:1 g . I PAGE FOUK .v T H E G U A R D I A N consumption averages only 14 pounds a year, not so much as the continental Eur- opean, but more than the American. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office - It is obvious from the above figures thag Department, Ottawa. The island Guardian Publishing Co. there is a great opportunity forgexpanding .the home market in the interests of our . fishery industry. President and Associate Editor, Ian A Burnett. Associate Editor. Frsnld Walker. CIRCULATION IEDHORIAI. NUIES "Coven Prince Edward island like the dew" --:- The suggestion in Pakistan's request for i Canadian wheat that the crisis might other- the Weakest Ink". wise be exploited by Communist propaganda 13"-A-n',j,;r;rE;r3fNj--375533-;f(,.uj 1,.-1,52" , is hardly worth considering. There are lots -- on - "m of arguments in favour of extending aid 0Id Home week at time of famine, but the least impressive ------ (is the vague threat of "or else". The mood of Old Home Week is es-E i' ' " sentially that of friendliness. The many In commemoration of gallant action visitors who crowd into the Island capital fought by number 41 Independent Com- come to take part in the great get-together mando Royal Marines at Chosin Reservoir, rather than merely witness a spectacle. Korea, 29th November 1950, the U. S. Citizens will see friendly faces which they Marine Corps has presented a portrait of :'The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tilon rt-no GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN All Set past lsiatr - Five gears have. perhaps. not seen for many moons. the Comma'ndos' commanding officer Lieut.- Despite the large number of fine trot- Colonel D. B. Drysdalc, D.S.O., M.B.E., to icrs and paccrs. some 200. entered there is' Royal Marines headquarters in London. nothing in the shape of Big Business about ' f ' the competing racing stables. Owner dri-I vers are not uncommon and individual horses and drivers are well known to the crowd. The livestock exhibits and the displays of handicrafts and home baking organized, by the Women's Institutes bring togcthcrl old and young, office worker and farmer. to comment on the merits of the exhibits and p rhaps to secretly resolve to try to measure up to the standard licressary to have such results. As friendly as any part of the show is the familiar yet different midway of Billy Lynch. Like other aspects of the show-I it is enlarged and modernized without be-t coming strange or unfrmiliar. The man- agement, perhaps, show the most friendly gesture of all in not botlicring to collect, any admission fee for entrance to they grounds. Fire fighting material available on every farm is the prudent suggestion of Provincial Fire Marshal T. A. Campbell. The removal of fire hazards and the availability of ex- ,tingulsl.iers and buckets might well prevent a high proportion of rural fire losses. Town- dwellers would be wise to act on the sug- gestion also. i I C O p Impede not the path of true love. The Chatliam News reports how an 18-year-oldl used his truck to hold up the course of a iiewly-wed couple on the highway, finally resulting in their being landed in the ditchn The judge imposed a three months jai sentence for what he very accurately term- ed, ”a moronic display". 0 i 0 Two out of some twenty-two P. E. I. butter and cheese producers have expres- sed themselves in favour of amalgamation. The others have not yet been heard from. The constitution of the proposed combined company is that of a producer's co-opcr- ative with power to apply patronage div- The lion-Conuiiunist. world has been aidcnds m build up me Capital of the bush little uneasy about the matter of repatri- neg i ation of Prisoners of War. The feeling was , ,, , that the Communists were technically with- in their rights under the Geneva Conven- tion ln demanding repatriation even al- Forced Repatriation The Montague School Board and the di- rectors of the Community Welfare League ,wliich being seconded ---19 T"! Thar; Hav'i.Tom, Wh5,t1egI The man like smoking.-Ottawa Journal. M ( , , , . Ke”'”d5"0"t”,m W”? sud R hm'59 Tiny Township Council in: been -3 S00 4 if It tsnf Ministeroti A8.-Z. and buses for giving consideration for some time me an wan an o... .......,, beat ::.:r. who hum been. fine Premier! a car 1 mile! Georgian Bay shares. In mem- . T hers realize that year-round resi- fwmem. the dents and the transient tourists . Nice Fellow. For a. Foreigner. fr9QiWOO-30 Old Charloitetou . juind r. 1:. L ) & xi CHAPLAIN. OF THE HOUSE From the Journal of .ihe Legis- lative Assembly, Jan. 27, 1836: Mr. Pope moved. that the Rev. Louis C. Jenkins. Chaplain of this House, have notice to attend the House each morning during the Session. to read Prayers, before the House proceeds to business. Mr. LoLacheur moved an amend- ment. that the words "Louis C. Jenkins. Chaplain of this House." was decided in the negative. Mr. Mncdonald. in amendment to the main motion, then moved. are having their differencespf opinion on bayonet-Q. on the moral side were was the question of using part.of the Leagues grounds for a new school site. No personal no doubt. It would be indefensible to forccl . , , , unwillin human beings across a border to lmemsts are involved m Such a dispme but g i ' ” leach side has its own opinion as to what It fate they dreaded. Now it appears that the Communists though it might require to be enforced by . lcourse will most benefit their town. 3 0 0 crond Louis C. Jenkins to be its tinues to entertain the highest respect for that gentleman's char- posed of persons professing vai- .v iltt'ftl-.l' tiir , , , l:iad:en(q:.ex1:.nl1:::,F: ;:)i:,q 1EmaWin0nmcfn,l The Edinburgh Scotsman is authority c mmemar, on tho qimation that Hm for the statement that since the liospitalst arifticles ofhthe Geneva Convention them-; were nationalized five years 3550' the west": . l .. i h'lit any enforced repatriation. A . , :ev.:1itii:l(e)xll)l8 points out Mr. Ewer, re-1.L20'000 worth of equlpmenh mamly be" ' I " i of pilfering. Linen formed a large . ,, p. j , , ..!cause quires that piisoncis of wai shall be ie Wmpomon of the losses, but other itemso leased and repatriated without delay after,, , . . . . . . . . .. tincluded crockery, cutlery, surgical instru- the cessation of RCUH? hostilities. The Sewing . . . . . . .ments two microsco es, and two word "released" is operative. It is tlultfflmachineg p plain that prisoners must not be repatriated . . . as prisoners. and therefore perhaps under ' t h f' at 'e-I iiurescliij h'llli:i'::iiabiillilicvmisccoonieCnonfonger1Copter before mo 10"” The South Bwki Paige ' f I 1, 3, 0 mm, Wm, Um right; Ofjlfestival site is being tested as a helicoptei” ifnsogfgi yl ' C . station for Central London during two rec . . . . . . . - ,-vk. f.' tlfllt ith Sin - i m l i. ll ' t vde , hmtetcilss of)riitl:ltCih:3bi't:hcc wlt IiiigiiisntlliaiiInsmtlmems are being used to record the er ' - - i r the United Nations have not merely a ' l bl' 't' of to force helpless Pris-. , . , rdizlras (if lllga!rKardi':1)ss into Communist hands: ”05p'tal' If the Sm? moves Sausfactonl b t the Geneva Convention which the U lmgular Snviceyusing 12'Seate" machmos u - v '- N. governments had agreed tn-respect. re-Z Wm Start in about two years. Londoners may be commuting by hell-j em Regional Board for Scotland have lostl” inoise in nearby buildings, notably that lliouses of Parliament and St. Tliomas's quires that no such compulsion should bci applied. Revealing Figures The Battle of Britain, the German in- vasion of Britain by air, opened this date 1940. There were four phases of the battle, massed formations of bombers escorted by equally large formations of fighters, then ious religious opinions. it Clergyman as attendance of any wlintcvcr, to officiaie in." The House divided on the ques- lion: McNutt, Clark. Cooper; Nays, Messrs. I.cLuchrur. Mackintosh. Thornton. Pope. Nelson. Binn.-i. Mc- allum, Dousc. Palmer. So it passed in the negative. The question being then put on the main motion. the House again divided: Yeas. Messrs. Pope. Binns. Palmer. Dc-use, Mccallum. Nelson; Nays, Mar-donald, Clark, Thornton, Cooper. McNuit, Mackintosh. Lo- Lachcur. So it passed in the neg- alive. ? wag. SILENT WORDS 'More silently than the sound made by the wing 'of a south-turning bird. the last 1 leaf falls. gnver the ruins of a forgotten spring; The blue-jay calls. .Forever' the first prophetic sign is made Without, within; the heart's pulse stumbles. slows, The Department of Fislicries has conic some 35 major attacks by smaller forma- Kmwm, the mm ,,,,.,,,m,,e' me to our fish-eating liaiiits. Nova Scotia is entitled to take zt how in this respect. Its per capita consumption of fresh and frozen fish (9.25 pounds) is the largest in Canada. being more than twice that of Columbia, and nearly three times that of Ontario. This is not surprising, of course, in view of Nova Scotia”s proximity to the Set; but how are we to account for the fact that Saskatchewan is ahead of both Prince Edward Island (1.42 pounds) and New Bmnswlck (1.34 pounds) in this com- parison? Newfoundland was not included in the rating. In consumption of smoked and cured fish, Nova Scotla is away ahead; lobsters give P. E. I. the lead in shellfish, and sal- mon put B. C. far out in front in the can- ned category. The freshness of produce is obviously an important factor in con- sumption, but as marketing methods im- prove the figures seem to show that the inliandlbuyer is becoming more partial to V” '.loeiIndei::, the figures show, average an gnbugl mnsurnption of 65 pounds of fish ', and Norwegians consume 47 - V i pounds annually, and theta British siiuotncohutt 30. The Canadian total not . . . . . I forward with some curious figures relative, British I tions with heavier fighter escort, then a ' mass attack on London going into 88 major iraids. On Oct. 6 the bombers were with- ldrawn and fighters and fighter-bombers jthemsclves made vmass attacks ending sud- denly by Oct. 31. German losses were 2375 ;aircraft, British losses included 375 pilots killed and 358 wounded. O h C The late Mr. W. R. Aitken delighted-in doing good by stealth. He was keenly in- terested in youth activities, particularly along athletic lines, and contributed gener- ously to these and other causes, but al- ways with a minimum of publicity and on many occasions anonymously. After his re- tirement from active business he devoted his abilities to the raising of high grade beef cattle on his beautiful farm at York Point and continued to serve, for several years, on the Provincial Sanatorium Com- mission. He was a valued member of St. Paul's Church, serving as vestryman for many years and taking active part in church activities. Those privileged to know him intimately admired his many fine qualities of mind and heart. He was de- voted most of all to his home and family, to the members of which The Guardian ex- tends sincere sympathy on this occasion. p blade That reaps the rose. iltlwsys ls mortal aware at the na- son's turn Of the shattered chord. lost and broken tunes. , And only in the mind the flames . still hum of defeated Junea. Lzleanor Alletta Chsffer. W4153v')”1eG0&rG0'1r'o0WOO' The Age-Old stung w!1eO9'3t0&00s3CO&wx The voice of him that erietli in the wilderness. Prepare yn tho wly of the Lord. make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted. and every mountain and hill shall be made low: and the crooked shall be made atralkli . and the rough places plain: Ill the glory of the Lord shall 'ho revealed. and all flesh shall no it together: --for the month of the Bord hath spoken it The voice said. Cry. And he said. What shall I cry! All flesh is gun. and all the gooalineu fluoro- of II u the flower of the field. ....LL....... - BRIBTDL. lnglnnd-- (OP) - Oanon 0.W. Wynne in his parish magazine dcnounocl choir girls who point. and powder their faces dur- ing services. lfeatsted: "choir girls should not try to look like chorus girl-.." unstable began in 1910 when King Manoei of Portugal. namesake of Manoei the Fortunate. went. exile to become fl regular attend- be cxpunged. and the words "Bern- sgecY!;1':b1:do?ep&irITg15'M mat nrd D. Macdonald" substituted - great" Ponumh Bruno we only 3”” P”'- Empire centered in the Western Hemisphere, had done in 1888. 0 O I that. after the word "That", all be -. . , expunged. and the following sub- vg8:gmwm' which brought Siiluird '- "ammugh "W Him” lill7t Germany (Kaiser Wilhelm) thought proper. in H5 first 595i 1913: and Austria. (Emperor Char- sion of 1&5, to appoint the Rev- ;e3,'1918. Chaplain. and did then andstillcon- Sultan 01 Turkey wem mm cxnc Wieh .V"l- 95 "19 HD1159 l5 C0"? of Syria was revived for a fleeting , g j V WW al Al Hussein became tdrcms it inexpcdicnt to desire the when hc 105; 1;, he can ClIilD- of Iraq, which is still a monarchy. Yeas. Mcssrs.7”liiE5:d0n81d. day has found another crown. (By Thomas Dunbitbln in Europe and the Near in the The days oftkings and crown: into Port- Emplres fell like ninepins in the (Czar Nicholas in As an aftermath of the war. the in 1922. Turkey became. and has- remained, in republic. The throne moment after the war when Feis- its King. on his feet. for in 1922 he became King. No other exiled monarch of our . . . I-'eisal's father. Hussein. lost the throne of the l-lejaz in 1926. King Ibn saud took over the Hejaz and Hussein went to live in Cyprus. King Alfonso of Spain lost his throne in 1931: according to the. Spanish jest. 90 percent of the Spaniards were moiierohisi ".:ld 90 percent were anti-Alionsists. After their Easter -..s.. ..:- ion of Albania in 1939, the ital- ians ousted King Zog. King Pct-, ci-'s troubled reign as iKmg cit Yugoslavia came to a full stop in 1945. The year 1948 saw the ex- pulsion of young King Simeon of Bulgaria; the fall of King Micli- ael of Rumania in 1947 left Greece. which had previously seen a couple of abdications, as the only monarchy in the Balkans. King Umberto of Italy abdicated in 1946. His son the Crow'n Prince took the Crown for 9. few weeks, after which Italy became a re- public. can King Leopold of Belgium abdic- ated in 1951, but the crown went to his son Prince Baudouln; the throne does not seem as stable as. for instance. that of The Nether- lands. where Queen Wilhelmina made way for her daughter Juli- ans in 1948. But then Wilhelmina was widely popular with her people and left the throne entirely of her own will. All these changes leave just. seven monarchists in Europe: the United Kingdom. Belgium. The Netherlands, Denmark. Norway, Sweden. and Greece. There nrr. really nine if you reckon in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (area, 998 square miles; popula- tion 300,000) and the principality of Liechenstein (61 square miles. 13,000 people). both of which have hereditary rulers. Maybe Luxem- bourg oughtwto count. since it is represented a I. country in good standing at t e Helsinki Olympic Games and has produced one win- ner. In Iran (Persia) the British An Age Of Falling Crowns King Fax-ouk of Egypt is the exile. or pretenders to thrones. in latest of nearly a score of mon- ' l nrcbs East who have abdicated or been forced off their thrones past 42 years. regul than any other country. Amongst them are Don Duarte, Pretender to the throne of Portugal itself; the Count of Paris, delcendnnt. of Louis Philippe and claimant tothe crown of France; FY3111 throne Crown of St. Stephen of Hungary; ex-King Simeon of Bulgaria; ex- King Michael of Rumania and his father, ex-King Carol: and Prince Svelode, who claims the crown of goly Russia. Don Jose.who claims ie looked rather like getting it, some- times makes Portugal a base. in the Ottawa Citizen) ar or residence, the Archduke Josef . Pretender to the of Austria and to the crown of Spain. and once Notes From Another Island by "Anson" LONDON, England:-There was .1 time. not soverylong ago, when the news of a revolution in some South American state was consitb err-d rather amusing, us if revolu- tions were it quaint sort of sport in that part of the,world. If the revolution were bloodless so much the better; one could enjoy the situation without heed to one"; conscience. Today, even if our first re- actions to happenings in distant parts of the globe nre still some- what off-handed. if we think them rather remote from our lives. we cannot entirely subdue :1 vague feeling that in some way. streets and highways else would. But there will be praise for London's police Knight. if he can succeed in his -Aodosr 11'. 155,. 300?OOf0C Q J.Notes Bx Before us a picture of former King Faroul: parading the terrace of his Capri hotel to soothe his baby. the new King. in his arms. Faroulc is smoking. with more ex- perlence he will learn babies don't are entitled to a place to swim. it is to be hoped that action is taken soon as the cost of beach property Ls steadily rising.-M-iclland Free Press-Herald. Premier Anrus Macdonald of Nova scotis. invites contributions for 3 fourth memorial in Scotland for Flora Macdonald. who bravely helped Prince Charlie escape after the 1145 rebellion. We tremble to think of the battalions of statues needed if every worthwhile Mac- donsld is to have more than one memorial-Ottawa Journal. No one wants to interfere withj the rights of motorcycles to use as anyone chief, A. E. big job for any man to that. and certainly not one to be undertaken lightly. A job that car- rier with it such a Joad of re- sponsibility. and such power, that we could only assume that those who were choosing the principal The Wei X4 drive to muffle the and clamp down on th:nl)au(KCyclW. "rev up" when other citizem M” i seeking sleep. After all in the 3" ent condition of Widespread D,:ea' vous tension nobody wants to war. an to an apparent fusilladt-,-L:k' don Free Press. "' News from Australia Iny. the United states is rapidly rum nlnz out of timber for imsegi ban. 01 which 6.000.000 are Ill d each year. 11 the national E: ” really faces so grim a 5,,.,ah;"3 American forest conscrvationjm can add a powerful argument ,0 their case. Meantime. a Brisbzmg company has contracted to sum 1.000.000 bats. starting soon my the Brooklyn -Dodgers and Clev: land Indians tour Australia 3, October. The Pacific alliance 1; uk lng shape.-Ottawa Citizen. ' With the adoption of lung-tum parking meters in the Klicllcner market square there is hope om the situation for shoppers will in greatly improved. Those who mm to shop for a few hours are mm, to pay reasonably for that mm. lege. provided they can get. ascom. modation within walking dismw, of the downtown area. The maxim square area appears to be the idea solution to their problem. Two, up. and ten-hour meters at the ffile .g five cents an hour will give vlsitoic a. good chance to park and dim and provide shoppers with mnpl; time to do their business withouu repeated returns to the meters... Kitchener-Waterloo Record, Ii.-has been noted in roniierugn with the forthcoming retirenient of contestants for it were scllng with a fit sense of their own duty. All this we knew. but thorn our knowledge ended. W: was kept pretty well posted about what was happening, and the nam- es of the leading characters in the drama became ns familiar to us as those of our own politicians: but how and why the plot unfolded was left unexplained. Could it be that there was nobody hero who could explain it? o 0 0 o Several people seemed to have sketchy notions about the matter; acme made so bold as to write about it in the Press. Yet, in spite of their efforts, doubtless well-lntcntioned. we found our- selves none the wiser. What I: pity. Thus might the flower of our internationalism have been nipped in the bud! Fortunately. however, we are still interested to see who will eventually become the new Pre- sident. Far be it from us to in- tercfere in other people's politics, but we do feel we have R sort of personal link. Quite apart from the plain truth that what hap- pen: in the United States in im- portant to the rest of the world we do rather like Ike as in man. We know him well, and we took to him long ago. All that other business we had better leave alone .until some genius appears who can explain it to us in simple words. . . Mr. Edward .1. Garland, Canadlu minister to Norway. that he is tag, third of our diplomats to quit cg. service since the beginning of no month. General Victor odlum, fog. mer ambasador to Turkey, mg Mr. W. W. Chlpman. former lug); commissioner to India have In,-Mb ed the age limit and abandoned 13 career. so far Jnench-Csnadiq have had a reasonable share of countries high diplomatic posts. as though originally Fi-cnch-spanking holders of these offices were mm on Ivscale decidedly lower tin; were their English-speaking cu, leagues. Apparently this state q affairs has been corrected. But we must make sure that among in. new envoys there are some French speaking Canadians. -- Lo molt, Ottawa. F0? 3'0-III. supporters of the son Bey route worried about paucity of incoming cargoes, up part items were largely confined to candy, liquor and curling stone; These familiar goods are agslg present in the holds of ships arriw ing at the port of Chuchill as Q new season gets under way, but they are augmented by motor can from British factories, as was also the case during the past. couple of seasons. Two-way trade with ma ope, on a. still larger scale, Oilll the best hope for the northern route.-Ottawa Citizen, PROFESSIONAL CKRDST A. Wuirhen Gander. LL.Bs BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. Etc. I'hllllps Julldlng lll. Grafton street Money to Loan Collei.-Mon Palmer & Huslcm A. J. KASLAM. B.A., f.l..n, Barrlltor. Etc. Bank of Nova Scotia (ilinmbcn Chsrlotteimvn. P. F.. l. MONEY T0 LOAN MucPiice & Truinor II. F. MaoI'llEl'J. B.A.. Q.C. perhaps not quite understood. such happenings could and might affect us in our very homes. We have come to realize that because our existence depends on our overseas trade. and on our rein- tlons with the rest of the world, we cannot. afford to ignore events in other lands. however far away. . . o Many things have contributed in this growth of the internation- nl outlook. The speed of modern communications. for one thing. 3. SOMEELED TBAINOIC, B.A. Barristers, Etc. Goods! 8: Haszcrd GILBERT A. GAUDET, B.A.. LLB. Barristers and solicitors Money to Ipan Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. i Frederic A. Large. QC. Bar-rlcter, Sollcltaor. Notary Royal Bank” of Canada Iluilrling which not only enables people to get about the five continent: quickly and conveniently. but also makes it possible for those who stay at home to hear about affairs thousands of miles nway within it matter of hours or less. In recent years. too. more people have had opportunities for travel abroad-- oftcn in uniform. true enough, but a strange land once visited is not enslly or quickly forgotten; its name, mentioned in the news. has A familiar ring. Many of us, too. have friends or relatives who linve cknigrated and who send us first-hand accounts of life in their new sprroundingzz. . helped case out its former mon- arch, lteza shah. in 1942 but they left the throne to his son. How- ever. the throne of the Land of the Lion and the Sun seems some- what. shaky at.,the moment. India, of which Queen Victoria was once Empress. ceased to be a part of the British Empire and became I republic in 1049, though it continues to be associated with the noun: commonwealth. crown: of Niurna, Raisins, Mshsujab: and other Indian Princes are now three I penny in thou parts. The second World War, which overthrow several thrones either directly or indirectly. did defin- itely restore one-, tint. of lthiopla. overthrown. with the help of modern weapons, by the Italians in N80. it wu-tutored In lNl when Hails It , the Lion of the Tribe of again became King of u. curiously enough Porlunimhcra this century's rush to republican- ioral routine. But. one could not avoid a faint suspicion that they were being reported as interest- ing examples of the way the Americans do things. rather cur- lisvs been true all along. not just at the time of the convention but right from the start of the whole business of ' ” 3 a Pre- Iideni. Oh you, we know that IIIHOCBHCO Ill!!! con- Nilll ur in our fuslon. would emerge one im began, now has more kings in ernm-mt of the United Statcf. it somehow, out of what seemed to who would be head of the GFV3 Charlottetown. P. E. 1. Loans on City and Farm Pro ertlea Mufhcson. Paulie 8: Nicholson A. W. MATHESON, 13.6. A. H. PEAIIE. B;A., LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LLB. Barristers. Etc. Collections - Money To Loan ' to Great George street. - , Chas. R. Mcouair ll.A. BABRISTEB. SOLlciTon. NOTARY, Etc. Eaatem Trust. Building CHARLOTTI'l'l'0WN Phone i1li J. A. McGuigcn BARIIISTEII. SOLICITOII. EN NOTARY, Etc. Currie Buihlinz "iiiifiifaihieson & Foster Barristers. Solicitors. Fif- R. R. BELL. (H'- D. L. lifATHlES()N. l.l..ll, 0.0- G. R. FOSTER. l.l..R. Loans on City nnd Farm Properties no Richmond Street Chnrlottetoivn. i".l1J- J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fltiltl Corner Kent and Qumi St!- Offlee Phone I950-llnniio 10” go ,1 128 Kent Street (Next to slmpaonfa Agency) ioul demonstration: of the "Am- erican way of.llfc.". cnwrnln . Actually the. some seemed to n"”''' 5” ' IlANDOLl"ll W. MANNING. C.A. MeDONAl.D.. can-rum Montreal. Quebec. Ottawa. I kind Currie mill:-.. Cbariotteuwnii Phone 281'! min"! offices at Halifax. lloneton. lontvllio. Liverpool. New nto. lllnt John. rake. Houston luniilon. ldnwntoin I Ch I tt to Our press and radio. alive to A "0 e W" - -.-. -- these trends. keep us informed of Mg Fgfmgrl 0.6. Dr. w. R. Carson major developments. Few over- BA LLB. seas events lately have had betb o i " CHIEOPRACTOE ter coverage than progress o 3.1.1.1.”, ma snudw, 1 date in the American presidential Film” ””"'"5”T - elections. But: few matters of com- ”""i ,:""i""' cnAnLorrnr,oliiI3:iI'm 5, parable importance. it must be r Eliona 1012 L” K I confessed, remain A bigger my- . Money 0 IAIIII go Byron J Grim" 0.0. story to us. I ' During hthe plalt few Hlhontdfill it A"iSOlI M. LL... OPTOMETMST d l. t i I r a . j dieymdswneud wiiii. :3: En Ito: nuusnn. soucnon. Ito. m M, s,,,,,. 'i-we open our paper: on ten some . . g. .. . in in 34"-oi-n I" ' news. first about the "Primaries". "0 m l,'S:;m "3"" pp” "'2 and then about the for-tr ' M Buuc . conventions. When the conven- J A C m R O of, A. L. CC tiona themselves took "place they 9 o CITII .75: ' ' DENTIST were reported almost. as fully as if they were part of our own elec- 0PT0HlTn5T x,",.,- nental 1, ' GLORIA BUll.l)l?'r:Mr ! m onmn st.;o.,2 H. R. DOANI 3: COMPANY ACCOUNTANT! MI drool (horn Sh. Charlottetown im - Box 241 . (,5 arms 1-. iinci-iirimgw st. John's, Amimfltv i Glasgow and Truff- CUIIII 8: CO. NJ Aoootm-i-Am-s ShBl'llr00k”v V cu Iottel0'”' "'l'eirrh""” I 9