3 Me Guazdian "Coven Inlet blink! IIIIII Lilo Mn 0:!" m,1,,.,.g Nu, gun in; nuinuu ll IN Prince strut. lonnunn. P. E. I., by me Tnumsnn Comvlllk um 44 Kill Si. w., Tuwniu. nu-uni Office. 22: ummiu Town sin; in A. Burnett. Publisher and oi-must Manage: Frank Vlalln-i. I-Lunar Mlmber h:1lIiAIlIqlILl-All) .t-wwaiiu Puhlislio.-rn Ahnxlhllun Member of the ('an.idian Pro: Member Audit Bureau of vircuiiiuuu Irhnrh nniun at puniuu-nude, .I.lniila;:ue auu Albenon Auuanriud u Second Class .u.ii in nu Po-I Ollie- uepanmeni. ouuu lg Carrier ciiariuiieiuwu SIAIIIIIIIHMIIK moo en un- nm Elnwhero III PLI tam ouie: Prunncu use U s si'.'oo Ilrf annum M()Nl).-IY, .-Il'(jt'S'Il Iii. i956 Passing Of A Tradition iiieies iiiore news li'uiIl I..oii(ioii. This time it has iioiliuig to had do llllliillilll, the Lxit't'li typ- riots, or the Stu-.1 t'-.iii.il. lt coiiccriis with the llyile lliirlx: l an instituiioii wliicii is ill aily as old ' as llrnisli llL'Ct.Llll.- l l l I l siitiplitix. in-r -ciiluiits, ac, phi:-oii wise niaii or tool--ailiii tell that he had a giiciaii-c ltl ixgirc-s iii ;-iiliiic or a illVilI') to it iipuiiiil. ll';cllilliNx of its liillllll' l'l ciliicy 4 ii-c, iviicu wiieic he willlfl liiiil an till-liciicc and piciity i of stioiig-luiigcil liccl(lci's to giie l nest in the ii;ii'ai';.,'iic. lllli l' lll llgiile Pa i K, pioyidcil all the soapho.ves were not already taken, lie could say anything that cuiiic into his head, happy in the aswiii-zivii-e that ionichody would listcn and applaud. There is probably not a crax,y idea in the fields of politics, rcligioii, and sociology that has not lien-ii given In airing, and a lieariiig. in that haven of freedom. Well, the park and are still there; but, accoiiliiig to re- ports, the crowds are getting thin- ner and tltiririer and less cntliusiastic all the time. Wliercas in the past political and social c1'ackiiiits were the chief speakers on any given day, eccentric religious reviialists are now in the asceiiilaiitgy, and some- how they don't seem hold the attention of the listeners as well as the violent proclaimers of political and social to do in former days. To (iflllilflilllls, who firefer to imbibe their soapbox ora- tory in small and respcclahle (loses once every four years or so at elec- tion time, this decline in llydc llark rhetoric will seem a ll'lYl:ll matter. But thoughtful linglislinicii--tiwv of whom ever participated in the rhe- torical exercises tlieinst-licswltnoyv better. They see in it the passiiu: of one more tradition, a..il they don't like it. Said one coir-.iiieiitaloi': ”ll'e are losing pride in our natioiiul originality." ctigiplii-xiis iii utopiiis used Big Time in Chicago Within a few hours the 1506 Deniocratic Natioiia! coiiiciitioii will be under way. 'l'liis first day will be occupied mainly with prelimiiiary formalities beginning with a relig- ious invocation (no lug Aini-iii-gin convention cicr oinits this) and ro- bust singing of Tlie Sttir-Spaiiglcrl Banner and ending with a good- night address by the iiiatriacli of all good l)eiiioci'zits, Mrs. l”i'aiil(liii I). Roosevelt. other atldrcssi-s. prcscntatioiis of meniorials, appointing of conimittecs and. of c()ui'sc, a lot of convivial handshakiiig and llEIt'l(Sllii)plll;.',. Tucs- day and Wcdiicsday will follow a somewhat siniiliir pattern, except that the pi'ayers will he a hit shorter than the o pc niiig one and the speeches a hit longer and more vehement. Alctinivliilc, licliiiid-tlie- scenes intrigue will gather momen- tum. and by the time the hig ilay arrives W 'lillUI'.S'fl6ly -- ey cry know n tricky device for swaying the minds of delegates will have been put to the text. By that time, too, every conceivable means of bringing prin- ciples into ailjustnieiit with oppor- tunism will have been examiiicd minutely. The niost spectacular cient will be the roll-call of states somctinic on Thursday afternoon. There is nothing quite like this anywhere else in the world. Perhaps it can best he described as a combination of an evangelical rally and a cheap third-rate burlesque. It will com- prise just about everything in the ,field of human emotions from tears v" to high Jinks. But, in some myster- ious manner, it will result some ,time before daybreak next morning ;in an expression of the sovereign - will ,In so far as assembled delegates ' an able to reveal it, aided by more Ind the st.ren'gth that comes " an egmjn-goienui rendition of In hciwccii there will he "rise Star-Spangled Banner .. which, 2- , only relatively few l l l l i i l l l i l I l 1 though he would be considered I traitor who did not make motions with his lips while it was being sung. At this moment Mr. Adlai Stev- enson appears to have the right of way to the Presidential nomination. But, of course, there is no certainty about it. Strange things happen at political conventions; and this one could possibly result in the iiomiiia- tion of someone whose name was mentioned for the first time in the convention's smoke-filled rooms. It will be time enough to say ”I told you so" when the victor is escorted amid singing and whistling of his supporters to the dais of lioiiour. As for the VlCP-i)l'(-'5ld('llllfIl candidate, ithe selection will depend l2l1'i10l.V. though not altogctli.-r. on the pre- l'llll0lll'P of the Piesidciilial noniiiiee. Should Mr. Stevenson hc given the palm, either Senator lluinplii'ey of Iiliiiiicsota or Senator lieniiciiy of Bias-acliiisetts would seem to he the likely rlioice for second place; but that, lot), is subject to many its and ands and huts. The fortunate thing-iiot only for the Llnitcd States but, to a lesser degree, for the world-is that these Arncrii-an national conventions, wild and irresponsible though they seem to he in some respects, usually end in the nomination of good and lioii- oiirahlc men capable of rising in a distinguished manner to the demands and respoiisibilities of national lead- ership, There have heen exceptions, of course. But these have been very few; and there is every rcason 10 believe that the convention begin- ning today in (lhicago will follow the historic trend. A Hopeful Sign South Africa's policy of apart- hcid may be due for revision, not from pi-cs-siire of world opinion as much as from a slackening of its in- tcrnal support. All along, the auth- orities have maintained that the rigid separation of the races is in the best interests of the vast Negro in:-ijority. They call it a policy of -”guardiaiiship"; the Negroes them- selves and their many friends in other countries call it by another and much less pleasant name-slaw PI'y--ii'lll('l'l in effect is what it is. The government has been sus- tained in this strange interpretation of "guardianship" by the support of the Dutch Reformed Church, the strongest denomination in the l.'n- ion. numerically, and in a sense the spiritual arm of the state; although Roman tiatliolic and other religious leaders have repudiated it consis- tently and resolutely. Recently, howeicr, and for the first time, a promineiii Dutch Reformed theo- logian came out vigorously against apartheid and all its works. in a speech at Slettenbnscli University, a cluirt-li-spoiisored institution, Dr. B. B. Keel stated that only a ”fast- aslccp" man would agree with the government that racial separation benefits the oppressed Negro ma- jority. He called the government's attitude ”a manifestation of repug- mince for non-wh'tes". If this means. as it probably does, that the Dutch Reformed ('liuri-h has at last decided to apply a little (lhristian theology to the country's racial problems, there is sonic hope that South Africa may yet turn over a new leaf and make amends for the harm it has done to many thousands of its Negro citi- zens and for the gr evous danizige it has done to its own good iiuine in world opinion. EDITORIAL NOTES The oil-rich sheikdom of Kuwait in the Near East gives all its gov- ernment ministers large fortunes--so l-ll0.Y P-"ln he ”al)oye temptation" in handling finances. This policy would 5""lll '0 Put an even higher premium on corrupt practices in obtaining office. The director of the Harvartl (lb- servatory says he is sure that inter- rilanclmxv travel will be possible by L066. We won't start packing for a little while, though. Goodness only knows what the well-dressed outer- space traveller will be wearing ten ' years from now. 0 O I Michigan state police are being equipped with a new device for traf- fic enforcement. It is a patrol car carrying 11 polaroid camera which develops a picture almost instantly after it takes It. The finished print non ha showm 1 violator while the omonrwrftuoutthcticket. . A Zlll-yr-:ii'-olil soldier named Nasser by seizing the Siicl. Canal ('onipany has manucuvred the West iiilo ii terrible dilemma. One way or the otliei'--barriiig a iniracle of lI(.'Ql)llEIIltilI--lllC West stands to lose. if it uses force. an criiplitin in the Middle East might deal a trcinciiduiis eco- nomic blow to I-Iurnpc, lf Nasser siicccssfiilly staiids his ground. his alrt-;i(ly great prestige among the Arabs would soar even higher. The West would be defied and de- feated. Na.sscr's powerful Saul al Aral) lYoice of Aralisi has implied that the Middle l".asl's oil key to any struggle for mastery would fe(l a flame scaring the Arab world and pronusing econoniic havoc for Fiirnpc Perhaps even the seeds of a third world war he be- neath the harsh desert soil of a vast area of lt)0.ti0tl,00fl Arabic- speaking people. They inhabit a dozen nations strelcliiiig from the Atlantic to the Persian Gulf. but Nasscrs Voice of Arabs con- stantly refers to them as a sinillc nation. led and inspired by Plgypt. POTICN THREAT The Voice warned that if the West attempted to use force. ”thc workers of Kuwait. Iraq. Bahrain and Aden stand side by side with the Arabs against the imperial- ists" and ”Ar.1h oil workers ev- erywhere are prepared to inflict harm on whoever attacks Egypt." The threat rs a potent one. A shot fired by a Briton or a Frencliman ciuild start a jihad - a holy war in which Arabs willi suicidal emotion might sweep over foreigiii-rs in ('hiil':!C of the oil pro- duction of the Middle East. No longer ihccked by their own quar- rels and intrigue. no longer rcincd by wary Arab rulers. litnslcnis might burst into Israel--an island The layman who reads Sir Win- stun Churcliilll's llistory of the Eu- zlisli-speaking Peoples may not hear anything like the surge and tliiindcr ut the Odyssey or fall sil- cnl. unflcr (lhapnian'.s magic. up- on a p"ak in Daricn lie may not 'evcn rcwl profound luslnry. But he will ri-ad a stupen:loiis tale, told hy a llliisll'l'. Ile v.ill piil down the lnipalicnt for the remaining three, first volume of llllx' inassive work, impatient for the remaining three. lneiitably tlic layiiizin will coni- pare f'liui'cliill's hook in the classic work of Mric.'iiiI.'iv iwlinm Church- ill dcplures as the lilielcr of ills aiiceslor. Mai llmroiigli '. T h e cninparison is not quite fail". since Mar-niilay undertook to discuss only the ll:-storation period w l'l i le ('liiirr-hill paints with gaudy and cliiiractcrislic strokes upon a canvas covering more than two thousand years Neverthe- less, the prnlcssional historian of the nineteenth century and the amateur of the twentieth will stand lngellier in a competition of lllanls so far as the ordinary reader is concerned. in the humble opinion of this ordinary rcailcr. having read both w (I r k s almnst simultaneously, t'hurcliill is no match for Mac- aulay in siibstance, in lntultirin or even in style MASTICRLY T0l'(ilI Before he attempts to discuss his chosrn period, the Restoration. Macaulay invites the reader's in- diligence as hr Jnis down ii hrlcf preface to cover the preceding six. teen centuries or so. This intro- duction, as everyone knows, turn: 0"! in be perhaps the most pen- etraliniz analysis of British history even written in such I space. its depth of understanding. it! inward sense of events its steady march. above all, its quality of llvelineso and use of illuminating anecdote complctcly dwarf Churchill's low- Pflllff structure. OM slight iumple must serve to illustrate the difference between the two men, one of whom spent his life writing history while the other made It and than wrou It as 1 klni-l of afterthought. Ry ' ,vfiex,'t.gear, " 2 there EVERYBODY'S GOING N T V 707777 777V 0 A Terrible Di By William Ryan Associated Press Analyst emma of 2.t)0f).fi0f) in a liustile sea of 40.- 000000 people-and crush ll by sheer force nf numbers. Would the West then face a pros- pect of at-the military interven- tion” A British-French-Anierican declaration of 1950 guarantees both Arab states and Israel against aggression. Beyond that. the oil stakes are so high that Britain and France might feel im- pelled to armed action on the very doorstep of the Soviet Union. They might consider it the only way to save Europe from eco- nomic chaos and communism. These seemed to be the consid- crallnns behind the second thoughts in London and Paris- considerations which could pro- duce a paralysis of Western ac- tion Ilrilaiii, while sending war- ships to the Middle East, vowed to seek a peaceful solution. (70N(il'IRN OF ALL ' Doubts rose in France about the wisdom of the "energetic riposte" demanded by France's premier when the crisis burst suddenly. I-Egypt's Nasser, though he had much to gain, had much to lose, and be marked time. He was on his way to great power or obliv- ion. depending upon the way the cards were played in this name of international power politics. He could not back down. The future of the Suez Canal is a matter of deep concern for all i Even the Soviet Union stake in the outcome of the crisis. It could mean a gen- eral weakening of the West-but would that entail the threat of war the Soviet leaders obviously fear" With all its worldwide implica- tions. all its widespread ramifica- tions, all its potentialities, the WA iforiipietitioniof than Bruce Hulchiiion In the Winnipeg Free Preiui Suez crisis is the most difficult and dangerous since Kori-a. gnicnt, regards King John as one of the most valuable of English Kings. not mainly because he signed the Great Charter, but be- cause he lost Britain's possessions in Europe; for it they had been retained. Britain would have be- come an outpost and satellite of 3 l'3llT"llP"l1 empire and could never have created its own pec- uliar island civiIi7,atiou. This judg- ment may appear nbvioiis, almost platiludinuiis in retrospect. It was i something like If stroke of light- ning when Maeaiilay announced If, BIlII.I.I.-IVT BUT THIN (Tburcliill, on the other hand, i gives John the ortliodox treatment nnianhnnnninl-hit and. as you would expect, seems to regret that the blundering mon- arch presided over the liquidation of the first embryonic British Ern- pirc ('nm-eriiing lliis decisive figure, and all the others for that matter. Cliurchill has nothing new to offer nothing but his genius as a story teller. The literate reader will find little in Churchillls story that he didnt know before. though the familiar facts are given I new and shining hue. The outer shine is brilliant but very thin. Churchill marches his ghostly battalions in brilliant pageantry. He does not penetrate events. on his ghostly batlnlinns in brilliant pngcantry. He does not penetrate events, if the comparison between the two historians is unfair in one sense, each having a different purpose. in another it is entirely apt That is to say. both below to the old-fashioned school of hi ry which has been lately submerged by the modern school. They think of history primarily as the erratic adventure! of hum- an beings, whose next folly can never be foreseen. whose future cannot be calculated; whereas the modern school. headed by Profes- nor Toynbee. has reduced history to mlculable and ordered cycles. the life spans of entire cfvlllnuons governed by lneloctalil lows of birth. growth and (hell. ll-'.Al. srvrr or IIITOIY Read Macaulay III (IO Restorat- lllllllv-IIIllmd&CHIh K ;oea'&maz SKETCH In the shadow of the barn Beside the brook A painter in a stained blue smock Reflects before his easel. He tips a brush with umber And careful as a farmer Paints the apple tree In black earth and gold sun. He steps back. squinls, returns And spreads the green bouglis On a cloud. The blossoms bud and open. A few fall to the grass. So swift The growing of that May-time tree! The painter does not know That on the canvas of my eyes Tree and cloud Barn and brook Include him too. -Beren Van Slykn. The Age Old Story Blessed are the poor In spirit: for their: in the kingdom of hen- VIII. MAXIMS ' Life cnmeii before literature. as the material always come: be- fore the work. The hlllii are full of marble before the world bloom: with statues. politics of the court, the intrigue: of the boudolr, the marches and of the public stage. but also, in the background, the life of the name- less British people. the entire stuff of society. The mob emerge: re- peatedly from the stews of London or assembles on the village green to reveal the ordinary Briton as the only enduring monarch on his Island. Read Churchill and you will find little more than the main charact- ers. mostly the soldiers, until an ignorant foreigner might conclude that British history consisted of war, revolution, assassination and adultery, For example every nkirmish and minor raid of the Wars of the Roses is lovingly re- corded. every royal personage, however obscure and worthless, is introduced with a peal of trum- pets but the reader will look in vain for the mass of common men who, ignoring that insensale strug- gle for personal power. were iluiellr erectln a new society out of the Middle gas. . The perfect history. one sup- poses. would provide a just bal- ance between living persons and abstract social movements, a com- promise, as it were, between the Toynbees. Until that history is written Macaulay, after more than I hundred years. still seems to stand up as the best, and also the most readable blend of incalrul- able human beings nsnd calcul- able forces. And it will require annfhcr Macaulay to do juiiu:-g to the history of our times that Churchill did not write but no largely made. FIRE 0N ISRAELI VILLAGE JERUSALEM ,tRc-iitersl.-An Is- raeli military spokesman said Egypt positions along the northern sector of the Gaza strip border Thursday night and Friday opened fire on the Israeli settlement of Erez. about I mile from the nor- der. The spokesman said Iurlcll settlers returned the fire. There were no Israeli casualties The Jenkins Phonlioey DIAL 4219 We're as near as your Phone. - Medically Speaking I! lorunn N. luduen. M. D. BOUT THESE INSECTS WITH "BOMB" ATTACK Willi mosquitoes. It"! the female of the species you have to worry about She's the one with the sharp tongue. But not only does she do In the biting. she is. of course the one who lays the eggs-hundreds of them. You can help prevent the bl'rth If many of these pesky little in- sect: by getting rid of any stag- nant water which might be around your home. IBEEDING PLACE Anything from tin cans. puddles -even a. plugged downspout, which holds water from 5 to lo days-might be the breeding place for thousands of mosqultoe . Actualy, diseases carried by mosquitoes are now fairly rare in the U.S. But their bites are still annoying and their loud humming frequently keeps many of us awake these summer nights. l ELIMINATING THEM The best way to eliminate them from your home is by use of new not bombs, a 5 per cent DDT spray or some other recommended in- Iectlcide. I Aerosol bombs usualy contain I solution of DDT and pyrettirum in liquid gas. V Releasing the solution for about 6 seconds in an average room will kill the mosquitoes Pl'959lll-End houseflies, too. The gaseous solut- ion evaporates at once. leaving minute particles of insecticide sus- pended in mid-air. Itls best to keep the room closed for about 15 minutes after you re- lease the spray. This will keep the solution concentrated in that par- ucular spot and prevent. any bugs from escapiritl. LARGE DOSES DDT. remember. is toxic in large doses both in humans and pets. So be careful when you use it. Avoid exposing yourself, family or pets to it unnecessarily. As for inseet-repelenls. there are many good ones-"6-12" for example, which will give you hours of protection. Another which you can buy at your neighborhood drug store is a solution of two parts indalone, two parts ethyl hexanediol and six varts dlmellwl phthallate. One last word of caution about these repelents-don't KP! them into your eyes. QUESTION AND ANSWER S.G.: Can fractures occur with- out Injury? Answer: At certain times. frac- tures occur due to bone disease in which the bone is eaten away. so that in the normal process of walk- ing and moving. the bone may break or fracture. OUR YVESTERDAY5 From The Guardian File-I TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Aug. 13. 1931) The ancient. custom of blessing the boats of the Acadian fisher- men. previous to the commence- ment of the fishing season, took place on Sunday at Fifteen Point, the service being conducted by Rev. J.T. Gallant, parish priest. The Trans-Canada Air Pageant will be held in the City August 3 and 27th, according to word re- ceived by Dr. JS. Jenkins. The 'building of an airport on Upton Farm was resumed yester- day and will be rushed to com- pletion in time for the use of the 50 planes that take part in the demonstration. TEN YEARS AGO (Aug. 13. 1946) Col. .l.l.. vRalston. D.S.O., Minis. tor of National Defence, arrived In the City last night and L: atop III at tho Gliulnttotown " ' Brig. D.H. Storm. Pruiuni t. the Storm Construction Com- pany, and now general manager of the Housing I-intr.-rprise of Can- ada, was in the City over the week- end conferring with His Worship Mayor MacDonald and members of the city Council relative to the proposed erection of 52 apart- ments tn the City. Wing Commander GS. Jacob- son. DFC., commanding officer at the lt.(VA.I-T Air Navigation School at Summerside has been posted to Air Force Headquarters at (it- tawa, for duty in the Navigation branch tlicre. WATCH YOUR , 1l4LK! A noted publisher in C” reports there in a simple loch- nurue of everyday conversation which can pay you real divi- dend: in both social and busi- lgml ad nricamont and work! like magic to give you added poise, self copfidonce and pulant. . According to publisher. many. people do not realize how line they could influence othuo nun ly by what they any Ind y say it. Whether I NOTES BY in; was . If you lulu upon it you cu make ends meet. Just drive real close to the car ahead.-Sunla Canadian-Observer ' Mu enact live In! bread alone but It in Iurprislnl the number who get by on their crust. Canadian Observer 'no.elly of In-afford. Ontario's centre of Sllakelpuruu culture, has voted down a plan to spend 900.00 on a all-room addition to its lilgli school and some disagreeable conclusions are being drawn.-Ob town Journal one thing that is puzzling to most. Canadians in why members of Parliament who feel that parl- iamentary life Is too great I "sac- rifice" and I "hli-t.'shlp.” don't just resign or announce that they will not seek re-electlon.,-Slier- broolie Record A U.S. taxpayer claimed I re- fund of 3200 in 1954. When it was still unpaid in 1955 he filed hit new income tax return llstini ill! refund as I bad debt. By return mail from Washington came a lat- ter of apology and 3200. Even bureaucrats can be proved hum- an.-Kingston Whig-Standard It in said that half of every ell- arctic goes for taxes. and I rest- aurant dishwasher claims the oth- er half goes into coffee cups.-Ton The frend toward: the four-week holiday is reported to be gaining momentum. This means that In- stead of trying to crowd three weeks activity into two weeks. we can try crowding five weeks into four.-Hamilton Spectator A linfi.eru' union in Australia has ruled Lliat all of its members must wear hats. The ultimatum sets out that batted hatter: will refuse to work with unhntted hat- ters. Furthermore members of the union will not be permitted to march in Labor Day parades un- less they first produce proof they have brought a new hat in the fore- going year.-Sudbury Stai- Speculation lhlt Prime Minister St. Laurent will make cabinet changes before the year in out ap- pears to have more Iubstance than reports of an election this year. If he intends to to to the country next year it would be good planning to enter the fray with a reshuffled team that he has had time to settle down.-Brant ford Expositor Search through a wide range of Canadian newspapers does not turn up one that defends Prime Minister St. Laurent's interven- tion by whlch the Speaker was per- suaded to withdraw his offer of resignation. On the contrary the reaction is solidly one of condem- nation for this affront to the au- thority and dignity of Parliament. -Branlford Expositor in outer lo make ydur mm, first than it is to make it laszf; London Free Press I ' Another book is announced Im. the Amerlxwl Civil War. Tlui-e must be more historians of it than there were generals in it.-Bi-uni. ford Expositor A Boston Itore was broken um, and looted five times in two weeks, A satisfied customer is the best nu. vertliement.-Chatham News There Is no more bitter foe of special privilege than the fellow who tried to get some and fail. ed-Oi-lllta Packet and Times One advantage. of new safety features in cars is that they help to keep the buyer alive till iii, crate is paid for.-Brantford Ex. posltor Speaking of classified ads. lliig one in a small paper caused con, slderable comment: "For sale - Two gave lots, nice location. fire- place fixt.ures."-Toronto Slai- Thcro Is little or no humor In the Suez Canal dispute but up can get a quiet laugh out of the ldtlon of the British sponsors of the annual mass swim across the English Channel. In a wave of pstrlcotic fervor they have l):ir. red Egyptian swimmers from this year's race.--Montreal Star Studies of parakeet IIIII.I'lllun made at a bird institute in Rut-h. ester, N.Y. revealed that the at- erage parakeet eats 100 times his weight every year and that if any human being actually "ale like a bird," he's consume about eight tons of food annually.-Cliatliam News . Can; Underwood .iiiiiiniwoon TYPEWRITERS ' hunting MACHINES CARBON PAPER Piibbins and Supplies Ilndel-wood limited 147 Hollis Street. t Call 3-6828 HALIFAX. N. S. 36 LOWER WATER. ST. RE-ROOFING? Your Best Buy ls BP ASPHALT SHINGLES O BEAUTY O PROTECTION O ECONOMY CONSULT! MacDONALD - ROWE WOODW-ORKING CO. LTD. PHONE 8575 cash for do-it-yourself projects When you need extra money for materials to complete 1 home project, borrow with confidence from HFC- Canada's first and foremost consumer finance company. Loam from S50 to 81000 ardmade in one day, in privacy. Repayment plans arranged to fit your income. (Loans also made to pay bills, seasonal expenm, or any good reason.) Phone or come in for friendly, helpful service. it bminpu. at social functions, woven In ' comm. ' with new acquainfancel. than nun vnu no way: in which on can a zukoyzugtmkim wry amr -;-u-pun 56 . . . To ncquni it the nodes of it . ' lhl in-par viii: the euy-to-rob "1. You r lowrulen for developing skill in ,1 .. ,4 F ovoryday convorution, the u,'.. u to ix. Nb!-hen have printed full do- ' i hills of their irifgutigigdf. vane n,"w .2 wniZ'...'..."-........”- & IIIWSEIIGIB Hlllllllf has toanyomwho to if. . . No obligation. Gimp y and . ,3 . mount. to: Connrufion "' " """"-”"""' my .83zglvonoyPnrk- llOCuouOouIOIl-vlhol.phoooo.I,I! g A F.i'& & ll-I. .