i PAGE mun -THE GUARDIAN Ilmnlng Aullmruul on uail: CFIIIIIIIIIII In mm Hon-niul Clul Ilull Pact Omen - Ilnpurluiunt. Oiluwo The Inlnnd uiunllln Publishing tn. mlttm lull Ilunlgllll Inna-It-c. J ll Burns-M Aunt-Into I-Jillian, Frlnh wnllur. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Man the Weakest Ink." CHARLOTTETUWN riuirliv. -was 2. mo Words From The Past In these days of Government handouts it is refreshing to take a glance at the aili- tude of one of our early statesmen towards relieving even necessitous cases at the t':.V- payers' expense. Few abler men ever occu- pied the position of Lieutenant Governor of this Island than Sir Donald Campbell. who arrived here in 1847 during a period of con- siderable hardship and whose first duty ii as to alleviate conditions to the best of his means. Sir Donald at once commenced a series of personal tours throughout the Ci."- ony. Everywhere he was received with open Irms. particularly by the Highland settlers whose first i'epi'cs.entatlve he was at Gov- ernment I-louse. lie was hanqucted and ten- dered addresses of welcome to which he coi- dially replied; but when these addresses were accompanied by appeals for Govern ment relief. as they were in several in- stances. he took a firm stand. Here are his words. as given in the course of a Vl?il to the Mlllll'3)' Harbour District: "You have alluded to the unfavorable position of the settlers from the loss of their crops and other causes. I trust that their condition this season will not be so hard as you seem to anticipate. I can assure you. that the potato crop presents a more favr.i'- able appearance of an abundant increase in this district than in any other I have yet visited. Should. however. the crops fall. it becomes the more urgent that you should impress upon the settlers the necessity of relying upon their own industry and econ- omy to supply their wants. instead of an peeling for aid to the Executive Govern- ment. whenever the shoe pinches. "If my object was to make myself a popular Governor. I could do it with ease. by putting my hands into the public purse. and thus furnishing a remedy for tempor- ary distress; but it would not be at my own expense. It would be at the cost of you. gentlemen. who pay the taxes: and I am convinced that by dipping my hands into your pockets for such a purpose. I should not prove myself a real friend of the coun- try or to the poor people themselves. "Better. far better. that they should manfully exert themselves to ameliorate their condition. and even submit to severe privations. than to degrade themselves to the condition of paupers. and lose the feel- ing of independence which steady persever- ance in the habits of industry and economy cannot fail to produce. "I shall be every ready to contribute to relieve the distressed. as far as my own private means will allow me. but I have no right to touch the public purse. It must be by the practice of the most strict econ- omy. and by restraining their little wants. in seasons of scarcity. that individual dis- tress is to be averted; and I should be very glad to learn that every man among you had become a member of a Temperance So- ciety. and every old lady in the settlement had made up her mind to restrict herself to one cup of tea less at each meal." Under Sir Donald the Island rallied very successfully from its depression. and subse- quent historians have described him as being among the most popular as well as most competent and conscientious of our Colonial administrators. Vital Statistics Although statistics must always be re- gardsd with some caution they provide a useful indication of long term and current trends. The most recent Canadian vital sta- tistics show a healthy natural increue both for the Dominion and this Province. In the third quarter of 1949 live births in Canada numbered 91,641 as against 27.334 deaths. the P. E. I. figures being 727 to 229. The natural increase for the first nine months. however. amounted to only 178,879 for Canada. which will not soon permit us go rival the population of the United States which may now be in the vicinity of 150,- 000.000. Diseases of the heart are still the great killers. '26.129. being more than double the number of deaths from the next cause. can- cer, 12,158.. It may be noted that deaths from Icute pollomyelitls and pollencepha- V lltll number only 156.-although even that mun lg a great increase over the previous yeu'I 51. There were no deaths from mallow!- .. EDITORIAL NOTES iiuhot how good for potatoes when foi-thcl!uIltobIl"loodRe- poncho nllhihum of All -.;w'3L”'DIlIhIVldl8p0lOd0fChQItCt0pl. a the chartered banks. An acknowledgement will be received from the Fund headquarters at Winnipeg. O 0 Mr. MacNaught is being kept busy ans- wering questions in the House of Commons in the absence of Fisheries Minister May- hew. I O O From henceforth it is to be the Anglican Church of Canada. In Scotland it is the Episcopal Church of Scotland. to differenti- ate it from -the Established Church of Scot- land Presbyterian. O I O Charlottetown and Summerside Kinsmen are vying for success in staging their carn- ivals. Summerside seems to have an ad- vantage in a mayor who can ”guess your weight.” 0 I I Reuters News Agency carries a report that the 258-year-old feud between clans Campbell and Macdonaid has been healed. Perhaps the U. N. has not been so ineffec- tive after all. 0 O D After the exposure of the Winnipeg Free Press. the Board of Transport Commission- ers should hide their diminished heads. but more than likely they will proceed to blun- der on as usual until they are relegated to the limbo of inadequacy. Maxmillian of Mexico executed this date 1867. In 1862 French troops entered the capital and proclaimed an empire under Maxmillian of Austria. A revolution in 1867 restored the republic, Maxmillian being shot I I 0 Both Montreal and Toronto have vice probes on their hands involving "higher- ups” in civic administration. Details of the charges are not given out and. are denied by those affected. Still, there can be no smoke without at least a little fire. I O 0 Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley Apple Blossom Festival gets under way today. The festival is. of course. regarded very largely as a tourist attraction. but it also provides excellent publicity for that Province's apple crop. O O O The preliminary rifle shoot which be- gins tomorrow should. provide an opportun- ity for younger marksmen. In Switzerland that country's successful neutrality in nu- merous wars can probably be traced to a large degree to the almost universal pro- ficiency in handling a rifle in that small country. 0 I I In. the past three years alone. invest- ments in Canada by U. S. companies, syndi- cates and individuals have increased by more than 3200 millions and now total over 552.700 millions. A large volume of new U. S. investment has been and still is being channeled into putting to productive use Canada's resources of oil. iron. titanium and other primary materials. the depletion of which in the U. S. is of such concern. Q 0 0 How ridiculous can you get? asks Mon- treal Gazette. Asuper-market in a neigh- boring municipality raised the lre of local small merchants. who persuaded the local gendarmes to station one of their number at the super to be strict about parking regu- lations. The other day a woman's purse was snatched in the store. She ran out yelling "Stop thief." Her pleas to the police- man for aid fell on deaf ears. "I'm only here to hand out parking tickets, lady," he advised. l O I O This from "Janus" of The Spectator. "The Dean of Canterbury. in pursuit of his loss ecclesiastical activities. told a Canadian au- dience on Tuesday (according to the Daily Herald) that the Archbishop of Canterbury was lilliterate about his own clergy and pro- foundly ignorant about what is going on in Russia.' The Dean added that 'the King ap- pointed me, and the King would have to fire me? Perhaps I may add further (since the Dean raises the point) that the King ap- pointed Dr. Hewlett Johnson on the advice of a Labour Prime Minister; another Labour Prime Minister would be taking a very popular step if he tendered appropriate ad- vice to His Majesty now." I O O This is the time of year when house- holders are tempted to make unnecessary use of their water supply. It is easier to run a hose all night than to water I lawn properly without undue waste. Citizens are apt to think that their water supply can be used to air-condition their entire neighbour- hood. Unfortunately it would take far more water and equipment than this city possesses to allow such practices to become wide- spread. Wlth the experience of New York City and other drought stricken municipal- ltles as I warning. we should practice every reasonable economy in the use of water. It would be I Ind day for this city if reckless waste of water coincided with the emer- gency needs of fighting any large fire. A warning to this effect is contained in In Idvertlnement by the Commlssioneis of WI- tu: in thin luau. . - THE GUARDIAN. 7; . 76am He never saw the sea or ever heard its sound. Yet. he was sure he heard The music it unwound Whenever men were sent To sail upon its crest. And sensed a kinship with The wonder in its breast. ms snu'r-iiv In sensing it. he knew The melody he heard was freer than the wind. Fleeter than the bird. And ever was prepared Against the toughest. tide. To sail the roughest sea with his dream by his side. Thus fortified. he sent His phantom ship ahead To visit every shore No matter where it led . . . Lillian Evens in the New Yolk Times. -5,- iv Old Charlottetown (And P 1-. I.) l 91:5 4; MACADAMIZI-JD ROADS l:'.xcerpL: from the report of a Joint committee of the Legislative Council and House of Assembly. appointed in 1867 to inquire into the best means of improving the nlghways of the Colony: "The committee are of opln. ion that the principal thorough- fares leading through Charlotte. town Royalty. and in other local-l zties where much traffic concen- trates, cannot be successfully dealt with except by macadamizing with hard stone; and one of the clue: obstacles hitherto experienced seems to have been the scarcity of lIbour -s the impossibility of procuring men to break stone. ex- cap! at rates which would render its use too costly for general ap. plication. ' "At a very early stage of their inquiries. the committee ascer- tained that a machine. styled lBlake's Stone Breaker, has been invented. and is coming into gen- eral use in Britain. and elsewhere. which. driven by steam power equal to eight horses. breaks the hardest materials ever used for roads. at the rate of six tons per hour. and at a cost of three pence sterling per ton. "Though the price of these mn- chines is considerable. yet the committee do not hesitate to re- commend the immediate purchase of one on wheels, calculated to operate on stones 20 inches by D in diameter; also. of A portable. eight horse power steam engine to work it. The price of a machine of this size is 222:: sterling. and of an eight horse power portable steam engine. about 5225 sterling. "The committee believe that good. hard Nova Scotia stone may be procured at from two shillings to four shillings per ton. They have ascertained. by actual weigh- ing and measuring. that I cubic yard of broken stone weighs I little more than ii ion. In nscque t- ly. one ton may be made in cover a space of road eighteen feet by three, and six inches deep; 1700 tons would be required to cover I mile in this manner, which, al- lowing five shillings per ton for sione broken Ind delivered in carts. would amount to nearly 54.50. The cost of conveyance to the spot required. spreading and superintendence. would probably not exceed the amount at present expended annually. to so little purpose. "The estimate is for a width of road sufficient for two vehicles to pass; a little more than half that width may suffice for the present want of many localities. The stone breaking machine. kept at constant work. would supply the material for making sixty yards of road per day. The work might proceed during several months. and. it is possible. the stone breaking might continue during winter. except. perhaps. A few weeks of the coldest weather. "The committee cannot. how- ever. recommend that an experi- menl of this extent should be at- tempted. except under the man- agement of a skilled superinten- dcni. so as to ensure proper econ- omy of labor and a judicious use of materials. It is therefore ex- pedient. in their opinion. thnt. I person , i : the .1 qualifications be permInenl.ly en- gaged. and all future operations of the kind referred to should be conducted by him under the direc- tions of the Bond of Works. "As. however. roads thus con- structed mIy be expected to last. with occulonnl repIirI. for half a century or more. the cost. of them ought not to bu borne entirely by the present genei-Ition. Their that cost may very properly be de- frayed by conti-Ictlng I loIn for thIt. purpose. with provision for repnymenl in twenty yearn. It lI right to slate thIt one of their number. Mr. Slnclnlr. la Ivei-Ie to borrowing for thlI purpolc: but it is evident thIt there on N no economy in Icqulring power- ful machinery. ma ennllnl I skilled superintendent. union means Ire provided to keep them fully employed." The committee comprlud Hon.i George Beer. Hon. Robert P. llIy- ; thorns. Hon. Peter Sinclair. L. C. Owen. and L. T. Jenkins mm- Eluotrlul GO&'ItO- Iilsllr I. IIIIII. ill: on. IIuII,IOiu CHARL()TTET( )WN Voices of siirliig "l'm F796. ljogduslg shout WILLIE SKIPWORK, (working Uplowni1"lt means less egest:vain- I cgintiike mg 9595 coast STRlVEMORF.,Gradu.2fe- Rev. o.K. Livwiziours with a. lump in mg throat. .' ' off the clock half In kouv earlier: J.QUIZMO KARSHAM, 550.. T umieasuso moummo PHOTOGRAPHER, . savs" spamc--wuws IT To YOU?" 1 o-(urns! MONIDIG Iiuvnsoroull uuo. amour.) "Most Favorable season Fay launchings on the sea or met Hmong." Miss BOSSIE Hl0E8ouND: " It's time to turn my produc- tion to lcecream again---' J TrC-lrildren Al The Cinema (The Times. London) The Departmental Committee on Children and the Cinema has been sitting for more than two years. The upshot is a painstak- ing report which is more concern- ed to throw an even light over I large figld than to compose a pic- ture in contrasting blacks and whites or to throw a dogmatic emphasis on any of their detailed recommendations. The authors of the report recognize that the cinema is by I long way the most frequent form of entertainment for children today. though they draw attention to a significant finding of the Social Survey in 1947 that "the children did not. at any age. place cinema-going as I first choice for out-of-school amusement." The purveyors of films come out of the inquiry with quite a good character. Most of them in their approach to children are judged to act with excellent motives. even though their understanding of the psychology of the question is no more profound than might be ex- pected. Even so the repurt strikes ,a note of considerable uneasiness concerning the effect on child character of the mental diet that most films provide. . . . The evident disquiet of the coin- mittee is the greater because it cannot be fixed on any specific ill consequence of the film-going ha- bit. The view that the cinema has contributed directly to the recent increase in the numbers of child- ren brought before the juvenile courts is examined and not ac- cepted. This is also the consen- sus among magistrates and social workers who have most experi- ence of the peccant child. One member of the Committee. Mrs. Robert Bower. clissents. Her dis- senting memorandum is of great interest: it pursues the subject of the debasing influence of bad films on the young mind to I rather deeper psychological level than is easily reduced to courtroom evidence. and in fact. tends to emphasize opinions that the ma- jority themselves express in less decided terms earlier in the re- port. "if the values it portrays are wholly worldly and material, the cinema will help lo rear a fu- ture generation of men and wo- men lacking in ideals and spiritual force. and therefore lacking in sound moral standards for normal fen It is this rather than any direct leaching of violence or dishonesty by example that may undermine lnsidiouslv the character of the young. It is this that slultifies the well meant efforts of the in- duotry itself. through its child- ren's cinema clubs and matinees. to provide especially for children's needs. They can for the most part select for the clubs only from among the general stock of com- mercial products. and in many of these crude or trivial standards pi-avail. it there is any centnl theme ,, the diverse recom- mendations of the committee. it is the desire to raise the standard of the films thIt children see. 0 O O The committee would do away with the present classification of films into those passed for "uni- verul" or "adult" exhibition. which in any. one hu failed through the impossibility of en- forcing the rule tliIt require: a child Idmmed to see Ifllm in the "A" cItcgo , to be accompanied by his pIrent or gum-dlln. In- stead. the report luglesto In of- flclIlly sponsored Central Com- mittee on Children Ind the Cine- ml. which Ihould clusify films Icooi-ding to their positive merit: for the entertainment of children. Than would M In index expur- , W. grog-.oMQs-(FAQ:-eel-mud I The Age-old story If the wicked will turn from all his hints that he hath ' inl- and keep all My statutes. Ind do that which II lawful Indirlght. he shall surely live. he nlmll not fl”- All his tnnuin-ehnlonu that he huh cnmmltfed. they sluu not ban men- tioned unto him: In his flsllltoll" hens that he hath done. he shall live. Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked Ihould die. with an Lord God. and not flint ll” should return from his evil wnsll Ind live? Repeat Ind turn yours selves from all 3'0"? tllMK?95'l”"'l whereby ye have lrnnsgressed: cu lnlqulty shall not be your ruin. Cast. away from you Ill Wu: trims- gresslnns whereby 3'0 l1lV0 """”f grossed. and make you I new heart Ind I new IIIllfll- Dublishing The Bible (Dennis Mitchell in London Calling) A publisher of the Bible faces one unique difficulty: by custom and demand. he must compress B text of 800,000 words. the equival- ent of 10 novels, into one volume half the size of one novel. To do this. he must. first select. a suit- able type face, Then he has to find paper which must. be ex.- tremely thin and at the same time non-translinrent. Having solved the paper prob- lem. he must. then acquire a ma- chine which will ink the type even- ly - ii difficult. matter. Finally land perhaps in these days most. difficult of all). he must employ unusually skilled and experienced craftsmen for the gliding. casc- maklng. and hand-binding. Even if he manages to solve these problems. he will still be ill!- able to print the Authorized Ver- slon of the Bible. for it. is Crown copyright. and he must have the King's permission. There are only four publishers or the Bible - the Oxford and the Cambridge Univ- erslty Presses. William Collins. Ind the King's Printer. The office of King's Printer has been virtually confined to three families for nearly four centuries -the Barkers until 1700. John Bas- kett. and his family until 1769. and subsequently the Eyre family to the present day. Right. up to the time of the latest. renewal of the patent, the office carried with it. an annual payment from the Treas- uiy of 56 L35 4d. . . . Incidentally. not all the Klnirs Printers were good at. their, job. When John Baskeit. held the mon- opoly. one of his Bibles was de- scribed as "B Basket:-full of print- er's errors". Another bad printer secured the monopoly in Scotland. and more than 2.000 mistakes were found in his edition of the New Testament. The first complete Bible printed I Nmole-:s By cui-Itely reveal weother in identifying ground.-Windsor Stai- ti-let. It is putting trees in xround at the rate of a seedlings. but however small monton Journal. 50 Common in the province, have automatic signals, They raise an arm or flash in light or do both. But most of these signals are not l'CC08lll-Zed by law in our province, though they are in Ontario. The Victoria Automobile Club is gath- erlniz information with the idea of pressing for an amendment to the B. C. Motor Vehicles Act. which would recognize these auto. n;Il.ic signals.-Vancouver Pro- v rice. One of the most traditional functions of the coron- El"SJl-l1'yls to act as a sort. of "zrancl lll-Fl!" in matters of public Salt-'lY.Dointini1 but faults that need to be corrected before they cause further tragedies. It is un- fortunate that. this function is be- ing curtailed through the grow- ing pnctlce of restricting inquests to criminal matters. Inquests into what. -might be called "non-cl-lm. lnal accidents" serve an extreme- ly useful purpose. - Edmonton Journal. Brflhh Coliunbfn lI visited each year by more motorists from every . . every householder worth 800 marks of yearly rent. and every yeomnn or burxess Worth 5300 stock. must have a Bible and Psalm Book un. '30! B91131!-y of 510. A searcher was appointed to visit. every house. holder to whom the act. applied. and it. appears from the records of the Privy Council that he was by no means idle. The King's Printer was natur. ally the first. man to be given the job of publishing the Aulhorlzed Version of the Bible: but there l'-We 3 Brest number of unauthor- ized odltlom before that. The first Drlnted Bible was issued by Gut- enburg in 1458. Bible publishing in those days of religious persocu. "OIL was a very dangerous occu- patlon. Caxton. for example. preferred to Print only Bible stories: it was safer. William '13'nclale (who (my, translated the Bible into English) published it on the Continent and smuggled copies into England, Miles Coverdale did the same. un. til Henry Vlll quarrelled with the Church of Rome and allowed the Coverdaie Bible Into England of- Foel. an 5 chlropodln. Io- condi- tions. 'rhey'i'e especially effective the plesence of mud. snow. ice, and water on the We Ice that oneiof the provin- cl-Il B0VeI'nment.'s two l.ree-plInt- tn: machines is in the olds dis- the thousand In hour. No doubt they are small the come such bad h bit; planting-rate ls astonishing.-Ed-I l mu some of the English an new lmlmrlvnht i ' JUNE 2. 1950 The Way - province of cInIdI of the mu. 0; u,:ngn::'3 um important for their ntety ; R our safety thIi the convenum ' driving be simplltled I; mu?! .. P”-"lbw Bl” mm! drivers ac Wet days. don't like to roll n C" the window to mIke I sign do" less the traffic is he”, mu "ll to slide around corners all putting their arm out. w. 1h”! W911 recognize the fact mam" matlc. signals would help kifxto er. pautomatlc signals. wha .may be said about m.:''':! 01:1 whole lot better thm no. ye ' at all.-Vancouver Provincewn I A People who on Suftly are the san: never carry their own .-13...: but. who are lust golng out u: some and they do nag mad ' meanwhile, they smoke Vsevenl yours. They are also with o matches or. in the vermcular M the door-slummer. "hem ow, The PC0Dle who slnin screen ' chew Axum in cheek-dlsgm quantities and leave I ti-all or sticky gobs of the lllllff on slab: walks and in subways. Peoplp W; slam screen doors sit in um. automobile waiting for mu llghls to change Ind blow 1,11,: horns ai pedestrians despgrltd making their way to the cum, Tl19.V klck at friendly dogs 4' people who slain screen d0Ol'I,.lh.' scowl at children and call call: people on the telephone and u, "Guess who this is." People wu slam sreen doors talk at the thu- . lre. repeat the punch lines of mm 3 and make dog-ears upon the pl." '.' of books. Worst of Ill, if Ipprouh. led on the subject of .1 screen doors. they (ugh min and surprise. -New York Ttmu. to himself. And there were othm, When James I came to an throne. he felt that still Inollm Bible should be prepared. BI wu a man of considerable learn and he persuaded 54 leading uliol. ars of the day to undertake nu work. It was completed and pub. lished in 1611: this 1. known the Authorized Version. The ' beauty of its language transcend all previous translations, and u. though there have been attempt. at improvements and revision. mu version is still In uudlspvuted m. orlte. The fact that it who produced g the direct f stlgatlon of the - and under his njpervlglgn at his expense - has been had lg law to constitute Crown copyright. The Crown has no rights any any other version of the Bible: but the King's copyright in cm Authorized Version has been up. held through centuries of legal hig. lory. So it is on law rather thIii Royal privilege that the Bible- Dublishlng houses base their riglitu. ml are now engaged in mum flclallv. with I suitable dedication PROFESSIONAL CARDS up 3 world shortage of mite mil. lion Bibles. Dr. A. L. Muclsouc nnmsr nenui x-nay GLORIA BUILDENG 119 Gallon St. Phone 291 Mutlioson It Paulie A. W. MATIIESON. 3.0. A. B. PEAKE, B.A., LLB IIPHIIABI. etc. Collections - Mon-v In bola Io Great Georgo stun Chnrloteatm-v Palmer & Haslum A. J. HASLAM. ILA. l.A..B. Borrtnur, nu-. sun at Nov-I scam uhu-ibon 0hII-lottotown. P.E.l. MONIY T0 IDAN MacPliee & Tumor E. I. Murllll. 3A.. 8.0 I .SOMEBl.ED TRAINOR. BA. Ilorrllut-I. Em. Toombu Bldg. Ida Queen II. J. A. McGulgoIi NOTARY. E70. BAIIIIISTEII. SULICITOI, CUIIIIIE BUILDING Boll & Mal-luoson BABBISTEBS. 8011011035. II B. B. BELL, ILL. . D. L MATHIESON. 1.3., L0. Attarnon II KAI LOANS ON CITY AND IAII PBURIBTIES loo Blelnnond st. Cbnrlotteoown. P.lJ M. Albnn Former MONEY T0 LOAN B.A.. LLB. BABRISTER. SOIJCITOB. lb Charlottetown. P. It I. Guide! 8: I-Iusurd Gn.Bl!:lIT A. GAIJDET. B.A.. LLB Bhrrlnen and Bullcltnn Money in Dunn Cuudlan limb of Commerce Bldg. ChIrlom:wwn Dr. W. ll. Carson Chlmprulnr l'IImor GI-oduIto CHARI)0T1'ETOWN :01 Prince 81. Phone WI 4.. there was a copy of the Geneva J S version. and in 1579 In Act of ' . . Scottish Parliament ordained that John P'LLN'.chol,on' o,g,n.m,g -'m-'-'- - - Eye: enmlned. glI-U Ill- gatorius of films no ch'ld hold see. enlarging the pmselm fhoxq. 'C.ms73n'-m'50uc'703v Corner Kent 6 Queen! Ill; fie" category by adding other , om” """" '9”-""'m lo, themes unfit for children. who 1" hm” 5"" 0""""" would be excluded. There would PHONE uu be I class "C" of films positively suited for children's ' ex. ch.s' R' hibitlons. and A class "U" suitable ..L for family entertainment. The l- MaTMm'no . rules would be intended. Ipart B sAl"::;:i'u,uMTo.' from the "horrific" category of ' ' . ilk films banned to children. not for M””"'"i 9”'-'”'"l- 5 II-hm Trill -WWI! the coercion but for the guldunce ”q""" 5”” l-'nA3l47l"l'F'"lw” of tile authorities controlling the "'0". 7'" , Hum 11' Idmlulon of children to the cine- mm” h 1”” ”""'u”"' mu. All the time. however. it will be well for everybody con. WC A. I-579.: ILC. T, WQMIIII GUN”! corned to remember thut the pro- IAIIISTBI. s0LlOl'l")I. per Iutborlty controlling the choice NOTARY LLB. of the child's entertainment in not the induutry or the muntclpIl- lty but the chlld'I own parents. Ion! Inn of Canada tnumlnn Chuloctunwn. FL) 1 IAIIIBTII. SOLIOITOI 1” Phllllpl Dnlldlll ropcln. woldlngnfe. lolfofown. Work Done At Your Door Iy Tlll MOIILI ATTENTION FARMERS Don't wash valuable time when your inch: or other farm machinery and: Phone 26184. chor- .l.l.ll'.A.ll.. 5l'l9l.'. . luoouon Ill GPIMOI wrott T J. Tweedy. no Money to loan 00ll”"' cimiomton II. R. DOANE & 30. "ml" ciumn.-a Accountant: row.” in cmnwnnowx "3. 3" Inmnipn w. Mnnnlng, c. A -m '""" .-rm !iui':.';i:'3I. . nu ICIIVIIIO r , gm , ":7. ' jog I" CIIAITIIID CIMI Bldg. IlcDONAl..D. CUBBIE 8 O0. Ilcnnol. Qubu. otIIwI. Toronto. um John. lhorbnokt VIIIIIVII. llthlou uu. Install. cu: Clulouctowl ACOOUNTANTI IOCCONWW , hlcplm l" J ..4-