'i -a S o- s , s 5. I 3 C is I 3. I k U ,. 3 r 9” 3, T. PITGII rotm THE GUARDIAN Authorised In Second Class Mail Post Office Department. Ottawa. The lsiund Guurdiim Publishing Co. Modern Berlin spreads over 341 square miles of a flat, open plain on the Spree Riv- er. a hundred miles from the Baltic Sea. Its site has been a natural crossroads for both trade and conquest since medieval times. In early days it was an outpost of Editor and ltlonnxiux Director, I-1::-..;..TB;nett. Associate Editor. Frank Walker- vert the Slavs. Later, as the capital of Brandenburg, Berlin was the nucleus of the expanding power of the llohenzollern fam- ilily. Still later, Berlin became the capital lof Prussia. alid in 1871 it joined the front Bi----. ----- V -M , """" ',--,,'”".'T ranks of international cities as the govern- ""A"'”:LT',n.'9.w.:V ...'l.'"L!:-ii-'31"'":i3'3w-lmcnt seat of the newly formed German Difficult ASSiZIIIIlEIII llL'inpire. It soon grew illto the nations in- idustrial and commercial center. as well as it is not an enviable t:isk that faces til" the hub of transport lilies by air, highway, members of the Senate-C0mm0ll5 C0mm”n rail. river and canal. Its more recent tee on Cilllllal llUl1lSllmClll- Tllcii ll3V9,catasti'opliic history is familiar to all. What been commissioned to inquire into the two does the future hold in store, of promise or maln questions: (1) is it 0V0l' m01ii1ll.V 1'ilgi”.i'0llCl)0(llllg. for this vital centre of human State to take human life? (2) toesl activity? itzrpittlaile puiiislimcnt in fact serve as a de- terrent to culpable homicide? The first question has been discussed ever since the dawn of civilization. Philoso- An intriguin'g picture of great northern phers, moral tlieol0gl3”S' ecdesiastlciw industrial cities inhabited by Eskimos is cal- sociologists. reformers, alld tradltionalisls. led up by a missionary who returned to Bel- of many races and IIIMLV Ckllll-HIPS. l1aV9'giunl from Labrador. He predicts that the taken part in the (lCbal0; llul. llius far. exploitation of the gi'eat iron, uranium and uiianimil.V has not been reached on a plalilt radium ore fields will transform the Eskimo ves or no answer. To make the issue PVPH people from nomadic hunters to industrial I ' fflln . there are inally on both sides wot-ket-5. I0Y;0ll(?iCb:0lltll(g)i'CltS.V' who attach reservations It is well known, of course, that the to their convictions. The second question, Eskimo is apt to be a genius with ma- while it does not have the moral significancrti chinery. Those who have lived in the north that is attached to the first, is no easier to tell how they repair equipment which is answer. Nor do statistical reports fronilquite unfamiliar. One Eskimo who had the American States whe1'e capital punish- taken down and repaired an outboard mo- ment was abolished years ago help very tor explained that he lncrely noticed where much. Sometimes they indicate one thing: each part came from and just put it back and sometimes another; on an average over the same way. a period of years abolition does not appear The change envisioned is, none the less, to have made much difference in the crime, startling. In New Zealand the native pop- situation one way or the other. lulation. the Maoris, have adapted themsel- One thing on which there seems to beves to modern life with great success. They general agreement is that in a civilizedifill positions in industry, the professions, State the purpose of punishment, including agriculture, government and the general the extreme form, is to discourage crime.,life of the country but manage to retain In no circumstances should vindictivenessj their identity and traditions. In this coun- enter into it: on the other hand, undue sym- , try, on the contrary. the Indian and Eskimo pathy for the convicted criminal ought not population has been kept apart from the to be allowed to obscure punishment's es-- general development of the nation and the sential purpose. As Mr. Drew recentlyl prospect of great cities and industries mali- pointed out in the Commons, if there were; lied by them seems strange indeed. no mI.irder there would be no lialigingl l (.IlIlCL'l.ATA0N "Cover: Prince I-jilvvurd lsliuid like the dew" I n1-he ,t.-ongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". Eskimo cities This elemental fact, among other facts of equal importance, doubtless will be consid- ered by members of the Senate-Commons BWB. Committee. who are entitled to sympathetic summci-side's Mayor and two out of and helpful Pullliil 5UPP0l'l in lll9lF-(lifllCUll;thi'ee Councillors have been returned by assignment and Dl0lll.V of time in which Ufacclaniatioii, an easy victory that candi- consider the recommendation which in due dates in Charlottetown are not likely to EDITORIAL NOTES Course in?! mu-bl make '0 Pallllanlent duplicate. All indications are for a strong- .u-vW.:n--..n-. ly contested election in the Provincial cap- Berlin Today Ital- Diplomats attending the Big Four For-, Women are being f:iV9i1 Credit f0? 974- eign tvttntstm-3' mnfpt-gm-9 in Bct-tin are in erting the predominant influence on auto- a City that is still only a spravvling skeletonimobile fl0SitIYl- Perllafls it i5 Only lalll 139' of its to,-may mighty self; but they hav,3'cause the automobile, after all. played a found also a surprising recovery from war'.s . Dromlnent Tole in lllfluellclnil Womenis fash- devastaiion. In West Berlin industrial pro-li0nS. Picture hills. puffed Sl90V0-S and V0l- auction has poached almost 70 per cent of.uniinous skirts went out when the ladies the 1936 level. Over 11,()ti(l homes have Stiililtitl gelling llllo CRYS- been built and 16,000 repaired. Another . . . 11.000 dwellings are going up. From the. more than 70 million tons of rubble lilfliiblo Clogged the St'i":iS' Bc."”,nm'S have 90""; record is redeemed in part, however, by the structed new office buildings, twlpallil1lCillS.:(,ffOl.ts to improve the lot of those peopte h0m5' Via-V-m'0””dS and Swimming pO0l5"without a country and particularly by the . t . . V 4 Most, heavn-V bnmbcd or an Gama" c"ie5'.Uiiited Nations convention on the status of Berlin was -10 per cent. destroyed during at .. Ad tdb .' out-'s and Vtrot-id lvnr II. the National Geographic So-lldtilggfoegtmnc fmfze ipghntehc Com clety says. The city provided more stra- , , vention is well termed a ”Magna Carta for teglc bombing targets than Munich, Lcipzig,, refugees... Cologne, Hanover and Mannheim combinedl o . o Heaps of shattered masonry, steel and glass were piled 30 feet high. Thousands of buildings were left burned-out shells. Berlin today is deep in the Soviet zone The existence of refugees is indeed a t on mankind's political record. The It is indeed a feather in the cap of tlsland poiiltrymeii that the supervising , ficldman for the Maritime Provinces should declare that ”a standard of cleanliness and f . ., T M . , - , , ' 2 M ltl:pC::I::'ilm:dlr”:: ulsqttf-Ktsanltation has been set for all Canada by -I V - -- -v 'i'tl.l'kid.'.fthI.ld."l half by Anlcricali. British and Fl't1ll(ll1lH;oac,3,:;.V It)1li:t1u:;:aqtt.(:, in (t),.:(.;?ng aftogkoiy iilliittltoritiesn Til-(1111: have been frcquclit-coli-1 10 this any 'of nmss ipmdu(.t'i0n' t,,;wm,(.i,.' adfn?n?::r'a”:):1"l'ilnS1"(; :)E';"4”gl'('”in;;dllml'1:c”l poultrymcn are faced with the challenge of - . .'.-.,a.. -ray us- sian blockade immpd west Berlin, Tm adding quantity to quality. Western powers were forced to operate a itigantir airlift to supply food and fuel to the two million residents in the western sector. Last summer disgruntled workmen i'ioted in East Berlin. Soviet tanks. troops The emphasis placed upon tlle.fostering of good relations between towli and farm in the address of Mr. Alan Holman, re- tiring President, of the Summerside Board and armored cars were called in to quell ,"f Tfadc P0q'uircs to be. constantly borne the uprisings. Martial law was declared. m mmdi Th” Pmvmce '5 essennan-V ag”' some 1.500000 mom, live in East Bmm: cultural and the municipalities depend upon a prosperous farmer. This implies also that In prc-war days the fornler German. , capital was the largest city on the European the ,urban pOpuI,a"0" must do Werythin-Z continent. Its 1940 population of 4.355.000 Wsslble '” P""V"'9 ""3 f”.'i'"e” Wm” b"'l' ness conveniences and social amenities. was surpassed only in London. New York and Tokyo. During the war almost two 0 ' ' ' million residents abandoned their homes in Fedor Mikhailovlch Dostolevsky. one of this Constanlly attacked Cii.V- At its Wa1'- the giants of Russian literature and one of time peak. nearly 200 Of the leading fac- the greatest novelists of all time, died this 901188 Of Germany. 0mPl0.Vinf! one-tenth ofl date 1881., He was educated for the army the nation's industrial workers, operated in' but early showed a preference for writing. Berlin. Huize plants turned out airplane His rim work, "Poor Folk" brought him engines, cables, ammunition, armaments and considerable celebrity. A period of lm. machine tools. Electrical goods, clothing.l prisonment furnished him with a- vast optics and chemicals are today the leading amount of material for literary works; Edict: of -West Berlin factoriesf Unem- Hard work could not enable him to pay his ipidylltellt II at its lowest level in eight debts, nor travel. but it produced a series of immortal novels. ' the militant religious order of the Teutonic; - Knights in campaigns to subjugate and con-V '1' HE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Re-Appearance f "tiara oed'6mm THE CONQUEROB How do I know the sea is near? Too far to glimpse it: too for to hear 'f'hundei-inc surf on hold-mocked sand. Yet into this valleyed. leaf-quiet land The sea is coming in wave on wave Of thickening mint. The hills en- grave And their peaika are lost in tlhe Profiles of fir on advaliciiig clouds, dripping shrouds. Claimed by the sea without a sound Conquered. possessed, the land lies drowned. -Eloise Hamilton. in "Wings." wmii-.n.u 3'- VALUABLE STOCK . Mr. John Rlcliards, Bideford, said one of his thoroughbred Here- ford bulls to Mr. Edwin Darby. Egmont. Bay, ll short time since. This animal is one of the finest in his class in Canada. and is registered in both the Ell'.!liSh and American Hereford Herd Books. Mir. Darby is one of our most progressive farmers, and we are pleased to note this new veil- ture on his part, and hope that the example he has set. will be followed by others of our well- to-do farmers... Mr. John Henry has purchased from Mr. R. T. Holman the fine team of greys he will lllm five years ago. Mr. Henry says he will challenge any team ill the Prov- ince. of the same weiglit.-2.600 lbs., -for walking. This is a branch oft horse training that is too gener- ally neglected. Quick vvalking teama do fully I fifth more work than slow stepping ones. and do it easier. better. and more satis- factorlly. while it is a greater plen- liure to do work with such I team. Draft. horses should invariably be trained to a fast. walking gait. which greatly increases their value. Taking the prize for the best walking horses from the exhibition list is. in our opinion, is serious mistake. The Agrlculturisi. Sept, B, 18-54. And they that be wise shall flrniunwnt: and they many to righteousness us the star: for ever and ever. He Made Life Gayer (New York Times) Like G-libel-t.'s collaborator, Ar- thur Bulilvan. Oakar Btraua. who died the other day in Austria at the one of elohty-three. longed to be remomberedi for set-toul music. but. the music he wrote was for light. open and of that music what will be remembered in a dance or two, I some or two. The and and the beginning might be 3. song from "The Ohocolote Bold- lar", on operetto derived from shore utlriool "Anna and the Man" - The. non; called "My Hero". New York City welcomed "Tho chocolate sewer" tn I009 with a run of N6 perfori'nanoeo- which in those day: no good. In 104'! a. revival did not do to well. But the long lurvlved and oven the may and uh; of it get. into oneto nerves and puluo. The old lurope died to this con; -and to I few othen, lnclumna "The Merry Widow Violin" and "Ivory Little Movement". 1' . n pilonen during the first Wild nhlllo -ii the brightneu of the- unit turnl The Public Forum . ISLAND WILDLIFE sir.-I iwvo been no mono and tragic sights in Nature's drama this winter that. I thought I would write you about them. One of the strangest. was a flock of wild ducks on what. is now called Whlt.ioc.k'o Pond. There wen fourteen in the bunch. which is something I had never been in my hunting and trapping exper- ience. Tney were feeding in I narrow stretch of water. with ice that would hold a man on eith- er side of the stream. They were in the narrows. as we call it, just. below the forks. What. they were feeding on I don't know; it. must. have been slim nations. for the bottom is mostly sand. Of course in the springs and one brook. there is plenty of watw cross and some graa but. the rest of the brook and the dam is covered with from two to three inches of tee. Today I walked up the Black Brook. as it is called, on the ice for three miles. I hadn't. seen this trout. Last. fall while wading in the Black Brook. I got. into dozen of. hollow scooped out in the griiwelliy bottom. I didn't know what. was the cause but after a cautious appioach to one of these. I saw that it. via full of t.iiout.. That's another struiae thing for these waters. for I remember long ago, at this time of year the springs everywhere would be alive with trout. Now very few come up the springs. My opinion. although I may be wrong, in that the new trout may have the instinct of the salmon, also they are eating the young of the native tmut. This I think. is 9. great. loss as none of the new trout. come up to the na- tivoo in fight or stile. A four pound tmut then was nothing un- uaual and two poundcru were quite common. I haven't caught a two pounder in years. Another thing I would like to mention while I am on trout. I remember. the summer we ward flock for the last week. but flush- ed two out. of the spring in the; brook and saw where they had been roosting on a log across thel spring. They must have been there nearly all night, as the mow and ice where they were sitting was melted to the wood. I was JUM- thinkin-g how lucky they were that 9. mink had not come along dur- ing the night. as it. would have been curtains for one of them. that's for sure. Another strange thing 1 saw this winter-just. last. week-was ii large crime. I never saw one this time of year before. The first glimpse I got. of him. he was fly- mg close' to the top of I ire: and I put. it. down as an owl though he seemed large for even a laivge owl. Then following the brook. I saw his track on the ice -the ice would hold me now; so I knew it. was a crane He was feeding in a spring where I noticed his tracks coming out of it and there wasn't. I. ti-out. left in it. I had seen quite I few trout. there the day before; I guess he had cleaned it out. . With the weather we are having. I wonder if the instinct. which wild birds are credited with in working this winter. I know if I could fly south. I would be there. I have heard that. some people have seen as many as tour robins. and there were never so many crows around as there are this winter. The muskrats have made few permanent dens. so far as I could see. . Just. feeding dens full of roots and that. sottt. water grass that they eat. The mink are not fol- lowing the -streams like they used to but are hiking through the woods. and that to not for lack of War sang it. Mr. sinus. because he had written it, and because the man who could write ouch a son; in a satire about militarism Ind Baiknnlsm was not safe or happy in Hitler: empire, tied his coun- try in 1939. Now he is dead, honored be- cause he took men's mlmh off their troubles for n. while and be- cause he remained um when others went mod. N died. no civilization and no hopes dbd because of Oahu st:-nun music. Life was inyer become he lived and worked. putting in I new bridge above Whitlo-:k'o mill in Upton, that the fish hatchery men dumped a large container of young trout in the pond. just above the bridge. Next morning I arrived early and went to where the trout. lizizl '.::rn t'" s- ed. I saw six wild ducks busy eat- intz or feasting on ,x.u..g .. . Goodness knows how many liuii- dreds of young trout. went down their gullets. considering the ap- petite of a wild duck and th.elr' quick digestion. No doubt. they were there at day-break. many hours before I arrived. I went to the spot, the trout were still there and almost. jump- ed out of the v.'s.ter when they saw me. They were looking for something to call. and, followed me to the brine. All day long. the poor creatures hung round where we were working,-heads nearly out of the water. staring at us with hungry-looking little eyel. I fed them some crumbs from my lunch and they last. no time in catching them. Now my opinion was. although I may be wrong, that it was the worst. place in the pond to put. the trout. The water is too deep and there is no shelter from sun. birds or animals which feed on fish. They would have little or no pro- tection until they got to the point. where the pond widens out, I quarter of I mile away. I think the proper place to put young trout is in the brooks. the springs that feed the pr." Brook I have mentioned in from one to two feet dl;..p a. . and has many springs that used to be full of spawning trout. in the fall. In the summer it. in com- pletely covered with puts cl-cu and shaded on both sides by :1- dero which makes oi perfect grow- ing ground for ftngei-ltnu and even smaller trout. There tho majority would have I charm to survive; not like the ,o.foromentloned place where I doubt if one-tenth of the victim: would reach shelter or safety, or o. tenth pa.-i reached maturity. . Another ti-uedly of Nature in this port. even worse than that. of trout, in the nlmont. complete clean- up of rabbits, grouse. pheoauitn and Hum by that four-toned morouder, the red fox. Eppeclally to it the one of the I-tuna around here. I hovevnover been one in and Collision Coverages. 12 onarxoiv or. ,. T CAR LAID UP! If your car is laid up for the winter phone or write us immediately and we will cancel the Liability Fire and Theft will contintfe tin force and you will receive a credit when the car is taken out of storage, provided it has been laid up for qtileant two months. I. ll. IIUIIES I.illl'l'EI'- the not two-mambo. while in the Tlloiflt one l I which farmers hiid shipped chic- would be more interested in it JANUARY 28. 1954 The Pass ing Scene ' By Oboerver . "Till UNIDUCATBD" Thin II the title of I book recent- ly published by the Columbia Unl- ver:lty' Press. The authors. Ell Ginsberg and Douglas Bray. were associated with a. post-war re- search undertaklng at that Univer- sity bearing the name "The Con- servation of Human Raoul-cu." General Eisenhower was the lt.ltu- lar head of Columbia at. the time; the research work itself was his way of trying-to find out. how the nation could avoid wastage of man- power through absolute and near illiteracy. School and college facilities are so plentiful and wide-spread in the United States. and have been for many years. that it is hard to be- lieve that at. this moment there are more than two million persons in that country who ciui neither read nor write. It. is a fact. never- theless. That. works out to about one out. of every seventy-five of the population. Another fact. brought. out. by the authors of this book is that dur- in; the second World War :1- Jority of thuo were by no mum mentally deranged: only a. mun fraction came under that head. ing. They were simply illiterate and. therefore. classed ll being deficient. . . . The situation, Il'll.l.hQ'iIMcIlll' speaking. is not. as but u it an fifty years ago. The rate of llll. teracy then was something mu one in every seven. However, M that. time the large negro pop. ulatton, according to the figure. given in this book. wu llmost. totally illiterate; now. the neg: 5 are almost all in the literate clalug. This, of course. makes the improve. merit. in the overall picture a lit- tle- less impressive than the (lg. urea themselves would teem to in. dlcate. What. the Canadian figures would show I am not in ; pogt. Lion to say as I do not. have any statistics covering the oubloct. Un. fortunoteiy. Canadian Universltiu donotoeemtogotntotbtoklna of research as much as they might, most. 800 thousand of otherwise eligible young men were rejected from military sen-ice because of mental deficiency. The great ma- fa.ll there were several flock: in the fields I to through. I believe the fox has caught them all. An example of what a,fox can do to a flock of I-Iuna can be seen by what. happened about four or five years ago. I found I. box in ks-nu. A short dlstniice away I flock of iwentv I-luns flew up; they seemed very tame. I was nearly on top of them before they flew. Next. day they were there again and I made I. sure count. This time there were only fifteen. I made the trip every three days at. daybreak and saw Mr, Raynard with a Hun in his mouth. I knew then where the birds were going. The next. time I vwent. by, only four flewlup and I never saw any more Huns that year. The strange port. of it. was the flock always beamed to be in the some place, in o unall clearance beside the road where tho box wu. The next wild creature when very exlstexice to in Jeopardy is the rabbit. Not. so many years ago, you could go through ally little bunch of older, poplar or any woods for that matter and it would be full of rabbits and you would seldom no r. fox track. Now rabbits are scarce, with none at all in some parts of the woods. In fact. I have seen only three this winter. and one was in I. fox more of mine. I have been no grouu or phea- sants this year. Of course last year I saw only one grouse and a couple of pair of pheasants; how- ever the native partridge are hold- in; out in spite of cute Mr. Fox. M 1 I00 it around here. unless the number of fame to drastically xe- ducod, moot of our small game birds and animals have a very poor chance of survival, especially the imported ones and our rabbits. The only my in this Province tau catch them is by marine and by traps. Poloon is out of the ques- tion, because of the many domes- tic animals that would be en- danaered. Om way to get. more trapper: interested. would be to raise the bountyton faxes to five dollars and coon: to three dollars. At the present. time, the rnonev made on the pelt and the bounty isn't worth the time it takes to catch and tin them. Tho fox is hard andfiuov topelt ondokiiilnliizo rucoon to like trying to pull a headless nail out. of the bottom of 3. poll of lud. I doubt. if there is o. four-legged animal M greasy and meal! I: I fat. coon. Undoubtedly. unless something is done noon to destroy at least part of the faxes and comic here. most 0' 0111' lmlll Karrie birds and ani- mals will be it. thing of the past. and our farmerr, at any riitc near the woods. will have even worse raids on their poultry yu-cu. Even if the Government. does rain the bounty to five dollars. I doubt if the treasury would cut. fer very much. for they no hard to catch and few if any trappei-5 would or could make a living at it. I know I couldnlt. Although I as a side lino than I would an a trapper. I am sir. etc... VERNON L. DAVEY. other sources of information - census figures, for example-on not. much use. Assuming that our situatloii is similar to that of our Amorlcan neighbours. and there in no reason to suppose it is my hot. ler. there an about 200 thousand totally illiterate persons in this country. about twice on many peo- pie as there are altogether in um province. Incidentally. I do not believe that the per capital mo of uiltonoty on this Island is anywhere near the figures given above. although I may very well be wrong in am, Personally. I have never come .. cross an Islander who could neith- er read nor write. but. then, of course, there on many Ialandm whom I don't. lmow. It would be an interesting subject for inves- tlgation and it. should not. pro- sent. any great difficulties. . . . The conclusion reached by the authors of "The Uneducatnd" in that " as 9. people we have been until recently little concerned with our human resources." If this bc true it to I oerloul indictinuit of our interpretation of tho democra- tic idea; democracy presuppose; an enlightened over-all society. In fact, from the pu:ely demomntic angle illiteracy is the State's worst enemy. It. would be I wonderful thing in I state where only the rulers were expected to do my thinking about. uiythlnc. How did it happen that there are in the United States and Can- ada at. least two and I half mil- lions of otherwise normal people who can neither read nor write? The current. fashion to to trim the blame for everything that. you wrong in modem educational trends back to John Dewey. I think there is no doubt that that kind- ly and brilliant philosopher con- tributed. albeit. unwittingly. to the educational melee of then dayu; mainly, I would suggest, houuu of the wrong and half-right inter- pretations which others have made of his philosophical views. Certainly Dewey cannot. be blamed for this particular problem of ilutemcy. If there was one thing more than another that ho advocated it was the widest. poll- sible dlstribuuon of the educa- tional process. I suppose that Prog- matlsm. like every other philoso- phical wtnd that blows. nu lie weaknesses as well its otaruictha (personally. I bell c then are more weakneasts than strengths in it). but. I do not see how it cm be charged with encourag- ing ignorance. Perhaps the real reason. u dit- tlnct from many auxiliary rauom. for the continuance of illiteracy in I democratic society, is that we have come to depend too heavily on niechalllcal and material )9- sources and not. heavily enough on human ones. Perhaps it isn't oo much that we are not concemea with them from the humane point. of view we Just. don't. believe they matter very much in a day when machines can do almost anything. Back of any educational system. if it. is to contribute much per- manent. good to society as a whole. there must. be the will to utilize all the resources at hand. FIRE INQUIRY oimunoti AURORA, 0nt., (CPI--A special inquiry was ordered Wednesday by the Ontario fire marshal! oftlro into the 3500.000 fire which Mon- day destroy:-d part of Aurora": main business block and claimed Foreot. Hill. PROFESSION the life of one man. t AL CARDS J. S. Taylor. R.O. 0l"I'0 ITEIST Bun lniufnod, Giana I-titted Ooruor Kent and Queen Ito. Office Pinon: M38-Ilouoo 4150 Dr. A. L. Muclsuoo DINTIII t Dollhl X-Ily ULOIIA BUILDING HI Grafton II. . Pbollo III Dr. K. A. Moeiooiiorn nkunu Donut X-my Above Charlottetown clinic on and: IL f Dial out M. Albon Format. 9.6. EA. LLB. lomotor and solicitor . Bank of Gonunorco Bufidlnl Ch..Iottotown Money to loan 0! Byron J. Grant. O.D OITIIMBTIIBT III lent Strut Plano I” tonpoolto lnvonlotoli Allison M. Glilis. LL3- IAIIIITIB. !0l.l0I'I'0I. III- IIO ltebmond It - I.'IllII3W" Plano II J. A. Corrutiion. I-0- ontmnnln III Kent Street emu II” (Nut to lliupoonu Annwi MeDQNAI.D. Gill!!! 8: CO; . OIIAITIIIII Aumumaivrs looluol. bun... othwo. hunts. some in... sliorbrooko. Vancouver. i'ai'”...'..&””u?.'....... Ilriloul nu. no-stun. Itmiiion. cumoimown. um-mo. cums on... nnmgguwn. my , DI-I 11-" I .. I-I. LDOANI In C"O'M":.ANY autumn nwmi A . Ill who ouoroo It. (monument rumour-ou.. -l lunch!" ianui e 2 ' "'l”"'.t'.tt..i.”i mnnsn. M i ' iuiimf atom-n. on. tours A-um. In 0- Nn ' Otunw. has and cone tr -..-.-