meme reaenaraen nee ete a rt PAGE FOUR THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN . Morning Daily (Founded in 1887) Authorized as Seeond Class Mail, Post Office Bros Department, Ottawa. resident, Ian A, Burnett; Vice-President, W 3 \ : p m. R. Barnett) Secy.-Treas., G. M. Burnett; Editor and anaging Director, J. R. Burnett; Associate Editor, Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1947 Industrial Development Bank It is interesting to note that the activiti a the. Industrial Development Bank are short. y to be extended to this Province, and that representatives of the Bank will be available for discussion of loan applications on March 28 at the Bank of Canada agency here. The Industrial Development Bank was. in- Cerporated by Act of Parliament during 1944 cs a subsidicry of the Bank of Canada, func- tioning under the same president and board of directors, It was established to supplement the activities of other agencies rather than to com- pete with them, and the Act of Incorporation requires that it should extend credit only when the directcrate is of opinion that similar credit would not be available elsewhere on reasonable terms and conditions. The Bank is specifically prohibited from engaging in the business of deposit lending. Chiefly it is to medium and small indus- trial enterprises that the Bank lends assistance, this phrase being interpreted as meaning a manufacturing, refrigeration, shipbuilding or electric power plant. The Bank may not lend to trade, transport or service establishments such as stores, truckers, restaurants, theatres, | etc., and reasonable protection to the Bank inj all cases is of course insisted on. The monthly statement of assets and liabil- ities of the Industrial Bank as at June 30, 1946, showed outstanding loans and investments of over four million dollars. Of the Bank’s $25,- 000,000 capital stock, subscribed by the Bank of Canada, $10,000,000 is now paid up according to the Canada Year Book 1946, from which the above information is taken. Control of Ring Rot Reflecting the wish of conscientious pro- ducers, the Dominion Department of Agricul- ture plans to tighten its regulations governing the production of Certified Seed potatces. An amendment to the regulations was recently des- cribed at a meeting of the Ontario Crop Im- provement Associaticn by J. W. Scannell, As- sistant Chief, Plant Protection Division. The proposed amendment will require the grower of Certified Seed polatoes to plant all potato fields on his farm with one of the three classes of certified seed. He muy continue to produce table stock for his own use or for sale but this table stock as well as his secd stock | must be grown from Foundation, Foundation A, or Certified Seed. Behind the proposed amendment is the need | for greater control of bacterial ring rot. The | Department has observed that most cases of this disease occurring in fields entered for certifica- | tion are found in areas where large fields of | table stock are grown. Table stock grown from | unhealthy, uncertified seed can contaminate nearby seed stock grown from the very best seed. The proposed amendment, Mr. Scannell said, should limit this danger of contamination. While second-hand: bags may still be the) greatest source of infection, field machinery, | especially diggers and planters, is also known to spread bacterial ring rot. To reduce this | risk, the amendment will, if it becomes law, | restrict the use of ficld machinery. If field equipment is used in fields planted with un- certified seed, its additional use in planting, e cultivating and hervesting certified seed will be prohibited. : Prince Edward Island is fortunate with re- gard to absence of ring rot, a fact which hed much to do with the selection of Island pota- tocs fer the big order now being loaded for the British Ministry of Food. The disease Is ex- tremely. hard to handle once it makes any in- roads, and for this reason every effort made to aliminate it throughout Canada is of value to every grower ard shipper. A Drastic Remedy A strcrq cpponent cf the continuance of wartime controls is Mr. John T. Hackett, M.P. for Stanstoad, whose spoech on the Draft Ad-! dress in the House of Commons dealt chiefly | with this topic. He asked his hearers to con- sider, among other things, the shortage of of- tice and factory space, and the hordes of gov- ernment employscs occupying useful space in most of the larga buildings of all the principal centres of the country. “We are told at times,” Mr. Hackett add- ed, “that it is impossible to find young men or young women to undertake tasks in the busi- ness werld., The reason is that they hav2 some kind of job with the Government. They are in a crown compeny, a beard, or a commission, that they occupy, if in Ottawa, some of these temporary buildings. | sometimes think that if a cleansing flame could wipe out the temporary buildings which have been put up here it would render a great service to the people of Canada. They are filled with people who were congre- gated there for the purposes of the war and who have remained for no purpose other than to increase the burden on the taxpayers.” Britain’s Tax Burden Lord Beveridge, author of the British social security plan, is said to be studying a special citizen-security scheme which ‘would provide welfare grants above the minirium guaranteed under the Government's present “cradle-to-the- grave” National Insurance Act. The question is fiom what source the nec- essary funds to afford this security will come. Under the Beveridge Plan, the contribution from ae a the National Exchequer for 1945 was estimated at 265,000,000 pounds and ten years hence, 519,- 000,000 pounds, together with contributions from employers and insured persons, This additional burden upon the British taxpayers, coming on top of that imposed by years cf war, would appear to rule out any hope of a lightening of the taxation which they are at oresent required to pay. How heavy that is, a few figures applying to higher incomes are sufficient to indicate. Income tax on 2,000 pounds in 1934 was 408 pounds; in 1946-47, 725 pounds; on 10,006 pounds it increased in that per- iod from 3,927 pounds to 6,512 pounds. Income tax at present on 50,000 pounds totals 45,037 pounds. There would seem to be no surer way of killing the geese that laid the. golden eggs. Incomes in the lower ranges have likewise shrunk in value. For instance, in the case of provision made for dependents by an invest- iment, say, in railway shares to bring in an in- come of 250 pounds, that income today is esti- mated to be worth 145 pounds after income tax is deducted and the shares under the national- ization scheme have been converted into Treas- ury bonds bearing 2’2 per cent. - EDITORIAL: NOTES - Think of Wl Lemon extract—two tragic fatalities. kok ek 8 Mandalay, the chief city of Upper Burma, wus recaptured by the British this date, 1945. There is no official Progressive Conserva- tive in the Cartier by-election. This in order to avoid splitting the anti-Socialist vote. -* # 8 i It may be after all there is something in the report that the Liberals are seeking align- ment with the Conservatives to offset the C. C. F. The Liberal ladies’ entertainment may be a case cf coming events casting their pleasant shadows before. *. * * * Sir Edward John Poynter, English classical pointer, born this date 1836; was a pupil of Leightcn and became a member of the Royal Academy in 1876 at the early age of forty; in 1894 was elected President of the Academy, two years later received a baronetcy; his two bes: known works are Atalanta’s Race,:and Visit To Aesculapius. His lectures on art hove been} published in two series. * * * * It is true this Province is fortunate in getting the order for disease-free potatoes for Britain out of the continental morket, Trade Min- | istcr MacKinnon announcing that contracts | tetclling $330,872,575 have been awarded by the Cenadian Export Beard and the Canadian Commercial! Corporation on behalf of France, | China, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway and | Czecheslevekia, as follows: British Columdia $32,356,280; Alberta $1,273,956; Scskat¢hewan $70,990;. Manitoba $931,626; Ontario .$122,- 637,18; Quebec $171,102,255; New Brunswick $348,628, and Nova Scotia $2,151,351. Federal Government policy, so repeatedly | stated by Mr. Gardiner, is to limit wheat pro-| ‘duction; increase livestock production, with the | announced intention of thus capturing the Brit- ish market for livestock products. The U. K. iovernment’s’ White Paper, Economic Survey for 1947, states specifically that U, K. Gov- ernment policy is to switch production as rap- idly as possible from wheat to livestock pro- duction. It would be pleasant to know wheth- er Mr. Gardiner is going to convince Mr. Stra- chey, or Mr. Strachey is going to convince Mr. |Gerdincr, for it is quite important for produc- ers and consumers to get their policies mutu- ally adjusted. cd * ww *. Eighty million extra units of electricity will be provided each year by a new United King- dom project which involves harnessing the wat- ers of two rivers in Scotland. Details of this scheme which will enlist the aid of the natural forces in overcoming Britain's temporery fuel difficulties have just been anncunced », the North Scotland Hydro-electric Board. It is the most recent addition to a series of big can- stictional projects being undertaken by the Board to ensure the fullest possible use of High- lard waters in the generation of electric power. The total annual output from the entire scheme wil} reach 500 million units. .- * * * Mr. Jean Francois Pouliot, self-acclaimed implacable friend’ of the Liberal Government, informed the Administration with more sorrow han anger, that in spite of 15 years of patient ” study, he could not accustom himself to neo-} Liberal ideas “more conservative than thos2 of the Progressive Conservative Party, more social- istic than those of the C. C. F., and more op- timistic than these of the Social Credit.” The zeulous Temiscouata reformer insists that there is still hope for the party “if we get rid of the obnoxious elements within it,” because it hos a populor background and appeal. But he is sad when he contrasts today’s Liberalism with that of years gone by, when it had been the friend of the individual, the promoter of private in- itiative, defender of decentralization, and 100 per cent Canadian in its outlook. Those were the days, he sighs. ee A comparison of the rise in the wholesale price indices of Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States reported in the Bank of Conada monthly statistical summary, shows Canada’s wholesale price index has remained closest to its 1926 base figure of 100. The com- parison was based on establishments of indices in each country at 100 on the basis of prices in 1926. Since prices at that level were not necessarily equal in the three countries, the present index figures are not directly compar- able, However, the tables showed that Can- ada’s index had risen only to 111.8 by last Dec- ember while Britain's index jumped to 145.2 and that of the U. S. to 140.9. In the year ended last December, however, the U. S. index leaped 33.8 points from 107.1, while figures for Can- ada and the U. K. remained relatively stable, advancing 7.9 and 8.4 points respectively. On the other handiwe have been cut |<. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way He jests at scars who never tried to open a gift coconut mailed from Florida with the outer shel] on. — Stratford BeaccesHerald. A school teacher in New Hamp- shire has resigned from her job in order to marry a millionaire. Of course if school teachers continue to be underpaid, they will do these des- perate things from time to time. — Peterborotigh Examiner. In Montreal a business manage: geve a 15-year-old-boy — $12,000 to take to a bank for deposit. The boy got on a traim, but was taken off with the money he had planned to spend somewhere somehow. Whatever he was guilty of, he was not the only ome at fault in this case, — Port Arthur News-Chronicle The juke box has flourished: only since 1937, says Industrial Bulletin. Nevertheless, five Chicago manu- facturers turn out 60,000 new boxes annuelly, at an average cost of abcut, $850. In good locations they usually average $25 a week, and many operators own ‘more than 100 machines. There cre ncw about 315,000 juke boxes in ope:ation. It is becoming increasingly obvious that Crtario is in the snowbelt. Sometimes too, according to’ science, if snows more heavily ‘than it does at other times. Physicists add their weight to the theory that it is diffi- cult for a motor cer to plough thrcugh a fifteen feot crift. Sentim- echbout first sighing of ara hate snow on “rinciple. We ere thinking of the hulla balloo that follows every snow. ~~ Hamil'cn Spectator. Each school board in the no-th has the solution ef the prebvlem in y hands—more meney_ fer staffs. The time of com- ils © France Prepares for 1947 Scout Jamboree (Service D'Information Francais) At the last Scout Jamboree in 1937 an invitation to hold the 1041 Jamboree in France was accept- ed. Then the war intervened and when the invitation was renewed e x at a meeting of world scouting lead- aa e"e aaa a'a"e"en"a"e"e"e"w"e"e"e"sTame | CrS ix, December, 1945 it was sug~- i gested that a Jamboree in Fiance POTATOES V. FISH SUPPLIES | jn 1947 would place too great a Bir—In rie strain on that country’s food, con- TREC 2 r een of March | struction and manpower resources, HERG PP Pet notice with the] However, France would accept no Motor . ii feu Closed tolrefusal, regarding the difficulties sf ehicles”, signed by ©. J.Jinvolved as merely another ciiall- stewart as Clerk of the Execu-|enge to her ingenuity. tive Council which . forbids all] Thus on August 9, 30,000 Scouts ee te when the com-| representing 43 countries will con- ie es een q. vehicle and load} verge on the beautiful camp site aor a 0 +» to travel on/at Moisson by ’plane, ship and train. i ighways. But should the|Kight thousand Scouts are coming oad happen to be potatoes the] from England alone. te weight allowable is 11,000 Moisson is just a few miles from : | Mantes, nicknamed “‘la Jolie’, and One wonders, Sir, why the Gov- | quite close to Paris, The camp site ernment sees fit to grant this is situated in a bend of the Seine Settee ahaha Naa PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by corre- spondents of questions af interest. The Charlottetown Guardian does not necessar- lly endorse the opinion of correspondents, a ———aSSSSSOSSS=—_— Mr. A. E. Arsenault K.C., LL.D, Retired Judge CONSULTATIVE and ADVISORY COUNSEL Law ‘Chambers 126 Richmond Street (Prowse Block) Hours: \ 10:30 A.M.-12:30 P.M. 2 P.M. - 4 P.M., or by Appointment PHONE 153-J concession on potatoes and pota-|and was offered for the purpose toes alone, True, | there is the|by a M. Lebaudy. It includes some British order which must be] 1,625 acres of well-drained sandy, filled (incidentally the potatoes] soil and until recently was : for this order must pass the | stretch of woodland park. There arq- the Island, and, according to Dr.|trees from which come the song G. Graham Samuel, a goodly] of bullfinches. And of course th portion of this order will be used | seine. as poultry feed. (Those British-| Plans for preparing the area for ers, sure, take no chances 1n/the Jamboree were completed = a so far’ as their poultry are Coll-] year ago and since November workr cerned). If there is such grave}men have been busy’ constructing danger of our highways being | yearly 13 miles of paved road, 1p destroyed would it not be better miles of trails and 23 miles of dor our province, from a financial | drains, Telephone lines are being standpoint. if the order had never | set wp and all during the Jamboree been receive? After all, the) the camp will be served by its own market is for this year only. } }ittloe railway connecting the oube- What another year may — bring} jying parts. forth in the way of a British In fact accommodation is being market time alone will tell. Even arranged for a cite of 50.009 hab the primary grade pupils of our itant: yts chosen by thelr scheols are aware that the two eo, Yo cn such a way that! basic industries of our Tslevd they icy be truly said to be the are farming and fishing. ard one elite of the world and dwellers {n is at a loss to see why the farm= q city of dreams because in it/ abcut “raids” from the is about over, To obtain or gocd teachers in. the 2 ‘| is imvst oven the’: purs> nd quit adit 7s) seme ort cf y who will be satis’ied wi E cf bretd. — YT read somewhere Ia'e’y thet °7- 600 public clocks in thir cour isn Fv in The Le seems to fo jo her a ude pit lke Mest 0° uw. To think remem’ e: n ovr carly davs the “Beatrix * books. which were frit 1 id which later we thumbed 2 on our own, following the entures of Peter ) and all the Tate Picture recently bor 3 . Petters cr r colors for these b y they were on show ren.awent to se? them She:ter hours may incress? man- hour cutput & om: trades. but they connet dy so in all, They will mnaecn. cither the employment of} more men cr the poyment of over-) time if output is to be maintained The solution of this problem is the responsibility of the government,, But the solution of the problem of production as a whole is the re- sponsibility of every worker. ington, point a ri dier before the Battle cf Water:co, eaid: “It all depends cn that erti- cle.” Whateter the Itadership and the plan of eompaign, the battle for prowperity depends today upon the British workman, — London Daily Mail. Bridge of Allan, The People of Starlicgshire, Scotland, are money to endow a roem in Sti | Roysl Infirmary in memory of De. \ Eric Dow. He acd no trouble with | unpaid bills. He mever sent any out. | His father was wealthy and left him la fortune. When he graduated from Glasgow University .with thee de- grees he commenced practice in the smal] town of Bridge of Allan. The jinhabit-mts of that town not only esteemed him as physician, but he had the remarkable hait of refus- in to accept any fies for his ser- yiees. Rich or poor, old or young, it was all the sime to him, When come patients become insistent and threatened to chamge their doctor he would reluctantly accept a small token payment. He worked from morning till night, and in between, and often far into the might, he gave his service to the hospit3} for sick children, --St. Thomas Times- Journal, qe 3 eg Ameng the few contributions of the American Indian to our civil- imition was the art of making maple sugat. The process was comparatively crude, After slash- ing the tres slantwise with a toma- hawk, a wooden chip or sprout was this privi whe fishing a ay ae ina if Ke seen de nied The 1947 Jamboree has been given | ae é thousands los. ef {he title of “Peace Jamboree’, a fie oe + Me gong he | title at which some people look _ beads, ty what scheme Of} askance because the risk the ero-! clenirg dees the Government |, r he cenciusi ik . oe yy ‘re Pe CemeT tees om like | tradicted. However, France has: ee eae pe Would accepted the title with the fait eate such havocs that action often results from words. ! ing industry shovld be granted vests the best hope of humanity | hi nd | nt most rigid inspection ever set on |Jong rows of great elm and birch cost of $4,000,000. additional wells will be drilled to prove it; Then shafts will be sunk and a 2,000-ton mill built at a total Thereafter pro- duction should be such that it will provide for the Dominion’s needs without recourse to imports from abroad. MARCH 20, 1947 Professional Cards $s DR. 0.8. NORDLAND Veterinary Surgeon Mount Edward Road Charlottetown, P.E.1, Phone 804 Serine rere rerio ae PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Mimeographing cards and circulars concert programs, correspondence, typing and bookkeeping HELEN GIDDEN Telephone 1890-3 ‘Apt. No, 4, Connaught Apts, Powna] Street NOTARY, ETC. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR CURRIE BUILDING Ry FRRRRRRRRRRRRRARRRRARAARA MORRELL and COMPANY Chartered Accountants « Eastern Trust Building t th Phone 1447 — Box 344 G OO; Charlottetown te B. M. SEARS, GAL ‘é Resident Partner é BOOSIE RRRARRNRRRRRRRRRA SRARRRRRRRRRARRRI “ KRRID St NEIL W HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT Ifow valuable economical. exploit- ation of these deposits can beccene | is seen in the fact that imports of | fertilizer already cost Canada | neatly $4,000,000 a year, In mae | katchewan itself many faimers have to pay $73 a ton for it delivered to! the farm, | With a supply on the loorstep, so | {o speak, the benefit to Dominion hgriculture in the future should be immense, ’s it contains run cf bens con~| Because of body's hunger are we f born, | And by contriving hunger are wei fed; COC COL OC OOS Currie Building Charlottetown Tel. 1636 P.O. Box 452 “pootecccccccccoceececes, $ > McLEOD & BENTLEY * ° W. E. BENTLEY, KC. J. A. BENTLEY, K.C. 3 ‘ ° ° ° + c} Barristers ood) Attorness-at Law 134 Prince Street eoeoeeeoeoe Oo eeoeeoroore $ H.R. DOANE & CO. ¢ Chartered Accountants $ 53 Grafton Street Charlottetown q Phone 2080 Box 247 Randolph W. Manning, C.A. Porecvecroes SHS SHSO FOSS SOF O SOLO OSO+OOOD | | A few :€ert weeks and eur A vai . « . - f'shing scason will be underwey. | a eiat the era See ean ie Because of hunger is our work well : hy are>() 3 end ap oat at j of a pnd ¥ shert) done, 7 . £5 malice ef coe Bu P quite liters will be arranged between the! As so are songs well sung, ana’ A MATHESON and PEAKE ‘ i S a l a aay e q pepe nig a ! ports, aerodromes and frontier sta- things well said e A. W. MATHESON ‘ wey ruling will remoin in ef) ion. and Moisson in order that, Desire and longing are the whips 4 An PEAKE a ee A. AKE, B.A, LL.B. f intik ca. wv . stove nacl vel H ices ne , a a tora I they may sce some of France's his-} fis aa peepee ir vn i ae toric centres. Once at Moisson the; aay 1 Beng (0 6 we" |program will follow the trad s to the peints where they - established at’ previous Jambor pre needed? , Many of those sun- | 0. j ‘at Birkenhead, Godollo and Vogel | . of God God save us all from death when’ ¢ we are fed -Anna Wickham. yics vere rot te up 0 2 ang in the way of ent : the present and 3 be acquire oN we ok enter ell CFOS COCO EE SO SHSHOOOOE . and ceremony, ga Soy eo! ed es seen cs av b Sureiy . P . 1 the Ccvernmert cf ctr Province d educational amusements play- 3 Old Charlottetown $ i r sted in the welfare of 1% an important role. Every day $ (And P.E.L) ? sen as they are in the the “arena” or “theatre” w.il be a 2! ae : “taken over by different nationa! peautry. : the Minister of Highways, Berkevr, or Premier Jones, groups taking turns in the presen- ‘te of demonstrations, dances,! Imes, choirs, the program beng! (Sydney Post-Record) \ jvarious sub-camps under the hotr The by-election in Cartier, Mon-|pitable colors of the old Frencl treal, to fill the Parliamentary vac-) provinces, For example, under tae! ancy resulting from Fred Rose's’ flag of Burgundy will be grouped expulsion from the House of Com-| 12 Burgundian Scout troops | mons, is beginning to assume {hej gether with s’x Tle-de-France, 12 eppearance of an old-time free-for-} American, 16 British, one Greelt,' all, Up to date no fewer thaM eight Polish and one Salvadore, seven candidates have taken out) troop. nomination fapers, although some| while admittedly there is a food) official nominations take place oN need not worry about their sons March 24, The ma‘ contenders are, suffering any privation. At Moisson! Maurice Hartt, now Liberal mens the boys will have a choice of ber of the Quebec Legislative AS-; French or Anglo-Saxon menus tor! sembly, and Michael Buhay, four meals a day. ; | Montreal alderman long nesociated The French menu will include} with Communism, who is running Breakfast of coffec, bread, butter, as the Labor-Progressive candidatt jam; lunch, fowl, green beans, and has the full support of Frefi cheese, sweets; tea, bread, butter, Ros2’s organization, One of the macaroons; dinner, clear soup, ham, most vigorous platform campaignerp calad, jam. for Mr. Buhay is Abe Rosenberg. f The Anglo-Saxon menu include: brother of the ex-member, WP Breakfast, tea, toast, pork sausage, urges the Labor-Progressive candir porridge, marmalade; lunch, bread, date’s election on the ground that butter, canned beef, fruit; tea, he is ‘a tried and true suprortdr pread butter, jam macaroons; din- of the cause for which Fred Roge yer, clear soup, fowl, green beans, is now serving a six-year teria In potatoes, rice pudding. prison, ’ _. 9 Though the Jamboree officiaily Led by External Affairs Minip- closes on August 23 that will mark ter St. Laurent, ever Quebec meM- only the beginning of the enter- ber of the King Cabinet is partiqi- tginment of foreign Scouts. The pating in the campaign on beh@if Prench have conceived the idea of of Mr, Hartt, in whose interest a a “Hospitality Fortnight” in o.der mass mecting was held in Montreal +, extend the “visiting” principle Jast. night. This rally took place jn implicit in the Jamboree. Thus for the Fusiliers’ Mount Royal Armaqry ‘an additional two weeks the fo. cign and was addressed by Rt. Hpn- gcout delegations will be entertain- Louis St, Laurent, Hon. Brogke eq at Moisson. French families are Claxton, Hon. Alphonse Fournfer, eager to take part in the plan and and Adelard Godbout, Provingial the French Scout authorities have leader of the Liberal Party. Mr. St.; Keen flooded with imvitations afl Laurent and other Liberal speakfrs .cking that Pierre, Alain or Ber- deplored the appearance of so MANY Hard be allowedato bring home the candidates in an election in which «prother? of his choice, ‘Tom, Ber- they claimed all the “anti-Red si wim or Ali. 4 forces” should be arrayed agaist pine inbusaes cs Notwithstanding the plethora of Potash candidates, it is doubtful that: anti-Communistic. vote in Cartier, The rich deposit of potash found on election day, Although there is, #® Saskatchewan last July, consid- the Communistic candidate. there will be much division of the (Ottawa Citizen) an independent Progressive Conser-' ¢Ted likely to make this Dominion imserted to guide birch bark pails resting on the} been disowned by that party's lead- ground. A number of such recep-|er in Quebec, Ivan Sabourin, K. ey tocles are on display in the Royal] who Is head of the Progressive Cor- ~tario Museum, varying in size and | servative organization. Mr. Sabourin design. One of the methods of boll-| has explained that the reason the ing down the sap was to use earthe | Progressive Conservatives are not enware pots. The other was to drop | running or endorsing a candidate red-hot stones imto a sap trough |is that they are unwilling to see euch as those commonly used by | the anti-Communistic forces of the the Mohawks—hollcwed-out bass- | constituency divided. Most of the wocd logs. In the latter process, candidates describe th lves as the stones were removed when cold | “independents,” although one of and. more hot ones dropped in S80] them, Paul Masse, was the Bloc thet the boiling down was Accomp- | Populaire candidate in the general lished only efter a great deal of | election. As Mr. Masse ts being sup- labor. Although poor in quality and | ported by outstanding Social Credit meagre in quantity the product] politicians, and as he is a very thus obtained was a highly valued | well-known figure in municipal one, beng the cmly sugar available. politics, it would not be surprising —Royal Ontario Museum, y€ he should poll a considerable the fluid into} vative candidate running, he has independent of the outside rvorld for its supply of am all-important fertilizer, ig not to be left to private enterprise to exploit. It is to be pub- licly owned. The Saskatchewan Government, according to the Minister of Nat- ural Resources, Mr. J. L. Phelps, who regards potash as “of the same relative international importance as uranium,” will itself undertake de- Yelopment of the new field. First, vote, but it will be almost entirely derived from radical elements, which in a two-way contest would rally to the support of the Com- MR. LEFURGY AND THE \ RAILWAY . _ , And time will yet show that there ; An innovation at Moisson this/is where'it should have been plac-| year Will be the grouping of the ef. After the six days’ Session of 1872, after an appeal had been made to the people, Mr.: Hay-, thorne’s Government came into power, ostensibly to show up and had so freely charged Mr, Pope's Government with having been guil-, ty of. To do this they brougut on | engineers from New York to report upon the road generally. These of these may withdraw before the, shortage in France mothers abroad} men were gentlemen of ability, and Money to Loan. above suspicion. Their report is before the country, and what does it prove? Just this, that the Hay-) thorne-Laird party had grossly slandered the Government of Mr.) Pope, of which I had been a mem-| ber... . They had the Government} then in their own hands, and in! so far as they could, determined to! alter all they could alter of what) their predecessors had done, and therefore, concluded to change the Railway stations at Alberton, Sum- merside, and Charlottetown. They, ordered a new survey at Summer- side... They ran the line around) the shore and through my shipyard. The Railway Commissioners came) to value the land, and I put in my claim to the hon, member. He said he thought I was not in earnest,| but he knows now that I was .. «| He referred the matter:to Mr, Mac- Millan. Mr. MacMillan is a gentle-| man whom T esteem highly; yet it ought not to be forgotten, that at that time he was my keen polit | cal opponent, and was then con-) tending a suit with me, for a seat} in the House.”—From a speech by| Hon, John Lefurgy, House of As- sembly, 1874. RE-EMPLOY FACTORIES EDINBURGH — (CP) — Scot- Jand is to have 13 “Re-employ Factories” to provide sheltered em- ployment for disibled persons. Workers will be paid full weekly wages based upon outside trade union rates irrespective of their individual output and goods will be sold at market prices. Barristers, etc. | | Collections, - Money to Loan : 90 ‘Great George Street | 4 Charlottetown 3 4). } Caw: Jase 9 DR A. R. SMITH DENTIST 115 Grafton Street Office Hours: 9 to 12—2 to b Telephone 2284 PROC ON GOTOH TOHOOOOHOO;N eencliyiag sest through/ {the cel either solemn or funny, while every} io rmrs of your good paper why yo © seareaer Lamas “Y) ©When the Government of which: ¢ i 4 {hig special favor wes granted to | Tish the f bw Yoecho wily riwas a member passed the Raiulwa- ¢ CHARLES R. McQUAID 3 fprmeis of the Prevince and ena and la ane from am we Hill and located the line at Sum- ¢ _ BAL . se ft , other the ckering campfires Spel ns yas “e “sawaart~. 2 F F d to the {shing and al} « taer ings will b dorved for patrels merside, it wa placed three-quart- ¢ Barrister, Solicitor, t industrics?. Tacir reply wall be , Gays 7 iB ODSEIVEC patrols, @rs of a mile from my land. T ¢ Notary, Ete, 3 eweitcd with great interest [for France, for the Cubs and thosq¢ {hought the station should have ? ay ate ‘ 1 am. Sir, ete. under 14 years of age but official, heen placed’ on Mr. Pope's land, 3 Eastern Trust Building, ; GEORGETOWN PACKER. ¢otemon:es Will be strictly limited: jn the rear of the town, and think. ¢ Charlottetown { a noel wh plenty of time for sports and so still, and from thence to have 3 Phone 1711 | ~ = leisure. ne w 7 7 Seven-Cornered Contest -_ run a branch down to the shore. POOH OOO EEO SHS OOOH OHHH EH M. ALBAN FARMER B.A., LL.B. MONEY TO LOAN BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. CHARLOTTETOWN ter! to prove the rascality which they ETT TTT TLV IST VOC OT ON A. Walthen Gaudet, LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phillips Building 111 Grafton St. Sollections POOCOCOOE SEES OOO OOOOH OE: PEPSCSESESOSESHSSEOSERE Oe $ EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED i J. S. Taylor $ OPTOMETRIST $ Corner Kent and Queen Sts. t i z Phone 1956 Evenings by Appointment Phone: Residence 1013 eee eeeoorrrreres Ase eee ees esesesesess ae ooo BELL & MATHIESON Barristers, Solicitors, &c. R. R. BELL, M.I.A, D. L. MATHIE@ON, LL.B, K.C. Attorneys-at-Law LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown, P.E.1. PALMER & HASLAM A. J. HASLAM, B.A. LL.B. | BARRISTER, ETC. Bank of Nova Scotia Chambers | Charlottetown, P.E.I1. | MONEY-TO LOAN Phone 85 P.O. Box A icsanaaslee H. F. McPHEE, B.A., K.C. NOTARY, ETC. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR Riley Building Charlottetow? A munistic nominee. As the campaign, is now shaping, it looks like a reasonably sure thing for the retur; of Maurice Hartt, the official Lib- MARKED THIS WAY eral nominee, GAUDET & HASZARD Barri tant Notaries, Ete Canadian Bank of Commerce Bids MONEY TO LOAN ERT A. GAUDET. B.A. LB nadian Bank of Commerce Bldg Charlottetown, P.E.1. 2 Ghartovtetowa, EEE Fredcric A. Large, K.C. tamara 3 SOLICITOR, ARY Royal Bank of Canada Chambers Charlottetown, P.E.I. Successor ‘ George J. Tweedy, K.C. DR. W. R. CARSON Chiropractor Palmer Graduate ‘ Charlottetown 21 Prince St. Phono 1074 aE ; ot er ook ike }