9 'IlDlnheI1 every weekday mantle at in Prince Itreet. Char iolielr-urn. P E.I.. by The Thnrneea company Limited "I;overe rrhee Ilwul Inland Like the Dew" political respons'I.bility in countries wmchl have now taken their places as free and l sovereign states. Western Colonialism and Soviet Commun- The attempt by a few delegates to lump P - e Medically" i Speaking iIaralaell.laaleeee.I.I. naaevhelelbue hear.'e::eaelwhhveenneieCaitilada m,,,'5.e:”g,,,';;;','r,,l:'1,:t';,,,,,,,, ism together as a common enemy of polItl- i sou AND oouol. "J .6:"'ub'.d"" "Inn" ." -11,. ,i.. g. 5., pg 3”; am.-i. off cu n Slunlnenrde. inoumu. Illd A'l)I):n.l;:I. Aumo cal and economic progress, as it concerns - II I H" always eaalc tb hear. -litehea- 0 Jared and 0 '"d " 5"” ch" M'iin"I..'.il' PM Ml" -” "'"' the small Asiatic and African -nations, mud as ea W hung If'WlU"' 30""- g In an ' -5'm'm'"'.md'::'; ei.-:.:e:re:r.:- gr:-:re.::.;r:-...::rr2r;.ri does not represent a seed readies or me ”.... u...'.i::'. .. .i.."""”..... ..;... n------ -r can M; --w to nu 'ma- -. . E W "9 n i ” heir annum e - tory: and it is doubtful that it will elicltl ?::LdIlGllQ of respiratory 2.01.! you e:aI'do tllll 0:0 amnuun of canadian opi.. ..' . much response from those peoples which: mm. hnumh u. up, 5.; Q. gunnery eat an H" 7'" ”""'5&:' ::'k':.';yu:;..?”m um have little sympathy for one or the other-J; :3: a coldfcu:;0iIl' wlndvlvo Ind :bImIIIi Diddle! I: I. W" "Fl: "':'::"o:"U lb .,.m.R,.D" "ML ,1 1,5, Colonialism, with all its faults, never adopt-i” my ad . T ” ceied potato and aaaine at the it ie eaq fe fnliew lie iudauneac t ' ' ed totalitarianism as an instrument of gov-U 1'0 brlnchu which spread from symmetry of a ledra ankle with 01 UNI ll0ll'h"I " 50 Supreme ' I I flu tth , iewlndpIpeIikathehancheaolun,,.,.u.1..;.muy." Whanacolllioiclllldlfllteonspinq .. . .. elnment. nalessenlalespecls epeo- ,n-u.ndgnm5uh.kgyouwuu.,m,u,udm.g.gm.guMmuahubuda&wu.h. A Distinguished VlSllOl' ples of India and the other nations which .: unse. ' as students. not a one eeored par- lzeouiblo. llnsina a an Charkmetown welcomes today one m.l0rmel'ly were under the protection and ii.,.;,.. 1.-gm... The a-verajemlnhwae five er- 'mu-Ollldfhl-V. umudlllllli ymezl: ac: , d. . . h d mzehs in theltufelage of Britain were Just as free as Wm. "mu. mm”, M, I h I. h h. were individuals and that '5. Canada 5 most ,1Sn:gul; ecyc I H W1 .t ,thev are now under their own governments. and or linuuhotlld duIt1.nlmIa'o:IIII; 'h"' "M" ,. gdmcuvg R7 d:"hm”:ddh't::"rnrl::.1g-gnaw. . ii I - rn-, ' , .i on. ec m3"h'h"”W"d u Pew)" M Her h "S 'p ml 0 e ,. Communism. on the other hand. 85 eV9l'Y' . isualiy to blame. A sore throat W. Th! -lwm hm Ibmbid would appear to Iunim Sir. d-iii: mm C'B'E” MA” Mayo! of Ottawa' ii no body knows-and as its leaders do not: ind: t '4 cough- " are ' ” ” WW5 ll 50110" mes Browne's eontentioa am y . 1" m deliver the Samuel Robertson Memo” bother to denv-is a totalitarian and free-: 3:;gn"mtn&y'33':';”flt b":e,b::1'M' &"""m','m.:”:v:m:,:';3:dB,rh.n; :1: "r I m":&P';P;"R" Dre- hl Lecture at Prince of wales Coliege tiy dom -suppressing system through and; ” Jecabae there In little expectorI- while radloactiviw cl till elf"! have been bettr ta have marrow We"-mg' am? who this evening Wm through. Joflllrtg tamda'yu::'two your mm. 1” b.i..iI-t a"li'5ii'.r bl::i.i ax- ?i mil mu .T"”"”' be honoured at a civic banquet preliminary um Wm become mo" blenmul g :1. 0:0 rm Wm. Pm”: now. contain. i fth C't t . ugh will become mu ' AaAaetraIIan lore:-bu to being tendered the key 0 e iy a a A Perenmal Issu. e:;Iix'ut:oAwu bmncmm h 1.4,. g iuunlcigm in fix an 1...... function in the City Hall. While this will be her first visit as chief magistrate of our national capital, she is no stranger to Prince Ed-walti Island, and many of our readers will recall her earlier visits with pleasure and appreciation. On those occas- ions she was executive director of the Canadian Welfare Council, a position which she held for fifteen years and during which: time she travelled widely throughout the' Dominion. This is a difficult time of year for many devotees of rod and reel. Neither the weather nor the state of the roads has any- thing to do with it; for to your real fish- erman these are incidental matters not worth a moment's thought. It is the per- ennial issue of bait versus the fly that both- ers them. There are, of course, the rigid uncompromising purists who Wet! b0l'll that way and who would no more think of :- Resforation Of An Old Custom Dr. Whitton's work in connection with child welfare involved the raising of money ”,woll u the stiidying of social problems and services in each Province, and she was a host in herself in the courageous and unceasing fight she waged on behalf of mothers and children. In the depression years of the 1930': she went into the nor- offering a trout worm than of stealing their neighbours' goods. Being usually of A courteous nature. they don't 583' much about it: but deep down in their su'b-oon- sciousness-where, so the psychologists say, our real characters are fashioned-- they despise any adult-who would so much . . . as mention the word ”'bait” in their hear- thern part of the Peace River district, the in . bl W , g. For these there is no pro em. arm dmhght are” 1". northern :a.T.mltcg((:ilVan',days or cold, wet weather or fine. a fly it and fh'hc?iasmltl:lan(: M” n lsdit. ur;'must. he. and no argument about it. "' w in 0” or er” con Hons N ' it uch of a problem for those families living in outlying regions. Between in thzrofhmngadicaq segment of the fray the tW.o wars sh. found time ro tel-nity--the habitual bait users. They Cahadmn representativh 0" the Seem ,take the view that purists in general are QWSHOY: Shicmm of :1; Leligiue of1tNa; a strange species and that their scorn of done an s was nam specia consu an , . th' but th fly is more a product of to the Government on the organization otggggctzjdgon thaneof good sen” Incidental. the movement of British children to Can- d. lrly, this group is growing in both nu-mlbers ' - . d . fee; there are almost as many bait Life for Dr. Whitton during the Secondan preq i (Ten it not in . . lclubs as the other kind. Wm” Wu "id um Immediate p0st'war.Gafh and publish it not in the streets of Wrmd W” mled with numerous goveml i Askelon; but Sir Winston has been known m'ht hmminunenu and social welfareito use a worm on occasion, and so has etudies, resulting, among other things, in a 1 President Eisenhower). "W" h” whdmcms i” Alberta which The real sufferers are those who are hwhmd Dmhiniomwide comment and 1?: torn between a desire to be known as fly mlthd 1" the provincial appointment of n r fishermen and a real hankering after fish R0-"1 Cammission t” look into child wehlfor the sake of their gustatory qualities. fave practices in that Province. Dr. Whitton has received many hon-; on, including the C.B.E. and honouraryl degrees from four universities. She enler- u in the ice for the purposa nor the Outright .I d ow” Politics 1" 1950 when She becamelbold and confident manner of the bai the first woman to be elected to the Board- of Control for the City of Ottawa. Becom- to use flies with success at any time or; they are, indeed, in a serious and uncom- lforlable plight and will remain there un- MC Mhy" 1" 1952' she was re'(?1ected t,wo 'til the warm winds of June come to their years later in a rousing campaign which wescue. created Canada-wide interest. Her accept-I EDITORIAL NOTES once of the invitation to deliver the Samuel Robertson Memorial Lecture this year, which is the chief reason for her visit to Charlottetown at this time, was learnedlences bemwn Messrs. Mao and Chou in with great ihlerhsl by 9” cmzmsr and the Chinese Communists top hierarchv on message well worth hearing at toniorrow observers-Mr. nightls function. munism. Some outside I . day is coming when Peiping will shut the; C0 oma Ism door on Moscow influence. The sooner the It is not surprising that some of the belle” delegates to the Bandung Conference are spending a good deal of their time in do-i nouncing Western Colonialism. forasmuch. as most of the countries represented have been under political control of one or other of the Western nations for long periods of time. It must be admitted. too, that in many instances their economic rcsolircesi . were exploited for the benefit of the na-. . timis which, by rirzht, of conquest or other-i Th” -b'r”Vhh Ahlhlchh j'l:""”"l'5' who wisa attended M the manazcmem of theirzhave just returned from a six weeks four affairs. This fact was a ready-madepro-l0uf Elhihlle Say that they hhve "0 fauh T9 pacanda weapon for the Communists inlflhd Whh the-. way they Whre treated lh their crusade of expansion throughout ;Chf'h”'”'5 hehlhd lhe ch”3'h- The Ohly Asia and Africa: and thev are making good l lh'"-guthht bolhfred them Whs lack 0f us? of it. Meanwtmm they thmsglves. in startling news, in quest of which they un- the outspoken words of the delezate from f dermoh the l0””l9.V- Nobody: theY ”3'PT"'tv Iraq. "are bulldinez up a new C'3l')'1l'-ili:r'l iwhhhd to he flumed 0" ah-Vthlh"-'”h 9"" Wm,” man anything ever produced by the re-v"e'alice which is perfectly understand- i wesfuoy 8 8. I a It is fashionable those davs to fake the. View that there is no such thing as hon.'r- The Art mgmute of Chicago is now in ' Volellt C0l0"WlS"l- M "W S”'"” "m9 ll lfipcsscssion of what the curators call "the something to the credit of Britain's long mos: remarkable recovery" in art history. status as a colonial D3W"J' that the It is Francisco de Zui'baran's "Crucifixion". vehement attack on Colonialism at the pre- 3 17th century masterpiece, It was paint. sent 'conference was not lavuiched nor even ed far ,, mnvem in Seville. 30,1", in 1323' supported by delegates from India. Pakie It hung there until the time of Napoleon's tan or Ceylon, the countries which have peninsular cmpgigm gf thg ea,-iy moors. haul the lonqeet experience as dependents " of Britain. Prime Minister Nehru has had I many unkind thingvto any about the West h.Qielul' but it is dgnlflcant that more I O I ”Day of Ti'ilinipli", a film on the life of Christ has now been released for pub- lic sliowing. A recent iss ic of a national marrazinc featured if as "the picture of the wreck." The film is Hollvwo'i”l's first full scale portrayal of the life of Christ since the lirqiniiing of sound nit-lul'cs. 0 0 O O es. It turned LI) again in 1880 in the col- -lection of theDuke.tl' Alia who gave it to an English theological eemlnary. From then llitil1Q0 little was linen! eboutit. formed in June, 1953. is Dr. lsario Fontalne of Montreal, di- lrector of the medico-legal labora- Not having the skill of those who are able ;lories operated by the Quebec sov- i ernment. The membership is made ,up of forensic scientists from all ,vthe year. even if they have to break lioleslparts of Canada. like to see evidence when French troops looted Spanish church- ,, l By John Forensic Scienlisls I. Bird Canadian Press Staff Writer A small group of prominent Can- tldian scientists are trying to make it tougher for iawbreakera to es- cape conviction and to reduce the danger of innocent persons being jailed. They are members of the Cana- dian Academy of Forensic Scien- tists which includes some of Can- ada's leading crime detection of- ficers, medico-legal experfe and chemists. Their objective is to im- prove and promote the use of scientific methods tion of justice and crime detection... in administra- The acarlem seeks: 1. Establishment of standards of qualification and a code of ethics acceptable to the courts for foren- sic acientist: or crimlnologists-- the expert witnesses who give evi- dence of a scientific nature. 2. Special courses at universi- ties for force a i c scientists on proper presentation of evidence in the courts. 3. To advise police and law en- forcement officers in the employ- ment of modern scientific methods of crime detection. ACADEMY PRESIDENT The president of the academy. ' Ro- The forensic scientist gives scien- ific opinions to the courts on tech- tgrs, nical problems arising in judicial proceedings, particularly in the field of crime. At one time police looked on scientific assistance only as an aid to criminal investigation. It was not sought if there was sufficient evidence to proceed without it. However, police now call in the forensic scientist immediately in nearly all cases of crime. The in- -vestigaftlon . - .' ' -. :1.-lenfi lc results obtained by these Theie is a rumour of glowing diffel mxpem mm" than "mg this in. lformalion merely to support evi- dence already obtained. thf-"'9 ih "0 dhubl but thal She Wm leave 5l the question of l'elaf.lof'is with Soviet C'1m- MEMBERSHIP LIMITED centres around the ' Active mcliibersliip in the acad- ' Atflee is one-appear to believe. that then-my is limited to qualified forensic scientists. the medical and legal professions. including members or Members of these two profcssiniis rcccive university training in the legal aspects of medicine and c..'- recf methods of presenting evi- dence in court. Their membership in colleges of ..h, ' genus and bar assoclatlona quali- fies them as expert witnesses in their fields. experts with membership in col- leges of pharmacists and colleges of veterinary surgeons. But the chemist, the botanist and' other called on to give evidence on in- volved technical subjects do not receive this type of training. s and sur- This also applies to scientists who often are The courts at present examine an expert witness for his qualificn ions. The weight of his evidence often is governed by the knowledge he possesses in a certain field of science. However, the academy takes the position that it is not possible in all cases for a court in a few minutes to determine the qualifi- c proper examination of an individual would take days. ationa of an expert witness. It say: This problem could be elimin- Ilsh that he is a qualified member of the acad WOULD ILIMINATI QUACKI emy. Ultimately the academy would of the courts deuce apparently linking an ac- cused person to a crime had no basis in fact. The academy says a course on evidence presentation should be in- cluded in universities for students studying the sciences. The RCMP maintains an ap- prentice system to train its experts on ballistics. documents and other technical subjects. No member of the force may undertake can work or appear in court as In expert witness until he liaa completed a year's instruction and passed ex- amination: and practical tests. Fitting Coincidence p (Montreal Gazette) It is a strange but fitting co- incidence that the announcement of the Salk polio vaccine should have been made on the tenth an- niversary of the death of Presi- dent Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was in August, 1921, that the Roosevelt: were at their summer home at Campobello in New Brunswick. sailing, fishing, swim- ming. One day the father of the family plunged with his usual zest info the cold surf. A few hours later he was stricken with pplia. He was carried away from Campobello on a stretcher. For months his life hung in the bal- ance. He fought his way back towards colivalescence, but his legs were useless. But gradually his indomit ' will prevailed. From his famous "wiggling of "1! little 108." he got to the point where he could swim again, at first only with his arms. It was then that be first went to Warm Springs. Georgia - a place that was to be connected with the most fateful days of his life. The properties of the warm waters had been recommended to him, and there he spent three months of every year. remaining for hours at a lime in the pool, constantly calling upon the re- luctant muscles to heed his will. t O 3 V His progress was so encourag- ing that be established the Warm Springs Foundation, so that others suifering from the same affliction, but without the 'money to go there, might have the benefit of ""3 Spflngs. He also encouraged his friend, Basil O'Connor, in the March of Dimes campaigns that largely financed polio research. It was at Warm Springs that he received a telephone call in 1920 from Governor Alfred E. smith of New York, urging him i0 ""3 701' Eovernor of New York. Roosevelt pleaded that his health would not permit him. Bill finally he consented. it was the first step - and a long one - towards the White House. And it was at Warm Springs. fen years ago that he died. Franklin D. Roosevelt was. in I VCYY lpeclal way, the symbol of the tragedy of polio and of the courage of man'e lung fight against it. Had he been alive now. he would have hailed the announcement of the Salk dis- covery. and no man could have spoken with a greater right. m Submarines were re-introduced to the Italian navy in 1963 after ex- Plry of the ban imposed by the peace UIICY. llofrlxoratlen Repairs To All Makes. APPLIANCES sans a SIZBVIOI MOTORS , .a-an-an-x -an Bevel!- I.,lO'l'lllCAL Palaer Electric , PIXIIUM Wt! ?oear SPRING SNOW In: About the center Of stillness it was softly snowing. molded. l The Age Old Story I The day following Jesus would go forth into Galilee. and flndqtb Jesus ef Nazareth. Joseph. Cherry Blossom (Japanese Embassy. Ottawa) it after many days" has had a fragrant fulfillment in J a p a li. Forty-three years ago, the Yukio Ozakl. then mayor of Tokyo, token of goodwill. They came from the banks of the Arakawa River, one of Tokyo's scenic spots, famed for its "cherry blossom in five colors." The saplings were trans- planted to the banks of the Poto- mac. blossoming every spring and developing into one of the ' While windhhwsnt violently blow- world. at one warm Outside this rigid ring the winter Waited for nightfall. Then snow lftad Over ltbe fields and found what Over the ban is sun rose, blind- ins. slanting across the ground deep- folded. And the warm morning green- unwinding, Melted all the white dark bad -Carleton Drawry, in the New York Herald-Tribune. Philip. and saith unto hhi, Follow me . . . . Philip flndeth Nathan- ael. Ind saith unto him. We have found him. of whom Moses In the law. and the prophets. did write. the son of The injunction te "cast thy bread upon the watere for thou shalt find late tale piesented 3.000 cherry saplings to the United States government as a a serious disease. except for the ery young or the very old when .here is more chance of the smaller tubes becoming blocked in bronchopneumoiiia. TnhhYoIrIeI Tbebestthlngtodoietegoto i bed and keep warm. Keep lull the windows in the room closed. Re- main in bed at least until two days after your tempe i has returned to normal. A steam vaporizer will relieve the feeling of rawneea in your cheat. Hot mime garglee will help your t on . Drink plenty of hot fruit drinkl. as much as five pinta a day. Your doctor probably will advise I cough mixture to relieve your cough. An alkaline axpectoraut may help you cough up more sputum. Penicillin Preeorlplee If your case is severe. your doctor might prescribe penicillin which may be sprayed from an atomizer. Injections of penicillin also might help. - If your child in stricken with fenced it, bronchitis. keep him isolated from 0' '5' WW l'Wl'd”' ”"G"hc And all night down that barrier the rest of the family. And wash 0011000 I 3- AlIll- Til! GINGE- drlfted your hands and face every time "13 0' "'0 015" "Ill 1031' W111 50 on stubborn faint that stood you leave the patient. Symptom; from August 4 te I inclusive. The against . usually subside after a week and 8119!! of llolwr from Scot-llnd will he'll probably be fully recovered within two weeks. Chronic bronchlde is something else again, and I may have more to say about that later. QUESTION AND ANSWEI What can I do for plnworme, and are they dangerous? Answer: Pinworma are brought inito the body probably by water or food. T: f f consists in, the use of such drugs as methylene blue or ' " substances given by mouth under the direction of a physician. The fingernails should be cut short, underpants worn at night if there is itching about the open- ing of the rectum and the hands washed before eating and after going to the toilet. Toper On The Wing (Ottawa Journal) The International Federation of Air Line Pilots' Associations - a mouthful that - has asked for powers for pilots to control drink- ing in aircraft as a potential safety hazard. All we can say in that the hazard doesn't seem to be as great all it used to be and from the cavern of memory we draw this In the early 30s the air mail was flowmbetween Winnipeg and Cal- gary by rohust aircraft, mostly Boelngs. in which f.he pilot sat re- mote from the passengers in I seat atop the fuselage. well behind the enclosed cabin. One night. out of Calgary. the pilot saw aboard a gentleman in mellow spirits and thought of him spectacles of Washington, D. C. struck the Arakawa in far-off Japan; inat- Wnr 11 not one of them . f i even a vestlge of its pristine glory. With great concern. and prompted by a laudable urge to resurrect the! beauty of. Tokyo and its surround- ing landscape, Masaji Oyama ar- ranged throu the Foreign Offce to have dra is transferred from the Potomac to Japan. In March, 1952. a total of 40-five for each of eight varieties - arrived from the Meanwhile, a war-time blight trees bordering the tention and lack of fertilizer exact- ed their toll. At the close of World of the Capital Park in Washing- ton. Tliesel were 'l"'fl!l”9f' 4 grafted to 100 seedlingauat the Metropolitan Nur.ic::. .1-' --3 seedlings. i-eplanted on the Anka- wa b ' f lut N h are over 12 feet h h and now cap- able of bearing bossoms. with them were planted 3.000 eeedllnil of 70 over varieties. Mr. Ouki who. in 1012. IIL" i f with secretions. This could result h ,preclahle effect. -Winnl !'reePreee. At the and ef 104! than were 46,631 patients in Canadian ment- al hoapltals. Ten years later, despite double the number of ad- mlsaiona, than were only 00,505 patients. This means that the ratio of successful treatment had grown enormously. other figures bear this out. Though the ratio of admiuone per 100,000 of popula- tion jumped from 92.! to 156.8, the number still receiving u-eatment at the and of the year increased by Ian than 15 patlente per 100,000. The happy fact is that profession- al knowledge haa increased to a point whu-e the large majority of the mantalw ll are now con- sidered ” " they are ad- mitted for treatment soon enough. -Monfnel Gaaette. Gaels Med plane. ee far as dis- cloaed, indicate a notable program for this annual Cape Breton event Klnfoeh. of Cutie May, lavarnee- ahlre. Two other pate in the four-day event: A master piper. Principal Seumaa MacNeill of in College of Piping; and the championship Highland dancer. James L. Mac- Konaie. -Sydney Poet-Record. The beat oettb some Irene cae- ada. This is the opinion ofiDr. Jon Ariatlubel. Minister of Agri- culture in Columbia, South Amer- ica. I-Ia heads a group of Colom- mm nomoreuntiliefliihtlntbedlm mllolllliht. he saw the passenger Clfcrlng about the lower biplane w ng. There was nothing the pilot could do about it, except keep the plane in level flight. The merry soul clalnbered about the wires, giving tipsy waves to the Elaasengere re- maininl ll the cab . When he of falling seemed in be in danflenr off the pilot would -the wing and slide him back towards the dz?! where the moat daring of the o er passengers waited. posed like a baseball catcher. One lift of the win: brought the eky,lerk within reach and he was dragged inside and eat on. When the plane landed the pilot and his sober passengers were excessively fatigued, more fatlxued we im- aglne than any modern pilot who can step from his cockpit Into the cabin and if neces .7 impose his authority with deft strokes of a fire extinguisher. It la lonely in the re- sponaibility of the pilot's seat. of course. but not an lonely as if once waa. OMOCRI in their ' mouths. parents are continually fishing tore. other thing: out of the mouth. of toddlers. But what about the . Star. Not For Children" (Gait Reporter) -Windsor .Cbildreh have a habit of putting" Moat 001113. spoon handle: and child who is turned loose in the ilrdenf Are we aware of til. poisons ae many plants contain? For instance. it will soon be time to plant potatoes, yet do we know that the sprouts of a seed potato are fatal if taken in qugm. idea a child may eat? Dr. Foster N. Martin, JL, . ..h.rmacolozlet at Tulane Univer- aity baa eat out a list which we can all avoid. We shun poisonoul toadstoole, which look like musli- roome and are becoming wary of poison ivy. But we know that the lovely sweet pea contains a poison which. while not fatal. can keep A person paralyzed and bed- ridden for six months? There is enough poison in a packet of cantor bean seeds to kill flv: . children. Plenta ta avoid eating include the elephant ear. lily-of-the-valley, ordinary ivy. foxglove, and rhod- odendron; the roots and seeds of the four o'clock. the underground stem of the iris. the bulbs of tulipa, nnrclssus, daffodil. spider 111195. cyclamen and the berries and seeds of bittersweet. casfor beans and pinks. People with, clilldfen can enjoy their gardens more by keeping their children from eating the leaves. seeds. stem: or roots of llllntl and by making certain. also. that stored bnlbe are not where little fingers can get at then Soiwlien you lift yollr daffodil bulbs be sure kiddies are not around to nibble on them. ....D.D.g,g, OLD CUBIIINCY The Spanish dollar. obtained from trade with the West Indies. wu ;c::'l.lIla::; c.ll1':QlCy unit in Nova CLEAN CLOTHES WEAR LONGER For Your Dry Cleaning Needs RITE-WAY CLEANERS ' min 7387 , PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. the goodwill gesture. died but year at the age of 90. Resrettebly. he passed away without seeing the descendants of the Potomac cherry United States, through the courtesy trees blooming once more on the Arakawef r Shop For These Specials This WEEK-END Men's suits to 349.50 . . . 31950 Bell, Matheson I Foster IEO Richmond St. J. Elmer Blanchard, D.A. 165 Queen at. Phone 4232 M. A. Farmer. Q.C., L Bank of Comma w Bldg. Allbon M. Gillie. LL.B. ill Iucamaed st. Dial 4143 A. Walther: Geudet,-LL.D. Phillipe Bldg. ul ' " St. Palmer 0 llaalam leak at Neva Beetle Bldg. Matheeon. Peake I Niehohon Men's SUITS fol369.50 . . . S1950, w;l'; :& Men's'l'epc'oufs to 529.50 .. 318.95 9- '-,,'-e'..,".:',- M- e v - ll aiaaanea ea. Dial p iaaaredaeeanae V speirslllmtzal like I IIIIIQIJIIIOIIIIVC it e. Ioye',SUiTS to mac .. sin I. 315. Dqe)IegiIIuIIMWed. Pdev:Ie81.00 , ' uni-itaoa - : leelheel LB. 5! iloluelt. ' I. HA&lERED AC .r. &.'j3SV?..ttl'. Chas. R. M sld. B.A. 156 Richmond Btoqu Dial 8911 OPTOMETRISTS G. F. llutcheson & Son F. G. nurclmson. lt.0. OI-lfiol St. Dial J. A. Gel-rllthers. 8.0. in leaf si. Dlal sell . 0.D. in gel Gun Dial 56 J. S. Taylor, B.0. Caner Kent 1 Queen St!- offlce ml: lloiiee 4156.; II. J. Ilaboa, B.0. inn. ' P. E ii CHIROPRACTORA Dr. W. B. Garson rrlaeelt. oi-H49 ARCHIECT4 Ian-unlit"; 1-.I.i. .mgl;-33' W 1". A i'65fi'vT plain! ms ,,