race you: g y ‘I'll! GIIAILIIITETIIIII GIIAIIIIIAII lensing flllly (Pounded In llfll President: Heat. Col. W. Chester B. Melon-e Viol- eunury Col. D. A. Maellnrlnn. 0.8.0. 841:0: and ‘ m“ Blaster: l. l. Emmett, FJ-I. Asloehh Isllton: husk Walker and LIeutJuiA. Iurnett, LQNNJ- (On Active Sarvleel "The Strongest Memory Is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." ss-runosv, txrroam oui. im Cadet ‘Corps With the organization of the Army Cadet Corps in the City everythingu in readiness for the winter training of our rising hopes. The Army Cadets will be under the command of Cap- tain Wellington Dixon, wiili Lieut Fred Discoll and Lieut. l-lazen Wigmorc as company cout- mandcrs. There will no loiiger_ be llldlVldl-lfll school corps, but senior and JUIIIOI‘ corps. to which all from twelve to eighteen may be draft- d. e This means we have now in active operation Sea Cadets, Army Cadets and Air Cadets. Both in Military and Sea Cadet Corps training in Scout knowledge is the foundation; indeed, “Scouting for Boys" and “Sea Scout Training" are the bases of the instructions given. Tilicrc is no inten- tion to substitute Cadets for Scouts, btit as in Nova Scotia, it is hoped to organize the Scouts throughout the Island from the age of eight to fourteen, after which they will be in readiness to start their Cadet training courses in earnest. __Thankgiviiig Not since the outbreak oi the war have we bun able m approach Thanksgiving Daywvith so much hope and expectation. The continued guidance of Providence in world affairs, spiritu- ll and material, must be manifest t0 the most in- different. The people of all the United Nations under arms, as well as those still in bondage to Nazi tyranny, are at any rate inspired by clearer prospects of victory. peace and postwar secur- ity than seemed possible even a few months ago. In the United States —the place of its origin -—Thanksgiving Day falls on the fotirth Thurs- day of November. \'\'c shall observe it in Cati- lda by lppropriatc church services tomorrow and by s public holiday on Monday. The precise date of the festival matters little; the spirit of its cele- bration, in both countries. is the same. it should be one not only of thanksgiving for a bountiful harvest and other blessings showered plentifiilly upon the humblest. but also one of rededication to great and unprecedented task! ahead. A new world will be born out of the chaos of this war-a world in which spiritual leader- ship will be no less important, surely, than p0- litical and social and economic planning. That this fact is recognized is shown by the declara- tion issued jointly this week in the United States by‘ the Federal Council of Churcltcs of Christ In America, the National Catholic Welfare Con- ference, and the Synagogue Council of America. These organizations, representing three great religious faiths —Catholic, Protestant and Jew- lshrfletsnd united before the world today in a common declaration, calling upon the nations to preserve the rights of man and the dignity of the human spirit in the terms of the peace to come. Nor are signs lacking in Great Britain Ind other quarters that similar religious move- ments are on foot. In‘ this Province we have much reason to be Iiankful for an unfailing harvest and other bless- ings. An encouraging review of our agricultural ictivities prepared by Mr. W. R. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, appears in today's issue Ind will be read with much interest. Though the potato crop has been badly affected by blight in some sections, there are so many other factors in our favor that we would be monsters of lngratitude if we did not gladly and thankfully concede that gr lot has been cast in one of this rough world's pleasantest places. Britain's Great Sacrifice ‘-’ As we prepare to do our utmost in the forth- coming Victory Loan drive, it is worth recalling the tremendous financial sacrifices which Bri- tain has suffered ungruduingly since this war began. Writing in the September issue of the Economic Journal, Mr. N, Kaldor, an authority, estimates that Britain's cumulative adverse bal- ance of payments, incurred chiefly for the purchase of war materials and food supplies, from the outbreak of the war until the end of 1042 (excluding lease-lend and Canadian con- tributions) amounted to about {$350,000,000 or roughly $l0,o00,000,000. This figure alouc, which has probably undergone a substantial in- crease during the current _\’_(‘Zll’, is equal tn almost , lulf the value of Britain's foreign assets iii H38, placed by competent authorities at between ,6oo,ooo,ooo and 54.700,o00,o0o. And this large fificit has been financed by the sale of £650,- 000,000 worth of gold and foreign exchange; by the sale nf foreign secufiiies, which were coni- mandeered for $75,000,000, and by the ac- cumulation of sterling balances and interest-free loans to ihe time of {$25,000,000 There has, therefore, been s sacrifice on an enormous scale of foreign securities, and ac- count must also be taken of it huge loss of assets in the Far East and Europe, which is estimated t0 have diminished the national annual income bv It least £60,000.0o0. The conclusion of .\fr. Kaldor is that Britain, which before this war en- joyed a total annual income of over izoooooyxm from her overseas investments, will be lucky if she manages to salvage between iioooooorx) and £r2o.oo0.000 of the amount aftcr the war. Apart from the serious hardships which have befallcit individuals and families through the cessation or drastic curtailment of their private incomes, a curtailment of a nation's income by about $500,000,000 per amium is no trifling af- fair, and for a time it will have serious consc- qticnces upon Britain's economic position. llcr large income from overseas investments helped materially to liquidate her heavy adverse anutizil trade balance catisetl by the great excess of her imports over her exports. After peace comes she will be unable to face such a large adverse balance, and this knowledge accounts [qr (hg planl which are being utti t» maintain the pe- sent expansion of her agricultural production. p EDITORIAL NOTES - Tomorrow Thanksgiving and much have we to return thanks for. - e e u The poor we have always with us, and alas, the poor orphans as well. Let us remember them "in our alms and thiinlisgiyings. We will soon be putting our hands deep ln our jeans to finance the Fifth Victory Loan —- gpegd the victory :5 well‘ as‘ speed the plough. o l-l, R. H. Prince Edward George Nicolas Paul Patrick, Duke of Kent, born this date, I935; elder son of H. R. H. George Edward Alex- ander Edmund, fifth son of King George V iDuke of Kent, K. G. etc., who was killed on active service Aug-tistxizg‘. r242. The old English practice of employing s man as a "knocker-up" for workers due to go 0n ,early shift may have t0 be used once more. Alarm clocks are almost unprocurable. No new clocks are going from abroad. They cannot be l made in Australia, for instance. No watches are l now made and no spare parts. i ill It! l! 1i I According to a Canadian Press bulletin St. Mary's Cathedral, \Viunipeg, is the first church in Canada to comply with the fuel coiitrollei"‘s re- quest to curtail the use of coal by cutting out services. But it is not clear whether this applies to week-flight or Sunday, as the Winnipeg Tri- luine says St. hlziry"s "will cease evening Service Oct 10," which doesnlt happfn to be a Sunday. U U Canadians have been given s double incentive t0 back the coming Fifth Victory Loan up to and past the announced objective of $1,200.09!)- ooo. livery citizen, company and institution face, of course, a challenge to mobilize their dol- lars in support of our fighting men in the armed forces. On top of that, the recent success of the Third War Loan in the United States, in going a good billion dollars past its goal of $15 bil- lions, has given us a friendly example we can do no less than match. V»- u e u La Ligue pour la Defense du Canada, the Quebec province anti-conscription group, wants to know if Article 39C of the Defence of Can- ada Regulations is still in force or has been abrogated. The Ligue officials also want t0 know if s person who declared at a public meet- ing before several hundred people in July last. "Sure I am a Communist and 1 am proud of it," is not guilty of an infraction against Article 39C. The group is seeking the information through an open letter addressed to the Hon. Louis St. Laurent, K.C., Minister of justice, and signed by Jean Drapeau, secretary of the organization. I U U l How is it New Brunswick, can get away with public projects while we are everlastingly held up on one pretext or another. N. B. Municipal Council has decided to go ahead forthwith with the construction of an abattoir costing $180,000 $80,000 of which will be contributed by the Fed- eral government, provided fhe project "is un- dertaken before next September." In other ivords, war or no war, the Mackenzie King Gov- ernment insists upon the Council going ahead with this practicallv unnecessary expenditure under the penalty of forfeting $80,000. They have live-wire Federal members in New Bruns- wick u a u o The murdered multi-millionaire Sir Harry Oakes left about $200,000,000. Of the amount named in the preliminary esti- mate of only $14,000,000. Lady Oakes receives one-tltird, or more than $4,800,000 and the remaining two-thirds is to be divided equally among five children, Sir Harry also bequeathed £50,000 ($200,000) to Lady Oakes and directed that each of the f-e children receive $12,000 annually in United States currency. It had been reported that Mrs. de llfarigny, Sir Harry's eldest daughter and wife of the man charged with murdering him, had been disinhcrifed, but this turns out to'be ungrue. i I It was inevitable, says the Gazette, that the federal Liberals should have taken time to draft resolutions and to give some attention to study of post-ivar problems, because their rivals for federal power are doing the same thing, but it may again be necessary to indicate that the reconstruction work that Will be necessary in Europe for the next ten or fifteen years will be sufficient to provide adequate employ- ment here in both the primary and the second- ary industries and if there is any serious lack of ciuployincnt it will bc because this country is not willing or is not given a full opportunity to play its part in rebuilding the war ravaged con- tinent across the Atlantic. Already it has been brought to the minds of Canadians that the needs of Europe must be met from this contin- ent for as small countries are liberated from the Nazis they are being fed by this continent, even clothed, and the demand for this humanitarian service will steadily increase. - l U i U According 1'0 the New York Times, Leon Degrelle, the Belgian traitor, has been excom- municated in consequence of incidents which oc- curred in the parish church at Bouillon, his birth- place. The decree of excommunication was issued by Monsignor Andre Charrue, Bishop of Namur, and has been read from the pulpit of Namur Cathedral. and in Bouillon church. It states that the facts on which the excommunica- tion is based are common knowledge. Degrellc had entered church in German uniform. In con- formity with the decision of Belgian bishops, the priest refused to administer Holy Communion to him while he was wearing the uniform, and Dcgrcllc then laid hands on the priest, removed him from the church and locked him up. In accordance with ecclesiastical discipline the act- ion of the Bishop of Namur excludes Degrelle from the conimitnity of faithful Catholics both spiritually and temporally in the diocese 0f Namur until such time as he makes honorable amt-lids to the bishop himself, who alone can absolve him from excommunication. ’ TlflLflf-IARLUFTETOWN ' GUARDIAN Ilotos 9y The Way Tb outlast uul ' peed the accounted‘?! of “h! Domiynnl 1s to durable staff would hen fllllDeer andthepem of nlI-rclDect of the old People would be restored .—West em Producer, Saskatoon. Evidence was [Ivan at the In- quest Into the bus disaster at AL dersnot that buses are compelled by law and by 00m any ula- ttoris t.o stop at all evel rs way crosslngs. The frequency of these tragic accidents would probably be reduced If thls precaution were generally observed by the motoring public. but the enactment of such a, measure met with strong opposl. tron. Stop, look and listen Is still the best. formula for avoiding col- llslons with tralns, -—HamIlt.on Spectator. Incidentally. the names Mitchell and Marauder mean nothing to most of the men who fly those ships abroad, John Lardner wrltes In Newsweek, Perhaps the riubllc at nome has been successfully edu. sated to the Ilse of sobrlquets like that, and like Warliawk, Mustang, Dauntless, Liberator and Lightning but a backward quiz kid wou score much lilizher than u. combat allot in the identification of such names. They are considered some- what nancelsh tn combat circles. where the boys stick to numbers. Even the Stuka ls just a plnln "87" or a "JU—-8'l," In nIr force conver- sation. -—Exchoiige. One woman In 17 In Canada Iii engaged in war industry, directly ur Indirectly. In Great Brltaln. the ratlo Is one womnn In four. A total of 1,191,000 women In Canada are reported to be employed outslde the home. Of this number, 255.- 000 are working In war Industrles. Women now constitute the chlef labor reserve upon which war and essentlal clvlllan industries depend. The major group In thls labor re- servolr are the urban housewives There are estimated to be 1,629,000 able-bodied housewives In the em- ployable age groups. It ls hoped the response from this group will be such as to relieve the labor shortage. —Toronto Star. The story Is told about the AI- berta farmer whose crop failed to grow because of too much rain. a strange thing here. His were drowned out. To make Imit- ters worse a plague of frogs ar. rlved I0 Inhablt tlic pools that. dry found his farm. Than suddenly winter came as It. does In Alberta. and Just as the frost. hardened the surface of the sloughs. the frogs leaped into the water and were frozen solid with their lilnd feet In the air. ‘Flie farmer merely look out his lawn mower and cut himself 10 bushels of frog legs to the acre and Ilved lusclously thro- ggh the Winter. -—W111nlpeg Free est. Smoke from farm chimneys In. dlcates the basing of the season The grey pennants are part of the landscape piilure when the grow- Ing season 1s done and the rich Dromlse of frultlon 1s at hand. The smoke rolls upward In a rupuc FORUM XQUQQIIIIIQ Ileudolil bholeoerndlillkloale washable banal} IIDIIGIATION r Elm-II Is refreshliig to note I newspaper men are will unufg?" voloes In grotest analnst the I'll!!!- buresilers c bpdgword‘ 0 an govemmen er lmml :mtlcn~of peoples from owrelled countries. While Arzentlnn ls Iftsnl-ln! ll- sylum f0 the ml 01' dem- e omes on the European continent. axiadala mlnes and Industrlel. talus and forest-s could absorb hem all If political "at Id not. have to be b0 zecause of political oonsloeratlonl the doors rnust. be opened slow] , no doubt. but oDenecl they 8111's!’ mustbelfcisn a tobeoome great and strong nation. A balanc- Inl; up of the Dobtilatlons of the world after thLs war will also do much to relieve the tenslon ‘lhaf. leads to repented world cOnII-OY-S- Those who have watched Lon- don gardeners producing frlllts find 1d vegetables from waste lauds. 0r Italian peasants cultivating moun- taln terraces between psrpendicular walls of stone are amazed at tile fertile lands azr- mineralbreas o! Canada stilt piautlcally witnou. in inhabitant. ’1wlce our present pa-p- uliitlon ls needed to finance our elaborate systems of Wvefflmflli and transportation. The chief obstacle to Increased immigration from Europe, strange- ly enough, Is our present small population — about equal to that 01 London. 1r Canada. were flood- ed with people unable to speak the English language. It. mlilm easlll! cease to be Canada. The solutlon of the problem would seem to be to make Canada more attractive, and more easily entered by E118- IIsh-speakuilz citizens of the Unit.- ed States, Great, Brltaln, and the Eznpire. A general lowerlnlz of steflmihlv fares between Canada and Great Brlfaln after the war. permit n; immigrants to keen In closer touch with relatlves left, behind, would materially help IIIIIHILTBIZIOYI. would legislation directed at. Dre- vcntlnlz a few great steamship companies making a monopoly 0! ali- transportation after the war. If thousands of planes are scrubbed after the war, to force 11D‘ D1011“ by the ore-war method of Dro- duclng a scarcity, It. wlll be one of the surest. means of kllllnz immig- ration. Newcomers to Canada like to feel that. when thev come here they are not severlnlz MI ties with the mother country. Whatever will contribute to preserving these Ites will contribute to the iti-owtn and prosperity of Canada. I Em, Slr, etc s. iirihvon. Moncton. N.B. October 3. 1943. FEED PRICES AND HOG PROFITS Sin-A few days ago I Issued s brief message through your paper, touching on the weaner plg situa- tlon, with a suggestion as to what was thought best, to do. where a changing pattern of beauty. There are spirals wlthln spirals. In the centre the smoke ls a darlnheavy grey, revolving and turning as It climbs. It forms a sturdy trunk from wliicli sldeshoots, like branch- es, blossom and unroll. As the izrey banners. leave the chimneys, cllrnb Info the air change to faint wtsus and tattered fragments, and flnally dissolve In the frosty zilr. the coun- tryside begins a new day. A dog barks across the fields. n cow rnoos from the pasture belilnd the barn, and a horse nelghs for his break- fast. —Stratford Beacon-Herald. Malta's bells, those that are left, are rlnglng agaln: the need for keeping them mute has passed. Bnrabarlc bells! Anyone who has not. heard them craslilng booming over Malta's snuggling streets has missed an unforgetable experience. Cascades of sound pour down from the twI - steepled churches tn roll their brazen dis- cords over the sun-baked flat roofs. On the many "Ies-Ia’ dnys to the noise of the bells Is added the spllnterlng explosions of hundred of maroons and crackers. And all the while, In the steeples the un- controlled beIl-rliilzers keep up their attack of sound. Boys and youths. they ring every bell wkether and H1101’ the effect! —Mauchester Guardian. Sandwiched between two of camouflaged cloth, a plastic developed by Monsanto chemists 1s helping to kecD United Statesman Ines snug and dry when they bed down for the night or crouch In dripping Jungle unclerbrush waiting for a shot at the enemy, says Th; New York Tlmes. The plastlc, technically known as vinyl acet- ate. takes the place of rubber In Donchos for the Murine Corps. These serve as ralnconts, or as rwo.men pup tents. They are flimouflflged on one side tn blend Info Jungle foliage and on the other to match a desert or wlnter lands. IIBPE- Two sheets of lightweight “water-repellent fabric prlnted with the camouflage design are bonded with the waterproof plastic. Rain gusts. hospitals sh layers Recent submarine research has revealed that. contrary t4; ggn. eral superstltlo . fish are really noisy creatures. Writes the londoii Wffflllvondent of The Ottawa Journal. The mwdlest of them all are the crustacl . . These themselves, have recalled another tnterestlnlz fact. The keeper of a Drury Lane tavern discovered about s century lie that an oyster on his premlggp, BWBWHK the knife and n tankard of most nonchalant mariner. This was due to the exhalation of water through a peculiar hole In Its Bhen, The tavern-keeper, a fully licensed man If ever there was one, rompl. 1y turned this Bllbmflflfln. slffleui- to sound -— no pun Intended —- com. merclal advantage. Crowds came tn hear It perform, and, ln. so IIOIIIIZ,‘ naturally consumed a certaln mount of malted or other lIquorJ Aimnnttat the distinguished auditors who attended n. rendition Iv; the| vtnrilstllnlr oyster was W. M. Thackeray; who Improved on the occasion y Inventlnlr an Amerl. can visitor, who expressed his su- Dreme contempt. for ..t.lie Di-ur Lane oyster. allegln with that, fIn_ flislr our triins.At nnltc have at command, that an nyste In Massachusetts could Whlstl tmaster like u do: Yankee Doodle" and followed its farmer had s greater number of tliose potential money makers than he cared to brlnlz through to mis- turlty. ‘ ‘ Sometimes a farmer does not do himself justice when he decides lie ls unable to raise more pigs the specified number to which lie commits himself. No doubt s. decldlng factor In many cases 1s whether there Is llkely to be a worthwhile broflt In the trans- actlon, If he undertakes the larger responsibility Imposed by greater production. Assuming that he Is capable of coDln with the main requirements, suc as feed sup- DIIes. housltiu factlltles "and the labour problem. then the only ques- tlon ls that of profit maklnlz or oth- erwise, and beisrlnit on that polnt perhaps the following blt of Infor- matlon and dediictlon wlll be an. preclatied: In checking over our records of sale transactlons from June to Ben. tember of three different years. our flndlnizs are as follows: During these months In 1939 the oversize price at which hosts were sold was $17.25 oer head: In 1942. $36.49 per head and In 1943 $28.90 oer head. This means that, In 194$, hog values for ts soeclfled perlod were Rreater than 1942 values by $3.50 per head and $11.65 per head filler than In 1939. lust before the r II Is assumed. and we believe It ls approximately correctly so. that D requlres seven hundred pounds _r_ lzraln to put a hon on the mar. ...t from weaner nae of sIx weeks. 1f that Is so, a hoe produce“ could “"0111 W my 50 cents a bag or $10-00 Der ton more for his feed In 1943 than In 1942 and slightly better than $1.65 oer bu: or $33.00 Der ton more than he dId In 1939 nu; stlll come out with the same Drollt Der oliz as he dId In the low- er ling price years. ‘ Feed nrlces are hlizher than In 1942 and 1939, but riol, 50 cents and $1.65 per bag higher. If a farmer could raise hogs In the summer of 1939 and break even we must conclude that hoe produc- Ilon In 1943 Is a profltttble ve1ture and the extent of monev maklnrt opportunity Is limit-d only hv the number It. Is possible to rnlse. I am. Sh’. rte. Secrets P E ,IA'CG!OpetLLmt!I' TV. . . . n- 3 v Marketlnlz Board. o lt-vvt. whisked Illllle Dlalnly-lrrcr Mr. Bracken On Mr. King‘ (Montreal Gazette) John Brsckem commentary, an Progressive Conservative leader, on Prime Mlnlstcr Mtwkentzle Klnrs speech of Monday was both shrewd and accurate, It. 1s perfectly true, ss Mr. Bracken says. that. the Prune Minister left. “ no less than sIx swinging doors to a snap elect- Ion at a time of hls own chooslnl, while st. the some time arranging In advance to cast. responsibility for such a step upon the Opposition. Against the Prlme Minister's charge of unworfh oi- unwarranted lIIIcal acflvlty, Ill ended himself with dignity and 1e- stralnt, During a tour of Canada whlch was an obvloiisly lllvlsable l‘ step for the new leader of a natldii- a1 rty to take, Mr, Bracken erlf teed the Government but once, and Lhen upon one polnt only —the manpower mess. the "hoax" of the Zombie army. and the "polli- Ical cowardice” whlch hsd led therein. Mr. Bracken dId not recall, as he might have done, that he had the Government on these points frctn the very beglnnlng. While sIIll hstvt of s provlnelll "~"'~~'“~I rrnrerallv classed as Ubei-al, Mr. Bracken denounced the r. Bracken de- - _ JOIN Van-baring. ‘mtber, may live!" ADVANCEMENT ! TRAINING l" Building e new utorld abud Tbs! RIGHT and FREEDOM COMB ON, GIRLS! Your Country Says: “YES . . . There's s job for YOU in the c.w..\.c.. if you're between the ages of I8 and 4S! Ofice workers, drivers. mechanics, hospital usistsntr-interesting jobs for everyone! OPPORTUNITIES! SPECIALIST Tbs‘: Apfieal i: URGENT I Canada Need: YOU I iwu ms iuqsty s...» . . . Fee! Mlgbly Paul . . , In lbs lingers! if f!" - These Felt Soldiers of Connie's Ivon- Onvllng, Ives-Needed AMY CWP" ". . . Yo: on (Ieudlan 5N4. peace-loving warn, I71», n bravely, do give Shred servrce, wrtb barium! and HOW TO ENLIST Hflgpllll), New Glulow Sydney. Or mark position llecrustlns Ofice. MD. 6, "lllfll, Nn-a shin! IIIIIOIIIIIHKQSIVIIISa TKIu , s "It" TS" for free C.W.A.(L _Tnm Apply to an of these Reerqltliu Stations: lhllfu (Cantrell. Si. out a ll b‘ ' °""'2"I;°.‘”& ID IIII I ll COIIPOII IO . . . IL Life Insurance ls the choicest Io meet the greatest emergency. preclates in value and provides mill- Ian homes. Edward Island Branch Office. PROVINCIAL MANAGERS Chazlottetown, Sumnierslde, SPEED THE VICTORY g BUY WAR LOAN BONDS Offices: Insured Against Depreciation ividiiye“ 1315'}? thing you have depreclates when you die and re- quires cash except Life Insurance. Wllltih 8P- Tlie Great-West Life is the champion of thrift and the guardian of thousands of Canad- ConsulI your nearest Agent or write Prince g l-IYNDMMI 8i B0. LIMITED Montague 1i '.'€.’°"“‘.I“...“~“‘%f.“""' °‘ “will.” e , an o er ways - '- self In the forefront of t use url- 5n °l°°tr°fl Ing total war. ed Only In one respect, and that a rnlnor one, do we tend to disagree with the Bracken statement. and that Is its slr of hurt surprise. After all. Mr. King has been making speeches like this one for the Dllfi 25 years, and has seldom made a more Klngly speech than on Monday, , Polit cally. Mr. King has always fully chosen for concealment, and emulated the woodehuek. The woodchuck, n sagsclous animal, builds hls nest. In n pmstlon eure- preferablv two rear tunnels for never settles down theretr. untll he has burrowed at least one and emergency exit. Mr. King's polltleq s1 positions are chosen wIth the same csre, and buff with the same precaution. Monday. Mr. Klnv ventured Int/o the nolltlcol davllqht Rut Irv mite. or rather because. of his Sfipaire address. nobody knows yet whrther he iww hls shadow. 11min- For Foot Ailments consuvr H. J. A. BROWN, D.P. GIIIIIOPUIIIST I49 Grass George 5mm CIIABLOTTETOWN. P.E.I.' I0 5-9 In,» These Coal Tips Ito u..- r aI el uperlenos refueling ll llfflelltles. eppotntmenfs. CEMENT CRACKS AN OPENINGS D Banish drafts‘ by blockl ll cracks and opening In yournfiouze. Cement can be applled sully and It II effectlve for blocklng holes. nurse v ,,_ s‘. ~< --~»<-.».~- rtiwbnivfmcnoscor: times ls great as can be 0W! wIIh an ordinary llght microscope. . l It l- "_T'IIR' ll. J. MIIBIIII OPIOHITIIII‘ 1min; use lemma; Glamor _; l“ . lulu-n. P. l. I. om» loom-gall»!- ate. Iv Miles Ixnneeted wIIb - DIIJGITORI How Are Your Eyes? an Islfl Iyllllofl n Tutu beauties. are eyeoor flatness - consult s spretalln AI you sure-Ir Irttb Gull In‘ soil dlnt~_ her Write or shone. In G. F. llutchoson AND SON I. G IIUTIIIIIIOI .0. I. IIUTOIIIIOI 1 t Venn s dbesepqb , _ Csf. HAIR RESTORER t-af-WQI...“ .....'.'5'.2= belulltlu Guy or hose "'l'i'-'i'.--."'ill‘.l Promote; . l0 m. #1193 fr? rifle" 1| fir" -,::..'.-.....--. "5"" - O III I III l blrlllllo lim- killer: .1 follow the Iflreeg bu: ‘Than "Jam Pfllle m per Mills. -___ itsscs PERFECT wostiu rownbns s t ', ' .:.: :',"'..':"...".."," moat: 90f lockup, , LABKSPUB newton 5U" Illl’ I m’ “ma? um u plllllilldgan. Ipgliglrlte; shah" n“ "g: e cod of tattle? .- _ Price 85o per bottle.“ n m Mill order! Given Plfllllpf Atlontlon . TIIE mo suns III Greet George lIi-det MAGNETIC BASEBALL _ M810!‘ Lewis baseball In New zxoglwfracfs an annual affendlnce PODl1latlon of 1 nei- cent. of ma the Unlted Slater-ta] “COMPLETE INSURANCE} SERVIC ” t w. K. lioness yllgencies Ltd.“ Pllone SID-slit Professional Bards McLeod 8' Bentley W. I. IINTLIY. l. 0. l. A. BENTLEY. K. Us _ BIITIIIGPI and Attorneys-it- ' Low n. r. ltnciiiastn, Chartered Accountants l lulu-n Trust Bulldfne Charlottetown _--_-=_-.-.= AltX W. MAI HIESUN Money In Lon Collections BARRIHTEII. SOLIGITOB. ETC- Offlee: 90 Great George Street- =M. Airs/sin‘ FARMER It A. LLB. IABIIITIII. BOLICITOI. ETC. Oansllan Bank of Commerce Ill; NONI? T0 LOAN BEll A MAI HIESON MONEY T0 LOAN '_ Ollneron Block CIIIIIOIIIIOII P Island 1‘ H. F. McPltee B.A., KC. NOTARY l0. UAIIIISTEB SOLICITOI llley Iullillng Charlottetown PALMI- R 6. HASLAM A. s. annals‘. s. A 1.1. I. Eves EXIIIIIIEII- GLASSEINDI-‘ITTEII ‘J. S. TAYLOR -. I OPTOMETRIST llvenlnn by Albllntllellli Phone ‘ 105C Phone leddenee IOII