Stewart MacDonald , Archie was one of the real fishermen who was liked by everyone. He was a hard worker and he used to fish about 800 lobster traps, before the number was cut down by law to 300 traps. He fished from Wood Islands ferry wharf, and he had a fish house and a small house where he lived during fishing time. Archie was a very close friend of Hector MacDonald and Stanley Living ¬ stone, and they used to like to play tricks on one an¬ other. Leonard, Archie's brother, fished with Hector. One day Leonard and Hector gathered all the small fish, just undersized, and lifted one of Archie's traps and put them in. When Archie lifted the trap he thought he had discov¬ ered a gold mine. Hector and Leonard watched nearby as Archie picked up the several fish, measured them, and had to throw each one overboard for just a fraction of an inch too short. Leonard was in my class at school. He was full of mischief. He would do something funny and when the teacher, Harold Buell , looked at him Leonard would look so innocent, while I took the strapping for laughing. I mentioned before that he was my partner in crime in singing on the table. The only difference was that he was a good singer. I recall at a school concert at Christmas Alvin , Leonard and I had to sing Roamin' in the Gloamin'. When we got up to sing they, who could sing, just stood there and I, as a non-singer, had to do it all myself - one of my most embarrassing moments. Leonard and his brother Cecil used to drive to Eldon on my motorcycle. The night I drove Leonard, I would be with Cecil's girlfriend, and the night I drove Cecil, I would be with Leonard's girlfriend. The boys never knew the difference. Harold Buell , our teacher, no doubt thought Leonard, 84