THE GUARDIAN Publubed Ivuy wool-any morning It in Prlpeg suui. cau- lotl-eIavrI- P-ILL. by Tbs nun-on campuy Limited "Conn Prtnu Iduuri l.IlInI Like the Dow" Editor. Frank Walks! Gencnl llnnllu. In A. Iunatl Iranrb office: It Summer-slot. Hunt is Alhgn , land In Second Class Qlnil by this l:sI.().l:fv.-I p.p.:i'..3.".,"'” Ottawa. I.v Curler: Charlottetown. s liuwiim in at-:.l. in-o. oiI;l'e"rmi:r::;(v'i.nc:uu':l.iapeli'.I..na'ili"iid l per Innurn ! "Tlic strangest memory In wean; u... the weakest Ink." "ruuiisiiir. MAR. lo. 195:. r I New Wood islands Ferry As indicated in today's news columns specifications for the new 32,000,()()() wood Islands-Caribou vehicular ferry have de. f""l91.V been approved at Ottawa and have been placed in the hands of Mr, Neil A. Matheson. Liberal M. P. for Queens by of- ficials of the Canadian Maritime Commis. It . sion. The details will be read with great in- - , terest locally and there will be general say. i ' isfactiou at the modern facilities which the I P0W9r engines with a service speed of not I less than 13 knots. Five round trips dailw will be provided by the new service, and vehicles will drive directly on and off at each terminal. The Queens County member and the officials of the Maritime Commission and Department of Transport express confi- dence that the new boat will meet all the. commercial and recreational, demands like-l ly to be made upon it on the basis of thel volume of traffic in recent years. The factl is. of course. that we expect I greatly in- creased traffic to develop from the ser- vice: and if this materializes I further ex-l pension of facilities will be required. Butt May. 1956. represents I great improvement l over the existing service. and all concerned in obtaining it are to be warmly congrat- ulated on their efforts. Internal Security Perhaps one truth which deserves, more ermrlhasis than most. of us are dis-I posed to accord it. amid all the protesta- :, tions concerning the freedom and the dig- ? nity of the individual, is that freedom is i never static. nor iI it self-perpetuating. It is easy enough these days to place mankind in two categories, the free and the unfree, and for citizens of the West to imagine that their liberties are so ..strongly entrenched that they are safel for ever. Historical events, however, are; not based on the cataloguing process: norl does the story of the political and social developments of the world warrant an 'easy optimism with respect to the con- tinuance of freedom for any specific na- tion or community. Attack from without is not the only, calamity that can threaten the liberties of a nation. indeed, it is a matter of. record that most of the defunct civiliza-I to their doom not by exterior force, butt by erosion and lack of moral vigilance within. It is of the nature of free societies to take their security for granted and tot! assume that the sort of thing that happen-i ed to less enlightened peoples cannot hat)-l pen to them. Yet. if history teaches any- thing. it is that that is the way in which decadence. or the undercurrent of political Ind social disarray that leads to rte-l cadence, usually sets in. In no historical instance has it come all at once. Slack-p ening of discipline here, widespread indif-l ference to social problems there; growing ' disrespect for duly constituted authorityl Ind for basic human rights: unawarenessl of the need for conservation, both ma-', terlal and spiritual; status quo com-. placency on one stratum of society and: chronic discontent on another. These andj I host of other insidious tendencies, some tangible, others intangible, are the forcesl which can destroy any community with-l out the aid of outside aggression. It would be one of the sad ironies ofl the human story if thevfree nations, ihj their anxiety to protect themselves from' armed aggression from without, should overlook the many signs of internal wear- ing away of the things which made them strong and which must be preserved if they are to remain free. . l . A Controversial Book Considerable controversy is now going on intthe religious press-especially in the United States-over the best-selling book "The Power Of Positive Thinking", by Dr.-, Norman Vincent Peale. This book It ' has retained firstlplaoe in popular favour for121weIkIandshawanoslgnofde- ' tprlqratton. when it h considered that done-years-vbest seller stain for a work & fl flog is g Isgvlixljy remarkable, . . tli'l,f,13if. Peale has . an cxtnoidlmgnmu.de K -c Ts. g it ,' . I which, in their view. have seriously hin- dered any real cultural progress among further. that any serious book that is fabric of the nation. ,very fact that a book which stresses the , .. g . . deed, in every paragraph, is running far new boat illll provide. Designed to cal-1... 60;ah93d- in public favoun of N91,... other vehicles with.-space for 300 pedestrian pas- lbook in any field, fictional 0,. mnlfi(..-lonalg sengers. it Will be powered by 2,500 horselmustv su,.e1y' be of some salutary signm. ca nee. tions and powers of the past were brought 1 V the masses of the people. They claim, read by millions of people cannot do less than strengthen the social and cultural Its denouncers say that. since the book is neither altogether psychological nor obviously religious in in- ent or content. but I sort of cross be- tween the two, .it has little value in either field. and that, in any case, it isla mis- take to encourage the belief that positive thinking alone can save the individual or the race from ruin. Perhaps the most common criticism is that the book's pop- ularity represents nothing more than a widespread desire to escape from the world of facts into a shadowy world of wishful-even though it may be positive- thinking. Whatever the merits or demerits of the claims or counter-claims may be. the power of thought on every page and. in- Call Oi The Soil The colorful seed catalogues which are arriving in many Canadian homes this . month are a welcome sign. Well ahead of the early crow or robin. they signal the”, end of winter and the approach of springp a friendly season when neighbors lean: over the backyard fence and chat aboutl their gardening plans. Leafing through al seed catalogue is an exciting pastime. 11-- lustrated descriptions of new varieties of flowers and vegetables stir one's fancy. One can almost smell the fresh earth as the new boat scheduled to be ready by lit is turned over by the spade of imagina- tion. Planning a garden should start almost as soon as the seed catalogue arrives and good planning not only results in a more attractive arrangement in the flower gar- den, but is extremely important to the vegetable plot. As the contents of the catalogue will testify. today's gardener never had it so good. To start. with. the seed houses can supply him with tested seeds of infinite variety. Garden tools have been improv- ed so much during the past few years that the chore of cultivation has been reduced to a minimum. Chemical fertilizers are available which have taken the guess work out of replenishing the soil with plant nutrients. No longer does a home garden- er have to bend over his plants picking off insects by hand. A variety of chemical insecticides, dusted or sprayed on, can do this for him. So the toil that remains for those who each year answer the call of the soil is usually written off as ”re- creation. . EDITORIAL NOTES Tliose who refuse to believe that there is any real unemployment problem, despite the evidence, are like the fabled jackasses who wore green glasses to make woods shavings'look like green wisps of grass. .0 Now that it has been pretty well es- tablished that New Brunswick farmers cannot hope to keep Camp Gagctown sup- plied with food for more than one month this coming summer, there would appear to be an excellent opportunity for this Province to help make up the deficiency. especially in eggs. butler, milk, and po- tatoes. Since we are only a few minutes away by air, the little matter of food- perishability ought to be no hindrance to trade The (Izcch figure-skating star. who has sought asylum in the United States, says that the Communist "amateurs" are not amateurs at all. She received a substan- tial salary from the state. Her statement only confirms what. was already suspected. But, comments The Gazette, how could it be possible to be an amateur in a country in which all activities, sports included. are under state regulation? The very word "amateur" means an independent activity, the one thing a Communist state most pro- thibits. O Here is another curious mathematical fact: any set of figures multiplied by 5 will give the same result when divided by 2, provided that one little rule is observ- ed. When the answer comes out evenly, the symbol 0 must be added to it; when it comes out unevenly--that is to say, when there is I remainder-5 must be added, For example: Multiply 312 by 5 and the answer is 1560; divide the same ninnber by 2 Ind you have 156; since there is no remainder, add 0 and the re- sult ls 1560. Now take 167 and multiply by'5: the Inswer is 835. Divide the fig- urIIby2IridthereiI83IndI.i-emalnder; place I 5 It use end, and the result is 835. men iaino exception to the mic. 1 Medically Speaking Illrlll N. Innduu. ll). canine run nu) ran can orran an 1-osrronsp Fmaturcorsenllsbnldnssais due to Ilopecia ubon-bolca. or Ilopecln IymptomIt.lcI. Now I know you're not especially inttrested these scientific these types of lnldnus can Iffect you. and what can be done to pre- vent or cure them. Well. maybe we can help you I little but don't get your hopes up too much. If you are I victim of sabot- rthelca. you will lose your but slowly. Usually. the loss is sym- metrical. Tlie balr on top of your head dlsappcal-I first. Eventually. that over the temples goes too. Your scalp will itch. and there will probably be scaling. In time. though. your scalp will become smooth, as the hair roots, or fol- licles, and the fat glands in your scalp waste Iway. While this condition in more prevalent in older persons, some- times young adults who are nor- mal ln every other way Ire stricken by Ilopccta seborrheica. This condition seems to run in families. but, unfortunately, Is in many types of baldness. we don't know what causes it. Outlook Not Good In general, the outlook for do- ing anything to restore your hair is not very good, but sometimes the balding process can be slowed down. Proper care of your balrd. 4 . I..I .. u LENTEN MEDITATIONS A l l The Heart Of Religion Till-I T Be-lo re anylliing in the New Tcstanienl was written there was a Christian community and a Christian way of life; and still to- day the true vitality of Christian- ity. from which all else springs. is that whenever it moves men to sincere self-committal it proves 'it- self in be a way of renewal of life. Tliere is prayer for such a mea- sure of grace that we may run the way of divine commandments; there is the testimony of lhc Apostle who ”labnured m n r e abunrlantlv than they all: yet not l. but the grace of God": and there is the contrast between the man who thought he could keep a pro- fit-aml-loss account with his Maker and thank God for his credit bal- ance. and another who "went down to his house justified" though he could only pray "God be merci- ful to me a sinner." "Grace" is a word which has lost rather than gained by over- subtle theological elaboration. In the New Testament it includes the whole range of God's dealings with man. Its operations may be more clearly recognized and experienced on particular occasions. through special "means of grace": but these are liable to perversion in so far as they depend-for their sacredness on their isolation from ordinary human activities. And this divine activity is always personal in operation. To say of the divine Spirit that every human virtue, ev- ery conqucst. and every thought of holiness "are his alone" is to ex- press what in genuine religious ex- perience is profoundly true: turn it into the mbjor premise of an argument about the compatibiiliy of divine grace with human ef- fort and free will and it becomes a falsehood, contradicted by ex- perience. Experienced as I grac- ious personal relation. divine grace and human effort or freedom are IMES, LONDON no more inconsistent alid no liior and no less difficult to understand than the relation of a brilliant musical conductor to his orchestra. or than the combined rebuke and inspiration which any man can ex- pcrience in close contact with an- other human life better than his OVVII. If God is creator, man's capac- ity for effort is a divine gift; and if the Creator's nature is love. to be totally outside his cnveloping grace is a condition in which no creature can ever be; and that he is "beforehand with us" in every more-nicnl we make towards him is l)nlh true and the ground of an endless hope. llcrcin is also the basis of the claim that Ciirisiian- ity consecrates the whole of life. It is from above. essentially su- pernatural, in the sense that its central nervous system is that God seeks to be creative in human hearts. But the natural is the basis and instrument of the super- natural, and in experience the two do not subsist apart. Men have thought of the natural as the en- emy of the supernatural. when it is only its essential instrumental medium: anything in the natural that is in fact hostile to the super- natural is but a perversion of the supernatural itself. l Unlike the earth, the spiritual world does not mechanically roll round on its own axis. Belief in necessary progress is rightly dead. Progress. indeed. there may well be; but it will vary as the ages listen or fail to listen for the calls of God. as they put his assisting grace tn the proof by pa- tiently faclng the evils which beset them less by violent efforts of self- will than by quiet seeking and ac- ceptance of the gifts of inward peace and power of God. "whose strength is made perfect in weak- ness." and declared ”mnst chiefly in showing mercy and pity." Jacob Gucrlf in The essential fea i ii re of the Renaissance was not the revival of classical learning - for the Classics had never been forgot- ten in the Middle Ages - but the revival of freedom of thought. Whe- ther we think of Leonardo da Vinci. who anticipated the discov- ery of gravity. of Copernicus. who reverted to Eratosthencs' ideas regarding the earth's rotation round the sun. of Mercator - of Antwerp, who laid the foundations mathematical geography, of Andreas Veaalius of Bi'usscI's, who first developed the science of anatomy, of the French surgeon. Ambroise Pare. or the German lnineralogist. Agricola. s c i e n c c duirng the -Renaissance was one and indivisible. based on the prin- ciple of free research and experi- ment. in Italy, the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries were marked both b I magnificent flowering of art nd the emancipa- tion of thought. The fall of Con- stantinople rlrovc many Greek scholars to Italy. including Plethon, who ' ” f an A , Flor- ence where Platonic studies helped to resist religious formalism and intellectual 'ion. Bramantc planned St. Peter's in Roma. Michelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel and raised ,Ibove the bullies the greatest dome ever built since that of Saint Sophia in Constantinople. After the. great creature outburst the QuIttro- cenio; painting, with Raphael. reached I peak of perfection which already lorsslladowed the academic manner. . O I 0 At the other and of the-trade route linking Venice and Bruges. the Netherlands rivallcd with Iuly, not only I! the greatest ec- onomic centre in Europe. but also. It the time of the Renaissance. II I centre of artistic Ind lntellactusl life. Jan van Eyck invented oil painting and founded the wonder- ful Flemnlah School which wII to Roger dc II Future and others. in Flanders, Jon uin den Pros and Clement Jnnncquii established the first school of music. fifty YQII1 bcforo Pnluirinc in Italy mode music one of the inn r am. 11!! VIII" PA 01' A While eIIIIlcIl philosophy was being revived in Italy. E1-IInluI of Rotterdam was fistula; ltloii ll lbs must in annual thin or of -United Europe - be immortalized by Memllng, of the rl iii of 400 Years Ago Uneiicu Features his time. After studying in Paris and Bologna he taught at Oxford and Basic. His cosmopolitan thinking exercised as great an in- fluence in the early XVIth cen- tury as that of Voltaire some two hundred years later. A classical scholar, he published Ptolemy's geography and an edition of the Grc k version of the Gospels: n phi supher. he sought to influence his contemporaries by turning his attention to m o r a l pioblems. Erasmus was the very pattern of the humanist as well as the great- est of them all. In England at that time Oxford was the great centre of humanistic studies. Hellenism was lI'Ill'0duCEd by Grocyn and Linacre, and Colet, who had studied under them. after visiting Florence. reintroduced the study of Platonism. it was he who slablished what has since been formers, made famous by Latlmer and especlaly Thomas More. A friend of Erasmus, More cham- pioned intellectual freedom. His book. "Utopia," advocating the h ”' of property. had almost as great an influence as Rousselu's "Social Contract” 200 years later. 0 O O In Germany, cities on the Rhine and the Danube gave birth to the llumanlsts, Reuclilln and Melan- chthon. and the painters. Durer and Holbeln. In Spain, the Renaissance developed within I religious frame- work. The grant mornllst Lula Vlvu; who laugh! It Louvain, put his ideas into pncticc by establish- ing the first charitable organiza- tion in the ctherlands. In the field of plill phy. Gomos Percirl foreahadowetb Descax-lcs' rIllonIl- ism. while Francisco de Vittoria initiated political science It the some time II Machiavelli. Unlike the Italian writer, how- ever, Vittoria sought to subordin- Itc public law to Christian ethics. Willi real daring, be prochlmcd. in his "De India." tho llmltntlon conqu';It and the obligation: imposed in "Do lure be lion; the foundations of film. later to ho Frsnclsco Suites in do leglblu Ic Don lulslalou. work of Hugo Grotiin the tenth c was 93' F Intury tlnuntlon of that d In France. was I tsi-diet velopincnt VIII IlQD03IOI,,II.l de- hidhbotl The Age Old Story For me to be cariially minded is death: but to be spiritually minded is life and peace. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it. is not subject to the law of God, neither Indeed up be. brushing might be helpful. In alopecla Iymptomatica, how- ever, blushing and massage might do more harm than good. if you begin too early. You'll have to wait until your hair is strong enough to benefit from such action. A' .. symptomatic: is I type of baldness that is premature. due to I condition or I disease in your system. In women. it occurs most Italy and the Netherlands. At the beginning the Flemish influence was prcponderanl in p a in l i n g; Clouct, the greatest French paint- er of the time. came from Brus- sels. But when Francis lst gath- ered togcther a group of Italian artists under the d i r e c t l o n of Primaticcio and summoned to his court at Fontainebleau Leonardo da Vinci. he ensured the victory of the Italian influence. in archi- lecture and sculpture too the clas- sic influence grew steadily strong- er. The greatest French writers of the XVIth century were learned men. Rabelais. in his ”Gargantua" drew inspiration from the philo- sophy of Erasmus, but at the same time he was profoundly influenced by Pomponazzils rationalism. He dealt with all the pulitical., social moral and religious problems of his day, was torn by I terrible civil war. The Middle Ages which had I decided influence on the work of Rabelais. left no trace on that of Montaigne. In his ”Essays," I sort of daily examination of con- science. this writer apears as the first of the free thinkers. seeking within himself the meaning of life and the rules of ethics. 0 0 t This revival of thought which affected the whole of Western Eu- rope was greatly facilitated by the invention of printing. in Haarlem. Laurens Custer invented movable wooden type. while Gutenberg, in Strasbourg. cast lead type which made possible the wide and rapid distribution of printed works. By 1500. there were printing presses everywhere. and as the people learned to read, they demanded more books which at the beginning were works in Latin. But as learn- ing became more general and new problems were studied, it seemed more and more natural for text- books to be written in the langu- age of the people, already used for a long time by poets and novelists. Each book written in I modern tongue refined the new in- strument of expression. bringing it closer to the exactitudc of Latin. Calvin wrote in French. Luther in German and More in English. so that the common people of their countries could hear their mes- sage. By so doing they enriched that language of their childhood. but also unwittingly undermined the foundations of the European community of which they them- selves were products. Modern languages have forged bonds between men of the same country but with differing cultural backgrounds; yet they have broken the links which formerly united fl ly after childbirth. It might follow operations of Iny sort in either men or women. First Symptoms Usually. the first symptoms de- velop three to four months Ifter an operation. Sometimes it also comes in the wake of typhoid fever or other exhaustive sickness. Worry. strenuous work. not. enough sleep and poor eating habits might leave you in In exhausted or ner- vous physical condition which in turn might be followed by Ilopecia symptomatica. This type of baldncss has two characteristic features: hair will fall out all over the head, on the top, in the back Ind on the sides; and hair will be dry Ind luster- lcss. Hair cIn be pulled out by the handfuls. Your physician should take your blood count and give you I bIIIl metabolism test. Applying remedies to your scalp won't do much good. But you might get pretty good results if your doctor prescribes intramuscu- lar injections of crude liver ex- tract along with vitamin B. Ordin- arily. the injections should be given twice I week for about six to eight weeks. If the hair begins to grow again, and becomes strong, then massage and washing might be good for it. Tomorrow. I'll discuss hered- ity and hats. QUESTION AND ANSWER M. L.: What cause: my tongue men of different countries but with the same cultural background. They developed concurrently with certain differences in religion. which often coincided with lingu- istic divisions, and were Icccntu- ated as I result of the Iblolutc powers wielded by the rulers of the time. Thus the and of the six- teenth century saw the finish of the extensive international co-op- eration characteriatlc of the be- ginning Ind middle of tin cen- tury. This co-operation was not to be lenewed for I long time. A new age was beginning. that of great States. conscious of their spiritual unity and seeking I clu- sicism of their own. Today. how- ever. the exchange of idea has become so rapid that we cut fol- low intellectual developments on the map of the world. often with- out being hindered by convention- al frontier divisions. But though we may pride ourselves on this. lot us not forget that. four hundrsd years ago. I similar unity ught forth I marvellous flowering of art. science Ind leIi-nin; in every field. (UNESCO) terms. You'd rntbcr know how 309 ll! ruse: 1'IIoGull'dI.In l NOTES BY cbnnou per cent or more. ortli it? -FInner'I Advo- down has blllI?' says I University of pared with in study: Cum p the house It 72 night and day. letting luck the thermostat 5 to 10 degrees at night cuts fuel costs about 5 per cent. But sleeping with t i In windows open - unless bedroom doors are weatberstrlpped - can wipe out the Iaving. -News I: Report. It is dcslnblc tbat I university Ihould not be I place reserved exclusively for the intellectual elite. A university so confined would undoubtedly lisli I rcput.Ition perhaps self-centred. for distinguished scholarship. But it may be contended that I univers- ity Ilso serves the country when it turns out young men and wo- men wlio. while not brilliant ac- IdemicI1' . l1Ivc had the advant- ages of I liberal arts course Ind by reason of it. are assisted to become good citizens. -Tor- onto Telegram. More people mean more prob- lems; the house shortage, the school shortage, the job shortage. the hospital shortage - all the disputes over pensions and wage rates and farm income and health insurance and "security" stem from them. Yet malgs genius for adaptation for coml g up with solutions out of I process of trial and or r. seems inexhaustible. and providing be does not com- mit aoomic suicide. we can have faitb in adaptation to greater populations. In fact we seem to have that assurance in the latest UN report which shows that in 1954 more people in the world were better off than ever before. -Ottawa Journal. Now we get to the pay-off of Prof. Scott's theme: The Canad- ian people. he said. Is I whole are apathetic to discrimination as long Is they are not affected per- sonally. We Ire getting more and more drugged. taking little inter- est in politics or anything else. be said. The reason could be the new emphasis on mass media such In radio. television and news- papers. Thc Canadian people seem satisfied "to just sit back and watch." he added. That's the ker- nel of it. Freedom was won for us by our forebears Is partici- pants in community life. actively engaged in the 'drama of events, In reaching decisions that deter- mined the course of things to come. Not the spectators but the players in whatever game. includ- ing politics. determine what the score will be. Civil liberties will not identify the winning team un- constantly to burn? 'Is there Iny cute for this condition? Answer: Burning of the tongue is usually due to infection. An ex- amination of the mouth and nose should be made to determine what disorders are present; then proper treatment can be given. turning tho thermostat at night save on U” less than who It.Ind for liberty In II concerned about the gum fellow'I right Is they are about 31101! OWL ,, -5YIiney Post-Re. cord. A Ilx-story office building going to be erected on I turn. table It Grand Junction, Col., 5., that. the clockwork swivels ll Ibout to cIt.ch.t.lic sun's rays 1.. winter Ind Ivoid them l.. summer. We're wondering win. the result will be if the lazy 5... san principle extends to construc. tion generally. will junior be will to come home from his date u 11 p.ln., or when the front porch faces out? We've heard of houses that turned people's beads. ll would be interesting to see sums that turned people. Cmlmm. polls Tribune. Men used to cry copiously. ll is on record this when Crom. well persuaded Parliament (4 authorize the death of Kl... Charles I. the whole House oi Commons wept unrestrainedly for several bours. Nowadays it Mr. Churchill has even one tear in his eye it is front page news; there is no evidence that. Mr, Al. flee ever wept. Canadian politic. ians are born without tear-ducts Just as tax-gatherers are bun wtihout bowels of compassion Men, if we Ire to live as long as women, we must stir almul more. and we must weep free- ly. Don't pay any attention in those who laugh at you; you'll be laughing at them 30 or 35 years after they have succumbed to thrombosis. -Peterbornuxli Examiner. , the ..f opil Kmnnly MY LIGHT WITH YOURS when the sea has devoured the ships. And the spires and the tliwcrs Have gone back to the hills, And all the cities Are one with the plains again, And the beauty of bronze And the strength of steel Arc blown over ..silcnt coiitinr-ms, As the desert sand is blown - My dust with yours forever. When folly and wisdom are no no more. And fire is no more. Because man is no more. When the dead world slowly spill nlng Drtfts and falls through the vind- My light with yours In the Light of Lights forever! --Edgar Lee Masters. CLEAN CLOTHES WEAR LONGER For Your Dry Cleaning NNFIIS RITE-WAY CLEANERS Dial 7887 95 - I00 Fitzroy so. A and IS GOOD Malls: trouble cliimnoys draw perfectly Easily Installed. Moderate Price If you have chimney trouble PHONE or CALL PALMER ELEGTRI THE WIGWAM THERMCAP Your heating plant can- not be efficient without good controlled chimney draft. Dial 8543 called the school of the Oxford re-3 MEN'S SUITS MEN'S TOPCOATS GREElllJAL'S ADVANCE SPRING SALE OF Men's suits, Iopcoats & sport coat: CONTINUES To 569.50 To S2950 . ....................... .. ” MEN'S SPORT cons Iu. on-in suns. TOPCOATS 1. Iron! coars isss aw. . Tho, Grsondal 29.50 I835 co. ltd. III. ODIN! am. , O For refreshing Ihnvu that look hotter lonjot, Ibnvo the Gillette way- with I Gillotts Blue Blade in your user. Fatoatraeonvulnneo buy Gigogto Blue with mod-binds com- pIrtmentI. 20-binds sin 8l.00- 10-bids also Soc. (Regular pIckIp for 251:.) 1 V I I3