i l -. l l 3 THE GUARDIAN Puiilisned every weekday ornlux It 13 Prince sired '3h.mottelnwu. PI-7.1. by In Thomson Complny Ltd. to Kllll St. w..,Tonnnua. Mlllillfdl ptuce. 225 University Town uuu. "l.'inrru Print: Edvlrd Inland LII: Ibo Der” Iidiuli, Prank Walker ucuual Manager. Ian A. Human lleinne: Canadian Daily Neuspupu Pulllishcrs hsociulion Meinm-I ol the Canadian Pnu j Mklllhcr Audit. Bureau at Cixcuiauuiu Bltllttll uiiircs at .5i-mmcrlllle. hluulaguo and klbertou Atiiiit-MI:-d as Scrum! Class Mall by the Poll OIIIBI Ilepallnlent, Ottawa. Ry ldillrl L'liarlulIcluMn. suiiiiiiersine si:i.tki pel n uuni. Elsewhere In P. L. l. 59.00 Jthrr Province and U. S. 312.00 per unnum "The strongest memory in weaker fill” the weakest Ink." VFRII).-IY, SEPT. 30, 1955 An Important Study 'l”hi'ough the .,eiiei'osity of Mr. John D. Rockt-t'ellci', .lr., who iias provided a quarter of a million dol- lars for the purpose, the World Council of Churches. made up 0! 158 religious deiioiiiiriations. is pre- paring to make a three year study of Christian responsibility in those parts of Asia and Africa where so- cial and political changts of great proportions are taking place. The new approacli. according to tloiiiicil officials. is the result of a conviction that "the Churches of the ecumeni- cal movement are propt-i'ly concern- ed with the spiritual foiiiidatioiis on which new societies are being luiilt and with the assiimptioiis about man and society which underlie so- cial policies and pi'ogi';ims". The study will have two llllllli olijci-fixes: ill to gather facts on the ciirrent situation: (2) to evaliiate existing work of social import, especially that carricd on by tiliristian agen- cies. The fact of the matter is that Ctiristian missions are finding it ever more and more difficult to carry on their work. especially the pg-rely evangelical phase of it. in t.hose areas of Asia and Africa which of late years have moved for- ward to political independence and some measure of economic strength. In India. for example, the new na- tionalism that emerged with the coming of full sovereignty is having I heavy impact on Western missioii- ary work in all its phases. Ml" Nehru. who is by no means anti- Christian, has stated on scxcral oc- casions that (Thristian work in India must. in due coitrsc-tlie sooner the better, he believes--he put under the direction of Indian iiatioiials. At the same time. he rccogni1,cs th-i immense good in matters of hcaltli, education. and social wcll'ai'e that Christian missions hzfve done. When India became a sovereign state it was fcared in some Western circles that Christian missions would be seriously hindered in their work and perhaps banned altogether. That this has not happened is duc. in part, to Mr. Nchru's tolcrancc and i,indci'standing. and. in part. to the great work so niaiiy ('hi'istian missionaries have doiic in all ai't-as of the Far East. For all that. it is tllllltl clear that arljiistmciits will litiw to he iiiutlc ll (llii'isti;-iiiity ea western product iin the miiitls of Asiatics. though of coiiixsc in origin it isnlt---is to con- tinue its influence in the face of rising nzitioiialisiii and thc political tctisioiis and social ttiilicuitils that go with it. How to make tlicsc ad- jiistiiicitts, without impairing the husic clt:ii';ictci' of niissitii1;ii'y work will, no doubt. loriii an iniporttint pm-t of the prnicctcrl study. Cheese import Question As a straiglit htisincss ttcal thi- rcporttvl piircliiisc of about Jl,ttt)ti,tltttt ipflllllfls of New Zealand cliecsc is likely to be profitable for the five or six importers concerned. The cheese can he landed at Montreal for about three cents a pound less than (lana- diaii cheddar would cost. and it is probable that markets will be found here tit the reduced price. It can also be admittcd that if we arc going to sell nianufacturcd products to New Zeal-.ind we must take somctliinll 1" return. and New Zealand has chccsc seeking markets. "Rut," comments the Ottawa Jouriitil, "the whole transaction can hc qiicstioiicd. and should he. In the first. place we do not need this extra ('llt'f'.'s'P, in fact are seeking markets for several million pounds we have to sell. In Eastern ()ritario. whcre N10 bulk of Canr'la's chccse is produced. farmers for the past two years have .h-on paying it fairly hlsh nei'ccntallF of the money they received for c, use milk into: fund" which en- a'ilt.-d their organization to export cheese United Kingdom. " lg funnel-I have every right I ' meal that, Ifter paylfls clear their market or surpluses, cheaper cheese should come in and ruin their plans, especially as they are now getting I price for cheese ,milk which is about half what other dairy farmers are getting for milk going into the fluid trade. ”The system of allowing imports that undermine established trade and prices which are fair having in mind the over-all Canadian economy and conditions, is of doubtful wisdom. It may be passed off by saying that trade must be a two-way affair but that argument can go just so far. If we are to allow food imports Which compete adveisely with Canadlnn costs why not also allow imports of manufactured products? The Cana- dian dairy farmer is entitled to the same treatment as his fellow Cana- dians who own factories or work in them." Advice in Rhyme in ruiiimagiiig through an Eng- lisli periodical published in the late lRtttl's we came across the follow- ing ”advice in rhyme”. And. 81- tlioiigli the passing years have brouglit many changes in news- paper techniques and practices. T-ll? advice it contains is still very good and. if followed faithfully. would de- light the heart of any ”pi'inter man"-or. for that matter, any "ed- itor man": "There is a man the printer loves zuid he is wondrous wise; wheneler he writes the printer man he dot- tetli all his i's. And when he's dotted all of them with carefulness and ease. lie punctuates each paragraph and crosses all his t's. Upon one side alone he writes, and never rolls his leaves; and from the man of ink a smile and mark tinsert' receives. And when A question he doth ask- taiight wisely he hath been-he doth the goodly penny stamp, for postage hack, put in. He gives the place from which he writese-the ad- dress the printer needs-and plain- ly writes his honoured name, so he that runneth reads. ”He writes, revises, reads, cor- rects, and re-writes all again.' and keeps one copy safe, and sends one to the printer man. And thus. by taking little pains, at trifling care and cost. assures himself his manu- script will not be burned or lost. So let all those who long to write take pattern by this man; with jet black ink and paper white do just the best they can; and then the printer man shall know. and bless them as his friends. all though life's journey as they go, until that journey ends." EDITORIAL NOTES Big league baseball is not what it used to be. At least that. is the implication of a report concerning attendance and gate receipts this season. Each department shows ait approximate decrease of 40') from the figures of seven or eight. years ago. Some pessimistic observers of the trcnd are saying that the end of the game in its professional phase is only a matter of time. D U U The North American Indian population in general may be on the dcclinc; but in this country it is in- creasing. Latest figures show there are now about i.')l.flf)0 Canadian In- flllllls, an li'. increase in the last five ycars. At the start of Confed- criition there were about tlfl,(l0fl. 'l'lie prcscnt growth is attributed cliicilv to better methods of treat- ing diseases to which. Indians were particularly siisccptible. C O O The memory of Dr. Thomas .Iohn Barnardo, Irish-born philan- thropist and founder of homes in Britain for destitute children, has been honored with services marking the Stlth anniversary of his death. From lR32 until the start of the Second World War 29.000 British yoiingstcrs were sent to Canada to start new lives. Most of them settled happily. There were- 108 Bernardt homes in Britain for destitute child ran. all supported by public dona tions. I O O For ten years or more a vagrant in a mid-west. State has been pur- posely getting into mischief about this time of the year in order to qualify for a 6 months sentence to tide him over the cold W(?1llllCl'. Last. week. however, when he came before the court on his annual ex- cursion, the judge, who said he was sick and tired of catering to the fellow'a winter comfort, suspended sentence for 6 months. Said the dis nppolnlcd vagrant: "Thai-ets no jus do! my more." GNLV BLUFFLNG ? WHY noes HE KEEP RAISING ME WHEN HE KNOWS I'M Pi'c.-.itlrnt E l s e n h 0 wet": heart attack conies at a time when medical S('l('ll('P is scoring its first ' major victories against the con- tinent's leading killer Just 30 rears ago heart attacks like his killed 50 per cent of the men they struck Today 80 to 90 per cent survive the first attack. And best of; all. may go back to normal lives and normal or nearly normal work. They aren't doomed to life in a wheel chair. Most. in fact, rciiiain useful citi- zens; most can live happily for many years. This radical cliaiigcs was born of new knowledge. new discoveries in laboratories, new understandings of that amazing life pump, the human heart. Similar advances have supplied the weapons to banish rheumatic fever-the great killer and cripplei' of children They have brought new drugs to combat high blood pressure. new surgery to repair defective licarts. even heart-lung macliiiics putting the heart on a holiday: iicw tops on how to live with your hcart and avoid trouble. THE HEART AD.II'STS Consider. first. this instrument of life's vitality. an organ the size of two fists. it beats and pulses .'lti.000.000 times a year. Daily it pumps 4.320 gallons of blood tlirtiugli tilltllltl miles of blood ves- scls-A di.staii(-c 2': times the earth's equator. lt rart-l.v complains. It adjusts blood flow to the demands of your body. But your heart has a secret -it rcsls lit-twccn strokes. Slightly less than half the time is it wnrkiiig Hotter than half the time' it rclaxcs. ' Why is it vulnerable to the heart attack. The iiiccliauical cxplauation is simplc. Your hcaltl docs not profit a hit from all the blood that enters and is punipcd out of its four (-h.1mItci's. it iucrcly distribiilcs the blood in tlic liiiigs. and then in all parts of the liudy. Your licart is a muscle. It also nuist Iiavc iioiirislnuent. brought in it liy the blood. So your heart nxygcii-c:iri'yiiig blood through its own privatc syslciu of arteries and veins Whcu it pumps. some blood cittt-rs the c o r fl n a r .v or heart arterics tn hathc all the muscle tissues of thc hcart. (il,0f3(iING STARTS Tlu-sc artcrirs along with others in the body. arc susceptible to in slogging and narrowing process. Deposits nt fatty material can form inside the artery wall, nur- rnwing and importing the blood flow. iuiich like rust collecting inside iron pipes This process is called atherosclerosis. and is 3 form of hardening of arteries. The clogging sometimes grad unlly cuts off the blood flow. Much more often clots begin to form as the blood flows past the roughened area. The clot then can suddenly shut ft" the flow. this is the coronary thrombosis. START ECONOMY SURVEY EDMONTON tCPI - A major study of resources, economy and In- dustry in Alberta has been under- taken by the lllonlrcal chemical and cctinomical consultant firm of .l- T. Donald Co. Ltd. Cahzary Pmu-r l.td.. aniioun .5: Tuesday. The study. sponsored by Calgary power. will be carried nut by I team of scientists. nnomtsts and mnrkct experts and is scheduled for cnmplctinn in a your to ill months. IAJMBER PRODUCTION UP OTTAWA 4CPl - Production of sawn lumber increased In Canada during the first six months of the year to 4.022.69l-JIM bolrd feel fi-nu; .1.4a-2.r-tto,otio in the corres- pimdiiig period last year. The hur-. can of statistics reported Tuesday lllflf half-year ouimn by provinces. wi'l1 last year's figures in brack- Thal Amazing Life Pump Associated Press The shutdown prevents oxygen and food from reaching part of the heart muscle. Cells in the area served by the blocked artery die. But the heart in tough and sturdy. It can recover. if not too large an area of muscle has been Other coronary arteries can ex- pand and stretch to begin taking blood into the affected area, or new blood vessels grow into it. Complete rest gives the heart time to make repairs. Blood- thlnning drugs can't dissolve the clot blocking an artery, but they can prevent it from spreading, or prevent complications such as clots forming in arteries of the legs during the long period of rest. Judicious use of blood-thinning or anti-coagulant drugs, such as heparin and dlcoumarol, is cred- ited with I large role in boosting survival from heart attacks. Strict rest for I time, oxygen, digitalis. or other drugs as indicated, and other improvements in medical care have contributed I heavy share. the WILD BRAMBLEBERRY No lioncy fruit is this, Garden-tended. mellow. it grows where shadows flick Of birch leaves summer-yellow. In a da7.7.lc of goldeiirnd And falling leaf. in a shambles Of burr and bricr and twirl it glints among the brambles. Amid the wliirr of bees And butterflies brown as the brack- en You fill your pail with berries That tease the tongue and blacken. But 0 remember this! The trail by hill and hollow Needs a roving foot And a stout heart to follow. Not for the lagging will, Not for the over wary The purple-ripe amhrosia Of the wild bramblcberry. -lllyrtle Reynolds Adams in The New York I-lerald-Tribune. Medically Speaking By Herman N. Buudesel. M. D. No HARM IN TESTS OF ATOMIC WEAPONS Don't worry about than Ne- vada atomic bomb tests. They are not ruining your health. While there has been specula- tion-and that's just what it is. specula” -about. whether the blasts might harm future gener- ations, present health and safety hazards have been reduced to I minimum. No Serious Aftermath Gordon M. Dunning. of the Atomic Energy Commission's di- vision of biology and medicine. reports that after five major tests no one at the site has incurred radiation exposure that may be conside cfl hazardous. No one was found to be in- jured by shock waves, nor have there been any known cases of serious eye damage from light effects. Mr. Dunning's report ap- peared in a recent issue of a medical journal. Here's what the government does to insure your safety during atomic tests: The site of the testing area is in itself a safeguard, covering an area of some 600 square miles. In addition. an Air Force gunnery range consisting of 4,000 square miles adjoins it. There are also other wide expanses of sparsely populated land around the site. One hundred full-time AEC employes and many additional part-time employes, throughout, the country. carry out an exten- sive warning program before each test. Just as important, they make repeated checks after a test. After each blast. monitoring equipment at the site, in nearby communities and on mobile units measures the radioactive fall-ouf. Planes track the clouds and plot the fall-out pattern on the ground. Ninety U. S. Weather Bureau sta- tions and 10 AEC installations col- lect fall-out data. The government. you see, keeps an accurate check on fall-out no matter where it occurs. That is one major reason why the Ne- vada tests have such an enviable safety record. QUESTION AND ANSWER J E: I have an overabundance of freckles. Is it safe to use any of the different solutions to get rid of them? Answer: Freckles are generally due to excessive pigmentation of spots in the skin. There is not much that can be done to get rid of them. but avoiding the sunlight might be helpful. should consult 8 derma- tologist (skin specialist) about the removal of freckles. BREMO BLUFF, Vn. (AP)-No Chesapeake and Ohio Railway freight trains smashed head-on here Tuesday, severing the legs and one arm of an engineer. and injur- ing at least three other crew mem- bers. The wreck occurred 50 miles east of Richmond on the C and 0's James River division. Nineteen freight cars and four diesal en- gines were reported derailed. ”The Minds of Men in the Atom- ic Age" was the title of what to me was the most penetrating and timely of all the addresses deliver- ed at the recent Couchiching Con- ference of the Canadian Institute of Public Affairs. The speaker was Professor George Grant of the Deparlment of Philosophy at Dal- housie University, and he natur- ally approached the subject of pub- lic affairs as a philosopher. He said he did not intend to discuss llCll'lf:I' we were going to be blown up or whether the human race is wing to be sensible enough to 'llTVlV2. During the conference he had noticed the assumption that all would be well if only we could escape external menaces. such as atomic bombs and economic dep- rcssions. Speakers had talked of the dynamic economy of expan- sion, ”a polite word for a boom." and assumed that this was to be taken as an undisputed good. "l can imagine." he said. "a pros- pcrous society. without war. of healthy animals adjusted to wor- shipping their machines which could be so disgiisllng that one cguld will that it should he destroy- c DEEPER THAN ECONOMIES That in itself was explosive mal- erlal and it caused an eruption of critical questions from the floor, which the professor had difficulty Perils Of Mass Society Dy uwls Mllllgan There had been "a hand of think- ers telling men to worship the world. and this had become the domincnt religion which shapes our society at nearly every point." SPIRITUAL VALUES ”What is wrong with this reli- gion?" askcd Professor Grant. "'1' plain fact that man's real purpose in life is not this. The goal of human existence is not found in the world of nature. but in freedom. Indeed, in be I man at all, and not just an animal who looks like a man but is not, is to strive to become free. And a free man is a person wltn is not ruled by fcar or passion, or the world aroiind him. but by the cxtcrnal world of truth and goodness which is thcre to be real- izcd by cvcry thought and action in our lives." Professor Grant (bits threw a spiritual monkey-wrench into the disciission of the materialistic mec- hanism of world affairs. The Age Old Story My faith Nujili. being warned of God nf things not soon in yet. moved with fear. prepared an lurk in the saving of his house: by the whlch be condemned the world. an became heir of the rlghteoutuleu which is by faith. - nooaoooououcnoooooooiouoooo FOR THE BEST IN Cameras I mo PHOTO SUPPLIES 888 9 TAYLOR'S JEUELLERS atarlanzgg. - ,a ' ncUI..l . auu uowsu. DEALERS - to: P: Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCES SALES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding and Repairs ELECTRICAL Repairs Palmer Electric Phones I34! 544 in answering. At other most of the speakers had no trouble in replying to the question raised'-- they had all the answers ready- madc: but Professor Grant was dealing with questions much deep- er than those of economics. He said there was no doubt that the mass scientific society is here to stay and that it had brought about great good. "It is obviously good that women should have automatic washing machines; and it is almost as good that men should have cars. The fact that machine: do our work means that we have more free time and human freedom requlrs this tlmt.-...Even modern edlcine. however much of I sacred cow is has become. we must judge as good ...We must welcome the man scientific society, despite Ill its horrors." The inofcssor said that I "ter- rible price is being paid over III America for the benefits of the mass society. Economic expanslm through the control of nature has become the chief purpoue of our exluence. It bu become the goal to which, everything else must. be subordinated. the God we worship". NEW YORK (AP) - Hurricane lone net I record for the number of Inxloun quarks recdved by the ets was: IHMMM) (515.- ilstimeti; -mg the Maritime: 21:,- W.& tIll.lM.flMI New York Telephone Company: Incl: nan:-nu u-vln TO THE PARENTS OF SEE YOUR FAMILY 'one year of age. Department of Healt 188 Once a month-in Summersl Spring Instead of this Fall. DEPARTMENT This I: National lminunization Week Have you had your young children protected against: DIPHTHERIA. WHOOPING COUCH, TEIANUS and SMALLPOXT IF NCYIL-D0 START PROTECTION THIS WEEK. INOCULATIONS and VACCINATION. Protection against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus should commence at 3 months of age. Vaccination against smallpox should be done before Once a week in Charlottet.own- Prlnoe St. Every Friday--2-4 P.M. lleailtll Centre (III III Ibl). but Frllly In month--8 - 4:080 Rip inoculation against polio for the school children who received inoculations this Spring, will be given next YOUNG CIIILDREN: DOCTOR ABOUT h Clinics are held: (km. NOTICE BE 3111 POLIO INOCULATION - The 311! OF HEALTH - Pollen chiefs. responding to I poll. report they have never known I pipe-smoking criminal. The thing in that I pipe can get I man into enough trouble right around his own house without his going out and breaking any laws.-ninnipeg Tribune. It's I won er that more murders aren't com ltted on golf courses -or even suicides-when golfers start hating themselves for.tbe foolish way in which they attempt to play the game. With this in mind; when a body is discovered on a golf course the immediate conclusion (to the mind of a gol- fer) is that the woman must have been murdered by her partner for missing a putt!-Brockville Recor- der and Times. The ways of man are curious and costly. Take water in Western Ontario for an example. For years Western Ontario has been spend- ing mlllions of dollars trying to get rid of water as fast as it can. By building drains, ditches and channels. the area sends the water out to the lakes as soon as it falls from the sky. Now the country's dry.So what is proposed? A water pipeline system from the Great Lakes to the communities. Thus man, who spent millions to rush water into the lakes, must now spend more millions to pump it inland again. Think how much cheaper it would have been if we had let the water take its natural course in the first place.-Exeter Times Advocate. Chief topic of conversation among Scouting folk for some time now is going to be "Jim." which is a composite word made up of the first letters of Jamboree, lndaba and Moot. Because i957 will mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Boy Scout movement. and the centenary of its founde , Lord Baden-Powell. a threefold world Scouting gathering will be staged in England to mark the occasion. Site of the gathering will be Sutton Coldfield, some eleven miles from Birmingham. and it will feature the Ninth World Scout Jamboree, the Second World Indabu tmeetlng of the leaders) and the sixth biennial meeting of the Interna- tional Scout Conference will be held at Oxford. the unniversity city.-Canadian Scouting. The bushel basket. which has served long and well as I method nf measuring grain on farms where no scales were available, is now recognized as I nuisance which should be abolished. Since the use of the bushel measure was pre- valent ou farms, it was carried over into commerce although the more accurate measures of pounds or hundred-weights were readily at hand. When I farmer say: he har- vested 20 bushels of wheat to the acre, he means he got 1,200 pounds. or 12 huudredwelght. Why convert this into bushels to determine the prlce'. Furthermore, it is confusing to the farmer, the magazine points out, to be comparing the feed value at 70 cents per bushel oats with s1.3o per bushel corn. when on 8 hundredweigbt basis it would be 32.19 for oats and 32.32 for corn The bushel measure is just an ex- NOTES BY Page 4 The gang THE WAY t It -mm that the ci-inoiiiu ll coming back into fashion with women. When one talks of the crlnoline era one usually thinks oi that era in which men surrounded women with care, with gallantry and attention. With the crinoline will we see a return of the courtesy of the past? It may be doubted. but A little more politeness. not only on the part of men toward women, but on the Part of men and women a mu :1 g themselves would certainly do no harm to our society-Montreal Maiiu. There are tricks to lick simple cases of insomnia without drugs. A main one is learning how to re. lax the body and mind-and not to worry about losing slccp. Cut down on whatever kinds of activity you find overstlmulaling, whether political arguments or melodram- atic movies. Other aids are exer- cise, such as walking in the fresh air, drinks of warm milk or cocoa. a warm bath for 15 to 20 minutes before retiring.-Kitchener-Water. loo Record. In certain other parts of Canada preparation of teachers has been made much easier by lowering re. quirements for entrance into train- ing school and by shortening the period of training. While this high- ly questioable system has been employed elsewhere in order to overcome an emergency. this pro. vlnce has progressed in the oppo- site dlrection-retainlng high mm. dards of qualification and draught. ml 8 Program of preparation which will eventually lead to de- grees ln e d u c a ti o u.-Victoria Times. We have no brief for Increasing British relations just for the sake 0! d0ln8 ll: but we do hold that it in not healthy for this country to lean too heavily on any one other. Putting all one's eggs in one basket is asking for trouble. If 'Canadian industry and agriculture are tied to American. Canadian dip- lomacy made to look -like Ameri- can. Canadian varnighgd with Ame-Hcan habits, where 1. the Canadian independence of when this country boasts? Not. many years ago European people thought of Canada as a British colony- Now must they think of it as a mate of the American union? It is not in that direction that Canadian id- entity will be preserved and Lin Canadian ,y be safely 5.1. lanced.-Peterborough "xamine ll wnl fake I lot of Soviet pro- ganda to answer the blistering in- dictment written at Athens by law- yu-I and judge: from as couutrlei. who met as the International Con- gress of Jurlsls. The council pas- sed a resolution urging all govern- ments to adhere to the ”rule of law", the first item of which is that "the state is subject to the law." The resolutions call attent- ion to the sweeping "destruction of the rule of law" in Communist- controled countries and in those ruled as personal governments. The resolutions, to be henceforth known as the Acts of Athens, demand also that every accused person be given I fair trial. The lawyers agreed to give the widest possible circul- alien to the Act of Athens and urge its adoption by all peoples.-Kib penslve habit.-Gall 'Beporter. chener Waterloo Record. MR. E. V. I-an . rm SERVICE FOR in Nukes or assume AIDS Ard- in- latest Ev ' Aid. ..:.' 9"": H mIh.cIeneIlI . E. V. Nulon. Canadian Serlvlc: Mup- Igupwtnrod' nbovemi pa-Ioml y Itund to your hearing Iid free of c.-huge. He he come to our office Inpeoinlly in conduct this clinic. THICoupon -wbuptun l0A.IL- Your giglmcliecked and cleaned nu or CHARGE at the Service Clinic III! ACOUSTICON SIRVICI mdonIilI:.tI& lo'FlIlElIE SERXJICIJ nolydrring If -in-.g 7' g as .. 'i';.3”3.? .:”'u.."w....i'”" ”" " dim 85!! vi . I ONE DAY ONLY- J. E. RAMSAY, 41' Bank of Toronto Bldg, Halifax present: NORTON Canadian, Service Manager for ACOIEHCOO International Our axcluIivI urvicc is da- Iificd to Iirin you the but poo- II I: rcsults ruin your heuring Iid, This testing Ind servicing is - done with I minimum of delay . . . often we can even make repnirl also while you wait. Rt-member. even I clm-liover Ind cleaning often improves the performance of I Hearing Aid In much In 2593. So clip unit the nu:-he-d con and drop into our friendly A-. inic noon. ......-4.-;n'.-at in down I! ' I OHARIUFPETOWN HOTEL, CHARIKYFTETOWN. P E. I. SATURDAY. OCTOBER ll! 1 ll.