‘cutting, mining and prospecting. trapping and PAGE roux TIIE GIIAIILOTTETIIWII GUARDIAN Morning Dolly (Founded Ill I881) Prelldent: Lleut. Col. W. Chester S. MuLIn ' Vlee-Pruldent: J. ll. Burnett, ll‘. J. I. Secret: y. Heat. Col. D. A. Macllnnon, 0.8.0. “my ma u ' Director: J. ll. Burnett. IJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Walker llll bloat. Ion A. Burnett. B..C.N.V.R. t0n Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” wsifiEsiiFnTi-oiiiifiisf 1m '—' Post War Jobs Dr. Leonard Marsh, the economist who gave us the Canadian equivalent to the Bever- idge Report, together with O. J. Firestone, has surveyed the job problem for cianadian Affairs, an education pamphlet put out monthly for the troops overseas. They have some ideas on how to assure jobs all around, but what is of almost equal interest is the factual background to their ideas. In the last war Canadian armed forces were 650,000. This time they are 750,000. At the erid of last war 300,000 men and women were ipd on war contracts. Today I,- agopoo are employed on contracts. In the lust war Cztuzulzt spout $l-">7O-°OO-OO°~ In this war so far we have spent $10,334,000,- QQQ, plus $i,5i8,ooo.00o in financial assist- aiice to the Pulled Kllllldmll- Until, this war 1920 was the year 0f lllgll watermark for Liauadian Qllllll0_\'|ll(’l‘lI. Jobs ilien totalled 3.7 million- fell to 3.l—about 700,000 iiueiiiployvetl, allow-i ing for the increase in population. Now, only ten vcars later, out of a population of nearl)’ twelve million, we hnit- (I\'L'l' five million men and women either iii civilian work or the armed forces. The Dominion Census iii I941 showed the largest group--26 per cent-of workers was engaged iii agriculture. Klzuiufacturing was next with 23. The wzir has chuigctl these! figures, putting more people into factories and‘ the armed forces. In i939 industries with more than fifteen employees provided work for 600,000. In [943 this had doubled. For example: The chemical industry rose by 34o per cent: iron and Steel by 273; non-ferrous metal produzts, I77; elec- trical apparatus, 140. ln four years of war Canadian manufacturing has grown as much as in 25 normal years. Dr. Marsh and his colleague estimate that at the end of the war there will be 5.2 million people in jobs. They judge that of these 4.7 will want jobs after the war. Of these per- haps 200.000 will serve in the armed fOrCCB, leaving 4.5 civilians wanting jobs-or nearly a million more than in the boom year of I929. Oiie reason for this, of course, is that since 1929 Canada's population has increased by L5 million. But, as they sayq “it will take some planning." "Hard Job Ahead" General Eisenhower, while reaffirming his conviction that Allied victory is certain, warns the peoples of the United Nations that “we have a. hard job ahead.” That puts an end to unjustified optimism, but it is no cause for despair. Rather, it is a summons to increased effort, not merely on the fighting fronts but oii the part of agricultural workers and those whose privilege it is to supply the “sinews of war." Nothing could be more reassuring than General liisciilioivciis confident statement: ‘WVe go iii as conquerors." lt is promised that there will be no let-tip iii the pressure exerted upon the 611C111)’, no pause iii the offensive, however difficult the going may be. If a decision can- not he reached before the onset of winter, the fight will go on just the same. from city to city until ticruiziiiy has been overrun. Even then, as the llritisli Foreign Secretary, Mr. Aiitlioiiy Eden, has said, the Nazi General Staff is prepared to continue resistance and do everything possible to embarrass the Allies in their tasks of ztdiuiiiistratioii. The job ahead is obviously a hard one, to be handled with firmness and a grim realiza- ‘this another “case of midsummer madness” on lii i933 that figure’ volumes so overwhelming. England seems to be the centre of the book- readirig boom. Sales of new books in England in 1943 mounted to 19,250,000 copies. There are no statistics on second-hand sales, but the turnover has been enormous and, incidentally, old-time works such as those by Dickens and Trollope, are hard to find. Formerly they were a. drug on the second-hand market. - Publishers are facing difficulties in meet- iiig this demand, both because of labor shortage and the scarcity of paper. Formerly English publishers drew on the Scandianavian wood pulp source. When that source was shut off, they turned to paper made from esparto grass which grows wild in South Africa. Shipping inter- ruptions have cut off that supply. IEDIIURIAI. NUItS _ The Fruits-of-Viclory Bonds uff to a K001i start. _ a u a u Prince of Wales students and their parents want to know why their locker fees have been increased 200 to 300 per cent with nothing to show for the increase. I i U It may be recalled Premier Jones announc- ed in July that a survey of our airport was to he made by Ottawa etigineers with a view to making it adequate for commercial flying. Was the part of the Premier or another stave-off by the Mackenzie King Government to fool th! electorate? a Robert Bridges, poet and physician, born this date 1813; practised at various London hospitals, retiring in 1882 to indulgediis poetic bent: published many plays, narrative poems I i I poetry is not of the popular J-Pscriptioll, b"! is appreciated by the cultured class: O my uncared-for songs what are ye worth, That in my secret book, with so inucb Cart, I write you this one here and this one there, Marking the time and order of your birth? “ n- o a e The French Provisional Government has promulgated a decree ordering the confisca- tion of all “illegal profits" accumulated by resi- dents of France since September l, I939. and setting up official committees to rarry out the measure. The decree defines as illegal profits any of which were obtained “from transactions with the enemy either directly or through in- termediaries" or from “infringements of the laws concerning prices, currency exchange, trad- ing in gold, rationing of food supplies or the collection and distribution of produce." t t t c Santa Claus, minus his traditional robes. vis- ited the British House of Commons the other day in the person of Col. J. J. Llewellin, Brit- ish Food Minister, who announccd his inten- tion oi giving extra rations this Christmas, the sixth Christmas since ' the beginning of the war. Col. Llewellin struck a. popular note when he said that lie had decided to give chil- dren between the ages of 6 months and l8 years an extra. half pound of candy for the holidavs. Everyone 70 years of age and older will get an extra ounce of tea each week, an addition. lie said, he hoped to be able to continue through- out I945. IIUI Now it can be told. “Germany invaded Nor- way for the purpose of invading America from ‘the north,” LL-Cnidr. Carr, R.C.N., former senior officer at Goose Bay in Labrador, de- clared. “That is why we established air and naval bases on the north shore of the St. Law- rence, at Goose Bay, l-Iudsoiis Bay, Southamp- toii Island, two on Baffin Island, nlld two in Greenland." Between December, I941 and April, I942, 332, ships were sunk off the east coast of North America “practically within sight of American shores,” he disclosed. “\Vc seamen," he said but during the four months Nova Scotia fishermen, organized by Lt.—Cmdr. Carr brought ashore 487 merchant seamen between Liverpool and Yar- iiioutli, N. S. He said that the wai lound Cait- ada so unprepared that after she had been in ship production a year- the first corvettes to es- SHINE tion of the fanatical character of the enemy with which we are dealing. " The Western Norlhland Numerous inquFt-it-s zire bcing received at Ottawa, iiicluiliug many from mclubrrs of the armed forccs of Cziuxula mid the United States. about the possibilities of settlement and about the regulations governing liomesteading, timber fur trading along the Alaska lliglirvay. The inqiiirers arc bring warned that the, rigorous life iii that north country is only fori the strong iii mind and body. 'l‘herc are manyI indications of minerals, and mining will he the chief activity after tli war. Much of the country traversed by die Alaska llghwayi has not been surveyed vet. Farmland ncar possible markets will he settled in time, the timber re- sources will be developed, and trapping will doubtless attract. many men. Some $6,600,000 worth of minerals have been taken out of the NOTlIHVLYSI in the last two years. ’l'liis was mostly gold from the Yellowknife district, radium-silver from Great Bear Lake, and oil from Fort Norman. But copper, lead, tungsten and several other valu- able minerals Iiavc been rccovcrctl in promising ‘lllalllllifls- The lllslYlCt Slwllld Yl°l<l KW“ the ItIiiiistcr which presumably will pass through 19449 Plflll-lellll" llflmlllllll- P . if Implemented. would wealth mil" llillire- in; hands in transit in his capacity as deputy w, h", ,,,,,'"-,,,,, ,,,,,, ,, ,, ,,,,,_, E“E9."_"‘.._'£;_fl’TPE’Z‘"_'1“°lf=’__°_P§ D d F B k minister. If Howe_follows the Ottawa pa; tithtthiexfllntg 0310;! Mk; tegatpeiapegurtofflplreidlxeltauntelbe msoldlert‘: eman or 00 s Pram“, of "Ilmsbers relymg Plhthelr ‘lemma to send service men. He tells us ter over for n few days, onde filial: ——-~— for advice and guidance. he will lntVliaIIlIY have tlis recently all their sti-slglit- 1y began taking his boolu home m Some books in Iiiiglitntl are now being to call on Mr. Henry to say what he thinks b“ "I ‘mm’! ""9 uh" “W” "m "m!" "lldlllll"! "W" fully printed on paper from domestic straw. I The world situation has created an over- whelming desire on the part of peoples to read books. Publishers, in the United States and processed tariiey-General, amended the Prohibition Act, arisen in Ottawa, according to the lllonfrnal will be able to go one better than the legendary We will thus have Mr. Henry, as chairman of the Air Transport Board, of his own reports as Transport Board head. It. is logical to assume that Mr. Henry will have no hesitation in urging the adoption of cort merchantmen to Great Britain left port with wooden guns on their forecastle heads. “Before those ships left the Atlantic coast of Canada we very ceremoniously hoisted the wood- en guns aboard with a four ton lii-is! at Hali- fax," said Carr. "We hoped this might I001 any enemy agents in the port." a m s w The Hon. Thane A. Campbell, when At- 5 giving authority to the Attorney-General to in- vestigate its administration by the Attorney- Geiieral-an investigation into his own admin- istration by himself. A similar situation has c Gazette, which says: “There are mist intriguing possibilities in the appointment of Mi. R. A. C. Henry as deputy minister of the newly-created Federal Department of Reconstruction. He bureaucrats in Washington write memos to themselves. who reputedly The new deputy. making reports to Enflond, have never known a demand for bound and lyrics; was made poet laureate in i913; hi5 hi heat condesnsecl m‘lk, years. down sliikes for hlni! hls 40-min: sectlon. lie lins walked a distance Tlmcs. colonies, irlini iiaton 1's to take them over? The weight of the argument 1s surely ln favor of Britain, niituiltlistandln the Empire-batters lll the United _ States lflVf‘ to say about i. That. did not even have ciiotigh ships to rescue our lfclme to the East must never be unofficially ago'~st' Catharine's Sh“. wlll Willi» a share fanglerl improvements and inven- tions. and it that in the neur future the farm home wlll possess all the conveni- ences and pretty plastic products l that. may be found ln Radio has made a vas’ difference to farm li will produce devces than, add to contentment of llvlniz ln the coun- try-fit the praise bestowed upon the in- dustrlal might of the Unl ed States by Premier Stulln of Russia, who Embassy in Moscow that Without American we." the Ellfilrefln conflict mlght have may be that Premier Stalin thought. It‘ necessary to say such B this. around, the flowers may well fly In man News-C ronlcle. cause you like him, or do you like hlm because you have already made up your mind to vo'.e for Most voteiu would answer “yes" to Wm, vancement of Science, based on an analysts their changes polled during and replaced with u bolstered easy chin to make pro onged reading lell of a strain. good deal plessunter, he ssy e at ft 11m cimnixrrricijowiv uuAxuu-tiv PUBLIC FORUM an! d Insult. Do Illllloliotnnl Quinlan doc 0v- n-nlllllr undone Q IOU!!! dtuienk-s DOCTORS AND SCRIPTS Sin-Just recently considerable radio publicity was given to s. letter Written by the Premier to Mrs. Charles Lord, Tryon, a copy of which also was made public tn the press. e all to the Implications made In the last; paragraph and to the interpretation given the ublic of this Province by the remlerts The etter ssld in psi-c “the doctors are made agents for the distribution of liquor under the Act. and l! their work ls ln. effective the Government wlll consider its duty to change the Act"; and again, "the distribution of liquor ls apparently to people ot slck ln most I am now faced with s dilemma. I have had no course durlng my medical trainlng on how to act as an agent, of the Government I have not been provlued by the Government. with a llst of the specific condltlons for which they consider liquor soeclfic therapy. Patients demand srclpts for varl. ous types of celebraliiiis such as meetings of any klnd, weddings, etc. and I am told that, liquor has been used quite ‘extensively dur. trig such celebrations as elections. Prescribed for the voters by the politicians before elections and often for the POIII-IITIBIIS by the voters afterwards. ' the Premier cannot. flnd any other reason for his wishing to change the Act than his conteii. tlon that lt ls the iiu-dlcal mgn who are sbuslng It. I. for one, am very glad to rakeve his mlrid for the future and will guarantee m that. I wlll havi- no part; ln the Act as his agent; and wlll ln. form my patients smirdlngly that I will treat, their allmenta with such remedies as I have on hand without the use of his serf , f I ‘feel ess on as a whole ta very tired of having politicians tell our pen. ple that we are responsible for conditions which they decry but do so little to contiol I am. Slr. etc. J. A. MiiMILLAN, MJ). llotes By The Way Hitler has called this “the hour- of danger" for Germany. For once Der Fuehi-efs intuition has in- 1°Ylll°<l lllm correctly. _ Brantford ExposLor. A lending electrical conoem has a machine that can see through s foot; of solid steel. How about; u, machine which will permit ‘he Pfivple to see through all this cur. Pent Political bunk? - Sratford Beacon-Herald. Demo's “Robinson Crusoe,” u perennial favorite with young Su- "let readers. says the U.S.S.R. Bul- letin, has been issued in a new ecllton of 150,000 copies. It's sflln: t b II ‘u. thl the Brockvllle ‘IIECCTGETIIIIIICI Tlniii: for sDme of the majors and the lleutenant-colonels, not; to mentjgn “l? bflllfldfrs to settle down to their pormal occupations-and the salaries that accompany them. Thflllllh blizzard: and through waves Charles E. Ghamness, cake and. some- plpellne for tin oll company for 30 Except ln his annual week has-not missed a day on 'n all that time. No slt- Inspecting off, he the job times York equal lo elght around the earth. — New It It-uy is i.» lgieiill her African z all that the same jeopardy as l1; was three Naturally, the farm housewife of the new- fs not too much to say city homes. ‘fe: the post-tym- area . Thomas Times-Journal. Few lri Canada wlll begrudge aid at s gathering at the Brtlsh alcl the course of ereat. The only wonder s thing w}? peotple knew en e throwing bouquets this time. already. umes for directions. - Port Arthur Do you vote for n candidate be- _ _ _ the flrst nest/on and “no" to the t M revision‘ "m" 5Y4"? it will be recalled, was only recently appoint- seoond- ‘gut the Probabilities are .‘{,,,,,,°'1§§?§,,,_;’,;’jf‘°ml},'°§;bg, ‘lg; ed chairman of the Air Transpflrt Board. And flfgglfihzamngi “Y” 5mm“ 5"“ the Bl-rslt the total cogt wgu] b, , . . . _ . your liking follows your gppfoxjmutely ‘Mmnom A Hon. (.. D. Howe, who 1S MllllSittf of Recon- Voting Intention. Dr. Paul 1". my with p, iouir‘ air hflVlcflfllzllg-fl struction over Mr. Henry, continues to be I-BWBMQ. C Eh UnWler-illy and tunnel approaches w I - - - -~ - - statistician demonstrated to tl-ill 1mm; g 1,3 u “u- minister-in-charge of civil aviation and as such emu, M15" the rneetlng of the with s bridge mm m to be final arbiter of all air transport matters. Amerlcan Association for the Ad- figures have been criticized-u be, vo ‘ei- preference and thr Things got is s. but enme to feel th merely bl‘ personally object on imy um; for the distribution ol liquor and flclal time n. him? R water, ‘Transportation Factor in Postwar Planning for The Maritimes Preliminary Report DR!!!“ by Rand II. Muthelon, Tnnl- portntlon Manner, TY!"- portntlon Commission of the Maritime Board of Trade, Sept. l5. 1m. aiiiimvvfl h! the Commission, 0st. 2, 1M4- II Previous reports of this Com- mlsslon have fndlcnted the plans considered and efforts made from time to time to mslntaln not only rate relationships and lmlml" the quality of service, but also to establish more reasonable edllut- meats to encourage market ex- pansion and increased develop- ment of the natural resources. In the Commission's planning there is, of necessity, Involved the col. lectlon and tabulation o! Iflcllllil material u antecedent to the formulation of specific object. lves. The conslderstlons lnvolvs an appraisal of changes, pro- posals imd transport trends to as- certain any detrimental or bene- lnfluences, and to determ. lne the needs of the Maritime: tn oflksetttng harmful tendencies ‘or In taking advantage of favour- able developments. Consequently, there ls involved s continuous study of legislation which might directly or indirectly have a bearing on transportation, of tech. nologlcal developments, of action taken or projects contemplated which would result ti. competitive advantages, and of trends which would tend to increase baslc de. marids for transportation, such as Increased growth lii population. What the future holds for Marl. time industry ln the international markets depends largely on the underlylng policy of the agree. merits that would be implemented by nations ln the postwar period. The Marttimes enjoyed a rela. tively fair export market in the pre.war period, and if the present tendency towards a lowering of trade barriers ls effected. the ex- port position of the Maritime: should be materially Improved. Au impetus to industrial activity tn the Marltlmes should tend to a population growth or shift. which, rom the market viewpoint, should exert a greater tendency towards decentralization than that. which as existed 1n the past. The ad. vantages of cheap water transport are In easy reach of practically the whole of the Msrltlmes dur. lng twelve months of the year-a fact ivhlch has been of significant Importance In the development of the modest export trade. As to the influence of cheap water transport, lt ls interesting to ob. serve that a survey made ln the United States in A938 indicated that "about hall of the (major manufacturing) areas are located on deep water and many of the remainder have access to nsvlg. able rivers." ' a a e The Commlslonbi Immediate post.war programme includes: t1) proposals for additions and better. ments in facllltles and services; (2) adjustments considered neceaary to remove handicaps. extend mar. kets and maintain relationships 1n the public interest; and (3) measures which mav promote ord- erly development aucl a fuller use of resources. These proposals are lii various stages of planning. Some are more or less of s pre. limlnnry nature. that ls to sa they are presently ‘he subjegt, Or surveys involving the collection of factual data; or they have been progressed to the print where analysts of the information ls possible; or further stlll to the place where the flndlngs can form the basis for rccotnmendatlon to or negotiations with the proper Jlllllorltlcs: ivlillt: others have been advanced to the extent thar they constitute official policies or mandates merely sitting necgg, Si!‘ ' r s .:1:iszri:l*:i2.f-' “l” m ' “Growth of American manu. facturing ai‘eas"~G. E. Macliaugh. llii, University of Pittsburgh Proposals For Additions AndiBeL terments of Transport Facility 1 Causewagervicel‘! tug t - or r e a the Strait, of Canso and Related Rall- rortiryl‘ Improvements. e proposal of a causeway o: bridge at the Strata of Cimso can, comitiint with improvements tn the railroad from Sydney w point, ln Nova Scotia and New Bruns. Wm‘ h" MW PMs-eased beyond the recommendation stage and t; a mutter which ls to be further studied and investigated by up proprlate Federal Department; The Special Committee on Recon. atructlon and Reestabllshment in 4th report to the House of c°mm°llfli dated January 26 1944 Blrviislr urged that the obuum,‘ mmlh give earnest consideration Portiitleon ‘.'.‘E‘?Z‘.’§“'“fi§“ °‘ can” by the constiiiuctlstiiiaitol on: CBUSEWHY or lii sucli manner u; mll-V be Judged most sntlsfsctorv. considering the amount of traffic and the conditions of lce tldé; lmd Current" and also to the “re iii-riding. realigning and double lirllllklll! of the Canadian Nat lonal Railways from Sydney 6 BM "- arlaus tl t l made as toeflitingogf of m" °l' bfldse at the Strait IéEIOfl “tilts econ: ctlon “bunk merit Mr. D. M. McLaughlin of the Department o! Transport and My S. W. Fslrweiithcr, vlcmpresldenl: ln charge of research and develop. meat of the Canadian Natlonal allwigakstated that. a causeway In: rel tlv l, ht h, connectlfoneivlthgs Fslrweather believed that the 1m.‘ IOV approximating soldier's. He now read; sitting fully clothed ln the bifhtllb In two or three inches of by flashlight. ne ny it ves hlm n~ entirely new ssnt, . . l Mr. Henry's recommendations. But (perish glflglefllted the fulndsrbnaetntal drill‘; inhifilcugltirly out all bookslddasllng - ~ - - erence n rspectve .ween w i pos-wnr wor . the the thought!) he might conceivably advise their "M," m m“ o, the sold,“ peace as“ what’ to do Wm. m. rejection on oemuol. mil thus lode him leu well Germans. - In Isobar, ‘flavor-FULL Chase 8: than ever before. 1—é '-' WARD ISLAND. PURCHASE OF A VICTOR ENTIRE RESOURCES 0F C TWO GREATEST ASSETS VIGTIIRY LOA ENTIRELY NEW SERIES October 16 Georgetown 18 0’Leary — 19 Murray Ha 20 Kinkors — dates will be an You Will Find These E. R]; I44 Richmond St. A ll $4 NO I ‘l1 c” I (.0 More Canadians are drinking “Sales are going up, 11p? UP!‘ annnnuunununnuann “Blood, Sweat and Tears” said Prime Minister Churchill. “We'll Sweat to earn dollars to invest in Victory Bonds: to help sror the Blood and Tears," answers PRINCE‘ iin-l NEVER WAS THE NEED S0 GREAT AS NOW, THE MENT IN OUR BOYS OVERSEAS BACKED BY THE‘ AND SHORT POINTED TALKS. 17 Tignish — Mount Stewart 23 Cape Traverse -- Cardigan 24 Vernon River — Freetown 25 Hunter River — Montague 26 York — Murray River 27 North Wiltshire — Souris 30 New Glasgow There will be several other meetings for which Bring ‘four Neighbours With, You i The, National War lhlillfilkblfillblfimlmlflllliblfilfilkhllbfill row & Son l Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness i and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, D. O. Stewart Sanbom Y BOND IS AN INVEST-i ANADA, WHICH ARE THE IN THE WHOLE WORLD. N MEETINGS OF WAR LOAN MOVIES — Alberton North Rustieo rbour — Kenslngton Crapaud nounced later. Meetings Interesting Finance Committee Charlottetown cent reductions in the handling traffic over the present faollltles. This Commlsslo stresses, ln siliport of representstlons made by the Government of Nova Sco. ta and Boards of Irade. that. the construction of a causeway or bnldse at the Strait of Cimso to. gather with rsllroud improvements. while of direct value to eastern Nova Scotia, possesses broader lflcsnce ln connection with n cmordlnated National Fuel Pol. lay, and l eornme is as s follow. MISSING IN ACTION: I944 In marches to a mush no one when marched the Roman and the vanquished Gaul, And 1p Dghe darkness of n hundred ars l-le heaps the etolld face. and late. O Illkltafc th the burning In l1 htl, th h h Dlanalepm‘ 5mg roux t one OI his momentous oasssse. there rem n Gear stun. the wsltlnu wlnd. the silent nlr. -John Clstliornewmgg. oonns”@ KIDNEY Pll.l.'5_ so ‘Vrql ‘l ll “at i" I cosli__o_fi"'u P to p l the pluiievsifibsulxtilapiiiiiirintlgettibxliiae m‘: to h "d t: never gi-smm g ° fiiateplsels, viiohosmtbniiiflakemm ie postfiwngprtgercllod'fscllltles e cost of tho v-sunewe. brld m; ' 7 °". mmfoillayégnlliéetatiti-as by the Do.‘ (To Bs Continued) and available In the —- -_....—__-:-_=:::; “COMPLETE ,3 INSURANCE SERVIC *1, W. ll. ROGERS Agencies Ltil. Phone 540-541 llurv-ai-l-l '- - Harrell iuui tlomllll‘ M. ALBAN FARME an. nun. cumin» Bunk of compel" ‘u M v 1- n i V IAIBIBTER. somicrw “firm: 0O Great 600' lAllllflls ' u/ONC ‘raj, SAINT JOHN., w. cuuwnsrowu 7.00 A. M. 11.30 A. M. ‘$.00 P. M. (‘Manchu Only) To ' NEW GLASGOM A |.o0 P. M. ‘moo 0B0 Way (flu T“, “""'“'filllilll°“"ltl IIONB 540-1001 miimnicuiu Ii. F. Ilutcliooon & $0M OPTOMETRISTS AIRWAYS “Specialist! In the m. ting of glasses for tl|| correction of ocular do feels.” 53 Grafton Street Attention Truss Wearers To those of you who m unfortunate enough to have to wear a truss we ask the question Are vou utlsfleil with the one you are wearing? Does It flt comfortably or ls It an antiquated and out-ul- flule style-outgrown ltii use- esl so to sneak. thus ensuing untold agony, then why continue sufferliic Wllrn we can alleviate the cause by ufferlnl You 8 net-feet flttliir. modern and uu-tu-date 0M from the large assortment hilt received sizes amt styles It Drlces to null every- body. Gassy Stomaclis Relieved E e rso who h lruuh‘ ledvwlIIhuEn IIn the stomach and bowe should Jet a bol- tllu of "Dr Evans Stomach Mlxture and see how uulcll! It wlll relieve all dlstresstiii lymptoml Dr. Evens Stomach Mll- tuu Cohen at meal tlmel. iiol only nreventl all had effect! from gal, but It nrumnles III! functional activity n! l!" ltomach. assists digestion and Improves the tits. Pill! 85 cents her bottle min Orders given iii-mill attention. TIIE 2 MACS m arm omre Hlml Professional llarili McLeod G Bentley W. I. BENTLEY. K- c- l. A. BENTLEY. K- c- Iorrllterl and ' WIMW“ Luv 1M Prlnoo Btm! ll. B. lloano 6 00- clurteml Accountant! ll Gallon Street- Charlottetown hon mo B" l" muuipii w. Mnnulll- 0-!- ll. F. Alllllillll; cum-u swarm" Intern ‘hunt nwlllll" Charlottetown 0 LOAN ALEX w. Msriiirflll" Ilec to Loan C: 5, .- B. IOLICIT u I Til-IT