Manon ,17. 194s a. . PROFESSIONAL CARDS "riiiifisrsrrosrauher plimwll‘ eoneerétypm‘ ‘up bookkeeping “aura 0.10"" Tglgphull! 1890-1 ‘p; No, _e Connaught Apta. rownal Street .1.-eee¢¢-noo ..._._‘._Q.Q-Q-Q-QQQQ-QQ'QQQCQQQQ Charlottetown. 9.5-i- a, .|. IIASLAM. B.A.. LL-B- v g J. r. sunwr. u. a i Barrister, Solicitor, 31¢- ODDFELLOWS BUILDING I34 Richmond Street ‘ Telephone 2380 i “o4»4¢¢~’“° m. J??? Palmer & llaslflm BARRISTER. Etc. n“; qr Nova Scotia Chambers Charlottetown. P-E-l- MONEY TO LOAN Neil w. mgsins i O E Chartered Accountant I Currie Building E Charlottetown _ 1 m. 163s‘ no. Box 452 s eeeo so» eeeoooevoeoao-eo iiaurlet & Hazard’- Bzirrrsn-rs oUilUltufS. .‘rlll.lll“|l!§ Etc Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg MONEY T0 LOAN ornnanr s. GAUDET. 8A.. LL-B Canadian Bank of’ Commerce Bldg Charlottetown. P.E.l. yeee-occooeeeooeeoeeooeee ll. ll. Duane & 0o. Randolph W. Manning. C-A: eeocoeooooooo-o 60§§§Q0§ Bell 8r Mathieson Barristers. Solicitors. do. It. It. BELL. M.L.A.. _ o. L marurasuu. one; K-C Attorneys at Law LOANS QN CITY AND FARM‘ PROPERTIES 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown. P.E.l. 1 Chartered Accountants 2 53 Grafton Street s Charlottetown : Phone 208D "OI 347 O e o V Y Dr. W. ‘l’. liooper Physician & Surgeon ‘cannons; BUILDING 123 lluston St. Office liours:—.'3 - 4 PM. ' 6 - 8 RM, Phone r-Offlce: 1111 Home: 126B w H+e+e++4eee+m e4 e ivevoveeevorvvvrvvo&oz §§F§§+§f§40§+Q-O LL-Gcn, commander of British forces in G. H. A. lVfncMlllan. p-‘il-‘liilv. has ‘ twice escaped ricath at the hands of assassins. Ill the latest attempt. his auto- snobile was demolished by a land- Iilne. but he was not in it. no blast occurred on the Jaffa-Jer- usalem road. . _.¢ wuss; cards and ciroolarl. pup-ants. correspondence. §§&O§O6—O§§§OOO$§§§§§§-§§‘ 2 I Z i O~O.§'§f-¥O-O-O O-t QC‘ OOQOO ‘O OQQO O-O-OQ GO 0-0-0 ‘ Dharles ii. Mciluairl B-A. 3 Barrister. Solicitor. i Notary. Etc. Z Eastern Trust Building. y Charlottetown Phone 17H eeoeveceeeoeeeee-enw» n. r. Mclthee, s. 1.. K. o. NOTARY. Etc. BARRISTEEI. SOLICITOR- ll-llc! BI-Ijldllll Charlottetown M. illlian Farmer ll.A., LLJi. MONEY TO LOAN BAltlt1S'l‘l-J|l.. SOLICITOR. l-Jto. v+ee++>o+ee4eew~o~¢¢¢¢¢ 9 s 0 ; Matheson anri Peaks; z A. W. MATIIESUN. KL‘. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. LLB. Barristers, etc. Collections - Money to Loan B0 Great Georfge Street Charlottetown QOOOOOe-eHewao-vvvooo-Ooo- 4 A. Waithen iiauriet. LL.B. Barrister. Solicitor. Etc. Phillipa Building 111 Grafton St. FO§§§§O§9 M0116! to Luau Collections W‘ v‘ ‘ e ve-e-o-e-ew-o- EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. TAYLUR’ orromsrrrsr i Corner Kent and Queen Sta Phone 1956 Evenings by Appointment "Phone: Residence 101$ evoeao-Q-oco-o-o-eoae o 0+0- 40440-046-04-04-0-0-60-00 e e e- Frerieric A. Largo K. l}. BARRISTER, SOLICITUB, NOTARY Royal Bank of Canada Chambers: Charlottetown. P.E.l. Successor to George J. Tweedy. 1L0. Dr. W. ll. Carson Chiropractor Paipcr Graduate Charlottetown St. Phone 1072 201 Prince Joseph ii. MaeMlllan, LLB. Barrister. Solicitor, lite. 75 Queen Street I PHONE 778 Money to Loan - Collections TrllfMciiuigan NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER. SOLIUITOR CURntlE BUILDING l i nonasn an co. Chartered Accountant: Eastern Trust Building Phone m1 - Box an Charlottetown B. M. SEARS. C.A. Resident Partner y... l +§¢+>e+oeo+oe 0400* » ~» s; ’ Dr. .|. D. Gallant B.Sc. i DENTIST Pickard Building 151 Great George St. Office flours: 9130-12190 2:00— 5:00 PIION E ‘Z567 e-ee-eeoem 0-4 e e e4 e c e e ee o0 William ii. ilerldin B.A., B.Sc.. LLB. BARMSTER. SOLICITOR, Etc. I.0.0.F. Bldg-Next to Reddin Bros. PHONE 2184 Money to Loan - Taxation Collections FIR?!‘ CANADIAN WHEAT‘ wheat. was first grown in (l0. To‘ misses iieod shorten, an itlnerhsrsat mile-long’ strip along the highway. Above. s wor "It arms s sssssss, sour roadside projects are lliiflcted w Canadian West l_n quunllh’ l" 1513-‘ 9 coco-e >0» e04 #01 04-0 $4 #0 6O O-OOCO O O O-OO-Q-O" i A mural painting entitled “The Circus" is mu project being carried out by above, during one of the classes they are attending at the Charlottetown Art Centre. a -Photo by Saunders. e Pictured above are children at work on a. pro jcct entitled "Creatures of the Sea" at the Char- lottetown Ari. Centre, located in the Market Building. The children are from grades three and four of various schools in the City. who are attending classes there under the direction of Misc Frames Johnston- -Photo by Saunders. the children pictured ‘The classes are under the direction of Miss Frances Johnston, and the children are from 818d?! iii/B 811d 51X 0f lhe fills..- ferent City Schools. CAVENDISH W. M. S- The Cavendish Auxiliary of the Women's ltlisslonary Society met at the Manse on Wednesday aft- ernoon with the president in the chair. Following the Lords Prayer in unison, the minutes of the Feb- ruary meeting were read and ap- proved. Roll call was responded to by each member repeating a verse of Scripture. Mrs. Ernest MacNeil was ap- poihtcd as devotional leader for the April meeting. A missionary was to he chosen by the president. who also was to offer prayer on her behalf. A letter was read by the Supply Secretary, Mrs. Alvah MacNeil, from the Canadian Council of churches. Toronto. acknowledging the receipt of n box of clothing for Canadian church relief a- ts under-way Mlddlesex to raise barley on e i: rnan uses a miniature tractor plow. I! the experi- ' spring up throughout the notion hr‘.- broad. Plans were made to pack another box at. the next meeting- Very helpful and inspiring letters from our Presbyterial officers were then read. The president's. M"- J. D. MacFarlanea was read by the secretary. Mrs. Milton Green. Mrs. Lewis Toombs, our Christian Stewardship secretary read Mrs. Eaiztorfs, who stressed the import- ance of stewardship in relation to our. time, money and talents, also giving us our allocation, which was accepted. The letter from our new Press secretary, ‘Miss Alice Gordon. was read by Mrs. Ernest MacPhall and she asked that n new Pre'ss sec'ty. be appointed. s0 the president was appointed to that office. The secretary then read a letter from Circle secretary desiring to know what possibilities there were for a circle. This was discussed but left to the executive to make a survey in view of same. I It \vas decided to hold our Eas- , fer thank-offering service in the church Easier Sunday evening, the executive to plan e. program. The Community Friendship sec- retary reported lid pick calls, 1 hospital call. and 5 cards sent. The vice-president, Mrs. Alfred Moore then tool: charge of the devotional period. Following the program given ln the Missionary Monthly. ehe was assisted by Mrs.‘ W. A- Simpson actlllg as reader, Noneedtobeavlctimoti Bonstipotion y Vegetable Laxative may beiire answer m: as ' r weary rrus's'."°':.i.'3"s' navel"- d _ by afcrsgdiqgfiilyfh fifitikr-iligiil niid coated. fall and from the annual report of Bible Society. The different incl- dents that were chosen to show the influence of the Bible were read by Mrs. Ed. Graham, Miss Bernice Axeworthy‘, Mrs. Ira Mac- Coubrey and Mrs. Geo. MacCoub- re . grayers were offered for the British and Foreign Bible society, for the missionaries who translate and who teach the_Bible, for the cclporteurs who distribute the Bible. by Nlrs. Lewis Toombs. Mrs- Olaf Stevenson, and. Mrs. W. A. Graham. Chapter V of Great is the Com- pany was then taken up by th president with assistants. ' Meeting closed with Benediction in unison. A delicious lunch was served by Mrs. Alfred Moore and Mrs. bli- ton Green assisted by the hostess- PITCAIBN ISLAND SCHOOL SUVA, Fiji -— (GP) — Pitcairn Island, first settled by the mutineers of l-l.M.S. Bounty. is te have a prefabricated government school-house whirh is being assembled here prior to being shipped to the island. The teacher will make the trip with the school to teach the children of the islands 200 inhabitants. HUGE DOMINTON anadrrs {area is ovcr L”! per cent C of the total area of the British Empire. Discuss Margarine in Relation To Geneva Agreements OTTAWA, March 16 - (CP) — Canada's obligations under the Geneva Trade Agreements may force it to lift its prohibition on the import of snargarine, the Sen- ate ‘Trade Commttee was told te- day. The Geneva Agreement requires its signatories, including Canada, itlons. Since margarine ls not. cov- ered by any special tariff agree— ment, however, it would still be open to Canada. to impose any tar- iff it liked. including a prohibitive one, on the product. Ratification of the Geneva Ag- reements, however. srweits the out- come of the Havana Conference on a world trade charter, which might alter acme of the general clauses of the agreements. The Senate ccmmittee, was hear- ing testimony from three Govern- ment experte when the case of margarine arose in an explanation of the Geneva pact. by lLB. Mo- Kinnon, chairman of the Tart! Board. Questioning by Senator Wishart Robertson, Liberal leader in the Senate, drew from Mr. McKinnon, HR. Kemp, director of Commer- to remove such blanket prohlh- ‘ vial Relations Division o! the De- partment of Trade and Commerce! and J.J. Deutsch, director of Eco-i nomic Relations, Department of _ Finance, an explanation of the way| in which sanitary regulations by American States can be used as a hidden fonm of protection against Canadian milk and cream ship- ments. a In the case of milk and cream exports from Ontario and Quebec. New York State and Boston form the natural market ln normal times, they explained. However, New York laws prohibit the sale of milk or cream in the state un~ less both it and the farm where it has been produced have been passed by the state's inspection service. The inspection service in turn refuses to send inspectors out- side the state "milk-shed" thus maintaining en effective embargo against isnports from either Can- ada. or the Western States, it was explained. The Government experts pointed out that this use of hidden pro- tcctive devices by the state lny out- side the U.S. Federal Government's powers of control. The American GOl-‘Bfnmcnt, while it only under- look obligaflons regarding its own actions, did agree to try to get the individual states to live up to such agreements as those in the Geneva pact prohibiting hidden forms of protection. Several‘ Senators suggested that since New York applied the same regulations to other states it was on strong ground in applying them to Canada, Dollar Program May Bring New Factories To ll. S. By JOE MacSWEEN HALIFAX, March l6 — (C?) —-. Premier Angus L. Macdonald said Canada's dollar saving program might result in increased indust- rial activity for the Maritlmes as the Nova Scotia Legislature plod- ded through its third day of de- bate an » the Speech from the Throne. Also taking part in the discussion was Robert McLellan (L-Colches-i ter), who warned {bf the dangers of Communism and urged early eon- struction of rural high schools de- spite the current hlBh costs of materials. Fifteen bills received second reading and were referred to the committee on law amendments. Referring to Nova Sc0tia's l5.- 000 unemployed, Premier Macdon- old said it was a possibility the Dcminlons dollar saving policy might indirectly result in increas- ed industry for the Maritimes and thc Prairie Provinces. The program of restricting im- ports i4; save United States cur- rency might force large American manufacturers to establish branch plants ln these areas. The Premier declared he was confident that in such an event the Federal Government would in- '\ PAGE NINE All U. S. navy fliers. stationed at the reserve sir station in Squan- tum. Mass, must wear the new inunersion suits, when they take to thl air over northeast waters, These immersion suits, which weigh but. 20 ounces, are made of rubber and nylon, and. seal the body compldtely, "We!!! retaining the warmth of the body in icy waters. when wee:- lng these new "Mae Wests", the man can float in the water quitn corn- fortably and be warm enough to give him a better chance of rescue i1! cvcnt of accident. Without such equipcnent, a man can freeze to death in icy waters in about five minutes. The suits slip easily over tho filers’ regular clothing. ‘They aren't cumbersome or bulky, and when not in use can be rolled up into a small bundle. Here Lleut. Goons Spooner "coolly" smokes a cigar as he relaxes in the icy water. Quill comfortably. too, he says. T.C.A. Announces Air Cargo Service MONTREAL, Que, March 17- From coast to coast in Canada, to the United States and Nevrfouhd- land and to overseas destinations, 'I‘rans Canada Air Lines today in- augurated a new air cargo service designed to aid Canadian business by-providing a speedy means of distribution of merchandise in volume shipments with resultant economies, Anson McKln, O. B. l1, vice president of traffic, nnnoun ced here today. ' The air cargo service will be distinct from air express which has been in operation on T.C.A. flights since 1938. Air express ls adaptable to smaller shipments and articles such as mattrix. med- ical suppliesjdocuments, films, blue prints and other items of small size. Air cargo will provide a fast “shipper to buyer" service but will differ from air express in that it is designed to attract large ship- ments. Volume rates will bring air transport charges down to the low- est levels seen in" Canada. - Will Broaden lilarke ts ‘T.C.A.'s new service will broaden nlarkets in Canada by placing seasonal produce sales on practic- ally a year round basis and. by making fruits and vegetables av- ailable durlng the winter months when they are often in short sup- ply in Central and Eastern Can- ada. It will help maintain a con- sistently high standard of living throughout the nation. Another advantage lies in the fact that. fruits, such as British Columbia apples, can be picked when fully ripe and placed on the market in other parts of Canada in a mat- te: of hours. The service will open new markets in Central Canada for salt water fishermen and it is expected that daily shipments of fresh fish will be sent to inland centres from the Marlin , and all kinds of fresh flow '5 1:1‘. West Coast growers will be avail- able throughout Canada (llifllL-L fluence some firms lTvsZtilc-Hln‘ Nova Scotla. "In Nova Seoiia," he said, "we have the great bases of industrial development, and we have what many other places have not — great ports that are open through- out the year, as well as railways, and so we can ship either by land or water to all parts of the. ivorld." the winter lnonths when supplieg often fall short of’ the demand. Cargo shipments will be flown over nearly 11.000 miles of T.C.A.. routes which directly link 3B o! the largest cities in Canada. tho United States, Ireland and the United Kingdom. It will also be possible to arrange connections ivith foreign operators for delivery to all parts of the world, while Canadian localities not directly served by T-C.A. ‘will be linked by iround transport and-feeder 4 nes. The new ‘Trans Canada. Ab Lines service will afford greain savings and sales opportunities in Canadian industry and business. Low volume rates. together wl packaging economies, savings frog reduced inventories and wares housing because" of the speed‘ “shipper to buyer" service, thd extension of seasonal sales and bwfldfir izcosraphlc markets wil make o. strong appeal to the rape mlv expanding Canadian businesl structure. ._ 1 __________ AUSTRALIA cars calcium; CANBERRA - (CP) — Eighty volunteer Royal Australian Al; Force pilots are training on g Brltisln aircraft carrier which‘ they will bring back to Ausfly-glj; when their training is completed. Planned maximum strength of 9d officer pilots and 8O ratings pflgf. 1s not expected to be reach“ f" l0 years. r , srnrrrrrc sews ’ AT liALIFAX-. Arrived Monday Rondo, from Colombq Bcanadlan Victor. Saint John. 1t‘. ‘Moveria, Glasgow * Nova Scotla. Boston Saiied Monday_ F'01‘t Erie, f0!‘ Falmputh Fort Amherst, New York Blmperial Halifax, Saint‘ John, I H- M- Flflxler. Tampico. AT SAINT JOHN- Arrived Tuesday Manchester City, from chester. City 0f Bfilwi, Glasgmm “None. , Soiled Tuesdey_ ‘ CHINESE TROOPS IN BOUT! T0 JAPAN _' l, ‘y MA eentlngentol t0 Chinese gendarmes undergofinal inspection before heading fa Japan. ‘Hie ' ' soldiers, about to leave shanghai en the ship in the background. will do guard duty for the Chin - sanitary Mission. and look after the isms “chm” "tilt"? ll he» ~ ' , .