PAGE rout: ' TllE BIIARLOTTETOWII Glllllllllll Merging nut; (Founded m 1m) President Ueut. Col. W. Chester B. Mature Vino-President: J. B. Burnett, I‘.J.l. flocretary: Lleul. Col. D. A. MIOKIIIIIOII, 0.8.0. lotto: and Managing Director: J. B. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Hell. Ill- A. Burnett, R..C.N.V.B. (On Active Service; “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY, srzrrrffii-in s, m5 The Atomic Bomb ise last May of With everybody talking about the atomic bomb readers are more curious than ever before about the scientific midget—the atom. This is a new world, in a scnsc-fln M00110 world, and people are asking questions about the attntfs power, tl1e centuries of research that lav behind the (lCVClOplllCllI of that power. These arid other questions are answered in seventeen daili- installments of a sketch-and-text feat- ure (similar to a c01nic strip) which'has been prepared by NIEA Service in collaboration witlt scientific authorities. The series will be releas- qd today, to time with school re-opcniug, so "that children tnzty follow “The Story 0f the Atom" in their classrooms. School attthorities migln git-g some attention to this timely series of ll1Zl\_\lll‘.I* and text. A iWioflliwhwilenwDecision Mr. Neil \\'. Higgins, C.A., announces in this issue the opening of an Office at I44 Rich‘ ntond Street, Liliarlottcttuvit. for the practice of his profession as a Chartered Accountant- Mr, lliggitts, who recently resigned his position Wllll the Inconte Tax Division of the Dept. of National Revenue at Charlottetown, is wcll qualified by his education and experience to offer the public excellent service. A graduate of West Kent School, the Charlottetown Busi- ness Collcge, Prince of Wales College Com- mercial COUTSC‘, and Dalhotisie University where he obtaincd his Bachelor of Commerce degree. Mr. Higgins also is a qualified Certified Gen- eml Accountant as well as a Chartered Account- Int. Previous to his graduation from Prince of lValcs College he was employed for two years as bookkeeper and salesman with R. E. Mutch d Co. Ltd., wholesale grocers, Charlottetown, and prior to attending Dalhousie University spent over one year with the Dominion Bureau of Statistics at Ottawa. While attending Dal- housie Yniversitv in addition to attaining a high scholastic record he was for three years Mau- ager of the Dalhousie University Store. Upon graduation from the University he entered the cmplov of Lloyd. Egan 81 Company, Chartered Accountants, Halifax, and in addition was Lec- turer in Accounting for the second year Ac- counting class at Ihlhousie University. In September I937 he entered the employ of the Income 'l'ax Division at Charlottetown where he has been steadily promoted and has become well kittnvii throughout the Province. .\11-. Higgins has participated in the work of many local organizations and among other positions held is at present Vice-President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of P. E. I.. President of the Charlottetown Kinsmen Club, a tnember of the Provincial Executive of the Boy Scouts Association and until his recent resignation was President of the Dominion In- come Tax Charlottetown Staff Association. It is to Mr. Iliggins’ credit that the Gov- ernment were loath to lose his services, offered him further promotion in the local office oi Income Tax, and when that was declined en- deavoured to obtain his services for headquart- ers at Ottawa. It is men of initiative and resource like_ Mr. Higgins that we wish to encourage to re. main among us with a view to the development of the Province. orities. peace. NSS handled through are matters for blame cannot be sion. nected with the General Sir and successively burning top_ic in Liberal members is an erroneous Nurse Placement Bureaux substitution for applications will the rnle. The first Canadian institute for directors‘ A nurse placement bureaux opens today in Winnipeg, with about forty directors of place- ment burcanx and nurse registries, officers of provincial nurses associations, and hospital and public health administrators attending. The I0- day institute is bciitg held under the attspices of the Cmtztdiatt Nurses’ Association. Owing to the distance and expense of travel, there will be no rcprcsctitation front Prince Edward Is- hnd, but the deliberations will naturally be s matter of gctteral interest. The insfitttte hopes to be effective in e5- fablishitig nurse plnccntcnt burcaux in all nine provinces. At present there are placement bureaux in British Columbia, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, and bureaux are bring flffilllllflVl in Saskatchewan and Alberta. The purpose of those bureaux is to help nurses find the positions for which they are best fit- ted and to supply employers with nurses best qualified for positions to be filled. The es- tablishment of placcntcnt bureaux in all prov- inces will greatly assist the nursing profession to mect the need for nursing service and to maintain a high quality of service through care- ful selection and placement. It will bring into closer association and co-ordinate the efforts of all tbnsc engaged in or concerned with the employment of nurses. Beyond the placement of nurses. the bureaux will undertake studies of particular community problems. The ivork done by psychiatrists in the placement of men in the armed services has pointed up the value of such service as the placement burcnux will give. More and more there will be a tendency in business and pro- fessions to try to place individuals according to their aptitnrlcs. The Canadian Nurses As- sociation. facing an unprecedented demand for nursing st-rvicc in certain fields on the one hurl and the demobilization of more than three duced to date. of catuinn seems the dependability pliable. r871, is revisions. and lend money corporations, and or to engage in to become a PIB, etc., ad infinitum. But these -EDITDRIAL NOTES- Parliament meets tomorrow in special ses- mander-in-chief of the Middle East, born this date 1881; educated at Eton, entering the army at eighteen he served in the South African \\"ar' 1899-1902, Great War I 1914-18, appointed to General Staff College at Camberley I930, Gen- eral Commanding in Chief of the Nile in I939, Transjordan, Greece, Syria, and the 10th Army in Iraq and Persia. The lightening of taxation will that the war is officially over, s strong move- ment, gaining in strength daily, is on foot to get rid of the bulk of the bureaucracies “business as usual" predominate. Mr. having an eye to leadership is inclined to stave this off in order not to alienate the bureaucrats and their official supporters, but quite a few on the government to do something to relieve an almost intolerable co a Plastics should not be looked upon as sub- stitutes for anything. warns C-I-L Oval. In the building of an automobile body. for example, steel is still cheaper. moral versatile and more durable than any plastic pro- plastics in ivartime has whctted the public ap- petite for post-ivar plastic products, and a word "Canada is among the leading nations in system," says the September Monthly Letter of The Royal Bank of Cflllélflft, which contains a simple description powers and business of banks are clearly de- fined in the -Bank Act, an enactment of the Dominion Government. This is not a creation of lawyers and statesmen arrivsd at once and fixed for all time. tem is s product of evolution, and it is still The Ban-k Act, originally passed in thoroughly years by a committee of the mons, and other changes may be made between Briefly, a bank to take deposits and to deal in, discount, bonds and debentures of municipal and other British or foreign public securities. are forbidden to advance money 0n mortgages, though they may accept a mortgage as addi- tional sectuity for a debt already incurred; they are forbidden to buy, sell or bartcr goods, regulations is to prevent a bank from locking up its assets. The greater part of the assets of a bank, which consist of investments and short-term Government bonds and other high- grade securities. and commercial loans, are con- stantly in the process of being collected and re- 24-19893’ thousand nursing sisters on the other hand, is setting up machinery for the proper placement of nurses and the providing of nursing service where it is most urgently required. Tax Cuts Are Vital Mr. Ilslcy's blunt declaration t0 a laborl deputation that no substantial cuts in taxation l will be forthcoming in the Dominion budget this,b1ess1n8 or s fall will be received with disappointment we believe, amazement, says The Fimmtidl P08!- “Following hard on his pre-election prom- and, substantial tax cuts, the public will find it difficult indeed to understand suchlgdd a. drastic change in attitude or to believe that the' excuse cited by the Finance Minister is suffici- they do mm ent for that change. Mr. Ilsley says that ‘if the demand is withdrawn for high which we have undertaken to provide, and for a satisfactory system of social security, I can in- troduce a very satisfactory budget.’ “This hardly seems good enough. The pre- election promise of lo\ver taxes was coupled with CO similar pre-eiection promises of ltiglt etuploymettt on g and a large social security program. "Has the general from mid-May, when the promise of lower taxes] was made, that the Government now finds that no rcdtiction in cxpcttdittires is possible? weight of evidence seems all the other way. "True, we still have large titimbcrs of lll€ll| in uniform but they are not fighting. They are'° not using the tremendous amounts of costly munitions, gasoline, transport, supplies, etc., that were necessary when they were fighting. Ex- penditures on war account tnust or should have dropped drastically from V-E Day and dropped again since hostilities ceased in the Pacific. It is possible that these expenditures have not bccu pared as promptly and substantially as they should have been. ports of excessive waste by the military auth- There are bureaus arc (ligging in for the durntiort of the insists that all situation so changed| The There are disturbing re- indications that wartime employment be its bureaucracy. WIB wants firm government action. The shouldered on the public." i i I U It has been pointed out that the change in command of Military District N0. 6 is not con- official report on the Halifax riots. Brigadier White had previously intimated his desire to return to his engineering business, and retired at his own request, having been cotu- mended irt the official report referred to. l I I I Henry Maitland Wilson, c0111- of Cyrenaica, Palestine, and lilo be the the House of Commons. Now and let Ilsley, are bringing pressure to bear mmercial situation. s s There belief that the ntain role of plastics will be as substitutes for such basic ma-_ terials as steel. glass, wood or stone. that there will be limited uses for plastics in It is trite common materials, but these be the exception, rather than The highly successful use of in order. l! it it vi and efficiency of its banking of the system. “The The Canadian banking sys- overhauled every ten I-lottse of Com- the Bank Act authorizes on commercial paper, stocks, Provincial, The banks on Dominion, trade. The object of these U!!! __ cnaawrrrrrown tgutuzprm lN0t88 n3 Way Juno i l; u. __-_ l ' 9 season lht th really bellsvv that “two c111 11$: cheaper than one." Winter u the “m? "M" “Ballad out um. tr "l" be d°110-—— ndou IIt-ea Press. Scientist; u; m; rlnclplc of the atomic bomb can c ange Can-' “dim W913i". Mitch makes it a curse dependlnz on m» kl d r a ’ ‘having? _0w we happen to be __. i enifiilyelnizwietffeiifvihmmm u 1n a‘ H}? e eng s no e. |fatllt of the British authorities, but; have so far be agree among en unable to themselves u to what L-Ohstham News. Civilisation ll lhll 01th u! af- employmcnt, fairs in which money ls collected, Pom women who make up their faces and tint. their nails, tn order w send missionaries abroad teach the savazes not to do the same-Montreal Star, l "It smells like shellac, looks like ffee and when you put, the mp p he bottle it blows off," ts the vivid description given a. mysterious liquor 1n police court. The Allies might be interested, as it. sounds like another secret weapon, -Hsm- llton Spectator. Since the use of the reverse gear involves sudh risks it is therefore of importance that the utmost‘ cure should be exercised by driv. rs in seeing that the Way is clear before proceeding to back up.- The rear view mirror cannot bet relied upon to give a clear sight. of the roadway close behind the vethlcle, s0 a special look-out should‘ be maintained. Never to start a motor vehicle suddenly, either for. ward or backwards, is a good rule‘ to follow. Take time to see that‘ noth‘ g ls ln the. way. This is. the rest. means of avoiding ac. cldents.—Canadian Motorist. ..0ne June 21, 1940, from Beirut, Syria, the Rev. Henry H. Riggs, executive secretary of. the Neat-i East Christian Councll for Mission- ary Co-operatloit, sent, a letter to’ Dr. nlph H. Long, secretary-l treasurer of the Lutheran Warld| Convention, acknowledging receipt- of a cheque for $2,000. He men-l tloned that, he was leaving the nexti day for a furlough in the United} States and added that; he probably would arrive "before you receive this letter." He beat the letter by a. little more than five years. The letter reached New York this week. _New York Herald Tribune. We are now entering the dis- turbing post-war period, Ln which crime waves are not. uncommon. Wars frequently leave a terrible wake of criminality and lt is one of those contingencies which should be prepared for. It, is always easy to condemn the police and to ridi- cule police efforts but. It ls also a solemn responsibility to support adequately the police arm. ‘There is one conclusion with which no one will quarrel at. present. There are too many murders 1n this ro- vlnce. and too many by far w ere the killers are getting away with 1t. The actual official record, lfl| produced, would no doubt bear out. the conclusion. - St. Catharines Standard. An analysis of street lighting and traffic safety by a large Insur- ance csmpany reveals the signl- Iicanl fact that. cities having the‘ lowest ner caplta cost of street llghting, consequently the poorest conditions for night, visibility, have tthe highest night. fatality rate, also the highest public 11a. btlity insurance premiums. An- other analysis showed that; the more light; there 1s On the road. way, fthe lower are the accident insurance rates. The rate in the bestJlghted city was less than half that ln the poorest. The rates are based upon the amount of money that: has to be mid out in payment of claims for damage. — The Municipal World. Because Article 6 of the Hague Convention lays it down that pris- oners cf war shall not work "ex- cessively hard," British women toll- ed voluntarily at night to ensure clean teacups for the 25,000 people expected at England-Australia Test at Old Trafford, Manchester. Err- ly in the clay 30 German prisoners were taken to the ground to help with final preparations. Some were ordered to wash the 5.000 dishes and teapots which had lain under the pavilion since the last Test in 1938- At 4.30 pun-under Article 6 -the men were allowed to stop work leaving hundreds of dishes un- washed. Five men and four v10- mcn employed by a local brewery. | hurried round after hours to finish‘ the job-London Express. The holiday crowd that haul gathered tn Downing Street 1n the hone of seeing Itotabllltles found only n London dust-cart outside,‘ Number Ten. When the cart mov- ed on and fumed the comer into Whitehall all eyes followed it, per- haps in the hope of seeing casta- way rellcs of the great. ‘Fhclr gaze was met calmly ,by the cock. ney dustman sitting at the back 0f the cart. He knew that the, °Y°Wd had hoped to see something of significance and he gave It to them. Dnawlng himself up he re- moved the wlde-brlmmed hat from his head with a dignified sweep and bent low over it with all the grace of a Spanish grandee. The, crowd was delighted and cheered, and he and the spectators went. on $11611‘ wav well satisfied. - Man- chester Guardian, tlons ls up just now. Illit through- out this war it fluctuated endless-' 1y. reflecting periods of smooth sail. rences enctuntered between rm l tlons trying to adjust trien- differ- ent, attitudes to the work of coils» boratlon. As surely as the sun will set tonight the barometer of| relations between Soviet Russia. the United States and the other Powers will go down again. But what matters is that the barometer, doesn't stay down. Wise men ln Russia, as well as wlse men in this country, know, and have shown that they know_ that neither ooun- try can any longer afford the lux-, ury of permanent disagreement with the other. And when ne otln- tors are agreed on that. an are agreed with sufficient convlcttonu solutions for current controversies can always be found. It; ls easy fol assent to this when the barometer| l _AA-fl. 44s.. 4.... ¢_¢. . ls up. It ought. not to be forgot- ten when the bs ometer goes down “s wlelv to the rm. um the’ tol l , ber maids, . Mr. Ilsley. He (Mr. Ilsley) has the The barometer of Allled rels- p I ‘lirfgeand as faithfully reflecting the m Green Gables Etc. ‘the following letter sppleared in a recent lssus of the lsouburg (Out) News: ‘lflllsonburg, Ont. Auzust fl. 1045. The Edltorz-In the columns of your Issue on Thursday, August , appears an article entitled "Green Gables Preserved tn P.E.I. National Park." This follows the wo g of the same article nub- lllhed ln The London Free Press ‘some time ago, and the followlng ls the same as the letter I went-cl ‘to The Free Press at that. time. The ofilenfng anagraph of the- wuttcle quest on reads as foI-' ‘lows: "If that exceptional child of fiction, Anne of Green Gables. created in the novels of Lucy Maud Montgomery, were to return to her enchanted home 1n Prince Edward .Island today she would find little 1 change. Most of her old familiar haunts are stlll tn existence. The old farm house, Green Gables, with which readers of "Anne" stories .became so intimately acquainted, has been faithfully preserved In every detail, and ls 110w available as a tea room." Probably I am butting mv head against a. stone wall, and will suc- ceed no better in my struggles against the fictions put forth by the Prince Edward Island 'I‘rnvel Bureau than dld my late mother. However, I shall carry on her fight with one more effort. ‘There ls d proverb, I believe, which holds that “it ls fun to be fooled, but it ls more fun to know." Whether this be so or not. the fact. remains that in the mind of the author there never was a “real” i l "Thanks f0 7°"! a I -.\_.;liu1- lMY IJJMBAGO IS A“ THING 0F THE PAS ” end from ltmhllilt- utfitltiamwtiififlwnv um whoa-fig mass on the ood news as to found relief. e lflyl: When I lwaagiventhetipto andlamvery relief: and after taking one l e lam glad to say that my lum become a thing of the past. the "I had bad ttack of lumbago. gofinto bid I hadto stay in one position-I could not move for pain. u? K_ntschen grateful or 1t. For aftu taking a fewfioses I felt some is no trace of it coming back."_—E.A.V. There are many instances m which Kruschen saline treatment has randpa Kruulron CID \ brouglttha rellef_...hrstllltdla forMnEA. i.$owhynottry1(rus chenyounelf? Butbesuretotakett faithfully for as long as needed and thereby give Knrschen a chance overcome conditions in your bod which have probably taken months. . or evm years, to develop. There it always a muse for lumbago and with rnanyperaonsthepaincanbetmced to toxins or poisons in the system Kruscherfs action isto help your organs of elimination and thereby bring you relief. Kruschen Salts are procurable at all drug stores: 25c. and 75c. bottle Green Gables, unless the house on l I as a“ "s" V Ml W111 Kalrs sfftuar to? ommmed? This ls our faltlt tremendous _ 0"!‘ Wild hone. who shall scorn - That ln the name of Jesus |The world shall be reborn. -—Vache1 Lindsay. the picture ppstcard, from which she took her Inspiration. can be termed “real." I1; is true that the lano- through the WOOds at Ernest Webb's farm, whtcfvls the present so-called Green Gables, was the original of the ‘Lovers’ Lane" im- mortalized ln the books, and pos- sibly also the "Haunted Wood" is the original, although 11s to this I am not sure. But certain 1t ls that the "Lake of Shining Waters" writ- ten about in the "Anne" books is not at. Cavendish. where the Tru- vel Bureau has placed it in the middle of the Green Gables golf course, and never was, With re- gard to the other so-called original haunts of Anne, the errors are ner- haps immaterial. and if the visit- ors are given an extra thrill, by all means let them enloy the same. But. the “Lake of Shining Wat- ers" ts a Nftl place. and that real place ls a, considerable distance up the coast on the farm of James Campbell at Park Corner, and not on Webb's farm at Cavendish, now the golf course. This fiction does impose upon the tourists who come to Prince Edward Island, not only because they do not see what they come to see, but because the real “Lake of Shining Waters" at Park Cornet- ls far more beautiful than the substitute passed off on the public by the Travel Bureau and its publlcltv department. Nor can the Bureau plead ignori- ance, because as I have already stated, the author herself carried on a campaign against them all her life on this point_ both 1n the public press and In person, but. without effect. Probably I shall have no more effect. But I am wrong In sayina there was no ef- fect. One thing was achieved: some of the nlcture postcards now nut out of "The Lake of Shlnlmz Waters" show the true pond at Park Corner, thus tacitly admit- ting the truth of the author's con- tentlon-rmd she should have known-—but they n10 still cap- tioned, "Lake of Shining Waters. Cavendish." If the Prince Edward Island Travel Bureau ls so carter to lure tourists anxious to see the - scenes set forth ln the "Anne" books, why pm all their egizs in one basket. They might better throw in the towel, ndmlt their error and popularize still anotherl district. in a province which de- servedly has the reputation among dlscemlng people-meaning atleast the Islanders-as the most beauti- ful in Canada. I trust that you will follow the example of The Free Press and Draining the Barrel (The Printed Word) The main reason the Ottawa Gov- ernment; ls making a strenuous, sales effort to set ovlnclal con- sent to levying most of the taxes ls that. Ottawa will be ln desper- ‘ate need of money. Mr. Ilsley ls ln the position of a. man with a income who is wa ng up after a spending spree. He finds himself with a 40-room house, spacious grounds, a stable, a five- car garage. a yacht_ a wine cellar, many old paintings, a concert grand and maybe even an econo- mic whatnot. Those are worries enou h, but, oh. the servants! The but er, thei footman, th parlor maids, chant-I tweenles_ ltousekeepers. : cooks, gardeners, chauffeurs, and‘ stable help. They are all thcre with life-time contracts, And Mr. Ilsley ls the fellow who has to meet the payroll. He must raise his income and the only hope o! doing that ls by persuading nine other people to let him take over the management of their financial affairs. The ordinary oltlzen might be vastly amused at. t ls picture of reputation of being a careful per- son. Ke doesn't fling his own money about. He's a street-car rider though because of his cabl- net rank he gets two thousand tax-free dollars for running a car. But when comes to spending public nctlons belle his private certain can be raised) Mr. Ilsley's ubllc nctlone belle his private character. One’s amusement at the contrast dies away when it ts re- called that the ari; ls mere- ly whether the c to pay e elver General of Canada or s provincial trensu . The wo- man always pays, An s0 will the an. “"’\(n/\L r" ‘ nnruv-t" T - Hi ‘H? _"“"l'n 1110"". l1 g 1.. .. 1" renew-n MISSIONS 11v barns ARRAY An endless line of splendor. These troops home. Wlth creeds they go from Scotland. With incense do from Rome. These, Against the dark gods stand. They gird the earth with valor, 'I‘hev heed their King's com Onward the line advances. Shaking the hills Slaying the hidden demons. The lions that devour. No bloodshed ln the wrestllnx.— But: souls new-born arise— v ‘The nations growing kinder. The child-hearts growing wise. What ls the final ending? ll Waters". Yours very truly, C. C. MACDONALD. with heaven in the name of Jesus, with power, rim nus letter, or so much at ast. as refers to this dlsputatlous matter of “The Lake of Shining Youth’;- Opportunity (Vancouver New Herald) U11 to the close of the Japanese war there was a shortage of man- power ln industry and boys and girls of 16 and 1'7 were attracted by the offer of good w es and dl- versifled experience. en then they were officially advised to keep up their schooling, complete their education and prepare themselves thoroughly for the exacting de- mands of a technological age. The end of the war in the Paci- flc is terminating the active de- mand for been use youth. The fighting men are returnlntz and are rilzhtli; entitled to pneferentlul treatment in the matter or employ- ment. During the transition period. there will be displacements in some industries and delays ln the absorp- ti": of mm into others. 0n the whole. labor will he ‘ply than demand. In these circum- stances, young people will be Well advised to seize the opportunity to for mand. in greater suu- u.“ i1@@@|§1@tn|okr'5*r‘QWW-IIIEIIQIEIIEJIEJIEIEIIEIEIEIIEI E d. '1. i: ,. F zl_l_il=@@fil@lfillfifil@@@lfilfilglfllfillfglfilfi@lblj@ A o1 l l( iKlES-r NOTICE The Rogers Hardware Company Limited wish to announce to their many customers that, S MR. WILLIAM T. ROGERS has returned to Charlottetown And that he will assume joint Managershlp of the Store with his brother, Benjamin Rogers, J12, In which position he hopes to meet. many of his old friends, and make many new ones. Live Poultry Wanted Buying live and dressed poultry daily. We specialize in processing live poultry at our modern killing plant ln Charlottetown. Live poultry killed and graded the clay re- ceived. Assures you of prompt returns and‘ light shrink. SHIPPING CRATES SUPPLIED UPON nsourzsr Canada Packers Limited CHARLOTTETOWN Id J-UICLFU-UUU-IJ-UICUUUTLJUU LI ..l U Li" "l. Ell By Ken Reynolds “Great Scott, Man! of your llh --'why, you can't seg good enough to road Q3011!!! I’!!! All!” . t You're missing the opportunity SEPPEIIBER. 5. 194.; ATTENTION muss wEARERs, T u‘: mo“ "l you who h n" l ‘llllllfl; u "l0 questloniu‘ n "I 7 ‘It V0 I u“ iirliaiiigmlflf ,f"'M:'~I- u llll] Qflefn h“. h?‘ flt- I-m "llllllluent h, ‘f; Ind {urn ostwwm in everybody, l‘ It GASSY {fonacn RELIEVED We alone h tfielved QM]? 70m lllllflbll my“. W 35° DBr bottle, TllE 2 MAGS 14s Great c run o ers ciiill. Attention lhe Burg’ Dlemre themselves Wlilles later. the)‘ youths. The tzood ucifioium Wm be 53km bv those with quote education and training, X°WIR men and wome which they wttl h v i gret bitterly as liini; rfigsollllew last, "Back to school" should t4 5108111 0f a popular mov avouswed by the emcatlon au . The brightest hope for future of Canada is a mu. it ard of education and tra among those who, a few 5 htipoe. must carrv all the w bl ties 0f a complex nee 01.. anical power. IDNDQN —(CP)-- Henry ' tor Ashley, 73, one of the arc - 0f the £1,000,000 (about $.50). Masonic Pease Memorial t. In London, has died. “iJ-OIITPMT INSURANC SERVICE” W. K. R065 Agsnciss Ltd. _l'l|m 540-441 “Profossio Neil W. lliggl" Chartered Accountant nal ‘littl- 144 Richmond St l ll. ll. lloanefi 00. Chrlrlcrfld BP-"oums 53 (ivultntt l-trcri. (jhnrlrttlrlm " l Phone 2080 B“ i‘ Randolph w. .‘."-""i"|t 0- l‘ ~1- xn-u -—* Public stei-agravhe’ . ||, nd cl" Mtrirwnsrrzigalfn 3,5,... m! hookket-plutl- mss nxry c1005" 1x904. T§lffil°$| 4:2. Oommllliil“ m‘ ‘ flH-fikl-Ps‘ '.'~"-'~"-""""' llorrellimd 60ml" Chnrlcrrtl Acw""""" n. r. lnttllll" lutern Trusl minim “ummown