THE GUARDIAN. Cl-IAIRLOTTETOWN gun- The Neighbors PAGE FOUR - . i g THE GUARDIAN! er to World War III. or a final attempt! will be made to settle East-West differ- oid cgmdouelown Authorised as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, ottanu. JULY 13. 1952 . A I (Notes IBX The. Wayj. l U The infamous Goebbel of good fortune Mr stunt . ' ' cast a ences around the conference table. West g l Germany's Chancellor Konrad Adenauer I m"! r' L L ' IET:-ii The Island uusniisn Publishing Co. and France's foreign minister Schuman are (;.E0nGE-rowix M,-ADE,” mm, mu H, mm wmch N am ' t 1 our h time and , ,.,,,,,,,m In Auwm. muw. In A. Human. both under heavy pressure to promote a "Tuesday W” 1. day long m be atotleasltuox:1:hv::woi::eint:cxli slumps; pound sea,-trout, Ci'khtm:nb:.:;l; - ' In 11 Scotsman. that any old Canadian boar, who - Probably can't find Europe on the globe. flies to Europe from his so- Big Four parley. Britain's Labour party is no less anxious to see another attempt remembered in Georgetown. when the ceremony of laying the faun- dation stone of the new Academy Associate Editor. Frank Walker. Driving through a, not warrant a cha:g: olI' uc':re(llen::. ClRCULA1'll)N ' "Covers Prince Edward Island like the dew” f'The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink". to ease the international tension around the conference table. Before Labour Day rolls around it may be possible to see whether 1952 is to be to be erected in that town. took place. I "A number of the brethern of the Masonic order from the City and various parts of Kings County were on hand and assist- per rich country which his people don't know how to exploit. and here bombards a continent with a crowded population." - Winnipeg Free Press. 11933. I Windsor ma Lg . guts. If that is a. prgpet:a1L:gu.n;:. tstion of the present law thenp 1' is time the law was changed -mt vast majority of motorists c6me t; a atop when the 3 at the entrance In f.emIln"Iiagis.l,l,'.'.”. or through city street and the) fully expect that other moforisty will do the same. If that funds: i mental safety rule is to bk dun. aarded and the choice of stopping or not stopping left to the indivi- ' the fateful year in civilizationls history. M. Bmhc, -P. M chmes Ben, FRIDAY, .ll'l.I' lit, 1952 i of St. John's Lodge, acted as -.. .-. ..... . ;.....- g g Deputy Grand Master oi the cor- emonies. At high 12 the proces- sion proceeded from the Lodge .room of St. George's Lodge, ac- Kelly's Hatchery Pond is the Mecca forlcompanied by Era. Lobbanls Band. lto Trinity Church, where divine As a means of atimulsting busi- ness. the traction company in Memphis. Tenn.. offered free rides on its buses and cars into the city between the hours of if and 7 p. m. every Thursday night. The company's t doubled because CIIARLOTTETOVVN. -.j Rates Boost Reaction , ,mCn,3aSed freight ralesl Win. pmbablli trout fishermen as me Federal Fisheries service was conducted by Bro. the the riders had to pay to set back dual d” in acceleiate the movement of fish by truck” Research Board seeks to deplete the trout Rev. 12. T. Rozitli, after which the home from the city. Just another h V''- 9 "Juli can only be I instance showing that you don't "i 5 ”p -ll""l' ”' "'9 "Went rm- procession re-formed and proceed- ed to the site of the new Academy --accompanied by a large number of the inhabitants of Georgetown and vicinity-where the corner- stone (a massive block) was laid due and ancient form. "In the afternoon t.he brethren sat down to R sumptuous dinner prepared for the occasion, where they enjoyed themselves until half- past nine In the evening, when the brethren and guests separated, and departed in peace and har- monv ' --The Islander, June 21, 1862. Our main hope of safe driving lie; in everyone following thg "me with Ruzsed individualism is .11 very well but it has no place in modern high speed traffic.-Flnnn. clal Post. get something for nothlng.-Klt- in the opinion of many shippers, according,popu1auon, chener-Waterloo Record. to a statement released this week by thci 0 0 -- Fisheries Council Of Calladit . 3 This seems a popular year for Provin- 0lllaYl0 and Quebec are Ill? large l1Sl1' cial elections. The reasons are fainly oh- lrlllgllkfiils ail: Illtf? bu(lkPof';.hc fisli Xomesivious, of course, the general prosperity, l" 'm ie an ic an acne coas s. sur- 1 In some countries. such as the g United states, television is a thing of the present. In others. such as Canada, it is a thing of the future. But in Denmark. it appears, tele- vision is a thing of the past. The - Danes, one might say, have had it. l Television was introduced into Denmark last fall, with 1500 sets being placed on sale. only 400 sets have been sold, and as a result. the Danish state radio, which presents that country's only TV programs is going to stop them. - Toronto Globe and Mail. The events mice of bread han gone up seven "cents a pound in five years. according to an analy. sis of the American Association 01 Grocers. And it was not the first material or other ingredients which contributed most to this in- crease. for that cost has remained practically the same. from 2.2 to 3.2 cents. But it is the cost of labor whlch has doubled. that is from 3.1 to six cents and the various taxes rising from 4.2 to six cenls. which are the cause of the increas- ed price of bread. The coat of 'the coronation and a Federal election next vey has revealed that these Provinces use, year, about equal quantities of all kinds of Atlan-l, 0 0 0 tie and Pacific fish. Truck movements arel Tourists talk deiigmediy 'of our C001 eve. leaslble 3ll(l- in many 03595. DI'0Vlde 5l-lPel”l,llli'lgS, incomparable beaches, and pastoral ior refrigeration facilities, although railway scenery, but our strawberries topped with , ”I wish the boss would stop bringing stuff from his garden. PFlglnC9l'5 RFC maklllg iZ00d DTOSYESS in lm- whipped cream really fill to overflowing, CT" ; Therels 3 3'm35h0l3Per 1” my typewriter". Pl'0Vlni-'. lll0ll' l3Clllll0S- their measure of the good things of life. ,. ' 7A? . 1-. n I r.i M- c.n..m. mi. :1 Nu. slum. Co Inc The United Elites might just as well reconcile itself to another meeting .with the Russians before Increases in freight rates react adversely e r on the price relationship between fish and The Kingston Whig-Standard tens of 9, . Victor and Vanquished Ollie? Pmleln f00dS. many 0fWl1lCll are Dr0- foreigner who wants to know if, "woman . ' . m E 1- u m production and the distribution of duced closer to these inland markets. SOT teachei" means "a woman who teaches" or K 03a (Anmh. Cooke m the Manchemr Guardlm) m: ne:,mp:;,f;e,x:1'el;,;:me3-,,h r('-35,): this food which is essential to life . has become the preponderant ele- many. In terms of accomplishment, such meetings in the past have in- ment in the constant increase of "one who teaches a woman.” Perhaps com- - its cost.-Le soleil, Quebec. far no action has been taken to modify I.llCl In file summer of 1901 the Gov- servedly from the top rung of one effects of such horizontal rate increases on many primary commodities requiring long hauls, as suggested by the Royal Commis- sion on Transportation. Fish is hard hit on; this score since long hauls are unavoldable.' The current requests hit the fishing in- dustry at a time when large stocks of can- ned fish are on hand and while price re- ductions are being made in an effort fol clear 1951 stocks. - "Everyone will agree," says the Council, "that the railways must have adequate revenues to operate efficiently. It would ap- pear to be time, however. that those de-, pending on these transportation facilities serious for their livelihood should give thought to the ultimate effects of steadily increasing transportation costs on railway parison with the phrase "Math. -teacher" . would be helpful. O O U Forty acres a year for reforestration may not seem a great deal for a Federal- Provincial effort but it should provide this Province with valuable forest coverage for the future. particularly in connection with encouragement to the farmers to operate their individual wood lots in the most ad-' vantageous manner. 0 O 0 Comments on British Columbia's altern- ative voting system continue to come in, few of them complimentary. The standard voting system may be crude but altern- ative voting is clumsy, difficult for the vot- er, slow to show the result, and results'in A CHILD WRITING All the recording race Burns in this little face Half buried by fallen hair: The Egyptian scribe, the Greei Carving on virgin wax Ills characters antique, Young Joseph entering sack: Of corn in his father's book. The child Virgil. and Pope Shaping with infant hope Each goosequlll letter and hook To the page's end, are there. And when he lifts his eyes To the dream he murmurs of. And his fleets of fancies melt Beyond his verbal reach, All that we ever felt of longing and surmise In launching out our love To an invisible beach 15 in his lighted look. -Geoffrey Johnson in the New ernor-General of the Philippines, s chuckling giant of a man whom Westerners were said to mistake for Santa Claus and Orientals for Buddha, was watching the serv- ants load the luggage of his son. Robert Alphonso. eleven years of age and going back to America to Uncle I-Iorace's school for young gentlemen in Connecticut. Before long the father was to inhabit the White House. . It can never have crossed his mind then that his improbable off- ladder to the top rung of the next. Two years later, he gained first place in the Ohio Bar exam- inations. He was admitted to the Bar and spent his holidays in the White l-louse, where his father was mnw presiding over the destinies of the Republic. A coming young man, a cool, able, admirable pros- pect. so many visitors told the President. Whether it was the need to nurse 9. broken leg, or a character- istic impulse to atone for his wide spring, this correct. owllsh little boy, was to have the same ambl- tlon and to pursue it with the same methodical zeal that in a year or two was to put him at the head of his class at Taft School. . . . player, chronic his class. phant proof of In that same summer. there was s monkeylsh little boy playing ball on the wrong side of the railroad tracks, which had recently been reputation as an athlete. poker "regular guy", Ike had an intense bout with his books and graduated in 1915 well up in the top third of Dizzled by this trium- respectability, he caught up with Robert Alphonso by meeting and marrying ll. rich young Texan at his first Army post at Fort Sam Houston. . e e and deed been a waste of time, and there is not the slightest evidence that another would be any more fruitful. But a new meeting of foreign mlnisters' deputies would not be a waste of time if It per.- suaded European waverers that the present course of the West is the right one; and that there is no altcrnstlve.- Wsshinsion P055- 011 the While angling Galch stretch of the River Spey. Mr. J. R. Stuart. Grantown, had the unusual experience of hooking four fish in four successive casts. Flshins Worm upstream on fine tackle, Mr. Stuart hooked a salmon with his first case. but lost it when his tackle broke. I-Ic repaired his cast. tried again. and promptly hooked and landed g. four-pound sal- mon which was safely "SN-55- ed." He then discovered that it was the first fish he had booked. his still fast in The new constituency of Lan- gara, contrived by the committee on redistribution at Ottawa, must have the strangest and most won- derful shape of any constituency in the whole Dominion. It looks like some creature out of a night- mare or out of the depths of the sea. obviously the committee was suffering from a nightmare or was entirely at sea when it gave birth to such an ugly and fanciful piece of work. Langara is about eleven miles long and a mile and a half wide at its widest. At its narrowest it isn't more than a. few blocks wide. It cromes Vancouver from west to east. starting at the tip of Point Grey and ending at Bound- ary road. it is made up of bits and pieces carved out of Vancouver- Qusdra, Vancouver south and Vancouver East. and it looks like a the patchwork it is. - Vancouver Y I! . or Tiiea original tackle being extended across the wheatiands of its mouth. To round off his Kansas as far as Abilene. This boy was known as Dwight, or Little Ike. or Ugly Ike. Being merely one animated snaiiis pace from camp of the seven sons of it small and to camp and rank to rank, the poor farmer of Swiss extraction, it methodical one at a dignified gal- mattered a. great deal what the lap from law office to prosperous other boys thought of you. You corporation lawyer to the state Legislature to the United States Down the next two decades the spell employment. While the fishing industry impulsive one was to move at an accounts for only a small proportion of freight shipments, it is a factor." .m:.A.--A---.--:-- Radio License Fees 3. weak. government by the least objection- able, that is to say the weakest party. I O . "A-at so:-'-' 29 I To-eon-I line Age-Old Story . rx4;v:-xi 9OG0(Cr69&G0&wvx PROFESSIONAL CARDS Palmer 8: Hoslum The Charlottetown Hospital needed ad-, ditional accommodation and modern equip- M. Albon Fornlrer. 0-C- merit and got it. NOW It needs funds for And may alkyd Mun nying, had to prove you were as good an d . . . t ' vv), . u. 1, u, 3, 1511 American as the next one, espec- Senate. The war affecte their , According to the Ottawa Citizenls par- Lmmgdlfate expcarilsef ftvetr fmd alzgve fundef: mug; all; mem:c9" Rad M. .,.,,w.:: lally when your parents stuck dog- careeas only slightly. The soldier B'A' LL A. J. IIASLAM. B.A.; 1413-3- ............y cmesponae--. rm; r--no ncense ,;;g,W;;:S-,,,,,::,:,:::::...:;;:e':f. .12; ::..::i' .:a':::...:"':i ".2. ..::”-..i.l:: fJ.”.l”i."h2”??:e.f..'i?;i;l 25...? ii; .,.l1.";:'::..';:.:.?l;:l.i:;... -- fee is likely lo be abollshed m Canada be' things. , "River Brethren" about whom the lawyer went to France, as an as- n ch”-iomsgotm Bmkcgzrgaiioscnolk slstant counsel to llcrbert Hoover's MONEY .1.0' LOAN cattlemen spread ribald rumors. "We were very poor," Little lke said fifty years later. but "lt was! The Rewi ing first rate hospital facilities available and mm” M Mm fore the next Federal election. , . . y will show their usual willingness to work enue Minister, Mr. McCann, states that no food mission. then as counsel for the American Relief Administra- Liglifi-1ir1Vg;A”sA-AgI(ilIer . . d give - h been reached but the GOV- an ' the glory of America that we tlon. gfrcliflleorilt isaiaid to be awmje of the unpopg o o o Ltlvflcitrlopolitank Life pnugegllwwly didn't know it." Shortly after Ike was singled out 'I' A' MPGu'9"n BOII. MCHIIGSOII 8: - 0 , , . is H Hg 3 95 H pf - - ularltv of this impost Moreover at the Gllbell While: English naturahstl W35 300 lives 3 Ye” 1" the ”""'ed Whether he .knew.it or not llt- edelalilg ””"ll5T”' s”uC"0"" '5'” Foster I I , Slalesi llbm” ml" murms ct mam tie Ike must have sensed that SIiI'- slon to the Philippines Robert Al- N0TAnY' mm B , I S H H E, ' Irfl GT5. 0 9 0l'!, C- born this date 1720. He took holy orders and devoted himself to the study of naturai history around his parishes, particularly his native Selborne. He published, "The Nat- ural History and Antiquities of Selborne", a new edition of which was published in 1950. The Selborne Society was formed to protect the British countryside and stim- ulate interest in its study. 0 I 0 in the Summer season. The victims are mainly men and boys, which reflects their greater exposure to this hazard because of outdoor work and recreation. The chances of being fatally injured by lightning are far high- er in rural than in urban areas. City dwelvzrs are protected ton some extent by the tall steel frame buildings, which safely conduct the lightning into the ground. Then. too, when sudden thunderstorms occur in urban areas, safe shelter phnso was picked as Ohio's "fav- orite son" at the Republican con- vention of 1938. Ike became a lieutenant-colonel and Robert Al- phonso a United States senator. . . . vival on the Chisholm trail was cu,,.;,, gundinx guaranteed to men who. like Wild Bill I-Iickox. were quickest on the draw. Ike was s jumpy. hot-tem- pered, generous little boy and he would lick the boy next door to prove it. But there was no method to his Americanlsm and after he got out of school he did add jobs around town. played semi-professional baseball for a while, at nineteen was a night foreman in a cream- ond of 19.31 Parliament set a precedent for an- alternative means of financing the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation by statutory grant. For the year ending March 31, 1952, the license fee brought in about twice as much as commercial broadcasting, and somewhat less than the statutory grant. Yet a third or more of all radio owners neglect- . R. R. BELL. 43.0. D. L. MATHIESON. LL.B.. Q.(7. G. B. FOSTER. LLB. Loam on City Ind Finn Properties lilo Richmond Street Charlottetown. l'.E.I. MecPhee 8: Trainer n. F. Mus-rnnrc. ILA. 0.0. E. soiunnnnn 1-barium. B.A. Ba;-rlsters. Etc. ............-.-. Goudef 8: Hosaerd in By the summer of 1941 Robert Alphonso's name was in the papers every day as a doughty patriot. voting against selective service, against lend-lease. against Ameri- can entry in the war, against se- duction by the ”fantastfc idea" Frederic A. Large. O.C. Barrister. Sollclto . Notary ed to pay it. Collection costs, borne by the are roughly 12 per Transport Department, cent, or about 5i600,000. So the CBC has been getting less revenue from fees tliap it should. and the taxpayer has been severely Drake's drum is back in London. It was brought here from Drake's home town of Plymouth. 210 miles away. for an exhib- ition of -Drake relics, and the last time it is usually hear at hand. In rural areas. on the other hand, one is likely to be caught some distance from a safe place of refuge. An insight into the details of how and where deaths from light- ning occur is provided by infor- ery. from a. friend, of going into th Navy. lie thought. under pressure He took the examination, that the Nazic could invade the e United. States any more than the Americans could "invade Germ- dld surprisingly well but he was any". too old for Annapolis. He applied, therefore, to West Point, got the senatorial appointment, and in name of Eisenhower for the first time in public hear- ing for his "brilliant" conduct of ln- Louisiana. In the same summer, the cropped up GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A., LLB. Barristers and Solicitors Money to Loan Bank of F r -- Bldg. Royal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P. E. I. Loans on City and Farm Properties A. Wulfhen Geudet. ...m....m:...:..mm...m was 599" in the Brltlsll Capltal W35 lll 1531: matlcm compiled by the Statistical Chas. R. MCCIICIO B.A. June of 1911 was on his way east army manoeuvres LLB. nicked. ....k..-.vmm--- when 5ll' Fl'allClS Drake W85 lmlghled by S35; Vf,';:,,1;:f”f3l,',,;:u W be it 5"ldl"- The mi ls hl5l0lY- Queen Elizabeth I. With it is the wood other sources, In .11 the records 1'” mm” "" he ” mmuwul " Al 61 1" l” 3"" " l"""”'””” nsnnlsrnn. soucrron, song ata . . . ' ' ,1 a the seven seas, but it was better as confident, and a belated eon- nAnRls.l-EB some"-on me with which the great British admiral play- 3:9-f:51'lgg.ed:::l;fIg1: 133;! than the creamery. He was twen- vert to the evangelism of his an- Nprsav. Etc. ' ' ' . 7”" . led bowls on Plymouth Hoe The drum The ms-for fact to eme-we "om" 53i's.;'.'3l'..&”m?lEi.l.v3l.1”2?L'2 .313 22:22". llfetlnli l3'”5il'.3i?.i?.3i?f.3l Ea-urn Tr--t nullmnn i'fl"'i'i1fu.ll.""iE't'i'.'.t Llgllls 3”? llufnlng law 1” the Chan'iwas used by Drake to summon up his llglfnosxfiywii glggth: 112:5” l,gf::: monkey-grin that got him called He is early to rise and late to bed: P cmmgo-n-m-own Money to Lolsn Collection celleries of western Europe these long sunl-A-or 9 It 1 H, h 1 - B T h P ,, "Ugly Ike" were now the most, lie cannot down an addiction to ' , , C S. S 51 e ping rl ls seamen, nliig are preventable. About on. engaging features of Cadet Dwi M orkmal rugs mm” and on Phone 1711 mm” 9Ve”mE5- 1" the Slate Department m l for the exhibition is in aid of King George's mm” "1 the '””"l"” 1” Wm” David Eisenhower 8 He believes that the Iinlt of wash-ng-on and in oums East Emmy... for 5...... "iier"::."i.li:O""”i::"iiiivziiiiz - -' - ----m -- -o-- ------m ”--n .i 5 Taylor 4- A-c""""""- W- . . .. ' os e ves w en . . code and cyphcr staffs work overtime. An; . . . . ilVLe;:;cl'llglIg':ltlI1e1ll:lgLI;e'l::lc;)I' near trees MI::::n:,';fJl;eltl;;' Itx:Y;nle';hg3;::1”glg;; ;?:upp;:l:'fn';'ffclan:l”g:'mognmlg op'rollu5'rnis'r OMOMETMST atmosphere of tension-not unlike lhatl An Old Wadi,-10,, was fecenuy 1.eS,0,.ed Because 0, ,h,,,,. ,,,',,g,,,' ueesg ert Alphonso was zi, just, out of any more Federal government. Eye. Enmlnedg mum Fmedj 1;3(;I::.;: :;:...s.;:nmon.s I:-::',1.:,3.-sit These are the Titans who collid- ed at Chicago with Ike winning on the first ballot. Yale. was plodding neatly and de- farmers working in their fields, herding Nil-ile. liberating tractors. Others were killed in barns. In some instances. the lethal dl-scharse killed people standing in a doorway or on a porch. sev- eral of the victims were gathering the family wash from clothsslines attached to trees hit by lightning. Curiously enough is substantial number were reported being hit while they were in the living room, Corner Kent and Queen Sta. Office Phone 1956-House I013 j:A Motheson. Penile 8: Nicholson . A. W. MATIIESON, Q.C. A. II. PEAKE. B.A., LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON, LLB. cspeclally isolated ones-are fa- vored targels. After striking a tree the bolt may flash sideways or it may run along the ground and kill anyone in its path. For example a group of five girls were fatally injured by lightning July of last year while they were lunchlng in a wooded area in Idaho. In Tums during June 1950 lightning struck a tree under which seven persons had taken refuge, killing four. In July of .that year a single bolt killed three members of a family which prevailed through the long lloll, in the Netherlands town of I-loogeveen. In W'.'”l(S Of lllal lawful Summer "f 1939'”lformer years this municipality and the .lJeI”V8dCS- The elllgma ls Rllsslai The neighbouring one of Echten were without a (lU8Sll0" ln llle mlllds of the dlpl0mals' war Protestant Church. On Sundays. therefore, 0? P9809? , , , the bughers went to the chapel on the AMOUE lllc many issues Whmh dmdci "Echten" estate to attend divine service. East and Wesln "W9 l5 m0” mmnous than In 1630 the Lord of Echtcn, who as a gen- the T9P0FlS emanatlnli from Wlthi" the oral had worn uniform for a long time de- Byron J. Grant. O.D. OPTOMETIIIST 126 Kent Street Phono 879 (Opposite Bevcro Hotel) TOKYO. July l'1 -(AP)-- Six- teen polics were injured Wednes- day when Communist demonstrst ors clashed with police at a Red peace rally in Nara. near the an- cient capital of Kyoto. -Kyodo news agency said some of the 1,200 demonstrators hurled three Molo- i.ov cocktails and rocks. Police ar- rested nine' Korean Reds. Dr. W. R. Carson Day by day, twenty- cnmornacron -smruner, ends theworid Soviet Union itself. four hours a day, press and radio in Rus- sia din the ears of the people with "I-latc America" slogans. Communist orators in every one of Russia's great, cities bend all their energies to whipplnz lhe D60Pleif1l0 frenzied antagonism against the United -States. Those who know Russia say that the intensity of the "Hate America" NOD38!-Ylda on the home front can only betoken a con- vlction in the minds of the men In the Kremlin that war is inevitable. Others. less pessimistic, declare that the purpose of the Soviet war drums on the home front is merely to distract the populace from economic problems and to frighten and di- vide the countries of western Europe. One thing seems.certsln. That is that the present status quo with Moscow can- not be indefinitely maintained. Before the cided-probably with the idea of heighten- ing interest-to have a military drummer make a round of Echten just before the service was due to start. In the 18th cen- tury, the Netherlands Reformed Church community of Hoogeveen adopted this cus- tom for, meanwhile, a church had been built but it had as yet no tower, partly for financial reasons, partly because it was feared that the swampy ground would not be able to support a church with a tower. Every Sdhdgy, for more than three centur- les, at first three times and later twice, the sounds of a drum could be heard in the houses of Hoogeveen. But in 1951 this familiar sound suddenly. ceased because there was no drum available. Recently. however. this defect was remedied and once more, as on Sundays three centuries ago, the muffled tones of the drum resound through I-foogeveen calling the faithful to will either be near- church. the bedroom, or kitchen. celebrating a Ibiithday t d in Barristers, Etc. Open spaces in general are hazardousr places in electrical storms. In one instance, three out of four lnflelders lost their lives when lightning swept their posit- tions on a baseball diamond. Two younuters were killed in a school- yard when lightning struck the chimney and travelled out along wet grass to where a group of children were playing. The records also showed that five. rsons were fatally injured by lightning while they were in boats-at least three of the victims were fishing. one of them outing with a steel rod from a metal boat. Swimmers are in danger not only of being struck directly. but also of being eleotrocuted by a chargn carried by the water from a bolt striking at some distance. A considerable proportion of the fatalities armaccountod for by the persons engaged in agricul- tural snd other outdoor its. Approxirnatsly one fifth of the deaths in this study were among Positively no enfrie NOTICE TO EXHIBITORS CLOSING DATE FOR LIVESTOCK PIS JULY 26th. date. Please get your entries in as ed as possible as catalogues have to be Issue . PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION ASSOCIATION 3 received after this Connecticut, a.., t- (' " " - Money To Lean ly having hit a chain left dangl- lng from a limb of a. tree. 90 Great Game street 0 lottetown Allison-M. Glllls. LL.I. nsssxs-ran. somcrlroit, ch. 180 Richmond St. - Charlottetown Phone 500 Palmer Graduate CIIAIILOTTETOWN Phone 107! 201 Prince Sl- Dr. A. I'.. Moelsooc DENT T IINIIII Ella)! GLORIA BUILDING I10 Grafton st. Phone 20! H. II. DOANE III Gull Oeorgs RANDOLPH W. MANNING. CA. other offices at Halifax. Moneton. St. John's. Amherlt. Dartmo llentvilio, Liverpool, New Glasgow and Ti-uro. S COMPANY CHAIIBIID ACCOUNTANT! 81.. Clnrlottefslvn Phones 1&0-I111 - Box MT ' - sum 1-. MaePIIElISON'. ('3- II I MeDONAI.D. ans:-rum 7 Manual. eushss.' Ottawa, Toronto. Vancouver, Iirklsnl Inks. Mention. Currie futon -Charlottetown.” - - CIIRIIIE 8: CO. ACCOUNTANTS saint John. lhsrbroolm Ildsilton. Charlottetown- ; :rrinam 1030 -cs: .