PAGEFOUR THE GUARDIAN llornlng Dull; (founded in IBM) ydnlhor-Ind no Iooond Clnu llnll Post office Dnpnrtmoll. Ottnwn The Island Onnrdlln Pnhiloblng Co. Editor and Ilunnglng Dina-tor. J. B. Ilnroott Auoolnto Editor, rrnnb Wnllror. f"Tho Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest ink." V CIIABLOTTETOWN FRIDAY, JUNE 23. 1950 Welcome To The Press Today members of the Maritime Region of the Canadian Press will be visiting us on an excursion from Pictou where the an- nual get-together is being held under the hospitable roof of Pictou Lodge. The ar- rangements are under the direction of Mr. Harry Sutherland, of the New Glasgow News and Mr. J. M. Murphy of the Truro News, two active and rising representatives of Canadian Press membership. The Mari- time members are guests of these two editors, to whom they are much indebted for a thoroughly enjoyable tour of one of the most attractive parts of the Atlantic sea- board. accompanied by their wives and other guests. But the convention is not by any means merely a "joy ride". Its primary object is to consider the practical operation of the great news agency system that sup- plies the whoie of Canada with its daily budget of news. The first session opened at 8 p.m. last evening, resuming this morn- ing at nine olclock, continuing till one o'clock when luncheon was served, and an address given by Premier Macdonald of Nova Scolia. Though this Province was not at first included in the itine'rary, the late Mr. H. Pope Duchemin, K.C., editor of the Sydney Post-Record, has kindly invited the ineinbers and their friends to visit him at his summer home at Fortune, an invita- tion which the promoters greatly appreci- ated and accepted, making the necessary arrangements therefore with the Northum- berland Ferries. Alas, Mr. Duchemin pass- ed away before the event, and the visit would have been cancelled had not Mr. R. E. Mutch, President of 'the Northum- herland Ferries Limited, stepped into the breach and generously offered to transport the party, and to entertain it at a lobster supper at the Dalvay Hotel, an invitation of which the promoters eagerly ook ad- vantage. Today the party will arrive about t 2 p.m. and will proceed to Dalvay where an early supper will be served, and an ad- dress of welcome given by acting Premier A. W. Matheson, in the unavoidable absence of Hon. J. Walter Jones, who has gone by plane to Newfoundland. Freight Assistance Payments Money paid out on freight assistance for western feed grains to this Province last year, according to returns tabled in Parlia- ment, amounted to iiS3,174,603 on 368,209 ions, or an average of 311.20 per ton. The highest. average rate per ton paid to ziny Province was 320.11 to Newfoundland, the lowest 514.62 to Ontario. The total payments for all Canada amounted to fS139,789,572 on 24,927,445 tons. The figures are for the year ending May 31 last. . In the House of Commons last week, a 355,000,000 vote for freight assistance was put through. Agriculture Minister Gardiner explained that this amount was necessary to cover the cost down to the 31st. of July. The original vote has always been an amount just sufficient to cover the cur- rent grain crop year, which begins on Aug- ust l and ends on July 31. Then it it is de- cided to continue the policy a further amount is placed in the supplcmeniaries. This hand-to-mouth system has been fol- lowed since the vote was established in 1941. Originally, Mr. Gardiner conceded, it was intended for the sole benefit of the Maritime Provinces, but last year's figures show that the lion's share of the payments went to the Central Provinces-350,463,111 to Ontario and 552,298,293 to Quebec. Brit- lsh Columbia also received 32,163,350. ' "This vote," Mr. Gardiner emphasized, "has been renewed from year to year. We said a year ago, and I think the year before that, that it was the intention to have the whole question of discrimina- tion in freight rates studied by a Commis- sion and a report made upon it. We have already called attention to the fact that this policy will probably be given fuller consid- eration when that report comes in. It will then be determined whether we are goiiig on with the policy or whether we are going to have some other plan of equalization which will bring results." The freight rate on western grains av- erage S8.40 per ton, the average Federal payment being 56. This represents an in- crease over previous years, due to the in- crease in freight rates. The rate increase granted this year by the Board of Trans- port Commissioners will doubtless add further to the payments per ton by way of reimbursement -- that is, provided the policy is continued. The only assurance producers have at present, however, is that thh policy will remain in effect until the lid the present crop year. . EDITORIAL NOTES Gracie came, saw and conquered. The Kiwanis deserve congratulations. O O 0 School is out, to the joy of youngsters. Their mothers' enthusiasm for the holiday season has probably already waned. O O O Newspapermen are -notoriously forever faced with a deadline and the Maritime regional meetings at Pictou and Dalvay should make them feel that everything is normal. 0 O 0 The public and private gardens of this city are at their best, but can hardly be seen to advantage amid a maze of fencing. If only the other fellow could be depended upon to respect lawns without the neces- sity of barricading them. 0 G 0 Welcome to the Maritime Library As- sociation delegates. They will find that on the Island their two distinct divisions, col- lege librares and public libraries, are here fused into an extremely valuable combina- tion. 0 In Windsor, N. S., the Retail Merchants Association at a special meeting asked the town council to have parking meters re- moved. The merchants said tourists were by-passing the town rather than pay as they parked. A trial period for parking meters in the town ends Aug. 1. O C O O O Notwitlistimding the objections of Sen- ators. the bill providing for a residence for the Prime Minister has passed, including the clause providing that the Prime Minister must contribute 335,000 per annum for board, etc. The Senators had tried to persuade the House that the Prime Minister should get off Scot-free. H. R. H. the Duke of Windsor born this date 1894. IR succeeded to the throne as King Edward VIII January 20, 1936; ab- dicated December 1936; he married June 3, 1937, Mrs. Wallis Warfield; was Gov- ernor and Commander-in-Chief of the Ba- hama Islands, 1940-1945. Since has resided abroad. 0 I 0 Prince Edward Island has an honour- able record of foreign missions which Miss Vodia MacKay of Albany is to carry on. She is to teach at a junior college in Japan under the auspices of the Missions Board of the United Church of Canada. The good wishes of Islanders will go with her. 0 O O This summer some 400 University stu- dents from Ontario, Quebec and the Mari- timcs are training with the Royal Canadian Navy at Halifax as Cadets, R.C.N. (R). Their summer training program is divided into 12 weeks of classroom and parade ground work at HMCS Stadacona and four weeks' training afloat in one of two frigates operating out of Halifax. The middle of June saw the Cadet training program at Halifax in full swing. O O 0 An effective way of combating bush fires, where water and firefighting equip- ment are not available, was demonstrated in a case recently reported in The Guar- dian. The fire broke out in the Martinvale area in King's County, and threatened to sweep through the whole community. It was checked with the aid of a bulldozer operated by Mr. Jack Compton, of Belle River. who ploughed a fire-break through the woods in a few hours. If bulldozers were available in every community at this season they would be of great assistance in reducing fire hazards. O L'. S. newspapers notoriously disregard the speeches of Canadian statesmen; disre- gard in fact almost everything Canadian, says The Gazette. Indeed, apart from the New York Times and perhaps the New York Herald-Tribune, Canada has to pro- duce quintuplets, or have a flood or some other sort of disaster to be noticed in Am- erican newspapers. And because quintup- lets come only about every 50 years, and we don't have floods every Spring, an item about Canada in the U. S. press is about as rare as the proverbial red Indian on the island of Manhattan. 0 0 Britain's chief agricultural research scientist, who studied as a young man in Guelph, Ont., and Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Que., comes back to Canada this week for a refresher coprse. Sir William Ogg, 58, heads a six-man team of British agricul- tural scientists and administrators who will spend eight weeks in Canada studying Can- adian methods of farming. The party's ex- pensm in Canada will be paid by the Can- adian Government. The agricultural expert also farms 400 yacres in Kincardineshire, Scotland. His Canadian associations are strong. After the First World War, he spent several months in agricultural college at Guelph and Ste. Anne de Bellevue, and has made several return visits. His pre- sent itinerary includes a visit to Prince Ed- ward Island. ,pi'essive voice, but. M PUBLIC FUR UM This column in opcn In nu discussion by wrroopondonu 0! illloltlonn of interest. The Guardian does nor nonun- ll.Y undo the opinion of . THE noozii nzvanun nznn Sir.-That letter in your June 3 issueadealinx in a colorful and forthright way with "those booze barons" and the hunt for addit- ional ilquor outlets. is the impulse behind this reader's desire to get. a commenting word or two into the record. - As a rural Canadian I confess I -and those near and dear to me- get. along nicely with an absolute minimum of the product of "those booze barons". On the other hand I must say that it is decidedly dis- heartening to see this anti-social traffic becoming increasingly a revenue pillar of the State. This latter trend can hardly avoid giv- ing an aura of respectability to the whole shady business; to make drinking alcoholic beverages the normal and essential element in the lives of our people; and, as ”W. I. G." points out, to implant in the minds of young Canadians that "to drink... is a fine social habit". Moreover, the fact that the CI)- adian people had 0780,000.000 to spend on alcoholic beverages dur- ing the single year of 1949, has not escaped the notice of the na- tion's farmers. whose revenues have been cut into by the produc- tion of 80 million pounds of mar- garine in that same year, in an effort to save' (7) 320,000,000 to urban consumers, by way of the margin between the price of but- ter and that of the substitute tspi-eat-l'. Maybe the following story from real life will garnish this little let- ter: I met a couple of my urban friends the other day and over the tea and coffee cups the discussion turned to the butter vs. margarine problem. The temperatures in- creased visibly and audibly. It was two to one in favor of butter. There is no room here to part:cu- larlse. but it seems worth record- ing one conclusion unanimously arrived at and acknowledged. namely. that our margarine fr end expended more cash on beer. t- ing June than he will "save' on margarine during 1950! I am, Sir, etc.. W. D. MD's As Orators (Herb Surplis in the Ottawa C' lzen) Now that the session is nearing its close and most, of the members have had their say on one or sev- eral topics, some assessment of their abilities as public speakers can be made. Who is the best speaker in the House of Commons? The honest answer is that there is no "best". Commons debates take so many forms; the opport- unities and occasions are so varied, that no single criterion can be- applied. It can be said, however,I that there are few orators of the old school in the House. and occasions when the florid verbiage of the past is in order are rare. The leaders of all the parties speak well. The Prime Minister iii at his best when his "Irish" is; up. Opposition Leader George Drew has a more sonorous, lm-i he too fre-i quently spoils a 300d Speech by saying in 40 minutes what he could say in ten. M. J. Coldwell has a reasoned, persuasive style, but his schoolteacher days have: left. their influence. He has a tendency to lecture. Solon Low gives a smooth, well-balanced presentation but. he has something of the nasal twang so common to all Western members of Parlia- ment. The two best. rough-and-tumble speakers in the House. are Agri- culture Mlnlster Jrunes Gardiner and Art Smith of Calgary West. They both love a fight. and t.hey' are equally deadly in the clinches. Most members, and certainly back- benchers, studlously avoid a tangle with either. An initial, bi-ash encounter is likely to be I bruising experience. 0 0 John Dlefenbaker (Lake Center) and Ernie Hansel (Maclood) speak clearly and well. Hnnaell has the happy knack of illustrating his points with down-to-earth ex- pesienoes and incidents. Dlofen- baker has 8 ring of sincerity that adds greatly to the weight of his arguments. A good many others are deserv- ing of mention H. W. Benito of Kootenay West. and Owen Jones of Yale invariably give reasoned, logical presentations. Jimmy sin- clalr of Coast.-Cnpllnno doesn't .speak often, but he can get in some effective punches when he does. Gordon Orsydon of Peel is another effective speaker. but. he suffers from the some pmllrilty as his leader. I. T. A.pplow'holt.e of skeenn makes occasional but well reasoned speeches. Donald Fleming ofllllngtonhuncholionm trig, almost. truoulent style that attracts nttcntion. One of the regrettable features of the House is its wretched ' . Conuquenr , some log- ical and witty speakers - that. in, judging by Hnnsnrd - on almost. inaudible in the galleries. Jl.-ri Mncdonnell of Oncnwood in, per- haps. the best. example. He has an incllive. analytical mind, garnished with n dolllhtfub. dry Scottish humor. To read him in llonurd isnjoy;bui.t.ohoorhlrn lntho Home is next. to irnpouiblo. In fnlmcu, it should be uld that ability to soak. or even the inclination to make moochoo, is not the solo mi. of I good member - good in the some of useful Then ore several ronlor munbor: who rarely, if ever, Ipuk, but may do tremendous! valuable work in cominltuu. And with tampon- tuno on they In in Ottawa at this time of the your. the House own! then 1 dub! J jib. -rm: GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN ' -And llow children”; My k. 9 i - ' Qgmbki 8 J Pex90i0O&0 9M Old C ha rlottetown i (And P L. 1.) "3Y a notice in another column, Published by the Central Agricui- tum Society. it will be seen that in addition to cattle shows and Pmughing matches. the intention of establishing Fairs. to be held twice a year in Charlottetown. has been resolved upon. Wednesday, the 2nd of October next, being the day of the cattle show, has been selected for holding the first 1-fair. As we have reason to be- lieve that the greatest anxiety is 1911 by the' committee and offi- cers of the Society tc provide the most. ample accommodations both for sellers and buyers, we trust the experiment will prove bane- ficial. not only to our farmers, by affording a ready mart for the disposal of their superfluous agri- cultural produce and of replen- ishing their stock from the most approved breeds, but also prove a great convenience to persons from other countries who may have occasion to make extensive purchases. which could then be done at little comparative trouble." -Colonial Herald, August if), 1889. (It appears from a subsequent report. that the number of cattle exhibited fell short of expecta- tions, although the novelty of the occurrence attracted "a vast con- course of persons, in pursuit of business or amusement. At. an early hour of the day they began to pour in. and for several hours boats and vehicles of all descrip- tions, crowded with passengers, continued to arrive. Never before, we believe, were so many per- sons of both sexes, and all in holiday attire, assembled in Char- lottetown; indeed. it was remark- ed by more than one. that the best. part of the show was the spectators of it..") FIRST LOCAL FAIR Quoted From Home rd Question by Mr. Diefenbaker. M.P.: 1. How many copies of "2 Min- utes of Employment Facts" are is- sued. and how often? 2. What is the cost per issues (a) for printing; (b) for distribution? 3. Is the distribution fran-ked? 4. What would be the cost of postage if notifranked? 5. What would be the saving in cost it issued quarterly? 6. What would be the saving if printed in one colour only? Answer of Department of La- bour: 1. "2 Minutes of Employment Facts" is issued semi-monthly. The total distribution of each issue fluctuates to a certain extent. but the average number is around 24,- 000 English and 4,700 French. 2. (a) The cost of printing each issue is:- (i) for printing 3322.38 (ii) for paper 388.96. (b) The coat of distribution is based on the salaries of those en- gaged in such work together with the number of hours involved. If. bu been entimntcd that each issue costs about 320.00 to distribute. (3) The publication is not frank- ed. It in rent.by metered mail which is not charged for.by the Post Office. ' ' 4. If the publication were sent by first-class mail. it would likely cost the Department about 3000.00 per issue. ii. On the basis of I quarterly tune, the saving in printing costs would be approximately 35,070 per year. (I. The uving in printing colts. if the publication were printed in one colour only, would be approx- imately 3100.45 per lame. and slums Ibnll be In Tire Ago-Old Story Mrovony in that Mouth I tr-notion, but be that rollrdoth r-on;roof oblll be honoured. J.P. llufhruu I On MEN'S owrnmo TIIAT FITS 15'! Q00! ltroot I Studying Press Freedom (Ottawa Citizen) At a time when the relation of the press to the state is being rc- examined in several countries, the simple fundamental of press freedom is worth recalling. Frec- dom is the absence of restriction. The test to be applied to pro- posals affecting the press is whether these increase or dim- inish restrictions on the press. lBut the letter of the law is often . not half as important as the spirit in which the press is regarded by the public. It is better, as Lord Burnham, the publisher of Lon- don's Daily Telegraph suggested at the Commonwealth Press Con- ference in Ottawa this week. to err on the side of freedom rather than of repression. The British tradition has a bias in favor of freedom. and that goes a long way to explain why freedom of the press flourishes in Commonwealth countries. it also goes a long way to ex- plain why there is a degree of reserve among newspaper men of the Commonwealth toward pru- posals for establishing formally the freedom of the press. That is a task to which a sub-commission of the Human Rights Commission of the United States has been applying itself. The admission of governments as partners in reg- ulating the press, even for the avowed purpose of maintaining theifreeclom of the press, would be unwelcome. Honest reservations therefore exist among many Bri- tish journalists, towards the pro- posal for a British Press Council. as recommended by a royal coni- mission on the press last year. A somewhat similar proposal is found in a draft. law now before the French National Assembly. It would provide France with a Press Council consisting of two groups; the publishers. editors and press association managers on one side. and journalists nominat- ed by colleagues in the trade on the other, all under a presiding judge. Whether professional standards would be heightened and whether any gain would not be at the ex- pense of a loss of in J rendence. are questions that such a pro- posal raises immediately. An independent press means I press that is independent of the government. Without it, a free so- ciety can hardly be expected to exist. A Press Council. of the sort envisaged in the recent British and French proposals. would tend to bring the government into not.- ive custodianship of the con- science of n free press. And that. judging by the basic test to be applied to schemes of the kind. leads in the direction of restric- tion, not freedom. ' .fn6p i770e&'6mw ON T!!! BENCH The benches in I park ue made In ouch n my on to dissuade, one must in honesty admit, The sittor from too long a sit. Consider how the slatted pent Doom: tender flash to quick defeat. AM 33" We Molt. curved very in. Precisely hit: each binnp of spine. lif one site to the rear, it's found, The foot just full to reach the ground it one alto uip. to meet this run, Ono very soon slips slowly book. Bub this is what the builds u long i, And well indeed they planned and wrought, For otherwise incumbent: might sit on through morning, noon and night. And those who came by inter. wear- P. Have no place for their own pos- for-tor -ltldhnrd Armour in the York'rtmos :2-jzm- Eilntrlcll contractor wnmo nun nnanrrco New IINIII I. IAIIAI. IDIIAIO PIDIIUIJ - the Highway Traffic Act which i Notes By The indeterminate untonoo should never be used no on not of mercy or clemency but should be based entirely on the ci-iu'iinal's conduct. and merits and extended to him when he has earned it. and simply as his due. The in- determinate sentence hu won its way in a large number of coun- tries. and while it has been criti- cized in Canada from time to time, there is no question of its success in Ontario, proof of the value of the parole system in dealing with prison inmates.- Timmirys Press. Perhaps Toronto has it, and in a lesser way than this City. The Toronto Telegram notes that a common form of discourtesy of motorists, both male and female, is on approaching a stop street to draw up across the intersection in such a way as to completely block pedestrian traffic or to force it out into the line of cars on the through street. This not only a discourtasy but also a breach of requires cars to come to a full stop "immediately before enter- ing the nearest crosswalk."-St. &t.harlnes Standard. Like many other issues. the pensions question is obscured by the confusion between what is desirable on moral or sentimen- tal grounds and what is practi- cal on economic grounds. Too little attention has been paid to the amount of earning power which must. be withheld from the working force to provide maintenance for the pensioner As a result, many of the argu- ments being put forward are like ii man blundering around in a pitch-dnrk room and knock- ing over all the china orna- ments. It's time the Govern- ment. got down to business and switched on the light.-Calgary Herald. Take smoking. which is a filthy habit. no doubt. scattering ashes over the newly cleaned rug and of no earthly use except comfort. It is good to break that habit now and then. partly to show it who is the master, and partly be- cause smoking is so much better after a short period of not smok- ing. If. for example, the high point of any day is the first cig- arette in the morning, taken with the second cup of coffee and the sports pages of the newspaper, then wait until later before light- ing up. The hour represented by later may very with the indivi- dual tastc. sometimes being even so far away as the third cup of coffee and the financial pages. but the particular hour does not. matter. What is good is that the habit has been broken. that it no longer is holding the reins. New VJUNE 23. 1950 -A The w y ..l Nothing that Canada has M," doneifor its Indiana has caused ,0 great a stir on and off the rem. vntions an Holllywoocfs effort: to find a wife for Clark Cable in 3 new motion picture. A film com. pany has naturally sent. scouts in. to these northern wilds to dl, cover the typical North American daughter of the forest. Acting ab”. ity is unimportant, needless to say, but she must have Photogenic possibilities. Hollywood has dectg. ed she will have I fiery personal- ity in the Lupe Valez tradition and be an expert on horseback: Though these requirements sug. gest is star more typical of Holly. wood itself than of the tribes many an Indian maiden is 3.1,; she can qualify. All who are con. cerned about the cultural future of Canada's native peoples my therefore feel heartened. Hoiiv. wood is taking an interest. The postmislress in a Lourentian vii. loge, an Iroquois girl from ciiugh. nawagir, has been offered in screen test, and is so excited she can neither eat nor sleep. In the Mus. koka Lakes district, in gcnum princess has advanced her candid. acy, and guarantees herself to by fiery. At Ohsweken on the Grand River, one girl has responded Nig- erly with "I'm available,” a re. action characteristic of in...”- among the Six Nations xvi.nv,cn'. But one maiden choosily specifies that if she is to vontribuin her talent to the film colony, Hon,-- wood must find a younger actor than Mr. Gable. Words of caution have been uttered. however, most. ly by the older people. Perhaps they -indicate a native COIlS(?Tl'Eit. ism that resists even the influence of the silver screen. An OllSwck,.n mother of several daughters ex. claims impatiently, "l wish lli:'l"d select the girl and get. it. over- With." The Laurentlan postinls- tress has been ndvlsed by both tier father and her boy friend to keep cool and use her head. She her. self has serious doubts. "1 have never wanted to be a glnmor girl," the confesses. "You can't slit and hunt in Hollywood." - Ottawn Citizen. COMPLETE VISUAL EEFRAUTION and ANALYSIS G. F. I-IUTCHESON & SON Optometrists 53 Grafton sti York Times. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. A. L. Moclsonc DENTIST Dental X-Buy GLORIA BUILDING 179 Grafton St. Phone 291 Murheson & Pooh A. W. MATIIESON. L0. A. ll. PEAKE, B.A.. LLB. Bnrrlntu-n, on. collection: - blurry to noon O0 Great George Stun! Clllrlotbeliowr Palmer & Hoslom Bank of Nova sooth Ubnnbu-I OharlotuwwII..l'.l.l. MONEY ro IDAN J. A. McGuigon NOTARY, ETC. BAIBISTEB, SULICITOI OUEBIE BUILDING M. Albnn Former MONEY T0 LOAN B.A.. LLB. BALI-ISTEB, SOLICITOE. Eh C” ' ., P. E. I. Dr. W. R. Carson chiropractor Pnlmor Gnduuo OEABIJ(Yl'l'lJTOWN I0! Pl-Inna BL Phone loll J. 8. TAYl.0li optometrist lyol ournlned, gluon fit- Oorner Kent 0' Queen! Ito. Office Phone 1956-lloruc i013 Goudet & I-loszord GlI.Bl!B'r A. GAUDIT. RA. LLB. Burris and Enllolton Money in Bonn Canadian Bank of Cornmoroo Bldg. Charlottetown John P. Nicholson. LLBO IAIHSTIZB. 30LlX1u no. 150 Prince St. Ob'bIrwn. PIIONI all ..m....E.m...... MocPIroo 8: Trainer I. I. blnofllll. ..I.A.. I0 I SOMEBLED TIAINOR. EA. Ilnrrlnto ro. lion. roonnbn Bldg. III Quote: It loll In Motlrioson DAIBISTIID. l0l.lUl'l'0II. II. I. I. ILL. . PRO Chas. R. Mcouaia BA. BAIIISTIB, BOLIOITOE Nornnv. nut, Intern Tr-not ilullding OllAlll.0'l'TETOWb: Pbono "I11 Joupii R. Mucmiiiif LL.B. IABBIBTIR. souormn. I0- 15 Queen street PIIONI 7'10 Honey be boon Frederic A. Largo. K-9- IAIIIBTIB. souornn. NOTARY loyal Bani of Canada IT oinriomcown. P-I1-I , . Inoeouoo Goorgo J. round). I-0 A. Woltbon Gnudot. LL. 8. IAIIISTIB, souorwn. III Phillips nnlldlnl In or-Afton Hanoi Iona In Loon Oollootfol 4... uouoctlolll olmiomlown H. B. DOANE 8 00. ':I'"''' Obnrhrod Aoeonnlonu Al'If;6'0lI IN 0llAlloUI"I'l'l0W'N "' mt Inndblpl w. Manning, 0. A. :'e':mOllIl0W wlnnlol ll. lolro, O A. nmuu. "Mn" & -.'gI:'InI Tbmnpoon, O.A. mu "1 MoDONALD. CURBIE I O0. OIIAITIIID ACCOUNTANT! Moztrltl. Qloboo, ovum. Toronto. loin! loll. aim-bi-coll! uoouvor. lake. IIIIOII. ohrlimofown. 0-Mo Illa. cnuiouuuwn ' Tolopbono 16" . . ,