SIIVVFEMBER 1. 1945 Tisifiwsv NOTES - B! AGIICOLA l on 0min; Peat sderabic amount ‘m1 in the Brit- the unf- of we Orkney and it is the 5Q beyond the Iii in: dlagiiii inhabitants cf e f5 " i/ardii: dig the stuff. i 9m was cmlilui" . .=_i.-_-. en e inffiliiliii Oyrwlvnei appear. the d‘ a 5 uitimatcly adapted it purpose. I-Ie n y“ at the same cut half as long m, I have heard. 3 v spxlc is called! A further improve-i forging of a fiange_ With such‘ dug C; , bricks and uaiiyeiy little loss; all fragments. i "ii number of_ bccn due. thtyt .13 "\vails";h ianb 013;! """ tcfter rc- cn afflgzlénufnils ran north‘ 53 that bcth sides were‘ . 1 sun. When thorough- it::_ rm; walls were carefully i; li.l.d“_n_a° p5 not. to break irlliiflawrvesdud conveyed Ito ll ~ . 'nter's use. n Lltlter lg 52gb“; Scotland the‘. W152i.“ near the towns and vii- lllii'b'“s miv exhausted, and as‘ .6 nu the transport of the lillzfgbéiomq more tedious and P“ ‘ ‘ 010955?" iying bf peat-digging 1;‘? e iieigiiburhotld today- w. i’. technique docs riot corri- dwj, For wan. o a l) Pqnyciiicut the Peal l5 dug - i “scum or square-pointed ‘i ; fitted for many nubt, but not. for by. the P? of drying is throvyn m“ , wagon, (during .- ‘t undergoes 50ml: which iirocjf, land taken home. mgmsma unloaded and Spread (m ltiiillEii it, must be o, s/vnaped together and storage. Too many beds of excellent I 1'1 but my elf- 0,1,1’; 1II\!11%Cail‘|y1BBC-I\TB is all is; tizcaiiir: .2’; litilg rlryanmle coal would make w’ it is quickly fine white ash. Bl- “. as fine as flour. For caloric ‘ suppose three tons equal to one ton Nineteen Years’ Will‘ . -. in the course of i1 Rfiifff $11K“. half. has Britain pun faced with destruction. Th0 n: aglinst Napoleon. W00 W" igenius iwhichkhe K8159? and were m“ ended with the ’ii ivdtcrloo. _‘-315- an‘? .. . iii so impoverished tha. people..l1 talked of the IIIiSBIY inri hardships they had und-zr- gone. rill the middle of the cen- tury. Beiyreen i793 and 1815 the ca ‘ against Napoleon Bona- ri ‘dcd 581,000,000 pounds. 0I inrec billion dollars to the l\ i Debt a crushing load for a population that was probably under 15.000000 all told. and Wlifl little occupation save agriculture. liiave listened to stories of the poverty that overspread the North in those if‘l‘i‘il'ii0 days: and I r:- cil . cut the daughter of a ncxi i‘ the . family in viii c. illfl had been sccn taking illrnips from a ficld. and who was ha“ the farmer before the Tiint ivorthy (who l Q." rat heard thi: she had takcn iii" hr a thi- family had no ~ rid tiic case was dismissed. it ivzs not until the middle of flail Qt "n Victoria's golden reign that Br -iin began to find hei- ritl I-Iiiicr both 11:16 . iizclvcs as "Nlen of in that faith con- ‘. cf Enropcqhut while r "a". duringmost of his -t. the latter “lost d became i1 mcgaio- IIGWCVEZ’. cnrlczi by mistake that f.il in the long oi Napoleon is in- aus~ as Garvin ex- ls worked from . in cf founding - ill? ruling passion cf d iii to divorce Jcs- l the Hiansburgs. a son v.':s born 1'1 a fair way to b0- Til‘. his Empire and jithough it stretch- liimac of taklnll two or (‘INC ml I nary talilm, mic only lllll ASCO. ' iitvflteulinvcmuch quicker your hud- hzmh; lf-ln vanishes. No fur cf min? Fri. acid stomach or over. n“ ‘n-n‘. . Thais because ASCNS mh "ill! hlllnzld Ingredients "lufmlg: xvotliii all the deep-sated m’: rwr headache or pain c! Harri‘ ' iisiiiiiii; l 0N! ASCO Tablet M m ‘l, I .0|0MFl.i'l‘l IIOSI lnimuguggcslmlotillgv low prlcu. - 100 1.25 ‘tn FOR ( ) $ ASCD m "Hlllllllflf IALAIIIO" TIILIT Also . o Inc-l . Cold , t: i ~ ' n...'iii-.'3.'i’.'.i?.fi“-'.'..‘§.‘:: lchu. Pcrloclle Pllnj, only , dlgimgi rsslons. have; K o; stand and an o; was fought on Sept. 7th, 1812. It _i\‘:w. he thought. he i" ed from the All ti _ icrs of Russia. Ticlue? hoe tvirlgsbgégi- ifronted by that contcmptibie "na- .liori of shopkeepers" whQEu navy {maintained a ceaseless ma... Wfaahltsl, Atlantic coast, but he cop. ~n v believed he could bring the shopkeepers to their knees by imfmiihg ii cantirient-ivide gm. blargo against British trade. Fur. ni-lmflfr in the back of his mind .S.e lurked the thought that DP-Eflfltil’ he would march against India and wrest it from the grasp .of the stubborn islanders, T° "ml m" his design there had to be a more complete co- operation with Russia or else i; great conflict with that nation. A few years before. Napoleon and Alexander had met at; T115“. m divide the military sway or Eufgpe between them. but since men various disagreements had arisen, Alexander fancied that. his part- Il" had hi5 We on both Poland and Constantinople, and like u later, riiier. “didn't ivnnt any- bcdys snout in his potato patch.” Then again. the Continental em- bargo was hitting Russian trade nearly as much as it did that cf Britain. And there was a deeper issue. Alexander. who was no fool, saw the drift cf affairs. and let it be known that he would retire as far as Toboisk in Siberia, rath- er than become a mere vassal like the King of Prussia, Th1; was almcst a challenge, [ind iiillaleon took it for cne. He would round off his Empire by capturing Moscow. For this gigantic enterprise he created the Brande Arrnee of 500.000 infantry, and 100,000 cav- alry, with 1,200 field Rims. Only half of this host was French; the rest were drawn from the con. quered nations. When on. June 34. 1812, he crossed the Nlemen at the head of the Grande Armee, he was moving to disaster. "In these desolate featureless. unend- lrig spaces. he was ‘out of his ac. customs-d military framework and out of his depth." says the 11m- orian. I-Ie could never overtake the filliive enemy. and when his commissarlat broke d-own nu the organization of the Armee fell apart. Large numbers of _troops on. sorted and rank lndiscipilne spread amongst the rest. With his daily d diminishing forces Napoleon reacti- ed Smolensk and cau m a the Russian forces bilit goiliitdrgi hold them. It was a barren vic- tory. Here he made one of his Bravest. mistakes in that he did not: winter at Smolensk and re- Ofkanize for a further campaign. Bu!’ 110; he pushed on through the intolerable summer heat while his ill-supplied hordes looted the country in search of food. At last the Arm-cc reached Borodino and the goal was in sight. Here the Russians made a indecisive battle was a double massacre. for the Russians lost 4,000 men, or more: while Napoicons casualties were close upon 3.000. With only 100,000 men left. ou: of the army that crossed the Nie- m-en so confidently three months before, the conqueror reached Moscow a week after the battle of Borodino. Through the streets of the deserted city he rode to the Kremlin. but the Russians set the city ablaze and the great fire which broke out. drove him and the main body of troops out of the city for a couple of days. When the flames were extinguished he returned, but his mood had changed. Hc secms to have lost his grip: he frivoiicd away his time, lay on o couch and rear: stories or wrote zroveliing letters to Alexander asking for peace. some mocking fiend at his elbow persuaded him to revise the char- cr of the Comedic Francaise. He ought. to have accumulated grant stores of food against the winter. but made no cffort to do so. Before he pulled himself tn- gether the first snow had fallen. Alarmed at last. he gave the order to frill back, on October 19.11. He mcant to retire no further than Smolciisk. but therc ivas neither help nor hope in that city. The wild retreat went on with less than 50.000 men in formation. By a sublime and heroic effort lheicy Beresinn rivcr was crossed but by now the Russian winter had set. in with the temperature far below zero. By December 10th the iii-clad, ill-fed. numbed and dc- lmoriiilzea army numbered only 4,000 men! When the Nicmeh icame in sight again only 1,000 mcii cf the Old Guard survived. About 100.000 straggiers brick- tracked and reached Koenigsburg in East Prussia but few of thcssi were French. The Russian Dfvv- inces had records showing that they had burned or buried the bod- i-ss “of 420,000 men Mid 230.000 ani- inals. lost in that. disastrous cani- pziign. ' Napoleon had deserted his doom- ed army on December 5th. and by rapid slcighing and coaching he reached the Tulieries Dalace J05! before Christmas. 0ft "K111i" ound. his old slpifit W85 50w!- ily recovered. l-Ie ivrirked day and night and by the sprint: of I813 lie had a million men under arms. i-Ie put 380.000 men into occupied Ger- many as garrisons. In Aprihhe crossed the Rhine once more with 2 5.000 men and 500 cannon. At Iiiizen and Bauzen he faced the combined forces of the Russians and Prussians. deleaféd film- but could not break the new sififit that was rising in Europe. Brit- ain. Austria, and Siveden 091'! among those nllicd against- him- and daily more of the German states, former satellites. yolried his enemies. His marshals, fighting "on their own", met invariable defeat. In August 181B. his acn- ius trained the day at Dresden, his 1.15; great victory. The Allies loss was four times that. of the Franch, and they retreated; but. it was only the ebb between the waves. ‘ By October the Ailies had re- organized their forces. and a1- lhough for many reasons they could not mass them. they had 300,000 men and almost 1.100 guns. Napoleon was able ti» gather 190,000 men and over 700 guns. Ac Leipsig the forces met bird the bcttlc lasted ‘four (i185; -- iii t v.1 lit? lllrlr1x§."mil%t‘ iii. egfl POI ii. 120.000 men had been killed or wounded‘. the Allies‘ losses b81118 heavEes. Though it sesincd that his m- Aiiies pushed into France v1: the Rhine and Dwltzerland. With 150,000 new troops Napoleon con- ducted the most brilliant carn- palgn of his life, but the end was near. The Allies captured Paris in hLs absence, and deserted -b.v his marshals and the Senate, he signed his unconditional surrend- er on April 12th. 1814. three years after the birth of his son, The dynasty was hbollshed. The Allies imprisoned him on the Island of Elba. whence he escaped to cast his erichantment anew over the heart of . France. He raised a fresh army and faced his foes. This brought him to his last battle. Waterloo. June 18th, 1815. He was made prisoner. and. like Prometheus. chained to the rock, he spent the rest of his life exiled to the lonely island of St. Helena, in the South Atlantic. THE KINDLY WORD AND DEED A word of encouragement t0 the troubled mind A kindly hand 0o one in need. V Reich-idles lost souls to start agam to find A soothing balm for those who bleed. It, ls not the wrong you do in life That is tallied in the Book above, 1t is the kindly deeds you do The little tender deeds of love. A word of encouragement to the man who has tried and tried but can. not: win. I5 a noble deed, that is done by Y0“. And what a wonderful help to Him. He staggers on with his heavy burden, _ Arid the world looks 0n with a piti- isss eye, If you should help him his cross to high A word of pity to those lri trouble. A helping hand to the man in need. Puts light in the soul of the man in trouble, Gives courage back to tlhe man 1n need. So it's npt. the wrong you do in life That. will deny you your crown bcur, o’ A crown will be waiting for you on above, it's the little uiinss you d'd not do 1mg lcntily vyords and deeds of! love. —Il. B. Cameron. IT IS HERE The war is over. We are now in what we have talked about for years, the POSLWBI‘ period. Arid t/he supreme need of the hour is a realization on the part; of gov‘ ernmerital authority of the urzlht ncccssity of speeding up the recon. version process from wartime economy to pencetme production. The tangled Jcsin cf ivartzme controls mus-t. be untanglsd as speedily as possible. Unnecessary bottlenecks in industry, survival‘; from war production priority, must b: removrd. In a speech follow. inc, V-J Day. Premier King dc. ciaicd: “Everything pcssble must be done for speedy conversion of war industry_ for the iecmployment of ivar industry. and, above all. for the smooth and rajrld rc/rstabiish- mrrr; of our fighting fllSTi." The initiative in implementing that “musLbc-donc" utterance of the Prime Minister rests with Gov- ernment and Pariiament. And not only at. Ottawa. but with govern. mental Puthorities. provncial and municipal, everywhere tfiiroughcut the Dominion. TIIOYC is urgency- 211d it must be met. Met. tjo. with speed. LYJFpOSE and nudes. v and devotion to the common rzorrcl in the row setting of this already PUBIJFi-I STATEM T ON GAMBLING By 1'. n. RE. A vcry thorough-statement. has icp-pcarccl iii the Daily Press re. garciing gambiiimg. It hm becn publlshcd under the auspices of the Saint John Ministerial As- sociation and sets clearly before all people the laws regarding gambling. mcntons the dangers which (go with this means of rais- ing money. and challenges all members oi all Protestant. Churches to refrain from the nefarious practice which is becoming a menace in these days- The A5- socia-tiqn has alto petitioned the Fedora. Gavcriimciit to deict: Sec. tion 6, paragraph b. from the Criminal Code. This section reads: That. the Criminal Code, section Z36. does not apply to raffles for prizes of small value at. any bu" zaar held for charitable or reiigl. misuibject. under certain condi- tions. The practice of holding lot. teries, bingo games, etc, is indulg- ed 1n by sci-Lain iieiigioim and pa. tiriotic groups, and in many cases such practices are against the laws of the land. The Ministerial As- sociation concludes its statement with the following: "We raaffirm the stand of the Christian Church as being opposed to gambling ‘in all its forms. We, therefore. urge all Christians to refrain from any form or gambling no matter how worthy may be t-iie objective for which the moncy is being raised. We further urge Chrstiims for the sake of our citizens as a Wlwir. to encourage groups or oiubs t0 whidh they belong. such as service clubs and fraternal organizations, to raise other means of raisin! the necessary funds to carry 0n their work. Above nil we ask them to orr-pcse any scheme in our vari- ous churches that savours of gambling.“ MISS cum oblivi- . m MANITOBA I-Ier work included 24 towns veiled; also villages, country places and citlzr. S-iia spflke '75 times to 0.220 pec .e, of whom, 4,. 600 were children. - Fifty Ysomen numbers were re- ceived. Arden, Shoal Lake and Alexander organized as Yeomen Two Indian schools were ponpone a - In m; beginning of I814 the myths- vls-iad, Ind c Y.'I‘.C. was organized at Amen. Bhc attended I Ukrain- 1‘rvlvE___CHARLO:l‘_'l‘_i~jf]‘_()w_l1 jUARDLqN TIMELYXNOTES ON TOPICS sosisiecreo, WITH l Silver Fox Farming i We are reliably informed that a young merchant from St. Pierre has purchased 100 foxes for breed- ing purposes (platinum-r. Pearl Pill- friums and slivers) from a ranch near Charlottetown which it is re- ported will be disposed of this fail. and will take them back with him in the near future. This young man has been breeding foxes for several years and has always had a good production, usually around three to the pair, and has no dif- ficulty in selling his pelts. The currency of the country is francs as 1t is a dependency of old France and the rate of exchange is 45 francs to the dollar. The inhabi- ‘ tents of St. Pierre are very proud of their connection and quite happy to be able to trade freely with the mother country. He plans on sending his pelts to Paris this fail where he will have no difficulty in securing entry, un- like Canadian or American fur farmers. Asked if fur farming is profitable in his remote situation he said it certainly is. At pres- ent he is in Montreal making ar- rangements for a supply of wire to build new fox pens. In the larger cities of the Uni- ted States the fur merchants arid those connected with the whole- sale and retail dilspcsiii of furs and fur garments as iveil as the manufacturers. have been ex- pending considerable thought on the trend of things to come, that is whether prices will continue in the same groove now chat the war with Germany and Japan is over or whether with the great produc- ticn of consumer goods and auto- mobiles which is about to take place ml‘luidy's thoughts will shift ‘ian Victory Loan Rally. andIiras Judge at a poetry contest, where sho was 3m... speaker. the frs: time 7-1155 Grant For h." mestigns in the northern part ‘zpnitoba, gettinrgufinc co-opcra. tion. A DEGRADING CUSTOM Flor many years our (‘.311 against the saioc-zi. Today i against so-called respectable drink. ing. We are laced v/ith a fght against social custom. cocktail drinking, indulged in vary fncely by women and young people. "i-'I u; see this portrayal I'll. only in our moving pictures and magazine stories, but Iii real life. Canada is a young country and we must not sanction a social cus. tom that leavers the moral stan- peoplc. — A. E. H. dards of our Gliicsplc. IJ. l5 ‘H tllFIfil i Hm“ SHIDI-B for 1093M“ Provide! vl'“""_ ' fllfl s“. "Pair lfiilfifitfirc ulc l’ v C" from articles of apparel u; those, of utility. Retailers in New York have been interviewed by Wo- men's Wear Daily are m; in agreement on the point, some feel that the furs and fur cont; have become a fashion necessity and once a woman has decided on a fur coat she won't put its pur. chase off indefinitely. "When u woman wants a fur coat" is the trite comment. “she can't put on a refrigerator." Yet. there are others who see a diminished volume in the fur~de- partment. One of the biggest voi- ume operators in New York sees keenest competition over the durc able goods. He thinks the con. sumer is so starved for the various appliances that she will prefer them to the fur coat. This he says will affect the lower priced and medium product. fur coats es- pecially because it is the middle class consumer who must make a 0111039- Many newly married folks will see their first oppor- tunity in buyinz liorne fumlsh. inigr. Another dealer says that. Bifilollilh the fur industry is in Rood condition nevertheless all its factors should be prepared i0.- substantlal losses of volume. The above isWnr-zrthe only thing that is disturbing the fur indus. try at present. In most American Cilififi Dfiilular fur departments are suffering most acutely from n barrage of consumer questioning on reduction of the Federal tax on furs. Some stores claim busi- ncss has fallen off sharply with many sales lost as a result. while others report. that most of the in- quiries are made by non-buying customers who have already \\':iit- ed the length 0f the war to pur- ciiate furs. High styled specialty stores have been besieged by i... nuiries but some furricrs explain that ihfv met the situation by Siimlihfl a customer newspaper clippings which said the tax would not be reduced until six months surrender. "flit Japan's formal We ‘icld th izh: nc“ ' cr ticrez- mc. ns. Other stcr~= gi-e offering to refund the tax if it is removed prior to the custom- ers taking over the fur garment for wear later in the fall. Canada we rrilme the Hon t". Il_=lr_y' ' makii. iin hi ' ivhich will be pr mczit acme time . . . icr to the writer . me time from lVIr. Iisley stated that wss glv ' his Ja/YfW/fl INSUL-BUA a r/rfiw/ 101/702 8P3 -WAY . PROTECTION “minn- lviuriivlh l(l)l)F'lP~/'v H fihllll lNSlllfNi .'J ‘"7 '° ‘PM w outside Wood shrllhinl. B,|v_ "- on him by a resolution of the Leg- isature of this province, by the Silver Fox Breeders’ and Exhibit- ors‘ Association, by the Canadian National Silver Fox Breeders‘ As- sociation, Dominion Fur Council. and other bodies and we hope and trust that it will ‘ere the fur sea- son commences this fall be rele- ,gatcd to the limbo of forgotten things. Recent sales of furs in New York have shown declines. For instance Lampsonfis big offering; o: Am. can Persian lamb consisting of 138,414 skins last week declined from '1 1-2 per cent to 10 per cent from the May sale. That the niar- ket held up as well as it did was reported in the sales room as due to the large amount of buying by Canadians. Various types of fox met with little resistance during the morning session. Blue Fox, a collection of 9'15 skins had a 40 Der cent turnover and declir/gd 10 per cent. Top figure was $78.00. Cross fox was 41 per cent sold with l high price of $70.00 for an ex- fielllivnally large and beautiful, belt. Red fox was 20 per com, 501d with a top of $9.75 and grey fox ivas 53 per cent sold with a top price of $320. The following day the sale OI slivers was held and Women's We" Dilly reports as follows: Prices for silver fox apparently were riot influenced by the recgm war and OPA development; u; was evidenced in the Izumpson. Fraser & Huth. Inc. salc yester- day where both mutation and standard silvers sold at firm cur- rent market levels, according to the saicsrocm. The auction com. Dany reported full silvers showed {m aliwlmcf‘ 0i in hi‘? ccii‘. since its lasflvfai‘ Sale while the mutations were firm and the three-quarter. half. etc. slivers were unchanged. The termination of the war was felt only at the very outset of the sale when a hesitant-y in bidding was noficsd on the mutation faxes. However. this disappeared a few minutes later and the sale cori- tlnued on a firm levci. This tcmu- crary softening ivas due to (hi; lack of interest noted on all long-l haired furs during the past two‘ weeks. a biiyzr said. riii-d 1135a l7?- ctiusc many persons in the sales- room liad marked their c.... ovs lower because of existing uncer- tainties. Demand for the mutation foxes “mas restricted to the heifer goods. .wiih 60 per cent of the 201i olcif-i linums sold a top of $17.1 largcr rail: ' c. skitis i338) 2s '70 pcr cent .c;,~1§ with two straight lots hitting a high of $128. A turnover cf '75 per cent was registered on the offering of 4.652 full silvers while rAGE NINE ' wlllllllljlp/II/rrl 1 ' WARNING I Potato Growers BACTERIAL RING ROT is one of the most serious as well as the most destructive and contagious of all potato diseases. _ BACTERIAL RING ROT may be carried and spread either in seed or on bags or machinery, baskets, efc., which have previously been in contact with diseased potatoes. The Legislature has passed an Act governing the con- fro] of bacterial ring rot which states: “No grower or dealer shall use crates, bags or other containers used for infected potatoes unless the same have been disinfected to the satisfaction of the Inspector.” This means that any secondhand slacks are liable to carry bacterial ring rot infection. Do not use any such sacks unless or until they are disinfected. This is a mal- i ter of the utmost importance to the potato industry of this province. Youncooperation in the protection of this im- poriant production is earnestly solicited. Naisitfiiwfifififior wsmaaucrmzmormtarx li-l, 4, ital. cent from a few years ago they morning session when the muta- tions and the better type silvers consider that qii-clitjr is up 3r) p31‘ were bEiIiiZ offered. cent. The sale continues this morn-‘ ‘—-——— in: ifritii ranch mink, originally. ANCIENT SPAN scheduled fcr yesterday afternoon. followed by the other regularly-i London Bridge. ‘though fro- scheduled offerings. Iqucntlv rebuilt. has occupied about —---— ‘the original sit.- of Roman days, George A. Cailbeck who leaves‘ this morning for Montreal to ar- tend thc fur auctions next \\"‘E‘l~'.. has V011! kindly given us the foi- lowing information: The silver for:- I‘? was London's onlv in" bridle over Thames Flifil] 175i) BRIGHTON SIYSFEX. Eiiiliand pelts which will be sold on Wed-, —~-lCP\-'I‘he Skylark. 01y; o! m; inesdayf and Thursday afternoons/little" ships that served 3i total 18.910. Slxty-tvro per cont. DIIIIRCTOUP. has romp brick g0 consist of irxferiors and low grzdcs. Brighton to occupation There arc only 437 specials ipliit- makers on pica inuins, platinum silvers and pciirl; Sum piatinumsi but the quantity of‘ - - ~— _:_-:_- ~_—._ _. i white-marked-i556—is about the same as i-ast June. The selected full silvers number- oniy 410. Mr. Caiibcck is arranging to serd us nightly reports of the sale.‘ lie "- J- also stated that he had read some news of Norway fox farms recently OPTOMETRBT ijlld the correspondent who scm it stated that there are about 80,000 breeding foxes in Norway; that this years production has been Hm"! Ind Sunrilrfnz ulassu Etc. 418 three-quarter. half. c212. sil- vers were 75 nri- (“ill sold. Fiills.’ reached a peak of $70 while lhree-. quarter silvers hi’ S36. I Manufacturers did most of the’ purchasing. it was reported. At- tendance was good throughcut the‘ l" though a greater iiuinbsi‘ of, t ns were present during tho.- light; but that the breeders expecr- ilfontogua, |=_ p; |_ (‘CI to market between now and Dcccmbcr 60 to 80.003 pelts. of these being platinums. Qriiici i a large number of these pelts are; in cold storage. Others are still‘ Office Hours: l0 t lg zwsr. K1, A‘ M Honda" "m" i" “Dlloinfmem f oml‘: Coimccfed with on the foxes‘ backs. The reporter v said that Norwegians told him that DRLGYTORE although production is down 30 per by -.' c v’ UILDING such a room as this in attic or basement with B.P. Insui-Board-is just one step you can readily take towards realizing the comfort and economy of B.P. “Thrce-Way" Protection. You can just as easily transform the exterior with B-P- Insul-Bric Siding and then carry through by re-roofing for beauty and security with B.P. Asphalt Shingles. The addition of a new room or complete renovation the B.P. way enhances the value of your home, an investment in good living that pays dividends down through the years. Fill out the coupon below and we will send you complete information on B.P. mfliree-Way Protection for new building or home renovation. 4;, i=1 '1 - i m, e... - ' ' - - S Building Products limited, 5 -. "brig-film 3W!" . l P.O. Box 6065, Montreal. P-Q- ' i If Q» r -=_ Wllrirfilwlfifylcik d, ho Plmse send me information on B.P. 3~Way Protection. i - -’- ding limiluei c; lrirfirlelic." "I! particularly interested in Roofing [I] Siding Cl ""1"" BU LDlNG PRODUCTIIMITED Q IOWONIO llNJ. - filfllNfi Board D Flooring [i I am planning: m build a new home 1 to renovate my home Addy!" ---4so Tr?‘- Todny‘: condition: "Ill-i? _.tlmrhlger almost incivllahlle Ill)!!! _ available sloth are dlilrlbulvil lair/y lo all 1H. an! HI- “ f, K25. r l