FKGE FOUR THE GUARBIAN letting the economies of free world coun- ltries. Its essential goal is to expand tiie -- mplrtmnh Uumw , lBoard, rightly suggested to the U. S. Tariff Th" hand Wmm" Puhmmu ”' Commission that American reduction of im- ports from Canada made it more difficult for this country to buy U. S. manufactured land agricultural goods. In l932,sfor in- istance, Canada spent 5B38I,00U,O00 oti lAmerican farm commodities, while export- ling S348,t)00,000 worth to the ll. S., cre- ating a deficit of ft333.000,000. Reckoning ithe price of oats at around fill a bushel, the proposed U. S. cut on import could add about 55.')tl,()00.000 to the Canadian (lCflCil.' The blow would result from a regressive l1otliLiberais and Progressive COIISGIT-:Sl('p, taken by the U. S. because of the, atives are confident of securing lour sea'.s'exigencies of American domestic politics: in the coming Federal general election, ac-;hut harsh in its effect oti friends of the, cordiiig to statements secured from the re-.L'nited States. spective presidents of the two Proviiicin associations. It is not to he wondered at that partisans ...5liotild show confidence in The scout Jamhores : '- . ' i '. Without l ,. . . I mm "lla'lcM ml pktcum da) . With a large representation of Princci -at ich confidence their chances would he g, , ,l:Jdwai'd Island boys participating in thel mm mdcml . Second Canadian Scout Jamboree at Con- Al lm Sam” mm the knowledge mm lnaueiit Camp this week there will be live- their opponents are equally confident oflly iinorest in me pmCC'edmgS' More than victory should prevent any easy assump- izooo Boy Scouts and Leaders will be pres. tion that it is not necessary to work llal't.lle;n from an ten Canadian provinces. the iuring the final three weeks of the caiii-lumted States Mexico Cubzh Chin and Wig” Gmmially Speaking me LiberbllGi'aiid Cayman, British West Indies. As inandidaws aw aplmalmg 0" my Gmimin-lCliief Scout for Canada, llis Excellency mmlis mmlid durmg the last ml yeaFSllG0l'6l'll0i' General Massey will formally open pointing out the favourable results of poll-l t cics put into effect (luring that time. Nir. jthe Jamboree this morning. Sir Ian Bol- Cecil Iiiller is an exception, lie havinv Editor and Managing Director. Ian A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward Island like the dew" "The strongest memory is weaker than tho waakaat ink”. llliKRl.(l'l"lil'I'll(HV N confident Of Victory MONDAY. JULY 20, I. It jl0il of Stirling, Scotland, is representing . . . . ”lLoi'd Rowalian, Chief Scout for the Brit- pointed out how little his constituency hasl I r. I ,,H b H 1 Q Cowm iish Commonwealth. wm' "N' N! M met ' ulglesi ' Located fourteen miles west of Ottawa, men suppor crs are re urne . V , , ,,Coiinauglit Camp has been placed at the ” Sim; gmljlilesogffige nm:;:'1l;):ig::ldisposai of the Boy Scouts Association by rum 1 n : , . s r ' I ., I d , lthe Department of National Defense. It . . ii) on the geneia issue 0 goo gov-,. water and . . r lt.l ' d "tl crninent, as do Mr. Thomas J. Kl('l(llalll,m tompcvy Oqwppe N 1 i' f' it (I l . "ts own fire de- mld Mr' J' W3;-30" Miicilaughp QC.” mpl:):llfini:ntlKAl4ltfbead1hodsdal on the grounds latter two, however, pointing with pride for the various particular benefits conferred 0Il!wi” be Staffed by active iUmy.doCtOrs an.d . g ., g. . , .'inurses. The 3rd Canadian Signals Regi- tlieir respective constituencies thiough then iment will operate a Communications and own ('filOl;lS lll1P:1;':lanlCfll and by the Gov'-'loud-speaker system for me Cmire Camp. Nmnm .n Fm 0' ' . There will be suitable religious services for MR lb Chest" S' MCLWC and ms cOI'lScouts of all denominations. and music lpagua .Mr' '1' Angus.M.aCLean argdefelld-lapleiity. The Royal Canadian Mounted lng lhe”. Seals by ”9'”l"lg out me” aCt.w'lPolice Band will play at the formal open- H-tv m mo lam Pmlllanlent am? by. Caumgling; the Band of the Royal Canadian Air rm: Support for me” mad” In his .cam' Force will play for the provincial displays paign for tax reform and more uniform during me week and at the dosing Cere- national development. Mr, John H. P1-iceimonv next Saturday the Governor Gen, is afgtalwarl Drew suppomer and '5 Coil. eralls Foot Guards Band will be heard. ducting a vigorous personal campaign ut,,I,w0 Scout Bands, one from Toronto. me pl.-mCe' aS' indeed an eight ciindldades al'elOfllPl' from Montreal, will attend. doing in their respective constituencies. lvlixi TWO years of Careful mannmg by nag John A' Ma.CDimaJd' lint” nOw.a memlmlltioiial, provincial and district Scout staffs of the Provincial Legislature, is sti'cssiitglhaW gone mm the pmpamtions for the the necessity for. a general cleanup. HislJambOree Not me least of these prepam: appeal' pmihapsl is mow. person.” than tions hasibeen the Plaiinintz, of menus and mm? of ma other mndldaleg ins fauM'ipi'ov'idiiig the food for 60,000 meals. The h.MmE Smlwd for Several years m we Or'lScouts will cook their food, over charcoal hm M. wllmll .119 new aSp”w' . . fires. A good time will be had by all. More it is anticipated that the voting will l'ifl.than that it Should Now a most Valuable rwnpllonnlly heaw amloss Canada and H and memorable experience in the art of liv- is to be hoped that Prince Edward Islaii:l mg and Workim amicably together re, will maintain. its record, set in previous ' . . qardless of creed, race or nationality. ::enei'al elections. of having the largest t proportionate turnout of any Province at, the polls. , EDIIORIAL NUIES llsland, Iladen .v. .u--;-- rug clown (And P. L I.) RESCUE AT SEA Among the interesting exhibits at the Historical Society's display in the Y. M. C. A. building is a large painting of the rescue of; survivors of a wrecked vessel at sea. The picture records on event which occurred on Oct. 28, 1847. in stormy weather off the coast of Newfoundland and wtis loaned to the exhibition by Mr. Victor Purdic. of Charlottetown, whose grandfather. C a p t a i n William Douse. effected the rescue. For a century. there had been pasted. nu the hack of the picture a clipping from an l'In5:lish paper describing the incident. The article records that the schooner "Jenny Lind", Capt. Dousc, Charlottetown, owner and master, ”a small vessel for the image site had to niahe, being of 64 tons, built at Prince Edward was on her wn.V thence. with deals. for Southampton. when on the evening of the 2'ith of October. in lat. 48 N., long. 4.1.30 W.. the master fancied he saw a wreck at a distance. and on hearintz down as close as a tremendously rough sea would permit. he discovered a ship water-logged. This suhsequentlv proved to be the barque Aiuitic tCapI. Edward .I. Allen, masterl. of and foi' Liverpool, laden with timber and deals. from Richihucto, New Brunswick." The article goes nn to state. that the "Amitie" had been water- logged on the 24th, and being struck with repeated terrific seas. fell over on her beam ends, when much of the. rigging including the maintopmast. went by the board. The master, male and crew. eight- een persons in all, climbed into the mizzen chains, when soon afterwards a tremendous wave took away four of the unfortun- ate crew, and not long after two more fell off liito the raging sea. The twelve survivors contrived to get hold of some ritztzing anti lashed themselves to the chains. but their situation was weilnigh hopeless. There for three day; and nights they were exposed to the sea, which rolled over them incessantly, the lower part of their bodies being constantly llil-I der water. . , 0 a 0 What added to their suffering was the fact that R ship bore down on them on the second day, and after an apparent examina- tion of the wreck. sailed away. on the evening of the third day. the "Jenny Lind" hove in sight. On hoard the latter vessel much doubt existed for n time whether the dark object was a wreck or not: "the mastei'”s goodness of heart made him, in such weather as would have served as an ex- cuse for giving up the search. continue to get within hail of the yet living beings on the side of the ship, but for safety could not venture with his small ship near enough to take them off. "It was nearly dark, and the prayers of the wrecked men that they might not he left were heart- fending, Captain i,iouse. as well as he could make himself heard. assured them that he would not desert them, but that zoiiig near- er would endanger all-and they might. be sure of being relieved in the ninrnintz. At hreak Oi flail the weather had slightly moder- ated, and Ft boat was sent with the mate and two hands tthcrc were but six in all. iiicluding apprentices, on board the Klenny I.ind'l to the wreck, and such was the desperation of the poor fellows at the prospect of res-I cue, that it was only by thrcatsli of leavinz them that they could be induced in come off two or: the Maritime Institutes of Charlottetown is host to convention of Agricultural Canada. Blow To canadals Economy The Ottawa .loiii'nal cites Wa-:liington's inflexible price support policy for agrieut-. turnl commodities as a major factor in the ci.ti'rent lfnitcd States program of restric- tion against foreign food imports. Dairy 0 0 0 Canada's newest Revised Statutes have been proclaimed to come into force Sept. :15. The last previous revision was that surplumq in mo 1.. Sq vaused largely hy'of l92t. To bring the pm-isioii up to the uiircalistically high government payments, fond of the 1932 Session, A mun M lawyem have led the Eisenhower administration I.v;w0l'kod about rm”; ysmi rcrlucc sharply the import of cheese and re- latcd products from Canada. Now Cait- ada's T3,(l(l0,f)00-btislicl-a-year trade in oat.- with tlic U. S. may feel the pinch, with the 1'. S. Tariff Commission holding hearings on government proposals for reduced im- ports on the feedstuff, to as little as 23,- 000,001! huslicls. ' ' ' A sharp reduction, argues the .lournaI,, Marconi, Italian liiveiitor of the wire- would hurt Canada's economy, but ironical-lless-telegraphy system, (lied this date 1937. ly enough, may do little to help the U. S. His mother was Irish and when the Italian government in its efforts to cut down tiii- government gave him no encouragement in niilarketable foodlsurpluses. Experience has his experiments Mat'coni migrated to Eng- I own tat so ong as price supports re-,land. There, in 1899, he established radio main extremely high, margipal producers'communication with France and in 1901 will grow crops that add to excess stocks. with Newfoundland. Later these were ex- Canada's oats exports, now only 5 per cent tended to Cape Breton and Massachusetts. of U. S. competition, would make little ' ' ' difference. Admittedly, such prices have Alberta is'justly proud that the three also served as a magnet to draw foreign power plants made possible by damming commodities to the U. S. market. But this the eastward-flowing Spray River and lead- is a by-prolduct ofuthe Amgrican payments ing the resulting accumulation sharply program; c ear y, lC reme y is to be found downward to the westward-flowing Bow in altering the policy itself. ,Rlver has been accomplished without cost The Canadian method. for instanct-:,'to the taxpayer. The 5B12,000,000 project which merely provides a floor on a stop-lwiil pay its way and provide vast amounts loss basis, offers far greater flexibility, dis-lof power at reasonable rates. couraglng the production of foods that are ' " ' glconomlcally unsound to produce at a given "Infrastructure" once seemed an amus- im9- ing term in NATO circles, that being the Apart fmm its probable ineffectiveness word for the basic land and runways of in solving the problem of U. S. farm sur- airdromes. It is no joke to Canadian pluses, the restrictive program undennlnes airmen in France, however, who have had the spirit of the General Agreement on to put up at Gros Tenquln with faulty One can easily be misled as to nunibcrs, whether of frogs creaking in the night or of dogs running the streets, but the revela- tion that only 86 dog licenses have been issued this year by the City is ant to make. citizens fear they must be imagining things. three at n time, the boat heing too small to hold iiioir-. o . . "llowever, the wlitilc twcixc lxvere got safely on board. and then how to provide for such lhrlpless sufferers wax an im- intense tlifficuily. Mr. l)oiisc imit- ,up his bed to the wrecketl iiiiistrr, 'Mr. Allen, and such was .his state ,of sufferiniz. that it would have iheen cruelty to lift him out of ll removed tiil aizain nor was he his arrival in Smttlinniptoit. The '.lenny I.ind's' trew also gave up ,their hcrtlts to the sufferers, lint that would hate hccn totally in- liidequute, but. that the ltrig 'l'le- hect'a'. hound for Glasgow, canie .w-illiin hail, anti took off six of :them'. As it win, the master and lcrrw of the tleiiny l.iud' wcrc uti- ahlo to have the use of then herths during thr image in Southampton, uhrre they arriv- ed on Sunday last. eighteen tin; after the rescue. The H1071 were iRl(Pfl Oil SlIOl'P Illi- medintely, hut in a had state. 'l'li:-l carpenter had his collar-hone and several ribs broken, the second mate his arm severely injured, and the rest much hurt, their legs not having half recovered their proper feeling. "Mr. Ianson, jun. agent for the. rxerted himself to fellows n frer con- veyance by rail to Liverpool or London, as they all had friends there. and the Merchant. Seams-n':: Fund afforded them ins. each." From here nn the old newspa- per cllppimz is partly indccipher- able. but It states that the ex- pression of gratitude hy the res- cued master and crew to their deliverers, as well as by the. pub- lic generally, was warm indeed. It was auniestcd that a subscrip- tion be raised for the purpose of presenting a ehronomeler to Cap- taln Dome. and cash rewards to his crew, for their brave humanl- tarlan conduct. The picture itself was painted by an English artist miasioned by Captain Allen. and presented personally by him to Captain Douse as a token of his appreciation. '.Ienny Llndl. get the poor Loch Neal in 'scotland la 23 miles long and averages 1 1-4 miles wide. grha presidency of Chile changed hands aix tlmea in 1032. Meteors travel as fast in 40 miles Tariffs and Trade, which aims at strength- runways and a sea of mud. ,d.1.l' I has l'liltlllR an East liicliaii wreclcetl. t l The Neighbors r7'.'vf;';l?9 - .t,tit.tiii-.; ( fi;i?,l?i'lll ,.l, J; '.. .... .- 1- I-- "I liked the old murder mysteries. They were all polite ladies and gentleineii." By George Clark PUBLIC FORUM l l Thla column is open to the discussion by correspondents of questions of interest. The l Guardian does not: necessar- ily endorse the opinion of wueapondenta. -IVM l YOl'N(i GIRLS AND BOYS l SMOKING Sll',- The tobacco men are tryiiig hard to get all the girls smokiiig. Nearly every ad. in the magazines. and there are many full pages. presents a beautiful girl with a cigar:-t in her mouth nr between her fingers, and each year limits- ands more girls are smoking. The motto is "a cigaret in the hand of every girl”. When I was growing up there was only one woman in our village and for many miles around who smoked. After she got marrletl thel plan was to stay in her fatlier'sl home for some time before movingl to their own. Her husband iioticedi that every day his wife would go out into the bush that surrounded the house. He thought she was going out to weep because she was leaving home. He decided he would take a peep and sec, and there she was sitting on a stump smoking. He nearly fell over in surprise. But. being a very kindly man, as he was, he said to her: "As long as we are spared to live together I'll buy tobacco for you", and he did. But. now a young girl smoking islmid 1”-0 WWI 1 wound with quite. the thing. I have a lady friend, the principal of one of the biggest izii'ls' schools east of Tor- onto, who smokes. I suppose she finds it relieves the strain of tier heavy responsibilities, bin picbabiy many a girl in that sshool followed her example to the regret of their pareiiis. I believe smoking is more harm- ful to girls than to boys. being liizlirr strung as they are. One family and found that the young mother was smoking two packs a dH.V- I said to her: ''If this doesn't kill you it may kill your baby or ll may be born biiiid. You had bet- ter cut down on tobacco or bcttei quit aitozeiliei”. . Now in this modcrn crave for ,tot)a:co more small boys are tak- .1213 to cigarct sniokiiig. I rse them at it. not more than nine or ten tyears old. I suppose their failicrs ...L..M. . . THE IVINII . ljdward ltelsa. the tax collector for Haddam. Conn. has asked his city fathers to reduce his salary. lHe explained the 53,500-a-year fsalary, plue a percentage of what ;he collects. is out of line with the :i'cmuncratioii of other city em- lployccs. This sort of thing doc.- illailpeil once in a while offering proof that all our heroes do not. viii their renown on the field of battle. - Detroit Free Press. , N-.- ' -In the village near Kitchen- cr. 0:if.. where they still use the l)l.ll'i,V line. a lious-zwifels phone i-an: Just after she'd varnished the Iltllll' around it. She rushed nrxt door to take the call at her :iri;liboi"s house. The receiver was joff the hook when she arrived, but not for liri' benefit. I-ler neigh- boi has poised with one hand over the mouthpiece, impatiently wait- iiiu for the cotiversatioii to be- gin. --IVIIICLEHIYS Registration at the I'nlveralty of Westcrii Ontario Summer School this year shows how fashions change in the demand for learn- ms. It was not only that more sztiriciits turned up than had been lcxpe;-ted-by about 50-but that 'lllF choice of courses was not what lllfld been anticipated. For exam- zple, where 50 had been looked for in Ds.i'ch010x.v. 100 registered: where it was thought It might want French, 45'siudenla asked for lit: where it was believed that 20 mirhi register for Spanish, more fllafl'6tl signed. The big increase was in English literature. Where 140 had been looked for only 60 arrived. English literature liasbecii el:ininated as a requirement for the permaiicnt first class teaching certificate in Oiitario.-tLondon Free Press) i In llilra when-planning and the 1 Vi" -l'"” W55 '17" k”''5 ”" ll"-ill associated arts ate becoming more And blow the birds about the sky;-.;,m1 mm-9 ,1 madly sxgcmmc Mum. And all arnuiid I lietiitl you Il.'lSS.lu)p1-C Like ladies skirts across grass - 0 iviiid, ti-hlmviiig all long! 0 llliltl, that sings so loud , song! Alex. sixtee ,aii(i peiiinps the.r moihci's irziinke. It is teiy iii,iui'ious to grouiiirc boys and especially for young I)D,l'S. It stunts their tzrowtli. weakening their muscles. No cliaiiipioii ath- lete smokes. Thcrt: is more excessive Sllloklllll tli.iii rvrr, nf (otirsr-. which does real hitrni. It cuts years off one; life. If one has In go throutzli it majnr ni-ci-atioti the result may be I saw the different things But always you yourself are hid,lstiideiits fiom other countries I felt you push. I llP:ll'fl you call,'dtveisc as Sweden and Thailand. I could not see yourself at till. 0 wind. a-blowing all loiliz. 0 wind. llltli siiit.-s so loud song! 0 you that are so strong cold. 0 blower. song! -Roller! Louis Stev thc , note about you and Indian student 'i.,bt-iiig alive to is ll refi'esiiingl,v different the news from India that students from fifteen nations El-"l.l',li:ii'c attended a live-week confer- i mice to discuss "the human aspects n of modern (levelopnieiit planning." .'l'lie coiifcience at Mysore was ,sponsored Jointly by the Canadian , groups. and attracted a large representation of as iT1ie position and the value of stu- day, dent opinion on some subjects may .be in subject for dispu-te; matters 3 of pi-iictical policy and internation- al rclatioiis, for example. are sub- '.ir2ts which call for mature judg- ami niciit and experience such as is not l,Qt'lll(lI'Illl,V to be found in young 3,... 3..., g.-,.,,,,., (... ,,1(l-lpztdtilts. But at the same time there Are you ll beast of field and :rce.ll5 l)0SSibi.V D0 l391'l0d Or Just :1 sti'oiigei' child ilirin uie? 1”” Mi?" 0 wind. a-blowing all day loiig.'5ll”'9 05 during hi5 lmlVEi'-iiilf d3.V3. O uiiid, that sings so loud til"”d it l9 3 lmpeilll Slim 101' in a man's he is iiiteliectually so the ,fuuii't- that the Canadian student ibody has given clear indication of the responsibilities lot citizenship in onct of the great icnuiitrics of the modern world.- Q JNotes By The Waxx, 40-I6-was .1... '.t A nevr recipe from A boiled bear paw. If cnai'ism:a 'l weather suggestion we would am it to stay in Alaska.- tlfani Wikp Bpectatoni l' l" (1anada' has-v-alivays ll)!!! 1 troubles with bilingualism. but . ” ed to them now is the Ctliiinl H. that most of our political pntgncrs are talking Dutch. llton Spectator.) One of the g;ii-t:on a rrcr-nl ..., Program is a prolific ll:'llc' - ivhodunlts. His scorn for all ll: H" I 11. tll.iiii. Jud" cw. "Shakespeare is ,lunk".b”it'i;.. erson observed that "in gig I. est civilization, the book IS highest delight", he wrote (,4 other era-and possibly of ,5 land. But if any bets were ., made, a reasonably safe one is m ” h””dl'9d Hm": Haiiilci still be read. and heard, uhilt. Me A Gal” will long .siiit.. mouluered aw'ay."-in-om H” , phta Bulletini ' " t 2 tit Wm! lficf oric-notes the sI...,i,, his fate that overcame fl fisherman of Forehu whcn ormoits fish of unidentified .. rammed his boat and ox-ci'tii:iiz' - about 105 yards from slime is- companion was saved. IL lk ., called that a 'Sydiiey man Hm children narrowly escaped A ,. , liar fate when a giant fish .t1:i rammed their boat ll -- r. t r-'. recently .i hUHdI'Cd Yards off-shore and far from Forcliu. There is tin "I31 We huge d8RLll-dt'3lIll!l'.l . at Little Lorraine and Forciiu be. hammer-head sharks it swim in schools. Tlicy are i:1' .. tlufni 111 CHIP? Breton warms I. now it is believed that wan water. may have brought here in Pursuit of iicrriniz 5h01i9-- t5l'dney Post Recorn' IAUIMII. the unreailzrrl um”... NOT): of Contctlcratiuii ltd: ., freight iatc structure that rm... lower the cost of consumer gm,-... imported into Newfoundland 1' the Canadian mainland and p the liidustrics of this prov-inpp -, more favorable position to spit mainland cities. Far Ironi i'cce:i .u these benefits, we have been (3,, with a continuous rise in ti.-1;... charges with cacti increa.s.e wei,. in: more heavily on Nevrfouudl v than any other part. of East :. Canada because we are at the tin of the line. On the niaiiilaiid bri fits accrue not only imm shorter hauls between ceiitres -1 SUPDiy and consumption but 5.3-. HP!" hi8hVl'R.V competition. i- might. reasonably be expecfpd .1..- on certain routes we would M, the advantage of water (lOl'llll"'- tion, but sea transport rates ti.-in Montical are maintained at we same level as rail rates and '.c anomaiy exists of lower rates I the Great Lakes to St. John's l .. are obtainable under the ('rri;,'r- ence tales from Moiitrczil In N t r H9 I5 UV” "1”Ci.l' mid l”l5itI.'sllIfiX Chronicle-Hei'aldl . . been sniokiii: since ll” was a boy " I came upon Jotiii I)ill'i'.lS(lil jdry in lllS iiziictv-sixtli ,icni'. id had his pipe stem at i I). If iuaii were not Lwicc nsl stiont; as a horse sniokiii: heavily: would kill him at flit, 5 wiialever, CXCFFSIVP siiiokiiig short-l llc i)r'::iii 5Il'Zl. I am. sir. etc. one He No doubt John's.--tst. John's Daily Ncust PROFESSIONAL CARDS” Marlieson. Peuke & Nicholson cits life. Purc iiicotirn will kill lllff” A. W. lllA'I'H!LS()N. Q.C. the Slliilz of n rattlcsiiiike. Vtllll A. ll. PEAKE. l3.A.. I.l..ll. forttiiizitry the smoker doesn't get; JOHN P. NI(3llOI.NnN, l.l..B. much nicotine at it time Tobacco Barristers, Etc. d005I1'i do RIW IP11 ucnd. but ex-l Coilectlnna - Money To Loan cessire sniokim: does rcal hai'ni.l 175 Grlilon Street Mary men and some wmnen arcl droppln: in tlzrir tracks. from lieart fazlurc Ore Cfillfe is lieztvvl PCIIHCY & HCSICHI smokinz. A. J. HASLAM. 8.A., LLB. Barrister. Etc. Chas. R. McQuuid - B.A. BARBISTER. S(lI.l(tlT()II. NOTARY. Etc. Eastern Trust Builrlinz CHARI.OT'I'IL'T(HVN Gaudet & Huszard GlLBl'Jl'CT A. UAUDET. B.A. Ll..II. Barrister: and Snllcttora Moncy to Loan Canadian Bank olCnmn1crce Blilu. w,1, GREEN Bank of Nova Scotia (” b - slang” B,-.339, , Charlottetown. P E L . L, 1 MONEY TO LOAN l Bell, Muflueson 8; The A e on St at M" g :. Barristers. Solicitors. Eta. , H n. R. BEI.l., q.c. I 033'i10TM'-WWODUDDBUWW , G. I! I-'()STl'2R. '..i..n. l w'iiiit': kuuu t.- not that ytiurl Man! on City and Firm hotly is the temple of the Holy r""Il""”' l lowu? For ,u- lIl't' lioiiizlil with prlcr: tlutrt-foi'c r:lurif,v (And your linrI,i. itutl In your spirit. w Itlch are God's. l The fiist ll.I.'-rllfill l'v(iil(l Sciirs itlliost which is In ,lIiive of (Bud. timl ,u- are not your ion. which 3'' lfio "'chmond street Charlottetown. -".E.l. II o ... Frederic A. Large. QC. Barrister, Solicitor. Notary ll Royal Bank of Canada Building ; (lliarlnttetnwn. P. IE. I. Loans on City and Farm quite serioiis. ; H 1 It llill he said: "Look at old was held in 15:84 ;7.?v -:---- .,. - M. Albun Farmer. Q.C. i l B.A.. LLB. .. M Our customers place their con- fidence In our diamond values because they know they can In aurc of full raeunre of quality for their money. 210.00 a aooond. f - 41 J ft 7flil( Confidence is the trust of one person in another. Your trust in our diamond values is well placed. I0Nl5lllEN(lE ... Our Most Valuable Asset G. H. i TAYLOR JlWEI.LEl8 FOB FOUR GENERATIONS Barrlater and solicitor Banlr of Commerw Building Charlottetown Money to Loan Gordon E. tJiEMtttun. l B.A.. LL.B.. ' BARIIISTER. SOLIGITOB. r.u.. IM Prince Rt. - (Tharlotlaetown PHONE no J. A. Currutliars. R.O. OPTOMETIIIST its ltenl street Phone an (Next to Slmpaorra Annoy) M,.......M..M..-.-A Allison M. Gtllis. Ll..I. BABBISTER. S0l.lCITllll.. lilo IIO Richmond st. - tfharlottctnwn Phone 190 Byron J, Grant. O.'?. OPTOMETIIIST in Kent Street Pliona Ill toppoalta luvcra Hotel) l l l l Dr. K. A. Mucnaci-iern DENTIST Dental K-ray Above Charlottetown ('linia- 2.02 Queen St. mat mt MacPliee & Trainor u. r. ilIIv'I'Hl.'.E. on. Q.('. E. 80lllEItl.EI) TIIII INUIC. ll..t. but-rlaterl. Eu-.. J. 5. nine?" OPTOMETRIST Eye: Examlnetl. Glnsir-a l"llt:-ti Corner Kent and Queen sis. Omen Phone lime-Hmiaa Itll-T A. Wallhen Gander. LLB. BABRISTER. S0l.lCl'r(lR. rt:-. Phllllpa Juiltllnx Ill Grafton Street Mon-y tn lman I-'0l'"""'j J. Ar. McGuigun BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. Fir- NOTARV Etc. rrla Building TH.".iTMZb3nfR".o. ” Optomot rlat Montague. "- '5 ll Phone 802 Dr. W. R. Carson CHIBOPIIACTOR Palmer (lratlnute CllAlll.O'l'TF.TnWN Dial M81 201 Prim:;:i- Dr. A. L. Maclsauc DENTIST Dental X-Ba! GLORIA IIIJILDING I'll Grafton st. Phone 95” ERMA P. MMPIEISIIN. (LA. V Montreal, Quebec. Ottawa. Currie Bltlan. Charlottetown. H. R. DOANE Ir COMPANY CHARTERED ACtJ(lUN'l'AN'I's Ht! urea! Oaoru St. Charlottetown Phonon 3&0 - I441 RANDOLPII W. MANNING. (LA. IIVIN J. Mcll.'NNA. C-A Otlur olflcea at llalllaa. Mouton. II. John's. Amherst, Dartmoiiiih lcntvlllo. Ltnrpool. New Glasgow and Truro. McDONAl.D. Clllltll In CO. CIIAITIIID. Aotmuurranra ' ' Ioroah. lalat mm, lllerbroolrc. Hnvw" . Kirkland Lake. uonoton. Iltnllton. Charlottetown. Etlmntlzlmn-W