PAGE FOUR ‘I'll! BEIIRLOTTETUWII Glllllllllll‘ Moruln; Dull! (Founded lu I801) President: Lleut. Col. W. Ollflkl S. Mel-In Vice-President: J. R. Burnett. l’. J. l. Socntlry: Lhut. Col. l). A. Mcokluubu, 0.8-0. Idltu And Managua; Director: J. B. Burnett. l'..l.l. Associate Editors: Frank Walla: and Llout. lau A. Burnett. 8.08MB. tOu Actlvo 80mm) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Thu the Weakest Ink.‘ . THURSDAY, DECEMBER, H, l9“ No Time For Complacency Within the last fe\v weeks some sobering statements have collie from men in high posi- tion in the actual prosecution of the war, notably General Dwight D. Eisenhower. First calne his rather startling report tllat shells had to be r.- tioned at the front, due to a shortage that had seriously slowed up the European advance. Then he predicted that lack of tires would, ivithin the near future, reduce the number of usable Illllll’ vehicles available for his forces. These statements were made at the very time plans were being announced on this con- tillelit. witll official sanction, for cutting back 0n shell manufacture. There had been broad hints. too, .~'.~emingl_v authoritative, that it would lzot be long before more tires would he made available for civilian use. These contradictions, says the Windsor Star, indicate just one thing. Someone has been far off ill his judgment of the situation. TllfifC-llllS been over-optinlislli in high places. At the mo- ment, the responsibility cannot be placed, hilt the situation should serve as a salutary lessoil. lt may be that officials in charge of produc- tioll at home iuider-cstinlatetl the needs on the fighting front, or over-estimated the speed and ease with which our advance toward victory could he carried ou. Or it is possible that our military commanders were misled for a time into believing the enemy was not capable of such stiff resistance aQ he has since shown. “lhichever explanation applies. there has certainly been faulty judgment. This does not necessarily mean that anyone should be coli- delnned, for it is always possible to make inis- takes, and this is true of the ablest and the best informed. lt should be an indication to all of us that extravagant optimism is to be avoided. even when it seems to be supported by the most reliable authority. Tokyo U nder Bombs Wilfrid Fleisher, writing in the New York Herold Tribune about Tokyo and from the spe- cial knowledge attained in l6 years of rcsi- dence there tells us the Japanese capital is “a unique mixture of Eastern and \Vestern arclii- tecture.” It is not the inflammable city it was be- fore the earthquake‘ and fire which destroy- ed seven-tenths of it 23 years ago nor the great moderircity which was planned after that catastrophe. .\lr. lileisher knew Tokyo four years ago, and he points out that with labor and materials short it cannot have changed greatly in that time. It had then, he reports, a couple of hundred modern concrete buildings in which wer¢ in- corporated the lessons of the earthquake, and u secondary list “of older brick buildings of doubtful resistance", but he adds that the vast majority of the city's structures are "wooden, frame and paper shacks which extend over about 30 square miles." "Certainly the bulk of Tokyo’s population is housed in the typical Japanese frame bungalows or two-storey dwel- lings. Some of these display misleading fronts, for they give the appearance of being stone buildings whereas they are frame houses with a thin stucco exterior." The writer says Washington has reports that about one-fifth of Tokyo's people have been evacuated, that the government has con- structed fire lanes through the city by_ de- molishing thousands of houses, that homes in the vicinity of likely targets have been demolished. But he is not impressed, and adds: "The. Jap- anese Government has undoubtedly done every- thing it could to protect Tokyo, but it has had an impossible problem on its handsfto rebuild a city of 7,000,000 in a hurry and in wartime. 1t is ridiculous to compare Tokyo with Cologne or Berlin, with their massive German architec- ture. Tokyo may fight back, but it is one of the world's most vulnerable cities. That is my opinion as an oldtime resident." 'l‘okyo now is the target of the American Superfortresses, and the Japanese defences are being put to the test. Such massive raids as have all hilt destroyed Cologne and Berlin are not yet possible, but Tokyo is getting doses of the same medicine-knows the doses will in- crease in frequency and tlestructiveness. The League And The Future League of Nations fanatics (says the Letter Review) continue to shout that only a League including all nations call prevent another urar. Well, all nations except the U. S. once belonged to the League; that did not prevent this war. Of them, France, Britain and the Domitiions were hopelessly unprepared to fight for peace -—-chieflv owing to an obsession with plans for Iftopia in domestic affairs, and, in the case of Canada especially, because of domestic political chicanery. The U. S., Norway, Denmark, Hol- land and Belgium believed in “collectivm secur- ity"; made no effort to prepare to support it on a proper scale. Poland and Czechoslovakia hoped it would work, and tried to be readv for its failure. llnngilry. Bulgaria, Rumania, pre- pared to assist its failure. Spain would have done the same thing. but was a little too far away. Russia prepared for war. and then made an agreement with (icrmanv — which Germany broke, and one with Japan—\vhicl1 still holds. Sweden and Turkey got ready to sit out the inevitable war, and to stand by for possible trouble with Russia later. The Argentine R».- oublic openly, and some South American re- J public: covertly, encouraged German ambitions. Eire ulanned to remain iieutral—-to satisfv Mr. de Valera’s whims. Germany, Italy and Japan openly promised war. On this record. we remain convinced that the way to prevent another war is to have a strong, well-armed British Coni- monwealth, frankly co-operating, frankly agreeing with the U. S. for joint self-protection. and frankly ready to meet Russia in a similar plan (as now agreed upon at Bretton Wood). We remain Convinced that to re-assemble the League is merely to invite another war. We agree with Field Marshal Lord Birdwood's re- mark that the noisy pacifists are the most blood- thirsty of individuals. Critics tell us that we are on the wrong track, when we argue that the Great Power idea is the right way to maintain peace; that we are merely advocating an in- creasing struggle between Titans. What we are 3dV0~llll1g is common sense; that we face the fact that the Great Powers will still be great. whether we like it or not; that the League of Nations on the old plan simply must become either all undercover struggle among Great Powers for spheres of influence, or a (lehating society; that the power to prevent War must lie in tlie hands of the major nations (as llu\v being recognized). EDIIURIAL NUltS Who \\'0uld exchange the Island for Ontlrlo these (lays? ' > I 1k Ill Ill British railways now employ more than 135,000 women lll 32o different capacities. wk =8 i l“ RCIIIPIHDCI‘ when chocolates were so jilcnii- ful we looked upon home-nlade fudge as a lilxury? i: i The chairman of the City Council Finance Committee, Mr. Earle Macdonald has done the right thing in disclosing to citizens the financial sitiiatioli and prospects. The Council works on a budget system, and unless this is adhered to, a chaotic result may ensue. II i ll i i! i Pity our poor hard-ivorking bureaucrats! A resolution urging the inauguration of a 6 1-2 hour day and a five-day week for civil servants was adopted at the annual meetiilg of the Civil Service Association of Ottawa. The civil serv- ants now work a 7 i-2 hour day and a six-day week. Payment for overtime was urged by dele- gates. u u n a During a. road-side halt in France an II- ycar-old boy climbed on the running board of a Y.M.C.A. mobile canteen and said to the woman driver, “Madam, may I embrace you ?” Explaining that she was the first English wo- man he liad seen, the lad kissed her firmly on both cheeks. He told her that his father had been shot by the Germans, two brothers had escaped to join the Fighting French, and he had been living with his mother who had taught him to admire everything British. l i I in His Most ‘Excellent Majesty George the Sixth (Albert Frederick Arthur George of Windsor), by the Grace of God of Great Brit- ain, Ireland alid of the Dominions beyond the Seas, King, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India, Sovereign of the British Orders of Knighthood, Admiral of the Fleet, Field Mar- shal, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, etc., etc., second son of his late Majesty King George V alid of Her Majesty Queen Mary, born at York Cottage, Sandringham, this date 1895, married the Lady Elizabeth Angela Marguerite, daughter of the 14th Earl of Stratlimore and Kindborrie, succeeded to the throne Dec. ii, i936, crowned at Westminster, May i2, i936. i ll! 1K l! The Federal Agriculture Department an- nounces that backlot gardeners now may buy certified seed potatoes in packages containing as little as 10 pounds. Last spring, certified seed potatoes were sold only in containers pack- ed by the shipper who usually filled nothing smaller than a bag containing 75 pounds. But now the plalit protection division will permit repacking of certified seed potatoes in Io, r5 and 25 pound containers, provided the repack- ing is done by firms who sell no potatoes other than those certified as seed, and provided each package is tagged or labelled with the name of the seed firm and the name of the variety, grade and certificate ‘numbe: of the potatoes. "The one thing the army do not feel they are getting in full measure, (writes Walter Lippmann in New York HcraId-Tribuiic), is a thing which cannot be produced in factories, but is imponderable and of the spirit. I know of no better short name for it than understand- ing. They do ilot feel that we do not think enough about the pain of battle. If anything, the soldiers lhrink from too much enervating civilian sentiment about their perils and their wounds. They know too from their letters how intense is the anguish of separation, and the anxiety of the long vigil of their families. What they miss is the feeling that in our public life we act and talk with a sufficient understanding of theimagnitude, and not merely of the dang- ers of their task." n- n- a- u The practical coalition of the C. C. F.’s with the Liberals in the recent political crises, says Illantreal Gazelle, is bound to be of importance to the political situation in Ontario, the pivotal province when it comes to a Federal election. People in the rural parts of that province have been heard to say that while they have had a, traditional leaning toward conservatism they are impatient with things at Ottawa and as they don't like the way Premier King has handled the military manpower problem they would be inclined to vote for the Socialists in the next contest. But now that they have the spectacle ir. their parliament of the Liberals and the Social- ists accepting each other’s help they will find it difficult to choose between these two parties and will find a better reason for holding to their first love, the Conservative persuasion. And all this in spite of the fact that Mitchell Hepburn is back in the Liberal fold as Ontario provincial leader of that party THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way Sometimes ft mm; l W! country ever tofiynntiiibtiig public sllencea-(Bosmn Q1013) Alt I Januililvnlii: gflyselgcqflngtlnawiieui? plnuble, with the head start they ave.-— (Chatham New“ Let u win- r the handy gsagifnwiiiiii "it'll. appeared from hardware eounms may h“? l° be invented all over flsaiiu-tsiii-ibury 13,111,. Sh,” There are " " und brld - 1e»- a- however __-(sg ‘are battle scenes, 31d.) ~ "l lflfd Beacon-Her- in In n~l“ll-'~il>'f?a’3'.l'§.'ll‘.tf3 w war volume of Canadian‘ e p“. of thesle tmpo t; ton §oulsglaqg tbemselves-(Edmon. l» snared u an It be super- James P. ‘ land. N YJue Wolfe On the lombstone of an "We Wes Inscribed mi folloaivlliié Epitaph. as reported by 1-118 5am“ Fe Magazine: “In memory 01 M“. sic. who tn her lifetime kmked one ll" general. four colonels, two majors égilgeélriglflllgjk Z4 lieutenants, ii bomb? r Privates and one Canada's a 1g creates a recclid fOlflrgfi llflllf: Tl“ Yleld ls estimated at ' m bushels, Th Weekly 5m ish Columbia 5' Blll‘ bushels: Nova sgiiiiiiucrifioeaiiiooolilg? sgtglésao glrllfialllgewz-‘gbollo; Quebec 000 bushels. runswlck mo" For eve _ short sto W k1 ts belnclud ' 99 t- ll uutobiogriispliigsFrhfifbsileyagrtbogléjsl lfégfi and iriloetry are among 1119 “n” 5.—- (C ristlan Science Mon. The men condemned la glfllls £01‘: the! cruel torture slaying emao ielilCe ess woman in Norm. executpouro say life is sweet when n of their sentence is post- Donecl. Llfe was also sweet 1m- Zltlxgll” Vlsllm: she was an industri- mothan law-abiding person. the a u B‘; 10f three young sling, and law Sgu member of society. The Bi... S? il’§f“.i!§‘§§§’ii$°“ih°°“""' n eywcre 0f liein-(Hamllton Spectator.) Australia has lhe gal. alned In . Pmjlnt respect fgrom the “iii R13 Never-Never Laud“. once con- ihereql s0 forbidding and barren r at]! could never be utilized, the ..li akes have become the homes °l lmlmrtant chemical industries, plhlle valuable deposits of tungs- Bn. manganese, tlri. copper, lead, vanadium aiid zinc have been oo- eiied. It has also been discovered that ports of this vast territory have distinct, agricultural [)055ib11_ itles. Such development must have been 1°11 delflyed but for the war. (Brockvlle Recorder and 1111135,) What seems odd about lts use. ln this war ls that the Germans, who have been able to see in their 0W" wlllltry the destruction done by firm-us compared with blast should continue to concentrate mi producing blast effects with high BXPlOSlves. They must know that the military value, of V-2 ls negitg. {bio-in this war at least. It. must. hcrefoie, be considered possible that it is used as l1 form of diver- sion. particularly directed to 11111 our preparations against tlie dan- gers of fire. It Ls not impossible that. if the Germans have some- thing else which they might con. celllflbll’ "Y. 1t will not be some fancy weapon but a surprise wea- D011 to attempt to fire once mere the City of London or some other important military base. A5 to m future. V-Z merely underlines the less‘!!! 0f V-l. and iilr power in mineral-that strategic frontiers of lrlvers and mountains are as use- 955 l" the drawing up of the next. Peace as the promises of dictators intent on WBlZ-(LOHCOII Observer.) Facts which b; 1 1 be Published Wlthalflie tiiiiiiii‘ lifting °l $9¢llr1lY bans reveal the as- tounding speed with which British film-s switched to war production. One firm, making fountain pans and 201d iilbs before the war, turn- ed over to munitions as soon a5 war began and has since switched three times to different products. according to the British Ministry of Information. In 1941 the com- Dany took over a mineral water factory and installed a plant for the manufacture of shell-ruse parts. with lutherto unskilled lab- Or- l-atcr. they converted another building to meet an urgent demand for armor-piercing bullets and anti-tank fuses. and began produc- tlon within six weeks. In August, 1943. they established another new factory for the ioductlon of radi- ators for alrcraf’, again using on- skilled labor. Within three months they lied trained the new stnfl and tlae flrtst radiators Were being turn- e ou. Striking while the Iron is hot, the U.S. Antl-Clgaret Alliance ls taklns advantage of the current Cluaret shortage to advance its pause. It: says the scarcity ls a Eolden opportunity" for millions of men and women to quit me nasty habit. The alllance not only lnts to the opportunity, but ot- ers means by which elgai-et. slavts can free themselves or tlielr ad- diction. Tliese involve a change 0f dleli. the use of Rochelle salts and cream of tartar, Turkish baths and the chewing of gentllin root, or camomlle bossom when the llrlze to smoke becomes overpow- erlns. Somehow. most people will ylew the antf-clgaret.organization's golden opportunity" with scant hope. An experiment noble in pur- pose. the odds are all agatns it. Recent statistics show that billions more ctgarets are being smoked :0. day than u few years ago. This ts true of the United States, Britain and Canada. One U.S. general was quoted as saying lately that one sure way to undermine the morale of fighting men was to deny them clparets. And during this war. mtltons more women smoke than during the lust war. The habit-fanning weed has slni- nlv cast n spell over mankind,- . {Ottawa Citizen.) PUBLIC FORUM Illlnlu-nblponfifil Inclusion» l! quanta; I blund- _ Qsllmdnulfluulfluukdlo. alnuutllloulnnobllflj d LATIN AND ENGLISH GBAMJWAR Sin-The dlsentangllng of the intricacies of English and Latin grammar afford me about us much usemen as the solving of l. cross-word puazle. Accordingly. in our house. we do lt nearly every night. before the children and I indulge ln antioufs reading together. Recently I asked an education- lst 111st Why parsing and analysis are stressed to such a degree In our school course. He replied that they are most helpful when one comes to study Latin. A few days later I chanced to meet another educatlonlst and I enquired o! him the reason for so much Latin on our curriculum. llls answer was, "It helps us wltli our English." Oh! Now 1 understand-our elillcli-eil study English grammar to help with Latin and they study Latin grammar to help with Enz- ltsli. It ls all clear at last. As I write. I can see our clever old cat through llle window. He has caught the idea too, for there he ls chasing his tall around a 00. I iim, Sir, etc. MUDDLED MOTHER. NAVAL BARRACKS AND SPRLNG PARK Sin-A letter in The Guardian issue of the 4th inst. ls well to the point in question, and signed “Landlubberf As far as the City Council ls concerned the petition presented to the Council. and sign- ed by ii very considerable number- of 1iroperty owners, residing hi Brighton, has evidently been side- tracked. I have been informed ttie 1ietltion would be dealt with at a special meeting of the Council; tlie least our Clty Fathers could do is to approve or reject the prayer of those signing tlie petition. I am afraid tlie Council ls too busy to attend to this very important matter. and will evidently let the point in question pass b1; Victoria Park was handed over to the City by the local Govern- mcnt tn June 1873, therefore it would appear that the,Ctt.y has the right to refuse the erection of any building in this area. On sev- eral occasions during the past few , tlie Council was requested by tlie tennis clubs to allow the building of club rooms, etc., ln that area. The Council has always re- fused those requests. "Laiidlubbcr" in his letter men- tions eleven sites where the Naval Barracks could be built. (Xe site I take exception to ls the City 1iroperty at. Spring Park. This urea ls the only vacant space in that locality where a playground could be made available for tlie small children. The youths living ln this section have always played baseball on this field. _ Then again, the Spring Park well should be stoned up and maintained 1n n proper condition. The fathers, mothers and children for years were supplied with drink- ing water froln this well, paying two cents a bucket, but this old land mark. the well, and the play ground for tlie cluldren, will be only a memory of the past, ‘if the City Council sells this parcel of land to the Island Motor ‘Trans- port Company. who wlsli to buy a frontage of one hundred feet \vlth a depth of one hundred and fifty feet. The first. price offered was one thousand five hundred. This was turned down by the Coun- cil, their decision being tlie land was not and would not be for sale. I learn from The Guard- ian's report. of the Council's meet- ing on tlie 11th inst, that this Company has made a second of- fer, the amount offered being three thousand dollars, and they will pay for flve jyeiirsaground rent of two hundred and forty dollars. At. the end of five years the company will negotiate with the Cl to take into the City proper the area on whlch tlielr buildings are erected, and will pay the Clty regular real estate assessment on their property. If the negotiation does not materialize the evident result will be a loss, for the city cannot tax real estate outside the City boundary. The City llmlt llrpe runs through the centre of t ls field commencing at Elm Ave. and extending westward to the pond. The Company's buildings wlll be erected on the outward slde of the old DesBrLsay property. and tlie Company therefore will be tax free, except for a small school tax. Charlottetown, Dec. l3, 1944:‘ Profecf Your Home ffom Tuberculosis _ playwright ..s-_ j __ -__. ._15_l194l4 '“"~\\ l m Annual Mouth! o! the Prim Breeders’ Association will b0 hill! q} Agrluulturqlhuk of Canada ‘ 16th u! 8 I. Invited s’. smile u iii-tun of import-nu will be s. c. WRIGHT. swath-y. PEJ. Sliorthnru Breeders’ Auoolutlou. ——————-s=“i E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness l and Plate Glass Insurance j at Lowest Rate 5 at Summerside, D. O. Stewart Agent 144 Richmond St. ANNUAL MEETING Edward Inland lhutlinru In the office of tho Deni-taunt Building, Richmond limit on m. All Interested hraodu-l un dlnilll. ChGFIOttCtOWII Whitehall Notebook tBy John Dauphlnee, Canadian Press Staff Writer) The fate of the National Labor Party headed by Rt. Hon. Malcolm MacDonald. United Kingdom high ommlssloner to Canada. has been getting attention Ln the newspap- ers and most. political writers say that its future isn't bright. The Part1.’ was created tn 1931 by the late Ramsay MacDonald. the present leader's father, to ac- commodate those Labor Members of P rllament who supported the Natfo al Government of the day. It ts u separate Party from the Labor "Party now lii annual con- ference. In the 1931 election National Labor contested 21 seats against Labor candidates and won l3; ln 1935 lt. contested 20 seats and won eight. But since then two members have become Independents-Ken- neth Lindsay of Kllmarnoek and Cmdr. Stephen King-Hull of Orni- sklrk, and Ltchfleld was lost to Labor iii a by-electlon. Of the flve seats National Labor now holds. Mr. MacDonald holds one and he has been. absent In Canada several years. While 1t. seems definite he will return tn the United Kingdom pollttcalseene before long, the move ls not ex- pected for several months. One writer has predicted that unless Mi. MacDonald gets back on the political job promptly, Na- tional Labor “will dlsburid and will not again appear before the elect- ors as an organized force." Talks between Sir Archibald Sln- clatr, leader of the Liberal Party, and Ernest. Brown, leadeh of the Liberal National Party, have brok- en down and there seems no nro- spect of an early reunion of the two Liberal factions. 4 Accordingly, the Liberals will contest the coming election us an Independent. Party while the Lib- eral Nationals will support Mr. Churchill's Conservatives, as ari- nounced some time ago. final exchange of correspon- dence between Slr Archibald and Mr. Brown was friendly but. final. "I do not see how the Liberal Party, lf ft. were to adopt that: pol- icy (of not. opposing Conservative candidates). could give the elect- ors an opportunity of voting for Liberal measures or obtain its Dro- per representation ln parliament" said Sir Archibald. ‘And Mr. Brown replied ln part: "I must not. overlook the fact that the tendency to seek association exclusively with Socialists which has shown itself ln your Patty would be inconsistent with tlie forthright presentation of the case for liberty. ln accordance with Lib- eral beliefs, upon which all Lib- eral Natlonals are resolved." Members of Parliament com- plained today of such London monuments as Nelson's column carrying “vulgar” posters urging such things as “eat more potatoes" and "eat less bread" but a Gov- ernment okesma insisted tlie posters were necessary. Finally one member pleaded with the Gov- ernment to cover Albert Hall. crin- lclzed as an architectural mons- trosltv. with posters so it could not be seen. LONDON. Dec. ia-(or-miicer) r —Qlle.itlons of who foots the bills for tours by Noel Coward. British and actor. to entertain troops were asked 1n the House o1 Commons to W" 11° "Ply when Cmdr. Ollvz-rs I-ovlrer-Lamlason usked: "Isolt too i‘ L “COMPL. INSURANCE ETE SERVIC ” i w. K. means Agencies Ltd. Fiona 540-541 late for‘ flilsl-gallant but undecnr- ated yepresentatlve to go into unf- fo .. POST'S CORNER YOUNG WISDOM The years that formed your man- hoo did n k8 Your gift for laughter or your boy- ess. I had been given strength to bear nor re Kissing a schoolboy 1n a battle- ress; So young you seemed, so confident and brave- So vulnerable. for cruelty and , ginis-_ I told my heart, "There ll n world to save, And countless mothers weeping for their sons!" And now across the miles of land and sea Your hard-won wisdom comes to c m my ars; You, whom I tauizlit to live. are teaching me That. wisdom is no attribute of| years. That, sorrow-taught, we'll learn to travel ori A safer way than we have ever $0116. I (Lucy Gertrude Clarktn in St Dunstank Red and White). This War-Four Yeari Ago ' Bv The Canadian Press I one. i IMO-British llnfl’ Western Prince wrpedoed and sunk rln Atlantic with loss of l7 lives: Canadian Sit/Dilly Minister C. D. Howe among those rescued. Pierre- Etleiine JFlandln succeeds-d to post of Vtchv foreign minister on restg. nation otgPlerre Laval. nwellfls l.|N~M£Nl CONSULT H. J. A. BROWN, DP. Orthopedic For Foot Ailments GHIROIFUIIIST 143 Grout George Street CIIARLOTTETOWN. P-EJ. M MON C TON SAINT JOHN. . . |.v. cunnnorrurowu J1. 7,00‘ A. M. 11.30 A. M- 5_ 15 r. M. - 011mm Oil!) "w To NEW GLASGOW l.00 P. M. $5M) Ono Way (PII In) lllllVATlONi-mglillllflOfl- PHONI BIO-Sill MARITIME IENTIIM. i Professional gm, Cliulotmwn Plum; 1080 I luudolnh W manna’: IIIIITB" and fiompanyi u. r. insulin Chartered Accgqngnn. Eur-urn Trim Building Charlottetown M. ALBAN FARMFR B.A.. LLB. Canadian’; 812E‘ 01f ‘gloluaxgc, m‘ “sfilf nv. ALEX w. lvilsriilliso? Money to Office: Loan c u 90 Great Georg: Qin“: BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, m, Richard B. 13515.15“, Attorney At Law Commissioner for Deeds. Etc 1' Prince Edward Island. (S Lute lllchticrilelifir fiihnmnj om». sum 42o, ii Mllk gm, Boston. M“; j EYES rxinnn GLASSES FITTED J. s. m YLOR/ OPTOMETRIST l Corner Kent n i1 g Phone Resldengulflit a Evenlfn by Anroutimiu Phone I956 |____.____________, ___ Charles R. McQuaid B A ' , Slollcltor. Notary. Etc. Riley Building, C lnttctm Phone 333 j Tiztleric A. Large BABBISTEIK. ETC. 144 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P. E. l- BELL c: MATHIESN. MONEY To LOAN Cameron Block - Clllllllmll" l-LF. McPhee B.A. K11 _annniqs9riziingogi'cr_ioit y . PALMER t? HASLAM A. .1. IIASLAM. B.A.. Ill-l BAR-RISTER. sgql Charlottetown. P- E- l M NEY T0 LOAN g5 o P. 0. N! Attention Swine Breeders my u U19 time u» m" gal PIG - WORM 5 "in; u" t afloat-M Iiyllfll! ll the "dill-rm. mac rio-woiin TONIC POWDER n wui ciimuhlv 1W1" trues of worm lnfd l ' of vnlll‘ ‘ll In. Flt-I: slinesiiglgu lb v MACS Amour/ATE" BRO? ..AL COMPOUND 5 riclil iifitllcfigul lnnilzasfllll? r5» 61f cent: n 50"" _{__ MAO! fill OTNTMNN‘ g fllnlenl "M" Ill " m‘ Hindi?- r1513: ‘to centu- TIIE 2 MAGS m omit Goon! 5W" , lawman: 0| P" Mull Orililénmuhel‘