"rags rout: i ‘ TIIE . GIIABLOTTETOWII GUARDIAN .iSFi_i§-§ Dally (Found * 1117i?) ‘Demise... Llllll. Col. w Cheater u. ucnm Grog-President:- J. ll. Barnett, I-l-l- I Iqenlary: Lleut. Col. D. A. laollsuson. 0.8-0- ‘lfllor and Managing fill-color: J. Callus-nail. FJ-l- naoinase fiction; l-‘rank iwalker and nut Ill A. Burnett. R..C.N.V.ll.‘ (On Active florvlos) “The Strongest Memory 1| Weaker Than 11w Weakest Ink.‘ minay, Motif/inf}. 2. 194i > a British Bacon Imports Official trziile figures have recently bcm issued‘ as thi- lioiu-il of 'l‘i'ade of the Unite? Kingdom lifted the curtain of the long black- out on exports and imports. Britain in 1944 imported more bacon than in i938. llwugh shipments entering the United Kmgdom dmP‘ ped off in i945. Figures 50f il1lP°Yt5 b)! Em‘ ish liuiidrcdwciglits W131’?! 1938—3»433-°°°F i944-—4.ss8.oo<>; 1945-2841000- _ Values of these imlwfti if“? mcfeas°d ngg-ly 3o per cent, so that Britain as a cus- tli somer faces slss problem of obtaining less bacon "E for the same money as before thehwar. _ i These figures disclose that during the ‘first half of 1945 bacon imports Coming inl0 Britain were running 17o milliOn pounds behind I944 imports. This decline reflects reduction in Can- adian shipments. It is probably unfortunate _for the Canadian producer this had to happen Just when Danish bacon reappeared on the market in the United Kingdom. Moreover this situation has added impetus to the desire of domestic producers to expand their production. To date, Denmark has ship- pgd 20,000,000 pounds to Britain, but shipments an running well over 2,000,000 pounds weekly and are increasing. The Danes are cutting their own consumption in order to export more. But Denmark feels the sliortage of fced and ho: hog population has been cut by the war to‘ s, poo, about five-eighth of the pro-war finm . ‘The fishsn she of the British bacon mar- ht will llkoly run as high as a thousand mil- lion pounds of imports annually. This is about a third abon pro-war imports. Pro-war sources slsowlhffio l9 figures htflo ordorofini- ’ no: wars rk, Canach, Eire, The ~ ' ctherlands, Poland, Sweden and Lithuania. The United States supplied negligible imports asscspt durigg the war. No one can foresee the food production situation in Europe for some yosrs to come, but it is obvious Canada occu- pies a preferred position as a bacon supplier. Canada should supply 50o million pounds an- nually. , g 111a British bacon rnsrlset will remain a _ I long time under close government regulation. .1 This means that the system of trading de- ' . veloped during the war will persist. At the y Canadian end the Meat Board will exercise re- sponsibility for filling British contracts, and '1 there the Food Ministry will handle distribution and rationing. On Higher Education Some timely thoughts on higher education are contained in a. recently published pamphlet on University Life in Canada, by Dr. H. L. Stewart, of Dalhousie University. Dr. Stew- art deals effectively with the current argument that universities should pay less attention "to cultural subjects and more to the so-called prac- tical sciences. He shows that this contention is by no means a new one, and that it is no truer today than it was in the past. *"In a great passage of The Advancement of Learning," Dr. Stewart recalls, “Francis Bacon told the Iihilistines of his own time how even for the purpose they had in view their method of banishing the liberal to make room for technical arts would be ineffective. He com- pared this insurgence to that described in Livy’s fable as begun by the other parts of the body T against the stomach, on the pretext that here was a lazy organ, neither moving like the limbs nor perceiving like the head. The in- surgents had forgotten how dependent they all were 'nn the silcnt digestion and distribution effected hy the stomach. In like manner, said Bacon, qll the special professions have their ultimate supply from the source in liberal knowl- edge which the fanatic of the ‘Institute’ derides. Then, varying the metaphor, with that profus- -ion of imagery in which he has seldom‘ had a rival and never a superior, he bids the men who would substitute a technological for a liberal training consider for a moment how plants are tended: '1 f vnu ruill have a free bear more fruit than if hath ilsrd to do, i! fr not anything you ran do to llic bnughr, bu! it i: the stirring of the earth and puffing new nzould about the roofs that must work if." _ ~ An “Age-Old Controversy ' President Truman's recent action in pro- f calming jurisdiction over the national resources of the continental shelf contiguous to the coasts of the Unihrd States and its territories running , out to an off-shore depth of feet, recalls an age-old controversy. Average offshore distances to which the im- mersed territory extends from the several ‘mo. are: Atlantic, 73 miles; Pacific. i8 34*» - Gulf of Mexico, 60 miles; Bering Sea, - .37 trifle and Arctic Ocean, r05 miles, the trauma, Qeozuvhk 5mm exwiilii- lllsri lite nations by common consent have general accepted the offshore limit of their ' my»... about three miles, measured from ‘ m, three-mile limit was _,ln thobelief that it marked the ex- p of coast defensognns. As the range lease lands as far as twenty-sevcn mil“ from the shore in the Gulf of Mexico. llkilii tho position that modern artillery can fire pm- jectiles for that distance, Appearance of the bomber as a coast-defense weapon has added a further complication to observance of the traditional extent of territorial rule. Exceptions are-to be noted with regard to Denmark, Norway and Sweden, which have a four-mile limit; Chile, Turkey and Uruguay with a five-mile strip, and France, Portugal and Spain, having a six-mile belt. Greater limits are also defined in some treaties made between the United States and other nations. By these treaties United States Coast Guard cutters are permitted to stop anti search vessels suspected of smuggling, eventhough they may be twelve miles from shore. Other treaties permit sus- pected smugglers to be stopped within one hour's sailing distance from shore. The United States prohibition brought provisions especially aimed at the outlaw “rum runners.” If a vessel is ordered to stop by a Coast Guard patrol within Ameri- can territorial water, and refuses to obey, it may be pursued. stopped and searched even though it succeeds in reaching the high scas. —EDITORIAL NOTES- period All Souls Day. a a- Edward, Duke of Kent, father of Queen Victoria, born this date I767. I U I U Ii 8 There is still a long way to go before we are “over the top" in our Victory Bond cam- paign—determination will do it. a a a a The City Council is being kept busy these days with ever so many projects on hand. It has to show that it has accomplished something worth while before it makes appeal for re- election in February. a s: a m Where does all Canadian high grade can- ned salmon go? A Fisheries Department of- ficial states that the 'entire Canadian pack was arrivals of British people in Canada say it's scsrcer than hens’ teeth there. Officers and men 0P Canada's armed forces say they never saw it in Britain, Italy. or Northern Europe. Perhaps the high class hotels and clubs mon- opolile the output. a a a n- Major James Stewart, mentioned as the officer taking over General Kurt Meyer, Ger- rnsnatrocitite and snapping the handcuffs on him is the eldest son of Mrs. James W. Stew- m. 110 Cumberland Street, and the late Mr. Stewart, long a member of the staff of Patons Ltd. He went overseas with the First Conting- ent as a Lance Corporal in the R. C. M, P, in 1939. mid has been on active service ever since. Unofficial word has been received that he has been promoted LieuL-Col. l iliill _The grave closed yesterday over the re- mains of another of our young, enterprising business men, Mr. Chester A. Campbell, who was so well and favourably known, in buginggg and sport circles. A veteran of World War l there seems little doubt that his early demise is in a measure due to the consequence 0f the hardships he_then underwent. His place will be hard to fill and widespread sympathy goes nut to his loved ones left to mourn, a o v The government plant at Chalk River, 0M. built as iiari of the development of the atomic bomb, will be producing radioactive ele- ments for the fight against cancer and a num- ber of other human ills, Dr. Yaffe an. "OUYICES- Dr. Yaffc, a native of Winnipeg and graduate of the universities of Manitoba and McGill, is one of the National Research Conn- cil’s scientists stationed at the Chalk River Plant. I10 miles northwest of Ottawa. He says not only would these curative materials be pro- duced at Chalk River in abundance, but . . f negligible cost. These elements could do mucah the same work as radium but at much less expense in the treatment of cancer, a is a a Sir Samuel Romilly English la d philanthropist, died this date 181s, beiiyiimiz. bered for his humane efforts to mitigate the Draconic code of English law; nearly 30° EFIIIILCS, yarying from the most frightful atrocity o. Fepmg conlpany with HYPSWS. Wcre indis- Cfimiiiately punishable with death; as a con". quence, vice flourished, for as Lord Coke long 3R0 observed, “too severe laws are never exe- cuted"; he introduced legislation, which passed repealing certain statutes of Queen Elizabgfl; which made it a capital offence to steal prising. l.Y_ from _the person of another; suoegeding in this introduced three other bills with sim- ilar intent. and though u. did not live to see 1i" Outcome, all became law, and thenceforth reform all along the criminal code became the l>°l>illar policy of succeeding governments. I U I I 'l‘l1ird parties have never been ‘ Quebec, and it seems that m. Bloc PZZEiZ-‘I. no exception. Born ~ of wartime condition; falhfl“ b)’ Mr. Maximo Raymond, M.P. for,‘ Bcauhsrnois in_ i942, nourished on the propa- gfmda °f L! L18"! P0111‘ La Defence du Canada at the time of the plebiscite when Quebec ans- wered "N0” in the matter of compulsory over- seas drafts, this party soon grew to lusty man- hlilqd. seemed to be _s_ new factor iii the tangled i "it of Quebec politic... But it did not fulfill u. earl)’ Pfomjlfifi; at the Provincial elections in ’944' 1* 8mm Wily 4 seats. since reduced to 3 by l resignation. In ti‘ Federal field, in June 194_5._ it sent but 2 representatives to Ottawa, Political wiseacres shook their Vhesdi; the Bloc $5 done: its demise was only a matter of time. l‘ Prophecy seems since to have been borne out by facts; a few weeks ago, the party n11. facial mouthpiece, Le Bloc, Significant, too, is e some; efforts were made io » of. protested water. slabs“ has offered to date for the -sold under contract to Great Britain, but recent i“ rue “CHARLOTTETOWN cuAizoiAN Notes By 77w Way PUBLIC, FORUM posltlon seems to be sllihfly ln favor o! the form- er by reason of longer acparatlon. rt. Arthur News-Chronicle. THE PROHlBITION ACT Buy-I am not, optimistic the ‘Ivmpensnco Federation their friends will Wield Hill fluenoe in tho next Provincial alco- that - Jonathan Wainwright, and tuidfng amidst those 1i s w o were wolcomtng film at New York, spoke thoughtful woirda. From years of painful experience as a prisoner of the Japanese, he had brought one insistent lesson. "Peace Ls a mtlltant state which 1s not to be used b wishful sec 1y“ ," he said: "Un we can be sure at our security 1s safe from such treachery as we-have suffered at the hands of the Japanese, we must keep our defences impregn- nble. ‘Phat ls thefllgesson of Bataan”. Wm; and‘ 1 u to find how ma. ct surpr se us a . muzhysentimcnt were u mil 1w 1n Prince Edward Island 1n favour of Prolubitlon. The Govern-Kiwi wlll not rlsk a rlcbfscfto on the question. How much better the present law ls, with all its failures, we whose memorleg go back fifty or sixty __Moug1-gglq _ years, well know. All eddlnls, ___ ba tlsms and even at fimarals and u. ‘enn ‘ was su Gerald Camhellhalbeend - away from Efnglanld for most of °°mm°n' I“ “m” Ilgyfhmci, “ti. twenty-five years, but when he re- Egg“ fiffiffiigg were s? i110 his!!!’ tlres ten days hence from the twin 1o 1 um. that may 1W1 some 11m oats of British Minister in Wnsh- 11c‘ 1,“ 1,, bum“; 11,, dead. “,1 kton and special assistant t0 the u y m 1 1 ’ _. British Ambassador 1n the United gating‘; fine ogtljanliicecu1gy1twfia States, he wonmgo home: The n“, unmgmmn “E1”, o; p“, reason: s. British housing short- 1° 10d new‘; 1111111; o1 1111mm, age. Hls relatives have tried vuln- pem bfigse days wmnn ten mfié. to obtain 11v accomm =~.- o, Charmtewwx-l on market m,” tlons for Slr Gerald,,hls wife, and mes es 1,011,113,111 w1n1e1. when daughter. There's a housing short- {in 'mp er “now dnvmg o“ age over here too, but. he's found e m s w e n ' shelter for tfie Wlnter-a cotta e them w“ dmfgerous’ Many “ . sh- th ; but. fortunate- iléilitursi? Dlegopbew York Hem d smatheupvehidleeswagere inot B01118 forty mlles an hour, and many a man came home from market with less money than he ought to have. Yes, present conditions are land. but not nearly so bad as they were 1n ms days when 1 uor was easier to get than it 1s t ay. I remem- ber when men and some women, too, would be around the polling booth in the evening waiting for news, how easy it was to star; a. fight, and let blood flow. At coun- try polling booths least. The war production board has lifted the ban on shlltalls. From now on». rrmi may make, buy and wear s. shirt with ample tall with- out feeling no ls hampering the war effort. or giving comfort to the enemy. I think this will do as much for the morale of America as anything that's happened since paace came. There ls nothing that will make a man feel as mean, "Bow docs that scoundrcl expect me w swing a hi: deal thls morning without my oh-so-lovely, malty-rich Grape-Nuts flakes? "Mycmclenoywlllbooutfiaydown without that bl; dividend of two-grain nourishment 1n Grape-Nuts Flakes: carbohydrates for energy; proteins for muscle; phosphorus for tooth and boneszfronfortliabloodlandother food cssentlalsl "And I must have something cal! to digest. That's mother reason vb! Grape-Nuts Flakes are my favorite pantry stock. They're spsclslly bluided, baked and toasted for [olden- brown crispness, gilt-edged flavor and easy digestion. "rvs instructed Jeeves to act more“ Grape-Nuts Flakes from this store im- inodlatlcly-q couple of those bl; eoonosny-sl... packages!" non-oo-operatlve and futile as a short . I was any good M. sum things I would try to fig- ure one how many man-hours had been lost 1n the war effort through at throughout; this Province, that is a rare occurrtmce today. , Yes, conditions are bad, due largely to so much money in the hands of people who do not know worry, exasperation and general how m use 1t, and w the chwm lnefflclerfilsdui giweeconomelzlng condmons o1 a good many mums; and the people who want booze are taking advantage of these conditions before they pass; but it would be safer and better to ask the people plainly what they want; and indeed, some day they may say 1t out in no unveflfllll v ce. I am. Slr, etc... W. l. GREEN. shirt . New York Sun. A couple of suppers aged 1| and 15 respectively are reported to have "borrowed" an airplane parked at a local airport down ln the Mlil- Weat States. The youngsters flew the craft handily to s town 40 mtlso away where they landed and J LONDON LETTER BY NORMA CRIBBENS (Canadian Pius Staff Writer) LONDON, Oct. 91 — (OP) ——(Ad- varioe) - A Chelsea pensioner —- oneofthsoldsoldlei-sseenaboizt Iiondon streets 1n black opckcd hats and red frock coats with -shlny brass butboria- was talking over the beer mugs with a young mim ust d from Britain's war- . time army. "Itflswursdmul to be tree again" had, themselves s time. Hers 1s s. clear portent of things to come. It 1s not, improbable that s. few years hence Pa. will settle into his easy chair after supper only to be Jarrod by one of his ‘teen-age offsprlngs asklng “How about lend- ing me the helicopter to breeze up to Dauphin this evening, Pop?“ And then Pop wlll get more grey- halrs when he hears his new heavy "===_—____'7 3% fiwfiflowzm. duty rotor being Cinted on the family clothes pole whlle Junior 1s trying so back the family ‘plane out of the garage-Winnipeg Tri- lvime. ' I In Canada we are always talking about our glorious future, but. too few of us realize what. the word "future" implies. There in With which Stout words, gallant words, iron “STEADY AND OOUR-AGEOUS” am searching for words to honor Churchill. words, Such as he spoke To the people of Britain In their hours of jeo nounced that. it would no longer ‘piiblish- its of- ‘d! I!" fact that so far it has not entered a candi- - pardy- "We shall fight on the b " We shall fight on the landing grounds. We shall fight in the fields And in the streets. We shall fight in the hills: We shall novcr surrenderl"—- Easy sentences to read, But Churchill said them With only ii strip of sen Between England and an enemy, Wenponed as no army on earth Had been weaponed before. I um lookln for words As steady a courageous As that stand he demanded of his people. While the whole world held its breath all" probability, be a city of some sort on the present site of Peter- borough for a thousand ars to come; we are determln ng the form and nature of that. city now. It ls up to us to do the job pro- perly, and lay the foundation us well as we can. Town-planning ts the way to do 1t, for in our de- mocratic age no dictator or great landowner ls capable of imposing a form upon us.‘ Town planning is everybodys busln -_ and next time a meeting even mildly, wlll tum out. to add what they can to the discussion ls called to ills- cuss it, we hope that everyone who ls interested. will attend. Peberborough Examiner. Tlio University of Alberlansuth- orltles have made a valiant effort to deal with th; problems caused 14,151 501. 1, thousand year,’ byte the ungrectelilientegldlnglsux o’; y??? wlll 51:11 s?‘ h ' ve ran an o er s 911 . 81h h \ s t er nest our’! for thes moment the situation is Bolds $31.15, Churchill, more or less under control. Class- When the men of England room and living accommodation Were walking her cliffs has been found for most oi the Nflkvd "f "Fm-i Rammed men‘ though 1; mn-lous as- liut becaulséa lye? sulg‘ themdthen. isaortmeristédagtgullmgs lhrlbullllld to llwetyfewvflgrstiliissgyq viwan years. s pres s ce 0r e pur- , - pose. Even so, It has been neces- qha‘ W” “ mam" my to tum HWY 15° qiiflliflf-‘d —Marl0n Susan Campbell, in the civilian students for whom no room Vancouver prmgnm can bemgounfill. bIn Janitiagy. ltloo. t. e r w e repose w en 200 riiore veterans register, and a further strain wlll come next Fall, when another record enrolment ls expected. ‘Ifnc faculties of the 1n- stltiutlon have already been ex- panded like an acooirlion, and lt ls questionable whether they can “Let us so hear ourselves That if the Briti h Empire And its Common ealth \ age at which men sire moat ch11- dren and break most sports re- cords. Avensglng it all up. Pro- fessor Lehman nrrlved at a pre- clse figure for the prime of life: 33. be 51,8161“... my lumm, _ m. fl monton ‘Journal. n»... .. u-r, ... ......... .... fiassy Stomach: tsln thatlendorsaglon b3‘ den1a1 science wtl break own e soca n . b ler against. the toolhlilflk. the pgsflbllalty 1s intriguing. Should this tilumbls instrument get back Every person who ls troubled into society, llfe will rcgsln some- with no In the stomach ffh of lta lost 00101‘. If the little should el. n bottle of Dr w slivers am will: ruled ao- Evan's B mach Mixture and oophabgmlnuihds best us: how qailokly 2 wig“: they oubtodly - MRI! I alncd by their more elsboname re- l tonnes. iaatlves. We can forward w ~ an m 1n W111“, w,“ mm Wm g; Dr. Evans Stomach Mfxturc 1 m 1,11 w“; m, on p“. taken at meal times not onlv ‘emu 111. ".1 “g ‘ 1 prevents all bad elects hill! In“ m“, o1 111m ,1” 111g h gas but It promotes ills (mo an o! we”. m flu)” "Gall! lcllflafl “Bus”: "°"“ °‘ ‘£1. 3h... ‘dfifinifltffé’ ‘° ' "in ww- ' main we . -- ' . in carvbd hone instruments, tastc- mulled for Immrfll- IN"! in wd-w-M w oi """'- "a"".:"i-.:".~..... bssusysswellssutflity. smiw u‘ ones sfialn reach tbs It!!! where j if? 11%;“? it‘: . lag ncbouiif hi: y s o a woudly silhlasplayod toothpick. — "Ellllm" - - Phllmztm. WW“: a dollaskl! minus we all sch! mali- - rforlisiigcea 1n their“ early u‘ 1%“ 1,.'f"""mh for fisltlyisholdusitorla of 4on3: "" ""'" ‘an’ m] n r O . miehmaiiwofpghlofivorlflltni“! in" rowed w‘ Inn u» ls u” 4:‘ .25.‘! lyiflhvontfng s: fmself ’ ' '. lnocfl lull. . dtoligahst whstw an mania a“ I “m” T.“ ore vs powers i their Polk? m 7 Talented ha. rsnoru D hi“ gs can“, “Pl-u.” Mai...“ WWII, "Music-w Beauce by-election, November asst next. . _ "' “i” so ‘s-iiddiifhifiil‘ can is u.‘ sold uis winter, as he told of tlie complicated "dram-b" process. The ' okl man shook his irrey head sadly. 1 "I should have dome all that 50 years I80." he said. "Then I wouldn't be Nlving on Olselseo Hos- pital for my bread and on good- hearted folk for my beer." The pensioner was ‘l9. He had served 1n two wars and several skirmishes along the Indian front- ‘lcr. Now he was living at the Royal Hospital in Chelsea founded by Kins Charla II In 1688 on the whlrn of ii pretty lass named Nell Gwynne. He. looked happy. well- fed and content/ed: but he had some oomplalrpts.‘ He complained of snobbery. Old j soldier! with small private incomes i would not mtx vrlth tlioce who rc- ‘ celved only the slot prnce-a-dlsy pockol», money handled out by the hospital. They gave themselves airs "as 1f they and s tied about owned t e place." "When men get past '10, kind of tobacco. lngthe pubsablt all the Information we could." placed by trousers and boots. You May Rest Assured FIRE LIFE AUTC is. If. nuouns ”lnsuros Everything" WOOD ISLANDS. EEJ. IAILINO SCHEDULE LUNCIIES SERVED s OABIBOU. N. B. i0 Miles from Flotoli tDA IL! INCLUDING SUNDAY! TIMI ALL SAILHGB STANDARD Leah Wood Islands Loavs Caribou NOITIIUMBIILAN D 6 am. I mm. l0 can. Noon FEBIlI-B LIMITED 2 pa. I sun. CIIADLOTTITOWN. PIINCI EDWARD ISLAND iiuickies By Ken Reynolds i .1»! :/ , can isn't» i , , up our Gdlfllllll wsiii ai- ._ _all tbs“ highs: I can roach!’ _ they become crobohety and little things get on their nerves," said the pen- sioner. "You'd be sin-prized at some of the bothers we have cver triv- lalltles-thilngs that don't. really matter, 1N2 opening and shutting windows or smoking the vii-ion; "I llks to not away from it dur- day and roam around the Olsrlsea hospital is not regarded as a charity. Residents, all former soldiers of 65 end over. disabled by wounds or old age, are there in enjoyment of honest independents. "Some time ago we had inquiries from Canada wltih a view to starl- lng a. similar institution there," said s hospital official. “We gave them The red frock coat and dmkeil hat. worn by the residents ls slm- ilar to the uniform worn in Ch~rle= H's relirn but kne-e breaches, stock- ings and boots have lonv been re- M. V. PRINCE NOVA the Conncctln Link Between Nova Scotla and Prince huwai-u Isis: . 1945 NOVA BCOTIA - PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND FERRY SERVICE a1. ii l This column h s hi’ mmooufntr; mash wgouestlomigsmgehg: 11 tilnndmsltllsclsgonquslymrfflé , Ofiosrurlllt m-ougm f Britain r soldlcr f! m». m Charlottetown Iluhsm imabhs "Inca 2."... craze...“ "us": -- ---- s '"" nus they ' ov a »; 11"” - u" ' lotions; Ill. l, The advantllo of ' - ‘ ‘ Ollas Dani‘: till A. p . "mu-wen" nauosronr ’ , ‘Professional, Card t l t a Neil W. Higgins » __._._____._._. -..;-._____ Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond SL Charlottetown ' Money to l ;lGLAS§E Mfil-eod 6' Bentley i Law _ l“ Prince Stress - a¥¥¢¥-.¥-¥-§-ois.s-¥Ww 'l‘el 589 ___ ‘P0 Box 66 / J.l. Mclilllfilll, ILA. swans. ITO. lAlllllTlll. soucrrol °!!"““:'.._;'.P!_"P“.'° M. ALBAN FARMER .is. a. i.i.. u. Mgxm‘ ‘to LOAN BAIIIS Ell. NULIUITOB. ETC. ' OIIABLOTTETOWN Canadian Bani n! Commerce Bld| ESON 90 Grtll Georg; 5m" Loan Collection ' BABIISTEB. souoiron. arc. H. i". McPhes B.A. K.(L ALEX W. MATH! 0810a: NOTARY I10. ‘ BABIISTER S OLICITOB Bllcy Building Charlottetown: _ BELL o MATTIIESON Barristers. Solicitors. lo. B. B. BELL- M.L.A., ' D. L. MATIIIESON. LL.B-. lLC. Aflofis COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond 8f. Charlottetown, P.E.I. , PALMER c.» HASLAM A. J. IIASLAM. BA. LLB. T BARRISTBR, ETC, Bank n! Nnvn Sculls Chamber; Chrrlwt-tnwn. l’ E. l. MONEV T0 LOAN . B5 P O Bowl‘. Atturnev. .-',l u (onsnslss-onsr for Dseih. l~.tc.. 1 Prince Edward lslanql (Sllcoosvw l Late Richard l. J-‘tfllllfllll OI!” Silk (20, 8| Milli Street sun. Mass lisicsisxiuiunif s JTTEII ~7- 8. Taylor L OPTOMETRIST "l" Kim Ind Queen Sis Phlmr WM! ' u "I z h I . minis Rycsliitisiixiibihenb 1 ._..__..___.__. . .-<- -._.__--__ .~.._.. I Frederic A. Large canisters-in, no. "mull liiilillna. iis orsmn si Phone l“! i I.,0 B01111 cancers-crown p, g, i. W. l. BENTLEY l. C. ' s. a BINTLIY n. c. Barristers and Attorneys-as .- A-F-‘ésvvc. L_4_Q_AA '~ Charles R. McQuaifd I. A.‘ ' ""fi“~‘.'.'.'..',‘§'l§."°" w lllllfil. l lilrrsllsaaflswqpsay “WW5 Chartered Accountants ' Phone. ms- _ ll nraltsnltnvl. ossmmswn ran-sass " m": Jlllyllsnw. Ilalll. r1 a Public Stenogrsphor ~ ‘his’ ins-s. i.‘ - ‘*- Il C ill-fir" ' t i l- F-iWmN- 1 n.