I mm mi lemma; ‘oiimm .1. a. swam, v4.1. T‘ raiice fee collected from every collective farin- . ige- of large-scale farming methods. One such ‘PAGE rouit ’= - _ TIIE BHARLIITTETUWII GIIAIIIIIAII Morning may lama»: i: ism Viuu-PIQAIIBIICZ J. l. Burnt; lhJ-l. swam-y: Liam. Dal. l). A. lhollnnon. 0.8.0- r Allochh Ediwrl: Frank ‘Walker nu! “out. Ill A. Burnett. R.C.N.V.B. (On Aetlv: Berna) ‘The Strongest Memory i: Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ FRIDAY DECEMBER. ‘I, 1M5 ' Transition Problems Problems inherent in the sudden change- qvci- to peace and the difficulties of timing the removal of wartime measures formed the theme of an illuminating address by Mr. H. D. Burns. president of the Bank of Nova Scotia, at the Bank's 114th annual meeting at Halifax on Wednesday. (In the whole, Mr. Burns believes that ihc liilllblllOll is proceeding “reasonably well” but he docs not shut his eyes to continuing causes of friction. such as shortages, bottlenecks, and strike which have impeded rcconversion. He coins a striking phrase for one of the most pressing of our post-ivar problems, ilairiely, "pockets of unemployment’ in particular local- itics, wlierc large war industries were located and where pcacctime opportunities are limited. Rt-incmberiing zilso that construction programs must largely be deferred until next spring, he foresees a considerable amount of transitional unemployment before the winter has passed. “But while there may be difficulties,” Mr. Burns says, "there is no cause fOr pessimism. On the contrary, it seems to me that the out- look for the coming year is reasonably good and that the general level of expenditure and in- come should be such as to allow us to move for- ward a long step toward a healthy peace-time economy." Wartime controls, he says, should be re- moved "jiist as promptly as the conditions of shortages which led to their imposition are over- come." The qualification is worth noting. In- discriminate removal of controls would, Mr. Burns believes, prove disastrous. Collective action through goveimnient is still needed to avert maior ecixiomic disorder and to provide an atmosphere ii: which we can move forward toward a high and sustained level of peacetime production and employment. A timely point stressed by Mr. Burns is the question of Dominion-Provincial relations and their bearing on the taxation outlook. Do- minioii-Provincial settlement he regards as one of our most important post-war tasks. Failure to reach such a settlement could seriously im- pede‘ our progress in the immediate transition and affect adversely our welfare in years to come. The report submitted by the new general manager, Mr. H. L. Enman, showed the increas- ingly important. role which the Bank of Nova Scotia is playing in the nation's financial af- fairs. Soviet Farms Types of farm organization in the Soviet Union is the subject of an interesting article in the current issue of the Economiin/liiiialist, a Dominion Government publication. Of chief interest is the fact that individual farms, as such, have practically disappeared. They are now found almost exclusively in the new Sov- iet territories of the three Baltic countries, as well as in Kai-elia, Bessarabia, Bukovina and fhe former Polish Ukraine. By 1940 a total of 99.9 per cent of all peas- ant farm lands were consolidated in collective farms; but collectivism was a gradual process xyitlrseveral types of transitory organizations existing prior ll) 1935. At the present time any agriciilipial enterprise that is not an individual or a Stale farni is covered by the “Model Statute of the Collective Farmers’ Ariel" and is proper- ll’ called “collective farm" or “Kolkhoz.” _ Under this Act the laud belongs m tin; ‘slate, hilt a grant for its use iii perpetuity is Elven to the collective farm by the Government. 'llit- liilliiiving are common property: draft ani- iiials. farm implements, seed, fodder for ioiiitly ,,O\\'llC(l live stock, fnrni buildings. processing lllaiilsg - The iion-socializctl private property for l\Ull\'ll0Z members is composed uf: .~\ plot of land (5-3 to .2 1-: acres) zidioiiiiiig the di\'t‘lling; lllc b01150 llflfll; live stock not exceeding oiic Cow, two calves, two sows with litter, i0 sheep RIKl/Or goals: so bccliivcs, and any number of rilbbll-‘l lllKl Illllltrv. TllChC uumhcrs are iii- creased C(lll\lflt‘i'i'llllV in the case of specialized live stock lflfllls or under noniailir, pastoral con- Ilifillfis. _ The socialized property of Kolkhoz meni- bers is estimated at cash value. From 5o to 75 per ccnt of tli s value is considered as the col- lcctiye farmers’ share. The balance is paid into the Kolklioz shaking fund, iii addition to an eul- er. Children alt taken into the Kolkhoz as full members upon reaching i6 years of age. “If a collective farmer wishes to withdraw from. Kolklioz. his share is paid back to him‘ but he is entitled to receive land somewhere else’ if-availablc. _ ' A State farm or Sovkhoz is tlic equivalent 0f,_a Canadian illustration farm, but h is owned byline State. Al the outset, it served a5 a mqfle] fflr" tlte organization of collective farms and to lWUlllit. peasants ith the operation and advant- f: the "Gigiint" in the Ukraine, ivas visited R than 110.1100 peasant delegates fmm a _ of thousands of iniles between i929 and i present. _Sm¢ farm's operate along more “I45 R8575}! 8nd dcmunglrgtg (ppllewon of‘ scientific prom-q, on , ' .-,ilii_emmaiion is one of primarily i-EDITORIAL NOTES- Ca adds death rate from tuberculosis in 1944 the lowest on record. Despite this, nearly six thousand Canadians died of this dis- ease. This i: too heavy a toll to pay to a dis- ease which car. be songueied; I People read classifiedadvcrlising for the accidental humour that sometimes slips in, as well as for the values advertised. For instance. a farmer put this ad in his local newspaper: “Wanted-Man to take care of a cow that 4W5 not KfllllblC,*drink,*0r Ikgoatto Sauces!" The book value of United States invest- ments in Canada at the end of 1943 exceeded $4,4oo,ooo,ooci and has increased since then, a report tabled in the Como-lots disclosed. In re- viewing the volume of current account transac- tions the report said Canadian credits with the United States readied $§,o21,ooo,ooo in i944 compared ivith $730,000,000 in 1939- Deb“ with the United States were $896,000,000 l“ 1939 and $3.004.000.0°0 l" 1944- - ‘ t i . Labor Minister Mitchell told the Com- mons that as of November 3 this year a total of 10,649 l11€1l,_C3.ll€d up {or compulsory mili- tary service during the war were unaccounted for. In presenting his departmental estimates, the minister said that a report revised up to September 3o, 1945, showed that 807,580 men had entered the armed forces of Canada and 278,651 were on, or were applying for, postpone- ment. The bulk of the remaining pool of men, numbering 615,904, consisted of those declared medically unfit. I! Ii i This is from the Ottawa Journal and speaks for itself: “Chester McLure, Progressive Con- servative memebi for Queen's, P.E.I., hard-hit- ting critic of wartime fish control, not only said of Mr. Bridges. (Minister of Fisheries), ‘I am proud he is a llfaritimer’, but went to special lengths to exonerate the new Minister from any blame or criticism he was levelling at the de- partment. The abuses he was striking at, Mr. McLure explained, were not in any way the iaultof the Minister or even of the department, but of ivartime bureaucrats ‘on control boards.” l? ‘l? W‘ The number of ration books issued in the province of Quebec is 3.335.293. This i5 only 54,416 above the census figure of 1941 but W. P. T. B. officials point out that a large part of the single urban population did not receive ra- tion books as most meals were obtained in pub- lic restaurants. Estimating from the number of ration books issued statisticians believe that the present population of Quebec is probably in excess of 3,600,000 persons. Figures on ra- tion books issued in other provinces were 372,- 032 in British Columbia, 816,483 in Alberta, 811,587 in Saskatchewan, 696,255 in Manitoba, 3,939,930 in Ontario, 3,386,298 in Quebec, 446,- 986 in New Brunswick, 600,115 in Nova Sco- iia, and 69,244 in Prince Edward Island 1' F I I This date 1941, without ivariiing and while her envoys in Washington were still negotiating ivith United States, Japanese bombers attacked the great naval base at Pearl Harbour, Hawaii, and air and naval base at Manila in the Pliilip- pines; serious damage was done to the United States Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbour where the Americans were taken by surprise, the battle- ship Arizona, three destroyers and two other craft being lost, and the battleship Oklahoma damaged; the laps lost three submarines and 41 aircraft; lap High Command later announc- ed that Iapan was in a state of war with Britain and the United States; President Roosevelt iin- mediately ordered the mobilization of the U. S. Army and Navy. - The United States has today a great many food products that could be purchased by Can- adians and which are not iii competition-or to a very small exteiit——\vith Canadian products, but they are excluded because they would have to be sold at the base period prices. This is iin- possible since inflation across the border has been much greater than in Canada. The food tradcs in the Dominion are this season faced with many shortages, such as canned fruit and vegetables and all products containing sugar and shortening. They will he hard pressed to main- tain sales throughout the winter months. If they were given an opportunity to bily and sell these iiuncouipcting, nonessential items, they could get back at least pari of the business lost through domestic shortages. Canadian Grocer has in mind such items as canned shrimp, olive 0ll_ Fllld FlDe olives; prune. lemon and pineapple JUICCS; peanuts in the shell, although some of these may not be considered so nonessential. ' I I l Ill To whom it may concern. Mr. Elmore Pliilpott write: in Toronto Newt: “All orgm- ized bodies-whether trade unions, business men's groups, religious gatherings. or women's clubs—-have the right to meet in private as often as they wish. They may keep such meetings closed to’ the press. But no public organization has a right to hold a public meeting, which is to be reported as news, and then attempt to dc- cree how it shall be reported by the press serv- iccs-iiiuch less to interfere with the identity of Mwsmbefs or newspaper people assigned to cover such meetings. Not long ago, in flit; column. I wrote of the folly of the English- language newspapers of Montreal in yielding to pressure from a big advertiser, and suppressing news of an armed hold-up in a department‘ store. I wrote then: The news does not be- lfl"! to those who make it, nor to the new:- papers who compile, print and sell it. The new: ll¢l°fllls to the public.’ Anything which 9mm}; in the way of the free flow of honest news to the public is bad. It should be resisted by every intelligent citizen of every democratic country. Alwmms by any public body m interfere with the normal production of any newspnper or press service are bad. All public meeting: should be freely open to representatives of the pres:- T-he D1155 "WY be, (and is) everything from good m indifferent and downright vicloin. but In _: democracy the press, whether Commuu. in, Liberll. Conservative, or nothlnrat-all, "firs"! 9-1:: aliouldxilever be hampered or Imiutning, muelr I f“ y, l‘ l, _, .._ ,. s t ITH E Dr. IOII,.CIIIAI'IIIIII of the 0n- tu-Io Hydro-Electric Power Com- miulon, ha: f ‘ ’ hi: belief that n iD-cyclo generating plant producing , horsepower could not be built In loss than four yenrl. He may recall that en- linear: estimated that the 1,250.- MO-hizi. plant at Bhlpshnw would take lve years to build, but It was finished In two years. It can be done If it. must. be.-Toronto Globe and Mall For cows and their owner: thuro i: good news coming down from Schenectady The General Electric Company has lately announced the making of a single device to warm watering troughs so their contents will not freeze. This, of course, will be a bovine boon for upstate farms equipped with kilowatts. Bess lucky northern barnyards will have to stick to an older system. Noses will continue to be dipped shrlnkingly In morning lee, and chilly, intelligent heifers will Yong for the day: of their nomadic an- cestors-when happy herds follow- ed the sun southward through lands of unfrozen brooks and no iitnnchloiis-N. Y. Herald-Tribune. Cotton Ii: called the universal fibre because of its many uses in industry and households. It is a vegetable product obtained from the pod of the cotton plant. It ha: been known from remote times. A: ls shown by the writings of early historians, Columbus found cotton growing In the West Indies and the natives making cotton cloth, says The Brandon Sim. Cor- tez, on invading Montezuma’: kingdom of Mexico, found the na- tive: weaving beautiful and richly colored cotton fabrics. Canada has a highly developed cotton tex- tile Industry, including both spin- ner: and weavers, and a very wide range of fabrics and goods are produced. In 1943 the industry gave employment to 27,000 persons and had a gross value of production a- mounting to $150,000. The other day the court of crim- inal appeal in London was hear- ing an appeal by William Joyce. (“Lord Haw-Haw") against the sentence of death for treason im- posed on him earlier by a lower tribunal. Joyce's defence rested Iargel on a denial that his use of a grltish passport constituted any evidence of his British citizen- ship. And the lord chief justice observed that passports were a. fairly modern Invention. Up spoke a King’: Counsel G. O. Slade. Shakespeare, he sald. had mention- ed this "modern invention" more than three centuries ago, and he quoted from a speech the poet aa- Ilgned to King Henry V at the Battle of Agirieourt: He that hath no stomach to this Ight, Hts _. ssport shall be made, And crowns for convoy out into his purse. It would seem Giat the Lord Chief Justice of England had be‘.- ter brush up on his Shakespeare. --Kan:as City Timex. At long hot, the g-lmrnest .rc- mlnders of war are being shifted from our surburb. Gangs of men with neumatic drills, ‘r huge travelling crane, and tr ck: are shifting bodily the massive cun- crete tank stoppers which strad- dled across the countryside, into the suburb and across a neighbor's rose garden. One even rises for- biddingly against hi: front bay window. They were, we are told. the lult line of London's defences. There were hundreds of them. The contractor tells me: "We're going to shift them away at the rate of nine a day We cut away a bot- tom corner and get a 35-ton hy- druullc jack under It. That lifts the thing out bodily. Then we lift It on to the ruck. "We can't make any use of them just tip them into a big ditch that needs to be filled. They're not worth the cost of breaking u . We‘ve got 2,000 of them on t is contract and they weigh two tons 15 ewtii. each."—- London Dally Mail, So he lolt hi: voice! Frank- Frankie the Volee~l: now silent. Not only ls the Winsome warble off the air but the same larynx which gave a swoon-thrill to mil- lions of semi-hypnotized girls Is now forbidden even to speak. Frankie cannot even ElSk for, a glass of water or the picture of his fainting family of frenzied followers. Dr. Irving Goldman, of New York City, throat specialist for Frank Sinatra Esquire, an- nounces his illustrious patient has "worn hi: throat out." and must now go lnto the great silence-Jar a time. Should he sing, or even lip k, he might lose the use of thx gilt-edged Instrument. of crooning. Would that be a nation- al calamity? We would not know. To the girl: yes; to some other folk, no, The and situation as to Frankie's melodic hog calling re- calls his meteoric rise In the world of musical Jame, and how easy it may be for thole not. overburden- ed with astounding talents to lay ’em In the aisles for a remunera- tion that would almost make a crooner lwooii. - London Free Irena. When lomeone cull: you up and ny: “Come on round and have a nine of bridge," you gladly say "You," If you have no other en- gagement. but when you get. there you don't play bridge "Of course we do." u: you-but It‘: billion: to one you don't. ‘There I: a Kaine called bridge, but nobody play: It nowndayl, uys the 8t. Thomas Timon-Journal. About N yenrl Hi0 : um: called bridge wu Invent- ed In England. The worin: we: two point: for a lpldl trick, four for club:, six for diamonds, c1811! for heart: and 12 for no trumpn. Game wu 30 point: and I00 for : rubber. there bolni no point: above the line. Four ummy." borne Y! lervlnt: In : rnmot: urn: of I were trying to play they incited a fourth p IIIIIQ to Orockford’: m: devoted to bard were drlwn up, and time the : d cilaizrcorriirowsld CILAIIIQIAN '.. tes By The‘ Way l ‘pdeopl: played, ind ,- Thl: column the dllciflon eponilantl ll III“. internal. Th: Gui-uh: doe: not mlly emlorlo flu I u! oorrllbonilcuh 4 BUSH JOBS FOR. VITIIANI Slr,—In a recent llsue of The Guardian there appeared 11 letter entitled "A Poor Ben", to the tone of which I ltrongiy dissent. It ha: reference to a new: Item to the effect, that MW Wm‘ Vet?!‘- uns in Montreal had been offered jobs at bushwork a: the beat avail- able, and on which your correspon- dent eommenta in a very dhparug- ing manner. And why not bush- work, forsooth? It Is a man's job. and whats the matter with It? It is clean, healthy and Invigorating and the pay is good. There never was a time when suclmwork was more urgently needed. The great ihortuge of wood for building cari- struction, and other purposes. makes it absolutely essential, and the veteran who undertakes it. not only doe: well for himself, but render: i: much needed public aer- vtee. In our own country it. was bush work that felled the forests. cleared the farms, and supplied the material to build our towns and cities. If we have entered on the making of "a brave new world" about which we have heard so much, we can help to make It so, by recognizing the value of honest work of whatever kind, whe- ther In the bush or elsewhere. WOODBMAN’. Summerviile, RR. Truman Administration Prestige Declining (Bruce Hutchison In the Winnipeg w F Pres. roe The key fiwt. o! American - tics, against. wihioh all tho new: o! failure In domestic and foreign pol- icy linulett Llge I: simple m- ouz . e wins mutant. of the Truman admin not. uwrelyain which ington Ia the capital. It affect: the foreign policy of every nation and th; hgrlgspeiiggfl of everybody. n“ is ‘a ,.reot.lae was blah after Potsdam. He seemed able to carry forward the work of hi: pr:- decessor. To the failure of Pots- dam to work, to the collapse of the Isondon conference, to the been added bitter reverse: in do- mestic politics and n ‘sharp breach between the Congreu and the President who was supposed to be ‘IL IN MIINTREAL . _ w‘ What has happened to the ‘rru- 69mm” mmAmei-imlmoomeme It cement: the ‘when wholeofizvlée world of Waah- “$17 mbllnfifil-Wd our country that tb enterprise" up ° Dlfilltlbllin 111d Cflll dc 188181! IQ schism with Russia In Japan have ‘glkmutyt 1350111’ R004: Ind the service: men want eed. If: moot. feotuna. Men of‘ affair: naturally stop at the WINDSOR-because of its reputation for dignified comfort, unobtrusive, courteou: Ion-vice and It: convenient location-Ind became the WINDSOR l: recognized a: tho proper place for business and social meetingl. lllfilihtlsnr‘ - J. II-DIIIC IAIIOND. IIIIUDIIII ree ‘nter ' . L__ Prue pmduottou. in flnmoe In oomf s nun . I: the lyatem fellow. I-son hWDDIIIOIG and the h Isthenutiem seeking nee extensive credit: and a ‘I'm: i: the system enterprise l! world mw look: ment of an .1iii: valor-mammal»: umption, un- whleli 1 to lndividua filial-robin Initiative salad . oom- the ll “UPI-Nd with other YIN!!! IN‘ of our domestic market. Iu inven- thiit has given 11a the Intent. amount. of Ighest. living standard. ever experienced by any 11%: In the history of man from which other forms of government an! now e use Inner share l; the r elem — to which lb: for the etablfah- DQ906011! hula of economic abundance. p0!- ttdcal and personal liberty." TRAPPERS a Congress man, The Pmnldent’: “xmanm 5 ~ whole domestic policy of recon- ‘Nahum 090911461100 1i Strum“ is at ‘he m em mm, tigmpetitlon and free play! of prig‘: Thuik: for the wonderful n:- mated In the legislature and he l: wh gem-nun: who sh! produce we to our adv ilur threatened with becoming the prls- Mum N0 I for Mink oner of the Rupbllcan: and the mom “m dwwdflwe upon and Mnnkntn. We no certainly soigzhieirra DOHIOCIBtICIbIYII alliance. on wgpmklylllffmliv9 I'll-h" 11% III-Jill! llllzflbflom lnllfl Mill our eh n all these o yous symp- - order: In filled. rln; or pend to.ns stands the man, ‘Truman. The emnhul‘ on 9 1"" Pawn“ °h°l°° l“ "I0 "ll! Nil have before nation Is now taking hi: measure. It likes hI: simple honesty and 331013 the I l I be they m.i'§°3?"i.%.?"°°' ““ ‘l’ . ‘rhllfsthelyltom-thef odwill. But it is disturbed by m Silvers. Bod n: Skunk “a 53ml? of his appointment: to the u“ gafmfitjlfilliiigdllrflviided Coon: no the low, nrlooil allele: highest posts. It did not appreciate in W0,“ w" n° “w”! 1m- In the President the euygoliig “m, B ma‘ hm“ Our office l: open a snu- manners of a Missouri unator dur- m "m stflmyseclnzd mmimmhi "w! Imtfl Ing his recent southern holiday tour which wan so damaging poli- flcally that all presidential juri- kets have been cancelled. Beyond thoiie minor irritations the President suffer: from two ai- ible l-lfiuWltllliz-lllk of World War II. said would reached its peak 10%‘ ‘he enslaved tbs world. a In! nine o'clock. system which miller v Nazism 1f ill; of production be- Tlie Royal Pa: king 0o. Is the system without mostdmpossible obstaclel-Iie has which‘ De ' ,, inherited world problem: sreater you“ 1m” Sana, 30%“, iinwm J: u: ' than those of any other president Th“ u the B" which h fr‘: history and hi; thha: lfllrlgffid ‘ha, u in I m“ "w ‘hon § t Pr” em rom one o e mos r - - - liant statesman of modern times. 10d m um,‘ world leaded“? l“ i .. 12-7-01 The contrast between him and i Roosevelt, a contrnlt which perhap: no living man could avoid, Is lo vivid as t9 make the present ad- ministration appear probably lea: able than It actually I:. A d fin- n ally the Presld find: himself leading a nation tired by war and eager to return to what another president at a llmllll‘ point In Ill:- tory culled ‘normalcy.’ LAST TWILIGHT Wh light ll 111d. Lizllllofllheggsuwellulfgm of day- Let. me have niuic for my oolwe: Dav: Like s. deep river flowing Let. there steal in Voices 0f Viol, viola, Vicki. l Then ‘Ii not ace how Re-cedes ‘- xorebl, on my While changeful music weovui Such pabtleme of bumbling flow- aind brighlenfzig lave: ify tihe cheep, I'll not. know the morriml, of my sleep. —Audrey A. Brown. In Th Monfaulfir ers To beaut The-t x what. you play when you :It down to play a game of "bi-Ida." Th: original game of bridge we: a d:- veiopment of the gun: of whilt, which Is flrlt. mentioned In Eng- DUBING TH! ENTIRE SEASON PILTS AR! RIOIIVID for marketing by u: J. A. Weblzlzer 6v Co.‘ 156 Richmond Street Oharlotmown ciiiiiiiiliiliiii Hill sills iii. 55 Queen Street Charlottetown J. Stewart Monte-gin Poll: loft with any of the above m forwarded to u: and handled and marketed by u: in the um: manner a: shipment: made direct to us. Prince Eilvanl island fiir Pul limited Summer-aide. Irina: Iihnll Inland liah record: In 162i. It l: nil] I popular ume In the United Kin;- dom, where there are many ‘whllt drivel" t urriamantl. LONDON — (Wk-IMF. What- eiv has hi: trouser: uiilht in the escalator It a Item. 111w wen trimmed :0 thn he not out of than. be lank- e and the more found liim o. r OOMPACTS uomi-ms v”. 4 Iiiiwiinniiitv sroiui - d7 ribosomes or. Illa-Chill! ' _ : slimmed, '- oils/tailing: I BRACELETS a Paramount's o, ' R =§1°45 EXCLUSIVE "GIFT SETS chagrin; h: Purl: Walnut Ashe: of Rose: Chub. Skylark Walnut Ohelb. Mlllhiuiil Walnut Chub. De ' "3 8 rein" . nut Frieze $2.00 trail“, Keystone and Plflphylluflq Walnut Hal: Brushes. Off: F are" =~~ i“ - P 8a Gil: 51.03%? $6.00.“ s“. iuvi om Sol: . £1.60 o“ n” “ Mlrmr Bot: 0.11m 11m 2x21"!!! Pawn In Chen: W P -, l‘ ... m. .211: "is ~- Numerous other gift ldeu. Drop In and lee our i 4151118’! of Gift suggestloiigga TllE 2 MAGS 10 Great George Sheet nxrniir 01v nsanim: LONDON - (cm _ P D Dunn. lmbberly mm f ' ' min-Inn's fish dlvlsiono wit? I as a ommlsslo e mohndland. 1188 been apiiblii, p w dem-rlmgm of Till m’ 0'9 of Agriculture and Flshflrl (IA-IMF. Wiltshlre Q _ -- Fined for riding saggy-c], that ii hIi-"iilcriiisiildantfiyiiiiiit ifleaded It was a "pedal cycle," n h“ 6. F. Ilutcheson 8i SOII OPTOMETRISTS ‘Specialists In the fil- ling of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feds.’ 53 Grafton Street i Professional Gard: Neil W. Higgins Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown T61 539 P.0. Box M Frederic A. Large BAIBISTIJB. no. Phillie: Biilldliiz. m Grafton ll Phu: 1M! p, Q, n,‘ 4g cnamorrarowu. r. n. i. Richard B. Johnston Atfuniey Al. Law (‘oinmluioner for Deeds. Em, fo" Prince Edward Island (Successor to Li“ Richard E. Johmgon) Office Sulfa 420, 31 Milk Street Boston. Miss. ' McLeod f? Bentley W. B. BENTLEY, K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. Barrister; and Attorneys-zit ' Law l5! Prince Street lkflxwxea s: .- ~ s.» u: szsxvcoé‘ _...______________.___ O-O-O+OO-O-O-O+O-OQ-O-O4~Q-QO-OV§QO Lhaues R. McQiiaid . - n. A. l Ilrrhhr. Solicitor. Notify. Eta. Intern Trim Bulldhun. Charlottetown wwwg I l . r i l Phillie 171i II. ii. niiiiiii s. ciiI , Chartered - Accountants i T u cumi- sum. Churlolioown n6» up w It lladolpii w Mlnlilll- 0- A q-v—-l" v Fublic Stenographol lllmoognphfng card: mil oIrn emniionhearuwyyiii: n . ii . l i " ms: HELEN nimml lino-J. __ timiifliislan _ Ohniuglit AB“- Nfl- 4-. . 1'5"“, .. _- .._._._._:,~_¢,~.: ’ "(Iffllliitiil Golllilllill l‘ Vclbkrlorflfl anon-feels}. ' ll. F. AlblllbAl-j, uh, 4-,»... naming; ' s. n.