' , in the that if only a man be forgiven? are: FOUR TllE GIIAIILIITTETIIWII GIIAIIIIIAI Mornin; Daily tIouurlel in I801) Authorized as Second Claae Hull. Poet Olloe Department, Ottawa. Ilie Guardian may be obtained at: Hub Tobacco Shop. Moneton, N. l The News Shop. lllonoton, N. I. George McLean Pletou, N. B. Walker's White Spot, ll Salter 5t, Halifax, N.l Metropolitan News Agency, I248 Peel Sh. Montreal United Cigar Stores, Chateau Laurler Ottawa, Ont. B. Aitken, Lord I-Jlgln’: Ilotel, Ottawa. Ont. J. I-‘iue, 354 Bay St., Toronto Ont. Wolfe's News Stand. Sudbllfli Ont. Old South News. Cur. Milk and Washington Sta. - ' Boston liotaling’: News Agency Times Building, New Kort “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than Me Weakesflnk.‘ THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1946 Misuse 0f Judges Speaking before the annual meeting of the Police Association of Ontario, Senator Roe- buck deplorcrl the employment of Stiprenic Court jiuljgt-s to conduct commissions of inquiry or for llllltil‘ conciliation. There was thus im- posed on jurists, he said, duties for which they had no training or experience. He cited ex- amples to sliov." how their tasks as commis- nonciis not only interfered with hut unfilled judges for thcir duties on the bench. \i\"orst example in his opinion was the commission to investigate espionage activities. “In Ottawa. recently," the Senator said, “we took two excellent justices of the bench of the Rupreme Court of Canada 'aiid ini- posed on them the police task of investigating an alleged seditious conspiracy and of institut- ing prosecutions against thOse who appeared to he guilty. Notwithstautliug they were em- inent jurists, they walked over the civil rights 0f flficllifil vflrsoiis as no experienced police officer would dream of doing, and they did things \vhich no good attorney would for one moment permit. They disregarded the great beacons in English law which light the way to freedom .and sectirity——the Magna Carta of r2i5,_the Petition of Rights of i627, the Habeas Corpus Act of i679, the Bill of Rights of i688. We thus scrapped two very good judges and recast two very indifferent police- men. I hope that we have learned our les- son." Governments have fallen into the habit of calling judges from the bench to have three man commissions to investigate any problem deemed too hot for politicians to touch. More and more is this practice coming under criti- cism, as not, only’ interfering with the reilula? court work for which judges were set aside by life appointment, but as impairing in too many crises their positions of judicial objectiv- ity. Strongly Criticized Wide and unfavorable comment is being made on the King Government act in granting a virtual amnesty to the £4,000 who deserted from the army, or failed to report for the call- up. Those, for instance, who have been catight. and are in jail, remarks the Globe and llIuiI, will have to serve out their sentences, but those who have hitherto evaded the police will have the slate wiped clean. This is a new form of justice—-—Canada brand. A further discrim- ination is practiced between those who deserted in this country, and those Wl\0 (lfieflfil OYEY‘ seas. There is a well-remembered group of 6,- 300 \vlio ivere absent without leave just before they were to be sent to the ships which were to take them to reinforcement depots overseas. They go scot frec. Thus the Government pet'- petuiitcs the dual system which caused s0 niucli of the w-hole trouble. It is typical that haying granted freedom, and restored the full dignity of citizenship to those who deserted their country's need, the‘ Government should__dccide to WithhOld lllflll‘ “rights, privileges and benefits." It is claimed that there will be some financial saving thfwllll this move, and the Government pats itself _ Oil the mad for its economyu How chraacteristic it is for this Administration to point to this pgfly advantage in an effort to cover up the enormity of its betrayal of justice and respect f‘); the law! The harvest of this shameless act, predicts i‘ the Globe and illail, will be reaped in after \\'hzit can Defense Minister Abbott now years. the member of the Permanent hope to do to ‘ ‘Ar-my, who has had enough of it. and decides to desert? What discipline can be expected Afmgd Forces of Canada when it is known hides long enough, he will What respect for the law CH" be hoped for, throughout the countrY Efiflfi" filly,‘ when the Government itself brushes aside the Vi0lflli0ii of one of the most serious crimcs ‘ on the military calendar as of no consequence? ,________________ Then And Now- "ltrikes situation in Hamilton, declares _ . R. Craven, Muskoka, is one 0f the most , g defiances of law, order and good Gov- ‘that we have lilad in Canada since the lllhipfig ltfilre of I919 when for a Illllg a Soviet Ibloltite control there and the Provincial stood by helpless and afraid to take ‘ ‘ jppdnelbility whatever, apparently intimi- by Ute feet that the police and Dominion had allied themselves with the law- ‘ __l'. lrmay not be amiss, therefore. to ,_ {he Dominion Gnvernngnt of the ' tlisetmnch more serious and threat- tlllfi now, prevails in Hamilton. pjjggefitlng a Parliamentary Indus- fflmttilltee to ‘investigate’ as ifimllton lssucfwitlt no ep- ‘ then Dominion Govern- , ' like salon with courage ‘ ' _t ot- Mounted Police L.‘ _ regiment of the - be: vqryjcioas: ">4. hand, and the Government notified every Do- minion employee to be back by a certain hour 0r lose his job for good. Nor did it stop there. Elilht men were arrested, all being convicted, with the result that in relatively short order the crisis, much more difficult and dangerous than this Hamilton mess, was ended and the disor- derly, lawless clement brought to their senses, And this, be it emphasized, without any active participation by the Militia. As the owner and editor of the Kingston Daily Standard at the time I naturally followed with lively interest the course of action taken and I recall distinctly" how Hon. Arthur ileiglieii, then iii the Domin- ion Cabinet as Manitoba .\Iinister, actually went out to the scene of disturbance to direct the sit- uation, remaining on the job till law and Qrrlt-r had been restored, the Soviet completely dis- conifited and the Liovcriiinciit had done its full duty by the country and honest labor. . i — EDITORIAL NOTES Q All Vcteraus—to arms one.- IIIOYE — for those unemployed! i! It! i i “Solid Liberal Quebec"—docs not appear very solid at the jirrsent juncture. * d‘ >l< X _ _Of the 34,000 (iLTlllZIll jirisoners-of-wsr‘ originally interned iii the Doiiiinioti all but .4,- QQO llflvt! rflurnctl to (icrniunij, figures recent- ly made available iii (lttziwn reveal. -‘l< -‘l= 7F >l< Field Klarslitil Lord .\lontgunicry' when he visits here Monday will find us the most loyal province in the \vh0le Dominion, with fcw shirkers and practically no rlescrters-always proud 0f our King and Country". >I< >l< >l< >l< The Russian Government, says The Privil- ed Word, is not moving to u five-day week, but away from it. ln force in theory before the war, but not in practice, the five-day week is openly abandoned in the Five Ycar Plan, and working time is to be eight hours a day for a seven day week. iii Ninety-nine women doctors served in the three branches of the Canadian armed forces during the late war, according to Dr. Edna Guest, (i). B.E., chairman of the Federation of Medical \Vomen of Canada, in the current issue of The Canadian Doctor. Of this number, more than half had still to be dcmobilizcd on _]uiie I5. The army had claimed 7o, the largest number; i4 joined the RCAF; and seven served in the navy. The first Canadian woman doctor to enlist was Squadron Officer lean Davey. ll‘ 41 llt ll‘ Rev. \V. A, Ross, former Secretary 0f the Maritime Religious Council, who rccciitly pas- sed away in Toronto, had many friend-s in this province ivliich for years lie visited annually. He was devoted to b0ys' work at a time when, so far as the Protestants were concerned, little in particular was being done for them. flllfl conceived the idea of n religious Tuxis and Trail Rangers movement, wliish. so long as lie supervised itv proved popular and an undoubt- ed success here, but lost ground considerably when his inspiring influence was willidrziivit. ll‘ If‘ >l< 1K Liberal circles at Ottawa, writes an Ot- tawa correspondent, take very seriously the theory that the Prime blinistcr will resign in the near future. \Vith .\lessrs. Howe, St. Laurent and llslcy definitely iiitcnrliiig to re- tire; with Mr. Claxton slated for External Affairs only, the candidates to replace the Prime Minister are nnw Mr. Gardiner, who really wants the post, and .\[r. Abbott, who would like it, but will not fight for it. The caucus would probably plump for .\Ir. Gar- diner if it were not that, at the moment. lie seems to have no ‘i102? of ‘carrying the Wcst. Sir Cicorgc Dzishwood Thinbiiizin (iioldic, founder of Nigeria, died this date i925; the region was originally discovered by the Portu- guese but gradually the British acquired the predominating sharevof the trade; and ulti- mately under the direction of .\'ir George the National African Co. was established and pro- ceeded to civilize and develop the territory, sur- rendering their riglits in 1000 for the 011F009? of establishing a British protectorate. All chil- d-ren born after that date were born free, and in I917 all the slaves held by native rulers were declared free and slave dealing abolished. and is now practically non-existent. Sir George attended the Berlin Conference in 15341065 an expert on Niger questions, and was appoint- ed to the Royal Commission on the South .\fri- can War in 1902-3. llc was an authority on defence. and was for long jircsidcnt of the Na- tional Defence Association; he stoutly main- tained the only real safeguard agziinst slavery was to be brepared at all times. to fight for lib- erty. ‘ l‘ » Here is worthwhile enterprise. lvIrs. Elmer Glaspie, Vancouver, slim, dark-haired and dynamic, with no previous agricultural background, bought a farm. But that was six years ago, and now, ivhat had started out as one farm, has grown to a corporation 0f three — Fairmeade Farms I.td., and occupies 350 acres in nearby Langley Prairie. Today. she spends six months of the year on the farms. of which she is president. Flllll m0“ 0f he" “'°°k' ends the rest of the year. She has 20o head of the finest cattle in a district noted for its fine cattle, a herd which boasts I75 cliamDlflllilllllb- The old farm-house, which used to stand on the property, has disappeared in favor of a modern home, complete with swimming mo]. But it wasn't enough to breed championship cattle, Mrs. Glaspie recently purchased a nuni- ber of Kentucky thoroughbred horses WlllCll are being trained for high school equestrian exhibitions under the direction of hlni. Georllf Griffin, formerly of the R. C. W. P. ller lat- est gesture is to send i8 lerseys, tinder the care of Alex Liimond, on a six-week tour of the American fair circuit which includes Salem. Gresham, and Portland. Sixteen of the record- breeken were bred at Feirmerrde-a record not likely to be equalled anywhere along the cir- l 1v ""4 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way Believe only half o! what you hear. and if you can't decide which half ‘on should believe. Play sate and elleye nothing. -Kltchener Record. ' The cart la bring placed before the horse, and tln reversal is grot- esque. For in this situation, the horse ls Pull Production and the cart is Low Prices. I1 the ~heavy lozd ls to be hauled to the top of the uphill road of Reconversion to Stability, the natural aim must be to strengthen the horse, and not to increase the weight in tn.- curt, When the top of ‘he hlll is reached and an. even road lies ahead then will be the time to place creator demands on 'he ncrse. —lyicntreal Gazette. "In four-dimensional space n tennis ball could be turned instue out without Iblfflh; the cover." Sounds like the U.N. trying to arrive at an atomic bomb control P0116)’. —Wlnnl0<-‘.‘Z Tribune. "A rose is n. ruse is a rose. . ." turret? the late Gertrude Stern and it might nppear equally mit- that a ClGll-JX‘ ls a dollar ts a dollar. But" this ls not quite true, as ls evid- enced by this extract which ye reprlr.‘ in _ts pristine form from Miss Stein's .ate.st book, "brewsle mid Willie." And, siild Donald Paul. you were sitting there with your lonesome dollar. What nu you mean. said Fred, i may be a pour soldier but I go: more than one dollar. Nct that. said Doniid Paul, not th-tt._what I mean ls tnat the dollar. the l-lniti-d Sta-ics dollir, is a very lo: cine. dollar. it's all fllOlIC, lt's riding wide and hand- some but We rldtng all alone. no- body can use it, perhaps soon we ain't use it, it's a m htly lonesome dollar. Wcll, the higher flights of economics always sound more or less .i.‘.re that. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Von Ribbentrup, once n. cham- pagne salesman rind Hitler's foreign minister, turned a sickly vvh.te and slumped forw-ird when the British prosecutor referrcd to hlni as n common murderer. General Keltel, long chief of the German high command, wept as the prosecutor detailed the slaughter and torture of Jews by Nazis These supermea: of the master race do not appear to be so tough after all. But a. show of weakness at. this stage is not likely to save them from the explatlon of their unparalleled crimes. —T0ronto Star. This fall children who go in one Chicago public school will find 25 mlriature planos—not toys, but practicable musical instruments-- waiting for then music-hungry fingers. They vyill owe this chance to an ex-Alr Force private. Hflmld B. Rhodes. who Invented the orig- inal lzp-sizecl piano from scraps of Wrecked planes so that; his dis- abled fellows cotrcl exercise their stiffened hands and divert their minds wit h music while in bed. The improved Iii-pound l: nodes model, culled Preplano, is stil. largely made of war-surplus mat/ar- lals. Instead of sitting on the play- er's lap, it rests an a. tubular alu- mlfiim frame which curves up to hold a contfortable iittuched seat. Chicago Ls not the only large- city school systeni to bike up re- planos. Denver w-.11 also intro uce them and other cities are think- lng as a deferiite prerequisite for the study 01 any musical instru- ment. -I-Iamlltcn Spectator This country is already begin- ning to feel the benefit of the re- turn of its umttlc yv-anlors. Let the disappointments be what they may, the veterans have tackled their own problems with a good denl of acumen. biota"; and lirgeiti- oous have been the occupations to which they have turned tt- make their living. Alrendy they are a force in the sane counsels of this land, They are not afraid of wot" . They know the value of preparat- ion, be lt. ol ‘he hand or of tn’: mind. Their Canaoinn spirit is real, and soundly earned, Also, they have been abroad and h-i-ve seen other peoples and other lands. Carrion looks fair to chem. as fine a herit- age as this DTOId world has any- where to offer. As the Years pass, these men who trove seen flie and sometimes tortuve will once more, prove among the finest. citizens of this lard. They are clear-vision- ed and objective, fair-minded and reasonable. and hiey will make Canada a better land in which to llve. Their return is Canada's ain. Our tested met‘. are coming bac to us. -—Vict.orla Colonist. Canada Ir u young and growling country, It needs people who can dream of the future. and then turn those dreams r.i.i visions into deeds that will continue to incite Can- ada grow and prosper. Bu? this cannot be done without trend, in the present d-iy for pie to want something for noth ng. They are merely content, to dream, not take action that. will tying results Onn adn is rich In natural resources and opportunities for the person with vision. But. ihnt erson must be able to trinslrite lose visions into act-utilities and it cannot be done by diiy damning. There is no present substitute for hard work, and plenty of It. Anyonr with that. vision and the will to work can help push back the barriers to brln about new ways tf llfc, Iz-ntlon. —Su-.'i.burv Star. Steel production in Britain dur- ing y was av. the rate of I3,- 619, tons ti}! vear, the highest rate ever reach-rd ln this month. The figure for I938 was l0,1-00.0t.‘0 tons. This record achievement wits disclosed by the British iron and Steel Federation tn its statistical survey publL-i ‘ted recently. The survey also show that exports 1f iron and steel durln the same month lncreacrd to .'.~.0tt tons. an BlTl-Il [BIG of 3,168,000 time, which L; higher than the flgurl for an of the inst elghtem years 28,6 percent, an the 1.059400 rec rded for I938. -U. s Inf ail n Service. It is odd to so; nummu stereo and shops on the principal street of Toronto. Ontario's ca ital cit-y, closed and ‘tearing sens ever-body ls. away urine some holl uya. The idea really is worklnf out well apparently. for many Ines of ecodl are no sorrel! -nor.1 st all some ‘kinda --- thntt tliereugvoyil n1. In "Guilt-Ya for 0050111011 IIY he egg-p were open. Anyway the lure-of the GRIT“ road. aliuiv beeches and oil fill: is 'l'r..l“é.f"""" _m”n new in ustrles and a better civil- .'I"he to '1 exports of iron rind steel for the first. five months of the year were at the rate of over 2,- 520,000 tons a veer. an increase 1i tom orni- thit PUBLIC FORUM ‘ This column h open lo ‘l! fllfilflfifll h] gun‘ , wmlhll" 0| Gueltiona ell inure-t. n» Clilrlotteinwn l Guardian does not neoeenr ' If; endorse the opinion oi, Jraepouoeuh. - MUSIC IN SCHOOLS Slr.~— Thoselt-f us who had the brlvlleze or ettendlng the re- cent Muslc Festival will nrartily endorse the llillitillvg of the Worn. en's Institute organizations in favor of more music in our schools. Tue children on the: occasion proved that they do not lack musical tal- ent, and lt. WOI-ltd be an excellent thing if such gifts were given INC chance of full development. We are fortunate in having an excell- ent and forward-looking GPTCCi-GT of education for Prince Edward Iii- land. and I feel acre that the pub- lic would heartily suppqn any steps he may deem wise and tit- tlrq in order to oroylde moie and better musical instruction ‘.n the schools all over the Island. Mus- iciil appreciation can nowadays be taught by almost anybody who can turn a erflmophune on mic. pine».- thereon _any one of the large nuni- ber of light slasslcal music records thiit. appeal to youth. Among. the-st- are those of Elgar (The \V.-hid n! Youth), Plernc. Greig, and Tschalkowsky (The Nutcracker Suite). Such inuslc only rnrds to be heard by nhlldzen to elevate and educate their musical taste. There is also a wealth of foil: mttslc iii the songs of ‘he various “prirent" nations — English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh and FfeiiCh-CBT-ldlfln airs and folk-songs, the sea-chantlus collected by Sir Richard ‘ferry, the Dlantatlon songs and Negro spirit- uals, etc. (Kennedy Fraser's songs of the Hebrides are good ex.nip'»:s ‘of folk-music). Music should also find a prominent place in tne course taken by future teachers. There is a. great. opportunity here for advancing the cause o1 musical culture among the rising genera. tlon. The chance should rot be missed. I am, A sir. etc. MUSIC LOVER THE DUCK SEASON Sir-In the issue of August 13th of our Island papers I saw t-he regulations regarding shooting oi‘ migratory birds. and once again the season for shooting ducks has been set back. this time to Sept. 25, which is later than ever; also one-half hour before sunrise til; one half hour after sunset. I wonder what all this is for? Is it to shut the farmer out of a little sport? Because he will be busy gatherinz his crop and a. good number will be digging their potatoes by that time and too busv to go shooting, which will leave more room and the birds will be easier for the outsiders 0i‘ city gunners to get. I may say the last halt hour in the evening l5 the best shooting. and it we have to shoulder our guns one halt hour after sunset and go home iii-broad daylight just as the ducks are beginning to come or fly into the ponds. it is hip-h time for the farme who are feeding the rest of t e world to wake up and have t eir say in making those laws; and than the laws will not be made only to protect the shooting for IfSlOSB other than the country people. The farmers, are asked nearly every Winter to feed the Hungar- ian partridge as they gather a- round the barn yard. and I won- der whom are we to feed them for? I 1065s it is for the ones who are helping to make the shooting laws; but if those laws are not. changed back to what they were other years, instead of the farmers feeding the “huns", they wlil be helping to feed the farmers. I was at B meeting the other night and the owners of land and marshes along Pisqtiid River and Pisquid Pond below Peakes are organizing to get together and forbid trespassing during shooting season. Of course that applies to the "buns" etc.. too. unless the duck season opens on Septi 20in and one hour before sunrise till one hour after sunset as of other sears. I think some of our country gunners should get ln touch with our Members and have them see those regulations for Lhls year changed back. In closing I think it would be s. Rood idea for all people who own land in shooting districts t0 lol- iow the people In this locality and prohibit outsiders from trespass- ing if the present regulations are not. changed. A great mrany people who call themselves runners have places for shooting along rivers rented. but. they tlo “out ln the early season to shoot at our little minds and as soon as those ponds freeze a little the ducks will leave for the rivers; then the said gun- ners will go to their rented spots and of course the farmers can hen: up their nuns. Our farmers. the back bOIIe of the Province. should get together and have our sengon open Sept. 20 and shooting cue hour before till one hour after sunset. I em. Blr. etc. E. B. JAY. Peakes. P. E. I. MR. KINPS GRUESOME CONFESSION Stir-So the 20.000 odd desert- ers, draft dodgers. etc-those milk fed pets of Mr. King, with the yellow streak down their backs —ere free, while those men who at least hen the guts to no over- seas before cracking under the strain of battle and deserving. must remain u hunted meu. What a dlegustlnl climax to Mr. King's comcrliptlon llcyl What s dibxuattne camper n of Jua- tice. Not no 10m: ago the p ‘Ie of this Dominion were rtupe ed by the alarming report of Russian erplonale‘ In our country. It wee unbelievable that Russia. the al- lied nation we had helped go during the war. should It: in active in "traitor" end we cheered ae read of the prison etntenoeemet- qt out to time found guilty emu-met whom was s member of srlleinent. Thane weenie. who .I‘--.°i‘i"‘r;?»"'..‘.ri2l. are be; for in: n- ibeir Iitiloyalty with meat. and Il tit |Ive secrete to c Those men who voluntarily went overseas and to battle before desertinr: are hot Included in the amnesty. They. like the thous. ands who deserted in Canada. don't deserve it and should be punished severely. But 1f lull pardons are Iranted to deserteis, those‘ who went overseas surely deserve first consideration. They are the men who, seeing the pggt- battle gaps Ln the ranks szrow steadily larger, rend in letters from home, and in army news- papers. of the mass riesertlons "back" tn Canada. They are the men who. battle weary, heard of Col. Ralstorrs recommendations for immediate reinforcements be- ing "thrown out". and of his sub- sequent retirement. as Ddence Minister. They are the men- who heard the disheartening report of conscripts tossini! heir rifles over- board while on eir way over- seas. Their morale shaken. and unable to stand the strain of battle, they said. "What's the use?" and "to hell with it all" and deserted. But are they par- doned. like their counterparts in Canada who fled to the woods? No. they are excluded from trhe amnesty and remain as exiles in a foreign country. while those iii Canada walk into a pawn shop in Mont- real and for a few pa try pennies buy a. war service badge) are free to get themselves birth-wage lob-s. is surely a disgusting demon- stration of democratic justice. We are told that it is only a partial anm-esty. and those who are freed must forego the bene- fits. rights. etc. normallv accorded to service men. Rights? What rights have these men earnedthat they must fore-go? ‘liliey do not deserve the right to be cull ed Canadians, let alone any service rights. There is nothing artiiil about the amnesty. it is Iul and complete. We are told that granting the amnesty will save much expense and trouble to the government. Wiirit a frivolous excuse when one considers the millions of dollars spent annually in carlmz for the thousands of disabled men. who might have been well and whole- todav had they had adequate re- ‘itiforcement at the front! So far only one member (IXL. Church. RC. Torun-io-Bmudvlewt has protested against the Order- in-Councll jzrantln the amnesty- He predicted that t would “cause wide dlsunitv 1n this countridflfld said it. should be annuled. I won- der if this means that all other members are in agreement with it. 0r are they remaining silent in case further protests will delay the House recess? A-few clays aso the Prime Miri- lster toured the battle fields of France. in memory of our honour- ed dead. Iwonder, as he walked 010m: those beaches. deeply stain- ed with the blood of Canada's youth, if he did. for an iruilB-nl. remember the days when votes were considered more impcrhmt than men’; llves. end how unsuc- cessfully he filled those blank files. caused by those who fell In the defence of freedom? Speaking to a group of French dignitaries at Dieppe, Mr. King said: "for the first time I fully appreciate what our men went through". - What. a gruesome con- fession to make when tine fighting is over! Those who let their fellow men qcwn and disgraced Canada are free, but we who went overseas and were spared to return will not forget nor foritlve them n01‘ their llberators. "To you from falling hands. we throw The torch----" ‘But there was no one there to catch the falling torch. - I am. Sir. etc.. WENDELL MucILAY Provincial Sanatorlum (anyone of whom cau- ATTEIITIIIII of Trusses. All sizes. H's the Mos! Exciting Make-up In Years... ‘kmthe screen star secret that" beautifies instantly. Originated by . /”ax 7402b?" HOLLYWOOD _ Orders Given Prompt Attention Mail i The 2 Macs i ‘AT-GP fuel?’ x THOUGHTS (On visiting a Veterans’ Hospital) We walked through the where our comrades are lying, 0! d!‘ 8: Lost and forgotten, yet living some- how, The battles they fought in are history now. We walked through the wards where our comrades are lying. Young to be faced yv-lth a future of dying; t Still ln their glory and showered with praise. rest. or their days. walked through the We vtvirds a where our CUIIITRGCS are lying. There wits a faflier and there a son, dying; Dying together, the father and son, A war Ls not over the day it ll won. --Wlilia.m D. DeCoste. Canadian Army, Charlottetown. P. E. I. August 20th, 1946. Summer’ s Last Long Week-Bud OOODXoIaQ from I200 noon, Irida , uq. until 2.00 pan. Hon y. Sophfln , 1946. RETURN: have destination not later than midniqlat Tneeday, Sent. 3rd, i946. (Ehrmerly of Charlottetown.) u , ) 630 '-' P5405: that beck AhIW siui the “'15., - Mir. 14a: . . . , ,.- ._ “n. .- .- “I'm m Inlet-noted la youripoliileel views-now ielre one with the Guardian Wat i . l), We carry a complete line’ wards Spent with the effort of long years II But. robbed of their youth for the AUGUST B. F. lltllehem 8r Sllll I OYPTOMETRISTQ “Specialists I ' "n! 0f glamsels fill: gggti-se-gtlon oi.’ ocular is. 53 Grafton Street Professional Bari: NEIL w. mounts Chartered A 144 rr.i...§.°.‘,l"‘§%“‘ Charlottetown Tel. 559 p_()_ B“ PUBLIC STl-JNOG Mlmttllfflphln‘ “m. ‘lzsuslli wPPfllmndence. Iypln‘ u‘ booklteepln; MISS IIELEN oinmur ‘Telephone 10-30 iayeningg 1390_J_ l 0. Bu; 45g 103 Queen Streeg vovoocovoov o oeo w< t," lvlllrrfilluiid fiflmpany cur-mm Acgqnnun“ Eulern Trust Buildln‘ Chnriotteluwu °+4¢++o+ ‘L H. R. IIOANE & (;()_ Chartered Accountant; I3 Grafton Street, Charlottetown llmne zoao m, lllnflolnh w. Manning, d; {o-ooovoo-M-o l McLeod & Bentley w. r. BENTLEY. ice, J. a BENTLEY. kc, Barrister! and Alforneypfl Law use Prince Street Charles R. Mcquaid. ILA. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary. Etc. Eastern Trust Building, Charlottetown Phone III! BELL s. MA-ruiiisoiq Barristers. Solicitors, M. B. R. BELL, M.I..A., D. L. MATIIIESON, LLB, ll; Attorneys-iat-Law LOANS 0N CITY AND FABI PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS I50 Richmond St. Churiottetnwn P.E.I. FREDI-JIIIC A. LARGE BARRISTER, ETC. Phillips Building, Ill Grafton Phone I048 P. 0 Bo! a CHABLOTTETOWN. IKE-L x DR. A. R. SMITH IIENTIST m urrrmn sum l Offioellours: BtoIZ-Ziol‘ Telephone 128i. o veo-oeo-caa-ooc-oooc-cvweoo ‘ ALEX W MATHIESON eaaittsrsu. soucnoir. m Officer 00> Great GCOIKP Stmt Money to Loan Collcelll J. A. Mt-GUIGAN. ILA. NOTARY. ETC. l BABRISTEII, SULIHTOI CURRIE BUILDING M. ALIZAN FARMER n.A.. LLB. MONEY T0 was nanttisrizit. SULIUITUR. e10- CIIARLOTTI-ITOWN Canadian Rank of Commerce hlll GAUDET £9 HASZARD Blfriltere Solicitors Noterlel III MONEY T!) LOAN GILBERT A. lsAiim-ri ILA. LLB A. WALTIIEN GAUIIET LLB Ulnldiln Bunk ot (Jouimt-rre Charlottetown. P l TH llli. W. ll. Ollhwlll Chiropractor Palmer Graduate . Charlottetown m Prince so. rho-v "l" PALMER s. l-IASLAM a. l. IIASLAM. ma. 1.1-1 BAIlltlSTI-JB, crc. ' Bank of Nova Scntla (‘hsnibtfl Charlottetown. r. in“ L MONEY ro toil. Phony 35 E0. B" u {ii u. F McPI-IEE. BA. K-Q NOTARY. ETC. nartnti-irnn- numcrroll ' lites Building (‘hurl-PW ooooeoaoonwwew"*“ Eves EXAMINED v imp GLASSES FITTED .1. S. Tail"! ~ OPTIIMETRIST l . “w.” ;,,,¢ ma nuven l HI 1|» I,“ Innings ti. Avlfllllhmn’. .........i Ilene: mm» AAQ“§*.M vwwv "4 ., Vi‘, =__ c~,.