l PACEJ-'oua - , i T H E U U A R l A N self and his family, would approve the adoption of a program designed to elimin- Auumrtud an second Cl-n Mull PM ("nu ate or reduce the ravages of disease. But ”'l”'"”""- ”'”""- few stop to think that, somehow or other. T" "I'M u'"'""'" Pumumnll C" ithe costs of health insurance must be met. I'NIII1-ml ""3 AWWWO N'W'-ilk" A ”'”""'- jand there is nowhere from which to draw A"'”""" ”"”'t """" "'l'””''' the revenues to meet the costs except the, CIRCULATION lpdckdis of 1119 peopiei I ttloveru Prince Edward Island like the dew” Canada has a iiationai produciioii of ai3.i i proximately 23 billion dollars a year and- that production is increasing. TEFR.QTi.Yk6EC.-iE-l.m. pi'0(.lLlCllOll and the steady expansion of it ma: , M ,, er ,- ' s ,; A ;umt are bringing Canada the aboundmiz, A (ilarlng Mlsstatement prosperity she is enjoying. It is important? em that the expansion be maintained. But how, can it be nlaintained? Our Vancouver COll- temporary cites in this connection a re- "llm Strongest Memory is Weaker Man the ,Weakesf Ink". ”cTiXEiT(Tffi:'rou A most misleading press report. has been issued by the Federal Department of La- bour to which StI'0n5Z 0lJ.lCCll0n Sllonlfl ll? cent. address by a leading western econ-i ink?-n n.V llll-Si Pll0VlnCP- The Slalement l9 omist, Professor Gilbert Jackson. To keep Wlln ll"f9li9ll””- l0 3 Unl0n 1'9D1'9S9nlan0n.L1p the business momentum we have attain- vote being ordered a ong marine cngineersied, Professor Jackson said, Canada needs below the Tank Of lUnl01' Chielsv 0n lb? to save and plow back into her various en- ships ”Abcgwcit” and "Prince Edward Is-.tei-prises 25 per cent of each year's in-i lnnd" 0D9l'?lllng ll0lll'99n B01'dPn and T0l"iC0l'llC. She has been doing practically that.” 'n9nlln9- The ml? W35 01'd9F9fl by ln9iBut can she continue to do it it, while coil- Canadian Labor Relations Board when theliinuing to meet essential defense obliga- National Association of Marine Engineersiiions, she runs her expenditure On S0Cl'r1l applied for certification as zzztgaiiiingisewice measures up by some hundreds of agents and the Canadian Brotherhood of 111i11ion5 of dollars? Railway Employees intervened. Both un-i ”There is another argument,” says The ions will appear on the ballot. A further Province, ”whieh cannot be ignored. Sup- request by the Marine l?3nginecrs' Associa-iposo we decide to embark on a nation-wide tion to represent marine electrical engineers, 119,-11111 insurance scheme, now, and mlllie Chief 9n8lnN3F5- lnnlor Flllel engineers nsl arrangements to find the money for it, we well as chief marine electrical engineers waslsimuid be stymied because of the lad! Of rejected. eygonnel and physical equipment. We have The Yftllnrt QUOYPS ll"? l-anon Denim", not the hospitals, we have not the machin- ment as stating that the ”Abcr,J,wcit” andjeryi we have not 1119 11111-595 or the doc. lne "Prince Edwnm Island" are "ownedqltors or the therapists or the facilities for by the Canadian National Railways. This training them. To get this personnel and Province has protested strenuously againstt ihese physicai necessities should be a first similar misstatements in the past, partic-lsiep, But it should be a planned step. , ularly in connection with the railway strike Though this is not an appropriate time to two Walls 320 When boln Snips Were lied UP inaugurate a health insurance scheme it is to the serious loss and inconvenience of ouri the time 10 be thinking about it and pre. citizens. This disruption of a service guar-'1 arin "1119 blueprints. As David Croll, one anteed us under Confederation should nev-lgf 11: Toronto members, told the HD1159 er have been permitted by the Dominion of C0m111o11s the other day, a joint C0m- Government, for it. is the Government anilimiiiee of pa;-iianient might well be at Work not the Railway which owns the vessels and; imesiigaiing health questions and making is responsible to this Province for their op-i recommeiidaiions in the light of modern eration. The status of the C. N. R. in lhelrngdicine, Then, when we feel we can matter is merely that of a subcontractorlsai-eiy finance the scheme, we can go There is provision in the Statutes for thci aiieadgv Government to- take over from the operat-' ing company at. any time, should the nec- essity arise; and this should certainly have been done in August, 1950. l To ensure that our right to continuous EDIIURIAL NU I ES Since the end of 1937 there have been 5,508 outbreaks of anthrax in Britain, of transportation will not again he interl'upl-1ll'nlCl1 724 W91'9 ln 19521 UP l0 October 13- ed. our Provincial Government, Boards of This nUnll391' ls larger than in any year Trade and I.-edemi members have 111-gedisince 1938 and affected 804 animals, of mat ihese ferries be iaken mien Pei-111a,1.:which 487 were cattle and 315 were pigs. ently by the Department of Transport fori ' ' " . operational purposes. No attention has beenl Sir -l0SCPl1 -l0lln Tll0nlPS0nv Blllllsll paid 10 iiiese mqidiesm T1131 11-as badlphysicist, was born this date 1856. l-le-dis- eiiougii, iiiii in haw. ,1 msponsibig D3pa1'f.lCOVCl'Cd the electron after experiments merit ai 0113114 n1igi'(3pi'e5enf 111p xyholgl which showed that electricity has mass. As- issue at stake. in a 11a1i0,1.wide pregs 1-C. sisted by Rutherford he adapted X-rays fol ieasei is worse still. iproducing controllable electrified gas. He? - - A . - - was also a pioneer in the development of Rlgms of 1” clllld the study of atomic physics. Tl l O O 0 Just eight days after the icelebrationi Higiiei. wagesggiiigiici. freight raiesg ' i t is t be the inevitable stor of the is being Celebraled today in honour of me ::::ci1t gycle in the transportatioli, field. It late Miss Eglantync Jebb who was the does not seem io harm any of the immedi ?:EEh(1))rc(f'i:i:ll:?(:'nD::llag::il:tli kllfltlg: iatc parties to the cycle but is rather rough ' f ”' ' ' tl '. 'l 0 . inco ics are not so direct- ration of the Rights of the Child was pro- nilpiice ieiyeisi ' one of the manyi . . o claimed in 1923 and is historic documents which contributed to, -i-iii, improved i.eCi.eaii0imi facilities for Lime WI'ltlIl;g the Universal Declaration of Canadian troops in Europe forecast by De, uman 1535' f Minist ' Claxton will be welcomed The rights. of the child were declai-cd biimgowicenieerli and those at home. The lodbeib the sight loi befpmtecfled beyond Government deliberately assumed the full an 3 We a mnmella long 0 raCe' """'l ' sibilitv for welfare and recreational lionamy Qt Creed: to be cared for wilhi.Is:iS'8l)cncs and it is expected to provide at due respect for the ram-ll-l1, fag an ,Pnm-Vlllcast as much as independent organizations to bedgivvein the il1Cill1SillC-qlllllslic for norii wouid he Capabie of doinrii ma eve opmen, ma cria y, mora y an i . . ., spiritually; to be fed when hungry, nursedi Fm, when sick, helped if handicapped, re-educal- 1 Britain ed if maladjustcd and sheltered and suc- eoured if an orphan: to be first to receive relief in times of distress: to enjoy the full benefits provided by social security schemes, to receive training to earn a livelihood and fl: prioliftctcgl tfgonlhiipioitztiogl angtflnalil-Viand Germany have come 120,000 Poles, 9 "E 0 9 C N 0 9 mllg up "i82,000 Germans and 38,000 Russians. the consciousness that its talents must be . . -- tlevoted to the service of its fellow men. The prospecis for marketing dairy came Much has been done to give effect m are fairly bright according to Mr. Norman these declared rights. particularly by great R. Martin. viceipresideni of the Hoisieiii. efforts in the relief of disaster foliowing Friesian Associaiion of Canada. "we have theiterrible, years of war. Those who take every reason", he mid the Association re. an active interest in this work. however. ceniiy. "to be opiimisiic about our market, know only too well that the need is almost with the U S when iiie, embargo is re. ,beyo"d lmaglnlng only by the pf"'sonal'mov'ed on March 1st. The dairy cattle pop- mterest and support of almost.eVely man ulation of the ,U. S. is sixteen percent less ml mm?" "ls We" 3? "'9 ”ic”V”-V ”f.g”e” than it was in 1945 and there is a definite organizations can mankinds obligation to shomigc of dairy cows in those Eastern "'9 child be adequately met States where 'our markets lie. Holstelns sold at auction in the U. S. have averaged A 1 higher this year than ever before and the '1 lot of pressure is being used to try to U. S. Department of Agriculture has pre- '. force the Federal Government to adopt an dlcted higher prices for dairy products in ekbonu, Canada-wide scheme of health 1953. All this together with an estimated V T. The move, remarks the Van- annual increase of six million in the U. S. 1... -.11, probiibl 1 a. good one population makes me feel sure that there anybody. ,wou,&.'llke to get an old heavily populated land has been remarkably active in re- ceiving immigrants. The recent census in Britain has revealed that nearly a million U. K. residents were born in foreign coun- tries, against half a million in 1931. From the oppressed countries of Eastern Europe ,:..m..m.k.. It is that: - lt?oe&' He must have waited till you slept; And not a single word he spoke, 7""? Here. Co For kick-'v1g bank and Forth between elections. 3.? f fjii A nifslakl I HIES Fl-' -N '3 ' (lTT.l"”.TnV-'”'b DEC”? 57777.? 1 9. That Man Again! V l 4f' , .... I . l, JACK FROST .i. But. pencllled. o'er the panes and crept Away again before you woke. And now you cannot. see the hills Nor fields that stretch beyond the lane; But there are fairer things than these His lingers traced on every pane. Rocks and castles towering high: Hills and dales, and streams and fields; o And knights in armor riding by, With nodding plumes and shining shields. And here are little boats, and there Big ships with sails spread to the breeze; And yonder, palm trees waving fair On islands set in silver seas. -Gabriel Setoun. Old Charlottetown lA.ndP.l.Ll SOUTHPORT FERRIES From an advertisement issued by the Executive Council, January 3 1832: "To be lot. at a yearlv rent, from the 1st day of May -next, mp House and Ferry across the Hills. borough. on the following terms: There shall be kept. 3, good and sufficient Tow Boat; for the ferry- iniz cf horses and cattle: one or lti feet in length. for the accommo- dation of passengers: that that: boats shall be kept constantlv ply. lng between the Kings Wharf and the opposite side. from sunrise to sunset: that there shall be no lone- er intermission of time for the Ferry Boat to remain on one atria, than fifteen minutes. (an hour for breakfast. and an hour for dinner excepted.) On a. boat. leavlnv eith- er slde, another shall lmmediatelv nroceed from the onooslte side in take her place whetlv-.r there he passengers. or not. Each boat to be men ed bv at least. two able men. Th re shall be kent two or more Horses and a Gig for the ac- eommodatlon of Trnw-.llers." (The reference to "Kings Whar!.' above. is to the wharf at the foot. of Queen street where passengers from the Cliarlot.tet.own side rm- barked. Southport was not then known by its present. name hut was referred to as Murplivts Point. where the landing place was situa- ted. The boats used were either call or row boats. Later A limzex craft called it "team boat" was substituted for the smaller ferries. the pro- pelling power being furnished bv a team of horses harnessed to I machine resembling n merry-rzo- roimd, which was geared to the paddlenwheels on each side of the boat.) -Aw:-.9g-1-.15-us Mdyzm.-.-4 Iv” The Ago;-Old Story 1 Have mercy upon me, 0 God. no- cordlng to thy lovlngklmlneu: no- cordlng unto the multitude of thy under moi-clan blot out my train- greulom. Wuh mu throuhly from mine lnlqulty, and clones Inc from my sin. EEBIABCJI INSTRUMENT! BTOCKHOLM, awoden-(OP)-A mm here In: produced the ant commercial but; ny ctronntarn in the wild. The on for bqllo research in nuclear phyl- lcs and il capable of mounting energies up to seven million elect- , will be a big demand for our Holstelns and for hlm- that they wlllibrlng good prices." , ' . I l ton Volta. - more Keel Boats of not leg thanllnsl-nvln-9 07 Child f.Notes B); The Waxl. Most delegates feel that Lester Bowles Pearson, cm the basis of his put performance as n. negotia- tor in the United Nations, may be abfeto whip out. the diplomatic miracle that will make the As- sembly 9. political success. And if the 1958 Assembly shows signs of increasing ram-bunctlousness, Pearson may comfort himself with I. remark made a couple of years ago by 3. United Nations delegate. "I always listen with great. atten- tion to the Canadian delegate, be- cause he often says what others think but are afraid to say,” said Andrei vlshinsky. - A. M. Rosen- thal in New York Times. Amedeans hnve long been ac- - eustomed to hearing Britons laugh at their tea. balls and tell them they don't know the first princi- ples of tea brewing. on well. theytve thought, teas a sissy drink anyway and - just let them try 9. cup of our coffee! We're i-ealiy 3 two-fisted nation of coffee drink- ers. But now comes another at- front to our national cuisine: our black coffee "tastes like medicine" though with cream it's ”n0t 50 bad," guys a, group of Brazilian students now at the University of southern California. In their opinion. we don't roast, our coffee beans enough.- Washington Post. Children Competition In (Edmonton Journal) The belief that competition is undesirable amomz children in school is one of the cl.ll'l0US an- omalies of some modern thinking on education. . A fairly typical example of the view was expressed at a recent teachers' convention in Calgary by Dr. W. E. Blatz, director of the study at the University of Toronto. one of the things he said, in effect, was that "the system of marks used to grade children has created it com- petition that shouldn't. exist." . An obvious comment. on this statement is that children do, in fact, compete among themselves in 8. great. variety ofsactivlties. They do so naturally, and, with aduwguidance. Wholesomelv. In spite of this, it. is often propon- ents of so-called "child-centred" education who are most against competition. This seems contra- dictory. If some of the extremists were entirely consistent. they would give children their head in com- petition, too, and the natural urge would make it. keen. In any case, however. wm should children not compete in school work as they do in play. games and sports, provided that they are fair and friendly about it and play the game? Anyone would grant. that it is not good to foster personal com- petition to a vicious extreme and that a. teacher can do harm by between children of very different abilities, interests and tempera- ment. It. is hardly the teacher's business to urge one child to de- feat. another. , But. it. certainly is the teachers and the school's business to set high utnndurds before the chil- dren, and to urge them "to do their standards. Among children per- haps even more than unong ad- ults, that usually involves compe- tition. Are we to eliminate high standards became we - fear that healthy children cannot. Itand the preuilra pf ,compet.ltlon,ot ” cause we fnrtthnt. ndulta cannot keep it fair and -friendly among them? What I vote of non-confidence in the aturdlnou of our children's minds and character and in our own ability to guide them! The euentlnl things are simply that my compemlon should be fair and that it. a mud be directed to worthwhile en . If educator: ut the children! lllhll on the attainment of the belt. or at the uud lust. their boat. and an 1111' play and good conduct, they need not worry about any competltlun in- volved. atruule, after Ill. is one. of life's great. original teacher: lmoose doesn't. openly making critical comparisons . very best. toward attaining these ' The hunter, like the counts no day altogether which he brings home nothing: the chase in itself is something, as the hunter for a little while transports himself backward into an age when man lived by his hunting skill and dined according to his ability. Weapons have been refined. down the centuries, but all the other elements of the hunt; remain pretty much the same, ele- mental and exciting. Fortunately, however, with civilization have come establishment; where. on the way home, this day's hunter may stop off to purchase B. steak in lieu of whatever it. was he set. out; to seek-and failed to find.-New York Times. angler, lost in The big-game hunting season is now raging across Canada, wl the usual list. of casualties. rather unusual disaster is report- ed from the Carlboo country in British Columbia. A Vancouver man had. gone hunting on horse- back. As he rode peacefully along there was a. bang, and his horse was shot from under him. The marksman, it. turned out, was another hunter. He explained that he had mistaken the unfortunate steed for 3 moose! surely by now even an amateur "sportsman" should realize that the Canadian normally come equipped with a :rlder.-Edmon- ton Journal. Not. many people have the (ill. of being able to deliver an effec- tive address when called upon and ,they avoid speaking at length un- itll they get someone to write out. in speech for them or they labor- iously write it out themselves. iThe result. is that the address lacks spontaneity. and both the contents and the manner of deliv- ;ery are stilted. and quite foreign to the speakers cuaomary way of speaking. Most. radio addresses are read. and the result often in 3 flat monoone of delivery.-st. Thomas ITimes-Journal. Thlk. C. M. P. tell us that since the electrical clocking de- vice has been installed on the main highway most. of the drivers can read the warning signals that were set up there for the control of traffic just: after the pavement was first completed. It would seem that the materials found the print. on the road signs much too small to read until the timing de- vice put the fear of the law into them.-Camroae Canadian. Refrigeration SALES and SERVILE Repairs To All Makes l MOTORS Rewinding and Repair! IQLEOIBIOAL APPLIANCE Bepalu Palmer Eloctrlci PHONE 1444 Have Your Clothe: DRY CLEANED rlmssm QNL! RITI-WAY CLEANERS Phone 2381 ' The Passing Scene By Oludrver ..?..,..... ' - IN PRAISE OF WORK I . mm?- "I don't understand it," said an requirements of Another. But thg acquaintance the other day 'ln inspiration is" the same and lhe speaking of a certain man. "He fundamental striving for iieiiwi has all the money he needs and tion is the same. 'These are lh still he keeps on working. This, things that count. most. 8 summer he had the biggest garden students of the Gospels know ever. It. almost seems as if he that Jesus looked upon work unh actually likes to work". reverence. "My food", he 551,1 "ii No'doubt. that is the expla.na- to do the will of Him Who ',.,,, tion. The man just; likes to work. me". He was so dedicated to in, In the words of 2. modern poet, task that it had become HIS rm- "he thanks God for the might of meat and drink. y it. the ardent, the urge, the delight f ' of it; work that springs from the heart's desire, setting the brain and the soul on fire". He sees what. his critic is apparently un- able to see-the splendour and the. 'glory of work. Like the man quoted above there are a. good many people in all walks of life who look upon work as a sort of necessaiy inconven- ience in the business of living. To them any kind of work is drudg- ery and their souls are in bondage. The people, however, who see work as a valuable part of their herit- age, valuable for itself as well u for what. it may bring in material comforts. are much wiser and in- finitely happier. They hive drunk deeply of the springs of a good phlloaomiy and their souls are for o The redeeming qualities of work in a physical sense are ge11c1.,,iiy recognized. There is no nxipemi so keen as the one that 0l'lgill?'cs in vi orous bodily exercise anl there 5 no repose so sweet. as thin which follows some task that, hid to be done. One thinks of 1,0112. fellow's blacksmith: 5 "Each morning sees begin, . Each evening sees it close; Something attempted, somg:11,,,g some task done, Has earned I n:lg'ht'n repose", Its spiritual properties are 11,, less beneficial. Wrote Carlyle: '11; all sorts of labour, even the lllP:ll;- est. the whole soul of ii. man is composed into a. kind of reai 1131.. ever free. old The adage, presents I deep for physical and even mental in- activity. Such time. may be well spent an a prelude to even more intensive work, but I am sure there can be nothing more shat- tering to ones spirit. than aimless loaflng. When one stop! to think of it. work is one of the fixed lawn of the universe. Sclenvlsw any that nothing in nature is ldlevfor any length of time. Not. 2. tree nor the leaf of 3 tree but which demon- strates activity almost continually. Everything 'ln the heaven above and in the earth benealfn and in the waters under the enrt.h' is busy every second, growing or changing or both. It has been discovered that even the tlruest. grain of sand is constantly on the move. I-low unnatural then must. it. be for a man to seek to avoid workl He is deliberately putting himself out of tune, out of harmony, with the rest; of creation. No matter how well of! a. man may be, he cannot afford to be idle for long periods of time. 0 O 0 The beat psychiatrists are now pram-lblng work and plenty of it. for various forms of psycho-som- stile disorders. And it is signific- ant; tlut extremely busy Ptople are seldom neurotic. They have no time for indulging in such expen- alve luxury. It is well of course when the worker of whatever category has a definite purpose in mind, for the hope of achievement is always an incentive to do one'a beat. But even purposeless work Ls better than none at all. And perhaps the common task, that is to say the job that must be done and done often, is best. of all. C O D And it doun't. matter what. kind of work it is so long as one goes at it. with vigor. Essentially, perhaps, one kind of work la the same as another. It. may be building a house, writing a book. editing 3 ,neW5P8-Per. tllllnz a. garden, mak- mz I song. playing a. violin, teach- Inc I group of youngsters, keep- lnc house. governing a country, or minding I baby. The methods are different, of course, and the tools for one will not at. all suit the "Satan still finds mischief for idle hands to do!" (or words to that effect) re- psychological truth. There is. of course, a time mony the instant. he sets himself to work". And Henry Van Di-1”; to day, In nelcl or forest, at the desk .,1 loom, In F0Uln8 market: place or in: n. quil room; i Let. me butlflnd ft. in my M311 to say, When vagrant wishes beckon me to stray, This is my work; not. my doom: Of. all who live, I am the 0114 i,., whom 0 This work can best. be done in the right way". 0 t O my bles.s:m;, Mental labour, so-called, 411,5,-e ls, of course, a. mental aspect to every task) may be Just as azrlu. ous as the physical kind. Some. times, even more so. And it stands in just. as great; need of order and discipline. More and more I am convinced that the mental WorlUu', if he is to bring out anything like the best. that is in him, must find some kind of manual labour dur- ing the course of each day. If he is fortunate enough to have n zu- den where weeds and cookies nrmv ' (in addition to other thlnizs ninth higher in the social scale of plants), well and good. For hzm were is no problem. If he is not so fortunatennnd min! deserving people are not---he will have to devise some other phm. Golf in summer and bollllllg in winter won't do. Respectalale enough. no doubt, but in both the emphasis. is on play which is something else altogether. Perleru ly good and necessary in itself but it. does not: answer to the sort of balancing and qulckenluglnfluencc I have in mind. only work xv:-li one'a hands is suitable. I knew one man who got nrmntrl it in a. rather strange way Btmnge in the opinions of his. as- sociates". that ls..On his way home from class-he happened to (men in B. college-he worked for one hour in a wa.tehou5e.- Just. for the fun of it, of course. People who knew no better were quire sure that the 11mm was not qu:te right. in his head. and he llOl'Pl' bothered to- explain. He did lE'll me. though, that the hour he spent handling crates and boxes helped him in -the preparatlnn of his next day's work in the class- room. And I am sure he nu right. Again to quote friend c.n-- lylc: "All work is as seed mun; it. grows and spreads". PROFESSIONAL CARDS in Mufheson. Peake & Nicholson A. W. MATEESON. 13.0. A. H. PEAKE. B.A.. LL.B. JOEW P. NICHOLSON. LLB. Bu-rlsteru. Etc. Collection: - Money To Loan 90 Great George street. Charlottetown MucPhee 8: Trainer :1. r. MncPHk:E;i"B.A., Q.c. Ir. SOMEBLED rmmok. B.A. Bu-rlltpn. Etc. Palmer 8: Huslum A. J. EIABLAM. I!.A.. LLB. 13u:lnter. Etc. . flank of Nova Scotln chambers Chu-lottelown. P. E. I. MONEY T0 LOAN Gouda '8: Huszurd Dr. R. Carson (7HlB(!l'RAGTOl1 Palmer (irnilunte ,CHABl.0'I'TET(IWN Phone I072 201 Prince St. Bell; Mal-hieson & Foster Bnrrluten, Solicitors. Etc. ' B. R. BELL, Q.C. G. B. FOSTER. l.L.B. Donn: on City and Farm Properllas . 150 Blchmond Street Charlottetown. l'.E.l. J. A. McGuigun BARBISTER. SOLICITOR. W"- NOTABY. Etc. Currie Building-dorddd Chas. R.,McQuuid B.A. BABBISTER. SOLICITOII, I'll Gnftml St. Thou 29! J. A. Currutliars. R.O. GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A., LLB NOTARY, Etc. Burlntan and sollclton E””"" T""'- 3”"'"'w Money to Lonn CllARLOTTE'I:()WN Olnullnn Bank of Commerce Bldn. Phone l'lIl W Dr. A., L. Muclsuue Byron J. Grant. 0-9- DENTIST 0I'TOMET!llST is nenuii x.na, ' I28 Kent Street I'l-I-no 9 GLORIA BUILDING - (Opposite Revere Hotel)-In Frederic A. Large. 95'' Barrister. Sollclm , Notary ollnrofflun at onnwrlinlm nuklnna une.-umm cum. Bldg. Charlottetown. Montreal. Quebec. Ottawa. Toronto. Mint John. KIIIIIOOH. ldmonum. OPTOMETBIHT loyll Bulk of Canada Bullillnx 138 In! Street Phone 251! Charlottetown. P. E; I- (Noxt to Slmplonln tueneyi In-nu on GM: and Mn" Properties ,; Allison M. Glllis. LLB. 9,. K, A, Muciuchern . DENTIST nnnlsrln. soui.rron. mm mm" Kay . no Iloluunnd ac. - Chlrlotlctmvn Above chuiomiown ( llnlx-"I Phone 500 i ' ' :0! Queen at. l P'""'f", H. R. DOANE 3: COMPANY , cununnun ACUOIJN'lANTl in Gran acorn s ctnirlmetowa , . mm .144 i-.- lo: :41 ii Inmonrn W. wummo. 0.A. - nun P MnaPllEltsnN. 4- lhlllu. Mansion. in Johnlc. Alnlncnl. Dnrlnmnnh Igtvllle. Llverliooloii-New ulolgmv Ind TmJ2.fg,, McDONAI.D. CURRII NCO. Acoounuml A 1" snmmolge. V-Mm" Charlottetown. Telephone l "Let. me but do my work from Clayl