THE GUARDIAN Baud oi-In week-day Icnlu It in P:-incl an-ad. rlmtllibwn. Pill. U the noninu Company LId.. in; st. W.. Tomato. Henlrul own. as ,UnIvI:-dty Tower lieu. "COVIII Prhn IIIIM IIIII I-Ila In Dev" ldltor. Prank Waller General Manager. III A. lui-nu lemon Canadian Dally Newsplper Piihllaheru Asaoriallnn Membrv nf lhr Clnadlln Freu Member Audit Burllu of Circnlatinill lunch lsffxru II Stimmerlide. Montague Ind Aiherlnn Altbortud II Second Clan Mail by the Pool Office Department. Ottawa. (Irrlu Glurluileu-wn. Summerndo u5.llI per II- . Kllrwllue in P. F L 59.00. Other Prounizea Ind l'. 5. ..ml per annum --nil. .c-;....'e.f.&.ei.I.o.-D. .....;'. than the weakest Ink." SATIIRDAY.-AIIGI I. was Our Naval Visitors Most welcome visitors at this time are the officers and men of H.M.C.S. Buckingham, and the l..'.S.S. Cross and i7.S.S. Jolinnic llulchins. it is uniisual to have the Red Ensign anti the Stars and Stripes flying at the same time from naval craft in Char- lottetown, but nothing could be more appi'fipt'lf-HP, niore in keeping with our ('enleiini;,iI ob.sei'vaiices, or more gratifying to our citizens. The frienrlly ties between us and our Amerivaii nciglibors have long been an exatiiple to the world. Prince I-lilwarri Island has played its part in cementing these ties, and it has bccn said, probably with truth, that tlit-re are more islanders, by birth or immediate dcsceiit, resident in the New England States alone than in our own Province. For I century we have visited back and forth across the international boundary line with the utmost freedom, and in recent years our naval and military forces have (might in the same cause in two world wars. and in hitter Korean bat- tles. Today we take for granted this unity of aim and purpose h every- thing touching upon world peace, or upon defense of our own lands and free democratic institutions. But it is really one of the most remarkable chapters bi history. We are writing new pages of it every diiy. It is I privilege to be able to illustrate these pages with the pictiires In todayls Guardian, symbolic of all that has gone before, and of what is yet to come. A Big Weekend This is I full year of centennial celebrations for Charlottetown, but the present weekend is of partic- ular interest. This afternoon the gqiiailc sports Vliil be held at Victoria Park. with the band of the l7th Raving Regiment in attendance. and the visiting Shrine-rs from Halifax will hold a ceremonial parade with their own band In colourful oriental costume. Harness racing at the Driving Park will hold the spotlight in the evening, On Suiiriny thc (lnnlcniiiai Naval and (i3l'i'l.K'tll1 flliiirrh Parade to St. Dunstan's Psasiiica and Trinity Church will he I most impressive one. The bands of the Royal (lana- dian ("orps of Signals, and the 17th Recce Regiment. will participate. In the evening the R.C.(l.S. Band, rec- ognized as one of the fincst In (an- ada, will giyc a concert at thc Mem- orial Finlrt. ' Monrl:i3': r-ivir hnlitlay will com- memorate particularly Charlotte- tnwn's first civic election. which took place on Aiiiziist 7. lR5.'i. following the p)ls's'lllE of tiic Act of incorpor- ation by the l.egisIature. After a joint Scrvicc ("tubs luncheon at The Cl'lal'lOlif'lfllKll, lhc (lentcnnial Mam- moth Float l';ii":irIe will get undcr. way, This spiictm-iiiar event will eclipse anything of its kind seen here. and will bc a filling prelude to the ('ciitcniii;iI which will be held on Monday and Tuesday evenings at the Coliseum. The Centennial Committee, the Art Society and numerous oi'gani7,atinns. mercantile firms and individuals have cooperated in the multitudinous preparations involved in these act- ivities. In which the past will come to life in many arrr-sting presentations. It is to he hniicrl that all our citizens and visitors will see and enjoy thesc spectacles to the full. Gaelic Bard anci Scholar The Edinburgh Scotsman reports the death of I grand old Gaelic scholar who won fame as the writer t of the words of "The Road to the Isles". and also for his work in pre- serving, interpreting and populariz- lng the old songs, legends and tunes i of Gaelic folk-lore. He was the Rev. Kenneth Macteod, D.D., I "native of the Idol!!! K 388. where his father OIII Ichoolmaster. Before his ; VII2 1917." Dr. VB known for his gift as "seanchaldh" or Gaelic 'storyteller. Before his re- tirement from the ministry in 1947 he was for many years an adjudi- cator at provincial and national Gaelic Mods. He was the collector, the translator, and, in I discreet nicasiire. even the coiiiposer of "The Songs of thc Ilcliridcs" that were ar- ranged and piiblishcd by Mrs. Ken- neriy-l-"raser in Edinburgh. For this and other work he did for the pre- servation of Gaelic literature, the degree of Dot-tor of Divinity was con- ferred on him by St, Andrews Uni- versity.in I9.'l2. The St-otsinaii recalls how "The Road to the lslcs”. which was sung by Scottish soldiers in two wars, came to be written. At the begin- ning of the First World War Dr. Slat-It-oil tthcii plain Mr. Macleodl was assistiiiit lllllill.&'lPli at (7rianIa- rlch. Every other week he came to Ediiihurgh to consult with Mrs. Ken- nedy-Frascr and they met many isli--l'olk illlfl liii.zIiIaiidci's on their way to Fr.'iiii-e. All the werp singing "It's I Long Way to 'fippci'-.iry." At one meeting a man from Barra ii as playing on the 4lll?illItll' the tune known as the "Burning Saiitls of Egypt". Mrs. Keiiiiedy-l"i'asei' liked the tune and suggvsteii to Mr. Iilat-leod that he shoulrl coiiiimse words for it more SllllHlIlP for the llighlanri boys than the Tipperary song. Mr. Macleod returned to ('riaiilarich and compos- ed the ever-popiilai' words "The Road to the Isles" while walking along the shores of Loch Etive. Di: Mar-lend, says The Scotsman, was I man of great modesty and charm. lwioved by those who knew him as pastor, folklorist. or as I friend. So unobtrusive was he that few, even of those to whom his name was a household word, knew him by sight. Naval Barracks Site The acliuiremenl of the Paoli watcirfront property as I new Naval Barracks site indicates quite defin- itely that the Naval Division will not be abandoned here. The new site is an ideal one for the purpose, and as t'cdc,i'aI airliitevls are already en- gaged in drafting plans for the build- ing, it should not be too long before construction is started after the site has been clczircd next year. Mr. Neil Miitlicson, Til.P., has been particular- ly active in furthering the negotia- tions with the Dominion Govern- llistoric Pageant - iiienl. and he has had every cooper- ation from hi: (Ionservative colleague Nlr. Angus .Vlacl.ean, as well as from the Provincial Government. It. is by pulling together in this way that con- crcte results are achieved. EDITORIAL NOTES Two scientists writing in the British Science pci'i0dl(:al "Nature" say illlll thcy have computed the ago of the earth as five 'billion years. They did it by "simply" measuring the ”aniouiit of radioactive argon l(l" preseiit in a inctcorite. O U I Iilissiiiii iistroiiomcrs are con- gratiilating themselves on the'discov- cry of a ncw comet, which they say the Anicricans have been looking for for years. Evcn so, it would seem -that the United States Iias a sligh' edge in the scientific market, will: an artificial moon almost ready for service. I000 The first i-liaplains in the United Statcs Army must have been versa- tile fellows. in addition to "sup- pirssiiig the horrid sin of swe'aring (their chief duty) they were expect cd, among other things, "to strength co the officcrs' hands by public an-' private exlioitiition to strict obedi "ncc, to discourage descrtions by ' recommending the service, to en- iroiirage eniistments, to recommend clciiitliness as an aid in virtue and to rcprehcnd the ncglect of it." C O O Communist. Party Secretary Khrushchev has been practising all sorts of little discourtesies lately in his attempts to show all concerned that he, and not Premier Bulganin, is the real ruler of the Soviet Union. Some of these discourtesies, indeed, have been in the form of outright rudeness, as, for example, when he pushed the Premier to one side as the two were boarding I plane. He may do this sort of thing once too often for his own good; for there k mounting evidence that the Anny, which can be expected to favour Dulganin Iver Khrushchev, is II- growlng influence in public affairs. soidiers I More Firmly Anchored Now iplhe Ca-useway And The Pioneers By Cliiirleii Bruce Canadian Press Staff Ry f'.HARl.ES llRl'CE Canadian ,PreIii staff Writer , McNAlR'S COVE. NS. iCPl-- The pipes will akirl and the flags fly along this share next Saturday. And it may be that a ghost or two will be on hand, among the umwds on either side, to see the road they've built Icross the old Passage de Frunaac. The names are strange” Well. yes. It's nearly I hundred years since they renamed this cove for - the third Earl of Mulgrave. Three lcenluriesi since Nicholas Denys, Sieur de Fronsac. raised his forts at Chedabucta and St. Peter's and set his name for a little while on the strip of sea they call the Strait of (Iansn. For this reason. this sweep of time. the ghosts---if ghosts there he-must come from many genera- tionn. Indians in lireechi-lniits. firsl. Traders in buckskin. Daiidies In plumed hat. velvet and swordbelt. Desperadoes in sub and eyepatcli. marching the sky for I skull-and ssbonea flag. And fugitives. tags of exile. , It was these, the exiles and the fugitives. who gave the country life. A hundred years and more of transient trade and piracy and war had touched and nassed. or almost passed, before their com- ing. Two hundred, since, of settle- ment. have seen I homeland born and brought to mellow strength. This is the work of the exiles and their children. Of men and women cast up by the backwash of war. when the frontier was a mile Refugees in the from the beach and the nation of 1 pa Canada less than I gleam in the eye of time. The stories of adventure tragedy and chance that go with I - been I counter in the war games and I pioneer settlement are rarely writ- . ten down. Taken for granted and half-forgotten. they come to misty life in another generation-fading flags of hearsay and memory. But some persist. And one at least that concerns the Strait of Caniin em- bodies the spirll and blood and bone that went into the beginnings of this land. THE FLORIDA LOYALISTS In the fall of 1784 I British trans- hort sailed into the southern reaches of the strait, between the indented coast of lie Madame and the red bluff of Cape Argos, Ind sot Ieliore on the mainland side I group of ragged passengers. These. the passengers. were Ill families from among the H.000 men, women and children, driven from Georgia and the Carolinas by re- volution, who had re-established I themselves briefly in Florida-and i seen their new land traded from under them to the crown of Spain. Now, on the eve of winter, they were set down on I narrow beach under steeply rising bluffs along the Strait of Conan. They lel! no written word to rec- ord the effect of northern front on blood thinned by southern sun. It was all they could do to keep Illve. But something of what they felt has come down In hearsay. As spring Ipproeched the leaf was gone. Twenty miles and more to Ie Inilheaiit, Icrou the flaring mouth of Cbedebucto bey. was CInIo- Ilready I summer fialilng station for two centuries, but only then beginning solid settlement. hventy miles to the north. when the strait mters the lower reaches off he Gulf of st. Lawrence, was the III- veu where Capt. Frenclii Boucher Iad wlntered II I150. Ind which still been tile name - Ilene loucher. Twenty miles to the went, around the head of Cliedebuclo her. were the uncbater settlers from the Cbedlbucm Gum. front the 71st niuunii tun Terletoifl Lesion III! the :2 Rifles. fighting the rigors of their kit ohm ll eastern Non Imus I I I land I As far as the Florida refugees were concerned, these settlements. I separated by snowbound woods and windy water, might just as well have been in Timbuctoo. But at the doorsteps of their drafty huts the strait was filling tip with ice. Across its entrance on Ile Ma- dame, three or four miles away at its nearest point, were the little French settlements fanning out from Arichat. There, after the fall of Louisbiirg, the British had left some families undisturbed. There, I after the expulsion of 1755. return- ing Acadians had drifted. l Toward this island, across I grinding causeway of Ice, I group of volunteers from the Florida ref- ugees worked their way. We do not know specifically who made the crossing: we have only the names of the All families from whom they came . . . Carter . . . iHunt . . Lyle . . . Reeves . . . Mnrtiii . . . We do not know who. amoiig the French. gave them help All we have are the names of families who lived there . . . Boudreau . . . Benoit . . . Girrior . . . 'Thei'lnuIl . . . Forgeron . . . Foiigere. The Florida settlers crossed the ice and returned with food. Pola- loes, tradition has it. Bags and bags of potatoes. SPBEADING SETTLEMENTS A simple story. and one of many. A story of grit and stubbornness and human charity-and having - in It the b i T of net” '”y. For the grit and stubbornness and charity were concerned with com- munity aurvlval. With the founding . of I settlement. not I military st. For too years Nova Scntia has of Europe. Now at last it mattered little whether I man had come to birth under St. George's cross or the Bourbon lilies. Now at last I man cniild plant life. plnvit in family, if he could meet the harsh demands of sea and weather. So, gradually, the wilderness on the mainland side began to fill. Scots and En glish loyalists branched out from the groups around the head of Chedabiicto bay. and the settlements came into being along the 20 miles of strait shore: Sand Point. Middle Melfnrd, Steep Creek, Pirate Harbor. Har- rials Cove (later Mi-Nair's and still later Mulgravel and so on up to Havre Boucher. THE HIGIILANDEIIJ Meanwhile across the sea the Scottish lalrds, touched with lex- tile fever. had begun to see more worth in sheep than people; and from. the 1790: on the displaced - changed. the soul and daughters , paid Highlanders made Cape Breton theirs. MacQuIrrie's, Mecbonalda, MIcLennIns Ind MIcLeInI began to settle Ship Harbor. Plaster Cove. and the shore up to Creignisti- opposite Havre Boucher It the northern outlet of the strait--Ind the hills and river valleys in the Island's interior. Port Hutlngs. where the cause- wey endl on the Cape Breton side, was still Plaster Cove while this lmmlgretion was It its height. ship barber-Iow Port Hewkesbury. was the main port of entry. Tvpt. cal of scenes there wII arrival in July. 181, of the ship st. Lawrence from the Inner Hebrides. Her no passengers ranged from lnfIiit-Iii- Irma Mary MI-Lean to I5-yeerold Rory Mclseac. Except f I Camp bell and I couple of Ilgtelslie, evernone of then lied the Inc 3 I ? E z 5' E ,, PUBLIC FORUM I rm: IIII-I II I'll no is da: by eenespoildentu of 1: lion: of interest. The CIIIIIIII lo I III Iooenarily oIl.IrII Ila I-Illlll If ierr-xn-man-In . RED CROSS CAMPAIGN Sir.--I would like to express though the columns of your paper on behalf of the Red Cl'0SS.gV8I'y sincere and deep IPPI'9Cl8ll0" '- over the results of the 1955 Red , Cross campaign. For the first- time in some years we have reach- ed and exceeded our campaign ob- icclive. . This fine result could not have been accomplished without the sincere cooperation and IupP0l'l of all who associated themselves with this worthy work. The Red Cross Headquarters Staff. the County and City and Rural Chair- men. of Committees. the can- vnsaers. the press and radio sta- tions, the Women's Institutes, the Catholic Women's Leagues. and other organized groups. the clarity. and lastly the individual contribut- ors all over the Province are .all deserving of very warm thanks and commendation for this splendid effort. I am sure that in the light of this achievement. all who sincerely X t ” ih8I'flS9lvcn with -the campaign. sometimes in the face of considerable difficulty and in- conveniences, will feel a deep glow of satisfaction that the Red Cross objective has been reached this year. As Provincial Campaign chair-4 man. I commend this great effort in which so many have been II- ' ' ” " of the value and influence of Red Cosa in the lives of all our people. I would strongly urge the same sincere and wide- spread support. in future appeals that has characterized the 1955 effort. I am, Sir. etc. WALTER R. SHAW Provincial Chairman 1955 Red "Cross 4'' ' Committee the generations, as economic tides moved on. To New England, to the California gold rush. to the Klondike and the opening of the prairies, and to two world wars. THE WANDEIIEIIS The iilnrieii Ire legion. Of Iona who went south and north and west and east from this region of homes around the strait. Of the Glou- cestermen, for instance. who used to take on bait and supplies at Hawkeabury, and men to man their dories. Men like Big Duncan Ind Wild Archie Ind John the Weuel. A local history remarks that men like these. forced to Accompany the vessels to MIsaIcliuutta to be off. "contributed I vast amount of terror and revenue to the lively town of Gloucester." They sold Wild Archie paid !l0.00o into Gloucestei-'s coffers In the ' course of his career. For the High- lander. I gentle man It home, sometimes reverts to the cleymore and plaids-on-the-heather w h I ll : 5 5-5 sf . solution into the patient. ' and in other parts of the body. -Medically. I ' Speaking I1 HenIIaI'N. IIIIIIII. K. D. Recurrent attacks of vomiting Ire camper -val: common Imnni Infants and children. While there Ire I variety of causes for such ' attacks. cyclical vomiting. or vomiting in regular cycles, usually can be traced to nervous or dietetic causes. . l -. If your youngster is what you might call the nervous type. the excitement of the beginning of school. an approaching party. or I long awaited outing, might pre- cipitate an attack. Again. car sick- ness may be thccause. ' in many instances of this sort, I think you'll find a family lilstow of migraines or allergies. if your youngster complain: of I disturb- ance of his vision or 'a severe headache. migraine might be the trouble. Cyclical vomiting is most often found in children over the age of three. Usually. I short period of nausea, listlessness and abdom- inal discomfo I will signal the start of an attack. When the vomiting begins, it is apt to be difficult to control for two days or more. Your child will become tired and weak and might complain of pain in the upper abdomen. EXPERT CARE He will need expert medical It-' tention. Meanwhile. put him to bed in I darkened room. If his bowels have not moved for 24 hours, your physician prob- ably will suggeat an enema. He may administer sedatives, alaa. Try giving your ailing young- Iier sips of sweetened orange juice. Begin with 1 dram and dou- ble the dose "each half hour I: long as he retains the fluid. Or maybe your doctor will suggest I mixture of saline and glucose in- stead of the orange juice. You might find thdt your young- Iler will retain dry toast and honey better than the liquid. How- ever. if dehydration can't be over- : come by administration of fluids I through the mouth. your doctor probably will inject I specific I There's one bright outlook to I this dismal ordeal of cyclical comiting. The child usually out- grows his susceptibility pretty much by the time he reaches puberty. QUESTION AND ANSWER V. V. I.: Can you please en- lighten me on-glandular fever? Answer: Glandular fever Is I condition In which there are en- larged lymph glands, in the neck and an increase In the white blood cells in the blood, particularly the one: known as lymphocytes. The condition is probably due to an infection and generally dis- appears within ten days to two weeks. The. .nfT” I ETERNITY As if the so: should part And show I further sea- Aud that I further. and the threc But I presumption be 0! periods of seas Unviaited of shares- Themselves the verge of seas to F Eternity is these. -Emily Dickinson. The Age Old Story Consider what say: and the Lou! give thee understanding In all things. Girrior . Lyle . . . McDonald . . . Reeves . . . Macbennan . . . Fougere . . . And hundreds more They came and did their work and died. and left their mmes on the land, and children. And so. while we may people the imagination with the ghosts of the fur trade. and ghost: of the warriors, the settlers need no ghoul to represent them. They are manta! by their flesh and The causeway II I thing of rock and iron, I link in mIn'a ' striving to beat the barriers of space. But in this land and all around it there is that other thing. Another dimension. The . newal of the flesh, Ind of the - arrange the wedding present: and Page 4 The Guards: NOTES BY THE WAY" Jute lull lilo lull It: 'H fonts: that people in: be happy iii their work, these three things Ire needed: They must. be fit for it: they must not do too much of ii: and they must have I sense of success in lt." -stretford Bea- can-Herald. Ottawa prohlifod the Canadian Pacific Railway from calling its new scenic dome transcontinental train the Royal Canadian. How- ever, the cables have been car- rying reporta of the bit made It the Brussels fashion show by I Canadian fur piece. This piece is advertised to the world as the "koyalcanedian Onyx Fox Boa." As the Canadian fur exhibit is under the aponso ably of the Fed-, eral Department of Agriculture. it. can only be assumed that the state department experts had not got around to passing their rui- ing on the use of "royal" over lo the agriculture department. - Vancouve Herald. Honeymooners naturally seek I degree of seclusion. Except "in most unusual cases, they don't wish to be accompanied by in- lIws or to have their idyllic hap- piness interfered wit by friends or strangers. Yet tere perhaps can be too much seclusion even on a honeymoon. This is illustrated by I neatly worded advertisement in an English newspaper of I honeymoon cottage. It is described as a "perfect dream; secluded. accessible." The advertiser recog- nized even honeymooners don't want to be completely sealed off from aociety. Honeymoons can be too long, just. as they can be too short. Even I loved one can be- come somewhat tedious. Most lioiieymooners are quite content to return home, the young wife to fix up the home; the young hus- band to get back to his job and the earning of his income. He al- ready has learned two can't live gs cheaply as one! -Windsor Ir. Infant mortality rates Ihow I steady drop in the last so-odd years in countries for which ate- tistica are available. In some countries. the Yearbook reports t.lie infant mortality rate in 1953 was less than one third of the 1920-2 average. In Sweden, for example. 61 infants out of 1.000 died. in their first year of life in the period 1920-24: in 1058 the rate had dropped to 18.7. In Mex- ico the rate dropped from more than 200 to less than 100. In- creasing life expectancy is shown in other tables giving previously unpublished material for I num- ber of countries. The highest life expectancy reported is for Nor- wegian women who-according to calculations based on data for I946-50-could hope to live to the age of 78. On the whole. all the statistics-the relatively high birth rates, the low infant and general death rates. the decreasing still- birth ratios-point towards larger population in the future. And thus ..It i now I violation of a Traffic Act (section 52) for In one under sixteen to drive I fari tractor on a highway, but the nevi does not seem to have got aroum A reader reports seeing I boy . about nine driving I tractor acrus I ditch to I hifhway. the tram. hauling I pint orm truck pile with baled liny. Violations of u. law ought. of course. to be gull; ice! of prosecution. It is unlikelv however, that the Legislature wil seek to govern what farmers (Ii on their own land. -Toronto Tell. 3T-lm- . I Historical societies have f'0llFf'l ed much of the "human" inlm-.si' material of Canadian history the letters and diaries of pg-o'p;, who built up communities through out the country. They have gather Id together, too, commercial a: count books. church and mumci pal records. Their work aSsurPI greater safety for irreplacsahi. documents that might ntherwm be discarded during some 0.," Iealous liousecleaning, or destrm. ed by fire. But few of the Inca; societies have undertaken to or gaiiize and protect their collect ions adequately. The Public Arch ives of Canada is rightly won-gm for a great deal of the malemf ll nf more than local lnlfrcr -Ottawa Citizen. The passenger pig.-on 5, E,,,,, low, slaughtered into extinct"... h market shooter: in the can Iervalionless years of the 15," century. The mourning dove 1. not extinct, but not is it. numei-. uua either-you would be hard put to find I dozen in Wentuvonh county. Since 1917 the mourning dove has been protected in Canada. Until last year, that ii Now. to the considerable surprise. of bird lovers. an open season has been declared on it by the Fedg.-ral Department of Resourc- Is. Certainly hunters are entitled to their sport (just Is bird-watrlr era are entitled to their hobbyl But. in all conscience. isn't there game enough without pirk tag on one of the gentlest and pleasanlest of feathered Creamy Is? -Hamilton Spectator. Jim why I ll-mile Ilrelcli If an important highway leading in lo the nation's capital has been let go from repair for so long It causing quite I lot of heater questioning in this area. Th: stretch in mention is. of cnurize that rough old part of Highwni at from a point one mile nortl of the Metcalfe corner to the southern limits of Ottawa. Mo torists in this area swear that I is the worst piece of highway in Ontario, and American coiisim are inclined to agree. Carleton County and other nearby Eastern Ontario citizens Ire not neces- sarily criticizing the Guvcru- ment'iz highway program. Tlicy are wondering why such an lili- portaut part. of the province's grealnelwnrk of highways is con- sistently Ignored. After all. the road is being travelled moi-r heavily each year. and it is one of the main links between Unit:-ri our international responsibilities States and the nation's caitilal are incr T.-Quebec Chronicle- For commuters it is I drivers Telegraph. nighlmare.e- Winchester Pl'f:ss. V "" ' ACADIAN HOTEL ”'""' it Hollis tl. Tel. 3-M88 HALIFAX. t DOWNTOWN HAL Ax Two inlniitee from Railway Station. Business Ind Tbuln District. -A Modern Brick Building with Automatic Sprinkler system in every Room for our Guest: safety. NEWLY DECORATED. COMFORTABLE. WELL FURNISHED . ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATH I SHOWER R SINGLE 32.50 - I-too - 33.50 WEEKLY RATE PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. ill tor lell,&l.atheson uos muur anus SINGLE 3.-i.oo Ind ss.-so. DOUBLE use. TWIN suns um ,,gjrg,:. ....z OOMS WITH HOT & COLD WATER FOB PERMANENT DOUBLE s4,oo - uao - 06.00 GUESTS OPTOMETRISTS (I. IF. Hufcheeoii & Sol 1. Elmer Blanchard. ILA. I. . .n. ll noon ll. Phone 0!: Q " " . . 12.0. I .'l:..":."a'.'..?:......li9-i...';lJ 1.3 .9-H-em .... .- Anlso M. Gillie, LL.B. in Blelnlilud Ii. iuui 4141 A. Walthu thudol. LL.B. euuip aux. ui Grafton st. Palmer-IHIIIIII HddNnIkohIlL '. Bay”:-o:LJ. Great. an J. S. Taylor. R.0. Ken I: Queen St!- omen all: Home 4750 H. I. Msbon. R-.0. In-um 9- '- E CHIROPRACTOR iril. Com- guxtiion tbroush vii? bloodlines m "G!Ff,2.””,'.'m, m 2, 3, cgmoih M .g i New was iiiiuoiiixi. DH III! - 9--L ARcHi;'EcT . rd :i:':f.'if ..i”.5:l..".':J.. 25." .”'u:?-'5. "'”"'”u y m;n..'i':i:au ige::aE-.h&t.&?: I can It. me! an: mu uni river. The ttrucfui-9 win 5. 1. memory of Commonwealth Ili-men ""94 Willi! nperltinl out of CIn- III and other western liemlsphe .- enints durlns the Second World War. - Burke Electric Allberlled ' hrhllis ll.B.DOANE llwoddelti lbeul-III ABTIIUBJ. hhee unharmed W IIIXDNALD, OUBRIE I O0. Cbnrlotbtowl INSURANCE nxunuan Dial I7, 8 COMPANY It. ciiniuumn - e. 0. Box 10 aIniui.'rr V pfglllil LIMITED - ImI'I'M'"', A m I