x , TllE Gllllll-OTTETOVIII fillllllllllll Morning Bulb thunder! III Ilfll 06mm um. on w Chutes s. mum Vino-President: J. B. Burnett. ILJ I. Slants-yr Lint. Cal. l). A bloom-anon. 0.8.0. “i”; “in m ' Director: l. k Blfllillx IJJ. Asuncion Emmi-s: Frank Will" "l" 14°"- l" A. Burnett. 8.0.101’); 40a Acflvs Santa) ‘The Strongest Memorll ll Wm“? Th“ the Weakest Ink.‘ WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER l0, ms Car Ferry Transportation Mr. McLun is to he congratulated on liav— ing obtained from 'l‘rzmsport llliiiisterfihevrier the definite zissiirciiicc that the Dominion Gov- rrnment is commiticrl, to expenditures of five and- oiic-lizilf lllllllllll mlullars on millmvelllents at Toriiieiiiiiic and llnrdcn, in zulditiou to the ne\v Car fgn-y {Igflfilillcd lo cost five million dollars. Mn (fhevrjm- didqioi go into details as to the terminal improvements, or state wlifitllfl‘ 01' 00f they involved extension of the Dlefs 5° 35 to shorten considerably 111l- distaiice WlllCll the fcrry would have [u train-l. Lust Klflllbfil‘. IIQTFPIY tn a (fllCSllfill by .\li". McLurc. the Mllllsl“ stated that a retired member of tlic . Ullll€d States corps of engineers had been engaged to review tlic previous YCDOFIS 011 H"? fem’ tum‘ iiial facilities. and had submitted certain recom- mendations with reference to the Tormoflflllfl terminal works. The ffflEifl¢efi5 F990" W35 at that time “still under consideration" by thtlt Department. Prcsumabl)’ a DDlICY 0f termm? imfirnvgmflllg has been adopted. The vote oi $250,000 for fills “mrk l" the Supplemfinlafl’ estimates indicates that a beginning 15 f0 be made shortly. _ _ y Not so satisfactory was the MIHISICFS at‘ flmde toward; Mr, McLurEs contention that the Government is responsible for the pro- hibitive truck rates on the Borden ferryifilnd that this service should be treated as a national . ,, . highway. Mr. Chevrier “passed the buck in this matter to the Board of Transport CW1‘ missioners, ignoring altogether our right t0 the frsedom of inter-provincial trade. We quot- ed recently in these columns the Conservative stand on this question, as enunciated at the Bncken meeting in Charlottetown last May- namgly, that the increase in cost of _moving farm products and other essential freight, _by truck or rail, over the normal cost of moving such farm products and freight for the 000W- nlcm; mileage on land, should, as a. matter 0f national policy, be borne by the Dominion. 'I‘h¢ Minister and his cabinet POIICHEUCS can scarcely plead ignorance to our grievance ih this connection. or contend that it has anY political motive. The point was made very strongly by Pfgmigr ]ones at the opening of the Dominion-Provincial Conference in August. when he quoted Clause 28 of the Confedera- lion Treaty as stating specifically that ferries between Provinces are a charge on the Parlia- ment of Canada. Equitable treatment. ‘Fromm’ Jones argued, meant carrying‘ trucks free of charge, or almost so” on the (Jovernment-oivned ferry; “ferries should be a national lnzllwflY undoi- the terms upon which we entered Con- federation." _ _ . Our transportation problem _w1_ll. never be satisfactorily solved until this policy 15 adopted- In the circumstances we cannot for a moment concede ihai thc_Board of Transport Comm“- sioriers has any jurisdiction in the matter. As for the attitude of the railway author- ities, it was bluntly summetbup in a_ letter Writ" ten some years ago by a Yicc-Presidciit of the C. N. R. to the then Premier of this Province. , . u refusing to lower automobile ferry rates. “We, as a railroad.” the Vice-President wrote, con- not afford to otierlook the fact that m rralifv ruin-y nulonzobilc we handle 0n the fWW I5 "1 competition shill: our own rail route?‘ 1f anything were needed to show why we are so_ insistent on having this vital matter taken our of bureaucratic hands, the above quotation should suffice. _The more one studies it, the more it \VIll be realized why we have been so persistently checkmatcd and double-crossed. Minister Of Provincial Relations‘? Premiers attending the recent Dominion- Provincial Conference are said to have discus- sed llic idea of the Dominion Government ap- pointing a minister responsible for provincial relations —- one minister t0 whom the Prov- iliccg could Q0 on all Dominion-Provincial mat- tors, The Prciivcrs liked the idca so well that it may be brought up zit the next tflffoflfll 0f lhfl Dominion-Provincial confcrcnce m_ January- Thc suggestion, says the WmmW-‘f Tflbum- is worthy at least of close study. Relations be- lwegii the Dominion and provinces are ‘becom- ing increasingly complex and far-reaching in their cf fcct on the day-to-day well-being of the average Cilllddldll. The present DINO“! I} ‘hi? this complexity will endure and grow in the monih; ahead. The financial arrangements I ‘alone which are the chief topic of discussion at omimon-Provincial meetings are tre- current mcmlousy involved. q Bu: more than this, the number of matters which the lcclcral authorities and the prov- llices coinpleineiifione another is on the ‘in- gem. For example, labor and agriculture. Marion and social welfare arc essentially the ‘rn of the provinces. Does that mean that no Dlacc for the Federal Departments of lIlIIT,‘ Labor and Health and Welfare? sllylhis is not the case. Tl Federal rm have had: notable, cnntri lions to Csuadianirand“ will un- .: do ‘so. But under Can- ‘ British Norm America era-operation with the the finsl. N". work ofthe various Federal deplrtzneiits it concerns the provinces is certainly indicated. iNotes By Way The idea of s responsible minister of Domin- ion-Provincial relations seem to be everybodyj b- ' — a scare of affairs not ooiiduéivb to speedy and thoroug action. Perhaps it would be s good idea to ms e them the concern of l single, responsible person. However, finding a Minister of Provincial Affairs who will be acceptable to all the Prov- inces may be no easy task. Tax On Fishermen Finance Minister Ilsley has indicated that he is giving serious consideration to changes in the income sax law affecting fishermen. This is not altruism on the Government's part. The present arrangements for collecting income tax from fishermen are said to be responsible, in part at least, for the delay in officially termin- ating war-time powers. Fishermen are not wage workers, but self- employcd workers living by the sale of their product. \‘Vartime emergency powers were used to make their purchase and sale contracts sub- ject to tax deduction at the source. So far as is known, i: is the only instance in an English- speaking country in which sales are treated as income and made subject to tax deduction at the source. Iii order to continue the present irictliod of collecting the tax from fishermen, wartime powers must be projected inlo peace- time arrangements, or alternatively, new pro- cedures must be devised. The present arrange- ment takes toll of fis/hcrmcn’s incomes in years of exceptional glut, and make no allowance for the years in which the men toil much and catch little. - It is gratifying to know that Mr. Ilsley is considering a proposal to levy itICOme tax on average earnings. Perhaps this cannot be done without extending the same right to sfarmers and others whose incomes are subject to wide fluctuations. In any case, there would seem to be no reasonable objection to such an. obvi- ously fair and equitable arrangement. —EDITORIAI. NOTES- Stock exchange gamblers have once more become acrash -—— not a very welcome Santa Claus. ~ is u is a The two Prince County hy-elections are not occasioning much stir, the candidates confin- ing their efforts to personal canvas. I i I I Our Federal representatives will now be able ‘to return home for Christmas after a most strenuous session at Ottawa. For the first time for many years, the voice of this Province was heard effectively in bEtlIJIOLISCS of Parliament. Readers are reminded to mail their cards and parcels early to insure delivery by Christ- mas, and to lighten the load on the post office officials. l i 1 U Neither a. brewery nor a tannery would be much of an asset here unless we had protec- tion. Outside competitors would simply sit on our door step preventing export and demanding import below our cost of production. Investors in our flour mill of‘ a few years ago know this to their cost. 3 . - n s a Joseph Mallord William Turner, R. A., died this date 1851; the son of a barber, he also followed that trade for five years when he was a student at the Royal Academy; first he was a landscape painter in water colours and then turned to oils producing over 20o pictures; among his more famous are: Kilchurn Castle, Loch Awe, The Tenth Plague of Egypt, The Wreck of the Minotaur, Calais Pier, The Grand Canal Venice, 'Dido and Eneas, The Golden Bough, Modern Italy, The Fall of Carthage, The Building of Carthage; his magnificent ser- ies of oil paintings and drawings, known as the Turner collection, were left to die national gal- leries, and are considered the most exalted tro- phies of British Art. ' n- a- v- u Mr. Gardiner announces the agricultural policy of Canada as, substantially, one of meat production ahead of the production of wheat, says The L¢Iter Review. We believe that this is wrong; that, in a world which is desperate- ly short of food of all sorts, it is pdrticularly important to produce as much food as possible, and wheat growing is unquestionably far ahead of meat production forthis purpose. Then, the cold fact is that our acute problem is how to sell food at all. Our customers are poor. Surc- ly, in such circumstances, the best policy is to try to furnish them with the sort of goods which they can afford, rather than the sort of goods which they cannot. Government trade in wheat, which is being taken for granted by most Canadians, without protest, brings one extremely grave danger which has not had much mention. It is a cold fact that, it the various times when the British Govoriimcnt, the Co-Operative Wholesale Society in Britain, and British millers were working together, to break i the price of Canadian wheat by refusing to buy Canadian wheat as long as any other could be obtained, the safeguard for Canada was that Canadian flour, of the highest quality, was available for British bakers. Without this, it is highly probable that the British ability to push Canadian wheat prices down would have been even greater than was the case. Obviously, the British Government, committed to n pro- gramme of advanced nationalism, does not look with favour on any plan which dots not give Britain the milling ofsll the flour which Britain consumes, and the present policy, which gives the British Government a monopoly on imports of whmit from Canada, with flit lslnd usin- snce of the Canadian Government, is very likely to end in s condition In, which Brilfln buys no flour from Canada. -In such circum- stances, the one method by. which" m high quil- Ity o! Canadian wlieu could In and to m» ‘fill - ls ‘Ilmbs-Joum 1-‘ 0h, VII. even u u the turn of the century, its-Is some- lhelr flngernllll, n but the; did so hullln: wstnuu. ~KItchener Record. a AL l. -V_--¢- PUBLIC . ‘FORUM n g pc-oceas used tn shoe manu- facture. The woodshed tanning u was also. discovered a Ions e ago .but, unfortunately, dls- olrded all too miIcklyw-St. 1110m- The olty of New Weshnhllhr l1 making plans to wlpe out Its en- tlre debt of something over $5,- 000,000 by 1965. In each of the next 11 years It will PM’ 0335.500 Into the slnklng fund and smaller sum! during the succeeding three years. Then,- unless It accumulates more debt In the meantime, It wlll be troop-Vancouver Province. Altar more than u month, It Is reported that 40,000 dock workers In Brltsln will return to work. They will return as beaten men with wages lost and unrecoverable. And they were beaten under a friendly government, which im- ported soldlers to unload tho sh! s. The Aftermath of such u str kc ‘ be pleasant-St. Catharine: Standard, The Ottawa Joumnl discusses the use or the misuse of the word “re1ease" as a noun. A letter was business Institution the other day In which the word "dlarylze" was used. And that Is one of the most. horrid lmprovlsatlons yet to‘ fame out, far worse, even, than he use of the word “contact” as s verb-St. Catharlnes Standard. Ihvln rad for the thlrd or fourth tme that Goerlng has been cured of drug-taking while a pris- oner of war, I should like to know who on earth cares what Goeiing has been cured of, or what advan- tage there ls to humanlty In cur- Ing him of anything. Ins-lei... of that waste of space, we mlghl be fold when he is going to stand trial. The drug question may naI arise very seriously alter that,- From London Spectator. Latest news on the upgrade- there's to be a special soup ration for chimney sweeps. Nobody zrumbles about that-the sweeter the sweep, no doubt, the swifter and sweeter the sweep of our chlmneys. Latest news on the downgrade-we're shocked at the queues for shoes that tlnd no shoes to choose at the queucfs end. In between we're going to gel. tinned puddings 0n points - not Christmas ones-just marma- lade, mixed fruit, treocle, date, ginger, etc. Four polntd per pound at’ pudding. And we've surmount- ed th salt. shortage, -London Dally ail. A mohlla klln that can turn out 10,000 bricks a day on the acluul building site is the lfllPSl ""'ir*o attracting the attention of Gov- ernment housing ezzpcics. VL ..\ feature of the equipment Is an entirely new process of electronic heating and drylrig which ls ex- pected to revolutlonl e the brlck- making industry. I entors esti- mate the cost of a mobile plant capable of turning out 10.000 brlcks a day at a "few thousand dollars." The machine ltrrir- un- treated clay Into glazed brick within a few seconds. ‘ihc cost of the bricks is said to equal that. of ordinary bricks in the pro-war period, They can be made in any shape, slze or color- Therc Is too great a tendency for men In public and semi-public positions to vvrap their work and themselves in a cloak of mystery from which they emerge only when their plans are fully com- pletcd and ready to be sold to the public to the accompaniment of propaganda. That Is how Fascists dld business. The public wants to see those plans at birth, wants to watch them struggling through debate and opposition to maturity. The press, as Its representative, has the right to be present. when- ever they are discussed, should be asked to withhold only such In- formation as would damage a cause or a reputation. Thur ls a tiger of democmcyn-Calgary Her- a . Every now sud ngnln kangaroos In Australia become a pest to farmers because of their fence- jumplng and crop-destroying hub- Its, Then the farmers seek per- mlsslon to liquidate some of them In organized kangaroo hunts, One farmer in Armldule, New South Wales, would have needed to be clairvoyant to curry out his kang- aroo hunt according to the terms o! th permit, Member of Parlia- ment. . H. Drummond complain- ed recently. The permit stated that the farmer could destroy not more than 10 kangaroos-provided none were females. Bald M2‘. Drum- mond: “When one catches s kim- Bnroo, put salt. on Its tall and ex- amines It for its biological fun- ctions, It Is m easy matter-but only In rare cases can one deter- mlne at 100 or 200 yards Whether It ls male or IemaIeP-Jrom Ans- tnllan News Bulletin, mtygtbmwrwvucim ‘INDOQI-‘nlnmslfllflflslooum- Aspuku-Iiliudrtvuismsnoonnoul muémisvisio sntsejt s market iii thoi U. ‘K. use»... Por- " v hops, In their dcvot to Socipllstigdaslliods ~ l trsdf. the Csmklian en Pools may llli» ncls ldespbut they will ‘éefisinly-‘psviur It,‘ It}, W?‘ ‘flu toll’! . o, discovered the veietablo tan- recelved In this office from a blg G TY common-mum‘ or! PEACE 0N HAITI Slrr-Anln Christmas Is approaching and we will be mernorsti the birth of "Prince of Peace," Jesus Christ our Saviour, who II 1h; only One that can bring peace to n wsrtnrn‘ world. Thousands of our boys and girls are coming homo and W111 "I10? In the ChrIstmas message "Goad tidings of great joy"- comlng home to disappointment. It Is not easy to shake off harrow- Ing experiences which many of them have seen and gone through u living death, which I: modern warfare. . In the 24th Psalm we rend thew majestic words: “Lin: up heads O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ya everlasting doors, and the King of Glory shall come In. Who Is this King of Glory? Th; Lmd strong and mighty; the 10rd mighty In battle. Lllt u vour heads, O ye gates; even II t when: up; Ye everlasting doors; and tho King of Glory shall come In. Who is Ihls Kin: of Glory}? The Lord of Hosts; He Is the King of o .. In this troubled world today w- lItt our eyes upward to Elm who alts an the throne. ' ’I‘he Man of Bethlehem; The Man of Calvary; the Klng of Glory and we reiterate toletlior m, Psalmist question "Who ls nil; King of Glory?" II one would know who God Is and understand some In: of HI: "fork. he must study t e four gos- pels. For thereln la Jesus Christ, God's only begotten Bon revealed as Irnmanual, "Gad wlth us." ‘Jesus was born to die. He turn- ed aslde from tha Ivory palaces, not that Ie might become an ex- ample for us to follow, but to dle as the slnless substitute for 510MB. He was born as Saviour, and on the Cross of Calvary the Reconversion Task ' (Exchnnze) , Canadian industry will chalk down 1945 as the year of recon- verslon headaches. As the ybar- end those headaches were by ‘no means over but there was at least hope In the minds of both employ- ers and employees that the sharp- est Impact had passed. Admittedly there was a difficult winter ahead. Industry as a whole went through most of I945 geared to Intensive war production, able to glve only limited attentlon to the problems that would be Intvl- table when the war ended. That end_came more suddenly than industrialists, In common with others, had antlclpated, It came, too, well toward the end of the year, at a time when employ- ment normally drops of! and that added a further complication. The lapse between VE-Dsy, Mav 3. and vJ-Dsy. Aug. 15 provided‘ a llmlted cushion In the reconver- slon of industry to a pegcetlmg basis. Direct war employmcm, had touched Its peak of 860.000 In Ben- lomher. 1943. g?- Jan. l. 104s, It was down to 5,00. after VE-Day the trend turned more sharply downward and from VJ-Day on the line became almost vertical untll It was estimated unofficially, then were tower than 1001000 In war jobs at this end of November. Augmenting this flow-of workers on to the labor were the veterans being -" , ed from the forces, more than 400.000 at. the end of November, Meantime, production engineers We" mflkihl load time In switch- Ing plants from war. to peacetime products: but there were Incvl- wbls layoff; While equipment was changed and retooling took place. Consumer goods - new cooking utensils, refrigerators and scores ot small‘ gadgets-begun coming war market '8MART rxciusws GIFT ssrs. unn- Wslnl m“ I AflBldIOlfl-Wlllll Chish- I lawns mum nuns. suuuucfwdnns anus. msm-r. m arms- M“ mums-aria» musing? up“ the hupplneal and joy u set forth ' You?‘ veered away from its high Idq- s. U Tho Universalily__ y Him Ii o tht’ m w ole sppurcnm on s cull-i ovu- 1000 yous no we III-ll‘! celebrate. Tho story of KI: advent has lost nothing of Its power or sweet- ‘ness as the centuries roll on, until today It Is the most unlverull.“ celebrated event In all history... This you It ll clothed with un- us crave ' "‘ because the general bankruptcy of all other ways of controlling the sctlons of man hnl become zlarlngly appar- ent. We now know that wars of aggression and In lgnomlny and‘ i At Christmas l . . r A ., z, * o ~ I Selby‘ t. ATIIIIII "his" - (It I- flhvgévguly "HWY" an “£31m?! r What Is u be y l, ~ . ‘Christmas! m ovor mo w,,',,.,“,,,f,y . l ~ = t , i. ' ': ogillrylsn and dllhstl “M. m," 3,: ‘m; _ - : llllllllrfilll DI Dnl of 9801118 than,“ o; ‘guano’, w why’ q‘. - , - v _ ‘ n ~- . scattered all ovu uie good-w "mon and women cvn-yw i" i, Ii: hi! ma" and , Ill If!!!“ - " . . figurative wvilfiugggnfinfvggg Ilvahln freedom from mi- ‘and thntumivlv irlirwnllwh w“ ‘ i_: ofn tau to make BI: teachings for a suffcrln: world, - atomic born chaos, and that wars f defense, ~no mutter Iiow hlgh s motive, bring In their train only human , death, disease and utter uc affair tIvs Christiana, In the world." It now that those prlnctplcg a ml)’ Entry Into publlc iscoi-d. 1m HI: way-peace on earth through 1"‘ goodwill, tolerandfl, unsllflshness and love for one’: fellow man-Is the only way to lusting peace. Whothe: It be between nations or between conflicting Interests wltn- In s nation. Mankind everywhere ls paying lip-service to this con- cept, but stops short of Its con- Iete acceptance, especlally when t leads to the surrender of some selfish Interest ‘ or ‘advantage, It In I rather strange and bu!- flIng circumstance that In this so- called Christian country, and In- but by lore; of necesslty t‘ the no bomb which was described b hold a fretful realm In_ awe." That 1| Indeed, our res] ho Onpo ma} n thls curt-um lesson the hundreds it!“ 3,20% m formula for a new charter of lib.- o know, deep down In our own souls, that there Is no ‘other lolli- lion and that It Is the only‘ way. We know It In that, or sooner or Inter snnlhéhtlon by way of the Benjunln Frmklln once ‘ssldf "m who shall Introduce Into pub- I the rlncl lel of prlml- ll revolution- ppsus llnd not through the genlus o! any OPIEJILAYI Y ‘Ihnnylon nearly s hundred years no when, casting his prophetic eye Into the future. he dsscrlbed the “nntlonr alrygisvles Brappllnr In the In!!! blue, and concluded that, amldst the resulttniz chaos of the future, ‘the common ...-nss of molt would The splrltlof Christmas, transform- ed Into and dialled to tho ordln. sl~ Professional Bards 4 . “ ‘ _ . There Tallinn other source of hops . _w. Chartered Accountant 1M Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel 589 P0 Box M ._._____________ P "lrlflllbfi. hdikfi“ imnusrsn. no. deed, within the Immediate circle f! Ir f Th t will " llllk of N o! snob own w» ' . n sub- ary: loll inc ~ ‘lbomb iiiuiii? Jlllrlvl"? guild” stanttai number during the Ohrlst- mare, the bull for a unlvsml 0 L05): mu season will pay tribute to Him comlty of nations, and the ‘ ' "'5'" u P. 0. Bog l; W00‘? blflhkwfi ggflbflli. W: Will tlon upon which all nations may , ill-smell: trdoltvhe zctllmll8ho fall": bum! a lam“: Infernal icohomy‘ J A s8 A '31]: hast bleen is‘: doiwnnathroiirih ' ' 1 u p e can ur es. anc s con ll his‘ day was keenly aware of this "MAR! ‘Tc- strange anomaly and accounted for It Ln then words: “Nothing doth so much keep men out of the church, and drlve men out. of the church, as breach of unity." The awesome experience of the st six years, and the disappoint- time when the forces of tyranny were iriumphant and Brltaln stood alone. We welcomed and plously subscribed to the fIne Christian principles enunciated In that his- toric documeni, but no sooner Iiud the tide o! battle changed and It became evldent that Hitler and nls hordes could not win, than we “consist: insunincr Then followed conference a e conference—Tehei-an, Cairo, Mos- cow, Yalta- at each one of which the shade of the fine Christi-m splrlt of the Atlantic Charter grew ever more and more dlm and eth- ereal, untll the San Francisco Con- _ terence, where a brave attempt was made to revive It, There It. had.some body and semblance of reality In the wording of the reduction Ilnes. W Ile all this was going on tho llnes on employment graphs were reflecting a sudden change, Th! employment Ilne went. down wIiIIo the line showing the number unemployed rose abruptly, In mid- uutumn the two lines crossed and the flrst time since the will mixes of the war Canada had m"? 96°01 looklnl for jobs than It had unt led jobs. Those with their finger on the pulse of busi- ness and employment conditions Ieved It would be spring belora reconverslon troubles would end and Canada would be In the full IWIIII o! pro-war production. QUICKIES O R O no Agencies Ltd. ' Phone 5405-54; v-n o >1 cr ‘P. I By Ken Reynolds $101!] suspicions of. n . wife-I ulllkiillli ‘Tin _ a Wmli 0| with a Gusrllsn, nit Ad!" t l n», Auto, szgcylnwiaang, sip. Poo ,q1q;- lmqwnjca l~@=Lmo»is, -l SERIIIGE " W. K. ROGER$ issiiiic- I5QRll§romo<findkhn§ nnrusnn. BOLICIfQI ovum aumnuvo moon II. Large m" °t the ‘W715 W" ""95 "W" ill; chaos and discord of these first ., ~ sail!!!‘- ‘Ta lm- few months of the stwar period EV" ‘W39 "l" “Y. Q05’! m"- Iu forcing mankind” to a ‘frantld l nmblamun" “Dunn” “ {fife}; glelgllgnwggldlléfiigotfvthgf; slofrecah is}; sozne 115F118 ‘at settling Plano loll I. 0. In ll l“sfm°“tl°"- W: 131W kiiiiavl/a that" tliennstdynil-c ‘ cawuoflnowu- P- ‘ l- 1‘ m“ savlmlrf Who entered bomb means annihilation To es- i“l° °‘"' W°T1d We!‘ 1900 Year! BBO. cape that lnevltuble fate ‘mankind u.” w.‘ your Personal Bavlour? He came Is grudgingly prepared to suri-en- I M E N n, kfklhlkl)\'(kr|\r'*'>'~'k*\7> to save from sin. Christ died for der some of his closely guards-d V i sh‘- but selllsh advantages I ‘ii v M Q Be fl I "m I'm". 3h‘- elm. A study of recent internatlonol l n 6y p d 5 MA! EATON conferences rPscloses some trends b, W- l GENTLE! l. 0, a" ‘"13 . that would be amusln were the ‘r ' canyon“ M, so mm The Agmm mg i z s. A. nun-run. n c, ter was released to the world a‘. a Lhuile$ R. McQuaid n. s. uni-am, solicitor. . Naforv. m. , culi""nmmn"w"‘f than 171l- woo-cacao“ Ila. noiur a co. Chartered Accountants ll Grlltun Strut ' Chsrlomown Phlmo “l0 r Box M1 llulolph W. Mlnnlns. 0. A Public» Stenogmipher» . "sosnsasvr ITS! [Ill-IN GIDDIN I ‘spirals’- Cvllnlnlhl Apt: No. l. “impuliwnm-Iaaafi-MAAHVV llomll and Company Chanel-M Accountants ll. F. lllllllllllll Indium ‘Pr-s lambs Ollltlfllktlwn -..~.I-..~v>~.ae.~w.~u\ MAP-RA * . ' "iifrxmiiirn aussiiiirmrn I. 8. Taylor OPTOMETRIST 1”!“ ‘gag? ill» ‘ ' Qwflflllllbl “fina- ‘hi!!!