PAGE FOUR 'l‘HE GUARDIAN Jfornln; Dally (Pounded In H1147) Authorised u: ltrnml Clan flail. Pun Office Dopntnn-nt, Ottawa. The hluml Huurdlun Publishing Po. Editor and Managing Director, J. ll. llurnelt. Anna-into Editor, Frank Walker. (‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink" x “CIIARLOTTETOWN. MONDAY, DEC. 6. I948 Trlfllng With The ll. K. Market (Mr. l-lowe) came in for a barrage of criti- cism ill the llousc on 'I‘hursday. The gen- eral feeling was expressed by Mr. Donald Fleming tPC—'l‘oronto-Eglinton) when he. said that the Government needed a sense. Mr. Howe did not directly deny that our export trade is falling off, although he threw out the remark that it had more doubled this year compared with 1929, quitc ignoring queries as to whether dollar valuc or volume was his yardstick. His real de- fence was that deliveries are getting behind suffice to meet demands, that the bacon con- tract with the U. K. could not be filled, that the same held true for eggs, and that there is just enough butter in Canada to see this country through the winter. The reason, however, for falling production is not the inability of Canadian farmers to produce these goods in sufficient quantity. It is the‘ uncertainty of markets, resulting from Mr. Howe's policy of practically writing off Brit- tain as a customer, that has caused the de- cline in production which now results in these demands not being met. of ilrgenc)’. of candor and a realization offlioll- COHBUIWDUOII. the pressing urgency of the trade situation. genlpmymellt and DODUIHUOH- g 'to participate in government they must be ,informed and it seems quitc clear that in ma“ Russia information is llol lorthcolning. on oats. barley and wheat, that flax may not "llssimlw rate increase. only one fifth as great. to more than 2'7 per cent. tDITORIAL NUIE Aid in Maritime coal production is What is equally necessary is a local market for the product. '11-“; ypnlgyo|~ of Trade and. cmnmel-ce Even industry founded or expanded here {contributes to tllc prosperity of lhc mines valuable as far as it goes. as well as of its own locality. I I v The Soviet Union no longer publishes sta- tistical information concerning its produc- cost of living, health, ull- For a people Today the C. P. Rfs appeal will be heard ‘by the Supreme Court of Canada from the decision of the Board of 'l‘ransport Com- s deferring consirlcrulion of part of the railway application for a ‘.20 per cent The Commission granted an eight per cent increase on September 20. The Charlottetown Junior Chamber of Commerce is considering a number of im- portant projects. Perhaps the most immedi- ately valuable one is that of lighting Gov- ernment Pond for skating. backed even by rink operators, for the open air produces the skaters and players who soon become acquainted with other skat- ing facilities. Furthermore, the‘ reduction in the total of court cases I111:- lnot been accompanied by a drop in the ratio of “repeaters”. the proportion of offender. with previous court appearances zllnounting It should be In Newfoundland rrerluer Smallwood has taken a leaf out of the P. E. I. Government book by in- troducing his new Liquor Act in Newfound- land as a “temperance measure.” As to whether there is justification for this description. says the St. John's Telegram. only time will show. It adds: "The provisions of the bill accord the public considerably greater latitude than be- fore to obtain liquor supplies. It removes c the last of the prohibition restrictions, and those who recall conditions under that sys- ‘tem must admit, unless prejudice blinds them to facts, that the restrictions imposed in the hands of the commissioners in time for them to become familiar with the con- tents before discussing them with the dele- They have The Massey Commission has been pain- ed by the failure, on the part of organ- izations submitting briefs on various as- pects of Canadian culture. to have copies gates who appear before them. set Dec._20 as the final date for filing Mari- time briefs, thereby requiring them to be prepared in great haste. O O Alexander Dumas, French novelist and dramatist, died this date 1870; soll of a ‘Marquis and aHartian Negress, he was taken to France as a youth; received a govern- klid nothing to make the community more temperate and were an encouragement to lawlessness and to demoralizing practices of many kinds. The question whether or not there will be greater indulgence in alcoholic liquors with greater freedom in procuring supplies will largely depend upon the re-I action of the public. . . . While emphasis fl laid upon the temperance motives under- bringing , ous oth lying the Government's purpose in in this legislation, we cannot refrain from _ luggesting that it exposes itself to the i pccusation of being guilty of a gentle ihypocrisy. Is there not some anticipation . or higher revenue returns from its business? l .... . . The increasing by 100 per cent of the permit to buy and the advances which have been made in the prices of controller's sup- fits of the business." An application, no of doubt, serves best." Juvenile Delinquency juvenile delinquency in Canada show an en- c-ouraging further decline last year in the number of court cases and convictions in- aging as it seems. cent in comparison with 1947. 155. l l bold Rotary motto that “he profits most who pla ment job, and immediately took to play- writing in which he was eminently success- ful. But it was as the author of his famous romances that Dumas attained world-ivicie fame. cycle, "The Three Musketeers". The three books of the D'Artagnan “Twenty Years After" and the “Viscomte de Brage- lonne" provided sufficient for a lasting repu- tation. But he proceeded to produce numer- er stories, this works total ‘.277 vols.) Well known in curling and bowling cir- cles ln many parts of the world, Mr. An- drew H. Hamilton, who for nearly thirty years was secretary and treasurer of the Royal Caledonian Curling Club, has died in I When he was presented four P11°5~ it may be ccmcndcdl are tc make cur‘ years ago with his portrait in oils a tele- chases mcrc difficult and cccsequcnfly to act . gram was handed to him from the presi- 55 a dctcrrcrlt t0 ccnsumpticni but to bc'dent of the Dominion Curling Association hcncst abcut the “much the Gcvcmmcnt of Canada. It carried greetings from the chculd frankly acnfit that by means of the 31,000 curlers affiliated to the association. high“ Prices it cxpccts m increase the pm‘ As another tribute he was presented with a certificate of honorary life membership of the the association-an honour held by few peo- Mr. Hamilton organized many curling visits of Canadians to Scotland and Scots to Edinburgh. Canada. O O O Six years ago on December The "cccmly Published Statistics c“ troops of the First Canadian Division in Italy began their offensive across the Moro River in the drive to Ortona and engaged 'in what Major-Gcilcral Chris Vokcs, volving juveniles. The totals are, however, lcommanding the Division’ described as “the m" Substantial enough to make dclmqucncy {most intensive fighting that the Canadians ,\ matter of continuing social concern. Sev- ‘had yet engaged my '0“ Dccmnbm. 5‘ um "a1 “Peels of the figure‘ 515° suggest that Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment at- i" some Yespecls the Shrmkagc i“ the cvcr‘ ‘tacked across the mouth of the Moro and, a“ "(Flume 0f dellnquenc-V i5 "ct 35 cnccu“ despite counter-attacks by enemy infantry and armour, managed to gain a foothold on During 1948 the "unlber of juvemlcs the high ground of the north bank to which charged before the courts and the number they dung precafiousm P-arflm. “p rive“ of ronvictiolis registered were approximate- on the extreme M,’ the ppcu descended 1y 40 P91‘ 99m 1°55 than the Peak Year cf to the river bed at midnight and, without 1942» having dmpPf-‘d bY another five P”? the assistance of artillery, scaled the op- H°wevcr~ posite bank and seized the hamlet of Villa juvenile court appearances still totalled 7,- Roafli Despite the mounting violence of 878 last year and convictions numbered 7,- enemy countemmacks’ the Pats and a And the figures d0 n°t °°V9r the addi‘ isquadron of the 44th Royal Tank Regiment tlonal cases of law violation which were somehow managed to hold on“, the“. prim dealt ‘Vim l" the Mme» at 5ch°°1 c" by In the meantime, the Seaforth Highlanders "19 Police 811d chnfhcare agencies’ m‘ were of Canada had moved two companies across handled unofficially by courts and court the river Opposite San Leonardo’ one of officers without a legal record being kept. ‘which fought its way up a gum, on the far The fflvfirflble asPect °f the figures is bank and held its ground against a stronr, mitigated to some extent by the fact that l attack by enemy tanim From December Silvie 1942 the"! has bee" 5 deem‘! cf ab°ut to the 10th, the Canadians improved their IiVB P81‘ 09m i" the luvmne 88° Emu!“ °f positions and fought off enemy counter- ‘lihe P0001650", m"! reducing the b“? attacks. Then, on the morning of the 10th, B00108 0f Illlvinuel fmemes- 515° it l! mic‘ the Edmontons broke out of the Seaforth WOT"!!! that the decmle in the mm 9f positions at San Leonardo and drove court cases between 1947 and 1948 was straight along the road leading to the Ber- _. lchléfly in ma“! w 1111M!‘ Offence!» the ardi crossroads and Ortona. The battle of l am in the nqnkr9§ mgloruoffenm beln: Ortona had begun. 'including his masterpiece, “Monte Cristo". 5. i943, then THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN 7A. filed 611m IF THIS WERE I-‘AITH God. if this \\'€l’f> enough, That I see things here lo the buff And up to the buttocks in Illlff‘, That l ask nor hope nor hire, Nut. in the husk. Nor dawn beyond the dusk. Nor life beyond death: God, if this were faith? Having felt Tlly wind ill my lace Spit sorrow and disgrace. Having seen Thine evil doom In Golgotha and Khartoum, And the brutes, the work of ‘fhllza- hands. Fill with iTIjIISIlFB lands Anri stain with hlcod the rcu l1 still in my veins lilo glee Ol‘ the black night, and the sun And the lost battle, runi If. un adept. The iniquitous lists I still accept With _l0.\'. and joy to endure nlll hi‘ withstood. And still to battle and perish fur a dream of good: God. lf that were enough? If to feel lll the ink of the slough And the sink of the mire. Veins of glory and file Run through and transpicrce and transpire. And a secret purpose of glory ill every part. And the answering glory of battle fill my heart; To thrill with the joy o! glrded men, To go on for ever and. fall and go on again. And be mauled to the earth and arise, And contend for the shade of a word and a thing not seen with the eyes; With the half of a broken hope for a pillow at night That somehow the right is the right. And the smooth shall bloom from the rough: Lord. if that were enough? -Roberl. Louis Stevenson (1850-94» Old Charlottetown (Am! r. l. u BURIED TREASURE "lilr. Stephen S. Squires. Clyde River. while moving an old build- ing on his premises, found a con- siderable sum of money stowed away in an old iron chest and buried in the cellar. It was prin- cipalLv coins (gold and silver), among which were lwo Bank of England notes, dating 1750. ‘The former occupant was a woman of a miserly disposition, who lived principally on charity, and al- though often in want of the ne- cessities of’ life. undoubtedly kept adding to her boarded treasure." —-Isla.nd Guardian. May 9.1890. Churchill's 75 Years (Ottawa Journull On the third of December, I874. the London Times printed among its birth notices the following: "On the 30th November at. Blenheim Palace, the Lady Randolph Churchill, prematurely. of a soil." Winston Churchill, beginning a5 a seven months child, had no time to waste from the first. Almost. from the hour of his birth they called him "Young Man in a Hurry“. Remaining in a hurry. what’. a. world of victory, glory and breathtaking struggle he has crowded into '75 years‘. Incredible it seems that. this man, a vigorous contemporary. should have more than half a century ago tln 1895 to be exact» fought with the Spaniards in Cuba (winning the Spanish Milit- ury Order of Merit, First. Classl; that he should have served with the Punjab Infantry in the Malak- and Field Fort-e (getting nlention- cd in llcspatchcs): that he was with the Nllc Expeditionary Forces and fought at. the Battle of Khllr- toum; and that. in the Boer War flu a correspondent for the Lon- don Morning Postl he was capt- ured by the grout General Botha! And Churchill, illl-iae wars bellinil him and still in his twenties, rc- tried his hand nt a novel tSav- rolal nrld lectured in the States and Canada. TIIOYC ed a toast to "Those yet uniiel self elected to Parliament Oldham. ant Winston Churchill quered South Africa? radical London newspaper. G. W. Stevens. lst. of his day. wrote of him Winston Churchill the storyl-countered with an amend ment: "The House without. grave appprehenslon ure military policy until times." "Mr. Winston Churchill ther". Overioyed. Uberll journalistic Masslngham malned in a. hurry. He had written a 11153013’ 0f the Infill!" CBmPBiKIL the Clirlncellorship of the Excheq- United “TIFF other worlds to conquer. As a youth at. a lllnner party. he had propos- twcnty-one years of ace who in Lwcnty years will control the tics;- tintes of the British lCInplfB". At 26 (after one failure) he cot him- fur He invited attack. Was ll. Field Marshal Lord Roberts or Lieuten- wllo con- askcd n Anil u fnmous journal- "Whet he will become, who can say? At the rate he goes. there will hardly be room for him tn Parliament at 30 or in England at .. ltadtcal jeers turned to cheers. “G0 nil-er the "on". Randolph They called him um until Mun- Churchlll hnd advised. Winston 1e11,, Churchill, taking his father's ad- ' _ . . ‘ vice. went after, of all people. the great. Joe Ghunberlaln. And when Broderick, Conservative War Min- ister, presented his war estimates. Conserva- tive - what classic irony in the cannot view the continual growth of purely military expenditure. The House desires to postpone the flnnl decision on fut.- calmer Scandalized, the Times said that repeats the disastrous mistakes of his fa- spokesman. _ Pale: L0‘- A flushlon Would llolp Should llumoty Fall will be Prime Minister - Liberal Prime Minister of England ~ I hope". . For his rebellion against party discipline Churchill was made to pay"; when Balfour succeeded Sal- isbury the heretic was excluded from his ministry. Said Chamber- lain to Margot. Asquith "Winston is the cleverest. of all the young men; the mistake Arthur made was to let. ‘him go“. Go Churchill did, the break final when Chamberlain raised the banner of Protection. Crossing the floor of the House one day he took a seal. beside a young Welsh sol- lritor whose name was Lloyd George. Two years later, the Tory party routed and dispersed Church- ill came back to the House as liberal member for North West .\i:lllt‘l'lCSl8I'. - - o - . l-‘ollowell the great Liberal days of Asquith, moyd George, Grey. Aiorley, Simon and Runclnlan, with Chilrchill in that goodly company the greatest warrior of all. He was Under-Secretary for the Colonies, Home Secretary, President o! the Board of Trade. One day, at As- qllltlrs house in Scotland. he was offered the First Lordship of the Admiralty. Wrote Churchill. in a high passage, describing his feel- ings; "The failing light. oi’ even- ing disclosed in the far distance the silhouettes of two battleships steaming slowly out of the Firth of Forth. 'l‘hey srelncd invested with a new significance." His new post was perilous glory? 'I‘he God of Battles, ln Blsmarclcs metaphor, might. soon fling the iron dice from his hands. What would happen? When Churchill went up to his bed that illgllt he rearl from a Bible on his table the passage where the God of Israel promises victory over "a peolpka great. and tall. l.lic children of‘ An- akiln" whom human strength alone might not. withstand. What came is history. Churchill. before the Kaiser struck. on his own responsibility had the fleet ready. He was "a veritable volcano of knowledge and of inspiration"; his odd words battles; his letters like victories. Yet the war mind. a hard critic, was critical of Churchill. There- was the episode of Antwerp: the trouble with "Jackie" Fisher; the tragedy of the Dzlrrlanellcs. At the warks close Churchill wrote his “World Crisis". largely a defence of ills own con- duct. and (as J. L. Garvin wrote) "with large claims to amends of a great Minister who. as commonly happens. paid most zlezll‘. not for his faults, but for the best. that. was in him".. o . . . World War I over. Churchill fell on evil days. Came his support of “White Russia“; his adventure with Koltcllzik; a. minor post ln a. Lloyd George ministry the had wanted uerl; defeat in Dundee; departure from Parliament. Inn Colvill. bril- liunt editor of the Tory Mornllv; Post. dipped his pen in gall Rllfi \\‘I‘OLC'.OL the "unsillkablc Mr ' Churchill". The former Tory. former-Liberal became an Ishmaelite. He would write for his living the once sold a piece to Mllcleaivs Magazine for $1001. learn brlcklllylng the held n, ullloll card us a bricklayer), paint pictures. In time he would return to the House as an Independent. Followed Billdlvin and Chamb- erlllln; thr- years when the Oxford Union was passing resolutions against "fighting for King and 1 Country" when Baldwin, n5 n "Scottish bard". was "singing the praises o! rural England", when a man named Hitler plotted to rule the world. Winston Churchill. 0n his cross-bench. cried out. in alarm. They called lilm a Cassandra. The God of Battles flung his dice down again. They culled Churchill back to the Admiralty, which sig- nalled “Winnie is back". And when - W35 Churchill, the Ishmneltte of Munich days who stepped into the Prime Mtnlstership. "I offer you nothing”, he told them but. "blood, sweat. toil and tears". What followed is the stuff of great history. The shock foreboded and withstood. In time he was of his race"; the greallat at. any . rate tn a thousand years. wrote: "The author of thtl speech Chamberlain tattered and quit, ti. for years, Winston Churchill met. u. be hailed as “the greatest mun And not only the greatest as Gigantic Chick Hatchery (St. Thomas Times-Joumal.) -—Near the town of Todmor- ten tn Yorkshire is the biggest chick hatchery in Europe, if not in the world. It. is the parent of some 50 other hafcheries between Todmorten and Halifax. and was started about 30 years ago by a. weaver who was in the soap busi- ness, Their combined capital was less than $100 and their original stock was three broody chicks a year. The two men realized the value of producing quality chicks. and in a few years their breeding stock rose to 1.200 hens. ‘Their main plant is arranged tn giant lays of incubators with a. capac- ity of 250.000 ens. By moving n lever an attendant can turn over 26.000 eggs at once, so that warm air bubbles get. to the other aide of the eggs. In addition, the chick factories produce 500.000 duckllngs a year and they supply up to 400,000 growing pullets for farmers. only Pltl: is on the same plane with him. As a writer of English he has no equal ln his day. I-Iis vocabul- ary romuins richer than any of his contemporaries; he has sub- stance yet buoyancy; his flow is incomparable like “pomp of ivaters unwithstood". Undoubtedly steeped in Gibbon and Dryden. he makes history ltve, makes us all live through it. again with the very pulse of’ vanished days; writes not only as one looking back from the viewpoint of after-knowledge upon the uncertainty o! human things, but looking forward from day to day to its marrow amidst the tn- calculable doubts and fears, the hopes and illusions, by which hu- man minds and hearts are beset. Thus Winston Churchill, in. through and after “l5 years; truly, as was written of him recently. "the savior of.’ his country, a lea- cndary hero who belonged to myth as much as to reality. the largest human being of our time." §Thc Age-Did That Ho might be a merciful and faithful high priest In things par- tuinlng m God, to make reconcilin- tlun for the sins of the people. . ,_________ G. F. l-lufchoson 8i Son ‘ ' OPTOMETMSTI ‘Specialist in the. fitting of gluon for tho formation o! ocular defoetl." " I as cannon scum Refrigeration SALES and SERVICE Repairs To All Makes MilTllllS Rewinding and Repairs ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE Repairs Pallnar Electric PHONE 1444 ‘Fl’! tw ga cd Ell‘ receive I100 they should remember also that DO without expecting something in lish constitutional history w“ return. If the clergy want to one Lester B. Pearson, M“; m“ keep their privilege of social cl-illi- tncame known to all llndflrgrgd. in Examiner. to qu all, built during the present cen- tury. transit controller in wartime, the 'I'I‘C parted with these sweet-run- ning vehicles which haven't fal- len to pieces even yet; wi sideration. little, for doesn't Ottawa have to spend $291000 to replace them? I: there no gratitude anywhere any more? (Loud cries of "Shame! ShameVy-Toronlo Star. hens which they kept. tn an nmnpe box, Today they rear be- to tvreen 3.000.000 and 4,000,000 ho In Philadelphia, a. took down its brand new sugges- tion box after the customers on gestod" prettier waitresses. There was not a single request for bel- ter food or more varied menus. - London Free Press. A brisk trio of Huron College undergraduates now toting bag- station as a way to earn extra Lui- tion money, are to bc congratulat- places of higher learning and the adjuration of Sit. Panlw-"Bear yc one anothers burdens." —~ London Free Press. The clergy would be unwise to accelpt tax if it were offered to them. As soon as they become the benefici- aries of special lose some nleasurc of t-hcir influ- eisnl they must take care not to become obliged to the Government According to The Ottawa Jour- nal, ills home town has to borrow $291,000 for l5 new buses to re- place tmms." DECEMBER 5, 1949 — Notes By The Way ~ restaurant | llaps ll is just as u-ell that ,.. claim should be put. to a test h“ it is valid, then the extra acco u niodation lnadc available Wliim- itself serve as a limiting helm on the rents that may be elm- ‘: ' Consequently. the WISE lanai“, will be the ullc who keeps his clr lnallds within reason. Qwe‘ Sound Sun-Times. n o consecutive days had "sug- ge at the Canadian ‘National -Mr. Donald M. Fleming (E11 ion): l\'ll', gpeakcl,’ duflnglulll- course of this debate yiesterdae and today lily lnind has kept turn’: “If! buck to a scene in a CiBSSIOQ at lllc University of Toronto 50mm 35 Years ago. when a young w: lcssur arrived to deliver his firs; lrclllre. lie was verv voilil-g- 1 fzlclfhe lookcd as though. he H1.‘ h’: be an illldergraduatc himself EH; spoke with a slight lisp; but h, quickly commanded the apgenfion out‘ his students and, in ll Ypyy short iilllf‘, “on their coin-plate si- fr-ctioll. l llari the gooj forum, lu be a lllOlIlbPl‘ of that class and 1h“ YOUR}! professor who mine is deliver his first lecture, in En‘. . This is in the tradition of exemption froln income privileges they cc with their parishioners, who such benefits. And government ever does a favor uatrs as Mike. Little did l think lilen that he and I would be‘ sil- llng on OPDQSHB sides of p,“ l-‘louse participating in a debuts o! Lils rlatlurL-Hansard. any special wayx-Peterborough 1 cocoa-l’ '5 803113‘ l0 believe u when we tell them that it's pol;- slble, ln November and in Cal- sary. to go to work in the mom- ing without a topcoat; they w“; put it down to mere bobllcrlsm and smile gently and ma)“ . mental n-ote that you alwavs have to discount about half ofieven-v- thin?! 3 Westernc-r tells you, 1:91 them go ahead and be as Skoptiegi as they like. If they get {o0 n,” just ask them a couple of m“; lions albout the price of cool (ll Ontario, or whether lhev've been ab‘? 1° E0! a man f-o haul out Li“ "those horrible Toronto Horrible — ivhal. a word apply to Toronto's lovely anti- es, mellowed by age, and, after Under pressure from the parted of course, for a con- But probably all too th them, Relaxation of’ rent controls had “h” f?!‘ 835532! day. or lhevhve put in um lllfoml stop them cold. And when they whether tic atoll- c‘ Y“ Thls- “'9 Runraulee, will move on to their next lack and ferred there would still be voci- ferous criticism. It claimed that easing of the rental ceilings would prod-nee additional rental make some slightilig remark such as what a pity it is that there's m» Sprints in Callzarr - that l. l-ill time to uncork the old one-two. “But if isn't so. old boy," you gv patronizingly’. "Fact is, we nllr Hngillf! in November." --- Cal. galgv Herald. ' come sometime. and n-o matter w long the relaxation was de- has been accommodation, and per- PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. A. McGuiqon NOTAR Y, ETC. BARBISTEB, SOLICITOI, Dr. A. L. Moclsuuc DENTIST Dental X-Rny G LORIA BUILD 1'79 Grafton St. Phone 29L ING. B A LLB J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist Eyu examined, glusen fit- ted Corner Kent. d Queen. Sh. Frederic A. Large NOTARY 1 Successor CURRIE ‘BUILDDWG M. Albun Former MONEY TO LOAN BABBISTEIIrSOLICITOB, I'M Charlottetown. P. E. L BARRISTER. SOLICITOB, Royal Bank of Canada Chambers Charlottetown, P.E.I. , lLC. Office Phone l956—llouse I013 George J. Tweedy. ILC. Joseph R. MucMillun. Dr. W. R. Carson l-L-B- piifiii°fiiflfiu BABBISTEB. SOLICITOIK, Etn- CHARLQTTETOWN 16 Queen 8mm sol Prince st. Phone m. Money to Loan Money to Loan Bell & Motllieson BABBISTEBS. SOLICITORS. Bu. PHONE 718 Collection: - _ Mafheson 8. Paulie A. W. MATIIESON, R0. A. H. PEAKE. B.A., LL.B. Barristers, etc. Collections - Mowv to Lou 80 Grout George Street Charlottetown Gaudet 8: Hazard Barristers, Solicitors. Notlrlel. W- llnnadlan Bank of Com uur Bltll- l MONEY To LOAN PROPERTIES GILBERT A. GAUDET. BA. LL3- 180 Richmond Si. Canadian Bunk of Commons Bid!- Cbnrlottetnwn, REJ - A. ‘Wclfhen Guudef. LL.B. \ BAR-SISTER. SOLIUITUB, Bio. Phillip: Building lII Grafton ‘vireo! Collections B. B. BELL. llLL. . D. L. MATHIESON. I..B., 8.0. Attorneys at Law LOANS ON CITY AND FARM Chas. n. Meoualu D" J‘ §'Sf_°"°"" Bnl- DENTIST Plckard Building l5] Grout George S1 DENTAL X-RAY Phone ‘£007 BARBISTEB, SOLIUITOII, NOTARY, Em, Eulorn Trust. lflllldllll UHABLOTTETIHVI‘ Phone "Ill ' MucPhee 8. Trcinol! Pl. F. MacPIIEE. J.A.. LLO- l SOMERLEI) TBAINOR. 5-‘- Barrllmro, 1m. isls queen It Palmer 8t Huslam .A. l. HASLAM, B.A., LL.B. Barrister, Etc. Electrical contractor WIRING AND IIPAIBINB simm- n. amen. m n» up. rum mu warrior. As statesman and orator, Bonk of Nova Seotln tihamben Tvombl Bldu- Chlrlotletowu, PJSJ. "'“—_"-‘" mourn "r0 LOAN ‘ NS MORRELL NEIL W. HIGG_I__ ' M“ cusnrmmo COMPANY Acouuuru‘! _4 AOCICAOBLITNTAPi-‘T Currie Build‘ i: ..?_____._._._.. \ intern Tron Building caAnw-nmiywpl CIIAII mo» 4 mum lm o ‘m Bo! m m. I630 P-U- 5°’ m l ‘ii-i H. R. DUANE 11nd COMPANY I CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS l OFFICES-l I IN UIIABIAYITETOWN llollfu b! Grafton F‘- Ohorloflotowi ll’! ‘ “m” Phone 2080 B“ V nsuoun w. mummi- o.