tansy i vs we > a - te pes SE Ot ee : . y 5 aed > * t _ a? ed ee: Se a ert? } “| Me 4) Fal. Pee te. >. whe bd a3 i’ al Site oes 7s t= CAR MISSES TURN AT MONTAGUE Vincent Boudreault, St. John,. N.B., was taken to the Kings County Memorial Hospital fol- lowing an accident near Paul Dewar’s service station on the outskirts of Montague on the road to Lower Montague, Satur- day night about 10.30 p.m. The dreault who was alone at the time suffered a severe cut over the nose and forehead. He was released from the hospital fol- lowing treatment. . Defeated Cand Election Through Law Court Acting on behalf of Leslie F.; September 9, the tie was broken Hunter, defeated PC candidate in| when the Kings County returning the Fifth District of Kings, Char-| officer, Edwin Reid cast the de- les R. McQuaid filed a petition|ciding vote in favor of Mr. Sa- at the prothonotory’s, Cha town, under the Controverted Elections Act. | the Supreme Court of P. E. IL set aside the election of George | Saville, Liberal, who was return- gin of one vote. Following the closing of the | polls.on September 1, Mr. Saville and Mr. Hunter wete. in a dead-| ‘Jock with both candidates having! 675 votes. On declaration day, ISLAND, BRIEFS SPENT WEEKEND Mrs. Claude Barlow and son, James spent the Thanksgiving weekend with her father, Patrick Delaney, Linkletter Road. VISITING PATHER Mrs. Ernest Cormier is spend- ing two weeks with her father, Patrick Delaney, Linkletter Road. IN HOSPITAL Mrs. Harold Palmer of Borden is a patient in Prince County Hospital, her friends wish her a speedy recovery. ’ ANNUAL LEAVE LAC Clide Sharpe who-has been gpending his annual holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Sharpe at Borden, returned to Ottawa on Thursday last. IS PATIENT Jens Hansen of Cape Traverse is & patient in Prince County \Hospi- tal. DOOR IS CLOSED Disappointment awaited large mumbers of tourists and Island- ers alike when they called \\ at Green Gables Sunday afternoon over the long holiday weekend. The storied home of Anne was closed. a locked door belying the sign which said ‘Welcome’. People trying the door in vain _ were from five Canadian pro vinces and several of the Unit- ed States. FUNERAL HELD— The funeral of the late N. Wesley MacDougall was held on Saturday. October 10, 1959, from New Dominion United Church. Service was conduced by Rev: I.L. Walls and Rev. G. Killen Honorary pallbearers were Louis Livingstone, Milton MacLean. Cameron MacPhee, Reginald Waish. Ivan Tavtor and} Lorne Taylor. Active pallbearers | Professional Cards Charterea Accountants T. Earle Hickey & Co. Mr. Hunter is seeking te have! ber of defective ballots were re- | ahead into . I e Seeking ville. In a further recount both can- didates lost votes when a num- jected by Judge J. S. DesRoche. Mr. Saville was finally declared | elected, still by a one vote mar- a ball-point pen was rejected. “4 Mr. Hunter's petition is the, second that has been filed in the past few weeks. Earlier Mr. McQuaid filed one for Welling- ton MaeNeill_PC,_who_was_de- feated by Harold Smith, Liberal in the District of Fourth Queens. | Election day returns gave Mr. Smith a margin of 22 and a re- count reduced this to 14. i From information available at the Law Courts Building it was learned that ‘it has been some 50 years since such action has been taken by a person defeated in a provincial election. | The Supteme Court justice who jrule that Mr. Saville had three courses of action open to him. He ‘could rule that Mr. Hun- ter had been elected, or he coulc been elected or he could rule “no elec- tion’’. Dog Days Last Until Autumn By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)—The dog days of summer have lasted well into €d to the legislature by a mar-|gin, when a ballot marked by the fall in the capital. Since the last session of Par- lament ended July 18, there have been no major political develop- ments here to take the public’s attention away from the heat of August or the fall return of fav- orite television programs. There is a preoccupation here with tight money but. this sub- ject. generally speaking, has not -apparentiy—impinged on the pub- lie consciousness to amy great ex- tent though it has probably imfur- iated the person trving unsuccess- fully to get a bank loan. The political party leaders have been making speeches here and there across the country but re RN > a a ee eS ee ISLAND NEWS PAGE GUARDIAN NEWS BUREAU TELEPHONES: Summerside 8031; Alberton 68-2; Montague 97-2; Souris 32-2 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Oct. 13, 1959. MATTRESSES BURNT, BARS SAWN OF THE GUARDIAN a week ago, and an attempted jail ‘| William Larkin and Willard Fin- provided still another way keep Prince County Jail in turmoil when they set fire to some mattress material and tos- sed it out into the corridor in front of their cells Sunday after- nnon. Taking no chances in releasing the two prisoners who were caught sawing their way out of their cells with hacksaw blades about midnight on Friday, Jailor Hugh Daley sought assistance from the RCMP who came to nan to general elections their efforts | have seemed almost perfunctory to the public. LITTLE EXCITEMENT There were two byelections last week but no turnover of seats— the Progressive Conservatives re- | tained Hastings - Frontenac and the Liberals Russell—and hardly anybody outside the ridings con- cerned got excited. The Young Liberals tried to warm up the political servatives: will try to do the same at their Ottawa convention Nov. 36 and Dec. 1. here Dec. 1 and 2 and of the na- tional advisory counc?! of the Lib- eral Federation Dec. 7 and 8. OCF Commons Leader Hazen Ar- gue is on a speaking tour and the next meeting of the OCF council will be held about mid-January just before Parliament opens None of these events seems to be creating any great stir and it appears now that a new parlia- mentany session will be required hears the petition would have in this period mid-way between! to heat up the political scene. \ 3 “re t oe = i wr ee be ry ? + ‘He 5 } , é ¥ a Mia d Phe é . ‘ ‘ . 40 BUSHELS APPLES AT 40 YEARS te A 40-year-old apple tree which this year produced 40 busisels of top quality MacIntosh apples is the pride of Percy Smallwood who has operated a fruit farm between North. River Road and were Dougis MacEachern, Harvey | MacEachern, Murchison: Mac- Eachern, Raymond Taylor, Wallis. | MacKenzie, Chesley MacDougall. | Interment was in the church cem- | etery. MacDOUGALL FUNERAL — The service of the late George A. MacDougall was held yesterday the shore line for the past 17 years. The ancient tree has a spread of 36 feet and over the weekend five pickers were em- ployed stripping the fruit for packaging. Mr. Smallwood proud of ‘this particular tree as he never before had a tree so old bear so much fruit. In his orchard which he. started in 1913 there are 15 acres, most of it fruit trees, mainly apples and plums. Mr. Smallwood is proud of the Island-type ‘apple which he believes is one of the best on the market. In addition is | to the MacIntosh he also grows Cortlands, Red Delicious, and the Hume which he describes as : branch of the MacIntosh fam- ily. break last Friday night, | prisoners while all other fire After one jail break more than | hazards were removed from their |Finnan will i cells. | Yesterday there was nothing in their -cells. The cells were | without windows, the rear and both side walls were concrete | and sheets of steel with just| enough. room to pass food | Larkin And Finnan Keep Prince Co. Jail In Turmoil SUMMERSIDE BUERAU | the jail and supervised the two;through covered each eell door. It is thought that Larkin and be transferred to Charlottetown today to face charges of breaking, entering, and theft, which occurred in Queens County during their pre- vious jail break several days ago. Turkey, Poland Fight. i For UN Council Seat By JOSEPH MACSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer | Tee. e 2 New Council Members Inducted At Alberton ALBERTON BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN Alberton Town Council was brought up to full strength last night when two new members were sworn in by Mayor Currie Roy Leard, Gerald Rooney and Richard Jeffery Jr. Mayor Currie welcomed the new members and hoped they would enjoy their work on the council. ¥ Bills amounting to $421.04 were approved and ordered paid. A bill amounting to $72. for transporting court cases woul be handled by the town magistrate. in future. The amount inclued one trip to Char- lottetown. Regarding a request for an as- sistant for the retail vendor on Saturdays and the day before pub- lie holidays the council was ad- vised by the P.E.I. Temperance SYDNEY. (CP) country with more than a cer! behind it—was tinged with gloom on Thanksgiving Day as the min-| ing men faced perhaps their) greatest crisis. About 3,000 of the island’s 7.000 Day as coalminers. By this time 18-nation economic council, hav next year, some of the mines— ting the support of both the U.S. | producing UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) and Britain in this contest. Kuz-|dwindling sales appeal—may not) a product with a Turkey and Communist Poland netsov’s move to delay the ballot | be operating. waged a bitter battle Monday for a seat on the United Nations sec- urity council, Poland leading in the inconclusive voting marathon which continues-togay. . | Turkish -diplomats, b&cked by ithe United States and Britain against the Soviet Union, pre- sue which involves considerable great-power prestige. ' was apparently prompted. by his Word of the coal industry's lat- wish to avoid arguments that Po-|est crisis reached the coalfields land should not be named to two| Friday, just before the miners UN councils at almost the same! knocked off for the holiday week- time. Diplomats d Canada voted on the security end id not disclose how From an emergency meeting in Industrial Cape Breton Is Tinged With Gloom. — Industrial | Halifax came news that Domin- $ Cape Breton—the tough-luck coal ion Steel and Coal Corporation, '¢ major coal operator in Nova tury of economic ups and downs Scotia, plans to close three Cape Mrs. Breton mines unless new markets can be found. SOME PROMISES The coal miners were promised coal miners held fears they were by Premier Stanfield, whose gov- | Service spending their last Thanksgiving! ernment has been beset by crisis Mrs. after crisis in the sick coal in- dustry since taking power in 1956, ‘that mine closures would come only as a last result. In the mean- time, the federal government ‘would be asked for more assist: | ance. Delegates to the meeting from Cape Breton coal towns asked | that any closures be withheld un- til after a one-man royal com- j mission into the coal problems is $ 2.00 ea: council ‘seat, but it was believed! proved by members of all oppo- | completed. Each year the assembly elects three non-permanent representa-! survive the motion. But it ap- effort will be made foran early '¢ 499 eg: The battle is for Japan’s place!tives of the council, the UN's pears that the parliamentary ses-| start on the investigation. There will be a general meet- on the 1l-country council. Jap-' most powerful political body. The sion may ing of the Conservative party 2n’s term, along with those of|U.S., Britain, France, the Soviet ter in the history of the island,| Breton Post in a telephone inter- vote went to' soon as parliament assembles atmos- dicted: they could still turn the!on the basis. of pre-session in-| sition parties, will be offered as phere last month at their con- tide and there was furious activ-/formation that the vention here and the Young Cap- ity behind the scenes over the is-| Poland. Oct. 27. Mr. Justice Ivan C. Rand, ap- pointed by Prime Minister Dief-. Longworth Ave. $ 55.00 M. F. Schurman Co., \" Ltd. i$ 15.00 .. Mrs. W. E. Champion i; Meee 6055s Dr. M. N.- Beck '$ 10.00 .... Mrs. W. R. Aitken $10.00 .. Miss C. E. Ratchford $ 10.00 Swift Canadian Co., Ltd. $ 5.00 . Mrs. Willard Jordan 2: Be ik Mrs. T. G. Ives $ 5.00 .... Mrs. G. E. Hartlen $- 5.00 .... Mrs. George Michael 5.00 .. New Method Cleaners 5.00 .... Chandler Bros., Ltd. $ 2.00 ea: Mrs. Lorne Callbeck, D. J. Morrison, Ideal |Grocery, Jenkin’s Transfer, |Keith MacKinnon, Mrs. W. C. | Davies. $ 1.00 ea: A.-B. Nolan, Burhoe’s - Station, Mrs. Ida Yeo, Fullan Douglas, Doris MacLeod. Mrs. Garth Herring, Mrs. Ruth Kennedy, Mrs. Leith MacLeod, Gay’s Grocery. Oe: Mrs. Lorne Acorn. .25e: Pius Lund. West & Richmond St. West. $ 25.00 . J. C. Montgomery $ 10.00 _... Mrs. George DeBlois $ 5.00 Mr. & Mrs. L. H. Field- ing $ 3.00:, Mrs. Frank Heartz. Irwin Printing Co., Ltd., Miss Daisy Douse, Victor Douse, Miss Mabel Holt, Mrs, G. G. Houston, Mrs. A. B. Cosh, jenbaker last week to inquire into|\trs| Charles-MacKenzie, Mrs. Many believe Dahanayake will, the problems, said Monday every Heber Large, J. A. Likely. among the most bit- Canada and Panama, comes to} Union and Nationalist China are noted for its angry politics. an automatic close at the end of this year after two years of serv- ice ; | €eyion—was elected easily as Commonwealth representative to succeed Canada and Ecuador had no trouble winning Panama's iplace as Latin American repre- sentative. 5 NOT TWO-THIRDS | Although Poland led Turkey in each of the 13 ballots held Mon day, it was never able to muster the required two-thirds majority in the secret voting in the 82- +member general assembly. On the 13th ballot Poland tfe-' ceived 46 votes and Turkey 34,: the Communist country falling eight short of the required 54. Israel was absent because of the |Yom Kippur holiday and one _ | other delegation abstained. In an , }earlier ballot Poland came within i six votes of victory. At the opening of the after | inoon session, Argentina’s Dr. |Mario Amadeo said voting had “reached an impasse.”’ He pro- posed that, following one addi- tional ballot, the assembly pro- ceed to the next item on its: agenda—election of members to ithe economic and social council. | Soviet Deputy Foreign\ Minister i Vassily Kuznetsov was defeated in a proposal that both elections —the security council and the permanent members. The decision to offer a no-con-} Mr. Justice Rand told the Cape’ view from his home in London, Ont., he would require several The U.S. has been campaign fidence motion is not generally | weeks of preliminary studies be- ing vigorously for Turkey. Diplo-! known in Ceylon because of the fore hearings begin. mats recalled that U.S. support press censorship. Censorship is} a 1955 contest ots, spread over two months. The two countries finally split the two- year term. olitical Feud Rocks Ceylon Ceylon is under press censor- ship following Prime Minister Bandaranaike’s assasssination a fortnight ago. This story was brought out by Watson Sims, AP bureau chief for India and Ceylon, who has been in Cey- lon, since the assassination. By WATSON SIMS MADRAS, India, AP — Hot political feuding has broken out in Ceylon two weeks after the as- sassination of Prime Minister Solomon Bandaranaike. Abruptly ending the brief truce that followed the assassination, opposition members of parlia- ment have decided to try to oust Prime Minister Wijayananda Da- hanayake. : A motion of no confidence, ap- jeconomic council—be postponed. Poland then was elected to fill | one of the six vacancies on the | most inexpensive salesman you can employ ---a GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 Film Developing In by 9 — Out by\5! Enlarged date stamped Perfect pictures Black and white or color George Wotton PHOTOGRAPHY MacDonald Block First St. Box 1600 Dial 8038 Summerside — | | HOME TEACHING—Trained C.N.IL.B. CAMPAIGN © NOW IN-PROGRESS, OBJECTIVE $9,900.00 HERE IS A MESSAGE FROM THE HANDS THAT READ The following are services available to blind people. teachers visit the newly teach Braille, typewriting and many crafts—the latter important in developing the sense of sightless . 2 blind in their homes and __— | ment policies failed to elect the Philippines in one of the opposjtion complaints. | with Yugoslavia! : ' that went to 35 inconclusive ball-, DEMANDS DEBATE The opposition demands a de-| bate on what it savs are changes |. Dahanayake has made in govern-, It also wants the immediate lifting of the state of emergency proclaimed after the! tTwo locals of District 26 of the} | United. Mine Workers fInd.) held! 49, assassination. On taking office, Dahanayake announced he would continue) Bandaranaike's policies — neut- | ralist in foreign affairs and in-| |dulgent to labor demands on the) | domestic scene. i ' TO ACT QUICKLY “I full realize the importance of the situation and will move with all possible haste,”’ he said He declined to say where the hearings would open but other sources predicted the first sit- tings will be in Cape Breton. meetings on the problems this weekend. One called for a con ference of Cape Breton locals ‘in order to obtain the widest pos- sible opinion from the miners re- garding .the crisis.” CAPITOL TODAY (TUESDAY) and WEDNESDAY Note: No Short Subjects SUMMERSIDE 7:15 — 9:15 as e | dings, Charles MacArthur. Mrs. -W. -T. Weir. Mrs. B. W. LePage, Mrs. Lloyd | Wonnacott, Mrs. Don Ross, West End Nurseries, Miss H. D. Me- Collum, Mrs. Sarah Paul. Kent St. to Date: |$ 35.00 Eaton’s of Canada, Ltd. '$ 25.00 .... CFCY Radio and TV '$ 20.00 Matheson & MacMillan $ 15.00 .. Col. D. A. MacKinnos POG eaksetdinns S. L. Hardy $10.00 .... William Rogers $ 10.00 .... Simpsons-Sears Ltd. /$ 10.00 F. A. S. Jones $ 10.00 Crockett & Storey, Lid. '$ 10.90 Dougias Bros. & Jones, Ltd. 00 Stewart’s Bakeries Ltd. |$ 10.00 ...... Milton’s Old Spain i$ 5.00 .. Traders Finance Corp. $ 5.00 .... Giggey’s Pharmacy $ 5.00 ...... J. Frank Pellerin $ 5.00 .......... Revere Hotel i$ 5.00. .eccccece. O. K. Preshey i$ 5.00 ........ Burke Electrie S Bae .3e..50s Miss F. Owen rs 5.00 Cudmore’s Dry Cleaners $ 5.00 ... Stead’s Pharmacy $ 5.00 Whitlock’s Tire Services $ 5.00..... Jerry’s Flower Shop iO 408 34... J. A. Carruthers i$ 3.00 ea: Mrs. W. W. Mutch, E. F. Seller, Dr. Mclsaac. $ 250: Tanton’s Accessories, Ltd. $ 2.00 ea: Mrs. R. D: DeBlois, Mrs. E. MacLeod, Mrs. B. W. MacEwen, C. W. McArthur, J. S. Taylor; Dr. T. E. E. Robins, George Ives, Mrs. G. Worth, Mrs. E. Flanagan, Kent Beauty Shoppe, Scantiebury Signs, B. J. Grant, Grace Dingwell, Hooley’s Men’s Wear, Dr. Gid- $ 100 ea: Ron & Joe's Barber Shop, Norma’s Ladies’ Wear, MacDonalg Radio Service, Roy’s Barber Shop, Regent Aluminum, MacLean & Son, H. A. Messer- vey, Mrs. Beer, Mrs. McArthur, YEO “PERFECT FURLOUGH” In color with Janet Leigh—Tony Curtis—Excellent COMING FRI-SAT: “HANGING TREE” THEATRE MONTAGUE MON.-TUE. OCT. 12-13 8.30 P.M. | Mrs. Orlam, Mrs. Coyle, E. B. Campbell, A. G. Bishop, Mrs. | Frank Bell, Nu-Style Dress Shop, J. T. Place, Patterson’s Jewel- lery, S. Williams, Mrs. Connors, Sally Burke, Mrs. G. Batt, Mrs. G. Crockett, Mrs. C. Shaw, Mi & A. Peters, Mrs. Leigh Walker, H. J.. Brown, Reta’s Beauty Shop, A Friend, Mrs. C. A. Or- ford, Mrs. John Rawek, Keith B. Jenkins, R. M. Crockett, E. ; MacFarlane, Vgonda Vessey, |Mrs. D. Cos, C. Martin, A; Matheson; G. Dockendorff, Phy- His Clay, S$: MacMillan, F, Gormley. 0c ea: Miss A. Walsh, Mrs. Grossman, Allan Doiron, Ronnie Basque, Teddy Reddin. West Kent School: $ 2.00 ea: Mrs. Bessie Robert- ison, Miss Jessie MacNevin. $ 1.00 ea: Ernest Mutch, Miss Mary MacLennan, Miss Alma Yeo, Miss Gladys Taylor, Mrs. Reta Campbell, Mrs. Anna Mac afternoon from the MacLean Fu- GARY COOPER-—-MARIA SCHELLE ‘‘neral Home to the Free Church of touch as well as providing a remunerative hobby and perhaps leading to full time employ- Canadian Bank of Commerce aes Miss Margaret Riley. | Deaths Monday Building 5 : ment. : : Scotland, Bangor. Service was : ; Summerside, PE 1 Phone 2788 acted by Rev. JH. Bishop.| By THE CANADIAN PRESS |] SOCIAL SERVICE—A service which makes the blind individual and his family acquainted renee en _— Insurance Pallbearers were Everett Mac-! Perce, Que. — Alberto Tomml, | with the Institute and its program and leads to other services. SALESROOM—Handicrafi materials, blind craft products and specially adapted games appliances for the use of the blind are supplied at cost or less. CONCESSIONS—CNIB administers concessions granted to us by theatres, bus and rail lines ae £ Kay, Otio Robbins, Donald Comp- | 47, Italian painter and husband, R. E. Ellis & Son Limited | ton, George Maclean, Jack!of Canadian sculptor Suzanne Fire — Auto — Casualty Worth and Robert Compton. In- | Guite. | and PRINCE COUNTY HOSPITAL § Summer. St. Summerside terment was in the church ceme- | Chicago — Carl Frank Ludwig] 4s well as discount services on radios and electrical appliances. tery. |Ed, 69, cartoonist-creator of the! : Jc 4 ss oO tometrists newspaper comic strip Harold | EMPLOYMENT—The CNIB is continually striving to find new~ employment opportunities P' ze SELBY FUNERAL — The fu- Teen if for the blind. Each year additional home workers, staff members, operators of news and E. E. Parkman neral for the late Mrs Nellie H.| Philadelphia — Bert Bell, 65, | refreshment stands and small businesses etc. are-trained) placed and supervised. : a. be Raeey se Sele ae Sere” OS | vemanbidonte of the National AUXILIARIES—Our Women’s Auxiliary’s responsibilities include visits t and treats for men 2 Bora pod — _— ee aaa | Feothell League, of a heart at-'{ shut-ins, picnics, special parties for the blind at Christmas, ete. . Summer $1 écmmith | onde Oilen Sareten nl thie is Aneke per CLUBS OF THE BLIND—CNIB finances 11 clibs of the blind and the Mar. Div. of the CCB. : Neeetesiceasd inti ot keene a - 5 , Sou —O: ei Seti : . + B. F. Hunter, R.0. | conducted ty Rev A. E. Piercey. | pirow, 68, leader of the prosecer || Tne#® clubs provide s forum for discussion of the problems of blindness: and carry oyt a var- The Board of Trustees have decided that ‘the e Be g BbeW- i r of. ’ : ' | ‘ x wy nb en Sb bt Caen tate oe bearers werd Percy Hwee {ton in South Africa’s mass ) ian coos gp waren aoe — i \ kind | t | C ; cl b os ill . _ > Stephen oyd. Alton Rodd, | con trial. of a heart attack. NCES—Supplementary and emergency assistance in cash or in ki s provided to be < _ SMAUAAN'S SunOS a teat viral ee Hudson, Que.—Sydney B. Ham || those in need of such help. | annua "ee Mt ane gta wilt no h con- a oper. Interment w md, 75, treasurer of Royal Se-|| PRE-SCHOOL—This s : as inaugurated May 1957. It rposes are; to help parent hotoaraphers - ’ | mond rer 0 ] ‘ is service was inauguré in May 195 s purty ; ; elp parents ed Ww The R > Z ‘dios the church cemetery. | coetis Corporation in Montreal! accept and adjust to their child's blindness; to give information regarding the development . |) duct t a . T ey wish to announce however e he Studios . " | before retiring in 1950. ‘| of blind chiJdr th h rsonal and written aterial: to work in partnershi rith th ; SERVICES HELD — Funcral ! nd ¢ en, through pe material; to ip wi e m mbe w D. W. SEARS poids tee the Wile Ware ME a Persia gc el Parents, to achieve for their child as normal a life as possible in’ his pre-school years; as the that contributions from former e f rs ill ae a g Se ee het Con | ston. (2, industrialist active I child approaches schooi age, to work with the parents toward his formal education. : + : f Frank McKenzie were held Sun- | : PP . Re, be Ww m mea Barristers day afternon. A short family wicca during both | EYE SERVICE—A service to ensure that no one threatened with the loss of vision shall be still most - iss bi k ie ene SOS OS RL | Vice at the home was followed by| w, Yerk—Dr. K : Von- || ‘denied the attention of an oculist through the lack of funds. Registered blind persons also : st t George R. MacMahon, | service at St. Mary’ : New Yerk—Dr. Kermas \ Shiihins Tien to reduce our substantial bank overdraft. : |! St. Mary's Anglicam| mer, 63, pediatrician who gained |] ‘Cc@ive necessary treatment. ' * LL.B. | Church a 2 o'clock. Rev. Mark fame for his development of al LIBRARY—Braille, Moon Type and Talking Buoks are loaned to blind people without charge F | Ferguson the rector officiated. In and machines oh which the talking book records are played are supplied at cost: or on loan. GENERAL SERVICES—Include complimentary articles, chair caning and piano tuning orders, concert tickets, Christmas Cheer pienics etic. Give Your Support today to the C. N. I. B. Campaign. the continuance and expansion of the C. N. I. B. Services. | tuberculosis test. ; ; Erie MacGregor, James Mac- 2c aapetaeedl Lean, George Clark, Maynard! The first recorder of the cor- | MacArthur. Fred Bingham and poration of London, England, was jbappointed im 1298, / Manager. 255 Water St. pee A- B. Campbell, BA, LL.B. . Phone S’Side 3818 Grocket? and Gallant Bidg, Sede i James Connell, J. M. Logan Your support will ensure i * ™ : ¢ a i