Elm Mastodon Covuo Prince Edward Island Like the Do. Published every week-day morning at 165 Prince fitted :bartottetown, P.E.I.. by the Thomson Company Ltd. In A. Burnett. Publisher and General Manuel Frank Walker. Editor [ember Canadian Dally Newspape: Publishers Association, Member of The Canadian Press Member Aden Bureau 0; Circulation Irnwb offices at Summerside. Montague and Alberto. fienieunted Nationally by: Thomson Newspaper- Advertislng Service a King Street West. Toronto. Ont. 640 Catheart St., Montreal 1030 West Georgia st... Vancouva 4! Carrier Charlottetown, Summerside 30¢: per week. 5! Mail elsewhere in P.E.I. $9.00 per annum. other Provinces and United States 812.00 per annum. “The strongest memory is,wealt"er than :he weakest ink.” PAGE 4 FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1958. Another Trouble‘ Spot News correspondents on the spot in the Middle -East seem to think that Kuwait may be the next target of Egyptian-Iraqui intrigue. SOme are suggesting that the Iraqui re- volutionists will attack the little Sheikdom soon. 3 " Kuwait is a'British Protectorate and has been since the turn» Of the century. It is slightly smaller in area than this Province and has a'popé ulation of approximately 200,000, many Of whom are native Iraquis. Its importance lies in its rich Oil de- posits, the richest in the Middle East. It is ruled, with advice and help from Britain, by a Sheik bear- ing the fancy name Abdullah as- Salim as-Sabah‘——wtho, no doubt, claims to be a descendant of the ,prophet Mahomet, as most of the native rulers in the region do. His income from Oil wells, which owned jointly by British and Amer- ican interests, is reported to be in the vicinity of $260 million a year. Unlike that Old rascal King Saudi of Saudi Arabia, hoWever,’ he shows some interest in the welfare Of his. subjects, One-third of his income goes to public welfare—health, roads, schools: and the like—.—one- third to administration of the Sheik» ' dam and the rest to his, private , purse. That gives him about $85 million a year to come and 'go on; and it seemsl hardly likely that he, will give that up for promises of rewards from the wily President Nasser. President Nasser, however, has been visiting the Sheik in re- cent days; and Heaven only kn0ws what they concocted. In the event of a coup in Ku- wait or an outright attack from neighbouring Iraq, the British can be expected to take all measures necessary. to defend their interests , there, no matter the UN. I, may Say and no matter what side Abdullah as;Salim as—Sabah may be on. ’ The Labrador Trough, Big doings, are under way in La- brador, according to an article in a recentlssue of “Mining Engineering”, the official magazine of the Society of Mining 'Engineers of the American Institution of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers. Already the magazine reports, the Labrador Trough “is one of the world’s great iron 'ore provinces.” , “Already occupying fourth place in world iron.Ore production, Canada, with 21.3 million tons in 1957, soon will receive a major boost from this 25 to 40 million ton production aimed for in the Mt. Wright-Wabash Lake area. Access lies in either a spur con- nection to the East, joining the Que— I bec North Shore and Labrador Rai1~ way at about the 200 mile point on its way North to Knob Lake, or con- struction South to join Quebec Car- tier’s' proposed railroad near Mt. Reed. ' “Quebec Cartier Mining 09. a wholly owned subsidiary of US. Steel Corporation, is working on plans to— ward construction Of a mill capable of producing 8 million tons a year of concentrates from about 20 million tons of crude iron ore. Part of I the project is a 175,000 h.p., power def velopment harnessing the Hart Jaune River. The largest property ever leas- ed for iron ore reserves by Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation sprawls- over a, 5640-acre plot in Northern Quebec’s Mt. Wright area. In this sparsley wooded land, under the mus~ keg of the Labrador Trough, about 1 billion tons of crude ore containing 335 million tons of concentrates have already been proved by diamond drill- ing. Once developed, the/ore will’ be used as feed for blast furnaces at Pittsburg and Cleveland. In the ad- joining area to the East, Iron Ore Co. of Canada and Wabash Iron Mines are going ahead with other projects.” Commenting in the same 'issue on all these developments and projects, P.E. Cavanagh of the Department of Engineering and Metallurgy, Ontario Research Foundation, states that “production of iron ore will be export- ed to the United States, with some of it going to Europe. In this situation, it is logical and proper at the present 81‘9- I shoplifting time for Canadians to consider means of converting some of this Canadian ore into semi-finished or finished pro- ducts in Canada.” This is something which should be given immediate attention. The practice Of sending vast amounts of raw material to other countries year after year for processing cannot be economically sound. Religion In Ru55Ia A group of American clergymen, including the Rev. Dr. John Suther-l land Bonnell, who had visited the Soviet Union and other Commun- ist countries, regorted on their re- turn to New York that “despite the efforts of an atheistic Government, the spirit of religion persists among the Russian people”. Dr. Bonnell ob- served that “every Sunday the chur- ches in Moscow were packed to .the doors”. Another member 00 the group expressed the Opinion that the Government “seems resigned to fail-- ure in its, efforts to stamp out re- ligion”. - ‘ This, in the main, accords with {information received from ‘ other sources; and there is nothing par- ticularly surprising about it. After all, the Russian people have a rich religious heritage. It would be s’ur- prising, indeed, if religious influence had been rooted out completely in forty years. As to the future of the Churches in Russia, the prospects are not bright, assessing the situation in terms of- human expectations. It, may be that theGovernment is not “resigned to failure“ in its efforts to stamp out religion but is patient- ly looking to anti-religious pressure to take its course. No young person. can be 'a churchgoer and, at the same time, a member of the Official Young Communist organization; and no church member can be a mem- ber of the party in good standing. It remains to be seen whateffect these restrictions will have on the next generation or the generation after that. 'But it is hard to see how it can I »‘ to be destructive,to or- Eanized religion. f EDITORIAL NOTE “Nova Scotia’s, Highways Minis- ter says that only “pure, unadul- terated courtesy” will reduce the traffic toll. If he is right, we can expect , conditions to get worse all ' the time; for courtesy is losing ground everywhere. A member of Parliament wants to know why there are ‘no oysters ' to speak of, in Nov‘a;ScOtian waters. That’s easy. They like the warm comfortable Waters around Prince 1 Edward Island so well that they don’t bother with less hospitable re- gions. a 4 *‘ ~ It is a high tribute to the su- periority. of RE. Island YOrkshires that they should be sought after by the Swedish, Department of Agricul- ture. This is perhaps the first move- ment of Canadian swine to Europe and it may spark a permanent trend if the Island; breeding stock comes up to expectations. . 4 4 * The Canadian National Railways survey of the industrial potential of Charlottetown is to be welcomed. It will be carried on as' part of an At— lantic Provinces economy-boosting project by the railway. supported by the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council and it'is expected to provide a basis for development of industrial / and 'cgmmercial sites. ‘ e 4- * According to the Hansard report of the House of Commons debates for July 18, Agriculture Minister Hark- ness attributed the , delay in settling”. the potato situation here to “the Provincial Government and/or the potato association in that'Province." We cannot imagine the Minister us— ing such an expression as “and/or” in an offhand statement to a ques- tioner; it has all the earmarks of hav— ing been cautiously revised for publi- cation. As it stands, it doesn’t mean much one way or the other. ‘ . 4F 4F. t Two years ago Nina Ponomareva, Soviet, Olympic discus throwen,- was charged with shoplifting five cheap ' hats in London. She was convicted but released after the Soviet em- bassy paid court cOsts. Now Olga »Lepeshinsaya, a star Of the Russian Bolshoi ballet, has been caught in a Brussels depart- ment store. According to police, she admitted taking two pairs of gloves, an umbrella, cuff links and some tape. The Russians really ought to make their own stores more at- tractive from the feminine point of View; then there would be less temp- tation to shoplifting abroad. I l l ( 'United Nations was sent to Le- ‘ of 125 cases of “infiltration” and. r’ of their OWn. III; is also reassur- ‘ted it to put to itself such ques- -... ‘EXPLOSIVE STUFF 7/ Network Of Montreal The United States now finds herself in conflict with the Unit- ed Nations on an important is— sue. < All observatiofi group of like banon to determine whether there were signs of any interferencein Lebanese affairs by Nasser’s Unli- ted Arab Republic. In summariz- ing the findings of this commit- tee, Dag Hammarskjold, secre bary - general of the United Na- tions said: “To my knowledge we have no foundation for such a judgment now." The difference of viewpoints is impoutant. The United States has sent troops‘in’co Lebanon on the ground that jthe interference in that country by Nasser Inow asks that a force of the United Nations take over this role firom her. , .But‘Mr. Harmnamskjold has al- ready more than hinted that the United Nations can scarcely send a force to prevent the interfer- ence of the. United Arab Repub- lic, when its own observation group has just’ reported that it could find no evidence of such serious interference. STRONG EVIDENCE The ‘ United States however, would scarcely have entered Le- banon without evidence that the interference loom Nvasser’s UAR was very real. She has released her own statement of this evi- dence. The odmltrast with the re- port of the'United 'Nations’ obser- vers is striking. The Unitcd States has evidence “indirect aggression” against Le- ‘banon by Egypt and Syria. All thwe incidents took place since May 11. The. incidents include shipment, by land and by sea, of fighting men and munitions, the instigation of, strikes and civilian unrest, the provision of huge sums of muney, and the supply- ing of regular army officers to direct events. ' , Documentary evidence of these incidents was supplied to the Sen: arte Foreign Relations Committee by Mr. Christian Herter, {the un- der secretary of state. SIMILAR EVIDENCE It is important to note that the British Govannmemt has gathered similar evidence. Speaking as long ago as May 26, the British Foreign Secretary, Mr. Selwyn Lloyd, said that Britain had Subversion Gazette “clear evidence” of outside inter- vention in Lebanon. '. lt ls possible to go much furth- er back. Throughout the year 1956 Nusser’s Military Attaches were so actively engaged in sub- verting neighboring Arab states that Nasser received one request after another that they be- with- drawn. V v 0n the night of Nvember 22-23, 1956 for instance, 3: Lebanese se- curity patrol seized a petrol lank— er filled with arms. It has just come over the Syrian border lrom Damascus. Also discovered in one one of the official cars of the Egyptian Embassy in Beirut was a quantity of high explosives, complete with fuses. OTHER ,EVIDENCE 0n the night of November 20, 1956 a lorry, loaded with high ex- plosives and small arms, .was found in the house of the chauf- feur of the Egyptian Assistant Military Attache in Lebanon. oth- er depots of arms were found in two Lebanese villages. A oartoOn in the Lebanese press showed Lebanon being stabbed by a figure representing dead: and having the "face of the Egy- ptian Military Attache. The cap- tion read: Whois the Brutus who is stabbing Lebanon?” Also as for back as 1956 Milk ser was using the Egyptian Milli- talry Attaches.‘ to subvert the Gavernment of Iraq -— a Govern- ment has just fallen. On January 8, 1956 the Iraqi Minis- ter of the Interior reported that the police had uncovered a net- work of subversive activities ~— activi‘tlies that had been going on under the direction vof “another Arab state.” NOT IN DOUBT The. identification of ‘this state was not left in doubt. The Gov- ernment of Inaw felt called upon to demand that the Egyptian Gov- ernment recal it’s Military At- tache, flout-Col. Kama] Hen— . nawy. The aim of the Egyptian plot, it was alleged was to as- sassinate Iraqi statesmen. If the subversive activities at Nasser’s military attaches in 1956 are any indication of indirect alg- greasion still to come, it is inter- esting to recall that demam' ds that Egyptian attaches be with- drawn on account of subversive activities, were also made in that year by Libya, Saudi Arabia and Abyssinia, '3 Ottawa The first annual report of the Canada Council is a fascinating primer in practical philanthropy. To those of us whose financial worries are usually in the other direction, it is somewhat corn- forting to learn that those who are committed to the distribu- tion of largesse have problems ing to know that the Council is bestowing iitls favors with prud-' ent circum’spectiocn. The Council seems to have‘had less difficulty in disbursing casp- itlal grants to the universities than in deciding the recipients of awards and fellowships from its Endowment Fund. In the first year 12 universities received a total of $4,084,800. With 10 years to dispense $50,000,000, the Coun- cil appears to be nicely on sche— dule. COUNCIL TASK The $50,000,000 Endowment Fund, however. enjoys an inter- est of more than $2,700,000 in year: The task of the Council was to find deserving candidates individuals and organizations, to share the bulk o‘f this revenue. The problem the Council had first to settle was how it wan- tions' as these: How should the money be divided among the arts humanities and social sciences? What proportion of money should be spent on organizations and how much on individuals of pro- mise to improve their ability? Should the Council meet the cost of maintaining a local alctivityl like a museum. library, choir or I theatre group which has ‘previous- I Canoclo Council’s First Year Journal ly received local support? However the Council resolved such questions, it does report that there was no difficulty in find- ing candidates which merited sup- port. The real problem was “to arrive at priorities so as to get the best value for the money”. LARGE SURPLUS It is here that the Council ac- ted with haps what proved to be embarfig‘ssing prudence. lt re- ports that in every category of scholarship in 1958 “there appear to be several qualified applicants for each award". Yet the Endow- ment Fund ended the first year with the rather large surplus of $771,871. This money is of course avail— able for grants in the future. How- eveg, it is unfortunate that some . of ast year’s “qualified appli- cants” must mark .time when money is available immediately. But this is to quibble. The re- port stands as tangible testimony to the enlightened swiftness with which the Canada Council has acted. Where a year ago there was noghing but intention, there is now a record expeditious ac- tion. It has been a propitious be- ginning. I , BACK ARMS CHECK NEW YORK, -— (AP) - Inter- national. inspection to enforce disarmament will work a Col- umbia University student re— ports. More than 50 scientists. engineers and social specialists poured their efforts into the study, made public Tuesday. IPUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discus- sion by correspondents of question of interest. The Guardian does not nelso- sarlly endorse the opinion at corres- pondents. , POTATO SUPPORT COMPARISON .2 ' Sin—Potatoes have been sup- ported under the Agricultural Prices Support Act ‘for the crop years 1946, 1948, 1950, 1955 and 1956 previous to the support guy- ‘en in 1957. In addition, potatoes have come under the Agricultur- al Products Comparative Marinat- ing Act, which Act is basically not designed for support but pay- ments were made’which had the efifect. of some support in con-'- nection with the 1950 and [1953 crops. ,' With respect to levels, various methods of support have been 'used with different types of costs insofar as the Government was cOncerned. . , 1946 Program: Potatoes deliv- ered for princes” sing—«guaranteed price of $1.65 per barrel at foe- tory for Canada No.1 grade. Po-“ taotos, delivered for export or other shipment—41.00 per :75 pound bag on car at shipping point bagged, tagged,and inspec- ted. Total cost of this program to the Government was $170,743.- 48. ‘ 1948,Progrnm: $1.15 per 100 pounds in bulk on the grower-’3 farm.The.tolaloostoftahispro- gram to the Govermncnt was $1.646?73934. ' , 1950 Program: 60 cents per [barrel on potatoes delivered und- ‘er the Agricultural Products Co» operative Marketing Act guar- antee, which guarantee also a- mounted to 60 cents per barrel. The total cost to the Govern- ment of the support of 60 cents per barrel amounted to $218,637.- 79. The cost under the Coopera- tive Marketing Act was -approx- ’imutely $50,000. 1953 Program: Under the Ag- ricultural Products Co-opemtlive Marketing Act the Government guaranteed an initial advance of 40, 50 and 55 cents per bushel in P.E.I. and 40, 45 and 55 cents per bushel in NB. for different time periods. The total loss und- er this program was approxim- ately $5 million. g 1955 Program: $1.00 per barrel of 165 pounds for potatoes de- livered to starch plants less what'— ‘ ever the Government could re— cover from the starch plants. The toms] goveth cost of this program was $4,830.77. 1956 Program: Support price ‘ based on $1.65 per barrel pro- viding the consumer market re- mained at a price of 3/1; cents per pound or higher on average up to June 15. This was based on potatoes delivered for processing with the Government to pay the difference up to' the $1.65. The total cost of program to the Government was $449,279.16. I invite our potato growers to compare the above support prices they received under the former Liberal Government during the ten year period from 1946 to 1956 and. more particularly, to the year 1948 when $1.15 was paid per one hundred. pounds in bulk on the grower‘s farm as com- pared to 27 cents per one hun- dred pounds bulk offered late in July by the Diefenbaker Govern- ment. 4 I am, Sir. etc. G.H. HARBOUR The Sehate, OttaWa. The Age Old Story Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that need- eth not to be ashamed,‘rightly dividing the word of truth. BELL VET DIES MONTREAL C‘P . Maaurice J. Lyons 94. dean of the Bell Tel- ephone Pioneer’s Club at Mont- real, died Tuesday in hospital. Born in England, Mr. Lyons came to Canada more than 50 years ago and joined the Bell Telephone Company, from which he retired 29 years ago. He had no direct survivors. Modern GP Is Highly Troinecl‘ By Herman N. Bundesen, I). THIS is an age of speClallza- tion. And the need for speciallsts is just as prdnounoed in medi- cine -— perhaps more so — as in any business or industry". We have specialists for the head, s‘peoia‘lsts fior the feet, specialists for the bottom. There are various kinds of specialists for the inside and more for the outside. MORE IMPORTANT This age of. specialization does not mean, as many persons ap- parently believe, that the days of the fairlin doctor, the general practitioner, are over. In fact, the GP is more important now than ever. Modem medical treatment re- quires the 'services of a team. And directing this team - Just like a quarterlka directs a foot- ball team or a manager runs a baseball team - is the family physician. Our hospital staffs today con- sist of a maze of specialists. Most patients, you included, would be lost as to whom to consult with- out the advice of the family doc— tor. HE’S DIFFERENT The G? of today bears little mesemblance to the family doctor of yesteryear who often had to treat ‘anytlungf' and everything with what he carried in his little black bag. The modern G1? is a scientifi- cally trained, highly skilled ex- } pert in both diagnosis and treat- ‘menlt The Very nature of his train— ing prepares him for encounters with all types of diseases, ail- ments and accidents. He is, quite naturally, the person you call first when illness or accident strikes your home. But how, many persons will ask, can a general practitioner keep up with all the medical ad- vances being made these days? HAS TO KEEP UP ' It does seem like an overwhelm- ing task, but the fact is that be has to, or he will be lolt behind -— without many patients. Many services not tokeep the doctors lnfiomned about what’s new in medicine and techniques. Still, with more than two dozen medical specialties which 11 a v e [developed during your lifetime; it has been impossible for the lamily. doctor to become an ex- pert in all fields. HIS RESPONSIBILITY Therefore, it is the responsibil- ity of this doctor to determine which cases he can treat and which require the help of special- ly trained experts. And that’s one of his main job-s '—- to know which specialist to call and when to call him. The family physician still is the most important man in med- icine as far‘as most of you are concerned. > _ QUESTION AND ANSWE ' Miss M: D.: ’I have poor “' cir- collation. Could this be caused by a thyroid condition? . Answer: Sometimes a lack of tho-mid hormone may be at fault in circulatory difficulties. How- ever, this is not otter: .the‘case. . I i I NIGHT FLIGHT We flew between two lighted layers— ’ stars. Burnedinlzhehlghandlowof might- It seemed we sailed across a cove . ' Whose waters caught the stars ubdve‘i But then the plane calmeglidin‘g down“ Toward astral splendor in the mwn— O’ . Reflected patterns similar V, To incandescence of the air. ‘ —Wllllelm Vincent Sieller OUR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian 'Flles) ' TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (July 25, 1933) . The work of the Prince Ed- ward Island .Library Institute which is now in its fourth and final week has thus far been at- tended with marked' success, and great satisfaction ’is being felt by Dr. GR. Lomer, Librarian Of McGill University, and Director of the Institute. A total of th-irty~/ eight students, he said, will comr— plete the full course. of libray solence. - Mayor Manson at'the request of many of the citizens of Sum- merside sent a telegram to She- diac on Tuesday morning asking General Balbo if he would fly over Summerside on the trip from Shediac to Newfoundland. Mayor Mansdn pointed out in his telegram that there was only two miles of land between the south and north shores at this point. TEN YEARS AGO (July 25, 1933) Plans for a new type of school, the first of its kind in the pro- vince, were discussed at a meet- ing of trustees and ratepayers at Southport last week. The school building will be equipped with a new system of lighting known as cleres-tory lighting, giv» ing a more uniform supply of light in classrooms, as well as with central heating and probably air conditioning. It will have flush toilets, drinking fountains and will be completely insulated. A lumber mill at Forest Hill, owned by Mr. Fred Ross. was destroyed by fire Friday night. NO one was at home at the Ross residence when the fire was dis- covered bout 9 o‘clock. Efforts of the neighbors saved the grist mill and the evsidence. r idea of it. Below, shone towns —'above, the I The galaxies of patterned light I in the Cl’mistian Science Monitor = ' NOTES BY THE \ It is possible that farmers on the Prairies are on the whole more prosperous than the farm- ers in Eastern Canada. The Gor- don Commission report indicates that in Saskatchewan about Saskatchewan farmers own pri- vate airplanes. Of course, it might well be that more than 20 gentle man farmers in Eastern Canada own private planes. But the truth is that trying to compare “East: ern farmers" with “Western far- mers” is like trying to compare horses and apples—there is no real basis for comparison.——-Wm— nipeg Tribune Dr. Robert MacGregor Dawson, dead at the early “age of 63, was described as a “Canadian histor- ian and political scientist." Just how great he was in these roles may be a matter of dispute, but he was good enough at any rate to win the Governor General’; prize for academic non—fiction. His best known work. undoubted- ly, was'his “Government of Ca- nada,” much of which was first rate but some of which was loose and not wholly accurate. On the whole, however, he was a highly intelligent and literate Canadian, and it seems a pity that he was unable to conclude his biography of Mackenzie King—Ottawa J our- nal ‘ The Cow And "You The Times, London Milk is now. flowing through the first pipeline to be construct- ed in, the Italian Alpine are: of Trento. The pipeline conducts it from two cow sheds to a cheese factory more than 3,300 ft. below in the Giudicalria valley where it will lose its separate identity for ever. The fact is that milk, like so much else that we eat and drink, is becoming impersonal, some- thing that is collected and deliv- ered in vast, anonymous quanti- ties, something divorced from so homely an object as a cow, in sympathy less with the field than the factory. ’ A glass of teaching milk strai— ght from a dairy content to cater for the needs of the household and one or two neighbors, and a speckled brown egg from the next, always a treat, have for the vast majority of people In this country become an lmootain- alble dream. The honey of Hym'et- tus. the food of the gods themsel- ves, would be as easy to come by. The egg and I, so to weak, do occasionally ,meet without pack- ing stations, marketing boards, or any hhind parties coming. be- tween us; milk and I, for all in- tents and purposes, never. It may well 'be tibat'milk is all the better for going tlmufll'the rigorously purifying processes it does, but the romantic is not to beoornfiortod.lhormilk,inspite’ of the mockery a glass of milk and a bath bun as a diet invites, is a romantic subject. If the treading of tee grapes inspires verses eloquent of bucolic joys sodoes themilllingofacow,and, like the treading, there is some- thing gay and lighthearted in the ' .1 I’ve. heard them lilting, at the Those who light], ,, eflfects and press“ I war should read the shimmering hen-ing fl» dam. A special pom that waterfront myrrh informed of aborting. “highly fluorescent’ carcass to the Noni Institute for enmity. ,, stated thatthe hem, » ly a very, very old. that herrings in that ly glow. The ~. ’ justified —- fillings , are -—- but it show, 1,5,, we have become a, dangers of radio-.1 ‘ —London Free: Pres; ‘lt. I Not so long alto R it that Canada’s‘nativo' ulation had arrived in, tively recent times. cal investigations, limo ' pushed the- age of early ml ' back several thousand warts“ Saskatchewan. archaedbash 1' me provincial Museum of Na} 31 History have uncovered of human habitation on ‘Illn els at one site near Esteva deepest is 5.000 Years oldiac'c ing to Carbon 14 testing of facts. It was .contemmlllfig‘h with the pyramid - buildhg‘lifip Dynasty in EgYP' “‘1 “flu than the great day: «(Bah " Ottawa Citizen ‘ x ‘ . Lowe milldng, I ' 7 asses a’ lilting, bum ’ of day , ‘ d"‘ are lines that card! the mm; the thins and. in harmony them, Milton's “Inilhmald _ blithe.” _, - , ‘ _ Marie Antoinette, w 1“, staged her pastoral rd “Petit Triannn," am ‘ tunitios 'ng and mum ‘ provided, the maidspwm, decorative “6015,: pieces to the Dresden » asses, yet not all 15 t, seen as a sentimental .. etherialized ruslioity. “'I'ln'eef 1:3!” and a em! put em as or position, and therem istic stuff In literature M. icicles of winter to set»; » thooe‘ lilting Insoles. 13 ... to fill pails, not to new .1 variety will, in the valley, ulcer-in. malno- excellent -. I I. l 54” Virgin Wool 54” TARTAN'S 7 Yannooons r ‘ ~. , “IVES TARTAN” 100% English Wool- loo-opog.oooonocosooo “VIYELLA TARTANS 55% Virgin Wool. 45% Cotton 54” 4.95 m “GLEN EAGLE TARTANS "100% Would MOORE & McLEOD LTD.. I 5.50 YD. 4-50. YD" tract of service. payroll. this —Write— INFORMATION FOR EMPLOYERS REGISTRATION: Immediately upon becomlfiz an employer under the Act it is required that sue;I employer register with the Board and file an est? v mate of his pay roll for the current year. This 19 necessary whether the workmen are paid a stated wage. or by piecc work, or on any basis by which l they are remunerated for their labor under a coll- . As so'on as an employer undertakes any 0119’” , tlon under the Act he is required, without requeS ’ 7 to report to the Board and submit an estimate 0 ‘a Personal coverage is available for th employer himself upon request. 1 . _ The responsibility of protecting his workmen hes With the employer and heavy penalties W111 IeVled upon any employer who carries on opera]£10 and falls to report to this Board. The Workmen’s Compensation Board: ' 123 Euston Street, ' Charlottetown, P. E. I. INFORMATION FOR, I V' WORKMEN_ Workmen engaged in Industries Within Scope of this Act are entitled to protection respect to personal injury by accident arising out and in the course of their employment- It is therefore, important that workmen whether or not their Employer is regiStere ' . Board thus insuring prompt handling Of I claims should they be injured while in the CO. , of their employment. For information and a Vlce The Workmen’s Compensation Board, I! 123 Euston Street, . - Charlottetown, P. E. I. r”. E l 0:, x, the with I of ' t