THE GUARDIAN Mnhgj gvgry ' e mnrnlnl II in Pnncs Sweet. Char lsttstnwn. P.l.1.. by The Thomson Company Limited "Goren lrtnoe Ilward Island Lilo the Dow" Editor. Frank Walker Consul Manager. l.an A. Burnett Iranek II Ilunmernds. Montague and Albcncn. Auuw lud II Second Class Mall by us Post Office Depuux---' Ottawa. , C Irlottolown. Summer-side 315.00 per Innunnl P,l.l. 09.00. Other Provinces and U5. 812.01 per Innum by Carrier: lleewbau II "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink." THURSDAY JULY. 7-1355 The Hillsborough Bridge Communications are of vital import- I nice in this day and age, as the many people who depend upon the I-lillsborough Bridge are well aware. A very considerable number are so effected; as workers in the city living on the south side of the river; I: residents carrying on operations which require frequent communication with the capital, or simply depending upon F9-EUI81' mail and ot.her services. The Hillsborough Bridge was closed to rail traffic early in March, 1951, on orders Imust be left to the I themselves. the day. If was opposed by most of the country's business concerns, many of whom. to this day, are by no means per- suaded that the choice made was a wise one. Whether it was or not is not yet clear. nor will it be for some time to come; it takes more than six years for a new ven- ture to prove its worth. Statistically, it would seem to an outsider that Newfound- land is better off now than under the former system of government; but, even if opponents of Confederation to argue" that the country's present prosperity was any great extent by the new political status. In any event, it is clear that there is considerable dissatisfaction in Newfound- land over Dominion-Provincial relations. "Moreover. information from various sour- ces would seem to indicate that that dis- satisfaction is growing; whether or not it is justified is another matter and one that Newfoundland people Secession, assuming that it would be legally possible-that, of course, would de- If the director of engineering of the Board of Transport Commissioners. on t h c grounds that the Board was satisfied that the structure was unsafe for rail traffic. In May last, it seems, the C.N.R. ceased to do maintenance work on the bridge, in accordance with instructions received from Moncton; and n o w further instructions have been received that the bridge be closed. There is logic. of course, in each step. But logic will be small consolation to those dependent upon the bridge, who may have too little time to adjust their personal and business arrangements to get along with- out it. The Provincial Government has seem- hgly been taken by surprise b.V the "10"? and any action which will now be taken is under the stress of emergency. The matter, however, i of too great importance to be satisfactorily dealt with in sudden fashion. It surely should not have been impos- sible for the Federal Department of Trans- port. the Board of Transportation Commis- sioners. the Canadian National Railways and the Provincial Government to have effected I smoother and safe evolution from the old railway bridge to the pro- posed causeway. Welcome Women's Institutes A pleasing follow-up of Farm Week is the 42nd annual convention of the Prince Edward Island Women's Institutes which opens this morning. It is fitting that the entertainment on the opening day will in- clude In outdoor chicken barbeque. with men working over the hot barbeque pits. All too often womenls organizations. md perhaps especially the Women's ln- stitutes, present their members with a program which involves a great deal of hard work, which their male counterparts somehow seem to avoid. It is well in this case that the ladies can simply enjoy them- selves and leave the catering to others. There is, nevertheless, a heavy program of work before the annual convention and even a glance at. the program indicates how wide are the interests of the member In- stitutes. Girls' work, 4-ll Clubs, home eco- nomics, agriculture, health and home eco- nomics. art and literature. citizenship and exchange programs with women in other parts of the world are only a part of the matters which will be taken up and which have been dealt with throughout the year. The fact is that there are few aspects of rural life on which lilies do not have their influence. Their activity represents hard work indeed but It also brings about a marked improvement in conditions of country living, so that the well-rounded and satisfying life becomes increasingly accessible to all. No Slip Of The Tongue Some of the press reactions to Premier Smallwoodis recent statement to the effect that Newfoundland might secede from Confederation unless she receives better treatment from the Federal Government, seem to imply that the Premier was speak- ing facetiously, as some Government lead- ers have I habit of doing when they are away from their customary habitations. There are. however. two main reasons, among other lesser ones, why this simple T , explanation may not be regarded lightly. ' In the first place. those who know Mr. Smallwood well say that he is not given to levity on official occasions at home or abroad, much less to meaningless asides in the course of a speech, He is not the sort of man to joke about economic problems or indulge in controversy just for the fun of it. In the second place, it must be re- membered that Newfoundland's entry into Gmfederation was. brought about by I mall majority of the citizens. Indeed, but fbr Mr. Slhnllwoodh persistent and single- llanded efforts, Provincial status would not have appeared on the ballot paper It the Qnenfthellidsreferendumssoneofthe ".oftbs-eiucforsln, theathcrtwobe ..I....-,-. . the Women's lnsti- I pend largely on the terms of Confeder- ation- is certainly not I live issue at the lmoment: but, if Mr. Smallwood and his Lib- ral colleagues were to begin thinking that lway, it could easily become one. And if the lmberals under Mr. Smallwood were to make secession a political objective, it is hard to see how Confederation could con- Ltinue to hold the popular fancy, especially 'in view of the fact that the Conservative i E neither brought about nor influenced to I that be true, it would be easy enough for l ..w as Iopposition has never accepted it with en-- lthusiasm. If we may be permitted to say so, all Ithings considered it does not seem right gnor necessary that there should be even a :whisper of possible secession of Newfound- land from the rest of Canada so soon after the completion of the union; and it is to be .hoped that, for the common good, I better relationship will sustained. But, from what we hear, Mr. lsmallwoodls reference to secession in his 1St. Andrews speech was neither a slip of lthe tongue nor a wagglsh gesture. EDITORIAL NOTES . Only one electric car is licensed in On- Itario out of the more than a million lvehicles in that Province. It is safe to say .that should I really efficient storage bat- Itery be developed electric cars would mul- tiply at least as rapidly as have the gaso- .line variety. I This week sees another centennial cele- -bration, that of the publication of "Leaves lof Grass" by Walt Whitman. For a long jtime the rambling poem received more cen- isure than praise. One well known critic referred to it as "raw collops slashed from the rump of poetry”. In recent years, how- Iever, Whitman has come in for much fav- lourable reappraisal, and his "Leaves" have Ibranched out into wider areas of critical popularity. 1 Canada continues to supply military equipment for NATO in addition to main- ltaining armed forces at the disposal of the common command. Shipments this month twill include artillery for Turkey and trucks d... for Portugal and Italy. It makes good sense, of course, to help these nations main- lgmws a dark ma, like its norm, (lain their own forces although it would Iern brother's I lnot do as a complete substitute for supply- ping Canadian manpower. I e 's e One American educational commission has found that there is a serious break- Idown of discipline and recommends a fur- ther commission to find out why. Discip- .line in almost every case depends more upon the character and effectiveness of those in authority than on differences in those subject to them. In any case the American educational system, like our own. must take its pupils as it finds them. Real improvement can only be looked for in the direction of more and better teach- crs. 0 Prof. W. S. MacNutt of the University of New Brunswick's history department, and a former Charlottetown man, has told the story of Canadals early days, and its sole link with prje-revolutionary British America within a scant 19 pages in Cana- dian Historical Association booklet No. 4. "The Making of the Maritimes Provinces." It is a story of evolution to national status as contrasted with the sudden cutting off of historic traditions in the United States. 0 I I The Canadian NATO Parliamentary Association has published a booklet on the Declaration of Atlantic Unity which was presented by prominent citizens of Can- ads, the United States, Britain, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Den- mark and Italy earlier this year to the Council of the North Atlantic. Treaty Or- ganization. The booklet contains the de- claration, its signature, by countries, com- ments by NATO officials, heads of states and the press: as well as the text of the North Atlantic Treaty. a summary of the Pill! Agreements Ind other matter. be IJTOUBIII about anddtalizc on is plentiful supply of sold I record 2,700,000 skins last I Canadian Mink Of High Quality National Geographic Society gives it. Fur experts advise hanging I mink coat on I heavy, shoulder-shaped hanger in I cool, roomy closet. Should it become wet. don't brush or comb. Simply shake and allow to dry away from any heat. Sending a mink coat off for In annual cleaning and for storge in an air-conditioned vault protects the natural oils of the pelts and restores their rpleness. It also guards against the fur's most vicious enemy. the moth. "You can always tell I fur- rier." one of them has said. "by his agitation in the presence of a moth. If you see a man chase a moth. in the subway for in- stance. you may know he is in- terested in the fur business. If he gets it on the first try. he is I competent furrier. If runs wildly up and down the car aisle. beating the air in vain, he is only someone who has loaned money to I furrier." The modern mink-even before it passes on to the Park Avenue promenade - is I well - traveled little animal. A few years ago 250 of them flew the Atlantic from the United States to Nor- way to help stock farms there. Recently 349 entrained at Dau- phin, Manitoba, bound for New- foundland to build up the island's mink industry and thereby cap- wholemeal. Americas 5,000 mink farmers year. Wisconsin produced more than a third of the Nation's farm- raised pelts. says the National Geographic Society. Other lead- ers were Minnesota. Illinois. Mich- igan and New York. In addition. trappers marketed 1,000.0()0 skins. boosting the value of mink pelts to 60 percent of all raw furs pro- cluccd in the United States, Still they didn't satisfy demand. America, the world's leading mink producer-consumer, also imported 1,800,000 skins In 19544, a new HELICOPTERS IILP Australia has granted official ap- proval for commercial use of hell- copters in aerial surycy and other high. or these, skins from Can- ada represented I little less than half the number, though three- fifths of the value. indicating their rangemenis 0 fine quality. Japanese mink. sec- work- I 7.-ifai FAREWELL Medically Speaking llennIIN.IuIdIIIs.l.D. owns ennsou snouu) comer ms vrulums oldllters est meals which are well- bslanced Ind abound in protactlvs foods. Many of you don't do this for various uons. As you grow older your sense of taste may decline. Very often this reduces appetite and you bsve little or no desire to eat I variety of foods. Thus. you stick to essen- -tially the same menu day after day and week after week. Then, too. digestion in the eld- erly person is not as efficient as in younger folk. Gastrointestinal function frequently is slowed. sec- retlon of saliva is reduced Ind other Iids to digestion are out. Maybe your dentures don't Ht properly. I complaint of many elderly persons. So you don't eat anything you have to chew. You are Istlsfied with soft, stsichy foods. But while you may be Iat- Hsflod, your body isn't! It's shout- ing for needed vitamins Ind min- erals which you aren't getting. Re(IlIrDioI It's probably advisable to take vitamin and mineral supplements. but it is Ilso essential that you get as much nourishment as pos- sible from your diet. Gener , the elderly person needs cslc um Ind iron more than other minerals. Iron. defi- cioncy frequentbr causes mild In- smls in the aged. Therefore, you should eat plenty of iron-rich foods such Is lean meals, liver, whole wheat, eggs, leafy vegetables, peaches, raisins, molasses. There are numerous other foods containing iron, of course. but When I lie where shades of dark- nen Shall no more asaall mine eyes. Nor the rain make lsmentation When the night. wind sighs; How will fare the world whose wonder Was the very proof of me? Memory fades. must be remem- bered Perlshlng be? Oh, when this my dust surrenders Hand. foot, lip. to dust again. May these loved and loving faces Please other men! May the rusting harvest hedgerow Still the Traveller's Joy entwine. And Is happy children gather Posles once mine. Look thy last on all things lovely. Every hour. Let no night Seal thy sense in deathly slumber Till to delight Thou have paid by utmost bless- ind. Ihoc that d Ifnn Ion would praise Beauty took hon: hose who loved them it other days. -Waller ch h Mare. ond in quantity among the im- ports. is much less prized I it is yellow and has to be dyed. Before the war, fur traders im- ported Chinese mink and kolln- sky, the Siberian mink. Both of those. like all furs from Com- munist countries. have been bar- red by Congress since 1951. The only other foreign source today is Scandinavia, It was the Swedes who first exported the word ”maenk" which became mink. The Choctaw Indians also had a word for the elegant skin a woman loves to touch; they called it "tout." To the Germans. it is simply the "Nerz." In North American the wild mink takes to forest and water. Svlretwater areas show I tend- cncy to produce thicker, darker OTTAWA REPORT Parliament Hill was in only place in Canada where the pro- gram wss "business as usual" on Dominion Day. The House of Commons sat in morning, after- noon and evening. Significantly it was on this oc- casion of overtime-without pay that Finance Minister Walter Har- rlx announced to Parliament how much it costs the taxpayers each year. Something in the elghbour- hood of S5,070.235 last year which. he said, works out to about 317.877 per day. I I colored furs than salt water sec- tions. From North Carolina south- ward pelts get thinner and red- . except near Lake Maurepas in Louisiana. There. in the Pres- ence of sweet water, the mink in spite of the pressure of pub- lic business, Parliament made three small concessions to mark our national birthday. At the op- ening of the house Prime Min- isler st. Laurent led the members in singing "0 Canada" and "God save the Queen". In this caco- phonous albeit patriotic gesture. our national unity was not exact. ly emphasised by the simultaneous singing of the French and English versions, as the one of course is not an exact translation of the other. As birthday decorations, Cans- dlan Red Ensigns and Union Jacks fluttered in profusion around Par- liament Hill. I As well as the singing - wish- ing ”llaPl3Y Birthday to you" in effect If not in words - and the decorations. we had I birthday party too. - It has ions been I tradition that the big gathering in Ottawa on Dominion Day should be I Governor Genersl's Garden Par- ty, in the grounds of Government House here. At this, city and fed- eral personalities, visiting diplo- mats. and the top brass of the nnned forces always used to be welcomed by the Governor Gen- eral of the day Ind his lady. This year, to the surprise Ind dismay of many, the Governor- General was away on'I private the wild the omnivorous, polygamous mink is a lone roam- er, Even the female. a fiercely protective mother. likes to go it alone as soon as she releases her kits. Once a year. late in April or early in May. she produces an average litter of four. By August her brood is ready to fend for itself, Hcr daughters issue grand- children the following spring- unlcss they are trapped. TWO COAT CHANGES Thc m in k is winter fur -- it changes coats at the enviable rate of two a year-reaches its prime in November. The chief interest of experi- menters is in colors of pelts. Stecpcd in the laws of heredity, breeders in the past two decades have worked up more exquisite color tones than Mendel himself could have imagined. The first mutation produced in quantity vlas the blue-gray platinum, trade- marked as silverblu, Then came pastel, followed by palomino. blufrost, white. amber gold. and sapphire. the guard hair of which is I sparkling sky- blue and the underfur. a softer blue. To add to the confusion, each breeder usually dreams up his own name for the mutants so that the public has been pelted with names like breath of spring, Rreen eye pastel. and halfblood (redressed as starlight). A single sapphire pelf has brought as high as 83!!) It auc- tion. Figure 65 to 100 skins to I single coat-Ind there goes one man's annual bond clippings. The average price of I farm- ralsed pelt today runs about :5. A finished. full-length cost may cps! from 84.000 to 0.000 or more. 1' -I9 8-83! in see why. when one CODSIIIBTH the letting-out process out of Canada on our natlonsl birthday. But the Speaker of the House of Commons, Hon dune " d in. did not let the occasion pus In- recognlzcd. in spite of the (lover- nor-GenerIl'I omission. Mr. Bean- doln invited I large group of cab. inst Ministers. Members of par- llsment. I en for civil servants, members of the Press Gsllery. and others to I Dominion Day reception in the Parlsment Infid- TIES. . Ottawa's memory cannot recall the equal of the role being deval- m.............m...:. I Patriotic Hospitality By Patrick Nlcboium oped in the We of our Capital by the ' Rene” ” and these that I have listed are espec- ially desirable because they also contain some cobalt, copper and manganese. And these minerals help development of hemoglobin. the oxygen-carrying red pigment in red blood wrpuscles. It's important to maintain I nor- msl calcium level in your blood to help keep your body's acid-base economy, . gulnte normal bl clotting and to keep your muscular and nervous systems in good shape. Leafy green vegetables, therefore. are I "must" in your diet, as are plenty of cheese and at least one pint of milk every day. I have I glass of milk if the morning, another k: the evening and one or two during my work- ind day. I sh-ongly urge you it do the same. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. M.: Is there anything other Iun orthopedic shoes b sorroct obfld's flat feet? Answer: Many Iblldrn have what i known as pronabd or weak foot but as they grow older they very often knprove. Special shoes. which to elevated on lie inner sole Ind bod. should be won. The exact hype of shoe to It In child will be mesoribsd by your plwslclaa Ifisr In enam- lnntlon. While built-up shoes seem In im- prove flat feet. exercises are also helpful. Surgery may be required in seven IIIII. Wbllotberelsnospocialdietfor pm 5... . "end. the aged. it. is important that you fully planned. nigh Ottawa Journsl. waves have been and to perform ttaordinsry medical development. and one to be applauded. But the wsves can be used to operate on the brain. perhaps I way will yet Citizen. first of its kind. Judge Walter ' ' ood- 3l'lIcI1!I1InllsQn ;(.)l.ll1d .that (file lags Id no gbt In orce ts local law Ilmed It keeping Iir- Repairs '!o AI Makes crsft 1.000 fest Ibovs its rooftops. HI condemned is law Is nncon- grPuANOX -HOOOTDOGUIIGISD. THE WAY ..n'- I and thin; for ....... Glilo tbatmtbs government does,” income tax on pg. --A may of cum: fade"! aovunmenz lilntllltleafor the lug about 3,000, had .0 be” niflfjt in Britain because, accm-din 3 '3 Enos Minister Prudliam 3 I” "1 COMP coul ' "3" W99 Oafnlylvhller o(I' tisllnllilgy the involved in assembling th wurk It would seem ironic um? igall 8111. one of the great produ fan- natlons of the world and 3 co cm: which boasts of its g..,,,,,,,""l,rv dustrlal Ind manufacturmg E m" how. should have to have a now of itself made in another cou "imp -3:-ockvllle Recorder and The Csnadian Income 1., M decreed last April 6 will begin to my 9” 55013112 The reminder that this tax saving lpplleg to Income earned after July 1 has gone over "'9 WIRE. unto the remotest pans of the land. It also warns um "'9 "X Nllll fill be almost shrink. IHEIY I conclusion most I-lxllayers probably had already reached. Yet no one will tum them down. although the reduc. tion runs only from 10 to 13 per cent in most instances. The pg;-. son whose tax deduction has bun BUY. 350 I month, can look for . IBVIIJE of I5 I month.-The wing. sor Dally Itar, scribed bow ultrssonlc (brain operation. This is an ex- world is still waiting for I cure for the common cold; if sound be found to stop Inlffles and I wbeezy cough. The Ottawa It will come as I surprise to most motor-boat owners to learn that they are amenable to fed- eral law, or to any law It all, for that matter. It will surprise them equally to learn that they are sup- posed to know the rules of the road. some of those who don't know either of these thlnu are due for I rude Iwskening. the R. C. M. P. will be concerned with safety and the llcencing of boats that are required to be lic- oncod. A motor-boat is supposed to be equipped with one or more life-proscrvers. More often than not these are absent Ind we have seen during the past few week ends I loss of life by drowning that could have been prevented had the boats involved been prop- erayr equipped - The Montreal . Another successful aerial spray. mg operation of New Brunswick; northern softwood stands to com. bat the destructive spread of in. spruce budworm bu been com. pleted. This "Operation Budworm IV" embraced I forested ten-31., of something over one million acres and Intended for I period of over three weeks. Again ape- cillly equipped Ivrlylns aero- plsnes. about so of them, spread the DDT insecticide over the are; selected by the forest ontornulo. gists as that requiring the app”. cation of pest control measures this summer. - The Moncton Transcript. Alvnlted Ifates Dbl:-let Court judge in Brooklyn has ruled that all the air space above I property is part of the public domain and not that of fbe property owner. Ills ruling was ' cident' to the voiding of ban on low-flying by aircraft ,adopted by the Village of Cedarhursl. Long Island, locat- ed near Idlewild Airport. It had been argued by the village's It- torney that each property owner Ilso owned the Ilr Ibove it in I vertical projection 1,000 feet high. In I decison believed to be the atltutionsl Ind purmanonly enjoin- ed and restrained the officials from enforcing it. l-- Saint John Telegraph-Journal. Alia:-tI'I doctors have refined the Manning Oovurnment. Int they appear to bsve dons it with such waning enthusissm II must leave Social Credit with I feeling !ALH8lERVIOE MOTORS Iewindlng and Repairs tbstmilt basdbccin welshod. fog: H-ECTRICAL Wlll K. IVOII I IIIIPCI sentence. zortalnly when I Gov- .0!”-ll" ernmsnt buttressed by prosperity loses eight or nine per cent of its vote and sees three its ministers defeated it be complacent. - Tbs Ottow '''"''1” mm. , PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. lie. Palmer Electric Phones 8543 - 8544 by his distinguished counterpart. Hon Wlsbsrt Robertson. Speaker of the Senate. These two. each aided by I grsclous wife, have become the great hosts of Parlia- ment llill. Neither Government House nor the Prime Minister's of- ficial residence see entertaining on pproscbing the scale of the lmportsncs. the interest and the international flavour now found in the Speak .' Chambers. ALIEN AND HOMESPUN GUESTS Mr. lesudoin entertains in honour of every distinguished po- llticsl visitor and does not omit to mark our national occasions too, such as Dominion Day Ind the Feast of it. John the Baptist. Through his hospitality, many M.PI Ire able as never before to enjoy meeting interesting visitors and to exchange views with them. Such In occasion was when Krish- nI Manon. the special representa- tive of India's Prime Minister Nehru, was here. In Mr. Beau- doln's panelled library. I noticed Mrs. Ann Shlpley, John Diefen- baker, Paul Martin and Ralph Cnmpney, among many others, talking with the man who bu made such I name fur himself It the United Nations. V Sen tor Robertson gathers smaller but equally interesting groups to cordial lunches in b historic Speaker's Chamber-.. I recently talked with such I varied cross-section of Ottawa II the Russian Ambassador, Vancouver's Senator Farris. General McNaugh- ton and Quebec's Mam-ice Bois- vert It one such luncb. Speculation at Mr. DeIudoin'I Dominion Day I ,"on - it was one of those very hot Ind very humid days when Ottsws is I- bout II Invigorating II I Turkish holiday, out of Ottawa and even hm, - centred around how sou: Psrllament will finish its business and let NLPI no home. I found Henry Ilosklng gains:-lug 1-HAY LOADER - Frost 1-FARMALL H 1-FARMALL A by which the mat is created. Each pelt is cut into tiny, V4-illcli ding. onal ribbons which are sewed in. in strips that run the length of the coat, Into one coat go nearly . seven miles of thread Ind more 3 700 hours of I-lshlv qknlea How much longer I mink pelt will travel once it reaches the back of its ultimate bearer del sends an the west Isd urs III bets. that Psrllsment will still be working It mid-July and even at. Mid-August. He himself is leav- ing on July 20 to motor bis charming wife around the Europ- ean battlefields where he fought. ten years ago. trip will be Illtbeswecterfortbebets he hopes to win from his colleagues, including 810 rashly staked by Dr. J. J. Mccann. Hon Lester Pearson's popular and pretty assistant, Mary Mac- Donsld. was telling M.P.'I Ibout I new vogue she had set last week It Inotber birthday party, the U- nited NItlon'I tenth anniversary celebrations in San F1-Incisco.. she Math 0 Foster TY”, M333” u OFP1l'IOti;iETRlSTS E u boson dl Son 1. Elmer Blanch: . ' ' us am. a. timid. .. .':.-2.- .. II. A. Farmer, Q.C., LLB. J. A. Can-uthers. R.0. null: at Commerce Bldg. In Kent sl. nm Leg Auho , , B J. G 0.D. III mango: sfm” Inlliincln Ill Kmgt Int. Dial M11 .1. s. Taylor. n.o. PAu'm3uthen G.'udot' LI”B' Corner Kent I Queen so. 111 Grafton St. bId won I mntcbln bat, vest and skirt the Mscdonsld, but the new pale blue tartan of the R.C.A.i'-' This, she said. had crested I lot of interest Imonx the representatives of the 00 nations gathered in Tris- co. I The Age Old Story I I ye lion be risen wins uirlst. seek those Ilhgs which In above. when Christ Ilttetll II to right band of God. set your Iffsctton II Ilinu above". not on things on the earth . . . Wllel Christ, who I8 H our life. Illall appear, then shall ye Ilse Ippoar with him h glory. IIOOTI M' YIIIGITII WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING USED FARM EQUIPMENT FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY &Wood.PushBIrtypIIK. 1-FARMALL H Front Mounted Manure Loader. 2-FORD HYDRAULIC 2 Bottom Plows. ALSO USED TRACFORS. 1-ALLIS-CHALMERS MODEL 3 You wouldbewellsdvlsedtncheckourprlcssm these items before purchasing elsewhere. S. R. JOHNSTON LTD. - , CHTOWN ' Office 91:8; House 4756 Palmer I llaslam H. J. Mnbon, R.0. Ink at Nova Icofia mu. Mnum P. I. 1. me;-,o;;o3;ko 8 CHIROPRACTOR . .. 3: - "s W - II, II I c.....u...nmu57.'...... ARCHITECT G. Keith Pickard. lmnmel-side. P.E.l. cm. 1:. MoQuni llCBlcbmoIId8L d, B.A. om sou MMBPIIOO U Tnlnor Charlottetown. by Ippolnfmllnt us once: Sf. pm as: mu ms CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS MCDONALD, CURRIE 3 C0. Curtis Ilflj. CIIIPIOCCOIAIWI Dill 8733 I II. B. DOANE & COMPANY I40 Great George St. Charlottetown pg... .547 . 5543 P. 0. Box 247 ARTHUR J. GARREP! Palmer Electric Building 100 Fltsroy Street Dial 5321 Charlottetown cALclull clllolllnla for innumerable uses 25 5. and 100 Is. bogs Tbs llogsrs llardwm CI. Ltd. II II. um 31! M S. III.” III Otuspssoooueeouonvylb hoe I21:-nhhunou numb. Kev!