THE GUARIDIAN Published ovary wool-day morning at 136 Prince nu-eel. Chu lotloiovl. P.I.l.. by The Thomson Company Llmned I "Cour: Prhu III-rs Island Like In Dow" Editor. Frank Walker Consul klanlsr. inn A. Burnett Conch olllcss at IHIIIlIl!I'8'd!. Montagus and Alberum. Aulho l Ind as Second Class Hall by the Post omen Dnpnrtmenl. Ottawa. I 00. Other Provinces and U.S. H20! per Innum whom ll P,E.!. "Tho strongest memory is weaker than tho weakest ink.” TUESDAY. MAY 3l.gl955 Hospital Organizations Meet , All our citizens will joill in the greet-w ings which will be extended today by His Worship Mayor Stewart to the visiting members of the Maritime Hospital Assoc- iation, the Maritime Hospital Aids Assoc- iation and the Maritime Exhibitors Assoc- iation. The organizations are representa- l tive of ninety-one hospitals in the four Atlantic Provinces, and the convention will continue its sittings until Friday, when an important session will be held t.o re- ceive the report of a joint commission a. - pointed to investigate Blue Cross-Hospital relations. Sectional meetings, round table discussions. and addresses by special tervening time. Mass opportunity for hospitalization represents one of the great developments of our age. Such organizations as the Blue Cross and hospital associations function for the purpose of spreading the benefits of high-quality hospital care at the lowest feasible cost to the public. Advances in medical science, bringing under control many of those diseases which formerly caused high mortality rates, have present- od new problems in hospital care and ac- oommodation. Federal and Provincial gov- ornments are interested directly in these -. matters through national health programs 1; and other activities. some idea of the .- scope of the work may be gathered from .- the fact that in 1953 the total capital and operational expenditure for health in Can- ada was. for hospitals alone, approximate- w . The word "hospital" derives from the Latin "hospitium", a place where guests ("hospes") were received; and in early times the institutions served for the ac- sormnodation of travellers as well as vic- films of disaster. By the fourth century, ,...,.,.r. . . . ll Carrisr: Cnsrlottslswn. sululnersldla 815.00 per annum.,ed? speakers will occupy a large part of the in-; Social Credit Coalition one years. lseventeen years under a Liberal regime. lNew Brunswick went Conservative. same year, British Columbia The elected a Government in place of the which had ruled it for eleven ”How," asks the Globe and Mail, "are these long tenures of office to be explain- any change is lieve so. Have the various Governments con- 'cerned ruled so well and so wisely that unthinkable? We do not be- It seems to us there are two rea- sons for the longevity of present-day Gov- ernments in Canada. One is that Cana- dians have had sixteen years of war and postwar prosperity. Comfortable. and in- deed complacent, they have been in no mood for upsetting political applecarts. ”The other reason tends to breed longevity. is that longevity When Govern- ments change every few years, the Opposi- tion parties remain alert, hopeful and well organized. Their turn will come again. But when Governments do not change, when they are returned in election after election, the Opposition .danger of losing heart. lone leader to another, from one platform to another, parties are in They drift from Worse yet, they try to imi- Atate what seems to them the successful platform of the party in office. This is the biggest error of all; losing their character and personality, they no longer present a real alternative to the party in office, and so there is no point in voting for them. "Opposition parties in all Provinces, and in Ottawa itself, will best serve them- selves and the electorate by presenting (however hopeless it may appear) alternatives. real The time must come-it al- ways has-when people want a change. And in any event, Governments in office, especially Governments long entrenched, should be constantly under criticism from Oppositions which know what they are about." Unnecessary Handicap lrt is now Rien will go clear that Prime Minister to the Big Four meeting not only with the consent of the British elec- torate but with the approval of all schools of political thought in the United Kingdom. Indeed, one of his very sincere well-wish- ers will be Mr. Attlee who, contended with him for the days ago, only s. few Prime Ministership. Had the election gone L. , ....s , Lw Ob-Mfwofrlce rs King Baudoulrfs tour of the Bel- gian Congo marks a new mile- stone in development of a vast ex- panse of brightest Africa that sup- plies the United States with atomic raw materials. The 2Lyear-old monarch, seeing the Congo for the first time, is visiting the uranium-producing southeast corner. But in a three- week air journey he will also be mindful of the Congo: hospitals, farms, industries, housing and the welfare of his 12,000,000 African subjects. King Baudouin finds a booming land that has made king-sized strides since the Congo Free State was set up under his great-grand uncle, Leopold II. in 1885, says the National Geographic Society. LAND OF ENCHANTMENT The Belgian Congo t 4' s M- rica's enchantment. It is big: larg- er than all the United States east King Baudouin's Tour National Geographic Society can make. runllile along streets. In the native sections new houses and new markets sprout continually. A stadium seating 75,- 000 persons and a recreation center were completed not long ago. Compressed air drills, the me- tallic ciang of pile drivers. the dull throb of bulldozers, rather than the beat of tom-toms, are set- ing the pace of Leopoldville, as all over the Congo today. iAustrian independence treaty, a more optimistic atmosphere is re- ported prevalent in Europe. I the main, it has been by the fact that Moscow made Elons. The question of the size of use of gallbladder Austria's armed forces and on Answer. mm gg luchblh .8” control of Austria's industries. med meat. "um, bunch etc: posals on disarmament. which avoided. use skifnn-led mllk um;-. are closer to the Western view lngly "d an Medically , Speaking Herman N. lundesen. M-ll BING IABY T0 SLEEP Don't hustle your baby off to bed right after his final f . Your bastetogatrldofhimfor the night may make him restless. some youngsters don't seem to mind this abrupt bruahoff, but others cry and fret and let you know they think they've been mis- treated. If your baby takes a half hour or longer to get to sleep, it's a pretty good sign that he should be quleted' down before beinl whisked off to slumberlnnd. This is especially true of excitable babies. soothing Music Rock him a little in your arms. or sing softly to him if you like. You don't. have to be good. He won't know whether you are car- rying the tune or not, but he'll appreciate the affection it displays. If you have a phonograph. put on some soothing music - Woodwinds or strings are best. It'll help you both to relax. These gentle movements and soothing music give your young- ster the same satisfaction that you get from rocking in a chair or tapping your foot. However. if he seems especially restless, give him a sponge bath. There will be occasions, of course, when you just won't have time to give your baby the proper attention before bedtime. In this event, leave him where he may watch other members of the fam- ily. hear household sounds. or see the lights until he falls asleep. Don't Tip-Toe Around You don't have to go around on tip-toes, but don't make any un- necessary noises either. Your baby must become accustomed to ordinary sounds around the home. One more thing. Try to put him to bed about the same time sach n evening. Then leave him alone. induced QUESTION AND ANSWER unexpected .2.-..M..:.-:.lr.:a-;:.i::::i::v:.: A New Challenge (Ottawa Citizen! Following the signing of the Coupled with recent Soviet pr0- Condiments, and alcohol should be in moderation. P.E.l. Election t Montreal Start Ontario has long been vincial pro- stronghold. New Brunswick, at its 1211.. cleri- ion, voted in a Conservative ad- lhlin anything yet 308863190 by starchy foods and sugars should Moscow, the concessions made in be reduced ll you .1-, ove,-welgm. Austria bespenk a new, concilia- ovgreatjng should l,, uoldedg ' tory approach. Observers in Eu- ---em----e-ee-- rope believe that internal eco- - llomic stress in the Soviet Union, xen,::;h;;'lesanl;ymm:utllvr:a'l .mgrg.:l:g 35 We” 35 demimds '0' "'""”'Y to obtain cultural and cconomlg aid from Russia's allies, especlal- alliance! with me "mom to ly China, have caused Moscow to whom mlmary nwtnmy may ministration. These two swallows. however, do not appear to make a summer. Prince Edward island. after 20 years of Liberal rule, re- fused on Wednesday to turn its Vsvilf "l 9”l"E 0" in "'9 will seem advantageous. if this now sia may be seizing an opportunity stolen a much an it , challenge is not met. the West Perhaps """'"Y lmP0"3”'- Russ may find that the Russians have made possible by a new situa- Page 4 The Guardian, l NOTES BY WI funny how months seem so much shorter and years seem so much longer when you pay for something on the instalment pllh. -Kitchener-u Record. in Rio do Janoiro. 10-you-old Signor Alberto Psgllsno got two resounding slaps on his face from an elderly woman he encounter- ed on the street. She was his wife - now 60 years old - from whom he had run away 34 years ago, and she necognlzed ' him when they met.-Stockholm Ex- change. A Miss Fanny Ennis, C9. of Lon- don has sued John Purser. 78, for breach of promise, charging she had been kept waiting since 1900 for him to keep his promise to marry her. We hope she collects. It should be a lesson to him that a man simply cannot keep a wo- man in suspense for 47 years. - N.Y. World Telegram. The ability of the younger gen- eration to pilot bicycles at an early age is astounding. We've seen tots who aren't as high as the wheels of their own bikes zllzpinll -long the streets in great style. Except that at times they have trouble keeping their bal- ance and steering the bike. It's fine for a dny tlke to have a bike fit In early an - but sometimes it's better to wait until they are better able to balance and steer before buying them the two. wheel chariot.-North Bay Nug. get. In this country we have done much to preserve life in the sur- lier years of mankind. There are literally hundreds of thousands of useful Canadian citizens today who in s previous generation would never have survived infancy. But we have neglected the other end of the chain and as a result we have lost a great may lllghly trained and experienced older people whose useful life might '15" Men Prolonged many years. Many of these people are highly trained. all Ire hllllly experi- ''"39d- 11 5031'-hlh 910! could make an enormous contribution to Canadian llfc both materially and culturally, and they would be infinitely happier themselveg 1;; doing so.-Financial Post. w' "I 330' 50 W90 of man WM lfinds his cigarette out on Your carpet. We have most of us suffered from the man who 193"! I cllnrctte burning on our Inantelpicce or favorite piece of furniture. We know the care- less way he throws away a match and up: out hh pipe on his host. This is the man who h setting the bush fires which are now 003311! taxpayers untold thou- sands of dollars. The man who is THE WAYj "It is surprising My l 1135' for that ,weekly nevnlett comes around" say. um pub"-ml man for a Government institution mu he ever try wol- iinlllyf-Port Arthur News. c 9. It is one of those thin sooner oi-.lnter were l:,l,,,:'”i: 1IIPDen- 11' Elllllnd when a an tint tugged at. tho loom of , year-old girl she, in pun, nu her teeth firmly into his fingu Flnbbergasted at this pain 1,, m' verse, he slapped her. Doublleu he also was pained when 3 Jud glued mm :5 for .mul:.-wl...l.f.1 tar. Democracy works offlcienu, . ratio to the proportion of Clllzely who actively participate ' 9! I Chron 1 i processes. A dull. compliacu: electorate makes for ll com plncent. inefficient Idminislratlon If politicians know they are con stantly under the surveillance on the citizens. they will make fewgl mistakes. Also, it is only lhruugh an enlightened. energetic and ex, presslve public opinion that ,,.,l. itlclnns know what people Wm, them to do. Contrary to the lam some may have, a demflcracy means elected representatives are the servants of the people,-wmd sor Star. There seems to be some affinity between Delhi and Ottawa so l" as British envoys are concerned Sir Archibald Nye who now rep: resents the United Kingdom l. Ottawa came to us after reprg senting his country in India. sl; Alexander Clutterbuck went from us to India. And now Malcolm MacDonald who was with us in eral terms ago moves from lh. Malay Peninsula to india, And going back a bit Lord Willlngdoll came to us after being Viceroy, Ottawa is full of people in every estate of life who will welcome this new posting of Mr Mal-. Donald's.-Ottawa Journal. If ever there was a time for steady nerves and a cool up praiul of political realities, it u now. The world is apparently moving into a new chapter 91 negotiation, in which the slruggls to contain Russia and to secun justice for tile oppressed people: of Eastern Europe will be pur- sued by different tactics. Thu West is strong. The West know: its own mind. There is every reason to be confident. But then is no reason to be carried away by soft hopes or by beguiling images of a world brought sud- denly into n epoch of peace.--New York Herald 'h'lbune. ISLAND HARVEST The pineapple industry of the Hawaiian islands is worth about Sl00,000,000 yearly in fruit and dlfferentlyv Mn Attlee would have 5P0ken of the Mississippi. It is rugged: political coat. The Liberals. under tion that has arisen since the de- careless at home or when visit. l ,A'Di' Crlristian co unmgs had estabnlghi for me British people and he would have the jungle slopes of the ”Mountains in new leader. swept the b'ual'n'r'. velopment of the hydrogen bomb. Ndlllft Untamed lnl. is doubly careless when he as? am ad hospitals for lepers, cripples, the blind been cheered on by.sir Anthony It all of the Moon.' rise to perpetualley d.We lflnd tl(l;is resulth 80II:l:Wh?b -nlel-9 ls evidence glm . growing (Momma Tmumpt, is in the bush. To him, the whole and the lid( pool" but it was not until - snow-clad peaks of more till!!! 9 lSlUl' InS- 000 85 I 6 Ll ET? 3 number of nations seek neutrality. Action by me Unlud state Wotld D hll ashtray, and, he I 'I' 2 ' 500ft, dLkT k be,th Lb I t',lk - - 8 - 1&3. during uh. Cnmean War. that Flory adds up to a position of strength for the us bggdelanis "as eSecz;l:Il(;ian3(I1le exp :3 Zngyolher pglitizisrgartyuaagl all; In this sense ,neutl-allty means ”em,,e,. Bureau in "ubmmu couldnt care less what anyone RP-frlgeratlon thinks about him or his dirty to be uncommitted llitarily as Storm mformmon C u. t Kl '" " ” habits.-Sault Ste. Marie Star. Elli Ell! 35””li.il'".f:l...l.'""A”.T.l'.'l.ll'. I,”,:i3,.”" '"”f,” 1” ”P'”'"';?:g neutrality has been promised its ' fences in Yugoslavia, although l:,:":,o::-,hoo:::::: 301;?! British view at the conference. For President Eisenhower the situation is somewhat different. Leaders of his own (4,700 feet) in the world. It is tropical: the Congo River, unique among large waterways, crosses the Equator twice. existed, cannot stay that good forever. A turn in opposition would bn a fine experience. It reduces complacency and arrogance. It is also just possible that the experi- cnoo Nightingale achieved the first effec- tlve coordination of scientific medicine and humanitarian care of patients in hos- Iliopairs To All Makes APPLIANCES pitals. Since that time, a bare summary of the progress made fills several columns in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. The subject grows ever more complex with the increasing diversification of diag- lthe President attend: a few nostic and therapeutic procedures and the; party are divided on the question whether should have consented to , such as Senators Knowland -and Jenner, seem to look upon the Presi- dent's decision peasement. Fortunately, most Democratic almost as an act of ap- The Congo is productive: ever more abundantly it yields copper, cobalt, zinc. manganese, gold. hn. industrial diamonds. palm-oil, cof- fee, cotton, rubber, timber, quin- inc, pyrethrum and beef. The Congo is wild: elephants, glraffes, atelopes, rhinoceroses roam Gar- amba National Park: Lake Albert Belgrade-is militarily bound to nan"-E. whn. control of un .1, ence might shake up, its thinking. As to the opposition, is turn in of- fice would be good for it too. Parties long out of power become both discouraged and irresponsible. The active conduct of administrat- ion not only cheers them up, but also gives them a sense of reality the West through an alliance with Turkey and Greece, both NATO :;uu:p?,::,.':uel,.5k"e gemllultl; countries. Russia will, undouhted- to we public in uvm: ldeguvde ly, also seek to obtain German wammu ,1 lPpm.cmu danger tion. neutrality in return for unlflca- so mmecuve mum,” nu he tnk . In Western capitals. some fresh Tehng vggm-le,,o( nature In mu SALES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewindlpg and Repairs light on services needed, their use and cost: also on the urgent necessity for bet- ation between hospitals and other health and welfare agencies, for less extravagant duplication of equipment and services. for preventive health care in clinics co-ordin- aled with hospitals. for visiting nursing and medical treatment in the homes, and for institutions for chronics and convales- cents. The Atlantic Provinces are keeping abreast of these and other developments. largely through the efforts of the organiz- ations represented at the convention this Vl'9Pl( in Charlottetown. Their deliber- ations will be of interest to us all. and the lconclusions reached may play an import- ant part in shaping future hospit,ali7.ati0n advances, Long-Lived Govcmmenls Commenting on the election results in ter community planning for closer co-oper- l lcourse known to Moscow officials, and it .menns that the conference will find the v own political President working under an unnecessary lhandicap. Obviously, since the mere fact of his attending the talks is causing un- easiness among influential members of his party, he is going to find it 1hard to convince the Russians that Ameri- can public opinion is behind any move that might be made to ease East-West tensions. Even under the best conditions. it would '.have been difficult enough for the summit meeting to produce anything really help- lful: in view of the divisions that are appar- lent ldifficlllt still. lmented fact in Washington, it is going to be more Considering the well docu- that the Soviet leaders res- pect strength and nothing else, it seems a lpity that these divisions were allowed to "develop ' rovr-rsy. into a full dress political con- EDITORIAL NOTES where the long tapering skull was once a sign of distinction and where the rhythmic beat of hol- low log drums still arouses frenzied dancers. Other Congolese, learning mod- ern ways. are employed in tap- ping resources that give thc Congo its strategic role in world affairs. In the rolling bushland at Shinkolohwe they help mine uran- ium ore, vital to the security of the United States. Here and elsewhere ,uipment marked "Made in U. S. A.” lightens the work load - huge shovels. generators, mining tools and even X-ray machines in medi- cal laboratories. "LEO" THE CAPTIAI. What is hnppcning in the colony is the story of what has happen- ed in more concentrated form in its capital. Lcopoldvillc. The city. dllbbed Leo. borders the lower Congo River. Little more than 40 years ago it was a town of 40 Europeans and 20.000 natives. Now it is a bustling city of 12,000 Europeans and 325.000 natives. Since World War ll it has more than doubled in size. Tribal women- folk and their children queue up for treatment at one of the largest are seeking signs of a Tory renasrence. They look for it hope- fully in the provinces, encouraged by the turnover in New Bruns- wick. But the Prince Edward Is- land election is a discouraging set- back. The Conservatlvcs, who badly needed something to shout about. must now find themselves in that province in about the same state of disorder as the provincial Conservatives In British Columbia who were virtually wiped ,out in the last voting there. Prehistoric man wasnt the apellke dullard he's been painted. Discove 3:. in Britain continue to stress that he was much bralnicr than has generally been supposed. Astronomers have believed for some time that the famous shrine of Stonehenge was consecrated on June 21. i840 B.C. - 3.705 years ago - because on that day the fi?st rays of sunlight would have streamed along the axis of the great stone enclosure. lsl status prevent a country from on glvg gdvlnce waning 0, the New Light On Stonehenge Montreal Gnsctto being oriented to one side or the a l-oagllln other in its cultural attitudes. in 1153; beenitirsnudmtld trade and in its friendships, as tion.: that, although pl-opal-lg dun. Switzerland and India have shown. an would not-b. lenemd ""3 Indeed, such orientation is inevit- could luv. been nved ' able. Up to a point, therefore. A; wlu, me ,tmo,l;h.,.lc an neutrality is an academic concept. ml-bane", name .1” ran um Nevertheless. its psychological pant all, y,” la an mam. WW. appeal runs deep. especially since inccl. lending flood; of wgtgr to the advent of the hydrogen bomb. lnum-late umuund, ., let" M It must be recognized and dealt valuable um, had. 3”. how with on its own terms, as Russia ever, although damage ha; been is evidently seeking to do-whlc J ., hm, .3 usmoooo i S alone, no lives in"' "em "'9 mill waters as they broke through man-mndo but Plafl. but because there was this f th struck one of the pillars. (Xi its lllifes t.Ve::cle:::ry F-enuuom no surface, they found the carving Tlll of a Greek dauer of the type to lcsssefllvfilse :lod:gl:.ih:' comm the Britons would have received of canad, muered in an r in trade for the stone axes. able loss df approximately lepmb Making superior tools, engaging cent 0; lg, Dreamed when P" in trade, architecture, engineer Again forest fires have rcamcpd lng, astronomy - these activities through Nova Scotin and onto; l sound as if the inhabitants of in recent days cousin mllliro Britain in those days were far of gall,” log; in "gm 1 om from savages. Perhaps they were sources and in Nova Scull. "I more civilized than modern man tlcularly in private A "F seems to be in many respects. Here ahln, because of were lost. it was not possible tol - - fl 1 b n l , thinking will have to be d bmadenlng Of h05Pltal Cllenlele and PmC' leaders are, favourable to the meenng' higglilasotglhhsggohhgl ilsons ul:h:?)sif. :1? lfl::lkl:Su3clffrs in me wilderness the whole question of neulilidlltllll :1 wmzzt u.'.l”.I,'e.'.',';t.l:.i:d.,..le ELECTRICAL t,-lees. widely organized prepayrnent plans Senate majority leader Walter George has Allml Nallonal park; gorillas These genemmies' applied '0 Neutrality does not uecessal-l., meal .10,-m. um wreaked hum l - - f p 'd v haunt the forests near Lake Klvu. Pl Ed d I h . save a nation from becoming a ll; an gouth-centl-ll U lted Stu Rem" 70 nilance hospital Cafe are On the ll'l- give" his full cons?!” to he rem ants But the Congo is alsola land of 9: zgllcamfg if a:':'fe:;'r'a1'fi:lg' battleground. or from the need to Striking with unexpetlled ..,.ld::Z ' crease, both 1" Europe and on this Con, acceptance: in fact it was he who suggest- peogle. Sglgle !l,ead primlglalehliixg. the p,.,,gresSh;e,ConSe,,vmwas hav; txlialxlila slides lndanwar. :1) Belgiium, negg um vlclo... um-M mulled DRY CLEANERS Pallllar Electrlli , , ' ' ' . UK! 88 6 ygmles 8 ' 0 an III LIX BI tment. Recent studies have thrown much ed ” "l "W f”-it Pia” These film 3” "f lsaettu tribes, both in the northeast ;l::;'s.”i;f,,Di;'e P:;f,"mff,'c' glgiggggcfg found. Nor does aemuliiarrli n:.lie- gllctlahlllrhlidl iii? an hfelamgzssilflg 110 not at P'''"''' 85” M Phone cm l AND 00. OIIIODI CHAIIDTTETOWN lllflillllltll INSURANCE Since 1872. LIMITED smimmzsmn Monrmvl .44 PROFESSIO NAL CARDS! BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Boll, Mnthooon & Foster no Iueamond st. oPToMETRFsfs: G. F. Ilufcheson dl Sol . . The design of the shrine. they be- - ... - , , hospitals in Africa. Lush gardens . it was to J, um, 31... h rd 3' ' g Prince Edward Island last week, the Globe It is reassuring to hear from Dr. Leo- and luxuriant trees frame attrnc- 333' kifflesenilliin lllllitxlthnglrlmtn Peron-lg Hum." Too residents in the danger m2"".'.'. 185 mean ht. c .rl:'ou.?z.iz 5, Gf',f;,,"3""”S0"' l-lilll st! and Mail says that the remarkable thing nard Scheele of the United States Public W; l:i""E5- A"l:l'9v ttrxckp predlct ms sunrise mm 3' 0 ' lt(l,l:at wore able to prevent M. A. 0 LB ' i -R0” . , an axes. mos y o merl- ' 0 e. pg.-m , , . g . . H , . about the return of a Liberal Government Health Service that, from now on, safety The IHOM olumns at Stone mlmllion 9P9c"'0"l In this port of Canada there in Ink 0' llkll Ill JR!-'3 SE-"when mug henge were lowered into their pits by burning the charcoal with after holding power for twenty years is and not haste will guide the Polio Vaccine Scores of experts and a great "We danger from floods. And B N J 6"?" "D v n . . - - ' Dial :4 . . . l l t fl , , , that it is not remarkable. Nova SC0lIa'pr0gram. If that had been the policy at 5 he 3-? whlchi tbegpits wene firist filled. 2331: aim p3.",""?,,”,".l l.”.'.. v.nhlil?ofw::rl;xlI,eul"l'eil:I::e! W uGmk ldhnl-in In Item st. ,, has had a Liberal Government for twenty-lthe beginning, much public confusion and mg ;: ,''8”",”'f; 9:1 "9""! 30”; men! of their children. Hardly w-rnlnsu. Forest am. of all the To T”TT'"TT'Eio. - l mp 9" ” 9 C "”"'l """”'l" a word is written or spoken about " hlrol" catastrophic; 3, A. Wslthos Gnudot LLB. J" 8' Ry 0" ' - two years; and in Manitoba, 2: Liberal Pro- fear would have been avoided. &' lng in the pits were sent to the ll, ,, M a mm ' m 9 p ' Corner Rent a cum 3" . . . l . 09505 I m t of N , Sm l e re one s of the case how noorly controllable, and. 59. Ill!!! IHl- 111 GPIMI IL m, mm, 4, lzresslve Government is still goint: slronlz . O .. cllllfollmela By uccl:e.fruilY ghglalzlllg chum” mould m" M" 9"" """ !"' 40 Idle from natural T” C--.---om" , ' -- d after thirty-three years in office. (It needs Aneilrin Bevanls rebellions nature may CIVIC IMPROVEMENTS the radiation of the samples, the enrli pm-..l. ..-9 ln-lmlu .l f:k"::"m':',?m:g""m.:h”&L; :90 . Fund", ' lnunmgm M ,l:l' "' M””"' 2. Fix more Yeam to equal the record-1897 have been a factor in the British-Labour whan one tree more or less? :"l1'l,"l"el:,”r;:ll;;"l:i9;'7,';"!9Yyel;8l.il: ifs? hThgmtIon.lnadndmmIt gm not occur as a result of human "I " - 4 RS to 193&mt by the Liberals in Quebec). Party's losses in last week's election. Yet Rf ll;:fd:,"1'g::lL::u:”9'"- remarknhly closelfo the ...l.-ml .,.l.,'..',, ".1 ll”, chluwog lg. ",f;'g'::"g"n Md" h V "wm 'P""' . CHIROPRACTQ, The Social Credit Government now scek- it is to be noted that the number of Bev- A pasging sigh, ”'gf;"ieh::';:"8::""-n1nre "M an ::g;:'"yIM.n3h!d;;I:0n'u:';.kE:l;"d mode In recent years l.'&.m 11! Oran: so-out - Dr. W. ll. Carri" ,u lng re-election in Alberta has held power aniles in the new Parliament will be no N"" '" '" w'"'"' engineering feel; it's the earliest yet in ninety-nins can: out of a hm mm” '"""' '""" "Ht 4 '91 PHI" 3- ,. ML ” i ' - The clmw" mm"! known exam Ia of fre h t I hundred lhsfr motive r is It l' '"'"d '5" '59 ll!-"W1! estab- '- As l'0G'l'I3l mm”-rmr””'” for twenty years The Socmhst Govern. "miner than it was ln the Old One. It The branches rolled and caught being used pin Il'c?llf:Cfoll-fzr nh nothin but tho furth'oriII:.3' tho unn" '""'l"' ""3" Wm Fm'&- ' m”u" 3'" 3- ,a merit of Saskatchewan, and the Union Na- would be quite wrong to assume that Mr. And M. .0", ml down ' technique made famous in ch. happiness and welfare of their '” "'5" Pmluilonlrr mou- '03 , . . - 01 den 8 e M at C H 0' mum ". m n g. which am that can be mg. l. 3.1,, Ohss. B. Ifoqnsld. BA. l G. KFif.fVPicIftlI'gv tionale Government of Quebec. are both Bevan s extreme leftlsm is no longer an 310 trunkiw-sb;ued OWE IBM” mmfumem ":'b:m h mf, l. mg . wgy .4 nying MIIHM in the battle against in. II Ilslnsns II. om mil 3. Ann. M.B.A.l.l--I : marking their eleventh anniversary. On- influential factor in British politics. 0:;"w',::,'j ',',f,ve,'k,,,,w ac, l..,w..v., ll pm,d,d 9,, love. ""9- T"CT"""'TfT"” To-T S-Immertldtv P-3-L l”.",,.. , , , , (. , ti, h , pm W W ml.” lb, llscheo O TI-alnor chmomuu. s.v um" tarlos Conservatives have been twelve , The elm had been. 4232- 1'35, gengftafggzmgdm , ,4 "mu. l... - .. over. What they would ll... l. ll. OIIII 3- DIII 413! Dill 7?" years in office. And finally, there is the me chance to buy Ford Company -Fred Swnyzc in Canadians. l..ll,.,,, ll , l.,,lc.'l deducllon ml emotion which most nlwlls dlI- Pmb MP3? than show. of af- CHARTERED CCOUN1-ZTNTS I A l l '4”-mporwmm ' the Creek ma 1: v le crl th KM” mm M W "M "cum-. ""- U A ' ” Dlberal Government at Ottawa, which on stock at half the marke. pr ce may not "us ' ;..,,,:. ll: alncelenlnvllrllone my "'"'" ml "' '""""' '""' ”' """ '”"" "'””'l' "0? - ' Our-her 14 will pass the twenty-year seem much of a boon to the Clo United , 1.," "M M, M M,” ,m,'.; show unit will-interfere with their aaulu have them. too): fnoddn MGDONAI-D.0IJIRI.Ed 00. W, , Th. Ag. om slm . ll chlldrons growth lulu mature. iI- tmm blrryins: help given without o''''' . cnmsuns . Auto Workers who are reported to have V me inches: :30 th:!a"ear.ly period, m M M ,,,,,,,. hm... l. 5. .,l,,,, M. m cm ........-E.....N.Y--W . , 0. . . . Newfoundland (which was turned down a company "package" which Wherefore so so on! In!!! finds Inylllc-:0 gill" lie of l'llsi'v:rev'v'd.ul:"thlmiI:'.:f :3-er'y l.'.l.".'.'.'.. ilfll. W" M "M 35 at c..l'.l.';Qe.-. ' l I I dad that rlvlle e. A reat man 10"” "Mei 1- Id in-I? -I Britons mode "letter stone axpr Iv. - -. is m 1' M" "' "'6' ' .0 3" mu h p am ll; too 1 Y your labour for that which nth. Winn were available on the can lng ', '.l."?l5..5"f.l.l'"J.'c'iam to :1-I-.u..':: lllutcpxllghllr ” Mg n.'T" u” r ' Qweyef wou on egg. ,. ', ; , ,' i "' i" -"-Y.-,. V -. - - c- n -2---m .- .. x - .....- -- psoac. . n 1. Y P miq null. And his 0:. tbcr M r . -. flfl yal,,..la;,-,.,uy pozupg, of ;. Jscy. A31-nu. ;. Aggjff get lntos pro tab businossso . L 7 two British scientists vis. nr they are smsllnss am if they. And perhaps, dam. .ll ml, H." m”. Ehh me. no ' -0-! III Mini ltalohsnge saw !cmetlIing' new are no: irritating ways they hav mo mull Qlh. men is m---v win a music shaft of mum yr... gmlm ., l,, ,.,,,,d l... mm, ' ' " qsuloueun ussfsmy In-I