me cnltnmrrsrown ounxotm. .. v i race rout: ii . TIIE GIIAIILOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Mllfllllll Dally (Founded In I881) President: Haul. CoL W. Chester S. McLun Vlco-Prelldont: J. IL Burnett, l‘. J. l. Secretary: Hunt. Col. D. A. MlcKlnnon, 0.8.0. ldltor 5nd llnnglng Director: .l. R. Burnett. l"..l.l. Aflochh Editors: Frank Walker and Lieut. In A. Burnett, R.C.N.V._R. tOn Active Servlcel "The Strongest Memory ia Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." mmav. OCTOBER s, 1944- Higher Education fiome worthwhile thoughts on the value and meaning of education, about which tltere seems lo be a good deal of confusion, were contribut- ed by Dr. Carleton Stanley. President of Dal- housie University, in an address delivered at the rc-opetting of the Uttivcrsity yesterday. Dr. Stanley lays emphasis on tlte importance 0f his institution “titaiutztittittg. throttglt thick and thin, certain ideas: lllc idca of tolerance; the‘ idea that intelligence sltttttitl he fostered and given an opportunity‘ in this part of the world, as it ltas been fostered in Srtttlaitd, rtuluttg rich Ind poor alike; and not lcztst the conviction that these ikws depend upon lllflllfl‘ education ltuv- ing a real coutuit and charactcrhltltsrctl upon the great literature of the world. and thc scien- tific aspirations and ucltievctticttts of all man- kind." There is nothing so \‘.'itl'lll and vitul, he in- sists, as an idea; tiuthiitg so tiaralyzittg and kil- ling and clantmy-cohl as apathy, It became tilztitt in I933 that education and ltfe were [icrishiug in Germany, not because igziorztut murderers had armed llO\\‘(‘l‘, but ltccaust: lcztrttiug had folded its hands, nturmuriiug: I “Creep into thy narrow bed, Creep, and let no more be sait." At that time also it was plain to any edu- cated man, that such an ztttittitle could not be confined to Germany, and that cver_\'tlting worth living for was threatened, at lcllst, in all PIITIS of the world. Higher CtlIICLIllUll. in Dr. S:ai1lc_v's view, has lllllk to a. lower and lower ebb in this coun- try, even since I935, not because of otttside ill- tcrferettce from lnztteriztlistic intcrcds, but be- cause those who ltave had to do with ltigher education have “folded their hands and float- ed with the stream——with any ‘stream or tide— of fashion, prejudices, inaterialistu or bigotry. They Itave gone in ltearily for ‘non-interven- tton' while dunces and boors ltave dcnottnced the great Iiteratttre, and the seminal ideas and theories, of ancient Greece, as a proper study for Canadians, Iihese ideas include among other things mathematics, science, music and poetry, philosophy, law, and pfllllllill‘ government -—— the very fabric of a rational life, as we con- ceive it. If we Catiadians had all migrated hither from Laffin Iztnd. or Patagonia, it would have been different, and the things l have tnentiotted would ltave no relevance to tts. But, the facts being what they are, any dodging. of such issues is like an invitation to escape front our own wave-length, and our whole in- heritance. The only way a people can do that is to perish, coutpleteltt and utterly perish, like the dinosaurs of geological time." Dr. Stanley forsces a struggle altead, if what he terms "our whrle inheritance" is to be maintained. The great '- schief done "throttglt the apathy and cold-ltearted indifference of those concerned" ntust he repaired. "When the dunces have had a long innings in high places, ignorance becomes a vested interest. Be- sides, in the next (lccade it will scent that there are many Canadian questions which will ltave to be settled in a lturry. .\ud that may be not the best atmosphere in which to determine the endless differences betwectt gsttittg a living and living the good life. "The older one grows the less is one given to definitions and precise statements. Iut surely. from age to age. the study of how to live the rgocttl life, and how to spread the good life among oue’s fclloivs, lies close to the focal PIITDOSC of education." About Our Airport Now the whole summer has passed, and not a thing done to extend the runways at the Charlottetown airport. When the airport is handed back to the City after the war by the Dominion (iioverntttcttt, it will hc ohsolcscent so far as large plane traffic. is concerned — and that is the kiud of traffic which we should be planning to encourage lli'l'(‘. The City Coun- cil and Ilottrd of Tirade Itare lntth ltccu work- ing on this pmpositiott. ltut they have not suc- ceeded in pulling together. nor ltave they been lble, apparently, to gct our Federal retireseti- Oltives 5llfflCi6l1ll_\' interested in the matter. lll the tneautittn. t-tfttt clttrcs are rtwakc to the iniportnttrc of 'tir :r.tff:c rtutl are doing things about it. In S" _ltti u tln- Municipal Council has been autho zt-d I.) the .\'cw Bruns- wick Legislature to t-xprt-p _t- lauds for air- port purposes, zntd ' .‘t.tt~ with propertv owners at Clovt-r \ -\. 'u tht- l.'lt‘ll Lomuud area, are now tuttlt-t- \\'.'i\'. The ZIIFPOFI cuzu- mittee of the Cottucil is also itegotiating; with Hon. C. D. llowv. llepartntctm of 'l'raitsttttrt '1‘. Ottawa, to, asccrt-‘titt the terms tutdrr which Ahe Ikpztrttttrtit would hr willing to lease from the tntttticipalityt the urca rcqtttrcd for the air- port. Both the site and the proposed runway layout ltave been dcusstrl by the committee with Hon. Mr. flora:- antl ltis deputy minister, Mr. Edwards. 'l‘ltat ts farther than we scent to ltave been able to get alter :tII the discussion and correspondence that have taken place over the utatter. Europe's Livestock Commenting on the agricultural situation in Europe. the Current Review on Agricul- tural Conditions in tfnttuda says that as rc- gards livestock and its tirodttcls, forced slattgltt- erings leecatttc necessary during early war years in order to reduce livestock inunbers to the level I of available feed supplies. By I943» lwwevm adjustments in European feed production have enabled a return to higher numbers, and this trend was further continued in I944. Tlill5. l0!’ instance, hog tiutubers in Denmark returned l0 2,291,000 ltcztd by I944. fill" llavml! fall"! m 1,267,000 ill 1942- Durlllls’ 193749385 the)’ numbered 2,705,000. Cattle numbers m the same country also advanced from 2.3249“? l" i943 to 3,033,000 head l-i I944. that 1S. l0 within two per cent of the average for llltf ten years 1928-1937. ~ _ v In Germany and the Danube basin. llve‘ stock production is reported to be in excess of pre-war levels. On the other hand. 3 $9110“ deterioration was observed in Ireland, as well as most of Western and Southern Europe, that is, in countries usually deficient in feed. Con- sidering Europe as a, whole, authoritative sour- ces placed Iivestock numl Js in Continental Luur- ope, as of I943. at IO per cent below 1939 Ill the case of cattle, about 30 per cent for hogs, and an even larger percentage for poultry. The numbers of sheep may have increased. The situation is not so favourable in Euro- [peau Russia, part of which has recently been liberated from etiemy occupation. Here, only ‘one-quarter of pre-tvar herds was left when tthe enemy withdrew. But large numbers were lt-vncttzttetl before the Nazis moved in and these lianitnuls are now being returned. In addition, lcollcctire and state farms in territories spared i from invasion arc, stipplvirtg most‘ of the foun- illllflll stucl; required for at quick return to nor- i llllll IIIIIIIIJBTS. EDIIURIAL NUILS .- l The rebellion in Lower Canada broke out this date. 1837, which led to Upper and Lower tCzutatkt bcittg rc-tutited in I841, to be followed Il\\'Clll_\"Sl.\' years later by the Confederation of Canada. l n- n- Signitig petitions means little these days. 'Tlte tiovernttient once tmdertook to analyse a inioustcr one presented to them. and discovered lta) ntauy of the nantes were in the same lhandtvriting, (b) some 0t the subscribers re- lpttdiatetl their signatures, (c) others declared lthey signed merely to oblige the cattvasser hut lotherwise were uniutcrestetl. I I A typical story going the rounds in the iC-erman capital, says a Stockholm despatclt, lwas that after the war was lost Hitler and Goeritig were Iiauging side by side from a gal- lows, convicted as war criminals. Goering turit- ed to Hitler and said: "Didn't I always tell you Adolf, the war would be decided in the air." i I fi it‘! New Glasgow, N. S., is experiencing the disadvantage of being without a proper laud- ing field for the planes. ‘Ihis week the service between here and there was interrupted on that account. By the by why should the service term- inate at New Glasgow’, instead of proceeding 0n to Ilalifax? 'I‘hat is the connection most needed here, instead of having to go rotmd by Moucton and wait connections there. $ One thing that has utade Rcpublicznt Thontas wey unpopular with 'llf‘\\S])Z1])CI'Ill€Il, even those of his own party, is his embargo on snap- shots of himself in characteristic attitudes. When the is to be press photographed he insists upon the stage Itciug previously set, and be represent- ed in immaculate pose, Wllll every hair of his head and moustache in its proper place. The fact is that he, like Prime Mitnster King, is nor photogenic, and must be "made-up" for press reproduction. n!!! l Writes Judith Robinson in Toronlo New : “Minnie said she guessed tnere wasn't as pretty a place to live in the world as right here. Tim said he guessed there wasn't either, except may- be the Island. Used to keep hotel on the Island, Tim said, and was it ever pretty, Fall days like this. How long ago? Long enough, Tim said, for the beer to be cheaper than the bottles. Used to be, he paid one-seventy a dozen quarts for the beer and one-eighty for the bottles and case, and got the one-eighty back. 'I'hat'd tcll you how long it was ago." l! it i I ll It ll No one need allege Beechant does ncit put muscle into his conducting. Sir Thontas con- ducted the Londoti PIIIIIIIITIIIOIIIC Orchestra so vigorously in his first Iittll rehearsal that he ;hroke two batons and sent himself to hospital. lPluugiug into Sibelius’ sixth symphony, Sir Thoutas swung the first Iutton so vigorously he broke it in half. and one pitte flew over his ‘shoulder into the attditoriunt. Iiinding a sec- ond, he gripped it ltard wvlt his lcft hand, crack- ing it and embedding a splinter in the palm. He ‘went to a hospital. retflrned with the splinter Ill! a souvenir, and resumed rehearsal with a 1 third baton. i i i ll The prospect that at winter campaign will be necessary‘ to defeat Gcrmutiy has made it cer- ltniit that the tircscnt Ilritfsh Cottservative-Lib- lcral-Isubor coalition government will endure ‘Itmtil ucxt spring or even slimmer. It cannot jlztst longer than that unless a. major catastrophe ju-cre to take place in the war ztgaiitst Germany, ‘sitict: labor has decided that an election must be neld in which it'wilI fight independently. The formal labor decision to d: so will be made at the party's national conference beginning ecember Il, Political machinery rusted by disuse since the country last voted in Novem- ber, I936, has Iiegun to turn in attticipation. The war office also has circulated forms for absentee voting by soldiers. of Conservative party leadership after becom- ling Prime Minister, Win=ton Churchill made fairly plain his intention of leading the party after the war. His speeches since on recon- lstruction in the post-war cra have emphasized this intention, although he presented his "food, ihomrs and work" program as something he would like to sec undertaken by. if not the pre- sent coalition, then by another formed after _the voting. flutes By The Way Thousnuh of Ludllnant people In mnarkshlze, the busy Scothlsl; county, have telegraphed to me Government: “Save our girl; from ItalIan prisoners of war. Send the men back to Italy to fight D for their country." — London Mall. ally In an urea suffering from drought. a man washed hs car, lwlllht a new straw hat, put: tne hat on got In the car and drove to an pl- av Picnic. And still It; dldnt raIm-Kkchener Record. nltuh Iplpmthlst n wtn B 0 M" . cvil servants to ad- minister the “baby bonus" legisla- tion. The growth of the ct vice In Canada threatens come an intolerable financial bur- Tflfi lame a percentage or 15 belflls’ supported by B Smflll Illlmbe taxpayers. -Brantford Expositor. Ottawa fa uld to be oonslderln the establishment of t; peuee-ttmg Bfml’ of 100,000 men with minimum vamp training of a month each J3“- FOT a COI-llllrl’ so vulnerable, we have always been pItIfully weak In a mlltary sense when. ever peace has prevgllecl. Perhaps hereafter we Wlll be better pm- Dflred on land. at sea. and In me aIr. -- Broekvllle Recorder and Tlmes. Horrible as have been some of the atrccitle; of tlrs war, It,Is never heless true that there Is nowadays a greater awakening of the human conscience than ever before. and the possibility of zhls eventuatlng In greater good for the greater number cannot be over- looked. In spite of all, humanity does advance. and humanity will survlve-Vlcmrlu Colonist. A‘. first the knight war frresisf- Ible against the foot soldier. Then the archers wlth their longbows bIWEht the kn'l;ht Into crushing ruin. The blundcrbuss swept the archer away. And so it went UV. ery weapon producing a more Powerful counter-weapon. The tank Itself Is moving toward tb- solescence. The only weapon that doesn't seem to lose its popular- tty ls the brlckbat a‘. thirty paces. —0fllsary Herald. require Child welfare measures f0 be carried forward l_n Britain are: n wide-spread provision of nurseigv schools, better care of physically and mentally handicapped children 811d more generous allowances for students. 19 public schools (private schools n5 they would be called In Canada) are to be In- spected and ietzistered by the De- partmen of Education. The stan- dards of all school bulldIngs and Eqlllpmenl: are to be brought up to date. Teachers’ salarles are to be Increased and the size of class- rooms reduced.-Tor0nto Star. The fllfl WI!’ with n serious nII- ment who lmcl been recommended to‘ a prominent doctor by n mutual ff-Bhd Was finally dismissed as vfllllltlctely cured. In parting with the distinguished physician she told hlm that; his services had been of a sort that uuttldti’: be Itlllf/ Paid for. She continued, "I do hope T011 lv.ll accept its u token from me this purse which I myself have embroidered." The doctor replied By his acceptance o, Very 001013’ that the fees of n physician must be paid in money, not meffll’ In era ltude and headd- ed: “Presents maintain Ifendship. they do mt. maintain a family.“ "What is ycur fee?" the woman inquired. "Two hundred dollars," Was the answer. The woman open- ed the purse and took from It flve $100 bills. She put back three, handed two f-o the dlscoruf ted PlIVSlCltln. and left-London Sat- urday Review. It would do a power of g on and Sllelvlthen Canada's hand hen It. wmfls to wrltlnll Peace terms If a substantial gody of Canadians were flPenly to express their abhorrcnce of German and Japanese atrocitles and then proceed to demand mens- ures of punishment and thereby of prevention. It would be well many Canadian organizations were to proclaim openly that zney wllt support strong punltlve meas- ures and bledtze that support to our offlclal delegates at the right time. We all deplore wrongdclng and a few of us raise our voices against ‘t: but that Is not suffici- ent. and the practical course I; to encourage the authorltles to out down evil wlth a flrm hand. promise publ c Support of all mens- ures directed Io the punishment and supnresson of evlldoers. Saint John Telegraph-Journal. The end of the war-even of the war In Europe-WWI loosen the moral restralns which nave helped the government to keep inflation wlthln manageable bounds. There wlll be a vast pent-up de- mand for consumable tzoods and particularly for household re- placements. backed by n flood of cashed savings. Bu: stocks of 'clvll'an products will be lot". and the government will be obliged. In the Interests of full employment In the long-term period, to dIvert some productive resources to cap- Ital constructor: and manufac- ture for export. In that danger- ous stuatlon the controlled re- ease of surplus war stocks adapt- able to cIvIlIan purposes can serve as an effectlve safety-valve. The greater the proportion of cIvIlIan expenditure that goes on such goods. the I855 rIsky and painful wIll be the transtlon from war- time scarcity to peace and plenty. -—Manchester Guardian. What richness In our! Britain Is not golng to emerge poor from this war when It. ‘s so wealthy In opportunity. The tropical de- pendencies might have been creat- ed of set purpose to confer mutual benefit. They fIt hand-In-glove. We In Britain could be ddng now with much more of their sugars and spleen. their refreshing fruits, thelr minerals and cattle-cake- Tlte people of the colonfe; In turn must await with Impatience the days of peace when We can buy theIr produce by the exchange of our manufacturers and amenities the progressive ltfe. velopment wllt be and one of the greatest Partnerships ever seen in the world. It; wlll be carried through by the younrt men who are flred with the snlrl’ of free enterprise. They will find hers a crest constructlve work when their tasks of destruction In Germany and Jnnan are fnIshed. -—London Dally Express. T or pmumv oma oes. eltim an, and newer: lelona to the same Iamlla. Washington Spotlight By C. B. BLACKBURN Canadian Pres; Staff Wrlter Britons. Russians and Amer!- cana, savloura of the world from threat of Axis slavery-a salvage ob sflll far from ended-are be- ng attacked for alleged plans to dominate the world In the Inter- ests of peace. , Slrange that tnfs could he true so soon after those dark days when all freedom-loving peoples pinned their wavering hopes on me efforts of these countrles to make themselvfl phwerful enough to tum back the Axis. That It Is true Is evldent from what has been written and said of the Dumbarton Oaks Confer- ence which has been dragging on here nearly slx weeks seektnz merely to draft a proposal for a vrorld securlty league . from all sides and from those Whose written and SPOKEN Wallis nd wlde attention come fright-Inspiring warnings of the terrble consequences If those three powers decide to stand £08991" a5 guardians of world peace and International decency. “Power polItIcs" Is the cry of those who now shout loudly for the rlght to share In declslous on future wars or suppressons of War of small countries whose continued existence depends entirely upon the lavish scariflcc of llv..=. wealth and brains of the three Collmlwfi theIr ptoagotrstit; fieem to fem‘- Unlversal brotherly love, humlllty and sclf-effccemcnt, might be fl better lot-mum but, lmrd-ltended reallsts a‘ Dumbarton‘ Oaks. D411‘- tlcularlv the Russians. do nct Ill‘.- mpt that; goal as possible of at- talnment just 110W- The alternative as a measure of insurance against Barbarlsm would seem m be unlimited power In the minds of those who can best be trusted to use It decently- The effort to but that nltervut- tlve Into a form palatable t0 tllf critics of power politics In the Uniffd Stntes ‘s believed to be (15.9 of thp reason: why the Dum- htn-lgtt oak; Conference 11:15 last- ed tvxice as 10m; as exlwfilflll. and still goes on.‘ O C camdtrs memorial neglected: In Arlintzton Cemetery. lust across the Potomac from the Whlte 1401159- burinl place of thousand; of ‘he United States. stand the flrefll marble. open-air theatre. the tomb of tlic Unknown Sold er. the hi5- toric Lee Mansion and the fore- mrtst of tho ba tleshlp Main". all benutlftilly kept and cared I0". A‘; 1m],- ntjpvf, mom the Main“. Nlertt- t orlal, without. aonrnach1n2 ‘infill-Ii way, lts base buried ‘n notice." ll gmc: and weeds. wenther-ivcrn rm" t. drab. stands ‘he Zl'<""E’fllI “tam” "l t. cross erected by the Can ti]! I heroic and illustrious dead of the ‘ Guvemment. tn memory uf Antqfj- cans who died While rr-rvwiu "jltl the Domlnlcns forces in the First l Great Wm‘. De Gaulltfs Declaration By Dewii MacKcnzie Associated Press War Analyst We shouldn't. allow 1,11,. tliunclzr of me guns of war to crown the significance of lien. De Gaulltfs declaration that. the French Gov- critment. gradually will take over BULOVA PRESIDENT 5. As Shown W. JEWELERS complete control of the country's economy. “It, shall be an organization of Industry,“ says the getter-Al, “In which all who participate shall be considered associates. We no longer can permit the concentration of Interests which In England and America are called trusts 1nd which wdav do not. meet. the needs of social betterment." While Dc Gaullc allows exact. lnterpictaticn of his pronounce- ment. to fall where It will, It's clear that he's signaling a gTCfIL ghanga In France to avoid, as he suys,"'tlie pro-war political. social and moral situation which took us to the brink of the Abyss." It also would seem that this represents a marl-tea swing tpfttrhat is popularly kitown as the .. e t .. - . - Some observers express the view that France L; headed toward com- munism. They believe they find additional stipport. for this In De- Gu-ulle's friendlv relations with Moscow and the appointment, of two communists to his cabinet. Then there‘. the statement made recently by Jean Jurgensen, one of the directors of the powerful fed- eration o! French resistance groups known B8 tn, "Mouvement de Ia Llb-erzttlon Natlouale" which sup- ports De Gaulle. Said Jurgensen: "Our federation I5 Socialist, even tending toward Communism. We want not-hlm; of the old govern- ment. It, brought about the ruin of France." As for Gen. DP Guulle, tt should he noted that he ticvcr has an- nobitced Communlstlc leanings, and If France ls moving toward that "Ism" he may be subject to the trend rather than Its author. In- deed. he may have entirely differ- ent Ideas for the ultimate form of Government - . a We must awnnlt. developments before jumping to the conclusion that trance If headed for Commun- Ism In her leftward swltig. The country Is agricultural nud the vnst ntzt-lorltv of its people art; tradition- ally conservative. I rhould say that th, otutccme depends on how fire-at. an influence can be exercised by the powerful and well-organized unlst mlnorltv tn the great Industrlal centres like Ports. We’ve seen numerous cases when. strong- ly co-ordlnated mfnorlttes have controlled blg majorities - but It doesn't necessarily follow that. this wIlI ha. pen In France. Be t u may, If we are to keep abreast of fest-movln events In Europe. we must recogn 2e that what's going on In France Is symptcmatlc of what's bolllng up In many other parts of the conti- nent. en's a deflnlm swlntz to the left. and In all Instances Com- munism I; Inyolt/‘ed; We see thIs In Eastern Europe, tn the Balkans. In Italy. and In Spain which Is belng urged bv the Mos- cow racllo to overthrow Gen Franco and wzsbabllsh the pre-clvil war republlc which was heavily Com- munlstlc. Even In Germany there's an tin uurltl Communist organ- Izattlon which hat; stirvlved ztll the Gestapo efforts to OXISTIIIIIIIIIQ II. And as thls article Is balm: written there comes w my desk rt Swekholm 6390M! 8871M the belief I: u- In ls given day Is ex offIcIn omniscient. pressed there, ually must foim n goverumuti more strongly leftist tendtu; she Ilohes to live In harmony \\'ll h tneetlzig where Russia. This Is n developing sltualloti. will thrust itself Into world nfftitlrs a5 we ccme to the end of the wur In Ettrope. Pe0pIeCWh0 Iznow I All (Dr. Irwin Edmtln tn Saturday Rn- M155 The to correct typewriter tlt“ who have spent flier llves In field. Miss of her cruslfng crusading. Is a large woman and she has pounded many ers to bIts. whom Mlss Thompson Is not only wrong; he ls able. ‘ATIIejInsSQswdIsmIssed. _ and _ll_/I ‘Isa gs are usunlly (which ls dnlll r) world saving world shaking events. If one writes millions addressed to millions of reach rs for thousands or days, It Is hard not to begin to trike self as seriously us one takes world. Nothlng Is nllen medltatlons - a columnist. becomes the empire of their minds. Miss Thompson takes herself nmre seriously even than most column- ists. There no: know and know anyone else. So Naturally It’: WELLNER’! 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COMPANY? LIMITED Montague, I’. E. I. Phone No. 5 that Flnlnurl - i all; Thompson wllt l8 t Ih if foot of p “e go O e the class, beginning next she wllt remain the sovereign of the non-sequltur 1t. and the master of the Irrelevant. vlettt Literature) Dorothy Thompsons writ- IF THERE BE MUSIC If there be music In that future n Whose fur blue edges lIe beyond our lmowfnfi. 1 shall be who y reconciled to 801118- Ftor tluttt ls language I can under- s an . - If melodies acrou than field; be stIi-ixd L Bv llfted wines too lliht for en t; |Or tlltod planets tkne their swift appearing l5 ngflflng she (1, as t To ltllrrgicpé-i that earth has never . bmer ma“ If some rnientkratxibow-arch, out- n t Id whole duly or n column ‘st Yet gilnipgeiilr leonlz since throllllh In nn hour at the sttlpldltles of fllPtYl} swmetpethgge" ulblm" it, t in After a ll, of wort-is pronunc ‘amen l 0s v0 ry ones tine to the or the hysterlcs- of The whole unlvei te ayllll G BARRISTEII. BA . Canadian Banknof Commerce Bldg. MONEY T0 L0 IIARRISTER, SOLICITOR. ETC. ‘ EX W. MATHIESON "oney to Loan Colleetlonl Office: 90 rent George Street SOLICITOR. ETC. McLeod 6L Bentley W. If. BENTLEY. K. C. I. A. BENTLEY, K C. Barristers and Attorney-al- Low 154 Prlllco Street Iloane fit 0o. Chartered Accountants 58 Grafton St., Ch'town. Phone 2080 - Box 247 I Marroll and Iloittpanyg II. F. AIIGIIIBALII Chartered Accountants lantern Trust Building Ohulottetown lmwms... Attention Truss wearers _ n ve all pr The “llllmllls l" I I5‘- i Into the perfect sevenfold amen:- I shnll not stop to think that I Thompson l5 full. have , But onlv listen nnd be uthfled. llS us ‘n1. e I lmaulno typewrit- As tisnnl anyone wtlth tllnzrt -es, disreput- 75/4 III. ntwiiottt LIIVI NllIl-ITTITOWII 180 LI- - NORTHEAST AIRLINES G. F. llutclttmn 8t $0" OPTOMETRISTS “Speclallsta In the flf- tlng of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feels.” I53 Grafton Street Y. to wear n lrlu we uh Ibo It. M comfortablv or l: It In antlqntukl and out-of- 1h caning untold agony. then offering you a nerfut. flttlnl. Relieved In i"): Ild n o ll It wlqazilcve all cllstresl n: symptoms. Improves the appetite. Prlcc o. oltcntlon. To than of you who are ven ntllfled lo Mylo-outgrown Itn use- Ihy continua suffering when person who l: troub- r. Evan llonueh Iv of the 85 dunk nor bolt I nnoriumto enouh to hi" q . An with the one you are wearlnl‘! Deon on l0 to sneak. thus we can lllevhlo tho cane by Gnssy Stomachs to h :4 bun mo: amt?!- of “D no how qulc l! lulu Stomach MI:- romofea the stomach, aullfs rlliestlon and Mall Orderv Ilvgyl nmlvl Ill Gm! Gun-n ltroet