HCLI it inrnluant. easel roux IHE GUARD-IAN A-Iitiloruhmi no second sin. nun .'-no om.-p - Deunrtrnonl. 'lt.tnwL,' rho Inlnml uunrdlnn rununnlng on. OIBUULAFIIDN fotni City Zone .. ' llotoil l'i-Iain; zono All Others , ,, up, Iotai Net Pnid ............... l8.IIn Editor and lllnnnging Director. J. is durnoll Anooclato Editor. Fl-Inh Walker. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Ihon the Weakest Ink" . CHABLOTTETOWN FRIDAY. MARC? .03.-1951 I. 165 I.I5'. The Session closes Our local legislators will have completed ineir work for the present session today. and the rural members will be returning to their homes to catch up on their farm chores, and prepare for the election which is reportedly in the offing. The session has been a comparatively short, one, and while there were occasional fire- works the proceedings on the whole were fairly humdrum. The most surprising feature was the collapse of the debate on the biggest budget ever introduced in the history of the Province. There was, .of course, some adverse criticism of the Government, but there was also much commendation of the work of various department, notably that of Public Health. Indeed, few ministers have ever received so many verbal boquets as did Hon. Mr. Matheson from his pre- decessor in that office, Hon. Dr. MacMii- lan. Other Government membersAinclud- ing the Premier and the Minister of Indus- try and Resources-were more in the line of Opposition fire. Much of this fire was concentrated on the operations of the M. V. Eskimo, the Government meeting the more serious charges by promising a com- mission of inquiry. Cost plus contracts, the Trans-Canada Highway and road condi- tions in general, came in for considerable criticism. Potatoes formed a fruitful topic of discussion, as did the respective merits of beef and dairy cattle-a point on which no vote was taken or decision arrived at. Undoubtedly the Opposition members were handicapped by the lack of Govern- ment reports dealing with the immediate past. The reports for the most part are over a year old when tabled, and it is the duty of the Government to see that later information is supplied promptly and fully when requested. We seem, fortunately. to be getting away from oldtime partisan controversies, and no member now would be applauded for indulging in the personal recrimin- ations which formed a considerable part of the speeches of former years. Comment- ing on this subject in years gone by, a for- mer Island editor remarked sagely: "Those who tdeceived, betrayed and sold' their constituents, their country and the Em- pire. have since gone to their reward, and received Christian burial and the usual eulogistic obituary notices in the press. The betrayed constituents have also pass- ed out, little the worse for the betrayal. And so there may be hope for the political sinners of today, notwithstanding the fears of their political opponents." Fostering Maritime Industry A tireless and effective force constantly backing the development of industry in the Maritimcs is the Maritime Provinces Board of Trade and its one hundred and nine federated boards in the four Atlantic Provinces. Some of its immediate objects. as set out by the President, Mr. Johnston Chew, are to ui';;v the Government to maintain the former picr at Cape Tormentine so that it may be available for the proposed new automobile aruti truck ferry when it materlalizes. It is proposed that larger boats be used on the Wood Islands-Caribou service and that improvements in docking facilities, channels, and aids to navigation be sought to handle the growing volume of traffic being created by this route. Other objects, which are directly for the benefit of these Provinces, include sponsoring a "Made in the Maritimes Week" in cooperation with Provincial Gov- ernments and a rotating annual Maritime Industrial Exposition held successively in each of the four Provinces in cooperation with the Maritime Junior Chamber of Commerce. The ranks of the Boards of Trade are open, not only to business men, but to all who desire to promote the prosperity and well-being of their community. Senator crorar's Words .M,.... The Ottawa Journal pays deserved tribute to a former Liberal Minister of Agriculture, Senator Crerar, for his out- spoken denunciation of the sixty-five mil- lion dollar vote, backed by- a majority of both Houses, at Ottawa, to be taken out of the treasury and thrown into the laps of well-to-do Western wheat growers. Sen- Indfuyltuofu-mei-of ;,.V- p , , Western Canada and one who will be a beneficiary through 4V; cents a bushel being added to wheat payment. ”The only salvation," Senator Crerar added, "is for Canada to get back to the virtues of those who are not looking for handouts. country or anywhere else that can stand these pressures and strains; we will burst into more and more inflation and the re- sult will be that we will all sink togethe into trouble and despair. ' "That is not the kind of liberalism on which I was nurtured. You can't take a CCF policy (bulk trading) of this kind and turn it upside down and call it a Liberal policy." 1- DIAIURIAI. "No: es l-ion. J. A. Bernard, Tignish, has un- dertaken to make a speaking tour in U. S. A. in furtherance of Prince Edward Island Festive Week. I I Next we may have a discussion in the Legislature on "who had the best medical training record-Mr. Mutheson, the present Minister of Health, or Dr. MacMillan, the ex-holder of the office? I I I "Sicilian Vespers" this date 1282. Charles of Anjou conquered Sicily and Naples in 1266 and by his misrule and gross injustice occasioned a rebellion by which all the French in Sicily were mas- sacred, and Pedro of Anjou made King. 0 O 0 Mr. Lem Rush, of the L. P. U., appar- ently has no high opinion of His Worship the Mayor when he declares: "We have a man at the head of government who has been death on labor since he went in and apparently the Mayor is following him.',l If the Premier goes to the Senate it is rumoured the Mayor will follow him in the representation of Belfast. O O O ' Family allowances have poured 61,- 535,000,000 into Canadian purses since July, 1945, Mr. J. R. Kirk (L.-Antigonislu Guysborough) was informed in a tabled return in the House of Commons. In that time the number of families receiving the monthly cheques has increased from 1,238,- 307 to 1,906,246 and the number of chil- dren benefiting by them has risen from 2,- 956,844 to 4,355,269. 0 O I The C. N. R. is not planning at the moment to put either diesel or oil-burning locomotives on any main passenger trains running in the Maritime Provinces, a re- turn informed Mr. Frank Stanfield (PC- Colchester-Hants). The return said "it is expected to commence diesel operation of two manifest freight trains daily between Montreal and Halifax via Edmundston in the near future." I O 0 Agricultural Minister Baker insisted in the Legislature that a dairy cow can pro- vide a farmer with thirteen calves while a beef animal is taken to the market and slaughtered. This Province, he said, is pre- emineiitly a dairy country according to the opinion of the experts at Ottawa. And he could have added according to the exper- ience of competent practical farmers here. People investing in farms for potato gam- bling or as--a hobby, are not farmers but merely experimenters. I 0 More Canadian newsprint for U. S. A. The Vancouver Sun says an American pulp and paper company is contemplating a 2S20,000,000 pulp mill on Upper Arrow Lake in the southern British Columbia interior. Power for the mill would come from B. C. Power Commission's new Whatsam hydro development on the Arrow Lakes, sched- uled to start next month. Pulp and paper projects now under way in B. C. total more than 5ii10,000,000 worth. More than 400 Canadian manufacturcrs expanded their operations during 1950, according to a recent release from the Can- adian Manufacturers Association. The an- nual 1950 Record of Industrial Development in Canada, which appeared this month in "Industrial Canada," the monthly C. M. A. publication, indicated that construction and development in Canadian industry is, if anything, on the increase over 1949 when slightly more than 300 companies were recorded as building new plants, renovating existing ones, expanding or renewing their operating facilities. I o A new type of microscope developed by research workers of Bristol University, England, replaces glass lenses by curved mirrors, the advantage being that, where- as lenses reflect only visible light, mirrors reflect all radiation. Another. advantage is that the new microscope is completely free from the tendency-found in conventional microscopes--for coloured "fringes" to ap- pear around the image ofthe object being examined. The reflecting microscope. is one of the most important developments in the field of microscopy for many years-I-on at par with the electron microscope, There is no economy in this ' THE GUARDIAN. CHARl..0T'I'ETOWN ensue FURUM This column in open to the dimension by corrupondenu of Question: of lnlenut. The Gnordinn doeo not necessar- il! onno tho pinion of .....reIpondentn. GOOD VVINTEB ROADS Sir.-The maintenance of ade- quate transportation facilities dur- ing the winter months is our Gov- ernment's chief concern. Now that we have continuous communica- tion with the mainland for twelve months in the year. it is time some person was giving thought to the question of linking our rural communities with our industrial centres during the some period. Without: a doubt there are men. and there is machinery available which. if but on the roads at the proper time would ensure adequate services. At present fnrmcrs' pro- ducts are rotting in the barns and in the store houses, and expensive road machinery is lying idle, and hundreds of men are sitting around the fireside wondering what ought to be done next. Scraping the road clear of snow and ice in January and expect- ing the people to flounder around in the mud during the months of March and April is not the ideal solution for the problem. The whole. question of road mainten- ance and supervision needs to be investigated. In the meantime it is difficult to get men who live on the paved highway to become interested in men who live in the mud. Twenty years ago winter trad- fic was more normal than it is today. All farmers had horses and road equipment in serviceable condition, and road foremen and supervisors did their work more efficiently than they do today. Last night there was a heavy full of snow. This morning farmers with their teams are moving in every direction and the only rea- son the snow is not being scrap- ed off the roads is that the me- clianvical gadgets cannot be oper- ated under these abnormal condi- tions. If all our roads were pav- ed highways, and if every farmer had is car and 3 tractor. and ii bank account traffic conditions could be improved, but at pre- sent we are living or surviving under conditions that suit no per- son. If more time in the Legislature were taken up solving uliese vital problems and less't.i.me in dis- cussing how intoxicating bever- ages might be placed at the dis- posal of the whole population this million acre farm might become an ideal place on which to live. in the meantime the only soili- tion to this problem of road traf- fic is to require every Govern- mcnt official and employee to drive over five miles of this mud flat while going to work every morning. I am, Sir, et.c., VERNON CROCKETF CAR. TOWING GOSSIP Sir,-As I happen to be one of the unfortunate farmers living on the clay road between New Ann- an and Kensington and owning a. tractor. I have been called upon a good many times within the last. month to pull and drag cars sunk deeply down in the mud through the. what might be called, bog hole. Being probably too good natured I have left my work when possible at all and also have been disturb- cd from my sleep. ill-used my tractor and gone through cold rain storms, mud to the knees. to help the poor unfortunate motor- ist out. I certainly, from the depths of my heart, long to know the gos- si-per who has started such out.- ragcous stories as to the charges I have made. It has indeed been rumoured that I charged Dr. Auld 315.00 for a low which I never had the privilege of giving. it nnyone should doubt my word kindly in-quire from the doctor. in fact in most. cases I simply told the drivers when they asked me my charge that I did not make I business of towing, it was just an obligement and it. was up to them what. they though: it was worth. In quite a number of cases I was asked to take more than I would accept and I passed back the balance realizing what I would care to pay if I were in the same boat. There have been a lot of tractors towing in this vicinity, in fact tractors coming in from outside districts. I may say I am quite sure some of these good men are not over-charging either. but there may have been some who have and I Im writing this letter through your paper to let the readers know that. I Im not the one who has been overcharging. My hows were from 50 cents to five dollars, according to the length of the low. On two oc- casions I got six dollars as the tows were heavier Ind longer. I might say the most I received was for I long drag, possibly 2 3-4 miles through mud and a cold raid storm at night: the car was not working Ind had to be towed to I garage in Kenoington. The man passed me over ten dollars and slid it was well worth it Ind I feel quite certain the gentleman would not have exchanged places with me as I won covered with mud and very cold: this was the only low for which I received over six dollars. Now I feel that these cu driven should not hnve to pay Inything for getting Iiong the road. In I case of this kind the Government should provido mochinu to take them through. . But one should not expect I few for:-nor: to give so much of their time and machinery omel- utoly free. Giving one tow I not in I hole when I look happened to be locked Ind the consequence won two of tho ptoiilr went an-ouch my ti-Ictor iiro Ind tbh (ii? wasn't fixed for nolhlnl. lei limit 4 I The liner Datum : To Prevent Tu inch or A and Till!- the time I lost getting it put to rights again. Lastly, I wish anyone who has Ictually paid me any more than I have already quoted or has seen -me receiving more. to kindly come forward as I am prepared to back any statements I have made. Thanking you for your valuable space, and remember: f'Ii doesn't always pay to lend I helping hand." I, am. Sir, ole. W. Kensington, P. E. I. R.R.4. 'A. MOASE. -2.--&-;: N fr , i 7! .2::i'.. I N I A, " I . 4 g .. . m, 1,, 3 '4, - . p - , . J - Wu, gh h- 3 4" ' . v .' FROM PROTIIALAMIION We must not to I too like time Yield up our present. Take . hand And up the morning we shall climb Until the wooded valley land Lies all beneath us in the drowse OI love's merediul aftermath; The trellis of entwlning boughs Trembles in the great joy of green. my MENTALLY RETARDED CHILDREN Sir,-Excepilng the very few be- ing cared for in the Infirmary where government officials tell us they are very overcrowded, there is no provision for menl-nlly Te- turded children in Prince Edward Island. Nor is there any such pro- ject in the Maritimes excepting the Nova Scotla Training Schmyl at Brookslde. Truro. N. S. This school is only equipped to Cafe 1” Nova Smile and is only able to in- clude tho moron and imbecile trulnable group. They 9'0 not equipped to take in the physically handicapped. The following is ii list of the occupations in Which pupils are there trained. For boys: Farming. elementary electrical work, road work. gardening. car- pentry, care of smaller boys. gen- But does not screen Tile comfortable glimpse of home- ward path. We will not to our ancient foe Yield all this happiness; it lies Shielded from sickle and from snow And all the menace of the skies. At night I shall watch over thee, The fixture safe beneath thy breast, And after autumn there shall be Dayspring. when for each other's sake We shall awake And follow Love beyond the un- known west. . -Robert Hillyei-. Old Charlottetown i (And P. E. I.) iG0&DG0M90&e00iaG0Q7 ii i? oral housework, baking bread, ele- mentary plumbing. elementary sheet metal work. elementary shoe repairing, general rnanuul labor. janitor work. For girls: General housework. laundry duties, knit- ting, embroidery, crotch:-l work, sewing. cooking. gardening. ele- mentary hair dressing and beauty parlor routine, lundicrult, care of smaller children, preserving. Cans mm: and maid service. Private institutions are scarce and are nolr Within average means. We are very grateful for the en- couragcment given by 0111” PWI rincial Government as to the P0!- siblllty of the Maritime Provinces jointly supporting such ll -pmlecin When a brief was presented by three well known or8BHlZ3”0"5 two years ago to our Department of Health and Welfare it was re- ceived with deep concern and sev- eral unsuccessful attempts were made at obtalmmz a survey as W the number in our Province. Let us hope and pray that our leaders will be guided by Him who said: "Whoso shnll receive one such lit- tle child in My name receiveth Me. But. whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believed in Me, it. were bot.tei' for him that n millstone were hanged about his neck," etc. "In considering what. retarded children have done for mankind. may I quote Pearl Buck 'in her book "The Child Who Never Grew": "We have to thank the helpless children for teaching us that mere intelligence is not enough. There is 9. whole person- nlity not concerned with the mind and children mentally deficient often compensate for their lack by other qualities of goodness. Psychologists working with ment- nllv children at the Training School in Vin-eland. New Jersey. have found that while the IQ. may he very low a child actually may function it good deal higher bccnuse of his social sense, his feeling of how he ought to he- have, his pride, his kindness. his wish to be liked. Acting on this observation they developed the social Maturity Scale. Today this vlnelnnd Social Mnturlty scale is wldelv used in the armed forces. in schools and colleges. in aptitude tests. wherever normal individuals are measured. They have taught us how people learn. Psychologists. observing the slower processes. have been Ible to discover exactly ns though in I slow-motion pict- ure the way the human creature acquires new knowledge and new habits. our educational techniques for normnl children have been vusthr improved by what the re- tarded children have inught us." As only I few of the causes of mental retardation are known. how is research to progress so that children yet. unborn will be born whole. if the facilities for such research Ire not made nvailnble? But Ibove -Ill else these child- ren can help us imirltunlly. Even if the retardation is severe. the body crippled. or if no speech cometli from the lips. yet if we listen God will talk to us through them. If God in him in. out of sorrow con ccme patience. toler- ance Ind humility. If not the soul in embittered Ind tho purpoqa of the child in loot. Let us then ex- Imine our love for these children when we say we connoi. part with them Ind ask ourselves in our love In that "which suffereth long Ind in kind. loeketh not her own," etc. Let us weigh the Idvontues Ininst the dludvomoses Ind not forget that God IO loved us He nvo lilo only begotten Ion. very the ill SEED GRAIN PURCHASES "On Saturday last. is special meeting of the Agricultural Socie- ty took place, for the purpose of preparing an order for the im- p:-rtntlon of seed Grain-the I-Ion. T. H. l-luviland.' vice president, in the chair. The meeting was en- guged upwards of four hours in considering the most beneficial manner of expending the sum of i200 at their disposal. They have ordered from England. summer wheat, is small quantity of winter wheat, barley and outs; white Dutch clover. cow grass and man- gel wurzel, field peas and beans -and from the United States. I quantity of spring seed wheat, and red clover. "During the time the meeting Wu engaged, the Society received an importation of a few bushels of the celebrated Tea Wheat. from New Brunswick. They have. very judiciously. divided it. shares. each member receiving ii peck being obliged to return half a bushel of the proceeds of it next fall. The meeting rcconunended to the committee the importa- tion of a few of the latest im- proved agricultural implements, such as drilling machines, etc., but, we fear. to execute the order for seed will require all the money of the Society." -Prince Edward bland Regis- ter, June 2. 1829. 'b'iuFln'b'inFn'-Fl E The Age-old Story 3:-.-. And the Lord nid unto Moses. llew thee two tables of stone like unto the first: Ind I will write upon these tnbles the words that were in the first tables. which thou brakest. And be randy in the morning. Ind come up in the morning unto Mount Sinai, and present thyself there to me in the top of the inonni....And be how- ed two tables of none like unto the first. Ind Moses rose up early in the morning and went up nnto Mount Sinai, Is the lord had conimnnded him, Ind took in his fund the two tables of mine. And the Lord descended in the cloud. Ind mood with bin: thou. Ind proclaimed the name of the Lord. . And it come to pose. when Moon came down from Mount Sinai with the two tnhlea of testimony in Maser hand. when hot conic down from the mount. that Moses win not that the skin of hi: fooo alone while he talked with lilln. And when Anon Ind III the ohildron of Isrul uw Motel. behold. the skin of hi: fnoo Ihono. 00MPl.I.'l' VISUAL BEIl'llA(J'l'l0N Ind ANALYSIS 6. r. Hum-i:'soN ' I son Optometrists 5!. Grafton Bl into peck - I Ini. llr. etc. V mm: minor Charlottetown. I I Notes By- Wllon wanton dronnl of tin house they would like to live in. cupboard Ipoce, clothes closets and "euy-to-dust" lurfnceo no high on the list. When men dream houses they vision few windows. on which double, windows will hIve to be put in position after cleaning at but three surfaces. (rho men Ilwnyn dream about 3 room for themselves Ind it might be noted thni: remains I di-com with all but I few.-(Moose JIw- Times-I-Ierukh. The Ilrgun in the mall Iuoiess toy ever invented. That doesn't matter much. but the fact that it is I very dangerous toy-docs There isn't one argument in favor of the air-rifle, mainly because as I rifle, it in not accurate and so cannot be used for anything. It inevitably causes .t.x-ouble. - (Que- bec Chronicle-Telegraph). I elderly IldItl' 60 or 'i0 years Igo pronounced some of their words in In odd fashion. They sold "yalier" for yellow, ".goulcl" for gold, -"brasslet" for bracelet, "chutney" for china, "vavvse" for vase, "corfee" for cof- fee. Girls were something be- tween "gellc" Ind "gulls". and. of course, there wu "huntin" and "shootin". Curiously enough, these ladies belonged to what were then known as the "best families" Nearly every epoch has its affec- tatlon of speech, and possibly these noble domes were times glad to escape from the over-pre- cise diction of that period.-(Lord Courtuuld-Thomson in London Times). Life has its emborrnsuing ino- ments for all of us. and few of them are more embarrassing than when we mistake a complete stranger for a close friend. We recall on anecdote of ll member of the Federal Government. The cabinet. minister was walking along an Ottawa street when he spotted I close friend from out of town. one whom he hadn't seen for weeks. The man was talking to another, a stranger. The cabinet minister approached from the rear. placed his hands playfully over the eyes of his friend. Ind asked him to guess who he was. The man entered into the guessing contest in good humor, mention- ing several names none of which were familiar to the minister, Un- able to guess, the man fumed around and. as he took his hands off the man's eyes, the cabinet minister was horrified to find is night was , MARCH 30. 1951 7" 5 The, Way... ' complete stronger. The "n-igmn for whom the mm had beo'n”m5. token actually not hundredr or miles way. Most; of us '33,, made similar errorl. It mnkuon, feel like I total tool. For we "aim. ally slap the Demon involvedpgm the back. or moire some perggnn remark which sound: silly -u) . slrI.nger.- (Windsor pstar). Ton blind refugees. rescued from R roofless existence in the pp camps of Germany by the Congo. inn National Institute for rm, Blind; have arrived in Toronto with their families, aboard plane; provided by the International ac. iugee Organization. For the u "ha. less DPs, the Journey put an end to the terrible doubt: that no coun. try would ever Idmlt them. some of them had begged mo omcm, to help resettle their families even if they themselves had in be ten behind. Canada's invitation mg made reunions possible for two of the families. Artuo Anomltlu. .40. year-old Latvian former. who" impaired during 1115 forced wartime labor fox-lie Ger. mans. was welcomed to Toronto 'by his cousin. Ansis Dremunic. who came here three years ago with the aid of mo. Konrnds Ricks. tins. 28. blinded by an e 1 i mine in 1944. is still more 3.? 000 miles distant from his ' Mrs. H. Mlks, of Calgary, visit from her is no longer an im. possibility. grants are undergoing examination by ophthalmologists, If specialized treatment or sumlcai operations can restore their night the Canadian Institute ' the necessary provisions. All them will be able to complete the vocational training begun in u" IRO rehabilitation centers in Oct. many.- (From IRO News Bul- letln). Cousin. but a The ten blind imml. thorough will make of H. .1. A. BROWN. n.cp. Orthopedic CHIROPODIST Now Located in the NEW CURRIE BLDG. Second Floor Cor. Kent dz Queen Sis. Two Entrances 106 Kent 179 Queen Telephono 140 PROFESSIONAL CARDS sen. Mnihieson 3. Foster Barristers. Solicitors. etc. R. R. BELL. K.C. D. L. MATHIESON, LL.B.. K.C. G. R. FOSTER. LL.B. b Loan: on City and Farm Properties. 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P. E. I. FREDERIC A. LARGE. KI cl ' Barrister, Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P E. I. LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES Motlieson 8: Pedro A.W. MATIIESON. II.C. A.ll. PEAKE, B. 11., LL. 3. BI:-riIt.:n. ole. Collection: - Money to Lonn Money to Loans .:.m..:.,. A. Walthon Gander. it LL.B. I BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. Ila. ' Phillipa Bulldlllg , ' Ill Grafton Street ,-.- Collection- Dr. A. i.. Moclsooc nnunsr Dental X-Bay ' if GLORIA BUILDING l 1'19 Grnfion st. Phone 291 z 1 J. S. TAYLOR optometrist Eye: examined, glnuu filial Corner Kent 0 Queen so... Office Phoro I956-llnnn 1013 to Great George street Crurlottetown I Palmer 8. I-losiom A A. J. IIASLAM. D.A.. LA..D chu R M d B Borrilter. Etc. u . m ' unit of Nov: Scott ()1 ital l l”"”' '.':.i-.?' n. A. , BARRIBTER, SOLICITOK '"'T""T-r:-.'-rm”" mm...,,, m, . J. A. McGiuqan 23:5 Bulldlnt BAIIRISTIZR. soucrroic. lie. "0"" uonuv. era . """" '7" IIARRISTER. SOLICITOBV D"-1""""""""'vI R CIJRRIE nunmno r. . . Carson Chi t Pnlmeiolg-r:d:i"Ite JO'III P. NICIIOISOM ounnnorrarowu LL 3 201 Princo st. Phone I01: - - " mnkisran. soucrron. M. Albon Former Jio. . n.ii. 1.1.. I. may To LOAN m PI-ine:h:'t..,u” cmown. c oilotowII.'P.B.I. Joseph it. MocMiiIon. , u.s.,, ..s::9r..t...':1'r:.4. nluuu nun. soi.r..I'ron, lie. ,.,.,,,,,,, m, nu”, Queen drool "'0"'i 7" c Idl ii3.'."' ho?” ' mu Mu” " L." cmuuom In on I of nunoroo IVIIIII J. OIIAIT ll. 0'. o,..mM"m" J. A. OARBIJTIIEBS um um cum I 39- .. room: no Adjoining North American Hotel ' omoumtlgr ' "T"-'T"T'WT'T-' PHONE 2872 . Mocihoo I. Trolnor ' 123 Kent Streot n.r. Inemln. o.A.. n.o. 3 g 30313.13” 1-.AlNQ." -V L (Noalt to Slmplbdl A3033, Ion-rhino, Mo. OIIIMNWI II. B. DOANI I 00. , ',,,''''',,,,'',. . ' Ulortorod Aamnuunu saw "'4 g...” III Grout Ooorn Mutt. i , rm on-m ...:-r'...'"- ......."- ”t't'.i'X; t I 1"" ' W. ornnt Ilouooon. OJ. 3"-Mlle ”PIoIoIi!&-Ill! . - In . " IlcDONALD. Olllllllli 0.00. v 4 - OIIAITIIIII Ioooun-rim-in. ,, I, Iooirni. Quote. oihou nionlo.-Joint John. lbonrooto. o-no IQ: ounoonun ' ' nunpuno mi . ,., .....,o p. -- un-