PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN 'AutboriIed AA Second Clue Mull Post office Department, 0tt.awA. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. inn A Burnett. Walker. Preoidcziit and Associate Ediwr. Auoeilto Editor. Funk CIBCU LATION "Coven Prince Edward island like the dew" "lhc Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink". i.'uAiu.u'r'rE'rowN. IVIONDAL-()OC.'l".-20,Ml952.-O Farm Ownclghiir That farm ownership is a goal which is not always easy to achieve is indicated in a report in The Economic .Annaiist publish- ed by the Federal Department of Agricul- ture. Difficulties seem to be increasing for the prospective owner with only moderate -means. Land prices are high in this coun- try at present and in order to derive full advantage from the USC of modern machin- ery and equipment, he must buy a farm larger than would have been necessary some fifteen or twenty years ago. Thus the prospective purchaser of today requires a larger amount of capital than the pur- chaser cf one or two decades ago if he is to have a farm business of a scale and type that will give him reasonable financial re- turns. On the other hand, farm income has witnessed an almost continuous increase during the last ten or twelve years. Gov- ernment farm loan agencies make credit available to farm purchasers at reasonable interest rates on long-term repayment plans. Social legislation such as old age pensions and family allowances also provide 3. form of assistance to prospective farm owners. A survey of the general pattern of ac- cession to farm ownership in Quebec indi- cates that it does not differ very much from that in other parts of Eastern Can- ada. The ways young people become farm owners have not changed very much dur- ing the past fifty years, although an in- creasing number have borrowed from gov- ernment sources. The highest proportion of young people remain and work on their parents' farm for several years as unpaid workers and when the time comes for them to make the choice of a career several fac- tors must be considered. , Amongst these factors, one may men- tlon: the number of children in the fam- ily, particularly the number of sons, their individual preferences for a given occupa- tlon, the financial resources of the parents and of the prospective farm owner, and the availability of suitable farms in the vicin-lhas issued another official history in two lty. For most young farmers, the acquir-ivolumes, "The Naval Service of Canada." lng of a farm is not easy. The process ofplt traces the development of the Royal ownership is a family affair which rcquircsicanadian Navy from earliest times when a great deal of co-operation, hard work, thriftiness and self denial from both par- ents and children. i The Late Mr. Spencer The late Mr. F. G. Spencer's name was a household word in this city and Province, ue to his long association with the motion picture industry here and throughout the Maritimes, and to the many personal con- tacts he had made among our citizens. One of the most enterprising and successful men in his business, he was also extremely friendly, and enjoyed meeting people and discussing local affairs on his frequent vis- its to Charlottetown and other centres. He prided himself on the high standing enjoy-. ed by the Spencer theatres and took a keen personal interest in the welfare of every member of his staff In his mvn home city of Saint John he was prominent. munity activities, in church work and hum- , production would make possible some rc- anitarian projects, contributing generouslyilduction in taxes. His opinion, however, not only of his wealth but of his time and i that he would be lucky to break even by organizing ability as well. Perhaps the trait which most. distinguish- in the Government's surplus to f5i!9(),967,000 ed Mr. Spencer was his unfailing courtesy. from 3ii336,668,000 in September. He had the self-effacing qualities of a true gentleman, and while he held strong opin- ions on moral and political issues he was always tolerant of the views of others. He had travelled extensively, had read and studied widely, and had come in contact with nearly all the outstanding personalities of his day and generation.'llis own person- ality was mellowed by these experiences, which extended well over half a century and included a distinguished career as a concert impresarlo i before the motion pictures-in which he pioneered so successfully. - ' Mr. iie3EBI.'s'uey) iiole The United Nations General Assembly in New York voted for the man rather I than the country, says the Ottawa Citizen, when it, elected Hon. L. B. Pearson, Can- AdA's Minister for External fairs, to the U. N. presidency. The on didate himself bu-Always been the paramount, factor in auctions: thoulll in practice the of- ' ' A gene to a. representative 7 7 it umber.-countries. Butlfthc ' - , em,-Puma. can- ada was honored also. As chairman of l member countries. Issues of war and peace, i T lems of great delicacy. The president will 1 I r i i l 4 the assembly, Mr. Pearson cannot escape acting for this country as well as for the U. N. . The very large majority given to Mr. Pearson is evidence of his popularity and of the confidence placed in him by the U. N.'s of human rights, and of colonialism will confront the assembly this year with prob- be required to demonstrate gifts of diplo- macy and tact of the highest order if he is to cope with them. "Mr. Pearson,” adds the Citizen, ”is virtually a founding father of the U. N., and perhaps as well as any man alive he understands its function as an instrument of conciliation. Behind the scenes, he can be relied upon to employ the great. prestige of his office to good effect, for he has al- ways stood for the adjustment of conflict- ing viewpoints, and has shown great skill in achieving conciliation. On questions of basic principle he has been uncompromising, but on tactical matters he has been flexible and empiric. Above all, he has tended to re- sist the View that the U. N. is an instru- ment for collective security, rather than a means of bringing disputing parties into agreement. I-lis qualities have earned him deep respect in the U. N. They should stand him in good stead now, and should help, as far as the ability of one man can, to advance the welfare of the U. N." our Christmas Tree Trade Last year, according to the current is-. sue of Foreign Trade, 10,981,000 Christmas trees were cut down in the Maritimes, Que- bec, Ontario and British Columbia forests. Of Uie total, some 7,400,000 went duty- free to the American market. Represent.- ing about 25 per cent of all the trees sold across the border, the Canadian exports were valued at 352,300,000. This year, sales of Canadian trees in the United States are expected to bring about 03,500,000. The suggestion is made that Canadian exporters might expand their business abroad by following the lead of a large Minnesota company. This firm treats small swamp spruce with a special green, silver or white preservative and sets them in metal bases with sealed-in synthetic tree sap, for shipment as far away as Central and South America and the Far East. It is pleasant to think that trees from Cana- dian forests should brighten homes in far- away countries at Christmas. i EDIIORIAL NUI ES The Department of National Defence Canadian ships were part of the Royal Navy, through five wars, to the present day. I O I Training in first aid may mean the diff- erence between 'being able to save a life and having to stand helplessly by in time of emergency. The classes being started in Charlottetown by the St. John's Ambul- ance Corps offer a real opportunity for service. 0 Sir Christopher Wren, English archi- tect, was born this date 1632. He taught astronomy and not until he was thirty did he go seriously into architecture. 'The list of his buildings reads like a guide to famous English and particularly London buildings. His plan, however, for laying out London after the Great Fire was never adopted. 0 6 av Finance Minister Abbott expressed a in com- i hope some time ago that increased national advent of - March 31 seems substantiated by the drop There was commendable imagination shown in making Canada's first contribu- tion to Ceylon under the Colombo plan fishing vessels and a refrigeration plant to stimulate the Ceylonese fisheries. It will have the effect of increasing the food sup- ply of that country notably and at the same time enable it to become more rather than less self sufficient. I O A report on a practical flushing bar for use on tractors hauling mowers in game bird country has been received by Depart- ment of Lands and Forests officials. The flushing bar is used by farmers to frighten nesting game from their nests during the haying season. It has been observed to save literally hundreds of nesting pheas- ants and other birds. I I With no less than 4,275 Canadian workers crossing into Maine to help with the potato crop it is scarcely anylwonder that the number coming over to the Island has fallen off this year. It is one of the happier worries, however, to have labour in get ilut way? We get fnlth contacting than who hnve molt THF. "GUARDIAN. CHABLQTTETOWN Right You Are, Sonnyi Children in .1 .-I France no longer nl 1.1 ' ,ling isolated rural areas of. have to travel to the city . to visit a museum-reports UNESCO-it 1': now comes to them in the form of A ti'aVei- 3 "bus-museum" seyvlce. If "a travelling could c'-ould V museum in Charlottetown or Summersidejf either (oreacln) had a museum. f beset here, it start the PUBLIC FORUM -A. This column in open to the discunion by correspondents of questions of interest. The Guardian does not necessar- ily endorse the opinion of correspondents. ALBERTA OIL AND WHEAT Sir,-Your editorial "Alberta Oil Boom", made very pleasant. read- ing. It, is clear that Albertans are, in the vernacular. ”going to town" on a sea of black gold-and, ob- viously, there will be plenty of what. our Labor friends term "fringe benefits" accruing, over the years, to the general welfare of the Cana- dian people from coast to coast? Meanwhile, I was almost. as pleased to read the following keen summation by one of the prairie farm editors, which indicates that our Western brethren are the kind of folk who know how to handle the heady new wine of oil-gas wealth, and have their feet firmly anchor- ed in the top six inches of. the good earth: "The oil boom has been making headlines for five years on the Prairies. Right now the wells of Alberta are spewing forth the black gold at the rate of 200,000 barrels E. day. That's 5500.- 000 a day of brand new wealth tumbling into the tills of the oil companies. In a year it. adds up almost 5200.000,000. Even in these days of inflated dollars. nobody sneers at. that string of digits. But let's get. it into perspective. This year the prairies are harvesting the biggest crop ever grown. It will run, for all grains, well be- yond 1,250,000,000 bushels, of which 630 million will be wheat, and high- rade wheat at that. This grain onanza. will bring almost 52 bil- Pion, or l0 times as much as all the oil wells are capable of pro- ducing. Albcrta alone will get more for its non-wheat coarse lzrain crop than will be realized from oil, with perhaps 550 million left ovciz", (James H. Gray. "King Wheat. Still Rules”, in Saturday Night). I am, Sir, el.r.. "'GOLD 01-" THE ,wHi:A'r" UNIIAPPINESS Sir.-I have been reading wnat 'tObserver" says in his diagnosis of the sickness of the world Ill this present age.. He describes the symptoms in a way that indicates that he is a very keen observer. We sometimes go through the sermons that. appear in The Guard- ian by two talcntcd clcrgymcn. They also diagnose and call the sickness "sin". They are quite at home on the subject, for they themselves have felt. its effects. The four young men who broke ujall at. Toronto had their group picture in the paper as they peer- ed through prison bars. We, at least. some of us, felt. a throb of pity for them. We felt; like saying -are they any worse than others who have built. their house of life on a sand bank, to have it. come to earth in utter ruin? They matte foolish mistakes as one might make in A 10 acre bush by losing the sense of direction. ' one symptom of "lostness” is dislike for belhg alone. or finding one's ownself poor company. or wishing for I clatter of noise, while eating in A real.aurAnt.- This is surely sickness of llho soul. ,We do not run in the mornings to buy A meal downtown. or to the theatre. but. we game for A few moments on God's handiwork, such an A low fog creeping over the fields. the sun breaking through the clouds. And the unsurpassed beauty of the changing leaf. Asking pardon for A personal reference, this writer As A child was Afraid of the creator of the starry heavens. And not knowing that the Divine Being was A God of love. was foolish enough to Vlllh thut. this wonderful display -had come by chance. We need peuco in the world. And it must coun- through the influence of more and more people who have omc AcquAlnted with God, A d Ave bopplneu in spite of ii hulth. material loss or old Age. cg Am. Sir. etc. rather short supply. 4 ARCH. MIMCENZIE. Kensinglon. P. E. I. decrease efficiency and affect health. Too little attention has -been given to this in the past. lvolt. of 135 A. D.. '1. Notes Bx Have you noticed that nothing else seems to stimulate A long can- versation like staging it in the cen.re spot of a. crowded side- walk downtown?-(Stratford Bea- con-Herald.) Once more there in talk in Ger- many of building ZEppei.lnS-iighl.- er-than-air flying machines. There was a time, in and after World War I, when the diriglble was held to be the chlefrhope of aerial navigation. but. a series of catas- trophes ended all that.-(Ottawa Journal.) The growth of local government has been one of the healthiest de- velopments in the recent history of Newfoundland politics, and has shown I. tendency to mushroom during the past four years. In 1948 there were 15'town councils. To- day there are 34. The population living in incorporated towns in 1948 was 67,000. Today it has risen to 113.000. including St... John's, nearly half the population of the province is living in municipal areas.-(St. John's Evening Tele- gram.) Mr. J. C. Radcliffe, chief of the industrial hygiene section, medi- cal department. Ford Motor Com- pany of Canada, Limited, warns of the effects of excessive noise on workers. Itican endanger hearing, when friction grinds on a machine, oil is applied to save it from dam- age. Excessive noise, especially if it be rasping and irritating, can- not but have a deleterious effect on the mental and physical well- heing of R. worker long subjected to its grind.-(Windsor Star.) Two twin copper sheets, rolled scrollwlse, and npparcntly con- taining statutcs and laws of the Essencs. were unearthed in a cave in Judea by Father Roland dc Vaux, director of the Dominion Archaeological School. Coins dat- ing from the second Jewish Re- also were dis- covered with the copper scrolls. The Esscnrs were a sect. of pre- Christlan Jews who lived an ascet- is life, and were distinguished by such characteristics as the coin- munlty of property, the practice of charity. and the pursuit of virtue. They date from about the, Maccabacan n-gc.-- (War Cry.) There in surprise at the great number of accidents. But the contrary is really surprising when one notices youngsters without any experience driving (only be- cause ii. is their father's car) crazy races on our boulevards. It is recognized that one-third of the accidents--38 per cent to be exact -are caused by drivers who are less than 25 years old. That. is the reason that calls for n surtax by the insurance companies that write' the risks. If driving tests became obligatory at least half of these young drivers would disap- pear from the wheels and that would be A good thing for safety on the road.-(Le Solell, Quebec.) Perhaps there II no more lovely time of year to Appreclute birds than on A long golden fall After- noo'n, when the old master painter has tipped his palnlpota of yel- low. orange ochre and scarlet; over the hills to fill every valley and coulee with vivid color. Then. gathering in little flocks befoe leaving for their long trip to the southern state: 'And Mexico, -the mountain bluebird: flip and tum- ble from A fencepoat. or the top- most bunch of A windswept. buck. As though they believed nummer could never end. And to the for-' -Hi"-hie Way I. we would like to know, but pre- sumably the engineers have it Ill many such ventures that will be tongues correctly). Nevertheless we sometimes wonder if modern teaching. with all its novelties, does not; neglect the essential, the indispensable. , We also wonder whether an exaggerated import.- ance is not. awarded to sports, in certain quarters At. least. In any case, we are inclined to believe that, following the example of ad- ults. students think too much about amusements and not enough about series things, in their case, their studies. - (Montreal Mann.) The next big industry for West- ern Canada, it. seems, will be the potash fertilizer plant: at Unity, Saskatchewan. A contract has al- ready been let to sink a. shaft, seven feet: by 12 feet, more than two-thirds of A mile into the earth, for the extraction of the potash mineral. Half way down the shaft will go through a. high-pressure natural gas zone. How it will be sealed off during the excavation worked out. This is but. one of undertaken in the West in the next; few years. Big things are ahead. What; more fortunate coun- try than Canada?-(Calgary Al- bertan.) ..... out I Here's some gm... news for those who want. to give up smoking, but who have failed to do so by any of the orthodox systenui. Itls news of a new method of breaking the tyrant yoke of the noxious weed, which bears the personal guaran- tee of the owner of I chain of grocery stores in Britain who died a month ago. All you have to do is decide that you won't. smoke again until you have 5:20.000 in the bank. of course it. may occur to you that if you give up smok- ing you don't. need 9220.000. But apart. from that, the system does seem to pay reasonable dividends; the man who invented it. left three-quarters of A million.- (Brandon Sun.) J ?0ez3' am . AUTUMN SECRET when I behold the secret That. lurks in every leaf That it can so tra-nsflgurc' An elemental grief. 1 think: for what great triumph Do maples march arrayed With spectacle of yellow To herald ll parade? with such emblazoned glory As trees in Autumn hold. May I. too, move toward Death with Such pageantry of gold! -Louis Ginsberg in Canadian Poetry Magazine. 0&0 Old Charlottetown -- And r. I. I. 3 ...j. BAl(EBS' PETITION "A memorial of the Baker: of this Town, praying for A re- llnqullhment of the duty on im- poi-led flour, amounting to eight shillings and alxpencc per barrel. wu . laid before the Executive Council At its inn sitting. And in prayer refund; the Board unim- l g as A reason for so doing lthut t e Revenue LAW of the Inlnnd does not empower the Executive Government- to suspend in oper- rtumta wayfurer who mix; gllm their Antics, the breath-catchng wonder of An Azure fluh Anlnlt the flunin; yellow of An Autumn- touched poplar grave. is A dot in to the eye. A bulm to the Ion.- (Reglm nude:-Post.) We foam to the pointing one took of drawing conclusion: And ubovc All-of prucribln: remedies (for the failure of senior student allot-1'." -The Islander, Nov. 19, 1847. ruin 8111'! nt mum land-(OP)-Arthur mu .mm'ny soon. 11- m-on ,brot.bcn, recently met for am. I 4 mm to An old folkr home. Arthur no killed by ha been in Charlottetown ii. week beauty of the Island to the tourist and in alld-in sum- mer nnd fall, should be added with emphasis In winter, which months of snow, fireside o' stormy nights”. summer, however," the writer em- m OCTOBER go, . ,9 Of P.E.I. Ini l "Since Prince Edward Island joined the Dominion, it has taken a fresh start. in the march of im- provement, and evidences of this are everywhere seen in its increas- ing commerce, the growing value of the fisheries, the many new buildings going up in Charlotte- town and the environs, and the new railroad. measuring 167 miles in length, completed in the year 1875. It is run on a gauge so nar- row that. only three persons can sit in the cars abreast. the seats being for one and for two persons alternately on each side of the car. The rolling stock was made on the Island, and .15 very credit- able. The car windows are not washed quite often enough, how- ever." 0 Shipbuilding was then in A very thriving condition. "In the vari- ous ship-yards of Mount. Stewart. Summerslde and Souris I countedt sixteen vessels go g up, from 75 to 1200 tons in s , and I heard of others building at Fortune Buy and elsewhere at. the same time." The new tonnage built. for export for the fiscal year of 1874-75 amounted to 3632.440 in value. The total value of the exports during the same period was 31,940,901, of which lumber was 5105,-107. agri- cultural products 787,070, live stock 394,070. and fisheries (chiefly in the hands of two enterprising Americans, Messrs. Churchill and Hall) 3308.037. Of the last item the United states took 5272.620, and the total exports to the States of the products of the Island for the year reached 5365352. For the same period the total value of the imports of the Island amounted to 81,973,222, the balance of trade showing an increased demand for foreign goods. 0 0 O The Island's tourist prospects are not lost sight. of. "One who or two ll not satisfied only with the evidences of insular prosperity furnished at. the Government of- fices by the courteous and effic- ient. servants of Her Majesty, of by the pleasant: glimpses of farm And river and sea gained from window and roof. These very charming bits of nature only serve to tempt the visitor to sally forth, and, in carriage or boat or by rail, to view for himself the exquisite and the proofs offered on every hand of its thriving condition. as well as the manifold attrac ons it. offers begins with November and lasts until May sometimes, Prince Ed- ward Island offers speciallinduce- ments to those who enjoy six and unlimited opportunities for sitting by the Details are given of the labori- ous and hazardous crossings by lcebout. to and from the mainland during the winter months. "In hasises, "the weather is moder- ate and equitable-more equitable than is found on the ad eni; continent...Fogs. which are com- mon in the Gulf and on the At- lantic coast of Nova Scotla, are very rare and hay fever, that. dis- tressing complaint. avoidable only by change of locality, is unknown on this lovely isle." O O 0 Reference is made to the enjoy- able trips afforded by steamers plying up the East and West Riv- ers; also to the settlement of Mic- mac Indians at Rocky Point and to the larger one at. Lennox Is- land, "which is reserved for them. and there they hold their annual U.S. Visitor's lmpressio (Continued from I'kiday'I ..? The ,l870's From an Article in Harper's Magazine. September, 1811. Guardian) ually decreasing. and does not now exceed three hundred and live They arc in charge of I. special" commissioner." The writer appears to have an. joyed particularly an excursion made to Rustlco from Charlotte. town, going by "rail to Hunter River Station and thence by car. riage "over farming country rp. sembllng some of the most beauu. fult portions of old England", hy way of Wheatley River to Rusuco iBay. "The children were playing 1., the road. but when they saw ma carriage approaching they ranggd themselves in 3 row, and as W, passed the girls ccurtesled low,gnq the lads bowed in the most. :9. spectful manner." 0 I By the French settlement and Roman Catholic church At. Rustlco they jogged Along to the end or the peninsula near the mouth of the bay. "The last part was over a kelp-strewn beach which is cov- ered at high tide. There, on 3 blufT. We found the Rusticc I-louse. admirably situated on the edge or the spruce woods. Facing the bar, like A breakwater, is I. send pit tufted with long salt grass. Op. posit: the hotel is the entrance into the bay; the flashing roller; of the St. Lawrence Gulf break on a bar across the mouth, and bg. tween the bar and the shore is I narrow shallow channel. Through this, twice daily during the sea- son, the little fishing schooners of the port pass out to pursue thn shore mackerel and herring mm. erles. It. is a. very pretty sight. to watch A fleet. of these white-called fishermen dodging in and out about the bar... "Outside of the spit. on the sandy beach, the surf bathing is unusually fine, and bathing-houses are also furnished to visitors, who enjoy, in Addition. zood boating facilitlest and, of course, capital sport. Isl afforded for whose who love the rod and the line. The mackerel fishing outside is excit- ing and novel, while the Hunter and Wheatley Rivers in the im- mediate vicinity offer various at- tractions to fishermen, especially in sea-trout. fishing." All the riyers of the Island. the writer notes, were re-stocked in 1876, and the Dominion fishing laws enforced. "Lobster: are very abundant, and large canning fac- tories have been establlthed At Alberton and Souris. Duck, snipe, teal, plover, quell. and other game are sufficiently abundant to minim hunting attractive, and dogs train- ed for sport. are common. Wolves and deer. formerly plenty. are now all but extinct, but I. few beaver and otter are still found, and in the tangled depths of the primeval forests which still exist here and there, black bears are quite numerous, hibernating un- disturbed in winter, and creeping forth sometimes in summer to try 3 fat. slice out of a tender young heifer." The flavour and lusclouaneu of Island oysters is also noted. "Be- deque oysters from Richmond Bay are already famous. and are ship- ped in large quantities to Great. Britain and other parts of the Dominion." (To be concluded) iTlie Age-Old Story '- i Blessed are tho pure in heart: fkl;-G 03i'G0'm:(E0xm00-O0 cy- EVCKEO-i 1' n -- 1 v:G.i:-.-.5. to pow-wows. Their number in grad- for they shall see God. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Palmer & Hosiom A. J. HASLAM. B.A.. LLB. Barrister, Etc. Bank of Nova Sculls Chamber: Charlottetown. P. E I. MONEY 'I'0 LOAN Bell. Murhieson & Foster Barristers, Solicitors. Etc. B. ll. BELL, Q.C. G. B. FOSTER. LLB. Loam on City and Farm t Properties 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P.E.I. Chas. R. Mc9ucid B .A. BAERISTEII, SOLICITOII, NOTARY. me. Eutem Trust nuumhg CHAIILOTTIJTOWN Phone I'll! Goudot & Huszord GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A.. Burrilteh ind solicitor: . Money to Loan Canadian Bunk of F In Bldg. Dr. W. R. Carson M. Albon Former. QC. B.A.. l.L.B. Barrister and Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Loan A. Wulfllell Gander? LLB. nnnmsrnn. SOLICITOB. FN- Phl lip: Jullcllng ill rnflon Street liloney to Loan Cnllvfgfl Frederic A. Large. 9-C- Bnrrlsier. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Cunmla Bulldlnr Chlrlotletown. P. E. I- bonne on City and Farm Properties J. S:7c.ylcr OPTORIETBIST Eyes Examined. Glance mm. Corner Kent and Queen St!- Offlco Phone 1055-Houu Byron J. Grant. 0-D- 0l'TOI'IETlllST in Kent. Street Phone 87' toppolltc Revere Hotel) Allison M. Gillis. LLB. GLORIA BUILDING cmnornacron . ,,., mm" Gmmm BABBIBTEB. soucn-on. E CHAIILDTTETOWN no Richmond St. - ohuiunetown Phone 1012 201 Prince 5!. mun. mo Dr. A. L. Moclsooc J. A. c.,.m,h.,,' mo, DENTIST OPTOMETBIST nenm x-my 183 Kent Street I; Phone 2871 I'll Grnfjon 8!. Phone 29! H. R. DOANE us Great acorn, Phones I000 - RANDOLPH W. MANNING com offices at mum. it lcnhllle. Liverpool. N O.A. to write And spell-their mother a truck-AI he went. 0oinAll,hlc,Ap'- ptmclcn form. . . o"AIllhll.nd I1”: I! V g c Ildra clnlrlolutowh. (Next. to SimpIon'c Agency) t. COMPANY CIIAIITIIED ACCOUNTANT! st. Cbulctletown 3 ll" - Box 241 ' cum r. met-Hanson. CA- onqum. st. John's; Amhcnt. Dartmouth- ew clutch And '1':-uro. -..i- McDONAI.D. CURRII 8: CO. omirmmm Aoconnnurs Ifcuhoal. Quebec. othwh. Toronto. jun! cnelou lIA'niiiton.. nton..chulatuto bn. shcrln-coke. Vnncouvcfl, I win. . ” fciepbom 135'