J 5' '5 1 THE GuAiznTAN "Conn lrhao llwul Inland lip on low" ldlhr.l'nnkWalku IolorllIIlInt.lnIA.IIu'Iou tuna alfleu at sununarddo. Iloonluo and Alberta. Authn food as locond Clan Ilail by the Put oiffoo Department. Ottawa. Sununlroido ll5.II pnr annum. mbor Ptovinua and U.l. 111.00 can-hr: Chlrlollll-owl. hub ll P,I.l. I100. par llllun "'11: strongest memory In tboweakoaflnk. "WOIIOF than IATURDAY. MAR. ll. lbs! Need For Full Inquiry Despite official attempts to hush them up, reports that radio-active fall-out from nuclear tests has reached serious, if not alarming, proportions, continue to be cir- culated. The latest report comes from two university scientists in Colorado, fol- lowing a series of explosions in neighbour- ing Nevada. It says in part: "For the firstltime in the history of the tests the upsurge in radioactivity measured here: within a matter of hours has been ap-' prccia'ble." Fully aware that their state- ment would give rise to uneasiness. the scientists went on to say: "It is not our desire to alarm the public mind needless-1 ly. but we feel it is our duty to say so." The Gdvernor of Colorado. whose knowledge of the subject is limited to, what he is told by others. immediately called the report "phony" and suggested that the two men should be arrested. That opinion can, of course, be disregarded. The reaction of the Atomic Energy Commis- sion, in whose councils nuclear experts are prominent, is another matter. When, therefore, a Commission spokesman de- clares that "there is no concern for the public and the radioactivity is inconse- quential", the people of Nevada and Col- orado-and indeed of the whole world- could hardly be blamed if they were to take all scientific opinions in this matter with the proverbial grain of salt! and that. as anyone can see, would make in- evitable all sorts of ill-informed and harm- ful speculations. There is an even greater danger. The Colorado scientists are not the first to warn against the ill effects of radio- activity: and it is significant that in each instance the warning has come from some expert not connected with the Atomic Energy Commission. It would be a pity and a real cause for alarm if the public mind should get the impression that of- ficials of the Commission are trying to cover up the ill effects of nuclear ex- plosions in order that the tests-which, doubtless, are of great importance-should not come under widespread suspicion and condemnation. That seems hardly cred- ible; but, in view of all the circumstances. it would appear that only a full inquiry by competent authorities, both within and outside the official body, to be followed by a frank and unambiguous ruling, will keep the public fear from being exagger- ated beyond the bounds of reason. Hall-Forgotten Calendar Long before Julius Caesar's time, March was the first month of the year. "Calends", first day of the month (whence the word "calendar"), came supposedly at the vernal equinox, now usually March 21. But so badly did the Roman calendar fit the seasons that only two years before Caesar died, March was arriving in mid- summer. That old calendar, notes the National Geographic Society, was based on the moon. There were 12 lunar months- Martius, Aprilis, Maius, Iunlus, Quintilis, Sextilis, September. October. N0V9mbel'. December, lanuarius, and Februarius. They added up to only 355 days. But the seasons, then as now, took 365 V4 days. Thus occasionally a 13th month had to be inserted. It followed the 23rd day of February which then was known as "terminalia." The priests of pre-Christ- lan Rome's Pontifical College had author- ity to decide when the leap Y9" 0991"" red and they often juggled the calendar for political ends. Finally in 46 B..C. Caesar took the advice of the Alexandrian astronomer Sosigenes and abandoned the lunar year. To bring the months back to their proper place, he gave the change- avgf year 1 grand total of three extra months. It was rightly dubhd "the Y9" of confusion." Even under the workable new Julian calendar that went into effect on January 1, 45 B.C.. the months still had Calends, Ides. and Nones. In the longer months of 31 dayI.'the Ides fell on the 15th; in others, on the 13th. The Nones occurred on the ninth day before the Ides. Roman data: were csieulaud u so many day! its i proposed dropping ten days to bring it back to March 21. The Gregorian cal- endar was only gradually adopted-not until 1752 in England and its American colonies, where even then the legal year began on March 25-but it remains the western world's standard to this day. In China, Polynesia, Babylon and Egypt, the ancient names of the months signified changes of the seasons and work on the land. In the Roman calendar, how- ever, only two of the months reflected the workings of Nature: Aprilis, the month of opening, when buds unfold and spring comes green in new leaves, and Maius, for Maia, a Goddess of growth. March, or Martius, was the month of the God of War, Mars. By ancient tradi- tion, it was Mars who fathered the twin foundlings Romulus and Remus, who were raised by a wolf and eventually founded the city by the Tiber. Charlemagne And Churchill So many honours and awards have come to Sir Winston Churchill that the bestowal of one more is not a matter of great moment. Yet, the announcement from Aachen, Germany, that he is to re- ceive this year's international Charle- magne award for "his service in the cause of European understanding and unity" makes an interesting little news item. No one would call Sir Winston the Charle- magne of the 20th century: their lives and political ambitions ran in different channels, even if we discount the mani- fest discrepancies between the 8th cen- tury and the present time. None the less, there is a resemblance joining their per- sonal traits and, especially, their respect-l ive imprints on the world's history. Here are a few excerpts from a brief encyclopaedical biography of the li- lustrious King of the Franks: "He was the foremost historical figure, the greatest doer of things, in several centuries. He was a large man in every way. He fought like a lion, but it was to establish peace. He sought power, but it was to use it wisely and justly. He advocated educa- tion, not ignorance: art. not idle luxury: comfort and plain living, not extrava- gance. He was courageous, yet pacific; kindly, yet determined; industrious, yet scholarly; large-hearted and merciful." There is not a word in any of these sent- ences which could not be used with equal warrant in a sketch of Sir Winston's life and character. There is a clear political resemblance, as well. Because he was instrumental in reviving a purely Western Emillfeu Cell” tered in Rome and freed from any Greek authority, Charlemagne might be said to have been the first architect of establish- ed European institutions. Without dis- counting the work of any other states- man of our times, it is, perhaps. not Qllt of place to say that Sir Winston Churchill has done more than any other individual to unite the free peoples in a resolution to keep their freedom from being de- stroyed by any aggressive power. This suggests that he has taken the lead in building a new and, let us hope, a better world. EDITORIAL NOTES World wool production set a record last year with an estimated total of 4,430 million pounds. This is 70 million pounds more than 1953, and 500 million pounds above the pre-war level. 0 O I A higher pork output and resultant lower prices are forecast for a number of the principal hog-producing countries this year. in 1954, a total of 5,078,715 hogs were slaughtered in Canada - an increase of 75,901 over 1953. 0 Total Canadian honey crop for 1954 was 19.9 million pounds. a drop of 25 per cent over the previous year and the smal- lest crop since 1926. Ontario, Quebec, and the three prairie provinces accounted for 93 per cent of the total production. I 0 Farm price supports in the United States will see the 1955 oat crop subsidized at 61 cents a bushel for Grade No. 3 or Lbetter; barley at 94 cents a bushel for Grade No. 2 or better; and rye at 51.18 a bushel for Grade No. 2 or better. I O 0 Atomic energy developments herald a revolution in agriculture, according to the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission. A rust- resistant strain of oats, new ways of fight- ing plant diseases and insects, and new fertilizers an among recent gains. One irradiation of tomato seedlliigs has been found to produce at least one generation of wilt-resistant plants. 0 I No explorer has ever done so much for African geography as David Living- stone, Scottish missionary born this date, 1813. in the little village of: Blantyre Works, Lanai-kluhln. His travels cover- ed one-third of the Dark Continent, ex- tending from the Cape to near the Euiator. and from tho Atlantic in the ,. Piec e or N 'n.-..-, . .. W PUBLIC FORUM Illa column to upon so In linen TRANSPORTATION Sir.-To-day, the transportation question is engaging the attention of not only the Department of Transport, but the merchant, the shipper and all who are interested in the shipment and import of goods to and from this Province. For short hauls, the motor truck is the principal means 0. Iran - port. and for long hauls there is a growing demand ior new or trucks with a greater carryinit capacity than the ones in use at the present time. With the completion Trans-Canada Highway. paved highways and improved secondary roads throughou. ilus Province, Trans-Canada Highway and Canso Causeway open to mot- or traffic in our neighbouring Province. the new ferry boat to ply between North Sydney and Port a Basque. Newfoundland, it will be possible for motor trucks to carry, and deliver if necessary. produce and other goods destined for points along the route. or through to a destination in the Sydneys .or Newfoundland, where highways for motor trucks are in fit condition overwhlch to travel. The matter of return cargo for trucks returning to P. E. I. will be taken up at a later date. In order to realize the success- ful accomplishment of this new venture in the field of transport- ation. it will be necessary to have a suitable ferry boat to transport can and trucks from Prince Ed- ward Island to a point on the mainland of Nova Scotia. The de- sign, specifications and carrying capacity of such a boat will not be gone into at this time: suffice it to say that it will be a boat that will give a satisfactory service to the travelling public, and will fill ut the m o r e I long felt want by Sl'li'7iP'S merchants and others interested in the venture. besides being a matter in which the Department of Defence might be interested. The ferry terminals are an im- portant matter to consider. Look- ing at it in the light of reason. and having the unbiased opinions of many interested parties, Georgetown is the unanlmoiis choice of Port for the P. E. 1. terminal, and Pictou the Nova Scotla terminus. I am. Sir, elc.. C. M. FITZGERALD Chairman of Committee on Proposed Georgetown-Piclou Ferry Service. THE TEACHER PROBLEM Sir,-Much was said during Ed- ucation Week regarding the leach- ers, and the question of lack of teachers always arise and rightly. Why is it that the younger gener- ation do not consider the teaching The Formosa Problem By W. N. Ewer United Kingdom information Office y When Sir Anl.hony Eden oullin- it is surely important -- that in ed to the House of Commons the fact the British Government's views as "the launched any attack on the lines along which progress is to be sought," in what we usually call the Formosa problem, he did not expect that those views would be immediately and warmly wel- comed either in Washington or in Peking in the Taipeh. That was not to be expected. And indeed. the Foreign Secretary himself was careful to say that as a result of his talks during the recent tour and of the information which has reached him from Pek- ing. he had "come reluctantly to the conclusion that the necessary conditions for progress do not yet exist." Sir Anthony was in a way ihiiik- lng aloud, with hope that his thoughts may seriously though not publicly obtain consideration by the "parties immediately concern- ed." He was throwing out ideas for such consideration. That and no more. It could not be more at the moment. The basic fact is that sooner or later in one way or another there has )0 be a settlement of "the Formosa problems." it might come as a result of or at any rate after armed conflict. or it might come peacefully without any ser- ious clash. Secondly, it is surely obvious that any attempt to reach a solu- tion by arms must involve un- speaknble dangers -- not only for those directly and immediately in- volved. Therefore in one way or an- other. along one line or another, an effort must be made to find a basis for peaceful settlement. What is the most hopeful line of was seeking the answer. DUAL PROBLEM The problem is a dual one - shori-term and long-term. The ini- medlate and urgent need is to re- duce or remove the immediate risks of war or of some local col- lision which. however unintention- ally on either side, might "touch off' a wider war. That would only be a temporary relief. Real peace requires a real settlcmenl. but the one is necessary before the other is possible. There could be no profitable negotiation unless the present tension is first relaxed. What can be done to relax it? The immediate danger point is of course the "offshore islands." A serious Chinese Communist attack on Formosa itself across a hun- dred miles of notoriously stormy sea is probably a logistical im- possibility. It would, to have any hope of success, require equip- ment and preparation - and sea and air power - comparable to those required for the Normandy landing of 1944. They do not exist. But there are no such obstacles Iiduaonuant El: to qualify as its you; hacbern to approach? This was the question. to which our Foreign Secretary, ly have not Is- Communists lands. After a long de facto irurc they did start bombarding them last August. They have made a few minor raids. But they have re- fraincd from actually attacking. Suppose that they could be per- suadcd to continue that restraint. Suppose that they could. in Sir Anthony's words. "make it appar- cut” that they would not in fact attempt to attack Forniosa. They could not be expected to give any foynal assurance of this. But sup- pose that they "made it appar- ent" that they do not iiiicnd to attempt to do something which they have not in any case the avail- able resources to do. nnucnrrz OPERATION Suppose that on the other hand. relieved from any apprelicnsion that Communist occupation of these Islands woud be the prelude to an attack on Formosa. the Americans could induce the Chinese National- ists lo evacuate Qucmoy and the Malsus. if that could happen then the danger of some almost ac- cidental clash Iwith almost un- predictable and disastrous possi- bilities) would begin to disappear. There is clearly no chance of any formal agreement. But surely it is not out of all question that in someway, and without formal com- mitment of any kind it could be "made apparent” that this would happen. To bring it about would be a delicate diplomatic operation. And delicate diplomatic operations have become in these days morel difficult than ever. But surely it is not as i say oiilside possibil- And then - I can only quote the Foreign Secretary's carefully chosen words - then "considera- tion would be given internationally at an appropriate moment to the problem of Chinese representation in the United Nations and to the future status of Formosa." .' Here is surely a not impossible "line" along which it is conceiv- able that progress could be made. The Age Old Story Wherefore the rather, brethren. give dilllgence to make your call- ing and election sure: for if ye do these things. ye shall never fall: for so an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly Into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. BANGKOK, Thailand (APl- Thallnnd is going in send a pair of Siamese twins to the United States for examination and pos- Medically Speaking Ilonnan'N. Iuducl. MJI. DON'T GIVE W IAIY "I.-l0'l'll0USl” THEY! Are you giving you baby the "bothouso" treatment! Are you keeping that "delicate" little lot of yours from the fresh air he needs? So many mothers, and fathers. too, believe they must keep their infants in hot, stuffy rooms to protect them from the cold air out- side. They couldn't be more wrong. if you are one who shares this belief, let me set you straight right now. cuua Needs Fresh Air Your youngster needs fresh air the year round. It helps his cir- culation, improves the color of hi! skin, gives him a better appetite and generally promotes good health. if he fails to get this fresh air. he is likely to become pale and fretful, perspire a good deal and probably have a poor appetite. Moreover, a baby kept in a very warm room is likely to catch cold when taken outside in cold wea- ther.- The abrupt change from ex- treme heat to outdoo cold is bad for him. What, then, should you do? Regardless of the weather. your baby's room should have a con- tinual supply of fresh, free-flow- ing air. The only exception is when he is taking a bath. Raise the lower sash and lower the upper sash of a window in your baby's room. Don't let cold air blow directly on your child. To prevent this, place a ventilator in the lower win- dow. Or you can even nail a board at an angle to the sill so that the fresh air will blow upward, re- placing the stale air. A cloth pin- ned over the open lower window also will help keep the air from blowing on the fol. Depends on Weather How far should the windows be opened"! That, of course. depends on the weather. Don't let the room get too cold. If the weather is chilly, open the window just an inch or two from the top and the bottom. If it's really cold and ” ' . outside, keep the baby's windows closed. But leave his door open. and open a window in all adjoin- ing room. During warm weather, you can open the windows in your young- ster's room as wide as you wish. But whatever the temperature. make sure he gets fresh air. He needs it! QUESTION AND Answnn C. L. A.: What causes hives, and is there a cure for them? Answer: Hives are usually due to a sensitive skin which reacts either to some food in the diet or to something with which an in- dividual comes in contact. The only way to bring about a cure of the condition is to have a thorough study made to determine the substance to which the per- son is sensitive. rm 7oe&' Kama-. .- BONNET What are you, ii. ...i'.' Why do you roll. Earth-ball, And float forever in a sea of light? Why spin among the stars and never fau Or deviate in your prodestined night? What are you, Time? What is the master-clock That regulates the space of night and day? How long has surf dissolved the stubborn rock, And licked the rim of continent away? I witness sunlight overflow the dark, And wonder at the Truth I can- not find, Like some night-moth attracted by a spar , Bewildered by the flame that leaves her blind. These marvels are so far beyond our skill That Man seems blind as moth, or der still. -Herbert Elliott in the New York Times. NEW YORK (CP) - W. G. Crisp, Vancouver author. has won the Dodd. Mead-Boys Life prize -0 SINGLE 5.4!) and lb.” tliefaps. .lir.tl .. '' min. I. III: - - DOUNLI HPWIR IIK .U. NEWLY DECORATED ROOM! WITH EUR I &D wauiusinsh suo-sanMuo- mu. ouousoam ' - h W334" ' ( LINTEN ITATIONB sources were so limited that result was incommensurate with the hopes that had been rolled. They were thus brought face to face with one of the prob- lems that life raises. whether for tho community or for the individu- al. the problem of the second best. Two things may be said about this. The first it. that where the best is possible. to be content with the second best is betrayal. Few men, (need with the alternatlvu of good and evil, would deliberately choose evil. But many, when the decision is between the best they can do and something inferior to it, are not ashamed to prefer the second. it is a common complaint to- day that pride of uaftsmanahlp is lacking. that men are too easily satisfied with something less than the best they are able to do and give. if this is so, then things have come to a sorry pass indeed. The true man sets his own high stand- ards and would count it dishonor- able to fall below them by his own fault. A scientific oversight or in- accuracy; and a generation that benefits I0 richly from the ap- plication: of science ought also to learn from it the moral qualities without which it could achieve nothing. But it is equally true that where the best is no longer possible, it in wisdom to avail oneself of the sec- Pogo! Th Guardian ,- Betrayal Or Wisdom The Times. laadon ond best. Many a man has found himself deprived by circumstance. 113! 58911 Riven without re. pininl over what has been denied. Sometimes. . i-edemp tion of the second but has been more fruitful Chll HIE enjoymem of, what was thought the best would ever have been. The re. birth of Denmark in the mid-nine. teenth century. with the vigorous Folk High Scbol movement, wag largely due to the courageous ac. coptuice of the new situation creai. ed by defeat at the hands of Pi-us. sis and the need to lurrendcr any dream of Great Power status. The watchword "We must gain ill. w what we have lost om. wardly" is one that expresses ad. miirably the spirit in which the second best is accepted and en. nobled. it is part of the open secret of the Christian faith that God him- self is not exempt from the Cllolce of the second best when the best has been refused him. He is not to be thought of as Clrrying out everything according to some prearranged scheme. Rather does he accept in patience and re. deem in love the innumerable per. versions of which human freedom is capable. The language of a di. vine regret. "If only they had known," runs through the Bible. The cross can be the red mplion of all human failures only ecause it was the point at which God trausmuted into a fresh appeal of his love to men their worst re- jection of that love. The acceptance of the second best when the best is refused had its place even within the divine wis- dom; and he who learns from ihis source how to be capable of it himself becomes thereby a partner with that wisdom. NOTES BY How do you pronounce the name of the Prime Minister of Austi-alia.who is now visiting Ot- tawa? It is a Scottish name. and in Scotland they 1,3 nounce it as .. .. .. , p .. . .. u they pronounce it Mengies-the g hard. Like the difference over the name of the late Premier Hep-' burn. The Scots pl0I10l.ll1CC it as spelled-Hep-burn. But many peo- ple dropped the p and pronounced ii. He-burn. -St. Thomas Times- Journal. One of the most dangeru... il- lusions a country can develop is to imagine that it has alwnyl been completely victorious in past. it tends to breed pride an over-confidence. and a feeling that the national honor can never be satisfied by anything less than on unconditional surrender of its op- ponents. in actual fact, however, no nation has over had an un- broken record of triumph and humiliations in its time. It is well for a people to remember its defeats as well as its victories; it helps to preserve an attitude of J 'inn and sense in tocllay's ci'lsea. -Edmonton Jour- na. I Back In 1981-14 year: before the first atomic bomb-a free- lance British pournallst wrote in The Strand magazine of London: "The coal 3 man can get in a day can easily do 500 times as much work as the man himself. Nuclear energyiil at least one million times more powerful still . . . What is lacking is the match to set the bonfire alight. or it may be, the detonator to cause the dynamite to explode." That free- lance Journalist indulged in the pleasure of quoting his own pro- phetic writing of 1931 in the THE WAY dictates of a model designer”! So long as this spirit of individuality can be maintained in the small towns throughout Canada the claim of the historian will remain true: that the spirit of a nation is best expressed through its small communities. -Newmarket Era and Express. We must confess lo feeling a slight misgiving at the announi'e- ment that the Austrian govern- ment has sold at auction a house that once belonged to Hil- lers parents and later to Martin Bormann. one of his henchmen. The Nazi spirit in by no means extinct. and as time passes Hit- ler's memory may undergo a treatment similar to that Napo- leon's received at the hands of time. For several generations there has been a Napoleonic cult and momentos of him are cher- lshed. It would be better if every ""118 that had any connection with Hitler were destroyed. The new owner of the house is said to have paid twice its estimated value-a sure sign -that Hitler's with it. even though Once-removed. has value. -Ham- ilton Spectator. Two English students are living in a cave in the southern countries in order to get first-hand experi- ence for use in a debate on: "Should man return to his orig- inal state?" The way things are in the world today the debate might well have been on such A thesis as: "When does men re- turn to his original state?" How- ever. a little cave-living would be suitable preparation. They could install a few modern comforts, lay in a stock of comestlbles and the wntem of Lethe. - London Free Press. House of Commons recently. "1 hope that the House will not re- provo me for vanity or conceit," said Sir Winston Churchill.-New York Herald-Tribune. All across Canada our small towns flourish. each with an in- dividual and distinctive character . . . . This retention of individual- ity is all to the good since it means that one small town is not a stereotyped copy of its neigh- bor but retains the major char- acteristics with which is Nothing could loan inspiring than an array of small towns that gave the impression of having sprung up in obedience to the CLEAN CLOTHES WEAR LONGER For Your Dry Cleaning Needs RITE-WAY oLnANnns pm 7387 PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS, Etc. p y I slble separation. the government for his manuscript, "Whit. Gold in :::..::::.':; ”.'.u:l'il'..'.. ".2:.:..""...: iiiii.'a.""..l.'.';. ?.f.'".'i';l rs 20-month we c------' - --w or - mu '”"' l.i".l"..”"..." "W 0"-9 "- "G9"-'e M- tlulztlciin of career arises? within gunshot of the mainland. (ciiflesttmnabgslxfenazgd jfgggdl 23:1 nh:lg::ull;c1::”':h WM ll? Clilllf c 8." I” 3' M Dill Sm vngbeena 't h f H , ' . - . ” ""1 Penn- conslderable numbeiuoferyenlih, T isuthe ?:'ll::(e'lli-:i)enefllll:g:I?.l-acraen :,Pl'l')';r'tlV1fa"&r"l'il:fYEtll;:ll be gentlto the win. Presented annually for the 1:'Q?.':eLnl"nTh."::uE'Ag.;' have noticed several factors to it be averted? Chicago "35 059'” 1" bf” smw "'1' boy. 13 W 10 Yilrl -j-2mi.......j ; Iuipuport the lclalma of those who Sir Anthony Eden noted - and ' ”d- '1” "'"'d l3 33-W1 1 A, mar, Q4)” LLB. ' ' lwwnmlou kg m . . .. u . . . , . . elm? " the """dmd "mm" th r lln f rk wh u h h id ' ” emu”. M". n Gum. u D” M Ion. nour present I thr 0 8 00 W0 - 9 930" uho .311”. 1,13. , , H-nth , , any number of disoaciionie-uiziii be able to take A short course "'A"'”';"I'I"' 9” m7 mm 59. "T :13 5511 ;.- ---. -.:- .e,--- H Y N n M A N . ,..... .. .. .. . .. ., 0.. nos. eatru. oc o f h , 0 llll'Y- 0 01' lmPI'0V9 . ll . I'll! . - gig" gll or which hwy. .m..gc,-0:35 his chosen lot. there would be a fun... nut. mdo:'nn.. .3. 18 (gallon. Dial son fgndgncy to an the cmdg mum still greater scarcity of teachers. , J 0 off what he should be studying A member of the local besisIa- . rum" 5 ngghm ' 8' hm" 3' ' and dgspltg um-uueg on thg pug lure in a recent address spoke in - , . CC!" KCC' 5 Cl!!! 5" of tlieiteache mud the lack of co- the, I-tale ilncregrlzt In the teach; ' '3' " N" 5”” '31- 0'3” '33- 300-0 '7" (mum! on on g p 1 f n. . era II at cl. 0 governmen . T um, um gush" 'b'.c:m..'.::.l. manages to eke out a small raise MIQHGI. P330 I Idue J' "Thom B'o' E. I. or ieu dlgcom-gggd. now and then just to say they l N S U Nlchokog . ................L., m m-nu or,--mm no--2,-s -v-.2-c-----9 we --I-,;-;- we in ........ ...... CHIROPRACTOR ' " I a ” an r ll 0)! -1-. so be coggidai-ad, bggldgg an an. didn't hesitate to increase their J A. u'&d”- D, W 3. mm from larger centres, riil- own benefit: by several hundred since 1873. ' ' ' om agy IN: h::d":..i mgghgf Enter. dug"-ghjn on; zooggl m ' cHAp W" I "T 60' mlh -'1. s Dill OBI - T U. W Prlaoo In TDIIII mug; g gv 1;. gen to III) or ml 01' on 0 same 0'''PC IIHIKI0 IUIIIIIIIITD Kn A any radio program and cimm subject is the lack in squlpmont. ' ' . G. I. Ilnubllllln. B.A., of children are not conducive to Well I! main. 1' lo. LLB. , Q, gljlg H&gyd, te-cher'- Ilklnm l-l”"Wx '"PP"9'- MN" "'0 ' - Ill an-an II. mica 3. Ana. su.Iu.c.. ufhe fencing; profession has 31:; 1:ndlMmPIl1 0' l-M If-'lI00l 1. am" 5,. , . . 33,1, nu me an an atom) g stone to better 1-. dl-If-'0lIl'llF I mm m .3 man” gguuo ....."'”" ;3..'.l""'....'i:'”.:'.'u'"3'.'.t '?.:'.':..":".::':..'::”"....."'”".rl.: -- '---""--r -”"'-- -an -I -- - ”""'--"” 4- --"iv primary oducatlon are drawing done before the question an to why "DOWNTOWN HALIFAX" salaries donbloandcveamoroteIclIIfIlI'elW.butiffbepow- 'I'woanInnuotrounlanwaplhtIoo.luInonaal'nooholIlo ' than on name incur. salary. on um be would mum on the trio. A Modern omit Building with nu-no on-nun ans. lnDONAI.ll, cumin 8 00. Wing their anon! an M solution to much of the trouble is In ovary noon for our Boosts huh. &m 1, 1.33. , on was u out. all may have to do I: lie in their hands. and if they Willd back and im on unemployment mm the rectum .-dmtmtnu. want comrornau nu. voasnnn I. 3. Wm. ii ELM loonuwrrnralvau narlaxnalnowll Idlnalisilln.