THE GUARDIAN Punusaad was-dssmlsnha nm:n' smu. uun:uT'i.n.x..urunu:-ma:-nu u..uuc'" rononrnhsnunnulnnmlannonawr IIQ.l'l-niialkm loom-alI.anams.la.na.Iurnm hanclstusulnmmaa-Idmllamnpuanaalnarun Autln tnduloonIddaaaIlal&b:':aPoatolffonDonaRmaat. In-non up nu. nus. C un- "'!50llrIIuatmomcyhwaakartban ' IDVIIIDQIII." lammm-ids sun In anaum: othar Plwinoas and I.'.I. 011.0! nnnum IATURDAY. MAR. I. llll Need For Action launched. Most of the other half ernment for everything that has some parts of the country;.and, in the same petulant manner. employment." there are at least a half-million jobless workers in this country. Just why this should be in a country that is said to bet in a period of great industrial expansion-4 is a matter that deserves careful study at! the opportune time. is for prompt remedial action on the prob- lem at hand. if that be possible. Perhaps it is. and perhaps it isnlt. Certainly.(. nothing is going to be done so long as members of all parties in Parliament con- tent themselves with throwing charges and counter charges across the floors of the House. French Politics I Recent months have demonstrated once again the political instability which makes. it difficult for the French Government to deal lncisively with questions of majory importance. This results from the fail- ure of the Constitution of the present Fourth Republic to create a sufficiently; strong executive. i Various measures have" been put forward to correct this.basic. constitutional fault, and according to a release from Service D'1nformation Fran-i cats at Ottawa. there is reason to hope that. the Constitution will be reformed within the near future. Such a reform. has not. however. been easy i about. since it can be effected only by, the French Assembly voluntarily giving up' some of its power. The French people feel an historic mistrust for a strong centralized govern-i ment. have exercised power oppressively. On each occasion it has given the basic pow-l er of government to a Parliament intend- ed to represent the will of the people. The Constitution of the Fourth Republic reflects this historic desire of the French people to create a truly democratic state and to minimize the possibility of the emergence of a "man on horseback." The French people are aware that the drafters-of the present Constitution. in their revulsion against totalitarianism. weakened the executive power excessive- ly. By making it possible for the mem- ,bers of the French Assembly to submit to a new national election. they paved the for the successive government crises that have marked the post-war period. r There is one redeeming feature In the present situation. however. In the United ltatea. for example. a new party coming -Into power means a complete change in the top officials of the various depart- lhalits. In Frahea the day-to-day work .i uuvasmnent B uwltheted-by a pennan- alt professional staff which raihaina in of- so shaman in min- -a powarful-- i gt France has had only two Ministers of Foreign Affairs-Robert Schuman and Georges Bidault. truth in the remark of a French political observer that while. during the post-war period. some countries have had one gov- ernment but many policies, France has had many governments but one policy. ed to have come upon a.hitherto unknown community in his journeyingsthrough the wild places of New Guinea; and, should his explorations lead to nothing else of lconsequence. he will still have a right to The Parliamentary debate on unem- the plaudits of mankind. ployment has been going on for a weekistrong tribe. which has remained hidden or more. and. judging by reports, not g through all the ups and downs of human single move towards alleviating the situa- history. has been brought to public at- lI'0n has been forthcoming. Indeed, oneltention at a most opportune time-for the searches in vain for anything that resem-toutside world, that is to say. bles a sound concrete proposal or a rea-lnot-hing of the advantages of civilization. sonable famimile thereof. About half the they are, nevertheless. friendly, cheerful. time has been taken up with motions of peaceable. and hospitable to non-confidence which haven't the slightest.l-laving no knowledge of hydrogen bombs chance of being adopted and which. fromland other scientific appendages to 20th all appearancesf are based on political century enlightenment. nnimosities rather than on the importance neither fear for the present nor anxiety of the issue for which the debate wasvfor the future. hast-yet ieamed to fight among themselves but been occupied in tit-for-tat wrangling over are secure under the benevolent leadership the original causes of the present state oflof their headmen. who probably do not affairs. With almost childish abandon. op- even have to make election speeches. but position members are blaming the Gov-lare selected on the basis of proven ability gone in the ways of diplomacy and in political wrong; even the hard winter that struck understanding. Governmenticommunity lack "modern conveniences" in spokesmen are disclaiming all responsibil-itheir homes as well as in their philosoph-' ity and even trying to make out that un-lical attachments, they do have the faculty employment insurance and other social of singing and dancing for the sheer joy security benefits-all very good and useful of living: a faculty which more civilized in their way-are able to atone for lack,peoples seem to have lost in their wan- of jobs. To make matters worse. some of -derings from one social service to another. the speakers persist in assuming that the Now that their seclusion has been broach- adjective "seasonal" has some magical way ;ed. doubtless they will be invaded by of softening the shock of the noun ”un- friendly and curious emissaries from out- side. armed with motion picture cameras. It may be that the situation is not asipopular poll charts. and learned treatises bad as critics of the Government say it is: on the social sciences. but figures show that at the momentlbe hoped that. before they have been in- troduced to all the niceties of a strange and bewildering culture. they will be given the opportunity of revealing to the world the secret of gracious and peaceful living. as they themselves have known and prac- Right now the need tised it from one generation to another. Prime Minister during the First World War. died this date. 0 .dream was "British Africa from Cape to Cairo", who gave his name to Rhodesia and established the Rhodes Scholarships. died this date, 1902. O 0 efficiency. So Parliament is taking no chan- ces. The Senate will take a 27-day Easter holiday from April 6 to May 3. and the lcommons will take twelve days off. from - April 6 to April 18. 0 some a ' -human There "is. in fact, some The New Tribe A young Australian explorer is report- The 20,000- Knowing strangers. they experience Strangely. they have not Although the members of this new However. it is to EDITORIAL NOTES David Lloyd George. Britain's dynamic 1945. O O Cecil Rhodes. empire builder whose All work and no play is not conducive to O 0 According to the Bureau of Statistics that "Open Sesanie" to all 'knowledge- travelling Canadians spent 533 millions more in the U. S. A. last year than the amount spent by Americans in this coun- try. Obviously, the tourist .business is no to bmlg l one-sided affair. Poultry processing ,and packaging on op Services, will mean a steady market for our poultry farmers. Taken in con- FOUF times ill TWO hundred Yeafsljunction with the expansion of fish pro-T France has overthrown governments whichlcessmg facmties at golms and the intro, duction of modern quick-freeze methods in the handling of fish and farm products as outlined in the Legislature. the pros- t l LENTEN MEDITATION S Possible" ilniorseen Devei Lenten Observance The Times. London The first and great command- ment - to love God with the whole heart and mind and soul and strength A is of absolute. uncon- ditional obligation. and from it all the rest are derivative. The var- ious rules and prescriptions for Christian living are means to that end. or they are mistaken. But it is a commandment that nobody can obey by the most strenuous moral resolution. T No man can be saved by his own effort. he cannot love God mere- ly by ”maklng up his mind to it": all depends on his response to the divine initiative, "We love. be- cause he first loved us." The beginning. middle. and end of Christianity are not in man's will. though his will is involved. but in the grace of God. Growth in grace is in truth rmovernent from the self-centred life towards the God-centred; and the aim of tradi- tional religious practices. and of all pastoral training. is to form such dispositions as to keep open the channels of the spirit so that men may the better "obey the godly motions" and grow in know- ledge and love of God. There is the. purpose and the justification of those institutional regulations which have at times been held to be incompatible with the spon- taneity of Christian life. It is true that these regulations can too easily degenerate into the barren formality of legalism. A man can keep all the command- menls - in a literal and outward sense - from youth up. but yet have no spark of Christian charity. unioving. He may even. like the Pharisee in the parable. thank God that he is not as other men are. That kind of stoical and self-ccn- tred virtue is the contradiction of Christian character. "Self rever- ence. self knowledge. self control." as Archbishop Temple once re- marked in a typical comment on Tennyson. "these three alone make a man a perfect prig." True sanctity is above all un-seifcon- scious. The Christian life is not to be identified with any bare keep- ing of the rules. Yet a man ignores the rules at his peril. A Christian who claims to be above the laws because he is too enlightened or too "spiritual" is in an extremely dangerous state of mind. All this applies to Lenten servance and not least to the "fast- ing and abstinence" which the Church has. from the earliest days. enjoined. "Giving things up" has no value in itself. and ascetic- ism for its own sake is no part of the leaching of Christianity. Mortification of the flesh should not. mean only physical austerity. as though the body were the seat of evil; it may even defeat its own object, driving a man in upon him- self and leaving him as far from God as ever. What matters is that he should try to keep himself. soul and body, fit for God's service. Fasting. interpreted as self-dis- cipline. whether physical. intel- lectual or spiritual, is a means to the liberation of life. Under the general guidance of the Church every man should make his own rules. They are and remain hard. censorious. an d secondary: what is fundamental is the offering of the self to God. i The Vanishing Whooping Crane By John Van buses The Canadian wildlife service is baffled over the love life of the rare whooping crane. Their evaslveness and small numbers-there are only 21 known to be in existence-meh if hard for wildlife experts to track them down to their summer nesting gr unds. ildlife people know the big cranes spend the winter in Texas and the 'summer somewhere in Canida's Northwest Territories. . Th t' bot ii. a big scale. as proposed by the Island Co-'. Tahesy Tlongl k.now why the bird is . l becoming so rare-why it isn't re- producing-because they can't get near its nesting grounds. NUMEROUS CENTURY AGO About lot) or 150 years ago. the whooping crane was a common sight in Canada and the United states. Hunters probably accounted for most of tho decline in the Canadian Press Staff Writer known about the bird until its mating grounds are found and in- vestigatlons are carried out to see what is preventing the population from increasing. - Originally the big bird with the slx-foot, black-tipped yinga trav- elled from the Arctl coast to central Mexico and from Utah to South Carolina. The flight pattern central Oklahoma. Kansas. Neb- raska. South Dakota. North Dn- kota and northwesterly across Sas- katchewan into the -Territories. There the trail disappears. Vhel ..L"x 7oe&' (Fnxzef. ' ADVENT The chili is wlnter..and the sun ob-4 in recent years goes across Texas. In -s4o:i-MK Felsk-5.9.4 ”P'"9"."5 aw PUBLIC FORUM rhla column is open to aha Ilaonn ion by correspondents of quastlom of lnlarenk The Guardian loan not naussnrlll Iulono Ibo ollllli 0' I-rvrlllulndenll FERRY ACCOMMODATION Sir.-Reading items in your paper from time to time. in re- ference to plans for the propos- ed boat to be used on the Wood Islands ferry service. makes one think that even the engineers who draw those plans are at a loss to know how to build a boat large enough to accommodate Wood is- lands service - and yet draw only lcn feet of water. When the Wood lslamg formin- als were built. the boat purchas- ed was large enough to handle the traffic at the time. However. it 'was not long until another larger boat was needed and pur- chased Now again the need for a third and much larger boat has become necessary. to accommo- date the ever increasing traffic. and to keep the route open for the entire year. The only boat that would handle present needs would be a boat. at least 300 feet long. and drawing from 24 to 26 feet water. and competent to carry at least 100 cars, which boat Wood Islands Harbor cannot ac- commodat . Georgetown harbor has a wide straight channel to the open Gulf. and can accommodate a boat of any size. drawing five talhoms or more of water. with no dredg- ing necessary. and is one of Can- ada's best natural harbors. With the Sydney to Port a Basque” ferry. the Canso Cause- way and a gobd ferry between Georgetown and Piclou. a very large boat would be needed to handle an ever increasing traf- fic between P. E. I. and Nova Scotia. Cape Breton and Port a Basque. . I am. Sir. etc. c. M. FITZGERALD Chairman of Commltee on Proposed Georgetown-Piclou Ferry Service. FT Work For l Committee. parliamentary occasion. had known its industry. minatlon and far-slgbtedness. The Senate Finance P ' Medically- Speaking ' Harman N. as-mun. nu. on. -ro'an A any aoam aancarcnuronsnanrz "numun1'nu-mybabylo sleep so much?" Thar: a question moat OIJOII new mothers have probably your doctor. Your baby. of course. need! I lot of sleep. and he usually set: as much as he needs. as Y0" ill": probably observed. - t sleep Requirements Vary Naturally. all babies do not sleep the same number of hours. They don”t require the same menu . There are averages. how- ever. which will give you xprelw good indication of how muc sleep a normal. healthy baby Ilwllld have. During the first month. an in- fant wui sleep between 18 and 5) hours. That means. he sleep! 811 the time except when he is fed or bath . ' Usually by the time he is eight weeks old; or maybe even before that. he will sleep right through hisnormal 2 a. In. feeding. it he wants to pass up this meal. let him Don't awaken him. If, on the other hand. he con- tinues to wake up around 2 a. m. you'll have to keep on feedlnll him at this time until he's about three months old. By this time. thank heavens. most babies stop waking up for this early morning feeding. Don't Advance I-lour Don't advance his 10 p. m. feed- ing to 11 or 12 o'clock in an effort to break his 2 a. m. feeding habit. You'll probably find that he wakes at 2 a. in. "anyway. ready for an- other meal. As your baby grows older. be will need less sleep. en he is three to five months old. he will probably sleep 14 to 1!! hours a day. . From five to 11 months. he will I usually nap one to two hours in the morning. a similar period in the afternoon. and will sleep about 10 to 12 hours a night. Along about this time. if not sooner. he probably will begin sleepinr through his 10 p. in. feeding. too. During his second year. he usu- ally sleeps between 10 to 12 hours a night. but he will nap only once. This one or two hours nap can be taken either in the morning or afternoon. whichever fits best into your own busy working schedule. So. that's about the amount of sleep an average infant gets. Pretty nice life. huh? But. re- member you once had it as good yoursclff! QUESTION AND ANSWER J. L.: is there relief for hard- ening of arteries. and is the condi- tion serious? A .. . Treatment for hard- ening of the arteries consists of rest in bed. correct diet. daily bowel movements and regulated exercise. Drugs are not of much value in this condition. . The diet. for the most part. should consist of fruits and green vegetables: meat. tea and coffee should be taken sparingly: alco- hol should be avoided. Milk may be drunk liberally. and bread. potatoes and other starchy foods used moderately. GOING DOWN UNDER OTTAWA fCP)-- Trade Minister Howe will leave April 8 on a three- wcek tou r of Australia and New Zealand. the department an- ” Wednesday. He will dis- cuss wheat marketing with Aus- tralian officials and trade in gen- eral with ministers of both coun- tries. the department said. He will taxes. is an old one. The assump- tion has always been thil only by departing this world would one be likely to escape -taxes. Now even that faint hope is gone. -Des Moines Register. War has become an absurdity. a crime, an act. of race suicide. How to translate this. realization into policies that insure peace and disarmament is the question that defies any single answer. On one level it must be worked at day by day, with perseverance and imagination by those who. like President Eisenhower in this country and Prime Minister Churchill in Great Britain. have dwelt with a consciousness of man's vast danger. At mother level it must be worked upon in the minds of the people them- selves - all the people, on both sides of the Iron Curtain, what- ever this ideologies or their creed. -New York Herald-Times. According to DB8. 24.2 per oent of all Canadians 15 to 24 years of age were married person: in 1958. compared with 21.9 per cent of the population in this age group in 1951. This is in parts reflection of prosperity; young people have not had to postpone marriage as they did for example. in the 303. 111 Dirt too. the early marriages may be a carryover from the war years. when an early mar- riage was often the alternative to no marriage at all. Whatever- the cause. the new pattern 01 the 40s and 505 has certainly contributed to the increase in de- mand for consumer goods. The demand for almost everything from toys to telephone lines has been stepped up a notch by the new ” in youthful mar- rlase. . -Financial Post. The goilee is back. with 'what could be a bang. One was sport. 0d by I zunman who held up a Detroit bar the other day. and the victim retained a vivid recol. lectlon of the follow. The fact 35.3)!) changed hands in the en. forced transaction helped lharp- en the bar owner's perceptions. Burke Electric Authorized C&b Dealer need to , rug: g. ---.. . r H. E A Y ..-I x Bandits have pared in varimu -M 0, U& llldl dlaguigesl which tradltlonalh add a touch olmystary-and mcnapetoanm. bury. A male: is not: feal-sum, In ll: heyday it wa. miond W ""13 Professional men. uoecallydoctou. Al was. OM IPOIIIIIIII. Sir Thomas ..1.,lp. ton. made it has trademark. let it may turn out tho gunman-I coatee was not geaulne. tuft. win be cleared of participation. in crime. The gunman's gouge, in fact, could have been a diva”. iouary tactic. to set police on . cold and false trail. But until the criminal in tripped up, who with a goatea in safe, at least in Detroit? -Windsor Star. Wisconsin farms will log mm, bl; changes about two yo.” from now. That is when the old- stern may start. drawing SW31 security benefits. Grandpa can re, tire and leave the farm to Ilia next generation. There are more than 11.000 active farmers in in. state who are more than 65 years old. A big percentage of um, will bepready to can it quits. Why are so many older folk; 811" keellllll their nose to thg pindstone? Mainly because lhey can't afford to retire. Retirement of more older couple will be good for Wisconsin fanning. It Wm open up farm: for younger tam. llies who want to get on a place of their own. -Wisconsin Agri- culturist. Many aspects of current fiscal policy are attacks on capital for. matloll. with the result that the L Oadellllll of the national tax base is being slowed down. Great Britain is now wrestling with in. same problem in a much mun acute form. having no great sum of undeveloped resources to fall back on. She must import to re. export. and she must export to dig live. In Canada we principally need to dig - using that verb to embrace all the rocesses of ex. politlng new sources of natural wealth. But the tax cost of dig- ging is slowing down the rate at which we do it. That slowdown. in turn. increase the cost of produc- lon giving us a lower productiv- ity ratio than either Britain or the United States. Such conditions !l'e lllllleclmlry. as a reorienta- tion of fiscal policy would be the bezlnlllna of I new trend. -Tor- onto Globe and Mali. POSITION CHANGED MONTREAL (CP) - A statue of Christ crucified has replaced a pic- ll-ll'E of -Queen Elizabeth on the wall behind Mayor Jean Drapeau': ornate chair in his city hall office. The photograph of the Queen has been moved to an opposite wall facfnz the mayor's desk. The mo- dernistlc bronze statue is the work of I 21-year-old Montreal artist. Susanne Marchand. TIMOTHY SEED FOR SALE Electrical Wiring . g Rew3',',g,:::t,:'Ppm” Not combined "”"”'lE..&El””” A. e. MOORI 156 Great Goo. St. . DIAL 4021 Pewnel be accompanied by Deputy Trade Minister W. F. Bull. The Senate Ottawa Journal Senator Ross MacDonald. Gov- crnment leader in the Senate. has given notice of a motion to refer 1955-56 estimates to tile Finance This is an important The com- mittee has been dormant for three years. to the regret of many who deter- spcrity was disturbed by the winds of adversity. . The MacDonald motion will give the committee power to assemble information on the impact of fed- eral. provlncial and, municipal taxes. 'on the gross national prod- uct and national income and on the movement of the cost-of-living in- dex. There wlll be. then. an inn. presslve ". of " um .0100 mmi -nrunuan iusunaucs LIMITED . 1873. amnmnamn - IONTAGUE has the advantage of being relax- ed. The elder statesmen are able to examine and criticize proposed government expenditures without being obsessed with the desire to protect. or advance party Interests. in their wisdom will draw clusions. grave security tha b er! A" ” 1.. facts and from them lb: senators con- These may not be agreeable to those who consider cndlo-to-t.be- irthright of ev- PROFESSIO NAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Dects are indeed reassuring. There has l1lll'Ill,l;ll:ill0D-Ml)l(l,ll lllrivel-l':e 0:11:15 h at Theyntakle thelli;,tln1e.m'ltlll1eylfoilog ” of world 2 W I1 I II - t I R C 1' never been any question about the quality mud by 9,, :,,...,.-y mg mg... 11,, 1c,,,.,.,, g,.k1,,. 0.. an mad. mg," unllifthfel; ffvewllfistlgdfgggir fz:;'l;l3'u9::':3mg:ufe'5::g9'l;ou1::: Boll, Mnthoaon I Foster Chas. B. MoQunid, B.A. of our food products; now it is a matter ill-lollt Huflg: mliw hay: magma. And he (om .-ta I mm” Elzloslly. They are largely tree of and prick complacency. That is m u''''''' u "' um” u 9'” 5L" of making them more 3099-Ssibh t9 900' ufiTfi'cl:I); ftenel. f.iI:l'eTI::fiid beemmore vinorea. P. pllllflo(!lIiI'Sic;llVhiC':I'r.:IgllIesdET:;'i medic".-W W meal J' mm”? Bhndntdl BrA' i sumers at home and abroad. than 11 IIlI'VlV0"- The shill ll William "'4 ""5 5"" Bren In I Commons examination HUnny,Up um". t m-m------rs , , , The population was cut to :1 last 1. far; . of the accountg, G. F. llutchaaon & so winner. three at the bl: - now or. my God. to find . am 1.: it never be thought um and NEW YORK M... g Th , ll 5- Flmelo Q-On 1-I-E I. o.nurcnssoN.no. Faces in the Vir inia De art nt 0 """'”d ""'" "ma "' " his been I comfortable. uncrltlcal '- " u” '' c""""' '33- 53 Grim! It Dlll 53” g p me f route betw Lo A 1 to the wlnterlnl around! It ArIlI- 0 chm 0' Wmmv ""1435 Ml" "T group of retired polltlcans resting em ' n" " ""1 Education must be red enough these days. an n tloual wildlife refuge in The Pine baushs cllllllll hick behind a smoke-screen raised by hggg ;:',:'u:l:',""l'.':"a:n'" wd” Auk” 3'' Gm”! LLE '1' A- 0"'"'a'9"v 3-0 It seems that since 1943 an Elementary g”.;.'”m'";:"n: gm! '”3j or dJf:i,',li:'m"'f2 mchm bud. ffgggllflbglzrcalilgmln ll 19': nesday. Three U. 5. Mr erorcd 1” ad-Td K D” an m K”. IT School text-book, which contains state- ball hurl. eral cibmetmlnlster bui”I.l:llIleVer ?,'.?f;&e:.,'.:e'.::bnf:L” gm 5- wmh” 331599 LL-E m':&."' '1' G''''"' 0'0” ,1 ments and inferences definitely inimicai to 1"" t""'" """'- ""9"": "W W p g;-;dtg;dv-gfgtgvmlgg ggllglgn he and of 4 mm o'3n.mu. ”un'Tfo' '”"" "" "' """"' ” free enterprise. has been in use. Sample of they In W '':W''" '"”"e "' '"”''1'”"v sive arty. the liveliest rorclereii ';"",mf.',,:,":,'i',,i? "” ' mm Pam" 3 5391"" Caries. s. statements: "Capitalism is based opon the ,3 -....,,.u .f,','.',,'.,, , ,,,,.,..,,,m 533;. n nollllcs in another sense 'L an a Non Satin mu. om. nun nu. use "maple "f "mm m the ,,”w"," mm" .,...,' Th; mu in winter in our silver .,,".',"f,,”;',',',',",",'f"c,f,':,:'.'P””t' '-SJ. BRAN'l'1l'ollD.0nt. (CPl -A 1-.. lfatbuon. Pulse 8 ' 3- 1- lhbon. 3.0. E L than service to the people ; The de- ,3, . M... an ':":gu.. duction of 54.: per cent in dental - obon ............................--""'”' ' ' M of th 1 3,0 1 ' mg sun. .ala cm on silver moans. """"" ' 40"” ll 3" Ailtllool clllldr in - - TOR pe ence ea reruponcapita te .n.cu'-'.hf.d&.m.aWbaethecommlttoawo1lldaboosa,uh.. mag” an Grllklltuot . CHIROPRAC to reduce him to.a servtle status." There ' . ' ” Tm '”' 9"” I"'''- "3 "'3' start of water fluoridation mar t"""T"T"'T'lT""'TT" II . catttnglnlhalvvcrluleatledlsrlm . -l.A.MaoGulpa Dr. .l.(hraoI aremanyothersln thesamegeneralvelmm II K0Wlnr.myG0d-lofllllllltlrlonoccadonwaa asrcwas-dlnato,mf,':'. ,j'3..;”"”'::i'dbg.,g.nu.mnug.m,u,. llamas! 911543 Apparently, it was only recently that the T "l..,,",t. v -3". run: Mlnrlsua.In "spirit." '5' mi” : load at the an i meeting of 'fT'”'”f'TTT”t"T:Tm- , ARCH"-EC-f Governor of the State found out about and '------t-t- . . no 6' 5' o 34-: G the book and ordered its recall.. Now, 11.. Ag. 0” 5”” nun--in. oialuaa .'uytu."a.u' c.'. ' there is a great public outciy; and avery- ct P.l.l. Dial ml bg A llavo Your (notice. g hm" : body in the department is denying any re- 1 Y "I ... r m L." 3 &- u. . I, "H .. aponaiblltty for its issuance in the first '::.".. " ;u',, u,".",."". ,.,' n , mi nny mun!” I CHARYERED Ace ' Ts place. It seems -incredible that a-book n I then. not at Mum. 0.” A" which Is plainly Communist-tinged could -""' """'t"" "'” "" "mm om” l aoo. l stay in use for 12 years without arousin aopammc Tupi :-3.. T" ":"ml-pk" m" . "'''' ""' A n""""' t i "” '7' ugy'mbnc '.nym.: hm::nms:I?1o':Inwua; I” all yon. : B clilanu-upaool-i IITVI-WAY r. Av.-1