@112 (guardian covnn Prince Edward island le. Tlu on w. mmx, Publllhu Iunon lowls Enermlvl Edna: Puuluhaa .my week thy mamlng intent 5.... an. m: llstmaly hallddyll .I IAS wtno sum ch a'ilinwn, P s I, u. lhmmon www.qu Lid numb nude. ll Summerllde. Montagul. Alb-l n ma Scull). Represented nnllollnll» b. Ihulumn Newspaper- Advelllslng Saunas 1mm. [25 mum... Av. Funk Wlikll Edna: Emplvo «ram Mammal um Calhoun Strut Unlvlully 5.5942 mm... bun. luau w... 0....“ sum kuum m. min Member Canadian Dali, town..." publnbm Anew.“ and The chm.“ I»... “Ellan at ..I new; durum” n. u... pm. "edited I: n or u the Amen-us In... a! Raul!!! Ind Ilsa Is I»? lClsl he... puhl-«hed hm... All I' In. or “which.” bl smut annual. hmh. Ilia reserved Stumpy.“ u... over 35. M. week u. tamer. sum 3 W. h. mall or will lot .5 .nd m... not lewmzd b, (M... SHUD . m. an hunu .nu UK moo 99 year in ms. .nu e‘wwm. unma. Bmuh Com. munwcalIh. Not m. not smng m v 'n 7: e m. Audi swab cl Cuculnilon U.S. lnlerlerence (‘audtlll's prlvlvlllm \lith the Sea- head by farel‘s’ Illlerlllltlnnnl L'nion hll. made much more dif 'clllt American interference, l’rinlr‘ .lliII- ister Pom-sou .Is hlllntly id as much. unll we now thut hl with cisnl of this ililcrtL-rc-llce t'intls illtlllv» cation in a ['N newspaper of world. wide prestiue4mmlely. the New York Times, while devotes a strong- Iy worded l‘tll'ltl'lzll to the sulliect. Tile Tinlt's lzlkcs issue with George Menu}: the pr dent of the great. labor federation in the United States, the All-(‘10. It cannot agree with .llr. Manny that Hal Banks. the notorious l'lL‘thl of the STU in Canada, is a fine leader in a free llllion who is being mar 'I‘Bd by vengeful attacks by unfriendly Canadians. It llelimcs that the (‘an- ndian Government is right in tr) ml to end "Mr. Banks’ dictatorial rule.” The I‘lli'cd States, it also he- lieves. should keep out of 3 Canal- dian matter. “)‘lanifestly. it is not. the proper function of the L‘nited States Gov ‘ill'l‘lPllt or United States labor to decide what is best for Call- adian labor or the Canadian econ- omy." The Times declares. it is safe to sal~ that if it wasn't for the presidential election in the offing. and the warming-up exer— cises the party leaders are doing with respect thereto, this sound view would find ready acceptance at Washington. But there ure twelve and one-half million votes of the AFLJ‘ll’l to he token into consider- ation. and political pr ire of this kind tun L'i\e politician—even the besl of them—cause for a lot of com cern. Thom are no votes to be torn» ‘ered in timed», on this .slie by either the ni‘lvlfll‘t‘; s or the Repub- lit lb. and thut's the crux of the mattlvl'. it's not something the Canadian Gowrnnwnt can do much about. Much less it something that sllmllrl intimidate the Government from taking the prnpor course to I've law and order in this collu- ill effect, is what it has done hv placing the SlU and four other murille. unions under public trustr‘eship in the wake of yester- rlav‘s “mllrrh on (lttn\\a". As Lahor MiIIlslr‘r .llat‘l‘hlchern hzls sllitl. this measure will protect seamen and their unions “against high-handed nation which would interfere with their democratic rights either from within or outside their unions." That's “hat all parties in Far— liament voted for. Further US. in- terference. if it comes. will be re- grettcd. but it won’t alter the fact that Canada must be prepared to do its own hollserlenninz'when the na- casion warrants it “Full-Time Occupation" It was the afternoon of July ‘29. when putting through the, Parlia- ment pav boost. legislation, that Prime Mini er Pearson was quoted in Hun. I'll as saying: "Members of the Commons to all intents and purposes NOW have A full-time oc- cupation..." At $18,000-plus, there would be no time for extra-curricular "moonlighting." There would be tim- only for the business of Parlinmenl. But. as noted by one Ottawa coni- mcntctor. there have been no dec- lnrstions from any of the lawyer is ’ MP: of retirement. even temporarily, i. from their law practical—or even the Ibnndonment of the abuse of their pilviiege of using their Commons of- fline end secretarie- { o r prlvntg bit-Ines aft-in. Then has been no indication from 3, a? of the prosperous Pruirll wheat- a. men that I'lwy will not or Inn their fat farms And attend Strictly to even been promises from the Ontario and Quebec MPs that they will my. up those notorious Thursday—to—Tues- day weekends at hnme. i Parliament business. Nor have there The Cnnadlun ‘1 pm. .. will...“ “mud to the in. iol apt/b- ‘ There has been only Silence. A silence not only about earning that $18,000, but, an even deeper silence on the part of many . . . the utter silence of continued absenteeism. in the first three divisions of this ses- sion. 2l2 MP5 were not. in the House to cast their votes. Some of these ahsentces missed all three. Some didn't bother to return to Parliament for the openink week at all. and came slralrglilllz in, 10 days or two weeks li'li‘. When the Commons voted on the stilldnntroversial nuclear treaty question. one~third of the Conserva- tives were playing Parliamentary hooker. Thirty of them. enough to have defeated the Government were AWOL. And what of the Government. members themselves? Last week two really disgraceful incidents occurred, when the House divided on two non- mnfilience motions directed at the Government and arising out of its policy fnr eastern agriculture Neither Agriculture Minister Hays nor Rene Tremblal‘. the man named for the post of minister of eastern agricul- ture w present in the chamber for the vote. Only a short while earlier, Mr. Clement Vincent. a Quebec Progres- sive Conservative. noted with amaz- ment that the Government: flont bench was empty. “There is not a minister in the House,” he gasped. “Not one". Perhaps they were out rounding Ilp the other strays in their party. To Keep The Glow Adlai Stevenson said of the late Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt that. “she would rather light. I candle than curse the darkness, and her glow has warmed the world." To keep that glow going, President Kennedy last fall named a distinguished group of Americans headed by Mr. Stevenson who formed the Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation. The founda- tion has been chartered by Congras and has now started a “once in a lifetime" fund rising campailrn on carry on the work of this devoted woman. It hopes to amass $25 million before next Oct. II—the 80th birth- day of Mrs. Roosevelt. The founda- tion, in line with Mr.. Roosevelt’s interests. will support a broad hu- man rilzhts program both at home and abroad. It will help carry on her commitments to cancer research. and work for emotionally disturbed children and understanding of the work of the United Nations. It will also support construction of the proposed Eleanor Roosevelt wing of the Franklin D. Roosevelt library at Hyde Park, N.Y.. as a repository of her writings and re- cordS, Issuance of a new 5c Eleanor Roosevelt. commemorative Stamp at a White House ceremony opens the drive. Subscriptions for the founda- tion are heimz sought from in- dividuals and corporate, labor and community groups. and there is every reason to believe that the drive will meet with complete suc— cess. The place which Eleanor Roose- velt‘s memory holds in the affection of her countrymen is something rare in modern times. The things she fought so valiantly for are still of vital concenl today. And those wing- ed words of Stevenson, in paying tribute to her Worth. could not be employed to better purpose than in furthering hcr humanitarian aims. They will be the keynote of the foundation's appeal. we, may depend, for they touch the heartstrings as poignantly today as when they were uttered. What II potent force is em- bodied in the mystery of words. as 1 great poet once remnrlledl ‘ EDITORIAL NOTE In referring yesterday to tho Norris report. indlcrinn tho Seafar— ers International Union Is 1 law- less and corrupt organization. it was erroneously Stated that the author, Mr. Justice Norris, won a Supreme Court judge. Actually he is ‘3 British Columbil appeal court judge, who made I year-long in- vutlntion of Grant Lake. lobar ltriie Ind shipping disruption for tho Canadian government. \l By Jack MIcMelloll, [mm Manchu Hmcs-‘l‘rlnscrlpd QLTAWA REPORT by Mr. Mossey’s Memoirs Reviewed Critically We sadly lack firstrlland at» summary to most of us. Enrlll most guilty of Ireason". and l counls at contelilparury public events. W TI | I E n by Ill? people whn have played u um in shap- l ing them. Our politics are ton olten a mystery DEl’lllfllll‘llll)‘ sealed up. became the men nnh the key cannot in- \\l|| not urllt- their memoirs l Su. like a stall'lnc man, we. can be rratetul inr, as he urn lalnly can Enjoy. the autobio- sruhhv oi the man whom news- 1 papers made famous under that selluonsl-Inus phrase- “0hr ilrst native-burn Governor Gcncral." But like any coilee addict, echI Flarl‘llll, “‘9 must l‘l‘lll‘el lhal this \velrnme cup I: nllly h nlil lull, and lacks the rellnemrnt utl cream and sugar "What's Past is Prolouue". lust Dubllsllcd by Macmillan: at $7.50. is I. Hon v i ncen Mane) account ut hll life and of the many parts he bust played in It it cerluinly is al I I rs t~hand contemporary lac-3 rount such as we too nitcn lack: l but It appears in he less 2h u n illlly informative. and laruely ai self-justification The In m on s and especially the titled pnoule HI (“‘0 continents art- drasccd willy-hilly HI‘I'DSS the panes. gen- erally descrihl‘fl by an Intimate nlcknamc. hilt loo seldom is sal- ISIyIllE conimcnt Eil‘t‘ll on "ll‘ll' relevnnre u. the nnluhlunz «my. 01.!) ONTARIO ORIGN The “3 'llie sillly is known only in brief and misleading PUBLIC FORUM nu cmumn I. up"! in nu a B! cnrrrxpordentl u "mm.- nl u. law The Gunmllp daes um um. um lqu m mnupnudcnc‘ mum. In. u. .. uuamltizfl JAIL SITUATION Sir,-—-(‘.omzratulutions to your- 31‘", Mayor Gaudm. Ralph Cum- eron and anyone else who has been giving puhllcily lo the dis- srarelul situation in Charlotte- Ibwn \lllll again to the jail, ci e. I wish Mr Cameron's article over the weekend could h: made compulsory running In every home in Prince Edward Islund II shuqu he read lulu re» road by everyone interested In the wcllare ol thnse uninnunaie Ind mlsnuldrd penile, wun keep nur police and the police couns so busy. Tile 'Hnslam Brtel' was - mu- lerpllx‘e. The president at lhe .Iuhn Howard Society in Humor was so impressed with it Ihut he rocured hull a Iiolen mph-s. I-Ie IelI II would be oi mu value to other communities which no (need with the same problem. throulzlluul lht- Murllimes. udam Rave - uruphlc picture ..l the problem as it ex- isled ul that time. lobe. and cor» rcctly predicted thnt It would worsen as me years went. by un- less umuechiuu wore done nbout II. He then outlluul ltM medial measure] which he MI were ncc~ usury. lo improve lhe situation. My pin-pm in writing this let ter In to emphlrin the lumen- able fuel that live various people and orguulzutim. who receiv- ed copies oi the Hulum reporl were huI then, Ind lpplrently no not now. nne bit intern-ltd In the problem shel- M-ry Henry III Ihu Cr thalic Well": Bureuu VII! the only one who even neknawlrdlt ed the melpt ut the brill. ll um: lnfhmflal mum and thruwu mu weiaht. u requested behind on Cullen In In, It I: Mmly Mable m the present (:ouuull would not m be u. telan no court action In lot-cc :9 Mad d On mm“.- 1 Im. sir. fit, EDWIN c. JOHNSTON New Elven. Patrick Nicholson \tith a silmr iarnl Implement in his molllll. ho was strictly raised as a poor little rich b uy in the stern Methodist high-I ' Tory mnulu at old Ontario. Two misty Ill‘rlods in his career were Illrec years when he lived in Washiuplnn a, Canadian Minis- her, and an even more cum: nine years vim lie was Canad- Ian High Conunisxioner 1n Lun- don Laten- came seven well ctr served yuan as Governor Gen» erul. when the pl distmguished actor RIymnlld MBSSEW 58V? an humbly: and applauded performance. 'His memoirs give scant expla- nation oi the two grant chances in NS vuned and nut typicully Canadian liie. on his departure ironl the Methodist iuith. there is but u urlel reference to his acceptance iqu the Anglican Church by the Archbishop of Canterbury in his Palace in Lnu- lion g o The turning point in his life nus his abrupt conversion tu le- eralism which resulted In him rcep In: an invitation to stand as u Liberal candidate. But his price has high, “I (cit It not uh- reasonable in suggest to the Prime Minister that ii I s l u on as a candidate [or Parliament 1 Should be given minlslmui slams " Surpnsingl - h l I must \\ :1 auto but . thus started his political curl-al- on me top rung, he ramptly iell oil the ladder by being relec- ted by the simple farmers oi Durham County in the pulling booths Business circles in Toron- to described him “us being Bl~ Llhl‘l‘al elder statesman referred to his "inconsistency." THE MEIGHEN LITTERS Behind that brief Interlude lies the tumour myS cry of is cur- respondencc with R. Arthur Meigheu. then leader a! the Conservative Party. This centred on Prim Minister Ma Tube Relieves Aneurysms mm: ll. Vu mu“ are caused weakness in the main wIll. AI - rule. aim mu protrude like - womqu inner tube. And the bulging part pulnlcs with every belt oi the heart. Sudden delth occurs if a blowout takes placu. Amrlosclemsu I. the man frequent cause of “ocular lulu- rysnln today. At. one time. - lllII was higher ml the list but the early treatment at mu dio- can has made “Ill campucr nun miller rare. Most 01 the nrlerlosclerotlc Aneurysms develop in the lower- molt pm of the aorta laurl . an artery! n it panel throng the abdomen and hm before It branches into me two large In infleries. This sIclIlBr swelling can be byuuml with . Dlnsllt: tube ol' n blood vessel grail. Thu procedm mly be llvuuvlug, - most men and wnmen with uni. rysmS oi the nbdominul non- survive less than n year alter abdominal pain develuy: from this cause. It the coudllluu ll un- treated. Aneurysm: ulw iorm lu lho blood vessel: 01 the brain. Many of these bulges m congenital Iu thul the lndividual coma Into the World with a weakness in nu wall at one ar more arteries. This type may produce wlrninl Symptoms, such I: u u dd all changes in Vision. lnng beloro rupture occ u u. When In. aneurysm breaks, the victim has n slroke. One at our readers asked us In describe the aneurysm that am. ed the drain ni Sell Ester Kel- auver. His was the dlssectlng Io- eurysm. SDAn'lmEd because I" opening develops only through the Inner lining oi the rrtcry and blood forces its way between [in layers ol the wall ut the aorta. The pressure may be so great, a new passageway lorms be- tween the layers. taking the piece oi the original In sll du- tug, it also blocks on the open. lugs to the branches oi Ih sort] and rob: the intestine, kid- neys. Spleen and spine ol nour- iShment. The dissecting process h min. lul as the blood separates the layers of thc “all, The learinl may resemble a heart attack or adiseuse at any at the organ! that need blood. Immediate lul~ gery is lifesaving but diagnosis may be delayed because tn. multipliein ul symptom: make! u diiiicull. COMMON DISORDER kenzic Klns's intent to lawn tho “riff on farm Implements — I mutter oi Er!!! conrern to Vlr. MasSey as head or the Massey- Hurris company. Folklore maintains “I a t Muv kenzie King n being I iool Ind I rhnrlalan, and a mixture of insinceriiy and Ignorance. when shortly after Massey became a ‘ toned to publicine this correspon- i dance. and . great raw ensued. ‘ Meighen did not write hll mem- olra: Mnssey bu. Ills [or paste- rity. quoted the correspondence only in part. thus neither roun- faunding nor confirming folklore. nul lherenlm Iollowed .n n minim: or a) yeurs with Mur- kenzle King who. accordan In these memoirs. treated Massey abominably. Hz spells out King‘s pellillesses. jealousies and Ill- suits: he shells revealing light uu why Canada has no Cnnsdinn Medal: and he giver - lung but misleading version of the Ianlnus Kihs~Byns constitutlunul lracus. Very many Canadians wrll‘ enjoy Ihis titllluiing bnak, beau- Iiiully written court irom Ill: irritallng conceit ul name-drop» Plug. It. contributes to our his- Iory — but an unexpurguled edi- tion wuula have been real hls- . lor)’. Fossils Of The Sea Chrllliln Science Molnar Supercarrlerl Ippen lo b o out. SmIller Ali‘ch union will ltlll how I role ill conven- tional deienu. But mill!“ fimm undermllnd Ind IIII‘I'MI will take over [mm Ille mined HI!- topl henceloflh. when it man to the nuclear dlhrrenl. The bi! In “K! much of a target lot kind of Ill-out warfare we Hui! will never hive n uled w nnl ml secure hldlnl m mnme as null to protect millllel against initial ltlack Ind lam "problny la n good one. Tin huge curler: would loo become victims to network. 9‘ submlriun which I: m them continually. em in the mm. which once were their lure mm III. 50 Lil: Pentaton wul not com- million more ol than lulu! nit/bile shill-ins .m the navy. which want: them pauluualely, will luv. to swallow hard. The! were the lelmnn'l projection in- lu the air use at the battleship Ind or loan earlier history 0' mm men of war. They hid many proud days. But pride I- not or ilSeli . good deienle. It lend! In a unil- menu! nthchmcnt. to III e uh ell-1c. We Ina bluer nun bimr we all In m un him. The technology oi mull by jeh and homtnl um- nlu m proximity (um Ind Ill! than (I! In Wall. Shouldnmgflen Here A mpnfl M children in Utah ml Nevndl hm received "a- cerclve dam" oi nan-Ann I». dine tmm mill: in nu nu near the us. mink: Imus mud my a: an inn In cmqu Dlrenu cm in. mu 1 could hlppen hen. it on likely. Dr. m. slut. chat or the numb mu Welt-n Deplrtmem'l RIdlIttoII Protec- nuu Diviolfln. Ian tin huh ml. our level: won I loc- ll proble cldadlommmonlllm Iflll. In human. CIIIIII‘I m hunt I! dim “MM-W. The [mill- om thin! about fallout that much of tho anger in: mm of the nuiqu yell- II the crIICIII one. And llIl eflecl oi lnnlAllved lump“ e Strum Hum 90 uni Clulllm 137 II cum- ulntlve. Pullout level: ln Can-d. ill (Ict melted Mr hilllell lmll In biliary In June. mil. week!“ then. "In Hell!!! Deplrhll out they were still well below Nil “Id! limits (calculated on n mull built. Mrs. R. wnm- What symp- , torn: are produced by mm in. erusl In:er Usually none, CLoTs AND DEFECTIVE vcms rites: Are blood Mrs. a, w clots more likely to develop In varicosed veml than In normll ‘ o Liberal Minister. Melghuu thm- m s new Yes. because the ctrculnriou to sluggish in varicoslllel nd Ilngnnnl pool: or blood cucolfl‘ age clotting. MOONLIGHT FLIGHT N. S. writes: Is it true tIl n sleeping on a terrace undel- Ill. direct rIyS oi the moon will lend to uleepwalkillg? REPLY No, bill. a little moonshine might FLUID IS 'I'IRING rs v.0, writes: Wu dropsy make I 70- ye I r- woman feel tired? REPLY uld old Yes. especially ll she has Ill to 20 pounds at excess l1qu In the tissue. Ind brenthlug 1. lab re o . TODAY’S HEALTH HINT-— Children thrive on pelican!!- deuce. Our Yesterda s (From (its GIIIl'dlIII Fl TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO number 12. ms J. Smart. National Purl! Oom- mllllnner of Ottawa, Iceolanlr lad by sllnley Thmplon. Tmnln, who hll llld chm! OI commotion oi I gall noun: II. Cavendllh In the Prince Edwlrd IllInd National Park. ertved in I'loflnmwn lul DIEM. They In "lying It. the C ldllll NI!- lonll Haul. This year's Community Can- ul’t oenlon opened [Int night in Prince of WIlll Collm Hall WWII lllrrln] recital by the innqu American tenor, PIIII Allhwule. usllted by Kenneth WIlmn in till dull ml. 0‘ MIMI! and composer. TIN “All! AGO om ll. 1”! Mn" thin filly couplel wan gum or the Comm-Mill om. cor Lint. Camdr. JIM. Kenny. III Mlle." 01 TIMES Queen mlnflz I! I WIN Room Tr:- Illllr DIy Bill held on bond WC! Queen ChII'lottI llll ullht. mm. D! McCorm [or mum to mud the meeting unhe nay-l emu Artillery Asmclltion, which I: bellll held In the Clinical: LII:- tier, Illh week. . Mr k will nun-cut the uni Aun- Almrlfl‘ Rellmlnl. NOTES BY THE WAY IMJIQIM- locum-y engtu II reported In uylnl um he Ippalnled uyur-old Gordon shew-rd u hil Ipecll] nann- el- cullun the-e am, that'- pmbnbly In good I vv ol ulcklug a Inn. 1: ur New: Chronch my... mum, bu . Mwlpn. pel- Ind - columnist. The paper I; the Dilly Telegraph. Th- columnist wrltcl under the num- a Anllr my um hlve many views. But more he has In Ill-m .ud without equlvouuou. When he writes. in. mm: quiver and then nil-lull undcr the but ol bl- III I recent column AI'IIIT wok Iinl It women. E: III! his own View: an the deadiizr of the Sp!- 1. And these VIeWI In not 2:0 one: IAN Chellgrlleld mu. on. re the In: M m r will. He (Intel I mlmuline de- cldellce from the lime Britain allowed Queen Elizabeth in Il‘ tend the throne Ind lav. women Ill Icroll the tillle a fall: "use of their Importance. Till! nonsense of giving up out: to women. raisin] the h“ and oth- er courted“ of the dcclden! We]? leave. Ill. Lalo columnist co . Tilers II a place for women. Antnr write! that he Till: “often uld mu! women must a (real- We’ll Bet On The h c n l I h deplrlment pm poses to eliminate some ol Mll- wuukce'll p l g e o n 5 by mvlng them I ha banquet dosed with tranquilizers. The birds are cur- rler: of a virus that causes m- plrntory lnicctlon. Once tranquil» ized, the theory goes. they will be carted ntt nun destroyed. We'll Rive odds on the b'rds. The pigeon IS n gentle. rooing. heady eyed rd u: enduring as municipal taxes and n stubborn n n mlsunthrapic M l I s u u rl mule. In Milwaukee and else- where. olnculs have proposed or tried to wipe out pigeons with Lholguns. fake Inuku. recorded sen, Ike uwu, train. bum tin , ectric .hock. mum candlei. nulku in. bulld» lug ledges. pigeon repelleuu Ind birth control pills. Look .t the evidence. Nearly a qu-nuol n century In plgeanl wm described here u "a menace tu health.“ Somebody proposed blasting them with shotguns. Thu war discarded on the ground that "not only crip- pied bird: but crippled clllzeu. might result.“ Mllwunkee'. amt mean wu C Mllwlnkeo M Gem. ,0 ICIII I“ Illl spoken cuollzh words In Illl 10.000 volume! that m m p... m long. Such Is the report the Sch of Pedagogy in mud. The .vmge German Specks at n I at 300 Iyllnhlel u unn— lite. Excluding lhe hours he llklfl. he is talking N per cent at the time. — Frankiurt New- Pres Nigerian Viewpoint lIrnlI Ohm: ed lg Moslcm. treat Item. Put them In like Jim. plenty at them, Ind drIw the veil over their Incas. Mull: them pet: in the home hilt live them no priv- lleges, and their [dell of equal. ‘l'ty with men will vlnlsll in I "u Ill AnlIr'I period world hl would "keep than: poor, and they will obey the hluhlnd [or money. Flog Olen! Ii lenl one. I week mid they will humble. I! you reaped them they will domhnte the house and humil- I-te your mlnly pride." There Is more. The Nigerian columnist support-I "the idea of une In“. several wives. 1‘ II 0 more you c ollcct Ind sturva them the better for society. Our father: did m. but today I no danger ahead. The solu. lion lit: in emluvlns Ill women. It ll lot known whether Anlnr ll nlll In leerlu. Neither is it. known whclller the gentleman i! I bIIzllllvl' n! nourish disposition of I man who wedded I woman and Iollnd out curly in Inlrrled Bf! that the world villi! dexlrlng WI not. the one In which he Wu privileged to he boss The Pigeons Jmu'nll begun in 1044. A length of garden host! was painted to resemble l bullsunke and installed outsidl eon trapper was hired by lhl health department. in four months he trapped ma pigeon! and iina qllit in disgust: soil.- llcurled 0' lens kept lreeln: [III hints irnrn their traps. City employees broke up pigeon nests. cunllscuted e g g I a n a Iquirtcd birds ull their ledges with a hose. They painted pigeon tooSts with repellents. Two years later. Milwaukee's booming ulg. eon population mu m It man than comm birds. book .I «u evidence else- where. in 1945. ehuuuelphl. pn- ud an ordinance lurbhldlugv pen- 1) to ma plgeuu, on the who lul theory that maybo the hungry birds would mlgrm ta Clrnden or possibly Honolulu. The law proved uncntorceable. beln u even less popular with penulo than with pigeons. Albany, used Stuffed own to iriglltcn tho birds. The pigeons u "a their hudl ior - mining plIce. .2 t< ll IDB LOAN YOUR BU ll Thousands of bluinessea throughout lCanIda haveuSedIDB Ioanshoexpami or modern!» their facilities. ' If you have plans for your human and.l require finandng, call in and dismal your needs with us. 10"? mat/smut . DEVELOPMENT BANK I RANCH omen cellos: cAnAnA MONCI‘ON, N. B. 236 3!. Telephone SI. 889-1551 ‘ HELP/N6 CANADIANS HELP THEMSELVES TO PEACE OF MIND d EXCELSIOR LIFE M aw