- number of admirers-not with THE.EliA'3P'6N Publul; every weak-du morning It 135 Prints linot. cnariouciowu. P1-:.l. by III 'f'lmmIuI Company ptdu N Kin: St. W.. Tomato. filuiiueal Office. 125 Univulity Town Bldg. "(inzn Priuc; Edwul IIIIII Lilo III DEIT Editor. Pnuk WIIkcr Gem-ral Manuel. Inn A. Runoff Member Canndlan Dnlly Navrwllht AIIodIiimi Mfgllltf of un CIuIdIIn PruI Mn-nibcr Audll Buruu oi CirculIll9nI di.1ni-ii ivim.-I at Summcnide. Monl.IguI Ind Alberinu. .-iiilfuuilt-(l As Serum! Class Mail by the Poll Offico l)eparlu:uu. 0IlIwI. Ky Ldlrivf cmnluiteiuwn. Summenide 315.00 per In- Ium. Elsewhere in P. E. I. 39.00. Other Provlncu In! L”. S. 8I2.0il per Innum T ”The strongest. memory ll weaker than the weakest ink." TUESIIAY. SEPTEMBER 6, 1955 .. ....... m E...- Crows Will Survive Thc day when a siraw man in :4. hattcri-d suit might expm-icd to frighten away rrmis is gone for ever. At least that sccius to be the coiisitlt-i'cd opinion of thc National Geographic S icicty. uliosn exports have concluilcil A survey or. the life and manners of the black rascals. Moreover. it is disclosed that during the past ten yours a nurc ber of scientific devices have been niibstitutcd for the old time scarc- criiu ..all to no purpose. Some of those devices were most ingcnious: firoci'ai'l(ci's attached to a long slow burning ropn, plastic snakcs. broad- casting of the recorded calls of crows in disimss. loudspeakers shouting dog; barks. and recorded shot gun blasls. The not result of it all is tha' crows arc now more numerous than in any other period of their turbulent history. In one roost near Baltimore more than 2fl(l.0i'lfl assemble nightly. No-nllcss to say. crows have more than their share of enemies: but they have some friends. too. and 21 great re- spect to their thievish habits but for the clever ways they have of prac- tising them while eluding their pur- siiers and foes. One noted arlniirm was tlw fanietl orator. Henry Warrl Beecher. He once said: ”If men wore tcatlicrs and wings. very fen would be clever enough to he crows." 1'casoiial)l;. ll.- Then: is no f1llPSllOI'l about thc destructive character of crows. No amount of cleverness or charming trait can atone for their lawlcssiicss. To their credit. however. is wholesale eradication of pests. Some experts go so far as to say that farming would be impossible if there were no crows to aid the farincr in post con- trol. Whether the good outweighs the bad is, of coursc. a question Iileanuhile. the crows tlicmsclvcs do not appear to be particiilarly con- cerned about it. They show every in- dication of holding their own, dcspitc the wiles and ingemiity of their op- pros-sors. Animals In Church Most people in this part of the world would he horrified to son cats and dogs and pigs and other i-in-hani- iiig animals strolling into ('lllll't'll for in rcligious scrvicc. Yet. accordiir-.' to the National Geographic Sol-icty. which kccps tabs on everything that f.(()tl-5 on in every pai't of tlic glohc. tho practice is by no mcans uncom- mon in various countrins. In Rica- ico the villagers bring their animals ,and pot birds, all gaily div-sscd for the or-4.-asinn. on St. Anthony's Day (.lan. IT) for what is called thc ”Roiiciliction of the Roasts". Tliv samc practice is obs:-rvcd in sonic parts of Switzcrland on April Bil. St G;-nyvgt-'g Dav. the patron saint of domestic animals in that I'P.!l0ll- In .l(-isenwatilz. Austria, l'arnn-rs drive their heavy working norsc right up to the altar of the villzizzt church for a spccial lilcssiiiu UIIW 6! year in the summer time. This has been going on since IRII. when R serious cpidcmic plagiicd the animnf population of the villagc was overcome, so the villagers lwlir-vc, by the prayers of priest and pvoplv. This partiv-iilar practice will soon bi- ; thing of tho past. Science ll'rH'illiZ caught up with Jcsciiwang, most oi the farm work is now being done bg. tractors; so there will soon be in horses to bless. In l'ltlI'('lflI'fi. I-Inf: land, on the first Sunday after Oct 3, the feast day of St. Francis of tAIsl!il- rahhifs, ducks, chickens. guinea pigs, white mice. in addition to the more common houscholfl pols. my brought to receive the bl:-ssini: ft Lg 3 great occasion. In mivlicvai nines it was the custom for English gantry, anxious to get off to the hunt, to bring their hloodhoiinrls and en thefn to their pews by iron gm lines. The hooks and and gi'gau.bo Iien in some of the 1 Ilthough the dog Qhng since ceased to " t ItIIy. horses Ire - g -quite frequently on i- mean. 'I'hlI' f has been going on for Iix centurion. It Ill maku one think If in old Hebrew cantlclez "0 III yo fowls of the Iir, 0 all ye bouts Ind cattle, bless ye the Lord, praioc 1-lim Ind magnify Him for Iver." A Life Saving Powder While the statesmen and econ- omists of the world are considering what can be done to feed the hungry millions in underprivileged countries, one organization of rather modest prcfcniions is doing something about it. It is the Meals for Millions Foun- dation with hcadquarters in a small office in Los Angeles. Working on the commonly accepted assumption that tlircc out of every four human bciiigs do iioi get enough to eat, the founilaiioii alrcafly has sent 40 mil- lion inctils of soy bean powder. com- monly l(lI()l.i'll as multiple purpose food. to the hungry areas of Asia and Africa. This soy bean powder is a very rcmarkablc food. Made from cheap soy bcans. it takcs about two ounces. valued at three cents. to provide the i-quivalcnl of a meal made up of a quartcr pound of beef. I glass of milk. a baked potato. and I dish of pcas. It lacks only one necessary licaltli vitamin, the C compound. It can be added to any other food with- out doing harm to taste or consist- ency. It can be eatcn either cooked i)I' llflii. To wcll fcd Americans and Cana- dians. and almost any people in the Western world, soy bean powder would sccm a very poor substitute for the hearty mcals to which they are accustomed. But isn't it something to think about that there are hun- dreds of millions of human beings who look upon it as a veritable life- saver? EDITORIAL NOTES A good university to attend. from the economic angle at least, is the I'niversity of Cairo. Students pay 5814 a month for room and board. Tuition fees come to 3345 a year, but students are exempted from paying simply by pleading inability. In ad- dition to all this, they are entitled to free participation in political dem- onstrations and riots. I O 0 Philadelphia, the birthplace of the United States, can claim also to have started thc use of the word "de,mocrat". It derived its name from a Frciich organizatioii after which several Philadelphia clubs hari pattcrncd their activities. Interest- ingly enough, Thomas Jefferson. per- haps the greatest democrat of them all never liked the word and, in fact, never uscd it. I I O A lot is being said these days about the folly of war in this atomic ago. Perhaps no one has put it any hr-ttcr than Earl Russell. the Well knmvii British philosopher. At a rccciit meeting of scientists he said: "The world has to choose between tlicsc two pictures: (ll war, which would dcstroy everything on the earth but a few mosses and fungi, (2) peace. with deserts producing food, poverty abolished. and stand- ards of life for the people of East Asia and Africa equivalent to Am- crica's." I O I We have aquatic champions in Princc Edward Island too. as evi- rlcnccrl by the achievement of Mrs. horoiliy Peters, of Summerside. in s w i m m in g the Northumberland strait from (Tape Tormentine to Bordon. duplicating the feat of Miss Evelyn Henry a few years ago. Mrs. Petr-rs had to swim almost double the nine-mile direct course, owing to strong currents, and she was eleven hours in the water. This was a stren- uous endurance test, and one not to 'w recommended to amateurs. Mrs. fvrs is a swimming instructress, ind it is quite evident that she is "oil qualified for her duties. 0 O C With the reopening of the city schools. I blissful period of irrespon- sibility for the younger generation has passed. But the routine hours will not be too arduous. They will still allow some time for play and, in 1 very short time, theyvwill develop interests of their own. New friend- ships are quickly formed in the class- room, and mutual activities directed towards educational ends can he in- teresting and even exciting when properly encouraged and directed. Meanwhile, the storage batterleu of the body have been repleniahcd. Ind young minds will come keen Ind alert to their new fun Ifter the Iiunacchtu-rcgmnu. , centuries. . - . -...-.. .... .....................x.........'.........L...................-..,. Sentiments Of The Season z 0 X. eu;.'.v The Abominable Snowman BBC Weekly Sumnnry F. R G. Slicpliard. who spent many yczirs as a tea planter in the foothills of the Himalayas. had many opportunities of observing evidence of the existence of the creature which the world knows by repute as the Abominable Snow- man In a talk in the BBC's General Ovei-scas Service he considered the siihjrct which has been given much more publicity in recent years ow- l inn to the increase in Himalayan exploration. Tom Stobart's recent attempt to photograph the Snow- man gave substance to the belief. , ”Righi from one end of the Himal- . ayas to the other the same stories persist and therefore one must admit the possibility - or even the probability -- of the creature's existence. and not dismiss the question as being legendary folk- lore peculiar to any tribe or any particular locality," said Shephard. Pcciiliar footprints left on snow- fields had been seen from time to timc from as far apart as Ladakh near thc Kashmir-Tibet border in the West and the Upper Salween Basin on the Tibet-Burma border in thc l'1- sf "The photographs taken by Eric Shipton in I951 of a rcni:irkabli- set of footprints found at about nineteen thousand feet to the Fest of Mount Everest are perhaps the clearest recorded evidence yet of the existence of a Snowman," he said. it It 0 Belief in the Snowman. or Yeti. was particularly stronr. in Sikkim. on the North border of Bengal. and as long nizn as 1889 strange foot- prints were sccn there by a Eur- opcan. In I925 another European camped on the Sikkim-Nepal border and saw a crratiire whose appear- ance fittcd the general description of the Yeti. generally known in Sikkim as tho Shukpa. In 1937 Sir John Iliiiit camc across footprints in the Scmu Gap in few miles Soiitli-East of Mount Kanchcnjunga. within ten miles of crcaturc was allegedly sccn twelve years earlier. Shcphard himself li ad soon the spot and unfortunately skull and skeleton were missing. The creature was male, covered with thick dark brown hair that was lighter on belly and chest and was between five Ind six feet high, with hands and feet similar to those of I large ape. He and I friend concluded that it was a large Langur Ape. Shepherd. who was then new to the country, had since regretted bitterly that he did not search for the skull and bones. A year or Io Ialer. near the Iame spot, he met I Nepali who Iaid that he had just seen two Shukpal cross the road. The two of them i searched and waited but they found where the I neither wild man nor tracks but . a few milcs from where the front- icrs nf Bhii-an. Sikkim and Bengal . join. ho had sccn and handled the skin of ii rcccnlly killcd rrcnlurc which lie was solcmnly assured was E Shukpa. It had been sklnncd on NoiUdT0nOhPahumc- nothing but disturbed leaves that could have been cnused by any animal. f There was also the creature that made headlines in the Calcutta newspapers in 1938 as the Giant of Belakoba. Enormous footprints were discovered in I small village on the Eastern Bengal railway. in flat cultivated country with quite a dense population. The large clear prints had I stride calculated to belong to a man nine feet high. They appeared on the mud of the paddy fields and were traced in I line for some hundred yards or so when they were lost: they caused I sensation locally for nothing like them had been seen before or since. "So now we have the story of this mysterious creature being seen in the flesh, or his tracks being found in the high snows. the hill forests or in the plains," Shep- hard said, He might be a forest resident who went up to the snows or down to the plains or the snow- man and the forest man might be two different creatures. with the Giant of Belakoba " three. Sceptics sa"l that the tracks were made by bears or some other animals but all such animal foot- prints were well known in the Himalayas and few animals ever walked upright. "So the mystery still remains un- solved - It least to the European. Meanwhile the Abominable Sn':v.'- man. or Jungle Man goes on, happily plodding about his snows or forest. on his own daily business. little thinking what a stir he has caused in the outside world. I, for one. firmly helicvc in his exist- ence." saint Shcphard. Canadian PNRI, Montreal A '.Ilfl8l'lIlE Bmlniiin searching for a lost sliccp beside the Dead Sea stumbled on an ancient cave that proved of priceless religious and historical value to stiidcnls of the blblc. Biblical scrolls 1,000 years older than any known previously were found by the iinspecting "edouin. Some of these will come to Me- Gill Univcrs which has the only such collection in North Am- erica. Sponsors hopc that in time it will he the largest collection outside Jirusalem. Dr R. B. Y. Scott. professor, of Old Testament at the United Theo- 'ogical College, Montreal. who first visited the scene in 1951 Ind hns been ii close student of the manu- scripts. says they throw I strong light on the history of religion in Palestine at I time of cruclIl im- portance to Christians Ind' Jaw! alike. ABSOBBING INTEEEH In I three-part discussion on the subject for the CBC. Dr. Scott. now under appointment to the re- ligion department of Princeton Univ ally. uld the scrolls Ire of Ibsorbinu interest and importance to ordinary folk as well In scholIn. ”""sl. here is the sheer I0- mnnilr aspect of the story: The wandering Bedouin lighting by Ic- cldenl on I library hidden for 10 the indifferent ma- ibe ulonlablng wanna of Iddlfinlr II discoveries h I but when no such Incient mniulcrlpil Ind not been found before. . "second. these finds ilimw I Iiolll In light II III Iiunu I religion in Palestine at I flme of crucial importance to Christians 4 d Jews alike-the period before. during and immediately after the lifetime of Jesus Christ. We find that In important Jewish sect. whose beliefs and prnctices hId many parallels with those of the first Christians. dwell at Qumran within sight of the road by which Jesus walked from Jericho throuizh the steep brown hills to Jerusalem. "The third reason that the find- ing of the Dem sea Icrolls is of more than IntiquIriIn interest is that they throw new light directly on the text of the bible. The EI- Icnes-ilie JewiIh-Iect with which . we mIy provisionally identify the community owning flu IcrollI- wu devoted to study of the In of in of path of the Ihlrew bible. Every book of the Old TeIfImenf II I-eprIIe.l.ed exccpt the book of Esther . . . but of.moIf of them my Icauu-ed frIgmIntI hIvI lur- vlved the" long The naming Ibupberd flrIf fl-id was in IN7 in I cut. Ind ofhcr cIvII Iubcequcutly were found in the frnckleu diutici r t POM Inna IN HAVING FIELDS Bright iron. now, seems brutal in the fields. The keen knives Ihlter and III blosloms full: Grasping steel fingers rub and wlndrow gold. And for their bales. Iters devour III. A part of summer'I beauty h Inch bIle II carried off to dark Ind cob- webbed bays. Nover to know the subtleties of time; The slow blight and the worm. and frost-struck days. When winter aura Ire Howers in the field Of night at windows where the cows look up, The stnbled herd will feed on golden hay Tasting of daisies and tweet bui- lercup. ' -William D. Mundell in bile New York TimeI. rim mon- Taxes And. Revenue t Ottawa Journal) In his budget of last April Mr. Harris. Minister of Finance, an- nounced personal income tax re- duclions of between 12 and 13 per- cent. for more than four-fifths of III taxpayers, effective July What has resulted? Well in uly the first month of lower taxes. re- venues were 10 percent higher than In July 1954 under higher taxes- So we have here I concrete de- monstration of the fact that high taxes do not necessarily produce the maximum of revenue. but that on the contrary a tax can be so high as to diminish revenue. to check the initiative in business which is the source of revenue. In other words it is not the tax rate that counts but the tax yield, and if the tax is so high as to stifle business there is less for everybody, including the Govern- ment. Yet this simple proposition. seem- ingly as clear as that two and two make four. has a way of escaping finance ministers. Terrified of de- ficils. and apparently bent on mak- ing surpluses the proof of thcir financla genius. they insist stulr bornly that high taxes must pre- vent the first Ind ensure the last. Perhaps Mr. Harris with evi- dence now before him that lower taxes do not necessarily mean less revenue will in the future be less timid about tax cuts. And if with in I canyon some 11 miles from the first discovery. The area later was shown to have been inhabited by humans In far back as 4000 BC. Du umenu found dated from Ibouf 600 BC to muss AD. A third cnche. nearer the flu! cnvea, gave up I jar of manuscripts and I bronze scroll. Study of these 1croIlI still II in preliminary Iugea llld Dr. Scott. But, he adds. "already It iI pos- sible to draw I conclullon in gen- eral erma witch will be reassur- ing to Iny who wander if iliIII In dhcovoriu will lead to mIi-kod clungcs in the fImlliIr Old Iluncni. It II f.hlI: The infer Icribct did their work well. The Hebrew bible which wu uud by tho Qumnn community in the lime U Join. In: Iuenitally the ume II '1 the IIM manulclpia on which we bIvI Ind to depend up until now." OI-Grlfml If. I ' rv AERIALS If you Ire going In purchuo I T.V. set this winter plcue nuke In-Ingemanls now for the Icrlni In eondltioiu IcrlIlI Ire dlfflcd! PIIIII order now to Ivnlii delay. BOWLAN RADIO Medically Speaking Herman N. Bundesen. M. D. YOU CAN'T BE A WORRIEB AND KEEP HEALTHY. T00. .. Take it easy, slow down, Ilop worrying. I Time and again I've tried to put across the importance of avoiding anxiety as much as pos- sible. I have cited innumerable diseases - heail trouble is the most obvious-which are caused or made worse by stress. Diarrhea is another. While diarrhea usually is al- trihutcd to some infection or food which docs not agree with you. there is such I thing as nervous diarrhea. FEAR AND WORRY Proper functioning of your in- tcslinal tract depends upon your nervous system. Fear, worry. aux- iety-these all produce excess ac- tivity of the giistro-colic reflex and increased action in the in- testines. Ordinarily. this condi- tion lasts only a short time. but in some instances. especially in anxiety neuroses. it may continue for a long period. Frequently this anxiety pre- vents your food from being di- gested properly and your bowels function after every meal. Your diet won't affect the condition much but you should avoid hot drinks. If your nervousness continues. youve got to see your doctor. He can help calm you down and overcome your anxiety. And this is essential before you can do much to relieve your diarrhea. Reassurance might be the best medicine he can give you. How- ever. he will also prescribe bro- mides or phenobarbital. He may even give you some codeine phos- phafe pills once in a while. They are convenient to fake since you can carry thcm around with you. Since worry probably has caused you diarrhea in such cases. don't make your condition worse by worrying about it. QUESTION AND ANSWER N. S I have mucous colitis. Could it cause itching around the rectum? Aniiwer: It iI not likely that mucous colitis in itself would cause itching Iround the rectum, The itching might be due to fungous infection of the tissues in. this area, to nervous disorders. or to bacterial infection. You should have In Ixaminalion made by your doctor so that the cause may be discovered and prop- er treatment instituted. Current Misuse: tsaull Daily Star) While few of us claim to be Simon Pure in our use of English. most of us cannot fail to shudder at some of the current misuses now in vogue. As one horrible example we would quote the word. if one can call it that since it appears to be mainly an expression of ignorance. "lrrcgardless”. We are not. very sure of the spelling. since this word. presumably either an ad- jective or an advert). completely contradicts itself. and there seems little sense in worrying about the spelling anyway. To many who have heard Billy Graham. his closing benediction: "May God Bless You real good", spoils much of the sound oratory which preccdes it. As a Baptist clergyman, the Rev. Dr. Graham must realize that in saying this. he is qualifying the blessing of God. as well as breaking several Eules of grammar. lilayhq the homepW' effect of this grammat- ical monstrosity outweighs all other considerations. but we. per- sonally have our doubts about this. Frequently in conversation and elsewhere we hear similar mis- takes; the use of an adjective where an advert) should be and the misuse of verbs. We hear of "accidents which cost the car own- ers considerable." We rcnd of em- inent lawyers snyinil "Where was you and the kids" and rcccntly I magistrate who asked: ”How come you was impaired?" PC0910 who have had the ad- vantage of a university education should be able to set an example Ol "10 nrnncr use of the English lnnszuage. As it. is, the apparently general desire to he one of the boys. niifwcighs fhc instinct of ed- ucated men to speak and writ; correctly. 1955 limldlly he could at the same time discover that one other way to have more net revenue is to eliminate waste, to save I few dol- lars here and there, we might ex- pect a real budget next March or April-the sort of thing that would he better than the kind of budget we get when its character is do- termlned mainly by its distance from an election. The Age Old Story For what thanks can we render '-" G03 llalll for you. for III the Joy wlierewltli we joy for your IIkeI before our God: night Ind NOTES BY THE WAY Each generation IIII itI owl non- ialgia. Thirty yeIr'I from now people will be uying that they don'lf make synthetic fIbrlcI. de- hydrated frult Juicn Ind quick- frozen dinner: the way they used to.-Emonton Journal Forest fires rain the price of lumber. They reduce the fee: that the Department of Land: Ind For- esls collects from the lumber in- dustry for the citizens of Ontario. They decrease the populations of game and fish available to citizen and visitor. The man who starts I forest fire is taking money from his own pocket and burning it. -Toronto Globe and Mail No one pushes I stranger Inlde at l doorway to gain entrance first. No one hogs the middle of the sidewalk. No one blarec loud- ly in I fellow pedeItrlan'I ear to force him in yield I right of wny. These are the tricks of iII-man- nered motorists however. And their bad manne II can easily and isn death for someone.-Vancouver un. A West German steel company plans to build I plant in Regina. Sask.. which will manufacture pipe for the prairie oil and gas industry. Only I few years ago. Germany's factories lIy in ruins. It is evidence of GermIny's ro- markable recovery In I great in- dustrial nation that the country in now able to help Canada develop its own induItrieI.-Ottawa Citizen There linger: in mankind. Il- mosi like In instinct. I feIr of starvation, Ind if II probably this which plays an unconscious part in compelling the over-eating ha- bits of many. But in the midst of abundance of modern civilization starvation II rcmofn Ind can't be confuaed with the roll condition in which the dread knowledge that food cannot be obtained plIys upon the mind and wrecks havoc with the body. - Hamilton Spectator Prince CIIIIII wII Ioncwinl chagrined who on Iutering I Info In London. bound for Portsmouth. he found that "there II no engine." It was an electric train. His Royal Highnen protested that angina "ought to puff.” We Igroc. The trains in tnvcllod in when we were his Ige puffed. Progress Ind science will no doubt dictate cl- ectric. Diesel or Itomic engines. but for the sake of sentiment and the children they Ihould Ill be fit- ted with puffm. bolls Ind old- time whistles. Puff! Puffl.Puffl- --Too-oot! - London Free Pull one of CInadI'I most overlook- ed areas now II taking ifs place on the path of progre-V The GIIpc Peninsula II the site of I lune copper mine development. This huge Ii-ea, bounded by the st. LIw- rence and the Bay of Chaleur, points its rugged and blunt nose out into the broad Gulf. It in I place of majestic beauty. It con- tains I harbor site equalled by I few in the world. It has I wenlth of timber and now, apparently. Il- so I known wealth of minerals. Except for the fisher folk in the villages which dot its IhoreI. it has been little known except ti tourists. Its surface has been scarcely scrapped by prospectors. The Peninsula now is awakening, to add its natural strength to that of our country. - Windsor Star Hun-lcInc rain is mil the re- cord for density in the United States. The rainiesf Ilngle min- ute in the weather bureau's his- tory occurred on April 5, 19i"l. when in 60 seconds almost two- rage 4.” The Guardian ...........AA..ggg,.gg thirds of In inch fell at 0-un., Cunp, Clllf. Holt, Mu.. i'.. I . 41 minutes on June 22. 19.2, . drenched by I foot of rain, . I drenched by I foot of rain. 5.; Smithport. Pa. by 30.3 inches .. four Ind I half hours on July .., 1942. Among high figures for ill; Northeut. which was utterly um". prepnred for what hit it in the last few dIyI. Ire: Bostou.I1.9i inches of rain in 40 hours. and Hartford 12.12 inches in 24 hours. ' -New York Herald Tribune. The world never is without ii; trouble spots. Among those that ex. lIt today II Goa. I Portugesemld seaport on the went coast of India It haI recently been the scene of rioting and disturbance. inspired by Indian nationalists who resent I Porlugese colony on their son, Goa was appropriated by Portugal in 1510 It I time when India was fIlr gnmo for Western nations with colonial Ind territorial ambitions. 'But today. India is an independent. sovereign country. The British and the French have left. Only Portu. gal refuses to give up its tiny (1,500 square miles) ,coIony which con. Iius principally of the city of Goa with its half million population. It II easy to understand India's re. sentment. The feeling among me Indians is about what it would be in the United States if Portugal (or my other foreign powerl held the city of Baltimore Is I colnnv and refused to give it up. - Detroit Free Press Th llllllh hnguuge, even when well uIcd. lIIvoI much to be de. sired. It lIckI the precise qualities of Punch. Often -we have to use I phrase to uy what it should be possible to say in one word. Also, many words have varying mean. lugs. Io they on be ambiguous or mlllcading. Conutantiy we I r. creating new words. often with in. different Iucceu. to overcome this handicap. We use. for instance. that awful word "baloney" to.de- Icrlbe I cortuin kind of t.Ilk. or we term it "rubbish." "aoui,i.. tIIk” or Iometbing IIII. Our In- coltorl had I better word. They would cIIl it "gommerll." That word meant Ilmpletnn or fool. When used to describe somebody"; chatter. there wII no mistaking its meaning. "A lot of gommeril.” was more than idle cbIttIr. blather, or baloney. 1! Fl! foolish talk. surli II only I fool would utter. A lot of people still tIIk "gomme ll.” only the word to define it has pas- gr from oi: lInguIgc. - Windsor AUTHORIZED p Mumi llcensoil Vllrlng contractors REFRIGERATION WI Iell. install and ser- vice refrigerated countei-I. wIlk-in coolers. Iliio House- hold refrigerators. C. G. E. VIcuiun Cleaner and Polisher Rental Service. MOTORS & APPLIANCES We sell and repair .Ill motorn. washers and electrical appliances. Storey Electric 175 Grafton Street P ONE 3287 Tirndiissionii CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bell. Matheson & Foster 150 Richmond st. J. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. OPTOMETRI STS G. F. Hutcheson dz Son F. G. nurcmcsou. no 165 Queen St. Phone 123! 53 GrIft.on Si. Dial 8321 ii. A, F .0, - 1.1.3. J. A. Can-uthers. R.0. am. .'.i"c':l3.'.'ln3c. lam. in Kent st DH! 1' Allison M. Glllls. LL.B. Byron J. Grunt 0-D- uo Richmond St. pm 4747 13 Kent 84- 9'” 5”) A. Walthen Gaudet, LL.B. Ill Grnftau st. .1. s. Taylor, n.o.'T corner Kent O Queen Sis. Emnlm Bldg. office ms: Home 41L Palmer & llaslam -w H. J. Malmn. R.0. bulk of Non scoua Bldg. Mont-W - pp” '3: i M3th”0"- Peaks 0 CHIROPRACTOR NICIIOIBOIII fj 175nGrIflon Street "I P ID” 3:: ll" C”'"f,'L, W, J. A. Macanlgan Chas. Ill Bicllln MncPlIee 0 Trninor :' in onion st. pm as: n. M Id, ILA.- UII Stcqun II Ill G. Keith Plckard. 3. Arch. M.ll..A.l.C.. Eummerlide. P.l:.l. cs rlouetowl. rnemys -Ml ;',-nun. DIII ma . CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS your faith? dIy pnyi eedlnl III I IIIDONALD CUBRIE I 00. might leenlyollruflcc. yud 'mig'l.ei Oink III. ciuiaoamn um ml '”""' ""' ""”" " ' L” " II. n. DOANE I comm in am: 00:10 pa. ciumumn nun . . . :41 awn" F..t”:?.'...”"". "" '"' ......... ......... ' ” ”” C V IIIIIO C D C eighth World Boy Scout 'JlmIIIIrOI hm" um mind”. 3. ""!F9”s"';f;f; .'”"”.L' annulus Ill I-mm um: om 5821 JImeI H. MIrIlInd of the Onurio Pravlnclnl Police said 'l'liurIdIy. Countcrs rogiuered ao.m vIhlclII entering the cImp. gltllllfllol. insult It wllul. WW”. 1NsunANcn nvnnunx , All co. Liiiim p. J t..,;'