PAGE Q01; TIIE BlIARLUTTETUWII Gllllllllll Morning Dally (Founded lll 1N1) Incident Uout. Col. W. Chalk: S. bloLun Vloo-Praldent: J. l. Burnett FJJ. Secretary: Lleut. CoL D. A. Mnoltingnn, 0.8.0. ldllor mil Mauagln; Director: J. B. Burnett, FJ-l- Annotate E" n: Frank Walker uul Halt. In A. Burnett, B.C.N.V.B.. (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory i: Weaker rm the Weakest Ink." i‘ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1945 Britain's Magnificent Record \\ orth repeating editorially, and preserving for future record, is the comprehensive factual compilation of Britain's war effort as outlined by Lord Keynes in the negotiations under way for a large-scale United States credit to Brit- ain. It should be inzide compulsory reading not only in Washington but in our own House of Commons, and in every Legislature in the Do- minion: l. British ctistniltics were 2 3-4 times as pelt as those oi the United States with losses i1 killed and missing 3 1-.’ times greater; 2. .\'l(‘llll)(‘l'5 of the British forces contri- buted twice as much in muii-_venrs as the United States f0rccs——\vitliottt taking into account the Sal-via»; of llriiziinis home guard and civil de- fence forces; 3. Total British war expenditures were 5o per cent greater than those of the United States: 4. Fiftyi-fivc per cent of Britain's total labor forces were mobilized into the forces of war production by _lIll1C, i944, compared with 40 per cent in the United States; _ 5_ The [tilted Kingdom suffered a loss 0t gxtcninl llI\'(‘.~llIl(‘IllS 35 times as heavy as did the lfuitctl Slates; 6. The United Kingdom suffered two t0 three times llCIlVlCI’ deterioration of capital plant and equipment in non-ivar industries than did the United States: I 7. Civilian consumption in the United States increased l6 per cffit (lufmfi llle_ w“ years while in Qie United Ixinildllm l! Slmlll‘ titncously decreased I6 per Ceiili; s. The British public paid 53.3 per cent of their cost in war taxation compared l0 47-7 P" cent paid by the_pe0ple in the United States; 9. The United Kingdom's national debt rose to a total 4o per cent greater than that of the United States; _ 1o. British Commonwealth merchant ship- ping was reduced from some 40,000,000 dead- weight tons to 19,500,000 while United States shipping "simultaneously was more than quad- rupled t0 50,000,090 1°"!- Mr. Howe's Oplimisn The following statements are attributed to Reconstruction Minister Howe in a recent Tor- onto addrfss: "There are at this moment two jabs open for each and every applicant for a job. "Most war industries are planning recon- version along lines that will provide employment riear and in some cases higher than the wartime scale. “Information available on (729) pliiiilii . . shows that the gross sales value of their products rose from $737,000,000 in I939 to $i,979,ooo,00o in 1944, and is expected to in- crease by an additional $189,000,000 after the completion of the (reconversion expansion) projects. “Exports of products from these plants rose from $214,000,000 in 1939 to $257,000,000 in 1941, and a further increase of $115,000,000 is anticipated. . . “I Q3" rQpQrt that 1,000,000 additional peacetime jobs (in excess of those obtainable in 1939) are definitely in sight, and that there is little liltclihootl of any overall lack of em- ployment in the near future." _ These statements make amazing reading to hundreds of returned service men in this Province who not only have not been able to find jobs, but have apparently no prospect of doing so ivithotit leaving the Province. Can it be trite that “thcrc are at this moment two jobs open for each and every applicant for a job," as .\lr. Howe says? \\"hat kind of jobs? Cer- tainly not acceptable jobs in their home prov»- incc and cnnimtiiiities, t0 which 011i” rfllifiied men rtrc entitled. . Back To Democracy (ltiI-‘htiitliug among wartime restrictions Ihc need for \VlllCll has virtually disappeared, were the considerations of military and nat- ional scctirityi and unqucstioning support of the war effort which jircvnilcd during hostilities. They cloaked many government 0p6r8ti0iiS iii complete secrecy‘, or compelled their unques- tioning acceptance tipon a brief statement that they had been or were hcing done. Noting these well-kiioivn fads, the lllfliilrefll 6089M’ argues: 'lThe end of ziiiy need for further veiling of the iiztltire and extent of the war effort, or of military and production programs, auto- matically removes the only valid reason for par- liamentary rcvimv nf war expenditures in secret. \\'iih the war in liurojie over nearly five months ago .'lll(l hostilities with fill)?!" 50"‘ eluded five weeks ago, it is high time that steps were taken to provide for scrutiny of war spend- ing that will he both tiublic and comprehensive. A practicable foundation for such a lcrtitiiiy is available in the operations of the House of Commons war expenditures commit- tee which functioned during several wartime sessions. Previously the plea of military security induced Parliament to permit the committee to inquiries. Most of the committee's reportnwcrd generalized and, in many cases, represented the views only of the Liberal majority on the com- mittcc. The committee should be Ififiiiabllilfld in the present session, with as many as possible of experienced former members, and explicitly directed to make its hearings and other activities fully public. It should undertake a thorough and persistent survey, not only of spending since the committee last sat but also of any items of importance left untouched by its pre- decessor body. It should also delve into post- war spending arising out of extension or liquidation of war projects, and the operations involved in disposal of surplus war assets. 45ft».- ~.- stores- The man who helped Winston Churchill escape from a prisoner-of-war camp in the Boer War, Thomas E. Pilkington, has died at T alacre, Wales. U U l I According to official data, Britain's plas- ers. The amount of raw materials used by this industry, which are supplied in the main by the coal and gas industry, exceeds 4 million tons PCT YCBY.‘ ii Ii Iii i! The Saskatchewan Government has under- taken re-connaissancc surveys for the purpose of outlining a program of development for a fur and water fowl conservation bloc. Territory to be used for the bloc was stirrendcred to the provincial government by the Hudson's Bay Company last year. “Ducks Limited” is con- sidering giving assistance‘ to the Saskatchewan government should the preliminary surveys prove satisfactory. I I I Alan Patrick Herbert, I\I.P., M.D., British author, journalist and politician, born this date 1890, educated at \vll’lCl‘l€Sl€l' and New Col- lege, Oxford, called t0 the bar Inner Temple I913; served with Royal Naval Division in Great War I, elected independent M.P. for Ox- ford 1935. Publications: The Secret Battle, Light Articles Only, Tinker Tailor . ., Mr. Moon, The Wafer Gypsicr, Holy Deadlock, La Vi: Paririeime, Helen, Tanliz/y Towers and Derby Day, (Librettl) Plain Jane, (Verse) Siren Song, The Trial: of Topsy, Misleading Cases, Let U: Be Glum, Bring Bark the Bells, lVell Anyhow (Essays), Home and Beauty (Musical Comedy), General Cargo: “A High- brow is the kind of person who looks at a sausage and think*oftPilctass'o." Preliminary estimates of the gross income derived from the sale of farm products in Saskatchewan show a decrease for farmers of approximately $166,000,000 as compared with r944,-Agriculture Minister L. F. McIntosh an- nounced recently. Total income for 1944 was $503,302,000. Surveys reveal an expected 4o per cent decrease in grain income. In 1944 farmers received $349,575,000 510m total Pflfl‘ eipal grain crops, while preliminary estimates for 1945 show the gross income t0 be approx- imately $209,629,000. Mr. McIntosh said the wheat situation was most serious, with a de- crease of approximately $109,000,000. De- crease in income derived from the sale 0f live- stock products is largely due to the falling off in hog production, Mr. McIntosh said. “A large part of the 1945 decrease of approxim- ately $24,000,000, is in this category. Income from cattle, sheep, and horses shows an in- crease." U I I I With the war in Europe over and Japan listed for the undivided concentration of Allied forces, plans for big developments in commer- cial air transport are beginning to take shape. But until Malaya and the N. E. I. are liber- ated, air travel on the United Kingdom-India- Australia route must be by the long uneconomic Indian Ocean route, with one "hop" of 3000 miles. Lancastrian mail planes are to beuscd on that route until it is possible to revert to the old route, which takes in Singapore, Sourabaya or Batavia. in java, and Darwin. Mr. Fysh said that the Lancastrians had shown that they coull fly from London to Sydney in only 75 ilaPsfll hours. The second Lancastrian had covered the 12,000 milg5 in 49 flying hours, averaging 240 m.p.h. “This sh0\vs that the three-day trip is possible," he said. “There is no reason why we should not reduce this to two days in fivc years, and to one day in 10 or 15 years with the application of jet propulsion to commercial air transport. "The jet commercial aircraft, of course, is still something for the future. All present arrangements are based 0n aircraft with the orthodox reciptrocpting etngine. “It was with considerable interest that I read an announcement, ‘Orange Juice‘ Deliv- cred by Dairies,” writes Mr. Percy G. Cherry, Montreal. “In recent conversation with an Ontario chemist who is specializing in the pre- servation 0f fruit juices t0 retain their vitamin and food values, he indicated that within a short time, possibly less than an hour or so, after orange juice is extracted from the fruit, it loses some of its best initial qualities. For example, if orange juice is left over-night, even though in a closed container and not in vacuum, it loses its vitamin content. Consequently, the plan to deliver juice by dairies, even under the conditions described in an article, may be open tn question unless the sponsors of this system have devised scientific methods by which to preserve its value until constimetl. In my home, where we use orange juice daily, we would welcome a ready-made supply at a lower cost. But what assurance have we that, first, it would arrive invested with its original notirishing con- tent; and second, that it would retain this for a day or two once it is open? Perhaps an ans- wer to these doubts may be in order before this product is marketed. At any rate, I for one would like to have some assurance on these ronduct its proceedings and keep its evidence en- iinlv secret, and even to limit the scope of input, "m" jug“) points before undertaking to use other than tics industry employs more than 100,000 work- that THE Notes By noiway we wane“- Maverick,‘ WI"! Vl gm A votann shocuuig‘ confident the rm qglfifinfit: “i? temp. *- - I can I In probably ii to mm’ mum: w? I cctlvo was the cue the: new llvo nun In grammar; -BmckvIlle Recorder and T111195, or’: dlv. “An elephant‘: trunk ‘contain: 40.000 1111150185." It dlffors some- what from n lady‘: trunk whlch holnt I muscle In u but l. stuff. ifedvith lllxiflviw o! oia love-letters ii b The Ofliawa 8.11am. And. It‘; p". fumed with lavender while the elephant’: smells of peanuts. “W Al a city-dweller us of (time) system doe: not llfoct, up miiflh. so we have no strong lean- Ings either one way or tfie\ot.her. But one thing we would urge: , whatever ls done, whatever system Is adopted-whether shu- dard or dayllsht sav time-It be made uniform. The ' ocal optlon" which left final decision to clpal authorities-so that while one community was under standard time its next-door neighbor was using daylight savIng-was a con- founded nuisance, - Owen Sound Sun-Times. Mr. Bevln made It clear, loo, that no more than Mr. Churchill does he propose to preside over the disintegration of the Brltlsh Commonwealth and Empire. His speech must have gone far to re- move any misconceptions from the world's mind of. the new Govern- ment's policy abroad. In the do- mestlc field a definite swln to- wards socialization Is lnevl able. In foreign affairs there will be no softness, no weakness, no trifl- ing with principles, but a sturdy adherence to thetradltlonal policy 0f conciliation, of sustained ro- gress, and for the Empire of gra ual and ordered development-Ottawa Journal. It will flu no hlirm for the peo- ple to face more squarely the aw- ful alternatives to which mankind too often thinks Itself bound by modem wan-destroy or be de- stroyed. Indeed, It wlll be wholly salutary If they can be aroused to resolve more ftrml that, war has become too horrl le to tolerate. Men must. make the spiritual ad- vances whlch wlll permit, them to hold International orlme In check without the necessity of slaughter- ing mllllons of the innocent. Christian Science Monitor. The present credllorl, the Unit.- ed States, Canada lxypt and In- dia, were saved rom destruction by the stubborn refusal of Brltnln to capltulate to Germany, and It Ill becomes them, on the morrow of victory, to demand their pound of flesh to the last drop. The pre- sent, problem arose from a war jointly fought; for purposes several- ly shared. It Is therefore a part of the war that. remains stll (,0 be fought out but not In terms of battle but, of mutual agreement and understanding. - Winnipeg Free Press. Qualntiest wartime crop In Ans» tnalla was Angellca, 50 called from the ancient, herbalist belief that "It doth impart angelic virtues." It ls growing In a Melbourne sub- urb and ls used for flavoring gln. When war cut. off su plies of Arch- angellcu Officials ( tanlsts pro- moted it In the hierarchy) the gin-makers scoured the country- side and round It. growing In a suburban herb garden. Now It. Is grown commercially by the acre.- Australlan News Review. Harnessing the bnlu force: of the universe may be Justified. but It strlkes us as a bad branch of the harness business to Set Into for the long pull. ‘There's no fu- ture for anybody In atomic bombs. The fact we got them first Is the best bad news of the war, but when man starts morikeylng with such terrific forces, l1; makes you feel lIke heading for the lillls to dig n hole Into the rock and pull the hole and rock In after you. Man may be out-thinking, out- smartlng and oublnveritlng film- self. And vIctory In the world nf tomorrow may go to the side which can stlll recognize the coroner and the mop-up crews. look what. fol- lowed the use of the bow and ar- row, and you can get an Idea what may come from this atomic bomb. New York Sun. A few days 83o o little girl lay dying In a Copenhagen hos Ital. Now, thanks to swift Interno- onnl action Involving thgee countries, an Allied transport plane and a cargo of bananas, the lIttle gIi-I may llve. Danlsh specialists found the chlld to be suffering from o. rare Intestinal disease which only a diet. of bananas could cure. A frantic 5€84TCh revealed that there was not s. single banana. In Den- mark, neither were there any In Sweden. But, by some strange quirk fate, Norway. the land of a thousand shortages, dId t ,,. to have the bananas. Only n few hours before, a whole shlpload of this precious fruit, purchased by Ing the war, had arrlved In Oslo from the Canary Islands. Wltliln a few hours a speclial Red Cross transport; permit had been u- ranged and sin Allied ‘plane rose from the Oslo airport. and headed south, loaded with bananas, not bombs-News of Norway. The German model ls copied In Hlrohltafs explanation that. the JIIDBIYLE high command and army, navy and air force have not been beaten In fair flght but by a shameful trick, " a new and most cruel bomb, the power of whIch w do damage is Indeed Incalculable," Complaints of cruel weapons from the chlvalrous heroes who bombed unarmed, defenseless China for years are not. Impressive outiilde Jflpflfl. WIIhIn Japan, however, the complaints have an effect. They keep up the vulgar faIth that. Japan ls supreme In war, was only defeated through n chance Inven- tion and wlll be InvIncIble n! ever next time. Ja ’s common fod- der are not a owed t0 know that iii-my and navy and ali- force were hopelessly defeated before the first. atomic bomb fe . It could Indeed not have been dellvered tlll the grtifxflledhlalargg chiplnk scraps this ac c a en r0 en rout! . When the breaches were made. when the Allied fleets closed the Japanese coast, when Allied llr ollher bol-Ioll lacked, Full of dlplomacy, he wanbsd tact. —R. J. P. Hewlson, m defeat. wu Inevitable. even I no atomlc bomb had exlstcd. the Norweglan Government dur- . poultry daily. are buying dally plants, we prefer llVg poultry left at Plant No. 2 nue. All poultry paid for the day received. No quan- tity too large or too mall. (irate: supplied on applica- ton . The Royal Packing 6o PUBLIC ‘roiwn an unn- r t-nic Canadian I om In- Ilbcntlonl ?u|°mc°mtlii'o b t on ou Canada In t!» uholoc of u‘ I flag for our [rut nation. What we and, my l suggest, f; n flog of original design, something personal to represent Canada; Is It not l Cmldlan flag that the peo- ple o! Canada damn-nil? Wllhout. predudfce to the op- InIon of others, In order to keep unity wltbln thln vast country of inlxed races and mods, we must choose o common flag. one cum- plotely new In design and sym- You wlll find herewith what my conception of this flag should be. White border: purity; top mangle of royal red: heroism; lower dry blue triangle: hope; lrecn maple leaf with nine polnta: eastern Clllldl and the ulna provinces; brown beaver: western Canada; up t. letterfng Usque Ad More," meaning "From Sea. to Sea”; a golden cord with a vamialied natural wood flag pole (Redwood). " This flag would ellmilnate all antipathy and represents well, Im- portant poInts about Canada which are already accepted smybols. I sincerely believe this Ia the flag of Canada. I am a. Canadian Army Active soldier of three years’ servlce u medical ordlerky. Interpreter, ty- pLsI: and clerk. I was born and raised In Ottawa. ' I am, Sir, etc. CPL. TREPANlI-Ill, J.L.A. C.B.M.H. Staff, RCAMO. Cumb Borden, Ontario. Free Port Pros And i Con (Hallfax Chronicle) The disclosure of the appqtng. merit of a governmental commit.- tee to Investigate the creation and exploitation of free ports In Can- aitin has glven rise to some speculn. on... The term "free port" Ia applied to ports, or more usually to zones wIthIn ports. In which vessels can load or unload, and commercial and even manufacturing businesses can be carried on, without an ac- tive control by the fiscal nut. orl- tcnfldfl: er The Tobacco with q 500ml Rflpflfgfl’. "ndcco Please ‘fry o Package 8Y8! largel ports, case 0X manufacture of goods with. the free zone, dut glgleslspayable only on B Imported and not on the manufactured pro- ducts which lenve the free zone to cross the customs frontier for domestic consumption. The 11159011’ of free ports dates back to the middle ages, when, with the growth of the mercantfle System and of restrictions on for- Qlkn Imports the creation of such ports became necessary to prevent ‘he @1194"? 01 10161811 commerce. with this object certain maritime towns were exempted from rest-rte. tlona and placed outside the Cus- togiishfrotpltlers of the countries In W ° BY were located. Leghorn ln 1547 became a free 9°" "id Pfflsbered as the centre of the Levimtlne trade. Other not- able examples were the Hanseatlc WWII: of Hamburg and Bremen In Northern Germany, with the Browth of nationalistic Bill?" In the early art ‘of the nineteenth century, fliloyed by these free ports were 8154118113’ withdrawn. Complaints by other maritime towns or “n- fair advantages granted to free D0"!- lmd i119 Bfecdlness of the stats for customs duties believed 1°“ lllfmlkh their operation were responsible for their vIrt- ual dsappeamrices. t many Insta 10W!“ 105$ their entitles as frag areas designated as zones. and performing the same fulwllonfi. were maintained. Such imam’ 01a wol-ia pom, noun, den of the free port “m, ‘ Is soine- those of Copenhagen, Daring, The advantage; o; Into tehariiwam illd Plfiitifieiammen’ Baden‘ stem“ ' oh “O13”; u" The advantages are perhaps best m; or ‘M l m lllllslfflled by the uotunl experl- will! th th th Thus e privileges However, In g, titles where the free hagen. the warehouses e owning com warehouslng, m!“ B" 01' floods wlthln the o e a minister vessels. lVIIa-Jor Hmiment creation of a. free t0 be that. paced QT 5111115811}?! between zone an t at covered b regulations, Thls, howtiiveglutolild: l? ence of phe free port d 0° . ‘Iliere. prior to the Pllgyoflmidwtook m .4 M. the P011. at rate the Danlsh governments. fixed by ants could rem; sites for ofllces and factories, manulfllil-“Plllk was permltted with readily-obtained sanction of o! public Warehouse warrants were Issued by the free port company free of 5mm? WK. thus facilitating the 11011110108 0f re-export trade. The Installatlon of up-to-dnto 11154311131. ery and appliances, plus the fact that an endless maze of govem- mmlnl red tflDB wos circumvented l" u" "e8 P011. gave rlse to the cliilm that Copenhagen was the qillvlrest. and cheapest port of cm In northern Europe and fonned "wre- iwd Hoods from wlthln the customs barrier were concentrated the" 5°? 9101011 on ocean-goliig act-Inst the rt area seems the problem the the encoura ‘ creatlon of gneixdiitliiiachii-friig h i rlea concerned primarily 1°, l export market. and hence m. ‘ atlon of a new employ-mm ML a n d lim- Merch- rind works. ATTENTION TRUSS WEARER; To thou of y h unfortunate enouoglii 1005:: toweu-olnusnuim w question. led with the one you wearing‘! Does It m ca: the most, c 1 f m» Balm’ mliggen Eignicliiklflltilleerifisr "f3 GOING!" agile‘: ‘lit u “u- Sman“ 3mm We" lPEnFiIlDI-‘Jed oontlnne suffering n", ‘h’ in can alleviate the o; offering you a perfciclfe all modern truss from fhs lute Wlllllllmeni lull n. solved. We can-y m d“ "la 81110! If price; t4 m; everybody. GASSY sTSMAcH; free ties of the country In which the designated port Is ‘ ’ In n Port no Import or e du-l ties are levied, the only charges beIrig for services rendered. as for‘ Instance wharf dues and ware- housing charges. II; Is only when 8006s pass from the free port. Into the customs zone that Import duty ls payable. Thus In a free port It ls possible for goods to be unload- ed. stored, worked up or process- ed. sold or trans-shipped for ex- port to other countries beyond the limits of the customs tarlfl reglon of the country esslng the free pose port, without the collection of any ImPCtrt or export duties. In the A PUBLIC SERVANT Of erudiltlo full, With d He wore fits ‘learnlngduvevlthemiiiierf.’ splcimus ease; And, that. no hint of don In him be Pi... ffliitli. e feet: firmly on r - matte ground. p a8 Past-master of the bureaucratic craft- The minute, memorandum, precla, draft, The marginally annotated sneer, When to wrlte “Sh” and when cm- _ ploy "My Dear." Hed formulate a plan, rough out a scheme (‘the while iw- ting yesfiemlgliva old dream), with facts well-groomed and toil- Iniz figures ranged: The c"ie".tIve alters — all to cult Is changed. A friend to ail. excepting frauds and fools. As often breaking u enforcing 9!. Ready t? make as follow preced- Efl . And all to Impatient executlon ll . A mighty load of cures be gully And, loving honours, loved hla honour more. One iit-Isrlbute this desk-Napoleon In the ' New Statesman dz Nation Poultry Wanted Buying llve and dressed While we at both to have on Longworth Avo- .Grafton Street, power ranged freq over the home- nnd and Allied Invasion forces were wtlhh nth-Iii; o, to- lodging. l. HOME MANAGEMENT: lo Int approximately slx weeks. llfllvldllll there are rnfffclent llllll Include Home Management, lug, Health and other cublects. 1. BLACKSMITHING: bllflkimnlllllli woodworking, I'll“! W Guilty for operation of work. Cour» to open In early November, 2. CABPENTRY: In! construction and [e early January. 3. MECHANICS: Agreement tnlnln 1 g ducted In cim-ioiisiiihiifc i‘ or Wm‘ m llnfll March 31, 1946. One mun lllllblled free of charge, u well Student must be between the commending COURSES F0 R GIRLS COURSES FOR MEN sleigh and wa general blacknnlt n and women wlll be “m. In November of 1945 and “n. d trip "flllillflrtlllon and turm- u an allowance for board and ages of 16 to 3o yum Three (3) courses sh l! be “ch First. class to open Inlea ham ppllcanfs to flII the One I1) five months course In [engrgl tron bulldlng. Tralnlng u. -l and repnlr TWO (Z) llx week: In "M, _ "m! firm reiniti- Wffgkwrll swam iylipzfiuin Two (2) six week I F “h.” °P°'“|°|\ ll"! Rlllll‘ 0! i-flvlofl. oars nidchliianeéinglllnesfrarrjnd y: an); oefuflayrulrn hurneu making and repair. Flnt Ming l» COURSES FOR MEN AND woman Charlottetown, P.E.I. hit. "Boy, this Is our lucky day! the Guardian Want Ads for the purse we found with 872 lrly November, . Train] Handicrafts, Nursing, cdoszklng, s: areas were In operation untll the been largely overcome by alert q outbreak 2f we: six years ago In vigilant customs patriot on the fig». RELIEVED A 1115189993711. Dyspepsia, Sm- Btomoeh, Heartburn, sum, U d. ‘b6 Pa, lath" In l‘ ‘l’ lmwllllllll 0f the Federal-Provlnclll Youth a I Training n preset-Italian which we under up sell 013%». Evniu Stomach h right’! fllllulhlua" reiiiirelpfloaii and nhioe uelllnu I have n solved animus testmmlab from satisfied yurehucn Price I56 It?! bottle. l0 G t Geo Street llllll 0:121: hump on i Professional Bards Neil W. Higgins Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. i. AGRICULTURE: One (i) ""06 weeks course w provide ln- Charlottetown "- fi- 0m t!) mum Ill Grading nit! Packing of cu: and pom" ‘m, Tel. 589 P-O. B0! 55 Mill"! Ellwlflnonf. Course to Inst approximately four (l) wmh commenc g n January. u All courses are of an Inteuloly practical nature and provide a fav- l. curable opportunity for young men nnil women h) [mpg-nu m," BARRIBTEI. ETC. Knowledge and lnln themselves for wider and more effective service. Phflllpg Bnfldlng, Ill Grafton It llplfooflon forms for enrolment on these courses may be mound hum ‘he underlined. Intending sin-um lhlllllll lpply n u“ eurllest o - "‘°"' m‘ P‘ °' M“ "‘"""'"'- ' p cnltumwnowu. P- I- l- w. R. SHAW, .,. ._,...__.. ..___,.= _-_= 339113‘ Minister of Agriculture. ill meat fAcrl It - crmmiewwii, his: iiiiii-i-a niiina. chad“ R‘ Mcouam -. B. A. QUICKIES BY Ken Reynolds “"l:‘.‘.'i..“é‘l§.“°’" iulq Dnlldlng, Chnrlotctown Phone 888 II. II. Iloane & 00. Charlene Amllll I Grlftou Sire"- Chnrlofteown 2 . Phone am M "l l lama» w. mum. 0- l- Public Slenographef ‘“'l.;i'-i‘l °'.'.°.l"' IIIIIN GIDDIN Teloph IMO-J. P. 0.%x l”. Connuglit Anll N°- ‘- yfigmynh-HNNHWAP-‘QV-fi-VV lhrioll and Ilollllllll Chartered Account-ll" llereb a $25 reward In ll. F. AIIGIIIBALD ‘..ufl| Tn.“ flqllrlllll imm- '- --.--_;|-_-_-_