THE GUARDIAN Fubliahed every week-any morning ll I36 PFIIICI latietnwn. P E. I.. by rho Thumlun Company 'CovcrI Prlnto Edilrd lllbnd Lilo lhl lid for IIIO Manager. Ian A Burnett. Auoclale Editor. Frank Walker nranrli omen oi Summorlido. Montague Ind Alberlon Auinoi ind no second Clan Mail by Inc Past Offico Department. Otuwn. . Summer-ndo Il5.Ilo per annum Etu- i 53.00. other Province: and U. s. A. Il2.Iw DC! IIIl'llHI'l. Street. Chll Limited. Dew" By Carnal: Cb- vvhero In P. E. "The In t memory to weaker thin E118 weaken FRIDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1954 Super-Penitentiary Since the rioting at Kingston Peniten- tiary last August the idea has been mooted that there should be a central penal insti- tution for prisoners who are not amenable to discipline in the regular penitentiarics This has been recommended in the report by the Commissioner of Penitentiaries on that episode with the suggestion that it take theiform either of a special institution or clse security blocks adjacent to existing! pcnitentiaries but physically separate from! them. The Government has approved of the first alternative. Human nature is not greatly different wherever you look. The existence of prisons does not prevent the commission of crime and it would be asking too much of such a place of punishment for unruly prisoners to expect it to clear up disciplinary problems in the prisons. Indeed it could be expected to be less effective because the force of public opinionlin prison society would fav- our rather than condemn behaviour leading to such special confinement. At the same time the system would not clear the regular penitentiaries of the more dangerous criminals. Most of them are apt to appear modcl prisoners rather than per- sistant challengers of authority. Their in- fluence, nevertlieless, would be anything but good. It will be convenient to have a place to which to ship prisoners who obviously do not fit in with a penitentiary run on ordin- ary lines. It may well simplify the problem of treating individual prisoners in the way best suited to their eventual re-establish- ment. It woiilri be folly. however. to fool that it provides any answer to what to do about lawbreakers already behind bars. llr. Toynbee's Optimism Since the publication some years ago of the first volume of his great work, ”A Study of History." Dr. Arnold Toynbee has been given unquestioned place among the master historians of all time. The com- pletion of the work, in ten monumental vol-l umes, was announced recently in Londor.,l and a press interview marked the occasion. at which Dr. Toynbee voiced his optimism with regard to world affairs. Atomic mis- siles, he conceded, are now ”poised head to head." while "minds and hearts are still poles apart"; nevertheless he did not believe we were going to fight a third world war. "I believe we are going to stand the strain of having to live, through a long period of nerve-wracking 'missionary warfare' with an undramatic ending." Sooner or later, he added. control of atomic energy will pass into the hands of some single world author-, ity. To be stable, this authority must be based not only on the concept of the broth? crhood of man, but of the fatheri'iood of God. It is the only condition on which man can go on living "on the face of this shrunken and explosive planet." Dr. Toynbce's optimism springs from profounrl Christian convictions. He has never minimized the dangers, or misinter-l prcted the warning signals along the road to world peace. These indeed might be said to form the theme of his whole work. As he pointed out in an earlier volume: "An unceasing round of internecine warfare of, ever increasing intensity between deified parochial states has been the principal cause of the breakdown and disintegration of some, and pcrhapslmost, of the civilizations that have already gone the way of all flesh. The bones of the Hellenic and Sinic societies-to pick out two conspicuous skel- etons-lie whitening ominously on fratii- cidal battlefields. If our own Western So- ciety in its turn is now assuming this fatal posture and falling into this deadly rhythm. then its prospects, so far from being en- couraging. are about as bad as they can be. for the 'drive' of Democracy and industrial- ism, which are the two master-forces in our Western World in this latest age. has al-N ready entered both our parochialism and our warfare: and this terrific head of steam seems likely to carry us iii an unpreccdcnl- 3 ed speed to an unparalleled disaster." But hcre Dr. Toynbee sees in significant difference between ancient and modern Western history. That difference lies in the potency of our Christian belief and tradi- tion. The process of apostasy has been go- ing on, but it is not so easy to get rid of the vitaiizing faith in which we and w”. forebears have been born and bred ccntiiries. It escapes eradication by in- sinuating ii strong tincture of its own es- sence "into the very disinfectants that are cepted his Old enemy Clemenceau u Prem. intentioh to km S0! vigorously applied, with sterilize if, by our latter-day neo-pagan lpclal physicians." Even Communists be-i u for - tray the extent of their debt to Christian- iity in the passion with which they deny it. lDespite many superficial signs to the con- trary, Dr. Toynbee sees, in our post-war generation, "the sap of life visibly flowing , once again through all the brancnes of our iwestern Christiandom; and perhaps, after all, the next chapter of our Western history may not follow the lines of the final chap- , ter in the history of Hellenism. instead of ;seeing some new church spring from the -' ploughed-up soil of an internal proletariat in order to serve as the executor and residuaiy legatee of a civilization that has broken down and gone into disintegration, we may yet live to see a civilization which has tried and failed to stand alone, being, saved, in spite of itself, from a fatal fall." Dr. Toynbce's latest words indicate that he believes more firmly than ever in this alternative, with a belief based on further intensive study of the whole 6,000-year span of human history. Laugh And lie Wall - Science at one time seemed to special- ize in showing up the ignorance and error of traditional founts of learning. That phase has passed in many fields. Archaeol- , ogists have discovered that popular tradition and folk tales are a valuable source of in- formation. Many primitive medical cures have been found to have value even in a scientific age. Medical men have come to realize the importance of a sound mind in a sound body, and now a statistical study reveals that an unhappy person is apt to be an un- healthy individual. A Cornell University study reveals that one-third of workers ac- count for 75 to 80 per cent of time lost through illness. This one-third consists generally of peo- ple who are unhappy, frustrated, often up- set in emotional feelings or moods. They stiffer three to 10 times as much minor and major illness and surgery as those who lose least time from work. The recipe for good health, or at least a good chance for health, would seem to . R" 1 in F933 4-H," .1- ””3.1rgil wt... PUBLIC FORUM This column In opal lo the dlnens olon by conuponduntl of caution- of lnlorut. Tho Gurdlnn dean nol ncoenuily -ndono Ibo opinion of oorronpondenln. POTATO CONTBOVERSY sir.-on the present controversial subject of potato marketing l would suggest. that your paper in- sist. on all contributions to the Public Forum be published only over the signature of the author. I am, Sir, etc., LESLIE SIMMONS be smile and have the world smile with you. t Just how to succeed in doing so is some- thing else again, but it seems clear thati whether or not misery loves company, it' certainly makes for poor health. It would seem that there should be a natural alliance "between the medical profession and the en- tertainmcnt world, using the term -in imi broadest possible sense and perhaps stretch-l ing it a bit. As an earlier generation was. told, we must avoid that sinking feeling. 3 l EDITORIAL NOTES . Charlie Chaplin is true to his role of: comic-serious clown in his latest action.i Donating substantially to a Roman Catholic charity for work with the poor, he is re-, ported to have drawn the money from a; peace prize donated by the Communists. I U C The newest U. S. jet trainer has sicle-by-E side seating rather than the conventional tandem arrangement. The new trainer thus permits more effective demonstration and at the same time eliminates the bugbear of back seat driving. 0 Prince Edward Island is rapidly achiev- ing the position of the Denmark of Nortli America. At any rate island bacon and Island Yorkshire breeding stock is now rec- ognized as the best on the continent. Sas- katchewan is yet another Province to look here for means of improving its strain. 0 O 0 It was to be expected, after the crash over Moose Jaw, that flying regulations would be tightened up. It will be a consid- erable relief to many fliers and-operators that while various altitude-s are allocated to aircraft according to the course they are flying, there has been no general ban on crossing the track of scheduled airlines. 0 O O Souris has a head start in developing the fast-growing fisheries industry in this Province. It may be assumed, however, that other ports will not be slow in seek- ing a share in the wealth of the Gulf, the possibilities of which, as a speaker at the Souris Board of Trade meeting observed, have hardly been scratched yet. I O O The improvement of standards of eggs , and poultry products is the objective of the inewly-formed organization of P. E. 1. egg graders. The aim is a laudable one but it has been suggested that an important way in which it can be advanced is by a reduc- ,tion in the number of eligible members. Certainly the organization should take steps t to see that the number of grading stations is not further increased. Raymond Nicolas Landry Poincare, French statesman, died this date 1934. Dur- ing his long public life he occupied almost all the important political posts in France. In 1912 hrs succeeded in obtaining the sul- i Ian's recognition of the French protectorate of Morocco. As President in 1917 he no- ln 1923, holding that Gemiany had defaulted, he occupied the Ruhr in concert President of the Potato and Turnip Dealers Association. Summerside. POTATO MARKETING BOARD sir.-On Oct. 4. 1954. I wrote the Chairman of the P. E. 1. Potato Marketing Board, Mr. Donald A. MacDonald. its follows: "Mr. Donald A. lVIacDo ager. P.E:I. Potato Marketing Board. 123 Kent. Street. Charlottetown. P.E.I. ”Dear Mr. MacDonald; "Re: Statement. at the Forum. "In your recent. address at the Forum you stated. when referring to a letter in the press on Septem- ber 29 over my signature, that it 'wa.1 not. worthy of any reputable citizen in this Province.' The statement. in itself is not clear as to what. is meant. and I shall bp- pi-eciate your enlarging on it. "Again, I should like you to in- form me whether or not, in mak- ing the statement. you were ex- pressing your personal views or those of the P.E.I. Potato Market- ing Board. This was not made ear. "An early reply will be appreciat- ed. nald. Man- I "Yours very truly "Austin A. Scales.” I think my letter made 1 rea- sonable request and that I was entitled to a prompt reply; yet ten days nftei mulling my letter none has been received. In the sam. address Mr. Mac- Donald read a letter dated Sept 20, 1954, that he had received from the Board's auditors. The" letter gave the source of the information available to the auditors. pwhich information they used as the basis for their comments in their re- port on the aniluiil financial state- ment of the Potato Marketing Board. The source of their infor- mation complicates things since it. indicates that some of the minu- tes of the Potato Board meetings and some correspondence in the Boardlii files conficta with answers to questions asked in our Legisla- ture. At this time I would not care to suggest that such answers were wrong. My letter strongly urged, as 1 have urged at different times, that the flnvincial statements of the Potato Marketing Board for each of the four year: landed May 31, IBM. be madetnvnllnble to our pro- ducers of pot:it.ou by being pub- lished in the press. Though long overdue the one for the year end- ed May 31, 1954. has recently ap- peared as suggested in my letter li. i954, of the Board's Iuditora. It. appears unfiiir to our potato pro- ducers to withheld from thsm the financial atawinents for the years ended May at, 1951, 1952 and 1053. In my lettei-,dnted Sept. 29, 1954. to the press, I accused the Potato Marketing Board with issuing an- nuul Jtnuimentc incomplete. obo- curo and at variance with state- ments mode on the floor of the House. No attempt has been made to refute my accusations unless possibly it ha: been done by pub- lishing the annual statement al- ready mentioned. Whether or not this it correct. I lhull mnko some observations i-eztrding the state- ment. The balance sheet. chow: under iu ltobllltfu, "Deduct . . . repay- ment of odunco from the Potato Promotion committee - 310,000-- on." The mnnmr In which the deduction is shown ounests a lit- bility which existed in the year ended May 11. 1953. yet not. ahown. rnultinz in the financial state- mm of that on being errone- ous; otherwise. he fldnnciul stitc- ment for the you ended May ll. 1054. mm: be erroneous. The Board's f:In;hclal ot'1lt.oi;i:al. for tho year it e May , bean in nonuou main; "cci-iific-I corrut. subject to our attached re- together with A report dated June 1, NOTESBY . "A person Inn to be stupid in order to be happy." asserts a philosopher. This statement won't. stand up under analysis. as there is ai great deal more stupidity in the world than happiness. - King- ston Whig-Standard. It would he on expensive and complicated process to weed out drivers who are psychologically un- fit. to be on the road. But the coat would be nothing compared to the ghastly toll of life and pro- perty exacted every year by drivers who should never have been licens- ed in the first place. -London Free Press. Avery Brundue, president of the international Olympic Games com- mittee, recently made 1 trip to Russia. and on his return he spoke of Americas "coddled and cushioned youth huddled over tele- vision sets.” He had been impres- sed by A sports parade in M05- cow, featuring 34,000 participants performing "like clockwork" under Communist banners. in view of the influence the U. 5. Pattern has upon us, to a certain extent his comment may apply equally to Canadian youth. - Quebec Chron- icle-Herald. Our c titulinn has given every Canadian the right to own a rifle or shot gun without the benefit of permit or registration. Let. us not usurp this right. by making murder weapons of them. Make absolute- ly certain you know what you're shooting at this coming hunting season before you squeeze the trig- ger. Statistics show hunting is still one of the safest sports. Let's keep it that way. - Delhi News- Record. Any one who know: Mr. Percy Phillip. as we do. will be certain that his account of I conversation with the "pi-escncef of the late Prime Minister Mackenzie King was given in absolute slncerw. Mr- Phillip in ii calm erudite and exceed- ingly civilized gentleman who served The New York Timeii with distinc- tion in manypparts of the world and reached retirement age some two years ago as its Ottawa cor- respondent. He has remained vig- orous in body and mind. When he says-as he did in If rcmnrimblc week-end broadcast-tliat he has spokeri with a man four years dead. he honestly and intelligently believes that he has: he is not. setting out to create a sensation nor to publicize himself.-Hamilton Spectator. Donne at C0,. Chartered Account- ants." After about ten weeks of almost continuous endeavour, I succeeded in obtaining the three annual financial statements of the Board up to and including that of May Si, 1953, together with the iiuditors' reports. Each of these statements bears 3 similar notation. some of the auditors reports re- flect thnt. the Board's financial statements do not. show the true liabilities and, ,hence. I: wrong surplus or deficit as the case may e. Financial statements are timo- honorcd documents that are sup- posed to give only Jndlsputable facts and reflect the true finan- cial position of the organization. They are supposed to be readily available to miiy member of the organization. Through them. to- gether with expinnntiona when re- quested. the members are-assisted ln assaying the efficiency of the management. In considering whether or not to support the compulsory mar- keting of potatoes through one organization in study of the full financial statements of the or- gonlution can assist. Any organ- ization is no stronger than the confidence existing between the management and the memberl. I am, Sir, ei.c., AUSTIN A. SCALES Freetown, P. E. I. (since reccliiiiz Mr. Banter lat- ter he has telephoned in to any final I letter. dated October ill. has been received fiom Mr. MacDon- ald in reply to hit of October 4. The letter any: in part: "At. the last. Board meeting when this wholo matter was dltcusud no indication whatever was given that the pxuoniil views I expressed were not lndorud by the Potato with Belgium. port datodlluno 11: 1954, 1-1,)! Ltfdukotlng Board members." THE WAY Someone has uld that on ntbelot finds the real impossibility of his position when he is grateful for life and has nobody to thank. - Sarnia Observer. How mean can people be? At n farm fire down Toronto way a few days ago a great crowd gath- ered and police had to protect the orchard from looters who stole baskets and -carried them away filled with apples. No wonder farmei-s.are sometimes provoked at the dcpredations of city (and town) folk who seem to think that anything growing on a farm common property. - G o d c r i c h Signal-Star. we were beginning to think lint Osnabrueck, Germany, must be I- bout one of the healthiest places in the world. We received this im- pression from some statistics which showed that an unusually - large number of its inhabitants were living to observe golden wedding anniversaries. Now it; seems that the city administration was becom- ing curious about the same situ- ation. And then the balloon burst. Otto Strackeljahn. a municipal em- ployce whose job it was to report the names of couples fifty years married. confessed that he had faked 198 anniversaries in order to pocket the money the city paid jubilee couples as gifts. - Saint John Telegraph Journal. The courts are getting tough on those convicted of asaults on police, and it. is timely they should do so. There have been too many cases these past. few years of hoodlums atteniptlng to rough up officers who were only doing their duty. In Toronto Magistrate W. W. McKeown sent. two men to jail for .1 year for assaulting an officer. In Windsor Magistrate Angus W. MacMlllan sent. one to jail for 10 days. These sentences are disparate, but. probably the degree of the assaults differed. Police officers are the protectors of us all. They should not be mo- lcsted while doing their duty. This doesn't. mean they are entitled to use unnecessary force in pursuance 1 l l are entitled to the support of our courts. -Windsor Star. Women are not only living longer than men. a fact known for some time, but are adding with the passage of the years to the dis- parity between the life expecta- tions of the two sexes. accord- ing to the latest table published the other day by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Life ex- pectancy at birth reached 86.3 years for males in 1951 an 70.8 years for females. ,The e pec- tancy increased appreciably for I child who had passed the first year of life being, in all, 89.3 for the male and 73.3 for the female. Women. in short. are expected to live four years longer than men. -Shcrbrooke Record. October. in eight of the poll ten years, has been Ontario's worst month for fatal traffic accidents. Fall and early Winter months are the year's most critical period for motor accidents. with October us- ually the worst month in numbers killed and in deaths in relation to mileage travelled by motor ve- hicles. In contrast to October. April might. be called the "Saf- est" month for motoring. Motor- istu in April travel about as many miles II in October but the April mileage death rate is less than half as high. an the October mile- age death rates. -- Gulf. Reporter. It is n trifle more than 40 your: use that at A critical stage in the Battle of the Marne, General Gul- lteni. According to t r I d l t i o n mobilized every taxicab in Paris for the purpose of rushing aid to the hard pressed French armies faltering before the German on- llaught on the west front. Whether or not the taxicab: were used to the extent idicuted. the reinforce- ments got there in time. and turn- the tide. Recently it. was proposed at Parlii. as on item in com- memoration of the victory. to round up the Renault: and other small cars used on the great oc- anion and give them an added day of glory oi part of a parade. To the surprise of nil concerned: the most careful and penlltent uiirch failed to dlsclon I olnglo one of those historic taxi cnbn. - Wood- stock Sentinel Review. ' is mbly harmless chatter of an ordin- of their duties. It. does mean they rooms - security gunrds are oi. 3.10 ”unuo,v lie: the hand tint. wear: I crown" ll not perhaps on opt these days as it was in the great poet.'l time; for the few kings and queens who are left do not have on much direct reaponniblllty for public affairs In didtt.i1cl.r,royni iorbeu-I and. generally speaking. they no held in much higher eo- teem. Our own monarch and her family appeal to be safe from oer- ioua molestation almost anywhere although. of course. police precau- tions are not neglected, for there is no telling where or when some criminally disposed fanatic might go ”bei'se.rk." However, awarding to an inter- esting report recently released. the head of state more likely to be annoyed and even endangered by mallcloul persons is not 1 heredi- tary ruler but an elected executive. the President of the United States. only rarely does a threat. to the President assume serious propor- tion; in fact, in recent history actual attempt: on the life of the President have been very few. "There was. for instance, the at.- temptcd auuaimtion of President Truman by Puei-to Ricnn extre- mista in 1950. At that time the would-be nsaassuu actually got: tn- atdo of Blair Home where Mr. Truman was staying temporarily and nuLC9edCd in killing one guard before they were overpowered. Two or three such attacks were made. and frustrated, during the lncumbency of the late Franklin D. Roosevelt. O 0 In the past. before security mea- sures had been brought. to their present. strength. three President: died from violence of the asanuln -Mr. Lincoln, Mr. Garfield, and M.r. McKinley. President Eisen- hower thus far has not. been ex- posed to actual violence, but: the danger is always only I lime dis- tance awny. In fact. according to the Secret. service report. a threat of bodily hum 11 made against him every six hour of every day in the year. Last year approxi- mately 1400 t.hi-eats were investi- gated; the year before was even worse. the total number being 1650. . These threats run all the way from the irresponsible and prob- ary drunk. who at that. particular moment doesnt. know who hap- pen: to be in the White House, to the definite intention of I. mun crazed by fanaticism or Nationalist fervour. Most of the threats come from those who have a congenital hatred of all constitutional au- thority; and probably get nit much pleasure out of loud. boastful talk as they would from an actual tit- tempt at. assassination. Neverthe- less, each threat, however foolish it may sound. is investigated by the United States Secret service. In most. cases the President him- self is unaware of the nature of the t.hi-eats against his person. He knows whnt everybody else knows. namely. that four times every day somebody is vowing to do him physical harm; but the details of the threats and the measures tak- en to examine them And. where 319065831"). to foil them. are left to the Secret Service Department and its army of officials. It is said that. the present. Presi- dent. shown no outward signs of anxiety: nevertheless. the fact. that once in every six hour: Jomeone is dreaming of violence against him must. be I source of some un- easineu. Further. the strict and manifold precautions taken for his safety. while they obviously are necessary. must. be irksome to a man who is noted for his unosten- tutious and simlpe manner. Where- ever he is at. any minute of the dacv or night - even in his own ways within immediate renc... when he leaves I place he is ac- companied by I secret Service man. usually by I number of them. The chief of the White House Secret Service detail. Mr. James Rowley, in almost. Always at. the President): side. Within the vic- inity are other gum-do; they watch windows, look for signs of extra- ordinary activity in the crowd, have An eye to any hiding place, however inconspicuous, md -ven measure the facial expressions of lndlvldunls who may be close by. Mr. Rowley and his assistants say that President Eisenhower. being I man of regular and predictable habits, presents no great security problem. He is an easy mm to guard. Mr. Truman. however. wu A bit different. While he co- operated with his guards, on all Presidents do - after iill, in for their own good - he had some The Passing Scene Page 4 boerver I LOOKING AI-"rEl1. THE PIIESIDE N! The Shnkeaperinn declu-Iuon, took his guard: "off guard." For instance. he used to get ul- very early most mornings - Home. times long before dawn - an: rush off on a brisk bike; so bi-is thlt hil guards had Ill they coulc do to keep up with him. It. in also rumoured that ho liked nothing better than to. slip out u back door, instead of walking aedntely through the front one. as I President should and as security officers gi. ways expected him to do. 0 O 0 Before he President uta out. or. 5 vacation or I. speaking toui everything is done to ensure his safety. Railway tracks are inspect. ed, and guarded at every mile Hotels are searched from top my bottom and each employoo ii checked for possible violent intent. All food iii prepared under the direction of a. specially trained agent. and only hand-picked em- ployees are permitted to handle it. at. any time. when he play: golf - u in. present President does every chance he gets - not all the hp. paren golf players are there foi- that purpose. some of them carry rifles in their golf bags; othci.-i have radio: in their pockets-aitll others are hidden in bushes and hedges - Just. in can. When he. goes fishing - as every President must. if he is to be A good one - most. likely than not the mild looking man who is casting a fly a bit further down stream is m6re intent. on watching the Pres. ldentfs movements than on lui-iii: an elusive rainbow to his creel. 9g?--nE3'”Wl tl7oe&' Gwmii BEACH COTTAGE. AUTUMN small bare temple to summer, keeg safe through the blizzarda. Re and sleep. Clean sand. when all our track: are gone, Will blow around you smooth is dawn. poles and wires that troop from sight. Will grow to B. harp in the hand ul night. Arid tearing from the .north the: The cry of surftwiil well, become the sky. Then in your weathered wood remember The swimmers laughing, the Jiidcl and amber Of summer. the voices. light Ind w .. The dune-drift days that have an end. Wait. for us in gray beach grass with sand, and shells. and frosted glass. -Elizabeth Bohm in the Christian Science Monitor. Old Ciioriotioiown undP.l.X. ENGLISH MAIL-BAG 'We have the pleasure of con. gi-atulating our r e ii d e r s, that through the exertions of His Ex.- celiency the Lieutenant Governor, in separate Mail Bag is from hence- forth to be mode up at the Post Office in England for this Island: and it is most earnestly to be wished that the House of Assembly will seriously take the matter into consideration and further the de- sign: of the parent Government. by devising some plan for the sure and speedy conveyance of the Mails after their arrival at. Pictou. If this desirable object is accom- plished. we may receive the Mail in twenty-two hours after its ar- rival in Halifax. It is of little use to us that the steamers arrive in ten or twelve days, if we have to wait nearly that time for its trans- mission from Halifax to this is- land, I distance of about 160 miles." -Royal Gazelle, Jan. 26. 1841. The Ages Old Story As the thief ls ashamed when he is found. so is the houm of In-nel Inhnmed; they. their kinks. their prlnou. niid their priests- nnd their prophetl, buying to I stock, Thou art my fothor: and to I stone. Thou but brought m0 forth: for they bovs turned their back unto me. and not their fine: but In the time of their ti-ouhl-' little habits which occasionally they will buy, Arloe. and save us- VETERANS DEC. ill, 1954, IS THE VETERANS DISCHARGED OTHER ELIGIBLE PERSO OF THEIR DISCHARGE Unused re-eoubliohmonl or 15 year: After ditch tmu'amV INSURANCE IWORLD wan H VETERANS lA5T DATE FOR ACCEPTINO APPLICATIONS FOR VETERANS INSURANCE FROM IEFOIE DEC. 3i, 1944, AND NS. VETERANS DISCHARGE!) LATER MAY APPLY-UP TO TEN YEARS AFTER THE DATE Ixcin tint credit may be mod to "I'- l'-EIIIO IIOW IDIIIIIIIOO OOIIEIICEI up E0 JlI- 14 A I urge. whichever la the later. I For further information and application forms. write to:.Supt.. Veteran: Insurance. Dept. of Vetei-om Affairs, Otnwnscanndm Publish! Hon. Hosp: LQdnh. nnlarlbootult art ql union .4 rzuy-u .4:-tn '"” ”' The Guardian V