PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN, Ll'1AKLUil'l'If."liU W A THE GUARDIAN 'Aulhurlu:d as Second Class Mall Poll Office Department, Ottawa. The island Guardian Publishing Co. CIRCULATION utll City Zone . .. Isetlul Trading Zone All Others . 327 Total Net Paid . 13.019 Editor and Managing Director. J. R. Burnett. Associate Editor, Frank Walker. 3.765 8.157 "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink". '-cil-A,itLo1'ri:'rovs':s'. FRIDAY. SEP-T. 14, iosi country Doctors Needed Among the distinguished guests attend- ing the annual meetings of the Prince Ed- : Communist guards. tion camp are inscribed the words: "Work is a matter of honor, a matter of glory, a matter of valor and heroism.--Stalin." Un- der the sign of this hypocritical motto, mil- lions of hopeless men and women toil" from ,dawn to dark in cold and rain, on starvation rations. treated as less than cattle by their The attitude of any Canadian towards this monstrous suffering is a fair test not only of his loyalty as a citizen but of his fundamental humanity as a man. l D! IURIAI. NUll:S The extension of the Borden-Cape Tor- gmentine Ferry summer schedule till the end .'of this month is appreciated. u 0 K Delay in treatment is serious where .vard Island Medical Association this xveek-Fancer is concemed and de1ay in com;-ibut. and is Dr. llai-court B. Church. of Alymer, mg to the (-ancpr campaign hardly less so. Quebec, president of the Canadian Medical Association. Addressing the New Bruns- U 0 4 If the Communists do not want an arm- Wlck Mcdlfal S0Cl9l.V 3 f0W days 380. D13 istice at Korea there is nothing the United Church called attention to a matter whichlNations can do about it, but increase the S of pressing importance here as well as inpffensiy-i-, Himself llle fifili Hvill is of the same opinion still. other parts of Canada. generation of his family to practice inedi- cine iii a rural community, he emphasizcdi An enemy convinced against its o is The gift of two British destroyers to 9 the need for more young doctors becominglihc Royai Canadian Navy. pi-eviousiy on general practitioners in such areas. Underlining the significance of this state-icanada has made heavy contributions loan to this country, is a gratifying gesture. of nlcnt, the Moncton Times points oL1t that aims to strengthen the Atlantic Pact and the swine of both specialization and medi-lthis return flattcringly acknowledges that cine over the past decade or so has been we are also capable of sharing in their use. one of the principal factors motivating thcl trend away from general practice. But there is another important one, too; the centralization theory, which has taken root in innumerable avenues of industry and business as well as in the administration of public affairs and in the professions, has caught on with the medical men. Many who had practiced in the rural communities have gravitated to the urban- " lzed localities as well as to the larger cen- tres, while there is a strong tendency on the part of today's grades in medicine-if not planning to go in for specialization-to shy clear of setting up practice in a coun- try district. While this might be considered as following the trend of the times, never- theless, as Dr. Church rightly observed, the growing scarcity of young doctors going in for general practice in rural areas was it znatter for alarm. u-. Sovlet slave Labour Below the level of existence of the in- dustrial serf and the peasant self are the millions of actual slaves of the Soviet sys- tem, a suffering mass of humanity out- numbering the slaves of any other age or country, writes Watson Kirkconnell in the Winnipeg Free Press. Five forms of forced labor may be found in the U.S.S.R.. some of them less drastic than others. The least savage type is the "labor levy", consisting of young men of military age whom the law prohibits (on their families political records) from serv- ing in the army. They build fortifications, strategic highways and flying fields. cut fodder and fell timber for army needs. Next come "compulsory works" and "correctional labor colonies” for those men and women sentenced by the courts to loss of freedom up to one year for small mis- demeanors. They are used in gangs in This Province has seen great advances in many fields but probably none more striking than that of medicine. The gath- ering of the P. E. I. Division of the Cana- dian Medical Association commencing today calls attention to an activity in this field that was unthought of a few years ago. 0 D O The Progressive Conservative party has a good case for the re-establishment of a parliamentary veterans' committee. The cost of living has far outstripped pension increases and it would be unjust to ignore the resulting hardship at a time when vast sums are to be paid out to those having far less claim on their country's bounty. D - O O Dante Alighieri, Italian poet, died this date 1321. The story of his youthful love for the mystic Beatrice. is told in the ”Vita Nuova". His imperial sentiments earned him a long banishment from his native Florence. His "Inferno" represents the state of ignorance and vice. His ttPurgato" is the life of converted sinners. obeying and reconciled to Caesar, having regained earth- ly paradise. ”Paradiso" represents the ideal life., I C A French princess, born in Russia, Prin- icess Sandra D'Anjou, has inherited a mil- lion dollars from Charles Ross, of Maine, former Canadian, who when becoming blind wanted to get at least one eye to save sight. The Princess. a widow with one son, offered to supply hers for the purpose, provided the recipient looked after her son. Ross died before completing the bargain, but in his will he bequeathed the million dollars, ;and the Princess is now in Montreal to col- llect the money. 0 C '0 No wonder the Trade Union Congress at Halifax dissociated themselves from the loading and unloading cargo at railway sta- tions and harbors. as street cleaners, and in agricultural and industrial projects. in the fourth category are inmates of”!'CD0l'tSI (spetsposjelki), tion led by Dewar Ferguson, vice-president scattei-edlof the Seamen's Union, arrived in Moscow the "special settlements" consisting chiefly of deportces, Communist section of trade unionism. By their fruits are they known. The Soviet Tass news agency under date of Sept. 9 "A Canadian trade union delega- across the European and Asiatic North of today on the invitation of the Central Coun- the U.S.S.R. They do similar work to that cil of the Soviet Trade Unions." Their busi- of the concentration camp population, but ness would not be in the interest of Can- differ in that they are paid for their labor, ada or Canadian democracy. though at a rate very much lower than for free workers. 0 a v A correspondent in the Public Forum Finally there are the slave camps proper yesterday asks how long would a private (known since 1932 as ”correctional camps") scattered all over the U.S.S.R., butlstreet paving the way the city does. especially in the European North and the northern areas of Asiatic Russia, including Siberia. Worst. of these are the "death camps" on the edge of the polar desert, from which no inmate is ever expected to return. It is sometimes urged that this is merely a carry-over from Tsarist times. but the comparison is absurd. In 1900-05, there were only 15,000 prisoners in the Tsar's penal camps: in 1910, some 28,742; and in 1913 just 32,757, of whom only 5,000 were political prisoners. Under Stalin. this has been expanded almost literally a thousand fold, to a figure between 15 millions and 30 millions. After 1930. a special depart- ment called GULAG (Chief Administration of Camps) was set up, in order to use cheap slave-labor in the vast development projects of the new economic planning system. The work in these camps consists large- ly of mining, lumbering and construction. 'lhe conditions are inhuman to the last de- gree. The last 20 years have built up a vast and irrefutable literature of first-hand testimony from survivors who have escaped to the flu countries, especially as I result of the Stalin-Silsonkl agreement of 1943. laboricompany exist that handled the work of In ldealing with this matter let us be fair. How many private firms would have to provide work for unemployed citizens under such a contract? There are without doubt not. a few employed on the streets who are more or less inefficient or slow at handling spades and shovels. But they are without work, and the city must look after them either by direct unemployment relief, or by work for which they are not very well fitted. ' A Ottmni City Council did not'shine any too brightly in its reception of London's Lord Mayor. Sir Denys Lowson and' two sheriffs the other day. There was no ban- quet, no red carpet to the city hall, in fact no nothing except a hand shake, a, formal address, and good-by. This was the out- come of the economy-minded controllers who opposed now acting Mayor Charlotte Whltton's proposal the London party should be suitably entertained, and telling the Council they were a lot of "cheap skates", offering to contribute 51,000 towards the cost. Sir Denys Lawson and Lady Lowson, spent the week-endf at the Governor-Gem eral's while most of the suit broke-up and I D you the page of soviet concentra- returned to England. . . WTL l Let's llot Put ifnieii (Fin? Motif-Balls . fvoposak - '3. PH.'roU- P.6.l. SEPTEMBER 14, 195. EARLY FERTILIZER PLANT "Messrs. Hyndman Eros. ham now in operation a first-class Gyp- sum Mill on the Steam Navigation Wharf. The mill seems to be in good order, and turns out. over sixty bags of fzypsuni every day. large quantity is sold to in- telligenl. farmers, nnd when bet- ter known, w" be sought. after by all classes. The firm intends to run a Bone Mill in connection with the above. As both mills are for the general good of the farm- ers of this Island. they should patronize and encourage this en- lerprlse. ..Thr Exaniinci-. June 1877. 5. Establishing A Bank In The l830's The Monthly Review of the Bank 'of Nova Scotia. Aug.-Sept. 1951 says:.”The Commerce of Hall- fax is at the present time in as prosperous a. condition as that of any town in America . . . The merchants of Halifax. generally speaking, connect. prudence and perseverance with enterprise. They are by no means backward in undertaking whatever affords a fair prospect of gain." As the lit- erary style suggests, these are quotations from an old book-John MacGregoi”s c”Brlllsh America." published in 1833. They are used to set the scene for the story of the establishment. of the Bank of Nova Si-olla in 1832. F 5 ii...-gg Nncxcvxr Q Old Charlottetown 7; Notes The Way fl rg (Am! r. E. l.) J J E TM5 1” ”” um” ”' 3'4" WM" In their original form. are they probably date the chi-ysantlienuim growers working feverishly. They are pre- paring for their autumn Like all flower growers. chrysan. themum growers are as happy as Lhelr blooms. They know not jcal- young Athenian ousy of each other. If ones ncigh- days 91 the Glory of Greece. In Cl"y53m'hE' Europe. the walking stick is be- lllcvcd to have taken the place of boy grows a. finer mum - well, that's just fine and he deserves all the praise. Tl'lGli8.S no back-biting in flower -Vancouver News Herald. Somebody pitched a lllrough our living room concerned so much about damage to the window and mess it created inside, but if it was the act of some moron who took this means of expressing his dis- pleasure over us or something that lmight have appeared in this news- paper. We wish that the next. time he make sure that we are at home instead of causing our family to suffer the scare all alone. we hap. pened to be at 9, ball game when he threw the rock Monday night, -North Bay Nugget. 4.. In the household of the celebrat- ed writer. Rider Haggard, the shouting, laughter and good-nntui-. ed horseplay of eight lusty sons kept. the place in a constant state of excitement. One day a visitor to the Haggard menage, trying to which is the subject of the Bank's early records in order lo illustrate the problems involved in .'-'ctling av banking lnstltutioii under way this early period. . A spirit. of entei-prise was nbi-nad( in Nova Scolia in these good timc.s' at the beginning of the 1830's. Pioneer agriculture. and the catch-E mg and curing of fish still formed the base of the economy. but lum-I berlng had expanded rapidly and. shipbuilding was established and, growing. Among the newer lnldus-I tries was coal mining: the Gencr-. al Minim: Corporation was then? making "ll1iCllSlVC installations" at Plctou and Sydiicy. including the first. stationary steam engines Canada. short-line railroads. and an iron foundry at Sydney. In shipping circles the idea of regular steam packet service was in the air. An unuceessful attempt had been made to establish steam service between Halifax and Que- bec with the "Royiil William." and In 1833 this little boat made her famous trip from Pictou to London by steam. using coal from the Pic- tou mines. only in few years later- at. the end of the decade -- Sam- uel Cunard founded his company to carry the British malls across the Atlantic. 0 Among the questions long uglin- tlugthe merchants and govern- ment of the Colony was the scare- ity of cash and the lack of an ade- quate circulating medium of ex- change. The problem was compli- cated by the bewildering grrny of gold and silver coins of various weights, fineness. and degrees of debasement - Doubloons. Spanish Dollars and A host of other strange coins - brought in by traders. bus the "defective state of the cu rency," from which banks might provide some relief, and the rapid expansion of the economy. Werlf combining to make the need for tnci-enserl banking facllltlea wldoly apparent. Accordingly. a. new bank began to be projected in Halifax. After numerous difficulties. in- cludlmz considerable opposition from the only existing bank - A private partnership of merchants well-established in the Govern- ment of the Colony -The Bank of Nov: Scotti finally obtained it: Act of Incorporation in March of 1&2. The charter was closely mod- elled on thlt of the first chartered bank in the Mnrttli.-nes. the Bank of New Brunswick. utubllshed ln mo. That bank. lh 1013. VII: amal- umoted with the Bank of Nova scotlo. which thus comprises the two oldest chartered banks in the Maritime Provinces.- 000 Today. of courts the lanh'I in 3 mother of the make himself heard above the kciieral bedliim of the Crowded rooms. asked the (my. gentle I household: "How in hcavcn's name do you eve.- managc to catch anybody's atten- tion in this fearful racket." The frall lady smiled. "Oh. that's slm- Dll'-'lly ltsclf." said she. "I whis- Dcr. In the Haggard household a whisper is so unusual everybody 5t0l'ls instantly to listen to it!" - wall Street. Journal. There is an old saying you keep a thing long use will be found for it. Appai-. iently that applies to Canada's Ri- .dcau Canal, built. a century or imore 880 in an earlier crisis, when the feared foe was Uncle Sam. Now. ifor the first time, n has been used lby Canadian warships. To be sure they were not very large. as the flotilla was composed of four Fair- miles.,Even these small craft had isome difficulties with the water- ,Wll5'. Indicating that the taxpay- 1'3i'5 01 it Cent-ui'.v nxo may not have gotten much for their money. But of coul'se we must. remember that .even if the Rldeau Canal wasn't lworth much it had an interesting bY-Dr0ducl- Ottawa. London Free Press. that If enough some TM wnlklnr stlek. or cane, ms captured the interest of n. Tole. gram reader. who would like to know when they were first used. -operations extend throughout and beyond: the Dominion. Its mann. gerlal offices have been in central Cnnada since the beginning or this century. Indeed. it was the forthcoming formal opening gf mg new building in Toronto on sep- tember 26 of this year which turn. ed the thoughts of the Review": editors to the early days in Hall. fax. The Review gives considerable information about the practical de- tails involved in the Bank's og. tabllahment -. the purchuo in New York of "the Plates, Nam, 561198 and Wellhts" And the "two wrought Ii-on Doors for Vaults," the search for "banking chain. bei-I." the appointment of unit, and the sending of the first Cosh- ler to saint john to study bank- inz Drnctlce mm the nun: of New Brunswick ":5 for u may be con- ltsteflt with your rules and rem. lltlons." u the letter to the Prat- dont. of that bank put. it. Finally, in Augmt of I06 business Mun at Halifax. Iltlr, aunclol wore established elsewhere in Non seem: at Windsor in 1637. Ind at Plctou. Yo:-mouth. Annapolis and 5l'l0W5- The custom of 50Cletl53- swords was The growers seem to pick up some- Louis XIV (1643-1715) the custom mm3 C” the 8en"05ltY Of 1119 5011- of carrying a stick was introduced mck slender canes. The womenis walk- wmdow lng sticks. incidentally, on Monday evening. We are not variably decorated with love knots the and other decorations. the Telegram. as staffs, back to the days when man first walked erect. carrying walkliig sticks. more for effect than use, is known to have been adopted by dnndles in the the sword (then the wearing of discontinued. Under to the French court. and both men and women began to carry long, were in- -Toronto Caesar Petrillo Is the master of music in the United States and his orders also cover Canada. At. Mid- land, in Ontario. the American Federation of Musicians (AFL), has sald an RCA? band cannot play at the Canadian Bundmas- ters' Association nnnunl meeting there. The band was invited, the defence department said okay and everyone get: set. for some pleasant listening. But. the federation un- der Petrillo said "No." The RCAF band is part. of the Canadian arm- ed forces. Their immediate boss is the Canadian minister of de- fence. The U. S. musicians union cancels the performance. Some one should act. - Brandon Sun. To keep pace with increasing business, Trans-Canada Air Lines have purchasedi five huge Super Constellations and three new North Stars. The former are for lllshts to Europe and the Carib- bean area, the latter for domestic routes. At the speed with which they travel these aircraft. with the T. C. A.'s existing fleet will haul a lot of people, mail and goods. Ca- nacllans being an increasingly atr- mlnded people. T. C. A.'s business on domestic routes has shown steady. even, rapid growth. This is in evidence in the travel in and out. Of Windsor. Its trans-oceanic services also fast are gaining in popularity, especially with business men or those people who haven't sufficient. tune to so such long dis- tances. in their regular vacation periods. by other forms of trans- port. As vice-President W. F. 1'' Battle K follow in the list of Nazi conquests. K then, and particularly upon Fight- f' er Command. that; the heavy re- In the early summer of 1040 the eyes of the world were focused upon the narrow strip of water separating Great Britain fromtthe continent. of Europe. To all men who lullevcd ir. (lcmocrncy. in freedom. truth, justice and human decency, that narrow channel, re- presented the last barrier against the forces of a new power of darkness that was threatening Christian civilization. Poland had been crushed, Norway and Don- mark had fallen; the Netherlands. Belgium. Luxembourg and France had been oilerwhelmcd by Hltlei-'3 Nazis. Mussollni's Italy had snat- ched at the opportunity to enter the war in hope of securing some of the victors spoils. From North Cape to the Pyi'eii- ecs the vlct.orious might of Nazi- tlom was arrayed, facing westward toward the only opponent remain- ing in the lists-Britain, the Do- ininious and the Empire. The next few weeks would witness a trial of strength upon which the cause of human freedom depended. What was freedoms order of Bantlc? The Royal Navy-which would operate at a decided disad- vuntzige in such restricted waters; the British Army-now sadly han- dicapped by the loss of much of its equipment; the Royal Air Force-, outnumbered by the great ali- fleets of the Luftwaffe; and the innate qualities of the British. people, epitomized in one of the, greatest leaders in the long history of that people. . Control of the air was the es- sential prerequislte to success in the Battle of Britain. If the Luft- waffe could win and retain con- trol over the Strait. niid Cluinncl long enough to permit the invas- ion fleets to cross and gain in beach-head, Britain might well It; was upon the Royal Air Force sponslblllty rested of being Brit- alnls first line of defence against invasion. Were the fifty squadrons of Hurricanes and Spitfires equal to the task? Could David asfllll overthrow Goliath? There was one hopeful indica- tion, although its full significance was little appreciated at the time. Over Dunkirk the fighters of the R.A.F. had come to grips with the Luftwaffe and had 'taken it heavy toll. Without. that fighter cover the story of the Dunkirk beaches would have been much more tragic. But could our squad- rons, exhausted by the great de- mands made upon them in the Battle of In-ance. meet. this new challenge? France fell on June 17th; the next day Prime Minister Churchill warned the House of Commons that the Battle of Britain was about to begin. It is difficult to assign precise dates for the Bat- tle. It did not begin with a thun- dering barrage at I-I-hour on 1)- day. nor did it end at any specific hour or day. In one sense the Battle started with the fall of France and con- tinued well into 1941. Air Minis- try, however. had accepted the dates from July 10th and October 31st, 1940, as being the most con- venient to mark t.he opening mid termination of theBatt.le. Although the selection has. of nccesslty.hecn somewhat arbitrary. the period be- tween these dates does cover the major Luftwaffe activity against Britain. 1 0 Before the Battle there was an interval of several weeks.a breath- ing spell during which the Luft- waffe rested from its arduous six- weeks blltzlu-elg, moved forward to new bases in the Low Countries and Northern France. collected re- placements of aircraft and person- nel, organized lines of communica- tion, and gathered all the varied supplies of bombs. ammunition. fuel. spares and equipment neces- sary for the next campaign. Tllc Wehrmacht too was making prepa- rations. moving up tmons MW supplies and collecting barges for the invasion fleet. l The I.uft.waffe'a preparations 11-1 0 English snld in Windsor recently, office girls, among others. now get to Parts and to the Caribbean. Trans-Cmlad-a Air Lines have be- come one of the best. and best- known, alr lines in the world. Good management, plus proper vi. slon. account. for its record, Windsor Daily Star. A? - 74c pl ?oe&s' Gmwl ELI-IGY IN A COUNTRY CIIURCHYARD The men that worked for England They have their graves at. home: And bees and birds of England About the cross can roam. But they that fought. for England, Fbllawln-1 a falling star, Alas. alias for England They have their grave. afar, And they that rule in niglaila, ln stately conclave met, Alas. sin for England They have no graves in yet. -G. K. Ohestertpn. 'o'lc'u'hNHlI. The Ago-old story: ..... i llghtomu art thou. 0 Lord. and upright are thy Judxmontu . . . Thy word In very pun: therefore thy servant lovech It. PROFESSIONAL CA W- or Britain RecalledO Armed Forces News quired six or seven neck: for completion; but before the full- scule assault could be lailnchm there was some prcliinliiaiy skiim. thing ever the Channel in lvlijch small forces bombed Portland ,-nu coastal convoys. On July 1on.' ,, sudden qulckenlng was evident i-. these activities: two formations at 150 aircraft. the largest foric ye. used. attacked a convoy off Down? The Battle for Britain had becuir The contest that followed J.-an be divided into three phases. Th; first, covering approximately 10.1., days (July 10th to August lath; was the period during which Gm-.' ring sought to overwhelm B:'l'.all1's lli.",lll.Cl' defences by heavy in. kg on coastal shipping, harbours. nir- fields, radio location stations and aircraft factories. This period reached its climax in the ten da(s August 3th to 18th when the Gci. man Air Force, its prepai-Mjom now completed, launched a sim- of mass attacks on a wide front 1;; a -supreme effort. to eliminate 0Lf' fighter squadrons and open the way for invasion. Fighter Command was called upon for intensive efforts on in scale greater than at any other time in the Battle. But G0Cring'5 effort failed. Air supremacy Ovfr the Channel and Strait was not achieved. Far from exhausting our llghter forces the Luftwaffe itself suffered crippling losses anil had to change its tactics. . . . After a five dayiv respite (Aug. ust 19th to 23rd). the second phasg began, with London the chief ob. jeclivc for great formations of bombers escorted by swarms of (tumors. This was the climax of the air battle and was probably intended by the Nazis to be the prelude to the actual invasion Their preparations for the land battle appeared to be complete and Hitler issued his solemn wariitii: ”u'e sluill come". For five liecks (August 24th to September ':7lh: the ordeal of London continued. rising to a peak on September 15th when the Luftwaffe suffered it major defeat. Great damage was infhctrd nu the capital but once again the Luftwaffe failed to attain its oh- jectlve. The heart of the Empire was not paralyzed, nor was tho spirit of its people broken. "We can take it" was their delimit re- ply, German bomber losses be- came so great. that a. continuation of this phase was impossible. Once again there was a change in tic- tics. September 15th had marked a definite turn in the course of the Battle; it was the beginning of the end. if On September 28th the thlrrl and final phase opened. a tbattle of attrition" which continued until the end of October. Forced to abandon the use of his bombers for mass daylight; attacks Goerlmz now resorted to fighter sweep! l7.1' squadrons of high-flying Master- schmitt. flghtei-3 and tighter- bombers. This attempt to weir down our fighter defeat was in itself an admlsslon of defeat. and like the others it failed. By (ha end ofgoctobcr the pi-essiire nu Fighter Command had dennlu-1:! eused: waves still best upon "19 defences, the night assault will still raging, but the memicc of hi- vnslon for that year had lm559ll- The Battle hat: b.Ccll wou- This brief summary of W 3" assault upon south-east. England 1! not a complete picture of the B11- tle of Britain. The Battle was not fought solely in the air, nor was the responsibility of gl1aI'dliIf Britain from invasion the rxclu:.- tvc prerogative of Fighter Com- mand. It was fought on the ground and within the Nazi for.- ress. . The ground crews whn sriwi-l the Hurricanes and Slllllllif-l ”" men and women who manned ll: operatlons rooms. and oPE.T"l9dl ” signals and communication str- vlces, the intelligence and, cqullf mcnt. staffs. the admlnislrntn: personnel and all those who lief: units. alrfields and llCnflll"'l”” operating efficiently. '-hC.V '"” (Continued on Page (ii RDS N- Allison M. Gillis. I.L.B. BARIIISTEB. S0l.IClT()Il. Etc. 130 Blclunond Sf. Chltown. Phone Dr. A. L. Maclsuuc .1. A. CARRUTIIEIIS R.O. OI'T0liIl5'I'lfIS'l PHONE .5872 123 Kent Street (Next to Simpson: M29"C3'l 0 llr. John -E. Stems immn” vt'.'rr:mNAn.1r SIYICGEU-V mom x-my I st ' n ai.oIuA auu.mNo Phone 120 2:: Poun no Grafton st. 0"," mm, Phone 291 By Appointment D J4 llll Great George came Ila. chumcmwo Llverpool tn 1 II. It. ll0AllE and OOMPIII CHARTERED A(l(.'0UNTANTS Phones 2050 - 1 RANDOLPH W. MANNING. C.A. lloulnnl. Quebec. mum rot-onto. sum John. Oh Vlncuuvnr. Ilthhnd nu. Ilnncwn. mum-. chnrlovtIW"9 V SL. Cllnrlotu-town 411 - Box 241 .1-zmm r. MIcPlll'lBS0N. CA- Other office: It. tlnllfnx. Moncton. St. .lohn'n. Amherst. "3"" month. Kentvllle. Liverpool. New (llnogow and TN"- (.14? IlclJONAl.I). CURIIIE O CO. CIIAITIIIIIII MJC0lJN'hAN1'I erbrootm