f- PAGE roux" -rm; GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN ,. V MARCH 2. T H E G U A R D I A N N i Possible Unforeseen Developments Authorised as Second Class Mall Post Office Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. scheme was based on two assumptions: That some Canadian families in the lower income groups were unable to provide ade- quate maintenance for their children in the necessities of life; that payment ofythese , ' i '1. Notes. By The Waxy. It is an error to aayltbat war is becoming more brutallzed. Would A .'J(ismu re THIS--'Tl-IE uavvjs pie waiting around who grew before "9 i:- "mi N” 5"'""” ”"'"- ""' 't- ”""""- allowances would 185.59" the d9'"a"d or ,,5NL'5TlN5 WOMEN AS ' you rather be atomized in a Iplit tested thlilig ovodguilneiilclillaieflimmd Associate Editor. Frank walker. wage increases. As it was considered im- coyq”u'1'cA1-oRs"I' l second or hacked up with a battle treal Gazette. t ' "ii . . . d I C1ncuLA'11oN possible to draw a strict line between those . I V 3;: sf” ';:m'1f:;x:u':tE, 19: ”Ii;i:d:: Among use minor Iillhytaeg life in Canada is the receipt of 0: letter in an envelope stunned "Four Cents Postage Dug" g or perhaps it is two or ten, whatever the amount. it is a definite in-i. tant. Why the recipient should be required to pay ooubia for the carelessness of the sender is be- yond understanding. Perhaps it 1. Just the Post office Depas-tmemv, -way of saying that it takes no rs- sponsiblllty, that it is easier for it to forward the letter and Lfugt that the natural curiosity of the ivceiver will make him pay up,-. Edmonton Journal. on January 16. The. Citizen drew attention editorially to the case or a. mentally ill resident of Hull who had been lodged in jail for weeks "CW"! PI'iIm'E'iWI"d Wind '1" "N d""' families that needed pensions and those 1:-ice pm; that did not, they were granted to every- body. Those who do not need but receive them pay the cost of their own allowances and contribute, through taxes, to those of their poorer neighbors. The Government apparently had no difficulty in persuading Encouraging evidence of Maritime Liiiiiyipalliament mat it would be unwlse fl' in pressing the needs of this section 0f;nancially and.dangcro.us to the future of Canada upon the attention of parnameml the whole social security system to under- and the Government: is afforded in theltake at this'time an upward revision of Budget debate now in progress at Ottawa-t(?llllCll'el'l's allowances. Hence the over- Mr. Dan Riley, Liberal tiiieinber for Shlwhel ming vote of the House of Commons f John-Albert, who spoke on Friday, follow- SOME oouesres. WITH A New Twist To 'rHA'r cu) 'i'Ei.wwti, TELEPHONE, mo--r A four-pound British "Corona- tion" cake, for the export trade, will cost 35.50 and keep for 10 years. The life expectancy, we sup- pose, wlllbe considerably less if there's a six-year-old boy in the house. -.- Windsor Star. , "The strongest memory is weaker than , the weakest ink". gCIlARLOT'l'ETOWN . Maritime illiiectives BIONDAY, MARCH 2, I953 A professor of dairy husbandry declares a good mill: producer must like a cow to succeed - if he doesn't she will detect it and re- fuse to co-operate. That shoul surprise many a farmer who didn' know she cared. - Fort. William Times-Journal. Mlontreal printing plant em- ploye has been sentenced to one 195 i. r i. lio adjourn the debate on the C.C.F. mo- cd other Maritime representatives in: strongly urging the need for an investiga-l tion of the power possibilities in these Pro- vinces. Mr. Riley referred particularly to. the proposed Passamaquoddy tidal project, which if feasible would be of tremendous, advantage in developing Maritime indus-I try. The new mineral and oil discoveries in: New Brunswick should also be given moral 38 hallming 01' killing Hell Malesiy. 19V)'-g X ing war against Canada, trying to over-, throw government by force, and assistingf 4 whom Canadian forces are engaged in hos-i attention. If developed on a large scale, these potential resources would be a great asset not only to our sister Province, but, to the Maritimes as a whole, and Prince Edward Island would undoubtedly benefit in greater marketing opportunities at our, door. Aiiothcr point, raised by Mr. Riley was: with rcspeci. to the trade mission recently headed by Rt. Hon. Mr. Howe to Latin America. Mr. Howe, Mr. Riley argued. should send another delegation to these- countries, this time composed of Maritime! business men, as it is this part of Canada which is most particularly concerned. This might mean the beginning of a new era for ilic Maritimes which are at present lagging out of step with the booms in other parts of Canada. The time seems fortunately to have gone by when Government supporters in Far- liament contented themselves with merely indorsing Government policies, and Op- position speakers with belabouring the ad- ministration along party lines. Our Mari- time members have more important inter- csts in common than the issues which divide them, and it is only by coordinating their efforts that they will obtain results. If Canada, as we believe, is on the eve of great expansion and development as a na- tion, the Maritimes must be placed in a position to play a far more important part, industrially and otherwise, than they have done since Confederation. The calibre of our members of Parliament should be judged by their zeal and ability in pro- moting this objective; even to the point forgetting party differences when neces- sary. children's Allowances Some interesting figures were given in Parliament the other day by Hon. Paul Martin, Minister of National Health and Welfare, in reply to a CCF motion "to in- crease children's allowances to the extent necessary to compensate for the increase in the cost of living since the Act was first. enacted". In the Government's judgment the taxpayers cannot afford this added bur- den so long as they are carrying the pre- sent heavy weight of defence and other ex- penditures. In 'the fiscal year beginning April 1 children's allowances will cost the taxpay- ers S347 millions. At the present rate of population growth that cost. will rise by something between 5812 and SE15 millions a year from now on. In a decade or so, that is to say, the total cost will increase by nearly fifty per cent. Already, calculating our. population at 15,000,000, the single item of children's allowances costs every man, woman and child in the nation, on average, about S23 dollars a year or near- ly a hundred dollars for a family of four. But this, as Mr. Martin observed, is only the beginning of the social services render- ed by the Canadian state at its Federal, provincial and municipal levels. To the cost of children's allowances must be added an item of 5300 millions for universal old age , pensions. Altogether Mr. Martin calculates that the three divisions of government will spend 51.3 billions in the present year on soclarsecurlty. Of that the Federal Gov- emment will spendgabout :51 billion; the pg-gvlnces S255 millions; and the municipal- mes 583 millions. All this, of course, in addition to every form of non-governmental chatty. To put the matter in perspective. the Minister estimated that if the United States were to adopt the Canadian system the cost would be 33.5 billions it year. He pointed out that by the time the average . reaches 16 years of age and ” 5) "eligible for an allowance he 331,188 from the state. silent children's allowances lion, which is tantamount to defeating it outright. Defining Treason As the result of amendment by the Sen- ate, the revised Criminal Code now before --m..,.... a parliamentary committee defines treason an cneiny "or any armed forces against tilities." Coiispiring to do any of these things, or manifesting an intention to do them, is treasonable. The wording of this section covers cases like ilie United Nations police action in Korea, which is not formally a war. L In the original draft, conspiracy ”likely I to be prejudicial to the safety or intekzsis 'of Canada" was treasoiiable. The Senate wisely eliminated "likely" and "interests". as being terms that leave too much room (for interpretation, and it related the of- lfeiice specifically to treason as defined. L But the Ottawa Citizen points out that in a similar context the Senate left the ,word "likely" in Section 50 (1) (C). which deals 'with conspiring with an agent of an- ,0lhcr state to communicate information or do an act prejudicial to Canada's safely. The'olher state need not be' legally an enemy; the illegal information could be whatever the authorities might choose to say it: is; the burden of proof is placed on the accused, and the penalty is imprison- ment for 14 years. This section seems to be too sweeping and ill-defined. Hceding criticism, the Senate put inter- ference with members of the civilian R. C. M. P. in a separate category from offences in relation to the armed forces. In Sec- tioii 62 on seditious offences, however, it fell in with the Government's contention that the penalty, already raised from two to seven years in 1951, should now be doubled. EDITORIAL NO TES Pope Pius XII waslborn this date 1876 Good farmers and good citizens, the new Canadians from the Netherlands fit in very well in our Island way of life. Probably this Province is more like their native land than any other part of Canada. 0 O O The more than ten per cent drop in the number of nurses on the Community Nursing Registry in Charlottetown is to be deplored. The Registry and its members render vital service and steps should be taken to keep up the number of available nurses. 0 O O The bill to reviselspelling in United Kingdom schools will have a good deal of sympathy at least amongst the rising gen- eration. It might, however, lead to com- plications rather than. otherwise. The pro- posal to spell one as "two", for example, should logically be followed by writing only as ”wunly”, with pronunciation to suit. West Germany's decision to pay off debts of the German Reich will certainly increase the prestige of the German peo- ple and be welcome news to holders of securities, particularly in the United States. The effect on the world trade picture, how- ever, may not be so welcome. The only means by which payment can be made is in goods and that means that West Ger- many must export some 553,270,000 worth more than needed for current financing. 0 Horace Walpole, fourth Earl of Oxford, English author and letter-writer, died this date 1797. He was for many years a Mem- ber of Parliament but it is as an author that he is famous. His polished and epi- grammatic correspondence is of the great- est importance to students of the life and times of the middle eighteenth century. He published 'a number of volumes of memoirs and "Castle of Otranto” whlchiesiabllshed the vogue of the terror novel. xi O 4 peat LIFE Shoulld we ask for days without pain? We, who eat the grain Thai. ripened to gold in the sun But. only because of the rain. food from the We, who see as spring melts the snow The green lawns gallantly grow, While the grass uncut by the blade on the wayside lies limpid and low. Should we strife When this is the secret of life: The fruit on the tree that is pruned Grows fairer because of the knife. -Phyllis Catlierine Wright. in Canadian Poetry Magazine. ask for days without Old Charlottetown (And r. a. I. ) NAVAL ENTERTAINMENT "On Wednesday 'evenlng "Hi. the gallant Commander of H.M.S. Crocodile, Capt. Milne, entertain- ed Ilia Excellency and family, to- gether with I. large party of the principal inhabitants of Charlotte- town and its vicinity. The enter- lainment. consisted of a ball and supper, and was conducted upon a scale of splendour and mag- nificence never before surpassed in this community. "When the company had reach- ed the ship's side, in boats pre- pared for the purpose, they were received by Capt. Milne and his officer with that attention and urbanily which so truly char- acterizes the officers of Her Majesty's Navy. A lofty awning covered the whole of the ship's deck, from atom to stem, the after part of which, as far as the mulnmasl, was appropriated for the purpose of A card room, find for refreshments, and was filled up in the shape of an Eastern tent, decorated with the flags of all nations. "After the company had as- semblcd a curtain was drawn up. and exhibited to the astonished spectators A spacious ball room, extending from the mnlnmnst lo the forcmast, and completely floored over for the convenience of the dancers. This room was brilliantly lighted up; -the chan- dellers were composed of hay- onets, ingeniously and tastefully grouped, while the sides and roof were profusely ornamented with flags and flowers, arranged in a variety of appropriate devices. "The dance continued with much spirit until one o'clock, when supper was announced. The company were then escorted to the miiin deck, where they seated themselves at A table extending the whole length of the deck, and spread with every delicacy which could be procured. A variety of complimentary toasts were pro- posed and replied to during the supper, at the conclusion of which dancing was resumed, and did not cease until the early beams of morning warned the lingering guests to retire-all of whomvde- parted, equally Impressed" with the generous hospitality of Capt. Milne and the unwearled exertions of his officers to promote the en- joyment of the evening." -Colonial J-lerald. Aug. 7. 1841. (The officers of the "Crocodile", along with those of H. S. Rlngdove, also in port at this time, were later entertained at a civic ball and supper given in the vgcsnt rooms of the Central Aca- demy. 'Ttie nllant guests.” says ylt Herald, "were honoured with he brightest galaxy of beauty which Charlottetown ever present- ed on any elmllar occaaion."). Jupiter. the largest planet, has a volume more than 1.000 times that of earth but only one-quarter of major planets. set fellow, somewhat about when recently I had the unusual iind exciting experience of present- ing the prizes at two girls" schools, the Headmietress remsirked on each occasion that ”All the nice girls love a sailor", and the roar of ap- plause lnft me wondering for how long fill the iiicc. girls really loved a sailor. and how long they would coiitiiiue in do so. The nice girls cannot have loved a sailor in the golden age d our naval supremacy; a large propor- tion of the crews of the wooden walls were pressed men and the rough, hard-bitten permanent rat- ings were only loved so long as their prize--money lasted, and then certainly not by the nice girls. iiudged by the descriptions by contemporaries of the sailor at the beklnnirig of the last cenliury, he was not the man to flutter the: hearts of the nice girls at all. This is a typical poriait . . . "He is continually furnishing subject for ' jest and anecdote. Reader. conceive a short thick- the height of five feet seven inches. with an habitual sloop, R black liandkeruhief tied loosely round his brawn-y neck. his legs thrust into trousers of coarse canvas. a glazed hat shading his weatlier-beaten face, and a pig-liail of a truly re- noeci-nble length sticking out over the collar of his jacket of true blue. This is your real Jack Tar." D 0 t He was a favorite subject for the carioaturist. I remember one drow- ing of a sailor mounting a horse to face the tall. and to the ostlei-ls remonstrances replying, "How t!he- do you know which way I am go- ing?'; and another of the skipper of R boat under sail. who. when asked by the anxious passengers where they were, replied, "Show me the Old Head of Icinsaie and I'll tell you." The sailor's illiteracy and long periods out of touch with civilized life combined to mould him into a different pattern to the "landlub- bars". A sailor who read :1 paper was a freak. who incurred the con- tempt of his shipmates "There never was gatiheir'd toge- ther such a beggarly bunch of prot- ln' pollvtlshins. There was the can- tain o' the maintop as took in the Times as regular, ay, as he took his daily allowance. Let the ship go where she would, the newspaper reg'l-arlv followed the feller-intend of lookiin' after his top, an' skulk- ln' below pouring over papers. or, as was mostly his favorite tashun. readin' out loud to a large. lazy set of haddock-mouth'd listeners the whole 0' the parliament-palaver as was oi-am.m'd chock ol block in ev- ery ooluimn 0' the Times." . . It must have .been during ifha latter part of the century that the sailor became an obiect of interest to the nice girls. With the tighten- ing up of the uniform regulations. more wasihlmz water. and more space, the blvuejacket began "to take. more pride in his aplpeai-ance, and when in his No. I dress "frock". with its aold badges, tucked into cloth bellebottomed trousers he completely outshone dther men. and nice girls were as proud as peacocks when walking arm-in-arm with these sun-tanned Adoniiies. The Jack Tar stlu spent much of his service on foreim stations and was still a romantic creature who had seen "the diunken roll- ers comb and the shooting seas ride by" and had been where "the nutmeg: snide the little wind llhlft baffles off the land". but did not now return 'from abroad with a p t, shells and native vs ameir t were of no interest to a nice girl: he brought had: something to make her an sparkle. 0 0 VI Han time to time reformers. who eee erveryiihinc in terms of blue-prints. eugcutn substituting what oh) Navy calls "fore and aft rig" for the biue,ia&ot's l , and wide trousers on the grounds that it is more suitable for men M13” work n::l:i,riyea.m'l'ltair wish is pa until! 0 into man- har of artisan The Sailoris Popularity Admiral Sir William James, G.('.,B., in The Navy (London), but the seamen, the liaiidy-men, Wil-l always be needed for the anch- ors. boots, ropes and rigging untii man ceases lo go to sea in ships. The,greatcst threat to the pub. lics affection and iidmiration for the bluejacket comes from nnotiher type of reformer who prefers 10 see the men of the Armed Forces in! "civvles" when they are not on du ty, SDOWMZC room in a man-of-war for 8 duplucate wardrobe for every mu. or. for not only is the bluejacket in his picturesque uniform one of our best ambassadors when he visits ll. rural?" D011. but when on leave in 1'15 Village or inland towii he is R symbol of our power to guard our sea-borne imports, ivlilllqut which We canxmly live for three weeks. 0 C I So we must earnesil-y hope that the day is for distant when the nice girls will no longer proclaim their love for a for. lllOll5;ill I prophesy that he will never be free for long from the attention of W056. Who. in the name of pro- gress, would strip him at the ad. vantage he holds over otllier men. It is ndt, however, only his uni- form and romantic halo that evoke the admiiration of the nice ginis: hhere is something else peculiar to an island people. who have become a great nation because 'their fore- bears iidventiuired to sea in frail craft to discover what lay beyond the horizon. I recently attended A village eon- cefrt. The first turns were received. with mild applause. but when four girls, dressed as sailors, oame on nnd began to sing sen shanties the audience sprang to life and soon the rafters were ringing with the songs that were first heard when anchors were being weighed and tonsaiis hoisted. There were some old women in the front row who had been quiet- ly knitting during the previous turns. Now their needles were mov- ing faster and faster and faster and they were swaying in their chnli-s. They were splicing ropes and rolling down to Rio. Nice Girls! ybif f-'-V35. Gl)s?2'-G.?r&tE0'iCO2 The Age-Old Story I Iu(v"?-i3o-Q.(?0(i)0haQceC0sQr-rv- Pralso yr the Loni. Bliiseeil is the man that feareth the Loril, that dclighicth greatly in his cum- mandments . . . Surely he shall not be moved for ever: the righteous shall be In everlasting remembrance. Evita On A Stamp (Philadelphia Inquirer) If you have had mavll from Ar- gentina lately. you probably notic- ed that the stamps bore the pot- trait of Evita Peron. You aha may have noticed that these stamps were cancelled Very carefully, at tfhe bottom, so no ink toudhed her f.lCf'. This is the result of orders from Dictator Peron. He told the post office that under no circum- stances must a cancellation mar Evfta's picture. Oddly enough this is nothing new. Nearly ioo Yeulrago, "King Bombs". f0l'mnlW known as Ferd- inand II of Two sicilies, had stamne lmued bearing his portrait. He. 190. save enter: that no lean- cellatiion was to touch his face, and so ii special framelitte cancellation was made which marked only the eaves of these steinpa. 3? eon . the portrait of Qu e VlOlDflI,hl2i?!i the days or the first; poiwage stamp whaokri on. was rexularlv W"-i1'he1v.v canoellers of- ten obliterating her features. Nei- ther Victoria nor her successors on the Brltlrdi tahwne ever seemed to mind. - But in Argentina -- as in Blcilv-. ihe'poet-man ind betas look twicel The Channel Ialanm off the French coast are not bound by ,snd artldcers new needed tend the maze of mech- anical liances in a men-of-war. sets of the British Parliament un- less named qaeciiieally. . month in jail for theft of the Cur- rie Report. The Opposition should see that he doesn't lack for com- pany on vlsltois' day. - Windsor Star. All sorts of advice is given these days about how to retain one's youthful strength and energy. Such advice would be wasted on Aubrey Davidson. of Thedford. He knows the answers. Just to prove it he led. the home team to victory in a hockey game, playing two full periods as cen-ire himself. And he's 62. Maybe the experts should nail him how he does it! -London Free Presg Turkey is jacking up customs on U. S. imports from 12 per cent to 100 per cent in retaliation for a higher U. S. protective tariff on Turkish figs. The independent newspaper Yevnl sabah said the in- creased customs would remain in effect until the United States eas- es the 30 per cent tariff on figs Jacking up the tariff is a game at which two can play iilid unfortun- ately it can ruffle friendly rela- tions. A Kitchener-Waterloo Rec- ord. Even for the irreliglous, the ag- nostic and the backsllder, the set- ting aside of one day in seven when routine jobs are abandoned has iindenlsblc mci-it. We think that the world's workers are eii- titled to a day of rest, and we should not like to see Sunday be- How fortunate that there is not come like any other day. But we have never been able to infer from the principles of Christianity that Sunday ought to be a day when impenetrable gloom should des- cend by statute upon the entire hu- man race. -Calgary Herald. In grandmother's day. when a child swallowed something not considered wholly nutritious, she used to say, "well, every child has to have his peck of dirt." Today, the tendency would be to put in an emergency call for the stomach pump. Tod-ay's attitude is obvious- ly much the safer. and may mean the difference between life and death. Yet, strangely enough, there because no other accontnadatlon was available. Soon afterward, he was admitted to a. Montreal hos- pital. But according to the Wei. fare Bureau in Hull. this case was not unique. Mayor Hem-l Gauth. ier states that Hull needs a home for the aged as well as a mental hospital to serve the region. The delegation he will soon lead to Quebec City will probably have some pretty strong arguments for action.-Ottawa Citizen. American women wore 10.000 tons of steel wire inlihelr hair last year in the form of hair pins and bobby pins. the American Iron and Steel Institute reports. when you consider that the average hair pin weighs less than 1-100th of an ounce (and a hobby pin slightly more) l0,000 tons of them amounts to ii lot of hair pins. So far, no brash male has come forth to chai- lengc the use to which these lo.- 000 tons of essential steel have been put. And if he values his own litr- sute adornment, he'd better nnt either. - Detroit Free Press. Books Received ARTHRITXS AND RHEUMA'I'Is-M -A new manual descriptive of the more common form of arthrltil and rheumatism has been publish- ed by David E. Rodger. M.D.. M.l't. C.P. (L); FR.C.P. (Cl. Physician. Medical Arts Clinic, Regina, and Gwyneth M. Miller, M.CS.P., C.P. A.. Physiotherapist, Saskatchewan Division. Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society. Methods of treatment of these conditions, which can be understood and car- ried out by the patient in the home, tire given and should serve as a guide and reference on all prob- lems of these diseases that may arise between visits of the family physician or when medical guid- ance is not available. The treat- ment outlined is not an overnight cure, rather offers the patient the best chance known today of pre- venting and overcoming the dia- abllitles of the disease. It is avail. able through Treatment Publica- tions Lim-ited, Box 214, Regina are some remarkably healthy peo- Saakatehcwiin. at s2.'l5. - PROFESSIONAL CARDS Palmer & Huslcim A. J. HASLAM. B.A.. LLB. Barrister, Etc. Bank of Nova Scotla Chambers Charlottetown, P. E. l. MONEY TO LOAN -A.-Wulthen Gvoiidet. LLB. BAERISTER. SOLICITOB. Etc. Phillips siiilillng lll Grafton street Money to Loan Collection .I. S. Taylor OPTODIETBIST I-lycs Examined, Glasaes Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Sta. Office Phone law-House I013 MocPiiee & Trainer II. F. Macl'HEE. B.A.. Q.C. F. SOMEIILED TRAINOII, B.A. bnrrlatere, Eve. Gciudet & Huszord GILBEIIT A. GAUDET. B.A-. LLB Bsrrlaiera and solicitors ' Money to Loan Canadian Bank of Comma .... Bldg. Mcitlieson. Peoiie 8: J. Ji. McGuigon BARIHSTEB. SOLICITOB. Eta. NOTARY, Eta. Currie Building M. Alban Former. O.C. - B.A..- LLB. Barrister and Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Donn Frederic A. Large. QC. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Iloysl Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P. E. I. leans on City and Firm Properties Clins.-R. Manuals 3 A. naaaisrimf soucrron. NOTARY. Etc. Eastern Trust Building CllA3f.0'l"rETOWN Phone 1111 Dr. K. A. Mociocliern DENTIST Dental X-ray Above, Charlottetown Clinlo l us Great George ' RANDOLPH W. ERMA I'. lilacl'llEISON. C,A. Phones 2000 - 144 other offices at Halifax. Ilonclon. It. lotan'e. Amherst. llentvtllo. uvernool. New Glasgow and Truro. Nighohgn :02 Queen St. Phone 641 A. W. DIATHESON. Q.C- a ii. rasnn. n.a.. LLB. Dr. A. l.. Moclaooc soim r. NICHOLSON. LLB. I-knai:'r;s:'" Q. a c it tl mm'"iii" atmlro nun m'”3ll'l '""”"m ” 9” 10,1? G:.m;"sim. no drama at. riiono m :: -'-”'”" J. A, Corrutiiers. R.O. hllv M5"'l”'"' & orronmraisr F0590! its Kent Street ' Phone 281! n.,,mM.,' gououon, 34., ;.E' - G gt. Fgsggknngg Allison M. Glllls. Ll.. . mm on C", W, ,,,,,,, siiimisran. BOLICITOB. Eta. nr,.,,.,.:..sm" . I50 lam no aiemanghsoiao-gnariomnm . ohmgmgam ,, IL ....m....m....mm.... 4T Dr W R Carson Byron J. Grant. 0.0. -cm;o"'mm, 0I'TOMl:'l'ltlS'l' Palmer Graduate in in-nt Street Phone an ouaamrrnrown (Opposite Revere Hotel) Phone I012 201 Prince 5': H. R. DOANE It COMPANY CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT! S0. Charlottetown MANNING. O.A. . mm (M- KEVIN s blcklnuhtnom Currie Blitz. Charlottetown. McDONAI.D. CURRII Ii 09. OHAITIIIIID ACCOUNTANT! Montreal. Quebec. omen. ibronto, Bainl soita. slierbrooko. V-I-M'"" Klrliland Lalu-, Moncton llaiiillton, Edmonton. Charlottetown- Telcphnne 1”