He Guardian "Conn Pnnu Edi-all bland LIII nu Dew" Published every week an -uunun; at Iu.) Prinu Street. Gm-Iottuiovm. P. I-2. 1.. by the l'hunIwlI Cnmvany I.ld 44 King st Vii. Toronto. Inuirul office. 225 I unersiiy Tone: Bldg. . . I-Jdiinr. l-trunk Vulkcr i' General Manager. Ian A. lluineu Member (lnnadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association mi.-mun in nu Canadian l'IEAr Member tudii Bureau of tliiculaiiuns - Iniirh oliii.-es dl Sumnienule. lliiniague and Alb:-non Authnriud as SN'Illl(I Hits.-' Mail by the Post Office f Department. (iiuivia. by L"-an-ii-r riiailuiu-imxii. sinnim-isiuc Sl.ilrIl pen An- Ium. I-llscuhci-e in r'.I-II 5900 other Pronm-es and LS Slliitl iiri Illlllillll "The struiigi-st int-mory is weaker than the weakest ink." I956 T 'l'HL'RSI)AY, APRIL I2. TT Middle East Crisis lixiticiicc that the crisis in the Mititllc hlllst is iicziring a decisive ' turiiiiig can he sccii in the strategic ' motions ili.ii are being made, as on ; a Vilxi I'lltli'lx'tll' Iiii.Ii'tl, by the world pout-rs. 'l'lic .tiiici'ic.iii goveruincnt has called two key men back to Wasliiiitgloii. :hlllI)rISS&llI0li B 0 Ii I e n from Kl o x c o w and Ainbassadoi' li'ail-iii-iili illilll Siuidi Araoia. Mr. B0lllI'll is ill llasliiiigtnii because the Soviet Linion is now a force in the Middle lisist. .llc:iiiwhiIc the United Nations' I).lLj II4IIIllIlilI'Sl(jL)l(l did not rcniain in lloiuc as Ioiig as he had intcndcd for hi-icI'iiigs on the crucial conflict 7.ouc; he ordered his Pales- tine siipervi.-or to stay in Jci'iisiilcm and flew to (aim where he began his talks yesterday with the Egypt- ian Prcmicr. lic will move on later to Tel Aviv and the capitals of .lor- dan, Syria and Lebanon for more conferences. In Washington. SUIIIIIOT Alex- ander Smith of New .lei-soy-a close administrat.ion supporter-said he believes Congress ought to arm Pre- sident Eisenhower with power to act in the Middle East just as it did in Formosa a year ago. Such a re- solution would be one step that could be taken in the present crisis. It might warn the Middle East gov- I , ernments of the seriousness with which Congress views the situation. But this move is now being dis- counted and it is unlikely, in any case, that. it would really persuade the governments either of the Arab states or of Israel that American f official or public opinion is actually prepared to garrison the Middle rt East. with all the risks implied. If I I I the armed forces needed to hold t.he Israeli and Arab nations apart could be simply peace-preserving forces, with no serious danger of heavy involvement, perhaps there would be no obstacles. But a troop commitment. in an election year would be a policy of last. resort. A New Second Ticks Suror than death or taxes, the seconds go by. This year, however, the most fleeting dimension of every- day life will be slightly changed from what it was in 1955. Astronom- ; crs have given it a new length. The old familiar second was defined as l.'8t'i,4llt)tli of a day. measured by timing the revolution of the earth. Most of the world's clocks still will tick away these seconds. But scien- tists who split the second into bits as small as billiontlis will hence- forth work with a new time scale. The trouble with the old hiiin- drum second is that it. won't stay the sanie length. Dziy by day, world time is checked by oliscllvatories wlioso extremely accurate instru- ments niark how long it takes the earth to turn once on its axis. N0 clock or watch yet made can match the precision with which the planet revolves. Even so, the earth doesn't turn at an cxzict and cliangelcss rate. Early in each year it spins more slowly than it does toward the end of the year. its rate wobbles over longer periods. tone-as much as 30 seconds in 200 years. And very grad- ually, the earth is slowing down. As it slows. the day lengthens slightly, and thus also the hour, minute, and second. This change is so slight that even over 2,000 years it has amount- ed to only a few hours, but scient ists must allow for it. So long as time was measured by sundial, pendulum, . or mechanical clocks. the planet's eccentric. spinning was of little con- sequence. B u t to r astronomers Itudying other bodies in the heav- ons, and for engineers working with lpeeds of light. and electrons, the fluctuating second has caused more Ind more trouble. Some years ago the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Paris, world guardian of standards of length. weight, and time, decided the problem had become critical. It began formulating a new Iecond. Lat! 81 August, 1955, the Inter- . national Astronomical Union met in :1 gmeml assembly In Dublin. It sp- provedlnlwdeflnluon dunne- ond for world-wide use, the final outcome of a long series of meetings. The new second is based not on the turning earth, btit on the time it takes the sun to pass from vernal equinox across the skies and back to vcrnzil equinox as the earth swings (nice around its home star in a year. This is the ”tropic2il year" of aslroiiomers, the year of the sea- sons. It is similar, but not quite the same. as the ”sidt-real year." which is thc actual time it takes the earth to follow its orl)it around the sun. The tropical year is about 20 min- utcs sliortcr. It ii as iicccssary, fin- ally, to choose a pzu'ticuIai' tropical year as a iriastcr yziiiistick. For various rcasoiis, including more ac- curate nicasurcnient, thc tropical year for ltltitl was choscii N new guide for the most nczirly accurate time yet kept by man. Hutterile Colonies 'l'lic Saxkatclicwaii A.s'.wv1'dti0Ii Of Rural Municipalities lizis called for legislation to rt-strict the size of liutterite colonies and isolate them from one another. A fiiiiilaiiiciitalist sect whose members adhere to the early Christian practice of com- munal ownership of goods and prop- ertics and to a rigid code of nioral- ity, lluttcrite colonies have existed for many years in the. Canadian West. They are industrioiis, hard working. honest and help one an- othcr, but, like the Doukholiors, they hold themselves apart from other Canadians, and show no indications of integrating. Hence the movement in the three prairie provinces for restrictions designed to p r e v e nt them from securing blanket control of extensive areas. In I947 Alberta passed legislation restricting the right of Hutterites to make further land purchases. Sim- ilar mcasiires are being proposed in lilanitoba. Ill Saskatclieivan, where the Association of Rural Municipali- ties is urging similar action. there are three lluttciite colonies, with a total membership estimated around 400. Unlike the Doukhobors, or, at least, the Sons of Freedom branch of that sect, the I-Iuttcrites are peaceful and law-abiding. In the war years, they made themselves un- popular by their pacifist attitude, which is an outgrowth of their re- ligious beliefs; and it is claimed they do not support or send their children to the public schools. So far as Saskatchewan is con- cerned, th e legislation proposed would violate the Saskatchewan bill of rights, on which the CCF govern- ment of Premier T. C. Douglas has preencd itself. A clause In this docu- ment. statcs that every person shall have the right. to own or rent land ”without discrimination because of race, creed, religion, color or et.hnlc or national origin of such person or class of persons." Citizenship, how- ever, entails obligations, dictated by the needs of the country as a whole, which the hcncficiaries of Canadian citizensliip must fulfill. The incident emphasizes th e sliortsightcdness of admitting to ('anada people or classes of people who will not integrate themselves with the country as a whole. In the case of the Iluttcritcs, as with the D()lll(llt)llflI'S, the mistake has been inarlc; and the most realistic course is to treat them fairly and justly. EDITORIAL NOTES I'i-I-sidciit Roosevelt died this date, 194.”). I I O can arresting sIo'gans play a more helpful part than in preventing higliwiiy accidents. In (lrecnyillc. Ohio, there is a police station sign which plcads: ”I)rive carefully-you may hit one of our customers." IN'owhr're For some time now some 50 geese have been taking advantage of open water extending from Cardigan bridge up the river to the highway. Some Cardigan residents are specu- lating on the feasibility of making this beautiful waterway a perman- ent. sanctuary for wild fowl. It has been suggested that. beautifying the roadside along the river 'mighf. be underlaken as a village project. It certainly could be made into a fine scenic attraction at inconsiderablc cost. At the same time it would be a valuable contribution to wild-life conservation (although the geese now frequenting the place appear to be extremely well behaved) Ind, wlthal. It would encourage citizen: and visitors in their Iesthetlc in- cllnotions. I"?-maul...-.'. I ma vouus mm i WHOSE. DIET IS RICH wmi , TI'DSE'AMTI-BIOTIC Qt.-f . I "rR.:Areo MID AToMic -at-I aAmATiosi Pl?-ESoERVED FOODS -- ?' x” You'x?.iv3.1.'-is " tho POSSIBLE UNFORES EEN DEVELOPMENTS S-chweitzer's Thirty-Year Debt By Harold Garnet Black. I.L.D. The serious minded group who came together at Aspen in the Colorado Rockies in 1949 did so to meet. and honor Albert Schwcilzr-r. I foreigner who lnni: arm gave up I life of case in F.ni'opc for the sake of suffering humanity in the " heart of Africa. Before he was thirty ycars nlrl. he had won thrcc adyaiiccd de- grees--doctor of philosophy doctor of music. and doctor of thcolgy-- Ind later was to become a doctor 1 of medicine. He had also distin- guished himself as unc of world's greatest organists. had given the funeral oration on .'xii-i- I zsche before the Sorbonnc in Paris. had authored several vnlumcs on philosophy and llicolugy, had be- come the most scholarly interprct- I er of Bach in his biography of that "musician-poet". and was oi-gaiiist of the Bach Societies of Paris, Strasbourg. and Barcelona. With such I background of Icaru- ing. one wonders why he gave it all up to become the world's best , known missionary. MAKES RF.SOI.L”TI().N' To understand this, one needs to know that when he was but twenty- one he awakened one summer morning in his Alsatian home in Gunsbach with the oierpowcriuit f feeling that he owed socicly sonic- thing for the happy days of his youth. He therefore resolved tlizit in due time he would pay the debt. "I settled with myself before I got up." he writes in his autobio- graphy, "that I would consider myself justified in living until I was thirty for science and art. in order to devote myself from that time onwa I to the direct service of humanity. Many a time already had I tried lo scltle ii hat nieanim: lay hidden for me in the saying of Jesus: twhosoever would save his life shall Inse it, shall lose his life for my sake and the Gospels shall save it.' Now thi- answer was found. In adtlilioii In Frobisher By Dave Ilic , and vvlinsncvcr l ftlic outward, I now had Inward happiness.” I Exactly how he sliuiild achieve his objective was not niade clear for nine years, but in 1904 he I stumbled upon a inziualiiic article called ”Thc Nccds of the Congo Missinn," which eniiiplclcly fired his iniagination and .-ruled the become a medical iiiis.-imiary! His friends thought him crazy to make so radical in change in his career. for they saw seven yczirs of study ahead of him In ord" to qualify as a pliysician and surgeon. Undclcrred by such I prospccl, however. Albert Schweit- 1.cr cnicrcd Strasbourg University as a nu-dical student and for seven long years studied hard, earning his living by preaching, teaching theology, and giving organ concerts. REMARKABLE STORY Upon graduation he and his wife, whom he had married the year before and who had been in train- ing for a nurse. began their peril- - nus joiirn y French equatorial Africa. The work of the Schweitzers in that Trader- Ilorn cniinlry during the past forty years. and the development of his "rcvcrciicc for life" philosophy make one of the most remarkable stories in all missionary annals. The (lrccks used to say that words have wings. No better il- lustration of the truth of this say- ing can be given than that of the article on the Congo. wlmse words wiiigcd their way into the soul of a man named Albert Schweitzer. chzingcd his entire career, and made his name an honored house- linld uord whcrcvcr Christian mis- sinus are spo'cn of or discussed. 4I)r. Black. author of the above article, is I brotlier of Mr. C. H. Black. of (lli.'irlottctowii. and I grnrliiatc of Kit. Allison. class of I907 Ilc rcsidc!-i in Beverley Hills, Califoriiia.) Bay Basel Mcllitovali I I question once and for all He would I Canadian Press Stuff I 1'(',L'llllIl'LV. So does the US. hurtli- FROI-llSllF.R HAY. .V.W.'I'. 't'I'i One is given pause licrc to vioiiiler about Canadian sovereignty in Ilie Canadian Arctic. One of the first ililiigs to strike I Canadian visitor to this Hzilliii island air base is the Llniu-(I States' Stars and Stripes Ill me over the adminisl r.-iliun lllIllIllll',.' alongside. not a Union Jack or lIt'fI Ensign. bill the II('Al” I-Znsiizii At Crimhridgc buy on Victoria cast .'iir l,'flllllll2lll(I, llIll('Il has head- quarters at St. John's, Nfld. BIG RADAR ('l-ZNTIII-I some (IlSI&lllt'l' from I”I'(lIlISlIl-'r in I riular station operated and niiiiiiicd by llic Us. Air Force with nuirc than ma personnel. It was built at a cost of between 515,- 1 001- MM) and S2iI.IK)n.lio0 and began . npi-i';itioii.x iii lt)5.'l. The station which is completely stlf-2-iislziiiiuiu for n yczir, sits atop . one of llallin island's tlioiiszinds of I island. to thc wcst. t)ltl (lhiry is flnwn beside the llcd liiisiizii The United States Air I-lurrcf built the original base at Frobislicr in 1942 and It still is much the iinmc as it was then. There has been no new lllllllllnfl sincc ltl4.'i. Canada at the end of the Sciond World War rciiiiliiirscrl Illl' LS. government for the cost and ilic RCAI” took over operation in Sep- Member. 1950. SMALL CANADIAN ('-ROI'l' But the RCAF runs the lmw lll nImc only. There iii a very small RCAP detacmcnt under a wing cmnmander but ii separate and large U.S. Air Force establish- mcnt. During a recent press Iuiir of the DEW 1Di.Iliinl I-Early Wariiiiigi radar llnc. Wing Cmdr. Caiiipbcll Rmzcrs. RCAF station i-ninniiindcr was asked by reporters about sev- eral aspects of the haiie's work. He. checked livlth an American lieu- tenant-coloncl. a st-ciirlty officer, before replying to sonic flll('s- tlons. The present population of the iitatlon also includes f':inudi.'iii I li:ii'i-cn. wlml-zivi-pt hills, It com- prises 26 l)IllI(lII1L'3. 23 of them joined by passageways. The radar site could provide - three or four hours' warning to the I transport department wealhcr and I communication in I f I in and an RCMP detachment. There is prac- tically no RCAF activity Ilrrc though the station Inst year han- dled In iivt-rage of 2.660 landings and takeoff: II month, rnmpari-d with 300 In I954. Nearly all the military planes Inndlag here are American. The IMI .8. Air Force. I hem Inns- nsrl formation, In: work out of out Joli. Qua, Fort Chiirchlll. MIn.. and Edmonton on the air- lift for the DEW line in Cannda'I Aldh. III 399 Ian NI blu IJllIl('(I States of any air altairk on N'nrIli America across the polar rcgions. It has the capability of ('f'llll'flIlIllLZ thc opcrzitions of IN In- t ti-it-cplor plans, which raises the plisklltlllly Ilizil Frnhishcr niichl be- ctiinc a flizlitcr basc. lilrobishi-r. whose huililiiigs are the familiar w a r t I in c barrack l)Itit'l(F. black with age. now has :i strength of about 600 but this number varies widely. In the summer. American soldiers ll'I0t'l' in to iiiilond sea cargo for the DEW 1, line. l'.8. EQFIPMENT Canadian and American ncws-, paper men on Ilicir DEW llnc tour I were transported In a U5. Airi Force (Hnbemnstcr lhoiiizli the or- iginal plan was to use two RCA!" into the jungles of- WITHOUT CLAMOUR sound. Will blow no trumpets, only the earthworm, Close to their roots, burrowing un- derground May hear the upsurge, fool the green stems yearn. Beauty returns to urth devoid of noise. Devoid of clamour. Now it lifts its head. Epitome of still -3: and of poise. And in unbroken silence all is said. -Fanny I)eGroot Hastings in the Christian Science Monitor. OUR YESTERDAYS from The Guardian Pllu TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (April 12. 1981) molor boat "E. NIncy Lea." The first trip down the river this sea- son was made in good time. Be- sides twenty-five passengers there was considerable freight including 100 cases eggs, pork, potatoes, beef, etc. The market for Prince Edward Island Mountains in Boston con- linucs strong. The peak price of 82.85 per bag wafreallzed this week. this Is an advance of 35 cents per bag over the previous week. TEN YEARS AGO (April 11. 1948) Mr. D.A. Clark, president of Clarke Steamship C , ny. Ir- rived In the City last night, on business connected with the new It-eamship service shortly to be- gin operating between Charlotte- town and Newfoundland. The "ls- land Connector" lcfl Vancouver I few days ago and will arrive at Charlottetown within I few weeks to open the service. A drive against inferior seed po- latnes being imported into Canada from the United States has been launched by the Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture. These potat- oes, tagged as "War approved seed" and "Seed potatoes-not cer- tified". have crossed the border at several points during the past month. Scores of stalled cars along the provincial highways testify to the severity of the storm which has swept the Province for the last. two days. With five feet of snow on the road in Fredericton. all motor traffic has been brought to I standstill. North Stars. Of the seven con- ducting officers. five were Amer- icans. The RCAF officers on the tour, like all newspaper mcn. wore Arc- lic gear labclled "U.S. Air Force." The DEW line is being built by and paid for by the United States and the main contractor I: Went- ern Electric. In American firm. The press tour originated In New York. heudquarters for the DEW line project. and reporters were briefed for I day by a dozen U.S. officers and one Canadian officer. The hlg majority of workers on the DEW line are Canadllns. Offl- cinls of the northern affairs depart- ment said RCMP constables will be based at the main Iltes along flu: line when it goes into open- lion. The department now is re- cruiting more northern service of- ficers I! well. Arriving daffodils will make no I The Bonshaw-Charlottetown wat- er route was opened today by the I DEBATING COMPETITION The P. E. I. Junior Farmers are again sponsor- ing a Debating Competition which is open to all 4-I-I ('lub members and all rural young people under 31 years of age. If your Club or Organization is Inter- csted in Debating, please contact Allan Palmer, Box 9, Department of Agriculture, Charlottltown. All Entries Close on April 17. Medically Speaking by Herman N. lluiuleueu. M. D. OBESITY SI-IORTENS LIFE Obesity is a health hazard for anyone. but it presents I special problem for flyers. This doesn't mean that stout passengers are In any danger while flying In our big commercial Ilrllners with their pressurized cabins. However, the recent death of two passengers in Air Force jets. following loss of pressurizat- ion .at I high altitude. points up more of the dangers of being mark- edly overweight. TWO VICTIMS Both of the victims were over- weight. Their deaths followed ex- plosive decompresslon at an alti- tude of 30,000 feet. They went into shock upon loss of pressurization, were taken unconsci us from the planes and died within a few hours. Fatty tissue. you see. can easily dissolve nitrogen from the blood At high altitudes. unfortunately, It may release this nitrogen the wrong way. The bends for example. might be ca ” by gas released at high altitudes. INTO BLOOD STREAM Even worse. these frccd gas bubbles can push tiny particles of fat into the blood stream. From there they can be carried directly to the brain or heart and result in death. This is one reason why pilots and crew members of Air Force planes are warned against becom- ing overweight. You are considered ovcrwciizlit if you are l0 per cent above the normal weight for persons of your age, height and body build. AVERAGE WEIGHT And whether you are a flycr or not, the death rate among obese persons is about 50 per cent high- er than it is for persons of average weight. Obesity dcfiuitcly sliorlcns your life expectancy. Yet about one- fifth of our population is over- weight. As you can see. it is I pretty big health problem. QUESTION AND ANSWER Miss D.M.: I have poor circula- tion. Could this be caused by a thyroid condition? Answer: Sometimes thyroid hormone may he at fault in circulatory difficulitcs. limi- ever, this is not often the case. The Age Old Story For as the rain comcth down. and the snow from heaven. and returneth not thither. but waterefh the earth. Ind maketh It bring forth and bud. that it may give seed to the sower. and bread to the enter: so shall my word he that goeth forth out of my mouth: It shall not return unto me void. but It shall accomplish that which I please. and it shall prosper In the thing whereto I sent it. DORVAI. IIUSIEST AIRPORT OTTAWA (CPI-Monlrealls Dor- val airport shot up to first from fourth place to supersede Van- couver ns Canada's busiest airport in 1955. Edmonton continued in sec- ond place. Vancouver fell to third and Toronto's Malton slipped to No. 4 from the No. 3 slot the trans- port department rcportcd Wednes- day. FAMOUS FALLS The Chaiidiere falls on the Chali- diere river. four miles from its mouth 0ppc'ile Quebec city. are 130 feet high. a lack of . ' mnorisls will head straight for I I pedestrian as if he had no right NOTES B; 4. The Guardian THE WAY If people had been meant to (III all those hypodermicx, surely nat- ure would have equipped humans with intake valves. -- Chntham' News More dependIblo,tIIII the robin as I harbinger of spring II tho amount of slush and mud tracked into the house.-FIrmer'l Advoc- ate Bob Hope dldirl. get Into mull: on his recent trip. This is probably just as Well because the Kremlin is booked bolld with comedy Ictl. -Oi-Illia Packet. In I television drum: I bank ' employee was foiled in his flight with a million dollars in stolen money because he missed aero- plane connections. It might make a good slogan for I competing medium of ma. -portatlon: "Next time. abscond by rail."-Hamilton Spectator The 1' like of I thousand bon- fires rising from the backyards of newspaper premises all over the country has its origin in the tons of this unsolicited material that cluttcrs up the mails every week in the year. The great bulk of it comes from government depart- ments in the form of press release and such useless tripe that no- body botliers'to read except per- haps the hacks who write it.-Port Elgin Times In the early years of soybean cultivation in this part of Canada. the future of the product all source of plastics was one of the encouragements. This outlet never did develop to any great extent. although Henry Ford the Elder lent his partonage to it. Yet soybean cultivation continued Ind expand- ed. Now Canadian growers are told there is a good demand for the beans in Europe. because of dam- age to olive trees. Chemistry can change the supply sources in pro- duction of plastics. but the need for oils remains steady.-Windsor Star PedcstriInl have rights which are often invaded by moloirlsta. Once a pedestrian in in In inter- section, he has the right-of-way. Yet very often If an intersection lVllEI'.' there are no traffic lights. to be on the street at all. More- over, an Ontario court has ruled that even if I pedestrian ll eros- sing against I red light. he has the right-of-way once he is into the street. And he certainly has the right-of-way when. crossing on I green light. he is met by I car making a right turn.-Ottawa Cit- izen on who take: his work seriously is more Important than one it-he taken himself seriously.-Niagara Falls Review. ABC II looking for I llamor ml to act I! I TV hostess. Around here you don't look for 'em. you whistle.-Windsor Star In I grlm way. one of the fun. nlest things that has happened ,,, Canada in years is the present 3,, tempt of the domestic Commun. ins to twist themselms into a cork, :crew- and look as If they are enjoying It.-Vancouver Province The CInadlan magazlne pubiigh, ers have won on an indefensible principle. Instead of indulging in . lot of handwrinizing. and classify. lug themselves with garment man. ufacturers and potato farmers in their demands for protection. they would have been better advised to spend their time in producing mm Interesting magazines-by paving more for writers. artists. editor: and photographers. and developing I. healthy interest in their own country.-Victoria Times When school boards and I.PEI('ll('l”l appear to be preoccupied with buildings and pedagogical l.E('l'lItlq. ues, it is well to have an P(llII'aI. lonist such as Sir Richard Living. stone. formcr 'vice-chancellor oi Oxford University, point out that 05 Wen greater importance in the education of youth is the lllt'lllIa. t.lon of high moral standards. In I thought.-provoking address to iii. Ontario Educational A!SO(!I8lltin' Sir Richard stated that the great. est need in education today is in teach the knowledge of good and evil, for without this knowledge the use of all other skills is sterile -Toronto Telegram " I Burke T Electric Authorized I M Dealer octrical Wiring Repairing and Supplies Oil Heating Household Appliimou Television DIAL 4021 156 Great Goo. St. A Pmaml LOAN ended my worries! D uM'I III Iouolddlou Sonia f up bills and reduce Iliiflhli payments that won too high. And than--in I Iingln viIit- Fruh Start!" You, too, can not I cub loan in jun 1 visit to the office if you phone first. 0:. if more oonnnlnk. write or come in. ucnstsonslsoou-ovooohpuumluunuoulunc IN GREAT GEORGE STREET, CHARLOTTILTOWN Ioetnd Iulldl .PI:kuI Fhontsilll-A&lIrl.hIYBH OIBI EVENINGS IV APPOINTMDII-NOON! POI EVENING H000! I:jIIIdl&dd-Ijbn ' lundnmutnpnyoftuiolo ” no how to clean lontmothocnhlogotn DIAL 3644 2 -15 oz. tins York (Tolgatc's Heinz York Aunt Jemima Magic Apple I: Strawberry JAM, 4 lb. fin SPICED BEEF, tin PLUM JAM, 9oz.icir . . . . MARMALADE, lge. jar . . . FACE SOAP, 4 bar: . . . . TOMATO JUICE, 448 oz. lin PORK & BEANS, lin . . . . PANCAKE MIX, pkg. . . . PANCAKE SYRUP, I601. iar SHORTENING, 2lbs. . . . MATCHES, 3 boxes . . . . BAKING POWDER, fin . . . WEATIIERBYI CORNIIJII. DOUGLAS AND UPPER QUEEN STREETS - FREE DELIVERY SAVE ON GROCERIES TEA,lli.. . . . . 79c 0 0 O I I PEACHES & PEARS, 35: 39: 19: 33c 29: 39: I9: 21: 29: 39: 29: 39: 79: Roast PORK, lb. 35: Loin 29c gmrs, lb. 49: BACK BACON, lb. . . .. 59: WIENERS, lb. 39c STEAK, lb. BACON, lb. 47:; MEATS 59:5 NYLONS FIRST QUALITY oNi.r 79c Pair Mlllood VIIIIII IIIIIIII 4-) ham