Russell Review, 8 Aug 1975, p. 11

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il. JAMES EADIE FARM SUPPLY SALES AND SERVICE RUSSELL ONT. 445 2990 "VERY INTERESTING PEOPLE" 1n RUSSELL AN INTERVIEW WITH DR. KINNAIRD DA. Kinnaind's parents were Saskatchewan homesteaders. But at three years of age, Da. Kinnaind Lost his father and the family moved to Hammond to be near relatives. After completing public and high schook in Navan, Da. Kinnaind signed on as a bank ckerk in Vans. Thaee yearns of misadded sums and unbalanced Ledgers convinced him he was not to become a banker! Perhaps the three years boarding in Vans with the town doctor nepresented a turaning-point in Dr. Kinnaind's Life. For that asscecdation motivated him to return to Nepean High Schook to earn his Grade 13, compLeting no Less than 13 subjects! The Queen's University School of Medicine was next. SAx years Later Da. Kinnaird was interning at the Ottawa Civic Hospitak with a particular dantenest in the field of Anaesthesia. His f445t post as a medical doctor was in Hearst, Ontario, a pulp and paper town in the Northern part of the province. The next four years formed a memorable part of Da. Kinnaind's past. These were the years of the depression, relies camps where workers earned 20¢ a day with board, and, of course, winter house calls were made by horse on by dog team. In 1938, Da. Kinnaind received a phone call from Dr. McDougall in Russekk, Near retinement, D2. McDougall remembered Da. Kinnaiad from his confinement in the Civic with a broken hip, and felt him to be an excekLent choice to take over his practice. The next year

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