. 2 mosrouni THE GUARDIAN Authorised on Second Clan: blnll Pout Olflu Department. Ottawa. The Inland Guardian Publlnhlng Co. President and Associate Editor. Inn A. Burnett. Associate Editor. hank Walter. CIRCULATION "Covers Prince Edward Island like the dew" 7'Tilc Strongest Memory is Weckc: Man the Weakest ink". CHARLOTTETOWN, THURSDAY. ran. 2l,”1E2' The Times llqulttell A judge at the Central Criminal Court, more familiarly the Old Bailey, has cleared the London "Times" of .a charge of (()l'- rupt election practices. In taking the case from the jury on the ground that there was no evidence of an intention to affect the -.-hances of election of any particular cand- idate, the learned judge cast into legal dis.- card a very large part of the territory seemingly taken in by the 1949 enactment prohibiting the spending of money to af- fect the result of any election, except by candidates and their parties. The decision leaves the Labour Govern- mel1t's legislation as prohibiting only spending of money to affect the result in a particular contest between opposing cand- idates, There is little doubt but yet further restrict the operation of the astonishing electoral law which seems dc- signed to prevent information leaking out when it might be most serious for the Gov- ernment of the day. The whole tradition l0f British justice is t0 Ewe no Wide” mtiselves well into a session before gaining any clear idea of what the Govemmcnt terpretation to legislation creating criminal offences than is required by the most strict reading of the statute. Telling Them According to the Financial Post the Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe has been ”talking turkey” to other Atlantic nations, including the Mother Country. There was a good punch line in his recent address before the Van- couver Board of Trade. It was his tact- fully worded intimation that other coun- tries which look so urgently to Canada as a source of supplies in their current cm- crgencies would be expected to continue to provide reasonably dependable markets dur- ing more normal times. ”Canada," he stated, "is not to be considered simply as a residential source of supply during critical times, and then forgotten when the crisis has blown over." Now, if this principle were merely translated into firm govern- ment policy, it would be sweet music, in- deed, for Canadian producers, whose for- eign markcts have so often been subjected to unpredictable vagaries beyond the nor- mal factor of supply and demand. It is not as if Canada were reluctant to recip- rocate. This country has a good record of being ready to buy abroad; but it does not seem to get much co-operation in re- turn, once thc crisis of whatever nature it may be from time to time, has passed away. llewi Plants For lianada Some thirteen European industrial con- cerns are looking for suitable plant loca- tions in Canada, according to an article in the February issue of Canadian Business magazine. Many of the companies are lo- cated in 'Holland with others in Belgium, Austria and Germany. The projected branch plants in Canada would employ anywhere from 20 to 200 persons accord- ing to the size, it is stated. A number of the companies which are investigating Canadian locations are textile firms but also included are manufacturers of machinery, heating equipment, paper, and other products. lea would bring their own plant equipment and key staff members but, according to Henry Catlcen the writer, most of the firms "need working capital. Sovlot Farming x . An overseas report jointly issued by the Departments of Agriculture and Trade and Commerce at Ottawa, and prepared by Dr. E. Jaska, now of the Economics Division and formerly an official of the Esthonian Department of Agriculture, states that in .1950 Soviet Russia merged more than half of its collective famu intd "collective farm settlements.” These each contain approx- imately 30,250 acres. of which about 18,500 should lie arable, and also 1,000 head of cattle, 8,000-cheep, 280 "horses and 400 hogs. Each will contnlnjmm 500 to a few Thealmlssaldtobea ilivcl unnococuon ensuring a build- run-vd and the saving of workers mm town to be the more lines-tin conectlve farm, which regarded as reservoirs .l.-,i;l,L p Itglll ll” tprice-cut policy has thus added additional ; plots.” ' the, llong continued storm as we have exper- thi" iienccd this week. should occasion require. the courts wouldpand we su,.,,i,,(,d them i l l Most of the compan-- increasing rate in order to make a greater part of the farming population available to industry." i The Soviet Union reduced prices in 19.50 land 1951, the most important reductions loccurring in 1951 and concerning food. Bread, flour and similar products were cut '15 per cent, as well as all types of meat, while milk, ice cream -and eggs were cut by Iten per cent. In this connection, Dr. Jaska iwritcsz .”It should be remembered that two- lthirds of the population consists of col- llective farmers who have to bear the bur- iden of financing the Soviet economy. Ac- 'cording to official pre-war data, 60 -per cent :of the state revenues was drawn from the jtiirnover tax, and over 70 per cent of this ttax was derived from agriculture. In 1950, -'the contribution provided by agriculture was about the same as pre-war. . . The in- fcome of farmers will be reduced by seven !billion rubles in 1951. . . The government's lweight to the massive burden borne by ifarnlers in 1951. In -addition, the cuts may ibe considered as a means to lessen the 'farmer's interest in maintaining individual I zllilitlklafsltllts Memories will have to go back a good ifew years to recall a scverer, and such a THE -GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN J Knocking Well dad blunti- But there were others. 0 V O The speech from the Throne is less and , jless a precise forecast of Government leg- I i British scientists, according to T. D. F, .in the Ottawa Citizen, are trying to figural :out. "why dogs' claws grow faster in the, y'Antarctic." After that they might turn to' why fingernails grow faster at potato dig- ging time. ' 1 - 1 l Nicolai Vasilievitch Gogol, , Russian; author, died one hundred years ago today. He early produced two series of stories and sketches depicting the life of Little Rus- sia with great truth and vigour. Love of nature and of the supernatural, humour, pathos and descriptive power characterize his many tales, many of which were trans- lated into English. lislation. Nowadays members find them- l . . .proposes to do ill many fields. 0 O l n "Getting away with it" is what leads to a spread of dishonesty in the public service. The bribing of Canadian Government of- ficials by prospective European emigrants is nothing new but is very hard to uncover. Neither the giver nor the receiver of bribes is likely to talk, and for tht? most part the authorities must depend upon the emigrants squealing and circumstantial evidence to obtain convictions. 0 0 O Closer understanding between our civic iauthorities Jand Trade Board members is to be welcomed. Tomorrow night's Board meeting, at which the Mayor and Council- llors are to be special guests, and at which Mr. Norman A. Hesler, past president of The Poetry Out Of It Another poet-' PUBLIC HJRUM This column is open In the discussion by correspondents of questlms of interest. The Guardian does not necessar- l l lly endorse the opinion of I coriesuondcnls. ON l.l-ZAVING TIIF. FARM I Six This subject has been drai- wlth in the t'Public Forlnu" deserves that time and space bP' given to it. To come quickly to the: point. I do not think that nlcazzrel or small financial returns are chicfl cause of the exodus. For the writer, can testify that this restlessness lsl just. a craving for adventure. A young man wishes to see the world.. finds the old life monotonous andl thinks there would be more exclte- ! ment. in building up a fortune under other skies; just to follnwl on where Dad left off sounds too tame. ; But we older ones have learned something. One is this. that the: best adventure can be found near home. Farming: is just comlmz into its own. The tlllcrs of the soil from now on will have more say as to what. price they will get for their toll. We know this because we see i the young men orgnrllzlng all over our Dominion. We know about the "Farm Forums" and Calf Clubs The spirit of cooncratiou is in the country air. And there is adventure in this. Even the girls are making things interesting by carrylnr! off honors in stock juriglnq nr exhibit- inr: animals they have raised. But. not wishlmz to talk "shop" all the time. there is adventure to be found in planning a country dance and enjoying it. And I would say that it is quite an accomplish- ment to know that all have had a good time witllont st.imulanl.s. Why. it's an adventure to follow your church in its pron-aln. In it we learn that "we get thr,3lr!h civ- lrlg." "lie that saves his life shall lcsc it". It is nn adventure to act as stewards of llmc- and moms. taking no more for ourselves than what brlonzs to us. ithc Canadian Manufacturers Association twill speak, should serve to promote this do- isirabie objective. 0 O O No country today can look with com- plete satisfaction on the record of its for- eign policy but France seems to have had one consistently out of step. When Ger- lmany had a Government favourable to ll-Trance, France spurned it, when anti- French elements assumed power, France felt obliged to yield on points previously refused. i O Summerslde Legionnalres are under- standably puzzled about how the Prince County Hospital is to be reinstated in the C O the hospital board wrote undertaking to see that if veterans were permitted to use the hospital, reports would be dealt with promptly, but the Department in an an- swering let.ter.indlcated..t.hat....the...b.t1n. "can.-, not be rescinded until such time as returns to this office prove more satisfactory." Stalemate. Both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick Legislatures have opened for their annual sessions. Neither has yet concluded ne- gotlatlons with the Federal Government for renewal of the tax rental agreement, but the former seems assured of satisfact- lng grants to municipalities. Both are faced with teacher salary disputes, but ev- idently are leaving it for the County Coun- cllll to handle the question, they and the respective parish authorities being the par- ties directly concerned. In all likeli- hood the teachers will secure increases and our Legislature will have to be pre- pared to follow suit, good”igric'es"'of”D.'-"V; -A! -The--president. on ory arrangement because it plans lncreas- ” Tile count:-v has always produced (the "suit" that preserves society. May it continue to do 'so. in cgscilssillz this subicct of the 'exodus from the land I have in blind mavbe l00 school districts loul of the 409 in the Province. where. if you an. union: the people you will find thcln cducalcrt ant! conversant. on cvcry subject of local or world interest, except ag- rlculture. The children growing up will hear about politics. church mat- ters. grading in school, cnlcrln-; Prince of Wales College or St. Dun.stnn's. which boy will study medicine or law; but they never run out the car to visit our own Dominion Experimental harm. or field day at an Illustration Station. From homes like these it. boy or two should be sent for ll year to learn both the practical and theo- retical of what it. takes, even with a. good farmer 10 miles away. or to VgleHAgl'lCllHlll'Bl College. He would galnibhhdehie in himself, and feel that the job is important and that there can be A good reward for diligence. It in not every youm man or woman that has a near neighbor from whom practical ideas can be borrowe.d,,,,1f,,he.o,r she had, the battle would be half "won. i When the young show a thirst for know- ledge, then the moral llump is stopped and we can begin to build. Agriculture in the basic industry. and if inducement: are offered in the line of practical education. more young people of keen mind: will be attracted. A clergyman gets from seven to twelve years training. I doctor six, and so forth. we have no respect for n quack doctor and he cannot carry a very high head. Whatever we hope to excel in. we need to pay the price r. I am, sir, el.c.. ARCH. MMKENZIII. 1-lurrr:n' mum- io the home of W.J. rcnton wound up I busy day recently for Lindsay fire-tighten. At the home the fit! chief ind to climb I ladder to the mid ' LINDSAY, Ont. --fCP)--- A call M In an article lu'.('linon De-nlel.j-irons" now. Chief or course, in of the New York Tums We see Hit”-Fort Willizlm. Others of note are Qlitell -Slwkcn 07 115 "ll 25-.l'0'glY-01d' Fort Frances, on Saskatchewan. housewife and mothcr;" thzs ispp-0,.-L St. John 3 d F0” Erie, Mac. about as desclmlw of ul9.lco:i has just as much light (is any Queen's nature and illllcllun into: men, to exploit ..-1-mever glam. ri BS I Not pine world as tliougli her late latll-four is numbed 1., the "am. cr liadmbefen dcsel-lb:;:i (as "a 1156- --Fm-L-r icnygn,-3. Alba,-can. vC'"-0 nrmcr an sum-3-co cc-- ....e , fol! Til1(hilCil(ld0l'”:l f4l'l;3li C0l"'K' The Ilamlrl Dead illnrch comes monwea 1 an e msress a gram ms O,.,.m,.1op SWL wrmen several palaces and mansions is H, 1733 when mt Compose, W” not it liousewlfc: the fact that the 53. Fm. head of the suite is a mother some reason long since - i5, for;:,ottcn. it. is always referred to of no II-ION llllllolilullcf ill-"'11 imlii us the Dead March in Salli. The '1 Bill? 15 fl iaill" - - - 1-” "sioratorio closely follows the Bibli- l1:SlSi. the desire of the Amcrlcullgml mm-Mjvc of me yclatigng be. M955 10 Wm the QUEEN IMO 9 tween Dnvzd and Saul. The Dead Super-Mom - l"'lPYll01”0U:ll EX')l'larch comes in the third scene Dnlmfh ll'.'ll'lCil opens with the interview , ,bc:wcen David and the Amule- Pzlrllamcnt lllll's memorial ccre- lute who brings the tidings of the fnony for George the Sixth wnsydculll of Saul and his son, Jona- dcscrlberl repeatedly by the rndlmtllan. The magnificent. dll-gt Lrozldcasters as a "service." it wlislwluch is called the Dead lV.n1-ch not a "servicc;" not. rertnlnly. n is played after the passage depict- Christian service. In-deed, omitting my this sad news. The Chopin the playing by bands of n singlu-&Funeral Mm-ch will be forever as- h,xLnn-”Ablde with Me"-if waslsorintcd with tthe life of that frail the sort of ceremony that migilt-nnd -fiery Polish patriot, Written take place in Moscowls lteuilowards the middle of the lath square with the death of sLalln,lrrllLury under the most macabre No hint in these laying of wreaths,circumstances, it was first a part and playing of bands. without nlol Chopin's Second Plrmolortc word from the Book of Cumnlonlsonatn ill B, Flat Minor, 0pus.35, Prayer, or -from the burial serviccs.lhllt it. has since been ustd as an of any other Christian faith, of l'J5l1'l-Illlfllitll i10FU0ll 0? steal fun- Gcorge the Sfxth's assoclatloziflznl occasions. It was so tied up with "the solemn bC:u;l.,v at flu-.MI.li the fame of Chopin that a Christian dream ' v.'llich gay-epiJ:u'l .0! the music is inscribed on strength to his patient power." lxllglluplilrs tombstone in Paris. this country some people talk ---t 1111190; Free Press. and boast.-of the ”separation of. Church and state." Dpes the sep- 3,?-7---s. g.,-coerce.-are nrnilon have to go in 'tllc point where a Christian country, o.'- .7 Old Chaihluei-OWII ficially marking the death of its ;; Chrlstlan Monarch, has to cx- ”i'"' r- 5- 1- i elude religious prayers? -- Otm-l ” n no Journal. - ; P()STOFFI(lI-: BOXES l .1-... I "Mr. .T. Newson is now engaged The town of lilnclcml is chang. ill Pi-'"'5"I-' the new lock-boxes in ing its name to run Mnclcnzl, as the Post Office. Thrr will he ar- ll was known in the carry days 9;-,r;m;:cd over the old lock-boxes, mp Roy"; Nm-m west Mounted ;:ln1l substitute the glass ones. Each p,,1-me. An exccumn idem we my. box will ill' filled with u very ilnnrlsomn Yhle Post Office Lock. ;which is made of brass. in the vfnrm of u very neat door, of six- -by-thrcc inch dimensions. In the lower part is inserted a piece of lglnss--which is protected, by a Ilnouldlng---so flint the owner can ,sr:c whether there is anything in ,the box without opening it. Be- lsidcs being It convenience to the public, the new boxes will ndd greatly to the appearance of the llost Ofiirc." - The Examiner? May 21, 1878. Ally community is entitled to cup- itallzc on whatever favors history has bestowed on it. Mncleorl will never be a great. city, but it has had ll rich past. The name Fart Mneleod conjures. up thnl past. and therefore it is ll. right and fitting name. It won't. hold up the progress of the town any more than Calgary! annual reversion to cow town has slowed up that city. In -fact Maclcod will prolll in some measure just as Calqnry has profited. Canada has several l X ..i;:- 7? Gum Tile Age-lllfl itory tog-to-9-9013M-as-cog-co-3 oedi FROM "THE COMEDY OF ERRORS" Moreover, brethren. we do you - to wit of the grace of God t stow- ed on the churches of Macedonia: how that in rm-eat trial of of- fllctlon the abundance of their Joy and their deep poverty cboumlcd unto the riches of their llhcrallty. . . . Therefore, on yo abound in everything, in nun, and nu...-. Illf-E. and knowledge. and in all iI'nll!lIce,"Ind hr your fowl to m, can that ye nlnourul in this (race nloo. . . . For ya know the grace of our Lord Jami! Christ. tint. though he in: rich. yet for your nlreo he became poor, that ye 5",V9v . ll-rough nu povmy might. be Forsooth took on him In a con- rich. And hncln 1 nlvo my --up ..-..-1um. ' vice: for this In expedient for you. And. Klllllli 111 my EYES. fetllnl my who have begun before, not only Pulse. ' to do, but am to be mwml n And with no face. pa 'Lwm. out- . . . Along with them They brought. one Pinch. a bunny lean-faced villain, A mere anatomy, a mountaebnnk. A threadbare, Juggler and I for- tune-tciler. " " A hwdy. hollow-eyed. sharp-loob lng vrretch. . A living-dead man: thlt pemlcloul .vur ago. Now therefore perform "Milli! me. the doing of It; that an more was cries out. I was pouenrd. Then all n reullm-an 40 will. It) then may together be 3 porlorlnulce all!) out of that They fell upon me. bound me, bar: which are have. For If them be me f-Hence ' ' llrtt a willing nlnd. It II M-.- And in a dark and dnnkinh vault canted according to that: man at home haul, and not according to that 1'1 INC C in hath not. liar 1 men. not out on me " my "m'' M" bound together; r man be-and and ye In Till, I -it as 2 but In .-n'em-uuy. u--'3 'u'L”..'Iu"in”.ui.u1'i.' W" "' n this , your abundance 1 "(nu my ffggdo-In and Mm”, um um: :l?blHIa3c:'n:Ihod:n:"'bi5 3. "M" I h h - - l ,6" '”u m” 11 bl; iour trace. whom I . ' ll 1' "I To gm me ample uumetlou bathroom window to bring out. lfentontc fwo-your-old 'dniu;hter, who had locked herself in. then county ml ...'il?i...1tt:t.:;.4t!;'r'f.t.'-'0'f:l,:;:,,s;7:,,-h-mu "-4 rr--I tint llnd ntllt-red ltttlo lmi no glui- l - William Shakespeare. Another itinerant preacher in Cu ' ' is predicting the end of the world sometime in the very near future. There is nothing no- ticeably novel about this as some- body comes up with 3 aimllu pre- diction every now and then. Strangely. the cry is visually first heard in California. only two or three years ago 0. man down there by the name of Long had hund- reds of people so worked up about it that they gave away everything they had and just sat back to await the end. when the day at- rived and nothing cataclyumlchap- pened.'Mr. Long said simply that be had made A little mistake. . No one, of course. has any right to any that this world will never come to an end. It is at best a speculative subject. However, scl- enticta claim to be in possession of evidence that would give the earth's age at about 2000 million years. They say. too. that barring unnecessary accidents. such as the indiscriminate throwing around of atom and hydrogen bombs, it ought to be good for at least: another such period. 0 0 Whatever may or may not hap- pen to this planet. it is certain that the states of society we call civilizations do come to an end. since the dawn of the first recog- nizable one roughly 6000 years ago there have been about nineteen or twenty in all. All of them except five (Western Christendom, Ortho- dox Chrlstcndom, Islam. Hindu Far Eastern) have seemingly come to an end. And. yet. since A law of nature is that nothing is ever really lost, we cannot by that any civilization has actusly perished. although most of them. so far. have declined virtually to the nofnt of, extinction. our own civ- ilization (Western Christendom) is definitely a product of the Greece- Roman which, in point of fact. it superseded. Indeed. in one way or another. all the surviving civiliza- tions have their basic origins in Greece and Rome. 0 The historians have never been unite able to agree on just what it. was that browzht former civiliz- aliens to gradual decline and fall. If they could do that. it would wrcntlv help those who are trying frantically to find some formula for saving our own. some believe that all civilizations must sooner or later die and be replaced bv higher ones. This is the theory of inevitability, once in popular vogue but not now. I believe. favoured bv the leading historians. ,n is interesting, thouch nerhaus --at erlllylnv. to recall that some historians of note have blamed re- lirzlon for the ill fate that hcfell the once all powerful and all in- rvm-ntlcl Fix-nccn-Roman culture. This was the view taken by Ed- ward Gibbon (AD. 1788) in his monumental "I-llstm-.v of the De- cline and Fall of the Roman Em- nlre." He writes in his concluding paragraph: "I have described the triumph of barbarlsm and relig- ion". . More than a hundred years later the same. view was taken by sir James Frazer in his qllasl-classic "The Golden Bough". He writes of communion of the soul with God. and its eternal salvation. as a "selfish and immoral doctrine". as A result of which. he noes on to say. "3. general disintegration of the body politic set in" (in Greek and Roman society). I C 0 one of the brlcht signs of our day is that. for all their ex-udftion and historical ability, the views of Gibbon and Frazer are now, well nigh obsolete. at least among his- torlans of our Western christen- dom civilisation. " The most. eminent of these is perhaps Arnold J. Toynbee whose The Passing Scene II: Ohlerver WHITHBB CIVILIZATION? I FEBRUA'RY 21. 1952 . bee I capable and or ' inn whose views comxglliigfi universal respect. He in also . ptlctlslng christian of note, which of course, makes his world outlook of even greater significance. H1, "Civilization on Trial" lg, one might suggest. required reading”, anyone who is anxious to see mm. glimmer of hope in the darknesg at our times. 0 Professor Toynbee does not. run- aul: the possibility at our civiliz- atlon's ultimate destruction. 1”. deed. if we 'continuec to pl” around with atomic bomb, mu even more deadly toys, my amp, that the end may not be far on and any thinking person will me; with him. But. even in that event he is of the opinion that 3 rom- nant of our heritage will be sal. vaged as has always happened in the fall of civilization. This time. it is interesting .5 well as humiliating for us to note the saving function, in TnV,,b,,-Kl opinion, will be the lot of it race Of Pygmies in Central Africa. For one thing. they will be about the only people likely to be safe from actual battlement. For anntim they are reputed to have an ex- !-!'EmP1Y ,hll;h and unspoiled con. centlon of the nature of God. For 0. while, the great historian believed that the historic honom might be shared by the Esklnlm. However. they were ruled out in his final prediction since, in lie... of the strides recently made in aviation, Northern Canada, rlgm to the North Pole, will almost cu. talnly be a battle theatre in any future world conflict. In that case. the Eskimos like everybody else in the hemisphere would be brought within the sphere of whatever dr- structlon might ensue. O O O The most hopeful and refrcshlm note of Toynbeeb philosophy 0' history is that. far from religion) being the destroyer of clvlllzallnm, civilizations themselves have al- ways been and will continue to be the servants of Religion. Some- times. unwilling servants. but ur- vants just the same. He cit:-3 as evidence that. in the encounters and conflicts of ancient civiliza- tions, the higher Religions were born. For example. Christianity and her "hell-sister" religion is- lam sprang -from the encounter between the Syrian and Greek civ- ilizations. the present form of Hinduism from the Indian-Greek encounter. and so on. To make a long story short (Toynbee always writes a lonv story) this eminent and deeply Christian historian is of the opin- ion that the future of manklnd-- if it is to have any future-lies. in his own words, "not with the of!- ahooto of the civilizations whole encounters provided the opportun- ity (in time) for the higher Rell;:- ' ions to come to birth but with N1?-S8 higher Religions themsc-lve.l." In the forefront of these-for Toynbee is is convinced Christian. not merelv a .student of Compara- tive Rellzionsvhe places Christian- ity which, he feels. whatever may hapoen to any civilization. inclini- ir.)z his own. will eventually nbsort into itself all that Is best and most useful in all the other Religion: and they all contain much that I: wood and mystlcallv essential in the triumph of Religion. 0 O O O kAll this. of course, is based M the assumption that human per versenesc coupled with teclinnlo: fcal ”know-how" will not ultim- ately drive all trace of man iron the face of the earth. If thlsslmull come to pass-and the honest his torlan cannot dismiss the though as an impossible sneculation-rm fcscor Toynbec thinks that martial! dominion may be taken over bx certain xneclcs of winged insert.- such as the ants and the bees. whr. historical works ire now accepted is mind: 6 in most intellectual circles. Not only to Professor 'l'oyn- mlght in the long run: do a nulrli better Job than man has been able to do. PROFESSIONAL CARDS” Willi! J. GMII Ill. OPTIIMETRIST Ill” lent slrcel PIIONL I18 Adjoining North American Hotel Dr. A. L. Moclsooc DENTIST Danni K-I-I! GLOIIA BUILDING I'll Orlllln UL finch!- Allison ..M.- Gills. Ll..I. IAIIIITIII. IOI.lOl'IDIy Eh. s llollcllnondll.-Ofhwl Phnnoit llr. ulllllll E. Stems "VETERINARY SURGEON Phone 1:0, 238 Powml 5! omen noun 8; Appointment loll. Motlllcson 8- Foster Barrlslerl. Soltcltorl. 0” R. R. BELL. 9-C- D. L. MATHIESON. LLER. G. R. FOSTER. LLB- Loans on city and FM" Properties 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P-El Goudot 8: Hum! amount A. otmnlrr. 3.11.. '- Iarrllun no uonouon I to Incl! Q.C ill Oran! (horn IANDOLPII W. IIANNING. 0.A. other omen It llnlltn. vacant. Ilrlhnl Ian. cunt! IIOI-. Charlottetown II. II. IOIIE d COMPANY UIIAITEIID AQ)()a.NTANTl Phonon I3 - ll - In M1 new omuln Bank at coma-cm "" mg; i 7 nuu r. MncPIllIBON C-A nmm, cl. Jolura. Amherst. mt” mouth, lcntvlllo. uvcrpool. New ulunw and Tmro. QIcl)0NAI.D. UIIBIIIE D 00. UIIAITIIIIJ A000UN'IAN'I'I Alanna. onion. Ochoa. foupto..loht I . lIuIm'"- macho. llnnmln. mar” nmnono N" J