759 Guardian 1. "CovIrI PnII:I Ddwul IIIIII Lila III Dov” hllihudovury voddunntlllllllblfrioeolkrld Qgrhtuoown. P.I.l.. I1 III hm: OCH!) Lid-4 41 Kill 5!. W.. TIIQIJ. lontrul Office. as Uninrili TIVII Illlu III A. Burnett. Puhhior Ind GIIIIII MIIIIQ Frnk Wnlker. Editor lombor ("IIIIIII Bally Nowqapc Pullilbcrs Assoc-iIuoI Member of The CIIIdiII Prcu Member Audi Bureau nl circulations Irnu-I offices It Sumnierldr. IloIuguI Ind Alberto: Authomed II Second Clan Inn by III Pun Oftiu Department. Uttawa. Iy larner Chnrluttetowl. Summulldo 315.00 PM ll- Iuin Eluwliero II P !:.l. I100. ouior Provincu III U. S lI1.00 per Innuni. .”Tlre Itrongesrmemo y is welker-thIT the weakest lnk.," P-G32? i!.0N'LAi5DEc-3J.1':' U. S.-Icelandic Agreement it will be recalled that about It yn;n- ago the Government of Iceland gate notice that all foreign troops, I w Inch happened to be American, would hate to be removed from that ,'x'.t'1lti Ina.-e. Well, after prolonged lIt",;t)llillItul.s' it seems that the United states tiox ernmcnt has persuaded the lwlatirlcrs that the troops should lie allow ed to stay. According to the rt-portcd arrangement. howex er, they will stay only for the purpose of de- tn-iultiig lcelnttd and the L" n i 1 ed SI;ll('w'. shoulrl,the need at'i.-cc: they are not to be used for the defence of WC-sterit Europe. livulcntly. this tentative agree- ment----apparently it has not yet been I'alIflt'(l tot-mall)---was made with Ireland by the United States acting independently of its allies, or shall we say its "former allies," since any alliance now in force between the United States and th 9 European members of NATO is so fragile that it can be said to be purely academic. If Canada was consulted in the mat- ter, which is unlikely, it has been kept secret. One thing is clear: the current wave of anti-Americanism in Britain and France is not going to be lessen- ed by the disclosure that an import- ant NATO base has been converted into an American fortress with no clear relation to West Europe's de- fences. Of course, it is possible that such a relation would be assumed in the event of war involving the North Atlantic region. But there is no men- tipn made of it in the report we have seen. As it reads. the agree- ment is simply a private one between the two countries. Tribute To France Critics of France of late have had the field much to themselves. All the more to be appreciated, there- fore. are the words of admiration expressed by General Alfred M. Gruenther of the United States Army who has lived in Paris for six years Is Supremo Allied Commander of NATO forces. and whose retirement took effect recently. General Gruenther is quoted by the publication France Actuelle as saying that his years with NATO had confirmed his faith in France and the French people. He added these striking words: "I know even better than before that France is an ally. steadfast tn the Westem Alliance for the defence of civilization. I have full confidence in France and in all It stands for in lpiritual values, love of liberty Ind respect for human dignity." It would have been nice to have heard something like this from the lips of President Eisenhower, 01' Prime Minister St. Laurent. during the past few weeks. But no man can speak with better authority than General Gnienther, and in timing his words to this critical occasion he has spoken Is I true friend. "Trained Seals" It is refreshing to turn for I moment from wars Ind rumours of wars to I little incident thIt took place the other day in I small town In Missouri. Four persons were di- rectly involved: I judge, I school board official. Mrs. Mary L. Schoen- heit and her seven-year-old daughter whose name was not given in the report. Involved. too, was the widely ICL pied principle of compulsory qlucation. In brief this is what happened. Hrs. Schoenheit wu brought before the court Ind fined I nominal Qtount for refusing to Iend her Qtuhter to school on the ground 8 Icboob turn out "trained Iesls" tht, in Iny cue, Ibo--Mrs. - --isquitecapnbleofedw he daughter much better It The Jab. "tnking note of ' ' .- 'l Ii-nmmt." Illowcd 2- -O ht G806. Ind tho ' -- v toooliotph a --.6-- - having the time of her life. It will be inteiesting to see how the case is finally settled. Compul- sory education is, of course, taken to mean education by compulsory at- tendance at an accredited school. It is intended to ensure a certain amount of formal schooling for every child. If, in the process, some "train- ed seals" or agile nincompoops are produced, that is one of the risks that must be taken in the interests of society as a whole. Usually, par- ents lack either the time or the pro- fessional ability, or both, to look after the education of their children. But, under the laws which exist in most communities, it doesn't matter who the parents are or what their qualifications may be-they may even be university professors and Ph.l)'s.-liteir children must attend school. even though the teacher may not be able to tell the dil'l'crcncc be- tween a Ph.D. and a horse )tb'Ii0,V. not that there is anything wrong with a horse jockey. Mrs. Sl'Ilt)l'llllt'll thinks this is a denial of fundaincntnl human rights. She says she has no objection to her daughter's ini.xin,; with trained seals socially. but str- doesn't want her to become one In being forced to attend a public school. Does one hear a taint rumbling of applause fi'oin kindred souls? Surely not. And yet The Quintal Doubt less, Confederation has gixcn Newfoundland some good things. But one is tempted to say that in taking away the ”quintal" it has brought disappointment aitd perhaps a sense of injury to thousands of fishermen. True, it was the Newfoundland Fed- eration of Fishermen that dealt the measuring unit its final blow, l)ut it was done mainly to bring the weigh- ing of cod into conformity with Canadian standards, and to that ex- tent it can be called a casualty of political union. For three hundred years the quintal was to a Newfoundland fish- erman what the bushel is to a Prince Edward Island farmer. It meant a number of things besides I12 pounds of salted cod. It meant the gauge of I day's work on the "grounds." the reward for getting up before dawn and setting out across dark waters, the difference between frustration and good cheer when the lines were hauled and the nets emptied. It was I link with a tradition which em- braced adventurers of many lands and many temperaments. a euphori- lous word that owed its attractive- ness to the intangible values of I society deeply rooted in knowledge of the sea, its charms and its dang- ers. Not nearly as utilitarian as "hundredweight" or "100 lbs."-that, of course, was why it was given the official coup de grace-but much more in keeping with the romance and adventure of a long and thrilling story built out of I people's en- counter with the elemental forces of wind and sea. Officialdom finds it easy to discard traditions. And it was. no doubt, in- evitable that it little word which never had become fashionable in the world at large would have to give way before the demands of the ef- ficiency experts. Yet. the culture of I community includes many things which have little or no utilitarian value but which are not easy to eliminate from vernacular usage. And it will not be surprising If long after the merchants have started to weigh cod by the hundredweight, many a fisherman will ask his neigh- bour in the autumn: "How many qulntals did you manage to bring ashore?" EDITORIAL NOTES A motorist arrested for speeding in an English town should have been let off with I minimum fine. He claimed that he was driving fast in order to get away from a police car. Originality of thought it so rare these days that when it does make In Ippearance it ought to be rewarded. O O I It's hardly likely that Canadians will be able to eliminate traffic ac- cidents entirely during our national Safe-Driving Week, which runs be- tween December 1st and 7th. but it h possible, Iccording to the experts, to cut the number of traffic deaths by It least 50 per cent this week. The only way It an be done, though, is for every person tn trafnc-moron ht Ind pe&ItrlIn-to take every ffG.t0XbIdIIIyl'enlti- illltosvolltskmgchnncesnndto Israe 's .llCIll S-ll I- ll llcn (i won has sontctlnnu of t'Iuutlull - tlzut for the apt quotation To lilo" -olcmn niectuig of the Kiu--sci VIllltl'llt'lI lo Iirur lIlt' rc on of xutort he quoted lsinali xiv. la in that day shall the liuyptimts hr III-(t' unto womcn; attd they s't.'ill ticmhlc and fear Itccntise of the sltuklnu of the hand of the Lord of Iltlsls, which he -tiitkctli otcr tln-ut' The face of tloshv ll.iy;m. t'lurf of Mat. stltutu lll pullou-r with op. en-necked slurt, (IIII not flicltcr. Ncllltcr at the ltt”.llllIllll.I. nor dur- HIE ttor at the end of lllt' Prime Ministers spec-U1 was llmre ap- plttu-c from HIV rruwulctl llouw To lsracl (lpi-tzilttut IHuini' was just one iuotv cltiiplcr in the Iolitl chronicle of blood.-hcd which has ruullnuctl durnn: cvcrx day of the State's eight lt'.lTS ol lite. Tlvire are other sunilnriluw be- tween Hrllzllllx and l-r;iel': unr- paign he was dirt-tlun; lIl)I'l'.'llltIlls from two maps on his bed. suitor- lng from para-typltotd with .'l INH- pcrature of I04 rtrcrw. lit-n (lur- ion has the -auto ltankrilittz for panache. Whrn he ruiule his radio announccmcnt lo lIll' kept the whole country" wlnttuq for an hour listening to luncrnl music before he finally spoke at I230 ii. m MOMENTOLS IIEFISION Ben-tltirion had srarrrly tlclix- cred his Knesset speech with its Its intmlmxzcitt Point ti. clt-cl:tr- in); that Israel would lltllllll no foreign troops to Sinai, ulu-n Bri- tain. the l' S.. ltussta and the Lou- cd Nations, out-li for their reasons. &lllfl('(Iih'IIt'tlIL1 sticks nt him. For tllr next twt'nlyIonI' hours the ('.'tbuu-t un-. lll nlvnos-I continuous st-s-ton tlrs liolrlu Meir. the Foreign tlutislrr. was intercepted at Pnrn on her way in LN and brouizht hztrk tn ntukr the momentous (Il'f'lsltlI'l The f';Ih- lncl bowed to Fnscnltovtcv s pros- surr. with Iltissuni Itll'('(tx huilrluic up in Syria Israel did not (lure jcopardin the pros'n9t'l of do- lhc event ol .S'xrt:In atturk llcn (lnrion's toirv sivltltdffl weak amt sad beyond (Inscription as he broad:-:1-t the news of his rlctisnon to surrender .N'ut.u If any other leader lt.'uI ntmlr such .'I do rtsmn he would hate hrcn mer- (Iurion is Israel's Joseph to. Well.- l),irkm--. has ilo-rd Ill over the Slate of Iowa. tho l)tt':ull).uskrI of the world We It:-tvc returned to our snut: little roomcllc on hoard the ”llocI(y Mount."-tin llotkct” in type these words When we board- ed this crack llock l-land train at Enlzlcwood Station. l'hi:;ien thr- temperalure was unrontfortnhly high We Iurncd tlu- tin-rntnslat down from 73 to H5 and now the atmosphcie is nun-h more pleas- anl Outside ll looks pretty cold For the past couple of hours we hate been sitting ui one of the club ears hisrimz 8 most interesting um- versatinn with a middle - aged lady buyer from a big store in Des Molncs and I yuunrt man who is I ”human engineer" The lady buyer is on her way back from one of her regular trips to New York. and thr "human engineer" - what we should call an imlu.-vt- rlnl psytlmlo-1:-t lr-ft Ihr train with the firm doll-rminatmn of starting in on a course leading to I Ph D. dcgrcc. "0I.l-I MAN RIVER" About an hour nrzo Is the sun was setting in I red. peaceful sky quite a thrill "Ole man rucr” was looking st.-rcnc. plnrlrl. and mai- entic. Even some hard - bitten us. paused in their card game to pay their homage to the great riv- or. You got quite I lot of Ilzrclse oI Amoricd mm time lcadrr- Hculiurion also works from tied, lllls tunc. coin- ptilsortly. 'l'lirotu.'Iiout lilo cont-. nation he , on It . fence front the IS Sixth Flccl in , thrown by puliltr opinion, but lion- A S(70TS!IAN'S A!iIERl('AN LOG Rocky qMo”unl3ifnl Rocket Ry Wilfred Taylor at the Edinburgh St-otImIn we crossed the Mississippi and felt .' businessmen. across the iuslc from I T... .ci.;.i.eoii. Joseph Multllr I:'u 1 (orrrspondi-nt. London Spectator vnunn was Moses! and the Israel- ncs followed Joseph Is he led his people out from Sinai. When this broadcast was made, the campaign. which last ninety- iwo hours. had been over for four days. Already nearly hIlf of the army had been demolished. It took - Israel's civilian army from Fri- day morning to Monday evening to mobilise and cross the frontier; the process of demoblllutlon wns even quicker. Two days after the fighting men Ind women were back at their old jobs. RLSSIAN EQUIPMENT with the decision to evacuate Sinai drivers were recalled to that colours together with their vehi- clcs. From then on an endless col- umn of trucks rolled down Into the desert to collect Inythlng Ind everything of military vIlue. It was like an endless procession of ants. seventy miles long; empty trucks drove down to Sinai II the loaded convoys returned. Included in endless streams of war material were the Russian jccps. trucks. artillery guns. Inti- tank guns. T34 lInkI Ind Iven I colossal radar station on wheels. Br-hind Abu Aghela. where tho E- gyptians made their only sum, the Israelis found sufficient equip- ment. Irud out in dz-pots. for two weapons which the Israeli Ambu- sador to Moscow, previously In army general. IIId were more nI(ltIt'l'n than any known to the military attaches In Moscow. Ben-Gurion sIld that. II he Tt"Iti Russinis threatening note. he felt like crumpllng It In his hInd; if he had not seen the signature lllulganin' he would have thought lllnl It had come from Hitler. There is no doubt In lsru-I that Russia is bent on the .lews' des- lrllt'lI()n. If Russian tanks could mow down the Hungarians when It suited the Communists, why should they know scruples about bombing Tel-Aviv Ind Haifa from Syria when to do so would loou I shout of triumph from Cairo to llanmscus? Mrs. Golda Meir. ls- rael's Foreign Minister. herself Russian-born and one time Am- hassndor in Moscow. hIs little doubt that the hour of vengeance is only a question of time. "If you asked me to sign I paper IlI)'int( that they will not bomb while we sit here and talk," she told me. "I would not." "AIN RI-IRA" Such is the mood of gallant ides- pair In Israel stnco RussiI show- scrn-s of chair cars. I small club car, and the diner, before we reached the big club car. It wIl rather hot there. and the radio wIs brrmlcasling the progress of I foot ball game. Club cars are pleIIInt Institut- inns. If you don't want to rend or listen to the radio you can Ilwnyn talk, which we have been doing. The three of us pulled our chIlrs rlnsr together and started tIlkIng about arrents, which, In turn led on to politics. The young mIn was I Republican Ind the lsdy Ivu I Democrat. There wII no rancour in the discussion Ind the young man agreed thIt It wu I ullonul tragedy that Mr. suvsuooo was politically finished. - DAIKNEN OVER TII PIAIIII We If! now in the heart of the prairie lands but, since It is now dark. we can't In much of them. Up ahead of us the Dluel loco motive ls moaning plslntlvely Ind behind its people are queuing up for the first dinner Itrvlce. II the any reclinlmt choirs in the choir can puungers Irl Ioddiq OH to sleep. We Ire Denver bound Ind we still have about is hours to go bo- fore we first catch lint d the mountains. Everyone lens 8 thIt ltwlllbeverycoldtlbnvorj we bitterly regretbd this honing that we left our cool II New York. NOVEMBER when clouds, rIin gray Ind Iomb- or. Close in upon November. And the eyelid of the sky Will not open on the eye Of the sun that lies In under. Then the sky is like the Ilter Whose petIls. when the sun goes down. Close ovor the gold crown. I Then thI sky is like the winter That closes eIcli white finger Upon I frosty world. While deep In It the center The next yeIr'I spring is curled. -Elizabeth June Astley. in tho ClirlItlIn Science Monitor. cd but claws. 'Aln berI'. that is the lIrIellI' secret weapon which will bring them victory evon though every house Ind fIrm shed is laid low: It mun: 'no IltornI- tlvI.' With the surf rolling Igslnst the strand behind them. with hos- tile neighbours Ilong their 500 mil- n of frontier. the IIrIeIlI hIvI nowhere to ucIpo- So there is no pInlc. no evacu- Itlon, no buying-In of food. Life continues more normslly thIn per- hIps in England. except thIt III the lorries Ire rolling down to sin- Il; Ind along the rind crowds of Yemeni, Moroccan Ind Irnqul Jews, young Ind old. with dIrk skins and brightly coloured shirts. ItInd outside their imnilgnnt shacks wnvlng to the lorrlu II they come bIck, bedeclned with Egypt's ItIndIrdI. like cturiots of old. AI the sun goes down on Fri- day evening, on Slbbsth. eyes will turn towsrds you In the West Ind lips will murmur Ill through Zion. tHeIr our Pnyerll PUBLIC FORUM IIII IIIIII II IQII II is lineup in by Ionnpoolnou Il qnudun I blond. III OIIIIIIJ Inn 1 IIIIQIIII1 IQIIIII .l opinion d Ionupoudalll. SANTA REPLIES Dear Ardl2.- Many thanks for your letter which Ippured in Saturday's Guardlln. No. I haven't forgotten Ibout the children. but I Ilwnys be. lleved, Ind IIIII do. thIt my man loyal friends Ire the little boys Ind girls who Ire too young to go to school. I used to have my pIrIde after school hours. but found there wII such I crush of children. some of the little lots were getting injur- l'm glId you noticed my plus- II II I was rsther worried Ibout Ivurlng them. Even SIntI gets eye trouble from reading the mil- lion: of letters thIt he receives. to I Plnu. A PIIII II I super- nuper market. It occuplel I huge Irn Ind the one we uw hId three lnrge cIr pIrkI. Under its roofs was I whole group of super-llnrlx. els Ind lnnurnerlble bunches of bl Ilores. ynu go Into I nuper-mIrk- at you collect I trolley Ind Just pick up from the sliolvn wint- Ilves find thIt they ed 00 I whole new sliopplnghoosvld tool -lnrhd. IQ CIILDIII 'I'hIrhyIhmIftIIu-hhvtfi IIporoflc.WIrochIIIItJIub- farodhotrvnhovecflioborlto unrclldreoultdmoim tketrlli-IttIlIu1m lt;'I.I.It:qhnwwuuhtIdr .unst-rovnumvnhl foetIta'I'.Atimt'In&lIbIe Itullbeeltnilu Ion. xnsu.IIdcIIIrQ. IIII Q Medically Speaking hlu-nIIN.IIIdIIoI.u.o. All YOU A SAFE DRIVER? AI I doctor who is interested 1- the safety Ind welfure of the Wmc II I Whole. Id like to com- Pumlm COIIIIII on the new roId P!" It lllforoved not so long ago. It! Iloo like to compliment the NW lnlklfl on the Iddltlon of Ivocinl padding, belts Ind mechan- kll "tel! feltures which they Ire buildinl into their cars. At the nine time I'd like to Will motorists not to rely entire- iv on wider Ind ItrIight.er road: Ind Iuto safety futures to keep you out of trouble. WARNS MOTORISTS Every one of these improve- ments is I step In the right di- rection. cuttliig down our tragic trIfflc deslli rolls which last year totIIed 37M!)-I near record. But it is briiinpower, not horse- power, the power to steer and brIke. not power steering or pow- er braking, which will ultimotely decide whether you will become I traffic statistic in the remaining dIyI of this year. Accidents don't just happen. More than 80 per cent of last yeIr's traffic deaths and injuries occurred as I direct result of In error or errors by the driver. DISASTROUS ENDINGS More than 2.000.000 pleasure trips ended in disaster. So Is the holiday season ap- proaches and many of you pre- pare to take to the road to visit friends Ind relatives. let me issue I few words of caution. Don't pit your reflexes against the modern Iuto”: super horse- power. You're apt to come out second best. Don't follow that urge to "pour It on" no matter how clear the day. how straight the road. or how dry the pavement. ' Remember that rules of the told Ire meant for you Is well Is for the other driver. WATCH STRAIN Don't Ignore strain and fatigue In Intlclpntlon of Implo relIxIt- lon It the lourney'I end. Stop Ind tuke I snooze in I safe place. or that relaxation at the end of your trip might be longer thIn you Inti- cipIte. Don't drink while driving. Don't drive while drinking. And, If I mIy repeat. don't rely upon built-in nfety devices to keep you out of the hospital. QUESTION AND ANSWER E. L.: In epilepsy hereditary In most cues? Answer: In most instances. it is not. However. I yl ”'Ipc-tuition to bus umJ'llIIIOIII or epilepsy cIIi be Inherited. OUR YESTERDAYS from The GnIrdIII Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO lbecember S. .1031) An Ippllcstlon set forth by the Prince Edward Island Bosrd of Trodo for re-estIbllIhmInt of two tnln connection: was hnrd todIy by the CInIdlIn Bonrd of RIllwIy Commission: a It Truro. Tho ll- lInd Ipplication sought i-e-InstIte- ment of trains it and 42 uncalled September 26 II I mount: of economy. George Clark of Hills River near Alberton lost his vIluIble turn. the head of I prize herd of Guru- sey cIttle and some of the cows, two Ilunble horses. his entire crop. fIrm machinery Ind I newly erected mIchlne house on Tuesday evening by fire of unknown origin. Mr. ClIrk'I loss is estimated It 310,000. TEN YEARS AGO (December 3. 1816) Mr. R. R. Bell was re-elected President of the P. E. Island Short horn Breeders Association It the Innual meeting of the Association held last night at the City HIII. Mr. Atltol Roberts, Hlghfleld, was elected vice-ynesldent and Mr Ster- llng MIcLeod. secretary - treasur- er. New directors include Mesners. H , t Mulch. John Du Pasquier Ind Austin Smith. Lt. Col. W. W. Reid. I). 9. 0-. Director of the Department of Phy- IlcIl Fitness was the guest speak- -er of the regular meeting of the Kinsmen Club of Summorslde last evening. and later met with the Kinsmen Hockey Committee to dis- cuss hockey dlans for the winter. Mr. Reid gave In interesting and Informative talk on the Ictlvltiel In which his department engages. I'm hIppy to say that this is now cleared up and I no longer need to wear them. I'm sorry thIt you and other children found the hours too short Ind you will be glad to know thIt I'll be staying In Toylnnd until 4:45 on the dIyI thIt I visit. I wish I could cover more cen- ters on Prince Edwsrd Island but. II most llttlo children know. I have to go from one and of the world to the other Indl only hsve I certain Impunt of time to make these visits and prepIre III the gifts for Christmas Eve. 'I'hInkI Inn: for your letter. SANTA MAXIMS - There II II "Inn with which" to fight Ilneorlly IIII bounty. GET IN THE tstuus farm 'h-nun no ii-NIIIIIIII Ibout Ilinost everything any WWMM tho telIplino.-lrII- don Sun ' IV! In I ,u... to kiss fII8.;idl go: my 5: d'f,':t,.'tmlh;,nsl5:ev they loco.-Low uh: Llbei-Il Guru-IneIt'I doo- m”':e0cl”Pul 5-8 betunnlu to flu Itacles in earnest Ind mung Wmsthlnu is done quickly lliere :32: ..':i..:”f."ll.”: I'..'.I I" "" Herald W I-(mun rlddl: Iu III crept W en t e IIst of to school with have from the Clirlstinn and list. Ind r.:'.”.:.:';":':.”'.:.r.'.."" '- Spectator T T I-H-mum" "P Cl YOII one thousand tons of per month are used to lers in the United StItes Appu. "'"Y "I9 Present crsze for tight metals has even gone to women. leI::ds.”Buthwe still think that un- Hell; 9 ht 9 heads which won Km sue lightweight crowns- Kston Whig-Standard mil" "I" II III! open sclson 1:07 Weather prophets. Some. one 38 Predicted I revere winter with as much as seven feet of snow. But Dr. B.C, Weir. of Auburn. says it will boil mild winter. He bases this on. the number of hairs in my cat s tail." This, of course, is which the elderly,- retired phygl. ion of Auburn expresses his be- lIef'1n weather prophets. We In inclined to agree with liim. Goderich Signal-Star 36 LOWER WATER ST. "0 I I. I Of I i Drllhn no I Inna: 7034- Ml bod temper li:ts"pr::.. IN? doused more Iinuliup...m.,.- gu:-cP:l”IlIIId of wlilslq.-slierbrooki found in the fact um hiyliw. In simultaneously clogged tl.th two di:ifgot::.groups of dl'IVl'I , Recorder A Brampton player has tu-on suspended because he shoved a referee. Perhaps he was beginning to feel that referees are no longer 'lI ectad by I code of sportsman. ship Iliice CBC television has hum, dedlcIted to the roughing of pi... officlIis by the wrestlers.-I-lo;-I WllliIm Times-Journal SALES INCREASE OTTAWA (CPI - l)epartmcnt store sales rose 1.0 per cent In or-. tober to an estimated s115,7gl.o.,0 compared with 8i07.3fll,000 3 year eIrlier. the bureau of statistics re. ported Friday. This brought the total for the first I0 months 0; this year to 8932.2ti7,00ll compared with 3851440000 in October. 1955. TROUBLE IN POLAND VIENNA (AP!-Amused l'onq1 peasants are resorting to sutmuuio plunder and armed attacks in a WId95Dl'03d C8mPalgn to lirt-elk up the collective farm system built up by their Communist ruler-, l't-. ports in vsrious Polish ncw-ua- per: received here disclosrd Hi- BUILDING rnonucrs LTD. INSUL - BOARD The Board of Approval Ponta-T1-outed "For Added Protection” For 8. beautiful finish Ink Ibout Drl-Wall MacDONALD - ROWE WOODWORKING CO. LTD. HYNDMAN 8; CO. LTD. PROVINCIAL AGENTS Git EAT-WEST LIFE AS 30 IAIC I IIAI ouocu-uuIwII.eIIIII YOUR FUIUIE IS OUR IUSINESS TO-DAY! B dIy. PHONE 8575 I I it I I I I I -I I I I I counuv : Pay old bills today... sleep better tonight Often I loan from HFC can help preserve your peace of mind. You can borrow from HFC. pay outstanding bills. Ind repny your loIn on I businesslike, budgeted basis. When the need for money arises. more people come to HFC thIn my other compIny in its field. Loans are mgdg promptly, in privIcy, on terms you Ipprove. You can borrow with conhdouce from HFC-CInIdI's only consumer finInc:ootnpIny bIckedby78yeIruxpciiencel IAIOII IAIII ' 3 Iomnf at I! mu nu nun vmum Ium .' m.””. ItII.n ItI.oo II mg” nu” K IoI.u u.oI :: J III.u use T ru.u u.II IO IIISIIHI; IFIIAIIIIEVL; II7&oI&od.CII&&I1G!I9I Inc-uoanikaikuoigsiiv