_....--.~.l.-4.4. _ . g _..\A-,,_.~,,,,,__,4q .-_,__ 4-1.’; n1‘. ~=. y; ww- ~s~.r;¢5zvrs~s1ser--r - _ yfisfq-‘yy- o‘ --~-PrcmieriMacMillanz ~ ‘ sue Isrslngllclllllesnad III’) IT-"IICIII up see yuss ill llvslss vqfl. Consuls and saruauav. JUN! as. ma. IIACLEAN OF DUART The many descendants of the l-lobr ridean pioneers in this l“ vince will have road with interest s. brief reference, some weeks ago. to the celebration at Duart Castle, Isle of Milli, of the hundredth birthday an- nlversary of Sir FitllRcy Donald Maclean of Dual-t, chieftain of the Olen Maclean. The London Week- ly Times features the event as of special interest. Clansmen, it re- ports, were in attendance from all par-ts of the United Kingdom, from the Dominions and the United states, from France and Scandin- avia. It was a gala event. While the aged chief aat in an upper room, the hundreds of clansmen drank loyal toasts ln his honour. Each re- ceived a portion of a huge birthday cake which’ was adorned with s hundred candles. In the evening‘ a. bonfire was lit on a. ‘high promon- tor-y in Mull, and there was a fire- worb display. The King and Queen sent cordial birthday greetings, and two volumes, ung the signat- ures of nearly 4,000 Maeleans in all parts of the world, were presented. Of the recipient of these tributes the Times says: Sir FitnRoy Mac- lean is one of the most romantic ngures in Bcotiand today. When he was seventeen his commission in the 7th Dragoon Guards was slgn-_ ed by ths Duke oi’ Wellington, and heiscnoofthsfew survivorsof those who took part in the Crimean campaign. He was awarded the lebsstsxxrl Medal for conspicuous bravery at the Biege of Bebastopol. Twenty-Hues, your Iso he zcrbcm- ed his youthful pledge to recover and rmore iDusrt Castle, the ances- trsl home of the Macleans, which for more than :00 years had been out of thepcssenion or his family. The ‘llimu publishes a fine son- net by the Celtic poet, Shane Leslie. “lb The Maicleen of Duart," which well merits quotation: Old Driart. chief of all the wu- r-icr clan, Who hold the bonosrod Highland name Maclesn, . Upon the rocks of Mull live out your reign By right of Chieftains; and W"! 0f years o-ctliving all you; ha"; splendid man Amid the mosseshs manila: aI the main, Wlhoss Bebridssu Ides still we: and wsns shes Northern Tide or begun. v 1nd now a hundred of tbs years yo! know, t d the wsr-atoineriozeldo “w. yesterday. You saw he Alma ‘ To men who died four-score of years ago. Your youth was bravely tempered l! The sqns Thin en and s led long-quenched Russian firs: Crimean snow] JIDMITTEDLY FALSE ‘Ibo present Liberal propaganda bout “a balanced budget" ., would hrry more conviction if ft had not View? been exposed as a piece of rheap political elsptrap. The ex- ' pcsuro occurred at the last session of the Legislature. when Premier MacMillan cited a Patriot report of a Liberal political meeting at York last November, in which Mr. Les was quoted as saying: ‘The did- ference between the two Govern- ments was that the Liberal Gov- ernment had balanced their bud- gets." We quote the discussion which followed: ' Mr. Lea: "That was the differ. once." “What do You think of that?" Mr. Lea: "On ordinary account, of course." Premier _MacMll1an: "It says noth- ~- lng about ordinary account. It rs- Dflftc you as saying that the Liberal Government "had balanced their 51158983’ Is that statement cor- sect?" Mr. Lea: "On ordinary account. You should give it in full." Premier MacMillan: "I am giving ft in full." Mr. lea: "Then it is not correct." Pimnier MacMlllanz "O1 course ftisnotoonochlsmjustdrawing you; attention to ths- statement, which purports to be your remarks and which appeared in your party During the four years d Ilbdrsi rule, I wonder how many ‘balanced budsets‘ my hon. kind hsdl” Mr. Les: "On ordinary account we hsd three." (Laughton) "will Qw-hQr-bisnd 1st 8s filows V017 well that the wilvrts of tlh meetings do not say one-tenth of. whit we say." (loud llushter.) .4’. llembsr: "That msku it r0 press. had nothing further to say. But how does he, or his deputy Ml‘- Qlmpbcll. explain the fact that the same misrepresentation ap- PM-Pa as Plank l in the Liberal Pit-PW platform? WHY FINLAND PAYS On June 15‘ war debt payments were due to the United States and. as has happened regularly at six- month intervals for a year-or two. no country paid up except Finland. Once again, notes the Winnipeg Free Press, as regularly at six- month intervals, Finland is getting bouquets in the American press as the only honest country in a. com- pany of welchers. There was even a news item from Washington the other-nay announcing gravely that the United states senate, in recog- nition of Finland's performance, had voted for a new $800,000 Amer- ican ‘ buildimg at l-Ielslng- fors. Thetrue explsfltion of Finland's unique with regard to war debts, says the Free Press, has, as a matter of fact, nothing to do with honor, integrity or any other moral issues. Finland has practical- ly shut out American goodsby tar- iffs. Finland used to buy more than it sold in the United States, but latterly it has reversed that posi- tion. Now it sells more than it buys and annually has a balance of three toslxmilliondollsrsowingtoltin American funds. All Finland has to dofopayitstr-lflingwardebt in_ stalmsuts is refrain from collecting about $00,000 of that balance each year. lit simply uses rather less than 10 per cent of its trading credit to wipe out the war obligation. All fire big war debtors, lmflud. ing Great Britain, France, Italy, Bclalum and Poland, have a trad- lus debit u» the United States with ycv-r- They buy far more from Americans than they sell to tlwm- Ouuuequenuv the! cannot. like Finland. use a credit owing to them in New York to cover the debt instalments. 0n the contrary, may mill- ncy out uumvy to square their commercial accounts. ‘EDITORIAL NOTES ‘With the schools all closed, and Dllmhlon Dav hm. vacation has ' really begun-escort for the politi- cians. _ --_-— The lady visitors from away are "loudintheirprslsesofever-ything in Prince Edward Island, including the weather, which has been on its best behaviour. In Italy under the dictatorship there’ ls no opposition and no public opinion. People have to say what they must, not what they may; consequently the Dictator becomes sadly inflated and tyrrunical. Hence an unjust war of conquest seems inevitable, in spite of the league of Nations and all other safeguards. Japan left the league to invade China. and Italy threatens to do tiresome if the L-easlic or any member of it, interferes to prevent her invasion of Ethiopia. 1i decree has just been -‘ by the German cabinet making all Germans liable to six months’ ser- vice ln building roads and canals. military drilling, farm work and the like. Th» labor conscription law, while it mentioned no age limits, announced the class of 1915 would be called first and volunteers 1B years old or older accepted. It pro- vlded the total rbbbr scrvifi: strength on Sept. 30. 1936, ‘ " not exceed 200,000. rmcaninl the first class will finish its service within the year. A fav- ourite Nazi project for com- batting unemployment, the labor service also gets much work done opportunity for putting men in uni- form. Hitherto 1r had been could voluntary but during the last year it has been virtually compulsory. Next week bids fair to be an un- usually full one socially and other- wise, It begins with Dominion my celebration and the diamond lub- ilee celebration of the town of Bum- ide. Governor Curloy of Mull»- churetts will be here and be ben- Powell. the World ohm Scout and Guide relpectively will be hers on Wednesday. have s ~ reception cheaply and offers an additional m, quetted. um: mo us: Bsdm- 10mins .1 l bronre ting Boulogue harbour. This will be in curious contrast to the lofty monument on the Whnereux cliff, the Colonne de la Grands Arrnee, erected on the spot where Napoleon sat in 180d with 191.000 troops. glaring day after day at the faint blue shadow of England don.) If we would grow, we must for- ever he discarding. Everthlng in nature keeps shedding, and renew- ring, and from her we get so many of our cues. Our ideas change. Our mode of living. Our thoughts of yesterday look strange to us today. No one can happily say who does not move, who does not grow, and who does not daily lighten his baggage or renew his rations. But there are a. few things that each of us must keep. We must keep our values to the very last. The things we say-creations from the seat of our mind, we give to our descen- dents. Sir Robert Borden told Carrion N. Y., reporters that he stopped giving interviews when he retired from public life. Which is a. remin- der that he was generous with interviews when 1n public life. No Prime Minister that Canada. has had enjoyed more cordial relations with newspapermen or had a, more intelligent conception or the value 0i’ those relations. Incldently, Sir Robert has more than once testified first not once in his career was his confidence with a newspaper- man brokem-Ottaws-loumal. Mflor B. T. Reynolds In The Spectator says: The real compari- son today ls not with pro-War times but with the era. after the Napole- onic Wars. If we had the une loy- ment statistics for those imes, computed on the same basis as they asetoday; we might well find that the percentages would. not be very different. There is a. story told of some unemployed men engaged on road-making under a Public Works schemsInIOiliLThoycameona. stone tablet embedded in the foundations of an old road. The in- srription mead: “This road was built by the unemployed in 16." It now seems quite probable that vie shall have in the Presidential campaign of 1996 a Republician candidate (the field is still open) carrying the harm of return to a greater degree of individual initia- tive; the candidate of s. new party (perhaps Huey Long) calling for much greater Government regula- tion of financial affairs to the end that the nation's wealth may be more" evenly divided and that a. Democratic candidate (undoubtedly Franklin Roosevelt) attempting to steer a. course between the two. Facing such c. choice, which road will the American people take?- Burlingrom IPree Press. King George has been the re- cipient of many richly deserved compliments during his Jubilee year. but none more aptly phrased than an appreciation voiced during the course of an address by Rev. John Gardner in the Cathedral of the Juicer-nation, long Island. N. Y. His reference was as follows: "King Georglevofililnglandisaman of rich and rare sanity and‘ a great deal 0f his power comes through his sagaeity in knowing what to say, when to say it and when not to say anything." This summarizes an ideal which it would profit all to follow-Brandford Expositor. Woodchoppers and farmers ln the mountains and hilly regions around Wuhu, Chins, are being worried by roaming tigers, while bandits are also praying on them. What with rebellion, wild animals, wilder men and invasion, the lot of the __ aceful Chinese is not at all enviable. Those slmpleions who believe that British Fascism. is more virtu- ous than the German brand would do well to ponder the correspon- dence. published in the German Press, between sir Oswald Mosley and Julius stretcher, chief Nazi anti-Semite. In reply to a telegram from streicher, sir Oswald is 1e- ported to have said: “I value your message . . . . The forces of Jewish corruption in all great lands must be defeated before the future of Europe can be ensured in justice and peace . . ." If this message is an. incorrect report, Sir Oswald ought to disclaim it at once. If it is true, then the British people will know their manr-Londczi Sunday Referee. A membe of ihe Shanghai Municipal Council, who was for- merly head of the Shanghai Rotary Club and the representative of a Canadian insurance company, de- clares that the action of the United States in raising the world price of and cursing Nelsom-Tnith (Lon- oyp... sass-bum I8 CANCER. REALLY _ LINCQEABIQNG! when We study the figures show- ing the number of cases o! cancer that occurred in former years with the nunmer tc-day it shows that a greater number dis from cancer to- day than ever before in the worldfis history. It comes as a surprise. then to learn that notwithstanding these figures, cancer is nctreally increas- ing when we compare the number 01' 980911: in the world who are at the “cancer age" with those of this age thirty-five years ago. Thus we road in the Jouhial of the ll ‘ Medical Association gthatr the Vienna investigator Dr. Peller whohas made an extensive study of the question states that the "apparent" increase in concer ls due to the marked increase in the lwrvsrage" age of the population. The progress cf hygiene which has greatly reduced the number of eases of small pox, typhoid and cholera, and lessened the death rate in tuberculos‘ and children's dis- eases, has broirght about an increase ln the number of people who live up to and past middle age. These hyg- ienic methoda have increased the life span by fifteen years during the period of 1900 to 1935. In 1900 there were 135 persons more than 50 years old per thousand of the population; by 1980 the num- ber had iucreased to 205. This means then that there are now 80 more individuals in each one thou- sand who are at the cancer age than there were thirty or more years ago. The cancer age is middle age, 40 to 60, and the figures show that in 1901 to 1906 the number of deaths from cancer at the ago of 40 to 50 was about 15 to the thousand of population and in 1928-1929 the r was about 11. ln i901 to 1905 the number of deaths at the age of 50to 60 was about 4B and in 1928-1929 the number was about 40. Thus while the cause of cancer is unknown these figures show that the newer me“ ’ of examination which find cancer sooner than in previous years, and the present methods of treatment-X ray, rad- ium, and surgery-are preventing sn increase in cancer when the actual number of men and woman of cancer age is taken into consider- ation. These figures are encouraging and will stimulate work in seeking the cause of umcer. ‘ ' FRANCIS THOMPSON Amour; the meteors "and the stars he fllld. Seuklug for refuse in the cloudy ves Whamdsirdwtly bodies of the sods ub G - He cowered under golden arcm. traves Rllbed by the sun and shattered by the moon In timeless alteration, Down thg mk abysm, e Lucifer, he plunged; ch doubling soon, en’ He fled tc where the rainbows slender prism sprang from the crystal gates. And still he caught The 8111a muaulna of thOBQ patient Punting w-lth fear, earthward he fled and sought, ‘Ere 1 covent Garden and the Yet s. we in lsudanum, or soaring He heard’ the Voice behind him; "Come with me." —Arthur H. Ncthercot. Pinned on the a d man‘ lie dropped aeba fin. exciribrgirefn The muiorlly or drivers 0 al V081’ after year without ‘palatial?’ they are the conscientious people who realise their responsibilities and are not obsessed with the mania for speed nor with that dullkerous complex which expresses m“ i" "W mills of chances. The? are ever on the alert, guard- l"! against the possibilities of dillller‘, avoidink risks, never Pllllwlllc 1101101 y into situations l" which the unknown or unseen constitute a potential menace. In other words. they proceed on their WHY. with their eyoswide open and their minds centred on the regpgn. sible work in hand. - Hamilton spectator. silver to help three sire. __ states of the Union is worse than war and is putting China econo- cally the mercy of the Japanesaa-Moncton Transcript. The wealth which we gather and storeinthemind hasto betoken care of-even though there be no thi to break in and steal. The f thoughts which we think and then set aside, must be given com- psnicnship in the shape of other thoughts-and, like a garden of flowers, these thesis-lite must be drenched now and then - with beauty-to keep them fresh. r ‘On the fiftieth anniversary of "olice force of stsnz. ldm Medal of Honor was bestow: on seventy-five-yesr old lerdincli Mann. c0!!- mony was rrtfgmedt‘ in the square before en re populs, of Btans. As the medal was being dinner of scooters and Guidsrs and menu at the Canadian National Hotel, bobs followed by conferences of the respective movements. m serum», moraine. the ‘Chiefs farewell‘ Canada, and leave for the styria. the r_ assist-canonical!!!‘- Special Prices While attending liq 33g" drop in and save money at the I Macs. gflodl-AIQGIKYQOIC ‘s idnsyrll '... NIH 50c i "missed m oisu Gouge scuba dents cl .2211... The ,Qss1otb1nrrs Guardian I Ill anon-nulls n ill ' IIABI VSOUP Bin-In explanation of leader Lea‘; absence from ti: pogv-wgw the party organ says-J or Br cou- serve his energies for the W01‘! 0! government immediately the Liberal party is returned to power." _ This recalls two familiar axioms. One is the recipe to make hare soup it commancesr-“Flrst catch your halo." The other was the old lady. with a setting of eggs under biddy. counted eleven chicks, those would make eleven hens. these eleven grown up raising each eleven more chicks, 182 in all, then multiplied YBIIIY, VH7. I I R well when three weeks later she dil- covbred eleven bodied essa and uu chicks her dream of empire vanish- ed inio bitter and dark disappoint- ment. You can’t catch the hare without some form of sagacity or strategy, chaff is useless, and only about three weeks, the hatching period, will disclose that addled pol- itical egga, just like addled hen fruit, will not hatch chickens. I am. Sir. etc, HEN-HOUSE A REMINDER 0F THE WAR airy-An aftermath cf the great war was the tale of war lords shel- ved, and crowned heads dethroned- The war within the Liberal camp is symbollca-l. ' "First Lieutenants" dumped into the discard with relentless cruelty. Old generals who had borne the brunt of battle for years are cast aside and the newcomer stripliug forges into prominence as the Lenin or Trotsky of campaign. The first principle cf Communism is in tri- umph. McIntyre is out book. The master mind of the Maels- tyre Highway put into cold storage; the devlsor of Liberal policy to the Halifax Herald stripped of his pro tom leadership and reduced to the ranks. By the WHY, was this his punishment for letting the taxation cat out of the has? How the mighty are fallen. and the fledgciing elevated to high place. Such is fortune, or misfortune. I am. Sir, etc, SYMPATIIIBEB. CROOKED A8 USUAL Sin-To deceive its readers into a false conclusion, in respect ro its “Balance the budget" 108811118. m" Patriot publishes what it alleflefl i0 be the Liberal expenditure for three years of its terrn and then its fourth and rottencst year it dcliberatel)’ * to the l" 1t puts the expenditure of the lea combination at 0935.331"- T119 falsity of this is shown on p880 3 of their own Public Accounts where tbecorrectflzuresueshcwntobe $1,170,252.11. I have not the 1009 Accounts be- fore me but no doubt they will show the same eXlIBBeration. ln 1930, per the Patriot, the Lib- eral expenditure was $1.1'lB.834-85~ ‘Accounts arrow the expenditure t0 The truth, as shown by their own be $1,483,451.35. - In 1931 the Liberal crash admits $1,463,190.70 expended in their dyinil (election) year. This was the YB" c! Lea debt-overdraft of $1,300,000. which it bequeathed to the Stewart administration, in which about half- b million was squandered trying W buy up the people with their own money. The Patriot may think 1i- adroit, but the stupidity of trylrls l0 bluff this off as a Conservative Yell‘ jg m; palpable to deceive even a half baked heeler. ‘Bren it sets to the Stewart-Mac- yungn record, the bDolnQfnug that hits back so hard. In 1932 the amount droplled l0 $1,377.44“ 111 1933 to $1,392,275. and in 1934, U1,- 650317, an average of 81.443304 111 the tlléteeliears. or $15,000 less than the a year. And this reduction notwithstand- ing interest of 81,000. whim '3" conservative Government had to PW 0n the bee. overdraft-debt, and mployment relief 3261.574 ill 1932, and 0214.900 in 1034, and 01d age pensions $04,040 in 1033 and $113,188 in 1934, a total of extre- ordinary payment of which the lea Government were never called rr n to pay a dollar, amounting to} 14.- 600, plus three years interest on the Lea debt of 091.009- The Liberal figure manipulator organ takes particular care to dodge clear of these damning truths. I am, Bil‘. 0W. FINANCIEB. SINS OF OMISSION sin-There are a few serious omissions from the Liberal Platform. not too late yet to correct. .. The taxation scheme, forecast in the LePage interview with the re- presentative of the Halifax Herald before‘ he was deposed as the “First r‘ * ‘" The public are eager that Solomon in all his 8101'? W" . exuberant beauty, .At Sumr ' . (llcutresl GOING) iatsummsz-sclstlce we conscious mat-w some 111mm" n the whole world has gismrom the r1801‘ 0f winter sr_ u» secmlfliiy lick = picture of rich and soft which rt beggars s11 words describe. And assuredly no natu: scene llmned upon the artist: s canvas can for a moment compar- wm; m9 original. or arouse the some sort of feellllfl- 9119M b7 u» bbno of God. u. perfection c! rm hints and delicate harmony. the June landscape, fair as any bride adorned with her Jewels, R- bcua the not iacsuasc u! "it psslmist concerninl @110 W14” spread Panorama of the sccbfl Pm" sented to the aaW-"Bi-W-‘llsth and, beauty are in His Sanctuary. Earth * to heaven with that fullness of 310V which ‘ L m9 bond o; gbr- ‘ , between two worlds which rr is our privueso to share. It was at some such tum of the year that our Lord addressed nu hearers on the amen alum of a Galilean hill. J05“! hfld ha!“ called the poet of nature. He had 3n eye to the common objects of the field. rt was nut or the mm stupendous and innneasurably vast soenesoi’ nature that our Saviour chosstodlsccrrraeltwasnct of the awesome _ stars, nor of the grandeur the mountains, nor of the martini; tides (If-tilt! seas she Master soake- Tol-limtherewas noirade» 01‘ vocation, no task at the horwehold health or at the plough. M WW- lng nor planting in the field. 1101' neighborly converse at the familiar steam or Wellspring. 11° sweeping of the house- nor leaven- ing or baking of the breed. but Jesus noted and straightway turned into a most illumlnetlnfl and instructive vehicle of gpirfltudl f/Bhchilig. He unfolded the inner and the un- suspected glcry of common thinsfi. of those fanailiar oblectl which most of us simply take for granted or pass by with cursory 818K100 8-5 though they were too ordinary 1°!‘ more careful notice. lt WM wt of garden flowers Jesus spake, but 0f those meek and lowly blooms which cluster urwn Wcry W"? hillock or nestle in the brs-mbly ditches beside the hedgerow. 0r under the lightest touch of the simmer broeflfi. wave lllw. lowl- blcssoms in s. 31w)’ B9B- "Common ss light and air. 011d warmth and rain, . And all the daily hiessingsthet in vain woo us to gratitude; eurliflt '. that rapturou- born Ofailtheiulcyvlldlll" adorn Tirefnrltmlbceomofthekindl! soil, '4 Pleasant to ewes that acne. and limbs that mu." DOLLAR ‘DAY. i BARGAINS ‘Continued All i _' SATURDAY Henderson Cucimore i r r lifr. ‘lea lot says: A Use Best‘ Quality . TEA BRAHMIN plmuycrz“ PEKOE amiss was _¢,, Sold only in ted airtight pkgs. itnobbssamsndwtthall reverencebeit said. 9118* W!‘ His simple and sublime eloquence when discoursinx "PM! @119" homellst of wild blooms which brighten the waste plaoce of tho earth, and alike in the essence and attributes of each. ever silently combine to remind us that all they are and all they teach spring from the mind Divine? When the Master bade His hearers to, “con~ sidcr the lilies of the 11ers.’ He also added, “For "I say unto W" not arrayed like one of these." If that is mysticism somuch “WWW would that the world had more of it, and that we all could more ruuy realize its value, its ubldlflfl truth and its helpfirll impltfitlflfll- We may profess ourselves ndiffer- ent to the poetry 0f will“! ghmgg, It is very dubthil whether we molly are. Yet do we ever pause to think what a sadloas it would be were the 0061110! B0 framed upon emot and stiltcd lines. not to say the monotonous style, of the so-called utilities that. instead of this overflow of this wlearthil’ dwqmng-place cf ours did c du Y as a mechanical drill Iwllllli. l- workshop, a warehouse. I ‘@151 museum of material 8°58 ‘"7"’ able alone to our m!‘ gers and thiratsl We need bread. we must have bread to exist best l“, but man has never vet n able to live by mud 01°" erhment to uhderta-keya "refifivll" able defence i» - - The resolution adopted Item‘: 18th annual session asked I-ltlo adian naval forces be 1x10115899‘! “WWW, mug-icy for our see-borne commerce as well ac ill W199‘? our neutrality in 0°" °f w“ " sbvicurrosemrbaverwuoeluf. 146 Richmond Sh, Charlottetown J j _} Lif Insurance Gives the 0lri Man You Will Be Some llay a Square lleal The Great-West Life ls the Cildlllplilll 0f Thrift and the Guardian of thousands of Canadian homes. There is a “Great-West” Policy to meet every need-Family and Business protection, Educational, Retirement Income or, Pension and ‘Annuities. - Consult our nearest Agent or or call on rnvrmirirr a 00., umun Established 1812 '_ Provincial Managers A Lower Queen Street Cllllrloiifiwwl i. E. R. BR 09W Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness’ and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate.- Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis tween other nations. in “mm” ebb with the bmi forces of Great anuub 011d u» other m- minions." \ to learn the details o! this plan w gct-rlch-culck by adding more taxes to the le I>¢°P - . u" c" ‘"r.r"°.zi°.ti".....""* e to v; pu c 0 0 . 51.7.... chiling compels them to be cmistantly on the road, in lieu of automobiles which they lull“ 91°- vids for themselves. Or does their platform compel an smpwlee, draw- ing 0100 a month . to mild $11M hundred sonar-b wbcrly for govern- Ths Platform fine this. Itdurtber omits to mention the ' branches of. the Wbli: to starve our. hey talk so Council ' ' Meet (C. r. 3y Guardian's ‘IOROMO Juno lhvy league i! Qifilllill spun m... . arr-owing: m u- RIVAL PIPE . smormu v v TOBACCO o" I F is" ‘. .'. __ i s 4.; g. n.|r.s.- assume, B-A~-¢~P~A~~==°:A ilertifierl Pupllc Accountant and ‘- Auditor Bookkeeping systems installed or revised‘ Profit and Loss Accounts Computed Company By-Laws, Minutes, Annual Statements and Reports Prepared. Administration of Estates a Specialty.- _ MONEY ‘TO LDAN. Bank of Nova Scotia Building Charlottetown, P.1d; L, 4 bout-rebut... mots cumaurs caucus avatar base rs ,0: HONEST rrnrovaaba Tobacco. . f .» r4 » .» _ k-rrsnbrss 4r. fllfiPltll-‘F’; a ASKgFOfi n" I “A lilillifllfillit y, ~ M .