PAGE FOUR. . .. THE GUARDIAN Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. Editor and Managing Director. In A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Frlnk Walker. CIBCULATION "Coven Prince Edward lllknd like the dew” "Tho strongest memory is weaker than the weaken ink". SHABLOTTETOWN WEDNESDAY, JULY 22. ms The Big Air Sh: ; Congratulations are in order for the 201st (Confederation) Wing of the R. C. A. F. Association on bringing to Charlotte- town today the National Air Shows, sup-, ported by R. C. A. F. F-S6 Sabre Jets and an R. C. N. helicopter. The people of this Province are intensely air-minded and the show will undoubtedly be extremely popu- lar. It will be recalled that some 10,000 peo- ple turned our for the first air show in this Province when on August 31, 1931 the Trans-Canada Air Pageant was held to mark the opening of Upton Airport, main- ly through the enthusiasm and good work of Dr. J. S. Jenkins, D.S.O. Before the page- ant proper the first autogyro to visit Canada came to Charlottetown, piloted by Capt. 'Godfrey Dean. The tri-motor "egg beater” was escorted here by planes flown by Harry O'Leary and H. S. Jones. That pioneer airport and the pageant1 the! were outcomes of the formation of Prince Edward Island Flying Club on May 2, 1929, of which the officers were: Presi- ient, Lieut. Col. D. A. MacKinnon. D.S.O.: lice-president, L. R. Allen; secretary, J. P. Hillion; and directors, Lei-toy Holman, T. W. L. Prowse and Senator Creelman Mc- Arthur. Flying has come a long way in this Province as elsewhere since that beginning. The establishment of training schools at Charlottetown and Summerside was offi- cially announced on June 13. 1949- The Charlottetown School did not survive the war but the schools at Summerside have continued to turn out highly trained fly- ers and navigators until the present time. Now is seems that these last schools are also to be closed and the Summerside air- port to be used as a base for search and rescue operations. I . In the activity of this great air show, 1 ment of European ..! ..... . immigrants and iii- dustries in these Provinces, or the setting up of big defense industries, taking advant- age of our manpower and raw materials. "The possibilities," he argues, "are end- less. What is certain is that continuous grants and subsidies will not solve the iuai-itimes' economic problems. any more than taking aspirin cures a toothache. Wel- fare payments will not bring Maritime wages one penny closer to Ontario wages, or begin to compensate for the difference between them. . . . This is especially the i case if Ottawa continues to force up freight rates; thus shutting Maritime producers out of all markets except their own, and mak- ing Maritime consumers pay through the nose for what they buy." All this is very true, and much more could be added. But the same thing has been going on ever since Confederation, under both parties at Ottawa, with the big Central Provinces usually blocking any real move for Maritime advancement. Our poli- ticians on both sides should realize what this means. it means that we have been exploited through partisan politics for gen- erations and that our only salvation is to work in unison for Maritime objectives, and pledge all our representatives to this end, regardless of where the political chips fall. If we heard more of this issue there .would be a livelier interest in election campaigns, and in the activities of the candidates. Shakespearian Revival New vistas for the theatre in Canada seem to have opened with the inauguration last week of the Shakespearian Festival at Stratford, Ontario. An exchange notes that in that little city amid a placid landscape the name of Shakespeare has had pleasant associations of a gentle river, bor- dering parklands, a garden in which all the flowers mentionedin his plays are grown, the names of schools and streets and much else. But the living spirit of William Shake- speare had been missing. His vitality was not there. The urge to stage the Shake- spearian Festival, however, came within the town itself. What began as a local spark grew to a flame lighting the national scene. What developed was that Britain's best talent came gladly to co-operate with Canadian talent. The upshot has brought the world and his wife to the little Ontario city. New Yorkis top critics hail the re- stilt. Now at the Stratford of Canada the however, Islanders will show that they re-I fierce passions and terror of Richard the tain their keen interest in flying and it may well be that the demonstration will have some effect on decisions as to future de- velopment of aviation in the Province. What Alls The Maritlmesi An interesting post mortcm on the Maritime Provinces has been held by Mr. appearing recently in the Toronto Globe and Mail. One of the articles was repub- lished a few days ago in The Guardian. While many of the writer's arguments have a distinct political slant, his general con- clusions are well worth considering. He shows, as the Globe and Mail notes edi- torially, that this part of Canada is in urgent need of development, especially in- dustrial development. For lack of it, the mi11jon-odd people who live here are oblig- ed to accept living standards about 30 per cent below those of Canada in general, and about 40 per cent below those of Ontario. "There is no indication of imPl'0V9' 'ment," says our Toronto contemporary. "Far from catching up with such Prov- inces as Ontario and Quebec. Alberta and British Columbia, the Maritimers seem likely, as things stand, to fall even farther behind. While other parts of the Domin- ion, notably Central Canada, enjoy lai'gff' scale development. and p1'0Sl391'h)'. ihc M3” times are getting only a trickle of wealth- producing investment. While other i'eSl0TlS look to the future with hope. the M31"' times look to it -with anxiety. "To such Provinces as Ontario, the last seven years have brought 51" 9XD8hSi0h 0! industry and resources that must be meas- ured in billions. To Nova Scotia. New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. the)! have brought very little but the old familiar subventions, subsidies and handouts. What is to show for them? An economic struc- Ricliard J. Ncedham in a series of articles I Third, and the unexpected graces and sub- leties of the little performed comedy, All's Well that Ends Well, have come to life in a manner inspiring ovation. The eyes of Canadians have been opened, their ears made alert and an eager expectation arous- ved EDITORIAL NOTES Festival of St. Mary Magdalen. O O U The Island is looking very much the Garden of the Gulf for the visit of the distinguished Agricultural Institute of Can- ada. Prince Edward Island's loss is New- foundlandls gain in the departure of Mr. V. A. Ainsworth, long manager of the Maritime Electric Company Ltd. in this Province. It will not be easy to find any- one of equal ability to fill his shoes. 0 D 0 . The American State Department can- not complain that it was not informed of the serious view Canada takes of proposed restrictions against oats and ground fish fillets. Between states as between individ- uals plain talking can avoid unfortunate l l l l l ! ture so precarious that it must be proppedl up with more subventions, subsidies and handouts; a chronic surplus of labor: a continual exodus of the most able and am- bltiour ii standard of living that is not. in the true sense, Canadian." What is needed in place of handouts. the Globe and Mail writer argues. is h'' "duntrlal development and its concomitant: f...ghggp power, a larger population. m0" - better highways. He suzzeats the gwulng of huge power plants in Cape Bre- pnei-ntlng electricity from coal at the and ii grid carrying this power to en;-"y port of the Maritlmes; the settle- misunderstandings. The Americans know us too well to imagine that Canada's rea- sons for speaking out are anything but friendly. The Battle of Salamanca, fought this date 1812, was one of Wellington's most important victories in the Peninsular War. The French were extended in a vast arc in an attempt to encircle the British army. Wellington launched three attacks on the French left. He then pressed back the re- maining forces but failed to press the pur- suit effectively. The followlng month he entered Madrid. Canada's vegetable growers in 1952 planted 190,820 acres, ranging alphabetical- ly from asparagus to tomatoes, and pro- duced crops amounting to 1,714,000,000 I pounds. Most important was tomatoes fol- lowed by com, carrots, onions and cabbage in that order. Smallest was asparagus at 5,814,000 pounds. Greatest vegetable prov- lince was Ontario with 120,350 acres. fol- lowed by Quebec with 37,940 ticres, Brit- lsli Columbia 16,400 acres, and the three prairie provinces, a total of 12,140 acres. The latter figure consisted of 4,390 acres lln Manitoba and 7,750 acres in Alberta. the . THE GUARDIAN. OCHARLOTTETOWN :?oed SWIBL OF FEIINS Once when I took is path along The top of a mountain I came upon A fifty foot square of maidenhalr Fern, and I thought. it is wasted here. in I place where people seldom came These swirl: of fern were green- er green Than anything I had ever seen. And I thought, what a pity no one knows. then I remcniberetl when Rich in form and poor in men Earth made its first turn And a time and high Like this, fern grew under the first sky. - Elizabeth Jane Astlcy. Hilaire Belloc (Ottawa Journal) Hilaire Belloc, dead in England at the age of 82, was the great con- temporary of Chesterton and Shaw. perhaps as brilliant at trin- ity as any nation ever produced in a single generation. Once Belloc wrote that "God put 6. K. Ches- terton on this earth to say No' to Bernard show." He himself seem- ed to have been put on earth to: say "No" to both of them. He haul not Shaw”: razor-edged wit nor humor. but he had more scholar- ship than either of them and, in the judgment of many, wrote bet- ter prose. Belloc was a Frenchman who was educated at Oxford and be- came a British subject. One of his most famous lines was to Baliol: ”Balllol made me. Balliol fed me. Whatever I had she gave me again: And the best. of Balliol loved and led me. God be with you, Balliol men." ' Belloc was famed as historian. poet and essayist when. still 9. young man, he entered the House of Commons. There he failed. He could not understand the temper of the House. could not catch its ear; in the end retired in frustra- tion to write with Cecil Chester- ton, (brother of G. K.), The Party System, an indictment of the par- liamentary way. A Roman Catholic. he was ll brilliant controversialist for his faith, kept alive the Newman tradi- tion. They described hlmg as "a genlally pugnacious protagonist of the Catholic faith in English lit- erature." i Historian and biographer. (he wrote at four-volume history of England and inumerable biogra- phies) and II. military critic. he may well be best remembered for his essays, his verse, his delightful rhymes, and for songs like this: "The great hills of the South Country They stand along the see: And it's there walking in the high woods That I could wish to be. And the men that were when I was a boy Walking along with me." boys Or this: "If ever I become a rich man. Or if ever I grow to be old. I will build a house with a deep thatch To shelter me from the cold. And there shall the Sussex songs be sung And the story of Sussex told. And the men that were boys when I was ii boy Shall sit. and drink with me." In the ramshackle house in which he spent his last years the men that were boy: when he was ii boy. and some who were younger, visited him often to hear his fam- ous talk, and many of them, like Duff Cooper. took him gifts of wine. In gratitude he would quote for them his own famous line: "From quiet homes and first be- ginning. out to the undiscovered ends. There's nothing worth the wear of winning But laughter and the love of friends." Long years ago. or so it seems to many of us, Belloc wrote: ”He does not die that can be- quenth some influence to the land he knows. Or dares. persistent. intei-wreath Love permanent with the wild hedgerowl: He does not die, but still re- mains substantiate with his darling plainl." That, now could be l-lllalre Bel- loc'I epitaph. British Emigrants (St. Thomas Times-Journal) A report from London states that last year 23.000 Britons emi- grated to the United States. 44,000 to Canada, 52,000 to Australia, and 58.tXl) to New Zeallnd and South Africa. It is surprising to learn that among the Empire countries Can- ada had fewer Brltixh settlers than Australia and South Africa. Australia has received A lot of bad publicity during the last year or two owing to immigrants being held in over-crowded compounds and under squalid conditions pending their finding Jobs and being charged high prices for what they did get. Soiuh Africa has also redelved ii lot of adverse publicity which appears to be slowly aimed at restoring the pre-Kruger statue of the country and arousing an nntl-white atti- ;tude among the blacks who are iflie Neighbors .1 I b 7" . 'i'h In the byways of cities and in the Highland villages. weather- beaten old knights of the open road-usually called tinkers-may sometimes be heard playing the bagpipes in a manner that suggests that the piper is past his best. if he ever had I best. One blames the piper. never his pipes. Yet. per- haps this is sometimes wrong. Bag- pipes. it seems, have their prime. There comes 9. time when they are qualified for retirement. This is a thought that does not normally occur to the non-expert in piping. but it is evidently a re- cognized fact among the experts for the editor of the regimental magazine of the Argyll and Su- therland Highlanders has been asked the question, "What is the life of a set of bagpipes?" He himself, without claiming it as I record.' has stated that a set of pipes owned by the Canadian Arg- ylls oullasted seven pipe-majors. and were "retired" and placed in a cabinet in the offlcers' mess after 49 yea.rs' service. Putting it in round figures, let us say that they alternately stirred the blood and brought wistful tears to the eyes of exiled Scots for a half-a- century before being honorably laid aside. one It is true that 50 years is a short life compared, for example. to that of a violin. A Stradivarius, at. 250 years old or thereabouts. is con- sidered to be even healthier than it was when new. But. the anatomy of ii violin is very different from the anatomy of a set of bagpipes. and it is the anatomy that counts in musical instruinents.'just as in the animal kingdom. Tortoises and fiddles (with constant replacement of strings in the case of the latteri are built to live. given favourable considerations and reasonable treatment. into a second or third century. Human beings and bag- plipes are of more delicate constitu- Oil. There are people, of course who would have all bagpipes forcib- ly retired long before they reach The Grass Has Grown (Hamilton Spectator) Clemency. that mild attribute so near to weakness. has been shown to another ruthless Nazi commander. General Nickolaus von Falkenhorst was released from- the British war crimes prison at Werl recently because he is suf- fering from a heart dlsesse.' Von Falkenhorst was sentenced to death in 1946 for passing the famous order for the execution of captured Allied commandos. The sentence was later commu to 20 years. Now he is free. He goes to join the growing company of mill ex- periiecutar: of mankind who have. for various reasons. managed to get out of prison and escape the full nsequencu of their acts. with Von Fnlkenhorst. the case was different, but no less criminal. when he passed the notorious or- der 'ndemnl commandos to death he had been an army offl- cer for forty years and was fully aware of all the implications. To- day he enjoy: I mercy which he denied to the brave young spirits who fell into his hand: during the war. Memory fadel. The war and its ogonlu are becoming I fugitive nightmare. The gnu has grown at Belsen. Dachau is lust a word with something vaguely ugly about it. the human bone factories. the (II .. in overwhelming proportion. We may not have the prolonged sunshine that prevails In the Anti- podel and in south' Africa. but we have other advantages these countries might envy. Apart from the fact. that it In much cheaper to come here because of distance. we never suffer from the cruel drought: that kill crops and live- stock in vast quantities. Perhaps the chief reuon II that emigrants are limited as to the amount of money they can bring here, whereas they can take all they have to the sterling coun- tries. Canada is developing tre- mendously ln retard, to mineral: and industries. and we can do with a neat many more Britons. The immigration question is, largely lied to the question or the convertibility of sterling. lyfeuenhaw . "vii Irigl(il1;s:'f I "But there was a can on the bottom of the stack that looked larger than the others." By George Clark on leg H I . r . bl. . y N?-."lywuu u in in ------...-.-.... A Venerable Bagpipes Edinburgh Scotsman the age of 50; indeed. there are extremists who would kill them off extremists have probably been made to suffer the music of a pipe band indoors. in ii. confined space. They have not heard the Great Music, the Piobalreachd played on ii morning in Skye. or an evening in the Western High- lands, by one solitary piper. mai'.i'y- ing his music. as it were. to the mist-capped hills and the heather. It is then that the bagpipe comes into its own. use But no matter what the music or the surroundings may be, it seems that they cannot give im- mortality tn the pipes upon which the music is played. The bag in- evitably ages. Moreover. there is a question of economics in this. Whlcli is to survive-the bagpipes or the maker of bagpipes? Obvlou.s- ly not both. It a set of bagpipes could be handed dowif from genera- tion Io generation and if no set ever perished. the viorld in course of time would be over-populated with pipes and the makers of pipes would be forced out of business. Let us, therefore. bow to the wis- dom of a Providence winch decrees that no bagpipe can live for ever. The question still remains: What. is the limit? chambers. the tortured millions are receding. Now the torturei-s and a sassins are being let loose at in- tervals "for health reasons." The minority that has retained interest in the subject may see a macabre humour in this excuse. but even they might now consider these de- praved creatures as "not. so bad after all." Perhaps only the dead could say how wrong they are - but the dead cannot speak. in youth. if they could. But these' 1 Notes Bx . r Medical men claim there in such , a thing in "highway crush disease." laudglng from the records. one feel: i inclined to consider it as incurable. l -Oshaw'a' Times-Gazette. If It's all the some to them, we hope that the young women of this country will not take up what is described as the latest. fad f among London girls, having their inner nose pierced so they can wear a gold ring through it.- lS:iint John Telegraph-Journal. It's encouraging to find people still are trying to think up ways of lrcduciiig the noise in New York. The problem always becomes es- pecially vexing at this time of year when windows are kept open at home and the heat helps to fraz- zle one's nerves on the street. Ef- forts in the past. have produced little diminution of Ions of the bllghts of New .York life. Among the suggestions made before a hearing held in the restful con- fines of City Hall were an increase in the maximum fine for unneces- sary noise making from 310 to 825; ithe muting of taxi and bus horns; 'a complete ban on horn blowing from 11 p. m. to 7 a. m.. and the in- stallatlon on all cars of two-tone horns -- loud for the country and .soft for the city. Of all these ideas, ltlie loud-and-soft horn suggestion its the most intriguing.-New York Herald Tribune. ' The Canadian Citizenship Coun- KCli has taken another look -it the statistics which say that between .1840 and 1940 Canada received E6,450,000 immigrants and in the -same century lost 6,000,000 of them, lchrfly to the United States. The Council. deeply interested in mak- ing the immigrant. ll useful citizen. lumpy in his new home..no longer is convinced that this country is merely being used as ll stepping stone, no matter what. the figures say. This movement of people, in the long run, may not be as damag- ing as -we may consider it today. There is the possibility that Can- ada, by immigration from the United States. will win back all she lost. as her resources and op- portunitles become more widely known. The council, in its careful vm.V. dares to mode a forecast in this regard: " . . . we expect that the flow south during the next twenty-five years, not to men- tion the next century. will be large- ly in the opposite direction, and that our 'lmmigrant-emigrant ex- port-importt position will be rather favorabh-perhaps too much so." -Ottawa Citizen. The conquest Everest has been as much a triumph for medi- cine as for climbing skill. Over 20,- 000 feet the atmosphere becomes too thin for active or prolonged jig ' 9. The .w.-..x .4 3 at medical one of how rcgaiie the lack of ox';;".'I. c:,I:dm'e"' "999 ltmobpherlc pressure De Cormac Swan explains ill. r" ggdgagbmrver that the expcd, tic outlook. Evereut scaled without the ligolllllfd 2:: be For five months before his af"”i WW 30! NCDII Dr. Michael wpar. the medical officer of the ,,f.”i' had prepared for the exped.im' That did not merely mun ,.ea1cii'L "'8 H with of physical fitness mi, preparing the medical atoi-t-s' ; . any likely eventualilles -pcni in "W Wlnha drugs. Particularly 5:1" phazuaniainee, which is so ..,1,,' able in dysentery. Paludrlne ..;.. i it malaria. first-aid equlpmgm M"; Ipllntl in case of accldentsr Vi'ni- nipeg Free Press. The nntliropolotlstl. who 3;. ways have something to won-y ,,, bout in their studies of man's eiol utlon, are now worried about lc 5O They think that in 50.000 y.-,..,”,,,' so the legs of mankind will be ,9. duced to useless stubs simply be. cause people have lost both the desire and the need to use .11.-,1, If we remember what. happe,,..d the horse - that nglle, doglike little creature which grew up om; the centuries to become ii hcaiv. hoofed worker - the prospects hr our descendants are not very 0011-T881118. Our reason for bringing "ll 31151903 UP is that some inven- '03! "0 trying to promote a mm". in: sidewalk. in kind of coiivcx-or belt which would reduce the pcdes. trlnn to the status of it passenzer. About the most required of ism even now is for getting in and pm, of automobiles, and to progress in- to the future by standing still .n this manner would certainly hm. ten the kind of immobility the an. thropologlsts are thinking abom, But there was a time when 'he moving stairway - the escalator... -was considered a childish garlgni, and look at it now. -- Saint John Telegraph Journal. till- Age on Story 3 3- The - Then the same day at 1-venlnr. being the first day of the work when the doors were slnit when- the disciples were nssembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst. and niilth initn them. Peace be unto you. And when he had so said. he uhcu-ml unto them his hands and his side. . . . And after eight dzu-s again his disciples were wltliln. and Thomas with them: then came Jesus. the doors being shut. and stood in the midst, and said. Peace be unto you . . . And niiiuy human existence and the problem of sustaining climbers on the great heights of Everest has been other signs truly did Jesus in tin- presonce of his disciples, vrliivli the are not written in this hook. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Matheson. Peolte 8: . Nicholson A. W. MATIESON. Q.C. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON: LLB. Barrllben, Etc. Collections - Money To Inn 175 Grafton Street Old Charlottetown (Am! F. E. L) A-. LAUNCHINGS Front the Colonial Herald, 1844: "March 23: Launched on Thurs- day last. from the shipyard of Mr. Alexander Dingwcll. St. Pe- ters, the schooner 'Hnrp', of 73 tons. She was hauled by 56 horses for A distance of three miles. and left within two or three hundred yards of the open water. A large concourse of people assembled to witness the novelty of the scone. She is intended for the seal fish- cry, and is owned hy Charles Braddock. Esq., and Mr. Cliarles. Sanderson, awhose enterprise, we hope, will be rewarded with suc- cess. "March 30: Launched on Tucs- dny last, from the shipyard of Messrs. Campbell, Lot 16. II fine schooner called the 'Zephina', of 120 tons. She was hauled by 90 span of horses for the distance of 300 yards on the ice. which they accomplished in a few min- uteii. "April 6: Launched at St. Pe- ter'5 Bay, on Saturday. from the shipyard of Messrs. Maclnnls, n handsome little schooner of the burden of 40 tons, called the 'Ex- perlment'. By the united strength of 22 horses. she was hauled the dlltsnce of seven and one-half miles, thirty chains of which were over bare ground. In consequence of I large crack in the lee, over which they intended to haul her. having given way on her up- pmschlng it. she immediately broke through, on which the hone: in draft hurl to be cut away from her with the greatest dexpntch possible. She is now floating nfely in her destined element. Owned by Capt. Angus MacDonald, St. Peters. she is in- tended for the seal fishery." TAPE iron sarirrv SYNWY. N.S. (CP)-- The Jun- lor dumber of comniercc. as part 01 I H1011! cnmvllln. his set up stations where five-foot strip: of reflector tape are placed on the rear bunwers of posing cars. Win conVEn7r?;T. Moos: JAVmu. (cm - A delegation of about 75 from Moose Jaw will attend the international at New York. July in. Palmer Olson. Palmer 8: Husloin A. J. HASLAM. B.A.. LLB. Barrister, Me. Cenlr of Nova Scott: W l Charlottetown, P. E. I. MONEY T0 LOAN Bell. Mothieson & Foster Barristers. Eollcllou. Illa. II. II. BELL. 0.0. (1. ll. FOSTER. LLB. Lnlnl on city and Fun Properties 150 Richmond street Charlottetown. P.l.l. l I .-rederic A. Large. Q.C. i Barrister, Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada lnlldllu Charlottetown. P. If. I. Louis on City and Inn Properties M. Alison Farmer. 9.6. B.A. LLB. Bu-rlelor and Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Loan Gordon E. MueMiIlon. I.A.. L1..I.. BABRISTEB. SOLICITOB, Ito, In Prince st. tllnrlotialhwl PHONE I'll J. A. coauthors. ll.O. orroimrun . in Kent Street Phone an (Nut to Slmpeoire Annoy) Timon M. ohm. Lu." BABIIBTIII. Iol.lCl'l'0I. I05 I use Richmond It - Charlottetown Phone Ml R Byron J. Grant. 0 OPTOMITIIIT III Kent Street Phone Ill - Money to Loon Chas. R. Mc9uoid ILA. BABBISTEIL snLu:i'ron, NOTARY. Etc. Intern Trust Building CllABl.0T'l'E'l'(lWN Gander & Haszurd GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. LL.l!. Barristers Ind solicitor: Money to Loan Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg Dr. K. A. Muoiochern DENTIST Dental X-ny Above Charlottetown Clinic 202 Queen St. Dial 438. MucPlieo 8. Trainer II. F. MUPHEE. II.A.. Q.C. E. IOMEIILED TBAINOB. B.A. hnrrlofan. Em. J. S. Taylor 0l'TOM.E'l'BlST lye: Examined. muses Filled Corner Kent and Queen Sta. Office Phone IBM-Home I013 A. Wullhon Guudefh LLB. BABIIBTER. SOLICITOII. Eltug Phillipe Sulldlng ill Grafton Street Collerllnr J. A. McGuigon IABIIITEII. SOLICITOB Eld- NOTAIV. Etc. Our!-to lulldlnl.' Jg, H. J." Mobon. R.0- Optometrist Ilontoxue. - E- Pliono In Dr. W. R. Carson CIIIIOPIAOTOB CIlAIL0'l'l'llTllWN pm 201 Prince 5 Dr. A. L. Muclsuac niirmsr Dental x-nu no (Opposite lento lob!) GLOIIA BUILD! IL HI Grafton Phone H. I. DOANE III GIG! 05930 PIES IANIIOIJI W. l,lMA P.' lllncflllltill. OA. other offices at llnllfu. 1: COMPANY ORAITIIIII -AUGIIUNTANTI :1. cinnamon X-Md? IARMNO. GA. Kevin J. IMIRNNA. CA nfonqm. on. him. Anliern. nammum Iuitvlllo. lJv'u-pool. Nowilllnnow and Turn-, MeDONAl.D. Cllllll.-I COL CIIARTIIID A(:l:IIIJN1A.NTI convention of Jehovah's Witnesses Montreal, Quebec. Ottawa. Toronto. lelnt JoIn..lborbroeko. Vnnwm'"- Kirklnml Lulu-. lilonelovl. Ilnlllu. FT -pi-uldir; m.nls1cr, rim::unce:l hare. Currie IIIdl.. cburlotutown. lid I "- rlouetown. m';','"'; 3”, the success to its ream: