a 'n. ' , encouragcment possible to put their 'theleft-wixucxuembuknnnaln .Ii-spot-tft-onMIrnII whictuqyc iiesrr-ct to coming to an un'lerstand- "Conn Prllu IIUIIC IIIII uh the Dow" Puhllmcd cvu-y wed:-&y Illliu II II Prince Street &utonotovtI.P.E.I.hlbn'liomnnOtInpII: Lld.. 61 III; It W- Tunic. uuugi office. E llnlvciu Town 3”- mm. 'l'II.I Wllkct General IIIIIIII. In A. Burnett lumbar can Dull: Nnllvl Publisher: uloctcuai Member I! the Cuudfn Pru- Ilember Audit Bureau of Clreulauonn Ii-Inch office: It Snmmuuidu. Montague Ind Alberlon Autbomaa II Second Cllll Hall by the Post Office Depnrunent. Ottawa. by Lurrier: Charlottetown. I 1110! 315.00 pel III- Ium. luwhuo in P. E. I. 50.00 other Pmvincu llll U. I. 113.00 per Innum "The strongest memory is weaker than the weaken! Ink." slirunnlfv, ocr. I5. 1955 Reassuring Statements It is encouraging to note that Premier Matheson does not share the view, widely expressed, that the Dominion-Provincial conference was largely a failure and that the tax rental agreements are doomed to extinction. On the contrary, he is convinced that the agreements will go on satisfactorily, and that the needs of this Province will be ade- quately provided for, either by means of a basic minimum grant or otherwise. He is also hopeful of ob- taining consideration for the reve- nues accruing from Canada's north- ern lands, on a basis that will be of value to us financially for all time to come. This is a much better prospect than we had reason to expect from the tentative proposals at the open- ing of the conference, and from the comments made by one government leader before the conference ad- journed. It indicates that the dis- cussions in camera were on I frank and friendly basis, and that the special claims for consideration of the smaller provinces, and parti- cularly of Prince Edward Island. were by no means slighted. We have already noted the able manner in which our case was band- led by the Premier and his col- leagues It the conference. We trust indeed that his judgment as to its reception. and the prospects of its implementation, will prove equally sound. The Great Desideraium There are many thoughtful per- sons who feel that one important trouble in the field of education these days is found in the large and ever increasing number of students going in for higher education. They argue that existing facilities were never intended as academic assemb- ly lines and that, in any case, the mass invasion of high schools, col- lcges. and universities by students of every conceivable capacity for learning-many with no capacity at Ill-was bound to lead to lowering of standards. indifferent teaching. and general confusion. Whatever merit these criticisms may have, it would be extremely unrealistic to imagine that the trend towards wider expansion of educational op-, portunities can be reversed. It is more reasonable to expect it to be accelerated as time goes on. Which means that some way will have to be found to expand facilities to meet the rising demand and, at the same timc. to avoid deterioration of edu- cational standards. In a recent address on the cduca tlonal situation, its strengths and weaknesses, Dr. Nathan M. Pusey President of Harvard University gave it as his opinion that, rcgarii less of methods. facilities. or am otherlmechanical aid to learning. the teacher is still the centre of am school system. "The inspired anti inspiring teacher", said Prcsidcnt Pusey. "remains the great dcsiden Itum". Perhaps this is a point which i has not been stressed as much as its importance warrants. ('.r-rtainiy. no system,-however good in tlicory. can be made. to work satisfactorily by an indifferent. half-trained. un- inspired, and uninspiring tcat-licr. On the other hand. we have all known teachers who. even with the Ild of the poorest facilities imagin- able. were able to make learning a thrilling and adventurous experi- ence. There must surely be some way of detecting such teachers very early in thcir period of training. They should then be given every 'vocatlon to its maximum use Commendable Act Further henrteningbvidence that the mode tn section of Bclthh Lab- our to the uouuluny over I tliattliecnmialmoetfngoftlacpcxty bIIzeJtctcdIpu'upaIIlwblawo&-4? China, in case a mutual ment to with the United States. It must be admitted that this was an ingenious political gesture on the part of Mr. it as. until lately, cquire DrlLalli to go it alone wlln ng with the Soviet Union and Red arrange- tiiat end cannot be made Aneurin Bevan and his merry-if in- tractable-mcn. For there is not I doubt in the world that much of British public opinion is becoming incrcasinglv impatient over many llll&lSt'S of American foreign policy. And. if r-nc may jurlgc from tho gcn: oral tonc of thc British press. many Britons of all political parties are under the impression that thc Un- itcd St-atcs State Department Is not doing all it might to further bcttcr relations between the Communist bloc and the Western world. To mention one specific point of diffcrcnce. recognition of Red China, and even the matter of her admis- sion to the United Nations, do not have the sinister implications in Britain that these issues appear to have in the United States. Then, in the matter of trade between East and West. the need for it is much more obvious in London than it is in Washington. Yes, all in all, the left-wing ”go it alone" resolution might be expected to find a sym- pathetic hearing in many areas of British life which generally have very little to do with Labour Party controversies. For all that, it is to the credit of the Party's member- ship that the proposal was turned down. To accept it would be to play right into the hands of the Soviet Governmcnt, whose chief aim in life is to split up the Western alliance into quarreling factions. Whatever betide. Britain and th e United States must continue to work to- gether on important issues, though, of coursc, tlicre will always be dif- ferences of opinion on methods to be employed in that broad under- taking. That way alone hes the security of lioth nations. EDITORIAL NOTES More and more, Health Minister Martin, Canada's chief delegate to the United Nations, is making his influence felt in deliberations of the world organization. Mr. Martin is a good spokcsman for this country's policy of firmness with patience. I C O Evangelist Billy Graham says he doesn't believe in "last moment" confessions. No doubt, they are far from ideal. Yet. there is excellent authority for their validity, provid- ed. of course. they are sincere. O O O Tlic services performed by the Y. M. ('. A. are recognized by all our citizens as a community asset. well worth maintaining and de- veloping. Attention is called to an article in today's issue outlining the ”Y" campaign at this time. and the plans for the coming season. I D O A liiissiuii newspaper reports that l-jxtcriial Affairs Minister Pear- son and his RIISSIHII hosts exchanged saliies about a ”co-existence cock- tail". a mixture half Russian" vodka Illli linlf ('unadian rye. That may miiir: but at present 90'; or more -if m-cxistciicc. in terms of actual -llorts to comic to a peaceful under- -Mllrlliig. liuvc come from the Cana- huh and whole free world-- sirlc. Tlic Russian version was a witty l'iIlllll:L'lli on affairs, for all ilnit. thi- 0 I 0 Ti l'lt' his alw.;ys been a centain illlltlillll of coolness between. the Al'(.ZUlllillll-lllS and the Paraguans: Jlllti it is going to be accentuated by .lu;ln llci-on's presence in Paraguay so long as he is there he will con- oitutc a potential threat to the gov- :-rnincnt of the country of which lic the controlling powcr. And the Paraguan authori- ties can be expected to observe tho rulcs of political sanctuary to thc letter, whether or not it pleases their complaining neighbours. O 0 0 Thank goodness, the General As- sembly of the U.N. has turned down a Russian proposal to compel politi- cal and religious refugees to return to their native lands. kind of reception I refugee from Communist tyranny would receive "on his arrival in Moscow! It would be the Siberian salt mines. or perhaps In appointment with a firing squad. In I matter of hours. It is dnttlcunt Ind heartening that onlyito Iovlct Unfit valid for the social construe d-ibri Imagine the ,lnthe 01'1"? I L. ... ....-.. . A ROUND-WORl.l) DIARY Somewhere A vs... ii; Moscow And Karachi By Norman Smith Associate Editor. Ottawa Journal llllr Smith is a nicnihcr of the olfici:-il party accompanying Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Pearson to Russia and on lo Signapnre, and is reporting his Impressions for semi-al leading Canadian news- ltarerzl Mnlltitlw October 3. thelayedl It uas perhaps I good omen when the Russian naviagtnr and radio opt-ratur who joined the RCAF crcw of ll'lr- Pearson's plane at Ber- lin Airport proved smiling, good natured fellows, willing to photo- graph and chin. but they hadn't much work to do for we flew over I well travelled route to Moscow beacon to beacon. We glimpsed the strategic Oder River and then Warsaw on the Vistula, but then heavy clouds prevented any sight seeing over Russia until we got but half an hour from Moscow: no doubt a cloud curtain to replace the iron one. Woods and not very fertile ficlds sccmed to crowd right to the suburbs of the historic cap- ital: ”a kind of city in a protecting wiidcrncss” -- which is why it was put there in the first place. And lhcn suddenly below us lay a vast IIl('lfllp0liS with a dozen or more gigantic buildings reach- ing proudly into the sky. But our rubber-ncckiiig was interrupted when the giant C5 aircraft which had glided smoothly all the way from Ottawa suddenly took what sci-med an agonizingly abrupt U turn at a mad anglc and not so far frnni trce tops that we had any spare height lo drop in. Wing Com- mander lllillcr told me afterwards he had never had to approach an airport that way in his life but this was the ii-m' ihc Russian navigator ordcrcd it. Whcthcr they were test- ing his ability or his aircraft or his ncrvc. or kt-cpiiu: us clear from some object ncnr the airfield which we were not supposed to see. I donlt suppmc iic shall ever know. No china was bro"!-n howcvcr. and in zi nmnicnt lhc Pearson party. ”4'IlIlxl'li by thc R('M'”s tinc red j:u-kci lllltl Ililicrls stern TIC.-Kl-I counlcnmu-c walkrd firnlfl lhc most f'I8bfIl'Jllc moving stmrcnrc l hair ever sccn as airimit l'tllllPIllNll MOI.0'lt)l"F 0N- Ii.-l.N'll Ami lillT(' uvis Mololnlt, hlk in” at his t'llsll)llliIl'-I .uui;irr :ui:lc. his right linnd ill his ("ill :1 in ).';-p- olron. his fzirc ill thc unsinillng eXpl'c.s.siou ili.ii stint mo moaning of his n;uiu- 'i'lu- llzininicr. But the slI'l'n itllllx (luv kli vanished gnd with imiitl-ll.-lo all around and floiit-w iliI' tip :-.,l,,.,- and pleasant littlc -pct-ilr .'lltl thc Red flag and thc t -'.'ll'llI cnsign flapping nVI'I'lic'i tr ll.'l(l arrived. .lliri ii.:liI ;iu;i) l lzni one thing Will i" Tlmsr granite - II c e d rlnrl. slltuijliiitlcs whom we have sci-n lll ill l"i':iIiciso at U. N. or .-u (min-i.i uumrling Russian digni- t.'il'u-- all look forbiddingly and ulI.iittr;uIr-cl,x alike; their heavy hluc coats almost to their feet. tin-ir rlnrk blue or black hats low on tho-r iurehcad: but thcy stand out Ill Russia as much as else- ulii-rr and bear no resemblance to thc run of mill of Russian people whom we met at the airport or wcrc about to see in Moscow. The Russians "ICTTI80lVcn look like- well- "like people" -- and not like walking hits out of Stonehenge. Away we sped in a cavalcade of Russian cars - thc Zn: or zlm much like the Packard or Buick of perhaps sevrn years back. Anrl It was I drive into the scttlng sun but. you might say. ”Out of dark- IICI." For hcrc was not I mean lI&kwIrd citv with old cobbled or narrow walled lanes and peanuts lending their cattle or OXOII along the way or looking out from decrepit collages that knew the Ilomannffs or cven the Tartan. Here wrrc miles and mug, of wide streets. many at ten: yld, enough for ten lane traffic: Ecru were miles of large mnunmg and fine ofHcg' .34 Mrs: here were fbemogo modern traffic light g N... "villas with speed ev the cm. Diluted channel: flowing mo .34 around the great squares: here were thousands of automobiles and buses, the buses clean and comfortable with their windows shining clean as in Paris: here were broad sidewalks crowded with shoppers. And what was that, stuff on the rooftops of so very very many apartment blocks and homes. reminiscent of the drive from New York through the suburbs to La Guardia field? Of course, Tele- vision sets. great tangled dozens of them on each large roof. IIEART OF THE CITY And here, as we got into the heart of this seven or eight million city, were the familiar continental posters of the opera, the concert, the cinema: Here too were the multitudinous parks, large and small, which European cities so cherish and which Canadian cities convert into housing developments. In our car we looked at each other in unspoken wonderment -- and then when the guide said "Red Square and the Kremlin" and we saw I thousand or more people just wandering around at leisure and fewer police than there are Bubbles outside Londonis Parlia- ment, and smack across the square I massive department store with men and women bustling out with their bulglrig string upping bags Ind scarcely looking t all to the Kremlin unless in see the time on its tower clock, but certainly not in fear - well, our wonderment turned to embarrassment. No, we werenlt concluding that all was love and peace and free- dom: we weren't thinking of polit- ics or policies. But we were real- izing that a kind of subtle pro- Dazanda which exists in the west- ern world.that because Commun- ism is undesirable Russia must therefore be backward ' -- such propaganda could be as dangerous to us as it is incorrect. Just the first drive of 20 miles made this Izrllmingly clear: we may think what we like about Communism - and I for one dislike it with heart, mind and soul, especially soul e but we dare not think it is not productive. dynamic. aggres- sivc. prnlzrcssive. detcn-nined and vital. And then the car stopped. across the traffic from the Red 8 iuirc and the Kremlin and we e crcd the National Hotel.' Its large and old fashioned halls and staircases and bedrooms dated to In earlier azc of grandeur now dlsparaged. But it was clean.'Ind the bath tub was immense when full of lint watcr and one was reluctant to lzet out of it after I chase across I hemisphere - even to go to the ballct which was "programmed" for this our first evening. AT THE BOLSIIOI THEATRE One walked the few blocks to the nearby Bolshoi theatre. along with I seeming million of the towns- folks out for I stroll. On this frst venture out one WII on guard against doing the "wrong thing, against being offensive in any way. But shortly this wu obvious non- sense. The people were having their own outing Ind I canals of Canad- ians walking Ilong tered not I fcnblu to them. Some smiled, some were curious, some were indifferent. some maintained the serious cxprusion they wore before they Inw us: but not one of them displayed may rudeness. any dfscourteou cin-louslty. And so it was in going through the old buslnell of a I. w lb street mIt- - Perhaps the reader notices I have skirted about the ballet it- self. Out of sheer incapacit.V- I could say. and do, that it was the finest ballet I have ever seen, but where does that get you? Or if I describe the. six layers of galleries reaching to the dizzy heights of the cheering students who buY their tickets for the price to them of two ice cream cones. Or the rich red plush chairs and trim- mings against golden decorations, the splendid central candelabra, the lavish gold and scarlet state curtain with the letters ”CCCP" worked delicately into the pattern tstanding for USSR! 4 that doesn't convey even the real estate assess- ment for it leaves out the massive stage that is perhaps 80 feet wide and 80 feet deep: it IPBVES Out the picture-hung corridors where the audience strolls in some awe at iuiermissions as they seek out the names of the theatre-'5 famed performers and discuss their mer- its and records (so the interpreter informed me) with the mast criti- cal but knowing knowledge. Let me add that in the nine month's season of each year there is rarely one empty seat. and that the seats are filled with rich and poor. scaffolder and poet, Mongol- ian Russian and Ukrainian Rus- sian. With, literally, people from "All the Russias." The ballet was Don Quixote." the ballerina Blis- clskay. I think ncrbaps Sadlers Wells' Miss Fonetyn is as good I ballerina, but at that level of artis- try I am incapable of making I useful ludgment. However the corps dc ballet at tonight's performance. the lighting and setting and ecor and costumlng and the overall ele- gance and perfection of the pre- sentation far surpassed Sadlers Wells as I have seen it in Covent Garden and also in the Melropolit an in New York and bullet in the Paris opera. A KNOWING AUDIENCE And to all that add I 100 piece orcbcsira playing superbly to the conception of a director who was evoking them in this will every moment of thc timc - well, one is uvuNIl8lITIC(I. And not least is one overwhelmed by the rapture of the audience: not the seeming noisy exhibitionism of the French and Latin audicnccs who so delight to demand cncorcs that I've seen ballets and upon lose all sense of direction hccmisc of them. It was a knowing audicnce, under- standing. quick to .applaud the finer points of tcchnique but as willing to dream at the behest of tcndcrivcss or inclody. Fcnic ucrc in old clothes. some willicul tics, sonic had brushed up their Sunday blur still for the lhllll.-llllfliil timc. many were un- lulv. unshavcn: some betrayed i!(ill('l'.'tll'”V.s of hrccding and cult- urc cvcn though they tried to con- ceal il undcr rough garments. But all. all sccnicd to have an intim- allcltlcsirr for personal participa- lion in this artistic experience. lion" do-T say -it? They seemed not to be there in twos or four: or as an audience. Each was tbere' for himself. a kind of intense yNll'nllll.' to live and to feel and to know burning about his face and 0.Vcs and evident in the very way hc sat himself in his chair. Iglhcrc was boredom here, or the wcarincss of sophistication. or that attitude which many CInIdlIns are now making I kind of all creed: "I couldn't care can" if there was any of thin here then I am no iudac whatever of pcoplc and should retire from the business of reporting-I)nt oug- fhls first day la-Rulsll nobody will persuade me to retire until I on- to! the remaining seven days. This place and people excites the unset gig! hurts my ignorance Into my AT KARACHI ' KARACHI, PAKISTAN. Oct. 18. External Affairs Minister Pearson said this morning In the Inc etc of Bun, our fin! I 'becn Icompllsbed In hf: visit to Moscow and then to the Black in Medically Speaking 3, nu-mu N. Bundeucn. M. D- on ICE CAN an HARMFUL Since dry ice is becoming mi;re widely used around the home or storing ice cream and frozen foods. to say nothing Of l"'9”"i”3 "sh en route home from 31036 F3" fishing trips,-I think a few words of warning are in order. - In the hands of inexperienced Individuals. dry ice can be WW dangerous. g IN SOLID FORM my ice is pure carbon dioxide in a solid form. it is extremely cold, with I temperature of 109 degrees below zero. It is so cold. in fact, that it can cause severe burns if it comes in- to contact with your skin. But that isn't the only danger. As a gas, carbon dioxide has 6 about 800 times the bulk it has as I solid. Therefore. there is I tremend rate of expansion when it evaporates and returns to its gaseous form. If the ice is confined to a con- tainer. its expansion quickly builds up I great pressure. A tragic example of this occur- red recently in Los Angeles. A child lost an eye when anothe youngster placed a pif.'C(' of dry ice in a bottle of water and screw- ed on the cover The bottle ex- ploded. There's another danger, too. - Dry ice is I heavy gas. If you store or discard it in an unven- tilated area, it may collect and cause suffocation. You've got to be especially care- ful in discarding dry ice. Probably one of the safest ways is to place it in a covered rubbish can where children are not likely to find it Generally, the lids of these runs are loose enough to permit the gas to escape. But Ytu had better make sure about this. QUESTION AND ANSWER A. P.: is it unhealthy to eat high protein foods and high starchy foods at the same meal? Answer: We know of no evi- dence that eating foods rich in proteins and starches at the same meal would be unhealthy. 7IreTd”-.a”” 70336 Keane-, DAWN A thrush is tannins: a stone With a snail-shell in its beak: A small bird hangs from I cherry Until the stem shall break. No waking song has begun. And yet birds chatter and hurry And throng in the elmls gloom Because an owl goes home. -Gordon Bottomley The Age Old Story Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need- It which they had not been pre- sent, seemed a valid proof of real Russian interest. Indeed their interest was so specific that during the summer- llouse talks, just a few miles from Yalta, Khrushclicv sought to amend the Moscow-prepared communi- que which was then to be approved. He would have liked it I little more resounding with some purple language about common desire for peace and the rclaxed atmosphere since Geneva. Mr. Pearson, how- ever, not without much discussion. clung closely to the draft he and Molotoff had adopted and which was Canada's in the first place. It rather sobcrly states: (1) peace is desirable. (2! disarmament is desirable, (3) world tension should be relaxed If many remaining prob- lems are to be solved. (4) a trade treaty between the two countries is clearly in the making. (5) cul- tural. scientific. industrial, agric- ultural, air transport and arctic weather information should be ex- changed, (6) that exchange of par- liamentary delegations might help understanding. (7) the Geneva agieements on Indochina should be implemented. That is the skeleton of the com- munique. The most important Ich- levcmcnl. however, is the vague partigrapb which states that the delegates discussed domestic. and world relations cordially and over I wide field, and gained clearer understandlng of each other's point of view which should assist in the promotion of good relations between the two countries. A realistic paragraph brought the communique to I close. It re- cognized that differences of ap- proach to political and economic problems should not be I hind- rance to cooperation on many prac- tical subjects on the basis of mut- ual interest and the desire to pro- mote peace; in short, coexistence. Obviously such I communique won't change the mo of the world, but Mr- PcIrIon's considerable sat- isfaction It the visit - expressed me only thin Page T HO NOTES BY Woman-I creature who loch the car door for fear of losing an eighteen cent can of beans off the back seat, but thinks nothing of risking an expensive husband on I tall lndder putting up Itorm screens Hamilton Spectator. -Police chiefs, responding to I poll, report they have never known I pipe-smoking criminal. The thing is that I pipe can get I man into enough trouble right around his own house without his going out and breaking laws.-Winnipeg Tri- bune. Two sea gulls, killed by I plane. are serving to keep other sea gulls off the runway of the airport at Block Island, off the New England coast. Airport attendants staked the two dead birds. one on each side of the runway to keep live gulls away. And the warning is keeping the live birds away. Pilots no longer are bothered by the numerous birds in the vicinity.-Sydney Post-Rec- ord. Here's dramatic evidence of how tense the East-West power strug- gle over the Middle East is getting: During I lbirdy-day period this fall, state visits will be paid to Egypt by Premier Bulganin of Russia. Premier Chou En-lai of Communist China. and Vice-Prep ident Nixon of the United States. India's Nehru and Yugoslavia's Tito have already been feted. News- week. From Jakarta. IndoneIla,comeI I report that the women of lnd in are flocking to the polls in that new nation's first popular national election. Most Indonesians Ire Mos- lems. As such. the male of the species is permitted to have four wives. If any males in monogamic lands have sighed wlstfully when reading of this custom. let them now survey the terrible results. It is bad enough, in Canada, to have the little woman kill your vote. But in Indonesia-your vote is not only killed, but buried four votcs down. Ontario Intelllgencer. This summer four Manitoba born young men completed their dental training and passed the ex- aminations set by the Dental Ex- amining Board of Canada. Of the four. one has left to practice in Alberta and another has gone to Chicago. This leaves-In far-two new dentists to serve in Manitoba. Unfortunately, during the past month and I half, three Manitoba dentists have died. Even if the two new graduates decide to remain in Manitoba. there will be I net loss. Replacements are not meet- lng wastage. Small wonder there is increasing anxiety abou availabil- ity of dental care in this province. 'x THE WAV7 Few women can It: 1 7 visitors to see them l')t rible as they look vile-, . husbands are coming. 13. A chelf officer of .. H steamer is less hoI'HeSl('fx y,--.. i he has grown.a smal: .ai-all grass in I shallow box in his rat, In the middle of it is a mcdcl far: house to remind him of his ..h;'l,1: hood days on his farm lick M true seamen.-St. Th(llllil.s 'r..,,,,,, Journal. The dlIpoIII of radioactive u.-.,l,, is a problem of the atomic R3, The United Kingdom has drop 'l 1,500 tons of this dangerous mater. ial into 1.200-falhonis in illP sg, off Land's End but at landlmlrpg Chalk River in Canada the problem is continuing and vexatious..m. tawa Journal. Egyptian leaders are irritated at reports the United States may cut off economic aid to their mun. try if ibinslsts in buying weapon, from Cammunls Czechoslovakia But if Cairn argues arms may 3,, bought anywhere they arc avail able Washington may argue tin aid is not given by cciiipulsmn -Ottawa Journal. No one pushes I stranger and. It I doorway to gain enlrknq first. No one bags the middle of the sidewalk. No one hlares loudly in a fellow pedestrian's car to him him to yield the right of mg These Ire the tricks of illmdnnep ed motorists however. And their bad manners can easily cnd ll death for SOm80IlE.-VmlL'0lll:f Sun. Increased fares woiilt solve in slipping revenue problem oil street can and busses. Sonic as- sistance must come from the Help eral taxpayer. After all it is win) something to the man who ma not use I streetcar or hus twin- year to have that servicr avai Ible on any occasion when his pri vate transportation fails him -0t tawa Journal. It now transpires that Peru fleeing from Argentina. left bchi him I "bobby-soxer" niislrr. fabulous jewels and S2n.0tlt'I Where would the 320,000,000 mm from? No one could know in the reason for this. of ronrsc that the accounts of dictators an never audited: there are no pallil ments to fix their salaries or cu mine their accounts-no watchiiui to nee that they are not dippmi into the public cash box Pun was I shoddy mounlchank. a rim charlatan, undoubtedly ii that Yet under I dictatorship S)'Rl0II I great and intelligent proplc let him get away with his h'lS('fIliil95. -Winnipeg Tribune. -Ottawa Journal. I S . t W ACADIAN li0TEl TGL03-348” Nova Scntia DOWNTOWN HALIFAX I've minutes from Railway Station. DIILI-let. 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