l _.._._..._.4 ...,-. anvvlsad 9-22-23 ‘x g:qt_:::;_n'::n 125v ~e may; - =.-zsc;*:c,=r;~i agcg -‘-‘-'H‘h"i nWfh ‘L _ _ A - < Kr. _Q WW: ;—_~‘_n "- - - -r:.-'_—.=..i-c-'r..- l ..~."..*I;-;-..‘;'."I-..‘}.£E:‘I.'-'I-.:. I'U‘~"-\'l.'J‘u"-'i‘¢'¢'-'-i'..' < :6 L, PAGE FOTTI? TIIE ' GIIMILOTTETIWI Glllllllllli Morning Dill) (handed In "I'll Pruident: Lteut. Col. W. Chum B. Mel-nu Viol-President: l. k Burnett. IJJ. humor: J. L Burnett. lfJ-l and Liut. Inn A Burnett, 10.11MB. Walker (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory i: Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ SATURDAY, MAY I8, 19M "Youth Welcome In Politics" Says the MontreatGazette: “Decidedly un- usual, but none the less interesting and desir- able qualifications for political office are held by the ne\v member who has just been taken into the provincial cabinet of Prince Edward Island. The chief attributes and distinctions of LL-Cmdr. Frederick A. Large, R.C.N.V.R., who has been named the lle\v Attorney-General of l‘.li.l., are his youth (he is only 3o), the fact that he is a member of the armed forces, and tllat he has never contested all election, lunch less held political office. "Doubtless LL-Cmtlr. Large has the necessary experience and ability to carry but the duties of the responsible office into which he has already been sworn. llut what sets him apart from other cabinet ministers .'lL'l'll55 the Dominion, and frolll the great utujority of those who have served in the past, is his youthful and completely fresh approach to political administration. “There was never a time \vhen new blood was more ncctlcd in politics, and wherever pOSSlDI-‘I qualified younger men should be encouraged by all means to enter the field of public service. .\nd certainly members of the armed forces have earned the right to claim consideration lll this sphere, and can bring t0 it a refreshing and real- lstic ontloolc." _f\1ilifary Call-Ups Hon. IIunlphrev Mitchell, the Minister of Labor, who is responsible for the call-ups under the National Resources Mobilization Act, has attempted to answer the figures given by .\lr. John Diefenbaker, Lake Centre Progressive Conservative member, on the number of men llll- accounted for in official figures. A careful rereading of the l-lansard report of the debate, says the tjlobe and Mail, leads to one certain conclusion. That is that Mr. Mit- chell's own department figures back up .\'Ir. Die- fenbaker. On Page 2634 of Hansard the Pro- gressive Conservative member is reported as follows: "We find that 988,475 were called for medical examination, and the number who reported for medical examination was 608,642." Mr. Mitchell has been unable to controvert those figures which were taken from official sources by Hr. Diefeubaker. Simple arithmetic gives the tnissing number as 379,833. Mr. Mitchell himself admits there are 49,000 men he cannot account for. But there has been no answer to l\lr. Diefenbakers figures, which give such a huge number of men who cannot be located. The fact that sonle men have joined the merchant marine, some have been lost in re- moval from one address to another do not begin t0 account for the huge disparity between the number called for medical examination under the draft and those wllo presented themselves for examination. Hr. Diefenbaker went into great detail .in making his argument. As he told the House of Commons during the debate: "I have supported my statement by figures (lirectly and definitely taken from the Government's own attswcrs. The responsibility is now upon the Government to meet the situation." .\lr. Diefenbakcr, who is careful of his state- ments: and \\'ll() has a record in Parliament of being able to support his charges, has nlade :1 study of what has been done in other countries where there is a call-up system. Ilere is what he says in that regard: "l say without fear of contradiction, after reading the records of the Ynitctl States of America, of Great Rritziin, of New Zealanrl and of Australia, that the record as to call-tip. iu this cotmtry reveals an appalling condition of default and disobedience unknown anywhere else among the countries having arty system of ulilitary call-up. It shows that either the (lcpilrtnlent statistics are \vrrlng-—aud they crlnnot be wrong, because they have bcell check- ed and c: ss-checlterl, and we have been assured of their correctness — or the enforcement is all wrong, and that is the conclusion to which any reasonable ])(‘l'.*.l'vll tilnst come under tlle circum- stances. tatcs the policy of the State and [iaralysis rc- suits." w... GSrThRCWOfWTlAQT-t?) A total of 115 lnillion pounds or 57,500 tons of vegetables were grown in I943 in 209,200 \ u-zlrtilne gardens, the estimated number in Can- adiall cities and towns with a population of l,- 000 m" more. 'l'his doesn't include the many thousands of wartimr- gardens in villages and on farms. The estimated production per garden of the 209,200 gardens Will-S about 55o potmds. This compilation was based on a survey plan- ned. tabulated and analyzed by the licontvtnics Division of the Donlinirm Departlneut of Agri- culture, with the assistanc alld co-operation of the Women's Voluntary Centres of the National urban centres, namely Liverpool, N. S., Corn- wall, Fort Erie, London, and Fort William, Ont., Winnipeg, Mam, and Saskatoon, Saslc, was 37.411. Their gardens extended over a to- tal of 1,950 acres which had an aggregate pro- duction of 10.432 [-2 tons of vegetables. In all these centres, with the exception of Fort Erie, more potatoes than any other vegetable were grown; in Fort Erie tomatoes headed the list. In Winnipeg, Saskatoon, London and Com- mill, tomatoes were in second place; in Liver- pool carrots were second and in Fort Erie, pota- toes. - Another feature revealed by the survey is that 53 per cent of the 37,811 gardeners in the seven cities and towns, canned, dried, pickled or con- served products for winter use. The 15 most popular vegetables grown in city wartime gardens last year were carrots, beets, beans, tomatoes, onions, potatoes, peas, lettuce, cucumbers, radishes, rhubarb, cabbage, turnips. sweet corll and Swiss chard, in the order named. The Agriculture Department points out that the substantial amount of vegetables grown in war- time gardens, meant a considerable saving on transportation facilities, in gasoline and wear on rubber tires, in addition to the important coll- trilnitiotl to the food supply. The crops grmvu in wartime gardens also enabled larger quanti- ties of vegetables from commercial gardens to be entitled and deyhdrated. The Department is urging an extension of ivartime gardens in 10.14 so as to augment the food supply, as there will be a ready denlaud for all the produce that will he offered by market gardeners. EDIIURIAL NOTES _ The Rev. George S. llcndrv of Bridge of Allan. Scotland. will be officially nonlinatctl for the principalship of Knox College, 'l‘orouto. when the lienernl Asscmblv of the Presyteriilll Church meets in June. Others also will be nominated. I U i I Defense Minister and Acting Prime Minister Ralston stated in the House of Commons that he knew 0f no "c0ercion” in trying to persuade Zombies t0 “go active." This, says “The Let- ter Review", suggests (a) that Mr. Ralston uses the word in the literal sense of physical force, or (b) that he doesn't know what is go- ing on, or (c) he would have the public be- lieve what isn't so. v u a n: A world dominated by four great superstates —-the United States, the British Commonwealth, the Soviet Union, and China—eacl1 controlling its own sphere, is more likely than a great post- war association of nations in which large and small countries will participate on equal terms, Prof. George T. Reuner of Columbia Univers- ity's Teachers College, declares in the current issue of The American hfagazine. "Informed observers in Washington and London see these four superstatcs even now enlerging.” aysPro- fessor Renner in a signed article. He adds that ivhile such a four-way division “is neither ideal nor quite what most of us have been expecting, it may, however, be no worse than yesterday's world of many large and small nations all work- ink at cross-purposes, and it may turn out to be much better." w n- No one would ever be guilty w u- of accusing Prime Minister Mackenzie King of having it sense of humour, far less of treating a serious subject with any degree of flippaucyu makes one opine that that epitaph story with which he embellished his magnificent oratorical effort before the British parliamentarians, was a Brockington touch. ington, K.C., is the patriotic orator par excellence of the Mackenzie King outfit. man who after winning the gold medal at a Welsh University came to Canada as a journal- ist in 1912, ultimately enteringlaw and becoming a member 0f the law firm in Calgary of which the then R. B. Bennett was the head. he has been successively a big interests lawyer, chairman of the C.B.C. representative of C.B.C. on l§.B.C. and the outstanding public speaker the King Government can absolutely and confid- ently rclie upon on all great patriotic occasions. i‘ ll‘ i! l‘ Which Mr. Leonard W. Brock- llc is a Welsh- Since then An emergency shipment of 1,000,000 bushels 0f Canadian oats will be rushed into nine south- ern States to combat a livestock feed shortage as soon as shipping facilities are available, Pre- sident j. T. lludson of the U.S. (Tommorlity Credit Corporation says. Florida. (ieorgia, Alabama, Mississippi. Louisi- ana, Rcnltlclgv, Tennessee and the Carolinas. .\lr. ll. L. McGeOrge, chairman of the South- east Region Committee, says the committee “is _ _ _ _ willing to divide" with Arkansas proportionate- l; .~ll4\\\:; tllnt [t-llllltflll expediency (llC- h. if that Sh“: has a d013,, in gating relief from the southwest committee. a Dominion agricultural and trade official told the Canadian Press that wrgtllrl l!" of oats to the southern United States, faced with livestock feed shortage, if transportation The feed will go to (Iommeilting on this he assumed Canada able t0 supply emergency shipments vere made available. i. m a a Alfred, 1st Viscount Milner, British states- man and administrator, died this date, 1925; \VllllC lligh Conunissioilcr for South Africa in 1897-1905, he opposed President Krugcrs treat- I’ ment of the Utlanders in the Transvaal, they be- ing treated practically as the blacks, without franchise or other rights, which were granted to tllc Boer population only; he served it1 South Africa during all the critical days of the Boer War and for five years thereafter, establishing War Services Department. the country with a peaceful, progressive policy, The 57,500 tons of vegetables would fill more than 25 trains of 75 freight cars per train, each with a capacity of 60,000 lbs. The survey dis- closes that nne urban householder in every seven in Canada had a wartime garden in 1943, which was about a l5 per cent increase over the num- ber of wartime gardeners in 1942 and about 24 per cent above i040. 0f the total quantity of vegetables grown last year approximately 37 per cent were pota- toes, l4 per cent tomatoes, l0 per cent carrots, 6 per cent beets, 4 per cent cabbages, 4 per cent beans, 3 per cent cacti of onions, cucumbers, l turmps and rhubarb. Peas and sweet corn each represented 2 per cent of the total and all other crops were 1 per cent or less of the aggregate prutltltTtl. The licontimies Division survey also disclosed that the number of ivartinle gardens in seven reorganizing agriculture and other departments, hilt arousing resentment in Britain by permit- ting the importation of Chinese emigrants for work in the mines; in later years Lord Milner became a chief consultant and adviser of luc- cessive British Governments in dealing with African and Asiatic colonies and dependencies, and especially in connection with British inter- ests in Egypt; not the least important part of Lord Milner's public services was the training of young men, including John Buchan Tweedsmuir), later Governor-General here, in (Lord he important work of atlministration and pub- hc relations: “An administrator's first duty is to know his people from within and not by hear- say; his second, to mete out even-handed jus- tice, irrespective of creed, colour or race; his ‘I'll?! ynqiiknionsrowiv QUARDIAN runuc roams ‘in nun- u o!!! III II i refill ‘it "'“""~ u‘: 1.1%.... mulled overflvklemfl 4 larnP 800.00. Iain May l2, . (B ntuv tin olsgtcal higher hfcscow. CC/ll ITLES the u years. hlgher four riccl of cited W l8 _ interest studied til-past: eranfcztn LUIII. In the theological lns'll:ut.e will be sl/u zlied 1:1 and Russian rluctdon sciences: t inc live and oh e preaehin liftflihg 0 3311811589 foreign polcmtca In courses t bbb lcal ends are boarding wlll eons them the Holy mcrl lopment culeetlon II IIIIIIIIIC third. and most essential, to know the Lord and fear him always." b class room. at $ 600.00 plus $1,462.00 for outlets for a total 0f $17,062.00. Yesterday, May ll, I recelved a copy of the specification covering the installation. and find that 6- e installed ln each ro0m~390 6- lamp fixtures 1n place of 360 4-4 lamp fixtures. a. difference of 130 fixtures: for fixtures only fluorescent give the required illumination 1n ct school class room of the regula- tlon square foot urea. ~ Theological Education In. The Soviet Union In aooordmioe wlth a approved by the Holly Synod, 1t. 1s proposed to found an OrthodoxThe- seoonctarv y y , districts. The period of tuztlon 1n ldltillOglffll-QIISWIHIC ‘tll be two years, and ln th-s Ortho- dox Th-aological Whereas rvrevicusly secondary and qulred six or seven years (two years ln an ecclesiastical seminary and your; ncn-:1<:i.1t_v1, the reduction in the secondary school and three years 1n the higher school: will be ccmvpens- pupil (entrants are not to be below vearS of agel, by their personal concentration .on thezlclgfcal jocks-in th educational theological sciences The ourrlcullzcn ln the theologie- Itlstlt-ute in comfcrmlty programs of the tanner ecclesiasti- cal Marisol. O lhlstcry cf the ecumenical Mil-h hngiolaev and the hlstcnv at rclfiglcn with Christian apslczrmc: htstoiiv 0f Russian sectarian i sm and cl the Raskol (smlsm): canonlcal code anrl the Constltutfon 0f the USSR! history cf C ian mmnclogy; reading of theologi- cal books 111 the ancient, slnvonw- Church language and church sing- tntl; ancient. languages: reading oi the Greek text of the l-loly Scrip- t-ures and the works of Fathers of the Church ln the Gree and Latin languages: the ages frcm th Protestant nlld ‘Anglleant. the plantation of selected the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments; catechism and Orthodox falth and maintenance of needy studerts. and for those cccnlng. from other Wwns. Inasmuch a; Orthodox Thealoglcal Instlbute and of the theological-pastorate courses of thelr cllnaxtfon, person, atrlvlng to serve religious and moral education must, strlctly. be a matter of wLf-educat- ton, to be accomplished wlth all ostble assistance from the leach- np staff, se f oral frame of mlnd. It follows therefrom that the Llfe of the students 1n the ‘ ‘_, l \ \ l s. stock, namely: Old nesls, Albion Round, Albion Nut, Bras d’Or. Also Dominion Coke. » Atvep annulment oi thermos glot- w-v- W51?“ or T" l.°£'...°“..'.‘t.‘t’."'.°..?.i.'..‘t‘“°“.:.l2. i‘: scn o s _,umawdh nyousungm 5pm,“, rm t f m“ and 1m warmers — a 0rd eacon- stiaslllnz elgcirlli: ‘llililttnll! ftxtiélits Hamid’ 1 66 class-rooms 11 our our l! Th N“;- men] M“, Sibhoola was fl ured on 4-4 lamp Gamma _,_ fyflmol o,’ tfwulguonu fluorescent llgt fixtures 1n ewa 5pm,; div m, Nome ma». .00 per unit-MB,- 4* ured for tlenera/tioxze n00 lief that mllhl. ll think sign ism fluorescent fixtures are to OI ethics of G 4 and this atom! will have out before German. “Edi” "n: 1 .00 ls '1.- m? yin-fled figll“ being elm-Guelph Mercury satlsfledithat a 4-4 lamp electric fixture would l-w-lwwd what Dle 1n our orflan I am, Slv. rte. . J~ T- MCKEE- ZSUQSuZ-fimbrwiii‘ r.-il.‘i.l‘ll.’l”“fi.'.‘f 1944- plicatlons: and. 1n response to cur emphatically ilcgative named several Archbishop Grigori, n! Sar- d Swing “d, the same lllzht as project Erie Tunes-Review. Insiltute as a. school of theological education ln and t-healtglcol pastorate a; thso oglcal schools of a lllt! tvpe ln the nlshoprlc honor-coloured can courses sour m lack Institute three Camitaanta the tomatoes theolcglcel education ne- clouclless as Kansas. ecelesllastlcal pe- cducatlon (two years ln the in an wlth a fractured s-nine the mental maturity of the doubtful o; recovery. but he out ht tn their studies and by Sltlb- e former ecclesiastical cstnbllslunentg non- ‘were aeo snld to hlm' rate sour-o; ls arranged ln but» looks HOW ll/v Will‘! a '5 0' .4 >1 a 5 .11 O >-. cal sctnllmlrles: x Theological the surgeon asked: ‘es, wlth the addition of lbjeets (hargiclcizy. his- m ht, of cf wer.-—B, B. C. Bulletin. the I-lolv Scriptures u! the New Teztrrnents, patriotic"; Christian Church, a n d Russian. could wlslt he didn't th What American tourist. rellzfous thoutzhit; lntm- ln the gohere of thr-olozleal ‘theology: dmmatlc, mor- ‘fillll! as Y1.) ccrtrpctnlt- ri.=.*='r.“"t* the hlstcnw of flndlmz a store locked at. 1 rotlre some day and llfe ln which each analysts the presently find Mexico ‘ art; l.’ and teaching f rehgicus beliefs; It was stated one rallwav s. l vte m B the Holly Hebrew : rea-ding of selected pass- Blble; reading of apologetic an akure (Catholic, the :-' 1 \ e theological-pastorate he following will be taught; hbiflwy. “ ex- ssalzes from SHIPS IN HARBOR. ll the Orthodox N" figs’ u- belng instituted for the They become as schools are t/o be opened thev know, students of the 1st of persons mtertn awn free wlll and in? Chumh, therefore their 5.1a" tasks of the er, reading of the mainly, of pours, by flclng wort: for the deve- of their faculties and 1n- of a Christian and pust- Wowd of and on holidays, lDn for ccmm-unton durlng 1 be obligatory. “if! COAL We have the following high grade coal In Sydney. Sprlnghlll. Inver- We advise customers to book their require- ments as early as possible ln order to lneun delivery later on. lion's By Tho Way. ‘- C811 right. that anal- rt of a. cruel, uncont-nljoul- tstne. unprlncloled total war is a o1 weakness. Prussian tnfllwr- ta an msenttal Dart of the code nation. the zt bartv to be complete: stnmpxd v L! t to take her place as a free natlon of Eur- A visitor from out of town In- seenled to us a horrtfvtniv question: were the Deo- tzotlon numlng 11 pool on the ntartlntz date of the Allied invasion of Europe? He ask- reply. companies whose personnel had instituted such a lottery. The thlnlz secured lncred- lble. ls 1t possible that 111th: here a 1n Ontario there are talks who re- gurd the forthcoming invasion 1n they would t1 game of foot-ball or baseballw-Fort It’: spring tn the Shenand Valley. and 1n Dorset and Devon lt ls late 1?'Drllll_?.. In Glronde a Gusccn who might be dhtrtugnan observes _ tlu-cb through the ncwly-prtuied vine 111 Brandenbura t1 farmer who has an over-lord st/udles his reluctant soil. of fertilizers. and hopes for one more good emb- nre ln. whlle in the uood black dlrl; area north of Kharkov the ohur! of trac- tors echeea the skies as blue and Evelwvvhere. the uatlent lobour basins-Christ- ian Szlence Monltort BOSWH-l A man was taken one day into H London ellulc more dead than alive. and two broken aims. The surgeon was very the man's chances nf prise. tn a few months the patient showed distinct stems of recovery. After seven months he could beam to take exercise. Then the eumeon . “Well. n1v man. we didn't. think vou'd ever PM. better. . as though you'll shnvtlv be able to no out and re- sviitte your occuioatnln aaulll." Notic- lng an odd lcok on the man's face. “By the way,‘ what were you before your accid- ent?" "A burglan sir." was the ans- No doubt President Manuel Avila- Cumacllo is actuated by sound mot- ‘ lves of eflicleitcv ln his decree end- ing that lovelv Mexican institution. the siesta, which comes under flclal ban on June l, No doubt. of 1t. he Ls in step wlth Progress. But. we ink ll: nec- S-ontethilu charmlnz 11nd. wonderful \vlll have stone from! Mexican life when the siesta goes. after re- covering frcm his first lrrttatllgn {It has not nresentlv come to vearn a bit ivistlfullv for a midday siesta at hemp? Knowing that. Wtlrtllfl be 1m- ‘onssiblc. l1’: ntakcs secret plans to to Mexico and a clay has blissfully restful period. If this de- cree lmuwurates a trend we may wluioutl - adobe ls-su-roq and sera-Jes - and locking for too much like Kansas for our taste-Brooklyn Eagle. he other day that. alone had hundreds of th usands of pounds I have not known n quieter thtnfl steeped 1n dream For allsthatisebhey have known dis- dreame of ships that: tzo Back to the secret waters that lEach as she wlll, to unforgot agoorls. ; Where nothlmz moves except the 8 v 51m‘: ', That mark the patient watches on the stars. DBv1<!_MQr.t9r-. d wlth the school: attending dtvtne service on sundrzyli and lrreproachable moral conduct. must i s s l l. he h nreépectedd Ill its .-.-.-.-.-,-.-,-.-,-,-“-: i- Offices: Outa. ' as a ltappened on the South .1. rat ways. It was vouched for. bv the Way. bv his fath oected come to some extent a pa the arts. Hearing that. there was for sale 1n Capetown a replica of the M-ATe-n-QT ft PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA SCOTIA VIA WOOD ISLANDS. P.E.I. — CARIBOU. N8. ."The Connecting Link Between These Province?" (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) Dnvllcht Swine Tim Starting May llt the Nova. Scotlm-Prlnu Eflwlrd Illlml Ferry Service will operate three round irlpl per day. Will Leave Wood Islands 7.00 mm. 11.00 1.1a. and 8.00 pm. Put Victory first Help maintain the supply llrlee so vltalto Victory. ' ' . Buy VICTORY BONDS Our sales organization is at your service. Hyndman & Co., Limited-i Provincial Managers The Great-West Llfe Assurance Company Charlottetown, of claim: to meet everv year for the V do Milo. he commissioned his e of lzoods consumed went to buy tt send . to lt. Those claims must be 01 a but on lta arrival he was much a11- vcry venous kin though 1t 1a noyed to flnd that 1t. Wu doubtful whether even an etmer- and but ln a claim for the " o term so w a would Elude such against the railway T ca: as that mentioned tn Deneys ratlw-nv company lo to the cum-Manchester Guard n. er. the much res- tlhe Crimean Wai- when tron of FOREST TREES For windbreaks or Ornamental Planting: l5,000 TREES WHITE ASH AND RED PINE 10 Trees either variety .. .50 25 Trees either variety . .. 1.00 100 Trees either variety 3.00 Instructions accompany each package own ORDERS SUGGESTED If to be expressed, order from E. A. SMITH, Supt. National Park, Grand Traeadie. P.E.I. or buy direct at TOURIST BUREAU Queen Street, Charlottetown (opposite Prowse’s) Between dates MAY 5 and MAY 15 Orders may also be placed with WILLIAM REID Agricultural Representative, O'I.eary. P.E.I. P. E.l. DEPT. 0F AGRICULTURE FERRY SERVICE M.V. “PRINCE NOVA" 1.00 p m. and s56“; m. LUNG/HES SERVED NORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES. LIMITED OIIARLOTTETOWN. IKE-I. Summerslde, Montague oked u.’ claim accented llablllty and mild a ta its Pflfrulatton of 1.200. 300 tine services- It got its name fought. a brawl here which a soldier back from Balaclava said was the Will Iaeave Caribou are 1n nargeea i 13. 1944' r ‘=- \ w“ We Have the Prop... ' TRUSS m": vririifw-fiufi .'l' . -' "~- ~ llr. Evans Stomach Mixture ' Every llersnn who (I m,“ _ led wlth in the ltnmaiih and bows should rot n bot. ile of "Dr. Evans‘ ‘ltnmnsl. \ Mixture” nnrl one how oulckly ll. will relieve all distressing symptoms. Recommended Rained lnlllmtlvn. Brannon... ‘xiii lleartbu . stomach troubles m"rllc':-,d TllE 2 MAGS ti!‘ Great George Sit-egg Mall Orders Gin-n P-olnm Attention. “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC " W. ll. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phuno 540-541 .41 Professional Barns McLeod o 5.511;- W l. BENTLEY. l. G J. A. BENTLEY K (I. Barrister; and Atinrneyl-li- Lew Ill Prince Street gvnhwsumvw-svwws-t-u . . mast... Gompanyi ll. IREIIIBALD Buy ERAS D'0R COAL Buy ll New! The Bras d’Or Mine is now ship- ping exceptionally well prepared Lump Coal free from impurities. You will be acting lni your own best interests if you order from your dealer today. Coal deliv- eries are uncertain. Make your arrangements early. S. Cunard 8. Company, Limited “Fuel Merchants Since “I835” m m-t ,- S&CO. PHONE 176 Is IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJZ III IIIHIIIII, HALIFAX. N. S. l l l l filHT BlNflllil mm“ “fmqnnlfmi “ism” °l ‘he d 1 m. ntlln will be cancelled on Christian Chm, h C, ,2,‘ . d ustroun seas, _ NOTE-The If l-lhllh _ n. II_ Rusiam Chmtclaig lapgiogmafi’ And \v]l;1dsmthattrleft their sails 1n a vv a p d a dnrlnl Ml! fn-tl d“ m l study of sects and of the Raskol Nomn gfistfu§fi “than m“, no June b: M" M 0|! i‘ - "" tschllasmn! tpractilcalhguldancc for saélny “flips ‘ will be nnnonnoed later. a [nun Tn“ “mum. ms rs 0 e c1urc ; Constlt/utlo ' - . stir m‘ ““°“' “° :- °'“"°“""" 1 nc avorl c ur , 18118118885; vondumd Chvflh Shik- Nor ciliisptchpi ‘mm harm ‘um E- _ The quiet that they learned on ' “ 'I‘ultlon in the Theological Instr-t» n y mm _ ute and the theologian-pastorate They have no part 1n all you: noisy M, ALBAN FARMER course \vlll be free of charge» Stlp- nouns; It A“ LLB. BAEIITEIK. SOLIUITOR. ITO. Canadian Bank of Oomlnerca Bldlr HONEY TO LOAN ALtX wmmmtesuiv than in Ian Cnllwllfltl‘ IAI STIR. SOIJCITOB. ETC- 0mg. O0 Great (learn Sir!" D PALMER (S HASLAM A. l. IIASLAM. B. A" LL B. BABBISTEB: ITO. Bani o! Nova sen la Chamber! Charlotte I I I u’; Loin MONI!._T to w" BELL 8. MATHIESON noun 1o toms cmisugyn pic. Mcphee B.A.,K.C- NO rlutv u. _ | Ten soucn-o: ntuyfifnu ¢|""°“°'°"' I h I m. exllmnsn I JLASSES mien I -asmnm OFTOMETRISTW t l ""'"':.:.i.*::."t"‘-""“ _._._'