l l ’ curtain the l riiisl I piigiitorrrroiiii tiuimiiiii Wounded u urn _ hi.“ “ma; (m, w. cum: l; Nebula nonrandom J. l. nun-pm. I-J l- jg-mqi women. p. A. uuxinun; 03.0..’ WNW“ Dlreuteralllurnetl»? J. jflidlh Imus: lkukiwallu and Hon. up A. lumen. 5.08MB. (On Aptlve Ienloll “WM Strongest Memory la Weaker Then . * the Weakest Ink.‘ slirvniiATnovnsmun i1, 1m Tut! Tull Mr. llsley .2 rvQn-“v. when Mr. King gets" back into harness at Ottawa it will be interesting to see what attitude he will take towards acting Prime Minister Il|ley’s dictum about the Crown IJFQFOZHliVB- Hr. Ilsley maintained that the Cabinet re- ceives its authority from the Crown and not drom the Iiouse of Commons, and lie refused b produce certain documents asked for bv the finder of the Opposition 0n this ground. Back in January, i934, when Mr. King was lnder of the Opposition. he delivered a four- hour speech on this very subject. His theme then was one of bitter complaint against the government of the day for proceeding “as if— i were an executive wholly independent of the House of Commons, rather than an executive which derives it: hauler from and i: responsible 90 the House." He accused the government of making the House "a sort of rubber stamp for what the ministry may choose to do,” and a few page: further on, waxing still more indignant. we find this statement attributed to him in Hansard: “I submit, Mr. Speaker, that the House of Common: alone should dirrrt the ministry with respect f0 all matters appertainino to the Royal prerogative. . . . That is the duty of the House of Commons, It has always been so, or at any rate for many years it has been regarded by the House of Commons as one of its rights and rivileges, and the House of Commons in Great gritain has been unwilling to admit that a statute l0 necessary to control the prerogative.” Mr. King went on to cite instances, one Of them concerning a statute introduced in i890 by Lord Salisbury for the ccssion of Heligoland b Germany in consideration of Germany's hav- ving recognized the claims of Britain to Zanzibar. When the bill was before Parliament Mr. Glad- ~ stone, seconded by Sir William Harcourt, took . the view that the government, by making the treaty a JUblCCl of legislation, had abandoned die treaty-making prerogative of the Crown. He (Mr. Gladstone) proceeded to show lhat the prerogative of the Crown, exercised by the min- loteri of the day, was subject to review by the Hour: of Common: and by the Home of Cam- mon: alone, whereas a bill required the sanc- tion of the House of Lords. Mr. Gladstone pointed out that the Commons, in countcnancing nich procedure and sharing its iurisdiction with the House of lords, was halving a right zuhich IVA“ peculiarly it: awn, namely’, controllinq the Herein of the Royal prerogative." "Thlt pvsition, I think,” commented Mr. Kiig, "is the sound one-the position that the ministry is responsible to the House of Coni- lions, and that the House of Commons should direct the ministry in this particular. That, I fink, i4 the mic position to be taken with re- prd to the exercise of the Royal prerogative." » , And again, same speech: "The control of the exercise of the Royal "jfllrogative in Canada 1's the peculiar Yffl/lf of this House of Commons, and I am amazed that Inc who is the leader of the House of Commons, deriving his authority from the House of Com- H0115. should take any view to the contrary.'If the House of Commons ceased to support him would cease to be Prime Minister, notwith- nunding all that the other House might seek to do for him, notwithstanding that every member H the other House might be a follower of his Own. His power is entirely dependent upon l" IHDDOrI he receives from this House of Commons. In the matter of the exercise of the Royal prerogative, an: of the most vital of lh: F337,"! If"! fiffvflflll! 0f the House of Conmions It that of dtrertmg the mitiirtry with respect to manner m which it is to be Morris-ed." no on, and so on; whole pages of it. l _l of which, doubtless, will be brought to Mr. _1"K'l and Mr. Ilsley’; attention before the resent session closes. "Fed Up’- On Ceremonials It was noticeable at Ottawa that the pro- portion of‘ veterans of the war iust ended who £00k part in the Remembrance Day ceremonies Qua-Parliament Hill was small —— apart of course U!!! the markers of the uniformed units tak- hfplrt in the commemoration. _- This, comments the Ottawa Journal. ifltllly-‘understandablc. Even_apart from the 1m that recently-discharged servicemen are ‘Rd up" on parades, reviews, speeches by poli- ‘Qllfld military leaders and formal ceremony. v _._- feel th November II is not their day hi‘! that of. past guieration. And their mem- firiel of the Sicilian and Normandy beaches, of Apennines, in the clouds and on lclef-lbove all the loss of tried com- Idle Ind friends-his too fresh in their minds dfolcefflny feeling of iubilation ovkr victory. Tomcat. the main-concern is to shake off tnflitarv habltssnd fetter: of the pest five , get beck into the channels of civilian , get iobi for. themselves 1nd hqmgg lo,- _ Hr families. ' ‘ - ' i - " It will DQITIWIYB be iiiuswiien time i... v {recollections ‘of dlrt. danger and black- '0f from t fr. gunfire on the ' ' I0 i ts, today's veter- atg itllelr- fellow-winner's of a generation Qt lliinlt inyebtncwhatiflfferent terms. ‘ ' . 11h! dlys 0f hard- l ' ‘ t flier played wll‘ I, since in their service the date has little significance. But on VE- Dev or V-l Dav. there will be gatherings of the 1939-1945 V1- erans, of men of the air squadrons, the ships of war, of the regiments, batteries, and line forma- tions. Distance heals wounds and lends en- chantment, dimming the harsher memories and lighting the happier thy}. Their experience has been one that neither the men themselves nor ever forget. Azoirok-iai. NOTES- The Britisli- and Foreign liible Society will be in possession of the principal Protest- ant Churches tomorrow.‘ Is H. M. C. S. Assiniboine to be left stranded at South Lake, or what is to become of her? She would be a tremendous asset ac- commodated at Charlottetown. . I I U I Newspaper readers don't miss a mod story because it isn't on the front Page. A scientific study shows that many of the best read stories are on the inside pages. . a e e Probably the quietest industry these days is the law. When everybody is more or leu prosperous and with money to spare. the most lawyers have l0 occupy them is chamber Drac- tice, the law courts being almost completely de- scrted. I i I I It is rumoured that the Hon. Dougald AIacKiniion, member of llie lones Govern- ment may receive the appointment of manag- er of the \Var Labour Board in succession to the late Mr. J. R. MacKinnon. This would occasion a vacancy in the Belfast district, and the prospect is that Attorney-(leneral Large will be the Liberal candidate. U i I i Sir john de Mandeville, first of England's eastern travellers, died this date I372 at Lictlfi; he was a second Marco Polo, and his diary is preserved in manuscript form in the Cotton- ian collection in the British museum; the first printed edition was that issued from the West- minster press in i499, by Winkyn de Worde; during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. the work enioyod a great reputation, second only to Marco Polo's, as an authority 0n all questions of oriental geography, and was trans- lated into several languages. a n- p e Credit is certainly due to Quebec for pol- itical and industrial aggressiveness. It is not so many years since it had erected a magnifi- cent new bridge connecting the east and west shores of the St. Lawrence, and bringing the C. P. R. trains right into Quebec City. Now it iyproposed to construct a bridge giving the C. N. R. a similar advantage, and sending the Levis ferry to the discard. The various niuni- cipalities are being invited to participate in the enterprise, but the Provincial Government is sponsoring the scheme, which indicates that the Federal Government will be called upon to subsidize the project as part of post-war re- construction. ‘ i i I ll Professor Walter Raleigh, Oxford Uni- versity, writes to the London Press a protest against foistiiig secondary education on all and sundry: "Tell Mackay to stop founding Universities. There's no sense in them. Bottled men, gone putrid, that's all. And they spread like mould on cheese. If a University or two would bust up, or resolve itself into an Agape- mone, my spirits would g0 up. Damn this so- called education of the young, anyhow. They're too good to be fouled this way." Rather strong language but containing more than a modicum of sound common sense, for not a few of the students attracted to Universities become mere- ly spoiled bread-earners. Iiii ‘ Halifax hu a knack of keeping in the limelight notoriously rather than otherwise. In the House of Commons the other afternoon Mr. George Black (P.C., Yukon) drew atten- tion to themfact that a question dealing with Neva 5Com; apply beer bottles stood on the Ordler paper in his name and he said he wished to suggest that I am not interested in empty bottles." Mr. Percy _Black (P.C., Cumberland) rose to say the question was his, It ukql 119w 1mm’ qlflpty or used beer bottles have been col- lected in Nova Scotia by the Prices Board or under its authority and sold either in Nova Scotia or elsewhere up to November I, i945. Nova Scotia "is the only part of Canada where empty beer bottles are of sufficient importance” tolbe placed by the government under the auth- ority of the PIlR!'BO:l'd,' hfisaid. the argument of Th; Financial Post for the lwfllnllncflt of such offldglg u Iaeun-Col. W. . Reid: "To Hmong who 190k upon Cnnadians an a nation of he-mei-i the of- ficial disclosure that army reiections in the last war totalled almost 5o per eem will mm; a, a terrific shock, The actual figure of 43.8 per cent is substantially highertliui incomplete ste- tistics indicate for any other Englilli-lpeaking country, including the ‘United Statoqthe United Kmzdom and Australia. It should be remem- bered that the recruiting system in Canada dif- fered greatly from tliat~of the United States or Great Britain. In the latter there’ was much Woling of human. raw material among the time services, in Canada practically none. More. Here in detailed here, the Air. Force and the Navy in the early years of the wlr at lent, made l very won: appeal to adventurous youth which re- sulted in thern having prsctiqllv g ti": choke of many reclaim offered. The fut that neither of these services considered my. but volunteer recruits tended to give them a further advant- flfff- ~But after all allowances are made. the percentile of army rclectiom termini shock- mtzly high. It in ifnr- too high for i country u Here surely‘ is g ' M- Aw fill‘ SCOIIQI, _ I the church”. the medial protwlm- Ind jll other agencies improve in this country tbhlcli p-qha-i .J. c Inna. < the people at home for whom they fought will 14m over. for various reuom which need not be~ i vomit. u biz and w zenerouslv endowed ‘with _ Y food and recreational resources. an Canada. i chllletile‘ to the__ichool|. the _ - _~- THE cantor? NotesBy n. Way ‘Iulve your difference: and gel on with reconverslon." 1a,, Truman's advice to labor and em- ployers. But mint’; not u easy to Accomplish as it sounds. — at. Thoma‘ Times-Journal. . An animated 110,0,“ anon. nrp engaged In war repair work ih don. where there are mole than 40.000 houses still so vbadly damag- es to be unlnhablba. le. Four and leéII-i-I lrgllllgfiyeéldlilllla firs‘; sum; or ea o n r during the war; the total damage to aropeiggo on land ls estimated at .900, .000 at 193B prices. - New York 'I‘lmes. A IS-callbre German which Victor Sanchez brmight hack from Europe roved to be a troublesome souve , land his father in Mount Sinai Hospital and him under arrest, The gun was discharged while his fiitflicr. John Sanchez. was cleaning it; ln his home at 108 East 100th Street, inflicting n. wound in the left leg, and pollcelater arrested Victor on n charge of violating the Sullivan law. - New York Herald-Tribune. One of the biggest consignments of rgtrlgenited ment to arrive tn the yal Victoria Dock since the outbreak of war. was discharged recently from the S. B. Ripping- liam Grange, ‘Iltie cargo of 7,000 tons included boneless beef. mut- ton, frozen heed, boneless pork, pork products, lamb, and fifty-five tons of cased meat; all from the Arge - tine. The consignment was stat d to be sufficient to supply one and one-half weeks’ meat, ration for the whole population of Greater London-P. L. A. Monthly. _.__. In Britain. many new industries have been created through the pro- cmsing of coal. The byproducts include 2,000 made from ooal tar- oosl tar dyes; medical supiplles 1n- modern anlisepltcs; perfumes, ~es~ eluding aspirin, local anaesthetics, sences and flavorings; plastic artic- les of many kinds; ammonia. and agricultural fertilizer, While Brit- pfri has been wenltih. from coal through diligent research, Omadlan coal remains in its primeval condition, with ll:- tle or nothing done to extract its hidden values. - Winnipeg Ifi-ee Press. revolver A prime wave of thefts and burg- lary which reached epidemic pro- portions during September and continues unabated po‘nts an ac- cusing finger at the Salem police department. which seems powerless to do anything about. 1t, either in the way of apprehending the guilt-y for punishment or discouraging their activities. The only allbls the police have to offer ls that may are unable to hire‘ sufficient men and that those utiey do get are lack- ing 1n training and experience. But even those excuses have B hollow ring in the face of such a record of thlevery ls, was chalked up against them during September.- Salem, Ore, Capitol-Journal. The great ideals of freedom, jus- tice, brotherhood and peace have been 1min. for, and clled for, twice in this century. They persisted even in the darkest moments. Evil did not conquer good, and freedom was never utterly destroyed. The hope of man. and the ideals of man, must. live on and triumph over scepticism and discourage- ment. is absurd for any man to write on’ the human raceand predict, its certain doom. ‘The spirit of man ls audacious and uncon- qiierable, Of his own deliberate choice and indomitable resoNe he can yet create a new world of law Ind order and human brotherhood, and bequeath to generations unborn n herltage that wars shall not dos- trosn-Hsllfax Herald. Blaaflng a two mile tunnel for g highway rlglit through the Andes to save forty kllometexes on the route between Valparaiso and Santiago, Chile, ls among the lend- ing post-war projects of Chile and her‘~slstcr republics, Ecuador and Bolivia. iimording to a commission of highway engineers just arrived 1n Washington as bhc guests of the tlon. Much of the wealth of these South American republics is fri mineral deposits and roads are the sole means of delivering the ore, Senor Rlsopstroii. chief engineer, pointed out, Development of a mid- em highway system ls therefore im lm rtant factor in a forward- loo naflnatlonal economy-Ameri- Oln Road Builders. News. The United States. whose econ- omic thlnklng still retains traces, and more than trams, of the fron- tier mentpllt which ls natural re- ue from e nineteenth century, manifestly thinks in terms of ex- panding consum tl and practic- ally free enberp se ln a theoretic- ally unlimited market. That lan- guage was familiar to Victorian- economists here. but. in the last 50 years it has become incieaslngLv out of date. md n stable economy with some measure of Government supervision and direction has necessarily begun to supersede 1t- The more farseel g economists ln Am rfca pee that hat tievelo ment ls round the corner for the ni .d States. but. there is no evidence the ordtnn business or even flnmuln Y Iruped its l . then ls m awkw function that has to be negotiated, for there are signs that the Americans may fall to appreciate the necessarily dif- ferent outlook of the British. . lttampt to convert u: l0 their VlW m low Herald. obtaining all this ls American Road Builders’ Auocla- . APPLE ncull 7 mm lpdde , we». in ggepfewlgl. bfdllflnllfll and-gs!!- 0 or p: iifevpii, wimp siinlilht The orcmird gnu, bdnlpfll N" have ftln their pdwertd . atdhflfibfref‘ TFIPHN- pvstview , ‘public FORUM C ‘Thu column In ‘open the dluudpa irll pl ISLAND INDUSTRIES NEEDED _ I. 511-?! have been i-euilu In valuable paper the comfll mode because the Goverumenthla not, provided jobs for our returned soldiers; Generally I pm n0?- in" cllned to take up the cudgels on behalf of our Premier; however. l‘ Y0“! many protects which can be under- “g” “tidal iesnlcy" put ‘nelddftlonsl W all.“ Pubtllc works be 1 v e 6mm"!!! hi»: iiindonwiiilleprfliillflh 119930 W b’ done we mllfit P18" Pemllmm» 1°59 which will give our people 11mm- cmikflseigxftglilrflvfiil merging-sf llttl: __u5t pl’ ege living for? themselves and mtfielr I B ti“ tn our voims people e ore a war had to leave the Province to HM the opportunities which were not ly find work not, only for our pound economic structure instead n has grown up like Tops throush the years. , Instead of selling everything we uylng our necessities on p retail market which at beet l: poor busl- ness, let. u; lan industries to nuke the goo we need. By s0 doing we shall keep our money and at the same tlmoprovlde wor for our people. A million dollars sent from the Province (and we pend out many millions 1n the course of l year) ' u. million dollars gone never u. return-gone to keep the, wheels of industry humming in other pro- vinces; but a million dollars re- tained here, paid out. in wages '\l‘ for raw ma-terlal, kept circulating. would mean increased prosperity IDTJJQ nll. We must. have tannerlea opene- ed on modern lines to process our hides. We must build factories to make our shoes, luggage, harness, school bags, etc. We must have factories making overalls and children's clothing. bet me be more specific. With our population of nearly 100.000. we need at least 200.000 pairs of boots and shoes a yeah-around 4.000 pairs a week. Some factory, some payroll and per orient work for quite a number of employees. A thousand pairs of overall; n week and wind breakers, ski-suits and other articles of clothing to no end. Much of this raw material would have to be imported but we shou‘ buy wholesale and the spread bc- tween that glee and the retail price would g industry right here. An even greater gdviantage lles in lhe establishment of factories- tliey would be breeding grounds for furtther industrial expansion. Ambitious mcn working in them would get experience enough to start other factories making artic- les for which there ls a demand, so that in a few years we should be manufacturing miny of the things we need. In short. we should have l peace. time boom bued dntlon of I. e ' . No other province u the opportunity ma! presents itself tn us at this e. God grant we shall avail our- selves o lt. With your~klnd permission I will continue this letter In your next issue. I am, sir, etc., ANNIE MacLEOD. (Mrs. Malcolm MacLeod) home Valley. v (Patriot plepse copy) P. I. I. HOG POSSIBILITI! GRAIN ELEVATOR l‘ Slr.—-Slnce my last letter neared in The Guardian this ls the kind of talk I am being given, “Why wvorrvwabout‘ the nu of s ran e.eva r. w , realize that, Ottawnm xgiiltfmiiiiz in‘ Prlncetlldvgnrd Island any su would be Petiioiiiiied ‘f0 “lion” u eletviam of ,, "m. '1‘ no short- o palqimflm I for one am notbo obpeuedi inferiority complex for the as to believe that. t! an elevator ls p the Fedesril n animal production. there reasons to believe that. owl I our natural climatic advantages animals of all kinds can be rug ed to p higher standard than any oléiieer Ptrgvintile. a; lémnedo leci-‘uglendmbocnuu of e 0 mow ff cine animal feed. m 1 our bottle population la not more than half ' should be and I be 1 of the economic future. — Gllu- It m?!" Vi 01w! h em 4n. r w v we should t follow lult aiiméli. ma»... £237.74‘? I100 offer rifl- i“ dim ‘an w-qt,‘ to them here, so how can we The ‘Iihe answer ta by blllldlnll l M: of i-petuating the lopsided affair M all“ Eroduce on a wholesale market and W l’ nhalle nl h cannot. be ignored = an“ r r... ' adhered to, fr ChorlotlvetownPilfz-ndleréd’ |70th Anniversary 0f l 7.40105“ 5V5"! i .| the iiuiA 0g ult 1768. Lord Rollo arrlvodln l"- tben Pm la. this end of the year there m not ed by the I -—- 001V nmpnrte of this Fort re- today. There helm therefore no de- fences. two American Prlvateers entered the harbour on the 17th November. 1775—one hundred and seventy sears six guru and ten swivels and had a crew of seventy men under Captain Nicholas Brouirhton. The other ship. the "Franklin". armed tIi four nuns and ten swivel: and had ‘an. Ind tlon eluding the Attorney General. . Phillips Callbeck. who. dur- lflll‘ the! Absence of Governor Pat- n an his place. and a. Mr. Wright. as well as the Governor's Silver Seal. After belnll releaaed by General aahlnlzton they arrived back Lfter much hardship. Mr. Cull- beck having learned throulzh ex- ed uo b! be knocked out of bus it was that larize n rs umbe of Islanders. instead of lesvlnu their iitlv vln . and and should have made l strong demand for same from Ot- tawa. Instead of olniz so they min-rated to the United States and other parts of Canada in wrest numbers. We have. I believe. lost hiore of our population in that way than we have remaining on the Island at ‘present. , Had they stayed ml home and raised families and had stuck to the wort. trade we should hlVQ f 300.000 to 400.- 000 on “IQ, Island at‘ present. And whst p very different Province this would have been. Now. thmnita to our Premier and to our representallva In Pur- llament. headed by Mr. MeLure. Ottawa eves have been opened tat-Ives from n11 of the Provinces now reiillze at int that full Justice must be done to Prince Edward Island and that there ts no reason why this Provi- lncc should not be unite as pros- perous as my other and financial- lv selfsupoortlng. Not only that. but the Government calllnu for exports from all sources and I personally know that. they po- preclate to what a lame extent this Island is capable of dolnii its full share in that respect. It is because of these facts that I have taken the liberty and re.- sponslbllitv of urizlna a really worthwhile enlarlzement of our hot! product/ton. of the lmportn- tloiis from the west of muclrlarz- er quantities of grain and of the building of a izraln elevator lofnlnz the railway wharf of Charlottetown harbor whlclv the present Govermnent ha: promised t3 mu and flfll-IRG tn the up An lnportuit feature In ‘he hoe production industry la that It ta one tn which our returninm army service men can enter and obtain financial returns 1n from stx to twelve months. - The only way 1n which we can hope to persuade Ottawa to spend, money tn this Province l: to do our own thlnklniz and plan- nlne in advance and then to prove by act/ual facts and flmires that the investment of the Fed- ernl money will be fully tustlfled and will earn Inn returns for the Prfvlnoe/nnd the Dominion. pm. Blr. e .. II. K. l. IIEMMING ‘I'll RUSSIAN ATTITUDE Bin-I have no desire to criticize Rum: unfairly, but hei- attempt. to dominate the countries of mast.- eni Europe by eirtern rn bury force. in pplrpprent defiance of. the rlncl leg o democracy adopted by e o or Allied nations. and wlzh- out regard for the promise of freedom n! choice in the mutter of |ovemment,_nilide to the smpllor of the world Mite em man, speaking for the United States and the British Empl In p recent pddreu, hid “d xmelerner that fulfill’: ‘stiff; e, spout plrtcuei-y the Balkans cannot possibly be the great, principles of freedom adopted at. the Bin Ihnefsoo conference Ind at Ypltn are to be curried out. The employment rpose 0t he Allies. and simply math the ‘ of one formiof ‘ma, » e Britain so friendly wwarih Bu! up now vilified-end dlup- U70 rsiuia colonial: ti h lness. ‘men rrr-ranfilm ‘Us 1nd urwtas‘ . ti def .:....... south“... i?” reeruitfne .100 men for the _ co of " O J O 51bit ,' ‘I Ill whet i4 ppm du» mode) was at luutjrgommetice in 177d. 0n lot duly. 1777. Mr. Callback was at leut commenced in I770. Battery was erected and mounted twelve Runs. On 10th July. 1778. four Provincial or Independent Oompnnlea nrrtvednhln the Town i- v d $01‘ . . “nfi-ifia nu mm Illahrieas. Edward Duke of Kent. then Con-i- mnnder-ln-Chlef of I-Ils Majesty's Forces In America. gave dliec» ti ns for the better defence of C arlottetown. Phi-t Bplnt Gaol-vo- was ureptlv Improved and Bar- raolm erected and Forte Edward and York-the latter st Iiemilev Beach-end a fort. at the Block I-Iouse- and also one pt the foot. of Great. Georne St dull completed bv 1709. troop: beine wfthdravitn o Relulu- . in i854 thou defences n. full into dams and eventually all have dfspm with tli - of Fort t . One hundred and seventy years atlo today the resldenu of misr- lot town were underzolniz the hardships of war. We may well be thankful that durlnz the years of strain and stress since that far- off dnv the residen s of Charlotte- town have been lbe to R0 about their usual evooetlons in peace and u .. ‘ TIM. lnted over this new p/l/tltude of e U.S.S.R. But surely Russia tihat won the plaudits of the world for the ma;- nlflcent contribution she made to- wards the defeat, of Germany, will recede from the posINn she has unfortunatelg taken nnd llne u again with or Allies in safeguar - tug the integrity of small nations and promoting peace and basic human rights throughout the world. At an mite these are the h1g1; Ideals o international goodwill so eamestl d ‘ by the peoples of lfhe word, and so strongly and un- selnshly promoted by the two greatest nations on earth, the British Commonwealth and the United States of America. And these two nations, united in a. p-mmom cause, and inspired by the same lofty ideals will eon- tlnuo to march on together towards democratic freedom and peacemnd the ultimate realization of human- ity's dream of universal brother- hood. . ~ It. is certain that there will be a high prim to pay. but the sacrifices involved tn unselfish devotionqo a worthy cause, will inevitably result fn world recovery and stability. and tend at the same time to purify their own national life. In the face of resent world conditions this woul seem to be a very far-off event. But even so. the struggle towards it will involve ample reward rnd incentive. I am, Sir, etc. i A. D. MacDONALD. Calgary. (Rev. Mr. MacDonald is a former Islander and was prominent tn the temperance movement in this Pro- vince some forty years n¢o.—‘Ed_G.l nix ricron Pancake Make-up Created by‘ Ml: Factor. Hollywood's eke-up genllll- who for many yearn Ian been olilef omnroflchn to the screen and I o rnfeulon- We also have t e ollowlng. FIG QIQ 150 Ill" a in‘: Isobar Llpltlckis . .. 76c n ski Freshener Ii. u . I! Ulud b P c ,.l.lp Uriah. Ehowdrzrllritllhf and Put: B01110- ATTENTION TIUBI WEABIII ‘l’ 2h I ll 3a....Zi'22..'°"'i'.°i.§£ ueorlme most modern trusses. all shes and able! end It prleu M pull everybody. TIIE 2 M08 Ill Greet George ltrooi Moll 0rd ' G I that? '°""‘ realisation‘: sncunirr lies In the home . . In pncq pe-ln wir uni home lithe keyston ' on." nation's ‘ltrengtli. ' Life Insurance pldllflll.llll the I‘. i’. homfili .1‘! ll f (Ill - '. m: .....'.‘il.."’=o§l§' lib-d?‘ ‘hi1? “léllllrlhlll Health Insurance hlmlelf and llll urlty. Consult ‘probe. puppet can tlu average effluent m. family with adequate flapper ‘ _ . "n. cmpwutut l u. c t dl ‘i anilp of cup-smile»: ' ', u" "' °' "'°"." Arm! or wi-ltaioi- ‘any... i, G. or. nits ' I'll...‘ i Fsypecliflbllj in .. ting of planner _ , correction of oc _ feels.‘ i Professional‘ ‘liar; iiurw. lllggina- Chartered Accountant I44 Richmond Sl. Charlottetown Tel. 589 P.0, Box 6| McLepd 6 Bentley w. s. aemuv. s. c. J. 1t BENTLEY. IL a Blrrlllcn ind Attorneys-a‘: r L", \ m ma»; sum g \!\l'\4\I\I' ,@;c14.;5.w\LY.w~<N. _ MM oo-o-ooooo-oawooow» Charles R. McQuafd l l.’ A. I llrrlller, Solicitor, I Nah". Etc. z us: Trim B ll ln ., etrllfanrloltetognd ' Phone I711 ++o+o4o¢o+o+++o+>¢d ii. a. minus sfiii: l. C hartered Accountants B! Grafton Qtml. Chulptteolwn - Phflne mo '\~ no: u’. nmioipii w. pnpdinr. c. A Public Stenographer Mlmeog-aphlng clrlll ind elrculal cvrrupondenoe, typing llid bookkeeping. miss aspen oiimeu Telephone IMO-J. P. 0. Bu! I52. _ Cflllnlllllll Apt; No, l. Morrell and llollpany chartered Accountants u. r. Alltlllllllllll Eastern Trust will"?! Charlottetown‘ " L JJIHNAJY BELL 6r MATHIESON IB)I'I'IIIQII, Inflation dw- Il. R. BELL, M.I..A.. n. t. iiuirlfmson. l.i..n.. K-O- AttorneyI-at-Law I Loans 0N on‘? AND rziniu . PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS 150 Jllphlllond 8!. Charlottetown. P-l-l ‘i-v-IAH-‘a-ak-e- . - . .. l0“ I0 level. ‘caveman. ". pihso‘ 70! Velevwli flelalm Incl,