l l 3 E ': PAGE FOUR liief of the Canadian general staff. i Authorized u second cim mil Pout mile. 1 mnr(:i';'i'i:i'ui:?:,;' ageweiliiise aghi Department. Ottawa. i The Island Guardian I'uhliIhiiu Co. icub and then a SC0ut' he bccarne a Cub g W i, leader and a scout leader. He assumed the litlitor and bl-nnclnz Dlrwwn 1-11 A Bl"Mli- 5 duties of chief executive commissioner of A-soclnle Editor. Fm-B Wlilteh i the Boy Scouts Association in the summer of 1946 after leaving the Army. Major General Spry was a prime fig- ilre in the work which culminated in the first giant Canadian Scout Jamboree at Connaught Ranges in 1949. The 2,500 scouts who arrived there last week-end from the country's ten provinces to partici- pate in the conlradeship and education of the second such jamboree owes much to his initiative. The Comlnissioner, who has been dep-, uty director of the Boy Scouts Interna- tional Bureau oil a part-time basis since 1951, ilow moves into a post which. in ef- ls already as deeply in debt as other com- fect, makes him chief executive of the, inunities which have their pllysical require-' wot-id scouting movement. His job is to ments fully modernized. . suggest, recommend and plan program for The nl0h9.V lnUSl be i01iiilC0lllillg 8n(i' scouting in the 55 countries ill which the the Only QUCSii0n is i10W ii is i0 be raised-i movement is established, then implement It is to be presuined that the Council will: that pi-ogi-ain once it has been approved "lo all in its power to increase receipts from; by a 12.membei- international committee Federal and Provincial sources but witlli and a biennial conference. iii reasonably anticipated funds from these: Bi-itaints Lord Baden-Powell, founder of lh0l'F is Still lhe n9C9S5ii.V Oi iiiSh91' lax-ii scouting, was fondly but unofficially known Ition. as the world's "chief scout". At his death Councillor Edwin C. .lohnstone, chair? in 1941, the title was vacated. The Ot- man of the Finance Committee proposes,i tau-3, Citizen suggests that in a very real -'ini0llE-I 0iil9l' things. iiiai 3 bi-l5iil95S 18-Xi sense. the far-flung scope and responsibi.li- be levied, rather than an occupancy tax. THE GUARDIAN i corvo. At the age of 33, he was made vice- i c l CIRCULATION "rulers Prince lixlwalrd Island like the dew" '-"The strongest memory is weaker than tho woaklll Ink". TIIESDAY, JULY 21 I953 lHARI.()1iT;ITOIVN Business Tax lvlow Charlottetown got into a situation rcquiriiig higher tax collections is of inter- est to citizens alid highly iinporlant to; Councillors. past and present. bill the hard: fact is that the city needs many things but , ties of Majoi'-Genaral Spi'y's new job give The objections to the latter are that the him inst ciaim to ”B.Pls" mantle. value of rented real estate does not neces- sarily reflect the volume of business tran- sacted alld that the tax discourages firms, from becoming properly established with-E Bcigium independence Day, iS3L in the city. It also discriminates betweeni . . .. firms which require heavy property invest-i A Sui.pi.ising aspect of the empioyment "Will and iii05'3 Wiiicii ii” "iii need Such: situation is that no less than 125 of those iaiigibie a55ei5- F”iiiii?i'- the Occupaiic-V taxi listed as unemployed at the Charlottetown mvolves double taxation. Both the land-iomce are residents of Country districisi lord and tenant would be assessed for the; Considerabie numbers oi: oi". Country pea. Same P1'0P0Yi.V Whiie 3” 0""9i"0'3”upie"ii ple have become dependent upon work in imiiid Pay iiiiii Oiiccg . itown and when that is not available they There is no painless solution to thc - i . are unemployed. problem of civic finance. On EDITORIAL NOTES principle, . a o however. those who benefit from services should pay for them so far as possible and. taxes should be designed to encourage. rather than discourage the development of the city. A great British union has overwhelm- ingly defeated a resolution deplorlng ac- ceptance of knighthoods by Labour leaders. Very properly they eoilsider that the na- .tion can as properly honour distinguished labour representatives with orders of chiv- alry as distinguished representatives of icommercial interests. ii 0 c o i Allulterated Butter . The seizure of "hundreds of thousalids' if George Bernard Shaw-'were alive in 0i li0UndS Of bullet" in Montreal aii9gGdiCanada today he would probably comment to have been adulterated by the addition that the Depai-tment of National Defence Oi V9S0iai3iP 0iiS giV9S Point i0 U19 31'8li' is our most important cultural institution. inenl Oi d8il')'nl9n thal SUCh Di'aCiiC0S Certainly there is no other body, govern- would become common if margarine were mentai 01' othei-i which makes it possible readily available. Margarine is prohibited for so many young poopie to take advant. n Quebec as it is in this Province and age of higher education, ionsequcntly there was a risk involved in. - ' ' is possession even before its use to niixi Saivaior Rosa, Italian painter, was born with butter. Had it been lawful to possess, this date 1515. He took part in an un. ihe margarine the risk to the lawbreakersisuccessfui insurrection, sang and acted in Would haw? been C0l.lSid91"r1i3iy 1055- the Carnival at Rome and wrote trenchant In this case detection Was made by . satires, including "Babylon". in addition to rhcmical analysis by the Federal Hcalthipaiiiting hisioi-icai pictures of sterling Departniclll. but not every i0l Oi i3UU91"nierlt, portraits and romantic and pictur- that reaches the public can be so examin-iesque iandsc-apes, He was threatened by Ni i1ilh0USh iegiiinlaie dailies ale Siliijelii the Inquisition for his "Wheel of Fortune". to regular inspcctloll. ; ' t' ' Dairymen conduct their operations un- The Depai-tment of Agriculture is older 4101' Sl1'iCt i”9f-.'lliaii0llS 85 i0 DUl'iiY and llUai' than Confederation, having had its origin ii.V- Tilffy may U50 "0 Pi'C5i3i'V3iiW-'5 93'; in 1852 in the. Bureau of Agriculture of the rcpt salt and very little of that. Mal'gar-Ipmvinco of Canada, and in 1867 its scope ille. on the other hand. is U00 i1'0m Siiciifand j7.ll'isdictlon ill the Dominion were laid PUBLIC l'URlJM i This column In open to the discussion by uurelpoudenln of questions of interest. The Guardian does not neceour- tiy endorse the opinion ol wrrccpondento. FORMAL GRAMMAR AND BETTER ENGLISH Sir,-Who has slipped? Mr. D.C. Williams, "A Former Teacher" oi "Minor Saxon"-"Which came first. the chicken or the egg?” That is the question there the word which is understood-see quotations from Shakespeare. Shelley, and Scott in postscript) this letter has to do with. My July 2nd letter met in late in the printing. Your proof- rcader usually so competent some- how on that occasion overlooked the omission of some lines which were in the last two paragraphs of my m.IllLLSCl'lDi.. Of course this omission made iile appear to say things which were nonsensical; quite enough to make Minor Sax- oii's opinions seem ridiculous to such a capable reader as "A For- mrr Teacher". I trust this letter will have better luck. In your Issue of July 13th, "A Former Teacher" treated the stat- us of our educational system fair- ly. with commendable reserve. and positively in my humble opinion. None the less I am sorry to say he misconceived the tenor of my ex- tended eomments on a nine-word seiitencaof Mr. Williams. This cen- tence I reduced to eight words and changed the verb has to have. It was here "A ' Former Teacher” connotatlvely became entangled in an old bewhiskered fallacy; rhetor- lclans call it. ignoratlo clenchl or mistaking the question. This long- haired hlghwayman has been driv- en from ambush by every out- sta.nci'ing advocate and debater since Cicero's day. The great Dan- iel Webster won many a legal and legislative battle by an alert attack against. this weak spot in his op- ponent's armor. For instance in his rejoinder to 1-layne on Fool's Resolution Webster calls for a reading of the resolution and then shows that. I-Iayne ignored the real question. We do not mean to imply that "A Former Teacher" deliberately used an artifice to deceive. Not at all. Giving the Better-English in the heading of Minor Saxons July 2nd letter more than the news- paper departmenlal signification might easily cause a troublesome preconception. Had it been headed "Has Mr. Williams Slipped?” I think "A Former Teacher" would have grasped its limited implica- tion. If,"Better English” slips only once in:a. dozen moons that's 9. Dirfl-W R0011 record for Ml'. Wil- hams. My attitude on this point was made clear by my praise or the educational system on" the whole. No system is perfect. All of them have their Queen Maps in stately coaches "drawn with a. team of little atomies". And in our own educational system you wl'l find a few so dogged they would rather die than to ever change (ah! a split infinitive; anything W. Doge Col: grammar crowns as good usage. Petrified stand - p at t er s standing on guard with drawn sword in hand; wherever ii. split infinitive pops up in their presence it is tantamount to a red cloth be- ing waved in a. bull's face. Them I crleltlzed in somewhat exagger- ated language. But. Did not some of Milton's combatants so frown "that. hell grew darker fi'own." The multiplicity of hair-splitting distinctions to which these de- votees dedicate their talents would make almost anyone applaud the satlri.st's lines and wrongfully ex- clalm: , "All their bla-w-sled rules Teach nothing but to name their tools." I am. Sir, etc. MINOR SAXON P.S.:-lai Anlecedent. of relative pl'i-liollll onilitcd: "Whom the gods love. the young." at their i The Neighbors ly George Clark n.. r s r.. (M on--m. im .. .x.-. 5.-l...u c. In ”ltis nothing serious. His legs are stiff from sitting in i front of television too long." i -Chlmplmzees. rays a naturalist, can recognize photographs of them- selves. Where they differ from humans is that they don't blame the photographer. -Hamilton Spectator. The Rev. Dr. Albert Doodheer, I former Dutch refugee who, after the war, was adopted as a candl- date for the ministry of the Church of Scotland, has been ordained and inducted by the Presbytery of Mull as the first minister of the united Gaelic charge of Tlree and Hyb- pol, on the Argyll island of Tiree. Mr. Doodheer, who is now learning Gaelic, is a theological graduate of Trinity College. Glasgow, and for- merly taught history in Holland. He is also a graduate of the Uni- verslly of Utrecht, where he spec- ialized ln Indonesian literature. -Edinburgh Scotsman. British sport. specialists certainly went into R rave over the perform- ance of Marlene Stewart in win- ning the British women'- amateur championship in Wales on Thurs- day. "To look at this wonder girl one could not imagine in her tiny hands a golf club becomes lethal to her opponents." wrote The Daily Mail expert. "Nothing so coldly cal- culated and correct. as this child," wrote The "oily Expiess. and this was added: "We have seen ll. girl who ' surely become the great- l'?oed 6-um SONG OF THYRSIS i'rhe tui'lle on you withered bough. That lately mourned her murdered mate, Has found another comrade now- Such changes all awaltl Again her drooping plume ls drest, Again she's willing to be blest And takes her lover to her nest. If nature has decreed it so With all above, and all below. Let us like them forget. our woe, And not be killed with narrow. it I should quit your nrms tonight "Who steals my purse steals trash." -SIIEIICSDCRIT. (bi Relative pronoun ninllled: "There breathes not ciansman of my line ' But. would have given for mine."-Scott. "Men must. reap the things they ills life l'estri(:li0ns in the Provinces Where ii nlii.Vidown by the Britlslr North America Act. he sold. Consequently it can be made to At one time the Deparmwm of Agiicui. keep without refrigei'ation and can be ship-I tum embmced immigraiion and Emigi-3. pcd or stored at much less CXPCHS9 iiiaiiitioll, Public Health and Quarantine, the butter. lMarine and Emigrant. Hospital at Quebec. Even with these competitive advant-!Ai.ts and Manufaciui-9' the Archives, the ages for the Sllhsiiiuie tile”? are "i3iiYiCensus and Statistics, the Registration of lairylnen who do not fear legitimate com-'Siaiisiic5Y patents of inventions, copyright, petition. feeling lhili iiie Piiiiiii-I Wiii geihialld Industrial Designs and Trademarks. Pfaiiy P1'0i0P 1110 daily lnl0(iUCi- EVC” iiiesc I All these multifarious duties and extraneous optimists, however, are deeply concernediSe,.ViceS were eveniuaiiy dropped and the about ih0 P0SSibiiiiY.0i miiFSai'i"9 01' mix" Department devoted itself to making Call- tures of margarine and butter being pilsnada one of the foremost agricultural coun- sed Off 8.5 the real in-ies of the world, ,.:-.u.i..... 0 o I s i Next. month marks the 120th anni- world scout Leader lversary of the first Atlantic crossing of a -F-' isliip propelled entirely by steam. This Appointment of Maj.-Gen. D. C. Spry,i memorable achievement was due to Cana- Conadian scouting's chief executive c0m- dian enterprise. The ship was the Royal mlasloner for the past seven years, as di- William, built at Quebec at a cost of 15,- rector of the Boy Scouts International ()()0 pounds and launched in 1831. A Bureau is being hailed as a signal honor for memorial tablet in the Canadian House of the commissioner. and for the 150.000- Commons commemorating the first trans- Itrong movement he has headed and for Atlantic voyage by steamer reads: "in Canada. ' Ihonour of the men by whose enterprise. ' The country's youngest general at 31- courage and skill the llloyal illlam', the he ill now 40-Major General Spry served first vessel to cross the Atlantic by steam for 15 years in the Canadian Army pe1'- power. was wholly constructed in Canada manent.foree. An adjutant when he went and navigated to England in 1833. The overseas in 1939 and later personal asslst- pioneer of thge mighty tests of ocean ant to General A. G. L. McNaughton. he steamers by which passengers and mer- was promoted i0 nl&50l' in 1940. brllzadler chandise of all nations are now conveyed and mllof 39119131 in mid-1944- He on every sea throughout the world." Two battle swam HI theitallnn caminlzn. years previous to this epoch-making trip didnlilkhinl himself Ptrticl-lilll'iY 1'0? the the Royal Wllllam on her first voyage from sow." - Shelley. i with these classical autlioritics ll seems the word "ovcl"' performs the function of a preposition even it the relative is not expressed but understood: whether I say, "here are a few pertinent facts over which to ponder,” or "here are It few pertinent facts 1 r to ponder over." Or this, "I don't think Shel- ley. Scott. or Shakespeare. would pick out this sentence as an exam- plc to quibble over." Old Charlottetown (And P. I. 1.) THE SOUTIIPORT RAISED "We are pleased to be able to state that the 'SoulliporI' has been successfully .raised from where she was sunk at the Ferry Wharf. Early on Saturday, the precaution was taken of sending to Plctou for a diver, who arriv- ed by the lst. Lnwrence' that sve- nlng. After encaslnz himself in hll diving suit, he went down to examine her hull from the out- side. but, owing to her peculiar shape and position, and the dark- neu, he could accomplish noth- it. "During the day preparations were made by Mr. A. Kelly. of Southport-who I! very succul- ful at such work-for drawing her more out of the channel when the tide rose, by which means she wns taken about thirty feet. up. he next morning the diver again ant down-this time inside. He soon found the dead-light by which the water entered, and cloud It. There being no other places visible where water would enter. he again come to the sur- face to Await further emergencies. with this tide, Mr. Kelly anln brilliant huidllnll of his brigade at Ponte- Quebec called at Charlottetown. ., And chance to die before 'twas light, I would advise you - and you Love again tomorrow. -Plilllp Frcneiiu 11752-1832) est-evi woman golfer" Even the staid old Manchester Guardian went off the deep end with this superlative: "Clearly one of the finest players to-day." But trust the old London Times to run true to form. No dazzy dither there, no smashing of tradition or precedent. The Times said that Miss Stewart played "quite exceptional" golf. Good old Timer it hlld to be the exception itself. It's really not done. you know, to overstate ally- thing. -St. Cuillarliles standard. Tea-drinking Cape Breton" who top all other Ciniadlnns in the per Capita drinking of tea. can take heart frolii R report out of Britain bolstering the renowned proclivity of Britons to find an ex- cuse for another cup of tea. A Reu- ters despatch straight from Lon- don says that scientific inquiry has come up with the answer that tea is as good as fluorlnated water for teeth. A dental research team, back in England, nfler investilzat.- ing the fluorinnteri water system of Canadian and U. S. cities, re- ported that the United Kingdom's favorite beverage contains propor- tionally just as much of the cav- ity-preventlng chemical as flourln- ated water. No British city has a fluorinated water supply. The den- till research group's report. how- ever. decided that fluorlnzition lsi a good thing. even for Britain. and "will do much to reduce the present serious up between the dental needs 0 the people and the II- mount of available treatment."- Sydney Post-Record. Hop into B. taxi on the East. Side of Manhattan Island any business day. and head across town. If you're on 42nd street. one of the wlder thoroughfares. the 1.8 mile trip will take 10 minutes. Thalia exactly the time an lfiel1f.i0'lI trip took with n llorse-drawn cab 50 years ago. If you think that's slow. try crossing Manhattan on any of the narrow streets that make up the teeming tr-xtlle, garment: and shopping districts. Watch the cnb meter llicxorlibly click tip the nlckels as you inch through tinf- flc or halt behind parked trucks. The ride will take 20 agonizing minutes, if you resist the tempta- tion to get out and walk. These are but. two examples of the traffic congestion in New Yorkts five. counties. The New York Board of Trade terms the tangle a "billion dollar a year headache." - Wall Street Journ-.11. i might- 3 took her up about ten feet. "About 4 p.m. the water fell sufficiently to gel. the steam en- ginc iRollo' and a rotary pump fronl McKinnon & 'McLezin's into position. They both worked ad- mirably. the engine delivering two heavy streams. and the rotary pump one. In about four hours the deck was clear of water and she hegun to rise. so that at ten o'clock the water was all out and she sat on nn even keel. Today nl noon she had steam on, and will be ready tomorrow to make her regular trips to West River, and to fulfil all her engagements for excursions." l rIlI1)1bo)l1()(I1)(.n1-lbtnrultvgboldn-no-in A, The Age Old story , ...- -'o '-x-.'n:-1-:-i-.-. Now there In at Jerusalem by the sheep market in pool, which is called In the Hebrew lnngnn Beth- min, . . . And in certain man was there. which hlul nn infirmity thlrly and eight yenrs. . . Jeeuisi smith unto him. Rise, take up thy hell, nml wlilk. Aml on the snmo llny wns the xahhnth. . . . After- wards Jesiis flndcth him In the temple, nnd said unto him. Be- hold, lhou nrt mmle whole: sin no more, lost it worse thin: come Oflleu: WITH SOUND AND ADEQUATE INSIJBANCI With over eighty years experience in handlhh inll lines of Protection, we are glad to be of what service we can to those having Insurance problem: to solve, without obligation. ' IIYIIIIMAII & CO. LTD. Insurance since 131) CHAIIDTTITOWN - BUIIIIIIEBSIDIE - MONTAGUI ALLISON P. McI.lAN, C.L.U.. District Manager at Summercldo. CYIIJS A. B. SIIAW. C.L.U.. Dlnlrlct Malian.-r at Monte . , THOMAS MMVINN. C.L.Il., Special Representative.- J- G IUTIIIII-AN!)-Ieprucnhtlvo at Charlottetown. " AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE DIAL 0561 and 6568 -The Examiner, July 7, 1379. unto thee. 54 yum. 5;, .. ch”-iotutown -.-.. i ,.a. rnoxu ('10 J. A. Corrurhers. R.O. or'roMn'rnis'r ' I28 Kent Street Phone mi The Pass Considering all the gloomy things ileare obliged to read about these days it in exhilarating to come across some item that has to do with cheerful reconstruction of some good thing that has fall- en into disuse. In this category I put the announcement that I group of educators are trying ser- iously" to restore to its ancient prestige the fine art of ehlrogra- phy. ' They are assuming ti tremendous task for they will be hard pressed to find 9. nucleus with which to work. In fact, good handwriting appears to be a thing of the past; a past, lnorcover, which goes back ll long, long way. There is some evidence that the early Greek pliilsophcrs used their quills .wlth some degree of leglblllty. And even as late as the first Elizabethan period there were a few. including England's Shakespeare, who took pride in "writing a good hand". .. . . However. the decline in legible penmanshlp had started long be- fore then. Hamlet ls quoted as say- ing. "I once did hold it as the staiists do, It baseness to wine fair". From then on the deelliie became more and more accelerated until by the beginning of the pre- sent century the only places good writing was likely to lie found were children's copybooks and the samples sent out by correspond- ence schools. Even the copybook influence dldnt last too long. So far as I can recall, girls usually remained faith- ful for two or three years after the books had been put away. Boys, being by nature more anx- ious to emulate their elders in all things, wise and foolish, were like- ly to show evidence of disdain im- mediately they had laboriously written the last maxlni, sometimes even before that. . . . As for the special penmanahip schools, it must be admitted that they gave promise of a new and llrighter day, chlrogrnphlcally speaking. Their championship of the artistic and quiet flourish was noble and courageous. but it could not withstand the strange form of sophistication that regarded fair writing as a sign of social baseiiess. Indeed. there wall some feeling among the proponents of better writing, so the historian: say. that the flourish itself was to be decried as much as the degen- erntlon it was supposed to remedy. I have never seen any psycho- logical explanation as to why plain legible penmanshlp came uner a social ban in the first place. In all other arts men have tried to reach perfection. Only in this one thing have disarray and down- right slovenlineas been hailed as marks of honor. Fl-IE GUARDIAN. cHAlu.o'r'rl;'i-owN JULY 21, 1953 ing Scene By Observer CIIIROGRAPHICALLY SPEAKING it in I fact. that the man ,,'i write: hi: signature so that his literate person might be expcclpi to tell what. it is is consider-cu -.i( odd character. He is certainly ' rare one. Illeglbllliy is H gc'n,.,,' malady, but professio mi imiii, are its chief victims. Dllrlqix lawyers, Journalists, ))0iiIlL.'l.)n: ministers, teachers tCSi)L'fIlliiii those who have reached iilotp,s...,.'. tal status) at. al compete with one another for the greatest dlcllnl-lion In the lnart.i.stic acrowl. This has been going on Sn 1””. that at present a man's leailllnf and ability in any particular llvlri are popularly judged by the M... he affixes his signature to ii hi. er or other document.. If no u;,, can read it, the man is consirlgmi bright almost: to the point of mi. lus. If anyone can read it, hf) ,5 put down as pretty much of 3 dullard. Strange, isn't it? I bring up my own case Illilili.-Ii it is probably typical. As ll lad of ten I could emulate copybook psi. fectlon with the best of liirni Gradually it came to me that ..nn. ful and palnst-siklng writing tl,iS not as important as I had been int to believe. High School 1.-g found me ready. like I-lainlef 3 "labour much how to forget :n,,; learning". 'From then on my peniiiamhv; went from bad to worse. and l- the time I had reached form 1 could sign my name as crnzili .,-g any man of my generation. -van take a lot of pride in the '(ICiill tn. ment. When a friend iiiforincil H1.) that he had put away until 5.2g next general holiday fl lcller its had received from me so that M; might have all day to explore inq intricacies of my writing, I lcli 1 was well on the way to distinr" (1., The crowning glory came on im- day when I discovered iii-'ii 1 could no longer read my mu scrawl. . . . That may have been the llllltmz point; I can't say exactly. I lln know that in the last few yeais ll :.- handwrltlng has tended to follow a somewhiil less crazy pattern. I can read it now without. too nmrh trouble, but I am not sure vim anyone else could. For that warm: I use the typewriter for zililmz-r. everything. My chief ambition now is in he able to write as well as I ro':ld when I was ten, but. I have il'li',' hope of achieving it. I only trash the thought had come to me Pili- lier, for the older one gets me harder it is to carry out new l'f'5H- lutions and realize new drew One thing is certain. Never . will I accept the foolish dlclllln that it is a basehess to write 1 :2 And I say "good luck" to the hi1. - souls who are trying to eiicoilnlc Whatever the reason or reasons. people to write better. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Marheson. Peaks 8: . Nicholson A. W. MATIIISON, 0.13. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. LLB. JOIIN P. NIUHOLSIIN. LLB. Burllterc, Etc. Collections - Money To (an -. 115 Grafton Street Palmer 8: Hoslom A. J. RASLAIII. l3.A., LLB. Barrister. Eta. (Sank of Nov: l-leotln (' " Charlottetown. F. ii). I. MONEY T0 LOAN Bell. Mothieson & Foster Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. 8. B. BELL. Q.(;. G. B. FOSTER. LLB. Loans on Clty and Form Properties lilo Richmond street (lharlottleloivn. P.E.l. Frederic A. Large. Q.C. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Ilulldtiu Charlottetown. P. IS. L Loam on City and Farm Properties M. Albon Former. 9.C. B.A., LLB. Bnrrlntor Ind solicitor Bank of Comma w Building Charlottetown Money to Loan Gordon E. MocMlIIon. B.A.. I.L.I.. BABBISTEB. SOLI UITOII. EIAL. (Next to slminoni Agency) -A-lllson M. onus. I.L.I. BABBIBTEB. SOLICITOI. Ito. 180 Blchiuond SI. - Charlottetown Phone 500 Byron J. Grant. Of). OPTODIITIIIT ll! Kent Street Phone I'll Chas. R. McQuoid B.A. BARBISTER. SHLIUITOB. NOFIAIIY. Etc. Entem Trust Bullrllnx Cl1ARI.0TTETOVI'N Gander & Hoszord GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A., LL.I1 Bun-Intern and Solicitors Money to Loan! Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. Dr. K. 'A. Mociochern DENTIST Dental X-ray Above Charlottetown Clinic 202 Queen St. Dial lllll MocPhee 8: Trainer 8. F. Ml:-Pl-Il'iE. B.A.. Q12 I. soMr.iu.ii:n'1"nAiNoiI. mi. bnrrloterl. Eve. J. S. Taylor 0PTOMI'2'l'I!IST Eye: Examined, Ginsu-I Filled Corner Kent and Queen st-. Oftlco Phone I956-Home lliii A. Wollhen Goudet. LLB. IABRISTEB. S0l.lClT0ll.. titr- Phllllpo Jutltllng Ill Grafton Street. Money to noon CniiN""'j J. A. McGuigon BAIBIST-Eu. SOLICITOR. Eli'- Norlinv. Etc. Currlo Bulldlnl ii H. J. Mobon. R.O. Optometrist Montague. 7- ii" i Phone 892 .. Dr. W. R. Carson CllIn0I'BAc'r()B Palmer (induct: CHAILOTTETUWN QL Dial M1: M1 l'rlnc-it-v.4 Dr. A, L. Moclsooci owner I ouml x-nay GLORIA nunnmn (Opposite Bonn Hotel) 1 CHAIITIIID In Great ooorn IIANDOLPII W. ERMA P. blu:I'l-IICRIIDN. O,A. OIIAITBIIII Curl-Io Bldp, Ct 'otatotowu. . H. R. DOANI In COMPANY Phones use - other office: at Ilalllu. Moncton. sl.".iniur-. Amherst. Dart lcntvlllo. Liverpool. Now Gllccow and Tram. McDONAI.D. CURRII I CC. Montreal, Quebec. Ottawa. Tmnh. Saint John. shcrbrnoke. VN"""is Kirkland Lckp. Moncton. Illmlltcn. Charlottetown. in drama at. Phone gill 4... ACU0lIN'l'AN'lI St. Charlottetown I441 momma. O.A. ncvw J. McKl':N.N'A. all month --.-v -v 411- ': A000I1N'l'AN'l'I hr Edmonton- . Dial 67-"