A l .,or.worlBV PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN Authorized as Second Ciul Mail Post Office Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. calm ma Managing Director. Inn A. Burnett. Auoclnto Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Covers Prince Edward Island like the dew” "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". lJllARL(l'l"l'ETOWN TUESDAY. SEPT. I. 1953 Back To The Town For those people with children and for many others Labour Day marks the end of the season for living in the summer cot- tage. Fine week-ends will continue to tempt them to the shore but the time has come to take up again the work-a-day life which was largely broken up by the institution of: school holidays. Forgotten are the problems of house- keeping in canlps and cottages, the battle with files alld mosquitoes, the rainy days which inevitably came when some special outdoor activity had been planned, the time spent by father commuting from his job to the shore. Now the task is to pack up, what must be carried back to town and- to make secure what must be left behind. Each year the problem is faced and usual- ly a slightly different solution reached. Whether to store everything including the frollt steps inside or try to keep the place reasonably usable must again be decided. It is quite a temptation to think of all the fine days that lie ahead and of how nice it would be to merely unlock the door and find everything conveniently placed. The temptation is not all one way, however, and it is apt to be more prudent to prac- tically llermetically seal the premises. it used to be fairly general to make cottages do 'double duty, acting as hunting lodges in the Fall, but today hunters are more likely to drive directly from their homes to the haunts of ducks, geese. pheas- ant or partridge. In any case there will probably be am- bitious plans for next year when that land- ing stage or extra veranda will certainly be built and the family will make an earlier start and enjoy the good weather that was .1”llSSt2d this year. Mar; Blood llonm liaolloll Tlirce times a year Prince Edward Is- landers are given an opportunity to replace the blood used in our local hospitals day in and day out at the rate of about 250 bottles per month. By this time almost every fam- difficult." Commenting on the bank review, the Financial Post points out that in our major farm export, wheat, we could hardly ex- pect another 10 million domestic consunl-- ers to eat all that; but to keep them in milk, eggs, meat, cheese and butter we would either have to feed a lot of our wheat to livestock or else grow more coarse grains in the place of wheat. And either switch we could easily make. And foods are only part of the picture. Ten million more people would require oth- er things too-houses, cars, household ap- pliances, services, and so on. "No matter how we look at it," says the Post, "the long term'picture for Canada is mighty favorable. The only thing we have to do is to keep growing. For such a vast empty country as ours that should not be Polntlllg The Moral Commenting on Viscount Montgomery's recent speech emphasizing the importance of long-term planning for global defense, the Montreal Gazette says that one of the principal threats to freedom is the West's incurable optimism. Optimism is good and necessary, but it must be tempered with common lsense. The current "peace of- fensive" by Moscow is having excellent rc- sults--from the Moscow point of view. There is a clamor in Britain for resuming trade with the Red bloc; France has had a lengthy, crippling strike; a unified Eu- ropean army seems indefinitely postponed. The old issue of national sovereignty seems once again to be gaining ground over the need for collective security. - "The truth," says The Gazette, "is that it was the very growth of NATO and the threat of a unified European army which caused much of Russials present "soft" at- titudes. Kremlin can produce a world on which she can impose her will without great cost. The first is by lulling the West into a sense of false security, and a consequent letdown in defence organization; the second would be to frighten the West into an all-out arms drive that would leave her economy ex- hausted and her arms-.-within a few years -obsolete. "The West must strike a sellsiblc, vigi- lant balance. between these two extremes. This is not easy, particularly for people who are used to getting at things and getting them over with.' The Russians, towhom time means nothing, are counting on the West's impatience. There is nothing dra- matic about patience, but it is vital to the long-term planning that is required." EDITORIAL NOT-iES ily in the Province must have had some member who has received one or more of the over 10,000 transfusions given through this free Red Cross Blood Transfusion Serv- ice and must realize the tremendous benefits it provides. Blood of the right type care- fully cross-matched in the Red Cross blood transfusion lab. by expert. technicians is available immediately for victims of serious accidents; for emergency operations and re- placement of the blood supply of babies who are born severely jaundiced as the result of a peculiar RH factor; for operations suchl as are performed on chest cases in the Sanatorium which could not be attempted without several bottles of blood; to build up patients for operations and for other condi- tions too numerous to mention. Surely this should not all be taken for granted by the majority of our citizens. The giving of less than a pint of blood at one of the clinics to be visited by the Mobile g Team this week-at O'Leary, Alberton, Tig nish, Wellington. the R. C. A. F. Station, Crapaud, Eldon or Montague-is easy and painless for the healthy individual between 18 and 65 years of age, and all in this cate- gory have an opportunity of rreglstering. and contributing to the blood required each day by so many. 050 donors must be reg- istered by the time the Clinics finish up on Thursday evening to provide the blood need- ed to continue this service for the next three months. it is to be hoped the response will be prompt and satisfactory. ' good deal of nautical language with the re- Flltm Home Market 'In a recent economic review the Bank of Nova Scotia makes son1e highly inter- esting calculations based on Canada's future population, especially with respect to the consumption of farm products. A two- thirds gain in Canadian consumers, it points out. would afford a new market capable of ablorbing more than twice the beef and cattle we have ever exported to the Unitell Station in our best years; as much pork as we shipped to Britain during the war-peak: and 5096 more eggs, poultry. and egg pro- ducts than we are producing now In oth- i l farmers would have it price that! product: than we are hav- cdfnldpnble difficulty in getting ket right utliome for far; Many congratulations were tendered yesterday to His Honour Lieutenant Gov- ernor Prowse, on the occasion of his 65th birthday anniversary. i 0 I It is understandable that released Pris- ,oners-of-War should want to forget that it ever happened. The rest of us, however, are far more in need of being remindeduthat it did happen and may well happen again. 0 V I Too little and too late, is the complaint -of some visitors about the heat wave. The iescape from the big-city heat should not be taken too seriously. Most holiday-makers want to escape from hot pavements to hot -beaches. l O l Tradition, particularly family tradition, iis of great value to a nation. The money being invested in the education of the chil- dren of veterans is only justice to the fam- ilies concerned and at the same time will help to provide this country with its finest citizens of the future. to it ii i C You cant make an omelettc without lbreaking eggs and road-making cannot well ,be carried on without inconvenience to travellers and those who live along the sections under construction. The time, however, during which a farmer's entrance is blocked should be reduced to a minimum. 0 3 to i Some thirty families will be hearing a turn of Charlottetown Sea Cadets from their annual camp. Perhaps the Navy Lea- gue or Sea Cadets could provide parents with a glossary of sea terms in the inter- est of family understanding. 0 I 0 William Wymark Jacobs, English auth- or, died this date 1843. Son of a wharf manager, he was early familiar with the types of longshoremen and sailors whose idiosyncrasies hesexplolted in his humorous stories. ings Bank and contributed humorous art- icles to the "Idler", "Today", and "Strand Magazine". His first volume of short stories was "Many Cargoea", followed by "The Skipper's wooing" and "Sen Urchlns," after Iwhich he lived entirely by writing. His gruesome play ',"I'he'Monkey's Paw" is in THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN W4”6X!K'r 4,yo.lv,. . -- BX . g A Long Shore Line SEPTEMBER- 1953 The Passing Scene Ily Observer SOME EARLY-SEPTEMBER THOUGHTS I The summer is over and gone. .There will be many warm days, l of course. but tlic,irend is toward llhc autumn, that great leveller of lplllfll. and flowcrealnd man. l it was in September that the myth lovers of ancient. times came ,to the crescendo of their devotion. lit was then that great Jupiter illt-l(l high court to which the ifllitllful tunic to do homage and lto make suppliclltion. "The best ':lnrl greatest of the gods" made himself known ill the playful pat- ter of the rain, the heavy batter- ing of the tllundcr, the quick dart of the lightning. To certain fav- 'oured ones he sent. signs and por- tents of things that must come to There are two ways in which the p rx . SUMMER Summer is a yellow rose nodding where the river flows. Summer is B. shadow deep where the white sheep lie asleep. Summer is a wave of light dimming all the stars of night. summer is 3 magic bell hung above ii golden well. summer is 3. hidden pool, deep and quiet and very cool, Where the drifting coins of Sill) -1.”-Wrtrtoil mug. .. : .. fplf. Z: RX; g g .24.; (A room has been made available-in the Law Courts Building in Charlottetown to store some of these historic articlesl. pass. His daughter. Minerva, the god- fdcss of wisdom, also belongs '0 iseplcinlier. llcr specialties ,were illgrlrlllllilc. rolninerce, llilri the lliousellolll lllls. All peaceful pur- lslllls, it will be noted, with no isympathy for war and violence. in- ,decd. it is noteworthy that in the lrhrolliclcs of myth Minerva and Mills are represellted as being vir- tual sllzlil;-,cls to each other. lwisdom uere not compatible. it was fl pure roinl-illcilrr, of course, Eopcncrl. A coincidence. ;lhnt has llnli iunrc than n 7ll".l:il- sldellgllts E . however. icw . . Jupiter has long since followed into exile the myths that gave llllnl life and power, but the month ,nf his festival continues to pre- lsent to all who will look and lis- Z Notes By A let Comet airliner touched down at London airport just. 51 minutes after taking off from Paris. They're practically twin cities now. -Ottawa Journal. Professor Plccard, the Swlssl scientist, is determined to add a new dimension to exploration. He used to go up in a. balloon to have a look at the stratosphere, but is now more interested in deep-sea diving-likely because if you've seen one piece of stratosphere. The Way f ? ylcn to the signs and portollts that ' inner were shown only to the clif'e. ,In different forms, of course, but tin no less intriguing ones. . i There are thousands of signs ;ihcse (lays to show that "like A tile duly it owes to those. who come i's1,:My din-If C"11bm...md.g: (hf sum. after by saving from oblivion ex-lg” r,:;?sla:,: V” m uogvcrs amples of man's finest handlworketh . did H, y m C as and courage. Future generations 5028 of ,?,,,,',”,”:,,,,,,,,f3,”5 bIent,:c1,' cherish them. the are the h ' Symbols of mmm3;mod- lstmicimore robus:.h nndl tllel;e are ll few .-Hamilton S fgtp ,spt-rlmensy a Hall. or Septem- P 9307- hi-r to guide them into maturity. L'"'d 5”” 0"" "”'m" dlW"l”"lyillvsical well-hclnz is an illusion general of the United Nations Food l mgr W,” ,1”; ' and Agricultural Organization, llnsl,-rm,-ism, B. knack of expressing large ideasl - in simple phrases that seize thel inmlzinaiion. At a Conenhasmi con-tr.-cc and you will see unml.-llll.-l-J (""399 um 01113? d-"l.V hf? Mild (N51 llhlc evitllvllres nf tlerny. Listen in-l Wllivll tiling IS lln allegory Sig-lcloseiy the leaf that fell 1- y,,,. lnifililg: that to the heathen who garden this morning for -I A vlrusted ill their myths war lind'unique bit of ('lCfillOll. ll ---,.,.M Villlll as nlitlitilogy gave place to of nl.'ll'igol(ls wliirit llzitv ll. ,,,. raltinnnl pllllusoplly llllli primitive general llppezlrllllrn. No l'- .... anstlllvts to scientific uffirnlations, lllike. llowevci, in mlnul H ,, this licllef that war nnd wisdom texture. Even on tho sniw ml, are nt variance was lillowed to ii: there is much ”ullllkv-urn ,1, hidden in vaults that were seldom likeness." T short. the chief characteristic 0; the good life is sameness. sgmo, times it is rlllinled tlult illilllllipl social levels and lnlinlwls W "unnatural". Well, I suppose that sonlr-thing could be said for a static, lohollc society in which there uoultl ha no stirring of the waters of till: content and no slglilll: ll: .,,.. winds of Llisrurti, lllthoulzll l ..,,: not. for the life of l1iC - wlilit that sonlvtlling lll.gi-,l One thing I do know is that N,-, turc herself knows nothing n: H", law of UIlll0l”lllll.V- The ' till) M mm; collie and go with llllilt; ..l ;,H regularity, but there is ll-llllny ulliform about their lllt)lt'llin',: c There was never another tum. mer exactly like the one tll.l: ,5 now about to enter the l'l)Zl.4ili;; of recorded time, nor will lllml, be another just. like it ill lllv l;,, turc. Always there is snnw M, ference to be noted, somr ,,,. equality to be displayed. So will, plant life. Look well at 0ll' trim in the woods for you ulll ill-Ir see another just like ll l-Jul; ,, in our lzarden lhnrc .-l:- 0 a o Snptl-nilicr, inure f”l1t.'llil,l' l " than all)" other nmnlh, 5- a senrcllin;; me that oqlll'.' opportunity in most laulii: cial tenet) does not llm--: bring equality of nrlllevcnlr-ls May two liulbs were plant.” - by side. They clinic from llll parklige illlll, prrsulllzllilh hall cqunl birth stlltlls. in. ground no rllsrrinlln.-mm: practised against one nr other. Sunshine. rain, and nontri- cal food were distributed zrl nqllal amounts. Growth, llnllmvl, ll.',nil in noticenhlc me.'lsllrl- One natured two week lw-ml of the other. gave ii murll .;;nr display, and lasted longer. in thp' orchard some apples slll'llvvn' the strong winds and some lllll not. He worked in the Post Office Sav- fllter slowly one by one. 1 - ' -L Swnmggnlfy gloiggtlrgigg Wgifjd saying Vgesglctariield :nistIer;l.Ml11)!,)l.le(;IyieInthh1lel . , - which he calls a. bathyscsphe. in S”""''" is the "W510 lost between Ell-lllcll he descended the other day the buddlntl and the frost 1m 3.608 feet in the sea. off the Isle ,,Sm.a van Mystyne Amen, in of Capri. Having made this initial New york Herald Tribune. Fdlve successfully, he hopes to do it again, this time to a depth of two .miles. or well over 10.000 feet, near lslirdlnia. Tile Age on Story -Evening Citizen: W" l Om of the most. llignificnlfl. de- velopments in Canada's After these things I heard a great voice of much people in h9:V8ll. saying, Allciuln; Salvation, an glory and honour, and power, 1 - unto the 'L0l'(I our God. . . . Anal:f:,,:,r:,'eni:ro,,v;ldf,l:e Jglan,:,I:;1iar:1lr?quag,h I heard nil it, warn the voice of n ' i - great: multitude, and as the l-lllcl-.l1,,",r,:,a,l g:dlfgi::aI')IE1:lcnl:d hsmel Cam- of many waters, and as the volcci - 8 p ' 5 now- ' providing simultaneous weather of mighty thunderlngs. saying, - t i l Alleluia: for the lord God omnipo- pm urea rght across the coumry pent mwnem for strategic stations at Moneton.,- --. u y - Dorval. Mdaltxon, Winnipeg, Ed.l men on an lincouver. It is the MT-CG.0lI”d.Ol1 On lfigst-deyielopmen-t of its kind olll '1' Cum gt 0 conment. ; ( -Saint John Telegraph Journal. augursted by the department nfl tomntic weather map tramnlisslon 4Oliawn Journal! '0ul Saskatoon this Donald Gorrlrin, uho has n , with the CNR. faced an audience Love of the old, particularly when it is beautiful, can often lead to lsecmingly strange decisions. In no of Canadian wcckl.V llPlt'S'Pal7PF-icnuntr-V in me Wmld 13 "'55 V5””" men and had 91 whale of R timciamm mt me lmclen-L ml)” C0m' man than it is in Britain. About a with them. And the main reasony why Mr. Gordon seems to linvciye" "30 it W” dmided (0 SKVE old four-masted got along so well-the title of llisllmm decay the , tea antltwool clipper. the Cutty years address was "How would you run, the Railroad?"-was flint, he fnoklsmikv which had 10F "WHY A sound, u,,d(.,5(,md,,,,z mmudc rllced before the Trade Winds from towards criticism, talked like nlchlnl Mid AU9iN'-ll9- The Si-libs public servant instead of A pullliclmrn lime CUWY Safk is almost I boss. lhousehold name in Britain and the There uns an old vlcw.sp:lprrlllHld fl? h91'F95CllF3 W55 (ll-'lCk1Y axiom. Gordon began. nll0llf,,5ub5Cribed- NOW, Bile)" her labor- everybody in the world ll:lvin'.Zll0"5 days. she is to rest on the two businesses-Ahis own and liu-,Tllames embankment at Green- newspaper business. in his world wich. In order to provide a suit- hc could flfllrll lllili. l'vrl;v neus-pubic setting, thirteen houses and nspermnn had too hllsllllus:-.c -llliyfli-llii. of a pier are to be demolished own and the railroading business land 3 public gard n is in be laid "Not ll single day goes by ultll- out and maintaind around her. out ll refvrcnvr brink made to Modern science is to have the job lrailways or TliilRfI)nlf'lI ill the of preserving the Cutty Sark. ll ,news or editorial pages of snnlv lovely memento of the great days lCB"HdiBrI nCWSD8PF'3" -of sail, for all future geuerntlons. "But this is ti licallhr lllllu:.'Althougll worship of the old, par- Sound criticism ill the zlrl of ucunmy when it is ugiy, horde,-5 ludzinz WC” W9 'NC”ll""Cit”5 5"” on the ridiculous, it is good that deiecls 0' human "W?" "N1 "l each generation should remember making It detached inquiry into --- -- in week 4 -ject is likely to meteor-, . i ' ologieal services has just been in-i ' transport. A new nation-wide au-5 .- l , .te(l up for their "If the hungry peoples of the world , tontly were offered the choice all our freedoms and four wiches. they would choose sandwiches." Few will challenge , this statement. When a have enough calories they may bcnisfyinlz ?lb0Ul- GE-lshoulrl be uniformity in Subs 1 nnd ideals. should lsoclnl artlon PROFESSIONAL cmio ready to listen to talk mocracy. but until thr-n the sound llcndemicl in their Pilrs. --Evcninlz C'ltizcn.l (And P. E. L) FIRST HOSPITAL Nl'lN'S l .. l "Four sisters of the Order nll"'&;c'P'hee & 1-minor Charity, and two lay sisters, -ar-. rived here last night, and wercl met. M the railway station by Ill large concourse of persons. They were drivell to their Convent. llllll former residence of our Bishop. onl Dorchen-t.cr Street. which has been thoroughly reprilred and fit-I reception. They, ,will devote lllemselves to the cure; lot the sick. A portion of thcl whuilding they occupy has been fit-; lied up as it hospital. This is the: first llttenlpt made in Charlotte-, town towards the establishmcn of- an illstitutiorl of this kind. and tnl Bishop Mcfntyre and ills clergy is; due the glory of leading the way- ln so przllsoworthy an undr-l-tak-l tug." -Colonial Herald. Sept. 10. l87fl.l (The site of this first Charlotte-l Itown Hospital was about wllerci, I l the Vestry of St. Dunstan's Bnsll-l lies now stands. The Sisters oft Charity. better known as the Greyl Nuns, came from Quebec under their superior: Mother St. Thomas. Tile first medical stliff of the hospital comprised Doctors Hob- kirk. Johnson. Canning. MlicLood.l 'l'aylor. Beer and Conroy. the last. named being appointed house sur- gvon. The first patient. axlnlittndl was Jrlnlrs Flynn, aged 60. on new lober 9, 1879. During the year 1li80.l 60 patients were admitted. 100 visits were made to the sick in homes and 190 persons trentr-d at the dispensary). the origin, integrity and value of the thing being judged. The news- papers of Canada have cert.-linlyl not permitted the art of rritielsnll in this sense to wither on the vine, in so far as the railroads lire concerned. ."I can say with all sincerity that your published criticisms are investigated promptly and that it is not infrequent for us to find your knowledge of local conditions ll guide to corrective action. That is a public service for all run- cerned." , A good thing it would be if, more of our administrators of- publlc utilities, and perhaps more of our ' public men. could meet criticism in this wholesome, demo- cratic way. For all too many of them seem to think that their job: as heads of public utilities or administrators of public business, must. he done In the dark, so far II the public ill concerned. and that questions ailked of them or crtlclnml made of them are prac- tlcally leu majesty; presumptuous and irreverent. .......:........m About 130,000 persons annually visit the Martyn shrine Ii. Fort whercwer your property may of bridges and other cameo. oulm: V cluuorn:-rows lmarked contrast to his other works. LIVESTOQK & FARM EQUIP-MENT Thorn II: no need for you to risk serious flnnncllll loss from destruction to! your livestock or farm equipment. At'Iow met our special policy provides hrolul covn-rlgm ... hull -- ' ' .- . . . or upset, trnnllportltlon peg-lls, Ilrrldl-nt to conveyances, collapse We will be glad of an opportunity to serve you. llYllllMAll & (:0. Lin. lnlurlnoo linen I81! AGENTS THROUGHOUT Tl-ll PROVINCE hdirlflllllh losses due to fire, collision, overturn s SDMEIEIBIDI - MONTAGUI l l l l l Yes. Nature is llllisll ulli H-- lln most instance: this look of parables in Scntnmbrl llll" tvll. of the things that f'l'll'lt'l'. nvwills. hear the test of of the things thnl lnlpmrzslt One has to do with things that f ' are equal, another with tillngn Look below the many-hued sur- thllt nre unequal. Ono tr”: R story of growth, llnolllrl M rin- ('frI)'. lind oflinlca our la :livi;lNl and you will hear low with the other. bclwcrllllvhlspcrinlz telling of the immin- ----- e---- 53-mi-jrnt dissolution nf "Nature's fair lll6,zlnrl lirnvc". There me those who say sprinl structure What is more. fnr uniformity and customs. strive that De0Dl9;in order to have R good and sni- thcr thought TV? in in, the century. LONDON. tCPi -London rrvlnh, council wants someone to completl the task of ll detailed lilstrl-v for each of its 28 bOZOll;'l1S. a . 0 completed and now golll: ll at. a salary of 21.750 .1 rm: ed is it fast worker who ('1' :- inll the job before thci '.'.l.' nl 4 S J. A. Me!-Ivuigun EAKRISTER. SOLICITOR, Etc. NOTARY. Etc. - Currie Building B. F. lllar.PHEE. B.A.. Q.C. E. SOMEllLED TBAINOB. B.A barristers. lsbo. Cllus. R. McQuaid B.A. BARBISTER. SOLICITOB. NOTARY. gut Eastern Trust ullrllng CHABI.0TTET()WN Frederic A. Large. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Bulldlnl Charlottetown, P. E. l. Lean: on City and Farm Proportion Guudef 8: Haszurd GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB Barristers Ind solicitor: Money to LOII1 Clllllldlnn Bank of Comm:-.r..u Bldg Matlleson. Penile & - Nicholson A. W. DIATHLSON, 11.0. A. ll. PEAKE. I3.A.. Ll..B. JOHN P. Nl(Jll0I.StlN. LLB. Barristers. Etc. Collections Money To 1'15 Grafton Street M. All?JlTl?aTlner. o.c. B.A.. LLB. Burl-later and Solicitor Charlottetown llloneyg to Loan o.c. Loan Bulk of Commerce lluildlngi ” A. Wulfhen Goudel. LLB. l3AllRiS'liF.lf. S()l.ltfl'l'(lIl. Phillips ililllltnlz lll Grafton Street 1 Money to loan (Zr-ill-M3 Gordon E. MucMilloll. l B.A.. LL.B.. l BARBISTER, SOLIUITOR. mm. 154 Prince St. Cllarl-lttctoin mar. 5223 TH.'.i."i;1El55lifR.o." Optomlt rlat litc. Dllmlllz1ll-.. 1”. 5- '4 Phone 892 .4 Palmer & Huslam A. J. lIASl.Alll. In. 1-H!- Barrlutcr. Etc, Elnll of Nova Scotin tllnlllhell Charlottetown. P. r? MONEY T0 IMAV A J. S. Taylor. R.O. OPTOMETRIS l' Eyes Examined. Glllsslw lluell Corner Kent nnll Qlll-ml Sit. Office Phone 91.13-ll:-ll-r I7-if, Bell. Mutilieson 8: Foster Barristers. Soliciton Hf- Iil. R. l!lCl.l.. ill- G. R FOSTEII. l.l ll. Loam on City lulll inf!" l'l'llpPri.l('.I lilo Richmond Strrrt Chnrlouetmvn. ?.i'-.l- Dr. W. R. Carson CHIROPIIAUTOB Palmer Graduate CllABLOT'I'ETlIWN Dllll M32 201 Prince Byron J7Gronl, O "T (H TUHETRINI I26 Kent Street. l'l""'” sir (Opposite ltevl-rn ll"-l:lL4 Phone 590 DENTIST llenlnl X-ray Above Charlottetown Clinic 302 Queen st. Allison M. Gillls. l.L.Ij BARRISTEB. S0l.lCl'NlIl. Eta lat) Richmond St. - Charlottetown I-):.TIT.'A'.-Q-lqdclciochorn Dill 484! I Dr. "A. L. Maclsauc DENTIST Dental S-Rn! . GLORIA I:IllII.l)IM- rm Grafton st. l'l'"L”, J. A. Carruthers. R-0- oi-'ro.umnlsT .lu from street I" (Next to Slmpnorfl IOIIF 337' l A21"; McDONAl.B. CURRIE ll. co. CHARTERED Monffell. Quebec, Ottnwa, Toronto. saint John. Sherbroolw. Kirkland Lnlle. Monclon. Hamilton. lC""'i0 Bids. Charlottetown. ml. A('.l20llNTAFlTS ,, l lull-nlil Charlottetown. "itllII""Vm"'.. lml N l Hflt.-ticTATtli"&'c6tiPANY CHAIITEIHD At7UOI1NTAN'l'H In Great thorn in. Ulnrlotuvtnwn Phone 3541 . mg ltAND0l.Pll IEBMA P MaePImm5(m ()5. now office: in uamn. ' Ste. Mule, near Midland, Ont. m"""”9v UVEPDOOI. New Gluxow. Truro and Corn" i 1-, 0. HM ” W IIIANNINU. GA. V, ,, ,-W lusvm a mat. -5 Wu, Iloni-Ion. Rt. Jnlmis. Amhl-rut "' nronll.