f PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN llorning Daily (Foisldsii lls illl) Authorised as aerunii Clisas llail, Pass OIIIII Drpnrtment, Oit-nsrn. The lainuil Guardian Publishing 0O. ldltor nnil Managing Director, J. B. Barnett whose circumstances are inadequate to the ex- pense. But if the peculiar values of university education are not to be perverted by irrelevance, and stultifed by sheer numbers, there must be intellectual tests of such a character that these who are unqualified, except financially, should ‘Tl-IE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN For iiur Guests éafi l"; o JUNE 14, 1949 m y-Notes By The Way .-. ‘ ii An Arisona rnaa has suggested concerned. — New York l-lerai] not clutter up the halls of learning. A univer- ' Tribune. sity education is not primarily a means to a higher income, though that may be possible. lt is on investment in human life and character which calls for on equivalent contribution to so- ciety in after life." {L EDITURiAL NOTES ./, FARM-WEI Before the flaming of the dsrm she's up to put the coffee on. To set the table, to bake the in-eed. To open the door of the chicken- Aasnaists Editor. Irnnls Wells!- _"Tho Strongest Memory is Weaker Thal the Weakesl Ink." TJBARLOTTETOWN, TUESDAY, JUNE 14, _1949 Welcome Visitors ‘Prince Edward Island extends a cordial wel- come to the members of the Canadian Manu- facturers’ Association, who have completed their annual general meeting at St. Andrews, N. B., and after visiting Fredericton, Halifax and other centres are due to arrive in Charlottetown today. They will be guests of the Provincial Government at luncheon at The Charlottetown and will have an opportunity of visiting the Confederation Chamber and other places of interest. Unfortunately their visit will be of only a few hours’ duration, but it is hoped fhat it will a w om r laxation and that m n who _ , . zfgvteriaklngelfheile’ fifst trip to the lsland feel "okht-‘d bY "dmm"! ‘midi °‘ '"'“°‘*°" "m" desirous of visiting us again. They have honour- Mum- , ,, g ' ed the Province by including its capital in their The Maritime m" of the Canadian Month itinera and our citizens enerall will heartil , . W’ g y y facturers Association, whose members are here endorse the official greetings which will be ten- 0d h ‘ c d. . t r clered them on their arrival. While we have few l fly’ ‘PPY offer! l e. TY“ ° b??? m“ fir“? large manufacturing interests here, we are not '° Mlmhme "l "Sim W5“ "w; W K l to the mayor of Regina that warm air could be piped to Saskatchewan from the South. Before any Cari- adian tags "crackpot" to the idea. he should be reminded that it can't be any worse than other ideas that will be sired in the Dominion dur- irrl the next few weeks of election campaignlrig.—l~‘ort William Times. Journal. The visiting teacher from u, country town was giving her fir-ll demonstration lesson to a o1". o‘ "lne-Yflar-olds in nn upland 1" area. She had chosen as her sol: llect "Wool", and started o" b Ihowln: a large colored picture y a sheep and remarking brjgmlol uNOW I am sure you u" know why. this is." Much to her sur H" there was no response to herplrl: plied question. When she put j’ more pointedly on; "urdy boy I kl ed if he could see the picture n: l er at hand. On permission be!“ given with much wonderment surveyed it carefully nrid than’), arded, "It's a two-year-oid Bord" Leicester. isn't it?" -- Mancbe t” Guardian. l u she , . To rattle the welichaln down, to drop _ And draw the bucket to the top. , Fuom kitchen-stoop the farm-wife seéa The dawn flame over the dew- dark trees. “IMP!!!” l0 "Witt new ideas is "P"? 5° lPPlrfllt as it was. There is still a lot of room for improve. merit in regular farming practices. The present seems a more than “wally °Pl>0rtune time for a wide scale demonstration of those ad- vanced farmlng methods that seem revolutionary today. and which may be commonplace in two or three years. - Cornwall Standard- Freeholder. Fourteen more days till the election, i k I Canadian Manufacturers’ Association are welcome on their brief visit. Th, New“, do“ m, bedqums * a d. The butter churned in the door- ysrd shade, The rooms all swept and the halls between The firmlture dusted. the dishes clean, The dinner cooked and the dinner done, The supper to get, and the wash begun. The Summer hotels are operating once more. May their season beat all records in patronage. i‘ I I ‘ The West Kent Cadets made a most favour- oble impression on their church parade Sunday, and their march to and from Trinity Church was Whereas n week n ed bad for the Wezsotehrlirlngj-Lijo? wheat belt, a lot o1 peorle talking about the return o! 3‘! dustbowl of the thirties, rein a a snowfall from May 17 go M! 1;: broke the drought over . greaty of the southern Prairies while w! lcnt weather through th'e U s a: Mid-\Vest ' and Mountain l Slat: gave an indication that this ls Ml suing to be a drought yam I,“ In 1948 the 428 Orglnlgnflong embraced by the Greater New York Fund will spend $170,000,000 (or their operations. Nearly half of this amount. $80,000,000. will be earned by the agencies themselves in the form of membership dues, clinic fees and payments for sor. Vlci- About 545000.000 will come from endowment income and pey- ments from governmental funds. The remaining 345000.000 will be Through the honeybee-drone of the afternoon She washes end whistles a horne- spun tune. The dark comes early. comes oool and deep. unmindful of the great importance of Canada's industrial development and we are eager to share in it to the extent of our opportunities, par- would be better to develop with Canadian ra- ther than American co-pital. Charlottetown vyelcbme; the visiting post- Whcn supper ls over, when children sleep. When fingers are weary, when farmers dream, sought from York Times. the public, -— New The woman responsible for start- deed, Kansas reports that star h Y ernay billitlapsnblgger crop "m" l“! year's western Alberta ‘ week's rains brought the total M.’ In Lethbrldge and South- generally i," She scours the crock for the morn- ing cream. When supper ls over, when crickets ink the Village Institute movement in Britain is to have a memorial of an avenue of 300 lime trees. She was Mrs. Alfred Watt, a Canadian, whq died at Montreal last Novem- b". lied over 80. The trees will line the main avenue leading from ticularly along lines associated with our basic activities of farming and fishing, and also to popularize what we modestly believe to be the fin- est tourist attractions in Canada. pgecipitation up m 6 H. which i l over the IY-ysrsaiiulillh; sliraelrfag: ha: could not ask anything ball". __ Lelhbfld8e Herald. about 2.8 in, masters attending the annual conference of the Maritime branch, Canadian Postmosters’ Asso- ciation. With its "all up" cross-country service cry. . . . . x aki , h bat- the Post Office continues to give meaning to when m“ a" o" n: w en wing‘ at the children fascinated st the wonder of moving pictures, and U. K. Dutch Bacon Contract ____ Winnipeg's Anniversary Tne city of Winnipeg lost week observed its 75th birthday. lt was a proud day in the history of this community born in the vastness of the open prairie and come now to a place of honor and distinction in Canadian life. Winnipeg in i870 had a population of 300, and two years later an agitation to make it a city was begun. The Legislature balked, however and it was not until I874 that incorporation was granted—this after a Speaker of the Legislature had been torred and feathered in the conviction of ‘his assailants that he was the Attorney-Gen- eral. A writer in the Winnipeg Free Press, telling of the city's early times, says a banker arrived to open a branch with $200,000 in currency sewn in his waistcoat. A man came in to open a saloon with a barrel of whiskey, a tent and two barrels of apples, and he retired wealthy in two years. ‘lll i872 the Free Press printed an item about "a brand new sawmill" in operation in the north- ern port of the city. The compositor who set the type asked the editor where the mill was located. The editor took him to the window, showed him in the otherwise empty plain two men working on a log with a whipsaw. "Winnipeg creaked into history with the Red River Cart," says the Free Press, "its infancy and youth were passed in a stern pioneering school; it felt the hot breath of the pre-war boom upon its face as it struggled, a tousled young giant, to catch up with its destiny and blllndered into greatness; it tasted prosperity in the twenties and wore its ragged trousers in the depression days when it knew defeat and almost despair, the surrender of a soul; but it came back with a marching of banners when freedom called to her sons in the war; and now Winnipeg awaits the future with d-ue caution and serene confi- fiiillce." Quality 0r lluentity The rise in the demand for university edu- cation is one of the characteristic aspects of this era. No fewer than 16,000 students attended the University of Toronto in the session just clos- ing. Only ninety years ago, the total enrolment at University College was eighty students, and even those at Victoria, Queen's and Trinity add- ed just 142 to the number seeking higher educa- tion in Ontario. Allowing for the much lower population, the contrast is extraordinary, and doubtless it would apply to every other Province in Canada. Obviously, one of the factors in in- creasing the numbers attending university is the general availability of elementary and secondary education. There has been a spurt in attendance since the war, however, higher in proportion than the simple accumulation of student mater- ial preoccupied with the war. "Some of this," remarks the Globe and Mail, "is due to a form of social hypocrisy, which values white-collar occu-piitions above those demanding skill of hand or eye. Some of it, also, results from the immense increase in technological op- portunities, as in engineering, electronics and other forms of applied science. Both factors, in slightly different ways, raise problems which will soon have to be faced with courage and responsi- bility. One relates directly to the size aLuniver- sity may reach without losing the distinctive characteristics of that sort of education. The other again poses the question as to whether ap- plied science in its various forms has any place in a university at all." In connection with the for- mer point, Vice-Chancellor John Lowe oi Christ Cihurch College, Oxford, took a definite stand against size in recent interview. "To say every- body is entitled to a university education is sheer nonsense," he said. "Under the English system, only people who can qualify on the highest level of scholarship are considered a good national in- vestmerlt, and receive some form of state aid." Oxford University proposes to stabilize its enrolment at about the present figure of 7,500, according to Dr. Lowe, and will aiin at a ratio of one staff member to every ten students. in e university tea big to maintain personal rela- tionships, rnucll of value is lost, and fennel lec- tures substitute very deficiently for the intellect- ual stimulus of direct touch with scholarship. To quote again from the Globe and Mall: "The privi- lege arlif enlargement of a university education siieiiid be available to every m who is fitted to receive it, This must involve assistance for thoge the expression "post haste.” Q O O There ls wlsdom on the part of the C.C.F.'s in risking only one candidate in Queen's County contest. The Party has not been over-active pub- licly here, and its tenets and platform known to comparatively few. A fortnight's campaign is not long enough to drive home effectively the Party's propaganda. l I The report that Canada will look to any communist-formed government in China for re- payment of $60,000,000 lent to that country for military and other equipment seems strangely unreal. That the Communists will pay for the equipment used against them in the civil war is, to say the least, improbable. i I The $22 million former Crown aircraft plant at Cartierville, Quebec and the steps by which it passed into the hands of an American com- pany for $200,000 a year may have been perfect- ly legitimate. The secrecy which surrounds the whole affair however seems hard to justify. 8 I I Visitors from away have, as might be ex- pected, diverse views on election prospects. ln one party assurance was giver that the "time for a change had come," which was immediately challenged by another "fellow traveller" who said Quebec and Ontario would decide in favour of St. Laurent carrying on. D I I improbable Topics at the Postmosters' Con- vention here tomorrow:- The preference of some people for mint flavoured mucilage on their postage stomps; ia mind reading course for mail sorters; and the cutting off altogether of the mail to King's County points since it doesn't get away from Charlottetown any day till mid- afternoon anyway. l 3 U The renewal, by the Fisheries Research Board, of investigations of the Eastern Arctic fishery begun last year may be of direct interest only to the Eskimo population. The general in- formation, including soundings taken in the course of their studies, will help to remove the reproach that Canada does not provide adequate navigational information about its Arctic coastal waters. U U U Complaint has been received about unneces- sary horn blowing throughout the city, espec- ially in what should be sleeping time, viz., be- tween ll P.M. and 3 A.M. Not a few autoists stop in front of, or near some dwelling and toot their horns to the HIHOYOHCQ and disturbance of the sleepers. The jolice cannot be every- where of course, but if residents so annoyed would endeavour to get the number of such 0f- fenders an example should be made of them. 3 3 U The future looks good for frozen foods, says the National Industrial Conference Board, Wash- ington. Pre-war, frozen fruit and vegetable con- sumption was only 1.2 pounds per person and other frozen food consumption was measured in ounces. ln i948, average consumption of frozen fruits and vegetables was about 6 pounds per person and 1.8 pounds‘of other frozen foods. Compared with -pre-war, the number of retail- ers equipped to handle frozen foods has doubled. Q i l‘ Magna Carta signed this date l2lS. The Great Charter granted by King John at Runny- mede, the principal provisions of which were: all accused persons to be tried by their equals; no taxes to be imposed without consent of Par- liament; no imprisonment without lawful trial, and no delay or sale of justice. Four copies of the original Charter still exist. Magna Carta was ratified and confirmed by successive Kings, and is now part of the British and Canadian con- stitutions. I I I When Mr. R. L. MacLean (Highbonlt, P. E. l.) opens his copy of the June issue of Popular Mechanics Magazine, he'll find that he's now a magazine writer. Some time age, MocLean sent an idea to the editors of Popular Mechanics that he thought other people might find interesting and useful. The Popular Mechanics editors must have thought so too for they passed the idea along, with full credit to MacLeaii, to the mil- liens of Popular Mechanics readers all over the world. The suggestion appears in the June Popli- lar Mechanics iii an illustrated article signed: fl. L. MecLean, l-iigiibenli, P. E. l., Canada}; ‘lheifarn-i-wife dilms s dusfry lamp. At. step-worn doorslll stands a 89611 To breathe a breath of evening damp. To watch the stars above the well. --Branson Blake in the Washington Post WWO l Old Charlottetown (And r. s. I.) __-.- GOVERNOR'S RESIDENCE Mr. Hodgson, chairman of the committee of the House appointed jointly with a committee of His Ma- jesty's Council to rent for a period of not less than 3 years a suitable residence for His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor, reported that the said joint committee had taken a lease from Col. Holland of a house in Charlotte-Town, for 3 years, at the rent of £150 per an- rium, which was deemed the best that could be had for the purpose: that the time for which the house was taken is considered by the joint committee to commence the 10th December last, when posses- sion was given to the joint com- mittee: that the first year's rent was agreed to be paid ili advance, and that previous to the possession of the house being given to the joint committee, the chief part had been advanced to Col. Holland, and since then the balance of the said £150. with an additional sum of £16, has been expended to put the said house in the state agreed on by the lease; but that sum has been in- sufficient to complete the some. as the house ls not yet painted, or the fence put up. —-H0use of Assembly, Thursday. April 26. 1347- (Note: In yesterday's reference in the first order for books transmit- ted to London tor the Island's first subscription library the date should have read December, 1825, not 1845 as given.) ' > Notes From Another Island By "Anson" LONDON, England:- News Theatres are a feature of London's entertainment so un- obtrusive that they might easily be overlooked by anyone but a News Theatre fan. But if they were taken away, many a London- ell- seeking innocent. usemeut. would feel a loss as keen ea any child who'd had his lollipop snatch- ed For many of Greater London's millions of people, a visit. to the movies in the West liknd is quite an event; something that. doesn't happen every day, so to speak. This is because, in the first place, although you may be s Londoner‘ born and bred. and have your ed- dress in London, you may still have something like an hour's journey or more to get lo the West End. so far do London's boundaries ex- tend. And, in the second place. the price you have to pay for admis- sion to some of the West End sup- er-colossal palaces seem almost enough to take nearly s whole row of seats in a suburban moviei Most of the big picture houses of the Icicester-Square ares special- ise ln the latest films. new re- leases full of big names and belly- hoo, and if you haven't enough patience to wait until they get around to your local cinema, well. you are expected to pay for your impatience. O O O But scattued here and there among the glittering West hid edifices, all neon lights and com- misionairm. is s News Theatre where. for about twenty-five cents. You can enjoy s protrsmme com- posed entirely -— except for about ten minutes of the latest news - of comic cartoons. You don't 4a in if you are looking for anythlril intellectual, or if you are looking for any kind of uplift except that which comes from laughter. or if humour except good, honest slep- stick. Ana you'd never believe the oddly assorted folk who do go ta... You may alt nest to s fashion- sblslsdrvithhdsmsiishlldrfl. you are looking for any kind 0L the-lady herself secretly pleased that "bringing the children" Elves her an excuse to enjoy herself an immeasurable degree more than the children themselves. In the row behind you, perhaps a clergy- man is roaring in mirth in a most undlgnlfied manner; or perhaps a dark-suited business executive has taken off his sober Hamburg hat and is guffawing at the antics of Donald Duck in a way his respect- fui stall have never seen. The News Theatres try an oc- casional stunt in order, perhaps. to show that they are not going to be entirely over-shadowed by the super-cinemas. One turned back the clock s. quarter of a century recently, for example, and show- ed today's teen-users the man who used to make their mothers’ hearts flutter in a manner that. seemed almost indecent in those clays - Rudolph Valentino. no less. There he was. silently outwitting the vililan in the best i925 style, and bringing back, no doubt. many e nostalgic memory to ladies in the audience whose husbands were never s. match for Rudolph but vilrgo happened to be more acces- s e. O O O This stunt was similar to that of another News Theatre recent- 1y. which put on a couple of old- time melodramas of the silent era, complete even to the detail of a pianist to provide atmosphere music. It seemed there was only om i-hlns missing - no kids in the front rows throwing orange peel and apple cores at the pion- lst in the middle of a tender "Hearts and Flowers" passage. Per- haps there would have been even that, if it. were not that oranges and apples are not so plentiful- or cheap-es they were in the days of the silent screen" ..._ O O O Londoners who didn't escape to t-he open country during the Whit- sun holiday found that the coun- irry came to them in one respect. as Hyde Park, in the heart of the metropolis, heard the sound of bloating sheep and barking dogs. Champion sheep dogs from all ova; the country came to town to show their training and intelligence. They have a skill that is almost uncanny when it comes to round- lug up wayward sheep and putting them into pens with as much gentle firmness and tender care as any nursemaicl. Many a Londoner, watching, must. have wonders-d if a fgw sheep-dogs wouldn't be a. good thing to have on some of the Un- derground Railway stations. to help control the crowds at rush hours! UUDOUQUQUC02MUDIiD if no Age-Old Slur’) i Being Justified by faith. we have peace with God. through our Lord Jesus Christ. Being justified by llisibloodnwe shsli be ‘saved from wrath through Him. By till: righteousness of Onei-the free gilt came upon all men ‘unto Justifi- cation of life. So by the obedience of One. shsli many he made right- eous. FIRE The following is the text of the statement about the United King- dom-Netherlarids Bacon Contract issued in London on June 2nd: "The Ministry of Food has agreed a contract with the Netherlands Government under which the Neth- erlands will supply bacon to the United Kingdom during the four years 1949-1952. The quantities to be delivered will be not less than 10,000 tons for the year 1949, for 1950 not less than 25.000 tons and for 1951 not less than 35.000 tons. The actual quantities are likely to be substantially larger, target fig- ures of 40.000 tons for 1950 and 60.- 000 tans for 195i having been agreed —\'i.'l‘ilCll quantities the Ministry of Food has undertaken to accept if they are offered. The two Govern- ments will discuss in 1950 the quantities to be fixed for 1952. 1n any case it ls agreed now that the Ministry of Food will take not less than 45.000 tons in that year and the Netherlands Government has indicated that the Netherlands may he able to supply as much as 80.000 ions." The following background infor- matinn regarding this contract from the United Kingdom view point may be of interest. The new four-year bacon con- tract with the Netherlands repre- sents a further step in the direc- tion of one of the main objectives of the European Recovery Pro- gramme, Le. an increase in trade between countries sharing in the programme. Such an increase is essential to European recovery. The supplies of bacon which the United Kihgdom expects to pur- chase under the agreement, al- oooovoooooevovoeobbooo lClsiropodist l For Foot Ailments i GOIISIILT i ii. J. A. iiliiiWii. ll. P. ilrthiliieille l i lil Great George Street CHABLOTTETOWN. P-Ll. G. F. Hutcheson 8i Son UPTOMETBIST’! l ‘Specialists in the fitting of ghsses for the correction ol ocular defects.” 08 GRAFTON STREET J. P. Macltilersoiiaton It's The Fit ‘Ihst Counts lilea‘ Custom Built and Steak Clothing Loss CAN BE PIIVBNTED Practice safety methods and carry adequate Insurance to cover present a Supplemental Coven. llYllllMAll 8i iscement vsluss, and including 00. LIMITED Insurance Since l!!! Offices: t"- . lfoLIlAN-Distrlct Manager CYRUS A. l. SHAW-District Manager st ALLISON P. st Sunsrnersiile Montague. THOMAS MaAVlNN-lpeclsl Ieprssentstiv . EL hIneNIlTT-Bepresentative st Dsrnley. I. 'l'. MYlll-Iepreseritstive at llnssdeis. mass: l. IILLIY-lepreeentslive st Oflesry. Alonts iliroulheut the Province. Office hours for luainser mestllsi 8:80 s.ni. so 1:00 p. as. eseepf on letardsy and Wednesday close st Hill. t t t the gates of Denman College, near Oxford. the residential college "It". Which was named after Lady Deriman. the first chairman, lage institutes are new being in- vited to give a memorial tree, cost £1, but small institutes will be able to combine for a Joint gift. _ Mrs. Watt came from Canada to start the first institute in Anglesey in September came into being in 1917, and there B" MW "Qflfly 7.200 institutes. with nearly 400.000 members, in Britain. —London Daily Mull. " ley Brown will be graduated from ed a moderate amount of atten- tion, for he is the first Negro en- sign to come from Annapolis. There was a time when such an rence might have caused consider- able stir. Other Negroes have won appointment to Annapolis, but none ever lasted the full four years. time. sentiment and opinion change. and we are glad to see that this honor to Wesley Brown, which re- flects the greatest credit both on him and the Naval Academy, is taken completely in stride by all though large. represent only part of the United Kingdom's total re. quirements and will reduction in the United Kingdom would like to obtain from other bacon exporting countries. however, the level of United King- dom purchases must continue ldepend on the availability or r101. ars. lands will be of benefit not only to theUnlted Kingdom which will be obtaining much needed supplies of bacon but will also be of consider- able assistsnce to the Dutch econ- omy. which suffered severely as a result of the last war. Mr. Forrestsl had the tense self-dlsciptlllriee ‘fir: fighter,‘ but he was a flgiltsr to: what principle and duty demanded riot for himself. He was doing to’ lhe b"! ‘if hi! great capacities an extraordinarily difficult job of re- "Eallllflllon. administrative plan. Hing. the reconciliation of violin-jg opposites; he was doing it with in- adequate powers and inadequate public understanding and supper-r and was without sufficient defence; against either the exhaustion to which his own labor had reduced him or the meannesses of the key- hole World of Washington, It 1| Possible to put a breaking strain upon the strongest, and Mr, For. restnl broke. But the loss is ills nation's: and the question it leavag behind it-as to whether as a m. tlan we can always afford the cruel luxury of the treatment we so Om“ mete out to our most devoted public servants-is not easily in be evaded, -—New York Herald Tribune, f he Federation of Women's Instal- Vil- 1915. The fedora tion A your mldlhlnmsn named Wes- he United States Naval Academy hi! Wflk. The event has attract- OCCUP- Ii: is almost Impossible to rig the beautiful green expanse sroun the Manitoba Legislative building this Spring without experiencing "Knights of thankfulnr-ss over thl advance of science. Anyone whosq memory of this city extends becl five years and more can recall t3 Iii great plague of dandellons the fastened itself upon the Legislsti lawns, Never did men work llardel to 80f rid of dandelion! than thl Legislative groundsmen. But everyi thing they did seemed merely id stimulate the growth of more, un- til finally the harassed provincial officials, from the Premier down. were just about ready to plow up the whole yellow mess and turn the grounds into a potato patch. Then, when the will to fight had almost been beaten out of the antl- dandellon forces, science produced the ally that turned defeat inie victory. The completeness of the victory gained by the chemical 2.44‘) can only be appreciated by a perv son who has not seen ihe iawnl for four or five years. — Winnipel Free Press. HJROFESSIONAL CARDS/ N!“ w_ pnesmg J. E. IIIIIIOH; LLB. Barrister, Solicitor, do. l ODDFELLOWS BUILDING l m Richmond Street l Charlottetown. P.E.l. ‘ a All Tel. 2880 not mean any the supplies which In the case of Canada, t0 The contract with the Nether- OBABTEIID ACCOUNTANT Ourrle Build‘ sg GHABMYITETOWN Chas. R. McQuaid ha. BABRISTER, SOLICITOE, NOTARY. lilo. Eastern Trust liulltlinl | UHABLOTTETOWN i Phone ' ‘Ill I c‘... ‘u, k- Quum u‘ - om» Phone less-noun m: William A. Reddin B.A.. 8.8a. LLB IAIIBIBTIZB, SOLIOITOR, Eta. LOB-F. Bldg-Next to sketldl - Brut PHONI I404 Money to Loan - , MORRELI. AND COMPANY OIIAITIIID AOOOUNTANI f‘ lsstarn frost Bisildllll Charlottetown Pholl l“? Tel. 1080 I20. B0! 0B2 J. S. TAYLOR I Optometrist | Eyes examined, glasses fit- ' ted Dr. J. C. Gallant, B.'Sc. DliNTlJl‘ Pioissrd Building 101 Great George Si. DENTAL X-IAY Phone 0H1 Collection! Dr. A. l.. Maelsaee DlNTllfl‘ Dental K-Isy Wiesel Building, loans 6 fll Grafton lttent Phone ill H. it. DOANI and COMPANY caaatsssn AUUOUNTANTI ~ as oaaswrrsrrorvn ll (ls-arses F‘- - mfllfik“ m a b’ u] New Gluglew ‘moon. m “mum; lsstvills 0- l- Baal“