‘TUNE f0! y. A busy found of lctivitln over the Dominion Day week-end was revealed in the itinerary released Wednesday for the sixth Canadian tour of the Governor-General and Slrscountess def". 4o Wind- sor. Ont., Toronto and Hamilton. The Viceregal par will reach the Oulnltal by train Thursday, sf- riving in Windsor Friday to re- ceive Mayor Rheaume 0d Wind- morning. Viscount Alexander will inspect s. guard of honor of Boy Scouts st the sta- tion. and latter take part in an in- ternational ceremony on Ambas- sador Bridge. where international expressions of good-will will be exchanged with the American and British Consul Generals st Wind- III. U I I The three children of the Gov- cr-nor- General will take part in the trip until Sunday, vnhen the family will take time out for an informal picnic luncheon expedi- tion to Niagara Falls. The chil- dren will then motor back to Ottawa. t Q O O Sympathy gOes out to Mrs. G. Carlyle Webster who was so pain- [ully injured in London. Ont... s low days ago. while visiting there mm Mr. Vilehster. she will be greatly missed in her manv church and other activities here and the. Encere wish of her home friends for a quqick return to normal health. . . ‘ The tea hosteses at the Char- lottetown Tennis Courts this after- noon will be Misses Audrey and Beryl DeBlols.‘ ‘ The marriage is taking place in lrhree Rivers. Que... today of Miss Efthaniel Cecile Smith. to Mar. James Carruthers Reid, son of Mr. nd Mrs. W. J. Reid of Kinkora. ' Smith is a graduate of Mac- rionald College School for Teach- grs. while Mr. Reid received his .Sc. at Macdlanaldsiollege. s . Rev. D. K. Ross. Mrs. Ross and their daughter. Miss Lorna. and Miss Mona Clarke, Stellarton. N. E, are spending two weeks at Stan- ope Beach. _ Mr. Kenneth Franklin of the Royal Bank, Montreal. accom- panied by Mrs. Hanklin and two winsome children are visiting ms. Franklin's rparents. Dr. an s. H. H. SthawzUurper Prince St. O O in. and Mrs. George Sdnclsir spent the week-end in Saint John as guests of . Sinclair's par- . George Tay- lor. Rockland Road. while en ventlon of Kinsmen Clubs being held there. Mr. Sinclair was dis- trict governor of the Maritime! and Nevlfoundland 0 Rev. T. H. B. Somero and Mrs. Somers returned lest night from g. dellghtlul holiday‘ in Toronto. m. and Mrs. William Fergu- 399 Roscdsle Avenue, Win- nipeg. Manitoba. arrived last Mm- day evening on an extended visit to their native Province after an penng [The Week p peg, aocouvmi son Ernest of Saint have arrived in the Queen Hotel. _ from Toronto where they taking a. five weeks’ special cour aumloes of G. B. R. E. These young chosen for outstamdlnB cation. Social Service and Health, Dramstics, singing and handicrafts siasn. for their chosen work. for the bride-to-be. who there re- bhififlng_, Mn. Dorothy Simms of Winni- ed by her John, N. 8.. city on a short red ct the visit. They are refit/e O Miss. Flor-one Eva-us and Miss Elinor 011w returned this week were se if in Youth leadership under the the Anglican W. A. people. leadership in church work. have had a re- fresher course in Religious Edu- snd have returned full of enthu- A pleasant afternoon tea and kitchen shower honored Mis Funny E. Leigh by the staff of Prince Street School on Wednes- day afternoon. A dainty sssefnbl- Lng of a green and white stream- er tent made a. graceful setting ceived hes‘ gifts with their Jolly verses which were read by Miss Marguerite Brehaut. Ool. Low- ther tendered Miss Leigh the good wishes of her fellow teachers which were further expressed by Mr. Stewart Williams in soulful rhyme. The staff's present was a Ken- wood blanket in pale green. The gift of an Island scene was the parting souvenir for_ Mrs. Jean McQusr-rle. who for several years has been c popular teacher of P. S S. Miss Mabel Matheson’; ex- preslons of regret at her leaving were fully shared by the stat-f. A social tea drinking ended an enjoyable gathering. -'. O O Miss Marion B. Woodward. of Montreal. will arrive on Friday to spend a vacation with Major and Mrs. Alex Knox‘ at Keppooh. I I Princess Elizabeth. wearing a tartan sash over e. white satin gown. danced Highland reels at the Royal Oaledonian Ball in Lon- don Tuesday night. Arriving with s small party she did not miss a dance. t t Among the out-of-town guests at the nmrrlsge in Sydney last Saturday afternoon of Mr. ohn to of Toronto. and Miss Elizabeth Jean lvllacNeill. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rufus MacNeill. of Sydney. were Mrs. of Charlottetown. Mr. Harper Mac- Neill, brother of the bride. was bfistxlnsn t e register. aunt of the bride. sang. “The Day of Golden Promise." The visitors were also guests at an afternoon tea and shower for the bride. Mrs. Roper reading the greetings st- tsched to the. lovely gifts. Miss Isabelle Jamieson left Monday to spend the summer among be: old homo friends in Halifax. . s Bailey of Ilivsnston. Ill.. absence of over forty years. Mrs. Mill ‘s brother, Mr ar Macifiinnon of Norwood. Manitoba. is also visiting on the Island. leaving this Province thirty-dour years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Few“- son really nil-prise - d Mr. Median non when they met Wednesday at their old home village of 111mb- Mr. and Mrs. Ferfllson. at the time of his departure. hadn't planned. their visit to the Island. Mr. MacKinnon leaves for Win- nipeg the first of July, while Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson will remain for tome time. They are the wel- come ‘guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Warren Inman. Hampton and Mr. and Mm. Wlirlrhor Bell, DeSwble. i HA’! AND BAG SET arrived Thursday to spend the with ha’ sister, Mrs. (Dr) V. L. . Dr. Bailey is arriving latcr A cordial wel- come always awaits these popular annual visitc II. en Professor and Mrs. Andrew Ola-k of Rutgers University. New Brunswick. New Jersey, are vis- itors for the simmer th Mr. and s. . MaoBeatb at their simmer home in St. Peter's. With than is their young son Dougaid. Dr. Clerk was enzlged in intelli- gence work for the Office of Strategic Services in the United States and China during the war. He is l. son of Dr. J. S. Clark of C radish and Brando Mani n. - lobe. and a grand-son of the late Mr. Ohsrles E. Pratt of 8t. Point's. ‘ ' ‘ Mob- the Queen ut frsic — and about fighting. QMSJima-y Brown sat between the Queen and the Duchess of Kent in the Royal box at Albert Hell. London. at s gals concert staged by hilly Pons. opera star and Andre Kostelanetl. her hus- band conductor- in aid of the Oom- msndos‘ benevolent fund. Brown was one of l0 Commandos hon- ored bv invitations to sit in the Royal Box. To each the gave s red rose. Cook? Corner Q. Should until he to it. that parents? meeting long before the engagement is announced parents live ln some the country. what. is being _ A- Yes; to be a good listener is just kas admirable as to be a good 5P0 Kills to his best man and his ushr ers? me if it did COIIUHII a strange and unexzpecled surprise. It was amaz- ing until l remembered that hum- an nature is made up ale substances and the ways of it un- predictable. And perhaps I should not mention the story at all. But then any happiness that comes to folks trud ing life's oflen weary will not resent my be . I spent today—or me part of t wthlcu. was so _ pierced the overhanging clouds and a nice fresh wind came down from the hills-with my very good friend and all. v bloke favorable cpportunit I should have bided at home to- day. However many thi ed my going The croppn at . l- derlea had been comple for the few rows of turnips which remained to be rolled; James would not be left alone but was going to be absent at Rob's: J cable's moth - er is with her and I bad my work advancing sever to keep me but which serv only Io make the trip seem ‘ able. It wa‘s as if an invlsi e and v no Arthur Roper. Mr. and Mrs. only that she had been on my mind Harper MscNeill, Mr. R. H. Mac- these last days that Rlssa needed Neill and Mrs. Elmer MacDonald my presence. et es it is the ‘ would be lcnaly _ memories and the.‘ he? dswvmmd .’\2\D\9\%>OO\9J3\, if l mm welt ll w! 0d before seeing his bri o-tcbe meets his A- No: he mould arrange this course his nt part of Q. Does it show lack of courtesy one does not show interest in told him? a er. Q. Should a bridegroom glvg A. This is customary. Ellen's Diary By an Island Farmer's Wife This has been a pleasant day for ofsub and she rail had tter be fold. delightful when the sun~ a. Many and often were the imes r have thought of her since' the day she visited me and more than once I set the date for a. rc- v-urn “kayley" with her and had to postpone it because of the busy season and our new babe’: coming There never before elt that And indeed, Jam-es prom t- excep t well in order for over the {rumbled a little, a weighty ints retty a-bbath . James moi desir- ue something urged me to go- in? else would do but to heed it, I ancied. but of it was turn of the strong to lean on weak. This is Rissab wedding anni- ‘ma. We are all filled with borne and her my of life m we is old and has to go to live with her she ts an unwelcome guest. But, strangely enough, we though the who is left with daughter in his to cheer up the Mon better than extreme cases of Poverty. the c"! keep her little brood together; when“. man has or how hard he tries. he give his children the care PATHETIC SPECTACLI No spectacle is more pitiful helplessly with and worn at night to a house that would be. eating study meals and ning wild. Of course, the suggested is remarriage. pecially if the man widower's fancy is the stepmother. So what is the poor or even middle-aged, the marry again. provided he picks out class. for a wife instead of a marriage is hhat whether happy it does something He has been house-broken and solution for the but that is wife's death the widower may kick soon finds out that he has lost his household pet instead of a vmlf. Also it is better for the children they But if a widower does not want. life by living in a hotel or club or companionship and someone to look of these. he shOllld go to an Old oonorrrv 01X Lot of Widower- Is ‘ Harder - forherwbenshebuah of,ort.beonewhohastogotollve Wlt-hhiflwhol‘ and pathetic than that of the bereaved widow. liven the Bible makes this distinction. between the sexes. for we are sdfured to vrldowb eyes. but that the widows: Yet, in reality. nuke s home for her children and that their mother would have done. than that of “the widower contending hired housekeepers and govemeses; coming home tired worrying over children who are run- is choosy. For he kind of women who would hit the not always willing to qualify widower with chilflen to do? If he is young best way to meet the situation is for him to glamour girl. For the curious thing about a. man's first man-tags has been happy 0r un- to him that unfits him for the single life. He has gotten used to home cooking and home comforts and ‘a wife bossing and nagging and taking care of him and. although a ht with her. than to have no moher at all to give them a background of s home and the respectability that goeswrltlh it. And it is not to be ignored that children grow up so fast in these high pressure times that soon fly the home nest. anyway, marry. he should preserve his own stances shuld he go to live with his children, because a father-in-law lln a house is even more disrupting than s rnother-in-lsw. For old men are not sdaptsble. They cannot change their ways. They can't even occupy themselves, as old women canby krlttting or looking after the children. They can only sit and criticize and be pests Which God forbid that any of motberleu youngsters to take cure 01d age.‘ is even more desperate wipe the tears from the nothing» is said about our duty widower, perhaps on the theory can always comfort himself. the widow can meet the situa- tbe widower can. for. except Lu no matter how much money the cannot make the happy home or is no more of a home than a barn 4 widower's dilemtmo that is usually not always as easy as it seems. es- for the hard role of _a sensible woman. in his own age he can't revert to the wild again. after his up his heels for a little while. he taste for liberty and wants to be s to have a stepmother, even if they and cease to be a. problem, to marry again. of if he is too old ‘to individuality and make his own ardlng house where he can have sf r him. If he can not afford any Mans Home; but under rte-circum- m._ us should be. then for James is not fond of driv- I expected that ~he there with paast be long. James then was determin- ed to drive me but I was quite as interested as he. in pass fetch me home . Y8 'slnce happenings and I sti tcrda‘ yes ys m‘ gander over the changes ve brought. Time will say. Un y time and hides ones within the veil years it takes. I of Rises. Rissa day, at least not the sad wa that _ 'I‘rue we ed of the old some-and went on to speck various sent interests. My of Jeentcb and o _ r ~ o id 35h f falrm‘ ofgsSusie and and IDBGeit. e-e them among the vegetables comes suddenly to a bed of ers: " tton" ansies ‘l égggsezgigp. gr s. getting _that| acre of Rob's —0.nd Jamie's done‘ so I prevailed upon him to turn at the corner. As it happened. there mounted_sh was no lack of lifts as many were rlblushinvestn ing in that dzrecllon and James himself bad promised to come and this was the date. many yen-s that Rissa. was mar- ried. The iilucs were fading then and the apple blossoms were gone. It all returns to me as clear a5 ars heal they does bell sorrows and losses of the past. Long know. on sccounl was not lonelv to- lgrmntly so in had expected. ;_. of our pro Or now tfnatIthinkofitJdid Itoldhel.‘ Good the babes home- " of Jamie's quaint ways and our work about the , the chickens bu, of Karolyns lovely flock of them. She talked of her gardening and at onm I Just had to come 0w "U neatneas of her one flow- detain, willy pink- glant ones aces-for- thoughts. ing the car after night I had a new recelpe or a. cookie I had liked at s a slip off ‘oer yeerlse-shae ' geranium, mp gm; pretty; a bit of fever-few ‘from the gsrdm. when a car drew‘ u door. “James? "I said, sin to get my coat. Rlsss only sm ed. er. The door opened softly admit-not. my sterner half. but D ‘W. . . . all the city. Rises. and me. grown u remain Sally and Mollie to the end of cha tor. But dear mo, J call n’ me so that 1 shall to finish my stc '—or other night. And of the Rissws. I recall now the drawing ni ‘, bless: the countrysde that noth can en from Another for‘ ‘all ou ours and ar Until Manda . . . Diary hum. .". Wm-LINO. Kent. (GP) — B0 man? barbie n here the they now christened in batches It St. Jahn the parish church. "Mass be are the only solution to my 25 babies in one day recently. at the "Ellen" she whispered and the pink e was always the thing “I should have . but she got no fin-th- o come the way from "D.W." to his business associates but always “Dennis? 1o When v01! have with boys and girls they nnnie and Johnnie and t e amen is e.- be obliged Risen sh- es today I was trend of cvervs England - s are being are .s_ lom." says the vicar who chris nsd WATER AND GRAVITATION Water. like everything else. is under the influence of gravitation. __A_ll parts-of- ib rnustr-thonfdreffiét s! near as ossible to the cecitre of the earth. n the case of a solid thing, those forces which hold it together ‘partly oppose the force} of gravitation. and so an hldlfl-fllb-' ber bull. for instance. will remain as s ball, though if it were melt- ed it would run outflet on the table just as water does. But when we come to consider who! the shape ofthe earth is. we shall see that the questlon.‘“Why ls the surface of wstenalwsys level?" is not quite right if we read t stri-ctl . The earth is s,bsll. an if water ls to obey the law of gravitation and get u near the centre of the earth as ponlble. it follows that the surface of water must always curve and ltscurvature. as we lay. must be the same es the curvature of the earth. The water in the smallest pool or basi-n must obey this law. t s be but. of course, the curve is so slight that we cannot see it. If. however. instead of a pool we take a huge lake or the bcesn. we can see that the surface of the wat- er is ‘curved. because we can nee how s ship leaving us gradually disappears. or a ship coming over the horizon rises up as at ap- proaches us. S0 the real answer- to this question is that the surface of water is always curved; and it fl always curved in one wey--the way in which the earth itself is curved. I Q sun-g HINDU ‘(CG- 9d. the tray from under the bumers of the gas stove once s day after washing dishes. crusts will form from food that has boiled over- inrlde of the Ilcel wool to remove this coating. It will come off very easily. scious in s hospital doctor inquir “oh... keeps putting his right arm out this way" "he's turn out late at night. Mr. Smith Mr. Smith for me, doctor?" the excitement that hurts you.’ Household c Scrapbook A good habit to form is to wash Then no hard The Electric Washer If a costing of soap forms on the electric washer use Morning Smile The road~hog wssblgding semi-con- “I-low is nee rnorr-in-f?" the replied the nurse. "he “Ab? re lied the rnedico genislly, g the turner.‘ Dr. KnowalhTlf-o; must not stay night air bad Doctor: “No. it isn't that. It's ‘after getting borne : “is the How Can 1!! By Anne Ashley E Q. How can I renovate black silk glovcs that are shabb '.' A. Mix a little wh te of an egg with black ink“ put the gloves cn the hands and apply “the mixture with a soft cloth ‘ Q- How can! brown? A. When frying cornmeal mush. add a tablespoonful of sugar and two tablespoonfuls of milk, and it will frv a nice brown. Q. How can I keep hhe kitchen range as bright as when new? 1am mush a nice A. Rub it frequentl with a soft cloth moistened with aseline pet- roleum ielly. L Better English é t ' D. C. Wlllllml 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? “We congratulated the groom and extended best wishes to a .. What is the correct pronunc- "roquefortfl (cheese)? . Which one of these words is misspelled? Hieroglyphic, hemcrage, hallucination. 4. What does the word “locus- Lrine" mean? 5. What is a word beginning that means "essential; with fu basal"? _ Answans l. Brid room is preferred to groom. 2. onouncen-ok-fert, o as in no, e as in her. accent first syl- sble- 3. Hemorrhage. 4. Pertaining to. or growing in, lakes; as, "locus- trlne flowers." (Pronounce ls-kus- trln. aasinsskuasinuslss in, accent second syllable). 5. Fun- damental. KRUGEIVS LAST HOME CAPETOWN — (OP) — A cam- Rsign is under way to secure the President Kruger Switzerland. A 1y hosted the house. English : J >-. is in Latin and "In this house Psulus channel Kruger. the last President of the South African Re ubllc. died in ex- ile on (he 14th ay of July. 19M." .____._____ BIT FIRES IN OIIUWCI! Living». -ms Six letter-l, World over A simple word-father. piss rowers m as bsd for eating at sl to the "I don't have time." vxcuse by making breakfast less of a slap- dssh affair? for breakfast and serving lt with I little more formality. Johnny can be trained to develop good eating habits which will car- ry through to their adult life. ' ' necessarily mean a. lot more work. Ia doesn't really take -any time to set s pretty table. than to set a sloppy one. And it mean buy either. enslve cloths of goodqusllt can e overcome by using stripe plaid Irish linen dish towellng to make u 22 x 32 nch size, can be joined with colored rickrack cloth 44 inches wide and M inches long. Or two strl s of towellng by the yard can be olned the ' same way. Plain towellng. edged the rtckrack. makes attractive nap- IIS. - ' rm: i0 AND ms ANOESTOBB there are wild pigs from which. ou domestic stock has pig fsmlly. widely distributed sl i over the we and are u differen as any faces could be, all men features and similarities. throughout all lands and from‘ we merely regard them as stu and lazy. but it ma the operfed. domest cated. fat por- ker is for from‘ either. He rncyjze both breve and cunning. Any of wild animals. when sheltered by man and bred to serve his particu- lsr purposes, will lose, to some ‘ex- tent. its natural characteristics. If turned out in s dense fend for itself. however. even the domesticated pig reverts to an old- er order and primitive creature. He‘: comtlng on you. . They mun jun the Ilml Time-honored name. -4oseph H, Oherrlngton. ameil digestions ll not {Pull . put a stop So why » not of- By allowing s little more time. Mary an A little more formality doesn't more doesn't g s lot of new things The scarcity of bright and inex- n wo or one. Four dish towels, the braid to make a with P BY F. J. WOB-HALI. (In Dumb Animals) Except for the knowledge that sprung. .mes eople regard the pig as just a pig l s matter of fact. however, a 5' rld, ls an enormous an 1 terestlng one. While there a {u resent a great var elty of h ear c It is srcurlous and true fact t?!» From our own knowledge of pgis. be said e en s. forest - to soon becomes a le One does not look upon a pig s: onecf Nature's sprinters. yet some of the wild figs are es fleet-footed as deer, an are among the most active and versatile of hoofedanl- msls. Also, despite thejsct that rigs have been prised as food. un- Ike msny other creatures. they have continued to survive suc- ccssfully. Many circumstances have contributed to this order of things. but the main reason rests vlth the pig itself because of its fearless‘ courage. Wild creatures have a way of lining each other up quick- will est almost anything that com- es their way. so are not easily starved out during e lean neuo as is sometimes the m. of othe animals. Finally. the wild boars are rollfic and have very large ‘sm- liu. Also. the are exceedln y ‘cunnln and a opt at conceal ng thernle ves and their offspring from hostile intruders. ‘ Perhaps no creature In the ani- mal kingdom is more maligned -—F OR THE ' The vs virenrnent. Perhaps the with hlm_. Alnerlcen doughboys. re from the Pacific theaters of war have , many interesting tales‘ to concerning ' their experiences. pecially the 0.1. Joes who coated in India, where the cow - considered to be moat sacred. For to the mostsscred of all animals. and this __ feet amazed the Americans who al- ways looked upon good old "Bony" I an s producer of milk and - beef. A cow is a cow to most Amer-V leans, but “Joe” found out that in. lIndio. the cow is really a "cmr of‘ 1s different color." . In the United States. the cow is_;_ _ ked upon and then mostly down. but in Indls. it is looked up to! For the native of India looks sacred. e killed i just loo {or sisomethlng that must not pear-in e, or eaten. And. along with the bull. -. it ls worshipped and given s prom- flnent place in the scheme of things 0.1. Joes who were used to see m: uficows kept in sutures were n. n- d Immediately. be taken 1014mm or. . urn, but over in Indie. it ll s ' , . ucredneu. r-the - ~ native-will not dare-touch a. ~¢ow...=. andwill permit it to roam u it Thus the Indian scene was SOME»! tcuishlng to American soldiers who... uwthese sacred cows crowding up, streets. snarling up forcinguhe natives to tske a back l??? r e en ’ ' Belcause F: economy of India. ave set the bull up as be red. commended Ttoruic oeuoh Oorurfittegnof o march. out a _ 1 |I MINI!“ Ill’ ‘MOW "m, u,‘ _ ouanncce mssus-mxgditgé flee-Fe u "m "' "'" w-mv- t» -,»»-,.,,.~,-,~», ,3» »- '.'..".."‘.:..'.':' n": s. ... ".......'":."."::" "is. "n. ‘n’ —-————— - , l ea g . n a no e.‘ -- ‘compassion for the poor endow who has her mflaihghfgudu“ Amelnl, always l stead of being dirty or ftltmr it l». broken w by her hulbend‘: death. Ibpeclslly N,“ w“. do“ a hum‘ Wm “m Believe in your dad. exeefiionaliy elem and ii not“ °“"'“1 °‘ “m” °' “h” ‘m m’ “whaufl” " ‘°' ‘n’ Tit,’°lrd“.‘r."'..rr a m “Vi. wit: 53:933.” “data” z C Q I , U IIICQI °r‘° " in-lsws m whose houses she knows lenflgl ‘airmen, bgguneglerxy; f) Him,‘ {filhonufif w, fiommarfl ,r,l,m,hg.rgtagh, 1,‘... ' _ - m“ ever e es. t o ‘ I --- "c: "M "M" .. ti?‘ -.'-l""::**= t?» ~ lt ems-n ‘ Ill lyou 0 creates nceohscerp-H- o Th‘ o“ Sh" h” R la for right; l-ng or spotting in the-t young. - showing that:- theymosseu- a very - close link with the wild boar whose youn always show this Dfl-‘ullsr _ rletlel of Wild Pig ta be J found in various countries are too . numerous to men Some are small mark ng. tlon in- AKE GAY _ Borne" aregray. some black; _ e BREAKFAST CLOTHES ‘ nuke , some coeted—but ell are“ f -_- aumistaksbly gr. distinct only ___ listing on the run can be reuhh the l uuces of their en- fhe ‘species i: »the pygmy‘- s which. when full grown. larger than a hare. Thisanlmsl ‘rs ' native to certain parts of " The other extreme is reached by , theAfrlcsn forest hogpwblrh rap- - d resents the largest member of the swine family. The tulks of creature are of great-size. and as - weapons of defense. they " formidable that the giant can meet , a tlgu- 9n terms ofequallty. The wai-thol. of Ethiopia. prob- ably represents the ugl men of the family. In fact. he hideous in a pesrance that not ev- - en that socla outcasLof the animal - J associate ' left -. rid. the hyena, will HOLY COW “BY P. E-fsxrmo (In Dumb Anlmifis) us, the cow l n the cow as something beginning of history. pigs hsveb 1d ls ed at the efsrence shown c tow‘ their own better than my ot er, s. Cow and all her relatives. species of wild creatures. Let a cow roam an i‘ art-H" can street today‘ and ~ - it lll‘ of traffic at for them. _Ths American ~could not under- stand’ the situation until they had learned something about “the net- lves’ rell lous beliefs. To the peo- ple of In spthe cow ls a symbol of osperlty and sround this snlmsl ' agricultural Hindus. once rode e bull when on the wer- bullt the entire Shiva. the God of the th and those who worship ct Even in the ftmlly life of th l ‘it d t - ' for: ffivihi°°§gnil.'3ts°ri§r'th§°tri. " ly. Fear Ind ttmidity on one hsnd room hut with member; of the wei-ghs against audacity on the household. ' in other. Thus. the timid die. Then, too, they are very omnivorous and INDIAN ATOMIC REIARCQI -' (or) .- I minerals in ‘Tnvonccrc Scientific ' and f Ind A sub-committee rhleedlecrpaft/ fHoMEj? L detal-l. some ere largo. _ smlilest Id‘ ETC I0 turning relate apprehended and ‘ put out I100- Nlwblllhlfélhu M 0.; simmer of menugflirfi for . geolog and pbysico-ohe- "; mloal survey of he tin-gee ing minerals in Indi a Dis. I no - n41 this '_ _ \ psecl l0 Es- l were '. , is l the." ' 8606.... -1 4 t0 will and Shlvn. Illdifl. .' ism, r: n‘...“h”;;s.;.a;.;............;....-_ ,