v v Vhoolthy on PA?..i-; rook THE UUAK... t;HAiu.o'ri:i-:'rowiv MAY 5, 1956 TIIEAGUARD-IAN Aim-nliig Ibnlly II"-Iunilrcl In MN?) Aiuliurmnl is. Invalid ("III Ilull l'mul tllflcv lluimrlmo-ul. Oiinviu llir I-luiul him:-mun lmnlnililiu ('u Mlilm ll iluiiiixiug Illrolvlur J It nun..." -kw-nriulo Eclllur. Frank Hulls:-r "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than! the Weakest Ink." CH:illl.U'I"l'I'."I'llWN FIHDAY. MAY 6. I950 (Best Pliini or All Other vacant Senatorial chairs are being-, filled at Ottawa, but not yet that of Princi- Edward island's. The Prime Minister, hon- evcr, has li"i)aIl8iy intimated that he aware of tiie vacaiicy in this Province. al the same time rebuking lllr-. McL.ure for as stiniing that it will iicccssarily be filled by :i Queen's Coiiiity applicant. Senators, he points out, tll't rcpi'cseiitativcs of their Prov iiiccs, which iiieaiis in theory that the ni:iii tie of the late Senator Sinclair may fall on any cieserviiig island democrat. As Mi. Bruce Hutchison writes in an entertaining article in the Winnipeg Free Press. no Cana- dian boy is born so poor, none is so undc:- pi'iviIcqc(l. lr.ickwzii'd and uiipromisiiig that lie iii:i,i liUi look ahead and hope. some day. to enter the Sciiiitc. Out of only fotirte-.-;i iiiillioii people 1012 inevitably must become Senators. Everybody has his chance. Mr. llutcliison recaflts that when his first child was boi-ii he peered through the wir- (Iow of the maternity ward, looked at his sleeping iiil'aiit's face and knew instantly that it was the face of a Senator. All the dozen new-borii faces in that ward had an iiiiinistakiiblc Senatorial look. One would have sworn that it was the Senate in ses- sion. ' ”i-ioii'evci'," he adds. ”a man must un- (lei-go a painful apprenticeship before he can hope to be a Senator. He must spend ap proximately sixty years in the study of our public affairs and iii the right party. The youth who would prepare himself for this highest profession must canvass voters, rirg rloorbells, raise campaign funds alid. for three score years, sacrifice his private con- venience to the public good: and even after he has succeeded he must risk the hardship of going to Ottawa for several weeks a year. usually in inid-winter, and listening without complaint to the speeches of his colleagues- truly an ordeal by fire, or at least by wind. "In every Canadian breast the great hope burns bright. Whenever his fortunes are low, when his bills are unpaid and his children starving, every Canadian. or at least every Liberal Canadian, comforts him- self with the knowledge that, at any mo- ment, the phone from Ottawa may ring and he will be invited into the Senate. And there alone, despite the labor of debate ard the rigorous duty of approving everything done in the Commons--there alone can real social security be found." 15 Economic Tendencies Questioning the grave tendencies to- wards a planned economy for Canada, Mr. Perry S. Bower, president of the Dominion Mortgage and Investment Association, de- clared in his presidential address at the an- nual meeting of the Association in Toronto yesterday, that there is a growing appre- hension that our personal liberties and rights may be irrevocably prejudiced. The new conception of government on- visages a much greater responsibility for the redistribution of wealth and income, by means of large payments to various groups in the economy. Taxation and the control of prices of certain commodities and inter- est rates are instruments for redistribii- tion of income. Mr. Bower deplored the entrance of government directly into indiis- try but felt that already there was a tight- ening of public opinion against it. He fear- ed. however. an unconscious drifting into a fully controlled economy. This movement will probably be accompanied by a rising standard of living, ”not because of it, but rather in spite of it." "The economic advantages and the op- portunities for a population such as ours," Mr. Bower concludes, "are tremendous. Such planning as we are likely to have for the foreseeable future may be frequently tinged with varying amounts of political considera- tions. Nevertheless, it can hardly prevent us from savoring in our standards of liv- ing sonie of the effects of so favorable in combination of factors. Further, we are essentially an individualistic society welded on democratic principles. We have strong vicivs on personal liberties and rights. I think we have every reason to believe that these will continue to assert themselves. As our educational background increases, so does our appreciation of the lessons of his- tory. With this comes an increasing real- ization of the consequences of our acts as individuals and as a society. A growing up- prehension (hit our personal liberties and rights in be pnejudiced is, therefore, a g. In the end, it is one of the EDITORIAL NOTES The City street committee seems to have learned the elementary lesson that the most economical street is the one that" re mains the longest time for money expended. I O O The many young people from out of town, their parents, and members of the Women's Institutes will be greatly missed from our streets and homes aftei" today, the conclusion of the greatest Musical Festival ever. 0 There is a curious tendency for Spring cleaning to be done earlier each year. The trend has a definite advantage from a man's point of view. The inside job is likely to be finished by the time it is possible to tackle outside ones. 9 O I it is easy to criticize U. N. secretary- gciieral Trygve Lie for even attempting a peace mission to Moscow, but the Western world would hardly be forgiven for neglect- ing even remote chances for reaching an understanding with that country's rulers. O I I Moiitrealls taxing of purchases made anywhere by Moiitrealers amounts, as the Toronto Financial Post points out, to an all.- tempt to shut off outside trade. we might add that so far as it applies to purchases outside the Province, it is very probably unconstitutional. O 0 A group of six Fredericton high school students have been suspended and may be expelled following an unauthorized basket- ball game with Saint John juveniles. The group are alleged to have "shipped" classes in order to take part in the game. Among the six suspended students are the valedic- torian and class president of the i950 gradu- ating class. Churchill and Truman have one thing in common, insults from their opponents. Tru- man was recently called "tlic clcverest poli- tician and the worst President ever to oc- cupy the White House." Churclilll, accord- ing to Defence Minister Shinwell, is "arro- gant, mischievous. irresponsible and as trici-:,v as a bag of monkeys." I O U The late Ivan Reddin was a popular figure here for many years before he went west. Both he and his wife belonged to old and popular families, and he himself was one of "the boys" in sport and pastimes before settling down to business. His father, the late Mr. D. O'M. Reddin, was for long one of the most popular druggi-sts here; while his father-in-law. the late Dr. Stephen Jenkins, was in his day a most popular surgeon and medical doctor. 0 I O Mixtures of grass and alfalfa seed are available to Saskatchewan farmers at cost price under the province's 1950 forage crop program. A million pounds of seed were distributed under the 1949 program. Urging farmers to seed one acre in grass- alfalfa per head of cattle on the farm, Mr. Nollet, Minister of Agriculture, said an in- crease in forage crop acreage was necessary to meet present requirements of the prov- incels livestock population and build up re- serves for emergency years. Movement of hayiwas no longer economically sound be- cause of high freight rates, so producers would have to take every means possible to grow their own. O O 0 Napoleon Bonaparte, the Stalin of the eighteenth century. died this date 1821. He had a great time while it lasted, trampling nations under his feet, and laying the foundation for an anti-Christ movement which had its repercussion long after his death. He was a master military strategist, and usually made his plans practically foo'- proof, till the battle of Waterloo when he miscalculated the reserves Wellington had at his command. At one time, almost every muntry in Europe lived in daily dread of an invasion by Napoleon's "unconquered army and invincible navy", just as they were of Hitler's airplanes. Ultimately Na- poleon met his fate, just as Hitler did, and which, more than probably, Stalin will. 0 I 0 Mr. Gardiner has announced that the Government is going to adopt a new farm marketing policy, which is supposed, accord- ing to rumours, to be the creation of com- pulsory, farmer-operated pools for various products, says The Letter-Review. The im- nouncement was made by Mr. Gardiner as a fait accompii, without his having yet com- municated his intentions to Parliament. Min- ister of Agriculture says that he has shown now that he can market butter very cheaply, the Government only losing V2C per lb. on its operations for a year, while private business would have wanted several cents per lb. spread. Private business might not be able to borrow money at less than 396. Private business might not be able to use the whole otaff'of the Department of Agri- culture, including s battalion of publicity agents, without paying for these services. it is much easier to do business when the tax- "gqox-nwiilooo,epttliolouu.g 1.-i.i-i.-i.n.-.-u5-i.-vi.i-u-s-i.-s-v-u-i.-e-i.-..-.- , PUB! IC FUR UM l'tnls column ll upon to the illwuulon by ciinrespuiidentl at mwotlun; if interest. The Guardian u"C' Mn necessar- Ily ondorue the opinion of cnrnsspondenu. -&55555N 5N'-f PBEFERS TAVERNS TO JOINTS Sir.-I have ,been looking over the statistics of the Liquor Com- mission and i find that besides all the shellac and shaving lotion that is being consumed in the Province there is an unbelievable amount of illegal liquor on the market. And besides all this we have to take into consideration the liquor be- ing imported from Nova Scotla and New Brunswick. What thr Temperance Commission is doing to stop such, traffic besides a lot of talking I haven't been able to find out. i have visited several Provinces in Canada but never have i seen so many drunks in the streets as l have in Cliarioiieiuwii and Sum- mcrside. I also have visited sev- eral villages in the Province where l have obtained liquor very easily". in the village of North Rustic.) in particular I was given a choice of five places. in Tignish there were six. I cannot hazard to guus how many them are in Charlottetown And yet. our Temperance Act does at permit these outlets. And it seems strange to me that on the island, where there is prohibition. there are so many bootlegging joints per village in comparison with other Provinces such as Oii- tario and Quebec which have but one or two taverns per village and where there is no prohibition. .- Silrlu Blossoms Mark Twain once said that the nuirtrer of old maids controlled the number of cats. Maybe he could have said that they control liquor houses too. Or maybe they control the Liberal governnient being as it seems to be in favor of the i'c-partition of wealth. The Situation Before The Western Foreign Ministers iBy iv. N. Ewer) One way to close all ihesr . boollegging juims i, to have The meeting of the tliiee Foreign licensed liquor houses irlierc MU1i51f-V8 in 1401745013 15 C51'i-8111-1l' being well prepared. The British. American and Frerich hadvance parties" of high officials and ex- ports will have put. in s. fertnighvs hard work before their chieifs meet. which is very wise. For the subject matter of the meeting is really nothing less than a world situation. The job of the working parties is to go over that whole wide field and select a few niajor problems on which the Ministers can con- centrate. some will be "major" be- cause of their intrinsic importance, some because they are matters of immediate difficulty or divergence of opinion between the three count.- ries. And some tune has to be left. for what one may call "new ideas" --like M. Bidaultfs suggestion ofa l-iigli Atlantic Council or Mr. Tru- man's proposals for a joint. inter- national piiibliclty campaign for democratic ideas. But. of course, as wide and com- plex as the questions are which will come under review. they all centre round the one big problem of relations between the "two liquor is cheaper and better than what the bootleggers sell. I am. Sir. etc.. JAMES Macl'iAE. Halifax. N S. 7036 Q54 OPUS The piano lives in R dusli Where rich amber lights Qi.iiver obscurely. it exists only at twilight, And somewhere star In the depths of a tropic forest. The sun is new setting, and the Phoenix locks Mrsteriously toward the gold. 50 I think I must have been born in . such a forest, camps" when the hiitusters ialli. Or in the l.:mglc of a Chinese about Germany they will talk M'TC8II- about Russia. When they talk of the Japanese Pence Tiesty they There is indigo in t-his music: will talk about Russia. when they This dusk is filled with amber talk about atomic energy they iviu th h h V ,, lights: talk about. Russia. It is hard to , e.. 9” i 9 f?””' d” The" Through the tangled evening of think of a. theme which can be an he sud be ”” wreememi Au WCIWCII GClId.'. , , . , there can be no npproachtio agree- heavy flower-scents discussed without Russia coming m M uni id 1 H. 8 . Come footfalls into it somehow. Rh .n',e5s.one ea 5 done "May ' ' JOIIII Po NICIICISCII. That surely 1 can almost rema:ii- ' ' ' 1'” ' I” '5 "” id” ii! Wmsir aannis-rm. SOLICITOB. me. her. For. when all is said and done. cicdgngoghgigl Euwgfion gm Pm"-'9' mind-'33 Ll-'3' . the dominant question is that of ,0 d '3'” I"-YY I 301! ll! 111 annon '-moot g -"Mme Km!” the ”cold was”. Is there any ohamel&,,?'fff,B" ';”fr”e ”"1j'm5'”-f'P”!”"' Money in Low coiieeuoiu BABRIETEB. souoiron. or ending no 11 not, -how is it w' ., H 0 99 00 V98 NIT! ........m-..-.---A:-j E941. II ' ' - - ""T”””"”qi be ,?Va89f,1 50 PM? W”'””” Yleldimgfi Palmer 8: HGSIGIII IM Prince St... cirtown. & Old Lha,l"ueg.,w" glow ccfglrilgegsggegsumtyzracpzn met d NEW BARRIERS N BERLIN A. J. HASLAM. B.A., u..n PHONE 2333 'l P -L it t” .."'”i2”":l".i ;".::i:l an M - v- asses-i.nen o ie 5 us 0 n 1 - f possibilities is the assessment of BER!-I,N. May 4 .. (AP) - East cMh"o,';';:',f".;.'(;"'u:f;,L the real intciition of the soviet. Gerlhanys Communist rulers 1115- D p L M '50. "HONI SOIT ..." Government. At. the moment, Sov- edtgewlilzarriers today ' trade r' ' t 'c c . . - - - ti w A id- ”Found. betwecri the Market :1; tI;o)pEiIgcaI'II::t tii:lli:eeiimfoerw;Eo,cg They esiubiiC:ii'e'ii1e:rii,i:".,:B,f;iic'i; cMs' R' DENTIST goatsew::eigI.ird331::w3:h: laglygs angwtiic p0s(sibllit.y,' of peaceful gontaal pignts charged with in- 9.; Dental X-luy r. 5 . s " ease cc n a - - owner may receive the same on :(,:n'lpEl?I::i0ll")m:)lI1ctI?8IeIIWO gystemt lgnll lgzzlzgatfgifiiduixcitdvgle 'A.3lsTlB' s0umTou' GLDMA BUILDING application at the Private scci-e- Does this liidlciine genuine desire. from the surrounding soviet OE- NOTARY. 3145-. I "9 G'”'0" sir iui-ys Office. upon producing the izcnuiiiewllllngness on the part. of cupution zone. llutorn Trull --ulldlnl Phone 291 fellow to it. and paying the cx- the Kremlin to iciicli B. defence Only German trade and travel UllABb0'l'rETtIWr penses of this advert.lsenient." with the West. to call. at any rate. was affected. The purpose, the Phone "III a truce in the cold war? Is there East-German authorities said, was , - Prince Edward island Register, And-a siniiter development- they are showing (as at. one time in pi-e-Hitler Germany) a iendlness to cooperate in violence with the reviving Fascism. Now. the importance of this is that these are not tactics of is genuinely revolutdon-ary party. seeking power. They run directly counter to all Lenin's teaching on revolutionary tactics, Their pur- Jose is clearly simply to create trouble for the Western Govem- ments, to impede economic recov- ery. to hamper the reorganization of national defences. They have nothing to do with ideological Communism, still less with the welfare of the working classes, They are a form of partisan war- fare-cold partisan wii.rfai'e-in- tended to weaken tliosc Govern- ment: and those countries which the Russians regard as their enemies . I I C l ' - ' Notes By The Way - fl ovum the United Kingdom 1940 Mr. McKoll was leader of in. there us new four Socln lst. Gov- New South wales Labor Party, gm ei-nments-in Denmark, l-inlund, uttered some expressions aim", Norway and Sweden. But nore of Mr. Cameron. then leader or an them, in face of the present world Federal Countiy Party. which M" situation, is now extaiidtiig nst.ion- latter. called "tine most pa;-sum; situation. They aim at: a Welfare attack I have ever been subjected State but are leaving Ol'd'IIlIl'y in- to in my life". Mr. Omicron w.-on dustry enterprise free to produce to the Governor General, lnzmm, the resources required to SUPPOIT I118 "Hit he did not desire to ncccpi it. In extending nationalization as the hospitality cf one who presiim. it is now doing the labor Clovei-n- ably still held the same view ubou, ment. is alone in Western Europe. his. Mr. Cameron's character: nu in the Governor Geneiul did in the Comnioiiweaith, not reply whole of the free world. - Sir Ar- The Prime Minister moved an thur Salter in the Mniichester closure on the ground that the Co. Gum-dign, bate was harmful to the office oi ...- the Governor General and to th. A firm lieliovrr in personal econ- House, and this was carried on , cimy is the well-known Hearst edl- party vote of 60 to 43. This is Q" for. Waller Howey. A salesman once precise kind of danger which ,, i endeavoured to interest Howey in always rendered possible by lh, a hearing old which sold for sev- appointment. as represent.at.ii'e 0, eral hundred dollars. "Oh, I (an the Crown of :1 person who ha, get along with soniethiiig much been active in political conflict, u cheaper than that". the editor told the country where he is to serve - him "You just wait. here a. rr(11ln- Toronto Saturday Night, ute, and I'll show you." Howey 3- . appeared into the inner recesses ofil Tourists this your will ileum; his private office. and a few mom- more for their money than eve; ants lam reappeared with a tlnwbefore, according to Hon. Hsraic wire running H his vest pooh Connolly. Nova Scotla Minister at of to his ear, This . he DTOCIBI-Hlfdn. Trade and Industry That is easy Lean purchased for a. few s to believe, for the some pi-lncipiq That. the salesman hootcd. ow is guiding many 01 us, we are shop, can a little scrap of wire help.yDu ping for goods and services today; to hear?" Howey, laughed. ”llVh8-I1 we are watching our pennies. And people see this: he relotned-. 'They with a greater variety offering we will talk louder" - Wall Street can afford to be more choosy. so Journal. can the tourist. The free spendui; lot the first few years after the our , g is ended, Tourists are shopping in: :::",,';r:TS'hb'::v:;r'Sn '3) Pa; for vacations and looking for T31. Chinese Information Bureau of ucs-which is certainly their rlzht Jlhis is not mere. academic specula- Slfs 2:515" gAlgT11k;';gi:::'whghl;': tion. although it is E thesis on mntmd Mr Mich”! shnmm... POL could accept. but ii. ststmient of meal mnocgms should perhaps be fact based on analyses of tourist told that these ..nd,,,su.5.. come spending in this Province in 1947. neither (mm the Foreim Omce mm, 1948 and 1949. The analyses show from the Brmsh chum". My that. although ii! are attracting springhsll was the national or- '"""e m"”5u' they "'9 spend!” mim of the British Communist 1”” ”" W ”V”,”"' Md '4” 53"” any mm he got seven yes” in thing is genenii.y true in other 1943 hr breaches of the secrets parts of North America. It. does Act some of ms early ymrs we” not. mean disaster. It might; even. spam in the R”? Navy. It is heuevg -prove ll. good thing for our tourist ed he was thefman who mmrned business. When customers are de- nom Moscow law "I 1939 with me mending and selective. we are put directive which. overnight, revers- M W" meme "3 pmvld” 5”” N P t . services. And when we do that, we glmgldee wiirnslvlgnmay Sail): lay solid foundations for a. lasting . business. To operate in 3. slipshod ghfl tales: H Tirgw I; llmimncr. Just. because people were niievvs E ersl - London Cbser- .spe"dmg Heel” would be I” -WU” run P p 'pardlze our future economy for the "ri .suke of an easy dollar or two today. lunch better prove ourselves good .hosf.s, in the interests of economy Cuudinns who are pushing for It is IlflJ'd to resist the conclus-' the appointment of a native Gov- ion that propaganda about peace ernor General would do well to oh- and peaceful co-existence is no serve carefully the way in which land of self-respect. Halifax Chron- isle-Herald. genuine expression of any genuine desire. but is rather a form of "psychological warfare." intended to create illusions, to confuse opin- ion and to divide counsels. Here, then, is surely the kernel of the whole matter. All Western statesimcn as all Western peoples would be glad to see the cold war ended. But the cold war can only end if Russia is prepared to cease waging it. And of thiit. so far, she gives not the least sign. she is waiting it as vigorously and im- scrupulously as ever. i Dean Acheson hit, the nail on Sept. 25. 1827 an opportunity which wise states: to mp, --unlicensed tmdec and ---- . . manship could and would seize? I. smuggun of (.0 dm yvordsworlli might. be so For Russia. as well as the soviegt mm, "mm es wt M the West, must be finding the in- ' , TT”' definite prolongation of the cold 1.- iw””"W3 WEE FWW war both a costly and an a.nxlou.s ORMER RUSSIAN "Wm" The cent narg or wii- ”"5”””-. Th” if 3 P085"'l”W All the turn of the t. woi-dswort.h'sedeai.li has iusi'bi?J.' lvmiifligujwalllziaal be cverlwked 1" me Ru ' empire extendeiimfruoriz bs - ' - h 0 and by the Brmsh peoplm " But. unhoPDil)'. Soviet Practice Shag: o";ttht:eaefI::'3&:::' '0 "19 rather by that minute fragment. of the public which is interested in DON-13'. Willi a. most. refreshing lack of solemnity. His contempor. arles were quick to poke fun at him. for he won the pmphoh mantle. in truth. with an nwkiwud posture and there is no reason why we should stiffen him into an in- stltutlon. De Quincey described his face as "certainly the noblest for intellec- tual effects that I have seen.' Well. there were other opinions. Carlyle spoke of him as n. "cold. hard, silent, prootlcnl man", with "stem blue eyes superior to men and circumstances" and his "lin- mense head and great jams like I crocodile. out in I. mould do- slgned for prodigious work." Enri- erson msrked him as a. "plain, ol- derlyhwhite-hstred man, not pro- posscsalna. who lsld down the low on the subject of America. of which he knew little, and talked mound of liot.enLrig", and whose unity led him to recite his poems unnkod to his visitor which mode Emerson comment wryiy: "he. the old Wordsworth. sun sport and reciting to me in nrdon walk, like 5. schoolboy doclolmlng." Hus.- iitt sold to Lander: "But you have seen a horse, I suppose? Well. Sir. if you have seen I horse, I mean his hand, sir. you may any you have seensworilowort-ll. Sir." Yet. this may man. whose toik of mountains would luvs aroused the onset of Dr. Johnson In It often owlklled the wine mirth of Charles Lunb. could on occasion touch men's hearts to s vfolon of the IYOIG truths, which nbido.in- who our reach Ind give in the healing gm of puom. is to contradict Soviet propaganda. The tone of soviet. diplomacy is consistently hush. insolent: and hostile-not the least the tone of men who would like to "make friends”. There is no cessation: of tho five behaviour of the satellite Ciovernments. There is something like on open that of I new attempt to drive the Western Allies out of Ber- lin. And very different props.- gsnds for intamnl mmuinpuon ceaselessly tries to arouse, the mu-ed of western countiles, of Western institutions and Western Governments on enemies of the "people's democracies", sending spies Ind nboteurs to wreck their economies. and plotting to "un- ieuh A third world was-" ogolnst. them. This. too, is hardly consist.- ont with the professed desire for o "peaceful Even more important I; the foot that Russia continues to Inge tho cold war by -every moms in his power. The chooon method of tho inommt is thst. cl Guorllls tuition. Thntlsnotanlysoinsoiithlut Ash. Tho Communist portion of n-nnco and Italy Ito using 1 mod- ified version ofgtho nme.wct.ioo. Their oi-dors now no to use and provoke vlolmco ..henvoi- possible; kings llldwl-Ill swollen convulnlvs. pangs of on In of snxicty. have calm and gone. Thty have not touched the sufumiisl sadness of his vine. its note of meditation. of beauty fiuhinc Inc. had its voice or otdorod freedom spacious no tho on. It is the mystery and russursnce of poetry. in when BUYING Scrap iron, steel, old hat- SPIOS. gar radiation, loud. pper nos. an of vaiiie in that u.:?".i"o25 prices paid. Write, phone or see- B. GABSON & SON, '1':-onion Road. New Glasgow. N.S' Pliolo 611 Eloctrloal cutricur WIIDIO AND IEAIIINO IINIIT I. IAIIIAI. no III In this I008: T OUR SALVAGE MARIE! sour on bananas. in. ouo Ion out what nut. ..... .. .. recur ontr sign, for In no: OOWIIIII ....-.... uolslntsid" lb. oInon'.......... Clo Abovo prlwg: dollvonl our IIIIIGE ILOGK 3 60. Ill IOIOIO. - Qlllltbhwn A himdnvd YG-Il.' allied with maple "veiled Melnnchol, his her wuoutdkhpfolllni-Ikrotlvvnlohnno.” ' c i- - ----moot-oooiatroucro-troop iiie Age-Old Story -3' JQQROQQEJQO ';E0.iC'.9?i CV3! Lei" .'.'.”? '1' C10 such an appointinent. is working out in Australia There was nearly an hour of ac.imonlou.s debate in the Canberra House of Representa- tives at the end of last month, on in question asked from the Labor benches, about the action of the Speaker, Mr. A. 6. Cameron, in declining the hospitality of the Governor Cvenei-iii. Mi. Mcxell. In PROFESSIONAL CARDS To him that ordereth his con- vorutlon night will show the psi- vnfion of God. Boll & I Mcifhieson IIAIllll.N"I'I?.Il!-l. 80l.ltll'l'UR5. Ml: It It 8I'.'l.l., flI.A.. . D L tlI.'HlIlIlGSON. I B.. 8.0. Attorneys It (AW LOANS (IN lllfllh AND FARM l'lt0Pl':ll1lIE5 Ibtl ltlohmond SI (ll-nrlottoluwn PJEJ M. Albon Farmei MONEY T0 LOAN B.A.. LLB. ILIIlB'l'I9R. S0l.I(ll'll0Il. W (Inlotbtown. P E I. - Dr. W. R. Carson ' 'jF Frederic A. Large. l(.C. IABRISTEB. 10l..I(lI'l' IR NOT ARV 3o.vu.uu:k ol Unnndn UIIIIIIDISII Charlottetown, t.E.a Successor George I. Pwoedy. ILU MocPhoo & Ti-uuior B. F. MMPHEE, 1.5., ILL I .80MEIlI.I'.'I) I'BAlN0't. BA Burl-tours. Elie. looinbs Bldg. I05 Queen SI. Ouudof & Hciszord GILBERT A. GAUDET. Il.A.. LL! Barristers Ind Solicitors Money to Loan Uhlrnpnnuw Cnnullsn hunk of Commerce Bldg. Palmer (ifldlllll Clllrlottowwn (ll-lAItI.01'Tl'l'l'0Wh ml Prlnnv til. Plume "'73 optometrist G h.so ' A. W IOIATIIESON K.C. A. ll PIAKF. 8.A. I.l.B Ioniousru. ow slolloottnns Mon 0 to IAIIII II Grim uoorn st:-or-I chm-lotto Ino ontnlned. glsliu fit- at Ool-not lonl O Quota Sh. Ollloo Phone um-now im nu-I Mb no , i I nnusgng soi.'iunoi.. nu. "' :J":SG”I9"' mu - "0 ' onto?! m BABIIBTEI. sm.ii:i1-on Inn; to loan uolloouoiv qungm uunnma guanmwn II. R. DOANII I GO. Mtman Chnrtored Aoonunlnnto ----- ..:i.;.?:'t.'”.i"”.'”"J' . I;--v 0--ow ....... it .':'.."'o.r PIIPO ""l'”-I0 Phonon: tart." GA". Box 265 M(;P0NTA'I;D. OUBBIE 8, O0. ' MAI so sccounnms r M'nv'r-tI- 0--bola. othi:s.ur:conu. was John. simimoine. IIOOIVQI. than QQQQQ, Quotcwn. 0""! I'll-. Qlurlotmown .. M onnhiophone I68! 2.. ..-