. tliree- (luv szullt on lliinihtirg in 10-13 the most (lt-vzistzttiiig of rill. In 7.3 hours between 60,- ooo and 100.000 \\'l‘l'E: ltillctl and a third of the city destroyed. The German government was thoroughly zilztrinerl. The committee found some ' c tllrlt the government fczlrcrl further t» of siliiil.'ir insight might force Germany out of the wzn". this, however, did not hap- Whether air power alone could have won ' the war -will remain an unanswered question. The survey came i0 the conclusion that a rug- ged and resilient first class military power can- not long live under full scale and free ex- ploitation of air weapons over the heart of its territory. However, Allied strategy was based upon laud invasion and because this was under- taken on a grand scale the opportunity did not arise for a demonstration of the efficiency of air power alone. On the debit side, the report found many items. The American precision bombing tech- nique is writtenoff as a failure. This at least is the implied yerdict of the report. Peak pro- ficiency was attained in Ianuary of this year when an average of 7o per cent hits inside the ‘target area was recorded. The target area. how- - ever, was a radius of 1,000 yards from the i central object. Th5 overall average, however was: only 2o per ceiit hits in such a target area. .7 The re ort found that estimates of darn- lgs to steefiiroduction were too high. Shortages of Meal were not a» factor in the Gennan break- owfi.’ Neither were shortages of ball bean ‘ despite the costly raids made upon the hurts; works at Schweinfurt. The sub- wh’ mite-Attacked frequently, by the raids. " . tidings were blmvp~ to _ ' .~ Machine tools sud ‘the Germans lhow-‘ require I 2,000,000 ments were made available to the 080016 _0l solely as a result of meat rationing would have gone for- ‘it! “Old Parr", whose extreme and almost antediluvian age (r52) has become proverbial, died this date at Albcrbury, Shropshire, I635, and was buried in Westminster Abbey, where a monument was erected to his memory; a farm labourer, till the age of eighty he remained a bachelor, then married his first wife, with whom he lived for thirty-two years; after her death Parr, in "consequence of an ‘intrigue with Catherine Milton, whom he afterwards married, was made to do penance in a. white sheet at the door of the parish church at Alberbury: when presented to Charles I at court, that monarch observed to him: "You have lived longer than other men, what have you done more than other men?" Parr’s reply was: “I did penance when I was a hundred years old.” In the meeting of the venerable patriarch with the British sov- ereign, a. parallel is almost suggcsted with the grand simplicity in which the presentation of Jacob to Pharaoh is recorded in the Book of Genesis; the old man's demise was hastened by his visit to London where the excitement proved too liiuch for him; a grandson lived until he was a hundred and twenty-four. a- All his life Lloyd George vyas a scrapper. and scrappingi follows him into the tomb. The widow (his secontl wife and previous socie- fary) aiid younger son, Major Gwilym Lloyd George, M. P., have W0l1_ll‘l€ first round of a lawsuit to break the former Prime Minister's will when Probate Court named an adminis- trator proposed by them to take charge of the £i2o,3oo (about $575,000) estate pending liti- father's title, but said he was left without ad- ditional legacy because he refused to enter politics. The eldest son tried to have an addi- tional administrator chosen. but the court held that one was enough. The eldest son started proceedings to prevent probate of his father's will last lune, a move opposed by the widow and younger soii, who were left the bulk of the estate and were l‘.'llllC(l executors. I i I ¥ Practically every county in Ontario has now less than the required supply of feed, ex- cept hay and roughage (says the Monthly Commercial Letter of the Canadian Bank of Commerce), and substantial quantities of west- ern grain will be necessary to carry live stock in this Province over the winter. Ontario, which usually accounts for about one-third of the total national food supply, is one of the few areas to show an increase this year in live stock holdings. The increases in this Province have held the national hog holdings from de- clining by more than 22 per cent from those of last year (when they were double those of the 1935-39 period) while its larger cattle pro- duction, together with that in Western Canada and Prince Edward Island, raised the total to a record level. There was also such progress in poultry farming in Ontario as to prevent a marked decline in this branch of agriculture. It is from this Province therefore that we must expect the largest supply of dairy and meat products, even in its difficult feed situation. So far dairy production this year for all Can- ada has been slightly above that for the oom- parable period of I944, and r5 per cent over the pre-war average, but this increase may not. because of the feed Ihortages in Ontario. Al- berta and Saskatchewan, be maintained for long. On the other hand. live stock marketing: are nearly 2o per cent less than those of a year ago (an increase in beef. mutton and lamb not oval-balancing a decline in pork) but may rise ahiornially in the next few months because of sortie sacrifice of killings indistrictl where feed shortagesiexist. In all-probability. however. the total meat supply will continue below that’ Became the climate, soil Australian lrrl gntlc n district, awarded £300 oout $1.000) service rlce industry ln Au his first crop later els or 103 bushels' California districts! Pacific-Australian Canada, and want away. It must be Blackmore ls a m thing ln which he. been remiss. Mr. The research depn amounts spent by and farm families foods. taken that flridlngs would average as possible. famllles spent $47.35 food cods. The farm fa RELIEV -\(‘llf*.i'\N(1l’l'\IN'~.(ll , u John _ trallan fruit farmer; noticed thlt. higher than the yleld convictions and that he afraid to voice them. Moreover he ls not urging on marrle Canada as a national duty some- Brndy. Aul- and irrigation condition! ln rice-growing areas cf California were identical with the Murrumbidgee River he has been a Government grant of for "special ri the establishment of the strolls.” In 1921 he vtslted California. became convinced that rice could be grown on the Murrumbidgee. and planted that yenr. By 1924-25 production was 16.000 bush- to the scre- ln some Last yeaYp harvest of 75,000 tons helped feed starving native peo les in ewsletter. the "If than ls anything we want In desperately, lt ls babies, and we want them rl::,\t The above was the state- ment made in the House of Com- mons Thuriidny by Jill"! Blfick‘ more the member for Lethbrlr ge. admitted that Mr. of strong ls not Ill d folk himself. has Blackrnore ls the father of eleven children. — Fort Wllllam Times-Journal. rtment of The Nebraska Flmner b" studied the typical ‘llfblfl for packaged In both groups cure was to balance the income s0 be as nearly The urhnn a month for . with $5.64 got-w "u: paolrwté‘! ' rvillles. thouqh gation. The present earl, Mai. Richard Lloyd 1181118‘ much h°mB-Yll“-’d ""941"- George, the statesman’s eldest son, inherited his :23“ ‘gull’ Wm‘ ‘"5 ‘or Dial.‘- ES For rm ll H. J. A. BRO GIlIRUPOIIIST oousuur ‘Orlhnpedlc in‘ Great Itnd Clflllnflgm rm llsllllits WN. m liiliiuclvi MM AiM. in 1H0 assessments. . of tut year, but well above the pre-wsr output. i The Board of valuations will‘ meet‘ on. Chsrlbltetovru,‘ to’ .4 court ' ciiuloluilm, l ,' l i iinirin bear a _‘ ippsuls pulitlc FORUM ' According to Londo- yggh l ‘in u" WNW‘! u. deluged ta “flaunts: by curl: American films, " ' an ..‘ - w". t. d nag,“ 0| rlfy the Brltlsh public.” 'A u u‘ fiwhgu..." Brit h, of course. are unnccultcth- but.“ n” g w“ i to horrors-but they'll just Milo Gum“ d“, M n . to get used to this one, 11kg w. endorse the oplnton , inii-oitawa Citizen. v of curs-revisits . 1f theflreekboplilncbieqm- . hive hlm back. Jung. George would mutants WOULD - Shy-If your Members cf Parlia- ment only know whilst tléey fwd tn the newspapers t ese lays W9 should not be too quick to b 0 them. The -would like l/O KIIOW more-rind 0w u about quite I lot, of things. But. the government, for reasons that. are known be" to itself, won't tell th Your Members of would like to know. for instance. about “black markets" 1n tires and other rationed commodities, They have heard reliably thatthcy have been flourishing in several places. They have even been told that. in some cases Wartime Prices and e Board employees have been involved in them and have had to be dismissed from their ‘post-s. They would like to have the facts. Furthermore. it. has been admit- ted ofllclully that the Commodit- les Stabilization Board, which has been handing out. tens of mllllnns of dollars of, subsidies annually to milling companies, to oll compan- tu, to importers of oranges and grapefruit julce, and to manufact- urers of shoes and other apparel. has had to check back on some of the claims by which lt has been separated from large bundles of gubllc cash. Your members of arllament would like to know what these investigations revealed, em. Parliament Y LIKE TO KNOW rile Cl-IARLOITETOWN-GUARDIAN - ‘ lilllfillilllllil how much the irregularities have cost the taxpayer, whether the money has been recovered, and whether the guilty psrtles respons- lbxliedfor the frauds have been pun- e . Aguln, your members of Parlia- ment would like to know, now that. e war ls over. what. orders-ln- councll with the full effect of iaws the Ministers pass when they go lnto secret session tn the Privy Council Chamber-r Since these orders-ln-councll no longer deal ln military strategy or ln war secrets but are concerned rather with the public business of the nation, lt- secms reasonable to your members etlxt they should be public prop- Y. . 0n all these matters, however, the government takes the stand at your members curloslty isn't. ln the publle interest. It doesn't explain just how this happens to be the case. It just uses its ma- jority tn the Commons to vote down any motion for the tnbllng of lnfonnsltion-glvlng documents thatryour members may make. Du 11g the past week, however, Parllment Hlll observers have lOlll- mericed to speculate on how much longer the-government can m- tlnue to refuse such information. Them were signs that the M.I'.'sl were coming closer all the time to taking matters lnto their own hands and forcing a disclosure of wanted facts. Thus, on the mot- ion for the tabllng of the corre- spondence which would have ex- posed the facts of black markets and the subsidy frauds which have been orfitlsed upon the Commod- ltles Sta fllzatlon Corporation, the government nearly found lt..s hand orced. The vote was 10B against the tabllng of the correspondence, for it. en a government's majority gets pared down t-o ll ln I. chamber of 245, it loses that comfortable feeling that goes with the margins of 50 or more that were common in the last Parlia- merit. ‘The next round In the battle for information may be fought over the sale by the War Assets Cor-I poratlon of several Falrmlle motor launches out. on the West Christi These craft cost $150,000 to build, but the War Assets Corooiutlon disposed of a number of thetn to ,Paclflc coast buyers, without ten- ders or any effort to get compet- ltlve bids, for $3.000. Defence Min- ister Douglas Abbott admitted to the Commons that the salm looked "bad on the face of things" and M.P.'s have served notice mitt they are going to ask some ques- tions about these yacht bargains before the Defense and Demoblllz- xtlon Expenses Committee when it p b‘ meats almost any day now. We are, Slr, etc, A MARITIME GROUP. aw Furs I am buying daily all kinds of furs, such as Mink, Muskrat, Fox, etc., at full market value. My office will be open as usual on Saturday nights from seven until nine o’clock for accommodation - of trappers. J. p. Jenkins, Mgr. THE ROYAL I PACKING C0. Charlottetown And work, nor care to rest, ily lu the" City Building ln from Supplements» uLnitMoN.‘ - ~ CltyCloi-k. ~ becomes the Empire's highest award in the Second Great War. A fleet a‘r srm pilot with the Royal Navy. the 2'7 year old, Can- adian in a flaming aircraft. home hls alt-tack and sank a Japan- ese destroyer slx days beforethe Till you awake and rise, here,_or Why should It be n wrench to leave This is the death of death, to And know the end of strife, and And joy without a fear, and smlle MEYER’S STUDIOS GIIOII‘ and Vendors‘ Asooclntlcu.) Roy's A complete llne of frsh and smoked meats, poultry. fllll and vegetables canned and fresh will be on sale at all times. A continuance of your past valued patronage will be much appreciated. Meat Market Since the death of my husband. Roy MacDonald, decided to carry on the business, I have secured the ser- vices of Hubert Thorne as meat cutter, Mr. about. l5 years service at this trade, for “lg past five years lle has been in the Armed Services. MRS. ROY MacDONALD. end o! the war fleet won Dos by Victoria Orin-s we" a/war for Lleut. Robert C NV R. of Nelson. 3.0., who Canada's 13th winner of pressed chlef cosmetlclnn screen and sh 0 We also hnvo e Max Fact/or beyond the skies. your wooden bench? to sult everybody. breathe away a breath taste the dreamless life without n tear; and flnd the last the best. —Mall.ble D. Babcock. ANNOUNCE OPENING DATE Monday, Nov. I 9th. Listen to regular program CFCY, FRIDAY EVENING, 8:30 For Special Announcements Free Pictures given on every program till Christmas Make Appointment now for Christmas Orders 128 RICHMOND ST.—PHONE 369-L USE MORE MILK Milk is the only complete food. lul. P rofesllon. ollovvlng. Face 75c 0c I have Thorns has Efllfillfillélflllillfilfitlmfilrfllfilfirflfillillillfillfillfilfillill UITAWA. Nov. 13 - (OP) - An almost. suicidal dlve on a Japan- aee d of gamoton (Hammy) Gralv. D S C . The ac u.v'.n. officer was clued llxilnlN-l Si: n comtmander of the Brlfllh Pull!" fllee . _ 6. F. lllltehpson 8i 80H, OPTOMETRISTB "specialists IILIIIG flt- flag of glasses for the eurrcetlou of ocular d0- feels.‘ 58 Grafton Street Professional Oarlls lleil W. Illgglns Chartered Accountant 144.Richniond St. Charlottetown Tel. 589 R0. Box 6| v MAX FACTOR Pancake Make-up Created by Mlx Hollywood's ‘Make-u who for lnlny years has Factor. to the TRUSS WEAREBS To those of you who are unfortunate enough to wesr a truss we nsk the hnve Why not, with hap y shout. run question. are you sntlsffod home when sc ool ls out? with the one you Ire Well‘- lng? Does It (It comfortably The dear ones left behind? Oh, or ls It an nntlqnlbd In foolish one and bllnd! fllll-flf-dlio IWIB- W6 h!" A day and you will meet -— a night n larlfl "Wrtllifil" 0| u" and you wlll greet. "m" mlflem "unu- l“ sizes and styles and st prlces TllE 2 lllcs j 14B Grout George Street Mall Orders Glven Prompt Attention. .___._______-__._; -'\—-'- McLeod é? Bentley w. u. nun-nu. K. c. s. a. strum. K. c. Barrister; and Attorneys-at‘ Law . 154 Prince sum =..‘<AQW.¥-¥.z¢ss<-\ “W OOO-O-O Lhorles R. McQuaid n. A. ‘ w: IN, DEATH Wt“ Dun -—-—— l Organ: ...... r 3d $1.85 Bin-Inter. Bollcltnl. Why be afraid cf death, as though Max Factor Llpstlclrs . Nntsrv. EM. your life were breath? ‘I50 Ind sus gum-n Tm,‘ Bnudm" Death but annolnts your eyes with Max Factor Llpstlclrs Bc- c|ur|nuuuwn clay. O glad surprise! m“, and l1. _ Max Factor Bou e ...... .. 75c Phillie lull Why should you be forlorn? Death Max Factor stringent, only husks the corn. Skin Freshener. Mnscnrl. Why should you fear to meet the Eye Shadow Eyebrow Pen- ____v__ thresher of the wheati’, clLdLlbp 126mg. Powder B a R & c ~ Ill as uge. y Is sleep a thing t dead? Y t. —— 0 sleeping you lire dead e ATTENTION ' ' ' Chartered Accountant l3 Grafton Street. Chnrlolteown Phone I080 Box H‘. Randolph W. Manning. C. A Public Slenographer Mlmecgrlphlng curds and clrculll correspondence. typing IINI bookkeeping. HIS! HELEN GIDDEN Telephone IMO-J. P. 0. Box 452. connnnght Ants. No. I. Mflfl-l-P.‘ HKH-H-NIH- l Morroll and Company Chartered Accountants ll. F. llllfllllllllll Intern Truss Bullrllnl Charlottetown fiVl-Pal.-l.\--w~-wva' wan-vs J'- 11-15-41 Milk is healthful and nourishing for the whole fam- and absolutely essential for your children. Milk is the moat economical food you can buy. M-ilk is the only food delivered to your home in lanl- lliry containers three hundred and sixty-five days of the year. Order an extra quart from your mllkman tomorrow. (‘llhssrlenofedmlssponlclsdby WANTED We rsqulre- large quantities IIOQIIIMMOUIIIQPD‘ ' MUSKRAT .. mun j of Muskrat and Mink Immediately to flll order for a largo Canadian manufacturer. You full market prlee when you sell We ’ nents recs ell. Bring or ship" your furs while market ls firm to: P. l. I. Fur Traders . "m. it. surmise) If! Great George 8L, Charlottetown ... l '. are assured of your furs to Ill. postage or express on all llilp- Immediately ‘ mi.- JA. Ilclillllilllhltll. NUIABI. ITO. QABBISTEB. SOLICITOI. CURBIB BUILDING i M. ALBAN FARMER B. A. LL B. MONEY TO LOAN BAI-BISTIB, BOLIOITOB. ITO- CHARLOTTETOWN Cnnsdlsn Bunk of Commerce Bllll ALEX w. MATHIESON I Otllcs: N t G Street Money t4 “f.” wrléllullfllltlll BAIIBISTEB, SOLICITOB. ETC. l1. ti. McPhee B.A. K.C- NOTARY m. IAIBISTEB. soucrroa‘ liiiin. o MATHIESON Barristers. Scllcllnfl. In. H. Atlorneys- - I LOANS ON CIT? D FARM PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS I50 Richmond Si. Charlottetown. P-IJ. ALMER 6r HASLAM a. J. HASLAM. an. LLB. BABBISTEB, no. of Nova Iii Chunblll "it???" 1o Ho‘ ruoiio r. o. Bu: ll ....—-_i_ crest rxiilllll-zli GLISSECDFITTED J. 8. Taylor OPTOMETRIST 9"" “new” "‘ l “h” .1- ... "int-WW" . _____________l Frollorlc ‘l. LlrlI ' IIAIIIITII. no " nulls: lull-q. ui mum It. Phone lfll r. o. Oh W unknown-own. r. I. l. 1 ._,Rlchard B. Johnston provenance ‘l5. l945_ t In {l