\ 1 y. ¢,, v-Auc your; TllE Gllllllllllillliiv" lillflllflllli llornim Dally tFonhded in llfl) Authorized ns Second Cllle MAL In! Office Department, Ottnwl. The Guardian ma; be obtained at: Hub Tobacco Shop, Moncton. N. l The News Shop. Moneton, N. B. George McLean Pleton, N. B. Walker's White Spot. ll Seller St... Hollies, N.l- Metropolitan News Agency, i248 Peel SL. Montreal United Cigar Stores, Chntenu Lnnrier Ottown, Ont B. Aitken, Lord Elgln‘: Hotel. Ottawa. Ont. J. Fine, 354 Bay St». Toronto Ont. Wolfe's News Stand. Sudbory. Ont. Old South News. Cor, Milk and Washington lie. Boston Hotalingi News Agency Times Building, New Ierl. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ sarmuisv, AUGUiS-‘ITZG. 194s Why lie Left Commenting on ihg disappointingly small numhcr of war veterans who have returned to fall" \\'l"'l\'. a Sllliiltcr at a recent Onta io agri- cultural tttccting stiggcsted that part of the failll» <11 lfi35l. lltifiht lie with the older gen- vratiou. Young pifliplfi need encouragement in a snhstuutiztl wav if they are to take an inter- est in farming. Too frequently in the past this vncottmgcmctit was withheld. lK-rhaps the following lincs, published in a littslhit exchange and received by The Guard- ian from a former Prince Edward Islander, no lOngtT applics to farm life. at least in this llrovitwr. int they are worth quoting in g0"- ncctioti with the Ontario speaker's criticism, and worth preserving as a reminder 0f a con- dition of affairs which was not uncommon in rural communities at one time, and which catised many unnecessary hcartlircaks: "Why dtd you leave the farnr. my lad? Why did you bolt and leave your dad? Why did you ‘beat it’ off to town And tum your poor old father down?" “I left my dad. his farm. his plow, Because my calf became his cow; l’ 19ft my dad. ‘twas wrong. of course. Because my colt became his horse. I left my dad to sow and reap Bt-cause my lamb became hls sheep; I dropped the hoe and stuck the m: BECRHSE my bis became his pork. The Harden truck that I mod; gmw Was his to sell, but mine to hoe." Senator Crerar’: Warning‘ there is a tendency on the part of those may be elected to public office t0 think llllllleillaldl’ "D011 election they are endowed with some peculiar virtue which qualifies them to guide the people, That is a false and wrong conception of our form of government. . W5 have no right in this House or the other by insidious ntcatis to frittcr away the free- doms and liberties of thc pcoplc." If it is necessary for the Government to exercise some control in monetary matters. it still has the temporary power to do so, “and it should not have any tiowcr hcvoutl that," Senator Crerar maintained. "This propuz-tctl legislation, comhinctl with the hill which we discussed last wcck sctting up the Catiadizm Commercial Corporation, would in the event 0f their being a gnvcruntcnt sympathetic to the development of the authoritarian idca put it within the power of such a Government and t its civil servants at Ottawa, to completely shackle the commerce of this country and to interfere absolutely with the fundamental rights of the individual citizens. Once thcsc things g0 it is almost intpossihlc, without rcvolu- tion itself, to have them restored." Tll€5¢ words of warning, from one of the] stalwarts of Liberalism in Canada, should have some effect on Parliament Hill. who that l - EDITORIAL NUIES -. All in readiness for “.\Ionty's“ reception Monday. ll is * it‘ Rt. Hon. Lord \\'00lt0n, English States-t marl, born this date i883; “'35 fortncrly chair-t man and managing director of Lewis Ltd.; ap-l pointed Director-(jcticral of liquipmcttt and Stores Supply Council in 1940, malt-mg a suc- cess 0f the job, ultimately licctituitig Ministcr of Food and Rcconstructioti respectively in Churchill Government. Now Chairman of the Conservative Party, which he is “reconstruct- ing" in its turn. s ‘v v By an unfortunate misplaccment of head- ings in yesterday's issue, Premier Duplcssis was credited with “Seeing A Bright Future for the Maritimcs" instead 0f a “Catnpaigti Against Democracy". It was Licnn-Goveruot" A. F. Williams, Manitoba, who was optim- istic over the Maritimes, while Premier Dup- lessis was defending Quebec's attitude to- ward Democracy. l‘ 1k it‘!!! No sooner does the province show an im- provement in healthiness in one respect than something occurs to offset it. The death-rate in T. B. cases dropped t8 points in 1945, show- Frotiz the lips of a staunch old Liberal war, rue CHARLOTTETOWN cuss’ fir .. s; ‘ Notes By The Way George Bernerd Shaw's most re-, mnrksble achievement is reaching 90 years. —Bra.tmon Sun. The passions ere the only orst that. always persuade; they ‘are. as lt were“; mt-tra! art, the rules of] which are infallible; and the strn-, plest mun with passion is more persuasive than the most eloquerw without it. —~La Rochefoucsuld. No man-made solution of the Ettropsan pronlcmls good for more than a little wmle but we have hlglt hCpEs for that new m: age. which should be along any neon’ now. —Strntlord Baacon-Hcrald. Why put. In tail, If he is caught, an lmagliratlre guy like that chap, reported to D‘: selling atom]. bomb stcck around the country? Why] not examine the dopes who buy the stock? -St. (lunar rzs Standard. Critics of Chnudifs new pictorial‘ Stamps may object to the left- lianded plough, the lumoerman who cuts trees with his back to, them and the non-existent ferry, boat but they should not over-luck one mighty important thing‘ The stamps get the mall delivered! — Montreal Star. “billion Mackinac Isllnd now; represents a more leisurely era's lust star-i agalns: the cur-roach- ments ct this mvchanlchl rage. m‘ one remolntug ally in this hen», tsphcre, Bermuda, has CapltttlutPd although not unconditionally. —- Sault. Ste. Marta Star, “Clock-stopping” is a new presslon that's cropped up in the aviation business slmce the recent] jet-propulsion trials says Tl-ils Week. Before ionq. you may be abs lo fly from New York to Califor-i ttia and get then- bcfore oi: start! This ls mt (louble-ta - it's "clock-stopping". The explanation is that. air exot-rts claim planes‘ will some day be table to bent tttc- sutn across the nation. l A out, owned by Harold Peterson qt the Smolancl district, hos adopt-f ed a b-itby rabbit and seems to be making a. good 10b of raising it to] maturity, says The Mlnnedosa Tri- bune. The oat. Wlilch recently gove- blrth to five kittens, went out and caught the rabbit after Mr Pet- erson had killed two of the kit- tens to reduce the size of Lhc fan".- for ten days and ln that time the animal has almost. doubled in size despite the fact that the rabbit is. gramlnlvctrous nlvorous l-n eating habits. "ff In an electrical storm do nothing danger from, Jghmlng. Do not go swimming, nor tzlre a bath, for ln- stance. for watrr ls an. excellent €X'. came fly. She has now had the rabbit. H and the cat. car-yeah, which exposes you to unnecessary 11-15}, M Giles-din does not neeeseu _ uy endorse one opinion m "ignflnflellk f _ O > btfl- THE FARMERS‘ WGOD-IXITS Sin-Much 300w advice hse- been given to our farmers relative to the car; of their wood-lots. Many small lots have been mopeny cared for. But what. hope ve we- in saving them? ' ’ Go where you will over the Pm- vince and you will see the r workers piling brush right up against those lots that we were ad- vised to save. _ What ls the farmer Premier's Government thinking of? And still worse, if tt. is possible, our small lumber that soon would be saw-MKS. ruthlessly slashed, leaving dry, red brush to catch fire and Wipe off our smell amount of lum/tvsr which those pit-prop fel- lows could not, buy. _ Soon our small saw mills will pass out. as many of our small in- dustries have posted. for in a very short. time not. e sow-lug will be hm to go to those mills. Remedy: stop cutting our small lumber f0!‘ pit-props. It will be interesting to know what. our visiting forestry officials, ,n0w here with us. will have to say about the undoing of their efforts. I am Slr, etc, ONE INTERESTED. NEGLECTED OPPORTUNITIES I Str,—ft ls fifty-five years since I. to the United States from| Prince Edward , and my memory is still keen of some young people without means of acqulrlntt an aptitude otgediucatlon fitting them for more congenial work. Eat-Governor Ifuller sold in rccent years that. he was sorry his sons could not sell papers. In the coun- try the farmer's boy had few Den- nles to count or save. Some boys could fish lobsters and spend vnhut they could on books. One o! the best x-Lporters in Boston learned shorthand that. way. In P. E. I. with butter 16 cents snd ems 8 to 10, cents. those were not the “good old; days" for farmers‘ wives or daught», ers. ' Perhaps you are familiar with "Acres of Diamonds". a lecture which built Temple University b:- cause a man ssw what no cne else seemed to notice in his own local- slmplepthings were being overlook- revenue. grccery stores in Charlottetown for oes. but found it only at Apothecarles Hall. ported from England. Passing Mt. Auburn cemetery I saw a load marked "Psnt Moss." conductor of electricity, Do not ing what care and preventive measures can accomplish, but this happy state is jeopardized 11°F“, Senator T. A. Crerar, came a solemn warning in Parliament the other day against the increasing danger of bureaucracy in this country. Senator Crerar was speaking on um Foreign Exchange Control Bill, which he un. equivocably denounced, and he took occasion to gay s. few words on other matters as well. For peacetime legislation," he said, “this is one of the 1110s: €xtraordittary bills that has ever come before the House. In principle it DIOPOSES t0 confer ttpUu a board of civil serv- ants absolute power over the import and ex. port of trade of the country and over the movement of funds across our borders, a 130w. er l-lfllimilctl its t0 time, and unrestricted as m the scope and sweep of operation. Should 3 ma" "i511 Y0 bu? 3. watch while on a visit l0 the Ullllcd States, 0r should his wife de- sire to purchase a gown, he or she could not do 5° "mil H ltcrntit was secured. I say that 5W1! 8 Proposal as a peacetime titcasttre is an unnecessary and unwarranted interference with the basic rights of Canadian citizens." Senator Crcrar said he first became a mctnhct" of Parliament thirty yrears ago, “and the functions of the Government of that day as contrastctl with those of the administration to. day rcprcsctit a complete transformation. The Govcrntitcnt of Canada today is in the wheat busincss, up past its cars. It is in the housing business to a most extensive degree. ,. . . It is in the transportation business, by laud, st-a and air. 1t is operating a transcon- fittcntal air scrvicc, ships on the sea and the tiational railways. The Government is in the broadcasting business on a very large scale. . It is in the motion picture business, and is pro- tlucing films. lt is also ih the httsittcss of op- crztting brown companies SllCll as Polymer ifflrpuratiott. It is in the business of dispens- ing lll‘l)llL‘ ,lllf<)l'lll?lll(7l], for they ltavc a Pub- lic llllllflllilllhn Hoard, the vote for which is passcrl by Parliament. The point I am mak- ing is that all thcse activities have completelv or at any rate vcry largely changed the func- dogs o_f government in this country." Thcsc things, Senator Crcrar argued, had been "tuorc or less pushed up0n_the Govern- ments of this country, who often have not had sufficient hack-bone to stand up against certain proposals and frankly discuss their implica- tions \Vlll'ltlll(f Canadian people." The inevit- able result is that the Government, busy with Parliamentary chores and domestic and inter- national problems of all kinds, has to depend more’ and more upon its civil service advisers. The advisers in the present instance will be (the members’ of the Foreign Exchange Control Board provided for in the bill. "Imagine a Government weary with the multitudinous problems that ifhas to deal with, and- some onc coming along and saying, ‘We think it is nec- esieary in the public interest of Canada that ulch and such a step should be taken.’ There ll. nothing new about that; it has often- hap- figncd before, all over the world; but inevit- ehiy, even when intentions are the best, it is precursor to the steady rise of authoritar- tm ,fn the State and the whittling sway of freedoms enddiberties we have enjoyed In plot Add which, if‘ we think rightly upon ,‘ srelfteuichesrtrcssures and heritage ' I mime got!’ . . Geld. urged his fellow oerlismett- ‘that-they were the repre- ' ' "Let us 1 by an outbreak of infantile paralysis, which may, or may not become epidemic. In public health, there is zllwavs something to keep the: rabbit's tail short zmd the hospital hill long. 1i * i i! Dr. H. H. Shaw is to be congratulated upon having a life tncmbcrsltip coitfcrretl upon stand ln front of a fireplace, for lightning quite often sweeps down chimneys. Dortt stand under a tree nor near one, for trees ant often struck, and lightning ls likely to| rum along the ground from a tree. strlklv-z anything 1n its stand under on umbrella. fcr the borough Examiner It ls just revealed that the. Ger- mans had kltes- aboard ll1i“.r_5lil\- him by the Canadian Education Association, and Mr. L. \\'. Shaw on being clcctcd to the executive. The latter is Costnopolitatt as an edu- cationist, having had expcrictice of the systems in Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, On- tario and Newfoundland, ltaving in atldition studied the subject on the spot in Iiumpc. l!‘ i‘ 1i‘ 1F "What's cooking" at Ottawa? Prime Min- ister King is ltastcning home without waiting for the conclusion of the Peace Conference; and Agricultural hlinister Gardiner is flying home ahead 0f him, without attcnditig the Food and Agricultural Conference in Copenhagen, Sept. 2, for. which purpose he was supposed to have gone to Europe. The proposed reconstruction of the Government no dottbt‘ has a grcztt dcal to do with it. . m n: s s A visitor from Toronto—-a hnsincss man —-—who was touring the ll/larititttcs for thc] first time in his career—ntarvcllcd at our utr; to-datcness. In some respects, llc said, we] were ahead of Toronto and Montreal. llc, spoke very highly of our stOrcs, their UllfZl-I modern appearance in the case of new andi retiovatcd premises, and of the culcrtirise 0f our; young mcn, able and ivillittg to turn their ltands‘ to anything to carn a living. llc was rctttru-t ing by car via Saint lolm, and anticipated find- ing New Brunswick equally progressive. ' s s: s- m One of the CXplE-illllliflllfi why religion so closely associated in people's minds with cap- italism is, it has been claimed, the style of prayer not infrequently indulged in hath publicly and privately by nenliglttcncd and selfish individ- usls. lt, is my to recall thc supplication of the hottest soul who petitioned: “O Lord he good to me and my wifc, my son and his wife, we four, no more," but here is a somewhat similar prayer from a publication called Th!‘ Book of Unconmtan ~Pravrrz "O Lord, thou knowcst that I have nine ltottscs in .tl1c City of London, and likewise that Iliavc lately pur- chased an estate in fee-simple in the County of Essex. Lord, I bcseeclt Thee to preserve the two counties of Essex and Middlesex from fires and earthquakes; and as I have a mortgage in Hcrtfordsltire, I beg Thee likewise to have an eye of compassion on that county. And, Ilnrtl, for the rest of the counties, Thou mayst deal with them as Thou art pleased. O Lord, cu- able the Bank to answer their bills, and make all my debtors good men. Give a prosperous voyage and return to the Mrrntaid sloop, which I have insured; and Lord, Thou hast said ‘That the days of the wicked are short,’ and I trust Thou wilt not forget Thy promises. hav- ing purchased an estate in reversion of Sir l. P., a profligate young man. Lord, keep our funds from sinking, and if it be Thy will, 'let there‘ be no rinkisg fund. Keep my son Celeb out of evil company and from gaming houses. And sanctity, O Lord, this night to ‘me, by preserving me from thieves and fire, end rnsive my servants honest end careful, while‘ I, Thy servant, ile down in Thee in sleep, 0 A marines which were cutt-Ible Of taking to the ulr CaTTYlflB fi ma" who was towcd behind the Il-boat arri from his position was able to act as “spoil?!” for the craft. either possible prey for torpedoes,‘ or possible attackers. The idea. however. ls far from new, says The St. Thomas Thurs-Journal. More than 50 years ztgo Captain B. Fl s. B-den-Powell. a brother of the late fou-rder and chief of the B0 Scouts, who was a sunk-rs truest-J built a kite 36 feet high that lift- ed a man D5 much as tuo feet‘ ln the air for observation Purim-i- es. Later he Pot better results by making a multiple kit-e which v.':\s really five klres tn one. arc. that type was used in British Army manoeuvres tor several F8511“- It seems that for nearly 200 years one of m» mast celcbratrd lines in EF-‘lish r-sst-"v has SW"- ed notably from a printer's error. snys The Montreal Guzcttc. “they. one comes to ulllllk uoc/t it sures] it. is stnnge thzt Thomas Grays solemn Elegy Wrltte“. tn a Count l’ Churzhgfnfld stiould brgln With the Jlncling line: j The curfzw tols the lil-‘fl’ 01 t parting day > As a matter of tact, most of us nruy recall iccnsisns when we 0'.‘ others have jlrgvcd throurh quits sz-riclcalrv. But tilt-t moor.- nnt cp rig ‘tine cf the $.22? e11? would mt nave mcbngliuculy ll?- . rt :. vczrs tin anon)" fiégsilgglglriess.» 1r. 1750 had not missed the comma v/hlch 110F951“! 1n co v‘s copy 9w‘ vhich Wu. some; how dropped in cliff process o. pri-ttlng. If me re-rcafs the lite with the comma in its prcpcr Hlcfié. one ages at cm? the ll::rurv ‘"- jtlstlce inflicted ‘iv the casual tr-l distant. error: The curfew bolls, the knell of i parting lay. v The significant pause hmlshes the llngllng metre and tsstorcs the impressive suemnlty at the‘ poems outset. But alas for Thom- as Gray. An Elttzv Written ln a Country Churchyard is not a legal‘ or a constitutional document. ,No government is likely to command that the critical comma be set back where it so cvldently belongs Where have they gone‘! One! never sees them any more. Appar- er-‘ly the old-fashioned parlor or- g-an has gone to loin e lot of things that. stand for nn out- moded wsy 0f llvlng. A generation ego the porlcr organ was s tress- wed part of the fnmil and M, family was over recocn com-l plate until the ornan Wes emuired l often with musical-able sacrifice and herd work. It ln-ooghg. hop-l plness into the horns end vise s certain social M5235 for which rnlh-l fng else hnd mat the some stand- tna. On s cold winter's nllhf- m’, on s Sunday afternoon or evenlni. mother l‘ sllster Kohl: a“, ‘lobe sn e pu s T- fig-tunes "Sweet Genevieve.” gin; Nelluulfcme", "Nelrer My, w o! Al)?‘ "Silver Threede Among the Go . and so on end cult they mt have, been the Irelt ueie we iii-er on the radios the (like metal shaft ls a conductor. -Peter- P l. Inquiring of the driver. I teamed thst it had come from Sweden. I wrote several men who were, I then supposed. employed tn public interests, with the hope of Interest- ing the public 1n moss. One wrote at,“ Don't,‘ me that tf any considerable amount. And m“ l‘ fl of moss had been on the shores of .E. l, when I lived there, it could no longer he found in any worthwhile amounts. t The public has b"en convinced. | I um. Sir. etc. ' EX-ISLANDER. Boston, Mass. I ISLANDERS ABROAD Sln-lvfany islanders heard llnd heeded the wall. "Go West, vouru; man. go West." The far-flung Ptulrle lands of. Western. Can-zda with its rich soil opened up u new SOUN-‘e of revenue for those who were enterprising enough "to seek out and grasp the opportunities that a virgtn country had w offeiz! Ir. 1919, ‘Prank Youmzer of Hampshire. sold out his belongings and hit the ttuil that finally led him lo settle ‘n Alberta. Hcre he purchased a quarter sectivu near the town of Inns Ooflilstltg or bluff and open spaces, and settled ‘down to the growing of wheat. Mr | Younker was so pletrsed with his new hcme and especially thc pos-l siblllties it afforded the Wllgent totlzr, that he finally peztuadcd his other brothers, George aod Charles to Join ntm. Having dis» ‘ at North‘ River, they, ‘too, came to Alberta L ‘l formed n orrtnersh known nzi-“Younfcr Bros". cann- .Ccorge together with his wfe and two children, Fred and Him}. The your was 1922. Jhnrlzs, the ‘filing?! brother, foII/rvrd two yevt". late-rt Since then. death has Helm-rd Gecrge. who cited as the result of an auto accident in 1941 F-rn-“k ls "rut living in Vancouver. BC. havng had to slve up fnnnhg owing to tll t.e n11. From li-swtiuu purchased 1n 1919, the Yourlzer family now own and operate over 2,003 acres cf flnr fat-m land! new country. it was mcstl" bush lend with a few patches if 0pm pit trio-tn other words, virgin ground. But once brought urdcr a state of cultivation and sowed to wheat, yields as nigh as 40 bushels to the acne were not uncommon. ch year, n-or: ground was broken, thus provided a tier livelihood m t» family circle which‘ had now Increased by ftv». more! children. This your on adclttonnl, one hundred scrcr of virgin coll has’ been cleared nr/l Juitivated for next en's uFOD. Little of the original b f and undergrowth re- mslns to be ceen 0n the Ywunker fann, for whet with modem ma- chtnerg. the task o! clearing the. land es become much ens er ln_ regent. m, d n omu; modern or. up-to-dete farm we 50 acres of growths when; 2B0 some of oats; 250 sores of summer-fellow end about 000 eons o! posture lard Rosalind these six hundred oct- of posture ere 100 heed o! est: u end some s whose usefulness hes been replee such ls es which oost Oele in; m e, s Cork- shutt onewsy, tqeether with plows, electric he p-ent. m. fr: ms. chtnsry ne. there ls on brvest- msnttof ' ll ‘igneous-std thosstlut, instenos. lot oeoole 1118i s, trade uni ‘emphasized by the report of the m‘; that pulling lbe strings from be- , tous attack." y- i - In 1934 I wrote an article for this “' " lpaper citing how many common.‘ E. I. that with little or no. ‘ cost of equipment might produce a! I had inquired at most? It had been lm-ll Who Orders Some Of Our Strikes tfinmclsl Post) 1t t; becomina more end more evident. to In tnlgll o; otusm ln our society hes to be reviewed and overhauled. The urgency of such action was commission lnvestizntlng Russian QsplOXlEEC. which revealed the 8o- vtet plan o! estehllshlnlt in Con- cda a “fifth column". Commun- lsts have shown immense skill in getting into key 115m’ union D081!- gons though by no means always do they take “from man" posit- ions. 1t is quite understandable 1mm scenes frequently suits their purposes better. Canadians who have just. been ypading the espionage report will inevitably ask thentsclves this uuestion. Where do orders for 50mg qt our biz strikes come lrom, Omada. United States or Russia? speakins sbout. Communism U. 5 Attorney-General Clark recent- tv declared: “No one but a complete crack- not can be deluded by whet we see going on toda. We know that there ls a not oust sud ln- temattonol conspiracy to divide our pegplé, to discredit our institut- jgns and to bring about disrespect for our government. Whv should we blind ourselves to obvious facts? Here ls a deep-seated and vicious plot to destroy our unity. No country on earth and no trov- emment can long endure this vic- Organlzed labor would greatly Strengthen its cause it it were to do u convlnclnk Job of burozlxul its communists. It is no longer msslble to deny 0r obscure the fact that communist loyalty ls tn Russia. There is immense public tolerance for people who want to reform the state from ‘vithin. But there is very little tolerance for fifth columns that want to keep us weak or to make us s colony of s foreign power. The Golden Dilemma (The with‘; Guide) The loudest and longest cry of agony that hollowed te shift of the dollar back to par cane from the gold mint-n interests. The prize of their product was reduced from $38.50 to $35 an ounce. But. it doesn‘; take a long mwnory to recall when 7oefi6wa x OVEBTUBE ITTEIITIUI We carry s‘ complete llne of Trusses. All sine. _——- , It's the Most fxrfling Make-up In Years . . . *...the screen star secret that beautifies instantly. Ovlglniil U] ' 1hr 7402b!" nonvwoon‘ Mali Orders Given Prompt Attention The 2 Macs the price of 801d was jacked up from s20. 835 en ounce by the decree of President Roosevelt. Tlfat was in 1983 In the depth of the depression. and it was done in an attempt to restore price levels. It didn't restore them, though 1v have helped. It certainly helped the ld industry which. with the ss 1e -on of diamond min- rig and pearl fishing, is the most. wasteful and socially useless of all primary industries. ‘Ihen along came the Fbrelgn llbrchanre Con- trol Board amt sot the price of the wartime dollar st 90 cents Americ- an which added more cream to tho £051‘ 14, 194“. ‘I it .3 r ii. F. iluteltes .8: 80ft orroncrnisrs “Specialists i h "n! 0f illasse: fol-eat; correction of t feels.” 0c“ at d‘ 53 Grafton Street 219E925 ‘Wt NEIL w. ntciims Chartered Acct, t 144 Richmundugfin‘ Charlottetown Tel. 589 Pt), u.“ PUB] “I BWPPINUGfLApHE. Mimeographlng cards sntl clr i oot-esnondence. tum", l" llflokktfcplng MISS HELEN (“Hymn Tfllllhono ‘I020 Evenings |H91)_.;_ P O. BM 452, l"! Queen Street , ‘060000-0000 00400-00 so U“ hllurrell and fiotnpanlyl Chet-tend Accotmtsuls ' Eastern Trust Building f Ohnrlottclmm v¢v+fvo+vo+oo+o+w+o~w ________ u. a DUANE YET‘ Chartered Accountants I8 Grlfton Street, ‘ Charlottetown rhesus use no, 5|; Randolph W. Manning, 0,5, .._?____-_._________ t McLeod a Bentley w. s. crummy. kc. I J. s nenruzv. mo. Banister: l-lld Attorneypfli law I54 Prince Street Charles R. McQuald gold miners’ apple pie. On that In the dark room, under a cone of 1 h f l8 . You precisely ping; the Mozart sonata. The or ht. Clear notes fly like sparks through the air lckerir-g pattern qt music there. Your hands dart in the light, your fingers flow- They a ow That pick their packets of sound from steel bars, Constructing harmonies as sharp as stars. But how shall I is is an ho Of new beginnings, concepts we!- rlng for power, y Decay of systems-—the tissue of art ls torn t With overtures of an era being born. hear old music? ur And this yoursel Th an Mozart, seems e trinket on s. A pretty octave played before n‘ ind w perfection which is less I shelf w o l Beyond whose curtain grows u world cresendo. -F. R. Scott. - bus. In 1992 there was a bumper crop but the price fell to 19 cents- s discouraging year to say the leust. Looking mt the brighter side of the picture and for the rake of comparison. let its take the, years 1943-1944 with yields running to six and seven thousand dollars re-t spectlvely- The price per bushel gained from these two harvests- coarse grains are hot. lncluoed in the above fl§1lT68~WflS 80 cents. per bushel for wheat. This ti cut at $4,600 for i943 and $6.600 for the year 1944. Add to these fig- ures the revenue derived from oats.' barley, etc and we have a rouroe of income that many t; prQp-ssgonai mlln might veil envy. This splcr-ild farm 5130 n15“ mflfly turkeys and fowls as Wall's! One year, the Younker When thi- btcllws came w this Righter-s marketed aoo hogs carry- lntl Off B chaqu: for This sort uffrnmtng prove; (ha, Pumps all ones esss- in one basket d"?! ml PM’. o: at least. that's, how. it looks in this f-smtly of fol-I incr Islanrliérs who have ma-ir- good‘ l‘ l "W" 11v thousands o: miles from the Garden of the 0mg y T "m. Sir, etc. FJI. MseAFTIIUB $9.000. V are ten careful operatives in mo i" basis phoney gold mining compan- lea were set up galore and the scandalous gold stock racket. smear- ed the name of Canada. Gold mines were put into production which cannot operaze profitably ever. at $85 an ounce. Now that they will have to close up, it is no national calamity in n country which Ls crying aloud for all kinds of goods that are of mme use. If you ut enough capital, lebor and mater is mnktng a oathooom ar-d the appartenences up rtslnmg there- to, you have u out iroom. It ou ptti the some amount of Olpllbf, labor and materials tnw mining gold, what have you? Iotlco to lluusa Holders Insurance that was ede- quate in 1939 most likely does not cover 1946 values. Per- mlt us to check your gover- BRe to ensure desired pro- tection in the event of a loss. Phone No. 540 or 541 W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Life - Fire - Casualty _ Marine Insurance EV"? Rik - Every Kind BA. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. lsstem Trnst Building, Charlottetown Phone lfll §¥Q§QQI BELL s. I MATHIESON M.L.A.. l¢%* O . LL, D. L MATIIIESON. Li..ll.. LU. Attorneys-nt-Law LOANS 0N CITY AND FAR‘ PROPERTIES ‘COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond 8t. Chsrtottetown. P.E.i. FREDERIC A. LARGE BARRISTER. ETC. Phillips Building. ll] Grafton It Phone IMO P. 0 Bo: it! CIIABLOTTETOWN. res DR. A. R. SMITH oewrtsr t. m. 0mm Street ‘ Offloelionrs: 9k: l2—ttol Telephone 2284. ALEX w. MATHIESONI IARBIBTER- SDLICITOR. Elli Office: Money to Loon _._________._______f~_- J. A McGUIGAN. BA now-stun nrc - aunts-rm, soucrron cutmu: autunsc M. Al . AN FARMER l\.:\.. LLB. lll(l\|iY T0 LOAN nAnllLsvt-Jt. sumcrrutt BTO- CII \RLOTTE’I‘0 WN tlensdlan limit of Common-e Bllll 90 Great George Strut (Iullecilol Large or Small Queen stspCharlottetown l om YOU KNOW? Statistics reveal that during six year's of war, Gl. road casualties at home were aearly twice Csnedlen overseas casual- LET US PUT A STOP T0 THIS NEED- LESS DRAIN ON OUR POPULATION.‘ H!" your cars thoroughly checked and I epproved by e competent mechanic and bsnisll anxiety sod won-y with ‘ Iltunmn. is lndsrsm Sines i812 . Illflllllts loser-sues Cover. 00., ILIMITEP GAUDET‘ l? HASZARD Barristers Solicitors Notaries I'll MQNEY T0 LUAN GILBERT A. usuntsr, n..\. u»! L WALTl-IEN ostrnnr |.t.n < v Ulflltlllfl Rlnlt m ffmnmtsrvl‘ l" Charlottetown. P l1 l ‘DB. W. Ii. BARLBI Ohlroprsctor Pointer Grsdimte Charlottetown as: Prince st. P110" "l" PALMER 8t HASLAM s. J- nssutu; 5.1L. t-I-B esnntsren. arc. Huh of Non t-Jeotls Chsmbll Charlottetown. r B. I- my MONEY 1o Low M" h. r. McPHEE. B.A.. K13 esrliiiififunsritrffirtzpklm eo0-o-o-eo+e+n»0-N“**“' JYEB BXAMINED ' um oosssss ‘towel! ; s. s. rail»! OBTOMETRIST IL .. s... “ha-e-