nil, PAGE roux TllE CIIARLOTTETOZVII GUARDIAN Morning Dolly (Founded In 1887) Authorized as Second Class Mall. Pool Olloo Department, Ottawa. President, Ian A. Burnett; Vice-President, Win. ll Burner-i; sccyu-Treau, G. M. Burnett; Editor atria Ilanaging Director, J. B. Burnett; Assoclato i-Jaitoi. finals Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tlla the Weakest Ink.‘ fiwnmfiieiisheffisfini Fishery Minister's Visit The Federal Minister of Fisheries, Hon. H. F. G. Bridges, K.C., who is now on a tour of the Maritimes, is due to visit Prince Edward Island this week, and will stay for three days. This will enable him to visit centres in each of our three Counties, and become acquainted at first hand with our fishermen's problems. Mr. Bridges is to be commended on planning his Maritime tour in this thorough-going man- ner, and he can be assured of a cordial wel- come in this Province. The portfolio he holds is a very important one so far as Prince Edward Island is concerned, for it deals with our second largest idustry. The Minister does not neod to be reminded that for the year I945 the market- ed value of our Island fisheries was over three million dollars, compared with some _Iwo_ and o half millions the previous year—a big increase due both to larger quantities caught and higher prices. This year there is likely to be a still further increase. The industry last year ‘em- ployed 3,885 persons throughout the Province, which was fewer than the previous year but this no doubt was due to the increasing difficulty in obtaining labour. In any case the foregoing figures show that we are a "big Province" so far as Mr. Bridges’ department is concerned, and are deserving of every consideration and at- tention. As pointed out some time ago in these col- umns, there are several things that can be done for the industry in co-operation with the Pro- vincial Government. Improved boat harbors_to accommodate larger fishing boats, as_ well as new harbors where none now exist, adyacent to the best fishing grounds, have been asked for repeatedly. Also badly needed are new_ plants for handling, storing and distributing fish, in- cluding fi__sh piers, salt fish storage, canneries and cold storage. It is to be hoped also that the Province and Dominion will co-operate in making a survey of the possibilities of setting up industries allied to the main fishing industry, incIuding'a chemical plant which could produce fish meal and other products. _ The question of markets is an important one toa. Wartime prices will not always pre- vail for canned lobster and other luxury fish- ery products, and we must look elsewhere than to the United States for export opportunities. Last January Monsieur Laurien, the Ffeflfill Consul General, visited us and stated that there was "a big market" in France for dried fish from the Maritimes. PerhaprMr. Bridges, when he comes, can tall us whether this opportunity is being investigated, and also what other P'°5' pects are being explored in the interests of our oxport fishery trade. Medical "Exodus Ill Ilrltalii There is one phase of the British Govern- ment's National Health Bill that seems to have escaped notice, or at any rate public comment. This is the determined exodus of many of the younger general practitioners in the country. In many populous London suburbsestah- lished doctors are packing up and clearing _out to distant countries, mostly to the DOIIIIIIIOIIS overseas. "My own family doctor, released from the services some months ago to resume_ his private London practice is off to South Africa, says a London correspondent. "He tells me of about a dozen other members of the medical profession much in his own position, who are known to him personally, and are also arranging to migrate elsewhere. This exodus, _which_ may ultimately amount to serious proportions, is due to the Government's decree that practices can no longer be sold, and that, unless doctors consent to come under the socialization scheme they will receive no compensation on retzrement for es- tablished goodwill." A Severe Loss It is on ironic turn in circumstances, when the farmers of New Brunswick’: potato grow- ing bolt in the Upper Saint John River counties were harvesting one of the largest crops in hist- ory that one of the sources from which they de- rived a considerable source of revenue for their labors should be destroyed by fire. astrous blaze which levelled, the big dehydration plant and starch factory of New Brunswick Potato Products, Limited, at Hortland, with a loss estimated as high as $300,000, is a serious blow both to the industry and to the growers in our sister Province, who had in this industrial establishment on outlet for much of their stock. It had been anticipated, says the Mocton Times, that with the heavy tuber crop this yoar tho factory would handle a greatly enlarged vol- l srsno and to take core of this new machinery cost- 1“ about $50,000, had been installed in an ad- ditional branch devoted to the manufacture of gluon which alone would have processed $500 yojtli of potatoes daily. In addition a now starch log procoss had just boon installed in that ‘finch of tho business at an expenditure of ' ~ lot tho raring of tho dohydrotion nvill bo sovsrsly fslf for It was tho only one pvovinco, tho other at Grand Falls hav- ' ‘IQ boon destroyed by flro flvo months ago. destruction of tho starch factory othor in operation which wlll ' s“ noble to handle tho ontiro surplus Mr H. H. Hatfield, M.P., prosi- I Potato Products, Llniitod, has Iho starch plant will Iio roboilt fit , which inalros it ovidont ' lhavo to boar consldordilo — EDITORIAL NOTES — Feast of St. Simon and St. Jude Protestant Churches rally in Zion Church tonight in celebration of Mission Centenary. i h i i It is o distinct and well-deserved compli- ment to have the Canadian Association of Tour- lil MCI Publicity Bureaus select Tjfrarlottetown for next year's conference. o a o Rural teachers are on record for incrxisedl salaries. Unless consderable advance in rates is forthcoming soon, there will be few if any mole teachers left in rural schools. fl i i i The latest "home" industry attracting ot- tention of housewives is Stewart's "Island Maid" bread, "baked and tastes like the home made article." Sounds like "the way Mother made it." It requires only "beans and molasses" to complete the feast. i not Births registered in Canadian Centres with a population of more than I0,000 totalled 14,802 during August against ll,305 in August, I945, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reports. Deaths totalled 4,605 against 4,578 and marriages 6,- 783 against 5,475. I won Tom Jordan, speculator, who caused o shut dawn of the United States cotton exchange last week because of inability to meet calls for additional margin from his brdkers, made $10,- 000,000 in‘ cotton between l94I and the recent market crack-up. Now he has to start all over again from scratch. He began‘ gambling five years ago, by borrowing $300 which he raised to 1,700 at a suburban gambling table. The Hap. Mr. Bridges, Minister of Fisher- ies, who is scheduled to visit Prince County on Wednesday and Thursday, and Queen's and King's on Friday and Saturday, had the dis- tinction of defeating the Hon. R. B. Panson in York-Sunbury, N. B., in last election. Should he be promoted, Mr. McNaught is slated as his SI-ICCESSOI‘. onto Italy invaded Greece this date I940. Mus- solini demanded that Greece should allow Ital- ian troops to_occupy strategic points in Greece, and gave three hours to reply. Greece rejected the ultimatum and people were called upon to fight for their independence and honour. Ital- ian troops crossed the frontier and were bravely resisted. Greece appealed to Britain for help, and in reply Mr. Churchill promised to give "all the help in our power" and share united victory. Athens airdrame and Corinth were bombed by Italian planes. Hitler and Mussolini met at Florence and exchanged felicitations. ‘It i‘ ‘I X The Department of Veterans’ Affairs an- nounced recently that since the commencement of the university program for veterans in October, I941, 42,442 ex-servicemen and women have registered at Canadian universities for train- ing with DVA assistance. More than 2,000 ex- service women are included in this figure, and among them, as among ex-servicemen, the greatest number have selected arts and science, or engineering cou rscs. i ‘k i I The British Medical Association has now appointed an editor and assistant editor for a bulletin of abstracts from the world's medical journals to begin publication in January. Be- fore the war this service was performed in Germ- any. The editor will be Dr. G. M. Findlay, dir- ector of the well-known Wellcome laboratory who as a brigadier during the war did valuable work in Africa on tropical medicine. His as- sistant will be Dr. N. Gilder,» who spent five years in German prison camps whence he emerg- ed with a knowledge of no less than I4 langu- ages. i‘ Judging by reports from Ottawa Premier Jones has accepted the Federal subsidy proposal of $l5 per capita based on the value of the gross national production. The C. P. learned that the basis for fixing the value of the gross national production has been one of the details that has been delaying the drafting of final agreements. The Provinces are understood to be asking for definite assurances that their annual per capita grants will not fall below a definite minimum. Provinces which do not sign new agreements with the Dominion will be free to reimpose in- come and corporation taxes as they did in pre- war years. o i: o n- * ii- u» "The training of sales people is the No. l The dis- ' problem of rho retailer," said Mr. Raymond C. Cosgrove, general manager of the Crosley Corpor- ation, addressing l,000 dealers grid buyers at lSan Francisco. "There is going to be a lot of very, very iovoro competition, and customers ore going to become very selective; in fact, they are becoming very selective right now on radios, and there is a good deal of advertising of sa- called off-brand table model radio sets at cut prices. While there is a sellers‘ market at the present time, when products become more avail- able, a capable, courteous, well-trained sales personnel will be a.n GESEQIIG’! to success." The Legion points out, quite correctly, says The Letter Review, that there is no proper vot- erans‘ housing scheme, o point which has boon stressed for two years. The sensible courso would be to clear out the entire housing mess at Ottawa; suspend all loans under NHA, for tho people who use thsso aro quito capoblo of fin- ancing tholr own requirements; engage in no more Housing Entorpriss developments; wind up Wartime Housing; offer loans to votorons, with a small down payment, to construct houses for themselves whoro thoy like. Tho gravest foll- uro has bun In connoction with tho production of building materials, and tho supply of bulld- ing workers. New invostments for tho production of building materials should bo glvon at loast as generous depreciation prlvilogss as woro oc- corded for war material production; whllo‘ tho labour situation can only bo hanllloitliy a rlgld rofusol to pay unemployment insurance to any THE CHARIJOTTETQWN GUARDIAN Ilstos By ‘Tho tloy A horse was Icd lnlq ln York mad Northampton,‘ M‘. the kltohem and cut lzv the buck EMYIEI’). Thll viii.’- the tiILly way w 8M It tuck on lire road again in»; l5 5951 into the basement arm cf the hours; Ii c0llfd nut ollml; up I119 £26m. The ha"; on 5 milk round. had lroltetl .Itir mg m" The can biroke I‘I ' bottles of l'I'I1Il( iwre spilled. And "my were not on ine mrt. They were standing in front of the house. —-10t1d0n Daily Mall. Wlth the exception of the h» Pm“ 01 JMM. now nairied the Empress of Scoolnnd. allthg ‘iomm gueens" qf which Vancouver was once so proud, lie in their graves eflys The Ottawa Journal, The Fknpiess of Asia is fathoms deep 0" Slneflmre. the Commits was 1m. pedoed off Wes: Africa. and the 311E516. uhe veteran of the flea b91118 burned while undergoing m. Pairs at Baanow, lri mncasbire _ Was Introduced to an elderly lady today who offered me own fingers to shake; they wum wit; damp and blue, like inrccoked was- ages l-Iea‘ conduct In this mam-fl- did not please me greatly, for I ‘Wald much nave preformed to have no hand at all, ratiher than half a band It was the custom 1n the last oemury to give a few fingers- three, two or In extreme vases. 0in»e—to people whom one re- garded as social interiors, or In some way undesirable. 1 only know one man who still .1098 It, and a, m, 41°98 ll '10 everybody I aasusna that he be! e hlsh ream-d for himself. "Illw-itmyisioidumr uhc late Arthur Balfour (mice dilated a ma" “m? finger to shelve. and the morn vindlctlvaig shook M, m sum a decree ohm Balfour was unable to write for a week. Moderation 1n_ me handshake is desirable; neither the blwksuhtitr grip, wihjlgh CPILSIIIES the hand Into the sem. blanceaf harmbwger, nor tthe obi-Hy extension of iwg m- um“ 1153a; I tihllnilf handnhnklng l5 gvmdqg, 1n amyeI-fl. wbyrhwenotoormll. merit our friends by staking nsrnds wlmh ourselves, like Ohlnaime-n, oa- boxers who nave worn a which? _ S.M. In Peberhorvngh Emmlnop It ls about time thlo country new WP Md 80$ eves- ILs enJaysnent or oolemnoe of titre flattery of strung. ars. That sort of thing Is nnt 10¢- oid/ulrts, but for Juveniles. aim! any speaker “i110 acts out ho tell m mm, we're the greatest people in one would llvilng h the world's grggmgg oaunury should be promptly oquelm- ed. We're not the groin/bat people lri tiho world, and we're not likely hc be until we cultivate a little Itiwmamity, pm, off clue bnastmess of WWII. and set more of a sense of Dwpirtlaui. -0htawu. Join-rial. Love Is usually o rather roman- tic emotion, biit. positively nut. vrhen tibe radio crooners open up on uhc topic while we're having breakfast. Our breakfast. love la bacon and eggs but having m lrooonweurefrvi-aiaioivoartw a. nosebagifisl of rolled oats. This from It We could cube u dog But, denflilbll. we irovc diogs—and will even leave 'em ear our ruLIed aorta f! they see flit. ~—OIM1IW1\ Cltlziour. A eltlren waited patiently In a drownmoiw-n resmursnt for an order of oolrd. outs. In (rue course o. welt. mess banned a pram: down In front Qf him. His oc-ld meat was bbere e11 right but It was almost. buried under e suzrok of dejected oole slow. With o. courageous lift to his shoulders me diner attacked his moribund lunch Just, ohm a supernel voice from the lake box in the come: bosom to uni-lute about being Stone 001d Dead In tihe Market. The foirk full d 001d outs and drlprng oole slaw jerk- ed to e built. It nus retirnned to the male. The diner wosr-ily push- ed his plate away and begun to stir his coffee-n beaten mus-n The curse of Booey on the fiend who invented the Julie box and ohie seven worse than him; 21f who first, brought cm into a restaurant... -Winnlpog Tribune. Poor timing can make even Im- portant orange Icolr trivial. We t-blnk uhis ls the case In the flag tumult. The .In.e Is have when a mflrc coimhruciive Ironi has to be plll. up by slarcsmarship. t-bun that of tmsles over nu eruiblem. A flag, will not imirte Canada: only a new spirit that a flag rvlll honour and vindloalfle can do that. The chall- enge to tihose iv'ic. repmscni the rwplc of Canada In Ottawa 1s b0 nurture that spirit am give body to It. 'I‘hen we can vrciry about a flag. -—1-Da.ml1torI Speoirator. Steadly beoclieo and other san- mu- rants In ‘these distortions have grown sad are becoming ooriruner- alallned. Since more and mane people are ac-qulring ootmsg-es at these resorts. mu- change mrust meet with the approval of a great munber of people. There ore haw- cvar, some who deal-res solitude more than oruwds, Aren't they en- titled oo some consideration? Is more any good resaim witty some resorts stiould not definitely ma Iruevooobhr be sot aside to ouli the meta of these people. —Owen Sound Bill-flares. Never: count your olilckono until they ore numbed ‘and even utter that you alwuld keep o padlock onihetmzitloussand nshotgun bo- okh the bod. —London Pr“ Pied. Whoto moot Iiovo IWUOIIIH ' lreavesuslnnomoadfor love Flor by Tears For The Liberal Party (Ottawa Join-o. 1) The Liberal party Izd-ay Is the Vblblm of disintegration by time But that dleiritacratlon bu boon tie-stoned by Mltmllllftl; also, The Llbeoial party in our day not mere- ly became oonfusral we‘ Its philos- ophy and direction; ‘l r JIJTIG, wmi nmah Footer pen lo its future, a one-man parry, ievolvmrg amimd Mr. King, around tils prestdgo and career. “ Mr. King ras long slnoe ceased to concern himself with party educ- ation or with warty organization: n-oire and more he cam-e to believe irhat. he was the pa-rty that the pantry at moot was his Instrument, that u-h-a-t muttered was his owrn fortune, 111s own place in history. Thane, inevitably, was an ingred- ient of dmay No party leader no amt/tier wiliait his skill or nalent. can ever be more important than o. party, and when a party peanuts its leader to think otherwise and sarrrendeas to acts which such trhougbt brings It lsJashlonlng Its own cxziffln. The low estate to which tihe Conservative party fell In the 1930's was In large pert. due to Mr. Bennett's Imagining that he vms iihe party and acting accordingly. l I I Why tears from us over the Liberal parity? Becsvuse the Liberal party is em historic and major part at our democratic pantry system, Its wealcnms a weakness in our gov- ernment. Need always more must be foo" a strong opposition parry, for a party equipped to provide an aiommtlve to the Government; If that alternative ls not provided by tihe Liberal parry II; will be provid- ed by some other party-perhaps the Socialists Tram Is tits-sit one of the Delllloal evils of oun- ttzm nae been titre pro- pensity qt the Liberal party to destroy Itself. Just as the Itlberuls of England tried to win themselves bempumry advantage by adopting the policies 0f British La-bom, which was a Socialist imroy, thereby los- ing in the end both its soul arid Its erdsience, so the Ubetail puny In Oanach tins been catering to the aiahillots, Increasingly reneglng on Ito oiwin traditions more have been times 1n recent years when It has not been possible to dlfltlngiulsh bet/ween tlhe colleotlvlsn of Mr. ma we know. has been distaste- nu to many Libwals; to men like 0.1). Howe, tn old-fhstdoned Lib- erals like T. A. Cress»: and Angus Mlaodrornald. to comes of others we could marirtion. Them have felt, azsdslrlmfeelfliatitlsbeisrgmade the ' k t of o. few young oe- reerista who sire more Sisal-slut titre/n Idberal, chat Ii. L: alienating the support of tbrousanda of Canadians who believe deeply In the old Lib- eralism of the individualist. This, art a time when the Liberal . y nuiry no longer ooirnt upon whee. ls something for Liberml leadership to ponder. The changed wainhd situation, utuema beyond re- cognitions by the atomic bomb. makes old political war orles and Issues oiwh as conscription hoipe- lusty Irrelevant. Today the pnov- inoe of Lmnirlor and Iapoinoe Is ruled omamwumhas mfhineinfllfl- mon wltih Liberalism who ls out to uproot It. and who, trcon all ac- counts, is achieving his goal rapid- 1y. Heasoethenieedafthehlbetial pamtyillt Isnotfomeetlitiefarte of Ltaariallsm in 531181595- lO WW‘ amino its bases: to realize that a jor party In this court-tow today, Walt is ho live and oerfomm the turmion wihloh ii 011cm w Perform must be oormetliirg rrucre uhsn a way}; omnprumlse between Inrdlvld- ualism and socialism. WE HAVE BEEN HERE BEFORE I think I remember this moorland, The tower on the tip of the tor; ' I feel In hbe distance another ex. Istence; I think I have been here before. And I think you were sitting beside m In a foIi-I In the face of the fell; For Time at Its workul so round In a circle, And what is befalllrng. befell. "I have been here before!" I as- serted. . - In a nook an a neck of the Nile. I once "KDv-a’ crlsls was punished by Isis. Ar-j you smiled. I remember- your smile. I bad tihe e sense of persistence On the slto o the seat of the Sioux: I heard In the teepee the sound of a sleepy Pleistocene grunt. It was you. The past made u promise. before It Began to begin to become. 1111s limited gamut brings you again. Damn lt- How Ion; has this got to go on? -Morrll Bishop. to ehoirdo of love and devot- fond endowments sent sweetest. strains of fellell! F» l“ fl Pf \ 4 oblo-bodiod man hi Canada whllo tho housing slrortogoloCsnodo nmoinsosoootonhlo. Klngaiadttiosoclouisaiellilrzcalid- h‘; well The Human Factor In Air Safely (Windsor Star) Officials of passenger alr llriea must be worrying ‘greatly ever one Mount opldunlo ot spectacular tot- alltles In tihclr fleid at transport- ation. Perhaps they are simply ohe victims of road luck. The laws of (Willie do seem tn crperate that way 3:0 times. - . It Ir. nevvaralieiess. a time for the moot oonous consideration of trlie whole question qf alr safety Adriplane transportation for the public, particularly cm long dis- tance routes, ls annually In its ln- fancy. It has lo itiect and oven: 9cm divplv ingrained prejudices and fears what It our. aaoompllsti at this period In one way or a5. aurlng safe passzim wlll be qt lon- rnenae importance to Its fmuue Probably tihere romalii today few people no» are ‘afraid’ to fly, A; the same time, the major-Icy have not yet oaken o. trip a: w“. sldoraible distance in the alr. they will not admit it, there is still a lingering suspicion In their minds that this method of pantie-r hazardous macs meidotcthem are not taloen arc faoo value They 1mm w be shovm. O O 8 It Ls not possible to convince such people by citing statistics as to on; millions of miles flown without mis- hap. ‘Ihew are rriioh more likely to be Impressed by one crash that kills s dmiem or more It. ts ookl oom- fort ho them to have percentages quoted at them The fact of the matter Ls that the average percair today le asking why so many accidents have occurr- ed. 'I‘-tic feeling l-s thief there must be some explanation and that It Is up to lihe airlines to flsnd It and to aorreot the conditions that are oanising lilld rnioharps llnesoweboi-hopubllcarsdmiem to llllfllliflelwis At tabla crltlceil per- lad,‘ their business can “be made or broken, depending on bow they handle the present situation. A survey of recent pinoives that flying, So song u major occidento oo- our. tiowevm, something In the wow of safety Is looking. ‘Iihe finger at suspicion points straight at the human element. Mnahlaies tuwe been developed to a blgb stale d effici- arsay. Aids tonavlgu ronhoiveneeoh- ed a some uiidreorrved of a. decode ago. Mom has gone a very long my indeed toward coizquarlng the ele- ments, ‘y Iooload on ms the chief enemies of flying. Frankly, 01011811. there one too many evidences of carelessness. Generally speaking. aili- crewman show up well, In fow tmtanoes mvietheyboenruweaiio belnopt or negligent. But ohere are too man/y lnsoafrwses of failure bo melee proper checks of mechanical equip- ment prior to fllgnt. A familiarity that breeds contempt, or at least aaauulnau, semis on be having Ito affect an technical and inspection staffs. Machines will not continue to nun at peak efficiency wltihiaut metloiiiiaus human care. Until every airplane In ohedkcd In evmiy detail before 1t leaves the gram-id and surallut part Is wanking perfeohly, smartest paint Is working perfectly trbe aafeiry qf the public will dangerously ocrmipomnlsr-d. lllgli lloallty Important In Poultry for Market. (Eiiperlmenml Forum News) A pIoasI appearance. a, h proportion of edible mieat to bone and the tenaemes of meat. when cooked are intend - pen-dent dimes-Actors required for o chicken to be olmsod as h quality, soyis W. Mountain, Act g Head Poultrymon, Dominion perIim-ntal Station, Harrow, Or . Itemderness Is govemed largely by theaaeafutrebinclsindthemsotsrit of exorcise allowed. The amount of aieait. depends to a. certain ex- tem on the breed and methpds of feeding, while Ilhe appearance rests with the (are and skill up. plied ho the tack of killing and dressing. Rationing of red meats has brought about u _ready demand far poultry, still, the difference In the prrloes paid to: Grade A and Grade Cplndlcates a decided preference for superior quality, an t-he 5 to 8 oem par Ib difference offered forbhehlghandlowg-radespre saints o, monetary inducement to the former who can present such a satisfactory article ho the consumer. G This undoubtedly Is a d-uty one Emm- otltier forms pwvigqy Sassy Stomach: Relieved Ivory poi-son who Io troo- bled with goo In the stomach and Iiovrolo should get o bottle of Dr. Evom‘ Stamooli Mixture and lee how quloi- ly It vvlll rollovo all distress- In‘ lymptoinn - Dr. Evans‘ Stomach MI:- taro token at meal time, not only prevents all bod effects from goo, but it promotion l tIio functional activity of the ‘stomach, ooslsts illgeottoa and Improves the appetite. m. Evans’ Stomach Mlx- ' taro lo sold only at the Tova Moon at 85o por bottle. v MACS PILI OINTMENT A oofo iuid efficient. rem- edy for Internal and enter- nol pllos. It Io mode only of tho hlgheot quality Ingredi- ents posseoolag . n1 therapeutic value purpose. It carries beneficial effoot woyo: 1. It liilirlouteo. ._. f s‘ e for this out ls In three Zli n Z5 Get o tuba today. Prlco 00c The 2 Macs H9 Great George St. We carry n complete ilao of Trusses. All olseo. Onit. lstopouruquldsouruklm mrllkalongutioaiiriaaeofobemaafi in the hoppers twice dolly. Onhr enough milk should be given that oarn be used within 20 minutes, and sufficient trapper space omuld be to -‘ re all binds at. ouioe. Detailed Information as no various formulas ma! methods oil fottenim poultry will be fumldhed package have helped to mlmulaite ~ salsa. Just an the attention of one hoiimwlfo is dirawn to the clean to buy lo often drao to the satisfaction ax- pmmed luv titre munlbeas o! the houwhoild In the meaty quality of the ' ahlcloeri. me mum in poultry breathe titre Individual farmer Is , _., ’ by , the nativity of the market amid every producer contributes a stiame to the malnteniaire q! a good de. mend wheubia- export or domestic tihmiqts the high quality of his product. - Ilotice to llouse holders Insurance that was ade- quate in 1939 most. likely does not cover 1946 values. Per- mit us to check your cover- age to ensure desired pro- tection In the event of a loss. Phone No. 540 or 541 W. If. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Life - Fire - Casualty _. Marine Insurance Every Rlsk - Every Kind Large or Small Queen Si» Charlottetown P. EJ. ‘ crate. feeding gives the QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds “Flwlioiiovorloioodoxtroiooiioyi-losog’ ill Goordlon. win Tel. No. 8 X Brace Bulldlng l l l} Tel. 589 I 5 I Flfio 2M0 201 Prlnoo so, Pboao is Ii. F. MePIIEE, B.A.. K. Blley Building onaainniii. 0mm oo Ioaoy to lane ‘OCTOBER 2e19- Professional Con; G. B. SHAW, Mp, QM nr.°i’i'éi"r5.§l'f°l-'f‘. , 21st OCT. m“; ' Office Hours :~. 1-8 P.M_ ‘l-l‘ I'.M. Mt. 5g, IIII. ll. lllacK£|I1| oath: Offlao Ilouro wrrl.m"' 8' Telephone - office-rm; Rflldonco 4351 NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accounts“; I44 Richmond Sp Charlottetown Pl). Box MlIlTlP-ll and I‘ "ion-m Chilton/d Accountant; Eastern Trust Bulldtn; Phone [M7 - ‘n; m Charlottetown B. M. SEARS, c. A Resident Par-tim- 0W iIiI/JI I(' VFHNIIIIIIAIIHF Mlmevirfflirhln: cards and aim "M"! iirorrams correspond“; Wplll: and bookkeeping, IZEGLEN GIDDEN siihono 1810-4. A98. Nmrtwnslonsntgigt: Ap~ u. R. nouns: & co. I Chartered Accountant; l! Grafton ltloet. Charlottetown Randolph W. Mnanlnr. McLeod & Bentley w. c. BENTLEY. u‘. s. n. BENTLEY. mo. Boriatero and Athrloyo.” Lo-iv l“ Prlneo Street o++o+¢o+o+o+¢¢¢“..“ sovvvn-voooov-o Charles R. McQuaid 5.4. Berliner, “new, Notoryszts, Euler-n Trust Balldhq, CllIIMtQhy-g Phone I111 ‘Lkkk BELL & MAPI-IIESON Burrow-h slriiieign, q. P IE8 COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond St. Ch-riottetovvn 9.5.]. FREDERIC A. LARGE BAERISTEE, no ' mm swam, Phug-‘m s Ill Grafton P. o. no cameos-renown, 1-11 0R. W. R. GARSU Chiropractor Palmer Groups“ Charlottetown Phone PALMER & HASLAM n. r. IIASLAM. an. can BARBISTEB, no. Bonk of Non Sootlo Chum Charlottetown, P. E. I. MONEY 'ro who P.0. Bor NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTEII. IRULICITOII Charlotte EY ES EXAMIN ED AND GLASSES FVITED J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent oviil Qlllel‘ w" DR. A R SMITH nouns-r I'll Grafton Street Qfflao llaaro: I to ll - ‘hloptiotso lol- Auix w mnvniusul uouorroii. Guerra 5 rial Orooo J. A Mc-GUIGAN. B-A NOTAII. ITO. pong; g Llano! cult-tuition.» M. AImAN IFARMER » o-o. ma; ’ M0 l! T0 LOAN . Illllghflilt uuaicnolt cilantro - 5 amour/o unsz: