PKG! POUR ir- sections of the state which these five coun- ties represented. From 20 to 60 per cent were trying to cut food costs. Forty-one per cent over- all eliminated planned vacation trips last. year. From three to seven per cent gave up plans to have their children finish high 1; school and the same number gave up plans for sending children to college. Nine per cent of the women gave up the purchase ,of a washing machine; 20 per cent, a home iifreezer, 14 per cent, a television set; 22 per cent, furniture or rugs; 5 per cent, a Aalhorlled as Second Class Mall Pout Offlo- Depsrtment. Ottawa. The Thomson (To. Llll. Editor and Manager. Ian A. Iii”;-netl. Assocllte I-Jtlltor, Frank Walker. ('lII(,'lIf.ATl()N "Covers Prllice litlward Island like the dew” "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". -i?Il4ARll('l7'fI71T(Jtl'N.sA'runn.u', it-fancir 5071357 Health And welfare The matter of making the public bel- Fetl'igel'8t0l'- fer acquainted with the department's healthl-Chase 0i an ine-VPenSiVe iteni SUCH 85 an prograninlcs is giving concern to the Chief: il'0n- and tilllee Deli Cent 00Uid n0t get it Healtlt Officer. it has been found by theibicvcle for the children. Sixteen per cent Directors of the various divisions that out"0f the families 88Ve UP the idea 0i 8 new people know little or nothing of the sei'v-'C3r- ices which are available or which they now In North Camiina the State Cfliiege Te' rcccivc. That, indeed, is an llllS'.'?liSfaCl0l') , Polited that 8 m3J'0llity Oi titllnlefs Were situation alld one which the pleas is in .li ti')'illE t0 illCl'93S(' 0UtPUt 35 8 means 05 position to rcnicdy to a considerable ex-Weeping net income "I1 In New YOYKI tent by publishing news of what the De-l State. where only four per cent of the total partmcnt is ztcltlally doing and .ldvertisin(.', population are farm people. non-farm in-. the particulars of services offered. comes lia'vc not been cut and farm income The C0nli)l'Fllf'llSlV0 annual report of the has been maintained lieaS0naili.V Weil- Department of Health and Welfare itself, The U 5- Depaftnlent Oi AE1'iCUitUl't3 gives a great deal of information about pub-1l'9P01't5 that g9il9l'aii.V tv31'm il0US”-WiVe5 Wiii lic health ilctivities but unfortuliately th-.-put up more canned izoods and do mon- hulrk of the inforlntltion is l)l'f)Ll2lll only to:il0nle btlkillfll the tnnliiy Will take i9W9l' 7,1. 1952, niiiinugii a poi-iion (-x.i trips to the movies; the farmer liilnself will; The Cg-nsequeiicel get his blue jeans patched for another year;l December tends to Marcli 31. 10.33. is that at from the report what i the relatively distant past rather than tlie;1'CPi3C9nl9"tS- And 50 it 2005- A basic ctlrrent activities of the various divisions.iindllStl'.V StlCil 35 tallnlillli tiallllbt be afi- Tiwse aptiyiiios, reported in consider-iverscly affected without serious results to branches oiithe whole national economy. This is even: public health. cancer control, dental health. tl'U9F Of Canada than 0i the United Statesf lalxn'atorics. and mental health. Under the and it is One tilinll WiliCil OUT legislators- welfat-c Branch come the activities of the industrialists. and business men--and labor child welfare, mothers' al-I leaders as well-should keep constantly in ahie detail. include various welfare officcr, Summerside, and the institutions are showna If the Federation of Agriculture man. separately. tages to have the Government vendors close nearly Saturday and the municipalities get the daylight time they want liquor sales . , i 'll . 1 St d it '. . Millions of bird lovers will celebrate aiwr Ceage eary a Ur ay a mmon special anliiversary this spring, remeniber-I ing that i3t) years ago ai-iigi.nami-aiiisy Farmers in these parts who feel they John James Audubon studied and sketch. have more than their share of troubles ed his first American birds, They werl3,Sh0Llld consider the bleak prospects of one peewees, small olive-green birds that beat in WiSC0nSin Who l'eCenti)' married 3 young the rohins north to the young Audtlbonsiady fl'0nl CiliC8g0- He? tiFSt (lUeSti0n 0n new home on a farm in Montgomery Coul1.':being shown round the barn was: "Which ty, Pennsylvania, cow is it that gives the nice buttermilk?" The National Geographic Society recalls . . . that early gm 1804' at the iflalmbom Establishment of an all the year round son of a Flench naval offlcer"arrl'ved from ferry Service for Kings County is advocated France '0 live I:"'h,'s ffthel 5 Ml” C”:0V'3ilfi'om both sides of the Legislature. Such firrzseiifyexnimr, Olnstovmz He lost lime-,a service would indeed be of great value pomfg the "am"! wmderjg c195”lto the eastern part of the Province. A at hand" prowling ,a "we along Perklomm-z'great deal of the County's product. does notl Creek, the naturalist happened upon a mud begin to move until after the close of the and moss nest attached to the entrance. present sewicei Snow still mantled the ground, and the air . . O Audubon -Angnlversary Four per cent delayed pur-; hpgt iiip public can oniy learn the barn door will continue to sag and the! has been done in farm machinery will get repairs instead of' was Chm' The peewees had ml yet at" Herbert Albert Lauren? Fisher British rived. Rut shortly they came, and with i ' . . . . ,t scholar. parliamentarian and historian, was' .2, iessoii Tl-fr. GUARDIAN. E G U A R D I A N ling with the relative prosperity of the five I l t l I l "”4'lI3' may . Longingly Looking CHARLOTTETOWN At Our Mountains - PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by wueapontlenta of questions of Interest. The lowanecs and old age pensions and Beach mind. Oulrdlun does not hotel!"- . . . . , Ily endorse the opinion of Grove. A satisfactorily low lllsldcnce on -m- ------ -- .,,.,...,..,,..ie,... t - '- - - '- ' 2 b' at ED R mm- dlfS0aS(. ifclltIi1:t:ttl (pi:t):i:ptnE:inll)l,ltinOl:fhclCon ITO IAL NOTES DEMOCRACY IN HOME AND O a ml or , ' '-mrc- scuooi, Leary district. Tomorrow, the third Sunday in Lent. S. T) 11-: Md mm” . . t - X A curious table is that showing the, ' ' ' .or Illrlnalilflen edcis)ecTlt:eUpOn whether 'amounts paid otlt in the form of old age. The last day of winter. Spring l)GglllSlor not its citizens can tlcvesop - i ,, , . - t , .- - and maintain democracy. To ay assistance. .Thc hieakdnwn is into elcc ,at 11.94 tonight. Canada has an mpcmct demoi toral districts, although Charlottetown,I . . . ci-acy. The country is run by en- tirely too few people. and we take Iwhat, is given to us. For example. in few people in our Government itock it into their heads to tlouble tthcir own salaries. They had the money and the power. It was very easy for them to do what. they did, but it was a most undemo- cratic procedure. If it had been put to a vote in the country it vtbuld have been turned down flat. Farmers are ptissiili: through hard times and they have to help pay the bills the Government. runs up with such haste. Democracy here in Canada has yet. to be learned. mill the most- effr-ctive way is through the home and the school. It was thought that Israel could be started off as I democratic nation. but they .m.ade a bad beginning. Isaac loved Esau. and Rebeccs made a pet of lJacob .and that woi'ked out badly for Israel ever after. That. cleavage began at home and went right down through the nation until it. split the country into pieces. Every harmonious and well-gov- erned home in this country is mi bulwark of strength to our demo- teachers. It is well that the Gov- t-rocy, and parents are the great! them Alldubon's intense delight in the birdsil born this daie 1355. He taught on th,.eei,,.he,.e bone, can i, be mush, Wm M Amencai continents. The old stone manor house of Milllthe Board of Education by Lloyd George Grove and 122 acres were acquired byiand was responsibie for the far reaching Montgomery County in 195i. the centen-,EduCation Act M1918 egtabnshing a mu” nial of Audubon's death, and were openetlinational System of education. :2 the public ms" -l:?a"' The Pause iiaslly ”History of England" gives him a lead- len tlcicorated with engravings floin mg place as an historian. Audubons famous folio, "Birds of Amer- ica". The grounds. equipped with picnlcii ' ' ' facilities, retain much of the wild charmi the artist-linturalist know. Mill Grove once Single mallket-ing a2ellC.V by Ml'- G001?" l i l i most. favourable circumstances. The teacher who daily tr.-tins her pupils along democratic lilies tia deserving of praise and lionourjtt”-953 Mid 389 the" find A better salary than she is getting. She is building founda- A SW0"? Point was made '(il.13in5i aitlons for an enduring nation. I am. Sir. etc., W. I. GREEN was filled with birds and animals the youlig-.:M8CK8Y in tile HOUSP ThUl'Sdil.V- "The smiiey Bi-idgg omitliologist had stuffed. There he tievisetitdcalers have spent years in building up. -e-------- his ingenious method of wiring ..pecimen.: markets which they are now in danger of; w1 into life.-like positions so that he coulclLlosintz." Every dealer has particular out-j 0” Ch l I draw ihpn-i ;i(-cui-nfoiy, In the (jgvp beside lets through tVhlCh he and probably hi” at OITEIOTT" Perkioming Creek he conducted the first alone can dispose of a certain number of and P- I 1-) bird banding experiment in Amt-.'lca, fast-:0nl'S Of potatoes. cning silver wircs around the young birds", legs. ' Audul)on's life at Mill Grove scat-ccly,cd firms having Federal Govcrr-mcnt con- carried out his father's intentions---a profit-,ll'aCls from conlrlbutinlz t0 DENY funds able business career. Nor did the youngiscrved ll useful purpose when the. com- man show any interest in a lcarl mine onIP3l'8tiV9iY Small G0Vellnment expenditure the property that furnished hullcts forjwent solely i0 ll few 800d friends 0i the Revolutionary soldiers. It was in the field Party in P0Well- TOGBY G0VeFl'llnent Spend- tluit he conceived his life work: 8 monu-; inlz is so extensive that the enforcement of mgmiii foiio (jf America”; birds, 'the rule would make it almost impossible -; for political parties to finance elections. At -, who" 1". Fmilar is pinch", ithe some some the lttirifze (liiumbeli: ofitfliims ,. .. receiving vernmen un 5 ma. es ess j Everyone loses when the farmer runs; likely that any particular one could greatly into hard times, for curtailment of needed iniiuellcc P0ii0y- enditurcs on the farm means loss or mbtiginess all round. This is exemplified in! The United States is reported to have rmoi-ts from the United States, where farm; about 40 per cent of total world income, a iii-ice, have dropped 17 per cent in two proportionate increase of more than 50 per yim. How have U. s. farmers met thislcent since 1938. Average per caplla income otmditlon which was aggravated by ii in 1948 was 51,525. Other countries ill dpught over a very large siren of the-larder were Switzerland, W50; New Zealand, A mine! of ll" counties ln Mls-'s933: Canada. 5895: Australia. 5812: swe- i."."...'.".:i.:.'3,”...?.' ..;"'...."i'.f::"l:: z'i.'.?i'-'ftli.”l.'i'.i'.”u'l-:””'”"...L?:!.m”E:"lii........ gull; involving some 500 families, may be den, 5805; Denmark, 5781; Great Britain, cg"; lm;d to the zrolllnd. folio: 3- 1'- Il:ll&-I-ot-IenhIIvo at II:-Ina . G . , I i e a vote 0 rl I 01! I HAIL! III-I-ll-Iorcoolhtlve Ulauty ii From 4 to 26 p-r cent 5777, Norway, b550, France, 5418, Gei- i,,, M”, ,i,',,,f",,,,,",,,,,i,'i',,, ,,i, 3, guy; gnu. .i,,, ,, 5,”, of have done without need- many, 3336; Italy, 5225; Soviet Russia, lnbltton lasted proved hlrmelf DONALD J. MneDONALD-Iqvrecenutlvo It Anguctlno Ooh , the percentage vary- S181. The rule. now abolished. which prevent-I VAl'l.TlNG MA'l'('ll "Ahnut twn hundred people at- lnntlerl the pole vnultilnz match at the Drill Shed last evening, for tlzc championship of the Maritime Plovinces. The contestants were J1-H193 Mclinrhern, of Charlotte tnwn. and Marcus Henderson nf Clyde River. McEaeht-rn is of medium height, weighing about one hundred and eighty pounds, and when he prepared for work presented a splendid physique. llcnrlerson is it taller man, but weighing somewhat less. and look- otl strong and wiry, but a trifle sliy and nervous. "McEachern led off. and his beautiful vaulting showed skill and training. Henderson followed his opponent over the bar with ap- parent case, but after three or four trials carried it with him; l-rd in his subsequent efforts showed the lack of training which he. failed to attend to for-the oc- clislon. He carried the bar with him three limes in succession. thus Ioslnl the battle. After the rliampionship was rlvclded the vaulting was l'(ll'llll'lllt.'d, when. to fully equal in the champion. Af- ter the bar went up between nine After Twenty,-Two Centuries National Geographic News word. its hold filled with fat- bcllled Greek amphorse. I O I About 230 B. 0.. a Greek ship sailing westward along the French Medit.eri'iuiean coast sank with I I ii The Pass l l I have been reading the text of an address delivered to at group of school administrators by Dr. Victor Butterfleld of University in Connecticut. Perhaps it. is well to mention that Dr. But.- terfleld belongs to what might be called the "middle notch" in pre- sent. day Intellectual circles rath- er than to the so-called "top notch", a place reserved for a few of the calibre and near mysticism of Robert I-Iutchlm. This is no disadvantage; in fact. it seems to add weight to his views, for the simple reason that the language in which they are clothed is more easily understood by the average serious minded student of contemporary thought tn the field of education. 0 I I One of the very bright character- istics of Dr. Butt.erfleld's assess- ment. of current school problems is the complete absence of mine- calllng and arbitrary condemna- tion whlch. unfortunately spoil much of the otherwise helpful criticism which is abroad today with respect to educational goals and methods. He sees no one panacea for the ills which beset education in these days; and that is not surprising, since they are in the main reflec- tions of the things that all? troub- ling society as a whole. ot. once does he melitioli labels like "tra- ditlonallsm" and "pronesuiviam" which are being tossed around as if one (depending on the point. of view) were the golden key to open the doors of knowledge to all who seek it, and the other a frightful stumblingblot-k to all that is good and fair in life. The only adjective he puts be- fore thc word "education" is "lib- ersl"; he doesn't; say so but. pre- sumably, he uses that one only because he believes that education which does not encourage free (Latin "llber") inquiry and gen- eral (no distinct from compart- mental) enlargement. of intellec- tual powers is not education at nlll Bi”0Wth. ltmiion 20. i ng Scene By Observer CONCERNING DR. BU TTI-I-IIFIEIJYS VIEWS until it has been discarded oncr Ifor all there is nothing up i,, gained by discussing methods and. Wesleyanisystema. Just the other day on. of our own respected and well. meaning legislators sussested that, this being I predominantly agri. cultural community, it is only right and proper to have element. iiry courses in agriculture taught In our public schools. Personally. I think he is right and it should have been done long ago. A way or life that. concern; so many people is lmpoi-uni enough to have its technique: and nicclianics on the school cur. riculum. However. I am sure then is something much more urgent than that. Before young peoplq are told about the physical tool. of agriculture and its many scienti. fic facts, they should have com. training in its historic fnfluenm on civilizations. its cultural con. nection with the human story, in poetry. end its essential ethos. it is good to tell A boy how to mglu a. living in fuming; is it. not bet. tcr still to show him how to de. velop his whole personality whll. he is making bliat living? Thu la education; anything less than that is mere coaching in mechanics, "Practical" training L3 of mu. use to anybody whose mind has not been trained how to think and, still more, why creative thinking is important. . Dr. Butterfield urged educators and school adnilnl.st;rat.ora to en. courage prospective ”teechers to ;develop it "genuine intellectual 'Cl.lrl0siL)"'. Perhaps he has put -his finger here on one of the basin lproblems of the hour. Once a pupil" iteacher has covered a certair. "course" in what. and how it teacli he is considered qualifie: ;for all time. "Grntluat.ion", wine! has been called "the bone of al iacademic training", is the goal towards which his sights are dl. i-ected. Often there is no further no new freshness, no l 1954 f i i i Campanla) full cargo of wine and Companion pottery. The story of that. ancient vessel. its discovery and salvaging of its archeologcal riches was told be- fore a Washington audience to- day (Friday, March 5) by Captain Jacques-Yves Cousteau. French marine explorer and leader of the National Geographic Society-Calyir so Marine Archeoloalcal Expedi- tion. The mud-covered ahlp. lying more than 110 feet deep off the rocky island of Grand Congloue near the port; of Mai-selllc, is being excav- ated by divers equipped with Aqua- lungs. Work has been In progress for more than I year. scientists of the expedition team consider the Greek shipwreck to be the oldest. seligoing cargo vessel ever i found. From the 100-foot-long Argosy. too big to be a rowed galley, have icome more than 3.000 gracefully tshaped amphorae, earthenware ijars used in Greek and Roman iwine trade. Packed among and above them in the shattered' ahlpis lhold were found thousands of ipleces of black-varnished Cam- panian dinnerware. Plates, cups, and bowls made in" Greek pottera for export. from the Roman Province of Latium (now never reached their destination in the markets of Mes- salla, ancestor of Marsellle. only now have human hands unpacked them from their careful nesting. and brought them up from the sea. either the yours had been unkind OT 'necullar. is in " he said. trademxirka would. ' From stamped ,a.uembled cvldencn pointing to it possible owner of Fhlp. Thus they vessel's last voyage. A Roman merchant trader nam- ed Marcus Sentius. known have received i-ecllarted have sent the great and ten feet, the men decided to jump no more. and the proceed- ings closed." -The Examiner. Oct. 25. 1888. the anclcntr taste had been "I tasted all the must- l';'Ti on ithe wine jars, traced through Ro- iman ni-chives, llrclieologlsts have . the foundernd the to Greek citizenship on the sacred Island of Deloa in the Aegean Sea in 240 B. 0, could ship west- Passing through the strait of Me.-.slna. between Sicily a'nd Italy. it. touched at a port. northwest of what in now Naples to load Com- panion pottery wore-an estimated 15,000 plecea-and even more em- phorae of tall slender Roman de- Sign. Deep laden, perhaps beyond its master's liking. the ship sailed on northward and westward along the Mediterranean shore. But the Greek settlers in Masnlls never got: the chance to bid for its valu- able cargo. Off it savage, rockbound ooaat. almost within sight of port, the vessel sank. There it lay, in s. limestone cradle, attacked by worms and slowly covered by fal- ling mud, until found by flippci-ed, Aqualunlzed divers 2,200 years is.- ter. " l?oe&l'Qmm FROM "FARE WELL". Oh, when this my dust surrenders Hand, foot, llp. to dust. again, May these loved and loving faces Please other menl May the rusting harvest hedge- row Still the Traveller's Joy entwinc, And as happy children gather Posiea once mine. ' ESBB"&mmq ;The Age oltl Story .'.'JJ?l 1 The cup of blessing which we Mesa, is it. not the communion of the blood of ('hrlat? The bread which we break. in it not the rommunlon of the body of Christ? For was being many are one bread. and one body: for we are all par- laltcra of that one bread. INDIAN MINERS The government of the Repub- lic of lndla spends 3651.000 an- nually on health facilities for coal miners. lies in the strength. cltlent and Health Insurance The Great.-West Life In the lion homes. Consult your nearest agent Offices: CIIAILOTTETOWN THE NATION'S SECURITY In peace as In war. the home In the keystone of the nation's Life Insurance protects the home, gives the family it foundation of sound flnlnolsl security. only through Lite. Ao- hlinaell and his family wlth adequate financial security. HYNIIMAN & CO. LTD. Provincial Manager: ALLISON P. MaeI.lAN-District Manager at sunmentde C-Illlll A. I. BIIAW-nlctrlot Manager at Montana 1. C. SUTIIEILAND-Iemeoenlntlve at can the average oltlxcn provide guurtllui of thousands of cone- or write or call on o IUDIMBISIDI - MONTAGUE ' 165 Queen St. -. ' llo Ilolnnoml st. - Charlottetown but oniy A training in viii-mus vigorous intellectual discipline, lil- techniques of a trade or avocationitel” "lilt- Even so. he uses the word very! A5 3 mettef 01 illcl. teachers sparingly; on the theory. no doubt. ll"! Vel'l' ilttle Opportunity (the time even the most robust adiec-imalorlty of them. that in to pne- tlve can be worked to death. So:t'iC9 'i"W”9CtU3i 0Ul'i0!itY" even much by way of pi-eiimine to ,i'ir they had a. mind for it. All brief review of a very interesting ""9 PC0910 they nleet in tile and thought. provoking address. (cillitfsli Oitt-illt3l!'”.tiil1ltsIe-5. tnciudlnl . o . cparmena o ice . supervisors, "Education". says Dr. Butter- t-l'"5""5- md W””"5 (NPNUUY the field. "is not a process of develop-inst nilmedi ff” e0ncemed Iimoat ing skills andl powers, nor Lshlt l;I;g,e1ilv”:ttet:(am1:13;it1lt6'. "lgln; lsrntn mere ' rat: ca' trainin . It s ou ' On 1” 3- le teach iivhat. it means lg be a liialiieneweti-lll.' mark 01 "Dl1l0iiC31itY" and at the same time a citizen!” 0" U5 8": may He8Ven f0l"8iVP- in a free society." This View of edu- , W- cation i5, in course, not new; ,3, is- In Dr. Buttei-field's words. "senor-I" " Did M pm”, perhaps aide,-. Bin: administrators, for one reason or somehow it. has never captured the t"t0ttl"- 113" Mt Wund iel-fntllll. popular imagiliation. People will;id9il3- b00kS- 0?. lfrtfnt-lVe illt.ellcl'- penis; in seeing educaiion as Ritual effort. significant or moving. necessary and bothersome melms'Ti'leY say they llBVe "too 11'-tiny 0th- to s professlo mi career: the infer-i" Ulsent things to dO"- It is ill- ence being. and 1 very natureliltge tfl'i3l;id;l;1lti::ttl:;chers, kjn(:1W- one, that oung 0 le who don't 8 ll 0 ey Ire U K- llitend to ygo on pteopone or other (id db? rllllrely melchanlical stall- at the rofessloiia really have lit- U" 5 t0l' Pxnlllll 6. OW nlallf tie or nit): need of a liberal ccluca-Illlllllll set pass marks. how man: mm, tare qualified for "entrancc"l The breaking down of this view -ipcnd much of their time in "milk- 15 the first ui-gem ask confront. mg for themselves friends of tilt lng educational authorities totlay;illllllllmon of llnrlshteouaneas." PROFESSIONAL tiARDS J. S. Tavlor. R.O.. OPTOM E'l'R I 5'1" Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Sta. J. A. McGuigon EAREKISTEIC. SULIUITOII. Eh. NOTARY. lilo. Currle Building iiiiiiixelgiiiilcif-13.5. "mm m cm” i.o'i.inp.1niiat'&n”iicilemiielc"krgiutiig till: Look my last on all things lovely. ”'"" "W" ""3-"""'9 '7” ',.-cm'-,m-m---cm-" , Is the school's chief function fated ship held resln- flavored Every hour. Let no sight. .'5'Ed8flC A. LCFQC. 9-cc leach democrat-y? What. bet- wine of the Greek Cyclades Is- Seal thy sense in deathly slumber Matmeson & 3,".,.i.ie,' s,,"cn,,,.. Non” can be taught. and lands and the rod Latium wliie of Till to delight ' . gnyni mini, up Cnnnd. nniidinn the Sabina. hills near Rjnme. hAti'1'hou have paid thy utniostl Fgsfef gnu-inungnwnl p, 3, Li - . - tin our schools? Those principles least. one earthenware ar its; blessinlz: boom on City and Farm He was appointed pleslaem of that underlie our democracyplieeii found with the rasence oflslnce that all things thou would: B""II";,r.l'l.5iI,!Ii'.?l..'l..,'-'li.).('3.m Properties Jiarmony, working together, in-iii-T 07313131 Wit” 3”” "mled 1'” Dl'Ei5C i 0, R p0g1lEn' LLB. 'mm-m-;-----m:-m-e itelltgent attitude toward g0VOl'll-X5i.dP. Beauty took from those who loved; hum on C", "M "rm M. Alba" Fan...” Q.c' intent. respect, for law. All day and! ' ' ' them i prope'.ue' EA” LLB. levery day these principles can be, Cillintn Couitmll t”5ted the in other days. i no mchmnnd 3",." Burma um sullen" His masteluitauglit in our schools and tinder nnclelit. viiitnzc. inportlng that gwalmr do In Mum! Chukmetmvni RE... 8."! M commune Buudlng Ch: rlotlctown Money tn Donn Palmer & Huslom A. J. HASLAM. B.A., LLB. Barrister. on Bank of Nova Scolln Chlmbero Clturloltclown, P. E. I. MONEY T0 LOAN A. Wclthen Gcudet. LLB. BABRISTTEII. SOLICITOK. EM. Phllllpc Jtllldlllj Ill Grafton Street Money to Loon Collectiol J. Elmer Blanchard. B.A. BARRISTER. .'30l.lCI'l'OR, NOTARY, Etc. Phone 4232 -Gaudet 8: Hoszcrd GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB Barristers and sollclttoro Money to boln Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg Chas. R. McOuoid B.A. ; BABBISTER. S(IT.l(lITOB. NOTARY. Etc. yron . ranh . . Intern Trust liulltllnl 0l,,l.0ME,r3m.l. i 0nA3”"'T'9T"WN no Kent Street but non (Opposite ltevt-re Hotel) Gordon E. Mocllillan. iB.A.. LL.l.. Allison M. Glllis. -LLB. IABBIBTEB. SOL! CITIIR. Filo. Phone lino "-jtT:”TT BABIIISTEB. IOl.lUl'I'0I:.”'E.lG-o in Prince tlt. - Char owl Dr. A. L. Moclsuoc am ",3 . DENTIST "GT?-T”-' ”'-..l.'.'.;..'.!.;.E.':.':”" m-0315 3”"-"mo Palmer Graduate I'll Grllwn St. Phone III CllABL(YlTl:T(IWN T Dial M81 201 Prince e l'. . . MCQ CC CHI T: " ,,,:,,m,. J. A. Curruthers. R.O- mnm Km” l"'l it c(iiTT"iwI ""811-in 0 will . .. en rec on - l Above Cliarlollelawn clinlo I,” mm. mm” "mm 3, in Queen at out out (Nut to elmpmro Asancn MeDONAI.D. donate a. co. CHARTERED A(t(:0UN1'ANTs lloatresl. Quebec. Ottawa, Toronto. saint John. sherhrooke. Vhnoouvel llrtland latte, Monclon. Itlsntlltnn, Charlottetown lklnonum. Currie lily. Charlottetown. moi ll-'9 H. II. DOANE In COMPANY GIIABTEIEB M'otIllNTANTI . III unit (hone It. lllnlotluowl P. 0. In 241 Phone IM1 - IMI ' r uanoorn w. IIANNINO. um ennui r. men-imnaoiv. CA. IIVIN J. IMIINHA. GA nlhev omen at llamas. run. It. tours. Ania!-It. Ilcrhcctl Iilhlllt. UVGPIIOOI. Now Olucow. True and Gone Incl.