106. Joyce McLellan. 107. A Snowstorm. The passengers had to abandon their trip and walk into Souris. The engine had to be shovelled out by hand. 108. Elizabeth McDonald was the wife of Andrew McInnis. She died in 1852 aged 65 and is interred at St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Cemetery in Souris. 109. Leonard Trainor. 110. Each spring they borrowed it from the Sisters of St. Mary’s Convent. 111. The High School was closed on account of the influenza epidemic. On November 6, news came through that Germany had asked for an armistice. The people of Souris started to falsely celebrate the end of hostilities and removed the Cadet Corp. .303 rifles and ammunition stored on the third floor of the High School. The rifles were discharged into the air. Then the celebrants arrived at the cliff top at the end of Church and Front Streets and used the buoys of Matthew and McLean’s herring traps tor targets until all were sunk. The riflemen could not hear properly for days. 112. Marshall A. Paquet. 113. Islander of the Year. Roy Lambie of Souris West was the Vice- President and General Manager of Usen Fisheries. 114. Janie MacQuarrie was awarded the J.A.B. McConnell Memorial Award for her 46 years in youth work. The judges were the three previous winners, Tim Mair, Raymond Soloman and Howard MacLean. 115. Moynagh would go off on a little party about twice a year, then return home and scrap with his wife. After one episode he told a neighbour that he and his wife had decided to divide the house - she would have the inside and Jim would have the out. 116. Leith and Stirling Dingwell of the Dingwell Funeral Home. They constructed framed shells in their workshop. They would hold a cleaned tuna and ice. The “casket” would be shipped to Japan using refrigerated trucks and specialized containers. The planes flew from J.E.K. Airport in New York to Tokyo. 117. Frederick Leard constructed an electric light plant at Pisquid in 1927 by converting a roller mill to a generator. He then constructed a transmission line to the Village, five miles away. By February 1928, about half of the homes were connected to the Leard plant. 118. John Meiklejohn and his five sons constructed a square-rigged vessel near Alley’s Mills on the Cardigan River. Manning it themselves, they sailed to New Zealand, where they remained. 119. Caleb C. Carlton Jr. A group of enterprising lads picked Carlton’s garden dry of pumpkins and took them down to the Carlton Store, selling This 'n That Answers 91