Ti-IE cuanoim. ( Iicilninva sodium time In iobmu In no cigar- oiic. It's this ooiinoiion of time in iohtm iii! radio: a Iudiiugkn to mill. so ilimi say. so nollwo dff THE 5 I I! ' .90 7.91204 r- efA.s'yX D7-CIGARETTE! . NORTH MILTON INSTITUTE The July meeting of North Mil- ton Institute was held at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Coles on the evening of July tlth. Fifteen members and several visitors were present. Minutes were read -and approved; sick committee reported three cards sent. and presented a bill of 51.50 for parcels sent for shut-in Sunday. A bill at 532.80 for hall curtain was also present- glt was moved. ceconded and car- ried that these bills be paid. Red Cross convenor reported eight pair children's stockings and one sweater sent in. Correspondence included receipt from Red Cross. a thank-you note. a letter annoucing that chest X- ray would be at the school on the evening of July 12. and a letter from the J. W. Windsor Co. re- garding the purchase of cans. Mrs. Garth Hooper. Mrs. Robert Carter and Mrs. Chester Matheson were named a committee to see about this matter. Mrs. Lindsay Colcs was ap- pointed a delegate to the annual convention. other delegates to be appointed later. Next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Verner Coles when lunch committee will be Mrs. Brenton Colcs. Mrs. Eric Coles and Mrs. Gordon Rodd. Lunch was served by hostesses and committee. and a social hour cnjoyed. equitable rates. . 3": .':i.'.::.."""-.......... Toioma w. loni i -a. anon. an aura Pnmc Ann ILAND MUTUAL PI DE INSURANCE C 0 M PANY ESTABLISHED I665 MUTUA . SERVICE aassi-:cuRi'rY IT'S nor woimi THE msx How protected to your home against all fire dame e? "Get all-round protection NOW! Be safe against ire -louea with our fitted-to-your-needs coverage. Low, op. mm L a. 3. aoanmiou. lcniail oi.i.r.r'oan mu-son. sun- I 0. la ,o.aaivr.4oaumuwn Rig lo (IAIalaAl'l'.- Walling- MIi'tYIlIgH8l'k I7 VIOLITII Imlhlila DUNN continued in know a ludden thrust: of thonkfullneu that they bod had no ohildrln. He had taken for granted her right 00 Valeria, I-lad auppoacd she must know what she was doing. And Valerie had been little more thin a stranger to him; an lnarticulato shadow with down- cllt eyes. who, appear-yd for brief visits in himhotiac. and went away lilo cyaa was now caught by a riot of color behind a plate glass window. He pulled around a corner and parkod.his car. - They coma out an hnurlater and piled boxes in the nimble. Valeria had insisted on carrying them. she wouldn't trust. them to be de- livered. she felt even now that there must be some mistake, and that it she took her eyes off the things they would be aura to vanish "I never saw so many at once. might. dresses, three suits. and four coats. besides hats and all the root," she said as they drove away She knew a spasm of what Ellen had labelled "common sense.” "whatever are we goingto do with all the clothes 1 have already?” Mark lighted a cigarette and waved the problem away. "I'll bet Mrs. Banwood knows some needy souls. She looks as it she would. If she doesn't. there are always people who-well. look out for people--" "I know-tho salvation Army." said Valerie. "But probably Mrs. Banwood will fix it. Housekeeper: are clever. arentt they. "Are they? My Icquaintancc seems to have been limited. Your mother picked Mrs. Banwood off a bush somewhere. I wasn't. crazy about her at first. but now I believe she's good for me, she takcs me down. If she looks at me long I begin to wonder if my face is dirty. or if I have acaterplllar on my collar." Valerie giggled dclightedly. she knew Mrs. Banwoods effect on one. ”5hc's only my second-I mean housekeeper,” she explained. "so you see I haven't: had much experience either. There was one at school-all sharp-" "All sharp?" "All. But specially her eyes and nose and elbows. We never knew much about her. If the girls met her in the halls. they ran. we hover knew why we ran. We just. did. so of course Mrs. Banwood seems pretty mild to me." "I dare say she is really," said Mark. "It's probably my guilty conscience." Mark headed for his factory next. morning. He had. he said. 1.0 show up at least for the day. be- fore they went. adventuring. He wondered a bit uneasily what Val- erie woulddo without him. It was the first time he had left her. He put it to her at breakfast. but she told him solemnly that with her old things to transfer to Mrs. nanwood. red new ones to pack, and the dogs to saw stood- bye to, the day would be hardly long enough. He left her standing out on the wide steps, the morn- ing breeze in her, hair, her right hand raised in a queer little saluto as he wheeled his roadster around the curve of the drive and was gone. He canted the picture with him with an odd sort. of icmotion. She looked small and somehow valiant under the great arch of the door- way. He was in the process of finding himself. as Valerie was. Getting his bearings to sail his, course alone. welxhtcd I bit with responsibility. Being a father. he was findinguwas nothing to laugh oil. Tho house frightened Valerie I little. for the first time since El- len went. She ran upstlin past her mother's sitting room. bright with chlntz and books and flowers. It's very brightness was I little barrlfying. There was a curiously suspended sensa about it. as if it war; 1 port, or picture waiting for Ellen to come back and give it life. With Mark there. everything that wasn't part of him faded. Now that he was gone. her mo- ther seemed everywhere. Her chil- ly voice came faintly. clipped and precise reciting what nice girls did and what they didn't do. What they thought and what they didn't. think. It was strange about Mark. in less than a week he had become the person she had known but in the world. Was it always like this is you exchanged a mother to! a father? What. happened when you had both? The thought. of Mark made her worm and hoppy. she tried not to think of Ellen and of Ellen's ampty rooms. shot went. into her dressing room and opened the big closet to pan: final sentence on the solemn drum in an orderly row on their hangers. It hardly seemed poul- blo ms was about to wipe the Dllco bare of them Ind 30!": All over Ilaln. she pulled down the things. oe- glnntng with the ones she special- Iy dullked and carrying them in to pile neatly on her bad. she looked over her ahouldor uvoral time! during the pi-ooua. She had a vague tarrifying notion that soon- body wu watching her. It made her so happy to give away tho good and uuful things. it must be wrong. Then she remomborod Ilark. and tho hilarity of their shopping. Nothing Mark did could be so very wrong. And lurk bad W.C.T.U. V NOTES TIE LAIIAN AND 'l.'Ill AIIXDIOII PIOIBIH I! My D. (Tho Marltknc Baptist) Alcohol should need no definition. outstanding modical authority brand: it a progressive nerve da- prusant. an irritant. a habit form- ing drug with anesthetic oharacte iatlcs. Instead of stimulating. it deadcns the power of perception. A person who has been drinking bus a feeling of warmth. because the natural reaction to cold has been deadencd. It has a neat affinity for water and robs the moisture from body cells so that they do not func- tion properly. Put a moist piece of bread in alcohol and now how hard and dry it instantly becomes. The human brain is a nerve switch board. relaying manages to different parts of the body; when alcohol affects the nerves of the eye. colors become blurred and un- certain. and the red stop signal. is mistaken for green and a collision occurs; it minimizes distances with the same results. It slows up ones thinking and causes uncertain walking. Alcohol also decreases bodily resistance to infection and dimin- ishea the likelihood of recovery. It is also the direct cause of various chronic discaez. It is one direct or indirect cause of a large percentage of the annual death toll.. From 5 to ten per cent of admissions to mental institution: is caused by al- cohol; 96 per cent of those in our tails are there directly or indirectly from the effects of alcohol. and a very. very high proportion of acci- dents on our highways may be at- tributed to alcohol. The Alcoholic Problem we are facing is not so much the drinker: thirst for alcohol. as the seller's thirst for gold. Are we as Layman contented to sit back and annually have our Government balance its budget and declare a large surplus from the sale of alcoholic bever- ages? We create our own -' L " problem by our ,' ,, whereas the problem is more or less self curative as far as Laymcn are concerned. Must we. I ask. sell al- cohol to our citizens to successfully negotiate the affairs of our Marl- tlme Provinces? Pirohibltlon is the fundamental principle in all law relating to things that are socially harmful. oh. I know some people shy off when we mentions the word "Prohibi- tion." yet no term has been more misused. misunderstood and abused. All laws are either mandatory or prohibltory. They say to citizens "Thou shalt" or "Thou shalt not" with the latter predominating. The same relationship is found in the Holy writ and although we often there is nothing we can do about it. Personally. I believe Prohibition is the answer. It is increasing in popularity again in the country to the south of us. and I would ain- cerely . mmeud its favorable con- sideration by our Laymen as a solu- tion to the alcohol problem. stop the increasing case whereby men and women. both young and old. may obtain alcoholic beverages. Eighteen taverns in the city of Halifax, I am told. witness a mother with a child in each arm demand- ing that the closed door of a tavern be opened. so she may take her husband home; a recent occurence. The alcohol problem is further augmented by the attitude the Lay- men take toward moderation. The most dangerous person. to my mind-. in a community, is the one who lays he or she can take a drink or leave it alone at will. Many men and women have become drunkards thinking they can do the nine. And unfortunately moderation in our churches. Pity the minister who when ondeavortng to preach 1 Tem- peronce sermon has to gun into the eyes of one of the leading lay- men. knowing him to be a moderg. tlonist. True Temperance is making me. the room. Valerie jumped and confronted her. standing before the swaying gannents defensive)... "I-I'm afraid I didn't. hear you knock." she said. - To be continued the famous English" are resentful to our own hurt. yet 5 becoming alarmingly prevalent in i 50b is up to me. The Lie INSURANCE couriiiilias in Canada ondiholrltopruoniclvoa WORKING FOR NATIONAL PIOOlE5S p o" n IUILDING VIKSONAI. SECURITY Lzsos individualist!" I II N 0 reporters ever interview me. out lust din Ioawq figure every man should have his own opinions about; politics. foreign affairs. business. or what have you., "Take all this talk nowadays about old-ago benefit. for instance. That's something everybody wants. And) each man has a different idea of how much security wants and how he'll get it. "1 knowithero are . lot of old folks in this country one really need help. But while I'm young and earning good money. I figure the big part of my own security-building "So. I'm hanging on to all my life insurance and adding to it whenever I can. It gives me and my family protec- tion now -- and a better income for the future. .415! it's all planned the way I want it. o l'"Wiiat'l&Jy relying on life insurance for my futur-Sp l iaacurify, I know exactly where I stand. My life policie. are gilt-edged in any weather. I know just how mucb' they're going on pay off - and when; t :'That'I the wu I like it. "Maybe that makes me a rugged individiia-li;t:'. But N it does. there are millions of others like me. Becausg .moat Qangdiuu like to do things on their own 1'? life i If your lervfce'T.':"!oaap you moot your mum lnancflf mm mm your life underwriter. Ho talus a 1.. u in your ,. , that must be considered in building a sound lifa insurance programme. His services provide another great advantage of aoobiru ucurity the lilo Inouunoo way: urvac you through I trained ' the fact! J deratc use of that which is not harmful. and totally abstaining from that which is. Knowing Al- cohol to be what it is. and as de- scribed in the first part of this talk. the alcohol problem would be solv- ed it Tnie Temperance were ob- served by every Laymcn. Student Drowns In Labrador KINGSTON. 0nt., July 8 (GP)-The body of Albert Vernon Gorlctt Jr.. who drowned in Labra- dor. was flown here today for urial. The 19-year-old Queen's Um- verslty student. son of Prof. and Mrs. A.. V.. Corlett. had been working with a summer survey party. He drowned while acting as lead man for a cable-laying gang Ilrge Refusal Of Peace Petition IONI:-ON. July 29-(Saturriaylo (Routers)-Two leaders of the Church of England today urge: Britons to refuse to sign the Cmnmunlst-backed "peace petit- ion." Dr. Oeofn-ey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury. said in the Canter- bury diocesan notes that some clergy had asked him for advice Labor Party as "a Communist campaign originating in the Com nform." To Diicuss U. S. Arms Assistance WASHINGTON. July 20-(APl-- A huge increase in United . States arms aid for foreign countriou re- ported to be as much as 04.000000 - comfort-in-action troimra W I h BAKE nouns tack... . Ltincioiio b;v;ndm Craftsman inma 'varletyTt.iiIo;:idtiahii fabrics. A natural companion. to Daks Slacks; i 000-will be discussed with remo- cratic and lumiblican Congression- about the petition. branded by the . al leaders at a conference here Monday. President Truman. already, firin- ly on record about the need for stepping up the common security program of non-Cotninunict count.- rlea. will lay the projected increase before the lawmakers in the pres- ence of State secretary Dean Acheson and Defence secretary Louis Johnson. It would augment the :1,2m.aoo.- ooo authorization already approved by Congress to furnish arms dur-Jo mg the current fiscal year to the countries abroad. 3.000 VVILLIAM SMITHS LONDON - (CP) - A card in- non. dex containing l8.000.000 name: has been complied by Britain's general post office. to keep track of holders of national savings cer- tificates. Included are 6.000 Wil- llam Smltlu. 3.500 William Jonas and 3,500 John 5.500 John Smiths.- M4-M. Big Transport Prepares For War BOSTON. July 20-(AP) .. Tm U.S.S. Librn. big attack transport. was tnkcn out of the "mothhnll" fleet here today and the task 01 Prcparinz her for weir service lw. zun. An auxiliary CBFEO-i'ii.'.lIL'l1 ship. she is 459 feet long and has a tonnage of 6.000. OUT OUR WAY BY J. K. WILLIAMS f l ,1 Wliilmt. '1'!” I. Iltu W: I ill lyluiylullla ' '1 . illi " if ixltw ilhi N , .. in I. xi; yluii WELL. Eveizv no-sv KID cogvtes ev WILL KEEP Pusi-mu' , . 'TH MOWER "nu. THE! 5155 ) ' ALL Tl-i'. PICTURES LGOT PASTED on THAT izer-.2 -LOOK wt-iAT"r' .- 'THNl'” K . i I i (.01. H ...u'.'”-,-f',gIz..i-ir..;:z,;,fr,, I ).",;,..,x ..,.lI.I.lz..',.... II." I P-' 5 .--.,.y x 6.1-.c.:.-i L; 'mo---sd....m...... M NITH FREE SAMPLE-SIZE STAKES MR- cosAi:rI voume Josr LEARNING, AND I'M so . uutuciot THE- -umenzes CALL LET'S e1'Aiz'r are OKAY! wen. ll: '0-its GENT REALLY I6 A LOIIOI YIIIOIII