I NOVEMBER 10. 1952 ..---f"'-”'” ”' T” THE ED UCA TIONAL LTORIZONL PRESENTING NEWS AND VIEWS OF IlN"I'EIII:2S'I' "P0 I'EACHEI(S ANII ALI. OTHERS SEEKING IMPROV EM ENT IN EDIJCATION I RECRUITMENT AND SELECTION OF TEACHERS-(Continued) -surely, some selection of teach- mg personnel is Justified and es- sential when those who are to in- struct our boys and girls show so. i;tl'iP understanding of the great 'ill”.IlS that pupils should master, mi because effective selection is v csibie in Canada at the pres- tzme under present practices, .;v-.10, if any. selection is attempt- NI. Therefore, until administrative imiicies are changed. the following it iLBS will continue: (1) All who meet lowered minimum 'i:c requirements will be ad- . (I to teacher training classes. .3. All ilmse who complete short ,..-iinris of training will be gradu- vtti and certificated. ,, "'rh:s account of recruitment and. .- ' ill of candidates for the - , .1; profession is very discon- -.,.i,g. The provinces have drift- NI into their present dilemma. not in tic-tor. but as the result of ; ; term measures that have - l1liICCI to solve a real edu- The system we one to -which the public i.t'i)II1C too accustomed. one-in . .rli lhey now place their faith 1' utilllfl appear that unless posi- ' aciioii is taken, we shall con- present policies until "ill economic conditions hood in labour market with thousands pioved who will again. as ask for teachers' cer- Ncw Goals ms-ni practice stresses meth- i recruitment that make lll impossible. If selection used by some province to 1-trindzirds and improve edu- ll by denying certification to .i:i l)liI top-ranking students, re- . mi-nt would not be necessary t tor the profession would siudci-.ts to teaching as they a now drawn to medicine. law -.tl i)i'..viiicci'ing. Let us assumt: Il.ll the new goals set by the pro- . were these: That there Ill be available to all children t'lCliit'lil.:ll'y and secondary, oi levels an education that i ensure to Canada and Cana- s a dignified and undisputed 9 among uorld nations in tht. and Science" commerce. iii- and international afiairs. at diversified school program- .iws should be provided to meet tire needs of pupils with vai'..1 .'i,iIllu(ICS, interests and needs. That the school's efTlciency should re uch that progress through the :.. cs is uiirciurded for any child ll .ormcl intelligence who at- .r:.tls school regularly: and that public schools should be so administered and financed that it misfits. Those who are accepted i for training must be interested-in teaching as a. life work and begin that training with the expectation of qualifying for a life of service in the classroom. "We may assume, therefore. that recruitment and selection would work somewhat as fouows: ”(l) No candidate for teacher training should'be accepted unless he is a. high school graduate with matriculation standing equivalent to that prescribed for entrance to law. engineering, medicine or theo- EY- "t2) The basis of selection and screening on social interests, cul- tural attainments, emotional sta- bility, vocational interests. health. personality and character should be the reports of high school prin- clpals' examinations. , "(ID The training college should conduct entrance to test proficien- cy in oral and written English (or E French) and demand a higii standard of attainment. "in The work' of selection should be continued throughout the period of training and candi- dates who fall to meet prescribed standards should be required to withdraw or attend an extra ses- sion to remove deficiencies; "t5) Teachers should be trained in a university where they would associate with other professional folk in the making; "to) All teachers, elementary as well as secondary, should be re- quirecl to integrate at least one full year of Arts and Science sub- ject-matter courses. one of which should be English (or French). with those in the professional field: . "(7) Elementary and secondary training programmes should be unified much more than at pre- sent to the end that elementary teachers be as well educated as their colleagues in the secondary school so that there would .bemorI- community of thought in the pro- fession and the present difference in prestige between elementary and secondary school teaching would disappear; ”(8) All training programniesl should be reviewed and revised. All non-challenging. watered-down methodology courses should be dc-1 leted and replaced by general cul- tural content that includes basic courses in psychology. philosophy and sociology that might providt. a background for meaningful ex- pcrlencc, and ”t9) only those persons who complete without failure all partsi of the training programme shouidi be given certification of any stlt. "Do these standards appca: s impossible foi' teachers to have I cultural and economic statusl ltifl a social prestige and com- inuiiity standing equivalent to thatl .'.H"li without question to mem- ms of other professions. "if we accept these goals. what iimsui-rs of recruitment and selec- Iii)ll must be applied? "l- it not evident that the em- ') as will be upon selection rath- zr I'.;an recruitment? The goals .ir' lirire ill mind will be unattaln-' IllIP if by pressure and propagan- da teaching ranks are filled with MATCH l Piltrlowii: 2. Planetoid; 3. Galileo; 25. Glucose; 26. Hygro-I Piiriii; 4. Praying mantis; bfmeter. - f lthotintiendron; 6. Saguaro: '1. Sat-I elliie: ii. Spcctroscope; 9. Talus; ii) Thcrmograph: ll. Trllobite: 12 .-irupiielcs; 13. Cecropla: 14. Cen- ...niv; 15. Copernicus; 16. Culex; i'.' iirdrn hobia: 18. Laintai: 19'. '..iip;iie; 2. Mesquite; 21. Lassem; 2;! Conservation; 23. Embryofzi. . fessions. high? Compare them with en- rance requirements to other pro The six professions of law, medicine, dentistry. pharmacy. engineering and accounting require on the average 4!: years of uni- versity educatlon following senior. matriculation. Surely all teachers! should have a university degreei Although it will take a long time before this educational status is mandatory, one cannot defend the thcsls that teachers need less gen- eral education than do pliarmac-K lsts. accountants. and medical practitloiiers.") . ta) The kind of mosquito WhlCh' may transmit malaria to man: (b) The largestlmoti) to be found in the eastern United States: to) The protection of our natura'. wealth from-loss or injury; (d) A kind of mosquito cc-mmon in the northern part of the United states: DAILY Icizosswoao ACROSS I 2. . Bird's 3. stomach . Foreman Narrow roadway Part of the eye Rabbit fur (Ind.) Small; filled I. Ridicule pastry sheila ll. bolts:-I' . An awn 13. Plant ovule 16. That is 15. A century iabbr.) it). At a Hereditary distance factor 20. Cover Abundant 21. Ahead tcolloq.) Sainte tabbr.) 23. Purified . Music noto . Public notice - . That which remove.- For . Rugged mountain crests . Verbal . Belonginf Pillage Herb of carrot family Departed Except Eggs Weight 23. 24. 26. 27. gay) 28. .4??? 29. 30. 81. 11. I2. 84. 37. 17. 18. 22. 44.1-iokorntako - 145. Leather- fluk ' 40. Minus DOWN 1. A wine ' DAILY OEYPTOQUOTE-llords how to work It: . A ' , II II and letter empty .3 for'l.ho chi-gg.,1,';; trophies. tho lqina Each down. . 93! Y N. to '1' . g 1- another. In this example A II Rant. Fate Butts A course brintly herb Personal pronoun Largo worm Publishes FOIIKGI. on cattle Palm loaves (var.) Think River ( Russ. 9 Sick SEES QEEEE ELSE EEEIEEE . .4111 Il l..VlIIIl!lII LIUIJLJ i'.IlIl;ll'J I laIIr4Iv'I Animal T: -'.0. Small explosion 51. Pomalo sheep LIAAXI I BLOW used (a) The young oil a plant or of an animal in its ear lest stages of de- velopment; (I) An Italian scient- ist who proved that the planets move around the sun. (g) A simple sugar formed dur- ing the dlgestlon of carbohydrates: (h) A plant which grows in many parts of the country and belongs to the same group as the bean plant: (1) An instrument used to measure humidity: (1) A fossil sea animal; (k) The loose and broken rock at the foot of a cllfI; (1) One of the earliest races of man; (m), A body similar to a planet but much smaller: (n) An edible sea animal; to) An insect which eats other insects: (p) The most recent of the five eras into which geolog- ists divlde the earth's history: (q) A Polish astronomer who first de- termlned by observation. and ma- thematical calculation that the sun wasthe center of the solar system: (r) A shrub that grows chleny in mountainous regions. is) A cactus which grows as much as 60 feet high; (t) A heav- enly body revolving around an- other. usually a body revolving about a planet: (u) Aninstrument used to determine the elements of which things are made; (v) A thermometer which automatically records the temperature; iw) Cas- i gage in an argument. Irma GUARDIAN. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN ,1. the 'ves. They are always on defensive, always ready to give battle, always willing to en- Inteiligence has no bearing on this emotional condition. some l-lerr Braun lebt in Amerika. Er ist Amerikaner. Frau Bi-aun ist Amerikanerln. Friiher lebte Herr Braun in Deutschland. Dort stu- dierte en Medlzin. Jetzt lebt er in Amerlka. Er ist Arzt oder Dokter der Medizin. Herr Braun hat cinen vater und cine mutter in Deutschland. Scin vater ist Karls und Annas Gross- vater. seine mutter ist ihre Gross- mutter. Der vater sagte zu Kari und Anna; Jetzt ist es Summer. Im Summer habt ihr keine Schule. very capable and intelligent people suffer from that type of emotion- al immaturity. We can't change them. and un- less they change themselves. we can only try -to tolerate them. EINE REISE NACH DEUTSCHLAND-(Translate) Deufschland und besucheri melnen vater und meine mutter. d.h. euren Grossvater und eure Gross- mutter. Im Herbst kommat ihr wleder nach Amcrlka und geht "Jo, wir besuehen gern unseren Grossvater und unsere Grossmut- ter." Anna fragte ihre mutter: ”Lebte dein vater fruher auch in Deutschland?" Die mutter ant- worte: "Nein. mcin viitcr lebte Wlr machcn elne Reise nach Plants Ere mostly propagated by spores. seeds, and by division. The en wood. made from milk curds. ix) A desert shrub; (y) An active volcano in Northern California: (2) An animal disease. MEASUREMENT OF AMOUNT OF HEAT (contributed) I .(a),Small calories: The am- ount of heat required to raise the temperature of one gi'am of water one degree ce tlgrade. tb) Large calories: The a cunt of heat re- quired to raise the temperature of one pound of water four degrees Fahrenheit. (c) Calorimeter: An instrument for measuring amount of heat. 11. Absorption and radiation of heat: ta) Absorption--Dark, dull objects absorb heat more rapidly than light, shiny ones. Surface of the earth heats quickly. ib) Ob- jects that are not transparent re- sist the passage of radiant energy and in doing so absorb this ener- gy. A black. sooty bottle absorbs heat faster than a bright, shiny one. (cl Objects that absorb heat quickly also radiate heat quickly. Light, shiny surfaces radiate heat more slowly than dull dark sur- faces, Such surfaces are good re- flectors of heat. III. Affect of temperature on density of water: (a) It's point of greatest density is at 4 degrees C or 39 degrees F. (bl Volume for volume hot water is lighter than cold water. IV. ta) At sea level atmospheric pressure is 15 pounds per sq. inch. Water boils at 212 degrees F. or 100 degrees C. (b) As pressure de- creases, boiling point is lower. a change of about one degree C for every 1000 feet of elevation. ic) Increasing pressure causes higher boiling temperature, a principle which is applied in the pressure cooker. V. Destructive distillation: (a) This is the decomposition of a substance by heat in an airtight container. Wood treated in this way produces charcoal and other producf.s. Coal treated in this way produces coke and other products. VI. Fractional distillation: (a) A liquid is heated and different sub- stances are driven off as vapors at different temperatures. Petroleum or crude oil is treated in this way. VII. Spontaneous combustion; ta) Heat. combustible substance and oxygen of the air necessary for combustion. tb) Damp hay. oily rags, rags soaked with paint, damp papers and other rubbish may oxidize slowly and produce heat. If there is enough heat to raise the substance to its kindling l temperature it bursts into flame. nu. IN THE BLANKS 1. The first President of the Utah. 9. The world's largest pro- United States was - , while ducer of manganese is ea 10. the President today is-:-. 2. - produces 90 per cent of The President of the United States the world's supply of molybdenite. is elected for a period of -M11. :-- is the foremost tung- years. 3. The country of isten-producing country of the in South America has rich depos- iworid. 12. The -1 is the larg- its of nitrates of copper. 4. The grasslands of Argeiitliia are called T 5. The language spoken in Argentina. is . 6. The name of Colonel Gorgas is associ- ated with the building of -1- 'l. Vanadium is a. 1'ero:illoy that touglieiis steels for use lll auto- niobile axels, pistons. crankshafts. pins and other parts where strain and shock are involved It is iouiid in - and :7 8. The largest copper mine in the United States is at - , est pro6ucer of oil in the world. 13. The port of Ashtabula is situ- ated on -O. 14. The world's largest all-elcctric smelter is at T. 15. The Nechako River is a tributary of the ' River 16. Lake Tahtso is in . 1'1. The new Governor-General of Australia is -:. ill. The high- est waterfall in the world is Z-. 19. Canada's Pacific gateway is) 20. The Pink Palace isi in ----. BATOCHE Batoche is on the South Sask- atchewan Rlver a short distance west of the junction of the two branches and not far south of quarters of Louis Riel in the Sask- atchewan Rebclllon of 1885 When General Middleton stormed it and captured Riel. the Rebellion was Prince Albert. It was the head- practicnlly at an end FORT DUQUESNE Fort Duquesnc was at the con- fluence of the Allegheny and the Monongahela Rivers on the site of the City of Pitisburg. It was the scene of the first clash of the French and the British in their efforts. to gain control of the Ohio valley. The fort remained in the SEVEN Seven Oaks is in the Red River valley. not far from Winnipeg. In 1812 Lord Selkirk started a colony of poor 1-flghlanders on the Red River. where Winnipeg now stands. on 116,000 square miles of territ- ory purchased from the Hudsons Bay Company of which he was the leading member. This territory had long been almost a. preserve of the North - West Company and they resented bitterly the founding of the col- ony. They stirred up the half- TEST 1. Dr. George Washington Carver searched for treasures in common things. He did his work in the South. He spent much time find- ing new uses for the plants of the South. He showed people how to make more than 300 different things from peanuts. Dr. Carver's work helped to make peanuts one of the South's most important crops. The South now raises twice as many peanuts as were raised there 20 years ago. 1. Dr. Carver did much work with plants, machines. rabbits, metals. 2. Dr. Carver's work has in- creased the South's territory, farms. wealth, pastures. 8. Draw A ring around a word in the story that means "hurited.", 1. The best title for this story is: Where Peanuts Are Stored; what Dr. Carver Did for the There's no one you can kid more easily than yourself. Wishful thinking is an ailment common to all of us-moreior less. When we indulge in it. pllcatlons and problems disappear. and reality becomes simple and manageable. suppose. .for instance. you have made A mistake. Confronted with it. you don't feel like cheering about it. Instead, 'you do your best not to acknowledge the-.mls- take. And if you must acknowledge it, your mind quickly produces .,any number of reasons why you had to make the mistake: qnd how. under the circumstances everyone else would hiivo acted exactly the way you did. :t was natural for you to make tumou- tsiu. - Tb we carry around with us 3- radial device that protect: our salt-oniii'ouoo.In colon our views so that it In are determined to -uoothfngursdwhen it is .bluo. self-protection provides at Q ltttlo . NI tinge on the hands of the French and was named after the Governor of Canada. In 1755, Braddock was :defeated and killed in an attempt to seize it, but in 1751! it was eas- lily taken by Forbes. when the capture of Fort Frontenac cut oil Iits supplies. OAKS lbreeds of the Red River against 'the colonists and when Robert Semple, the governor of the col- ony, sallled forth with a small band of colonists to meet the ex- cited half-breeds, Semple and twenty-one of the settlers were shot down near 9. place named lseven Oaks. The remainder of the settlers were driven from their homes but the colony was re- established later on the arrival of .Lord Selkirk. its founder. SILENT READING South; The Chief Crops of Amer- ica; Hunting for Buried Treasures. TEST II. A safe landing field for airplanes can be prepared in a few hours by using steel mats. The mats are woven nets of steel. They can be rolled up and transplanted almost anywhere. They can be laid out quickly and locked together to make runways. They save weeks in establishing an emergency air- field. I. The story mats are act together, tied posts. 2. The story shows that steel mats save food, gasoline, lives. labor. 3. Draw 3 ring around a word in the story that means carried. 4. The best title for this story is: Steel Mats for Airfields; steel Mats for Fishing; Faster Airplanes; Transporting Freight by Air. says that the steel in cement. locked down, held with SELF-DECEPTION - (Conlrlbulod) edges. The other fellow doesn't see the red tinge, of course. But. as one's ego argues. he is a fat.-head any- way. and it is a waste of energy to try to convince him. Thus, self- deception invariably goes hand in hand with A sense of superiority. And because the other fellow ro- senu that. he leaves us alone. There is only one way to over- come that isolation: by admitting the mistake openly. All of this is normal. That's how most of us behave. our sense of self-protec- tlon asserts itself until it pro- duces effects which make it diffi- cult for us to get along with oth- ers. . There 'are some people, however. who are emotionally unable ever to admit a mistake. or to admit that it was unavoidable. Their need for self-protection is much stronger than their v.' h to sr,u:re themselves with o;b.::-. '. r.: difficult to live with beer 9 they feel so terribly insecure scout most important methods of propa- gation on the farm are by spores, seeds, and by several methods of division, such as creeping stems and root stocks. tubers, cuttings, buds and grafts. Nearl all econ- omic plants are pro agated by means of seeds. Spores differ from seeds in that they do not contain an embryo. or young plant. They are usually one-celled. or few-celled and mic- roscopic. Only the lower orders of plants form spores. The rust mar- gins on the underside of fern leaves contain spores. Corn smut, oat smut. oat rust. are masses of spores. This method of propaga- tion ls not of great direct import- ance in agriculture, because only a few plants are of use to us. But spores are of great import- ance when we consider plant dis- eases. for nearly all such diseases are caused by plants that repro- duce spores. The following plants produce seeds, creeping stems, and root- stocks. The branches of white clover take root, and so form new plants. The most important ex- ample of seedless reproduction is in grasses. All the perennial grasses increase by new stems or corms that arise from the joints that are near the ground or below it. More often a. branch comes TRUE AND 1. Two straight lilies can inter- lsect in only one point. 2 Adjacent angles are always supplementary. 3. All equilateral triangles are congruent. 4. An angle may equal its own supplement. 5. A point has no dimensions. 5. The converse of a theorem is COMPOSITION Good writing partly depends on the understanding of the principle of good writing. A good compo- sitlon is well organized when its facts.and ideas are properly plac- ed at the beginning, middle, and the end. Grammar is the study in which ways and words are related to each other in the sentence. Re-, immer in- Amerika" e PROPAGATION, OF PLANTS out more or less horizontally.cith- er above or below. the ground takes root at its joint, and sends up one branch or more stems. Such a branch is called a root- stock. It is probable that all grass plants would die after the formation of seed were it not for this means of reproduction. The plant that grows from a joint apparently forms seed but once. But it may produce root- stocks or rooting branches and so continue the stand of grass. The grasses with long root-stands or long rooting branches tstolons), like blue grass lend to form a dense sod. and are therefore, best for pasture. Canada ranks first in the world's supply of nickel. newsprint, asbes- tos. platinum, and radium. Can- ada ranks second in woodpulp and gold, third in aluminum, cop- per, zinc, cobalt, and silver; fourth in wheat and lead. Those of you who lend books will appreciate the sentiment which Sir Walter Scott had print- ed on his book-plate: "And please return this book. You may think it a strange request, but I find that though many of my friends are poor arithmetlcians. they near- ly all are good bookkeepers." An executive is a man who de- cides. Sometimes he decides right but always he decides. FALSE TEST always true. 7. The altitude of ii triangle is also the median. - 8. The bisector of an angle of a triangle bisects the opposite side. 9. A perigon angle is an angle of 360 degrees. 10. The sum of all the angles about a point is 360 degrees. member that grammar ends with the sentence. Grammar is to be used. not just memorized. Politeness costs nothing. But is often worth a fortune. The highest of distinction is service to others. The person who watches the clock easily remains one of the wleder in die Schule. "Die mutter , fragte: Ge-hr ihr gern nadir Deutschland?” Karl Antwortete: - Fredericton and Vicinity . Mr. Frank Weeks. Fredericton. -was a. recent visitor to Charlotte- town. Mr. Homer Chappell was I visit- ed to Charlottetown on Monday. November 3rd. 1 Mr. Roduick Maclntosh. Spring- ton, was a. visitor to Charlottetown on Monday, November 3rd. Mr. and Mrs.- J. B. MacDoweli, and Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Cutciiffe. Fredericton, were guests of Mr. and ;Mrs. J. A. MacDonald, Ebenezer. ion Sunday, November 2nd. . Mr. and Mrs. Turner Glydon, Marglate. were visitors to Frederic- ton and Charlottetown, pn Sun- day. November 2nd.- Mr. and Mrs. William Dunsford and family, Charlottetown, were visitors to Fredericton on Sunday, November 2nd. Mr. Eddy Cutclilfe. Charlotte- town, was a visitor to Fredericton for the week-end of November 2nd. Miss Pauline Lavoie, Carleton, visited friends in Fredericton dur- ing the weeil:-end of November 2nd. Miss Dorothy Townsend. Sher- brooke. was a visitor to Frederic- lton on Saturday. November ist, tthe guest of Miss lreta Stevenson. l The many friends of Mrs. Glen lLing, Pleasant Valley, are pleased jto know she has returned home from the P. E. 1. Hospital. Miss Catherine Stevenson, lit- tle daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Wil- liam E. Stevenson. Fredericton, is a patient in the P. E. I. Hospital. She is expected to undergo a. ton- siiiestomy before returning home. The Happy Gleaners Mission Band held their October meeting at the home of Mrs. Harry Weeks. All the members took part in the study period. Joan Stevenson and Morris Weeks were appointed on the sick committee. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Weeks. Pleasant Valley, were visitors to Charlottetown on Tuesday, Novem- ber 4th. Mrs. Everett MacLcllan. Pleasant Valley, was a visitor to Charlotte- town on Tuesday, November 4th Mrs. George Pound. Hazel Grove. was hostess to the members of the Pleasant Valley Mlsion Circle for their October meeting. The presi- dent, Mrs. Milliner Hill presided. Different. members took part in the study peniod the theme being "Lightning Literacy," taken from hands. the study book "Angora Airmail." PAGE NINE Kelly - Hanilricken Wedding .fst. Andrew's Church. at. An- drews, was the scene of a. pretty wedding on Wednesday. Octobel 1st at 8.30 p.m. when Mary Ber- nice. daughter of Mr. and Mrs Daniel Handricken. exchanged vow: with William Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Kelly, Pisquid. The ceremony was performed b Father Reginald Phelan, cousin o the bride. The bride. who was given ll marriage by her fatherf was at- tlred in a navy blue suit with white accessories, and carried 1 white bridal prayerbook and ros- ary. gift of the groom. Her cor- tsage was of white carnations. The bride was attended by Mill Teresa I-landrahan, who were I suit of grey gabardine with navy accessories. Her corsage was of pink gladioll. Mr. Lawrence Kelly, brother of the groom, was groomsman. Mrs. Hendricken chose for her daughter's wedding a navy still with matching accessories, and wore a cor-sage of yellow carna- tions. Mrs. Kelly was attired in 1 dress of grey crepe with matchln accessories and wore a corsage 0 red carnatioris. Immediately after the ceremony breakfast was served at the ham of the bride to about one huncire guests. The dining room was beau- tifully decorated with pink and white streamers and white wed- ding bclls. The table was centered with a three-tier wedding cakl topped with a miniature bride and groom. The flowers were pink and white gladioli. The toast to the bride was pro- posed by Father Phelan and re- sponded to by the groom. Later the bridal party left on a tour of the I:-land. In the evening of the return of the wedding party. supper was served to about two hundred and seventy-five guests, at the home of the groom. The bride's gift to the groom was a cigarette lighter, and to the bridesmaid silver brooch and ear- rings to match. The groom's gift to the groomsman was 8. silver cigarette case. Previous to her marriage the bride was tendered a shower by her friends, at which she was the recipient of many beautiful and useful gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Kelly will reside in Pisquid, where the groom is apro- gressive farmer. BOSTON. Nov. 3 -(AP)-- Dr. Henry Demarest Lloyd. 74, son of a founder of the Chicago Tribunl and himself a director it that paper for many years. died today. His grandfather was William Brass, 2: Tribune founder. I-lis fa- ther the late Henry Demaresl Lloyd. was an editorial writer and financial writer on the Tribune for many years. , L.ur:icli:v7I:I3-served by the hostesl assisted by Mrs. Woodrow Jackson and Mrs. Hugh MacKinnon. : -A I Often this honour policyholders. Of course, when a new bridge or highway is com- pleted, it's traditional for-some prominent citizen or government official to cut the ribbon in the opening ceremony. And yet . . . might be awardeclwirh good reason to any one of the nation's life insurance Why should they deserve this distinction? Bccauselt wb 9gqpumiwhich Maqbe you should cutilili ribbon! is invested for them by life insurance companies, which makes it possible to build many such useful public works. Not only roads and bridges, but ,elcctricaI power stations, waterworks, . stores, homes, office buildings and Industrial plants are built with the help of life insurance dollars. So here's to the life insurance policyholders! While they provide financial security for their families and themselves. they also help to make Canada a better land to live lirvoiin SERVICEI. A lrolnoillfo undorwrIIoF:-.Io"pI'ounlIng one of tho more than 50 Canadian, EIIOIIII and United Stole: Ilfo lmuromzn compunira -' lirconodo - will gladly IlOIp you plan For your family 'u I..:urIiy and your own nude in Ialor yours. Rely on Iilml ' "Ii is Good Ciiixonshlphld own Lilo Insurance" in! ' IHE mi iusxuniiice (;(lMPAIII.ES,lIl (ANA-DA Ir. 3” I: .5 r .' A. .t i. . . ,, . 3 j I 0 ti ,i,v9 6.7?) a -i in A mg l Li it '2 l p . XV ' 8