, rlrfiinistratlon,’ Mr. MacDonald answered ~ I CKiiAciaIQkBQ \. rue lonmonerowli summer lhrllllll Dally (lauded I'm ism UQIIL ca. W'Cliel\sr a sums Flee-President: .l. l lurid!» IJ-l. - Secretary: Heist. Col. l). A. Ilelllsnon, D10. limos um Managing Director: J. I. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Minors: Frank Walker and Host. In A. Burnett. B.0.N.V.lf.. (On Active Service) ‘The Strongest Memory ls Weaker Then the Weakest Ink.‘ ~ wupnuspav, nevus-Q's: 1, ms A Proper “Challenge u.‘ l\'iug Government has cxtricated itself from a tight corner by employing its parliament- ary maiority to defeat a motion of the Opposi- tion leader, Hon. Iohn Bracken, for the produc- tion of all Orders in Council and Treasury min- utes passed since Sept. 6 last. when Parliament resumed. . Mr. Bracken, says the Globe and Mail. "i349 out a compelling case for a proper refill-lei! 811d had sound constitutional authority on his side. The Cabinet is the Executive Committee of the elected representatives of the Deople sittinl! a5 6- Pkrlhtnent. 1t is responsible to them and can be called to account by them for all its actions. It is empowered under traditional limitations to ex_- ercise its authority through Orders-in-Council when problems and issues demanding immedi- ate acliou arise, or matters like appointments which do not require the sanction of Parlia- ment have to be dealt with. ' ~ , The long-established principle is that, ex- cept in the cases of orders authorized through the prerogative of the Crown. ‘there can be no valid Orcler-in-Council which has nOt behind it some statutory authority, Legal recognition of this principle was given some years 62o in a decision of the Privy Council, the highest court in the British Cdmmoriivealth. and the late Mr. Lapointe, a. Liberal Minister of lustice. en- dorsed it ivhen the issue was raised by Lord Bennett. Parliament i; entitled to know to what eX- tent the Government has found it necessary to exercise its executive power and whether such use as has been made of that power has the hacking of statutory authority. Obviously the only possible way 0f ascertaininz these vital facts is through a careful scrutiny of the Cab- inet’s Orders-in-Couiicil. If this is denied the elected representatives of the people. they cannot puss .1 proper iudgmcnt upon their- validity. S0 Mr. lifilCkCll uns upholding a fundamental prin- ciple of our democratic system when; he declared that the House of Commons had “a full and inalienable right to a disclosure of all actions of the cxcciitivc." When zi \l1ilC of war prevailed there may have ilCCll some excuse for the Cabinet to with- hold its (lrrlcrs-iu-Council from the scrutiny of the Commons, because in some of them matters of military secrecy would be involved. But now that peace has come there is no semblance of an excuse fur such zm- attitude. It is a repudiation of a llllslt.‘ principle of the democratic parlia- mentary system of the British peoples and it is a very strange performance on the part of a Ministry which bears the label “Liberal." The Government has harl its arbitrary way. but the country will note that .\‘Ir. Bracken's \vell-con- cciverl attempt tn check its dictatorial tendencies was supported by the solid strength of all the Opposition groups. the Independents. and an Independent Ilihcral. Britiaifs Colonial Burden Some pertinent facts relative to Britain's Colonial administration were given recently lW Rt. llon. Nlalcolm Nlucllonald, High Commis- siouer for the United Kingdom. in an address at an Uttaiya luncheon, Mr. MacDonald set out to answer some of the misrepresentations made regarding British Imperialism. It is a common accusation, for example, that Britain Eliplfillsflfi‘ pendent coinnmniiics. economically and politic- ally, in ordcr to enhance hcr own wealth and power. Such is far from being the case. In peace time, Mr. MacDonald pointed out. every Colony keeps all its revenues for expend- iture on its own domestic development. The Gov- ernment in London does not receive a Denny from any of them, Moreover, where the Col- onies cannot raise from their own resources suf- ficient monies to promote their proper welfare. ‘ the taxpayers in Britain give them the money. In the Budget which the Chancellor of the Exchequer presented to the House of Commons at Westminster a fortnight i120. flea-fly £51000.‘ 000 was provided for expenditure on develop- incur and ivelfare in the Colonies. That is av‘ proximately $22,000,000’ Canadian dollars. Be- cause of lower costs of material and services in the Colonies, it is the- equivalent of several times that amount. It is worth about $200,000,000 1B Cmadian values. Of course. that il IOSiSIlIIC-Q over and above tl1e considerable revenues which the Colonies themselves produce. Also, it is only one year's contribution from the British taxpay- ers. They are committed to even greater sums in each of the next ten years. In other words.‘ in these times of their own economic and fin- ancial stringency. they are providing immense sums for economic development. social services "and education amongst their-Colonial fellow sub- ts. The "money is not a loan, It is anvoutrizht gift. The British people get no return from it gresptthe latisfactionof lllllllllfll wisely and “geiidrously their duties as trustees for dependent noble.‘ ~ ming i» i. political sideqf Bfllllll Col- sm that the desire for self-qovermnent ‘at Westminster, The contrary, he t,_is firs“... The. rocess of extend- freedojn to? British olonials is loin! ‘ It is‘ accomplished by stages. in s in at reforms. of their’ poll- them more re- iflialrthe last. Within‘ the ~ inple. -an extremely I ‘ inaugurated in ~ ns almost com- rstion of-all their ix months a nest" ‘ye lover-it- ‘inwre the safety of the United States ‘ure decent world order.” Gen. Marshall Ii"! the Ceylonese complete self-zovernmentin their island affairs. At the present moment considerable extensions of democratic govern- ment are being planned at .Malta. Malaya. Sin- gapore. East Africa. West Africa and else- where. .The fact is that under British lzuldafice the peoples of fifty British Colonies are march- inz in orderly and certain fashion alon! the road towards the attainment of complete self- Eflvfrliment. such as Canada and the other Dominions already cnioy, British policy in India has been the chief target for attack by critics. and Mr. MacDon- ald does not shun discussion of this issue. It is untrue, he says. that-British Imperialism is an obstacle preventing the Iudiaii people from gaining their national freedom. The central fact is that for s long time Dast the British Govern- ment and people have striven to help India to become an entirely free nation. As far back as i930, the British Government summoned the famous Indian Round Table Conference at which it proposed a Federal Constitution‘ for Dominion within the British Commonwealth. Owing to quarrels. not in Britain but amongst Indians in India, the proposal never reached fruition. In 194i the British Government then \went even further, and declared that when the lapan- ese had been defeated and the war was won they Wflilld be‘ ready to accept any constitution for a free India which the Indians themselves could agree upon. They attached no conditions what- ever to that offer. Two months ago, as soon as Iapan was defeated. the new British Gov- ernment reaffirmed that offer and took every practical step which it was in their power to take to put it into practice. Whether the Indians achieve their great ani- bition does not, therefore. depend on the British. As soon as they can compose their differences and draw up a political constitution of their own choice, they can be as free as any nation on earth. - . -It is well to have these matters authoritative- ly discussed, especially at Ottawa. where iudging by Hansard there is a good deal of misunder- standing on the part even of Federal Cabinet Ministers as to the nature of British Colonial policies. s-EDITORIAL NOTES- _ Surely all the wells are filled to overflow- ing by this time. nan Ihere is still time for laggards to get in on the Yictory Bonds before Saturday and thus help to_ raise the total of individual contributors. It will be at least a year before another such oppor- tunity presents itself. . l h u Our air servioe is building up, but why do the bureaucrats at Ottawa declare that Trans- means ambitious to establish a. line to Charlotte- town on acocunt of “the operation being expens- lye and the revenue insufficient?" U I J 5 i Sir Martin Frobislicr, Iinglish navigator, died this date ISO-l; \V3.S the first Englishman to attempt lhe NOrlh-ll/est passage to Cathay; sail- ed- in command of a. small expedition i576, reach- ed Labrador; the following year he set out with 3 iii-FEB!‘ Expedition but returned on account of the discovery of supposed gold ore near Hall's Island in Frobisher Strait; made another un- successful attempt in I578; later was appointed to command a man-of war distinguishing him- self against the Spanish Armada in i588, when he was knighted for his services; he was mortal- ly wounded during the assault 0n a. fort near Brest in the war with France. 1 ill i i! It is announced in London that the 19x4- 1918 and "1939-1945 World PWars will be com- memorated on Armistice Day, November II, this year, and that the ceremony will follow the lines of those held up to i938. A BBC commentator will set the scene; there will be a short service of remembrance in Whitehall. which the Cab- inet will attend; and the King will lay a w-reath at the Cenotaph. The service will be held sim- ultaneously in the BBC’s Home Service and General Forces Programme. and edited versions of the ceremony will be carried in the Pacific, African, North American, and General Over- Seas 5ervicfs- The Church services will com- mence at the usual hour, and the two minutes sil- ence observed at worship. I Ill I 1O i _They are having their own military and de- mobilization troubles over the border. Gen. Ceorge C. Marshall declares that demobilization in the United States has become “disintegration not only of all the armed forces but apparently of all conception of world responsibility." In a speech the U. S. chief 0f staff said "it is certain that the military establishment cannot hope to , very 15inch ltilliiker at the present rate of demobiliza- ion un ess some permanent peacetime program is established and st an early date." “If we are to nourish the infant United Nations Organiza- tion and thus establish some possibility of a fut- said, "definite measures must be taken immediately to determine at least the basic principles for our post-war military policy. I have never felt so certain of anything in my life.‘_' I U I A Chinese flying officer known to not a few here is Tom Tung Yep. He was born in Kong and, as s baby, went to Australia with his parents, who have a fruit business in ‘ Cairns. North Queensland.’ Soon after the Iapenese entered the war 'he and two Chinese friends. We Wong Hoy and L. Fang Yuen. left Cairns for Brisbane and iolmd the RAAF for aircrew duties. An attack of the mumps and one or two ‘other minor maladies divided the three friends before they had lime fsr. Tom wll sent to Csnads for his final trslninz and the other two remained in Australia. for the time belnl. bu: sllfliree finished up hi England. "We unt- urally wanted to haveFs crack st the laps when we joined’ up," said /O. Tun; Yep, “ ybe we shsll be lucky enough to gel our there." F/0. We Wong sf-Ioy is st present s nsvizstor iii s Coastal Commend FlyinlszFdrtress squadron. He has two brothers in the AAF. F/O. L. Fanlf I a. ~A few dm ‘the Colonies sn- for which -Yuen hsa finished s four ss s wireless operator on Australia's‘ senior Lancaster squadron end is now with Trsnsport Command. ~- India which would make her a fully autonomous Brim Cahada Air Transportation Board is by no t}, . "B?! flvlnl should be m! OM rile cuaiuorrcrown cuaapiau" Notes By ‘The Way A company has been formed to manufacture orange wder from Florida oranges. A. ‘gioutpuq of 6,000 pounds of deb! ted Juli: is expected from the new plan which will be tn production next Spring. Marked-iii reports. The addition of water to the powder makes the product substantially 1m a lgulshable from Irish one a c n penance an yuan WORM. it. Is claimed. , Nwmws do slum iii-Inc. 1nd thouah eta crimes may carry extensive he: lines tihere u no reason to believe that. the method of handlinz the news en- oo es youth "to engage in shin ingiibgry." The capture of the criminals and the pen PB? for their "industry" are chron- cled just as prominently. Noth- ing ls to be gained by the press adopting an ostrich policy and lgnonngf crime. - Toronto Tele- Ont of £00,451 pnld in s little more than an hour for jewelry at Christie's in London recently £30,500 was for a suite of enlr- aids and diamonds. The Lonuon HIPNW reports. In the suite were three pear-shaped emeralds mount- ed as pendants, an emerald and diamond head ornament, an oval emerald mounted as mbrooch, a diamond and emerald corsage ornament, an emerald and dia- mond ornament composed of an oval anel and a piilr of rectangu- lar diamonds. Bod manners are bad llllllllbfl. Customers who were bad-man- nered before the war will be bad- mannered again. But most. custlvn- ars were not bad-mannered before e war, and they are not golnl; to begin now, merely edevtl a merchant who had to take what he could get during the war. A much better way would be for merchants and customers to vie with each other in trying to b: polite and reasonable. - Pasadena Star-News, Canada ls pie-eminently an agricultural country, and yet the far-m does not exert that attraction for Canadian youth that 1t, should In Britain they are preaching the doctrine of “back to the land." A similar movement would not be amiss in this country. The prob- lem of Canada ls just as much e problem of colonization as of im- migration, and the finest coloniz- ing material is to be found right. 81110118 0"! 0W1! P601316 if it can be gzlztractod to the farm. - Chatham ewe. We’ve seen shocking things take place over butten People we'd trusted and respected stooped to all sorts of devices and subter. fuges b0 get their hands on a bll; of 1t. Women went behind one ari- othersflbalcks for half s, pound, Mind we don't go as far as to say that there was lying and scheming 0h the Dflrt of the grocers to sup- ply certain favorites customers, bu: ere WES 80ml? rett c1059 to it. The cleverlflsessp ofy some housewives, slipping behind the counter and leaving y the hack door with-a rectangu 1r package under their coats! And the insan- ity of others, Lsmpllng one im- other in a stampede to get a new supply! - Providence Journal. Jade, like the other semi-pree- ious stones, is cut into shape by means of sawing drilling or grind- ing, and for this preparation the craftsman uses drills. etc.. actuated by a. foot treadle, says The Can- adian Mining Journal. His tools hove to fed continuously a paste consisting of water and flue sand. The hardness of jade makes this technl us essential, and thus it is the too remain fixed and the carving ls turned as required, The Clryer does not clamp down a foiilh Piece» of jade and proceed to work upon it; he clamps down his tools and brlnu the jade block to them a sehles of operations which demand the utmost nlcety of judgment and skill. It ls a popular fallacy u“; the" ls s. tremendous world demand for woollens and not enough wool or adequate pl 6$lll1€hmlf2hlfl0 to meet lt- Aetuall ere are riierge accumulated shoe s of wool in world flllembllri! centres. Much mach- inery has been retooled. But, labor conditions are worse than aver, Today 1n land, for example, labor ls setualy sosrcer than dur- ing the war. A demobllfaed mm is on ltled to two months’ vacation- which he and his entire family take together. Canadian mills are still on military tgroductlon, There l! n0 flhflhse in e situation as it exlstod before VI Dir-y. We our-_ selves are making the some n . of uniforms u before the co - lapse of the Reich. - Tip wpfcs, Isn't It time somebody uld a word or two about the unnecessary nolla of airplanes over American cities and homes? In wartime no one thong/ht of guesttonlng it. When the thunder o motors shattered the might hours we figured phone fellows were olng somewhere tn a. hurl’! and or our protqztlon. when a P-bl. or a Thunderbolt roared through town level we Johan e DJ “bu! noise seemed unueo an some of the low flying im ought- lul of ‘earthbound civilians, who-t of it? Thou fliers mhht be go oversea tomorrow. We so ft-st least the today it isn't so golne. Indeed there sons for demsndtn fore aviation gets to full flight and slrflolds are sprinkled tmni the question of l... d Mr. McLure " Gives Boost to P. _l. Oyster Industry ‘ (u. h union-n swan Asoundthschsiiooests mwuiuniuia. omen In Wh- vestlock fte dunner-to ii — Mt “Wild bests" ss an Australian 1%?!“ recently’ in l vesruii: nil 1H mgnmkswgihlyfli l-hQ WON 0! V.‘ ' manta: f lie- °°““‘M""'° u, surf unofficial ment ismbemldor-ct for the 111""! province. and "llqflfl-IBUDUIK . - Mr. MoL-ure does not. insist Pflnfi Edward bigmiin the are e belt oys s insists and two make four. Why. obvious. he says? But. he is uslldly oorry for the poor landlirbbers of Central Cl-IIEGIYWIXO never had ii chance to ss lo the delectable bivalves from e Will-firm! 0! the Gulf. II O U I To man people tn Consul. the phr . “aiid the territorial waters thereof". is Just. so much loiallstlc patter chiefly linked with the NR- M.A But not so to Mr; M014!!!‘ constituencies. r The waters are ‘as vital s! the shore itself. There: gold lmthcre green Lillls of eurf-tlflwd b-ll5w§- and jobs for a large number of his constituents depend directly on the ealth of the bays. ear — hint when ld into Novena-ber- ls the time when Malpoque oybiers are at the peak of succulence and fgavormfubtexr! 6811591" n ge p , ; ear er they are good but not quite the gourmet’: ideal. There reml-ly is a reason why oysters are not served d the months iiiivme no "R" 1n bem- Mr. MoLure tells us. From Mny to August ls spawning time. and while not poisonous nor harmful. ‘Fliers In these months are not clean and proprietor. who 1n turn D onuntu the Prloewasrunupto But pearls, the Prince Edward Island member hastens to eXPlaln. are rare in healthy oymrs. and virtually no other kind are slbwed in his bstllwlck. The wealth ls 1n the animal itself. _ There are advantages about. oy- ster-fnnntng which puts it in a c ass livestock on on land. 0y- sta-fumu are mall 1n slse. varyina from two to six sores. 0y- sbers t‘ maelves are self-feeding, taking their nourishment from the plankton ln the sea mixed with particles of food rrwterlal coming into the bays ln fresh-water streams which flow down throuirh-the rich red boll. You don't need any cowboy! f0 ride ranee on an oyster-bed. rior shepherds with pipes and crook. nor even an old mongrel like Raver who brink! in the cows, lf youre an aqua-firmer. Oysters ptsy put until their owners come with twelvefoot scissor-like rakes and scoop them into the boat. on the first stage of their trip to Canad- la" P-"d “MW S"“°°s~'“"l‘°i‘-- coiiiihuilseim r r US lze x c ted ii m“ Factor WWI‘! ‘It! ‘gulf; axlrgpen‘ we ragga will rediuoepolor oellmlngtlbe (Siemens llglfryifroorrs bhlro-ul: 81:16:‘: e r l‘ OIII the aqua-farm of his neighbor? He gdcggeyalgmgfitg 5,12; “MEZQL, w ‘h, admit“! it w” h“? by“! In of table Potatoes movln! in an "PW" "l"! ' ° "l°“‘°“' general they Just dent do that sort. orderly mmmer_m keep imports w, ‘m, h", 9 allowing. of thlnir dovm there. although some weak-willed oysbermen have been “i"°".." "' "i‘.'ifii..“'“" ‘flpihbfmfiw t on a ne r's s 0Y8 Br- fann on a moonlidlt nllht. The boys on the Island are mod mish- bors and have n. wholuome rwvect of "mine and thine". If not it is thumped into them. And any new- comer who tried ovbfervfmschinl would soon bani notifier. . oyster-famine is , oomparatvoly new deyelosuneut. on husotta ofPrlnhs‘ la . mltiiiislusl on oyster _ ./ “ll does taste qood in u pipe" urns-incur, ff "or rosaecg e nor to his colleagues of the 0015681. firm. Besides. the temperature of n. the water ls too high for them i» b- " "Mr-Pet. PUBLIC FORUM And how about Desi-ls? Well. n“ M“, h N" m §i""";."t.l§.3°§“..’.‘l‘."l.'i‘- i». “ma... s. Mr a. wiiommerclail ytraveiller almost; ‘Wmium "l qmflh“. l” wrecked h“ mldgewort on I p“, Interest. The Charlottetown embedded tn a Mslpeqise. He sold Gill-Null 4°" M‘ 5”"- it for s2. w the oouivwi-rnaii, who “I'll! endow the will!" bold it for as. to the minim}: ._ o! wlrolwiiilwtl- by itself iiiia wny lhfld of I FIRE LIFE ~ AUTO "Insure: Everything" You Miay Rest Assured B. H. HUGHES Here. in this A slkh is vls U], [OTATO IMPORTS Sh‘, — This morning's mall brouitht me s potato bulletin under date of Novunber 3. 1946. 0m Messrs. Lee. Holman Ltd. Toronto, which I felt would be of public lu- tereat to the farmer throughout the Proving. and which I have tn earlots, subject to of import permits by Wartime Food Corporation, Toronto. "These potatoes must be pur- chased at US. Support Prices “Certffted" Shippers named by Was-tune Foods-arid shipments must be taken from States named by Wartime Foods when Purchase approval is zranted. “A subsidy will be paid cover the difference between dellv - oust and wholesale laid down cost of Canadian Potatoes st the same pol-n . “It is apparently the intention of the W.P.'I‘,B. to permit import. of sufficient US tablestock to meet. requirements adequately. All d at o. minimum, as if imports are in excess of requirements, prices on Cxfiiadmn potatoes might go below Imzdentslly this is a Charlotte- town boy. Holman. He was trained in different murioties of the Canada Packers. and has done well for himself in Toronto. I am. Sir. etc FRANK B. CLARKE Cream Mu tstned mineswoepers: ' ."m Toronto ‘s West End 13 men live, work and study In seclusion sosrl-gely matched!‘ pyjama ltse . ey are e o cerss 10o otiriekit. ranks of th Red Fleet in Canada 30th.. keep to th zelves wltllioa miigeagoe. Atrflrs: e s an an svy. pa o whosenoberiuoks the visitors occupy. tried email uie iima of ni- lowshb, but constant rebufls dis- couraged them. Sailors of the two countries now pass one mother in unsmllln: sllenceJ "Altboue sailor has been officers are punotlltous gifllfl iiviio oiirusigns these remain. Ill; use modern slses rid d tprlees to so]: eveliglbgily-i‘ . rear, 2 MAGS 14D Greet Gentle Street Mull Orders Given Prompt Attention. . MAX ration —l'arcalie Make-up Max Factor Face Powder ........... .. 75c and I Factor Lipsticks ............................ t. at: Ml! B600! DI .................. .. 00o end "MacLeank" Article 93$ km’ ' , MIIQI‘: °°“‘_""‘_'°‘°" §”.'i"“.r'4s""§:i.”ii':.':r.m A recent issue of Mule ‘s Mng- snil, Pliisto Doings. ATTENTION THUS! WEAR!!! To those of you who no ' unf rtunebe h to to siren l erfium ilk the FLUTTEII. 0F A LEAF leaf that fell, lble. The flnsl word of grief Is scribbled in this leaf. Here pathos huddles .eree More than in any verse. Answers to riddles cling "us. Clue .122‘? flblo potatoes m m’ '1“ flumfln" are now med to be imported ‘Pmledy’ tlln . Its wrinkle?!“ infill? Here in this leaf is curled rrima of the world, ~—147lli8 311185611. 1n the New York Herald Tribune. 7g . i “COMPLETE, INSURANCE; SERVIC w. r. Agencies i Csnldlsn Bunk bl Commerce Bl|l| I l l , 0 Money l 3. B. BELL, | D. L. MATIIIEION, T lowest-viii» r-ig,‘ sluts iliVlho m- ‘ stirrer ‘glance for the eoi-reetloifoflueulsr do "feetb-P» H ‘ - 58 reftbii- Street viii-sushi bards Neil w. lliggins Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown 589 I-‘.0. Box 6i Tel JJl. llclilIltiAll. B.l\. NUTAII. ETC. IIIBIBTIII. SOLIOITOI. OUBBVII BUILDING M. AL AN FARMER u. a. l.L. l‘. i MONEY 1-0 com dlinnisran, sumo-iron. are. CIIAILOTTETOWN ALEX W. MATHIESON lies: 90 Great George Street to Loan Collection BABIISTIB. EOLICITOB. ETC. l1. F. McPhee B.A. K.C. Norlmv m. naimisrcn. SOLICITOB Bill! us- _-___ .s.»-__.._____-- -_ BELL 8 MATHIESON Barristers.‘ Solicitors, m. M.L.A., ‘m, t ab!" RC. LOANS 0N CIT?- ANI; IAiuf PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS I50 Mahmoud sit. Chsi-lottetown, IREJ. PALMER 8v HASLAM A. .I. BASLAM. I.A.. LLB. BABBIBTIR. ETC. . Blnk of Nova Snotls Chambers Clllllflltrl-flr, P. i1. I. MONEY 0 LOA l8 l’. 0. Bu: l! ‘s; Phone Artur-nu At Commissioner tori’ Ste. to Ptlncs Edward Island . (Successor m, Late Richard l.» ohnsunl 081cc Sllle l". 3! Milli Sta-eel Boston. Mass ares exliuuisn GLISSESCFITTEII l l J. s. can.» l OPTOMETRIST Corner Kent and Can its Phone minim m: J Plume I95 Ivenlnes bjy Appointment: Frederic l. Largo, nhnrersrnlt. etc. ' Pllllllps swam. iii oi-smii n Phone ms r. o. an u: ouansonsruwu; r. s. I. McLeod 6‘ Bentley w. e. noun-Ir. n c. .|. A. nervous, IL c. Ilrrlsten sad Amman-ll LII‘ ~ r _m ri-mu sum masses-Isa ssws wooo CherlesR. McQuaid I. A. lsrrlslor. . lollolter. Note". Ito. firmmm" ' m "' > I v PlWII "ll O-O-O-QOQO-O-Od O-§§-O§-OO-O Chartered Accountant! s: memo sum. ‘ Ohlrldfsewn an Ill