PAGE FOUR . TIIE WT Indian Iornln; Dull; thunder) In Ill?) Var-President: l. B. Burnett. l’ J the Weakest Ink.‘ us-us Col. W Chute: S. Nolan l. Iourolnryx Uaut. Col. l) A Maclhnon. 0.8.0. III“! IIII MIIIIIIIIQ DINOIQH I. K Burnett, FJ-l. lllochh Elf-hurl: Frank Walker and Molt. Ill Ljurutt. B..C.N.V.IL i0: Active Berna) ‘The Strongest Memory u Weaker Thou itiniiturrernvii GIIAIIIIIAII how the vote will be received. Without question when it was introduced the estimates some years ago and it is due en- tirely to tjovcriiiiieiit policy and not to Par- ianient that the work was not completed. Since thcrc is an zidditinual rczisoii t0 rc-vote will have unqualified llcrc is thc Conserva- tive pledge on the subject given J! the Bracken meeting in Charlottetown last lylzrv, and per- ionally iiidorsed by Mr. Bracken himself. It reads: lieu, l1U\\'t.‘\'Q'.'. oclicve that support i“ the lloiisc. of the bill. , still lacking. _i fig amended substitute more vague in many places. of this have been offset to some extent on of the fact that whatever the Gov- _ does must now be done in the open. . The Provinces, therefore, hath‘ Parliament and an in whatever ‘actions they may feel E dangers l '1» l)!‘ Y?" I l] eminent WEDNESDAY. DECEIIIBER I2, I945 Harbour Repairs Vole Public Works Minister Fournier has once this scssion. more indicated that thc rc-vote for Charlotte- town ivharf and hzirbor iiiiproveuietits will be provided for in the supplementary estimates to be brought down that it will be introduced in the course of the next few flaw. Let us hope that this is final, and that no further delay will take place. 'I‘hat means The tioveriuiiciit need have no fear as to the “The Progressive Conservative Party 1t was passed Ill is determined that bilaritime ports will be regard- ed as national assets and that they will be main- tained in a state of security and efficiency. As an application of this policy the wharfage fac- ilities at Charlottetown, Summerside, Alberton, Georgetown‘ and Souris will be kept in a state of efficient repair and usefulness. Furthermore, a marine railway slip at Charlottetown for the repai and servicing of {ferries and ships will be proceeded with immediately. This will bring employment to many residents _of this Island and particularly men returning from overseas, riot only during the construction stage but also after completion." It will be noted that this goes much further than mere wharf repairs, and is in line with resolutions previously passed by our Boards of Trade and Citv Council. The Provincial Government, too, will sure- Whcre Democracy Scored The retreat which the Federal ly feel-justified in supporting Mr. McLure's presentation of our harbor repair claims at Ottawa, in view of its own solemn committment to the people of this Province in the matter. as expressed in the following term tion platform of September, i943: continue to urge upon the merit the necessity of improving the Charlotte- town harbour .. and waterfront, and that dry dock for which a site has been surveyed be built at once." s in its elec- “We will Federal Govern- the Govern- -mcnt began before the combined pressure of the Provincial Premiers was completed in Par- liament last week, when the National Emer- gency Transitional Powers Bill, which it sub- stituted for Bill I5, was approved by the House in Committee, but only after the Government had amended it to return to Parliament its fun- damental rights. Full credit for the Govern- ment's surrender, says the Globe and Mail, be- longs to the Opposition and, in particular, to Mr. John Diefenbaker, who, as its chief spokes- man, rejected all compromise which failed to recognize and rc-cstablish the supremacy of Parliament. Only after continuous pressure did Min- ister of Justice St. Laurent accept the amend- ment which puts an end to Government secrecy and resores Parliament's authority over all its actions. By the changes written into Section 4 of the redrafted bill all those Orders-in-Council passed during the war which the Government wishes to continue must come before Parlia- ment. Many of them Parliament has seen and is completely ignorant 0f the admin- istrative powers exercised through them. In its original form the hill provided that these orders would continue automatically at pleasure of the Government and for the life But now all orders, old and new. must be examined by Parliament and be ap- proved or rejected as it chooses. IICVCI‘ the There is still much in the bill to which the can The real significance of the QPDOSitioNs levcmcnt- in the Commons is that it was by the democratic process. Hav- bcln forced to exert their will in this fash- t- 4min the experience. , , f "Lifting Controls WQY Provinces reasonably can take objection. What they asked of the Government by clarification and definition of its intentions is Instead of being more specific, for Bill I5 is in fact Nevertheless the of now marshal formed public against impelled f0 ‘bothnParliament and the people should f _ tong and influential. for ~ - ‘ent of all economic oun- - of equal strength at active the agitation to this w itutartyzfivnu. the sooner is beqlccurnplishcd. This ‘It will be soon. The ation would soon adjust itself came available. time. More of them are being eased. lifted. But, at Ottawa, those start, have governed the anti-i icy and intend, as they say, to five years. the regulativc rvstrictions have the wind, free enterprise will straint of trade. The wartime Prices Board and took his staff lilvidciitly ,u"c tire going to 1i Ill i‘ criticisms. reform are brought about. Ii ll i i firmation, that the Telephone introduce the automatic system girls. ttli _ Prince Edward Island is ince which has not National Housing Act. the Act since its coming into 98o. a o s a During the war the causes. 18.1 million tons deadweight. of her losses amounted to 8i pre-war tonnage. i i I Senator James Murdock predicted in the Senate another the basis of its origin. The reared in the belief that it was world has ever been confronted Murdock was speaking on a _ A helicopter taxi may soon tram service to the most remote am. home-whether in the Welsh services which hold the world s- s s a. “Praise-God Barcbones‘ erwise the Little Parliament of its own death in a resolution it took its first name from one merchant in Fleet St. entered with a few soldiers they were doing. “We are seeking the Lord," said they. “Then, you‘ maylgo bones Parliament” died; four Oliver Cromwell became Iii! sociations, released its annual that 5,125,059 more was bet with 25 associations holding 35 ity with 98 days of racing and the, Ontario Ioekey Club It $150.75.‘! W" ti“ 1944 P01 of A ting increased It every centre ‘llltl, Clbrcntiolitt. Alta. in prices, it is contended by some that the situ- petition, once the materials or merchandise be- The signs. bowevier, are against the regu- lators of business letting go completely for some Many of the controls have been removed. tured as not distant when the lid will be wholly through, maintain that, to open up everything now. would be to ensure the very consequences that were so successfully combattcd in the last “IQYCOVEF. illtTC is a reminder that. when do as it pleases if that, by any chance, should take the form of combinations involving so thorough that a combine simply couldn't op- erate because it couldn't get the stuff to oper- ate with. The Commissioner went to the War the time of moving backv is nearing with the intention of resuming business at the old stand. -I:Dl TORIAL NOTES- all right as the result of the agitation ovcr thc Charlottetown Harbour improvements. i It. is refreshing to have the City Couiicil- lors dISCLfSSlIIfl‘ civic_affairs and replying It 1S by discussion that progress and It is reported, though without official con- practicable, and so dispense with the “l-lcllo" taken advantage of _ Following amount of loans by provinces authorized under Nova Scotia $242,320; New Brunswick $92,- 000; Quebec 2.902.580: Ontario $9,945,905: Manlwbfl $2.742,26O; Saskatchewan $393,340; Alberta. $2058.25); British Columbia $3,099,- Principal Allies (i.e., British Commonwealth, U. S. A., Norway, Holland, France and Greece) lost 31.1 million dcadweight tons of shipping from Of this the British Commonwealth lost 18.7 million tons deadweight and the U. K. lost losses of the principal Maritime Allies the U. K. lost approximately 61 per cent and the total ed that money, “the cause of wars", would be come, he told the Senate, because men were nral to gain gold or its equivalent money. He depicted it as "the most unfortunate thing the Canada increase her gold production. a m it w _ The Yorkshire Post reports that Railway Air $€TVKECS are considering a plan to establish an air taxi service costing no more .thaii average car hire prices which will take a passenger front Scottish Highlands or isolated districts of Eng- land—-direct to the mainline station. The pass- engcrswill merely phone an order and an air taxi will call -- almost literally “on the door- step." The scheme should raise the entire sys- tem of rail transport to the level of express train Parliament," of the City of London, selected by Cromwell, known as “Mr. Praise-God Barebone," leather The minority insisted 0n maintaining "a house", and continued the sit- tings with a new speaker, but General Harrison he. “for to my certain knowledge He has not bfien here thea- many years." Thus the “Bare- Protector. We are a gambling people-from bingo to atomic bombs. Canadians flocked to the pari- mutuels and pushed $42,193,258 through wickets in I945—the largest amount wagered on horse racing since the boom days of 1929. The Dominion Agriculture Department, which supervises bettingdt 26 Canadian Racing As- this year than the $37,068,199 which went whirl- ing around with the-thoroughbrctls in 1944. The report said 35 race meetings which lasted adtotal of 307 days were held during the year, compared 298 days in 194.1. In i929, 3o associations hul 335 ihysof racing and the publiqwagered $45.- 58o,845. Ontario fans had the most opportun- enthusiasm, backing their favorites to the tune of $1§.9°7.764. The largest amountgathcrcd in a single meeting was at the spring session of {ii through com- The time is pic- who, from the nflatlonary pol- stay and see it all gone with not be free to re- regulation was with him. Now get somewhere to Co. intends to as soon as the only prov- the the is force last year : Maritime all Thus of all the per cent of her (L, Ontario) war and claim- new war would logical and nat- Senator that with." suggestion bring an express corners of Brit- mountains, the speed records. oth- Cromwell, voted this date, i649; of the members and asked what elsewhere,” said days afterwards. the report showing on the nags meetings lasting showed the most Woodbine Pflk, Toronto. when the take was $2,419,059 Prise" < money 111mm!- to $i.s88.s4s. ' " an increase ‘l v43? ""9! U Notes By The Way trslntng. The adv ce II sound, hut will people Instst on It: being fol- lowed? Similar advlce was given In 1918 but Instead the counsel of the clflsts was accepted with nearly atal results-Brantford Expositor. 0n a recent week-end we could not help but admlre the vocabulary of a first-year student at Toronto He was discussing aglrl from the west, and this was what he said: "Boy! That's the kind of a dame I Ilka. She's got plenty of looks and Isn't proud, and plenty of dough, but she doesn't thrown he:- self around. Yes, that’: the kind of babe I can go for-she's msb and fIushW-Fergus News-Herald. ‘llhe largest drydook In the world, recently opened to traffic at_Cupe- town, South Africa, can easilyno- commodate the gigantic liner Queen Elizabeth. At the openln ceremony, F. C. Sturrock, Minister of Transport for the Union of South Africa, stated that the building of the IIOCKqWBS complet- ed, after many difficulties had been overcome, in the record time of 1'6 months, and that. thanks for this success were clue to the British Admiralty, which had supplied the machinery and equipment neces- nary. Dlsastrous fire which ‘left much of Bredeuhury, Sask, in ruins brings Into the headlines one of those towns that derive their nanii-s from unconventional circumstances. What with the times being IiuriI, money scarce, and oxen just about the slowest beasts of burden known to man, the early settlers oiirn lived for considerable periods on bread and berries. Thus it was that this section of the country became jokingly known as “Bread and Berry" district. When a town grew up there the “Bread and Berry" tltle stuck. finally becom- ing the more polished Bredenbury. --Wlndsor Star. We all have hoard of-and sumo- tlmes, unhapplly, from-a juke box but how many know how _it ‘fame by its name‘! The answer is IZIVPII in a fascinating, and an authori- tative Dictionary of Word Origins, compiled by Joseph T. Shlpley, SW5 The Buffalo News. Here it is: "Juke (Box): In the mountains nf Southern United States, many Eliz- abethan words, that have dled our In England, are preserved. Thus ‘jouk,’ to dodge, to move quickly, was applied to the places when- llquor was sold In prohibition times; hence, any cheap drinking place. When the automatic phono- graph swept to popularity In such shops it came to he called a JUKQ box.’ " Con;- amen. opposed to credttn for Britain except on terms beyond the ability of that country to ac- cept ln Its present straitened fi- nancial position, probably have the Idea In their minds also that this gives the United States an oppor- tunity to hamper its most. Impor- tunt. trade rival. f/fore responsible opinion in the United States ls clearly aware of the fallacy In such a viewpoint, realizing that fur the American economy to be healthy the rest of the world must also be as prosperous as possible, and especially Great Britain, If the Iattefs economic position should be seriously and permanently In- jured, the repercussions on Ameri- can and world commerce and prosperity would be highly disad- vantageous-Jforonto Star. A Lethbrldge workman bought a $1,000 bond during the First Great. War Victory Loan campaigns, thought It was a straight donation to the Government, tossed the bond into a biscuit tIn and put It on top of the cupboard, When a Victory Loan salesman called In one of the early drives In the war just. ended he refused to subscribe on the ground that, I.n the First Great War, he had put up $1.000 got a fancy piece of paper and that was the last of his money. Asked to produce the paper he brought down the tin box, dug a- mong the dust and brought out the bond. The canvasser took him to the bank and he found that l.!'I the 25 or so years It had grown In value to more than $2,000.—Leth- bridge Herald. Potentlally nnc of the richest, but actually one of the least de- veloped, tourist regions ln the Pro- vlnce of Nova Scotla is the Bay of Fundy shore from Blomldon to Dlgby, says The Halifax Herald. Picturesque, ln places overlooking the rlch Annapolis Valley, in oth- ors the sweeping ocean-tides (n- mong the highest In the world), It lls not served adequately \vIth roads. In fact, the very presence of navigable waters accounts for the absence of a highway for slx miles In a place a dozen or so mllel, as the gull files, from the oldest whlte settlement In North America. What was good enough for the. ploneer settlers, whether farmers or fishermen, Is not ada- quate to today's needs, however. That ls why a delegation has call- ed upon the Government of Nova Bcotta to Improve what. ts hoped IIPDCI‘ occupants of t. mans who retI lethal hatptn, says Herald Tribune. General WIIIIam Palmer of then obtatntng by evolvln “I am oral. practice of two n the same raIIroad-car berth. narrow-turn cars will and a but nzle occu nt berth." One north was, In the ‘Wsylu the gubllu was fascinated. :11 t c now cars ah do I the rlllrflldl the In thing CICTIIr-‘aflltbhl rue cuaniorrtirowu GUARCIA Isenliovvor hal adds;- hIa Gen. .voIce to that of Gen. Marshall In calling for corn ulsory mllltary wIIl become known na the Fundy Trail. i The hllbory of sleeping can Io IOIII. varied and humorous. and the berth has become a footnote to Amerlcsn folklore of both draw- Inlroom and washroom variety. Rltlroad historians are enchanted with the details of the first. Indy tlnental Pull- red fully.‘ dressed. armed against aurelslon with a The New York In the curly “D's Rto Grande- fame believed ho had the solution of the double-berth systair: I narrow- uage sleeper In Co orudo. determined." sald the REH- "once and for all to end tho strangers slecplni that, llnce there will he room for a a sf of each DI patented of a fohltu In one of his own man traps and hen Only Snath Factory In British Empire‘ (John Anthony In c-I-i. om) ' ‘Itbc lfttla town of Wntvervfllo. Quebec. boast-s O IOM-utlblhhud. thriving business which the m age cit-y dweller may find a c’ bizarre. It has the only llllf-Il factory In the British ltmplrm, Even when you loci-u that a math Ia nothing other than the once-familiar scythe handle, It comes as a surprise to learn that. the demand for these odd-shaped sticks ts barely met. try the plant's present output. of some 40 down a day. The only place most people ever see a snath fa on a Year's greeting card. In the hands of Old Father Time. The company ts known as the DomInIon Smith Company lamb.- ed, and Its president Is H. 8. Ball. grand nephew of Its founder. ' There Is no real mystery about. the scythnfs continuing popular- Ity. According to M-r. Ball the C. N. R. and C. P. R. alone require about 500 dozens a year. Scythe: are still the best instruments for clearing weeds and gram from roadsldes, rough ground and fence corners, and hundreds of dozens no to municipalities. The bulk of the output. however, Is stilt taken by farmers, who know the virtues and limitations of all theIr imple- ments and who reserve s perman- ent snot In their toolsheds for the scythe. ‘ The traditional wood for snaths is white ash, because It is rela- tively easy to bend. And why all the bends In a smith? (It. has stx curves altogether, In two planes). Mr. Ball fs always ready for this question. "A bent suath prevents n bent back," he says. “Eiuopean snaths are straight, but the man who wields one must bend down to net the blade In the right post- tion. With the bent snath the wielder gets maximum power and sweep from a comfortable, upright. position." While ash Is easv to bend. I1: Is no longer easy b0 get, and It bu recently been necessary to use elm and cherry. But the break- age In these woods was great. as they were forced lnto the smiths tortuous shape. At thls point Mr. Ball decided to try crystal rurea, which makes wood caster to bend. The plastic- IzIng action of crystal urea on wood was discovered by the Forest. Products Laboratory at Mitdfaon. WIs., during experiments on the use of urea to prevent checking. Urea has since been used suc- cessfully on a wide vmrlew of items, ranging from basket hand- les to ship tlnmbers. The snatb poles are now put. In a water batth oontulnhtg between 15 and a0 per cent of urea by weight and are left there for sp- proxunatetv 12 hours at. 180 de izrees F. This helps them to withstand the tremendous pres- sure of the bending press and the breakage has been greatly re- duced. A metal form In-to vs they are forced matntatns their odd shape until they are dried. Great; care Is taken In the smoothing and finishing opera.- tions. This work was once done all by hand, but speclal tools have been developed over the years, and both Mr. Ball and son, J. T. Ball. the company's treasurer, are proud of the fact that not. a single tool in their shop Is of a stand- ard type. ,. Not all the manufacturing tn- novattons were devised at the plant, however. A machine called the crooked lathe was Inv by an inmate of a Vermont jail. who was doing a term for forg- ery. Gtven the job of pliuilnsz snaths, he used his head to save his hands (presumably so that art would not. suffer). and Invent.- ed a lathe which shaves the bent sticks down to sIze while auto- matically conforming to the taper from top to bottom. Many orders for maths ptled up during the war, owing to restric- tions on shIDDlIIR. and the dlffl- culttes In obtaining malleable tron. A short time alto Mr. Ball a tended a grand convention of all the snath manufacturers of North America — all flve of them. 1t. Is unllkelv that that ” I be either increased or dImInIahed fifty years hence. _ UK Seen No Longer As Best Customer a (Montreal Gazette) A strong plea for Canadians to » the Army or the R.C.A.F., and who t. thlt PUBLIC FORUM for am quantum Q Th; Charlottetown Guardian dose not IONI- eulono- the "Pill" OIISIIIICQKI». Tish column, Ia UNI the obsession In spontlcuta cl Intelsat. VITIIANB’ sons , Sir, —After carefully reading ,“Woodsman'a" letter In a recent Isque of The Guudt I must say, that I relent It. very much Indeed, and I thlnk that any returned cx- servtceman should resent It. as much as I do. Any man who has spent any time on the Continent, In either was lucky enough to get back to Canada all In one piece, has no yearnlng to go to a camp In the woods and chop wood every day, day In and day out, sleeping In old bunk LOIIKGS, and eating grub pre- pared In mass production whether t Is cooked good or bad. He cer- nt to go through thls again. Evidently "Woodsman" hasn't spent any time In the services, or he would not write such a letter. I made several trips to Njymegan last wlnter and saw what the boy: (Army) had to Ifve In, and put up wlth, and what they had to eat: bully beef and mutton, mutton and bully beef, dehydrated potatoes, carrots, and “ talnly does not \ N " . ' i -- conrtizr£ iusuntncr ssiivicr i" w. ii. noiirns, Agencies Ltd... Phone 540-541 gccmsan W12 194s ‘TL r "r ‘r i my ‘ 3 II l IIT EXCLUSIVE . 5|" $5.73 _-_ I InPu-ln‘ has" _ W-i-“l i sum- of am- i Walnut cums ~ Skvlsrk Wllnul Gash. Mnlllnard Walnutqflhosh. Dru!’ . ouch" - nut $.00 hwalb. arse-tar‘ “We Tangoo GIN Belts llc to 02.00. L Peggy $180 , GII} 50h 81.00 to “~00. Revlon CIR 80h IL“ to $1.50, [Adfu Brush. Comb and Min-or Beta 80.00 to 81700. .Wl'Ifll‘II Paper In 01".“ 81.00. vvi-mn Pa . umtfwszliliainwh” t .1 The potatoes would be and setjved like a paste that would be used to paper with. Sleeping In slit trenches and In tents In the muck, mud, raln and snow wasn't nice, and any man who served his time over there deserves some job a llttle better than chopplngwood. And don't forget, the Alrforce didn't have a bed of roses over there elther. How about having a chat with some of the Vets some time, and the tales they can tell you, If they feel like talking, would open one's eyes. I am, Sir, etc., EX-RJLAJI‘. PHOTO-EASIER. Bloomfield, P.E.I. aln will not Include among essen- tials goods whIch, through the appllcatlon of austerity IIvIng, (which Is a more palatable term for a lower standard of living.) she can do without or grow or manufacture readily at home." I I Stnce Canada Is noiiv faced wIth the necessity of not only rnalntaln- Ing but of greatly Increaslng her export trade, Mr. Duncan continued, she must make up her mind to pro- duce Inw.cost goods that can com- pete In world markets, to In- crease the number and Importance of her customers abroad, and to purchase freely from those to whom we wIsh to sell. This Inst will not be easy of accomplishment and ‘may Involve substantial sac- rifices to certain vested Interests," he said, "but the fact remalns that In the new economic world In whIch we are IIvIng, we cannot continue to shfp goods greatly In excess of those whIch we tmporz." New customers, sug ested by Mr. Duncan, were countr es such as China and India, There Is evl- dence, he said, that these coun- trIes, with theIr teaming millions scekln: a higher standard of IIv- Ing, are going to become world customers to a degree never thought of before the war, To those and other countries, he be- lieved, Canada must. send her young men to learn languages and WHY: of Ilfe, “We must correspond with them In their own language and quote them tn their own cur. Pencil.’ he said, “We must under- stand them; we must demonstrate our products there; we must issslst them with our technical knowledge, with credtts where possible and wIth our skllla and expel-fence." Flnllb’. he ma, If Cllnlidl Is to produce the national Income neces- BIPY f0 support her post-war ex- Pendltures, we must further de- velop our own country by lncrena. In; Its population which means lmmllratton. Mr. uncan dld not advocate "the opensdoor Immigra- "Q" B0119?" but held, nevertheless, never was there a time since Canada wan first settled which ha; been more favorable to selective lmmlkratlon than the present." Fresh Frolon t 2 llowid. Delfverednmylstat on. FREEMAN POPE, flow-la. B. n. 2. OO-OO4OQXGO-O-O-O-O-O-QO-O-OQ-O-OQ 12-12-11. TRAPPERS Thanh for the wonderful rap poms to our advertisements au- In; November. lskfng for Mink and Miuknfs. We an certainly DIM-Ill hllh prlou and sun gm- orders are not flllofl. Bring or 1cm! l.“ the fun you have baton Christmas. Al IIIIIII we an hi"... "W! Ill 800d Plstlnuma and Ugh! Sflvers. Bad Fox, snug n“ Coons umtho Imv Drlood urflclel this year. Our office Is open every Batu- day evculng from seven until nlno o'clock. The Royal Packing 0o. J. I). JENKINS Prov. mizratlon policy would provlda a greater home .market whIch, In turn, would enable us to consume right here In Canada more of the things whlch we grow and manu- facture," he concluded, We could create greater wealth Internally by tradlnz among ourselvel, and because we would be more numer- ous our Individual burden of tax» tlon would be reduced." President Donald H. Stewart was In the chair at yesterday's meet- bYE.A.BI'I‘lI,dIhkQd by Frank WIiffcoii-ib. ‘n m LONDON——(CP)—- Only 700 19.529 houses In ‘ war damage. The Popular, tori fallen from 97.420 n 1938 of “An lntelllzentiy planned 1m- PILTS All face the fact that Great Britain can no longer be our best lndlvld- ual customer. to develop exnort| markets In other countries and to, encourage Immigration lnto the Dominion. was made In Montreal by Mr. J. S. Duncan, president of Massey-Hunts Company Llmlted. In a speech In the Mount. Royal Hotel, Mr. Duncan pointed out that Britain, " _the dtrect result of unequalled sacrifice for a common cause" Is no longer In a position to Import goods In excess of her exports n she dId In the pre-war days when the houizht three times as much from Canada u we bought from her. “Let u: be reallstlc about It," Mr, Duncan said, “It wlll not be easy for un under exlltln: condi- ttons to mnlntafn a trldlni refs. tlonlhlp so favorable to our couri- try, and much as we disapprove, we may as well msltc up our minds to the fact that during her mess of economic recover; tho Ktngdom wlll Ilmlt er purchases from abroad to inentlsll and un- len I mlsjudn he attuaflon, Dru- snla on obscure ru ence an oldtlmo sensation once common to all. In s word, the open berth wIlI become a special ‘p.4- vtlege for amateurs of the old my: and customs, a hallmark of the con- notueur, Ilka drlnklng ilatlelra and snioklng rat-tall cigars. ft POM". In tlon, the cachlt delltgit whIch cornea from tho soc . . ob- llllIlllllllEllllIll litmmmtds, Prln ,Adsni E- R- Brow & 5.... p Fire, Auto, Li!‘ , Accident, Sickness, ondilPlata- Glass. [marques ' o! ‘Lowest’ Rota _ ~i WLMOLhI-sycar. DURING THE ENTIRE SEASON RECEIVED for marketing by u] J. A. WeliZter 6- Cc» 156 Richmond Street Charlottetown fllll SIIES lll). 55 Queen Street ~ Charlottetown J. J. Stewart ' Montague mu loft vrlth any of u... s»... a». 1mm... tousandhandlodsndmarkmdby n] mm; “m; mrnmssshtpmontrmsdadtrsottour. y Pros Edvard lshiiil Fur Pul limitlil " oe Idvnrd Island .-.. u. Oil-tram, , 7 Fox Ranchers cont; a 3' other gift Hull. Drill) In and loo our Inga display of Gflt suggestion. TIlE 2 MAGS 140 Great George an“; ti. F. Ilutchmn tng and the speaker was Introduced i OPTOMETRISTI ‘Speclallsts In the fit.- ttng of glasses for tho correction of ocular de- Iects." ' 58 Grafton Street Professional Bards Ileil W. Higgins Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel ass no. Box on i a. J. nasnam. a . ma. minus ‘k Charlottetown, P, g, y, MON!!! 1'0 [,0 35 P. 0. In l! J.‘\. IMGIIIGAIIJJ.» NOTARY. ITO. IAEIJBTII. SOLIOITOI OUIIIE BUILDING Frederic I. largo“ t; "was nous-ran, gm, I Phillis: Irllllur. in Grafton l; Plums m: I. 0. lo: Gd oaanuonnown. r. l. n. Richard B. Johnston lVlcLeod 8 Bentley ma. IINTLII. s. o. J. a. CINTLII. n. o. ‘Blrrfltun inc ‘ swarms-us- » , Low Lhfnles R. McQuaid a a. i Banister. iolfulur Notify. Ito. O§OQ~. Phenol’!!! Chartered Accountants ll 0mm: ltrall. l _ autumn m...‘ i Bill’: and» ‘w. ma». 0- l Public Stcnofraphor I wars-s"