PAGE FOUR Post 0ulEcT l "Authorized as Second CIEC Mail l Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing ()0. President and Associate Editor, Inn A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward island like the dew” "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". '(?u.'Anl.oT'rl-:'l'olv.x 'l'l'lZSD.-TY. APRIL 14, iii- ""nev'faniiiwlck'rovieFsch6ie” The International Joint (Waterways) Commission has placed its approval on the plan of New Brunswick Electric Power Commission to harness the waters of the St. John River at Beechwood. Carleton County. The proposal would. if carried out,, make more electrical energy available tni industrial and commercial users as well as domestic consumers in our sister Province. The Beechwood site is one of several potential sources of power within what is termed the St. John River basin. Its devel- opment has for some time been envisoned by the Electric Power Commission. Now, with the feasibility for harnessing the wat- ers there favorably determined and approv- ed by the International .loint Commission, the provincial authority has been given the "green light" to proceed with the work nec- essary for the production of energy at this source. The estimated productive capacity of the new site at Beechwood is placed at 48,000 horsepower. Already the Power Commis- sion has preliminary plans well advanced for carrying out the project. And the Leg- islature at the past session gave authority to the Commission to make financial ar- rangements for undertaking the develop- ment when it considered this should be done. If the work begins this year, it has been estimated that power would be avail- able by 1956. With the widening develop- ment of new sources of electric energy, Pre- mier Flemming predicts that New Bruns- wick will gain definitely in industrial and commercal importance. No More Tank Towns In common parlance, whatever railway- men thought about it. ”tank town” has long been used to denote the very minimum of municipal facilities and existence. There is nothing to get off for nor anywhere to come from. Without the water tank, the tank town is nothing. Canadians, however, may have to seek a new term of oppre- brium to denote just how insignificant we consider a community to be. Tank towns will be no more, because the tanks are electrical" taken part in any war, but she has usually T H E (J U A R A N maintained strong armed forces and re- garded her neutrality as a bargaining counter in the power politics of nations, rather than as absolute doctrine to he guarded inviolate as the Swiss regard theirs. The leading advocate of Swedish isolation was the present Secretary-Gem eral's father, Mjalmar Hammarskjold, who as Prime Minister attempted to remain absolutely neutral in World War One. Today, though Sweden lives under the shadow of Russia, she has not proved sub- servient to Soviet policy. When war broke out in Korea, Sweden declared that the North Koreans were the aggressors, but confined her contributions to the U.N. forces to field ambulances. A year later, when a Swedish plane was shot down over the Baltic Sea by Russian planes, it fell to 'Dag llammarskjold, as temporary head of the Foreign Office, to send three forthright notes of protest to Russia. In dealing with the high politics of in- ternational wrangling, the new Secretary- Gcneral may be expected to be correct and ingenious, though it is unlikely that he will undertake the bold initiative that sometimes characterized his predecessors, Trygyve Lie's, period of office. His inter- ests, it is anticipated, will lie more in the iopportunities for playing a positive role through the specialized agencies which are the welfare departments of the United Nations. LDITORIAL NOTES Pan-American Day 1 t I Today is budget day in Britain. Presum- ably there are always optimists hoping for tax cuts, but with a I-136,000,000 deficit for the past year they must be few and far between. I O 0 According to reports Canada will have an army contingent at the Coronation of which we may well be proud, both as to ymembership and appearance. It should in ia gallant band, gallantly turned out. 0 O W Tomorrow the trout fishing season opens and at any time after midnight to- night enthusiastics will be able to wet a line. Less hardy types and those more in- terested in the eating qualities of their catch will not be in a hurry to be under the wire. I ID I Air Cadet Week is well under way. The Air Cadet League of Canada branches in Summerside and Charlottetown and the 'air cadet squadrons are putting on special shows. In this Province they are fortunate disappearing. The introduction of the diesel locomo- tive spelled the doom of great. numbers of these elevated reservoirs. Steam locomo- tives had an enormous thirst which re- quired closely spaced water tanks to satisfy. The diesel, however. has no such need and so the tanks are to go. It is to reduce costs. of course. that the railways are turning to diesel so that it is not to be expected that they would keep up unnecessary equipment. At the same time local authorities would do well to take note of the location of water tanks and determine their value for other than rail- way purposes. Not infrequently. although water sources are plentiful in this Prov- ince, such a tank is a valuable source of water for firefighting and other purposes. llewdi. ll. chief Functlonary The first task of the new Secretary- General of the linited Nations. Mr. Dag Hammarskjold, will be to restore the mor- ale of the Secretariat. which have been under attack by Ameri- can senators and newspapers for alleged eontaminatiorl by subversive and Com- munist influences. Mr. I-lammarskjold has given considerable thought to the relations of civil servants and governments. and he will certainly bring some order into the present hopeless confusion. But. notes the London Observer, the U.;'x'. Secretariat suf- fers from a more profound complaint, than some members of i in having generous assistance and facilities provided by the Commanding Officer, R.C. iA.F. Station Summerside. o o 0 1 The London County Council has offered jaccommodation at two of its school camps i-at Marchant's Hill, Hindhead, and Say- iers Croft, Ewhurst in the English county of Surrey-to parties of children from : overseas who wish to visit London for Cor- fonatlon week. Invitations have been sent .to the Commonwealth and Western Europ- , can countries. ! - O O O At last the explanation of soap operas ,has been revealed. Mr. A. B. Dunton, jchairman of the C.B.C. board of governors, itold a House committee that psychologists reasoned that soap operas provide a' good emotional outlet for women and that it had been suggested that there would be ,many more divorces if it werenlt for the lserials. Presumably the most miserable of women can take comfort that things are -not so bad as in her favorite soap opera. i an Georg Friedrich Handel. German musician. dic(l this date 1759. He early pro- duced operas in Hamburg, Florence. Venice, ,Rome, Naples and London. From I711 un- itll his death he made his home in Eng- iland, becoming a close friend of Pope, . h THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN. as we P513315 MINISTER ( Mmlsmz ac EDUCATION Possible Unforeseen Developments" h I I NEWSITEM: ThePremier 'su eats tad ' geog ll teach fr it 8-5 arteries of comnvercgsrather tal'lgafLLiver;q;n?1 b 'g wag mates OFFICE Magba holll help meget good marks tag -telling me the route OF the Trans. Canada Htgl-u..,;3 uwaugt, 1 Chart NE Lsows ow -11 M6 6 soc-Rxrw I am not a. weather prophet nor the son of one. Nevertheless, I ven- ture to predict. that it will rain on Wednesday, the 15th inst. My sole reason for staking this pre- diction is that as for back as I can remember it has always rain- ed (sometimes it. has snowed, too) on Opening Day. Whether this be a. boon or a bane to trout fisher- men depends, of -urse, on the point. of view. My own belief is that a. little rain is helpful. It encourages the fish to be a. bit. more cheerful and co-operative. This view, however. is by no means universally shared. Many fisher- men, more weather-wise than I. cl:im that a. bright sunny day provides the ideal condluons. The truth is that trout. fisher- men L. r in ..lciT views con- cerning such matters Just as no- ticeably as in their political c.:i- victlons. The controversy about. the effect of east. wind has gone on for centuries and shows no sign of abutment. Personally, I take my stand with the who say that Otfetoug n! 1 94.T””Ec” ii?08a! &1l1m T0 SPRING 0 Thou with dewy locks, who look- ect down Through the clear windows of the morning, turn -' Thine angel eyes upon our western isle. iwhlch in full choir hails thy ap- proach. O Springl The hills tell one another, and the listening Valleys hear; all our longing eyes are turned Up to thy bright pavilions; issue forth And let thy holy feet. visit our clime! Come oter the eastern hills. and let. our winds Kiss thy perfumed garments; let us taste .Thy mom and t t scatter thy pearls Upon our lovesick mourn: for thee. Awillinm Blake. land that NI Am A Barbarian Here . . . " By Peter Dwberg, Editor, UNESCO FEA'I'URES ficatlotn for murder, the fighting slogan for one war after another, the self-sufficient explanation for enslavement and persecution. The most brutish cnuelues were to be come lmpectable - so long as they were practised upon ”bar-ba.r- tans". No single word is better fitted to typify the complex of hos- tilities, "suspicions and fears which have divided mankind. It. is reasonable to suppose that the word resulted from an en- counter ln Ancient. Greece between two men who spoke different dia- lects of the extinct Inclo-Aryan language, of which Greek was an offshoot. Hopelessly misunder- standing each other, the language of one mm seemed to the other to consist only of meaningless syll- ables, ”balwbax-bar” (much as one man may still say that another merely speaks "bl.a-bla--bla"l. At any rate. the Greek ”barbaros" ap- pears orlgrlnnlly to have meant only "not Greek" and was applied to all those who spoke different languages. Later. it. came to mean "outlandish" ”uncivllized", "cruel" and "coarse. Pwblius Ovid, popular poet. of the early Rormlui Empire, may have been one of the first. to recognize that the contemptuous expletlve was 3 two-edged sword -- and to apply it to himself. After five years exile from his beloved Rome, in the town of Toml on the Black :Fielding, Arne, I-logarth and others. He. .composed fifteen oratorios of unique, un-i precedented splendour, including "Israel in ,iEgypt" and the "lviessiah". lie is remem- ibcred as an English composer because of see. he wrote: "I am a barbarian here, because I am understood by no one”. Millions of boys and girls spend from two to four years in the istudy of living languages. A few years later. only ll. few of them lcan read books and newspapers or carry on a reasonable conver- disloyalty. They are ,”'l . -v t f -' -' i . .- ' - 9'” Vila” S 0 -1,. the tradition of big choral wilting llillcilisamm m the languages may have world government that does not exist. No Secretary-General can fill that gap, though he may give the technical depart- ments a sense. of more precise purpose and procedure. Mr. Hanrma-rskjold (who recommendq the pronunciation ”Hammershield") has had a good deal of experience with inter- national co-operation since the war. As Sweden's representative at the original Marshall Plan meetings, he was with Sir Oliver Franksponeiof the main architects I of the Organization for European Economioo Co-operation. He also attended many meet- slllm of the Council of Europe, and occas- ionally, of the United Nations. There is no doubt that he is an ardent internatlonalist, 'has developed only in England. 0 C ll Dr. U. R. Bryner. a member of a team ,of five physicians sent by the American Medical Association to spend six weeks studying socialized medicine in Great Bri- tain, feels that the general practitioner in Britain is no longer a free, independent pro- fessional person. Hevis part of the state ma- chine. ”His lvork tends to become more superficial," Dr. Bryner told a group of doctors in St. Louis on his return, "as he is increasingly concerned with clerical and technical trivlalties. His importance in diagnosis, in treatment and in preventive medicine diminishes as these functions are increasingly taken over by specialists, and Q. neutrallst in the special Swedish way. health officials, midwives, hospital labora- stuoded. Many of them,. in fact, have had their original interest and entlfuslum destroyed by the teaching itself. It. is important to note that there have always been exception: to this - for the ex- ceptions provide 1 clue to the colu- tlon; native: of many geographi- cally small countries, the Nether- lands, for example. are very often fluent in other languages - the languages of their neighbors, and of cnuntries with which may share extensive commercial or cultural Interests. Inwrut and necessity, therefore, have something to do with ability to learn languages. I"m'l.unu.olly, in recent year: numerous advances have been made in methods of language teaching. Generally , thug methods are "enter" in that they llruervo and at-inulatlo the inter- est of the Ifludcnta and do not deadan and destroy his incentive to older method: have no often done. It has been shown that llmulzes can be learned for more For the last 140 years Sweden has nctltorleg and technical sewicesp. Quickly. more effectively and more evening breath; I ii LNotes By Waxh g ! The Department of Flghq-leg reports that. its officers hold I. shoot. once a year to keep down the population of sea lions on the BC coast. The sea. lion, ft is explained, plays havoc with netted salmon. biting chunks out of many fish and sometimes destroying yards of valuable nets. About 30 years ago, so-called experts reported that sea. lions lived on seaweed because they found seaweed in their stom- achs. whereupon A. W. Nell of Comox-Albeml told the House of Commons: "I suppose if they had found 9. horse collar inside they would have said sea lions lived on horses. I have seen sea lions gam- bollng with salmon in the ocean: one animal would playfully toss the fish in the air and another would catch it. There is no doubt. they live very largely on salmon."- Toronto Telegram. One of the mot: disturbing de- velopments in Britain recently is ,the announcement that A society W -v 4-t-l C-r-4.tk3b6.oq&-p(-:0s&0O4 The Age-Old Story , I F-Gositlo-'mO0&60sIa-tux After these things the Lord up- ,polntx-d other seventy also, and tsenl. them two and two -before his "Bax-barian", face into every city and place, This complacent, hateful, ex- whither he himself would come. pletlve was to become the ,1usti- Therefore said he unto them. The harvest truly is great, but the laborers are few: pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he would send forth laborers into his harvest. . . . . And the seventy returned ngnln with Joy, uylnzhlnrd. even the devils are subject unto us through thy name. And he slid unto them. I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven. Be- hold. I give unto you power to tread on serpents md scorplom, and over all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means hurt you. Notwlthstandlnlr in this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject iunto you: but rather rejoice, be- cause your names are written In heaven. lasttngly than had been supposed. The need to exchange informa- tion about such developments, and to evaluate them is one of the principal purpose: of Unesoola 1953 seminar "On the Oontrlbutlcoi of the Teaching of Modern Languages Towards Education for Living in a. World Community." 'I'l-ills four. week seminar will be held at Nu- ware Ellyn. in Ceylon at-artlng on August 3rd. under the direction of Professor Theodore Anderson, head of the Master of Arts in Teaching Programme, of Yale Unl- verstl.y. Ceylon was chosen in the site because language problem; in Ceylon itself, and in other coun- tries in South Asia, are putt;-,u. larly acute. has been formed to revive the rbeautlful pexunnnchjp" of the Ellzalbethnn cm. Anyone who has ever seen a photostat of 3 six- teenth century manuscript. will realize how alarming this is. The penmanshlp of that period was undoubtedly beautiful, in an or- nate sort. of way, with wavy lines and spirals and curllcues spread- ing in all directions. The only trouble with it. is that it. it prac- tically impossible to road. For ex- ample, after I careful study of I number of William Shakespeare: signatures on legal documents, even the experts can't tell whet.h- er he spelled his name Shakes- peare. shakespere, or Shakspere. -Echnonton Journal. Old Charlottetown mu r. I. ll THE ST. GEORGI "The beautiful steamer 'St. George' made her first trip to Plctou on Wednesday morning last. having on board an overflow of passengers. The directors of the Company and their families, with other principal inhabitants of Charlottetown. to the number of sixty, accompanied by in numerous Amateur Band, took passage in her. The 'St. George' left Char- lottetown at half-past nine o'clock, amidst the cheers of ii large con- course of spectators. who had as- sembled to witness her departure, and arrived at Plctou at 3, hav- ing been 5 1-2 hours from wharf to wharf, and proving herself in every respect wofthy of the high character which report gave her for comfort, superior accommoda- tion and efficiency. Her reception at Pictou was exceedingly credit- able to the llberallty and good feeling of the inhabitants. Salutes were fired from different post- tlons commanding the River, as she approached the Town, while crowds of people welcomed her with their cheer: as she passed up to her destination, the band playing the whole time with great taste and execution several ap- propriate air: . . . "The 'St. George' sailed on her second trip for Plctou about half- pallt seven o'clock this morning. After proceeding some dlltnnce. it was discovered that the Mail had of was immediately I. to the Garrison, when several guns were fired, and A signal hoisted: but by this time the Steamer was at least. two miles distant. She, however, proceeded on her way without seeming to take any notice of the firing, and wax noon outside of the heads. The Schooner tMargnret' wal im- medlntely dispatched with the mall." -Colonial Herald, Aug. 3, 1842. PERIL falling aircraft, of automobiles, In our modern life we are nanclally. obligation. Insurance Offices: moms McAVINN'-Special On the lien, on land. in the alt. peril of fire. lightning, In why we employ the system of insurance to protect us fl- We are In A partition to provide A complete lnsurnnrc gen. ice. and welcome your inquiries for advice and Information. No HYNDMAN & 00. LTD. cuancorrnown .. communion - MONTAGUE ALLISON P. McLEANmDIof.rfct Djlnagor gt sum;-ngnldg, CYRUS A. R. SHAW-Dllttlct Mllllfor at lfollllfllo. J. 0. cu-rnnnuzm-nepmm-an It Clnrlollolovvn Aunt: tluovuhout the Province. of accident. of Ilckneu. surrounded by perils, and that Since 1811 Iopruentoflve. been left behind. Intlmutlon therq ' led an east wind blows nobody any good. I cannot. recall catching a single fish worth keeping when the wind has been from that quartet-. whether the wind or my own paycholozlcal preconception has been to blame I cannot say. I um ready to admit. that the latter may have had something to do with it, for my friend Jim Skin- ner of Brld.get.own, who in his day has landed so many big trout as any two men on the Island (ac- cording to his own testimony), stoutlvy maintains that the wind has nothing whatever to say fr. the matter. Time and time again I have debated the question with him, but always my theoretical mrtmmvta have been randerecl weak and almost. pucrlle by the strength of the fact; and figures which he has been able to pro- duce of. 9. moment's notice. I O O For you! I had been under the impression that an electric ntnrm played havoc with my fishing prospects, until an old gentleman from Washington, D.C., for whose skill I learned to have the high- est. respect. lmd a.dmira.t.lon, con- vinced me that my ilnpreulon in this respect was nothing but. u delusion and a snare. "Nothing brings the trout to the surface." he used to tell me, "like the roar of thunder and the flash of liglhtning." t Even now than are times when I half revert to my former view. but out. of respect to my good Am- erican friend I don't. allow it to get; the upper hand. Now, when anyone blames the thunder and lightning for his lil fortune, I merely smile and say nothing. To most. t.i-out. fishermen the mosquito, especially -the female of the species, is public enemy No. 1. (30 where you will, the pesky little creature is abused. Not. so however. in the ease of one man with whom I used to fish some year: ago. "I Just love them." I have heard him my many times as if he were talking about a cherished pet. His theory was that. there was some sort. of working agreement between the trout be- low and the mosquitoes above. When planning a. trip he would want. to know what. the prospects were for big clouds of mosquitoes. If good, he would feel reasonably certain of getting his limit. Other- wise, he would be pessimistic about the whole thing. Mad? Of course not. At. least. no more so than the root. of us. I I C Troublesome as the mosquito is. Chas. R. Mctiluaid BA aannlsrlon-.' souorron, NOTARY. on-. llufarn Trust Building CFIABI.0T'rETOWN Phone III! Mulhoson. Peuke 8: Nicholson A. W. MATHISON. Q.O. A. H. PEAKE. B.A.. I.L.B. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LLB. Barrlllnrc, Etc. Collection - Money To Loin 1'15 Grafton Street Gaudet 8: Huszurd Ban-Inter: and Solicitors Money to Loni MucPlIu & Trainer 8. l. DIIGPIIEE. B.A-. Q.0. IL SOMEBLED TBAINOI, B.A blnlntarl. Em. J. A. Cdfl'IlI'IIIl'S. R.O. OPTOMETBIST 1!! Kent Street inst-n M. Gillis. LLB. IABIISTER. SOLICITOB. Etc. Phone 590 GILBERT A. GAUDET. B.A-. LLB Conndlul Bank of Commerce Bldg. Phone 287: (Nerf to Simpson's Annoy) ISO Richmond St. - Charlottetown 203 Qtloen Si- ilyron J. Grant. O.D. l DENTIST OPTOMETIIST Den"; x.m.y 1” Ken Strut PIIOIII I7! GLORIA nulmpmfl (0 DMICO Devon IIMAI) . I'll Gnuon Sc. . Phone APRIL 14. 1953 The Passing Scene 3', Olnerver FURTHER PISQATOBIAL REFLECTIONS it is really A fl ll , compared with ther :.Cc,,ff;l,,”9l ger" tint haunts the fishin- in Michigan and olh-2;. pgrsr Lilli)! chi lncldentall, t , 9! "9h1!”9".yB. liielil bCtlOtnu.p' favourably known West mm N! that somehow found its M,d”l”' the rich American lna,.ke,t3 .”,”0 little creature. so small ti .1” cannot be seen with lhe it-AI eye, is not satisfied to bilcmmi be on her way in the menu and the mosquito. No, mdcm "gm K935 Tight. under the skin km stays th. until she lm; sh.i7l'fi mm” ” Fwd 5iZ9d lanulv she comes out. lE3Vin:v hex; , r.l brood to grow and get iafl-111'; best they can. And it is slmmmns how quickly the youngsters W112; on to the lucrative racket. H ltleanwhile, the lucklgss .,,,,,, man feels as if a m1llio:t”;;.,i .V glmleta were boring into his 112”! and m"N- The Wily remedv sh far as I know, is for the ob,-gg, the aufok to put m5 Sear to;p1)-,.. and make for home. Then -,1 some reason. the Cill?,2el'.s ,-.,'-...;i'. to vzsate the premises alxlrlw-J; agony is on the wane. i A cuzisua thing, and 5 V9,). 1,” tunate one, is that chlggers and mosquitoes don't seem to get aim; well together. At, any rate, 211.8.- don't. usually mix socially or pel- ttlcally. Perhzp. they have a mutual agreement whereby ihp-; divide their zone: of operaimi, This would be by no means tm. Dossible. for specialists in ,.-,,.v, matters say that treaties ln Cf, insect world have been (iipi...,,,.-., practice for many cfmtul-,.g. 5,, tax, man has not managed to an in on them; that may com; M civilization odvamea. not one of the questions that um” fishermen in this part of the uq;-id have to consider at. this lime nf the year is that of ball. versus flv, To use or not to use, that is the question. Sonic of the more rma purists with respect to fly 1.5,... mg are inclined to bend n lime for the first month or so of the 59950" on the trrounds um only bait. can bring results. They (lam tall: much about it, and deep down in their heart: they are likely u feel I twinge of shame while m the act of stringing the. wnrm on the hook. If caught in said art they would try. usually uncon- vtncinslv. to laugh it. off as .1; ext-faintly uncommon occurrence. In this I can speak from personal experience. I know there are any number of fishermen who can use it fly successfully at any time of the year. even in the middle of mu. let if the law permitted. While I cannot. claim to be of thedr number I never cease to marvel at their skill and know-how. It is sheer waste of time for me to use a flv until the middle of May at the earlieot. I have tried. it many times, and no doubt I will try it again this coming Wednesday. The outcome will be the same as it bu alway been - :1 purely llegzlllve response. It. in I. very sad wnfecwm to have to make. However, stme the aurmner will provide plenty of op- portunity for me to indulge lll ex- aggerations and even ))T6l:l1lPll- tions. the least I can do is in be- gin the season with ll clear enn- science. The Coronation service at Wast- lnlnlster Abbey June 2 lasts from 11.15 n. m. to I45 p. m. PROFESSIONAL CARD? J. A. McGIIigun BAIIEISTER. S()Ll()IT()Il. l-Ztd NOTARY. Etc. Curl-lo Building M. Albun Farmer. Q.C. B.A.. Ll..B. Barrister Ind Solicitor Haul: of Commerce Hull-lml (llnrloltetown Money to Loan J. S. Taylor ()PTOMETRI5'I' Eyes Exnmlned. Glnsswa lulled Corner Kent and Queen St!- Office Phone I950-House IRE jggggglr Bell. Malhieson 8: Foster llnrrlnlern. Solicitors. No- R. B. BI'2l.l., lil- G. n. FOSTER. Lin"- lnlnl on City und Filrm Properties I30 Rlchmoml Street. Chnrlotfetown. 155' J) Palmer & Huslom A. J. HASLAM. rm. 1-1-1 Blrrllter. Etc. I. Sunk of Nova Seotln rlunnlbe Chnrlotlclmvn. l'- V7 '- -MONEY T0 Loni 2 6r.”KT'A. Miiaiaclon DENTIST Dental Xal'l'l.V I Above Charlottetown ( lln e I, l'Ilone Dr. A. L. Maclsaocg ERMA P. MuPBllI80N. (LA. Iontvlllo. Liverpool. CIIIHI Ildl. Crurlotlotowh. t H. R. DUANE & COMPANY cnaurnnn AUC(llTN'l'AN1'! III Great George st. (.:.u-lututown Phone: 1000 - I447 BANDOLPII W. MANNING. 0.A. KEVIN other office: at Halifax. Ifonctan, MCDONALD. CHINE II CD. can-rncn cocoon-rams uonmnl. cuckoo. mun 1-omuo. nun John. lherbrook . ' M Kirkland ulna, Honcho lnmilton. admontaon. ChIr.;.0'l:f;:nn, C l . . . l i 1. nleKl'1N5?'n Bl. John'I. Amherst. "5"" J New Glnuow Ind Trnra. ,