@119 huorcliau. (Jovian Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Pnblisner every weeit-Gay m0fI'IIll8 Ii 155 Prince sue“ f‘.harInm.l,,,,,.n, P.|-;_L, by the Thomson Company Ltd. hi! A Burnett, Publisher and General Mannie! Prank Walker. Editor Member Canadian Daily !\IewsnaP¢I‘ Publishers Association Member of The _('anadian Press Mr-mbcr Adun Rnreau or Circulations Braich «mice: at Summi.-rside. Montague and Alberto: app:--sented Nationally by Thomson Newspaper: Advertising Service i 00 King street West Toronto. Out. 640 Cathcart St., Montreal 1030 West Georgia St., Vancouver By Carri:-r Charlottetown. Sumrnerside 30¢ per week. 33 Mail eIsewhex'e‘in P.E.I. $9.00 per annum. Other Frminccs and United States 812.00 per annum. PAGE 4‘ FRIDAYTTMAY ‘ 307 19587 The Newfoundland Plan The St. John’s Daily News reports that negotiations between the New- foundland and Federal Governments over the Hospital Insurance Plan have now reached the final stages and are awaiting final approval from Ottawa and the signing of the agreement. Newfoundland therefore becomes one of thefew Provinces where the plan will take effect on July 1, the earliest date suggested by Federal author- ities. _ -. The Newfoundland plan will give free ward hospitalization to every- body; but it will not include medical fees. Those patients who desire pri- vate or semi-private accommodation will be able to-have it by paying the difference. Out-patients’ diagnostic work and free X-Rays are also includ- ed. Incidentally, Newfoundland _has had a Children’s Hospitalization Plan in effect for some time. Under the plan, all children 16 years old and un- der are given virtually complete me- dical care. The Provincial Govern- ment claims——probably with justifica- tion——that it is the most generous medical coverage for children in Can- ada. In each case, the plan was work- ed‘ out by the Provincial Cabinet‘ in consultation with medical authorities. "' For a Province which—as Premier Smallwood claimed at the Dominion- Provincial Conference last Novem- ber—is still “a quarter of a century behind the‘ Maritime Provinces” in public services, Newfoundland is do- ing very well indeed. As we remark- ed before in ‘this connection, ,Mr. Smallwood must be quite a man. Pcr- hlaps we coulditake a leaf out of his book in our approach to Ottawa on financial matters. 3 ‘ Old Age Pensions Ottawa authorities are said to be disturbed over the inability of the old age pension \fund to stay out of the’red, the 2 per cent tax on per- sonal and corporation incomes and commodity sales being ilisufficient to keep it in balance. It isdoubtful, how- . .ever, whether anyone ever seriously- believed that the fund could be sus- taining over a long period of time. The Government may as well get used . to the fact that regular budget ex- penditures will have to be used for the maintenance and the expansion of the old age pension plan. - At $40 per month, pension pay- ments ran ahead of contributions at first. with the difference being made up by loans from the treasury. But by 1956, four years after payments started, the gap was clos1'ng. The $15 per month increase since then, how- ever, has added more than $150 mil- lion to the annual total payment. Perhaps the best solution, suggests the» Ottawa Citizen, would be a com- bination of the two choices facing the government. Contributions could be raised, so as to reduce the drain on the treasury. But it might as well beflrecognized that the fund cannot be actuarily sound without increasing contributions to a large amount— possibly to as much as 5 or 6 percent of personal income and corporation taxes. After a reasonableilicrease in direct contributions, perhaps to 3 per- cent in each category, the remainder could be made up from general re- "venue. The pension could be regarded partially as an insurance plan, partial-I ly as a welfare scheme. Contributions could continue to be collected through ' the Department of National Revenue, thus keeping administrative costs low, and the plan could be flexible enough so that the contributing rate could be raised or lowered slightly as circumstances required. Farm Accldenis . An extensive study of farm ac- cidents in the United States has been made since the first Farm - Safety Week was observed fifteen Years ago. l\lachinerv, drowning fire arms an . . .' ’ d falls vseie found to cause three Out of every four accidental farm deaths. Machinery most deadly of the four, took nearly 4,000 lives from 1949 to 1953. Nearly one out of three farm accidents involved ma. chinery. its chief victims were pe,._. sons between 45 and 64 years of age. In a five-year period under study in the United States it was found that drownings claimed the place of I No. 2 killer with more than 1,600 lives. About one out of four drowning victims was a child under five years of age. Uncovered wells on farms and unguarded swimming areas such as nearby ponds and streams are thought to be largely responsible for drowning accidents in farm life. In the observance of Farm Safety Week in the United States this year a new approach is to be made in an effort to reach farm residents with a safety message. It is planned to enlist the help of rural clergymen who will be able to‘ deliver a safety message from the pulpits. The situation in the United States'is no different from that in Canada. Very few days pass without a news report on an accident involving a farm family. They fall into the same category as our U.S. cousins- machinery, drownings, firearms and falls. And the major problem is ex- actly the same—how to get the safety message “across” to farm residents. The Haggis Haggle Revenue Minister Nowlan has done his best to clear himself of the foul suspicion that he harbors any de- signs upon the "reputation of Scot- land’s national dish. It was recently reported that the import of haggis had been banned by Canadian author- ities. Mr. Nowlan later explained in the House of Commons that ‘it is not prohibited under the Customs Act but that haggis cannot come into Canada unless it complies with regulations of the Animal Contagious Diseases Act and also the Meat and Canned Foods Act. Still implicit in his statement was the suspicion by Canadian au- thorities as to just’ what goes into a haggis. H On this point Mr. Herridge, CCF member for Kootenay West, asked: “What is the mystery about the haggle over the haggis '7” That was so tricky question, and Mr. N owlan trod warily. He thought the fact that an M.P. of English extraction and a minister of Irish extraction should at- tempt to discuss haggis was a mys- tery in itself. He said that any haggis which complies with the regulations , under the acts he had cited and which bears at label authorized by National, Health and Welfare is automatically admitted to this country. “Those which do not, unfortunately, are bar- red. That is the haggle.” Mr. Nowlan added. That word “unfortunately” should be noted. Mr. ' Nowlan—-of Irish ex- traction-eis not going to say what goes into a haggis, or that it -is sus- pect as an- edible dish in any shape of form so far as his department is concerned. It is just a matter of health regulations—a problem that comes under the Health and Welfare Minister, Mr. Monteith. He implies that he hopes Mr. Monteith will be lenient and that there will befew if any haggises that will fail to make the grade,——and leaves it at that. We think Mr. Nowlan got out of the difficulty rather neatly. He is known as a sturdy political fighter, al- ways ready to lick his weight in an opponent; but this is one controversy in which he is understandably not anxious to be further involved. EDITORIAL NOTES The death of Lionel Shapiro'is a distinct loss to Canadian letters. He was a writer of great talent. 4- 4 -I. , Another American attempt to put a satellite in orbit has failed. Mr. Khrushchev will probably call the lat- est 21% pound sphere a “spoiled orange”. He referred to the successful ones as “little oranges.” *‘ ' 4- 4 NA» \ Premier Pflimlin will go down in history as the one'French Govern- ment leader who resigned before his time came to be fired by the As- sembly. No doubt, General de Gaulle will give him suitable reward. . 4 4 ‘I’ In one of his platitude-ridden speeches for which he is noted, Pre- sident' Eisenhower made this state- ment: “The question is going to be not one of surmounting our problems but one of rising to our opportun- ities”.. The less rhetorically-minded will say that, even so, the problems have to be surmounted before pro- ‘ gress can be made on the opportun- “ ities. 4 .4 1- C One product after another is being brought under the price stabilization program. Sugar beets and soya beans are the latest to receive the protec- tion. It will soon be time for potatoes to I09 given consideration. Represen- tations with this in View were made ' by Island growers to the Department Of Agriculture two weeks ago. It Ought not to take much longer to coffle I90 a favorable decision. Potatoes 319 091 tamly as important to the economy 35 S0.Y a beans. MAKING THE TAIL WAG THE DOG OTTAWA REPORT ‘Housing Program Criticisedl By Patrick Nicholson Special Correspondent for The Guardian OTTAWA: “My Government will continue to promote a vigor- ous program of house building," promised Governor General Mas- sey in his speech from the throne when opening’ the new Parlia- ment this month. This ‘was the first item of new legislation to receive the atten- tion of Parliament. During the de- hate, the small Opposition swamp- ' ed the massed ranks of the Gov- ernment with a flood of largely justified criticism of our national home-building program. ’ " ’ As was inevitable in the very early days of a new Parliament, some of the protesters had failed to do their homework, ‘so their comments brought to_-mind that old saying, that “It is better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool, than to open it and remove all doubt.”- But there remained ample grounds upon which the Gov- ernment attracted criticism from those Opposition members who had studied the problems. The most obvious point was the failure of the Crown-owned Central Mort- gage and Housing Corporation to promote truly low-cost housing to- day, in place of the fancy-dan split-level and gingerbread homes financed by the taxpayers’ money yet which are aimed exclusively at buyers with an average in- come at unrepresentative level of $5,934 per year. WHAT CANADA NEEDS ’I‘oday’s need is to provide durable basic housing, without the frills, at a cbst which is with- THE AcAoIANs OF'P.E.|. De Pense~ns’MemoricII , By J. Henri Blanchard. LL.D. ~ (Continued from yesterday)‘ In 1731 do Pensenls went to France, and on March 5, 1732, he presented a memorial to the gov- ernment which gives a very good account of the situation of the colony of lsle Saint-Jean at that time. This memorial states that‘ Port Lajoie and the Northeast Riv- er (Hillsboro) were the most con- siderable areas in which the land was being cultivated. “Twenty- eight inhabitants are settled there and several of them sow as much as 10 or 12 barrels of grain, and the poorest of these inhabitants aresself-supporting. v St. Peters is the most thickly settled community. The people are nearly all deep-sea fishermen and they own 24 shallops. Only eight are engaged in clearing land for wheat. “The fishermen had ahard time to make ends meet, although the fishing was exceedingly good, as they had to sell‘ their fish and secure their supplies from Louisbuhg at great . cost. At Tranchemonltalgne (South Lake) the settlement consisted of six families who were well on the way to self- support, but they found great difficulty in clearing the land which was covered with a thick growth of large oaks. MULPEQUE HARBOUR Malpeque had a beautiful har- bour and good soil, but it too was covered with large oaks and pine and it was very difficult to clear the land. An island in this harbor was the headquarters of the sav- ages who grew Indian corn. ,It could be seen that the land was very fentile as rich returns were obtained by very crude methods of husbandry. All they do is to make a hole in the ground with ,; .s'h-arrlp stick, pour in the seed,‘ and they do not touch it except to hill it; nevertheless, their small- est crop would amount sometime to 200 barrels. In time he expect- ed that this district would be the most densely inhabited. Four A- cadian families had established themselves there; they had reap- ed ten to one of their sorwing, and the prospects for the next year were bright. They had also built a mill, the advantage of which added to the fertility ‘of the soil would certainly at-Itnact many more families from Acadia. The total population of the six settlements with two families of fishermen settled at East Point, amounted to 347 persons. These then were the humble beginnings of settlement‘ in Isle Saint- Jean (now Prince Edward Island), after it was placed direc- tly under the Royal domain. With the exception of the settlement at Three Rivers (Bsrudenell Point) by de Roma, the number of set- tlements was not increased until 1749, when the mlgnation of the Acadians following the founding of Halifax, made it necessary to plant many new settlements in various parts of the island. (To be continued) Pcinic Feolrs About De Gaulle By Alan HaPvey Canadian Press Staff Writer Panic fears that Gen. Charles de Gaulle’s assumption of power in France might be the begin- ning of the end for the Western military alliance seem based on flimsy evidence. . Some experienced observers are less pessimistic. They agree that de Gaulle has made bleak state- ments about NATO in_ the past and they concede he is an ex- ponent of priclklly nationalism. but they feel France needs NATO as much as NATO needs France. N0 HASTY MOVES A lot will depend on how things go if and when- de Gaulle takes over. His first efforts will un- doubtedly be concentrated on trying to solve the Algerian prob- lem, so that hasty moves to with- draw from NATO are unlikely to rank high on his program. He will cerlalnly stress his View of French interest, always a fixed idea with de Gaulle. and try for a change of emphasis in NATO activities. He will want to worry less about Europe and more about .\'ort‘h Africa. in line with his feeling that the colonial awakening is part of an Islamic crusade against the West, fold and fostered b_v communism. STRENGTHENING POSSIBLE There is a posslliility that de Gaulle at the helm might strengthen ratller than weaken NATO. Despite his aloof and authoigltarian manner, the war- time hero has always acted ‘cir- cumspect-ly in c o n s t i t,u tional terms, and if his access to power is achieved bloodlessly it might ultimately result in a greater measure of political stability for France, with obvious benefits to the Western alliance. A second fea,r—that de Gaulle might try on his own to make a deal with Russia—may have little substance. Shortly after the Sec- ond World War, he appeared to be attracted by the idea, but the honeymoon is probably over. His aides are said to have given as- surances on this score. His reputation for anti - Amer- ican feeling is probably exagger- ated. It may arise from his fear that France, which he sees as still a great power, is becoming merely an American satellite, playing a subordinate role in NATO. His vehement espousal of the French cause sometimes‘ can,-;ed_ headaclles to wartime leaders Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt. Back in p()\,\'e1', dc Gaulle would undoubtedly be a difficult customer. but his rcic might be less unl”l‘lell:lly to NATO than some accounts suW°st. co‘- in the means of the average work- er. The government hires hun- dreds of “experts” in housing to advise how this could be done, but so far appears to have received -no effective advice from them. For a start, the Government might practice that historical re- rhedy, of firing one in" ten of those high-priced but inexpert “ex- pe ” in C.M.H.C. “pour en- courager les autres.” This. ex- ample would perhaps encourage thel remaining nine-tenths to sharpen their pencils and study with a sense of urgency such points astlie high interest rate on C.M.H.C. mortgages, criticized by Timiskaming’s Arnold Peters; as the failure of the C.M.H.C. program to provide: mortgage loans in small communities, cri- ticized by Fort Wi1liam’s Hubert Badanai; as the failure of the C.M.H.C. experts to recommend steps to make safe the outmoded firetraps created by electrical gadgetry, criticised by Tim- miris’ Murdo Martin. _ Specifically, the Cabinet could profitably study the figures quoted by West K0otenay’s Bert Herridge, who doffed his jester-’s cap and bells to make a telling speech. 61 per cent of all Cana- dians who filed income tax Ire- turns in the last reponted year earned incomes of less than $3,000, he said. But of the would- be homeowners who were en-‘ abled to borrow gove‘rnme=nIt mortgages, only fioulr-tenths of one pe4r.cent were in the under- $3,000 income bracket. IIALT SPECULATION Of the many possible steps which would result in cheaper homes, the most effective might be for the Government to-order the C.M.H.C. to create. in all big communities, a supply of serviced building lots at cos-t price. This would have the ef- fect of reducing the present out- rageously inflated price of com.- peting vacant lots. The average lot price has risen in the past ten years from $523 to $2,443. evidence of the unjustified and exorbitant profits being made by speculators in a country where there should never be a short- age of land. The government might also consider establishing a regular and ample supply of mortgage money at a cheaper rate. It is ’ borrowing flrom the public by the sale of government bonds yielding less than 41/4 per cent. Why should the government not ,borrow at this same rate on “Government Housing Bo-nds"— which is exactly what National Housing Act mortgages are - and lend this at cost, including charges, say 5 per cent in place of the present 6 per cent mort- gages? . And when will some Govern- ment take steps to halt the long post-war. racket whereby loan sharks lend money on second mortgages at a discount, thus dodging the tax collector to ob- tain a bogus yet tax-free “cap- tal gain”? The Liberal Government was asleep at the switch to permit these abuses to grow up while it was in office but obviously not in power. The Conservative Government is allowing its “ad- visers” to sleep, instead of in- forming itof these abuses which they must know should be cor- rected. The Age Old Story If thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and hiln a- lone. OUR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian Files) (May 30, 1933) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO The schooner H. Macin- tosh" Halifax, 128 tons. Captain William H. Collins of Newfound- land, went ashore on the east end of SIL. Peters llsleand early Sunday morning. They left Port Hawkesbury on Saturday for ‘Charlottetown to load a cargo of potatoes for’ Newfoundland. A dense fog arose shutting out all visibility and the ship struck a reef some distancc' from the ls- land. She im-medialelly filled with water allowing the men only time .to collect their belongings before abandoning ship. One unit from this province . spit. A Word About Dental Problem By Herman N. Bundesen. 31- WITH OUR modern Elena ‘ techniques and equlplriclih. body has to \\'01‘_1‘y mu“ t~ more about havlfl‘-3 a.‘~tCE[)‘A1 Dulled. HoweV€I‘~ 9"“. ““h 3°. “smoc-tllest" extraction. PEI-nv swe11'1ng and lTemorT'.hagmg‘ sometimes develop after a P3’: ' t‘ h me. . tle\Id17tl‘laIgte csanoyou ‘do? a-bwt Such dental emerg€‘f1'C195- WHAT NOT TO DO _ Well first of all. d0fl"I l11V‘1le bleeding. Don‘! rinse Y°“-is mouth too violently and don suck too thoroughly when you To halt bleeding once it begun rinse your mouth “ll a warm saline solution (mix one-half teaspoonful tgxf‘ salt in glass of warm \_va_ - _ ‘Then fold a 2-in. by 2-111- sterile gauze pad ‘la moisutenefi teabag will do) into _a 31113 hard mass and P130? it _°"er the site of the extraction. Bit; (:11: it’. with firm Pressure for 3 0 PUBLIC FORUM 1 pen to the discus- RI: bgohclxrnespbndents of qi-IESIIO“ °f ‘ terest The Guardian does not neses- Iflarily endorse the 0Pifl'1°“ °‘ °‘’"'“' poiidents. ALASKA Sir,-—-Two or three years ago -I was both interested and _amused by an announcf-‘m‘e“’t 1“ Th: Guardian of a» debate. that too place in St. Dunstans Univer- sity on the following questmni “Resolved that ‘Canada should procure Alaska from the United States in exchange for the M31“- time Provinces.” The report of this debate would likely appear more amusing than seriously offensive to the average Canadian reader, Mari-timers in- cluded, and was not. We may Wen judge, intended to be taken too seriously by practical Canadian statesmen of the present day- But before dlismissing the de- bate with a smile. Some Mam‘ timers like myself might _be tempted to modify the flor¢g01_Il'-S resolution by substituting in lieu of the Maritime Plpov-inces, a ' of Southern Ontario, in- cluding “Toronto the Good” and the famous Nialgarla fruits dis- tlric-t. But shad-.es of Queenstoh Heights and Lunday-’s L ane! Some good United Empire Loy- aliists of Ontario might seriously object’ to‘ this proposition, quite as strenuously 35 'Maritimer.ss are likely to object to the original one. I — . - Nevertheless, I may say that, personally, I never. gaze -at~the map of Canada without feeling- that it is a consumlma-tion greatly to be desired that Alaska should be part of this country. For with Alaska added to it, our fair Dom- inion would then extend, not as formerly described in the old school song, ‘-‘From Oape Race to Nooltlca .Sound’,”_. but rather from the extreme eastern point, of North America to the extreme Western point of it,' fifty miles "mom or less from the extreme eastern poinlt of Asia. Canada then would afford geo- graphically, the connecting link between East and West -that Kip- ling said, somewhat rashly, could never meet. It would then on ac- count of its geognaphical situa- tion, its vast natural resources and the high standard of its soc- ial and political inslti-tutionls, bid fair to be the leading nation a- mong the nations of the world - _the United States of America not excepted. Canadian 5tates- men, especially, should in this case stand pre-eminent among if any of your readers are i_nclin- ed to consider this estimate of the coming Canadian statesmen, as well as the present ones, alto- gether too ex-travalgant, let them reflect but for a moment that our Canadian statesmen for well over a century have been train- ed in *the greatest and best poll- tical school that the world has ever seen, that is to say, fhe British Empire that gradually e- volved into the British Common- wealth of Nations —- a,Comm,on- wealth, indeed, that would seem to foreshadow the poet’s prophet. ic Federation of the World. Is there then a gleam of hope for Canadians that the United States may in the not too distant future cede Alaska to Canada? one great outstanding fact wmgd seem to point that way; name1y the doctrine of se1f—determl’na: lion; ~ a doctrine that was pro. pounded by the late President Wilson during the first World War and that has been irisisited “P011 I35’ the United States ever since in connection with the col. miles of the British Empire. Is it not possible that some day in the not too distant future the Deolple of‘A1aska, on account of will go into training at the mill. I313’ camp at Aldershot this sum. "}'=1“- N0- 2 Cvmlpany Division of Slgnallers, un-der CO‘lTlI_XlI3l’Id of M3101‘ F. B. Conrad, M.M., will go under canvas. The camp W111 last until July 16. (May 30, 1948) I keep house before the invention the statesmen of the world; and , if WAY An” fmyyy don't let yourself gcl lat. ariviscs a doctor. A’ word to the wide should be sufficient. —New Glasgow News It's hard to believe, but recent arcllacologlcal discoveries indi- cate that women were able to of wax paper.—-Stratlforld Beacon- Herald 10 or 15 minutes. This stop the bleeding. ' If it does, don't rinse your mouth and don’t spit excessive- 1y for at least 24 hours. GET ADVICE If it doesn't, 1 Suggest YOU contact your dentist or your phygxmiian. They might advise retaining a hydrogen peroxide solution about the bleeding soc-, ket followed by comlpresslon. Or maybe they will use iod‘_ofom_i gauze saturated with epineph- rine. There are a n".~mIber of things they can do.~ should Pain may follow immediately after extraction of a tooth or it may be delayed! for two or three days. ' Immediate pain caused by an infection may be in the line extraction. Generally, apply- ing cold alplplicatiorils to the face will relieve it. DELAYED PAIN Delayed pain usually develops two or three days after the ex- -traction. It becomes increasing- 1y worse after the third day ‘and is severe for the next four or five days. By the, 10th. day or so it usually subsides, but it may per- sist in subdued form for a total of two or three weeks. This, of course, requires treamment by I their close geographical, racial and commercial connection with CEll1‘¢':1d'l3IIIS, will seek political un- ion on some reasonable terms United States, because of American-sponsored and much- appnovcd doctrine of selIf-dle<teIr- min-ation, would ‘be morally bound to assent to the proposed union? _ Personally, I believe such an event is possible in the not too distant future; and in the mean- time I think the students of St. Dunstan’s University are to be congratulated for having already selected this question as a time- ly one for academic discussion in ,a Canadian University. Hence- forth in all,Canadian Universities est Alaska," but rather, “Pro Canada Alaska.” I am, Sir, etc., I M. MacKENZIE Shore MEN'S Hand Woven single Breasted, Patch socket or by an in3111'Y durinlg I with Canada, in whlich. case the- its _ let the slogan be not, “Delenda ’ From Robert McCleave, Conger‘ ji vative MP for Halifax, comes ti; ll suggestion that the four Atlantigl Provinces be termed -«Auamica'.“ How about reviving the old clash‘ 3:-lurliéallm Auamls? .,.,, To the casual observe;-"It; clothesline on Monday ‘Hing doesn’t give much i-nfofma to whether the family is boys or girls -- so many jeans and boys‘ shirts ’ Falls Review doctor. lt’s caused by ’ flammation of the alv ‘ . Post-extraction swelling‘, ally is caused by injui-y soft tissues. It is .,,,, companied by pain or? ..t ness. SEDATIVES HELP Usually you can reduee t Swellimg by alplplying an ice bh‘ for half an hour every 1,0“, 3 the area returns to its “hm size. It’s pnobably g . ‘ to consult your docimr,g:fi;d"’ I can prescribe phenobarbital ‘ other sedatives to keep “I: calm. . One more word about Io‘ I extraction. If you base 00 genital heant disease or 1,,,,,n' or have had, ‘rlheumatjc f °' tell your phusi-clan .nd .denIIigfl;~ probably will I penicillin both before and we hhecextrac-tion to prtvem I teria“ inflammation of 11119 QUESTION AND ANswE1§ . . P. R.: Are sebaceous cw. dangenous, and do you ilheysliouzld beremoved? Answer: Sebaicious cygh, ml’ seldom dangerous. Howey; it's usually best to have thm; removed surgically. " ; .. IIIoIIn I§I.AIIn-IIIIIIIIIII1 FERRY sEIIvIeE “é May 1st - June 20th iucluslvi. _ Daily from each. terminal: I a.in,, 11 a.m., 2 p.m., 5 L" I STANDARD TIME _"’f_" I F'or.I_iaily report dial CFCY I first weather broadcast E I I I I I I I I I I Gross early aiidlavoid delay: No Reservatloilsi ,.l‘.—.-I: 1 For particulars contact: I! NORTHIJII/IBERLANDT I Charlottetown, P. 1!. Island HARRIS TwEEn SPORT COATS 7 Assorted Patterns Special $24.95 Sizes 36 to 44 MOORE‘ 3. Mci.EOD LTD. . i , . I FERRIES LIMITED m-_1_ } I I I Hi. I Pockets IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE. ., OR MISSED a_1-.-=. =-=-_-.,._ DIAL missed. and a paper will be delivered right to your door- Special delivery service available between 8:30 am. to 9:00 am. if your paper is late — 01' . 6561 s ,1 . * ED'S 173 Great George St. DIAL Science Now Without Pain A stone cairn and tablet to.‘ commemorate the work of Luc I P‘/Laud M011Ig0m€I‘y. author Anne of Green Gables,” will be I erected near the famous Green? Gables house at Cavendish. it was . decided at a meeting of the His- toric Sites and Monuments Board yesterday. Choice of the precise‘ site of the cairn and coll.~:ltl‘Ilc—* tion of the monument itself is, exmecled to be carried out this? summer. Local bakers are pl‘0I.€‘Sllll-EZ a. gainst the practice of lna-inland bakers shipping 20-ounce loans; of bread to the Province at a c:..~; of one cent a loaf less than the 24-ounce loaves sold to stores in‘ this province by local bakersfi Some of the local bakers state‘ that some retailers charge the same for bot.h loaves and the con. sumer is under the impression he is getting the same size loaf. I I Toronto, On Q , (specia|)__I,-or the first time science has found a I new healing sub 1. ‘ ability to shrink Isleidldfirhblidg alrlils I. ' ‘ . . ,I9h0:'l:‘Iiine(;/e hpaln and itching with thissl We Pee" '°“"""‘d r. h . "expensive substance ,,‘g ‘ ‘" the Privacy or their 0..., _ onie without ' inconvenience. any discomfort or In « mam” {yam rléy SLI‘lI(iIlg impr9Ve_ b d 3 ported and verified y octors obsorvanons P1 ' ~- -mi1“;:.‘:“”.:ll"‘-'y m“md- And reduction or ' evmg pam’ aclual took Dlacc remmuon (Shrinking) In lac; __ , results were so thorough For the Fastest Service in Town,Call I \ Ed's Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom W’ serve — the goal for which we strive!” : ‘ ' Finds" Healing Substance That Relieves Pain *““d Itching As It Shrinks Hemorrhoids TAXI I Charlottetown I 6561 C‘ __..—J‘ Shrinks Piles‘ 01' Discomfort “ that sufierers were able to Wk’. such statements as "Piles ha" ceased to be a problem!’ A“ among these sufferers were_a V97’ wide variety of hemorrhoid 00"“: ditions, some of even 10 to 20 Y9 standing All this, without the use of 031; cotics, anesthetics or astrlngenl-5 —_ any kind. The secret is a new henl‘ ,. ing substance (Bio-Dyne) _’ I discovery of a Iamousscienllligl ‘P’ slltute. Already, BI0‘Dl'“9 ‘.5 m wide use for healing injured 1155"’ on all parts of the body This new healing SuI).5i,ailC€‘ I? offered in 8up])0$ll(1rg or ozrllnml form called Preparation H ASP I0’ , individually sealed. con\{8Y"em I Preparation H Supp0SII0“€’5.°r reparation H ointment, W" special applicator. Preparation is sold at all drug 310795‘ Satisfaction guaranteed or m°”e’ refunded. ,4 r