expltcit,<tt- int-hid tliztt the DWIYlIIiOH GOV‘ crzimcnt WYlll replace entiipmcnt so tisvd 0r worn out ~tit<~ thc um‘. Rn; tum the litimitnoit (iovernmeitt and \\’. .\. L. w‘. ll .'tt the schools must pay for such cilmtitncnt. li. rift-ct this itiezins that the pub- hc, who put-l tU-r sllCll t-ituititticitt once as Fed- c-rgtl (iiivuiviiiiut taxpayers. liillSl 110W Pill’ for it ztgztiti zis l’r~ vzncial (iovcrtimetit or hltinicipal . t;l_\'|i;l_\€l's_ "time 0f age m- the battlefields of World War PAGE FOUR” TllE llllllllLllTTETlIWll Glllllllllll Morning Dell! (Founded In llfll Authorized e: Second Clu: Mall, PM‘ 9"“. Department, Ottewe Prelldent: Lleut. Col. W. Cheeter S. “flan ‘ Vloe-Prelldent: .|. a. sun-m, P-l-l- herein-y: Lleut. Col. D. A. Mncllnnon, 0.8.0. Idltor lnd Manning Director: J. B. Burnett, F-J-l- Auoclate Editors: Frank Welter mil . In A. Burnett. "The Strongest Memory is Weak" Th4"! the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, JANUARY ll, 191G The Schools 'And War Surpluses \\'ztr .-\ ~'.~ Corporation ll2l$ an army 0f eitipluyccs wriggling with complications in (nspusing o! surplus materials and equipment pliid fur (lll‘.'l'.‘_' the ivlir, or yct to be paid for, by the lZl.\']|Il\II_\ of this xuntry. ln Montreal alone, thcrc is at staff 0f tnore than 1,000. 111t- |)i|ll\'\ of the Dominion Government and of \\'. .\. C. is that everything of value shall be soil. \\'ith .1 high overhead and re- ductions in iariu- to sectire quick sale in (luau- lll\', htnvcvt-i. zi is nut likely that the public trtaisury \\'1ll gain trcmcntlutislyi by a Flllltl 6d- hcrtitcc to t _ pctlcv. Th,- 5CtliHIl~ ztnd tiniversitics 0f Canada are t-t-ttorttd to l», n tit-gent necd of much 0f this stirnltis cmminztnt. The \CllU()lS turned over thcii l‘L'>\>tll‘t‘c: lit the llontittioti Government during the n1. to trztin workers for industry zmd the zirmtu furcrs, with tl-c understanding The rcltsot, for this policy is probably 3 " then nnttln: thzit giving saleable articles t0 the >Clltt<il5 t‘ il, l'L(lilCL‘ the market of those who lmt- Jar-itin- m sell such articles The truth is sCiLmls always nced more than they can afford to In. and that they will continue t0 buy zill that tl.t:\ can afford. It is to the in- terest of litismcss as well 21-.» to the general in- tercst that the schools should be given as much of the wzir surplus as possible rather than that it be sold to other users‘ or to dealers with a consequent reduction in the demand for new equipment. At present the War Assets Corporation per- mits the schools t0 obtain “on indefinite loan" —in effect, grzitis—0nly such materials and equipment that its scrceners have listed as non- saleable or scrap. Presumably educators are expected to be grateful for these crumbs from the master's tchle. In fact they are indignant. The work of the schools isvsurely of sufficient importance to deserve something more than a hand-out of reiected iunk. ‘W, .i.. I00 New Canadian Products Hundreds 0f articles never before made in Canada are going to pour from the D0mini0n's war-expanded industry, the Reconstruction De- partment predicts in its report by George Mc- Ilraith, Parliamentary assistant to Reconstruc- tion Minister Howe. While the tone of the report is optimistic there is recognition of problems to be faced in the reconstruction period, particularly in the re- conversion of plant and equipment and in “a lubstanttial realignment of the labor force." Figures included in the 65-page survey show : wartime expansion by Canadian Government investment of $706,000,000 in industrial plants and investments by private industry of $500,- 000,000. It is roughly estimated that the post- war value cf this expansion will be in the neighborhood of $583,000,000. The report is largely of a. factual nature, consolidating iufornlation on developlnent of industry, employment trends and population shifts; but from those figures certain clear- cut conclusions emerge. "Canadian mamifzicttiring industries are planning to expand and produce many new lines, iticludmg at least I00 maior products never before manufactured in Canada," the re- port says. “For example, products range from ihtcr- city buses, prefabricated houses, glass fabrics and plastic prctlucts to a myriad of household articles. Thefdr-vclopmeut of the toy industry il Canada gives promise of an end to reliance M foreign countries. "Primary materials and components of mantifacttired articles include ball and roller type bearings: polymer flake, an important ma- terial for nylon fabrics; special type yarns; syn- thetic resins; titanium dioxide for all types of paint. The list of new products includes medicines and chemicals as well as many types of plant HLICllLIEFV and equipmenLnevcr be- forc produced in Canada.’ On Canada's Corfiing Of Age An American IIUWS mttgazinc has a pic- ture of Mr. hlackcnzie King on‘ its cover, prints under it the legend “His country has come of ags." Canadians, suggests the Otlawa Journal, are sufficiently adult to accept with grace any llF-riut that comes t0 their Prime Minister, will l-c only pleased or amused (de- pending oti the-h mood or knowledge of the flctsl by the news magazine's sketch of his career. For the sake of the record. it seems right tu point nut that the implied nntlon Ill through the piece. that Canada came of age under or Lecausp of Mr. King is nonsense. Canada lzwd come of age long before Mr. lag, World Wu I, acted that age also in thel peace conference at Versailles. ' The Stature of Westminster? That statute was purely declaratory; creating nothing, es- tablishing tiuthmg, it merely defined somethingl established before. _ Our American neighbors may not under- stand that; it. is well- that Canadians should. Too much tionsense‘ is talked in too manyl places about Canada having been brought t0 nationhood tinder Mr. King. Mr. King, good student that he is, must himself know differ- ently. Queen's Canadian Fund The Queen's Canadian Fund was formally closed at the end of the year Since the spring of 1941, when i! was organized, contributions have bfifin sent in from all parts 0f the Domiriiom the headquarters 0f the fund being in Mont- real, with local collecting agencies established in the various provinces. For the most Dart, individual subscriptions have been small in amount, but ‘illectively they have meant a respectable augmentation 0f the sum available for relief purpoises. The money was forward- ed to the Lord Mayor's Fund in London, a. small proportion going t0 the Far East; but most 0f it was set aside f0‘: the benefit of the people of Britain, who suffered so cruelly as a‘ result of Nazi bombing raids. l About $1,700,000 in all was collected in Canada in support 0f the fund, mainly as a result of newspaper public-in. A special effort was made to brighten the lives of young people affected by the tirar; the "Children's Christ- mas" may be n-ctitioned as a particularly pleas- ing feature m this regard Subscribers have the satisfaction of knowint- that the money donated has, ir. all circumstances been used to the best advantage and helped to supply a mqgt urgent need. _-tIJIIURIAL notes- _ Interest ll! thc forthcoming civic election is steadily liveznng up, and the prospects are that there will be more candidates seeking seats than at any election in the past ten years. This is as it should be. l.‘ i fi i When the Canadian sociation was organized in less than 3O hospital beds for tuberculosis pati- ents m Canfldfl- Tllda)’. there are 12,000. The tuberculosis rate among Indians is fifteen times as high as among white tieople. tr ,»= ‘ e w Tuberculosis As- 1900 there were H Among the additions to our medical prac- titioners in the city we have to welcome l); L. E. Prowsr, son of Hon. T. W. L, Pr0wse,_ and ‘formerly Surgeou-LieuL-Cmn. itiander m the _i\'avy. llJr Proyvse has hosts of friends who will [be delighted to have him settle and practise in his old home town. at m l- 1v New Brunswick Government is to be con- gratulated un ending its financial year with a 5‘"Pl11_5 0f $465,305. Thisis its sixth annual surplus m succession, and a lump 0f over $360,- 000 above the surplus recorded last year. Here our Government is in the _d0ldrum.s of depres- sion and have been ever SiilCe the Liberals ob. tamed the sweets of office. Ill l! 1K Ill A world slate is now being touted from London, and information is that this story comes from the anti-Bevin extremists. Obviously, a world state is what we are working to create, but, equally obviously, it will still take some cen- turies to bring one about. Talk of this kind does nothing but discredit. all the efforts to bmfllt about a working arrangement between nations to keep peace. The provinces, etc., alleges to have de- creased in population since 1941 are Prince Ed. ward Island, from 95,047 to 92,000; Saskamhe. wanfrqm 395,992 to 345,000, and North West Territories from 12,028 to 12,000. It ‘vould be interesting to know, for instance, how the Bur- eau 0f Statistics discovered that 28 reduction lll the N. W. T., not to mention ithg 3,047 re. duction in our own- province. i Ii 1 i! _ _ If the population of Charlottetown and vic- ‘mil’ b6 20,000 as claimed, and a reduction 0f .3900 population in the Province as a whole is admitted, then the state of our basic industry, agriculture, for help, must be worse than the most pessimistic of us guessed. The Boards of Trade shonld chock their statistics, say,’ with the help of the Agricultural Federation, 'or one 0r other of the Post-War Reconstruction Com- mtttees or Councils. There is something radic- flll)’ P7002 statistically somewhere badly need- ing righting. U i i I Sit john Moore, British Gcncril, Qlllld Corunna this date 1309; he was an officer in the American War, was wounded in the Cor- sican campaign; served in the West Indies and Ireland; the Holland campaign and in Egypt," was commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, and earned undying fame for his conduct of the Spanish resistance to France, including the March of the Light Brigade and the battle of Corunna where he was slain, and buried by request in the ramparts; the verses by Rev. Charles Wolfe, Chaplain, entitled "Burial of Sir john Moore," were popular for over half- a-century. ' I O I Q _ Number are export customer of the Am- erican farmler today is United Nations Re- organization and Reconstruction Association. Provided funds are available, UNRRA plan: to buy $100,000,000 per month of American farm products during the early part of r946. This amounts to less than 2 cents a day for each of the r80 odd million people in Europe thlt UNRRA has to help feed. Major food items for relief ordered by UNRRA for lhnuary ln- cluded: grain and grain ‘products $43,000\b00 dairy products. $3z,000,0oc; meats, $23,000,- 000: fats and soap, $5,000,000; dried soups, $3,000,000; soy: flour. $1,000,000; peas dild Mackenzie Kim; becalrte its Prime Minister. It l, ected the: are in the Empire’: council: dur- bcans, $2,000,000; sugar, $2,000,000: fish. $f,- , 000,000. Value of the food scheduled for January shipment total: $n5poo,'ooo._ i combination of the two‘) Whn could by [one year: ltlll vlvltfl: r-‘ilmem- Luke where ill fun. Service , pfgyldfll "fifty IOIP~WO "' n Nazi By The Way Id. O he might exlmlne nth: llnlgifanl-Illlaléfi hollll-II B6110)’. ~—Id- "Whentlulmu ‘ of “am, falls around" an urea, luaplclon l: lmlvllldlble‘ unless conjecture aubstltu for knowledge’ and de- Pefldlblo It i: out of he quel- llfih- There are not the implement: 01' Peace end pro an‘. Unden- "mql"! end 800 cannot flourish ln e vacuum."— Senator Vandenburg o! Mlchlggn, P l fwlfl flgllrquenotyetn all- sble but t e mlnlatry of juliltlce estimates thet there are at least 345.000 children who require teare. About 3.000 are Jewish orphans. WhO We" secretly adopted .by non- Jewtsh famllles and ,00o are children of Dutch Nazis. The nu. thorlties plan to re-educate the Children of the collaborators by lodging then. with patriotic fami- lleg and exercising close supexvis- lon over their activities. —Ncther- land News. American investor: have done ex- tremely well out of Canadian mln- fng_ and there is good eason to believe they can continue to do so. Attempting to protect another mans pocketbook is a thankless job at any time, and thebest and most effective way in which It; can be done lg to follow the principle of "full disclosure" of.’ the facts. If the United States desires t0 ex- tend its paternalism over citizens beyond the point of clothing them with the "armor of truth,“ It should be regarded as outside the realm of Canada's affairs. - Northern Miner. There wlll be sympathy, but not in any great volume, for Yntlosls- vla’s King Peter, who ls finding himself without a country, and must face the future poorer by $32,000 a month, the amount of his allowance to date as a royal exile. Peter however, is not quite destitute. He has what is called s small private income. The world could be sorrler for Peter lfilt did not see about it many thousand: of young men who had fewer, op- portunities than he, and n9 private resources other than relatively small gratuities, yet- are digging in and roe-establishing themselves. Perhaps that ls the answer for hi: problem-work. -Windsor Star. It ls announced by Premier Drew that special course at Toronto Unl- versity l5 being arranged to train veterans ln the operation of camps, resorts, hotels and other estab- lishments for the better promotion of the tourist trade. Here, lt. ls A m. cukntorrerowt~l' cbsnomi vuatlc, , _FOR_UM Tu: solace: l: open fo- the dhoululon POLL TAX VOTERS ._._.__. Sin-In your edltorlnl note: I reed today this ltérm- ’ , How many unpro rtled peo le have paid their hen tux to ena le them to vote at the forthcoming clvlc election? Apparently the r1:- lng generation are not yet ruffle- lently Interested to induce them to reRlster a: voters In considerable numbers, thus lenvlnx the lelectlorl of Mayor and Councillor: u: here- tofore largely in the hand: a! pro- party-owners. I am a housewife and own no property. The other evenln I was so pleased mo read both s tes ln the pa er showing additional in- terest n civic affairs. I was par- ticularly interested in the new slate whose platform contains so many good points. I at once began to wonder what I could do r0 help to get them elected. I thought. I had no vote. Please tell me how much the head-tax ls which will enable me to vote and when and where can this be paid? Could vou suggest how other unpropertied people might be induced to vote. It is u bad thing for property own- ers to have the whole say. We shall never have improvement that. way. I am, gilr. etc., IIOUSEWIFI-I (The poll tux ls $5 and must be paid by December 3'1. If tmpald the date before election year, the vote is lost. The other taxes are levied 0n real estate and personal property. entitling the taxpayer to vote. Women have a vote on red estate only. -Ed G.) Bacterial Warfare (Windsor Star) Still another wartime rumor is now given substantiation. The use of bacteria as a destructive force was not simply an alarmist dream. It. ls revealed that the Axis r ; Inc's? l t Professional Bard: GAUDET‘, e» HASZARD l from: :0, non: A " A. aAune-r l gfi... ..... um , 31"#filmt=;»»v»?ail'-= , - “IMP lllllj _ Commerce Bu; m‘ IQ-IIIIIQlUUIPIIVIAIICO: l r.ll h above your beul rm l“ “"" Sand OI fiercely m: m h éffltlsf NEH‘ Yw‘ “resins Not, for yotrnie cruh of smudg, r ma h ll ch t d A Not. m you u» dollar's m I mm m preventing “r ”' ‘cmmlnl ' m; d590,“. mum, 5.5-‘ l“ Richmond St. $13M‘ udlfwft 3.322“ “w?” ,J;'i’lu§°'1'i,‘l fi hi? "°"“"°“°‘°"" l Whm uufdmam will be lea: boemuednttberelllfi. Tel-s” Pro-Bl)!“ P t, And our burd what ium. Fifty yyears helix‘ fign a me-eylng Prop of State and You, my lad, wlll ..n"r.:*“u~ P!!! 8 ry Loan. . cuss? 1715mm: O A_A_A_AAAA x xxxxx xx xx‘ on our latest Vlcto ssumvnn . m ,_ m, Harrell and Con! any gfisiwil “iihvmdirwfiliéil, lthiwm’ l" "' l‘ "'“"° "°'“"" ‘ x m» is what John mu is’ there 3",?” “u "W chm“ °°,°"‘“.““' or when World War; are duly won; umminusruhwellelb‘ Far be and perchimce or maybe u flllomnllk" D‘ F? There lie stands when things are "m7 ‘u, ' thrQush‘ Dr. Even: Stomefl: o‘ ‘ futon: Trlllt Building Always rm m bold the baby tire. hi"! It flfllmlfiaih Mumh‘, (Not. so nice a. one n: you.) “l? P'°"’“l' u, m" I" h" "vrnmm. ' rmt, of course. as ou Brow older, "Mflgfl "ll ‘Y '1, 3:5 You will clearly un erstand; mmhnm"; ‘film ‘m h. PUBLIC STENOGBAPHER merefore, babe der Burdens by your batters planned. When you outgrow toys and Get ml» rum from esrll Britain always wins her battles , prepare to shoul- Don't bottle tad: . Prloe 86 rattles, er starb- dehy. Order 0:3: Attention! lull resolved I T lhlpment of np-to-dnte Trun- es. Allslzu. Ill-remaking card: mi olrcuhp correspond t meiiigpmyfih‘ T“ ms nun GIDDIN And ls always in tihe cart. ‘ mllfllm" xlfé-J —I1ucl,l.ThM best < CounehtAmfl. o éluardiean. B‘ 2 R‘ ISOAIJE &° C‘ —- _. e ‘- <0 Pbfafiils uni’ Fl m Gm“ m 5 l rte d A coirnmtmlt!‘ has solved m. own ppygjgjj J “u ‘fmwnwsm’, ' h g problem. A model village chuhuflo“ ‘"“ "M" ,t°°‘“““i,‘l,‘~’£., ‘fill’; 1-1.... 2m s. m young eou es noq x to take over lame ham-es from DONGASIER. “shad, _(OP) lllldvlllh W. Meaning, C.A. elderly people’ whose families nave _D°n “d _ _ Its s. std-sign trade neflmflwmmmwd’ pun a ‘ammo,’ gt: M__,_,_ i, , ; l ‘ oolllerv at, item-by Ind e ______,____._ fully the electronics devices in- vented slnce Pearl Harbor. ls announced. $4,500,000 village of N0 bounce. lt McLeod & Bentley w. l. BENTLEY, no. was actually planning this type of offensive. What l: most striking about the revelation la the secret: which sur- rounded the affair dur ng the war. It l: now disclosed that the lind- Qng of means to counteract blo- loglcal warfare was the chlef con- cern of the late Slr Frederick Bant- ing. It is clearly recalled ln news- paper offices ln Canada that cen- sorshlp was particularly active ln screening his activities. Cautious directives‘ sent out preceding his hoped, ls the beginning of .1 new vocation, one which holds many at-l fractions, and which has a wide field, particularly throughout the northern country. It should be meet and drink for many veterans who have been in the outdoors for so long and who naturally balk at confined spaces. It will be good business for the provlncé, too, to show leadership in the tourist ln- dustry, which to date has been left to hit and mlss methods, and which, in too many cases, has been ex- plotted not. too scrupuloully. —St. Catharines Standard. An open singer wrote me thlt tongue twlsters are a part of her daily practice grind. Another car- respondent asserts her aspirants for the stage are required to say: Threg grey geese in the green grass grazing; grey were the geese and green was the grazing. Radio announcers are often requlredto recite as a test: The seething sea cesseth and thus the seething sea sufflcleth us. A Detroit woman claims she was cured of stammer- Lng by practising: The sun shines on shop signs. A young woman writes that her dentist father makes patients with new plates practise on: Amidst the mists and coldest frosts, Wlth bnrest wrist and stoutest boasts He thrusts his flats against the posts. And still insists he sees the ghosts. And now, if your tang is so tungled you cannot stalk trait, llmber lt up with three doses of: Lemon linlment. -Charles Potter in Read- er’: Digest. Recent correspondence ln The Times, London, on the dstlm; of books has usually drawn attention to a commercial dlscourtesy which is lrksome to all who take a ser- lous interest 1n literature, nnd ap- gear: tn b9 increasingly frequent. one of the publishers addicted to the practice of issuing their books without a date hall ventured- to defend lt. One publisher, not him- self an offender, has indeed drawn attention to a wartime difficulty, that delays in production may cause 3 book to be put on sale with the ate of the prevlous year. The meln issue l: that what the reader moat needs to know ls when a book was printed, not when lt was first sold. It. ls obvious that legal, and Indeed all technical. book: may be seriously misleading without a date; reputable publisher: of these: ' however, :eldom..wlthhold It Un- dnted maps, eieln, including road maps, can be a delusion and a snare, especially ln these days of thq violent removal of ltind- marks :li over the world; and ln mu kind it n regrettlble to find V that :ome of .the largelt cartograp- hlcei publisher: are at feuit. Bu: even ephemeral book: ought tn be fixed to their passing day by I date for the mqst trivial fiction l: n lent q part of social history. It he: been pro en elsewhere that children taught. to plant trees never have been educated ln the need of comervlnz them later ln llfe. In thl: province we need both coruervutlon end pletlng 0f "Bel Planting expedition: Y l¢l1°°l children can be plnnned no the younzlte 5 can heve l Irlfld d!!!’ of lt. The province he: a nursery turning out thouund: ofJrec: for planting. Why not :n organlred be more benefldll then e day ln the open for m: younntm. whet; more e ucntlonel than to learn "" f“ ° l“. it'll. .,“ court ry, w n vism lncldentllly. i! "10 nrv- vine: l: not lntcrelted, "h" "will 1m, lulow (and the other town: bore) omenlzln: on their own‘! School c dram, now flown up 0! orbe: row ef- greet mm _ have tllln- ovnr norm, m, , bur being tranqlpfllldpl-nt“ o: ltwl: mm’ ° ember: rvl tragic death hinted that he was engaged in a study of aviation medicine, and stressed that no publicity should be given the fact. It was rather mysterious, in that this type of medical research had not formerly been treated as con- lldentlal, and fact had been rather freely discussed. The value of the secrecy ls clear It doubtless protected the public against panic, at the same time coriceallng from our enemies the extent of our knowledge of their plans. 'I‘he revelation now made b: one that should Increase our d»- ferminatlon that. war shell be for- ever outlawed. Science Now Offers Many New Gadgets (By Associated Press) An electronic device which liter- ally will burn the egg yolk and bacon grease off the breakfast dishes without damaging the plates l: among the wonders fore- cast by Howard Blakcslee, science reporter of the Assncialcd Press, ln the January Issue of Steelwsys Magazine. nt"*“ratlori of the American Iron and Steel In- stltute. Completing his preview of the dishwasher that wlll out trill"; of electrons to work ln place of soap. water and hcrubblng. Biukwh lee declares apuff of air wlll "dry" the dishes by blowing off the ln- cinerated dust. Other applications which he fore- sees for the science which grew from a feeble start tn 189$ to a multi-bllilon dollar industry today, are: Electronic steam tables for restaurants which wlll heat each plateful of food an instant before it ls serve . Cookutoves, planned but not yet bullt, which wlll have compart- ments for electronic baking, broll- lng and frying. . An apparatus to emit sounds he- yound the range of the human oar to detect, which literally will vl- brate bnceterla to death. Buch a device already he: been used to sterilize milk and its application to household refrigerators as a spoilage eliminator is being inverti- gated. eee Highways sign: which will plck up the beam of your headlights at n ght and flash you a printed warning that you are trawl Int; at 30, 50 or '10 miles an hour. The field of electronic: mvera all devices in which vacuum tubes e used to emit controlled stream: of electron: which can be put to :11 kind of teakl. Electronic: l: act- ANNOUNCEMENT nn. i L. n. mowsn PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON , HAS COMMENCED PRACTICE AT 152V; GREAT GEORGE ST. i, (Offices Formerly Occupied by Dr. J. A. MacMillan) OFFICE HOURS: ' 1-3 P. M. Except Wednesday 7-8 PM. Except Wed. and Set. ruomi: OFFICE 2302; from: '50s ‘ J. A. BENTLEY, LC. Ben-Her: and Attomen-et Lew 1s: Prime Street DR. A. R. SMITH nsumr 1'15 Grafton Street Offleellonrulltolz-Btol Telephone 32M. ALEX W. MATHIESON Office: l0 Greet George Strut Money to Inn: Collection BAR-METER} SOLICITUB. BIC, PALMER & HASLAM A- l. BABLAII, 8A.. LLB. BABBISTBB, ITO. Bulk of Non, Booth Chamber: Charlottetown, . l. l. MONEY T0 ‘Lorin e Phone IN Moivrumu. Men o! eflair: naturally stop at the WINDSOR because of its reputation for dignified comfort, unobtrusive, courteoul eervice and ite convenient location-and because the WINDSOR la recognized as the proper place for business and social meetings. V ilihlifiilsur s. Anni-c nan-or» III! nun ll l0. B08 lb J. A. McGUIGAN, B.A. nanny, no. BABBISTEB, SOLICITOB cunnm nuunma M. ALBAN FARMER 5-5- LLB. MONEY TO LOAN BAR-BITTER, SOIJCITOB, ETC. CIABLOTTETOWN Canadian Bank of Commerce 8H8 BELL & MATHIESON an. 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown, EEJ. iii-i H. F. McPHEE. B.A., K." , NOTARY. mo. nnstsnn. sonrcrron Bllcy Bulldln; Charlottetown FREDERIC A. LARGE omnibus. u-rc. Phllllp: Bulldlng, Ill Grafton St. PIIOIIQ “ll P. O. Bo: H3 CIIABLOTTITOWN. ELI. ooooloc-voo-éoooo-oo-o-voww-vw Charles n. McQuaid l an. _ fi Blrrhter. Solicitor. . Notary, Etc. " _ _ ' - - ~~- - -~——-———* Intern Trust Bnlldlnl. QUlblUhb By Ken Reynolds Charlottetown ' Phone l1ll » ually one form of atomic energy ule, but the energy reicele l: en infinitely mull percenteje of the fQlQllg that occur: when en mom’: guclfiu: l: lmuhed l.n an atomic om . "Electronics he: not been offered for home use: on e large scale bo- caule of expense, "thl: can i: not in the electronic tubes, not-An the mechenlnn: they operete. The ex- penle l: the power required. Thl: power i: uled ln the form of high frequency electric curl-elm. High frequencle: are comparatively exggillve to produce. e electronic dovlcel, which IIVQ greet aunt: of money ln tn- dum-y, monltou operation: Involvi- ing u ally thounnd: or hundred: of dollars. In the home electronic: cenaot pay It: way by producing t pro l. "Butlf power lot: s: cheep l: the etornlc drumm ope. than Ill-frequency electrical _ cur nt wll become lncarpcruive. ~ an there will be electronic tube: to turn the light: on end off amoral-- lngulo the outd illumination: u for ooolrinr, wuhln: Mall“, underln], Iron , dultlel: not clelnlng, elr. p nl.” ‘ .."""'":' t". =-....,...,,~,:::i en coo om y _ ‘germ olefin-st: u»: er: wo- o’ electronic Mun l leltvlc, In eon: even t r C?‘ hie _ : Nu l ohm try, it'll-fill mull?! _0O0fll W2“ ~ DION JOOIVOIO) ' "Ismail of n: m’: put u: l: Wendy-la » \ a tli: ,- ‘ovoo-e-o-e-oo-oooo-oo-ouooo-ow- I O§§Q4§§§OOO4 EYES sxlunvsn ' ' AND. omssps FITTED 3- 8. Tevlor OPTOMETRIST -°*-.-r*,=-.:.:-:,,':-~ "~ sjenau" in»: l lzilleooolflt