THE GUARDIAN l niauiueuuo-uuuunuiii-ouonuf Dapu-In-t. Ottawa. the tint (haedln Pabllablu (Jo. Holden and Anoclatn Miler. In A. Barnett. Aueelata Editor. Frank Walker. pincss in one means sloppiness in the other. A thorough study of a subject like Latin. or French. or our own English tongue, reveals the prentlsc on which all other- .studies are based. It is not that perfection- '. in them should be an end in itself; to mu-l ter them makes the way to broader fields cucuuvnon .clearer and easier: Languages are more ..c,,,,. "in, an... ml" in, iii, ,i,,,- ithan the keysiof science, said La Bruyere: life who despises one, slights the other. Never has language been so slighted as it n" t”"k'" lnkn is today--in spite of lip service to educa- '&1”&" Tmiir.iTis3a” tion. The short cutl mentality has won too tilmr Tlis-Vltilf Eiice" H 1 "MY Comm.” l "The strongest memory is weaker than l ----- ----- -- -- Heraldic Anlmah -m” I As noted in these columns, crafts-V .men are at work in London modelling the iQucen's heraldic Beasts which will be feat- ured prominently among the Royal sym- . bots at the Coronation. Godfrey Talbot has: idescribcd these antique figures in London? lCalling. Of the ten Beasts, he observes! lone he saw in full outline was the Lionj 101' England. llc is magnificent, rearing up,l showing his claws, and yet maintaining; the Crown. straight. with firm dignity, up-i on his brow. and registering upon his face an expression of ferocious loyalty. There is, too, the l7nicoi'n of Scotland. tossing :his head with a suggestion of unquench- ably fiery spirit. The Dragon of the Tu- dors is a red Welsh dragon with his tongue A positive step to promote greater: trade between France and Canada hast come out of the Ottawa visit of Prime Min- ister Rene Mayer. It was agreed to establish a Franco-Canadian joint committee to work out details for a better balance of tradc between the two countres. At present, Pro- inler Mayer pointed out. imports of Cana- dian goods by France were greater than imports of French goods by Canada. The aim of the committee will be to develop a satisfactory balance of trade at a level cor- responding more fully to the productivr capacity of the two countries and the tra- ditional bonds between them. During the Ottawa talks. according to A joint communique issued at their con-. clusion, there was an examination of thei general economic and financial problems ofi . today. It was agreed that suppression of; curling out and with a defiant look in his ihe ohsiacies to ii-adc and paymenis n-as-t eye. and like all of them, standing up tall. essential to the development of production,i Thellft l5 t0 he the Gl'9.Vh0Uhd Of th0 the strengthening of the defence of thgl If. These, like all the others, have been free world and the improvement of I . i standard of living. The French and Cana-l, dt”-Sllihhd t1'0m he-'1'3ldlC d9V1C0S Wed by the dian ministers recognized that the re-estab- l QU90h'S ?1hC05t0l'5- lishment of the convertibility of currencies tlS(U1l9S l5 the Fdlcdh 0t the Pl8ht38'3h9tS- constituted a common objective for con- '8 .!1t3t'9t'Ul blfd Wlth Whigs 0UtSl'3F93d- other pei-ted action on the pan of the inn Gov. spectacular animals will include the White xi-ninenis as weii as of an oihep Govern. p Horse of the House of Hanover: the Bull menis Concerned. tof Clarence: the White Lion (badge of the The Ottawa talks brought an exchange M0l'tlm9tt5- anceslonn of the Yorlnnt klhgsltl nf Views on NATO befoive the meeiing or and the ”Yale" of the Beauforts. The the North Atlantic Council on April 23 in i ”Y8l0" lS H m.VthlC8l h9'(1St-3 lletlaldlti Pal-is, NATO inust iteconcilg the niiiitapylEllllelope--l)Llt. here lS Sll0Wl'l RS 3 S0l'l Oi. requirements of the alliance with the econ- l 5tll”3t”20at Wlth El.'9nt tnshs and h0l'n5- omic capabilities of member countries, Pre-f mier Mayer stressed at a press conference: following the meetings with the Canadian mmm Cahlhet mll'llSt91'5- 1t W35 95-Sehtlal t0 lmo The Queen Square School manual traili- DFOVE the Present methods Of NATO alsn-I ing classes put their training to practical with a view to enabling the member states advantage in constructing the-H. mm wood. to work out in common an arrangement ii-m.ki,,g mam in me School hasememv program sp1'ead over a period of yeaI'9- i There is much to be gained in thus using Flnallyv lt W35 h9C955dl'.V tn Consider nleth' the skills which are being actltured in pro- nds Of Wgnnlzlhg Close” Cotoperannn among l ducing things which would not otherwise the Atlantic powers in the economic field he p,.m.i(ied. in accordance with the provision of Article - v - ll Ofithe tlt9ntY tn Whlch the French C'0V' Congratulations are in order for Gerald ernlnentv nke the Canadian G0V9l'nln9nlv all Steele of St. Dunstan's University who has t"Ch9S the greatest lmP01't3nC9- jbeen selected to attend the International The French Premier Stressed that n0th' , Students' Seminar in India this summer, lng would warrant any slackening in tn",aftei' first going to the Coronation. Even collective defence effort. Here he was re-'-if it means iaking an additional year 10 EDITORIAL NOTES ferring to recent changes in the Soviet l-ln'11c0mpletc his courses, as he fears, the ex-: ion and the appearance of peacelike over-p' pei.iem.e should be very worm whiie in, titres. It was necessary to take advantage. deed. of all possible resources in the Free World a c - including those of western Germany. he A recent. court ruling points out that this said. The treaty establishing the European: p1.m.in(.(, does not have a registry of inlet (lnmlnunn-lf was negotiated and Signed n-Vi. to land but merely a registry of deeds and lnie llrecedlng French Governmentn prfii similar documents of title. Registering a "net Mayer recalled" He added that one nf l document serves as notice of its existence the first acts of nls Government in tne to subsequent purchasers but non-rcgistra-1 foreign Wncy neld was to lnn tne treat-V tion may not enable a purchaser to ignore before Parliament to have it ratified. The. me existence of a right mat is known ml French Parliament will have to decide on that pm,(.haSE,l.. the treaty in the near future. 0 u . However in Ottawa as in Washington m-mi the French delegation insisted that before lirance joins a European Army with West A V-".3-mian of weigh (mg-m' he was A German troops there must be an agm” member of the Second Continental Con- ment reached between France and Germanypg1.(,sS and wmu, me Declamiion of 1nd,,, 0" the Status of the 5”” -pendencc which was adopted with few lchanges. He was largely influential in sel- lccting the site of the national capital and was the first President to be inaugurated The latest F1m0hfZ m8h.V leiidlflll F(lU(la"in Washington. He made the Louisiana Thomas Jefferson. President of Up Service llot Enough nonists to Snund 3 lV3FhlhZ ah0Ut the hell- i purchase by which the United States gain-I lect Of the study of language in the schools 5 ed 1,171,931 square miles west of the Mis- ts Albert W. Trueman, President of the ' Sissippi and paved the way for further px. University of New Brunswick. ”It is true pansion, He de.-iined in i-nn for 3 third that We P3.V lll? S9FVlC9 t0 the Cllllm-S 05 term, setting a precedent which was ob- language study by retaining in our cu1'ri-ism-vpd nniii imp, cula for lower schools, English composi-l "On", he told tn? Cantldlah Club lh M0"-I Since the Korean war began in June treal the other d8.V'- '"BUt Zllammall h8Si1950, the casualties in the United Nations been Sadly reduced in milk. and L8tln.,army (including South Koreans) have been which used to direct sludents' attention to.'3go'()0(i, with 50900 kiiied, according in an the'fh3t0my 0t language. is fast dlS3PD98T- announcement by Mr. Nigel Birch in the "lg" . British House of Commons. At the present . Cdmmehtlhg Oh thls Statement. the H8m- time the South Koreans are holding two- lltdh 5P9Ctalol' remarks: "In a. concentra- thirds of the entire front and further South tion on 'utilitarian'. or what is more loosely Korean troops win shortly be ready for hai. '-'9-lled PP3.Ct1C8l- 9dUC8tl0h- the study Of tle. Two additional divisions are presently l8h81l889 18 Often T8tt,?d 85 3 decorative lrlll in the final stages of training. Because the o-3 nlt-'9 d0C0mPllShm9"t. Perhaps. but Of United Nations holds mastery in the air, no great value otherwise. The results of Mr, Birch said that the Communist an-. tnls annnde hale nee" dlarmlhllly 1”9V9al- planes had been compelled throughout the Pd in recent "nlV”;l'5lt5f testsv With Students winter to abandon alrfields in Korea in Showing 8" 8PP8lllD8 1800131108 Of the slm- favor of those in the "Manchurian sanc- ple rules of grammar and speech. This is a tuary." This air masterv has restricted t'll8ClPlll'l3l'y Sh0l'tC0mln8. ,WhlCl1 Can be re- the movement of supplies to the point that heeled in the whole approach to life: it is in the considered judgment of the United neglect of the foundation of the structure Nations command the Communists wouid 9t ed'-fCt1tl0h- Language. as Samuel J0hn- be unable "to maintain the momentum of 3”" Mldv l3 the dl'995 05 thought. and 8l0P- ag sustained large-scale offensive." that Tudors and the Golden Griffin of Edwardi One of the oiitstanding the United States, was born this date 17412.; WT? 4:: ; PUBLIC FORUM I , This column is open to the 1 discussion by correspondents l of questions of interest. The l (lunrtllnn does not. necessar- i tly endorse the opinion of i correspondents. TEA(3llEllS' DIFAIIVANTAGES Sir.-Only 1'rcc1i..; we celebrated Education Week acroS Canada. During that time a variety of tmagaziue articles, pamphlets, etc... linvaded the country. These art- . icles all had the same theme. They praised the teaching profession as the noblest on earth and con- ldcmned the conditions under ;which they work, particularly the lrural teacher, as deplorable. l, A short time ago after graduat- -ing from a local college as a lie- ienced teacher I embarked on a lrural teaching career. because this ifield has always appealed to me. I must admit that one nf the feat- iures which appealed to me was ithe 200 day working year which is pointed out. so often to the pros- ipectivc teacher as a point. of in- iducement. Unfortun-atel,v we fall to ,rcalizc that. the teacher is paid 1only on clays for which she actual- ily teaches. All holidays, regardless if they fall on a week day or not. are considered by the Department tas days when the teacher stops eating, etc. Of course, our board has to be paid just the same. The features. It Nazism for what it. was, and was easy to see its very deviltry made it easier to light. Communism is different. It has some commendable featursc. It practises racial equality. The poor have a better chance. All classes are getting educaction. But its attractive features con- stitulc its greatest danger. It at- tracts the poor. Its promises fool people who have heen under- privileged. That. great Chinese na- tion that has fallen for Commun- ism havc found themselves under a harsh tyranny far worse than they ever knew before. The Rus- sian promises are so glowing and their methods so deceitful that they constitute a grave danger to all pftnr people who are the great majority of mankind. We are rightly set with all our resources against. the spread of this per- nicious sy stem. Quite right. to be greatly con- cerned over this menace to our frecdoni. and spending our hil- lions to guard against it; but why are ur so little alarmed over this other enemy that doing us more harm than even Communism is likely to do us. and (lay and night, openly and secretly this enemy Number One. is doing his devilish work all. ever our country. This cncmy within our gates has fooled more than a thousand times more peo- ple than Russian propaganda. I knew an old doctor once in Nova Scotia and a good doctor, who was fooled by alcohol and average teacher ls, therefore. idrawlng pay for only 200 days of pine year. This leaves I65 days or nearly one half year that. the teacher does not make one red cent unless she has some other means of income. Now IN us follow the teacher as she begins teaching. How many of your readers have been employed in an office with its comfortable desks, modern equipment and everyday comforts taken so for granted. Compare this with the teacher's lot and conditions under which she has to work. The maj- nrlty of country schools are pitiful- ly undersupplled. In all fields of employment an employee has only to report to work and find every- thing at hand, but not the teacher. She has to begin subscribing at. once to teachers' aid magazines, supply hcctographs, buy exercise books. etc. Compare this with an rmploycc in the business world who docsirt. even have to buy her i0Wll ptfntzll, t Then there is the matter of prizes. All rural teachers are called .upon to offer a variety.of prizes to imducc the pupils to study. These ,prizes which come to no little iamouni are to -be paid from the teacher's own pocketbook. Can you immune any other job where an employee would be asked to pass out her hard earned money to the public? Why are provisions not. made b.V the school boards to sup- ;l1l.V these necessities? surely they icen afford it. as well as the teach- er. l i some of the trustees are quite l.F.)'l'l'IplllllFtlC. They inform the i teacher that money has been voted lfor supplies: then unless she beats a path to their door ”begglng" for them to purchase much needed Iartlcles. they promptly forget. about iii, and in the end the money goes to some cause considered more Im- portant. The Dux-pose of this letter is not to discredit. the teaching profes- sion. I maintain that It. is, "In lt- self." the finest career open but. I think all prospective teachers ahouid have the inside picture of conditions in the majority of rural schools. ) Until the government seen fit. to raise the salary of the teachers supply the very bu-eat necessltlca to their schools. there will be a greater decrease of teachers in the next few years than this Provlnre has ever realized. I am. Sir. etc. AN EX-TEACHER TO BE r0MMUNI3M AND THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC Sir, -We are quite rightly con- cerned about Communism. It Is A greater menace than Nazism was, that hnmhastlcally brutal Ger- man system, with no . i' l and the various dlatrlcta Me fit. to t through his example it fooled his son. I knew that boy well. A isinger he was, and a real nice ifellow. He started out to study imcdicine but for drunkenness he (was expelled from college and drilled about a hopeless fellow, a sad trial to his two sisters, uu-i til he died. If this were an ex- ceptional case it could he" forgot- ten, but there are hundreds and thousands of such cases. men and iviomcn, too, who are of the best of people. 5 Why in heaven's name are wel so concerned enemy and so complacent this iworsc one? i WIi,v'! Because liquor poses as 'a friend. A dmuizht of Commun- ism does not give quick stim- ulation, so--felt and R superiority complex that can drive a car better than any one else on the road. And further, it does not yield the handsome dividends that the brewers get out of the liquor traffic. Liquor has always had I mcsmeric power to fool and to deceive. The brewers, the sellers, the drinkers are all its dupes. because they are led to imagine thnt this mysterious. illusive thing called alcohol is a safe and wholesome drink. In the very long ago ll man, noted for his wisdoni, said: "Look not upon the wine when it. is red. when it giveth its color in the cup, when it. moveth itself aright. At. the last it bitelh like a serpent and stlngeth like an adder." How long are the Christian people of Canada going to allow the ravages of this destroyer of life and prosperity to continue? A combination of devout. and de- termined Christians could put a stop to it. I am. Sir, ole. W. I. GREEN. about one about Stanley Bridge. fxiifi-i.6n:':3 LONDON, (AP)--A 53.590900 loan floated on the London market by the Jamaican government Thursday wuiovernubacrlbed. the colonial office announced. The 4 1-2-per-cent loan is redeemable in 1973-78. The money is needed for development projects. COMPLHIE VISUAL REFRACTIOZI AND ANNALYSIS e. F. l-lll'l'Cl-IISON 1. son A Optoinotebla ae&r.:. ?O 7oe&l'Qmwz BOY AND SEA-CALL He walks across the moss-wet rocks clinging to them with bare brown toes. Turning his back against all clocks The way a timeless creature goes. For he is kin to turtles and A second-cousin to the perch, Loving water more than land. Loving sea-grass more than birch. Reaching a secret waterfall. He stands where water tumbles down And hears the sea shell's ancient cah And trcmbles from his toe to crown. What tells him where the won- ders are, 'He dcesnlt know and cannot say- But oceans and the white North Star Will surely claim their own some day! -An obel Armour. -at - ' - 4 ...- The Age-Oltl T i-H1 u, . V0 .r,1A. 2)” I - -.- a, .. u.,-m.,.,, The Lord is my llillit and my salvation: whom shall 1 fear"! l-he. Imril Is the strength of my life: of whom shall I he nfraltl? Dried Apple Pie t0ttaws. Journal) The countryman dpepeninz disquiet the progres- sive devbllltatlon of the culinary situation. It is more than parsley tossed lndl.-.-crlmlnately over pota. toes and meat. and the defiant ef- frontery of a red cherry precnr. lously perched n-top ll doodad- dish salad. A man has to argue for a week for a meal of fried snlt pork because his 't.een-age daugh. tars feel it. In 1 too pleblan dish. A bowlful or hulled corn in rich, hot. salted milk for supper is as rare today as a woman's hat that adequately protect; her tressu. In general. of course, a man wants his apple pies made of man fruit. He isn't going to stand up in meeting and argue that 3 dried- apple pie is as satisfying as a fresh one. But once in a. while he sets A hankering for a wedge of old-fashioned dried-nipple pie. Half a century ago. many home. wives planned to peel. quarter. core and slice two or three bushels of apple: for 9. supply of dried fruit. 01 the some 16.000 named vnrletleu and, sub-varieties of ap- plea none equals the Northern spy for dried-wple plea. A; the slices on linen ntrlnca shrivelled through oocwberb sunny days and frosty nights some of Autumn's hearty tang was sealed into the apples lbetore they were put. into brown aaper bags and stored in the at- c. There is nothing complicated about an acceptable dried-apple pie. The aliens must. be soaked in cold water for several hours. the plenty of inn: and flour in the bottom crust. to insure - deep utunehineu. The pin mould be one and u-van-sixteenth indies deep. be generous with the nut.- Ineg and cinnamon and tons In a handful of nlslm. Throw in some lemon juice to bring out the flavor of the apples; lprlnkle luc- ar and flair over the applet. Just. before the top crust. you on, man eight in to tilt; of ohu-p cheese, the also of a chlnilnx marrow: cu. along with half a -noun chunk of butter. wliqnsmsnondnadaya work with a hot. ftuflnt. quarter such a pie covered with belt I cupful of heavy cram he can view views with 58 Grafton Street temporary lolnu-on without. got- llng loo bully upset. We -. ..... .- Ottawa Journal. office and clerical help. These are the tllwant ymmg mung: jun puking In time and lnun-eated only in trying to look pretty and having I. good time. There an the career girls. usually older, more experienced and genuinely inter- ested in their work and anxious to do a good Job. And then there are the young married women. - Oalnry Albertan. It. ls many yarn since there bu been an outbreak of smallpox tn Oanada and many more since there was a one in Brantford. In- deed the building elected as a smallpox hospital has been put. to other uses for so long that. only the "old-timers" can remember when there was such an institu- tion. Just. the same. what: has hap- pened overseas is a grim remin- der that. one cannot take security for granted. Doctors and public Health officials have to be con- stantly on the alert.-Brantford Expositor. Upon due consideration. the mother of a Fort. William family decided to rename her baking con- fections. Her young daughter, In the first grade. was among those asked by the teacher totell their favorite dessert. She replied wromrptlyz "Illa pavpa-kiss-mamma zvith jam-in-between.” she an- nounced. to the astonishment. of the teacher. It was the family name for a turn-over.-Fort Wil- liam Times-Journal. Old Charlottetown was r. I. 1. I PRINCE COUNTY VlSlTEl)' ”His Excellency the 'I.leutcnant Governor (Sir Henry Vere Hunt- ley), accompanied by the Hon. Mr. Haviland, left Charlottetown on the 25th ult. on a tour to the Westward, and returned on Fri- day. much pleased, we under- stand, with the fertile appearance of that part. of the Island. par- ticularly the districts of Bedque, Tryon and Crapaud. "During his tour. His Excel- lency visited St. Eleanor's. where an address was presented to him -Port; Hill-Lennox Island, on the anniversary nf St. Anne, which gave him an opportunity of seeing assembled. as is their custom on that day. the whole of the tribe of Micmac Indians be- longing to this Island, with whose interesting appearance. decked out. in their holiday and fanciful dresses. His Excellency was much struck -- Prlncctown Royalty. Bedeque. Crapaud and Desable, calling at Mr. Irving's, of Bonshaw. whom he accom- panied over his farm, and great- ly extolled his praisi-worthy per- severance in redeeniiniz from a dense forest. in the course of four years. the large extent of land which he has in productive cultivation." --Colonial Herald, Aug. 6. 1842. to punue his argu- th the Bush. In the old the Thousand and one out. Mr. Iloaaadeuh hll heed.- 'l'lnlearoMII'-:-tiypaaof female IPIIIJISIE x j I.Noles Bx The Wayfx i A notable calmness YIN"! 01 urlcultun at. ll: (it: VGl'llt.V of Alberta is the official licensing of in new "Gateway-. lltrler-'. The new variety 1. iii, product of many yeug of immg alvo work and testing in the plum science department of the faculty The objective was to obtain ..' maltlna barley which would ma. ture as early as the widely med Olll variety. but have a high” yield and stronger nu-aw. Th. solution was finally found in, crossing olll with Nawnl, a. med barley developed earlier at the University. The final result. an..- n. long series of crosses. was Gate. way. The seed will not be ready for general distribution until the Fall of 1954. but. in time it. should have wide popularity. - Eamon. ton Journal. A local firm is giving nwgy cuh prizes to those who guess the sub. lect 0! Jingles. To be eligible for the prize however, the contestants must send in vlt.h,the answer thc end of the wrapper in which the company's product is sold. The object of the contest, from the firms point of view, is to encour. age people to buy their product in greater quantities. But in a few cases, this does not happen. "Believe it or not." said one Fort. William grocer. "we have had people come into the. store and tear off the end of the wrapper-. when nobody was lookng of course --without. buying it. Can you beat it?" -Fort William Times-Journal. Ame:-lean engineers have Invent- ed an electronic device that will play checkers with you and a chess klbitzer that will improve your g e by analyzing the re- sults of every move you make be- fore you make it. But. what can it do in the way of kicking your partners shins under the bridge table? -I-Iamilton spectator. No, it is not children's tops. or the books they read. or the movies they see tliat turn them to a life of crime in later life. All tliesl things may have some influence but. in the main they are merely reflections of a much deeper part of a child's life - his environ- ment. his home. the way his par- ents. teachers and friends think. talk and act. the emotional and political climate or his city and his country as n whole-these. are the real influences that shape the man the child will someday be. If you would dlminlsh crime, take the evils out of these factors, and dmrt. worry too much about toy pistols out of the toybox.-Owen Sound Sun-Times. First it. was lard. Then It was butter. Now It ls wool. wool is selling today in Boston at. about half the prices of early 1951. Ono reason is the :00,0(l0,000 pounds unsold South Anicrlcnn surplus. Another reason is the 10 per cent. replacement nf wool by synthetic fibres. It. is estimated that. within tzwo years this coilntry will use as much of the new s,x-nthetlcs as the total present American clip of natural wool. Therc are those who beiieve t,hat.t.he synthetics may eventually do tn wool what ny- lon has done in silk. At best, it. im- pears. wool will have sharp coni- petition from man-inarlc fibres. just as lard has from li.i'dT0st'.nnt-- ed fats and butter has from oleo- margarlne. Milwaukee Jour- I'lI'll. PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. A. McGuigon BARRISTEB. SOLICITOE. Etc NOTARY. Etc. Cunlo Building Clius. R. McQuuid i B.A I BABIIISTER. SOIJCITOIC. ivowuzr. an-.. i liutorn Trust Bullrlln; . CllAnl.0'l"l'E'ruWN Phone l'f1l Mafheson. Paulie & . Nicholson A. W. MATIIEEON. Q.C. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. LL.B. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LLB Bari-lotion, Etc. Colloctlona - Money To Loan 1'15 Grafton street 'ii on.nun'r A. GAUDET. llA-- LL-B Barristers and sollcltnru Money to Loin Canadian Bank of Common... Bids. ? : MocPlioe 8: Trainer I. F. MMSPHME, 3.5-. Q-C. I. SOIIEIILED TBAINOII. B.A. hnrrlnton. Gus. J. A. Cori-uthers. R.O. OPTOMITBIET 118 III! Shoot Phone I875 (Next to Slmpaoira Agency) .. ........m...-...A- Allison M. Glllls. LLB. Maxim-ml. souon-on. Eh. uo Iiuuuona si. - Charlottetown A. Woltlien Guudel. LLB. l BARIIISTER. SOLICITOR. Etc. Pbllllps sulldlng ; Ill Gnifton Street ' Money - to boon Collectlon IM. Albun Farmer. QC. B.A.. LLB. Barrister and Solleltor Bank of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Loan J. S. Taylor OPTOMIETRIST Eye: Examined, Gliuses Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Sta. tlfflce Phone lllfull-lloune llllfl Bell. Mutliieson & Foster t Burl-litters. snllnllon. Etc. II. R. BELL. Q.C. G. R. FOSTER. LLB. Imina on City and Farm Properties I50 lllchmontl Sheet Charlottetown. P.E.I. Palmer & Hoslam A. J. I-IASLAM. B.A.. LLB., Burt-later. Etc. ' Rank of Nova Scotln Chamber: Chuloltetmvn. P. E. L MONEY T0 LOAN I5:-l(T'A. Muciucliern DENTIST Dental X-ray Above Charlottetown Cllnlo 202 Queen St. Phone Ml ILIMA l'. RIMPIIEISON. (LA. OIAITIIED cum-lo um. Charlottetown Other omen at Halifax. Mnnolnn, st. Johny. lontvllla. uurnool. New Glasgow and Truro. McDONALD. CUIIRIE 8: CO. Phone .j.gm..M.......-j Dr. A. L. Maclsuce lyron J. Grant. O.D. DENTIST g OPTOMETIIBT ueiiigi x.3;, I20 Ion! Sheet Phone ca (30315 gunning topposlln lover: Hotel) in gum”, 5., phone 29! '-I. ll. DOANE In COMPANY OEAIITIIED ACO0ITNI'AN'I'B In Great George st. C?-nrlotleltovn Phones 1080 - 144'! RANDOLPH W. MANNI C.A Ntl. . KEVIN J. Mi-.l(IENNA. (7.5 Amherst. Dartmouth AOOOITNTANTI Ilontroal, Quebec. Ottawa. Toronto. saint John. sliei-Iirooke. Vancouver In-bland lake. Monctmi lliuntltmi, Edmonton. Charlottetown Telephone 103!