He Guamfiatt l ; "Cluck: rmm Edvul mun Ubo an nur- " l If-trim 'Ublllfl!d every week - day nonluu II II: Prlnco lured. :n.;luuu.awu, F. 1-5. I.. by the Ilmmmn COIIIPIRJ Lil. It hing SL W.. Toronto. nugu-gal office. 225 Lnlleruty Tutu Bill. Ellllor. I-ranll Walker Grneral hlanagcr. r..n A. aunlcu Member tanadlnnlully M-vupaPd' Publunen Animation Member ul Ihe Caliaulan Pith Mcnlber Audll Bun-.ul ul tlrrulanalrl lulu-es at aummemlia. Montague and Alberto- Auulorlzed I! second titan Mall by mu Post Ollie! .. y H rum. - "The strongest memory is weaker thaI Uepdrlmtnl. oilauu. clllm Vharlulteluwu, Surnlueilide Slam pen I-- Elsewhere in cut sriuu 0 lithe: Prmm-.-on In U. s. sl2.o0 pcr anllum the weakest ink." '-"&.alll.xll.siv.T.iL'l.it ls."l9:.ll g Eleven Years Ago This date, llii.i. the first atomic litlllll) in the lllstory of lnlulkind was cXpl()(lPd at .'l.I-ill am. at the Maillo- -A gordo air base in the dcszrrl llll l . mil c s .-oiiilll-.l-i of Xllllitliiciuilc. - Now Klcxico. The i,W(ivlUslUll tzauscd a flash that l.i up the llloilntaili pl-aks ton null-. ;iil'a;.'. Tlieii clinic i a lrelncndoli-. sllili-illit?(l roar ac- -. I-oinpaiiicd in ;i toriizidolikc biirsi of wind. Wllcre the tower had stood . there ll as a LIi'Plll boiling. Slll'KlllE l-lollll of many colours rising into tllc i the S -and city of .'ii1l,ill)li inhabitants, felt its filll fury on August 6 following. It was i said tllat the construction of this bomb was so superior to that used render that Tile bombs knocked Japan out of World War 'Dvo and undoubtedly hastened the capitula- tion of Nazi Germany. But it was a grim decision for the leaders of the , free nations to make. The explosions j killed 70,000 persons 0 u t r i g h t, I ” ' left i and at XNOU ity. Iv:B.,.u. ..-;..:';:-ta .. I .-.- . Nlll2il'0 feel ill hcight. model obsolete. chine. dust and ashes. parison. Great Britain. heat, was a hilgh crater. Nagasaki on August 9. Hiroshima as to nded 120,000 others and 290,000 more homeless. The knowledge of atomic energy , in 1045, which produced these world- shaking results, may be compared with the knowledge of electricity in the time of Benjamin F r a n kl i n. Franklin proved that the destructive lightning bolt was electricity, but i man at that time had at his disposal only the feeble static electric ma- L Scientists say there is no reason to suppose that the conquest Ind utilization of atomic energy will not duplicate the history of electric- It would be unwise to pursue this parallel too far, for the differ- ence in the use to which the two dis- coveries have been put has already set them widely apart. Nevertheless, the progress made in the peacetime use of atomic power has been lllar- t . vellous indeed, and perhaps it is true l that its catastrophic possibilities as l ' a war weapon are already acting as a deterrent against its use by ally nation for aggressive purposes. Therein lies the best hope of , harnessing atomic energy to the ser- l vice of mankind, and of ushering in a golden age in which war will be. unthinkable because, in the space of l I few hours after its outbreak, noth- i ing would remain of the principal cities of the contending powers but Dante's vision of Hell would be paradisaical by com- (Tivilization is fighting des- perately for time in which to banish this nightmare from the minds of men, and no other issue is compar- able to ill urgency and importance at the present time. Press Legislation Tile i ' - l - lb- shered in. non atomic age idt (ell u. intrusion" begins. conscientious could easily find himself entrapped by an arbitrary interpretation of that part oft hand, he mig the side of ov turn, would neccssarily insipid and dull. (illce the right of cellsorship is pill illio the hands of a quasi-judicial "Ant horily” judgcnlent t aiitllority may be-mthe ll'a.l' lb 009'” ed to all sort. veil). ix ell make the cure worse than the lllsca.-e against wllicll it ll as aim- Takillg one thing Willi ailotilcr, alillougll doubtless the intention he- ! hind the proposed law is l)l"dlS'tlll0l" l ed. till, one feel i of lliscussion at Westniillsicr bofure ll becomes established. is inclined to believe that ill its pre- sent form. as reporicrl by Rcutcrs. it will not pass the sharp .scI'L1llll.V of the Commons. Waste Of Time One cannot help feeling a touch cll'?llllcllll01'9. In 0 l'9 I ll 3 ll 40-(mil of pity for those Pllysical Education In place of experts at the Llniversity of Florida the toner, conlplcicly vaporized by , who in their goodness of heart spent many months in devising a new kind Even the mosf editor in the world he bill; or, on the other ht be tempted I6 err on er-caution; and that, in render his paper un- - h 0 we v e r wise in be members of that s of abuses which might s that there will be a lot lllllccli. one of tennis for the benefit of elderly l'lll'f)slilmR. a Japanese aI'iTl.V base 1 folk wllow or so they thought - . would appreciate s 0 m e t ll 1 ll g less strenuous t their time ban the orthodox game. Tlley might just as well have saved and effort, for reports coming in from various sources. b0lh American that iheiri just the ill course, if were as we tion 30 and active as tl It was young or curred to us travel "one is on i i medical no i EDIT l develop he newspaper and Canadiail. indicate ntendcd beneficiaries will have none of it. The few realistic souls who have tried the revised version say it is ing for men and women 50 years old or older; but on a broad front the psychological reaction is anything but favourable. And. of the benevolent experts ll versed in the intricacies of the human story as tlley are in physical culture, they would have known better than to suggest to 50 and 60 year old men-not to men- 60 year old women-that they are neither as young nor as iey uscd to be. a sensible idea for young men to think up (they must be it would never have oc- them), but unfortunately it is not by good sense that most of the other side of middle age, but rather by the theory that ly as old as one feels" - which, incidentally, has n e it he 1' r psychological warrant. ORIAL NOTES (Tommenting on the offer of the Soviet Government to help Greece economy, the official Pravda stated th at F l "true to its principles the Soviet any terms Evidently, is no impr 5(),ti(lt) left recent st came to Tllcre is no country in the world Where the freedom of the press is more I.ealou.sly guarded than it is in It, therefore, comes as a hit of a surprise to hear that i the House of Lords is sponsoring legislation which, if enacted. conceiv- ably lnight curb that essential free- dom considcrably. , standards proposed in the bill no fairmindcd person will find fault. In l the main they are standards which , reputable newspapers in Britain and elsewhere accept readily; and there is no reason why sensation-mongen lng papers should be permitted to disrcgard them. The fault, if fault there he. lies in that section of the bill which would prohibit "unneces- sary intriision on the privacy of the , Queen's subjects". L In theory, of course. that pro- hibition, too, is fair enough. The legitimate business of a newspaper is to publish news of public interest. not to pry relentlessly into the pri- vate lives of citizens: and it is against the sort of newspaper that , tIII9I delight in doing the latter that the proposed legislation is directed. But, it isn't always any to tell where honest reporting in the pub- It Mum: and: Ind "unnca.-arr Iponlibillty. With the ethical Tile llighlx ays tensive fa all ribuicd lions, diso before a N l court. The boys were wasn't as singing in sovereignty and national this country and over 20,l)()tl to the U. S. A. To off- set the emigration 20,000 foreigners country, mostly from Balkan states. wrong side of ing and loss of control are other fac- tors fol' accidents along iviih failure to yield the right-of-ivay, improper passing, improper care of inierscc- lieu of fines Union does not present Greece with could affect her dignity". the new editor of Pravda ovemcnt over the former that one who is now Foreign Secretary. West Germans are not emigrat- ing in as big numbers as formerly. In I934, 60,000 left their homeland for foreign fields; last year only . Of tllcsc, according to a atistical report, 13,336 slightly to some extent, came into the I O I Oillario l)cp.'lrilllcili of which ill a i ll I a in s ex- cilltics for the study of motor accidents, reveals that one. oil! of every four mishaps can be to dr i v i ng on the the road. Spccd- beying of railway cross- ing signals and unsafe equipment. Three young lads who appcared ew York magistrate on a disorderly conduct charge were ordered to come back a fciv (lays later prepared to sing a song in penalty being paid. in or imprisonment, the dismissed. It probably easy as it sounds; for public is not a strong point of the type of teenager who is likely to get in law. That view of the marked that to sing convinced him that had learned trouble with the seems to have been the magistrate. too. He re- the boys' willingness they I lesson in social re- I l Conference Results By Fraser Wighton LiNl)().V tfleutcrsl -- The nine (Kllllmonivculth prime ministers who ended a 10-day conference on world affairs here Friday felt it was one of the most ilseful held since the Second World War, au- thoritative sources said today. In virtually all crucial foreign affairs issues there was more agreement than disagreement. and there was a large degree of unity among statesmen represent- ing counirics with such different interests, llicy said. The one snag on foreign policy agreement was on recognition of (iommunihl China and its admis- sion tu the l'nited Nations. Bril- ain, India. Pakistan and Ceylon give diplomatic recognition to China while Canada. Australia, New Zealand and South Africa do not. AVOIDS CHINA ISSl'E The conference was dominated by a searching analysis of Rus- sia's lnl-!'nll(7IiS toward the non- Ciinrlliillisi world following the denunciation of Stalin by the new Soviet lcadcrs. Thcy unanimously warned that there would be no lasting peace unless the major causes of international tension were renloved. A immulliqlie Friday after the nu tings dealt vlllh world prob- lems area by area. But it avoided any mention of the controversial qucslion of admitting Communist China to the UN. Tile confcrcnce agreed that Cey- ion could slay in the Common- wealth once it became I republic like India and Pakistan. Britain also agrcd to hand over her naval and air force bases in Cey- lon lo the Ceylonese government. The conference also spent I large amount of time discuss- ing Commonwealth relations with Japan. Meanwhile, press comment by British paper: called the confer- ence everything from successful to the "most disappointing yet held." NO MORE HOPE The London Times calls meeting "fruitful." It says the premiers spent much time dis- cussing ihe Soviet Union's changed tactics and "in spite of their differing politics, varying from non-Ilignr.c::t to close alli- ance for common defence, they reached broad agreement." The Daily Telegraph says that if the Commonwealth was to re- lain its vigor "it needs more than an annual injection of soft words. The problem of maintaining its unity will grow greater as new members add to its diversity." The Manchester Guardian says "it looks as if this has been I humdrum conference. It has cer- tainly ended with I humdrum statement." The Daily Express says the con- fcrcnce "must rank as one of the most disappointing )et held . Little enough has come olit of previous conferences but at least there was a measure of hope. Now there seems to be no longer the even hope." jine Ari Ofdiaising Family Simeon Stylltu In the Christian Century Ynlc lllliversily has announced ll new dcgrce to be given ncxt ycar -- doctor of fine arts. I hasten to offer some suggstions for con- fcrring the new degree. I would like to see a few par- ents gel the degree of doctor of fine arts for the line art of raising a family, and educating them. on a fixed salary which every year is gelling ncarrr and ncrlrcr in the vanishing point. Pcrhzlps sonic oi lhese couplcs uould bc clcrgymcn aild Ihcir ilivcs. if thrrc is a liilcr art than this, I would like to know what it is. Soillcollc once ask:-ti (Qcn A. W. (irccly, the cxplurcr, what he rcgllrlled as his greatest achieve- mclll lie said, "liaising and ed- lI('alIlIL' six children on an army officcrs pay." if that is true of I gcncllll, how about I captain or I scrgc.'lllt” Sonic coillliil-llccnlcni day I would llkc lo arisc and solemnly inlune ”Mr. president. I have the honor to prcsrni for the degree of doctor of fine arts. Mrs. John Doe, For I5 ycalt. she has taught the class of young buodlllms in the corncr of the Sunday school Ind lived through it So did the hood- Illms Danlcl in the lion's den wn child's play compared to Mrs. Doc holding down Ille 'wnys' class." ;SonleAEiilil.sll uomnn once said, ''I have always liked a lllallly man and I womanly woman, but I never cared much for I boily boy." And these were the bniliest boys that ever boiled. Teaching them is truly a fine art. I would like to see a dog. 0 of doctor of fine arts awarded in mnthcrs who have passed I piece of clothing down through five or six diflicrcnt children. and each time it emerged in I new style. We are told in Yale's announce- ment that the degree is to be given for creative work. Bclicve me, this Work with children's clothing is creative with a capital (2 The com nr pair of trousers or dress is ml always Brooks Brollicrs or Chris- tian Dior after its fourth lllcarllat- ion. bill it gets by. Tun women I have often ad- mired and wnndl-rcd about are Mrs. Samuel Wcslcy, the mother of John Wesley and is other child- ren. and Mrs. Josiah Franklin, the mnthcr of Bcnlamin Franklin and 16 other cllildrcn. lf those two could ever have met they would have had plenty to talk Ibout. What A rrsearch job it would have been to trace down . dreng through six or seven girls, or to record the natural history of 3 small pair of trousers Is it travel- led from Saucl to John to Charles What crcnllve achievements in fine Iris those were! Gather Ye tWlvulipcg Free Prenlli The end of the school term - "W lwkimllng of the slimmer holi- (lays: jibe line that separate: them is invisible but they are itorlds apart, and I.'vfl.000 boys and Hills in Manitoba havl lust nccnmnlisllcd the rxhllarllilng lcnp .l.ifc is one long ucrics of hr. glnninlzs and rnds: of doors that open into other rooms and close behind us. And surely few of these transitions are made with lighter hurls than is the mic thIl tran- slates the schoolboy from his weary desk to summer”: joys. lie in not likely. on his day of (rent. om. to cast I backward glance If tilc swlnlzini door as it shuts him off lorcvcr from another vear of ylutil. ' He will look back later on. when the disappointments. frufrntlonu Ind anxieties that loomed so om- lnously in hill boyish eyes have, in the long perspective of tbe passing years, nllrunk to mInIge- can also Ind Ion their due. The Rosebuds poets may be right iillfl call the days We spend in school life's Kflldell days. but perhaps the ills. "'9 "V 'l"" Dreclolls metal taken "" 3 f"'hl'l' Klaw when seen in retmspcci But rcirospection mans pastime, The boy let out of school hair more important matters on his mind. The lovely days of summer stretch endlessly before him, created for his spec- ial benefit, to make the most of, "9 is loo vounri. too busy being IIIVP. to be nddened bv the lllmlillit that summer's day; are flcellnl and must fade like sum- mcrs flowers. It is enough for him that they are sweet. Youth has I wisdom of its own. MODERN METHODS in the Sbglbdom of Kuwait. newly rich by oil dovelopnlout, some Sbeiiu now pul-no mg .3. Clflll lwrl of fnlconry from lim- oulinel. is an old i MORE THAN A HOUSE More than I house is this. Do you remember How wood was chosen and i atone! lifted and laid; How it was panned the woud be half in sunlight. Half in the andienl maplels shade? Many a one stops by, half journey done. homu Tile bare ground rolls now green to pansy borders; Nasturtium: march straight down from the opened door. Remember the plan”? Though the handful's given to callers The sturdy blooms would grow the ITIOFC. Many I seed grows here for I friendship": need. Here on the top of this little hill- side, masons. Carpenters. growers made all for I view. Here it was planned that friends would be brought nearer; Seeing their houses, we are part of them, too: Many I hand waves greeting: over one land. - Joseph .iocl Keith in the Clristian Science Monitor. PUBLIC FORUM I'll! IIOIIIIII II open (0 lb. dllelb plan by correspondent: of quulloru II lllerelt. The Gulrdlhn duel In Ines-urlly Indorn Ibo aplnlol If urmpouaum. LOW FLYING PLAY ES Sir,--There is I! duly ollr news- papers owe to their subscribers which no otllcr organilations can readily fulfill. It is In protect them against serious dangers that are evident. Any sound reasoner who reads the news of this time and sees the destruction of life and properly by the explosion of Ieroplancs can realize the danger to which we here in Charlotte- town are exposed by low flying pianos night and day. It will be too late to warn of this menacc after it has occurrcd and we will be left to bury ollr dead and take our loss of property. I am. Sir. etc. .lA.Vl P. KF.l.l.Y -;'.:vTRude Of Nowlan (Sydney Post-Rccordi The opposition at Ottawa made a series of suggestions as to "Wills Of iilflllllz the coal industry. The Government struck the suit- gcsiions doull Mlncs Minister Prllrlham was adopt in explain- ing why the (lovcrnnlcnl doesn't l”""- I" ll" anything about coal. The Government is exhausted from its exertions in behalf of pip- Ing natural gas from the high plains of Alberta to the industries of Central Canada. It is obvious that the fuel de- bate in the Commons was as an annoying buzz in the Prlldham 03” Pmilressivc Conservative and tl(lF spokesmen pleaded in V3” "W H Dositivc policy about coal-for a national fuel policy that would have some benevolent concern for coal as well all oil and Kris. But it would be incor- not to say that the Government lacks a policy. Plalnly, its policy is based on I smug i,eilcf that it has done all it need do about rnnl. Supporlcrs of the Liberals herc and elsewhere. whether they think so or not. encourage the Government's longing to have talk about coal cease. It is foolish to expect any other attitude from 3 weary administration. How rude of Nova ScotiI'I George Nowian. to suggest that the Government "stop horslllg Iround" with the experiment to produce I cnalflred gas turbine engine. fake it out of the univer- Slly laboratory. Ind give it In hon- Ml I0 goodness trynul on rIlls. llonvenr. it might prove to be ll success. and think of the dismay that would be to the fuel oil peo- ple. Ind of the ernbnrraumut to Chulia Gilli; who doesn't bIlievI the engine would require Inoilnll coal to make it worth svhtlo. But many coal-fired gas turbine any- in: would be decidedly worth while to tbo out IGUIIT. -fmVMediccllly' L Speaking CURRENT FAD MAY DAMPER MEDICAL USEIOF IIYPNOSIS All this talk about Bridle Murphy has I lot of doctors wor- ried. They fear tbnt the clue it bar crented might setback the undu tanding of hypnosis II I yauabe therapeutic too. The met I flu hI1.e which has arisen around hypnosll-Ind it's happened before-tends to ob- Icure the serious efforts being made to volume the in leaf po- tential o this phenomenon. MEDICAL AID - Hypnosis has been used in the field of medicine for A long time. It was used in surgery In far back as 1321. With the Iid of. hypnosis, painless tooth extract- ions were reported in medicIl journals around 1837. In the following years, interest dwindled but recently it has been increasing. Today hypnosis is be- ing used by various doctors in I variety of cases. And they gen- eraly report that it is being used successfully. CAESAREAN SECTION Onlya short time ago a young Chicago mother delivered a child by Caesarean section with hyp- nosis as her only anesthetic. She says she didn't feel a thing. A group of Texas doctors re- cently reported that they used hypnosis to help keep alive severe- ly burned patients. They say that hypnotherapy served not only as an anesthetic but through it they were Ible to stimulate tremendous appetites in their patients and to get them to exercise painful areas. In another field the New Eng- land Journal of Medicine tells how hypnosis was used to stop I cough which had persisted for eight days and which was bringing I 14-year- old girl near death. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Hypnotherapy also is beiluz used in treating multiple sclerotic pat- ients. This September, Tufts Univer- sity plans to sponsor a postdoctoral course in hypnodontics. Hypnosis is proving I valuable scientific aid. We are just begin- ing to discover it.-l possibllitier Io let's not hamper the work. QUESTION AND ANSWER H.P.: What causes hiccup in I baby? Answer: Hircup is a spasm of the large muscle that separates the chest and the abdomen. In babies, hiccup usually comes on right after feeding and. in most cases, lasts only a few moments. OUR YESTERDAY5 From The GuIrdiIn Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Jay 16. mil The new Canadian National Rail- ways carferry, "Charlottetown", will arrive Thursday at Borden. where she will shortly be placed in service between Borden and Cape Tormentine. His Honor Lieutenant Governor Dalton and Mrs. Dalton yesterday afternoon entertained the visiting delegates of th. Women": Instit- ule It a tea at Government House. There were present 350 guests. The first Gllwell St-olltmasiers' camp over to be held on Prince Edward Island will have In It- icndancc of about 32. according to deputy camp chief F.F..L. Coombl of Ottawa. Ont. TEN YEARS AGO (July 16. I946) The appointment of Lieutenant Colonel W.W. Reid. D.S.0., ED to command the )7 Reece. P.E.I. Regiment, Royal Canadian Ar- moured Corp.-i llieserve Force) has been announced by Headquar- lcrs M.D. 6. Two blistercd tubes which fin- ally cracked to throw gallons of water on the boiler fires necess- itated the partial shutting off of electrical power throughout the City on Saturday- The appninlmeni to command the Zlitll l.. AA. Regiment. RCA lrcserve Forcci of Lieut. Col. G. G.K. Pcake. DSO.. F.D., of Char- ottetnwll has been announced by military authorities It MI). 6. Halifax. Scots Abroad GLASGOW RI ll Scots have tanned mlt so freely across the world that today there If! about four times as many peo- ple overseas with scots blood Is there are still in Scotland. The continuing drift south of the border to England and abroad is causing official concern here. A former Scottish registrar-gem cral, J. G. Kyd. forecasts I Scot- land of the future inhabited by the aged and infirm. and without In adequate industrial system. In the first six post-war years Scotland lost 181,000 people by emigration, and the outward How continucs at I high level. "She is fast losing the trained young personnel so necessary for the future prosperity of her indus- try." observed Kyd. ALL OVER WORLD In the last Soyears 1,000,000 Scots have left their native land to seek fortunes elsewhere. 11 lg estimated that the number of peo- ple with Scots blood living in other Darts of the earth must number more than 20,000,000, 'ccordlIK lo the last report by the registrar - general, Scotland, wjlth I Dopuiation today of 5,123,- l' ll Hllllll rlpldly. If the rat; c o n t l n ll e I unchanged. by 1971 c than one in every eight scou will be I pensioner. Kyd -ommentcd "The complg. cency with which the spectacle of Hill upping of the lifeblood .1 Scotland in Iccepted is nothing short of tragic " The chief of the clan Mn. kinlosli. Vice - Admiral Lachinn MN-'lllM0sll. said recently that tile Hlgllluds In in In! need of repIlr. "The bald net: are that the Highland: today Ire little better lhnn I waste lInd Ind Ire fur- nlsblng only I meIgre living for ll-lt hardy -oula." be uid. - I whg"Id.ThIViGuIxdiIn Notes BY THE WAY T Of uu-Ie. "freodul from VIII" is not to be taken in In Iblolule sense. when we're through Wurl- ing. we're through growing.-Vnm couver Herald , . If: too In! the Id-than hono- hair son went. out" of fublon. It could luv; done I lot to discour- Ixe the children from sitting too long in front of television.-Nair Iirno Free Press A prominent Cnudlurr police of- ficer ls quoted ll nylnz: "Bad boys don't come from good bom- en." Merely another wIy of. IIy- lug that parents are responsible. -Port Arthur News-Chron.iclI The Inn wIIo' II thinking About getting married should bear in mind that it is very difficult, el- peclally in these days, to support I girl in the luxurious manner to which she expects to become quic- kly accustomed.-Kitchen-Watch loo Record In a recent Manitoba use I youth who had not reached his 13th birthday pleaded guilty to I holdup and was sentenced to five voars in :he'penlterltiIry. He had no previous criminal record. ,Un- der similar circumstances elu- whcre, particularly in England un- dcr the Borstal system, he might have been given a new chance in life. But in Manitoba he is ran into contact with hardened crim- inals.-Winnipeg Tribune There is every renal to be- lieve that sunshine la healthful But. there is no reuon to think that hours of broillng can givo anything but discomfort Ind pol- nibly actual harm. Start your urn tanning program urefully. You may not become I bronzed lut- ucsque figure over night. But nel- ther will you suddenly get to look like something fresh out of tho frying pan!-Owen Sound Sun- Times MARITIME CORRESPONDENCE COLLEGE POST OFFICE BOX 51 CIIARLOTIETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Maritime Correspoudenco Colleu in now offering Iouruc in the varlour subject: of GrIdeI X, XI, Ind XII. These coursel In designed to propu-I student: is Gr-Idu XI, and XII for the cxamlrnllou of the AtIIni.ic ProvlrlceI' EI- amlning Board and in GrIdI X for the Provincinl Enminationx. TEACHERS AND OTHERS IN'I'ERES'l'ED IN IMPROVING THEIR ACADEMIC QUALIll'ICA'I'ION6 should contact the Prin- cipal without delay. Realonlblo tultioru. Interview: on request. Applications should be mIdI immediately. Courses Ivailable in commercial. lending to I recognized diploma. ARNOLD L. IIUBLEY, Auoc. EA. 1: ul the an im' Ilnp l. church wen laid and to end. they zzuld y moi-I comfortable.-Gall on of Britain's Ilnuest Ipeed records. the linking of the true. hlrlmt link: in I-Jutland. Scot- land. Ind Wales by I combination of mountaineering and fast. cu- drivtng bu been broken by foul- Immberl of the RAF mountain rescue team from VIiley, Angleg. ey. They lowered by six minutes the previous but time of 16 hours 25 ' utu recorded last month for the journey from the Iummlg of Ben Nevis (4.406 feet) to the summit of Snowdon (3,560 feeti, taking in tho Iummit of Scafell Pike (3,210 feet) en route.-Low don Times Underwood Tgp-ewrxfexg ' I F" NEVI uuosnwoon 1'1 so" Underwood United 14'! Hollis ltroet, HALIFAX. N. I. CIII Mm Principal. You an borrow the cash you need quickly and easily. ..Ind got life-inuunnce protec- tion for your fIrnily I9 IO GINO GO!" If your pnunt ion Inch this vital protection, pay it ed with I Turn Clllldl Cndii life-inuund loos. CIII II Qodny. 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