"PAGE THE GUARDIAN "7 Auiliorlzed 5.2.53 t7i3'.T7i..iTi-.1... Tm... uepnrtnieiit, ottnwn. The Isliind Guardian Publishing Co. rout F.dltor4xiniI Managing lllrector, Inn A. Burnett. Associate I-J-.Iitor. Frank Walker. I" cTi?c'ciXrTos7 "(favors Prince Edward lnlund like the dew" "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". T.Ioniani:oa'ri-zrowivvriunaii. um. 15. 1954". Senate F ltfolio It is tliirty-four years since. the last cabinet post went to a senator, a lapse of usage which on the whole seems about a quarter of a century too long. It is true that members of the House of Commons look with disfavour on Government depart- ments being headed by anyone who is not directly available to answer their questions. On the other hand there is a great reservoir of experience and ability in the Upper Chamber that has gone too long untapped. The appointment of Senator W. Ross Macdonald. solicitor-general, shows that the Government has finally realized that ap- pointment to the Senate does not necessar- ily deprive the nation of the administrative ability of a man with cabinet experience. The Government leader in the Senate has had wide experience, including that of act- ing for three years as Speaker of the House of Commons and is highly regarded by 311 parties. It yrould, indeed, be a serious mistake to deprive the House of Commons of the right to ask questions of the responsible ministers of a number of important depart- ments. There are already more than enough activities of government removed from the dii'ect'siipe1'viSi0n Of the H0115? by the technique of setting up Crown corp- orations. In the case of a. portfolio, how- ever, like that of solicitor-general which seldonl gives rise to such questions the move is IJUYPLV gain- ..------w-mm Talking Points People in the United -States and else- where who cling to the view.that in some mysterious manner the United.KmgC.10m continues to dominate Communist think- ing perhaps will learn something to then advantage by reading the first report to come out of the finance, conference now be- ing held in Australia. This report indicates that the first proposal put forward by rl British delegate, Sir Leslie Rowan.-that the Commonwealth's dollar and gold. re- serves be used to meet problems arising from any American economic slump-was met immediately by vigorous opposition from all other delegates. Apparently. Sir Leslie took the rebuff in good spirits: he explained that he had introduced the idea only as a talking-point. . ' Many talking-points will come up in the course of this conference: in fact. discus- sion is its primary purpose. The -countries represented have many Common Interest-9. but each has some interests and needs which differ from those of the other. In such a situation some disagreement on methods must be expected even when. ac- cord can be reached on principles. This is not to suggest that no community strength can ensue from the Australian conference: in the long run there probably will be a good deal of it. It, will be, however, a strength horn of friendly diversity, not of formal and rigid unanimity. --- Plowmen's Olympics Nine European countries as well as (Ian:-ida and the t.'-nitcd States participated in the first annual world chrimpionship plowing match held last year on a farm near Cobourg, Ontario. The contest received wide publicity at the time. but some interesting background information is provided in an article in the current Imperial Oil Review. The first world match came after years of hopes and planning. First steps were the early international contests established in Ontario for competition between Cana- dian and American experts. Ther. in 1946, Imperial Oil offered an all-expenses-paid six-weeksl trip to Europe as grand prize for the two top plowmen of the meet. Each year two crack plowmen went overseas, ac- companied by a team manager appointed by the Ontario PIowmen's Association. They competed in European plowing matches and their visits stimulated the idea of A world match. V , Three international conferences were held to discuss the project and finally, at the last of these at Falkirk, Scotland, in November. 1952, the World Championship -Ploughing Organization was formed and a governing board elected. The world champ- ionship trophy. known as the Essa Golden Flow. is a miniature of an eighteenth cen- lury Norfolk plow. the ancestor of many cube plow: used today throughout the , , World. It wps designed And mAde We English craftsmen who recon- ditioned the Imperial Crown Jewels for the Coronation. The trophy is held for a year by the plowing organization to which the world championship belongs. The winner is presented with a smaller replica. Today the first replica rests proudly in the Ontario farm home of last year's win- ner, Jim Eccles, and the original is on dis'- play in the Ontario Parliament Buildings. But next year, who knows? The second may come to rest in a Prince Edward Is- land farm home, or in England, Ireland. France, Germany or Scandinavia. It may even end up under the sweltering North African sun. Twenty-two countries have al- ready indicated their intention to take part in the 1954 match which will be held near Kiliarney in Ireland. on llussials Farms A vivid picture of the ills of Soviet agri- culture has been painted in a London dis-l patch to the New York Times. Poverty among the farmers, great shortage of man- power, poor mechanization of farm work, and semi-starved livestock. these are among the features of the Soviet farm scene de- scribed by defectors from that country. That these reports have more than a small element of truth. says The Times, is ap- parent to anyone who has read Khrush- chev's pronouncement on the failings of Soviet agriculture as published last Septem- ber. It would be wrong. however, to con- clude that the Soviet agricultural situation as a whole is completely near collapse. The Soviet Union is a very large country. The problem is to strike an accurate average for an assessment. Clearly the great gains in farm pro- duction since the faniiiie year of 1946 indi- cate that the Soviet authorities have been able to build agriculture up from the sorry state to which the Second World War re- duced it. The same testimony is given by the Soviet Union's ability to reduce food prices substantially since 1947. Some areas of production. such as cotton and sugar beets, have done relatively well in recent years; others. such as livestock. have im- proved slowly and then retrogressed; others, such as flax-growing, have experienced near-debacles. In the face of this diversity it hzis taken great pressure to enable the state to squeeze from the farmers the large amounts of products needed for the urban population, but the Soviet state has been able to do so. Agriculture, as Khrushchev indicated last September, is one of the weakest links in the Soviet economy. But there is little evidence as yet to suggest that a complete collapse has occurred. The military threat posed by the Soviet Union is not lessened by the poverty of Soviet farmers, but the political discontent born of that poverty is a key problem for the men who have suc- ceeded Stalin. EDITORIAL NOTES Sulky racing in New York will have a "czar" if legislation proposed by Gov. Thomas E. Dewey is passed, as anticipated. A state harness racing commissioner will be appointed to prevent a repetition of re- cent scandals. O O O Chancellor of the Exchequer Richard A. Butler's "declaration of independence of United States aid is not a new objective. It is a continuation of the aim of "trade. not aid”. that depends, however, upon Amer- ican markets being made reasonably avail- able to products of the sterling area. It has been ruled in the past: by Mr. Speaker that a minister need not answer a question in the House of Commons and further that he need not give any reason for not answering. 'A recent ruling, how- ever, seems to go further and hold that A statement that the minister cannot answer the question must be accepted as an answer. I O I Henry Dupre Labouchere, English jour- nalist and politician, died this date 1912. After diplomatic service he entered Parlia- ment: and became one of Gladstone's most faithful supporters. He was editor and proprietor of "Truth", A society paper suc- cessful in exposing scandals of various natures and was also a contributor to the "Daily News". He served on the Jameson Raid Commission. All R. A. F. pilots under training will eventually have to qualify in jet planes the Air Ministry has announced. Under the new training system to be established in two or three years time. all flying pupils will have to pass jet tests before being granted their wings. Formerly. R. A. F. pupils received their basic training in low- powered piston-engined planes, graduating in planes with more powerful piston en'- glnes. In future they will begin training in Pravocts which have 550 h.p. piston engines And will complete the course at An Advanced training school in De Havillancl Vpmpfre T-11 Jet trainers. ' ' THE GUARDIAN. O , cHAiu.o'i"ri-:'roh''N Neighbour With The Large vl-:,amily AL "Loon, ktaaios! m.-.. nice wlrevi allare under, one roof like 'that--- wowt it be PUBLIC FORUM This column II open to the dincunion by correspondent: of question: of interest. The Gun-diAn doe: not ncoeuAr- fly undone the opinion of pondcnu. THE B. C. M. P. Sir.---Willi reference to iour re cent editorial the New York Times he has published A book "Royal Canadian Mounted lice". This in A very history of the the wild west, etc. The book was published by I ,, .... Random House of Canada, Ltd.. why St dtgwtuhe sgxlffe ms; Toronto. pom,-morum I ""- 5"- "fr Or thin th c died 1 the HELEN MERRILL ”':jMmn9, ” " C”'p”"d' Above all, why doest thou con- MORE I iscaivoisitsiiaiinqab sir.-A few weeks ago as I was walking down our street in Tor onto, A man came towards me from It nearby house. and as lie came close enough to be heard, he said: ”Lady. if you know any- will know that these are good," he held up A large well formed pota- thing about potatoes you to. "These come from Prince Ed ward Island" he went on; they know all about growing pot aloes down there. They take th greatest care in grading them and they are sent up here in refrlger Ated cars." I told him that each sack and read familiar sound in; names on the sh-ippin tag such as A. G. MacNutt. K nsiiig ton. Webster, Carleton. potatoes and now cacti day as prepare them for the table think of the enviable reputation the Islanders enjoy for hones dealing and cure in shipping only little Islanders they send abroad are good Island the best. These successful sound advertising for the potato growers. I am Sir. etc. ROSE RICHARDSON, (nee MacDougall Toroiito; Ont. FEEDING THIS MIND ON TRASH Sir.-ls not this significant. ha habit of this Age one thin the most far-reaching day I listened to A mon it was and most set me thinking. lmr their minds on trash. not bu but just of no vitamin Som'o are feeding their Their food lacks trash. I went into lI' cheap books of the hugging An shooting kind. They sell And poo- brought them. Country pic are reading stores stock them. I cannot thin of Any other habit that is more deleterloul to character than chi and those who read this They lose their lute lltcnture. To them the Bible A cloned book. The ideal: of the writers of this chap stuff are not high. They write what will AoIl.. The writer. . ,,,,,,m ,M ,,,,,', to use factory. Today mien me novels when nnnmi ideals. Sir Walter Scott's for Axunple, interesting And thril in. Are full of clean And noble characters. What A woman In-been in fvunhocl Scott was great lover of the Bible. He read copiod in literary I'l'Ili- "III MEI IIOI smug. can dcabout it.- over it daily And" rlmpllcity and upon: in bi: buuty. play: has Wncemms 5" '1'” Who art thou clad so obouiinoualy” iclc by Richard L. Neuberger in ' Manum Why art thou so different from Iboul. the R. C. M. P.-it may he of interest to know that this year And why do than "M I hum 50 called Po- interesting , ; . tamed Mounmm And fifty one per cent Taitar? anecdotes of their prowess. their ,Vhy 1. H thy umonunne wont method of training men. their ex- periences in the last century in T0 by w Emmet people by uni": "and I had lived for twenity-five years among the Island potatoes and we walked to his truck. It was good to see al picture of the little red Island on Ftir s2.25 , , I bought a bag of Mr. M:icNutt's,i""s has Pictures stick in their conscqiicn-1 cm: in human character? Last Sun- xM'mon-- "Healthy-mlndedncss", A good ser- un-wiy, it This is their greatest responsibil- Pt-oplc. to:lay.'"y- especially young people are food- vain-. bodies plenty but getting no nourishment. vitamin value. Thus sickness of all kinds relmts. This. bad as it is, is not so Acr- lous. in its results. As feeding on store in Chnlcttetown recently nnd fhern your in dead: let it die. dI:plAyod were over one hundred stuff rarely read any worth-while book. I" 1”," have not been no good. cqoolclly " pontoon. but I can well rcnicluba ecu lood: Pork. beef. lunb. poul- wu try. butter fAl. All have been good. ,, mwuio the price and bctwuui KIND OF AN ODE T0 DUTY 0 Duty, Wlhy hast. thou not the visage of I sweetie or ii cutie? Why glitter thy spectacles so om- inously? Venus few interests mutually in common between us? Why art. thou fifty per oent martyr on them either to leave un- done the deeds they like. orl tlnue to hound me? Why art thou always albatrocsly hanging Around me? ' Thou so ubiquitous. And I so iniquitous. I seem to be the one person in the world thou art peipetually, preaching at who or to wliozl Whatever looks like fun. there art thou standing betzweeri me and it. calling you-hoo. - O Duty. Duty! . -Ogden Nash. in "The Pocket ,. Book of I-lumoraus Verse." two hundred quotations from the Bible. His characters are Among th: choicest in literature, strong and beautiful. . There are so many books that young people would love. When I . wns twelve I read "The Scottish Chiefs", much of which I remem- hcr to this day. To me it was a great book. Robert Louis Slcvcn-I "Treasure Isiand", for ex- I,miiplc, h.-is thrilled many A boy the world over. Oh. so many most interesting books! No need to fall for inferior stuff. t And closely allied to this trash are many of the comics. some are clean and clever uilli a good moral point. but so many of the hugging and shooting kind, quite unfit. for young people. especially children. It is A mercy the law fines not allow obscene pictures to l reach the public, or there would be in flood which even Nnnh would not escape. This is not prudery. We have got to think of our children. They fl have very impressionable minds. minds II life-lime. If they are clean and good. well. If they are not they poison the mind. Parents can do much to guard their children. 5 I Am. Sir. etc. .1 w. 1. GREEN Stanley Bridge. THE NEW YEAR Sir.-At. this time I would like to extend to All my friends And readers of your very fine DIDH. A very happy New Year. The old It's bad it's share of sorrow to come. Acci- (I dents to A good many. but it Alto Joy: And plcArurAbie times. too. One thing we mint k be thankful for Arid tahni. in good hcnlth, one of our molt procloul 1- poneuionr, work. to keep III in trim; happy hovnu. And lot: to at. True. price: for some uilnu ullln; than; for in ion. hcullng them to at. Peter: nu-ch factory. loom: III day to at one load in door Almost AI l, soon II graded. other lines hAvc Old Charloltelow sin 1. I. 1.) PIONEER ENTERPRISEIR From the oecretAry'A report At the Annual gomrnl incettna of the Cecitrnl Ac-ricultur-Al society. Jun. 0, 1836: "When they contemplate the na- tural advnntages of this Island. both for farming and fishing your committee entertain hop: Arid fti-in expectation that prosperity must. Attend the united efforts of our population At. no distant period. and in this hope they Are encour- aged by the fact. that, whatever the general state of commerce And Ami-lciilture may be. time Ms been much lndlvidunl Advmcernezit. and increase of property. AA must be evident to every person iuiio travels the Island. Within fer. years the miserable log huts, I.llEll so common. hAve disappeared in A great degree, uid their places been Auppiied by cub:-tA.ntlAl well- flnichcd frame dlwellluas; icrm buildings Are unmoved. And A lArge portion of farmers have some com- fortable vehicle to transport. them whenever b or pleuurc may induce them to long their homes. . . "Among the cause of this Ad- vance may be noticed the wisdom of the Legislature in appropriating no large 1 portion of the revenue to make roads of commuxiiutlon and encourage education; but chiefly perhaps may it be imputed to the facility with which the soil may be cultivated-A great benefit. during a short. season-and the very grateful ieturn it makes for any Attention paid to it; no Atrong- er proof of which need be recit- ed than the hat of pcrloria who have quittcd the Island in quest of ii more favored spot. having returned; and some who were de- puied to liis-pact. the fAmed neigh- borhood of Toronto. have mAdc such A report As to satisfy their constituents with their present lo- cation. "Your committee would reiterate the maxim so often en-forced. of not exporting agricultural produce in A mw state. The price of pota- -toes in the I-Iullfox And other Col- onial market: has been ruinous to the grower. Barley also has been low. It would be very encouraging were the time arrived when every farmer in the Colony could be induced to cure, were it only two barrels of pork, for exportation. "It. has, been argued that the fisheries will never be prosecuted while land is to be obtglngd on easy terms. and yields A living with so llt.le labour compared with the tails of the fisherman; but would not the many young men who go to Mtnmichl And elsewhere in ob- tain the means of commencing A farm. be willing to employ the summer in fishing, were peuom of oupiul eltnbllchcd in the IA- lv-nd? The prom: of ooommvn Alone will Aoon Afford An Ample populction for commencing A flgh. Cry. which. once eoubllshed. would bring other finhcrmc-n; And the lroopull-y of web Ad cuwbllchmcrit would not only confirm an pmg. llriw of Ohuriothowli. but in tumble And Auocuc would be felt throughout the limo." PIONEBI PAS!!! I Ill'-A-DOW 1.-An. lab. (or) - TNM03 30011411. Pioneer of north- euum Bummhowun And orie- time buffalo hunter. died fill at loo. In bin youth ha lived in A tcepec. lot u do A0 with courage And cu-efuhcu. knowing full woll tint we mull hAvA our Aonowc. but we our Alla have our Joya too; And lctucputcurtruulnnlmwbo long no Acid. "2 will rumor leave you nor fonuu you. I will bu with you oven unto the and." who know pump: but ml, the old "spurt" will be an per Michel. no cheat III! DWI. bitch Ilvhbcoiucvcnlhciidlcciuplug I Am. Sir. otc.. . OE. IIICIWHC 1; Notes By The Plltdown Man In several thoiuunds yun younger than everybody Ind thought he Inn. And we wish we could any the same.-Winnipeg Tribune Sir:-IA thiA new world of Ibo acientilta. "fis.iionAble", Alembic? ALFR HURHF; Portland Place. sir:-In my opinion. even though I Am a scientist. fissloniible (an Amertcanism, I believe) is not ad- mlulle. though fissile is. A. L. BAG!-IARACH. Willow Road. -Letters in London Times. Words. like breed: 6! dog. enjoy fashions. and when A word comes into populuity it is in danger of being "run to depth", until, rngged and threadbare. it becomes apauper of the dictionary. The clearest ex- ample is provided 'by descriptive adjectives which have long since ” ceased to have any sense of their original meaning. Such A word ll i"terrlblc" or its corresponding ad- verb seldom today conveys any , sense of terror; and it is not mere- ly in the teen-age vocabulary, with its "keen" and simllisr terms, that such'miAuae 1: found; even in adult and reasonably educated speech we have come to the point of requir- ing a new degree of comparisnii beyond the siipcrlatlve.-Halifax Chronicle-I-Ieraid. Recent report: from Ruscin tell of success attained by scientists in inducing two heads of cabbage to grow from A single root. Moscow Radio explained that on one col- rctive farm 33.000 pounds of cab- oage heads were harvested from it all Acre plot. These heads were removed in such A manner as to leave a few leaves on the plant, These were stimulated with miner- al fertilizers so that new heads grew on the root, netting another 10,100 pounds of cabbage. If Rus- sian scientists would give closer study to duplicity in the Kremlin they might find the means of per- fecting their cabbage crop even more by having the two heads deve- :A-:--:w-z--:m'1'T Mr. Speaker IBBC Weekly Tllks ” TY) Stanley Hylancl, talking in tile BBC! Elli-opeui Service on "How Parltnnionc Worn". laid '-hit M Member of Parliament can take part. in A debate lng the House of Commons unless the Speaker calls upon him by name to do so. Thr- speuccr was elected by the I-Ipusn and had to be A member of it. "He must be there in person." said I-lyland, "present in the House as It Mcmiber when the debate takes place in which he will be named. and -econded." Very oc- cuioi-ially more than one member wu pmpocod for the office. but once A speaker had been elected he was re-elected wltlhout OPPOSI- tion At. the beginning of every Parliament until he decided that he inust. retire. 'ri-odiuonoi cer lal expwlrl-"d the speaker to seem reluctant to take office. "The Members who have proposed and seconded him lead him to the chair as soon as he has been elected and his she-.v cf reluctance is historically inter- esting," said I-Iyland. "It's not Al- wnyu been pleasant to be speaker of the House of Oommons. The of- flee was once in the direct gift of the Crown. the Speaker was a King's man and his uripopulai-ill. in the Hands of commons was jultifled for centuries until he broke A-my from the royal dinet- ion." I O 0 The speaker was no longer the Sovereign! man but ll scivant. of the House of Oommons. His of- ficial residence was WllJhln.n few yards of the Caiimizber and he could not leave it so long as one House was sitting except to take his place in the Speaker's chair. I-Ila full-Lime job of enormous ruponaibuity had become ll symbol of the House's sovereign supremacy "The" Speaker of the House has A lonely And elevntcd dignity which III the symbolism and Ancient cere- Admi.I- . . The Wax :7 10!! Aimultcneounly. Inctood of with A time IA; A: At present.-Wtniil. Del Ree Press. -Tbul fut rclulng of "g in bed, After the guests i..v?.....': and the party! over. may indeed in . the fact clurettc. Invutiution by the National Fire Protection As. soclation shows that during the pun, five years at least. 1490 pexpong mm in the U. B. from fire: caused by smoking in bed. During 1953 in Vancouver. the fire wArden'A do. psi-tment has recorded 11 fire deaths, two of them directly um. ed by smoking in bed, three "- four doubtful but likely an caused, "Most domestic fires are caused by carelessness with cigarette: And matches", warns the department -Vuicouver sun, 301118-0111: the old cslandlr win. the new is both A and and A hope- ful ritual. If it is a deck calendar. here are those 365 pages of germ. bled notation: that tell so much of I you: living-puss Al. mun be suddenly And heArtl y con. signed to history! wutcbuket. Each Jottlnz start: its train of memory. It may have been A key to ii new friendship. A new experi. ence. A new idea, perhapn even tg an event that brought much chang- in the Jol.tcr's life. Now 365 clenn white unllved-on pages must be In snrtcd. What appointmciits, remind. crs. names. happenings will they record?-Washington Post. Solft.-confidence IA Anything but self-importance. Most xi-eAt Achieve. ments have been won in the fact of ridicule, hostility and bitter din. couragement. Writers. Artists. in. ventors. pl 6 in medicine-an have had to stomach scepticism, scorn and rebuke. Joseph Herze- sheimcr had a thousand atoi-iel rejected before he got one publish- ed. George Westinghouse, who in. vented the air brake, was called A tool by the financier: he Approach- ed for help in producing this wond- erful safety device. CnnAdA'A Barit- lng, who saved hundred: and thousands of lives through his development. of insulin, was writ.- tcn off As A cnckpoi: foi-' returning to A.fleld t.hAt had been curefully investigated many times before by medical scientists. -Hamilton Spectator. he retires and he ll elevAtAd to th- peerage As soon u be luvu tlu Speakerghlp. I-la ranks high in the list. of precedenclel in the Auto. higher even than dukes who Aro not of the blood royAl Airi only two commoners, the Prime Minister and the Lord President of the Council. can Aver precede him in status. But he in A lonely ftxui-c for all his advantage: in preced- ence, wealth and authority. The personality of the speaker, Aided by the impressive dignity And ceremonial of his office And Allin- ed by rigid rules of order. must the House of Common: An cfflciem legislative and investigating cham- ber. The Speaker has many import- ant. functions. He cAllA Membexi lnto debates. decides what Amend- ments should be put. when debate: should come to An end Arid when supplementary questions cAn be put to Ministers at question time. when the House divides on A question he holds the casting vote. - . . It in he who decls with offend- era brought before the Home And those Judged to have been guilty of contempt are solemnly Admoniahed by him in public before being dic- mlsaed or committed to prison by order of the House. His power in very grent but he ll Also the nerv- ant. of the House which no control: in accordance with A eticulous and complicated body of standing orders and coiiveiitlons. "No one has the Speaker! Authority in tho Chamber or outside it," nld HY- lnnd. "No one but the speaker him- self n suspend the House. 0' deal with offenders. These Are the functions of the highest responsibil- tty and authority; than are for thclspcakcr Alone. the Speuker to whom all Members. from the Prim Minister down to the llmt blci benchcr to take his ant. bow with humility and respect." monlal helps to maintain." said I-Iyland. "He starts as n mo:n'ier of A politlcAl party but As soon as he becomes Speaker he savers himself from every political connec- tion; he resigns from his political clubs, he expresses no political views. he separates himself in Actuallty I: well as in implication from his follow-members." . . . I-Ie Avoids the rooms which Mem- bers use And has A separate part of the Library. the grounds of the House And part of tube Teri-ace helps the River Thames relax-ved for him. His main: in high. he hu A large pension when . .1 For in thaw. 0 Lordp '50 1 l"""': thou wilt hear, 0 Lord my ' ...-....A..--- LIKES HER PIPE REYMERBTONE. Emtinnd- IE” Mrs. Agnes Peel, A pipe Nnfjll" for no of her 72 ye-rs. any "V regular pipe of unnoeo" I he? '7'" formula for longovlty. PROFESSIONAL CARDS -.4 Dr. A. L. Mqclsuuc DINTII1” . DIIIIII K-Bay UIDIIA BUILDING I'll OI-Afton Oi. DINTIIT Donal .8411 Above Oluriotulowb Clinic III one: If. DIAI mi OIIAITRIED llrllnnd Lube. Manchu. Illm Ounic Ildp. Charlottetown. UIIAIITIIID Ill Oral (horn than our - lul IIIA P. IIIPIIIION. OA. ouuoomunu lnllfu. u3m3o-.'oi. lnmllo. uvctbillo Row dlccccw I In lent ltroct loulrcal. Quebec. Ottawa. Tomhto. Saint John. Blorbroole. VI"00'"" IANIIILPII W. IANNINIII. CA. J. Grant. 0-9- OITOHBTUIIT Phonc I” IODDOIIIA Iovurc Halal! Iyi-on "W" ”' Allison M. Gilglnigznl-I: oi-ronrrliirr M Ion: beam. ' "'0'" mm to oi...”-o A;-cg. McDONAl.D. Clllllll I CO. I AIXXIUNTANTI moo. Charlottetown. Edmonton. , Dill I H. I: DOANI I: COMPANY- urn iicoumn ''''u'''' "- i-.oIu"' ..'.;...m. M Avnu. um” nits.” Inn AA(Ocncl"'"-