it I t . i I Inc GUIARDIANT Publls "week-day morning at I36 Prince sireei Charlottetown. P.I-:.I. by the Thomson Company Ltd. , M King st. W.. Toronto. Montreal Office, 225 University Towel Bldg. "Cure" Prince Edward llluld Like the Dei” Editor. I-lnnk walker uenural Manager. Ian A. Burneu All-mber ('.-inadinn Daily Neuspapu Publisher: Association Member of the Canadian Preiis Member Audit Bureau of Circulauunn I uificu at Summerxlde. Montague and Albenui. lll led as Second Clan Mail by the Poll Offlco Department. Ottawa. 53 ..iiriei C rluuewwn. Sunime nu: 315.00 per ui mm. Lise-where in P. E. l. 89.00 other Province: nu U. S. 112.00 per nnniun -:'Tlii- strongest memory is weaker than the weakest Ink." FRIDATTSEIETT 16 1955 W Renewed Search For Oil important indeed is the au- noiincement by Premier Mathcson that a license has been granted to Iinp-criiil Oil Limited to search for all and gas on Prince Edward Is- land. The area to be explored cov- ers oier -ttl0,tio0 acres and it is iiiucrstood that aerial survey work will be begun within a few weeks, to as followed by ground work of at. intensive nature. Our citizens will recall the drop )t'..l made some years ago in iii" iro Bay, which failed in pro- ii-.:i; oil but resulted in securing lYll.i'll .2i'i:alile int'oi'mat'ion about the lsltvti-l's geology. Since that time. fIl0l'Pi'lX'8l', ii thorough survey has been nizide of the Province, carried on by the Federal Department of Iii il'.x' with the assistance of the Pro- VIII-X.'1I ficpartment of Industry and Reeolirces. This work has been going on -zu-iidily for the past three years, and a -zrer-it deal of assistance has Iw.-ii lt'”:lltll'PtI the expci'ts by Mr. B. Gr:-:h:iti'i I'f0;,'t'lE', of the local dcpart- ment. with the active support and co-operation of the Government. As stated in the news story in to- days issue, there is no certainty that oil in commercial quantities will lie lncaterl here, and it would be uiiwicia to raise undue hopes in this connection; but the fact that a big company of tho status of Imperial Oil Limited is prepared to go ahead is of prime significance. Their suc- cess would be of tremendous import- ance to this Province, and to the whole llaritiine area for that mat- for. " Walden Pond Today (Iiicc-solitary Walden Pond where Hi-nry David Thoreau did his phil- osr-pliixing may soon be bordered by more public land for the enjoyment of modern Thoreauvians escaping the complexities of city life. Under a Alzissacliiisetts bill some 100 acres would be added to the 144-acre Wal- den Pond State Reservation. Today lIltlll- .'lllflS of visitors frequent the bit of wilderiiess edging the 64-acre pond. I5 miles west of Boston. Some picnic. some swim, some boat; al- most all muse on the back-to-nature author of ”Walden or Life in the Vt'r)urIs," says the National Geo- zrin-iiic Society. A native of Concord, only a short walk .-iwny, Thoreau secluded him- self at the pond in 1845. Out of his two-your stay grew his literary mas- tci-pivre. The eccentric genius lived in n --nv.-ill house fashioned by his Ollll Il.llI'I.S. Framed by pines and lVi'II”l. it cost 3ii'.28.I21,5. The boards iwintiz in 3R,t).'l'g.: the shingles for roof and sides. 324; hinges and screws. 1 tithe-r items: two cnsks of limc. a ..i:.h, l.fl0ll old bricks at M, and mo .w'i'I1llfl-Iiflllfl glass wiiidows. llc Intur wrote: ”I give thc dctiiils lic- iuiiisc very few are able to tell exact- ly what their houses cost." Much of his thinking: was givcn over to tho pond itsvlf. Tho n;ilui'aI- jQl.In-lllll-l'flllQIl lroiiut-iilly took to Ills Iillfll .'lI siiiisvt to ”cli:irni thc fish with flute music." When wintcr cast a mantlc of snow ovc'i' the foot-thick ice, Tliorciiu often cut through and kn:-it to drink, at the same time gaz- ing into the "quiet, parlour of thc He struck up a fancy for the pirlii-i'cl which he preferred to the f.ixoi-its New England cod and lla(ItiO('k "whose fame is trumpeted in our streets." When workmen performed the workaday job of cutting ice for ship- ment,” Thoreau let his thoughts d-riff dreamlly to far-off places. "It appears," be reflected, "that the sweltering inhabitants of Charleston and New Orleans, of Madras and Bombay and Calcutta, drink at my well. . . . The pure Walden water is mingled with the sacred water of the Ganges." . when spring in-rived, red squir- rels dwclt under his house. Sparrows IISIIKK." - Guttmyd in. Marsh-hawks wheeled over the greening meadows. bytiholomrutookofffrnm me pun... Asltnavu Lucu uuiuung ranks and headed for Canada. Wild pigeons winged ovcrhcad. The sap crept higher in the hickories and maples, fringing them with pale leaves etched against the somber pines. p Thorcau. man of nature, lived oft these sights and sounds but little more. As ifthe act of nourishing the body were a troublesome physical chore, he spent only 27 cents a day for the victuals he couldnlt raise. A story has it that Thoreau once ate a woodcliuck that coveted his beans. A different fate awaited a second trans- grcssor. He carried the woodchuck two miles and released it-whether from lack of heart or lack of appetite is not known. Noteworthy Anniversary The commemoration on Sunday by the Royal Canadian Air Force of the fifteenth anniversary of the Battle of Britain is something in which all our people should partici- pate, at least in spirit. In Canada as well as overseas the Force will hold church parades and special services to pay tribute to the famous ”feW". who, over Britain, fought the battle that decided the fate and destiny of free m'en. The dates July 10 and October 31, 1940, have been accept- ed as marking the opening and tenn- ination of the battle, which reached its peak on September 15, when the Luftwaffe suffered its major defeat over Britain. Each year since that September, members of the RAF and RCAF have commemorated the Suit- day following September I5, or on that date when it falls on Sunday. The Battle of Britain had special significance for the RCAF, marking the Force's baptism of fire. In August 1940 No. 1 Fighter Squadron of the RCAF, later designated 401 Squadron, flew into action against the enemy, won its first victories. and suffered its first casualties. Can- ada was represented in the famous battle by several hundred officer.- and airmen who served as aircrew and groundcrew in Fighter, Bomber. and Coastal Commands. Forty-seven Canadian officers and men, serving with the RCAF and RAF, gave their lives. On this occasion at timely men orial booklet has been issued by th Air Historical Section of the RCAI entitled ”Among The Few", giviii a detailed sketch of the part play cd by Canadian airmen in the battl- together with a complete list of th fallen. These names are enscribe on the honour roll in the memoria chapel in Westminster Abbey. It 1: but fitting indeed that they shoult be recalled with pride and gratitude in their native land. t EDITORIAL NOTES There will be general regret at the resignation of Dr. 0. H. Curtis from the office of Deputy Minister of Health and Welfare. a position he has flllcd so capably since 1951. Dr. Curtis is resuming private practice in the city. I I O Coiigratiilations to Mr. Glen Morrissey, of Cherry Valley, the new Maritime plowing champion, and to another Cherry Valley man, Mal- colm MarRae, the new Island champ- ion who will represent this Provincc in the Dominion plowing contest. 0 O 0 Appiircntly the railway economy movcmcnt in this Province is being duplicatcd in the United Kingdom. A So:-icty has bccn formed there "for the Rcinvigorntion of Unremunera- tivc Branch Lines," with a view to prcvcnting, if that's possible, furth- er dismantling of small railways. e 9 o No more suitable epitaph for the Canadian National Exhibition's Lake Ontario swim could be devised, says the Globe and Mail, than the com- merit of a St. John Ambulance driver - as he escorted one of the exhausted and half frozen contestants to hos- pital. "This is no sport-it's like watching the casualties being carried from a battlefield." The Provincial Plowing Match and Fair at Dundasi was a big suc- cess, as were the Provincial Exhibi- tion and other Island fairs held earl- ier in the season. This is all the more gratifying in view of the slum - which hit the Canadian National Ex- hibition at Toronto. Expected to attract a record three million visit- ors, the big Exhibition In fact at- tracted 10,500 fewer visitors than lad van: - A st-aft!) OTTAWA REPORT Politically Good, Economically Bad By Patrick in its rccciil survey of the sales tax levied by the Federal Govern- ment. the Canzidian Tax Founda- tion listed the estimated cost of this tax on a wide range of ar- Iicles. ' These figiirss served to drive home the point that this tax is fiscally a very bad tax Yet It is politically a very good tax. and that is the reason why we are saddled with it. Thanks to the ac- tivities of such organizations as the Canadian Tax Foundation. every Canadian may one day become alerted to the high cost of this bad tax, and dcmand that Parlia- ment slioudl rcpcal it. and replace it by a less costly tax. The Manufacturers Sales Tax. an it is called, is levied upon pro- ducts at the manufacturers level: or, in the case of foreign products, at the import:-rs level. Thus the factory or wholesale price of any article subject to this tax is In- creased by the ten per cent scale of the tax. This enhanced price I la is then. in the case of most pro- ducts. subject in its entirely to the inark-up which provides the livelihood of the dsti-ibutor. the johhcr and the retail merchant. Supposing. as is not uncommon that those mark-ups double the factory pricc. so that the ultimate purchaser. Mrs. .lohnny Canuck, pays just twice the price at which that article left. the factory; then Mrs. Canuck is paying a surcharge of 20 per cent on the factory price in order that the federal govern- ment can collect a tax amounting to ten per cent of the factory price. That makes this a very bad tax. from the fiscal point of view, be- cause its yicld to the federal trea- sury is only half of its cost to the taxpayer. HIDDEN THEREFORE GOOD But politiczilly of course this is a vcry exccllcnt tax. This is be- cause it is a so-called "hidden" tax. When you buy a pound of tea or a candy bar. you are not conscious that you are paying a tax in Ottawa included in the pur- chase price. Even when you buy a car or in refrigerator, you are pcrliaps loss conscious that you are peyiniz Iaxcs than you are when IIIFDIYIP tax makcs a direct cut from Four earnings--Iinless you happen to have noticed the price of the same article on the Ameri- can market where lower taxes and higher immigration show a plea- sini! effect. The varying scale of mark-ups In price. between the producer and consumer. mcans that this sales tax shows a very varicd yield. per sioo spcnl at lhr retail level. on different classes of goods. Tn exemplify this. the Canadian Tax Foundation cniimerated the retail price of a wide range of articles, and estimated the sum yielded to the Federal Government as sales tax upon each. Among these are four articles each listed at S300 at the retail level an clcclric stovc, a refrig- erator. a television receiving set, and a chcstcrfield. The sales tax yield to the Federal Government, included in the retail price of S310, is estimated to be 515 in the case The Age Old Story Truly God In good to Iiirnel. even to such as are of clean hurt. But as for me, my feet were al- most gone; my steps had well nlgl slipped. For I was envlou It be foolish, when I saw the prosperity OF THE WICKED ;. They are cor- rupt. and speak wickedly concen- llg oppression: they iipuh lnltlly. They set their mouth animal the heavens. and their tongue wnllielh tlirmigli the urtli. MAINILLE. France (CF)- RCAF authorities Thursday rc- pai-led "no change" in the polio- Inyelttln situation at this jet fighter station. . Twenty-four por- sonn were hit by the disease In the last month but no new cases we been reported since Satur- N icholsun of the electric stove and the felt vision set, S16 in the case of th refrigerator. and 320 in the cas of the chesterfield. This implies that the factor price of each article is ten timc the tax figure. namely S150 in the I case of the television set. ranging to 5200 in the case of the chester- ficld. Thus distribution costs and retail profit amount to some 3135 on the television set, and only still on the chestefleld. The factory price of the television set of course also includes the special 15 per cent tax paid to cover the operat- ing costs of the Canadian Broad- casting Corporation. This artlclr probably contains therefore the lowest dollar value of any of these tour 3300 purchases. Margarine priced at 40 cents re- tail contains a three cent tax pay- vient to the government. Allowing 'or the mark-up on the tax. it would probably therefore sell at 36 cents if not subject to this sales x. This survey by the Canadian Tax Foundation has attracted a lot of attention here. If it makes Canadian voters more tax-con- scious, it might lead to a popular demand for the abolition of this I costly hidden tax. and its substi- I tution by a more efficient butl cheaper direct tax. . New Traces 0f Eskimo Culture Canadian A 30-pound sack of stones from .L-ake Kamut, Lake Contwoyto and Canada's Far North may contain I evidence of the culture of the Cape ' Dorset Eskimos. among the most anci A Eskimo peoples to inhabit the Arctic. The stones were brought here by Prof. Elmer Harp Jr.. Dart- mouth College anthropuloglst who has just returned from the Arctic. They're not ordinary stones. They are flint spear points, arrow heads, scraping and cutting tools and chips left behind as long as 2,000 years ago in the campsites of stone age aborigines. During an eight-week expedition. Pi-of, Harp and Dr. Ralph E. Mll- lcr, Hanover physician and Arctic flying enthusiast. sought ancient Eskimo habitation sites In the vi- cinity of Coronation gulf. Dismal lakes and Biithurst inlet on the coast of the Arctic ocean. They also travelled Inland in a vast unexplored region between Cont- woyto lake and the big bend of the Cnppei-mlne river. HUGE SURVEY Prnf. Harp is carrying out an aiitli.npologlc' survey he hopes will eventually extend from New- foundland to Alaska. He seeks evi- dence of the spread of the Cape Dorset culture. or of peoples even more ancient. This summer's expedition was financed by the American Philo- sophlcal Society and the Dart- mouth faculty commltlee on re- search. The two men flew more than 5.000 miles across the Arctic bar- rens in Dr. Mlllei-'3 plane. Much of this flying was done at NO to 300 feet. so that they could spot from the shadows of the sun's slanting ray: former campsite: and likely spot: to do exploratory ex- cavation work. Prof. Harp found campsites that showed signs of occupancy as long as 2.000 years ago and also within the present century. In these he was able to dig up nittlfnctii of stone age Inhabitants while at the same time there were remain: of Indian "lirusli campl" of the pres- ent prn. IN NEW REGION up said the moat pro- ductlve areas were In the region lying between Coronation gulf nu Great Bear lab, DIIIIII Ilka. Prol.I-I 0y .3 I Q .4 K2,, .. AT GLASTONBURY Iladgalen at Michaells gate I Firled at the pin: ')n Joseph's horn sang the black- bird. Let her in! Let her in! "Hasl thou seen the wiiiiiidsf" said Michael. tKnowest thou thy sin?' 'It is evening, evenlng,' sang the blackblrd. - Let her in! Let her in! 'Yes, I have seen the wounds, Ind I know my sin.' She knows it well. well, well,' sang the blackblrd. Let her In! Let her inrl Thou bringest no nffei-ings,' said Michael Noughl: but sin. And the blackbird sang. She is. sorry, sorry, sorry, Let her in! Let her in!' When he had sung himself to sleep. And night did begin. One came and opened Michael's gate, And Magdalen went in. -Henry Kingsley tlllm-76). Poul Lake Kathawachaga. Anthropologists believe that the Eskimo culture first found at Cape Dorset on Baffin island. thousands of miles to the east, gradually moved from Alaska into the cast- ern Arctic. This means that the remains found at Cape Dorset it- self represent relatively recent evidence of those ancient stone age people. The Dorset culture never has been recorded in the central Arc- llc. Prof. Harp said. He hopes to learn whether it can be found much farthcv to the west. stemming from peoples who lived as much as 20.000 years ago. when men first came to North America across Bering strait. - Subject For Study tSydI1ey Post-Record) Britain's High Commissioner to Canada, Sir Archibald Nye, said in Fredericton that he was alarm- ingly concerned over the sudden drop In Canadian purcliaseii in Britain. Brllalnts exports to Can- ada have fallen uinllnunusly In the last three years. . Canadians have as much reason as has Sir Archibald to be con- cerned. A drop in imports from Medically Speaking By Ilerman N. Bundesen. M. D. PREVENTING AIRSICKNESS Don't let fear of airsickness stop you from travelling by plane. ' Althn this form of motlin sickness causes more discomfort among commercial air passenger! than anything else, it affects only a small percentage of airline pat- rons-less than one percent. Development of effective drug! and larger and better equipped planes promises to reduce the num- ber of casese veu further. Yet, there will always be some who are susceptible to alrsick- ness, espec' "3 on the smaller planes. If you have rcasun to suspect that you might be susceptible. you'll be interested in the report of studies made -by Drs. Ludwig G. Lederer and George J Kidera. WOMEN SUFFER MOST Women are more often affected than are men or children. Studies indicate that about 59 per cent of the victims are women, 24 per- cent men. and only l7 per cent children. You arc lcss likcly to become airsick in the big four-engine DC-4 ships than you are in the smaller twn-engine DC-35. You are more apt to bccoine ill during daylight flights. The low- est incidence of cnscs reported in the studies was during the evening hours. Sit on the right sidc-,of the plane. especially if you are riding in a DC-fl. In this report in'a recent issue of International Record of Medicinc and General Practice Clinics, the doctors say the great- est amount of airsickness occurred among passengers sitting in the left-hand window seats of this type of plane. The two window seats situated lmmcdiatr-ly hack of the trailing edge of the left wing probably are the worst for airsickness. Sit some- where else. if you can. - If the we-allicr ls turbulent, look off al the lIUl'lZllll instead of try- iiig lu rt-ad. And don't eat too much before your flight leaves. If you think you might be affected by the trip. Drs. Ledcrer and Kidera found several drugs effective in treat- " ing symptoms of airsickness among them Bonaminc. Benacine. Dram- amine. lllarczinc, Trimeton and Soda-Stay. Some are more effect- ive than others. They advise use of the drugs by anyone who is susceptible before airsickness develops. QUESTION AND ANSWER F. Y.: What is epilepsy and what causes it? Answer: In the petit mal form of epilepsy there is loss of con- sciousness for an interval varying from a few seconds to a minute or two. Grand mal epilepsy is char- acterized by loss of .' NOTES BY No one should It! 30 ll 3'0 things at once-and that. includes women who put on welsh! llld slacks at the same time. -Shei- bi-ooke Record. Two mombe . of the Albert! Legislature who were read out of the party by Premier Manning because they 'had business deal- ings with the suvernment. have been welcomed back to the PHYW seats in the House followins their re-election. It's not so much the principle in this case: its the votes that count. -Vancouver Pro- vince. It was a picture publlslled III III Edmonton daily newspaper that ended Western Canada's most ex- tensive manhunt. For a Week U19 R. C. M. P. and 'local police had been hunting for a man sought for questioning in connection with the slaying of five members of I Saskatchewan farm famly- It is a matter of record that most wanted criminals are arrested after their pictures have been published in the newspapers, A recent survey in the United States gave credit to the newspapers for bringing about the arrest of dangerous criminalsr Sudbury Star. The Connaughl Laboratories of Toronto are preparing large quan- tities of the Salk vaccines to con- tinue the massive vacinntion pro- gram which this Province andlthe rest of Canada began last Spring. Children who have received two inoculations will be able to get the third and final shot late this Aut- umn. Other children, younger and older, who were outside the limited Spring scheme, will be given the anllpollo vaccine. There is little doubt. here in Peterborough as In the rest of Canada. that the Salk vaccine is perfectly harmless. and is proving to be a definite prevent- atlve.vPeterborough Examiner. We see where a three-man arbit- ration board has ruled that airline steivuiwlesses are not iilisolctc at 30. On the whole, this strikes us as a reasonable decision. While it may result in a few disappointed male passengers, it will also be productive of comfort for those passengers who are just plain scar- ed of airplanes and see more sec- urity in a greylng head than a blond one. We would also lleto point out that if charm falls at 30, then Cleopatra. Lady Hamilton and the Duchess of Windsor had no I right being so successful. However it is doubtful if it was for any of those reasons that the three-man arbitration board found as it did. The arbitrators were men. presum- ably married. And what we would like to know is this. How old are their wlves?--Vancouver Province. ha-4'l'lio0u-nu. THE WAY The nvorltt nlul coiuumpllnii of cu: in ruins. .enchlniz 414 per penon in the United States, and probably very nearly the same fig. ure in Canada. This makes the poultry industry an Important one, and it may well be the. most scient- me branch of farming. Moreover no substitute for the product of the familiar hen has so far been de- vugd, Eggs are here to stay. even though each lasts only until some. body gets around to cracking it open.-Cornwall Standard-Free. holder. How much have we lost In this past season because of dreadful forest fires? Now that the worst seems over. an approximate com- pilatlon released by Lands and Forest Minlster Clair Maplednram says that 330,000 acres are gone, Bad as this is It Is still less than the loss in 1948. when there were vast fires in the Mlsslssa 3 (H98. and the total destruction that year was three times the 1955 1055. That was a tremendous challenge to for- est fire control methods.-Cornwall Standard-Freeholder. Need we really be no precise. so solemn. so anxious in our deal- ing; with Russia? Have we no senu of humor or self-confidence whole that country is concerned? Th. Supreme Soviet has offered, in ef- fect, to send a group of- its nicin- hers to Canada. Let Canada's l'ar- liament accept the offer, if only out parliamentarians look like. And let of curiosity to see what Russian parliamentarians look like. Amt let it. in return. send a group of its own members to Russia. We do not see how such visits can do anybody a particle of harm. And it is puss- ible. at least, that over a pCl'l0d they might do some good. Suclt possibilities, in today's world. are all we have to work with. W: should learn to use them with VH5- dom, with patience. and not least with good nature.-Globe and Mail. Gone, but perhaps comln,, back. are the days when autuninliilcs were finished in quiet, staid colors, and Henry Ford is said to have told his agents they could have any color cars they liked as long as they were black. This years cars are gaudy affairs in bizarre designs. but manufacturers are reported to have taken a census of opinion among the public, and that more than 50 per cent of them. prefer blacks, greys and IIIBTOOIIS, to the oranges, yellows, pinks, vlvld blues and reds. and combinations of them. Perhaps the traffic police are of the same opinion. It would be easier for them to note the color of a wanted car flaaliln by at 70 or 80 miles an hour than one of those multi- colored affairs that are just a blur of all the colors of the spectrum. St. Thomas Times-Journal. - and convulsions. The cause of epilepsy is not known. , adian dollars in British hands with which to buy what Canada wants to sell to the United K' J The Times in London attributes many British firms do not show sufficient interest, do not advert- care. A few products-chemicals. for instance-still sell as well in Canada now as they did two years goods products, motor cars. woolen and cotton textiles-have fallen off. It is important to find the cause of the decline. The Times has an impression that many British firms are happier to.scll near home, and preferably in the easy home mark- et. It doesn't seem likely, however. that the London newspaper has put a finger on the sole cause of the decline. What is required is a closer study of the potential market for British products in Canada. AIlTH(lIllZEll' m DEALER licensed Wlrlng motors, washers and electrical appliances. Storey Electric 175 Grafton Street PHONE 3237 Britain means so much less of Can- STORE uoiici CHANGE OF HOURS Ioginning smniuy. September mi. one Store wiii Ilunojn Open Al Day Saturday llntl 9:30 p.ni. HOURS the decline in British exports to Canada. to a Canadian feeling that ise enough. do not really seem to ago, but imports of most kinds of from Britain-engineering PROFESSIONAL ciiiiis BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bell, Matheson it Foster l50 Richmond St. J. Elmer Blanchard, BA. 165 Queen st. Phone 4232 OPTOMETRISTS ...m.......sD..m... G. F. Hutcheson & Son F. G. HUTCHESON. 3.0. 58 Grafton St. Dial BM M. A'. Farmer, Q.C., 1.1.3. Bank of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. Gulls, LL.B. iso Richmond St. Dial no A. Waltlien Gaudet, LL.B. Phillips Bldg. in Grub: st. Palmer & Baslam Bank of Nova Scoda Bldg. J. A. Carruthers. R.0. I23 Kent St. DIII 56 Byron 126 Kent St. V Sill J. S. Taylor, R.0. Corner Kent & Queen Sta. Office 9133; Bones 4756 H. J. Mabon, B.0. Montague P. E. I. ii J. Grant. 0.D. Dial Matheson, Peako & Nicholson 115 Gallon street J. A. MacGuigan Currie Bldg. - Dial 9424 - Queen 3. CHIROPRACTOR Dr. W. E. Carson 201 Prince 5:. Dial up ARCHITECT Chas. R. M(..'Q!laid, inn.- Pl-I I56 Richmond St. ill! MacPhee & Trainer Isl Queen St. Dial 4281 I G. Keith Plckard, B. Arch. M.B.A.l.C.. Rummerslde. P.E.l. Dial hail Charlottetown. Tuesdays and I-".'l4"'7I. Dial 8613 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS gllitstiiii '1 - pffffhtl it”. McDONALD CURRIE I 00. Contractors cnnia lldl. cr...'i-ioueiown out use REFRIGERATION - ---- - -e- --e- H. R. DOANE.& COMPANY :.:i1i.;i:t::: "::...:::i "- G-m c---------n lk, I , 1 H j Phone B47 - 054! P. 0. Box 247 ilfia 'r1irciZ"ef;ii.rs.as" 0"" AR.-Hf!-in J GARREH. C. G. E. Vacuum Cleaner PIINGT Electflc Blllldllll and Polisher Rental Service. chl10m90'l 100 "CVO! lint! Dlll 53! MOTORS & A APPLIANCES ' We sell and repair all no SERV CE ' in N UE t- rot. in N GAllllt3E