mo! TIE _ BIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Iwllin] Daily (Folmdod In 1H7) President: Ueut. Col. W. Chester B. Mulmn Vice-President: J. ll. Burnett, FJJ. Beorciary. Lleut. CoL D, A. ltlacKlnnon. 0.8.0. Nile: and Managing DL-cctor: .I. B. Burnett. IJJ. Insulate Editors: ‘ 11k Walker and Lleat. Ian A Burnett, R-LLNJCIL 10n Act-Iva Service] ‘The Strangest Alenzory is Weaker; Tlfl 1 the Weakest Ink.‘ SATURDAY. JULY 8. 19M King's County Hospital Starting Xlollday, July 1o, the King's County Hospital is putting n11 a uevkfs driu; for funds l0 erect a new 1111111111 -, 11111 111111111111 required for lie purpose being _l1».1»o11. .~\ personal house- lO-house canvas is b1 ' mzule in the entire dis- kict served by the llsilllfil. It should not be necessary to Cltlllllilslfit: the importance of this lflmPHlgfl, or the great sctlicc which Kings County derives 1111111 Ilzlving ils own hospital facilities. lt is to be hoped 111.11 the contributions will be prompt as wcii 2l> gvnerous, thus enabl- hg the trustees to proceed \v1:11 the work at the Iarllest oppnrlu :_. \ Dominion Provincial Planning Promier Drew of Vlrflulriu has contributed» a valuable suggestion clilninatiug friction in be field of social 1‘ H111 1g and reconstruction. He would set up :1 p. 1e11: Dominion-Prov- Heial planning board, w ‘e duty would be l0 laal with matters of moment to the Canadian people which in" (re 0-1 b11131 Dominion and provincial jurfs» n. The need for son (“such body is apparent. It will become more so :1 ' tomes neresvl" m CI. . various enact- . ill the like. C da's Fed .21’ s_v~"l1-111 is solidly founded, and it has been pfuVUll though 7; years of ex- perience. It must be CZlZClUibY safeguarded, and uly attempt to llestrnv it must be resisted. But, in its pracfirnl open it has its drawbacks. 'I"hese have collie to li . '1' the passage of yours, as platters arcs.- ull llle Fathers of Confederation could not possn 1y have foreseen, Controversies as tn rekllivc jurisdiction have become frequent. because the British North Am- erica. Act is silent rc,;'11'1’-'1q developments which have come with the alvallcc of science, eco- nomies and s0cin1r1_1_-_v. Our social and economic problems have assumed 111 complexity which was never dreamed of in ill-use days. As arguments Ind cilsfnltes have a u fvunl time to time, fre- quent conferences have been llcld. They have enjoyed varying degrees of success. Too often, fiey have collapsed in deadlock. - Such a pormaricnt hoard as Mr. Drew pro- poses could do awav. tn a great extent. with this floflfllflofl- ll l5 to l1" pr1<11lncd that lle' would ltflve all prolirfierl 11- on touching the divid- ad jurisdiction suhuli m it in advance. Thus, it would be fully infwrlucrl as to the form and intent of all onacnnenn. and the provincial rep- resentatives could advise their Governments. No such board, 111' ~l1r<e, could guarantee the elimination of r111 Inn and misunder- standing. But it wml‘ f .1‘ a step in that direc- lon, and, as the 1'1 Yon Spectator suggests, a short period of suc 1'14 funcfnning would do much to remove ,~\~_. -i1~< 11nd suspicious which now threaten 1/. i 1111c our efforts at re- Instruction. F More Surgical Exploits. l . L..- i American n1ilit:l1-_v surgeons arc now using hafnium to restore mzlllglcd bodies, faces. and holds which in prcvF-uls wars would have been disfigured for life. Till. new melal is one of the 92 chemical elculw l1 is a 11111531115.- sub. amnce, three 11mm 1...... ~11 l1-,-..l_ hm Cap. able of forming all-n... ' 1.1.. 1.1m, and also sheets and plates as t. :1 and pliable as paper. It was named after ' "Jogical Tantalus because it was sf» 1‘. \"r;11> I15 3"?" ‘ .1 its l1eing vir- lwlll‘ inert. 11-11 to tissue and l0 Corfoilnn. ' .l'e>', used as threads to sew \l"lllTT"l\ 1 These thin wires "l" lrlfifll“? cvcrrrl ucrvcs while cuffs nlrl111: ' 1 tuvtnl protect the heal- lflfi’ HPYW“. '| 1'1 '11- unusual and scientific- l1ll_v pumling p- »;1-\l"._\ of tantalum. Ordinary living tissues "H: t1» l-"l-p alvrly from foreign substance, but not so villi lalltzllllln. The tis- sues, iucluding- 111.1 _ .1 1 lllll\(‘l(‘S, cling so closely that 111111-11 1' 111w ml hltilllflll as to Wllfllbt?!‘ 01' 111'". acllrlllv he attaching ll"l€l\'lS(‘l\'P.~ lo 11 11. Tantalum ,1. 111- l1.>c1l t1. rc>torc normal dupe to Rlillll- wllcrr thr- hrlltc l1:ls been partly - n1 l‘? shot alvay. 'l'll1~ n‘. l~1l i. ~n lunllcable that a surgeon may l" 11.11‘ .1 511*». final (‘mllfillfS right beside the r-pw ' <1 \l.1=l wartime tantalum aomes by plane lull '1-1~1-el1tly a sup- )l1y was found i " "Anlaleurixh Handling" \I‘lillll' l).'l\ll‘>. Saturday l 1~1-:>1.-,1 .11l1-v1 r11 .\1o.~cnw wrote ‘ 11.11 luzljglliliccllt reception H11: opening 111' 1111 \1.*11;.l liflllll 11nd in Ruggia, where tllc llriii-l. .:"l \lll1'l‘l('.'lll officers and diplomats v.(-l'1 lilllfll’ 1.1111 1.-.'1~l1*1l with Russian lavisllncss. '|'1l11.. 111- :.1l1l. 111*. 111110 of regret rc- garrlirlg 1111- 1115-: 1n: .11 Oltalvzl: “In this tllolllvnt 111' 1.1111». ill the demo- . . trrltic world l._1 .1‘ 1'1 1. l)l\l\'~ drugqlillg to rid lllClllSCl\'(‘.\’ 111' 1111- i 1111-1111111 Fascist scourge it is uol. liulc 11. 11-11; 11:11.. 1.11 ~11 s one or oth- er \\‘(‘.<’ll(llL.~!~. 1111'. _\1lll1‘ 1' lmudcnt would like to L'.\Ll‘tl‘(‘>,~ hi. r1 ,;1-1l 111.111 ill r111 this public- ity about lll" 1111:1411 1'11 1111‘ lllzl~s reports and lllovcs by 1l11~ .\'1l1~l"'1~ 11nd lillllSll to establish more Canadian information before the public. Of that I wrote before at length. All I can add now is that when Britansky Soyuznik and Special Representative Smollett of the British Ministry of Information who has been here for months asked our Embassy for photographs of the Generals leading our Divisions all they could say was that they would try and get them from London by radio. The fault doesn't lie with ollr Embassy or even with the Department of Ex- ternal Affairs but rather with our regretfully amateurish handling of work with other nations which leaves us far behind our great allies.” EDITORIAL NOTES u! Tomorrow is theday in which all churches should benefit from the attendance of summer visitors in city, towns and country. n1 111 =11 111 Nalvy Leaguers, of whom Chief Justice Campbell is President, should be interested in the forthcoming Sea Cadet Camp at Camp Bucharl. n1 n1 The Boy Scouts are having a “whale of a time" at Camp Buchan under the direction of Mr. Harpur and Mr. Pineau, camp directors. On the 12th the Y's Boy Camp opens at Rocky l i n1 111 The Bahama still enjoys open voting, and will continue to do so, notwithstanding a recom- mendation on the part of the British Govern- ment that the ballot be introduced. The House of Assembly has just voted I7 to 8 to reject the "quest. Following rioting in Nassau, the cap- ital city, in I942, a Royal Commission investi- gated grievances, and one of its recommenda- tions was the introduction of the secret ballot. ti!‘ In Quebec 56 Duplessis candidates have been already adopted to contest the 86 seats in the forthcoming Provincial election. The reaction to the recent sensational disclosures in the Senate is said to be in favour of Premier Godbout, rallying all "good" Liberals to his support. n1 w a u ‘There is little prospect of an increase in our butter ration, yet awhile. The Dominion Bureau of Statistics report that storage stocks of cream- ery butter in the nine principal cities of Canada at July I, were 2r,137,372 pounds, compared with 7,565,648 at June 1 and 26,157,759 pounds at July r, r943. t l‘ ‘l Are western C.C.F. farn-lers deserting a sinking ship? Hon. T. L. Kennedy, agriculture minister of Ontario, reports that Western Can- ada farmers are arriving in Ontario at thc rate of between 1o to 2o a day, and a total of 600 to 70o are expected to come east to help Ontario harvesters. l I! a n1 n n1 Rations of hard liquor for Nova Scotia have been increased from one to two quarts per four weeks. The alternative wine and beer quotas re- main unchanged at 36 quarts of beer for the four weeks period or four quarts of Canadian wine or two quarts of imported wine. . ll‘ i * i There is no Canadian Party in thc l-lousc of Commons at present—the only member, .\Ir. Liguori Lacombe, having been suspended for seven days for repeatedly interrupting a Bloc Populaire member, Mr. Maxime RZl_\'1llOfl(‘l. Should each of the six Quebec parties be rcp- resentecl in next Parliament, the proceedings might be reminiscent of the British House of Commons in Parnell and Timothy Heally's days, when suspensions were the regular order of the day. l‘ a1 a x An Anglican Priest, Rev. Frank J. Colman, B. A., has been adopted as Liberal candidate for a. New Brunswick provincial constituency. A correspondent of the Telegraph-Journal says if elected he will not be the first clergyman to sit in the New Brunswick Legislature. “Rev. Walter Price, Church of England missionary stationed at Nashwaak, N.B., from 1791 to I797. was elected for York County in I802. There is also the case of Rev. John Agnew, whose use- fulness in the House of Asselnbly' is said to have prompted Governor Thomas Carleton t0 recommend him for appointment to the Legisla- tive Council." 1l< * ‘it It The Quebec C. C. F. group put R11". David Lewis on the spot by passing a stout resolution condemning the British Labour Party for not going all out for Socialism, bllt cooperating with the Conservative Party, for \\'ar purposes. Professor Scott rather overtlid himself at this point in his eternal effort to 11111111: all alliance between the Quebec Nationalists and Socialists, for 1.\lr. David Lewis has gone on record very publicly and loudly that we do not need to be afraid of the C.C.F. because it has exactly the same platform as the British Labour Party. Per- haps Professor Scott and Mr. Lewis should get together as two brother Rhodes Scholars, szgvs The Letter-Review, and try to iron out their little differences on this point. l? l! ll! ll‘ Rt. Hon. Sir Jolm Anderson, P.C., OCR, G.C.S.I., G.C.I.E., hLA, B.Sc., L. L. 1)., M.P., British Chancellor of the Exchequer, born this date, I882; graduate of Edinburgh and Leipzig Universities; cutcrcd tllc Colonial Office as a civil servant by examination in 1905, became secretary of the Nigeria Lands Commission four years later, after which his services were continuously in demand for situ- ilar executive appointments, till he bccaluc Joint- Ullder Secretary to the Lord Licut. of Ireland in 1920; two years later was made Pcrunulcnt Under Secretary of Slate at the Home Office; and when, in I932, trouble arose in Bengal, he was sent there as Governor, rclnailliug till 1937, straightening out highly contentious ulatters, and retiring with the goodwill of all classes and races; the following year was elected .\l.P. for thc Scottish Llniversilies. ill succession m Julm l’-ll1"ll.'lll (lmrd 'l‘lvce1lsln1lir) 411111 illllncdiah-ly started out on a second ca ‘er of public life, closer lllll~n \\l.'ll 1h. 14.1.11“. pl-llplv, srllllcllolv wc were l.1|'l 1.1111111. ‘.011 \\il_\' \lllllllll we have Ill-ml? lllll 'l‘\1‘1'1t1 l‘. . :1! 1111- lllllll <l1‘~1'l'\'c 111111111" .'lll<l ~ 1111 ‘.1 .~ 111.1 111111115 zllld tllc 5ovil-l 111-1.; ‘.5. 1. '1. w : 1111 1111-111 as lllllcll as 111111111. 1'11: \111.~--...=.-1.1 111111-11. llllt thc way yve l}: organized we have no way of bringing which 1111s culminated in his nppoiululcnt 11> his present office and membership of the War Cab- inet. while still 910x in hi! 53nd w". 12-..”. 1 THE cHARLogETQwN GCARDIQN A b Fishermen Also Need in++ss++++ss++¢+¢+++++.a¢ "»"-i-& Notes By Tho Way Where all the money is to come frflm to meet the growing depen- dency upon the state 1s hard to see. However, We have reached the stage where we talk 1n bflllona and no one seems to worry about the sources of wealth these clays. — London Free Press. We are Nllnnlng again lo hear reference to the {poor German People!’ Let us remember first of ' B11 the Poor people of all the lands which the)’ have enslaved, who have been murdered, tortured, des- polled. dispossessed. Let us con- sider the victims before we pre- pare to weep for the murderers. — Niagara. Falls Review, V No system that. ls devised for nub- llc or private security will ever tum a lazy mun into an indus- trious one. or u spend-thrift Into a provident individual. Hanging as deadwclllht on all such schemes vrlll be found those who will be active neither 1n their own affairs nor 1n the affairs of any other human driftwood on the great tide of life. —V1¢t0l'la Colonist. Now the end is certain. flor- many will be beaten, but still most of these neutrals are supplying her with much-needed war materials. Why? Because they know that there will be no retribution from beaten- For nearly four years Sweden's iron ore, Spain's and Por- tugal's wolfram, and Turkey's chrome have helped to smash our cities, sink our ships, and kill our men, while their own territory has been fnvioIato-London Daily Mall. President Roosevelt favor! the designation "The Tyrants‘ War" for the present conflict, rather than "Second World War" or "Great War II." Against this it can be objected that 1t may have been the tyrants’ war for the first. two or three years, but it isn't theirs now. The initiative has been taken out of their hands and grasped by the United Nations. Considering the underlying purpose of the struggle of the (lenlocraclcs, why not cull it. the \\1':lr of Il‘1'CL‘(lUlli,*-M°ntreHl (lazette. There arc about 2.500 Dollh in British Cnlunlbla. ulostly in the in- terior, W110 should be tn uniform. The chief reason they are not ls that as r1 group they have defied the authorities, quite successfully ~11 far. Where 1i11es the trouble lie? The ‘tl-ollble" which ls the ex- planntlon Qf why they are allowed to continue to defy the Govern- ment, and set at naught the laws of Canada. We may assume that the great bulk of the Doukhobors are not. quite the trouble-makers which the Sons 0f Freedom have shown themselves to be. But they must be amenable to the laws of’ the land, not stand off nor try to take advantage of the bluff which the nudist cult has pried to put o\‘1*r.~Vancouver Sun. . Ctmnda needs the inspiration and the spiritual refreshment, which art alone can give it. "Where there is no vision, the laeople perish." At pmscnt, 1n platters of art, We are one of the lllnst backward coun- lrirs in the world, far behind peo- 1110s Whom we look upon as half civilized. If our Canadian civil- ization were to be destroyed to- morrow, 1r would not leave a sln- glc oblcct behind it. to tell future ages that the Canadians were more than a nation which bought and sold, lived and died, ate and drank 111111 slept. Is art in Canada always to be thc possession of a few, 1m- porled by them from other and more svil"it\11ll1.l' nlive nations? or are we coin: to produce something of our own? the latter ls our decision, we should begin to en- courage our artists now. —Peter- borough Examiner. Women as well as men are Ilk- pcsslbllity emigration. Tley have been receptive to talks ab ut r111- Columnnlvcalth that. have h en given in the Services. Informaton on the Domlnions has been spr ad til nllnh the National A ' lo" of Girls‘ Clubs. and. of course. he women have followed the welcom- ing speeches of~ the Domlnon Prhnc Ministers. According to he Society for the Overseas Set le- ment of British Women there as been a marked increase ln the n- qulrics and applications, and llhfs society, which arranged for he emigration of 18.346 women oe- twcen the Wars, is hearing from ilurses, and land girls. All this n- tcrcst 111 cluigrrltioll ls rather tim- barrassillg to the agencies wh ch are haviufz to answer inquiries - fore an official policy has en announced.—-Manchester Guard! n. Last Summc a lnt 0f "city sllilk- ers" 1fclnzllcl went down on lhe farm and worked like Trojans to got out thc cmlntryls crops in lhe midst of :1 manpower shortage he like of which nobody had ever s n before. A lnt more will do lhe same thing this Summer. In d- (litlon, 55,000 have taken yar- rountl farm jobs for the clurat on. At. first lhc farmers looked wit a suspicious eve on these volunte rs, and regarded with no little skepJc- ism their professed ability to capable work. But the w more than earned their way. camc- tn tho rescue of fruit and . crops m1 the Wcst Coast. T even proved to be better than 1n n on dairy farms. Moreover. th was lvhnlosolnc interchange tween (arm people and their cit - bred hired 1101p. The effect on t e city dwellers has been good. and evcn more important in f implications for the future- Nev r again will these girls and worn n be in any doubt ns to What; t panel's mean by the "farm pro - 1cm". They have learned at. firstl- ltnud that. the farmer's dny ls lon , his work hard, and his rewards un certain. Ami lt ls doubtful if on of those 1150.000 women will ev again turn an unhcecllng our the lslilzht. of 1111-, farmer. —- Chris!- tlan Science Monitor. Professors, and other lntelleolu men who have to do a good 1112a cl thinking, are the butt of 10k about 1111-1." absent ‘ nntl r1 mlnlstcr in a Scottish recently gave hls congregation stllrt as he walked toward the nu] nit carrying n long poker in hi right hand. was he lzolnlz w chu- tlsc bncksltders. or use it to illus- trctc his sermon, or what? As he was about to open the service he sllddmllv became nware of the 1m‘- plolncnt in his l1antl,'and as lllCl‘ rcdllcnrtl he beckoned his "1 m" 111111 111111111111 over the poker, whlr-h h1- explnlncd to the 111111 lllnlf he had been t 111g 111 clear 11 blocked ventilator ln 1hr vcslry 11nd had forgotten to lay it aside before leaving on. @5351» n :r E‘ mil-sit. Twin!" °§'.. the Allies when Germany has been 55h int: an increased interest in he a“?! i of members <11 thc services, teachms, 8 , operates. We do not alway! 118W (St. John ‘thlolrwh Journal) If u. la 10:14:01 to guarantee min- imum prices for farm products- which lawuat Ottawa. M09089: W10 rthen ft should be equally loilcal to guarantee minimum prlcesfor the products of ourffaherlea. were lflfl to note that Maritime mam .6 of the House of Common, have lately made an attempt to fmprfil this 1m the government. Hon. R. B. Harmon, M. P. for York-Sun- a. floor WW 1°! the linemen. He... l; to a. fair return for what. 01M‘ All. l; fairly arduous work,...l-Ie has to so out. 1n all kinda of west-her... the latter put of Septem- ber, w en them m mn-nv 881% mild wind-storms. and into Octob- er, when the weather fa 85m"! colder this owllnatfozl fa carried 0n under the most. 1111100118 611011111- stances.” Mr. Hanson. of course, la a Pro-, g-rusfva Conservative. b“?! his tement was promptly endorsed by other Maritime member. re- gardless of th fr political affiliations. Mr. W. C. MacDonald. Liberal -r-§+-r-_+.~r7. of f vroducta YlsghTi-iieoter force Ln the case of Mr. B. H. H111. !.&Q!8-l M1?- for Charlotte, said: “Unless a floor price 1s but under and maintained. w" the wayweshall ofitiibfiheVofl same bad con Mona we had dur- lnz t he mklElf-TICO of this question to ‘s Atlantic provinces 1s underlined by the fact. that. Marl- time members put. aside party lines 51.19pm minimum price; for flab. Its encouraging to see them standtnfl together this way. and we earnest- ly hope they get somewhere In Whit they are W111i‘; ftp h out. fishermen ‘halve any means the consideration given, other large Erotms U! bB-Slc produc- ers. Durlng the thirties theirs WEB a. depressed industry. in the worst sense of the worvl. lmd nleasures to 111d them were too mall. too half- heartnd, to be effective. Poverty 11¢ be fish cons (Iondltlons were intolerable flstie-rmerfa ear-nines were hardly enough to keep the ffshermenk boats and equipment. 1n repair. Such conditions must never be permitted to return. If the eminent k B06118 110 gotta-rites arm prices, the program, we imagine. will be a syatenl of mbsldfas. The government which can subsidize the farmer can sub- sidize the fisherman. who is en- titled to lust as much help and who perhaps needs it wen more. 1n the Brave New World our W1- ftfcfsm are talking about these days. ous- flshennen must not be lg- noted. Maginot - Mined (Halifax Chronicle) Among many extraordinary as- pects of this war, one considerat- ion which stands out ls the way 1n which not only the fortunes of the war itself have turned. but the way fn which the two main oppvwi peo,‘ have respectively adopted each other! original ideas. At. the beginning of the war the Allies seriously mlscalculated the speed and strength latent in the German alrmfes and alrforce. period which was tanned the “PHO- ney war" lasted so 1on1: lhfll the events of 1940 came with shut- tering 1:1 act. on everyone, includ- fng the rltlsh. For years the supposed fnvulnerabllfty of the M11- ginot Line had brought a sense of comfort. and security which al- most amounted to Complacency- Th; German construction of the ma Line in opposition ten- ded, perhaps to lull us all into a feeling of certainty that once more we were to be occupied in o long jr-FE-r-t- entitled ‘ y? d- t!- t? ll- - :'i"_"l"_~‘i". iii-J’ ‘F i“ 151-31-21- NOTICE ~ 0 FARMERS Through the co-operatlon of the National Selective Service and the Dominion-Prov- incial Farm Labour Bureau l. lufflclont number of men to supply file needs of our farmers during the haying season, have been arranged for. Such help Will be mostly inexperienced but la the only aourca of assistance available. The n10 of wag; is $2.00 per day, (wet days excluded). , Farmers desiring such kelp ‘Mild ap- ply immediately to the P, E. Island Farm Labour Bumu Charlottetown, PJLI. '+'-i.-'-.i.~'<li d? iii-Ff -i-'4~'¢'¢'+'+'§T#Ib7i'¥i~ '1-+'4-'-!~'~l-"!7b71-71~'4~'-17-b'+'+1- MONEY T0 LOAN .. 0n Approved Freehold Property REFINANCING EXISTING MORT- GAGES. PURCHASING PROPERTIES, m. Convenient Tune. Hyndman & Co., Limited Agents and Appraiser! CANADA PERMANENT MORTGAQI NEW CONSTRUCTION, REMODELLING. District Agent A1. Montague ~\- m": ~- ,1 war 0f position. Ibur long years have passed since those days. For the allies they have bean years of re-orfentatlon, of ex- perimentation and of lie-construc- non of everything-from guns. 011m- e5 and tanks to the ideas which lie behind their use. Now ll: is the Al- lle; who have almost inexhaus- tlble supplies. It. ls the Allies whose all-forces dominate the skies Europe. It is Montgomery who can mass artillery so that a. mere 9111111 feet separate sun 1mm un. Now ft is the German who has turned to the mentality of the man relying on fixed fortifications. At, eppe he was encouraged to believe that his Atlantic Wall wasl Indeed lmpregnable. He had ne- ver been trained to fight a. defen- sive war, but when driven by clr- cumstances u. do so, he thought he Was secure in his bastion. But lhe cold fact. fs beginning to obtrude that. against armies in sufficient numbers and suPDlled Wm! B" adequacy of arms and armor, no artlflclnl fortification is of much avail. That fact has been abund- antly proved ln recent. weeks at Casslno and on the Normlfl beflfill- heads. It ls once more belnz 11¢- monstrated on the eastern front. where Vltebak and Zhoblln have gone down like houses of cards before the Russian advance. The more efficient than the Mannerhcim Line 1n Finland or the original Maglnot Line ln France. Nor fa it so obviously true that the old theory that. the attackers invariably lose the most. men still the actual figures either of our own losses or of those of the en- emy. but modern methods of en- closln strong points by 111MB" operat ons appear to be costlnz the enemy very serious losses both In killed and captured. we m; told the Germans put. up a "fanatical defence" in Cher- bourg. But they were beaten, nev- ertheless, and with great speed. The cumulative effect of contin- ued defeat on three fronts. surely. ts bound to have a. telling effect in time on the morale of all German troops who have been told so often that. their positions are implyi- nable. There is bound to come o. .1 ‘HYaHK VaHHVTE-K NOTICE All fuel due Albany Village School mist ha palll un or before Jlly 15th. After that date they will be handed In to Clerk of the Court for collection. Signed on luhalt of Trustees. “Fatherland Line" has been no - PHONE 116 PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA scom FERRY SERVICE . VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P.E.l. - CARIBOU, N.S. M .V. “PRINCE NOVA” Will Leave Wood Islands 7.00 a.m. 11.00 a.m. and 8.00 p.111. LUNCHES SERVED CIIARLOTTETOWN, Pl NOUNCED LATER. no l: whf en iron discipline will fail to holtl men together. When CORPORATION Offices: Chariotfotown, liorildo, Montague. Allison P. MacLean I1 District Agent at- Summer-old; Cyrus‘ A. R. Shaw i311 01d Sydney Screened We are now receiving regular shipments of this hlglt grade corll for steam and household use. We strongly advise taking delivery as early as pos sible, as it is expected transportation, etc. may make it difficult to secure coal latex-in the lesson. W. D. GlLLlS & C0. 3.7.’, C t. L. k lnaeinvgsriliiipianlih liitcbunbeliiileygayflhlfgugmr" Slflrllflx May 1st the Nova Booth-Prince Idward Island Ferry Service will Ollerats three round trlpa par day. Will Leave Caribou 0-00 an. 1-00 pm. and 5.00 pm. NORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES, LIMITED .I. OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER. SCI! EDULI WILL I! AN. TSGMMQIIIQOO. Charlottetown. mlx rllcroll llouvwoon i BEAUTY 1110s,? m: mu».- lgg, h; fiat-seals TIIE p 2 M08 ; lllnatflullolhm "COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC t w. ll. 1.11.1.1 Agencies Ltd. Home 540-541 i-ui _ __ ___ , Professional Cards ll-ll- lloane81 Company OIAHIKID ACCOUNTANTS 7-8-111. I. l. man's-an. l. 0.. .I. a. aa-lvuav. m c Illlbhta and Attorneys-at- Law Ill Prlnca sums rvrs rxlllltlllsli 1.111.? 111ml 1smnmE OPTOMETRIST i a a a I ' i s".:.1...‘1:".1..%“ i IVIBIIIII h! Annotntmaata Phone 1050 _ that time comes-and it came quickly In 1918-11112 end for Ger- many will be at. hand. THE MOUSE WHOSE NAME 1S TIMI-J 'I'he mouse whose name ls Time Fur Foot Ailments CONSULT H. J. A. BROWN, DJ’. Orthopedic I BIIIMPUDIST Ill Glut George Mn» OIIAIIAITIITOWN. Ill. Is out of sound nnd sight He nibbles at the day And nibbles at the night. H11 nibbles at the summer Till nll of it. ls lzmle He nibbles nt ‘.11: seashore He nibbles nt. the moor. Yct no man not a seer, No woman not n sltrgl Can ever hctlr Or see hlm nibble. nibble. And whence or how hr: comes Anti how or whcru he goes Nobody dead remembers Nobody living knows. -Robrl-\ I-‘rnnvll. in ‘ he Sound I Llstellctl F0 " feels.” RAYMOND CAMERON. Secret ary. the muaamw-mmvH-v-uv 1.11.1, . ....a..-‘....aa1a.l..-....._.._.- s: 1-. he ulm expects noth- llni‘ for he shall never in disap- 00 ted. Li. F. llutcheson 81 S0! OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fif- tlng of glasses for the correction of ocular de- 53 Grafton Street BELL & MATHIESON noun T0 1.01m ._ p cannon ism: cluu-lnltfbun H. F. McPhee B.A.- kc. NOTARY be. IAIBISTEB SOLICITOI Biloy Building Charlottotowl PALMER A HASEAM LI IASLAM B A. LL B- u. r. llltclllslllill Charurall Accountants Illhm Tran Bnlldlm Charlottetown i