THE GUARBIKN Published every weekday morning It 130 Prince strut. Qiarlotteloxvn. P.E.l. by the Thomson company l.t.d.. I S ,. t? it v 4 ml”?- 3 .v F I 154 it 2" 44 Killl St. W.. Tomato. Montreal Offtcl. I25 ltnlvarsiur Tower Bldg. "Covers PHI" EIIIM lolnd us. III Dow" Editor. Frank WIlkIr Ganersl Haunt. III A. Burnett Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publllhrrit Alsnclalioll In-mber of the Canadian Press Mriiiner Audit Bureau at Circulation: Iunrti offices at Summzriude. Montague and Alberto: Authnnted In Second CIIII Mall by the Post Office Department. Ottawa. ll; LIITIEI (ibar . Summeraide Il5.tlfI par ll Ilum. Elsewhere In I'. E. I. S9.l'lI. Other Provinces Ild l . S. 812.00 per Illnum "The st-longest memory in than the weakest ink." T-"Ri'r)Ai'. Ai3i;.'i3.TiaE - Highway Tragedy Tiic tragic highway accident near Clyde River on Wednesday night has shocked all our citizens. It has takcn a toll of five lives. and several others have been injured. There will, of course. he I full inquiry into the circumstahces. and comment on them at this time would be out of pl.i--c. The bcrcaxcri families. in this Province and in the State of Maine, will have the heartfelt sympathy of all ottr people. tfoniing in the midst of our civil: cciclmittoiis and on the eve of Old Home Wcck festivities, the tragedy is a grim reminder of the precarious- itcss of life, and particularly of the iiaiigcrs inhcrcnt in modern high- way traffic. It unricrline.-2 the need for safety measures on a far more comprehensive and effective scale than we have at present. Motoi' traf- flc has wrouglit a revolution in our way of life. but we are still in the horse and buggy stage so far as ade- quate protection of life and limb is concerned. It is not enough to say that many accidents of this kind are due to carelessness. We are human beings, not machines. The dangers consequent upon even momentary lapses of attention are too appalling to be tolerated. Public opinion can, if it will. speed the day when greater emphasis will be placed on safe driv- ing. not only educationally but in hltlltway design and in the manufac- titre of cars, which are equipped to- day with power out of all proportion to ordinary requirements. Hannibal's March A question over which historians have wrangled for many centuries has now been settled definitely by I British scholar. It concerns Hanni- bals route over the Alps in 2151 B.C., which he crossed with elephants. Sir Gavin do Beer. director of Lon- don's History Museum, has remap- pcd the great march by tracing clues of terrain. climate, and even trees which Hannibal saw. They lead over I 9.600-foot pass on the French- ltalian iiordr-r. ('01 de la Traversettc. This is a higher and more hazard- ous way than any previously thought possible for Carthage's army to have Crossed. The 28-year-old gciwral marched from Spain across southern Gaul with 50.000 foot soldiers. 9,000 horse- men. and .10-odd Moroccan ele- phants. llc crrisscrl the Rhone near the prcscnt French town of Aries, Sir Gavin sayskmuch farther south than historians previously thought. He tricked his elephants onto a raft by 4-mcring it with earth. Some panicked and fell off. but then they waded. for the river there was wide. slow. and shallow. A Roman legion itiidcr Scipio. landing hastily at Mas- siiia tnoiv Maixscillct. arrived too late to prevent the crossing. ilaitnibai marched north. not to the iscre as long believed. but to the Ayxzucs trihittary. He turned cast. fighting off hostile Gauls. From the ancient historians Livy and Polybiits. Sir Gavin deduccs that Hannibal followcd thc Durance River into the Alpine foothills above today's town of (lap. Other Gauis guirkid him. only to attack him later. The precise pass they led him to has remained I mystery. Livy and Polybius write that it was pine-covered, very high -and dangerous. coated not only with new snow but hard-frozen snow from the winter before. The plains of ltalia could be sccn from its crest. Only one pass could meet all these conditions in 218 B.C.. Sir Gavin de- termined by long scientific study - the Col de la Traversette. Even to- day this remains wild, rugged coun- try.-frequcnted by smugglers, cros- sed by neither highway nor railroad. .' Monte Vino. rising 12.802 feet high just soutlrof the past. as covered with pines in that Incl t -age, for , lbocrlbu them. In October, ftuio-main; of an Pleladeu" - ' i it woukl have had Indians. . - Through "narrow, stony. and broken ways" Hannibal fought. Treacherous ambushes cost him many men and animals. Others fell from terrifying precipices. Rocks rolled down on them. Descending across avalanche snowfields., "the soldier knew not where to set his foot with safety.” To make passage for the elephants, ancient accounts tell. Hannibal's men "wrought into the hill itself” by first lighting a fire on one huge rock and 1 then drenching it ivith vinegar. l..ong scoffed at. this was a recognized an- cient mcthod of mining and attack- ing f0l'tIfIcnti(ttis, Sir Gavin says. When liaiiiiiiiai's army at last ntarciied out upon the plain of Pied- mont. it numiiereti only 2(t,t)(X) foot and 6,000 horse. It had taken them five niontlislfrom Spain, but they had crn.-;.sed the mountain wall. The News From Geneva To nmst of us, all this talk about licnvy water, fission. and fusion, now going on at the atomic energy conference in (leneva is virtually iiicaiiinglcss; lint there is no person aiiywhctc in lIlt' world who can re- niain ll1tIlllt'l't'lll to dccisioiis that in due coitrse will result from the con- sultations. It would. of cottrsc, be very foolish to evpcct a great deal of tangiiilc licncfit to come out of Geneva at this time. After all. it is less than a month since the summit parlcy DIhIW'll'ti(l the way for a long series of ncgotiations on the inrious levels of officialdom, and it is inttch too soon for the new phase in inter- national relations to have any sal- utary effect on the many and varied problems that beset the world in this age of anxiety. Yet, things have happened this week which would have been undrcamed of only six months ago. American Jtlttl Rtissiaii (IUIINVWIPQ ' have. for one thing. cvcliatigcd folios . of atomic information. it may well be that these folios are impressive more for their hulk than for any im- portant secret they revciii; since na- tions, like individuals. do not sudden- ly advance to complete trust and amity in one another after years of, distrust wrangling. Perhaps the exciiange is nothing more than a symbol of what could be accom- plished if only, in President Eisen- and howcr's worils, "the iiivciitivcitcss of . man could lie consecrated to life." No matter; it may be the beginning of I new venture in the lives of peo- pics and of nations. and it may yet take us all into the light of a bright- er day. If any one is disposed to say that that is an optimistic view. totally un- warranted by any clear act of per- formance. let him say it; certainly, be has plenty of historical evidence on his side. But. as the poet said, "faith has centre cveigvwhere. nor cares to fix itself to form", and surely it will do none of us any harm to hopeeand believe, without being dogmatic about it--that there is in- deed something new in the world. EDITORIAL NOTES Now we know why some young- sters are more mischievous than others in school. After coiisi(ici'iiig the grave problem for several months. specialists have decided that the trouble-makers are above the average in intellectual ability. in other ivorrls, their antics are just time-fillers while they are waiting for the lcss brilliant to catch up. It is to be Itnpctl that this scientific (list-mfcry will not have any deleter- ious affect on discipline. I I 0 Another large scale effort to lo- cate the treasure supposedly hidden by the famed (faptain Kidd, whose reputation for piracy has been clear- ed by the historians, is now under way in the waters surrounding Block Island. off the Rhode Island shore. aided by the latest electronic de- vices. It is interesting to note that more than a million dollars have been spent on the 250 year old search, probably a good deal more than the treasure is worth. I O 0 Whatever else the hot weather may do, it brings out the perennial claims and counter-claims to heat records. No sooner had Libya claimed a record reading of 136 de- grees for Sept. 13, 1922. then Port- ugal sent in proof that it had ex- perienced 158 degrees in July, 1949. So far there has been no official re- Iction from the Soviet Union. but we may expect I report from that coun- try of It least 159 before the sum- IICIOUL i Summer A rim Deal By Heath Macquarrle llr II.'uuItI I”. 'i”ailiutt, Scci'etar,V' l iii the Air Force in Presidenti I-Iisciihowci”s cabinet. has been the centre nf a suirniy political issue in the Liniicd States. A few days ago the storm blew out leaving a tacaiicy in the I'IlS0llIIlH!0l' cabin- ct Tlic Pi-rsiriciit. while praising Tatliott Inr his ”tirclcss energy" and ”uiicxccllcd diliaence in the way he carried out his. duties” Sccreta ' rcsiiznation effective Augiist lftth. While the Dcinocratic incmliers , of the Senate's Armed Services I Committee wcre most active in pressing the case against Talbott. , tiicre uas little indication of any ' strung Republican desire to rush to his tlcfciicc The main charge against the Secretary concerned his dealings as a partner in an - engineering firm with heavy gov- . ernrucnl contracts. lilr. Talbot! ad- I t l mittcd that he had contacted pro- spcctivc ciicnts for the firm from his Pciitagon office and had writ- I ten letters in connection with his , firm's business on Air Force Stat- ionery. At a later stage of the investigation 5 n in 9 Democratic senators expressed dissatisfaction with the viay in which Mr. Tal- bott had fIIKpus'('fI of his 2.000 shares in the Chrysler Corporation when he accepted the office oft Jules Verne's ls Jules Verne still read by t children and tccn-agcrs in France" There is no doubt about the . . answer. "Around the World in 80 Davs". "Twenty l.(-agucs Under the. Sea" and the whole series of these novels about things to come still have a faithful following. The Chatclct Theatre continues to give most popular performances for young people of the adventures of Philcas Fngg and Passc Partout. What is more, the grown-ups are now turning back with delight to the amazing prodigious work of this writer who died fifty years ago. and commemorating the an- niversary. They do not hesitate even to call Jules Verne I real poet and base a sort of PIIIIOSODIIY of science on his work. It is very true. as Mr Andre Siculricd writes, that after this pimiccr in the field of popular science. ”tlu- literature of dis- covery. izcnizraplilcal adventure and things to come gave rise to excellent books. thriilinlt 0n 0f" rasinn. biil no writer in the 20th century has won the exceptional position” that was his. For that faliulnus writer was the first-10 connect mechanics and imaizlnIi- ion. and. the first visionary of, the modern world in its material I evolution. There is hardly I dls- , covcry he did not anticipate. Ke0- t graphical or scientific. The atomic . "Nautilus" is surely I tribute I0 that force of imagination which was iinlque in. his time. What would his thoughts be to- day? What inspiration would he derive from the IctuIl material- tzstion of his dreams. which have been left far behind? He would certainly be terrified It the de- plorable results of human progress. it would seem. This sublect pro- vldes much food for thought. But can one tmItll"C I Pelllmlluc Julii Verne? He belonged to I fortunate age when everything tended to show that "the future of science" would be I happy futurd for mankind. that material well being would bring liIpplneII with it. that endless discoveries would transform the world. I world in which Ill-powerful man would be I demi-god. But Jules Verne VII no philosopher Ind in lilo books It any rate he raised no such questions. Willi established scient- lnc facts II I but: lie went on to imagine future possibilities, many of which of course Ilcnpod him, in particular the must b- presalve one today. the disinte- grntlon of matter. So that ova after two world wars. and (Iced 1 rabbit, This leaves room for doubt "Anniversary By Remy Rtiuro Service D'1nfm-motion Francala WIIIIHIIIINIII br- Secretary of the Air Force in l9.'i.'l. At that time. instead of disposing of them on the open market. Mr. Talbot. it now appears, gave them to his children, one of whom were minors. iilr. Talbott resigned on a Tues- day alter announcing on the pre- vious Friday that he had no more intention of quitting than I lack as to whether his resignation was completely voluntary. in any case the whole affair was judged on ethical rather than legal grounds, since there was no disposition to accuse Talbott of ilegai acts. But, like Caesar's wife. I cabinet sec- retary's public performances must he ahave reproach; and so Mr. Talbott quilted the scene. We wonder how much sympathy Mr. Talbrilt will elicit by his com- ment that his experience had been "pretty tough". since. on his own admission. he had earned more than 5130.000 from his partnership in the private firm after taking over his government job as Scc- , rotary of the Air Force. Many Americans may not agree that he had such I tough deal during those three hard years! However. his future course looks brighter for, Is he told reporters. "Anyway I'm going back to business and make myself I little dough". truction that causes such anxiety in the world today, Jules Verneis imagination unuld lead him off on , In other prophecies less ominous i no doubt. Next May I "Jules . . Verne cycle" . lit to commemorate the career and amazing work of this novelist. who may already be consitlcred. if not one of the masters. certainly one i of the instructors of the younger generations before the deluge of frightful wars, for he did much to interest young minds in technical i things and. after all. In scientific research. Perhaps this is too big a word to use. bill it is difficult to determine the origins, however. slight. of any evolution In taste and sentiment. Who knows. many I young man reading Jules Verne I may have been attracted to studies which, but for this added Itimulus. might have seemed uninteresting. not only In France but abroad too. since the author of "Twenty Thou- sand Leagues Under the Sea" has A public that is worldwide. His books have been translated into almost all languages. including Japanese. This machine age of ours does owe I great deal to him. and it . would be unfair to regard him y merely as I writer of popular books. He gave imaglnntion to! science and that is no mean com- pliment. But his lmIginItion starl- ed off from nations as yet very vague. which have since been more clearly defined. and we are only juiit beginning to trace their devel- opment II regards the study of regions under the sea. for instance. 0 I I Mr. Andre Siegfried notes that Jules Verne'I heroes are Idealist; who are concerned only with the happiness of men. It does not oc- cur to them tbIt their discoveries may be used for works of denth Ind destruction. or rather they Ire certain that once man his muta- ed the forces of nature he will have acquired greater wisdom. They do not experience the anxiety of scientists today with regard to the ends their research will be mIde to nerve. It would be Im- Ilfnply never arose. Probably If Jules Verne had be- Too Rougli For . President Eienhowerls Our Fancy I Domesiicaiing The Atom (Now York llerald 'Trihunel it probably took 'hIlllEl1lEI it! dumcsticate horned cattle. But ten 2 years after Hiroshima. atomic en- ergy is driving I vessel. lighting homes. curing bodily ills. And In (Geneva. scientists from all over the world have Eatliered 10,0001 tlicir kiiowledgc of the bcnellfenl employment of this mighty force. During those ten .Y96FS- mil" M5 lived-and still lives-in the had- nw of the atomic bomb and its even more awful successor. the thcrmn-nuclear portions that it has created the tacit assumption that man cannot afford to fight another major war. It is thus beginning tn fulfil Church- ill's prayer that the atom may "conduce in peace among the nat- ions." The world is turning more and more to the exploration and . application of ways in which, in words. to strip the bomb of its military cas- ing and adapt it to the art of peace." No man has done more than , President Eisenhower to concent- rate attention and cooperative ef- fort upon "the most peaceful uses of fissionabie material." The con- fcrcncc now meeting in Geneva is his work. The United States has taken the lead in making avail- able to other nations material and reactors that may provide the foundation for power plants in re- gions whcrc coal. oil and falling water. the ciinvciitionai sources of ltnwer. arc scant. This is a worthy acceptance of the heavy rcsponsib. ility that was assumed when the Finals Gay was dispatcliod nn her eptichal flight over Hiroshima I decade ago. young people of his time and thus hi-?lD9t.l to mini: about a new turn -of mind. But his Icchnical detail is often childish and mistakes are VPIKV frequent. He for long re- fused in believe in something heav- t ier than air flying. But why rg. proach him on this account? He never claimed to he I scientist and only set out after all to be a novelist. a dreamer of science. More informed. and for a very flood reason. than Cyrano (12 Bar- geran who, as we remember. wrote I "journey in the moon", he was the poet of adventure who delight. ed and thrilled us as children. That, along with the rest, is I Rood enquzh title to fame. ' TO STUDY IN U. K. IWTAWA tCPt -- Doreen Brice nt Saskatoon. ynursinlt suporvtsor of "'9 Oflhnllaedi ward at Saskatoon Sanatnrlum. has been awarded the British Commonwealth and Em- ltirr Nurses' war memorial fund W"0lll'-'thlP for 1955. the Canadian N ll r s e I Association announced Thursday. Miss Brice will leave in September for I year of study in Britain. COFEI PRICES RISE MONTREAL (cc) -. Price! climbed four cents I pound to,- xome coffee brands this week and the increase likely will becom. general In Montreal. I survey showed Thursday. The upward trend results from frosts that harmed 3 fl zlllIn producuoii, wholesalers said. C i-rent popum brands of coffee ullng It 31.1.07 likely will cost 81.04-31.11 by tho "L." " i NOTICE Dr. M. E. DeLory will be Ibsent from his office from Augmt11loAuguIt21ln-I cluslvo. Medically Speaking ly llermn N1 ludeaon. M. 3. There's new hope in treatment of I major eye disease which blinds more than 3,200 Americans each year. Scientists believe now that I tiny onecelled animal parasite. "Taxo- plasma." may be an important factor in causing uveitil. Uveitis is an inflammation of one of the tissues of the eye. the uvea. tract which is found just inside the white coat of the eye-ball. This tract includes the iris, ciliary body and choroid. The choroid is next to the retina. the delicate nervo- film of vision. ' Bacteriological examination of the retina and choroid is difficult and dangerous. Doctors seldom get I chance to look at them closely. except when the eye has been severely damaged by dis- ease and removed. Than. they usually have to make a presump- tive diagnosis of the cause of the disease. RECENT DISCOVERY Until just two years ago, it was believed that the germ of tuber- culosis caused a great many cases of posterior uveitis. Now. however. it is believed by many that Taxo- plasma causes I large percentage of these cases That's an important discovery because T n x ti pl a s in :2 can be treated. Tests have been tried with sulfa drugs and pyrimethamine. I drug previously used in treatment of malaria. Most of the patients thus treated responded quickly. However. further research is needed since this treatment pro- duces side effects such as nausea and decrease of blood elements. Other treatments may prove more valuable. ACTH or cortisone and vaccines or antiscra used con- currently with the pyrimcthaminc and sulfa drugs might be just what we need QUESTION AND ANSWER A.P.: I get dizzy spells. What can be done about them? Answer: Attacks of dizziness may come from I variety of dis- orders. such as disturbances of the inner ear, high blood pres- sure, low blood pressure, heart disturbances and the like. iii! f)r)&nnA; 4:4 bomb. Indeed the , shadow has grown to such pro- where stimulated the curiosity of tho' FROM "A nov's SONG" Where the pools are bright and dee P. the gray trout lie asleep. Up the river Ind over the lea, That's the way for Billy and me. Where the latest, blackbird sings sweetest. tthet iwhere tlie hawthorn blooms the Where the nesttings chirp Ind flee, I That's the way for Billy and me. I Where the mowers mow the clean- 1 . est, 5WIleI'9 the hay lies thick and greenest. I There to track the liomeward boo, That's the way for Billy and me. Where the liazcl bank is steepest. l Where the shadow falls the deep- ; est l tvthe clustering nuts fall tree . Thatls the way for Billy and me. - James Hung. The Age Old Story 0 Lord. thou art my God: I will exalt thee. I will praise thy name: for htiu liasl ('I!'1l(' wr.mfer- . "N "Null: thy counsels of old Ire faithfulness Ind truth. HOTEL MAN DIE! OTTAWA tCPi Rcdvcrse F. (Red! Pratt. 55. former manager 0! the Lord Etizin Hotel here. died Thursday following I heart attagk. Mr. Pratt had, been msnaller of the Ottawa office of the National l'-mltloymcnt Service since 1942. He began his business career with the Ottawa Citizen and later i worked for the Toronto Globe. the Detroit Free Preiis and the Phila- delphia Public Ledger. Happy Holidays! IF YOU - DRIVE Stop for AUTHORIZED Q DEALER tlctinsotl Vllijlng cuiitmtm REFRIGERATION We sell. lnItIll Ind nor- vice refi-igei-Ited counters. walk-in coolers. Illa House hold refrigerators. C. G. E. Vacuum Cleaner Ind Polisher Rentnl Service. M0'l0llS,& APPLIANCES We sell Ind repair Ill motors. washers and electrical Ippllancu. Stony Eloetrlc 11! Graflonltnot . Page 4 The Guardian. NOTES BY THE WATT CInIdlII political leaders In not I: well known ll many ofl them may think. A recent survey 1 by the CInIdlIn Institute of Pub- lic Opinion revealed that 68 per cent could not name any likely successor to Prime Minister St. Laurent. Seventy-four per cent of presumed Idulls were unable to name I successor to Hon. George Drew in the event of the retire- ment of the leader of the Con- servative party. - Vancouver Her- aid. It is sometimes alleged by u- friendly critics ouside and even by i some inside that Scotland com-3 plains too much and does too , little to help herself. Such I charge i is largely uninformed and unfair. The complaint is rather that Scol- land. in which new life has been ' stirring since the war. banishing ; any spirit of defealism, has some- times found herself fruslrated by Government restrictions of one , kind or another from undertaking new developments on her own ac- count. -Edinburgh Scotsman. "The white man's burden" is I phrase used today in derision more - often than seriously. recalling as it does the spacious days of pukka sahibs who lorded it over "lesser breeds without the law". Ncver- I tlieless. it still describes something real though "the free man's re- sponsibi”y" might be a more tactful way of expressing the idea . in 1955. Political confusion in Pak- I istan underlines the fact that some communities now nominally sover- eign are unable to create I demo- cratic system. Pakistan may in the long run prove to be unmanage- able under any system of govern- ment. Some day I salvage job may have to be done. Certainly the Pakistanis. despil notable achievements are not getting on very rapidly with their great ex- , pcriment in building I nation - Toronto Globe and Mail. A ptipular idea on this side of the Atlantic has been that Euro- peans. the French in particular, drink more sensibly than do Cuna- dians who indulge in alcoholic bev- erages. lt is I myth that France herself is Iakin pains to reveal as fallacy. Alco oi has the same effect according to amount taken in whatever country imbibed. The French Government is planning compulsory treatment of alcohol- ism as its next step to combat the ravages of too much liquor in what is conceded in Paris is "the world's hardest-drinking country." Premier Faure has pledged he will continue the anti-alcoholism cam- paign begun last year by milk- drinking ex-Premier Mendes- France. Decrees enacting IIIE8SUI'cI to combat the menace to the race are expected soon. Moncton Transcript. The K & Siock Reclu NOW on AT FENNltJl.L it slsting of:- LADIES' American Girl with I large aasortnient of pumps. oxfortls. lmil- I ers. hullerlnui and c.hlldren' CHILDREN'S In I truism but it's worth uh lng again: Canadian circumsu, ces Ire different than those sum of the border. For I Calladgan steel-worker to argue that m. wage should be identical with u.,,, of I U.S. Iteelworkei is as logm, as I Toronto suburbanite argujn hil income should be same ., ,,,: next door neighbors. That is nm 1. yy that Canadians in some fields or in future years, cannot be mm. productive than Americans tr, only a recognition of the real fan. -The Financial Post i The plalnt has been vol- while some 1,500,000 Bi'il:rdis"l:II the United Kingdom since 1945'. make homes in other lands, cam; ds. the wealthiest of the co,,,m,,", wealth countries. secured onlv rm. min of them. About one-tltird .. the migrants made the much Ionp. er trip to settle in Australia am New Zcaland. The reason, U seems. is that these C0llllIl'IQs ha... more advanced social wcllarg p.-,. grams than Canada has. For ,, ample. the old age Pension Wllhou means test starts at agp 55, ,. compared with age 70 in Fmiaita and both countries have 1l.'llltm,-p hospital and health S(,'l”I'l"pI Chatham Daily News Ottawa prohibited the (I-fltladlnu Pacific Railway from calling it. new scenic dome transcniiiincim train the Royal Caiiadian ltuu ever the cables have been cm-I. ing reports of the hit matte .ii tin Brussels fashion show by I Fans. dian fur piece. This more x All- vcrtised to the world as the ' Rm. at Canadian Onyx Fox Boa" it the Canadian fur ex-hihu ll lIlldt'l the Sp0IISOI':IIIp of the Vi-(tn-at Department of Agriculture. II can only be assumed that the state ch. partnient experts had not got .. round to passing their iulinc M the use of "royal" our to the agriculture department --Vaiii-nu. ver Herald. Ten years after Wm-M War II, shipping still continues to he ping! ued by Hosting mines. Twelu ships were victims of the man-maria marine hazard last year. TBISIM in 429 the number of vessels out had run afoul of the expltism mines since the end of hostilitiei in 1945. Floating mines were sight- ed in the Atlantic, the Pacific Ind the Caribbean. ,,Vesseis were sunl or damaged after hitting the letti- al weapons at such widely scpair ted points as Bangkok, Tlimiaiiii. and Ostend. Belgium. At tlir end of hostilities it was believed that mine hazards would be eliminated in a short. time. but in I l'BCPtlI survey of danger areas ill in Pacific the Hydrographic Oftii-ed clared that "many areas in FA: Eastern waters still remain dati- gerous." - The Times-(lazctte. R Store , ction Shoe I CHANI)I.IlR Bl)-ILIIING Sale. l ' QUEEN 31'. I shoes and sneakers. All must go.III we need space for our new full stock now arriving It the K. it B. Store, 158 Queen Street, oun- Tetnu" LI Parlsettp Koch Gale umtth Shop Ritclm I)uglrI1:lns Swan 6”, Grand More and Grab Sizes 4 to 10. 3"” Width AAA to E Sid-Cap -Wm, Palm" PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT . Check our stock and be convinced. PIOFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bell. Matheoon & Foster iue 150 humid at. J. Elmer Blanchard. ILA. 165 Queen St. Pius (III M. A. Farmer. Q.C., LIIB. Bank of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. GIIIII. LL.B. no ltlehmond In. our on A. Wsltlien Gsudot, LLB. Pllllllps am. in Grafton IL Palmer I IIIIIIII Bank of Non leotla Illa. Mstheson, Pooh O Nlcli I I'll GI-Illa Street I. A. MIcGuIgII MIcl'hool'rnlnor iuonnst. ma Cnrrlolldg.-DIIIMIA-&ooI.E Oh .ll..MeQuIld.B.A. lICll.Ie.:mIII8t. DIIIIII opromiaraisjf mm 0. F. Hutcheson 51 50' F. G. uurcmsson. R-0l- V 5: Grafton st. 0'' I .1. A. CIrruthe:s.TRTll)- , 1:: Kent at. 0" B J. om.t.'07D- , in KIIIMIL 9'" ' , Rio. cor'ISrsk;IiTyIorouee.. sis Offlcn ma: Haw) -Tl.Tl-.'TtIEb'o;R-0- & Montana , E pk M”; CHIROPRACTOR Dr. W. R. Carsml an Prints at. ARCHITECT 9- f.'.'.t." .iT'.li't'.'.Tt'.'. , P.E.l. , Timdlyl rrum- 01'' ”" CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Clrrlo Bldg. -- IUGIIG Pltlll-III PIONIIII Qnblldtll It-.I)0NALl). OUBBIE I 00- CIIIIIIIUVI . EE ANY II B. .1 00!? Al'l'll1ll.0AIBlI'I' II&'IIIIlIlIK nllnuvhut out I. O.” IN