PAGE FOUR TH E G U A R N time, and find them very good; the little ,ones are called periwinkles. On the other Amlmrlml " Second Class M," pm (m.;"'illiand, "the British wouldn't dream of eat- Department. otiawn. ing clams.” rm Inland Gnu-dlnn Publlahmn Cm i It would appcai' from these remarks President. and Associate Editor. Ian A. Burnett. ll that there is a great SCOPC-101' We”'dlFeCl9d Associate Editor. Frank Walker. publicity in developing the home market for our fisliermcn. Draggers are revolu- ltionizing the iiietliods of offshore fishing, and modern processing and transportation lmcthods may be expected to improve tre- inieiidously in the coming years. But all An Adjudi ; ('IRL'Ul.ATl0N "Cover: Prince Edivnrd Island like the dew” "The strongest memory il weaker than the weakest ink". "l;BF:..Tf”lET:j;i:lVl' 5' '”53 'ihis will be of little avail unless consumer The Law Mr. Hughes demand keeps pace and prices are main- ' ..-...m tained at reasonably profitable levels. This in the passing: of Mr. George A. l'iLl;2,'ii0s, matter is of particular concern to the At- Prince Edward Island has lost one of its lanlitl P1'0VlnC95- Til” Um? has 31'1liV'9d very oldest residents and the last living When nl0l'9 3gE1'05SlV"9 '3”01il5 Should be lniade, through federal and provincial chan- this Province. But to our many citizeiislllel-iv 0f making 001' alm05l lncxhaustlbl” who were privileged to know him pci'soii-lfl5ll91'.V 1'9S0U1'CCS 1110 Still”? film they Wt??? ally. he was much more than that. lie via: llllmldnd h.V natUl't3 in ll"- in the true sense a gentleman of the old. ' school, a man of great kindliness. affection. and courtesy, who had ivcatliered all the Storms, of me am had rmfmwd 3" abidmq The last British gari-isoii stationed on faith in the simple Christian verifies, stip-lgcmlllda Sald farewell ll, lllc lslalld A few Pltlmenied "ml 3 mild. M "xpemence amt: days ago and marched on shipboard for the pmlosimh-V which nlade ” a grgat p1Ca5ur'3lvoyage home. So ended a romantic little to converse with him on almost any sul;--lllaplm. of lllslolll l.-Ol. 250 years Bl.-ltalll -"T" l l . t had maintained a garrisoii on Bermuda and He retained to the end his physical alldlnoll, llle delencc (ll lllc lslalld becomes llle mental alertness. and could recall thelmsponslblllly of llll, 3-,,l.,ll Allamlc Treaty events of yesterday, or of tlireclquarterslOlllalllzallolll nf .3,Cem”'i-V Pig” Mm Oqualulnieclslon and Bermuda, notes the llziiiiilton Spectator. lucldity. Ovcrl and above his reniai"l(ablcll)ccam(. R Bllllsll mlollll, wllcll Sll. George record as alrailway man. he setan example Somels was sllllmwclled Oll lls Shores lll of good Citizenship and 'mCgrm" "f de' 1609. In the days of piracy and during the link with the early days of ra'ili'oadiiig lll ..ast British Garrison THE GUARDIAN. CI-IARLOTTETOVVN Cato-r With His Own mm?" in his homc” ms, Church and his Cf)m.:lOllg wars for maritime supremacy between munity, which won him the well iiiei'itedllBl,llall1l lllance and llollamll the lsland was ”l"em am WSW” of an 3185505" lof strategic importance, but for many TTTTTTTT years the peace-time garrison has rarely A5 otiwrs 599 Us lexceeded 200 men. ' OT? l With peace-time duties that were most- ly social and decorative. the only hardships a term of garrison duty on Bermuda could offer a soldier were monotony and separa- ltion from home. Considering that almost 90 per cent of the island's revenue is de- M. PX: Pensions (Winnipeg Free Press) OTTAWA: It. may Iurprioe noinci taxpayers that not a. cent. L- been! paid yet in pensions to M.P.'s un- dcr the term! of the Pension Act passed in 1952 by Parliament. That's because although some 87 members were qualified last year for pensions in varying amounts, none in that category have re- signed or been defeated in by-elec- tions and rt-iiiained out. Of the 87, about 48 were qualified last "year for the full pension of 53,000 -three quarters of their scssional indemnity. some 39 others were qualified for annual pensions in lesser amounts up to about 32.750 and are still on the job. There is a tendency to disregard the familiar values of our surroundings and think chiefly of the things which we lack. That is what Islanders seem to be doing according to Mr. Kenneth Watson, financial ad,Vl5,er 10 ml: Lllmod lkmgdnm High ,COrl1,1'li'ived from tourists who pay for the privi- mggslfnflft liln d 3,5 lhwcomp ”lf”l”:5.'fliege of visiting it. soldiers must have been . .. o . . . f, ll) 8 "1" 1" 8 Cour” 0 R H lhard pressed to find causes for the indis- vis . I - , . What Mr Watson .saw was prosperous- pensablc gl-louse-that-is a pat of M-my Me- l k, f ' i ' ,d flh I, O b la . In making his Official farewell, Sir Alex- This picture may Cliftligc after 00 mi arms 0” 9VP1'.V 51 9- W1 "m U1 ' - ' . . .. ' .-g the general election expected about lngs in R hlgh stale of repair: my lmmlander Ilood, Beiniudas goveinoi. paid iii lmlgusl mxlimd in R but my ll , , , , butc to the contribution the army had l0llf.','.mere were aGovp,rnmeni, turnover, of summerslde mdmatmg a remarkable made to the island's social cultural andi i ' ' amount of wealth for a town of its size ,. . ' ' ', - The art is compulsory-every l V , spoiting life. In these stein times, tax-.Mcml,e,. nf pa,.1.,.,,,..m .5 mlulled and an equally notable lack of poveity. Vic Iln my llllo llll. lllml 6 pm. Cent. Bl do not make nearly enough fit What wcl .. - . - l I . his '”sSl0Iial iiideiniiiiy of 54,000. have in Mr walsolfs Opinion Jiielltlfoi its highly paid soldieiy, uhilc tlicl.l-he 51000 nomaxable Mllellse ' ' ' ' irealities of the international situation make allowance does not enter the Cal- l lculation. The Government con- of far more auractwe Scenes thanl -W&,,-,,Vg Wmwa itund, 5240 per MP. per year. But. in be eligible for R. pension. an iaiigf-is mt: iha1lla3i)tt)P-in h h 1 lthan two parliaments. That's to 9 - Z 9 V C9 9 at l --W icover cases where an MP. is elect- ed at a. by-election preceding A M "ourset M N” beavhesi but It is mtltbe world's record trout came from Nipiv,onlsemI'al elccnons Would 113": l0 necessary to wait. for bathing weather to , - . ” iscrvc. it portion Film two parlia- ,Lake. Ont. It ueiglied 14 1 2 pounds and mm” ll, mm, ..,.m wllh me by. lpayers can think of more useful eniploy-. In a few: hours after his arrival here he saw a niini- , . . l ,, plesuge an expensive luxm-l' itributes an equal amount to the any he could find depicted oti the souvenirl EDITORIAI. N()rl-LS MP. must have served in more no idea of how A tracnie It lg He kneii A9901dlnE '0 the 1-Vnlh BUN Nugget new parliament. Others elected in. find mi” Pmvmve ” delightful Flam miwas caught. in 1913 by the late Dr. J. W. election members. vlsitl i MP1: )1 vin met. the above ' Cook. of Port Arthur l I ' a ” ' . , ' ,qualification and Plectcd 10 take All of this is true. of course, and none. . ll ' lllle pmslmll on mllemenl M deg 7 l lieat. would receive an annual pen- (.'harlottetown is the mecca for iiiusiclsion graded in dollars accordmtz people who would like to visit us if they (lmhusiasls this ””k' The Quamy 0r mcligririig iigniiiei liiiaictisrrsiiiniiisotiilii knew whlll ll... lsland has to om... Thp.('Onipetltl0f1 in vocal and insti-uiiiciitallsinns Carryliig the full 33,000 pen- 'I"y-avvpl Bu";-La” jg doing R lzl-Pal .1031 lo classes would certainly have astonished Is-l”'"l landers even a few years ago. of it is new to Islanders. The importanti thing is that it is new to a vast number of All pensioiis recipients would liavr: tn pay up. either in a lump sum or instalments. all the bark ' llnontributions of 8 per cent.nf their The course for the Boy Scout Piii'eniai1's.:l4o?l(;0 :::3:,f:l"al,e1l2f.!:m:1ll:y 1:; ifs; badge is a fine example of co-operation be- liaw; that isszao for cacti back ses- , . .iwcen the Fire. Department and the Bovlsm" "ms """"5" H G D” NM V1 PUb11Cll.V 39"" ml ll”? 3"””'''””S 0f Scouts Association. For many vears tiifilmmpoundcdi the Province. i t Department has been introducing: the bovsi M”:l”"'” :e':C'”l'l1lel:in'l;"lC:l:(c)55::; . . . ', n e 2e 0 to the methods of fire fighting iisod inlm...-,.., mm Wm, six msims be. thp City. twr-eii 1939 and 1945 and five ses- .sions between 1945 and 1949 its line number of sessions scrvcdtliat publicise our nttractions for the tourist but it in clear that only in beginning has beeni made. The job is too big for a singlell agency to undertake. Every Islander. should feel that be or she is a dilly appoint-i Ei;i.i..g ltnssthllltios Lobsiers are not usually regarrlerl as l .mllllll migratory ,l.eallll..,S' lllll lll, National lrisli moss was formerly left thcl But. there-Tn cteadiinlw.l'i'lhelnlft - - , , ,- v - ' - uires a member t Pec- 0 AT Gengraplllc Snclcll, lnlmlls lllp Mlslellcp nllyoungsteis of the family to galhei but thatilm pmsllm heme November lllll a dwarf variety of these criistaccaiis wbiclilsoml Changed "hm famnws and n5hemle”il9-'13. Or the COM”? l"'"”'”” NV” . . ' .' 3 it't')tllid that ill? 'OLlli it '. - V - --Utinii, whichever is earlier. Those ate spawned in the Caiibbcan and wind up 3 t-3” 9” (mild 9&1" mm- . lm do ml elm. ml mnlm ll,,l., 0 0 O to '1. Notes Bx Snlvellnnn foniinnlln. to give the speckled trout his technical name, has been sought. by anglers for hundreds of years. He may weigh. in extreme cases, as much as seven or eight. pounds, in which case he usually will have come from Lake Nipigon or Niplgon river, although it is claimed that. larger trout. may be found in more isolated parts of the province. In any event. the world's record ti-out came from the Niplgon river. It weighed 102 pounds and was caught in 1915 by the late Dr. J. W. Cook, of Port Arthur.-North Bay Nugget. Pedestrians who have formed the giddy habit of crossing the street. just. before the green light. becomes yellow should consider the case of the newly produced all- eleciric sports car off the assembly line in Saginaw, Michigan. This electrically driven automobile. which has no transmission, can go from dead stop to one hundred miles an hour in 800 feet. This is virtually jumping off from base. The pedestrian is iloing to need lessons from A kangaroo.-, Lon- don Free Press. Mu-k Twain, on his Journey through England. was confronted with the rumor that. he was dead. He made his celebrated reply: "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated." Perhaps the some exaggeration has occurred in the rumors that are being spread about. inflation being dead. Per- lhis victim. or the The Wax L that one recently. But surely that could have kept the Post Office art. department happy for a while? And if they do feel an irrepressible urge to draw up postage stamps, surely they could have designed a. better one than the present moun- tain-goat effect. where the four- ccnt. denomination niark is so per- fcclly camouflaged as to be almost invisible. Once they get an ac- ceptable dcsigii. we can stand it nicely if they spare us the expense of running off pretty new stamp issues every couple of months. who knows, with the money saved that uay, it might even be possiblci for them to give us back our two deliveries per day.- Owen sound Sun-Times. The principal effect. of removing the death penalty would probably be to increase the number of mur- ders committed in the course of other crimes of violence. If the penalty for murder and robbery were the same. for example, it would pay it. holdup man to kill policeman who tried to arrest. him; he would have little to lose even if he were caught. The opposition to capital punish- ment is based largely on pity for the condemned man mixed with horror at the ugly process of exe- cution. But we should not, out of sympathy for the guilty. remove a powerful protection for the inno- cent.-Edmonton Journal. haps inflation is not quite what it used to be. But it may still have within it ll. remarkable degree of vitality. Unless production in 1953 keeps up with earnings, or exceeds it. it may prove hard to keep infla- tion away from Canada's door. -- Montreal Gazette. kuunnii-innnuns”...-u.....-uux lg Old Charlottetown Now mind yriuiwe luv! M W"- rel with animals -- in their proper place. We'll even go along with the gag and say that once in a while that place might perhaps ht 0" R postage stamp. Last. year there was a seven-cent. issue with 11 blue goose or I. lame duck or something on it, and it was right. pretty. And although we don't often buy fif- teen-centers. seems we recall the old reliable beaver nppearim: mi tt?oed' Gum Off thp Cmlsl (ll l.-lmlllal ..ll-WW lmmdl.-lliy gzaiberinc, it than could the parents. The llllllcll 5e,...,c,. (hcy mm rolled up, ll ft!-r either of says a Society spokesman, ”that these babv moss has A new many uses and Should ilanmtd lquani-ii. v would he nllt of ' l - , . l l. l . l iosc 5! es. ' e, ' lobsters travel ten to twelve miles a day." "'1" day be the "N nmmlal fol 10"” 1”';iucic--some members apparently idll5tlil9S. do not realize this yet. . . . A great deal of other curious information is being Eathcred by the organization in co-operationlwith the marine laboratory of 'I'hp siluallml of lllls plvovlncpl elllllwlltl-1'gzsozlhglpilifggcst:;d”(;:lf:::”::: the University of Miami in a search f0f'lly surrounded by warm waters and almostws defe-nted.he tzetslinck the money the mySl9Fl0US -spawnins: SI1'0UndS Of S0mPisurroundcd by fine beaches lends great lni- ihalilaf pild mm the fund-wink ml: and llhe Paths tllt”.V lakf? lhmugll 1h5iD0lltaliC0 to the work of the Sivimniiiiglourf iigrehxis elected to take the ..”2”..f2:..."l;i'::2C:'. 7.2: ::::?d..:::i:.';:..vt.'; fZ?'ff.:l at "1? .R.c3:?::?2a. ::v.::.:.::::::: sass than vanish l - l . p S 0 last years activities is due. If re-elected.dl1lercim re: - and plans for the coming summer indicate '”"””l' 1"” "1"" ”" " 3" "E" It is hoped by these l'PsPal'(;il0S to tiv-i ' , . , , sfon but. will not. receive the pension that the work is being enthusiastically siip- whii.-, receiving an indemnity. Like velop the food resources of the ocean. But l pm-mi, alllthe others. he can qualify by the big problem, according to Dr. Lionclf "?hl'l:3le"l;,n:”:lo:h:el5l:lc;i ”"'""" Walford. chief piscatorial expert in the wTehe ibnck payments are pretty United States fish and wildlife service, is 'heavy. For example, if any of the to change the eating habits of people on ii:eriim:1rbeir;4(i,el:i:i: ii'li3ife.f”iiiE; this continent in favour of the fishery in- could qualify for an nnnunl pen- dustry. Fish makes up a mere three per ”,'.,,”,f.ff,.”i',,ff,2”L';i..Z?,Ti;?",; cent of the total protein food eaten in lump sum. or instalment-I. of 84.- North America. "Cultural barriers cause M3 mCmdm'1m'."'.t' this," Dr. Walford says. "We happen to be ii meat-catiniz people. and we just don': eat fish." This, he points out. is by no means an indication of superior civiliza- tion. On the contrary, "it's very primitive. Savages in the jungle won't eat anything new." Our people would not think of eni- lng mails, yet the British eat them all the I I C if a. member has not. riui-ilined Napoleon I. Emperor of the French. died this date 1821. A Corsican by birth, Bonaparte went as a cadet to the military school at Paris. becoming an officer of artillery. V His first step towards high rank was the taking of Toulon from the Royal- isis. English and Spaniards. Later he quashed ii popular rising against. the Con- vcntion with a "whiff of grapesboi." He commanded the army of Italy. sending vast amounts of plunder back to France. Na- poleon saved the Directory a second time. He seized Egypt but failed to conquer Syria. He returned to France and became First Consul some members have rolled up liiiize record: of service. There's Charles G. "Chubby" Power, Que- bec south. elected 1917 with 35 years of service and 4:! sessions. Speaker W. Rosa Mncdonuld, el- ected, X935. could qualify for the full t3.000 pension by paying up contribution: for the sessions be- fore. the not passed in 1952. , To give ngeneral idea of the inrnpe of the pension policy it may , THE PASSING mcomorivr. l .t. lAbidlmz joy of childhood: wonder- liuidl lTt')dli.y, as long two. I love. the tone Of hLssing steam. your whistle, bell. the groan Of clutching broken. I like to watch your land Beneath reluctant. wheels - your headlight": grand Reflection on your bed of steel and alone: And. of an men, I envy him alone who pull: your throttle with ii master hand. But. in the schema of change whose gods compute The span of transient things in numbered days. The hour in nesr when ' you will glide no more the burnished rails. for Time's pursuit Of higher forms, and quest for bet- ter ways, Are twitching you to mine museum floor. -Wilbur Bheron in the New York Times. Along I be unit! that. there Are, in all. 262 members of the Home of Com- mons. In the present nouse there are 34 members who are qualified. by length of service, for the full pension. An additional 39 mem- bers, if defeated in the next elec- tion, would qualify for the lesser pension of 32,754 annually provid- ed of course that. they made up the hack payments. l . ld uimi r. E. L) E l.tP('Al. Blill.l)l.V(E BOOM "Our i'earler.s will he gratified .tn learn that no less than eighty- leight buildings. of various classes land dimensions exclusive of stables. etc, - h.'iv(- been erected in this Town during the prcsciit year, nearlv the whole of which. before the close of the present season. Amongst these, it. is true. there, are many diminutive and uiipretcnding edifices. but still there are anions: the number sev- eral of the most. substantial, enm- ninclioiis and elegant. buildings ever constructed in this town --- buildings which will no credit. in some plricres of far loftier preten- tinns thiiii Clinrlottetovvn. "For several milrs around a like improvement in this respect is also visible; and those. who compare the present state of things with that which existed some ten or fifteen years since. must feel not A little gratified at. the contrast. There is yet. however, abundant room for further improvement -- particu- larly in the eastern part. of the town. where are still to be found many valuable lots utterly desti- tute nf buildings or Improvements of any kind. "The demand for llinirs and cntingrs. at moderate rentals, ll at this moment for izreater than can be supplied: in fact. we almost daily hear com- plaints of the difficulty experi- cnced by mechanics and others. wlin are unable to pay high rents. in finding suitable accommodation for their families." -Kfolonlai Herald. Nov. 5, 1842. small dwel- .u; WHY HAVE zifirl s o n E we iiiidersiand. will be completed l The Pass By ing Scene Observer MAY It was for Main. the goddess of growth and the mother of Mercury. that happy, care-tfree messenger of the gods, that the present. month was named. in Mr. Longfellow's ”Foets' Calendar" she is made to nay: "Hark! The sea-faring wild fowl loud proclaim My coming, and the swarming of the bees. These are my heralds and behold! My name In written in hlosscms on the haw- thorn trees. I tell the mariner when to sail the seas; I waft o'er all the land from far away The breath and bloom of the Hesperldes, My birthplace, I am Maia. I am May”. . We smile. and with good reason. at the credulfty of the ancients who assumed the existence of many QOQ and goddesses. but in this matter of month naming they pro- bnbly did much better than we ourselves could do in like circum- stucco. Their imaginativenesa, with all its faults and inadequacies, was at. least touched by romantic and adventurous fire. less troubled than ours by the exacting demands of the machine god. tion. A garden can never full. its proper function so long ll, is treated solely as is pjacc ,,, utility. It is that, of course. ml its utility ought to be viewui ,-.-. merely an outward sign of its inner spiritual strength and purpose ' . In .. It was in a prirrleu. not - ,l machine shop or a countiiig il.,l,.. that our first parents were p1,v,,l by first of the Creator. It will 1.9 in a garden. if anywlicrr. in... paradise lost will become pnv ,-, regained, where'hopes will i)lI?S' in and bear fruit abiiiidaiitiyg At. this time of year, llr ,.. the person who B not uiirespoi; to natural beauty and vmndc. it find himself staying with uplm, Van Dyke: i "These are the things 1 law.- And hold of dearest. worth. Light. of the sapphire skies. t Peace of the silent. hills. Shelter of the forests. comi":ni of the grass. .,rl Music of the birds, inurimiv of little rills. Shadows of clouds that Mi.” pass. V And. lifter nhmvers. The smell of flowers And of the good brown earth". . . . '1 There are times and when all of us are vcr) litar w F”.i.'fl l In our part of the world. May is likely to be It bit erratic in her manners. Warm sunshine one dayl and "lingering winter's chill" the; next, are things we expect. We must wait 3. while for the niyriaclsi l l of flowers, and the poet. was not thinking of this corner of that earth when he sang of the "swiu-m- in of the bees”. Our bees do not ordinarily work quite so fut. nsl that. nor do the ”blossoms of the hawthorn trees”. The apple trees. horwe'ver. have already budded and before the north is out. will pre- sent: a clean, white. spotless rip- pennnce to delight the eye and re-invigorate the soul, The May-iflower. forerunner of summer's beauty, is lifting up its shy face to the sun, glad to be alive if only for 3. short period of time. "No reg-refs. no fear”, it seems to say. coo . Now is tllic time when the, pos-i sessor of A garden. however cir-' cumacrlbed in length and breadth. is very near to the front of life. and can share, if he will. in the marvels and glories of infinite force and beauty, No sensitive person can tread on the soft, mellow earth these days without feeling that he. is walking in R holy place. Wlthl all our mechanical ability and our knowledge of the physical woi-ld.I there is still deep mystery in l7he' first. appearance of the tiny plant which only fl week or so ago was a dull, lifeless seedling almost in- visible to the eye. And the unfoldlmz of the first flower of May contains all we need to know, much more than we can well understand, out the sure. unerring force that permeates ihci universe and gives it. monl direc- scepticism. for we are. even the but of us, men and wnmrii 0' little faith, It is then that rve need to walk abroad In the f' '"ls, across the meadows. and by strcanis, and take within 0lll'.x each according to his Capaciiv, nieanlngs that. lurk behind common things". It: may be only 1! new blade .-if grass where only a few weeks n:n there was nothing but barren .4v.l. Or it may be it little coivslip -r ii fragile bluobe'l listening ”t.l iii the rythm of time unrollimz", PW the 1: Now when Jesus wan risen enr- ly the first day -.1! the week. he l'Ipp('nfPll first. In Mary )l.'i:tlnlt-uv-, out. of whom he lind east sum. devils. The Norwegian Government at. located 3280.000 to aid the theatre in Norway during the 1953-54 ."- nanclal year. IUNE lllllili COFFEE First choice for fine flavour! :un 32 PROFESSIONAL CARDS MocPhee 8: Trainer B. F. MMPHEE, B.A.. Q.0. E. SOMIBLED TBAINOB. B.A. bunlntern, Em. A. Wulrlien Gander. LLB. IABRISTER. SOLICITOB. Etc. Phillip: Jtllldlng Iii Grafton Street Money in Loon Cnlleclinnl Matlieson. P;;ke.&O . Nicholson A. W. MATHESON. Q.C. A. ll.,PEAKE. B.A.. LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LL.B. Barristers, Etc. Collection: - Money To 175 Grafton street J. A. McGuigun BARIHSTEB. SOLICITOR, Etc. NOTARY. Etc. CIIITIO Building Chas. R. McQuuld BA. BABBISTEB. SULICITOR. NOTARY. Etc. Eulem Trust Building CHARLOTTETOVVN Phone 1111 Frederic A. Large. 9.6. Bnrrlnler. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Cumin Building Charlottetown. P. E. I. noun on City and Farm Loan iiell. Midfhie-STII-O8: Foster Barristers. Solicitors. Eta R. R. BELL, Q11. G. Ii. FOSTER. LLB. mum on City and Fnrin Properties 1.50 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P.l'Z.l. Gander & Huszarcl GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. l.I..lk Barrister! and solicitors Money to Loan Clnndlnn Bank of Commerce Blitz. M. Albun Farmer. Q.C. B.A.. LLB. Barrister and Solicitor Bank of Comnicn-e Building Chtll'l0ll('.l(IH'!! (7HIR0PIlA(1T0B . Palmer Grndiiato (THABLOTTFZTUVVN Phone I072 '20! Prliire J. S. Taylor (H'T()i"ETRIS'l Eyes Exnmliied, llln.-no! l"lllN' Corner Kent and Qiii-on St!- Olfico l'honn -I956-Ilnuon llflil-L Palmer & Haslam A. J. IIASLAM. B.A.. LL3- Bnrrluer. Etc. Bank of Non Seotin tlhnmbc" other office: at Halifax. Mom-ton Mnnmll. Quebec. otuiwn. Toronto. Currie Bldg. Charlottetown. Kirkland Lake. Moncum Hamilton. Edmonton, Charlotte " '""P""" cimioimown. r. it. I. ”'-'T MONEY 1'0 LIMN J. A. Curruthers. R.O. lig OPTOMZETBIST .- 123 Kent Street Phone 2372 Dr. K. A. Muceuchefll (Next to 8lmmon'I Agency) m:N1'is1 -T”-”T T" . Dental X-II! Allisan M. Glllis. LL-B. Above Chnrlnttetniv-ivrtlllllltlllllf Ml BABBISTEB. SOLICITOB. Eta. 202 Wu" 5'- xao lllchmnnd EL - Chnrlottalown ...j.....: -...?-r-s”T Phone 590 i i i ii on J G:--ant o o ”" d' "' ””'5"” yr ' "'t ' ' ' DENTIST OPTOMETBIST .,,,,m 3.1", IM Kent Street Phone I?! GLORIA BUlI.nl.V(: WI tonimlta maven Hotel) in onium St. t"t"""r"- ,g,,. l H. R. DOANE 8: COMPANY. CIIAIITEIIED A()c0UN'l'AN1'! in Grant George St. Ctuirlnttclmm Phones mo mi RANDOLPH w. MANNING. rm. . I l ll ERMA r. Dlnel'Bl'JBSON. (:,A. KEVIN J llli'lvI'..v5 . um . SI. .lnhn'I. Amherst. linrtmu leiitvllle. Llurponl. New Glnxnw and Trum- 4 MeDONAl.D. cum: 3. co. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS saint John. shmimmiu-. l'm"'"'""' form. 3. Telephone 13