PAGE FOUR GIIARLOTTETIHVII GUARDIAN Ilorulu; Dally (Founded In 1881) Authorized a: Faoond Clan: Mail Poet Oftln: Department. Ottawa The Guardian may ha "obtained at: Hub lonaooa Shop. Mona-ton, N. I The New: Shop. Monet-an N. B. George McLean. hctou N. 8. Walker’: White Spot. ii Salter St. Halifax. NJ. Metropolitan New: Agency, i248 Peer 8L, Montreal. United Cigar Stores. Chateau Laurler, Ottawa Ont. B. Altken, lord Elglifs Hotel Ottawa, Ont. J. Fina. 35: Bay St. Toronto. Ont. Wolfe's New: Stand, Surlbury. Ont. Old South News, Cor. Milk and Washington 8b.. Boalou Iota-llnf: New: Agency, Time: Building, New York. I‘. ‘dent: W. Chester S. McLure, M}. Vice-President: l. R. Burnett FJJ. Secretary: lieut Col. l). A Manlimuun. 0.8.0. Iditor and Managing Director: l B. Burnett. FJJ. Auoclate Editors: Frank Walker and Ion A. Burnett ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." MONDAY, MAY 27, 1946 Representation By Wealth? Carrying ro its logical absurdity an iQ frequently implied by Central Canadian inter- ests, a correspondent in a Toronto exchange comes forward with the suggestion that repre- sentation in Parliament should no longer be based on population, but on wealth. "The number should be based 0n the amount of money czrch Province contributes to the central government," and the B. N. A. Act amended accordingly. ll that were dune, with the total nrcmber- ship of the llOllnC of Commons 245 as at present, Ontario uouhl hrrvg r15 members instead of 82; Quebec, ti; illslczul of 65; British Columbia, 2o inslciirl of to. But the representation of the three prairie provinces combined would be re- duced from 55 to l7, and that of the three Mari- times from so to r0. The Yukon would have none. Just to cite these figures is to reject the proposal. But, as a western contemporary re- marks, the principle back of such an idea is even more to be condemned than the manner in which the idea would work out. The principle is that wealth is more inrportan-t than human- ity, and that, in consequence, the provinces where the most wealth is located should have an over- whelming preponderance in the governing body.‘ Nothing could be more foreign to democracy than that. 'l‘hcre is the further point that the taxable wealth of the great industrial provinces of Ont- ario and Quebec is derived in part from sister provinces which constitute a market for the in- dustrial oulpht of Central Canada, and which make a substantial contribution to the pros- perity of the financial institutions which have headquarters in these two provinces. ls This Our Unity’? Pointing the moral of the Canadian Legion convention at {Quebec City last week, the Ham- ilton 5'/wclntui' (Independent) makes the fol- lmving sad but true reflections: "First it confirmed what all sane people who weren't chasing votes always understood, that if there was one way to create a perman- ent cleavage in the Dominion it was to dodge the issue of a. united Canada when the chips were down. Canada's Federal Government of the day dodged it exceedingly well. Now the chickens are coming home to roOst. “In the first place, the Legion refused to admit N. R. M. A. troops who bear that ‘stigma through no fault of their o\vn, as they were 0f- ficially sanctioned and iustified in their stand by the Government of the country. liven those who fought overseas come under this ban. So that is one hitter" and permanent gulf created, not hy the Legion, but by political cowardice in war-lime. “'l‘hen the Quebec delegation voted as a solid bluc at lcztsl three times in opposition to the general stand. This is merely a mild con- firmation of what every honest Canadian ad- mits;inainel_v, that the two-army system creat- Cd a two-army Canada, and that Quebec, which nevcr had the issue honestly put up to it, was encouraged to form a bloc against the rest of Canada, and the rcst d! Canada forced to stand —in spirit anyway—in vigorous opposition to Quebec. Very prnfitable—for voles. "Quebec, the N. R. .\l. /\., and in the end the volunteer troops were thus all lct clown hv this classic betrayal. On the principle that to glorify a cancer is tn cure it. the refusal of Can- ada's Government to introduce a draft system which both the United States and England did without flinching for a split second, the politi- cians may have felt they won their point. If they did feel that way, they can now watch the unfolding of inevitable and sordid consequences. It will take high political courage and many long years to undo the deep injury that was ’ done to the Canadian people in a clay of great trial and peril." Man Away From Home a '.‘ Mr. Donald Ferguson Brown, the some- Jvhat garrulous Liberal member of Parliament [for Essex West (Ontario) got neatly told off .,_r:* the House the other day by the only lady member, Mrs. Gladys Strum, Qu’Appelle .,(Saskatchcwsn). Here is the story, as taken Hansard: . " mt. known: This is why lam opposed to the amendment submitted by the loyal Opposi- fion. New, as to the un-loyal opposition- a Sonia hon. MEMBERS: Oh, oh. by. - Samedfon. QIIMBERII Order. - MR. snows: ls there sOme question about that? r ' _ i ' - . An hon Milt - ’ "in" a In‘ Certainly ‘there ii. well, ‘l will pas: that fi (i _ with rheflonservarivcs. lifted I_ will call them “cm m. the DOW. I909. inal tion.’ Cl SOT. year she ll’! dren ma, BROWN: dict a woman. nizable . _ mas. srnuu: Orr THE_‘CHARLOTTETOVXNlQQAjIDlfAN a point of order, speaker is classifying two kinds of opposition or two kinds of "loyal" opposition. Am l correct in assuming we have an official opposition and then we have other hon. member's in opposition? MR. BROWN: Bless your little heart, I would not do anything- ‘ MRS. srxuru; Well, see that you don't then. Far be it from me to contra- I am married too. runs. srxuu: Well, you are not at home .- EDITORIAL ‘NOTES -. Dominion Atlanfic Railway, Pacific subsidiary in Nova Scotia, will half a million dollars on improvements right-of-way and buildings this yiear. C U I U a Canadian spend to its More potatoes will be planted in Nova. Sco- tia this year. Agriculture Department reports indicate 24,600 acres will be planted in potatoes, 20o acres more than 1945. It =8 It! i‘ The B.Sc. degrees won by P. \V. C. gradu- II 8K ates at McGill University, reported Saturday, d: indicate that the College is not altogether so derelict as some would have us believe. at UK City 0f Halifax and the Nova ScOtia Light it and Power Company have begun talks about a new transportation system for the city. Pres- ent street car lines are expected to be scrapped in favor of a system of trolley or motor buses. . 8K I! All things to all men. Mr. Mackenzie King, i! i John Calvin, i: v ‘e Arguing the social, political and economic advantages of Newfoundland entering into Con- federation with Canzrda, a writer in the Corner Brook Western Star makes the following orig- point: “Instead of I Protestant Reformer, this date r564; after being ordained a priest of the Church, he withdrew and studied law at Orleans, and later a Brourges; he imbibed the doctrines of Reformation, and in r536 publish- ed his Institute: of the Christian Rcliqion; his influence increased year by year, though he was constantly engaged in warfare with the enemies of his new faith; Calvinism, in the extreme form which it assumed in the 17th century, has long been losing ground in Scotland and England, where the quater-centenary was celebrated in who told the House of Commons he was going to England unwillingly, declared in London he was “eager" to begin his discussions with other Empire statesmen. w it 1k Surely Premier Jones must have been talk- ing a little too freely to reporters at Ottawa about his disappointment over the Conference collapse. But when he announced here that he proposes to alter Daylight Saving Act irext year, it would seem he has recovered from his chagrin. i l died l living in isolated ham- lets where it takes from four to six weeks to get mail, there would be main highways and inter-town communication ‘roads. . . a young man, instead of marrying a girl from my own village I would have an Opportunity to see what the girls in other towns look like and avoid the calamity of marrying a blood rela- Certainly a prime optimist, and one who knows not Ottawa's “bottleneck? a n- ni - . 1_fI were Should war ribbons be worn on civvies? it! A “We in Canada (says Saint Jc/m Telegraph- Journal) consider this a iron-military country and in peacetime ribbons are carefuly stored in safe places only to be brought into the public gaze when something special demands their display» Perhaps we are too modest in this respect, but we are proud of honors won by our fighting men just the sanre; and if wearing ribbons on vvies is favored by the former fighting men we are all for it, but we think ribbons repre- sent far too much to be worn on working clothes where they are likely to become soiled and be- draggled." it it The, King, smoking a cigarette and wearing a checked suit and thick shoes, put his feet on the fence Saturday last with fellow-farmers from around the world when they discussed his ca‘.- tle, pigs and sheep at the Royal Farm at Wind- The 15o overseas visitors are in Britain for an international farmers’ conference. King described his Scotch Shorthorn hcrd from which champions have come for nearly years and asked lack WCssOn of Regina about the Saskatchewan wheat crop and how much grain the Canadian west could provide . Both the Kim: French with J. A. Marion of .Montreal and Majesty told \V. l. Parker of Winnill¢2 ill?" the rainstorm halted their Winnipeg program Royal Visit to Canada in r939. remembered The 10o this in Her and Queen chatted almost the which during t! I Any government that "becomes convinced eptrutted with jtha that it will have to fight any other country at any time would be very foolish indeed not to neutralize that other country at once," Maj.- Gen. G. Brock Chisholm of Ottawa, Minister of National Health and Welfare for Canada, told the National Conference of Social Work at Buffalo in a. prepared address. long as children are brought up, on the un- questionable authority of their parents, to be- lieve in the exclusive validity of whatever social, economic, financial, legal, ethical, educational or other customs happen to be approved by those particular parents, only rarely will any of them be able to develop beyond these local certain- ties to any real understanding of themselves or of‘ her kinds of people, Surely . that the development of children who will make or destroyi tlie world as they‘ Will" come to adulthood, i: the ‘moat, important prob“ lem of any generation. “In the face of lhi: fact we go on paving movie actors ‘and actresses zoo and 30o time: the aallrlea vie. my leathers who htfrglngup of on: chil- , Deputy “As it is recog- nmnton oumsi ‘ltlshardtoaaywholathenrom subservient the yes-man or the lamb-man of the studio audience. -Brarrdon Sun. The Buralan and tn; American at heart, are much alike. t the Russian 1e not Permitted to know —Vl’rs§iiinq- ton Journal. To he : good citizen you moat be honest, obey the law and work hard If that. docs not. make you _ ' ‘£27.19 _ 1h‘ 0 t’ "f6 rm The ‘Mumm r » i 4- ; Nor-s By 11w W-y .ir.""a:::.".: rm’ w... or. mr... Ailments i . I ' , —-—— a .. wmvwi E mange ‘fume. litrtmfi Itfgiimlfiugggrcggmzelioagb ' n ‘l “mm l" H‘ ‘ ° » u. J. A. BROWN. 0.1» ‘: mu: onl flirts“ hlmgoiit. -m- $330tgofifhihltlplgcflhfiarsg; Orthopedic‘ ’ Montgomery said: “We have built _ a Control Commission worthy ‘o our country, which has success- fully overcome man l: marching forwar with confr- deue ." What have been the Con- trol o I ' achievement: ln the year that paued since Ger- many surrendered? Following the immediate task of clearing up the concentration camps, the problem of repatr sting their vlc- tims and foreign workers. Eizht hundred camp: were established for displaced persolnr. of whom a rations higher than the Germans and levies of clothe: for them have been made on the German Md dre - f '2" mfsfi suiicr°’m°fi.".ll“o."“’“ Pear-shit d pigs rue bgl d . Sllfhed by fife u s n‘ e Axrlgulture scientists. ha: been the problem of the trans- fer of German: displaced by vari- ou: war causes. eration "Swal- low", now proceed ng. bring: Ger- mans from the are: taken over by Poland. The total influx into the British zone has been estimated st over two million. compared with a prewar population in the zone o! twenty million. Disposing of half u mllllon tons of explosives. The dlsbnndment of “retinas Bnrry The Toronto Telegram. Use being deviate-pad are eggs wltrh harder Shel-Ls. quick aging cheese and new knockout drops for chlggers and roaches. by a system of priorities. Thus Operation “Barley/corn" release half a mllllon for last year's har- vest. Operation "Coalscuttle“ then provided some twenty thnurancl miners. By early thl: year de- mobilization of all three services ln the zone was almost complete. ex- cept for some two hundred thous- and war prisoners retained for es- sential lnbour. German war mater- ial destroyed includes half a mll- ion tons of explosive: and ever A Some of lhe gentlemen of the press who are wr ting qt the alder days and the all m4 foo" ohbefn habits and practices of uno er genera. tron might well vrrlbe something 810M the line 0f an inquiry as to what has become of the old-fash- loned farm hand. The Guel Merc- ury thinks. The old- adtrloned farm hand, we gather, is an extinct. specles—he no longer exists. The patient. calloused. hard-headed 1n- dlviduul in overalls who formerly slept Ln the rr-ttlc or out. in farm granary and was n the 00w 0r harnessing inc horses at 5 o'clock 0t spring mornin s hiss one com- is the destruction of all vltal parts of U-boats still on the stocks in Hamburg. and for crimes szalnrt the British forces. In extensive denszlflcatlon, eighty-nine thousand ha: been dlsmlssedtor Nazi asloclstlons by Marc and well over fifty thous- and tamed. dls- htand ndob zWa xp sdhtr e Reform in Local Government. A start has been made with recon- structing the German administrat- lon on a democratic balls. The local permanent official he: been subjected to the control of the loc- al council, merely retaining cutive authority. Pending the umn elections, the local govern- ment bodies are nominated. Ad- ministration has been built up to A provincial level. The year has seen a growth of democratic political parties and trades unions. British policy is to insist on the parties being devel- oped from the bottom up on a democratic basis. The Unions allowed to settle among themselv- e: the form of organization. Strik- have often been awarded for wor which was not. of particularly high standard. Though it. goes against the grain with us to oppose any att-snrpt. to foster the arts in Canada we doubt 1f Sen- ator David's plan would produce the expected results». Of course. if the Government wanted to give some encouragement to our au- thors, it. could always stop taxing their eamlngs on its present. un- enlightened plan. -Pet.erbomug'h Examiner. One hundred and thirty-six years a o a Welsh soldier, his wife and fve children, while on s frcm Ireland. shelter rsvel pit. near Castle Douglas. Dur- ng the night. the overhanging bank of the plt caved in and the entire family was buried alive. A stone in the clvuirchyarrd or Twynholm, which describes tihe soldier and his wife as nunstrels was erected to their memory by four local ministers in 1871 Two members of Glasgow Galloway Association have now dis- covered that the soldier was none other than the prof/of. of “Wlan- deirdng Willie" ln Sir‘ alter" Scott's ' novel "Red gaunt-lot)’, and recently a ceremony was meld at, the grave and a tablet. rec-curing the facts mas dedicated. —-L:0rnd0n Times. Even In this age of feminism, in which outstsnclznr; women are no longer a rarity tart ccmmmlace. it would be difficult ind to find a woman whose innate tal- ents. vision and breadth of activ- ity exceed those of lvlirs. Eleanor Roosevelt, wlf-e of the late Presi- dent, of the United State-s. It. could be said that Nh-s Roosevelt. could not have helped beln Drvmlnelll’. in that her Prusban ‘s ltlons. from his days in the W1 son Ad- minlstrauon,untu his death dur- of the occupation forces must be maintained. The formation of local cooperative societies has just been authorized. Schooling for all children -Edu- cation has shown remarkable pro- gress. Despite the lack of sol-table textbooks and the necessity fcrr the careful vetting of teachers and damage to buildings, by February over twelve thousand schools ere open ln the British zone and all children receive some There are twenty-three teacher- trslnlng institutions and over six thousand democratic youth groups. Pro-nazl text book: have been re- printed. new books written. and an excellent system of school broad- casts inaugurated on 3.15.0. lines. From August last. licenses were issued for nawlpapers, which in- eludes several of a political ch11‘- scter though not party organs. The British-controlled news agency, D. P.D.. supplier some thirty th and words daily. Well over one hundred publishers have been 1h:- ensed and lltitature banned by the Nazi: is appearing again. to world prominence. wives have remained unnoticed. Who can name the-wife of 81W former president who achieved even half the sts/ture of Mrs. alt? —Toronto Globe. Official functions usually savour of the formal. but them was soone- thrng almost. of a famll circle st- mosphere at the Fore Secret- ‘s farewell dinner to the Am- erican Ambassador. That, was due Nearly one million tons of tom‘ supplied -0n the economic side, the greatest problem has been food. The British zone to import fifty percent of lts requirement: compared with twenty ercent for Germany as n whole. 0144b vlg- orous messuru have been taken to plough up grassland etc. Briton has had to supply over eight hund- red thousand tons of cereals, fifty thousand tons of potatoes and twenty-six thousand tons of vege- éables, partly from United King‘ om stoc s. The allure of 1 cal filgfllglflcglgfinlfiegogxnws ‘Numb harvests andsthe generally ode- terlorated world food situation led to a cut ln the basic rathn ~1- Mlfvh l0 lust over one thousand calories daily. This ln tum to a check ln the hitherto rtesly rise scenoes of war-time companionship —-"one night ln the blsdr-out. the Ambassador and 1 ed ln Gros- Square; he walked into his l" have dlreetl controlle nl 1:1- thonv Eden; to Mr. Eden hens; y d l o all, they had sat fu/r by tilde than they have with the floor or the House between them.- bondon Spectator , From Phlladel hl.a comes a 0t flow C m-les Gooey. ndry driver whose pay never x- ceeded $25 :. weak. discovered altar By March eight; Bercent Jf the rld ln the rl :h zone qwn: I. electricity output was up to seventy-this percent of the pre- ss lnulh on, n e s tailnee: not so tall t lichen on the wall; far, and he cannot. scan llf,.‘.'.ff'.l.°“*lt. ...... r a wry of planks of hl: own. ,u» "padding i0 problem: and. ‘l! hB-PDY 1E W111 wt 190511 make you over one and a h f million were 1,555, glispicuovs- —Quebw Chronicle- repatriated by September, 0.11.1111. we“ i. w, rem not only s , °“"""‘" _ *-.:::.:lr:;".:::: as: n“... =,-,»;-=~-- It's all right for us over here ln g guggnd d}; [mad per-mm re- ' u u,‘ °‘ . f“) 51mm“ '0 3° Wlflwlli alnlnz in t e zone ore houmd in all"! Tm" Bllllllllll. tgrlt fafifyfi 83am mp: with medical, educational Charlottetown nwwvme women o! Hba-Tonldmd haven’ and other amenities. They nave “ma, "u population. Akin to this problem m the German forces has proceeded as thousand planes. The latest phase , New” and entlmy ‘mt ° mums" War criminals have been system- m‘ ship heévaflgo place ¥1 so m; 2m B“ m -— s. '5'" w” a" "l" ‘F°‘“'l"°"d m“ ' l-airlrflasuiilf '.l'{'>i‘§.l“..'§l.lr"§i iii‘. o‘ a otrenclfgsy or dusegutac For B""d°lph w‘ Munml- CA- ' aceflvebrgéaafiPtwr 51g: hY°gl§nH§g?°‘;; lies. The major trial at Nuremburg ha" we“ "° 9"!“ m“ fl" b” izlgriebiientr :fa1<i'i]i>ciuiff' ‘hfnsiifiih uch the radiation will w ‘ ox - = ~ “ ‘ ernor- Generals prize has done so. y I i, Be, m .3 s’ m ho M, m?“ v“ The Puma" Primes m me U s A such as or t e sen atrocities m; and w much r o-ac y con- irs w e: are not banned, though security ° schooling. h time venm m.’ and I walked mm 5 hm‘, 1.. Co“ production. whlch m Fem fifty-five mobile teamnBody-wclght ..._. W'—Dm2rfl~'=\'wd_ by an asreenblv ruary reached forty-one rcent of ‘WWW “mm check fl" “h” °l person who I ioulr N91“; 57¢. non into much address: "You. the prewar figure. u. month "is ""9" °" °“'"l""- Tl" ' l" u: u. the mum. “Amlsrm ‘soum-ro, Jchn» -\. ." There Wm H0 llll- there was a slight recovery. nc ‘pplkimml DD-T- cud“ u’ “' and bower-should re: a Ml‘ Bl! Bull I Charlottetown necessary busters To the December the Brltlsh authorities“ “m”? ll" dhpmmd P"‘°'“~ tle of. Dr. an’: Stomach , '7 ‘l "5 ______“ 711F918“ 560mm‘? m8 Mixture and lee how quickly a HASZARD» III GNIt GQOIIO Street . CIIABLOTTITOWN. 91,1 Unique Preparation For Atom Bomb Test Professional Bards? (Associated Press) at the greatest biological in medical ibletory will be W- ' by the United States Navy Simmer in the Bikini Atbll Charms R_ McQuald BA. O OQ-OO-OO-O OfifiQ-‘Qi NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown _ Id, ass no. Box a: O O£QQQ _ Morrell and Company _ Chartered Accountant: sltlve to chanxes in heredity from loo much exposure to recite-active NB. . ‘Ilia-ere will be 1:50 special white mice. with inherited weakness for cancer, to study whether the bomb single, massive flash o1 X- reys and neutrons can wtlvsto malignant. growth. There will be 1.000 white rats. 200 pigs and 200 goats. distributed to determine the of- Illaatetn Trust Bulldln; t flash ess s few minutes and blisters In a few hours. But it. is important. to learn how to distinguish early bet-ween sunburn, heel; burns and those of X-rays. The latter superficially f resemble sunburn. but are, much nrore dangerous and in general are slower ln appearing. A lame series of tests l: based on the foot that man on a. war- ’ Charlottetown air-raid damage of Museum ++e3+oe+0+e0+e+oo++++¢e6 H. R. DOANE & CO. Chartered Accountants I3 Grafton Street, Charlottetown McLeod 8: Bentley W. I. BENTLEY. l0. ‘J. A. BENTLEY. LC. Barristers and Attorneys-at Law 1M Prince Street terminated sir the ventilators will suck in, what. harm it will do. and tic/w to protect. or treat the vic- 1‘t time. Neither can navel men dodge rmmy and waves coming aboard. l“? thOLUh the water may be as dan- b° gerous a: machine-mm bullet: because it is earrylnu many tem- porarily ratio-active particles. klnli of clothing may protect not only against radio- active spray and radio-active dust. particles, but against. flash heat as well. On the other hand the there n . my??? so ‘add it. 1.52mi germ mate two or three hundred years. 0R. W. R. GARSOI wrong kind of clothing might be our” u, a a a s death trap. Goats will have rum" ~1 i- ns“: t. P": are...» “thanks” whkih lilflasofbeeseedsn q gxhtirfgf men.” these “rte M! m“, on 12mm o e diflerent kinds of CIONIlUR wt be ihP"___ "m" 1m FREDERIC A. LARGE BARRISTEB. ETC. Phillip: Bulldlnl. ill Grafton Phone 1048. P. o. 5o; campers-prawn. nu. DR. A. R. SMITH pawns-r 115 Grafton Street Office Hours: 9to12-lt0l Telephone Z284. ALEX _\\'. MATHIESON uaanrsrrzn. soucrroa. mu‘ Office: 90 Great George Street Money to Loan Caller/til. PALMER 8r HASLAM A. J. BASLAM, B.A., LLB. BARRISTBB, ETC. Bani of Nova Seotla Chamber: . Charlottetown, P. E. l. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone B5 E0. Bo: tested. Much information that the ani- mals furnlsh will be secret. This will cover precise dlstama at which occur the various types of that injury from infra-red. ultra-violet and X-rays and from blast. Drive out AC" ES nr level and ninety rcent of ln- ‘ ‘delimited urpaniodxgllnngsectliilu: h: G‘ F. PUBLIC STENQGRAPHER r su - m... “m. my $2": 9f lillpeyflreaf bmb damn“ czurf-xgohrildgnee, typlff: ilrid Gas ls exported to the r-‘rench zone and electricity to the Frencn and American zones. Nearly the seven thousand five hundre miles of main-line railway .n th zone have been restored, comps!‘ ed with the slx hundred and rlft six miles ' working a Y9 ago. Nearly ellhl dred rall & Sllll OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists ln the fit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de-_ feels.”- 53 Grafton Street bookkeeping. M188 HELEN HIDDEN Talc hone ‘i020 liven up 15904. P. O. Bur A52. 108 Queen Streee J. A..McGUlGAN. B.A. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTEB, SOLICITOB CURRIE BUILDING ' M. ALUAN FARMER EA, LLB. MONEY TO LOAN w‘. nannrstrrm SOLICITOR. s70.‘ CRARLOTTETOWN Canadian Bank ell/Commerce Bldg“ bridges have been lred, including two over gahlne. Rhine truffle was restore completely by January, t Dortmund-Erna canal was , " ln March, and_the last ream“ the Mlttelland Canal in now d for reopening. Industrle: w-rt. include motor and tractor wor a. cycle and tlre factories and he manufacture of glass, paper, sh es and drugs. The Brltlsh Red Cross nus over flve hundred doctors moblllzed ln liassry ' Stomach: Ralelved H. F. McPHEE. ll.A.. l(.G_ It will relieve all distressing . lym Or. Iv: Stomach Mixture, u not only at fir: lion dwelling: were destri ye: in the Brltlah zone durlnit the . war). 0n the financial eide. ration- January. despite labour short one flfth of the necesas y h use rrrefialrl- had been cornQleted. “ma”. “Imam Noam, l,‘ MONEY T0 LOAN unnsnr a. savour. B-A- 14-‘ a warn-nun oammr Luna“ Ian Bani nl Commerce ._. Charlottetown. r n L ~- lnl and prlceoontrol and th ree- cent drastic taxation lncr nae: check Inflation tendencies. are aom: of the feature: or work of the Brltlrh control in r- rnany, which h the next t elvc month: l: expected to cost the Brltllh taxpayer ellhty mutton pound: ' - ' ...._._ .EY ES EXAMINED ' - AND GLASSES FITTED J. 8'. Taylor, orronsrnrsr m", ' t a w" l“ ‘ "fissfud . J! ‘l ' Residence W" . Q4‘. ' . . of. Alf-I‘ t”, : ~ l-Ji-