THE GUARDIAN Published ovary Isak-day morning at DI Prince Street. Char loslalnwn. P.l.I.. by The Thomson Company Limited "Coven Pshss llwnl Island us. lbs Dsw" Editor. Frank Walker Guns! Iunnu Ian A. lumen lunch offices ll lusunarsidl. llontllilo and Albsrloa. Autho lies! as 133- Hall by the Post Olffoo Department. Ottawn. Can-Int: Oulottnlown. Buinmersldn l1A.0o par annum. when I P,I.L GIMP. Ollnr Provinces and U.l. IILN par snnuin "The strongest memory is weaker than 90 weakest ink." WEDNESDAY. MAR. N. 1955 National Safety Conference I h to be hoped that this Province will be we! represented at a national con- ference which is to be called at Ottawa in May under the sponsorship of the Cana- dian Good Roads Association. The con- ference will not concern itself with im- proved roads, but with the appalling ac- cident toll of death, injury and property damage on our highways from coast to coast. The meeting will be attended by federal, provincial and municipal officials and by representatives of business, in- dustry and other ”interested groups." That should include everybody. The sessions, which will be held May 24-26, will attempt to marshal into a hat- ional safety movement the safety forces now at work. It will formulate recom- mendations for a program of action across the country and consider the set- ting up of a permanent organization to push the plan. As pointed out in a Canadian Press despatch, almost 3,000 persons met death on the roads and streets of this country in 1953. More than 57,000 were injured, some crippled or scarred for life. Pro- perty damage exceeded 5I5100,000,000, ac- cording to C. G. R. A. figures. The 1954 toll may be slightly lower, but not much. when final figures are compiled. Every Province, every county, every district and municipality has a stake in this problem. The proposed conference is the first of its kind to be called, and no effort should be spared to arouse Public interest in its objectives. The Good Roads Association is to be commended for its initiative In promoting the scheme, but ill will require the co-operation and sup- port of all our citizens to ensure its suc- cess in concrete action on a nation-wide basis. Spring Precautions A thorough checkup of potential fire hazards as part of every spring cleaning program is urged in a timely article is- sued by the All Canada Insurance Fed- eration. Stressing the importance of fire prevention in the home, officials of the Federation, which represents more than 200 fire, automobile and casualty insur- ance companies in Canada, state that residential fires account for the deaths of more than 400 Canadians each year-half of them children under 15 years of age. They recommend the following 'PF9Cl1U' tions: Before storing winter clothing for sum- mer, remove matches from pockets. Clear old newspapers. magazines and inflam- mable material from attics, basements. garages and spare moms. mable liquids such as painting and ing materials in plainly-marked clean- ed with paint, furniture polish or Clcan old leaves and rubbish from eaves and behind shrubhcry. Whcn burnml-I loaves, rubbish or grass. watch carefully for flying sparks. llavc clcclrical wiring and equipmcnt examined h.V 8 Qualified electrician for wcar or damage lVl'”Ch might have occurred during the winter. These recommendations are worth memorizing. They are not new, but fol- lowed carefully they mllihl be "19 mews. of saving many lives and many thousands of dollars in unnecessary fire losses during the next few weeks. Mechanical Brains One of the great marvels of th1's'tech- nological age is the machine which threat- ens te take over almost every chore that, up to now, has required great mathemat- ical skill and intensemental concentra- tion. It is truly amazing what the latest devices are able to do and how closely their -electronic habits-if that is the right word--resemble the flesh and blood ones of their human colleagues. There is one on the market--or. more lccunmlyi I" The obvious these machines. even the most skllful ones. hat their ueomlnslv myaterlwl 90"- .pu:-siy mechanical and Store inflam- ,No doubt they know their own business: Safetyjbui it does seem as though they could cans. and destroy rags or clothing soak-I wax. ogist, who happens to be an authority in electrical engineering, Dr. Wladyslaw Sluckin of the University of Durham, has now written a book about it, "Minds and Machines." Professor Sluckin does not claim that there is such a thing as a mechanical brain that does its own thinking: neither does he dismiss the idea with a verbal shrug. Like the rest of us, never come when machines will be inde- culations; but he is by no means contradictable evidence. He seems to have more than a suspicion that already some of the machines have more under- standing than their living teachers. question as to whether or not man is about scientific thought. Explosions And The Weather atomic and hydrogen bomb explosions for unusually bad weather, among other things. of the facts. Whether this is true in this Sir Graham Sutton. a British scientist and head of the British Meteorological Office, writing in the scientific weekly "Nature", says he is of that opinion. After study- ing last summer's weather. which was generally cold and wet over most of West- ern Europe, he has come to the con- clusion that there is no evidence for or against the atomic explosion theory: and, being a just man, he is prepared to give the much maligned explosions the benefit of the doubt. Looking into his records, Sir Graham discovered that in the last thirty years there have been at least three wetter sum- mers than 1954; but he had to go back to 1906 and 1912 to find summers which had had less sunshine. Both in the Uni- ted States and Soviet Russia, on the other hand. 1954 was warmer and drier than the average season for the past several years. On a world front, and balancing one region with another, however, 1954 was wetter and colder than might rea- sonably have been expected. Sir Graham sums up his opinions by stating that weather "peculiarities", so- called, are, in fact, quite ordinary and normal to anyone with expert knowledge iin meteorology. and that they had been, noted-and grumbled at-centuries before lthe idea of the atom bomb had even: been considered. At the same time, he is careful to point out that very little is known about the possible effect of atomic explosions on solar radiation; he thinks it will be several years before results can be ascertained with any measure of ac- curacy. Perhaps by then the nations of the world will have found some way of getting along together without having to ,make use of the persuasive powers of -atomic explosions. EDITORIAL NOTES A firm has gone to court in Memphis. Tenn. seeking damages of 953.164.458.05. have left the extra nickel out. 0 O O Evidently pro-Kaiser sentiment is still alive in Germany. At any rate, a month- ly periodical advocating the restoration of the monarchy is being circulated reg- ularly. The publishers are said to be well satisfied with the sales. , C O C One cheerful note amid all the gloom is that the swallows came to San Juan Capistrano on March 19-right on time- just as they have been doing for many generations. Radio-active phosphorous put into the drinking water of blow-flies at a refuse dump in Britain, and subsequent geiger counter tests, proved that the flies trav- elled to premises two miles away. The tests were part of current research into pest control. 0 Something new in school administra- tion ls reported from Jubbulpore, India. where school children have started a campaign to cure their teachers of the smoking habit. They mean-business. too. At the end of the school term special prizes are given those' teachers who are in the puplls' good books. The others are declared to be incompetent and immature. The longest single diesel locomotive run in North America-2.930 miles-will be established on April 24 with the intro- duction of the Canadian National Rail- way'I new fast "Super Continental". The diesel locomotives hauling the "super Con- tinental". which will slssh more than 14 hours n-our panic schcnules. will oper- su from moms: to Vancouver without rqnacunsnt. O entitled ' he wants to assume that the day will I pendent of human aid and direction in the most difficult fields of scientific cal- con- ; vinced that that assumption rests on un- in short. Professor Sluckin leaves open the I to be outwitted by the products of his It is becoming fashionable to blame i But fashions are sometimes bas- ed on prejudice rather than on knowledge 1 instance has yet to be determined; but ' ck-To-TPhIea- 9 Soil B0 The spnokiest spot in Canada's capital is right in Parliament Hill. It is a labyrinth of twisting pas- sages and dark spaces where S500,000 worth of machinery throbs and clanks without end. At the end of long tunnels. fig- ures of engineers and maintenance men moved about in the dim light. The strange sounds come from the maze of fans, pumps. generators, compressors. steam lines and elec- trical devices. It is the cellar of the Parliament Buildings' centre block and is cut 30 feet down into the solid lime- stone of the hill overlooking the Ottawa river. The centre block houses the House of Commons and the Senate. Along its walls and ceilings are some 20 miles of pipes-, from huge air ducts. three feet square to thin electrical conduits the size of gar- den hose. No chances are taken in the pro- . Spookiesl Spot In Ottawa The Canadian Press has been estimaled at l25.000.000. A modern Guy Fawkes would find it difficult to get into the eerie cellar passages which are patrolled regularly by the Commons pro- tective staff. Most visitors to the underground nerve centre of the centre blockls facilities need the permission of Commons Speaker Rene Beaudoin, who is responsible for operation of the buildings. Not long after his appointment at the start of the present 22nd P a rl in m c n t. Mr. Speaker visited the cellar. He found no conspirators and no gunpowder but did find some dis- array. He 0 r d c r e d the place cleaned up, the walls whitewashed and gave instructions that rats and mice be exterminated. The clean- up dld not make the cellar a thing of beauty but did relieve some of its grimness. It is reached by a series of cir- cular stairwnys. All engineering tectinn of a building whose value OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick I Merchants In United States cities adjoining the Canadian border are again petitioning against Canadian tariff restrictions on their trade. They complain that sales to resi- dents of their cities are reduced in certain lines by competition from stores in Canada. while Canadian restrictions prevent them from benefitting equally fro reciprocal sales to Canadian lou ists. This situation is caused by the Canadian tariff provisions cover- ing lourists' purchases. which are much stiffer than the comparable U. S. provisions. This tariff discrimination by Can- ada against U. S. A., the American merchants complain. is not in com- formity with international trade agreements; and while thus re- stricting U. S. exports to Canada. it considerably weakens our case in complaining about U. S. re- strictions against our exports to that country. The tariff provisions criticised are those referring to the exemp- tions from customs duty and ex- cise lnxes and sales tax which are allowed on goods purchased outside Canada by Canadian tour- isls and then imported into this country. U. S. WORLD SHOPPERS U. S. A. is lHlQllESll(.lll8bly far. far more generous to its returning tourists than Canada is. Thyreturning Canadian may bring in, duty-free. only 8100 worth of purchases e vs r y four months. The returning American. on the other hand, may bring in 5200 worth of goods every 31 days. plus goods to the value of an ad- ditional S300 every six months. Thus a Canadian tourist who takes full advantage of this duty- free provision may bring in 3300 worth of goods in a car. But inn American could take ome no less than ten times the value of pur- chases, or C3.000 worth. To qualify at all for the duty- free entry, in Canadian tourist must have been out of the country for at least 48 consecutive hours. An American shopping in Mexico is entirely freed from such restric- tion. An American shopping in Canada. however, is not granted the duty-free privilege unless he has been out of his country for at least 46 consecutive hours. This discrimination against Canada is a little bit of retaliation against our stiff yl isio . This retaliation hits hard those stores in Canadian border cities which might otherwise make sub- stantial sslcs to.Americsn tour- ists who would drive across the line for a day's shopping. The measure of flu loss to our stores is seen in the official figures of tourist expenditures. The average American visitor spends fill in Cannon: in Mexico he spends a whopplns 3112. PREFERRED SHOPPING some articles; notably woollen ads. Ollie. srtlc , cloth Ind gadgets. are cheaper kl the tel than in Canada. and are also available ls's wider staff is on duty round-the-clock. Tourist Restrictions Nicholson would save ,nearly 3300 compared to prices for the identical articles in Canada. For example, a piece of photographic equipment which I have just bought here .- Ameri- can-made because nothing like it is made in Canada - cost me 329.95. It is listed in regular U. S. catalogues at 815.80. Other concessions which favour the American tourist, as against the Canadian traveler, include higher permitted imports of liquor and cigars, and more realistic ar- iangemcnts about foreign pur- chases. For example. the American may pool the exemption; of two or more members of his party to cover an article too expensive to be admitted under one person's exemption; Canadians may not do this. Americans can claim duty exemption on bulky articles being shipped separately: Canadians can only claim exemption on articles brought with them as part. of their normal personal baggage. Americans can claim exemption for custom-made articles which are not ready to be delivered un- til after the tourists has returned; Canadians cannot. If the U. S. A. should limit its tourists In Canada to these Can- adian-type exemptions. our ten buck tourist trade would be finally killed off. If Canada should match those generous American exemp- tion. some Canadian border stores would lose business or else be compelled to pare their profit mar- gin; but everyone's cost of living would be agreeably slashedghere. Vlw .asf”P” feed Q-mm CRUSADE The Kings come riding back -from the Crusade. The purple Kings and all their mounted men: They fill the street with clamor- ous cavalca . The Kings have taken down the Saracen. singing a great song of the out- tbey came. with man sails and dlamonded oars. That made the Medltcrrsnsan nus with llama. month , nah Formedonthc softbadoscrt. And young lord Jerusalem. -I-fllsirs Belloc. GHANA, (CP)-The Labrador. navy Arctic patrol vessel which sailed the N FAN 5 i sncrsl rule; a Canadian in '"YI5tl'llcU0II M the fldlf ll buying worth lloussbsl me only w-r-its nu-D Ila- ICCHH N bobby l6&'h & -M ' -And reading now. in um far armoured . lwlshlooodtlistlbadbssswlth. them when the first Norman leap! upon itaymond stormed orthwsst PUBLIC FORUM I run column In span to Ins discus ulon by correspondents of qnssllnns of Interest. The Guardian loss ut nuunrfly sndsru the opinion 0' nrvesponlnnts. EMPLOYMENT INSURANCE Sir,-I think that ' mploymcnt insurance is one of the greatest plans ever designed to-take the sting out of a seasonal layoff. and make a man feel that he is getting something for nothing, and kind of provide an escape from the reality of not having a job. Unem- ployment insurance is better than nothing, it is true. but who wants to be unempl-ycd? Can Canada build a prosperous nation on un- employment insurance? Can We educate our children and main- tnin our homes on unemployment? You have the answer already. No! You say, what then? I am can- vinced that what Canada needs is a national employment insur- ance programme. This and this alone will make provisions for the individual to maintain his home and provide a minimum living standard both socially and phy- sically, and go a long way In helping him solve at least. one of his spiritual p. blems - faith in his felluwmen; faith in his nation. According to the Information Branch of the Department of La- bour, Ottawa. Sl38,600.000 was paid out last year to Canadians in unemployment insurance benefits. The same source says that S150.- 000.000 was lost last year in wages due to seasonal layoffs. If this si3s,eoo,ooo paid in unemploy- ment insurance has been supple- mented by slightly less than 996 by Federal and Provincial Gov- ernments and put into an employ- ment programme. Canadians could have been kept at work. The breadwlnner could have known the satisfaction which comes from earning his livelihood. and have bad job security which is a psy- chological essential if we are to have a strong nation. The national security is no stranger than the security and contentment of the homes which make the nation. A national ' programme could be inaugurated whereby our nation could be im- proved. and al.l'EIlKl.hel'l9dn at a local and provincial level. Min- lng, electrical, expansion. per- manent living quarters, central heating for cities and towns; the topping of many of our natural resources; forestry. agriculture development and improvements, advancements in education, etc. There is plenty to be done. and A . to grow to an independent self- supporting nation capable of tak- ing her place in world affairs. as our national and provincial lead- ers say she will. The present superannuation pen- sion plan now enjoyed only by Government workers should be ex- tended to every employee no mat- ter where he or shefworks. Em- ployee deductions should be com- pulsory as a benefit for pension at the age of 65 years, and could be coupled with old age pensions to make an employees retirement benefits worth while. sud worthy of looking forward to as well as a reward for service. I believe that Canada had a right to expect her population to rally to the forces of defence. and defend her during a time of crisis such as World War I and 11, when must be done if Canada is ever "Ill Medically . Speaking usnnss N. lusdssss. ILD. V SOMETHING IN irons nut .- 3: sun NUITOBUIITI, One has a natural tendency to rub the eye the moment espock of dirt or some other foreign ml- terlnl files into it. Don't do it. Rubbing lnlurlous Rubbing will only help the pan tlcle get such a firm hold that it can't be removed without a knife or a magnet. This. of course. means a trip to your doctor. I can't uvei-emphasize the fact that it is important to have A foreign body removed from your eye quickly. If the measures I de- scribed yesterday fall to dislodge it, you need the professional at- tentlon of your physician or eye specialist. He can aneslbstizs your eye and probably remove the cum material with an astringent or boric acid solution. or perhaps as can wipe it off with a piece of cot- ton. If these measures fail, be can usually remove it instru- ments or s sgnet. An electronic magnet is snow being developed for removing bits of non-iron metals not attracted by ordinary magnets. such as alum- inum, brass. copper. silver and others. It should be especially helpful to military doctors. During the Korean War, fragments of non- iron metals were responsible for about one-fourth of Army eye in- juries. If you rub your eye in an effort to dislodge a foreign particle. this substance is likely to break up Into several tiny fragments. If they are metallic. they can even rust right there in your eye. Then they'll have to be scraped out. Corneal ulcers sometimes form, and the fragments may go so deep that you'll need surgery. Usually. though. your physician or eye specialist can remove the particle painlessly. Testing the Ulcer After he does so. he'll want. to check to determine whether an ulcer has formed. He may use a two per cent fluoi-esceln solution on your eye. If an ulcer has form- ed, the solution will stain green. Then he knows you need addition- al treatment. I-Ie'll probably put antiseptfcs in your eye and order you to keep It covered for 24 hours or so. It's an isu.uuVelIlel'lCC. But so is the loss of an eye. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. C. E.: I have developed s severe itch on my head at thg nape of my neck. There is no rub. What causes this? Answer: Infections in the teeth. tonsils: or nasal sinuses. or other chronic infection may be s con. tributing cause for such trouble. Sometimes the skin will itch following bathing. Nervousnsss is a common cause for this disorder, It may also be due to some aller- gic disorder. - You should have a careful ex- amination by a Physician so um if any Infection are present thsy may be discovered and cleared up. The Age Old Story But when thou art hidden. go and sit down in the lowest room: that. when he that basis than cometh. be may say to thee, Friend. to up higher: then slssll than have worship in the pros- sncs of them that sit at most with the. For whosoever axnllctl himself shall be abused: and In that humbletll himself slllll be exalted. WASHINGTON. (AP)- Premier Mario Scslba of Italy arriving for talks with President Sunday pledged his government would work with the United States to "discourage aggression and prevent-more tragedy." the cause of freedom. which we cnloy--both religiously and socially. was at stake. But on the other hand Canadians have the right to expect that the country for which their fathers d sons and brothers fought an died. should provide job security and social security for every citizen who wishes to work. Employment in- surance could be the answer to need. Canada can be and should be one of the greatest nation. and examples of freedom loving and free people in the whole world; but she never will be on the pres- ent unemployment insurance pro- gramme. If we are to ever reach a maximum population and pro- duction. the leaders of this great country will need to quit flound- erlng around and take the present unemployment l lion, which egos" mourns?" Inna" I nmni HATION I The Gar also pllrvortsd to account for IWIIGHGIII orlzln; irreconcilable with to:-lcsl oritin of the doctrine of ad human nature. It is nvsrcaaln referred to in the Old Testament, con- cstnsd though that is with hu- man sin. Therein, sin is not re- glrded II mysterious; it is as- cribed to hardness of heart and stlffnusnf neck, that is. to wil- ful dlsobedlsncc. Nor does Jesus rsgsni sun as mysterious; no view of its origin can be extracted from his words. The origin of what came to be regarded as the ”fallsnness" of human na- the second century before Christ. in their reflections upon the fact of human experience so pointedly summarized by St. Paul: "For the good which .1 would I do not. but the evil which I would not. that I practise." The first ex- planation of this division in hu- man nature was found. not in Genesis ill, but in the cruder myth in the opening verses of chapter vl. That man's nature is divided is a manifest fact of experience; that his nature is totally corrupt is not. The latter notion is as fatal to any gospel of redemption by personal action as is atheism; for if it were the fact, the sole hope would be a literal recrea- tion, wbolly God's action. s doo- trins which logically entails the den Of Eden Story l'Is'lImoI.!aadsa and tation has issued in sin. and 5... fun is found in certain rabbis of equally and nuperflu. fmmntarr of why such action Though the Eden story mom no explanation of the origin of sin. it does enshrlpo tbs gm. story of human oxpeg-ten”, h primitive symbouam Howsvc IIIPPV and secure I3. cblldbood's shol . sooner Q later men some to the pm- of the ways. Then they leav. an ff of innocence and life be. comes a battleground. When temp. lll Illlme. we too. like Adam and Eva. when other sounds and (11,. traction: are still, may hear lh, voice of the Lord God. I voice of sorrow and of warning, uwhag is this that thou hast done?” Childhood's innocence. tempts. tlon. the knowledge of good and evil, the passage into A world of struggl against what is within and wi out-these are realities, But the world is not only a val. of tears from which man can! only sigh to be delivered into . heavenly Jerusalem; there are also happiness. love. achievement fidelity. compassion, ' I ship. glorious conquests and ma.-. tyrdoms. beyond the posslbllllles of childhood. And it is in this world that man must play hi, part, ignoring neither the good not the evil. And in such a world, as in the Eden story. though ma heel of good may be bruised. the head of evil may be crushed. This is man's appointed palll ol progress. There is no true ad- vance towards well-being and wisdom that Is not also progress In goodness; and the record or devoted and noble lives gi'ows longer as the world grows older. After the knowledge of good and evil has come to man through his sin, the world. as to Adam and Eve, can never be quite the same again; but it is still God's, and his work may be done in it. and bring "Joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repanlath." NOTES B'Y Gorsnlolsglsls report that the American of today has s life span tsn years longer than that of his grandparents. But. these experts n old MI add. he must have lbs right approach to his later ears. Different people have dif- erent approaches. some believe in slowing down to stretch out their re years. Others be- llsvslns gupinordarlo crowd more into them. The time is yours. you can use it as you see fit. -- it. Cstlierlnes Stand- ard. lnspussfhsappcalofnewim dust:-iss. Scotland was still losing about mm of her population an- nually thro migration, Mr. E. A. Eons, trsr-General for bsn be re- w viewed vlhl-Itltisths for 1964. Last you the figure was nearly ZSMD. Ml. Hogan said it had been estimated that about 11.700 Scots last your had gone to other parts of the United Kingdom. and the mnjoriw of tho remainder to Dom- inion countries. of which Canada was the most popular. - London E .8 Wbzonllsft the dslryincn's ss- r (at out and convince uranta that cheese is a very good thing with which to finish off a mail especially when the is is good as that pro almost in the suburbs of T Such ,i-omotlon would to the Industry In two It would notably increase amount of cheese producers would sell. It would also assure public that the industry was trying to help itself as vigorously as the taxpayers are forced to help it. It might even do good to the people who ate it. After all, it is one of the . nfnttenlng foods, Is well as being pleasant to the tnste. - Kingston Whig-Standard. We read the other day that s resourceful Plttsburg cltlzen had developed I piano practicing sil- encer. Without wishing to detract from the brilliance of the inven- tion itself, described, rather loose- ly we think, as I pole with pieces of felt attached. we hazard a guns, that this was another ex- THE WAY I ample of necessity being the mother of Invention. Anyone who has resided above or below par- ents wlio drive their unwilling off- spring to the keyboard for an hour or two of pi-actlcs each day will sympathize with the Pitlshurg man's problem-it was either s stiletto or s silencer! -Vancouver Herald. Admitting that farming was booming back in 1951 when the world, recovering from the war, was reaching out for food producls to slap up nutrition following i'a- stoning, it is a sad drop in Can- ada's farm lncoins from 52.155.- 000.000 that year to the esliniated bl.1l4.lIXl,000 in 1954. One wnnd- ers how long Canada's economy can stand up under such a bill! to the &)0.000 farm families to- talling more than 8,000,000 people who last year received much less than 10 per cent of the Gross Na- tional Product of more than S23.- 000.000,000. More than 20 per cent of.Canada's pcopls cannot IIVE on less than 10 per cent of the na- tional Income without a disloca- tion whlch one of these days will threaten our whole economy. -Lethbridge llcrald. Over in England a most useful contraption has been developed. It is a miniature light which E ” C from green to amber when an after-dinner speaker ap- proaches his time limit and to red when he passes it. This could be a real boon to luncheon and dinner meetings. or to other meetings. for that matter. Too few speakers understand the hrleler they can keep their rt-lnai-ks. while saying what is worth say- ing. the better Impression they leave.4The longer they talk. the less likely they jre to be ap- preciated. Few men can talk more than 30 minutes and still be interesting. This applics to parliamentarians as well as to after-dinner speakers. Too many ramble on and on. long after they have lost the Interest of lhnsc Pliorrsslollll EARDSPI IARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. who are supposed to be llslcnlnll -Windsor Star. Boll. Mstueion o Foster Ill Richmond so. J. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. 108 can It. Pb . Ch . R. M id. sol." 156 Rlglimond sl.cQua Dlnljgll OPTOMETRISTS g Need money to pay Easy-to-meet requirements. with n RFC Ioanl Nud money ? Bills to 850 to 81.000 nude as RFC on you own signature. to repay. Today . . . keep your credit good. start from pay? Call HFC fodayf mlollsllloio nllsllci jW.l.WIleslsl-Jlsasgsr Ilborowvtosrgslmsalve Lphsaeilil CMAMOIIIOWW P-IJ-. has now reached an all-time high, ...m........i1'3' q' .l.;:.:::: .:::.::::i::.:'.;.':..::: in :,-,.r,-.r-3 Q-0-v LI--n -. ca. at-m&”?6'u”n.2f?" by other nations will take notice er” 3”" 5' Gun” M ml" 93 0' Cindi 3' W0'l'k- Allhon H. Gilli, LLB. J. A. Cal-ruthers. R.(). I 1:: Big. ertJc.l,cMmmN lss Iuesnssl IL Dill km in Kent at. mung! .l..:.'-ill: 6-.-::k.:;..'-.:;-:. .. :i.r:.'- Gm 3,. Emma Pun" . nun J. S. Taylor, R.0. - IN 4 Km new Tm. c3'c's'l'e'. lid. "n352'47ssiL i ' H. J. Mabon. R.0. '-"i:.-.-..v-.:.-:i-- ' -----. . -o in Cell: Strut CHIROPRACTOR I. A. Dr. W. E. Carson - i ounloslu..nlniuu.q....st IIIPH-colt DI-W” Clean them up nu at one tinol Ina: of 5. .. Ii”... BA" - LE5 . Plckard .- 000-dlr -emu 34 I-00"! gun Ins-ass It. Dial an 2 M.a.A.l.c.'. 5 . rrunor lsnunsrsldc. P.l.l. mu! u 7"" 4 us an out 'l'u'.l'iu?""' &IblQ. gill! CHARTERED ACCQUNTANTS Ilenonsm. cunsm a co. ' T IO dual Coup I-uuefllllhwl mu mi 5 .: 5' no. soxI4""l -..s-t