PAGE FOUR T H E G U A R A N l been exchanged for commodities needed by g i Britain and other countries of the non-Com- Tmunist world. In fact, during the Korean lwar the United States itself has imported millions of dollars worth of necessary nia- terials from China. Good sense mdtivated this action, for granted the U. S. dollars help strengthen China's econoniv. the im- ported commodities no doubt assist tiie United States even more. "T,sEti'i7i:-ed as second Class MR'ii'rTu-onice Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. Editor nnfninnnging ni?e?u-ii? Ian AT-Burnett, Associate Editor, Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Covers Prince Edward Island like the dew" ”””'0TThTowx wnnxnsnn" JUNE "' 19;; During the course of its existence the . Foundation established by Andrew Carnegie Marmme P'LwE';Poss"'"mes 'in 1911 has made grants exceeding 55231.- tliir Federal election candidates are ap- 900'000' The purpose (if "Fe Foundation is Dealing on different platloljms but there ls, the advancement and diffusion of knowledge one issue on which all those in the Mari- and understandmg At the recent meek iinies should be in full accord. That is in the mg of the Carnegie Corporation m New . York it was stated that assets of the ntlvoeacy of electrical power development . l j l M for lhosc l,l,m,ln(,es. Thls projllcl l.equll,eS Foundation totalled 3sll7,192,204. (..iants Federal aid if it is to be on a worthwhile m the flscal year mfhng beptt ',m',10J2' scale. It is conceded that we are entitled Welre ml)” the") l &)'0q0'000 dlsmbulod In this as a quid pm We lol, the huge exl , chiefly in the I-Jllllcd States. toward lim- mndlllllvs -lm,Ol,.ed in me st. Lawl.CllcC proving the quality of university teaching. ixateri-.'ay project, which will be of treni- SL”'lCv”"g the meld Gt cnclous advantage to Central Canada. What 20'? Nlrtj Cha1t1el5dD.Oll?l:dl lprcS1tdi:tt0fh::: is needed is a iiig overall scheme which 01poral0"' 5 3 6 1” 9 mp” a . . . . .. . ', l - v t ” einvi orate will tie in with the rural electrification Dro-ll aavlclesplegddyflengfml O fllbelfl ed” - . ,- - . ici ea s em 0 ie in ie eriii ' - graninies of our Provincial Maiitime goi- . . i '” i Z - d'ff '- crnments, cutting down the cost to some- Cau0n' but that the” H a gleat 1 9' thing proportionate with the rates enjoyed l the central ingredient in any kind of edu-ll in the larger industrial Provinces. A Canadian Press dcspatch this week! , . , . . ' - ' . t . 1 . ' . - r - b ' -- 3 . . t ' mums m good meawle 01 Que ecs Cm said, adding that ”a conviction that the teacher is a more important factor than re.nt phenomenal industrial development." the curriculum is reflected in a series of There is no shortage of power resources in grants made by the Corporation during the "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". The Carnegie Foundadon the Maritimes either, but where is the dc- velopment? The fact that for political pur- poses we are divided into separate Provin- past -Veal” ces is beside the point; for power develop- - merit purposes we should regard ourselves f;DlI()RlAL NOIES as one area, and work constructively alone that line in utilizing our tidal and other possibilities. There is still lacking a full sur- vey of these resources, which should be begun immediately. Quebec this year is planning projects in liydro-electric development which will cost more than fS500,000,000. Work has begun British territories, in addition to the Pan- on a colossal project on the Bersimis River allla Canal and rl-oblllk. The fllst part of which compares with the Kitimat powerlllle l-0lll.ll(.l.' by all. llcloss the Atlallllc development in British Columbia for sheerl lo Bermuda and llalllalcal wlll llkely be in magnitude- The WOFWS largest g9"e1'al01”5,a British Overseas Airways Stratocruiser. will be installed and the second-longest; - o a power tunnel dug. A town is being erected lll Fl-al-la. lllel, lake llle lollllst trade In the wilderness to house constructionlsel.l0llSll.. A palls judge has lolllld a Call, crews and, later on, maintenance staff.lal.el mallagel. and llllee accomplices gllllly Initially the development will produce 300.-'l,lr --Sllllylllg the llollol. 0f pl-allce" by con. J00 horsepower but will he stepped llplsplrlng. lo pass Off lnlellol. Sparkling wllle rzradualiy to its potential estimated at he-loll lollllsls as llhlllllpagllel rl-ll, sentences tween 1,300,000 and 2,000,000 horsepower. ranged from 50000 llallcs and suspended This is ihe dt3V9l0Pm9"t which by "wami sentence of 15 days in prison to 450,000 of four 31-mile-long underwater cables andllallcs and 15 days sllsllllllded lll.-lsoll sell, another 130 miles of overland power lines, lence. will provide power for Gaspe's copper: mines. Another line will shoot out into thcl Chibougamu area where prospectors argl vention at St. Andrew's this week were active. Recently. Premier Duplessis sai ladvlsed not lo lol. et the ow”. of lldvel, hydro-electric. development must continueltlsllm The Speakei Ml. c)I,)l.ll H. Landelsi M iii? mi” hf 300-000 h01'5CP0"91' 3”"'”a”-V president and general manager of the Na- if lh0.V 3"? 10 keep W Wlih me pace Of, tional Drug and Chemical Company, quot- ihtlusillal ”XP'rlhSl0"- 5 om surve showin that customers A Maiitinic power development sciieiiie:::r:r mm; llllemiled lll good sl,l.,,lCe lllall would no doubt require many millions foi':l.ed,lced lll.lceS' Alll.aCll,,e dlsplays welc its development, but what, of that? in i'ie'.i'llhe grealest Slllgle l-aclol. ln allllllg lhl. Sale of the activities cited ablove irlil one Pl'lovl-lief general merchalldlsel inee of Canada alone, w 0 wt sa.V 13 - such expenditures would be unwari'anted'?i " . H ' They have become, in fact. vitally neces-' L0”? k”Ch9”,(:"v Bmlsh 50ld'e1V W95 saigv. Our Maritime political candidatesl boml th'5 dlate 1830- H9 Cmewd the R0-Val Engineers in 1871 and was engaged on the should make it clear that they are alive to. l V 0 the iniportaiicc of this issue, and are pre- Palesmm 5U1'V9Yv 18t4t78i and the" that Of pared to work iinitcdly avainst further dc-, C-VP1'U5v He took 93” i” U" relief M Festival of St. John Baptist. I O I Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth is prepar- ing to make a globe-girdling tour of the lCommonwealth. Starting November 23, she and the Duke of Edinburgh will visit twelve 0 A 0 Maritime druggists assembled in con- 0 D THE GU ARDIAN. UHARLOTTETOWIN Land Of Champions l 72.: i? 1. Notes Bx The Korean war dldifl seem too violent until the subject of peace Came up-Hamilton spectator. WIHDIDH with s 3-dimensional lion derives fro effect. is announced. A little em- barrasing for a visitor who tries to hang his coat on it -Hamilton Spectator. Thieves lacked a man in his re- frigerator while they robbed his delicatessen store. He is not JU1)l'l2 24, 1953 The Wax 1, Nature like u; stltutlon,' if left tea Al:e.lrfw::t cm its own system of Checks 3 H balances. This profound 0bs(.:in . - 'ia the discovery ofntartjglrgzr a(:3'01Il .0 ::erad?:rnablnt chop 5"9y .llllt's S s ou this our tlilnkinl went. something like thlg H.” Chinese invented gunpmllflll. ,l ' , riff 2'6”. by the lord Harry, a (.lH se dish turns out in , antidote for its effects." W he RHSWGTIHZ any smart questions a-losopher. given this as a A PM higher educa- ence of opinion as to how to achieve it..' The report stated that the teacher is: bout how he managed to keep cool. Hamilton Spectator ”iF?3i Three Hf Shakespeare's lliave hsrii translated into Zulu. As the Bard might have asked. ”How many ages hence shall these our lofty plays be written o'er. i i ; ',. memovg 99 l I me. A - eg;:::i.:. woo06t04"' More power 12: 'em a.it,I . If " - - Notes From ' Another Island .iA..I.IFi ,, 'Ax;' .2; yo . 0 '.toe&"Qwze2z i LONDON, England:- The Coronation is still too from - in our minds for us to be able to Rgmtlgf Wm" they cum” llways look back on it with anything like 5 l l ll l ks l l. loblecttvfty; and in any case it is om” c'l:l:l,lln: Dl.e”l:lclll.lVa Mu "9 I doubtful if we could ever be truly And Scheme lo Catch hlm at lllll objective about anything that we lfelt, involved us all so intimately. MOUSE thievery. , But 1 condone his izeiitle iiainscotl Th" hmmy 9” W” milnllrchy llllbllll goes back so far that. long ago we came to regard the idea of royalty Fearful yet brave. the delicate R5 P3" 01 We 35 W9 IKMW "5- En? Igmlld, land without. R crowned head was. when caught off-guard. gratin-,and is, unthinkable. True, from lwsly leadmlzl ,timc to time a voice in raised say- Of one who is reluctant to in-lint! that the monarchy Should be trude-- abolished but there are never any 0, is it, not it trait, of better breed. clear ideas on how to set; about it. lng? lF.xeciitive ideas are never required, lln factpfor the proposition never His real offense is not that he's it gets that. far. Those who advance rake, sthe theory are regarded more or But vulgarly imagines I wouldlless amiably as cranks, to be brac- izrudge him -keted with others who advocate some aims of cheese or poor miin'slsimllar unlikely changes. dolenfcalu-2.... t -0- Stlll, who am I to judge him? There had. it. seemed. always lhelbeen royalty and it appeared there i3IWllyK would be. The idea. of a' monarchy was born in us and for that reason. truth to tell, we .. lrai-ely thought there was any call " lto comment. One does not. feel it .. lnecessary to remark on the fact. -- lthnt. the earth revolves! -Amanda Benjamin Hall, in New York Herald-Tribune. in states unborn and accents yet lurikiiown ?" I A fundamental principle of ed.i- cstion should be to make the nupil lrealize the meaning of excellence. lot the first-rate. and to send lliim out of school and college per- lsuacied that it is his business to learn what is first-i-:ite and to which he earns his living but in itself.-Slr' i lbove all. in living imchnrd Livingstone. A partisan plea for appointing May 28 as "National Golf Day" has been turned down by the House Judiciary committee. Its ad- vocate. Representative Jack West- lnnd, of Washington, is national amateur golf champion. National .Galf Day was stymied by the argument. that one day leads to zinother, so that other "days" xiight be demanded for football, :i.iseball, table tennis or pocket llilllinrds. There is nbvloiisiy no lgmwzaxtem.-a;:vi-mxeoca; . . . I eed for a National Golf Day. Charlouehollxn The true. golfer plays his game i on an day, in season or out. His mm! r' L 1') bl; dgy in the year is when he -T" breaks par. or maker a hole in one; and its date cannot be de- termined by Act of Congress. - Philzidelphia Bulletin. BATIIING BEGUIATIONS "Persons in the habit of bath- ing would do viell to keep in mind that all persons above the age of eight years are prohibited from bathing, in an unclothed state, in open day. between the Four Gun Battery on the West, and the creek, called Big Marsh Creek, on the east of Charlotte- town, under penalty of five shil- lings, with costs, for the first, and ten shillings, with costs, for every subsequent offence, or in default of payment, be committed to prison for ten days. All constables are not only authorized. but re- quired, to apprehend every person whom they shall see so offending. without any warrant being neces- sary, and take the offender be- fore a Justice. Justices are also authorized to punish offenders, either upon view, or on the oath of one witness. Bathers, there- fore, had better beware what they are about. as the magistrates and constables of Charlottetown are on the alert, and are determined to prevent, as far as in them lies. public decency being violated, Seventeen ...rnIlllon ..l.elephone calls are made in New York on the average business day, and of these it is estimated that one in every 100 is it wrong number. stohisiitaians have never officially celculiitcd the total of profanity. bad manners and embarmssirnent produced by these 170.000 calls, but the subscrib- er who has been got. out of bed by one of them can be depended upon for a. vigorous private opinion. Later he may admit liaviniz made such mistakes himself, for the dial telephone. like other aspects of our mechanical age. lesvest, final responsibility to the personal touch. A face-saving exception. the experts say, is that 10 percent of the time the equipment is to blame. but that still leaves 90 percent for the human error. -New York Times pursue it-not only in the job by' all the grant fields of life and. - in Siarilil; lpolnt, could work out ii System We shall be content to work res through and re that man has upset write to tell us isn't really a chin lAmerlcsn inventio which the thrimsp, store liiilaiim: Lot 110 mic that chop sum. ese dish but an n-the sauce ill succulent swim ls Chinese and ill9:i:1aM'M lsaiice that has these njngil-all M" ertles. If there is 4'lllli.l1lnI'3Hw. - .. Hi this theory we have d,l.el,ll.ml H - r M" "(port to find th, ' for the effects of the a,toi:1imlll)1iri”-0 in something as AlllPl'i('Ilii M ii ham and eggs. --.li.)ntrr-al slll. We recall first noticing 11..." l 91” 55-Till youth, those hflltf? with the golden windows A51 ll: walked east in the rural lanes his: before siinsetr HOW the qoldell lm. sizes in the windows of those lav--n. houses reflected the lives 0, ,ll,,,. oocupanu. following mm i..,.,;.l Pursuits and creating new weallll gm the soil. A recent 5-ul,.,,. CW5 ” sthgherlhif fact-one pm of three farmhouses on the iglalld ls vacant! The setting sun is not ieflected from the window mfg: 0'1 them - these IlOllSP5 :' V. 7-h9 once golden win. "W R W5 the Uhbluterrd Walls within them and soon dim" and old age will take its 1011. wl,,,, of the future? We think ii shir- nlng example of conditions ii... 3"" in Prince county recently-ii Dllwh immlsmnt and family who had been here but I short vim. ""1195 UP stakes and headed for Weslern Canada! Wanderlust" Moving to I more fertile pI'OVllTrP" We doubt it, because he mmm from one of the best farming dls. trldts on the Island.-summp;-mg (PEI) Journal. j COMPLETE VISUAL REFRACTIOZI AND ANALYSIS G. F. HUTCHESON & SON Optometrists 7 53 Grafton Street PROFESSIONAL CARDS” by the infringement of the law in this particular.” --Colonial Herald. July l5, 1843. cim. R. McOuoid B.A. But. in recent months, and more especially since June 2nd, we have rediscovered our heritage. The all that is within me. bless lilslsymbonsm of the Crow" h" ”k' holy name. Bless the Lord. 0 my en lnn a m0” Vivid ream” Th” soul, and forget not all his bene-inc"! Family themselv” have fits: who fnrglvelh all thine in-lmmed "059" l0 "5 than many 01 lqultlcs; who liealeth all thy dis-lus can "V" remembe" cases; who redeemetli thy life Th” 15” pm” "my p”h5P5 "um denlllcllonl who rmwmlll take us back to the war years. We thee with lovlngklridness and un- jha” heard mP"y 3t””e5 0i "19 ll" mclclelll who samlilclll lhylconduct of King George the Sixth mouth Wm, wad llllllnl ll, ulauand his Queen during that awe- ull. youth ll "llewed ml, lllll some time that made it plain that nglc-,. pm ll, (ll, llullll ls they sought. no favours. Later, in hm, .h.," ",5 ealull ll, "cu ll 1937, came the wedding of Princess his mercy toward them that fesriEh13be1h- 35 5119 WM lhm: and him ,.,, The, Lord haul ll" ,l.,d.ii'hcn her own children were born at: throne in the hcavenszpandlwe really began to see our Royalty is kingdom rulcth our all, mm,-as a family in the truest sense. Not. the Lord, ye his angels, that Qxcgl the least endearing feature was to in iinnmi. that do his command- See the Kim: and Queen as grand- ments. liesrkenlng unto the voice iD3l'Ch15. nothing lotli to en.i0Y their of his word. Bless ye lhe Lord,Igitaiidchildrcn as grandparents the all ye his hosts; ye ministers of world over do. his. that do his pleasure. Bless the Later still the sudden death ofl lions. To comport herself with un- BABRISTER. stlI.l('.IT0ll. remitting dignity before the vast NOTARY. Etc crowds that lined the Coronation E-mm Trust Bulldlna route itself would be taxing cnA3Lo-1-1-51-uwn enough; the knowledge that in Plum. "ll l addition almost. her every move throughout the hours of the pro- cession and ceremony was being transmitted to an even bigger, un- vseen audience, would have con- stituted for the young Queen an i Gender 8: I-laszord l c.u.nan'r A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB Barristers and solicitors Money to Loan I . igdgxlllthn few of "3 mm” can Canadian Bank of Commerw lid: To say that. she bore herself well ' would he almost. an impertin- Mucphgg & Trulnor H. F. MIRPHISE. B.A.. Q.C. IL SOMERLED TBAINOB. B.A. hnlrrlstsn. Elm. Pulmer & Hoslom A. J. HASLAM. l!.A.. LLB. Barrister. Eta Bank In Nova Sculls Chambers Charlottetown. P. E. I. MONEY T0 LOAN . ' A. Woltlien Goudet. LLB. ence, for we never expected any- lthing else. We were proud of her. land we were proud, too, of all the 'men and women who came from lali parts of the Commonwealth as lwell as from within our own shores lto play their part in the memor- able proceedings. We were proud to be ourselves members of such a . I fraternity. This pride in ourselves emerged without. conscious intent. Those of us who listened in the radio com- Mafhoson. Peoke 8: . Nicholson A. W. MATHLSON, QC. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. IJ..B. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LLJ1. Barristers. Etc. Collections - Money To Loan I'll Grafton Street J. S. Taylor OPTOMETBXST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted Corner Kent and Queen on. olfloo Phone I956-House loll Bell. Murhieson 8. Foster Ilarriaters. Solicitors. Eli-. B. It. BELL, 1.2.0. 0. IL FOSTER, LLB. Loans oniclty and Farm Properties 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P.E.I. Frederic A. Large. 0.6. Blsrr-lslcr. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Buildinl la), ln lll.-lmllll, ll lo 3 llcadl ;Khai-toum- as a member of the Egyptian fftir1'Il..saiiloIli1ilsiI'iirkls,I in all pinmltiie King shocked us all more mentarles on the day's events; Charlottetown, iv. in. I. yyyyyyyyy ig army. subsequently ovcrtlii-owing the Kha- 0 m :1 I non. ens the Lord. deeply by for than it ever could those who saw it all on the tele- asnnis-rim. soucimn. me. Loans on City and Farm British Trade With -"hlna mi” He "35 Chief (if 5”” ” Lord Roi” y :19 --- lmica1sf3:e:rndus.not "mm o' Xliihlnilriiiilciilldsi. iX"3..1”fi3i' ii'i""c'i'l'.'iu3.7"'s".'.".'.. -ee-sm'””""" -- 00-yy a ,Cl'iS in South Africa, then in supreme com- EIISI BCIIIII RIUIS Now his daughter wears the magnificent. newsreel pictures; Money to noon Collection M Alba" Farmer Q C . l . ' - . Crown. Her Coronation was at- i - ' mmmjs-TT”"j - . - - , .,. l l He modg lcd lh Indl n Alm .- . (and they are magnificent. did Fill) Bllilsh govcinment has now pOSl- man 1” Z 8 3' y lwllmlpez Fr” Prpssl ltendcd by such a glare of public-lever ii film have such a cast?) andi J. A. MCGIIIQCII B ll:-A-. l;'L.:3." H ans er an .0 r or and that of Australia. No less than 300,- 000 men voluntarily eiiiistcd in his British service battalions lieforc his death in 1916. lively denied that British ships have trans- ported Communist troops and strategic ma- terials to the Chinese iiialiilaiid. Quite properly, trade in non-strategic goods has been carried on. As Mr. Anthony Nutting,l the under-secretary of state for foreign at-' fairs, pointed out in the House of Com-: mons, Britain "cannot live without trade and we consider that this trade in non- strategic goods is to the advantage of the free world." Before this denial was made, great dam- age was done to the cause of Anglo-Ameri- can unity by mischief-makers in the United States. especially by Senator McCarthy, who sought to convince public opinion that Britain was enriching itself at the expense of American lives. The chief beneficiary of such damage to unity, of course, is Rus- ;ia. a 1 a "The wlioic theory of the police in Brit- ain is based on the axiom that the police are no different from any other group of citizens," reports Michael Davie, speaking in the BBC's Far Eastern Service about the British police system. "Indeed, they have very few powers which are not also possessed by ordinary citizens. Their authority is based, not on their powers, nor on force, but upon public recognition that the interests of the police are also the interests of citizens. and upon public co- operation with them. If a policeman is assaulted by a memberof the public, be may take him to court. And if is member of the public is assaulted by a policeman, exactly the same processes of the law are open to him, to right any wrong commit- ted. The police, after all, are merely mem- bers of the public dressed up in different clothes. To the British way of thinking, it -is of the utmost importance that both police and "the public should recognize this, as they do. It is fundamental to our police system that the police should not turn into a special caste with special privileges and so There was nothing new in the "discov- gry" by American Congressional investi- gators that Britain had been trading with China, remarks the Ottawa Citizen. Trade has been carried on quite openly, not only by Britain but by other members of the United Nations. and with the knowledge and agreement of the United states IIWemment- But the commerce has been in goods cal- culal not to contribute to Chinese mill- Thc full inmlicritions of thr Enstdny as has never been 5”” hem”- ,Bel.lln llou callml lwlv he M,hSSedlThe Press. the newsrerl cameras. -but some mrasiirr of tlir lrnt Nillirndm. Imd me must "umcli" "I )l,. llauzell l,.. ll” ml... Ill. lo lm0l,t.clcvis:on all helped in bringing l,(,.. lll,l.l.l..l law aml lo mom lnlthe immense grarideiir and the tanks anti Soviet trooris. 'liiieinsi5;-imwmg wlemmty 0! the 59”” I0 tcnt demands that the Russians leave, tint the Communists go with them and that Germany be minn- ed after free elections emphasize the deplliofthe resentment against the East German Communist Gov- l ' above all those who stood for . BARRISTER. BOLICITOB, Etc. lhours in the cold and rain of thel NOTARY. Elo. English Junct!) along the i-outt:' C l 3 ll," gall. tolbegin with. had the notion e-D-3:. u -9- - of seeing or hearing the izrentesi H. J. Mubon. Rlal i event of recent. times. But in some ornament. and its policies, A strike that began an A means "7 hrotesting high prices and un- satisfactory living conditions soon- bccame a. patriotic surge for Ger- man unity. It was slgnificantthat the movement should occur when the East German Communist Gov- ernment was planning moves to repeal repressive measures. The lnltlal ordinances included: the with- drawal of nation cards from sections of the population on the mounds that they were "non-productive" Eighty years ago. the aallln the longing for adventure. Insurance. blocked by government order, will now be returned to them. But Ger- mans who have fled to the Feder- al Republic and West. Berlin and who now return home will not be liable to punishments. Those overtures and later prom- ises failed to avert the riots. Aft- er years of repression nut Bel-liners received the blsndlshmenls with seeiitloisrn. lvnfoldfm of events wllidotermlne the effect of the up- rising upon the Communist. Gov- Axents for Lloyd's, mm-I-. Canadian, and become resented by other citizens." nag Goods of this category have ernment in East Gerrnimy; but t-ht P.W-9 Mid Mr! of uni-Old mll- mysterious and mystical way we olmmeu-1.9 found ourselves sharing in it. . obviously the regime has been Outwardly we had seen or heard lirloiitiiguc, P. E. l. shaken and cracks in the structure the Coronation. Inwiirdly we felt are rlggwnpparcni. we mu experienced it. 0 ”"'"” m ......C e e” vs ....- .....j.-....T;.,- .-.C. ' J. A. Corrutliers. R.O. OPTOMETBIBT . III lent omen 9...... 2372 TIIPMIIIIOIII5 these years from wooden nailing yihlpgi of yeupp. day. in the streamlined fabricated steamer and air ships of to- dsy, we have always endeavor:-.1 tn Iu-ep panel with mg V.” changes that have occurred In trans HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. nslsbllnneal 107! i and representing Offices: cnsauyrruowu- suumissms; .. Moursous: (Next to llmpoonb Agency) Allison M. Gillis. LLI. BAIIBISTBB. SOLICITOII. Eta. no Blclunosd st. - Charlottetown Phone 590 1 ship filled the eye and stirred portatlon and its relation to Byron J. Grant, O.D. Bank of Commerce Butldlns Cliarlottelown Money to Loan "Gordon Eihdddhddio-niil D.A., LL.B.. IIAIIRISTEII, SOLIUITOR. Etc. 154 Prince St. Charl-otteluivn PHONE 470 Dr. W. R. Carson CBIROPIIACTOB Palmer Graduate CHABLO'l"l"ET(lWN Phona I011 201 Prince Fi- m' Dr. A. I.. Macisooc DENTIST Dental X-nay GLORIA BUILDING I10 Grafton St. Phone W Dr. K. A7 -MGCEGCIIOYII RANDOLPII W. ERMA P. MMPHEISCIN. 0,A. of London. England. other em us at llallfas. slonelon. It. alohnts. Anihent. Dartmouth lonhlllo. uverpool. New Glasgow and Truro. Illa?” been revoked. hi-mars whose ” m.N,"s,'. o ngii were confiscated be e We Irv happy to be t In t 'I - ' tlllley failed to deliver their sppci:tliI- Porflt-l0II Coven H W I Inn on M3 an M "urn Tn". in lane gtl;:3M:TmsTl'lionI I'D Ahoy. Cllnlr quotss of od l th Stat "" ' wlll mom lfl”m”l”l;ldlt;m” hm: (Opposite Revere noun :0: Queen St. . Phone MI Their bank credits, previously ,. H. R. & CHAIITIBID ACCOD'N'I'AN'I'l 145 Gr--I Guru St. cimiocuiown Phones 2060 - IM 7 nsmvmo. c.iL , KEVIN .i. MrKF.NNA. N American Underwriters. Montreal. Quebec. Ottawa. Toronto. l Curtis Bids. Clisrlolungn. l McDONAl.D. CURRIE 8: CO. CIIAIITEIID ACCOUNTANTS Kirkland Lake, uonclon llainllloa. Edmonton. Chsrlotutnwn. lalsl Joan. lharbnooke. v-nmv"" Telephone WI