Eh: @ttm‘dtmt l i Dovera l'rlnca Ellwmu Inland Like The new ' W. J. Helicon. Publishe- Bwlon Lawla . Frank walker Executive Editor Editor Pub|llhed every weak day morning (Ouopl Sun daya and alatulovy holidays) at I“ Prime Shoat. Charlottetown. P.E.l.. by [human Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summauida. Momagua. Alba: Ice and Scum. Replace-lied nationally by “IOIIIIOH Newspapala Advanlalng Services Icronlc, 425 University Ava. Empire 3-5394; Montreal. 640 Calhcau Shoat. UNivaralty @5942; Wauam oillca, I030 wm Goergla Strut. Vancouver (MA 7087). M=mbav Canadian Daily Newspaper Pnbliahan Association and the Canadian PIC|I~ the Canadian Preaa ia exclusively entitled to the u" lot Iapub licalion of all nawa dliplldlfll Il-‘a papal credited Io ll of to (he Aucciaiad PIIII e: leo- lora. and also to the lore' new: publishad hm In All right: on Ilpub'ltliicn oi aperlal (lisp-mm herein also Ialuvcd Subluiplipn lam. Not DVOI 35: pl: week by union. SILOO a year by mail or Iurul ionic. and anal not aorvucad by caniar No.00 a you all Island and U.K. $20.00 par id elsewhere ouiaida Blllllll Cem- yeer III U.S. cl monweallb. Not oval 7: per Henlde "-I‘d eaaz'z'wmssm, JANUARY-ll. 1080: Another Glassco Report The reports issued so far by the Glass-co royal commission on gov- ernment organization run to al- most 700,000 words, and are the re- sult of a two years' study costing nearly three million dollars. The re- port released this week was the third. The. fourth is expected in about four weeks, and the fifth. to be issued about the end of Febru- ary, will sum up the commission's views on the whole federal organi- zation. The initial report, made public last September, went into the broad subjects of management in person- nel. financial affairs and paper Work. No. '2, in November, studied seven fields in which the Govern- ment supplies itself with goods and services. The current report con- tinues the theme of No. 2 and also branches into five areas in which the. Government provides direct service. to the public. No. 4 will deal with the CBC, defense deparment. external affairs and scientific re- search. Nothing so extensive as this inquiry has, ever been attempted in Canada before. While a government committee is reported to be already Working to put many of the propos- als into force, it is safe to assume that others will run up against political snags, or be sidetracked for other reasons. For the commis~ sion would use its scalpel on ex- penditures with the precision of a surgeon cutting flatulent growths to the bone, and there would be squawks from those affected that would be heard from one end of the country to the other. This is the value of the inquiry, that it is a surgical diagnosis and not an attempt to prescribe quack remedies. Fortunately the operation can be carried on in stages if the pa- tient so insists. All political parties will doubtless agree with the main provisions of the report. and the Prime Minister has as s u re d the Commons that the Government in- tends to adopt most of the propos- als “at the earliest possible date." But the controversial matters, such as those affecting civil service and military personnel, will be handled more gingerly. Eventually. perhaps. all the car- dinal recommendations will be im- plemenled. or at. least tested out in principle. But in the meantime em- phasis will be on the reforms that will hurt least. from the standpoint of the voting public. These in them- selves may add up to a great deal in governmental saving. and should more than justify the commission's appointment. That Norslad Interview An examination of the text of General Norstad’s interview at Ot- tawa, in which he claimed that Canada had committed its forces serving in Europe under NATO command to acceptance of nuclear warheads. leaves a good many q ueetion s unanswered. For one thing. it seems that the former NATO commander refused to be pinned down on just when Canada would be failing to live up to her nuclear agreement. It would not be a problem, he conceded, until the Canadian air force contingent to NATO was fully equipped with planes designed to carry tactical nuclear warheads. Then, apparently, than was- pons would not be used under NATO or under Canadian control. They Would be "in American custody and . M”. but would be “avail-b ” 4/ I. siiiglo cop] ii when“ i-‘ rillltlflllllll 4.4.4. to Canadian torcca under a bilateral agreement. Such an agreement Would have to be reached before the (‘anadian commitment could be put into effect. “I am advocating such an agreement here and in the U.S.,” he told the reporters. General Not-stud was asked if any (‘anadian nuclear commitment existed in writing. He confessed that he did not know. “The com- mitment to provide the units." he said. “is certainly in writing. I can't specifically recall whether it states they should be atomic or not." Asked. further, if these Cana- dian forces have any capability without nuclear weapons, he said “they could have"; but in his judg- ment it Would “degrade their deter- rent value by making them con- ventional." Al the close of the interview the General was asked if it would be fair to suggest that Canada had not now met her NATO commit- ments. His reply is worth noting. “No,” he said. “It Would be unfair. t‘anada is one of the two or three countries who have done their best to meet their commitments in every sense.” It is regrettable that in the summarized report; of the press conference, this statement did not get the publicity it warranted. It fully substantiates the statements made by lxternal Affairs Minister Green and Defense Minister Hark- ness on their return from the NATO Council meeting in Paris. This still leaves unanswered the question of whether Canada is, or is not. committed to the eventual use of tactical nuclear weapons in its new strike aircraft in Europe. General Norstad maintains it to be. but he is vague as to the details. The Government has never satid that (‘anada is so committed. There should be a clarification of this whole matter when Parlia- ment resumes. Already, however, it appears that the furore raised by the. garbled report of General Norstad's remarks was pretty much a tempest in a teapot. A Sleallhy Killer If carbon-monoxide smelled like hydrogen sulphide, it would smell like rotten eggs; in which case no one Would ever die of carbon-mon- oxide poisoning. But it doesn’t. and every motorist has to be on the alert for the ravages of this stealthy killer during the “cloned-windows" season. This warning comes from Mr. W. S. Chalmers, manager of the Dominion Automobile Association, who states that. every year, increas- ing sharply during the fall and winter months. come reports of death from this source. And for every death directly attributable thereto, probably five others have resulted in traffic deaths—a direct causative factor being loss of alert- ness or even consciousness due to carbon-monoxide poisoning. with a subsequent traffic death frequently attributed to other more obvious causes. This colorless, odorless, taste- less gas, while relatively harmless in outside concentrations, is deadly poison in an enclosed space, such as a garage or a tightly closed automobile tonneau. And in most cases. no warning is apparent until the victim slips from drowsiness into unconsciousness and final death from asphyxiation. Leaky mufflers and exhaust pipes probably are the villains in most cases. It is advised that on long trips. one car window should be left slightly open. even on cold days. The same applies when the car is parked for a minute or more, with motor running. Simple pre- cautions. nnd well worth taking at this season. EDITORIAL NOTES The Egyptian ministry of edu- cation is 6rdering a team to Inver- ness, England, to record, for the benefit of students. the clear ac- centless voices which are acid to flourish there. Which prompts “Punch” of London to remark that "if other countries follow suit, the results may well be rather cham- ing for us. Already television has shown that policeman in Reykjavik. brigadiera in Jordan and students in Bangkok often speak clearer English into the microphone than some of our native consonant-swal- lowere and vowel-twiatcre. The world may yet teach ua our own language." i j; “GOOD HEAVENS - RUM!” OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson I No Queen’s Honors For Canadians (in New Year's Day. Queen? Elizabeth bestowed honours and l decorations to reward s 0 m e . 2.200 deserving citizens o' Bri- I tain. Australia. New Zealand.’ Nigeria. Rhodesia. Trinidad and ‘ other monarcllical nations with- in the Commonwealth —— but not Canada. , Most of those recipients were. given a metal bauble dangling. on a piece of coloured ribbon. costing a dollar or so. They also received the right to a d d 1 some distinguishing letter after their name. That was their re, ward for years of devoted ser-l vice to their country or th e i r community. and they were hap- py to accept from their Monarch , what they regarded as a m p l e. recognition. Why were no Canadians cluded in that list? Well of course we are proud in- governments if eminent politi- 3 clans are called "Hon"; and. our universities are happy to ar- 1 range for prominent persons I who are not scholastically qual~l iflcd to be dubbbed “Doctor” as ‘ the result of an honorary dc- . gree. What is the difference? I And in any case, less than 100 of i those 2.200 Commonwealth citi- . zens were given an honour which ‘ carried a title of address such . as “Lord” or “Sir” or “Dame” What riled many of our own diplomats and other civil ser- 1 vants was that three of their ilk resident in Ottawa were includ- ed in that New Year's list two Britons and one Australian l ——but our equally deserving Ca- I nadian ambassadors and others 1 were banned from similar re-I l . - , cognition. ' Ia. to call our country democratic; of that holler than thou socialis- tic type which believes in equal- ity but considers that all should be levcllcd downwards. So we do not permit our fellow ciw lizens to be honoured with any-i thing so undemocratic as a dis- tinction which would lift the de-i serving slightly above the un- doserving. More specifically. successive governments have not permitted any Canadian to be honoured with anything so un- demoncralic as a title of distinc- ; lion. WHAT'S IN A NAME? No Canadian may be called "Sir". But it is okay by 0 u 1‘ PUBLIC FORUM this column In open to the dllcusainn by correspondents of questions of In tonal. The Guardian does not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of cones uondenle. All IeIIera published are Iub Tu: and condensation where Guardian ls unable to to any correspondence renrrl. in. lellers aubmllted 0 a .- 3 “ EMPHATIC DENIAL Sir, — The letter appearing In your Public Forum columns on- titled “Mr. Wheatley Replies" has necessitated further com- ments from me. To ignore .\Ir. Wheailey's reply would be doing Our sister dominion. Austral- ls even more emocratic 5 than we are. yet she does n of i . ffcr from the false modesty in . this respect which has bcdevill- i ed Canada for 40 years. barring ‘ the Conservative regime in theI 19305. A hundred or so Austral- 5 lens were given awards in the| recent New Year‘s Honours list. .; These included the lifetime hon- 1 our of a knighthood to a m e re 1 half dozen, including an ambas- ‘ sador. a doctor. a soldier. a pol- . itician. an industrialist and a? civil servant. Others were given medals, I and these included the High Commissioner to Canada. the able and well-liked David Hay: a professor r e w a r or his services to tertiary educa-l ' tion; the m a t ro n of a Baptist To Speak Of lndicins Cape Breton Post home for the aged; a sister on- gaged in social welfare services; an interpreter in a supreme court; an air force flying instru- tor; a nursing sister; and so on. -CANADIANS UNPRAISED Have we no outstanding Can- adian matron, night-watchman, civil servant. nurse. foreman. artist. policeman. industrialist or other who deserves recogni- tion by his country for services beyond the normal cell of duty? Of course we have. many such. So why are we the only monar- chy in the Commonwealth which suffers from this inverted snob- bery. when even the great. deni- ocratic USA delights in bestow- ing and receiving such decora- tions? Are we not ~‘mbugs. that our governments pioust pro- claim “No distinction to honour any Canadian, and then endow the Canada Council which itself bestows medals to Canadians whom our government should honour? But if Canadians are thus se- cond class democrats. poor Que- beckers are third class Cana- dians. For our government has recently firmly prevented a newspaper executive in Quebec from accepting an honour p ro- ferred to him by a foreign monarch. whilst a similar Cana- dian from Ontario has been able to accept a similar distinction from another foreign monarch. Quebeckers here are aware of this recent further injustice to their province. and this matter is likely to be raised in a loud voice when Parliament meets. The mistaken idea of Colum- bus and other explorers that they had come upon the East Indies and mainland Asia when ‘ they reached ,the western hcm- Isphcre. has perpetuated . c o n- 1 fusion In nommenclature. The mistake gave the original natives of the Americas their ' identification as Indians. where- Prince Edward Isl d F . I an "med 1 of the human race. The mistake Foods Limited company and Its officers 3 gross injustice. As the chief negotiator be- ‘ tween the Government and my , company during the early slag- es of development. I was llinr with every phase of such development. and therefore am fully qualified to state that not one penny of what Mr. ley refers to as “free taxpay- ers' money" was offered. or gi- ven to my company, time before. during or since. Furthermore. not one member of the company has any know- ledge of “the free' taxpayers' money" to which Mr. Whenilcy makes reference. As for the External Auditor'a report. I have neither seen it. nor have I heard of It. There- fore. it is impossible to intelli- gently comment on a matter about which I have no knowled~ go. but from the standpoint of curiosity I will endeavour to ob-' Iain a copy of the report. I have adequately dealt with all of Mr. Wheelley's statements in my letter of December 14. and have no reason to comment further or to alter my remarks. which were quite clear. The purpose of this letter In to register my indignation ov- er the careless Ioeinuations of Mr. Wheatley and to emphasize that my company or Its officers , nevor at any time was offch “w received "free lsxpayera' money" in connection with the construction or the establish- ment of our business In the Engine of Prince Edward II- Youra vary truly, P11. PROS’I‘BD room LTD. M w. ll. them. La Pub-Io. m Whent- . at any 7 as the true Indians always have been the inhabitants of India. a people of quite another division also resulted in the islands of the Caribbean Sea becoming known as the West Indies; Col- umbus believed they were part of the East indies. The Indians figuring mostly in the news nowadays of course are the people of India. and they are mentioned so frequently that It's generally understood who they are by the nature of the discussion. Even so. it still can be confusing at time! unless ; qualifying terms are used to in- . dicale which Indians are meant. * the actual Indians of Asia or ; the misnamed Indians of the I Western Hemisphere. It may be too late to do any- thing about it. but If the writer were a North American Indian he would demand a change in the designation of his people. There's steadily more need for a separate designation. As India becomes more important in self-government and In the de- velopment of history. her peo- ple will figure more lmportantly In the world's convelsallon. The point made here Is that our North American "Indians" are too important In themselves to be forgotten. We have a con- tinuing obligation to give them a fairer deal than they had In the past. In discussing them. It. should not be necessary to use . the qualifying term of North I American or Canadian Indiana. wonied At Vim Ridge The Victoria In the Legion ary a veteran tells of a visit be paid recently to the Canadian w a r memorial on Vimy Ridge. It brought him great satisfaction. He stood at sunrise on the same spot as on that far - off Euler Monday morning. He noted the memorial'a grandeur and the perfect condition of the' surroundings. with trenches. dug-outs. etc. preserved as he knew them 45 years ago. In the nearby cemeteries. carefully tended, he saw the graves of many men with whom he had' served. The whole scene was one to fill him with pride and he will- Ingly answered quoallons about others soak the memorial from - ng . Only one china dismayed him: the nude who allowed around 'a visitors could not anal cal to ex- plain the significance of the memori- area. ' Vlnvhablalctlaaaan I modern Canadian annals; the massive monument on its ridge is the moat moving of all over- seas Canadlan memorials. That part of French aoil II for over Canada. It should be possible for fed- eral authorities to remedy f a lack noted by this veteran, and to ensure the availability of someone able to explain the ahrlne‘a history In the language moat common to Canada to most of those who vIaIt the Vimy mmorial. i Strength Food By Dr. Theodore H. Van Dalian PRIMITIVI: warden drank blood and gnawed the meal of wild animalalntbc mistaken belief it made them more pow- arful and aaamalva. Meat atlll Ia symbolic of atronlth and en- arl . Aihlctu consume I t e a k a and chop: as though the atrcnlth of the butchered animal was transferred In every mouthful. The same In true of m a ny older men who believe they will be weak without red meat. Vea- etablca are conlldcrcd more feminine. even though they may contain substitute proteins of comparable value. According to Marlon H, Zet- teratrom. New York dietitian. certain meanings have come to be associated with foods. Fruits symbolize love and affection. A basket of fruit is a c o m m o I am and the apple for the (cache or la part of our culture. It not clear to me just where the apple I day that keeps the doc- tor away (It: In. Fruits also are associated with reproduction (fruition) and they are symbols of beauty. esteem. and luxury. Dr. W. Kaufman believes cer- tain foods have emotional sig- nificance. When a person is th- warted or frustrated. for exam- ple. be Is likely to reach to r reward or party foods such as chocolates. ice cream. nuts, cake. or hot dogs. Fetish foods Ire those many of us think we cannot do without; the athlete and his red meat Is an example. Bread. the staff of life. is an- other and many food faddists have a long list of nutrlmcnta that fall into this category. The maturity foods (beer, cof- fee. and ten) are Items used by adults but denied to children. Milk and milk products are re- garded as security foods be- cause they help bind the early parent-child relationship. Most of us have consumed large amounts of a particular food on certain occasions when we feel a special need for emotional comfort. We also have a private list of foods that remind us of happy circumstances and another list that has unpleasent a s s o cia- tions. These include foods to which we develop aversion: through religious or cultural up- bringing or because they once caused a digestive upset. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical topics If stamped. self-addressed en- velope accompanies request.) INSECURE COUPLE Mrs. D. Writes: My husband and I both lack confidence. This hinders us in our social life and his work. Should we see a psy- chiatrist? REPLY er the c a u s e of your insecur- ity and teach you to live within your limitations. But I doubt if It would make you more capable or add to your abilities. NOSEBLEED 0N RISING S.M. writes: Lately. I am suf- fering from nosebleed on get- ting up in the morning. I'm 61. Can you tell me the cause? REPLY No. but your physician can. He will examine your nose to see whether a scratch. un ulcer or a tumor Is present. take the blood pressure recording, check your heart. and order blood tests to determine whether a bleeding tendency exists. JAUNDICE IN NEWBORNS i W.D. writes: Why do some infants have jaundice at birth? REPLY Because of an incompatibility of blood between mother and child. There is no need for con- cern when the skin turns slight- Iy yellow a few days after birth. this occurs so often In new be- bies it might be considered nor- 1 ma . OUTGROWING BRONCHITIS Mr. . writs. Is chronic bronchitis In childhood e v e r outgrown? Probably not. although the question cannot be answered intelligently unless the cause of bronchitis is known. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT —-... Seek a balance between stress and relaxation. I X S Ilsa) Our Yesterda (From lbe Guardian TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO January I, me Im risoned In drift-Ice In Northumberland Strait for nearly all: days. the achoonvr rigged motor vessel "Mahone" wa the Marine W h a r f. Charlottetown. In I t n I g h t. The Icebreaker CGS Montcalm reached the 89-! o of vessel, and broke through about ' alx Inches of Ice to port. follow- ed by the "Mahoua". under her own power The dwelling of Ira Clark. Un- Ion Road. was completely dea- lroyed by fire ear Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Clark and y ouna c 11116 were In Charlottetown when the fire broke (out. TEN YEARS AGO January I. I“! . Malcolm G. Patterson. asso- ciated with the Bank of Nova Men of accountant at bank's branch In Sums, N.B. STEP UP sABOTAGE TAIPEI. Formosa (Router-a) A “large number" of ages ave be. can! to Communist China from Formosa data II a base: In coordina- tion with local amle. a Nationalist Chinese apobeeman Ilkll m. M Admiral Pal Yu he told a mu conference the already neon-chub carried out mem- mradona and bad mm to sabotage m 3 Mr. less operator during the war. will be bed In Sussex by Mrs Pat- mat Meat Considered Psychiatric care may uncovw Cara with now am may not not atuck In the snow but they do let stuck behind can with- out anew til-ca. - Ottawa Jour- be. They laughed at his red cl unmont enables. but In ay Great Grandpa hardly knew Ev'hcu t was sure. aor er. flan- hla lrilain'l latest move In the complex Central African Fed- :ratlon problem la in the right no At its simplest this is a prob- lem ranging over three torrltor- In (Southern and Northern Rho dcala and little Nyaaaland) three main bodies of opinion (white supremacy. white- black partnership and African nationalist). The white supre- macy uroup Ia at the top of the new at this moment. One of ita leaders. Winston Field. baa won an election victory over the more moderate and liberal Sir Ed. gar Whitehead. until now Sou- thern Rhodesia“: Prime Minister. In the wake of this upset, the British Government has withdrawn Its support for the federation. by rccognizlug Ny- asaland’s right to withdraw from It. This has provoked a violent verbal attack on London by Sll‘ Roy Wclensky. the federation‘l Prime Minister. Nyasaland appears prominent- ly in struggle because t area has an almost totally black population. It has been reslating efforts to keep It in a federation where white power is backed mainly from Southern Rhodesia. C n on After a long struggle. It look as though Joeo Goulart may get his chance to "straighten out“ Brazil's tangled economy. While results of Sunday's plebiscite are not yet In, re- ports from Rio de Janeer say the odds favor the 44-year-old president in his bid to restore the strong presidential powers taken away when he assumed office almost ll’z years a o. oulart. then vice-president, was in Peking talking trade when the abrupt resignath of president Janio Quedros brought chaos and the threat of civil war late in the summer of 1961. Although a wealthy rancher. Goulart was a leading left- wlnger and head of the Labor party. Conservative elements In army government dis- trusted him and imposed a par- liamentary system. transferring executive powers from the pres- ident to a premier and cabinet. before allowing his succession. CONOMY SLUMPED Since then, while the economy went from bad to worse and Congress passed through suc- cessive crises. Goulart has care- fully laid the groundwork for a i return to full power. While retaining support from labor and left-wing elements. he has appeared to move closer to the centre of the political road and has gained suport of many moderate and conserve- tive leaders in the military. NOTES r BY THE WAY A choir of beya ornulacd by Sydney pollcc as part of t h c I r welfare work was prevented from lln‘llll Christmas carols In a clan becauac Aciors' liqu. Ily oblectad. The boys h d to give back the five pounds I‘vlt‘il they had melved‘to spend Ill lb: store. — Manchester Guar- n. . Britain In Africa Chrlallan Iclcnce Monitor The victory for whltc Ill rema- cllll In Southern Rhoda“: tends to confirm the Nyualandera' suspicion of the federation Idea. II also la a setback for a party which under Sir Eduar was too liberal to keep num- clcnt white aupport but not liberal enough to win qull- clout black support. It reflects the belief of the African nation- allatl that "partnership" is snare. Nationallsts guess the v have lean to fear from the white supremacists -— though he struggle with them may be more violent. Since Southern Rhodesia dc.- Deuds partly on British power for its position in the federation liberal thought In Britain as well as nationalist thought in the federation argues that London should call the tune for the Southern Rhodesians. The latter insist London sup- port thc federation. It appears now, however. that Britain has decided to try to preserve the economic benefits of the feder- ation through new relationships while further dissociating itself from efforts to delay the com- ng of black-white political equ- ality in Africa. - Oclds Favor ghoulon‘ By Cal-man Cum g Canadian Pm: staff Writer press and business comuni- cs. Congressional elections in Oc- tober further strengthened the president's hand as an alliance of the Labor and Social Demo- cratic parties emerged under Premier Hermes Lima of the Labor party. Goulart also appealed to the Brazilian p e ople. contending that a strong hand was needed to bring order to the economy. INFLATION GREW As inflation mounted — the Cruzeiro fell from 80 to the US. dollar in 1956 to 300 when Quad- ros resigned and to about 500 at present—boarders stocked up in hopes of a break In govern- ment price controls. Food riots last July caused 11 deaths and hundreds of injuries -—while at the same time stock- piles were mounting in rural teas. In the face of these and other problems — ncluding presure for land reform and a huge and mounting government deficit~— has promised that in 21 years under the presidential system he will “straighten out this country do away with the. distortion caused by Inflation . . organize the economic de- velopment and begin indispens- able work toward our economic consolidation and recovery." The task. if he is allowed to tackle it, promises to be a touch one. Leonard Montague WAR SURPLUS NEW ARMY OILSKIN COATS a SOWESTER ........ .. 3.00 NEW ALL WOOL BLANKETS 3.50 NEW ARCTIC THERMO BOOTS .... .. 7.60 CAR COATS (NAVY) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _, 2.50 NEW ARMY HAVERSACKS (suitable for school bags) 1.00 WINTER CAPS .. . . . . . . . .. . . 1.00 ARMY & NAVY BOOTS (new heel and sole) ..........3.50-5.00 R ALIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4.00 NAVY BLUE SERGE PANTS 2.00 A BA EDRESS PANTS 3.00 RUBBER RAINCO . 5.00 CONSTRUCTION HELMETS 2.50 SMALL AND LARGE KIT BAGS ............. ----- ,. 1.00-1.25 WOOL FLANNEL T-SHIRTS 1.25 NEW RUBBER SOWESTERS 1-35 BELTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75 ARMY I NAVY BATTLEDRESS TUNICS 2-00 COVERALLS . . . . .. ......... 3.00 WORK SHIRTS—1.00 WORK PANTS L00 WORK JACKETS _ . . ................. 1.00 C. 0. D. Orders Accepted HOOLEY’S MEN'S WEAR Annual Inventory Reduction Sale This yourth IO-HMMW' lhoaavcrbafenlenummckmust go. SAY! yourmenoyfor new mum. . SALE carcinomas THURSDAY. IAN. ltllh. Munroe Phone 38-5 J