APAGF. FOUR THE GUARDIAN Authorized ll Second Class Mail Post. 0ffic;- Department. Ottawa. Tho Island Gusrdisn Publishing Co. and still further back. (Cheers and laugh- ter). Her Majesty's present advisers would for their part find no difficulty in accept-I mg a principle. From this it naturally fol- lows that there should not in their view be any difficulty anywhere in acknowledging the style and title of her present Majesty." To the query ”why he had decided on 1066 as the starting point for all this?- was it to get out of tile difficulty that the first King Edward is not known as Edward ",- ,, , I but as Edward the Confessor?" the Prime ;..”i3, 1 Minister diplomatically replied: "As the i great scroll of history unfolds. many compli- lcated incidents occur. whicll it is difficult lto introduce effectively into the pattern of Commenting on the formal appcaljrc-, the likes and me dislikcq of HM, Opovh in cently by eight of the ten Provinces against which we live... a. judgment of the Transport Board. the, Winnipeg Free Press stresses the major” significance of this action. Under the Rail-, way act two avenues of appeal from judg-I mems Of the Boam am lnlml-ldcd' An ap'l taken another look at the statistics which Deal on a queslion of law may be taken ml say that between 1840 and 1940 Canada the Supreme Court of Canada' An appeal-l received 6450 000 immivrants and in the 9” 3 question "f fact ml of law may bel same centilry lost 6000 000 of them chief- laken to the cabinet. It should be under-; IV to the United Staicg '.I.he Councif deepp stood, of course, that the Transport Board. 1;, interested in makh)" me immigllant a is a court of record but not a court in the dseful Citizen happy inhhis new home no Accepted sense nf the lminl It is a body lonver is convinced that this country is created by Parliament to carry otlt the, merely Being used as R :lCppmg Smm, no function of freight rate and other railwaylmaner what the nvures gay. " regulation which formerly devolved upon The figures of iourse ljepmsent a gen, me cabinet" For that reasmh an appeal to eralization. The 6,000,000 who left were President and Associate Editor, Ian A. Burnett, Assocists Editor, Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Conn Prince Edward Island like tho dun" "Tho strongest memory is weaker than tho wcakut ink". Hfiftf(Yr'rE'rolv. . The Freight Rates Appeal citizenship statistics The Canadian Citizenship Council has GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Expensive But Necessary Looks rinse the cabinet is really an appeal from lhelnot all newcomers to Canada and it is Tubsldlafy 10 lllf'1'05D0hSllJl9 h0(l.V- Kvitllill the knolvlcd-re of every Canadian It is the fact' howevel" mat Smce melthat opportunities azross the border havel Equalization Case or 1925'27' there has beenllured away great numbers of people whose like each ., 1 l l but one major appeal-lin September 1948lancestors lived in this country for genera- on the 21 per cent judgment. Only wh C i A l the principles of rate regulation adopted byy the Board are fundamentally unsound wouldl an appeal by such responsible bodies as the Governments of a majority of the prov- lnces be taken. In the present case, the fact that eight Provincial Governments. n "Tile Council does not say so. notes the Ottawa Journal, ”but the loss of a native Canadian could be more damaging tol Canada than the departure of a stranger; who did not wait to becolne part of the: PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by correspondent! of questions of interest. The Guardian does not '- tl,v endorse the opinion of community and had no interest in building: a home and family here. On the othel" hand, Canada has been permanently enrich-l ed by the arrival of new citizens from oth- er lands bringing their skills alld cultures, and enthusiasm for our way of life. This; movement of people. in the long run. may not be as damaging as we may consider it, today. There is the possibility that Can-q ada, by immigration froln the United States, l will win back all she lost as her resourcesl representing such varied interests as those of the four western and four Atlantic prov- inces, have found common ground in con- demning a judgment of the Transport Board, must carry great weight. The present appeal is against the 7 per cent, flat horizontal increase in freight rates granted by the Board on March 5. 1953. The petitioners pointed out that with this 7 per cent increase, freight rates have risen since April 1948 by 98.2 perl -on their business eslablisllnlcllts to: Lu: respondents. vnsan nl;lb;lrlcArloN Slr.-The Charlottetown ,Branch of the Community Planning As- i l melatloll has included Beoutifica-, md Cover the garden MN tlull ln lts pl'os'1'am 10? l-he lms provement. nl the city The slogan wllich has been adopted is "Palllt",l "Plant", f'Clean". , This is the tune for those cltl-, mils who have been plallnllllz for, several years to do a completel painting job on their houses or, add their bit to the im-provenlell . . - , and opportunities become more widely . . . ' cent. This ls a greater increase than the, ' v H ,ot ohallottetown. If mono) gs , , , . known. lsealce, lnlplolenlents can be ma e POST. Of l1VlllFI- alld. 1” lll” VIPW of lliei ,'nv just Dnlntlnx the, doors anti; petitioners, entirely unwarranted. To clinch the point. the Provinces pointed out that there have been no less than three I791" - - P-ehlage hlC1'9359S 5lhC9 -lahl-lary 25- 1952m Graduates of the Charlottetown Hospital 5 Def C9hl 0" lhat flalhi 9 D9? C9"-l 9lf9Cth'9 School of Nursing were urged not to be car- -IRHUNXV 1 la-Tl and 7 DPT Fem tlliahled Wlgried away by inducements to leave this March 6. last. Province where they are so urgently need-l It. may be askedCWhat about the in-led. The Province consequently has anl creases in Wages rzrantcd l0 Pallw-'3.V 9m',obligation to see that they are not thcl ployees in December and February? Do 1059,-5 by 1-emaining, these justify the 7 per cent increase? Th-ll - Imtwer. as made by mp PmVinCeS' is mall Taking steps to remain on a sound fl-I lh0 I'3llWEl.V5 WP” EIVPH an IUCFGBSC Of 9, nancial basis may seem hard sometimes bull Def GEM in 171105 f'll9CllW -l3hUaF.V 1- "Vin the ease of a city, at any rate, it pays: meet the December Wag? lhC1"3a595- Theloff. The favorable price received forl Provinces did mt 0h.l0C-l? lhe lhffeash Wenll Charlottetown bonds when the bond mar-E 5l'1l”0UEh almflsl aUl0mi1llCall.V- The C051 05lket is weak would certainly not have beenl "he February wage increase is estimated bid had tho Coumil 1,99,. afraid to apply.-f lC.P.R. ficuresl at 5i6,050.000. Bul lh?,the measures required by good financing. freight rates. as they existed before the T, v - ner cent increase. when applied on the in-L "Nova Scotia is afraid to gamble,". creased traffic Of l9-33. 35 Csllmaled by lhi",charges Newfoundlands Premier Small- hallways lh0lh50lVC9- Wlll .Vl9l(l 330-450-000-l wood. contrasting the great strides takenl Thus. Without ill? 7 DOV Whl lnclcase 1119'”--ll by his own Province since Confedcrationl will be enough additional revenue to pay-with the more sedate pace of 11... Older; the 35.il50.(Wl Wllh 334-40”-lloll Ml 0V9l'- ,member. The accusation applies with al-l ------------- m" lmost equal force to Prince Edward Island., We do not have the vast stake of New-l foundland III the form of undeveloped re- sources but in proportion this Pl'ovil1cc, uld invest far more in its future. LDITORIAL NOTES l l 0 0 o The Sovereignls Title In debate in the British Ilouse of Com- mons Prime Minister Churchill was asked C” whether. in advising the Sovereign to as-l Slime lhC lillf (ll Elllnbelll ll. ht-I 100k int”: Sunlmcrsidc is finding that many of its 30hSld0F3ll0h lht" flCSlFf1bllll.Y "l ad0Dl-lhil citizens are not familiar with the proper the principle of using whichever numeral irrl way of calling mp rim (lgparlrnenf in The Ehgllsh "V Scnlll-Th llh05 Ol Kings and an emergency by lllcrely dialling the oper- QUGGNS hallflchefl l0 h" lh? lllglleli lator who in turn can set off the alarm. it The Elsi 0r lll" Pllnl” Mlnlslel"-A l'CDl.Vl, would be a good thing if in every com- WBS been Slhlcll lh DFCSS flCSDalChC'S. hul lh0l munity householders held their own practice lull text ls W0l'lh (lU0llllf!. "Th? fl0CiSl0n l'T. alarms. Thinking out in advance what to lSSUm9 Th? llllr hf Ellzilhelll II." he Si1id.l do about fire in the kitchen or elsewhere "was of course taken on the advice of thel might later mean the precious minutes Accession Council and the form of ' n I- n the, which would make the difference between proclamation was approved by Her Maj-l a minor blaze and serious loss. esty's government. ” it t' "Since the Act of Union the principle to Lazaro Nicolas Marguerite which my right Hon. friend refers has in French soldier and statesman, was borll fact been followed. Although I am sure this date 1733. He entered the army in neither the Queen nor her advisers could 1784, serving under Louis XVI, the Re- seek to bind their successors in such a mat- public and Napoleon. In 1786 he published ter I think it would be reasonable and logi-r his celebrated "Essai sur les machines ell cal to continue to adopt in future whicheveri general". He was a member of the Na-. numeral ln the English or Scottish iinc,tional Assembly and of the Committee ofl, were higher. Thus if. for instance. a Kin-:,lPublic Safety. He fled to Germany and' Robert 01' a King James came to the throne wrote a defence which caused his col- lie might well be designated by the numeral leagues' ruin. Recalled in 1800, he becamel Ippropriate to the Scottish succession, minister of war, conducting the Italian and 'JIereby emphasizing that our Royal Family Rhineland campaigns with great credit. Hel traces its descent through the English Royal came out of retirement in 1814, defending """ He was mln- - line and through the Scottish Royal line Antwerp against the allies. I from William the Conqueror and beyond. ister of the interior during the Hundred through the Scottish Royal line from Days between Napoleon's return from Elba Rfobtrt ,the Bruce and Malcolm Canmore and Waterloo. Cl Carllol, I lwmclmv frames. and in such casesl one need not be ashamed to use l)l'l2I”lL colours. A gnlly painted- door may well be a welcome slant to any home: or shop-also con-, slderable fun may be had in do-l ing the job. j l The idea of Arbour l).lv origi- nrlted in the. need for plantlll: trees and ll. day was chosen in the springtime when the vegetable kingdom awakens from its winter sleep. At this time. of year many; pcrsolls have the urge in get out and rile and plant. 0nc's prnpery or street may be1nlpl'oved by planting a tree, A shrub, or flow- ers. Or maybe one has plenty of trees and. II so, it. is more than likely that. they will need prun- ing There will he. dead branches to cut, low hanging branches that bother pedestrians. or branches that shade the lawn so that the grass will not grow. The shade tree ill the garden that one will like to sit under on the hot sum-. mer dllvs should have the limit- l lches trimmed fairly lllzll to allow" -the grass to grow nicely llll('lFt'-l lleath. Again. it few sllrubs such as Lilac, Honeysuckle, or many mil-, rrs--arrantzed properly anti film- lned adeqllntely--call provide a sheltered and private nnnk, their- by adding to the attractllcness of appearance on the street on alcmcket Club mviwd H, laws and , . . olle's property. Perhaps circumstances do pelmlt. the planting of flees or shrubs, but a border flowers llll'1lTL be be:lutlful factory-or where space frenlely lllnllerl, a wlnrhw will add pleasure not onlv to on"- self but. also to the passerby. In- of 1? PV- lrrcsltng new gardens are beaun at. little expense from plants one s lleighbour has thlll- xezlot fl. ld .t.bll low- ! U 0 H50 M1 lsm "n lmzs fol' stranted: and one of llltll-ll0UKl'l there are others better. den People who lived in the days before a meal or lunch cmlld lu- l).).lzll'. in packages had one ad- vantaae over the present life. they dld not have to worry about the disposal of tin calls. paper car- ton: and kleenrx. UnforLullmc- 'lv this generation has not found an easy why of overcoming this problem. However. if every per- son, ,'.'0ullR and old. who resides in Charlottetown nr visits cllv would stop throwing empty bottles, cartons and cans on the streets and keep them lllltll n '.sult.able place to dispose of them was found we would have a cleaner '1): The Community Plnnnllllz As- sociation asks every person to join r puxn -The Age Old Story? hYfk'atYanuuuu.- And in this mountallrsllall the Loni of hosts make unto all peo- pie is tent of fat things, a feast of wines on the lens. of fat things fllll nf marrow, of wine: on the lees well refined. And he will do- stroy in this mountain the face of the covering out over all pg)- snd the'vIiI that is spread over .all nations. Ho will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord God will wipe away tests from off all faces; and tho rebuke of his .....,.. l 74b Gum v a I)ESER'liI-ID FARM Butterflies are a splash of cream- and-yellow In the blue-weed and the clover That wander w:ll;.-nllly across the lawn l Throu ! gh the leisurely sulillt. day the bees make bum in the flowering apple-tree, And the fragrant lllacs press to the window-panes In a purple galaxy. Only when twilight moves down the quiet lane, And the luminous mellow day Melts into dusk, and the l.)ll'ds that warble, like mad l llave. folded their songs away-- i Only then is the house A heart-l breaking sight. Its old arms. ample and wide, Are a haven of shelter and com- fort . - and no-one cares To creep inside. -Blanche. Wwnnll Gnrrett in the prolzraln of beautification nf Chnl'lol-tetown lll the week oil M0HdaV. May 18th. "Paint-Planb Clean." I am. Sir, etc, 1 P, A. CREELMAN, President. Charlot.i.etown Com- lnumty Planning Association, THE HAPTY Sir.--"But there was none to welcome him". This was the la- ment of Saunders McGlasllan af- ter his mother died. He became fed up with living alone. and re- solved to have a wife, and so in a very business-like w:ly'he setgbout to find a wife. He had to shave and put on his best. He not pencjl and paper and wrote down the names of slx females whom he; knew or had heard about. Hist, weekday in his Sunday clothcsl not caused a sensation in the village. ma- hag Many noses were flattened against the window panes facing the, lid sat .- - 3 if stleet. He went. after Jallct Hell-Ind. ll-H5 1-mm, 15 not clean but 1, dersoll First, and to make a long he his wife. And Saunders A home, Janet. made, and when he; oft . . "” came home flom work she gavclmlarters, and the Mecca of cricket- ylllm a welcome. l We take too many of our bless-I things we take. thus is our home. I”.'1TniIiHl"ll,V breeds lngmtltude We think we. know all there is to know -about our home. but we do not lknow half. not half the comforts ynnd joys that are. ours lll that ,zlbode of peace. we let. them come land go nlmnst unnoticed. It. is when the wife becomes ill and has to so to hospital that we feel the lloss nlld begin t.o remember how lh(VlITI8Sl. we were. We are not half its", do It great deal of walking, often ten miles a day. Coming home after night it was an inspiration to picture the lighted rooln and feel the warmth and one waiting for me. A Christian home is A little bit of heaven; and coming home from work tired and hungry, reminds us of another home, all lighted up for us and loved ones waiting to welcome us. And (3 we can be patient and keep in our journey, tired though we may bc,butknow- lmr that "eye hath not seen nor ear heard what God hath prepar- ed for those who love. him", in the home of many mansions. This is Family week, 10-16. and we -hall have s .new chance to evaluate our homes and mske some resolutions; and one resolu- tion parents should make is that their day should begin in an act of family worship. This is not easy but if it is realized that effective help comes from worship 9. way people shall he tsko swny from off All tho earth: for tho Lorll hath woken It. will be found to have it. regularly. No ten or fifteen minutes during -l,,, tP(I that they should have a pri- lvnte ground on which to play. it l 1814. lhankful for our homes as we should be. In one charge. I had, I had tol 6&0 Notes From Another Island by "Anson" LONDON. Ellglancl:- Thomas Lord was 9. Yorkshire- msn, born very nearly two hun- dred years ngo. He is recorded to have been a charming man, hand- some in app-carallce and with a head for business. Desirable char- acteristics. but. others of his age would have possessed them in equal measure: indeed nothing is claimed lfor. 'I'-homes Lord that would single him out for poster- ity. I should be very much sur- prised if he is mentioned in any textbook of history, yet his name is perpetuated by a place in Lon- don that has been visited by countless thousands of people from lands as far afield as South Africa and the West. Indies Aus- tralia and New Zcaland and In- dla, as well as front Vie and breadth of Great Britain. And thousands more who . never seen it know Thomas Lord's "monument" by name as well as they know the name of their own home town. Thomas entered the service of the Earl of Wlnchelsea. who. as it hH.l'7D8lTBd, was prominent in the cricketing world of those days. particularly in an organization known as the White Conduit Club. Thomas evidently made him- self useful in LITIKE circles, for when members of the Club decid- was suggested that he open n ground for that purpose. He not- ed on the suggestion. and Lord's llzl7g;lnd was opened in the year As time. went on remov-sis be- came necessary. and on the sec- ond occasion a move was made to the site on which the ground stands in this day. That. was ill Other developments had taken place meanwhile that gave Lord's ground tlledmportsnce to cricketers the world over that it has held ever since. The White Condult Club chang- ed its name to the Marylebonc a published them with an authority never been challenged. Who gave the M.C.C.. as it is known wherever cricket is play- stands And unquestioned. its I .' . , mb story short he got. her consent. foqmmsv Lm-ds Cncket Ground in H . select part. of North West. London, is rclzarded- as Crickets Head- ers all over the world. I: is .a well-appointed ground, .Man,v in other parts of England I-are much more picturesque; some, '.here and in other countries. are llnore spacious; alld we have it loll the word of professional cric- lketers who have played there llhal lls Playing surface is not lperfect. But ask the professionals lwhleh ground they like to play 1 Notes By Sooner or inter hospitals becumo urgent matters for almost every- body. Then tt suddenly matters to the individual whether the hos- pitals of his community have all AIIE equipment and facilities neces- sary. The time to wonder about all this is, of course, long before the emergency takes place.- Montreal Financial Times. A correspondent who advocates :1 distinctive Cluladilln flag writes that Ontario also should IL. lie. as Nova Scotla has. Ontario. how- ever, is not. entitled to s. distinc- tivc flag nor is any other province of the Dominion except Nova Seotiu, which acquired one more than 800 years ago - first. British colony to possess a flag. It is de- rived from the coat of arms grant- ed Nova Scotfs. In 1625 by Charla I of England. It. is described as a silver field with a blue St. Andrew's Cross, in the centre the royal arms of Scotland - red linn on a golden shield. -Toronto Telegram. boat. to stand up to a fearful lick now on the market. of toughness. Made of H. synthetic material, this boat will stand a drop from I. two-storey building on to concrete without showing a dent. and will turn back pistol fire at close range. The boat re- quires no varnish or palm. upkeep. msterlsl have the same charm. lightness and beauty of the wood- en boat, but for the man who needs a. boat. that. can withstand terrif- ic punishment. these new boats may be the answer. - Brockville Recorder and Times. It is very easy, by brooding over the past and worrying about the future, to evade the obligations of the present. Conscientio sess is not to be measured by tr- de- gree of snyone's emotional tor- menu; it is to be measured by what. is done in the only tlr- any- one has at his disposal -- the present hour. The long habit of living may Indispose us to dying. But. the long habit of worrying may also Indispose us to living. The present. hour is both our re- fuge and our duty. Hsppv are those who learn the habit of keep- ing within it.-Montreal Gazette. Hard pressed to make ends meet on 52,300 per year, members of Parliament in Great Britain are seeking an increase in their salar- ies. They would like to have enough to keep from gollllt lmol debt. Canadians in the Commons, get. 56,000 per year, of which ::.:j-jjj-:-j Much at Lord's. The answer will be. the same whether he comes from Melbourne. Australia or Kmgslon. Jamaica. Recently st. Lord's in cricket museum wss opened by the Duke of Edlnburglh H himself at cricket- er of no mean prowess - contstn- ing rclies and records of the game since the days of Thomas Lord himself. It is dedicated to the memory of cricketers who laid down their lives in the two 53-009 ll tanned as txpengg For the man who expects his 1. ml: yesr after year, there is B. boat lncrcdlblc, One doubts that boats of synthetic A MAY 13. 1953 k-1, The Way; and is not. taxable. It man" that Parliament only ;::,:d ;:r I” I couple of months or 5 more like A club ihBnoaa)::1;vt ll," body. Frequently. membeltsiame Parliament looked on their 9! tlon as an honorary posg ,mpmi active Te5P0nBlblllty ',,, u, '" nlueh attendance to detaltq lit" members of Parliament if”, 0 devote most of their time to th to duties. Even when the Hausa all not in session. members an anal: on to do this and help that. he. auently they have to go to Ott. 30 try and iron out somethln wt. all takes motley. The time ism: come, and it. will not. be long lmnc when Canadians in the co....m " will be paid more. Good man gnl needed at Ottawa and they cu? not give up most of their um; without some adequate compcnss. tion.-Wlndnor Star. llll1I'"lllllillllll-it!-1-1., Old Charlottetown (And 2. E. 1.) TOVVN LOTS & ROYALTY "By looking at the map p Wm be seen that the situation inf Charlottetown) is both centricsl and convenient, having a sale lil- ternal water communication with very considerable part of in, Island. by means of the Hills- borough. York and Elliot Riv-rs, which meet in its harbour, Ts. ground I! well adapted for in site of ;l town, rising ;:l'adusll.. lo a moderate height above in water, snd is generally sound 5”, land, the ascent from the river in very easy, the streets are laid out at right angles, those. running from the river are one llundml feet in hrcadlh. the cross streets were originally laid out at elgym. feet. but have since been reducsd to forty feet in breadth. "The building lot: are eighty feet in front, by one hundred sud sixty in depth. and many of the inhabitants having several eon. tlguous lots. are thereby enabled to have large gardens. by which means the place slresdy covers . considerable surface, though ltdou not contain more than SPvpntv houses: and though many of thnh are very indifferent, yet the town viewed from the harbour or the opposite. shores has A very pleu- ins appearance. "The only public building yet erected in it is A church. There is a Common of one llundrerl arru adjoining the town. and turn every hulldlng lot there is grant- ed A pasture lot of twelve Acres in the Royalty, a tract of seven thousand acres so called. which surrounds the town and cnmmnn, and has an extensive frnlu ball! on HlIIFll0i'0U,lZIi and York Rnnu, Many of these pastures llnve heen purchased from the Grantees by I few individuals on speculation. and some progress hns been made in improving these aecunlulatlnns. there. being several small farm: within the i'toynlty." - From "An Account of Prlnnn Edward Island." etc., by John World Wars. If it is true to say that they would sak for no finer memorial it is equally safe ml claim that. they would ask for it to be in no more revered s. ploce.l Stewart. Esq, 1806. Absolute, zero, whet-swall molecu- lar motion theoretically ceases. is 459 degrees below zero. PROFESSIONAL CARDS M. Albon Former. 9.C. B.A.. LLB. Barrister uld Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Losn A. Wolthen Cl-foil-cl: LLB. nslmlsrsn. souclslon. so-. Phillips Julldlnx xii Grafton Street Money to loan Collecllnll Frederic A. Large. Q.C. Barrister. Solicitor, Notary lloyal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. l'. E. I. Loans on City and Farm Propertie- STB-ell. Murhleson 8: Foster Barristers. Solicitors. Etc. E. R. BELL, 11.0. G. II. FOSTER. LLB. Donna on City snd Farm Properties 150 Richmond street chfrlomiown. i'.E.l. -Gander & Hoszord GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB Barristers and Solicitors l on: ssk especially the younser Ultra, not yet. blase or surfelted Clnmum maiynrcoarrrco mn MONEY 'r()wl.()A.L,'4 'wl success. and most will g,gggg.gg:,.;.-..- - . --; --1. a- J A. McGuIgalI imam M j--- J' A' cu'""h.'s' R'o' naniilsrrlu. sol.lol'roB. F-M Every slimmer we welcome I - NOTARY life. Touring Team from overseas. Its In K .g;:gbmTnlSl';hon. 337-; (jurflg uullrllnx m'9m'b"3 1'” W059" 8-! '-h0 but "en. a, mm M," A'.,nc,) r----r-'-r-'.- inl the country concerned. They ( u p D7: Ku Au MICIGCIIGW play against the English county -' , DEN-"5-I :l:i:..:":..l::t :”;:..2l”i..E:.:l A'""" ”- ”'"''5- '-L-'- . . , - 5 mg of England's beat. Each mem- l:A:3::1,;:::'sE0,l.J 20, AM" 'lo"'"ov”'pll-nlllld Mi 1 ber of the touring party has one ",0". mo .a.91'E':. ,. declared ambition: to be t- Dr A L Madsugc to represent his country in to Test 3 '-on J G.-...r., O D ' ' ' Match. Question him and he will Y ' ' H . I . DENTIST narrow it down to closer limits: 0PT0llmT3'5T Dental X-Bay to play for his country in a Test I33 Kfsi 3"I':5”B n”;:I"' '7' GLORIA BUlI.Dll;i(h3 gyl I mm 0 avers 0 i no Grafton St. ""5 - Illrlrtiqglayl can be so prontgbly faperillt. H. R. DOANE 8: COMPANY 9”" mm" W " "m V cnaurrnrn in-curls-ran-rs worship both easy and interesting. ' ' H , M no point in humlnme 1. mung us Great George St. Lhsrluttelolvn guidance more needed than in n'”"'' "3" i '”7. family affairs. Problems are al- 3ANDm-P" Wr "5NN'N”- "Mr .,V. (at way, comm up. p,.ob,,m, um snnu r. Mncl'Hl'.Ils0N. o,A. at Jltllavrl-lA.umll:;lli;:r;”m"u,h 0 III. I'll - need superior wisdom. , "The promise is unto you and to your children”. come: right in here. God most. certainly wants to give effective help to parents. I am. Sir, ct.c., w. r. oizsmz. Chas. R. McQuoid B.A. BAIHHSTEB. SOLICITOI. NOTARY. Etc. Esstcm Trust Building CI'lAiKI.()TTl5TOWN Phone ml Matheson. Peoke.& . Nicholson A. W. MATHESON. Q.(T, A. H. l"EAl(I'i. B.A.. LLB. .JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LL.ii. Barristers, Etc Collections - Money To Losn 1'15 Grafton Street Dr. W. R. Carson CIllll(ll'RA()'li()ll Palmer (irsduain CHAill.0TTF.T(IWN Phone I072 zol r-rim It- .i. S. Taylor ()l'TU)lE'l'RIS'I' Eyes Exalnined, Glasses iiillvd Corner Kent nnd Queen Sill. Offico Phone I956-House l0i3 Shiiolmer & l-FEIEET A. J. IIASLAM. B.A., LLB. Barrister. Etc Blink of News South: Chsrlottetolvn. P. l'-- l- ('lllImlverI Other offices Bnllfu. cg. flloncum. lien vllle. Liverpool. New Glasgow and Trum CHARTERED Kirkland Lake. Moncton ll Stanley Bridge. Currie Bldg. Charlottetown. Ilontrcsl. Quebec. Ottawa. Toronto. McDONAI.D. CURRIE 8- CO. ACCHUNTANTU W Saint John. Sberbrooke. Vl""'"' I itetown. . Edmonton. Chsralwham ",4