-.......... --on-p..a.-i-ma:--4. 5-5:- I... l u-AI .. .. ..,.. ..,.....,.-s?...g.... fi- Tle Guamfiau '. "C an Prince Elwlld llllnl Like the Dev” Published every week - day morning It has Prince Sin-1-I. uuulottctnwn. l'.l-' .. by the 'l'hum.-on Company Ltd. 44 km St. W.. Toronto. Mootlral Ofliu-. . t'uner.sil,i Tuuzr Bldg. Editor. Frank Walker General Manager. Ian A. Burnett Member ('auatIian Daily Newspaper Publisher: Anuciaun Us-min-r of The Canadian Prefix all-iuI.it-r Au-lit Bureau of Clrculntuuu Ii-amt: nfflres .1l SUl"lIIIll!l'SldF.N10l'lIIllI( and Alhu-iuu AuIhvu'II-ti as hi-uuul Class Mall by the Post Office - In-unitiiii-pt. Ottawa. Ir t".-iuicr timulnttciuun, summcrnlde Sl5.tI0 DH in- mm. Elsewhere in l".I-1.1. s9.ou. other Pmvincu and U. 5. 312.00 per nnnum. ' rm-.smv.;JXu. i-1.75."-is Educational Problems 'llic 'l't-aclicrs Federation have lnstitutcd workshop discussions, the first of which was llOl(l here on Sal Ul'tltl) with over thirty tezuzhcis in attendance. This method of discuss- ing and focusing attention on prob- lems affecting the lczu-liiiig prufc;s- siou should prove highly stimuli:-H lug. Education is lattiiic seriou- problems at lllls llllit'. uut ouh in Prince Edward Island but tlirou:.;li- otit Caiiiitla. llcrlizips the must press- ing one is the slii)i'I.i-.:i- of full-. trained lcat"-iei- 'lllfl the pr0spet't- that this l i ' will ll - -ozue niore acute. with tlXll.liltllllt,' st-liool en- rollments Elllll the inrlureniciits held out in industry and other profes- sions to college qrnrliialcs. The first Ff'f'tlllllllDnflHll(lll from he Federation worksliop stresses I the need of raisin: the ciitiwuicc requirements to tlw ll-.r-'u-i-s' tv:uu- ' lng course and of eliniinating un- qualified teachers; also of revising: the program of teachers training with special emphasis on the quali- fications for rural schools. and of providing in the salary scale a basic minimum or starting figure, a sub- Itantial differential for each year of tiraifdffg and adcquate increment: for each year of service. -Nodoubt these and other recom- mendations made at Saturday's ses- Ilons will be studied carefully by the Department of Education. It Ieems evident that they can only be effectively carried out with increas- cd expenditure. Here again we share with other Provinces the problem of financing, which can only be ade- quately met. by federal assistance. It to to be hoped that the present ses atom of Parliament will see a full discussion on this matter. There is no reason why such aid would affect our provincial status under the Brit- hli North America Act. for the prin- ciple has already been recognized in other federal expenditures. Ten years ago. when the Prince ldward Island Advisory Recon- ltruction Committee outlined plans Ior educational improvement which were tabled in the Legislature, it was pointed out that the program could only be achieved by contribu- Ionii from federal funds. "Only by assistance from federal sources." the report stated, "will it be pos- dblk to offer .the youth of Prince ltlwud Island educational oppor- tunities that will approximate those available in the larger and wealth- ier provinces whose wealth we have helped to create." The report also cited the findings of the Rowell- lirois Commission not up by the Dominion Government. which re- commended a national adjustment pant from the Federal Government to enable this Province at least to roach the standard of public Iervices in other Provinces, and which specifically mentioned educa- Hon as requiring such assistance. Today the situation is much worse -tum when the Rowcll Commission "snorted. or when the Provincial Advisory Reconstruction Commit.- vrc prnselllcfl its findings. Demands on mluration have intensified and costs have risen tremendously in the past decade. They will continue at an accelerated pace in the years to come. The problem is a national onn and it has become such a cliallcng-. today that it can no longer be ignor- ed without disastrous rcsults to the country as a whole. Unfortunate Words There is no question about ll Secretary of State Dulles takes first place among Western statesmen in the practice of irritating-phraso making. As far as his latest venture in-this practice is concerned, and for which he has been roundly criti- clzed in the British press, and in- dged in some sections of the Ameri- M71 PPI!-sf. the information he gave if his interview with a widely cir- dlated magazine was not. in itself. ' lculu-ly startling. whether or the United States was "on the of war” three times In ,. tun months. It seems certain -' Arnerlcan show of strength in but 3 good deal to do Li. " "'--cs. with keeping the Chinese-Conimuir ists from taking over most of Asia. and there is no question whatever that it thwarted the intended in- vasion of Formosa. The statement that was really irritating in Mr. Dulles' expressions of opinion was this one: "The ability to get to the verge without gelling into war is the necessary art. If you cannot master it, you inevitably get into war." To Mr. Dulles this may seem the latcst thing in internation- al political fashions, and he may be quite right in that view; but to the Chinese Communists it was bound to savor of that commodity which is the sto:-k-in-trade of the bully the world ovcr. namely. bluff. As a mat- ter of fact, the Pciping radio al- ready has made that interpretation. ”If Mr. Dullcs." the radio announ- ced. ”thinks for one moment that he l'(lll liluff the (lhincse people out nl llu-ir rights he is greatly mis- talu-ii." Mr. Dulles. of course. meant no such thing. The movements of the Tlli l-llcct in the Formosa sti-nits. tor instance. constituted no bluff lvut stark reality which, it is szile to sziy. the Pciping authorities i'ct-oqiiixt-rl for what it was. Mr. Dllllcs intentions were good. as they always arc: the words he used to coiivry them were unfortunate, as they li:m- horn on previous occas- nccds a refresher neccss-;ii'y arl. inns. llerluips he i-nurse lll .'uiuillor that old IlIliltlllTrl(')'. , Mr. MacDonald's Statement Mr. I). A MacDonald, former cliuirniau and manager of the P. E Island Potato Marketing Board. has made it clear that there were no irregularities in connection with fed- Pl'lll payments to the Board undev the agreement covering the 1953-54 crop. The Auditor General's report to Parliament suggested that therc had been an over payment of 55330.- l)0t), but he is evidently intcrprctinn -transportation charges under tilt agreement as covering all rail freight for export from shipping points to market destination. Mr MacDonald states there was nevei any doubt in the minds of Board of ficials who administered the agree menl, or of agricultural and treas ury officials who supervised its ad ministration. that such freight cost.- should not be a direct charge againsf sales realization. He also recall- that in April 1955 the Dominion. Government settled all its obliga- tions under the marketing agree ment and in an official order-in- Board and the Selling Agency had carried out their duties "in a com petenl and efficient manner.” It is to be hoped that this mat- ter will be brought up in Parliament so that there will be no possibility of misunderstanding the Auditor Generals report so far as our Island potato marketing activities were concerned. This is all the more im- portant in view of the serious charges made in the report concern- wick potato marketing records for I053 which now has reportedly brought resignations from several fcdcral inspectors in the ncii:lilior- ing Province. Our Island record ls under no suspicion of this kind: but it is due to Mr. MacDonald. and all associated with him in the P. E. Is- land Marketing Board activities during the period in question. that the facts in connection with their operations be placed fully on record. EDITORAL NOTES A lvlltllosl, in a teapot may have only a figurative meaning; but a hurricane in a dishpan is a scientific fact. It is part of a huge United States Weather Bureau project de- signed to furnish information re- garding the catlscs and habits of big slornis. O O O - West Gernian Chancellor Arlen auer must have a remarkable ca lltWll.l' for work. As if he . did not haw Nlmltzh to do already. be has asked parliament to give him con- trol over the country's any system which employs more than 4000 men. Evidently. the fact that he is in his 8l)'.s- doesn't bother him nitu-li. 0 O O 1iRrictIllIu'c Minister Garrlinci has al1ll0Ullt'NJ that l)l.ll.te.r sold to Czechoslovakia went. for 39 cents a pound. while that to East Germany brought only 37 cents. Does that mean the Czechs have more money to spend than their East Geminn neighbours or only that East Ger- mans are better at bargaining? It cannot mean that the Germans are more ln favour at Ottawa. council it was stated that both the ing the falsification of New Bruns- -CAN sg-222:; i.'oMPA.e: llll 0 PUBLIC FORUM This rolulnu in npen Iu Ihr dunn- ulol by corrur.-mdenln of quntlom nf lntl.-roll. Thr Gulnllnn dou lot netellnrlly endoru the nplllol Cl currospoudcnll. RURAL SCHOOLS Sir.-lrliile reading thi- of the Provincial Honie School mccling held in our capital on June lllh. I was astouiulcil at this remark: ”Act- ually in the rural (.llSlrlL'l5 on the Island. it was common practice for the School Boards to look for the cheapest teachers available -and consequently the poorest qualified." Surely there is no member of the llonie and Scliuol Board guilty of makim: such a ruthless remark. Speaking an a rural parent and one wliu has served on the report and fair local school board for several years. thank goodness I have . never felt that spirit at any of our meetings. On the contrary. the chief thought was. ”we must seek one who has the qualifica- tions of a good teziclier. that with the parents co-operation. at the end of the school term pupils and teacher's efforts would be crowned with "W01! done'." And I believe without fear of contra diction. our rural pupils have at ways been able to take their stand at any time with their city friends. With the splendid support our Government has given. and we know will continue to give in im- proving and building rural schools along with full cu-opcra- tion of rate payers and pupils the iural schools will continue to be creditable. . I am. Sir. nu-.. L. A. New Glasgow Against Teta nus An explanation of the causes of tetanus. and the methods of guard- ing against the disease is given by Dr. R. .l- vl'ilson. Associate Pralin- sor of ll.i l-'lO1lC and Preventive Med- lcinc. ltcscarrh Associate. Con- nauulit L.'il)0l'Hllll'lf'S- 1Jniicrxn,v of Toronto. in an article written spec- lnlly for the present i.-suc of Health Ma;:a7iuc. official publication of the Health League of Cmiada. "Tetanus or lnckjnw is a dlsCilSC usuulli contactcd through 11 penet- ratiiig wound contaminated by soil or street dust which contains the germ causf the disease." says Dr. Wilson. Tlir-rc are two ways of combat- ini: tcliuius. lhr first licini; liv lhc - ll.-P of Rllll-lvxlll. .1 i-cmli-Iii;-dc ininiuiiuy which in IIVPII to pct- sons not known in be fminunited at thc time of injury nur of this mcu.-turc is that the c lctrts last only about ten (lays and victiins must be lnorulalcd at the time of each subsequent iniury. Further. many persons are 4cnsit- ive to the serum. and skin-tests must be Elven before me of anti toxin. It is also not always easy to detect which injury the .-:cr'u'n should be iziven for. as it In not posslblc to uivc it for every llttlc sI'rillClI. ycl tetanus will come- tlmcs result from a seemingly tri- vial wound. Second and host mclborl n! im- munizlng against tetanus is by lot- anus loxold. First largo sralr trial of thin loxnid was in the last war when it was administered to all American. Canadian. and British service men and woman. In some 52.000 Canadian Army casualties there were two ca es and no deaths. the two cases" lug people who had not received a proper course of toxold. In the whole U.S. Army only six cases ocurrcd among those who received partial or complete immunization. and only our rasr in .'-.'IR..'-'!tt l-attlr llI"llfldPd. There were no cambnl l2DHlalfl";u in the. U S Nniy ulio dc! nloperl tetanus. Since lull. most Canadian chil- dren who receive the combined pre- partition of diphtheria loxnid and. whooping cough vaccine for the pre- ven ' of those dlleases. also have the tetanus toxold added at the some time. Hot sump in I vacuum bottle is I vlilllhk part of a M-lmnl olulcf; OTTAWA REPORT ”l:2lruria was xtl great that its lanic l'?.VU:lll(lCtl uicr land and sea. from one end of Italy to the other. from the Alps to the Straits of Mcssnia”. Thus wrote Liiy in the first century B.(2 In extolling the gi'::uI- ncss of ltmuc. lic wis Cl.l .l pin tribute to the forerunners of Latin culture. the Etruscans wlio. iimugh a conquered people. had played so grcat a part in bringing Home into being and who probably provitlcil it with its first kinds. The l-Jlruscaus were also cu-lctl llic "lutor:- of llunic". Long allvr thcy hail been defeated and lin- ally sublugated. they were rumin- ed for their mastery in art and learning. It iv s to them that the Roman palricians entrusted the ctlucatioii of their sons. But with time the amazing civilization of the Etruscans was all but lor- gottcn and remained so for nearly two lliousand five hundred years. Today, the world is glviniz lic- lalcd rcroy;nilinu to this iiiy.stcr- ious pcopleiibout whom we still know so little. in Europe. tlmuks to the co-operation of muscui and collectors in different lands. a remarkable exhibition of 400 spccimens of Etruscan art is to tour several capitals. Orizanizeil by Professor Massimo Pallottino. of Rome University. it is bclnc sent to Zurich. Milan. The Hague Paris. Stockholm and Berlin wiicrci -'a 2. minus in Westcrn European his- lory. Few inilcctl ucrc lhc people ulio in past ccnturics appreciated or even knew the work of the Etruscan artists. Michelangelo and other sculptors and painters o' the llalian Renaissance may have hr-cn familiar with certain aspc-.-ts of their powerful. sophisticated art. But for Iiinctcr-ii liuu" "l years the creators of the ”Api-Ii of Veil" and the famous "Wall of the Capitol" were generally for- uuttcn. Their work was so lil'lc valucd that. in I546. six llious'uid pnunds of brmnc nhlccts fnunrl in tlw nci-ropollscs of 'l'us(-any wrrrr mcllcrl down in maL'c orluuiicnts fur the Basilica of Saint Jonn Lalrran in Ronic. Tlll-1 RIDDLF. OF l.ANGl'.-i('.f'7 Yet ll was aboic all lhrnuqli their tombs that the Etruscans world. when a few funerary chambers were discovered in the Dl5D(lHllI'.' I ?-...-ii STAR-CIIOOSING Winter's the time for choosing stars. Come out to the blazing dark And take your plck. White earth lies still save for I dog's cold burk Two farms nvcr. Out of this Vltll Splendor. which star will you hnvc? Aldcbmm'I burning role or Rlulix Blue-uhito on that arcliltrave Where Orion stride! with Dale!- pause A topaz on his arm? Or will you choose the She.-Goat. koevtns Her three Imnll white Kids warm? Front cryltaln in MI throat. the Dog Trutn toward his westward haven. Winter's the time for choosing starl- Help yourself to heaven! -l-'ram-in rI"0.'tI MONTREAL POUO IASEI - IIIONTIJJAL rcrv-buns. ii-om polio dropped to three in Montreal during 1965 from to in 1964. Health Dlreotorhnr. Add-3.: Grout: Isrltl Friday a you report. . O attributed the in roll: plun- mgttonolnlkntl lione- of "we the out- na d the year." He sold ELEM children received two loloofloln of-lbo-van.-loo and LU lunch. especially In colder months. monmollllliot. Return Of The Etruscians Lucien Butnlcr in Uneaon Bulletin carly 19th century at Corneto tlhc ancient. Tarquininl. Unfortunately. museums and art gallries benelltted little from these early finds. Smuettea. vases and jewels were greodily snapped up by antique dealers to satisfy Ilic sudden craze for Etruscan art. Medically Speaking Illa-nnN.Iunluu.lI.'lI. Y,0U CAN'T AVOID COLDS BUT YOU CAN SPEED CUBE Alon: about this time of the year many of you (re troubled with I running none. watery eyes. freq- uent nneulnz. chill: and henda '- . you are. you belong in bed. the best place for anyone with 1 cold. And. chances are. than what you've got. CAN'T AVOID COLD! While there isn't an awful lot the average working man or wom- an can do to avoid colds. ther are quit: I few things you can do to help tspeed recovery and alleviate pain and discomfort. If you've got. a fever-you might have a slight temperature with a cold-it's essential that you re- main in bed until it subsides. Your bedroom should be warm, but not too hot-about 70 to 72 degrees. Drink 1 lot of liquids. Hot both: are often helpful. too. If you have a temperature. your doctor should be summoned. of course. You dont want that cold to develop into pneumonia. He can prescribe medicine to help get rid of the symptoms. but he probably won't advise anil- biotlcs unlss there are definite .in- dications you are developing com- plications. If he suspects your sore throat means a streptococcal in- fection, he'll probably give you pen- icillln. As for the sore throat itself. he might advise that you izargle with an easily mixed solution every four hours. In a glass of hot water. mix one leaspoonful of salt. our-half tra- spoonful of soda bicarbonate mid five drops of tincture of lodme 12 per cent! or your doctor may give you a special pros:-riptmii. If your sinuss are painful, w.'ii'in compresses might provide rclicf. Apply them for 15 minutes or so every four to six hours. For nasal relief. he may suggest that you tak a small amount of a salt water mixture-one lea- spoonful of salt to one quart of warm water-in your hand and shift it slowly into your nose. QUESTION AND ANSWER S.D.: For the past few months 1 have had pains in my left hcel. It feels like I am stepping on a nail. What could be causing this? Answer: Your difficulty could be caused by a spur. or extra unr- lion of bone protruding from the heel bone. Sometimes an lnfl:im- mation of the ligaments around the Wl"-ln ill? 3llCl18E0lUlZl5l5 HUB")! heel or arthritis can also be at entered the hypogea or nnder- fault. ground tombs they found that An X-ray will help reveal th others had been there before them cause. and thousands of ' ” " t ' were lost to the world.of learning. Fate seems to have conspired to and Plutairch. and most l'll"(l.'”l' conceal the rcal history of this people. Litcrary evidnce in anci- ent writers is extraordinarily slight and though we have many wonderful works produced by Etruscan sculptors. goldsinlths and painters. we know next to nothing of their daily life. Their language. morcol.-'ci'. which was still spoken in the early cunt- urles of our era. remains a myst- cry for philulogists who have de- ciphcrcd barely a hundred wt-eds. Nearly ten thousand very :-.lmrt inscriptions have both coll;-L-ted. but most of them chiefly contain proper names. The only lniuortulil Etruscan manuscript found to date is a liturgical text of about L500 words written on the wrappings of the famous mummy of the A-:i'.iin Museum in Zagreb. Its interpret- ation. however. still 'ml'il:s ar- chacologisls and the only remain- ing hope is the discovery of u bilingual text such as the famous Rosetta stonc wliosc inst-riptiums in liii-roplynliic. dcmotic and Grcck provitlcd the key for de- ciplicriug liicroglynhlcs. MYSTERIOUS ORIGINS As though the language difficulty were not enough. the riddle of the I-Jtiuscans is still further compli- cnted by their mysterious origins. No one really knows where those people came from when they and- dcnly appeared in central Italy during the eighth century B. C. some believe that they were run- away and" Egyptian slaves; others. that they were exllea from the distant Finno-Urgrlnn lands. or barbarians who settled in Cam- D-"ml-'I. bet-.u-en the Tiber and the Arno and hccame masters of two- llllrdl of Italy. . Today scholars arc still dhitlcd on two main thcorlca. One is the . . by st-liolnrs accept the l(ll'il that tlu: Etruscans came from the l-Inst. But. five hundred years after Herodotus, Dionysius of Halicarn- nssus rejected this thory because he found "no similarity in lpugiuige or in customs between the inhabitants of Lydia and those of Elruria". He regarded the Eturscans as indigenous to Italy and today his theory still has some supporters. including Professor Pallottlno. one of the foremost cxpcrl: on l-its-list-an re.-t-.".rr-Ii. Nu:li'n:. as yet. has bccn 'lnally provcd. But there is no doubt that. except when they show the in- fluence of Greece. the Etruscan masterpieces are aklii in their delicacy and. in many cases. in their subject-matter to the wu":S of Babylon. Phoenicia 8-id P.-rsia. The Etruscan religion too. with its emphasis on funeral ritcs and core- monial and an the practices of div- lnatlon. is reminiscent of Egyptaln and lllttltc bclicfs. But wlialcver htcr surly mo: rc- inal about the lruc identity of" the l-ltruscan people. it in uudon-':ible that. thousands of years ago. they laid the foundations of the arts and tastes of modern man. The Age Old Story 0 satisfy up early with Thy. mercy: that we may rejoice and be glad all our days. ACTIVE BESCUEB NEll'("ASTlJ:2 UPON TYNE. England (CPI - An inspector of the royal society for prevention of cruelty to animals reports he climbed 97 trees and roofs last year - rescuing cats. Lydian thcory first pi llcrodotus in the fifth century l3.C. According to hb'n..the Etruscan: were descended from a tribe which had come from Lydia in Asia Minor. Led by their chief Tyrrhcn- us. they had been driven out by laminc and travelled by sea to the known as the Tyrrhenian Sea west coast of Italy. landing on the shares of what was tlici--war known on the Tyrrhenlan Sen Many classical wrltrs Iucli Is Catullus. Cicero. Seneca, Pliny W0 ULD WIDIN ACT Burke Electric Authorized fix 93101. The Guardian Notes The Way A . Anll-llucrklallonlltu iwho storm about "mus medication" have ll!- lli of Ilndllnl to out about the no status -the World rlllllutlon. are in use on food additives. -Buuttord Expon- tor. It would not be difficult to agree with Mr. BuIubla'I pronouncement. that the law in I nu. a ldlot. if he had been musing about munlclpll legislation in Toronto. Among the bylaws which have accumulated un- attended during the put half-c.ut- ury. numbering almost 20.I)0. are many nnncbronlams which fit the description. eGlobe and Mall. An exhibition recently held in Paris on the theme of Speed gave visitors an idea of the time taken not only by machines but by anim- als, insects and even tiny particles of matter to cover a given distance. A number of unusual facts were revealed. For instance a certain species of fly, the Cephonomya. holds the "animal world speed re- cord." flying faster than sound, at 817 mph. Blood In the human body pulses through arteries at a speed of almost one foot per second. and fingernails grow at the rate of 5- looths. of a millimetre an hour. - Unesco Bulletin. Real purpose of the Federal de- cision to raise the level of the ”stan(lard" corporation tax levy from 8&5 per cent to 9. was to make the package deal more attractive to a single provim-cu-Ontario. At the same that the fall conference broke up. Ontario's Premier Frost inade it clear flint lic retzarrlcd Quebec as the prime beneficiary of the Iiew furnuila. Ontario would pick up about SR million. But this compared poorly with the spec!ac- ular pain which might go Que. bcc's way since Quebec. which had felt that it couldnlt sign the old- fashioned tax rental pact. might be able to accept the ncw formulh. Result of the key revision is that Ontariols slain has been raised to about S14 million which. apparently, is enough to satisfy Queen's Park. The nun Ionic. drivers don't. 81" I I181!!! ll because there in no Ilznnl for what they are going to do. -St. Tboinu Times-Joui-nu. The holidays are over. Two leg, llfely. 10118 Week-eiuis are lpenL' And patch null brings ltemiud statements on what clue wu Ipept. - It won fun. but it makes it euy.” to agree with the British observe, who said recently: "The trouble t with leisure in that it can be very ” expenllve. when we get 1 general I an hour week, I think most peom. will have to have two jobs." -M11. ” wnukee Journal. Canada can compel In by nscgi and tariff policlel to buy all our consumer needs from the main. land but that will not alter the fact that 90 per cent of what we have to sell must. be gsported to count- ries other than aiudl. We have to put our dependence on three primary products--the output of the sea. the forests and the mines, And apart from the iron ore std to Sydney. everything we produce from these resources must be sent to foreign lands. -St. John: New- foundland News.- Tbe existence of the ll-bomb has turned international buying policy into the most important tactical weapon in the world. For non-coin). munixt countries. this means that trade and tariff policy has become the over-ridlng national luue. Les- ter Pearson may have had this in mind when he insisted on pulim Article 11 into NATO. If so. he was far ahead of his NATO colleagues- niany of whom havenit realized even now that a change in em pliasis has taken place. Yet it has taken place: and herets why: nat- ions depend on one another for three kinds of co-operation: milit- ary aid in lime of war: markets or sources of supply; and financ- ial capital or opportunities for in- vestmcnl. If war become: impract- ical, military help becomes less im- portant: markets and capital be- come much more so. -Financial Post. CASH IOI CIOTIIII: Illll AND FAMILY Ill-I If you need money .. call on HFC soon. ' If you have a steady income and can make regular monthly payments. no endorsera are required. Loans from 350 to S1000, usually made in one day. Kr -- T I-IOIIEIIGLD FINANCE . and need it promptly for shopping. to pay over- due bills, or any other good reason. W. I. Whaler, Manager 150 Gram (locus 50.. who 1, phone I! I 7 CIIAILOTTITOWN. P.l.I. CHARLOTTETOWN iDALE CARNEGIE CLASS NO. 3 Opens January 31. l Dcxclop Couliilcnce. Become a Leader. C. Fisher. 239 Pownal Street. For Information and Registration. please apply Dr. George Phone 9465. (oaleeiimrgie INSTIT TI iMItRlTlMIkll.IMllll 955; Dale Carnegie - Founder of Carnegie Course ' Blake More Friends Speak Effectlv& -PROFESSIONAL ACARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Boll. Mntbesoo & Footer "-0 use--21,-1-. J. Elmer Blanchard. B.A.. ill Queen st Photo All! it A. runner. Q0 1.1.; lulu of co T OPTOMETRISTS G. F. Hutcheson & son r. G. mrrcimnon no is or-mm at. N -0111 an I. A. Ourruthorn. B.0. in Kent at. out uu . .o'.o.T' '32'.'i”3i" G'"" am an ft! mAdI:hi:J"uGm" iiiiiB'nn 1” SUDBURY. 0 t. C -- Pmrln ........j............. -z-- lly Allowance And R mlsird A W I”. M LLB. J. S. 3.0- nllow payment! to continue to u 8 ab”... 5 m t' Oornu Rent A dun Stu. M ::::r;:..:: "."""”.:.”""":.9 :; ”""”i2'.2.i1l;ll”"” ---"-l----"""” ' ” """' Pol Ollulo ,. ho. .0.- lil;..2'..".- 2.-hi-.::--.:.-:.s.t':;!i:.".;-.:r. DIAL 4021 .. .:":'... ...... 2.. .......'t.' "t " " -;.--.- . .;;;31;l"';',;g.t,g,";;.;:;";f:;dw':,f 156 Great 000. St Iuuiuon. hobo 0 cl-uRopRAcToR fire council to support Ill! Inell i m lgnmuhnuug. Dr. W. B. 6730! . 3 ffmmm. cu-noun IIHOOO anon; ARCHITECT 'oIiu. B. oQmlil. o. llllleiula. M. I. Arch. M.l.A.l.Cu CON8UL'I'i run voun llt8llllAllcE ill-Ins llYllllMAll & CO. LTD. lhilnu-balm. ourexperlanocdovuclhruquutoruduooatnryuts mrucoUndcrwrftd'I.lou!0IltIIInl. ' on-an cuum-I-uowu - nmiunnni . uowuoul mum-on. AGlN'II'l'mGIllIlCPQVX-- M-ugh Bloclhiee & Tnlnor ll Mac II. but ill lunnonllu. P.l.l. cnummn.m1:eu-y- -34 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS IIoDONALD. CUBBII I O0. CIIHICIIQICI