THE GUARDIANI i Fublulleni every week day murnln; II In Plzi-.I-0 street. flu: I lntletnwn P F. l., by rho rhomuon Company Limited. ' tlluven Prince Edward Island Lllo the nu" L-iiur and Ilanuu. In A lumen. Auoclau Editor. Pr Walks! Irlncll ollwu II iummerride. Mantegna um Aloerton Author land or Second Clnu Mail by the Pool Office Department. t Ottawa Ilurtouelnwn, aummrnldo Slh.IlJ pen annum I-Ilse . other Province: and U S A H200 oer lnlllllll. "Tbeusltrongut memory II weaker than the weaken Ink." is Cari-um. Ihero in P. E wr:nxl:so.u'. NOV. :4. 1954 Ministry of Youtli Whatever may happen to Premier Men- des-France's attempts to put new vigor in- to his country's political and economic life, he certainly will be remembered in years to come as a man who was not afraid to tackle old problems with new and bold methods. His negotiations with Chancellor Adenaucr on the vexing Saar question pro- vided one good example of his fresh ap-' proach to disputes which hitherto have; seemed insoluble. Another is the courage- oii.s'way in which he has been trying toy get his fellow-citizens to see the wisdom of? drinking more milk and less alcohol. His: latest venture into new fields of states-l inanship is indicated in a Paris report that be is Sljllitlilsiy considering a "Ministry of Youth." His idea is to set up a special; group consisting of representatives of! young people from all over the country for, the purpose of helping to prepare "national Ilecisionzz." If the plan proves to be prac- ticable, this group will be placed under a departmental head who will have full cab- inet status and an equal share with other ministers in managing the nation's affairs. It looks like an excellent idea; if M.' Mendes-l-Trance can make it work it may in due course become a recognized institution of government in all free and democratic states. And why not? Doubtless, there are irresponsible elements among young people just as there are among other segments of society. But it is to be observed that in times of national danger young men and women are called upon to bear their full share of service and sacrifice; in most in- stances they bear it well and with honour. Moreovcr,.youth organizations of various, kinds often bring to light evidence of con- structive thinking and planning. There would seem to be no good reason why, with careful guidance and counselling, the vision. enthusiasm, and forthrightness of youth could not be marshalled and put to good use in times of peace, just as these qualities have been found useful, and in- deed indispensable, in times of war. All those who are anxious to see a strengthen- ing of the principles of democracy, as they are being hard pressed by alien forces; bent on their destruction, will wish thci French statesman every success in lus efforts to present the youth of his country with a fresh and clear challenge of citizen- ship. Illstorlali's Epilogue i What does it feel like to have finished writing a monumental ten-volume liistoiy of civilization, thirty-three years and ten months after starting it? Dr. Arnold Toyn- boc attempts to answer this question in the ciirrent. issue of "The Periodical", publish- ed by the Oxford University Press, and hisy reflzctions are of great interest and valuei pointing out a probable constitutional dc-l to students of his work. One point in par-i velopment along other lines than Canadianl lI('t'iFll' is worth noting. "When I started writing A Study of I-ii:iory'," Dr. Toynbee says, ”religion was ten princely states while East Pakistan liasiil” ,:i not a prominent feature in my mental land- S('IlllP. I was then still in the callow stage of disbelief in the traditional form .of the. particular religion in which I happened to! hrve been brought up: so I fancied that Iy h"d thrown religion itself out of the win- dnw. In writing my 'Study' I have been constantly surprised to find religion coming have been anticipatlons of I future world- state. "This Pauline unitary view of history," says Dr. Toynbee, "is the vision that has led me into writing my ten volumes; but I was already following the visionary gleam long before June 1920-indeed, loiig before I became conscious of having any master- aim-and, although my work on 'A Study of History' is now behind me, I still find myself pursuing the same unending quest as eagerly as ever. . . . Six of those ten volumes were written within sixteen miles of York; and. lying on a bronze-age barrow on Slingsby Moor on inter-war summer af- ternoons, I used to catch the voice of Lucius Septimius Severus giving the watch-word? for his dying day as he lay on his death-' bed in the Brigantian city. Ephesians. from the lips of a dying man. lny inward ear first heard this watch-word being given, I have been Lucius every day. days have I ahead of me? still have my wits about me fo1' another twenty-five years, or -I might be run over in the street when I go out this afternoon. Meanwhile, let us redeem ever short or long our time may be going to be. During these remaining hours, weeks, or years, llaboreniiis'!” For Freer Trade It is distinctly encouraging that a group of United States only see the .advantages of developing rc- criprocal trade but also be urging government to do something about it. The The Emperor's; last word was tlaboremus', a lapidary Latini counterpart of eight soldierly Greek versesl in the sixth chapter of the Epistle to the. "Laboremus'-rtGo to it!'ewas a magnificent profession of a life-long faith, Ever sincel taking it from? How many more of these Well, I might the time, how-i OTTAWA REPORT Some Green More pave. if Book Figures By Patrick Nicholson l Ottawa: Canada's number of mil. '..ona res rose by 270 to an all-time high of 1,810 in the latest year for which taxation statistics are avail- able. I This evidence of our growing lmeni is tucked modestly away in the Green Book describing the in- must earn if your life ambition you the stupid one of wanting to ;tives" crosswords now being pub- lished in many Canadian newspap- ers; the thance of getting an all- correct solution. I calculated on one 'of these, was 'one in 131,000. Saying that Canada had 1.840 businessmen should nof'prosp:riiy and increasing develop-kmillionaires during the 1952 yea: iparhaps necd explaining. Income re- lturns of course refer only to in- tllell'.conie of the .loiic.s's, and how much come; they do not disclose the total wealth of taxpayers. It has long been customary to describe as n Comminee for Economic Dmviopment has keep up with them. The govcrn- ni-.llionaire at pesson whose income urged a five-year extension of the rccripro- ,cal trade programme and a policy of grad- ual and selective tariff reduction. President Eisenhower had asked Con- gress to give him power to cut tariffs by five per cent a year for three years, but he ment publishes this Green Book lrach year, not to DIIDIICLSE the idoncsts but to list comprehensive details of where its direct tax reven-I iues came from. The latest issue, tout this week. contains statistics Ii-elating to the fiscal year ending laisi March, 1952. ' Hon. Walter Harris, our new Min- 'pcrmits him to live in the style of a man with 1' million dollars. The 'rough and ready yardstick for this is possession of an income rep- resenting the conservative rate of interest of 5Q upon tl,000,000. A third of a million more Can- adians paid income tax in 1952 than in 1951: the average of these had to be Cement with 3 0n91V0a1i 9-Vl9n5i0n ister of Finance. happened to com- taxpayers rose from 53.150 to S3.- of the programme. The committee would like to see the principle carried further and the President authorized to exchange tar- iff reductions for other kinds of benefits. such as removal of import restrictions or concessions to American investors. There is a feeling, which it is to be hop- ed is justified, that Congress, with elections behind it for a while and with a predom- D inanfly Democratic aspect, will look more kindly upon measures designed to open up the channels of world trade. Such an ap- proach would do far more to raise the liv- ing standards of the world than all the contributions which it would be possible to make to social projects and development. "Trade, not aid", was the plea of Britain a few years ago and although manv bar- riers remain to trading between -other countries and the United States that ap- proach has unquestionably enabled the Old Country to struggle in her feet economi- cally, whereas a policy of merely accepting all the aid offered would have left her in the position, more or less of a beggar. EDITORIAL NOTES ment publicly upon our taxes on the ve;y day when the Green Book was issued. Showing a very sharp sense of humor about what is not int all a funny subjccl, he put the audience at the Canadian Tax Pauiidatioii DLnnei' into excellent lhumour. and capped this by de- scribing that he had been doing ,a little homework since taking overI1952 new Department. and had gain- thc main impression that the ii-ates of tax in Canada are "pretty ihigll". The Green Book shows that in- divldual income tax is not merely high. and "ugly" rather than ."prctty" is the qualification most lapplli-able to its height; it. further ,shoivs that Mr. Hariist predecessor 'arranged to extract from us sums which progressed alarmingly to ever uglier heights. In the 15 months ended 31st March of this ilear. for example, Mr. Abbott levied Llrom us. as direct taxation upon our individual incomes. a sum great- ihis levied in the two years ended only three years earlier. In other words. personal income tax collections lhnvo doubled since thr 1951 fiscal year. ilillLI.IONAIRE'S INCOME However, in the year reviewed by this latest edition of the Green Book. one out of every 1,700 tax- pnyeis could live like a millionaire. er than the total which he. had 290. and their average tax payments rose from 5293 to 5345 over the year. 0I'II WEALTHY CITIES Two more cities achieved the glory of having more than 5.000 'citizens paying income tax, bring- 'ing the total to 52 such cities in Trail as usual headed the list, with an average income risen by 5303 33,789. Siiinia has been rising ustcadily in the list of avenge in- come per taxpayer; in 1950 our rubber-chemical metropolis achiev- ed only the lith highest average income; the next. year it crept up to 5th place, and in 1952 it boasted second place, with average incomes only S100 less than at Trail. Chatham his risen spectacularly on this income honor roll over these three years. from 37th to 27th to 18th place. Port Arthur has as good a record. rising from 38th to 26th l to 19th place. Eloqucnt of the general rises in average incomes between 1951 and 1952 is Vancouvei-'3 drop from 6th to lath place on this list, in spite of an increase of 351 per taxpayer in avi-"sage income. In fact the aver- age Canadian taxpayer enjoyed a good year with A rise of 3140 in his income; but it is hard to dis- agree with Mr. Walter Harris when he says it is a remarkable situation that Cauadiaiis allow their govern- ments to take an ay nearly one-third Matching provincial governments havetThi-T is it much bell” Chance than of their income in direct and indis- been set up for East and West Pakistan, Confederation. A complication is that West Pakistan is made up of four provinces and always been considered a unit Xcne has of winning the "alterna- .ect taxes. NOTES BY The truth II that I man corrlen the junk in his waistcoat that woman carries in her handbag, land that I, waistcoat. with all its freight on board, weighs about nine pounds. When it woman is under fire about the overloading (THE WAY One could Icarch I long time be- fore finding an expert on world conquest. It has been clear for many months that the Russians 'f:cl there is mole to be gained - at less rlsk - in pursuing the kind of political and economic combat only 0nt3i'i0, QLIOIJCC and Prince Ed-rot her handbag. she should remem- which has come to be known as ivard Island now do not take part in the Joint. civil dcfcncc assistance programme, under which matching Federal and Pro- vincial grants are made ibcr this fact, which has for so long lbren a ivell-guarded masculine sec- "ct. --Pettrborough Examiner. Canadian Incomes in III ranges back to fill an ever greater place in my the two former, however, feel that tlieyv"'”"" -V””'” ” mm" by ”"'"' I)" published statistics. By far the 1 ' . - l - p . houghts and feelings. but It took me sev- cannot afford to accept the conditional as-nnrgesi number moving into ll new cral volumes to learn the truth that every sistance it is small wonder that this Prov- hmckcl ""3 "W" '"”V””1 mm ”" one of us has a religion all the time, and that what looks like a spiritual vacuum is merely one of rcligion's protean epiphanies. To slough religion off would be to sllthcri out of human nature, and that feat is not within any human bcing's power." In Dr. Toynbee's view, from what hci calls "the historian's angle of vision", every- thing in the universe is either on the movci towards its Creator or away from Him, This is the standard he has sought to apply in measuring the true value of any civiliza- tion, past or present. In our own day, a revolutionary change has overtaken man- kind. For the first time in history the whole habitable surface of our planet has shrunk together Into "one world"; and this means that in our day, for the first time in history, the whole of history can be seen synoptlcally as a unity. God "hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the Earth, and hath de- termined the times before appointed and the bound; of their habitation." when st, Paul declared thin truth to his Athenian contentporurleu. they did not pay much It. tentlon, though they and ho were then liv- ing in opeiof those oecumcnial empires that ince is still waiting for "better terms." I C C Parents will probably not be as grateful as they should be to the London doctor who insists that. growing children should have five new pairs of shoes a year. Nor will his advice be popular that girls should avoid high heels before they are seventeen. Doc- tors, however, have always been prone to prescribe bitter medicine and their hope is that it will do good whether people like it 01' HOT. 0 o 0 John Knox, Scottish reformer, died' this date 1572. As :1 tutor in Douglas and Cock- burn houses he met George Wishart, whose zeal for the Lutheran cause made a deep impression on him. He was a prisoner in the French galleys some eighteen months and on his release became one of six royal chaplains to Edward VI. In the latter cap- acity he assisted in the revision of Prayer Book. 'In Scotland he championed the Protestant cause to such. an extent that the history can he read practically as a personal contest between him and the the. 33,000-54.0-00 group. Their ranks SW cited to 936,520 from 198.262. The group immediately below this, how- ever, is still the largest. --Monc- ton Times. Every person going into the ,bush should make sure he has matches or II lighter in good work- ing order. It's all very well to read about starting fi'res.by rubbing sticks together. but the avenue man isn't likely to have siiccer-s in getting it fire started by this method. Nor is It wise to follow the storybook instruction of firing shots periodically to at- tract attention. It Is dlfflcult..to pinpoint the direction of I dllitlnt shot. and the wasted ammunition could be very- useful in bringing itlmvn small gnnic to feed I hungry man. -Sudbury. Star. llllhlppy New York bu now Im- covered I I Itemrtiud, pncticully rituallud ollca force, reports The Christian Science Monitor. Not just I flve-dollar bill palm- ed In I hand-shake. But the flash of an nrniltcly printed cnrd indicating the hold- ier iii I patron of I putrolmenlr Vbensvolent league or an honorary mambo. of police chlef'I nsooclltion. And the expected result? The ll- legal pniklng overlooked the passed. red" light Ignored, the oxceu speed form-itten.. And all for love? Hard- I,v. A member of the ring calls upon the curd-flasher for I "contribu- muchl the "cold war." Transcript. y The most. Intriguing feature can- ncctcd with the resignatzoli of Mi: --Monc ton to municipalities. If have shown an increase in the past Graham Towers as Governor of the Bank of Canada is that he gives no reason for it, says The Toronto Globe and Mail. Questioned at his press conference. he said: when ii man of my age (fifty-seven) quits It Job without any reason given -,ihcrc's always speculation about thlm going to some other job or about his lzealth. In ninety-nlne cases out of one hundred that's right. However. I'm the one out inf the hundred. My health is good I haven't got my other job in mind None has been offered me. -syd- ney Post-Record. Probably one of the moat Illllolll statements ever mndn by any Queen was Her Majesty's reply dur- ing the Battle of Britain when she was asked of she wu going to send the young princesses to cInIdI. "The children will not leIve un- lens 1 do. I ahull not lenve unless their father does. and the King will not leave the country in any circumstances whatever." -Chrlst- lIn' science Monitor. The report of u luulgoucbe t, woodomnn hnvlng been killed by I falling tree trunk re- 1ateI'lt type of accident. thIt. has become i-are during the put rev- enl yeIrI in this province, II In most other photo where lumber- ing operation: lire curled on. In eulier yeIrI fItIllt.lea of into nature were much more prevIl- ent in the run of the lumbering reason. But with quite ndlool chmgu having taken place In wood: operations. coupled with I more wldelprend Ind intensified educltlonol prognrn of uf-.ty- llnn." -Sydney Post-Record. 'ftrIt, the incidence of lmiaenu. Shakespeare: Not . Neal, But Gaudy (Kingston Wig-Standard) Recently in New York was the premiere of 3, new production of Shakespeare's "A Mid 5 u m m e I Night's Dream.” straight from its successful presentation at the Ed- inburgh Festival. It is a -luxlous productioii. the like of which has not been seen on the professional Shakespeare stage for many I year. Far from the ai'eiia theatre of the Straiford Canadian Festival. and from the modified single sets of the immediately post-war Old Vic, this production has all the ra- mantic accessories that were thought. p.oper ml the Shakespear- crin stage half ll century ago. In those paliny days there were laigc forests and real birds on the stage. It. is told. somewhat. ap- ocryphzilly, that Beerholm Tree had a live cow for one of his produc- tions of "The Dream," and it is known that he did havc.live rab- bits skipping about. This new production of "I'll: Dream" has a luxuriant and uln- brageous forest designed by Mich- acl Bonthall. a symphony oi-ohesti-I to play the Mciidelssolin score and a full corps-deballtt undrr the pro- fessional and practiced eyes of iMoirn Sliearrr and Robert Help- mann who play the parts of "Tit- ania" and "Oberon." respectively. The return to luxurious treat- ment may be part of a new trend ,in the production of Sllakcspeare. Witness what Tyrnnc Guthrie did to "The Tarning of the Shrew" at Stratford this year to put a little factitious llfc' into it. Perhaps the idea of Shakespeare nest. is giving way to Shakespeare gaudy. And. if more people like it that way. we, are sure that Shakespeare, cleverly icontroller and fnrcccister of thei lbox-office as he was, would have lno objection. Modern Numerology (Windsor Shari As part of an official move to siinpliiy identification, Canada's 10.000 Eskimos are to receive num- bers. and the p.-eject sounds rea- sonablc enough. It was in the crirds tliat. personal numbering would catch up with them sooner or later, in it has with everyone else. lfnving Iln family names, and a predisposition to take new names in the hope of changing their luck. Eskimos were hard to follow. That formula is not exclusive with the Eskimos. however. We Iuperlor rnccs "outside" have representa- tivrs who earned long ago that an alias can change oncls prospects materially in .'l tline of troubles. As for identification through numbers, the Eskimos should not feel they are being rcleguted to the status of prison inmates. The utility of numerals has spread much failher than tlvit. "In reply to this letter," states a familiar directive. "please refer to File PDQ 25-6434." or whatever It happens to be. Then there are licence numb.-rs, and -unenIiloy- ment. insurance nu mbers. and lfainily allowance numbers. and sat on tlimiigli it long classification. The Eskimo who gets one num- bcr he can wear around his neck throughout hls lifetime doesn't know how easv things are. being lmlldc for him by the Great White Fath:.s in Ottawa. fatal and otherwise. in New Bruns- wick have greatly lessened. -Moncton Tlmeo. This will be one of the int oc- casions when we will refer to the new mental hospital at North Bay as such. By and large, from now on, the columns of the Nuggest. will refer to it by its proper name- Ontarlo Hospital, North Say. We are dropping the word "mentIl". There may be rare ncculona down through the year: when it will be quite necessary for ur to mention the type of treltment provided by the hospital. but for Ill general purposes the Nugget liernfter In- tends to use nnly the name "On- tario Hospital." -North .BIy' Nug- get. bonus r. KIDNEY Plus PUBLIC FORUM lthlI eullnl II In the (hen In I III IIuIIIrl.I: uh I the opinion of uorrupulunn. POTATO MARKET Sir,--Your edition of yesterday contained a letter from Mr. L. F. Simmons. Summerilde. in wlilch he seeks to inform the general public and particularly the under- signed why potato prices in the Province have declined since No- vember ll.th. I believe the pub- he would now be better inform- ed on this matter if he had seen fit to quote all the "Potato News- letter" he refers to rather than just the part which he, believed suitable for his purpose. The re- mainder ls very interesting, here it is: "We would recommend i.IllL shippers avoid rolling into either Toronto or Montreal on a con- slgnmcnt basis. Some smaller loaders from Prince Edward Is- land are partly responsible for the present condition by rolling stuff to brokers and dealers open or on R consignment basis." . The significance of this state- ment should be quite clear to all. Perhaps this was not ii case of too many cars being sold. as Mr. Simmons states, but rather too many not being sold. He, may also be interested to learn that more carloIds left this Province between Nov. 3rd and 10th when prices were improving than dur- ing the. following week WilC'l price-cutting again became evi- dent with such harmful effect to all. I am, Sir. etc., DONALD A. MBCDONALII November '13. I954 , BUTTER PRICES Sir.-From Canadian Grocer No- vember 1, we read "Ottawa sup- ports butter, wheat. cheese, pork. and other products. On butter alonr our govc,rnmcnt. is said to be holding some G0,000,000 lbs.” The U. S. government owns 447.- 0()0.000 pounds. In view of thir. and with the dairy industry last week meeting to explore ways of selling more buttc-,r at prices than prevailing, how can last week's local -in- crease of four cents per pound be justified? If this is to be permitted then the sale of margarine in this Province should be made legal. I am. Sir, t-It-., IIOUSEHOLDER The Age Old Story And heIlde tllll. giving III dilig- ence. add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge; and to know- ledge temperance; Ind to temper once patience; and to patience god- liness; and to gndllneu brotherly klnrlnels and lo brotherly kind- ncu charity. For if then tlllnn be In you. and abound. they make you tint ya IbIlI neither be but- ren nor unfrultful In the know- ledge of our Lord JesuI Christ. rouo INSUIIANCI-3 STOCKHOLM (CP) - The Swe- dish Textile WorkerI' Union now is issuing I Ipcclal "polio lnsurunce" to members. First of its kind in the Swedish labor movement. it provides 553.000 kroner (about 36.- 200l in use of wrath caused by infantile pIrIlyslI, and ll,000 kro- ner for permanent dlnblement. USEFUL MASCOT SALTFORD. England (CP)-Sam I Labrador Dog. is more than just a mascot It the golf club in this Somerset town. In three years he has retrieved more than 4,000 lost (7oed'6mw2 AUTUHNAL Lnt night It dusk the wedged um geese come over. Crying out of the north; oi-oulng Q And chilly moon. they left the niaty - hollowo, The tattered putuxu, taking sum- lncr south. Last night: the letting Plelldes swung over The black-flout hill in I bright and climbing mint. And late. later than midnight, Orion followed. striding in glitter. hunting tin summer down. But. we who know the brittle weed; of Autumn, The naked rock. brown leaf and I'll.- tlinx stem, Who know the calm of bronze and ' barren meadows. Leave to the cricket. Summer; iequiem. -Frances Frost. Old Charlottetown ' MIALII. From the Royiil Gazette. Aug, 3 1841: Mr. James Narraway informs the iiiliabitants of Prince Edward Is- land that he will be at Mr Nathaniel Wright's. Esquire, when he is erecting I Threshing Much- lne. He expects to remain for flva weeks. and will be happy to re- cive orders for erecting Machines. If he can get, two or more Mach- ines to erect in one Settlement he will make it reduction on the price of each. A. Leslie, Soul-is, announces that while fishing with I seine for sal- mon lately, at the mouth of st. Peter's Bay. his net hauled up from the bottom of the deepest. partof the Harbour I ship'I rudder. which the former owner may have on prov- ing property and paying damages and expenses. The Hon. Samuel Cunard having ' possessed of the whole of the legal and equitable Estate of the late John Cambridge. in Ill those townships, tracts and parcels of land mortgaged by the said John Cave, the subscriber (James E. Peters) announces that as the agent. of the said Samuel Cunard he is now prepared to sell and lease the same. Tenants having long leases. at la. per acre. may purchase It 203. sterling per acre. The tenants must be prepared to pay up all Ir- reara at once. and to those who are prepared to purchase, I liberal deduction of the buck rent: will be mule. William O'Toole. having obtained a Forge in Mr. C. C. Davisoirs Shop, at the head of the Queens Wharf. announces that he in ready to receive and execute with neat- ness and despatch, orders for locks. guns, and all kinds of whitesmith work. brand and figure cutting, bell hanging. etc. S. W. Martin. artist in mkrme and landscape, returns thanks for the patronage he has received since his arrival in Charlottetown, and begs to inform the gentry that the remainder of his Collection is for sale at the corner of Priiirr Sti-eet. opposite the Episcopal Church. Mr. Irving. Bonshavv. announces that he has procured tradesmen from Scotland acquainted with lllf'. construction of the most impl'0l'r(l implements of husbandry. includ- lnz drill machines for solving gum. turnips. beans and mouse! wurml. scuffle:-s and cultlvators. chaff Ind turnip cutters. wlnnowing much- Ines, horse rakes. etc.. and informs the farmers of Prince Edwurd fr- lund that Mr. Macxowan, Secre- tory of the Axrfculturu Society. has kindly offered to receive Ind transmit orders for my of the above articles, specimens of whicl may be seen at his store. The great Inllers of the Cana diun moose, measuring up to six feet across. are grown and dis- cardcd cacti year. REFRIGERATION llourehold. o. u o men counten, walk-In coolers dnlry cnneu, etc. We Iervlco Ind repnli any make of electrical re- frlgentlon equipment. WIRING CONTRACTORS Moloru. Wuhan Ind All pllnnoel - we repair them alL Contact uI lor nu vvlrlnz Job from lnutalllng I switch to wlrln; your borne. Storey Electric PIIONI I211 115 Grafton Street golf balls. IIO Crod 0001'. 51,, B0RR.0Wf5205-59 I R0DIIy in I5 monthly lnotqimontl of only 316.09 ouclit CHAIIOHIIOVIN. I i mi G” "P to .1000 on Ienolhlo leI'lI'lI-'olIglF'!l own signature. Reqnlremenlo are easy to "E95 Fills One dly Iervloo. Call IIFC loclnyl To llouul-loin runner I. W. Church. Monger ION I, phone II” I ll.