PAGE FOUR WG-1} __._@-_ iii: 1 1 tiiiiitorrsrowii iiuiiiniiii Morning Dally (Founded tn I887) Authorized n Second Class Mall. Post Uffloo > Department, Ottawa Incident: Lleut. Col. W. Chuter S. McLuro View-Proficient: J. B. Burnett, F..I.l. Secretary: Uout. Col. D. A. Maelflnnou, 0.8.0. Idltor out! Managing Director: J. ll- Bllrnoll. F-J- l- Anochte Editors: Frank Walker and Inn A. Burnett. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, JANUARY l8, 1946 Municipal Hospitals In these days of socialization and commun- istic propaganda. private charity as well as private enterprise, scents to be ou the way out. The popular ixilicy scents to be to compel tlle State or the Municipality to foot the bill for everything from the cradle to the grave. and refrain iron touching the private pocket of . the uidividutl. OI to allow the uaturtil love for hunlatliti" and regard for its tazliugs to have free scope. A: our door, just over at lloncton. they are planning to run their hospital as a citv or City-aiiil-Coniii\ prilieet. cairicd Ill and inaiu- lziiilcd by wio=< publicly elected oodles. and if this be CQITIEJ into ‘effect. it will not be long before (lthrrr cities and towns, including our own, will follow suit. kcortling to tlle Saint lohn Telegriih/z-lollrnlll, everything is in fair way for Moncton iuunieipaliziiig its hospital. The first step toward-s tltaking the Slouc- ton City fltspital a civic 0r municipally-oiviled institution was léllifill at the monthly meeting of the hospital lward of trustees. The institution has‘ been asking the City council to guarantee bonds for the erection of a new hospital to the amount of $800,000. .-\i the request of the council, the board passed a resolution stating that it “is ivilling that the number of trustees may be reduced and that the act and amend- men-ts thereto respecting the Moucton Hospital be amended in such a ntzinncr as the City Coun- cil may d-esre. if the City of Bloncton guaran- tees bonds to the amount 0f $800,000 for the construction cf a new ltospital." Action now lies chiefly with the City Coun- cil which is expected to bring the matter before the Municipal Council of Westmorland-which is scheduled to meet at Dorchcster Ian. 22—with the intention of asking the county to be ioint guarantors of the amount subscribed. The County Councils of Kent and Albert will also be approached on the matter, it is believed, as citizens from these districts are admitted as patients and will continue to be Datients in the hospital. It was pointed out during the discussion of this important. step that this amount would not cover the cost of the new nurses’ residence which would be needed with the increase in hos- pital facilities and services. The probable total cost, as mentioned in a plan drawn up a few years ago by Dr. A. I. Swanson, will be about $1,200,000. If the city guarantees the bonds, it has been reported unofficially that it will appoint a hospital commission to govern the hospital in place of the present trustee board which is self-perpetuating and over which the city has little or no control. If the County Council also decide to back the bonds, they will have full representation on the commission, it was stat- Many Research Chores An organization which had iniicb to do with the ‘success of our huge egg shipments to Great Britain last year was the National Re- search Council. Among a multitude of other chores, the Council busied itself with improv- ing methods of preserving shell eggs by oiling them.’ The contract for shell eggs for Great Britain in I945 was 600,001. cases Specifica- tions for the ozling of eggs were drawn and applied. It was found that oils of higher vis- cosity than ordinarily used were better and that application could be made at room temperature. _ Dehydration studies were also carried out in milk, eggs. and in mixtures of these two. Of it dried sugar-egg mixture some twenty mil- lion pounds weir used in Great Britain in the lzalting trade hast year. Dried sugar egg retains its whipping power in sponge. Milk and egg tnixlttres ham: been used \\"lll suctcss as high protein foods III the treatment of amputation patients. About 90,000 pounds of such prepar- ations were .s'llll.'PL'd last year for use in over- seas military hospitals for this purpose, 1\ very concise review of the Research Council's lctizitles in I949 runs to 2o typed pages. Tilt"; cover such important things as invcstigtitioits in atomic energy, radar research. design and construction of a plywood taillcss aircraft which was ready for flight trials at the end of the ‘veal, and the development to the pilot-illant stage of a process for the produc- tiou of butvluie glycol from wheat. Among trher things. a building research conference ti-vwewed the situation in the hous- ing and roiistiuclion field and laid plans for the co-ordintifion of studies and the initiation of practical SPlICIIICS for the improvement of housing in all its branches This work is be- ing closely integrated with the activities of the Department of Reconstruction. through the Scientific Research and Development branch of which the president 0f the National Research Council is director. Research. work for the Nayy. .\rmv and Air-continued three services-— throughout lllyf slackening basis towards the end of 'thc wlll‘. Much .~i the work ‘undertaken for the ccs as a war measuri- will be continued irl-Jpacetilhe. but with ipyilustrial and com- ~ l . replications Io ct ilian rather than i y fcvtiiirements. 7*” -' ‘National Research Council pas three . filnctlons It operates laboratories. at the [time eleven dffitlftiv across Canada. It ” fhcyear but. as was to be expected on a gridir- Government, particularly those of National Pefence, Reconstruction and Supply The third Important function is in connection with the organizing and cO-ordfnaiing of national co- (HRH-five rtfiirhrdl programs in whzch various departments and organizations have an active interest. Research activities must be maintained ‘on a steadily increasing scale if Canada is to go forward and llvlfl the place she has gained dur- mll the war .t.\ an industrial nation. A good pace was set in this direction during i945. Since 1939. the actual phvscal facilities of the Council have been widely extended The staffs of the laboratories have inc. eased fourfold; the direct peacetime budget of‘ under a million dollars has grown to nearly six millions and. in addition, the Council controls indirectly fur- ther expenditure of the same order 0f tnagni- tudc. —I:Dl IURIAL NUI ES- Our potatoes are being more discussed ‘than eaten Ill Ottawa these days. w v n: The Legion has the first call on our poc- kets today — a pleasant outlay, iv =4- u 1t! Three candidates are now in the field for Charlottetown Mayoralty, viz., llltssrs. Keith and Tom Rogers and Earle MacDonald. w x ii a- .\ proud intent called izp the society editor ofvthe local newspaper t0 report the hirtli of twins. 'lhe girl on the phone didn't quite Iiear, and asked. ‘Wilt you repeat that?" “Not if l can help it!" was the quick reply. v * v >I< Canada is progressing all -right when it thinks it can afford to pay at least $125,000 for a residence- for Prime Minister King. Of course, his successors would have the right of occupancy as vrell. ‘I II O The United Kingdoms training school for Naval Air Artificer Ap- prentices, opened this month at Ar- broath, Angus. Scotland, ivrTll be dealing with young men regarded as the future technical brains of the maintenance personnel 0f Brit- ain's Naval Air Arm. n- first permanent $111! Improved standards for new permanent houses have been laid down by Nlr. Aneurin Bevan, Britain's Minister of Health. A three- bedroom house for five people must now have a minimum range of 900 square feet-loo square feet more than was average in pre-war days. Other types of houses are to be on a proportionate scale. 1K Ill Ii The Citizens’ Reception Committee and the Women's Naval Auxiliary are giving a. recep- tion and dance for Naval Veterans in the Sport- ing Club on Tuesday night. Here is their excuse: “When the Navy came home from the war there were no receptions, no bands playing and no streamers flying in greeting - - and there was a reason. We didn't come back in a group like the Army and Air Force did, but every train brought in a dozen or so matelots with their bags and hammocks and discharge chits. Friends and relatives may have been at the station to meet your train and the Red Cross Reception- ists were always there, but there was noth- ing in the way of a bang-up affair to say “Hello-welcome home—-and thanks for a grand job well done!" So now it is to be done Tuesday. #18! Regret will be felt, especially by many old- timers here, at the death of Senator Duncan McLean Marshall who was “an Islander by i! ' adoption". He married a Charlottetown lady. Miss Christina MacIsaac, and for long nursed an ambition ti become a member of Parlia- ment from here in the days when he organ- ized “The Patron of Industry Party". Sub- sequently he entered iournalism, devoting his talents to the development of agriculture on a scientific basis. He went to Alberta, where he became Minister of Agriculture. later he re- turned t0 his native province, Ontario, where he was elected to the Legislature there, becom- ing Minister of Agriculture in the Hepburn Government. In I938 he WEI: called to the Sen- ate. i!!! Unless something is done soon to increase the facilities at Wood Islands we are going to be in a sad iam this coming summer. The freight and passenger traffic there has been increas- ing so rapidly that it is a physical linp0ssibil- ity t0 handle i: with the existing service, which must be doubled to meet the demands. The Northuinberlantl Ferries have had their orig- inal ship the Sankaty returned to them by the Government after war service as a mine-layer. and it is up to the people her; to see that the Company puts it into service for which it was originally intended. Now is the time to per- lulde the Government to take the necessary action so rliatthe Sankaty may be ready by the time the season opens. ‘ Rudyard Kipling, English poet and novel- ist, died this date I936; was newspaper man in India until i889, when he settled in England, producing IIOWlS and poems at an unusually rapid rate, and of more than ordinary high quality; he greatly extended the bounds of literary art, says a biography, by the introduc- tion of strange experiences and new types of characters and of novel forms of PERM? tion; perhaps his chief characteristic is his ver- satility, his subjects ranging from animals and children to the sophisticated products of mod- ern society, and from native life in India to slum life in London; he shows an absolute command of style in all it| resources; as a poet his’ mastery of versificatior. is complete. and telly‘ modern poets have so well caught the bal- ladlnotel-he w!» awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in i997: Mun a bear in most relations, worm and sav- ‘ age otherwise, ‘an propounds negotiations, man accepts the ~ compromise. y, “ _ - . fiery rarely will he squarely pu logic of ~ 8 fflCl "\ its ultirntttc conclusion in unmwtcd m, CH0 NoteeBy The Way __-_- A U- MINI Mlllfi l.n Mo:- wW. Orlanl All! Ion, finds that “Morgen/i ehlldi-en m ust. ‘ lllll! ours. Common lo Ic mglit have Indicated that cone uzlnn, but It Iii fl "mmfllfll one for all that, and l! everyone on both alder will rec- ognize the fact, It may save a wealth of complications In the future-Brlntford Expositor, . An lmprnvllll fioehnl . structlna "W: e’ u" lghlefuorlscdlei- Ivrlbed by Prof. . L. Bragg and A. R. Stokes of the Cavendish Ln- boratory Cambrld o, ln Nature. Pfévlollily. the grl of luch Ien es had been made by uaIng-pinho es In a square array, with 40 pinholes‘ to the centimeter. This reduced fuzzy lmaxer. often spoil further by dust. The new method ls to use small lenses embossed on the surface of a sheet of transparent plastic and to cover the rest of the sheet with a taper mask. ‘The minute lenses (0. centlmetei In diameter, 0.5 centimeter In focal length) form lmazes which tare sharper and more uniform than those formed by the pinhole method. ._ s If Is curious to note that Ralph Waldo Emerson, "t e Sage of can. cord," who foresaw o many things, foresaw atomic energy also ar-d It Is Interesting to note that his confident optimism made hlm cer- tain that it would mean the end of war. In a lecture on The For- tune of the Republic. delivered l.n the Old South Church on March 30. 1878, he spoke these words: “Our sleepy civilization. Is very scornful about bows and arrows and reckons Greeks and Romans llttle better than Indians and bow- and-arrow times. As if the earth, water, gases, lights and ciilorlc have not a million energies, the discovery of any one of which could change of the art of war again, and put an end to war by the extermfnatlng forces men can appIy.—Morltrt-al Gazette. Fear causes most people to launch the smoking habit. They are afraid they will not be thought "big" or important. This is especially true of teen-lagers who long to be thought older than their years. But what about women, and many men, who start the tobaccn hablt after they are grown? Again It Is fear that makes them kee suck- lng on their cigarettes tll the original distaste has been over come and a habit developed. They are afraid of being different from the herd. Tobacco doesn't anesthe- tize your judgment like whisky, but It does for your mlnd slightly as regards mental multiplication or another flne cerebral funrtinris. It costs enough to pay your In- surance premiums or buv a small farm, so financially It Isn't IVBG. -Dr. George W. Crane in Chicago Daily News. A ker at ii meeting of the OLiav/u Authors‘ Association com- plained that "Canadian publishers are entirely unsympathetlc toward Canadian poets." We should say their attitude is riot unsympathetic but ls based on the very practlctfl ground that books are made to be sold and If a ubllsher, on his ex- perience and udgment, believes a certain collection of poems would riot attract buyers he can hardly be expected to spend his compunys money on printing ltnPoets may hate to admit It, but if they are wrltlng for the public their pro- duce comes under the old economic law of supply and demand a_s much as though they were growing po- tatoes or making mouse traps. The publisher, if not the poet, has to reco nize that fact If he wants to cont ue In busniess. Printers have to be gold, paper costs money. and a boo the people_wlll not buy holds a dim place in any Ilst 0! assets-Ottawa Journal. Even before the war, of course, Canadian women had shown that. they.c0uld turn their hands to many varied occupations and per- form them well. Thelr entry In the varloul uniformed services, however, took them to new heights of versatility. Reports of the vn- rlety of tralnlng courses undertak- en by those coming out of the for- ces show the broader horizons to- ward which they are reaching. Educational facilities are being o fered them as a means toward re- establlshment, and many of them are stepping out of the traitltlon- ally "feminine" vocations. They are training as artists, reporters, photo- graphers, cllnlcal workers, even as assessors and printers. To these enterprising women there n0 such thing as a feminine prob- Iem In business and Industry. Dur- Ing their war service, they demon- strated that they could handle any number of jo s formerly look- ed on as exclusively for men. They are not 80in! to let pence force them back Into the restricted sphere once Imposed on their sex. _Windsor Dally Star. There lo l storm of Quail-Mm“! right now about the effectiveness of our penal system, and with comes the usual flood of well- meimtng If misdirected tears. Ifor always there ls confusion about .112 cause of crime (a falrly Iiroad problem even for the modern sup- er-anal t) and the untshment of the cr mlnal. And t ere probably always will be confusion about It. u long as people Inillt on bring- lng half-digested sentiment t: betlié‘ on well-digested law. AnYOYIQ WW t admit that the ultimate roots 0d crime are obscure, challenging an worthy of the deepest. thought that. clvlllzed people can zlve t» them- Wliat elements there are In lheale root: of poverty, of lack of dllcli lIne or of sheer delcnerncy cf or the mm urgent study by w o; loglat and psycholozllt allke. Bu the ordinary cltlzen la In no post- tlon to pass valid judgment on this. I-Ila concern hi with protection by what he know: as the law. with; out It he fully understand: the‘ even If he could exist, an orI-l" W community could not. Prom lhi crudeii beulmilnn this hnl been dominant and unchalleniefl; my [oflp of people who decide to Ilve gather can achieve no develop- ment or pronen whatever unlen lecurlty I rovlded for their 9"‘ . . rue, CHARIOTTETOWAN minced from end to end. party and or their llvu. Do rear ism be measured from there. one who defy the lawn must nutter the nultlel. There mtllt be dlffllv Inc, and without the elemeri of, fear of ootuequonco there can be‘ no discipline at nu. Any Immfll- att- uirut to the homo or to the llfe of dcltlun of- lily community mun be mot u Ill . To mix up wlth normal law 0n men! the ffequqm, about envir- to. open ttio m. It! I . e faith-lent Ind of ofiwiaitgltly the ma] utter Iran . . premllo t It Iitiwloll l would renltv be- new.“ Justified If the "blcli "- were known. - No Utopian I¢IIQIIICH§O Republic, with Itl' democrac, to Prof Make Th s Your Gui acorn of arlatocrl blrth or of talent-vii ure In any coiuitry If condltlons: flrut,~ l- o tartan dictator ca ble of , rcl z h d an keeping lite lieuten- ant: at heel; and lccorid, complete Isolation from the rent of the world. When Columbus discovered Arn- erlca l.n 1492, there W! continent to the sou of several millions w of polltlcal- and social for centuries. created {restart Iiapplnearof the greateh number” to a degree not known In any other land or age, before orjelnize. . The system held unbroken sway over an Immense stretch of ter- rltory covering the present repub- Ilcs of Peru, ChIIe, Ecuador, Bo- livia, Argentlnn, and robnblv a considerable rectton of razll. Here Ilved between leven and nine mll- lIun peopl enjoying a hlzh degree of clvlllzat on wltli no mun, woman or rhlld knowing poverty, hunger or fear of an enemy Inside or outside Its borders. Such was lllB'EfllDlI‘Q of the Incas, the Children of the Sun. Ignorant of iron, the Incas were in tempt to r Scott's ,h with It» e or fear fail! tad two P1120‘! g Phone ZDS-L iilirlcia ro . w. are midi‘ operating a -'ldellveiry service to be known u the Clty PIcIr-Up Service and would oppre- clitta a fair share of your patronage. . City Pick-up Service B. F. Ward and? llay lluiloy Prompt and Courteous Service iffli Illlbtltl‘ Prop.‘ Great George Street abfllt were drafted Into the han- dler t: for which they were beat adapted. "Aptitude testing" reacti- ed a high plane with the Incas. Jewellery, weaving, d elng, pot- tery, muon y, lumber rig fishing and farming were all given prior- Itles tn the selecting of artisans best adapted to thelr respective activities. The system resulted In a Iilgh degree of efficiency and skill particularly In masonry, jew- ellery, weavlng and dyeing. The business of the Ianrl was conducted by thousand: of cour- Iera carrylnl messages and news by word of mouth and an effective system of mnemonlcr, from end to end of the empire. The travel- led In relays of ftye mt es with tremendous speed along the asphalt hlghrolds. Expert runners covered the world's number one engineers, as their massive architectural re-i mains attest. Into these structures. they bullt; dressed stones too. heavy for modern equipment to handle, quarried and transported across ravines and rlvera spanned by suspension bridges swung from cable: of a girth beyond the ablllty of modern cording; machinery to spln. These stones they hoisted hundreds and sometimes thousands of feet abovqsea level, flttlng them so closely In position that the blade of a knife be Inserted between of a knife cannot be inserted be- tween them. In the matter of roads the Incas surpassed the Romans, their king- dom from end to erid being linked together by a system of well-built, asphalt highways. Ignorant of the plough, the Chil- dren of the Sun were the world‘: best farmers, growlng an lnflrilto variety of crops In their tropical, temperate, and cold zones. Expert. in the use of fertlllzerc, they were more careful t0 prevent theft and destruction of their guano deporlfa than of their vasts hoards of izold. Irrigation they brought to a high state of perfection. canals and aque- ducts providing moisture for the most remote farm, whether In a valley, on the plnln. or perched hlgh on the slopes of the Andes. Each form was guaranteed Its quota of water and woe betlde the farmer who dlverterl a neighbor's supply to his own use. Without wrltten language or hleroglyphlcii, the men of anclent Peru developed open-air theatres to which the people resorted In great numbers on the many na- tlonal festivals and holidays. They held national spurts on a scale comparable with our own Olympic Games of pre-war days. They evolved a language which all con- quered trlbex and nations had to speak before they could reap the soclul benefits enjoyed by those ltvlng under the patriarchal sway of the Emperor who was u direct descendant nf the Sun. O O O Completely Isolated from the rest of the world, completely Ignorant of contemporary political science, the Incas, llttle by llttle, through trial and error over lam: pert and not: by government flat or nr- der-In-councll, evolved a schemr of nntlonol lIvLng and well-balm; that. gave economic security to every citizen. At 24 years of ‘age every man was obliged to marry. HI: choice and the choice of the lady were consulted, but any bachelor who was coy or too choosy or too In- different had his mind made up for hlm. Marrled he was, wlllynllly, mid izlven a place of liind and a house. It was not much of a house and It hiirl a thatched roof. This showed no discrimination, how- ever. becauae the magnificent Teln- ple of the Sun - n repository of vast treasure-and the gorgeous palace: of the Emperor were slmf- lorly roofed. _ When a chlld was born. the father was glven an extra piece of land -double area If the new- comer wail a boy, the theory being. doubtless, that a boy eats twice as mtlch as a girl. All the land was distributed. beginning with inc Temple of the Sun and Its nubsldl- arles, the Emperor and nobility (his relatives) comlng next and the people third. Nowhere til the land of the Incas did the uliildnw of a landlord fall and there Wan no tenant who could be evicted for non-payment. of rent. Only the priesthood could hold land In peb petulty and they must confine It! use strictly to their own jail. No- body could sell land, iilve It away. least- It, or wlll it to liIa lielrn as much as 150 miles In a day. All this national activity of mlI- Ilons of people was conducted with- out money or Its equivalent. There war no taxation; everything was nld for with Indlvldual labour. ch man worked for the govern- ment for three months In each year. For nine months his time was his own, to work or play or worship the Sun. . Inca justice was equitable and swift. Judge: were In constant ctr- cult and must dls ose of all cases at any glven pa nt wlthln flve days; "IIEIB a of the law" were not tolerated. Sylnce there was no pro- perty, theft wtu unknown. Major crimes were iiacrllege, murder and adultery. Lerner offences, but bringing heavy penalties, were idleness and lying. Idleness was defined as engaging In less work than was neceas to Provide for the sustenance o ones self or family. All sentence: could be ap- pealed and the Emperor made fre- quent royal progresses to hear com- plalnts In perlon. Iflt wu found that an unjust sentence had been pronounced, It was annulled and the errlng judge was made to suf- fer the penalty he had wrongfully inflicted. It was n system that kept {Ihelrhhonorl from nodding on the enc . O I O Here, then was a great com- munity enjoying all that statesmen can offer In economic security. freedom from want, a job for every mun, "bread and clrcuseii" wlth- out stint, every man, woman and chIId pulling from the cradle to the grave wlthout ever knowing hunger, nakedness, homelessness. or fear of the future. Pampered and spoon-fad for centuries, a nation ciii-ile Into existence which knew nothing of Indlvldilal Inltlatlve or enterprise, It: every need antlcl peted and provided for by a grand- fatlierly xovernment. Curl such u nyrtem, or cul- gelted modification of ft.- oduce a vlrlle and successful race? It worked In ancient Pe u so long a: the/mm Ire was comp ately Isolated from t rest of the.world, but when a handful of enterprising. selfitartlng, self-propelling lur- opeaiis appeared suddenly on the scene, the fair and proud structure of the Incas fell In a nlglit. Their leadership failed them at the crisis and none was trained or sufficient- ly enterprising to plck up the fal- len iceptre. The nation fell Into slavery, a slavery from which their unhappy descendant: have not yet entirely escaped. There may he no exact parallel between modern nostrum for en- surlng "the greatest happiness of the greatest number" and the pn- ternal system of the Incas; but they have thls In common. that they all seek to destroy personal initiative and private enterprise. Perhaps a system that abolishes these prerogative: Is p iislble but history, which has a s on ten- dency to repeat Itself, has emoti- stratedthat the suppression of In- dlvlduallty In n nation In Itvfng without contact with other and more dynamic pe lea. The deadly virus must be a I ed tn n universal Inoculation. F n: thls, a country that permlts any group of politie- Ianr to strangle freedom of choice In Its way ofgllfe will eventually be a push-over for another race which has encouraged and develop- ed that principle. .66’ 6w LAST TWILIGHT When light. Is going. . Llkhtxiwg the eyes as well u Ilflit o iiy—- Lot m; have music for my solace; a . 1.1x if’ rt n ...'..:...*" la or“ Voices of vlol, viola, vlolln. ‘mien I'll n t (to l Recedee Ineiiorrly oii rifjitslgftt. - Whtle chimgeful iniislc weaves such mums of trembling. flower! B tenllng leaves T fill steep Tliat-Illljilot Show the moment of my sleep. c f»... e! IN MolvT Men of affairs naturally stop at the; WINDSOR because of its reputation for dignified comfort, unobtrusive, oouflguu] ocrvice and its convenient location-and because u... WIIVDSOKIii. proper place for business and social meotlngl. illfilffi lbs nonunion sauna: a. Aiunic liaison». in» on" -A.udrey Aleuniko Brown. REAL gnizodactho dsnr n There were no heirs-except t» high rank or high off‘ e ‘ there was no property. A new Emperor liud to start from scratch ' with hi! own palace. household fur- nlahlngl, personnel went-In: air garel and even royal regatta. When e died, llll palace and all It: eon- ten a wiu abandoned and allowed to all Into do . dtlme and arveat were loo- tlvnll at which Ill llilnted In :1- iznntlc been. The Ian of the priests win first cultivate and seeded. Next, the fields of the peogle were fended, the Ilmperonbreu l.n: the first rod with l l of gold. Lastly, the royal demelno wn Ill- ed. Slmflor national coo rat on marked the gathering of Inn vent. Surplus crepe of all produce, Including wool and place, were stored In magazine: I texlcally af the I mm; m. t z (11% rfiiiipiioziiiiig m ll l» liiifiliiln dlnr nnnlu pin! swarming populnt on, and lIljvuIlable-wltli- cu any red tape.‘ . W32 Efdllfihf." 2'1"” “$33? en of special nklll urinal-infirm! uul\».slllis {£1 “aynoldp fly he... . .y . _ i “ 16w Null: till r- l‘.'|l.o e Tel. 589 Ilii. Lemuel E. Proivse Physician and Surgeon Has Commenced Practice OFFICE: my. GR. GEORGE ST. Phone: Office _2302: Home 50s M c‘ " l-18-6i. It'll/II’; MMVS IIAIII RESTORER A delicately perfumed pro- llantfon which rental-q, aviation: 5nd heaiitlflu n wlll fore m OHIIIIKIHQIIIOIKI“, h“ u’ E 5 1 5' i ,. B l 5 Wins"? be mined at the renilll. Got your bottle 00-day. Price 0o canto per bottle. GASSY STOMAOII BIILIBVED neno h In trot u.» .- h his‘; ........‘.. uni! hove mould get n bo tlo of Dr. Eva's Stomu live IQrYirY Dr. Bum Stomach MI: tire, taken at. Ideal time not only prevents d] bu! o foot: from n: but ft promotes the functions! activity of the ntomoch. and Improves the one Ne. Don't delay. Order your: bottle toiny. Price l5 oenh. Attention! Jim, received a shipment of up-to-dnto Trun- < c; Alllllos. TIIE 2 IIIBS’ . flo Great lived b FII-ZVQIIJI ll. J. IMBIIII OITOLIIIIIIT fitting and Sélailyhg Gillan lloutnpmltll. Ofllollonrl: lflfollLl Ital! ll. u Ill m. nut-m ° "airbag-rob: . Office Cormack! will Professional Ilarils GAUDET EQHASZARD Barrllforl, Solfclforl, Nofarlel, Md MONEY TO LOAN . annular A. GAUDET ma, 1.1.! A. WALTKIIN oavnnlr, nus. Canadian Bonk of Commerce Ill]. Ollltlolfelown, P. IL l. ' NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 RIcIinionibSt. Charlottetown ' P.0. Box 66 Morroll and tloiiinany Chartered Accountant: D. " F. ARCHIBALD auteur-minimal rqpilniq. is-riluooiiarni-zii "chm-rm W..- bullion!!!- ‘ Ho. G n. R. thorium-roe. . Chartered Accountant-l ll lind- llo ‘ lo: I" O-A- ileum a 5 amt-v . '0 i ' 1- 4- .- w