B . . :a!MNA i align-. .1 .,. PAGE FOUR W Eras GUARDIAN; CHARLOTTETOWN THE GUARDIAN Authorized ll Second Gino Moll Post Office Department, Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. l't-oxidant mu Associate Editor. Auocinto Editor. Frank no A Burnett. Walker. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward Island like the dew” f'Tho Strongest Memory ls Weaker than . the Weakest Ink". CIIAIIIJOTTETOWN, I IDAY, JULY B5. 1952 Youthful Ambassadors Fifty-nine top ranking Air Cadets from all parts of Canada are ready to take off on their annual ”exchange visits” jaunts to the United States, United Kingdom and con- tinental Europe. On Monday morning, the honour cadets will clamber aboard BCAF and USAF aircraft at Montreal Airport to mark the opening of the sixth annual inter- change of cadets sponsored by the Air Ca- det League and the R.C.A.F. way since it was inaugurated in 1947 with a modest exchange of cadets between Can- ada and Britain's Air Training Corps. The United States Civil Air Patrol entered the scheme in 1948; Sweden joined the plan in 1950 and this year Canada will exchange cadets with Norway, Sweden, Holland and Denmark as well as with the U. S. and Britain. Twenty-six young Canadians will tour the United States; 25 cadets will take in the sights of the United Kingdom and two lads will go to each of the four con- tinental European countries. Return groups of cadets from all of these countries will be entertained in Canada by the Air Cadet League and the R.C.A.F. Primary purpose of the exchange plan is to stimulate an interest among youths in affairs removed from their local scene. While broadening the experience of these "young men in their chosen field of aviation, the trips come also in the nature of a re- ward for outstanding services rendered as Air Cadets. An interesting by-product of the cadet exchange scheme has been the impact made upon other countries by the Air Cadet idea as it is practised in Canada. After study- ing the Canadian pattern, Sweden launched an organization of "Air Force Boys" which has already reached a strength of 2.000 cadets. Holland has laid the groundwork 'for a similar youth movement while several other countries are expected to follow suit shortly. - Elusive Bookkeeping In an age when it is no longer fashion- able to be relevant, it is not surprising to discover more than a tincture of the irrel- evant in the manner in which that mon- olithic structure, the Canadian Broadcast- ing Corporation, keeps its books. A glance at the CBC's annual report will suffice to substantiate this point of view. i Total revenues for the fiscal year 1951.- Il952, the CBC report states, amounted to fF14,813,598.01. By deducting from this fig- ure the expenditures for the year, the CBC manages to show, on paper, a comfortable surplus on operations for the year. In point of fact. however, the CBC has a def- icit rather than a surplus. For included in theirevcnue figures was an item of 2196.- 2.')0,000, representing a government subsidv supposed to keep the CBC out of the red for a period not of one, but of five years. Allowing for the inclusion of 311,250,000 of the subsidy for the fiscal year 1951-1952, the total revenue of the CBC would have been !'69,8l3,598.0l, against expenditures of Sl0,6T4,415.36. So instead of the agreeable surplus of 53,000,000 to which reference is made with such satisfaction in the re- port, in fact the CBC had a deficit. of 75860,- Sl.7.35, even after allowing for the 5lii,250,- 000 subsidy. The Reluctant iiermans Like it highstrung horse, Western Ger- many is showing considerable skittishness at the prospect of being harnessed to the European Defence Community. The har- ness itself. so proudly displayed by Dr. Adenaueur in company with the foreign ministers of the United Kingdom, France and the United States at Bonn late in May, consists of two treaties. One is aimed at the establishment of the West German Fed- eral Republic as a sovereign state. The other is intended to bring Western Germany into the six-nation defence community and to provide for the inclusion of twelve Ger- man divisions in the European Army. Reason for German fears is the haunt. ing threat of Soviet-precipitated civil war. Thoughtful Germans, many of them ex- tremely anti-Soviet, fear that Moscow will force East Germany to some overt act of nurculon that will create another Korea in the heart of Europe. A war of attrition, and between Germans at that. is an omin- ous enough threat to give even the most l l , vocal socialists. The exchange scheme has con1e:a long: : 'some 200 models. ardentiof Chancellor Adenaueur's support- ers pause for thought. Before the treaties become a fait ac- compli, three hurdles must be successfully overcome. The first is ratification by the Bundestag, or lower house of the West Ger- man parliament. The second is ratification by the Bundesrat, or upper house. The third is 8. ruling from the Federal Repub- lic's Supreme Court as to the constitution- ality of the treaties. Gravest doubt in German minds is the sincerity of an Anglo-American policy which professes to a genuine dwire to see Ger- many reunited and independent. The so- cialist followers of Dr. Kurt Schumacher, for political reasons domestic in character, violently oppose the treaties on the ground that, if ratified they would accomplish only the integration of the, western half of Ger- many in the Anglo-American alliance and would mark the deathknell of German as- pirations for united independence. Paradox in the existing situation is that the fate of western civilization itself is, for the time being, in pawn to a handful of .s,D..B EDI IORIAL NOIES Feast of St. James. D C I The excellent turn-out for regettas Wed- nesday at North Rustico and Murray Har- bour as well as at the St. Peter's Races indicates that there is as strong a demand for exciting outdoor entertainment here in summer as there is for hockey in winter. I D O The supreme authority on Moslem law has ruled that: ”The authority to draw up laws for society and to supervise their ex- ecution requires qualities which only men possess." In the Moslem world the place of woman will continue to be the home or perhaps the harem, for a while longer. C it Q The International Red Cross holding its four yearly meeting in Toronto has a great responsibility. If the organization should become entangled in the meshes of pow- er politics which have for some time been laid for it. the Red Cross task of reliev- ing human suffering is apt to come goff Old Charlottetown (Am! r. z. 1. ) on "man NORTH snons The following excerpt: are from an article appearing anonymously in the Daily Examiner of June 11. 1883: "New London sand-dunes; while far from forming the longest range on the Island, are among the loftiest-attaining a height of forty feet. When the sheen of midday sun flashes on the Gulf and all its foaming coastline sounds A mighty vibrating chord in nature's harp of praise, the sand-hill , veiled in the thin sea- mist, gl am a long, white, ghastly ridge, appropriate border to the waste of waters. They form n sea-wall to New London Bay. On the one. side are the silvery waters of the sheltered basis. on the other the angry. booming Gull. At sunset the sands are u gilded highway amid the waters, appar- rntly linking the Bay View shore to the mist-shrouded front of dis- tant Tryon. ”The sand-hills have at vegeta- tion of their own. The wiry, slip- pery sand-grass. 'psumma aren- aria', binds the sands together with its creeping roots, and the sand-pea, tpisum marltimum', in endless profusion, waves its pur- ple banners aloft on the dunes. They shelter numbers of peaceful glossy ponds, that with no boi- der lave the green skirts of the meadows. and in the other reflect the towering storm-piled forms of the dunes. Fields of purple irises spread their bright beauty round these miniature lakes and jungles of reeds filled with uncommon plants. "These ponds are the home of wild fowl taking refuge from the storm-beaten outer coast. The mallard here first leads'out her duckling brood on the silver sur- face, and the golden-eye hides its nest in the reedy borders. The gulls bring in their young from the stormy wave, and the pewit and the kerlew rejoice forever in this rich feeding ground. The blue heron at stiily cvc stands in shallow tide and rcpleles his pouch for his young, and the nightly biltern utters his booming cry in mimicry of the deep sound- ing sea. "The level beach of sand in front of the dunes is the arena of the wildest. elemental warfare. We go out on it for the sake of be- ing lost in the roar of waters, and to feel the salt spray dashed into our face. and to brace ourselves against the wild buffeting of the windhnnd to watch the crystal floods chase each other for up the smooth grey sand-floor. There is very little life to be seen here, badly. I I I Louis Bleriot, French aviator, flew from Calais to Dover this date 1009. to be the first man to cross the English Channel by air. His monopiane weighed 600 ibs., and had a 22 h.p. engine. Ile covered the dis- tance of 31 miles in 37 minutes. Before his death in 1936 he claimed to have built about 10,000 planes and to have designed To be the first airman ever to be sta- tioned at either the R. c. A. r. Station.i Summerside or the R. C. A. F. airport at Charlottetown is the unique distinction of Flying Officer (then Corporal) G. R. Meri- thew. Visiting here from his home in St. Catherines, Ont., he must be proud of the way the Summerside station has developed. The Charlottetown airport must strike him, however, as having been somewhat stunted. O I O The ruling of the Lyon King of Arms that the New Yorker Robert Lister Mac- Neil was "adjudged chief in 1950 and so remains," rather than Prince Edward Is- lander Colin MaeNeii puts the former in the position of being officially the MaeNeii of Barra. It is not to be expected, how- ever, that. the Vernon River branch of the family will give up their claims without a struggle. O I I Scientists of the International Commis- sion will confer at the International Coun- cil for the Exploration of the Sea meeting in September to prepare a programme for research to be carried on in the Northwest Atlantic. This phase of the work was giv- en decidcd emphasis at the St. Andrews meetings and will play an important part in the programme of the Commission. Dr. Needler, who was re-appointed chairman of the Standing Committee on Research and Statistics ,will represent Canada at the ICES meeting. 0 O O The peoples of South-East Asia, reports a U. N. agency, are now engaged in a tre- mendous cffogt to shake off widespread ignorance which is holding them back in their struggld” against want, hunger and disease. All over the region-which is the home of some of the oldest and finest civil- izations-nations can look back with pride to their architects and philosophers, poets, sculptors, mathematicians, religious4think- ers. But theygare fully aware of their present great handicap: the heritage of mass illiteracy-and they are determined to put an end to it. From Soekarno, the President of Indonesia and spare-time teacher of lllltcrates, to Mohammed Sidky, a young UNESCO scholar who adapts chil- dren's books to the needs of Afghanistan -men and women throughout South-East Asia are throwing themselves with enthus- iasm into the immense job of building ed- ucation. amid the drifting seaosand and the foam. A few solid shells of moc- tra and the massive quahog. some dead litorinoe, and the large purple mussel. 'mytilus niodiolus'. with a fragment of snowy petri- coln. washed from its rocky lair in the reels, are all that we find -A strong contrast to the rich fauna of our southern coasts. ”Wc wander by the breaking waves lill evening tlnges the west, and lofty Tryon is lost. 'in the glory of the sunset in the purple mists of even.' The setting sun sinks right into the blazing wave. We depress our eyes towards the water. where the mist is densest. and the intensity of the crimson and purple and golden light fills heaven and earth with such a quivering flame of glory as we may not see elsewhere." 1:-nj-gm-z-:-j PUBLIC FORUM This column in open to the discussion by correspondents The Neighbors .gyyh. -r V , 7- 2.7 1 Ly ' In: 3. hi my 'i cu. m. Am. s, .4... spun. c.. In By George Clark "Those chops were -awful. Just ask my husband what 3 time I had making, him eat them." when Queen Elizabeth It goes to the R. A. F. in bomshir on 25th July to present a "Queen's Colour" to No. 1 Technical Training school, Her Majesty will be paying a. sig- nal honour to the youngest mem- bers of the youngest service: the R. A. I". Apprentices. It is to the boys who yearly pass out of training establishments such as Bolton that the R. A. F. looks for its nucleus of future N. . C.O.'s and o leavenlng of its fut- , ure officers. since it was started ,in 1920, the Apprentice scheme ;has produced a steady flow of I educated, well-trained men whose . contribution in skill and experi- ence hss been of lnestimable value to the R. A. F. both in flying and ground duties. It is certainly a tribute not only to the school, but also to the high standard of efficiency that has marked its old pupils in their subsequent R. A. F. careers. that I-Iolton should have earned such notable Royal recognition. On two previous occasions only have com- ponents of the R. A. F. been hon- oured with the rare award of a "Sovereigns Colour". The first was given by King George VI to . the Royal Air Force College at Cronwell in July, 1948. and the second was "The Queen's Colour of the R.A.F'. in the United King- dom," whtch was , esentcd by the vazvq;-. E -' Notes BX Candidate llnrrlman states he is not displeased with the reaction to his campaign for the presidential nomination. A lot. of other people prefer quiet, too.-Windsor star. People become attached to the strangest. customs. Britain is re- ported to have told the UN Trus- teeship Council it is ready to abol- ish flogging in Tanganyika, East Africa, but the natives oppose the Tile Waxx I ally in his business he is more in- terested in their mastery of the "three R's." In public schools and high schools, first - come first. and the frills after. im- portant as they are. -Brockvilic Recorder and Times. things should Few trees in the province of On- tario nre as beautiful as the paper birch; it is unfortunate many of them along our highways, that so changea. Ottawa Journal. According to Moscow reports, the Soviet Union expects a rich grain harvest this year. Now all that the Kremlin needs to dig up for the Russians is circuses. The germ warfare charges made by Russia against the West should fall into that category.-Ottawa Citizen. In these days when potatoes are a pretty live topic of conversa- tion it is interesting to note .the world potato-growing record was claimed by a South Australian farmer who has grown 1.790 1-2 pounds of spuds from one pound of seed in 15-1 square yards of earth. -St. Thomas Times-Journal. Transient saleswomen are thick again as files in the community. As usual. they have outstanding bargains-I525 value for 52.50, etc. it must. be remembered that the sales-tact of these people is reck- less. They can make any sort of statements to convince you of a, bargain because they do not have; to stay around to see if you are satisfied or not. Then. too, exper- ience shows us that we may never” receive what we have paid for. - Winkler Progress. Too often, in this province to- day, one hears of emplvyeis 00"!" piaining that young people, public school graduates. cannot add ac- curately. cannot spell correctly, and cannot write legibly. The av- erage employer is quite P11335335 that his office girl, Susie, has gain- ccl an art appreciation, or that of questions of interest. The Guardian does not necessar- tly endorse the opinion of correspondents. SOMETHING FOR NOTHING R"? x Sir,--Bingo may be taken as a symbol of nil games of chance. Suppose a player draw a prize of ten dollars. What is wrong with that? He entered voluntarily in- to the contest. If he gained, it was his luck; if he lost. he had no complaint. What is wrong with such a transaction? It is In gettimz something for nothing. if this principle were applied to business it would undermine and destroy all commerce. In busi- ness no one can get something for nothing, except by theft. It is when we apply this prin- ciple of getting something for nothing to the moral order that we see its fallacy. Take friend- ship for example. No one can enjoy.lhc sweets of friendship without. making a corresponding contribution. A friendship sprang up between David and Saul, King of Israel. and through jealousy, Saul ceased to make any contribu- tion to the union and the friend- ship soured. The quarrel between capital and labour comes at this point. Labour claim; that rap- itnl wants too much, capital claims labour wohln too much. Friend- ship can only come when each side is willing to make its just contribution to the union. Some of the Government handouts, no doubt, come under this heading. getting something for nothing which tends to undermine and de- stroy fhe social order. Young people, today. easily turn awnffrom honest work to scheme: of making money which do not re- oulre work. Gambling, b ' re is one of the most insidious and pernicious practices of our day. It is appearing in many forms in the church and outside the church: on the race track: in sport it has almost ruined boxing in the U. S.: and! football and baseball are-being threatened. Society II ,bclng honeycombed with dishon- esty. It is making rogues of all kinds xnf people. We here in Can- ada are not so cursed with this craze as they are in tho states because we havenit got the money to come and go upon. This gambling habit would not threaten our civilization as it does except for the fact that the Christian Church in setting the example. Last year in one of our Canadian rltlos a men”: club built A house for 815,000 and sold tic- -ed Johnnie, his stock clerk. knows something of sculpture, but basic- ?m?mf?T:j kels on it at 31.00. Todfly. 8 young couple who paid their dol- lar possess and live in that house and an elder of the Christian Church was the one who deliver- ed them the keys. The church is the regular gambling kinder- garten for the young people of Canada and this, no doubt. ne- counts for the rapid spread of this pernicious evil, into every corner of our society. It accounts, too. for this most serious fact that Christian people, in general. 500 'no harm in the practice. Eyes have been blinded and conscience scared by the example of the Church. t W who nre followers of Jesus wlllido well to heed his injunc- tion: "What I say unto you I say unto all, watt-h"! I am, Sir, ctr., W. I. GREEN Stanley Bridge. DELIGHTEI) VISITORS Sir.-Bad roads are forgotten in the joys of A friendly pleasant place to stay and the beautiful beaches. say vlsitorn to Stanhope Beach Inn. Many guests were vis- lling the Island for the first time and were from' Newfoundland, New York and the States, Nova Scott: and New Brunswick, etc. Comments from all sides were wonderfully complimentary to our little Island. Comparisons were made between Miami and Florida benches and the Island's were vat.- definitely superior. Those splendid citizens, the Reymonds, are the most charming and thoughtful how: anyone could wish for and not one complaint was voiced during a recent vac'a- tion spent there. One can usual- ly find something to complain about but not so at Shannon and fl really grand job of promotinl the tourist industry In P. E. I. is being done by these hardworking people and their staff. Mr. Mor- tln of the National Film Board ollp co-operates by showing film: once A week that are of Interest to everyone, and are well chosen. For people who do not venture very far from ourjhorcx it is very gratifying to hear our Is- land spoken of so highly and to know that people are going batik to their home: full of such-good ....p.eulonI and the determination to come again. ' lakes and streams have been strip- ped of their bark. The thin papery bark protects the -tree from dying out and from attack by insects and disease when the bark is peeled off. the inner parts of the tree are exposed to these enemies which often cause death. Even if the tree does not die its beauty is marred forever. Although the birch is not our most. valuable timber tree it does have many commercial uses and when its scenic beauty is also considered, it deserves better treatment than it is getting at present.- Woodstock Sentinel Re- view. Speaking before the ..u.. present. Queen (then Princess El- izabeth). on behalf of her father. at I ceremony in Hyde Park in May of last year. 0 . . ..,. scheme was in- augurated after the 1914-18 War when it became clear that the re- cruitment ot trained mechanics from civilian life could not keep pace with the needs of on ex- panding Alr Force. Marshal of the R.A.F. Viscount Trenchard decided that the only way to fill the gap with young men of the right cal- ibre ond necessary training was for the Service to start its own "Public Schools". A modest begin- ning was made at cranwell in 1920 and two years later, in Janu- ary, I922, Hallon opened its door to its first intake of apprentices. been given R. A. F. including 9. V.C. and in Dcspatches. by this door. and intelligent citizens. Station at Holtou tho Since then it. has turned out more than 5.000 men who have commissions, besides many thousands more who have served with distinction as N.C.O.'s. Its "Old Boys" have been awarded nearly 1,000 decorations. s G.C.. and another 2,000 have been Mentioned Such successes give the, measure of the -boys who enter the R. A. F. The Halton school makes them into good craftsmen It cares for their bodies and helps them to , my '25. 1952 Cradle Of The R. A. F, (By PATRICK GREGORY) cultivate their minds. It give, m no more than an inn-oduc. tton to flying. but it can never be unaware that boyish ambition in these days tends more town.-.l,.. Wings on the tunic breast. than to batons in knnpsacks. That msv explain why the school persists even in its greatly expanded formi in being so much more than an establishment for the training of mechanics. can The boys spend much of their time in the workshops and labor- atories, learning to use tools and machines, studying the details or the jet. engine. assembling and dis. mantltng the latest radar and m. clar devices, getting practical ex. perlsnce of gun turrets, temun; oircrnft on the aerodrome and practising the processes of pg;-log. icnl overhaul. But. another plus of their time is spent. at desk; 1;, a school which naturally lays sp.-. clol emphasis on technical stunts. and yet seeks, like all good 50110015. to develop character and lead the boys to wider inter.-.51.. iahmllsh a thorough general edu. cation. For off-duty hours, Halton pro. vides facilities for every kind or recreation. its 2.000 acres, once . millionaires estate. has 30 soccer pitches and 15 cricket pitches. Tm; school boasts one of the finest in. d5" 5Wlmmin8 pools in Britain. and one of the .country's besr. equipped gymnasiums. The Halton Society caters for 1. score of dif- ferent hobbies and pasttmes,i-a,ng. ing in chess to angling, from time ur theatricals to glidlnz. There are also discussion group: and a debating society, and the apprentices contribute to the Hai- ton Magazine, which is published twice a. year. . . On finishing their apprentice- ship a. certain small number of boys are each year chosen to go to the R. A. F. College at Cranwell for training as officers in the Gen- eral Duties (Flying) Branch. Oth- ers are selected to go up to . um. 9 versity for a free course to gain an engineering degree and a com- mission later in the Technical Bi-onchf Others again are chosen to become pilots or navigators. But. whether singled out or not for these special distinctions. the ex-apprentices as a whole form the cream of the R.A.F.'s tech- nical tradesmen. Perhops the most outstanding figure that I-lalton has produced is Air Commodore sir Frank Whittle. the pioneer of the jet engine, who went from the school with ,1 com- mission to take an honours de- gree ln engineering at Cambridge University. of the Ontario Association of the Deal. Fred L. Sparks, Jr., superin- tendent of the Central New York School for the Deaf. said that sur- veys have shown deaf people to be the most careful workers and the safest automobile drivers. The lat- ter fact has been attested on more than one occasion, deaf people re- cognizing their” handicap and ad- justing their driving habits to over- come the handicap. It. can be said that deafness is not a handicap to automobile drivers when those in possession of normal faculties run up high accident tolls. The "nor- mal" drivers are the "lske-a- ehance" drivers.- Sudbury Star. The current crop of pr PROFESSIONAL CARDS MocPhee 8: Trainer IINF. MMPHBE, B.A.. Q.C. E. SOMEBLED TBALNOB, B.A. Barristers, Etc. B.A.. LL.B. . Barrister and Solicitor Bank of Commcrcolnuilding Charlottetown Money to Loon M..Albon Former.”gQTCS. J. A. lMcGuigon BABBISTBB, sououon. Etc. NOTARY. me. lg Currie Building I Bell. Mothieson 8: 1 Foster Barristers, Solicitor... Etc. )1. n. BELL. Q.C. candidates includes some very fair phrosemakers. There was General Elsenhoweris comment that the Truman administration was "in- bred, ingrown snd inept." And Sen. Kefauver's reference to Eisen- hower's "straight from the shoul- der generalities.” But for com- pressing the truth into neat cap- sules, no other has equalled Seno- tor Kerr. Qulzzed about Truman's record, he said: "Truman's record is what it ls." Asked the source of the letter-writing campaign against his controversial bill on gas-rate regulations, he explained: "Those messages came from those who sent them." There we have a knack for interpreting the fact that has hardly been seen since Calvin Coolidge informed the world that when large numbers of people were unable to find Jobs. unemployment resulted.-Chicago Daily News. 74a '?oe&l' 612192” TIIE IMMOBTAL t Beauty is still immortal in our eyes. When sways no more the spirit- haunted reed, when the wild grape shall build No more her canopies, when blows no more the moon-grey thistle need, When the lost bell has lulled the white flocks home. When the lost eye has stillod The wandering wind and touched the dying foam, When the last moon burns low. and , spark by spark The littitle worlds die out along the ark. , -Marjorie Plcktholl. BOWGOBOBOQTW The Ago-Old Story 4:1-ff-GD-1Zrr!bj0OWC0Bvvx PM God uponkoth once. you, Wide. yet mu: peroelvoth it not. . . . Yen. his ioul drnwoth near unto the grave, and his life to the destroyers. If there be A messenger with him. on interpret.- er. one among A thousand. to show nnw nun IIII nprlghtnou: than he In gracious unto him. unl ulth. Deliver him front going down to the pit: I have found A ransom. . . . no shall pray unto God, Ind he will be favourable unto him: and he shall no his face with Joy: l,om. Sir, nlv. ' nasozn. for he will render unto man his rightemuncu. ' Palmer 8: Hoslom A. J. IIASLAM. B.A., LLB. Barrister, Etc. Bank of Nova Scott: Chambers Charlottetown. P. E. I. MONEY T0 LOAN Barrister: Ind Solicitors Money to Loon Chas. R. McQuoid B.A. BABBISTBB, SOLICITOB. NOTARY, Etc. liar Trust Building CHABLOTTETOWN Phone 1111 J. S. Taylor b oi-'roM1u1'n1s'r Eyes V ' ' '" Fitted Corner Kent: and Queen sts. Office Phone IBM!-House 1013 Nicholson A. w. nwrnnsox, o.c. A. II. PEAKE, B.A.. LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LL.B. Barristers, Etc. ' Collections - Money To Loan to Great George Street Charlottetown BABBISTIB. soucrron, nu. Phone 590 .:(--z-zm-Z-mi Guudet 8: Hoszord i GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB. Canadian Bank of Comme cu Bldg. Mothoson. Peaks 8: -Allison ML Gilils. LL.B. 130 Richmond St. - Charlottetown 1). L. MATIIIESON, LL.B.. Q.C. G. B. FOSTER. LLB. Loom on City and Farm Properties 160 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P.E.I. Frederic A. Largo. QC Burl-Inter, Solicitor, Notary Royal Bank of Canada Bnllrllnz Charlottetown, P. E. 1. Loans on City and Farm Properties A. Wolthen Gander. LL.B. BARBISTEB, SOLICITOB. Eta Phillipl Jullding lll Grafton Street. Money to Loon Collection J. A. Corruthers. R.O. OPTOMETRIST 123 Kent Street Phone. 24171 (Next to Simpson's Agency) Byron J. Grant. O.D- OPTOMETBIST I26 Kent. Street Phone 875 (Opposite Revere Hotel) Dr. W. R. Carson CHIBOPBACTOB Palmer Grnduotn CHABLOTTETOVVN Phone 1072 N '20! Prince Si- -T ' Dr. A. L; Mocisooc DENTIST DCIIIII X-Bl! GLORIA BUILDING I'll Grafton Si. Phone '3'" . Phones M80 BANIDOLPH W. MANNING. (LA. lfentvlllo. Liverpool, McDONAI.D. CHABTIBBD Montreal. Quebec. Ottlwn. . H. R. DOANE 8: COMPANY CHABTIBED ACCOUNTANTS In Great George St.. C' Itlottctown -I477 - Box 241 , - ERMA P. MMPHEBSON, (-5 Other offices It lloliflx. Monoton. -St. John's, Amherst. Dnrtmmntlu. New Glasgow and Truro. CURRIE I: O0. ACCOUNTANT! Toronto. Saint John. Shcrbroolm. Vancouver, Kirkland Lake. bloncton. Hamilton. Chnrlottotnun. Currie Bldg" Charlottetown. .. . TQQg'h0nI 1ll1l6