J T H E Authorized Editor and With the acclamatioti. discharged zippears in opinion. managed a A uurlulo Edit ur Ward as well Water Commission in the forthcoming civic election. 'l‘his is to be welcomed as an in- dication of public interest, and it is to be hoped that the voting will be large and rep- resentative on February 8th. As a whole, the members of the Council who are seeking re-election claim to have satisfactorily. as against which there is the stand taken by Councillor Johnstone as to the manner in which certain matters have been transacted. under-lVIayor MacDonald, and with regard to which he has expressed his strong dis- approval. Both sides of the issue have been discussed in our Forum further letter Of the contestants for other are well known citizens and may be pre- sumed to be desirous of seeing civic affairs s efficiently ’as possible. There are no political issues involved, and the best we can wish for all the candidates is a fair field and no favours. East Boast Fisheries Conference The fourth annual East Coast Fisheries Conference now being held at Fredericton, in spite of attendance by politicians and government officials, is strictly a private in- Leaders of the fishing industry from Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, land are engaging in panel discussions on technical and research activities by govern- ments, industrial development and finance, fish inspection services and domestic and ex- port marketing. It would be folly to think that all is now well with Maritime fisheries but it is only necessary to consider the in- comparable fishing grounds which are avail- able in our waters. the great potential mar- kets of this country and the United States which now consume only a fraction of what can reasonably be expected, and the great advances made elsewhere in producing sea- food delicacies, to realize that the oppor- tunities are great, indeed, if we can but take dustry gathering. non-dollar areas? Farm roux GUARDIAN Morning Dnlly (Founded In llilfil an Boa-out] Clan Mull, Punt Olflcl Uopartun-ut. Ottn a n. Tho lnlnml Guardian Fuhllnhtng Po. liming!" lllrvctnr, .| u. lluruoft. l-‘rnnk “other. "The Strongest Memory is .Weaker Than the Weakest Ink" Cl-IARLOTTETVJWN. THURSDAY. ‘FEB. ‘I. i950 Blvlo Nominations exception of Ward '2, where Councillor O‘l)ounell has been rc-elected by there will be contests iu every as for the Mayoruiw and their duties from Councillor todays issue. His Wot-ship's decision to enter the field for a third successive term was not defin- itely known until _a few minutes before the nominations closed yesterday. He is run- ning against two newcomers in the May- oralty contest, both, however, with ex- perience in City Council affairs. From their record and the reports of the proceedings of Council appearing from time to time, the electors will be able to form Newfoundland and advantage of them. Mr. Gardiner & Farm Prices Agriculture Minister GardineI-‘s to Canadian farmers to build up strong co- operatives and distributing agencies in the marketing of produce throughout the Prov- inces is excellent so far as it goes. In Prince Edward Island it is already being followed in an aggressive manner. Coupled with an all-out advertising campaign, dairy farmers recommended at their recent annual meeting in Ottawa, this should have beneficial effect in boosting domestic sales. The question remains, however, what about our export markets? minion Government no responsibility in this connection, in view of the loss of substantial markets in the United Kingdom and other Floor prices are a poor substitute for freedom from the rigid con- trol of farm prices which was established during the war and continued as a Govern- ment policy in its subsequent contracts with the United Kingdom, but the fact remains that this substitute is the only one which theGovernment has been able to suggest. According to a Western exchange, the Anglo-Canadian wheat agreement, signed in July 1946, is a typical example of what hap- pened. This agreement cost wheat produc- era $329 millions in the first two years and a further $28 millions in the third year. It compelled the Government to close the wheat market and thus enabled the domestic price of wheat to be fixed by Ottawa far below world levels, which would have been the market levels in Canada. With other farm products, annual contracts at prices , much lower than available prices were ent- and into and all other export markets were cloned emburgoes. _As the years passed, . this control system was broken down in g items and under local Pressure. ' Tho- Women early in .1948 insisted upon opening of the United States market,‘ a main. however, agriculture has been under columns, and a Johnstone their own offices. all the Is- advice which the Has the D0- which was done in August of that year, the embargo on beef and cattle being repealed with results which are well known. In the indirect but effective price control through- out the post-war years, this being the of- ficial policy at Ottawa when almost every- body else in the country except the farmers was obtaining the full market pricefor his goods or services. .. ~ . . ' Sir. - In the January 28th. is- Mr. Gardiner, as the leading exponent of sue of the Guardian, Councillor Johnstone, commenting on the this policy, cannot now wash his hands of the matter by stating that the Government made no promise to our farmers of fair prices through the transition period from war to peace. it is a late hour in the day for him to have discovered, as he is quoted as having told the Canadian Federation of Agriculture at Niagara Falls this week, that “trade in farm products is a provincial right under the constitution and can be delegated to the Federal Government only by the Provinces." EDIIURIAL NUIES Cancilemas. O I Purification of/the B. V. luary. O I l Groundhog day, but six weeks “more" of winter would still not total a great deal more than six weeks. I O I The civic electorate is now keenly in- terested in the coming contest for seats on the Council board. This is as it should be. O Dominion Bureau of Statistics figures are being quoted to show that the decline in farm income is actually very slight in spite of falling prices. O I Q O According to a recent announcement by the Canadian Minister of National Defence French, Belgian and Dutch officers are to take training courses in Canada, probably in the province of Quebec. O I O Selection of a Canadian as Governor- General is again a live issue, at least in Ottawa. lt would be easier to keep the of- fice out of domestic politics by making the selection from any member of tbe Common- wealth, not necessarily restricting the choice ing on social and religious topics, she found- ed charity schools on church lines in the belief that education without religion is a wholeheartedly to lovers of both the arts. The picture is here for only two days, and the final showings will be this afternoon and evening. It shouldn't be missed. I I O In St. Ferdinand, Que, Mrs. Onesime Bisson has given birth to her third set of twins in four years, a boy and a girl. The first twins, also a boy and a girl, were born in January, 1946. The second pair, two girls, were delivered in May, 1948. The Bissons have eight other children. O I O the Ontario Psychological Association. trlst. The United States Atomic Energy Com mission in its report to Congress emphas ized the "importance of the most efficien possible titilization of the resources avail gramme." It is unfortunate that it did no this country and the United Kingdom. St. Peter's Cathedral Monthly), of Mayor In Ontario a determined effort is being made to make the practice of “psychology" something of a closed shop, controlled by If the practitioners really wish to be recog- nized as belonging to a learned profession they might start by considering the differ- ence between a psychologist and a psychia- able for the nation's atomic energy pro- more specifically call for the pooling of tech- nical knowledge and raw materials with The idea of "Sunday Obligation" has disappeared from the minds of many (says even of those who call themselves Churchmen. Gone is the old conviction that the churchmen must be in his placept 11 o'clock, however dull the preacher and raucous the choir. We regret the loss of this tradition, but we THE GUARDIAN rb-i00%0®€40-iOO€~ . PUBLIC FORUM g This column fl open to the, ‘ discussion by correlpondentn of question: of interest. The 4' Guardian dou not nooennu- lly endorse the upinlup ul corrolpondentl. THE CITY DUMP condition of the dump‘ in the Spring of 1948, made the follow- ing statement. “I found n condition prevailing at the City Dump which, in my opinion, was far from sat- isfactory. A large quantity ofrut- ten eggs and dead chickens which 11nd been dumped there by a lg- cnl hatchery remained uncovered; pools of stagnant. water, filled with all sorts of refuse, st/ootl undrnin- ed; and near thc street. I was shown the body of a large clog which, according to reliable citiz- ens had been lylng there for weeks." Yet Mayor MacDonald has the nerve to try to tell the people of this Town that surh was not the case. He quotes from the inmates of the Council meeting of April l2, 1948, to prove that the matter had been investigated and that they found no reason for coni- plaint. l-Ie also says the Health Officer said there was no danger of it giving rise to a contagious disease. Apparently, ln/the opinion MacDonald and his Council. there was no reason for complaint so long as no one (il(’(i from the smoke and stench. His Worship gives a long harangue on what. it would cost, to lay culvert at stick to facts. The most objection-- able features were overcome with-l out. any cost to the City. A few! cart. loads of’ clay are not expcu-i sive. ' We who live in thc neighborhood . wish to state emphatically that conditions at that time were even worse than pictured by Councillor Johnstone, and we resent the Mayor and Council saying there was no reason for complaint. We are. Sir. etc. the fields, plain, Ln Verendrye. Fraser, Alex- Seems nowhere no qllghl; ll“; under Henry; the great statesmen. Qfirezacélfl; are Jagjzifig L’ “I ‘Signor canes!‘ osnounns. 4 wliited air _ {fflljlqgud LLYP“ ““’°f°“""' The next. motigii Wflsyfofg a $111.06 ' " ' ., ‘ g ' q C 1- - ‘H . l _ months. Councillors. O'Donnell. gARl, MQINNIS, And vtil. the fanmhouse at the ° allmllmlsm 5P9"! ‘"85 011K Doyle and Holland voted “may” DOWLING. Sh. ERNEST L. OS- H. FRASER. ' - ‘ Ti i d (i i» ii i0 d. Ll ‘e ssouraigrls rifle: er s ppe ‘e fortunate when he made reference eri01l8h f" the Blflpiflyfie; I 8159 ‘ ‘ ' . .~ ‘ w . u u _ _ , t. i, , __ A. °““”°.‘.'.;..2i'....‘.il§.“‘ii ii-.~‘ili‘.ii‘.°.° .. as"; .111; $3.121? i.:;"..:::::a:. GODKIN‘ Around tho radiant fireplace, cn- Ml‘- Fl-DWI‘ is "c"- famlilftl‘ will‘ tie vote caused Mayor Mac-Donald *—-"'—"""" closed _ clilzy-“dlfalfil htlswrya l d l M to become very angry, and threat- ‘rur; "nmnco POLO" m a ‘“‘m“““°“s pmacy Ohsmui" Fishir nciveriiodkrederlsnarllils ‘fistula: fliiigiiafiaiiimsiiieihii."iiiiii? " _ . . . ' - f i ., - i Al .- , - A wt .1 [EH5 0‘! mt‘- hss of om‘ of the yum-q ‘d f}, HQ U as - . u. man who was the first whit:- innn out‘ w mm that n “as his duty t.“ “w w‘ ‘ ' ‘e ‘me “r ‘ ‘ ‘ do so. He replied that he \\'Olil(i "figureheads" of the wrecked clip- per ship "Marco Polo" in thc rc- cent. disastrous fire. The memento ed a beautiful silver W8$Cil»'\Vi‘liC1l is now in possession of the Cap- tain's nephew, William Delaney. bearing the inscription “Presented J. PENDERGAST. Kensingtou, P. E. I. Journal of the Legislative Coun- cil, Monday, April 2U. 1863: Pursuant to the order of the day, thc Bill iutitulcd "An Act to authorize His Excellency the Lieutenant: Governor of Prince Edward Island to sell certain Pews in Saint Paul's Church. Char- ‘ottclown, now held by thc Gov- ernment," was rend a second time. The Hon. Mr. Goff, with leave of the House, presented a copy of a Resolution having reference to the subject-mailer of the said Bill, and the same was received and read, and is as followclh: "Resolved: That provi ed the Legislature agree to sel to the Congregation of St. Paul's Church. Charlottetown, the three Pews called the House of Assembly, Legislative Council. and Military ' Pews, for the sum of £100, the - Congregation will hereafter, as t heretofore, keep the Government Pew, so called, for the use of tho - Lieutenant Governor as Adminis- trator of thc Government, and his family (for the time being) free of assessments chargeable there- on, eiiher against the Government or the Lieutenant Governor. Peu- ed unafllmously, Robert Hutchin- son. Chairman." The said Bill, being committed to the whole House. was report- ed on as agreed to without amend- mcnt. t And n hffllww lhnll be. than. and n way, and it ohnll be called Y must emphasize that the Christian Famil d,“ m," M, w, 0m m b“ It oholl be for thou: the wnyhr- to “ f1 this." meets. not principally to ‘hear or see, but $16.00 per foot; why doesn't he Arluounccd by all the trimipets of Arrives tlls- snow. and. driving o'er Curves iIlS white bastions with pro- Tbo Way of llollnul: the un- . CHARLOTTiZTOWN .Lot Tho Light So Shine ‘I N ci 21 TH E SNOW-STORM i, thc Ski‘. ganleifs end. ficcr jected roof 1s all his own. retiring. as he were not. Loaves. when the sun appears, as- tonished Art The ‘lhvo Foes IFrom ru-eedom of the Individual right. It is freedom seen in tilts’, fundamental and general way that is the deepest principle of demo- crncy, in that sense of democracy which uutll recently has been ac- cepted in the western world. It. was not the stupid idea of complete equality, nnd not the arithmetical idea of counting heads to sec irhero the majority llcs, that supplied the fire and drive to the splendid social movement that. has given us our present heri- tage of political liberty. It was the recognition of man's peculi- arity a; a. race, and every man's peculiar dignity. - a An so understood. democracy has not one opposite but two, so that it. has to guard itself on a double front. It is the opposite of deinngoguery as well as of despot- ism. It. is pitted as much against _. "We are ignorant trigues and all thing of beauty, a lesson of forti- tudo and determination." pioneers of our country, Cham- forgotten." said Mr. Fisher. Historical ‘Facts <Sudbury Daily Star) When JOiITIOFlSiIGI‘, n Canadian vmmcntator, spoke before the orthern Ontario Historical So- ety in Sudbury recently, he said: of our history, .in- a from palace other vices, history free "The hardy explorers and Mr. Fisher's remarks were to cross the Rocky liinuntuins and roach the Pacific Orcnn, thus 0nd- ing the search for the Northwest inspir- which was thc William Lyon Mackenzie and Sir Wilfrid Laurler in Mackenzie the breath. nut accomplish by legislation, an Li“- some sought to achieve by rebellion what he could KEBRUARY 2. I950 Sir, - I am, indeed, sorry. that. my criticism of Mayor MacDonald has‘ aha-ileum: opinion of me to the point where he says, "I do not clples as outlined in the history of Democracy." That. must be bad. that his Worship has [Bl-gotten This time I shall endeavour to be this incident. more “successful in expediency," After some further discussion if I understand what that. means. I shall pass no further opinion on the condition of the Market and the City Dump. I prefer to leave further comment to those who are in a better position .3» speak with authority. Perhaps His Worship would be wise to do like- wise. I regret that I have disappoint- ed the Mayor by refusing to vote on subjects about which I had nu knowledge. How does one vote in such cases? with regard to the motion concerning the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation I recall that. my protest. that l knew nothing about it was dis- missed with the explanation that. ‘we would be told all about it Qiter in the City Council is a experience to usually goes on. Voting rather bewildering the uninitiated. It come-what like this. The City Olerir, in stentorinn tones. reads the motion. His Worship thou says, "Now are there any other mo- tions?" or some such irrelevant remark. This intimation that wel are now prepared for further bum. iness means that tho motion ha.- been put and passed unzuilinousljv. Mayor MacDonald says that. I did not vote either for or against the motion to increase the em- ployees salaries. Here I must flat- ly contradict this sin-lenient. llc apparently has forgotten thc tic- taiis of this incident, so I take pleasure in publicly reviewing them. When the request for salary increase came up for discussion I stated clearly and emphatically that I would vote against any in- crease unless there was also an increase-in taxes. The first motion was for n $15.00 monthly increase because they felt it was not. good responsible govern- granting of became thc ment—n report which City Council Procedure not, and said if I were in h“ place I would not elthei. Hi: words in effect tthough expressed l,“ . more characteristic manner) “u... think he is sticking to the prin- “You wouldn't have the ‘intestinal fortitude’ ". Mayor MacDonald agreed 9,0 ca,“ on. A third motion was made that a $10.00 monthly increase retro- active for six-months be given our If 1S ‘rather strung; employees. This motion pussell an though f again voted "flay", so on three separate occasions on Lin; subject alone I voted, unce with the majority, once with the min. ority and once when I caused thc impasse which so nnnoycrl th» Nlaynr. Rc aippoinininnt to gl-llw; Board: When this question it u raised Councillor O'Donnell Db. jet-ted to the re-appolntmeiit of Mrs. Lantz on the grounds that there wt-rc six Prubestauts and only three Roman Catholics an the School Board and he thou-gm, there should be greater cqunlllyq 1 agreed. But this was not the “an; and only time I recorded my v0“ against the majority", as I have just explained. Re appointment to Apply“ Board: I uni glad Mayor lint-inn. aid has reminded me of this in- cident. I believe Mr. Brown null thc public in general will be in. tercsted in the particulars recurri- ing his nnpouiinlent, Tile hunter was introduced by ltinyoi- hint-Don. aid at the close of n meeting. HQ stated that there were two applic- ants for the position, namely, Bv- ron Brown and Benjamin Ga l. lie tlwn intimated that as m» \.l r9 all ngrocd that Mr. Gallant. was the better man, he felt. it would b; nlriclit to instruct the City Clerk t9 inform him of his appointment. At that Cotinclllor Doyle rose and said that. he hnri no objection to iMr. Gallant hut he had promised Mr. Brown that. he would support his application. and he wanted to be\ as good as his word. Council- lor Cox then said he, too, knew of no agreement. and that he favour- ml Mr. Brown. Councillor Holland demanded that. thc mutter bu. fir-all. with in proper fashion by votr. liu \VOl‘Sillp was very loath to put tho motion but when he did so Mr. Brown was elected. As I knew nothing about. the qualifications at either Mr. Brown or Mr. Gztllnntl did not. vole. and l um surc no- body bui. Mayor MacDonald cares a hoot whether I did or didn't. However. I think, some readerl may be interested in the above particulars. ‘Fomorrrnv, I shall deal with the buiuhcE of Mayor Mac- Dounrls letter if The Guardian will ho kinri enough to give the nct~ossary~ space. Era examined. ‘lanes fit- tel Corner Kent a! Queen. Sh. d om“ Phone ltlbti-llnuse lfil3 \ to a native of the United Kingdom. o 0 o was the property of Robert Clcm- Rmmd “my wmdward 5Lake_ or Prlsqlgg . _ b . . ents of the P.E.I. ‘Telephone Co. b. . no‘; anon of most. Canadian explorers. basis for the constitution of thc I ain. Sir, etc. , .ee. 0i d probabhv ‘he most embarrassmg sltua‘ It i5 I. mfli-‘IPY 0f T981“ m“ the Speeding, the myriad-handed, hisimld “imi- flbmlt I'l<‘""." "ufisml- new Canadian union? And wluil l-JDWIN C. JOHNSTON! ' . -. 1' ' ' '~ ' ' Museu people in Charlottetown rm ..k ‘Siillllwi Heurnc, Rudisson and of Sir John A. Macdonnld, Sir - “Pn a seaman Um 11nd hunself m l5 Slttmg were hbt. able to secure the rcilc SQ nrlqiglrliifq so sewage, nought'Gl‘°5°i1li°f5'-’ Charles Tuppen- Sir Georgi- (‘ur- IIILAFIIEI) MOON high and dry on a “lud bankv absglutely sooner. cares no i _F‘ree from nature inlfkuuvs Hug tier. George Brown and Joseph _- m ' . Wh h's A t u r s 1c of the salvzwe For numbe o~ proportion. Mcck- “cc. sow Mr. Flshvrfl "9 soul naive? $cigntists made contact with t helpless and a figure Of fun en _ nen 1e c c: h ‘ ‘,5 J18 h‘ l\_t~ i point to Rathsson and Crush-liters. No mall" wha], our modern n, on m- llle {ll-St time in history . , b t] h cien. H. has been roug to 3.. o f Sh“) also happens to be a guedt at es ‘p attention of the writer that there On cooprr laourrel he hangs Pariah "llliclffl 0f l1 ""89 Tfilflim‘ "f thiflklflfl ml)’ bP- “'5 ‘Emmi’ ml mu, 1n, i946, with a beam of like thc U. S. S. lVlissouri, condolences are was a slight, discrepancy in the A wvciktiisr; 1 i s‘ t“ lid Dlz'nr!\il(‘thjil7\'(f“ll‘dllc(:l' at 222$“? igélrforlealilfien?! hlstory~nor mgh_n.(.q,,,.,,(.y "(no lmplllsc$. . . -. * -. . " ll- ll’! m‘ l l - l » ' '0 - Indeed m Ordel" igsrizierepgiiiinariiaeriiauilnii‘mAiiibd ‘madcnlihorcn: c S \"@l'1‘l"1!'l'¢ l‘(‘1i@\’°d 0!‘ his will‘ ' o b 0 f‘ . ' , * ll .l,,_ ' l 1- ll mzuul of tho ulcstern posts hy n _ _ _ McLeods life boat on that hnz- “115 "a ‘:_:mv"*“'“°“'5 ‘m’: m“ “"3 gowmnrw; n|rn"otilell. we mum I A L F A R D S Hannah More, LngilSil novelist and ardous mission of me or death, u} Mange (he farmers sighs; and M also dm“, anemic“ ,0 me "Pack p d ethical writer. born this date 1833, popu- mwg“ ca“ M°L°°d T“ °“° °d the gate fir. Srfuulal" ""11 "r-‘Ffmll °f Lmfd U 1-119 6T9“! 0f W" "left l‘ 1° ‘namle A “pH-mg tun-o; oval-slows me Durham after only fl\e months in £4 larly known as thc author of Caelebs In uie boat. The Dominion Govletru- work. cmmla is governor-general. . A w I h G d ’ ~< . . - v- u . " - ' _ ment of the day. i" WW3“ w“ A l q 1y lw- y M bend Historians will he surprised to a f en qu a Seaich Of A \\1fe . In addition to writ of me gm“ performanw presenb m “ariltillbhlj‘\lorllds a e n m» Wear of M“ Fish" speaking u! ‘L s_ TAYLQR . L B, ~ Optometrist L - - BABRISTEB. SOLICITUB. Ito. Phillipa Blludlnl ll] Grafton “treat Money to Lonn Collection! Lower. Canada and advocated the conclescension as against contempt, by T, l5, Jessllpj . as much against. superior pity as ChBFIOtIGlOWW Freedom is whnl. enables a malllfllgaillfii- Wlmrlor WWPT- 85 much Lu be a man, and what entitles against being nicely looked after M!“ P‘ ‘ u him to be treated as one, tihus as against being fxoddcn on. Con- -—-— creating both a comprehensive‘temporary democracy, guarding it.- ST. PAUL'S CHURCH PEWS obligation and a comprehensive self against. its old foe only, is ' slipping into the coils of its other foe. Democracy, we are forgetting, excludes every social system in which men are not. treated as men. and therefore every system in which they are treated as child- ren. as well as the system in which they are handled as beasts. It. is the pollticnl expression of the ideal of manllness. It. postu- lates that. the aim of society is to release virility, and to supply the most varied stimuli to further virility. The basin of It is the conviction that. there is n. dignity which in make and its programme is to some degree belongs to nil men, tho sense and power of this dig- PFIONE 7'18 njonoy to loan MncPhee & Tremor n. r. MlcPl-IEE. 4.5.. no. n sonmnmu TRAINOR, an Bnrrllterl, Etc. Toombl Bldg. Coilectiloiu 16b Queen St. menace rather than a blessing. bybthe Goiiernmcrg or‘ Cimadn to To lflhbliiUtiil sioiv structures, stone “ism”, ‘lesmbes mm in mesa a o 0 Ca taln Coin Mc enzc n recog- y sane, ‘ ‘ _ u , . . . nitlon o! his humane “Him” l“ Bill“ l‘? a“ We the ma“ ‘films “W151, The nffhbrfjz,‘ "jjdhflfl; F d - A L r e K c Great music and acting combine to make m, ma“ u; the crew of m: n fiulght-tvtgrlt. b Hm Qilfrgtatgggminqmxge flboui him" Jasaph R. Macmlnun‘ m 92g m; gLgnhB. . - - - _ M p1 o; Non“ 25m p, i ncic arc iec urea snow. ~ f BAR 1‘ . S . the Tchaikovsky picture at the Prince Ed Julisflomsatrno y t I a Ho... M Mn Fm... Owrlook _ I NOTARY ward Theatre ‘ one to be mconnnended i I gm, sir, etc“ —R.allph Wuldo Etnerson (IBOQ-B-l. Lord Durham‘ as a statesman. ‘I?! BABNSTER‘ SOLICITO“ n“ any“ Bank n’ can“! Chunk," __.__. mnn who recommended‘ the leg s- u Que Sue“ I Churhtwuum’ “E1 iiitlYc union of Upper Canada and 5" succeum, , George J. ’l‘weed!- ILU- ,l. A. McGuigon NOTARY, E'l‘C. BARRISTER. SULIUITOR CURRH‘) BUILDING M. Aibun Farmer Dr. A. L. Mcclsccc DENTIST Dental X-llny GLORIA BUILDING 110 Grafton St. Phone 29f Palmer 81 Hcslnm A. l. RABLAM. B.A., LLB. Bnrrllfer, lite. Olurlotwfown, P.E.l. MONEY T0 LOAN patronage and paternalism against tyranny. ns much against Bank of Nov! Booth (numbers n- Dr. W. R. Carson MONEY TD LUAN l an. 1.1.5. l BARRISTER, SOLICITOB. EN- , Charlottetown, P. E l- ____._- John P. Nicholson. LLB. ulurnisrurc. souvlfvlf» Etc. I54 Prince st. 1‘l'""“"" mom: 251m __@ Mutheson 8t Peoke A. W. DINITIIESON, “lg _Pli0iID ! oorlntfon. qrrtborefly h; Ion, though fooh obnll not I We have p Id | we. a.:...:.:.".:.."::;. mffflfv - - - nrlde. m, in °W|°¢Ie Ind trnlnlng, "l" Precision lrul accuracy in filling your doctori p". nlty pass into the lives of all men. Chiropractor u Measured by that. fine standard. Palmer Graduate A‘ n'§fr¢|.:g:"?-:|L_ many of our contemporary pro- OHAIILOTTETOWN Uuflecun“, Mm, , h, mu grammes look sickly, framed n; m Prince 8t. Phone H112 _ w M, as t! all of us were childish, infirm 90 Oren! UIEUTKIJJ» r [or 589m . (ihnrlntfetni I Chas. R. McQunud -—. EA. BAIBISTEB. souorrun. Gtllldfl 8: Hdldfdum "WILEY. E16» Bnrrlnwro, Solicitors. TiM-"w" Intern Truot nulldinl llnnndlnn‘ Bank of Com wit‘ flflAlllbTfiiTfiwl‘ MONEY T0 LOAN u’ who". “m albumin" A. GAUDET, an... m‘ Cnnvllnn Bnnl| OITIOEB: Charlottetown, Glnuow, Trnro, m onnbnonwrown: Phonon: 2M0 - nln IIEIL CIABTIB 151.108! ll. R. DUANE and COMPANY ' CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Randolph W. "- 59""- c-A» Lorne ll. Ives, 0A., W. Grunt Thnmlflml- " OUBIIE BUILDING TOWN, P. I. I. mum. bfonctnn, Anti-mt. N" lfentvlllo. . lilnnninl, U-M 5mm. W. IIIBBIIIS ED ACCOUNT ANT w" 4i