PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN blot-ping Dally (Founded In IN“) Authorized s: Second Clue Mull, Poll Offloo Department, Ottawa. Thu Inland (luurdlun Puhlllhlng Co, Editor 1nd Managing Director, J. B. Burnett. Anni-Int: Editor, Frank Wilbur. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest lnk" tzsoav, JAN. 1i‘ I950. CllARLOTTETOlVNv interest In Elections Much has been said and written about party politics, practically all of it unkind. Yet. in any state that would avoid the bane of despotism or totalitarianism, political parties are inescapably necessary. if the hypothetical “man in the street" wishes t0 be a factor in forming his country's poli- tics, and not merely submit to them, his obvious cottrse is to seek out those who lhink_as he does on important questions and combine with those others to put his ideas into practice. Government is, of course, a complex task and it is unlikely that the in- rlividual will find any significant number who agree with him on all points. He can then remain in his tiny minority or else join those who advocate his most important principles, and try to convert them to his views on other matters while working to make his chosen party a power in the land. Only thus can he influence the course of events. The "independent” in politics in- evttably finds he is really the ineffective. The man who “doesn't take any interest. in politics" is the man who puts in power the self-seeker who could not possibly influence any large number of voters, but who de- pends upon the majority of them not taking sufficient interest to insist upon getting the type of candidate they profess they would like to have. I.n municipal affairs there are no party politics as such, and to this fact may be attributed the not infrequent indifference shown by the voters in civic elections. It is always hard to get out a large vote, and practically impossible unless there are clear- ly defined local issues. and men willing and capable of expressing their views. Back in the year 1859, just four years after Char- lottetown became incorporated, the Hon. Ed- ward Whelan wrote in The Examiner: "No one seems to take any interest in civic af- fairs-no one speaks of the forthcoming election-and no one seems to know or care whether the present City Fathers will be re-elected. Then, wherefore should we trouble our heads with speculation on the subject? We must take it for granted that our fellow citizens are delighted with the present Municipal Government, which have distinguished themselves by doing nothing." With minor variations, this has too fre- quently been the complaint from that day to this. What is the remedy against such public apathy? Certainly we do not want party politics injected into civic affairs; but we must find a substitute by arousing public interest, not only in the candidates but in the issues for which they stand. One of the best means of achieving this end is by the railing of a public meeting where every pro- spective candidate would have an oppor- tunity of airing his views. The meeting might be held either before or after nomina- lion day, which in Charlottetown this year falls on February ‘l. Preferably it should be held after the Council's annual meeting, which is set for January 27. The reports will then all be in, and there will be ample limc before the election date, February 8, for the voters to come to some intelligent rottclttsiott. This practice, when followed in the past. invariably resulted in a larger turnout at the polls. ll is of little use to preach to the electors that. it is their duty to get out and vote, un- less they have something concrete to vote int‘. Newfoundland Development The intimation that Premier Smnlwood has succeeded in securing Rockefeller de- velopment money ‘for an economic survey of Newfoundland is hailed by the Financial Post as “big news indeed,” not only for our newest Province but for the rest of Canada. For years the greatest need of New- foundland and other vast undeveloped reg- ions of this country has been new capital. Without it there can be no hope of even locating our natural resources, let alone making real use of them. And by attract- ing American venture capital for this job wc are on the way toward solving another big and pressing problem, the balancing of our dollar account with the United States. Am- erlcan money poured into development work ln Newfoundland and elsewhere will help to balance our excess purchasing in the U. S. This was the historic pattern followed by Great Britain when that country was world's banker. A large portion of British sales abroad was balanced by British capital in- vestment abroad, including hundreds of mil- lions of dollars in North America. -»-' Britain did not follow the shortslghted pol- Wisely the balance. Now the United States, after some bitter experience on an opposite course is beginning to see the wisdom of that pol- icy “For underdeveloped countries like Can- ada that change can be of tremendous sig- nificance," says the Post. “But we must realize that capital will only come where it is welcome, where it gets a fair chance for safety and a reasonable profit to its owners. On the whole the Canadian record in this re- spect has been good. If is vital for us and our future that it remain so.“ EDITORIAL NOTES All eyes are focusscd on Ottawa for the Federal-Provincial Conference proceedings. O O I Charlottetown civic elections will see at least two, if not three candidates for the mayoralty, and contests in every ward for councillors. This shows a healthy munici- pal state of affairs. O Ottawa now has a municipal council of 33 which is three members more than the legislature of this Province. It will be in- teresting to discover when it ceases to be a council at all. and becomes an assembly. O O I The proposed use of infra-rent lamps in the curing of kippered snacks from herring may or may not be commercially feasible, but it has unlimited possibilities from an ad- vertising point of view. I There seems to be as much, if not more, competition for a policemans job here than for a senatorship, though it seems the num- ber of prospects for the senate vacancy is increasing. At least two others have been mentioned in addition to Premier Jones and Mr. Lester Douglas, M. P. I O Premier Sniallwood announced that he intended only to observe what goes on at the constitutional conference at Ottawa, but the fact that he was the first Provincial Premier to arrive there indicates that he does not. intend to let. very much escape his observation. The report which the Royal Commission on Arts and Sciences will produce may or may not have any significance, but the commission has already served a valuable purpose in stimulating cultural organiza- tions and bringing them and their efforts before the public. I Sir Hans Stoane. physician and natural- ist, one of the founders of the British Mus- eum; was governor of Jamaica in 1687 and made a collection of native plants; return- ing to England in 1727 he was made presi- dent of the Royal Society, and the same year was appointed court physician to Queen Anne, and later to (leorge I and George II. O The Ottawa Citizen carries a long and informative article on the rank of Com- monwealth envoys, deploring the fact that they should rank below ambassadors in the table of precedence, but without: once re- ferring to the fact that the Canadian Gov- ernment has already taken steps to shift them up to rank with ambassadors on that table of which the printed versiors are now, of course, out of date. O I An acute world shortage of human skele- tons is causing concern among teachers and students of anatomy who are finding human bones both expensive and difficult to ob- tain. Skeletons for medical teaching have usually been supplied by India, Russia and France, but since the war the French Gov- ernment has passed laws which make it impossible to maintain the previous large scale supply and now even France herself is said to be faced with a skeleton short- age. A London firm has however found a solution to this problem of the "skeleton in the medical cupboard." It has just moulded its first. plastic skeleton which is complete in every detail of its 206 bones and, so "(is said, stronger and much cheap- er than the real thing. O O I The cartel charges against the match industry seem to indicate that Mr. Mac- Gregous commission was not treated against “after-glow." Bryant and May, English match manufacturers, have for many years been in the forefront of combines and car- tels. It is recalled that over twenty years ago an enterprising firm in British Guiana saw the possibilities of starting a wooden match factory there, where wood and labour were plentiful and matches dear. No sooner did they get underway than Bryant and May pulled wires through the Colonial Office to have excise duties imposed to protect Bry- ant & May's imported matches from local competition, and to help to smother the new enterprise at its birth. Evidently, according to Mr. MacGregor's report they are still at their old game, crushing out local industry. Subsequent to Great War ‘I Bryant and May were involved in an international match con- icy of demanding all cash for its export: ‘ but welcomed what imports wore available ---\ ---a- u": “um lnvmtmontn to cover: troi scheme in which a Swedish firm play- TBE ANATOMIST He many a creature did anotcmize. Allow urine-opting water. m. and land, Beasts. fishes. birds. smile. outer- pillars, flies, were laid full low by his relent- lass hand. That oft with gory crimson was dlstained: H! mam’ u dog destroyed, and many a cat; Otf fleas his bed. of frogs the marshes drained; Could tellen if a. mite were lggn or And read a lecture o'er the entmlls of o. gnat. -—Ma.rk Akonpldo (1721-1710). Old Charlottetown (Infill-U w." TENANTS‘ APPLICATION v "A numerously attended meet- lflfl‘ of the tenants of Laurence Suhvan, Elsq, residing on Lot 22, was held on Tuesday at Hope River school-house, convened for the purpose of petitioning the proprie- tor to authorize his agent, William FOYKBH. Esq. to receive the rents of the tenants due or to become due. in merchantable produce. l course rendered necessary from the scarcity of cash throughout the island. C. Birch Bagster, Esq, J. P» was unanimously called to the chair, and Mr. E. Hill appointed secretary. Several resolutions were adopted. Ind the following com- mittee was appointed to draw up a petition in accordance therewith: Messrs. C. Birch Bagstcr, Jeremiah Simpson, James Sullivan. John Simpson. Sr., James Byrus, Thomas Hays, James Parsons. Jobm Hodtgson and Duncan Ross. The chairman, in concluding the business of the meeting. reminded his audience that the course they were pursu- ing was a conditional one, and that constitutional means could alone ensure its accomplishment." ——The Islander, Nov. 8, i844. Tomahlo‘? Tomayto‘! Fruit? Vegetable‘? (Toronto Telegram) The Ottawa Journal, bent spreading useful knowledge and harmless pleasure, tells us edi- torially that. the tomato is "a na- Live American herb of the night- shade family; it has a lartze red or yellow berry." If, adds; "To. matocs are delicious when sun- ripened on the vines; they arc good in juice, scalloped, in soup and chowder." That. is only the half. or less of it, They are good eaten raw, with or without salt, popper and vine- gar. They taste delicious when eaten plain with Wlliltz- bread and butter. They are admirable when fried with bacon, or with chops. Thcy make an excellent preserve, or jam, Reduced to catsup, catch- up or kctchup~all three terms are approved by Webster -— they form the great American condi- ment, with which tasteless foods may be flavored at, home, and with which the fine but strange flavors of foreign foods may be disguised abroad. Stuffed or quartered, they are a valuable tn- grediont in a salad. They are sometimes used-for a reason not quite clear-ms filling in an omel- ctte. They may be sliced, stewed or canned. They are a most. amen- able fruit, or vegetable. OI’! But the most; controversial. Is the tomato a fruit or n vegetable? That is a question frequently argued. The Encyclo- paedla Britannica speaks of "the common tomato with large fruits". but in another place lists jt among the common vegetables, The Ox- ford and Webster dictionaries call it. a fruit. It seems m be a fruit. No sooner is that settled than the question of pronunciation crops up. This is a matter of taste. The Oxford favors tomahto while Web- ster likes tomuyto. The latter can cite potato for support, and the former may argue that its style is nearer the original Spanish and French "tomato." In a Canadian restaurant, if you ask tor tomaytoes the waitress will call them to- mahtoes, and if you ask for to- muhtocs she will call them to- maytocs. You will both be right, either way. Under its original name of "to- mate," the fruit, or vegetable came north from South America. It was a simple, unsophisticated berry then, but was called the "love apple" from a belief that it in- duced ln human beings a liking for their opposites in sex. Now. it has been so altered by cultiva- tion that there are more than I50 varieties, none credited with the love-inducing quality. Whether the world has lost or gained may be debated. Radioactive Oysters (Christian Science Monitor) A great deal has been laid or surmised about people pry secrets out of the Energy Commission. But tho A. E. C., in co-operutlon with the Fish and Wildlife Service, ha: em- barked on the ultimate in counter- esplonage. It hopes to pry atomic secrets out of an oyster. It la some time now since lav- ants discovered who! ~klnd of noise annoy: an oyuter (a nolly noise, ofcourlel, but now the F. W. S. hope: with radioactive isoto- pes to learn what. kind: of food appeal to an oyster. We hope thl: will not encourage connundrums adding further ulll- teration to "an :tom’:‘ anatomy". To be sure, It may throw import- ant zoological light an the quest- tlon of iult how mum I: on oyster. But lgnln we hope that if researcher: succeed in learning from the oyster the secret of how edopromlnentpart. to bomb cutfleflsh, sting rays, and octomm: footonl. did you n11), By Tliolrvlillilths The Decisive Year (By W. N. Ewer) The your 1949 will, I think, be seen in retrospect as one not. of dramatic but of decisive change in the world situation. Stalin and his associates had seen 1948 as a year of spreading "revolution" ~ or rather Soviet ascendancy in Eur- ope. It was not so much that they were dazzled by the romantic coincidence that this was the centenary of “the '48?’ It was rather that all their analysts- except for a space the trouble- some Varga-assuretl them that. the West; was both politically and eco- nomically on the verge of col- lapse. There we: u "revolutionary situ- ation." The moment was ripe for nn offensive. And, believing ln their prognosticntioti, Stalin npctvcd his offensive on four fronts. On the North, the blockade of Ber- lin was put into force. ln the centre, Czechoslovakia was seized without a blow. In the South an intensification of’ the Greek civll war was ordered, While "behind the lines" strenuous efforts were made to bring about collapse in France and Italy. On the flanks the war of nerves beat against Scandinavia and ‘Turkey. In the summer the offensive was in full swing. Anxiety in the Vi. cst equalled the confidence in Moscow. There were many who believed that before another twelve months had gone by the \‘Vcstern Allies would be forced to evacuate Ger- many and that Russian would be on the Rlllllf‘, though the airlift to Berlin lturi. in fact, been a decisive counter- stroke, the pressure of attack was stlll maintained when i948 ended or 1949 opened. At the close of 1949 it has failed or been aband- oned for the time being all along the front. The change is complete. mmwmnrnmm-a-aa. .. .. .. .. vgruLrLuAij 93. an. Age-Old Story Not. by work: of rfgbtoouuneu: which we have done, but accord- Iug to Illa mercy He saved un by the washing of regeneration and reuevrlng of the Iloly Ghost, Who ls Intelligent’? (‘I'm- Printed Word) A contributing editor of a Van- couver monthly publication claims that The Printed Word is too in- telligent for farmers. "Over Far- mer Brown': noggin," ls what he says, The inference is that’. a special kind of Writing is required for farmers, a sort. of’ easy-steps- for-llttle fcel. The author of this attack on Canada's major industry brags that he himself l; "city- fled," and apparently he consider: himself brighter than farmers. This brings up the large ques- tion of whether country or city people are the more intelligent. 1f it were to be settled by a poll the country folk would probably win. because they still outnumber the populations of our swelling cities. But what is the truth’? On the basis of education there are likely to be found in cities "w"? People ‘who are highly edu- cated. but there are vast numbers who definitely are not. Education costs more in cities-costs the rate- payers more. anyway’, But cost is no rcvtuln test. Education costs less in T‘. E, I. titan In Toronto. But. who, except maybe [hag city. fled editor, will undertake to ea- tablish that. the Islander; 115v; loss savvy than Torontonians the people who run up the big Communist’, vole. Ono hit, of evidence on the side During i949 the Berlin blockade has been lifted and the Grvvk civil war ended, Communist of- fensives in France and Italy have failed and been called EV?" the war of nerves has died down. The theme of Soviet; jiropagandu l5 peace and n professed tear of at; tack by "Western imperialists. Even the expected attempt to coerce recalcitrant YUSKOSlHYlR ll“ cgmg (a curiously little. a a o The reasons for this comvlelfi change have been two. First, there has been steadiness and consnhdn- tion of ‘he “lest, Western Etiro- peamcountrien have mndc lt v19!" u“; they would not be intimidated {n10 a policy of appeasement nnd time they would certainly resist any further aggression. And the United States has made it Pllll", that. if conflict come American aid, would be "without. stint." If thet Berlin airlift was the first decisive counter-action, the sttlhlnli! 0f ll" Atlantic Pact was the second ‘In 1947, at the founding of the Com- lnform. Russia hurl declared a’ cold war between the “twq 68ml“ - l" i948 and ‘i949, the challenge‘. had more cautious second thoutllllk But there has been another and by no means untmlwllflflly Tells" for the change. If the Vlcst has proved stronger. the Soviet em- pire has proved weaker titan Slllllfl foresaw In . The revolt of ‘Tltn has succeeded beyond expecta- . And the rest of the satellite countries are riddled Willi discon- resurgence. and with a growing hatred of’ Rus- sian domination and Russian ex- ploitatlon. Stalin l5 forced to think not Ol’ extending but. of consolidating his empire. of repression instead aggression. The Dllfllfl "ml “T” so“ trials “we the most dramatic symptoms. But the trouble is holh widespread and deellrfleflwfl- Th” satellite Governments _ l" threaten ruthless nctlon aitfllnfil “l1 Opposition. Even the Com- munist parties urn tinrellablc. A Soviet. Marshal has to be put ln churgn of Poland's armed fort‘!!!- And there are Slims (as ln Malon- Stalin's no llllln discontent und unrest ln the Soviet- ......___--- they will not infer therefrom that the, world is their oyster. e also do our GOOD TURN daily When you travel . . or our . . . include Personal can't lose, if your baggage is stolen, pious. Then you lost or damaged. See us of teacher and lcadcv" of farmers is that they have in- telligence enough to live in the country. ‘There is evidence, ho\v- ever, which would go to show that. people living in Vancouver are not so dumb either. Not many Canadians who are stuck in other clflcs can get up much steam these days in running down the intelligence of farmers and those who mnke their homes in the smaller communities. The hey, rubc! joke sounds weak when you are jammed info a bus. It is hard to fag n fellow Cana- dian dull-wilted when he manages . ._____..._______________ Union itself. It is no time for ad- venturous or risky foreign poll- clcs, O I But, it may ho objected. this analysis ignores the Far East and thr- grent Communist victory in China. Surely all that has hap- pened ls that Moscow has swung its offensive from Wcst to East, from Europe to Asia. I think not. The victory of the Chinese Communists is an event of tremendous world significance. The Chinese Communists, however, like the Yugosnlvs, won their vic- tory themselves wlth singularly little aid from the Soviet Union. Stalin's preoccupation at the end of the Wu!‘ WES not f0 help his Chin- cse "comrades" but. to recover for himself the territory nnd dominant situation of the Tsurs in North Exist China. And the, greatest handicap of Mao Tsc-Tung’; armies ha; been their lack nf aircraft which the Russians could have given them but did not. That. is a very significant fnct. Another is that. Mao at the Moscow Birth- day celebrations spoke of Stnlln as a "lonelier and friend." The l5 n phrase re- It. was a independence qulred of snlellltcs. quiet declaration of and equality. t. There are now in the world two great. powers whose Governments profess devotion to Marxism. One ls Russia and the other China. l would ndd that just. as the one l! now very Russian, the other l! 8nd will be very Chinese, But the el- sentlnl point is that tllQY l!" W" --not one - And 1945i has been ns definitely defeat; and fnllure for a year of Stalin as It has been n Y0" 01 for Mao. victory and success . whether by boat, train Effects Iusuraum in your about modern insurance. clllfxgfsogcra tfigoncloa finned IINglfl-ll. MIBNIB GIAI IIIOIII OIVIGI IIIMIIMAIO I , "u i‘ i _ W0 III _ luxiou: a: mybody else to rapect. Canadian justice, but we get spots before t'he eyes when we read that one man has been fined $50 for catching a fish out. olf lesson, and another has been fined the same sum for kill- ing a man while driving a car.- Petertaorough Examiner. Although we have been only loo pleased to report the gonor- ally improved operating circum- stances for the mining industry with the attending improvement in profits, the fact should not. be lost. sight of that many of the = Notes BX mines — and gold mines in par- icuior — are operating on a dan- gerously :l-im margin of profit. it is : point that the astute labor leader would do well to bear con- stantly in mind-Northern Miner. Largo ureus of the world are to- day faced with starvation or near-starvation. We are haggling with Britliu over food contracts. surpluses are piling up on the North American Continent. What- ever the economics of this parl- dox, to destroy food or store it in anticipation of selling it for practically nothing seems almost criminal in vicw of the desperate need of great armies of humans in Europe and Asia. —- Ilamillou Spectator. A deadly weapon which can be tucked into l handbag. or into a coat pocket, is obviously extreme- ly difficult to control. Such a weapon ought to be outlawed. Manufacture of revolvers could be prohibited, except under ii- cence, and those revolvers which wen mode lhould be solely for the use of police officers. Manu- facture of ammunition for re- volvers already in existence could be prohibited, except mantiicic- ture for police use. The law could require owners of revolvers to turn them in to the police, with a very heavy penalty for failure to do so. There need he no movc to make the ban cove: shot-guns or rifles. They are just as deadly as a revolver, but. they can't be tucked into u lady's handbag or shoved in a coat. pocket. Thcy can‘t. be carried into a bank or store without attracting attention. -—0wcn Sound Sun-Times. The balance of nature, by which excesses in animal population are checked, will continue to be : mystery to most laymen. It is in- teresting, however, to read that scientists of distinction, Dr. Ian Mc'I‘aggart Cowan, professor of zoology at the University of British Columbia. and Dr. William Rowan, of the University of Alberta, are notw turning their attention to the theory that the sun spot. cycle may hi: affair: so that he ha: ready access to fishing, hunting, okllng, golfing, just walking with clear air to breathe, looking at trees nnd streams that uro not. tired from other people's looking at. them, and taking his wide, unhindered vicw of the vast sky above, FlfiMfn JANUARY l1. 1950 The _ be : factor in the heavy room. tion expected in another two you; time among rabbits, grouse, limp. lcn, lynx and other wild game Many factors in the balance n. subject to logical enough explana- tion. Fiilfll parasites, for instance, accompany the tent. caterpillar. de_ cimating the ranks of the cmw. lers when they reach pcakinfe51a_ tiou. Weak strains in game fall prey to predators that weed out all bu‘. the fit; numbers are kept down and (utality is kept up. Wile; food supplies fail.,certain Specie‘ are reduced to a point. al. whici lc\v nun-c than the required num. ber for brcctlitig stirvivc. —— Vic torla Ttmcs. A judge in Oblo recently um tcnced n drunken drivetr who lug knocked down a pedestrian t4 spend as much time in jail as hi: victim spent in hospital. If tho judge had the power to infliq the same amount of auiifering there would perhaps be mue merit in such a sentence. A: is, it lotiks more like a spur-o the-moment decision than a co stdcrcd sentence. But at that,‘ sccms a more equitable sentenci than is meted out. in Manitoba where the drunk drive-r generally goes to jail for only seven day: and has his (iriving licence can- culled for stx months — as though a drunk bclutid the wheel were not. Just as dangerous as l drunk wav- ing a loaded weapon. Thou du- posed to drive while under tho in- ilucnce will continue to do :0 u long as the punishment is mild. ’l‘ht.- penalty should be oeve-ro enough to slop the majority cvf individuals getting behind flu wheel when under the influenct of liquor. — Winnipeg ha Prue: In most of the government ll- qtior stores this week and lust we had an example of what life would be like if the statemon oil the httsincss. 'l‘o make u purchase that an ordinary private ltnro would handle in : few minutes cvcn at (Thrisfntas, took from half lo thrcc-qttnrtcrs of an hour. In many cases the customer was re- quired to enter three oeporai: qucitcs. some of which wound in and out of every comer in tho store and around every pillar. And when hr did reach the goods coun- tcr the. bttycr often found u slow- utotion cl ~rk who. in producing a bottle, would put. the moat ra- luctant host to shame, It i: no wonder that production is so slow in those cottntrles where the stat: runs I‘\‘(‘l'_\'illll’\_l or tries to. H? the time the citizen queues up for his food, his clothing and what» cvcr else his government g. clous: ly allmvs him to buy, he would have little time for anything elll. —-'l'oronlo Financial Post. Electrical contractor WIRING AND REPAIBNO ERNEST R. RAMSAY. 129 Elm Are. Phone 1068.! PROFESSIONAL CARD$ Mutheson 8t Penile A. W. MATHESON, LC. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A., LLB Borrhteru, etc. Collection: - Money to Loan It) Grout George Street Churlottew . M. Albcn Former MONEY TO DOAN 3A., LL.B. BABRITER, SOLICITOII. Etc. Charlottetown. P. It. I. _.___.___________ Dr. W. R. Carson Chiropractor Palmer 8t Hoslom A. a. IIASLAM, 5.5., LL.B. ‘ Burrlutor, Etc. Bunk nf Nova Scotia Chamber! burlotfabown, P.E.l. momsr r0 man a - MocPhee 8t Trainer H. I‘. lllncPllEE, 5A., KO. I SOMPIRLED TRAEOR, B-L Barrlstoru, Eta. Toombu Bldg. 165 Qugqg 3Q J. A. McGuigan NOTARY, ETC. BARIIISTICR. SUIJCITOB. (JUR-Illlfl BUILDING Palmer Graduate OHABLOTTETOWN I01 Prince 8L _______._______.__ Gouda! 8t Hazard Burl-futon, Solloltm-n, Notaries. Eta Canadian Bonk of Com wrc Bldg. MONEY T0 LOAN GILBERT A. GAUDET, 8A., LL.B. Phone i012 ' _______._____,_____________ Bell 8t Mol-lnoson BABRISTEBS. SOLICITOBS, Ac ll. R. BELL, D. L. MATIIIESON, L.B., ‘.0- Attorney: uf Law LOANS 0N CITY AND FAB)! PROPERTIES I50 Richmond 8f. Charlottetown, R5,]. Canadian Bonk of C -- Bldg. Chas. It. would Dr. A. L. Moclsooc IM- DENTIST ...'.a.r.s?"°"~ -»»-~--- Illltoru Trult Building GLORIA BUILDING ouAnLoTrlvmvrawx I'll) (iifllflllll Si‘ Phnno 1111 Phone 291 4‘, J. 8. TAYLOR Optomotrllt ‘IQ. Qlllllllled, _' Ill- conm not a.’ Queen! so. Offloo Phone lfiw-llouu I013 Joseph ll. MocMillon. LL.B. IABIIBTIII. SOLIGITOB, Mo. ‘ll Queen Street PHONE 770 44.- A. Wultlten Goudof. LL.B. BABRISTILR. SOLIOITOI, Iii- Phllllpo Building , Ill Grafton lltroot Money to boon Oollootfol Frederic A. Largo. K-C BABRISTER. SOLIOITOB, _ NOTARY lloyul Bonk of Canada Chumbol Chulottcbowu, I'll. Successor ’ Money to lnun collection: George J. Tweedy, L0. ll. ll. llllllllE OFFICES: IN CI-IARLOTTETOW : M. Soon, 0.A., borne ll. Iveu, Charlottetown, Glngnw, Phonon: 2060 - I441 llEll. W. To]. l“. UHABMJTTETOWN, P. I. l. and oourmn" CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS llulllux, Itlonctnn, Amherst, NOW ruro, lionfvlllc. Randolph W. ltlnnning, 0.A., Bronlfii C.A., W. Grunt Thompoon, 0-5- 10: Ill lllGGlllS ~ CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT cunnns Umuimo lo: (l!