PAGE FOUR 7* r I‘ TIIE GIIIRLIITTETOWII GIIIIIIDIAI Homing Dally (Founded In 1N7) Althorlasd as Second Class MAIL Post 08km Department, Ottawa. President, 1m A. Burnett; Vice-Positions, Will. H. Burnett; Seem-Tress, G. M. Burnett; Editor and Innaging Director, J. B. “ AIIWII" E519"- Pnnk Walker. . “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Till the Weakest Ink.‘ SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1|, 1946 Welcome yisitors ft is a trihtitc to the reputation enjoyed by Prince Edward lslziud as a tourist centre that the IIICIIIIJQTS of the Canadian \Veekly News- papcrs Association, who have been holdting their first post-war convention in Halifax, should decide to pay us a visit over the week- end. Thcv will be entertained at Charlotte- sfown and Stuiinierside during their two-day stay, atid will see something of our National Park and other attractions as well. Coming by plane, they will get a bird's eye view of the whole Isl:ii1d if the weather today proves favor- able, and therc is no doubt but that like other visitors they will be pleased with what they see. ThgC. \\'. N. A. is representative of news- paper nicn and women from coast to coast, and no bcttci‘ mcaiis of advertising otir tourist ad- vantages could be conceived than that of liav- ing them visit us in a body. But that is really a secondary consideration. They are Chlclll‘ to he ivclconictl on their own account, as un- official ambassadors of goodwill from 0U!‘ sistcr provinces. and potcfll Slloliesme" of "a" tional unity and of those ideals of frcedoiiialid democracy, which we claim as otir richest heritage. Social‘ Penicillin _ Nearly forty years ago, says the Hamilton Spectator, a man discovered a sort of social penicillin which has done more, perhaps, than any other modern curative agent to keep soc- iety sane and healthy. That man was Baden- Powell and his discovery was the Boy Scout movcineut, without which democracy itself might not have survived. The mental hospitals of the nation are crowded but there are no neurotics among the Boy Scouts. Crime alarms the public but not Scout Leaders. Prominent men deplore youth's lack of aggression but they will not find Scouters lacking in initiative. Neither will team spirit be found lackng in Boy Scout troops. Bad as things may be, they would be worse, the social organism would be more ill than it is, had there been no Boy Scout move- merit. Baden-Powell's discovery was hailed throughout the world, and his movement spread to every land. It appealed to youth and was encouraged by their parents. Everywhere its beneficicnt effects became apparent. The dic- tators hated it, for it developed in the young ideas of freedom and honour which were in- imical to tyranny. All over Europe the B0)’ Scout movement ivas suppressed entirely or compelled to exist. as a junior underground activity. ' lut Scouting in Etirope is coming back. Already, it is on its feet, and to this recovery 31¢ hundred thousand Boy Scouts of Canada have contributed through their characteristic- ally-named Chins Up Fund. Lord Rowallen, Chief Scout of the British Commonwealth and- Empire, the successor of the immortal Baden- Powell, whose visit to Canada at this time ls a most welcome one, has voiced his at? preciation of this generous act by Canadian boys. _ The 'Boy Scout movement has been 911d the sincerest compliment of imitation, for at home and abroad other organizations have emulated its methods and ideals, so its influ- ence has also been indirect. Critics of Scout- ing are usually tiiiinforiiied. were it 0ll1€FW15¢ they would never seriously attack an organ- ization which teaches the young 110110111‘. mill‘ ative, team-play, the helping of others and the love of home, country and religion. The Only danger to Scouting, a danger to which every movement is subject, is that it shall fall below the standards of its originator. _ Whyqnughe Boy Scouts meat in France next year at their international _ Iain- boree, Canadians generally can take Dflflt! "1 this evidence of the renaissance of world Scouting, to which otir youth have contribut- ed so mticli. It will be a peace conference in which harmony will prevail, the sign, Id Isl hops of the growing unity of youth. Industrial Paradox Unctupluynlflll; compensation in the United States varies in amount from state t0 state but averages somewhere around- $20 a week. It is Coon-contributory and iii theory is payable only to persons unable to obtain a job. But the manner in which it is operated has left the country in the peculiar condition of having a labor shortage and unemployment at the same time; ' Attention was called to the abuses that hgvg grownup in its ooerationtby the Baltimore Sim-which conducted an enillllfv in its 0W0 vicinity. Subsequently other agencies made Investigations and the New York Tum-r ac- cepts the figures supplied by an agency called the Current Survey of Business showing i,- n receiving compensation while sev- ohl films t. t number sremeeded by industry ' liid-bushichsfl, ‘ Th; ' uiry by the Baltimore paper re- flla coiljléngiition payments have hi; In the naturqnf a racket. ' live on $10‘; week in ped s host of tricks by - "W "a" just as far ahead with $20 from the unemploy- ment fund. That is to say, by the time taxes, union dues check off, carfare and lunch money have been taken out of the $30 pay, he is down to the unemployment level of income. . _ There are, of course, other factors mak- ing for a large body of unemployed at the time that industry and business is crying for help. There are nearly 2,000,000 veterans still re- ceiving readjustment allowances and many of them want a holiday. And there are local con- ditions causing idleness in limited areas. But the fact that unemployment compen- sation can be obtained so easily and ivithout undue questioning of circumstances is generally credited with being the chief factor. The abuses which have crept into the system, the Baltimore paper asserts, are no reason for ab- andoning the principle of unemployment com- pcnsation but it points out -that “neither iii- dustrial stability nor human dignity is proiiiot- ed by a. system which rewards men for idling.” @- EDI IURIAL NOTES = Brazil "my be an itiiportatut additional Outlet for_our seed DOtatocs. Its possibilities have previously been explored by Messm Boulter and Thompson. ##1##‘ No fewer than :30 candidates wifl contest the 75 seats in the Australian House of Rep- "Selllallvfi. (l9 the I9 vacancies in the Sen- ate on 28th inst. Figures for the i943 elec- tions were 343 and 7o. * >i< * i- Herc is a good way of sizing up next Tuesdays by-clection results in Second Prince. If the Government retains roughly its vote of the last ‘election, the result will have little sig- nificance. If its majority is I‘(‘(lllC€(I substan- tially, it niczuis the liovcrunicnt is going down. hill. If the Government candidate should be defeated, then the handwriting for it will in- deed be on the wall. >l< s u a What should a woman preacher wear in the pulpit? The question ivas discussed by the United Church Women‘ Workers at Winnipeg. At the closing session of their four day con- ference they instructed the national executive to bestir itself in the matter of suitable garb for women ministers. Up till now Women in the ministry have donned the round collar and black gown of their calling without a murmur, but last week the voice of revolt was heard. On a vote of the meeting which included some 6o delegates of the Order of Deaconesses and the Fellowship of Professional Workers, the present garb was denounced as unsatisfactory, unbecoming and unfeminine. The national committee was instructed to give serious thought to a proper dress for women members of the clergy as soon as possible. * =l= s i- On this date I852 died Field Marshal Ar- thur, Duke of Wellington, the most illustrious Englishman of his time, at the age of eighty- three. He had performed the highest services to his country, and indeed, to Europe, and the honours he had consequently received, were such as to make him unrivalled in interna- tional life. While so mticli honourcd, the Duke was a man 0f such simplicity that he never ap- peared the slightest degree uplifted. His lead- ing idea in life was the duty he owed his coun- try and its government, and with the perform- ance of that he always appeared perfectly sat- isfied. He was the truest of men, and even in his dcspatches and bulletins which he had oc- casion to compose amidst the excitement of victory, there is never to be traced a feeling in the slightest degree allied to vapouring or even self-complacency. 4- =o< i- Polio’: behaviour is a bundle of contra- dictions, say virus disease authorities of the National Institute of Health. It is well known, for example, that at least 90 pcr cent of all persons in this country in areas where tests have been made have had the disease at some time. In sOme groups this runs as high a5 10o per cent of all persons more than 2o years old. Only about one in 1,000 ever had the slightest suspicion of their Irving polio. Either there were tio symptoms vhatsocvcr, or the victims may have only felt a trifle off form for a day or two. The almost universal prevalence of polio becomes apparent from blood serum tests. In the blood of nearly every American adult there are'polio antibodies ivhich, so far as known, could not have been formed except in response to an attack of the disease itself. As one goes down the age Sflllg below 2o, fewer and fewer persons have these antibodies and they disappear entirely in the blood serum of small children. This lcads to the conclusion that nobody is boin Iilllllllllt? to the disease. Ill l The first balloon ascent in France took place tomorrow's date I783. Writing of thg event, Horace Walpole said: “Balloon-s occupy sen- ators, philosophers, ladies, everybody." Being a French invention, it was felt the new phen- omenon might prove the means of an invasion. A caricature published in January i784 is cit- titlcd Aloft/golfer in the clouds constructing Air Balloon: for [he Grmidc Moiiarqiiv. In this the French inventor is, represented blowing soap bubbles, and saying: “O by Gar, dis be dc grand invention. Dis will inimortalise my king, my country, and myself. We, will declare (lg war against oitr cuciiiic: wc will made dose English quake, by Gar. We will inspect their camp, we will intercept tlicir fleet, and we willaset fire to their dockyartls, and, by Gar, we will take Gibraltar, in de air-balloon; and when we have coifdtier dc English, den we will conquer de other country, and make them all colonic to de Grand Monarque." At the same time the auth- or of a poem, entitled The Air-Balloon or Fly- ing Mortal, exclaims: How few the worldly cvils now I dread, No more confined thi.; narrow earth to treadl Should fire or water spread destruction dreary,- Or earthquake shake this sphere, "J In sir-balloon to distant realms I fly, And leave the creerfiiig world to sink and die. And now the Czzziadinn Weekly News- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Progressive Conservative Association 'A convention of the Progressive Conservative Notes ByiTlie Way In: on. why not Insist that. tho competitors strut. their stuff with- out makeup on so that the Judges can see what they really look like? Many a prize winner owes he!‘ success to the cosmetlclan rather than to her own face. -— St. T|iom- n Times-Journal. A fine of $15,000 wll recently Im- _ d on iui English firm for manu- facturing aluminum frying pans without a licence, The London Dally Mail reports. The company, which has a licence to make tea strainers, decided instead to use the metal for frybiz pans, which are badly needed by British house- wives. One of the defence argu- ments was that tea strainers were principally for wealthy persons. Houswives complained that alum- inum fryl-ng pans required too much scouring. Under the forbidding Jft-le of "Cerebratlon in the Cinema," Jean Benoit-Levy, film director for the United Nations, says the real mis- sion of movies "is to show men that they are brothers.” This doeuft fit too well with the boy- get-girl tradition of the Ameilcim movies, or the man-chases-man of the westerns. Benoit-Levy rec- ognizes this, and gently rebukes the American producers in whose propaganda leaflet he writes. But don't worry, folks. Most films are still based on pure entertainment values, leaving the uplift stuff for the hlghbrows. To the average movie-goer, the movies prove not all men are brothers, but that ht: personally ls (for the evening) a great lover, a dashing horseman, a cultured scion of wealth. —-Dcs Moines 'I‘rlbune. In a recent letter to ‘Ilhe Times of London, Lord Harmsworlh com- plains: “Where have all our English cheese gone‘! For many years we have been nurtured on paltid, sa- ponaceous products from overseas —better suited to the palates of un- discriminating rodents. What has happened to Stilton and Wensley- dale, to name two of our supreme cheese? Many Canadians will hasten to point. out to hlsllordshtp that probably these two ‘supreme cheese" just. naturally crawled away and quite decently buried themsel- ves, says The Winnipeg Tribune. We are not quite sure what Lord Harmsworth means by “pallld pro- ducts from overseas.” As far as we know, the hundreds of tons of Canadian cheese going to hti lord- shtp’s and other British tables are the usual fine, golden yellow. Per- haps this color clashes‘ with that of ‘the exquisite blue mold that usually graces supreme Wensley- dale. Perhaps hls lordship means that Canadian cheese la not as col- orful and all-ye as that which he formerly munched. Lord Harms- worth seems to overlook the dis- covery and widespread use of DDT since those exciting days. The Inhabitants 0| I village In Lincolnshrre, England, were recent- ly astonished to discover that a bull had climbed the narrow spir- al staircase of their 14th-century castle tower, and was observing the world with interest from a wi-ndow at. the top. Conoetvably the ad- venturer was under the impression that it was a bell-tower; for it will be remembered from the fam- ous affair of Cock Robin. that the bull fancies himself as a bell-ringer. Those, however, who are inclined to regard this as a tock-and-bull story, might. prefer the explanation that hls motive lay purely in a commo -sense endeavor to spy out the best pasture. But although hls object may be In doubt. there is one ‘interesting concluslc-ri to be deduced from the episode. We must not, on the strength of his well known anti-red attitude, wrlte the bull down as a hopeless reaction- ary. He has shown that he l-s cer- tainly progressive, capable of rls- lng to heights far above the level of the common herd. and of tak- lng wide and detached views. - Chrlstlan Science Monitor, Boston. During the Italian camps! n General Montgomery cabled te Brltlrh War Offlce to send nim a pair of waterproof trousers - a well-known general ln the War Of- flce attended specially to the or- der, havlng them despatched by plane -whlch also happened to be carrying the Bishop of Southwark to the arrea. and the General. with an evidently kec-n appreciation c-f the situation, penned the follow- ing lines which went. along with the shipment: We've despatched pour 1a gucrre A Mackintosh pair Of jacket and trousers express. They are coming by air Acid sent you tn care Of ‘the Bishop of Southwark, no eaa. So wherever you go From Pescara to Po Through mud and morasses ditches You undoubtedly ought To be braced by the thought That the Church has laid hands on your brltches. Arid you'll find. as we hope When you call on the Pope That hls blesslngb more readily given On learnln That your acklntosh tre a Were brought down by Bishop from Heaven. —Miscollilhy. Wearing an elaborate uniform nf scarlet and izold, with a crimson sash, Mr. Winston Churchill was ceremonlally Installed as Lord War- den and Admiral of the Clnque Ports -an honor he had accepted at the King's reouest flve years before. The Installation into the centuries-old office took place at the Grand Court of Shepway. a quaint feudal ceremony In the close of Dover College. Addressing the Court. Mr. Churchfll recalled the precarious sttuutlon in which lit-lt- aln foundhqself In 1940 and 1M1. Then he gave this warning: "We can no longer guarantee to the nations of the world that this strip of salt water (the English Channel). however faithfully it may be iruaitded. will again save the Ilbertiea of Europe as tt~ did iiumst Napoleon. and the freedom of mankind as It did against I-llt- Iar. ‘Tar larger forces must be made to play their part. ‘Far wid- er c mbliiatlonl than the defences of 0 Invllsh Channel will be needed to save the future par-e and happiness, of the world. "We have moved Into a new use. Se- orots ha been wrested from mt.- and the news Wlfi all those “Ills Thin" and "Miss That" beauty contests 5o- vueuc rbiium - ‘Ihll column la opus lo to discussion by eon-o, sposulsntl of questions on mums. The Charlottetown Guardian dons not nuisanc- ‘ lly endorse In opinion cl _. "crraspondonh. VITAL BY-ELECTION ISSUES ber 11, m; electors of and lslature to flll the vacancy created by the death of the late Hon. W. H. Dennis, who represented them faithfully foo‘ many years. This contest t‘: of much greater significance than that of an ordin- ary bye-election, inasmuch as the declslon arrived at wlll put the electors of the constituency on re- cord as being dissatisfied, or the reverse, with the policies pursued by the present local Liberal Gov- ernment, slmce attaining to office a number of years ago. The Progressive - Conservative party ls contesting this try-elec- tlon ln order to provide an oppor- tunity for the electors to register their reaction against the present Intolerable dictatorship form of government now holding sway in this Province, and to simultaneous- ly serve notice on the Dominion Government that Prince Edward Islahd has finished. with fore- bearance, and ls now vigorously protesting against the conditions prevailing in this Province as Ll direct result of Federal neglect, and mismanagement of our affairs by the King Government at Ottawa. The eyes of Prince Edward Is- land will be focused on Second Prince vri election day, and many a district In the Province would appreciate having an opportunity si-mllar to that which ls now theirs of registering a knock-out blow to the tottering Jones Government. The First District was given a chance to express themselves a few months ago, and notwithstand- lng tremendous odds, they dealt a smashing defeat to the Govern- merit candidate in spite of the fact that Flrst Prince was rated by the Government u being 1m- ptegnnble. Flfteen months or so ago ths Premier of the Province attempt- ed to get a snap verdict tn the Cardigan District by executing a bit of specially calculated political strategy. He sprang a by-election there during the -Domln1on gen- eral election c tun hoping that the "eddyhig" sns o_ his ad- ministration might well _ sub- merged In the whirlpool of offen- ces charged up against hls Fed- eral chleftaln. But lt boomerang- ed, and the defeat administered by the Cardigan electors at that. time ls now a matter of happy memory. Now it ls 2nd Prince elec- tors opportunity. The Jones Government has been increasing the debt of the Prov- ince by approximately one million dollars a year ever since coming into office, with little or nothing of tangible nature to show for the expenditure. Early ln the war it locked its financial horns with that of the Dominion Government. It sold out or traded its most profitable source of prbvtnclal revenue to the Do- minion for a paltry seven hundred thousand dollars per annum, with the result that the people of the Province have been mercilessly taxed by the Federal Government ever since. Charlottetown itself,_ lrt one yeatr, paid the Mackenzie King Government over three mllllon dollars tn income tax alone, and in addition. hundreds of thousands of dollars in other different‘ taxes that were Imposed. It. is difficult to estimate the Brand total of tales tllts Province is omitribut- in; annually to the Domlnion Treasury, but it is a safe calcula- tion that the gross amount would be between ten and twenty mll" lion dollars a year. The figure! are astounding but. unfortunately a reality. The Domlnlori Government, now gloating over the wartime bargain they put over on our unsuspecting Premier and Provincial Secretary- Treasurer, is loath to redeem ltl promise, that this bonanza would terminate at the end of the war. So it raises its ante and offers us about two million dollars p9!‘ annum in exchange for the ool- lossal amount we are now forcib- ly contributing; or, ui other words, they offer us one dollar Dominion subsidy for every seven to ten they collect from us ln taxes. And if we accept. this arrangement remain in effect indefinitely. The vote on Tuesday next will signify the attitbde of 2nd Prlnce towards this outrageous proposal from the Dominion Government. This Federal Government offer ls not an amount arrived at by negotiation and mutual agreement wlth the Province, but. rather has lt been hurled at us by the Do- mlnton Finance Minister on a take-lt-or-leave-lt-what-cairi-ynu-do about-It basis and there is method ln their madness even at that. Why? How? Durl-ng all these years. the local Government has been ‘most wan- ton ln its expenditure of Provin- clal revenues. In fact ll. openly glorled lh its excesses and would pay no heed to opposition appeals for caution and economy. While every other Province ln Canada showed a large surplus of revenue over expenditure each year, our Government seemed de- lighted tn repeatedly creating hutze deficits and without explanation u to m purpose. Finally, when they could no longer contain this inflating bal- loon within themselves they de- clded to expose their master plan to the Opposition. The deposc cabinet minister frommBelfa e e kenzle King was to open the \vl - dows of Heaven and pour fort from its abundance, In iinrtlnie measure. the where-wlth-all tint. would liquidate Provincial in ~ pgosperlty unprecedenteddn Cs -' s s. ' Our two-man Govemmfmt es - mated that the poorer the mou h upon ailllroach to the fount, the, eater wflild be the contribu- tori from a benevolent dispenser. Bo they placed their money on the wheel and It spun around. lire wlit ought to awe w. to prevent the quarrels of m-nkind paper men fly for pleasure to Prince Edward or"$3o a week ls Illsral. svoii‘ If they clflllot assuage gosh I Thin the Dominion-Paw vinclal . ersllce and the awak- QJIIIII on every Province In Can a ‘d covered to their dismay that no window was open mil tlis t? from which ll_ was anticipat- rloll blssslan would flow, ha! Shy-On Tuesday next, Be tlem- rnca are being asked to select a. rcp- raentatlve to the Provincial Leg- wlll l debtcdness and usher In an era f, . will be held in Election. selection of delegates. ELDON HALL ON WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 18th AT 8 P.M. STANDARD TIME For the purpose of nominating two candidates to_-con- test the Fourth District of Queen's in the next. Provincial Poll chairmen will please call meetings for the GEORGE MacLEAN, OWEN CALLAGIIAN, Converters. Party into a suction valve, - And so today, as a result of this Ill-conceived strately and ""5- management of the Jones Govern- ment, our Province is practically bankrupt. The Dominion Govern- ment hu [often us Into its strangle-hold and la mercilessly bleeding us white, And now tn the face of such a catastrophe of its own making, the Liberal Party in this Province ls asking the intelligent electors of Second Prince to elect a Liberal candidate tn this by-electlon und thus place their stamp of ap- proval upon thls, the most ltnfilm- ous record of any government that ever appealed to an electorate. Let 2nd Prince electors there- fore think well before they decide how they cast their ballots. No matter what their politics may have been in the past, let them vote in their own interests this time. Make it a third-straight ic- buke of the present incompetent i. 7 6mm TIIE sour. mums SPACE How true my body needs but little space An uripietent! room to shelter me. ~ An army bunk, and that is all, but yet My soul requires the world's 1m- meristty. Without decorum It must, nomad- like Go far and wtdq 1n lta erratic search, To open wind-swept means of the west. To broad. blue seas in everlasting lurch. In Ila tnconstuicy, at times it must Seek (‘with the friendliness of cuddled 5. Oi- wtnag. in a forest dense and w . Or In a meadow cut wtbh ribbon rllls. How good stint It damanh a space v And tfgvels ova lands both strange and far: My badly needs but little room, yet a The while my soul ts reaching for is. star. —WlllI.il.m been mysteriously transformed Government. They can dotso by. voting Ptrogresstve-Conservatlve— by votlng for Allie McNeil on Tucs- day, September 17. Ill‘ b‘ imbiings out the full beauty of your natural complexion coloring. "gives your skin that soft, satin-smooth, star-like look of loveliness you have always wanted. Telephone 315 149 Great George Street Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island of Trusses. All sizes. D. DeCoato, Canadian Anny. tFomvrly of Gtiiarlottetownku I am. Sir. etc. INTERESTED VOTER. kl l pER» kiwi: The 2 Macs We carry a complete line PERIL accident, of sickness. lit our modern life we IIYIIIIMAII 8t Insurance Offices: THOMAS McAVINN Charlottetown - Summer-st AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE On the sea, on land, iii the air, peril of fire, lightning, falling aircraft, of automobiles, of are surrounded by per- ils, and that is why we employ the system of insurance to protect us financially. We are in a position to provide a complete In- surance service, anll welcome your for advice and information. inquiries No obligation. 00., LIMITEII Since 1872 - Montague ALLISON P. MoLEAN-Dlltrlot Manager at Summersl’ CYRUS A. R. SHAW-District Manager at Montague - EARL R. BURKE n ‘u. . t QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds . y, Guardian "lllifvilllllst be some good offer/ell in lotliyhl. Walt. Ads - Johnson last lauded In hls rssi-F ».-_.__ '1 ‘a ‘ i i " . iSEgTEll/IBER 14. 194s _, i f B. F. llutehesoii I 8. Still ' OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fig. l ting of glasses for the i correction of ocular de. feels.” ~ 53 Grafton Street i? Professional 0s. .5: mm. w. HIGH Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St_ Charlottetown 589 P1). Box 66 Tel. vum IC sricivotiimi-iiian f Mmmlllfillhllll cards and circulars, l "We" ilrvrrlms. flflllflndence, W911i: and bookkeeping. HELEN GIDDEN Tfllfillllono 189M. AM. Nu. 4, Connaught Arm,’ Pownal Street. o-oorovooo4. llllorrell and Company Chartered Accountant Eastern Trim Building Charlottetown w‘ y v “ n. R. DOANE a co, Chartered Accountants I8 Grafton Stress, Charlottetown Box M1 hone use I Randolph W. Manning, CA. I McLeod & Bentley t W. l. BENTLEY. K-C. J. A. BENTLEY. LC. Banister: and Attorneys-as Law I54 Prince Street i +++++o+4+o s+o++o+++o4+w . vv oovvoovooovrmow-o-oo Charles R. McQuaid a Charlottetown Phone I'll! .A. Banister, Solicitor, o 6 UO-O-O-O-GOQQ 00496-04 Q-O-O-O-QQ Notary. Etc. Eastern Trust Building, FREDERIC A. LARGE T ETC. BARBIE ma, nuup imuum, lll Grafton Phone toss . r. o. n... CIIARLUTTETUWN. PJLL BELL 8i MATHIESUN Barristers, Solicitors, mi. B. B. B L, M D. I... MATBIESON. LL.B.. 8.0. Attorneys-ohms! LOANS 0N CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS I50 Richmond St. Charlottetown. P.E.I. IIR. W. II. GARSIIII Chiropractor Pnlmor Graduate l“arlott.el,iiwn l0! Prince 80. Phone 107! PALMER & HASLAM A. J. IIASLAM, B.A.. LLB. BARRISTEB, ETC. Bank of Nova Scull! Chambers Charlottetown. P. E. I. MONEY TO LOAN Pholla I5 IEO. Box II __.___,____ u. F. McPHEE. Bu. K.C. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER. SOLICITOII lulu Bulldlnii Charlottetown ‘0-0+0+0+o+o-0o4+oo+++»0+ EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED J. 8. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Queen Sk- ‘ Phois- 19M Evening; By Allllfllllmw‘ Phone: Residence I013 QQO-OOQ4‘ ' DR. A R SMITH DENTIST 11$ Grafton Strut! Ofllosllciursztlsolfl-il"! Telephone I284. ALEX W. MATIHIESON aaisisiimcli. soucrroii. H0- Offlooi ll 0m! Guru sin-cl m”, s. u“ Collection J. A. McGUIGAN. B-A- NOTARY. ITO. ls, souuri-oii BUILDING M. ALEAN FARMER LLB. lion v rn w»: oauisrnit QULIUITUIL m? m r0 assist-n nun III Commerce BIII oauusv o ii/tszmrb M- Ml vwiooo-Q v—Q0—Q—§<-+§+0 0000 r0 l0 LOAN a '3lt$€'n"i'l.il& "' “Ff? r