céijfi Emil‘... 111E GIIARLOTTETUWII GllAlllllAll Morning Daily tr‘ouiidi.-d in i881) Authorised en Second Chins Mull. Poet. Office Department. Ottawa. regiment, Inn A. Burnett; Vine-President. Wm. I. ggmgn; Bony-Trend, G. M. Burnett; Editor and lliinlrlns Director. .|. B. Burnett; Aseoelabo berm. I-‘renk Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker TIIM the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY. JANUABIL". 1M1 ,_._.____-_- The ' ciirirciiiii Route Attention is called to an impflflfllli 1911" in today's Forum by M_r._l_'l. K. S. Hemming, with reference to the possibilities of western grains being brought direct to Prince Edward lsland and other Maritime Provinces from Port Chur- chill via the Hudson Strait. The fact that ships can leave Churchill as late as November l5. thus permitting a vessel to make as many as six return trips from Churchill to Charlottetown each autumn, is something which is not gen- orally known and which changes the whole pic- ture, so far as the grain supply question is con- cerned. Mr. Hemming states that he has not yet been able to obtain all the cost figures. lt is to be hoped that these will be disclosed with as little delay as possible, and that the Wlwlfl matter will be gone into thoroughly and expedi- tioiisly. w s2 When the Provincial Treasurer, Hon. Mr. Hughes, declared in the Legislature last Morch that he could not agree with the OPP°5"'°" claim that the tax on liquor and tobacco should be devoted to public health and not. used as general revenue, h‘ W‘ "m"! "°"9l‘5l‘Pd 9'?‘ the law of the land. The Act under which this tax ls collected was passed in 1941 and I5 5P9- cifically entitled "An Act to Provide a Revenue for the Public Health Services." The preamble reeds: _ . "Whereas it ls deemed advisable to rciise fl revenue for the purpose of defraying additional expenditure incurred in the provincial lipflltlt services and particularly in Pfittldm! lufllm‘ for combating tuberculosis: therefore be it en- acted," etc. _ Obviously, therefore, the Tuberculosis Lea- gue is perfectly within its rights in insisting that this money no longer go into general revenue, as has been the case, but be used for the purpose for which the tax was iinP°$°d~ u Moreover, Section B of the Act reads: The tex shall be collected, accounted for and paid to the Minister by such persons, at such times and in such manner as the regulations may pre- scribe." The Minister referred to is the Min- ister of Public Health. Be it noted also that the tax is for the purpose of defraying "additional" eirpenditure in public health services. This does not include the expense borne by the Department occasion- ed through the transfer o_f Folconwood and the Infirmary from the Public Works Department to the Public Health Department; this is not on additional expense, but only the accounting transfer from one department to another. The purpose of the Act is to raise revenue to_pay for additional services not theretoforeprovrded by our public health program. In particular, as the preamble 'states, is this money for tuber- eulosis work. _ _ The phrasing of Section 8, providing that the money shall be paid to the Health Min- ister, is in direct contrast to that of statutes whose main or sols obiect is revenue for general purposes. For example, the corresponding sec- tion of the Prohibition Act (167) dealing with the fines and profits received from the sale of liquor provides that all monies received or col- lected "shall be paid into an account in the name of the Provincial Treasurer atsuch branch of a chartered bank as the Provincial Treas- urer may direct and shall form part of the con- solidated revenue of the Province." , The distinction is clear. ln 0M 6115i "l! money is to be paid to the Provincial Treasurer and‘ constitutes part of the ordinary revenue to be used in the ordinary course of governmental administration. In the other case the money is to be paid directly to the Minister of Public Health, and kept separate and apart from. the funds which normally come into the ordinary revenue of the Provincial Treasurer. They are funds at the Health Minister's disposal to be used in his department only. As a matter of fact, however, the Public Accounts show_th_at the health fax has been paid to the Provincial Treasurer, put into ordinary revenue, and pre- sumably spznt as the exigencies of government or opportunity demand-ed. This practice, now that it has been shown to be absolutely contrary to the statute, will surely not be defended as a matter of policy by the Government. As we suggested the other day, it is better for the Government to admit . its mistake and have this tdx money revert o its proper use. Otherwise there is not much “ use in our Legislature meeting and passing laws at all. The first duty of any administration, as bf the humblest citizen, is to obey the law.’ A Serious Situation , i Re its fronrParliament Hill tell that the sag rnment will now try to extricate it- hon. the mess of its dealings with the by o new conference with the five - witlrwhlch it has made different = s. If this should happen, predicts an ' exchange, i: llltlg. have the oImBst in- ipectacle o r cent. omin- lbl Conference, ‘fritlli. the_ provinces umbla, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Vend Prince Edward Island iii- ‘ _ of Ontario, Quebec, AI- elclddeil. This is the ‘ ' i Geiieda drawn up ‘inces included in‘ it took what ‘the Dominion offered them in the first place-what was pro- posed in the Dominion’: original plan, and later modified by Mr. llsley. It would be to quiet and satisfy them by yielding to them the terms which bought off British CoIumbia—-a jump from the original proposition of a $15 per cap- ita subsidy to one of $21. , Ontario and Quebec, apart from Nova Scotia and Alberta, are not going to be bought or " J. " by the Dominion's tactics. They have asked that the Dominion-Provincial Con- ference be re-convened; demanded that fiscal p, t‘ between the Dominion and the prov- inces be discussed and resolved in a fair, dec- ent, Canadian way. If they are denied that right, the only récourse left to them will be to impose their own taxation. Should they do so, it may well mean the beginning of the end, so far as Canadian unity is concerned. - LDITURIAL NOTES — Premier Jones has thrown his weight be- hind the project to develop fruit and vegetable canning in this Province. The next step should be to appoint some one—not a politician—ex- pert and efficient to advise farmers, and would- be farmers how to enter upon and develop such an enterprise. i fi The City Council have re-appointed Mor- rell 8r Co. auditors. lt would have been a little ungracious to unseat them after proclaiming from the roof tops that their system of muni- cipal accounting was the best submitted to McGill University department of public ac- counts. I I I I We enter the second half of the month today. There is so much still to do to adiust ourselves to almost daily changing economic conditions that one wonders what the outcome will be when Parliament meets and thrashes out pro-socialist vs. pro-individualist policies. One thing of course is certain, whichever plan finds favour, the consumer will be made to pay. i Q i I The decision of the Privy Council does not mean that appeal to that body from Canadian judgments automatically ceases. All that it decides is that it is within the jurisdiction of Canada to decide for itself whether or not such appeals should cease. At the present showing five provinces are in favour of con- tinuing the appeals. a w w n Fanny Kemble, tragedian actress, died this date 1893. She belonged to a distinguished theatrical family all of whom became famous in the nineteenth century. Fanny was a daugh- ter of Charles Kemble, who played s-econd to John, the greatest Hamlet of his day, parts play- ed by Charles being Cassio, Macduff, Laertes; Fanny was outstanding in tragic parts and her reading and interpretation of Shakespeare both in the theatre and on the concert platform- the latter a form of cultural entertainment rarely given these days. n w w w Will our powers-that-be please note. A British Empire Exhibition will be held in Aus- tralia this year, in conjunction with the Royal Agricultural Show. Contributions from all parts of the Empire are being prepared for shipment to Australia. A large map of Canada, indicat- ing towns where Australian airmen received training during the war, will form the back- ground of the Canadian display. Aspects of reciprocal trade between Canada and Australia will be demonstrated, together with different ways in which Australian raw materials are manufactured for consumption by the Canadian market. The Canadian section will be super- vised by Mr. R. C. Brown, who will ‘arrive in Australia shortly. O Q Q The 600th anniversary of the foundation of the Order of the Garter will be celebrated in Windsor with pag-eantry and music in the late spring of 1948. His Majesty the King has com- manded Britain's Poet Laureate, Dr. John Mase- field, to write a pageant play, and the Master of the King's Music, Sir Arnold Bax, is to cam- pose its musical setting. The riave of St. George's Chapel, home of the Order, will be the setting of the Pageant. Knights the Order under the Chairmanship of ishop Hamilton, Deon of Windsor, are now at work on the plans. Q C‘ I New schools costing $4,000,000,000 are to go up all over Britain as a result of the‘ 1944 Education Act. This is the estimate of a com- mittee of experts, formed to simplify and ex- pedite the school building programme, whose re- port was published this month as a White Paper. The figure includes the building work needed for all reforms covered by the Act including re- construction, reform and development of prim- ary and secondary education, new schools on new housing estates, new County Colleges, and other wide developments in further education, and the expansion of facilities for the training of teachers. ’ l I I The Dominion Bureau of Statistics report stocks of creomery butter in cold storoges and dairy factories at January 1 totalled 43,919,807 pounds, showing o seasonal decline of 13,277,- 387 pounds from ‘December 1, but an increase of 7,700,017 pounds over the amount in storage a year ago. The stocks also were 5,750,000 ‘ higher than the January 1 average for the five years 1942-46. January 1 stocks of cheese, at 25,768,722 pounds, were only slightly under December 1, but were 7,973,326 pounds lower than January l lost year. Holdings of evaporated whole milk also were reduced, the total of 12,700,131 pounds comparing with 18,- 744,117 pounds at December 1, and 18,422,534 pounds at January 1 last year. Shell e g stocks were increased amounting to 2,445,7 3 dozen compared with 1,450,644 and 1,953,146. Frozen egg-meet holdings totalled 5,442,707 unds "hdetlleblocs-towhi ' ii. i’! n» l mr- . g s. compared with 6,877,264 pounds and l, J86. Stocks of poultry meat were substantially high- deiilnss have been made during ihe l f. _'l‘HE CHARLOTTETOWN llotos by The Way Th’ "h" 591"! Nye n number n! "Dwnrd adjustments i... price YOU’. little having h9g1; necessary to reflect the lmpggt, 0g hlghu- pm, dlwtlon costs and the csssa. ion or some of the subsidies. All o which l‘ "m" Way of caving that the “WNW hes had a, spot of inflation. -—Brentford Expositor. _ Radio Moscow clllmg the Ruse. 1811f! have invented a track-laying "H111 Which allows 20 men to handle n Job formerly requiring 5.000, m) Eonlvbox orator will describe this BS o. capitalistic trick to hamstring the workers at any rate. -Teronto. Telegram. What the ladies wlll say about. Dr- Ivor Grifrlui. of Philadelphia. can be left lo their imaginations Dr- GYlIlll-h 5113's that the reason ‘vmfle-‘J Prlml? ls because they are 111mg hard to be as beautiful ns, the men. He says iuriher bliat the. ru-ilcs of any species have always] their the more handsome and llin‘. women have inferiority complexes, m"? "l9 bBIBfl-l". about their com- parntive lack of beauty. Maybe h; ‘$110111 He does research along that "he. --Var.cmrre;- Suzi. Naturally the most, prosperous nation on earth. we have mocked our own prosperity in the hour Qt the Wflrldk most desperate need when other nations were digging themselves out of their ruins, The great- 1¢$0ri of the war has been 10st on ue. While we speak big words of peace. we soom the plenty that We have to sear-ah for the little more that we might get. We have grown dcubtful in what should have been our hour of greatest confid- ence. We have tied cur own hands and made an almost unexamplerl record of lnterlor discord when the simreme need 0.1’ all mankind was WOFk- hroducliveness and good will among us. —Detr0it News, The notora of trends and viewers vrilth alarm wlll flnd ample fodder in lhc portrayal of the year's best dfcsscd woman 1n male hoirdress, 51°DDy shirt, belling trousers, jitter- blll; lieychain. zoot suit belt. and play-toe sandals. Pending a sanity “M1118 for the board of style “berks responsible. however, n'e‘ll generously assume lt ls p subtle him that living costs have made "10 lWO-Pant suit essential even in the top-bracket. family. There had been hopes before thatfillile could g0 dovm in history as only a mildly scrc-vrball year. -St. Louis Globe. Democrat. 0n the street. car a group of high-painted liigh-sehoaleers were talking about a. [mter ihsi dis- play; not only Miss Detroit Street Railway for December, but; 5i); 0mg;- charmers. The youths were loud in their praises i‘ the seven. The discussion got q ile heated and then it went completely bold when s. liv- erish-looklng mid-aged gent, pfQ- jected his voice into their paean 0f praise for beauty. to grumph: "Probablv there isnt a darn one of ‘cm that can cook." -Deiroil News. I suppose the wine of my coun- try is beer. . . I-‘ive miles away ls Bere Regts. Just over the border lll Devon is the fishing village of Beer, while up in the north of my county ls Bere l-Iiackett. Bere was the old name for barlzy, and this PUBLIC FORUM Tbll column 1e open to the discussion by earn-- lpondentl ot quad-lone o! I In c‘ The Charlottetown Guardian doee not neeemr- 11y eiiilorna the oplnlim o! correspondents. A REVELATION AND . POSSIBLY A'BEVOLUTION§ ___ I Slr.— It will probably be e met-l ier of surprise to Islanders getter-E ally. as it. has been to me, to learni that so soon as we have a gralrii elevator near the improved railway] wharf‘ 1n Charlottetown with ai rapid system of automatic ship un-E earlier unseen! PLASTIC oilizrio letter than glans for growiu planter Permitetliefree penetration oltho beisefloielaltre- violetrayeoftheeumOrdiiinryglnmebopetlseeernye. Retain: beet longer than glue. Keeps out oold better than glue. Will give your seedlings earlier and better growth. No drawing or scorching under Windolite. Plniite require lem watering. Unbreakable, light-weight. eaeily handled. JANUANY 15. 1947 :1. - Rglpgfetwieg‘, mien z. rm. ‘Professional ttarils DI. 0.8. NOIDLAND V emu-n mus isiiwere no“ Charlottetown, ELI. Phone ltd NEIL W. HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT Currie Building I Charlottetown Tel. 1636 P.O. Ion 452 ___________ J. A. McGUlGAN, on. ‘grains’ grown in the Western pralr-, -this matter for several months I loading, we Sllflll be able to lay} cicwn in Prince Edward Island all; lcs, including wheat, barley, oetsfl rye and flax. at. a net east. welll U“ below that. at which the sortie Bruins mum'- T “Ann. "m lay through your hardware dealer. ma! order belle or need lease. WINDOLITE ie It!!! in abort aupply. To avoid dlmppaintmmf: since your order early. Write for free sample with denirlptive folder. NOTARY. ITO, IABIISTIB. SOLICITOI MORRELL and comrmv l l 40 WeIiigtaa It. ‘We Ieroete cim be landed 1n Montreal, pass-| ibly an an average of fifteen to‘ twenty five cents per b hel. Al-l though I have been ins ligating lantern Trans Blflllllygl Chartered Aoeoaiiteim Phone 1647 - Ion 34s é have not yet been able to obtain all the oost figures, so it will be as well to accept. the fifteen cent. figure fc-i- the present. ‘Tim ilbgrizzial ls to have grains, for the Maritime Provinces shipped from‘ the grain growing areas to the Hudson Bay and brought down from Port Churchill 1n ships via the Hudson Strait. down along the Labrador Coast and thrciugli the Strait of Belle Isle, a distance be- tween Churchill and Charlottetown qt 1500 miles. Up to date, all grain shipments from‘ Churchill have gone to Liverpool, n distance of 3000 miles. The Maritlmes, there- fore, will have a preference of fifty percent in ocean travel. ‘There has for year; been a wide- spread idea in Canada that the Hudscn Bay ls closed for the winter during the month of August each year. thus preventing the year's Western harvest from being shipped by that mute. It is now, however, Qlieen Street COMPLETE l N S U R A N C E SERVICE W. K. Rogers Agencies LIMITED Charlottetown s I- M. SEARS. C.A. igr Redeem Partner ’ é .PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Mlnicvrrirhlnc curds and err-mm, ""1"" iirosreins, u... penitence, iilllltl llid bookkeeping HELEN (HIDDEN Telephone 1690-1 Apt. No. l. Conneught Agog. Powyllll Street -o4-o+0+ooooooooooeooo+oo- 2 McLEOD a. BENTLEY I. l. BENTLEY. K.C. Barristers and Attorneys-at» i‘. l. A. BENTLEY. K.C. Charlottetown Lew 15d Prince Street z stated by reliable Western auth- orities that ships can readily leave Churchill up to November 15th. thus permitting a vessel to make six return trips from Churchill to Charlottetown ouch autumn. Mare- over, as their ships may be loaded to the top deck with 300.000 bushels of grain. a decided advantage ls gained in freight rates over ships sailing from Port. Arthur for Montreal. for the latter can only be partially loaded as they have to Doss through the l4 feet St. Law- rence Canals. Naturally these ships from Churchill would have to be unloaded very rapidly. whlch could only be dune with the best ouiae mail/s marine leg unloading facili- ties and an elevator large enough to be used as a transfer and stor- age bin, so that the grain could be distributed throughout the Island and held by farmer; and merchant dealers. - I have disclosed the above facts at this dale. mlor to obtaining all the necessary 00st. figures, because the farmers of the Island are now showing a keen interest in the building of an elevator close to the railway wharf ln Charlottetown. and hcre let me emphasize the fact that this is an Island proposition and not merely a Oharlottetoiim one. It would be of material assist.- anoe to formers all over the Island enabling them to feed their live- stock at a, cost lower than could be done in Ontario and Quebec. while the fact that the finished product of the Prairie farmers would ier tat test. "Another Consumer's" inability to grasp the purport of that. state- ment does not by any means alter the fact. For Instance. mllk of 3 Der cent butter fat; content is 25 percent, lower value than mllk showing 4, per cent. and on the same baols at reckoning, 4 per cent mllk is 33 1-3 per cent hlgtier value than 3 per cent mllk. Lt that is no: 8°» l Hm Prepared io be authorita- tively corrected. So far as the deplorable mllk sit- uation in Saint John. NB. is con- cerned. I am probably as poorly advised an detail as lie is, only with this dlfference—I never presume to discuss any matter with which I am not familiar or know nothing about. I wlll. however, venture to suggest, the present impasse in Saint John is due to human nature cutting loose with both sides hiss- ing at each other, revenging and raking revenge as the blcod boiled, and now producers and consumers are at each others throats ‘m deadly combat. with no sign of n let-up. or Blvfi-lfl, on either ride. rind con- sumers including babies, growing children. lnvzillds and certain ugetl people are suffering as R result. That. Ls o. situation we do not wish to eee hold sway in Charlottetown. no matter how much 1t might, thrill n pervert, goedlng from the shad- ows. ' The substitutes for milk, sug- gested for use. while the conflict was in progress-cheese, milk pow- der. I-Illd condensed mllk - are ex- probably accounts for the name of I the beverage made from barley. . ., A score of miles away io the west,‘ cider-making comes irito its c-wn. tlon that 1t was introduced for 1h first time into England by 1h monk; of Forde Abbey in my count; of Dorset Conquest. Ralph soon alter: the Norman Wighlman. A Cunudliin bride, having com to England io rejoin her husbnn . was thankful after a heart-break;- ing scorch for accommodation to fin-d rienr his camp a primitive three-roamed collage which boasted as its only amenity n cold-watpr tap over the kitchen sink. One day she we; vrlstfully describing to an English frlcrd her home near Vap- couvcr nnrl produced photograph; OJ’ tl.—ri ccmpiict. but roomy onc- storled house, with lls.sun roof and central heating, its ell-electric com- bined kitchen and laundry un-lt, and names-cue labor-savLng devices. The Engllshwoman looked at the phala- kflWltB- “Bul- ll‘s a wooden house" she exclaimed; and then- with n compassionate smile, "Never mind dost. now that so many of you hue been over hero and have seen our homes you will all go back to Can- ada demanding houses ln the Eng- llsh style!" —Manchester Guisgdlan. 72 .6‘? 7nd 611w: a LIFE LAUGHS ONWARD Rambling I looked for an old abode Where. years back, one had lived I know: Its slte a dwelling dulyshowed. But It was new. I went where, not no lone lee. The sod had rLsen two bz-eeete asunder; Deletes thrcve gully there. es though No grnve were under. I walked alone n terrace where The figure that hiid once set there Wei missed by none. Life laughed end moved on un- subdued. I new that 01d succumbed to Yoillll: ‘Twas well. My too resentful mood Died on my tongue. er iit 30,390,570 pounds against 25,972,324 pound; end 16,318,720. - - -1‘tiomne Her-ii. Cider-maklng is relailvelymsnd fccdcrs a decided advantage. new 1n England. We have a tradl-, ‘ in ioee. BBC ,'I‘alk by] Loud children eiimbolled in the sun: _ be liable to heavy rail frelghts wihen shipped East for export would give the Maritime farmers cellerit supplementary articles of food. but hardly a replacement for that enerviiting. bodybuilding fluid called "cow's mllk" purified and refined and made safe through the modern procemlog practice; of sterilization and pasteurization. At. any rate, from whence could we arrow our supply of cheese. mllk powder and condensed milk, if pro- ductlon of whole mllk was allowed to become rm extinct. art. AC. asks why I, having know- ledge of such irregularities do not. report my information to the Mllk Board’! Well, I'll be brief and t0 the point and confess that so for as I am concerned, l have no con- fidence 1n the Mllk Board as at pment constituted. The Board can never tulflll wlih any degree of satisfaction the purposes for which it was originally created just so long an one-third of it,‘ personnel is so obviously biased nizalnsi the ihord working. poorly paid mllk produce s operating in varlouo vio- The above, however. to by no means the whole story. for if We can land wheat, onto. barley. etc. l.n the Miiritlrnes at a lower coat ‘than in Montreal we should haye n-rr advantage in the milling of flour and cereals, for not only will the production costs 1n these lines be lower ln the Marltlaies but we inc geographically from slx to eight days nearer the ocean than Mont- real. Furthermore, in Halifax, N S. '-si John. rma - and ueorscicwn P FJI. exports can be made over)’ ldsy of the yenr u against the five and 5 half months of closed winter lperlod 1n Montreal and Quebec. These facts I claim are revolut- vionary and too important to be neglected. l I trust that not only the farmers but the Boards of Trude o] the Island wlll glve those matters care- OOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOQOOQ- Frederic A. Largo. 11.0. iiniiiusrisrt. somcrron, 0 AIIY . N T Royal Bunk t C ad ch . Clllrlolbtetobvlli. EHILL-mber. show rate instances c! impure and contaminated mllk. but that does not indicate that all mllk produc-y crs are equally careless and tn the same category You wlll fLrid imit- ators and misfits in every vocation, but that should not be sufficient. reason to condemn the whole frat- ernliy. Minimizing reference had been made to the work in which I um personally engaged. Well, I don't mind that, but it provokes ii thought. If itie milk producers in the Charlottetown area will adopb, and apply the principles and prac- itces that were so successfully em- played in redeeming the hog in- dusiry of the Province from the despairing levels 1o which it. liiid been rcduced. a quarter of a cen- tury ugo, there l5 no doubt in my mind that it would bring about. a iorrcspondlng revolution in their business. The net. returns to pro- ducers would be increased to prof- itable levels, while. oftlie some time the consumer could be enjoy- ing his requirements at lower cost. Successor to Gwflo J. Tweedy, ILC, ALEX W. MATHIESON BABBISTI-IR, soucrron. cm. ""1"" 9° Grins George Street Mono: to loan Collection DENTIST 175 Grafton Street Office Hears: 9 to 12-! to r Telephone 2284 M. ALBAN FARMER B-A» LLB. iironrrv 1'0 LOAN BARBISTER. sopmiroir. arc. CIIARLOTTETOWN ‘ OOOOOQvQvoQOQOOOOQQQQQ-Q CHARLES R. McQUAlD B.A. I 5,111, Slr, etc. J. . _ A Gnlms, Barrister. Solicitor, ooo-moaooooo-oaooooa-orro; Nmlfy. Etc. g _ i Eastern Trut Bulldl . Old Lliarlottetown . crrsrioiiernwn n‘ 1 iAnii P-E-l-i i Phone I711 f O6 om TRAVERSE cirossina ‘ llll. W. l1. llAllSflll The mails which were lorwiirded from hence on the 10th instant, were detained at. Cape Traverse Chimps-sem- until Saturday last, svhen the cour- ier and another person got over Pzlg-eaogt-xg“ in i. flat, sOmeWhat. larger than the ice boat. At 3 o'clock l.n the afternoon of the some day, they left, the opposite side cnghelr ro- tum having a passenger wit-h them._ and had nearly all perished in the violent. snow storm of that. evening. About ien o'clock they contrived. to haul their boat an e. small cake of tce, upon which they remained exposed to all the fury of-the tempt- est the whole of that dismal night. To odd to their distress they lost NOTARY. ETC, their oars by a Wave-breaking over BABIIISTEB, 801101103 them which had nearly swept them Blley Blldlng ciruinmgnw; all off. About ten o'clock an Sun- day morning. having drifted up to T.”“°"““““°"*“*E llxmont Bay. they were observed from the shore. when three men EYES EXAMMED put off to their assistance end re- 5N5 lleved them from their perilous 0 situation, almost dead with cold GLASSES FITTED and two of them frost bitten. They‘ J. 8. Taylor ill Prince 8t. ' Phone [I'll PALMER 8i HASLAM A. l. I-IASLAM. B.A-. LLB. BABBISTIB. are. Bunk of Nova Scott: Chambers Charlottetown, P1,], MONEY T0 LOAN ‘Phone l5 P.O. Bo: ll brought three Halifax and two Cumberland malls which arrived at. ful and Immediate consideration. lriltles addolnlng Charlottetown. me p931 0m“ i“; “min; “w; ' 1 lm- S“? °l°- Df- 50511911 P913011. with ‘which nine o'clock. A n-umber of the news- OPTOMETMST l ll-K-S- "EMWNQ I em not famillisr. probably will papers were soaked with water, but' Corner Kent nnrl Queen 81A ———-——-— . Phone isis ' "ll-K PFlf-‘Fis A" T"! QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds Iva-rm i», Appointment PRODUCER Ilelei loeldenoe I018 l Slr,~"A.nother Conirumer" did not lose much time ln getting back limo your Forum ln renewed dfort ito mallgn the mllk producer; ad- ‘jecent to Charlottetown, and in re- buttal of criticism of his Previous iletter I offered through Your ool- ‘ umns on January 9th. ‘ Posing as iin authority on the matter under discussion. he ill- rlulges 1n e bit of ridicule 1n "EX- poetng" the impossibility at some deductions I offered. yet notwith- zstendlng all sold, l’ still melatefn iI was correct when stating that in n given oiantlty of mllk the butter .fnt content may be l8 per cent lllllllfl’ then ihnt contained 1n en- iother lot, and etlll not neoeisef! ' that either show n l3 P" NM- b1!!- sins lINllVilN! r t i I r r . g. l v . "l still think it would be easier to forget about thd snare- - » end get your-rabbits with e Guardian Went Ad!" . ' g E Q§QOOOQQOOOQ>OQOOOOQOOQ@" GAUDET l. HASZARD ' Berrleoere. Battalion. ‘*‘ .15“ x . Canadian Bnnlr of Commerce Bluf- IIONIY T0 LOAN GILBERT-A.» GAUDII. 1A.. 1.1-3 Cniieillen Bank of Commerce Blillr Cbnrlottosowni. can. IELL d." MATHIESON Barristers. lsllottarl, ile- I. ‘l: BILL. ILA» I. L IATIIISON. LLB. K-U- Mhmlyl-lt-Llw LOAN! ONEITY AND Fill ‘ruprnwnlo COLLIOIIONB III Iloliloel ea. Charlottetown. P.I.l. ti. l. DUANE Ii C0. Chartered Accountants p _ is Cretlsa scan Phone use " .. no *1 _leele1eb w. imnbe. ch. - Pointing-out that not evrn fill" ll e ertoot, self-sufficient P s ' l g f, . niiirii teurel. lfldllllmbflflgt’ ‘hbstiliim edlbtre ll I" ca limit vies out“? W!“ iiin. no rim s Inell wit“ the eaentleh to melatonin" 3 ol