, .xx.uxuAm:une.a A iTI-IE GUARDIAN Published every week-day morning II in Pt-:;-cc street. that Iottetovvn. P. E. l. by The Thomson Company Limited. "Cover: Print-o Edward Island Llh III IIII" I-.'tI:toi and Manner, Ian A. Burnout. Auoctnto Editor. lronlt Waller lunch nllteetu at suntmt-istde. ttlniituue and Atntrfon Author ind an Srrnnd Clan Mail by tho Pout Office Department. Ottawa. By Carrier: rltarlottetuwn. summerotdn Il.5.ott per annum Else uhon tn P. E. I not imnunt. moo. Other Pmvmres nun U s. "The strongest me ,7 In the weaken Ink weaker than .. FRIDAY. Not-'.-l9-.-I954 A Happy Visit 1 l t ed from the canings: A. !I1.0lt . people who may have been the first to make existence of the little kingdom of Sumerf As Queen Mother Elizabeth is carried back to Britain in the sister ship to the great liner named after her pleasant and heart-warming Canadians and Americans alike. she le This EH93 memories to tVi-IS no epic journey, laden with undertones of drama. but a friendly call upon relatives and friends. It must be an unresponsive heart indeed which would not feel that work and worry has been properly reduced to more rcasonable proportions while human relations were elevated to place. their pro per It is the genius of the Queen Mother to be able to work far harder than most of her daughter's subjects and yet to enjoy personal contacts with and new acquaintances whom round includes. her the numerous old busy We sing of our gracious Queen and, indeed. the term is strikingly appropriate to the Queen Mother. She Lift- crringly says and does the right. thing at the right. time but, far more important, she is the right kind of person to do so. There has been some discussion of a pro- posal that she be invited to become Can- She would certainly be popular and successful in such a post but actually she needs no appoint- ada's next Governor General. country. as she was Canada's Queen Consort. such and as herself she is loved and wel- come throughout the land. The Archbishop And Apartheid In line with its determination to restrict the citizenship rights of the native Negro. , , populatim. the Gm.,,mmem of the Union: versely to its distance from the Island. An A S of South Africa recently. put the responsi- bility for native education in the hands of the Secretary for Native Affairs. This 'inodern scholars until less than a century - ment to hold a most honoured place in this' She is Canada's Queen Mother, I er to invite the headmaster home for it! meal. The parent not only did so. but gave the teacher a new garment and a ring for good measure. The plan worked per-i fectly. After dinner, the master told the anxious student, who probably still smart-. ”You have carried 3 t out well the school's activities, you have become a man of learning." This first apple polisher belonged to it; enduring written records. Oddly, the very between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in Mesopotamia was not even suspected byi ago. Through Greek and Hebrew writings, archeologists knew of Assyria and Babylon and had located them geographically. It was during their digging for relics of these later civilizations that they first came upon clay tablets which, when deciphered. prov- ed to be written in the Sumerian tongue. i At first" it was thought that this was merely a variant of Assyrian invented by. priests to hide their secrets from the pub- llc. When finally the language was studied. astonished scholars found they possessed a record that would enable them to resurrect the history of an entire people from be-I heath the dust of centuries. NUllI(ll"0'.lS,i widely scattered in world museums. and difficult to translate. cuneiform tablets oft the Near East have not yet told their full story. Scholars face years of work. , When the task is done, some believe. ancient history may have to be reviewed in its light. Facets of modern western civ-i ilization believed to stem from ancient Greece may have earlier origins. As per- . haps the oldest historians, the'Sumeriansl almost certainly will have "firsts" other, than an apple polisher inscribed in the an-i A iials of mankind. PUBLIC FORUM nun column in open In tho otmu I I i't Vxwigsn -7oe&' Gum THE WOODSPUIIGE EDITORIAL NOTES ' Prince Edward Island is contributing in a most valuable way to the improvement of swine breeding in Canada. It is not without significance that the various Prov- olon by correspondent: of quutlontt II Inltrlol. Tho Gtltulllll don not noounrlly ondono no opinion of correspondents. READING I5-STRL-C1-1()N The wind flzilpped loose. the wind l was 511 , Sir.-The G1mt'd.-I1l- for l”P'Iml-Ill sliztkcii out IIC'l.Ili from tree and hill: ince5' proportion of gyade A hogs Val-jes jn. p'.'.2, 19.34. contained in "Widening 1 lmdo walked on at the winds Euutatioit Horiz.oiis." an npnlog.a; Wlii.- ,m- lhg madam xncfhtids of it-aeii-l1 sat now, for the wind was still. it ' '2 " -d-13'." exception. hovtctet. is Rittish Coltiinl)t.i. mt ttrgatgrsz. WI)ni:20vr;t(jllIl;:: hucgits BMW,” my mm my Mmwd which rates higher than the Pi-;ui'te Prnv- m IP10” sugfuilii, ”p,m',m, has wa5.- . t A it ' ' i ' M3: llpS, drawn ill, sairl not Alas! was done, in the words of an official state-, meant, "in order that education for Negroes might be coiitrolled in such a way that it will be in accord with the policy of the State." This means that the variot IS Churches. which hitherto have maintained mission schools. will be unable to continue their work, for with one exception-t he Dutch Reformed Church-they have signi- fied their unalterablc opposition to Negro-cnslaving system which goes by the name of ”aparthcid." that in a recent address the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rcv. Geoffrey Fran-i cis Fisher. charged the South African Gov-l ernment with ”imitating the Communist methods Government and control.” of ”It is tzrief beyond measure to us," said His? Grrce, ”that, just at this moment when in many ways world tensions are relaxing, all portrnts in South Africa point to a relent- less pursuit of a policy toward the native population which is unchristian in principlei and hound, in the long run, to be catastro- phic in its effects. Each detail of the ap- plication of the policy of apartheid is a fresh violation of Christian principles and common justice." sivc nicrtsiircs which the After citing the succes- Government has taken in its restrictions on Negroes. and rcfcrrincz to the new education policy as calculated to insure that Negro educationi will be "strictly limited to what the Gov- ernment thinks iznod for them." the Arch- bishop wcnt on to say: ”All that is total- itarianism and differs not at all front the s'..ippressions of civic freedom and Church It is strange life in Commttnist countries. that the South African Government does not begin to support its own wisdom when it. finds itself imitating the methods Communist Government and control." It is very strange, indeed. How of any I country can hope to maintain internal peace, --not to mention its good name-when the ':reat majority of its inhabitants are pur- posely kept in ignorance and political serf- dom is beyond the comprehension of any- one who believes in elementary justice and fair-pla y. A Sumerian "First" The first ”apple polisher” in recorded history was A Sumerian schoolboy t vho. some 2,000 years before the Christian era began. buttered up his teacher home-cooked meal. reports the Dr. Samuel Geographic Society. with National Noah Kramer, curator of the clay writing tablet mllection in the University of Pennsylvania Museum and the university's professor Assyriology, unearthed the story as pared over cuneiform symbols tablets dug up In Iraq. reaIIzed,,lay a schooIchiId's diary. In It the his pupils. who left It to her son, Artharj Ind bewailed it day marked chiefly by the Hnuser. Mr. Hauser has presented it to thel canlngs his teacher had given library. umber of iittlt-. mu or takes! 91- an autumn- gra ven of he Ont composer hi" which W35 10"? EH9" UP f0"l"'I1ie modernlltn tell our teacltrrs Before him. he lost. .shown that they are better." Then he proceeds to exzol the merit: oi mCeS' My hair was over in the grass. E ' ' . . , , . My iiztkcd ears heard the day pass. the "reading reatlii rss piogiam. I-'u:ther on he me ntiniis that )At' pyps, wide open. had the run The broad hints front I-ederal sotiix-cs .phmH,s.. is USN, mm H”, ,,,.m,,,,. of 5mm mu wads In "x upon: that tax l'0dllCIiOllS may be ill DIIOSDOPI 3l'C ally the Chlid is taught. the entire Among those few, out of the sun, themsoh-PS pncom-aging tn business at, algltvabcti lo Um th Wald The :'It';lsdSi1.;Ul'CEIt1tP flowered, thrcc , , re s ory i. .: r ' ' - 1 . though not as effective as actual tax relief. .t'ecogni11(,n" m PI.hf)d intgnduced It. would be otherwise if it were reductions '-'i9"l9 fill”? l''3l'5 "30 "5" "I0 "mdo . . . V g . rrnists proved to be such a finscn. Ill excise land sales taxes that ttcie being D,O,.3km,, so many ,.,,,m,s and proposed. In that. case btisiiicssmen would -rromis from ll-ll't'"i5 ml Vthenlrnf .3- hesitate to maintain full inventories t'1X'l(i i”'”””” ””m. 1"5h'5i'",””l5, ”"d The l'-CIJII-iilllllic M5 a cut) of . . , i k colleges, that its spotisois .eluct-, mum,” at the going l3i9- antly brouglit back it ”plioiietic. Illtlilufi"; O I O I Front perfect i1l'lCf there need not be It lszloir. or men tneinory: -One thing then learnt remains to lll.I.l,13lP(i ; . fomi of the tamoull.:t:ed as "plioiictic iir.al:. ' - . - .. , , II. is significaiit that tlte only ele- Canadian incomes in all ianges hate mm 0, mg "Id mlwmm My shown an increase in the past eleven years, that has been iiic01'pnl';iiPd in the it is shown bv recently published statistics. "W "miwd 15 ""4 ””””””1y 3” B ' h If g V. . the multiple remedial reading p:'o- nu-nu," mm. ggygsh 1 ",1 I-tun, y far t e aigest number moving into a m wmch ...,,.,1.1 ml, be amp, and ,,,,mS,.d Wm, nods, M", new bracket were those moving into the bad Wad-llll DP-"ll I-"tlllm WY" liiive iiccd nf nothing; and know- .'i13,0()t)-5i;4,tlOtl group. Their ranks swelled l0Cll.V' ill Ill? 13155 ll15illllf-"- out not that tlinti art. wretched. o o o A rcpi'esrnta,tivc of Colliers has 4,"; mg;-H-,.h1... and poor, and hung. to 986,020 from 198,232. The group Im- mediately below this, however, is still the -D. G. Rossetti. -. .. ,,- .j The Age Old Story b:cn deputecl to make a llatiflllfllipand naked; 1 mun"; one 1., buy study of modern education. Htslog me mid mug in the 1:", tin; ,.'.IIdlllKS are a flat cotitradictloii of 11"," mnyggt be rim, largest. lzhc swccp.nt: assertion " . expert--, o o o FIICP has shown that they tthc ' , . .modcrn nicthocist are better." Col- - Built-in safety devices for cars were urg- mm, mm Mr, How,-d, M...-5--,,g0f the day. We use it to defend . . , . - i '1 I .. ad before the Amemcan college of phys1.i.he amount of discontent with thclgggn”::b'It:d-l9sg99E:n';I0:?1ll:Egn . . . t hi f ' d" -llh I found , clans and Surgeons recently, with the on-i,:3:1 2:32, 1:,” c1,i,:,g5tii,,1,,f0,,',, 15Vc1,lIlal'e railed t.. profit. from reading servation that they would reduce auto headed parents was too amt" 1'! ;1,i,t:':L'”f,.L:0",,f',,: l::mgcg,10"":;:: 13:?! -- ,- - Iliad . . tl. dci'nlst.sin.dua-" , I iv if (IEHIIIS and ln.iUU95 h.V 80 Per cent It i5mOnuC(.o?,:u;:.;: "3: ..emmionar; dcisdcltistoii that they were not ready. necessary to add the proviso. however, that ittu-uance" or "neurosis" on the partiwi T1” IWIOBISEHI ill” I5 not 1"-'Hd33 v . in te ' ." some of them be actually used. Safety belts, if L” ”mp1”'"”'”' "6 ''”"m " Lml oarrhttr ganrdincr of the 1.05 for instance. would be of no value unless zelen IlI;',II-SCIIOOI teaclirr as habitually fastened on by car users. mu. xix mach nmuh I,-5 ml Itntzeles Board of Efillcalioll, said iltat some nf these lecll-fIR0l'S can'ti'" M" whimmni "W5 doi” "em do math. some have pretty goodiso mum ”'T”d”' mndmgi what The mmmc-tvc do need is more preventioii of ni:tt.hemal.ic.l minds. , . ill they can'1t read the problems iniiwdmg dimcumu ' - - oi" Job 13 R.C M.P. basic training will be extendedime b,,(,;;,-- The Nau.,m1 snclmito gepilir the weaknesse; brought ' -' ' ' I to the Stud I Education in its ”” 5' We 0V”5”""3 it" m3"55lV5 :0 lncaud: Hdmf or equnanom as thiiyiwzs ",pm.t Myatzd. ' t a m,.m.,S,lEducattoit methods . . . I think it erm I . ll rcccn years as many rc(tl'ullSp,,,gly hr”. number 0, h,gh.5C,mnlils significant that when they fin- as possible received such training before oriand rolletzn students "N, Sc,.i0,,m.;ally get the poor readers into the , g , , . . I d n- t m man of the I”, g,i'cmedtnl reading classes. they use after basic nothing but it will be tncludcd.p:c,:”;i, mdmlyn I ,.9s:,11:lC”.T:,.iplionlc5 and plenty of it. If the in the regular course. Apart from being are unable to prepare fIS5iKlIfnPIIL5i?Bn2:(ei3c rgstizzd di15”i::leL.e:V”ythe";: . effectively and are, therefore. frti- , - 1 - trite to the name of the famous fotcc, the imam, m mm mom to M mghg N ougm, to 1,, ,, prmylmod ,,.a"v, training is considered valuable for develep- school and college work." 1” "Mil mldmi "1 the I'M D1809- . . . . . t G1" Monk I .- 1 I; The some "modern methods" trig good policemen and quickly eliminat- WW0 swam” cm Ctzatatailrgrnlfq that R... causing mm dt5,.u,;,,c. I08 l)00l' Ones. wrote in the May i952 issue of :33” l;'::"3p;t;:l:I0tL'31tilt::o:;ll:t;?Iit O 0 0 "Elementary English," official jour- ml of the National Council oftSi1s'A'ar'e”wP:E:i:":sli:VJ'hie:”:P;e Franz Schubert, Austrian composer, .T"0h"' "I E"8”5hi "T0" "”"y hov? to teach. Pgrentanshouldcwioi , , children tire pa i th'oul died this date 1828. I-le learned to play the :pre.cnt.d.., ,cho:,5;,nK,..,Lh:,u,gt1,,:ii - - in t and d tig. I 't' piano and vlolm at an eariy age and then in: diirtfctor ;i')fEgii:I'icCElil.ll1lIA iirsnrctled be ”””"d ,by the ””'90I'3'P9d the organ and counterpoint. At 13 he ,,c,,,,,y pm, on W. b....., or FTIIOKRY banalttlea with whlch pro- wrote It fantasy for piano duet and the fol- standardized tests tzlvm to all ,"””'”"" "'"'.”"'”"”” "Y '” ii"? , , . Auden” "om Hnde Om, mmmh t.-in hn tnarttculatc state. Let. them lowing year composed his first song. Al- ma, ,V,,,.,,.,.. we W,” h,..,, .,,, gay "Willie their apprehensions. or as though he died at 31 he left more music thnt seventy-two per cent of our ggtrgggmt" t;”ii:m',';"?:9,,gip 2;" than almost any other master. The pur- "Wm '" '""d'""”” '”d"”' ' E ' ity and solemnity characteristic of his work is shown to best advantage, perhaps, "An twentieth-century progress we” 9'09!” 'p"ki" move: ahead int. such a startling I ""' 5”” mi" in his songs of which he composed some 600. allow their concern about their children! reading deficiencies to rate in so many other fields. why, w' '7' ENRIGHT are We faced with the fact that our schools are clogged with poor , renders? Why does reading inade- ' quacy continue to be one of the . . . rlnct I f h I d - gnaw." ""5" " M 0" mp ,2-rt Hatch. for many years one An autographed manuscript of R hither- Pmgrmmm He mmmm "of Onmws mm” hommm Wm to ttnpubltshed composition by Franz Lisztmmlu mm", -M the nmmltrtiise prize cattle Instead of nc. has been presented to the United Statesfpubttc with A lot of showy vacu-,.:,':,'m:,'::edd'. ';,2r.',,?:::hi:;',':,-:2 2: Library of Congress, reports Unesco News. ttlu. Look at the volume of cInp- ",9, that 1 73 h I .. b , tn w .du I tcchlrl b-i .. I ””.-"”'f " The work is the "Quatrieme Valse Oubtlee," i.,t..i'...,i.'L"”?h..”t." m..ti:..tn .313...;L”:r5'2d”:f":"”w "j""'”"'”P"'i ”f"i' which is -mentioned in biographies of the "'"'""I "l""n9'-" "'T' NFln' .whitmttn quotes Glenn McCrRkcn: Charlottetown. EWITCH TO?) TILE OAKVILLE. Ont. tCP) -- Herb- itihioiiiaifgnianaoan Liszt gave the manusci-,ipt to one of ;not to teach I child In read until. TORONTO (CR) - The memor- he to 'ready': he must first bcpinlut-den named for themnn who taken along I playful and casual WW3? "The c1l'WgPi9 1-"1 Ff:l;V""' , ,, . . was damage y hurricane net. .ottd lino.-.n as reading readiness. HMS at the Mcxmd" Mu” 6". Reading l'Cf!(I.l)P,!.l hex h:ronie,,t(.M in NM”, 1-Mgnm W” go. one of the most. overworked terms mated at 9.000. The work is to he published this! Old Charlottetown u1dP.II. 1 RAILWAY IMPROVEMENTS From The Examiner, Dec. 6, 1882: "The improvements oti the Princc Edward Island Railtvay, commenced by Mr. Archibald tn the spring of 1881. have been vigorously prosecut- etl durtiig the present sealotia A neat l).lSSClll2Cl' and lrciglit stallotl was erected at MISCDUCIIC ill octobcr. making the seventh open- ing in ttvo years. The station house 3:, O'Leary was thoroughly renovat- ed, the agent's house enlarged. and the whole building neatly painted a few weeks mm. The station houses at County Line and Bradalbanc have tcccircd stmilnr attention. Altcrotlnns and repairs were also made at Hunter River. Royalty Jutirtioii. Georgetown and Chat"- lottetown stations. The station houses at Mill River, Richmond and New zeaiutd were moved to pool- l.ons more cotivciilciit to the public, and new pltltfornis erected in eachv of those places, as well as at Bar- bara Welt, I..oyallst.'Ml1l.0n. and Rotnltv Junction. The platform in fruint at tile station at Charlotte- town has been entirely renewed. and extended about too feet at the 9551 end of the bullduig. "During the summer 50,000 sleep- ers have been put. on the track west of Cli.1rlottct.own, and 42.000 east. The number per mile has, been increased from 2200 to 26403 making the Island road equal int this respect. to the finest roads in, America. 800 tons of steel rails werel ordered in September llllf-. bill in consequence. of the (IIIIICLIIIYI in procurlnl! V955915 in mverpooll only about 90 tons have as yct been received. havml WW1 shipped by steamer to Boston and thence per Boston and Colonial, Steamship Line to Cliarlott.etown.: The balance is now afloat. and ex- pected daily- I "800 carloads of ballast. have been" distributed on the Western Divis- innfimrl 500 on the Eastern where most required. while it large Blmum of ditching has been done. In the neighborhood of twelve miles of barbed wire fencing and -four miles of pole fencing have been erected. in addition to which half it mile of the ordinary rail fence has been constructed. The heavy storms of last winter having dt-monstrated that the snow-fence its originally built along the line was in mnnll cases too close to the track. up- words of two and 1 half miles of it. have been removed. and placed from, twenty to forty feet back II'OI1'I1I.hCi inc. original railway boundary Forty cattle guards have been re- built and seven Additional one: provided. The number of road cros- sings, public and private. (in the line now exceed; one thousand, an average of over five to the mile. "The wooden top: of the bridge: at Milton and st. Nlcholu have been renewed. and extensive 1'9- polrl made to the masonry of all bridges and culverts where requir- ed. New sldingtt for the accom- modation of traffic have been pro- vided at Northam. Summeruds. March. and at; the starch factories at Mt. Stewart and st. Peterl. while the nldlnn at Portage. Mu- couche and Charlottetown have been lengthened. A foundation of crtb work 2'15 ft. long and 25 ft. wide I'll built. under the coal met! It Charlottetown. the worm: having almost entirely deltroyed the pun, upon which the cited wu flnt ullt. "Additional lfnuu tank: have been supplied where neceoury, the most useful perhlpl -on the line being located at. the corner of Water and Prince Street. near the Round House, Charlottetown. The railway authorities have arranged on that it. can be utlliud by the City Fire Department when desired. In con- nection with this n powerful slum pump has been placed In the Round Home capable of throwlm water ovor any of the roilwly bulld- inn in the city. "Since. the middle of July loot. the oonltructlon of "come fifty-olght :manufacturcd by the I NOTES air You probably grumble if 10'! M" to wllk n. block to get. a poll of honey and yet I bee nut to travel 43.11! miles to gather 3. Pound- -Strotlord Beacon-Herald. It has always been out of the corclinol rules for ml)-notch ath- lete: that they must underio lllld training. But. maybe the rule now is due for revision. Dr. Roger Ban- nioter and Chris Chataway who broke new running records thin year both have adopted a rather casual attitude toward tralnlnlg. Two other great runners. Jim Peter: and, Gordon Pixie, trained strenuously and missed the prizes. Aquebec Chronicle Telegraph. It In not only women who find It difficult. to make up their minds. The Manitoba section of the Can- adian Restaurant Association is convinced that this is a failing of everyone. regardless of sex. At. a recent convention it heard that peo- ple complained that the menus offered only peas and carrots as a vegetable. And when the menus were changed to Include mashed turnips and buttered spinach. the same people turned around and re- queated peas and carrots. -Quebec. Chronicle Telegraph. ' A rifle kept. loaded as o protec- tion against. burglars was the means of killing a 10-year-old boy dlllflllll a children's game of make-believe burglars in El Detroit home the other day. The mother was attend- ing church service at the time. The trigger of the .22 rifle that fired the fatal bullet. was pulled by an eight-year-old girl. It on roster was kept of the tragedies resulting from loaded guns being cars in the railway shop: has given employment. to R large number of mechanics. A number of the pas- senger cars have been furnished with larger and stroiiger trucks, and we understaitd that the train iwhlch will be run in connection with the Northern Light this winter will be equipped with steel tired wheels-the first ever used under cars on the road. ”Four new powerful locomotives, Canadian Locoinotlve and Engine Company. Kingston. were landed at the Rail- way wharf here a few weeks ago. Three of them are already in daily use on the mad. and giving excel- lent satisfaction. some six or eight locomotives have been thuroughly repaired during the past. Sunlilltli. and are in as good condition as when originally constructed. A new turntable has been put in the Round I-louse here. and another is being put in at Summersidc. We are pleaszd to learn that. not.wlthstand- ing the low prices which have pre- vailed for farm produce lately. the traffic on the road has been equal Inge 4 THE WAY I kept in homes for the ooteitsibie purpose of protecting householders from the molestation or Intruders It conceivably might outweigh M; the protection actually accomplish. ed. Certainly no loaded gun mould be kept within hand! reach of a child. -Sydney Post-Raeconi The foot. that com: 1955 can win be 10 to 18 inches longer than 1954 model: suggests that the designs;-,-. haven't. heard there's a parking problem. -Brantforcl Expositor How would you like to hlvo Inc” born without the ability to 1,91 pain? There are such people, and one of them was studied by doctor, at a hospital in New York Cltr. He to II 22 year old grocery am, who literally does not know the meaning of pain-and wishes he did. Not. long ago a pocket -.1 matches flared up in his hand as he was lighting 3 cigai-et, Luckm. the bum was not. serious. It pro. duced large blisters but still did not bother him. '1 felt a slight. sensation like 3 fly crawling around on my fingers," he said. 11. hm been the same story as far back as he can remember. He has never had headaches or sore muscles. Bra stings, cuts and bruises do not hurt. -Woodstock Sentinel-Review. Clarence Campbell In I IllIiVa.l'3il) graduate, it lawyer, business iuait at experience. sportsman; a hock.-.. lst who. after ta, successful career as a referee. was made president of the National Hockey Leagup, foremost of all hockey organjza. tions. No man ip Canada is bet. ter qualified to judge and say what constitutes the proper rclattotisltlp of education. sports and business in a. young man's life. Mr. Camp. bell is ayoung man's life. Mr. Camp- all Canadian boys that education is more important titan hock:-t-. Also it is A better and more (Tit. talii way to the ultimate aecuntt that is the objective of almost. 9VEl')'0llE- YDUHE End old.-Wellaiirl Tribune. An obllgln; husbnnd In one win. wishes to save his wife worry and labor. He does not wait. to be ask. ed. Ht: volunteers his service. Whcn she announces that. she has so IIIUri'I to do she does not. know how stir can manage, the obllging husband steps into the breach and proposes that at least he can do an errand for her. When reminded that II will take him out of his way he re- plies that it gives him no concern. He likes to walk and the exams: will do him good. when It. la sua- gcsted that the time required Will take hint away from his work, he assures her that It is of small con- sequence. He remarks that of lot: the office has been depending far too much on him and It is high time they let-ti'n that others can no Gutu-dun PRESTONE -ANTl- FREEZE . SPECIAL For 53.69 Gal. .95 Quart WESTERN BATTERIES Guaranteed up to 4 Yrs. from 58.95 181 Gt. George WESTERN TIRE and AUTO SUPPLY LTD. to that of last. year. which was thctwork well its he. -Naiiaiinn, largest In the history of the road." Free Press. WINTER TIRES "The Tire Pius" At the Lowest Competitive Price Gives Double Wear and Double Voluo You MUST am this Tire WESTERN OILS 99: HEAVY DUTY 51.49 gal. Dial 4917 MAKE THIS All EL gift Items We ' Sunbeam Toasters ” Sunbeam Fry Pans ' ' G. E. Kettles, Toasters. " Perocoiators " Bed Lamps etc. C.G.E. Washers We carry a full line Storey 175 Grafton St. she will simply love a bright new guaranteed rlnctrlral nppllancr drop in today and sec for yourself the numy C.G.E. Electric Ranges Reconditioned Washers, Refrigerators and Electric Ranges EC'i'lilGAL XMAS .. from Storey Electric. 50 ltavo to offor. Steam and Dry Irons of Xmas Tree Lights I Electric Dial 3237 44