zeal: FOUR TllE ~ OIIARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded ln 1887) Althorlaed ll Second Class Mall. Polt Oflloa Department. Ottawa. Prelident, Ian A. Burnett; Vice-President. Wrn. R. Burnett; Seem-Trees, G. M. Burnett; ‘Editor and Managing Director, J. R. Burnett; Associate Editor, Frank Walker. Ea Strongest Memory is Weaker Than lhe Weakest Ink.” MONDAY, APRIL H. fill‘! tlo Budget Secrecy There seems to be no secrecy nowadays about budgets, the contents of which are disclosed be- fore the Finance Minister makes his statement to the House. ln his last budget speech Mr. lisley actually predicted a $300,000,000 deficit lor the fiscal year ended on March 3l. lt is forecast that there will be a surplus now, instead of a deficit, of not less than $300,000,000. Two factors in changing an anticipated defi- lit into a surplus have been the surprising buoy- ancy of revenues, which have considerably ex- ceeded the estimate last June of over $2,500,- Oll0,000, and the quicker realization ,on war assets than was anticipated a year ago or even eight months ago. lt is believed the actual revenue figure won't fall tar short of the $3,000,- 000,000 mark of two years ago, when there was n much higher tax levcl. A third factor has been a more rapid dcmobiiaation of armed forces than was thought possible. »___* "Nothing llone" Perhaps it is because he has so many in the fire that Premier Jones’ irons do not always stay hot. His Budget speech contained a whole batch of new schemes, and it is to be hoped that some at least of them will be realized. Too frequently, however, we have occurrences such as was witnessed in the Legislature last week, when Mr. Morrissey, First District of Prince, rose to ask thé Premier what hod been done En implementation of his promise, given in the House last year, to have a survey made of the lime deposits near Trgnish. Mr. Morrisscy had claimed that there were good possibilities in this deposit, and the Premier had promptly assured him that they would be investigated. Asked on Wednesday if this had been done, the Premier had to confess, "Nothing done." He offered no excuse or explanation. Perhaps he hod forgot- ten all about his promise, which was a specific one and should, of course, have been followed up last summer. i This is the kind of thing that does not con- duce to confidence in the Government's ability to give sound leadership in any direction. Con- sistency and strict veracity in promise-making are perhaps too much to expect in the heat of political campaigns, but in the cooler atmosphere I of the House, the case is different and Ministers should try to confine themselves to statements of fact about their policies. This of course goes double for the leader of the Government, who should set an example. But perhaps the most extraordinary evi- dence of the Premier's forgetfulness f his own ‘assurances was the absence of any re erence in his Budget speech to the question of rural elec- trification. This was not only a prominent plank in his platform four years ago, but it has figured in Speeches from the Throne, and in his own speeches, prominently in other years. De- spite his claim to be budgeting this year for over half a million dollar surplus, there is not a cent in the Estimates for rural electrification, and nothing whatever has been said to indi- cate what plans, if any, the Government has ln mind. The Premier was twice challenged by thc Opposition, during his Budget speech, to speak’ on this point, but ho failed to respond. Nor has the Minister of Public Works nor any other of his colleagues come forward to fill the gap. U. ll. And Palestine Called into llS first special session, the United Nations Gcncral Assembly, the world council of 55 nations, will meet at Flushing Meadows, N.Y., ln'work out a solution lor the many-faceted problem of Palestine. In less than a month since the United King- dom, which administers Palestine under a Lea- gue of Nations mandate, requested a special session of the General Assembly, the physical job of preparation has been virtually finished. Meanwhile, the member countries of thc U. N. have been preparing their policies on thc questions before the session. The United King- dom asked that a special committee be set up ta prepare for the consideration of the Pales- tine question by the next regular meeting of the General Assembly, scheduled for this fall. The special session's task will be to de- cide whether or not to set up a special com- mittce and to give it instructions as to its task if it is established. Under its rules of proced- ure, the Assembly may consider only this ques- tion unless it votes to consider additional mat- ters by a two-thirds majority. Tlic summoning of the special; session, swlftly, accomplished by cable and wireless, came on April l3, only ll days after the dril- lsh proposal for the meeting hod been received and sent to U. N.'s other 54 members. After the British request for the session W! received, U. N. conference officials im- mt to work on" plans fol the mut- i i lltoljuilon was approved by a mai- niimbsrl, the U. N.‘ rtaffbagan r Into opal-otter, estimating that “‘w'o . r The'huge General Assembly Hall, idle since last fall, has been opened for airing and clean- mg. The cafeteria, from which the equipment borrowed‘ from U. N. Headquarters at Lake Suc- cess and from a hotel leased by the U. N. In New York City, some 300 hotel rooms were reserved for delegates. Airline reserva- tions to and from all ports of the world were secured. A fleet of 65 automobiles was rented to supplement U. N.'s transportation pool. One of the more difficult problems of pre- paration was getting a telephone system ready. While the switchboard and cables were in place, many of the instruments had been re- moved from offices. However, since tele- phone maintenance workers were on strike, only a skeleton phone system could be installed to cover the emergency. The 2,600 members of the U. N. staff pre- pared for long hours of overtime as the As- sembly drew closer. With the staff cut to o minimum for budgetary reasons and with many conference officers serving many meetings at Geneva, U. N. officials declared, however, that the international "civil service could cope with the session. a EDITORIAL NOTES n ‘Dr. Allan Peebles, director of research and statistics for the Department of Labor, estimates that Canada will have a labor shortage of be- tween 35,000 and 40,000 men and women within the next two years which might be met by immi- gration. He testified before the Senate com- mittee now studying immigration problems. n» n The Mutiny of the Bounty this date I784; the crew of H. M. Bounty mutined n-aar Tahiti, setting adrift their overbearing commander Wil- liam Bhqh, who, with those loyal to him reach- ed Batoiia safely. Many of the mutine-crs set- tled in Tahiti, some of whom were afterwards punished. Others founded the colony of Pit- cairn lsland, where th-eir descendants still live under the protection of the British Colonial De- partment, \- o n a According to the Ottawa Journal there need be no doubt as to Mr. Bracken's victory in the next Dominion general election but for question how. the electors of Quebec may divide. Un- certainty of course exists as to how for feeling had been removed, was refitted with counters‘ THE CHARLOTFETOWN GUARDIAN flutes“ By the Way ' Immediately um u» Queen Ella- cvbc-llfs little adventure lhe freighter B. F‘. Aftlcck ran aground in the river here. Just trying to keep up will; the Jcrncses, eh? — \‘l'ind_s0;' Star. A Saanfch man w" brought lnto court for hanging a dog from a tree He testified he had hanged a thousand dogs while llving in Bel- gium. He saw rfo reason why he should not. hang dogs ln Canada. ‘mt- rnaglslratc. after n week spemt lii looking up statute law and sear- ching case references for pre- (‘Bdenl-S. has dismissed lhe charge. ‘Phcre was no law against dog hang- ing 1n this country he found and there had been no evidence sub- mitted in the case of cruelty or that the clog had sulfezerl. Whal- ovnr the loge‘. decision of lhe court the practice c,f hanging dog; from trees is revolting to public opinion in tliis country. Ta say that dogs do not sillfor ln being so treated ls unconvincing. Facilities that ore beyond question humane ar; pro- vided for putting dogs to sleep and are freely available. If it ls legal for men to hang dogs fTOm trees here. then step; shouldbetaken to make it illegal» by amending the statute. We don't want more bar- baric customs. introduced from Eur-opp. We have enough of our own ltl contend with. W VZlllCOUYCl‘ News- Herald. Ontario la golng to carry out unl- qua 0XDETlFll1Clll5 with the liclcovi- tor .15 n likely moans of successfully fighting: forest fires in the northern n-ooderl areas this summer. This was stated by the Premier and so that. Miembcrs of lhe Legislature might. actually sec this cmvll alr- plane rin operalloir it. landed Cll the gvounvrls surrounding the legislative building. The Department of Lands and Forests is coitducting under contract it was aimnunccd. exper- imental Illglll5 will! this new machine WhlCll van make o. landing in a very small space and coin-se- qucntlv it ls hoped. will be able to pol; close to an ineipenl blaze with n coirtninrr- a! extinguishing mater- inl. ‘lhe helicopter Ls capable of uavhviiig a load of such material up to 500 DOUrlds ln weight. Should lhe trialg provr» successful. the ex- l(‘llSl\'E i055, cnusr annually‘ by flrcs in the North “My hp mar-ply re- cliii-rtl Kingston Whig-Standard. It la probably not generally tea!- in that Province still remains domninated by the anti-conscription issue of l9l4-l8. Let us hope that most of that water has run undcr the bridge. that this country needs Mr. Bracken, and will profit with him as leader beyond any Olfli-Jfilfldll En sight. c 1i a a Speaking against the general principles of the report of the Social Service Council of thc Montreal Anglican Synod W. G. R. Armstrong said that it was compounded "part of the plat- form of the C. C. F. with some overtones of the Social Credit party". lt was, he said, vague, high-school Socialism...not a serious discussion of current economic problems . . . a very bad. . . a very erroneous report. "l give full credit to the sincerity and good intentions of those who wrote the report but I cannot give such credit to their knowledge or intelligence. They are like those who hold Marxian economic theories but have never read Marx." ‘ ‘l! I i i Hospitalized veterans at the Prince Edward lsland Hospital number approximately 45. The ex-soldiers are more than pleased with their sur- roundings, care and attention. Through the Red Cross Corps the Legion endeavors to keep tabs on these veterans and provide the little ncccs; saries which help brighten the otherwise lengthy and lonely hours. Nothing is appreciated more by the ex-servicemen than d visit by farmer comrades or representatives of organizations showing nn interest in th-cir well being, Thc Wm is over but let us not forget these veterans of two world wars. A visit to the Veterans Wing should be of mutual benefit. fi w i‘ it I‘ A signal victory for Progressive Conservatives, notably John Diefcnbaker, (Lake Centre, Sask.) and E. D. Fulton (Kamloops), in their two-session fight to restore to the citizen the right of access to Courts if hc feels he or his property has liccn injured by the action of thc Wartime Prices and Control Board, featured a sitting of the House which is considering the omnibus Measure in committee. Soon aft-er Mr. Fulton moved his amendment, which expressed the idea over which there have bc-cn warm debates for two sessions and led by Mr. Diefcnbaker. Jus- tice Minister llslcy, while bowing to the justice of the move, suggested an amendment of his own to give the same effect and which was acceptable to Opposition and other members. Mr. llsley moved his own amendment and it was approved after Mr. Fulton had withdrawn lhe one he proposed. 9r Q Q Exciting new careers for women are forc- cast in a statement made in the United King- dom House of Commons by the Air Minister, Mr. Philip Noel-Baker. For the first time they will be enrolled in the Royal Air Force in a non- ccmbatant capacity as.pi|ots, navigators, radio officers and flight engineers. This revolution- ary advance is part of, o plan to integrate the Women's Auxiliary Air Force permqnently into the R. A. F. for service at home and abtoed. The R.-A. F. Reserve Organization will also have a women's flying branch in which’ they will fly their own planes in their own squadrons. Rc- cruits will ba mainly women who alreddy hold pilot licenses, and thou who flew in the furry pool of the Air Transport Auxiliary during the war. It recalls the Airman: of previous days, -and inelm one pause to wonder wlictlicr our civilization ls going round in a circle. It is the Journal's whole-hearted belief; lmrl that the British people are now paling a lot. cf Caradian lamb and mutton. Shipments is 1946 o.’ frozen miiltirn anil lamb from Canada l0 ill? Uiiitrd Kmgdoiri nmnurvtrcl tn lliltitlvflfl pounds. Total shipments of mutton ancl lfimb frc-ru July. 1945 uhrrn the contract began. up to the Fllfl of December 1946. amounted to 1R5 million pounds. - st. Thomas Times-Herald. In the past the irre-t imwration movements jrom Britain to the Frnpiro have sprung from the Brlt- lsli peoples unqiiencliable zest for .'icl\'rr.':lti:'o. In tlio fullness of its Slrolrflbll. a vigorous and prosper- Clls lllillllCTlflllfl las spilled over its ZC70dllC>5 lo itizike celery nations be- yond l.ll(\ seas. But. the present iiiovremont is an gscapo more than an adventure. lt springs from an exvcfls of poverty. ratltc? that a riches: from a lack rnlhev than .1 £U|1Cfllllll._v of individual self-confl- clenvce. from shortage. restrictions. discomfort tincl disillusionment.- London Evening Standard. Sugar ls up a cent a pound and is new selling around iilne vents velall. Which is bad cmough but a lon: way from the twenty-six cents lt. hit after the First Great War. Aftm- all. sugar- beets once sold here at $5 n. fnn and crown-s are now gelling! around $12 and nohobdv ivho witncssrd tho harvest last fall with the elements doing their worst will snv growers were overpaid. — Lrsthbridge Herald. Toliil sum realized at the tl-rt-e- rlnv ziuclion of filo treasurers of the Dllfllcis of Kt-nt n‘ Christ's London rnlc rooms was 292.541. Top prices on the lnsl. rlav was ‘Z900 auln-eas pnirl fnz- “Priests Sacrificing to Apollo.“ a picture 'o_v the Caroline lY-‘lllllfl’ Claude Le larraln. When if wits last. sold in 1040 it fetched T1701 ziiincns. Two other pictures bv the same artist wrro knocked ririwi "ci- 23.385. All were bouizht h.» n famous ‘Nest End denier. The Duslzrss‘ Worrrstor- dessert. service —llr’tllll.lf(‘l by the Worcester artist Clmmbc-"liriii with Epalim flowers on .1 mottled a-hlln and cold hack- ei-oiintl-rnzilizd 200 guincas after n bri=k baffle between a cumber- nf lfclrle-as-niost of them women. Tiir- most coveted furniture pflze was n Queen Amie walnut fetter vfiVClCd with irnerllework ln colored silks which v.'.".< irfd lnr 1.709 auinoas nficr starting nf. 400 guineas. London Daily Mail. A survey prepared hv n United Strtir. f)'l'lCCll"l'tl estimates that n f- milv with -r $5.000 n yea:- income spends about $12,750 to hvlng up n (‘lllltl to the age of eighteen veers. That is a lnl cl mcmy, but it. will hardly surprise any parent. whether ln the tifol-‘ncrme class or not. fn fact. n0 tnatter what sum of money ls figured as the crst. lt won't surprise ‘most householders. The way ITlOHCy goes these days. thcv one ready to believe anything. But what is a blt of a shock la the statement that boys cos’ thelr Iparetts ivor; than glrln. Here ls a point. that ls likely to ‘oi- avertloned Immediately by any father with irrowlng daughters. realizing an rue- fully as he doe: how alfekly their all; add up. The survey found that y; and lzlrls are about: equally expensive up lo the age o! twelve. and then the eternal fernlnlve be- glns to assert melt. By the an of eighteen. the emu wrrdrobe has rel Father book acme OM00 vrtille the boy's elothlnl ha: colt 81.280. But. the boy's food colt ll $200 hletgr: than the rlstwr. to he flalrh- es lltead "of tier tn oxoonnivenus by n. mugln or $60. - Said Jopn ‘telegraph Join-oat. § PUBLIC FORUM "I Thla column tr open to 5 the dllcalalon by corra- k apoadenu of question: u! lntorclt. The Charlottetown Guardian doe: not neeelur- lly endorse the oplnlon at correlpoadentl. 'l'u'l'l‘l\'l~'l'l\'i SERVICI MAN PROTESTS Shir-Premier Jones, on from; questioned by Maj. .1. A. hlnv- Donald on tho Government's omission ln granting the Armed Services it vote in the last gin- oral election, has commrcilcrl. a‘:- cording to the report. of his Buil- gel. speech in this morning's Guzm- dlan," as follows: "With our sul- diers scattered all over the ivoilcl, how could you do it? Most of the real sc-ldlers were fighting at llie front, only some officers and lhe fellows working in the kin-liens and not many more you \\'0'.lll.l have got." It is well Ln remind lhe Prcxriir-l‘ that those who enlisted vo-liiiztar- il_v enlisted for service iii any part of the world. The Britt-sh Com- monwealth Air Training Plan and many similar‘ services in . the Army and Navy kept many thous- ands ot‘ men ln Canada. Very fevv desired to do so. The Premir-f, never being either directly nv fn- directly associated with the Arm- etl Services. probably docs not know that once a mnri (‘Illlbla ll" ceases to he g free :i,cclli. il-iifl zoos or stays at. the \\ill of liaise in authority. waves-aura» I am. Sll‘. rlv. ONE WHO SERVED IN CANADA. GOING 'r0 CHURCH Here 1n a quiet. unpretentious spot. 0f the turbulent earth. stands in the dlgnlfy 0! lts peace. e country church. On Sunday moi-rung Its doors stand open to each refugrc From the problems of living. First. to arrive are the old. Disllluslonrd and wcauv; thccn stroll the yculig. Whose lives are still touched willi wonder. who lmve loss |ir~rrl Of the comfort. of prayer. their lyrics stlll unsung. Their ralnibow vislons unfurled of what may be. ln a world of confusion creasing foal‘. 0g yngg] divided by nspivnliims, creeds. ' The bells o flllas little church ring loud and clear. Despite the crosses standing on the after and ln- hlll, 1t promises the trials of life shall be brief. _ It. promises fulfillment of mans desires- Asklng only humility. only a stead- fast belief. -Hele.ne Mullins in the Ncw ‘folk lW-nes. &.~O'.'¥§:*. Q'.-@.'§Q VQ f§'.'§-O"'. Old Charlottetown ; (Alld PILL) : O '§OO§§-§- BAGPIPE ORATORY From debates and proceedings of tn» House of Assembly. Marsh 10, 1874‘. Hen. Mr. Mclfiachorn mid thal- tho noisy declamation of the lion. membfirs of the Opposition rpm tid- ecl hlm of the sounds cmrtted by an old pair of Highland bagpipes- there was more iroise than music in them. . .l~lad not the Opposition themselves jumped Jim Crow 011 thc qllflllffil of Confederation? Ht". himself, had been as much opposed to Confederation as his lion. friend from Bodeque. and would be so sflll if he had his way in the fliflll-Flr" not that tir- was tilllwsffl l0 m‘? Domlnion. but brcuiise lir ll\Vl‘(l frerdo-zn and self zovcvnmcul. He had never denounced the lczidirifi statesmen of the Dnmlirlcin as rogues and robbers. n5 some of the men now rnnreicnlltig us It. Ottawa had done. H" never was aii ad- mlrcr at ihr- lntior would-b, irpub- licnns and patriots. as he never thought they had the good of thelr country at heart. , thc Ml‘. l... H. Davies tliouulil hon mombci- fnv Ens‘. Paint. hart mistmclerslnorl the whol» tenor rf the, rlcbntr. lli- 1M". Di would W‘- mombei" tlrr- timi- Wllfllt smvrolv l! word Cnulrl b~ utter-ed by the Op- position-t in reference in the "iililllls o! the party to which lhe lion. member bclonrzerl. but Ill’, jllnlprd f0 hls {vet mid answered them in tones of’ thunder. But ll HOW arr peared that. what Once delighted that hon. member was new 50rd!" to hi5 nature. l-Lon. memicrs of the Opposition had now tn speak ln altered tones anrl bated breath in tho presence of lhls Government official! He noukl assure that hnn. member that; hen. members of the Opposition intended to exercise their right of speaking ln this hon. Committee just when they thought proper. and as long as lh~v nioascd. The hon. member should remember} that nlme-lcnths of the people o this Island end n very largo multif- ity of those of thr- nther Provlnces supported Mr. Mr1<~nzle's Govern- ment at. Ottawa and. therefore, he should show them some llule re- spoof. Hon. Mr. Mcllicliorn found ‘ll'I early Irleh history a iro~d dcllnlllon for the sound nroducrd- by oratars of the class to whlch the. hon. Leader of thr- Opposltlon belonged. It was a (Joelle phrase. and ‘slim- llled "empty sound from a skln BIC." H! did 2"! Ctflllllre lhe hon. member himself to a skln bee. but hls oratory mnlndcd hlm of the fltful noise produced by handling o. piper’: tag. up rox possum Rod taxes eat nape; to round out their diet. under tlie Modern _!__ islrnfford Beacon-Herald) The i-nrtimcinly-helrl rif thc Highlands of Scotland is ill-ll ll"‘.\' largely consiast of lT-ITC mom's extrpl for heather. rugged motiiitnins. wild glens and fish- ing streams, with n few c-roflers‘ hollows llPfC and there. and that illfl‘ all‘ vhsllerl only liy anglers rmd Enclish and American hunt- rrs iii search of deep To a large extent that ls true. hundreds of thousands of acres. being worth- less for productive purposes. The Secretary for Scotland, Jos- eph Wcsfu-uorl. proposes to change that, and to make the Hlghlinds 110l- mfllflll‘ R playground, but. e useful coptrlbutlon to national revovvfy- Mr. Westwood recently ilpp0llll0d an advisory panel of l8 members, with headquarters in I-Zl\'I‘l‘ll¢‘.=.\‘, lo report on what should he rloiie for lhe Western I-“lefi H'- Wcll as the Highlands. "l want zwfi-Oll," he told them, "and early action." ' The first ret-ommclidaliorls of llre panel are new and lmproverl l'<.‘ilfl.\', reconstruction of liar-liars, r-stalilislnncnl of nirfielils and dc- vnlopnrent of hydro-electricity. 'l‘lizit done. the next. slop wlll be tho establishment of factories. which will not only bring money lnfn lllr‘ Highland districts. but eliminate some of lltn iiicltisfvinl nvrr-i-ro-ivtlllig that has led to so "Willy depressed centres. The Scottish Highlands arr.- so spnvioiis, however. flint no oiie iierrl fear that tho natural appriil of tlrr- .'\l'("-'\ will he seriously ma..- vrrl. impression Will King Retire ‘f (Canadian Business; Prime Minister Mackenzie King‘! intention about retirement‘ re- main as muvh ti tll)'Sl(.’l‘_V as raver, They are discussed evrrywvheve ‘m 0 "WW “PPM in the circles where l y are most vital, the sappy-mks of lllP Liberal party. The fact is that. lllf" cabinet ministers and key men in the party organization know as litlle llllfilll what is to hiipivr-n as anyone. They don't talk because they don't know and don't want. to give the Impl'(5~ slon of volrlng oplnlons which may prove \Vl'0lll!. Moreover. some of thc-m have ambitions and don't want lo let those ambitions he- come apparent too soon. Mv. King's bout. wlth pneumonia ln mld-wlnter may or may not. hasten hls retirement He has al- weyn taken close atoek of his t)\\n hbnlllt and strength, advised vfvllllslvr mm to do no. He says that a dead man or a slek man ls no use to hlimrell or hls country. Hls approach to hls own heuLlr ls ‘reallellc, nolther that of a hypochondrlan nor of n man who works untll he drops. For all the Importance which Mr. King's health holds to offl-t-lel ttuwtr. and the Llperal pasty, ere was sirrprlnlngly llttla pub- llc note taken of lilr Illness. An Amer-lean ln Ottawa, remarked that ft the President hod a lem~ baeraturc o! 103 hourly bullellnl guld be lnuod from the Whit, 9300 Veterans of this group seek jobs . . . . Today, age has become an lricrouiugcmployraenl handicap, A: n result, there are approximately 9,334 older veterans seeking jobs in Canada. \I'liila eruplnyerii-must maintain rigid standards o! production enrl efficiency, it is e feet jobless between the ages of 45 lo 54 in being loll Ia industry in his most productive years. "Automobile Farts", in a survey of the motor indus- lr_v, reported earnings reached the peak among the age group from 50 In 53 yours. The Massachusetts Institute nl Tivrlmolos)‘. in n I938 survey, found among cotton textile weavers wage! were “slightly higher" for men from 45 to 54. Another U5. Study on W.I‘.A. building projects found those given highest grader for quantity of work ivero the employees in the older groups. ' ‘fliero are M older veterans Charlottetown. The Cltdzens‘ Behabllltntlon Com- mittee, the National Employment Service and the Department of Veterans Affalra. are malrlnl l concerted effort tzo out. tlrls total. If you can em- ploy an older veteran, lint. your opening vvltli the (‘ltlzeiw Rehablllfiwtlon Commit-fro or Wllh National Emplnnnent. rerrlrr. road in .i..i......... a older Vittrntt , authority of the In}. tliidrm flirt-is! vf "with Alien House and ‘there \vould_bio—cro\vde APRIL Z8. 1947 1__ that the man Professional ftarili on. o.s. uonnuiifir‘ V Bllruon Mount Edward a“; Charlottetown, [LE-L Phone I06 PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER hllmgnlvhkic and! And elre IN. oorre mun; and iminrsslriondm‘ IIILEN GIDDEN Telephone 1399.3 AM- No. C. Connaught Al,“ Pawnal Street MORRELI. and COMPANY i‘ Chartered Aocountaam cumi- a...» BIIIICLII] Phone 1447 - B" g“ c” Iltlflflayn a. lit spans. as. Realdent Partner unemployed tn flit‘ ‘l around newspaper bulletin bon-ds. In Ottawa Mr. King just stayed home from work and lils staff let it. be known that he was ln bed, no one pressed marry fmquules and it was not until he was on the mend that. the word leaked out that the illness we; grave. Strange But True iToroitlo Glolrr- and Mall) Lord Addison. Domlnlons Sec- retary in the Brltish government, has glven the House of Lords some information whlch ought to he of interest to Canada. The rzovernmetit, he says. ls in favor of emigration to the Domlnlons "so far as the domestic manpower sit.- uatlon and Shlpphllfl feclilltles wlll permit." Australia and South Afrlca. lt seems from what Lord Addison says. have been interested enough ln the idea to do something about. ‘rt. ‘They have arranged for the use of troopships to carry British mlizrants to their ports. Australia wlll revolve a substantial number this year And twice as many m 1948. Where doc,»- Canada come in? Canada's efforts to asslsl. migra- tion will he "hlndered for some time." says lard Addison "by llmitctl shipping: accommodation." Considering that Australla ll three times as far from Britain as Canada is, and South Africa twice as far, and considering also that. the shipping companies prefer Al- lanlic traffic to any other traffic. thorn is something decidedly odd about flia plr-tiire presented l~_v Lorrl Addison. Cari if ho that lllf‘ Caitaiinrtr izoverumcnt. believes this country does not need or could not em- ploy. settlers from Britain? C“ it; be that the Canadian govern- ment, with considerable dollbcva- tlon. has dot-lined to make known ifs intentions or do anylznnr ivliich might have encouraged the shipping companies to prepare for - the traffic which a forthright,’ constructive lmmlgratlon poltr-y’ would ensure? Only the very! naive will have to ponder ‘those questions. INDIAN COMMISSIONS l NEW DELHI — (OP) — For the first time tn the history of ilie Royal Indlan Afr Force, short-ser- vlco CCIIITIIISSIOIIS mo. liclng <ffered_ to those who with lo join the .-e'.'-, vlco. This scheme is intended to bulid up an adequate reserve of highly tralnecl officers. *r.-.rr'*i"erg IRREGULARITY ?4/‘ ntlvo. II an NR. a rnllrl, all-vegetable Ill! WI help lmmsinnetg. headaches _ r|| on _- nqullrlty. Y HE l-lailslovrb < h: u. I“ ta booted or of: 10' a. n%=- \ mic-Ra's NEIL W. HlGGlN CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT Currie Building Charlottetown . “D ‘Nsunfllfi Pl-Alls ‘If. I636 P.O. Box 451 (IA l lliro older work!" ' o. . n0 - a roll? In runny (H595iniIilfrriItiuscdos-oslh! l\°“5“‘“ an s MCL§OD 8r BENTLEY t l""""‘_“‘”,‘Ll§"i.ii-. i . w. a. neuron. icc. l lllflllilfl ; I ' b l n“ m‘ J. A. BENTLEY. RC, _ . g w “I! ‘A up insurance the dilleécuciaslylgfimtyhaiwatgfi llerrlstere nail AblUTltt-gi-gl, In are d ,3 and ant‘. ass‘ ‘ ‘ ma,” "1 an. 1 _ no r-mploffi“ “E” with,‘ in rho f: "m! p [Hg contribulw" ‘tor “Trwlxrcd ‘dag: ll n: Lr-eré-‘(llurvrfl 154 Prince Street a vnv . - ~ . . .5 ‘of the ("Ildinciuibiririlae contribution “WI i o+++o+o44 000+oo 0 so‘ H,‘ .t n80 ‘w’ "e - pofllll“ “ 444“ 2°“"- time... new"!‘lihiidiiih-iiiiilir °°“ °i H n DOANE a. ' t. i." " "°' l an,“ group insurgxgd older vqiersaidnrflrcal produfi C artered Accountants t (izmnrllfl iugnff ‘find ma. rlgrllngjntgintcgril?’ m s: Grafton Street l “ark. Plflinv All linvo a lush (‘ET Charlottetown l rive rnlt_=\"_“.- ' Phone 2080 Box 24 I b Iltv I r~l'““" ‘ " Randolph w. Mannlnl. o.» i LA. McGUlGAN, ex. NOTARY. ETC. IABRISTEB, SOLICITOR CURRIE BUILDING M. ALBAN FARMER an. our. _ MONEY T0 LOAN BARBISTER. SOLICITOR. no. llR. W. ll. Blllilll Chlropraotor Palmer Graduate Charlottetown I04 Prince 8t. - Phone lffll o+0++0++0+o<o+0++0+00+++ cvrs EXAMINED l AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. TQYIQI‘ OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Qimn 5"- Phonc 1956 Evenings by Appointment Phone: Residence mu oavooxooeoooeoooocooo» ————-——————~*—.r. l l A. Walther Gaudet. LLJ. Barrister. lolloltor, Ito. Phllllpa Bulldlng 111 Grafton St. Money to Loan. (‘affection f-Q-oo-Q-ooeeoar- l MATHESON fllltil PEAK! n. w. MATHESON. Kr- . A. u. reuse. an. l-b-B- Barristers, etc. Colleotloal. - Money l° M“ 90 Great Goorlo Street Charlottetown gciepggxbl? vkétt DR. A. R. SMITH DENTIST 17b Grafton Street -_ Offloo Hours: 9 t0 12-2 l0 | Telephone 22M GAUDET a. HASiARD Barristers, Sltlloltbli. Notaries, Canadian Burk of Commvr“ money TO WAN i... m elit- |GILBERT A. GAUDET. on». W‘ Canullan Bonk of Commerce B"!- Charlottotnwn. 7-5-1- _______. Frederic A L-irst. lf.fl. lAlln'rNr;gr_i_Ag;%i.|olr0I-. Royal Bank of Canada Chenille! Charlottetown. P-E-I- S ccesaor to George “J. Trvoedi- 55' oQOOOO'QQOI \ O1 0005M CHARLES R. McQUAlD ILA. . Barrister, Sollaltor. Notary. 53°- Ifltefls T"!!! Blllldllllt Charlottetown g Phone 1711 escoofl“ 0 e 00004-00400 000 BELL a. MATHIESON Barrlatorl. Bolleltorl. l“ n. w. ‘er-zap. nuns. m n. l. mar-meson‘. ~- Atborneys-I - , 1.0m! on crrv AN" "u rnorervrllfl I50 Mahmoud 5%! Charlottetown-If} ""_”"'"' LAM PALMER s. HAS n: AM. M- L a s. IIASI. "a IABRISTER. ‘ i Bunk ol Nova Scott: (iglllammfl; . Charlottetown. l'- -' - ‘ noun 10 If’? w: ylttlcna u ff- ' TTJFTTAEFETB-A- "rc- ‘ wonnv. are. f IARIISTEB» l°'-"'}",“ ' lallllnl Cl" loll“!