l I . l i it . l t i : it THE GUARDIAN Published avers -uh-day mornlll II DI Pvinu Bind. (murtnuetmvn. FEJ. by the Thomson Cnmulu um. (4 Kill St. W.. Toronto. . itunuul (mice. :25 l'-nn'enit.y Towlr Itldx. '('nvnn Prince Edward llllld LII! II DUI" Editor. Funk Walker r.-n-ral Muller. Inn A. lurnol Member Canadian D-ll.v Newman: Publuhlrl Auoclnuon Membu tlf the Canadian Full Member Audit Hui-uu nf Circulation Iran--n ottut-s at s'umtnrrmte. Montague and Albennn. iunmnn-d as Second t'I.-us Mail by tho Pan office ' Depannuuu. nitnvi-a. in (attic! t'lI.utullclimn. summenide 113.00 por an- Inn r.Ix-urine in P. l-3. I. 39.06 other Provincu all I' S. HIM DO! umun ”The strongest memory In weaker than the weakest Ink." Adenauer's Difficulties tlliancellor Adenauer's impending VI ii in -3-'Ilmf' months. in- cirlcitfalh, before he originally had planned to go -may prove to be an important event for other nations lwslrlcs West Germany. it will pro- vide the first real tcst. the atoms for pcnce confcrcnce cxccptcd. of the Soviet l'nion's much publicized sweet rca.-oriabiencss. It will be recalled that Soviet rlclcgutcs to the Four Power cuiiiciw-iicc in Geneva rel'uscd to accept Western overtures on the ticruiaii problem or even to discuss illt'ill All siiggcstioiis were brush- ctl asitic us if thc mattcr could wait tor a more suitable sczison. So not- iceable was this indifference to one of the very urgent issues of the day that most observers came away with the iinpicssion that the Russians are determined to deal with the West Germans on a bilateral basis with- out any reference to the other Pow- ilnsctm - ere. if that appraisal of the situation is in any way responsible. It means that Chancellor Adenauer is in for a difficult time. Along with the charm and bonhomie of his official welcome the Russians will find any number of little ways of reminding the vis- itor that the dream of reunifica- tion. which is in every German's heart. will be contingent on certain reciprocal arrangements between the two governments; one of which al- most certainly will be West Ger- many": aliandoumentv-or perhaps only modification. of its ties with the West. How the Chancellor will fare. no one can say. He himself is undoubtedly anvious that his coini- try shruild continue in its present role as a steadfast ally of the West. it mtist be remembered. however. that his people are evpecting him to bring back something tangible in the way of reunification. Should he fail to do that. he will have a lot of trouble on his hands. It must be remember- ed. too, that there is a segment of public opinion in West Germany that favours a more friendly approach to the Soviet l'nion. even if it should mean less corrliality towards the West. This view is not as strong as that to which the Bonn government. for the time being. is committed: but it is by no means a trifling one. Tak- en together. the two difficulties could embarrass Dr. Adenauer very con- siderably indeed. governments have fallen to less formidable attacks. And were the present government to fall now. it would probably be more pre- judicial to Fiuropean security than any other single factor. Anticipating Mr. Drew Aiiticipaiing criticisms which the Conservative national leader is like- I) to make in his nation-wide speak- ing tour. a prominent Liberal news- paper. the Winnipeg Free Press. says it is important for Liberals to recognize their shnrtcomings and examine them honestlv with a View to correcting thcm ”lwfore the-y In crowded out by the irrelevaneies and exaggerations lhat Mr. Drew ma) Sn, taking time by the forelock the Free Press makes. on behalf of its party. the following candid conlcssiruts' ”Virst. Liberal .VIPs on the hack- benclies have grown, as a whole. lazy. The Government having been safe and successful so long. they are far too ready to believe that not mere- ly the Government collectively but individual Ministers are almost al- ways right. There is far too little of the questioning from their own side that keeps Ministers on their toes. There is too much spineless accept- ance Ofipoiicies and too little thrash- ing to-and-fro of ideas. "Secondly. the present Ministers ure. with very few exceptions. poor parliamentarians: not in the sense Mr. Drew alleges. that they despise and override Parliament; but in p tedinlml sense. And the technical lmuitheuveryimportant. Agoorl pqlflpionurianhnmanwhohnot ulna!-nod about seeming to hI'l&t every time on every detail. UN ll prnrli ice " o In an In atom in can lung. in that trivial nopoct. than about the mod for genuine, democratic dis- cussion promoting a collective wis- dom. He knows that this means be- ing tripped up sometimes himself; but he does not mind because be real- izes that in the process he will lose less than he gains on other occasions. He is happy to encourage lively and vigorous debate. because he is con- fident of generally coming out of it pretty well. That fighting spirit has faded from Parliament. Far too much. the Government plays safe. Either because they are too pre-oc- cupied with administration. or be- cause they lack confidence in them- selves. most Ministers do not take the trouble to conduct parliamentary business in the way that would give Parliament -its full stature as the focus of political debate. y ”Thirdly. and most important. Ministers themselves have become somewhat slack about their collective I responsibility for government policy. Just as backbcnch MPs take Minis- tcrs' policies too much for granted. Ministers take each other's. Too many mzitlers get too far on the re- sponsibility of the individual Min- istcr. or of mic or two Ministers: and the cabinet as a whole thcn fails to convey that sense of its collective re- sponsibility to Parliament which is ; the keystone of representative gov- ernmcnt." These faults. says the Free Press. "are not remotely like the terrible ' things that Mr. Drew gets so in- coherently indignant about. They are not the product of evil Govern- ment intentions. They have grown up because the Opposition is weak. ' and it has therefore been easy for i Ministers to have a quiet parlia- mentary life." But this. it adds. "does not free Ministers and Liberal MP5 from the responsibility to re- form. There is a genuine public un- easiness about the condition of Par- liament. And, whatever the origin of the faults. the Government will rightly get the blame if it allows them to continue." EDITORIAL NOTES The Italian barber who says he can shave a man in i6 seconds ”from lather to lotion" evidently is not al- lowing any time at all for the tra- ditional comments on current events. I O I A bank in Chicago has set up a special "Teen Age Loan Fund" for high school students. The 351.001) fund will make loans at 3 per cent up to F450 ”nr even more in special cases" without co-signers or collat- oral. J O D A report from Madrid says that the United States Government placed an embargo on all Hollywood films to that country. Whether the move is part of the new American- spanish goodwill treaty is not made clear in the report. 0 O 0 An authority on cattle feed has announced after lengthy research in the subject that it is better for cows to select their own forage than to have it selected for them by ex- perts. That way. the man says. they are more likely to get what's good for them. It's an interesting discovery: but. from all reports, the cows have known it all along. C I O A Norwegian government official. after being on a visit to New York. adriressed a club meeting in his home town in this wise: "Who would want to live in New York when one can live in Kristiansand and go out in a boat and fish for mackerel? country we have bigger opportunity for creating happiness. balance. and harmony than is possible in most of the thoroughly industriali7.ed com- munities. Perhaps we are the hap- piest nation in the world." There is a lot of sense in what he said. O O I Mr. Jean Paul St. Laurent. son of the Prime Minister. has been nom- inated as Liberal candidate in the forthcoming Federal by-election in Temiscouata. In the event of his election. we shall have the interest- ing spectacle of a prime minister and his son in the House of Commons at the sometime. But it will not cre- ate I precedent, remarks the Ottawa Journal. Hihbert Tupper not only .-at in the House with his father. Sir Charles Tupper. but was actually solicitor general in his father's min- lstry. And Hugh John Macdonald not in the House with his father for nix months before St: John's death H 1391. has - In this - . surprisingly ()'l"l'A W A If ICPORT '.-.-...m...-...-..u....s......- is -..-......l Medically Speaking 0! BIIONCIIIAL ASTHMA While hay fever in an NOTES BY problem. These recurring attacks ford Beacon-He'llIl c u leave you gasping for breath ahd totally disabled. Between three and five of every 100 persons in the United States While asthma may be caused by allergy to various food: or some sort of infection, we'll consider here only those attacks brought on by ragweed and other inhal- ants. the United States the day may come when the men will remain at home to look after the house- j hold chores while their wives take over the earning of the family income. Dr. Henry David. secre- CONTROL ATTACKS tary of the National Manpower There is no cure for bronchial Council. told a regional conference asthma except to avoid the pollen ' that female employment has in- to which you are allergic. We can. creased I25 percent during the l last 10 years. Mauls employment increased but R5 percent during however. control must attacks by a variety of well tried medicines. , An asthmatic has difficulty the same period. Last year wo- lbrcathlng when a thick. rubbery men held 211000.000 of the nation's mu to us secretion plugs the 84.000.000 jobs Paint John Tele- bronchial passages. The bronchial izranh-Joure" tubes contract. It ' i i t breathe .n than it liss ftfslskhliz " is 3' Sill” tlllI'85 that at flu- sjngp expiration usually is 3 com. next session the Federal Liberal Darnitiilely feeble act. anyway. For Luff"; 1"": 3'9 a0309d.l;!"l 1””? a wt 0 in 1, u. - respec u o e pposi on an 0 air thaen yy.,'l. in 9:3,; lwmzmi; the rights of Parliament than they little your lungs become over- ha" 59'" fol" 3 l0"l3 'lm9 935' distended with residmi ,i,-g The threat to our traditional sys . , lem of government has been eased DANGER or mucky considerably. The result is often Most attacks occur at night and described as a Progressive Con' -- ” mhwawwmwmw ill untreated might last from an cu-vaiivc triumph, yet it was I ' S ' "M 1" "V'”l d"-V5- Th? l0II80I' much more of a triumph for par- n Ine with the attack. lasts and the more in- liamenlary government and for T -. - .A,.. . ?--..A loll” ll l5- "'9 Srllleli ii "I? the Canadian people But -' will Spuri in Home Building By Patrick Sass-altlu-wan has lcd Canada's huiltlini: lumnl mer the past four years. Prosperity in the construct- ion industry has been the back- bone of our national prosperity. 'llbcreturc one could reason. bum- per wheat crops are still the ('oriici'.sIonc of our ucaltli. The llominion llurea of Statist- lcs has inst announced that the value of construction in Saskatche- wan iunmcd by .-i slaggcriniz 7ft per cent over till" past four )cars This figure is rcachcd by comparing the total construction cost last year with l'l3l's fitzurc. The all-Canada building boom showed a '38 per cent increase in the same period. The Proyincc I-l llntario lust cx- cccdcd the national avcraic. by recording an Increase of :29 per cent. Quebec is not far behind with 36 per cent British Columbia lass with a more it per cent increase b"li!('Ptt "I5! and i954. just heading Prince Eduard island in one percentage point. More than half a million work- ers are averaizini: 5.1 "50 a year in waves in this nstructinn boom. and in er two billion dollars a car are being poured out in materials to be included in these no building- The chartered banks have now been in the Iuune-innrtgage busi- ness for it-st over one year. and the fillip given to our building ilttlusll” by 'hi- "ylra source of muruzacc financing is clearly sluncn in this earls acceleration in the boom The volume of new home building finan:-ml Vat?--n. al Housing Act vnorigagcs has jiunperl by -15 oer cent in the first half of this year. in munnarisun with last ycn" HOMF. OF TOMORROW icconin:;nyvn' this spurt in home-huildinlz is a decided change in home Iiesigr The 'lonIc of Tomorrow is being optimistically designed on drawing ltllRl'fl" all over the country. but meanwhile The Home of Today has "iken very definite shape as something which our parents. and even our immediate post-war sclics, would tic have u-onsi(lcrct' This new home. according to the Central Mortgage and Finance Corporation head office here. is the bungalow. More than l7 out of every 20 homes built with N. ll .l mortgages last year were liuncalnn. or nn("sforcy dwellings Another two out of every 20 such Nic halimn lhumes were part-bungalows. that IS to say our and a half storey homes. The remainder were split level or ii o-storey dwellings. The rnniantically minded will regret that no Canadian Juliet will henceforth be scrcnadcd on her balcony by her Romeo. for lV'Il('UnleS have no place in I bungalow. But the more serious persons whose job it is to design easier living in the homes they plan will he liappi to scc the staircase disappear. The next slcp will hr the trend towards the tune- mentless house. with a utility room adjoining the kitchen in place of the laundry Iubs in the basement. This will remove the horror known to every mother and housewife. of irudguu: down a rickety staircase with heavy loads of dirty clothes. and climbing up again with those loads made even heityier by being damp from the washer: while at least oncc in each )(HluE life. baby falls doun the same staircase to damage on the concrete basement floor what migtt otherwiic have become the llreatesl Canadian brain. HIGH!-IR FANNDIAN COSTS While more Canadians are each year able to afford :1 new onic. and offered I choice :if such homes in our boomin-,1 building industry. the price of that home i- rising and stands wcl' above the cost of a comparable house in the S'taIcs Last year. the avcraizc liomc Inlrcliascd with the help of R National Housing Act mortgage lust over .il2.00(i. Tins coni- pared with a price 11.000 lower in the previous yczn 'l'ilc '1st year the typical imerican custo- nic-' under that" -'e""ral llousing A--' paid only &ltl.67t' in both countries. this average home had five and a half rooms. The tlanadiau Immc however was the more spacious. with a floor area of L094 square feet. coni- pnred to the Americans Ml square fcc' The higher cost of the Canadian home was partly attributable to its larger size. and very appreci- ably on ac-mint of the higher cost of fighting the climate here. in many States. such practices as excavatinll below the frost line, instituting the walls and ceiling, and supplying storm sashes are unheard of. On the other hand. though. in some States the need 'nr :IIi'-cnnrlitioniil" 'VI'csent.s an "xpense which matches our cost if I hot air oil furnace No Verbal Skvrockels Sydney Poet-lfeeoed TFII-I TWO HFlI'l'tlNS who had breakfast in London. luncheon III New York and were back In Eng- land to dine with their wives. all on the same day. vverc nwnchalnnt about the danling performance. but there was nuthinr cannot in what they accomplished "Juxttroulinc " one of tin-in ex- plained Nonscncc. The understate- ment is positivelv quaint. What Pilnt .Inhn llackett and Navigator Peter Moneypenny did. scintillatu with success. The twin-let Canberra p I a n e whlch so neatly did their epicnl hiding In the 6.914-mile rnundtrin trans-Atlantic flight. shares In a triumph that rebounds in the sci- ence and skill of British aeron- autics on well as to the personal credit of the two airmen. The pair flew a photo-reconnaliw nnce vcraion of the Canberra bom- ber. lt was the first London-New York round-trip ever completed in one day. An earlier model of the aam plane made the first trans- Atlantir roundtriw in a single day three years ago-from Northern lrel art in t-'nvfnuadlam'l amt hack. 2. miles shorter than the flight Tiiesrtny. in New York. during the 36-min- ute Intermission of the flight. the United States Navy supervised the refuellinl of the Canberra oottiul min. . I ' it up for thc trip llIllIIt' 1 Iialk this up to a fine bit of Anglo-American co-operation. While the two airmen so eagerly questioned by newsmen I that they were kep' from doing justice to the meal awaiting them. A fellow should be allowed to finish his eggs and coffee this side of the ocean befnre hoppinl homeward Modesty about this achievement is out of order. The staid old Times of Printing House Square In Lon- jdon. nanaged to say that it was "of more than passing interest." and a "matter of pride." Come now. throw off the wrap: and sung- qer. A for”w"l" mek-a-doodle-don in behalf of John liackett and Peter Woneypenny. shout-4 will but 1! the Aflov-W - if these tlvo t'i:.'lDl want to be casual about It all right. but their countrymen can't eullv be for- given if they fall to stick out their cheats and frankly bout. In the England of the first Elizabeth's reign the air would have vibrated ;witlu the lyric thunder of blanlf i verso. Oh for a little oldilme Elin- bellnn bombut. for an ode to shake the rafters. There are moment; when the cunt! manner can be quite annoying. one look: in vain for VCIIII Ikyroeketl in 13400. Don't In! people in realise that d3"il(”' 0' 0805508 Permanent III- depend fundamentally n the vigil- ll i ' Jur.V lo the heart or lungs - ' - Cohege ObleCflVeS Probably the easiest '-way to 3-i'c(i:ry”fi:h:,.:,::',l:...M'"h5f.m:,':,'f ll-lxcliangel P"-Wen! pan attack is by inhaling con J,.u,.,...- lA college should not be con- '.p'"Fph”"9 59'” fmm I M!bll- H sidcred ('hiEll)' a marriage bureau. MEL In 59”” au”k5- l"Jemi'-"'5 Ah" "M" h” 5'” """s'" believed dead." for ten years now. but interesting bit: of information be taken by mouth. Cortisonc and about him still come in light. The li.".illi'””'i'l'2F ".:".::.'.';' mi: N li.'.Ei.'illif.l'S:'-Z”l.'.lifi.l'.Z':f.:'J.?' int si 'l 'ili 909907 -' -s ' " ...T..”.'.l.i?...v'l... lllill. 11..-l.'.'.'.'l3.'.7"If.'. fi”""l de--ow-was or an mm -o.. err Au-ora-nu In - r--rm--- v s. perpclrating a perversion. and I "9 "tucks fl” 50""? INTVHIS very tzrm" ""'- QUESTION AND ANSWER f'. R. W.: I have I number of of epinephrine or adrenaline usu- nor an employment agency, nor a any provide reliot Enhedmw mav social club. nor an arena. no. nor yet a technical school for crafts ficial records indicate 'hat by the cnd of I934 Hitler awed Cl5tl.000 in it sccms lo nic in our present back ta.yc- These were quietly lAUl'l(l a college is the one place sebum": cysts 9" my he"! and cancelled by a secret au:' turnb- vrhere standards are considered Md-V' 1' ll ""59 '0 ll”? 'l'9m VF ably illegal decrcc. Front 'hat and not prices. the one place that moved, b"f”"' "'9-V ll"-'"'"C l"' time on. the fuehrer simply ig. is not a market. ltiveryvihere else '?.”l'”.- 1' 0'9"” 3"-Vihlnl ill” nored thc lax-collector and enjoy- lor the rcsl of our lives we will ””"1'M w'''”' M." ”'l'"l"3l9 ed his official salary. and his eh- bc called on to justify ourselves "Wm , ormuus rnygitios (mm (hp com. and render account. Here we only A"5WPI'I N in WISE to have fit? puisnry sale of ”Mein Kampf." recognize. "b'""'" ""5 '"9""'V”d- U" 0' tax-free. it is a curious thought vitamins would not cause cysts to disappear. ""59 that If Adolf Hitler proved to be still alive. and 4 inf? back to Ger- many. the nulhoriies might have to put him in jail for not paying his income tax. like Al Capone. - Edmonton Journal llcre it gains us nothing to say a thing is sound if it is not. We can have the joy ut thinking for the intoxication of thinking and for (p no other purpose - not because. ,' for instance. it will enable us to; TI-IA(illEll REM!-JMBERS buy I more expensive dinner- Here we can ask. "Is this true?" without the withering raulinn al to uhat might or might not accrue to the answer. We can say. "This How can you tell when I cow is getting ready to cross the mad'.' Tnm Burson. the Camilla editnr. raises the question. Tom's ll1eor:.' 09hr); , p g Here are the wild flowers he "i "'1" 3”" "Will li99ll -V01" "-V55 linlltlallllflll r- "13 N98” lllrns in would 63".... hmmp on the cow's tall. if the tail in it . in pure love. when had h, seen them on, shun hanging straight dowr and stiff. . I. . ., , The quesuuns Hhiyffl (llli'IilL: these g'",”mh '3'” . lhn.".'""s md'!:'g5'o"' llhe af"':m .l'cars arc tundanienlal Questions H9" ” ' 5””-V l””hll'l.l' ll? mllilll - m m” ' "V l" m"" 1' gr amt the answers given are classic f"7""v ass is vzrccncr on the u'lu-- V mm is. mm are (,nm".ing and but still. beyond. the deer in with f side n the pavement. But. says passionate And the licopic who h” d"'- U dedicate iheirglixea to helping us "P Mm the MM W”, round and The SlOry ask and ansvei are set apart fium M. R hmo.( others ' f , . Sing unto the Lord. all the earth: qllafhffd 9"” M”' "T" "W" shew forth from day to dav his T(.'ll'lI(ll': exist and uurk uul lmed I" "'0 PW” ..l,.-um. wholly for tllenlsclyes but in large W9"? Washed f'.V95- H? mm 599" Give 'nlu llic l...rd die '4 part for others: and they seldom g 50m9b0'l.V lt"0l' , have ally: to grind. They ask only ilk? "183 ll!" month. hefnre the attention. They ask this. and they "Id of school. ask that. the student do ,lho best he can with no thought of im- mcdizue profit. II -ITIIIS lilllc e- nough. hut in actuality it is very much. It will not he demanded again of us in a hurry. due until his name: bring an offer lng. and come before him: worship the Lord In the heaufr -' lmllnes PROFESSIO Sidney it was who wamtered late to class. p who walked as nnc walks in the l deer's still place: in his label. from hidden pass. This is the point of view of the Wild blossoms: on his washed and some green It takes a man of iron resolu- I tion to let I cough drop dissolve tremely annoying type of nllergy, in his mouth without spegdlngi happy and contented. and W,” asthma is a much more action: : the prim"! by Chewlnil. - lra- on grazing where she IS. I-Inn. A solar cooking stove. composed . (.,. simply of a concave mirror and I the mad. She makeg n iport for pots and pans. in i occupation officer In ttermany. of-I Page 4 The Guardian, T THE WAY be. if the tail is swingin .... . in the breeze. then theg :1:.Mil': Kll Burson brings up the llumlun H: cause his wife. Mary. in.-i,-I. .” are getting ready '" crm. hnn slow. down to a walk every film: h.. an suffer from asthma. Some 2,000- 1 "5 be mlifkeled wmmercla"-V yjproachcs one. I'm sure hr in. 000 of them have bronchial 3" 53 mm """v Whlac&)0ex”ec'3. appreciate help in an-iviim .-Hui: asthma. the form of the disease , '0 "W" fa-"1".5b0"i. 1- FWV95 l fair formula. -- Atlanta c-......,.,. usually meant when we speak of ' A 3'93” Tl"? '"V9"l'f W35, De"-tiou asthma. .fecl'd by D"- T"C"-1L Um" l'9' There is need in. mm u-um; Bronchial asthma strikes both culuy HWVVEP5 will-IV9 Df ihel men in business to IllEISl(lI.lllPlI' sexes, and is most common among it”? 0f 39m"! at "'9 Untied own particular jobs first and white persona. About one-third of i N5"0"5- my 339"" W""l"'?5v I then learn smnr.-lhinn .-ihuui 1;". the cases begin in children under WIWTP fuel I5 5C3'?9.find 5""5l""9 other fellowls worries .'i WM 10. Like hay fever. asthma fre- plentiful. Dr. Tarctcls stove WI” salt-sin in r..,- .-xa,,,n1.. "HM quemiy is round an (amine, with 1 provide an econonncal means of ham. 3 wund kllwlctigp M M histories of allergy. Because of? C00kllfl8 70? lh0U53"d5 0' ll90Pl9- . own Iucrcltnndise iv order to tell this we think heredity might be - Niagara Falls Review a convincing story. That 3, ,,,,. I factor. .5: ".3 wings an tom! in sufficient He must also be ahh. tu discuss intelligently the am... carried by his nnpositioll ilercix dismisslnk his -ompcliturls lam. with :- lt'llE(' 'nfcrcnce of poor .workinanshlp i- not Pliounh fhmiui. Wlnrcul-y 1' lde:- of getting away lI'iun jthe ruuunc In order to get ...,,,,. lfliiiiking done is not only ilflllllt abIc' in the modern world it .. becoming essential. For tlum.;h there may be greater lci.sim- in It" world today thar cvcr hl'l(i1'(I it has not been extended to (huge with the heaviest resp(m.-.iliilitw- On the contrary. tl who ought to think the most nroliahly have less Iimc for thnuglil than mm- before -- Montreal Gazette B. F Goodrich TllllIiiE I I0 WI! 30 IIOW out I FITS YOU PIIDII IIMS i (0575 I00 MOI! Hill! A menu Til! AND lllll no--.-------------.4 Dawson's Service Stn. Crapaud. P. E. L PIIONE l7 NAL CARDS BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS. Etc. artist and of the pure scientist. of lzuiltless face I the true scholar and of the true his nwn found knowledge. Till I friend. This is an important moral far September. experience and one which we cer- the b0.V kept after school he'd lonl Bell. Matheson & Foster llatlirllrlchmond St. ha 7.-V Elmer Blanchard. . OPTOMETRlSTS': G. F. iIBTcFeL3F&'sBh F. G. IIUTCHESON. R.0. tuially canlpol 31ffclir;l to 'l'llilhs.h' h remember. I 1" Q.... m pg..." an 5' GI,-non SL mm 3"; emem er a ree on: as . , -jaw m-mm --be - --- '-r always been kept alive by student: f”'l”"9l' '""'l K''”' I” ll” of''''”' y H. A. Fnnner, Q.C.. LL.R. J. A. Cnrruthers. R-0- in cloister or lInIV('l'sll,V, that the '"' 50"-""09 M0""0'- B I of ommetcr Bldg. I28 Kent St. Dial up nnnersity is always the first line - ,j g, j r 'm T " ' of battle I l Allison M. Gillie ',L.B. RN70" J- Gflllt. 0.". l R I H ! "M r M m . i no Richmond St. inn m 16 KW syn”. ,i'""' W. cm:-mwr I8 e I e -----e--- universities first and destroyed i A. Wolthen Gludet, LL.B . "' so "'yl0rv R'0';" their freedom. And until he had I pump. 31.", in (1,.-In,” 31 k'"'"'' K9”. T Q"""4.'56' done this he could do little else: RF I T M k I :-jj-e------7---ve- Ofnnf itst "mu!" ' .,- innit once he hhadd'(lI(:l1C this all els: "H n 0 T u l puma, a Hlshm .l uglmn. R 4- I ' 5 fl lA'C II "bl ' I. . ..'i-a.."r?':u"..l..' " ' APPLIANCES j ""'i " ”"" MI" "W L"””E . L- It was the universities in Poland M'th”on' Puka & W Nicholson l -:-e-j--"s-To that tlnve the first evidence nf the SALF3 I SERVICE breach within the slate in it was the Polish faculties that were mur- dcrcd first Remember always runs! solemnly I75 Grafton Street 3. A. Madiuignn MOTORS I Curie Bldg. - Dial 9424 - Queen St. Dr. W. R. Carson inn Prince Si. m-I WI g'gy Rewinding and Repairs that the person who determines your way of living and your chance Chas. R. M1.-Qlulltl. B.A. I! G. Keith Picka rd. ;flvill;':llIlr0lIwLlge:0ln:'l:C ymlarn pref: ELE(,Vrl"CAL ill lllchmond St. - N-I V II :ummelIr.m.Ael:cl;;.Eh:.R.A.l.g.m 1365 N ' ' l l . ' "fl idem. nor your doctor or police- Rgpgln "I & TI'I,llli)I').rl an "I--rll2t'Ile'i::;n 'l;:t:"sd”-:1; it man. nor yet even your spouu. jg k". W” , but the one who look: you In the i f ll . . . ll ' ' .JLl.'b;" .5.'.'...”?."..."i.'.....”."."'.'.l..t Ely? rs--m am am CHARTER” lCC0UN'A'”-T5 "G0 '0T"'"- . MeDt'INAl.l). CIIRRTE & F0. M - .- . .. --... . . c---u -u-. -'----I-um v--gr" IiTn."poANn icourauv H8 Great Ga-nv-re St. Charlottetown In . . 0. 3)! Bncausr 1"” '"' '"' do mot. HoucholdFinnnee iuvrum. ... u.uuum- gives you every service Palmer Electric Building H yo. yum when you Charlottetown too run-oy sum Dial 5' O need extra cult . .. i T :50 to :i.ooo simply on trom tllc rm"-' "W- ugfriondly ontday I N U ' E Why H H FC Canada'I Iargen, luau recommended to repay. - .fuauceconipaIy . Momyviunyoumoditt miousutoio unmet vlithiqtoillnonths OI1D1IIl&a MI-I. this in n on lltubethn out f HYNDMAN ” no on, v.avn-no.5-o-v Q... 1313, tun.-an-nu.-uuI.eh-Ill? Oman! mAHlVI'I'HOWI - EIIEIIIII I H0N1'M'W3 LIMITED