i -c--..(3-...- ......a. g . ' and ingots; promises. "gulp.-ggglliqaabouttnlaoounlrylsuue ,dollars are available than there is a de-imam in these termoriesg MC;H'h.1lfl- PAGE FOUR ,,,. ....s,,,....,.- . .. . T H E G U A R D I A N led policemen. Perhaps Canadians should (not try too hard to shatter the new it- ', lusion and reveal that we can be as irration- Authorised ll second elm mil l'oIt omen ial, petty, radical and hard up as before Deulrtllienh 0"-"M 3 parity: or that our neighbours should seek 1"" '”"'"' ”'”"”"' P""""”" 0'” ito exclude us irrationdlly from their mar- rmlaem ma Auocl-to Editor. (In A. Burnett. fkets. Associate Editor. Frank Walker. ' CIRCULATION "Corei-I Prince Edward Island like the dew" EDIIURIAI. NUIIZS ,- If one in every 35 persons in Winnipeg " is an alcoholic, what would the proportion ”" wade" "'k i - 1 Ag he in Charlottetown and Summerside?- Tluljkll-I:0:li:IETh(;ltfN. i'Rin.u'. run. 29. I952 -, ' ' ' Generous. Striking grave-diggers in :Glasgow say they have no objection to rel- Zatives digging graves for the deceased but Our rcpres.entativcs at Ottawa iiitcnd,'will not tolerate other non-unionists. getting after the CE0VCl'llllllellt flor a Shale Tl St f g ” .' b k I th C in war contracts. or w lici tiey are 0 ie one o cone is ac in e or- be commended. The best way to succecdlonation Chair in Westminster Abbey, ready is to, (1) Show the Government what we for Elizabeth to be crowned Queen of can do; (2) Name the people likely to un-lscotlaiid as well as of her other realms rlertake it; and (3) Stipul-ate what help (if whenever the coronation may take place. any) we need to iiiake the contracts suc- ' ' ' . ccssful. There is no use approaching a, It is not only the rate of taxation that government in general terms. the appeal is heavy in Britain. A half ton of paper must. be Conci'ctc. brief, and likely to provelwas reported to have been carried into the effective both to the Province and tliell-louse of Commons last week, being copies Government, the contractors themselves of the 508-page proposed income tax con- bcing a seconclary. though very importantisolidation for the 625 members. part or the project I! .1 ' i it Til. ' is 'l iontinuous Whom”, W n0tc'()tili)tLi?:,ic&t:Lsl.C uinezihthgilsglsliiftiiigliihzidizahhitaiigrlil l)Glfll'tfef”l lheL offensive should press unitcdly for still further im-land defensive. Automobiles and then air- t? 11” ii? .f”.;i..ii'.i2i”2.l1i”.?:EiZ .22.. :23. 3:3,; t is rovmcc. s ie on y agricu ura r i - . ., - I sou ea ore every aCll' ' c'-' ' " lr - keting our products on the mainland. lair, only to walk into the hands of the law. A long delayed improvement in this coli- ' " ' nection is with regard to the ferry accom- modation between Wood Islands and Cari- bou. The operating company has been secl:- - . . ing the go-ahead signal from the Canadlanlsome of fl:'c tactics I learned theie into play Maritime Commission to provide a nc'.v;ovcr here. The former Governor-General boat for this service which would carrylshould bepweli versed in the problems of many additional truckloads of. our farm'dcallng with sectional interests, a highly produce daily, as well as providing addi- developed characteristic of Government in tional tourist facilities. Such a boat cannot this counti',v. now be built in time for the 1952 season. but the permission to go ahead with the project should be given immediately. What- ever can be done to expedite the movement "The Strongest Memory is Weaker lhon our Interests All ilttawa substantial war Earl Alexander has stated that, "My six years in Canada gave me an insight into how the Government works. I may bring Q 0 D U. S. military contracts given Cana- dians up to the end of the first nine months of the fiscal year 1951-2 totalled 5139,000,- of traffic this year should also be given 000 against i544,000,000 for the whole of consideration. Rcprcsclltativcs of the the previous year. That money must be Northumberland Ferries Ltd. are meeting circulating somewhere and should bring with the Commission next week at Ottawa benefit to all sorts and conditions of lCana- t.o discuss the season's contract, and it is,dians, including agriculturists. The result hoped that our members will also take aniis inflation for the time being. 0 O C interest in this matter and do everythingl Th W t K t H d S h 01 AS e es en onie an c o - they can to obtain a more satisfactory scr- - vice. sociation has inaugurated -a lively public discussion on various school questions of primary importance, namely, popular elec- tion of the School Board, the place of home studies, monthly reports on pupils' pro- gress, teachers salaries, etc. It is an indica- lnternatlonal Army ft is stillcnccessary for a formal trraty' to be drafted and ratified before the Eur- . g . opean army visualized by the Atlantic Pact tion of growing public concern Over mat- nations becomes a reality but the agree-,l0FS 0f V1131 lmD0l'tanCe l0 bfllh h0m9 and ment reached at Lisbon defines the evenpsciiool, and cannot fail to bring forth good ual composition of that force. Also agiics 1'95hh5- . . . Svlllzllaiviyhbstjgdiilllcsclxszhigugallamlife as): Edward Frederic Benson. English auth- sistance of West Germany if she should bcL0l'v died this dale 1940- 50” 0f the Amh: attacked as they would go to one anotliei”s'hiSh0P 01' Cant0FbUl'Y- FPOHI 1592 10 1393 assistance and West Germany would Sim. he was engaged in investigations atgAthens "arly be”; any N A-1-O member. :on behalf of the British Archaeological Probably a decisive factoiuin 'l)l'itflglllgl!,:;::j)i;1g eaidnlllg-2:1 loiif1a2:v(iiiS'tih1e about agmemeni on a.b?;.ngle gntegfnatgz? lsand”; two plays, "Aunt Jennie" and "Din- mrce was the lmpossl Hty 0 C ec yiner for Eight”; as well as lives of Charlotte defendingilurtope witfh?-l:.t rC7eeS.t0G:Cl;,m.E:nG:i:tBronte and King Edward VII. His own and thet.1en:fi;?CCeafmV grcawd Th; omvilife was recorded in two volumes of man na to . - '. . . . solution was the creation of a one-uniform mem0"S' I O 0 force. . . . . . . It s ' fit in to learn that our farm- The possibilities of the idea are vasii 1 gm y g .The NATO has already Shown mat it isiers benefited very considerably from in- able and willing to accept additional mem- bers, even outside its immediate strategic sphere and it may well be that in time it; past year, but sad to reflect that this in a measure is due to Canada being in a state :of war. H m b 0 atcngne with member It follows that when inflation re- wi come l' " -- . .- -- , lsults in improved piices for sales it is ac- ' , b .. . . . 5”? m me Uh: Usiha1:f11):L”?ncO(:E:; osifcfconipaiiigd by increased prices for- pur- ihe'NATO tome mm, , ,d ,ichases, 0. that actually, in the long run, armed forces of "mi. mm 2m. the producer or consumer is no better off. emmen an accomp isi - raised, and is not likely to again be lower- Golhg "ii in Th” world ed when the war clouds disappear. is.-a O O 0 It might seem that the rate of exchange, The rememem of Msgr. M. M, Coady Of the Cahadiah d0ha1' has Very hme mlfrom the direction of St. Francis Xavier do with this country's stature in the ivorld.lUmVel.s".y Extension Department is of more It b0h5 d0Wh '0 lhe Old law Of Sum”-V ”"d7than ordinary interest, for not only has he demand. If. for instance, Canadian funds been the leader in the Marmmes of the are scarce and in demand in New Yorlilmovemem for advanced adult education, the" Ouh dollar 3095 ”P' If more at ”"'''but the father of the co-operative move- He early real- mlnd f0l'v the mice 0' mm of exchamhlizcd that if the farmers and fishermen were 8093 d0Wh- lto get anywhere in their industrial exist- A !ll1'D1'i5lYlE result OT 1119 Yecehlience they must. learn to co-operate, one strength of Canada's currency. parisicularlv'with anothen both in the way of pmduc. of its attaining 8 Premhhh 0V9? the Ame" tion and in the disposal of their produce. lean dollar, wasawave of enthusiasm south It has been an arduous,'uphiIl task, but -of the border 50? all things C8m'1dhlh- We being a labour of love he strayed not from are a land Of PFOINSE. Of 81'?-at F9-S0UPC0Sv it. and now has the credit and honour of vigorous people. expanding Industry. self placing his university and himself in the f'IllInce.'8tlbl9'80V9l'"m9hh T93!”-'t fa” WV forefront of progress in the Maritimes. and wherever such achievements are appreciat- ed. In the endeavour he has sacrificed his health. and all who know him of him will pray that his years obscured for a long time extended to enjoy in retirement the fruits of do; sleds arldsmuunt-”of1llI"ltbourI. - ' g 1t,h alwiylpleuant to go up in the neighbour and much that the A icreased prices for their produce in the ll except that his standard of living has been dn FHE GUARDIAN. ( :I-I ARi.0TTF.T()w N . Call Of The Wild . , . pl vi . . N U '5 i - - i. this 9.3 h3n.9.;n C l FROM WINTER MEMORIES I have remembered when the win- ter came, High. in my chamber in the frosty nights When in the still light of the cheerful moon, (xi every twig and rail and Jut- ttng spout. The icy spears their length, Against the arrows of the caning sun. How in the shimmering noon of summer past. unrecorded beam slanted across upland pastures where the Johnswort grew: or heard. amid the verdure of my in were Idding to some The in d. The ce's long smothered hum. on the blue flag Lettering amidst the mend; or busy rlll , which now through all its course stands still and dumb Its own memorial . . . -Henry David Thoreau. The Lutine Bell (Ottawa Journal) To announce the news of the King's death the famous Lutine bell at Lloyd's in London wasrung once. This is the custom when bad news is to be.repoi-ted. It is rung twice for good news. . only very rarely is the bell toll- ed at all-it is reserved for an- nouncements of maior importance -and it was last rum: when Can- taln Carlsen came to Lloyd's to receive the nresentation for his riallantry on the Flying Enterprise. On that. occasion the bell was rung wice. The history of the Lutlne bell might. encourage wold-diggers-in the literal sense of the term-to en salvaging in the North Sea. In October. I799. ii cargo of precious wold bullion-reports of its value vary between l:140.000 and f:l.400.- 000-was loaded on I naval frigate. called the Lutlne. at: Yai-mouth for shipping to Hamburg. The reason 3 naval vessel was chosen was to ensure safe passage for the valu- .--ble freight. Lloyd's had insured One day after leaving port. the vessel was caught in a severe pale and sank. Lloyd's paid out for a total loss. but later occasional at- tempts at salvage were made. some of the gold was recovered--about l:40.000 of it-but the rest. still lies on the sea. bed. In 1859 another attempt at salvage brought up the ship's bell. It has been hung in Lloyd's underwriting room ever cc. Private Secretary (London Observer) As the King's Private secretarv sir Alan Lascellcs has been both courtler Ind dlplomntlst and has shown competence in both mic. Before World War fl he was ..member of a particularly brilliant circle of youne people in London. Ind he embodies the grace of Ed- wardian times. Early on in life Sir Alan had the ambition of becoming I Jlnlomnt. Insteld. after fighting in France. he became for nine yesn Allist- ant Private Beci-etai-v to the Prince of VIles and for four years see- retlry to Lord Beubarough when Governor General of Canada. He returned to Court. in lots. in time to wItch I Prlvste secretary”: nightmare come true when Bir Al- exander Hal-dings found that his foyslty to his master. Edward vm, Ind'hls loyalty to the institution of the monarchy clashed over the- abdication. Lucelles was at that time Har- dlnu's assistant. He liimself be- came Private Secretary in 1943. He is I cultivated man-he has I sound knowledge of lath century social history and literature. el- peclslly the lesser-imown novelists -Ind.he possesses O discriminat- ing intelligence. gnu Age-(lid Story d0s&O0TOOm0 Every good gift and every per- fect gift is from above. and com- etb down from the Father of lights. with whom is no variable- neu, neither shadow of turning. Of his own will begai: he us with the word of truth, that we should be I. kind of first-fruit: of his creatures. . . . Wherefore lIy apart all filthineu and superfluity of nsughtineu, and receive with moeknesa the erigrafted ' word, which is Ible to save your souls. Notes From Another Island 3 Dy "Anson" LONDON. England:- On such official and other docu- mcnts as come our way from time to time and on which. for various reasons, we are required to record our "particulars", we customarily put down our nationality collect- ively as "British". Less officially we are inclined to be more exclus- ive, preferring to regard ourselves as Yorkshlremen, Kentishmen, De- vonians. Cockneys or natives of whagcever county or locality we happen to have been born in: we are all Ipt: to consider our own part of the country the best-if not, indeed, the only part worthy of note. This is the measure of our par- tisanship. which finds other manl- festations of individual thinking in such matters as politics, sport. dialect food, climate, and in it host. of other ways. But". now and then there comes a time when we sink our differences (which are often no more than ll pose, any- way) and become irnlted as one Such an occasion burst upon us with numblnez suddenrless when we heard that King George V! had died. In an instant we were all members of one family. our ranks closed by the shock and the mag- nitude of out bereavement. O O O I And yet. was it really "in an in- stant"? Looking back on that late- ful morning. rather grey and cold. it seemed that the news came as such a fearful blow that we cmlldnlt. fake it in fully. We had followed the course of the King's months of illness with growing re- lief in he seemed to be returnlni: to full health: everything was set 'or his convalescent cruise. and we had no doubt: that he would re- turn refreshed and well. There had seemed to be no cloud on the Rovnl horizon to obscure the virus- rwei: of lmnnv veers to come. Small wonder that the words of the of- rrzinl statement made an impact almost too great. to be fell at once. But the stark realisation was not lone delaved, The pomp and pay- esntry of the Proclamation of Queen Elizabeth It could hardly do more than underline the foul that caused it to talc-. place. Then came the King's bodv to London. tn lie in state. and nFl'hIpB it was when we saw the coffin that we understood fullv. for the first time. what his death meant to us. I 'We knew then. if we had not known before. ow near to us the Rim: had been. how much he had been one of us. A monarch is of- ten I person am-rt. moving in circles far removed from our own. but as we remembered Oeorae V! we could Ice lHIt he had been I mun verv much like. ourselves: A betien man. indeed. that most of us. A man with his own likes Ind dlsllku.' as befits in. person of char- Icter. A man who had I nut sense of humour. who would crack a take with linvone Ind whewould take a joke even Iuinst himself- I trait that we Ibove Ill people find irresistible. - He had been rvmbodyfl King. for no section of the community could have me that he kept him- self Iloof from their activities. fits link with the services came not merely from hone:-Ivy. rush and titles. for he had served in the Royal now. and its-t'sse-r action 19 w I- ma ties with, sportsmen trenlthensd by his own set- Old Charlottetown And r. z. 1. ) BUNAVVAY "A runaway occurred on Queen Street at 11 o'clock today. Two Misses Habklrk were passing Apothecarlesl Hall in a vis-a-vii wagon, when the bolt which at- taches the fore-axle to the wagon body came out. The shafts im- mediately struck the horse's heels. and he med down the street. It I rapid gate. carrying with him the two fore-wheels and shafts. At the Market House. the wheels col- llded with a wagon owned by Mr. John Cole, carrying away the two side wheels. and throwing Mr. Cole from the wagon. He then turned into the North Side of the Market Square, which was crowd- ed with market. people and veh- icles. caused a great flutter of excitement among the fish-women. passed into Grafton Street. and entered a gangway at Mr. A. Mur- ray's store, when he was taken in charge by the owner." -The Examiner, May Ill. 1878. Splitting The Infinitive (Lethbridu Herald) To knowingly split an infinitive is a crime according to the best minds in the country. It is, in fact. one of the worst crimes 3 person who tries to correctly write English can commit. At any rate. that is what we have re- cently been reading in in series of articles on the split infinitive in a widely read maA'BZln9- The trouble with the split In- finitive to that many people don't know what. an infinitive is. In fact we are willing to confident- ly wager that half the people who read this don't know what one is. To them we can only say that they are lucky, because to know and to wholly understand an in- finitive is to bitterly hate it. 'We hate lnflnltlves. They have been a source of frustration for years. To tell the truth, it has taken us years to really get to know what one looks like, and an equal length of time to finally learn to completely avoid split- ting the.f.ool things. . We hope to never mention the subject again. I lve participation in some sports and keen interest in others, and no football Cup Final: d com- To show how apathy to civil ls- fuilo Wtotstl. the lady who in- quired I year no is still Vithout. In answer to "Where should I put my African violets in an A- bonib raid?" - Dtti-olt'News. lftlies-elsto to I new Illin- bethan size. the most. important thing for us to remember about the first Elizabethans is that they were the ultra-modern. of their tfme. in their thoughts and deeds and culture they were dai-lnlzly unconventional. They muitlflied their modest resources by their boldness as pioneers. The same chsnce and task are ours today.- The Observer (London). Life for CInIdiariI may be more complex today. but we can fll-af- tord to neglect the fundamentals, that pioneers had to live by. Most important: of all, these rules are the inheritance of higher moral and spiritual values. These are the force and spirit of a nation. They Ire behind the tide of its wealth and industry and when they begin to ebb the nation be- comes sick slid enterprise and initiative become diseased. They should be repeated often. - Que- bec Chroiiicle-Telegraph. some dob-owners seem never to understand that purchase of I ll- cence does not and cannot give them authority to turn their pet loose to cavort. gaily over a neigh- bai-'s grounds, to bark up and down the street at dawn and af- ter dark. to upset a neighbor's garbage tins, to chase ii neighbors cat or badger the neighbor's small children. A licence does no more than permit a. dog to live within civic regulations and it is illegal to let a do: run at large, licence or no. -Ottawa Journal. Seen on a railway train leaving Montreal for the Lauxeiitiaiis last week-end was a conductor refus- ing to accept a United States dol- lar at par in pliylment of a fare. As might be expected, the visitor concerned showed considerable indignation; more than the great mass or csnsdfons ever showed wh;n similarly treated across the border in the past. Montreal Final-lclal Times. It may be hard for American ship owners to gel crews for their vessels if many more U. S. freight- er: "split" while at sea. There was the Flying Eht.ex'pi'lse.whlch. be- fore she was taken in tow, broke her back in the Atlantic. Another freighter split in the Pacific and all hands were lost. Now we have two other American tankers split. into four pieces eff Cape Cod. Granted that there have been gsles and heavy seas running the last: few weeks but ocean-going ships are not expected to "split" at sea is they are efficiently load- ed and the cargo properly distri- buted. - London Free Press. "TV' When Mr. Glurchlll visited Washington and Ottawa recently the Cunaml company gave him free passage on the liner Queen Mary and the railroads in the U. B. and Canada carried him with- out charge. In the House of com- mons. : Labor member. one Col. 6. E. C. Win. questioned the pro- priety of the Prime Minister ac- cepting such free-service, to which; Mr. Churchill replied that tho, British taxpayers thereby had been relieved of so much expense. "I cannot feel sure," Mr. Churchill continued, "that there is ,any- thing dleci-editable in what hap- pened" (and here we can imagine that dramatic pause and stutter of (Notes By The Wayr. 3 cf!-ZBRUARY 29. t e&. II! that in the cheers and Wtwbbkh followed lhjere wasn't llibum M "M This wIIk we Ind i at am on the St. I..a:1rI;iic.e" ',,'T"' A deer was seen flcunclei-in W" the ice flow: about 500 yardsgir on the Canadian shore. Two ,,;J”" bers of tile Brockvllle police iorni. eqlliplied W"-11 poles and n 11,)", punt went out: on the lfealtilcrhli ice to rescue the stricken nnimi comments were heard (mm m" tutors on the shore; --Hy; , i,,,J”,; alright. you can see his 1-3,.-. C, hornsz" another, "you can 38; .1"' head moving all right. must lag.” deer.''' and yet another. ”.he n- I he's waving his legs and head :3, can see he's-been badly ll-.;,-lg in: so on. The police i-eturiied cmryy, handed. The itdeer” was iinthin but a big piece a: dart; tar pang. -'13l'-lp-in: in the breeze. It is far (on easy to "see" a deer, it )oli frlallv want. to see I deer wiietiier of animal is Ictually there or flute And this is precisely v.-11.. m.,J year as: too many hi.-ntc:'-. :l..;.'. gtrilcdh - Biocl.-vzlie Rosamu- When Elluhcui 1 (mum about the country, as she ea... enough did, she was confronted with alleged portraits or tierseic on the forecourt: posts of li-.a,..i, country inns, and some of then- coitstltuted so great. an affronl that she appointed Waller ml. elxh to grant. "lyccnces for m, keeping of taverns and rela;.u..g ,9 wines in England." Among his duj ties was that of seeing to if. um the numerous unflattering pol-. traits of Her Majesty were "lino.-ll. ed to pieces Ind cast into the fix-9' For the future it. was ordered uni no person should presume to per. tray the Queen's head on a shin. board "for satisfaction of her lav. ing subjects" save only artists m approved ability directly commh. stoned by the Queen for the pi”. pose. This was reasonable enough if we remember that, except by people through whose district; she passed on her progrogu, 1. was by the stgnboards or inns only that country people knew wllil their Queen was like. - Manchu- ter Guardian. In morning nuh-liour traffic in Toronto the other day it nlntomt felt his car bumped from bghmd. It wasn't much of I jar, not enough to shift any of the passen. gers more than an inch in their seats. Bumpers could easily lmn absorbed more. Unfortunately, in this case. the bumpers never em. came close, one being too high, tin other too low. one vehicle was I Passenger car, the other a med- luin-slzed truck. The garage blll was 5176. If all vehicles. regard- less of size. weight and stl'raniltn- inc, were equipped with liumpiil 4'1-out. and rear of H. standard Might from the ground. we would save millions of dollars in damage every year and poslbly sums lives as well. It might require a lit- lle ingenuity to provide it suitable bumper for the rear end of it truck which would also permit easy leading. But surely the cnrlnem who have produced the modern miracle which we call today's au- tomobile can meet a chlillenie like this. Toronto Financial Post. . William A. Reddin n.a.. B.Sc., 1.1.3., Barrister. solicitor. Etc. 120 Richmond st. -. Chnrlnltclomi which Churchill is master), "ex- cept perhaps the spirit that prompted the question." Reports PHONE 2484 PROFESSIONAL CARDS”p Guudot & I-lususrd GflI.BEK1'- A. GAUDET. B A., M. I Barristers and solicitors Money to Man Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg plete without his presence. The theatre knew him for his frequent visits to West: End shows. and he made no secret of his fondness for his favourite radio piupammes. Above Ill. he knew his responsibil- ities Is King and Emperor. and workesd indefItlgI”y to keep him- self Ibreast of affairs of state. 0 I 0 These things we knew, but there was more that we could not know. Many times in recent months we had seen the King's face in photo- graph: or newareel picture taken msybe It unguarded moments and we had been struck by In expres- sion of countenance thst punled us. If we had tried to describe it we should probably have said that it was the look of I man who saw the Ipprosch of some supremely dire event which, however. he re- garded not with fear but with re- gret. How right we should have been we were not to know until Mr. Churchill told us in I radio address that the xii-is had "walked with death" than last few months. One sympathies with Royal per- Ionacsrwho have to carry out their official duties with impec- cable grace whatever their pl-tvIte feelings. but in do so under the cloud of death itself Isemed in re- quire I stungth of will that few of us would wish to be called on to show. , C o 9 King George VI c'sms' in the '.l'hi-one in I.moIt. dramatic fash- ion, and mailed for flfteenbyui-I in a period of prodigious events. In these eventl he Ilwsys played his full psi-t. Ind Iometiinu sought to do more tbaircoold be permit- ted hlni, Yet. om felt that no use hspolut when he could witlutmr for I monnntfrom the Ian "of bfloitr. to in I hoinI- fain- man. In the end he. as he would have liked to flu. quiotb. Maostullr. and in the oountry. when he felt at liolzm, Dr. A. L. Maclsouc DIENTIET Dental X-Ray GLORIA BUILDINII 1'19 Oraitno St. Phone 2!! p Allison -M. Gillis. LLB. BARRISTIZR. BOLICITOIG. Eta. no Ilchmono fit. - Cmnwt Phone coo .. ..-.. CIICS. P -Mctghnlill as. seams-ran. soucrroli NOTARY. lite. Intern 1'1-Isl bulldinl. cnanuwrarown Phone I'll! Dr. Jlilln E. Stems ' vilrllimunv - SURGEON Phone 129 288 Powmil St ' Office Hours . By Appointment l MacPhoo ll Tram! H. F. MacPHEE. BA. l-'-Vt is soMism.r:u l'ItAlNUI( is A Bsrristrn. - -0- ..a Bell. Malliiesen 8: Foster Barristers. Solicitors. W- R. R. BELL. Q.(.', C D. 1.. MATHIESON. I-1--W Q-r G. n. rosren. I-L-if Louns on City uizd HI'"' Properties 150 Richmond Rlrr-rt. Charlottetown, P-El”.-- iTll'II'lI-ITTTTT 0- '- orrolui-;'rius'l 12615 Kent street 81! PHONE Ham .4 . lI.li. IMIE I Ml Great George other offices gs.auuu. Adlolninl Nflrlb American Ii IEGMMIY UIIAITIIRIID MJUUUNTANTB -- lt.. Chariot-ulowl noun use. rm - an 801 aumou-n w. msicmno. on menu I'. siurnaasnn CA- I Monelon. It. ulufl. Amh5""'mm" nuns. lentvllle. uvmooi. nu ole-nw:-Ind W" 4;,-r4 ncouivliip. ouaine zoo. Itootnsl. wf cum IIII. chulomtovo can um. aqwoui'Au”taf of Quebec. ucuws roams. was seen lherbrtnrluf-I. Vancouver. Klraiaul Qllwluoctn. Ilsnlton. charm" if A, mconm l