luv. fiitutdiuu vurI Prince Edvard lsllld Liko The Dev w l. mum, Pubiixhu i... u... Ivlotletuwn, PE Inch crime: .v n no sin"... me i udv. :‘ lepvescnlud neuenhl, by [human Ne..p.p.iv . vending Service) Toronto .2. oniyeimy Av- pue seen, Menneil, a. imiuy 6.5‘742 u"ch. mi. sue... Vlnwwpl ins 7537) Daily Neasvapr‘r laneluhen immune... .nd the Canadian P'ru rte Cn'lldlhn E... i. mluuyely ennui. to m. i.. tor repub— lilorl hem... " Memhe. Canadian .6 .ll new! numuhe. edited to it e. n the Annotated w... e. Rem... It Funk Well... we. llFuhltlhld ovuv wellr day momlnu text-pl Sun tutuvy holiday!) .v to: PrinKl su... l , lholnxan Newlulperl Ltd All... Munlegue. u Cllhrlrl in y... In. .lee is th- leeel new. pueliuied heiein fight. or vepubllrlllen at lpetlal displkhal her-tr u... even... slum“... me. um eye. :5. pet mil by (enter it on . y... by ml or rural lame! .nd .ie.. not invited hy um... moo . ye.. oil lli'nnd .n. U y... in u.s. .nd elsewhere minis. a...» can. manwealth. l N... m. 7. Del Imgll ee ‘ Member u. en Bluest pv nl ; Diei's Deviou Government will proceed to one by s10 21 m Ill pens fare lilinisli‘l‘ Wedge hopes it may do following the announch boost in the basic old age security pen- liun, there is rn tinllht that plt‘SSlll‘e cueuluien s Trail ‘ Whether or not the Paar. rmth. as “'91- has applied in this direction at the closed yincial conference in Week, No doubt. eitl on: of the fedcrnlqlrn- Ottawa this lel'. that the Government is susceptible to pres- sure as indicated by the concession It has nlreadv made nilh respect to us, i old age p0 f Which brings Qditorial in the Sept. 6 esteemed Liberal rnnte Winnipeg FIT‘P Press. us to a leading i e of our mporiiry. the it was that trian Dietellbuker. according to this cuthorit . who iv... re.“ the allitution to hnve sponsihle for the Liberal commitment re the nld are pension boost implelnbntcd at this time and .‘tot later He seized ' on this to at a pres before his departure end the lliddle Enet making a pnliticdl L'l 'despol'utely" s conference for Europe . hnpiulz tn out of it for his nwn devious ends! ' 0N Pre knew that the contri had encountered crave THE HlPi As sees it. this diuholirul scllemer the Free hutory nlnn obstacles in Onmrio and Quebec. and saw his chance "to catch the Government on the hip. to make a temmmvv ‘lliunce with the Ne“ Ind present himself in Ible as the embattled the poor." Think of that. non: and aged pCl‘snll," we, ‘.’if he gives the matter ' Democrats his favorite champion of ! “Any poor are assured, a moment's thought, will realize why Canada cannot afford an immediate pen- sion increase. lackinl! a I'cheme to finance it." Diefenbaker left the contributory That man treasury ln Iuch disorder that it would he dis- astrous to think of such a thing. ‘.'Sensible Conselvatives thoroughly understand this." it srems: “but so... lam w... nape- 32an per l riot-ll. they will now pay for It through taxes. Where does Mr. Diefenblkcr figure in this deal? Nowhere. accord- ing to Mr. Pearson's explanation. But we bet the Free Press will not be satisfied. It will still have lts own dark suspicion that the Tory boss was at the bottom of it all—just us he was at the bottom of that “brazen bribe” of I causeway for Prince Edward Island which the Free Press, a year ago, denounced as the most outrageous political . commitment ever made by any gov— ernment leader since Confederation. i Since then the Pearson Govern- ment has indicated that it is con- tiutliltkv the causeway planning nperatinns, after satisfying it‘sell . as to its feasibility, and the Free Press has retired into its shell on the subject. But we expect another blast at any time. aimed to show ‘ that it's John Diefenbuker. isomer haw, who is still pulling the strings. In or out of office. he's always at his nefarious tricks! This foist- inp of a $l0 Liberal increase on our need pensioners will not be the last of his desperate ventures. Goodness knows what he'll be tip to next; but whatever it is, we may depend upon the Liberal organ in Winnipeg to spot it instantly. and l trumpet the news abroad. An Old Grievance An illfl grievance between Russia and China is in the limelight again. . China hits accused Russia of trying ‘ to subvert the government of part i of its outlying province of Sinkiang, l and of hiring thousands of Chinese workers across the border into So— ‘ riot tel-run ', It has been charged. in turn. with issuing l map laying ‘ claim to territory now inside the . Soviet Union. As relations between Pokiulz and Moscow become angrier we nlav export to hear more ahou: ‘ this long-standing source of trouble. It antidotes Communism and goes buck to the years following the Opium War of 1840, when the great pnucrs imposed a series of troulies on China which enabled them to carve up a lot of the coun- r ‘s territory between them. 700,» 000 square miles were annexed by Czarist Russia in this manner, near- ly half of whichjs still within the borders of the Soviet Union. When the People's Republic of China \\t inaugurated, it was laid down that the Communist govern- ment would in due course examine ant “recognize. abrogate. revise or renegotiate" unequal treaties which previous C h i n e s e administrations had been bullied into signing. Since then. the Chinese have negotiated frontier settlements with all their neighbors apart from India and the Soviet Uninn. They have sought, by force. a redrawing of their Indian frontier and are reportedly planning a further drive in this connection. I How long will it: he before they demand it return of Russia's vast. acquisitions in Eastern Siberia? No one knows, But we may assume that the thought has been haunting Premier Khrushchev‘s mind of late. This may account for his efforts to strengthen his ties with other Communist countries and keep tensions with the Western world on a minimum. For Closer Unity Five years ago. at the Common- wealth Trade and Economic Con- Iheir loader is not interested in facts: he is interested in politics." After a lot more to the same ef- feet. in which the any leader is dhided for having such a low es~ fimate of public intelligence, the ‘innipelz paper concludes: “if the Government has sufficient. couruge to stand by its policy it will find that the Canadian people resent: Mr. Diefenbilker’s attempt to play ’olitics of the most cynical kind with the human problem of old 489'" t This was just three days before Ihe Government found it didn‘t have a courage to act in any such men- et—if indeed it was I question of rage as our Libernl contempor- Iry maintains. E PEARSON VERSION—0n this point, Prime Minister Pearson is [untied to have the last word. Que. Doc, he told the Ottawa conference this week, said it was setting up its two pension scheme and “opting rut” o! the federal contributory lln. This would mean that Quebec would be making no contribution to hwmtional scheme. "If all con- flbutlom are not collected in all ominous." Mr. Penman emphasiz- II, “it would cleIrly be unfair to in people of other provinces to time. the additional payment to lawn out: of reduced con. u I no that Quebec by re- ntddl the Merci scheme Went to revise it. I ' i . an increase out. of 4: lmtnd of taxpayers #- 3 Damien couu-lbu. ‘l ference at Montreal. the Common~ wealth Scholarship scheme was con- ceived nnd details were worked out at the Commonwealth Education Conferenceheld at Oxford in July, 1959, This is the fourth year of the wheme'e operation, and we are reminded of it by an announcement: from the Commonwealth Scholar- ship Commission in Britain of the names of 32 Canadian who have been awarded scholarships tenabie in the United Kinlzdom. The students will be, leaving Canadl this month for one or two years’ studies at universities or other institutions of higher learn- ing. Subjects ranging from philos- ophy to physics are covered by the group of men and women from across Canada. Scholarships tenable In Britain are also heian awarded to success- ful candidates in nther countries of the Commonwealth. The majority of the awards are (iron to students of high intellectual promise who might he expected to make I nig- nlflunt contribution to life In their own countries on their return from ltudy overseas. L l i 0 I7 WWI/71 3, ”//////7 MW- . . i, ,..,,, we.) ‘ , t: :i .1 c N'“ so: warm». Mm. l: I Many Clues To Pancreatilis I] Dr. MI. I. VII Deh- xutiunmutiu. ul the plasma! ll Inflected when lever! plll mum in the up»..- ‘ehdnme. lull lo the I!!! M the mldllne. Th II plrflculnrly true when ll rldilm lo the blink Ind Io i. .l men. to sit nu. . leun forwlrd. Ind let out or bed .ua mlk lbouttue m... In . Itooved with... with l. e u d . premd lgllnlt tun Ihdumeu. Naulel u.u.lly l. pee-em. lend- lug to persistent vomiting. w. uld "let out of bed' he eel... attack. at .cut. plucre— uni. often occur .2 night. All too um. die bout tullow. . drinklnl .me or . hearty men. may perm. with thl. dllm’dlr . heevy drink... and the pun- m tlkel .- mu of . belt- in. . thellver.1'he .cut. at- ..ek l. extremely pulntul Ind liker Io were the old sunk lqu min. the pledle. 1n Ilddltiou. dun-em. difficult in relieve even wlth morphine o. u ther pllu killer. Al:th plncreltim .lm lever. time with guuuauu, or peptic ulcer. Thl. it likely to compile cue the dilgnosll becIule Ill these disorders produce mine- whul .lnillei- symptoms. nut . blond text (serum Ilnylasel ll posilive wilhln eight hours 0! the onsel of acute paucrestltll. Thi. help. .lugl. out the condi- uon nnd exnluin. why the test. l. .uggested in pain in the upper Ibdnrnen. Treatment at the infection in- uiie bed mt, plin lelllen. end NOTES BY AM I rock‘- nu I blIcI mum dirty-unwilli- bu! II doesn't lofl II dirty.— Gllt RI’DDI'III'. We cll't VIII! ulrlllm Illa belle! Mullunl. We will hlve to luv for them. Thlt l. why we woldd like to know c tly wh Dttswl ll up to. Al the moment the pun Rumble! In Iceberg of wuiel. only the tip my be leer. above Wlter.— Vlncouver Province. Pointers For THE WAY m elrl out In IIIIIEII new» ldlyl mu when two colllde it Is not In much ll! Ice em as a mercen—Bundnn Sun. A mum-l ufl'flol‘lflnl l... ex- perimented with courses "I French converlllinn to. its per. .uuuel .ud found them "lpecta- cullr.’ Any course til-t worked .vvuld be Ipectlzulll' contrast to the ulchiul at French in man CluldlIu .elioulu —ou.w. Journll. Khrushchev Hurry By All! Clo-dim Pm SM WrIIer Nikiu Khmshchev went blck to Moscow from Belll'lde helm- lug. but out his smile mull llldl lome prlvlle doubt]. Fm! of I11 beclnle me men It! nl vlllfiul Yulmllvil mull ve been Iomethln I u- millltivu. Only I few yearn Ilo Khnnhuhev wu using lame oi the "ailment words in Ill: 5% Vlet voclhuln'y to delcrlbe tho Yulolllv horny. Now III Wel- come: the prodilll Marshal llflnnhll Tito blck IA! respecta- ity. Mr. K it In expert I! elllnl his words Without giving lny outwlrd slgu that there In ' l e .Ioflv. but. his mun- cllilfiou wlth the stubborn man who Iuccredad ln stlriuz down Sullu must hlve had ‘1: Gail- ills moment]. And if Khrushchev Iucceedud in learning lnylhinl on his two~ week [our of Yugoslavia. lhI cl 5 Intiblollcl. Food II withhetd IA: rest the swollen and Infill-lied BADLY NEEDED YONDER OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Blinded War Veteran Runs In Toronto Against the background of the lung. some met death wi l haul ll"lld. The shrapnel blasted into cunning lt. Ma’ur E, Dunlap, ol hlI (are and m... bench ' Own Rifles oi clue l ing victim was unlinmied But h ‘ that lakeshure co appalling inudequacy of so many men in public lire today, Ottawans .re wateliing with proud hope one faruuay tam. paign in the Ontario pmvinnlel election. Thi. is the eeudiduy 0! Ed- ward Dunlop, seeking tn win the , new Toronto riding at r in... ‘ Hill This close interest tel ottawun. i does not he in distant Toronto. . hut in Edward Dunlap. who i. l well liked here and admired II A man who has much to contri- bute in public lite , The tall and handsome Ed ls wizardcd by noises. ‘9 Ottawa as u "local m “ who has gull! out into the world and .Ide nod. He wal born and raised in the nearby Ottawa V Illey town of Pembroke But college called him to Toronto. then the war pulled him to North Atrch and Britain. At the end of his war. a chnng- i Kl Edward Dunlap was back lll ‘ . in cold 1 ‘lmmoblle while the I- tuse inexorably ate its May i wards the explosive which would blast him to pieces, the Queen’s Idl. chase to brush with deal blond. he cheated alt-all. commundn mining eumv a lonely invem-y in Scotland: . lqusd ot onnudien ny. were learning to throw grenades. This wlsn't nndlnt play with soil lulu; thi. v... lor kerul_ hurlinl live “Mill.” grenade. 0n. trainee pulled [.ut the pin —then— lt wus on the unlucky 15th, exactly 20 years ugn lomur- - he butteredvt'uuercu “it live grenade. It tell between his sl‘uck second in. feet. and he seemed to be The lnstructnr ma . record «I prev... service in the mllttil. He we. the .on of . nther who liud Ottawa for three years. BPPNP— been associated with Ille I2nd riately working i. the Casualty Rehabilitation D vision in the Department oi v. - erans Affairs. More fluently he ‘ l... pmlcipaled in mlny publlc l hearings here. u. i. . re'w end ; tsir- minded member of d to witnessed this event. must regimental type of oIIlcer director of Regiment or the Canadian Mil ms for 36 years. He was dent‘llr me by a colleague. w h o ls "l ll 9 I hlve ever known." His churlu- t h e me. made hi... lutornlticllly leap Board oi Broadcast cover-ion. t to pick up the ripening mlrhlln WORLD WAR NERO l When I say that . “changed” 1 Edward Dunlop was "uppi-npi-l. , tnlv" active in helping wounded . veterans to became rehabilitat- ed. 1 .ele. to the most imuorlent quality in his character, which (or better or in.- worse made him what he lsitntully blinded. Mnny heroes placed their lite on the line in the we.- were honoured. some died uu~ PUBLIC FORUM ovu KIL'I'ED Pull:an Slr:—A few duy. ago there nurtured in your puller . ulc- lure or Premier Shlw me e ling Prime Minister Pelmu durlug the ceremony at me lnylng or the cornerstnne at Ilia new Cun- Iederuiloll Eulldlulz In Charlotte- town. Premier Shaw was slid to be resplendent In ‘ltilts‘. Now the question ll.th muny kIIII will the Premier welrlng? Your phntugrupher or reporter mun hlve been I “Susannah”. (but. of course. poor chlpy he I! not to hllme for "III. it's his misinf- tunel- to.- kit l. .ingular. uniike trmlers.whlcl| Ire Illd lo M IIngulI It the lop Ind plurll II the bflltu , You could Ipenk o! t... or more men, or I reglment we lug hill! but in the one a! man It would be spoken In tho .lngulur. i once lie-rd . trooper in In English Clvllry Regiment .ey. when vutuhln. e n I ghllud Bull-lion pulsing —- "Wllrd thlull. them kllll. I wonder'ow (ht? 59¢! lulu th elr 'eIdI, or Item Ilrlt‘ So the kill, moi—nu end vllid .l-e mum-lee mount. except to than at in who In the descendan of the 'nghlundmenl’ My neuter- stopped oft on the "llllud" for Ihnlll One hul— d n the null-nu. of Mall to the in.th at Brlttlll Columbll and l .pent the tint mite-u .. Ind the night-nan Ire those all!!!» ed by th. who w From the lone lMIIIul in Ill! -« milky IIIIIId. until W t- Ind th- wIItz of Icl Bu! lull lhl ad II ml. the hurt I. mill-Ill. And we in mum m III Hebrides . I ll“. Sir. an, HIGHLAND mm Vmwvu’. lo. of death: he Iorced the soldier's held down Into slIe ' Io hurl the grenade y ou nude. But it burst when it was only u [not out ol his throwan it; Recalls Martial Conflicts was the lust scene which I. h I of its mulled Victim. bl" Paid I young instructor. Major E. Dun- Ie'vere price himsell (I: d all: I ‘ lop. could Iver see, In. Plctura the locus. on a tough ‘floNOURS FOR SERVICE Major Dunlup K i the George Medal. one o! the . highest durorulion: [or acts gallantry. out oi hvsnilsl. country again. th ‘ I EPvrrnme-ti do th-lplruz otlv-r “nullde \olerans tread the [Fall t.» jduue to u lull and ust'l'ul lile. .Hrre 323m. his leadership ivnn rorn'znition the Inrm «I a civilian nunrd. i Then Cnnadu ‘ peacetime pursuil l'Dunlnp plunged into a busy me of service lo the physically han- dlcnuued. in Toronto and lethal c.nud.. You mm the melety or committee, he Now he seeks to ener the poll- ticul tleld in the stops of his ll- tut-r. the late Hon E ‘l Dunlap. ‘ lonlztlme M.L.A. trot-n Pembroke Ind Cubinet Minister In the On- ltsrlo Governme With his lb! hlm |n r‘ores‘nt in mm le~ slative Nlllonll Geolrlplllc Soclety ‘llhe peeeenu lame oi cue... . subtle and elegant battle oi In- Iellectl. derive. its origins tram mmlul conflict. 0! lung ago. cumin... hlve their nuunten luru in the mulury lurces or bath yesterdly Ind today; their varied deugn. reflect the IIIF Inry. culture. Ind gengrlphy oi much at the world. hels l. believed to huve ui-ig- timed ln lndll .t lust 1:1 cen» tune. .zu. it was all... rhntur- an... o.- “tour Irma." utter the components at . euntempui-ui-y .i-iny — eleph.nt.. hon... chur- lots. Ind inllntry. WORLI'I TRAVELER The piece. underwent m . n y ehuuge. u. uh... tnveied to Europe throth Per-l. Iud the Mediternneln countries. n .1... moved nurtuwuni tmn ludl. in- to chin. Ind JIpln. The modern cutie or rook de- veluped (rum en unit... elephunt elrrytux . turret-I. Iued how- duh. ln aunt.- the rook l. rep- resented by . bolt. The word ruck come. from IggIPerIilu mndlfl: lIilwp VIII ll ela- phlnt lu IIII Elli. lu Frlun II been... e gum; in Germ . runner. The pl’elemdly Ihnd I I‘ I! kms'v queen. bishops. knights, mob. and plum: come from In 1w design by Ewlrd Mum. By mo Bhutan DllcaI wen In W ill. But III- military cl'mnolfllm of chess remln evident III III. (III!!! of Ipecinl ut Th. clflu collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art II New York Clb. for [male conulul Inboth Ill: Ind .u- ver vlecel Inst Runs-it 11m Ins mull“ II. Aluther , let commmorlm the lem 'lr III“: a! Sun I In Tb. R I! In olhel’ ml, vIrlmuly trln- od [rum m. Illm, or w , Ensllshmct III III. III! Infill "Your HIM Nell Hugo Immortals: Ind Wur ll VIIIMKE. Ire Hitler. Ind sense of duty. lucky would be the rnustituenu who ate kt oi Edward Dunlop It could nev. er he slid that he typiflu “ID- i pallml lnadequac " Company play against Indians: Mortals are matched . light Mongols. In . set .1 World Mussolinl, Ind Chamberlain org... Drugs that depress the uervel of the pancreas lessen .u- tivlly oi the structure, ow null then these nerves .re revered with dramatic relief of pain. M- l Irr the iniectlon subsides. the ‘ physician may .uggeu removal ut the gull bladder it um. um present or the struclure other- wise l. diseased. l The ulucrell ls loclled deep in the upper abdomen. behind the named. Some at it. cell! munutuetui-e huntin: other: se- crele powerlul enzymes [till lid in the digenlo. at l... Ind .tui-chen The dust leading from the pancreas lain. . common tube through which t1th bile and Pan creatic Juices drain Into the in- tesiine. This nussegewey ex- plains the association between the biliary trlct ml the on areas. It is a vulnerable Ireu becuuse it wen. “u e lrect. route (or intention from the In» testine and the lull uledder to enter th' pancreas. A T WON'T new J G. writes: Will ru h hill 1 i table salt into the scalp twice . week keep the hair tram falling um? i REPLY Hair cannot be preserved with brine—like pork. Little can be done to prevent mung hllr it the scalp l. lieultliy .nlierwlie. I) BAIT Mrs M, writes: D0 mosqui- toe. stay away from people who eut very littlo sweets? ‘s wllt. mmando range was awarded ol lid served his is time behind sk ill Otllwl. 3 ch as he had or in qunhlies rctlll rd s. and Eduard serves on It. . REPLY No, I doubt it food has I ny- thing to do with uttnctlnlz or discouraging mosqultoel. These insects must one In order to taste the blood. Our Yesterdol s (From the Gulrdlln FI ll TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO tseflkmber 12. l t 0:. Lil: eve of the deuIrture BI Mill E. Jenn MIcEwen, 3.8:. for Montrell to enter the RuyIl VictoriI Hospitll {or trllniul in Ill: nunluz prutenlou, the Young Peoples Society a! th. Marie United arch gut/e I farewell party Ind presented M l MICEWEII with I helutiful II mmuasslnn thrlr Interest. ssemhlv For y It Rulsllns the (our ranks Franco. winters he picked up must have been anything but rennin-lug. r . the ludlcltions are that Yugoslale— despite accuiouul Western criticisms nt Slavic inelliclency — seem to have succeeded in iiudin. . lormull [or economic productivity that. nuke. some Communist sys- tem. luoii woetully backward. WORKERS "AVE SAY The Yugosllvs, as chi. n:- porter noted liter 1. 1960 visit. put it uh down to their mu: vuunted "workers' councils. Time involve I decent-nun. um. run in Communist rectum and give worker. . same ol plnlclpluon their own cuter. . e. T. mm Western visitors. in. mliu impression l. thlt whlt» ever the merit ot the councils, much u! the malt (or Yugo. Illv vltIlity a... be timed u. I nenuulw l . word they uu incentle alumni techniquel euuulugly em. pluyed l.u . Communist econ. : 2 lomy. . in 1952. Yulolllvll'l national 'iucome me by 1. per . the London mmziu. The Spec- tnm. sum. Glllll’lom wmt. utter . vult: y Slut/a planning l. qua-e luule. . . nunuene. have consider. lulu. lreedom at lotion and .cuinpeutinn, they mlke their own contracts and do Lhelr own buying .nd .elllnr. . . . The d.- IlIl! of “I! “MEGS! of this form of .acieliuu .re Ilscinlting Ind “M!fllflble." ramming perhaps evcn u. lKhrusnchev. but .omewhut re- lvultlng u. we! ‘ Mr. K [W0 obsession. ‘One 1. hi. laymen'. Vent-ration .lor the bright Ind shining my. go! the new technology: the nther ihiS passion tor productivity it ‘will be .wkwai-d indeed it h. . ill! to admit, Ilnllly, "III h!!!- . ttcel nelgrud. he. loud the Hull key. The Victims Toronlo Globe Ind Mlll One of the Sons 0! Freedom Doukhobnrs in Mountain Prison. British Columbia, l... died in the hunger strike conducted by the prlluners and other mem- rs ut the net. and level-Ii Ire Iu serious condition. Before ml. stimulnlu. i. weve o! sentimental .uppaet Freedomltee, it might be well to mull the offenses which put. me of them behind hm. Time included: Burntnl the unmmuiuil llflme of an Orthodox Doukhobors who barely emp— ed with their lives: numbing In entire othndnx village; pinni— Lug bomb: under .n A n g licau Church: bombing . section of nilwly in. putting bombl undcr . grai elevator: bomlr E? ing . powerline nylon and runs- lug summit damage and throw- lug 1,000 people out ot work. During the wave of Freedom- ue violence which precipitated the pmeeuuun. the iollowln. pmeuty we. named strayed in tun-nines .ud homb- Illgl: 1M power pales, 75 [that/.5. 54 sections of rallwuy truck. .3 communlty hulls. is mlll.. eluhl churches. .eveu boxcarl. tour railway stations. four postuIIlc~ es. two Ierryhoats. hue deput- mont store. one grandstand. and . courthouse. Thl. is . violent .ud amused seal with which Clnldllns lieve to dell. Ind first Iymplth y should go in Its victim , September Music Dfllwl In September. Autumn tlpl Summer on the shoulder. In Sep- tember we hear the mullc that is building twllrd the grlnd “A nlle n! the Winter wmpeltl. when the planet! In the VIII. outer Ipnces swing into line. men [killed with grlphl Ind chum eln tell us the exlct mm men! when the equinox occurs. Then we know that day Ind night are a! oqllll length. Th I Inn rile! due ell! Ind sinks due went. The equinox ll but I "Bet- ing instant ot eternity. Nature'. bnslc law II that time sh Ill never ceIu. [I Is good to feel the cooler llr: loud to so out in the morn- l nd see hiue»bllck s m o k A sum-Age design l... chaus- ‘3 ' ed pawns tn rnekety. rocks to r.— dur towers. knights I0 spore sa- tt‘llltos. bishops to InIert‘onIinen» tul missiles. lllt’ rluecn lo I mm ship. and in. kin. to . [Dace station, Another madern verslon, this one in... .lpan. [euturcs an atom bomb llhe queenl, I spy, 3 mil- tt...-y policemln. .ud assorted more all. roucra‘ls. captains. Ind urivuios. In East Germany. myelty wu tuppled in levor nl urolrtarlln «gum, A set exhibited in hell» .i. In l960 portrays the king u . worker rendtllu an economic Ill'dly. eph men lowered lrlot Two young unidenfttled huy. were saved lrnin almull certuln iii-owning in the hlrhar here 5..- by Liam: Duran Ind Jone Polrter at Ch The boys were pllylng on . mukeuim mt when they aimed rlpldiy out at the harbor. Shout- ing to the buy: u. but; an the . dory end u... huel the boy. .eiely lbolrd. TEN YEARS AGO thumb" 12. I”! A R. Smith. Chlrlnllb lelku. l r... Iclentllt. PIWnI plln. Ind the queen .. . mun... n. Iirkles. 0.. . .lmim Mmdst theme. a 3' h“ M“ I “031131 mtg; t3: numun .et ' chmmnim In cer w I lain, .ldn ve figure a! men lllfl women plwnl, but the Clpltalill. mqu are build with l. a I v y c llnl. rel K0 Ind J In liter thlrum munthl nrvlce ln Illa Flr Elli. ill the ""y "“'""‘"' CIuldlln Army Dent-l Col-pk, The two illustntlon 'euon. In the Mlldlleul Ire unl plaud- R.C. Paul. the Dominion nu rising from Ilrm houle chim- ney. .lons the m... The m ll: of I September duy include- the clear. IIr-rlrrying calls of the blue jlyl a: they nan. Ibuve the mth the chants of the MOTORISTS or Iulueuslou when all of i Prue'er um. i Regulu- Dtunount- on FIrmu-I' Cm HYNDMAN Id work in the [Maren Ill the . .7.._ fishermen-term... l. the vl... a! . “MW‘WI O III-Immu- MANY WOLVES ulme o! 0 Mn- 0 AID-fin Why I'll! until you became involved In I llrenk [EDDY-II“ Clrdl will protect your drtvlnl prlvlluu II well II your umkflml‘! lulnrlnce Elm 1812 Jmmd ehlckudee. .. they explore th. old Ipple tree behind the wood- .lied. Ind the mellncholy call! or the crawl tin... elm. in the meadow. ‘ stuud nu . ridge mun. th . olkl in the .u... trove. of lm u. the evergreens .huve th- lz..ture. Ind yuu m hear mus- t. in the lelvu. When aunt deal» end. .na light. dine in... kit. Chen window... invl. hello t. hoot m... the woodllnd uni . [ox may lurk in... the upper field. I! ll the ripe time of year The .1. l. tilled with frlgrlnce from un pened mue. Ind drylnfi leres. In the mid" of the ripe nes. that mull . eyel. endln. one Ihould “lien in. the mullt. Nllure‘l symphony i. never tln< mica. but It .lw. l... nielady thlt ltflltes . chord tn the .en. Illlve hllrt. P.E.l. our Molar Vohlclo LIIDIIIIY [or Preferred Illskl 8. CO. LTD. A haul of 1m waive. were Emeline. IlIlu by bounty hunterl in OI- rmn hero, who returned 1.. ‘m m m m turn. in in any (rum n leIt Park these a, I. i-l u H m bi ul ll El st M