The process is based on calcium acryilatc PAC FOUR THE GUARDIAN Ill‘! I Pull fllflru Iorninn Dally tltuumled In Aulhnrlnvl a New m (‘lini- ‘ilull Urllil mm: tlllnvia rm luliuul liunrilimi Putin-inn; ti» nun-n 1nd Mai-ugh»; [Humor .| K uni-mil. Aulncliulo Htlllur lfrlnlt Hulk" "The Strongest Memory is Weaker than ‘ the Weakest Ink" l CHARLOTTE’! I \Wi\l I I '61 lei; iii. i950 Farm Mariietiiig Measures Of speciafiiiterest in the Speech from: the Throne at Ottawa is thc four-itioint pro- gramme proposed as a means of tutllbill- ting falling agricultural prices and shriiilz- lng foreign trade. 'l‘liis will involve action t.o provide more price support for farm and fish products by placing l)l'iL‘L‘-S1lplJOl‘l legislation on a permanent peacciiiiie basis;‘ extension of the (iovcriimenfs monopoly over the sale of wliirat; participation in Ill-i tEPllHllOllfli efforts to reduce world trade! barriers. and assistziiice to such countries‘ as the United Kingdom and other tradi- tional customers of Caiiud-a, to enable them‘ to earn more dollars with which to increase their purchases in this country. The programme will involve changes inl the Agricultural Prices Sitpport Act. the‘ Fisheries Price Support Act and thc Agri- cultural Products Act. It was under authority of the latter measure that the Agriculture Departmentl established food buying boards in coiiiiec- tion with meat, ciairy and special products. The need for continuing thc buying authorq ity of thc meat and ilairy boards stems: from the 1950 Anglo-Canadian contracts for bacon and cheese. The Speech reiterates the policy of the Government to continue efforts to get trade barriers reduced. which will involve tariff negotiations this year with numerous couii- tries. It is also indicated that the Govern- ment is pursuing policies designed to de- velop new markets for Canadian products. These measures are of far-reaching im- portance to our farm and fishery produc- ers, and it is hoped will be given priority on the order paper for discussion and ilCllOll. Mud Into "Pavlng” n-om earliest days of settlement the lack of satisfactory road material has been a handicap in this Province. Few natural obstacles present themselves in the open- ing up of highways but when it comes to providing a roadbed and surface, the Is- land soil is sadly deficient. In Spring and Fall it is the rule rather than the exception for roads to become impassable, and it is during these seasons, ironically enough. that there is greatest need for the movement of fertilizers and heavy produce. It will be. therefore, with more than a little interest that Islanders receive the announcement of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that a chemical process has been developed tio convert a mass of mud into a stable sur- face capable of supporting heavy vehicles. which is absorbed by the soil particles. So- dium thiosulfate and ammonium persulfate are then added, causing the calcium acrylate molecules to "lock together." The stabiliza- tion process is claimed to produce in less than five hours, a stable, tough and some- what rubbery surface on a beach. “soupy" road or muddy pasture. The possibilities for improving our secondary rcacls would seem to warrant serious investigation tiargaiituan Activities Edmonton to Superior. Earth front the trench in which the pipe will be placed would make a pile 100 feet square and more than a milc liigli~an odd-shaped but iiii- prcssive pile. _ The company building tlic pipeline seems to be losing no time. Work is already in progress at pumping station sites in.Edinon- ton and near Ermine, Sask. Pipe has becn delivered near Gretna in IVIUllllUbtt. The first 450-niilc section. with a capacity of 95,000 barrels of oil a duy tictwcen Edmon- ton and Regina, is expected to be completed this year. The second section, cast of Re- gina, from which the proposed \\'iniiipcg rc- ifill€l'_\’ will draw, will be completed next year. #7.“ EDITORIAL NUI ltS The prospects for a Provincial Museum seem to be steadily improving. O U I (Tongrzitulations arc in order for tiic operators of the Wood Islands ferry service on the favorable impression their service has made upon the Nlaritimc Commission. . C I Unemployment is not a particularly serious problem herc, but the suggestion is a prudent one, that as many of those little jobs as possible bc undertaken now before skilled labour becomes practically uiiobtain- able in the Spring. I Decision of the‘ Canadian Horticultural Council to train thc corner grocer and oth- ers in the proper handling of perishable pro- ducts should prove of advantage to the inid- dleman and consumer as well as to the farm- 8i‘. O I “An English school master (says BBC London Letter) once asked a Welsh boy this question: ‘If a farmer had ten sheep iii a ficld and three got out, liow many would 0 be left?‘ ‘None,’ said the boy. ‘You don't understand the question.‘ said the school- master. ‘But you don't understand the sheep,’ said the boy." ' I I O lilenibers of the Boy Scout Association, Girl Guide Association and others will to- morrow pay homage to the memory of their founder, Lord Robert Baden-Powell of Gil- well. “B-P" as he was affectionately known, not only founded Scouting and Guiding but profoundly influenced the ideas of educa- tionalists the world over. Q I I Australia's Minister of Commerce finds it "curious" that Britain should use sub- stantial amounts of dollar exchange to buy Canadian wheat while refraining from tak- ing the Australian product. 'Tlic explana- tion, of course, lies in the very high qual- ity of wheat grown in the Canadian West. Like P. E. I. Certified Seed potatoes it commands a market even in the face of low-priced competition. n o p “Reasonably good business conditions but some recession from the peaks achieved in 1949", is the outlook seen by the Bank of Montreal in its monthly business l'G\'l(_‘\\'. One of the most reassuring elements is thc probability that new capital iinestment in plant, equipment and housing will continue on a large scale. A small rise in unem- ployment, a lessening margin of increase in labour income and a slight dcclinc in farm income, the bank said, may cause some “diminution in thc flow of personal income and expenditure in 1950." O Quebec farms arc now 50': provided Construction of a pipeline from Edmon- ton t.o Superior, Wisconsin, has set. thc wheels humming in many (Tanarlian in- dustrial plants and will provide hundreds of jobs for workers during the coming sitm- mcr. Already. a factory in Port Arthur has l‘f“.'f.’i\'0d a StifiOJltltl order for plasticizcd coal tar which will bc used to coat. the pipeline; another firm. in Oshawa, has been given a $280,000 order for fibreglass to be used in ivrapping thc pipe; two of thc largest lankcrs ever built iii (Tanarlzi have been ordered at. a cost of $7,800,000; a factory has been built to roll 16-inch pipe-a new. product for Canada. S0 far Canadian in- dustfy has received more than 518,000,000 in orders as'a direct result of the proposed 1,150-mile pipeline. with every prospect of more to come. Actual construction of the line will pro- wide jobs for 1,500 workers for many months. The job of delivering 175,000 tons of steel pipe to the-site, coating it, wrapping it in fibreglass and burying it to a depth of 31/2 feet for a distance of 1,500 miles is a gigantic job. Here are a few eye-opening figures men- tinned in the Imperial Oil Review “fill; to fill the pipeline will require 64,800, - gallons of oil-sufficient to supply the whole d Canada for six days. That much gas- drivn a car 46,300 time: around ,w'ith electricity. somewhat less, than in ‘Ontario and B. C; considerably bettci" than ‘in other F’rovinccs. Considering: economic ‘and geographic factors, says tiie Letter-Re- ‘[\'i8\\’, this would justify the statement that lprivate enterprise in this field in Quebec has done at. least as well as (loverninciit under- takings iii other Provinces. lt should be not- ed that Quebec Hydro is not a Province- widc publicly-owned undertaking. lt rally covers the Montreal area only. 0 0 u Martin Luther, loader of thc Protestant. Reformation in Germany, died this date 1546. After his quarrel with Rome in 1517 over tiie Augsburg Confession, the Gemian reformation began, intensified by Luther's publication of “An Address to the Nobility of the German Nation, on the Liberty of the Christian man, and the Babylonian Captivity of the Church.". He refused to re- tract anything he had written or said in the controversy, and was condemned by the Diet of Worms; retiring to the castle of IWarburg, he wrote pamphlets and completed his translation of the New Testament; he then resumed travelling, preaching with un- abated zeal. condemning all excesses, seek- lng to vindicate the law on one hand and condemn tyranny on the other. He sent a sharp reply to Henry VIII of England on the seven sacraments, attacked Erasmus, quarrelled with Zwlngll on the sacramental question. There are few incidents in Luther’: life after the drawing up of the Augsburg Confeuion, the high-water mu German Rdomiaflon. . ~ FHF GU.’ RDIAN a wi-s-e-a-e-wfi-n-a-i-amu Pub! it- rUNUF-i This column t: open to the discussion by correspondent» ‘II question» of Interest. The Guardian docs nut. accoun- Il! endorse the opinion u' correspondent: » 'u‘u'u'u"n'n'ln\'b'ln'fn'u%'ln‘n'ln"u"u'ndd'ln'n I‘0'I‘A T0 GIIOWERS ASSOCIATION ‘fJ-‘¢‘-'-‘-'¢'-'u'¢'-‘-" 1|'&'u'fn'n'n'r‘|'n'f¢‘- Shy-Almost a year has passed since the Dir ‘tors of the P. E. I. Potato Growers Association were instructed by a “rcsolution" pass- ed at its iiillltifli meeting to have I questionnaire mailccl to all of its tso-callcdi nieinbcrs, asking if thty were in favor of rc-organiz- ation under The P.E.I. Co-op So- cieties Act, and it the majority were lll- favor, plans for such rc- organization were to be drawn up. with the aid of a three man committee (which was named), and such plans as decided upon be placed before a general meet- iiiP. which was to bc held within thrcc months. To dale no tiucstionniiire has been received by the members. _Tl1i$- sir. was a counter resolu- tion to one the writer had spon- sored. which asked the meeting to approve of immediate rc-or- yilililaliOll under the P. E. I. Co- operative Societies Act. Farmer J. P. Hooper and Mr. Rupert Godfrey, led the debate against thc original resolution and after several hours of such, were successful in having this counter resolution adopted. No doubt those men were sin- cereln opposing the original re- solution, on the grounds that, first, the meeting was not suffi- ciently representative, second, the members did not know en- ougli about. co-operation to vote on re-organization under such a set-up, and several other well intended reasons. For the information of the readers of this letter and those "interested" in the future of the Potato Growers Association I would point out that the 1948 an- nual meeting of the P. E. l. Po- tato Gi-oivi-rs Asociation (held in 1949i was just as representa- tive of‘its members as any other held the past. eighteen years; also the fact that it v/as organized as a co-operative, and after over 30 years of business as such, it should not be necessary that its members have to study what co~ operation l5 before they can vote on rte-organization. Yes, Sir, the majority of the members who supported the counter-resolution have been ai- tcndiiig the annual meetings since the writer attended his first one in i931. and were always consid- cred representative enough to transact the necessary business until 1948. when suddenly it was learned they were non represen- lutivc. Now that tlic members who do attend thc annual meetings have had almost. a ycar to study what a (Jo-operative is really meant. to be, should now be acquainted with the fact that they are mem- bers (in name only) but have not angything-not even a mem- bership card to prove that. they own 5 cents yvorth of assets in an organization they built. and that claims assets of $100,000.00. This fact. alone, should be sufficient reason for the stay-at-home mem- bers, to attend the coming annual meeting and support any measure that will guarantee for them a proportionate share in this or- ganization and if that ll not pos- sible, compromise for not less than ii membership card. I am, Sir, etc. H. E. CONNELLY. Dunsiarfnage. P. E. l. 74c 70efl$wzal TIME GOES BY TUB-NS The 10017011 twee in time may grow again, twist naked plants renew boLh fruit and flcwver; The mri-iest wiglrl may 11nd n. lease of pain, The iirirst soil suck in some moist- “ cniiig shower; Iinn- goes by turns. and dwmcqr; change by course, I“l't;lll foul to fair, frtm bcttcr iiaip to worse. The sci; of librtune doth not ever W. Slit: drums her favours tio the low- est ebb- Her IJGPS tiave equal time: to come and go, ller loom diotih weave the fine and warsest web; N0 ivy s: great but TUHIICIAII w m en , No hop so hard but amend. "W! in fine Not always falll of 1m. m: ever $01108. No endless night, yet not owl-Mi day; The saddest. binds n season find to '98. The toughen. storm n calm may soon allay; 111m. with succeeding hum, God tempemth all, ‘that man may mp0 in ma, yet. tea: to fall. A Chance may win that. 11y mil- chance was loot; That net. that holds n0 neat, takes little fish; In some things all, in all thing; none 8T0 crossed; PW H" they need. but hone have all they wish- Umllnllfi 1W! hero '00 no man befall- Who iomfiuiiii ma; who molt. huh nevu- IN. -8ohrt louthvull tun-m. "rm province of Ontario lo the would‘: Ink» Indoor of nick- (-l“ V; r< v .~.:..‘..-...,. “He, __________..__ POiOOiiMmO Old Charlottetown (And r. E. i.i 9/.‘ .4. .i 00m AN ARCII-DECEIVER “In the autumn of 18%, the poo- ple of Guernsey. owing to a cle- pression of trade, were induced to think of emigrating to some other country, when a Mrs. Burns came tifGuernsey, and post- ed up a number of very flatter- ing handbills; the people, on see- ing these, flocked to her at hei- lodgings, where she had a map of Prince Edward Island, show- ing that the principal river there- of ran through her land: pointed out thc ‘facility by which the settlers. by this means. could transport their produce to the Charlottetown market; that those who purchased land from her FEBRUARY‘ " 18, 1950 -~--+ Til-Ba Taken In iiaiiii iiow-- iiot later '_—i>'.%iriy' lsabeisé i0ttayva Journal I Up in Inndon. Ont, some Pro- gressive Conservatives want. to drop the word "Progressive" from their party's name, get back to "Conservative." This. we confess. leaves its unex- cited. Important. it may be that a man who is a conservative should know what he yvants to conserve. that. a man who believes him elf progressive should uiiderstaicl to- wards what. Ito's progressing. and that a man who thinks himself a liberal should know what hi: ‘is being liberal about. But. with a party. which inevitably embraces people of all sorts of ideas and temperaments. a label amounts to little. The proof is in the fact. thiit, as everybody knows. we haie li- berals imd progressives iii the Con- servative Party. and tories and re- actioriaries in the Liberal party- have today and always have had. And the truth is that. here. as in might choose their portions on they banks of the river, that each per-i, son should have one-fifth of his‘ purchase clear land fit for the‘ plough. aiid that the land was free, from all kinds of taxation. hav-* ing bought the quit rent from the Government, with many other flattering inducements, equally false. that can be fully substan- ttated. "By these means. she obtained from different people the following sums at 20s sterling per acrezi froim J. Lelacheur, £640; Hilei-y Roberts, £50; Daniel Maclion. £22k} Charles Phillips, £50; Mrs. Jam-i anon, £10; Thomas P. Richardsn DeJei-sey. £25: John £100; Mrs. Hide (widow), £70; Mis M. Phillips, £10. Total - £1,054. “What think you were the feel- ings of the people, on arriving here, to find that the land we bud bought, and thought to oc- cupy on the banks of the Hills- borough was long before in the possession of others. and there- fore did not exist for us . . . “To crown the whole. this arch- deceiver and polished lhyprociie made the most solemn appeal to her Maker, with hands and eyes uplifted, that if she had told us any untruth. she wished the gates of Heaven might be shut against her!" ——From a letter in the Colonial ilerald, Nov. 4, 1837. by James W. Lelacheur, Murray Harbour. IQGZCIDDDOQUDDIZIOUQDU _The Age-Old Story Thin God in our God for over and ever; He will be our Guide even unw dent-h. CITY MANAGER-i’ HALIFAX. Feb. 17 -—(ClPi —A plebiscite will be held here some time tn Ootwer to decide wiheil-ier tho citizens u! Halifax fervor l. city manager for-m of government. De- cision to hold the vote was i111- £4; Henry Brehaut. £70; Thomas‘, DBCOGVII.‘ animuus at last. night's City Coun- Britain. names and labels of parties have never meant much; emerged mostly from terms of abuse. “'l‘ory", by which the British Conservative ‘Party was loiig known. and still is known by some, was an Irish word applied originally m Celtic and Catholic outlaws among the bogs. It. was shouted svitii vilificntloii to suggest that. the English party of Church and State was ready iii its lieiirt to plunder and murder its 0DpOll0nLS-—i.llB supporters of ad- vanced Protestnnti-"m and pal- iziiiientary lilicrtyt. "l/Vhlg", Oi the other band, svas a Scotch word ap- plied to the fanatical Covenanters who, in the cause of extreme Pro- testantism, had menaced the throne and beaten to death an archbishop daughter. - . Now "Whiz" was shouted by the Tories ID suggest. with the same want of truth and scruple, that all English politicians who favored the Nonconformists and opposed the Court were a band of rogues and ruffians. ln that; pretty way the party label system was founded with that rancorous travesty of each side by the other which has belong- ed, in degree at". any rate, to the thing ever since. | The label "Liberal" was borrow- ed from Spain and France; was first used in an English magazine called "The Liberal" (Leigh Hunt was the editor). The Tories, when they mo felt the need of a new label, bit. upon “Conservatlvefi Re- form was coming. Sir Walter Scott. frightened by it, cried out. that. “un- washed ai-tificera will henceforth choose our legislators". The thing, then. was to appeal to the middle classes who, having got. what. they v; ‘ma: w. H -. ‘For Foot liliament tiuiisult ~l |t..l.l\. iinuwii ii. r. , Orthopedic . Chiropodist \ 14s Gm: George strut OHABLOTTBTOWN, P.3d. (ill. IHGBT-IIIQS . IIYNDMAN 8i Ofllcen: Charlottetown . IT’S 000D PULIBY TO BE ADEQUATELY INSURED. ALL LINES 0F INSURANCE IFFECTED. 00. LIMITED Slam 1872 Our experience M over three quorum of u century, n ln- lurlneo Underwriters, In at your diapoul. Summon-side - Mont: ALLISON l‘. liIcLEAN-Uiutrict Manager at HIIIIIIIICPIIIIO. (AIIUS A. It. SllAW-Dlutrict Manager int Montague THOMAS McAVINN-Spoctll llnpnnnhtalvo l‘. L. lIuNUTT-lepruunhtlvc n Remington l. T. BRIDE-Representative at Ilium]; IAIIJ l. llLLY-leprelonlaflvl l0 Winery 585M! Thntlllllvll ‘I'M PNVIINO before the face of his agonized , Notes By A University of Toronto pro- fessor has bcui debunking thc beaver. “The bcavcr, iii spite of what is said iii popular stories is iiol a good Woodsman.“ Dr. Letiti- ard Butler, assistant pfflfkmul‘ of QJICRICS told an aiidiciicc rcccntly "He often fells ireis indiscriniiii- aicly. and makes no attempt. to use more than a fraction of thc trees he chops down." Uii- caniiy~ju>t like liiimansl ~ Hum- iltun Spectator. ' “'5?- Cougrcss probably will tic asked to help out with the designing of the 150 lilarsliall Plan. for it iii- volvcs llic lifting of restrictions on use of dollars by Europeans- restrictions which wcrc \\l‘lllti\ iiiio the original Marshall Plan legislation. To do so would lessen the appeal of the Marshall Plan to some Americans who now rn- joy thc exclusive markets its creates for tlicin with ilullars. ~- Christiaii Sci- cc Monitor. wanted for themselves. would op- pose giving the same things to the workers. Thu; it was that. Croker, a sort of Tory boss in his day. sug- gested the name "Conservative". Nut everybody liked it. MacAulay spoke of "Conservaiiic" as "thc new cant ivorcl". To Peel it seemed just the thing. Disraeli. though. detested it. lntci" Randolph Chur- chill tried a new label: Tory De- mocracy. In similar nonsense, or in a great deal of it. came our own party labels. In Ontario were the "Grits", the "Reformers", the “Tories". In Quebec were the "Ranges". and the "Elcus". To Ontario “Grits“ avid “Reformer? the "Tories" were the Family Corbin-t people. "Grits" and "Reformers" were rebels; traitors. ln Quebec the "Blues" said the “Houses? were anti-Catholic, freemasona and free thinkers. The ‘flanges’ " said thc ‘Bleus’ were Ultrnmontancs. Out of this vibuveralion of one side by this other emerged the “Libel-als" and “Conservatives? John A. MacDonald. trying to bring political order out of chaos. rind incidentally to steal as mary Liberals as poslblc from thc Liberal Party, created the "Liberal Con- servatives". But the label "Conser- vative" stuck; even the label "Tory". The Liberals, on the other hand, continued lorg to be thc "Grits“. The Conservatives, beginning with World War l, started new la- bels. First they tried “National Conservative": then went back to "Liberal Conservative". then be- came “Progressive Conservatives". S0 far as party fortunes went, noth- ing much changed. We doubt. whether min-h would change with f1 return to "Conserva- tive". Because we doubt much that today people are svorld Rs "little Conservatives or little Liberals". And we doubt. also that people todny hotiicr much about. labels. We think it is the leadership. thc record, the temper and policies of a party that count- not ivliiit. it. calls itself- that. in short it's the goods in the can that the public looks for not what's on the label. PROUD-l scrlutlon, HUGHES DRUG STORE 5n..- horn into tlie~ -~§ on uni’. ‘If-En, The Way , _ fhcrn were some people, duh in; thc war who bflllluflllcd u, prospect. of a slctp rise Q w hcii peacetime l‘L‘l.lll‘l1t.‘d _ W“ the "bail Ultllliblll" among den chziygtil liiLIl woulii make UMHIIT with the guns tliry P to lint‘. 'l'his bogey materialized. instead, that buys and girls Qroiv-iig up all thcilighting was on in Euro are the licaciachts. l1 L,- mm, f‘)? tll"b'llill7.iitl constructive action u‘ \I\I\'(' into the root “macs lruublc and to [ind I'~IlI('d1L-§I it. The streets should be Inga safe again. —- Saint John Tate graph-Journal. ' a - Iva-nu “l Crime had ivurnvd has “La-er we 11nd who M“ around iii,» when to vi the Edmonton's 194!) tragic rate, all will agree, is llol. be proud of. Reported by the Ed moiitoii Safety Comm“ ,0 b; among the highest on the cum.“ rnt. ii appears as a lilai-k bio; upon tlic rccord of what “a5 . iiriually all other ffgpiti: '3!“ other very bright yem- (o; m“ city, On the basis of the firs; l; months the final figures for u; fblllalnlflg two not yet b“ a Jvflilable. Edmonton ltood “e03 among 47 reporting cities in u, number of deaths per 10.000 v’ hiclcs. The figure stated in t}: Way was 8.5. In relation to p0,, death hing 1° iilation, our rate was little belie.- niily 13 of the North Anleru; citiis cxctcding it__ Ed, i Journal. Homo“ It must be a lrem to iihat. Canadianapxrhust “,'“§,'f,'," fish if Canada's fisheries u, t: Pfllfillei“. The export trade h“ becn an important part o] W] fisheries and will Continue to b, but we are not making the moat of our opportunities i1 we fail it; sell fish in our own country, Th. average Canadian eats much lug fish than his counterpart in many other lands. Those who how tasty fish dishes eat them ‘x111. ingly. For them, eating fish i; M patriotic duty. but a true dellnn ivho, for instance, feel; it m m“ pleasant duty to eat glmm mayonnaise, broiled mackerel with lemon-tips, or a fine hill- but. steak'.'—l{alifax Ciipgntqg, Herald. The PYBPIIIIIIII put out l)’ British Columbia iiouristorganlu- lions has long had l bcrnusin; tiffect on people in other “n, of Canada, leading them to d»; everything Incl rush out to thi 9°“! t0 D1837 Rolf at Christan‘, "follow the birds to Vlctoyin, and generally enjoy thqt new“, ceasing sunshine and warmth tin travel folders talk about. But n comes as a surprise to find that this same lpropaganda has Al» had its effect on thc B.C. laturc. leading it to imagine that its province never has any win. . tci- \\'(‘llll1t‘l‘. This is the only "i. planation for that extraordinary _clause in the B.C. workmen’: coin. ipensaiion lay which provide: f<>| compensation to workmen for ilh riess caused through siinstroko but says nothing about frostbite. . “Edmonton Jaiirnal. “'6 have prld i tatsfon for iit-sengaiiiiftffiizfl] Integrity - - - pride: too. in it‘: kmlzlllcdle and training, Pr“! MI and accuracy l" "m"! your doctor's prg. .157 John P. Nicholson. LL.B. BAIIIIISTER. SULIUITOR. Etc. 1M Prince st, (Jlrlutvn. PHONE 2838 A. Wclthen Guudof, LL.B. BABBISTEB. SOIJUITUII. Etc. Phillipa Building lll Grafton trout Mime: in Loni Collections Frederic A. Large. ILC. BABIJSTEII, SOLIGITWB, NOTARY Bu!!! Bunk ol Canada tihuubexo C‘ lottemwn, I'.E.I Buoooum- - George l. Tweedy. ILO PROFESSIONAL LIARITS‘ J. A. McGuigun NOTARY, IETG. ISAIIIHSTTJII, SULIUPIOII. (IUIIIIIE BUILDING . Palmer & Hcslam A. J. JIASLAM, BJL. LL.B. Barrister, Etc. Bank oi Noni scoiln thiimiierl Charlottetown. l‘.E.l. MONEY T0 LOAN “Dr. W. R. Carson (lhlrnpractnr rnlnicr tiruduiitu- UHARLOITETOWA :01 Prince SI. Phniie 11m Joseph R. MucMiilun. LL.B. mmniwrun. suuorrou. Im- ‘lli Queen Street PHONE 11a Motley u» Loan ‘ ' "llwm" <__.- MucPiiu 8i Trainer I. I. MuPl-IEE, 1A., K-(A I IOMIBLED TRAINOYI. EA lawman. Em M. Albun Farmer MONEY TO LOAN B.A.. LL.B- BABRISTER. SOLIIIIIUB- n‘ Toomln Bldg. I65 Queen s; Charlottetown. P. E I ll. it. llllfilli OFFICES: IN UHABLOTTETOWN : anti COMPANY CHARTERED Altt.0UN'l‘AN’l‘s Charlottetown, lllllfu, Glasgow, Truro. llentvlllo. I Rlmfolph w. Manning, c..\.. Bret" Mountain, Amherst. N" n. Bears. (m. um“ n. im. ca. w. (mm TIIIIIIIFIWW- W“ PIIOIISII 2m . m: Iill. Vi. IIIBBIIS ' can't-nun AUUOUNTANT ovum autumn: m. m: omnwnrrown. r. u. I. I" m i