{if Q -.-- -- PAGE FOUR’ TIIE IIIIMLIITTETIWIII IIIIMIIIIAII Ilfllll] Dilly (Inllifll II Ill?) fiflhl: LC0LW.Clwlt0r8.MLur0 l Vmtrflfillltllll J. l. Burnett. I-l-z flgorqlmry. Lleut. Col. D. A. MIBKIIIIOB, 0.8.0. Ddllo and Managing Dlrector: J. B. Burnett. FJJ. Alooliat-e Edllnnt: Frank Walker and Ucul. [an A Burnett, B.O.N.V.B. (On Act-Iva Sorvlul ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” wsnnusnnl, JAN. 10. i044 Free Ports In recent l-stlers to the press M1. H- K- 5- Ilcliliiiing has clnphzisizcd ‘the great possibiliticri of a free port in this Pruiiiicc. Ile has Pumlcd out how sucll a port could be established, and the tremendous advantages that wouldmccrue 1t is iiitcrcstiilg to iiule Illalt (alllulum ~\/ll/’/"".‘/ ullii .lllzrl'lu~ ILiIIL/illfifflllfl -\1‘1¢'~l. l" ‘l5 1M9“ T‘ suc, gives editorial prominence to the saliic su _- jcct. l: urges that the idea of free P°Yt lacll" 15¢; bg given “immediate study by those respon- siblc for iiicrczlsiilg Cziiilldas imports and ex- ports." 'l“ltc workings of thc lfCc P01‘! Z013“ flsl'llbll~ll\‘il Ill New York arc rclcrrcd til. In!‘ for the advent of the war, other zoncs ivould have been put ililo operation at other L’. S. polls. as the fdrilitics thcse zoncs oifcr llnvfi proved the lllCZIllS iii (lllfilfllllg‘llllpOfllllll quail- I"IL‘\' ill spccizllizlvl czlruocs which could not llc llanlllcd ill '.ul_\' lilhcr \\11_\'. _ Ulllltltlltlll Mop/ling suggests that Halifax. Montyegl and Vancouver are the logical loca- tions for free zonrs in Canada. But why not in l'fl‘,l-‘(‘ I‘i'l\\'1ll4l lski-id? In any case its argu- iliciu l», lhc ;liI\.'lllIL’\'\ of lire purl» is -'\ gflullg one. .\p.ill from the increased tradc w-hich would resillt, it sayis. thousands of tons of merchandise would also become available for dcl-verv to ulnnv oiliside (lcstinrltioiis, thus ftlrlnitlq illl illt|l<-l'l;lt1l iluclcus fur iutorillltionzl‘ shipping flijffallltn§_ “'l‘llis." it adds, "is olic of the many proiccts which should have the immediate attention of the illllllSldjflOf‘ Trans- port to assist Canadians to PHTIICIPFIIC 1Y1 PUSF war interiiationzzl trading." Co-Education Ended In U.S.S.R. (Jf grunt iillcrcad in rducatiollisis throughout the “will is the bu: that Soviet hiissia has iluiie ileliliizrly- abaiidfilufid the vr-citluvationdl syslcm. This system was regarded some years ago as an essential part of the reforms designed m give equality of rights to men and women. and it cxtcildcil from elementary schools to the Ufil\'tfl’:ill\'. \\illi ilic attainment. of equal rights for w-olneii, the Soviet authorities have found that it is not only unnecessary to insist on co- educalion, but that better results are obtained bv rclul'iiil:;[ lo :1 scpllrattc (‘diicutiou .\\s'l€lll, The subircl i» ilctllt with ill all interesting article by Prof. A. Solokhitn, head of one of the Moscow schools, in a bulletin published at Washington \lll(_l€l' authority of the Soviet I§ilibassv' Cliicf rczison for the change is the iliifr-rci ili the development of girls and boys ni tllc slllllc zljgcs. lictwccn thc agcs of 1O and 14. it was found, boys usually go through a priod oi accumulating strength, during which their physical development slows down. \\’ith girls. on the other hand, this age is marked hv rapid physical dCVflODIllCllII. 'l‘lic_v_ are ahcztd of buys ill height and weight. Between the ages oi i4 aild i7 it is the other way round-boys dcvclop quicker than girls. The unequal development of boys and gills is ihc l"‘1l:l.lll for uncilual ulidcrstiuldillg of It's- illflj, "flint," writes Prof. Solokhilil, "is whv schoolboys and school girls of the saute age do not make the same progress. And lt is not only progress that is involved. Thcrc is also the llljflfinlll‘ of :1 iliifcrciit educational approach of boys and girls in various phases of thcir develop- mciil——diffcrcilt presentation of tllc iuatcriail, different work to be assigrlcd—in fact, differ- ent mctlirxls of teaching and ivorkiiig. This dillcrciitiaiioil cannot ho attained if the girls and bovs arc in the szuuc class." .\ SCCUIILI rcasoli givcii is the iilcsczltizlblc di- vision of labour between mcn and women. Wo- men have responsibilities which do not apply to men. and are of crucial importance. \\'onlci1 are IIIHIITCIT.‘ and thcv must he ablc to look ai- lvr children and bring thclil up. “Whzlirvvr is said about clplzllitv of rixspollsibility‘ llctwccp 121931 and ivrinicn in bringing up children, the riii-lhcr remains Illfllllfd‘. School should giro gills spvriidl killlwlt-rlgc in lllllllilll Illlillflllll‘ zul.l Llll_\>li_rlilg_\', lll ll\'"l(‘ll<', psychology zllld llli- sci- l'll((‘ pt tencliillr." .~\ few mouths’ experience of work in the new ivay in illoscow", ‘it is claimed, has given "Dflsitivc results.’ Clzlsscs have become more llolilogeneous and better balanced. Children are llettcr taught and organized. This year separ- atc education is to be introduced in other towns which have a large number of secondary and intermediate schools. The boys and girls will sturly scparatcly from lhe first class. Scpzlrzltc (llllCilllllll is to be. applicd only tn school studios. .-\flcr lessons mixed entertain- ments, debates, lectures, concerts. ¢tc., will con- tinue to be encouraged. Strong emphasis is placed in the article on the iiiipurl:iiicc of sclcctiiig the right kind of trzlcllvrs, lhi-v mud IKE “sclisitivc and undcr standing," \\llIl “authority and personality." They must be capable of organizing activity Outside as ivrll as inside of school hours "on l wide scale and correctly." “Separate cducaliuil is an rxlrmucly impor- tant slop iii the consolidation of Sovict schools,‘ the article concludes. “It puts them on a new level. and the results will not be slow in show’- ing ihclilsclves in the rate of progress of pupils, in rlisciplinc mid in the streiiglllciliiig of th¢ Soviet family." Canada's Buffaloes The announcement that, in order to preserve the proper balance between its buffalo herds and the grazing facilities in its national parks, tlic Canadian government has slaughtered 60o of the animals, draws attention to the manner in 0 $1» which the virtually extinct monarch of the pllilll came back once his prime enemy, man, adopted a benevolent altitude, That the killing of 60o buffalo should demand attention would have brought smiles to Buffalo Bill and other plaim men who thought nothing of killing from 1,000 to 3,000 buffalo in a single season to meet the tremendous commercial demands for hides. But it marks great progress since the Canadian gov- ernment, in 1906, bought the herd offered for sale by two Montana ranchers and, between the years of 1907 and 1912, scattered them through- out the Dominion. Di=case took some toll but now Canada has four lilajor herds in addition to those in city parks and zoos and those which ' have been turned loose to mingle with the wood buffalo in the Great Slave Lake and Peace River regions. All of them are reported ih good hcalth and multiplying stcadily. The slaughter. as in previous years, was confined to the older animals. Their hides went to pro- vide coats for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and it is announced, ivithout explanation of the method, that the meat and bones also wcrc fully utilized. .- EDITORIAL NOTES .- “Progrcss all along the line" is the substance of the various Church reports submitted at the annual meetings. I I In another week. Ottawa will be the centre iii’ tlltciltion with tllc gathering of Parliament for whzit iuai" be its last session bcforc the elec- tlon. I U U i Thcre will be a formal transfer of the R.A.F. Airport to the R.C.A.F. before long. A skele- Hill l\‘.-\.l". crew will be left for a time attached 1o the I\’.L'..'\.F. i I I I Sir Frederick Barton Maurice, British a01- dier and war critic, born this date 1871; in ad- ficld, \\‘£l$ director 0f imperial operations in 1915-1910; in the following year he differed with the War Office in the conduct of the war, and in bzlarch 1918, he charged the Government with making misleading statements about the disposition of troops, for which offence he was placed on retired pay by the Army Council; this was his opportunity, he became military contributor to several London newspapers, in- cluding “The Times" in which capacity he did much to bring the War Office up to a state of greater, modern efficiency; author of “Russo- Turkish War, 1877-8": "Sir Frederick Maurice, (his father) a. Record", “Forty Days in 1914". “The Last Four bfonths.“ u a u a Sherburn, l\'linu., Iligli school's row over wlic- ther girl students may or may not ivcar slacks in class rooms appears headed for the courts. Parents who object to the school board's ruling of "no slacks" in classrooms announced last wcck that they had made plans to retain all at- torney to back up their objections. Mr. E. E. Johnson, school board president, annouuccd the board also has employed an attorney. “We stand pat on our original ulrder barring slacks in the classroom,” Mr. joiuisoil said. “We have Zll\\'1.l)'5 lclr that high school girls ivczlriiig slacks in the classroom would not contribute to the morale and dignity of the school. We don't care if they wear slacks or ski suits to school to protect themselves against cold; but once they arc inside, we will not pcrmit them." Oppon- ents of the rule have expressed determination to fight for the right of their daughters to wear slacks in school as well as outside. They main- tziin that the ban against slacks is a blow against "personal Iihcrty" and “scif-dctcrmination," i 1K i i The Archbishop of York, in his December let- ter to the Dl0ces§ commends the Save the Chil- dren Fund‘ which enjoys his Grace's patronage together with that of the Archbishop of Canter- bury flll(l other Church leaders. This is ivllat the Archbishop says: “At Christmas we think especially of childhood, so I want to take this opportunity of commending to you the Save the Clllgfll Fund, 20 Gordon Square, London, ". .1. All ovcr the world in country after country tlicre are starving children. lVhcn the oppressed peoples are liberated we shall find pitiable, undernourished, starving children. This Fund exists to help to bring to thcm food and hell», lr has done grell: work in the past and it is ciiiltinllliig iluiilg so II1I‘.\', hul soon thc rcs~ pnnsibilitics IiiIIllIZ on it will be greater than ever. The extent of its work depends on the Fllllllflrl it receives. As we. think of the luirtli of (‘hrist iii poverly, wc should hr moved to offi-r Illlll a |ll'<‘>Clll by giving SUlllClllllIQ towards the I"ilIl'|(l which exists to save His litth: brothers and sisters of all lands-Cyril Ebor." with An Otllwl correspondent writing in Toronb News says: "Mr, lrdili, his face set like s. rock against any truck or trade with his late leader. has lately had some talks with Maurice Duplessis about a possible federal-provincial saw-off between Mr. Cardin's machine and Dr. Duplcssis'—liotli in lhe first of working order ——to the cndthat Cardin-Liberal federal catidi- dates might escape the fate of Liberal candi- dates supporting the leader Mr. Cardin has rc- pudiated. All of which is said to be but a pre- liminary to the grcat act blcssrs. King and (lar- diii may be expel-ind to put on during the fed- rrnl election contest, which not only circles but quarters agree will be col-hing about March if it romrs this year. Then Mr. Cardin will do his stuff, yell flown with Mackenzie King the fnrcsivbrll, meanwhile kicking the Prime Min- Ifitcfs Omvrinciils in the slats whencvcr lie sees an opportune opening, will denounce his late leader with Iurv where it will do him no harm, and will proclaim the purity of Cardin-Lilcrals from all coiltilct ivilh King-Conscriptignislg, If the plzln goes as foreseen, it scents likely that whcii the smoke and hot air of conflict have rolled away, P. _T. Arthur Cardin and not M. Raynlonds "Bloc Popu" will control the largest siiitdc group of Quebec members in the Federal Pnrlirullrill. Then, ivliatever else happens. QI- taiva will “illness a moving scene of recon- Clllillhlll; Mr, Cardin and his dcztr old cx-leatlcr will hr rcunilcd on top of the old party machine under the old party barlner, never to part again.’ diiioii to being a distinguished general in the b "UIIXTI/ECI worls of Crirmun are to be ‘rm: CHARLWFTETOWN GUARDIAN ' llotes By Tho Way Pulley, prilcu hark Jul Illa-II a potatoes. out we'll be earned. tr we'll out. me lawn with our teeth or so out In the wooos and Amaw mem-Wumaur Btu-r. 0t all tho war, Bur and tho Grewt war considered. Ouiaatuns have never had tougher hinting than In me rvullim boot, o: me present oeriou. Weumer. mud, prountalns. lice uicl dirt, naveefieen no enemy w overc e. as w u test nghungtntroo could tmuw uL-dt. Standard. 1mm now, m. this momflll, In the Rrovmce u! Alberta. mere are over 10v schools closed w: lack o! a watcher: this means that the cau- cmnlqn 0! more than 3.000 Alberta children In 0cm: luidemuneu. and to all intents ant. vurposcs. n08- leotccL-Calgary Herald. Llmiled manuraerure or washlul machines and irons has started waln In won. Bil/t. e have to be fought, so there is I10 possible exlouse tor relaxing anon. —.Bcaziltiord Expositor. A lcleufllt contends that. thn “ mam-six feet. three out Inches tall. never growing gray nor fat. and livlmz to be 120 years old -w"lll be developed a tiuudroa years hcnoe. We'll bet, however, than, perfect or not. his We will sou find fault. with him tor faul- mx to shovel the snow or out. the fi. — Bmckvlllq Recorder and es. As tea In unobtnfnahlo In accu- pled. Belgium, the Gennali-muu- controlled newspapers have uro- posed the following subsvibuws to their readers- Jomnion brmr, nlaw- thorn, broom, oormculate M115. cmnute clover mltsioot, Aaruirs rod. Jupiter's beard, gromweu, und prlclclly-wsl-low-herb. -- Moiitival ‘tar, Basulos who are greatly es- so much that. they do 1t ln their spare time as amusement. the re- sult is that, I.O_Il.l\‘.l sluraibu: mul- ISIIXIIEEHI 101' mlllUl‘ (ltflllllluellcrES, C. O.'.s have soienuuy w foroiu me olfencers to uute part 1n any drills. regular, extra. or voluntary. n sounds very odd, but the tact. is 01'- ficially voucliecl iun-mnuou uaily D1998 . Many years have been ported as crucial In the nlawry 0t manlzila; 194-4 be crucial. For 06th.?!‘ or for worso it may well deciae the future oi manlurld tor the iinoll- sanu years ninlur used w be so loud of talking about. but, wilfu- over it decided 1n 13-14, the decision will not be that. of 10-14 alont-‘ublit of all the years that have gone imo the mnkinz 0t man Yours are not isolated pol-tors, but. links In the chains which bind the funure t0 trlie past-Loilcon Free Press. A Perth 510m advertised that ll- lilul clothes pegs for sale. The next momma crowds rushed the place. bum. open the doors, and swept away a lzuard of shop assist- ants. We ham. ' . pegs, and thought we would do people a flood turn by advertising them. but they wrecked the place.’ said the man- ager. Clothes pegs are one 0i the wartime shortages-Australian News-Letter. stitlulbe for cork, _ from tlhe Nrmoizail Geographic Soc- lew. Ground. into a fine areal milled width a liquid, peanut. hull "cork" may supplement 91111101195 u! natural cork now uwd in bottle caps, icfiigcrnwr linings, wall- bourds, iiurer soles and other cork needs. Normally, all of the cork used in the Umlcd Shades 003195 from Perri-BM. Spain. France, Italy and North M11021. when war threatened sluppmg 1n the Atlan- tic, this material was placed on the "ciatdoal" 11st. and civilian use restricted- —Fredericton ivaa Bllss Clrmnlffi home town. He was born and brmurht up there, he wrote his eluLv poems there, he was buried there. Yet, it. 1s at. Halifax, rather than Fredericton, that; letters, Christmas curds and lesser-known says a bulletin kept. for future-generations. They have Just been resented to King College by a dent 0t the United States. While we heartily congratu- late King's College, we cannot do so wlt-hout some serum oi regret that these treasiuers have Lccn JosL to the great. peers own rilmn nm-ter. the Uiuversity or New Bfllnlalvlflli, whore Bliss Oarman graduated with the class o! ‘eight/b’- onle. -— Saint John Telegraph Jour- u . One n! (In: Iruly tragic notes 0f this w.lr whirled Ill a ‘Tokyo brwdcust 11M: other duy. Holly- wooas power over Japanese women Ls on the wane. The Black Draion Society is pulping old Nippon 01 the lust vestiges or mnerloaniam. Not a pemnlimczit wave machine In Japan is 110w working! Well, you know what Sherman said about. girl However. tn‘? calamity may e v by Jap hills- bairds who used 0o find s " - ent” one very monthly ' i The prints o! old Japan also show some rather good colffures in style when Hollywood was just. fur old Spanish cattle ranch. — Chicago Daily News. Herr Goebbels commands the German people not. to talk o! German defeats or even to look depressed. Why worry, the Nazi Propaganda Mtnlstnv risks, bccause the Hunts have evacuated more than 300.000 aqua a miles of "deb- ris" In Russia?’ A year ago Null smiles were battering the doors o! Stlalllngrad, and Herr Hltlcr m- mfsed that. the Vollra cltly was a out w r011. Now the Russians are surn- lmz back 1M0 White Russia. Uter- nllly nulllons of Gennnns llo dead beside those "heaps of debris In he ‘East!’ L! Goebbels can force ihe Home folk tn retrain from talk- n: about German defesita. from depressed, then we are wro . am‘. there In n. timer-meo- Bhe RAKDHI. tumbles. Evening schools have been opened for mshlna education, as from There are morning and attom courses for shift workers. schools, staffed by qualified omhrv school teachers, Russian youth: are ahead o! our: l In educational facilities and owor- i voimx Soviet. workersl to continue their RETIETOII October . - PUBLIC FORUM ' g. k ...-'-'"-~........" "at"? W atoll Q ii... A CALL FOI- HELP Sin-Are flu pooph In thin pro- vince and 959861811)’ our government aware of the tact. that an educa- tional system Is NQIIIBIWTW‘ We people hem? At. one time such a system was 0t the uhnou 1m ancetoiulnflilsamllllallu ,but that. has been re laud by other matters ‘such u 11nd Penulozu. 01d Age Pensllonl. etc. why are the young people o! P. E_ I. becom- ing more Illlteratn and Ignorant? Because every man, woman and child will just put u much Into their work u they at out o! it. and as the teachers get nearly nothlnl -or nothing at all If they have to pay board-why should they ex- ert themselves trym: to educate their community when the Govern- ment has ceased to no that the a‘ u teachers u: paid tor their work. be At lut the teacher; no awaken- ing 0o the rant. that they are doing the work while those white-collar- ed gentlemen of the Government got the pay and crc-dlt for It. We have 1n this province an organiz- ation knlWm as the Teacher's Ilbd- eratlon, whose obloct Ia to help the teacher who calls upon It. This Fc-deration helped us to Bet a small raise a few years ago but as us- ual the Government had a catch In It that. you bad to teach four yearn and then you got. no. Wihnt percent o! the expanses of tho teachers own education did that pay? Again, lust before the elec- tion of Sept. l5, 1M3, Hon. Walter Jones promised a. raise In salary to teachers it he were elected. H.0- member, usllow teachers, that m: In September and It 1s now Janu- ary, 16, 1944 and still no sign of helping the poor unfortunate teachers. Is Mr. Jones waiting for another electlou—or ivas It Just another catch? Why 1s It that the members of the Teacher's Execu- tive aro not pushing the mutter more? Is 1t because their salaries are so large at the present time, that besides being able to llve like lords on It. they would be obliged to pay a small Item known as In- come Tax. Probably that ls why the teachers of the rural districts are getting so little help from me head fellows of the Federation. It has came to a point where the surfer- ing of the teachers In silence has come to be a virtue and strike ls tho next step. Eve one I; going c» strike, even the no c0 1n Montreal, g0 why can't we tewhnrs? That 1s Just what we are 30in: to do the lust of tin month. so Mr. Jones had better do something or also let education take lbs own way. Teachers. write to Mr. Jones and let. Mr. Jone; know that at last that no trenching ls to be dons uln- operatlun I! necessary. I flm, Sir, etc A. I. M. Sourlr. There Is an young workers who want. i. and c IIIIIYITTBITI; are supplied by the autho tiles. Monoton 'I‘lmes. LIKE TM TENDER .... i BABY ' CHICKS We are now booking or- ders for Baby Chicks. We urgently request that. orders be placed early. First Chicks for delivery February 18th. All orders promptly acknowledged. SWIFTS Ghick Hatchery Charlottetown, P. E. l. Attentioii Swine Breeders Now ll tho tlmu t0 guard against PIGWOBM By using the most effective remedy on the market. MAGS PIG - WORM TONIC POWDER. ll. will thoroughly abolish all traces of worm; and Im" prove lhc health of your nerd. Prlu: 35c per lb- AMMONIATED BRONCIIIAL COMPOUND A reliable and offecllvu pre- parnlnn for tho treatment I coughs and coldl- A 4:11: tulle! for chronlu Bronc nu. Prim M0 per b0 It. ARE YOU TIOUILED WITH LUMBAGO SORE HACK If no we hive one M file Price 50 cents per box. fIIE TWO MAGS 149 Great Georlb Street. .1 ‘Illt learned It since Coffee Obamraoffiallmjoymminnooryw?» Tyou mint we really good eofiao! That's what 0o many housewives: have learned in a making tho moat of the family 00100 nuou. And that’: why tho nub of Maxwell Hwll marl now include new thouundu who have proved beyond question what muvolloul 00500 Maxwell HOIIIO really in! . , You can be aura of‘ getting real enjoyment and n01 vlluo out of Maxwell Home boon 31min! from mo, emu-flavor calm urdully ulacud from tho world‘: fined. Router! by l lpecfal procau that cup- ~ lllrll 3 Pub! In I Wnnlma Bu In an All It's: I. Q5 T; NH I4 2 all h: can flavor and goodnul. u" Purpose Grind and n: Inn eon lo you. Maxwell llouse Collie AirodudolOomnlhodu the teachers are awake. Tell him w; we mum til we can see more cash for It. C0- to AT A OONCIIT Here for a tumuv momcnt. from walvs mortals 3108611138 liilauu an: sum EbUVQ all’ d.” msousrrzn inaction. m“? bevlmh- "m" '1‘ u" In maldowflrhlsinmahnthnvunln nghomufiJawz new s ltlllllii_whizu rmnuum u un- a week tor personal tultiltonnogg; i huilgenglgffi °n "I 3W5“ an mneripeace, not merited u‘ rwr dumb like I ,0 nrunr uponlblduiluou ‘ lwuo a r n, III“: . It. Ind! N. B- Pl . ~ 80:01:00. Ontario." Wrlle lot nrloo 11%. ... 1., A. H. BRYENTON PHONE NOS-l.- , to year. Tons o! “wn:te" hulls which ‘c’ usgmbyell/Ilexidiiiig ‘flflzsmlfflleg Mbltli l”: w‘ ti?‘ B. f]. . r - i um; ' fillhtiiél l.?;°?°..‘.7i.°.t..l"’.‘§;§ mu slur. on... "’ not ".°“‘ m‘ “‘ l IMW- Evewflilnv scooped up and made into ll sub- .2_.~J m. Imdm 119 Queen Street CHICKS — CHICKS — CHICKS An om Illhllll In order thdr cnlckn I wont? Wllh sozlllve their n00 fiwalatomdvxvgtgncihrlit-okmérdmfllld FURNITURE You have hour buying furniture from year Have you increased your Insurance! Ohrlottotnwn. P. I. L Phone 714 lnnlréd on or near tscwrv m‘ In all towns and ilvorkers‘ set.- ems. The period for studies ll Mull Order! Given rnimrt Attention. STRENGTH v Confederation Life IIIAII OIIICI Invested in Victory Bonds Paid t0 living pollcyownora Paid to" Inntfidarloa of demand pollcyownou ' Increase In Insurance in force Total lnaurana In force Surplus new minds at Confederation Life p Renders lmunl of its Service Io its Policyovlners in I943 $11,500,000 0,291,105 3,979,604 33,31 0,140 s21, ,4o2 12,1 noes The results for the year have been most ntiafactory and the Association is in a much stronger position than at the beginning of the war. Greater lusirlm In Tom Mon Favorable Mortality mm Tmhcllonn Every policyownn is Invited to mend the lnnull meeting of the Auociation which will be held at Head Oflice, 105 Victoria Street, Toronto, on Tuesday, January 25, at 11 l-m. lncmmd Premium Income lpwor (out of Operation Improved Surplus Position A copy of theyull Annual Rupert will be gladly mailed upon request. SERVICE - sw- 101/ ‘ Association IOIONTO SECURITY