and statesmen are evaluating the prospect -,,,, 0, ,, - .; ' ' . ~ ~ . . . . of less than iweniy-ilv. If you go to it milseum you know ,, .2 of an atomic age that has nothing to do The Gross National Product is examined dollars and not more than tiv: “‘—‘—“' §.",,°,:§""“‘ b°'""“' "°’ '"" I ' .- ' - - - 1-. a d. t bo . . .- . . ' with destruction. and explained at considerable length in the .n‘,'l’;m'];m‘'’_‘ ‘’ ‘“ “ll” “"1 "ll ;~ll:m*;°1V:;”ih'”'a:“:;e ":‘;‘:d __,. p ,3 a millionth of a second but at whatever pay and allowances: net tam} ii‘-comet net appointed under this Act for nliy- of the Act. and give it careful > rate is deg];-ed or uggbl¢_ Uranium can sup. income of unincorporated busmess; indirect thing. done by him in grrlcl fnllh thought and then decide who is ' in the performance or izltcnded supporting individual liberty. I — Wllld In what rlsht. choice Dr of fair play to leave it with the ’ the adoption of atomic energy will mean 1933- liberty umiilm to the producer. individual. c . an opportunity for a long delayed,indu_-um] \ o e - excedptt la‘mRy mrct the plcasu . 1 am. air. em. 3 v - . or e erm nation of the Board. 1' -I. -THOMAS. revolution. Greatness is in part ii capacity for dc- my mm ,, M, am, am“, Mm cmumuc. _ -2...‘. THE GUARDIAl_\l I36 Princ- Thomso* Published every week-day morning a: Street. Charlottetown, P. E. I.. by The Company Limited. lfiditiir and blnnager. loan A. Burns-lt- Aaaociato Editor. frank Walker. Branch offices at Alberton. Authorized as Second Class the Post Office Department, Ottawa. By Carrier: Charlottetown. Summersitie $15.00 pci annuni. Elsewhere in P. E. 1. $9.00. Other Prov- inccs and U. S. A. 8i2.00 per annum. Summerside. Montague ant Mail by -"Th;—:t.ro_n;:a7t. memory‘ |l~\D't:lA|:e-I-UI—I_l; the weakest Ink." crime Ami Puiilsliiiient "An eye for an eye, and a iootli for a tooth." is to a great extent society's ap- proach to crime today as it has been for thousands of years. Many individuals have questioned the validity of the solution, but very rarely have criminals themselves been intelligent enough, interested enough, 0-‘ fluent. enough to describe at all 'dC(‘.llI‘al£‘l:.‘ why they are what they are. When Prentice-Hall, Inc., New York publishers, announced that they were is- suing the autobiography of Caryl Chess- man who was awaiting execution for ab- duction, a first and probably general re- action was distaste for such morbid sell- sationalisni. “Cell 2455 Death Row”, how- ever. is a remarkable attempt by a youth- ful bandit and tough to explain not only what he did but the much mole difficult question of why he did it. Throughout the book it is emphasized that he is only one of a multitude who find themselves at war with society, a war in which little quarter is asked or given. It is all too obvious to the reader that if Chessman had devoted a fraction of the ability and determination be expended in fighting the law to more acceptable ob- jects he would readily have become a sub- stantial and respected citizen. It was equally obvious to Chessman. Amongst many other achievements hc used as an atomic fuel when converted in a. breeder reactor. Power is already being produced on a small scale at Harwell. in England. and further developments are planned at Cal- der Hall in Cumberland and at the north- crn tip of Scotland. the latter to be of the breeder type. In Pittsburgh. also. a large installation is being built in spite of the - fact that the energy produced will cost mol'e.than electricity from coal. E—d=:‘t:a—t|:Il_fll‘—Vdl;eh Schools, colleges alid universities arc so filled with young women today that it not easy to recognize that educated. as distinct from accomplished, .1 difficult to see either the wonderful cation and giving them the vote. What brings the matter to mind at tho A moment is a passage from the Falconer lectures delivered by Lady Violet Bonham Carter and now issued in pamplet form.. The daughter of Prime Minister (and Earl) Asquith said: “Let me assure you that it is with deep humility and grave trepidation that I ap- proach this learned audience. for alas!— let me make a clean breast of it—I have never myself had the benefit of a Univer- sity education. In fact, belonging as I do to a generation in which to educate wo- men was considered at the best unneces- sary and at the worst dangerous, I have never in my life been inside any educa- tional establishment—a school, a univer- sity or even a kindergarten—exccpt to givc away prizes to other people better educat- ed than myself." EDITORIAL NOTES Canadian Citizenship Day. 0 I 0 women were i rare indeed only a few years ago. It is ‘ im- i provements or the dll‘e,COl’lS6quOl‘l(‘.€S once’ predicted because of the trend towards edu- ‘ mo 51' *0‘ .5 . wmi waicii *ro:Mee1' moo Sttontnoes J 3:"[»‘-4 '- ‘ -'-' 4)‘ A~Ywi«ée;e.I E; /zkiesrbv, A/0. cwkoua/4‘. Wei Blanket PUBLIC FORUM I‘hla column in open to“ the discussion by corrcspulidenta of questions of interest. The Guardian does not necessar- Ily endorse tin: opinion of correspondents. INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY states that my words Sir.-«Mr. actions do not. support. my Dcuar Head of "I often wondered what it Would be like to find a. hidden treasure or is lost. play by Shakespeare, or an old master stacked awn)’ 3“ me attic. It's the sort of thing people dream about. When we were in Asia Minor last summer. we really did do something like that-''. and Margi\ret._ Bean in a BBC talk. The find was the bronze head and at Goddess (3130 Weekly Talks Summn y) in advance what. things are famous and you ought to admire. But. this sad and lovely face was quite un- known to us, in fact it. still seems to be unknown either by copies or ancient records." Bods-um in olden times was Hali- cameasus. capital city of the great ruler Miiusolus, who was lord of all the surrounding lands of Carla at Page 4 The uuaraian It NOTES liv Most people don't seem concern-i ed over where the world is head- ing. They act as if they Just came along for the ride. Wealth says a noted writer. is a disease. But disconcertingly hard for most of us to catch.—l-Iamfltoo Spectator. An Illinois man was arrested for robbing people entering a night club. You'd -hardly expect him to wait. until they came out.—Budbury Star. A colony of rats was found and deatrgyed recently inside Alberta’: eastern border. It was the first definite proof that Alberta had been invaded by the nasty vern- in.—Let.hbrldge Herald. The state recently hanged llahim I-Iingoro in Pakistan. The man was convicted on one of ,250 murder charges. One hanging for 250 murders doea not seem quite ade- quate.—l"ort William 'l‘lmea-Joi.lrn- al. The St. Louis Zoo ha: I wolf so old that it lives on baby ce- real. We know a. few other would-be wolvaa who aren't dan- gerous to anything but a bowl of rnush.——-Peterborough Examin- er. A British Columbin boy has caught an eight-foot octopus with a hook. In later life he’: going to present a. picture of circular ani- mstlon as he tries to show how long it wu.——Windsor star. A Toronto man. lefl. it home , while his wife went on a holiday, received detailed instructions on the care and feeding of the two goldfish and the cat. After several days of struggling with the gold- fish he solved part. of the problem and cut his work in half. Instead of feeding the goldfish expensive food be fed the goldfish to the cat. The day before his wife re- turned he purchased two new gold- fish for twenty-five cents. His wife was none the wiser.-Macbeans. Tlao bore baa probably promoted more bad Jokes (and more good ones) than my human type we can label. He is harder to shake than consistently to define. Am- brose Bierce. in The Devil's Dic- Ffldny. my :1. use 2-oduced from Europe in dirt um! :1 ships‘ ballast; the first menunni if it apparently was in the pa ..m.—-otiswii Journal. ‘ ’ Ivar lines the outbreak ,1 World War II. the stockpiling 0, essential materials has been A commonplace of sound dClElIic Dolley. Now the United States gm,” .0‘ be going a step further-Cu“. stockpiling of factories. n,¢¢,m,y“ .he Ford Motor Company unvemd .1 complete "packaged" tank factory worth $40 million. In a one-sum, building. properly dehumldlfii-ll 2nd put under guard. are slow 5,500 items of machinery, mots gauges and blueprints. All are 55 carefully catalogued that change; in tank design could be lncoi-pm». ated quickly into the lay.“-.5. plan. This is not the first um, war plant machinery has been stored. But. it is the first time , zomplete, aelfcontalned factory ha, been set aside, ready for Speedy assembly in event of need. The plan is an imaginative and ,-,. aourceful way of saving pi~mo,,, time in the event. of war. If. is 1,, be applied to other plants in the luture.-winnipeg ‘n-lbune. They're Just nicely up now in nu strip of black soil. so lately t‘.o\'t!l'rrl by the waters of the spring freshel, between the edge of the sand, -beach and the row of trees inni. the river bank; those oddly-imp. ed sprouts that. give them in” name. the fiddleheada. Arid .5 1; was in the days when the Micmm and Maliseets had New El'LlIi3\i'lr'( to themselves. so it still is in th. days of us Paleface ilsurpe”; scarcely are the sprouts mp, enough to be seen before they m spotted. picked and on their way to‘ the dinner table. For it seems to be the mark of a true New Brunswlcker. red or white, that he likes his fiddleheada. Moreover, in seems to find them wherever ii. goes. Contrary to the tradition um they grow only in New Brunswick, we have heard from trilnsplautgd neighbors. exiled to such dtrferinr areas as Ontario and P. E. I.. that going in the spring to places when llddleheads would grow if ‘ism in N .B.. there. sure enough. they have found fiddleheads [f'O'Xll‘.[, —Fredericton Daily Gleaner, taught himself law and conducted 8. 1'e- A Wgmanon has been dranejd by the re individual liberty. His state- bust, of a veiled woman which the time when Demeter was made. tfonary. fingerprints him as "a /;__._-. markable series of defences, appeals and New 7-9813“ Road Safety Council {OT C-On‘ ments as to the petition in ques- was now in smym, muggum await, ms queen built. a. fine monument person who talks when you wish ’ him to listen." Voltaire. naturally. technical pleadings which have prevented a sentence of death from being carried out for (>1 period of five yea;-s_ The lesson he has to teach is not that "crime does not pay" hilt that "punish- ment does not pay." As he reads human nature. including his own, the crimlnal's hostility. defiance, recklessness and con- tempt for his mvn safety stem from an iii- stinct for survival: a reaction against com. pulsion, whether compulsion to conform or compulsion to admit defeat. In the death cell he concludes that: It is better to bc anything than afraid! "Be good or else . ." - , , , 0 El Revised Statutes 1951 Vol. 2 t of all he- brings the’ contemptuous lap], of’ --I-,._V and i _ Chap 20' SM’ 5. sub sec as h D xismbi-3‘nz:}5mIl]':“é'§lT:Age‘ mmy pm or the ‘cargo of . moked gze-1:. ;:or;victly bailed with a ._wuu. gi make me.‘ Elizabeth Fry, prison reformer, was in. To rcgi,l‘.ate the time and .11..-m melted down for the metal. treasure slilp, not only the rest grtnzntizl ‘:1; l_Ind ’l:3;:-n_‘il;€f ———————-——- We recognizc the pl‘ln(‘iplc-s i.Wol\.,.d gn born this date l780. She was a daugliter l3]E:.CP.A:ti’n\\"IhlCthh. alllcllq to hdezlgiiate Mug glen? saw the sfiatuienxg gin‘? :l:“‘k““"1d‘.’“';“":)‘[h';:‘”w:”:‘d';l:_° Spring fever would be more er- ANCIENT EXPERTS , _ . ' . . . C‘ l'01 E W C . any 9|’ W n - . v _ ‘ our dealings with f‘l‘Illdl‘Pt‘l. The wnn(l- ‘ll -Villll G"l‘ll9.V- the Quaki’-l’ milk?” Of i-cguiateci product shall be packed. 1?:-ln::h::lo;:i?nbroi,her and two ful antiquities. may still be lying ;‘::l°:‘I‘.Y ‘apt ‘"“‘§l’ :°“"°1~ A Skilled wnrkers in copper and shed. as a svmhnl of par.-may diqpipling Norwich. Her husband was also a Quaker stored or marketed: to delemlmr friends were on 3. mp round the on the bed of the sea." mo 9:33’ “knee ml’ =0mllntend- bronze were known to the anti ‘ ' ‘ ' Ll-ii-. manner of distribution the §]((‘3 of Greek and Roman cities ' 35 3 W“‘°“°" 9"“ 10“! b!90l'0 the birth 0 ' and great. vigor. The seed was in- Christ. has lost any standing it ever had. Even in training animals we have come to recog. nize that thc whip is not the means to bring ollt the most desirable character- isttigs. 'rl‘ho_sp whodhaue made a serious politics and ultimately resulted in reform. quamy M class M am rammed and ma Tuflmh conquerom and nornryl _. _ _ V ‘U s u y 0 crime an criminals recognize a o o :ll‘°dllCt- - St. Paul was there. and the Ci-u- ALIS “w r 5 gs. dm _ ,..M.,.", ,,_ V ' ’ Iii To i-rqlllre filll iilforination sad”,-,_ in fact. everything that is -0 '7 5;? . .. a .. that punishment. is not an effective method of reforming men. . The reformation of criminals is not the sole object of the law. however, for it is also a substitute for private vengeance, \\'hcn the ordinary member of society can acccpt the reform of the criminal as a suitable aftermath of even a great wrong done to himself or to those deal to him lhcii sricicty will _i)e able to go all the way Power From The Atom (,‘aiiada‘s work on atomic energy is ex- clusively directed towards peaceful llsc and a spokesman for the Crown company that To supply useful energy instead of a blast it is necessary that the fission reac- tion proceed slowly under the control of the operator to liberate its energy, not in ply three million times as much energy as an equivalent amount of coal ‘so that in countries where there is a scarcity of fuel According to Uneaco Features. ‘although the eventual coat of atomic power is not yet sideration by the Government, requiring niotor-cyclists and pillion passengers in wear crash helmets when travelling at morc than 30 miles an hour. 0 O O The baking industry is greatly concern- ed about thc problem of loss leader selling in that industry. The. national council of the baking industry blames the practice in large part for the decline in the number of bakeries in Canada from 3,231 in 1938 to 2,583 in I932. In the same period when salcs increased by 331 per cent. the num- ber of bakeries declined by 20 per cent. 0 D and interested in cocoa. She devoted her life to relieving the condition of those in prison. It was largely due to lier efforts that the matter became oneof practical Pi'eniicl' Sinallwood of Newfoundlallz‘. tried to “buy" higher education as he has been buying industrialization for his Prov- ince. On accepting an honorary doctoratc of laws at U. B. C. he revealed that three- ycar-old Newfoundland University is pat- terned after the University of British Columbia and that he had attempted to ac- quire the president and head of the. ex- tcnsion dcpartmcnt of that inz.-titution. lives by naming after them lakes, island’-'. bays and rivers in thc northcln part «if the Provincc. A recent announcement list- ed no less than 69 such namcs added in Bank of Montreal Business Review. it equals the gross national expenditure and consists of such things as wages, salaries and supplementary labour income; military taxes less subsidies; depreciation allowances and similar business costs. In millions, it has grown from 5,707 in 1939 to 24,345 in tail. Prime Minister Churchill's wartime bodyguard recalls: “One of our first trips lion are so absurd that I do not J£‘li$'\‘e they need comment. How- ever I have no dcslre to deny that I did help to circulate the petition. ilso to present it. I may also say that I very much doubt. that the producers would have the present. opportunity to express an opinion if some such action had not been taken. Mr. Deviar's rrmalks are quite .iilld compared uiih some of those nf the Board at the time. It would seem that the objection is, that the Board's permission was not asked. But as that is one of the few things not covered iii the Act perhaps we may be cxciired. Now as regards individual llbFl‘- :_\-, I should like to quote from P. quality.-. grade or class of the recli- latcd product. that. shall be trails- inried, slorcd or marketed by any person at any i;mc; and to pro- hibit tlic ti'ar:portatlon. packing. storage or niiilkctliig of any grade. cialing to the prndiictlon, picking. .riinsporllnr. storing and l‘llIll'lit?i-- .ng of the regulated product, from ill pcr"3ns engaged tliercin; and n l-rqui:-e periodic. returns in he ii:-id-.~ by such persons. and to in- ‘pcci. the books and ].)I‘l‘llll5Ci of such Df‘.l'S0llS. int To fix the DIN‘? or l'tl‘ii‘I‘.‘. .naximuiil pilcc or priccs. the nim- .mum pl'lf‘P or piiccs. or both max» nilini and nillilrmlm prices at ihfch the rczulalcd prndiici. or nv gi-.uir or class llic:cof, may be he N-,iilile:i proclucl miilci be :alispoitcrl tr) ])l‘l'l’Il2l ally iiicmbcr :' cliip2n:.cc of the Bfl.’il'(l in search lie icliiclc, Ill Tn §€lZ€ iind fll’~|'lI)'-F of any czulrilerl lll'()(lllf‘i_ k("il ll.ins- Noble. on silmmary conviction to a Sec. (13) No action shall be ill-ouglit against any person who since the fifth day of September or who hereafter achs or purports .o act as a member of any Board performance of his duties ibis Act. Now in view of those claim-s_ I under 1950 has acted or purported to iict. lug cleaning operations. The head is said to be a fourth century 3. c. original. 0‘ the century of Pm!‘- tries. the last great. site 01 GT9" Art. thought to be part of a lull-length statue of Demeter. KONG“ °‘ mm and crops. whose daughter Perse- phone was carried of to the under- world. The statue ortrays her mourning for her child and “The race is so beautiful that the emo- tional force of it. comes to S0“ straight across the thousands of years since the unknown Greek sculptor made it: she is the DOT- rowlng mother of all time. said Miss Bean. The head is extreme- lv rare and valuable, for ancient Greek statuem are not often found. of Asia Minor. “Asia Minor in the sort. of place where an)'ihll'lE C3“ happen, you feel. lt.'a so beautiful and wild and remote_ and there are all these ruins of the ancient- world, and the Byzantine Empire. romantic and exciting and full of long fame spread quickly and while they were breakfasting a messatle l!l'l‘lV' rd saying sponge fishers in a near- by village had found ii qmer sort of statue in the sea and would the)’ go alid investigate? They hired 1! jecp and drove five miles away. where "but. the face. was ceptlonnl. "The intercatintl has suggested. It. is over life size and is ago greatness." she aaid. FEW visitors come to Bodrum and their to a lonely bench sponge fishers had brought. the statue to shore. They went into the gendai'- mos‘ hilt alid there saw Demeter miraculously quite untouched by these things". said Miss Bean. They drained the 5i;,z.ue out and photographed it and saw at once that it was quite ex- thing aense of the farmers as Mr. Dewar But. I would like to call special attention to (g. h and i). also to sec. (mi and «fat and would aug- gest that everyone procure a copy might go into much greater detail re those clauses. but I believe it. will be perhaps more in the way to his memory, the Mausoleum, and Greek sculptors were commissioned to carve friezes for it. Had one of these made their Demeter? She had been almost certainly lost in a shipwreck, but in what. way? l-Iallcarrieuua was only one of the rich cities that might have oom- misaioned such a. statue, and Cnldua. nearby, was known for its love of art. Perhaps Demeter was intended for Cnldua but was ship- wrecked and lost and its own fam- ous marble statue of Demeter com- misaloned to replace the lost. one? or the statue may have been part of a cargo of looted Grecian trea- sure lost. at sea. on its way to Rome. "There are exciting possibil- ities in this idea." said Miss Bean in conclusion, "and if Demeter was Old Cliarlottetoyln '-and r. 11.’ l "The land sale by A. McNeill, auctioneer. at the Court House to- day realized fair prlces. The house occupied by Mr. A. Newberry was purchased by Mr. Horace 1-Iaasard lor the sum of |l.800. The business site on Water Street. adjoining Mr. ll‘. T. Newberryll store, realized mo. purchaser Mr. M. Hickey. The fiirma on Peake'a Road. Lot 52. realized from $1.26 to 81.75 per acre, and one of them was pur- chased by Mr. 3. Hearts. the other by Mr. William Raydan. of this by himself for 3250. Mrs. Coomba‘ reserved at 31.500," -—The Presbyterian. Jan. 1'1, 1004, lint. done? And the woman mid. was more cutting. “The secret of being a bore," wrote this famous French man. “is to tell everything." A bore is one who simply can't discipline iiia self-importance. so he inflicts it on the moat durable liatienera be can find.—I-Iamilton Spectator. .. It is all right; to talk enthu- siastically about such things as Swiss chard, beet. greens, or even lettuce that has been frightened Into abject submission by pouring hot. bacon fat over the green leaves. The countryman tried to be rea- sonably tolerant ot the strange culinary tangents of his peers: but. he feels strongly that if all men .ate heartily of dandelion ‘J4€',.asEff;”7 ‘ l pane Like rigging in a driving gale. My battered craft in voyaging W th one lane sail. The oceanic clouds roll by The windows of this lonely room; The vessel of my. life veers past Great cross that loom ] And threateri to annihilate The compare in the heart of me I rise and draw the shaking ahadzl On memory, house on Great George Street was 1 5 in rcforming criminals instead of punisliin: I . . . lmizlii, or mm ill thc. P!.’l\’llI(‘|'; mi the first time, propped against city. The lot. in Georgetown was p,},',,.;' ',,',,,,i)‘. in ,, , - ~ I erenl r ' . , - i ‘ ‘. l _'- .. . or on- ’ . . ____ ____ ~_ saskaicheuan has connmwd us win. 1,, ..““,f,;,,:,.. 3;, ,,°.‘,.i:;,;' ;;,,i:;c;3;:;{,0,,“,,.,,“,,..,. . .,., ,. ,..,,...,,,, ..,,.. ,,,,,’,,,,,,, Z-3/t_viJ‘i_t¢I8o‘fPu‘iitii1'Vand!.adios. ' . .' . . ‘ . . . “ * ' . ' em ' . of l10n0Ul‘1ll2_S¢‘l\|C9l'|l9Tl who same then ll'll'j.'t‘ (ll any mum ill ulizch great, hole In the. top nl nu», iiead by Mr. John Vlshey. was bought mom,:,,°;{ifi:v'{,,;'f,ej';§;‘;'.’;‘,,f“"° .,,m__..-‘ ‘$- '‘ nperatp‘ ‘hp projed at Chalk Rive‘ p C the map Of that Province. NP\\' placi‘ ‘giicrl. paskcd. stored, rir m-.il'kct— was that we were all instanttly fon- . . . . . . . , ,‘ r - _ . - - , ,, iii \l(‘il‘ill0lI f . . -d 1 ' d that it was ii mas crp ece. I -" dicts that this country may be the first in names me not "i sudl demand in "HS pm,‘ Aw Boaid, 0 W m N 0 lllildcinorc we looked it it the more The A99 Old sl°"Y mum’ Rubs’ Electric“ Appnmce’ » ‘ ' v > _ . 1 .' I’ ‘A . . _ S. _ K 1, H . II M. II g n... .....n to nnn .. ............. °;,p',*,‘;,;°;:;;;'n-Va’;;a,,;;°,§;;;g;g,," '5 “>1” ..3..£J.“Si"..fl?‘f.‘:’.‘.-??J1::.i?;E3f.‘§.*i“‘L‘i‘Z.§i.‘:J?°t'i;.‘éif.:‘:.n.".‘2.2 , ,, ,, M MUSICAL Mmncnmvnxsr . 8 . ' - » - - . “ - ‘ ' ‘ , n e r God said unto the . plant. The world over‘ however-_ engineers aiaoe under this Act. shall bi: a great work of art. with a com- _ 137 Queen st" , _ ‘L . Nemy me mu unpmudmd m,nd_ wolnln. What is thin that siiou Charlottetown. PE Operpltu ii _iitiro‘IITo‘iitti"oo‘m i8¢» ' "A':_bottary‘.'!no ‘"5"’ battery greater'oconomy,l“ 3-.ti'ins.is_1;o,a gwrn nlininé’ aio .orryl'o7dm /Rust i§3'nli3d in Order izmnedr TOOMBS Music STORE ‘C ‘Nassau. ‘ 4 \-‘nor 3nl VICTORY LOAN BONDS have been :f“::UNl:°L€ern‘l"d Vl¢t°Ty Loan 3% Bonds (iaaued November. 1942 to J "'1' ' 1956) ‘MY 'h°“ld 59 Pffieflted 70? payment on or after “"9 ht "“'°“lh my branch bank in Canada. AFTER THIS DATE N0 vacourateiy known, it is estimated that »; when coal cost). more than $10 a ton, ,l"t9ml‘¢ 1003 could prove more economical. , _ Alb the U. 3. Energy Commission jj" llfl for lolly operating a nuclear -C-'3.~ "breeder" which de- was up to Scapa in the winter of '39. I remember Sir Winston standing on the deck of a battleship and looking towards a dummy battleship some distance away. The dummy looked perfect to me, but after a time Sir Winston said to me, ‘There's some- .'"'*...i.:F:.':..**::.':*::*.?*..W- is me --.-«--- mm -- the bond. wh'm th ‘ ¢°“P0nI dated later than this must be attached to ,0, _ um hm (_:Yd ;" Pfmnted for payment. Payment will be $101.26 ‘mind’ . 3‘ ‘mi or other denominations accordingly): This payment is interest at JP’; I “m " requmd by “'° ‘°'"‘' °' ““ b°“d—pluI 26¢ which ° '°'“ “W 1" '50 Jim! 1It—thc period since the last: coupon A._ PIGKARII & CO. LTD. PHONE 5541 “T If. I lune time turns thing wrong her-e—and I know h t it ‘ I beam rtylble: ‘ V‘ ‘active form. so No aeagulls. If the Germans fiytvotier alill COAL AND FURNACE 0”’ novuua-colcaua. Dy or can - " par untorunnlum see i battleship with no seagull: round it _ ' ,,,_ _ ‘ ‘°*-"'°" ‘!“' NV Ill be -used. they'll know it’: a fake. I must li'l'In8e ‘ A -PROMVF 1951-IVER‘! . g for some fax! to be put down'.”____ _. ‘ _ _ _