trace route TIIE BIIAIILUTTETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Qally (Founded In 1M1) President: Lleut. CoL W. Chester S. Molnar: Vice-President: .I. I. lluruotlLIJ-l. Secretary: Ueut. 00L f), A. Mulflnmon. 0.8.0. ldltor and Manning Dine . J. B. Burnett. FJJ. Alumna Editors: l-‘nnlt Walker and Lleut. Ian A Burnett, B.0.N.V.R. (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY, NOV. l0, 1943 A Building Analysis Bublished under the authority of Finance Minister Ilsley, the National Housing Adminis- :ratiou has just issued a publication entitled “The Labour Value of tl1e Building Dollar," which is zhe first of its kind i11 Canada and represents a listinctive step in the research necessary to the preparation of practical plans for full employ- ment. The analytsis reveals the stimulating ef- fect which expenditures on housing construc- lion ltas had on tho whole Ctlllildlllll economy by proritling ctnployliiellt 1n a series of indus- lTlCr- ranging from those supplying raw ma- terial. trwtiisportati-ni and other services to those eugagcrl i11 carrywttg on the actual building op- erations on the site 'l'i~e -tutl\' |11";;1r-.rc1| hr Dr. (). l. ITirc-toutt. senior re 1 assistant to the Advisory C011!- uiittce on Rcctitistrtictioti, assisted by the staff of the National llotising Administration, and with an iuirtitluctitiu by F. \V. Nicolls, NR. .‘..l,('., director of housing for Canada. is bas- cd on infornnttioti ttsscntblctl by the National llotisitig .\d1uinistration. which has lust com- pleted eight years of administration of various housing acts. During these eight years, 25,085 dwelling tmits were constructed at at1 average cost of $3.- 924. The total lcittliitg value of houses erected under the Dominion Housing Act and the Na- t-ioital l'l0ll5ill{,‘{ .~\ct, amounts to about $103,000,- 000. Taking 1.00m man-hottrs for a full work- ing year. this residential construction provided employment for an aggregate of over 00.000 men for one year. Under the llome lmprovcnicnt Loans Guar- anteg Aq, 1937, about $50,000,000 were loaned to finance rcnairs and alterations to existing urban and rural homes. During four years’ operation under this Act, ovcr 125,000 loans were tnade. By .\larch 31, 1943, over $47,600,- 000 or n55 per cent of the total had been re- paid. The loss incurred as of the same datc was infinitesimally small, namely 0.75 per cent. The study emphasizes the need to consider the extent to which employment can be pro- vidcd by a post-ivar housing programme. Un- less such information is systematically collect- ed, it will not be possible to gauge the effect which any big housing scheme after the war will have on the labour market. To this end, Mr. Nicolls solicits the. co-opcration and the assistance of all those industries interested in construction opergttions. Nothing New! Following Hon. Mr. Bracken's outline of the 30-point program necessary to the recovery of Agriculture in Canada, Hon. j. G. Gardiner, Prime Minister Mackenzie King's minister of agriculture, gave out a statement to the press. In it, he said there was nothing new in Hr. Bracken’; program, and also made some other slighting references to what Mr. Bracken was trying to do for the Canadian farmer. Undoubtedly, says an exchange, the farmers of Canada will pass judgment on Mr. Bracket-Ks program in due course. As for the politics of Mr. Gardinefs glib talk about the program, the farmers of Canada know him best. not for what has been done for agriculture, but for what has been done with the Saskatchewan Lib- eral party machine, and as Mr. King's prin- clple political hatchetman. While Mr. Gardiner was engaging in politi- cal banter, his deputy, Dr. G. H. Barton, was at the Canadian Chamber of Commerce con- vention talking about the recent United Nat- ions Food Conference at Oil Springs, Va. It was immediately apparent to all Dr Barton's listeners that Mr. Brock-en's program was put together with the kind of thinking that in- spired the unanitnous resolutions of the representations of the fortv nations assembled at Oil Springs. Mr. liardiuct- will have to get his thinking proiectcd out and beyond the narrow confines of Canadian party politics if he even hopes t0 do anything for agriculture i11 this Dominion when the peace comes — Notes Bil he Way — The comma, u everyone known. n; a snmll, eurllculsh. dot. and tall employed helpful. but, we be tn to feel. some- Tha I-‘Bl l5 reported to have taken its 75,G00.030th rut of finger-prints. That leaves only 55,060,000 persons ln thls country who can ccmmlt frequently .- FDITOkIAI. NOTES - After a wet Slimmer and Fall, we have rea- son to expect a light snow fall in lVinter; onlv Nature does 11ot work on a compctisatioit basis. I U i It Without an organized police patrol system throughout the city, it is difficult to enforce the curfew or any other law. - II ll i I The terrible air attacks resumed in the Old Country, endangering the lives and ltomes of kmsmen there, should stimulate a ready res- ponse to the Milk for British Babies Fund. i l 1 I Tomorrow Remembrance Day when honour will be paid to the memory of those who gave their lives for us in the last war. It is not a public holiday, not even a Civil Service holiday, as the powers-that-be at Ottawa ltave ordered it otherwise. u a o v A Grand Jury in Chicago have returned in- dictments against 16 policemen for gambling. The Grand jury inquiry resulted in one of the greatest police shakeups in recent years; also charged a police capniu and the chief of the county highway police force with malfeasance. i It! ll Oliver Goldsmith, British poet, dramatist, and titan of letters, born this date 1728; after severe struggle hogan to he known in literary society, and made the acquaintance of Johnson, Burke, Reynolds, Garrick and others; his “Vicar of Wakefield" is one of the masterpieces of Eng- lisl1 fiction, and his brilliant comedy, “She Stoops to Conquer" still maintains its popular- ‘ty; his poem “The Deserted Village" is his outstanding contribution to poetry; his great nephew, also named Oliver Goldsmith, who was born at Annapolis, N.S., in I787, was the first Cattadian-born poet, and wrote iu intitation of his great uncle a poem entitled "The Rising Village." a a a w Harassed manufacturers and housewives may take consolation in the fact there tnay hc prospects in time of getting coal from Russia. More than a lnunlrctl ucw pits are to be opened in the Doubas. Preparations to handle coal from the Donhas are now in progress on the 1\l0sco\v-tiorlo\'ka railway line—‘.l1e main link between Moscow a11d the Donbas. Depots and machines destroyed by the enemy are being put in ivorkitig order. Barracks and signal-boxes and passenger shelters are being built. Reg- ular air mail services are i11 operation from Moscow a11d Kharkov to Stalino and other Donbas towns. The first 1,300 letters were dis- patched by air from hloscow for Stalino on the morning of September 8. i ll! Ill i i "That's one for the bo0ks"-—-or phrases sim- ilar-matle the rounds of the ‘llontrcal police court when word got out of how a woman pickpockct hid two $10 bills i11 her false teeth. Arrested i11 an east end flight club shc was al- lcged to have taken “about $30" from a seamati. DEL-Sgt. jette described how two $l0 bills were found in her false teeth and $10 in one of her shoes. The latter discovery was made, Jette said, when the woman tried to kick one of the detectives and the shoe of her kicking foot slipped off, revealing the money. A police matron took ovcr further search hut met with no success until she noticed that the prisoner had false teeth. She ordered her to remove them and, hidden in between her upper plate and the roof of her mouth, were the other two bills. n- a- e n- Godfrey Talbot recounted in a BBC short wave broadcast the other day a story told to him by a United States army sergeant. The story belongs to the davs of the Tunisian fight- ing when American Fortrcsses were making first contacts with lVlontgornerys men. The sergeant said that on one occasion it had been a matter of some urgency for him to find a particular advance unit of the Eighth Army. On turning a corner at speed, he came upon a. small group of soldiers in battledress. He pull- ed up and shouted an enquiry as to wherc he‘ might find the such-and-sttch unit. “Instead of answering my question," the sergeant told Tal- bot, “this man asked me what I wanted to know that for. Well, I was in a rush and in no mood to carry on a long conversation, and l told him so pretty plainly, I guess, with a few personal remarks maybe, thrown in. He talk- ed back to me pretty straight, too, and when he walked away I said to one of the British sol- diers standing by that I guessed that fellow must be a sergeant, by the way he talked to me. ‘You're wrong there’ the man from the Eighth Army replied, ‘that isn't a sergeant. That's General Montgomery?’ I needed them more than we do. The other l: that the shortage we are experlenclng ls anrnvnbed by the moultlng season. The little wnlte hen. the llttlo red hen. the little speckled hen - they're too busy shedding feathers to lay eggs rlght new. But they'll be through shedd- altogether the r1 nc of burglary wltho t: what. verused, alt ough not as one wearirctgi gloves. 4311mm courtei- mlghtothlnk, impossibly abused, L‘): éifilhgf gfigyegj“'§'e‘gn,f,'lf§é Express. mark of punctuatlon. The comma. you w,“ m“ h“. m ' u“ your ——- afber all la common but. that. ln lt- "ham and“ Wuhan, me “and, __ There's a pants factory ln the basement. of the cny Hall ln Ver- lallles, Mo. and the Ottawa Citizen supposes that, when the tax collee- tor has dam hls stuff. the rate- payer goes downstairs and borrows a palr to go home tn -stratford Beacon-Herald. We were wunderlng how long ft would be before the Germans dls- eovered mysterious "documents" that mlght. reveal scme "skuldug- Egg-y" on Marshal Badoizllo‘; part. ey have turned up- It. appears that. the present head of Italy’ temporary government had plans for the kidnapping of l-tltler as well as Museollnt. Cnntured mlll- tary ‘documents’ are sald to have given the show nway. This ls an old dOdK€~ but 1 efully out of date. Well do we rem mbnr how "docu- menta" wen- found after every new Herman aflkrcsslon ln contln""‘al fllurope. The world was told ‘wt f the lifzlcns cl’ l-lltlor had not 11.114: nto this or thnt country. the wick- ed Brltlsh wculzl have taken lhefr "be?!" HWRY~ the “documentfl supplied the proof. 0f all the stun d bronaznnda th" Herr Doktor mental, -—Chrlstlan fact t Goebbels ha: nut on‘. however. the< Brltaln slxty mllllon dozen eggs fn sllllest. -vlctorln powdered form. which means the 088s we aren't getting in Canada to feed the Brltlsb, who xlnutnn Whig-Ste latest ls Tlmel. the IN helpl self la not per w. anything against. lt. Many of the common everyday. frequent helps are sturdy. funda- weight-hearth eonstructlve. helpful 131g llvlng. One, however, ls. per- l tcally reminded that some wrlt- ers. not all. but so ma wlthout. rutralnt, A llttle 11cm- ma sense (pardon!) tn wrlttng ls helpful. Too many commas are like too much salt tn chowde excess camouflpges r111; true flavor. s So now we have on e|| shortage. Saturday you had as much dlfflculty tlndlng eggs ln Saint John as you'd have ffndlng the proverbial needle ln the haystack- People wandered from store to store asking a. futlle question -"f-fave you any eggs.’ And tn thousands of homes, eggs - boiled. rrled, poached or acrnmb. led —were consnlcuoua by their ab- sence et the Sunday —and Mon. day —mornlnlt breakfast table But the plcture isn't as black as ft. looks. according to It has two brlght spots. One ls that the shortage stems lnrsely from the hat we are ahlpplng Great Saint John Telegraph Journal- Inltlatlonl u they an today practised ln many unlversltles must. be a startling revelation to the incoming student seeklng b hlgh- er edueatlon. We have often wond- ered what passes through the mind; of freshmen when they flnd them- selves confronted wlth the luventle hrutalltles and ,. ‘ mumbo- Jubo enforced by older students whose clalma to maturity can only be measured ln terms of time . . . Inltlatlons of this nature are l. relic of barbarlsm. The so-called tests of hardlhcod are dlnvtly descended from the trials by flesh and flre practised by our savage aneeawra and stlll used in certain rituals of aborlglnal peoples. The practice o! stones of orward- look- mve use the com- — the onltor. wear publicly articles of clothlnq denoting their status has its count- "rpart umom unolvlltned trlbes to- ‘- resorted tn for ldentlflcutlon and "asslflnatlon. tt. u Indeed a atranvte poultry “r-rtlnnfnz to hlgher educatlon, thle ralsers. l “ackksrd racer. The llhlverrllles ‘java. the power to nlscontlnbe this "Jdlcrnus and harmful nractfu ideal. compelllnw first year students to My. where br-mdlmz and tattooing ~hlldlsh and stevlntlc fmltatfon of‘ “rtatn ntntum; stlll clunu to by the ~ ~rne CHARLOTTETOWN __GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUM Ila clean In up; my z paw-"r-"rmg-EL; OUR OIDWDID P. I. ISLAND HOSPITAL e . .‘.‘;f'°f.‘..“.'..‘.‘l..“‘° ‘ll.°"."lll '3'” m. a c oa- nltol was full. 1 wu greatly surprised. lu fut I was nhocked- Iurtlur mutton Wis Riven that on Novem- ber t the Hospltbl had 114 baff- yata and there are only room for When about fen years more than the now used as an Infirmary. The pub- llc w..'e advised that we would need no further room for‘ thirty filled! are fourteen patients more than were ts umber accommodation for. Some say that the armed forces that has helped. but, when the war la over we wlll have a~ new Influx of patients caused-by the new hos. nltallzatlon scheme whlch has re- duced the bed rates for these Firm“ 111 b ou w see y our local papers the number of organizations and business firms that: are joining up every day. whlrh wlll keep the ma. ultal overcrowded. Something will have to be done. and that at once. The Hospital board would be wise 1n 1001111!!! around and flgurlrlft ways and means to overcome what may be a serl-"us condition. am Sir. em, ANXIOUS CITIZEN. r0 rue morn or rumor: znwann rsnann Bln- The campahn o! Fifth Victory Loan ls over. and gléce 5551" the NOD16 of Prince d cyvard Island have nobly respon. be“ 1E1 ‘the challenue. The flnanclal T?“ h l" bee" 1°ll8ht and won. s as only been made possible by the united efforts every fglem?“ 0f WP Crftanlzatlon and I et oval co-operatlon and stead. “Bid Purpose of all our people, It ,5 ramatlc. and dlrecl: intimation tso our fees that we are prepared u, ack our cause to the llurnll; and must be a comforting assurflncg to 1);!!!‘ ‘Joys that. they can stlll count; n us or Jae support they new, 1 o" behalf of the Provlnclal Nat- vtlllfggl gar Finance Committee I an wh express sincere thanks to 0 so freely. and splendidly “smell "5- T0 His Honor Lieut- figgg °°§°PIW I-ePflxe. t» the Hon pal‘; “p11. J. Walter Jones. to E " n; - J- M".':Mlllan. f), B_ -- 0 e Mayors of all lncorpnrq. ted towns all of whcm Ir/e so gen- emusly °f "lei" time. 27nd prestige on loubllc platform and radio, to the many talented speakers who dwveml Inspiring addresses Bl; so was ’“’°3i‘i.‘1§l.‘..“'§."“* ‘ - ~ --~ ‘ gers. ggtfmll/fiss Hilda Glllls. who 5o am. to any Barranged those meetlrv, silks who with derglgied staffs wmkgd mfifly I011! hour f overtlme. to the members of 5113.; IIBJeBch Grove, Tralnltig centre, and ' o‘ A‘ mp‘ Elm“ and all other filtertfllners. w Lt. e01. .1. n. Paton 6,1051‘; caailg!‘ A‘ S. Robertson. Lleut cup ‘n Hampm’ R" A" 1"- . arles MscKcnzle R. c N V- R» the officers 115d rue}, of than. commands. the members of the Reserve Atmv- and Red cm. (‘Grits for so freely turning but w slmlulailnl’ P878695. demonstrating Equipment and modern methods or "arlare- l° the Dress ever loyal to 1n great. tradition of service‘ 1b.- filllendid local Dubllclty and <tlr1-. 1n: editorials. t) radio for broad- ggifglgloa continuous stream nf 1-__ cementsn atpd dramatlc annuun. 12ers a hank finally to 3]] Orgam r n sa .smen who ln the face ° ""59 dlsflereeable weather eon 5M9"! HEW!‘ relaxed their effort; 1°!‘ a Blmtle moment. It has been the l- Kfetlt ‘Vl to . proud of oiir llltlaerlqlslriindhare an I am.et¢., . . MACKINNON Provincial chairman. National War finance Committee. mmii JOHNSTO an z. ‘Sm-Mam’ T-eslflfints of Beef n ljfénglgttgggyg llififimlse a belovgd 8"“ beyond. Wasllwsifeld w ‘hi5 Eemorg, w» e behlrld. and wlth those of hls new embrace. as the "Obie with of Richard r: Johnso "Bfly 0f Charlottetown, late of 30:1 $21,311:)?“ "8 flltzht across the es of eternlty, to the ever. w whlch with certainty and debfilllfl 1e ihwas the ber, where comb. ‘Therguslizmtjlie ed! .1. ...1 1 t“ "are boo ouncl of the l lied olds of a deep trtiiigd mflhqlmv casket. that bore the 1m mgsnlloulqxfeéne. the neoDle loved m“. “Bfizmodmz ltnhgeubiusllent rever- tures of my ood We affections had W131 Till vioutty. .. 3L “.’.%l.'.°'%l‘1l'§.‘ “t”. Rllfltlhmon Avenue neu- hi; 10mg When hf! Bflld, ln lllg klnd wnyi "Peter. when I tun dylng r will t0 know that I have a. slnillarltv to God!" What- n sumac colmldeiioel My beat friend, mum 1n “m; strum: tanns about something he m ‘ssttrslaaraa h l - I I bZ-lfiiplldfi "12. °“.‘,l§’°‘2,“.,‘§°‘ ‘m’ ""2. I er" . ca. iilvn: for u 11f; fawn‘ '°’ more than the bvnlu ltlon. KlllNlif Plllfi 1, ’- 1 "»|r-1|"’ .11 Bin-Ma lnnulrl f N la th P. gnisland n?1bil§t'1'°§3 tnfor- m‘ the new Hocpltnl was built "u I80 ft. had old Hospital that ll tho years: yet. ln our new Hospital there -" are causlne this overflow. No doubt i‘ ream-lead: “Then f0 better lotohoun mdbmml" Btnmllrontbst no went awly o future. I am not attempt-ml to accomplishments, the e 0113191111 from n local paper hm- donels thatyery Well. one of the sons eled the barriers boundarlefi,‘ and brad ovttitgctllxnepre . re aus an no n - ices. by exemplifying all. that mental and moral values, like love and “ dness. are universal qualltles understood. and recoi- nlzed by all humanity. May nlslaoul igst ln Deane. am, o ., ec-relt a. REILLY 32 Westland Ave., Boston Miss. Another Ghost Town! (Hallfax Chronicle) Amld 8.11 the many local hum of post-war prosperlty for Canada tn general and Nova. Bwtla tn partl- cular, comes the baneful flew! m" the Domlnlon steel and v03‘ Corporation lnbends to close down —apparently permanently -- the Trenton Steel works. The alleged excuse ls that there have been extenslve money 05°" during the 111st year, and the Cor- poratlcn wlll not even consider the proposal to keep the works zolns 0n the old wage rate. penning a Gov- ernment. investigation of the sltu- atlon. It: ls possible. no doubt, to argue that. ln peace tlme the local steel lndustry suffers from foreign tarlffs. In war time the“! BDPEB" to be no such reason ln operation. It may be claimed nevertheless. that. under present ccndltlons, when steel manufacture can only be undertaken on Government order. certain llnes are not profltable to the operators M nrevallins prices- But, granted all this. there ls no reason that can decently be alleged for turnlnr Trenton lnto one more nhost town. The statement that "trc products of these plants could be manufactured elsewhere" strlkes the lowest ncte o’! inhuman cal- lousnes. On the face of ft. steel should be able to be manufactured. under good management. more econcmlc- ally ln Nora Scctie than ln Upper or Inwer Canads- We have the raw materlals here at our door and 1n respect; to war material, we are as near to the ports cf exlt to points overseas u any plan» ln Canada. We have the workmen here. All we need ls the goodwill necessary to make the wheels no round. To sutzzest that a Marltlme tn- dustry shculd casually be shlfted to Montreal. or elsewhere. l; to make a statement that wlll rankle in the minds of every Nova Scot. lan. It wlll make a good many ‘Jeanie who have never done 1v before. besln to distrust the Q11 Drlnvlflle of free enterprise, lf by that term we mean that Labor can strlke whenever 1t. chooses. and fiflhltal can kill an industry at, wlll and leave an old established mwn a desolation E2 F “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE ” W. If. IlOGEBS Agencies Ltd. H1011: 540-541 =ssnter==n=f now to talk it over with him. HVNDMAN l. CO. LTD. PROVINCIAL MANAGERS - .N'Q!E_l\_4B'lElti_lt). 194;‘ 0: 42240604 saw/m srme m mum: man mun- No one can tell what poet-war tbli lad f: heading sllkt bl nlnn WI into. But come what may-aver: lf bl: dad lhould not be here u,‘ “but? l" to support him-Jill! education ll provided for. He is sure o! i tllklllt Slit“ that steppinq-afone f0 success. H1: father and the Great- mmm‘ N W“!!! Weal Life man made all necessary plum flu; y“; 119 w“ 130m llttllll tllllll m?‘ There is a Great-West Life man ma: you, trained to plan an. lttllllll illllll ll- insurance program to suit your own individual needs, and to bring your family Freedom from Fear and Want. . 1 ”"6R£A1=II/£$flIi-'£ ASSHRANCE COMPANY can LOTTETOWN g LIFEiINSURANCE E___ ACCIDENT a. HEALTH % onour INSURANCE =_=-1 Decide at?“ on nrrouerre No lob that helps ln the mill- tlry forces. ln the. home or tn business ls "beneath" the person who does ft. It. ls 800d manners fills“ liberty ls only silo-flier W"! for license. and we are likely ln the future to face a succession of situations that can only l.“ u, glxtgglsnuous strife and ultimate and patrlutlc to do every job that come: your way 0r r 1 :15 dblnz well and happily. Clip These 00.17am FLOWER 0F REMEMBBANCE I am the scarlet symbol of Faith anc Remembrance. Sbrlnnlnnvfrom toll. deep-scarred by the travail of War; on the stone, enshrfnlng ur heroes lmmor , of the Velour that liven through the years evermcre. Does ll. matter to you who pass by that my chalice uplifted Backups you ack to tllke? Past, Mvh I98 l Let ft or; to your heart, from the fur. still graves of the alaln. I am themflulnders POPPYI I speak o e , Blinded and manned. snrlvmg yet. tn the Battle of e; I lm the mystical truth that we keep wlth the fallen; I am the Peace that must. come at the end of all strife. Wlntfred O. Brpss ln The Legionary Don't Cover Soft Coll Wh b ln ~ . t... fihélllml fih°‘3.8‘.1?'.£1.2‘l‘t.. slow-tn: coals to one slde and add fresh coal at the other. leaving a. $0M tzlowlna spew lgntte the nu from the fresh E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summ rs'd , Ll d Le ' 144 Richmond S: I eChaii-lottetovfvi: i 1 1a.. .\- RAINBOW The rsln bow he: always been of good cheer to farmers because when tbm l; a. rainbow, there has been rain for ‘ he mpl. Anothengood friend of arm "s ls H. d1 N)! “BLACK TWIbf” CHEWING became ltl stimulating, frlendly flavor and lut- om lng goodness help to smooth the fur- rows of are. “ DIE 0N ACTIVE SERVICE NDON. Nov. 9—(OP)—TM Speaker of the House of Common: today announced the death on ao- ttve service of Capt. Stuart Rus- sell. 34-year-old Conservative mem- ber who was stricken wlth- fever ln Slcflv ln July and dled lh ln an Elfyptlan hospltul. thfi eldest son of Slr Lennux Rus- an Are You Troubled With LUMBAGO 0 sons flack: If no we have ume of the M" Nllmilu to offer namely BACK-RITE TABLETS lmochll affective I01- unu- bqo. Deletion. Nem-lth, Joint nntuuh and other forms 0| rheumatism whlou brdlnnrv treatment fall to reach- Prloe 50b per bu. macs nu: omrtvnmw A uh and effluent remedy hr Internal and external It l; made om; of the [hell qnnllty , ingredients. n1 remarkable thera- utlo u 1m for lhlu urllfiifi- t nan-lee nut. fu hone elal el- feot In three IIIIYI: t, u mouths. z, n. rlcates, a, n ll iliflllkflnt. ucr. a tube t0- dly- Price 00 cents. MACS ANALGESIG LINIMENT Uni In the amount or Aim. and Nenralrlo Fhhull. bruises, enlarges! ‘ll! vlrfbole velnn etc. 80 cent: Per but! s, TIIE TWO MAGS Ill! (Drier: Given Prompt Mtontlun, NI Great Gonna Street Professional Bards vlcLeod 6' Bentley I. I. IINTI-IY. l. O- ' l. l. IINTLII. l. O. Barrister: and ottoman-lt- I l1. r. Ancmutn Olanorclluonhnll llulenhmtlnlllha Charlottetown