T H E G U A R D I, A l3;i.lE7?3lf?.Il”T?.'.illS.Eif.'5f."J.'. '5 .'.'lZi'1?fE Published every week-day morning at in Prince street. Char Current risks and future Cont-lngenCie& ioiieinwa. P.l.l.. by The Thomson Company Limited "CIIIII PIIICO IIIAPI I II LII! IBI DIV" Editor. Frank Walker General Manager. lan A. Burnett l The Nevadans Are Unhappy ":.";.:' ::t2::..:.: 3.”."J.'"tf:.'f'.:.”f.?fi!::'J.li'1fl)':';3?.;3.lf””t Ex-evens the Fern-0-an Straits . ' 0"""- lother areas where an outbreak of war isi chmmusuuivnltif tit'i.'l'r'ni-5.-T3inc:.m.).i.ap'ii.rE":ET..il possible at any moment, the State of Nevada , '”' '”'"”" ”is probably the most jittery part of the: world these days; for it is there that the) Aniericaii Atomic Energy Commission isi lpreparing for a series of nuclear explosions isome time this month. While the tests will take place in the vast desert regions of that state, there are many small communities too close for comfort. Residents recalle and not with pleasureethe tests of 1953. "ltliese were on a much smaller scale than T I in cm-in: Elsewhan in P,I:.i. , "The strongest memory is weaker than t the weakest ink." TUESDAY. FEB. 15. 1955 The First Requisite The popular assumption in the West is that, although Soviet Russia has more man- powerito mobilize in time of war than has the L'nited States, superiority in industrial and scientific potential is definitely with the latter country. Recently, at a meet- ing of experts in the States, this view was called into question; indeed, some of the exports stated quite openly that the view is not only without evidence to back it up bill is a source of very great danger in the' present situation. Actually, according to figures brought out at the meeting, Russia now has nearly as many atomic engineers as the t'iii1ed States and is turning them otit at a much faster rate. in the United States the number of eligiiicering graduates in 19:34 fell to lEl,Uotl from the peak of So,- tltttt in ltlbtl; in the same period the Rus- sian output rose from 28.000 to .33,tltlt). were followedvwhether inevitably or by coincidence has never been determined-by the mysterious death of thousands of sheep that had been grazing hundreds of miles For the last several weeks experts havei been travelling from one isolated commu- nity to another assuring the people that they need have no fear of "fall-out radia- tion” from the forthcoming explosions. Per- sons w ho have inquired why Nevada should be preferred to the Pacific for these tests have been told that their state ”is cheaper by many millions of dollars.” Perhaps the tiring words of the experts will calm ithe fears of Nevadans; perhaps they will the ones now being planned; even so, theyl ' from the test sites. ;r .. 1 5. and. i This, of course, does not tell the whole story, since Britain, Canada, and other Western countries, are producing engineers not. Certainly, the words would be given added value if the experts could tell the The Makings Of A Free-For-All Cit-tzens,at' lfarmoodt m e st in return some advice from our ma3ot'.' .91.: l and technicians of their own; but it can be assumed that the countries in the Soviet bloc, notably Red China and East Germany, are adding their quotas to the Russian total, a circumstance which does not bright- en the picture appreciably from the West's . point of view. ' The figures and their implications serve to emphasize a fundamental difference be- tween democratic and totalitarian prac- tices in governmental and economic fields. I In the United States and the other free nations there is notvand cannot be. if the freedom of the individual is to be honour- ed--any bureaucratic agency with author- ity to place students in this or that school with or without their consent. in Russia this is standard practice. How to reverse the trend towards Rus- sian superiority in this vital field, without having to resort to the sort of govern- mental control which is foreign to the dem- ocratic way of life, is a problem of real magnitude; but certainly the security. and perhaps the survival of Western freedom. depends in large measure on its solution. The first requisite. as the experts have pointed otil. is it better understanding of the real situation among citizens of all Vfestern countries. This means an end to complacency. always the foe of prepared- ness. and security. ..,. u......:-... ., Defense Obligations The idisenliower budget for next year contemplates a total expenditure of 3260 hil- is for army, iiaiy and air force. ln Canada. of total expenditures in the fiscal year end- ed .Vlarch Lil. 19.34, defence took 321.583 million otil of it-1 'l.)(l million, or 43 per cent. There was a time, notes The Printed Vvord, when residents of the United States, malty of whom are still living. were boast- ing that their Congress was a Billion-Dot lar Congrcss. Soon thci'caltci', the billion dollars cxpcndcd in two years became ,-i billion dollars expended in Ilflf' ycar. Tbosc were the days. The United States army comprised a group of smart cavalry units and some infantry, to a total of 23,()t)tl per- sons in uniform. And the highest peace- time rank was that of brigadicr-gcncral. The navy. while it may have been fancy. was not pretentious and perhaps ranked fourth in the world after Britain, Germany and France. Not many citizcnr of the U. S. would lee any connection between this economy of government expenditure and the Monroe Doctrine. The Monroe Doctrine, it will be recalled, was it device. attributed to Presi- dent Monroe. whereby the United States declared to the world that it would not per- mit any foreign (that is, European) power to establish more territorial rights in this hemisphere than it had up to that time. T'he serious historian has believed that this doctrine was suggested to the United States in 1823 by Lord Canning. Its en- forcement for more than a hundred years was made possible by the existence of the British navy, supporting it policy of the British foreign office and the British col- Ilial office. 'l'lie point of all this is that Canada, too, has benefited from the Monroe Doctrine, certainly Q I) 1914, and now benefits Iufther from the fact that the United Item, to defend itself, must defend Can- nh. 'Hiia b a convenient arrangement, but Ilaalbdangen. Ithdangerouniflt mane U to regard our external obli- IQII our internal defense, sliccp-ranchers just what it was that killed so many of their sheep. This. unfortunate- lly, they have been unable to do. although -agricultural scientists have been working on the problem for nearly two years. The deserts of Nevada have their own -peculiar atiractiveiiess; but we may be sure lthat at this moment the inhabitants of that region would feel a tliousand times happier if there was not an acre of desert land any- where in their sagebrush State. More fer- lvently than any other people on this con- itinent they regret the day that Dr. Einstein sinformcd President Roosevelt that he had worked otit a formula for the production lof an atom bomb. EDITORIAL NOTES Siiigapoic lost this date, 1942. I A small collcge in the States is offering a thousand dollar prize to the student who. at the end of the college year, is judged most competent in the art of putting con- stnictive thoughts in short speeches. Won- der how this would work in our legislatures? O 1 0 0 o It would serve the political forecasters right if Premier Mathcson were to decide to postponc thc general election to the very last moment permitted by law. It is doubt- ful that - barring emergencies which do not appear to cxist at the present time4fourth- year clerlions serve any useful purpose. . . . Dr. Otto Strasser's anxiety to get back to his homcland is understandable. He n””' M Mum M” bmiunt or 66 P9" 09"!" would be well advised, however, to combine caution with basic in his political ambitions. it is to bc hoped that his quiet years in Paradise have helped him to see the wis- dom of a sound. modcratc approach to the problems which now confront his fellow- citizens. . Mr. .lohn D. Rockefeller. Jr. recently added to his philanthropic enterprises by giving S21) million to develop religious edu- cation in tlic t'nitcd Statcs. The money will be handled by the Sealanlic Fluid which looks after most of his give-away programs. Only a few ycars ago Mr. Rockefeller pre- sentcd Harvard Linivcrsity Divinity Schooll with a million dollars for ”revitalizati0n" plllil)(iS(lS. Pri-sidcnt R. M. i-iowlcr of the (fana- dian Pulp and Paper Association made some very interesting observations at the recent annual mc.c,ting of his group; one of these would seem to be of special public concern. ”At least in the year ahead”, he said, "it is difficult to discover the forces that would create another spectacular spurt forward. We are likely to grow at a steady lbut more gradual rate.” While Mr. Fowler lwas referring particularly to the economic prospects of the pulp and paper industry, lwhat be had to say might be applied to the lgeneral economic outlook. x According to Mr. Frank T. Sherk, presi- dent of the Canadian Food Processors As- sociation, sales in retail food stores in Can- ada have climbed to 229 per cent since 1941, while population growth in the same per- iod was only 22 per cent. The reasons for this difference are first, that the typical Canadian family today can afford to eat better than it did fourteen years ago. See- ondly. preserved and pre-packaged foods that were scarcely dreamed of in 1941 are commonplace on the store shelves today. A third reason is thst distribution methoth are undergoing similar improvements with sharp competition from and among the marina Freedom O By Frank Written for The i Fret-doin of the press is part of the constitutional and cultural ll(il": itage Canada received front the- botb in Canada and in the United Kingdom have pronounced it an essential part of our system of democratic Parliamentary govern- ment. p Since the British constitution is unwritten it contains no precise definition of this freedom. .Ncitlier does the British North America Act under which the British con- stitutional system bccamc nli'i- Clall.V implanted in Canada .1 constitution ”similar in principle lln that of the United Kingdom" The reasons for this were painted up by Mr. Justice l.. A Calm:-ii of the Supreme ('ourt of Canada ill a judgment delncrcd in lflfltl on laws passed by the Alberta legisla- lure. FREE F()L'lx'DATl0N "At the time of Contcderation.' he said. "the United Kingdoni was In democracy. Democracy cannot tl')F maintained without its founda- d fri-c ltion: free public opinion an ldiscussion throughout thc nation of all matters affecting the state within the limits set by the crim- inal code and the common lax ." i Freedom of discussion and froc- dom of the press became part of ;the British constitution only aflcr in series of struggles waited in illritain over three centuries- from 'tbe time of the invention of the printing press. down to the tinic when the constitution took its present form, an executive re- sponsible in a Parliament possess- ing unlimited powers hut. in turn. dependent on the free vote of al citizens. . Before freedom of the press be- lt-anie established the press had to ,contend with three different forms -of restriction. First there was control mer- printing When the printing press icamc In England the authorities were afraid of the cnnscquciit-cs which might result from the pub? lic learning too much from tlic new medium of passing informa- tion from man to man. Printers were licensed by the government. A printer who printed things the government did not like could lose his licence. MlI.TON'S PROTEST it was against this systciii that the poet John Milton wrotc his lclassic protest. "Areopagitira". tSaid Milton "Give me liberty to know. to iilter and to argue freely laccording to conscience. above all lnthcr liberties." Miltonis protests were ineffective at the time. The British licensing laws were not allowed to lapse until 1692. long after his dcntli. Another phase of the striigglc was for the right of the press to information on public affairs. spe- iciflcally the right to report dc- bntes in Parliament. Parliamcni at first did not take kindly to letting reporters tell the world what was said within its walls. Parliament itself was engaged in a struggle with the king and didn't want the king to know what was said in their sessions because the king still possessed powers to discipline members who did not behave as he wished. LONG STRUGGLE The struggle of the press for the right to report Parliamentary pro- ceeding went on in the second half of the lath century and was characterized by numerous ar- rests, fines and punishments tn- Tllcted on reporters and edttbrs of the pioneer newspapers and news- letters. The press had its cham- pions wlthtii Parliament Itself and there were numerous debates be- fore it became accepted that news- paper: have a right to report Par- liamentary debates without regu- lation or censorship. Almost coincident with this de- velopment came the extension of the franchise and the change in the British political system from the rule of the few to the rule of the many. The third handicap imposed on the early British press was taxa- Hol.Pl'loI'hlUlDlPtfItIOdi1I printing was heavily taxed. This in served to make news pets high in price. was an , ence with the puhllc'I right I) know which may have had some canne- quencaa in American history. The untaned newspapers of the colonies flourished wt press wu. . lfb out-iui you '6 United Kingdom. Eminent jurists, That art says Canada shall li-aw? i The Press Flalu-rty Canadian Press gate full support to the ideas ofl llic rctoluliun. The late Prof ilarold lnnis saystl "The prominent role of the news-l papcr in the American Revolutionp ltl'&l.s rct-ngnized in the first article. lot the Bill of Rights. forbidding: i('ongr(-ss to abridge freedom of ltlic press The movement towards; restriction of the press by taxes: ill the latter part nf the 18th and. lcarly part of the filth century in England was paralleled by an in-l sistr-ncc on freedom of the press lin the United States." PAPER TAXES AH(ll.lSHlil) l, Britain became a popular dcnint-w lracy only after the press was frcctl by the abolition nf the taxes :on paper. The principle of self-i, lgotcrnnicnt for thc overseas parts of the Empire bccarnc cst'blishcd around the same time ilistorically. lllic cstzililisliiiicnt of Canada as a; tree dcmocracy and its siibscuticnt growth under the Parliamentary, ,sy:-tcm is lll'll(N'l with and. in largel inieasurc. due to the freeing of the iprcss from the triplc curbs of. l 1 l. (itlV('l'Til'llPfli c 0 it t r nl over” l printniu: , 2. Parlianicnlary control over lacccss to infnrmatioii on public af- l fairs: fl. Flxccssivc and discriminatory ; tavcs. t The question now troubling iriziny l lxhclicvcrs in democracy is whether, that freedom is secure or wlicthcrl rt can or should be reinforced by, gzz ..&T Wmld f' M22125 SUNRISE ON THE SNOW The world outdoors is now a holy place. g Enfoldcd round and round with angel wings in vthitc. A choir of birds no longer sings Hosanna tn the dawn. and green leaf-lace Becomes ii memory. There's not a trace Of footmarks on the snow. but only rings Of amber light the lamp of sun- rise fllngs About this moment in a luicd eni- brace. The wild wolf wind. tired out from howling. lies At rest. Frail silence blooms. Across the land A new day. God's own promise. bows to greet The quiet ltomcs soon will rise To talk of tasks the busy demand And join the symphony of hurry ing feet -Amy Bissetl Eiiglaiid. Montreal Gazette. w hcre pmiplc hours ill the iliaia N;aQi.i5J. tSy(lllc,V Post-Recordl Medically Speaking Herman N. Bundesen, M.D. COMMON EYE AIIJVIENT Having trouble with your eyes? Do they itch and burn and water Princess Margarr-t's HSII in the British West Indies draws atten- tion to tropical islands nearer to Canada than tn the Mother Coun- sornc written law or rule. 'llhtusI.-jj,-N M any "Hm. duminion of H", who want freedom defined by aj lwritten law have to face up In Cnnimonwcalth. and closer to Nova Scolia in terms nf historical as- lthe question of whether it defini-,sm.iannn and s,,a,gOing (.,,mm(.n., llllin may not. restrict freedom l Lnrd Kt-nynn.1an eminent Brit- las well as in geographical fact Trinidad. where the Princess be- llish judge. once described the tin gan her Canhbean vruise aboard i9l'l.V 9i ii"? W955 i” F'"Kl9"d "iii the royal yacht Britannia. is due ich l2 of his countrymen ,hc ought to be punished if he pub-l lishcs that which is blaniable." lDEllATABl.E POINT That statcincnt would imply that , , . so man may publish anything an, m th of Cape Breton Island. as hers of the Windward and uryi tbiiik is not blamable. btiSllLeeward Rump of islands where the yacht will take her northward from Trinidad. They include. Tn- bago. Grenada. St. Vincent, Bar- bados. St. Lucia. Dominica. Anti- gua, Nevis. St. Kitts. and others. Names well known to Nova Sco- frecdom to publish is part of 'heltian traders of old. common law of England. If it is The British possessions the that and not part of the constuu- Queen's sister will visit describe tion. as Mr. Justice Cannon seemed an arc or crescent on the map. to ihhik. it can be changed and curving northwestward from Trini- .'i"'t'”l”Nl h.V act of Parliament. pdad which is near the South Amer- Thn Parlianicnt of Canada and the tit-an coast off Venezuela. They in- lcgislatures of the provinces can and often do change the common llaw. They could do it simply by ldclining more things that may be l”hlamablc”. telling ii jury what to find "hlamablc". If freedom of the press is part ,nf the unwritten constitution lclcnrly it can't be restricted by Parliament or a provincial legisla- ttiirc. So far as (ianada is con- ccrncd it cant even be restricted by a change made in the British constitution since it is laid down that (Tanarla shall have ii constitu- tion similar to that of the United Kingdom-at the time of Confeder- lilllln. This view found support in at least one official statement from lbc government of Canada, At the second General Assembly of the United Nations the Canadian dele- gate said: , "The people and the government of my country believe that free- dom of information and freedom of the press are not only basic freedoms in themselves but are essential to the exercise of the other basic freedoms. Democracy implies that the ultimate -esponsi- billty for government policies is determined by die people. BASIS OF JUDGMENT "Unless the pegple have free and unfettered access through their in- dependent news media to signifi- cant facts and opinions. wherever these may originate throughout the world. the people would be limited and impeded in their elforta to judge wlselx'tha luuea they are called upon to a. This would he -s I a very serious limitation on the, efficiency of what we call dunoc-i "iii the role of the some in eco- nomic and social affairs lncreaus.. attacks on freedom (I the press; iendtotakaanawllne. itiaaonie-: times alleged that privatab-owaedl ""..:.'”.1'.i't; .'l3.".'f.. ”'l.if't.".”..'1il e ,- pi: e fac . that state latarvutioa or nateeonuulhncauuytopro Show. clude the Windward and Leeward islands - part of the group called the Lcsser Antilles - marking the dividing line between the Atlantic Qccan and the Caribbean Sea. Later the voyage will bring Princes Margaret to .l a m it i c a which is part of the Greater Antil- lcs that include Cuba. Lastly and most northerly in the royal visit will come the Bahamas whose cap- ital Nassau is within relatively short sailing and flying distance from Miami in Florida. - There has been discussion of late about uniting the British Wcst Indies into 3 new self-governing memhe nf the British Common- wealth. and that would mean much rivalry as to the location of a cap- ll!Il- 51. Ge0rile's on little Grenada has been described as most suit- table. a sultgcstlon disputed by Klnzsto in Jamaica the largest of the islands but more remote from ntliers of the galaxy. Wlm. ever the outcome is of importance to Canada and particularly these Marltlmes which would have much mission to report on how a free press in the United Kingdom was doing its Job. The commission reported in 1949 and found no case for state owner- ship or control of the press. Its significant finding was "in our view free enterprise in the pro- duction of newspapers in a pre- requtsite of a free press." a great deal? p p . 4 Maybe you've go conjunctivitis, but don't worry; tis type of in- fection will usually clear up with in a few days to a week. The delicate membrane that lines the eyelids and covers the eyeball is called the conjunctiva. This conjunctiva may become in- flamed as a result of infection. There are many forms and many causes of conjunctivitis. The in- fection may be produced by var- ious germs such as the pneumo- coccus, and occasionally by germs known as Koch-Weeks bacilli. It can also be caused by invisible ultraviolet rays from therapeutic lamps, such ss sun lamps, Klleg lights or acetylene torches. if your eyes are irritated by wind, sun. dust or smoke, you might develop a case of conjunc- tivitis. So-called snow blindness is another form of this ailment. Follows Colds Cnnjunctivitis also frequently follows ordinary colds and the "catching" diseases of children. if you've got it. your eyes will water a good deal. Soon this wall- ery discharge becomes thick. Your eyes will itch and burn. and often the lids will be stuck together when you awake. Some forms of conjunctivitis are catching and the symptoms in these forms are usually more sev- ere ”Pink eye." for example. is highly catching. in the milder types. the condi- tion usually clears up within a week at the most. Severe cases may take from two to four weeks. Place cold compresses tan icc bag nr cloth soaked in cold water and wrung out! on your eyes for about 10 to 15 minutes several times a day. Wash your eyes frequently with a mild alkaline or boric arid so- lution and put a small amount of it into your eyes at bedtime. You shouldn't wear an patch. but you can wear glasses. it the disorder cuiilinues for a time. your doctor can give you preparations of zinc sulfate. or he mitlhl recommend use of anti- biotic drops both day and night. if you have a tendency to de- velop this condition. you must avoid overexposure to exccssivc light. dust. smoke and chemical irritant.s. QUESTION AND ANSWER R. W.: My child has been given sulfa drugs for a sore thrust is there any chance of this drug damaging the kidneys? Answer: if the newer sulfa drugs have been employed in pro- per dosage. there is little chance of their t-rystallixing and causing kidney difficulty. eye dark Ability To Survive Illlonlreal (iazcttcl Only one Apmcrican corcspond- cnt was permitted to attend and rcport the funeral of Stalin. He was Eddy Gilmore of the Associated Press. Later he reported wluil he had seen and heard in greater detail. this passage "Th speakinii bcitan Malen- kov. cria and Mnlntnv. The first spoke in a firm. clear. well- modulatcd voicc. ” Berta spoke in ii wt-ll-(-unit-oiled voice. A business-like tone. ”Then Molotov.” This story of 1953 has new lmeaning. Mnlntnv is now the only one of the three orators at Stalin's funeral who has not fallen from finite and power. Beria was shot. Malenknx has withdrawn in a cloud of self-accusation. it is all rather like what hap- pened at the funeral of Lenin in 1924. There were seven psllpear- ers.-Only two. Stalin and Kalinln, died of supposedly natural causes. The remaining four died violently. Kamenev. Zlnoviev and Buimd;-in were executed. and Tomsky killed himself during the purge trails. Of the seven at Lenin's funeral there is only one siirvivnr. Oddly enough, he is Molotov. the only thriving orator fom Stalin's funeral. M"l"l0V'3 Hbllil.V to survive state funerals has become his nut- stsnding characteristic. i The Age Old Story And it came to parts, when Jesus had ended these sayings. the peo- ple were astonished at his doc- trine: for he taught them as mu- having authority. and min .5 ii..- scribes. to gain in trade if the B. W. l. were transferred from the pound Slefllml tn the Canadian dollar area. Difficulties of exchange now hamper trade. FOR. Tailoring and Alterations RITE-WAY cmaumzs Dial 7387 has 4 The Guardian We find a rather morbid com- fort in those letters that arrive at our house addressed "Occupant." "Householder." there are at least some lists that we're not yet on. -Ham- ilton Spectator. OF able NOTES BY THE WAY Eisenhower. welfare. Britons. regardless who owns the plant they work in. belong to Brit- ish unions; Belgians belong to Bel- gian unions; and so on down the line. Canadian workers are only ones in the world who have no national trade ment of their own. Letter Review. union move Nelson llockfeller has a new lob as special assistant to President It must have been someone with a streak of genius who suggested the because Nelson Aldrich Rocker- feller is one of the hardest working men in Washington. His name sel- dom appears in society columns simply because he has no time to attend daily official functions. And. the 46-year-old millionaire doesn't even play golf. The White House cnuld use many more like him. A Sherbrnnke Record. Expericiice Indicates yearls epidemic among the doizs of Labrador differs similar occureuces Modern science may be able to pronounce causes and prescribe methods of prevention. The natives need dogs to collect firewood and to hunt for food. Where there are no dogs cap- nf being formed into sled- tcams. careful check will have to be made to ensure that the peo- ple will not have to go without things necessary to their simple p The Department of Na- tional Rt-sources appears to be taking the necessary steps to cope with the situation. in the past accurately -St. They prove sucker the - Fort Erie appointment that this little from upon the J ohn's one of the scares of World win if is recalled by the finding of I Japanese balloon bomb in the wilds of northeast Alaska. It was still in working condition after 10 yea” exposure to the weather. The bomb will go to laboratories for examin. ation and will resi permanently in the air force techn 'al museum at Dayton. Ohio. Most American; remember the Japanese balloon: which were released in great num, bers to float on the winds across the Pacific to America. They wen largely made of paper, but some proved remarkably durable and landed in spots on American soil as far east as Iowa and as far south as the Mexican border. Pg. per balloons seem fantastic wea- pons indeed to be utilized in the same decade as that which see, Present day guided missiles and rocket planes. - St. Paul Pioneer News If Karl Marx. the pl-oggnilm. 0, Communism. were to return a few years or even a few months hem-9 he might be hard put to recogniu his brain-child. "Das Kapital " Through a century on more, ma, massive tome has been the biblp M the Communist world. It was ". "Das Kapital" that Lenin andl ii" early Bolsheviks found the in spiration which resulted in mg overthrow of the Czars. But. not long ago. some of the searching minds in the Soviet hierarchv (lip. ped into the revered volume and discovered a number of principle; and statements that did not com- cide with their own curent pre.-H-i.. ments and practices. It may even be that they were irked by Kari Marx's comments on Russia it. salt; which in his early davs Ii... prophet of the Better World tr... quently lambasted for its lack oi leadership. which, as he saw it permitted the survival in Rlllild of conditions which even the (lgp. News. Will The Queen Mother should have a little life of her own” Why do we sclfishly ask that she should become Governor General of Can- ada and involve herself in the ex- acting duties which that position entails? Let us show. rather. that ever she wishes. and for as long what with waist bands shrinking Currie Bldg. - Dial Mu - Queen It. is it not time that Queen Eliza. we would welcome her to come and live as a private citizen when- as she wishes. Let us not insist that she take up again those grind- mg public duties which she has alfelidy fully performed to the set- isfacfion of the whole Common. wealth H Kingston Whig-Standard. -Thai docs It. We were just .191. um: nicely ageing on another diet. again and the cleaners not pressing "W Clvthes nrniwrly. For two days H-SPY a dessert had crossed our lIDs and the bread and butter wast- in away unwanted on the side plate was reaching a considernblet altitude. But now comes the Can. ads and Dominion Suga C ' Limited with a blurb ;boTilfIpatT1); stories of mini: and the folly of diets. it winds tip this way: ”And remember the story of the guy who finally took off A few pounds. and A friend reported: "He's not such a big fool as he used to be . . ,, heis tblnner'." Pass the c a it Q please. - Ottawa Journal. be drcamcd italistic world would no Permit. In any event. the pa.-W heads have issued an ukase to the Marx-Engels-Lenin-S t s l l n lnsii. lute to prepare a revised and mi. rected cdilion of the work. When they get through their revision. it's really Marx would recognize it. it's doubt. fiil, for that matter, if he would identify Russia itself as a living semblance of the Utopia of who-h -- Chathani Now. Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCES SALES & Rewinding and Repairs ELECTRICAL Repairs MOTORS Palmer Electric U40-I544 Phones longer immortal doubtful if SERVICE The ii? nmne eearoauu . R. C. Allen's .n. rVisOmalic- iosnoden-aehaaonow with 1' insioui-sec V5-onus: it-vi i M i'KeyedTob0poo-adieu Ahsbdlbbonhwuu Y”"'”'VP"95'0950',.l9fhe-r,Fodu'Yyp0ng snaafdononom I.C.AlleaaaIiuiaedaalu&aaniu H. M. SIMPSON LTD. SALm I SERVICE 160 Richmond St. Dial 8571 PROFESSIONAL CARDSTT- BARRISTERS. -SOLICITORS. Etc. Chris. B. McQua.id, B.A. Bell. Mbtlieson & Foster 150 Richmond si. J. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. 165 Queen St. Phone 4282 156 Richmond St. Dial Kill opromenusfs: G. F. Hutcheson & Son M. A. Farmer, Q.C., LL.B. F. G. HUTCHESON. R.0. 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