r ' gnd however hard the way may be- by an Ontario farm group is report- qdiln the Ottawa Journal. Launched by the. ' ' ' unu-.Mni:a 9, 1., T them in pain. They 9 hand wings and conuzugntgniligii PAGE FOUR i THE .G.!JAKUlAlV. t.rtAKl.()'i"l'E'lUWiv n - i the UK plus other factors in recent years, T H E (J U A R A N threatened to wipe out Canada's cheese The Saboteur I . - The passin S s ' - umor.I;mj.-'s;;;;d- njf n;ni"i.;,;f0',n;';- trade with Britain. Some has gone over ' ' xii - Lefle mp-nmeni. mum. undet goveinment subsidy but this was re- i 3, mun" The kiwi ulmdim Wininnnn Cu fused this year and it looked like the end mm... ni-nni.nn of an old-established trade, IXTKA n55nLnN33 730" THE PAH! Editor and M-nlllnl 91min in A Bumcik Faced with a cheese surplus, and loud am A--oclnlo Edlton Frlnli Wlllwh complaints from their producers the 0t- l '1' .- any .ievot.a"33..7'".'.lii'.!i.il"t3 hcatlirln: tawa Cheese Marketing Board made a deal with the United Kingdom Ministry of Food in one of the last contracts made here by Sir Andrew Jones. The board agreed to take the best price the British would offei'. -n---n-r - , . - . i CllAlii.0'l'TE'i'0WN VVEDNESDAY. DEC. 9,195: l,23 V2 Cenl5- ml Cheese lllllch ""3 bclald -e--e----m ihad accepted at 27 and 28 cents and for; They Wonlt 50 "Ollie liwhich the Prices" Support Board in Ottawa; ' n-n was prepared to pay 30 cents on Octobcri C0lllllilllll5l nl0l'llb9l'S Ol all 0l'gaill7-ilsi3l. Through amendments secured to their, llon Won't E0 home. ille HOUSE Of C0m-lmarketiug scheme in Toronto the Cheesei lll0YlS W35 101d by M11 -l- M- Macdonnell Marketing Board made a two-cents-a-pound (PC-Toronto-Greenwood). The technique levy on all current and future make in On-l has been made familiar by va1'i0us expos-V tario, the resulting fund to be used to com-1 "V95 0f C0lllmUnlSl 5ll'3l9g.l'- ll Slmlllylpensate those who contributed cheese toi means that the Communist members out-l the 10-million-pound pool purchased by sit the general membership and then passl Britain. resolutions corresponding to the party line? The results, reports The Journal, have and iid0Pt C0lll'SeS Of ilclloll Wlllcll '3 Walt been beneficial all-around. Relieved of its nlal0l'll)' Ol ill? 0FlZi1TllZ'(lll0n W0Ul(l 1'”-"isurplus the cheese market has gone froln pudialc. CIRCULATION "Covers Prlnu Edward Island like tho dew" "The strongest memory is weaker than L tho weakest ink". .,... ;28 to over 33 cents within a few weeks, so This presumably is why the Comniuiiists' iiini ni.0ducei.s are i.(,Ceii.ing better returns, can rely upon a Wide variety of organila-, despite the levy. A good method of selling ll0llS Dl'0lllPll.V and Pllbllcly Sllfllli-ll'llllS lnl'E future surpluses has been established and est propaganda ideas that come from Mos-I a good nun-keg kept open. This was not 90W- T0 Cal'11V Ollt llle llmgllalnnln ll 51 dumping as the price at which t.he'cheese only necessaixv to have a few party mom-i was sold to the UK was competitive. And, hers in quite a large organization. prcfei'- Considering prices here in general, it im-! ably in Office. ' posed no hardship on Canadian cheese con- Other members and officers who are Slime,-S. It appears a sensible way for -a readily influenced by the determined nilll-ihighyeconomy nonniry like Canada 10 keep ority can safely be left alone but wheniiis foreign trade, an individual understands what is going: rggyy,BB.,..u.-.. on and cannot be silenced he is "smeared". Nothing is too bad to say about him and g the pressure is rclelitlcss until he is finallyl president Eisennowervs habit of rising removed from office or from the organiza- at 6, am. Should not have seriously dis, hon. , . turbed the French and British delegations The lesson in all lllls '5 lllal "0 One milat the recent Bermuda conference. After nay can afford to lend llls "am? and Sup' all in Paris and London that meant 10 a. Polltdmt allynlllilly ln .lVlntlCl'l1ltl9. l5u:l0llp1l;e'im., a sufficiently civilized time for any- are (i pu llS welgi. IS (1 al lone to risei ' igiumber of indifferent members who permit, . . a the technique to be successful. In this - Province there is less of ti field for Com-, . munist effort man in inn la,-gen centres should charge that Island fishermen would but here as elsewhere the meml.ers of or-: lake Small l0bSl01'S lll ally 9V9lll- The Bell- Eanizations of every kind must i'emembel'.91"rll leellllfi Of llle P. E. I. FlShel'men's AS- that vigilance is the price of safety, tsociation annual meeting seems to have been that whatever regulations are made should be enforced. 4 EDITORIAL N01 ES It is to be deplored that spokesmen T Wearlncss Danger President Eisenhower says that ”frec. wnai niay he a turning point in the nations must not grow weary of the pro-Ileconomy was announced by Mines Min. 795505 of negolilallon and ncllllslmenl-H llowi ister Prudham when he said that the Do- iiery true and how very wise! .Many times: minion Coal Board in ni.enai.ed in take 13.Illf.'?:f.:.1flIf332'?.I.?.ii?J;?Ff7;.3SE2? to or the breaking point as they have seen theloec ma poms! lanmocnrll 30lllmllnl5li Sllokesmen reject One 300d Pl'0' With the completion Thursday of the 303al nltnll annlhnr Wnlcllv ll aCC9Pl9dv,i'otation of the 27th Canadian Infantry Bri- nlgllt ll3Vn gone n long Way lowards FL" gade there ends an historic episode. The ieving world tension. Often the .Russian brigade constituted Canadavs first pence. lelegates ll8V9 Usefl the Unlled Natl0n.5 Asi time contribution of land forces to inter- iflnlbly 35 R Pl'0Vlnfl ground for the” lnnnational security. They "showed the flag" f1dl0US Pn0PaS?ind3 l'3lll9l' than 35 n lmuml for this country in Germany, not as occupa- or the discussion of common problems. . ition troops but as defenders against nos, There are plenty of competeiithobsteriv-isibie aggression. ars of the international scene w o are the view that the Communists do not want to come to a peaceful and honourable un-' .'lerstanding with the rest of the world. They, Tialbmit Seems l0 b9 50m9Wll8t astray in say it is only it waste of time to seek th.3;hl5 llllnklng when Slfoke Of ll0rtl1ern gememem or any serious nmbiem byibase development as payiiigoff right now negotiation. i in terms of the apprehension it must 0 O 0 United States Secretary of Air Harold PUBLIC FORUM discussion by -.uu pondcnt of questions of interest. The Guardian does not naccu lly endorse the opinion of wucapomlenta. i This column in open to the ' AN ISLAND BALLAD Atlantic Ocean over grammes are received from the en- tire eastern half U. S. A. At approximately 10:45 p.m. De- whlch was broadcasting Edward Island 1: Heaven To Me” and. bring curious to much to my surprise found that it. Virginia. This peculiarly Prince Edward 1:- land ballad is no literary master-l piece. but. set: as it. is to a pleas-' in; "come all ye" tune it has con-l lliderable listening appeal in groups of hearers who like barn dance and programmes of similar styles. Retaining, all I do, a certain nos- talgia for the little red Island I was particularly pleased to hear this; song about my native Province! coming from a point. so geograph-' lcaliy remote. I am not writ.lng,l however. merely to record the event. but rather to suggest to the P. E. 1. Tourist Bureau that they should ensure that a copy of this. recording is in the record llbifaryi of every broadcasting station on the continent. To this end I would recommend that they provide each station with the recording as a gift. in the hope that its occasional use will bring rich tourist reward to the Province described in the ong. I don't. know how many broad-l Canada and U. S. A.-perhaps two thousand-but if you can get them, all playing "Prince Edward Island There has even been talk 0 V " 1 . using the throat of a cause . The danger lS that apprehension "preventive war" asl d i the mny device nkeiy in have any pci.,iWOl.ll cause disastious action where a feel- suasive effect on international Communism.l lng Ol neclllllly Wcnlln ll3VC meant Peace- Evidence to support these views is not; a a a lacking and yet, as the President suggests, The gi.ni.e concern (,xni.eSSen by the to EPOWI lVC'-811V n0lV Of llle Pl'0Cn5595 0fiUnited Nations General Assembly at Red negotiation Would be l0 Undo all the 53005: atrocities in Korea will justify in the eyes work:-and there has be?” iZl'9-'llr deal 0i of the world the almost incredible Ameri- it-tliat has been accomplished thus faixicnn Ciiargcn Hint nearly 38,000 U. N. Then, indeed, the sacrifices of those ii.'llJiS0idiei.n and Civilians n.ei.e kined apart have fought and bled l0 T3-nlsl dllglie-i5l0n,fi-om normal deaths in battle. Since the would be" "in Vain. That lllelln 5ll0'-lld First World War it has become increasingly weariness and impatience in the COLil1Cll.siobViOuS that win. is not merely R threatiio of the United Natl0n-Ti lihUlld9ll5l:lndi:!bl;-,civilization, it is the abnegation of civiliza- l rseverance n e wa.V P 3- l , - Eunttl tgdnycolifd, wherever this possible, has mn . . o ally Chance in snvlng mallkmd fmm she: R. C. A. F. Maritime search-and-rescue dgep. and dark nbyso 0l:'de5ll'”Cfl0"'. operations. coastal patrol and transport npt, weary in Well-dolng mu5l lemaln l ” work will soon be handled by United King- watchword Of free "lent n0lVeV" trylng dom designed Bristol Britannia aircraft. The replacements for the familiar Lancast- crs are sleek four-engined, propeller-and- gas-turbine, aircraft. About 50 of them will be produced at Canadair. They are re- ported to have ll cruising speed of about 350 m.p.h. ..... ..m......-...:.. Sc-lllng Surplus Elms: in interesting experiment in overseas George Grossmlth. English actor and entertainer. was born this date 1847, died' March 1, 1912. He gave up reporting for "The Times" to go on the stage, singing and playing comic songs. Seven years later he began a successful career as an actor in "The Sorcerer" and in many.Gllbert and Sullivan operas. winning special distinction as the admiral in "Plnafore". His writing: include "The Reminiscence: of a Society Clown" and "The Diary of n Nobodyff 1!: two sons, Laurence and George, were both A available for actors. Tile latter, who died in 1935, was ,9 mini low-coat coun- prominent on the music hall stage during on the part of the period of the Fflrgt Wgrld War.” 0 Cheese Producers' Marketing Boardl lg "it became apparent that A small sur- , ofciieece threatened to wreck the A - market price and put it lot of V farmers out of business, it now mi”: oxperiment lies been success- ' Ii Canada's surplus cheese ' iht British market, for many ntltles but more recently i an the Canadian mar- lproducta expanded and Is Heaven To Me" for on ex- ith.-it the Province will have miidc A rewarding investment. I am. Sir, etc.. ULRIC Cl. DAWSON. Yitrmoutli, N.s. l :' (And P. E. I.) ll0llll')WARll BUITNI) "Passengers returning to P. E. island by the boat. from Point vlu Chene number about 400 iwr v.-rrk, exclusive of children. The major- ity of those are American tourists but many are former resident: of the Island returning home for good. A Monrtonian ml the train ito Shedlar one day recently as- certained that there were forty or fifty persons on board going back to P. E. I. from different parts of the States. They incluclvrl iilx families and 1) to 30 young men and women. The Monrtonlnn talli- ed with several of them. and they said they had been in the States long enough to find out that P. E. island is the best place.for them. and thatl if they worked as hard there as they lire obliged to do in the Suites they would he better all. Most of then people haul been away from three in yenrx. but one young man "was ro- turning lifter an experience of only about one month." -Moncton Times. July 21, 1&8. Th ID VII &lIIlOIMl the love of Col toward us. hm-amc that God unit NI only into the world, that we live through him. . . . And we liavn coca and do tutlfy that the Idiot abut the son to be the lnearly six years, a prisoner remem- egr”; l;'lh”Nlt:'; lgcglgia ll'e:llf,l;Elin extraordinarily eloquent English. remarkable radio reception. dueltolge wrong of many mm” but as. l k fltcfe en fferd b th ”"”"''”m l” - ac ” ll ” ' Ce ” 9 Y 9 down are his views on the Cana- whlch 9"” dian and Russian armies for he nl Wnnnennl ly predicted that eventually they camber 5th. I picked up a station which "Pmwe sponsibility for the shooting of war l”"l ll" t v d ii i wrlti source of the broadcast, I waited 2:: ioiil;0:i:;n :;i;: 33,. ilnlnil inf: for the station announcement and.He ndnnun much about it and, in b ate ' was coming from Wheeling, WestlfaanCn' ggfniglngge (1 that camdmn 'work a mathematical masterpiece. - . iThc staff always succeeded in . . . l cam"; "anon! mere may be milrzmsforming the defence position ll , Wm! It won't be onlg tjouf end which sinks! l Kurt 'Myers' Comments On Canadian 8. Russian Armies By Do As it prisoner in Canada for bered by his guards for model, un- complalning behavior, Kurt,Meyer read widely and wrote a great. deal anything he put. taught. them both and he frequent- must fight one another. Towards the Canadian Army imprisoned him for re- prfconers by others. Meyer bore soldiers should be teamed together by the Atlantic Pact powers in R corps for the dc- fence of Europe. His analysts of it was detached and clinical and based primarily on the fighting along the C:icii-Falaise road from, Aug. 7-16, 1944. in which he com- manded the 12th German I. B. division. I 0 0 His judgment. was that the. Canadlans robbed themselves of quick, easy victory there by ex- cesclve caution up top, that thei Russians would have fought the same battle to a far swifter, less hesitant conclusion. He wrote: - -"me cmaainn Army 01 1944 wasiprobably the salient. features of all was a high-class force . . . destin- ed to fight an enemy who was. in ntanpower and equipment, inferior. Every Canadian operation bore the mp of intensive planning and was built. on sound tactical principles. Every opening phase was a. complete success and the staff into a cemetery. "The Canadian Army never fol- lowed tip their opening successes to reach :1 complete victory. Every pendlm” M "OOODO I ""3 sumloiie of the Canadian attacks lost its push and determination after R few miles . . . British and Cana- .diaii planning was absolutely with- out risk. Nclther army employed its armored strength for which it. wns created. Both used the tank. more or less, as an infantry support- llwcapon . . . They executed their operations in an inflexible. time- iilRStlng method. Never once did speed. the most powerful weapon of armored warfare appear." . . . Air and artillery attack: had ir..pt-tl out the German defence linc land laid the road to Faialsc open jthc opening night, Meyer wrote. But. the Anglo-Canadian forces stuck to their step-by-step scliedulc and took Falalsc. as planned, in eight. clays. The time they lost. al- lowed the Germans to bring In lrelnforccmentlt. Far worse. it allow- !ed much armored material and manpower to be saved to build up the units which later fought in the Battle of the Bulge. The Russians, wrote Meyer, would probably have adopted I similar plan but' would Have through far differently. Above all. "they certainly would not permit. a bottle of phases wtlh the first objective only three miles behind the enemy frontline." At the first sign that the way was open. an llvsiannored column would have struck straight for Falllise. under "a fanatical young communist who would stop at. nothing." This dynamic, up-front leadership the Canadians had lacked. 111: Can- adians. on Iohodulc, had used heavy bombers once the attack had Ito:-ted. The Russian: would have used tactical planes at the young loader directed. In a matter of hours. instead of day, said Meyer. Alain would have fallen. hr lumen leadership "known the value ofitlme." , I I 0 nchcitigbcnmcmhuutbatthn oanadfuu at raisin warn mn- parauniy nut to battle wlillc mu: had. fought ill Mann fu- aavlnt of the world. The run leadm of uglu llow foiirht it 1941 were no' match for the Ger- man generals. he worte, but. within it year they pi fuced leaders "who were sure tactlclans with daring strategic minds." "-rhelr junior officers are well trained. fanatical and brutal com- manders. Their armored force is excellent. It's tanks are the but in the world. The tank men are handpicked. good mechanic: and very skillful tn improvisation . . . Russian lnfantrymen are bad soldiers by western standards but they are masters in defence and. in attack, the moat .. E,” I have over encountered. Death seemed meaningless to them.” If. in the new war he considers inevitable, the Rumllnc over run Europe they would soon have Ger- man. French and other divisions because those people would prefer the battlefield to Siberia, Meyer wrote. To prevent. this .he re- peatedly advocated the rearmlng of Germany but not in the old way. A new German national army would be I retrograde step. Ger- many must. in woven into I Western European fcdcnticn and her soldiers must be part. of that grand dealtrn. inspired by the ideal of a united Europe. The rejection of nationalism by this once-fanatical follower of the warped nationalism of Hitler. his apparently fervent acceptance of the concept of European union are writings that poured from Kurt Meyer's typewriter behind the bars of Dorchester. N. . E WINTER FIELD Sorrow on the acres. w.ind in tine thorn, And an old man plowing Through the frosty mom A flock of the dark bird! - Rooks and their wives, Follow the plow team The old man drives; And troops of starlings, A-little-tat and prim, Follow the rocks That follow him. wA. E. Coward. "Six-Fool Lobster: Isaint. John Telegraph-Joui-nail History has told us a. lot. of tall tales about big man. his pumpkins and big mnaqullu. but Mrs. Meryle Evans of the New York Historical Society has found a fish awry in the records of New York's fli-It Thanksgiving Day black in 1044 that will provoke great guffuwa amonx the lobster fishermen of New Brunswick. it cecml that the only New Englander was ll fond of super- latlvca as the modern Tenn. The description Mfl. mini has found of that. first harvest celcbratlonv is in great detail and Mal to sixty- pound turkey! which were brought to the fecal. of course. tairkeyl ran wild in than day! and perhaps some of then did now to that site. But we are dibloua about the six- foot native lchatcra that smeared on the menu. The Pilgrim: were really thankful for their bounttcl. If a six-foot. granddaddy ldiaur showed up in a flahulnaira catch these days hetd be inclined to take the pledge-the flahennan, that in. However. times have changed. and lobster: may have been blur too you! ago. A twelve-pound crun- tdccan is connected a II: can NICO cut. but than an author: c record! of Atlantic coast. I new: taken from some bound vol- umes of an American periodical published, -,,pl-oxlxutely one hund- red 3”" lie. Since these article: appeared quite a few readers have asked for more. oi the nine fan. ment was trying to purchase Cuba. ii-lcr some strange ispanlards were not anxious to roll which made the magazine very crou indeed. "Why". he asked. "doeil Spain turn up her Cuba. to this country? Apparently it never occurred to him that the Cuban: themselves should be given some any in the matter. iplafe, too. According to a report us Spain is required by law- to have at lent one resident. aurgcon. one of his duties is to shave all the rate-payers once a week. He in paid in com". A report from Lon- don brought the news that a bar- ber there established a tonaorlnl record by slaying eighty men in thirty min- u iront. It seems that the governor of that state owned quite I. large farm which was operated by hired "hands". On one occasion visitors came from Albany, N. Y. wheir lunch time shocked to ace the governor and his lady sit down with the hired men. Later in the day one of the Well, the United Stataea govern- reqson the editor of the august. nose at the idea of selling Spain was mentioned in another received "every village in (not a surgeon) had Alpretty story came out of Var- arrived they were visitors said to the lady of the house: "Surely you don't make I. practice of eating with the hired hands?" "Yes. we do". she re- plied. "Personally I don't: think it is right. that we who alt. around all day should eat at the first table with those who are doing all the work. The Just thing would be to serve them first and ourselves aftanvardl. but the governor say: the men don't mind. so we all act together". . . A man who had been committed to an asylum following failure in business, was trying to get out on the ground: that he was being held without cause. This is how he explained the situation to the court: "I am in the asylum be- cause of a mist.c.ke in business. I was engaged during the winter in making mosquito wlnu which I uxpeoted to cell in the summer. I had ten thousand on hand when the season opened hut, unfortun- olgly, I had forgotten to make though. and tho fiche:-lea dcpartr moi-it. dlaima that the great. do- main for the sec. delicacy and the i, trade from Labrador to Cape Hableru doesn't give the lobster much .time 00 FW- the sale of them and coui I my bills". The judge thoggllnnnml in the circumstances it. mlgiit 1? just as well for the man to sue. where he was for the time bcln l A little further down in the ,f.',. column was this item: "Miss Dils the celebrated philanthropist ,,l' recently been on an t-i-imiiil: mercy to Prince Edwartl lslanln lneulrlnz into the condition and wants of the insane. And a vi-am. ln Ohio petitioned the courtlin have her husband committed to .3 asylum "because. your honor”; i,,, ll nuconfcunded fool". multin- further evidence the petition ,,.A'; refused. "It would be a danmmn precedent. to establish", the mun commented. A O 0 O A Professor Mitchell wot ;,., around the country lECllll'lll;,; "The nest. problem of the .i'l'lrld'l Commented the editor: "It ll! llttvn to ace how the problems could in worse". What would he may it he could catch a glimpse of flip 19; version? '3 A woman in Pennsylvaim 1.3.1 been arrested for weal-int; ; in on the street. and fined ten dnlrm. "Mark my words". she tnlrl tin court. "the time will come it-hm slacks on women will hr n-,,,,i respectable than pal1l.'ll4m!l'. mi men". There was a proplirtru. tn, youl . In New York a man hurl hem charged with breaking the peace. It seems that he had bi-okrn his wife's hoops, ll contraption '.l 1-mi had just. come into gCiit'tl'.:l use He was acquitted. Said the i tag-; "I could never punish a man for dotng something I my:-if mire been wanting to do for some t-me”. . . . some medical discoveries had just. been announced. A New x-my physician claimed that Illbbill; the limbs with brandy (no other liquo- would do) was 1 sure cure for rheumatism. Another was of the oponlon that the common cold and kindred ailments would tllmppm if everybody C0illd be iwtsuatlcd to wear plain woolen flannnl no-it to the skin winter and summer. still another had found that hem tea. drinkers hardly ever become alcoholics. For this Wflsrvr hp advocated legislation niakm: mm- pulnory the drinking at him quantities of tea by everybrwr nvn: sixteen . A new school of medicine my the study of "magnetopnthv" had recently been opened. Wlintcirr happened to that? . BR! GI?! PLUMA GE The male can-let. tanager ii a bright scarlet bird with lvirli wings but the female is trrrnlilrfi in color. But. it six-foot. lobstei-l Well. we Just. curt, swallow tint. one, . Frederic A. Large. Q.C. Barrister. Solicitor. Rout! loyal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P. E. I. Loans on City and Farm PROFESSIONAL cakes Palmer It Husiuin A. J. BASLAM. B.A.. LLB. Ban-later, Etc. - Bank of Nova Scotla ttlimuitm Charlottetown, P. E. I. A. W. IIATIISON. C-0- 111 Grafton Street Money to um: colloclltm Ma occ- I .A. LLB. Bu-tiller" and solicitor Bank of commerce Building I” lotutown Monu to Loan ....C................... Guide! In Hcszuni 1 GILBERT A. GAUDIT. l.A.. LLB la:-rich:-I and solicitors Mon: to loan Canadian Bank of Common: lldl J. Elmo? Ilanciicrd. in Int lhal tonulh Iowan local) llonlrcal. 'Quoboc, - . Icivn Currie Bldg. Cliarlothtown. nuolcumuu lcbum w up to thirty-four an n nieuutlnc two not in the claw being at much all It inches by twenty inches. mutton arcn't.ublcul.hq uudtobi. : Icatvllic. uvcrpool. ow Plume I'll W. IANIIIII. CA. Charl-attctniu Properties MONEY T0 LOA.'u'.m-.-i H. J. Mubon. R.O. Gordon E. MucMillcn. ovmtn-t B.A. i.L.B. "””""' " IL L IAItI1lSTER.'SOLl0lT('lR. rn-.. , Phone 893 IM Prlnco D223 Mctliucn. Paulie It ---n---menus. R. Mcmmid Nicholson M IARIISTIB. SOLICITOR. A. a. raliui. B.A.. um Non” in mi.” "n" "'iQf:'wnli':' "'3 nmrn Trust" Bifllrilni coiioouim - Money -ro boll! CEABLOTTETOWN I'll or-alwn sum - ,.. Dr. W. ll. Carson loll. MtIflIl050'l & ir:::'::.2:::: Foster . FM uggwwmgiwn ,, ”'""i:"i.”'.llEiil"t...:. mil ''l”' o. I. rosnin. '1-I-Bi i & F Hf A. Wuitlian Gllldeh ”""' ”';,f,3.,2'2 " LL I 150 Blciunond Strret ' ' cimiotmown. rm- aliaais-raa. soucrroil. Ik. -------n-.-'r" rump Jniidinz J. A. MCGIIIQCII SAIIIBTEB. BOLICITOR. EM ' NOTARY. Etc. Gun-lo Bulldlnlv J. s.1aviIR.07 OPTOMETRIST liyoa Examined. Glasses Fly" Corner Kent and QIW" i";' . Office Phone 9133-llnusc 47-7 i if , - MccPhec 8: Trainer ll. 1. MMPHEE. a.A.. 0-"- r. somiuuin nwmm. M hnntaten. EW- Allison M. eiinflii BAIBIITEB. soucmm. Eu ”'n in liclunond st. - vhv"l"""'"' IARRl:'g:iAl.hYS0'lnlCXT0R. Phone Lg , , c. 165 Queen st. - Phone 42.12 D... A. L. Maclsagf .:.:--:cm-:-zmzx ' DENTIST 'yVOlI Jo 0.”. ngnui X-III,Vi OPTOMITIIIT ' ULOIIIA BlJll.nlMl I7.iGl'I"0ll ll. Phone l Dr. K. A. Mccacciw ...............m.m.....m.... J. A. CIIHIIICII. KO. 'nr:n'ris'r oP'l'0IIl1'IlI'I' ' ncntal x-m II N III lent shoal than an Alum Charlottetown llnl i (Next to Ilnpaolru Annex) III Queen M. l”” t McDONAl.D. cum: 1. co. UNI CIIAITIIID A0113 ET. ' out to. some John. siianmoke. W" llrkland pm. Iioiiom. In-llba. camotmown. ndmm""', ..j--? H. R. DOANI It COMPANY 0II'Al1'InID ACCOUNTANT! In onu Cum nu K r. 0. Box McKF.N-Vn- um .i. WW II. ltcauoq. It Join. Amherst- alucw. hue and Corn" ll"”l