BIAILITTETIII illlllllll Preddfit, Ian A. Barnett; Vice-hailed. In. l Burnett; Beep-Trees, G. l. Barnett; lditer one laughs Frank Willi’. _ a 11m cuAnwrTzrrowN cigutnum f ~ ' NOVEMBER 11» 1946 4: ‘ to organise and to strike by withholding’ his pro- ‘ . ' _ _. duetion on the industrial werker_ and is no way ht.‘ Th‘ w.’ Bone‘ of conquuladore 0" 110E101‘ ' Pflfllllbhll elf“ ethically bound to give away his potatoes any (I. r... Maamerenn 111 the Iv John nauphlnee more than a labourer is to ive awa his work. '* seats Writer. 5- 3- '$l'|AW. MD. CM H h I1 d to '9 ' yl h i. u" 1 wmdm st") "1311. l m srawa ' ' e as n pay rncrggsmgy i g,- gen" p. The Ant queries searching the 1-5771 n _ . RT. 2.2.1. “ti? gdlgm m) on“ prices for his machinery, hirclothes and aviary. {he raoubtiilerli’ ideas: cool; 0:111: bfgenh P gfllfvl“ “hm”. d‘ (By John ‘~ - 1- -- ll 0m“ “°'"‘" nepmeaaas. oceans. thing else. So he can hardly be attacked as a ,,';,§*,,,'§"," m“ m‘ “m” ‘° “"“° ioufrcglriurliae Tiiierlbplril 111:1 ‘can: Prose sears Writer. London) 2 f: g’ M‘ xrofiteeig" lf dhed is a "pirotiteer why arcs, there would 1..§§§',.l§“‘3§,,,‘,,,§f"’_§§‘j,E and dust they found what ‘time his‘: been ‘a strrngha wsekti: n"; [Q55 T‘ N“ ' ' ‘M’ M‘ sum“ enty tousan esor arms in r ‘ gar-y Albet , had spared r n1 111,51. w c t o peope o to me .____?_____.___ °'"°"'- f- l ‘"°"= *'°°““ ""- with your! 1.11111 people still flocking 111" ‘iii; r an '—' “mt o m w“ Q Klrsdm "My-d new lulu-flew Why should- m-n. » “'* cm"? One men in every twelve who The three were identified as that they are gsttinB “ck '"‘ l! though six feet tall. NEll. W. PHGGlNS served 1n me My,“ Canadian Diego Almargo. co-conqueror of peacetime footing and yet were think he matters CHARTERED A . Navy dining the we, enlisted n Peru and conquer“ of Chile: forced to think of war and pre- at all. at all? CCOUNTANT “The Sdrorsgeot Memory lo Iodid- flat ~ the Weakest Ink.‘ Tuscan. nova-seam is. 1m htr. Gordon's hoelpo Asked if Canada would embark on price control experiments similar to those in vogue in the United States, Mr. Donald Gordon, chairman of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, de- clared emphatically: "We are not going to be tempted." He went on: "Not only will there lie no decontrol but it looks as if we will have to wait a while before we can have accelerated easing of ‘the controls. Production is remark- ably on the upswing in this country with the ending of most of the paralyzing strikes, but it will be weeks before we con ascertain how fast the gap is closing between stripped stores and new goods, and for that reason, chiefly, we ore-obliged to move cautiously, if not slowly." There is to be no reliance in Canada on buyers' strikes. "Buyers' strikes are spasmodic, unrelated, too often out of line with actual conditions. Again, it looks as if the cunsumers are not cop- cble of any sustained organized action against those who would boost prices out of reason, out of any relation to supply. "l just cannot believe," said Mr. Gordon, "that the people of this country would want to swap their present economic position with that which unfortunately exists in the United States, ‘would wish to exchange all the benefits that have come from what was to a large extent a self imposed discipline for the chaotic and the exotic price and supply conditions in the United States. "Wholesale prices, the most reliable basis of calculation, have more than doubled in the United States since V-J Day," Mr. Gordon point- ed out, and he insisted that the advantages won here by carefully held controls were too great to be tossed away overnight by a rash experi- ment." When will controls come off? Gordon's formula is tlzis: When Con ans arc assured of ample pro- duction, when t. y are fairly sure of getting o steady supply of houses and sugar and butter and suspcnd-ers and men's clothing and many other essentials, the controls will disappear When that vxiil come Mr. Gordon, who is neithc: a prophet nor u n of a prophet, is too shrewd to venture n gr . _ It is to be hoped that every word cf this is earnestly mcarit and will be resolutely car- ried through. llon‘t Be loggers We should not be above benefitting from advice given others in similar circumstances to ourselves. "Scotland must not be like a nagging woman, inefficient as all riaggers are. lf we wont things done in Scotland, we must do them ourselves and blame ourselves if we don't do them"--Lody Glen-Coats, chairman of Scottish Liberal Party, at Edinburgh and District Liberal Council told the annual meeting of the associ- ation the other day. Commenting on this the Edinburgh Scots- man said: "A good deal was said about Scot- land, her present discontents and future place, at conferences during the week-end. lt was left to Lady Glcn-Coats, chairman of the Scot- tish Liberal Party, to take her fellow-country- men, rather thon the Sassennch, to task. Scot- land, she declared must not be like n nagging woman. There is something-more perhaps than some of us realize-in what Lady Glen-Coats said. Scotland has to stand up for her rights, never more so than now when Socialist legisla- tion gives extra power to centralized control at Whitehall, but there remains much that Scot- land can do for herself. We should beware lest, paying overmuch attention to asserting our- selves with London, we forget the native virtue of self-help. Besides, the nagger is never liked -and the habit tends to grow." Why Blame The Farmer‘! In some quarters the farmer isnow being blamed for pushing up the cost of living index. But, says the Hamilton Spectator: This seems grossly unfair; not only because it ignores the blunt fact that the farmer's pro- duce prices have been stiffly controlled (in othor words, his wages) but because it skips a basic truth that a great number of people_scem ol- mest hysterically incapable of accepting, That is simply that a price increase that benefits one wage earner or producer is a cut in another man's real wages or earnings The farmer's youngest son can see that what matters is not how much cash he gets for ten bushels of potatoes, but how many shirts, or what part of a suit or a re- frigerator he can claim from the store with that ten bushels, and that if it takes more potatoes to get these things, then his real wages are down. He knows that trade is still trade. "Id that the only valid claim on the goods or serv- lces of the community is what he contributes to the community himself — heretical e_s it might sound. Thus, a jump in crty prices is a cut in his wages. . So why blame the farmer? What lie gets for his food is his income, his wages. Other people get ell they con—no matter what hap- pens to the public-so why shouldn't he? There , are lean, herd'years on the form; no "security" but that he makes for himself; no holidays nor relief from a ruthlessly demanding twenty-four ‘hour: day. In Canada he gets far lesp than he does in the Unitdd States; in the west he is almost bunting at the seams about the way the Government has set a fer andor-world-prico ceil- lngoeblenheehtfoheotlreeenioeiorelrigltt $I,2$0elb_. a- EDITORIAL NOTES a Now we are efl set for work till Decem- ber 25. more are telling time by the ferelock in order be sure o! g'afti.rtg ‘phat they "m, I Q "The King opens the new session of the British Parliament today, Tuesday. The previ- ous sesoren began ‘in August 1945. i I Q Now in Nova Seetia it is a case of an op- peal from Prime Minister King to Liberal caucus, with Premier Angus Macdonold’: leadership at stake. I O What a peek of trouble has resulted from the Federal Government's procrastination over the new Car Ferry-and the Province has to pay the penalty, which Premier Jones declared pre- viously amounted to millions of dollars. lt IS the "endless web" the poet speaks of when a Government "first practises to deceive." i’ I I * Socialists like peerages just as other party- men do. George Henry Hall, who, on his recent op- pointment as First Lord of the Admiralty was created a Viscount, has taken the title of Vis- courit Hall of Cynon Valley in the County of Glamorgan. Formerly he was colonial secretary. i i Q War veterans and others are interested to learn that vocational training was given 35,- 800 veterans in September. This type of train- ing is cxpected to continue for another year ond expectations ore that a total of 100,000 veter- ans will take part in the plan. The September report showed 11,310 veterans taking on-the-iob training; 4,662 training in private schools; 6,411 attending vocational training schools for pre- matriculation work; 12,557 in straight voca- tional training and 958 taking correspondence courses arranged under the vocational training plan. e 1t 1o ~n Admiral Darlan, French Commissioner in Africa, in a broadcast this date 1943, asked Commanders of the French fleet locked in Tou- lon to bring the ships to North Africa, the enemy occupation of France being completed, though the Germans announced that the French warships would be snfcgzarded. The Eighth Army, pursuing its victorious course, occupied Bardia, Hulfuyn and Sollum; six weeks later Darlan was assassinated in Algiers by a young Frenchman, and was succeeded by General Gir- aud. I Let party heelers beware. They have adopt- ed a new and effective method of preventing "repeaters" at elections in Venezuela which might be introduced with advantage in this country. As each voter leaves the polls he dips the little finger of his right hand into a green fluid to keep him from voting twice. The crea- tion of one Dr. Roberto Finol of Maracaibo, the green dye is upposed to be proof against soap, acid or anything for at least a couple of days. Venezuelans read the inscription on the bottle- " to guarantee universal suffrage"—and illingly. 1k I l! submit w a o1 As time passes, the demand for first edi- tions of famous books increases, and competi- tIon at the present is keener than ever it has been. A first folio edition of Shakespeare's plays, published in London in 1623, seven years after the playwright's death, has been purchas- ed ot an auction in New York for $22,000 by on anonymous private New York collector. The 12 5-8 by 8 1-8 inch volume, bound in crimson morocco and gilt tooled on the sides, was from the collection of the late Eldridge R. Johnson, of Moorestown, N. 1., founder of the Victor Tnlk- ing Machine Company. lt sold for $5,500 in 1900. That was an increase of $16,500 on its previous price, as it was acquired in 1900 f0!’ $5,500. * Described by Time as a sort of town meet- ing of the world which can discuss anything. maize recommendations to the Security Coun- cil and the member nations on almost anything, the United Nations Assembly in addition holds U. N.'s fragile purse strings. Supervises U._N.§ subsidiary agencies, such as the Economic 81 Social Council (material progress and human betterment), and the not-yet established Trus- teeship Council (dependent peoples). Elects six of the eleven Security Council members. (The others are the permanent Big Five.) Has the power to initiate ‘amendments to the U. N. Charter-o power it will some day need to use if U. N. is to become, in truth and not merely in aspiration, the ‘orggn pf Ono World- era-o Premier loner has not the monopoly of high priced bulls. Jock Hoffman, a farm boy from Ida Grove, Iowa, bought a calf last year for $50, says Time. To feed his calf, a purebred white-faced Hereford named T. O. Pride, he paid out another $210. Last week, 15-year-old Jack Hoffman get a jack-pot return for his $260 in- vostment. After T. O. Pride had first been named junior champion and then grand cham- pion steor at Kansas City's rich, famed American Royal livestock show, Jack Hoffman sold him. The auction price: $42,600 (the Government will get $19,001.00 of this unless Jack is able to de- duct a siseable amount as "operating expenses" and needed improvements an his UD-acre farm). Prize bulls had brought higher prices. lut at $35.50 a 1b., the LIN-lb. T. O. Pride was for and away the costliest moat of all time (provi- ous record for 1a steor:_ $11.50 a 1b.). Sirloin 3711191963. In figures that means ~99 flifivcrs. 7.600 men as well as 7°" munbers of the warms. That means that this city 510x19 Supplied nearly enough personnel to man the peace-time Navy. — Winnipeg Tribune. Winston Chin-chill ls 1.1111 s; Work on his history of the war, hoping to finian the first volume by Avril and follow 11.11.1111 with "it? Others. says Newsweek. He die. fates fmm nis bed to a secretary imtli lunch; later he resumes die. ation in the library, striding back and follh- He sees few visitors and 1°15 °Y11y Dlrllamcntary and party duties take time from the book. Many movements have “mug. ed W1“! myfilliyifls names, but a study of their theories has usually cleared matters up. 1111,; ngw 5116111056 of exlstenolahsm mp5 Them all. however. The word will‘) "0! Possibly mean anything l“ B layman. but after reading an exhaustive explanation, the mys- tery is made immeasurably deep. er. —Wlndsor star. The coming 10 months are going to see a scarcity of Itigndgy 1391i. days. The Ottawa Journal reflects. Christmas and New Year's fall on Wednesday. 'l‘he:'e is Easter Mon- day. next April '1, but that never 1s observed very wholeheartedly. Dmmmml D33’ T19!"- Year fails on a ’I‘uesday- unless Parliament in the 13680 3i Jcven ('I'.he Lad). his son: and Gonealo Plaarro. bro- ther or half-brother. depending 0n file authority, of Frandggo Pizarro. Peru's conqueror. "The bodies." related The Unl- ted Prem. "were still garbed in the legal robes in which they were interred. The richness of the vestrnents and the coffins reflect- ed their high rank. All had been executed at various times." That lest sentence tells a story of its own. Those magnificent 10th century destroyers. the con- qui adores. sometimes were vic- li of their own fury. ‘This was the fate that overtook two of the lllsinterred trio. When the anti- quaries look more closely they will find. as doubtless they a1- ready know, that all three heads had previously been detached from their respective bodies. The rxypt which yielded this grisly find was in Cuzcu, a name which has its own historic and tragic signifiance. This once was the high capital of the Incas. a city of strange rites and customs and architecture—untli the con- quistadcres came. the Aimagroe and Gonzalo Pizarro among them. Death rode with the adventurers. but they (Ore the Incan empire apart before they died. 1 1 o The story of the conquest of Peru is old and well known. but men still are amazed by it. as by something stranger than fiction- meanwhile abolishes it, so 1r is that f0r full-scale Monday holidays, and the long weekends they allow mnggl workers, we mus: wait for Civic Hflllllfiy and Labor Day next 11.114;- ust and September. t We wish to join those protesting Rfiflipst newly-mired words: particularly dislike the several hid- eous “buTgt-rs" which have become prpular in recon: years. The “ham- burger" came of honest purentnic. but there is notrizns: to exct-"é me illegitimate .. and‘ “nutbLu-rrzr." -~ West- I .1 ,._ve1'ti.s-_ ern U S "c trig ‘buffdl til whigh 1'5 enough i0 m » r-ggygt that 0:111 mo. ' L.» the trouble‘ "tar-i FXllHCllOiLl .' nnimrd. Hollywood 1'. 11-11; n; t,!1|~.;;-_ n9“; films‘. all nxur. --cr.i.1c'.lons. 111at' is. r.‘ soars . I dance; 11nd band numbers c; L ; tons-the: cn a 11111 11 I 1-1-1111: in f""‘ _..l_1' |1'_L. J11“: ' got, there are‘ -.).t who like adult‘ 1 . rind are bored with 1t giorific-"tn o: band lcarh; ers and com ors from m ptbiic I have v 1:12am all high-l 2110i)‘ ntcrciit. mush.’ llirfr manners t‘ 111-11- charms ui, and ilicir mug“ 1111115113‘) ' -I_nnrlc1 Billy Telegraph. if we “(sit for India's friendship v.0 bllfill have tn work hard to win it and to induce 11- 1' to fcrg-st the past. Our racial arrogance. together with the last Lf-cenfury cf con- iim ius rep .01‘. cf Iwtlirfs insur-l 1111s made our, i i..= Indian i11slory' 1s wit]: an absurd? "h bias. Illt‘ history is r ' ‘ iten whh an equal up bzzxs bv vo-Aries of Indian] nationalism and memuifcs of an- cient wrcitgs :11“ being revived and cherisherls. so that we are held re- sponsible fir all lnriitrs present wsalznesse. Manchester Gum-than. lf newspapers ignored unpleas- ant news, crlrnc mciudrxi the pic- turc of contemporary life so pre- sented would be incomplete and inadequate. ‘Inc newspapers en- deavour to p: c-nt an accurate summary of 1o '11. nziticnl and tmrld affairs. rind since crime ncuvs fig- ures fairly prormnently in these activities. it comcs in for its due share-and more- of drpiay. Pub- l-‘Cili’ is hated by the criminal with bitter intensiqr. Newspapers play a large and Important part in the suppression of crime, These are fans which '11.‘. slightest thought will make evidcnr. -Ch:1tham News, l We reaa that in a divorce pro- Cfifdlflgs h wife testified her hus- band did not like to be called "Daddy" by his child bccausc it "made him ice] aged and uncolor- ful." Aged. yes. Who can watch the boundless exertions of a child with- out. feeling aged? asks The Des Moines Register. We remember hearing about an experiment along this line. An athlete at. the height of his power and condition was Bfifiiflfled the job of following n child around for a day At the end of the day the athlete was oom- Dleffly exhausted. when one tries to translate the activity of s child into the activity of on adult, pay- ing proper attention to length of legs, relative height and weight and ac on. one is stunned. It is beyond belief. 1b find anything equal to it one must ao into the animal and insect world, matching the scamperim; of the onipmimk. the jump of the squirrel. the loop of‘ the grasshopper, the strength of the ant. Certs niy being a daddy makes one feel 010. aithoufli the knowledge thus one helped create a being of such energy maker one feel that the years have not been spent. in vain. But. unooi 1111: No! A child is the greatest fiettorer of the father. Hie ability to toes her to 1h! cciiins. to reach the shelf where the cookies are kept, to imi- tate the noises rnnde by dogs and ducks. hie knowledge of what. nukes the leaves fail and the rnln to atop. his funny faces and oom- forttns ahouider- evesythtfl about him to admired: ifc may be aged. i‘! steak from T. O. Pride would be worth about I’ but he certain] is, rmnanfiv-Weit- Pldllll» lo Ibirbealn ‘NE " ‘ tire Aztecs l Mrxico. current demand for 300 years. something wildly improbab“ vct a fact proved beyond ' "mite. Francisco Pizarro tackled the {and of the I111". an cmvtire that could nut 100.090 or more men [n10 H" field. with only 16B sol- dict‘ 62 of them mounted. And (gughl the defenders dizzy. Fever htivins! seen horses before. .!iey broke before his cavalry, as had done earlier in And they couldnt fath- 3m the tactics of a soldier-y which always attacked. The conquista- does. of course. had no alterna- tive to attack. invariably out- numbered. and svlth their bridges b.li‘11€d behind them. their only choice was lo seize sword and pike and charge. The results were i‘i‘\'.'.ii'fliilfl. but the destruc- tion was monumental. Tiwy fought for loot. and the best of that lcct was gold. They w: gold-mad. but. WOlilfl gamble auzly in r1 nicfii lite spoils of '1 cr-"rwaizn. ‘Titty were cold and cucl. and employed terror in ccmper-"rite for i-‘neir deficiency in numbers. But history has :1 ‘rzmri of sneaking reward for them. because there irrasrft s1 coward in the bunch. 0f the three wncxi‘ i‘2l~.ii‘.tq DlHCCb have just lwon divovcred. only Gonzwlo Pizarro was among the 163 who broke the spirit and resistance u! ' inc-rs 0'0! .*'\l‘1Tl2\'Ii'r\ did not arrive until liter. ar-d his young’ ecu later still. Bu! Disco. S23. 1x11: 1119i’? fur the final "opninz n11 and topped 1t off with further adventures in Chile. conquisladnres N. b. ldgziMuss liidusiry| (Saint John Telegraph-Journal) Lle “'04:... o1 1L 1111, to the ex- perts of the federal department. of ‘iiliiltli and resources who explor- ed e..slc1n Canadian peat moss 1e- sourcts back in 1941). was that New Brunswicks vast begs had been so iittlc exploited. Canadians, with almost unlimited peat moss de- posits lying dc-rmnnt all around them, had been content lo see the Dominion and the United States import their industrial needs of this material largely from Ger- many, Holland, Latvia. Sweden and other distant lands. The survey re- port stated: "I; is 1.1. overstalemcnt to suy that Canada possesses resource-s of high grade peat ‘boss that could supply the American continent with its requirements for a very long time to come. “One of tho largest deposits, the Eel River bog in Northumberiand County in New Brunswick. has been csiimuicd to contain twenty- one million tons of peat moss, cal- cuinted on a basis of twenty per cent, content of moisture. With an import into the United States and Canada ct 85,000 tons of peat moss, this deposit. alone would have a Islficlent tonnage to supply the more than "New Brunswickkr deposits are the largest in Canada and in ull probability can compare favorably in size and duality with many of the large bogs producing peat moss in Europe. It is astohishlng that they have not been put to Indus- trial urea. especially in later years when there has been a very large importation of this commodity into the United ltates." Up to that time. Canada's small Peat moor operations had been eon- fined mostly to British Columbia. Donald Duck, Prank Sinatra ell rolled into one. And the nune for Mm ll that htllld I011]. “Daddy!” .11? ill ‘i! r it's ‘llliliigir Q? lie f unit‘ .. Fig r i fl ‘i. i’ parednen for war. It's not that the people in Lon- don and the provinces accept war as being inevitable, There is a profound hope that the United Nations, despite early difficulties, will somehow manager to ward off future conflicts. Certainly they laugh at every occasional pessi- mist whn predicts war in the next few years. Speeches of the Duke of Glou- cester at Canberra. Lord Alan- brooke, former Chief of the Im- perial General Staff in London. and Admiral of the Fleet Lord Cunningham in Edinburgh ail focus attention on Commonwealth defence. The lord Mayor's show in Lon- don Saturday-much closer to pr-war- pageantry than last year's -aeemed almost a report to spur lagging recruiting with its dolerro of floats rzlvimz a cheery picture of life in the navy. army and air force. Newspapers bannered specula- tion that Prime Minister Attlec's Labor Government m Tuesday's Throne Speech opening the new session of Parliament will forecast a long-term peacetime conscrip- tion to maintain adequate forces 41 and though he live for seventy years. does he suppose that anyone cares? Rather iet. me to him propose the flushed example of the rose. who. with her dazzling irmh of scent. a summer's day weighs imminent upon the spirit entranced. and goes richer with that than he with those. ~Humbert Wolfe. Old Charlottetown (And IEEJ.) "GOOD OLD DAYS" An anoymous writer in the Roy- al Gazette of July 2'1. 1820, in dis- cussing judicial grievances, says: “If I reside at East. Point or unrest. And 4-1.. in the fiace of grave international o Cape North and nave an account of five pounds against my neighbor _I must send and generally speaking 1 ccmc to Charlnttctowvi before I ,can compel him to pay mo, 1g 1 5m o o ‘Y iYYlfiV Re- \\'.'i< l l rwomluzznce Day poppies were worn by almost' everyone in memory of the coun- try's dead. Certainly it is not a cheery week. Dreary weather has something to do with it but there are more long faces ln the United Kingdom than 1' have seen in a ic-m: time. Even Food Minister Sfrecheys an- nouncement of small extra rations for Christmas provided only a momentary lift. And yet despite their giumness most; people can see that things at home are potting better. They are‘ finding Christmas shnppiriy! simp- ler this your although lt. ‘s still not easy and gifts are inclined to be on the expensive side. Everyone has a few more cio-fii- ing coupons than in i945. Toys are of much better quality and cacti variety. Women on ouy lipstick. cosmetics and other toilet articles to rzive away mistrwd of lacing obliged to level) anything they find: (he staunt-hcsl Labor smpcrlcrs. A 55111-111 rolrrxflinn in Britain would hr a national ionic 1 But thr- stimuius of this sur- vey report. interest in developing New Brunswlck's peat hogs was kindled anew. I In tho last four years three com» pimics have begun “mining" t‘1e_ pent mc-ss blocks on a big scale) on Slrippeg-Jn Island. off the north- east lip of Gloucester County, andl now a fourth company has just‘ hvqn organized. Citizens of Chat-l ham and Ncrfhumberland County generally are keen to see operab‘ inns r-zxrricd out extensively 1n the Eel River bog and Escummacl Plains, the latter helm: estimated, to contain four million tons of peat Poss. ; The moss has a great many prac-I licai uses-for insulation, as stuf- fing for furniture and mistresses“ as packinf! for the shipment of| fruits and vegetables, as soil 1011-1 riitinner, as peat bricks for fur-Lt to name only a few. In the years l to comv the expandi-nr: pent moss] industry should prc-vido employ- ment for thousands of New Bruns- wickers. . Lifted ‘llul, 001111 1.1.1.1 No pads or plasters to [use with-lust a few drone of a painless remedy PUTNAM'S CORN EXTRACTOR-mnly a few applica- tions and relief comes quickly. Tackle your sore earn today. For rapid results. far greater mmfnrt. use the old reliable Core rernaver. PUTNAMKS CORN EXTRACTOM 35c at all dealers in medicine. Putnam's Corn Extractor Life Insurance is the modern financial success. to win financial certainty. TIIOMAI IAAVINN - with an aching pocket and a half-starved horse. “We see the Chief Justice. so far the representative of our 10rd the King. 110W trying ,5 murder, then an appeal from an eighteen penny summons; new the right to a township or 11 ship, now a slap in the face— process servers gallo- ing in all directions, and attorneys shoving their clients into the streets by dozens for want of house mom." for their own use. While ciparelsl still are short, most smokers] suprilirs are available now for’ presents. Tho trouble in the Uzflcrl Kins,- dnm is that vilmosi cvcryihinr: mlinncri llirnwzh th" war is still’ raiimicri. Stories of rr-mnvai of.‘ controls in other countries par-l" flcularly in the United Stwfnsf still ran’! help disco-imaging oven . is netting INSURB SUCCESS when Fiandersqroor it would be madness in me to attempt to defend chflflOtletow-r} because Wmlld be a certain loss. Lf I so into Charlottetown I am led into dissipation there and return home head. an empty my Sure relief- for Head Colds Miélfil stops colds where they start fiassy Stomachs Relieved Every person who la tron- a 1. bled with gas in the and bowels should get s battle of Dr. Evans‘ Stomach Mixture and see how quick- ly It will relieve all distress- lng symptoms. Dr. Evans’ Stomach Mix- ture taken at meal time, not only prevents all had effects from gas. but 1t promotes the functional activity of the stomach. assists digestion and Improves the appetite. Dr. Evens‘ Stomach Mix- ture is oold only at the Two Mace at 85o per bottle. MACS FILE OINTMENT A safe and efficient rem- edy for Internal and extor- nai pllea. It ls made only oi the highest quality ingredi- ents possessing remarkable therapeutic value far this purpose. lt carries out to beneficial effect in thtei ways: l. lt. lubrieetcs. 2. ll ‘ 3. It soothes. Get a tube today. Price 60c The 2. Macs ll Greet floor-lo It. We carry a complete line of Trusses. All olsee. method of making certain Mankind stumbled for centuries against the uncer-. taintios of life which wrecked the financial plans of ambiti- our mon, and from this problem finally evolved the system of Life Insurance. lt is the culminating effort in man's fight Why not use the modern plan? ‘ Consult your nearest Great-West Life Prince Edward Island Iranch Office. llfllllfdllfl 81 00., LIMITED Provincial Managers Offices: Charlottetown - lanmorstde - lfontegao nausea r. arouses-mam Ionlsor as lnsasnoroldo ' CIIUB A. l. lllAW-Dlotrlet Manager at llentanf HAIL l. IUIII lpoolal Ieproeonletfves at commune aaerrrs raeouaaour m: raovnrce an appeal in gain Agent or write Currie luilding Charlottetown Tel. 1636 ‘ P.O. Box 452 J. TFFGTJTEATITEZ? NOTARY. no. IAIBISTIR. SOLICITOII. ___°_‘l‘l‘.“ """'"1"G _______ u‘ i MORRELL 1111a COMPANY Chartered Accountant; Eastern Trust Blllldlng Phone 1441 - Box M4 Charlottetown B. M. SEARS, c"; Resident Par-m" PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Millwlfflphlfll cards and circulars, ""1"" Pffllfllfll. correspondence Wiring and bookkeeping l HELEN 010mm Telephone 1890-] AM. No. 4. Connaught Apg, Pownai Street L? H. R. DUANE 81 CO. Chartered Accountants 58 Grafton Street Charlottetown Phone 2060 B“ u’ Randolph W. Mllllhln‘, (LA, »+ooo-oo-o-o+o+++o+o+-o-o+~¢ McLEOD 81 BENTLEY s W. l. BENTLEY, KC. J. A. BENTLEY, KC. Barristers and Atflifngyg-gg. Law E m Prince Street ovoo-o-rowo-oroovooowe» ______i_________ mt a. MATHIESON Barristers, Solicitors, ac. n. n. 521.1. M.L.A., b. 1.. numuasorr. 1.1.5., ice. Attorneya-at-lsew LOANS on crrsr an» i-"alur rnoranrrss COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown, r.|.-'..r. FREDERIC A. LARGE BARRISTER, ETC. Phillips Building, ll] Grafton It. Phone 1048 R0. Box 442 CIIARLOTTETOWN. EEJ. 16000000 OOO CHARLES R. McQUAlD B.A. Barrister. Solicitor, Notary. Etc. Ila-stern Trust Building, Charlottetown Phone 1111 | . l . r l oQOOO-O-O-O-OO-OQGO-OOO-O-OOW 11R. W. l1. 011115011 Chiropractor Palmer 11111111111. Charlottetown 201 Prince St. -Phone 1072 PALMER 81 HASLAM A. J. RASLAM, B.A.. LLB. BABRISTER. ETC. Bank of Nova Scotla Chamber! Charlottetown P.E.l. MONEY TO LOAN Phone 8b P.0. Box i2 H. F. McPHEE, B.A., K.C. NOTARY. ETC. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR Riley Building Charlottetown EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED if. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Queen Sf!- Phono 1958 Evenings by Appointment Phone: Residence 1013 ooooooooveoooeooeoo coves DR. A. R. SMITH nerrrrsr 11b Grafton Street Office llanrs: 9 to 12-2 to I Telephone 2184 M. ALIAN FARMER an. um. Mount so LOAN anaarsraa. sonrorrors. i10- cannmrnrown GAUDET d. HASZARD B- " —' aeuamra. from-In. l" canealan neat: or conaaaereo Ill! arose! so was araaanr a. oaunar. 11.11.. 11.1 a. warmers aaunn‘. bl-l Canadian leak 1r Oonraom Bl" Charlottetown. nu. ALEX W. MATHIESON ' aaausrln. aoucsson. i" Offloes so on» aeern 9"“ Ilene; to lien 9'1"”