. E GUARDIAN cry wud-(M1 morning at 1)! Prince ltnut. F.E.I. by the Tbomoon Company Lld.. on King 51. w.. Tomato. m.......-..i Office. as vulva-icy ""”"' Win. "Coven Prince Edward Island Lila to nor Edllnr. Frank Waller General Mann . In A. lnrnu Member Can: an Dally Nnwqupor . - Association Member of Lb: Canadian Press Menwrr Audll Bureau of Circulation! branch nlllrea at summerniur. Montague and Alberlul. Aulhnnud II Second Clan Mall by tho Put Ollie! Department. Ottawa. By (ilrrlH' Charlullrlown. summeralde rum put up anlll. Eluwhere In P. F. I. 89.00. Other Province! and r. s. moo per Innum T” In ”The strongest vmcmory la than the weakest lak." 'sAr1lRnXi'TA1.Ic..tii.'I-9:5 Old Home Week All roads lead to Charlottetown next week. to Old Home Week fes- tivities and the Provincial Exhibi- tion. There is every indication that this year will set an all-time record, both in attendance and in the entries irrvarious livestock classes and rac- ing events. Over 800 head of cattle are entered, with two herds from New Brunswick and one from Nova Scotia. New Brunswick is also com- peting in the sheep classification. Some -if) steers are entered in the Fat Stock Show which is now a feature of the big fair. Entries in show horses are reportedly up 20 per cent over last year. and there are approxi- mately 2120 single entries in the har- ness racing events. Women's Insti- tute entries exceed those of last year. with new facilities being pro- vided in the home cooking section. All vaudeville will be held this year in the Coliseum. except high wire act. which will be in front of the main grandstand. The Midway will be bigger and livelier than ever. and nothing will be lacking to make the Exhibition as colourful and en.i0.V'ribl'” as possible. Citizens and visitors alike have been looking fonvard to this big avpnl of the season, providing as it does a unique opportunity of meet- ing old friends and making new sc- quaintances. Racing fans have an exceptionally exciting week in pros- pect. and our farmers will find the livestock competition of tremendous educational value and interest. There is not a class or section of the com- munity which is not directly con- cerned with our Provincial Fair. There is nothing like it in Eastern Canada and many visitors tell us it is unsurpassed by any exhibition on the continent. Be that as it may. we know tnat It is drawing an increas- ing number of enthusiastic partici- pants and spectators every year. and that the management is finding it j more and more difficult to cope with the problem of accommodation It has done an excellent job in this re- spect. and the whole program shows evidence. of expert planning and di- rection. Aid For Repairs There are many Americans-and non-Americans. too. for that matter -who feel that by dropping atomic bombs on the Japanese cities Hiro- shima and Nagasaki ten years ago the l'nitcri States made a serious error in diplomacy as well as in mili- tary strategy. It is clear that the action was not needed to force Japan Into surrender; and It is equally clear that it dealt a heavy blow to allied, a n d especially American. prestige among the peoples of the Far East. But, whatever the right or wrong of it. it must be acknowl- edged that in the ten year period since the war, the United States has gone a long way towards repairing and reconstructing the areas damag- ed or dcsfrovci by its bombs, atomic or conventional. A recent report by the Depart- ment of the Army reveals that in Japan. the Ryukyu Islands. and Ko- rea, the United States has spent more than Si4';. billion in various repair projects. while in Vietnam prior to I the 1954 partition. the amount spent was approximately 51'-;- billion. The - fehabilitalion of Japan. including the two cities destroyed by the first ltomlc bombs. cost the Americans more than 32 billion. In addition to all this. economic assistance to the . area amounted to over 53 billion of a Government funds, while individuals 'cont.rlbuted another million for var- ious purposes not covered by legisla- tion. lndlcatlng a smaller outlay of money but no less important work 4 In the way of restoration is the re- search work being done by Ameri- 'i can scientists in collaboration with Qtdr colleagues In the I Hlbilm-ttrlneffecuofatomlc 4”. .e', crests of the United states: but that fact does not lessen the munit- lcence of the aid programs nor de- tract greatl; 'IIour their -.-xccllencc. Oil Production The demand for oil products is increasing yearly; so, fortunately, is the supply. This is revealed in a report just made public by an Uni- ted Nations agency. It says that, not counting the Soviet Union and its satellites, which do not furnish complete statistics at regular inter- vals. world output of crude oil and natural gas liquids in the six months ended June ill) approximately l-ll; million barrels a day. This was a 9"-r increase over the first half of I934. Of this total, a ii .-i more than one-half was produced in the United States. )1 gain of 73'. over the same p;2i'i(i(l last year. . The next area in amount of pro- duction is the Middle East. which ac- counts for about 3 million barrels a IVHS day. a considerable increase over last year's figures; this it as made possible by the return of Iran to world trade. The leading single pro- duction ceutre in the Middle East is Kuwait, with about I million bar- rels a day; Iraq is next, with Ttlll,(ltlll. In South America. Vene'I.uela is the top-notch producer. averaging over 2 million barrels daily. Canadian pro- duction which. the report says. "is subject to seasonal changes and a .lack of adequate pipeline facilities." turned about 3.'l().t)ilfi barrels every day in the six months under review: this was a gain of nearly .'ll)'. over the previous year. Gains were made also in Western Europe, Mexico. and the Far East. While the figures for lhe Soviet Union and other countries behind the Iron Curtain are by no means ac- curate, it is believed that there has been some increase in production. probably about 11: million barrels a day as compared with I l 4 million In the first six months of I934. It amounts to about one-tenth of free world output. It must, however. be sufficient for Russia's ngeds. as that. qountry exports oil products in fair- ly large volume. Melodious Insect Now approaches the time of the cicada, that cheerful. gay insect of late summer. often irreverently re- ferred to as the ”liot-bug”. presum- ably because it loies to chirp and trill in the mid-day heat. It stays but a short time. just long enough to bid unhurried farewell to the depart- ing daisies and to extend waiIm wel- come to the goldenrods of autumn. But while it is around, It' manages to make itself heard over all the sounds and melodies of the fields and meadows. Ilow. no one but Apollo-who, according to legend. called the first cicada into life to keep the muses joyful company- knows, and perhaps he has forgot- ten. for it was a long time ago. As for the scientists. it is much easier for them to reveal the secrets of the atom than to understand just what it is that directs the complex orches- tras of the insect world. They talk of membranes. vibrations. and the like. but these are only the instru- ments through which the music flows; the art, the skill. the deep calling unto deep-these are hidden from the wise, yes. and perhaps from the prudent. too. Maybe it is just as well. In a day when all the un- important things are being measur- ed, weighed, and appraised for their practical value to the world. it is good to know that there are a few really important. things that can be neither classified nor standardized. EDITORIAI. NOTES Florence Nightingale died this date, 1910. Tear down your barns and build smaller. is perhaps an extreme ver- sion of the advice now being giveh to farmers. One of the many factors which are making the old high barns less of a feature of the landscape is the practice of baling hay in the field. It requires stronger flooring and less height. I I D A woman candidate for the gov- ernorshlp of Missls'sippi has come up with an ingenious plan for continu- ing racial segregation in public schools despite the Supreme Court ruling declaring it unconstitutional. She would abolish all state laws con- cerning the schools, thus taking the but outside the jurisdiction of the faint! mum which, she argues. on laws, not aoclal cus- .,,-I I; -.1 lio msrccrt obs P. E. l.'s Mary MacLennan ' Gordon Dewar in (.'UNXAl.'Gl'l'l' RANGI-ZS. Aug. . - The lillh-grade pupils of Weslgale Public School in Prince Edward Island probably don"! sass teacher. ., Teacher jiast happens to be, one of Canada's sharpest rifle shols. (In a shoot-nfl at noon today. Miss laurel from 600 yards to win the Rankers' Match. She tied for first place yesterday with a score of 99 out of 100. with Major G. )2. Kecler of Piclon. Ont. Judging by her performance In today's Bankers' Match shoot-off at the 73rd annual DCRA prize shootnff. Mary MacI.ennan could knock the hind legs off a horsefly at a quarter-mile. Undoubtedly she could do the same for an upstart I2-year-old in a back seat of her classroom. It doesn't seem likely she would resort to such rough and ready laclics in her teaching duties. however. A: well as being sharp of eye and steady of limb, the .12- year-old sharp-shooter is possessed ' of a keen sense of humor and a charmingly mild manner. Talking with her. It is difficult to picture her with a powerful service rifle firmly locked against her shoulder. She has. however. what seems to her a perfectly natural expla- nation for her hobby. I IN THE FAMILY l legislators "I come from a shooting family”. she said and just let it go at that. Her father. until his death. was considered one of the best riflemen in the country. Her brother, George 50. is shooting in the present DCRA matches and has been for 30 years. He was on the i928 Canadian Blsley team. Two other brothers. Vernon and Harold, while they do not use rifles much. handle shotguns with deadly accuracy. "It seems to me I grew up with a ltun in my hands". Mary said. "I did a few ycars' small-horc target shooting before I started Machcnnan fired a perfect I ma Ottawa Journal coming to lhe l)('IiA Inalchcs here That was in 1933 and I llaielll l missed one yet." l Which just means lliat the modest. lady has been of champi- onship CI-lllbl'8 in the rifle game since she was 15 years old. ller claim to fame as a marks- man Inr is that mackswomanll, was firmly established in lliil I, when she became the first and only to date. woman member of the Bisley team. in order to shoot the Eislcy. she was commissioned in the army at that time and still holds the rank of lieutenant inpthc supplementary reserve. attached to the RCAMC - at Charlottetown. Thus ranked as one of the top lfl shooters in Canada. she jour- . I l neyed to England with the team. but the results did not please her. "Conditions there were so much different from here". she remarked I "and besides. this shooting game , is mostly luck, Anything can happen in a match and iiIr(-ally has its tips and downs " with a modest but happy smile. she insisted that it was just luck that she topped more than 600: crack shots to tie for first in the Bankers' Match yesterday with a score of 99 out of a possible 100. "I will admit I'm very pleased about it, though". she said. ”ll's the first time I've ever come this close to winning a match." The first-place spot she shared with Major 6. E. Keelcr. RCSA fAAt. Piclon. Onl.. was decided j this morning when Miss lilacLeunan l turned in a perfect score. "I don't know ifI can win this. l shc but we'll sure be trying", confided last evening The ”wc" was pu1.7.ling until she explained she was referring to the rifle she held crooked in her arm. ”She's a lovely old thing". said Mary. gazing fondly at the rugged looking .303 "I don't know how l I'd have made it this far without I 3 her." I Seems ll girl's best friend is her l rifle. . Dr. Rhee In Eruption Tnrnnln Globe and Mail when President Syngman Rhee l commentators in the United States of South Korea addressed the United States Congress a year ago, he chilled the spines by proposing that an army of 1.500.000 South Koreans V and 600,000 Chinese. with American j aid. resume the war against the Communist North, Not one Ameri- can fool soldier would be needed. said l)r. Rhee. With the backing of the United States navy and air force. be declared. his own troops plus Chiang Kai-shells on Formosa arms: could drive the Communists over the Ya.lu River and unity Korea. Congress received this alarming proposal In stony silence. Mem- bers sat on their hands when Dr. Rhee went on to explain that, of course his projected In v a I I in would touch off a World War. He guaranteed the destruction of the Peking regime by his excluslvel, Asian armies. The likely Inter- vention of Russia. he declared. would be ”excellent for the West because it would provide an excuu for wlplnil out Soviet centres of ya ductloa. President Eisenhower walled, no doubt from politeness. until the bellicoce Korean leader was back home and then. language. lie turned down flat tho project of a pruventlve war In tho Far East. He has not changed Illl mind. On the contrary. he to probably more anxious than ever at Geneva u a man of peace. nuts changed either. He in never repealed his Washington lavlmlou to disaster: but he has often mad: of the I in measured ' find him objectionable. Dr. Rhee's latest manoeuvre is a demand that the neutral Super- visory Commission in Korea. a body appointed by the United Nations to oversee enforcement of the armistice. quit the country. Switzerland. Sweden. Poland and Czechoslovakia are the four mem I I hers. Dr. Rhee says the two Red - J delegations are engaged in spying. It is easy to believe that they l are far from impartial. It is im- possible to believe that current mob demonstrations against them are spontaneous. obviously. as officials of the Brlllah Foreign Office have suggest- ed. Dr. Rhee la whipping up ill-will Iagainst the UN commissioners. , denouncing the -r ' lice itself or I in the hope of lnvelgllng the United I States into fresh commitments in Korea. The Foreign Office has protested Jlrongly against Dr. RlIec'a action. Washington might to Join In the objection. The . present Korean compromise may I not plan: Dr. lime (la fact it please: nobody) but this hot- huded old man cannot be per- mitted to disturb It at the Hair of I World War. ENGLISH NOVILIST Sussex rural life is the back- ' ground of moat of the novels bv bbolla Kaye-smith. English auth- M. , noun Amman mu LONDON taoumn-air r'(-incl; Conceivable Consequences Ir; The Same Old Story till-allh League of Canadal The ducslion of fluoi'i(Iallun of ualcr has become an active issue all over Canada. All new discoveries hay? aroused fears in the minds of the iimnrous amt the uneducated. It is only a few years since the news- papers of (lulario were hcsciged by the timid souls who feared the dangers of par-tcurilcrl milk. The rirlicuinus crusade against chlorin- ation in Vancouver's water supply ..in the face of all scientific opin- ion was unly a brief decade ago. And who can forget the frantic lei- ters agtiinst toxoid to prevent diphtheria. In earlier days there were anti- vaccinnliou riots--but in spite of all. truth prevails in the long run. Vaccination conquered smallpox. chlorination couruicrcd lvnlmid. Toxnid against diphtheria has re- duced lhal disease almost lo the vanishing point. And pasteuriza- tion of milk has saved the lives of , 2 rain. so waa the appearance of ' the brightness round about. This thousands of children. In the current campaign waged by the fearful and the ill-balanced hislor) is repeating itself. Ignor- ance. sclfisluiess and fanaticism cannot in the long run prevail. l Medically Speaking By llernu N. Buadcul. M. I. SKIN IASII MAY RESULT AFTER DIP IN THE LAKE Swimmer”: itch it a su hazard found in many small. sheltered lakes; especially, the lakes found in the Midwest. It's caused by the microscopic larvae of the schistosome worm. a colorless, swimming organism which is a little less than milli- meter in length. These parasites penetrate your skin while you are swimming or wading in contaminated stag- nant lake water. You'll seldom find them on wave-swept beaches. After burrowing into your skin, the parasites die. They cannot enter your blood stream. but they. can give you a rather trying time. Within a few minutes after Ieaving the water, you'll feel a prickllng sensation. A rash will develop on your skin and it will begin to itch. In an hour or so. both the rash and itching will disappear. They'll return in about 10 or 12 hours. however. and this time they'll stick with you for about a week. The disease is not communi- cable and eventually it will cure itself. SIMPLE PRECAUTIONS A couple of simple precautions. however. can save you from a week of scratching and itching. As soon as you leave the water wash thoroughly and dry your- self with a towel. Be sure to rub briskly. In most cases. this is enough to prevent itch. But rubbing your body with alcohol is an additional precau- tion. and might be advisable, if you have reason to suspect the water is infected Once the itch starts there's not much you can do hilt apply a soothing lotion There is no other treatment. The worm which causes swim- mer's itch in the United States is a parasite of snails. waterfowl and possibly muskrals, but it is not a parasite of man. You can eliminate these para- sites from small ponds by treat- ing the water with copper sulfate or copper carbonate to destroy the infected snails. QUESTION AND ANSWER W. F. K: Are myocardial in- farction and coronary thrombosis similar ailments? Answer: Myocardial Infarction means death of some of the heart muscle tissue. This occurs fre- quently in cases of coronary thrombosis in which the blood supply to the coronary arteries is cut off. Thus. a coronary throm- hosis often produces a myocardial I infarction. The Age Old-Story As the appearance of the how that Is In the cloud in the day of was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord. And when I saw it. I fell upon my face. and I heard a voice of one that spake. -Acadians Of New Iberia National Geographic loclety After 200 years the possibility of Acadians find the New Iberia ire: l bountiful with temperate and sub- annlher deportation confronts ' I-the people of Longfel- vanizeline." story of I wandering girl who suffered much for love. This lime many Acadian families will lie uprooted if ll proposed Navy air station is built in the Evangeline country around New Iberia. I.a. Generations of Acad- ians have prospered there while holding to traditions rooted in dis- lant France and Nova Scolia. The Louisiana Acadians descend from several thousand men and - women of French extraction ex- pellcd bv the Hritish from Nova Scofia during a mid-lllth century 1-mhrnilmcnl with France for pos- session of North America. Groups were randomly settled from Mass- achltsclls to Georgia. Some wand- ered to southern Louisiana and found ai.ain the atmosphere they were torn from--French people and French ways of life. WANTED TO BE LET ALONE As migrants finally settled in a hospitable and fertile land, they gravitated to what they knew best: farming. In the Wolfvllle and Grand Pre rnuntrysidcs of Nova they had tended orchards. grown wheat and peas, raised black- hnrned cattle and sheep, In Louis- iana they turned to small farming and cattle raising. They built meeting houses and strove to re- create their former life in as much seclusion as possible In the water- streaked back country. They II n u r l s h e d especially around quiel St. Martinvllle in the New Iberia area. There stands the Evangeline Oak. reputdely marking the landing place of the Acadlam and the meeting place of Emmellne Labiche and Louis Arrenaux. the Evangeline and Gabriel of I.ongfellow'n "Evange- line." , In their loved Iaml of deep shadows and live oak. the Acad- iana cling to their speech with the tenacity of the Pennsylvania Dutch. Many fifth-generation Am- ericans have little if any gz-up of English. Drlll sergeant: in World War ll were unbellevlng when Louisiana Acadlanl llld "Jo ac comprenda pan." Dialects stemming from France. Canada and Inululana are heard In home: and business places. all softened in southern accent. some terms are traceable to French villages of the late lsflru, with borrowing: from Spanish English and Indian. Voice lnumiou and hand gestures enliven the speech. Thrifty fannan. merchants, raiser: and traders. the TIIIIIVI VALUI Vcgetallldsshouldllebollulta I ofvalahhrlb &1utnuIlblntuo. Scotia I tropic plants. Economic depress- ions have largely bypassed the region of which Longfellow said: ”Beaulifui is the land. with its prairies and forests of fruit trees. "Under the feel a garden of flowers. and the blues! of heavens "They who dwell there have named it the Eden of Louisiana." 7;” 7702271 mwgg AUGUST NIGHT This August night In a rift cloud Antares reddens. The great one, the ancient torch, 2; lord among lost children. The earths orbit doublgd would not girdle his greatness, one of fire Globetl. out of grasp of the mind enormous; but to you 0 Night What? Not a spark." What flicker of a spark in the faint far glimmer Of a lost fire dying in the desert. dim coals of a sand-plt the Bedouins wandered from at dawn! -Robinson Jeffers. rm: aeonsoaa swm ST. CATHARINES. Ont. tCP)- Leon Bouchard. 25. who plan: to swim across Lake Ontario this weekend. will be sponsored by his employers - Niagara Structural Steel. Ltd.. it was announced Fri- day. A native of Five Fingers. N. 8.. he ll senior foreman at their plant here. Boucliard is scheduled to start the at-mile swim from Niagara-on-the-Lake to To- ronto about 7.45 p. m. ADT. today. ID;-kc Electric NOTES BY . Editorials. and. safely bulletins A on highway traffic usually stress the part motor vehicles play in accidents. This is understandable. for cars and trucks are chiefly lesponsible for mishaps on the : roads. But motor vehicles are not I the only ”culprl 3." The pedestrian or. to be mor walker was known in the horse and buggy days. but he did not come into full prominence until cars look to the road. -Times- Gazette. I . ..Don't. blow your luck. There ls nothing of any importance that you can say when you are angry which you cannot say just as well when you are not angry. So stead of bawling out the boss-or your staff. or your wife. or the children. or the girl behind the counter. or the bus driver -- get an axe and chop up some wood. And if you still think that a fit of temper is good for your heart. remember that lots of people have had strokes while they were in a rage and have died on the spot, locking extremely foolish. -Peter- borough Examiner. surprising is the fact that the British taxpayers contribute not a ' single penny directly to Lbe upkeep of the queen and "the royal fam- ily. It seems that in the early swimmerls : years of her reign Queen Victoria made an arrangement with the government of the day whereby her inherited royal properties ac- quired by her ancestors through hundreds of years were turned over to the treasury. with the stip- ulation that royal allowances and expenses were to be paid by the government from the revenues of these properties. As a result. the revenue from the former royal properties. now owned by the state. has through the intervening years not merely paid the cost of - the royal family but has yielded a substantial margin to the lreas- l ury. -Chalham News. ..It is a long time since we saw or heard the term ”Black Maria” but we saw it in an Ontario news- paper this week. The younger gen- eration may not know who or what ”Black Maria” is. Accord- ' ing to our recollection "Black. Maria" was a notorious drunken woman in the London of Victoria days, and as she was so often arrested the police in the station got into the habit of saying "Here comes Black Maria"' when they saw the vehicle coming. regard- less of whether the lady herself was in it or not. Thus the name came to be applied to the paddy- wagon: not to the inmate. -St. Thomas Times-Journal. ..A prison warden Iuggests that prisoners should be kept up to date on world news. No doubt this would check any desire to specific. the Jay- - ”" THE WAY I ..Addi-using the International A. I lronautlcal Federation's congrgu at Copenhagen. an American scien. list has remarked that space night planners should not entirely mi, out the possibility of speed, 0, many million miles per second space traffic engineers will pm. vide lanes for the slowpoke drivel- who likes tnlloaf along at merely '. the velocity of light. -The cum.-,, Citizen. .We must confess to an norm. l sinnal twinge of fear at the atti- l tude of some of the men in whus, I hands our destiny rests. We 4., I not pretend to know what is 1,, I President Eisenhowers mind. but I his record shows he is a reason- ) able man. Among his advisun I however. are far too many "1": I cup readers" who discard evidence and ommou sense. preferring in. stead to base decisions on prp. judice. rumor. or some queer in. ;ternal prompting. And far um many of them still believe the I Russians are weak while we gm strong, and that we can gain our point by blustering. -Tornnln p Star. The garment manufacturing seq. lion of the Canadian lcxtile in. dustry has some very naive econ. mic ideas relating to the llllltllun of Canadian tariffs. They are ask- ing Ottawa, for instance to llllpugp higher duties on Japanese llllllurlx, in order to ”provide fair and honest competition”. The pmp.,-.3; is for a tariff rate which would compel Japanese exporters to "11 in Canada at the level of our :1... mastic prices. regardless of actual import costs. There are at least 1W0 things wrong with that point of view. In the first place. it is not Canadian policy to create tariff barriers against a single nu. lion. our dumping laws are pm vided for that purpose. and lhev apply only when goods are offered here at prices below the 19.91, existing in the country of origin, The second II that "fair and honest competition" is not attained by forcing foreign competitors (0 raise their prices. Whatever the Industry may conceive its own po. sition to be, there is nothing cllller fair or honest in such propuuli; so far as the Canadian cnnsumpr is cloncerned. -Toronto Globe and SMOTHEIIS IN BLANKET! BELLEVILLE (CPI - A lml. Indian boysmothered in his blank- ets at his grandparents hnrnl Thursday when he rolled between his bed and the wall. police said. Gerald Lyle Tugwood was staying with his mother and her parents at Mohawk I n d I A n reservation while his father Gerard was at army manoeuviu at Camp Gage escape. -Edmonton Journal. 'yC"fl IIHO. HMO. 14 M0. on 0-- 154.19 529.59 756.56 M -l'.'.t.:ty sin 52: 540 AL... ..y-mm um "um...- fun 1 Parental: for in-bnlvoon on-o.mu on Ill proportion. It.-.1 oouuovvoolou-sq. may. we, Make Loans in OIIE TRIP- D Phone hrs! and give us . fgw gmpi, 'BCl!- Pinon approval. come in to sign and pick up the cash. Whether you monthly payment: and clean up hill: throuzh our Bill Consolidation Service, . phona . . . wnta . . . or come in lodny' : lo-cu in npmoo or am FINANCE CO. Mm lown. N. B. nt extra cash now or wish to ndure c u c Ill I-- '-Av vi- 151 GREAT GEORGE STREET CHA OTT ioeond .Plckanl annual-TL now" Floor Phone: 051! - Ask fol-the YES MA 0994 zvmlucs IV AFPOINYMENT ll" -PHONE POI EVENING MOUII luau soda to mllaatl of all unending IIIII ' hmnal Fluent: Iaapny of foul; Pmnuw NAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. loll. Matheson & Footer ISO Richmond St. J.. Dmer Blanchard. B.A. III Queen St. Phone 1282 I. A. Former, Q.C., LLB. Bank of Commerce Bldg. OPTOMETRISTT. (I. F. llutcheson It So: - r. G. EUTCIIESON. 11.0. 5: Guam SL Dlal J. A. Carruthera. R.0. in Kent at. Dial all t Allison M. Glllls. LL.B. in Iucamond st. om 4147 Byron J. Grant. 0.DT- II Kent st. mu ml J. s. Imyior, It-.0. A. Walth Ga d t I.L.B. rauun main Illll eGi'allon st. egg: fffg: 'tn'::f:'.,s5;" Palmer 1- llaslam H. J. Mabon, li."o'. Bank .1 am Scotlu am. Mo-I-an . P- 1: Matbeson Peaks 0 OR Nigifouon 5O..q.4 in onuon Strut Dr. B. Cancglr I W J. A. Macaulgul ""'” ' curl. mu. . mu M14-Quuagt; ARCHITECT Chas. B. McQu.Ild. B.A. G. Keith Plckard, in mama an. out an a. mi. M.B.A.I.C.. Hume:-side. P.E.l. Dial 3365 MacI'heo 8 Tralnor II on. st. Dla cnuloueun. -rumlnyx -nd Fridays. but am CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS IQDONALD, . o... .... c...S?.E'3.””” ..... ml II. I. DOANE I (XIMPANY II Ono! Gun! 80-. Charlottetown than our - tun p, o. no: I47 A GABBl.'l'1' (Inland:-n III Fhfwk 33”” Dial 513' T CA-MIINMI if . xasuaaacn nrannaa an op. laplnl. uanau