i publicly controlled schools of eight ‘shiny 1n over-all increase of $250 Since 1939- i 2Q; rotm UIMRLUTTETUWI allllllllll iGIi-sfbuu, (Founded u. turn Indian. Bent. Col. ‘W Cherie: S. Mulmn Vwo-luedduit: J. ll. Burnett. IZJ I. flunliuy: Llclt. Cal. D. ‘A. Imihulon, 0.8.0. “m: um Managing Director: .I. l. Durant, FJ-l. uncut: lildlwn: Frank Walker uni Hut. nu _ A lumen. R.O.N.V.B. (On Active Sumac) “The Strongest Memory in Walker Tllll the Weakest Ink.‘ __.-.-- roasnnv. £665.35." o, m: A Matter of Confidence Ciiatices of thc hlaritimes getting a square deal from the lung Uovcrilnient in the field of Uunnnion-Urovincial relations. where thc m- tcrcsts of the big industrial provinces are in the balance, do not sccni to be very favorable in the opinion of Nova Scotias leading Liberal paper. the llaliftnt" (I/truiziclv, _ The (J/tronirli’ says tho return of the bov- erntuent in the first postwar general election was due to confidence in ‘the will and capacity of the administration to create free and pros- perous conditions without resort to the "exocri- tricities and phantasies" of leftist. elements in 1115 mug“- tni the one hand, and to Conserve- tivc policies on thc other. lt asks lio\v the Gov- ernment has lived up to its obligations. and finds the answer rathci- (lepressing. "The question which has now t0 be faced. especially by the pcoplc of the provinces of the fringe," says our Halifax contemporary, “is how far that confidence in the Federal Government can be continued. Certain items in Mr. Ilslev's recent budget have come as a violent shock to nany Slll))>t>l't01's of his party. That budget re- pcalcd an Uulcr-iit-Cotiiicil granting tariff protection to certain central Canadian OTEB-llllfl- tions such as could only have been squeezed out of the Government by high-pressure local poli- tics. The whole thing is the more unexpected and reprehensible because Diesel engines. of the type and quality included under this new and paralysing tariff, have never satisfactorily been manufactured in Central Canada. To- impose a tariff upon imported articles of this type is to use the tariff specifically for the purpose of rais- ing revenue. Itqvill put up the price of English Diesels from $1,275 to $1,575. solely for the benefit of manufacturers in Montreal, Sher- brooke and Toronto. The rest of us will pay the shot. “lf this is indicative of the policy that is to be continued bv the Federal Government. one can easily see what is to be the result if all rights tn direct taxation are to be handed over to that body. “The centralization of finance will obvious- lv be only the preliminary to a. still more pro- nounced centralization of all manufacture. In- dustries already hard put to it to survive in this province stand in peril of going entirely out of existence, as so many local industries have al- ready done. Markets which are natural to us. but which lic over the seas, will be more than ever shut off from us. We stand in imminent danger of being reduced to a mere holiday ground in which weary industrialists of Central Canada may take their ease, away from the toil 0f de- veloping enterprises in which rightly we our- selves ought to have a share. “Before thc outer provinces repose all re- maining power in the hands of a central govern- ment, there must be unlimited confidence in the intentions of that government to play a fair and impartial game. The past has given us little ground for such confidence. The recent budget of Mr. llsley. with its backdoor fiscal clauses. gives ur a picture of an Ottawa we have long known too well." ~ The Last Wrecker The last of the three provincial Premiers who smashed the Dominion-Provincial Confer- ence of 1941 has now been removed from the scene of politics. In the recent election in British Columbia the voters of Prince Rupert at last turned upon Mr. T. D. Pattullo and defeated him. In Ontario, Mr. Mitchell Hepburn like- wise has been mfloved. In Alberta. Mf- W11‘ liam Aberhart is dead. The last- remains of the sorry conspiracy which blocked the attempt at a satisfactory D0- minion-Provincial settlement during the dark days of the war have'thu| disappeared. remarks the Winnipeg Free Presr. Mr. Pattullo‘ had sat continuously for Prince Rupert in the provincial elections since 1916 when he was returned in the great Liberal landslide of that veifr. As he says he went to the well once too often‘. With his defeat ends a famous era in British Columbia politics. an era which began with thc establishment of the Lib- eral party and which has finally produced a union between the Liberals ‘and Conservatives wflfi my well prove permanent. Teachers’ Salaries o Annual salary rates for teachers in _ the provinces This figure is based on the median salaries for 50,000 teachers in 1939 and _19_44, according to "tfepofgissnqd by tho Dominion- Bureau of 5W5‘? i' . . ‘i " rates for teachers in city schools have q en per cent since the war, exclusive . dost of living bonus paid by a compara- , qulll number of school boards. The ul- ‘f i hers in towns and villages are 21.6 gher than in 1939 and those for one- l chools have advanced 5o per cent. ‘q; as been a decrease of 5.000 male _. m“ .1939. Numerically the teaching . t»... maintained at pie-war strength, Q issuance of temporary permits r" ‘ wore 3,500 permits issued in tll first class certificates 'ably, but‘ generally the have been relaxed to teacher shortage due to the war. The demand for teachers with experience, by city and town schools has had a mo: than usual devitalizing effect on rural schoo s. In I944 the average length of experience rof teach- ers in one-room schools was 3-0 yearsln com- parison with 4.7 years in i939. The tenure of service for such teachers in pre-war years was from two to two and a half years. In I944 the median‘ for seven proginces-Ontario and Que- bec exceptcd—was 1.8 years. The practice of allowing’ teachers with temporary permits to remain in the same school for one year only, unless under exceptional circumstances, has had some bearing on the decrease of tenure for teachers in the one-room rural schools. —I:UI IURIAL NUI ES- Uur Victory Bond sales are mounting up, though still we have a long way to go before we attain our individual obiective. Every $50 bond helps. i‘ A silent and attentive crowd broke laughter at Kingston, Ont. during the testimony of Inspector Laughced of the Ontario provincial police, over a remark made by Koreskv when he was arrested in P. E. I. on September 14. Police had found over $2,000 on Koreskv. As they looked over the bills one officer asked, “How do you account for the money?" A slv smile on his face, Koresgy put one hand into his suit coat pocket, took out two dice, shook them together in expert style and said: “Why. don't you ever play dice." i‘ ll i‘ all! The Governments, Federal and Provincial, should bear in mind that their first dutv is to the average taxpayer, and not to bit! 0r little financial interests who may have particular axes to grind. If they do not pay attention to this, nothing possibly can prevent Canada following the lead of the United Kingdom into the Soc- ialist column. In the municipal elections iust con- cluded, England has, for the second year. Hone practically a hundred per cent socialist. Labor candidates had gained 700 municipal seats against 21 losses. The Conservatives gained Only r3 and lost 331. Liberal nominees registered five gains against I10 losses, while Independent can- didates had 49 gains and 311 losses. i- U 1- I A Capetown message says that “ex-service- men and ex-prisoner-of-war are astonished at l how furniture prices have gone up. To furnish a house consisting of one bedroom. one lounge, a small dining-room and a kitchen now costs at least $2,000, and that's doing it on a pretty aus- tere basis. This figure does not include things like carpets, curtains, cutlery and the stove and refrigerator." They should have been at the rec- ent war assets sale at the airport. where new pianos were allegedly knocked down for a dollar, sitting room suits thrown out for lack of Dur- chasers, and bed and table linens practically given away. II I! Consulting economist Stuart Armour. an associate of Gilbert lackson, speaking before the Canadian Institute on Public Affairs‘ at Lake Couchiching last month pointed out that about three-eighth of Canada's working population de- pended on export trade for iobs in 1939- Tllifi statement emphasizes the necessity for exerting every effort and seeking every means to establish world markets for the products of our lands. for- ests, mines and factories. Mr. Armour also made the pertinent comment that when it is suggested that social legislation can be made a substitute for exports, the people of this country are being misléd. We sell in order to buy. I‘ I Richard Jefferies. British naturalist and author, born this date, 1848; his Gamakeclwr A! Home, showed rare powers of observation and description‘, he also published The Anwleur Poacher, Wild Life in a Southern County, Hodge and Hi: Masters, Field and Hedgerow, Toiler: of the Field: f‘I believe in the flesh and the body, which is worthy of worship—to see a per- fect human body unveiled causes a sense of worship . . . Increase of physical beauty is at- tended by increase of soul beauty. The soul is the higher even by gazing on beauty. Let me be fleshly perfect.” l‘ Passenger travel from the United States ‘to Great Britain will remain on a priority basis indefinitely, it is announced, although previously it was scheduled to be abolished November 7. Reason given for its continuance is the realloca- tion of some British-transports for the repatria- tion of troops in other parts of the world from the North Atlantic. Anyone desiring to travel from the United States to Britain must file ap- plication for priority with the nearest British consul who will then notify lihe British Ministry of War Transport. Three British lines are oper- ating ships between the United States and the United Kingdom: Anchor Line, Cunard-White Star, Ltd., and Furness, lNithy and Company. D l‘ Ancient Cairo has been chosen unanimously as the scene of the next annual general meeting of International Air Transport Association and Hafez Afifi Pasha, president of Misr Airwork of Egypt, has been elected president of the as- sociation as from that occasion at the annual meeting of the Association in Montreal. IATA. the international air line operators’ association organized It Havana in April. has been holding its first annual meeting in the Windsor Hotel. Allhmlkh the meeting place of the Association is subject to annual change. the headquarters are fixed at the same city as is PICAO and thus are now in Montreal more or‘ less permanently. n t I? I In his maiden speech in the House of Com- mons, Mr. I. M. Macdonuell. member for Mul- koka, Ontario, declared that members of Psi- \ v , \ _.a Notes By The“ ‘hay ' ,Ano the now-baron: around by the Inna ls a oolllcr’: son who left school at the e of l0 to work in a woollen l. ‘This o bt to be democratic enough even or some of the antl-lm the U. k-Brmtlord . Wanted. Ahnnn who gall to work on tlme, who can fln plenty to do without culling 1n the min- uier and three ngslntmts, who does not sulk when he '11s; to put in no hour overtime in m emu- gericy, who i5 naturally courteous oaltor. place. to an einployeia-Almer Ex- press. The completion of one of the largegl; print-ins orders for Blbes has announced from Swed n 1n a message to the fish and Foreign Bible Society. On Swedish paper this order was for 345.000 copies ln eight Euro can lang- uages — French. Czec , Estonian, Pa vlan, Greek, two Polish dialects. Romania-n. and Serbian. Another order has been placed for 100,000 copies 1n Gennan.—-.Scaridlnavlaii ws. into Ne The largest block of timber ever oflered for sale in any of the U. S. national forests 1n the north cen- tral region - 800,000 cords of pulp- wood on the Superior National Forest in Minnesota, has been placed 0n the market by the Unl- ted States Forest. Service, accord- ing to Jay H. Price, regional for- ester. The timber consists largely of mature and over-mature jac pine. s ruce and balsam m.- Fredwl n Gleaner. The abuses o! the democratic system are the less to be condoned ln that they. more than any ut- lve agency elsewher prepare the ground for dlctatorsh p. Every time that; democracy ls weaker, more tardy or bllnder than it need be. and should by any means be. autocnacy gains, The height o1 ab- surdity ls reached when democracy attempts to dlctate.— to order the lives of everyone as lf they lived ln some slave SbBI/Cw-"vlfilblflfl, B (7.. Dally Colonist. The Burns Federation has. dil- closed the awful news that Am- erican slang is sneak-lug into the scotiblsh dialect. It may not get very far-not lt Scots are sllll like the one who heard an American declaring he came from “God's own country," says The Halifax Chron- ule. " n," countered the Scot, "Ye like an swfu’ puir Scots ac- cent." was the Englishman who maln- talned that a Scottish accent. was nothing but the result of a foreign people trying to speak a. language they never could master! And now we are deep in a loadable. A epoch! nlnr not lnh be pn- duced for United Kingdom merch- ant ship. A government appointed scientific committee has prepared a performance specification which has now been sent to the manu- facturers of radar apparatus. In the meantime arr emerits have been made to DYOV-l e shl wners who require them with ra at sets manufactured for the British Ad- miralty during the war, which are suitable for use 1n merchant ships. Other forms of radio navigational aids which wlll make Britain's merchant fleet the safest in the world are also under investigation. -Vancouver Province, Pipe smokers, It ls our experi- ence, are usually calm, thoughtful and studious individuals and . Chlfley, like Clement Attlee, ls a great Plge smoker. He‘ ls peltlom wlthou ls pipe and u we sat next to him at a luncheon in Canberra he was continually puffing his pipe and lighting up Mr. Chlfley ln addition to beng a railroad man owns a newspaper 1n hlr native city of Bnthurbtl, m Inland city of 20.000. He h e publisher of. the Bothunt Advocate, one of the few Labor papers ln New South Wales. When he was out of Parliament from 198-1 to 1939 he edited his own auger and proved an excellent tor. The paper has been a suc- cess nnmclally and Mr, Ohlfley ls one of the few Labor loaders with independent means. — Arthur Ford ‘in London Free Press. A Illortnge of tobacco would have caused u much concern three centuries ago for the Ind- ians of Ontario, as it, would for us today. The Indians used a great variety of pipes. as illustrated by the collections 1n the Royal On~ tarlo Museum. Many of them are of baked clay. These run the gamut, from very simple forms resembllng sr..':.‘s"........°‘"" “Paul.” . w - npresen squash-blossoms or tobwcoo blos- soms o 1- n strange face or creep- 111g lizard. sun more cherished are the stone pipes. some of which bear intricate carved s." In also they range from y mlnlu- tures to large, impressive ornate pleou. The vary, also, 1n details of constzuc on. n some the stem and bowl are curved out. of one block. ln others the stem was a separate. wooden piece. The stem- leas pipes were usually sus nded from a plece o! cord whl was worn around the neck o! the owu- u. About minded smoker: o! bo- dny might copy this ldel. to their IGVGIIMQQ.—OIIMHO Museum Bul- letln. ‘that very unbl- tect and 1 able Illlll Km rungs p unner- g Solomon or the value of cedar and e loyod it well 1n the bulldfng of umpie. American pioneers, particularly In the North- west States, when the giant rod cedar grows, cut their rough cedar shakes end our. o whom hshl d rn cedar shingle IIIWIY! ular tn Amer-loin bulldlngp was o foun- dation of o. tremendous business liament should regard themselves as tr all the powers and resources that are placedflm- der their control. "We who sit in the Commons are merely representatives." he did. “and are here only because our constituenfs themselves cannot be here.” It is not often. says the Mont- real Gazette, that members of flhe House of Commons use the words/Merely" and ,"only" in relation to themselves. If some consider Mr. Macdonnell‘: remarks old-fashioned. it i: per- haps because there lias been sogreat a falling down from the sense that government is service and not rulership. assistance and not rlictation, trustceship-and not ownership. ‘ I’ And when the open rlntes we fenced lt wu soon discovered that the cadu- polt, , consider- ed, wu proferubln :11! other. 8o aver; the New r , e - for ‘” ‘ th .-' " for n time m threat/an the wood, but the fur now seems baseless when cedar ls gullible many of tho put-w hugging lumen are preferring t. t cut-over cedar had In of the U. B. southwm‘ la na turned Into pasture for “Jolt: and game. New , k tie-slug n no mun was, n»! cedar poluyhnvi wwdorfully ln- creased their durability. Th0 cedar regarded u one til-WI mm tor- m u. Till’ m: of" 15mins e c , . gill: u ' a‘ t mtood whet wu tlml rm: cnARLorvEibwn nuimm _. to overyone..Apply any time, any V On the other hand, there 1 GUARDIAN i post».- ronun i Tkhoohnnllwlill ‘Ilollon um- a.lillfil valence! G handrai- peril“ ‘inrlly undone u. ‘oi-hr of oorrcIpouflnl-l. EDUCATION NEWFOUPIDLA \ ,- I be rm! 1 w u“ n stnptzmeigwmad: comment “Don concerning Newfoundland by - J. . McAme ln ‘Toronto Globe and Mall and quoted ln your otlhorlsl of Novul. I shall refer b0 x statement only-that dealing ‘There is education. Hr. McAree keys: nu such thing as u trained teacher. At. the present time children no straight from school into teaching. with absolutely no training and frequentl before they have roach- ed niatr culatlon stand ." In fairness to Newfoundland and wit; educational system I wish w point out that this statement ls quite incorrect, Matriculation. that. ls Grade XI. ls required lor ent- srcuniir CYIIJI A. I. SIAW. ‘IIOIAI IoAVlNN, . . . r -» Guaranteed‘ Savings; u... you mole liquor: provision for your old up, youtdepondonhinllioovontofyourdooth? ' i A "liq yin} Th; Incl-Wm Life guuruiitm mm merit-y. ma. am u m...“ room i ' Ilyndman fi Co. Ltd. Oman: Quloflotawn - lilllllfllllio - H0898!" ALLISON i. MeLlAN. Dhtrlul‘ lunar: u ammun- 2-101‘ ‘ ' Ilaiipgu at Montague l. I. IIYNDMAN. rance to the teacher framing] ‘ 7 ln Memorial University Co age in 5t. John's where a full year or professional tralnl la given. Dur- in: the years I lved in New- foundland approxlmately one hun- dred students were enrolled each gar for these professional course: addition to this. very satis- factory summe courses are given. ‘llhese one of five weeks’ duration, and axe attended in any one year by ap roxlmately twenty-five per cent 0 the whole teaching y. Like the provinces of Ca oda. Newfoundland has had its prob- lems in staffing all its schools with nerufled teachers throughout the period of the war. but even ln this they have required a summer course before grantl the lowest grade of certificate. 0 percent- age of toichers holding degrees, and having had professional train- ing in Canada, the Unified States and England ls large, especially ln St, John's, Gnand Falls, Corner Brook and other towns. There ls a staff of competent school super- visors, most of whom have degrees. Arrangements ave lately been completed where y three of these supervisors are granted leave o! absence each year so that may may pursue educational studies at Universities outside the country 1n vlew the above which l know to be correct it ls difficult. to understand Mr, Mom-ea’; state- ment, It certainly gives a very wrong impression of eduzatlonal conditions as I know them in New- ouaidlsnd. I am, Sir, ole Nov. 5th, 1945. i. w. IIAW. Electoral Reform (Sydney Put Herald) The few papers in Canada. that advocate proportional reps-combo- tlon in voting are quick to point to the wide lacrepnncy between the popular vote and the rewulu 1n the individual constituencies In Nova. 500MB’! Provincial election on October 23. ‘me Progressive aervatlves polled 34 per cent of the total vote. but failed to win a seat. 111-2 Socialists polled only '13 per cent. but got 2 seats. The Liberals polled 5B per cent-o. little over half‘; the totaL-and carried 38 sen . The Montreal Gazette. which ls not a P.R. newspaper, nevertheless resflrdfi these anomalous election returns as "a particularly striking example" of the failure of the ex- isting electoral system to give the people what bhew vote for. Bur. nedtlmr rrogressiye Conser- vative nor Liberal statesmen favor proportional representation for Canada. While admitting there ls an electoral problem to be ved, they do not think FR. the answer. m because that Intern would lnovlm- ebly ntbotltiutc a number of weak troupe for two strong port-lea, tn the prejudice bf stable government and majority rule. The future of wholesome democratic development clearly does m; lle tn that dlrectm WOOD ISLANDS. IJJ. have Wool [duh Imvo Caribou NOII-TIIUIIDIILAN D M. V. PRINCI: NUVA sormnriu CHANGES urine rrvrr no ‘ Lllll Be N no I ‘L4H nut: n. war s. f 8 tl t‘ ‘l '11 d l ‘ll! I 11:: gUDTIA s rhiitfciis EIVDTNABD ISLAND FEIIBY SERVICE O LUNCIIES SERVED SAILING SCHEDULE ‘ (DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY) ALL SAILINGS STANDARD TIME | olAlmnuown. cameo EDWARD 1514"" AN ILFIN KNIGHT He put his scorn helmet on; i 1t was pltuncd with the silk of the thistle-down; The comet plate that grandad his Wes once: the wild bee‘; golden ‘H1: 01:35,’ of‘: thousand mingled Was formed of the wings of but- N; llh shield was the fltoll of n lwdy- queen. snide gold on s ground of And e qiil ll-DOI which he wumesungorswiqiiisiira dun in Baht. ' Qwift. ‘had bestrode his fire-fly ee . He bislred his blade of me bent gnu in. He dmve his mun a! the oockle- And away'llke s glance of unought ew, To skim the heavens, and follow I . The flee-y troll o! the rocket-star. -4. Rodmmi Drake, ln The Vlowrlo, B. C. Dally (hlonlst. . publicizing Potatoes (it. John Telegraph Journal) The clue! potato states woes the border. Mame and Idaho, got mum list evening on a strum. to mzbllclu their VIE-IQ. It was n dinner u. Wastilngton, ln the lng room of the United States d of Mnlnemd Idnboaad frkndslromotztinr mtnmrotntoeswenthcmnlndlsh ~ wlndfliorent Btutbhelrlp opium! tlnvepltlbluworldwhlchlatoo bosolvad by m lnlellaent measure men tamed "um Meleotorolreformbuaedontvhe Dytbdrwldelv-cd two principles of my. ration by Population and the single transfer- able vote. Every Province needs n redlstrlbutlon of its constituencies so u to make them all approxim- ately equal in population. Such n reform ls even more necessary in the lode-ml electoral field. If this were done. and only single-member rldtlnizs created. the introduction of e aimle transferable vole such as used under P.R. would make uerw! the retpreeen lve mllvrlfy 0f its electors demanded BIG EMPIRE LAND UNIT Canada comprises more than 28 bar cent of the total urn of the British Bm-plre. \ hipreaont-hepowers at: Ottawa that ln these trwo sea- board moylziccs. potatoes an the famicra’ bl: cub crop. Potatoes. tomarewhstwhcutlnwt-hengrt- c of PnlrlcPmvmou wild grower. 1m,- fommnteb. his never been able to convince the federal government that he la entitled to the some sort c»! consideration so generously ac- corded the grain power. H; m; not ARIIOU. N. S. t6 im- from Plotoui II!- 9mm. m. 11 l. m. Funnies LIMITED 1p. 8 p. __...___' Sassy ‘stomachs. Relieved i Eve non who l: troubled will? ‘as In the skin-loll should get a bottle of Dr Evan's Stomach Mixture and m; how quickly wlll re- llevs an dMrcnlfll lvmlr toms. Dr. lune Stomach Mixture taken at men] tlmes not onlv prevents all but effects from g1; but It promotes the lune tlonll uctlvlt of the Ilom uh, usllta estlon nml lm proweg use lppflllfi. Iccom mended for Dyllfilml- 1m“! ostlon, Heartburn. etc. Price 85 Cents P" BM"!- incfimn RESTOREB A delicately perllllllefl hnlr preparation which restores, n. ulth and benutlflu the hair. i‘: motes n new and su rln frowth when the hnr nlllng and ls_ romlrklhly useful In preventing ‘um drull. Got Your Bottle Today Price 00 Cents. TllE 2' MAGS man Orders Given mum‘ Attention. H For Foot Ailments BIIIROPODIST e \ cousuur _ H. J. A. BROWN, DJ‘ Orthopedic Ill Great Goon-go Israel OIABLOTTETOWN. PL! \ mlnlmtmi price-although Ottawa. ls extending ixotieotl pguotlcully all other farm produc- e s. In shoot. the potato grower has 9|‘ plus ho which he entitled u a scientific fanner who not only supplies the Canadian market with a. vital item of diet but who tums out such a mperlar yen‘ bum ab! to t ° mm...‘ m. "b. 7.1L“? countries. product that it la sought by other —--------i '- Phone m; gun-crime him the protection of a u, i . ._,..._ ____.- -'~'-xx~'-=- p |?.,. _ 80b . jomurimm 3pm" .1»: iiiqu. m- " tiff-til glpinie f0; tho so“ vol ocllutle - us“, . . ' all bllraftbp Strut Priifqssioiial Bards loll jllggins ‘Chartered Accountant llfldllchnond St. .. Charlottetown Tel.'589 i I‘ 9.0. Box 6i J.l. llllfilllilll, BA. norakr. iiro. ennui-n. soucrron OUIIII norumvo M. ALBAN FARMER ll. A.. Ll... B. IIONIY TO - LOAN BAIIIBTIII. sotiorron. irrc, cannons-rows Onulln Bonk or Commerce lld| _._.i___'. L;-__._-.:_ -..__.__. __ ALEX W. MATHIESON .9.‘£'.°'t._'°..-.‘.‘r'"°""a.i:::::. unlrsnn. lager-con. mo. H. F. MePhee B.A. K.C ‘nor/my m. umnrsnm. souofroa U!!! Charlottetown Barf-vim? aim Burl-Intern, Solicitors, h, n. n. BEL runs. COLLECTION! 1B0 Richmond St. Ohulofletown. IKEJ. PALMER 6' HASLAM A. J. BABLAM. n. , B.“ lltAllqllflTslhll. BATClIL‘ o on ii Ohulcltrtown? ‘Pl. glnlinbe" MONEY T0 LOAN Phone l5 P. o. a»; ii szwr: -fi-» -. .. .. .____ _____ Richard B. Johnston Attorn Al. b. Commissioner (iii need: Bu»... lo Prlloo Edward Iulnna t... n“.'.‘:':';.°'i"'.'" l! . 0 l one. 811M120. n iiniiimiimi llama. Mus. i EYES EXAMINER ’ AND 1 GLASSES FITTED _. J. S. Taylor OPT OMETRIST om» Inn: n‘ a s . rimmniuagm“ u‘ Inwhl! b! Appointments | PM» Residence 1m 1 Frederic A. Largo IABRIITEI. no. "will "Wilma Ill Grafton s: P. 0. Bu: M! _ Qllfiliorrnowu. r. l. I. 1N8 McLeod £4 Bentley w. c. uuuruz. u, C, a. c tun-rut. 1c o. "mil!!! lml Attorneys-st Lli ‘Ill Prince Street . “-¥"~°¥=+-=iu-:~~s . -~ gyixxx -\ mac-n - 5n ~ - i"? I_‘.. A _ nanny yo. can "mus *“° i Chfifllvii. R. McQuaid l . .1 x barium. Bolloltor. l . "UH". Ric. z i — PIIIIO I'll! ‘ ‘ . . Chartered Accountants t: Giulia‘ m». blrloluown Ella nu N'- Puilillle iSlQnogra pher