summer apo rte-where ski- ill Ind b. 5W3”- badmhiton, » l bowling and arrling are national l your favourite sport. find a use for ‘ OLYMPENE — thl antiseptic (“'1 linirnent for all strains, sprains, cues. bruises. pore and aching . muscles, and tired feet. Get n bottle of Olympene to-dey -—-keep it handy-you may need = it tomorrow. ANNOUNCEMENT ' A limited stock company has been formed and taken over the produce business formerly conducted by Frank B. Clarke to do business under the firm name of Clarke Produce Association Ltd. The new association will draw their supply of produce prin- cipally from its shareholders and members of the association but not exclusively. All purchases to be carlots only. Any two or more farmers desiring to go together to load a car may do so. Cars settled for when loaded. We solicit a share of your patronage. CLARKE PRODUCE A§$°ClATl°N LTD. FRANK B. CLARKE, Manager. Seeks to ltombat Marriage. Failure MONTREAL. Oct. 25 ~(OPl'-Ah adequate marriage counselling ser- vice is urgently need-ed to deal scientifically with personal prob- lems which result in many tragic marriage failures, Dr. Baruch Sil- verman. director of the Mental Hygiene Institute. said in an ad- dress to the suburban St. Lambert! Women's Association. Dr. Siiverman assisant professor of psychiatry at McGlll University, said emotional insecurity rather than financial and economic insec- ilrltv produces the majority of mar- riagg problems. A mlrringe counselling service would ad s: young people con- tcmplating marriage and would deal svltth marital problems. The service would enable couples to adapt themselves more satisfactor- ily to one another to maintain the integrity of the family group. In many cases husbands and wiv- es were unable to adapt themselves 001w warr r012 satisfactorily to one mother be- cause of the emotional stress to which they had been subjected since the war ended. Many of these people had always been mentally unstable individuals but prior to the war they had‘ been able to make a relatively success- ful adaptation to marriage and home lite. At the present time they 811F990?‘ ed unable to face their respon- sibilities and readily tended to be- come involved in serious marital difficulties. They required special psychiatric treatment to tide them over their emergency period. “In order to help people to devel- op more satisfactory social relation- ships, said Dr. Silverrnan, "we must strive to create in them a capacity to adapt themselves realistically to the problems with which they are confronted. "This requires three essential ad- ustments. Social adaptability. v0- cational adjustment and fitness for family life. "By helping people to make suoh necessary adjustments, we can build up in the-m wholesome mental attitudes, adequate social relation- ships. an ability to make a real success of marriage. and a greater t JACK FRQST y SEND YOUR ‘ovsncoar TO US FOR DRY CLEANING NOW-BEFORE THE FROSTY DAYS COME. — IT'S WISE TO BE PREPARED. — HAVE IT CLEANED WHILE THE WEATHER IS STILL WARM. - ALL READY FOR THE COLD SNAP THAT'S COMING - SOON. “lie dollar" Workers Are Leading Exodus OTTAWA, Oct. at —t@)— fin- adian "white cellar" workers are leading an exodus to the United in excess of 20.000 a. year. it weal disclosed today in United States immigration statistics. In the year ended June 30, 1866. visas to enter the United states for‘, residence were issued to 10,80 nat- ive-born Canadians. Issuance of 1.- 683 visas for July indicates a step- up in the trend. . While United States immigration regulations are stiff for manual workers, they are comparatively easy for “white collar" type work- ers. Only Canadian restriction is the exit permit requirement which applies to nurses and certain technical personnel such u some scientific experts and emineers. Included in the visas issued in July were 3.12 to pl fessional and executive workers: 171 to clerical workers and 126 to skilled workers. Compared with this there were only 203 who went. in the classification lint-skilled or unskilled. The bal- ance was made up of persons who listed no occupation,_ including students and wives and families of workers. Decision Reserved 0n Appeals EDMONTON, Oct. M - (GP)- Decislon was reserved. by Mr, Jus- tice Hugh John MacDonald today on app-eels by four St. Paul. Alta. farmers against; convictions on l3 charges arising out of violence during the Alberta Farmers’ Union delivery strike. Defence counsel Stan Ross con- tended the trial of the farmers, Victor Tessier. Richard Flritze. E Batholomew and Adam Bkakoon, was e. "kangaroo trial." He said the accused were re- fused proper adjournment to pre- pare a. full defence and that the magistrate took into account facts- allegaiions and circumstances which had not smeared in evi- dence. The men received 14-day senten- ces on each of the charges for which they were convicted. WATCH YOUR, STEP WELLINGTON N.Z . 0d. I - New Zaalhndis Governor-General LL-Gen. Sir Bernard Freybtug. v.0. lamented in an eddies here, the way penpbe are losing the abil- ity to walk. “If we are not care- ful we shall nnt be the hardy race we were" he said in warning that the next generation vrould have to “vrateh its step." In this senttmmt he h oar- ryixig lnto Clvillln life the cair- dlnal principle he stremed in train- ing when he wmmanded the New Zealand Expedttlonamy mo, dur- ing the w-ar He insisted that tlhe first and most muiential step in training was lengthy route muniti- ing with heavy uacks. Although his troops grtmitbled vhat this was not necessary with a modern mechan- ized army, the policy pend rich dividends in hard oarIIIPI-lCII-i in the Westem Desert and in Italy. capacity for citizens-hip in a demo- cratic state of society." , HANGER WITH EACH GARMENT s: sun: TO séuo a1" LEAST on: W IETllilll CLEANER ‘Phone 983 1st ionowonrn ave l I "I Escape By Royal Brown Mill Martin saw possibilities in Bing. Bo dld others. but not. as it happened, happy ones. Three ‘suites Whlfih h" "wit"! l "i! pairs of feminine eyes in that din- in; room ivotched Binge progress from door to table with unveiled hostility. If looks could kill, Bing would have dropped deed. Of this Blrm was unconscious. He seldom dined as early as seven; he did not, know that the dining room would have closed in _two minutes more. and that to the three waitres- sea who were waiting impatiently to [at their tables cleared and re- set and then take up the import- ant things of the evening he was a menace ta life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. There were only three waitresses -Jone|ey was ln the kitchen get- tlng the Martins’ desserts-mud all three had something in view tor the evening. Therefore, they <=ll promptly ducked to the kltcm-n. None of them wanted this lute guest, wished on herl It was Jonesey, returning w the dining room with the Martins’ des- serts, who got him. "You have no social engagements for tonight.” Eddie had said 1118\n- lngly. in a voice that no one but she could hear. Joaesey knew what he meant. He wia-s being deliberately nasty, just giving her a sample of the ways in which he could harass her if she were not nice to him. She had felt as if she'd die before she lin- lshed with the Martins, and now she had this other guest thrust on her. That, was why she had hardly seen Bing, save through the mist of hc-t resentment. But that was not the Way Bing saw her then. Nor as he saw her later, when he sat smoking his pipe irn the cockpit of the Ellen J. She was in his thoughts strongly. a mental image persisted, Perhaps it was because of the moon that had just risen from the sea, almost full. It seemed to fill the night with atomized silver. There was hardly a rlplple of breeze on the water. The night was still heavy with heat, but; Bing, tuck in his bathing suit, was almost cool. The smoke from his pipe lifted laz- ily, the lighthouse on the point blinked and winked. A phrase crerpt lnto his mind. "On such n night-J’ He had a hazy notion that it was from Shakes- peare and that the rest was about things. exciting things, that might happen on such a ‘night as this. He had. in fact, a definite feeling that. something must happen. The moon lifted ltlghet‘, mistress of the tides in flood. c-f human emo- tions in flux, But all that happen- ed was that mosquitoes began to visit him. Bing slapping here and there, finally emptied his pipe. "I'll plunge anti drown d few not these pests," he decided. He went forward, but before he plunged the share again drew his eyes. The Inn was but a dim pat- tern agalnst the glory of right. Lights gleamed from it here and there; he wandered if one window high up might be hers. He moped she was rested. and cool. The poor kid had looked so hot. A mosquito stabbed viciously at him and he breathed deeply, plung- led swiftly into a sea that seemed saturated with silver. The water was colder than ever. but he felt as if he could swim forever. The more so as the mosquitoes still pursued him. They, or rather their near relatives. had also discovered Jonesey in her room. She was rest- ed. but she was not cool; the room stifled her. She didn't want to go to bed. It must ~be almost ten. Surely nlyslpelas Eddie would no longer be anywhere around. she might escape now. get a breath of Says Moslem .dlen nationalism and oe of the eauatry towards League ls iFomenting Riots NEW DELHI. Oct. 26 -—(AP)~ The Congress Party working com- mittee tonight directly accused the Moslem League of fomentlng bloody rioting in eastern Bengal. and a Congress official declared lts representatives ln the seven- weeks-old interim government "might" resign if they were not assured cooperation by Muslem League nominees for the cabinet. The Congress Party resolution also charged the British Governor- General in Bengal and the Viceroy, Viscount Wsvell, with neglect in permitting the bloodshed in which estimates of the dead have rang- ed from 400 up to 5,000. Mohammad All Jinnah. presi- dent of the Maslem League, ap- palled to "both Hindus and Mos- leme to stop this orgy and ear- ‘na|e" in Bengal. In Bombay, scene of almost daily killings in Hindu-Marlena warfare. today's report placed the casual- ties at two dead and 10 wounded. A government report from Bam- ganj in the strife-tom Noakhsll‘ district of eastern Bengal said one of a mob of "holll-gans" attacking a police patrol party was killed, . while in Calcutta two more deaths occurred In stabbing affrays. A resolution adopted by. the ~worlrlng committee of the pre- dominantly Hindu All-India 0on- INII declared bitterly that the riots in Bengal "clearly form the pert! of a pattern of political eabotlel calculated to destroy In- check the do ocrstla freedom." ‘The committee holds this out- *lt of ‘brutal! le the rnrect result o! the polities of hate and ltrfhthet the lfollem League has eel m years past, and of “a titre’ or violence It m y tied out in pelt months.‘ e resolution u“ HARLEWN GUARDIAN - \ ‘baker's means Finest Chocolate” Vi’ cher, true: BAKER3 k COCOA oeooauBeIru-‘smnkalt ' rionsofgotadcoolrshlveplnoed iarbacfamotreanmOnoe soeamingcupofBakeehCaooenr-sde aoeordin to you'll cocoa should woe . . . full- pletely satisfying. In recipes calling _ flavor, because Baker's is all pun cocoa-nothing added. B00119- mical, oao-rbe l-lb. package makes up oo 90 servings. for-cocoa, yjuszifiqtlsofnlthtlsetgeaae-e- yauwemoed n instructions on die label, ied a» . you’. hfimhfisil.” In: try ‘Cocoa Tour?" Children lave Isl Make l: ' iuu like cinnamon wait, bur \_ instead of mixing cinnamon .- qad eugnroospreadonrbe buttered tour, substitute Baker's Cocoa for the cinna- mon. Grand for a bedtime snsckl VAInhIeIOQ-ileea “and Baker's means Finest Cckctoa" Tfimmakdlolldkerh ummqudl week's cxocoure am. sAv$= - fresh air. She rose with the thought, search- ed out her bathing suit and still in the dark slipped swiftly lnto lt. A clock struck as she descended the back stat-rs. She counted the strokes—ten o'clock. A moment lat- er she was outside, the ground cool against her bareslim feet. A light burned dimly in the kit- chen; she went past it and the tgarbage cans outside, emergéd from the shadow the Inn cast to the west, and caught her breath. The night, viewed from her Window. had been full of dlsllluslon. Now it had abruptly become touched with magic. She stood for a mo- ment with her face tumed to the moo-n and then she went on. avoid- ing the pier where the guests sat, slapping mosquitoes, to a little stretch of sandy beach. There she entered the water and moved out until she stood waist high in it, then dipped. Just three time-s. Then she scampered ashore. She had always been afraid of the water. She could not swim a stroke. Bu; at last she was eilquie- itely cool, She returned to the sandy bit. set there a little while with a very ancient canoe that the help sometimes used, at her back. On a night like this, touched with witchery, when the moan shone across the water, stretching a path right; to her feet, if she knew anything about a canoe. if she weren't so terribly scared of the water. she'd paddle out. If she only could! She caught her breath. Ker thoughts had turned lnto a chal. lenge- She rose. turned the canoe right side up“ A paddle slipped from it. She thrust it back and tugged the canoe toward the water. She held her breath again u she stepped lnto it. She felt panic, but it was a delicious panic, “Only a "tile WHY." she promised herself. "Not ever my head." Once started. however, it was as if she were hypnotized. It was so like the things you do in e dream. expertly, effortlessly. she had m, idea how a canoe was paddled 1E1 she was doing it, following m; moon path. ‘And then again she as. breath and this time hall-shale: seemed to freeze. Something h“ surged lnto the moon path lheld of her. Sh; tried instinctively, d“. Perfllely. to turn the canoe. felt a sudden sickening lurch, and U,’ terrlfvlnz impact of water an her face. Drowning people may "numb, all that has happened in me“. lives, sometimes. Jonesey didn't All she was conscious of was all the water in the world trying g . drown her, (To be continued.) 80% of theiconsumers could be in Class “A” fuel. I. NEW REGIILATMNS surrii or ll0ll$Ell0Lll FllEl. Order No: Coél 25 Normal Annual Re This order which applies to Ontario, Quebec and the Maritime Provinces, became effective on June 6, 1946. Under Sec. 4 the quantity of coal and coke that could be delivered between April 1, 1946 and October 31, 1946 was restricted to not more than quirements of which not more than 60% Has Now Been Amended’ l Sec. 4 has now been amended effective October 24, 1946 so that between April l‘, 1946 and February. 1, 1947 dealers may deliver and consumers may accept 100% of Normal Annual Requirements of which not more than 80% may be in Class “A? fuel. The above percentage of Class "A" fuel is the maxi; mum quantity that may be delivered or accepted and there is no assurance that all communities will receive before February l, ‘I947 sufficient Class “N! fuel to supply all consumers with the permitted maximum. Ar present suitable Class "C" is available: 2- I. screen. 4. CLASS "A" FUELS comprise: l. United Stntii anthracite coal in the following alrea- Grnte (broken), Egg, Stove, Clreetnu and Pee. Welsh anthracite coal-Cobbler, French Nuts, Stove Nuts. Anidk tiBhl smite: Ill: ilfittii in ezfippuseshrbdggonuninch‘nndrghb-eighgh Low Volatile coal-Nut else and larger. I. briquettes-ell kinds. I . a CLASS . "C" FUELS comprise: any solid fuel which la not Clue “A" fuel. This if! Order No. Coal 2.6 Priorrltv of Delivery t Effective October Zlthroughout Canada " grlorl order similar to Order No. Coal l2 previously In elect and rescinded In Marci; I946. Un er ti: s order dealers are ‘r-equlred to give priority of delivery of solid fuelao 1.1- lnvinl mares‘ 1 mart. ' wbimmry onrdl Eremueddeeiersydrugpliorlorm’ - " ' °" m“ "'“"'°"’“““ l“ 2. To consumers having lose than of normal annual requirements on band. [rut nsrisru these. an or sseolnmnon slrrtr ,.noic.e.n.aown.r.e..uurtsrusy , l