ViSitors coming by boat in the log cabin home of, Ken Kendall near Nanaimo, B.C.. may be startled to see a shot: this cannon whistle \ BEWARE THE CAN‘NON across their bow. III the visi- tors are regarded by the Ken- dall's as “stuffed shirts," the shot could be a warning; owner- wise it’s a welcome. They've had more than 5.000 visitors in the last 15 years and have entertained them by serving such delicacies as rattlesnake. octopus. wolf—eel, beaver. ra- coon and crow. (CP Photo) .By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CH—Nostalgia is for sale Saturdays in the street market in Portobello Road. Bargain hunters from all over the world converge weekly on rrow. seedy thoroughfare a short walk north of the posh antique shops of Kensington. There are few antiques to be found in Portobelio Road—this Is the place for souvenirs of the recent past. the Britain oi the day before yesterrday. Over the babble of a dozen languages drift reedy strains of a wax cylinder record revolving on an Edison Bell phonograph. It might be John McCormack's yearning Irish tenor in I'll Walk Beside You, or soldiers’ songs of the First . World War—"recorded on the battlefield." the stallholder tells ‘ you proud! y. Many of the parttime sales- men who spread their wares Saturdays on a few yard Portobello Road are collectors themselves, indulging their hobby and making enough out of it weekends to pay the rent. The phonograph man, forin- stance, has more than 1,000 cylinders at home and can't re- sist raiding his stock for his own collection. CHAIRS BIG SELLERS Some stalls specialize in brass and copper or Victorian furni- ture: others are a ragbag of sentimental bric-a-brac. ,. ere is a pile of Edwardian song-sheets with a picture of 9.. Bargain Hunters Converge On London Street Market music-hall star Vesta Tilley strutting in a scarlet uniform ——over there 3 china mug made for Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897. Under a map of the world the inscription boasts: “The Empire on which the sun never ." Buttoned plush chairs are perennial best - sellers. They command a high price however tattered. So do pairs of hansom- cab lamps and tall Victorian telephones with curly brass handsets that sell for anything up to $20. They can legally be installed only as extension phones. but many people buy them as exotic ornaments. Genuine bargains such as Vic- torian glass paperweights for a few shillings are almost im- possible to find these days. American tourists are often blamed for inflating the prices in Portobello Road. but furnish- ing crazes have a lot to do with it and there has been a boom in trappings of the gasllght era. EDWARDIAN REVIVAL Right now fashion is swinging towards Edwardian decor. It's smart to convert ornate gas street lamps to flower holders. to have rooms filled with squashy couches, green baize tablecloths, brass curtain-poles holding heavy velvet drapes in rich period colors—plum. bur- gundy, parma violet and‘char- treuse. Columnist Drusilla Beyfus. writing on the woman's page of The Observer, says the Ed— wardian revival Is a distinc- tively British contribution to Passengers home comfort, welcome afterl gear: of . barf:1t Japanese and lPOSE PTOblem can inav1an er ors. The cosy solidity of the style. CA8 [NO Show, she writes, seems to “evoke an, ura of permanence" — a re-, rk that perhaps explains why‘ Britons appear so powerfully OTTAWA (CP) -— The Pier ironic reservation system rsiab lished by Trans-Canada 8 a years before the First World ar. Almost any stage or tele- ation. the Commons seems predestined for popular- nesday. ity here. A weak drawing-room‘ TCA President comedy panned recently gecor. Now it’s drawing packed Its automatic reservation i-apa ous Is. ' ' seats available. He told Art Smith REFORMER RETIRES 1 Calgary South) that the govern LONDON (CP) —— Father Jos- jeph Williamson, for 40 years an ymcnt-owned airline must have . the itaken 15 looks over the years at capital's notorious East End, is lthe problem of the passenger to materialize—tho anti-vice campaigner in to retire to take charge of two [who fails 1homes he founded for reformed " . no show." ‘ prostitutes. l . _ Air fascmated by the confident jLines—to help heal the problem ‘of the passenger who doesn‘t appear—is 60 per cent in oper- ‘ I railway Vision play set in the period committee was informed Wed- Gordon Mc- by Gregor said the system remains London c rltic s nevertheless .to be established on some routes won praise for its plushy 1914jincluding trans-continental ones. ibility gave a true picture of. (PU-- But he was glad no attempt l The Guardian. Charlottetown, Thurs. Nov. 29, I962. ,had been made to penalize such ‘passengers. U.S. airlines were jtrying to do this but bills sent ,lo “no show“ customers pro- duced almost no money. Asked if he thought ryci‘yilmi: possible has becn done to weed out the no show passenger. who blocks others who could have used the space, Mr. McGregor replied: "At this stage of the art. Vcs.” I lie was reminded by S. . Rideout «L Westmorclandi V. ‘ Products l l i l W General Electric tree lights are Individual Lights. If one light goes out the others will stay lit. We w ill check and inspect your present sets frbe of charge. NEWSON ELECTRIC 161 Queen St. Dial 894-8325 $150.00” Sicck ‘ .o a l‘. t a, s; ON PRICES SLASHED FURNITURE STEREO I AND » APPLIANCES. Automatic WASHERS 8. DRYERS TELEVISIONS ‘ Automatic DISHWASHERS 8. DRYERS l Oil orGos RANGES Electric VACUUM CLEANERS . ' ’Spoce‘ HEATERS, Floor FURNACES " Car, Truck 8. Tractor TIRES noon POLISHERS THE WHITE HUNTERS ooE BESERK PRIGES DHOPPE T0 BITS Clearance CRITRD COMPRDIE GASOLINES that there is also the of “show and no go." Gregor agreed that some flights; never get off the groundW'W-i‘ cause of “minor hut this sum“; times was a tough problem “A: forecasting. MrI Smith said: 'I‘('A's safety record over “is. years is a credit to the ennui-J problcmi I‘lc—i .iiinn. Huntsman "*_ On the average Canadian:1 spend $235 a year on imported manufuviui'ed goods comparch with $35 in the United States... that are by research... by performance ion on ,LIII'IITED " ROSE OFUEL OILS FS-9 LAY-II-WAY YOITEAN $30,000 T O Y S SANTA CLAUS FILL THE STOCKINGS HUNDREDS OF NEW TOYS Games, Dolls, Cars, Trucks, voll Carriages, Skis, Toboggans, Books, etc. " DISCOUNT (Cash Sale) on all TOYS for 5' Thurs, Fri., Sat. Nov. 29, 30, Dec. 1 STORE OPEN 8 mm. — 9 pun. During this Sole No Down Payment ‘4- Start To Pay in '63 Up to 3 years to pay — low. low payments THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE To SAVE ON ALL GIFTS Home 8. Auto Co. Ltd. 7., I I R I o E 137 m. (ion. at. Phone 4- 5547 will" u—uvu-n-"llwrs's .uu-vrr—mu— U A t I I l I i l l