Inauguration of a flower shop "Salon Emilie" in Montreal, Canada. Marie Dionne with help of her three surviving Dionne Quintuplets sisters open a flower shop in memory of their dead sister Emilie Dionne. Guests greet the sisters at the inauguration of Salon Emilie. Father Gaston Sauve of Ottawa University blesses the store. The sisters wish luck to Marie Dionne.
United States General Dwight D. Eisenhower visits Canada. General Eisenhower at the Canadian Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (53 Elgin St, Ottawa, ON, Canada) in Ottawa, Canada. He places a wreath on the tomb as photographers click pictures. General Eisenhower salutes as Canadian Prime Minister MacKenzie King stands next to him. General Eisenhower arrives at the University of Toronto (27 King's College Cir, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada). He enters the building. General Eisenhower talks about the friendship between United States and Canada. He accepts the honorary doctorate by the University of Toronto and extends his support to the cause of education.
President Eisenhower visits Ottawa, Canada. President of the United States Dwight D. Eisenhower and his wife Mamie Geneva Doud Eisenhower get off an aircraft at Ottawa. Officers greet and receive them. He arrives in Ottawa to talk to Prime Minister of Canada John George Diefenbaker and Canadian leaders. Eisenhower addresses the parliament on difference in trade policy. Gathering applauds.
Water skiing in Ottawa, Canada at Rideau Glen summer resort on the Ottawa River, near Manotick. Men and women display their water-skiing skills. Men and women ski on the river as a girl balances herself on the shoulders of two men skiing on water. Women watch water-skiing demonstration. Many take to water skiing as women look on. Canadian water skier Dave Hyman water skis on bare feet on Ottawa River.
U.S. Air Force Chief General Hoyt S. Vandenberg in Ottawa, Canada. U.S. Air Force C-121 aircraft taxis along the airfield. USAF Chief General Hoyt Vandenberg talks to an officer at an airfield in Ottawa. The General greets the dignitaries who arrive for the Ottawa conference.
Employees at Bank of Canada in Ottawa put one-dollar bills in bales of five hundred bills to take them out of circulation. View of the Bank of Canada Building (234 Wellington St. W, Ottawa, ON K1A 0G9, Canada). Bales are put in a sack and then burnt in a furnace.