riaue; FUl.fR -:ATl;hDlIlQVd as Sct:TJhti.("luss Mull Post. Office Department. Ottawa. The Island (iuardinn I'ubliIliing Co. spearheads were discovered in the desolate A N Brooks Range fronting the Arctic Ocean. These earliest peoples, pioneers of Amer Eskimo tribes. Little has been found Editor and M:lVlXTx"IlTg. i.i...1E.. iiiii A. As.-toeizite Editor. Frunk Wiilker. Lip have shown a relatively advanced cul i lure. ciiiil-iiifiiirjoiv "(lovers Prince Edward Island like the dew" 'Tl'to strongest memory in weaker than the weakest ink". i ; ions of the far north. Their '.-?llABl.T(I'rTIA:T0WNV WEILV av. JAN. 13.pl9.H Another Glimmer or Hope The news that a substaiice found in the lobster shell may prove helpful to the con- trol of cancer or eveti turn out to be a cure: for that dread disease will be received: averywliere liy ciitliusiasiii tempered by caution. Over it period of many years in- tense labour and immense sums of money have gone into cancer research. From time to time the scientists have discovered vai'i- ous substances which seemed to give a glimmer of hope that victory over one of mankind's forniidable scourgcs was ncar,. only to find on further investigation that: the hope was illusory. Despite these disappoiiitnients atid set-, backs science has persevered in the searchf mme day its goal Wm he reached and One: the political implications that course volvcs. more fear will have been rcmove(l from hu- man hearts and minds. The gratitude of 0n9"- ”ll50i'l'"9 ill? w”"l50l' Slari mere the entire human faiiiily awaits the scicii- 3"" W.'-'-3051101” (ll T-'m'1'.Vlll3”d01'i'lg alldv In lists who can say the fight has been won Meanwhile, every ciicouragiiig lead is welcomed on all sides. The lobster-shell theory is still in the experimental stage: it would be unwise at this time to evpect that .t will succeed where so many others have failed. Should a cure actually be foundp in such a seeniingly unlikely medium it: would mean that another straiige and glad development would taltc its place among the marvels of our age. uninhabited New World. Federal lleilistrilidti-on sider the whole question of arics. in- ,such suggestions. ltirely that of the party in power which has la majority on the redistribution committee. Vcry frequently the final outcome is a re- sult of agreciiieiits. tacit or otherwise, be- itween politicians of the various parties. Mr. Power's principal point is that many constituencies, normally urban ones, have a far larger population than others. rural. This is true, and it can mean that two rural votes are worth as much as three urban ones in the election of a member. That. at first siulit. sccms unfair. ' There is another factor, liowcver, notes lour Windsor contemporary. An urban con- istituency may comprise only a few square imiles, while a rural one can comprise 50 Council. That a spcciali7.t'(I fll'f;.'-llllZ&lll0llif)r nmm Squaw.n”lvS' An '”Si.”””” Cited ilS that of Hastiiigs-Fi'otiteiiac, in Eastern is necessary to administer the water sup-, , , , , my and sewers mes wnhmn saying. .I.h9i!Ontai-i(i,pwhich is T00 miles long and 80 question at issue will be whether or not llimlles mdm Including 49 dlrfelent 1mm" is to be made l'cspolisiI)lc to the Council. iShipS' It i Town Services Summerside voters will be asked on Feb- ruary 2 whether they wish to continue the Water Commission as an independent body or as a committee responsible to the Town --.....;. iica's Paleo-Indians, came long before the to bridge the gapiof thousands of years. Yet 3.....m, the oldest Eskimo settlements so far dug Eskimo sites go back only 2,000 to 3,000 years-Ipiutak in Alaska, the Dorset cul- ture of the Canadian Arctic-and indicate a people highly adapted to the bleak reg- rclics can ,be directly traced to Asian sources. With ;little change, the Eskimo spread eastward 3,000 miles to Greenland. But before the Eskimo, who? lilopcfully, detectives of the past look to the barren Arctic and sub- Arctic for the hidden track of ancient men who first wandered across the top of Amer- ica. and perhaps down into the heart of an A parliamentary committee, at the re- quest of the lion. C. G. Power. is to con- fedcral con- stituencies. to see if some better method cannot be found to determine their bound-l At present redistributions are made- by a committee of the Comiiioiis, with all the past, there have been many reasons for But the fault is not en- usually obviously is more difficult for a, am so EOIAN . caar-.i.o'r'rE"row.'v It Didn't Come To THIS ; PUBLIC FORUM ThlI column II open be the discussion by correspondent: of queItlonI of interest. The uuIrrIian does not neceIInr- ily endorse the opinion of correspondents. READING MATTER Sir,-I thank God for the read- ing habit and for something to read. It”: a poor paper that does not contain in every issue some- thing to stir the imagination. Ii iiiay lic biascd bill I rci:;;irrl tlici "Guardian Of The Gulf" as the best in the Maritimes. While waiting for it to come in. I read some in the "War Cry”. I religious paper. First I thought-nh this is just what I have read and licardi, hcfnrc. Hui I camc across an .dca worth clir-rishirig- that thr-I tman of the world travel: by sight; but. the man of faith by insight. Or in other words, Faith is the eye of the soul. Also we may add, the car of the soul. byi Generally spiiakiitrz. citizcii. s look i imember to adequately represent, a constitu-i cncy of that size than a city one which is: livhicii we hcar the inaudihlc asl iwcll as see the invisible. l Turnini: to The Guardian will their local council to manage the affairs of' . , . . ' glance at. the h dllne rl . l the munlclpalmx we do not 20 in for fewer blocks in length and. width than the dmh mmmf: 5 5" W": electing each and every public officer o:wHastmgS'Fm,m.enaC 115 in miles That is d,.:f,(,),',l,",;,l,1,fne::”T7S,:::,..h”:; ',",'"r”,i . . ' a t a . SHTI ' official and. the case of such conimissioristllh-V mlal Fldlngs. ll (0mm0fl C0"59mi'nn illc wcsl. i-mist of ScnlI.1nti.iVci thavc had fewer voters than urban 0l'l(3S.lbclicvc this to be true. that iiimiiil is clearly cxccptiomil. It seems that in fi- nancing these works and those of Char- lottetown. it was felt that potential bond buyers would have more confidence in the investment if adniiiiisti'ation was in the hands of people concerned only with oper- ating the system on a business-like basis. bunal rather than a political committee. EDITORIAL NOTES But this doesn't detract from the merit ofi, iMr. Power's contention that redistribution,sivi- l'ittrum:(:mt-icigz, should be in cliarge of an independent tri-i linvr oppres- ivi'o-tliirds of the people -cmigriilcd on account. of Now you give its tlin Ilnarlpning, lnnws of wit.-it the Skin Council; of Social Sciwicrts is rloirill. Tltcyl have an ccotioiiiic survey of lhc, potential assets of the island tin- dcrway. They find in valuable de- posit in mineral of n. hcllcr qual- In more closely biiilt-up areas it is; .. ,it,i- than elsewhere, The r.;,.,,.i sometimes necessary for such! systeins to 1,, 1953' a ).c..(,,. in which Canada as serve more than one municipality. In sticlip,,.h01C probably gavy its vyoltgt attacks of ,...-.:(.....''..t 1.1;... ;...p.-mip,..C,.i, 1...; a case a fnint-committee rc rescntin thi. - ' . -' -- - ' "I" " V” -V "' ll" '""T-ill . . . I t y -I p E tlpohm HHS Ploxmcn lids rmtunate Indeed trade. The descendants of those various intercs 5 may wcl niatiarze the cn-pin havilng no nm. ,.,,s,.S. --(;,.,,,,,,,s-- m,,,, ,,,,m,,,,, M, H, terprise and because it has several masters. in effect it has none, except. perhaps the I O O Legislature. -, p I fensive since it was shown by a survey that blood is redder there than in Canadian city. There must be solution, however. in the feeling The Earliest Americans New clllcs arc pitsliiti: back the calcit- dar of arzcs in sciciiccs ion: sczircli for the Cm" 1” "' earliest Anicricaiis. Until i'c:'eiitly definite llllosllomhl-V mwms R B1”9mSP' proof of hutiian life on this continent wcnti, back 10,000 years at most. Now this spaiii appears to liavc bciiii doubled by the dating of a 2tl,00t)-year-olrl maniniotlfs tusk founrl amid evidence of mziii in New Mexico's ancient Saiidia i-iivii-(lwclliii,q. it Sfllldltl Man killed that iiiaiiiiiiotii, be long preccdedi Folsom Man. wliose crudcly-chipped spca" poitits and tools once were considered tir- oldest relics of Aiiieiicziii IlllI)llttllOll. th:- National Geographic Society says. other cvidence and explorations of recent yeatsi 0 0 D proposed been iti cffcct. ulation but rcpcated surplus production un sonic such adjustment. offer furtlicr hints that nian was in Nortiii America immediately after the last Ice Age, an era that wmicd some 2Ti.tt()0 )'Pill'.s'. ago. There has even been speculation. has , g I . ed on findings in a California gravel pivf,lS Simni-'-IY rC'm'”5C.Cm of wamme meas that he was here while it was still in pro-i”1'Cs' It '5 rmSm”"g' at any mic gress, more than 100,000 years ago. Archeologists agree that the first wan- dering peoples must have come. fom Asia. With ocean levels slightly lower Bcrinc Strait between Siberia and Alaska Wt')Ul(I be dry land. Along an Arctic grassland welt in the thawing lcc Age could have tome Asiatic game animals and then, per-t ups, predatory hunting tribes. There are hints that these first migrants would have followed the Arctic scacoast rather than brave the glacier-locked mountains of ceri- tral Alaska. At the valley of the Matrimo- zie River they cpuld have turned south along an lee-free corridor down the eastern front of the Rocky Mountains into today's Great Plains. Folsom-type projectile points have been found in northwestern Alaska, as have Stone Age carving tools, called curing, not found farther south.' Similar see that this country does not by its un prcparcdncss invite surprise attack. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, whose pen 0 I an Oxford Chiel". Under his own nam he published a number of works involvin ulatlons. His fame, however. log "The Hunting Of The Snark". .. t llalifax blucbloods have been oti the dc-3 any other” SOmC COI1”lI(0llSill:IOH. t that refer- rcd-bloodcd Catiadian now un- A variable farm price support policy at between T3 and 90 per cent of parity is nowi in: Iii.-it. iiii-io is ii sni-iriii. i-t-oiiw, I0l' ill? Linlled Slates Insload Ofisteniniing from the i-crciil :iIiunil- the rigid 00 per cent support price that has, It caniiot be expected to be ;j1't)('lt"(I with cheers by the l'arm pop- dcr the former system obviously required l The appointment of a dollar-a-year man to head Canada's electronics defence pro-l gramme. including conventional radar dc-. fences and presumably the McGill Fence,i as ishowing that both top industrialists and the lGovernment are making strong efforts to name was Lewis Carroll, died this date 1898. He took holy orders and was lectur- er in mathematics at Christ Church, Ox- ford. Some of his witty pamphlets on uni- versity affairs were collected as "Notes by intricate and ingenious mathematical spec- rests on "Alice's Adventures In Wonderland"zond "Through The Looking-Glass". Both books still delight children and grown-ups alike, as do his many humourous poems includ- tlic millions In the United States -and Cannllii. Those of them wlin, ninl;n a liuropcan lolll'. wnulrii surcly inrliidc the lVcslci'ii l-ligli-i lands in lhrir itinerary. i ' I rim. Sir. rte. ; ARCH Maclx'l".NZl.E. l i I".Uf.lI ('()b”l'S Sir. In the course of Thc, Guaitliiiiis cziitorial on "Our Vital; industries” l was struck by tliep zissr-rtion of )out' Ciilgaiy con-I tcinpiirni'y tThc H0i'ZII(It inliiii:it- tlic Prairies--. oiiiir crisis on mice, plugged elevators, lack nfi tllllnlctllaic. cash "dc. lltc facti that grriin )i(-ids were good iiii, l9.'il and . and most of tliisl grsiiii has been paid for. . . VVlicrci has lIlt'll' lll0llI') gone? Nciv lita- cltinery, so frequently necessary for su:-rcssfiil forming. has eaten up a lot of it. And operating costs are high, too." These latter points made 9. special impression on me, because I had read only the other day that operating costs during the past. three years (including dc- tpreciation, obsolescence, and inter- est as low as 3 per cent on cup- ital lnvcstmcntl had i.vr-rrigcrl Sit.- l55.000.000 annually. This m.-issivc figure made crystal clear that. as agriculture niovcs to mechanical power, it. costs real money to farm. The above 3 reference to new machinery certainly gets nmplc support from the following few lines in my farm paper this week: "in the five years from 1948 to 1952, the TPIIII value of farm mn- chlnory and implements and of repair parts sold in Canada reach- ed Sl,5l5l,.'l72.000. In 1952. the re- tail value of farm niiichinr-ry and spare parts sales for Canada total- led S346,230.000. Last year, there- fore, the average Canadian farmer 8 fl The lord II my strength and song, and In become my, uln- tion . . . I III!" not die, but live. Iml declare the worlu of the To A SNOWFLAKE What heart would have you?- Past. our devisal IO filagree petal!) Fonhioned so purely, Pmgtlely, surely, From what Paradise! Imaglneleos metal, 'l'oo molly for cost? Who hammered yoii. ii-rniigiit yuii, From argenttne vapCrur?... "God was my Ihaper Passing aurmisal. He hammered, He wrought me, From curled silver vapour. To lust of His ll1llldZ-- Thou cnu-ldst. not have thought me! So purely. so palely, Tinily. frailty. lnourled and embossed. With His hammer of wind, And His grave of frost." thought: --Francis Tlioiiipoon. spent 5485 on new farm machinery and 366 on spare parts and repair: --an average outlay of 5554 per farm." This latter figure. sotnchow, viv- idly rr-niinds me of the. dismal fact. that. according to the official figures, the net cash income of the nation's farmers over the decade l.'l30-.'l9, was under mm per year. We have certainly come some dis- tance from those depression lcvcls. May tlicy never return! I am. Sir. elc.. RURALITE. THE FIRES OF ERGEwEI)()llI Sir. -The word IFITPIIOIH figures largely in the thought. of liuman- ily today. In an old custom in Switzerland by which Independ- ence. Day is celebrated I fire is ill on a mountain, and then more fires appear and finally cvcry mountain is aflnmc. They are cal- led the fires of Freedom. Perhaps no country in the world prizes freedom as does Switzerland. it is n reninrkable fact that in our day those fires of freedom have spriinz up in cvcry corncr of illfw woiltl. in Africa from Cairo to the Cape lhosc fires arc breaking out. sometimes in strange anrl terrible conflnrzratlons as in the case of the Man Mau in Kenya. but rill significant of one passion --freedom: and Malrtn's campaign in South Africa is in the intcrc.-it of freedom for the white race. llc believes that the "white man was born to farm the world." as it white man said years ago. and so far he has formed a grant part of it. in Africa 6.000.000 whites arc trying to form 175,000,000 black and brown people. This day of domination seems to be passion. Who first lit. this fire of free- dom? From the beginning of his- tory it has been simmering. It broke out in Greece at various stages of her history. it was con- cerning Grccce that Byron said: "Whose land from plain to mountain cave WM frcndom'x home. or f1I0l'Y'-i grave." But. this spirit. of freedom I.- we feel it today dates its birth from the (In): of Jesus. 1-Ie found a people in chains of superstition and fear: and many of ill: par- ables were employed to set the people free from their bondage. The reality of His divinity Is manifested in His self-control in the face of severe. provocation. Many R time His anger was truly to burst. out against the rulers who kept the common people in bondage. to their foolish and gil- llng regulations. Jesus' freedom from the social taboos of His day and a hundred unessentlol cus- toms is what angered and scared Ill: enemies. He said to them: "If you know He you will know the truth Ind the truth will moke you free." He wu the only truly Free Man in His day. And It is quite rnmarknhle how free JesuI' followers been . free from fear. free from foolish cus- toms. from prejudices. and super- stitions. They but an independ- once that amazed the mItlIl.rIteI lions, and wherever Christianity tins gone. the fires of freedom ?oiea'G5i-uwzi and law courts of their tiny. They , had no fear of iflomes or hunlfl ' Old Charlottetown (And I. I. 1.) WATER. WORKS COMMISSIONERS From I letter, signed "An Indig- iiant Citizen," appearing in The Ex- aminer of Aug. 22, 1888: "Our Water Commissioners ap- pear to be students of the Old Testament, for in dlecbu-sine their duties they have followed in Re- hoboI.i'n'I footsteps. While the City Fathers have chastised us with ii-hips, they have cliastlsed us with scorpions, and their little fingers promise to be thicker than the City Fat.hoi-5' lotna. "Instead of carrying the wIt,ei- pipes from the fountain in the reservoir in the most direct line across any of the farms between Malpeque and Mount Edward Roads. they have run the line ti-iuisvei-sely through all the farms they could intersect between these points, thus imposing upon the long-suffering citizens I large I- mount of damages which could easily have been saved by the ex- ercise of ordinary judgement and common sense. Not. content with this they have taken possession of the land without. previous arrange- ment with tbe land owners for damages. They have made the claimants for damages as numer- ous as possible. and have run I.- muck by involving the city in an arbitration of lawsuit with almost every claimant. "in the zirbitratinns so far held the awards have been outrageous- ly exorbitant, Ind the arbitra- tors have been appointed in con- t.i-aventiori to the plalneot princip- les of justice. The claimant whose case was first heard was awarded 5275. though he previously agreed with the Commissioners to accept 506.. in full for his damages. In the last. award the clolmant. Ip- polnted his own brother on arbitra- tor. and was awarded 83.50) for three and it half acres of land, 1; Notes By Ii; men get their run on money. The rut. of tie Just try to get our hands on it. -HImll- wn Spectator In IIINI to belleveitliat. space has no limit: when you watch a woman trying to park in an eight- foot opening. -Sudbury Star All Corn of worrieI kept. uI awake as 1954 moved In-such as what in the world scientists will find to put in toothpaste this year.- Hnmilton spectator. women get binned I lot. and Io do teen-lagers. but research moors that the worst drivers are those right in front of whoeverls doing the research. -Edmonton Jour- not A Judge In Ohio sentenced I. man to Jail because he was hab- itually lazy. If this establishes a precedent, we foresee a substantial increase in the Jail population. -Ontnrio Ian I. new town. An old, prosperous and pleasant lake- side village has achieved that status. Its name, of course. will continue to be Port Dover and, one of these days, such will be the economic expansion of this part of the province, it may gain in- corporation as a city.--Brriiitford Expositor. The Ottun Journnl commented ediborlnlly on the decline of the calibre of speaking in the House of Commons. Strange this, in View of the fact that so many of our parliamentary members are lawyers, men who should be profes- sional speakers by the very nature of their trllnlna and occupation. Di-ookvllle Recorder and Times. There In only one effective answ. er to bigotry-a sense of propor- tion, Applied both to the ideas and to the holder of them. An idea. I belief or o prlctice is not neces- sarily bigoted Just because it is emphatic; it becomes bigoted when its emphasis is out of proportion with the scale of common sense. And the blgoh own proportions will put him in his proper place in the Icheme of things-it is .I small place, for he is I very small man.-Hamilton Spectator. -The Ainei-lcIn Airlines hII flown its last. sleeper plane from New York to Log Angelea. offhand this might sound like I backward step, but there is an explanation. The sleeper plane service required 11 hours for the trip across the continent. It is being replaced by new 365-mile-In-hour DC-'1': which fly the distance in five minutes less than eight hours. That still is long enough for I good nap, Alilngoton Whig-Standardu JANUARY 13. W54 .. 2M20 The Wax I. the more he works. produces and enrm the larger that mnrket be- comes."-Winnipeg Free Press. If we sense that Illlflllge 5, shaped less by writers t.ui-miig phrases elegantly in their book; than by the speech in the streets, in the market place: Ind in living room, it becomes clear that upon parents falls 9. great burden but, one well worth the carrying. Ir parents fall to pass on to tlirir children an awareness of the beauty, the precision, the majesty of English well spoken and writ. ten we may all be II lost. some day as was the little boy who ask- ed to inquire how a neighboring grocei was progressing in In as- sault upon an obat.in.It.e Iurled awning, reported, "1-Ie Iln't. never clone git the Iwniru down yet.t' Everyone knew what. he meInt, but the English language lay writhing lat his feet.-From the New York 1'l'imes. I E.E . Bernard Newman. trlveller. author and lecturer. bu been awarded the Legion of Honour by the French. They have made him -a Chevalier, the equivalent of our lkntghtliood. Mr. Newmm hopes to go to France to be invested with the order by the President. but he's afraid he may not hove time to fit in the visit. For Mr. New- ,man at 55 is still giving lecture: 'at the rate of nearly 400 I year, writing numerous books and tra- velling up and down the worlo. Two days after Christmu he wu off to see the new Sultan of Mor- occo, iiiid after that his New Year lectures will be engaging him every day. A grand-nephew of Georg: Eliot, Newman has written over 70 books, toured as 3 strong man in a Polish clrcin. interviewed Hitler, written comic songs for Arthur Askey and scripted for Walt Disney. lived on a oornmuiisil farm in Russia. hunted elephant: in Burma. -Ottawa Journal Although the people by the Ion have always had 5. great deal of lfniidiiess for both lobster and dulse, our inland friends have trn.dit.ioii- ally considered the loboter II choic- est If all see. products and hIve consistently turned up their noses -at dulse. Now we are Ill going to increase our respect for the jcrust.-iccan still higher. and the Up- lper Cimadiaiis are going to look on dulse with 5 more fnvot-Ible eye, because both these things from the sen Ire going to be used It medic- ine. Reaeuch workers at the At.- ianttc fisheries experimental station at Halifax have discovered I cheat? iii-ay to produce the chemical I)- glueosamine from lobster shells. D- glucosamlne hydrochloride slows the growth of certain tumors in imlmals. Dulae. which to high in iodine. iron and other mineral can- but. not long enough the airline mm 35 being prepared in capsiiln figures, to call for berths, whlchlnnd pm (mm by g (inn in the cut down the passenger CSnSCliyi,Annap01i! v,,11,,y,wn,h mg expecta- Monitor. "Since the war this country hnsi Compared in Cannon present. pop- ulation, its need of more people Ind the wealth of it: resources. these are omnll Ind unsatisfactory figures. The immigrant. becomes a producer of new as he goes to work. He also becomes ta customer for the production of the worker: already here. 1-Ie needs. for exnmple, I house which others will build, and Ill the necessities and luxurle of life that he can. afford to b from them. He in-' creases the internal market. and of the planes.-Christian scienceq wealth as soon inquest into tloi-i that. dulse in this more Ittrlcr tive guise will be widely uIed to lprevent goitre and to hell! 6011390?" act iiietai-y aeticiency--Saint John admitted about 940.000 foreigriei-s. .1.(,k.g,.3ph Journal. INQUEST DATE SET PEMBROKE. ozit... (Ci?) - AI ii CPR. sleeping-cm" took one life Dec. 30. has been set. for Jan. 21. CNW” oifiota.l.s said Tuesday. Charm Eaucault. of Noranda. Que. 1 P6P senger held for questioning in the fire, has been releasedl. official! said. but he will appear at the iiiquest. me which .... which the Commissioners valued int ssoo. and which could iieiiiciiiy have been purchased by them for less money if they had gone the right way about it...If this to law. would it not simplify matters to refer the valuation of the land to the claimant himself. in every instance, and allow him to assess his own damages?" that today, the world over, those fires are fed from fires started by the Man of Galilee? The fires of freedom may be lit by various motives. Often. it is nice hatred, or economic and polit- lcal oppression. That motive is treacherous. and is "apt to lead to violence, and end in another form of slavery as in the revolt of the Bolsheviks against the Czors. Sometimes it is I pure desire to make the but of one'I life, for only when a man is free can he come into his best. Slaves rarely become great men. Freedom is I big, broad. rich word. and to be truly free is I glorloul achieve- ment. Ignm, Sir. etc., W. I. GREEN Stanley Bridge. COLD CASH KYICI-IEN'm. Ont... (OP)-James AnlrenmIi-in nude 85 in cash" here Tuesday what he trot- ted about one-qttu-for of I mile in his bare feet t.o'wln I bet. The sub-freezlu sprint cnme Ifter he and some fellow packing-oompnnl workers discussed the cold spell during the noon lunch hour. The wuer followed. OOMPLEIE VISUAL REFBAOTIOZI AND ANALYSIS 6. r. HUTCI-IISON Ii SON Optometrist: as oimoii emu Lorri. have been ill. Ind who can deny "cold . Office Hours: Office - 181 Queen KEITH s. W.K. Rogers Agencies Limited COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE 9:00 until 5:00 Monday through Friday. Closed all day Saturday. Telephones: President and Manager AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE Street -- 8541 - 8542 ROGERS. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. A. L. Moclsouc DENTIST MI Quota St. McDONAI.D. Dlll IIMI Byron J. Grant. OD: OPTOMBTII S1 mum ml” in lent Street Phone I” ULOIIA BUILDING i”"'”'"' '""' "m" A” ”""'"' "' "'"""' ”" Allison M. GIIIII. I.I..S- "iIi”iI.I."”.I'".3"”3II?i3B.Ii.'?.n I80 1: on - ' Dr. K. A. Mociochorn PlIonolI0 l:::lT:(s-SI! J' A" E:;,""".l::' R'O' . Above Charlottetown Cllnlo In K.” s".""m" "M" ,3” (Nut to SI:-pIon'o Anlwl CUIIRIE In CO. ' one am. II nuim. niiinto unmet. loohfllo. Glasgow. from omurruunn Acooomaivre r Montreal. Quebec. mtnwn, Toronto. saint John. Sliorbrooke. VIl'00'"" ' llrklnntl use nlonetrm. Illrnilton, Clnrlottetown. HIIIIIIIMJIL " Dorrie Itii... cniihoueumi. DN '7', H. I. DOANI Ii COMPANY onnnnonn Iioooonntci-I ta oniii oeom 32.. cbimomcown w non our - IMO 9- 0- 3'" IuPE u1'. """'I'3vi?h II nuns CA I. .0 e - t n." ii. It. aaiiii-I. Aiiim DI-"I-0""" eni '0onor, Inel-