n "l. _\_ _ PAGE FOUR 0 TIIE D-IARLDTTETDWII GUARDIAN Iorning Daily (Founded in 1887) Authorised an Second Clan Mall. Post Office Department. Ottawa. q 1 s; I [an A. B ‘ ; Vice-E Wm. l ‘57119933 sfl-‘L-Treal, G. M. Burnett; Editor and "Elfin; Director, J. ll. Barnett; Associate Editors Frank _Walker. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." "capsular, sarrrzrunan z. um Sugar 0n Increase represents average daily consumption as it is, rather than as it should be. A properly balanc- ed diet would today cost 430 francs per day. Inasmuch as the average monthly earnings of semi-skilled French labor lost May were 10,000 francs and of skilled labor 12000 francs, it can readily be seen that French working-class fa- mrzies must spend 80-10096 of their income for food. - EDITORIAL NOTES - It was o glorious Labour Day. i I I O Germany invaded Poland this date 1939. i i \‘ I Thanksgiving Monday, October 13, is the It was bound ta come-a surplus of sugar for the world's market, and a resulting 3-pound in- crease, as announced last week in the canning, sugar ration for Canadians. No less than 150,000 l}; tons of sugar have been found ready for export I in rhe fgur ci in East Java. lt also reported that foreign-owned plantations in the area are generally in good! The Conservatives of both sexes were in condition and at least seven important sugarlthe City in force Saturday honouring Mr. Broc- factories are intact. Tlrcrr rated output is aboutéken and Mr», McLur-e. 300,000 tonsonnually; about 50,000 acres orel * under cultivation in sugar in the area. Then we’ This is the month in which the Provincial Ex- lre told by the Canada and Dominion Sugar Coqhibitions formerly was held, and could usually Ltd. that efforts of Cuban cane producers to dis- be counted upon for fmourobie weather both for pose of their 1947 crap before the end of thejharvesting and holiday making. year,’ are regarded as indicating that Cubans| x x _ , fear any carry-over in sugars into next ycar would! The Winnipeg Free Press reports that the R.| result in a price-toppling surplus according to a C.M.P. have now got horses at their Regina train- report of the Canada and Dominion Sugar Co..ling depot. The "Mounties" had been dismount- Ltd. Mr. James Marshall, U.S. Sugar firanchlcd early in the war. Director, has just concluded talks with Cubans] " regarding raw sugar pr ccs and dispositions all Strange, isn't it? Shot down three times, while free sugars now warehoused on the island, and j serving with the R.A.F. and eventually taken pris- a new contract providing Icr the sale of I947foner, 24-year-old Stanley Burleigh of Sutton, sugars at a fixed price may soon be arranged. Surrey, England, was killed, while motorcycling. This agreement wouhl guarantee movement oil ' ' ' ' tfre raw sugar bclore Dec. 31 when the New: There were 500 fewer applications fcr jobs at Sugar Act comes into cIf-cct. Under terms of the _ the National Employment office here in the past Act, Cuba's 1948 allocation is over three millionlycar than in the preceding one-which may be tons. If the 1947 Cuban crop equals this ycor's' taken as a healthy economic sign. There were cud world-shortage of U. S. dollars continues,l31 fewer vacancies registered. Cuba would face serious problems in disposing " i “ ‘ of the I943 harvest. next public holiday. i i i The Kinsmen are to be congratulated on their ne achievement in supplying sound systems ty schools. "I ‘A I w 1r a a s The deplorable railway catastrophe at Wil- mot level crossing cast a gloom aver th-e week- —i—’__i"_‘ end holiday-makers and those returning, like the Unfortunate EXllIlllS victims, from their summer vacation. Surely the — »»»»» ~ 4 Govcrnm-cnt and the C. N. R. will be now arous- VQDQlIGFdI °i sfnmefszg blfuili'mehwf°°‘lts gmrlfWed to take measures to prevent recurrence. ers who wil in t e uture olow terr ro e rnr British Columbia, a group of 45 New Brunswick- ers already are 0n their wil)‘ 1° Hie We“ 9995b ‘that snails have been clocked at .000363005 m. While British Columbia's urgent. need for ex- pp or 22 fee’ p2 inch in in“ under 1| hours perienced woods Wvrklrfi W" lfldlll’ be F099" and 30 minutes. Studies are for the purpose of SW0d 0nd "Pllredfllefl lmmnl" file “gflmxesfr "iprotecting the oyster from the snail and other r- r there has been an e ua serious ear a n r: _ 1511i: fype of labor, ccmnragts tliic Moncfon Times,le em s it is unfortunate 1110i will l1" “wil” 9i Mm“ Bureaucrats are the some the world over. The time 1050f Sllllllld 15kg Pl-"I- _ I ,Sydn:y Morning Herald columnist says he hasn't The movement Cf WvTi-lri U0?" fl"? Murlllme‘ ldcred to check this one for fear it's not true:— to other parts of Car-ado dates back to Confed-ETpe Chinese in Sydney get a special rice mg e.- tion. lts an oft-raid "lie 0f 15559 1019B Pm" j tion A half-Chinese woman thought she'd like: Vlllcei bY lha 59° b‘~‘l"9 “fflbledw [Prlllilde ‘lie some, and applied. She got half a ration. labor opportunities to b: orrn esew ere m‘ I the Dominion. 511i‘ 0H9 WO-‘deri ll Ill? "W915 Farmers are to bl: rzigulateif regarding income ll"? 0i EmPlQYIYl-‘Fll uflttlY 5mm Mme" l" fll°5ijtax into two classes, reminiscent of the old time cases is not but orwfltvr infillfflflfie 0i’ i!" lleldsihaves” and "have nots". Those who have an es- appearing greener. _ _ ltablished basic herd will not be taxed on the The fact is that the ivluflilmei m" lll "llmd 'sales except the excess of their standard herd. to lose thtse skilled wv~hflfi~ And $13115 50°21? The basic herd total will constitute their in- be taken to discourc e representatives o. e y-Qsfed w imp BllilSll Columbia lumbgrlrrg iuterests from mak-i p A report from tire ‘Unikersity of Maryland is| wean In the passing of Mr.‘ John Sutherland l nE CHARLUPTETOWN_ auAuprmr ing to statistics. has been length- ened by 2'! years 1n the past cen- as a brake. an w d w ‘lite expectancy. — in so!‘ S i’. . Shanghai police are rounding up all persons not wearing shirts 1n that clty 1n a "sanitation. purge". The bare-backed are probably clean- er in hot weather than the shlrt- wearars but. sanltatlcn like morals is no doubt a matter of opinion.- Edmonton Journal. A contemporary says that only Th, ‘maria, m, n", wank‘ men who have. for months tuxy. This provides more time for 9m faster driving, which In turn rec'd“ “at” py The w” l The Leoprld’: spot. r (Halifax Chronlcle) f Those Journalists and maintaining that. there 1s noth- ing la the new Dominion-Provin- arrangements but. a finan- agreement must, have felt. their convictions severely shaken by the proposal mooted last. Tues- |clay by the provincial Attorney- General for an expansion of the prlnclple of the delegation of au- thority between -Domln1on and ‘province upon which the whole 10f the new agreements with Ot- tawa are based. As was pointed out in these col- umns yesterday. there 1s nothing -very new about. such a proposal. Perhaps Lhe latest and mast. cate- gorical statement concerning 1t .v.'as made ln 1946 when the ques- ltion of the situation of certain ‘Lunenburg fishermen in respect to the Nova Scotla Warllme La- bor Relations Board was 1n dis- ,pute. On that. occasion the brlef of the Attorney-Generals office ‘declared that “there does not 8D- pear to be any reason in law or logic why the Dominion Parlia- lment cannot delegate to a provin- clal legislature authority to legis- the mlddle-agrd can remrmber mOVlE5 ufrirlr starred Mabel Nor- rmand. BPn Turpin. Defl Henderson and Charlie Chaplin. comments The Peterborough Examlncr. If you can remember- John Bunny you are well c-n the way tovrard senllity. When he was 1n America. a num- her ofyears ago, Wu Ting Fang. the great Chinese diplomat. met an American woman at a recep- lion. she did not know who he ~ _ _ lot/e ln respect to a defmed topic. iiaf‘ an? 5J1? asked him sweetly’ or vice versa. The plenary nature “out nos." are you Japanese. o, the legislative pnwe, enjoyed Javmlose or Chinese?" "rm Ch"? by Parliament and the Provincial eso." replied Dr. Wu. and then he Legmature; mph.“ their l-sepem] continued. "What ‘kee’ are you — five spheres’ is H," esmbushed r monkey. donkey or Yankee?" — a a 0 The danger inherent. In such a statement is not. that it ls neces- sary vrcicus per se, but that it appears to attemlll- by 9005mm- and point-blank reiteration. to em‘ Wall Street Journal. r lt Is lKiI/‘fbilljg to nufo t'.'a1 30.- 00‘) young pitvasanls are to be turned loose from Ontario hatch- rfes tftls Suirtmcr. [5150 that grouse are making a comeback 1n the Ontario laniscare. Even wlWaul: the boon fsr the hunters this Lablish 1n popular belief a theory that. ls doubtful 1h fact. That the ‘prlnclple ls doubtful ls acknow- _ lodged by the Attorncjv-Genoral flifid lIlIPE- b9“““5~"'lrlmse1f, who proposes to Lest its 5 ' "'9 Pn°rm°u5 W391 validity by reference Lo the Su- error-s. The ricrxrirzg and rralning reme Court Q; Nova 5mm "m; ‘f W‘ "m1 111"" Fluid“ l5 fll-“Wgossiory to the Judicial Commit- annllltl‘ lcrwvnrrl 51C“. 1f w ld life m, n; [he Privy coumg 0g Eng- is to tt-"rrme thr- torrrl-t at:r-:ction'1and_ A 115011; of {hrs w“ 110w. l‘ -“~l"lYl~'l b“ sl- C-‘IIYTlYW-S ever, might. prove unsatisfactory. Sl""9“i‘l~ since the Courts of any drvrdual province are incompcrcrrr. to grve (""1111 '1"'"'"'I ""1 V‘- i“I‘-'l a final opinion on a concur-nuan- "flillfl “- "15" h" lefllllifill" a1 matter affecting the Wllfllf‘ Do- Pzlinrd griflniillf‘ workers. oven mjnign‘ and the Privy COllllCll of lhaut-zlr n1 prrsrnl she has moral England might. prefer to keep it.- Ylflfl n! any athPr litre in hl-‘Yfl-“y- self out of Canadian constitution- Tiio siwfillrn is dufurtlrrg but in‘ a1 affairs at. this time when Ca- "lew 0f the "1119519318057011 Win! nada has so definitely asserted taken l5 scarcely alarming. It is her own sovereignty and when the quite possfbe that the Clll"9flI. de- future bf appeals to the Privy mand in the United States for Can- Council ls so uncertain. adlarr scentist; is a temporary one The point. ls nevertheless lrn- rluc to the past-avar- YECOIITMTEIDII‘ poriant, Upon it, in fact. hangs totin. one which may dFOD Sharply. all the validity of the present rs enr-Zy ns 1048 - the presidrntial Dominion-Provincial relation- clccricn year -- Ottwn Jouinal. ships where the provinces. under the euphemism of “renting? have actually delegated conslderablel A rfrrgle womcn of nrtls lc trsber fln 2nd nked two or three fdcrrds fc- terr lrr co‘e‘:r2te 1h" event. Laid rorflrsst- nrr a sde table were two books h-"rndsrmrly bound in different odors. x115 one of the Pucrti lurking at. 11.19 lilies rnd krrc-"irrg her hos-lts‘. exjtresserl ‘amc Government. What is becoming abundantly clear ls that. in the formation of these agreements as in the new proposal of the Nova Section At-l r torney-General. an attempt is llbeing made to alter the tenor" of nrlld surprise at Ute choice. "Oh," the BNA Act. without. recourse to nuns the rxplsnatirn. “I'm not going the British Parliament and with- 1o road 111cm. but I did feel that ‘ our any formal amendment of that tablr- wnrrtcl something this afler- Act. It may be argued. and the noon. so 1 hfed cvrf to the nubile ‘ Attorney-General has argued. that library —~ 12111;“! arr just [be lrr a time of national emergency cola; zne 1' rrcrr:'e:‘." _. Fyomlsuch as the depression of the lvfarchcstcr Guardian. thirties. the Canadian constitution _.___ is too rigid to meet the case. But. M a gnlhering n1 C20 vllage 13m. ll. has never been satisfactorily other evening. a yourg wbman settled whether any Canadian gov- wha:e 5021a] conscience ls sticng Bmmem can dP-Cliue a 513W 91 rmd whose was? emergency in time of peace. ing these annual "raids" upon our manpower resources. To strip this section of Canada 0i m?" Who one needed h:re as mucir as they are elsewhere in the Dominion appears ridiculous rn the light of our national manpower" probiems. lf more men are needed to sustain t'r2 B. C. logging industry they sh :1 come from fir: vast manpower pool of Europe's displaced persons camps. France After Exports oul According to the l-zrnzs of on agrezzncnt re- <ently signed at Wellington by Mr. Walter Nash, New Zealand Minister of Finance and Mr. Ar- mand Cazel, French tainistcr to that country, New Zealand will open the first foreign credrr in its history to France, principally for purchases ' of raw wool. Last year, France bought three and one-half million pounds sterling worth of wool from New Zealand. The present agreement gives France a credit of five million pounds at 2.5922 interest, payalble not loler than December 1957. If bath contracting parties so d-esire, France can purchase other products from New Zealand. M. Cazel thanked the New Zealanders for their con- fidence in his country H: pointed out that under the terms of theagrcemc-rt, each New Zeolander was actually lending France three and one-half pounds. The French woolen industry was cut off from ‘rhe rest of the world during the war and the oc- cupation and is now bending all efforts to re- cover its former foreign markets. The need to meet domestic requirements made it impossible for French woolen manufacturers to start export- ing before the second half of 1946. Neverthe- less, wool exports for 1946 totalled 7,300,000,000 francs worth (approximatzly $61,344,500), that rs 30% of the total value of textile exports for that year. During the first five months of I947, wool exports totalled 7,226,000,000 francs. ($61,- 310,900) as compared with only 895,000,000 " "francs ($7,521,000) for thecorresponding period ‘of 1946. Exports are of primary importance for French wool industry because they alone make rt possible to finance imports of needed raw mater- ials. During the next few months, both the manu- facturers and the workers will concentrate on increasing production jn combing and weaving plants and on improving the quality of finished goods destined for foreign markets. According to recent statistics, food currently consumes almost the entire income of skilled workers, white-collar workers and government employees in France. If 2500 calories is token as the average daily adu't requirement, the cost ‘ of a day's food for the French workers is 335 years ago, on September 3, 1943, Allied armies, including the Ist. Canadian Infantry Division, invaded southern Italy after a successful, whirl- francs (of which 85 francs must be spent for ra- tioned Items and Z50 francs for non-rationed the i Cousins, the Province has lost an esteemed citi- lzcn who in his younger days, was a promoter ofl linrlustry, giving employment to many. Running rsomc of the most keenly contested elections in jthe province from 1906 to 1923, it may be well .said that there have been Liberals who have earned Senatorships for much less service and sacrifice. s r. . Sir Alan P. Herbert, M.P.,'may not be up to his usual standard of wit or poetry in writing the following, but it at least has the merit of bcing timely, and brief. The sun is over Britain, The kids are in the sea; And if our doom is written It shan't disturb our tea. ‘S ¥ '4 l Mr. George R. Sims, English novelist and dra- matist, born this date 1847. His works include The Social Kaleidoscope, Young Mrs. Caudle, For Life-and After. Among his popular plays are The Lights O'London, The Romany Rye, Ever- Open Door, 'Gainst minor evils let him pray, Who fortune’s favour curries,- For one that big misfortunes slay, Ten die of little worries. The beneficiaries ‘of 54 pdrsons who died in Prince Edward Island during the first six months of 1947 received $84,824 from life insurance companies operating in Canada, the Canadian Life Insurance Officers Association announce. In all of Canada during the six-month period $34,- 678,940 was paid out irr death claims by the life insurance companies. Prince Edward Island's payments were mode on 52 individual ordinary life policies and on two group policies. The fig- ures were compiled by the Canadian Life In- surance Officers Association based on the data of companies representing more than 95 percent of the life insurance in force in Canada. Eight years ago on September 3, I939, Great Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand de- clared war on Germany. Canada, who already had called out on active service several thou- sand men, joined the fight one week later, on September I0. The first British troops arrived in France on September 6, but were withdrawn a rgcsls it should be made as easy vavsrs are legion < tolling bcrrt t"n rly apartment rlrv and her" lruxbrnrl have. When slrr was asked by one of her audit- ors lo give its dmcnslons. she llllvliflfrl h-“r lJTC-"XS for a moment and then said. "Wcll. 1 reaflyr can't loll you how big tke rroms are 1n fcct. but it's give you some Idea when I tell ycll that. 1n two years we've been t-hcrr. we've given _. let's see - twclv-e parlirs. and not rne cf tho-n has netted les than Three hundred dollm-W-Ncu‘ Yerk- er. Noting that Canadian ap;l'-r rzrruvgrs are rxpectlng bumper crcpsl this yenr and are likely to face marketing problem". the Ottawa Journal makes the titrTeIy suggrsl- ion that someone get. busy and fefllll’ sell Canadian apples to Canadian; .Tr‘.ra Journal sug- 10 buy a dozen apples cf a spcciflc Qfndc as it. Ls 1o buy a doren crim- 1'85. There is a tremendous market for Canadian applcs right hcre at homo. if someone will guarantee the purchaser that the apples are pro- perly Brad-ad. and they are sold 1n cnnvcnlcntly small quantities. Ccrnwall Standard fieehclder, A $250,000 experlrnzni In m; whether 1t will be possible to control the gradual linking of La- Guardla Field without closing dawn the nltpc-rl indefinitely h}; be"; b93011 by the Port of New York rclatrs The New York Herald Trl. bune. The Authority's ppm is to rlrlll 450 holes l6 Inches wide and 84 feet deep into the waterlogged cast end 011-119 field. Then fill them with sand and see If the sand will cflny off the sub-surfrgg wgtgf respcnzlbln for csnllnulng settle- ment nrf the airport‘; erstem rec. tion. This system nf "sand drains", untired In the East. has been used extensively by Callfbrnj; 9351mm‘ f0 prepare swampy bemrin for highway projects. REPLACES TIMBIZR. CANBERRA - (C?) — Steel poles for communication services are being constructed ln Australia. Because of wartime ttmber short. ages. the government decldsd to few months later when that country copitulated in June, 1940 . . . . Seven years G90. on September 3, 1940, the United States transferred 50 "over- age" destroyers to Britain in return for seven defence outposts in the Caribbean and an eighth in Newfoundland on a lease of 99 years . . . Four substitute prefabricated steel p016! which are made ‘In sections weigh- ing less than 25 pounds. WE AQTI-ZEE. T00 WHITBTABLE. Kent. England- (CP) - Dr. Hewlltt Johnscn. Dean lllll.) Furthermore, the figure of 335 francs wind campaign lrr Sicily . . . . o! Canterbury. who uld he prrr t- Dayliglrt Time rNew Glasgow Evening Newsq Daylight Saving Time will soon be coming to an end ln New Glas- gow and Plc-tou-schedulod for the end of August. We have had an experiment this year, two of the county. towns adopting 1t. the rural sections and the other three remaining on Standard Time. On the whole. no grant inna- vcnlence was caused by tlre double system; others coming ta New Glasgow or Plctou had to hustle u blt and while the citizens regulated by Daylight Time could lake things easily 1n visiting fries-ids outside, but were amazed haw late their stays were 1n their own hour-terms. For practical purposes. It would be more convenient for n11 were we to have a common time standard 1n all the towns (and perhaps the rural sections. too.) Perhaps ll. will ‘not he too much to hope that. by the time next summer rolls around there will be more unanimity, Certainly there will he more understanding of the fact. that Daylight Time 1s actually only a. painless means of kidding our- selves lnto getting up and going to bed an hour earlier and. as auclr. 1| relatively harmless. Certalnly, too. there will he more understanding of the fact. that this form of kidding ourselves 1s genulrrely dc- slred by a large body of citizens 1n the trading towns-a majorlty of them. TI! GAFIEB‘! DONG A sudden wakln‘, a sudden weepln’; A ll'l suckl-n‘, a ll'l sleepln‘; A cheel’: full joys an ‘a cheel‘; short sorrows. ~We' a power 0' faith 1n gert to- morrows, Young blood red-hot an‘ the love I 0f I! maid. Wan glorious hour us'1l never fade: Then shadows an‘ sunshine an’ triumphs an’ tears. Pile trhe gatherln‘ weight o‘ the flyln' ye! rs. Now auld man's talk o‘ the days behind me; My dealer's youngest darfer to rni-nd me; A ll'l dreamin’. a'l1'l dyin’. A ll'l, low corner o’ alrth to lle 1n. -—Edc'n Phillpotls. . TIIE This marvellous new Hearing that enables you to use light mow-rim" ‘tmihlrevsrsmzuhunuaru-rmnuakwcrrwrsn-rr- \ sEPTEMBER 2. 1947 ~- -‘_'*::_,_ N ‘w; 59100" sonoroua Aid with the "Magic Key" weight batteries, making tlr; complete instrument about the sin of a package of cigar. ettes. A free demonstration and Aua-ometer reading of you; hearirig loss awaits you when our chief consultant, Mrs. C. F. Smith, visits Charlottetown, P E. I. Saturday, Aug. 30th., Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2nd. at the TIIE DIIAIILDTTETDWII IIDTEL l For further particulars write 6 IUld Li Irarlutfetowrr l (Ana P.E.l.) EARLY THOROUGHBREDS The records of the Island pgnve’ that horses of the most approvtd kinds were imported as early as the year 1824. ln that year a suf- folk Puncu horse. called “The True Briton". was brought to King's County by Mr. Llewellyn, and performed gmd service for the Jarmeis there. Then “Rencevalles", a first. class thoroughbred, arrived 1n Charlottetown, and beam... M1. ebraled as the progenitor of ex- ccllcnt horses. He was bred by the Duke of Rlclmrznd. and was nc-r cnmpzrrriod by a more named "R911- lotto“ of the samv breed. 'l'l*.ey were lmporled here tram l-Inglnndl by l-lrutenant COVCTHOF Ready. The progeny at these horses sup- plied lhe foundation strains for mBny of the noted horses nf e"- wards prcducerl in this Isianrl. In 1827 a thoroughbred named ‘Wan. ton". bred by Lord Egmont. and ln 1833 another- tttorcughbred named “Slag” weze Imported. The’ colts of these horses were often‘ successful competitors with the progeny of Rencevalics on the Charlottetown rzce-course. A stai- llcn named "Revenge", described as a "bry. sixteen hands. with g eat power and substance" was brought 121613" rsrnblilrrd hcrsrlf 1n a tiny provrncial powers to the Federal r to 111v Island fro-m Nova Scotla lnl the year 1833. The .'lr't rxccllent rozd=ters and trntters of ths ls- lanrl we e his descendants. In the spring nf raao. two lhoroughbredsl wrro imported from England -- "Tfdmourrh" cwnerl by a Mr. wood. man, and "Aurelian". . cum-ed by Mr. Gcrdc-n Fitzroy. Both were re- ported to have done good service towards the improvement of the horses of the Istand, though their names are ntw forgotten. The name of "Saladln", hc-weve". ls still well known throufnh his pro- geny. He was a rhorovgwbrcd ‘m- ported from England ln 11145. The Rival Agricultural Society. 1n 1855. purchased 1n the United States three hcrses for brwding purposes. - "Sam Slick". "Teln- pranh Morgan" and "Eclpse", mvklng n gord udmiwture r-f blood for general purpose- horses. Little was done lrwnrds the pro- ducllon of heavy cart. horses un- tfl 1839. In that year llle rld Cen- frnl Agrlcutural Sorrietv lmorrted 1hr- Clydesdale claflon "CaIum- bus". - beVeved to be the first cart stafllrn of any breed Imported to America. excepting one n Prrchcron - which was br-uzht by rr gnntlemrsw of Pi-Tacelphln from Paris. the SEIHP your. lllke that. of their klnsmen. -only thlng 1n‘ our common pos- McMurray Book 8r Statioimy Cm, Ltd. Fredericton, N. B. lng) elther by birth or marriage ‘are eligible to Join. while assorr- ate and honorary membership are ' Their ‘Chief Reports To The Stewart Clan _ _ open to those descended from (Earl of Galloway 1n the Edln- °P "llelesled l" the" burgh Scotsman.) 1 write as honorary president of She Stewart Society, which was. armed 1n 1899 to preserve the traditions and history of the astewar-t family ln all its branches. and to provide a point. of contact for all who share or are associat- ed with the name. The Stxswarts are not a clan lnl the ordinary sense. for. although several branches were settled 1n the Highlands. the orlgln of the family was essentially Lowland. the Bruces. Douglasses and Hamil- tons. No one locality or personal- lty can appeal to each and every Stewart; the name ls almost. the sslon. The society has no politics and no dynastic aims or ideals, but devotes itself to family matters- historical. genealogical. and phil- anthroplc _ while It keeps 1n "touch with members all over the world through lts annual maga- zine. The Sfewarts. Although the society's has been devoted mainly to its mnagazlne-whlch has been the rmeans of preserving much lnfor- matlon which would otherwise .have been lost.—lt. lent. material ‘help 1n preserving the graves and memorials of the clans at. Cullo- clen. and 1n the rscqulsltlon of the Glenflnnan Monument. by the Na- tlonal ‘Trust. and has erected a series of memorials 1n Appln to preserve the memory of the race 1n that district. and also s monu- “ment at. Fortlngall to General The Goal Question is one of the most important ,you have to solve every year. On rt depends your comfort during the cold winter weather. May we suggest that you pur- chase your supply now, while coal Is available and careful delivery can be mode. We are prepared to deliver: American Hard- Coal ~ Old Sydney Screened Albion Lump and Nut lnverness Screened Bras '.l'Or Screened and Stoker lntercolonial Screened Bay View Screened. income I David Stewart of Garth. the his-l torlan of the Highlands and the r Hlghlnnd reglmentk. The society also acquired and O present-ed to the Scottish Naval and Military Museum ln Edln- A‘ & burgh Castle the banner und whlch the Stewart: of Appleri PHONE 24° fought at Culloden. and the col- ; ors of "Ban-oil's Blues" one of the regiments opposed to them that day. The outbreak of war 1n 1989 forced us to stop publication of the magazine and put a tempor- ary closure on our other activi- ties. Now we are starting again and our first. post-war magazine has Just been lssued, All those who bear the name of Stewart fln any form or spell- OOO§GOO4OGOOQ£ OOQ§OO§§O Professional Oardf H. R. DOANE 8r CO. Chartered AI-sblllllllliis u Grafton Street Charlottetown Phone I000 Box M7 I ‘ ' ‘ W. M ' CA. 9 9 All lines of Ins IIYNDMIIII s. Insurance Our 75 years experience can Oflaos: Charlottetown - (Thomas MacAvinn (Earl R. Burke (J. E. Burrows B. F. llrrtchesen ‘ a. sou OPTOMIITRISTS _ “Gpeclallots In the fli- ting of glasses for the eorregtlon of ocular de- feeia. _ 53 Grafton Street For Foot Ailments CONSULT ll. rl- ‘l 9110*". I.P Orthopedic Chironodiat too-anomalous lsed what he preached. nugget ed that everyone should have at leut alx weeks’ holidays a year. OIAIIATTITUWN. tin Agents through Leave Wood Islands- ‘ Prince Nova Charles A. Dunning Leave Caribou- i Chorlu A. Dunning ... Prince Nova LISTEN IN T0 CFCY AT 7 rrs A coon Poucv to be adequately insured. your Insurance needs. Allison P. McLean: District Manager at Summersido Cyrus A. R. Show: District Manager at Montague. : Special Representatives at Charlottetown Wood lolanduCas-lbou Service SCHEDULE UNTIL SEPT. 30th. DAYLIGHT SAVING TlME Operating Daily Including Sundays DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME RATES: Same as 1946 FOR urzsr NEWS ‘ Ilrthfllrllal Ferries Ltd. urance effected. 00. LIMITED since I872 bu of assistance in meotin Summerside —- Montages out the Province ll a.m. I p.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 a.m. 9 a.m. 3 p.m. 5 om. I1 a.m. I p.m. 7 a.m. 9 a.m. :30 A. M. (STANDARD TIMEL OQ IO PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER allmeflgraphlng earsh and circulars. concert pmflllfll. correspondence. typing and bookkeeping Ill-EN (HIDDEN Telephone IIBO-J liti- No. C. Coanaaght Apia. Powlul Street NEIL W HIGGINS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT ' Currie Building - Charlottetown Tel. 1636 P.O. lo! 457 ______________i_ MORRELL and COMPANY l fllftnnd Accountants lamra ‘has! entrain; Phone 1M1 - Baa l“ fhlrlotktawn I. I. ITAIU. OJ. ladders Intact TO ’ MONCTON SUMMERSIDE NEW GLASGOW HALIFAX Leave Charlottetown I0! MONCION l:ll Ami-z 11:10 AM. ~ 0:00 PM. T0 NIW GLAUGOW :00 A.lll.; [:10 EM. 1'0 HALIFAX a