PAG! POUR -rm: GUARDIAN. CHARIDTTETOWN jannunn I 9. 1131 THE GUARDTAN Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Pnblllhlnl Co. Editor and Ilnnogtng Director. Inn L 513119"- Auoetnto Editor. Frank Wilker- CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward lduid Ilka til! 38"" "Tho ntrongost memory lo woakor than tho wocakort ink". CBABLOTTETOWN MONDAY. JAN. 4. 1954 Janus, Guardian IT The Gates In ancient Roman myth010E.V J3nU5- ft?” whom the first month in the calendar is named, was a very important deity indeed, ranking second only to the great Jupiter himself. He was the author of all the use- ful arts and the guardian of 28195. fl00I'S. and corridors. None could P359 W9” 9" route to heaven. without his knowledge and consent. No undertaking could prosper that lacked his prior approval: none could fall that had it. Even the rising and set- ting of the sun depended on his benevolence. and the changing of the seasons was in his hands. His having two faces-one looking forward. the other backward-meant that nothing could ever escape his notice, He was the all-knowing. the all-seeing, and, within his province. the all-powerful, I The myth, like the god that gave it life. has been dead for many centuries, but some of its svmholisni has survived. in .laiiLiai'y the thoughts of all are directed towards the future: there is much speculation on what the new year may have in store for the. human family. Will events this .V9al' forward or hinder man's search for the worl(l of his heart's desire? This is the perennial question of the human spirit. And yet. because the old year has. only lately been laid away to await the Judgment 0 historv. it, too. merits thoughtful consider- ation. Only as nations and individuals ' learn from the records of the dH.V mid years that are gone can they hope. to brim: vigorous and coiistriictive thoutzlll i0 llf'r"i1' on the days and years that are yet to be. T-fixes on Knowledge One hundred years ago. after a vigor- ous campaign by writers, publishers and year is being celebrated as the ”Universal political leaders, Britain relieved news- papers from the onerous duty on adver- tisements and t.hus made it possible for many daily newspapers to he established. Up to that time only a few organizations could afford to publish daily papers. Lead- ers in the campaign for the free flow of ideas were Charles Dickens, Benjamin Dis- raeli, William Gladstone and Richard Cob- den. Now Britain has joined 16 other nations in applying the Unesco-sponsored intema- tional agreement which abolishes import duties on a wide range scientific and cultural materials. Books, newspapers, magazines. works of art, music scores, articles for the blind. are exempt, as are ncwsreeis. educational films, sound re- cordings and scientific equipment if con- signed to approved institutions or organ- izations. Cambodia, Ceylon, Cuba, Egypt, France. Israel, Laos. Monaco. Pakistan, Philippines, F21 Salvador, Sweden Switzer- land, Thailand. Vietnam and Yugoslavia have already ratified the treaty and 14 other nations have signed it. The importance of thus freeing knowl- edge from being penalized by the tax col- lector can hardly'be too greatly emphasized. "The freedom of the press" is not merely for the benefit of publishers. It is vital to the growth of civilization in its widest sense. UNESCO is rendering a most valu- able service to the world by carrying on its fight. against taxes on knowledge. Tit: Foreign The current business reviews in the Un- ited States reveal the highly interesting States foreign trade no longer exists--even though the Marshall Plan is finished. In- stead of the United States exporting some 3:5 or 526 billions more than it. imports in goods or services, the year 1953 will find a favorable balance of about 3i1 billion on trade account. Due to the overseas mili- tary expenditures of the United States- whlch are justifiable -wholly on military grounds-the invisible. items offset the trade surplus. So that in 1953 for the first time in many years the overall accounts of the United States with the world will be ' in balance and the so-called "dollar gap" will have been eliminated. Most of the reviews point out that there is nothing stable or permanent in this con- dition. Trade fluctuatlons. United States military "expenditures abroad. will be gov- erned by politlcal and not economic, con- siderations. The importation of goods into the United States is tending to rise while U. S. exports are meeting much stiffer com- . petition. , I .DW.wwnmmu9n in ,Wuhinz- C tariffs: fact. that the chronic.unbalance in United If is important in these circumstances to I ton is Republican not Democratic: that by tradition it tends to high tariffs, not low that it is the first Republican Ad- ministration since the disastrous ones of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover from 1920 to 1932. But experience is B. stern teacher and there are good grounds for believing that the lessons of the Fordney-McCumber and the Hawley-Smoot tariff eras have been learned. "It must be conceded,” says the Winni- peg Free Press. "that with this rise in im- ports and stiffer competition abroad there are strong stirrings of protectionism in the United States. The. clamor for higher tar- iffs, quotas or other restrictions on fish and farm products and other articles is rising. ,Equally it must be conceded that domestic policies in the United States-like parity prices-tend to make high tariffs if not outright prohibitions difficult to avoid. But there is evidence, also, of great restraint, of a desire not to impose higher fariffs. on lthe part of the Fiisenliower Adniinistration. iThe recent decision on oats is a case in lpoint. , ”Thus it will be seen that the Unitedl lstates is entering upon a critical period. testing time in terms of economic policy.l For the first time in many years, the Un-v, ited States trade is in balance. Foreign countries. in 1053. will actually have ac-3 ycumulaicd some -30.2 billions of U. S. dollarsl i-due largely to private capital ;tions. l ”If the United States Administration and the Congress will resist short-sighted fappeals by selfish groups and adhere firm- ly to a policy of freer trade, then the major economic problem confronting the free world will be resolved and 21 new era ofj o tra ilsa C- prospcrity'-not an inflationary boom but real pr0speriiy-- will begin. That wisdom and courage to see the way and to pur- -sue it will not be lacking at Washington. will be the hope of the free world in the ,months ahead." EDITORIAL NOTES The after-Clii'isiiiias sales are ali'eadj-W, ywcll under uay. giving slioppcrs :1 cliance for bargains before the stores take in ventory. Once again the first full week of the yWeek of Prayer". Christians of many! denominations will be attending services' throughout the week. i o at at The number of contributions to Civil lservice superannuation funds increased by 160,000 at the first of the year, requiring lthe Department of Finance to establish'a night shift as well as increasing staff. Un- der the new Act virtually all civil servants qualify for superannuation. I O O i Renewed British investment in Canada 0f' educational, is recognition indeed of the high pii()spects.,.,,,,1,, lot this country in the years to come. It isl idesirable, of course, that as far as possible ;Canadians should provide the capital for lexpansion but the rate of development can ,be considerably increased by money from ltbe United States and Britain. 1 i Sir Isaac Pitman. inventor of the sys- ,t.cm of shorthand known by his name, was ,born this date. 1813. While teaching lschool, he published his "Stenographic 3 Sound Hand” and later gave himself up en- ltirely to the work of spreading the system, ithere propounded. In 1842 he commenced ,the "Phonetic Journal" which he- carried ,on until his death in 1897. He was a' strong supporter of spelling reform. I O I Because the Canadians were serving in various theatres and under other commands their part. in the Great Invasion which led :70e&i&mwL ............, FROM FAI.l.IMA('HI'S 'I'liey told lll(':”lif;ra(illlllS, the:., told me you were dead, They brought me bitter news to bear and bitter tears in riled. Arthur Newsychmnicle. I Wepl as I remembered how nltvn you and l l Had and sent him down the sky. 1 And now that thou art lying, my, dear old Carian guest. A handful long ago at rest, Still are thy plcasaiil voices. thy, iiizlitiiigalrx. :iu;il.c; lnvzilh. he taketh all but thcm he cannot take. t1l)Oia6Qs33te:z32EUo3:C(Q11C83RL81'9 1 Old Charlottetown l (And P. E. I.) ; B()N.'V'li'l”h' TO THE REAR "On Friday last Dr. Mcculloch, from Plctou, commenced his course of ten lectures on various branches of experimental phil- osnphy, in the Court House, which was crowilcd in almost every part where n sight of the he obtnincd. The lecture was delivered last ning, to, if possible, A still more crowded audience. The subject, the prop:-rti estiiig exp:-rinicnls on the piimp. Such is the interest cited by those lectures. eral young men over from Pictnu to attend them. "it is but lcctuul cliariicter of the to slzite. that A very portion of the midi:-nces was com- fair posed of elegantly dressed feninleslneykjavlk when the wireless On this part of the subject a cor-3 orator of the plane fell ill respondent has suggested, that as iuslicn tn the intol-, sex . Sydiicy large prn-loniergc-.nr-y member of lsays an observer. MM mo dun mm talkingllllloblf may be cute for the small of grey ashes, long,,-Winnipeg TTlbll11E away,iii:-avlci'-t.li;m-air machine to leave ihe ground under its own power. ”'wlll'"l'l J”ll"m"'C0l'93'isiiicn solidly established as a means i of lfmind the airplane a weapon of es of matter, was illustrnl-l liuve ed by several beautiful and inter-,tlie Vikings close to us. air today in many ways seems neigh- ex-.horly that sev-lncighbnrly have even cnmcwvhcn at Cape the ladins linve had but few op- porlunltics of nllcuiilng public, lectures. lhc) arc pinbably not aware, that on such occasions it is always customary for those who persist in keeping their bonnets on to occupy the buck seats. A word to the wish is cnniigh. We trust that common sense will show them the propriety of thlt ar- l"angemr-ni." -Royal Gazette. Sept. I, 1835. to the liberation of Europe has not, per- haps, received the attention in general war histories that it might otherwise have done. Major G. K. Bell has in part rectified the ,situation by publishing his "photographic ,essay” on the role played by the 1st Cana-. ldian Army from the landings in Normandy,l through France, Belgium, Holland, into' Germany, across the Rhine and on to thel final surrender. "Curtain Call" depicts thel wartime. scene and in many cases the same locality and people five years later. It is at very fine memorial to a-great army. 5 O "I see humanity as made of millions of precious individuals, highly individual in- dividuals; no two of them in the least alike," Col. Robert I-lenriques, farmer and novel- ist, said recently on the BBC. "And each individual has, in modern jargon, a 'trl- partitel relationship. Each . individual, whether he likes it or not, is closely re- lated to all the other individuals, -which is what we call Society. And each, wheth- er he likes it or not, is related to natural forces--to sunrise and the change of the seasons, to the processes ,of birth, growing old and death. And each. whether he likes it or not, is vitally related to supernatural forces, which I call God-and which oblige The Flow Of Time (New SYorl(O'Timcsl With 'December the VHF 1”!” out, the year as we know and tally it in numberl. Yet no WIT in ever bounded by the stars and no clock ever did more than time away the moments, one year to the. next. Perhaps the forefathers did it better, by numberinz "19 yearsiaccording to the reasons. springtime and sprouting or their start, winter behind, A whole new year ahead. the equinox the divid- ing line. But as we move away roni the land we move away from both solstice and equinox- nave tn the nlmanrics. and we not our tally-point. arbitrarily. So the new year came it? ll!!- tern liizht and snow-gleam, and at the depth or winter. And yet. such is the lag of our day-tnlbc in: the depth of winter. the shortest day, is already put. Not the depth of cnlrl or snow. but "19 depth of darkness. From here on the sun climbs slowly. day by tiny. toward the zenith and eventually the north. And there. of course, is the conventional symbol. ,fhe change. the turn toward spring once more. - There, too. is the substance of continuity. which governs life.Tor even at the depth of winter snow the icy hillside and the cold val- ley are quick with their own life. waiting. Not the death of win- ter, but the waiting life which in due time and process will be touched by spring again. For the years are more than A pattern, re- curring A! the seasons; they are him superiiatiirallv to recognise that this, - .a-y-o 1-). thing is wrong, and this thing is rightfl .-in rnflfmsnt", for all the com- pulatiuii-", and tie nurnlwr them in bits ,only that we may more . . Reaching Out :1; Notes Bx whore there's a will. there's oi-I ways a lot of willing listeners.-l St. Thomas Tinies-Journal. Big families make happy homorn; At least they, reduce the dull moments.-Port These bathrobes with a cowboy boyfbul. not exactly suitable as a costume for one the Three Wise Men in the Sunday school pageant. this week the flew the first Fifty years ago Wright Brothers The anniversary found flying long transport: and, loss happily. par and an agency of destruction and chaos. But. the progress of tlll'Cl'11ft in half a century has been one of the marvel: of all time. Starting from the primitive ma- chine in which daringly the Wrights flew we have seen It re- markable change in design, it startling increase in speed and safety and durability, to the sleek and stirring monsters of today. -Ottawa Journal lecturerl In-liiiul. nfnr in the North Af- secoiid t lnntic, eve-l. little known as to seem .out. of once was so rcinote and this world, but air travel and the strategy of hemispheric defence. brought the island nation of Iceland to Cape Breton. It was a deed the other day Bretoner hailing from River Denys and on the De- partment. of Transport staff at Airport. filled in as an the crew to up- and was brought. to ti l10!DlNll ll"!- -Sydney Post-Recprd. of an Icelandic plane going Arthur Mann. blacksmith of Chalf in England. hammers out horoeaboea on I to!!! 350 905" old in that Kentlah vtllue. But the tone is cooling. "I am luck! to get. one horse 3 week." II!!! Blacksmith Mann. The same awry could be told of the old forges in southern Oh-laltlb. Where will you my-1 them today? when will you now come across I lturdy smith shoeing I, heavy horse? There re- main two blaokamltlha hero in. London but they iihoe hunters and light. homes. The maznmunt Pet- chea and Clyde: have duoppoued before the onruah of the auto- mobile and the tractor. Tho ll-I" ages flourish. The arivtla cool. -London Free Press. The tank of uoeulru tho vlluoo of women and making compari- sons between ono nation and ori- other II a dangeroul bit of bull- ness, but some observers have shown the courage to do some in- vestiiziiting on the subject of the status of women in modern Io- cioty. It. in perhaps I good thing that tho survwl worn modo W women and not by men who might be called upon to account for thelr interpretations -in their own homes. The first assessment. has been made by I German journal- ist. Anna Han. who compare: the women of America with thou In Germany. she points out that in Germany the women must abide by up-old traditions. which has the effect. of keeping them invin- lhle and inaudible when import- ant decision: are to be mado. In Gdrmany I woman is swore that she is "only I woman" and that she is expected to behave her- self redately and go through her a .t.hoeo of Senator Aoelttne. The Way I i day'I activities as though they were all duties. On the other hand, American women enjoy---or at least demand-unlimited fros- dom.-Saint John Te'lezraph-Jour- nal. Provinces Galore (Ottawa Oltizeii) When, in the opting of 1949, the coat. of arms of Newfoundland was chiseled into the stone of the Peace Tower arch taking its place beside those of nine other pro- vinces, most. people doubtless thought it. would be a. long time before any further artistic effurt.s of the kind were required. Perhaps it will be. yet. the intervening years have been filled with pro- posals for creating still more pro- vlncee. some then are who dream of Canada's domains extending to z THE when Pu-idoro wu alono in tho house of Eplmothua, lo the story goes, she could not keep away from the room which contained the forbidden box. She said to her- Ielf: "All corridors and passages lead hither and all doors but open into it. Yon mysterious chest at- tract: and fascinates me. Would I knew what there lies hidden! But the oracle forbids." Anyone who ventures to look into I new year-and who doesn't? --in in I similar position. Perhaps it in just as well. Foreknowledge does not always bring happiness and our minds are so built that they thrive on mystery and antici- pation. For all that. the prophets will prophesy and the aeers will tell what: they see. In the few spare moments I have had since Christmas I have been searching newspaper and- magazine reports of speeches made by statesmen, politicians, diplo- mats, and plain after dinner ora- tors. for hints and predictions which, taken together. might indi- cate a trend of thought as it con- cerns the prospects for 1954. So far as X can make out they all add up to something like the follow- ing: - The possibility of global war will remain. but it seems it little lies likely than it was, say. ,twelve months ago. This latter ,vlew, however, in conditioned by ls!) many ifs. ands. and buts. that ,it doesn't differ very much from what is commonly referred to as wishful thinking. And tht-re'is al- most unanimous agreement for the view that any real understanding between Russia and the West would be nothing less than A miracle. Apparently. the best that even the most optimistic can predict in that this year will see slight progress in that direction. The Korean-story will remain much as it is now. There will be no peace settlement: on the other hand there will be no actual re- sumption of hostilities. Panmun- jnm will retain its dubious dis- tinction as a base for negotiations that do not end. Of course, a determined. all-out Communist thrust in Indo-China or some oth- er Asiatic area would change the picture overnight but. apparently. this isn't considered probable. though no one will come out with the categorical statement that it. won't happen. In fact. categorical statements on any subject have pretty much (one out of fashion. I O The idea of the European De- fence Community will continue to experience hard sledding, chiefly because of France's reluctance to support an all-European army in- cluding German units. some ex- ports. and a multitude of non- The Passing Scene By observer NEW Franco. In that can, no it ll be- lieved, the year will witness the removal of all restrictions which hove kept West Germany in a demilitarized suite. The French won't like that but they will have no one to blame but themselves. The Russian: won't like it either; what they will do about it, if any- thing, is one of the secrets in "yon mysterious chest". i Personally, I find it lI1CeFESiill;.: to note the predictions of various economic prophets. only I few months ago there was a near un. animlty among them that no major depression was indicated in lite foreseeable future. Even now most of the predictions are marked by optimism. Here in Canada My. Howe leer nothing to worry about. Export markets will continue to be good and trade generally will stay at A high level.' Mr. Gardiner, always an npti. mist. feels that. the farm outlook to bright. (The farmers them- selves seem to take a less cheer. ful view: they don't see how rap- idly declining farm prices can indicate continued prosperity.) Mr, Gregg. the Labour Minister, sees no serious unemployment in the offing. In short, lllt: ninjority opinion among the economists and cabinet ministers indicates A good year. although there will be mild "recessions" here and there. 0 O 0 However. there is "lwnys som.-. thing to spoil the f n. Only the other day an English economist of distinction this name escapes me at the momenti rose in his place to suggest that all this talk about continued prosperity is 5 case of whistling in the dark. A: he sees it. nothing short of ii miracle-which he doesn't expect -can kcop an all-out, old-fashion- depression from getting under way some time this year. Well. wo shrill sec. Meanwhile, it wouldn't do anybody any harm to consider a word of counsel at- tributed to Plato: "As for the future, it is not to be treated lightly nor with fear, but we mun approach it with calm reason." book ya the Lord, oil yo meet. of the olrtin. whldx have wrought. his Judgment; sock righteousness. seek Inoolmeonz it may be ye shall be bid in the day of Hie Lord's anger. OLYMPIC TIMD Ancient Greek ohi-nndlogy was measured in olymplads-four-your experts. seem to be of the opinion that the plan will be rejected by cycles corresponding to the Olym- the tales of the Caribbean. Otolieis are most intent. on rcmoulding closer to the heart's desire the Canada that now exists. These latter include advocates of plans to extend for northward the boundaries of both Alberta and British Columbia; to give away the entire Yukon and North-West Territories to the four Western provinces (this idea was put foi- ward by senator W. M. Aoeltine the other day); to carve a. new province out of north-western On- tario and call it "Aurora"; to take a large part. of the mid-covntinem tal mineral belt. and tom the pro- vince of "Pro-Oumbrta," possibly with its capital It. Flln Flon: to give the Nonh-West. Territories provincial status; and to turn the island of Montreal lniat) I separate province independent of Quebec. This lut: suggestion was debated by Montreal's city council not ion: Mo and turned down. Its sponoro probably didn't expect my picturesque way of drawing at- tention in growing dlsattsfacttnn in the metropolis with treatment accorded ft. by the provincial cov- ammmt. Dtooottofoctlon. - tndeod. luppltes the boy to some of the other plan. The Auroruna feel they are toorrcmote from Queen's Park and mould be governed from Port Arthur or Fort William. The Pro-Oambadana on quite convin- ced that then ore too many wheat former: and not enough hard!-root: Inlrion in ithe legis- lature of Arbor-tin. sukntchew-in and Manitoba, and that the in- tereota of tho uorthlond an eon- oequonoly being neglected. But discontent dool not explain In Albarto-3.0. eztonllon idea, or There are grand tiriperlallotic f ' Little to hoard nowadoyo ollout a lthane which involved not. hav- ing rnom Canadian provinces, but fewer. This was the unification of the Iireo pntrlo provinces: its main aim. economy in adminis- tration. The proposal goes back even beyond the term of th:- Aumn propodtlon. nad wu moot anally dtoeu-od . during the troitled 'ltilI-Ion. But. 5 primary obstacle was that no one could agree when the capital should be. The lama difficulty may stand in the may of It united Moritimcs. also talked about from Mme to time. 1114- not htonotinl point a- hmit the ourruit can of plnnii for the new provinces in not so much whether they have any chance of ouoeon but tho further evidence they give of an expanding nation. suffering from inevitable growing polnl. VITAMIN! POI. Ill!!! euily comprehend. A year noun mi end, and we know it because we have numbered the years; and another year has just begun. so we tally up and make our little summaries. and in n fl1?L'.SLlT(! come In Liiuu the flow uf lime. the span of life. - ,'Auota-olln (OP) -Air- rioul isl ocloluoto in Australia report. that loaned to sheep flocks during dry seuons may be run- duced by nkninlltorlnc o spray :or'it.nlnlng vitamin A to sheep and lnmbing ewel, Under normal con- dlttom green feed In the natural source of thin vitamin. L- other treatment. but they chose al PROFESSIONAL CARDS Gander & Huszurd H. J. Mubon. R.O. Ill Grafton Street Money to Loon Collection Chas. R. McQuuld BA. IAJBIBTEB. SOLIOITOB. NOTARY. nu-. llutorn Trust. Building CHAlIl.01'rE'l'0WN J. A. McGuigan BABBIBTEB. SOLICITOR. Eta. NOTARY. Eta. - Currie Building MucPlioo & Truinor B. I. MILPHEE. IL. Q.O. E. SOBIEBLED TBAINOK. B.A cum.-in-r A. GAUDET. on 1.1.: Ontometrm omimu Ind soueico" Mont-cue. I It I- MP”! :0 5”” 3” Phone DI Cuudlnn Built o F ... I- m......C........ A. Waltlien Gander. hm M”""95”" & LLB. F091" 3 ice . sou tto . Et BABIISTEB. souicrrou. rm. ""K"& 31.f”LLf'Q,(-A” PN"'P' 5'" 5'"! 0. 3. rosrim. LLB. 4. Man: on City and Farm Properties 150 Richmond street Charlottetown. P.E.l. Mutlieson. Poako 8: Nicholson ' A. W. RIATHESON. Q.C. A. 8. PEAKE. B.A.. LL.B. JOHN P. NTCHOLSON. LLB Bu-rloferl. Etc. Collection: - Money To Loan 1'15 Grafton Street. Palmer 8: Huslum A. J. IIASLAM. B.A., LL11 Barrister. Etc. Bank of Non Scottn Chamber! Charlottetown. P. E. L M. Albun Former. QC. LLB. . BA. Borrlotor and Solicitor Bank of Common-.o Building Charlottetown Money to boon J.. Elmer Blanchard. B.A. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. OTARY, Etc. 135 Queen st. Phone 47-12 ”'"""”"'- 9” i MONEY T0 LOAN Dr. W. R. Carson Gordon E. MacMillun. 9-'.ll.5?."3f.?.3?.'3 3-A-- "-3-- cnannornrnwn BABBIBTEII. souorron. rm. Dial 6631 201 Prince at lln Prlnca L- ngsbarlottofoun .Cf?...:-:4 Frederic A. Large. 9-C- Borrlour. solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Donna: Hiitldlnl Charlottetown. P. E. I. - loom on City and Firm Propertlel ' J. o?&W3.TJ7 OPTOMETBI ST IN lone Street Phone 8'" topporlto llovoro Hotel) WW?T::' Allison M. Gillis. LL.B. BABIIBTBB. SOLICITOII. Etc. III) llchmond BL - Chorlottkwwn Byron s T I n O Phonomo "' 6rr:nl:?disr' ' Dr. A. l.. Muclsuce Eyol Innalnod. Ginsu Hillel DENTIST Connor lone and Queen su. Dental X-Bay onto. mung Mu-llama HBO . l.iLOI:A BlJlLDl:: '' I1! Grafton t. om . - Or. it. A. Mociocliorn R O pain-in J. A. Currutliors. - - Donlll K-my OPTODIETIIIT ' Abovo OIIIIOMOIGIII Cllnlo III KUIIC It:-not Phone I87- an Quin st. Dill (Non to BIinpoon'I Anna!) Montreal, Quebec, I TUNIN- Kllllllul IJHO. III GPHI COMBO Phone 056'! - OMB IIANDOLPI-I W. ERMA P. bIlcl'I!I'll80lI. CA. other omen at llolllu. llontville, Liverpool. New Gluxmv. Ifonotulo Nanllwn. W H. I. DgA:lnI In CO:dN:'ANY MGDONALD. CIIRRIE I: CC. cum-nu Aooommun-o loin! John. Bhorbrooka. VIl!00'""- Charlottetown Edmonton. DIII B780 & IIANNINO CA I .v'iN'.i. McIF.NNA. C.A. P. 0. Bar Ml nlonoton. It John's. Amherst. Dartmouth. Turn and Comer llrool