v 559??" ____ y, _,_ ___ _ [HE GvARvIAN._cHAn_Lm"re'1-owrv _ yarsqujrmye. 194a prices and inflation. ' ' “Quo Vddis" I pi THE GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded in 1887i, Authorized ae Second Clare Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa. Preeldent, lan A. Burnett; Vice-President. Wm. R. Burnett: Seep-Trees, G. M. Burnett; Editor and Managing Director, J. B. Burnett; Associate Editor,’ Frank Walker. "The Strongest‘ Memory is v/Zrfeilljrhl... T the Weakest Ink." Tflcruaniforrrsrowrv munsonvfiiis.‘ an." no - ’ A civic Problem While controversial issues have not arisen in connection with the forthcoming civic elec- lion, there is one ma-tter with which our citizens are vitally concerned, and whic-h they will ex- pect to hear discussed at Friday night's annual meeting of the City Council. This is with re- gard to the progress, if any, made in inducing our fast-growing suburban population to assume the responsibilities and privileges of citizenship. The rapid expansion in building activities in areas contiguous to Charlottetown has caus- ed a very serious health problem. A special committee appointed at the last session of thc Legislature took note of this fact, expressing concern at the conditions, particularly in respect to wa-ter supply, sanitary facilities and housing accommodations. The committee made the fol- lowing recommendations: (I) That provision be made for the im- mediate employment of a qualified engineer. (Z) That the compilation of _o building code be proceeded with immediately. i (3) That a Well Diggers’ Act and regula- tions in respect to the operation of the some be immediately prepared. (4) That barn and sanitation standards be immediately prepared with a view to improving the mil-k supply. The proposed Well Diggers‘ Act was intra- duced and passed, forbidding, in certain pre- scribed areas, the digging of wells without a license from the Minister of Health, a-uthorizing the Minister to make regulations prescribing thc location of wells in relation to buildings or sani- tary facilities on the same or adjoining prem- ises, etc. Primarily, of course, the enforcement of these and other regulations is a matter for thc Provincial Government, but it is also a prob- lem of very serious import ta our City Council. The logical solution would be the installation of the City's serwerage and water facilities in the areas affected. lf the present expansion g continues it is difficult to see how this can be avoided. Every expdnding municipality has the some problem to meet, and our Charlottetown Council cannot go on shelving it year after year. It involves w,orking out proposal; that will be mutually acceptable, or at least mutually fair and equitable. An excellent civic election platform cou-ld be drafted on this issue alone, which in the long-range view is perhaps. the most important with whic-h we are concerned. Hint To Housewives Mr. H. G. James, Sherbrookc, writes as follows on how to improve the quantity of but- ter in o household: "lf a few more house- wives played tricks with their butter instead of placing it in the refrigerator until they need- ed it on the table, the butter situation ‘in'many households would be considerably eased. For instance, take one pound of butter, soften it, put a cup and a half of milk on the stove until it simmers, add the contents of one envelope of a packet of gelatine mixed in a little warm milk or water, stir and let cool; place your pound cl butter in a bowl, add half teaspoon salt and a dash of dandelion butter coloring (35 cents o _ bottle which will last four to six months, making aver two pounds of butter per week); pour over the butter the milk and gelatine mixture and beat with ordinary egg beater to a consistency ol heavy whipped cream; place in container, and refrigerator or cold pantry. The result—twice the volume of your original pound, weight i 3-4 lbs. of something that looks like butter, tastes like butter and as a matter of fact is butter but more of it. During the rationing period our household treated butter this way because we had not enough to go round otherwise. And since rationing has been discontinued we haven't CIIOIIQlII money to go round." Prices Inquiry Prime Minis-ter King's promise of a parlia- men-tary inquiry into the rise in the cost of liv- ing, will, it ic hoped, be conducted in a fa-ir and non-partisan manner. The public has been prone to lay the blame for higher prices at the door of particular groups in the community, and without any reliable evidence some industries and enterprises Ihave been accused of profiteering. In some quarters there is a naive belief that the reimposition of the excess profits tax would somehow bring prices down. There are many popular illusions on the subject but usually the underlying causes of inflation and high prices have been overlooked or misunderstood. _ The committee, suggests an exchange, can render a real service in the education of pub- lic opinion by calling as witnesses qualified, trained economists to relate the maladjustment caused by the war to present economic condi- ‘tiona and particularly the price level. What is not sufficiently understood by the public is that today's high prices aie attributable to the scar- cities due to war’: destructiveness. Coupled "with the scarcity of many of the material things which mankind has come to regard as necessary lta existence there has been an excess of money lgupply and purchasing power, likewise attribut- able to the war. With scarcity of goods on the fone hand and excessive money supply on the ,atlrer, price levels have been forced up. Last- ‘ing benefit: will be achieved if the committee “fin ille course of its hearings, educates the coun- -,lry to enundentanding that greater production If there have been occasional instances of profiteering they should be brought to light and the resulting publicity will probably be suffici- ent to end them. gA fairly-conducted inquiry will probably reveal that no group or class in the community have been profiting excessively. lt is likely to disclose that in a period of infla- tion everyone is caught in its grip and that high- er wages and higher prices are merely attempts to keep a foothold in the whirl of economic forces. IIDIIURIAI. NOTES Devaluati-oni of the franc, whatever it may eventually mean to the stability of other cur- rzncrcs, should ensure greatly increased French exports of wines, laces and china. a n a a A bad third to a private individual in Que- bcc and thc government of Ontario, the Domin- ion government is at last preparing to bring in immigrants by modern means, via air. a n n w At the consecration of Very Rev. R. H Waterman to the office of Coadjutor Bishop o: Nova Scotia in Halifax, Tuesday, the Presbyter- ian Clrurch in Canad-a was represented by the llcv. T. H. Bussell Somers, M.A., $.T.M., Mod- erator of the Synod of the Maritime Provinces. I 1| l. w Mr. J. F. Arnctt is to be congratulated on being rc-elected by a-cclamation Mayor of that progressing and "coming city" of Summerside. He has a magnificent record of public service to his credit, and Summerside may well feel proud of its first and representative citizen in the maintenance of the progress and dignity of the community. .. .. .. . interest in the civic election is livening up. What has tended in recent years to create lack of interest is failure on the part of success- ive Mayors and Councils to conve-ne a meeting of electors fa give an account of their steward- ship. Public spirited citizens continue to throw their hat in the ring for civic elections. Public service is arduous and without significant re- muneration and we should show our apprecia- tion of the efforts of those who would serve us. n w n e Premier Jones in the nature of things is a politician, but he is a farmer first and all the time. In Ottawa this week interviewing the powers-that-be there he devoted most of his talk to fertilizer, milk. butter, margarine—"if mar- garine was permitted to flood the market, it would destroy the dairy industry." That is talk- ing horse-—or rather cow-sense. ~1- w l. s We are not nearly so mature a generation as we fondly think. W_e look with con- descensiamon our ancestors who, being loath to change the law when it obviously needed chang- ing, fell back on fictions. The arbitrary‘sel- action of standard periods for such things as the dollar saving program enables us to discrimin- ate against certain countries, while holding high the banner of non-discrimination. n w n o Official estimates of the Australian wheat yield for 1947-48 have been reduced by 36,000,- 000 bushels by summer rains-the heaviest mon- soonal rains in the wheat belt for 30 years. The Australian harvest time is normally settled and dry. This year it has been almost incessantly ive-t in New South Wales, and wet also in Vic- toria and Queensland. The effect has been twofold. Wheat has been damaged by excess mdlsturc and the harvest has been delayed for weeks because the machines and men have been unable to operate. According to the Saskatchewan News the market this year for pelts shows signs of strength, and better prices are expected, es- pecially among short haired furs. At a special ranch and wild mink sale held by the Fur Mar- keting Service in December, i947, approximate- ly $100,000 worth of pelts were sold. A strong demand was ‘evident, with on increase over the PIGVIOUS YEGF S PYICES. I i I I Vocational and academic training will soon be‘ provid-ed inmates of Saskatchewan provincial jails under a new government plan administer- ed by the corrections branch of the Department of Social Welfare. The program, a resulvt of recommendations contained in the Saskatche- wan penal report of i946, calls for vocational training such as farm and motor mechanics, woodworking and carpentry to be taught in the jails. Academic teachers will also be posted in jails to assist inmates with ordinary school and correspondence courses. i i i I The Charlottetown "Y", which i; the oldest organization of its kind on this continent, has held its 92nd annual meeting, and reported pro- gress all along the line, notwithstanding that it has been handicapped recently Ivy-lack of a central meeting place waiting the completion of the magnificent new building, corner of Prince and Euston. Under the Jnergetic and inspired guidance of Mr. James MacConnell, the mem-i bership, juvenile and adult, has been kept act- "ely together, the institution of regional "gangs" tending_to sustain and develop the interest of "the rising hopes" in the work and objectives of the "Y". - i I I I Earl Haig of Bemersyde, lst Earl, died this date i928; muc-h of the success of the Allies in Great War I was due to his friendly relations with the French, and to his ready acceptance of an Allied Command with Foch as generalissimo. Made Field Marshal on January l, l9i7, and Knight of- the Thistle in July the same year. After his brilliant advance of August I918 he was awarded the M-ilitary Medal~ from France. On his retirementhe received the Order of Merit in l9l9, an earldom and $400,000 together with the thanks of Parliament for the eminent For the flret time In our hil- oory a ZOO-pound women can carry $1.0. worth. of groceries through n revolving door. — Brendon Sun. Under present oireumltanael. the business of renting houses ie what the English call e mug’: game: no- body will go lnto it. And because nobody will go info it, there is e severe shortage of rental housing in Canada a shortage w-hlch will not. be appreclably'relleved till the Government comes to its senses and throws rent. controls into the discard wher'e they properly be- long. - Calgary Herald. That en aeoueed husband had sufficient provocation to Justify tire spanking of his wife was the can cluslan reached in c. Windsor wart. It's nice to know husbands still have some rights. But, remember men, there must. be ample provo- catlon- sufficient to convince a court. -before you take the little wonran over your knee. It. would also be a good idea to ensure that. the wife hasn't. e rolling pin handy. -Windsor Star. Motorists should take time to clear their rear windows of ice und frost these wintry days. Marry cars are seen on the roads with the driver's rear vision almost ivholly blocked by an accumula- tion of frozen snow or a mall): of frost on the back windows. i: Lakes only e. fe-w minutes to remedy such a condition and to allow if. to exist invites the danger of ac- cidents. - Brandon Sun. The red planet Mare — named after the Roman deity who stands as the symbol of war —ls now ris- ing to ascendancy in our January slay. Astronomers gazing into the interminable‘ neutrality of the heavens tell us this mysterious planet. about which so much has been thought and written, wul grow brighter until at last. he out- shines his two rivals in the nightly show —Saturn and Regulus. With three such performers in the sky, star guzers who breve the zero air will be rewarded with a brilliant picture. saturn glows with a gold- en radiance; Regulus gleams Like a diamond. But. ll; is ruddy-faced Mars which holds place of hono‘ in this slderlel theatre. And Mars ls the mythical god of war, and this is a. year pregnant. with huge uncertainties and unknown events. -Iiondon Free Prms. The Ottawa Journal repeate ite opinion that "the primary func- tion of a school should be to turn out. young people with a love ana reverence for education, and above all with understanding that. edu- cation ls a continuing process." To that, “Hear, hear!" Especially the port. about it. being a. continuing process. Some graduates we have known, however, disdain even the comlnulng use of n dictionary, and apparently, despite all their school- ing. never learned how to look up anything in an encyolopaedia, Branlford illxposltor. The story of the pampered Flint. youth who has finally gone to jail for stealing his stepfather‘: car al- most. provides lire own editorial comment. Hen le e boy, if, who. a year ego, stole his mother’: rife savings of $15,000 and was found by police only after a four-month spree. Ills mother refused to pro- ‘secute, so he went. soot. free. Now he's been apprehended for ca! stealing and has begun a one w five-year term in jail ~and his mother has left his stepfather bo- causc the later insisted on prosecu- ting. Mother love is one of the finest things the world he: to offer, but. like all fine things, we much is too much. Here's a mother so foolishly doting that, in her eyes her son literally can do no wrong. and when he does lt.. she doesnt. want. hlm punished. She must. re- ulize that. there comes a time when neither she nor anybody else in the world exrcept. the boy himself“ can save him from the results of his folly. He's a grown man, even though she'd try to keep him mam- mafs boy. I-fe must. pay the permit,‘ for her faollsh overfondnes-s, which never reckoned the cost. of her ‘n- dulgence. She thought to give him everything, t.o make life easy for him. S-o he's in Jail. It's food for though/c. - From Windsor Star.‘ One oi the reaeane why ea many people in the world are suffering from one kind of neurosis or an- other, doctors claim, la that. they live too close ID their nelgbbare and too close to each other. Coupl- ed with living boo close to tho nex-t. door neighbor la the ineacap able fact. that. as the coat of home construction hee gone up the aloe of the dwelling has gone down so that. it. la now quite comm n to find femlllee living in q re where they are literally falling ell over one another and where per- enu can find no piece of quiet a- way from noley children —or vice verso. In this connection some ln- teresting information contained ill an old builder's book ehowe how much the modem, moderately prie- ecl home hes shrunk in size as compared wit-h ITIJnOGHlOGBOI of the 1890's. For example, in lfll, for t7300, a brick house could be built that. contained twelve roome. had three floors end approximately 3,500 square feet. of floor epeoe. For the same price today a new home would contain a ernelllah living morn. a kitchen. a email hall and perhaps a dining alcove, two or three email bedroome end e bathroom. The building would be at the moat. a etorey and e half ln height and contain about 1,000 square feet. of floor epece. if the people ol Canada "are to have larger living quarters it. would seem that present cobra of construction must be dreetleelb out. probably through new methods of building with new end rmréh cheaper mem- \- r of commodities and goods is the solution to high f‘ part he played in defeating the enemy. ' 1' - —--———-——-.».r-. . lelL —IrentIeM-$oltor. ‘By Robert. s. Bergboff. I. D. ln "The Canadian Doctor) "Whittier are vou going" coping, prattling little chap? Gleefully you clap your baby hands es you push your home-made one meet sailboat. ecroee the tub of water-your own private ocean. Out it goes, back it camel at the pull of your string. Master of your; own destiny, Llfe ia/almple, ir it not? “Wh-ther are you going" my little man, with your school books dang- ling from a strep. and your top swinging In the palm o1 your free hand? Still cure-free, are, you not, a creuliwe of instinct. unconsciously following g plan, apart from the world and yet a part of lt.. Still selling your toy ship, but. already others are pulling and guiding its Course. "Whither are you going" you stalwart youth in full p- ssesslo of LII your physical and mental facul- ties? Does that tilt. of your chin and your furrowed brow bespeak minor bettles—some lost, some won? ‘There is confusion in your face. vexation too, but purpose and dc- termlnaflon in your eye! March on. my man, you are in the army now, the army of life. May God speed you and guide you, and guidance you need like never before. Fnd your path Leotards happiness! Be tolerant and patient for a moment, ah youth,- and harlsen lo this homely message. Man ls horn with an insatiable desire la avoid pain, misery. suffering and wsnt, and t.o rchieve perfect happiness. , Even though through lhe years he senses that. this is impossible, on and on he goes ‘n his mad futile search for this Will o‘ the Wisp. The paths toward Peace and diver- gent. g . Some follow the hlzhwevs that lead to gold. to glory, to con- quest, and some few tread the narrow trail of service, service to their God. service to their fellow man. All roads if travelled doggedly tenaciously and with farthrightness converge to u ocrrrnon objective. ultimate peace and contentment. Which will you choose? Now, ch youth‘; is the appointed time for your decision! "Whither are you going” man of maturity? Your jaw has lost. its egg- gresslve contour, your brow is wrinkled with care. the- natural re- suits of your battle with life. You sail your ship with difficulty HUW. far the ocean is no longer your ocean, but teams with craft—some friendly-mthers contlnously cross- ing and recrosslng your bow, har- assing and endangering you at every turn. Possibly you should have taken a different. a Wide!‘ tack, bypassing thie seething meelstorm, and selling your ship on some smooth distant water in peace, end solitude? Does that look in your eye bespeak despair? Have you selected the wrong path towards happiness? , Ah. men of maturity, Again give heed to the voice of experience. Sail an, sail on your ship of life, with grim determination! Un- furi your canvas. sweat you and lqgbgfl surge for-ward r_nd drive your ship into that vast armandu. They will reach the shore and so must. you. Let one import-enl- 9""- clple guide you.—~Sall by compass. but let. your guiding beacons be Friendship, Fair Play, Justice and a figlplng Hand to your neighbor in dlllxoel. "Whither are you evlnl" I n"! toothless, decrepit old mun? Too lute. too late to ask that question now! Your ship has reached it! harbor—Your life's work is done- Your face l: lined with "T9. YOU!‘ eye; m-mdimmed, but rah-Ahoy re- tain the faded smile that beamed. from them as yOu pulled 3'0"!‘ hcmemade one master on a atria:- Sq your life we: worthwhile? And the light, in your eyes le the PTO- jeetlon of the memories of acts of kindneee, of helpfullness to Y0K" neighbor? Well done, old Skipper! Rpusg yourself ta n, final effort: Back on your ship. twine those gnarled old hands once more around your rudder and ‘with tilted chin and n steadfast eye sail your ship courageously into the Calm If"! peaceful harbor a_f eternity. The Doctor-An Ideal The initials, M.D.. after the fllmfl of your family doctor. mean much that is important ta the health and happiness of the individual. the frmlly, and the community. Your faitfly physician is more than just a person highly,- trainer! and skilled in the medical profession. This skill, plus human kindness and understanding, the will to Elle pain and prevent death. foraet- fulneee of aeif in service to hum- anity - ell of than qualities make the family‘ physician one of the most valuable and beet loved per- eons in the community. Your doctor is, first of all. a healer qr the sick. Upon begin- ning the practice of medicine he bakes an oath l4; consider D81‘!- mount the health and well-being of his patients. Rain or shine. night. or day, many are the true stories of the calls he maker to help rave the life of a child with pneumonia, deliver e baby, or ease the suffering af an elderly per- eon. Nat only II the‘ physician u heal- er of the physically rick but nieo e healer of the mentally lll, Un- publlclaed but unforgotten are the telke in the privacy ofthe phyrlc- len'e office 5n which he helpe re- eelemble the misguided thoughts 0,1 a patient with financial troub- lee or one with mar-ill difficulties. Your physician ls aware that many of hie patient: who complain to h‘m of phyelcLl aches and paints actually ere suffering from un- derlying mental ettele. tor to hang up hie hat, roll up hle sleeves and accompllrh hie mission of mercy. The physician playa the part of public servant in the corn- munlty. Palestine ltee e unique piece In the history of three religions — Judelem. ohnmnrty end Islam. i No home lo too poor for the doc- . .46”; ihwdéeae SEXTON’! EPITAPH (Fran "Ding Dang Bell") These be the eahee of Jacob Todd, Sexton now in the land of Nod. Digging he lived‘, and digging died Pick, mattock, spade, and naught beside. Here oft at. evening lie would all Tired with his toll, and proud of it; Watching the pretty Rabin flit. Now sl-umbere he as deep as they He bedded for the Judgment Day. —Walt.er de lo More. Rikwv‘ Old Charlottetown (All P. l. T.) ___ DEER DESTROYED During, or more likely prior Lo. the actual settlement of the Is- land by the French, e destructive fire swept a large purl. of its sur- face, causing enormous damage Before this calamity occurred, the Island must. have been stocked with deer. Even to this day bllCli antlers are sometimes found, prov- ing their farmer existence here. in his childhood the writer has heara Lin: old people tel-l that, in some great by-gone fire, all the deer lied been destroyed, and, although trhey dld not. know when it. hap- pened, the tradition could only have referred to this fire, during or before the early daya of French settlement. Mr. Stewart (in hrs History) refers to 1r briefly. It as likely that when it. occurred fish- ermen were frequenting these shores, but. if so, their settlement. must. have been of a very tempor- ary nature, and there ls no record of them. Of the the destruction of the deer and of the TOTESbu, there seems no room for doubt. —Warburton's History Britain Gives History A Landmark (By W. N. Ewerjn United Kinxdfim Information) a_.__ At. the end 'of each year one la tempted to assess the value of ltl political happenlngi. t0 wonder for which of zts events it. will be remembered in history. Thnl ls not easy, often quite impossible. Who, for instance, in A. D. 622 would have chosen as the "event of the year" the flight. of a certain Arab from Mecca to Mcdlnfli OI‘ 1Y1 1581 the crossing of the Urals and the capture of the town of Slblr B. Roy Holman Stability Mcleure Bldg. B. ROY WWO steed it ie the imperialist power which, hlvlng dellberetel stimul- ated end encouraged nut. one] and democratic alpiretlone in peoples who, e few generations ago. knew nothing either of nationality or of democracy. has firmly’ and decisively insisted on relinquishing all authority over the greatest. subject population in hstory. And the process has been entirely peaceful. It ls true. there hove been conflicts and there has been bloodshed; but. they have sprung entirely from domestic and internal quarrels in which the British hat/g no part. The "British Raj" has been ended without the firing of a ehot: not because it. has collapsed, but because it. has completed its, work. The very quietude of thc change ha! distracted attention from its mlznltude and from its importance. It has deluded game vfltlcg 1mg for With Economy ln Fire Insurance- l. A. Lewis \ HOLMAN Phone 396 these two great. and entirely in. dependent, stafee in the piece or the British litmpire 1n Indie, and of a third, Burma, will be under-- stood ln all its significance. And because of this the year‘ 1947 w,“ be one of the great. landmarl" ,ln the world history of pgllflcnv development. 19TH CENTURY INNOVATION Josephine Bonaparte introduced the custom- of daily baths with soap in Europe. Soothe them with MINAR‘D'S thinking that because ll is against all precedent, and rig inst, their own theories, t cannot be real. Bu! as it crrncs to be seen in’ Pflrloeciive and in proportion. this; establishment, in such a we)’, of. week, buying and paying the who will be only too glad to c Charlottetown . . . . . . . . CHARLOTTETOWN classes of Livestock. In case you do not live handy where our Buying Station cart benefit you, get in touch with our Buyers MR. D. C. TOMPKINS, Summerside‘ . .. . .. MR. C. D. ROGERSON, 70 Up. MR. G. O. WEST, Box 539, Summerside-Phone 7-2 (Bedequg) SWIFT IIAIIAIllllII Illl. LTB. LINIMENT P R b f , nick" lyqyu-ndggm‘ melee rcouauiur 5'14"“: Na ltron i e 6 c °d°'~ ll-el FARMERS Our Buying Station in Charlottetown is open 6 days a highest Market Pfices for o" ontact you promptly. .. Phone 789-4 Hillsboro $t., . . . . . . . Phone m4. PHO N'E I457 PROFESSIONAL CARDX GAUDET 8. HASZARD Barrielcre. Bollaltnre. Notaries, lite Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. MONEY T0 LOAN 011.5521‘ A. GAUDET, ma. one y» €Y.‘€Y\ H. R. DOANE 8r CO, Chartered Accountants 58 Grafton snug Charlottetown Phone 2080 n \\' €{‘$\C£ nu m i3 w. Manning, c"; d‘ .- by Yermak and his C ‘s: or in 1169 the birth of a baby to the family of Bonaparte in “Ajaccla in Corsica That. now forgotten battle of Pontenuova, a few miles arway, must. have seemed far from import- ant to the folk of Ajaccla. Q; in 1600- when Dutch traders had raised the price qr pepper from 3 shillings lo 3 shillings and 125 London traders. lo try to break the monopoly. formed the "Cam- peqy of the Merchants of London trading to the not Ina-lee." with e modest capital of £10,080 - it would have required prophetic gifts to assess the historical im- portance of that, move. So it may be that. 194'! Will, a century or more hence, be rememb- ered for something. for scme happening which we hardly notic- ed or did not notice at nil. But. it will certainly be l member-ed, ea well, a: the year of the ending of the British Empire in India. b! which the story began with the meeting of London merchants to proteeregelnst the increased price of pepper. For thl; ending of a great Empire has -- apart. from all other consideration — e quality wlfch marks it out for historical l brknce. It is an event ‘which has no parallel.- rollepsed in defeat or in revolution. But never before has an "imperial- lst" nation deliberately planned and carried out. the transference of power from itself to a "sublevl" nation. In the case of India and Pakistan and Burma, the empire mrhich has ended, had been established by armed conquest. Between conquer- or| and conquered there was e wide gcp of race and language. of rellglon nnri social waye. The "Indian Empire" was a clastcnl example of capitalist lmperlalnn. The manner at it's end. however. has confounded all the Marxist prophets, There should have been an increasingly intense strufll! between "oppresaors" and "oppress- ed," culminating in a violent up- heaval and n revolutionary seleure of power, or In the brutal re- pression by the “impel-lulleu" of their freedom-loving victims. But n hee not. unopened w- In- "nerves" 5%“ eerervntedeey I re-elweye loo lied. “Nerveefiie omits molberbleod- a. Klheyfleeteeee. flnhprevadedtee aflierilhoyehebelteclaer bleed Iqillee Id laoebe odde- Iii"- berhche, Iuederhmleeleieeemlo- append. Dell’: Pl: eseleln detail“. d thallium-eel bebnebre rmladlm. _Greet Emplren in the past have often crumbled to decay: they have Candler!‘ Bank of Commerce Bldg C arlattetown, PILL‘ nonnm and co. Chartered Accountant: ii Eeatern Trust Building ll / Phone rm - Bu! are fl j Charlottetown j n. M. salons. an. y; g lteeldent Partner j é-‘exocc- . . . ...-~~~w»~""- g‘_ WILLIAM A. REDDIN BA. B.Bc., 1,1,3, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. m. I-O-O-F. BldL-Next ta Reddln um. moms Edit PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Mlmeagrapiing aarde and olroulare, concert programs, wueepondenee ‘ tying and bookkeeping. HELEN GIDDEN Telephone 1890-3 Apt. No. 4 Connnu ht Apll. Pownal Street .'\)‘I\ J. E. BIIRIIETT, l.l.. B. Barrister, Solicitor, Bic. ODDFELLOWS BUILDING I34 Richmond Street Charlottetown, P.E.l. Telephone 2380 8v on. J. c. GALLANT. 8.51:. f’ DENTIST 1 Ploltarrl Building l I51 Greet George St. g ‘a \.\. r I r Office lloura: 9:30Ll2:0l y ::00— 5;00 ) ‘ ruour: m1 l 4.1 -~\\‘\,\*sr,*\r vvv\rv\rv\ CHARLES R. McQUAlD .A. Barrletelr’, Solicitor, Notary. Etc. Ielern Trust Building. g) Charlottetown Phone l‘! ll ggvxvcxav. w r4. w. xmacww BELL 8r MATHIESON Illa-liven. Sollcltore, ea. it. B. BELL, M.L.A., b. L. MATIIIESON, 1.1.3.. no Attorncye at Lew LOANS on orrv nrvo renru, PROPERTIES l“ Richmond St. Charlottetown. P.ll.l. var. MATIIESON and PEAKE A. W. MATIIISON. ILC. A. ll. PIAKI. B.A.. l.l..! Barrlatere, eta. Calleotlone - Money to Loan It Greet George Street Charlottetown was ‘ H. F. McPIIEE, B.A., K.C. NOTARY. Ito. BABRIBTIB. SOLIOITOB Riley lulldlng Charlottetown l. A. McGUIGAN moron. arc. IAIIISTII. IOLICITOI OUIFIII BUILDING Money to Loan - Collection: Taxation y? urn. w. HIGGINS 5) Chartered Accountant r) Currie Building if Charlottetown § Tel. I636 P.O. BOX 452 A. Walther liauilet, |.|..e. Barrister. Solicitor. Eta. Phillipa Building 111 Grafton st. to Loan Collection: _»\. Money Josern a. MocMILLAN, LLB Berrleter. Solicitor, Etc. 75 Queen Street PHONE 770 Money lo Laln . __ Frederic A. ‘Largo ll. ll. BARRlbTl-IR, SOLICITOR, NOTAIKY llayal Bank oi’ Canada Chamber! Charlottetown. P.E.i. Sucoereor to (ieoreo J. Tweedy, ILC. (lolleetlnnr g; zvss sxmmeo AND cusses rmso d. S. TRY I. 0 Il y orromernrsr Corner ltent enrl Queen Ste. Phone 1056 Evening! by Appointment Phone: Residence i013 - x; ._ *,‘~,§,Rrfipu:\']\=.~vw:}w \~»kv;| on. vi. n. cursor Chiropractor Palmer Graduate Charlottetown M! Prince 8t. _ Phone l_°7_1 PALMER Ir l-IASLAM A. J. IIASLAM. 8.1L, l.l..!- ‘ anntuaren. m. . Bank of Nova Beetle Chamber! Charlottetown. P1,]. MONEY T0 LOAN M. ALBAN FARMER ‘L. lllul. MONI! ‘I0 LOAN IAIIIITII» IOLICITOI». l“-