GIIAIILOTTEIDWII Glllltlllll Iefllng Dilly thllldlll ll 1N1) Haul. Col. W. Cluck: I. Isl-Io Vlnflhdlecl: l. I». Bunch, lLJ-l. lemony: Hut. Col. D. A. Iaolhnea. 0.8.0. ldlhr and Managing Director: J. l. Burnett, IJJ. Annotate Edison: husk Walla all Hell. In A. Burnett, LCJLVL (0: Ache lumen) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker The: the Weakest Ink.’ TUIBDAY, OCTOBER. l, l)“ Saying Children's Lives _ This is National Immunization Week, dur- 1111 Whicluthe Health League of Canada co- operates with the health authorities throughout the Dominion in calling special attention to the ‘need of. protecting children against com. municable diseases, notably whooping mngh, fllplllllefia. smallpox and scarlet fever. Vaccination has been so effective in Can- ada that today a case of smallpox is rare, But eternal vigilance is the price of security and failure to vaccinate would mean more small- pox. Diphtheria has disappeared in some parts of Caniidn and lll others the rate is still dis- gracefully high. Whooping cough, largely pre- ventable, causes the most deaths among con- tagious diseases of early childhood. There were 333 deaths from this cause last year. . lnfection_ by the serious communicable diseases of childhood results largely-from fail- ure to irnmunize. Facilities to immunize everv child in the Dominion are available if only par- ents would take advantage of them. Forty thousand cases annually of scarlet fever. diph- theria and whooping cough alone mean many unnecessary deaths and many children dam- aged for life by unnecessary disease. Supreme Court Of Canada To the average Canadian the government's Announced intention of introducing a bill at the present ses-ion of Parliament to repeal the act of establishing the department of National \Var sflWlCtfis, comes merely as another sign that hostilities have ended and that the useful- ness of one war department is over. But to one particular little group of people, re- peal of the zict will niinin that at long last they are to come into their own. To this little group-the judges of the Supreme Court of Canada, the court officials, and the barristers whose legal qualifications and nttaintnetits entitle them to appear before the Dominionk high court of law-—-the news has a very special significance. lt means that the emptying of the Supreme Court bitililing now occupied by National lVar Services, the Income Tax Division, and the .\i'ni_\' will imrmit the Supreme Court judges to ntore into the magnificent $2,500,000 struc- ture which was designed and built for them, but which with the outbreak of war was pres- sed into the service of government depart- ments. ' Of the seven Supreme Court judges ivhn in 1939 were eager and waiting to move into the new building, only three will occupy places in the new courtroom, Rt. Hon. Sir Lynn Poore Duff, then Chief justice of Canada, has retired, to be succeeded by Rt. Hon. Mr. justice Rin- fret. Mr. justice Crocket, retired in i1‘- health and later passed away. Mr. justice Can- non and Mr. justice Davis also have died since the new building was completed. In addition to the new Chief justice, the only old members of the court left are Mr. justice Kerwin and Mr. justice Hudson. The four new members of the court are: Mr. justice Taschereau. Mr. justice Rand, Mr. justice Kellock and Mr. justice Esdey. Needy Britain Helps Dutch The most urgent task in liberated Holland nas been the feeding of the Dutch civilians. Be- fore their liberation the Dutch Government purchased foodstuffs and raw materials in Britain, but German ruthlessness rendered dras- tic measures essential. April 29-—the clay after the last potato ration was distributed in the Dutch cities and nine days before the final Ger- man surrender ‘— R. A. F. bombers began dropping food supplies which by May 8, had amounted to nearly eight thousand tons, apart from nearly three thousand dropped by U. S. planes. The Dutch declare that this aid came in the nick of time. From May 2 British and Canadian lorries brought food and coal into Holland from the east. Several days before the final liberation Zritish merchant vessels yvere entering Rotterdam with food and coal supplies. Since then, British harbour clearance parties have been removing elaborate German blocks in the waterway, enabling 166 Allied ships to bring 806,000 tons of supplies to Rot- terdam in three months. A similar clearance was llso made in the North Sea Canal leading to Antsterrlam. To aid in the restoration of en- feebled Rotterdam (lockers British canteens wcrc established mi tho quaysidcs. Other Brit- ish canteens by early juiie were serving twelve thousand hot meals (laily in the Hague, and nearly thirty thousand in three other towns alone. By the end of September, the Allies will have imported nearly 800.000 tons of food (one- tliird more than ivns requested by the Dutch and almost the equivalent of the pre-war rate of food imports). The feeding and clothing of the Dutch was undertaken by the Civil Affairs branch of the British Army and the Council of British Soc- ieties for Relief Abroad (an Association of British Philanthropic bodies under the aegis of the British ltcd Cross Society). The problem of the restoration of the of British scientists under the famous dietician, Sir jack Drummond, consisting of predigested proteins, glucose, and vitamins. After forty- eight hours of the treatment the patients can’ eat normally. Behind the British and Canadian Armies liberating Holland were three hundred medical teams for the relief of civilians, equip- ped not only with the “F” treatment, but also with blood plasma from Britain's scanty re- serve supplies. -EDITORIAL NOTES- October entered with autumnal chilliness though dry and invigorating; also with more latitude in obtaining something “to keep out the cold." I~4t$ Disappointment was fel-t over the collapse of the welcome arrangements on Sunday. We can more than make up for it in the warmth of our reception today. i i i 1F Now that the bulk of the “Red Patch Devils" have returned, or are on their way home, Prime Minister Mckenzie King finds time to re-visit England and the Continent of Europe. j I The n‘ if the war has apparently brought little peace or security to North Chitia. Dur- i i les between japanese regulars supported by inese “puppet" troops and units purporting to be soldiers of the Chinese Communist 3th Route Army. According to The Associated Press, trains have been fired upon and derail- ed and looted, bridges have been blown up and the main line between Tientsin and Shanghai is badly disrupted. 4 4- lt is shocking to reflect that the world faces more hunger during its first t\velve months of peace than during the last year-long period Of war; yet this is the finding of world-wide survey of the food situation just completed by the U. S. office of foreign agri- cultural relations. The agency, which is part of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, esti- mates that more than 35,000,000 tons of tood must be moved into areas where there are shortages, if acute hunger is to be prevented. n- 1- u 111 Mr. McLure's activities On behalf of this Province have roused the other Klriritime mem- bers to realize a sense of their responsibilities to their constituents. Too long we have been the Cinderellas of Canada, and it is encourag- ing to find that representatives of all three par- ties are now determined to make their pres- ence felt and obtain a measure of justice and fair play in the administration of govern- ment affairs. Mr. McLure has been asked to speak over radio at 9 P. .\’l. tonight v u n- n- Ill 11K D Disappointment is felt in Quebec that Britain and France have not favoured the substitution of Quebec City for Geneva 1s headquarters for the organization to succeed the League of Nations. Also it is felt to be a little unneighbourly on the part of the U. S. A. to push the claims of San Francisco on the score of more enjoyable weather. Officials could easily accommodate themselves to the healthy, invigorating climate of Canada. which would be all to the good. k >4- »: s Major john Andrew (or Andre) British soldier, was hanged this date I780 for the part he played in attempting to capture West Point; he was the popular adjutant and A. D. C. of General Sir Henry Clinton, and had entered into a secret arrangement with American Gen- eral Arnold for the surrender of West Point, but in crossing the lines with the papers of be- trayal he was seized by farmers and handed over to the American command, which ordered the execution of Arnold by hanging; Arnold however, by the blunder of another American officer, escaped on the Vulture, and the Court Martial ordered that Andrew should take his place on the date fixed unless the culprit was handed over. This could not be done, and Andrew suffered in his stead with heroic firm- ness. The whole British Army went into mourning, and after the close of the war his body was resurrected and conveyed to \Vcst- minster Abbey for internment. Even in the U. S. A. where the name of Arnold is a synonym for treason, the sad fate of Andrew, excited, and still excites universal commiseration. ' I 101 it 1k "Emergency Shelter" regulations, applied I the whole country, are a complete admission that the Government does not know what to do about housing, says The Letter-Romero. As with the prohibition o1 purchasers taking over occupancy, this does not provide any more lions- ing accommodation, unless the Government is going to force householders to take strangers into their homes. The Government refuses to face facts. There is a shortage of housing. The cost of housing is so high that citizens are hesitant about building for investment, or for their own use. The Government is wasting materials and labour on Veteran's Land Act schemes, which are badly planned and located. The low-cost housing plan has been a failure. The Dominion, Provinces and municipalities are planning to start public works, which would make the situation worse. There is a shortage of labour for lumbering, digging and all heavy work, and a surplus of labour seeking well pziid light employment. If the Government docs not think that the present level of house prices is correct, then it has to deal with building labour wages. If it thinks that the present level of house prices is correct, then ‘it has to remove rental controls, More power for the Govern- ment is not the answer. It is the usual refuge for an incompetent Administration to take more power, to do more things, without excr- i?‘ the last six weeks there have been pitched T; b 2,111: WCI-IARIDFFPIYPOWN emigrant Notes By The Way power on earth-not, even “the GovernmEnW-"a do anything to ensure-munch less guamntee-Anil employment-Owen Sound Sun- mes. A merchant up the line no naked what the prospects were for wlld berries this year. He looked mourn- ful_ "Not so good," he replied, “and I am not taking any orders. One o! my best raspberry pickers BOt a family allowance cheque for 853 last month, and she tells me “IE3 she and her family are through picking berries for all time." Who shall blame her? The girls 1n her large family would ruln their s11k stockings picking berries. To heck with the berrles-Dauphln Herald. The real remedy for the shortage of houses 1s to create moire of them. not by the dozen but by the hundreds. This country has the labor-if only the armed forces will release lt-the materials and the skill to build houses 1n very liirge numbers as 1t bullt ships. alr- cmft, motor vehicles and many other articles 1n volume during the war period. provided there ls sim- ilar direction and era-ordination given to the effort; and the hous- ing shortage will not be materially relieved untll such construction 1s undertaken and complete d.- Brockville Recorder and Times. The appointment, of Joseph West- wood. M. P. for Stirling and Falklrk as Secretary of State for Scotland. has been generally elcomed. Mr. estwood has been Under-Secre- tary and is therefore famlllar wlt‘: most of the work. He ls sald to have no enemies on either slde of the House. "Joe" lives in a modest way in Kirkcnldy-untll recently he was the tenant, of a Council House iit a rental o1‘ £25 which he thought too high, says British Weekly. It is known that he has had several jobs in his time, including that of n miner. What does not seem to be so generally known is that he was once an officer of the Salvation Army. He ls a little mam-only five feet,—:uid he ls modest. and quiet. Lltvlnoff, visliilng u» White House. was served some dellclovs “Washington Cake." It was of white filling and whlte tclrig. Re- membering 1t on a. train later, ne asked a negro dlntrig-car waiter for Washington cake, and the iv/ er brought some delicious chocolate cake with chocolate lclng. “Thls ls 17. funny country.” Lltvlnoff said to the waiter, "The lost Washtriv- ton cake I had was all white. ‘Th 5 1s all dark." "Well," replied the waiter, "In thls country we had two Washlngtons-George and Booker T." —Earl Wilson 1n Phil- adelphia Record. Tipping was once the aristocrat’: way of showing his lordly pleas- ure wlth his humble servant. Now MIBYS it's a big b ess runntng into the mllllons, Robert. Froman wrlites 1n Pageant. Walters and waitresses, for Instance, share a $200,000,000 national tlp each year. depend on tips for the largest art of their income. In New York, t e1r average sala 1| $15-$18 is week. Tips boost, t ls to $35-$55. N18 club waiters, whose -customers are 1n a freespencllng mood, often tjte 1n as much as $70 a week 1n tips. Doormen at; hotels, night clubs and apartment houses also come 1n for a share of the millions Americans spend on tips each year, and so do bartenders 1n the lgher priced bars. A bartender at the Stork Club 1n New York tells of the cus- tomer who pald a $10 check with a $100 bill and told 111m to keep the change. ~- Followinl the revolt of Q gen- eration ago against the tiudltlonal classical curriculum, the pendulum swung far ln the direction of "practical" specialization. ‘Ihe movement Biilned tmpetus from World Win- I and will receive an- other push from the current eon- flict. For war t premium on lmmedlac an direct. appllcatlan of know edge. Happily for the re- storatlon of balance, n movement toward “liberal” education was un- der way before the peremptory de- mands of war took over. Not edu- cators alone, but, likewise leaders 1n the professions, came to see th t those merely tnalned technical‘! proved both inadequate 1n their role as citizens and limited 1n thelr own professional progress. “wisdom of the agar-the common heritage o! the experience, the thinking and the creative art of mariklnd-seems essentlal for its cltlzens 1f democracy 1s to pre- serve lts vltality, -Prov1dcnce Journal. Nowthutbewarhovenlthln- terestlng to look back through the news reports and delpatdiee and note the varled and remarkable things our troo ii did. I have noted the followln : ey battered, bloat- ed, blazed. s‘ carved, charged, churned. crash , crunched dash- ed drove, forged, galloped, gangs, hurled, hurdled, hurtled, jab , rimmed. knlfed, laced, tamed, ashed, lunged. mauled, plowed, plunged. pounded, irred, probed, punched, nlumme d, prodded i-umnna. rolled, slashed, smashed ripped, ramaged, roared, rammed, rollegi, Sllflk-lelilibipeamfllléd, spur ,siirge ,sna ,s .lp061'- ed. stabbed. stormed. streaked, sprinted. slammed, sheared, swept, starving Dutch to a normal diet was solved by the so-called "F" treatment devised by a team cising its existing powers. We get nowhere in that way. swooped, sliced. slugged. shot, toppled, tore, thundered. whfpped. was expected on all hands, and 1t A some minimum contact, with the “m, IEEKB I. l. I. CORRESPONDENT Shy-Probably this wfll be one of the most unusual letters that you have received, but my business with you 1s to ask 1f you could 11nd a young girl or boy, about my own age, who would like to wrlte to an Australian girl. I am almost seventeen and have been worklns at a Sydney office for nearly e. year. For some yerirs now I have been fascinated by tales and books I have read about your Dresume that 1t must. be a. really lovely place. Out, of all the laces I oould try to obtain e, en- rtend I gave chosen Prlnce ward Isl- an . I am just an everyday Australlan girl. fond of the usual things that all girls my age are fond of, and would be so happy i1 you could manage to obtain a pen-friend for me and 1f so I will certainly keep up the correspondence. The problem that confronted me when I set to work was w get tlils letter into the right hands. so respondent for me I am, Slr, etc, JUDITH BLAKE. 5 Homedale Aves North Strathfield, ustralla. FARMING CONDITIONS Stu-Your correspondent, Fred- erick G. Borgerhoff (Cornwall, P. E I ) writes n most interesting let- ter 1n the Guardian of Sept. 8, and. while his thought seems to veer definitely to the rural side of the life scale, it cannot be galnsald that the accent was decidedly on “the good life." I am one who believes that. rursl and urban Canadians are inter- dependable and t at, 1n the long run. their econo 1c lnterests are identical. Nevertheless I also feel that, as so often emphasized by the present leader 0,1’ the Opposition, Hon. John Bracken. it, 1s import- ant that our prlma producers win "thelr fair share o the nation's income", to which they make so early and indispensable a contrl- bution? If I may encroach on your valued space with the following references, 1t would be appreciated, They ex- press what is 1n this reader's mind exapttily, and 1n better form than I oou ' (ll-"I want emphatically to deny the belief which has become for too common. that 1t ls right, for the primary producer to receive l1 lower reward for h1s work and en- terprlse than those engaged 1n sec- ondary or other industries. The prl- mary producer ls, after 0.11, the base of the Pyramid qt lffe--sweep him away and civilization would collapse)‘. . . (Rt. Hon. R. Hudson, Minister of Agriculture 1n the Churchill administration.) (2)—"At a. C.W.A.C. poll taken 1n Saskatoon to determine how many young women wanted to go back to the land after the war, only 5 per cent siild they would like to do so. Can you blame them? After farmlng fo: 42 years 1n Westr srn Canada, I have seen this 001:1- fng for a long time. Who 1s to blame? It 1s easy to blame the Gov- ernment; but the farmer blmsefl‘ 1s most to blame. I wonder 1f 10 per cent of our farmers are satisfied with their own conditions. The 0- ther 90 per cent say ‘I don't. want my 50115 and daughters to st/ay on the farmfl" (J. R. Hannafard, Western Farm Leader, Calgary). I am. Blr, etc. DOWN 0N THE FARM TIDIE ON IIIS HANDS DA Dldlmd - (Router!) - I01 M it 1a time be II ca . A thief who bu bmken into several railway stations 1n Wlltshlre and Somerset has 1n each case taken away the brass drum clock supplied for use tn station- maaterl’ offices. T1115. of very four Madonna work on the Gland. It 1s noteworthy that 1t was only American troops that did mess 1n; and picturesque thlngs. Brltfsh and Russtan troops did very few of them: Germans and Japa- nees practically none. Those visrloua foreigners seem to have done noth- ing more interesting than just to advance or 1,0 attack. It's a wonder that our enemies lasted more than a week-Adrlan tMlm.) Telegram. *nooos*t _ KIDNEY s ‘t. ‘ *1!» u.“ M V\( H’ ‘a i. "i . M. i,“- IIHI \| H, lip "I II I no" ._. _ T\ A i" S. Al’ members of Parlfame t 1n tn ' built House of Commgiis. will iiifv‘; loudape but still there wlll be not enough 22211:“! so that all 840 can sit down Lhgd 01d m emllta on; the tboflllht. Yvhoffihmlld be glut. tlfinmajorlty, led by Winston Island, and from these I ca‘: only agoousc ' House sknllar to the ol Adrian 1n chug,‘ recalled 1n a recent speech t tMlr. Churchill had sold: "We inn-ks our but afterwards they make us. Thev re- I promptly rang the Canadian g in m b] n be . ‘Prado Commissioner's Offlce 1n ‘i? ‘fill.’ rgqpiggrugxeizdc Eiinsi. CONSULT Sydney and they gave me the mime flout some gmlfi for members a J A BROWN |)_|1 o our paper. . - ' ' ' Ifbplng you will be able to flnd a“ m8 mo __- Qflhnpedig an interesting young Island cor- 5,130 13 golngh t Rebuilding a. 10 DOWnlng Stret. dltlona! Whitehall residence 0f Prime Ministers. The layout 1s be- ing ohan ed so that. the First. Min- isters w11 We WI! and 1i, 1s hoped to have 1t comble 1n time for occupation by Mlrilster and Mr!- Parltiiment resumes Oct. 9 found 1n Canada. B!” "/11" OPTOMETRIST cmlflem! ‘mmm’ Conner K0 g a d queen Uta. aonchuf°sgsj riiimeniiiiia sh, Crle e . At on E l b A l h Simpson, leading drug. hardware vufsage almm cooperative stores. Hr W14" 9"?“ ___, __ _ Product. Toronto 4. ___“ -.-.__- The Connectlng Llnk Between Nova Sootln and Prince Edward Island 1945 NOVA SCOTIA - PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND FERRY SERVICE FULIFLJUU ‘LFlfl fl.l‘lJ'l_l"I_l'1J'Ll'lI -l|¢ doesn't oven look at us!” Asiatic Rice-Bowl u . ocilapan was to furnish consumer goods 1n return for raw materials. Tokyo took the raw mnterlals. but image plundered the ooun , econ- omically wtth their usual tboroluizti- nass. It was not until lest March that hhp Japanese formally took over the administration. and by then the colony was 1n’ bad shape. There was no stilpptnz. and the slnirle l-meter rail line that runs the lenklh o! the country was kept out of com- mission by American planes. People star-Led 1n one of Aslas blizriest ripe w . (i5: Puss Staff Writer; nounon - United Kingdom rs so they can be heard WM mbgme" b0 sha n l. nnan inb ttered Commons chamber some members changes. then Prime out for Mlnlster reconstructed d one. Gflbefl; Scott. the arcbttieot B BIRD MORE NUMEROUS Birds are much more numerous ldlngs and worse: l Professional Bani; i945 "___ l it‘. ll l l i’? ___ mil/guy]; IJJAIII ILWIITI I Th Ot-lrlo Gverlllnltltl AlodMflhQ sstdfmayn reduce fir 40 miles ‘per ‘my; N". ° I ma: the lfiicuiipum rpm llfliatllfl _ | . ov e or motor . ' It wopuild be a. minim 4:3. iniii ‘ w“ . i" m“, chum-nil Accountant ears and tires betni whet they are, , m ma“ iréi? would save tivasmattava Journal. themoelvee 1n m; pgnuu‘ £1‘, l“ Richmond 8L n. to wiowfllbellnt- my m“ "1""""°"""1' wlth ‘glineatbni-ay and the Buck ‘T s-EEBUBSTED i nedomgy w w“ ma‘: chirhfl-“UII ' Rogers diam tor wfll now beqtn. gram; 9mm“ o1 . qua.‘ ‘h, ‘u! The Bel-MM- mnt um rend wmuii mum-y m» m. ‘sight d nnrthma u lmwlllble now um. Alflfll, have n flo Stamp ' m o! Td- m R0. Bo: q “m” m"?! h" - Club which 1s sllnlne new msm- thh nun big up i; m. t“; Wl" 1111111511! W111 Wlflllte 1-0 the hers n11 the time u more patents that there are 0t Baird: ' moon i! even the rumor of another are admitted from the moan mic forces 1n the wiimy u» the m Fffldflflfi A h world war 1a bean-Lies Angeles 1mi- East, stamp gall l! P10" 8°” u‘ “n u" V3!- b nhlwlné ' I’ Tlmel- vtnz an excellent form of occupat- shortens hold than Milli gm ——-- tonal therapy for these boy; most: liq-e l; “m; n1 m. ; h Hamill-Twig Vi" llllllll lull of whom must spend long. weary e p t; e ere e post-wu- t 1n bed, h most of us will have to workqfmall mo“ h. h‘ t c, ‘m. llnlnat $91.1’. Tnutti’: °! 115 11-" w ell. llllkests the I srould be very grateful to you last century ‘Ibo five klnidoms of Sill?".l.'ét.i"°‘llii“".i..ll“.fiitfififi “’°““"i“"l.l““"°°“ Wt} “"°“‘“ ' "f" - -~ ~-~ i - ' v - never expected to em 1f they dldiilt 3101i: Zfnulo Zeiiiipeais ‘Quin gigging h2g1 cochfle-tfoijm‘ h“ Waylon“? i i i" ~ work. and sometimes they worked u possible to the nut, Lender Y. . After Franco fell 1n 1M0 the Jap- IvICLCOd 0 Ben ’ l izliigiind m ‘unmy’ Comma” cifiii Jillian b m‘ fin i H” thls ‘ ‘m h“ b f hi: w I. nuns! e ' p , 0 I195 UPI, 0i, e . i I may say that most of these and strategic materials. ‘gaolked 1n. t o‘ i nc nlladbolla down u» pun. u w; boys are Im rial Army wlth a Vlc time a ted new -'- ‘- "WTI-BY- l c. - n an cantmou ooda o inkii ___ _ x - l,- "-1 u-lltv 113d at 314cc; when suit ‘pr n; o R AF and 0mm ?W » 9 fiqBVXIUrIDOGrUOI-llceglgtxia trhiid w realat '“""'°" ""1 ‘two-mi- t ose whom we seek u customers- I am. 811', m. hlléhll" NOICDOOR; Jamueae demands and 11v 1n- u" and 1f those customers have the B. TIIUIITON P vnslon. But after bloody losses and 1“ money w gar for them-flute W111 iso Military Hospital ; after Ime obvfous no help , be no trou le about unemployment flgyggwgngbh 31' JAM“ “$00K , was arriving. he agreed to Japanese 1n Canada. If we cannot, then no mngvnni, gontn “m; Charles R. McQunid u A. “filiitsdififw- 1.1m! Building, Chlrlglflown Phone S8! oo . l . ll. It. lloano 8i Go. g Chartered Account: . N Grlllol! Street, , . ff»,lll§¢t- .__-au _.._m._._.___- forward at tra- iii~niiilPfllllST bave a nrlvate CHARLOTIETOWN l'.l.l flat on of the b1!" bulldlnl! ted Prime Attlee when ‘iiiiisxiuiisn GLASSES FITTED ' "l. S. Taylor LA-RGE VARIETY Nearly 60 kinds of food fish are DERPD M. V. PRINCE NOVA WOOD ISLANDS. P.E.l. OAIIDOU. N. B. LUNCIIES SERVED (8 Mlle: from Pinion) SAILING SCHEDULE (DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY) ALL SAILINGS STANDARD TIME Leave Wood Inland: Delve Caribou l0 an. Noon 8 mm. I nan. i pan. I pan. NOBTIIUMBEIILANI) FEBRIEB LIMITED OHAB-LOTTETOWN. FRINGE EDWARD ISLAND U1IU'U'IJ'L"I.FU'D'U'U'IJUULI'U'IJ'I.I IRISH MOSS BUYING DAILY AT NEWFRAGE l DRIED BLACK MOSS '~ Eastern Packing Co. LEO ANDERSON, Agent gulate the course four lives. Tb the mammals 1n the P161110 19' . lvyhole tarCIIB-ffigffi gr Barton flaps: iiiiifis. °‘“"'°"’°"" as amen y - u ons epen n , the fact. that. the Home of Colon- ---—- '— rho” M“ so‘ M7 ‘ momfaanoblonizaudnotasemf- I ’, 17.51 -__¢_L clmular structure." ‘Litn glttsh Homage. asdtn c%an- I "-" __""-— a a, overnmen an no sltlcn members face each other " ‘___? Public slenngrhphe, lull birds Ind olmug, coneeponilenoe, g i bookkeepmil‘ “d mas nun: GIDDEN Telephone 1890-]. P. O. Bu: 462. when!» Aim N0. s. -_-_--__.________ nvvwwm-vsmvumuvs-inu ‘i MUN!" and Company Chartered Accountants II. F. ABGIIIBALD Elltern Trust Building C‘ lnltetowl I‘IW.M H. F. McPhee B.A. K.C. 1 NOTARY m. annnisnzn. soucrron I110! lnlldtnir Charlottetown 1 z- BELL 6t MATHIESON Cla-rlotu PALMER 8 HASLAlyf A. l. IASLAM, D. , BADBISTIB. DTCTIL‘ In r u 1 cf..i.:’.:t.3'.?"ii Sh?“ v -ro 911m r. o. m u Richard B. Johnston Attorney Al In: ', Conlnllsloner for Deeds. $10.. for Prim?! ldwlril Island r ‘DMD’ E0 oeulfiiuliskiiiif ‘ailnhii-"iiisu Ilolhll. Ital. Are You Troubled WITH summon l issons user? A l! l9. II have one of the but Ielnedleg offer, namely BACK-RITE TABLETS Artiglorliukuhmliub T". N s if” U "Muciihrm 10:1! Inuit mm of Rheumatism which ordinary trenlmenll all‘. to reach. Pelee 50o W’ iuuihnn nrsronrn A llilllflkly [dilated 01"‘ llllflll which HIM‘- I11! ma?" v‘ "- " ‘Those Guardian Want Ads must be most interesting £33.11? hi: iii? i.'."f'l . and laugh -E..-t.""'""""""’"'"' PIIOI MOUNTI- TIIE 2 MACS Ill Grad Guano llml In! onlln Given HWY‘ M13110!-