FQAGE [NAIR TIIE _ IITIARLDTTETOWN BIIAINIIAN Moral.“ Dolly flnlnhl ll "l1! incident: ilieiit. Ool. W. Cluster I. V n, Burnett, lU-NJLB. itln Active Benton) “The Strongest Memory it Weaker Th: the Weakest Ink.‘ Tiiuiisnav, Manon 5Tb‘ Bo; Scout's Training From time to time from all over the Domin- ion unsoiight testimonials are received and pub- lished of the benefits of Boy Scout training both in peace and war. Ever so many ex-Boy Scouts from this province in the armed forces have written home telling how beneficial their early Scout training proved in their naval and military courses ‘and in the discharge of their other dut- ies. llcfore the war Scoutiiiaster A. P. Ceretti, Borden, conducted courses iii deep sea diving for Sea Scouts in Charlottetown, among his , pupils being Dori Martin, son of Mr. K. M. Mar- 7 tin, KC. Mr. Ceretti sends us the following letter received from Don who is now in the Flt-er .\riii of the British Navy in England: HMS. St. Vincent Sun., Mar. 4, 1945. Dear LI iinuiodnrc: Q. I had a letter from Dad a couple of days ' ago and behold me you weren't feeling too well. I hope you're on your feet by the time you get this but if not I hope you regain health in the very near future. What's ivrong? Surely you haven't swallowed one of those cigars you used v to chew. ' 3 The station \ve’re at now is one of those old Royal Navy establishmehts. You know the type. strict .'lS old Harry. Boy, the training I had under you sure has helped me along.. 'Whv every little detail of the diving course is on my official papers and I feel sure it will help me get along in this outfit. As soon as we got over here we all had intelligence interviews with an officer at the station. The idea was to find out what I kllfili‘, but in the end I was telling him what he didn't know about deep sea diving and all things connected. And on another occasion an old guy was telling us how to splice rope and while he was talking I made a perfect eye splice just like you taught me. It really surprised him as most of the boys had never handled rope be- fore. He wanted to know where I had picked it up so I told him all about your course and he was really interested in the whole thing. Well that's about all for now, perhaps I'll rim into Smokey sometime, if so I'll let you know. ' Yours, Don (junior) Farm Income Serious concern is expressed in the Speech 1 from the Throne over the fact that while the farms on Prince Edward Island are "in a healthy state", we were yet the only Province in Canada in which cash farm income declined in i944. An increase in farm income coinmen- surate ivith the average increase in Canada in that year would have amounted to 25 per cent over $3,500,000. This is indeed a matter to challenge serious study and concern. The Throne Speech mere- ly beclouds the issue when it suggests, as causes for our position, lack of manpower and machinery. These drawbacks to wartime farm production were experienced by every prov- ,_ ince, yet lariii incomes in every other prov~ ince weie not decreased but greatly im- proved. The real cause is our transportation bottleneck, and the inexcusable delay of the King Government in providing a new car ferry steam- er aftcr the sinking of the S. S. Ciunlfiffflftiltlll in 194i. The Government might indeed have antici- pated this loss of farm income in I944 had it given lived to the ivariiing contained in the brief presented t0 the Legislature last year by the P. E. I. Federation of Agriculture. “The pres- ent is sufficient," said the brief, "to create in the mind of every producer a fear that he may not be able to place his i944 crop on the mar- kcts of the \\'0l'l(l. May we suggest that iin- mediately you begin investigatio_ns as to the best arrangement which can be made that will insure a continuous movement to and from the mainland during the winter of 1944-45. T0 avoid disaster you cannot allow the annual icc barrier to again close the Strait of Nortliu|nber- land without having at Iiordfln another i106! that will assist the Prince Edward Island in the movement of th: freight which under normal crop yields in i944 will lic much greater than it is for the present winter." For another striking illustration of the peculiar obstacles placed in the way of export- ing Island farm products, take from the report to the Provincial Government of Dr. Lattiiiier, farm economist: "In the year of our Lord i944. there departed from Char- lottetown, Prince Edward Island, a boat bound for Newfoundland. The distance is a very small portion of a roniid-the-world cruise. Hay. to be used as cow feed, was loaded at $18.00 per ton. was reported as in this particular case $26.50 pet ton. The import duty at destination was $4.75 per ton. The selling price in Newfoundland ' was reported as between $50.00 and $50-00 P01‘ ' ton, almost three times the,buying price." Dr. Iilflllliftl‘, who has a sense of irony, adds this by way of comment: "The Chris-lion Sci’- encc Illonilor (August 1944) devotes one page to a discussion of the Atlantic Charter on the third anniversary of its proposal. The pictures featuring the page are of Newfoundland off whose waters this important document came lino being. It ivould be fine if the important principles of the Charter such as freedom from went and access to raw materials could he ap- proached right in the vicinity of its inception.” _ ren. Provision is also made for allowances this excerpt , Fine for our. Inland farmers, too, if our Federal and Provineinlnmembers would get to- gether 1nd drive home the facts 0f our economic handicaps at Ottawa. But instead -nd even in for Federal negligence that stultify the efforts of those who are really trying to get something accomplished. _ y -EDITORIAI. NOTES- Purchases of eggs b Board for the British lVlinfstry of Food to the end of February were 25 -per cent ahead of the same period last yearpiti has. been announced The current agreement calls" for total minimum shipments by May 15 of 600,000 cases of shell eggs of Winter and Spring production, and in- additionalquantities if available above the 600,- 000 cases of spring production to be stored for shipment in the fall. i I i I During the celebration of her employer’s golden wedding anniversary, a Negro servant who had beetl with, the family about 40 years added her own felicitations to those that had come by wire, telephone, letter and by personal call. The opportunity came while she was as- sisting in the preparation of the anniversary dinner, when she said to her mistress: “Well, all I has to say is dat you two sho’ has fought a good fight." it a u n- _ "Canada is rapidly becoming a manufactur- ing nation, with 25 per cent of its people dir- ectly engaged in industrial work, and its status is almost comparable with that of the United Company Limited, Montreal, told the Fore- men's Club of Montreal. “Now in the position 0f having to rely heavily on our export trade. the well-being of our manufacturing industry is of vital importance to our post-war future." Agriculture needs nianufactories for its exist- ence or depression follows. ll I U I Widows of veterans of this war and of the North West Field Force have now become elig- ible for pensions under the War Veterans’ Al- lowance Act, under which widows of the South African War and the First World ‘War had been included since August 1943. Widows of such veterans, if they have reached the age of 55 or have become permanently incapable of circumstances, are now eligible for an allow- ance oi $365 annually if without dependents, or $730 it’ supporting one or more dependent child- $36o for one, $648 for two or $730 for more than two, to be paid on behalf of children of such veterans where both parents are dead. Ill l i I Estimates of the coming season's wheat harvest, prepared by the Australian Wheat Board, show that the crop is expected t0 total about 66,000,000 bushels. The figures by States are :- Queensland .. 6,000,000 New South Wales . . . . . . . . 25,000,000 Victoria . . . . . 7,000,000 South Australia . . . . . . . . . . . . 13,000,000 Western Australia . . . . . . . . . . . 15,000,000 With the exception of Queensland and Western Australia, the crop position is deterior- ating further because of the dry weather. The estimate of 66,000,000 bushels compares with an average Australian yield from i931 to 1940 of nearly 178,000,000‘ bushels. i! ll ‘ 1 be a hero in real life, too. When it does hap- pen, there is a certain satisfaction‘ to his screen fans that they had recognized, iii his-screen heroics. a note of truth. Take Sabu, for in- stance. The young Indian boy who ruled a screen jungle until he was called to war, has Cross for his service as tail gunner with the 13th Air Force, somewhere off Borneo. The action and its reward tops one of the most colorful careers in films. Sabu was discov- cred in India, where he was actually the son of an elephant man, and chosen for the leading role in Elephant Boy, which Robert O'Flalierty was then filming in India. He was an immedi- ate success and was taken to England for the film, later appearing in other pictures, most of WlllCll have been eiéhihited here. i I Gaius Julius Caesar, Roman General and dictator, died this date 44 B.C. ; bound to demo- crats by family ties, although of piitrlcian blood, he distinguished himself in the army in the East and in the Mithridatic War; identifying hiin- self with the democrats, he became Curule Aedilc in 65 B.C., Pontifex Maximus in 63 B.C. Proctor in 6'1 B.C.; in 60 B.C. he formed the ‘First Ti-iumvirate”, with Pompey and Crassus, against the oligarchy in his consulate; a quar- latter's defeat; and in 46 EC. Caesar's victory cause; in July of that year he was made dictator for io years; he extended local government, en- _ gradually tended towards undisguited absolutisin, and he was assassinated March r5; 44 B.C.; i bril- trator and a gteit ststunianjjiiaesar founded the new monarchy lt Rome, litd hit assassination failed to prelrent the development of the Roman Empire he planned; loctldjolio at ("The die is cast") a declaration made oitflcrossing the Rubi- con after coming from _Gttul and advancing into Italy against Pompey. Theogiubicon has been __ the Fluminico the height of oh: erected on avignano, to mark identified as a brook now; (little river), and Mullolitfl” his glory, caused a triotltt _ its bank nearthe village pf led the Speech from theThrone-one finds alibis m: the Special Products ml dications are this quantity will be offered “well g“ ahead of schedule". The contract provides for States," Mr. A. Herrgen, manager of the maiiu- b facturiiig methods division of R.C.A. Victor , Th la maintaining themselves and are itt necessitous " of”, It is not asked of every screen hero that he 1943 jilSt been awarded the, Distinguished Flying d rel between Caesar and Pompey ended in the u, of Thapsus was the death-knell of the Pompeian m, liant and original soldier, a‘ forceful adminis- ' Notes By 77w Way , an I e mln his week orewnrn him ulna htfllbloP-Gllda-lgno. i . 0M tliorf "lllhortod m mi“; °° each of M box cm. Bomb: diary?!" ti?“ “In? bllllitglb d us a ls, gocgllllll fiflfiiaiifiéfi ‘d..f.'lf" ‘ '1" M" mum the tcntlal Illemlu of free speech h; hill-h of coercion f; llilf pa the real! in wl the ids? of eflvllgailemocratlc clt lfldfvld l mail‘? aiiliwll’. "Till... 12"‘ tater-Montreal Gazette. , Everybody hos lhl t bl _ 3719 Yvllns worry beciiilise 13.1.11“. ear sophlstlcated- e Boa; ti h° mike mvnev~riie head of hi; Tpjuse tries to fill the coal bln __ e evicted try to find s. house The world ls trying to flnd pence: —-London Free Press. . “W6 f"!!! know enough about u, law." admits a .. ° 1W9!) out of contemppraw’ '0 do not set o learnerd ln _ eve o ten tempted to say, Micawber, ‘The law l: the other hand we geld? to learn." B" "my traps II ave miiy b5?" 59111118; how many plncglg been buttoned up nvgr fir‘? gigigmed enenlijv hordes? A few, t" c mlhy- or have the mlll- Y ommanders, except as an out. $159 hobo. ever expected that many gag}? d "EWSDBDBT renders an s of miles away watch ex_ pectantly for the jaws to snap the 09ml"! 01- the Japanese condem- Bd not blindly fighting on ofilllivlousl to the danger like tho V 511a n th d _ Christian Bcleencae '1'fllili'li'lf§r,s'r'p!' 0h thls _“ hlsl. hlstorlcn-ltlilgliltlcilonltlzlilidnxiln "tot: a ta fipnference. Prime Minister ans are still as lleclflc as ln the days, Years Mo, when a issueflnlwgs fought large- treal Gazette. rocm ' _ Mon‘ mm" if 0|‘ not. but world-fam- ed Tflfflflza Park Zoo. overlooking 57d"!!! 118N701‘. ls shortly expect.- lng from Canada a pair of "tie. odorlzed s." "You are not "U118?" secretary of rongs. Park Trust was asked, when he related this to a news- Pllherman. "No, really," he replied. And to prove it, he produced n llsl: of what the Zoo ls expecting from Brltalns neighboring Dominion gwglflgeghfl 11st was: "One pair of eo or k k." _ New‘ “were lln 5 Austrnllan skunk Alth h n. ll- iitiintIaTuAinci-eehlee lnufiflienein pzodilil: tlon, crop prices and net farm 1n- come since the war started. recent statistics on the value of occupied farm land show a relatively modest Bnln the Kitchener Record com- ments. The annual figures of net: farm income have approximately doubled since 1939, but the aver- age value per acre of farm land across Canada has risen only 2o per cent and last year's gain over was only seven per cent. The official explanation suggests that ery have d scoura ed expansion iind YIBW Purchase of land holdings, thus curhlnx the price-rising demand. The En llah vTe-r-efplnnnera where we were mprovlsers. They thought lfl terms 0f 50 years where we as surely as we lacked their equal- ty. We were volatile where they were traditional, and unpredictable where they were certain. amused them by always rushing off somewhere, even if we had noth- lnt; to do when we got there. they could lnfurlate us by remaining calm and un fact th I01 Although their mln s appeared to move more slow- ly than ours, this was not neces- sarily because they were slower ln their thinking. It may have been because they were thlnklng ahead. Thelr leisure was as much a proof of their self-control as our energy was of our spontaneity. - John Mason Brown ln the Saturday Re- view of Literature. It ls extremely hard for Ameri- cans to comprehend the problems of Ohlnn when such varied com. merit on the subiect comes from so many llfferen sources. Even his conflict, however, understanding would not be easy. An ex .e of the dlfflcliltles ls to be found ln the announcement from Chungklng that n third of e military personnel fa to be dis- missed and many military iii-gang- nations abolished. This ml ht be en to indicate a weaken n; of China’: war effort, but the precise pgposlto ls the case. The fact ls at the decision made was one for n long overdue reform. Ohlna has had millions of men in uniform but few under arms. vast hordes of men tn the Olilneao army could not be supplied with weapons the resources of their country lnedln suf- iuaittlty from America, be- o o transport diffloultlel. In addition ~to this lack i of arms, Otilnn‘: anon-nous mill force: not be pgoperfy or even clothed. and e pay was so low that many a rfckahn puller nude more monev than e Ohfn of . arch e . . ‘p: no“ cornea out Jomptly, ft soon should remit in‘ an Increase that-than f9- the spot where his glorious predecessor crossed it. , ‘ f ‘ofilifm-r-ifi... °i"ii".' iwnlkhlllili 'l‘rf c. ' rue CHARLMTETOWN on ll f" area, for if I - according r tries to ap- g some are three weeks without , they put on an advertising cam- moderatlon leagu the shorts es of l bor and machln- 1f ‘ duatry tell the talc lo pltlnl t e none but u blind man m . co u human body; how it PUBLIC FORUM f ed this Illimd I .§'.l“....i°'i‘a 1M0 our uni! none outside area I would be improperly dressed. to Kin: Rulel andniw- gulogorés, and would be tried fore millov/ may I uk the 0.0. ofRe Armylfthelrmcnorntf them, men every day with the . on working on farms and going to and from stores and vniases haul- ing produce to stations. and all other work in the count-ry- some ully dressed even to the cal). badge and boobs. I wonder tf some of the boys now in the thickest of battle would not like to have some of those uniforms for a chemo as a change of clothes. I hgpe that the 0.0. of each uzilt ll put a stop to this. 1t not I think our" Legion which 1 am a member of and proud to be in such a wonderful organization. wlll take action. Any one who wears the uniform renders himself liable to usual military dlsclpllne as if he were on strength of a unit. I am. 51!‘. etc. -.. Eli-SERVICE SOLDIER. GOVERNMENT oonwnor. AND wiwr NEXT? Sin-The lld ls off. The noble experiment has ended. The appeal to the provinces to restrict the sale and consumption of 81001101 in the Interest of war and tn the interests of humanity has been made, has been heard and ignored. The only limit to the consump- tlon of liquor 1n the near future is the inability of the vested ln- terests to supply the demand. We are first approaching the era of the greatest consummlon of ln- toxlciitlng beverages the world has ever known. Men stand Wheat at. the implications of that indict- ment. British Columblu 828.000.1100 for drink alone. 841000.000 revenue they ho to do better next year. The Iliiuor controller as he ls culled. any: that. the removal of restrictions that dld not restrict. ls the best. news he has heard in a long while. Does he forget that the primary mir- pose of Government Control la or was to reduce the consumption of liquor to a minim/um’! The pur- pose of enforcement as at ,. conducted seems to be to increase consumption to a maximum. English brewers and dfstllfers are more straight forward ln their methods. A few years no C their palgri ln connection with business. They spent a million pounds. Through their campaign literature they said "we are lor- lng ground. English men and wo- men are drinking less. We are los- ing our markets and our reputa- tion. If we cannot get. hold of the young people our traffic Lt doom- ed." And this ls how they work- ed ft. They. the brewers, pro- for beverage pu temperance. They fraterntzed with and organized moderation leagues of their own. They favoured temperance educa- tlon tn the school. ‘I'M’? would even be willing to wrlto the text- books on temperance for the schools. They would subsidize fraternal organizations that would interest themselves in popularlzlng the virtues of temperance as the brewers and distiller: understood . They favoured cocktail parties and the serving of alcohol ln d11- ute form for young people. The punch bowl was an invention of 1 _ to their lost. dollar klipd alcohol ln modern on lea ‘m m” ‘momma new” hum“: “or courtesy nor couimon decency. The enquiry therefore ha: forc- a part of a cleverly devised scheme to socialize the liquor traffic. Mod- eration leagues also condemned the open bar for the sale of bev- erages. They aald the open bar was unehrlstlan and uncherl and sordid. They favoured the. driving of the liquor traffic off the streets and right into the homes of the people where it could e regulated. And that is where u have it today. And that ls where rovaglng of homes; and when you destroy the home. you have destroyed clvlllzatlon. The reason for the temperance campaign sponsored by the Chur- ches of Canada a year ago to les- sen the comsurnp“ was the de- plorable effect of the traffic upon the successful prosecution of the eating beverages prerogative, go Brltlah North Amer-loan Act. Onlv through an lmendmon to Act can the Dominion Govern- ment take over the control. un- leoeuwudonelnllmua war measure. iiwfi t lt. th ua on pu up to e prov- inces. The provinces dld apond because the people of the provinces did not respond; wgfhfle lam lltl 1 th f l ere ‘a. po ca eory er- thnt. in iv democracy we get just about the kind of government. we deserve. I think conll measure of truth tn that laur- tlon. When the electorate. after tlcal psi-ties pletized not to seri- ously interfere with the free flow of liquor, we cannot complain 1f ft: flows rather freely". The 1n our own hands. If the homes of Canada. working through the oclioola and churches and other benevolent tn- stltutlons may that. the liquor trl-f- flc has to g ll. Recent statistics from the United we able trial activity which carried u: derived from the proceeds of the "WW8?!- 9 liquor traffic. And alltarlnn powers, and lilzatfon. from Berlin that Germany looked upon increased consumption of spirit-s claimed themselves the friend: of gingham!“ distillery. Ottawa. and W ‘not: to lift the brewerles e rles. What 1| the liquor traffic doing for our young men and women in the war services? It lo not. enough that these young should be called upon to face hell itself every hour of the day table Ilmfl one lt dues ltc moat deadly work-the g“ it reads t Prime Mlniste of the seriousness pe ple. tenslvely held there a year, returns to than mgoltwl states soy that there on 000 people there _who do not. touch lntoxlcimtk ln only shape or form. That ls 2-8 o! the population. For Canada that would mean 8.000000 out of 12,000,000. In 1t pomlble 8,000,000 people- wfll for over aub- mtt to the rule of a. would not be democratic and lt. would not be common sense. Mr. Lloyd George was recently discussing drink problem at the time of the First Great War and sold: I quote “It. became a choice between alco- by takiul the seriousness hol and victory. Qily stern and revollutio measures to restrict the use of NWT W6" to maintain the Lbten to blink Ill u. u "i"? ,ln e consum-p on o l- liiiwm Hldutfid IND-MN. per. cent. Wlne a decrease of 5 Beer, etc, a decrease of ent. Distilled spirits n decrease of 75Dper cent. the Mme period the lu- oreose ln the efficiency of the g workers has been estimated at between '1 per con-t and l7 per cent. present restrictions have been definite figures are not available. Within the lat 3 yearn the tol- Italy. Germany Japan have practically put a ban 0n the production of Since the outbreak war further 1110525. Onl democracies. the United Nations. find the liquor traffic l helpful ally ln their struggle to save clv- In l recent bMl the oonnnentator sold democracies an one ton people upon usi one conclusion only. This traffic ln alcohol must ceerv Government Nationalization with the profit m0- tlve undisturbed would have s ft 1110011 and impossible for any nun, cor- poration or government to make one dollar profit out of the traf- fic would be a. step ln the right dlrdctlon. To that end directed. The control has a1- result. es muctbe lucked wlll I am. Bir. etc. VERNON CBOCKITA‘. Charlottetown, P121. Mysterious ‘ Mlnlottr ll a provincial rfully minority. That allies in defeating the - es. It has been po out that. German all-raiders eel- or never hit a brewery or n Our governments at aloo try or distil- ln the the of the not re- and 90,000,— that ofthe lndul- duper of the dent. the of their failed. all our destroy a For one n. time Warmth on a darkening uni -Knt.hryno I}. Bodvllll. ll The Wllllnilbn POIB. nedlnte delivery only. BLOOD DONOR FOR ONE OI‘ TIIII I might have homo Had God willed differently. ‘Yet now. ' Incredibly. olfnthcne myoplooii may l» PIDGIN INGIJII Pidlh Eniillh in probably Qokon n Y Ho. thncmmoii other with more than 300 dlnleole in the Pacific island; alone. It Pay: to llly SNIWS BABY Gllllllli! Oiwlfl‘: an hatching mo". vigorous ehlelio now. Come In to the hatchery and niolm your, own lclocllon. High-producing strnlnn of the popular, profi- clilo broods-hr out or innit: Swlffl lnby Chicks Ito ind for profitable production. ‘they glow test - loathe! qulelify - mntuvn curly. Oct your nquln- Inontn new for n money-linking I945 Noelr. IVIIIPI IINICIIIIY Telephone 2ft)? Charlottetown ._,_ ATTENTION TIlIISS WEAIIEIIS war. Just recently our leaders "w céncilgr; 5%” M“ or have discovered that the con- m o, Hem Du “y. n“ sumptlon of lntoxlcants has no h r w illlf D00: orlo noticeable lnjurloul effects n Y” or h It ll nullified our war effort. One wonder: w at out of lite lilo-Oil IIIII technique or what. standurdo “I DQ110- li l. I!‘ measurement are used in arriving “I! “fill m at that conclusion. The people w“; e n“ ,pnmq,|,,n "Ill Vi! "Nil! ‘. charged with raising money for now my", him, '5'" n m?“ E-"hh . war purposes keep telling ua what “m. m, m] o; gig-mu, piipuy, 2:’. money will buy ln terms of war hi, “gummy, in lgndari, used to u u“ ‘a u i.“ a equipment. Every week or l0 we bgtwom mutton and ‘uh “ ma. “ 1 n”. get circular: from headquarters tony. How he mauled to not ln h“, nquewhot public school and uidoutolrrazioe Whiz‘ mom ' r of a uxvltclv. Some . e trived to d0 it: and Pierre 941W! o... mo... catch . Al IENTIIIN bombing planes. not told nun m report! f» <7"- saui and Brltlth nutiiorltill. ln- mrr. ohuiontli m: I'm!!- m m» hllhu and peace to follow after. The statistics from hospitals and institutions for the insane. statistics women falling to after the nightb dill ' millions of work hotire loot to in- that could lui w ii" iimmohi’ “guano effort Md n‘ Y‘ I yet ii ii’... ilrnotgggo lnfurlwl w r I ‘"11 iiiiiiifu in» nutter n tut I!!! invaluable. ill We have a limited number of week-old m"; i ed cniix-n-cmcxs lVlllllllG ll the follow. l‘ In: bmlv BARRED‘: ROCKS. NEW amp, sums lIEDS and cannon noon naMPsninncnoss minim. w. will loll um; u iiqaiia prlcel t... PHONE AT ‘OUR EXPENSE DILLON 8t SPILLETT s I ‘ _i_i.i'rc_1iiiiiv, enormous-rows m-grmi-TM '.'.. ottctown FIIOIQ "no. ‘um a. a. nrnnlv. s, a, Barristers nnl Attornvygqq, law ill Prhoo Its-qt . It. lluiiii o at Gluten- Amateur let-film. emu. Inlldolnb I than; q‘, . new " 4 I “Ifffllland ll. F. AllflllllAlll Olurtorcl Accountant. Intern ‘hut Inning; fihrlottetiin - ==_______=__=_, J.A..Mc6lll6llll,B.A. IABIIITEB, NOTARY. OUR-BIB I unsung“ M. ALBAN Onnndhn nun‘ of Phone l“! egg-custom ALEX w. MATHIESON i, an one: om" loq' __..____=9u_211_i2~_=m NONI! T0 BAIIIBTBB. BOIJCLIQIDI. ITO," ; Frederic A. largo nanlrann, no. m om: 000m ltroet lilllpllyf IOLICITOI, - no. UILDINQ l FARMER" Commerce Illa. P. O. lot fl CIIAELOTTETOWN! P. E. PALMER C! HASLAM L I. RAGLAN, Bdgllflfll, ITO | "-......-*--.::..::.i-r.i-.--" i Charles R. ll. "$7.31 Richard B. ---..:‘~.‘i.='.‘.'=..."">"' .....'-i..‘. loll!- TmihtamTfll-“F ' lift‘. ms EXANIIIEII AND GLASSES lJ. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent nnl ‘ i Worn cnntlnlnlly “Eith- Annie "u ""1uuiu.'II-l I-Aalll-I. FITTED ll I IUPIIJ ANY. {r4 IMcQuaId ‘nonsensical-amen run-an " Johnston . ll Illa ma. K5