l relationships 7h Guardian 'tCov1r- lnnu slum mus uh In luv" Pulslubod won wont do: nnrlnu ll ll: Pnnco Sln-ll. tau-luutowu. P l!:.l.. by an momma Company hid M King st W. Tnroulo. . Ilonueol Office. m Lnlvcniu Town Bldg. Editor. I-Tull Waller Gonuu Innuar. Inn A. Burncll lumber Cund11nDa1'Lv Nowlvanel Publlnhnn lino Member oi TII1 Cundlln Pru- unmbor Audit Bureau of Circulation- lunch union 1! Summenlde. Huuuuue and ilbrrlnn Authorised on second Clan Mail by "ll Post Office Department. Otuwi. Kv Carr-ler lhorlnltetown Snmmenldr tum. upwhere UI PEI 89.00. Other U 5 IlZ.0lJ nu onnum jjvlll on an- Prorineu 1nl1 ”-TllI-ISDAY: MAY 29. ism Let Us Be Thankful We ought to be a little l( ss ill- clined to grumble about the frequent rains which have accompanied the backward Spring in this region. In- -leed, we should be thankful for them, considering I h e droughts which already this season have descended with burning fury. on m;my parts of the world alld to an uncomfortable extent on Wcstcrn t'anada. In Britain lack of rain is rapidly becoming an economic dis- aster. So far. there has been only it little more than 3 inches. the small- psi amount since 1938. Potatoes and other Spring crops are suffering badly. Grass is drying out in the pa;-titles Some cities are allr-ttl)' ratlonlni: precious water supplies. One re:-crvoir with a capacity of al- most A billion gallons is empty. LV;.lrItlliL"? have gone out to several lnrlustrial centres that unless es- lrrnic economy is practised. and the drought does not lessen. there will soon be no water for any purpose. A similar condition prevails over a large part of Western Europe. What llould these people give for rain two or three times a week? It is too early to say whether or not the dry conditions will spread to this part of the world; but cer- tainly the possibility exists. Mean- while. let lis be thankful for the rains that have fallen so generously to water the soil and fill the wclls. Too much is an inconvenience. bllt except when it. develops into floods -which. thank God. do not often fall to our lot---is infinitely bfvtter than too little. A Neighbourly Gesture Four young priests. natives of st Province which has supplied per- haps more than its statistical sllare of vocations for the. propagation of the faith under the various Chris- tian traditions. said their first so- lemn masses Sunday momitll: i" their respective parish churches among their lelatives and friends. To each one. and to his family. it was an occasion of joy and gladness. It was an occasioti. too. of public in- terest. as cvidelicerl by the goodly number of (Thristians of other tradi- tions who wero present. to join with their Catholic neighbours in doing honour to the newly ordained priests ---and. even more important. to lmll reverently in R solemn net of praise 1nd thanksgiving. There was A dark day in the when this sort of neighbourly ges- ture on the llilzliest, plane of human would hardly have Sn perhaps, despite the cleavages which hinder the Christian ethos from dninfl 1'5 maximum good in the world. there in 3 growing conviction that the things which divide Christian from Christian are not so strong anti p()wCl'lLll as the things which unltt" them with cords of mutual respect. and understanding. It is unlikely that the day will ever come when absolute llniformity in mattcrs of religious dogma and ecclesiastical order will dominate ,Cbrlstian faith and practice. It may be that lb? more zealous proponents of the ecumcnical idea are expecting and asking too much. It will be enoutlit if men and women of different. tradi- tions. each group according to its historic convictions and interpreta- tions. ncknowledge freely with good- will the strength and beauty and good faith of the other's heritage. Pelulant Words Secretary of State Dulles has done it 1311:; For 1 seasoned. or at but experienced. diplomat it is nmozlng how often he allows his tongue to run ahead of his thinking. When the Egyptian Government an- nounced its intention of granting do Iocto recognition to the Government of Communist Chino, thus following the umnplc of Britain. he declared past been possible. i tprolects l 1-. 'TL.... 1-1:. - cu. , with its plans to help build a dam on the Nile for Egypt's benefit. Isn't 111 this the height of folly? Almost anyone would say that 1 country's independence includes the right to make what treaties the gov- ernment may think wise and neces- sary. No country is independent that has to obtain the consent of another power before formulating its foreign policy: as Premier Nasser will find out to his cost once he gets deeply involved in ”friendsbip" treaties with the Soviet Union and its allies. If the Egyptians. after seeing what has happened to other satellites. are fools enough to sell their indepen- dence for Soviet protestations 01 lricndship. it is certain that no oilf- sidc prcssui'c. short of bat". will be able to save them from their fool- ishncss. If filr. I)ullcs' petulant manner in this instance had the slightest chance of wliatiizine the Egyptian (;m-pl-nmentl: policy, there. would of course be some sense to it. although even then it would not tall.V Willi Pic-ltlclit lt;lS0llh()lVCl"S recent state- m.-H; llmi mini now on American foreign aid wil not be based 00 P0ii' ll.-at ('rlllx'lfllIl'?ll.l0li5. But it hasn't any -llllll challrc. as Mr. Dulltps must l(llt)ll full well indeed. it is almost t-crl.uu in drive I-Egypt and probably the other Arab states further and further under the domination of the Soviet l'niou: which. ostensibly at any l.llv', i- precisely what Kit. mlll.-: flows out it ant to come about. Andi! the f'.nltcd States. out of pique with F'reniic.r Nasser. titlrslfi huild the dam on the Nile the Rus- sians Hill----fillfl zlutlly. Why Not The Maritimes? "Those Liberal members at fit- tana who represent. Maritime rou- slituttncics.” says the Toront.o Globe and Mail. ”must feel very uneas.V about the lavish assistance the Gov- ernment proposes t.o give Trans- (laliada Pipe Lines Limited. llere is an American-owned company. HP-l tip for the purpose of supplying Al- bcrla natural gas to Ontario and r,)tiebcr. To help it in doing that. lltlawa is prepared to lay out some- thing like fElt30.0()f),00(l. But when the Maritime Provinces ask Ottawa for help of a similar nature. it slants the door in their faces." It cites par- ticularly the complaint of Mr. A. J. Brooks. Conservative member for Royal. New Brunswick, with TPERM to his Provinceis power ptt0.lN'i Fil Beechwood. which Ottawa rlcrlittrtti in any way to assist. This point, is well taken. And as the Toronto paper points out. there is it simple method by which Ottawa large-scale development in the ”have-not" Provin- ces. Let it set up 1 fund of perhaps 1. billion dollars for this purpose. in some tgascs. the money would be loaned to Provincial (jovernment:-' at low rates of interest; once. paid back into the fund. it could be loaned all over again. In other cases (for ex- ample. higliways and conservation worksl repayment would nol, be re- ouired. The Dominion Government. taking the project concerned as A public service. would pay part of the cost in the form of an olltrieht zraut. Political 5tl'SlW our Toronto contemporary. should compel Ottawa to move in this dir- ection. But there are better ones. Assistance of this nature is worth while for its own sake. It would mean a wide use of natural resour- ccs. It would stimulate and broaden opoprtunities for private invcst- mcnt. It would mean higher rev- enucs coming in to Ottawa-onfi fewer doles going out. Most import- ant of all. it would strengthen Con- federation hy narrowing the great difference in living standards be- tween some parts of Canada and others. - EDITORIAL NOTES According to former President Truman who has been touring Italy. the largest Italian city in the world is New York, with its 3 million ('.lll- wns of Italian extraction. Mr. Tru- man said he likes most of them-- lncluding. presum.-ibl.V. lit? "W R" publicans among them. I I I can assist reasons alone. That secret. urge in so many of us prompted 1 man In North Bergen. New Jersey, the other day to bor- row 1 sledge hammer from 1 con- struction worker. With it be smash- ed 1 puking matter into bits 1nd sped off on 1' motorcycle. saying "rve 1tw1y1 Iymht! to do this!" wttnevn of the some clolm they won Itutloll tint thq funed to not is nun:-otion num- yg, . .... um.m.mg.4.. A A A PUBLIC FORUM ; This column In nprn In tho dis:-uo Alon by eorrrvtpniidvnlx of questions nl Intzrul. Tau tnmnmn -inn ul nooesurlly rndnna nu opinion of correspondents. AGAINST l”LL'l)Illl):lTl0N Sir.-l'lirtlici' (ll'sf'llS5l0ll of Dr. F. S K. .llaclllll.'in's answer to l my letter appcarllle lll your Pub- L ltc Forum. May 3 would lcorl us Inn far afield and would be of little interest to ymir reader'- Sluilltlcatil. limit-tt:i' oi lhc at Itludc of propuneltt:- is Dr Mac- lVllllan's remark that the ”lsulat- ed cases of fluorine poisoning from bculutr;:h" a woman who sllffcrcrl sl'VPl'Plll is inconse- oueullal comptlrctl to the claims for safety bclni; made hv usuu: m.'ls:- sI.'lllslit- its statistical study :l1tliou;:h pulillshcd in the highly aullltirilative .luui'lial of the American Xlcdlcnl Association is based on an unprolcn premise that if cltroiuc kulnc) tllscusc. ad vaticctl cnou;:ll to be detected by urlnc cxuininnlion. is not found. there can he no fluorine poison- ing. A critique of this study has been presented to the Mayor of New York and was subsequently puhli bed In the fionercsr-ulrtal fierurd dated l"ch l-l 1935 Want: A lll7i lily nun studies lllfll('JliP that there is a large lull undiagnosed series of cases of chronic fluorine poisoning -u everv cttv from fluoride: ttliethcr they nrcitr nat- urnllv lll drutl-inn watcr artlllctrillv nrlrlr-rl The results of or arr , this study will he made available . to the profession in clue time However. even if there were our case. this in itself. should . hr sufftcicnt reason to use safer t ndmutislcrln: "unr- rlttldrcn imlivtduallv There are at least a dozen mcth- ads. cg. capsules. drops, bottled writer cnntainlnt: fluorides. pillx, lozenges, etc. for those, who are convinced of it-- benefits. lhus pcrvuittinl: frccrloni of choice I ant. Sir. clc. til-'.0Rf7l". L WALDBOTT. M ll Detroit. ilich. methods of i rl :5 s ln OUR YESTE-RDAYb ltrmu Tbc Gualdian Files 23: YICARS ACO (.'i1.1v 29. 19.11) .llunl upinci . nl Gcncrall: ilcllalu at ll.-ldla l,'tu- Vrl'stlVlll1'. tear arc Ml” l-'. Mrnllllau flllfl llmmlri f' Frn.cr. Miss .'"l"lllll:1n lwlonzs to Albcrrv Plains. P.I".l. and received the award in lfouscholrl Econonurs. rnlrltt--. of lnurlctl at our of 'l'hc loll-tcr the lsl:lud good. while north aiilc I.;i-.l ucrk a for cnrllusll ucrc thc S4Illl'l- uliat'lr- flslunu off this roll of at the present is TFTV we understnnrl the rnlcltcs are extra tztmd Mr Vlcrt-r Butler l'(-lcris Rood. rec:-llcrl .1 letter from a larlv in Frill filter. Mass. with the following: ''I found the pots- loes that vnu grew lmnrkcrli and can say they are the best pota- toes l cvcr fouled l was icry guypfikbfl will cut only Still 'I bushel vhilc l rt-"id ' 4” I l'l"fk TFN vvrsns um (Mn 29. mm the taruuls a u Rl"l)l'F'rfllal.Il'Ps nl co-nnernltvcs Assn!-i:vlinn'-' crmm linitmk tin-nuclmtlt the Prm-mce --tlhcrcrl at the (her- loltelmtn Hotel to honor Dr .I T Crntr-an ulin is lrnvimv -horllv to make his home in Texas. I' S A Klr IS the Prmtncr F Ward. uhn l'ilTlF In three and a half years am an acting inspector of poultry markcttm: and produc- tion service: is le-ring for Ol- lawa on Frldnv vvhl-re he will act as '-Pfllflf inspector for East- on Ontario. ll'.I.l. T0 ILS. FIRM nAMIl.1'ov rcpt. nlru-inn of Canadian Faunors Limited hlvo approved sale of n two-third in lutst tn the company to lhp cm. fonu Packing Corporation. to was announced . XI. ofwbicll than on 3.1!! uhtonctlnsvm Dewitt Moms 3 A column: slut-0 1nd two Ijhusoo. gs l llir fintrtnnr l zr um .--. .5 1. H617 Y Britain's Bombers By William f'ollt'tcn:lx Ht--I-iiii'3 next generation ti! llnlnhcr: will be in the 2.'l'lll ulltll class and llldeed must be if 'llet' air to be clothed with am urn- spcrt of evading tlic littcni-pnn' nl l9ti5. It will be ten ye.'l.s be fore they reach the Sqtinilrmt: of Empire Air Forces but nl:o:idy specifications of R.A.F. t'ctuure- mcnls ltavc been studied by in- terested manufacturers. filuch design work has llccn rmtr on various types which firms thought might suit the Royal Au Force. Some priparcd drawings using 24 engines; others for alr- craft constructed of steel. all of them produced ideas for ft:-ul ttrst' flying. some rlcsuznctl Blun- bcrs with mere c.lil.s for vision and tllr crew totally rncloscrl for Lind mes made entirely by inslrunlcnts and control from the Control 'l'nw- or. This tins to L-cl over the pro- hlem of the 'llCRl barrier for the blasts of hot air which ntuuld reach the crew at such speeds might roast them. Peter Twisx of the Fairey Aviation Co. remarked on this heat when he flew at over l ll00 mph lately in the P'.ilrcy Tlcltai and I recall watclnug the high speed runs at over 700 mph of the Superlnarme 'Swltt in Libya two years ago when a spec lal refrigeration jacket was de- signcd for the pilot.-by Farnbor- nutzh 'hoffins'. THERMAL BARRIER Thus the sound barrier” ctlcnunl cred at. speeds of 740 mph at sea level is already behind us. it is i no longer the threshold of unex- plored territory. Development is sn rapid that we stand today on the threshold of the thermal bar- rier. Intense heat is experienced as aircraft approach speeds twice that of sound. due to friction be- ing caused by passage of the air- eraft through the air. At tremend- ous speeds this gives rise-in the case of meteors and shooting stars to lncnndescencc. Titus the next generation of Bombers which Britain. Anicric-1 and Russia are all designing must not only be in the 2.000 mph class to count as modern and ill for battle by I905 but must provide means of refrigeration fnr crru and must be constructed of heat resisting mattrials. At 2.000 mph or even at L500 mph-these pro- blems of the heat barrier are be- ing experienced Jane Was First Fredericton Gleaner If asked to choose the quotation from English literature which has caused the most embarrassment to the most people. we'll be inclin- tvl In pick a sentence from Jane Austen's ”North.1nger Ahbcvf a work which lls author completed in I790. allhouzh it was not act- unlly published until lfllfl Describing her heroine ill the first chapter of the book as a bit of 1 tomboy. Miss Austen says of her: It was not very wonderful that Catherine should prefer crick- et. base ball. riding on horseback. and rum-line about the cottnirg. at the age of fourteen. to books." We call attention to the words "base. ball." -- Nnw. the awkwnrtl thing about this seemingly innocent sentence is that. according to the authoriz- ed version of the history of the sport. baseball-both the name and the game were invented at (looperstown. New York. in llifltl by one Abner Doubleday. who later became a general in the Ameri- can Army. It can be seen by I t'0ml'3l"!"'V of dates that the discovery of Miss Austen's description of her nlhle tic young heroine was just sboul the most. ernbnrrhssinn thing that ever happened in the history of either literature or sport Attempts have been mndr to show that the some popular H1 ltlth century England was some- modern ll h.i. -iluwul) llreu Lil?-)l.Pll ital the .-it-in (utup:-lily of Maln.liest- er and t'.'ln;nl.t has secured a con- tract Ittl tonstructioil of some of flrlttun - next generation of Bom- licrs 'l”lirn- delta winged tVul:nn' llontlnvr '.'or.s into service with the R A If ill .1 lcw months: ll is tn the wt mph class. It will thin. rm--css a useful operational life til '61! tears before the 2.000 mph Bollthcr - now on thr draumg lioard.-.-is in use MOST P()Wl.'JIlFUL JET The world's most powerful let engine-thc. De Havllland lGyron'- Illa)” well form the power plant his or eleltt of these will provide tlnllulcrous power. In 4 yc.'-rs time when the first of such engines are rcotnrcd for the new flonihm-5, thcv will probably he developing up loy2.':.000 lbs of tlirust prl.-.'er'. tl-itlssia is already using lfl.000 lbs thrust lets us witncsserl in her air lincr which flew to Loildont lletrn:cratItui iackcts rvs:-ntblc ll cont htltlt of pipes tltrouuli which iced water circulates lo cool the pilot. of the sllpcrsontc Fighter. The 2.000 tnpll Bomber must no further and refrigerate crew t0l"l'l- nil Wllclhcr the newest Boomers. il.VHtS at '2': times the speed of sotlnrl will be delta unmml nr tau first' lvpes is still a guarrlcd sec rcl But it is alone tltesp lines. that fl?!-liners are thinking nnrl are tm-klllil: their tasks on lllr :1.-aw. tut: hoards It ulll hr llltill llclmr lltc llrsl of these fttttlrt:.l tlc:.ieu;.pcl'ltaps the last manned Bombers before the Guided Missile takes over cont. hlelely will be seen flying expel-l. mentally and lfltii bc'ore any Air Forces of any Pnwm-5. um hope in lnrin their first Sruiadrons But it should not be later and Britain is Pi?-1ri.V Eniltr to be in the van of this development. Sioncls Firm -Giving for view receding roast of 'i":nit-uttler llcralrli p 'l'llc ('ahuwt of .1 ff:ui.'uli:tn pm.-. tnce cutinnt he llbcllczl. A group cannot sit-.1.-tn. an ;.,-lmn gm. Mm. l ant". when lllc :.lory rellg-cl: nu ll1fllllfll)a'llt- That is lllr decision of a Protulcc of Ncwfountllrlnd - cnllrl III the c.'lst- of an nlleiuplml lihcl suit uualnsl the St .lnlln's Evening Tclclzram The case was ' dislntsscrl This lullmlcrl nu exttnnrdtliarv sq-tulcucc nl rvcnls uluclt reveal. Nl that Pl'r-mlcr .lnc Sroallwood b:-il twtrc slopuerl 5l(ll'Pl'll&t'll'lf'I1l'. In the paper hecntlsc of adverse criticism The Iivcnint: Telegram rinhtly refused to consider alter- inl! its lone. l'i'h.'lt ls morc. the paper no- llotinccs that It rclu-.c.s In rnrry any more provincial :trlvrt'Ilsing . except III case of Nncrgcticy. lr- l l is. r f Fm information wnu fllld Rant-A-Cu lystul Md . III! VQL ldnttul. h & hllltty. 1500 St Cntbc Frnnohuo ( --' foracavjw 1 ti :7 Medically Speaking By H1:-mun N. lundeun. II. D. SHOULD PATIENT BE TOLD? Would you want your doctor to tell you if you had cnncer? Most patients would. according to 1 survey conducted by Dr. Otis R. Bowen of Bre .e... Indiana. Reporting on his survey in an is- sue of "Mxlical Times." he says 96.6 per cent of the 471 persons answering his detailed question- naire sald they desired to know the truth. A greater percentage of those in the 18 to 35 age group than in (he 65 to 90 group said they would want to know. Anyway fir. Bowen concludes. a doctor an seldom ' ol 1 patient into believing he does not have cancer hen he actually does. at least not l'or very long. MILK ALLERGY Allergy to milk may be the cause of chroni' rectal bleeding. according to two doctors in Bom- ty. India. Rectal bleeding of 1 38-year-old woman was stopped. they report. when her diet was restricted in fruit juice and water. whenever she was given milk. the hemorrhaging began again. Then they desensitized her by starting with 1 single drop of milk and gradually increasing the allowance by one drop per day. until she was finally able to take the necessary amount of milk without any untoward results. Bothered by temporary night blindness while driving when you piss an oncoming t:ar'.' Your Iroublc probably Is due more to poor eye habits than to vitamin deficiency. Watching the right edge of the road. not the oncoming car. prollalf. ill help a great (lea. SEVERE MYOPIA Glasses. incidentally. cant cor- rect all r .es of nlyopia or near- siglltedness. While they do take care of the vast majority of such cases. an operation sometimes is necessary in severe r yopia. Excessive length of the eyeball is the chief problem in near- slulltediless. This operalton ulucli 11- rniclv performed. slmrtens the lPll'.1lll bv clltfng a segment around the en- tire periphr.,. of the eyeball. Join- ine the two halvr lnl:('lll':r re- duces the lcnctll QUESTION AND ANSWIZR A. D.: is it safe to use corn- starch instead of talcum powder for the babl' Ansucr Yc-. no tun-in can re- sult and u timid. Vfrv well in ear- lain liistmlrcs. 7?0e5 6;m EX LIBRIS Spaccslup of mine. by supersonic speed Contracting lung millennta to mere 2 bolus. 0n hoarding which I am superbly freed To walk strange fields and gather stranger flowers: Brttgllt volume. you olllrllstamc all my dreams And without engine. fuselage or spars. or sticks. or cylinders or radar beams. stars Go. with my blessing. and sport my friend Wltll equal wonder to that world not known Outside your pagesl Wlllingly I ll'Bl'l- raue 4..HTlt3"Guuaian NOTES BY THE WAY" "Our Innguuo grows 1nd ex- pands." says 1 phllologlst. An 11(- unple of this is the word "love" which. 11 pronounced by pop- ular singers. has now expanded to about five syllables.-Edmonton Joumal some of the recent. level cros- sing deaths have been at. protect- ed crossings. Not even gates, lights or bells will pwtect a driv- er determined to be careleu.-Ob lawn Journal The American customs now clas- sifies our com-on-the-cob 11 1 veg- . etable. with 1n import duty of 7.5 per cent. But their corn-on-the-air pours in here duty free! How bout that--Ottawa Citizen The money and effort spent in in fuclng 1 graduate nurse never is wasted no matter how. after graduation, she elects to utilize her training. Whether actiiely caring for the sick or managing a home and children. or serving as a school nurse or a company nurse. the community directly or indirectly profits from her skills and experience.-Ottawa Journal Newfoundland is attempting to persuade tent-dwelling Indians to move into small wooden houses. A b90.000 as imale put before the Assembly is for that purpose. Most of the sum would be spent at the Labrador village of North West River where the Indians live In canvas tents across the "IVEF from the frame houses of the white inhabitants. it might be sug. gosted that if the Indians prefer to live in tents. why not let them? Were they not living in wigams and other primitive shelters for centuries bcfnore people of Cur- opean race came to North Anter- lca?--Sydney Post Record I Most parents wilhheartily ap. plaud the stand of five principals 0t Greater Victoria high schools against all-night uncltaperoned "tolltills nut" parties after the graduation ball Nobody begrudges the teenagers their ftln. but a cur. few of 1 or 2 am does not. seem unreasonable. Even that late hour -the closing-time of the recent Royal Roads dance-has caused considerable anguish to Victoria parents. who have had to wait up Until fl. 4 or even 5 o'clock in the m'JI'nItlS for adolescent daughters who ltave gone on to the local lukehox bone for post-party (951. miles Front the sheer h-am, standpoint alone. the all-ntglnigi-1. d"8ll0Il Party is nonsense.-Wlllni peg Tribune Burke Electric Authorized O Dealer Electrical Wiring g 1.nd Supplies Oil Heating Household Appliances Television DIAL 402T I 156 Great Goo. St. lend. Anrl lltuiutlllgly-I101 limiting the loan But not entirely shall I set you free I do expert. your safe return to me. Pearl Strachan llurrl ..:............ rcspcclivc of the party in power. "We are not. antllgnvcrnmenl. but anti some of the things the gov- ernment is dolua." said the paper Thus a newspaper stands firm agnutst the attempt of a !-2elf-ap- pointed little Caesar of Canadian politics to stuff his use into the mouths of editors By tlirse nieans the newspapers of Canada must make their voice felt. whatever the cost. agattl:-t any conspiracy in make them tools. RECAP STARTS BLAZE OIIILLIA. Ont. tCl"i - defective- recapped tire started 1 fire Mon- day which did SE00 damage to 1 ll'actor-lruller. The tire worked loose and started the fire which spread to the body of the flock. The driver w'n.-2 able to extinguish the blaze. VACA'l'lON..; renI1.vparkl'np :1-v TILDEN-A VIS on tCODMORE'S DRY CLEANERS Phone (In FIH7. Truman said in No. York as he prepared to sail for Europe that many of today's Am. erlcln leaders seem to be "aim. in by the smile on the face of the Kremlin." If so. we 1t ism know what's taklng them in. Sim mysterious is what took in Horn at the Potsdam Conference. 11;. miniscing abotill it in 1948 in Ore- gon. he said of Stalin: "I like old Joe-he's 1 decent fellow. But Jog is 1 prisoner of the Politburo. Hp can't do what he wants to."-1)e. ti-olt Free Press This month's award for mix... metaphors must go to Profegso, w-w- ROSWW 0' the Massachusetts Institute of Technolo . 1 leading American expert on the USSR Testifying before 1: (LS. Senatg committee. on the present. position in Russia, n feasor Rostow stat. od that the Soviet government wu faced with ”the coming home to most of certain chickens which they are still sitting on". om. wonders if these unfortunate chick. ens were the same ones that new counted before they were hatchpd -Edmonton Journal Today the fair sex finds wel- come in many lines of endeavor. and finds welcome within; the walls of many institutions. form- erly considered the prerogative of the male of the species. There is one notable exception-the bar her shop. We submit the propvygl firm that while hair-dressing par lors are for women. barber shop: are for men. and for men only We do not suggest we speak helcp for all barbers. it may be that they welcome their female trade But we are quite sure we do speak for the vast majority of male cus- tomers.-Brockville Recorder It Is grunled that the idea of Nova Scutia. New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island becoming one province is purely academic now. There is no harm. however, in surmise. One imagines easily the contest for the location of the provincial capital it theory or tlpecillatlon became fact. The tem- perature would be of 1 degree where no existing city would have a chance of acceptance. The Hip!- tal would have to be an entirely new community on the New Bruns- wick-Nova Scotla boundary. 1 50- 50 proposition on the line. or in P.E.I., with the little fellow mak- ing peace between his larger niegh bors.-Sydney Post. Record A. PICKARD & CO. LTD. PHONE 5541 COAL -- COKE -- OIL Hard Cool Briquots Dominion Coke Old Sydney Spdnghdl Acadia lnvorness Sydney Stoker Smithing and Charcoal PROMPT DELIVERY LOANS for things you need and wont 30'550IoSl000al Household I-tnann for my Worthwhile purpose. 11': the vny thousands of people ovary you get the oxtrs ash they need on forms they on nlord. if you luvs 1 study income. and you an moet the r1gul1r monthly pay- ments. you can borrow without mdorms 1t. HFC. llousalloin FINANCE W. I. Wlnobnkooopov '30 IVOQIOCQIQQ Mu V001. phone IDI7 . P.I.l. ...k.-.... -. &N8Ul.T: Clleooi FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS NYNDMAN 8: G0. LTD. Otaroxprlnoodovurthnoqsortoruolsoenturyoafltur once Undorwrlteru. is 1! your dl1po11l. (ZIAIIAHTITCIWN - IUIHIIIIDI - IDNTAGUI - ALIIITUN vr ......-........... .. ........O.. ...O........m.-..-.