- plies only to pigs graded under govcminent sup- PAGE FOUR -} TIIE * CIIIIILOTTETOWII GIIAIIIIIIII Morning Dally (Founded In “I'll Pnaldont: Llcut. Col. W. Cheater B. Mal-In Vice-President: J. IL Burnett, I‘. J. I. Spent-an: Llein. Col. D. A. bholifnnon, 0.8.0. Idltor and Managing Director: J. ll. Burnett. IJJ. Annotate Editor-l: Frank Waller and Hut. In A. Burnett. IKO-NJLB. (On Aatlu Service) “The Strongest Memory i; Weaker Thu the Weakest Ink.‘ MONDAY, sauuasw n, 1045' Subsidies Farmers’ According to a recent report from Ottawa, the Federal Department of agriculture has esti- mated that Canadian farmers in i944 received ‘Pllrwinlaltfly $94.I42,00o u. subsidies and bon- uses from the Dominion treasury compared with $77.04-i.130 in i943. The i944 figures are approximate as all returns have not been received. 'l'lierc were several changes in the i944 stibsidics compared with the previous year, btit last wcck Agriculture Minister Gardiner said the intention was t0 continue last year's subsidies in i945 without ally important altera- tion. Hog premiums were started early in i944 and $349,000 in premiums were paid during the year. Tilt} bonus is $3 Ollleacil grade “A" pig marketed and $2 oil grade “Bi." It ap- crvision so pigs butchered on farms and inar- keted as dressed pork do not rate tlle bonus. The premitiiiis are (lcsignetl to encourage hog raixrs to improve their products and to market their pigs to governmciit-itispected abat- toirs. Marked increases were shown in most of the subsidies to the dairy industry, chiefly because of increases in the rates. There was a big incrczise last year in government assistance to growers of crops for the canning industry and also in the drawbacks granted on feed wheat. Canadian millcrs buy rotighly‘ 50,000,- 000 biishcls of wheat to grind into flour for domestic use cacli year and on every bushel bought at $1.25 they get a drawback of 47 1-2 cents. . School Planning In Britain "Reference has been made in these columns to the new Education Act in Great Britain, nlost of which goes into effect in April, and under which thcrc will be drastic improvements in the standard of British school buildings. The Min- istry of Education has drawn up a set of school building regulations with which the local auth- oritics will have to comply, both for new and existing schools. llere are some of them: .\ll new schools will have to be built off riuiin roads. TIICR? itiust be unrestricted sun- light and plenty‘ of space around the buildings. They will be required to contain staff rooms, kitchens, accommodations for medical exam- ination and treatment. and (except in the smaller primary schools) one or more dining rooms. ‘The size of playinggrounds will run from half an acre for the smaller of these primary schools tip to fourteen acres for the bigger sec- ondaiy schools. .-\ secondary school must have arts and crafts rooms, a libraryfan assembly hall with a platform or a stage, and a gymnasium. The regulations provide for a progressive reduction in the size of classes, so that the maxi- mum for a primary school shall be forty, and for a secondary school thirty. This will require big- ger buildings and teaching staffs, quite apart from the expansion that will be needed for the increased school population which will result from raising the school-leaving age under the new Act. Boy Scouts In Holland Says The Edmonton Journal: It will be readily understood how particularly offensive the Boy Scouts of occupied countries have been to the Nazis. Their organizations were prompt- ly disbanded and they were subject to perse- cution whenever they tried to continue their activities. This did not, however, prevent a troop in southern Holland from quadrupling its mem- bership during the past four years. That information is furnished by the infor- mation bureau of the Netherlands government, which also tells how the boys in Maastricht were so keen to gct back into their uniforms that a hundred of them were parading the streets of the town twenty-four hours aftcr the last German left. They assisted the .'\llied soldiers in inak- ing their first crossing of the Meuse at that point. In mud-i battered Nijmegen a meeting of the Scouts was held the day after its liberation. They have acted as messengers, stretcher-bearers and firemen, helped to organize the first postal ser- vices, compiled statistics, set tip a special iiifor- mation bureau for the rchousiiig of the bombed- oiit population and in one case they were even found running a bakery. Much the same story has come from liitidhtivcn, with the addition, however, that thcre the accent lies more par- ticularly ou repairing the streets. All over lib- erated areas of llolland the reputation of the Scouts is such that when an important letter has to be delivered it is getter-ally considered that one of the safest ways is handing it to one of the boys. Dr. Cyril James On Money Domestic. control of the financial structure is not sufficient to snlvc the economic problems of the post-war world since "there is no con- Field of Money before The Institute on Money and the Law at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York. The influence of the London money market declined with the numerous expedients to meet the staggering cost of the war, and coiise- nuently the influence of the London money mar- ket ceased to be a restraining force, and Lon- don itself was impoverished to the point where ancial responsibilities that it had carried before i914.’ “It has become amply apparent that we have only two choices for our children (said Prin- cipal James). We can organize the world along the lines of full national sovereignty and ‘eco- nomic independence of every state-with the inevitable result that competitive policies of economic nationalism . . . will bring us rapidly to a third world wan-or we can decide on that minimum sacrifice of sovereignty which will permit us to recognize . . . a world economy in fully” he continued.‘ Dr. James pointed out that "an appropriate international monetary organ- ization is one of the basic elements in such a program"; and went on to say that the machin- ery tentatively worked out at the Brettoii Woods conference had a significance that transcends even the economic aspects of life. That program,» he said, “is the first detailed prcgwasal for post-war organization on which the legislatures and the peoples of the United Nat- ions are asked to decide." -EDITORIAL NOTES- Every war expands the vocabulary of the British speaking peoples. The Saipan campaign has added a new phrase to the pungent jargon of soldiers. "Foxhole knees", the result of thirty nights of crouching in positions which would discourage a Hindu fakir, speak—or rather, creak——for themselves. i The military recall status of service per- sonnel dischargad from operational posts in Newfoundland, Labrador, Greenland, Iceland, the West Indies, Alaska and the Aleutiaiis, is one ofthe details of new call-up legislation not yet decided, a Selective Service official declares. Labor Minister Mitchell announced that men discharged from the forces who have not serv- ed outside of Canada are subject to military call-up. 11kt! Here is the sort of resistance the Canadians are up against on the Maas. Resting in a cow barn the battle-tired men said it took two hours to cross the icy ground they had planned on crossing in 20 minutes. “We got into a four. hour slugging match, WIllCIl gave the enemy a chance to recover and regroup from the first shock of our fine artillery barrage," the colonel said. "I called it off at daylight. They were fanatics. Some of theni wouldn't even come out of their holes when we put flame-throwers on them." 1K ll l! I Quebec can get more than she needs from the Federal Government. Justice Minister St. Laurent announces that an Order-in-(Touncil had been passcd authorizing the construction on Boulevard dcs Capucins in downtown Lim- oilou Ward, of a $350,000 building to house Welfare Department and the Veterans’ Depart- ment for the Quebec district. The three-story building will have an area of 71,000 square feet and is expected to be ready by Sept. I, sliort— ly after the coming election. 4- s u it In England they have been having the worst snow storm since I940, in some places to in- ches being recorded. In London the snow was from two to three inches jn,depth—-an unusual amount considering tlhe busy traffic which ordinarily turns it to slush. Ice and snow caused trouble on the open sections of the capital's subways and trains on one linc were held up all of Tuesday afternoon through snow blocks on the line. Civil defence work- ers were called out to help clear vital roads and 30 snow ploughs were used to clear road- cars routes. At Hampstead Heath, London's greatest winter sports centre, expert skiers in many costumes last worn in Switzerland six years ago mingled with children on sleighs and toboggans. 101*!!! At the irionient the rough percentage esti- mates of what Canadian service men intend to do when they are discharged is something like this—40 per cent to 50 per cent say that they will go back to their olxl jobs; i5 per cent to 25_plcr cent indicate a desire for vocational training; 5 per cent to l0 per cent say that they want to go to University; about io per cent and expected to increase as full privileges become better known, say that they ivant to go farm- ing. or at least to take advantage of the Vet- eran's Land Act ivhich includes fishermen, and the establishment of a rural home with part time, at least, devoted‘ to farming. The bal- ance have various other preferences including men who want to set up in business for tliein- selves. n- u a- s Queen Victoria died this date 190i after a reign of 64 years, in which she celebrated three jubilecs, Silver, Golden and Diamond; her cra saw the utmost expansion of the British Em- pire and the freest of free trade the world has ever experienced; then, too, began in earnest the social revolution which liberated millions of which the nations are able to develop peace- the offices of the Dominion Health and Social me THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way take era-Windsor Star. wilted Canada wlll have to be between the leaders of groups and factions-Fort. Times-Journal. When the Congress llote will be Chicago News. A London speculation has It that giant. v-zs went so lilgli they never came down. They are supposed tu have disintegrated in the strato- sphere due to frlczirm. Many of us have been led to believe on the other hand that the stratopheie was virtually frictionless. the alr there being so tliln. Perhaps the missing V-Ts have merely started off for Mars-Edmonton Journal. For a natlon dazed by a start- llng German resurgence and swol- len casualty lists. the President's call for the completion of total mobilization through national ser- vlee provides clear and brilliant cll- rectlon. We will either take that. direction or pay with the llvcs of our brothers and sons for our fail- ure to do so. It.’s as simple as than. —New York Post. A cordless electric iron for house- hold use having been invented. one United States manufacturer is planning to produce 100.000 of them in the first quarter of 1945. 150,000 in the second quarter and 200,000 in the third quarter, says the Brockvllle Recorder and Times. If they are as represented, the manufacturer should have no dif- ficulty whatever in selling every one of them. for a cordless iron promises to be an exceptional boon to everyone who does ironing. The sunflower has become the basis of an important wartime ln- dustry ln likigland. The seed con- tains rich, sweet oll which can be used for frying. sulads and mar- garlne manufacture, the Toronto Star reports. Cellulose and pot- ash can be made from the residue as well as cake Ol.‘ food for poul- try. Even the husks can be used as fuel for seed-drying furnaces. War time does not fool the sea- gulls. They come from their roost- ng rocks at daylight, taking their time from the sun. They spend the day along the shore, in follow- fng boats. or hunting occasionally over back gardens on the chance that. the llubltc may remember them. Towards dusk. again taking their time from the sun, they troop in twos and threes back to the roosting rocks, not one whit put- oa: by the fact that down below on the ground men have juggled with thelrclocks and forgotten how to set them right again. -— Vlctorla Colonist. Whlla we're at It. let's not. inla- Peuce foolers for peace feel- There’; going to be a heap of ra- bulldlng after the war and some of it could no longer fulfil the international fin- JKJKLZ” "I ‘he mind‘ _ undo" The first step In building up a a little more sci-operation and unlon artles. Illlam I re- opens May l it will defy tradition by having a 18th floor. However, for the superstitious a concession made-there will be no room bearing the number “l3."— The Whole Story (Toronto Telegram) Since Mr. Ilsley. In his recent radio Bfidress compared the 18 cent rise in the cost of llvlng index In this war with a 85 per cent Increase in the last war it is pertlmeut to make a comparison o the rates of income tax paid in the first Eur- opean war and the present one. The Borden Government dldno; 1m. pose income tax at all until 1917 and ln 1918 at the end of the war single persons earning less than 81.500 and married persona with In. comes of less than $3,000 were en. tlrely exempt. A 4 per cent tax was imposed on incomes In excess of these amounts. A 2 per cent supertiix was lm on incomes of $6.000 and over and the rate was stepped up as the income 1n- creased. Compared with today's tax rates these imposed in the last wai- were infinitesimal. Today, a slnzle Der- son earning $700 pay $20 tax and an individual earning $1,000 pays 892 tax. A married person. without children ls taxed if his income 1s about $1,250 and if he earns $1.500 tie pays it tax of $103. If his in- come ls $2.000 Ile pays $231. These are but u few examples of bow pre- sent day taxation bits the small Wage earner. One of the reasons they are so heavy is Mr. Ilsleyb determination to make his price control policy work. W; do not wlsli t0 be under- stood as condemning price control in its ciitlrety. What we are polnt- ing out ls that; ivlien Mr. Ilsley compares prices in this war with those ln the last. war and makes no reference to the higher taxes which are imposed to help make the control policy work he ls only stating one side of the case. Looking Ahead In Ottawa tBy The Ottawa Staff of ‘The Canadian Press) If military planners have ‘their way. there wm bu, little or no cur- t-a-ilmctit in defence department cadct estimates after the war The school army and air force cadets have bcccmc an important source of potential man-power for both services and the common-to- rill arms training glveri in these Junior units facilities training programs when the youths actually enlist. Tlie sea courts-usually not af- filiated with schools and sponsorcd by the Navy L-eague- are being used as the only source of recruit- ing for the senor service and courses have been so designed as to take the ycuiiwters clvcr the less difficult wrlit. .2: of sea-going know/ledge before they sign on for regular duty. One military spokesman told a. reporter recently that he intended to reccmmcrid that the Fcdcral Government approach the pro- vlnces with a view to having post- war voluntary cadet, uizlts estab- llshed in all secondary schools In the Dominion He thought it should be left to the schools t0 dedicate which service they want- ed to support. Mr. IIsIey Didn’t Tell siiiivrirut Ill When you haw counted snnflshnlun DEPARTMENT OF MUNITIONS AVEI Uplohur Andlllvllllodoor AND SUPPLY Hon. C. D. Howe. Minister earner-General reuiatnlng 1n office over the five-year period, but so er none have yet. served a full second tenn. The Governor-Gen- eral ls appointed by the King on the advice of the Canadian Gov- T_his War—Four Years Ago ED311830. Two new a ln/mienLs of -—~— - the Nlltional Labor Relations Br TM Olnldl-n Pm: 308m M8 expected t.o be an- ' JAN. 22. lllfil-Churchlll told Commons British labor register 9;. sentlal to meet manpower de- ds. _ slgrzled andd no successor has Yet. ffsqlimtroopsrrwhildktdtggtlégegoobiiyrgiif- Mme - . o k b be ' _ Reports are current that Fred coiiiibv oiimiotintfiiisittlwfig il/Iiggglfifllclt oftl-lamllwn, Trades and anliln front. Large contingent Ger- a !‘ ess R ttl , i ~ . , nlk 91y wvnrgsjgn shtzizrtlern pmvesucs man prlsoneis iirrlied at Hunt“, cessor would be nominated by the BELFAST, Northern Ireland ._ The couizc‘l of the Royal mate;- gmzgffisc-a d! Ml‘. hfgflltlllléflllX e Ila a r . . f A l lt. t the Bwlherhoeii (flprgifillllgfiifp tig- sciiireiciileiiiii-l ,,*;;’,;‘,I1,”§°,,,'; “law's and Daperliant-ters tlnrl it farmers. Medals ol‘ certificates will is understood his union duties be issued to farmhimds who have leave him insufficient time to con- worked 40 years m- more on me same property. nounced shortly. W.l-l. Browne of Toronto, a. mcmiber of the employ- er side of the Board, recently re- tlniie as a member of the Board This Week's Campaign For Books For Cur I Fighting Forces Athlone: One of the decisions pressing ln on the cabinet, is the When Kulemoff, a Soviet officer and former railway ivorker. lost the fingers of both hands at the from. plastic surgeons made him new fingers by separating the bones of his hands. Kulemoff also got arti- flcl feet. Psychiatrists helped lilm recover from the psychic srloirk he suffered when tortured by the thought that he had no place ln because of his loss of limbs. Now he is being trained for solen- tlflc work ln a laboratory. Jellled gasoline, fund for flame- throwers and fire bombs, looks like raspberry or orange gelatin but is far more deadly. ls made to or- tier at the battlefronts by stirring a secret; white powder into ordlnaiy motor fuel. The jcllled gasullne maintains an Intense flame for eight to ten minutes. sticks to its target; and ignites any substance that. will burn. such as Wood w! cloth, at temperatures as low as 40 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. flame-throwers spurt streams uf the jellled gasoline into enemy plll- boxes and moving tanks. Award of the Carnegie lnslitlllll $1,000 first prize for a DBIHUHS l° Yasuo Kunlyoslil deserves more than passing attention. He ls n native of Japan. resident ln the United States since he was l3 yfldr-S old. We doubt whether the Japan- ese would accord sucli a distinc- tion to it member of an alien race under the circumstances. The dis- tinguished artists who were 1115898 of the contest were able to lay aside prejudice and deal justly with an dlvidual. It ls an example of fulr play for citizens ln more mundane activities than the paint- ing of pictures. - SPri Francisco Chronicle. A few miles south Bergvh. Norway, llcs the little village of Os, noted for its scenic surround- Ings and-before the war — for i1 small but thriving furniture in- dustry. Last: ll an RAF 01BX19 made an emergency lnlldlllll he" Os; members of the crew destroy- ed the plane. then made a clean getaway. The Gestapo turned ..n accusing eye on the DEOPII! 0f 05- One day a strange woman np- pearecl ln town; she went. from house to house selling religious tracts, talking and listening, and she stayed several day-S. When Sh‘? returned it was with the Gestalw- Then followed two days of terror tn Os. with ransacklnrt and brutal- it; and winding up with the arrest of 100-or more men aged l8 to (l5, all of whom were transported to Bergen and locked up thorax-Mori- treal Star. War accounts for many strauze circumstances. and one of them ls the fact. that ln the German town of Alsdorf, recently occupied by Am- erican troops. the town has been “tun; its rnllk supply from a herd of slaves abroad and gave the horny-handed dwellers at home the franchise and an equal share in citizenship through the policy of “no taxation without representation"; to be taxed a man had first to be permitted the right to be eeivable possibility of an automatic monetary system" unless some international machinery is created to undertake the task now that London, once the regulatory money-market of the world. can no longer fulfil that responsibility and "no other nation was able or ivilling to zisstime the litirtleti." icmzirkcd Dr. F. ('yril James. princi- pal and vice chancellor of hlcGill University. directly represented in parliament. county and town councils; from this sprang the policy oi social reform which places the power and auth- ority of state in the hands of the majority of the people, and constitutes democratic govern- ment; we arc now fighting largely to give Eur- opean and Eastern nations the same rights and privileges-but at sucli a cost compared with Qpcaking on International Cooperation in the of 25 Holstein cows 1,200 feet uri- 5e1- tm ground. Coal mlnlniz ha! always been the chief industry of Alsdorf. but rlsht now the chief mourns of its largest mlne are Fresh rnllk. veal. pork and mutton. The cows, pigs and sheep we.e taken underground by the 990018 of the town last September. to pro- tect. them from artillery fire zind bombs, 3g well as from other (Jer- mans who wanted them- 1; st 1 under occasional hell-tire. but he animals remain safe and sound underground. The American commanding officer. a Boston law- yer, asked the Germans at Alstlorf why there were no chickens ln the the British evolution of the Victorian era. d mu d barnyard. The ans- ‘iwiierertibld “the story: The chicken!‘ he town g‘ appointment of a new Governor General. The five-year term of the Earl o.‘ Athlone ersplrcs the year p There ls a strong posslbllty that owing to ivar conditions he may be yirevallcd on to carry on for a limited time after the ex- plration of his term, but not to ac- cept a second term cf office There ls precedent for a Gov- 0072M. THE ROVING BREED Over the Islands of Valor for many ages and long Winds irom each compass point faring wooed with an impell- ing song. And ever the boldest hearkeiied. tuiiiliig with great. lilnrts apame To wrle brave deeds on the cour- age page in Britain's Book of IHIITIC. Then tieace became tin unknown grace until their feet ituncd down By one 0t many highways to some salt-smelling town Where tall ships stringing to the stream or moored beside the (IUPYS Were trimmed for deep-sea faring and the challenge of the breeze. Aut wltli the entrant's helpful ebb the ghosting sailors crtpt, Waiting neltliei tor time nor tide the liidv liners swept; Manned by iiic.i of the restless brcctt. e-(“r to prove their wort They passcd null-dawn from g shores of home to all 9 ports of earth. And some rebumed with cargoes rlcli, and some returned no more; You'll find their bones in ev'ry sea, on ev'iy surf-blown shore; But evcr the winds keep calling. and out on every tide The gallant crews go stilling forth with glory still their guide. ~Frank M. Kelley, in The Victoria Colonist. were so easv to carry the Nazi troops took them and with them they fled before the American ln- vaslo -Hur0n E. osltor BERIDTZIL ‘Eaves? , siii: CALLED IT - lasing Interact- Iolln] friends-rho um went out me-‘nlnyn too KI PiII It b" “b!” ham F", Illldlcll Ibldifllul‘: 4 Wrry- llillnurnd. ' ' ' The following m b - r n. - Order Daughters 0f eltliieelilniipire fvilllnblfryi: cepting contributions to the great National Cflmllllign t0 Buy Books for our Fighting Forces. ROYAL EDWARD CHAPTER W. R. Adams-Mrs. A. V. Saunders Earl MzicDonaltb-Mrs. Arthur Lewis P. W. Turner-Mrs. J. A. Fraser- L. McDougiill-Mrs. T, Davies Harry Hill-Mrs. Milton Bell xrs- C-H-B- Lmlgworth-Mrs. F. E. Smallwood rs. Wm‘. Brehiiut-Mrs. F. S, Chandler Mrs. R. b. P. Jardine-‘dilrs. J. It. Paton Mrs. George Binns—Miss Rose Longworth Mrs. GordonIves-Mrs. Henry Lupthom Miss Jacqueline Macdonald-Miss Mary Irving Mrs. J. A. MacMillan-Mrs, V, L, Goodwin HILLSBOROUGH CHAPTER Don Grant-Mrs. T. B. Rogers James Hashim-Mrs. Ira Clark Fred Moore-Mrs. Maurice Weeks Walter Pickard-Mrs. George Ives Mrs. Wm. McNeil]- Mrs. (Din) Wendell McDonald Mrs. George Sinclair-Mrs. Wm. Hogg All of these ladies are anxious to receive your contribution and others will be at Hol- rnan’s Store, on Stinnyside, all day Tuesday, Thursday and Friday of this week to trike your money and give you a receipt. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs, Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Therg will be no general canvass through- out the City and no house to house collection. But the ladies are making it easy for "0': to get your contribution to them. Out of town contributors may pay to an] of the representatives appointed by the Can- adian Leglon in the different centres through- out Queens and King’s Counties. And all who find it more convenient are urged to clip the following coupon and send their remittance at once direct to Mr. A. Belch- er, Campaign Treasurer, Bank of Montreal, Charlottetown. MR. A. BELCIIER, Treasurer, 1.0.012. Books Campaign, . Charlottetown. P.E.l. llarewlfh II m! contribution the l. 0. D. I. Csmpnlni to Buy Books Our I-‘lghflng Forces. L: for NAME ....-~....-..|----.--.. ADDRESS .. .-.-....-....--nuns...“ DO IT TO-DAY neatisitianeymiii Fem Isl Metropnllt: Opera s: d2.‘.";a."l..,_‘ ‘h cu. Chem u‘ “M! Irtim. . symptoms. nob Mixture. taken at meal- i? times. not only prevents all lind effects from zas lint |t romntes the functional n. lvlty of the stomach. assists digestion and Improves the appetite. DON'T DELAY — ORDER YOUR BOTTLE TODAY PRICE ~50 ARE YOU TROUBLE!) ‘VITII LUMBAGO 0R SORE BACK If so we have one of the. peat. remedies to offer. name- v BACK-RITE TABLETS Eapeclallv effective fnr lum- bago. sciatica. neuritis. lolnt. muscular and other forms o rheumatism Which ordlnar ‘rratments fail to reach. Only 50c r"'r lvix ‘trill orders "wen DIOIIM _ attention TIIE 2 MAGS 149 Gt. George St. I _ F, l-Iiitchesoii 8t SUN OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- _ feels." 53 Grafton Street ll. J. IMBIIII OPTOMETRIST Ffltlnl and Sllalplllillll Glasses J t. Montague. P. l2. I. Ofllco Hours: l0 to l2 A. M- l t0 5 P. M. llollihya etc. by uppolntitlltllt. Ofllco Connected with DRUGSTGIRE. Pr. fessitlnrl Bards F McLeod f? Bentley w. a. BENTLEY. K. c. .i. a. summer. n c. i Barristers and Attorneys-at- Law I54 Prince Street Vlsltifn .. f __._ i. ll‘. It. Duane 0 0o. ‘ Chartered Accountants I 53 Grafton Street. Charlottetown Phone 2080 Box 24'! Randolph W ltlnnnlnl. C A- mor- alIand Company II. F. AIIBIIIBIILII Chartered Accountants Eastern Trust Bulldlnz ghvvuv J-‘HHVMUM g Charlottetown _ ' M. ALBAN F AIR M ER B.A., LLB. Canadian Bank of Commerce Blit- MONI-IY T" LOAN IIARBIBTER. SOLICITOR. ETC: in. ntiiuiiiiiii. M. BARRISTER. souciron NOTARY. are. CURRIE BUILDING c ABLOTTETOWN ‘fir? W ST)? Office: 90 Great (learn Strefl Money to Loan Collection! . IIAIIIITII. IOIJOIIDI; IT“ As»