..:-.n.s.4-.-. - 'PAGE roux THE GUARDIAN Authorized no Second Class Mail Post Ollie- Departinent. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. President and Associate Editor. In A. Burnett. Associate Editor, Frank Willie!- CIRCULATION "Covcr: Prince Edward island like the dew” acquiesced in the idea that civic. like other government. should ”do something" for the people, without any regard to cost, that social service is the only criterion, that if in performing social service the government runs short of money-well, it should just go and get some more money. For in- stance, it seemed desirable that New York- ers should have cheap transportation. So, the city had to subsidize the subways to .THE GUARDIAN. CHAkLt)TTETOWN' - Sweeping The Land irIsf',riic'riiiIfl;Sf. so is )4 0 ins ii: woiftwf 3:. pcansti F "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". cu.Uri.01"i'i;'ruiv ?-1-,-FRIl)Al . APRll.'F7. 1953 the tune of 3117 million a year. The peo- ple were so happy with their 5 cent, and more recently their 10 cent, subway. fare, that they never reckoned the cost in taxes. iin dilapidated equipment, in inefficient and even dangerous operation. Higher educa- , , . . ltion was also desirable. So it had to be oil industry had begun to cstablish itself,, given m the people of New York ,,free,, m the crude oil production savcd Canada S9.-lthe tune of S522 million a War. And so it 000,000 in importations. ll'0lll the Went on down the line ' slateS' East yea! this Wing amffmllde . 1 Now comes the reckoning: a city in. roughly &.8U'U0UlU0U'7a tmmnf O .m come tax on top of a city sales tax. then Mensa .Wl.th Vastly lmpmw-id nanS.pmta- a higher sales tax, higher real estate taxes; mm faclimes aimlul)1C Hm. yoaia ,th: new and higher business taxes; a special amount Wm be SW gl.iCa”.1' b.0mCl eiiin authority to run the subways and a high- ihe huge Fxpansmn In iwsh-ll” fma la” er fare to Day for them. These are to be oil production may also bc C,LilllCtiVfl0lll plied upon levies already .50 high mu fact that 1” 1946' M new ml liens veil; there has begun an exodus of business from opened, where-a-s l.is)t year l1ilP.llel:e;Vein- the Once great City. "umbered 131” . hoien 01 1,8581 d 40 There is a moral for every community creased during this period from aioun .- in this account of New Y0rk.S predicament. 000900 to almost 2'000.'00U'WU' and estldilt does not mean that municipal govern. mates now run closc to ..20,0.0tl,t100.000 bai- mems Should follow a penny-wise, poundg, re15' The prmClpa.l hninanon on Ptihet mg foolish Dolicy of ignoring modern require- dusk” at present 15 ne1m.e,r the S o,rt:g' ments which would result only in stagna- of 011 rescrws. mm of. in.a1kmS'. but,1a er tion and retrogression. What it does mean, of tra"5p0",1a”0” faU1mOS'. Nwelxhelfgssylis that such requirements must be met oni p;0iiBC()m:1 15 ICXPCCHE l()inm1(-gggsio a basis of sound economy. The more am-i 1 6, arrc S 1701' all - c - k wi1'1ie'iI1E'a1fsi1?rE”inPc-rease Five years ago when Canada's western: . 0 APRIL 17 1953 ..--u.-.. ..,.g?'g? M-gap. r.Notes By The Waxg To add color and fantasy to the coronation in London, nightingale: are to sing in fash- West-End Square. The birds will be perched in appropriate positions and carclings are to be played in companiment. It. must. be centur- ies since London has ioneble dict. asleep in the nu tie and mink in .'”um..,.",;.t1.t",l;l;; fat Bronx housewives end '.11,,.. artificial Berkeley Italian grocers and the move, slonally Chinese Chinese nt lxfott street; it is' the Queen Einabeth passing a. garbage sccw; 1; ,5 the Empire State Bulldng and meg I0- 80- echoed to enklcd models; it is Irish cop, ma . zance of the publicity the song or this melodious warb- ler. Visitors will have to walk the country lanes of Sussex and Hampshire and Devon to hear a nightingale. However. it. reflects a poetic spirit in the coronation committee for Mayfair where. in the past. money and social pree- tlge have counted for more than the poetic fancy.-London Free press. merits; it. is the and crime; it. Waldorf and a. tor. Victoria's breath of Spring went. this week to the prairies, Onta- rio and Quebec. The biggest air- lift. of daffodils in the city's his- tory was carried by chartered plane to eastern markets. Elsewhere in the living rooms oi the nation are samples of the gold that covers fields on the southern end of Van- couver Island. True. they repre- sent coln to the growers who have produced them. Yet it is pleasant to think that their value is some- thing more than financial. There is satisfaction in knowing that we share some of our floral rich- es with less fortunate parts of the country. And if we must note the commercial end of the transac- tion, we should also take cogni- value to this community of such ship- esst as New York lous howls nights. Coyotes breed which has among flocks and al coyote hunters down. eat anything. The plum and tarantul sert. to him. -Cor Freeholder. O00 . 10.1 bitious the scheme the greater attentionl tha'r;h::36r0:)pe"l1”V tlflicll haw mme ,0 thelshould be given to the financial problem! I , g.g..........m.:....m Western Provinces tlirougli oil resources is,i inVolY:d' It is :11 too 0,35,), toerfolxgrulgllei of course, beneficial to the whole of Can-iopposl 9 Courset ecause away 5 i v - l ada Nevertheless, it is a Sore point with ly react unfavorably to tax increases. Tbel , I . . . iallmark of conscientious administration if yaea wzm lcondensed from it B. B C. talk the people of Prmcc Edward Island that as 1 '1 iby' proremr s. P. 0'Riorda.in, D. . however is to keep the day of reckoning A , , ,- . . i d 1 91 v - L. I-f., Professor of Archaeology, 3 landless Pmunc? lie hale falc 0 g. isteadilv in sight, i University college, Dublin. Profes- recognition of our Just claims at Ottawa in - srnmc. this respect. Not only do the Western Provinces enjoy huge revenues from their Crown lands. but: they retain as well ill"! substantial subsidies allocated to ptlicin ini lieu thereof. To Alberta, where 011 is noxw providing such lavish public revenue. at sor OtRlordain is leading the V l d th r1 L I . t K I team of archaeologists who are an- . o c EDITORIAL NOTES E ” ” Kar.:.: t:.:..:::::::”::.:.:..T”.;: gggg. ilvgw tl)u'r'gcoi;.T every maze of qllifislpoeg Moo,-e wrote of v . 5 Syria” Naumml Day. la ou mlicrxl mxcriiig square . an I 'I'hcT2:.EI11l: htE.ll;;ast ' " " iliy nshen rum: Ill;-)diiio1Si5lbigV'-Id '1'he soul of music shed. . . . now rings 9 ii an ou in H15 m 1 t, 1 d, Roads in some remote paits of Pakistang ions. 'Tpart,ed gf.?.f, E25...”?i.? ej8():")rf,eenfh once through The distance takes a lovelier hue. century an unknown poet W,-mug Excavating At Tara 1 grant of SS375,000,000 was made to be rev-is-i ed upward as thc population increased, "ill-I asmuch as thc said Province will not have; public lands as a source of revenue." the case of Saskatchewan the minimunr grant was S3T5.000.000, and to Manitobal 5:')62,500,t)00. Then in 1930, under thc. Natural Resources Act applicable r three Provinces, thc public lands generally. are classified as good niacadam, good but, dusty, bad and very dusty. and, at the bot-i tom of the list, ”jcepable”. Presumably inp lni the latter the passengers are apt to be iiibrhe ”:r'k3 are whit... down the bottom of the jeep. i i- in O 1 Canadian sculptors will be invited to en-, monument of Sir Robert Borden, to be sct' And drowned lll lovelier living blue iThr: lnrk become: :1 sightlcss songnu-ated Ammnde, and cam” and Now dance the lights on lawn and the vale. And milkier every milky sail. On winding stream or distant sea; Where now the seaniew pipes, or dives to all ier a competition to design a 2350.000 bron7.o1m ynndm. mmmm mum! and my The happy birds, that change their gin Irish notes how time has de- the city of Troy. and he couples iwith them deserted Tara. 'Gra.ss grows on Tara. Troy is over- Lhrown,' he writes. Troy and Tara, -Caesar and Alexander are for him giigures of greatness departed. Past iglory, past. greatness are symbol- yised by Tara. It is also a site which awakens t.he affection of ithe Irish people. scarcely a. day ipasses but Tara has its visitors. , you the Sunday before St. Pat- 11"'5- lrickls Day numbers of people in those Provinces were tianslelred by U101 up in Ottawa. It is hoped to have the work, To bufldv and brood, mm M? their Dominion to them. including all the mines,1completed and ready for unveiling, June til minerals and rcsourccs, while the compensii-i1954, the 100th anniversary of the birth of tion previously authorized to be paid in lieu this illustrious Canadian. thereof was continued on the same basisl " " " by special provision in each of the trans-; the United Statcs, g , come to pick shamrock on the I'M” Tmmfm Hill of Tara. - for clearly Tara's p Coronation Seal mm which it grew. The Director of importance of its role in the early ferring Statutes. . All this uzis sci, lortli in the brief pre- sented by thc Princc Edward Island Gov- ernment at the Federal-Provincial Confer- ence of 19511. The modcst claim was made that for Prince lidward Island. HPQU3-i and equitable trcatmcnt demands an equiv- alent transfer” winch in our case would mean the cancellation of the land purchase loan made at Confederation (fiST82,402) and payment: of thc full amount of 534-WW) ails nually since 15330. It is to be hoped that our representa- tives at Ottawa will not fail to keep this issue in the foreground. in view of the circumstanccs thc claim is indccd a moder- ate onc. Perhaps this is why it has at- tracted so little attention. But the time is coming when there must be a realloca- tion of our national wealth on a morc equitable basis, and no one who has studied the question of our Jami compensation claims can fail to conccdc its mciits. During thc past few months Mr. J. O. Hyndman has drawn attention to this sub- ject in letters appearing in The Guardian. He has strivcn for years to arouse public interest in thc qucstioii. Sonic day. 10t U5 hope, we shall achicvc thc drive and unani- mity that will enable us to capitalize on it to our lasting advantagc. Pllglit i mliew York's Smaller cities arc prone to say that if, they only had more population their prob-i lems would be eased. But that is not tho way it works out. The more populous the city, the worse relatively its problems may become. Take New York City for example. It may be H mecca of private wealth and opulence. but it is no such mecca in civic terms. Thc Wall Street Journal reports that it is not an exaggeration to say that today the City of New York is edging bankruptcy. It has been running deficits for years, but until now has been able to stave off thc reckoning by a number of makeshift devices. City officials have now gone to the state capital to concede that the city has come to the end of its rope. The governor has felt impelled to step in with proposals for drastic measures. The main reason for the great city's Bureau of Standards has been fired, al-, flcgediy because of something to do with prolonging the life of automobile batteries. It seems far more probable that he really ,got the heave-ho because of insisting that 1 women who used to be told that they were in ”perfect 36" must now wear a 48. 1 O 9 O l , Ian I-lay (Major General Hay Beithl. 1Eng-lish author. was born this date 1876. iHis earlier books, "The First Hundred i'l”housand" and "Carrying On", on 4tlic lFirst World War attracted attention. They icaught much of what was best in the ilspirit of 1914 and gave a graphic. account i0f life in the New Armies. He also ivrotc icomedies, children's books and works on T the Second World War. j u to o I Crop pollination by honey bees lizis Ereached large proportions in the United fstates and is being done on a modest scalc ,in this country. Usually an agreement is fmade between a legume crop seed-grower iand the bee-keeper. A stated number of fcolonics per acre is provided and the crop rreturn above a certain yield is divided keeper. ! U U I The attractive feature of state hospital- ization plans is that the individual ceases to be threatened with the crushing costs of ily. Like all such measures, however, it must be compulsory in order to be work-1 able and fair. Government publication, reports that more than 961000 in fines has already been paid this year for failure to pay the Provincial hospitalization tax. I D 0 Both imagination and co-operation is shown by the filming of the movement. of- a Dutch family to Grahams Road in thisi Province. It is probably just as well that actual Spring conditions are to be pictur- ed, rather than those of Summer. The early history of immigration here holds for too much of glowing accounts by agents which bore no relation at all to truth. Immigrants induced to come by tiie actual conditions and prospects here will certainly be better satisfied than any induced by Biixht, notes on exchange, is that the people equally between the grower and the bee-' illness to one or more members of the fam-, The Saskatchewan News, all i, INational Geogrnpliic News) An old oak chair. b.-it,tei-ed and niiitilated. will stniid as the focal point. of Queen Elizabeth II's mspldemn ooronaiion ritual on June -ii . 1 Appearance, however, cannot mar .thn historic. sviiibolisiii of 6.')2-,vcar- pnld King Edward's Chair, on wli.ch 127 British monarchs have sat to be ,crowned, says the National Geo- graphic Society. 1 The ancient Gothic seat has lost inearly all of its original rich decoration. It has acquired. instead. scrws-s of initials and nicks carved irrcverently by tourists of bygone days when guardianship was more lax. Eighteenth century visitors lcspccially could cvade or bribe guides in Westminster Abbey for it Fhance in Kit in thc. mynl ch Ill'. One rclionlbm, the story goes spciu. the night. in the Abbey nn a dare. As proof of his lxildness and to while away the hours. be r llefi in the seat of the Corona- tian Chair: jrP, Abbott slept. in this char 5-6 July 1800." Thc Coronation Chair has furth- rr suffered abuse at the hands of the expedient. the well-meanin: and the angry. Nails once used M fastcii coronation drnpci-ic.s have scarred the wood. Well-mean- 11:: decorators applied a coat of brmvn paint for Queen Victoriais I387 Jubilee. This effort to mov.iei'n- zzc the proud old relic has since been scrubbed off. The Chair's worst indignity was ,an attempted bombing in 1941 dur- ,i!lR A suffragette demonstration. It. escaped. however, and nlso avoided bombs of World War II. when it was safely hidden away. The Chair was damaged as rc- rcntly as 1950, when Sc.nt.i.isli nationaiists carved and splintered it. in stealing the famous Stone of Scone which the chair contains. That fabulous stone, now back in place in its recem under the seat, is far more historic than the chair which was made to hold it. On the Stone. the ancient kings of Scotland were enthroncd. and its legendary history proclaims it in be Jacob's pillow. Legend also links the stone with Ireland's ancient Stone of Destiny, Lia- Fail The Stone of scene was captured by Kin: Edward I when he in- vaded Scotland in IE6, He brought it back in triumph to London and commissioned his royal painter, Writer of Durham, to build a chair in hold it. He paid Wnliier five tmunrls for the Chair. mmplctcd in l.'i(ll. That. is about 814 today but in those times it: nmnuntctf L: 3500. Richly ornamented with gilt izesso work and pain-led designs the Chair was further embellished with carved moldin-vs .-rd glass mosaics. A painted figure of an picturing us as enjoying July in April. f enthmned king, his feet on a lion, history of the country. While many or the places mentioned. in early ihlstory or ancient tales are diffi- lcuit. t.o identify, no one doubm fthat the hill of Tara. in County i.VIeath is in fact. identical with ithe ancient .Teamhair - Team- !hair na Riogh. Tara. of the Kings, ,Ro,val Tara. And there is the kern- Kai of the whole story. At Tara lived kings. and these were no provin- lclal kings but were kings of Ire- iiand - so their glory is the glory '01 early Ireland and their rule ,meant the unity of Ireland and their seat. at. Tara symbollsed that glory and that unity. . . . We are told that. Tara was the irhlef residence of the Irish kings ifrom the time of Slainge, who reigned in the twentieth century, EB. C- and continued to be occu- jpicd until the reign of Diarmuid in ,t.he sixth century. A. D. Then, be- cause of ii quarrel between the king and St. Ruadhsn, the saint. lcursed the place and as a result it juas deserted. Between its foundri- lllofl and its rlesertion there reigned in Tara 142 monarchs: 136 of ithem were pagan and six were christian. one of the most remark- iable of them. the fortieth in the isuccession was ollamh Fodhla, so lnnmed because of his wisdom, for fnllamh means a learned one. He 3csta.bli.shed the assembly known as lthc Feis of Tara to be held every gl-hild year, at the feast of Sam- lhaln, corresponding to our Hal- lowefen. The foundation of this great. assembly was is notable achievement. - for this Feis con- tinues to be spoken of as ii. nation- al function throughout the history of Tara and it is described by early and late writers. Thus the seven- teenth-ccntury historian Keatlng writes: Now the Fois of Tara was it great assembly like a parliament in which nobles and scholars of Ireland . . . were wont. to lay down and to renew rules and laws and to approve the annals and records of Ireland. There. too, it was arranged that each of the nobles of Ireland should have ii seat according to his rank and adorned the high gebled beck. Traces of this are still visible. Four gilded lions support the seat, but they are relatively modem. King Edward's Chair, placed in me Abbey chancel facing the altar for the crowning, is not consider- ed ii true throne since it is used only for :1 out of the ritual. The real throne is the seat in the House of Lords from which the sovereign opens Parliament. BATH, England, (CF) - Don Desk. who set out with his wife and two children to travel by truck to Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia. now has reported completing the ioufney "without even a punc- ture." title . . . It was also their custom to pass six days in feasting to- gether . . . making peace and en- tering into friendly alliances. . . . In the third century A. D. we meet. with the most notable of the names of the kings of Tara -- Cormac Mac Airt. His reign is rc- t carded as R. golden which Tara reached age during the summit. of its glory, and the ancient. writ- ers compare him with Solomon. In Cormscs time many of the build- ings of Tara erected, in- cluding the most. magnificent. of them all - the great. banqueting hall. Bringing artificers from across the sen. he built. at Tara the first water-mill known in Ireland. In his time there flourished Finn M-accumhaill and his warriors. and connected with Cormac and Finn is the great: Irish love tale concerning Crralnnc, daughter of Cormsc, who was promised to Finn but who eloped with his lieutenant Diarmuid. To Tara came Finn and his warriors to ask for Grainne as Finns wife and from Tara Grain- ne and Diarmuld eloped. to begin their epic wanderings which end- were shamrock 1'5 hallowed by the milled in Dla.rmuid's death. At Tara is a site named from Grainne. and Turns pre-eminence lies in thewhe joint names of D1,,rmmd and Grainne attached to inegalithlc tombs throughout; Ireland bear witness to their flight. In the fourth century the kings of Tara frequently raided Roman Britain. Niall of the Nine Hos- tages continued the raidng with vigour and it was he who brought back among his captives the boy who was to b! St. Patrick, the Apostle of Ireland. Niall died in one of his raids. about A. D. 427. and was succeeded by his son Iaog mine, In his reign occurred one of the most. momentous happenings in the history of Tara - the coming of St. Patrick its mission- ary. Patrickis coming to Tara was .the beginning of the end. we have ihesrd of the cursing of Tara in the sixth century. After that there are still kings of Tara but. there is no certainty that. they lived at the site from which they took their title. . . . Such. in brief. is the story. Be- fore we try to evaluate it let. us look ai.,the site itself. The Hill of Tara. about twenty miles north of Dublin. is not B. great eminence. It is a north-south ridge rising to about 500 feet. above sea level. but remarkable for the prospect it commands over the plain on which it. is set. On the hill we find ll. series of earthworks of various types - burial mounds. circular enclosures, and, at the north, two great parallel banks. Most of the individual sites are now marked with plaques which give the names by which they have been identi- fled. The identifications are based on a. medieval tract known as the Dinnschcrichss, in which the not- able places in early Ireland are described and in which Tara is given pride of place. Not. only are the Turn sites named in the tract. but. their position is given in rela- tion to one another. so we find the burial mound known as the Mound of the Hos- tages. the small ring-forts known as Conmads House, the Royal seat and Grainne's Bath, the larger fort. named from King mog- haire, the great. enclosure the Port of thmxlngs, and e site with con- centric banks which is the Fort of the synods. Most remarkable of all are the two parallel banks. over 700 feet long, labelled the Teach Mloilcliuariop or Banquet Hall For information on this hell we have as authority not only the Dinluhenchss but she the plans of it which are given in two menu- scripte the twelfth-century Book of Leinster and the four- teenth-century Yellow Book of Le- csn. The plane show a rectangular building. divided into live long aisles: in which compartments are marked to show the various pro- fessions and grades of society ap- propriate to each. with the name of those who should occupy each cubicle is given the joint of meat appropriate to them at the ban- poratlon of the City of Toronto ,surely have not reached the depth mcntsevlctorla Times. The financial needs of the Cor- of desperation where 61,000 a month from advertising placards on parking meters looks like bis money. But apparently the Civic Works Committee thinks so high- ly of the idea that it has ordered 9. study of an offer f1'om a firm to pay 26 per cent. of its gross revenue from this advertising business. The thought evidently has not oc- curred tc the Committee that the streets would look an undigrilfled mess with cluttering cards be- seeching the citizenry to Buy Brighter Bromide for Their :Blle's sake. or to Drive Faster with Mar- velous swift. Gasoline, not I. Ping in I. Gallon.-Toron-to Telegram. length, has been part: of 32, nearly Devlzes Road. in continued through New York is 7.;PIf;lllll0f of lIsr- "A15”- Mmmef lem and the breath-stopping beauty of towers shimmering in the mist. as the ship approaches: it. is the fury of taxi-drivers and the serenity of children feeding 57, 58. 60 and 62 of ten miles. Heights and Brooklyn; or Tazewell county, port the loss of 410 sheep worn, 323.000 to one coyote. Profession. "Canis ietrans" anything smaller than a. cow, gm-1 meant literally. The coyote set. and apparently digest 1931.115- belts and old shoes. spiders. scar. Old Cha.rlottetown (And r. r. r. i ROAD ILMPROVEMENTI UMWCI Nation; 15 Mornlngsido ii. is the thousand 11.11,. dellcatessens: it is success and ,. million lost. hopes. some love N", York and some hate it. No man can ignore it.-Hamilton spec”. The National Geographic soup, ty tells us there are coyotes M ,5, state. M351”; by listening carefully along the river bank we could hear these their cm-. quiet Spring crossbred with C1086 have produced a curious Wily W1'0U'8lht havoc herds. Farm”; Virginia. 1-5 finally ran mm will 1.111 t. last: phrase is will as are just deg. nwall standard- '1We have been informed that I. new line of Road. six miles in opened centri- cslly through Townships 31 and parallel to the New Wiltshin. which will shorten the distance from Bedeque to Charlottetown (if the eastern part of Lot 32 and parts of Township: 65, 30 and 29 in s westerly direc- tion) several miles. and will be a much superior, level line, to the can formerly laid off and made in 1838, by order of government. survey has just been completed tlirougli Townships for a distance from Orwell Herd, through Newtown and Montague, towards the Wood Island Bett1e- ' WI t'Qi.4.- 0” me beside pigeons: it is the canned heat. ad- -A -4-.oag;.:c.ka.;-co-amok The Age-Old Storyi .1-T96 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leuleth the still waters. He ments, which will shorten the dis- tance of the interior lands of the latter place, to Charlottetown thy way of the new Orwell Bridge) I- bout seven miles. On the Estates. the property of the Rt. Hon. Thomas Earl of Selkirk, there are at. present, in various directions. about forty miles opened, for new roads to be made forthwith-the principal part. of which has been surveyed by Mr. Hickey, Land Sur- veyor, under the direction of Wil- restoreth my soul Yes, though liam Douse, Esq, I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil:. for thou art with me,. thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.....Surely goodness and mercy shell fouow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever. settlers. as well as ship's Estate." his Lordship! land agent, to whom much credit is -due for planning out. these ex- tensive improvements, ing so wide a field for agricultural and open- providing labour for persons located on his Loni- -Royal Gazette. Sept. 2, 1541 PROFESSIONAL CARDS Gender & Heszerd GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LL.n Barristers and solicitors Money to Loan Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Ste. Office Phone 1956-Home 1013 M. Alben Farmer. QC. . Frederic A. Large. QC. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Royal Bank of Canada Biilldliil Charlottetown. P. E. I. Louis on City and Farm Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. pmpeme. J. S. Taylor A. Weltiien Geudet. OPTOMETRIST LLB, BARBISTER. SOLICITOR. Eil- Phillipe suiiciini: 111 Grafton Street Money to noon Cnllfii-E Bell. Methiesen & B.A., l'.L.B. Barrister end solieilo , Bank of Commerce Building Fosfer H chulomwwn Barristers. Solieito -. A 0- Money to Loan ii. R. BElI;L.LB-g- G. R. FOSTE . - - Chas. R. McOueid Loans on city mo Firm EA. Propcrtierig BABBISTEB. OLICITOB. 1-'50 Rlchmmi 5"” Charlottetown. I'.E.l- NOTARY. Etc. Eutom Trust Building & CIIARLOTTETOWN Mm'h55.9"- P'ukg Phone mi Nicholson A. W. MATIIESON. D'- W- 3- CW0" .o'i...”'.-."”.'v'i'.5ii'...'?i.'is”... cola CIIIBOPRACTOB Palmer Graduate Barristers. Etc L0" CHABLOTTETOWN Collections -- Mono! T: Phone I012 201 Prince St. 175 Graftnn& MocPiiee 8: Trainer II. F. iiIacPHIISE. B.A.. Q.C. ' l'. SOIIIEIILED TBAINOE. B.A. barristers. Eur. J. A. Cerruthers. N.O. OPTOMETBIBT Palmer & Hoslam A. J. HASLAM. B.A.. LL3- ' Barrister. Ew- Benlr of News South: trliamhl" Charlottetown. l'- 5 L MONEY T0 LUAN P-P-1-fg Dr. K. A. Meciuclicfli 118 Kent Street Phone 281': (Ext to Simpson's Agency) DEN-"ST Dental X-fl! Allison M. Gillis. LLB. Mm. Charlottetown pciinicw BABRlSfl'l!B.rSOI.lCl'l'0B. an m Queen so. H""'” 130 Richmond St. - Charlottetown -:--- -- .'.'"'.."'..m.m...."” A Dr. A. L. Meclsoec Byron J. Greet. 0.0. l)lt!t:'l'&9:" , OPTOMITIIIT GL(?;:'A.3i”L1)I,VG , in Kent Street Phone I'll m Gum” m rlinne 19 (Opposite Bowen Hotel) ,,,- quet. ' semi r. MecPI1EB!0N. on. other offices II Ilsmu. Monelen. It. lentviile. Liverpool. New Glasgow and Trum McDONAl.D. CURRIE 8: CO. Montreal. Quebec. fmswe. Toronto. llirlilsnd Lain. Mancini: Hamilton. Bdriionton. Currie Bldg. Charlottetown. H. R. DOANE In COMPANY CIIAIITIIED AUIJGUNTANTS NI Great George St... Charlottetown Phones IMO - 1441 RANDOLPH W. MANNING. (LA. - V . (-HQ, m1:viN J. iiirki.r..xA.n"m Jnhifl. Amherst. 95'” j CIIARTIBED ACCOUNTANTS um Saint John. Sh:-rhrooirc. Vnlif" Chuiottctnu 0- I rclepbol"