THE GUARDIAN Published every weekday morning at 1:6 Prtncs stnet. can i iottelown. P.E.l.. by Tim Thomson Company Limited "Csvus frfsnls Idvsrl Islssd Libs the Dow" Edilnr. Frank Walker General Manager. in A. Burnett Bunch o!..te:. st Summer-side. Montague and Alberiun. Aulliu .zMl as Btltnlld Class Mall by Ina Poss Oiflco Department. Ottawa. 43 t.i.i.ei: Charlottetown. suluinersidv 515.00 per sunnin- ilsmtilelu ill P.E.l. 39.00. Other Provinces and US. Il1.Ut snnum "The ETERE -emrfis WCAB-IfeI"lI'lVaVIiI ille weakest ink.” Tl-ILRSDAY, FEB. ll, 1955 Rural Education The little old riliai sc.io.iliiu.ise, with its siligle-rooln accoiiihiouaiion facilities, ll0l(lS a niche all to iiseil in tile liisiory oi. our pioneer dx.lliCV6Allc'illS. Lutai scholars came out oi tiiese early iils.iiu- tlons, alid they served their nay and gen- eratioh with f3XllkiUl'ulilHl) success. DUL tlieii' disaovaiitage in tile cuucaiioii oi sen- ior grade pupils has lllL'iti.lSC(l with the passing years and it iias iiecolile necessary, in Hrince i:.oward island as in oiiier i'i'ov- ilices, to rcmcuy tile siiuailoli. 'l he Mili- isier of lslducaiion, iioll. .Vll'. Clark, devoted a large part of his speech on the Draft Ad- dress to uisctissioii oi tillS SUUJCCI, and lo ills uepariinenis new pUllt."k of aSSlSldIlC6, by way of grants, in proviuiilg separale C1655- rooms for junior nigh school giuoes in selected rural centres. The Minister outlined fully the require- ments in these areas, the conditions oi the grants, and the co-operatioli needed to make the policy etiective. in addition to sharing in C0ilSti'U(.'li0il costs, the Govern- hient may contribute to transportation ex- and iliilllctl sires to transport all stuttents of grades. Tile same principle has been fol- lowed in the Westerii Provinces for many years, and is now standard practice in most parts of the continent. . The Minister also dealt with the estab- lishment last year, in five of the rural senior high schools, of Grade XII as the standard of matriculation, and with the prospects of extending this advantage to other areas. The importance of this development, he stated, cannot be overestimated because the advantage of a complete senior high school education is brought within the reach of many young people in rural areas who otherwise, for financial or other rea- sons, would be denied such opportunity. As a oonsiderable number of these students may be expected to enter teacher-training classes, and after a year of normal training become fully qualified teachers, the policy has a very practical application to the , , , tsachor shortage problem. This emphasis on rural education im- provemonts will have far-reaching results. There may be criticism of details, but the objective is perhaps of more concern than any subject which has come within the scope of the Legislature of this agricultural Province for many years. Its practical as- pects are obvious. but they are but one phase of the situation. More important still are the intangible values involved, and the vision required on the part of our legis- lators in dealing with them wisely and well. The Union Merger The news that the two great American Labour Unions, the A. F. of L. and the C. l. 0., are making final plans for merger is important. Organized labour, it would seem, has nothing to lose and a good (leaf to gain by achieving a position of solidarity. If it means a unity of over-all puipose,e-and ways an(l means of achieving that purpose -as well as a fusion of interests, it might well contribute something very tangible lo the advancement of peace in all its phases. At the moment, however, there is some doubt of this, at least in the political field where both organizations have exercised considerable influence. A case in point is "the difference in views, already expressed. regarding United States relations with Com- munist China. . At its annual meeting in Log Angeies about two months ago the C. I. 0. passed a resolution opposing Red China's admission to the United Nations at this time. This resolution, however, had a stormy passage. Walter Reuther, C. I. 0. President, opposed it on the grounds that recognition of the Mao regime, though perhaps not desirable, was the only realistic approach to the con- troversial question. It is reported that his brother, Victor, regarded by many as the "brains" of the organization. stiu believes that non-recognition of Peiping is a diplo- matic mistake. No leader of the A. F. of L... on the oth- or hand. has expressed any such misgiving. At the recent annual meeting of the Fed- eration an extraordinarily strong rewin- tlon, supporting the Administration's entire policy in Asia, was passed without dissent. "We strongly warn." the resolution read. g, own friendly way. There is no question of pehses where an oiiiside school district de-- tlicsei Almost right up to the last moment Mr.' itant one adopted. after considerable internal. dissension. by the C. I. 0.. a few weeks be- fore ls, of co:-rse, a matter of opinion: but.- certainly. it shows that much work needs' - to be done and much re-examination of pol- icy completed. before the two organizations can hope to present a united front on all questions; and. unless they can do that, per- haps they are better apart, each going its iprinciple involved here; one is as profound- lly anti-Communist as the other. It is im- p'n'tant. nevertheless; conceivably. it could lVfl'rli(9il the new structure which would re- sult from the proposed rapprochement. Traffic Offences Emphasized A decided upward climb since 19.32 in ine '(I:,a'lL'g'dle Of crimiiial invesiiganoiis ill tilts rrovmce is noted in tile aiiilual repair. of the Royal Canadian iviouiiied Police ioi last year, as tabled in the Legislature. lllf: iepori, as usual, gives a comprehensive pic- ture of police activities, and of law enloice-' iiient matters gQl'l6I'a1i)'. The greatest in-' crease in iflV8Stig8i.i0flS is noted in connec-l tion with Provincial SlalUieS, reflecting ihei activiiy of RClvll-' patrols in highway traf- he and 'lemperance Act enforcement; out there was also a substantial increase over 1933 in the number of Criminal Code in- vesiigatiohs, especially in moioring olfenses and cases of theft. Reassuringly, the report states that the incidence of Juvenile crime remains at a satisfactorily low level. Strong emphasis is placed by Inspector Nevin, however, upon the marked increase; in the offences of ”drivihg whilst intoxicat- ed", "driving whilst impaired", "failing to stop at the scene of an accident", and "reck- less driving". It is obvious, he says, in deal-I, mg with these major offences, that only strict enforcement measures arid the lin- posltion of severe penalties by the courtsi will have the desired effect. A special traf-i fic squad augments the efforts of the de-, tachment personnel employed on general; police duties in dealing with highway eh-1 iforcement, and has produced good results. iOf equal importance, however, is education in preventive work, which is cited as the keyliote in the continuing traffic program. The increase in motor vehicle registra-I tions to a new high of 20,841 in 1954, coupled with the record volume of cars and tourists visiting the Province, contributedi to traffic patrol duties. The Centennial celebrations in Charlottetown this year will, further increase the road traffic to andl i from the Province, as no fewer than twenty-- lsix conventions of varying sizes are sched-, uled for the summer months. The 1955 traf- i 3 he and enforcement program. will not differ i esentially from that of last year, but its ef- ,fectiveness will benefit from the research which the Force is now carrying on into. -various types of modern patrol equipment. m iThe specialized training of men employed, ion highway traffic work will be on a con-i itihuihg basis. Appreciation is expressed in the report ,for the co-operation and support received, from a large majority of the motoring pub- i Iic. This is perhaps the most important- factor of all. It should be stressed through- ; out 1955 if we are to keep down our high- 1 way accidents and reverse the trend in traf- fic offenses which play a vital part in the accident toll. i EDITORIAL NOTES i Sir Wilfrid Laurler died this date. 1919. . u an , Iraq may not be the most highly ill- dusirialized country in the world; it does, ,'however, have I standard of manageinent-: i labour relations which labour and indusirial' Jleaders in other countries might study with i profit. While the Government ooes not oan ilabour tinions, there has been little demand ifor them among the workers; and in Kir- lkuck, the country's leading industrial town, "no union. as such, exists. Instead, griev-I iances are discussed by joint committevsi lmade lip of workers' delegates and repro- sentailves of employers. Very rarely, so V reports say, does a dispute get out of hand. 0 I Q As if United States lawmakers did lint have enough to worry about already. at tresolution has been introduced in both Houses to make the rose the national flow-l er of the Republic. Rose-lovers the world over will be surprised and shocked to hear that the proposal is receiving "plenty of op- position from all parts of the country. The chief objection appears to be the flower's alleged Oriental origin; another is that there are so many species that no agree- ments could be reached on any specific one. C O D Trustees, of Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio--made famous by its first President, Horace Mann-are going to give faculty members the chance to find out for themselves how '.'the other half" lives. Be- ginning next year professors and instruc- tors will take turns in one yam jobs in busi- nesssndlndustry. AccordlngtothcPresl- .l)l1i('t'(i on the route between i and lllalifax on trading ships. dssItofthoColhgu,tficlrwektfiattliess" Posloffice Anniversary By Gerald Frechian. Canadian Press Staff tialliitlziis post. uitlce this year, iiliscries the Zlltllli-or 20lsi--aii- iiivcrsiiry of its obscure birth. it lacks a birth certificate. but commemorative stamp lnay be issued if the postmaster- gcilt-ral acts on requests for one hy iim Nova Scolia Historical Society Two centuries have changed the post office from a haphazard venture that made postmasters rich to an efficient government service that ranks with the best in the world. A nickel will speed a letter from Black Diamond. Alta., to Cape Town, South Africa. in less time than it once took a special delivery to get the 200 miles from Halifax to Loulsbours. NS- and it used to cost many times as much. RECORD OF PROGRESS The full-sailed ships that cros- sed the Atlantic in a mouth or more gave way to steamers that did it in days. and now fast ships are giving way to planes that do it in hours. i llard - riding postal couriers have long since hung up their spurs in favor of snorting loco- oti as. The local post office in Canada may be a complex big-city op- eration or the back room of a village general store, but every- where it's taken as much for granted as coffee for breakfast. The Canadian post office was born in Halifax and the closest thing it has to a birth certificate is an announcement clipped from fl Boston paper of April 17. 175:3. it was inserted by the post of- fice at Boston. and said silnply that mails could be sent from and received at Halifax. 5 This has been taken as offirial.l Bill a your earlier an advertise-,1 mclit in the same paper said one iionjniilln lioigh had opened a ”l)ilrcall of intelligence and out- uarrl post office" at Halifax. Tlint would make Canadais post tfil('f' 201 years old. l'l,.i()l'E RECORD il 'pl.'luiic on the old fi-iii-l':il Iuliiilllig ill llalifiix adjtiiliilig the present post oilice. says: 'ln 1755 a line of packets iias' Ply-i mollth and New York. This , plirt of a general scheme for, L'il)St'l' and more regular conncc-5 lions between the colonies alldl lhl- lnntilrr country. Those pac- l.cts called at Halifax. in that yeiir and in this city was estab- iiSilf'(i the first post office in the Dolillllillll of Canada as new con- stittllml." ; The pl.-lqlic was erected by thci ill:tul'il- Silos and Monuments dozirtl of Canada. but the histori- rnl society claims the facts are twisted. . , it says fhc packets probably” didn't call at Halifax at all. More likely they sailed direct- ly in New York. the society says. sent the mail by post to Boston. From there it came to Over- seas mall wasn't brought to Hal- lfax by is regular monthly service until 1812. SECOND POST OFFICE Canada's second post office was opened at Quebec in 1763. Mall came down ths St. Law- rence river by canoe or river boat and was taken across the Bay of Fundy by barqne. Then N15 1 the puper delivery, and another E450 on other deals. . Big changes in the post office came in the middle 15005. In 1838 the Great Western ship Sirius. a sidewheeler. crossed the Atlantic under steam and the next year a contract was let for fortnightly steamship mail service to Hal- ifax. In 1848 post office accounts were abolished between the prov- inces. rates were equalized. and in 1851 postage stamps were a- dopted. At Confederation the post of- fice took roughly the same form it has today. 'Ae .f'” goe&'G1mM FROM DOVER BEACH . . . The Sea of faith Was once, too at the full. and round earth's shore Lay like the folds of a height girdle furled; But now I only hear Its melancholy, long. withdrawing roar. Retreating in the breath Of the night-wind down the vast edges drear And naked siiinglss of the world. Ah, love. lot as be but To one another!. for the world. which seems To lie before us like a land of dreams, So various. so beautiful. so new. Hath really neither joy, nor love. not light, Nor certitude, nor pause. nor help for pain; And we are here as on s darkllng - plain Swept with confused 'alarms of struggle and flight, Where ignorant armies clash by night. eMatthew Arnold. Yes To Russia lwinnipeg Free Press) A proposal tins come irom the Si .nc Soviet. in Moscow which tllii lit nnubt scare the living nay- iitlills out of all the brave Mc- (':lrlil; .10 ii-arrioi's who tremble at giiity of our tender demo- cixitic l iiliitions. Tile new Rus- sian f2'iwi'iimcnt silagesh that there s llltlifi be exchange visits by parllzim.-l1'i;'l'y delegations. that M.P.s should appear and speak in the Supreme Soviet and Rus- sian spokesmen in the assemblies of the West. Yes, emphatically. to such cxcliuligcs. The more and the stroller the better. What have we to lose? The timid will SllL'HP.K'i--illl'I('(?(I they have al- ready suggested-that this is just another propaganda opening by ultra-clover Russians all set to blindfold ils. wheedle us on to paths of destruction and push us over the cliff. Perhaps it is. Are the people of the mature demo- cracies. who live all their lives in B swirl of controversy. such sheep that they must panic at a strange opinion or meekly submit to being led by the nose by Communists? What have we to gain? At best the hope of making some im- Pressiori upon men who are. after all, well over a generation remov- - Refrigeration horsemen brought it to Halifax. establishing a regular mail route, through the Annapolis Valley. Lnler an overland route wasl chosen from Saint John. N.B..v via Moncton and Truro to llal-' BX. People not on postal routes were quite happy bscauu tlie' Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCE saws a sslnvlcs: Rawindlng sad Repairs ELECTRICAL Repairs IDTOIIS Pslssr lloctrls Ii-CC-ICL PUBLIC FORUM 1 his usual D no! lo Ilo discus .Iou by col-rsspoudssts of u on- -f tutu-ssl. The Gurus: loss not suosssrlly saiarsn 00 -IMHO Al con-uoondoula HELP APPRECIATED Sir.-I periodically call at the ”Island" in the course of my bu- siness selling fishing supplies. Last week, when road conditions were very bad. would have found me bogged down for hours had it not been for the kindness of dif- ferent people w"bo voluntarily came to my assistance. In these days of sternal rushing around it is very refreshing to find there are people who can still find time to go out of their way to help. and through the medium of your paper would like to express my thanks to all. I am a comparative newcomer to Canada and I would also like to take this opportunity of saying to tile tlslande s" that their hos- pitality is something which has impressed me deeply. It is a very rars quality nowadays and I look forward to my visits to the Is-. land" as one looks forward to elc.. DAVID N. CORMACK Saint John. NB. ed from the Lenlnist involution. For a decade the nations of the West have urged the K0VImm9”' of Russia to dismantle tbs Iron Curtain and permit the free cir- culation of ideas. It is illolllcal '0 shy h tisrmr at the first misses!- ion of a tentative move in that dtrsetlon by the Bulslllilk Khrushchev regime. At least we should welcome any OPPOWIDNY of contributing. without serious peril to ourselves. to a lessening of the tension which now grips the world. The CsnadlaiY'Govornment should respond positively to this proposal. making it clear that Mr. Khrush- chev will be cordially welcomed in Ottawa and in the House Commons whenever he can es- cape the pressure'of his Parlia- ments y duties in the Russian capital. - The Age Old Story 0 satisfy us early with thy mercy: that we may rololcs and Medically, Speaking Hermon N. Bundesen. M.D. COIJ LIVER OIL HELPS BABY'S BONES GROW WELL Your baby needs vitamin! A am; D. and one of the best ways to see that he gets them is to give him daily doses of cod liver oil. Vitamins A and D help Y0” youngster srow.. and SW0 him strength aild energy. if he lacks ivitamin D he probably won't have sound. straight bones. and he might be irritable and even de- velop rickets. "Biiiiied sunsiiine"' Vitamin D has frequently been "called "bottled sunshine," since it has practically the same effect on your baby as the ultraviolet rays of the sun. Because of this. many mothers mistakenly believe their tots don't need cod liver oil dur- ing the summer months. Your baby. however. probably doesn't get enough sun. even in the sum- mer,'to take the place of cod liver oil completely. Summertime doses. however. usually can. be reduced. As a rule. you should begin giv- ing your baby cod liver oil when he is from two to four weeks old. At first, give him half a teaspoon- ful once a day. preferably before his 10 a. m. feeding. until he be- comes used to it. This usually takes a couple of days. Increase the amount gradually. until within a week he is getting one spoonful each day. At the age of five weeks. give him a second spoonful daily, one before the 2 p. in. feeding and another before the 6 p.m. meal. It's probably best to keep giving him two spoonfuls daily until he's two years old. During the summer months when he can get a daily sun bath. he'll probably need only one spoonful. We usually advise giving the cod liver oil before, rather than after his meals. because it sometimes makes children vomit. If he vomits after his feeding. he loses his food as well as the cod liver oil. If the baby repeatedly vomits or spits out his cod liver oil. or if he continues to refuse to take it. don't force it on him. This will only make him dislike it. Instead. give him some other preparation rich in vitamin D. such as cod liver oil cont-enti"ates or other fish oils. Ask your doctor which is best for him. Orange Juice May Help Sometimes you can get a baby to take cod liver oil if you put it in a spoon containing orange juice. I don't advise you to mix it with his milk mixture. The oil will stick to the inside of the bottle and the nipple, which might cause him to dislike his milk mixture. and you don't want that to happen. The baby may make a face and cry the first few times he is given cod liver oil .But if you give it to him every day, and in the right manner. -he will probably soon learn to like it, One more thing: do 't give the baby the idea you dont like it by making a face. He might sense your attitude and learn to dis- like if. too. - QUESTION AND ANSWER R. 'I'.: My throat has been sore constantly. What causes this? Answer: It may be due to in- fection. excessive or faulty use of the voice, the frequent inhalation of smoke or abuse of alcoholic beverages. WINTER CLIMBERS GLENCOE. Scotland (CPI - A mountaineering club in this Argyll- shire district arranges courses in snowcraft for experienced climb- ers. They live in huts on the slopes of Ben Nevis and Glen Coe. fend- ing for themselves for two weeks at a time. WEIRD ATMOSPHERE TORONTO tCPi -Theme scribed. Have Your Clothes be glad all on: days . . . And let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us: and establish! thou the work of our hands ulmnl us; yea. the work, of our lisnds' establish than it. , mu- 1 KOREAN SERVICE OSLO (C1-') - Norwegian Army chaplain Lorentz Pedersen has re- ccived the United States Bronze Star for meritorious work at the Norwegian mobile surgical hospital in Korea, which was closed last an? imn. ' t DRY CLEANED PRESSED ONLY at RITE-WAY CLEANERS Dial 7337 WIN A PROMOTION anoclstioriswlllsonti'I.urlstogoodwlllsi'id ii':"l',;:.E.Eha:.d..:. undsntamIrigbsfwuuifhsCollegouid"s'P'" ' . fP'Y tioqutpnapiohaswailnot life." m-.....""""', &f.f ssinbiy,smuu as so no ivoi-y-amrst-gncdnmleou--mar akin-,tsussussu-ans 2.'.".:".':"'.l..'..".'.'.".'.".2 for the Ontario College of Arts ball . this year is Dante's Inferno and sill-i dents are busy preparing replicas of dragons and other monsters for the event Costume dress is pre- I NOTES. av rliuioryilnouusa.x.cnuo- ertonthstliswasouesaskedtbe old chestnut about bolus loft sinus lags! miaunli... THE wmrj Nils lrltisb luropcas All-w c-pt-ins. all of whom have ...3:,: ill the RAF. loft for Hamburg on on an uninhabited desert island. 1flisfoum:llilmselfistbatsitu- ation and could have but one book with him. what book would it be? Chesterton did not name the Bible nor, did lie ” espeani for quite obvioifl . he would not have chosen. had it then been published. "How to Win Friends and Influence People." Ho lies- ltated only a moment, and than said, ”Wby. I think above all else I should want a copy of Johnston's Manual of Practical Shipbuilding." -New York Times. with progress being mads at such a rate. in mother dozen years or so we wouldn't be at all surprised if all a person had to do was to think about what would be nice for a meal, press a button-and there it would be. cooked to perfection. When ideas such as this become a reality. some brave. new housewife will suddenly decide that it might be more fun to buy food in "5 original form. unearth ber moth- er's old pots and pans and PW" pare the meal from scratch-just for the feeling of accomplish- ment. -Brockville Recorder and Times. A new song by Thailand's Zl- year-old king, is topping the hit parade in that southeastern Asia country. The young monarch has a reputation as an accomplished jazz musician. The popularity of the song-We Want. to Be Happy Today-indicates that the, "we" of the title applies to everyone it not to the royal "we" alone. ey have reason for the tuneful wish amid aprehension of the Communist threat on the country's borders. In the meantime the jazz- loving king continues to writs songs in his capital city. Bangkok. One may hope that he grows old- er in the merry vein of old King Cole calling for his fiddlers three. rather than be recorded in his- tory as a Siamese Nero who fid- died while Bangkok burned. --Sydney Post-Record. The language. we fear, has fallen on evil times. We came to this conclusion while watch- ing a television program of al- leged humour featuring two com- edians, or comics as they are sometimes and justifiably- called. "Man" said one. "you are the greatest." "Jack." replied the other. though Jack was not his name. "you are the most." This kind of talk is natural enough. we suppose. for an in- dustry that makes verbs of such respectable nouns as pan and daily. and nouns of words like spectacular. It will do no good. we know. to point out that while a show may be spectacular. or even a spectdcle (some of them are. too) it cannot be a spectacular. Neither will we gain anything by asking of what the comedian is the greatest or the most. We can and do protest the effect such talk is having on the younger generation. What with things being "real George" when they have no relation to any one named George, or "real gone" when they have not in any way departed, our avenues of com- munication with the younger set are already in danger of com- plete collapse. without the added irritant of these adjective-nouns. There is a limit, too. to what the parent can stand. a fact that was brought home to us receptly upon hearing a bright nine-year-old refer to her baby sitter as the "jazzlest." Man. that's the least. -Louis. ville Courier-Journal. Sootils thin with " to as chief - tbs ravivsdni -L , resume atlons in A , lim beffimsaeauded opting man air-line for a year, and Wm 1: band was ills clptajncy 0, the aircraft to , who Wm be trained by the BEA men wail. flying as co-pilots. - Ludo. Times. A sulmammluas of use can”. ian Bar Association recommsuu. owners of cattle G other imlmlh which cause accidents on high, Wlys be laid rssponslble on an "basis of usual negligencs priucl. Pltll." Animals on roads certain. ly are a hazard. They are a haz- nrd became "MY Pay no atten. tion to traffic rules and are jugt as likely to wander in front or an automobile as away from Kl They are a hazard also beciiuss 0"! 111030-Fllll do not understand animals and their peculia ..-ays Thus they don't know enough .0. slow down immediately on 5,31,, of a cow on the road. From . legal view point there may in justification for the recommends. tlon. But we fear it does not aka into consideration either farlm-rs or their beasts. Farmers certain. ly don't want their cattle wail. derlng on the road. They are afraid of some fool of a motor. in killing them. But a breiichy WW 0811 lump or break a fence, despite the best precautions of the owner. Also. farmers often have to drive cattle across a road from one field to another. They Gael". clse extreme caution whiki do. tag so. from selfish dud nthni ino- tlvea. They don't want to lose any beasts in an encullntcr with a motor vehicle. -Windsor Star. ' The true meaning of life is not a thing of record. It is a some- thing wlthln that changes with the years. so that past and pres- ent mingle together. to forlil llt'W meanings and purposes. Life is really soniehlng viewed, as it were. through a changing prlhm. Understanding comes, in its uwll way, as maturing wisdom. it is the product of- that blessed mood. In which the burtllen of the mystery. . In which e heavy and the weary wel t Of all this unintelligible world, Is lightened. Such a mood is a lhillti of Rrowth. hot of record. So it is that the inner resistance that keeps people from keeping diar- ies is not merely want of effort or the prudence that would keep others from knowing the truth about them. It may be. rzlther the sound instinct that what they will set down will not be lllt' real truth about themselves. Anti the false picture will become like a curse to confuse even lh('ll' own understanding of the meaning at their days. Life is its owli littor- pretatlon. its own record. In the ultimate sense. there can hv no other. -Montreal (;:m-Its. (,- l I PROFESSIO Boll, Mstlieson & Foster 150 Richmond st. J. Elinor Blanchard. BA. 16! Queen St. Pinon 4888 llu” CANADA 5 FiNEST CIGARETTE ...:..O4 NAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Efc. oiiu. 1:. M id. B.A. '5 156'" r -stcqu Dir-18915 OPTOMETRlS'f'S.:7 0. ll". uuiciieson (six BUTCIIEB R.0. i 5 t , .,. .mmm...m...s.... ., M. A. F .C., IzL.B. , , . , ..'1 INCREASE vous INCOME! ..... ti":-i.'2.i:.f.l.. .i.i.. .. ..'.”..t'.. st. Bluff! Learn how to, Allison M. Gillls, LLB. J. A. Carrutliors. R.0- " DEAL WITH lsEx)PLE I10 Richmond St. Dial 4747 1” Kelli SI. m"'gi” SUOGESSFULLYI A. wiiitiioii Gludet, 1.L.a. 1- gyI;9g&-l- Gnnh 3,-3-,,,, DALE Pllllllpl BIIJ. ,lIl Grsffss SC. 9' COURSE . Palmer h Ilsslsm J' mmm "fig; !'n"';':':g: mm" Due C out of N-mi sooth mu. --f S hym, mo. - rniiniu Author . conir -km s linen sin. - llamas Rotation si Writer "m'””"'o:o”:k” T cum ms; louse 4750, Hm-"L'..c--"IL";-m"?;-."-ii'..-till;-”3':?;"”-”...”' " -t year: , one . c . stock. , . r' ”"'.':.-.u-".......- """.'.:-..':.".'.3:.f::'...'!?.t.:?.'--'e"-t- e... W?” .. -x --u”-I-' 3? ”' Ecf-I W Dots Cornsgls Class No; 2 opens in 9- 3- we 3-A-v ' GA:::" c'lIl'I0"0NVlll 9'' "IIINGIIY. 24 55- '55 us sueiimns It. Dial use ' s.' Arch. lu.s.1i.i.c.'. ., g.3o sumo . P.l.l. DI-l ”". - P-M-I Msollios a Tnlnor , :5 -notnw-' Oslyllmsmbersroglstsredlussoclass. l'”"""-, 3”" ”"' " . For lafsrnuisl or nuumtn please nn-In DI. GE0lwl CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS rIsIIl:Il.. IQ Punt sweet. 7 Iephwno uu.. . , ...v...-.-.( r” ...... .. wW-ta2me-w- -- , . .. nauuvmo" -7 - 3 "i'-"'”' T A X .--.1!