GE FOUR TllE BIIAIILOTTETIIWII GUARDIAN Morning Qnily (Founded in i881) Prelident: liicut. Col. W. Cheater S. Molaire Vice-President: J. it. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary: Llcut. CoL D. A. Mlolfinnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. B. nett, l-‘JJ. Associate Editors: hank Walker Ind LleuLhn A. Burnett, R.C.N.V.R. tOn Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22. 1941* Christmas Mailing November l is the deadline for mailing Christ- mas yiarcels to mcn iii the armed forces over- seas. This does not tiiecin that it should be put off until that tiiiic. Such delay would he taiita- mount to lt‘li\‘lllQ domestic Christmas mail until (Thristnias Eve. The Post Office will do its best to get the mail to lllt‘ tiicn in time for Christmas, even if it is p-i-tctl the icry lzr-t day. llut there is no guarantee that it can do at). It is far better to take lltt chances, and to gt-t the par cls away it oiici". all-iuiiig [Fihtllllllllt lcctvay for delays that so tllllll ticcui" during ivartiiiie, and reliev- ing th; piwtzii Illlllll>l'lllt‘~ of ii lztst-mitiutt: rush. Britain's \\’or Expenditure Kcrlttltly, ivhcn L15‘. Senator Elleudcr stated that Great llritziiirs per capita war debt had lllCl't.‘ll.~t'll only b‘ iii five years while that of the bnittd Status hzttl incl‘ .scd $04.’ since Sep~ lt‘!lIl)\"l'. llhltl, it was iibvioiis that he knew nothing aboif! ivhat he uzis talking about. The Ottawa lottrnzil ha,- obtained the (ifficizil fig- ures, ivhich tcll ii completely different storv. llere they art \\'hat the oi iil figures now show is that Britain's per czipiui dt-bt in i038 was $848; that on June, l4).l_l. it was SL346: that. consequently, the increase in yigr c.'ipit:i deb: over five years has been ruutghli SL000 The llritisll iicr c-pitzt debt. far greater than that of the built-t‘. St is a terrific thing. It would be still lll'tl't‘ tcr fic were i‘. not for ilie fact that British taxation is among the heaviest in the world: va- y heavier than auv existing taxation in the biiitctl States. lillllllll has been waging this ivar on a "pay as you go" pi'inciplc. in i042 she dcvotvtl ti: per ccnt of her tiational income to war cxpctttlittirc, this as against 4;‘ per cent for the bnitcd States. 'l‘his year ‘the United States titttlav, in terms of national in- come will be greater: but it is zloubtftil whether it will be as great as that of Britain. No NB. Election The tmnotuicciiicitt of Prrntier ]. B. Mac- Nair of New llrtiiisvviclc that the general elec- tion in that province is to he deferred till 194.1, giving the present Legislature its ftill statutory time limit, is not surprising says the Sydney Post- Rccorrl. iii vii-u" of the rliszipptiiiiting results from the I.ibé'r.'il point of view 0f the provincial elec- tiotis ht-ltl this _\'(‘.'ll‘. The overwhelming defeat of the Nixon Government of Ontario and the lt’.‘ftl' dt-fcat of the _ll)ll8S Uovcrunietit 0f Prince litluztrd lslzintl are regarded by political observers, as reactions in provincial politics to the growing tmpopularity" of the King liovcrit- nieitt and the Ctlllsctltlfillt weakening of the Lib- eral cause botli in the federal and provincial arenas. 'l'here \\'.'\< C‘>ll.\ltlt‘l'Ill)lC talk of an appeal by; the (lovcriiiiieiit of New lli-tinslviclc to the elec- torate this year until quite recently. 1t is now almost four years since the ])l‘f'.\‘(‘lll New Bruits- wit-k Legislature \\'.'l\ tlectcl 0n November 2o, 105w, ziirl although the .\.~sc-nihl_v has another year to iuii. an a] ‘ ezil this war would have crin- formed with gcncrzil polttisal practice, had the (iovcrnttlcttt felt secure enough in its position to risk a H143 elcctiili, The restilt of the 193g i1 t- EDlTOklAL NOTES - Everybody is doing ft now-buying Victory Bonds. i: in a v It is estimated the estate of the late Mr. Hil- son amounts to $200,000, and that the bequest to Sf. James Church endowment fuitd will be $30,000. _ u in a in "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition" is not just a song title to a preacher in \\'allace- io\vn, Mass. The Rev. James ll. Burckes, pas- tor of the Second Congregational Church, praises the Lord each Sunday with his congregation and during the week passes the atiiiiiiinition as a war-worker in the General Electric Co. plant at Pittsfield. u e w it Fighting a losing battle with two unknown thieves who dynamited Zellei-‘s N.S. Limited department store safe, Halifax, Constable Ed- ward Doyle wasn't able to use his policemaifs stick on the two but used something almost as good. Irle slugged them repeatedly with a bag he had wrested from them. lle later found it to contain three sticks of dynamife. The thieves, who escaped with $l.000, left ailotlicr $10,001) behind them iii au inner cotiipartmeiit of the safe. u in it- it: Aviation conference at Lotidon will not de- fine the pattern of post-war aviation, but will itidicatc the general policies of the Governments which participate. Mr. Roosevelt has made it clear that the US. is committed to free enter- prise in the air. Powerful pressure is bciug used in the L'.l\'. for a similar declaration. Can- zitla enters the Conference embarrassed by .\lr. King's titiforttiuate attempt to commit the coun- try to exclusive (ioveriinteiit bpcratioti of in- tertiatitmal lines. n- i- x at Sir Archibald Henry lfzicdtiiialtl Sinclair. 4th Bart of Clbster, Cartliiiess, l‘.(.'., l\'.'l‘., C..\l.ti,, .\I.P., British Liberal Leader and lll(‘lill)(‘l‘ of the Churchill Cabinet, born this date i890; like his chief, his tiiother was an American, datiglt- tcr of Mr. M. Sands of New York; hr,- tnvns 100,000 acres; joined the .\rm_v in 1910; enter- ed politics in l9l9; has held various portfolios in Liberal and Coalition (lovcrntncnls, his pre- sent offise being that 0f Sccrctzinv of State for Air. n- : at at _. Tl‘? CHARLOT”. .irrown_ GUARDIAN A Well-Earned Honor (The following’ editorial tribute to a distinguished Prince Edward Islander appeared fn the Oct. l0 lasulp) of the Toronto Globe and Ma : The announcement that. Arch- bishop McG-tilgan of Toronto bu been accorded by the Pope the rare distinctions of an appointment u assistant to the Pontifical Throne and the rank of a. Roman Colin will gtve to our Roma-n Cntlwlm community deep satisfaction, which will be shared by many people 0f Protestant faith. These hilh honor! are bestowed by the Vatican only when tt desires to give formal re- cognition to a very successful stew- ard5hl1) of important offices in the Church. and rovlde encouragement for further la rs of the same fruit- ul k d. The Catholics of this province are aware how well Archbishop Mc- Gulgan has earned these prized dis- tinctions by his selfless labors tn his chosen vineyard as a preacher and spiritual guide, and by his as- slduous zeal for the interests of their Church. But others. who do not accept lils religious teachings, have come to recognize in lilm o public-spirited eccleslastlc, en- dowed with scholarly erudltion and fine dignity, who has a broad- mlnded tolerance of other fall-ha than his own. They have noted that. since the beginning of this war he has been an unswervlng sup- porter of the cause of democratic freedom and the national war ef- fort planned for its salvation. and that he has given freely of his time and energies to assist. various domestic phases of this effort. Lead- ership of this klnd for the R0- man Catholic Church lri Ontario makes a great contribution to the prevention of sectarian feuds. and there will be a widespread feeling that in Archbishop McGulgtm His Hcliziess has selected a very fitting personage for special honor. Roads To Rome (Prof. W. M. l-fuglll in the Winni- peg Free Press) By possessing itself of Oopua and crossing the Volturno, the Fifth Army has definitely set its feet: upon the road to Rome. or perhaps upon two roads to Rome from the south. Meantime the \Vho is likely to be successor to the late la- mented justice Saunders on the Supreme Cottrt bench? This question is zigitatitig lawyers and politicians. According to the usual, thouyglt by no means invariable practice, the Provincial _\t- torney General if backed by his COllffflgllkfii and the Federal representatives has the first rcfttsal. \\'ill the Hon. Mark hlcfiuigan lie so stipportcd? Other names mentioned as prospects are ludgc Palmer, who has earned a great reputation as judge of Probate, with no judgtiieiiis reversed; .\lr. George 'l‘\vccd_v, Magistrate for (Queen's County, and Mr. K. M. .\lartiu, City Xlagistrtite. There are other aspiratits, of course, btit these are the. four most pronliuently mcutioittitl. is n: a it Mr. \\'. T. Hill, a live stock dealer, fartniiig just outside Lethbridge. (.-'\lta.) has reported this year a banner crop of wheat in Southern .-\lberta-(io bushels an acre from a loo-acre irrigated field. Last year the sanle field yieltl- ed 69 to 70 bushels an acre and its poorest yield was 5O bushels during a year when there was a scarcity of irrigation water. The field is ir- rigatcd by ptutiping and has grown five consecu- tive crops since the lantl was first brtil-"eii. The Eighth Army ls steadily approach- ing Pescara, the eastern terminus of the most direct road between Rome and the Adriatic. Neither should we overlook svestern rout/e of sixteen miles from Ostla along either bank cf the Tiber. The lat- ter. lhougli involving new am- phibious operations. ls now made possible by ottr ccmplete command of the sea and newly captured sirdromes. All four rotites are served by railways WlllCll follow the course of nnc‘tnt Roman highways. ’I‘he natural liucs of travel were long arzo determined by a nation of master builders. who covered west- ern Europe and parts of Asia and Africa with a network of roads as intricate and as interesting us n spider's web. “All roads lead to Rome." said the RCFHRXIS. and well they might, since they built. them specifically for that purpose, and set up cottntless tnllestones to re- cord the dlstzince of each from the golden milestone which stood ln the Forum at Rome The‘ Roman Campaign, like all Italian plains. ls limited ln size and hedged about by volcanic hills and spurs cf the Apennlnes through which the roads, ancient, and mod- ern, thread their way and seek the passes lending to other plalns and cities of the peninsula. Inevltably, first crop was flax and the sticccctliiig four were wheat. Next year the field will be Slllll- titer-fallowed because the farmer has no place to store more wheat. This y'car's crop was a good grade, weighing (i4 pounds to the bushel. 4- a- x it Already the “Seventh Columnist." is at work among the Bloc Populziirc, a tiiauifesto having been issued by Dr. lliunel, Patil G0lllll, jean contest in New llruusvviclt was the rcttirn of :9 lilicrztls and H) (Vinssrvritires, t0 make up a I-lctise nf 4S incnibt ~ There were, however, ' or eight extr . close contests for Legisla- tive seats in that t-lcmiou. and the outcome was on: of the Cl‘l>l'.wl \'ew llrtinsvvick had known in tiiariv w ' . '1" t".'l‘ are now several vacan- cies in i..t li'|ll~(‘ and in vinw ti! tn: fact that lllt‘l't' is to be a fifth session of the Legislature it may ll.‘ ‘stllllllttl that these vacancies will he. lillt-l lhrriiigii ' ~ uiis ii; the intcriut, although l‘r<-iii"ci n" was singurirlv silent (ti. this point in the toursu of his statement which toiil. the form of .tii elaborate llllflllllPlll zicnitnst jqiinig to tTu- tieoyilc "ttnnrcesszirilv" wh' ti ill v..~ i~ will in prorrrt -", Martiiicati and Rene Lihzilotit 1o the effect that "we cannot publicly sitpport the movement so long as Mr, Edouard Lacroix, .\I.l'., is coit- iiccted with it." “We have made our platform one on which we have committed ourselves to fight the ‘trusts and the financial interests which tiotiiinate the lives of tltt- l:rcnch-(‘ttnzidiaits and as .\lr. Lacroix is llllll53lf a millionaire who has made his lTlOllEy by being closely associated with these trusts, we could not in justice to ourselves or of the policy we preach tztlte our place be- side hint on the httstings." .\lr.. Clialotit said that .\lr. Lacroix h;id ‘cased himself into the Bloc Poptilnire movctitent l)(‘t‘itll~t‘ of the illness of ‘.\l: "Hie Raymond, .\l.l‘., ltfi.‘ lleauharuois- Laprairic." C Notes By The Way Uni Knnv. the United States Navy 5 ry. bflrci r-s the Germans will During the terrible cold of the first blockade Winter in Leningrad. the tiger in the Zco one day ceased to get his meat ratlon- He felt lonely. sucked his paw as the near does. Hts keepers stuffed rabbit. The liunllng season and the nn- 1d h g| flUCil tragedy of errors are with us skim with m" Be’ and i e get trc Rome as they treated Naples. when fcrcod to retreat, One thing about these Huns -— they tire eon- rlstcntly and inevitably lllttialsh. They can be depended upon to loot, klll and destro -0ttawa Journal The Royul Navy's battlefront ls 60.001000 suuaro miles of ocean; lt covers half the world's seas. Despite the help from the Royal Canadian Navy and Allied navies, the Rnvsl Navy has to carry the miiln burden still and this rcqiilres great en- durance frc-n men and ships. —O:- tawa Citizen. A newspaper (‘correspondent dined in Ireland on Ssturtlav night, had breakfast ln Newfoundland. lllflCllPd lu Canada and was in New York for his Sunday dinner. Post-war trans- Atlantlc travellt-rs will probably find such an experience (‘ffflmlfl- place. —Brot~kvllle Recorder and Times. Became deersklns art- urzrnlly needed for wnr our-noses the War Prodttcticn Board niirl tho Fish and Wildlife Servin- cf the l7. S Do- rvirttvent of lll" lnt-rlm- anneal to "c," hvnl~r~ ‘in t" all lfrlcq from flr-r-r slio‘ this .~cn into min mernlal (‘haunt-la tm- tlii- manufac- ture of mllltari" "qllllllllflll. Deer aides furnish the n<-;~.-=_»._-,rv,l 1mm. Pl‘! t-v mile» chit», ....d "Wllnys llrctii‘ $ll""5I f'-- "'l'l-f‘lllll,'t'l‘ nip, These are lll"f!‘!"l" 'l""fl,"d by the aimed forces. -Excliange. again. A soldier, home on letive, went, hunting. Another hunter mis- took him for a bear. So the soldier ls dead. Through the years in New Brunswick, dozens of persons have been shot and killed because they were mistaken for partridge, wood- cock. Jackrabbits, deer, moose and other varieties of native game. The familiar and faltering explnnptlong —“I thought he was a deer“ has been heard by most veteran cur. oncrs- It sounds ludicrous enough ro be l “M 3mm 8 103E; but when a blunder costs a llfe. ft is no joke. -Sal:1t John Telegraph Journal, Unreasnnlng lam nbqug u", duration of the war ls to be dis- couraged. but ft 1s just as unwise to become arbitrary about the gar. mill-T’ 0f H lBHS-drawn-out atniggle. A sample of unfounded pessimism l5 l0 be found ln the speech at London. Ont, of Reverend Norrngn Rowson. who declared unequivocally that there isn't. a ghost o; 5 vhflnce of the war being over before 1945 The war could certainly be over before that time. N0 om- should be foolish enough to pyg- dirt the end this month or (m; year. But neither should anyone be foolish enough to make the ipqsluve statement that the end cannot mm‘! 59ml? 9m’ certain date. No one can know that. and adopting this onllcv of studied hopelessness ls distinctly bad for morale. .. r . pounced at. the "rabbit." tore hlm to plecrs, and wondered at the lstrange fauna one encounters in this world. l-le learned to eat "shlci" —cabbage sotip ~wltlicut a trace of fat. -U. S. S. R Bulletin. Twelve men at t-he University of Illinois have been undergoing spe- clal nutritional tests. It seems that scientists have discovered that cer- tain substances known as amino acids may be considered as the building blocks of proteins, the food constituents found in meat. milk, eggs, etc. Them are twenty two of these amino aclds- Twelve of them are known to be non-essen- tial to human diet. eight, of them are known to be essential, and the status of the remaining two ha! not yet been determined. For eight months these twelve men at the University of Illlncts have got the nutritional equlvalant of beefsteok .ln the form of amino acids in distilled water. a dash of lemon juice being ydded to the drink to make it more palatable. They also get speclalcrockers, spread with purified butter; cod liver oll; and vitamin pills. By omitting tlie amino acids one at e time and checking the weight and nitrogen mnlance of the individuals undergo- lmz the test; it ls hoped to deter- mine whether or not the amino in question ls eswntlal to the human system. The rum of this investiga- lon ls to hclo plan adequate diets during meat shortages by substituting eminoocidaforfilstorlleftbe they parallel the courses of some of the principal rivers. The Ostlan Way ran straight to the mouth of the Tiber. as do the modern electric railway and motor highway. Parallel to lt on the north bank, the Port Road led from Rccne to the artf- ffcial harbor built by Claudius and enlarged by Trajan. to the right of the Tlberfls mouth. which fills with silt so fast. that it has never been practicable for ships of heavy burden. Access to the Adriatic ls not so easy. The spinal column of Italy lles between. tho coldest regions of the Apennlnes two thousand feet: above the sea. From Rcrne the key to this route ls Ttvoll. a favorite imclent summer resort, perched un- on the brow of the Sabine hills, meat; ln the menus. A nlce. thlfik- juicy steak. grilled to ~ turn. st-lll looks good to us. —Des Mollie! _Trlguni= noes INDIGESTIDN uitttor vou l BELOW TllE neg; Heb You Function “H” For The lolelTllliliolpoMllofll IIIWLTIG. I t-hl lllll d 1W! ‘ll-u’- rhil'"='.filtz..'.i..'zt:..'i'i:: :'....'""'*.....5 w cn Ii gill“ nails-b digestion ti. u.- lwnueh an C OW Q E at cum‘ Little LivI “YR; 1733.133 lwlll? w m5 "lomtil 13 feel of bowels. ’ Pill bl! T.“ an“ l glnllilea-hlmmulleoorvlin T: 1 ‘m: a " filhetlllflllVO lnleel in I 1h‘ ‘Nlfnboiivels-liolp you dllct what III ' a . “llilfikl? fiftfflfé hlllfilioi rellnf u.» make! you feel better from IMII bflicwm: t n u no a ‘fiftliilflvll ‘dfillllllfi whit-um - I“ Your Eyes ‘i If you on hntn lylnlhrio at ctrnin - h ache; oer! eyee or diIlneel- consult n lpecloillt. At your eervlee with you: of experience and e there‘! relrnctinl lo Oell in and IIIGIIQ your difficulties. Write or phone h! appointments. B. F. liutclmon AND SON I. 0. [IUTUIIEEON 0. I‘. IIUTOIIESON now no i my! "l! l u...» tpmfggve um bet me count I love thee "f0 thfi “V” m‘ breadth and heltfhil- 1 "i escalate "m °°““' cu o . Ilor the ends of Belllll l“ u“! I.love the: to the level of every- ‘s e M“; any]; need. by m ""1 1 iovectme ‘iicelifnc men ltrlve 3°? I love eenmrely. ll u"! mm I love thee wfuf the claim W‘ l ' l r . nd wit-h my In mlltlfflghogrdfi afllllii. m I love thee with o lave I seemed With 'lost ulnw. I 1m "l" will: bhe brelth. d Smiles. tears, o! all my llfel-m . if God OhOOw. 1 shall but love thee better efttr death. _mlzabetb Barrett Browiilcc- over which the Anio‘ P1258? ptcturseque cascades w 13,‘. waters with the ‘fiber. A 16W n1 ~-= lower down is the Villa. of Hadrian, the tourist emperor who tried to reproduce the natural wonders of his empire on a small scale on this broad estate in the Sabine foothills. A few miles farther up in the B-l-l of f-loraceb beloved Sabine 1M1"- eo which the poet fled from the heat and cares of the metropolis._ The Vla Tlburtlna. followed the Mm upstream to Tlvoll, whence it. was continued east by the in Valeria, which presently the upper Pesccro and followed river down to the town of the some name on the AdrlBl-lv- In the highlands beside the road and between the two rivers once lay the Fuclne lake. which bad no out- let; until the Emperor Claudius drained it with a mile-foul W?!‘ m]. The decayed tunnel was re- reached the lake ls now ienlaced by i1 fer- tile fan-n of 36.000 iieres- 'I“nis ls the difficult route that the mod- ern railroad follows. and by lllll route Montgomery may 60m l! he plans to assall Rcme on its eastern flank. O O O O The more apparent threat to Rome is from the south from Capllb, ROIfle'5 ancient rlval in Campanla. Here after his devas- tntlntz victory at Corinne in B, C, Hannibal made lils base. Here ln '13 B. c. began the slave revolt of Spartacus. which dealt the republic shrewd blow. Here. tn 1860, Garibaldi was stopped and could neither take Gapua nor cross the Volturno- Capua was the na- tlve capital of CnmDlmlfl. B Elle 01 considerable stratcllc importance. connected by a snort r081! “m! the Greek cities of Naples and Pozzuolt on the bay, and with Rome, one hundred and thirty miles away. by the two chlef R0- man roads to the south. In 856. the inhabitants were driven from their homes by the-Saracens and founded the new Capua three miles distant at the crossing of the Volturno.‘ and at the convergence of the Vla Latina 3nd the Vin Appla. The Applan Way is the better known of the two, and bore the heavier traffic. It: ls strange but true that Pozzuoll. so far to the south was preferred over Ostlo as the port of Rome. By landing on the Bay of Naples. passengers cur- tailed the voyage up the coast. and avoided trons-shipment: at. Tiber mouth. They completed their journey to Rome by the Apulpn Way. Most famous of all the roads. it l5 called by c Neapoltan poet "the queen of ways." This way went Pain to the court of Nero. To Pozzuoll came his brethren from Rome to meet him. The final lap from Terrsclna to Home runs as straight as a taut string for sixty-five miles. But at. Tenaclna. it ls almost crowded into the lea. The mountainous headland was cut, back 120 feet to let it pass. Be- tween Terraclna and Capua it bends clrcultously. anion the hills and crosses the river ls, some- time: called Garlgllimo, o conveni- ent line for a German sund- The new railroad from Rome to Naples. parallel to the Applan Way, reach- es its destination through consid- erable tunnels. . . . The less familiar Latin Way parallels the older and more fami- liar rail line from Naples to Rome by Casslno and m-oiilnone. The Latin Way was perhaps older than the Applan and the natural line of transportatoln throuzh Latlum. It followed the long valley of the Lirls and its tributary the Sacco to the Alban hills, and then drop- ped to the Campaigns u; Wascatl. about fifteen miles from Home. The Fifth Anny at Ccpun stands upon the threshold of both Afipfpn and Latin Ways. It: will be inter- esting to observe which way the vanguard follows. Both were built long ego, primarily for military ui-poaee to speed the legions on elr way. The standard orid lym- bol of the Ramon legion was Ill eagle, s bird that lost many tall feathers ct the hands of German barbarians. American eagles have come at last to the rescue and will doubtlea pick some barbarian bonu before the bottle l; done. Pi‘ 4i stored and extended in 1862. and Bd- fiiv ‘_- - BLUING HINT Blulng added to the water when] cleaning windows meom that ‘the, l5 “Fill” 3"‘. film” will Eliot??? u y. u - an l amen of bluln8 n added w the h“ My water when the glou fa being wash- C’ snack. energy So t e modem housekeepe. drin " always on tap. Ionian Iiniu lb: apply d’ Snucxi ‘l! Sun: QUALITY rennin: lb: snu atelairze of Goodflousekeeping/ SUSSEX Ginger Ale i; more than aire- freshing drink. Actually it is a lood -- for it su plies the need of a ‘tween menl ervice men, war-workers and business folk all find Sussex is o welcome pick-up. Hospitals also approve. follows suit. Do likewise. Keep Sussex-“the QUALIT i. l = _ ffiwcsrzgggc SPEED THE VlClllRY BUY VICTORY BONDS lTziftaei- l- T]; Patriots have tried to kill / i C/{U£&OVEJ~LQ t/ze . BER 22, 1943 " m NAVY ween OFFICERS Auo RATINGS or rue “QUEEN CHARLOTTE" Are Sponsoring Local Publicity to pyut The 5th‘ LYiciory Bond Sales Away Out Front This Week Friends’ 0F The Navy BUY YOUR VICTORY BONDS TODAY AND WATCH THE INDICAT OR GO UP! u» incum- Shielih ‘ '~_ ilewr shields reflect heel: out in he room and prevent heat ib- siaiztion b the wall behind the r moor. eat may we saved by Bleacing any solid reflecting ittrfiict liln radium. Mi. Professional Bards McLeod 8 Bentley w. l. summit. n. c. I. o. owruv. n. c. Barrister; and Attoroen-nt- Luv ill Prince line! tiorrollaiia Company ll. F. AlttllllBALD Chartered Aeoonotanlo lantern Trust lniidiu Charlottetown ALEX W. MATHIESON loony to Leon Collection! BAIIBISTIB. IOLIOITOB. ET“ Office: D0 Great GMrge Sim‘ M. AL AN FARMER i . I. A». LLB. BLIIIIETIR. SOLIUITOR. ETC- Osandino look of Commerce Bill NONI! TO LOAN "m: ouALmr mno sine: was‘ RAINBOW Titerelnbowiiosalwaynliecoofgood cheer to formers because when there in a rainbow, there 1m been rota for he mp0. Another good friend of ' 1m.- 1 l: n. a 1m "anon ' Twist" OHIWING because it: ltimulotlng, friendly flavor and lut- ep ing podium help to lmooth the fur- rows of care. MACS’ HAIR RESTORER ..i\ it il tel rfumcd W‘ ti: “w pl: reflllil": lllfl VIII nmueni et the mull!- lle per bottle. .IAOB PERFECT W0!!! POWDER! bl: l§".rlil?.‘.'.‘" rlifd ll! Pllllll- LAIIIPUI I‘! Prleg lie p" nettle. Mull Order! Given 7",” Alklltllll - TIIE ‘N0 M08 ll mm Gum 9"!"