PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN Morning Dilly (Founded In nun! Authorised n Barund Cllu Slull, Punt Offlr-o Department, Otflul. ‘I'll! lnliuul (iuardlnn l'u lhlllnr and Slamming lilrrctur, .l. Aunrlulo Billion Frlnli Walker. ”Ths Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest ink" CHARLOTTETUWN. moNuAv. JM. 30. 195-11 National Health Week Loss of $35,000,000 in wages a year, a cost of $l,ti00,000.000 a yciu" {or sickness, untimely death and accidents and loss of education for 28,000,000 pttpil-diiys in the year were recently estimated for (fanada in n recent monthly’ letter of the Royal Bank of Canada. Such figures show graphitfill)‘ the urgent need for increased interest in public health and wider stippori oi immun- ization programmes. lt ntust" alwa_vs be borne in mind. however, that ill health and accidents are not more statistical losses but individual and family tragedies. To have the bread winner incapacitated by prevent- able disease, to endanger lives of mothers and children because of neglect of immun- ization is cause for individual heartbreak as well as being part of the national cost of ill health. The Health League of Can- ada has proclaimed January 29-l<‘ebrtiar_v' 4 as National Health Week and Cantidians would do well to take thought of their per- sonal health and lend support to health activities in the community. ll. S. Farm Surplus” The main items included in the new United States policy to throw Government- owned surpluses of foodstuffs on the export market are dried eggs, dried skim milk. flaxseed, raw linseed oil, beans, Mexican canned beef with gravy, feed barley, corn, oats and potatoes. The (lried eggs, which the Goyernmenfs agency, the Commodity Credit Corporation, bought at about $1.30 Der pound will be sold at 40 cts. a pound. The canned meat. which cost the C.C.C. 30 cents a pound, will be sold for about half that price, and the potatoes, which cost the C. C. C. over $2 per hundred pounds, will be sold at the fire-sale price of 1 cent per hundred pounds. In the case oi.’ oats, barley, flax and corn, the C.C.C. plans to sell its holdings at mar- ket prices. The linseed oil will be sold at about the same price as Canada is getting. The effect on the market will be not nearly as marked as it would have been had the C. C. C. applied the same selling policy to grains and linseed oil as it is to eggs, can- ned meat and potatoes. Nevertheless, it is obvious that the availability of the addi- tional supplies will make for lower prices. The following Canadian trade figures for the first 11 months of 1949 are cited as giving a fair idea of the importance of this development to our exporters. The fig- ures are for overseas exports only. The U. S. market itself is not greatly affected. The item of barley for example is feed barley, whereas our exports to the U. S. are al- most entirely malting barley. In potatoes, our exports of seed potatoes will not be af- fected as the sales by the U. S. are of table potatoes. The figures are as follows: Dried eggs . . . . $4,763,457 Powdered skim milk .. .. . 1,340,458 lflaxseed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . £4,860,574 Linseed oil . . . . 7.682684 Barley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,502,007 Oats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Il,202,870 Table potatoes . . .. . . . . . . . . 1,182,544 Beans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 498,464 (Torn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142,940 (Tanned beef with grawv .. .. nil Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $33,175,998 ln only a few of the items in which Can- nda trades is the competition 0f the fire- sale type. The rest is competition at pre- sent market prices. The products which are being sold at prices below the market. are table potatoes and dried eggs. Canada's total wales of these commodities in the first 1i months of i049 amounted in about $5.94 millions. lilgh Peacetlme Record 1n Great Britain, higher production re- cords continue to embrace more industries. Latest report to hand deals with the ship- building trade, in which it is expected that shipyard completions in 1949 will register the greatest output since the war. The esti- mated gross tonnage constructed is placed at 1.4 million tons, compared with 1.2 million tons in 1948 and 886,000 tons in 1947. A total of 47 per cent—over five million tons deadweight-of the world's ocean-going shippin on order or under construction was ' in the ands of United Kingdom yards last July, according to the recently published American survey of world shipping. Of the total world tonnage-IO] million tons-44 per cent was for export, 3.2 million tons for registry in the British Isles, 2.6 million tons for Norway and 800,000 tons for France. The latest statistics publithed by the October last, shipping under. construction in United Kingdom yards totalled 1.9 million tons gross and that laid down during the month totalled 99,000 tons. Tonnage coin- pieted and leaving the yards in October was 139,000. Six hundred and ninety-five thousand tons of the total under construc- tion is scheduled for export. It is also interesting to note that the in- crease in exports in the British motor ship building industry during the past two years is one of the highest of any large United Kingdom industigv. For the first ten months of last year the tonnage built for overseas owners was treble the corresponding period of i947 and 60 per cent more than in 1948. lzDllURlAL NUIES Number and calibre of the nominations for civic office should prove an accurate barometer of the state of civic spirit. Q 0 I Seeing the tendency’ to suppress public discussion in the City Council, it is a bless- ing there still is a free press to which ag- gressive citizens may have access. Q I O The t\\o main causes of a large number of fires, says Fire Chief Herbert Jewell, are carelessness and neglect, especially with re- gard to cigarette smoking. O O I The Royal Canadian Mint has offered $1,000 for a design for the new “nickel”. Even in China a nickel hardly fetches that much. O I O One particular advantage of the kind of winter we have been experiencing is that the lack of sno\v and repeated freezing and thawing should result in a high mortality rate for insect pests. I I O One of the most important factors in public health is care of the teeth. This is empasized by an advertisement in today's issue, inserted by the division of public health nursing, Department of Health and Welfare, pointing out how tooth decay can be controlled. I O I The Quebec Government, which has found suitable employment for some 250 former TB patients in the last two years, claims that with proper supervision in the early years of recovery, such patients are perfectly safe to associate with and no more dangerous than the ex-measles patient. O O O By far the most outstanding culture authority on the Island is Agricola, (Mr. Blythe Hurst, Sr.) but his voice was not heard, or even reference made to him and his work in any of the briefs prepared for stibmission to the Massey Commission on Arts, etc. I I O Whether a national emergency now ex- ists in housing is a principal point to be decided by the Supreme Court of Canada in hearings beginning today. The actual de- cision may go much further and decide the legality of practically all remaining Fed- eral controls. O l I 'l‘he average number of persons employ- ed by the Canadian National System is more than 115,000. Their occupations illustrate the widespread and varied operations of the country. 'l‘here are, for example, tele- graph repair men; deep sea divers; hotel porters: sea captains; machinists of all kinds; architects; cartage drivers: research chemists; accountants; doctors and lawyers. I l I Mungo Park, Scottish explorer, left Lon- don on his second West African expedition this date 1805. Ten years earlier he had already been sent, in 1795, by the African Association to explore the valley of the Niger, and on his return settled in Peebles as a surgeon. On the new expedition he was drowned at Boussa. He was the author of the famous “'l‘ravels" published in 1799, and his “Journal of a Mission to the inter- ior". published in 1.815, ten years after his death. I O I A direct passenger liner service between the Clyde and Canada will begin next May. The 26,000 ton Empress of Scotland will re- enter the service of the Canadian Pacific Steamships Lid. She will sail every third Tuesday from Liverpool for Quebec, making a call at Greenock both outward and home- ward, thus reviving the C.P.R.‘s traditional association with the Clyde, which had to be suspended in 1940. The ship has berths for 700 passengers and a speed of 21 knots. The voyage will take only five days between Quebec and Greenock, the shortest time in the history of the route. The Empress of Scotland was built by the Fairfield Ship- building and Eng. Co. as the Empress of Japan and, before the war, was in service on the Pacific, holding the Pacific blue rib- bon. She was engaged for 8% years as a troopship carrying 270,000 troops and sup- plying 20 million meals until about eighteen months ago when she was taken in hand for reconditioning. The first trip leaves Britlfli Admiralty show that at the end of May 16th. Grcenock on May 10th, arriving Quebec lHE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN ~75 ...£é¢ - llow llOT I WOULON‘? no "run, AN D ?0efi ME WITH Nlfl€ MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE No flocks that range free To slaughter I coirzicnin; Taught by that Power that. tpitics me, I learn to pity thorn. the valley But frcm the mountain's grassy ' dc. . A guiltlcss feast I bring; 'A script. with llellbs and fruits. sup- phe . And water from the spring. Then, pilgrim, turn. thy carcs forc- go: All earth-born cares are w rang: Man xvants but little here belowu Nor wants that little long. -—Ollver Gqldsmih (1738-1774‘ Charlottetown um r. l. u Old PRlN CETOWN DISFRAN ClllSED Legislative Council, March 23, 1860: The following petition was pre- sented io the House by the Hon. M.~r. Palmer, and the same was received and read: “A petition of divens inhabit- ants of Prince County, setting‘ forth that although nearly a cen- tury has elapsed since Prince- town was originally laid otf as the County Town, only one or two buildings have hitherto been erected on the site of the said Town; that the Act 19th Vic. cap. 24 virtually disfranohised Prince- tow-n by adding Township No. i8 thereto, thereby conferring upon that portion of the County a rc- prcwtaiion of two members in the House of Assembly, a privilege to which. from its natural posi- tion and relative resources, it has no just or equitable claim; and praying Lite House to sanction such an alteration in the present Election Law as will transfer the right of returning Lw"o\ re- presentatives to the House of Assenmbly hitherto enjoyed by‘ the district aforesaid, to the in- habitants of Township No. l7, em- bracing Suinmcrside and St. Elcanmfls. and to make such other provisions in the premises as the House, in its wisdom, may deem meet." ThanklifolnfiThiaitk You Friday. rThe ‘times. London) King Lear may have been right. when he exclaimed "l-low sharper than aserpen-Us tooth it is to have a thankless child!" Marty mothers, and not. a few nannies, whose pride and joy stands scowling at its hostesss calves (round which a howling savagely whips her skirts) and re- fuses to say. "Thank you for a nice partly." know exactly how King Lear felt. Hui. it. is not. much fun. either. having a child whose energies are temporarily diverted into being thankful. Just as every rose has a thorn. so every Christmas pre-"ent. from the outside world involves a letter 0f thanks. o o - Most. children. though prepared to recognize-on an academic plane-the Justice o! this, take a good deal of convincing, when the time comes. tihat. in their own case justice really needs b0 be done. On Christmas morning. up be their hooks in coloured paper and shavings. they were full of good in- tentions and the spirit of recipro- city. when their mother ex- claimed "But how kind of Aurt Griselda! You mint. wiriie her a specially nice letter" it. was with truo slnceritv that. they echoed “Yes. I must.“ But iha-t was a ion: time ago now. They still think well of Aunt‘. Griseldifs genefosity, but there are better things to do than sit down and wrl‘e her a letter. Be- sides. aren't they going to see her al. the pantomime next week? - o - Ars for the old gentleman who sent. them the long book by Shake. soc-arc. they don't even know him. nt lean‘. they can't remember xvi-lat. he looks like. Srrely you ought no‘ to write to people whom you do not know’! When at. last. these qujbblcs have been disposed of formidable ad- ministrative problems t rv on‘ fitFl!‘.’.'."\'6S. Ruled paper. so hi; prnsable at this staze o.’ the lotto"- writerb develonment. is less plent- iful a-i. home than st: school; ard w-hen it has been found a certain impetuostty in the scribes an- proach to the tack in hand. results in ink being upset. often in q~'an- titles large 611011811 to necessitate a partial change of clothing. and "copjurin; tricks" take on arrange and unfamiliar to paper. creating an urgert: de- results in the missive being atlon. ly furrow with an air of volent concentration. The ulesceni. nib, with little or or loter~wlth ultimate Ruth. For there i! n. tendency Griselda) Household words ‘like "dvnamo" forms when committed for the first time nnmtl for on eraser which, if met sav- agely oxcorinted. There is nothing very cursive about. the whole oper- Bowed like a galley slave‘ over his oar. the child plouohs its lore- male- desk bears what the police would des- cribe as "signs of a struggle"; and, indeetiasirugglela heirg waged-m struggle with the oulvporta of the English lnnzuptze. with the scat- torna of ink, with an intense duh-e tn go nnd do smoothing elu, and—soon- for these letters. of thinks to mfeo- typo themnelvellrho child feeh thot what it. his once uid well it will never sov better, 1nd tho phrore fused with perfect slncerllry to Au-i. "It. Wu Suit whot. I til Notes From .W Another island i B: THE ELECTIOA (First Itistailmenti LONDON, Englund~ After all the agitation of past months -— all the uncertainty and the won- "Anson" dering when the General Elec- tion would take place — now we know. But. l doubt if we are any better 01f for knowing. The knowledge doesn't. seem to ll‘ made much difference to the ordi- nary man and woman of this 1s- land, as far as I can see. A little while ago I wrote about a man who complained that busi- ness was not. so good, and who blamed-amongst. other things — the uncertainty created by lilr: ex- pectation of a general election without the knowledge of when it ivmzld come. Yet, as I said then, the mass of our population are easily influenced by ‘iJlLlllgS Lhztt, might. happen this week or next. or next. month or six months hence. It; was then, as it is now, a case of getting on ivith the routine business of living and taking in our stride whatever comes along. If a general election happens to come along, well, what. of it? The faci- is that comparatively few people really expect that. tlir- rc- sult. of the election will have much effect on their lhes. IL may tic draught [mm the 0P9“ "ml" “or that we are somewhat cvniczil, or a Pallilcm m‘ "11 perhaps we have learnt that. life isn't. subject to violent change (or the ordinary folk whatever the colour of the government, at. least. during the past. few generations. ‘The Socialist Government which we elected in 1943 has wrought some pretty severe changes in our national policies domestically- but the changes haven't. made much. if any immediate difference to us individually. We may see the re- sult. of these changes in years to come, for better or for WDFSO, but. if we notice anything at. all it will probably be put down to a normal process of evolution, and lcw people apart from those who have an axe to grind will bother atwut causes. By all accounts most. of the world lS taking a keen interest in our performance at the forthcom- ing poll. We hear that Australri and New" Zealnnd, having reccntl"; rcjcctcd thcii-‘own Socialist (lov- crnmcnts .nre anxious to see if we shall dn the same. We hear that the Big Business interests in the United States would be very pleas- cd if we did. \\'e hear from Mos- cow that if we have any sense at. all we shall vote Communist. but l don't think we shall have much of that kind of sense. ' The reports of all this earrin- ment. may be exaggni-titrd. One thing is certain-there ir; not mush excitement. over here. Not. yet. .'|ii_'- way‘. but. then. campaigning has not yet. started; maylw u!‘ sh-ll liven tlp when pblltn: day is lien!- cr. when the lending mcn of the opposing mriifs have had their rrmrf. iitr: u.‘ telling, n."- what miracles they will work for us if they are elected. Elven then, l suspect that only people who will he really ox- cited will be the politicians them- selves. The rest of the coiintry will listen to them on tho rmlio. ut meetings up and down the land, will read their articles in the press, and will eventually stroll along to Hm polling booths to register vdtes in ar- 1 '1 tlicl To Grow llll "HITCHING RIDES" ON THE BACK€ 0F CAR$ CTT-Tfdil Of Culture tOLtaws Journal» From Halifax a Canadian Press reporter has been inviting our ' lsympathy for Mr. Vincent. Massey ‘and his associates in the Royal Commission on National Develop- ment in the Arts. Letters and Sciences. The poor fellows. he |says, spend long days listening to evidence and arguments, devote their supposedly leisure hours to reading briefs and dismissing them with {allow - commissioners, and even on train journeys from one lccntre to another their talk isn't lof fishing or gulf but on deep cul- tural subjects. If this is a true picture of Mr. -Massey's commission in action we fear for the out-come, because af- ilcr some ntonths of this sort. of thing, and confronted hy mount- {ains oi‘ briefs and recorded evid- iencc, the commissioners in a per- ifccily natural reaction might re- .))0l'i. that, with culture already ooz- ing out of our ears, what. this country needs most is public lot- teries. more prize-fights and free liquor. , We cannot help wondering sometimes what. Mr. Massey and ‘his associates will make of these ‘devastating torrents of words which have pursued them through the l0 provinces. They have uncovered a deep and abiding passion for the ‘Better Things of life, and thry must. come to suspect. that every casual stranger has in his pocket. our cultural Ehortcnmings. Education, the ra- lGilO, art. galleries, museums. the ,cordance with private decisions ‘made months ago. For that. is an- iiothei" characteristic of John Buli and his politics—he makes up his mintl early whom he is going to support, and his loyalty takes an awful lot. of shifting. lfhedecides to 'vot:e a certain way, he'll that. way, and oppoSllig political speakers can argue black in the face and never change his opinion! those who voted for Socialism in 1946 will do tn:- same on Febunrjv 23rd. or that. those who supported the Conservative or the Liberal dr any other party five years ago will not have changed their minds. There may have been a Good deal of mind changing one way or an- other. but ‘there have been five years for it. Many. if not most, wtcrs make up their minds slowly, whilst. a particular‘ government is in power. and having reached a verdict. about that government's efficiency or otherwise in the light of €.\'i)€l'i8nC(‘. they are not easily swayed by promises about. whit will be done in the future. So. when election campaigning begins in real r-nrnest, millions of prople will take note of everything that is hein: said. ll they agree with the speaker's politics they will nurco with what he has lo my; ii‘ they don't. intend to vote for his party anyway they will listen with their tongue in their clwcknv, and consider that. he doesn't know what he is talking about. Most of the general excitement. is likely to come after the votes have been counted and the result ‘nliliollllclid. It. will be more inter- esting then-almost like B, soccer ‘game --to sec if you supported the wanted" recurs throughout the whole correspondence. 0f some presents ll is true. of others it might. be true, but. of other: again (and a glarce at its innumerable but unillusfiraied page; strongly suggest. that. the book by Shakespeare comes into this ‘ ., y) this ‘ ‘ is V018 themselves 'l‘hat. however, is not to say that 1"n‘d"d'¢ w The traditional pageuniiqv and color of British public life which is being restored after the ne- cessary wartime austerity will receive a further contribution to its full revival from the decision that foreign aizibassadors gut i to Buckingham Palace to pro n‘. their credentials to the King w l in future travel in a State ca.‘- riagc, sent for them from the Royal mews and driven by Ruynl coachmen wearing sczirict ('\).lt.\ and gold-laced top hats, and th"\' The worst fears of the vippnn- distressing to find the U..\'. tnus disregarded, but it is hard tn see what else the architects of internationalization plm could have expected. — New ‘In l. ll lid Tribune. A free market. for Lunudian farm produce offers the best hope for the future. The propci- finic- act as a buying and cdiilllg Li_ for Canadian produce, as ll been. but to concentrate its tention on eliping open up m. kets. The i indlmg of the Bri- advatntage at least in that a‘. i conspicuously demonslr-alcd danger of bilateral arrangements as a continuing policy. There is something rad;- caily wrong with such a plan when it can only be maintained subsidies. — Regina There are some good things about an open winter. even if win- ter rye doesn't think so. Part- ridge: arefft urged to a dict of apple buds, as in white nights of drama, the universities, literature- there's salvation in each of them, according to its advocates. if only the commission can persuade the government. to spend mum-v, 31y] preferably a gieat- dcai of ml.nq\-_ on its development. - But we suspect. the uomlllissittll- era are immunized by this time and don't. catch culture easily. w.- should rather think of them lint on trains and in their off hours they play bridge, road "whntiiui- its", doze, and that. anybody who so much as mentions culture ls fined a. round of shall five say ten and toast. -\\'b'd\‘a'u'n%%'r\‘nfi \fl'fi'ffu'o%'o5'_u%'fi'fn'u‘-'-'.".-,-,q — Notes. By will be attended by fooitnrn .1: Royal livery »— ill\' in i-Uflllililtlll j Office. 1 th", tion of the government is l a‘ to 1 -‘ tish contract markeLs has had n 9g bulk tradiiigi by; Lvndei-lNL-t JANUARY 5o. 1950 The Way -~ ‘il'tJSilGl' moonlight. Cow; do,“ {have tn eat so much i>o fill l nnlk pail. and even breakfa" pancakes need not. be pncd m high by the goddess of the griddle llcns lay more and a \\'()Qdpn° lusts longer. And if a mun vwuul lll a vallcy pasture and listens to the brook talk to the willow, h; can pause long enough to break: a twig from a black birch andi gnznv it as happily as any mbb,‘ lie would never gct so f,“- n.0,‘; tilt‘ house in two fcct nf snow _‘ New York llcrnld ‘Fribunr- Scawccrl ls being used mm.- a" ‘more as both a food. and (o, 1. 111ml foddc lls value lu Hi3“. cnls of the Unncd Nations. plan v-a- !~"'.l'\;:Sf‘(l rrcenll; for Jerusalem zirt- rontirmml hvwi "T" Umlcd Killl-lfinm the Israeli govcrnmriil‘; dct-i l l 11- Plllifinul‘ Newton. lp (c, move 115 offices m 11 _-‘ imp. to an audience of scient: ,- capjia] white pm U_ p; ;l.‘l\‘ British Association (‘infer- ship Comm] is gum; 1th,,“ ltncc. The dIFCCIlOTl which luI-uro motions of drawing up an “tlik "ml Y*‘5°5'l‘°il lll developing tiaitionalizatifm stzittiic, the ‘lo l 5P "B91191 5001M‘ of viii. itself continues to txls‘. n; .—!l1,iH~i|-< ~ “id iakv- “I15 discussed acluaiiky, not as a biilCpFilll. lt ',,\ P11015101‘ Newton said that I TQ- ccnt experiments have shown m, common brown seaweeds 1., b. particularly rich lll Vilflllllllj. A 'lar_‘ field of work awaitcd bio, chunuis 1n extracting ii1;_.-_ P fir-m in palatal. , Mb cri form. fur human can, Sunlgflmi. — Toronto TEiGQIQUL i The hrst import. we m" bow ' : ‘ ‘it'll, enterprise, and hops and women who 19;,“ .1 fiver-populated and troubled t-Ll world to carry on new live; for themselves and for their so“ land daughters. The rumor 1h“ Ottawa may introduce a new tvpg of flizzmczal encouragement 'u rsist Britons wishing to come in Canada. but. w-ho are 110w bu" , discouraged by UK financial n’, tilations, should not w-orry u” public. It is a good sign. It em,“ he extended. lt could be vuend, rd it» noriihcrn Europeans as w-q as in Britons-to Dutch poop!‘ who have been so notably s“, cessful ll’l this land. to Scan“ navians, and to others. There an still fields of intensive and 5p. Fifllllwl Bflriculture and industry where such newcomers woultl not will)’ itch) themselves but m, help others. To feel that ne ha" ixniched a dead-end in exp“, sr-n l5 a poor type of fawn“ Our horizons should be mud; lvvoflriri‘ than that. - lfamtito Spectator. JQQZZIDIKID I The Age-Old Story ILOIZ-QQDJJDI ‘ l will turn My hmd mm; f]: nml I will purely purge sway t lllross, and take away all thy liq "naorizssion/xi. CARDS J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist Eye: examined, glasses I'll- ’ ted Corner Kent. 8a‘ Queen! Sis. Office Phone lllitl-dlouse ltlitl i A. Walfhen Gander. ' LL.B. BARBISTER, SOLICITOB, so. Phillips Building lll Grafton Gixoof Money tn Loan Collection t Joseph R. MucMillun, LL.B. BABRISTER. SOLICITOL, Em. ‘l5 Queen Street PHONE 776 Money to Loan M. Albon Farmer MONEY T0 LOAN B.A., LL.B. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. Etc. Charlottetown, P. E I. MacPhee 8r Tremor B. I‘. lllacPl-IEE. L! \ E SOMERLED TRAI Barristers, Etc. Toomho Bldg. Hi5 Queen St iinllectiom Dr. A. L. Moclsaac DENTIST Denial X-Ruy GLORIA BUILDING I70 Grafton Si. Phone ‘Jill Palmer & Haslam A. l. IIASLAM. ll.l\.. Li.“ Barr-Inter, Etc. Bank of Nova Scniln (Jhaoihcra Chllrlllllfiwwn. l'.l'§.l. MONEY TO LOAN Dr. W. R. Carson Chiropractor Palmer (iraflimte / cFlAllLOTTFlTfllVh m Prlnco Si. Phone m1: l iFIEdGIIC A. Large. K.Ct , BABRISTER. SOLICITOB. . NOTARY l Royal Bank of (lanada Chaniberl Charlottetown, REJ l Successor ’ i George J. Tweedy. 1L0. I J. A. McGuigon xoramr, mo. . BARRISTEB, stauorrou t CURRIE nmumvc. C out a. Mufhieson BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS. M B. R. BELL, ML. , D. L. BIATHIESON, l..B., LG Attorneys at Law LOANS 0N CITY AND FARM ‘ PROPERTIES I m Richmond st. ' Charlottetown, P.E.l ______ , John P. Nicholson. i LL.B. li-UXRIKPER. SOLICITOR- l-lic. |.‘>l Princi- .\'t., (‘lftvuvll- , PHONE 2838 Mafheson 8: Penile A. w. DIATEIESON. mo. ‘ A. ll. PEAKE, B.A., LL15 Barristers, etc. Itollectlons - Mon v in M" D0 (iron! George Strut l l l neither true nor oven, in the child's view. credible. A doubt. nulls it: its conscience is pricked. But what. else is there to soy? "It was very nice"? Luke- worm. 1nd will not. get you over the page. "I un going to read it as noon u I can"? A blacker lie than bhe first. In the end the path of least. rc- tul formulr-"m in thinn- iio condom’. sistonce is taken. Down goes the well tried. the speciou . the deceii- t just what. I wanted"; and the child rises from the thankless in‘: of being thank- ful with n stain on-amorg other‘ winning side or not.... and than l Chflflnfllim“ to go in work next. dny just. the " ' same. and to carry on as it noth- chug R' Mcwuuld I ‘in; had happened 5,5, l asamsncn. SOLIUPPOb. Guudef 8: Hazard NUTARY- 510-. flnrrlsmrs, Solloltorl. Nvlflfm- Elggtflgg] flgnuggtgp mum Trust Mullding thinning ngltgvo; 8012,0111.- . ' , UHARLOTTETOWB‘ |o I WIRING AND nznmusn rho“. .7" ‘aunts-RT A Gum“; 5_/r\‘.,ll. camisr a muusn. i ‘ 5"" “' “m” I29 Elm Au. Phone 1003.! ii‘..._..._-.._,.._.,,B.,.,_. ll. R. OOMIE and COMPANY i _ UIIARITIRED ACCOUNTANTS i G‘ F’ Hmch“°n OFFICES: Uhlrlotlefown, lluilfax, Monclmi, Amherst. h" Glasgow. Trurn, Kentvllle. Or $00 m omnwwrzrown: Randolph w. Mlnnlnx. 0A» B" M. 8on0, 11A" Lorna H. Iva-s, C.A., W. Grunt. ihomllltlll- u i ononmrnfsrl Phones: mo . 1m B“ ' l ‘Spoolllloh in the fitting ol gluon for tho oonooflon of W. l new" duwmu CHARTERED AULOUNTANT ' ‘ CURIIIE BUILDING p on onrron ITIIIIT I Tel. um CHARLOTTETOWN, r. n. I. 5°‘ _ l