7719 Guardian ”CIvu-I Prlnu Edwu-I Iulul Llh the luv" puuuwgd n cry week . any naming ni lib Prllu.-c Suefl Charlottetown. P. I-;.l by the Tliumwn company Lid M K Si W.. Tomniu. uououl Officer. .2; iilllrrslli 'ruwu plug. l-klllllr. Ffallk Walker ilnm-.ll hlnnlluer. Ian A lsuim-u Member caimilan Dull) .NeivIpiIpcr Publmms Aasoclaliun Melllllcr ul The Canadian Prvu Mn-lllbcr Audit Blllfdu oi cin-ulaiimu 6l'lll'fI offices at sunlnleruluc-. Plluniallue and .UI)1'fI0lI Acfhumul u Sciuml chm mil in lhl Pool omen in-i..iinu-ni. ouawa. By tlilucr (ihai.:-itolimn.suuilm-rsiile SI500 pet in gum. Ifiluwillrrr In t'l-1.l s-.i.ilo. oom Pi-uvlm-u and I h SI.'u0 pl-r AIIIIUIII. ."'rlu- strungcst. mcniury Iii weaker than - the we-ulicsl ink." ii'L'i;smv. FEBRUARY iifisso , , .. . . The Premier's Statement I illtervieu on the sub- ciulscivay 'l'oll;ly wc plllllisli fill with ltl'clnicl' Alathcson ject of 1 ll e proposctl across Sortliitrillici'l;ilid Strllll. It silhsleultiatcs ttle fact that t h c sclicnle is no "pipe dream". that the- Provincial tiovernnlent has bccli study ing it for the past six months and that it has ll real prospect of silcccss iii, as the Premier states. it is not killed in advance by adverse criticism. l-le,staics that all the ob- jections raised by Mr. Kickham will be fully answered ill ihc l.cgislatul'e. Tllat is the proper place to have them discilsscd; and all our mem- bers. if they Choose. can get in on the act and state their views on the basis of concrete information rather than of hearsay. The full-scale survey advocated by the Charlottetown Board of Trade is being pressed for by the Government, which has gone much further into the matter than was generally supposed. and is already well informed on silch questions as the effects on our fisheries. on navi- gation and ice conditions. These matters. naturally, would be of first concern to any Government. and the Premier was emphatic in stating that t.here is no cause for concern on these grounds. '7 This is very reassilrillg. No pur- Tpose would be served by further comment on the subject. at this time. The Premier's statement will be nfade early in the session, and we alga-.ll await it with much interest. Notable Anniversary Last Sunday was the 147th birth- day anniversary of Abraham Lin- " . the sixteenth and, without dgubt. the greatest, President of the Uiilted States. This week, all over the Republic unrestrained homage will be done to l1Ls memory. And, all oder the world, where free men pon- T the troubles of the present and the prospects of the future. the in- fluence of his life and work will be discussed and honoured. When, on that fateful night of April 14, 1865. W. Lincoln died from an assassin's bilillet. Secretary of War Stanton observed: ”Now he belongs to the ages". So, indeed, it turned out to be. From the earliest known bene- factor of the human race right down to Albert. Schweitzer and Winston Churchill, the world has known only in few m'en and womene-perhaps no more than a dozen;who could fair- ly be placed in the category of greatness in which the name of Ab- raham Lincoln is very near the top. Troublcd as human society is in so many ways. and weak though demo- cracy is in many of its pliliscs. there can be little doubt that human rc- lationships today would. be much more fcar-ridden titan thcy arc. and democratic institutions much less effective. if Lincoln hlld not passed through the world and left such an indelible imprint on its destiny. What things are seen by the spirit of Abraham Lincoln. hover- ing over the country which in his life he loved and served so well? Many things. both good and bad. (liltstalidiilg among the former. per- haps. is a fixed determination on the part of the American peoplc that, as Mr. Lincoln himself had urged. "government of the people. by the pcoplc. and for the people. shall not perish tom the earth". There are times, t be sure when this ideal is marred and torn by dcmagogic treachery; bill it is still alive and very much a part of the true con- science of the nation On the other and less worthy side. there remains a nectional concept of freedom which is wounding the heart of the nation. It seems incredible that 91 years ailter Mr. Lincoln's passionate de- sire for freedom for all men of all races passed into the chronicle of the age. I young Negro girl should be prevented by icon and threats of bodily Jamil . from exercising I right which ha: been "Pheld by the highest low of the land. Nor is she tithe only am. Thoustnds of her this lament on uthriq persecution simpu nccausi '-my covet freedom ulider Ihe law This. too. will pass. Already, wiser and more just counsels are beginning to be hcaril ill the south. Some dayait may not be for a long time yet. for old uilirlgoliisnis die hardelvlr. Lincoln's drcanl will be fulfilled; and all citizens of the Un- ited States. North and South. East and West, will joili in proclaiming the truth and good sens” of his COD-r viction that no socicty can long en- dure half slave and half frcc. The Kazan Cathedral Soy let apologists are fond of say- ing that. despite the aliti-l'elif-Zl0llb' basc of Marxism, no cllilrclics in the Sovlci l'llion havc llccn burned or otlicmim done away with. That lllii) bc true. There are otllcr ways. llowcxcr. of destroying tllL1I't'liPa' without demolishing their smile and brick and mortar. ()lli' favorite method employed by tlic, sovicts is that of collicrting edifices formerly ilsed to r worship into buildiligs which help to emphasize the hold uliicli the Colnmunistic philosophy has plcsxxcd on the life of modern Russia. Mr. lloiiicc Sutton, ii contribut- ilig editor of the Saturday Review of Literature, who recently returned from a trip which took him behind the iron curtain. tells in the latest issue of that magazilie of what has happened to one of the oldest Cath- edrals in the Soviet Union. the Kazan in Leningrad. "Defunct as a place of worship". Mr. Sutton writes. ”the Kazan has become the museum of the History of Religion. Actually, it is a shocking anti-religious mu- scum. ”'l'he Soviet dogma of science over religion is symbolized at the door where the visitor comes face to face with a portrait of Lomonsov, father of Russian science. and far- ther on. a bronze of a famous eye doctor. The exhibitors tie the Church to Russian capitalists with paintings depicting Christ followed by the people carrying a cross (the Church) while atop the crossbar a top-batted bourgeois sits in the driv- er's seat. urging the citizens on. There are panels on Greek my- thology, Ohristianity. and Judaism. attempts to show that the idea of Christ. and the Resurrection was adapted from mythology”. In addi- tion, Mr. Sutton reports, he saw scores of caricatures of the Chris- tian religion in all its phases. Yet, there are those in the West who pro- fess to believe that religion will be- fore long rcassert its influence in the lives of the Soviet people! How can that be. when the young gener- ation is obligcd to absorb this fear- ful dogma based on ridicule and scorn of all religion and of the Chris- tian tradition in particular? EDITORIAL NOTES Tile chairman of the United States Atomic Energy Commission complains that ”too many people have a limited idea of what is in- volvcd in atomic fusion". And what good would it do them if they did know more about it? 0 O O A United States Navy doctor says that hospital patients who col- lect postage stamps recover a lot Iastcr than those who do not. Attire- over. he has known instances where the hobby has saved lives by getting wounded men's minds off their immediate troubles. O O O , Where docs all the rubber come from? According to the National Geograpliic Society. thi-cr--fourths of it come from Malaya and Indonesia. Political troubles in those areas and uncertainty as to hoiv they might develop have caused manufacturers to look elsewhere for the natural product. At present, large rubber fields are being startcd in Africa. notably in Liberia and Nigeria. I I O The Vice-President of the llnited Suites. just. returned from Brazil. said hc is convinced that that coun- try has a great future under its new President Dr. Juscelino Kubitschek. He is also of the opinion that Com- munism will make no great. holid- way. although. as he pllt it. "Brazil is it natural target for the (Tominun- lsts." Mr. Nixon's good chccr may be justified by events; it is siciiificluit. however. that but for Commiinists votes. it is doubtful that Dr. l(ubit- iochek could have been elected. At lent, that is the view expressed the other day by the new President him- lelf. That kind of support usually Inna payment. N POSSIBL UNFOR ES N DEVELPtviNTS British Columbia's Centennial By Larry Stanwood Canadian Press. Vancouver British ('ollinlliia is planing to cclcliratc its ltltlth birthday party in I956 and the restoration of its liirtliplace is proposed as the climax to a year of mcrrymak- lllg. it was on a rainy wintry day that ii handful of frock-coated gelitigv. a tow prospectors and curious Indians watched silently Governor James Douglas pro- claimed the birth of BC at Fort Langley. That was on Nov. I9. 1838 Otlicrs in the icclnilig trading post on the Fraser river. 20 miles from the sea. didn't give a hoot about cercnlnliies. A gold rush ua on. and 2.000 tortilne-scckers were embroiled in a battle for a plilcc to pitch their camp or find a grub iliake. UNN()Tl('El) AT TIME No celebration aC('(lfllp&llll('fl the declaration of lnainlalul British Columbia as a crown culcmy of Britain. The San Francisco Bul letin published a brief ilcm of tlic event several weeks later. Said the Bulletin: ". Few klicw ailytlillig about it until the announcement was published in The Gazette." And the first British fnotliold on the mainland of the west coast was not destined for further honors. New Westnll.stcl'. farther down river. hecalllc tlic capital nnd I'lPlll- clpal port. Victoria on Vancouver island. seat of the gnvrl-nor. re- tained its alltlinrity while Flirt Lllnglcy cruinhlcd iln dust. But two icars from now. the spotlight will again be on Fort Lrlllgley-now a village of 400 fishermen and sawmill workers. MAJOR PI((l.lF.('.T Tllcre'll bc a lot of mlthusiaslic OUR YESTERDAYS From The Guardian Files TWEN'I'Y-FIVE YEARS AGO (February ll. I931) The rP('l'ill storlr. which orrllrrcd in the lilaritinlcs has colnplotcly isolnicd Cape Breton island. lcc lltlrdened wires topplcs l..'i50 power tclegraph alld telephone poles. it was estimated that it would take large crz-its six months to make romplctc repairs. Mllinlnnd offic- ials were unable to obtain rt-poi'bs from repair rrcws. tllcy said that a fill! cstilmlie of tlic ialile of tlic damage could ncwr llc clllclllatcd. Morc than six llilndrcil cxlrll men were employed on tlic island lllil sion of the ('.N ll. .ic.stcrday. rc- slorillg iiormal ('llll(l'lllUllS llflcr Thursday”: heavy snow storm. The train from lililrray llarboilr which became stalled at llcrnlilauc the day before ycstcltlay arrived in the city at it 00 R m ycslcrdny. l.iclit llobcrl T. llarlly of tlic Wnrccsicr. liass. puller furl-c formerly a native of Prince (iniility. P E l . ulls rcccntly appnililcd Captain ot llctccilics. The .1ppoint- ment was slnlitly opposed iii lhc City COllnK'Il. hilt ('ounclllor Jllmcs A. Coillsnn. also R forillcr lslnlidcr. stood strong for his cnuntrynlzln. TEN YEARS AGO (Fl-hruary ll. I946) ('ali.1vlai.s dllmcstlc hililcr I'Jilitll'I. faced by a l-olitiliiling dcclilw in production and by an lnci'c:l.sr in population. will he slnshcrl during March and April. from six In four ounces pcr person .1 wcck. l”iii:ini-c Minister llslcy alinoilltccd inlliuht. Continuing a four month decline. production dropped l5.6 per cent in January in 9.tWl.000 poimds as campared to ll.-421.403 in January l 5 Firc dcstroycri tlic foundry of linll mid Strwcrt locsltcrl on Pick- ardis Wharf. The mainritv of the loss is renl'(-scntcd in tlic destruct- inn of expensive patterns and dam- agc to n valuable motor. Aflcr battling the blaze for two hours the firemen had ll1f' fire extliigliislicd. lcmilig tlic ii.-all slniirling but so bnrllv chill-rr-rl that the building is practically ll total loss. At a press meeting today Recon- struction Minister C. D. Howe. nld Maritime coal used to be shipped to Ontario. but recently their hasn't . been enough coal prorltlced in the i Mliritlmu to meet. their own de- lIl&. cclelmltlolls at the historic site if plans to recreate the fort as it stood in i858-storkades, offlcei's' log qullrtcrs and all--are rcali7.c(l. "lt will be an atonement for the sin of our forefathers." said Alex Hnpc. president of the Fort Lang ley Restoration Socicly. who with provincial arcliivist William ire- land and others has crusaded for the project for several years. (Hist is estimated at close to SS00.t)0(l but the plan has been rc- cciicd ”faioral)ly" by Premier Bennett and the historical sitcs and monuments board. said Mr. Hope. "Western Canada and particu- larly H.('. has been severely ne- glcctcd in the past ill lllslilrlcal sitcs." said the business mall-farmer and past president of the board of trade ”And with Fort Langley. we really missed the boat." The old fort on the milddy. surg- ing river rilshilig through the far- tilc Fraser valley was fouildcd in ltl27 on orders of Governor George Simpson. First permanent cstab lisllnlciit of the white lllan on the B.C coast it was considered re- sponsible for holding the Fraser river mouth for Britain when the United States boundary was estab- lished on the 49th parallel. it was also at Fort Langley that l2 wllitcs with musk:-ts pill to flight a raiding party of 200 Yuculia in- dian.-: from the South and won lnstilii: respect from native trlbcs. restoring , Z-mi Tl-.'A('HEll A sculptor sees in marble hlock the form He will release; a teat-lier's art 3 must find The gold in tolls of slit. in bafflillg stnrm A trail to peace for some who tra- vcl blind Hcr intuition must i'lli'llll' the fears That nftcil lilrk behind a mask. to sight Bcyond the haze of time the gift of ycars. The yct llllwnvcll pattcrll spun from ' hi lg . She stallds before her class an in- sirunicni Of flrace. ll trailsienl innihi-r. hum- bly proud Not only of tlic crcai-in-he shc scnt Allcad. but of each wczlkcr child. clldowcd By her with strength. cal-ll sliim- hlillg. awkward one. Each wail of night now turning to the sun. --Elias Lieberman. -The Age Old Story Love not the world. neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world. the love of, the Father is not in him. Eskimo Reindeer "Cowboys" National (looglvplllc Society When it's rclililccr rilllnrlilp time in the ('ali;ldlan Arctic. Fiskilnos son rallhoil skins and skis and wiiliout one "yip-cce." cfficlciilly drive tllcir anilcred clillrges into ('m'I'HlS in tlic cold Alilailk area of tlic Norillwcst Tcrritorlcs. 25 l-Zskiniils rcrcnily corrlllcd 6.500 rcllirlcer in five llcrds that feed in an area nf suluc lti.'l()0 square miles. , Oiic llcrd is guvcrnincnt owncd. The other four are owned or man- aged entirely by Eskimos. IMPOIQTED FROM SIBERIA lll-lluli-cr. as tllstingilislicll from the larger Nortli Anicrlclin cllriboll. rc;l:-lird tlic ('llli;ulian Arctic in i ii in time-ll lid disiulicc-spzilinillg stops Hctuccn llltll ulld ltltlz. IIllll'(' llllln a tlioilszlilll of tlic tltllll('Slit'z'll- . cd beasts ucrc llollgllt lll Sihcrta by tlic Uiiltcd Slates (lovcrnnlcnt and shipped to Alaska. Long lic- custolncd to the wild. strong. and ollstlilatc -- hut dwindlillg--cariboil. tlic l-Iskinlos took kindly in tlic gclltlcr rclntlccr gciillc cxccpl in imltlng smsoli ulicli claslling ant- lcrs resound across tlic lllt1fll'l'I l..'ltcr. aholll 25 ycnis ago. the allimals iicrc driven from Alaska to not-tliiicstcrn tiatimla in 5! tori- iiollx l.20il-inllc trck. Tllc llll'l.zcly tlncxplored rlrivc rolltc lay nnrtli of the Arctic (lir- cle llctwccn Nabaclitoolik in Alaska and Kittigazillt on the clist shore of (':lllada's ital-Kcnzic llclta. tin lllclr liardsllip-rllrkcd jour- llcv. the llcrrlcrs rrnsscd mnunllllns. rlicrs and swamps lll lCll1flOl'Hlltl'('S hlnslillll down to 50 degrees below rcrn. llrivcrs ucrc furtlicr lllHL'IlNl by two trying rcilldccr trails--ihr lllIl1'l- lmz instinct which might at any moment scnd deer racing hack on their own tracks. and the reindeer habit of traveling against the wind. FEED ON LICHENS lli (innllda and Alaska. the smllll li(lll1(lP(ll' tslanding only about three- nnd-.'i-half ccl high) live on the Iilndrn and fccd in its ndjmnlng fort-ills. l.it-limis. one SDPCIPI living the so-czillcd rcludc-or moss. arr an liilportnnt .xnul't'P of their sIl-ll-n- ail:-c. Tlir tiny lirailched plant, A few inches tall. covers lll'll'llPI'llQ areas in Arctic llmdx. Lapps and other Scandinavian have come in to train the North American Eskimo: in handling reindeer. For the Lapps especially, those animals for i-cntiirles have provided euentlol food and iron- plnatlnn. r. l l American Eskimos also find the reindeer a welcome addition to illeir economy. its strong but flav- nrful flesh is eaten either fresh or preserved. Reilidcer milk iii prized as a beverage nnd for cheese lnaking. Skills are used fnr sleep- ing bags and clollllnlz. One hide will make two parkas. From the horns and hooves. rude bill uscfiil inlplclilcnis arc fasllllllicd. The strullg-bodied dccr can llalll licavy sleds as fast as 15 miles an hour. and keep up the pace for long periods. Some of tlic l-stillintetl 25.500 rcilldccr now in Alaska draw sled- gcs more effiriclitly--one cxpcri vcntilrcs--tlmn do the famous slcd flltlzs. l)cla.Vs caliscd by storms may reduce llll' ilngs' food dang. i-roilsly But rcilltlccr. their advoc- ate asserts. will find food even if I lllcy have to dig for it under the l snow. l Medically Speaking 0: Norman N. imam-. M. b. EXERCISE PRESCRIBED FOR FROZEN SHOULDER With virtually everyone consci- ous of snow and ice these days. it's probably a good time to dis- cuss : very painful ailment. the frozen thoulder. Despite its name. this ailment. of course, has nothing to do with the winter weather. Technically. it's called chronic adhesive peri- arthritis of the shoulder. EXTREMELY PAINFUL It might be. started by ll fall or by throwing ll baseball or some other object. Over a period of time. sometimes years. it gradually be- comes worse. Eventually. bands of scar tissue are formed and any movement. of the shoulder is ex- iremcly painful. ' While -your doctor may recom- mend specific treatment. he'll pro- bably also advise a few stretch- ing exercises. At first, these exercises will be painful. If your shoulder trouble is in the advanced stage. your phy- sician probably will havc to help you perform them. If it isn't. YOU may be able to tolerate the initial pain and continue with the move- ments by yourself. SIMPLE EXERCISE Before explaining sonic simple exercises. let mi: cllipllzisim that you shouldn't try them wiilioilt apv i prilval of your doctor. Here are exercises often recolnniend: With your painful arm. NIYNP 8 firmly anchored abject like a strap or rope fastened to the top of R doorway. Usillg your good ill'lll as an aid. left yoilr ailing arm as litith as possible and take 3 firm hold. Thcn squat as milch as pain will permit. placing your weight on the extended arm. Repeat this l0 or 15 times every half hoilr. BEHIND BACK Another exercise is to grasp your ailing arm behind your back with your good band and pull it as far ilp your back as possible. Do this lit to 12 times evely half hour. A third exercise is to grasp the hand of the painful arm with your that doctors T other hand behind your head. Then slowly. move the elbow of your painful arm forward and then back in a side positinn again. This can he done 10 to 20 times each 30 minutes. You'll be sul'priscd how quickly these exercises can improve your arm movements. QUESTION AND ANSWER R. S. M: What are the symp- toms of diabetes? Answer: Symptoms of diabetes consist of loss of weight and stren- gth. sometimes itching of the skin. the development of infections. in- creasing appetite and thirst and frequent emptying of the bladder. Self-Lighting Cigars tAmeri(-an Forests Magazinel The early days nf the match in- dusiry were punctuated with the explosions of many odd devices for making fire easily. The self lighting cigar. wearing it cap treated with match composi- tinn, appeared early in the filth L-cllillry in Austria. When the cigar was "strilck', it burst into flame and the smoker inhaled the com- illcd fumes of phosphorus. glue. paper and tobacco - but he had it light! On the more practical side. there was the "drullkard's match” creat- cd by the Diamond Match Co. in H382. which was used by hon viv- ants for 20 years. The splint of this match was so treated that it would not burn heyond midpoint. thus avoiding burned fingers for those who had indulged too heavily. FUND FOR CHILD TORONTO tCPl -- A campaign to raise money for an operation on in scvcn-year-old girl with a hole in her heart went over its 35.000 nbjccilve during the weekend. The filnd for Faye Carnegie of Picker- ing township Monday stood ll 55.lll.l0. AIRLINES REVENUE UP (l'l'TAWA ICPI - Canadian air carriers had I 40-per-ccnt gain in revenues during August compared iillfl the corresponding month of i954. The companies had operat- iiis! rcvcllilcli of Sl5,l3.'l.000. the bllrcail of statistics rcporictl Mon- dzly. This compared with Sl(l.785.- 000 a year earlier. Net operating lncomc rose to 52315.00!) from Si.- 806.000. Notes By Page. 4, The Guardian. .. The Way A philosopher in n mun yho. ll stead of crying over spilt milk. con- soles himself with the thought lb” it was four-fifths water IIIYVWV-" Toronto Star There lire estimated to be fort! million homeless dos: end cat! in the U.S.A.; there is no figure avail- able for Canada. but there are plenty of people here who think that the way to get rid of an un- wanted animal is to abandon it.- Peterborough Examiner Ciipture of 50 French Assembly seats by the No Tax party of Poujade has s arked ll similar movement in Ialy. Some Euro- pean observers see the Pollllide sucess as the start of a drlft.to autlioxitaria ism. it took Hitler five years to go his first 12 Relchstag seals. pmljade was unknown two years ago.-Brantiord Expositor. In a Montreal court I woman struck and injured by an automo- bile lost a suit for damages be- cause when part way across the street she had changed her mind and direction and sicPP0d 1" "Um of the car. The operatoroi a nio- tor vehicle must. exercise every possible prccilution. but. they ped- estrian loo has rcspilllsllllllties.- Ottawa Journal. The hmlcy-glliilc bird. wllich rc- iscliilllcs a ivoodpcckcr. fllill(CS a noise like solncouc shllkillg a small box of matches. and llius attracts attcntioll. Wlicn anyollc appl'oaclI- es. the bird files a short distance. repeats the noise. falls its tail. and flies off again llntil finally it reaches lli(' honey l)ccs' hivc. Then the asliltc Ilird waits quietly llntil the pcrsiln has left iiitli the honey- comb. iihcrcilpon it fccds (ill the bits of wax strcwn about. Oddly, it does not eat the honey or the grilhs of the bees. but is able to digest the beeswax. it has cvcn been known to eat wax candlcs.- Saint John Telegraph-Juilrnal Through the eyes of the camera. Niagara district residents learned the other day one of their favorite laildlnarks is slowly being eaten away by the ravages of time. The old relic-the grounded barge in the upper Niagara River-is rusting away after llearly ihirly-cigllt years nn the rocks. Even so the ancient hulk probably will outlast many of its. but the fact rcnlalns some day it is going to disappear alid with it will go some of the lore from the river scene. it is hard to lm- agine the upper river without the scow. After all. its thirty-eight year existence is older than the malority of buildings in Niagara l-'alls. It l1lInL' itself on the rocks just fourteen years after Niagara Falls hecmnc a rlty and there it has clung for millions of people to sce.eNingara Falls Review. About all we know colcontu progress in the aviation field, 1. that if it looks like Ill airplane, it's obsolete.-Brandon, Sun. People who complain of tho con. tinuity of government in Canada- for instance of long Conurvullvq administrations in Ontario and Liberal at Ottawa - should con. sider the instability of government; in some South American counti-leg and not grieve too much about ill. constancy nt. home.-Peterborouglg Examiner. ' People convening on I ieleplionq can't. see one another-unless ill. phone has a television attachment. And yet the personality boy; gu. ture and grin at the mouihpiecg. Women flutter their eyelashes If. the telephone and sometimes wig. gle their hips at it. But it doesn't move.-Sherbl-ooke Record. The recent train dlnlter in Cal. ifornia is a reminder that in all forms of transportation no matter how mechanically efficient the con- veyance. Safety may depend on Lil: human factor. Sudden illness may be the cause of accidents. Perhaps more frequent medical checkups us well as extra crew members in key positions could reduce this partic- ular hazard in rail and other form: of tl'.'lvel.---Ottawa Citizen. A charter has been issued to 1 new corporation which will in known as "The Abstainers' Insur- ance Cu." As the name implies, only those who do not touch alcoho- lic beverages will be able to ililil oilt automobile insurance in thll company. it is going to SDE('lElll7.0 in that class of risks. It will ho ililcl'csling to see how this experi- ment works. There is a growing im- pression that drunken driving is not responsible for such a large pro- portion of accidents as was con- sidered the case some years ago. bili time and statistics will tell- Almonte Gazette. People who worry about the do eline in attendance at church might give some' thought to the apparent disappearance of the old and well- loved hymns. in one Victoria church this week. of five hymlll selected. at least four were clearly unfamiliar to the congregation. The choir could not sing them; so com- plex and variable were the keys. it is doubtful whether the choir of the Metropolitan Opera could have sung them. The result was a half-hearted and tumbling attempt to follow the notes of the church organ. About three-quarter: of the congregation gave up-after a manful struggle- and the whole performance degel aied into 8 timid . ' d guessin- game which bordered dangerously mi mass embnlrusmeut.-Victoria Tilucs. lflllcll UP. .. BUDGET DOWN? Why; not borrow the money you need to put your finances back on a sound. budgeted basis? A: I-IFC you can get 350 up to 81000 -usually in one dny. If you have I Itendy income Ind cu milks regular monthly pity- menta. no endonvero an needed. Phone or drop in Oodoyi T HOUSEHOLD FINANCI w. l. Wboolor. Monogov 150 Grout Guru! 59-. who I. phone our CIIAILOITIIOWN. F.I.I. CONSULT: Ollicolz FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. Insurance since 1311. our experience of over three quarter: of A century II I- ailrnncc Underwriters. is at your disposal. CIIARLO'l'Tl:ITOWN - SUMMERSIDE - MONTAGUI - ALBERTON. AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE. ..on request t if you and aululoou with your Income foil mom. conwlt tho monboor of my offleo of tho Eastern Trim Company. Cliarinitelown Branch: A. A. M?cLl-30D, Manager. You can havo a copy of this handy. van-poclrot silo tax- payer's guido, simply by writing or phoning your Moron bvuneh of the Eoilorn Trim Compqrw '(.'onodian Poclrotox contain an ozewolo yot cooelu outline of tho lncoml Tu and Suoooulon Duty Adi. i including tho most recent omondmovm to those uolutu. 'nil. handy, froo booklet will give you valuable bola .with your 1955 INCOME nx And upon in provldod to hop oscuvoto rosordn of H54 laconic on well. The EASTERN TRUST Company HEAD OFFICE Halifax, Nova Smtin