THE GUARDIAN “(‘meru Prince Iflilwnrd Island Like the Ilew‘ i‘iIli|I':licrt !‘\f‘I)‘ wi-ck-ilay morning -it llili i"iini~- Street. Charlnttct~v.\ii. i‘. E. 1., h,\ The Tliomson Company Limited. Editor and Manager. Inn A. Burnett. Associate Editor, Frank Wnllicr. ll:-in ll f7ff|""< at riiiviiiiivisiile, .\iiilli.‘\l1l|i“ an’! .'\illE‘litill. ,\llilli|l./“ti as Stwnllfi Class .\l.ill by the Pm! ()ffl'c ilcpiilmciit, (l'.law:i. B_\ Carrier: Cliailollctniili. Suiunierside $15.00 -per nnnum. ‘.‘.:ew here in l‘ R. 1.3000. Other Prov- inces and i’. S. .\ S'.‘.I,II(I pi-1 riunum. "1‘ilf‘r.|llrti7|'.'4*sl im-ni->r_\ i(W\\'(‘fIVi\t3I than the iivikest ink." ideological Warfare 'l‘lw “twilil \\:ii''', the “slioolin;; war" in 1\'m«r~-,l, the nl‘lillSlli'i‘ at Piiiiiniiiijoiii, ant now the “sliootiiig war” in lndo-Cliiua and the Geneva coiil‘ci'eiice, serve well the }{l-pmlln‘; pui~po<i- of plaving upon the ]1(yIi(\s and l'c.-ii"-' «if llllllll(l|lt'i. l.-ittists and muddle-liiizuli-rl lilicriils who like to imag- ine that Soviet tliicigii policy has changed materiall_\' in the if) months since Stalins death. will re-ilisr-o\'ei' if they take the trouble to c\;in‘.iilc the f\l:i_v Day sl0.L’Utl>’ (if the Cciltrzil Coiiiinitlei‘ Hf lllf‘ 50l'l“' Communist I’zirty the truth of the sa.\'“l.Z- “Plus ca l-lmnge. plus c'est la meme chose." Slogans are ct'lci'li\'e \\'t‘2lll(lil:. in th“ ;ll'\'f‘llfli of l{l(‘(lltl‘_{lt'£li w';ii‘l':u'e. .\’iay lhilvi crowds in .\iosi-ow's led Square clidnt. “F1'al(‘l'll.'ll grectin<_:s to the peoples of the colonial and dependent coiliitrics, flglitim’. lay their fl‘t"i‘(itilll and iii<’lepeiuience," anti’ trouble flares anew in British Guiana. Oi‘ Malava. or union: the .\i£lll .\lau of :'\fl‘l(‘.'l. The universal desire for peace and the bogey of Gcrniaii niilitzirisni are exploited to the full in the l\'i*emlin's ilnccasiiig ideol- ogical \\’2ll‘i:ll'(‘. Thus the [thy of the \\'es‘. is weakened. the authority of the Dr. Adcnauer's govcrnnicut in the West Ger- man Republic is l|ll(i(‘i‘llllIlI‘(i, and the Soviet I grip on its l-‘.uropc;in satellites at‘d on Roll China is strcngtliencrl. Alternating hope and drfillail‘. 1l€‘\'<"-' certainty, is the strategy of the Soviet ‘ V ' ' -r ‘.1 '\ ‘ ‘VI 4 ‘. i'nlons ideological \\(llirllt. li.isi.l as a. \\:ivs on the princilile of “ilivirle and rule." North Shore 'l‘lw 7.4311 miln iviilwny front Sept isles to Sclieffcrvillc, Quelwc, will commence oper- an,-ms in _.‘\ugll_:t and will haul a million and 3 half inns of iron ore this year. About lftfiti it will begin to ll‘FlIl.<p0l‘L 10: million tons of ore l"‘|‘ ."“‘“'- The rcmarkablc development north of the Gulf of St. l.awrcnce has been very largely matte possible b_v air transport, al- tliougli in winter il'tl(‘it)l‘ trains and trucks moved stecl, timber, piling and heavy l‘lbw- er-plant equipment. lleavy snowfall and winter inaintcnancc mzule such hauling as 9xpcnsi\'r\ as fl_\’in:. in spite of lt‘!l‘.l)I‘i‘;lllll'i‘\‘ ranging from 4'.’ below to R3‘ above zero, high winds and long winters which profoundly affect operations over the l..'ibrador plateau great _q[l'i(‘(\< h,’\\'r\ been taken in makln;: the rich acccssilile. l“ower is be- iron ore deliosits V small ing developed at .\»ienihik. Ont)’ “V0 turbines are being presently installed but provision is being made for the addition of two more units when development rcquii'cs. The (‘.<lllll&lil‘(i full_v regulatcil flow of the river is capable of producing Ll-1,t)0t) con- tinuous liorsepowcr at the site, or 56,000 iiorsr~pnwcr at till per cent load factor. ll ll; .|.l‘fi.-till tn ,'ll)lil't't‘i.'lit". the effect “ml 1],,‘ l,1l";L1 ,<t'Glit‘ ricvclopmcm of that 31-.-3 wlll have on cnstcrn Canada generally and this Province in particular. The danger is that we may reznrrl the whole operation as ticiii: on too large .1 scale for us to cope “-jlh_ Suppliruz, however, must be moved into the new communities and in ever in- creasing quantities. The fact that the)’ “ill be required in vast quantities should be 5 (-]1',;]lm]Qr\ to our producers and middle- men. if the orders were to be available only by drihs arid drabs they would be so mlrpll the less Yiliililllif‘ and less worth the 11-ouble of ;;i~ttiii;: and filling lllllll. of A Higher order When son1e- one near and dear is at the point of death there are few people who would hesitate to donate a pint of blood to save their life. The trouble with such programmes as the Red Cross Blood Donor Service is that although it is enormously more efficient than looking for donor; when an emergency arises, it lacks the per sonal impact of the appeal to save a par- ticular person in his or her hour of need. it requires a certain t‘.\tcnsion of one's instincts for protecting the home and fam- ily to go to a Blood Donor Clinic in mid blood when all one's friends and relatives are in good health. It is the ability to make such a sacrifice before. an cniergcncy arises, however, that distinguishes the truly civilized man from the savage. The primitive man will shed his blood for his kin when they are in imminent danger but it is quite impossible to convince him that the some magnanimity is in order when Uiey are not immediately threatened. The salesman for an electrical safety intgtviewing the manager -s or a ractory when unexpectedly a work- man was electrocuted by operating an old- fashioned unprotected switch. The sales- man gnt an order which surprised him. it was not practical to kill a man when in- terviewing each prospect but he did in words kill a man in every subsequent in- terview. His success was phenomenal. 'l‘he same technique might well bring to the Blood Donor Clinics those who would not hesitate to donate for their immediate family but are not readily impiessed by the need for contributing to an impersonal blood bank. Canada ln_ltew York A building costing between SR millions and Kit) millions, to serve as a centre for Canadian activities in the City of New York. now seems certain of realization. I‘. will be privately financed by a group of Canadians. The building is expected to become self-supporting. Provision prob- ably will be made for it to be turned over eventually to the Canadian Government without cost to the taxpayers. This is a i'cni:u'kable uluiertaking. lion. Ray Lawson, Canadian Consul General in New York, and former Lieuten- ant-Governor of Ontario. originally propos- ed the project in a speech before the Cana- dian Club of New York in 1953. It al- ready has won more support than at first was anticipated. Ynder the name of Can- ada House it prol)abl_v will bring under one roof Canada's governmental, industrial and cultural activities in New York. White details are not _vet complete it is known that Canada Ilouse will be located within half a mile of Grand Central Ter- minal in the heart of Manhattan. Financ- ing of the project no longer is a problem Originally it was hoped to find 12 spon- sors. each of whom would invest $l(ltl,()(ltl, Now the number of sponsors has increased to 22 and the campaign is not yet closed. The Canadian Government has offices in four buildings of Rockefeller Centre. l-Tlsewhere in I\ianhattan are i)t‘1lll(‘ilt"S of five Canadian banks, the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National Railways. and vari- ous Canadian business enterprises. In ad- dition. many American concerns have sub- stantial Canadian interests and might wish to obtain office space in Canada House. The Canadian Club and the Canadian Govern- ment Travel Bureau also are expected in move to the building. It would become the centre of great activity. EDITORIAL NOTES The Canadian international Trade Fair open today, the Rt. lion. Peter Thor- neycroft, President of the British Board of Trade, doing the honours at thz opening. This Province will be represented by an exhibit which should attract the attention of both Canadian and outside buyers. O O 0 Global interests, but commitments lim- ited to our means of fulfilling them, is the practical policy enunciated in the House of Commons by External Affairs Minister Pearson. Unforturuitely even though we wish to restrict our responsibilities in pro- ,poi-tion to our means, the hard facts of necessity may require them to be extended. A proposal to make a gift of an atom research instrument to the Australian Gov- ernment has been announced by the U. K. Treasury. The gift is a synchrotron—an instrument for the basic studies of the structure of the atom-—from the i.'. K. Atomic Energy Research Flstalilisliineiit. it will be for the use of the National Uni- versity of Australia. 0 The liead of Canada's Royal Canadian Mounted Police gave good and useful ad- vice to parliamentarians when he told it joint committee that legislators cannot pass laws contrary to public opinion and expect adequate enforcement. In this Province, in the matter of Prohibition, we learned that the Commissioner's views are dem- onstrably correct. "The Glorious First. of June" 1794 Ad- miral Lord Howe defeated a French fleet under Villaret-Joyeuse, capturing seven ships. The action took place in the English Channel off Ushant. The repercussions were great and it may not be too much to sav that it. led to the fall of Robespierre and his death on the guillotine. on the follow- ing July 14th. The notorious Committee of Public Safety soon lost. its dreadful pow- er and the Reign of Terror was over. The coalition Government of Prime Minister Robert Menzies of Australia hav- ing been returned to power with a smaller popular vote than the defeated Labour party there will undoubtedly be .1 demand "Down Under" for some form of propor- tionnl representation. The conventional voting system, however, with all its faults seems to give the best results in the way of strong government which yet keeps i touch with popular opinion. - Last Lap ’ fl Old Charlottetown and P. I. I. l NOTES BY Moose are reported to be in- creasing in Ontario, with the 1953 population set at 42,000. Any evi- interesting facts rlcnee of an increase in wild life toiiceriiing \\E‘:Illl(‘l' con(l'.t:oh.s o‘. i: gratityin,-z in an age when man's M1_\~ _w\»pnl_\-.gt,\~n pt-ears ago. are deprcdatinns have. in many areas. excerpts from a dlfll_\' of the late,upsct the balance of nature by Alexander MacDonald of Glcnfin-‘kcarclcss slaughter. ~—- Ottawa Cit- VVF..\'l‘lil'lR IN MAY The following nan, P.E.l. 11911. May 1 1882: Cold north wind, ice _ on East. River. Notlung done to-i V" '5 h"'°”‘_5"'‘,‘ '“ “Me, "“" Mrds fmmimz H l(an;idian grain first. niude its ap- MM. 3,.d. p,.O.“. hnm Ins, mzhl. pciirancc fll quantity on the Jap- ‘ lanese markcts after rice prices slcizhs travelling on roads .. _ Mav 5th: Crossrd on ice frnm.-‘"““‘d- Ham’-V ‘’5i’"'311-‘’ “'33 Scotchfnrt. Ice quite solid for thisl-‘_"“Km "”‘ *‘ ‘"h‘‘“V‘'‘" ““"""3""" '° “me of Wm. H rice. Now rice prices are declin- May -ft“: -I-,._,‘._.,.”(,d to Fort Au_ ing but Japan apparently still gust,“ Church on W, mdm.‘__ iwants the Canadian grains. May Mm. Rm: EINUOI, dm.__Im [Mm we deduce from this that quality “.m_k’ dam, '\.,,,’_4 of product has \\'(\n a porn1anenL May 12th: No plowing done yet. ‘""-‘“"l“"'7 "sh -‘k *‘i‘‘'‘" Sta!“ Severe night frosts and a good im"”"‘i"‘ sliare of snow on the lanes... ‘ H m“, M unwrmm M“ me” May ifith: Ground coverrd with fresh fall of snow this morning... quite cold. Southport boat made first trip up the l'lVPf‘ today, dit- ficulties with ice flow.. boat. had iis a rule of the. sidewalk. it is lkecp to the right. Where this is ‘understood pedesiriaiis can move tensity even in rush hours on the _ _ _ V , lbusiest. streets of a community. . _ _ , _ . ra c r-comes snare . cop e, lieadlar._ds still cmeied win siioumnld and -‘_mmg_ dud“ “Ch am"; stop. hesitate. turn, and start for- ward only to collide again. Other ‘knots of people may stand in the -I-"E PERIODICAL centre of the way talking. A boy ifn "Fiddling While Rome Buriis",’“"‘-" "‘"‘ 35133"-“i lhi‘ traffic S”. Gem.ge Dysnm Wm.’ was [or stream, knocking parcels to the fifteen years Din,,.m,. of me Roy,” pa\'eiiient. Confusion re s ults. College of Music, writes on R num-, H19” ‘5, "° l“‘«"‘-‘Wt Why Bn.Vthinlz ber of the most. interesting toplc.s,"‘ ‘he kl"? Shfmld hHDPt‘"- There in music, ranging over 1! wide fieldfl‘ l “J19 0' ill!‘ »“id£‘\*‘all~’ it "" and expressing the thoughts of,l“ 1”?!‘ l0 ‘he Tilht —- Victoria one of the leading figures in Eng‘-‘C"l‘"“-“- — lish musical life of the present. century.) Enemies Of Chaos ihath no music in his soul is fit. ‘There are three types of men for treasons, alratagems and spoils. who have ('0llSlSln3lli.i_V fought the Let no such man be trusted." apparent. chaos of the world. Tliey3Brouden this definition to include are the saints, the prophets, and the harmonics of all the arts and the art.sls. The saints have pre- we are not far from the ideal of served. somclimcs lll loiielim-s-s. all grlucutjon g{ the _;pi,~lr_ soiueiimcs through the ministry‘ ‘. . . It is the idle mind which of a chosen few. more rarely by a is the prey of slogalls, of tenden- successtul appeal to the civic vlr- tious facts, of prejudiced and self- tues of a community, a faith in cent.red emotion. It. is the passive those spiritual and ethical values spectator who is most susceptible which are the basis of all religions to tickle and Sllncrflcial fa5htgn5_ and of .-ii‘. grnuuin liuiuan bet.tcr- If we could make the arts to con- mcnt. The proplirts include all srious and integral part of our who passionately pursue the trutlihvliole social st.ruct.ure, we should and fearlessly prorlalm lt.. Their.l_h3v¢ achieve;-1 at 1955:, ,. potgnt M 111" CN“‘d 0f “"19 €"QUil'‘‘Y. the contribution to the sanity and per- scientist, the sage, and the pliilos-‘man:-nce of our civilization. We nl)hcl'. The artist nlispls from hls‘should lmve provided a balance. iiiiagiinitloii an intuition of nriiorla ‘pm... of m-npo;-tlm~l_ . release and and proportion, on which he builds: (1-..,ed0m_ bow mom“ “Id spun- a seiisilive and convincing inter-lual, which might. well mltignw imitation of the world of nDl)cnr- the strains and anxieties of politi- ahces and emotions. These are the} cal and national strife. We might three faiths. in the latent. g0('Ki,‘|=vel‘l persuade men that the fel- the honest kllO\\if‘.dg(‘, and the lowshlp 91 ll". Mi,-._ which mmg- l'i"P.'lii\'4" arts of mankind. whieli‘m-nd, up the ham,” of race and poem, priests. and cvaiigclist.-i have; langung¢_ jg . not gm, fanciful extolled since man first learnt to model (if what. human relations flE‘flH<‘ Mid "<D|‘¢‘-S! his ihnui1hL5-illllllli. become in other spheres.’ They are, or should be, the goal of’ 7 all education, of which textbooks and m.-zthods are but the technical slindows. Human sympathy, ob-l jcctlve truth, and disciplined taste are the ideals which all our de- vices of selection and nurture should serve. , In tho beginning was the Word. ‘The artist has two tasks. He and the Word was with God. and must. express his own some ot_ the word was God . . . All thlnga vnluul, his exceptional awnreness‘\W'I‘0 made by him: nnil without of the pageant of nature, his inter-I hllll WI! lint In)’ thin; mltlo tihlt pretation of human e.nvlronmcnt..'“’M mid!- his crystallized emotion in face of] ——~—-—§— appearance: and events. But he HCTUKE UNCOVERED has also the social function of evoking a. comparable response in those to whom his art is addressed. We are all potentlnl artists in so tin‘ of we can follow the thoughts and share the intuitions of poeu or painters or musicians. But we are also much more than this, in that we can all put some meuure.cas¢- after the watch was bought or creative order and energy into f'om an Egyptian government nuc- the tasks nr recreation: of our own-tinn of Faroulrs treasures. lives. And it. as is now so often the —** #- HIM‘, we have to earn our bread in the mniiotonoua or mechanical routine of an office or factory, it In all the more imperative that. our leisure should be devoted to more personal and satisfying ends. Boon should give in knowledge. sympathy and I touch of wisdom. drama I more vivid cnnsclousnerui of hu- man and metal problems. the fine art: a window through which we see the grace: and ornaments of life. Music should carry us into I world of imagery and nensltlveneu of sound which at its lowest. is I reapltc and at its highest. fl revela- Tlio Age Old Story LONDON (Reutei'si—--A hidden picture of the Empress Josephine n_f Frahcc has turned up in I gold watch from ex-King Farouku col- leclinn. A British antique dealer discovered the picture when he touched I concealed spring in the tlon and 1 renewal. "Tho nun that ‘have time to dream, THE WAY Prime Minister ltlalnn of South Africa says that it is time for his country “to protect her native: against the United Nations." Now we have heard everything. ~To- ronto Telegram. Doggoult, things nlwayl happen too late! A new drug has been developed which may eventually be able to control gout. by drawing troublesome uric acid from the gouty tissue. This would have been good news in the Horatio Alger days when almost every young man toyed with Lhe idea of nursing gout while sitting in an over-stuffed chair in his palatial living room. with a wood fire burning brightly, and If. least three Great Danes at his feet. But how in the heck is a guy go- ing to get gout, with income and other taxes what they are? Cleveland Plain Dealer. In Britain It pays to get. mur- ried; in more ways than one. in fact it could almost be said that the Chancellor of the Exchequer bribes young people to take the important step. We say all this because young British taxpayers‘ get a refund up to £40 from the tax man if they get married be- fore the income tax deadline. The result, of course. is that thousands of harried young men decide that married life is far better than paying the full tax required of a bachelor. — Vegreville Observer. The brlght child who ffntlheo his work early in school should _ says A. E. Robinson, principal of Medway Area High School. “it is from these dreams," he told I panel discussion here at the convention of the Associated High School Boards of Ontario “that the ad- vances of the future will come." it will, of course. always be dif- ficult for the teacher to differenti- nte between dreaming. indolence, and the occasional inertia of A 8I'0Winl boy. But. this is part of the teaching art. One thing is sure. the dream comes before the cffort. and without dreams there would be no achievement. —Lon. don Free Press. It I: reported Ilnt. the Bishop of Huron has inaugurated 1 "so. ciety for the Prevention of Gab- bilnl the Lord‘: Prayer." Hg de. fined nabblinr an “to mu. off without meaning." But the mfg. "*9 ‘he 3151109 has ‘made is to ""01 only adults in his Anti-gobble society: really the worst offend- ers are children, whom we for. give because of the amusing na- ture of their misgnbbles. in one orphanage. for instance, the Lord‘: Prayer was known familiarly as "Father Charten"; in another case 3 ""8" 170)’ was heard to repent "Our Father we shot in Heaven"; still nnothdr perversion wu “Lena Iutlon." u: not into 'I'h|n1¢| Manchester Guardian. The Guardian After waive you: of hard work a group of 5clent.iata_ announced the other day that at long last they have developed a clus-room which will create the "ideal" en- vironment for learning. Already some educators and architect: are hailing it u the "clue-room of tomorrow" and praising it as the most. advanced am? CV01‘ mid! in tho phyalcnl and psychological , on of education. Up to now, according to than experts. the main obstacle to the ideal has been the inability to get. daylight. in proper quantity and quality into achoolroolm. They estimate that ‘more than 75% of the school buildings on the North American Continent (the situation Ls much worse elsewhere) havelesa than the necessary minimum lighting standards. As a result designers have been obliged to use light coloured walls, ceilings, and furnishings as lighting aids. Now, all this preference for light colours can be dispensed with; under the new plan, the class- rooms, even when dressed in gaudy colours—whlch, presumably, are supposed to be good for stu- dent.s—will have on an average dark and cloudy day double the required daylight. Not. only that, but: it will be of far better quality: at least. that is what. the design- ers claim. Just what. particular virtue there is in cocoa-coloured mosaic tile and natural birch paneling the re- port. does not say, but the design- ers are rejoicing over the fact that for the first time in history these wonderful thing: can be used in schoolrooms. There is A little reservation to be noted, however, before trustees rush to buy up all the mosaic tile and birch paneling available; the east wall only should have the cocoa-coloured tint; oth- er walls must. be content with the birch. As with colours, so with furn- ishings; revolutionary designs are to bring salvation. There is to be complete freedom of movement for chain: and desks as well as for student; and teachers. Everything is to be portable and so light in weight that the smallest. youngs- ter will be able to stack chairs and desk; one on top of the other. Perhaps in due time. even this lit.- tle exertion will be unnecessary, but that will have to await. fur- ther research. There are to be no more sky- llglita which only a few years ago were the "latest things" in mod- em school lighting; they brought in light alright. but they brought in heat. and glare with it. Under the new system heat. and glare will be unknown. . . . Om great advantage of the plan. according to one very zealous admirer, is that it tends to create n. "home-like atmosphere". which he declares has been I. "long sought. and elusive" objeqtlve. This. of course. will be recognized as the old "home away from home" concept. which once upon a. time hotel keepers used to make much of in their advertiaementa. It was never too popular with hotel guests and_ with all respect to the plan- ners of the ideal, I don't believe it will work too well with school stu- dents. To the average youngster home in home and school is school and never the twin shall meet. Anyway, even if this traditional juvenile belief could be modern- ized by the social scientists and their technicians, it. can hardly be said ‘that. cocoa-coloured mosaic tile; for the east. wall and mtural Tuesday, June 1, 1954 ‘ Observer T!!! IDEAL‘ ENVIRONMENT The Passing Scene 3! birch paintings for the other; 3,, standard equipment. for the ma. jorlty of homes. A: for the “ldeal" environmgm for learning which the design", claim for their new urchitectui-at system, thin depends on who“ point. of view in beta! considered If it be that of the theorisu .-mu‘ planners. well and good; um, consciences must. be their judggs so far as the pupils are OOHCEXXIEQ: especially those in the upper elem. entary grtdes—|llowlng, of mum for a few who are far ahead of their contemporuries—ii. is safe in say that the ideal environment for learnlng, or for any other prim of the good life, would he on, where there were no teachers at all. It is a mistake to assume that the average healthy youngster ac. cepts the adult dogma of lcacller indispensobfllty. . As for the teachers themseli-es- again allowing for an Occasional run ovf.x—t.heir concept of an ideal school environment would almost; certainly leave no room for pupils or. if this be lmpracucablg_ for only at few at. 1 time, with these few having been moulded lIli.O perfection. The historic fact, which no amount of 20th century "co-existence" philosophy can du. turb, is that good and harmonious relations between teacher and pupil were broken of! within I weak liter the first. school opened its doors. Modernist: are Lrylng very ham to convince both parties to the dispute that it. was all a mistilu in the firstfplace and that tap- prochementll both necessary and attainable; and. such is the power of modem educational diplomacy, there are signs from time to time of cordial teacher-pupil relations. Any fifth grader will tell you. hou- ever, that much of the alleged improvement 1.: L superficial mi- eer, covering instinctive and deep- ly-rooted variances. Yes, the more I think about it, the more I am convinced uni no one but an incorrigible optimist in the field of psychology would hem the temerity to prescribe the in- gredfents of an ideal. or even near. idenhenvlronment for learning, ec- peclally in the elementary schools, where wisdom must begin. 7/‘? l Woefi Garza/2‘ CHIMNEY BONNET Thin Ls what Nancy has observed of homes: some have brick chimneys, rel against the blue And changing sky. some have brief that comes Down-aide from root to ground in straight. and min Buff lines; while vino-clad other! have mouth: wide And squarely open. Then do not deny By any tricks the swim that dirt and hide In their cool and sooty throat; from summer‘: sky. A duplex house has two slim chim- neys watching Each other acrou a decent neutral space; While one, old. gabled. maybe but nve matching: And one loom ooutliwsrd with I languid grace. But all hearth-centered homes have this to pay: "cut off our chimney: —— cut 0"! hearts uvay." —-Alma Roberta Glordnn in tin christian science Monitor. most. convenient to Inquire. tunlty to serve you. Offices: CIIABLOTTETOWN THOMAS MCAVINN, Full Value Immediately Available ‘rim to why the moat dependable and randy Cub Aunt n mun lenveo in I'll: Life Insurance. Of All his nonunion: thin will probably the easiest. and The Great-Wont Llfo representative will welcome on oppor- HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. Provincial Managers ALLISON I’. McI.EAN, C.L.U.—Dl|trlc¢ Manager at Bummer.-ii‘. CYIIU5 A. II. SHAW, (i.L.U.—Dlotrlet Manager at Mont-II'II*‘- C.I.U.—Spec|Al Ilapreoanutlv... J. C SUTHIEBLAND, M.A.-Representative It Chulottctown. Atenta throughout flu rrovlnoo - MON TAG CE SUMMEIISIDE - payable: Oovonumat of Coma VI - 8 - 94 3rd VICIORY LOAN nouns have bun ‘ CALLED ron PAYMENT JUNE Ist "' Y0” 3°’-D Third Victory Loan 3% Bond: (iuued November. rm to mature November. 1956) they should be presented for payment on or cite? June lot throuxh any branch bank in Canada; AFTER ‘rt-us DATE NO FURTHER INTEREST WILL BE PAID: The internal: coupon dated November In. 1954 and all coupon: dated mar than than munt be amciaed to the bond: when they are presented for payment: Payment will be 3101-15 {Of I 3100 bond (Ind 1'01’ other denomination: accordingly)! Tbio payment msludeu I 81 premium as required by the term of the bond—pluI 25¢ which is interest at 3% from May lot: to June tgg_u,¢ lyilANIOI‘CANADAil'|ooIlAP‘ period since the int coupon