Y be established in Charlottetown. ‘£54212 L rue ciuntonsrowu GUARDIAN Iemln; Dally (Foiuuled III 1'87) Hi1 Uolll. Co]. W. Chester S. Mclnm Vino-Pullout: J. B. Burnett, l‘..l.l. Ilolfllq: Llent. Col. D. A. blnlilnnon, 0.8.0. litter llll Managing Dlreoton J. B. Burnett, FJJ. lleohto Elton: Frank Walker and Lleot. h! A. Burnett, LQNJEB. (On Act-Iva Service) Who Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ WEDNESDAY, 0013?»... 11, .1045 The Manitoba Results The sweeping victory of the Coalition Gov- emment in Manitoba under Premier Stuart S. Garson may be regarded as a triumph not only for the Government but for Hon. john Bracken, who formed the Coalition in i940, two years before he accepted the national leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party. Mr. Bracken achieved in Manitoba what Prime blinistei- King's partisanship prevented him from doing at Ottawa; lte sought a union of Conservative, Liberal, and Independent par- ties, and even brought the C. C. F. within the Coalition orbit during his Premiership, leaving only the extreme Radical wing in Opposition. This was a war measure, but so efficiently has it worked that the people of Manitoba evidently desire to have it continued on a peacetime basis The C. C. F. withdrew from the Coalition lfter Mr. Bracken entered Federal politics, and was the leading Opposition party in Monday's electoral contest. Its decisive defeat puts an- other damper on Socialistic hopes, but not nec- essarily on the ltopcs of those seeking social and economic reform by constitutional means, The Bracken and Garson administrations have given sound leadership in this direction. It was on the Government's record of the war years and l post-ivar recnustrnctioii prnggrauitiie promising agricultural and itidustrizil development, built around decisions to be made at the Dominion- Provincial Conference, that .\I0nda_v's victory was won. The exact score in the election may not be known for some days. \\'licre there are more than two candidates in a constituency, 1s in “linnipeg for example. the proportional representation system is used and this makes for delay in totalling the count. Returns also from the far northern constit-ttcncics of The Pas and Rupert's Land itiay be late. There is no question, however, as to the landslide that has swept the Government back to power, and this for practical purposes is all that counts. Shameful Treatment Now we knmv the attitude of the King Government's Defense Department towards our returning Prince lidward Island veterans. 'I‘hc Department docs not think our boys are en- titled to be discharged in their own Province on returning from overseas, and it gives two reasons. First, the zidvaittagcs would be “out- weighed by fur" by the disadvantages which would result if the boys travelled dir- ectly home. (‘Z-klvantages" to whom? it may be asked.) Second, the resulting “over- heacl" would not he “‘\varratitcd." So it is to save money that the Government forces our boys to spend week's kicking their heels in Halifax before getting their discharge.‘ This is the coldest slap we have yet received from Ottawa, and it is worth noting how the veterans themselves, through their organiza- tion the Canadian Legion, look at the matter. At the annual convention of the Provincial Command of the Legion last month, reference was made to the fact that “practically no at- tention has been given to these requests with the exception of nonsensical arguments against the establishment of a depot here, by the Depart- ment of National Defense and especially by the staff of Military District N0. 6, Halifax." Being tied to Nova Scotia in the same military district, the resolution stated, “has al- ways functioned to the detriment of our Island Province, through the Department of National Defense and Veterans Affairs. The ex- cuse given was that there are no X-ray facil- ities here and that n0 tnedical examiners were available, in spite of the fact that every man Ind woman enlisted here was X-rayed llcre 11nd that X-ray facilities are still available. Several of our medical doctors have given brilliant serv- ice dtiring the war and are now available to take care of all possible needs of a discharge depot. The Army continues to ignore the actual fact that the Navy has been discharging men at Charlottetown for some time past and they must admit that the procedure has been very satisfactory to all, and most efficient." The fact is that we should have had our enlistment and discharge depot here throughout the war. Onr service men and their families have been put to all kinds of inconvenience and expense because of the Government's stubborn refusal to remedy this injustice. Even our splen- did enlistment record -— the best in all Canada — was misrepresented in official Ottawa re- turns until a few months ago, due to the fact that Islanders enlisting in VZITIOIIS units were attested in Halifax and improperly credited to Nova Scotia. It took years to obtain s break- down of the figures, and we are still handicap- ped by lack of detailed information on this point. In the case of the discharge depot, how- ever, it was thought that this matter had been settled. Such was evidently the opinion of Pre- mier jones as far back as last April, when he lnnounced in the Legislature that he had been "assured" that a military (liscliargc depot would Ilis statement vvss received with lmid applause from both sideti of the House. Now it seems that the Premier, and reasonable request in the interests of our service men. l Austria And Hungary It is anticipated in London that s decision b)’ the four powers represented on the Control Council of Austria to recognize the recently reconstructed provisional Government of Dr. Renner will be announced shortly. This aet- H011 on the part of the United Kingdom, the United States, Russian and French Govern- ments would be based on the report recently mflvtd frqln the Control Council dealing with the composition of the new Austrian Provis. ‘mill Gm/emmfllf. and with conference of pro- visional delegates summoned in Vienna by Dr, Rf-‘flflfl’. which led to the recognization of the Renner Government. LIt is Dr. Renner's proclaimed intention that Parliamentary’ elections should be held in Aus- tria before the end of the year, and that a MW and representative Austrian Government should be formed, based on the result of the poll. The most important innovation decided upon at the Provincial Delegates’ Conference and ac- cepted by Dr. Renner was the creation of a Government Commission of five to deal with electoral procedure, with a view to ensuring that elections should be fair and free, The 53mg Coiuiiiissioti will also assume charge of internal security questions, Hitherto, both the prepara- tion of elections and security had been ex- clusively in the hands of the Communist Min- istcr of the Interior, Franz Honner. In addi- tion, in pursuance of a resolution adopted by the Conference of Provincial Delegates, the Renner Government has been.broadcned by the inclusion of three more representatives of the People's Party. Freedom of elections is the criterion which the United Kingdom applies ivithout discrim- ination to the governments of countries which have been under German domination. This is the condition which the United States Govern- ment has set to the Provisional Hungarian Governitien: if the United States Government is to grant recognition to the Governmnt o1 General Miklos. If the guarantees furnished by the Provisional Hungarian Government seem satisfactory, the United Kingdom Government, as is known, may also be prepared to enter into unofficial diplomatic relations with it. It is be- cause of the absence 0f similar political free- dom in Rumania and Bulgaria that the United Kingdom Government has not felt disposed to recognize the Provisional Governments in thcsc two countries. —EDITORIAL NOTES- Wedtiesday holiday presents a fitting op- portunity to those “townies" who would like to assist in harvesting the potato crop. v is a u blanitoba folloivcd the lead of Ontario, and the Dominion as a whole, iti discouraging C.C.F.-ism. i l F l According to the King Government, the Province of Prince Edward Island may be big enough to lead Canada in cnlistments, but not big enough to permit of a demobilization depot. s it a- is Canadian Press, which gathers and sup- plies news all over Canada and the world, is a non-profit making co-operative association of daily newspapers. I I Q The delegation from the City Council to- day will be in Ottawa, where Mr. Douglas and Mr. McLure will introduce them to the various ministers with whom they have business. The delegates are Mayor Blanchard, City Clerk Ful- lcrton, and City Councillor LePage. it- x s u Socialism inevitably leads to dictatorship u la Stalin. In extending its war-time control over Britain for another five years, Mr. Anth- ony Eden rightly declared that the Attlee Social- ist Goverutneiit takes powers such as no gov- ernment has ever before assumed, or even ask- ed, in times of peace. “Easy is the descent to Lake Avernus (mouth of Hades)", according to Virgil; "night and day the gate of gloomy Dis (god of Hades) is open; but to retrace one's steps, and escape to the upper air, this, indeed, is a task; this indeed is a toil". Happy the people politically, and socially, who never allow themselves to take the first downward step. t s s e Commenting on President Truman's state- ment that “a society of self-governing men is more powerful, more creative than any other kind of system, however disciplined, however centralized," Editor & Publisher says: "Some advertisers have taken it upon themselves to employ their copy to preserve such a form of government, to rc-iinite the thoughts of our citizenship, to head off the danger that con- fronts us. They have devoted a share of their advertising appropriation to do the job of selling the svstem under which we now live as free citizens, . . All advertisers will see the wis- dom of joining in this movement." I I Feast of St. Etheldreda or St. Audry, daughter of a King of East Anglia atid Abbess of the Convent and Church of Ely, which ghe found- ed; she died 679; from her name St. Audry, is derived an adjective in the English language in common use, viz, tawdry; at the annual fair of Ely in former times, toys of all sorts were sold, and a description of cheap necklaces, which under the denomination of tawdry laces, long enjoyed great celebrity; various allusions to St. Audry, or tawdry, laces occur in Shake- speare, Spencer, and other writers of their age: One time I gave thee a paper of pins, Another time a tawdry lace, And if thou wilt not grant thy love, In truth I'll die before thy face._ -r In process of tihie, the epithet tawdry came like the rest nf us, was merclv bcing taken “for ‘b walk" by the powers-that-be, and that there THE was never any intention of meeting this modqt Notes By The lVay 0 — lie a flu-n bo- lfever 1n "votes for women" antl- vaccination and 0012M flutters electro- flobulos. — ‘I110 Times ( mdo mug! of course, oonfg on an dlvld or any no lndlVRll-llll the rlfilkit to sly Qoiélnt whatever 1.11% e sbout u: wltli whom 0y hop w d1:- sgree. But 1f the luv broken 1n that . the remedy lies with the court-I. not wlth the mobs. - Tomnto Btu-H l! H 5 (‘leap banker- t-lnl Ollllfll. lI-ld the; the Unlted States will be seekln; Canadian trade u a hemi- 1n s ‘“ ‘ stble un- r b ' employment. It ls to be hoped that whatever system of trade be- tween tlie two countxlos ml be established ln the future 1t wll no: be of the ug-lisndled vsrlety. We can do w1 s. wlder market also, for we may have, eventually, an unemployment problem of our own-Fort William Times-Journal. Restrictions cannot be enforced unless people are fully willing to oo-operste; money cannot be bor- rowed by s government unless a vast. number of citizens are will- lnB to put off buying today to ln- vest 1n tomorrow; prices cannot be ke t down unless 1t ls the wish and t e will of the consuming pub- 11c that they be ke down, and it takes a most patent public to yteld to the continuous admonition thatlmmedlate irrltatlons are small compared to distant hardships. _ Hamilton Spectator. Tlils tlme, for more chm we: before 1n history, man's brains were doing the fighting rather than his comparative! weak bod . Hls brain has always en the be ter fighter. And what; a fight it. has made 1n this short span of ylears! But man never surrendered 1s control nor 10st the mastery of one dreadful agent. He. was the centre, and both individually and cooperatively achieved one of his greatest spiritual trlumps, He ls body and mind, or splrlt. And mind won. He stands today more the measure o! all things than ever before.—Provldence Jo n1. A five-year ogram for the ile- velopment of ndustrlal and scien- tlfle research 1n India at an esti- mated expendltine of $18,000,000 says The New York Times, pro- vides for the building and equip- ping of nlne specialized laboratories including a technological Ynstltute on the lines of the Massachusetts 000 grant. for strengthening the scientific departments of India's 18 universities and the training of 700 research workers 1n five years. The program was formulated by the Industrial Research Planning Committee, appointed by the Gov- ernment of India. There should be removed from the vocabulary of the city-born that slightly contemptuous and wholly misinformed phrase, "just. a farmer." They should get some idea of the lifetime of stored-up wisdom and the hours of unremit- ting toll that go to make up a good farmer. They should see lilm fighting, with one brain and one pair of hands, the unpredictable and uncuntrolable forces of Nature. And they should kNw cl the fore- sight and readjustment of plans that; occasionally salvage some- thing out of an apparently hope- less situation. C Kitchener Record. I hadn't hoard this French Re- sistance story before. Apparently an old lady had taught her parrot to say "Mort aux Boches". Sudden- ly she had a member of the Ges- tapo bllleted on her. He bold the old lady that next time he beard 1t he would kill the parrot. Very worrled, she asked the Cure to help. He had, he said, a. very well brought up parrot which he would exchange for hers. They swapped. That night when the Gestapo man came ln the parrot said nothing. At last, losing his temper, he shouted “Mort aux Boches". The parrot; said, "May the good Lord answer your prayers, my son.”-- London New Statesman. President Truman's proclamation that. the United States claims all the oil and other resources of the 750-000 - square - mile continental shelf which lies beneath the sea off our coasts puts into the discard the traditional three-mile llnilt established by international law. Most of the shelf extends well be- yond this zone. The President has also esserted the rlght. of the United States to set up CDTIIGHM» tion zones 1n flshlng areas near our coasts and these, too, are be- yond the three-mile mark. The shelf contains large amo ‘ of oll and, no doubt, other vsluable resources which we some day will flnd a way to acquire. The ffsh- erles,, of course, are already of great importance to our economic life. Certainly no nation can find fault with our claims, nor could we very well object lf they made similar claims for their own Mfllfill areas. The ancient. three-mile rue no longer prevslls 1n fact. - Boston Post. Most Csnldlans know something of the splendid work whlch was done throughout the wsr by the Y.M.C.A. on behalf of members of the armed services. Husbands and sons 1n their letters borne, many of them written on YJLC. A. ststlonery, have sung praises of the “Y's" work. Few, however, are fully aware of the breadth and scope of the job und n and tm-i-lod out. by u lts nr services. ‘Ihul the story of that effort. as contslned 1n the brochure With Arthur Jones Through Five Years of War, re- porting on the lotion’; ser- cfiAlll- sfill-‘lll Institute of Technology; B $5.000: made Laval chief of the IOMI FORGOTTEN MEN ln-Nw that. our Do ‘ ' Parlhmmt 1g [ettlng down to busl- noel 1n this the first sesslon after the olecblon, sud wltlrtho war over, there ls one olsss of employment that should be given consideration. I refit to our rural mall oourlers, who 1n fine weather or foul have to o on on t. starvation wales. w with a new Postmas- ter General we all hope- he will be more generous with this class of ' n... than his predecessors, and will see 111.5 we clear to adopt s. system for thls c ass of employ- ment that wlll give those men at lent s llvtn; wage. 'I'h1s has been before Parliament since 1%, but u yet liss not received oon- alderman. Ii 1s hoped that when the Post Off ce estlmates come before Per- lloment this will receive the sup- port. from our Federal membem and especlslly the new members st their first session. Where 1s there an employee of the Government, that has been lift as hard as our rural mall couriers through almost six ears o1 war, with prices of fe s and other equipment almost double. Yet they struggled on doing their duty noblv and well. I venture to say there 1s not s man that calls himself a Csnadlan, but. would like to see those men receive a. deal that. would at least give them a llvlng wue. I em, Sir, etc, FAIR. PLAY. Laval (I Jim-mes D. White Assoclnéd Press sum Writer) (By The Associated Press) Arch-collaboratlonist Pierre Laval executed on Monday as s traitor, headed the French Government twice 1n peacetime before he made a third rise to power during the war by courting Nazi Germany. Often expressing publicly a. hope for a German victory, Lavnl fell quickly from his status of wartime chief of a con uered state to that of a condemn prisoner after the of 1044, and lie was unsuccessful 1n attempts 1,0 flee from justice. Acting under Nazi ressure, ag- ed Marshal Henri Phllppe Petaln French Government ln 1940, and he quick- ly zput, into effect a number of Na drisplred antl-semltlc and forced-labor lays.‘ In s broadcast no the French peo 1e Laval said peace ln Europe eoud grow only out, of friendship between France and Germany. When Vichy was threatened, he moved the eollaboratlonlst govern- ment; to Paris, then to Belfort and finally made a feeble effort to or- ranlze a pro-German French gov- ernment. in Slgmarlngen, ln southern Germany. That, falling because of Allled mllltiary successes, Laval went. into flight, returning only to become a. key defendant, 1n war crimes trials. He was a central figure ln the dramatic series of events that led from a tumultuous appearance ln the treason trial of his Vichy chief, Petain. to his own historic trlal ImvaPs first. appearance before post-war offlclnldom of the coun- try he led Into a honeymoon wltn Nail Germany was 1n a stormy seselon of the Petatn trial Aug. 3, 11MB. Called u a defence wit- ness. be declared: "I sin not here to charge the Marshal or to clear h1m," then recited a full defence of the entire Vichy course. He testified both he and Penaln protested to the Germans about excesses agstnnt France during the war, and dented the oft-re- peated shame that he was the "evil genius" behind Petsln. who subsequently was condemned to death and later had his sentence commu by Gen. de Gaulle to llfe imprisonment. Levin's own trial for treason, following Petolnk by two monthl. wrote s. singular chapter 1n the annals of French Jurisprudence. In the five-day trial starting Oct. 4, 1045, Laval was twice evlcted from the court for bitter exchanges with the judges and juror‘, and ffnally, on the thlrd dsy, blulrew to his dungeon beneath the court-room and fused to return to the court. He termed the proeeedlng "s judicial crime". llld spent. his time wrlttng a defame he apper- en y would be used 1n s later trl death. IQ- , perhaps even altar hls O00 The trlsl was criticized almost. unanimously by French news- papers and the Bar Association, and u s ielult Level recruited support 1n s retrial pies. from some of his srchwnemlu. One we: former Premier Paul Rey- nsud. condemned and imprisoned by the Vichy regime. The jurors. however, condemned Level to debt-h. and he was joll- vloea to the Army, s and Alr Force 1s truly small . ore than 18.000 workers 3 ‘ “ 1n . including "Y" huts, lesve centres, clubs, rinks. sport ground out.- poet points had I pert 1n the bu . Spots equipment ststlonery, clun- ettes and drinks to a value of vrell over a million and hslf dollars were issued free to men 1n the sn- vfces. The report, says: "The Y. M.C.A. has gone vrtth 111m when- ever he went, fulfllllng the Ohrln- tlnn task 1t undertook st the out- break of weir-patiently following the lines of battle randy tn serve hur Jones tui llll ‘buddies whenever and wherever thgheould -even 1n prison comps." e de- tail of the report show how oom- pletely the ssoelstfon sustsfned and completed glint million. It 1s to he applied to any piece of glittering tinsel or tarnished fincryw KIDNEY "\zs<.\in' 4 uinii~"",| r "Ii. tit-W‘ Allies liberated France in the fall M10 speaking, the evolution-which wtll empire are predominantly Moham- llglous crusade. l to Dutch spokesmen-but which wiguld be a. normal medium through For Eastern Situation Iy DIWITT Mall-N Ionln Afhln Gen. MacArthur’: e 11mph for broken Js m ls so star It no lonltr rec- d power, either lame or smell. Thus parishes |.n evll power which for almost. 100 years lncreu- piugglydomluo‘ ‘ 1.11:1 13,2101‘: untll proed tmpell over- reach ltnlf 1n m effort to master and enslave not only 114 nelghbors but to conquer great countries of the western world. Japan has been deprived of her ill-gotten palm and thrust back into bar tiny Island klngdom. 8b.: now loch the resources to recover surf-blag approaching her formu- posltton. E-he has be_en flung into the oblivion from whlch lhe emerged, almost wlthln the memory of llvlng man. A vacuum has been crested 1n the Orient with tbs dluppesnnce of thll domlnsnt power. It. ls 1n the nature of things that somethlng must. rush 1n to 111.1 that vacuum that. ls, some other people will ln due course take its place. What will 1t be? . l» O 0 The probsbllltlos are that. for s oonsldorabls period the influence of the Blg ‘fliree-Brltnln. the United States and Russia-Will control the situation, pending the emergence of the new Aslatfc pow- er. China 1s a logical successor, but 1t will be Ion: before she could assume the crown, for she ls ter- ribly‘ weak ln all categories ex- cepting one-the magnificent spirit, which enabled her to hang on 1n face of the Jnp onslaught. Chins bu s monumental task ahead of her. She must repair the terrible ravages of her long vnr, she must rehabilitate and greet- ly expend her lndustrles, and she stlll has to go through pioneer-trig days 1n developing the far reaches of s country which 1s so vast. as to be unwieldy. Ohlne 1s s. logical ultimate sue- cessor to the throne, but before we accept this as s finality we should stop and ask ourselves whether there ls any other Asiatic power which might intervene. This 1s no time for prophesy as to what wtll come out of the Orl- ental melting-pot, but. we shall 1n- deed be short-sighted 1f we don‘t recognize that Rusla may be the power which will rush Into the vacuum crested by Japan's ellmln- n. As for Japan, while she has had to surrender her ituzhli. she 8W1 can achieve a useful and happy llfe. Gen MacArthur says, the Jap- anese "hsve for the first time seen the free man's way of life 1n actual action, and 1t. has stunned them into new thought and new ideas. A revolution — or more properly restore the dignity and freedom of the common man has begun. The Dutch East Indies By JAMES wnm: (Associated Press Stiff Writer) An important aspect of the pre- sent disturbance ln the Dutch East Indies 1s religion. The 70,000,000 people of thls great medan, and Japanese agltatois are trying to color the natural native impulse just. now toward indepen- dence wlth the war-paint of a re- The Japanese have tried this 1n which he wus condemned to elsewhere. Their attempts to ln- Pffilvlflllflll Wlllvll MW"!- deetli. cite the Chinese Mohammedan "Whlfilml "15 59011115" Laval returned to France 1n nnnm-tty are well known. They "w hill’- Amerlcan military custody after 181151, although they had more Promo“, a n", mg m mn- surrendering at Llnz, Austria, Mohammedan; 1n China to work row", when the in; 1| July 31- 1945~ on than there are 1n n11 Ariiby. slung and ls remarkably Vlflllfllly B 585L800 “PM” d1"- Last week-end 11; becflme 8P- uoeful 1n preventing dan- lng the darkening days 0f hi5 parent that Japanese mlllbarlsts 1n di-nn. Vichy M81318» Lflvfll made B 5"" the India-still waiting in places o“ les of moves to escape custody. (or Allied commanders to accept. Get Your Bottle T Y unsuccessfully sought sanctuary in their surrender-are attemptingto h,“ so cm“ Switzerland and Lichtenstein, f1n- sm- up n "holy war" before they sllyhflewhto Spalp-w d b G finally lay down tthglr arms“ ere e was n rne y en. 1111s 1s apparen ecause WM Franco and later evicted from the not; 1); Soeknrno, the Indonesian 2 country. file arrived at Lin! in B mtlonslist leader,‘ wise gpclared German pane. war" at the wee -en . s was c“ Given "ma, ‘ done by the “In<1°"°‘1“" Pmple‘ M“ ordAttenllun. army", which appears to have lit- tle 1f any connection with Sock- arno’s political movementP-accord- wmih Jgpgng” agitators would well ls interest-Ins W 110W m“ m9 "Indonesian peoplt?! firm?" 4111'?“- ed its declaration of war laiilnat. the Dutch, the Emrsstsns iind the Ambonese. The Dutch and the mixed Dutch- risttve Eurutsns are, of course." Christians. 8o are the Ambonese. s people who come from the eastern part of the empire and who fumfshed most of the native troops which the Dutch used to control the predominantly Moham- medan population of the other lslands. But there are Indonesian Moham- medan: who have no use for the Japanese-o group of them stormed the Japanese cendarmei-le head- quarters st Baridoenl, for instance Wanna probable that. Indon- ed, 1n hur-up prison curb In with one leg chained to the wall, whlle hls counsel mode final ef- forts to save his llfe. H11 wrltten defence, made pub- lte motor ths an In pro- nounced. contended lavel plotting to turn the I eminent bee! to Gen. do Gsulle when the Germans ordered hlm arrested. The enemas against 111m 1n- cluded plotting 0 coun- t.b w... "t..." t... s desire for o Gannon xpredfl stator; 1n the vnr. s story of which Consuls may be proud. — Wlnnlpe; Tribune. 14d Richmond St. Down 1h! 1on8 hall she nllstpns e a star. . 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"f? _..._. ... .. ._.___ Professional Bards Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. VENUS OF THE LOUVRE tnit could not mar rest ream afar stricken Jew. move. one poet-brain. pa . —lhn.ma Lazarus. Sassy Stomach: Relieved Every person who h troubled with no 1n the staunch should get ii bottle of Dr. Evan's stoma: llflature and see bow qulo y It will re- lieve lll dlslremlng Iylllb toms. Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture taken st mell tlmes not only prevents all bud effects from [as but 1t promotes the Illne- tlnnal activity of the ll~ uh, salute dlgestlon and in- proves the appetite. luoom- mended for Dyspepsia. hulls’- estlon, Heartburn, etc. Prleg 85 Cenls P!!!‘ Bottle. MAGS llAIll RESTURER A delicately perfumed hair Charlottetown Tel. 589 P.O. Box 6| Frederic A. Largo bAartiss-rin, no. Phlllln Biillfllns. iii Grafton s; Phone loss r. o. m; i; OHABLOTTITOWN, r s. L McLeod 8 Bentley w. n. anus-us. l. o. s. A. BINTLIY. n. o. Barristers and Attorneys-et- LII iu Prlisoe sum t >es _______________ Charles R. McQuafd s. n. . Solbltel, Now-v. Eta. Ila Illllflllll. Oils-lemon Phone I88 l L44 x —-—~rc.>~.- “L-p- - 11. n. noises ti; Chartered Accountants ll Grllton IIIOL ‘a _. . Phone I000 lot u: lllulolph W. bhnnlng, c, A Public Stenographer "lllwnflnlllps cord: sad our QQIYQINIII 8H bookckqeeplgm‘ I buss nun GIDDII Te h 1x904. l i-'."l>.°li'a. m. Connlughl Ants No. l. wfii-Hfll-fi‘ ’- -"-"-" N" ‘. Morrelland flompanyi Chartered Accountlnls ll. F. lllllllllBlLll Intern Trust llnlldllll Charlottetown evm-s-.-.~.-.-.vsvi.v ‘ JJ. 11061112111101. NUIAIY. ITO. BABBISTEB. SOLICITOI CURB"! BUILDING 4J4‘! \_I_l~' SERVIC ” W. K. RUGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 Charlottetown M. ALBAN FARMH: H. l\.. L‘... B. MONEY TO LOAN IAIBISTEB, sol-‘IOITOI. I10. CIIAELOTTETOWI Clnldlnn Bank of Commerce Bllll ALEX W. MATHIESON 0810b: I0 Great George ltrod Money to Loan Column BABIISTII». SOLIOITOI. 8T0. H. F. McPhee B.A. ICC- Norsiu bu. BARBISTER. souonon BELL 9 MATHIESON PBOPEITIES . COLLECTION! Charlottetown. ‘s; l. l. Attorneys-l LOANS 0N CITY AN‘) PAID PALMER 8! HASLAM A. I. IIAILAM, 8A.. LLB. BAIIISTIB. ITO. on (Illusion Olurlottetown. P. I. I. :0“? 1'0 LOAN P. O. B0! ll 242:?»- Rlchard B. Johnstoli ‘m?’ islsiii; m. I» 0r Prince ldvunl lllnl IJCQ-dflslllfil 1M onus-mm. ‘stimuli-u lclhtlhns. __. i- AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST cor-m ngénguqnm an lvenhge ‘ I -_.-._-_ ink“; _ Dill