PAGE FOUR THE GU1:RDlAN Authorized as Second Clan Mull Post Office Department. Ottawa. The island (iuudlln Pilblilllllll Co. -L;l”i;yP aiiivi.-lirnii-aging Director. in A. Burnett. Assoclate Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Cover: Prince Edwnnl lliunii like the lion” "The strongest memory is weaker than ' the weakest ink". 'T:iiA'ii'i3i:r-aiiivwx MONDAY. AUG. 17. 1953 A Basic World Problem it is encouraging to note, on the assur- ance of Mrs. Raymond Sayre, president of the Associated Countrywomen of the World, n addressing the Association's annual con- xentioli at Toronto last week, that the world's food supply is now increasing faster han its population. Agricultural produc- tion is moving ahead at the rate of two Jcr cent while population increase now is ..4 per cent a year. l-lowever. Mrs. Sayre- -imphasizcd that this increased production '5 not evenly distributed and many of the .vorid's 30,000,000 new babies born each year may soon face starvation. Hcrein lies the tremendous importance of modern agricultural techniques. The United Nations organization is quoted as predicting that a 50 per cent increase ill farm yields could be accomplished in two decades without a substantial increase in capital or the reorganization of the agri- cultural system. In this, as in other mat- ters relating to farm economy. the mem- hers of the Associated Countrywomen of the World-with which our Women's Insti- tutcs across Canada are actively associated vhave an important role to play in seeing that modern techniques are taught in their countries. If changes in traditions and habits are to be made, women must first see their value. Certainly this subject is one of outstanding importance at the pres- cnt time. There can be no hope of world peace and stability until basic food require- ments are met, and no greater responsibil- ity rests upon the United Nations than of achieving this objective. Big Responsibility Tile Financial Post sounds the right note when it says that the very magnitude of the Liberal victory at the polls last week attests the magnitude of the responsibility Mr. St. Laurent and his associates now un- dertake. Part. of that responsibility as good, citizens and honorable men is to seize this new mandate as an occasion for soul- searching and self-examination. After two decades of power what poli- lieved to be a liver remedy. The walnutl was used as a brain medicine, bloodroot as a blood tonic. Such'homely potions. based more .on superstition than on science, were widely used even a few generations ago. Herbs gathered as medicines were called "sim- ples." As medical knowledge grew, many of these remedies were. revealed as worth- less. But others were found to have solid substance. Digitalis for heart disorders is made from the foxglove plant, which Welsh-S men used as far back. as the 13th century: Opium from the poppy, henballc, pepper-l mint. and castor oil were all known in an-; cient Egypt. Ephedrine, a drug used for treating colds, asthma. and hay fever, comes from a plant used in .China for nearly 5,000 years. ; Witch doctors, shamans; and other, primitive medicine men, from the tribes of inner Africa to the American Indians, havel given medicine many an important drug.- The South American tribe that first chew-l ed the bark of the cinchona tree when stricken with jungle fever, gave quinine to the world. Curare, the deadly native arrow poison, now is widely used as a muscle re- laxer. North American Indians discovered the use of cascara, made from bark of the buckthoi-n tree. Wild parsnip, which they used, has been discovered to yield a drug active against pneumonia and menin- gitis. Another .old Indian remedy was found several years ago to damage can- cers in mice. Medical scientists today take very seri- ously new reports of strange or primitive cures. No matter how fantastic they may seem. they are investigated in the hope that some might lead to important medical discoveries. EDITORIAL NOTES Seven modern German fishing-boats have been bought by the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo to help improve the state cap- ital's food supply. The boats are equipped with Diesel motors. echo-sounding gear, echo fish-locators. and cold-storage space for 50 tons of fish. I O 0 Welcome visitors to Charlottetown this week are Supreme Chancellor Sheldon M. Roper and the members of the Grand Lodge of the Maritime Domain. Knights of Pythias, and the Grand Temple Pythian Sisters. Lo- cal Pythians are doing the honours as hosts but all our citizens will join in extending best wishes to both organizations for a" suc- cessful convention. i O I-lonore de Balzac. French novelist, died cies i(ilc;ed Vtrli be rsviewegl tand proli)abl1)y this date 1850. His early years were a without comment 0,, the datum, babi "1 1900- . . . a revise . iiat a minis ra lve co we s struggle against poverty and failure and 31. subjunctive "ivcic" 1 would EiSi( Tm, mm n0,e,w,.,hy ,mm ,5 . need sweeping out? In fairness to the citi- thou h he roduced some 85 novels after A mm" Teach” ”? ””.”m "Wile hish l'llllH'e for the expectation Mqfhgsom Ind" 8' H' J' Mubom R'o' - . g .p Wm” "M" ”' ””59'J"331”W ll” of life at birth for white females RESCUE ' zens who have announced their trust in he was thirty, he never managed to get would hliiivc "self-expression" iolgn, Wm In ms gmup mm A chud lawn;-I; th mt u Nicholson o,.i.,..,.m.i . - , , ,. t -' i f -. ' t '. '. - e I me . LEON. .c. them. the G0Ve1nm8nt is now ableg and cieai of debt. He made many fiiends, how- ,ef;;.f::.re:ii?i1il Owiillmasaiiiilii'i"f2,.7O 3.33” ,1" M”, ""””",h”lf at the sea. A5: rhiiiigii. I!.A.. 21.3. Mont-HIM f'- 5- '- should be willing to make a microscopic re- ever, amongst the literary great, His pall- imitation of the expressions .i.3,,l',g;,'.; ,;;.”t,'.3,,,,.i”.'i....;.?ii".5ze it: Slandilllqeilwdiiggii iii” dlrk eyes aomv r. ivlcmiuiiin. LL mm 3” view of its operations with a view to effici- begfefs were Dumas, H,.,g0' Bamche, and tzlvltgyglrlgglsirpsxttggiltessill;?g,::uTgrz;:a2l;- so years for adults I mu mgouen "5", 'mm" at W C0mcno::";'.'i'b;;-ne';i”To an vncy andieconomin In an operation of that Salnte-Beuve. Hugo delivered the funeral I am. so-. etc. M; m,,.,... 0, me. 3,, ,,,.,.,,. so bu;";'Y- Mn 175 Gr-nan stmi ' . size it would be incredible it real probing oration. Balzac's genius flashed on all the MIN” SW0-Vt use at death.-the attained age yiiliar uwhftwu bmhml J. A; Mcsuigun Foster did not reveal some rot. Mr. St. Laurent and his group are most- iv firm believers in the parliamentary sys- fem. Had they been in opposition so long they doubtless would have appropriated the cry. ”It's time for a change." Since there ".sn'l to he a change, it is vital that they do llittle, unnoticed things the lurid light of his imagination. I O Q Since its formation in 1945 by Mr. Thomas Johnston, then Secretary of State for Scotland, the Scots Ancestry Research Society has dealt with roughly 10,000 quer- ill in their power to do those things now -iii our gigantic government engine which would offscl the need there might be for a rlialngc. Self-righteousness. warns Th? - Post, is at present the great Lineral peril. i'i'hat they need and what Canada deserves if them is profound humility: a renewed and sharpened sense of moral l'eSpOl'lSibllli)i to the people of this great land. Strange llrug Source: Far-off lands and the superstitions of primitive tribes still are important con- tributors to the medicines of modern sci- ence. Into the warehouses of huge pharm- 'iCt3LiilCal firms come not only basic chemi- cals to be compounded into today's exact ,)l'cscriptions and drugs, but also tons of strange. exotic plant materials front the world around. the National Geographic Society says. One company reports it uses 140 different types of medicinal plants. Crude drugs arrive in paper-and-varnish containers from the Orient and in woven baskets from the tropics. Storage bins smell like apothecary shops of old. The science that deals with the history, -ollectlon. identification. and use of drug iiants is known as pharmacognosy. It is I! old as medicine itself. Priest-doctors of Auyria knew the use of several hundred slant remqiles. They treated wounds with sea kelp and goiter with burnt sponge, both rich in iodine uaed'for the some purposes- today. 'In the Middle Ages arose .the no- aullod "doctrliie of signatures," in belief that Nature gives clues to its plant remedies for i1iIii'l' ailments. Hepatlca. for example, ies on Scottish ancestry. Tile inquiries lhave come from almost every country of lthe world-some from descendants of Scots who left their native shores more than 200 years ago. During 1952' the Society sup- lplied "family trees" in 650 cases. and in ddition, it dealt with more than 1,000 in- uiries on a variety of subjects--surnames, clans. tartans and origins. The Society is a non-profit making organization. More than a quarter of the fees received is in dollars. It is known that there are more than 1,000,000 people of Scottish birth liv- ing out of Scotland and 20,000,000 of Scot- tish descent living overseas. l a I q 0 O O i There is still room and work in Scot- land for the expert in the ancient art of thaiching roofs with reeds or straw. One of the few who still practise it, Mr. John Brough, of Queen Street. Freuchie, in the Scottish county of Fife, is finding that more people in Scotland are now expres- sing a preference for thatched roofs be- cause they keep rooms cool in summer and are proof against frost. damp and rain in winter. Mr. Brough has been in the trade for nearly 50 years and has made and re- paired thatched roofs for hundreds of agri- cultural workers' cottages all over Scotland. He uses reeds from the upper reaches of the river Tay. Each roof requires at least 400 bunches of thatch, which are held in place with tar twine. it takes u fortnight for one man to complete a roof. So endur- ing is thatch that this year Mr. Bx-ough carried outonly minor repairs to ii. roof at the Garelock which had been thatched in bud leaves; tgiui-gfgi'g it was 1 1913- 2 I c -N... THE ouA5olAN. CHARLOTTETOWN, Sentiments Attached -, PUBLIC FORUM i This column in open to the discussion by wrreapondenil of questions of interest. The Guardian does ,not'necessar- iiy end the opinion of col-rcllpondenil. LITERARY EXPRESSION Sir.-Minor Saxon"; letter in The Guardian entitled "Roots nl Culture" defines literary srli-e:.'- presslon thus: "The former (better English writers) produce our classi- cal literature. the supreme artist ill which, like the inspired musician. reaches a point in artistic ulter- ance when he or she is no longer conscious of technique. wlicii n Paderewskl is in i1 fine musical passion his piano becomes an ill- tegral part. of himself: and this perfect union becomes as it were .1 single living vehicle of self-ex- pi-csslon." Upon reading R. definite statement like that how i-an any one accuse me of advocating the imitation of models. at the sacrifice of originality and independence? None the less it induces in which he cxclalms ”Imilationl' and still more imitation" and thcnl there appears this choice doggcrcil couplet.- "As if the pupil's whole vocation . Were never-ending imitation." -.-l- H- nll. supplicatlons, prliycr-4. lnlcr- ceuioml. and giving of iliiiiiks. lu- made for all men . . . for this is good and acceptable in tho sight of God our saviour;-who will ban- iiil men to be saved, and to comi- unto the knowledge of the irnili. Educational Broblem tMoncton Tlmcsl It is not altogether a new asscl'- lion which the professor of E1151- llsh at University of British Col- umbia makes-that 65 to 75 per cent of high school graduates who go to university cannot. l'Plifl. write or think properly. The Mill- cator in question. Prof. Stanley E. Read, evidently based his conclu- storm on the experience of UBC. for her further asserts that he often has to move back to Grade 3 floor in an effort to bring the fundamentals of freshmen up i.o university level. We would like to believe that the situation described by Prof. Read is peculiar to UBC, but we very much doubt such is the case. other foremoat educationisis in Canada have. in the not too dis- tant put. related experiences not greatly dissimilar from those con- fronting the metric Coast univer- sity. President Sidney Smith of University of Toronto. ii year oi- two Ago. expremd some quite candid comment ..on a problem not at all unlike the one which the UBC professor has seen fit to de- plore. He wugemphasizlllz the neceuiiy that students coming to university be better prepared for it: demands. from the revelations of Prof. Read the logical deduction seems to be I greater need for 'inore aerloua purpose in the secondary schooll. and A far higher standard of basic education in the public lchooln. Thai. constitutes 3 dual goal which will have to be attain- ed, if the univulitil are to be able to do tho training lob ex- pected of'them with the material may receive. it. is not ucnei. that the munici- palities are having an increasingly diclcult. time to meet. their bud- lli "A. Former Teacher” a fit. of ecstatic:-l I exhnrt therefore. that. first of! New High In Longevity Meti-opolltnn Life Bulletin In 1950 the average lifetime of lllic American people reached: new high of 68.4 years. This re- presented : gain of 21 years since 1900-an extraordinary record of progress in life conservation. Dur- ing the prior half century-from 1850 to 1900-the increase in ever- acc lifetime in the U. S. was only seven years: before that the gains were even more gradual. Urhese figures are for the United states. Statistics for Canada vnll not differ greatly.) Our remarkable longevity record since the tum of the century is the result of many factors. The striking advances achieved in the medical and allied sciences have been made widely available throughout the country. At the same time, public health agencies. official and voluntary, have mul- united in number and broadened the agape of 'iheir noiivltleo. In addition. our health And general well-being have benefited greatly from the rapid rise of the standard of living. The effect of these advances is highlighted by the fact that the average Ameri- can who now reaches age 25 has as many years of life before him as did the average newly born lriciclcd tn the expectiitiorl of life- is at least '15 years for all white females 21 years of age or older. The cxpectatlon of life at birth ,'lnr white males corresponding to lmc:-tality conditions in 1950 is 66.6 lycars. or 5.8 years less than that llor ixliitc females. This disadvantage diminishes slmiiy with advance in age; the fdiflcluulcc drops to five y-3ul'a at taste :3, to four years at age 51, and to three years at age 60. l The sex differences were up- ip:'cclnbl,v smaller at the turn of ithc cciilui-y-namely 2.1 years at l.l-th and Eels than one yer at lrzc no. Thus. during the past. all cclltilry white females have not nrlly had a longer iavel-age life- lllme than white males but they ,have made more rapid gains in longevity as well. The ninrked success achieved ll: fcniitroliing the diseases of child- jlmnd and early adult life is clearly lrellcctcd in the remarkably low lmol-tailty rates at these periods 'of life. In 1950, the mortality among white males was less than 2 per 1.000 in the ages from 2 through 31 years; iimong white females the correppondlnix range was even wider-from age: 1 through .7. After infancy. it death rate iis high as 10 per 1,000-wn not reached until age 50 by white males and age 57 by white fe- males. one Among non-whites the'expecta- tlon of life at birth in 1950 was 59.2 years for males and 681 years for females. Their record falls far behind that for white persons, the dmerence amounting to as much as 9.2 years for female: and to 7.4 years for males: The longevity among non-whites in 1960 was practically. identical with that for the white population in 1937. The mortality rum Among non-whiten are appreciably timber than those for whlto- persona throughout life. and particularly after childhood. ,- The improvement in longevity during the put. half century has lncrensod greatly (M chlncl of aurvlviil to midlife and evIn,i.o the threshold of old age. with the mortality conditions gets for educational purponu. but whether or not this has anything to do with the problem exposed by around 1900, only 06 out of every 100 newly born babies (without distinction as to sex or color) would be expected to reach age 40, and their remaining lifetime then avenged 28.3 yous. Under current mortality. the chances of survival to age 40 are 92 in 100, and the expectation of life at that age is 33.1 years. Stin- llarly. the chances of living from age 40 to use 65 have risen from 62 to 74 per 100, and the expecta- tlon of life at age 65 has increased from 11.9 to 14.1 years. It is not likely that the second half of this century will duplicate the accomplishment of thci first half in improving the average length of life. However. there are still substan- tial margins for improvement. and it probably will not be long before the population of our coulitl-5 reaches an average lifetime of 70 years. 7 lair-conditioned car, then pay: :50 The millennium will be hen when insurance companies base their rates on the theory that we're only as old as we feel.- iilamllton Spectator.) Senator Solpcr define: I mlllliw'n- sire as a man who travels be- tween hls all--conditioned homo and nil"-conditioned office in an to go over to the ateafn room It the club and sweat.-(Hamilton Spectator.) Old In is everybody: problem. And it is everybody: problem not olily because everybody will one day be old. It is everybody's prob- lem. bccausc the burden of old age is becoming one of the greatest. of national burdens. And it is grow- ing all the time. The problem is an anxious one because the num- ber of older people is enlarging in relation to the total population.- (Montreal Gazette.) The Royal Canadian Navy in: dropped the rank of sinker from its rolls. Considering that the last coal-burning vessels in the RUN were retired after the Second World War. the title has been obsolete since. The men who watch the gauges in the Navy's oli- bul-nlng engine-rooms now become "engineering mechanics" and en- gine-room nrtlficers become "eli- gineertng artlflccrs". This confirms a suspicion that many an ex-Navy man has harbored since 1945. Es- peclallywhen he has to carry out the ashes on A cold winter morn- lng, he wonders if the joys of life ashore are really worthlt.-(Monk real Gazette.) Canadians, who. for the most: part. are fortunate enough to live in an area of the world which is normally free from major cartil- quake shocks, will read with hor- ror and pity of the disaster which has this week overwhelmed the Greek islands. To those who have never gone through the terrifying experience of even a relatively mild earthquake there can be lit- tle rcal comprehension of the panic bred by the feeling that even earth itself has lost. its com- fortlnz stability. Man can ac- custom hlmself to the unstable motion of Ii ship at sea, to the sometimes erratic flight of an air- frightenlngly across city streets. vomiting smoke. dust and flame, when the stout:-st buildings crum- ple like card-mansions and a pail of dusty gloom hangs nienacini'z- ly over ruined cities luridly lit only by spouting fire. then the holrlest spirit qualls. - Halifax Chonlcle-Herald. This is I little story of a dog and a girl, which illustrates how smart ii dog can be. The big collie and the bobby-sox lass were great companions romping and playing together. If the girl was away. on her return she would be given a g JNotes By The Way 15 point at which the director of 11... who know the answers to lcllv pas. ed questions, .who illidcrstaiitls the mena over which amateurs lnir to speculate. invariably kills nil thuslasm by his Further discusslo i must soon de- generate into leaving the shallows of mcrc for the depths of sound kiiowlcugc. Nothing remains but to Clliillgc (hp subject for one on which all V cm. can claim ii common bond of ignorance. - New York Times. United States rose 7.5 pcr K (Taft in ill? air. but iillcfl the 1953: Petroleum output was Ull 23 solid earth itself ceases to be 9” Cent . solid, when huge chasm: yawn Aycysr w. 1953 -it "'1 U would lea and ., her on nine face.M;:mg: 1:” kiss” on this occasion the gm haI:lp""d fend a broken bone while an Eur" cation. When she got out ('3 "ii automobile all her mum Hi "i9 dog made a leap toward hie. iiill ful of being hurt. she Vi';u.n'ed oar. 03- The dos was shown the 1, ages around her slmumcrs ""d' al-ma. He was told that She and hurt. After that he mzidc n M5 tempt "to play rough" 0, ," ail anything which might Unilsvoidn min. He instinctively sciisrri mg: was v . sum something vi rolig. - ii mam "wlmt I-'3"'T)l' Wiiiiiiiii might be the title of ,.h,”,".My article in Lancet -- ..,.H.- W” British medical journal. The A-mm" says millions of Bl'lll&ll1iQn1Cl! overwork because their llllshuuan don't work hard cnoiigii, 1. x" i that in Glasgow. wlill-ii .-i. A35. loyal Glaswegian will lll)tlt:ili' admit, is one of the gi-mi (QM,-V of the world. the more lioin.-..,,l.ex work the less their hillsilflllfliirnes tribute to domestic crisis iii Hi hands, it would SCCIH. lilmiiisi come more drancs, cl" ildlillr: They let their wives ill) ;. km” d8Y': work and in Eltitlllllin H” household chores. In this liq effete land liusbnnds must tulip" sneaking envy for tho .-..m: Scots. How do Illcy got "H; with it?-London Free Prr-. i 'A wise man once reuiariu-ii that conversation about the wcatllcr ran be a delightful medium of sum; intercourse. but only up Ia me local weather bureau ciiici-s in. room. From there on light coiii-pr. satlcn is impossible; llle rkpcrta true facts about curious iilipim. cn- mcrc l)l'v”s(lm-p. scientific aiialislq, talk lllCS- Natural E85 Dl-oductioii ll1.44'lhp rill :ii COMPLETE VISUAL REFRACTIOII AND ANALYSIS G. F. HUTCHESON 8: SON Optometrists 53 Grafton Street vigorous welcome by the dogwhich PROFESSIONAL CARDS v w c. All that could make the world is in that look- The song of heavenly host when Christ was born, The first, fresh wonder as when some rare book Reveals its truths. And I, night. and mom Have watched the plunging forth, the rolling back; Checked tides for sailing making shore. Stand rooted. near a clump of mm. who, 01' -IDF anck. Awake”? lut. to what I waited Go. little world! one great com. pulling force Brlnsa each tired wanderer back to his own course. -Pearl Stnchln Hurd, in the N”, York Times. eiown (And r. 3. I.) TOBACCO MANUFACTUBY "ll lives us much pleasure to observe that a tobacco manufact- Itry. upon a somewhat extensive seals. is immediately to be com. menced in Oh... ouetown by Mr. Robert Macxlnlly. This will form in lmPm't-int addition to our domutic manufacture, as it will be the mean: of ren. 49?”! III. in Lynn: manure. in- dependent of other countries 10.- our Iuppliu of the manufactured Article. A tobacco press and the other necessary lmpleiuenu for Glfrylnl on.the business. together with I hhdl. of leaf tobacco. for a commencement. were landed from "'4-H3'4l'lIGl' Yutenily. Ind prepa- ration: are already in ptojrgg gm- Wmmenclnl operations. About ten or I doun hum. we imdei-stand. will be employed lmmuiintqly in the elubilninnenta 1 "The.enoounuinant of such on undqmklnx we oomidn well wor- thy. the nmntlon of the Legislat- ure. so uixioiu IN the Nova soo- tluu to encourage the domutlc manufacture of this article in that 1” ' , that unmonufutimd to- bacco in permitted to be imported free of colonial duty. an example which. we trulti. our Lezlalnturc Professor Map. we are not pre- -pared to say. y will not. be slow to follow." '-Colonial Herald. July 6. flat. I BAIIRISTEB. SOLlUlTOKi Ill. NOTAIIY. Etc. Currie Building . MucPhu & Trainer II. F. Mlrrnblli. i!.A., Q.C. IL BOMERLED TBAINOB. IA. barristers. mu Dr. W. R. Carson Frederic A. Large. O.C. Bank of Colnmerc. Building Charlottetown Money to Loan R Byron J. Grant. 0.- . OPTOMETIIIST in Kent Street Phone I'll toppoultp Raven Hotel) Allison M. Gillis. I.I..I. BABBISTEII. s0i.lcl'r(Ilt. Eh. no Richmond st. - Charlottetown Gordon E. MueMlllun. 'oAog LL... BAIIIISTEII, SOLIUITOR. l'liic.. CIIIBOPBACTOR Cliurloticiuwn. l'. E L Puimer (lrnluuto MONEY To LUAN CHABLOTTHTCIWN T 1j.' T0 13.116432 zoi Prince as Chas, R, McQuai B.A. Barrister Solicitor Notary N"T"W' met soul 3”"; M c.nn'h Banal". Intern Trust Building Charlottetown. P. E. L CllAlll.i)T'l'l-ZTOWN Loam on City and Farm '-"-mm:-j l'-' ” miiemu A. Wultlien Gender. M. Albun Farmer. QC. LLB. g BA. LLB. BABRISTER. S0l.lCI1'i)il. lif- Burrllicy and Solicitor T Phillip: Jilililiiiiz "W" W Cilfllllr Kent uni! QUE?" 5'1-ll”; . -- om om-ii so 4 Dr., K. A. Mucucliorn -As-A--" ”'""” ”" -or namisr on A. L Mgglsqucr Dental X-ray DFNTIST ; Above ciinioiteiown clinic Mn”. wk" 2.3 QIIIOII 53- ' Dill C80 0L(""A BU".”l3'(l, in ri-liioal st. - ciuiriomtown in Item slim: I'll nuu. ms (Nell to 3!mpaa Burrluten. Solicitors. Etc. It. It BELL. Q.(l. 0. ll FOSTER. LLB. Loan: on City and lfxirm Properiiel lilo Richmond Street Charlottetown. l".E.l. Palmer & I-iaslclm V A. J. HASLAM. B.A., i.l..l). Barrister. Etc. Hunk of Nova Scutin ltiiaiuilcrl BABBISTEH. SlIl.I('I'li(ill- iii Grafton Strut Money to Loon (5I'l':'f'1' Gaudet 8: Huszurd oumsnr A. GAIJDI-;'r. iJ.A. 1.1.5 Barristers and solicitor- Money to Loim ," Bunk oi Crimmcrrn Eldll J. S. Taylor. R.0- OPTO ETIHST M It Eyes I: ulnined. Glnsles lit!" , I” In button on. I'h"";i'3 J. A. Curl-uiiiers. R-9- nlvrolimrmsr L, ,1 min -5' Montreal. Quebec, Ottawa. 'I'oi-onto. McDONAl.D. duniuii a. co. nnAIrrI.'Iir.n ACCOUNTANTS mm min. gnaibmup. i'nr;--nf'l"" xentville. Liverpool. luililniiil Lillie. M ' ii (::....' I ,.., Cllrrln BM!" Charlottetown. "f:'l ”"'.' H. R. DOANI I SOMPANY m(::AI1'nIl:n All0nUN'l'AN'l'l not 000 ll. Ulutuulnwl . Phone mi - ms '" P. 0. JW "7 IANIIOIIII W. MANNING. (LA. . ERMA l'. tllacriilimsnn. u,A. uuivm .0. hick!-;l4l.'s'.l.-m:I'". If mun nmuo II llltitu. Manchu. It. John's. Amlinnl. E New Giutow. mm and corner BM" '.