V’ ondlater married PAGE mun . Tlli GIIRLQTTETUWI Gllllllillll Morning Dally il-‘oundod 1n lllil Aflhortaod an oocund Clrna Mall. Poat Olllaa Department. Ottawa. Pullout. [an A. Burnett; Vlee-Prealdent. Wm. R. Barnett: Seesn-Trvarc, u. .\l. Burnett; Elllllil’ and Imaging Director, J. R. Burnett: Auoruto Editor. Frank Walker. “The Strongest Memory in Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." TL‘lT-1Sli.~\\', JLIF; 17, 2911 S31 Million In ling Premiums Recently the Federal Minister of Agricul- ture, Hon. J. G. Gardiner, gave a statement on agricultural subsidies in the House of Com- rnons. This showed that a sum of S3i,Z4Z,944 had been paid to producers as premiums on hogs slaughtered up to Janluary i, i947. Dominion Governmenthog premiums were introduced by order-in-council on January 24, i944. The order authorized the payment to producers of $3.00 for "A" grade and $2.00 for "Bi" grade carcasses of hogs delivered to inspected and other establishments approved for government grading. As stated at the time the order was announced, its purpose was to encour- age the production of hogs to provide the quan- tity and quality of bacon and hams to be ex- ported annually to the United Kingdom. A two- year contract, to export 900 million pounds of bacon in i944 and i945, had just been negoti- ated with the British Government. The initial basis of premiums remained operative until April i, i946, when the present premiums of $2.00 for "A" grade and $i.0O for "Bl" grade wen made effective. The total amount of premium paid to hog producers in any one Province was dependent not only on tho volume of gradings but also on tho quality of the hogs produced. For ax- ample, tho over-ail average per hog received in Ontario was $i.85 compared with with $i-44 in Manitoba and $1.56 in Alberta. The over-all average par hog received in the Maritime Provi- lncos (which are lumped together in the table ilauad by tho industrial and development coun- cil of Canadian Meat Packers) W05 9-30 0! against an average for all Canada of $l.6$. Were the figures for Prince Edward island ‘an independently, they would probably show gilt our producers received the highest over- all average hog premium of any Province. Link With "Treasure island" For lovers of Robert Louis SQEVOHSOIl-fl geoap including every boy who has read "Treas- ura lsiand"—aa obscure item in the newspapers raaalfa a fascinating story.’ in Los Angeles Lloyd Oobourne is dead at tho age of 79. This is the man whom Stevenson met in a Pranoh inn in i876. Osbourne was a boy then, ataying with his mother, Mrs. Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne. As soon as the young Steven- son saw Mrs. Osbourne he fell in love witlrwhier T her in the United States. Tlraa, Stevenson acquired Lloyd for a stepson. At that time Stevenson was iust embarking on the soa of literature and Lloyd was able to haip him. in "The Wrecker," a blood-and-thun- der romance, written for pot-boiling purposes, the stepson collaborated with Stevenson and seems to have been a useful partner. But Os- bourna will be remembered by the young reader of romance for a still greater service to the mortar. Wiian Osbourne was a child he draw a map of a far-off, imaginary island, as most small boys do. Stevenson came across the map and it gave him the idea for "Treasure island," which is likely to endure as long as the Eng- lish language is read and as long as there are boys in the world.‘ Now Osbourne is dead and his death sev- or: a string of memory which stretched from that first accidental meeting in France to far- off Samoa, where Stevenson died in the arms of Osbourne's mother. "The Humanities Gan llelp" Reference was made in these columns rec- antly to the publication of o new and valuable addition to the list of academic works, entitled "Tire Humanities in Canada." The work is fin- anced by the Rockefeller Foundation and spon- sored by the Humanities Research Council of Canada. it constitutes the first survey of the position of languages, literature and the fine arts in this country, and is edited by Prof. A. S. P. Woodhouse of the University of Toronto and Prof. Watson Kirkconneil of McMaster Unl- versity, Hamilton. The 287-page report deals chiefly with academic work at the university and college level and is partly the result of fiv-e de- tailed questionnaires sent to university presi- dents, deans or registrars, department heads, librarians and individual scholars at institutions across Canada. Drawing the attention of a materialist world to the importance of intellectual and artis- tic development the authors say there "is an act- ive function for the humanities in our time in applying the powers of the mind to the vast human need and problems of the present." They call for a "serious stock-taking of aims and methods" of modern society. "The world has grown small and explosive. An intimate knowledge of the various peoples and civiliza- tions of our times is urgently needed, not merc- ly for survival but for any possibility of the posi- tive enrichment of an interrelated world. "The humanities can irelp in this task, not merely in providing the tools of language but in comprehending, largely through the medium of language, the intellectual, aesthetic and moral systems that are the main-springs of character and conduct in profoundly different civiliza- riona." Tho book outlines the historical back- Hardinge. and recommends moans to: advancement. Time ‘ara appendices outlining collage courses and works published by Canadian eaucotionrsts. — Lurruruavr -\l)||..\ _ Now that the Legislative Chamberhos been renovated we presume that some oi the lair sex might like to see the inside of it. Mr. Gibson Martin, addressing the insti- tute of Journalists, remarked that it would be a great service to find a better name for the group of materials termed 'plastics." For whol it may be worth we submit the term "rnastics." Perhaps a reader could improve on it. Under our present constitution the consent of the Dominians is necessary before any change is made in the titles of His Ma|csty. it is mosl unlikely, however, that any of them will object to lne change from Emperor of lndia to King of Pakistan and of Hindustan. .. . -. a it will be noted that it is the Conservatives and not the Liberals who are fighting in Ottawn cr behalf of political appointees to Government jobs, the Government supporters shrewdly leav- mq it to their opponents to pick their chestnuts nut of the firs. i I I I The little village of Gonneville-la-Malet in the Havre district has broken all records for large families. Among its inhabitants thirteen families, which together have ninety-seven children, hold the Medal of the French family. The whole community has only 700 inhabitants. I i I i it is worse than a scandal that so little i5 done to supply the internal Canadian market with fresh edible fish. The demand is iherc waiting to be filled, but the bureaucrats, who now run the government, sit idly by with the self-satisfied reflection—-"the public, who are the public? The public be damned." And this suits tho powers~that-be-—until an election haves in sight. ' i i I I ‘Ono thing that is not changed by making American dollars available to the world is the scarcity of steel. alt is lack of sufficient steel that, more than any other one factor, is delaying recovery in Britain. Unable to buy steel to get her own production under way the U. K. has had to squander the proceeds of her Ameiicpn, loan on imported products. I i i D While the old $l shirt, "which was taken out of the sweat of labour," will never come back again, by Fall "normalcy" will assert itself'in the shirt business, says Murray Rabbino, counsel for the Shirt institute, inc. "Narmalcy doesn't mean pre-war prices and cannot mean those prices under present conditions," he added. "Th: buying public will come back into the market strongly when it realizes just how much may be expected in the way of price reduction." 1 i Ii ll Somewhere in Canada there is an heir to an,English baronetcy, sixth in line, who does not know that he might one day be Sir Charles The present ‘Sir Charles has enlist- ed the aid of the editor of Debrett’; Peerage in an attempt to find his heirs. A near relative emi- grated to Canada in i350 and was believed to have worked for the Canadian Pacific Railway "at its farthest west" point. A son and daugh- ter were reported born to the Canadian Hardinge but no clues exist as to their whereabouts. The present baronet is anxious to locate them as they are his nearest relatives and will inherit the es- tate. ‘ a a w a Sir Edward Burns-Jones, hart, English art- where he formed a friendship with William Morris, and became deeply impressed with point- ings of D. G. Rossetti, under whom he after-i wards studied. Being a line classical scholar, and on enthusiastic student of Chaucer and the earlier English writers, his mind was richly. stored with mythological and mediaeval lore, which he turned to useful account in his choice of subjects for pictures, decorative works and stained glass designs of which latter he pro- his time, and stands out conspicuously among‘ the great artists of the i9th Century. .. a . w it sounds like a COllliLdiCllOll, but ll’ is true-a lighter wick which burns, but will not burn out. Made from glass fibre, it is the first time it has been successfully produced‘ anywhere in the world, and is a United Kingdom dzvclop» merit which might never have occurred had it not been for the war in the tropics. Trocps in the Fdr East found that ordinary cotton wick! were quickly eaten away by termites-often evln before they were issued from stores. At the re- quest of Britain's Ministry cf Supply, the oldest tirm of lighter manufacturers in Britain were asked to provide something that would defeat rne termites. They did-anddiscovered that in addition ‘to this quality the wick would not burn away or deteriorate. Thus, once it hasbeen fit- ted in a lighter it never needs replacing, nor even lifting up. i fi The Rockwood case will receive another airing h-ere in October, when the Synod of the Presbyterian Church meets in St. James Presby- terian Church, Charloltetawn. The report, pre- pared by a special committee of the General Assembly at Calgary to investigate the Rock- wood case, recommended that the records’ ‘ of the presbytery be reviewed by the Maritime Synod at its next meeting to decide whether” U10 presbytery had jurisdiction rnvthe matter arid “m; properly in hearing and determin- ing the complaint." Mr. Rockwood, Z9, was min- ister at St. James Presbyterian Church at Truro when he started preaching sermons la's't_Y¢°" "ii the theme that the Church was sick unto death." Ho was called before tire pmsbytlry 0f Halifax and Lunanburg and convicted after Mod- erator Rev. Frank Lawson of Halifax had charg- grorrnd of work on the humanities in Canada, examines its place in French and English uni- mo; curricula, rrrrvaya pmanreday facilities rd him with having made "a definite attomlii i9 our in Pnaebytariaa cr s .- THE CHARLOTTITOWN GUARDIAN lam ly the lay; »—— I Ilal Roach nan an man h fanny "Y! rich fr) mnke an audience laugh rv-ue 1mm 50 minutes. some of our noun-nuns, |\o\ve\er. shouldn't quit. i I l IlfJ-HK. -Wmdsor Binr. l i "There nre 75 usna for the hark ,5“ m}, h, “Med "m, ha“ gr macro-ogre. m." onplnr I20 IP-‘i-Vi-‘i-‘l-‘i-VP-NM . spring to m1 est in: as rr wrapper or t o Thar ult dtlah h “mg free. - Toronto Sear. "Anny m lulu‘ l riiiigeht i‘ a _ The snow of cotton cluetcn; that his share ""—— i l You may loaf on the job ur hour iilllfi 30 mriiuies our of every eight- liiOUi‘ d.r_\, especially 1f you are a urafnuorkvr, say-s This Week. Thais‘ because _\our mind won't lei itself he overworked; it. rests involuntarily for a second or loss on an awrnae of three to five tunes a Iitrlllllt‘. If you're tired. nwvvrrnri‘, _\'Olll‘ mind urll intermit- trnilg: go blank for two or even ilrree seconds as often as 10 Limes o minute-no matter how hard you fight ta slay on the alert. At. this rule, your mind will be asleep for 30 minutes of every hour you keep ivorkrng. A ahlnin example of what peo- ple can do for themselves in the face of great physical handicap la that shown by Mrs. Kare Taylor. farm wife al. Hazel Dell. about 100 miles north of Yorkion. Despite the loss of boih legs and an‘ arm in a childhood accident, she was able to complete her education reach school, marry and look after her farm home and children. —-R.e_- gins Leader-Post. Murder- and armed robbery rm rampant through Ontario during the last. few days. Alert police have made some arrests and are on the trail of others. Ii. ls apparent that ihe law has fallen into disrespect. Virhenbffenders are caught and convicted, the punishment should be sufficient to make the criminals know they have done wrong. Too many loopholes have been found in the laws. I! used to be in Can- ada that. criminals did not. duck punishment by stratagems more clever than just. —Windsor Star. Lack of Jute required itro pack her strain for export. may compel Argentina lo reduce her wheel acreage and cut dam; her grain exports according to Miguel Mir- randa. chairman of the Argentina Trade Institute. Argentina imports Jute from India. Miranda says that India's shipments of jute are six wreaths behind schedule. Under" a barter agreement. made last Sep- tember India was to ship 30.000 ions rvf jute. Shipment-s are 13,- 790 tons short of ‘that quantity. Na julr‘ “as shipped during tho flrsi quarter‘ of this year. Avgen- line farmers van see no point. in growing \\lI(‘3l just [d let it mi; on ill-l‘ irnunri because of lack of iafillll?‘ for exporting it. —I"red- ersc-trin Gleaner. Orr the rhessbuard at‘ war the PUBLIC FORUM. Iiboalalnbopanu; tladlaoboalyoorrm Bin-According to the American ' Federation of Labor in its "Month. Li’ Survey" for Aprrl, Russians, or nearly 1o per cgnt, or the entire Soviet. population. arel held in concentration camps on charges of disloyalty to the Com-q murilst regime. them by the secret police, And no one so seized, it. l5 53rd, had Edy fight. of protest or appeal, m- any chance whatever of receiving l. fair unbiased trial by jury or court judges. As only 5 per cent of Russians, so committed to slave labor arej ever released by the government» it follows therefore that 95 per cent of this vast army ofnvork. ers are doomed to perpetual ser- vlsude. It is also pointed out in the "Monthly Survey" may gingg the war. Russia has thus enslav- ad more Russians than Hitler ever did! Naturally many thousands of proletarlans, thin-sting for freedom. would like to emigrate to freer lands, but they are not allowed to leave their country. In line with her dictatorship policy. Russia lakes very strong measures to prevent any of her citizens from leaving home. Here is an incident recorded by Sherwood Eddy in his "Chal- Ienge of Europe." which sheds a lurid light upon this point: “Some years ago, 149 people out of touch with Soviet methods, attempted to get away from Russia by crossing the Amur River on the ice. Nine- teen got. over, four of them ivound- ed. All the others were shot." In contrast with that. drastic. and exclusively Red method of retaining its citizens, the people of the United states, Canada and Brazil, out. of their generosity of heart. would be glad, I am sure, to assist all Communists wlihln their borders to emigrate to their Russian El Dorado. and avail themselves of the luxury of Sov- iet freedom and discipline. and the full enloyment. of an entirely anti-Christian environment. to- rzether Will‘! the boon of con- stant. employment and secret. police surveillance. In all three countries the loss sustained by Communist emigra- tion would not. be great, while on the other hand. the conscious- ness of having done a generous act. would be ample compensa- tion. I am. Sir, etc. 17.000000 I | Meant everything WHO LOVES Tllli LAND .01 fields give bread. The meadow- urrush, the call Of crow. mist hanging on the moon-foray all to him: were have or scare Dffllfffefl HEHiIIBt l In pregnant. seasons var-hm the very i air Was sensitive to change; a sunset- ball Of flerme spelled miuch. Remember that: he knew l‘ The secrecles of wood and hill: ; when trout. i Were lumgry; where the ripest Iver-rice grew; - what rides of summer green would fall in drought. | who loveg tihe land and drrlvos h-lc , furrows deep Becomes a name humanity atrouldl keep. dwalrkl Blacks/look in NI KR Times. ‘ §0|u Charlottetown , (And I'll.) z kO-O ABEL/S CAPE TRAGEDY No reference to Capt-our Mam’- nts visit to Abel's Cape, Bay Fortune, in tho early days of U19 19th century would be complete without mention of the trust-WY which occurred there some time afterwards, the victim being Edward Abel. agent for Lord Townsend. proprietor of Lot fi. who WE Captain Martyn’; hoot. The house nearest to Fortune Harbour at that lime nus occupied by one Patrick Pierce, who become tenant for a hundred acre: at: the customary yearly rrm-tnl or! one shilling sterl- ing per acre or five pounds, eleven shillings lrwo pence Island curzency per 100 acres. PIPTCF. was the possessor of a nice black carriage horse. if Lhe term is appliaabio to a time. W119i! carriages and valTlale roads were almost unknown. Mrs. Abel looked upon this horse with a. covetorus eye and irlcd in vain lo 11101169 Pierce oa sell him. Falling in that. she prevailed upon her husband to demand immediate payment of the ycafks back rent. Poor Pierce succeeded in getting together the five pounds eleven shillings and rmv.) A.’ n. MacDONALD. Calgary. two peivcr, but. on presenting it b0 be] the latter objected that some f the coins were not current auromaru i BOOKti l cronniffi enecna l l __.____________ Incomes For Farmers (Vancouver Province) The Department of National Rev venue does not appear to have nod muah success in its attempt b0 taxi (he Canadian farmer. It was gettlfig Tel. i636 very little money from him a d sent. out reflectors to come. The report of the collect. rs gJ UNE l7. 1947 M to color tho mimetic" m endure the a=snavniit~g,~-..._r°, u..." IN norm-mu have to h“, , f”; nlfnraageaplrlng and; _fr.g for the tori. , Professional Carla i /.___.___ Dl O-I. NORDLANI) V Slrlaol Moan: Edward Charlottetown, P.I'.‘.I_ Phone NI rusuc srsuosrrrrisr BIO Clftllhy‘ "15"" llflrarlma. eorreapoadq,“ 0-0o-o-0++0+oo¢o¢¢¢_~»¢.,‘.< ——--___ brim we o¢~ dollars in. But the dollars did flui- g was that 93 percent of Lhe Canadian faruners were not worth taxing. ‘Ilbat. Ls, their income was not’ largo enough to get. into even the] lowest income fax bracket. The Canadian farmer does not; companies or the implement firms. So, the investigation made him angry. No-w the Minister of Agricul- ture la trying to plaiate nim by felling him the Department o! Revenue dild him a favor by est- ablishing his poor condition, l The report. of the tax collectors eXplains why so many young people leave the farm. They like the feel of dollars ln their povkeis and the ,like tax COllEvlDTS any more thin‘ ~** t he likea collectors for the mortgage, __'* farmer has few dollars lo rub min: and bookkeeping HELEN GIDDIJN Telephone 1990-3 All‘ No. l. Connaught A”; Pownal Street o-oo-o-ooowoooooovoomoo4o McLEOD 8. BENTLEY ‘ I. l. BENTLEY. K.C. l .r. A. BENTLEY. K.C. - 1 Barristers and Attnrireya-at, i Law I I54 Prtnoa Street i NEIL W HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT Currie Building Charlottetown P.O. Box 45? u. n. DOANE a. co. f Chartered Accountants t 58 Grafton Street i Charlottetown l Phone zoao n“ m I Randolph W. Manning, 6,5, z vvll MORRELL and COMPANY Chartered Aoaonnonnoa ( lantern Trrut Blifldll!‘ Phone 1447 - Box l“ c B. M. BEARS. CA. i Rcaldent Partner against one a mother. Tihe report, hovrever. dries not. °""""'°""‘******"* tell the whole story. It does not CHARLES R- MCQUAiD 1 tell, for instance, why in spite of B.A. .§*;:.P:".ii:..‘1."“:;'i;:"‘:.:.ms:ii Sui-rs»- . . M1. Gardiner. who is is fame!‘ o n’ m“ himself. when the pressure of Huh“ Tm“ Bm-ldmlr politics will let him. could tell, ci""i°"°'4"'l Farming, svnlle a poor way of Phone 1111 making money, happens to be a ,A.AA- _ t very good way of making A 12v ng-l if you nave a bent that way. It. is a way 0f life that. has a lot o.’ tai- infection in 1t. And if you ari- a good farmer with a good farm, you do not need very much money. You (HLBERT A GAUDET. BA LLB 'h°' Canadian Bank at Commerce Bldg. start’. of! with advantages that. city mrm never achieves. T0 begin with. you have a house liilaulijv fire masters’ of strategy. Th fill)! however. is not always op- prevlaled hy the hard-worked foot- dogger ivho bears the bru baffles, while others ton frequent- ljr l‘lfll‘\f2'~i the glory Ewn mailer of appeared m the past. to be 3i cer- lain riiwviiiiinalron. .We had on the one hand the Royal Canadian Air Force of world renown; an the other (he Roy-oi Canadian Artillery nomenclature the may slill be Queen to isdig- nt. of in the re has \\rll1 ifs own Suvh insianre» unulrl be multiplied and ll consolation io- the foot-soldier seiwire might he tit-signaled simply as the "Cranadian Infantry Corps,“ 1i. yielded in finite 1n (be ranks of ist, died this date i898," educated at Oxford (‘he valmni. Veil, wcaluze. AiT_\'l1i)\\' an apparent dis- criminatmri is out. As of ll1ls week ii is proper in rrfcl‘ the Ru; a1 Cairarllan Infantry Corps —il1ls by i-IIIHT‘ of H15 Majesty and and LrCflilEY-Pfisl. legitimate laurels. not. muc h lo the was probably ‘EZlllZB that. “Till? lrls arm of Whats in a name? more perhaps than people {1t.-W lacing wiped Iii Pl“. John Doakes of ‘in rez-oeuii ion gallant of rllsi rnguisbcd service." Regma (Formerly of P. E. Islandi LEGION MERIBERSHIP APPEAL W?” I Sii'.—On June 18th. the Char‘- lotietown lsranrh of the Canadian Legion is opening a i-hree dfl-Y drive for membership. It. is irue that a areal many veterans have joined. but there are still many veterans who have not taken this important. stop. It is essential that all veterans join. and become active members of, this one organ- iration capable of effevtlvvlyr ex- pressing their ideals anti Pfflmfil‘ in; their common interests. Dur- ing the war we learned the mean- lng rif comracleship; we discover"- h (o-operation. Now that, the war is over, we can not afford to forget these lessons; our cause to become weak, and our aims in be rendered fruitless lhrcueh lack of uuiti? For there is still work l.o be done: further service in be rendered. benefits b0 be procured, rights to be fourtht. far-we can do this work only‘ always wandered folks vriulcl so nv-l Mother lion Ira». her iiiwn duced an immense number. He undoubtedly \'ill'fll(‘l_\' judge the r-orreri. moment. I exercised a strong influence upon the art of Y" W‘ l" W’ kiisiicfl M‘ a ‘milk r of ivalrr. Bur on a Saturday in Mai when (he i'iillllll'_\'l‘llfin and his on are rushing with the s‘ ' ‘s \\\""l\'. it's prFlcviLv under‘- fllrlillf‘ (hui iiirn ice! ili.‘.i_v - €>l>4‘<'»“flli.\‘ Fll _lii~l about fen-thirty. Hui lllfil ,-r nmir is fussy about what l ill" “amen folks are hakinc. Thai. :szi‘f fir" Ilflilll rrl. all. 'I'l1ero‘s much fr. i\s> \fll(i for‘ lioi uingerbrcad. for ills. " o; m‘ fur a I‘liLllIlt'“ of .<llf‘(',s nf h'll. fragrant. musty ho-memade broad. Bui ll if. should so happen lhai Mother was frying iloughnufs, a, yirunr: man counts that as the apex of fortune. The aroma of frying ricuglinubs rm i; warm, sun- n_\ tiny (lay jusf fills Lime bill. Four or fi\e hot douglmuls and a glass m i\\o of void, vrr-nmy milk give n man sircirrzili and r-aurflize f0 go bar-k in his work. - Si. Louis. Star. Times. SHARK HARVEST‘ PORT LINCOLN. Australia - ICP) --- 'l‘hree fishermen of this port caught .540 deep-water richinap- per sharks between 3.15 A. M. an a recent Sunday and 10 A. M. the next day. The haul was valued at. £300 (semi. The sharks averaged between uhree and four feel. in lenglrh. KlllllEYliTlllS‘ ‘.-.l; veterans should join the Lec- ‘Lhe valve of the lmglnn \\lll sink when we are strong and united. A11 of us recognize the truth of (he prion-mo that strength comes |l'il‘Ol.li1l1 unify. But pvriifiib‘ ll l5- nni fully realized llint- effective tmty r-nnsists not mcreLv ln hav- sng the same ideals, the some stflllinrcnls on mailers of vital lili- 1.(_l"ri!liC€‘, nui even in OXPTESSPHR izrrlivirluully, ll]f' sflnrt‘ desires for national nnrl itummullilt‘ heifer- rnrni. Effefine unity nrcaris one firing: unlit-d airtion. Thai is “by inn‘ Wm] strung membership. Lilith (‘llil lir- dune. lf. 011 the other" l hand. ilw ucrh is lefi. in ill!‘ frw, i iii a mere wliispoi- la wirir-lr no one. will listen; lot us make "it a lourl valve. and n powerful VOlCC. so that citizens will look upon us and say: "Hero is a afoul? "i m?" and women who have brought inin their‘ organization those same h-ifih ideals of service which drew liwm into the forces; who. moreover. have the unity and strength ne- pessai-y Ln put, lhelr ideas and ‘ideals into effect." _ _ _ From n purely individual point at vlew.\also, there are good ren- wn; why the veteran should be- long to the legion and attend the meetings. It ts necessary that. he be kept. informed of all b01161"! extended to him. ape that. he be aware of the various schemes de- vised by the Dominion Govern- menl. and Dominion Command. for his welfare. (Such thlnga as hous- ing, education. and many other!)- Mrmy g, veteran has milwd 01"- 0" certain benefits for the nlmple reason that. he was lrnorani o! their existence. At the lorll branch be will he kept tn touch with rsl there matters. There are also the many ser- vcer ovlgirnrrllrr: in the local Branch. has lust compifltti l cleaning and overhauling job om the home. n1 Grafton street; plans have been drawn up to make this a headquarter: of which all wtil be proud. These plans include UOIIEY. d with the full amount in ind}- uiable man-r-y Abel W84 sitting on with a John O‘Donnell) beside him hold- e wood pile ' g the horse by the bridle. PiQTCG ffored Abel the money and repeat.- diy irrgecl him to give up the iorse. and on his persistent refusal (there were no notes at. without. rent and. n; a rule, ivxth no great. tax bill. You are _\ouri _own boss and mBster of your own‘ activities. You have no need to worry about union rules snd unon dues. Quite ofsen, you!‘ fuel is thew- for the cutting, And, if vou are ‘mnilable industrious and iifgcninus, you have an almost mvxhaustibe -ln"k of food-meats. ‘fcgetatlog 1rd fruits -cereals. too. pvrlrups~rig t. at your door. And no incrme tux rep rt, nd stabbed Abel first 1n the at)“ i?! then in the groin. Abe] man- opcupled by Valentino ed. also. the necessity of unify and gdtathcr Qt the we must. not allow fr a week. joining provinces. But. little effort. branch itself. The Charlottetown‘ do so went into his mouse find rough! out on aid Queen Ab"? ruskrt with a bayonet bffecwed ed to crawl to the next ihouso. Neerlhem. emigrants from hence he was taken to hfk own use. where he died after lingering Pat Pierce kept. out. of the ‘way tll after Abel's death, and lhm n tie his escape to one 1f lhe Bd- wns undo l0 arrest. him, althovgh a reuard of twenty pounds ‘Ins offered by one Governor for his apprvhension. as appears in n copy of the Royal Gazelle publislud 1n‘ 1816. courses, and so on. It t5 definitely undertaken Lhat. general meetings in the future shall be short and snappy, con- sisting of not only business and lllSPllSSiCiIi. but. lively, well-plan- ned entertainment. Driving the three days of this rlrlve representatives of the branch will be calling on all veterans. members and non-members alike. We urge that these Workers he revolved r-o-ur-leously, aided cheer- full_v_ and all ex-ser-vlr-emen and woman loin in maklngihe local branch what. all know it should tie- a paivvarful instrument for good in tira community. lilliLliillilNli COAL l BRAS D'OR SCREENED BRAS D'OR OIL-TREATED STOKER and INVERNESS SCREENED LIMITED I am. Sir, elx‘. A. W. ROGERS. President. Charlottetown Branch Canadian Legion, B.E.S.L. PHONE 240 llYllliMllll 8r Ottlooa: 0l-"“ Tlrornn MoAvlnn Earl I. Burke J. l. Barrow’ AGINTI THROUGH Otflaaa oloaa ‘for Bummer ouch things an library facilities, a lively sports programme, rrlurly poops, organized lama study Saturday, For Your Insurance Needs ThaiOldort-lrrerrranca Agency in Prince Edward Island ALLISON P. MoLlAN, Dlatrlol Manager CYRUS A. I. SHAW. Dlatrlot Manage Si] LT 00. LIMITED ‘ _- __-.s_M. at Sununenldo at Montana lpoclal lopreaonlativea no Charlottetown OUT Till PROVINCE months, on Wadnoaday and at 1 EM. ‘ Barristers, Snlleltrorn, Notaries, Eta D. L. MATHIESON, LL.B., K.C. LOANS ON CITY ltiley Building M. ALBAN FARMER T BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. ETC. r r As l Bunk of Non Scotln Chamber! Phone 85 on. w. n. crnsorr i Ordo rs Delivered. Chlrallflflttl‘ Rumor-magnate Al & co. 3|. Prlnggbst. ‘DPIMM I NOT RY Royal Bank of Cnnudn Chnmlwll O-QO-OO-O-OOO-OK ooooooooooooooooooooo-OF‘ lloaey ea Loan. Charlottetown g it lkilalbbi-rlkr GAUDET 8. HASZARD Charlottetown, P.E.l. BELL 8. MATHIESON Barristers. Solicitors, Ara 1s. B. BELL, M.|._A., Kttarneyp-at-Law AND FARM PROPERTIES 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown. P.E.l. H. F. McPHEE, B.A., K.C. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR Charlottetown B.A.. LLB.‘ MONEY TO LOAN r. A. McGUlGAN, ER. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTBR. SOLICITOR- CURRIE BUILDING ATHESON and PEAKE A. w. MATHESON, 5.0. "t A. n. PEAKE. B.A.. nun. Barristers, etc. 1s Collection]. - Money u» Loan f 00 Greot George Street ii Charlottetown PALMER 8. HASLAM A. J. HASLAM. B.A., nun. rsnrsmsncrr. ma. Charlottetown, PEI. MONEY T0 LOAN P.0. Box 1| Freilsrlo ll. Large. K1}. BARRTSTER. SOLICITOB. A Charlottetown. Ill-LI. Successor to George J. Tweedy. K.C. " EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner lent and Q1199" l“ ' ' Phone 1056" lvenlala ti, Aprwlfltfltn‘ Phone: Residence llill i ‘g LA‘ A. tlaltlren liauilet. i-i-J- Barrister. lollcltor. Ite- r-rirrup‘. annals? 111 Grafton “alum” _________, DR. A. R. SMITH arm-mg‘ m I‘ flfloa"l'lol?rbtfil0nto 12-: u I Telephone