PAGE FOUR m'.THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN ' .T H E G U A R Di A N Possible Unforeseen Developments The passmg Scene Deir-muons. Othwt By Observer '11: Island Guardian Publishing Co. --j- . THE 20TH CENTURY TIIOUT FISHERMAN SEPTEMBER 23. 195: A . . . -.....-...A... ......-. .. . ... ... ..........-. .. .. -. VA. will say, 'What was the case? You of course will say . . . You will tell them all the details of the case. and you will tell 'them how carefully and completely the case was proved. When you have finished they will say, lAnd what did you do?' And was here theg catch why couldn't we ""'df":':;'ciL":":l'I't:, 5;:-'1: ”""”n' you will reply. iWe acquitted her”,-And tn”-'5 FOV eK3""1'!i"3 3'” S9 349'? 35 fb-59'” ' then the fat Wm he in the fire... lma.rk,ing by shocking them vcrs some -t.-ime No one can predict with any was nttached to one end of th. olncuuniou . ' with 8. mild currewt..- when tines io'Utis muml 1"” Wm” W” "W14 "1" W” "'1' ”"””"”V' M” '10 Pm- - Put suck 4; P 1 I be like in an. 2102. indeed. there tlcal use Whmoeven It may have "Coven Prince Edward Island uko the dew” 5 ' 0P- 1,; no cg;-talnty it, will he mound had some psychological effect, f'Tho Strongest Memory is Waakor Iliu tho Weakest ink". 0 l.'u-A-B.LOT'l'ETOW'N, TUESDAY. SEPT. 23. 1952 New Brunswick Election After 17 years of Liberal government- Ilremier McNair being in office 13 years- New Brunswick voters yesterday swung to the Progrcssive-Conservative party under its new leader-Mr. Hugh John Flemming. The victorious Progressive-Conservatives had deliberately ignored the ”official” is- sue proposed by Premier McNair-the re- cent walk-out of provincial hydro em- ployees demanding recognition of their in- ternational union. In fact Mr. Flemming made a point of asking the union to call off its strike so that the electioil could be fought on wide grounds rather than the particular issue chosen by the Liberal Gov- ernment. The strike was accordingly call- ed off. I What the voters did take iiiio consider- ation seems to have been the brand of gov- ernment which has been carried on; the increase of the public debt to the point where it was the highest in Canada despite such measures as a provincial sales tax: charges of mismanagement of highway contracts which even a Royal Commission report exonerating members of the Gov- ernment from any charge of dishonesty failed to counteract. Even the usually potent factor of pros- perity did not save the Government for Mr. Flemming and his colleagues pointedly re- ferred to 111C exodus of New Brunswickers 0 a c Ii 0 O I3 t Prevention Week." And it is alarming to learn from the Proclamation last ten years 534,777 fires in Canada have destroyed property valued at h542 million. In that time 4,087 persons have lost their lives and it is estimated that at least 15.- if a systematic inspection had been made beforehand of all conditions likely to cause tories and offices; education in fire protec- tion in schools, to Boy Scout groups and the like-every householder can be a vol- untary fire warden by checking his home for fire hazards. An obvious place tol start is in the basement with the furnace- pipes-a frequent cause of fire. And the average basement is cluttered with iliflam- mable material that except to add fuel to a potential fire. It's best out on the dump. hazard. An open fireplace witiiout a guard -particularly with children around-is an unnecessary risk. A faulty chimney bring fire-producing sparks. The home is full of comforts Fire Protection By Royal Proclamation at Ottawa, Oct- ber 5th to 11th has been designated "Fire that in the 00 others have been seriously injured as result of fire. What the Proclamation annot show, of course, is the number of ves that could have been saved, the value E property that could have been protected, r promote the spread of fire. Apart from the obvious inspection of ubllc buildings-fire drill in schools, fac- own i l serves little purpose Faulty electric switches are best replaced, hey're worn out anyway and can be a fire can modern labour-saving devices and which in good condition are harmless. but worn out or faulty, can spell (in not too near a house of rcse, ' The deprcdation of a breeze QK1 ?oez&fI'&mm,3 . I (and board free, but there iformaiities about checking out. - Edmonton Journal. ,' lNSl'ICl'Rl'lW' ) Notes By 0 Toronto's Don Jail seems like he ideal hotel. Not. only are room! EYE 110' There is pleasure in saving. For-h :;a0Or&rMQQO&r0Os&s&9&h-Q0&0KQm0O? ' a small button in the back of ms atlall. But, assuming that. atom and hydrogen bombs and their even more lethal sucoesso have not blown it to bits before then, it. is safe to say that atomic power will be commonplace. It will be called upon to stimulate every- thing that man will do with the time at his disposal for play. And there will be plenty to t for, of course. there will be line or no work for anybody to do. Even the trout. fisherman will use some sort of atomic device to attract the big ones. An interesting question is: What will the historians of that period say about the fisherman of the 20th. century and his primitive methods? . . . I have been thinking about this situation a good deal since the 15th. when, reluctantly, I put my gear in metaphorical moth balls for another seven months. (Inci- dentally, the long sabbath seems to begin earlier and earlier as the years go by.) My guess is that the 2102 his- torians will say something like this: It is difficult. -for the present. day trout fisherman to visualize the life and manners of the spec- ies only it hundred and fifty years ago. Today he has only to press watch and almost instantly he is at. his favourite trout. stream for- ty or fifty miles away. Not. so in the year 1952. Believe it or not, it took him more than an hour to make a similar journey. He had to fool around with four wheel vehicles commonly called motor cars, sometimes automo- biles, which in our time can be seen only in museums. What E . The Way I. at the Edinburgh Festival. It was designed to fit. an oi-lgliial musi-1 cal score-a synphonic study three movements by Richard Ar- nell. The work is played by the London Symphony Oorcheslra, conducted by Edward Renton, and crude machines they were to be sure! Switches, gears. clutches, steering wiieels. gas tanks, and other gadgets which are now un- remembered by even the oldest inhabitants. Sometimes, indeed, these vehicles would not move at all without much coaxing on the part of the unfortunate 'drivers' as the men Or inundation of a dew 1. ll hate are those who like to readlthc film-Opus 65-draws on anal. or women who sat in them were called. Not. infrequently they stall- though just what it was nobody seems to know. The line was usually made 0, nylon which at. that time was much used for all sorts of pur. posesult has long ago gone out. or fashion. The lures were of every conceivable color and design and the more common ones were called files. These had no resemblance to any inatural fly (mogquito black-flies, gnats, etc., all now ex.' tinot) but the innocent; fisherman thought they did, and he would spend hours in throwing them on the -water in an effort. to fool the fish. The strange thing is tha( occasionally - not often - he was successful. On these rare occas- ions he would call his friends and neighbours together that they might rejoice with him and praise his wonderful skill and ingenu- lty. In this day and age such juvp. nlle antics sec-in pathetic but in those far off days, when science had only just begun its crude es. forts at enlightenineiit, it must have been great flln. Ill charity it. must. be remembered that man was only just emerging from the dark ages, and his idea of enter- tainment. was naturally childish and immature. It must. be remembered, too, that 20th. century man had to work. or at. least make a show or working, for as lnuoh as five or six hours a day. Some were known to put. in as much as eight houu. The purpose of all this work was to "make zi living", a phrase never heard nowadays when atomic force does everything. Naturally enough, these hard- pressed citizens of the 20th. cen- tury would do almost. anything to "get away from it. all", and they seemed to think that throwing so- cizlled files across a trout pond was a diversion. Let. us not laugh nt their innit. cence but rather build monuments to their fortitude, for trout. fish. ing in AD. 1952 was little less than martyrdom. A picture at present in the National Museum shows a civil servant from Char- lottctown, P. E. I. eaten alive by black-flies while in the being to other Provinces in search of employ- disaster through me. hhmm 1,5 mus May; l;oollc:r.!kT:o:)20:. ;:egg(l)ek.:ogykhetween a great. orchestra atied completely. when they am act. of trying one lure after an. ment. ill;-ire protection week" ls Om, week that Nor W to he the Dummy: of horrors, VA Eomemmg to behvjvggy Sh sgnheegvtiggirhciiiarixhs aw gvrglgimove it. was at an extremely slow other withollt the slightest re. spouse from the fish he sought im speed and the time wasted in go- , , diligently and at. such 3. iiorriblc l ling lo and fro was terrific accord- gzlanced at. with "a shudder and,on a new car.-Hamilton special- Some or the hottest and possibly most should be taken seriously. A couple of Nor climb the bars of ccstrlsy - f ' ' . . - . in insecuiityt l' 'lhei the t. t. f 'l,H M - temvg debate had to- do with the aiimmls hours 599'” by evely househmdi" "1 Check is Joys lrlisui-hit: Ci:ality'. treall Gii:esLte1.Ju 0 mm on ion imgtltli) Iansodi;i:nBslam.S1gEni1i5- 'll wk. ' t l tratlon of the public health programme. ing possible the hazards would he amph. . I ' h hhh , ---A momea out 1.” hizs yams? rglohg There the Government turned on its own repaid hr. 3 redhcuoh in me losses in canm hm h-hleillililllcklllsollt, it is fa faliacyhtohthinkh um a:d0f1'"h'3.p”J:,"f:":":SF:,i;fd":;,l';;';; mental work "The Primitive Twen- o1,'l9,,?:i5;'loT:g1i'3cc;1tl:ls . - . - ' r . - ro o - - . i ' ' --" - -v - :'.V Dllhllc servants of the medical profession. In ada. ,.-;,,,Q,,,,,.,”h, V I:a,.1::;u1m.me;'o,:p:ten?,:e Sm-01'mm;'mwith rgrcat. runwn,vs.. sidcshows, g:;:IeCS:g:1ivc'n1;'JEs,'p::;b:1;1gp:h::; trout ilsherinan was his well dc- what appeared to be an attempt to find g 1 Old Charlmleum," ylown affairs can by the simple ex- 31:; Sari: Ig:1:1d'F,"' 35' they are new, Admittedly, mt, Wlgpeld faculty for dpl'evnri;atioii h . V h , - , ediet I 1 1, m .h - i .V l A19. alr-T . it -1 , . . - an , n many cases. ownrlg t ly- scape-goats. The appalent attempt to shift IZDIIURIAL NUIE3 (A d P F 3 iy mrlcot3m:10lvcg:da(ci?rl;ci:a11Ehaaigs home own: know)”: me mC?mh:)ilio:iv:z(y1niEiibelst ant: 11512:; Ilgagxvgiiechtg mg. Exmm records Indicate that responsibility from the shoulders of the " ' "L1 ,0: 3 naiionis business accardinrv Ve"1e”” mi a.”1”"”' 3”” "me ”"”;r00m for relaxation and thought mm wmms tawny "5 ”""””V G v ' t t rivate individuals certainlv . l .. lto D. vague blueprint for state con: that an hm is H mm h,. rondlwhlch is lmrdly possible now when mmded 35 e”””””1 ” GXW” 0V9”1mC” 0 D 1 r A useful catalogue gives complete dc, iMPROH:.D TROTTING srocn ,,o,,,.Mo,,5e Jaw Thmshkmdv from Charlns Cross. the centre a man cm glide mm, Charlotte. "9551" the Short The blazer the 01' I110 Clly.RI1(11l93l'1i' all 110111"-S town to Toronto in it matter of Me n ma" mu” m1 me mm" failed to WV 011- tails of all Fri l bl' t' l r -- .- , , . . glish-language pu ica ions uwhh the pmpm, or W G h , ,,.,,,.e1 1,, C,.0,,,deh s,m,5. , Ohm . , highly esteemed he was bound to The election was followed with much in- now in print issued by Uhes-co since its in. in-nmeniih. to ,,,,,,o,., ,,.,,”,..,.”.2.. fig: mazlgolrulpihygicigalh :e:Lstssp;:1- we Journal. 1mlFn:re:il that, very few among us psi ilghoihghdlnhimiggdnhiwrs ly. . w . . l . - . r . . 101' . i 7 ,,,,u,, i' ' OH. mmst acloss Canaddl and 1lhl'le, If gas ception. Publications in Spanish. Italian nhlesescnlei-S;ari;s1'er1r:)i' Siigattfegelgixig. 1112 him are to he rorglven. Anoth- To huh dawn 3 mode," M m,,,,1.1-12,",,1211 ;l;f",,,f;?.fF';,?,,”f,l:;il,;;g,Q;; Some day the sociologlical rx- l?.0llCl'311.V Conceded mat mef Mhhlan 0V. and other languages are also listed, but no merllrthtls fi'1i9Y1”c”h” time takes a ;ga?o:tKO0r difhlzhfs saK':iEi,l)z1assi.01halxela:m0der" s""”'1'” 1'””””1'”5 1m””l1a"d mmquu '1" daubm but 1L W” fslmbaggllfgincihgubstthe mndinlicw . . h h 0 its m e ma- g. . g . .gi sari in tc res-ding of 1 i , h - , is (1 ll d t . 1 . ' ""89 (illl 1H ?ln.ment 11Ould IOQC g(.)me g gb 1 d9SCl1Pt10n5 319 g1V9n- nigh-styled carriage horses and pawl” mm cxpenslve Illnesses to tliirekiiidnnii:ntret1;p;;1::jpig,:lC.:tS5 gglianeo sitting" inmogo 0gli1a(;uspoltr'Il13:gd 2mh' Century mommy but 5” ii". gority in the last Legislatule (43 Li era S. o o o first-class i.rott.ers. We are. iii- gcck ?1d91i15' hlllld lV6Bl”y.-100kinil Jericho. There are hcmes around vehicle for hours at ii time. It g hf ghem bamedt Pr,Me559r '1' 593” la". or 93.00.. the - n . to (W115 11”" amicipamd SW11 a completoiof the Coronation procession next July 2 giant (i1(eneralh Withers 'Lexlngtou T, s(' i;:;i1:nlo::c::.1t:::o'i(ii:ev ltrhiftur slit)” hardly ever lived tn?(l:l'cm iilgfiops f:fctf,e”h:"',d”5,f',1fi"1E;.,ff9 m,””' . ; en m: y', a he bay colt. slred'by ' Ie younger set a, , ll -e , ” in d d v -. C 3 09 V Y. 3 VEW. ; tuI1:1oVer' M V . I t he1 mg partV,Sl3b0Ut 30.000 W111 be 3110tted to C0mm0n"ithat. renowned sire of trottcrs, tlnoonvelitioiial vvaymoi exgfcssilaig 9I0:.”Ya:rg:x:i Ki” ”t1;n:1' they wmlldl 1 n re Mmsu - o hl”w""- 15dI”9" Ee”9"11Y 1191” M ler aci air ias a ' I . , , ,. - v . iAl t'. tAl t', - n Cir graves. - snce. accor h t h d. d fretm amel ' "ind in a public statement W.eam1 Coumllesv Of W1l1C1l Canadas 511319 mnTko.nhaS slrzlcllmiiiorgetltgtgrsJill igefuilicigzz piiiiiyagi-elf? ictutvtf T”"””” 51”" mid 51311 T?” Pml" ”51l9l'mt1n'5 8031' was as are nvalla1lzJle.o 233;. e ea g 5. c " - W1" be about 5,000 seats, Already SGVGF31 the 2.30 01855 Ulan any 0'-llel” Silld year-oldv girl excused her Ihree- m- timely 21!. as crude as his automo- man, especially that part of the has a””0””C9d that now that the Contest thousand applications have been received bv 1l11V1"3h0l”hthatbcver1livedd for the year-old sister for ssing her Circus l-lawns hehzml the iron 0; eare,:drre?.,,,t,"C1f 13”;f,'s "sf,f,:f;5”: :,1;i:,1lf5f”1l” "km W iilsgi "5 Q": . , , . ., .d to ether in 1 ' me e as een n stu. In his 1 I -1k 1 . - C t h. . 1 I ' , 01”. BUY Eppreca e mena is ovci we can all go hf01iVdl g . h the SeC,.e,a,.y of State or Chhhdd. mm hows me mood or Hwmmeh lzsxiziiis sgnmti: helltfioikngeli Crlilaciilizigd lifinr I'iIll1i;iEl'l"li,n alie thing. length of wood. usually bamboo, in vigor. we may yet have to on what we shall hope will prove the unintei- . a a tonian. Mcmbrine Chief, Clay Pilot hemh. hm” wowed ,, V lshck and k.” h" 1' 1,1 1 ph ”l”?-9 590110"-h '1 l”N?1-,l1nf- and back to the old fashioned Dr. ruptcd march of progress in our Province." Th 1 t. f M A W hhen G udet Rid 1V,1:”'33,” fg"””e5 0i ”'”"”"-i- Kitchener-lvotegrloo n:Eorcl1c1- whereas .32? iirgc tzlilcdptciigsesiiaylizld various mm M mm. T" m1 nwd (or the '"'sw"' h y es . , e cec ion 0 1'. . a a mug e est. channels and ' ' 3 , This exemphfles the true splnt of demo. to be 1'l3t10n31 p1"351dent of the Association iJoaliiei?:lat.lib1naTiSii:cll11,t L1f(f”,),”g1l1,l,1'f,d A unique docum:ni.arv film on tx?:Eitllu(1iih(l)11:1i1:l1gthqoabrgkttoctiigurgraiizs - . . . co ,wic wl . - s - " C1"r1C.Vv and 0531131151195 3 Common mound of K-msmenvs clubs of Canada. and his fel, ah hwhhlahle hcquismoh ,0 m: an industrial subject. will be shown ly ideological with n grotesquely FWWCTWTT" iTi"m painted nose and nn inflated sau- ' equal voting rights with men. That Greece on which victors and vanquished can work! together constructively. 1 Greek Women To Vote Greece this year passed a law granting: lull political rights to women, according to a recent report by U. N. Secretary-General Trygve Lie, thus bringing to 57 the num- lier of countries in which women have should be so late recognizing women as full citizens will come as no surprise to the great numbers of mode1'ns who take H101? ideas about the classical Greeks from re- ferences and lack of references in Greek literature and from the tradition that Greek society was almost wholly mascu- line; that Greek women lived in an almost Oriental seclusion. That conception. however. has been effectively challenged by Professor H. D '1”. Kitto in "The Greeks", published by tho Penguin Books last. year. Professor Kitto admits that women were not full citizens in ancient times. They did not vote in the Assembly, much less hold office, for the reason that they could not be expected to match or row and fight in the campaigns decided upon by the Assembly. Other groups were without the franchise for the same reason. For the rest, however, they seem to have occupied a position of some dignity. They were educated in the household arts, as boys were educated for war and public life. Attic vases and sculptured tombstones portray domestic scenes indicating that the wife held an honoured place in. Attic so- ciefy. Euripides, many of whose strongest characters are women, puts this into. the mouth of a. prosecutor: "Gentlemen, if you acquit. this woman, what will you say to your wives and daughters when you go home? They will ask you where you have been. You will say, 'In the courts'. They low Charlottetown officers being the otherl national officers is matter of congratula- tion both for the new officers and for the organization. . 0 IA 0 Bazaar is ' I The Charlottetown liospital having its grand opening at the Forum. Coronation Seals this evening with several attractive fea- tures, including a concert by the 17th; Reece Band. All our citizens enjoy enter-i tainment of this kind, particularly when' associated with such a worthy cause. 0 O I William Wilkie Collins, English novelist,' died this date 1889. Under the inspiration! of youthful years in Italy he wrote "An-. tonina”, his earliest novel and was permit-i ted to give up the tea business and study law. A lifelong friend of Dickens, many of his works were first published in Dickensl periodical "Household Words". One of his' inimitable characters is Count Fosco inl "The Woman in White." I an o 9 , The commercial uses of Irish moss are steadily increasing. This product should be made the foundation of local industries rather than being merely shipped in its raw, state, after being merely cl'e”an'ediarid'dried; " French dressing for salads which does not require shaking before use and chocolate milk which remains a perfect mixture are only two of a multitude of products for which the moss can be used. 0 O 0 Rev. Canon Malone's departure from the Province this week is indeed a matter of regret, not only to his long-time parishion- ers at St. Peter's Cathedral but to all our citizens. Fortunately, however, his new duties as lecturer and chaplain at King's College will enable him to revisit us fre- 1a.gencles are sitting back and wait- horse breeders of this Province. will arrive here about the first of May next. General Withers. from whom he was purchased, is one of the most. successful breeders of trotters in the United States.” -The Examiner, Marsh 3, 1881. Fantastic Prices For (London observer) l Fantastic prices are l'8lll': 'l0-;- manded for seats in privately own-i ed premises with windows over- looking next year's Coronation- route in London. Generally speaking. the figures are now so high that reputable ing for prices to stabilize at a somewhat. more rational level. But the demand for any kind of accommodation is reported to be overwhelming. One of the biggest ticket agencies says that so many applications have come in, from all over the world, that even if prices were more scrllble could not all be satisfied. Another agency reports that at the time of the late King's funer- al, they hired premises overlook- ing the route, and accommodating I60 people, for 8,000 pounds. The owners of the property say that. they l'I.ooo pounds and are standing out for more. 0 O "For a single seat," an agency official said, 50 or 60 pounds seems at. the moment-to be nothing out of the way and there are people willing to pay this price. I've al- ready sold an ilcloeia to an Amer- ican at 50 pounds a seat. and he would have taken 5 lot. more if we had had them." A few days ago an applicant for a family batch of seats con- sulted one of the smaller agencies and was told prices would prob- Ibly be from five gulneaa to C? guineas I seat. The applicant. ca - led on the agency yesterday and was told that all seats would be at the top price or over and that in any event new appliodnia would have very little chance as there quently. All will join in wishing for his successor at St. Peter's, Rev. Mr. Moffatt, the some measure of success which has attended, in such an outstanding degree, Canon Malone's incumbcncy. . wag already a waiting list of be- tween 30.000 and 40.000 on the Al- ency's books. A shop on'i.iio route in offering unis on their first (four at 30 gulneu each. A window in Pic- said to have been offered through they have already been offered! an agency for 600 pounds. . . . In some instances, owners of window space have declined to commit. themselves to a price, but have called the agencies in and asked what. the accommodation is worth-a question to which no ag- cncy is, for the moment, willing to offer a positive answer. A few stands are being erected hy private enterprise on bombed sites and privately-owned open spaces. but these are limited. Al. the last Coronation, in 1967 seats on these stands were sold at. five guineas s. time. For the coming Coronation the price will probab- ly be double, and agencies feel that this could be justified by the in- creased charge for the land and the higher cost of building stands. The established agencies in London have met. it. is understood, to consider the situation and have evolved a policy of prudent. inac- sage sl-ziii.-Hamilton Spectator. A coat of arms. I memorial of Tudor England, has recently been brought into fresh prominence by cleaning during during the rou- tine nialntenancc of Windsor Castle. The coat of arms is em- bedded in the wall of the first floor window of the tower occu- pied by the Governor of the Milli- tnrv Knighhs. Originally called the belfry lower, this has now, by command of the Queen, been re- named the Mary Tudor tower. The achievement shows the combined coats of arms of Mary Tudor and of Philip ll of Spain, who were marrlcd in I554.-London Times. 1&0 We Age-Old s WV it i tom -to yo.-sgco-m-.,.g 0) tiviiy. But the fear that ”gei-rlch- quick" people may organize deals outside the normal agency chan- nels is said to be causing the ag- encies "smite discomfo1'i.." PERIL On the -on. on land. In the ing aircraft, of automobiles. in why we empio nanclailyi Ice, and welcome your man ' No obligation. Insurance Offices: Cl-lAIll.0'l'l'E'l'0WN CYRUS A. B. BIIAW-Dlltrlcl cauilly; with room for alt people, is In our modern life we are lurronndetl hy Perils. anti that the system of insurance to protect us fi- Wo are In I position to provide a complete innnrancn serv- .HYNBMAii 8: 00. LTD. ALLISON P. McLEAN-District Manager all Iummcraldol Anni: throughout the Previous Now unto tho Ring cit-rnai, im- lmortal. lnvlsllrlc. the only wise God. he honour and glory for ever and ever. Amen. lift peril of fire. lightning. fall- of accident. of sickness. irleu for Idvlco and information. ,sineo ms - IUMMEBSIDI a MONTAOUI Manager at Montague . .x. J. CS. Taylor Gaudef & Huszard GILBERT A. oaunnr. B.A., l'.r..u Barristers and Solicitor- Monoy to Loan t Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. Muilleson. Peaks 8r . Nicholson A. W. MATHESON. 11.0. A. H. PEAKE, B.A., Li..B. JOHN P. NICHOLSON, LLB. Barristers, Etc. Collections - Money To Loan 00 Great George Street Charlottetown OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Stu. Office Phone 1050-House 1013 Frederic A. Large. 0.6. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P. E. I. loans on City and Farm Properties Tilison M. Giliis. i.L.sT IABIISTEB. SOLICITOB. Eh. A. Wultlien Gander. LLB. BA BIHSTER, SOLICITOR, Etc. Phillips Juiilllng Ill Grafton Street Money to loan Collection Bell. Mufhieson 1& Foster Barristers. Solicitors, Etc. B. R. BELL. 12.0. D. L. MATHIESON, LL.B.. Q.C. G. R. FOSTER. LLB. Loans on City and Farm Properties c l.'i0 mcitmond Street Charlottetown. P.l'.'.i. MacPhee & Trainer .II. F. MlIcPllEE. B.A.. Q.(). E. SOMEBLED TBAINOE. I).A. Barristers. Etc. Palmer & Huslom A. J. HASLAM. B.A.. LLB. Banister, Etc. Bank of Nova Scotti: Chambers Charlottetown. P. Ill. 1. ' M'JNEY T0 LOAN Byron JTGrunl. 0.5; OPTOMETBIST 180 llicllmond St. - Charlottetown lgyxhhg 5"”. phon. us Phone 1(- - -1 noun & J. A. Curruthors. R.O. I Dr. A. L. Muciucc orrosmnls-r DENTIST . Dental X-Bay 128 Kent Street Phone 3572 GLORIA IUILDING (Next to Simpson's Agency)p 110 Grafton It. Phone 291 CIIAICTEIEDI 148 Great (horn Phones 1000 - nmooimn w. MANNING. c.A. McDONALD. CIIAITIIID Montreal, Quebec. Ottawa. Cori-to llitlg. Charlottetown. Kirkland lake, lloncum llamllhn. plmoniion, i-i. it.DOANE1& comvanvt Accdnnrarrrs st.. charlotuumn im - no: 1 nm e. Mu:-mcnsou. 17-A- otlier office: at Halifax. Moneton. st. Jobnts, Amlioru. Dartmouth: . Kntvtlio. Liverpool, New Glasgow and Truro. CIIIIRIE Ir CO. ACCOUNTANT! I-unto. Saint John. lfm-brooks. Vaooonwfv Citarlucutovzlr nu