\ m!" a i Jags roua i Illi OllAlll-OITEIQWI Glllllllllll lus-uhgllulythuulodlnllfl) v [ems ad lulllllu 0 ""°.“':.....“":"a€£ti'lt.“.‘“...7.'.‘ a222, "‘ "flu Strongest Memory is Weaker flue the Weakest Ink.’ sK-ruanay. my I, 1M5- Nurses’ Church Parade Across Canada tomorrow the Iriembefl 0i the nursing profession will attend church sgrv; ices in s body, following an admirable prece c: instituted some years aRQ- I" Chaflmfelml“ l e Protestant nurses will attend the Baptist Church aei-viee at 7 p.m. and the Catholic nurses serv- ice in the Charlottetown Hospital chapel at 7.30 p.m. At Suinmerside they will attend the serv- i¢e§ aLSt, Mary's and St. Pauls churches re. spectivelv. All nurses not activelyon duty are requested to attend. ' v _ \Vith the glorious victory over the Nazi nggressors in Etirope, one's thoughts naturally turn to the great work achieved by the nursing prqfc55i0n both on the many fighting fronts and at home. It is fitting that they, whose heal- ing hands have brought comfort to so niian)’ restlesu pillows, should be among the flrfit i" ‘fiend Divine Services as a body on this moment- ous occasion. when ‘LE DR)’ l5 allom l" M celebrated. "He Alone" A prize example 0f official election adver- tising of the Liberal party_ is afforded by thc Victoria Times, which CIIFTIES,‘ ‘in heavy typf, under s picturebf Prime hliiiister RIBdWYV-"i King, the following: "He alone has been responsible for . L TH! WEATHERING or THE STORM "He alone!" comments the Ollauin Journal scathingly. "Not the Canadian boys who faced the machine gun fire and the deadly mortars It Caen and Falaise! Not the men who fought Ind endured incredibly in the murl and fIOOdS and frost-bitten mists of Holland. hot ill? Canadian bovs who lived on the great waters and faced the peril of the submarines to keep otir army's life-line. Not the youths who night after night in the bombers rode through the flame-lit skies of Germany! 0111.“ Mdckellzle King. He. and ‘he alone.’ was responsible for ‘weathering the storm.’ _ _ _ “The Liberal party——ln its official advertis- ing ——- savs so. The rest 0f us, soldiers, sail- ors, airmen. war workers-and of CCIIYSE. those tiresome Conservatives-dbl‘): We" Jllsl m m“ bleachers." Farmers’ Markets fhe acute meat shortage confronting the Allied Anglo-Saxon nations is only partially at- tributable to increased requirements of the arm- ed services and the relief agencies in the liber- ated countries 0f Europe. Due to a variety of reasons the over-all production of livestock iii North America has fallen off from the peaks which were established last year. The shortage of shipping has restricted the customary heavy movement of chilled and frozen meats to Britain from Argentine and Australia. Reviewing otli- er aspects of the export farm market situa- tion the Monetary Times says: In Canada present prospects point to s drop in hog production this year of 20 per cent from the 8,600,000 head marketed in I944 but cattle slatighterings are expected to rise from the 1,000,000 last year to possible l,400,000 in the present twelve-month period. The building up of herds which commenced three years ago is now producing results. The decline in hog pro- duction which will seriously affect the domestic supply and the bacon shipments to Britain, is particularly noticeable in western Canada where the prairie farmers are again- showing a pref- erence for wheat growing to sowing coarse grains, which, \vlieii harvested must be proces- sed into pork before they put money into the producer's pocket book. Sowing and harvest- ing a wheat crop is much simpler in these times of acute labor shortage. The increase a year ago in the initial payment on wheat to $1.25 per bushel with the prospect of participation in a higher price when the grain is sold by the Wheat Board has encouraged the western farm- er to return to wheat growing. Recent action of the Federal Government ln limiting the amount of wheat a farmer can market to t4 bushels per acre is an effort to reduce by 1,750,000 acres the land sown to this grain and to bring about a corresponding in- crease in seeding of feeding grain. The importance which Dr. (i. S. H. Bar- ton, Deputy Minister in the Federal Depart- ment of Agriculture attaches t0 maintaining livestock and dairy production at high levels de- serves attention. The Canadian farmer is pros- perous today chiefly because there is a heavy foreign demand for his products at good prices. If our farmers are to remain prosperous after the war Canada must retain her export inar- kets in agricultural products. It has been esti- mated that Canadian farms can feed 30 to 40 per cent more people than there are in the Dominion. This surplus above domestic re- quirements represents our capacity in foreign markets and the nearer it can be attained the greater the prospects for Canadian farmers to hold their present production levels. The crucial factor is not the farmers‘ ability to continue producing but it is our prospects ol ‘holding the post-war export market. The agricultural products which we offer for sale must be of the kind which the foreign custom- ers want. There is no prospective shortage of wheat in the world, but as Dr. Burton hss int- ed out, the wh6le world is short of meat. éliere is a further- consideration to beborne in mind. The liberated countries of Europe will find it possible in one crop year to grow most of their wheat requirements but it may take sev- eral years to restore their herds and flocks of the prospect that in the post-war years there will be greater demands in Europe for Can- adian livestock and dairy products than there will be for Canadian wheat, though this will be wanted, too. It seems fairly plain that in the next few years the Canadian farmer’s greatest export opportunity will be in livestock and dairy production. -EDITORIAL NOTES- Propare for V-E Day. i I U i Tomorrow the Second Sunday in Victory Loan. n- e o e When the good news is broadcast then is the time to double up Victory Loan investments. U I i I The two main political parties here are no“ lined up for the fray. i i U i Tomorrow marks the 100th anniversary of the incorporation of the toivn of Niagara-on- tlie-Lake. This old Canadian town. first settled 165 years ago, once capital of Upper Canada, has ambitious plans for its post-ivar future. The Niagara Post-War Planning Committee has picked the centenary of incorporation as ‘ the moment to launch a scheme for restoring the town in colonial style. U i U According to Mr. llsley, Acting Prime Min- ister, V-E Day will be officially announced from Ottawa and not be dependent upon hearsay broadcast. Mr. Ilsley said it was intended to follow the announcement with two proclama- tions —~ the first declaring the following Sun- day to be s day of solemn thanksgiving and rc- membrance, and the second declaring the day following the announcement to be a public. holiday. _ is s e s These are the saddest days imaginable for the Rt. Hon. L. S. Amery, British Secretary of State for India, whose thirty-three-year-old son, John, has been arrested as a collaborator of "Lord Haw Haw", Axis radio broadcaster in Nazi land. John adopted Germany ss his home before the war, and. like many “converts". es- sayed to out-Nazi Nazis in the vehemence of the advocacy of his new found faith, even to the extent of disowning the parents who bore him. His day of retribution has come. u is a a Evidently the C. C. F. is not very hopeful nt the French Canadian vote either in Quebec 0r throughout Canada. Mrs. Grace MacInnis. C. C. F. member of the British Columbia Leg- islature for Vancouver-Burrard, told a C, C. F- vPcrl forum in Vancouver that a combina- tion of church, industrialists and politicians keep the French-speaking people of Quebec "ignor- ant, uneducated aged helpless." Isn't it the old story-if you don't speak English you are ignorant? iii! Armed forces have political regulations laid down for their guidance. Under King's regu- lations and orders, the only servicemen who may take part in any manner in the fortli- coining Federal and Ontario general elections are service candidates and officers appointed to take service votes. The regulations-on the books for many years — mean servicemen, oth- er than candidates, may not address meetings even if they don civilian clothes. Thus, the only uniforms allowed at meetings would he those of the candidate on the platform or servicemen in the audience. Servicemen may not deal in anv ivav with party funds and may not participate in an election a; agents or scriitineers “or eti- gage in partizan work." u w a is Germany has collapsed in s mass of bcstial corruption, says The Tinzes. _All that we be- lieved worst in the Nazis has been more than proved true, and the satanic myth ivhich for long clung to the leaders with certain evil grandeur is being dispelled, leaving them to be seen as they are—evil men, perverted men. but men—not demigods. Mussolini's wretched exit is typical of the end 0f those monstrous sys- tems which for so long threatened the world, which the Allies fully intend to have done with forever. Yet because victory is total. and col- lapse has brought with it such clear indica- tions of the inhuman, anti-Christian nature of the enemy, it would be foolish to a degree, it is felt in London, to overlook the fact that even now the enemy is preparing to lay the founda- tions of yet another attempt to rule the world by wrong. a s n o Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of the French, died this date, i821; he was t0 Europe and the world s hundred years or so ago, what Adolf Hitler has been today, only with this- difference—he was the greatest military genius of all time, whereas his imitator was merely a vile nit-wit, able to surround himself with a few more-or-less brilliant sorcheads who en- couraged him to his doom; like Hitler, Napoleon was unhampcred by tradition, and unmoved by moral or religious influences, but he had genius though it proved of little avail when he reached Waterloo; his death in St. Helena at the age of forty-six called forth the admiration of a world for his intellectual powers, and regret they should have been put to such ignoblc tises: "Providence is always on the side of the last reserve. . . . 'Tis s. principle of war that when you can use the lightning ‘tis better than can- non.” cattle, hogs and sheep. Consequently there is’ Notes By The Way A survey shows that the of the women do not want the family urse strings. Then why don't they et. go of theml-Chut- hun News. Povert and rfde o bus time sskwin hB-llflshlpl‘ with .51.: folks who wouldnt have so muc poverty to contend with had eas rlde. Of the two evils. the lut- r the least desirable-Guelph murv. A blue-tinged lnd 3155i keeps people cob] bit? "w by Mr. W. M. Hem to the London Du y "rklnk with other been invented ton. Mull to trsmm ut not its heat fell dead from th ports. It wlll cost. the state $240,. 000.000 a year. It ls planned n15" to provide them with a minimum of one-third of a pint o! milk daily, with two-thirds as the’ 511m Home 70000000 mm]; have been-suit. out. from w”. and urlousl, n tn nuinblir clld l...f“§é'gi.. mi iiiiiie; st te. i n , ' , and Caartadareggdbtitlfldi m6 48o words Mohandas K. heard from-again. He says that 1f had run Flori u ZITBIQIIG. That ls the gist of what a correspond- ant. says ln a recent letter to the Tribune. He pc/lnts out that. 1n this community or 9,000 new], there are more than 300 cars and United States wlll receive wlll be hearts, . and no delldacles for them. ew of the scarcity of meat ln United States and also ln vlew of what has been learned about the average annual rate of 158 pounds. as compared to 126 pounds of meat each year 1n the late"30a The school of medicine of Col- umbia Un1verslty ls to conduct an investigation to obtain knowledge m the aging process of the human ndlvldual. T e alm of the studv s lo discover the factors by which nealth. vigor and usefulness of the mldlle-msed period may be extend- ed, the Toronto Star. reports. The research plan states that the ultl- mate goal 1s "the conservation of youthful stamina and vitality at. this (middle age) period ol’ llfe." Extensive research ln being done ln Professor Bogomnletz. leading scl- engllslg ln the Soviet Ukrainian Re. PU . In the middle of the U-boal st- tacks. dive-bomber raids and one of the worst storms that has ever battered n convoy round the North Cape. Lee Baron Russell Brlgs Olsen was bom. She ls now weeks old and 1s safe with her mother, a pretty dark haired Nor- wegian ctr of 19, 1n a hostel in Scotland. Lee's mother was one of 500 Norwegian men w children of the little island of Soroy who were snatched from the Ger- mans by the British Navy. From a destroyer the glrl was transfer- red to a United States Liberty ship, the Baron Russell Briggs. Helped by two Norwegian women. the p armaceutlcal mate brouizht ‘Lee into the world-London Dally Mall. While misguided amateur strata. gist: 1n the United States clnmored or Russian participation ln the be where they are today ln Ger. many had Russia ln 1942-34 been tloris consider the ghastly qtroeltzles in German prison camps, t; no more than natural that they should bitterly compare these revelations with the humane treatment given rlsoners of war In Al. lied coun rles. 'I‘he.se Nazis have every comfort. and are well fed. “But ls that ulte necessary?" us! elvlllans. It s, orttles. The calls for that attitude and th are following it to the let. JCCBIISQ of any excess of k. accorded Allied their captors the h "1 3 i‘ § a a :s a 5 3 3 i Z a 5' 5 I i‘ ters ln n, and 1t e never be lost. sight of, 1f ‘prisoners are not to suf smllton Spectator. fill fkhteoul lhl o! Lo d bywar correspondents since D332; ‘cum Gandhi has been h “shuns Japan as we" u Gab Evans Stomach Mtxturs n many. Tle erlcan and British ‘ "'7 “hflwmu”; 14"” casualty 1st,; robabl would have "h" Pu’ "m "Si: been swoilen by ed ltlonisl hund- ' ' and" "n" reds of thousands had Russia not n: '“°":g b,‘ a ' been enabled to offer such undl- u " h” um‘ “ha n‘ m’ vldled resistance to Germany dur- "n" “rgeuug ‘am’ lng those years. (Minneapolis “"1” . ‘m’ °' Star-Journal). ‘— a» elvllluns of the United m; unsu nku CALIPOI-NIA Bin-When referring to the looked mPI-JFiii-Fii" wds ovtnli: which be Pulmfst. date JNII- “The like the palm tree"; also t runcbeu of the o Eh ;»%i="‘§l2 The “a data Aiirxrlebi. Pawfsiew ‘m! delicious dates. Bo f 0 Ill undisnce oln tlile ‘ll-did? lso at Indlo whern be trees are laden en delicious fruit. we have the apricot. has been the favorite fruit in Palestine. I like the apri- cot. but had never eaten one un- til I came to Csllfornla twenty- szo. The apricot we ste e out wu Iced before it 1n order ship it across It is’ very int ma; to ' the hlllaldeerewhcre onndgdlz: s of an apricot orch- "d "99 Y0 In bloom, but more beautiful when covered with tleous white blossoms, with t, e11- sweet fragrance. Very restful lu- deed ls the drlve along the ranches at. the crest of the foothills where we hear mocking birds break forth ln aonz. and bees are busy auokng oney from the blossoms In he orchards. At u distance we vow the hills which are covered with blooms of wild lilacs, s scene nev. er to be forgotten, i, Then the clrlve along the valley. We see an orchard of almond trees covered with pink and white blooms. mentioned in the Bible. of whose wood Asro ‘s rod was of frult n . It. 1s the esrllest trees to blossom. Here also we have a little Syrlan tree 1n abundance which ls the Carob. Its principal use ln Call- fornlu ls for an ornamental shade tree and has a crown of leathery inate leaves and bean-like pods. n Palestine the Carob tree grows ,‘,Z2.§§“§§”°n{’y"'2,°“,§§§e§°§,1°1r§' gall’; flmd- 3W" 1190919 "link ti“! The effect of miles of valleys and spears. o! which are m the my]! . f the huska the swine did eat." foothill slopes draped In color 1s over- the bat, eoltunor came uspell sa,k,,,c,,ewan_ so thafas 1f; gs graiatlgalliledsgg tvlrigrennrable ogf lndlscflbable. I am s“ m or trmlgtllflgexllllilfllc and they foiisht P058 . . .. n w . 122%’: llli‘.‘i‘é’in°°ili°if.lli"_vllfiifi°“' “W m» M“ “an w» wee»- wwm m» “mum ' "F The fltmflmhere o! olive groves Pasadena, Calif. thelr tribute. tears; - 1n California brings oonstan ly to Th“; mm“ u, 91¢ s“ ‘tar-lea m Hereafter the only fresh meat iiiiiigirtiiiiit?“ ihgilfinmit o)?’ men. “n; enemy orIsoners-of-war 1n the trees emblerxiigatlc to eaileyI-I bréw: ‘M’ mo? Wm wit“: u“ "d ha“! iafogrosperlty and the blessing nf "lisp shalt tn u be d1 sh ii be welliywlth the; thyme drgn ilkbel ollve plants round about. thv a e." l: u green olfve leaf brbuglit l It W to the lfreledtlinglniglxjsfllflggt psiglgpxpserzofgyrii: ma‘ Arkmbyghthtsrqrettlilignfnq Bdove - . fair enough ' arrangement. (Brock- any ti: prggnlg: offietié‘, THEY WENT FORT" T0 BATTLE ville Recorder and. Times). The rlpe frutt. 1s s glossy black BUT Tum’ ALWAYS mu‘ s —-— berry with u bitter taste 'biit -—- - Clvill h be rlnlrlng ma,“ , ' The t. f Lh t b ttl b t th more and veiitlngenmoge meat tllgfgrrgd to the ‘ti-fiend’. o“. L‘ y Zlgvllayaolflell: a a e u o! MAY 5. till-Navy w-llllfl‘ slnce the war. They are now w, n, "nmdfi, 6; m, holy 111st: eves were fixed above the Macdonsld snsiounood that 1 drinking between 2o "a. cent and memory m," Jemmm “lied be_ sullen shields; Canadian military personnel. and 25 per cent more ml]; than may cause o; the, abundwc, o; n, Nobly they fought and bravely but Others including Sam Robertson. drflnk l" the Drew!" dill". Mfiflrd- olive plantation ‘The Mount. of Ml’ We“ i umm" ‘upeflnlendenl M‘ The g to the United Sta s War Food olives", ' d sank heart-wounded by s Canadian Press. were feared lost 1n Administration. During the first A150 eormeeud "m, m, sci-gm subtle spell. the slnklnq 0f the llnef N915!!- tliree months of 1944, the aver-ace tin-ea t; a fppdy 100mm p)“; m, They lcnew not. fear that to the MAY 8. lM-lqloaeoh Stalin n- Amerfcan was eating meat at the shaggy 31115-11“ he“, all", lelds sumed premiership of Mull We: grown in the ardens for orna- meritih! have eeeni tolp that fins was e paper re o an qu y; books were made out of this. The pith was extracted, cut lnto strips. then lald side by aide with others cross-wise upon them. than soaked and pressed. ThlJl produced sheets of paper upon which ks were Inscribed, sheet lued to sheet, end to end, n11 rolle tu- gether u a scroll. abundantly rt of lakes n reed grew the marshy borders Egypt and Palestine and some think that the "Ark of bullrushe " was made from this lant. n which the Mother. of oses hlrl him sway by the brink of the rlv- er where the daughter of Pharaoh found him. It ll not to be wonder- adflfit. than that the traveller tree funlltsr through the scriptures. To most tourists the prince of the fruit trees ls the or: e. To pick your first orange wit your own fingers with hundreds more, s. tree grow- ing not ln s boxju u greenhouse, bu outdoors like an apple tree. la something worth remernberl - t0 travel along the country road 1n March where the lurks and mock- lng birds are singing gully tn song, where are orchards of" orange alissv STOMAGII nrticvzn lf you have any trouble with your stomach such u Indigestion, Dyl pull. Stomach. Heart m. Gsstrlc Dlatnss. ete. Then don't do" lly gettlnl .u bottle of Dr Evan's 8t sch Mlxlure lus- medlutely. lng of the orchards. lne. The Sacramento Valley 1s the principle home of the pear; ln the ernan y , They were not weak, as one who A futlt weapon. vet the sad scrolls How on the 1|; This The‘ Man yThat Made The Earth To Tremble?’ I ' The text for tomorrow is from the 14th chapter of Isallh. the 12th to the 21st verses: . . - Haw m thou fallen from heaven, 0 Lflflftf, son of ‘the morning! How art lliou cur down. to Ihs ground. W/Wh d"!!! weaken the nations! ' _ For thou has! said in thine hlort, I urill ascend into heaven. I will exalt my lhrone above the star: of God; I will n! also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the North. 1 will ascend above the Izeighl: of the clouds; I will be like the most High. _ , Ye! thou slialtbc brought dowarfo hell, f0 flu min of the ' pit. They that re: rhea shall narrowly look upon fhu. and con- sider thee, saying: I: fliis the man that mad: fhs earth to fremble, that did sliake kingdoms," Tlia! made llie world as a wildrrnesr, and destroyed the cilia: thereof; that a/iened not the hours of his prisoners! All the kings of the nalimt, awn all of them, lie in glory, every one in his arc-n house. _ Bur than m"! cast out of thy grave like an abominable branch, and as the rziiuwn! of than that are slain, thrust through toil/t a sword, that go da-wn to" fhs slams of the flit; as 6 tar- casc tradden under feet. Thou shalt not be joinrd ‘with them in burial, because thou host dcrlrrrvrtl thy lmirl, and slain thy people,- Ihs seed of wiI-dbcrs slial! never be ration/nod. Prepare xIaug/iirr for Iii: children for the iniquity of their fathers; that they dn 1m! rise, nor possess the land, nor fill the face of the itivrld ‘will: cities. trees 1n abundance, crowned wltliift was s secret. music that they myrfads of starry perfumed bl0s-, . A sad sweet plu for pity and for {gmsbllt 1s s ugonltngom the b11185 e osaoms egn open un ! ace. And- than which placed the hens-t wo the tlg-lbl have fallen. Thelrli there ‘I 1' , . 0111011 l.‘ V85 E Ill fflfl- W! , a e e g o q ih Though the wl-ilte breast. Wu red- ll-pped where tlieJword cru rant. but the lemons unlike e or- ange, which flowers only once 1n Pleroed a fierce el kiss, to our sisroease On ttsmgiot thirst, but drunk s bot twelve months. distributes its bloom more or less throughout the year. reuse. Ab. they by some strange troubling oubt were st ed No sight in the state ls more en- trancing than bhfl annual bloom- In the San Joaqln ls the strong-- d . hold of the peach and the neotar- And died for hearlng what no foe- man board. apple ls king; the “no vanelihe apricot share the ‘Ihey went. forth to battle but. they rune and always : hrone 1n Santa. Clara Valley. Their lpxifght was not the might of Who wentefoi-th to battle and ul- ways fell “Bhutan O’Sheel. This War-Four i \ Secretary Stilmson u: ed immed- iate use of the U. s. avy to aa- sure delivery of munltlona to Brit.- alnhU. S. export mt» Rpaelahlg mac tnery or eq omen w could be used 1n defence produc~ .tlon was belted. rnnnnirnainnuiiainnnininiaiuiinuiuiuiniuici . YOUR VICTORY LOAN SALESMAN . llAS A Bu; JOB T0 no vainly wields " hard-fought. field they fell. always HE CAN ONLY REACIPI-IIS OBJECTIVE THROUGH THE COOPERATION OF EVERY PATRIOTIC CITIZEN. PLEASE HE PREPARED T0 DO BUSINESS ON THE FIRST CALL. THIS IS VITALLY IMPORTANT TO THE SUCCESS OF THE LOAN- lational War Finance Committee IQEIJEIEIEIEWWWWIFIIEIEIIIBJIEIBJEWFIIIEIE All IOU ‘IIOUIILBD WITII LUMIAGO OI I03! BACK I If l0. we have one of lhs boss remedies to else namely Back-Bits Tablets .~....~-~.i.. "i “estr- . n: es reg-ville. Jolut bllvuuuln sud th f or Irma. tlsm ‘hi?! ‘when trientrhenh lull l0 resell. m» u...“ oer Im- TIIE 2 MAGS Ill Orul George Strut Ill Orlerl. (‘liven Prowl! Attention. The llostillalualile Thing in thsllurld to YOU ls your TIME, and the income you earn by employment of that time. An injury by ACCIDENT may destroy, or reduce your income. , it should be Insured! Our accident policy pays for doctor, nurse and hospital, as well as for lose of time. Ask for particulars from, our nearest Agent or write. llYllllMAll 8i 00., LIMITED Established 1872 Charlottetown - Surnuierslde 4- Montague Offices: ALLISON P. MoLEAN. C .U-, Dlstrlel Manner st Humanistic. GYBUII A. B. BIIAW. DI trlel. Manner at Montague. p THOMAS MoAVlNN. C.i..l!.. Annoy Supervisor st Charlottetown. iiuv; llltlTflillY soups l VUHUWHV u.-. xtlaiid 00mm ii. r. silcimuin Charters! Accountant; Isms-u ‘hull Bum" Charlottetown J. A. DINTLII. 5 ti Barristers lllfltlullfhuypn. ‘ law I54 Prince Street LLB. Canadian Bank "of Clllllmerce T" LOAN cannon-carom Offlou: Mon Alt-om Coussululoner 3r Ilbedlsfwr ‘(QSPWIIO wan 0°11)‘ [ACO B-lfllll . om» mu 45:. an J.l. McGIIIGA BAH-ENTER. NOTAII. Ill! I ou_ IOLICITOB ETC. UILDINQ NOTAI! to. BAI-IISTII SOLICITOI Blloy Building l. I. IAILAII. B.A., LLB. DADRIBTII. ETC. n! Great George street Phone 1M8 OIAILOTTETOWN. P. a. l. n A. amour, Solicitor. Notary. Mo. lllley Ilulldlng, (“urluttetown ' Phone I33 l" PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS Churlotteown. I‘. E. l. yi tar-cur- "i" HQUUBQSI“ M. ALBAN Fruiliiiit‘ BA noun m‘ DAlllsTER. SOIJCITOII. rm "AIEX W l0 Grout George 5m" nssfdsgnn. sobsorrgbmilirfi _——?-_~_—q Richard B. Johnston J I ac " .__.__,= "g 8|“! -—_:-__‘—1=-____-__~: I-LF. McPhee B.A. |(_c_ Chsrlotleows PALMER 8 HASLAM Frederic A. Large P. O. Bo! “I Charles R. McQuaid isTfiTB“'MATiiias0N Alfonse -at-I.aw DANS 0N CIIIY AND FARM GLASSEANDFITTED J. S. TAYLOR _ OPTOMETRIST Corner lent and Queen Ms. Phone ll“ Ivoulnn by Appointments Phone ‘Riddance Ill! ll. J. MABIIN OPTOMITI-IST Montague. P. l. I. '8. F. lllllfilldttlll - d: $0" ' OPTOMETRISTS "Specialists lll ll‘ ting of I'll!” l“ cert-sirloin of ow ‘:8 Grafton 51"“ l, rsiiiiiiiniiiizn‘ fitting and Uupulylnr 611"" . Ito. Oflew I l0 to II A. ll- iT-"r r. n. o“. |t nt ' o 383.2’ "' hi?’ DIUQSTORI 0 fil- the lar 60' l I l l ..