.'PAGE FOUR . THE GUARDIAN Aut oriud as second Clun Mull Pon umco Department. Ottawa. The Island Uunrdisn Publishing Co. Edi tor. Frank fun A Human. President uul Associate ' Walker. Associate Editor, , CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward Island like the dew" :'Tho Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink". , 'T;u-IFIfoI'r”Ti.7'r?)W..KrFfliAT.”()IcVr.T2'4.Il 9.-42 T" ' United Nations Day i charter of the United Nations was signed. Unlike the ill fated League of Nations, the U. N. has not brought with it Utopian dreams. Few look to it to solve all our problems or to be a guarantee of perpetual peace. i Instead the general attitude towards '.'le organization of the United Nations is that it provides a channel in which their efforts towards a better and more peaceful world may be directed. It depends upon the wis-. dom and energy of those efforts whether: the United Nations will succeed in its pul- pose. ' During its early years the United Na- tions has been helped by the universal de- sire for peace and by the loyalty of the great majority of its members in upholding decisions even at the cost of lives and treasure. It has had to contend with the aggression of North Korea against its southern neighbour, aggression openly aid- ed by Communist China and only slightly less openly by Soviet Russia. Aggression has been met, however, with the forces of the peace-loving world in which the United States has come to take a leading role. At the same time a. very large part of. the effort directed through the United Na-l tions has been to improve the standard of living of those countries which have been by-passed in the economic development of the past. two hundred years. Emergency relief measures are giving place to long term policies of making permanent im- provements in the standard of living of large areas. Whether this results in reducing the danger of war or not, it is certainly well worth while. Seven years ago at San Francisco the. l Farm Prices Due to potato prices, Prince Edward Is- land's farm income showed a substantial in-, year" on the lobster fishery, considered the present two seasons in the southern St. Lawrence Gulf and the Northumberland Strait, respectively, as being responsible for many very serious problems. And not the least among these was effective enforcement of the Fishery Act regulations. For the canning branch of the industry, as previously noted, the proposed revision of some rules also is important. Towards bet- ter conservation, it is being advpcated that the minimum size of lobsters which may be taken should be increased from the present L...L....i2 378-inch carapace measurement to 2 U2 And the 5,,” Mam, wmd. and me inches, giving a range in size from 6.8 to 7.8 inches with a general average of 7.3 in- ches. And that the present size limit of 3 3716 inches carapace gauge, enforced last year in conformity with Massachusetts State regulations be retained. What appears to be an advisable sug- gestion for action in the interests of furth- er conservation of this valuable fishery calls for a curb on the illegal practice of a min- ority of fishermen dismembering undersized lobsters. To achieve this, it is' proposed that a tail width measurement also be es- tablished as a supplement to the carapace dimension. Regulations for inspection and approval of all fresh and frozen lobster- meat exported from any of the producing provinces would also serve a good purpose. in this respect proposals are being put forth for changes in the Meat and Canned Food Act which would embrace greater control over eanneries. Included in these new pro- visions would be one requiring that only that part of the lobster which is flesh can be calmed as fresh or frozen lobstermeat. It is essential that high-quality lobster pro- duct be supplied to consumers and any new methods by which improvement can be made should be readily adopted, for by so doing our valuable lobster industry stands to be further enhanced. EDITORIAL NOIES Mounting casualties in Korea reflect the grimness with which the struggle there is now being carried on. The campaign may be on 8. miniature scale compared with the world wars of the past but it certainly lacks nothing in ferocity. O I O The most universally needed permit for international travel is not a passport but proof of a recent smallpox vaccination, says the National Geographic Society: Even countries which require no passport or visa ask for smallpox certificates before border crease according to the latest Bureau of uC1'05Si"8 is Permitted- Statistics release, but throughout Canada generally serious declines were reported. And while farm prices have' continued to drop, everything else the farmer uses, ex- cepting what he produces for himself, is rising in price. More on this subject will doubtless be heard when Parliament meets. on November 20. l .The statistics show that farm prices Bureau of Statistics show that farm prices for August, 1952, based on 100 as the 1935- 39 average, were 259.7 compared to 295.1 in the corresponding month of last year. In the meantime. the price index of commod- ities and services used by the farmer, based on the same 1935-39 average as 100, has risen from 237.8 in August, 1951, to 243.4 in August, 1952. That this decline is con- tinuing is revealed also in the DBS bulletin of October 7. Between July 1 and August 1 of this year, the national farm price in- dex of agricultural products fell from an in- tlex of 264.0 in July to 259.7 in August. .”The decline in August from July," says the DBS bulletin, "results largely from a lowering of the advance payment for grains in western Canada and lower prices for live- stock. As compared with a year earlier, current prices were lower for grains, live- ' stock, dairy products, poultry, and eggs." The Western Provinces were hit hardest in this August decline. The farm price in- ,dex of agricultural products for Nova Sco- tialfellto 271.9 from 272.6 in July; Que-i bec to 283.5 from 291.5; Manitoba to 231.8 from 244.4; Saskatchewan to 209.9 from '215.4; Alberta to 231.9 from 237.3; and Brit- ish Columbia to 293.6 from 305.7. The Prince Edward Island index rose to 378.5 from”348.4; New Brunswick to 376.9 from 370.8 while Ontariols remained un- changed at 293.2. Tin "Lobster Fishery Judging from the discussion at the fish- eries conference in Charlottetown earlier thhweek, there is certainly not unanimous approval of the suggestion that the districts covered by the southern Gulf of St. Law- iyencergnd Northumberland Strait should ijgvailhe sun lobster fishing period cover- ' A line. This ouestion, points . M . . 0 '. Times, is not new. It has ii.'. previous. occasions, at-. "er the change, if made, Qlnehdai all-round as Dr. A. W. H. Need- ',untold importance Sir Francis Turner Palgrave. English poet, died this date 1897. He was private secretary to Gladstone and then entered the Education Office, rising to be assist- ant secretary. On retirement at sixty, he became professor of poetry at Oxford for about eleven years. His anthology, ”The Golden Treasury of Songs and Lyrics" is regarded as one of the best of its kind. 9 O I The immediate appointment of a Fed- eral director of transport has been urged by the Canadian Good Roads Association. The duties of the proposed director would be to make a nation-wide survey of roads and road transport facilities so that there will be adequate preparations in the event of war. In effect the Association goes on record as recognizing that highway trans- port has become a matter of national rath- er than local importance. O O I A Gaelic language exchange, ”IRlSLEA- BI-IAR CEILTEACH" (The Celtic Journal) published by Padraig O Broin, 52 Dcrwy Road, Toronto, has been received. It is a miniature quarterly devoted to the liter- ature and other cultural aspects of those whose heritage is Celtic: the Gaels of Alba, Eire, Man; the Brythons of Wales, Corn- wall and Brittany. A valuable check-list of Scottish Gaelic writings in North America is included showing no less than ten Gaelic works published in Charlottetown. Among these are works by Rev. Ronald Rankin (1841), Rev. Donald MacDonald and Ewen O 0 O The International Bank for Reconstruc- tion and Development" has as its chief aim the assistance and restoration. of either war damaged countries or the raising of production and the standard of living in the less developed areas of the world. For in- stance the bank loaned 82.-30,000,000 to the French Government for the revival of their steel industry. With the money the French mills were built over from the" old hand methods which produced 24 tons per eight hour shift to the modern automatic mill which produces 1,200 tons each eight hours. Truely a tremendous development and of to the economy of France. If the bank could be persuaded to finance a modern cunning and food pm- cesslng plant in Prince Edward Island the farmers of this Province might also see a considerable rise in their standard of living. 5 '1 .. . Lamont (1858), Rev. William Stewart (1885) and Rev. Alex Maciean Sinclair, (1890, 1892, 1899, 1902). . I ?.en Ll-r'rLil rumor There's nothing very beautiful and nothing very gay About the rush of faces in the town by day. But a light tan cow 11193 , That is very beautiful. beautiful indeed. , t in s pale green low March mist Are better than kisses in 1 dark street kissed. The fr-t-i--"ca of the forest when it wakes at down, The tin-gra.l'lce of a trim green vil- ' lage lawn, on, better let the little things I loved when lltlte Return when the heart finds the great things brittle; And better is a temple made of bark and thong Than a tall stone temple that may stand too long. OCTOBER 24, 19, W&ug.”. I.Notes BX The -Wax; - The St. Thomu city council ruling chat all civic employees should have a Ghost X-ray marks a. timely advance in the cause of preventative medicine on the part of the local Hsdminstrators. This category includes police. firemen, and all others on the city's payroll. Poulbly no group in th; whole city city comes into contact witl. a larg- er number of citizens than these workers except school teachers and clergyman, the former of whom are required to submit to a chest X-ray by the Department of Education. - St. Thomas Times-Journal It was depress! to the Rev. Herbert '1-ioyl:,"";', Egg,"- onto. that Canada. still Occ'upie3 n' better place than 14th in infan: .m01'lB1lty rates among the leauln nations of the world. Rev M? Troyer is director of the Canadian olhlld Health Association, mg he described lIhiA country's record ... "BPPEl1ll18". It is deplorable um n.country which talks as much about health as Canada. and spends as much on it, should lose as many as an average of 20,00li babies '., year - ”every 34 minutes . mother somewhere was losing im- chtld". Canada must lower its in- fant mortality rate, or its people must acknowledge the present imp as a, national disgrace. -. Kmgsmnt W-hlg-Standard. The bl:-hearted Irish collie that moved her litter of four pups into the Dublin 2.00 the other day. would seem to deserve the annual The hf:1'E"gt”.:l;;:m"'m"” M the Noah's Ark Medal if there were , 1 as day! . motor- I i or scorn .' . Clll('k when the feast Ls md. 10., I day for an understanding animal to them out the car window. In our new-bo,.n. assume the task of feeding the opinion this habit, is on; that mm young felines, whose mothers had cut for revival of the ducking abandoned them. why the cubs stool. Jagged pieces of glass can" were deserted by their mothers easily cause' fatal accidents on wasn't explained. Lions and tigers highways over which traffic nor. aren't communicative about such mally travels at a fast clip. Brok- things but it might be assumed en bottles tossed from pagsing they didn't. fancy the idea of cars area hazard that even in. raising their children to live in 1 most cautious driver finds hard to case. Tuts, the Iron collie, is tsk- foresee. An even greater menses -Orrlck -lohnal in: care of the emergency but is is the persons who breaks a hot. --T-m . . understood to want it known she tie on a bathing beach and alum- C-toc-uft-0 l-ssatdtige zPoo frgy onda loan basis. l..cav.ee.l.. tllensharp dfragmgms hall. y n y os- ecor. urle ll le son or t ow th Old Charla”-9'-own broken pieces into the waters. Th: ml” 1.. I. L ). i Bernard nluonnettn. s Justice flucklr.lz stool would be far too len- og the Quebgg court 91 Appegig, lent or these characters.-Wlnnh THE SCOTT ACT Dead Sea (Winnipeg "In the Legislative Library this forenoon a delegation consisting of clergy and laymen waited upon the geadfzr of. tisle Gotvernment and the rov ncls eere ary in reference to the enforcement of the Cam. When the. discovery five years than Temperance Act. Among ago, in the spring of 1947, of the those present. were Revs. A. Mc-l Dead 599' serous was dnnaunced ailvmy, G, wl H,,dg,,,n. D. Fm, they aroused the keenest interest gg;-aid. 1.," Mum”. J. Hams. H. among Biblical scholars and among 1:, cowperthwlue. and Wm. F. the people of the churches. The -nppet; A. B. Mcxemi-E. Em. M. story of the discovery is an old one E. 5.. J. (7. underhay. Esq" M. P. by now. The goat which ntra,vcd p.. .1. J. chappe”. G.w.P.. Sons of high up the cliffs ovclhallglllg tile Temperance. G. W. Mmner. Eu... Dead Sea led to the discovery by w. B1 . M. M her goatherd of 5. quantity of Jury. and! gun. A.etl&:l:'Dof,:l11g. documeits in Grecian jars among "Mr. Hales stated that their ob- wfhitchh werehwzolpairtis of dam am)? ject in waiting upon the members om 8 girglp el bsalin aiiu lpm . 9 of the Government was to remind 0 er E031 001: .I Hm incl” them that before the closing of the ga:l3;M;;m?Sulfre05m (:,.hci:.h 011:." present session of the Legislature, 11;. Old D-I-estamem. was made ” something should be done to en- smce those Dead sea SC'mn5 . . great. amount force the Canada Temperance were discovered 5. Act in this Province. At the pre- of controversy has been going on sent time the Act was a greater To some scholars th whole mini injury than the license system. As was 3 hoax The nu be, hold”... the MW mmd it was eV"Yb”dY'5 that theory. has steadily declined msiness m mmme H5 bl” What until today the weight of evidence was everybody's business seemed is an on the side that the Dead to be nobody's business in the long sea Sc,-0115 are genuine. And jf ””l' What "WY Wallled W!!! the they are genuine. then they are of G”V9"lm9Tll '0 BIJPOIM R PEFSOH infinite consequence and a real "'10 Would "Ct 85 8 Dubllc D1”0S9e help to the further ulldcrstandinv NW Under the Act. and carry out of the background of the Biblicnhl the law in its integrity. books, "Hon. Mr. Sullivan assured the The Bedouin shepherd who made delegation that the Government tho first, discovery of tin had "at 1053 Sltzht of the matter documents did not know the value and that. in Council they had it of what, he had found, He took lsevcral times under consideration. them to a. Muslim sheik in Beth- ll-le showed them that the Domin- lchem, who told him the docu- lion Government. in passing the ments were written in Syriac. Then Act, had taken the machinery for the Bedouin took them to asyrlan working it out of the hands of all merchant friend, Klalll Khnndo, to local governments save that of turn them into cash. Ontario, where fines collected for V ' 8 ' offences against the Act were paid Apparently Mr. Khando told into the local government. There George Isaiah. 9- Syrian Jerusalem was no provision made for repay- merchant and Mr. Isaiah in turn in: the local Government of this told the Syrian Archbishop. Mar .p.-ovjnce for the amount gxpend- Athanastan Yeshue Samuel of St. ed in putting the Act in operation. Mark 01'lh0d0X CODVCM. Who, in However, since they saw that it 194,7 succeeded in buying five was me will at we pgople that lg scrolls of the original documents. should be enforced, they agreed to - appoint officials to carry it out. He then informed the delegation ment M mediflai 50191109 in W0 that it was the intentlpn of the 9”m1"95l' .0! ""1055 and dl-5811597 Government to appoint three In- why 15 there "0 ll'0l'1d'Wld0 Clim- spectors of License-one for each PM?" Mr muv Wat" End infest County-whose duty it would be to cc'"55F"u0n V3 milwh WC Public mrry cu. me provision, at the health crusade? Why is there no AC1." such campaign actively being wag- Q-rhc Emmln". March 14. 1881. ed right here in Canada? Right TL, F-0,W. EVEFY Dollnd Of food which Vvhat To Eat? may be produced. is needed to iG1obe And Mail) support- the human race. Instead of fulfilling its role of a world food supplier, Canada has fallen The World Health Organization, a branch of the United Nations, stated last week that the popula- so far short of its responsibility that it is actually importing food. Thus because of superior wealth firm of the world had risen by 400 it is d”"'l"8 f1'0m Wmld Gt-OCKS million since 1939. Part. of this food W015 ursently needed else- huge increase was said to be due "he"- to 8. lower death rate, reflecting Here We look upon a bounteous the progress of medical science and the introduction of public health measures in backward parts wheat crop as almost ll national disaster. instead of ,n challenge to our ingenuity to find ways to of the world. Credence is given ml"! 0111' 5m"P1U5 50 those who this claim by the fact: that through Med it at cheaper prices. The accidental conditions which swamp drainage and the use of DDT, malaria has been so well controlled that the number of deaths from this cause alone has fallen by three million a year since the wsr. The improvement. of sanitary conditions has helped to reduce diseases due to filth, especially among children. From one point of view. this is a remarkable and very creditable record. But it is an achievement, filled with the utmost danger for humanltzy. The millions medical science has saved from an early death by disease are doomed in- brought us a bumper crop cannot be depended upon to furnish us with enough food in the future. Unless we also strive to preserve tho fertility of our land, we too will suffer the fate of the earlier civilizations who wasted their her- itage of soil wealth. It is one of the gravest: problems facing this country and it is receiving only the most superficial attention from the nation's Governments. An in- creasing number of citizens are realizing the dgnger. but they are handicapped and frllstrnted by ScroHs Free Press) Then six gm-0115 were 13:” gold to created man as head of the fnm- SOUUIETH 0I1UH'i0- Thllt KM Prof. E. L. Sukenlx, Professor of lly." Archaeology at the Hebrew Unl- male priority as pater versity. when the syrlsns (then were of hugbuxdg but 1:, .159 mg m un. end the Ontario department has more than one after the first dls- pmuguo ring goo, In .. mm.m.dg covery was made) discovered that wand 13 1, 1031.531 gm; ,. mare 111;- me "mus l'l'”e wmien 1" Hebrewr ist should ascribe to Divine author- ””" S5'”"- they wergoge ”'0g”?het1l; lty an arrangement placing friends interpreted them as refer- ring to the Biblical books. Finally, scrolls were taken to the American School of Oriental Re- search in Jerusalem. P done at tho lnvitston of rot. John C. Trevor. who writes the gaugughrggsglig Fhtglcgoggterulzagg know what to do. the story in the Christian Century. war, "The Darkness". ters 40-66. out the documents was bought the 1949. In the U. S. greapsignincance. be done in time to come. was not very for wrong. fling of the Christian era”. ical school Belles Lettres last April. type of scroll as those of 1947. documents will be discovered. ARAB RACES "The entire Arab population 45,000.000. COMPLETE VISUAL REFRACTION AND " ANALYSIS 6. F. HUTCHESON Optometrists & SON 53 Grafton St. the indolenca and indifference of it hi to l d th 1 EV 3 Y " "W " mm political leadership. starvation. Confused, and misled This was From that time the documents were in the right hands. Prof. .sol:.l;e”ti.”fgerE:gr 5:;,.d5c::2:'e Egurwgiz craft is moulded in one piece from he calls, "Hymns of the Thanks- giving”. The second describes .3 Sons of Ltghlaaggg tiifetwegglm '1: onstrste the strength of this ms.- The third was I por- tion of the scroll of the Book of Isaiah, giving sections of chap- The most. impressive group lot Y Archbishop Samuel, of St. Muk Orthodox Convent, who landed in United sift” yFe:::"?;.' foot of this material weighs only safe hands and are being inter- preted and used on occasions. The text of the-new revised version of i:lenorH3byriaSgnl'tl':helathaedogdfsd Ed: :.n3lmamed' Tm total weight ox Scrolls, though none of these is of U. K. Inmnmuon. The use being made of the known mcumenmmme have been discovered in this very you 1952 -15 only I prelude to what pvlil Prof. R. B. Y. Scott. of McGill, Mont- real, says: ,"To assess it fully may take half a generation. But. it can be said now that the majority view is that the original estimate The - MONEY TO LOAN scrolls are genuine, and were cop- led some time about the begin- Thc site of the original discov- cry of the famous cave has now been excavated by ll. Joint expedi- tion of the Jordan service of An- tiques and the French AA haeolop in Jerusalem. A pre- liminary COITI'II'iLInIl.t.II.lOII was made to the Academic Inscriptions ct Father dc vaux told of the discovery at Kherbet Quamran of the some would seem that more of these the world is estimated st'nearly said bluntly before the Henri D98 Tribune. Capltsnt Association-an assocla- mu- tlon of lawyers-that God creat.- The James Bay slope. which ed mm 35 hood 0: the family. forms the northern section of the up-uni.) gnd mu-ital sumo,-lty 5,14 district of Cochrnnc. contains I psrentnl power," he said, "are sa- formation similar to that in which bogged by'Qqu51jty, 1 any god gas and oil have been found In and assume" of oil may yet. be located in gaming; the James Bay lowlands is n high-. ly interesting possibility. To this This resolute may sound reassuring in the ears completed diamond drilling to provide what it considers a mini- mum of geological information on which an intelligent search for gas and oil can be based. In addi- tion to this there is the possibility that certain synthetics might be produced from the extensive de- posits of lignlte in the area. It is known that the Ontario Depart- ment. of Mines is vvntclling rer- taln investigations along this line with great interest. - Timmlns Press. the crown of. superiority upon the brow of man. A woman Jurist might. differ... London Free Press. An outstanding example of the of small craft is tlhe new dinghy made from flbreglaps in Way- brldge. Surrey. The hull of the I. must of spun glass fibres which, WI”? taken singly. are much finer -than 9. human hair. In ll. test. to dem- I an sacc&ccc-M-Q-e03.-w 30 terlsl after moulding. 1 sample was struck with a. six and one- half pound weight which bounded ofllim without cs.usingma.ny.. damagi.a, a ough it was su cerl to spit, in two mac” of mahogany nemqy yourselves: it Is the gift of God nve times ,5 mick. To give the . . . For we are his m..kmansl:lin dinghy ., namni buoy”-my. tx- crested in Christ Jesus unto good pm;-led Qbon1t,g.1g mm mm the works. which God hath before on end; 0: me :1-gmomg, A wbm dnlned ithnt we should walk in ' them . . . Now therefore ye Ill no more strangers and foreigners. but fellow-citizens with the saint and of the household of God: an are built. upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets. Jesus Christ. himself being the 'chlef PROFESSIONAL . CARDS For by grace no yo saved through faith-. and that not of four pounds, and it has the lul- vsntage of a completely cellular structure, so that. even if a hole is driven through, its buoyancy is he dinghy is about '15 pounds.- Pcllmcr 8: i-loslum Mcrheson. Peaks 8: t" l' 'i.'t?..'it.”.”;, ”' Nicholson 3"'kc::r::f;;';o;',f:.”: g.”',.'"”"' A. w. luA'rlmsoN. 12.0. A. a. Miami. n.A.. LLB. some 1-. NIcuoLsoN. LL.n. Barristers. Etc. Collections - Money To Loan 00 Great George street Charlottetown M. Aibon Farmer. QC. B.A.. LLB. Barrister and Solicitor Bank of Commerce Buildlnt Charlottetown Money to than A. womien Gander: LLB. BABIIISTER. SOI.ICITO.R. WC- Phillips Xsulldln: . 111 Grafton Street Money to boon C0"9C”"' Frederic A. Large. QC- Bsrrlster. solicitor, Notary Iloynl Bank of Canada Blllldint Charlottetown. P. E. 1- Mucl'hco & Trainer II. F. MMPHEE. B.A.,.. 02.0. E SOMERLED TRAINOII, B.A. Barristers. Etc. J. A. McGulgcln BABRISTEB, OLICITOB. Elan. NOTARY. Etc. Curl-is Building - Boil. Mathioson 8: Foster Barristers. Solicitors, Etc. 3. It. BELL, 11.0. G. B. FOSTER, LLB. boom on City and Form Properties . 150 Richmond Street 1"” ' ” ' ... P.E.l. It of Chas. R. Mc9udid B.A. - BABEISTEB. SOLICITOB. NOTARY. lite. . Donna on City and Form Intern Trust Building pl-opg;-an .4 CHAICLOTTETOWN l Phone 1711 J9 5' Taylor OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glnues Fitted Corner Kent and Queen St!- Offlco Phono loss-Houu 1018 Byron -J. Grant. 0-9- Guudol & Hoszord IIILIEBT A. GAUDET. BA. LLB. Ilnlnun and Solicitors Money tobonn ' OPTOMETBIST by the abundance of food in North America and I good put of Eu- rope. the scientists have not borne in mind the frightful consequence: 'of their idealism. There is simply not enough food in the world for all the people there are. Probably half of the earth's populstlo never gets a square rneal,:nnd un- fortunately the trend of food pro- duction is down. v . The chief rusop for this is the unwise use of the land. Many of our best. known deserts were at one time flourishing. sources of food -for the ancient world. The. grim Western Dean of the Norm African campaign wuionoo known as the Granary of the noiuan Empire: The. dual-9 of lyric and , Lebanon. of Mesopotamia and Chins. once-cu nlctl and cultured clvlllu iom. liven in our own era, whole districts in Can- non and the United sum have. been worn out in I few untra- tlona and no for oductlon pur- poostut.t'.srg.wo yd. ha.-' Why are no adios -011- thustutio edort to tutor: dud maintain soil Icl"i.iIlt!.WiIlchml1l!ii in vou HAVIA Rulnultsg -H ' -nun Ask-lion Mn cast I-I IEASLEY'S CANADA IITD. ANNOUNCE THE WORLD FAMOUS .'.ii.lIi-iiiilsllllill ..RllPTIillE APPLIANGE I IS NOW AVAILABLE AT . HUGHES DRUG STORE ( No longer need):-uptureil men and women suffer tlle peculn and misery of old-fuhioimi. ill-fitting AN v . cundlnn Bank of Commerce Bldg. Dr. W. R. Carson - CFIIILOPBACTOI! Palmer Graduate CHABDOTTETOWN Phone 101! .291 Prince st. in Kent smear Phone all (Opposite Bovoro Hotel) Allison M. Glills. LL3- Bnnnlsrzit, somcrron. Etc- lso Richmond st. - chulomwwn . ' Phone 500 D" As "' M.”'"” J. A. Carrurhors. R-0- DENTIST OPTOMETIIIST Dental X-Ray . ,5” nwmlt aumpuvo 113 Kan! Strut "l""'” " in (mm... 51.. mm... :9; (Next to 8impmn' , H. R. DOANE In COMPANY ' ,. onairnelnn ACCOUNTANT! ' - us Great. (learn so. Charlottetown nmmou." . , ,.I'.iaonu tau 9 Mn - I3: WI V N F .. . W. MANN (I . - IRS" v " Wm villus It nnlltgf hgztun. so. Erna-hn'u.PA:iia?r'o':.' nmmoulh Ill . KOIIWWO. Liverpool. New Oil 0 Truro. T"T””"”.Meoou'sLo cWi””i”"”lus co he, Ituiicoul" hnriottctown. la Klfklllld mt. Monet:-n match the orosrcn md noninva- . 6......” .".uc................'..ll!hI!l1i.rn. Ilatanonton .we......” l L