PACE FOUR THEMCLUARDIAJS ....; 4. - -jg?-1-m-m-m y Auihorlzcd In Second CIIDI Mlll P001 03"” Department. Ottawa ian coast. Behind its fine stretches of beach grow a profusion of trees-stringy bark. woolly-butte, plum and ironwood. Bloodwood. white gum and paperbark thrivc ' Th (' . I. d. , - ---1 h'- m":''---:- -!;----t-'- in freshwater swamps. Mangrove trees dol , Editor nnrl llnungcr. Inn A. ume . . , . , ,- Mwdm, mm". ,,.m,,, wmm. its shores. The bearded natnes wield - -- tspears, woomeras, waddtes and a short 'll ('l LATION . , "(overs Princc(lltfvi'nrd lslantl -like thr-Ade-vt"' lSllCi( thrown so as to rebound' from tho.- ”T"T " ground onto liS target. While singing and idancing the aborigines paint their faces lll T lurid shades of red and .whitc. "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". ion.-tn r.o7rTs-rowN:A'rnL'Rs lil3lconLe.ll evis DAY. FEB. 25. 195 Melville Island was Robert Joel (Joel Cooper, the sturdy six-footer who arrived QUCCH M0ih0l' F-ll'1-ilbtlih 170995 10 Come miery and forthright personality cstablishctl Canada for a "few days autumn visit to thc l'nited States as the who t-onsidoi-c guest of Prrsidellt and Mrs. EiSCl'lll0W0l'.i Many changes have taken place since the Queen Mother toured this country fl'0nliea1-ly Mai-ch coast to coast with her husband the late months, King. A great war has come and 201102 3 been in progress for more than a year. beloved monarch has passed away mourned by millions of loyal subjects in a world- wide Commonwealth: the crown has been assumed courageously and with a deep d him king of the island. and will remain A lax Watchdogs who already has won her way into hearts of her subjects. Profound changes have been brought about in the constitu- tion of the Commonwealth and Empire. No change. however. has diminished the devotion and respect which people of the Commonwealth accord the Royal Fam- ily. The Queen Mother is held in affec-i tionatc cstccm for her friendly and cheer- ful manner: by carrying out so well and wisely her important roles as the consort of the late Sovereign and the mother of his successor she has earned herself a place among the most honoured women of Brit- ish history. (lnly Apparent Surnlusas With world population expanding at a rate of 75,000 each day, the problem of finding new food sources is an ever increas- ing challenge to economic geographers, Dr. R. C. Wallace, CMG. FRSC, warned that 25th annual meeting of the Canadian Geo- graphical Society at the National Museum in Ottawa. Dr. Wallace does not think that signifi- cant new acreagc can be brought under cultivation. Canada's north provides very little prospect of agricultural expansion. The Peace River district, once loudly ac- l idian Institute of Chartered Accountants are recommended by the two professiona dealing with taxation problems. regular practice. are most valuable in re 'in the nature of things, be perfect. "is properly the field of politics but de tail and administration can best be car ried out and criticized by experts. on sales on credit. restrictions on charitable donation by lim ited companies should be removed. pensions to be taxed as income when actual quires plowing in of organic material suchi as clover to maintain production. Australia has little potential crop-pro- ducing land not already in use. The Am- azon valley territory, while able to produce crops of a subsistence level, has been found in recent surveys to be not too encouraging. AM. Central Africa may provide more possibili- Thanksgiving Day will he lies if the native population can be trained this year on October 11, states a pmr-lama in more scientific methods. "But." points tion in the Canada Gazette, out Dr. Wallace, ”we have already posses- ' ' ' sed the agricultural regions of our planet." The London Times reports that Cana scheme or some more individual provision make for a fairer incidence of tax. EDJTORIAL NOTES creasing the productivity of land presentlvstandapd of operational efficiency, in USP. A P0niP3l'l50" 01' ihe 1'918iiV9 PF0-ithe troops who must live under it are in duction in different parts Of the world using l evitably proud of the results of proper different methods illustrates how greatly,oip)ine applied to sound soldier material, world production can be increased by this, ' ' ' means. It requires the education of farm-i That all ers and others in the most efficient tech- coal, butter, niques of agriculture and it also mea the farmer must be enabled to make use of the most effective equipment. These ends can only be achieved if the fighting is some indicztt income of the farmer is Permitted to risri way in which the resources of Britain wer to the point. where he can afford to use thrown into the great struggle. modern equipment" and provide the highcr' " ' ' education necessary to make his children efficient farmers by modern standards. rationing. isummer is I'llDSi. lVClC0l'llf? news. A reader takes issue with the finding Melville Island The Naiifiliill (7007-'li?lPhl(' 50Cl9i.V 13 Seotia apparently figured in the experi sending all PXI70dlil0ll '9 limeskliown Mel-, ment and our correspondent points out tha ville Island off northern Australia to reportiit provides no evidence that P, E, 1, lob on the art. mythology and tribal character-1, stcrs would not return to P. E. I. water istics of its people, Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor. Cir given the chance. the Society's president. announced this ' ' week. Leader of the group will be Charlesl "Form threes!" as an order to th P. Mountford. an Australian ethnologistwhopguard of honour at the opening: of th led a joint National Geographic Society-' New Brunswick Legislature took the Glean Smithsonian Institution study of Arnhem Land on the Australian mainlan-cl, in 1948. , thus: There are gaps in scientific knowledgc,o of the Mclvillc Island aborigines. Their art and beliefs differ from those of the main- land natives and seem to be centered about a colorful burial ceremony, the Pukamuni. The Pukamuni requires three or four months of dancing and rituals. Much oft the,time is used in making and decorating biographer, died this date 1852. He is re oarved burial poles, ornaments and bark utensils. The expedition will photograph imd record the rites especially from the standpoint of art. symbolism and music. It will also closely observe the nallves' food, From three ranks, the odd number to the rear, to form "two deep". cedure. ' ,p.. studied at Dublin University and then wen tor. In tltgeurly nineteenth century the founded Fort Dundas there but it was soon Ibkndonod. .j . 11:0. ialund. 85 miles long. 45 m t& pound largest close to the Auutral- best. works. ill" Probably the most noted inhabitant of Canadians will welcome the news that from south Australia in 1331, His bi-av. i0”0l-Vingt ii” a place for him in the hearts of the natives It is expected the National Geographic -Society's expedition will reach the field in several Arrangements for the trip have A joint brief to Finance Minister Abbott SW15? 07 Ii?-b'li0'l5lbl1iil' 135' H YOU”:-' S0V91i0iSZil and Revenue Minister McCann has been the presented by a committee representing the Canadian Bar Association and the Cana- in all. 33 changes in Federal tax statutes bodies in the light of their experience in These presentations. which have become ,ducing the awkwardness and unfairness of tax legislation which must deal with A ,multitude of individual cases and can never, l Policy some of the particular points raised in the present brief are that the Income Tax; Act differs from the best accounting prac-i tice in such matters as methods of calculat- ing depreciation and the immediate profit It is also urged that the present limit of five per cent and other Of more general concern is the pro- posal that all taxpayers should be permit- ited to make tax free contributions towards the provision of retirement pensions, such -ly received. At the present time it makes claimed, does not have good soil and re.-tall the difference in the world whether the contribution is to an "approved" pension iRelaxation in this matter would certainly telei)ItatC(lit.liat one of our chief virtues in the All thiS adds UP Y0 H18 necessity Of in-,dian forces in Europe have reached a high Hi this approncli to the educational Even debate. diS- Charlottetown, including that of margarine. meat and bacony n5 that will at last be ended in Britain by mid-I Austerit, continued for nine years after the end of ion of the unlimited Inf the Massachusetts State Fisheries Dlvis-I ion that lobsters liberated in one area show no sign of returning to their native waters Only short. lobsters from Maine and Nova nearb.V:cr reporter off guard. He recovered suf- ficiently, however. to explain that it is done f the centre rank take a pace left and forward and even numbers a pace left and, "Form! threes" is carried out by reversing the pro-' Thomas Moore, Irish poet. satirist. antll garded as the national poet of Ireland. He to London to study law in the Middle Tem- ple. In 1803 he was given the appoint- ment of Admiralty registrar at Bermuda. tion of 126000. Byron had entrusted him with his "Memoirs" but when Byron died, Moore destroyed the text and instead wrote lies wide, I biography which is rated as one of his THE GUARDIAN. Where The Money Comes From CI-IARLOTTETOWN l PUBLIC FURUM Thin column II open In the dlltcuulan by wrrenpondentu of questions of interest; The Guardian does not neceuar lly endorse the nplnlon of w0l'fElp0IIdenfI. MR. CHANDLER REPLIES Sir,-In I letter in yesterday's Guardian. Mr. W. J. Enright. refers to me as ”the spokesman for edu- cational offtcialdom to P. E. I." I beg to be excused from any such presumption. My review of Miss NeIt.by's book "So Little for the Mind" was written at. the request of the Secretary of the Prince Ed- ward Island Teachers" Federation, and my comments on the book represent my personal views. Neither the Teachers Federation nor the Department of Education have officially associated them- selves with my opinions before or since the review was published. The labels "traditionalist." nnd "progreaslvint." in education Ira like most. labels considerably mis- lending. and I would not like to be tagged with either one. The main purpose of my review was to suggest that fortunately life is seldom that. simple. Historians nssert. L Notes I3); Noted Icluntlul Inyn the day In taming when the world will be. toothless, Then we'll have to pass laws with upper and lower den- tures in them. --Hamilton Spec- Later. The ll-bomb touted It linlwelok, in 1952 in now reported to have turn I hole 3 mile wide and 175 feet deep in the floor of the Paci- fic Ocean. Which puts oven the neighbourir nplnlel in the shade. --Hamilton spectator. An efficiency expert any: house- wives do not plan their day care- fully. This should include planning which salesmen should call on the telephone, just. what the baby will spill, md the exact extent of the injuries the boy is to receive from the bully next door. - Edmonton Journal. During a convention of the French Geographical Society an expert. on south Aslnnjungleotold the story that Malays consider apes to be a. kind of especially clever human beings. According to the natives "apes are perfect- ly capable of talking, but won't do it in the pruence of people-, for fear of being recognized as people British Commonwealth has been the ability to take a comprehensive view, to compromise and to find a work-i able solution to political and otherl 'l l book. to put. it mildly, sadly lack- , I am, sir. etc. H. B. CHANDLER February 24. Idlanapolis Star. disputes. I felt that Miss Ncalby's' i nmpllfyi and having to pay taxes." -In- The skin of I blind man enables him to "see." This startling state- ment. was made by Doctor Ivo Keller, of the University of Inns- bruck, Austrlti, as I result of ex- periments he carried out with an rig microphone. According to Dr. Kojler. acoustic waves be- low the level of audibility are transformed by the ear into an irritation of the skin on the fore- Old Cltarlottelown "And 1-. 3. Li V ,, From The Exntnntct, rict. 9. 1888: l 1 be sun at the office of Phillips and Chnppcll. At. the Cl7ll'i0liIii0llll Wnollcn s I tvaluc cannot. be had Ill any unar- - ket. in Canada. t The Last. Royal (iazclte contains inn l(iVCl'llS('ml'llL signed by John ' l Lavcrs, Collector. (icorzetown. an- S 5 nouncing the sale. in April next, of ',Town Lot. No. 4. in that place. for non-payment of assessment. The assessment is 33 cmts: txpenscs 33.40-in all 53.15. The Methodist ChlllCll at Wel- lington was opened for divine. ser- vice on Sunday last. The services were largely nttcndcd. Rev. H. Couperthwaite, AM. occupied the pulpit in the morning and preach- ed an earnest. eloquent sermon. At. the afternoon service Hon. W. G. Strong preached in very practical discourse which was much apprec' l I i l 0 C S ,. atcd by his hearers and in the evening Rev. T. Corbett. of the Presbyterian congregation of Tyne Valley, delivered a sermon of great. power. After the morning aervlct! the dedication took place. The church is well finished and furn- mien throughout. p 7.7. ,- L f(QQl2fCfl2tUO'6UD'UUOUl2tCfCfOO'QODi'- The Age Old Story it shelter, tools and water transportation. the work being done by a deputy. The u--u.-...ggoo,ggo,qoo-mo; Melville Island was discovered in 1644 deputy defaulted and most of Moore's lit- i V by Abel-Jpmz Tasman, the Dutch navi- erary earnings went to repay an obliga- :1! Innuroned; Ind muke you I new hurt um! I new spirit: for why wul ye die. 0 house of In-ml? for I hue no pl:-Illlre In the death 0! him Ihlt dlelh, saith the lard tflnd: wherefore turn yourselves and i live 10. mg l ,rorshlnpcrs? They are the The ttrcmcn have Itttctl up rooms t.,h,. l m the upper flat or the new Citvlnf their own. the ones who go their building in accordance with plans to own way. stand on their own (go: marl are not concerned with copy- :Company's store you can gr-L cus- I tom-made pant: from all x-.ooll"'," "m0'i'”l 79” -V0""iI NOD19- twccd our own make for s2.00.iL"mm0" 5p”ct3'"”''' - 5225 "nd 5250 PM M”-' Ben”: Om nf nutu:-jail-mos! Ipechcu-. P l head. With his skin thus irritated. thr. blind man is able to "see" objects as fine and light Mi 3 fish- ' net.-Edmonton Journal. Look around you for I mlnnlc. Who are t-hc'per1tnn.s who stand out -- the heroes to the hero- ones have developed personalities lng others, Br- lhe mxt. thlntz body will be copying ynu. -Frrnn yourself. Perltnns you know sunta- lrr dtsp'ays - the gorgcnus nl;v':i'. show of the polar aurora or ltnorthern lights" is helping sclcnrc to explore the world of the ruper nlr. An unexplained plle'V1- mrnon until mndrrn times, the Vnarora has enabled man to men- isurc how far the Itmosohere I'V- ,tcnds abwc the surface of the 1:.---th Analysis of its light: has trcvcwled the composition of true: it: the lonmpherc. the clv-ctrtttrsi ,2-rglon between 50 and 230 miles at-.ovr the earth. -Washington. . The qm-ntlnn of Idequnte mt. lnries for teachers seems to be it world-wide nroblrm. It has rr-s'tlt- ,ed in dissatisfaction. not. only in ,thLs country, but also in mnrv tether Western lands. That It ll rfso rxprrlenced in India ahouid. therefore. be no cuuse for sur- prise. It is unfortunate thIt It Its- mmed the riotous aspect that !t did. but. just In their cause may have been. the deatntctton which the teachers caused ll bound to lower them in the estimation of the Very people who look to them for lendershlp.-Halifax Chroniclh Herald. Tuberculowll. which plant-s poor Ind under-developed coun- tries, in psrtlculnrly hard on In- dts. Next. to main-in. tuberculosis in msponslble for the lnrurtt lmu of life in that country. The "white plague" tuku I high toll of life in M! of AMI. Of on oottrnutcd 5,- 000,000 TB dentin annually in the world uoomo ure believed to oc- cur in Am. main. lass about 500.- 000 lfvu owing to tuberculosis. and there In In utln-rated 2,500,- non Ictlve L-Inn. The metal fact.-mt The Way 1. i lack of Adequate treatrnent full!- tles la doubtleu of importance but the spread of the disease is caused chiefly by social conditions-wide spread poverty, malnutrition, con- gested housing conditions affect- ing millions of people in villages, towns and cities. -Toronto Star. jt-o - A number of years ago I hound. wife on the Nova Scotia coast PXDPFIIHBM-illy added a few sprigs of dried Irish mass from the go. to I bowl of milk she was warm- ing in the oven, Ind when the ntllk jellled into A tasty pudding the impetus was given to a new industry of the sea. From that moss is taken an extract known as "gt-lose." which has a wide com- merclnl value as in. stabilizing in- gredient in certain foods, and, ironically. as an emulsifying factor in the manufacture of medicines and oil paints, -Saint: John Tele- graph Journal, um. All too often. the yurdsllck for behavior is no longer "Is it right 0! wronz? but "Can I get away vtlth it?" and crime is no longer considered crime if flhc only rel- t:l)utlon it. brings is n politr-ly' rcmonstratlvc lettrr from the victlm. Certainly the man who stuffs a hotel towel tntn his suit Case is J! thief just as much its thi- liifk-pockct or the sorry creature V-ho filchcs things from it store's Counter. But the shaded moralltv DY 10d-'V.V won't admit it. If hotel men wnnt to keep their towels they will haw to chain thorn firm- ly to the bathroom wall. or start prosecuting the thieves. or - thr- best if the hardest solution -start :1 crusade to put: moral standards rack on it proper foundation. From Hamilton Spectator. scurlty for another brief period of FEBRUARY 7,5, ,.,5, popularity. There huve been many of these "off-again, on-again” philosophies. or intellectual the- ories, or mental fashions, which- ever description is the most. suit.- uble. One of them goes by the name of Utllltariunism; it. had quite in vogue in certain quarters .i hundred years or so ago; it was pretty well out. of fashion by the turn of this century; it is now coming back into a measure of favour in some American circles and. no doubt, elsewhere. Thousands of reams of paper have been used up by the advoc- ates of this little philosophy with the big name; stripped of much top-heavy and cumbersome ver- biage, its central theme is that huppineu is the one uid only ultimate Ilin of life. I I 0 C E C I. E 9. 5 Like every philosophy which has earned or been given A. place in h::.t.ory. this one goes back at long way. There are traces of the principle. though not. of the name. in the writings of Aristotle Ind Socrates. In the 17th and early lath centuries, when there was a more or less favourable climate for almost. any theory which had to do with ethics. it received con- siderable support in high aca- demic plncea. Indeed, A few of the more prominent theologians of the period were not averse to It. A ii (I until the union: about that,-he certainly was an intellectual genius. one evidence of that is the fact. that by the time he was eight years old he had learned to, read Greek fluently; in fact. he had already read many of the Greek authors. (Alan, there was no Hollywood in those days to pay him A million dollars a week!) By the time he. was 17 he. had gained recognition 5.! I thinker uf distinction and already was cnnged in the writing of philoso- phical papers. . V W P l. e D Essentially. Mill was in political (4.-onomist. and one far ahead of his time; his philosophy. in th- mnln I development of what Jeremy Bentham only A few years before had called "utilitarianism". was intended. as he saw it. to purify and strengthen the polit- F The Passing Scene I By Obnener I UTILITARIANISM , It. is strange how some phllosa- teal customs of his day. Th, phy will flourish for a. while, then pines: which Benthani amt mp- be almost forgotten for m.-ny (specially the latter. had in V1". ytars,-and. later, emerge from ob- as the supreme good of me mad - : not that of the tow . much as that of thi-1 iiaifizudl greatest happiness . the tlndlvidual to Personal happiness abstraction. either; the demo 1 happiness had to be Slll'll)(lftn(l S; own words: "Actions are righzl proportion as they tend to W: mote happiness: tend happiness.” strict dlvldusl should be so guided an trained that he would always 100. in the l i Pleasure. according to Mitt the same thing as hapntllcss only when the senses had been plan-Q under complete control of has in. tallect, and physical things the dominance of spiritual (am... I O I and other philosophers of em,” sincerity of purpose, fif7lll7iiC5' pursuit of happiness, for th. im lcgitmmte aim: It was not.however. ult. to believe that. it is ihPHnnl, middle of the 19th century that aim, -1-he momi education ..M Utllltarlunlsm became I fashinn- ti-..M with it. 0,. H 1,”, Whi able and respectable theory; this Mill intended should go development was due mainly in us in itself A fine thin: T5, JOY”! 5W3” Muir 5117913 0"? M most serious flaw in it. Ms -t, the most nmazintz men In the obvious lack of attention tn 4,, history of political and social con- snlutps of my kind, W-,,. at txwoversy. Whutever his value as wrong, a philosopher-there are many nn- To suggest that no nu... . pines: that. dries not. appear true rt- Everybody tlons nice to happiness or anything cl.-' ttc of his cat temperament would he- t.r-mely dangerous as fashion. There are quite en.-nigh incentives to the pursuit. of pin. Slll'E terlnl concept. of Utilltarianlstn give them added strength; and can be assumed that it c: lrrl. ”l5.R()IFiEiSiSIUNALiMCKRDS4 T mnsu .t. , of U”? Strut: l5'EKa:'umb8l was their fathurm It. might even be net:csS.try go, renounce hm order t. tho teal oncenti-ate on the Kmd of Me" It "35 "Gt 3 lihilosnph ood moral action. or it would no. mount. to anything, In MW. wrong as t W promote the reverse )1: The desire and th ctlon complemented cacti WWI This, in turn, lrnplied ,f,' moral education. The 1: proper moral (illfcfl,-"L vuu twig Utllltarianism. as taught in W" tad place among the valucs V.'lI,.hh take for the abundant W. T.” ivldual as for the but. TRCF, it it is. "-z-A allrl which does not promote: --.3, is tn suggest. Anna-tn. knows that 50'lF are right and some in; ron,f, per so. without. any ref-it. At all events, a philosophy whir- crhnps was perfectly safe in t-in ands of Mill or any other mu. moral and psyrhv-l--:t- 9!: I pen-.1. In word often used. thnvtzli rroneously. to represent. inn. lncss) these days. without 74 an.- it is tht concept. not the muvi. tl one, that is now being arit'.1l'c. tntcrlal Muflteson. Peulte 8: . Nicholson A. W. MATKLSON. 12.0. A. H. PEAKE. B.A.. lJ..B. JOHN P. NI(JHOl.B()N. LLB. Barristers. Etc. Collections - Money To l..oIn I75 Gruftan Street Mucfhee & Trainer 8. Ir. Mu-PHEE. rm. Q.C. I. sonncuum TRAINOE. B.A. mrrlneru. Eu: &aif I Money to l.onn J. S. Tuvlor. R.O. ()l'TOMl-ZTRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fun-d Corner Ifcnt and Queen su. Office Phtme 9133--House 4755 LLB. BABRISTER. SOLICITOR, lite. Phillipa Julldlng Ill Grafton Street Cnllcctilrl ,. Gander 8: Hcszurd GHJEBT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB J. Elmer Blanchard. H. A. crnt in cities of more than 100.- 000. There nro scvernl rcnsnns. nil of them good. vhv farmers don't hdulgc in alccbcl so much as ur- ban people. Most farmers nre frugal and thrifty. and momv sncnf. in alcohol can seem I w--str. There rise is a social aspect. In I lnrvzo city it m1n may go on n bender without many of his frlmds knowing nhout it. That. isn't possible In the cnuntrv. Windsor Dally Stir. C.m-...,.C.j 7Ae t'?oe&t' 6-uzexz FROM YOUTH AND AGE ' 0 Youth! for years In many and ltweel, Tia known that. than and I were one; I'll think it. but is fond conceit.- It. cunnot be t,hIt thou art gone! Thy Vesper-bell hIth not. yet. toll'd- And thou were aye n. is bold! What. strange disguise him now put. on. To make believe that thou In gone? Burt-ten Ind sollclto - isnnmsri-:R. souciron, Rettrtirrment may be I 1:11:91-r nf mono, to La... NOTARY, Etc. man s or rears away u it is ,.165 Queen st. -. Phone 4231 lmraortpnt that preparations be cuudhn Bulk ni Comm?!" um: - ma . 0 case this sudden change - -m-no--H ---------M - --4 In the mem m or me- c'"'5- 'i- ,W9""'4 Bell. Mutltleson 8. Planned hobbies will llclfl to molt! 3- H1! yaBl's to come much mm ln- uuzmsnsn. SOLICITOR. Foster tn-estlntz than lust killing time. 4 NOTARY. Etc. nnrrlntern, Snlleltarl. Ftr. Niagara F'nlLs Review. Eutern Trult. Building 5 ii, m.;i,i" Q4, -i G. R. FOSTER. '.i..H. Farmers arr the most ' .. .1: CnAmi0rnsT"wNo hum on City nmi Farm of all Ontario purple in the use bg Propertie- of alcohol. nccorrllnrr to the Al- H' J' OM: M": R' ' Ibo ntehmoml sum cohnllsm Rose.-trrii Fnunrlntlon of "onunn ” me ' P It I Charlottetown, l'.F..l. Ontario. The ratio of atgst.-liners In ' ' ' ' , TT-" Cg rurnl areas is 3-3 percent. com- rho" 391 i Ffederic A, Large, Ptitcfllu '0 illegal ln1rl?m- ----- -- 3..-mt", sottoitoi-, Notary v mun 9: tin er . bonus 011: 3 1 31 k g C 1, n 'iitng 2-'4 twrcrnt In places of from 10,- M' -Anmn Farm.” o'c' oy.Chllf'Ii(IH:ffIn':',mI(f.1I5. Ii.” 000 to l00.00 people. and 24 vwr- B-A-. I-I-J1 IN", on (my M... irnm. Barrister Ind soltcllo Bank of Colnme u Building Charlottetown Money to Loin Palmer 8: Huslum A. J. RASLAM. B.A., LLB. Blrrlultor. Etc. i Bank of Nov: Seotln Chamber! Churlnttaetown, P. E. L MONEY T0 LOAN Dr. W. R. Carson CIIIBOPBACTOB Pnimor Orudunto cnannorrlrrown DIII M32 201 Prince Sf. Dr. A. L. Muclsuuc DENTIST Dental X-Bay GLORIA BUILDING l l l 1 I19 Onftan BL Phone an Dr. K. A. Muciucltorn ounrtsr Dental x-ny 'Abon Ohulottelown Clinic :0: Queen as Dlnt out I nee these locks in silvery trltpa. This dmnvptng nit. this alter-'d nine: But. nprtnqtlde blossoms on thtv lips. And turn take numbing from thine eyes! Life in but. thought: so think I will Tl-mt zoluth and 1 Ire housemates I. are of primary importance. The llrklund lake. Moncton. Illlnll (hnlc Bldl-. Chnrlotleluwn. IM Prim-a St. J. 'A. Curr'utlicTs..P--0- McDONAl.D. CUIIRIE 8: CO. CHARTERED ACCIIUNTANTS Ilontroul. Quebec. Ottun. Toronto. sulnt John. Properties 7. A. McGuigan BARIIISTEIC. S(ll.l('.lT()ll NOTARY. Etc. Currlo llullding Gordon E. MacMillan l.A.. LL.B.. mumls'rr.n. S()l.l(VfTt)lt. Itc. tihartuttrtmrl DIAL M93 Byron J. Grant. 0-9- l)l'T()MY.TEI.Vl I20 lien! Street l0ppnnlto nova-ro lltitrll 7 Allison M. Giilis. LLB. BABRISTEB. Sfll.l(TIT0lt, Hil- lift .4 .. l'h:-uo I” I3! Richmond St. - Clutrtuttrtntn Phone 590 -....- ot-'rour.1-msr , 12: Kent Street rtw-W -1”” I1! hunt street I'lmnu. I- (nut to slmp '3',. H. II. DOANE CHARTERED A PIOIO IM1 - IMI ERMA P. IlIcI'Il':RSON. (),A. olhu emu: at llnllfu. Ilnncton. -aurtuel Tnylor Coleridge. III aunt 0-one at. ubututuunwn IANDOLPII W. MANNING. (LA Ialtvlllo, Llvu-pod. New Glugow. Tran Ind Shcrbrookr. l'.mmnvcf- ton, Chlrloltetown. I-Ztlnmnlnn mu I1-if UUGIIINTANTS r, n, nut 1" KEVIN '1. ntcnrz.-.'sA."zt IL John'I. Amhcrnt. ll.-ivlm Comer I" ,