ghee mun ,. I THE GUARDIAN . Department. Ottawa. The klllnlf Guardian Publishing ()0. Editor and Managing - tractor. Inn A. Burnett. A.-bum Editor. Frank Wukcr. CIRCULATION "Cover: Prince Edward Island like the dew" "Tho strongest memory lo weaker than the weakest ink". CHARLOTTETOWN FRIDAY, SEPT. 4. I951 The Home Market ' Necessity is proverbially the mother of invention and it also may take credit for Improvements in efficiency and quality which might not otherwise be bothered about. This is proving true in the potato industry at the present time. Faced with heavy production both in this country and in the United States which can be expected to cut seriously into export markets, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island rep- resentatives of potato shipping and carry- ing interests are energetically tackling the problems of improving the quality of Mari- time table stock potatoes upon arrival in the hands of Consumers in Ontario and Quebec. that a high quality product will be produc- ed and graded. Attention is now being di- rected particularly to the handling of the crop in transit. It is encouraging that rep- resentatives of stevedores as well as of the railways and shipping companies have pledged their co-operation in getting the potatoes to market in good condition. Producers, shippe1's, handlers and rail- -ways all have a vital interest in maintain- ing the quality of the product. Even a very few shipments of bruised or otherwise in- I ferior potatoes can seriously reduce the de- mand for the Maritime product and prove . costly to all who depend upon it as a source ' of revenue. The southern market for certified seed is, of course. the backbone of the industry in this Province. The sale of table stock on the Canadian nvirkct, however, par- ticularly in a year of abundance, may well make the difference between a reasonably prosperous year for the industry and near disaster; --... ...j.m...... Towering llomlmlor A cheese weighing more than five tons will be displayed at the Quebec Provincial Exhibition this month. Concocted by an aspiring cheesemaker of the Lac St. Jean countryside, the cheese required in the niaking, 100,000 pounds of milk-the equiv- alent daily production of 4,tX)0 cows and 442 man-hours of work. A cheese so huge, remarks the Sydney i -Post-Record, obviously was designed to at- tract attention, with hope it will inspire not only respect but a yen as well for cheese on the daily menu. its chief purpose is to remind Canadians and the people of other lands, that excellent cheese is made in Can- ada and a proper recognition of a whole- some and nutritious product would be to eat more of it. If cheese figured as importantly in the Canadian diet as it certainly does in meals served in such countries wise in the lore of cheese as the British Isles, France, Italy industry of Canada would enjoy 3 new spurt of prosperity- People who have lived or travelled abroad know from experience how pleasing 3 part. of the dinner or supper menu is good cheese to top off a meal, how cheer- fully a meal is rounded off with cheese, crisp, biscuits, an apple or pear and a steaming cup of coffee or a comforting pot of tea on the side. it is eloquent evident:-: of our neglect of this fine product that a cheese weighing more than five tons is re- quired to- remind us that cheese exists in Canada. It is as though we were so un- observant of things in their proper sizes that something monstrous must be done for a special occasion. old-Ago Pensions Month-end reports out of Ottawa have It thntr Canada's old age pension system stiiillhrunnlng in the red. Contributions are not covering uutgo, with the result that evil" a period of 19 months 'the government has had to" provide temporary loans total- hng C116,340.000. As ll piece of book- uya the Windsor Star, this is in- but the practical value of all that " " is doubtful. Canada has in age pension system, stripped of ' of a means test. it provides ,u"n matter of right for all ,Ind over; who can meet the At this stige the bout 700,000, and m. ate s300,tI)0,000 c .'. I .1-it iiiinot reallydn debt tothe mttilnx can be gained by , that life. it is in main. iglith present . 4--. , ...-at ,.- .,.. Much has already been done to assure, and indeed all European countries, the dairy- and ftiture beneficiaries paying special security taxes. But. no one has argued seriously that it would have to be self-sup- porting through those ear-marked contribu- tions. It always was considered inevitable that supplementary assistance would have to be forthcoming from general federal revenues. There was no opportunity for the first beneficiaries under this plan to finance, through direct payments, the pen- sions they will receive: i The danger in a bookkeeping system like i the present one, says the Star, is that it: will load the pension -program with a debty similar to the unreasonable one carried sci long by the Canadian National Railways. indeed, there is a school which feels thei pensions should be wholly paid out of gen- eral revenues, as the family allowances are! financed. They argue quite reasonably that funds raised in this way are in 'a strict sense, contributory, for no one escapes the tax collector. Perhaps eventually that system: will be adopted. It is virtually in effect; now. The portions of sales, corporation! and personal income taxes assigned to pen-, sion purposes actually are just monetary, transfers from one federal pocket to an- other. . ' E It can be argued, too, that the asserted debt, or loan, of d116,340,000 is something less than accurate. It does not take into account, as it should, the unspecified buti substantial recovery from pension payments, through taxes. They are subject to incomeh tax, if the beneficiaryls income is of tax-i able proportions. When spent. pension money is subject to sales, excise, and all EDITORIAL NOTES Sunken ships once yielded treasure in the form of gold and precious stories. It is somehow unsatisfying to read of the salvage of 085,000 and 5,000 in paper currency from the wreck of the Flying Enterprise. Intrinsically it is just so much waste paper and hardly worth the risk of life necessary for its recovery. There was a time when such a statement as that of United States Secretary of State Dulles would have been regarded as an ulti- matum, cautioning China that aggression against Korea or Indo-China would result in war. In this day and age it may, perhaps, be regarded as the conscientious pointing out of a fairly obvious fact. O I I If long-range weather forecasting were an exact science this Province would have enjoyed an unprecedented influx of tour- ists seeking relief from the current heat- wave in,the comfort of our own sea-cooled breezes. The seventies and eighties experi- enced here would seem downright chilly to anyone fleeing from temperatures in the nineties and higher. I Canadians have more ”eneijoes" per capita than any other people, according to a recent statement. For those not familiar with recent developments in the language of electrical engineers, it may be said that an "enerjoe” is the output of physical energy by an average working man in a year; This country now has 1,900,000,000 enerjoes which represents a great deal of work indeed. Edvard l-lagerop Grieg, Norwegian coni- poser and pianist, died this date 1907. He Q His music is intensely national in character and is mostly lyrical. He drew largely on for his ciude work in many different" fields of music. U I The Fall vacation should be abolished and all schools opened the first week of September according to a resolution passed 0 from urban ones but it would probably do no harm if all school children were given an opportunity of helping out with the harvest, rather than just those who live on a farm. The common conception of the free- spending American tourist is blasted by the cold figures of which indicate that while the tavern dian visiting lh than 48 hours spends b83- vioitlng this country spend! itors could spend their money. 0 O O The 800th annlversliry of St. Bernard de Clairvaux is being obserwd this year with a series of IPECN 9Y9"'3 in the region where he was born,: near Dijon. ri-once. St. bu.-moi-"d has been proclaimed "Patron Saint of United Europe," as the famous monk acted as umpire in, many in- ter-nugionol disputes of his time, smoothing out difficulties between ,sove,relgno and states. other hidden levies that are floating abou'..i received his musical education in Germany. ' the Bureau -of Statistics go Cana- e United States for more the American only 351- 099 remedy for the inequality would be to pro- vide more attractive ways in which our via- the death of THE GUARDIAN. CHAR LOTT ETOWN Tum-up Long Overdue J Fr f. Notes Bx" - The pioneers blazed trolls-and QHNY-pp uielr descendants burn up the roads. - Hamilton ttpectutor. PUBLIC FORUM This column In open in the discussion by wuospondentc of questions of interest. The Guardian does not necessar- ily endorse the opinion. of correspondents. . THE UNION JACK isir,-A friend of mine told me of an experience he had in the first Great War. He was in his trench one night, and restless. Keeping his head down he crept along the trench until he came to the end, and there. sticking in the clay, was a small Union Jack. Suddenly the whole British Em- pire was with him. That flag was 9. symbol of a power and glory that could never know defeat. The Union Jack is a symbol of freedom. If, assures the citizen that within the bounds of the Empire he is 9. free man, that he may expect the protection of just laws. India. knows freedom today because since 1857 our flag waved over that land for her protection and her progress until 1947, and it is no wonder that Illdlil has remained within the Empire and is proud of her staiiding. I saw with pride the scales of justice held with even hand among col- oured people. Fair play was taken for granted. I should like to see our flag fly- ing from every school in this Pro- vince and often saluted with un- derstanding and pride. Every school day should be flag day. Paulotlsm is ,1; noble virtue, cul- tivated through the ages by our greatest poets. No child should be allowed to forget that he belongs to 9. great country to which he owes a deep debt of gratitude and the flag reminds him of that debt. Let it wave every school day. I am, Sir, etc. w. I. GREEN. Stanley Bridge. Lessons In Lingo tottawa Citizcnl For those who like to uphold' the merits of whodunit literature Mr. Francis A. Hardy. Purlinmc:i- tarian librarian. has proriurcrl ;i-, traditional Norse folk-melodies new ally-and one who niny urlll i have a good point. songsx TWIO .SOnatas For the Plano. ravk Explaining why the si.'ilri.Vi. amongst his finest achievements, which in- Librgry at p;..n;,.,.c... .-.,,.m,.s detectin- such a. largo-"lstock of stories. Mr. Hardy told the Crimi- diiin Library Association confer- ence that he always dcfcnrlctl this choice by quoting n rcnuirk of tlicfl late Ernest Lapointc. Mr. l..1-, pointe. an lmpcrtnnt figure in iliizj cabinet of Prime Minister M:llIi(Cll- zic King, traced his pond lI."m of the reading - - .- ll ii E Ii.h t at the teachers' convention at Souiis. it gslfhamcfftuim ” is unsatisfactory. of course. mat rural The nuances of EI1;zlish-lcnl- - . ' loquial and otherwise-lins t0f'll Schools Should be on 3 dlffel ant footing one of the fictional dc-iertiye's best weapons. Sherlock Holmes. tlin sage of Baker Street, was fond of intellectual repartec. As he onre told Watson in an intimate mo- "occasionnlly very con- dcnce as f. vlnclng as when you find it trou example. . who seldom pushed his bulk nu and bark. of "ii calculated eccentricity," affirms. ablc existence. . . u an aide struggled to explain I a situation, Wolfe snarled: "Im ore-talk." Dapper Hercule Poirot. the pre- cise sleuth of u dozen Aizatlui Chrlltlc epics. was gentler, infin- itely more polite. "Volin." be ex- elliml, "how clear, how marvel- louoiy elear'. . ." Where did he not his "first glimmering of tho truth?” "1 wt: in church at the time singing I verse of a psalm. it spoke of a cords. . '. .". i France. in the milk, "to quote Thoreau's Rex Stout"; hulking Nero Wolfe, of an arm-chair. mixed erudiilon straight - from- the - shoulder "You regard my rule not to leave my house on A business or- ranri as one of the stubborn posrft he "It in no such luxury. It is merely anecesslty for n toler- ." Minutes later, mural laid with Members of the Canadian Board on Geographical Names are too pressed by the present and pushed tby the future to have much time for the problems of the past. They are officers of the geographical section of the Departments of Mines and Technical Surveys; the secretary of the Board is L.. B. Skinner of the Topographic Sur- vey section. And Canada has more topography than any other coun- try on earth except the Soviet. Topography is the art or prac- tlce of graphic and exact delinea- tion in minute detail, usually maps or charts, of the physical features of any place or region. Canada has 3,845,000 miles of topo- graphy, a fifteenth of the land surface of the earth. And it is all being set out on new maps which, will give everything from Point! Pelee to the Pole and from Capci Race to Skidegate in the Queen Charlotte Islands. There are new names crowding on the maps day by day without. worrying over the old ones. . . Still the Board had to take time to dive back four cciituri:-s and more into history when a man in Winnipeg raised Cain about the revival in the United States of the old, old story that we call the country Canada today because n stray crew of Spanish scam:-n who had sought gold and failed to find it had once snlcl:-- ”Aca nude." (nothing here). As the story runs the Indians picked up the phrase and trotted it out when Curiierl came; he look it for the mime nfi the county. The story seems too good to be true. Cartier first heard of Canada from two Indians whom he picked up on the Gaspe coast on his first voyage in 1534. and took to They had come to Gaspc in fish but their home was at or near the present site of Quebec. As Cartier understood them they call-l ed their own country Canada. ' . . . When Cartier returned in 1535 he brought the two Indians slung. On August lftli. 1535. he left the Bay of St. Lawrence on his way to Canada; on September he came to "the place where the land or prov- ince of Canada begins." This was at Grosse Island. Later in his ac- count.'lic notes that he left Can- nda. This was between Quebec and Three Rivers and he was on his way to I-loclicloga, where Montreal now stands. Elsewhere he speaks of the "kingdoms" of Saguenay, Canada and Hoclielaga. All ihis is plain enough. was a place name. like Saguenay or l-lochclsga, used by the Indians. But. Cartier notes that on October 13 the chief Donnacona invited him to visit Canada. In this case it seems to mean the Indian vil- Camida I Ilshed his book, in French, oh the place names of Quebec ho accept- ed this meaning of Canada. He stated that in the Iroquois tongue of today A word variously spelt Kimcda, kanatn, Kanetae and Ka- nadinn still mean; town, vlllole or camp. I. O 0 Without being dogmatic about it the Board inclines to accept. this view and to think that Cumin originally mean I. village. And may- be the two Indian: caught at Gupe were only trying to tell Lowrance the River of Canada. ' were the Indians that Carlie Iroquois at all? if. P. Dinar. edlud Cutie:-'1 accounts. to think bitty Wyuidolo. lie notes that wyondotyord for village to Yond- tu. Maybe we are lucky . not "to Spanish is irrelevant. Cartier where their village or canada, Wu Incidentally Cartier named the st. saw at "Canada" and i-iochelus former Dominion Archivist who inclined veto Huron or Why We Say Canada 1 , Thomas Dunbcbin in the Monti-coloGuctio have to call the country Yanodh. There is it theory that Canada ,really comes from an Algonquin word meaning Narrows. that is the narrowing of the river at Quebec. And when Champlain came 73 years after there were Algonquim -in "Canada" (in Cartier": use of the name) an” neither Hurons nor Iroquois living anywhere near, though the 1-lurons soon came to trade. . Anyway the Spaniards are out because there do not seem to have on been any around before Cartier to ,moon 0, Mars or Venus,-.Amherst '.say:- "Aca nadn." For the same reason the fact that csnada. means a. gully, ravine or cattle track in A Spanish ship captured by Estevan Gomez, ii. Portuguese. came up the Atlan- tic coast in 1525 but probably did not get as far even as Nova. Scotia. The harbor of Sydney, Cape B.rewn. was earlier called Spanish River because it was frequented by Spanish fishermen. This per- haps began after Cnrtlt-r's time: in any case it is it long way from Cal-ticr's Canada. The Board also mentions a sug- gestion that Canada. came from the Portuguese eanads. This means a lane or narrow street today but it might. also mean a strait. If the Portuguese were at Quebec before Cartier the Indians might. have picked up the Portuguese word ap- plied to the Narrows. But. so for no one has ever found any proof that the Portuguese were there. I I 0 Still the Portuguese are much more likely candidates for the honor of naming Canada than the Spaniards. And if there were any evidence at all, which does not seem to be the case, f-or the peren- nial "nothing here" story the For- tuguese ”x1qul nada." might.' serve mnrly as well for the origin. While there is no clear evidence that they entered the St. Law- rence bcfore Cartier the Portuguese were exploring parts of the coast. of what is now Canada at least as early as the voyages of the Carte- reals in 1500 A. D. Leaving aside the Portuguese names-some of them Very twisted - that litter the coast. of Newfoundland two names of Portuguese origin go back to A pre-Cartier perio . One is Labrador. It is nlsn Span- ish-indeed the mod.;-n Portuguese word is spelled Lavrador-but it. seems to have definitely been giv- on by the Portuguese Cox-terenls, though at first it int-mil. South Greenland. The other, which is not so defin- itely dated, is the Bay of Fundy. It comes from the Portuguese fundo, deep. As Alvaro Fagundez, e Por- colony the luguesc, sought to found 8. in the Fundy region in 1519 name is probably older than that. homes, who can look down the corridor of years to the 1900 an odd still hear the hollow-clmguia but pleasantly musical note of a whetstonc against is ocythc blade. when men used norms and math to u-lm along. and around trees. and to mow wiry male grass for beddinii. they paused periodically in their rhythmic. swinging motion to put I sharper cutting edge on the blade. , Grandfather was a master unlu- man with scythe and math. He used the grlridctono. of course. to put a thin edge on the scythe. But when he was mowing, 'the instant he felt. the edge was turned ho stopped his work. stood the ono.th' on and, reached unburned- ly into his overall pocket. and pulled out tho long slender whomnoo. With ooennnc nonolillnoe. but skill born of A half cuatiirro pne- tice. he alternately Rocked the tide! of the scythe with the stone. ., . I There was 5 time when "Are you converted?" didn't refer to 00-cy. ole.-Hamilton Spectator. Obviously our conception and technique of retirement have in be overhauled if we are to make the best use of our human stock. It makes little sense for medical science to be keeping more and more people alive into old age, while our econ c science keeps Mall. If you have been speaking quiet- ly. suddenly raise your . voice; if, loudly, then lower it. This is one of the tips which the Standard Oil Company of New York gives its executives in a pamphlet on ink- ing after-dinner speeches. Even try a few seconds of complete sll-l ence - "tension mounts as. the audience wonders whether you are going to be able to go on." -Van-l couvcr News Herald. Aviation really has .,.own old when at the age of M piloted her own up. were much healthier than we A woman who already was ll years today- the Wright brother: things as over-refined foods, lack made that first flight, this week of fresh air and exercise or iSEPTEMBER 4. 1953 3N3N The Way I. . ' .4! ;mBlm' medical problem, tin: liven short.-New Yofkw Whllc hunbllrn still waft their delic Cllls Times. uni ht ' ate are;-la ':g,: I 'ward over the midway at ogmws exhibition, they must i . room to a new rival: thev 983 roll. Appearance of the 5 roll at the fair underscores the growing importance of this dish .1. though it does nothing to cieai-A up the mystery of how truly 3,,” egg rolls are made. Restaurants I which feature Canadian dishes have now begun to sport egg mm on forcing more and more people out the menu but may wo id of production while still in or near b9 the may go mmnu mggobkfzll? their prime.-Toronto Globe and not yc; nached the perfecuon peak achieved by the chefs at such spot; as Ottawa's Canton Inn. Experts explain that the an of the chin," egg roll is comparatively slmpl, For the filling. mix bean lpfouls. onions, celery, bits of shrimp ma pork and Chinese vegetables. En. case the whole in ii. covering mad, from noodle paste and fry in am, fat. Make certain alltheingrediemg are fresh and of first-class qual. lty.-Ottawa Evening Citizen, one of the most. popular legend; is that people of the remote past lit. Many believe that sucxl: "the tensions of modern living" hug single-engined Beechcraft across ocean. It was the first direct cross- ing in il. small nircaft foundland to Ireland since pioneering days Lindbergh, then an aw the led to the development of many diseases such as heart trouble, in. from New- geotive disorders and the like the which were unknown in the Slfilp. such as when ler and less luxurious day: of our kward youth, ancestors. some cold wmr has made his daring solo flight to Paris.-Fredericton Daily Gleaner. small fry cnxrc the only people interested in space-tnvcl. This illustrated in the report from New York that more than 30,000 permit of both sexes have already filled out "application forms" for for. in- clusion ln the first trips to the moon. The forms are available at the Hayden Planetarium in New York City. The Planetarium, in- cidentally. hasn't bothered to wait until space ships are developed, It has neatly side-stepped all that fuss and bother and conducted" space tours every day for years. A highly complicated pro.iect.or- which has as many controls no I space ship-fills the great dome of the planetarium with stars. As the amphitheatre darkens and sound effects fill out the illusion. the audience, led by Nomi or pilot Catherine Barry. finds itself whirl- ing through space on trips to the News and sentinel. The well-known fact that the dict of most of muikind is poor has been confirmed once again by the studies of the American G002"!- phlcal Society's medical geogra- phers. Speaking in terms of broad averages. about. one-third of hu- manity has an adequate diet, both in terms of total caloric intake and qualitatively in term: of protein. vitamin and mineral consump- ton; the diet of the remaining two- tlilrds of mankind is deficient. in caloric intake. protective foods, or both. This of course. is not the some thing u'seylng that two-thirds of mankind is rapidly starvlns 10 death. but hick of balanced diet does contribute much to disease and shortness of life tiirollshblliv "18 world. Conversely. of course we should not forget that in this coun- try obesity. born of overeating. la a - Each blow of the stone on steel mode a ringing, echoing note. If the oountrymnnis research is complete the first mention of whet- stonec in North America. was in I letter home to llinglanci from one Thomas Merton who arrived in this new land with the Pilgrims. We know that quarrying operations for sharpening stones began in Arkansas about 1816. Few citizens appreciate the vital role today of stones and abra- sives in industry, although since ancient times man has been search- ing for better ways to sharpen his tools. In the Bible. First. Samuel. 13th chapter. we find this: "But all the Israelites went. down to the Phllistlnes to sharpen every man his share and his coulter, and his axe and his mattock." Year by year the song of the whetatone grows fainter on the farms of America. But the scythe will still be used to some extent Mr I. long time to trim out around fences and buildings. And as long as a craftsman swings scythe and south there will be the music of stone against steel. sounding I- cross the fields and around the been thrown on this theory by ii German physician, Dr. Erwin Ack- emecht. I-lis hobby is examining Egyptian mummies to find out what ailments they suffered from; tha bodies are so well preserved that this if often possible. Dr. Ackn- necht's researches have shown the Paris newspaper, Noir at Blnnc re- ports, that the ancient Egyptian. suffered from a great many disco... co that afflict us today. The mum. mien showed traces of tubereulorts. pneumonia, pleurlsy, gallstones, meningitis, malaria, gnd even sin- us trouble. Ono pharaoh was crip- pled by un attack of pollomyelitis. -Edmonton Journal. v -41- . . i ll veg: SOLITUDE Seek for solitude among Places of the 5. t tongue, Where communications find. Soundle.-sly, the waiting mind. Quest in braeken, in the glide By the llchwsi ragged shade Where the moss is deep and cool, Joined in silence by the pool. If you find it it will hall You as friend. and make nuoll with a loaf from stlllneasl grain, None shall taste but wish again. And A beaker from the prime Herbs found in unhurrled time. Blended with high skill and on For the thirsty who walk there. --Edward D. Garner in His New York Herald Tribune. Old Charlottetown (And 2. I. 1.) .- AN ISLAND INVENTOR "Mr. J.-C. Stead. A native of Coveliead. and it near, relative of Messrs. George and David Lawson, of this city, was lately on 3. visit to the Island. Mr. Stead hafbeen several years in the United states. and has, by his enerly. his enter- prise. and hi! ingenuity, gained for himself there both reputation and wealth. He is another of our successful Islanders, He has in- vented a. circulating generator for steam boilers which bears hi! name, and which has brought hllf bath fame" and money. Mr. stem is still oulte a young ninn and ha: I we trust. in brilliant career hcfol" him." -The Examiner, Sept. xx. telli- 1 -The Ag o illd Story -;.;.,. . -.--.-.-:-:-.r.- ' He that overcomcth choll lnhffil all things: and! will be his (lod homcsteads of the land. and he shall be my non. m ntl "A man should ken his ""19 "ml" 9"” ”l""0"d- M" c”'"”"'"'”'" L C to mile bramgnmc stock” M3, an hnown as Stadncona. And in the Song Of The p r; the furnltui-'e hhe is liketly to use Clggcazlzlflaivymcsf c:;fa:l:el:g:ed,nh: Whelglone , and the res e can ill away in t v N the lumber-room of 1his library lhcgnc t of his second voyage rs-or D" w- R- can." J. GIWI". O ' E where he can get at it it he he gives Canada as meaning in (Ottawa Journal) cmcornamol - - ,2: want: it." At. another point, the town. Puma: Gnduntn 0l"l'0MlTBl3'T pl; nlrlly described circumstantial evi- when pie;-re my in 1999 pub. There are men and women in CHAIIDTTITOWN g in 3...; some Plionl 3 ' city offices. in town and village Dial 043: in Prince st - toppoolto noun Hotel) 3 Allison M. Gilils. l.l..I. Dr. A.'L. Maclsuoc I BAIIIISTII. COIJUITQI. ICC. onnvl-1.-f iso lichmqnd so - cimidumwn m, 3,”, ' """' "' 'oi.ti:iA BUILDING ” Or. If. A: Muciccliorn "' W-"on on, Phone DENTIST J. A. Com-utliors. Raoul Deni-I X-r-1 orronlnlsr Abovo c:.uio'u.eton Clinic no Ion: an-no x ' Phone 2&1 2'' Wm it but out man to Iimodoirn Aoeml McDONAi.D. CUIIIII In 00. OIIAITIIIII AOIJCIUNTKNTI HOMIOII. Quebec. Ottawa. Toronto. sun: John. herbrooke. vnneourcl lfirkluul Lake. Mouton. Ilnmllion. Obulot clown. lklmonlom C-mlo lid:-. ch-nouotnwn. DI-ti” H. n.-com: 1. COMPANY cnliutusn Aiicuournn III that acorn It. lztnolcttctowu Phone an . qu ' p 0, Box 347 CANDOIJI W IIANNINI-is 0-L ' ' GA noun 2. nut-union. ox nvm J.,lIIKINNA. g ml!" offices at llallfn. lfoucton. Is. John. Arnhem. NI""'k:"" BN0 ”''""'0- Liverpool. Ngow 0lIII'0W,- than no comer