illll5lllfsfi, and that they prefer to retain their . p. tittr Ihtfl .\rt‘ttttt' cntttcnipnrarjt, this little PAGE rout: TIIE GHARLOTTETGWN Gllllllllllll Morning lgully [Founded In 1581) President: Lleut. Col. W. Chester S. Mcliun Vice-President: J. B. Burnett, l-‘JJ. Secretary: Lleul. Col. D. A. Mlclilnnon. 9-59- Eilltor and nlanaging Director: J. ll. Burnett, l-‘JJ. Associate Editors: l-rank Walker and UeuLIlnA. Burnett, R.C.N.V.R. (On Active Servlool “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." sziirtttttiav OCTOBER z 1943 Of The St. The sittltiitg of the Cattadiatt destroyer SI. Crutlr with loss of all but one of her _!-l7“"l3" crew is a grint reminder that tlte war _ts by no means over. This hcavy toll of casualties 1S the worst experienced by the Royal Canadian Navy in the \\'.'tt'. and hrittgs to thirteen the number of l\’.L'..\'. .~llllt5 lust sittcc the hostilities began. T1“. St. Croix, like litany of her sister ships, was m, gfnjvtiy duty in the North .\tlantic when tor- pcdoeil. "This is line of the most arduous and rlrtttjgertitts of all wartime tasks. Due largely to the ttitmtiifiricttt work of ottr naval attd an‘ forces. losses frttttl enemy submarine action have hecn greatly lessened iii recent tttontlis. But the tticttiicc still exists. The 5f» CFQlX and ' " cruw were playing their part in sub- -.i tht- disaster itccttrrcd. . hf tkttiatla are represented in the casnaitr lzst. Tu.» l‘rittce lidward Island names, [h9g0 hi’ ,\hl.- St-atitntt _I l5. Burriaitlt, Welling- ton. and lmtttltttq‘ Ctlttk l. \\'. Smith, Emerald luttctititt. are ittelttdetl. The sympathy of all our citizens goes out to the fantilies of these young mm, it; of clntrse, it does to all who have lost litvbfl ones in the war. (lit this Occasiml it l5 ,1 nytllPf {hr ll1lll<lll-\\'l(.lt3 mourning. Bttt there will be pride, t-it», in the fact that death was nit-t sn l\l'.'l\<'i\'. and in the cause of freedom and justice for till ntttttltittd. L053 C roix More Ontario Advice A Port .\rthttr exchange notes that with _a pppulniir... til ntiilei- 100,000 we ltave tn _thts .l’rovincc a Lieutenant Governor, a Lcglilil- lite .\ssettthl_v nf 3O lll0lllllcr5. 07 one l0 ab?“ "cry 54.00 pciiple, a Premier, three active mm- isters, five withnttt portfolio, and a whole set of tiruvittcial gttvcvlllllctlt officers, cottrtfi. fic- “_.\ hit of governutetit for a few people," 1t_S1l-y5. adding: “lite other two Maritime Provinces, Nova Scotia, population 554,000 ' and New grungy‘ 1,3 population 43t,0oo, are tn much the same C], g‘ _\l| [tn-ec- toqether have only about o,,c_,j,;,-,1 the lltllllllilllUll (lf Quebec, less than one-third that of Utttario. A5. lllllllerrlwle. the interests, industries attd otttloolc of the three are. much the same, it \\'ottld scent that one gov- ernment for the three wottkl be sufficient." The old deatl-aitd-ltttrictl arguments for .\lari- titne Union, dug up and rcsttscitated at every Qjljlllflllllll)’, The fact that the RonTll-Slrtllfi gonmnsshn. ittvestiglttctl thcsc arguments and found thcnt to have no tnerit whatcvfl‘. llaslfl discouraged the trishfttl thinkers tn Otitarto. They arc still ltopiitg to ltave tts jott1<r<l._\vllly- nilly, iii political wedlock. All, of course, m the interests of economy! . \\'lt_v do not these wtseacres take a case near- er ltonte. There are, for example, the twin cities of Port .\rthttr and Fort William, with popula- tions of 25,000 and _§0,<'>0o respectively —- Sltltat- ed only a few titiles apart, and still with duplic- ate sc-rviees and civic governmctits. Why n0l cotubittc them into one city, twice as big, cheap and hattdstnnc? _ _ ']‘1,,. gill”... m‘ Port .\rtlntt- and Port Wll- 1i“... “mild tllrllllllCS§ say that this ts their own idrntitv. \\'ith much ntore reason can Prince Fftlii-tttirl lslattd argue that if any place Slwllld 11.1w ;| provincial governntcttt setup tt is surely ll..- (‘tq-ldle of (ftiitfederation. Our ltistortc leg- l>lllfl\'(‘ httiltliitg, tllll‘ colonial tradition long atitcdatinq (‘onfederation, surely mean sonic- thing. Vlhev nteati tttttch to us in this Provtncc; all the lllwFt‘ so because. strange as it may scent l-lillltl ha. .'ilu;i_r\ had a smaller pcr captta ex- pt-ttditttrt: tlrtti other pt'0\'lll€@§. illld ‘Vould ‘In’ douhtedlr find both her (lcht and hcr taxes tn- Slaritintc Fninn were consummated. creased if V. A. D. Work 'l‘l-.t-i»ttglw ti: (iinada an appeal is being lllatlt‘ l‘i_v the 5t. _|~lm .\tttlittl;ittcc llrigude for young initt \~ltttt'.:tr_v .\itl lletztclttttetits, ll0\V , of the Royal (Xmadiatt .\rtuy Tn- . i _ .~(‘l'\'lCC with tnatty of its‘ .tl:t;.l\ uflvittg in tttilitary ltospitah \ ..\.I)_ work attracted ltutttlrcds of Lj;,,,;,,li;,., \-...m. tt in the lZl>f war, hut, largely as a t'(‘.\llll ~f tltt‘ ;tt.':tt\' ttlltet‘ calls on \\‘0l‘t19ll b)’ nrtttul \Il'\'iL'l‘* and industry, voluntary hos- l tuirl. hst. lllll l".'<‘lt tttuch to the forc in tllt’ prwttt! t" rflivt. ']'l,.,.,- “l... .p tllwlll‘ the \'..\.l'). appeal do not claitn th rt- i. zrtv shtirtttgtr of graduate nurses to \t:tif (Etttrtilizttt titilitary ltnspitals, here or ()\'(‘l',~4'.'l.'~, l\‘:ttlt<-i- they pttitll to the ever-grow- ing ;_l,...-pp\-¢ ..f ttttrst-s itt civilian hospitals, a sitotttiqc which lta. pt-ctittte ticutc and a serious jirohlt in itt tttatty cities. and claim that if V.A._D. s l7? ithtnittt-tl for the tnilitary ltnspttals -r1 E t Cillllllll lllltfc tttttwes uiil ltavt- h. he called up. The re- sults flit" citiliztti ltt».<pit.'tls titigltt \\'(.'ll become (l('-]it't';t'tt. i»‘...- \\'ttllll‘tl thittk-ittg of joining one of the u-ottirtfs" _\ttxili:tt'v Services, especially those “pt, m, jflpljfljlllllll trnvtirtls tending the sick, the \‘..l....t.-..-\- _\i.l llctacltittetit riffcrs many attrac- tions, 'l'ltc ttet-tl i< for girls and women he- ,,,.,...,, itp- _-,._v,, ml t8 and 44, withottt depctttlettt children. lt is first tieccssary to obtain a Sf- lt-hn .\lltlllll.'llll‘t' First .i\id (fertificate and the Rml (1.... m’ Si. _lllllll ll/ltttt- Nursing Certific- ate. .\rr:ttirretticnts ltave lh-en tnade for initial training and. nftcr a three tiiotttlts probation t» ‘rind, th.» zipplieattt siqtis armv attestation pap- er.- ‘llii-re rtrn lilteral allowances. Tlh- ttfltvl for \’..\.D.'< ltas increased now that th~ (‘nnntliziii :trtttv is in action attd casual- ties are coming to ltospttals herc é EDITORIAL NOTES - The ban on canned- vegetables is to be lif at an early date. I i I has given the assurance that the railways will provide sufficient facilities for carrying coarse grain to the East and Maritimes for the pur- pose of feeding dairy and other livestock. l! l! ll i The Charlottetown Board of Trade and City Council will have the unanimous approval of citizens in their action re our airport. It may not be generally known, but all the airmen who take courses here comment adversly on the in- adequacy of the runways. Surely the worst pos- opments. after-war trade devel i i l I Canadian airmen are serving everywhere. There are 32 Canadian squadrons overseas but n others with the R.A.F. Thus Canada added its might to every air blow struck against the enemy. Recently the R.C.A.F. had assumed guard of patrolling the west half of the North Atlantic and sometimes clear across. adian airmen went a share of the credit for the Slllllmfl‘. i ll i U The Liberals in caucus wereJoud in their cri- pecially with regard to exceptions made and con- cessions offered due to high-pressure stuntsJ There would ltave been little complaint, it was claimed, had the controllers, when they clamped down just stood their grottud, for then all would have been on the same footing. In Ontario and in Western Canada the people have been tattgltt to believe that the controls are being ad- ministered either by or on behalf of the nat- ion's financial interests, not for the better pro- secution of the \\'ar effort, and it is easy to surmise that many of the teachers are of C.C.F. or Social Credit perstLasioti or of both. a n- u Relations Committee expressed fear of intem- perate and troublemaking debate in the Senate, ivhieh prompted the Buffalo Courier Express to think in not too cautious terms that the U.S. Senate ought to be abolished. In support of this suggestion it argued that in Britain the demo- cratic process was accelerated when the House of Lords was turned into “a polite debating society with only a few vestiges of legislative power.” True, it added, the House of Lords is hereditary and undemocratic, but if anyone raises that point it respectfully refers him “to the Canadian Senate, probably the world's most in- nocuous deliberative body.” This is too bad, but the Express shottld ltave added the words “when the Liberals are in power.” ' ll‘ ll‘ i Cordell Hull, U.S.A. Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Chief of Foreign Relations, born this date 1871 ; as Democratic leader strong supporter of President Roosevelt though not over enthusiastic on the question of the New Deal; at present engaged in building up a de- partment of Foreign Affairs that will control the whole situation; hitherto several bureau- cracies have been running their o\vn show to the detriment of U.S.A. foreign policy general- ly; and which led to the resignation of Mr. Hull's assistant, Mr. Sumner \Velles; the ap- pointment of Mr. Edward R. Stettinius, Jr, as successor to Mr. Welles is considered ad- mirable; the new Under-secretary is one of the most successful Government administrators dc- velopcd during the war, ltaving particularly distinguished himself for his handling of the $to,ooo,ooo.ooo-a-ytear Lend-Lease program; that is one of the few important war agencies on the domestic front which have been so ad- mittistercd as to win virtually unanimous ap- proval in U.S.A. llllttlflil We are very much left to ottrselves if we delay building our car ferry arid any other es- sential structure until after the war. We should take a leaf out of the httssiatfs book. A con- ference of leading Soviet architects held in Mos- cow recently discussed the two ntain problems structiott of liberated towns. It ivas stated that although the main work of Soviet architects during the first year of the war was concerned with camouflage and construction of military ob- jectives, more than 10,000 new buildings have been built in the Soviet Union since the be- ginning of the war. As each town is liberated. ted fact that no ship was sunk in four months this‘ ticisms of ration controls and controllers, es-l Senator Connally in U.S.A. Senate Foreign t; of wzi construction—ttcw ltousing and recon? h . hall’ Item . . l h Ibderlt- Bunaun- B R. 801100 In m l i. Gunning‘ my; m; m". -. Th on edllcL on of ‘moloy Btrgt who "began: tlon Plvvlllclll 61W- Dotlflon to tho Home of 00mm with the words, "We the people h d." l llifilonof - whe I Ogll have j ltmltntton report-n, th nbcndon trousers cuffs, that the tnllon of Buvllo In effect " Allontroul for every Canadian in those Squadrons there arc l tmumt‘: n a ofst the To Can- ‘cumin of outlutlng um “m, all?" u. u. “t. ll sulshmo. _ n: o process- n - centuries looked dovilnurlyeforo on m‘ l“ m“ m“ “'1”: ‘h, .11,“ mm“ m" a The vt roua and wit]? cum- nzen ambitious tn evtl. ‘lbdny ft “w” a u“ “mo on o‘ "M" l‘ "wwtlon" l» l» X§.°.‘”‘..2“ili;‘f.l'.“’2f "l. “flu... hut“ whlc f.» not lately obvious- thousand sled tom bune. in th I thfll ls more nolsome than the out- ho f v a; can It ls o0 l Wllfllllfl from a aewer- some of this all-i, g n-nyosulnowy ' training to "M! lt-l Wily Into Canada. censor- flt a for Jo . is‘? 5°" n“ I P"! l0 Pwvent a a the "education" that f: elr sale ln th country. The betn heralded, lauded. adver- almwl‘! 0! filthy llterltwe and flied. demanded up and down the D153’! are steer-tn a course that land. Itlsalaothe education which an offlctal tivltfe can follow members of pon holders faml ally Drohlbltlon encouraged. view we tht wlth Journ arse ll t. Si.’ IJles. has a group of architects is assigned to work on its reconstruction. All architectural colleges and the building industry in getteral are studying Uttitcrl States titctltotls of cottslrttctioti of jlllilflllltllll blocks, while we here are waiting with aggravating jaatieticc on our petty politi- cians to make a move itt the direction of a new car ferry, and Charlottetown ltarbour improve- mcnts. m 4t a: i: "The far-seeing getttlcmcn who manage Tor- otit0's Fair. which in recent years has been known as the Canadian National Exhibition, never miss an opportunity t0 make their annual show bigger and better" says thcGazcttc. If a prince or other notability is in the spotlight. they immed- iately bid for his presence, generally with sue-- cess. They have learned a lot about exhibitions in their more than half a century of practice and they apply the knowledge to their .truly great show. At present South America is attracting a lot nf attention in North America. just Rs it did in the last years of the former World War. Then there was a movement in Toronto busincs! circles to have young men le rn Spanish, in order that some of the South Amcricatt trade tilight be captured. Quite recently the Toronto City nllh tclothes mad m, ' t! "Yllkees have Iorange gsrévgrlgp tn the le the island; has bee lstr All e ough rm Council gave a (linner to twelve visiting South American itewspaper men, at which Mayor COH- boy called for the free exchange of professor! and students between Cattarla and the lower American republics. That was in the interest of the good neighbor policy ivhich President Roose- velt has been nrcaeltiitg, More than that. Mayor Ccnboy said that the first post-war Canadian National Fxltilliliott, Torotttrfs Own. would he Keep: Ohllra or called "the WnrlrVs Fair." to which South Amer- ican cottnlries would he itivitcd to send exhibits. his is a good example of etiterprise and initia- hive on the part of the Fair's directors!’- i,“ __ the room. tab OI ll ll recalled b the pron f Bavlle Row in the n flier men's _ etlght or ten pockets. The _ "(over-Intent b stble advertisement to pass round the world for 1'“ ml-lhtblb" Al you: a renende Aur- trlnn planned for Bangstel’ leadership declm - n Germany no ll soon 811D broken from hll wro ed hands. —New York Herald ‘rrl ‘than an writ-en uul a United States. not emclustvely, tllberate purveyors of sooner or later wll s so that an intolerable nuts- zllllg may be abated. -Guelpt| Mgr-j I ll developing u yup-bun" lll Wl-‘Mhlnz else, quallty t; Jiut what foods to others uses no tea a no coffee, and the former hn cou- t does lt appear crlmtnal or even w- trad l Mtheeasclafgalales of rationed food; the board thinks wife ls nenntttted to rationed good se spare coupons, and one form of black market Possible abuses. al . New York I Daylllt; somewhat grudglng trlbue C hlll as mat and patrlot broken string States went lnto the preserve the Lovely Isle Naples. once u... millionaires and some Mae glothes they wear and "H! ll converted into atlve {centre and how, Bmous o t; f Porridge ofolmund m.“ News . Clip TrTJEJTi... t. laced tn front of hot nlr r!!- uiibarapnnd hot water radiator: hln- der m, circulation pahenzut-pywllch 00D m cgantmrrirrowtv cuiuzotm llom lly The llay ilblrllnbnlloetl lumen inhale.‘ Andlfiwltiundfl." " Commerce Minister James A. MacKinnontqqimgyn yum"? IIDOGIIIIAI LII tn for plowing, averaging at: I. dIY- - - 8. Plain Speaking i on Election draft v. I lfberlm been flu r. 0mm. napalm. h" Out m ' ta A. i vol’! Oollfilltu Imtltuto and ul School. Orb WI. PIWIIOd and a for publlbat-ton . the Ontarlo Bec- n: d I name of "education" tn only mmg" of people for cumin: d vu 1n ; unbl this may i mllttlo moral at; do with lune three-blocs cult; m?! "1 n ellht h denounced u b9 1° ureuucncy and neat o Englishmen rnfuu to it my be -* Raw an the people of Imgllnd." I mum‘ crowd" klndl power, cultivated w cm. tho aplrlt, stud! tmmed . 1y or ftmnctnlly useful. bu gust about done tta work- the blot lng out of ltbenl eduoatlon. n cuual glance at the educational acme settle a Germany hll hu ruined and publisher! mostly though conscious and cheap filth abuolutely fomc if persisted tn, wlll send our vaunt- curtallment of their ac- ed clvlllzntton crashing to its de- served doom. That such a oom- plote surrender to the practical, the material, and the immediate ea without challenge Ls of the d tbs to w I e ‘l; sunk mwtfiictu-ny and ’ spiritually DUNT B E A SM V WILL you be skulking on the aidelf come marching home? Or will victory? Where you will stand you do NOW. If you tu-e medically fit for active service, no -tnining which will be of great value l0 war. Call or write for free booklet. INFANTRY-Here you will be trained u mortar-men, rnachi , I| w armoren, drivers, motor mechanics. AIMORED CORPS - wireless operator: and of the unk crews. HOW TO ENLIST no: when the boya _ yotlbeproudl lined up with them-conscious that ou've done your it for HEN depend: on what in a war industry, and. a woman or older man work, YOUR DUTY is 1o enlist now and get the necu. ury training for whatever service you are best suited-for ulna opal-non. Highly-skilled driven, gunmen, mowi- rncchmlcl all form pun ARTILlERY-Srill mother up of lptcllllou ll nquind found-aircraft, anti .., field, medium lad survey regiments. cit: not engaged can do your you after the llguullon. I: J...» fielmlylfi/V/ ‘ a -___ tu mm on rlllonlng mm" the slvlnc of rattoned dummy than m» t the family of t . t. hard to he °°“ see. If one nd another 1,, ta province. By the twt butts of job-training and job’: lllldllll. students and . parents Ill-pvgrbigpkeluyd away from faith er. E110 mason for the less upectnculg’ tiiitel ‘liege lixiiifculf ll 11° tvleflr- ly ate useful and remunerntlve ed. hat uca on Industry and business, lteduloual cultivated, have be". 501d 0n the speclouu advantages. flnanclal and manager-tat of uslngi narrowly trained workers for the simpler skills lnto which operations‘ of actory and office can be brok- ' en down. Naturally public ap-l provnl goes to the institutions whlck , deliver the goodfl-whlch gtve the le what hey want, rather than l m what they need. Consequently, use- Brent orator, dlplq- l edllcntton. education for B job, ," harps on the old vccattonal education, ls enjoylng that the United S V°8ue and s nport out of all ,- 1“; w“ “to Dlflpvrtlon w t e cnntrtbutton it Brltlsh unplug’ ‘m, can make to man's fundamental llwll» limpet-sci"; mqulrementl u or humanity: betterment. llur- educatlon hasn't a hlgherl 1131,55,... our youth t ‘anew: than prepgflng New d m 01' . we are waning bll ' stmfglfilfm? 151,311,’ llllllléy: for common sense tell‘; ug i lf some of our lzobd apt! statistics ghow that 90 per cent ,‘ ° a Ill very elementary BdUQBQIDIL m m.‘ most: jobs can be best at- l ency tn ys o: our ,' . Why should 1t glve to the latter? not o’ m Nor unsound for fuming; w i. she might: dectii:% that ‘ab: wou U this ls the board's nk tt ls too ooncemed -—lllrlmontton ‘a Dally News, m] “a tried. even as tn the d; day Xtprkttig ‘at. u cc n of "old hands. Our intensive meghantzslf the tlon, tnstead of .,,- , m, tneu. m... simplified t; by in“. lnto petty 194°- 6 lll down operatlons Durtlose might easily skills and reducing problem; m nrcof checks *“""‘-=;:r stshtrb~ ml- a ma t: a necesalty ofthogu “litfsctialftiiltlidiltitaenticig Jlldzment. Our urge expenditures for educntton therefore must Justlfted on other grounds than u... of training youth to 93m g g. I O Of course, the ._.___ cw"- Wilmette Playsround of hlllleymoun cou- the refugg of 250.000 I educatlon of n bl: fps. young and old. ought: or; a t?! B “T89 and even larger g?“ a?‘ 0‘ the llrtonttl income. the asstlmibflohe tiiiitltdlecditedtinly on he gftgfthlng m uca on wlll m9 a - in iu j , e3. _._.1 3...’; ii}? “plildliff lfilll. them have more nly bvercoats over met.- mon and the upper part o; the little town of Cflpfl “COMPLETE l INSURANCE sttttvtc " w. ll. noarns "Agencies ltd; it... 540-541 OOOKQd ml- -~Lond0n Evening Ingmar: Olm- other nieces of furni- l-YP ed to free men. It. is imperative t WW jhave the welfare of their country n, as the words signify, sult- O'I'1‘A Canadlm operation with l that educated men and women who at heart-and especially those pro- fessional educatlonlsts who have deserted thte ranksl of lhet faithful to reach he fa se doc rne 0 utllty, tmmedlacy and expediency i $gzyaewljllzd -turn from thelr apostasy and l checks are con defaulters and Owing to the help problem deliveries tinued u_ntil further notice. l Stewart Bakeries ' Kent. Street PERIL On the sen, on land, peril of fire, ing aircraft, of automobiles, of ness, or war. unce to protect us finunciu We are in u position to provide a and information. No obligation. Insurance since I872 Chznlottetown, Offices: Moun cently been choc. Canada. an 3.0 a; “patchy” but tlnulng ' b1‘ Preferred b0 mere bulk mm and for which we pTOPOSG to make N . . “me to b j i ' d. l”. h _ Applyto IIIYQfIIIQSQRGCIUIIlII Snugnszl-lnlifl: Copwcll thousands of ewggd: train; m lgsencourgeys nefif" fiilfifo... mum. I 5t. next flOipllll), Yumouth, enm eLTruro, 0w Glu- tlmmelvu l" such 19¢“ m4 qemocnggc ,_.,,.Z,,,,KF_ 59w, Sydney, Charlottetown. Or mlr urvicc saluted, bastard . . . . growths as "ftnaltug- “mnnw.” M 1, I our day’ us,“ -- I sign and IIISII Ill]! cou n to Dnmct Recruiting Dim, ‘ ym; " 1nd m, moqlimt u m; gynqnyjnoug Wm; M.D. 6, Halifax, N.S., or free booklet. men are those who use good m“, "stomach." their ever- . _ . with sktll, Shakespeare wrote many lasting dlagrace our * ‘ ‘ Mm’ “m” " _-_-.= 2th‘... trt:"...r;;~=,:;, ,1- =1=~ ':.‘::‘...*"“...¥°*""::.:"' lttmltslt I w - . . . ~ -=.-_ ‘fight, u: glam ward! “M23959: figtvidmdedmagonhugeiahc‘ ‘up: 111111111111111111 a . a _ - . lmprovehla cmmogiiiiiitifa iiebiittii? "*“°°- lug. To justify the demand for boldly proclaim the true mp0] in: up vocabulary let hlm remem- . ‘ ' more educattontt. lstmperattve that that education la the culture of ber that. quality tn word; 1, (u- Th‘ ‘Jhimlllmll 0f firmly llllll- we return Immediately and decls- souls. minds Ind bodlel. more important m... qmnp, _ tllllll trllnlll wlll. our-so lvely to liberal education-the ed- to CHECK UP ON DEFAULT!!! WA. Oct. 1-(0?) —ROyll ted Pollce tn n1 police have re- xtn! un 0n draft across Ol dle men .M.P. offlclal an o the check- from our sales shop to private houses has to be dlscon- Ltd. .____i__ lightning, full- " nl, of sick- ln our modern life we on surrounded by perils, and that is wliy we employ tlte system of insur ly. complete insur- ance service, and welcome your inquiries for advice HYNDMAN & C0. LIMITED Summerslde, Montague tttttvs sctiiznute cit Effective Sept. 28 Arrives Moncton 1.05 pan. FERRY SERVI M. V. "PRINCE NOVA” “The Connecting Link Between These (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) Stlrlln It‘: Will Leave Wood Islands 10.00 A. M. $.15 P. M. ' LUNCHES SERVED CIIARLOTTETOWN. P. I. l. Trip 3 Leaves ClUTuwn 12.00 noon Leaves Summerside 12.35 p.m. MARITIME CENTRAL AIRWAYS, DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY MIGE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA SCOTIA. CE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. l. — CARIBOU, N. S. Province!” October 1st. the Nova Scott: — Prince Etlwlrd Illllld rry ervlca wlll operate two round trllll Der Ill!- Wlll Leave Caribou 1m r. u. 4.18 P- M- NOIPPHUMBERLANI) FERIUES, LIMITHII/ "wt/hf l ‘t8’ DISCONTINUED... id e \ l And h 0o the” lat“... Of the wlelde Huoeued atmtr “°' “"80 Q11 ‘g0 the llttlilgw 8m The In l. And We watt-we Professional ' BEll (S MAIHIESON Cameron Block l’ E. l H. F. McPhee B.A., KQC. P-AIME-R a‘ ' i-iAstArii ' Phone ~ Our burvuta lro in - _ Warm md ‘Jgootgumgh m, m", nun-u. ' the aceiithzi i5 d scythe la over. _- rotlbln ‘-'_~‘_ tiiiiiibtiii‘ H“ “w”? wt o! i. hurtlc mfitm uutthoi-gqogmd» protestant-é- M sunset we close the dorm, mber, __. All" W! 10W you-late iiiiloiiooit —Edm Mud. u “t. .. ::.'..:."_~:.:m..:::~'~~ l!!! 0r dlnfnen - comm Imam ,1 ll "I! um..- m... g 70in gflmmrrv-lial: I menu“ l cm . %°‘:|"E:h i? :10 $301107: G. F. llutchesoit AND son r. o. aurcanson I. HUTCHEsou MACS’ HAIR ,1_ " RESTORER "i --A d ll tel . 9"" ‘Bu.’ w 5"“.'3.€."a. Ind belutlfle! Promotqg g a naw l‘; llleflll ln preventing and“; , "tmln: mantis 1m: "I. Just follow the dim- llom llllGfillly 5nd y“ mu be unned at fhg Prlve m m mm». __..-_ ,, mo: enum- wom rownzng '~'--' Sole and effective. Enqi“ ll rlae . e hlldre . POI Plgkgge. n LARKSPUI. wnou A u n . mu».- ‘Iitfistlflh n. Illfl int-mm n. u.» ‘fir. pl mlwwlntlvllrlteg thshplau N‘ n” o end ofo -, a ilrufl Price 85o nor ‘mile. m ' ' Mall Orde 9| p; a.......'.:." . "m TIIE 1W0 MAGS 149 Gun Gem-n Street. l arde McLeod G Bentléy w. s. BENTLEY. u. c. .I. A. nan-run. u. c. llnlllen u: lIlllfllllYI-lbi w 1M Prince street __-- rr- llorrelland Company. ll. F. Altlllllllllll Clurknd Acronnlinll _ f sum-i. rm: llulldlnl‘ fr: Chnlottnfown MONEY T0 LOAN i ChlrlnflGMIl Inland , , simullwloffcnoi‘ Riley Building Chlrltlllfil-QVII l. .|. msum. a. A. u. mf- IAIIIIISTEB. ITO. . . link of Non 800th Chllllllll Olurlnttetolwai. EON! ~' “noun. _ o u" u isitiitititrnl v AND .‘-.-: trusses smut ..I. 'S. TA YLOR, ‘tut-take. 1t..2t:.-.:.:.%I* l 56 ruiiroiguauim 1018