"State of the Un- the President's 2-..,:'u ion" message next month. This -I . p calls for farmers to take certain I '”""' "" """ """ ”' l" ”" acerage out of grain production and Puhllnud Ivory moruu It in Prlnon su-sex . . . ”""'"' ';,'-5,: ;f',," K W” "”- put it in production of soil-building . ' uumu OHBI. as uunrdu iv-u Ila. grasses. For every acre so.designat- XIII. I-YIAI Iulhu ed farmers will receive so much money from the Federal Adminis Gcnenl Iniunr. III A. uuruu Ideilibcr Cancun DID: Newrpapu 3 until on I MImAb:lmo.l the Can an llheu tration. ember I Bureau of Circu Iuou Branch mice: It summeullie, Mullluguc Ina Alberiun There is- too! the matlter 0! Aul.lw'1eu In Second class Mu! by the Pan ulfioo paruneni. Ottawa. By Larriu Lnurwiluluwu -uiuniclsiue olmuo pei ul- Iiuul. Elk when in P. l-.. l. 39.00 Jlhu Provinces and U 5. 312.06 Dc: Innum price supports which, reports say. ' will be increased considerably this coming year-an election year, in- cidentally. Neither of these e!!!)edi- ents may be the answer to Ameri- can farm problems-some farmers appear to welcome them: others do not. But, whatever their results may be-good or bad-they do in- dicate official recognition of the need for specific action to deal with specific problems 4 much better and more encouraging in every way than an endless round of conferen- ces which get nowhere and accom- plish nothing. "The Iirougesl memory II wcalliai-A-t.uaI the weakest. lnk." wl:lmssi3Xv, ma; 2a.i'li93:9T' N Appalling Alternative in her Cliristmas Day i)l'()':l(i- cast Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth l emphasized the great cllallenge fat-- l l ing this day and age. It is not g r e ate r scientific li(3VCi0pfTlClli, , which is going ahead by leaps and. bounds. "We have still." she said. "to solve the problem of iiviiig peaceably together as peoples and , IS nations." World leaders every- 3 where. have been sounding this y warning, and it was epitomized in p the Christmas Eve message in l which Pope Pius called upon world l statesmen of East and West to i agree as soon as possible to outlaw nuclear weapons and ban experi- mental atomic explosions. As re- l l I S l Ottawa's Decision The (lity Council of Ottawa, by a vote of 17 to 6, has accepted the recommendation of the Ottawa Board of Health that Ottawa should follow the example of scores of other communities in North Am- erica in fluoridation of the city's water supply. In speaking on the motion, Controller Donaldson made a point which is applicable to every municipality where this issue is be- ing considered. Pointing out that the views of the Board of Health have been endorsed by the Ontario Depart.ment of Health and many other expert bodies, he continued: "How else can Board of Control form an opinion other than by ac- renting the word of the responsible ported by the Canadian Press, His Holiness painted a vivid picture of the destruction and horror a nu- clear war could bring. It is worth quoting again, for its terrifying knplications. "Entire cities, even the largest and the richest in art and history, 1. wiped out; I pail of death over the l pulverized ruins, covering countless vibtirns with limbs burnt twisted ”””””'lml Wm W equipped t” Ind scattered, while others groali l gags, tefiiylcal recommendations in their dearth agony. Meanwhile. l '5 Sm I , . i ”If we allowed I plebiscite on the spectre of the radioactive cloud hinders the survivors from giving my help, and inexorably advances he muff out any remaining life. There will be no song of victory. only the itnconsolabie weeping of humanitly which in desolation will g-ue upon the catastrophe brought on by its own folly." Dan-te in I vision was conducted by Virgiil through the realms of Hell to an exit ”where once was Eden." it is this vision of the In- ferno tiiat His Holiness may well have had in mind-, but even Dante could not have imagined a whole World engulfed in this man-made nightmare which looms now as a possibility ilf we fail to meet the challenge which the advance of science has confronted us with. It is I moral challenge, and can only be met upon moral grounds. All ollr , material progress will avail us notli- l log if we do not rise to meet ii. i fluoridation, there is I possibility that the whole issue could be con- fused by cranks and that the public would misunderstand this highly technical question. ”'I'he people elected us to make decisions of this sort; we must for the good of the people, show the quality of leadership." As the Ottawa Journal points out, ”most of the qualified experts are convinced that the addition of fluorine to a community's water supply c u t s down tooth - decay among the children and has no bad effects. They support. their opin- ions with the evidence of iong-con- tinued experiments in Brantford and in cities of the United States. How can the layman take it upon himself to say the experts are wrong?” EDITORIAL NOTES World-wid ,, en ti , issue may bee saidntiixrliieiilhe lnolslli Mmmced. 1:a::1' dnoieimfiremll C . . .. . important trend of the ycar lS).”l;'i. ompoqen 16 R ale 7 Will it carry over with greater force and effectiveness into the lien year? If so, there is hope. if not. we shall have moved nearer lilv abyss. and the problem of finding ll solution will be all the hlirtler at another year's end. l The officers and crew of the (Y.G.S. Saurci are A deserving of much praise for their efforts in clearing icr-bound ships in the har- hour. No x-iolcnll deaths in Prince Ed- l Aslrrl islantl or Saskatchewan were l-cportcrl over the Christmas week- -nri. but the toil across Canada, of :ix'ti'-follr persons killed in traffic ll-t-irivnts is a shocking one indeed. Conferences And Action It must be appalwlil In civil ill" most steadfast sllppol-tors of thc Preseni F(lilIllll'-ll (;oi'cl'llmo-Ill illill. , thus far. plans for l'clicVili.g thc 1, l-jvon worse is the record in thg prcsclll iiilszllisiliclory pllL',lli ol "nitctl Slates, (lanatlian agl'lt'ultlu'c have not pm- i ' grcsscrl noticeably brwontl thc talk- iriu stage. There ma)" lw good i'll;1s. do for this. ('ci'laini)', it would be- unfair to suggest that Federal Gov- ernment officials are inrliffcrcnt, ti. (fongrallliations to Mr. W. Stew- '-ll'i l.ai'cr.s, formerly of (2corge- lown, ii ho has hccn appoinlcd Chiel of Police for the Town of Sackviile. N. R. His twenty years of varied the nccti for specific action in a service in the R.C.M.P. ought. to very important phase of thc couu fit him cminnnuy for the regpon. "CV s economy. The Govcrllmcnt has sibic post. nothing to lose, in prestige, and it ' good deal to gain. by a vigorous at- tempt to strengthen any branch of the economy that has fallen on dif- ficult times. The fact remains, how ever. that the various conferences I O The P. F). 1. Dairy Association deserves commendation for its de- cision to provide 240 quarts of milk for needy Charlottetown citizens at Christmas time. The Catholic Wei- on farm problems have produced farc Bureau and the Free Dispen very little in the way of tangible sary were entrusted with the dis- results. tribution. It could not have been in better hands. 0 Meanwhile, in the United States. where agricultural conditions in many respects are no better than The recent cold spell brought I they are here-and in some re- certain amount of discomfort to spec-ts worse - definite action is residents of various sections of Under Way to improve conditions. Canada; and, in this section It The details of this action are ex- - treinely controversial even , among 3 the IIIIIII-I themselves, but It lelltemq Idpnotnt II earnest It- got down to business. hwumple, the "sol- least, it was felt the more -keenly because It came early and unex- pectedly. Yet, hi view of the dis- uten in other part: of this world- the floodI in Callornls, for Il- , stance-any dhcomfart Canadian Illicmo. which has been tlx- hm expel-lemui I. aim Ill, relo- V If Acncldhro A tlvuly trivlIl lid, corhi. Iot I Wishifcoutd pget mg . . that 'lp7rea1nlfm370-FR . Sentiments at The ea ll? SON World' Affairs in 1955- By Russell Ehnn Ilianadiian Press Siaff other in 1955 and agreed that their differences could be settled with- out bloodshed. While the July air was filled with muniques from the first Big Four summit conference since 1945 told of disarmament proposals. Plans for German unification and of I possible lifting of the Iron Curtain. But four months later, when the Big Four foreign ministers metlto negotiate the details of their chelfs' pronouncements, they found they were as far apart as ever on how to disarm, how to reunite Germany and how to reestablish normal contacts between East and West. AUSTRIAN INDEPENDENCE Oue comparatively minor prob- lem was settled during the year. After years of deadlock, Russia fin- Illy signed the treaty giving Aus- tria her independence for the first time since 1938. An uneasy calm settled over the Far East, after artillery exchanges between the Communist Chinese mainland and the Nationalist-held isles of Quemoy and Matsu ap- peared to herald full-scale hostili- ties in the early months. The Middle East. however, he- came a new danger spot. Renewed border warfare between Israel and Egypt threatened to assume major proportions as Communist Czech- oslovakia, backed by Russia. sent arms to Egypt. In I sudden change of tactics. Russia's leaders made unprece- dented trips abroad to shop for goodwill. Premier Nikolai Bulga- nin and Communist party secre- tary Nikita Khrushchev banqucted with Marshal Tito in Belgrade, posed for photographs with the Western Big Three in Geneva and wooed Prime Minister Nehru in New Delhi. At home the Kremlin was equally busy, entcrtaining Nehru. Wcsl German Clianc-cllnr Konrad .-idcnauer, Canadian Exter- nal Affairs Minister I. H Pear- son and thc premiers of Norway and Rllrlna GERMANY JOINS NATO Russia offered technical Asian collntries, returned the naval I tokcn rciliirtion in her armed forces and pcrmitlcll an ilu-rl-zi-llu: number of cultural, trade and ll'('ll- side world. On the other hand. Riisslllll rec- ognition of newly sovercllzn i.'.;-st Germany and repatriation of Ger- man pl-isoncrs did not prcvcnl the Adeuaucr government frnm join. my the North Atlantic Treaty or. ganizatlon. As a counter-nicnsllre, Russia organized an East Eiirupran defence system Later in the year a new xliddlc Eastern anti-Communist alliance wall signed by Britain. P:ll;i5t;m' Iran. Iraq and Turkcy. Of the parlicipantts in the summit conference, only Prcsidcnt Eisen- hower was in power In January, Bulganin. British Prime Minimu- Sir Anthony Eden and French Pre. micr Edgar Faure all came to of- fice during the year, MALENKOV RESIGNS Bllhzanin took over the soviet premiership when Georgi Mali-nkov luddenlv resilzned Feb 8 befquqe 0' 8?”-NVOWHI "inexperience"? in handling domestic nrohlems. stal. iu's successor was dnwn.,m,ded to deoutv premier In nhnrg. M p,,,,.,,. developments. Eden inherited the leadership of the Conservative imvernrnent from Sir Winston Churchill M Am." ",4 I month later led his party to I sweeping 99-seal majority in I use ill dectlon.Chiu'chiil k IIIflI the Oovmnoiislmt m talk of the "spirit of Geneva," com- , l The worldis leaders toasted each i erai election. This will be held .Jan. 2. i Unrest ill North Africa was I major cause of France's political problems. A wave of nationalism swept Algeria, Morocco and Tuni- sia, culminating in bloody riots. After long negotiations, the FIurI lgovernment. quieted the distur- H5'KlSr l lance in underdeveloped Afrlt-an-i base of Pnrkkala to Finland. mullr i nlcal exchange visits with the u Il- l bances in Tunisia by granting home rule and attempted to appease Moroccan nationalists by restoring the exiled Sultan Mohammad Ben Youssef to the throne. CYPRUS TERRORISM A growing agitation for union with Greece produced I series of mi-i-oi-ist attacks in the strategic British Mediterranean colony of Cyprus. A campaign against colonialism by I group of African-Asian nu- tionr - the ”Baiidung powers"- was conducted in the United NI- tionl with occasional Russian and Latin American support. This neutrulist power bloc got its name from the Indonesian town where 29 nations, including Red China. met in April. The confer- ence ended with I declaration em- phasizing peaceful goals and re- jecting all forms of colonialism. Latin America had more than its share of political unrest. A revolt of the armed servdcel removed Fresideiit Juan Peron. ending I 10-year dictatorship. Two months after Peron went into exile his successor, Maj.-Gen. Eduardo Lanai-di, was ousted by the army chief of staff, Maj.-Gen Pedro Arumburu, who pledged I return to democratic rule. In Brazil, where President .1030 Cafe Filho suffered I heart attack in the last weeks of his term of office, his successor, Carolol de Luz. remained in office only two days before being ousted in I bloodless coup. Charging I plot to prevent president - elect Juscelliio Kubitschek from taking office in January, the rebels installed Mereu Ramos as provisional president. Panamannian president Jose An- lonin Remon was assassinated (III. 2 and his successor, Jose Ramon Guizzldu, was arrested two weeks later. He was charged with colt- The sun that brief December day Rose clieerless over hills of grey. And darkly circled gave at noon A sadder light than waning inooii. slow tracing down the thickening sky Ito mute and ominous prophecy. A potent seeming less I threat, It bank from night before it set. A chill no coat however stout Of homespun stuff could quite shut out, A hard, dull bitterness of cold. . . . That checked mid-vein, the circling race 01 life-blood in the sharpened face, The coming of the snowstorm told, Unwlrmed by any sunset light, The grey day darkened into night; The night made hoary with the swarm And whirl-dance of the blinding -.It0I'ln. As zigzag: wavering to and fro Crossed and re-crossed the winged snow, And ere the early bedtime came. The white drift tiled the window frame. And through the glass the clothes- line Dost Looked like I tail and shceted ghost. -J. G. Whittier. six-yenr prison term. A short-lived Costa Rican rebel- lion was crushed. For several months world inter- est was held by the romance of Princess Margaret and Group Capt. Peter Townsend, a former royal querry now serving as a Royal ii: Force attache. Apprehension: if the effect of I possible marriage between B divorced man and I member of the Royal Family were stiiled when the princess an- nounced her decision not to marry him. A vlcclne against poliomyelilll invented by Dr. Jonas Salk was put into wide and effective use in several countries, including Canada and the United States. Russia and the U.S. both announced plans to launch the world's first mtin-made nlicity in the murder and given I l satellite within ,two years. Canada's largest Forest Whnlpcg rm Prdu The western softwood forest, rol- ling in succssive wIveI from the Rockies to the sen. is one of Can- lria's primary Insets. It provides tl)0Ui. 8 quarter of the nation's Tlllii timber products and half the innual income of British Columbia. its future, now under study by I royal commission. is therefore of high national importance. Is the forest being overcut by Britiril Columbia's huge Ind ex- panding timber industries? Will they face. some you-I hence, I hiatus in their supply of rIw inat- forcst grown in I minimum cycle of Ibout ninety years? Is I i-cvointlomry cbnuge In forest manuomaut -during the elicli representing an empire of timber worth many millions o( (inl- lars, have been granted so far. mostly in the coastal region. In addition, the Government sets aside what Ii-I called public work- ing circles where small logging opcntorl Ire permitted to cut Crown timber under supervision. my-Ina for it as they cut. No doubt Is he expected in re- commen this system, Chief Justice Sloln finds himself cou- fmntcd, in his second inquiry, by I Itru between the big timber com es and the small independ- at operators. The independents have found In ted champion in Mr. H. IL MIcMll1In. His company, luc- V Speaking ' imi.invmonmrin.uusci.u -rlnl -aonlxlnu pain in W" .4- ei-? Most road: today In black. shoulder is often halnedby I who which quickly take: is light It you can't. even hear. v night. P v: Does this sound lmilluibief the road In obliterated. It Well, it isn't. The treatuiult em- ploys use of ultrasound wIveI and its effectiveness II heilll dGm0"' sti-Ited every day. ' Ulti-uonlc energy relieve! rain Ind spasm in muscles Ind help: get the sore muscles back in work- ing order again. Doctors ll! ii ll especially effective in treatinl 5111'" sitis, flbrositls, perlarthrltis nnd capsuiitis. SOUND WAVES These sound waves have fre- quencies beyond our hearing range. Because of the energy involved in the motion. they produce I sooth- ing heating effect. Generally, a series of treatments ranges between six and twelve daily applications given in success- ion. Tlie length of the treat-lnenll ranges from a minimum of five minutes at first and increases grud- unlly to a maximum of 15 minutes. Doctors advise against these new treatments. however. on the eyes, helm, genitalia, growing bones and other specific areas. Since air is not dense enough to permit easy passage of these ul- trasound waves, two methods are used to get these healing waves to the source of the pain. One is the direct method of application in which petroleum jel- ly, liquid paraffin, mineral or cast- or oil are Ippliedto the body to serve as I binding agent between the skin and the treating appara- tus. In the other, water is used as the conducting agent. Both the part of the body to be treated and the apparatus are held under water throughout the treat- ment. QUESTION AND ANSWER ' 11.11.: I have poor circulation. Could this be caused by I thyroid condition? Answer: Sometimes I lack of thyroid hormone may be at fault in circulatory difficulties. However, this is not often the case. The Age Old Story 0 man greatly beloved, fear not: peace be unto thee, be strong, yen. be strong. And when he had spok- en unto me I was strengthened. On Honoring Poets (Ottawa Journal) The United Kingdom Post Office has rejected I suggestion that-the head of Robert Burns, Scotland's immortal poet. be used on an issue of Britain's postage stamps. Said the Postmaster General, Dr. Char- les Hill: , ' "It is traditional in this country that the head of the reigning mou- arcli is the basic feature of all out I ps and I think there is no de- sir to depart from that." Little reason why there should be. For it once I beginning be made in putting the heads of poets on stamps, even the head of I belov- ed poet like Burns. where would the thing end? Would we hIvI Shakespeare and Swinburne, and Arnold and Keats and Shelley. and perhaps later on Eliot and Auden Ind Spender? And then start with politicians, engineers, industrialists and scientists. There is another and better way to honor poets: To read them. Robert Burns is rightly remembe ed in Scotland and indeed through- out the English-speaking world (there are said to be more monu- ments to him in Canada than to any other mun), but we sometimes wonder how many read him? In truth, we wonder often how many of our youth now read shake- xpeu-e (apart from what they read It Ichool). or read the Victorian poets, or I poet like Longfellow Ind Whitman. or wine of our own Canadian poets like Archibald ilampinsu If Blls Canaan? we hear of Eliot and Spender Ind Auden, or Ivan of Dylan Thomas (the poets of our own youth. Fran- cis Thompson, Lionel Johnson, Step- hen Philipuesui completely for- gotten but how much of Mathew Arnold and Milton and Byron and Shelley? of all the Ixpi-unions of our thought, of our hopes. fears, am- bltions, joys, sorrows Ind longinga, poetry is the noblest. Yet the works of the poets, of the greatest of tomb is possible that some other color. Iny yellow or. teen. would prove most ntisfactoiry both for Ind dIy trnvelint. -Bnndon sun. A new show! on wheels is do- isned to take the strain air. of removing snow from walks and driveways. The m-inch blade on this manual snow plow can bu Id- Justod easily to push snow to the right or left, or forward. The plow in of Iturdy steel construc- ton and rolls easily on rubber tires. -Science Digest. The wall It the door has become I symbol for pretty dire emerg- ency, but few things are so bad they can't be worse, and that also applies to wolves It the door. An Eskimo community near the north- eastern tip of Quebec is proof of it. The settlement was raided by five hungry polar bears, and the R.C.A.F. has had to fly up there to replenish the exhausted food supply. -Windsor Star. llo. June: Sinclair has often Ilk- ed for more attention to be paid to the posibliity that one day the starving nations of the world will be fed by the seas. Vast numbers of people already subsist on fish. The sea has been the great pro- vider from time immemorial. But there is no reason why the answer to the starving masses of the Orient will not be an elaboration of the simple fishing net that drags in sustenance and v in: in such generous measure. -Vancouver Herald. To avoid being inoculated against rabies. I Flin Flou cat illegally boarded I CNR train and set of into the wild blue yonder. It is difficult to see how any good can come of this. People who reproach cat: for being cats will be quick to point out that here II I clear cau of feline dereliction of duty. One suspects too that by this time the offence has been compounded As sure I: cats Ire cats, this cat will turn up at some Saskatchewan point without visible means of sup- port Ind become I charge on the public authorities. But in all fair- ness it should be recognized that I cut spaces oveknlne lives the ex- perience that I human compresses into one. This is probably conducive to luesponsible conduct. 1-winnl- Pel- If all motorists subscribed to the laudable plan of having their tli-es checked periodically for curb bruis- es, pot-hole breaks and other dam- age. there would doubtleu be few- er blowout: and accidents caused by tire failure. But we can go fur- ther. If we would have our vehic- les treated to regular programs of preventive maintenance, there would be even fewer accidents still. I! we Ill saw our dentist twice I year. we wouldn't have many tooth- Iches. If we all took physical check- up: at reasonable Intervals. than might not be so many deaths duo to heIrt ailments or other dil- eases. So the big question with tires is to sce,tliat they are given is - iodlc lnspctioii by qualified pco le. There is merit to the tire dealers” Insertions but unless there In compulsory periodic safety lanes for checking up on motor vehicles. people will go right on driving with unsafe tires-some of which will cause serious acidents. -Welland Tribune. CONSULT: ofllou: Wollloolcnlllclwusbonaf-l PIIOIICU Iiiceuful. t Jducltinn. On um ..l.d',",,, nut dental work. 31,, ml”. or cl ninz guem, W den students in I !hree.ye.. mm or much to Qualify u,,,, for the work. A Iinall pmponh take I five-yen: course, to qualw. them In oi-thodonigu, etc, M. l?ii.'f2.””'i”."”l?'””” -- t ordin -Wind”: sin: "7 ""'"' Canadians Ihould he . deduct" the whole of their hlfel from taxable in They should not. in other, gm have to My one i h ex. pendltures should be hroailtiatiaed include health costs of every souable drug, .11 3””, sum. an treatments, In inediail 01' lwlllltal or Icldent Insurance Finance Minister Harris has ll; Power to make this change. Na ralnzle voice would be raised nag I single vote cast, in Pal-lining; ,iIug:uinst it. - Toronto Globe M Clnullatil have,-dqvgigpgd m Ire being called on from of the world. Canadian Iefll juz. veyors have worked in palm. and Ceylon. various areas of South America; two-specially equipped Ilrcraft are presently being now. to the Antarctic to act as the phi). tnlzraphlc eyes ,of the British An arctic expedition. The special um. hodl. lpeclal devices these my. use were dveiaped in cum, which has such I great new 1,, them and which presents every kind of terrain. in one area of 3''”'-h" '0? Experience and expat. lment. -Montreal Gazette. Premier. DuplcIIis'. threat I. control newsprint production .. Quebec has an air of um-egu about it. If it were in the intel-es of newspapers generally it would be forgivable, though mistaken. But his point is that the ow, - ---u mills must give 3 pm, price to uebec newspapers or face controls which possibly might crip- Dle their capacity for expansion The move has the egnna.-k, , I political play to win the g Wm 0' .QJI8bec's press. it we r. coat the Government nothing "4 the newsprint firms very mu. since it's said the mills could turn out all the newsprint consumed I3 Quebec Province in I glnglg mt --Vancouver Sun. skill in mm aurveyin -, - I Ind prospectinl um ugh-tmla 1 l Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCES SALES ll SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding Ind Begun llLE(7l'RlCAL lepali-I Palmer Electric Phonumsssu FOR YOIIR INSURANCE NEEDS IIYNDMAN & CO. LTD. lnIurInca Slim! 1378. Our experience of over three quarters I century I! 5 surance Underwriters. is It your dilpoul. CIIABLOTTETOWN - SUMMEBSIDE - MONTAGUl- ALBEIITON. I i AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE. PROFESSIONAL CARDS them, seem on fewer h ' t 'm., their place in the home is now with I TV set or radio BARRISTERS, 4OI.iCITORS. Etc. onltol:r0ll:':'f the uddesf comments -Q. iggugc?-fzugsfogmr utch & S0! that I forelt commillioll mlzht I. Illnar Blanchard. B.A. Gi,Fd. N. R.0. fqlllntothc lIIndI Ingopx-ovo 3 man It. Hum 42:: 9 Gm... 3, mil :'::tnmc:llimI'lw Qnlilotilwlpiigd I. A. Tanner. Q.C., LLJI. l J. A. OI:-rnthem R.0. tvyktile Iilectorl it makes mlI- Ink If canmm mag. in: use It. PM I . e . . '" er "m"r--"I-"" mug: more of the revenues from ' AIIHIII M. Glllls. LL.B. l Grant. la, um mun Izmzltowlegld lmil II III:-on in. mi 4-m Eg,gg,ggg,,-. 0 mo. ' - PCT?-" I . I R' l Mellon, Ind IIII the forestry Io & Wsltlien G-Iudet, LL.B. ,,,,,'j,,'EfV1”l,..,, su- vlco (fly!!! M06 and Illl. l1l0rIflIIM- oflbgiltll Home 47! W-:.. .2 .. ll.”lf.”fw?fl.”6.Fi -3-"'--'”""'. ”""'. --"'”"" ”"' "” -'"-"'31.? ....."”""'... ......'.'s" ""”"' infant - . - fore Chief Justice aim of. lifetime of expulaulru "WW. '”i”' R who, I! royal . is forester. logger Ind manufacturer. ""5" ” lhtlieoon. Peaks I - taking his second look It forest Mr. ldIcMiIlIn has praplrcd I Win"! 5'3"” "' " '3. mcho.” problems after tan you-I of II II- clauic brief on forest prob in mm mm ”' m n DEW. I. CIr!0l3 perimentllunchulhild. llenynthatbomoreforestmn-' a”wIflIIvlIwtoihIdopt- GIIHIIICIII0 mpg Dial mm mm 3?;"l.:'”.:".";l..".l”f:.l'.f::li - I 'r " f" t "”"""' - - ARCHITECT ......”'”.”'.:'.l”"”””.':."'.:."” .l.'l?”'""" I-M v-i-2:-.2: mar”:-fl”-'3-””mmm ”'"'" ”'””" ”''''-'t .. - so man in ft " - , M. ....l may ...u... ....,,';2 ”" ,"',,';",,',':.f',,'”i',,,,",', ,, up lggamump :. mu. elm. I. Iloqvnld. u. 2. 5:1: giuglgi-,.C.' clnfcvlnee.-To end the pro- ting (Ir more free: ma your '”"- "" " "W" L...m.."""""..K . .L'”"'!' ,3... zlneinl wage in ugbpg 3-aha-ea-unmu mun-Imn -no ,'f,?,,'5,"';,"::,.'",",'.'.'(.' Inna I 1-luau ' he-d-,;' IEl",::M' - mm” In ma:-smell: lleeIcu.lII'n -gs,-.u uuaill JournII-AmIi-l- D up I. III at I IIIIUI 9'01 " .... ..u.........""""'”'" ..... .."..:.".:.' .. '..:.' ll'.l'..'..::'."'.'."'.....".':.'.'.'.'lr .CI-lAIl1'Elfll',) A ovum-as wlI&IrIIIIdIdovertoIIraI IIIoclIilydIngg;-onp.i ,. . iMYIIOIUIl0PlN8 , ', comedians. provided they agree iunis FIRST mqum- , uoII'rnnAI. (cm - Qua-bIe'I 1 DUI I,” to II: out I! much clmeber Is on Justice sim 3 .13 ' mud new PIrilImIIt 35 1- p A ; ”'m'''':lopcrIul ma lfrlct cover: i'I':"::ui'il".":l A” r. o I! m