PAGE roux" T H E G U A R D l A N Authorised In Second UIIII MIII Pout uffloo Depurtment. Ottawa. . Tho lIlInd Gulrdlnn Publishing Co. Prelldent Ind Auucilla Editor, Inn A. Burnett. Auoclllp Editor, Frank Wulher. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward l.IlInd Him the door” "The Strongest Memory ll Woakor ihon tho Weollesf ink". CHARLOTTETOWN, VVEDNESDAY, JULY, lo, 195; Scots Wha liae! . Scots abroad, like the plans in the Highlands, find that it keeps them "in good heart" to gather periodically for tra- ditional Scottish music, dancing and games. The Fraser chiefs, the present one of whom we welcome to this Province, have the reputation of keeping up these tra- ditional social gatherings, where grace and strength and skill and swiftness bring joy to the spectators and acclaim for the vic- tors. Canadians think of Dieppe as largely their own show, as it was, but British and Americans were there. Lord Lovat led No. 4 Commando llnit at Dieppe. its objective was a six-gun battery with a range that imperiled any ship within five miles of Dicppe. The battery was destroyed by a frontal assault and all attack from the rear led by Lovat. 7 It is appropriate that in this Province, so largely although far from wholly, set- tled by Scotsmen and their descendants that the traditional "gathering of the clans" should continue to be a major event of the year. To Lord Lovat, to the Cape Breton Girls Pipe Band, to the R. C. A. F. Central Band and to all our visitors Prince Edward island cxtends ”a hundred thousand wel- comes.” Social credit in 0.0. With the sifting of alternative votes Social Credit has nosed out the C. C. F. and will attempt to form," albeit as a min- ority, its second provincial government in Canada. Both Conservatives and Liberals, who killed each other with internal feuding, have been sent to the sidelines. ! Social Credit has had a curious history. it originated, notes the Hamilton Spectator, with a Scottish engineer turned economist, and for a long time they called it the Doug- las theory. Engineer Douglas touched up a familiar premise that producers could nev- er buy back what they produced because of a chronic shortage of mass purchasing pow- er. This meant that a man who made a shoe never got quite enough cash for his work to buy it back. Governments, said Major Douglas, should make good the gap. Although it was promptly analyzed as just one more polite variation of the Marxian thesis and could only mean in practical adoption an inflation of currency, many peo- pic who were sick and dizzy with depres- sion took to it. Douglas himself had been worked up to his doctrine by watching how a nation could produce anything it wanted to in war-time and get all the money it needed with hardly a stir. Not all econ- omists wrote him off on that count. , If ground was barren for his creed in Britain, and only partly fertile in Australia, in Canada he struck lush fields. Out in Al- herta, where they had always favoured "ginger group” politics, the crusading Bible teacher William Aberllart put it over, and Social Credit took practical command of government for the first time in history. There was a brief and fruitless spree with "prosperity certificates" to prove that Social Credit wouldn't work, and the party has been solid with Albertans ever since. Good times returned and wonderful times were assured with the Leduc strike of 1947. The last thing any one cared about was Social Credit. They figured that as Ottawa con-- trolled the currency they were stymied any- lVay. In recent framing of platforms the Social Credit Party has been rather canny in its hroadness. For instance it would "provide home markets with purchasing power suf- ficient to buy the goods for sale at econ- omic prices,” and "make the exchange rate of the Canadian dollar comparative with the price level of .currency in a nation it trades with.” On a loftier level it believes in "the sanctity of the human personality as 'children of God'," and urges "that every one should be able to develop his personality as he sees fit." Rev. E. G. Hansell, Al- berta M. P., who led the B. C. campaign, has explained his party's success at the coast with the statement that "Social Credit is based on great principles of life that never change, that are eternal." In Alberta, where it was first enthronid. Social Credit is now so firmly established that no one seriously challenges it. Prem- ier E. C. Manning, one of the ablest and most financially orthodox administrators in the country, carries on. There is a vast revenue from royalties on oil wells; the public debt is being steadily reduced, and Social Credit affirms its loyalty to the basic principle of monetary reform, as it has for 20 years. It wants nothing of the welfare state; ("nothing we get from the government is free . . . the aim of the wel- fare state is to entrench the old financial policy of scarcity.") It is the number one antagonist of Communism in any form. It is, in fact, the most right wing party in Canada. ' EDITORIAL NO ITS Today the Scots' Gathering at Mont- ague. O D D It may surprise even Premier Jones to learn, on the authority of an American farm scientist quoted in yesterday's issue, that the system of scoring show cattle to- day is derived from a Latin translation of the work of an ancient Carthaginian. O O 0 Another step towards freedom of travel was a four-country agreement which went into effect Saturday making it unnecessary for citizens of Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland to show passports when they cross the borders of those countries. I I 9 Today Quebec goes to the polls in what is definitely a two-party fight, Liberal vs. Union Nationale. In 1944 no less than 338 candidates were in the running. This drop- ped to 312 in 1948 and today only 240 are in the field for the Province's 92 constitu- encies. O U D While there is a shortage of help in farming, the use of immigration as a source of relief .is questionable. The importation of cheap labour, while giving temporary re- lief, prevents the only permanent solution which is to make farming profitable enough to pay wages that will attract our own boys. 0 O I A new British jet engine, the most pow- erlul in the world, is just off the secret list. Known as the Olympus, and made by the Bristol Aeroplane Co. Ltd., the engine de- livers 9,750 lb. thrustwthe equivalent of over 17,000 horsepower at 600 m.p.h. Cur- tis-Wright have already purchased "produc- tion rights in U. S. A. 0 O O Trygve Lie, Norwegian lawyer and statesman, was born this date 1896. He joined the Norwegian Labour party in 1919, aild later became its legal adviser. From 1935 he was successively minister of justice, commerce, and supply, becoming minister of foreign affairs in 1941. He resigned that portfolio on being appointed first sec- retary-general of the United Nations As- sembly in 1946. O O 0 Summer excursions once meant Island- ers and others from the Maritimes head- ing for the West in great numbers. For the past few years, however, there has been great interest in the annual East- bound excursion of the Canadian National Railways. This year, known as the "Grand Banks Special”, it starts at Vancouver on July 18th and brings home Maritimers for a month-long Visit. 0 I 0 Governor General, the Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, who has already done a good deal of travelling since his appointment, will visit this Province on August 28, the Thursday before Labour Day. His Excel- lency is following in the footsteps of our most popular Governors General in seeing as much of Canada as possible and show- ing himself to the Canadian people. C k 0 The Borden and Wood Island Ferries may yet have competition for auto and truck traffic across the Straits. Bristol Freighters of Silver City Airways, England, have opened a new car ferry serviceibe- tween Southend and Ostend, first of its kind to link England and Belgium. The fare works out about 5541.00 each return for a small car and four passengers. The flight takes 35 minutes for the 100 mile trip. 0 O O A welconle visitor to the Province is Mr. Jackson Dodds, C.B.E., who since his retirement as General Manager of the Bank of Montreal, has devoted his time to the Boy Scouts Association of Canada, the Can- adian Corps of Commlssionaires, and the Red Cross. Last year he travelled 20,000 miles in the interest of the Boy Scouts and expects to do the some this year, having crossed the continent, attended the Aus- trian Jamboree and after visiting Winni- peg again this year, will journey to Eng- land this fall. Mr. Dodds comes to Prinice Edward Island for his vacation every year and is so enthusiastic that he might be termed the Island's Roving Ambassador. He loves the climate, the beaches, the sea, the food and the people, but he added "please do something about the roads." He referred particularly to the road to Dalvay which is under repair at the height'of the tourist season, and which is not only an inconvenience, but an actual source of danger. THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN O PUBLIC FORUM This column II open to Inc dhcuulon by wri-oIpondentI of queltions of interest. The Guardian doe: not neceI.IIr- ily cndorlo the opinion of correspondents. FREE TRADE Sir,--Free trade has a pleasant sound. We need to trade and we enjoy freedom. I understand that the civilized world got along with- out tarlff walls until, in 1830, the United States of America began to protect her "infant" industries by taxing the products of other countries. This, no doubt, had the result of causing these infants to grow to the stature of giants and be so influential that the Wash- ington Government could never ignore them since then. Canada was forced to retaliate in I small way. But we did not reap the benefit from protection that Uncle Sam did. In fact, every time we tried to tax American goods we hurt our own forming population to the advantage of the manufact- urer, and our infants have also grown to be giants. Those old enough to remember 1911, saw the United States, un- der a change of heart, carry the olive branch of reciprocity and of- fer us equal terms of trading. This was the main issue under which the election of that year was contested. But we went to the polls and declared that we wished "no truck nor trade with the Yankees". I well remember a Canadian woman who for years had been a servant in the United States and home for a rest, rid- vising me to vote against "this thing called Reciprocity." She said: "The Americans are too smart for you: they would pick the eyes out of you." From this our Marilimes and es- pecially this Province has been to a divided world. An interesting experiment is now to be tried in Europe called the Schumnn Plan. countries, namely France, lands and Luxemburg, agree so that no hindrance to trade in these two commodities shall exist any more than we find in trad- ing with n firm in Halifax or a State. Each of these European states Germany. still even a United States of Europe. States of America. it take fourteen months to talk it over? Why did it not come to pass fifty years ago? We can imagine two answers. the bar- rier of language or more than in North America, where the most of the wealth and influence is in the hands of a comparatively few. But as we see the matter nt this distance, the fear of a common enemy over-ruled the fear in their hearts towards each other us well as regard for private interest. Qejif .7oel55'5”J.: HEAT Beyond me in the fields the sun Soak: in the grass and hath his will: I count the marguerites one by one; Even the buttercupa are still. On the brook yonder not. a breath Disturbs the spider or the midge. The water-bugs draw close beneath The cool gloom of the bridge. Where the far elm-tree shadows flood Dark patches in the burning grass. The cows, each with her peaceful cud, Lie waiting for the heat to pass. From somewhere on the slope near by Into the pale depth of the noon. vArchlbald Lsmpman. Qihsm-t0M3G0&00&G0&OO4' who Age-Old Story 3, w&r(-Josmcbsidbfrtifrvvx And Iftor Iix dIyI Jesul lnltoth with him Pater, Ind Jlmeu. Ind John, Ind lendeth them up into In high mountain Ipurt by them- selves: and he was tnnafigured bcforo them. And his rllmcnt be- come Ihlning. exceeding white II Inow; Io II no fuller on earth can white them. And there Ip- penred unto them EIIII with Moles: Ind they were hiking with Jesus . . . And there wII I cloud the oval-IhIdowod them: Ind ll voice come out of the cloud IIy- ing. '.l'hiI In my beloved Son: hour him. And suddenly. when they hId looked round Ibont. they IIW no mIn Iny morn, Inc Jun only with thomselveo. And no they cImo down from the mounhln, hc chnrgod them thIl. they Ihouid tell no mun whot thlnn they hId Icon. till the Son of man were risen from the dud. ' . 4(ToQ Books Received can cnnadlm Income Tux Act (OCH cInIdiIn Ltd. 82.50 340 pp.) The lath edition of this IummI y of the Income Tax Act Ind its predecessor the Income WIr Ix Act has htIt.oi'lcIi InnolIt.lon, de- duction t.IbleI Ind tax Igl-cements with other countries. Al in the put, however, it II the admirably indexed lesl.IlItlon which nukes thin I highly useful reference for the business man us well As the ever since the loser. Suspicion and 5 , , , spite led to tariff walls anti they ex"e'ph0”a1 fans which Filed UP 3. hills of the mainland left their mark on the Cuillin also, and under it six Sgurr nan Gillean and Bruach na vvggt Frithe, during the early days of Germany, Italy, Belgium, Ncther- May. rose while to like pool their output ofsteeland coal, range. State of Maine resident would feel The contrast betwecn these snowy in burlniz or selling in New York peaks and the parched land he- neath them was remarkable. has recorded the others as iwlen- highest of the Cuillin, yet its as- lial enemies. especially France and cent is not difficult. The usual MMIY Of 115 MP6 for approach is by way of Sligachan better things, such as free and the path Wade in 9V9T.V ""9 Of B00d5v Di" path to Glen oBrittle. Here the , climber is always in sound of the till" the P'1”"" 0i the Umied clear waters of the Al-it Dearg, I Bl" Why did stream with I succession of small waterfalls and deep, green-tinged pools, haunt of the water ousel. and Bruach na Frithe dominate I am, Sir, etc, . ARCH Marx-ENZIE. pair of golden plovers flew anx- Kensingmn 1;. E1 iousiy around us. for they had i ' ' ' evidently hatched their brood. A wandering thrush slides leis- on their release, they found them- New selves in brilliant sunshine, and His thin revolving tune. at once began their dela)'0d :- "Now whose idea was it to .t M: , m. I. mu S;-lit-la cu in Aunt Martha's ?" stone inscriptions as now 1 know it." -Toronto star. home methods. but most lcitls, or for repeated attacks of in- digestion. to cite I few examples. "Curing symptoms may be I con- venient. way of stopping pain, but it may mean that the warning of I serious disease is being driven un- der cover. - Kitchener-Waterloo Record. They looked like three fugitives from I. prison riot as their car stopped for a red light, and per- haps they were. Bertillon would have looked with plofessional in- spend our vacation at your ' -.t .. ,.- (Seton of the Atlantic, do not ny average winter. This year the great depth of snow on the and glistening the peaks of some Polar The drought of May, and the cloudless heat-wave of the first ten days of June, failed to melt; the snow, except. on the ridges. Bruach na Frithe is one of the that crosses the All the time Sgurr nan Gillean the view southward, and they likely private interests involved, as rose Clear to me blue, almost um clouded sky on the June after- noon when I approached them. 3 . a last. waterfall the Near the of the Fionn Choire, carpeted with grass and short hcnther. Here a Ahead of us were great snowficlds. now lighted by the evening sun. A strcam of ice-cold water flowed through the corrie from these snows. On its banks flower- ed many cushions of silenc acu- lis. Some of these cushions were compact areas of small red flow- ers, honey-scented; in others, the flowers were pink. One green cushion had on it only a single flower: this was of unusual beau- ty because of its deep rose col- our. This colony of the cushion pink, flowering beside clear suniit wat- ers, reminded me of a scene on the Swiss Alps where this plant grows under similar conditions at E height of 9000 feet above sea level. The blue of the sea lochs was intense as one looked back: to the north, Beinn Storr rose sharp and clear. At a height. of perhaps' 2000 feet, the stream emerged from the snow. As one reached the snow- cap, one passed in a few yards from summer to winter. The Alp- ine plants had been imprisoned for months beneath the snow; now growtll. No swiftcr transition can bc' imagined than that from snow and ice to the brilliance of I June day. The view from the sharp sum- mit ridge of Brunch no Frithe is always striking. and on this sum- mer evening the great amount of snow made it.ur:u.s:lally so. On the north side of the ridge the snow in in great waves and mounds, l2 to 16 feet. deep. The whole of the north face was un- der snow, yet. I fcw steps took the climber to the south lIce, where already the northern rock- cress (arabls petroea) and the roseroot. were opening their flow- ers, and the tiny Alpine willow, sa.l.lx he:-bacon. was unrolling its small green leaves only I frac- tion of In inch above the ground. At 9.30 in the evening, the sum- mit cairn of Brunch na Frlthe, 314:! feet Ibove sea level, was reached. The -sun wu still wIrm. Ind no Iir stirred, although I strong wind fmm,t.ha north-east wu pending waves racing through the much Ind Icross the dark waters of Loch scavnig far he- neath us. The Minch wu silver in the track of the sun. Between Skye Ind Bonbeculo I destroyer could be seen stemming fast. towIrd the norm. Light, fleecy clouds of evening were forming on the high hills of the mainland, be- yond the white sands of Morn. Ben Nevis wu hidden in haze. Thi-ouch I up in the Cuillin rose the hills of Rum, dark and aus- tore. A nnoll cloud touched tho peak of Cilsham of Rum, Ind cloud Inm-led also on the slope! of Rain- inntion expert. Gordoll in The climber leaves the path and strikes . up the broad and pleasant slopes! Sunset On The Cuillin Weekly Scotsman) The hills of Skye, rising as they of Harris. Heels and Beinn Mhor do from the comparatively warm waters hold show over a long period in of South Uist were clear, but Barra was almost hidden in haze. -, o 0 At ten o'clock the sun was sink- ing, and the snowfields of the Cuillin were tinged with pink. All around rose the high tops of the range-Sgurr nan Gillean, Sgurr na Banachdicb, Sgurr Dearg, and, highest of ,them all Sgurr Alas- dair, commemorating that Skye- man. poet, and climber, Sheriff Alexander Nicolson. The eagle had gone to his rocky roosting-pearch high above Loch Coruisk; nor bark of raven disturbed the stillness of evening. Lower the sun sank, and at 10.19 his setting bzgan. Five min- utes later the edge of the upper rim disappeared, quivering and pulsing, where distant I-iirta rose from the waves. The air remained warm on the high, snowy ridge, but as we - my two companions and I - reached the mouth of the corrie, I cold air from the east came across from the sea. The Bay of Portree, with its ships, might have been an inland loch, its entrance to the open sea invisible. tereat It those heads and the surly faces stamped on them. The light changed and the car moved on. A streamer across the back came into view, and said in substantially these words: "O'Toole for Prose- cutor.” sometimes it seems that American candidates for law en- forcement offlces could be more choosy about the people they en- trust. with their promotion mater- ial. Awlndsor Star. The federal constituency of Pop- lneau, which lies within Montreal, must be I most. agreeable place. It seems that the people of Paplneau have no grievances. no worries about the scale of taxation or gov- ernmental expenditures; they are in brief perfectly satisfied with everything that goes on at. the seat of authority in Ottawa. Their only desire is to be left. alone, and they believe with the late Thomas Car- lyle that silence is deep as eternity, speech shallow as time. For it they had any grievances or any ranki- ing anxieties. it. would be the duty of their federal member to give ex- no crux of ptarmigan presslon to them in Parliament. forlorn fugitives, unpltietl, un- protected, and, apparently. neglect- ed even by that Government for the maintenance of which we have before this sacrificed all we held in estimation, and even periled our llves." The petition. signed by James Laird. chairman, requested the Governor to intervene, either by restoring the original lands or providing others equivalent in value,-"a favour which, if con- ferred, will redound to the hon- our and dignity of the British Crown, and will, most unquestion- ahly, tend to the, stability of Her In the U. K.. then ll some ob. jeotion to the tone of such tomb- "cheerloi Be seeing youl" And yet Gay, of neg. can Opera fame, left as his epi- taph. "Life's I Jest, and Ill' things show it; I thought so once. and '.lIIero In I few minor Iilmenta that may be treated by proper- illnesses should receive medical attention in their earnest stages. No one should ,ever try home treatment for 5 pain in the side, that might be append- JULY 16. 3952 ONc&N&OO I.Notes. B); The Way 1. Bull Mr. Camillien Hou 9 Mayor of Montreal, who w.i'eieZ'i5 ed as the Independent member 10,- thls unfortunate community in 1949. is one of the moat, silent. pm-1. laments lulu since Confederation N0” 0'"! does he avoid speech in the House of Commons, he seldom goes near the place, ..wmmpez Free Press. One of the most in rig-um stories of the week win cal-'l.3'Y,',', the Atlkokan Progress. which tells about a man who bought a gold mine, and then could not find is The man in the story is C. Al'Xl- ould. The mine he bought wgg gm Elizabeth Gold Mine, northwest, of Atlkoksn. When he bought, he had no hope of getting any gold out of the old mine. Mr. Arnould LI I Scrap dealer. He bought strictly fol- Icrap. when the mine was operat- ed. before World War I, there was 9. good trail into the property, gut as the last. bullion was produced in 1914. the trail has long since been covered ovexau pox-9; wgmnm Times-Journal. Up Italnst Canada's wailing wall. the critics have been pillow. ing head on arms to weep quite . few tears for the state of am; tn Canada. No poems to sing I nu- tional song. When fresh talent, blooms, what: happens? It rushu across the line where more dig. cernlng cultural circles are happy to snap It up. That is what the wallets sigh. And, oddly enough. while their slow tears drip, then, are Canadians who go on bun, pretty busy, year after year, writ- lng their books and their poems and. what is more, winning notion- al acclaim and awards for them,- Regina Leader-Post. Home accident: In I leoding "1159 01 iniurie-1. and In some en- es. even death, but still the home is apt. to be a neglected place when it comes to the matter of inspec- tion for hazards. Most persons are content to go along until some- thing happens snd then make their repairs or changes. That is it pol- icy which may lead to trouble. The frequency with which persons are injured when stairs collapse, por- ches fall and holes appear in floor coverings attests to the fact that a close watch should be kept It Ill times to prevent trouble. rather than to overcome it when it is too late. A check around the prem- ises once in 3 while to seek out possible sources of harm will pay big dividends. There is no good rea- son why the home should be over- looked in this important matter- Boston Post. FAMOUS RIVER 9.,e,..;,,,3. Majesty's possessions in North The Yalu River. l(orea-Manchu America." rla boundary, is 300 miles long. Old Charlottetown (And P. E. L i LOYALIST GIIIEVANCES From a petition from numerous "loyal American refugees, disband- ed troops and their represent- atives, rcsiding in this Island," :0 Lieutenant Governor Huntley, 31st July. 1839, setting forth the de- plorabie situation to which they were reduced through oppressive proceedings adapted against them by sundry speculators, who had succeeded in depriving them of the lands on which they had been located by the Government: "Influenced by principles of loy- PROFESSION AL CARDS M. Aibon Former. O.C. B.A.. LLB. Burl-lst.er Ind Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Chnrlottetown Money to Donn J. A. McGuigan BARIIISTER. SOLICITOR, Elm NOTARY. ITO. BARIIIBTEIL SOLICITOB the American Revolution, and. with devoted integrity, we con- tended for the rights of our Sov- erelgn in the battle-field, in con- junction with many of our brave associates, who are now no more; and faithfully have we sustained our allegiance to our King until the disastrous termination of the war, when, for the preservation of life, we were reluctantly com- pelled to abandon our country and all we esteemed in ii" and. in ac- II. ,3. DIIEPHEE. B.A., Q.C. I. IOMEELEI) TRAINOB. B A. Burluoro, . to. . Gouda 8: I-loszord GILBERT A. onuntrr, n. A.. L1. is Bnrrlnton Ind " " Money to IAIIII UInIdlIn Blnh of Commerce Bldg cordance with the n tlon issued by the then Governor of Prince Edward Island, we repair- ed thereto, which Proclamation insured to each of us, on our Ir- rlval in said Island, a competent location on n portion of certain lands surrendered to the Crown for the aforesaid Ipeclfic purpose by sundry proprietors. . . . "After our arrival in thin Col- ony, a great majority of us were located on the lands referred to, which lands were partially im- proved; and in many instance: we erected dwelllngl thereon. some of us received Crown lrnllls for IIld lands, which grants are still in our polseulon and were regularly registered in the pro- per office. Notwithltanding all which, the mid proprietors. or their immediate Iulznn. soon If- ter our location, buely Idopted the man coercive Ind cruel pro- cecdingl against us, whereby they succeeded in depriving us of the said lando, on which we were lo- cated, II Iforesald. to the man- ifest prejudico of the Brllilh Crown and lrrepIrIblo'ruin of I loyal and deurvlng people. "For the recovery of our rlsths. we made Ieverol application to the public Iuthoritlu of thiI II- land: but Iuch proved totally Iboi-tlve, through the undue in- fluence improperly exercised over it: Council: by many of the nut proprietors. their Iulgnl Ind agents. In Iuch case, we were re- luctnntiy compelled, in mIny in- Itunces, to become In Ibieat ton- Intry to lamb of the IIld pro- prlotorl. who oblige u: to pay our nnnuul rent for I portion of the land: from which we have been Io oppreulvely evicted: and it fre- quently occurs. through our inabil- "ln Iuch run we are compel- led to wander through the Col- Clius. R. McQuoid B. A. BARRISTEII, SOLICITOK. NOTIIR Y. EM.. lyu enmlned. glasses mteo Corner Kent Ind Queen Sis. Office Phone I956-House 1013 MATIIESON, PEAKE & NICHOLSON A. W. MATIIISON. 0.0. A. ll. PEAKIS. IA. LLB JOHN P. NlUIl'l)LSON, LLJL Ion-intern. Ito Palmer 8: Hoslom A. J. HASLAM. B.A., LLB. BIrrlIt.er. Eto. Bonk of Non sooth (lumber: Clnrlottetown. P. E 1. MONEY TO LOAN Bell, Mathlcson & Foster Borristera, Solicitors. etc. R. R. BELL, Q.C. D. .1. MAT!-IIESON. LL.B., Q.C. G. I3, FOSTER. LLB. alty and attachment, as faithful D Lean, on cm. and 1.-um British subjects, we; h" lrgoullr Cunnm av" mo pmpe,-gas imperative duty to oin t e oya 159 Richmond Street Army in the commencement of Mucphee & 'ru'no' Ch,,,.1,mcm,,,,.L 12.1.3.1. FREDERIC A. LARGE. 9.6. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P B. I. LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES A. Wolthen Gouda. LLB. IIARRISTER. SOIJCITOII. IM- I-lztllipo inotloin. ill GrIllnn Street Money to I.oIu Collection I.-Jutuen. l'ruu Building CllAltI.0'l'TETUWN J. A. CARRIJTI-IEBS Phono I'll! . , OPTOMETRIST J. S. 'I'AVl0il PHONE 2372 optometrist 3 Konl Street 12 (Next to SlmpIou'I Agency) Bllliil J. BEAM OJ. OPTOMETBIST 120 Kent Street PHONE 8'13 Opposite Revere Hotel Dr. W. R. Carson n IARDOLPII W. CollootIonI;- Money To boon chkuvnegog 00 Grant George street pun" qngnu. C'W'0'W0"" cnnsnorrsrown Phone 1072 201 ri-Inca st- Allison M. Gillis. . Dr. A. L. Moclsuoc L... - DENTIST IJABIIBTER. soucn-on. oenul X-IlIy Eta tn.oluA BUILDING tm llolunond st. . on-an 1-,, Gun”, 3;, "'”"' ”' I Phono an II. It. li0IlE and BOMPAIY CHARTERED Icoounnms Ill Grout Goorgo Sh. Chlrlottolowl Phone: UK - l4'l'l - Box 147 DlANN'lN0.0.A. other offiooo It QIIIIYII. Ifoneton. St. John's. Amhont. DIN- uonlh. lontvlllo. Liverpool, Now Glugow Ind Truro. IRMA P. MMPIIIISON. 0.5. evll, It the entrance to the Sound oily. and eiuwherq, II In many Curtis Imp, L'hIrIouetown lty to realize laid rent. that our entire chIl.telI In frmll-IO!"-IY uclx,NALD'.cUBlnE T 00' . nixed Ind I d by public Iuc- cnAI1'i3lnAooouu1Au'rl l I "”"' ” """' " "" """' mama. ounce. mun Toronto. Icon John. nomuu. Voooounr, llrllond IAII. Iloneton. lllmllhu, Ohrlouotown. ' loibpl-on IIII