PAGE TIIE GIIAIILOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded In 1887) Pnlldent: Lleul. Col W. Chatel- S. Mel-Ire I Vina-President: J. R. Burnett, FJJ. Been yo Lleut. Col D. A. Muolflnnon, 11.5.0. Idltor llld Managing DL-eewr: J IL Burnett. IJJ Annotate Bdltms: anlt Walker and Llenl. Inn A Burnett, 8.U.N.V.R. (On Active Service) ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Thu the Weakest Ink.‘ THURSDAY. JULY 21 1944 Was "It A Hoax‘? Discussing the unfortunately abortive at- tempt at Hitler's liquidation, Lord Vrlnsittart inclines to the theory that the whole thing was Nazi propaganda stage stuff. Ill an article writ- ten for the British United Press, Vansittart puts forward three possible explanations of the episode and its repercussions: l. The attelllpt to kill llitlcr and his top Nazi-untitled gem-rails and adtnirals lttay have been genuine —— a honzl fidc effort on the part of the conservative generals to get rid of Hitler and sue for ytcace with the .\llies. 2. \\'l1at iufornlatiott is available also raises n strong possibility that the attentpt to assass- inate Hitler trtts stlged like other famous hoaxcl in Nazi (iernltttl history. it wouldgive Hitler a chance to proclzliltt his indispensability to tierntany and give ruthless Heinrich Himmler a strangleholtl on the llotlte front. 3. 'l‘ltcre is a possibility the "assassination" was staged to test reaction in .-\llicd countries. It requires an itnztgitlntion capable of feed- ing ml wild iantztsv to accept thesis 2 or 3. Goebbels‘ propugalttltl has zulnlittctlly become more stupid than ttsttsll with the knowledge that Gcrnlany's doom is advancing with por- teutons strides, but it is difficult to picture such a Reich-reciting story‘ bcitlg invented by Berlin as a feeler of .\llied scntinlettt, at a time when the nroltlent of the hour is to ltcep the Nazi home front from falling to pieces from nervous pfoitfflllOll. The N41“ bosses may be curious to know what the .\ icd reaction would be to a real or threatened revolution in Germany, but it would he stark insanity to try to gratify such curiosity by a crack-brain expedient which would at the same time upset and divide the German people more than anything else that could be conceived. Any hypothesis that the attack on Hitler's life was a hoax, requires to be based on more sheer nonsense than the average mind can comfortably absorb. l A Confused Picture One effect of the invasion is to lift the veil which has hidden from us the ordinary life of occupied France, and very interesting the first glimpse of the picture ought to be, writes Janus in the Spectator. But so far it is a. very con- fused picture, made up in part of flabby con- tradictory evidence. The Daily Mail 0n Wed- nesday collccted reports frolll several corre- spondents. The first, sufficiently arresting, told of two French girls, wives of German sold- iers, who sniped from windows in a village at Allied soldiers, killing five of them before they were shot themselves. Another correspondent described the local population in the area he visited as variously enthusiastic, indifferent or sullenly hostile. Another story, no doubt more typical, was of eager atld valuable collabora- tion. But the strangest contradiction in be- tween l Renter's correspondent’: stories of the comfort and even luxury he found in some Nor- man villages, with houses amply stocked with thick tweed suits, silk dresses, thick towels, cos- metics arld abundance of excellent food — be- tween that and the report of a. French corre- epondent who, cabling to France, depicted the lot of the inhabitants in very different terms. They had got accustomed, he said, to their 11in hula If dure, and he mentioned that, as meas- ure of it, he had heard repeated again and again the exclamation, "just think of it, monsicur, fifty grammes of butter (less than z oz.) a month-in Normandy of all places." This must be the true picture. The luxury houses sound Gennen. -“Silence," the Watchword 'A warning to the people of Belgium to maintain complete silence on the subject of the resistance movement, has been broadcast from London by Hubert Pierlot, the Belgian Prime Minister. The Allied Supreme Command, he said, had paid tribute to the Belgian forces of resistance for their work behind the German lines and for the disorganization of communi- cations used by the enemy in transporting men and munitions. This action contributed to the Allied successes in Normandy. To those who asked how they could help, the Belgian government replied that they could and should help the resistance forces by re- specting their essential secrecy. Everyone should behave as if he knew nothing. Mr. Pifirlof added, “l labor this point because thcre has been too much talking. 'l‘hose who are responsible for the fight in Belgium are in imminent danger- I demanded that yotlr watchword be, Stlertcel The ‘Alligd Command attaches the greatest lm- portance to the watchword being punctiliously obeyed." C. C. F. Technique Through indifference and, it mtlst be said, in many instances throttgh incompetence the two old political trait-tics have been chiefly rc- lponsible for the new and quickening life which, in recent months, has been surging through the veins and arteries of the C. C. F. political body. This renewed strength is largely due to a political technique which its worst enemy can- not accusc the C. C. F. of having copied from the older parties. From its very inception the C. C. F. has concentrated upon tllc younger gen- eration. It has encouraged the youth of Can- ldl in the belief that it is possible with only slight physical effort to make this country an- other Garden of Eden as before the Fall. All that is necessary is to vote C.C.F. or, in other words, to fall down and worship Mr. Coldwcll. It appeals, too, to the disgruntled. There arc thousands of people who, by the peculiarity of ernnlent". To those, the call of the C. C. F. has a most fascinating appeal. On the other hand, it is well to remember that this outwartl appeal of the C. C. F. for economic justice, for freedom of speech, and for many other rights of the common man, does not appear to be part of its own practice wher- ever it has the power. Mr. Lenderyon of Lethbridge, beaten and battered by burly C. C. F. thugs, did not re- ccive mucll of this freedom of opinion which the C. C. F. would have us believe it is so dc- sirous of maintaining. It is well if we give some thought to such incidents. _. EDITORIAL‘ NOTES _ . Another successful race day has come and gone, bringing us within three weeks of Char- lottetown's big events. Y? 1i i l The Scotia Steam Ferry is doing good work at Borden-Tormentine crossing, but it is ques- tionable if it can handle satisfactorily the big traffic of next month. , 4y at m v When two Bloc Poptrlaire M. P.'s from Quebec, Dr. Pierre Gauthier and Mr. Edward Lacroix resign in order to enter the contest for the Provincial Legislature, they must consider the Iiart_v’s prospects pretty good. As M. P.'s they are each entitled to $4,000 per annum, and railway travelling expenses; as M. L. A.'s they are allowed $3,000 plus $300 travelling ex- penses. n- : a a A delegation from the Russian Orthodox Church, probably consisting of three high mem- bers of the church, is leaving for Britain "in the near future" to return the visit of the Archbishop of York last year. Alexei, the in- cumbcnt patriarch of Russia, said: "We are confident that this visit will serve to strengthen still further the friendly and fraternal rela- tions betwecn the two countries.” i i I I The peak of war production would be over before October I, and before the end of the year there would be a goodly quantity of consumer goods in the market, it was predicted to retail- ers attending the Chicago Midsummer furniture mart. Demand for appliances would run into the millions, speakers agreed. Thomas F. Kelly _ of the Hoover Company (a former Canadian) reported surveys showing as high as 4,000,000 prospects for vacuum cleaners. u e a u A good deal of indignation is being expres- sed over the far from laudatory description of our province in a Toronto newspaper, written by a sport columnist. The worst feature is that the visiting sport writer quotes local in- dividuals as his authority to give an indication of verisimiltude to what he says. It would ap- pear to be up to our Tourist and Publicity Bureau to take both the writer and his news- paper to task. At the same time this should be a. lesson to Islanders to beware of slick strang- ers bringing gifts of so-called free publicity. a v n w New records for Australia, both for the highest price and the highest average for Beef Shorthom bulls, were established at the stud beef cattle sales in Sydney. For Coonong Napoleon, winner of the junior championship at the show, C. P. Fairbairn & Co., 0f \Voomar- gama, paid $10,000 after bidding that started at $2,500. The senior champion bull, bred by D. R. McCaughey, of Coonong Stud, sold in r942 to E. L. Killen, of Pine Park, used in the Antrim Stud, and brought back to the Cattle Show, where he won the senior championship, was re-purchascd at auction by his breeder for $8,500. The entire team of eight Coonong bulls realized $3r,6o7.5o, ayeraging $3,825.85. w v 1- Hilaire Bclloc, poet, historian, novelist, journalist, traveller and politician, born this date, 1870; of French descent, though his mother was English and his wife Irish-Ameri- can; educated at Edgehaston Oratory School and Oxford University; keen student of mili- tary matters he prophesied before Great War I that the Germans would invade France by way of Belgium; was Liberal Member of Parlia- ment for South Salford for four years; editor of "G. KI; Weekly" since I936; his chief pub- lication: include “Verses and Sonnets", “The Path to Rome", “The Crusade", "Monarchy", "The Silence of the Sea", "The Last Rally", “Elizabethan Commentary." “When I ml deed, I hope it may bi said: His sins were scarlet, but his books were read." u u 4 i: Sumner Welles says in his new book that the free exchange of news among all the peo- ples of the earth is one of the essentials for maintaining the world organized for peace. Welles takes up the theme many times in his book. At one point he tells of his arrival in Ger- many in 1940 on a special mission for Presi- dent Roosevelt and his discovery of the extent to which the German press was ‘controlled. "I remember that on the first page of the very first paper I picked up,” he says, “were three items. written with ponderous solcmnity, which purported to describe events alleged to have taken place recently in the United States." Welles says this gave him a new concept of the "tremendous power" which complete control of the sources of information gives to a govern- ment. “Under those conditions," he writes, “and at a time when listening to a foreign radio broadcast was a capital offence, punish- ment for which was reported in the very news- paper I was then reading, how was it conceiv- able that the people of Germany could ever move except as their masters instructed them? From that moment, I have been convinced that when this war is over, the peoples of the earth must never again permit a situation to arise where any people shall be deprived 0f their inherent right to know the truth." - their disposition, are always "agin the Gov- Rommel '1'“ CHARIUTTETOWN, 635.111.21.51‘? Notes By The Way Two more German Generall have been captured by the Rus- sians. They can't all be an good as . on the run-St. Cath- arine: Standard. PUBLIC FORUM Illlenlu-nlnonnlul llleullonbyownopulnh 3%..- ‘ tonn‘ 0 wrlt- er the " l anthem" of scot- land la "The Campbclls Are Com- ing.’ And all the time we thought lt. was. "Just a Wee Deocll 'n Doruafl-Wlnclsor Star. If elected. Thoma: E. Dewey will be the flrst mustached Presl- aent 1n 32 years. William Howard Taft wore u. mustac“. But the country had a close shave ln 1016 when Charles Evan Hu hes nearly won the election. - B falo Cour- fer-Express. Herr von Rlhbentrop Itlll owen a London dentist for work done on his teeth before the war. A time is coming; however, when the Nazis will ave to pay; and Germany's Foreign Minister can count himself 1n with the rest of the gangsters-Hamilton Spectat- or. It may be too much to expect that the term "chairwoman" wlll be replaced by any such crackjaw as “minor manipulative tradeswoman." Indeed, that. would be ridiculous. But 1t should be possible t0 eoln a word free of srlobblsh implications and more ln keeping with the dignity of hon- eat and indispensable toll. - Brantford Expositor. Only two per cent of men dis- charged from Australia's fighting services are flndlng it dlfflcult to gldjust themselves to clvlllan llfe. One man started 12 different Jobs before he found one in which he could stlck. Manpower officers say that the war has changed many outlooks. Clty men want jobs ln the country and out-of-doors work- ers want clty Jobs. Disabled men are difficult, but are patiently en- couraged to keep trying to get comfortably placed. -- Fredericton Gleaner. House builders are banding them- selves together to end Jerry-bulld- lng after the war. Already 50 per cent of the private builders who v/lll put up B5 per cent of Britain's brick houses have agreed to accept certain standards and to permit inspectors to examine their work. If their buildings are sound they wlll receive a. certificate which wlll guarantee to the purchaser of the house that. lf anything goes wron wlthln two years the bulld- er yyll put it right-London Dally Ma . Benjamin ll. Marshall. ‘l0, de- sZgn-for-llvlng architect, dled 0f a heart ailment tn Chicago. He de- signed Chicago's Blackstone, Drake and Edgewater Beach hotels, New York's Maxine Elliott Theatre and Philadelphia's Forrest, for hlm- self designed a pink, gaudy, trick- ed-up house which boasted a Ming bed that. slept. seven, a dlnlng table that. came up with the soup course, sank to the kitchen below, came bog}; with the chicken and gravy. -- me. Every time we come to Mont- real, we walk up and down St. James Street a few times — Just to get; the general effect. The general effect. to be frank, ls rath- er dlsappolntlns. especially lf you walk up and down St. James street on a Sunday or a holiday, when the legendary monsters who ln- habit these parts are all playing golf, when the great. office bulld- lngs are deserted, and you could easily play a game of baseball right ln the middle of the street. —By Richard J. Needham, wrltlng to the! Calgary Herald from Mont- reu . Rome has fallen before. and with qulta different. consequences. It fell t0 the Gauls, who sacked lt ln 390 8.0.; it, was largely burn- ed ln Nero's flre ln 63 A.D.; 1t was sacked by Alarlc ln 410 A.D., by Gensertc the vandal in 455; it was taken by Totzlla the Goth in 546, by the German Arnulf in 8G6: it was plundered by the Con- stable of Bourbon in 1527; it was seized by Napoleon the Great ln 1808. and by Napoleon the Little 1n 1840; finally, the conscience- less adventurer. for whom the best that can be said ls that he dld not believe his own horrid nonsense, took ft tn mill-New York Times. In nn unsuccessful effort to Jeacl-l America with n short- wave station, Eire spent. $24,000, P. J. Little, Minister of Posts, stat- ed tn Dublin. Alludfng to com- plaints about interference with the station, he aald that although the matter was serious, nothing could be done. "Beyond maklng repre- sentations to foreign countries, we can hardly expect to get the mat- ter adjus ed until present world condltlons settle," he explained. Re- viewing a year's work b the broadcasting station, be and that the news service had been improv- ed lmcl that. the station hoped to have a news service of its own. Television would be adopted after the war, he added. All restriction: upon the dellv- ery of wheat in Western Canada. have been removed. Hereafter only the natural restrictions wlll ap- ply — the avatlablllty of cars to move the product and of the llna elevators to handle it, u lt ls of- fered by the growers. The an- nouncement of the l 1 of the quota restrictions on deliver marks the return of an old era. he new era on wheat. came to the Great Plains about four years ago when, owing to nn overburdenlng sur- plus. the Government was forced to ask farmers to keep the bulk of the wheat, they raised in blns on the farm. We were then bent on reducing our wheat: rorlucllon. Even at the end of 1 z we had something like a bllllon bushels in Canada. That wheat has disap- peared as lf by magic. Today farmers have been glven the go- nhead alga to deliver as the please and to grow as much us t. ey like -tl1ere‘a an almost certain market for lh-Lethbrldge Herald. On n tour of lndlnn lnlsulonl In the Far Nort Bishop R. Dlgnnn, of the Bault Ste. Marla Diocese, was preperpelg to fly to one of the mos fsola stations ln diocese for l eon- flrrnatlon service when n well- dresaed, well-spoken Indian woman approached hlm. She asked if he could take her along as n pas- senger. The bishop pointed to the already crowded 'plane but when tne woman explained she was the organist. at the mlsslon he was going to vlslt. he relented. Wlth some adrolt, manoeuvring the wo- man managed tn squeeze aboard the Htlnne. If anybody had sneez- ed during the fll ht. the_ cabin would have burst. owov . land- n u field of potatoes. it up to examine it and ll _ 1t was exactly like ycul‘ GESCIYDHOII- with dark rrreen head and brown body. When it; opened its wlntls they were twice as 10ml as dy; 1f you care to notify the proper authorities and send them to the farm of Edwln Taylor at: North Bedeque, I wlll show them where I found lt. I am Slr. tc. P. ll. TAYLOR. Wllmot: Valley._P E.I. THE (LA A. GROUNDS Sin-Pet Power's lament 1n H1- rlayb "In This Corner“ strikes u rc- sDonslve chord ln the ullvsleal and mental fnbrlc of your llunlble scribe No doubt there is, that nostalgia ls general among all the older nab- ltucs of the vlell beloved (LA A _ Grounds. ‘that well kept track £1110 centre 119111 wus a "Mecca" for the youth of Charlottetown and cur Island community ln general; as a public institution it. was one of the main attractions of the city. It. was the principal factor m the uhy- slcal development. or our youth. m order mat they could compete suc- eessltully at home and abroad- even to the Olympics. _ Mr. Power nunled a comparative tow of good oncs. lle would not presume t0 trv to name lllenl all. Many of tllem are living abroad and wlll feel lonesolrle and frustrat- ted when they lire reminded of the way that one of the best rttllletzc grounds tn the Murltilnes ls lelt. w the forces of decay. , Let us not yet lose hope-now ls the time to start re-htlbllltattorl on the old grounds-arr some other grounds ln close proxbnlty to the clty. Realms could be wrltttn of the benefit of a. noun open air uthletlo grounds. Every cltv vrlth any tie- zreo of civic orlde ls so cntttoped. lt would be all inspiration to the youth of the whole Island. Cross roads and village clubs would soon be lot-med to practice the stntloalvl events-with the ln/ntlon of com-i petlmz in Charlottetown for lhet Island championships. t It appears that there ls not enough attention uald to ullyslcall development ln our schools. ‘Pile, school would be the uropcr place to, inculcate the idea. I tlllnk that the prlmordlal urlZe to test. oncsf strength and encltu-allce amour: 11111118118 has been evident since the days of the Greek Olympics and: Etcman gladiators to the day fights of Dempsey and lotus Something drastic must be done to better the physical condition of our youth-which would work ln- versely proportional as rt detenent of juvenile tor adult) delinquency. The records show that a lartzc number of army apollearlts wcre unfit for service, but after trnlnlntr {fir some months were able to uuu- It would appeal‘ that the City Council and Provinolal Goverlztnent should take fill‘ active, tangible 1n- terest. ln providing athletic grounds. It would be a public spirited ges- Ullre in keeping with the trend of the times ln other provinces and States .'1‘here are mallv old time athletes in Charlottetown not the least of whom are Premier Jones and Lleut. Col. D A Maeliinnotl- both being champions and now men of admlrtlstratlo . v, others of the tzood old timers will’ at least: Rive the protect their moral support and benedlct something more tangible. Char-l lottetown ls the “Queen" city of the! Marltlmes and everything possible and feasible should be done for its beautification. The German fontasmagorla of a Nazi empire is vanishing fast-and the tempo of the war wlll szo into the multiples very soon. Japan vrlll be begging for mercy bv next sum- mer-nt the present rate of the American onslaught. and the boys wlll be home azaln. Let us not leave] this proposal of Mr. Power 1n a.‘ nebulous state for a long tlme.| “The present; time is the ‘drlve". The movement can scarcely fall to be popular. It has everythlnz to commend lt. Jce I am Slr, etc JAMES PENDERGAST Kenslngtotl. lng safely at their destination the bishop spotted transportation walt- zng to take hlm to the mlsslun. "Walt," he told the resident priest, "I brought along the organist for the service." 1'0rganlst?" claimed the priest. "Why, we haven't even got an organ." But by this time the wlly backwoods htch-hlker had disappeared. leav- ing the genial bishop with a feel- lnB that somehow or other he had Just been taken for a rlde. —Ml1c- lean’s Magazlne. CONQUEBORJB COAST, JUNE. 19M Conqueror‘: coast - with its sands T t.h iirobufir l d o e n ups newy sol-ea . And lts tides must serve for our errand t re As the dawn breaks grey and red.- And the croft. drive on with their precious loa That. lea-ns from each blunt-nosed 97W; This was the coast that Duke Wll- trade. am s And we are astrlde it now. THESE days everyone ha! to be in tip-top shape f0 do his job. And inner clennli-i ness is very helpful for fitness.‘ The use of lino’: ‘Fruit Salt’- will help you gain freedom fromconsripatiolnhea’ “ indigestion and that listless out-of-sorts feeling that so often slows you down. Take a. dash of sparkling, refreshing Eno in a glass of water before break- fast. You'll like its pleasant taste because Eno is free of harsh, bitter salts-its action is gentle but effective.‘ To help keep you fir, take Eno’: ‘Fruit Salt.’ Buy a large, economical NEW DELI-I batch of "Bevin Boys" Will Leave Wood Islands 700 am OCTOBER AN NOUNCED LATE . batik lode] from any druggin. Il-M {Andi llW/l/M I 0' time nine serous alts/luv ‘Mongolian... 1min‘: ———- ‘ship-building There is an urgent ileed in the coal-mines for peeled, mine sticks- 3-in. to S-in: tops 5, 6 and 7 ft. lengths. Spruce, Princess Pine, Red Pine, Tamarack and Balsam (Fir) - Contracts for 1914-45 given out until August 30th Write. wire ‘or ‘phone Bergmann Construction 0o. Ltd. Phone 5. Montague, P. E. I. eludes four ncmlnees of various fllms to 1 _rCP\- The lothjmeeial training in shipbuilding and comprlsingpship repairs. This brings the total 79 trainees. recently sailed for t|.‘.C‘l1lll1‘lb(’l'GfB-E\'lfl trainees sent» for United Kingdom. The group ln-l traltiing to 563. receive PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ‘- NOVA scorn FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS. P.E.l. .- CARIBOU us. Ill-V. “PRINCE NOVA" .“Tlle Contracting Link Ffiry Service wlll nperatdthree round trips per day. 11.00 ‘mum-arid 3.00 p.m. LUNCHES SERVED NORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES, LIMITED t CIIARLOTTETOWN. P-E. . n IéOVEMBI-IR scn count WILL an m. But a hlghaetéde than Duke wll- Svrlnie through to the flelde and Fmm glider’ and bomber drop in view The airborne men-at-nrnla. The sands are forced and the air m the ammo: th l u l t a. e ; m“ l! v 0M a Kn til a" Lid that r. At v1.51 ...§.'.“%t“°§t.. émhmflifa ne. Then on ln the bitter noon of drlv Pant the dark. deep forest ways, | To Cnen of the tmlrca and the nb-. bevs izrev. And thleserrreen craft-neat. of ml- fl . There was he bred: and at. Caenl lav 1d - c0 That ruthless breast and brow. l This was the Conauerorts Coast. of ,__ God-speed to lts conquerors now! —Luclo ln the Manchester Guardian. l Between Tle ' " (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) Dayllglhfqeslsliiiirlogvfifi: n 51811111! May 1st the Nova Scotla-Prlnce Edward Island Will Leave Caribou 9-00 mm. 1.00 p m and 5.00 p m distinctively beautiful mounl- , lags net with flawless diamond; . . . creation: of "cauty _ W. W. WELLNER LTD. Jewelers Since 1868 exqnhlle . lnrze selection too. wI-Y 27. 1944 This War~p Years lg, I mvlzhhiomfslfl" pa. mllltln obiectlvee 1n’ " .9§.et§li“l‘.i'$““° “‘°'"e= at crlbed an umfliiuit lfltdm" " to: q? HOME can? Successful heme cantiihl: 0n destroying all micron by uelrla sufficient he“ y PM!‘ lo of tlme rm n3 ell-tight. Containers to . n-lnfectlon. In £111., a,’ urnl tendency of tnllt and tables w decay through m, of bacteria. moulds. m, enzymes ts counteracted, we HAVE nu; m, TRUSS m: YOUR PARTlc cast: To than of you unfortunate enough an“ to wen a truss we ask it questlon- Are you my with the one you are y; in]? Does It. flt comm, out of date || lust received ; rnent of new style tflllltg, llaes and at prices u, everybody. ___ sassy STOHACl|§ RELIEVED 5V"! Person who l led wlth ‘as in th s m‘ or bowels should grt a but of Dr. Evans’ Stomach. t turn Ind see how qutgu, wlll relleve all out, M, symptoms. Dr. Evans Stomach .. taken at meal hours, niiiixl,‘ prevents all bad effects If n: but It promotes the tlonul uctlvlty of the run och, mints digestion m ., 9""! the appetite. Don't Delay. Order y Bottle Today. Price an. TIIE 2 MACS H6 Great George Street Mill Orders Given Pmn Attention. For Foot Ailments CONSULT H. J. A. BROWN, D.l'. Orthopedic GHIRUPUlBlST l4! Great George Slmt CIIABLOTTETIHVN l'.E.l Professional Gard llll. lloane & Oompa CHARTERED ACC()l?.\'T.l.\'T Bl Grafton Street. Charlotteto M. ALBAN FARMl uaunlsniit. ASOITIIl-fllillfllt. n Canadian Bani of Cnmmcm 1 noun _r ALEX w. iialultsu llnncv k loan Collect! Office: O0 Grunt Genrie street BAIIBIBTIB. HOIJCITOB. ET Blrll A MA I HIESU MONEY T0 LOAN (Lin: Block Chnjllltm H. F. MrPhee BA. K. NOTARY m, IAIIRIBTER 5011f ITOR Blley Building Charlfltlt" PAI MFR 8 HASIA A. J IIASLAM B A. Ll- 5 BARRISTER. ETC» Illnl nl Nova $001M f‘ ambit‘ °"B'r'lll'f“$' filly‘ £1 1/0 an Phone McLeod C? Bentlel’ I l. ulmur. It f- J. A. IIIN_'I'I.IIY K <1 lienmen nml lmnrnern-IP LII l“ Prince Street Imellana Gompall! I ll. F. ARGIIIBALII Ola-tend Accuunllllll Illftn Trust Bnlltlllf Charlottetown ‘ AMflZZ-g EYES EXMIIIEII A ausslsiwirnrn .I. s. 1:4 YLOR. OIYFOMETRIST Carlo’! lhnt and 0W" l" be Residence lull “av Ann-tutti” IIDB ll“