12.. re 1.:.-pp 4-"Elic-.:.-..l..; I 9dhv-4:- i'l'l-IE GUARDlAN' excessive admiration and rciwect from my fellows through no fault "Tin strongest the y is weaker the: cakes! III." I . ruasnav. APRIL is. its: of my own." He ' came to Princeton University a voluntary '- to-bcbopadtltatMr.NuhwwIwbatbeia dolna;tar.liyIii reportsmr.-Giouin lirew!lhaiidatpolit:icalcIIep.'Al;tlieaanie tImo,'bya ati-anpcolneldenoe. the?!-unler dcouiinmlst Nortlrviebiam, Phun Van "”.."f&f.3:,"”ia.E.'I."i.?1:.""" " mo-mu"-':"u'-"dun" exile from Hitler's Germany. and when "cmn M-u II--I bind the lb 0"” asked to name his own salary suggested 55,000, the sum he had received from the ........ ,....... ll s.nn....-.m. uonuiuu nu man... man Prussian Academy of Science. It was with '"" ”'5””" W" "'::..”.'.':' P” M" D"""""'i .difficulty that he 'could,be persuaded to I: Carrier: C inminwa. summenian us.oa per lllulll laccept thrice that amount, and then only mwhm h P'”' M:e'r(f-ii:-i-npnvmu M 'M mmafter the officials had explained that they "had to maintain a high standard." He felt most at home in baggy clothes, smok- ling his pipe. playing his fiddle. or going lboat sailing. He detested formal gather- ings, and shied like a frightened steer from Bandung hero-worshippers. Yet he was no recluse, For this week at least Bandung. 1ndon- dt:l:n:lngif;i:;'n kindly dd SOUL and n true- es-'a' M" be capifmng the spiimght of ll"-l The world honours the memory of this t.ereSt.fm"i th? mg piiwer capitals For tfm great man today, and holds in reverence '"'5.i time m history It is. .thel Scenfe 0 flnot only his scientific attainments but the ma)" economic and pgiflca con e':enC."lexample he set in the virtues of simplicity More than half the W0lldS. population isyand modesty, These indeed are the ham wpresented iherei yet there is no 0,” from marks of true greatness; but they are diffi- any of the great powem. East .or .W-ESL uni cult to maintain amid the adulation of mul- him of Course Commumfq China S prawn. titudes, and they have seldom been more wins to .that status are JuStmed' .A few at: consistently exemplified than in the life of the nations represented - Thailand is a yDr' Einstein. good example-are friends and supporters of the Western alliance. while the Peiping g delegates will be speaking for the Com- In The AFCIIC. ' . .. to QlgTh:l:gddl:Sih(:)i1:hetl?e:Li:!l:::fii;::ing: in May. 1937. planes landed four Rus- Widence in vesterday-S news reports that sian scientists and technicians on an ice the Commmlists arynot the only ones p,-9. floe at the North Pole. After drifting un- pared to Slug it out in debate. ltil February, 1938, toward ,Greenland the The first blast has come from Iraqis ; four were taken off only after the floe melt- Foreign Minister. Fadhil Jamall. whose ed and Criicked but With important 0b59i'V3'y speech is stated to have drawn prolonged l tions to their credit. The New York Timesl applause from many of the twentymine-notes that In Pravdail account of three delegates. Red China's Premier and othersliaier Ruiisiah 9XP9diii0"' that 3i0WlY di'if'i'l from Peiping says the report "sat with set :ed on floes hundreds of miles, a glimpse Isl faces while Jamall charged that inter-iC8l-ighi Of What the N0i'ih9i'n 593 Riiiiie national Communism is a materialistic re-l-Administration has been doing Since 1933- Hgion that breeds hatred among c1a55e5,5There have been hardships and grim ad- and peoplesgn He called it 3 4-, new fol-mlventures of which there is only a hint. It of colonialism much more dangerous to uslis Piiiin that thC Oid day! Of h9i'0iC dashes than the old.” and said that no nation on ;for the Pole are over. A polar empire is to earth is free from its effects. Premier be exploited. and the N01'th9i'n 393 R0i-lie Mohammed All of Pakistan. which has a Administration ls' exploiting it mutual aid treaty with the Lnited States. "Pravda might have given us a little shook hands with Jamall and congratulat- more history than it did." says The Times- ed him at the and of his meech, Signifi- "There was the famous deliberate drift of eantly, Prime Minister Nehru's Indian dele- N8nS9n'S F 1'8-m fi'0n'l 1393 i0 1396 Mid OW) gatrlon heard out the speech in silence, Schmidt's accidental drift of 1943 in the India indeed is 1,, the big place of un. icebreaker Chelyuskin, which was crushed certainty, a position which Mr. Nehru ap- by the ice off the coast of Siberia. and sank pear: to relish. The Western power: like to after the crew landed on the ice with their think he is their friend. even though he has records. Then there was the drift of the not been a very ardent one up to this time. Sedov. which began in 1937 and lasted 812 It cannot be overlooked. however. that in days and which took her into regions never recent weeiu he has reserved most of hisbefore entered by ship or plane. A few erltlciuia for the Western side: he has years later 150 freighters of various nat- stated quits openly that he blames the Un- ionalities were sailing through the North- ited Statecforpresen-t tensions in the Paci- west Passage SS 8 maiier Of T0i-iiiiie- fic: and he has gone so far as to say that "More work remains to be done in the Asia and Africa care no more about lihe Arctic. Some of it is being done-by Can- Western style of democracy than for So- ada and the United States, but the Russians vlet or Chinese Communism. If he takes have the largest and the most experienced this attitude at Bandung he will serve- organization. Pravda's account indicates though, no doubt, unwittingly-the inter- that they regard the arctic as part of their eat: of Moscow and Peiping almost to per-lterritory-a territory rich in values that fgaion, 'have been too long neglected." Meanwhile. however. the Iraq spokes- man's speech at Bandung is highly encour- impressive Figures aging. It is even surprising in view of the ' way the cards have been stacked by Red. According to the Canadian Life Insur-L propagandlsts in preparation for this im- ance Officers Association. Canadian fami- portant conference. lies received approximately 351200.000 on every working day during the past year Alberf Einslejm from their life insurance companies. These payments were paid to many thousands of DIV Aiheri Eihsieihu Wh0S9 death OCCUI" L policy-holders and beneficiaries. Death Ted .V95i9i'd8.V at Pi'ihC9i0hv New J?i'59Y- benefits alone averaged more than M50.- was one of the most famous men in theiooo each working day, with payments be. world. He enjoyed this distinction in scien- ving made under about 300 policies, Thcvr tific circles for half R century, for it is just totalled over 9,'113,000,00() last year. This fifiy year-S 8R0 that h? Pi'0P0Uhd9d-Hi ihe was about 550000.000 more than 10 yrars 829 Of iW8l'li.Y-Six--his ih90i1V Oi Y?-'i3iiViiy ago and represents nearly a 78 per cent rise which added a fourth dimension to the in the decade, measurement of matter and upset New-i Aggregate payments for all types of ton's law of gravitation. Since that time. benefit were greater than S2?.()2 000.000 in his theories have revolutionized 'mathe- 1954. This exceeded the previous y'e'ir's fig- malics and physics. and led. amoniz olheriure by more than 325,000,000 and was - things. in present-day developments in Sl30,()00.()()() greater than 10 years ago. 8i0lni(' i'nPi'g.V- "9 W35 the l'9('-iliieni 0ifThe I954 payments brought to more than miiliilurlinous honors and eulotzies from L 3:2 billions the arzgrertale received by policy- aii P3149 M iii? W0l'id- When he ViSliPfi holders and beneficiaries in Canada since Japan some years ago. the Emperor pro-ithg glose of World War II. claimed a national holiday: in Belgium the Royal Family sent their personal car to meet him: in England Lord Haldane. a re- nowned British scholar. hailed him as ”a Lord Beaconsfield died this date, 1881. man who has called Birth a greater revolu-y ' ' f . tion of thought than Cooerincus. Galilcol Another indication that racial prejudice or Newton himself": while in the United in the United States is on the wane: for istalns Dr. Nicholas Vlurrav Butler. presi- the first time since they were established dent of Columbia University. lauded hivnyln 1872 the Lyman Beecher lectures in as "one of those gifted with the almost Homilctics at Yale University have been superhuman power to use the loftiest ole-idelivered by a Negro scholar, the Rev. menis of intelligence to take this unlvnrse James Robinson. pastor of a Presbyterian more completely to pieces. to see alike into Church in New York. His subject was "Ad- lls greatest distances and Into its remotest Ventlimlls Preaching in ii W0i'id 0f ciians depths. and to give us for our intellectual and trouble." " satisfaction is completer knowledge of its ' ' ' . mysteries." , It may not mean anything, and yet Albert Einstein walked amid the blaze again it may. For three daysi prior to the of this publicity the iiumblest of mortals. Bandung Conference Premier Chou En-Lal "A Quiet. unpretentious wizard." someone of Communist China stayed in Rangoon as called him. He liked to belittle himself, con- fessing publicity on one occasion that he adv: an intricacies of his own puunwuwininn.-nd. Mac with Prime imeui, in terms g Expecting To g Get One loo PUBLIC FORUM rliia galainn In span to the linen .lon by correspondent: of quullnn at Inlai-ul. The Guardian loan ni luunllly undone Ibo nlllhu J- .u- .sIIolilltIlIA. BRITISH FREEDOM Sir, - In your feature "The Poels' Corner" (April 7) I noted Wordswortlfa dealhless lines on "British Freedom" which include the thought which have today a global sweep: "We must be free or die. who speak the tongue That Sbakesmare spoke; die faith and morals hold which Milton held . . ." The lead item l.n your "Editor- ial Notes" on that same page says: William Wordsworth born this data. 1770. The above is the impulse for the following spot of 20th century comment from a man in the street: la) that, undoubtedly, there never was so wide a tide of human freedom as that which roll: at the present hour; not- withstanding the bleak fact that dictatorial lyraniiy also covers more millions of human beings than in all history; and lb) that of course. the urge for freedom is, today. given a global measure- of spirit? . Somehow. I seem to see a rela- tionship between the passing of Georgi Maleukov from the Soviet spotlight. as a result of the ad- mitted fallure of collective peas- ant agriculture, and the following immortal lines with which the polillcal philosopher, John Stuart Mill. closed his great manifesto against despotism of all kinds. On Liberty: "The worth of a State, in the long run. in the worth of the individuals composing it; and a State which postpones the in- ierests of their mental expansion and elevation to a little more of administratice skill. or of that semblance of it which practice gives, in the details of business; a State which dwarfs its men. in order that they may be more docile iuslriuneuls in its hands even for beneficial purposes-wlll find that with small men no great thing can really be complished; and that the perfection of machi- nery io which it has sacrificed everything will in the end avail it nothing. for want. of the vital power which. in order Iliat ilie machine might work more smooth- ly. It has preferred to banish." 11851). I ponder, with respect and ad- miration. the character and abil- ity of the people on Canada's 620.000 farms! I am. Sir. 9lc.. CITYMAN Toronto, Ont. BRITISH COLONIALISM Sir,-Commenting on the pub llcatlon of the American records of tbe Yalta conference, the Globe and Mall of Toronto quoted the following statements attributed to the late P. ” " .'.. "Of one thing I'm certain, Stalin is no imperialist . . . I've tried to make it clear to Winston mint) they must never gel the idea we're in lt'(l.be war) lust to help them in bank an to their anchale, medieval Empire ideas." When I read that there flashed across my memory a very different statement made by Mr. Roosevelt during the war when in the wickedness of all colonial sysleml." And It inl t have added, -like some also. the guest of Premier U Nu of Biuma. It is M the human K1,, in glowlnl Saturday but lflth lrh. Ago Old Story I And when he was come into the temple. the chief priests and the elders of the people came unto him as he was teaching, and said. By what authority does! iliou uiese things? and who (ave thee this authority? T history books we were proud to call William the Conqueror. The Normans colonized the whole of England and established I system of law and order where previously the people had been divided into warring tribes and petty king- doms. From that time forward the British people became more and more united and their sailors and traders began to venture beyond the scan to explore distant lauds. They little knew at that time that they were the pioneers of an Em- like that would outmatcb that of ancient Rome. They swept the Spanish Main from the seas and opened the gateway to the Western World for all nations to colonize the North American continent. They turned to Africa and the Far East and sailed south to the Antipodes where they founded col- onies in the wilds of Australia. Cruising the Far East in search of trade. they established t at Singapore. Shanghai and Hon; 3. When they went to India they found it in a state of chaos owing to periodic invasions from without and perpetual civil and religious strife wlthln. For a hun- dred years Britain governed India in peace. and in withdrawing sbven years ago handed over the gov- ernment to Hindus and Moslems whom they had educated and train- ed ln the principles of Western democracy. Nehru himself recently admitted that. although he is a full-blooded East Indian he feel: lie is also an Englishman. Egypt and the Sudan are other countries that under British rule emerged from a state of semi- barbarlsm and national bank- ruptcy. in a recent CBC broadcast Arthur Galtskell. of the British Information Services. told an in- leresting story of how the Sudan had been reclalined from the de- sert and its primitive people re- scued from starvation by the Gezlra Projecti Mr. Galtskell was himself in charge of that great un- dertaking. The Sudan was a hot and dusty plain bordering on the Sahara. but the Blue Nile ran through it and its waters were turned to the land In a great ir- rigation scheme. Today the Sudan loolzs from the air like a huge grrcn oasis producing food. fodder and cotton crops. which have made famine in mere memory. Mr. Gait- skell emphasized that the Gezira Project was not planned by ldeologists. but was financed by private risk capital and carried out by conservative administrations and business men. That is but one example of what Mr. Roosevelt at Yalta called "archaic, medieval Empire ideas." Britain was developing backward nations long before the United Nations was ever thought of. I am. Sir. elc. LOUIS MILLIGAN, Toronto. T0 PREACII IN EUROPE PARIS (AP)- Evangelist Billy Graham will tour six continental mass meeting: in Glasgow and . It was announced during the weekend. He starts in Paris Switui-land. Gennali . the Nether- landl. Norway and wedeii. GRAND OLD LADY SIIERBROOKE. Que. (CF)- Mn. Adeline Deliault celebrated birthday. Her bus diedtwoyeanago.aud the its, just after celebrating their nth wedding anniversary. European countries following his y June 3-11 and continues through 1. an ' ,'J We Weed (Luca ALWAYS NE! No spring in like another spring: One year it's swift and bold and Say. And bright day follows on bright d ill. While the next year it's loitering And shy and cool and hesitant, sifting on buds untimely snow, A5 loath to let the winter so And let the sun his blessing grant. But late or early, liarali or kind. The season still must guy the heart, Whereln new hopes, new impulse, start. And new porcoptlonl I the mind. -Nora B. Cunningham in the Christian Science Monitor. Britain Trains Her Youth (Globe and Mali More than I million young Brit- ons have done their period of com- pulsory service (currently two years) with that country's armed services, A further 250.000 are now doing it. According to an article by Mr. John Prince in the Iandon Dally Telezrapii - reprinted on this page some days ago - the great majority .of these young men accept their service period as a necessity. They are not entliuiilaa. tic about it: one could not rea- sonably expect them to be. But they do it without serious com- plalnt. Moat, according to survey: cited by Mr. Prince. get some good out of it. Roughly two out of three, on returning to civilian life, felt their two-year stretch had been used both to the country's full advantage and to their own. A War Office study quotes in per cent as saying they ealoyed it; and 96 per cent as saying it had developed their character and self-reliance. Can this country learn something from the British experience? They, of course. have had forty years. off and on. of compulsory military service. It was In oduced halfway through the Pin World War, in 1916. and dropped when that war ended. It was re-introduced a few months before the start of the Second World War in 1939. and is still with them. Four years from now. Britain will have had twenty continuous years of it. Canada, by contrast has bad compulsory serv- ice only for brief periods in each of the two wars; and each time. It turned out to be a shambles. Or rather, was made so by politic- lans. Canada's population and geo- graphy do not under present cir- cumstances warrant universal serv- ice in the Brltlsli style .- two years' enlistment for every fit young man on reaching the age of eighteen. But if it is seriously con- cerned with lta own defense, and with its collective obligations. it must make a beginning on pre- paredness samewiu-re. It in a sob- ering thought that if we were pltciiforkad Into war tomorrow. we would have fewer than 310,000 men with any sort of training. even part-time. There are. of course. the million-odd veteran: of tin Second World War. But that war ended ten mine new (ind; -to get used toil. If he seems to ' p wv Niie'r9E st ziiv E F If an aim: - . . ' by its appearance in some For a while. hell probably take "i , ow - or new w-v - 3"-..:i.:. ':l;s'?.'”'f..".”:'..'..i'.'. he's slow. It takes time for him 9 ' ' " thing that can be said of the re- sult in to quote the gcliaracter in "Adam Bede" who declared "it was a pity lie couldnn be hatch- ed o'er again, an' batched dif- ferent." -St. John's News. News bu come that the United States Army, in an atteiritp to ob- tain "quality of manpower" in a take it well from a cup. give iilm all his juice this way. When he's about seven months old, offer him an ounce or two of his milk mixture once a day from a cup. If this works, gradually give him more milk from a cup at his other feeding times. By the age of nine or ten months. he should be drinking all or at least most of his milk from I cup. Usually, your tot will learn what is expected of him and will gladly drink from a cup. Some babies. though. will give their anxious mothers a difficult time. Iill have some tips tomorrow on what toido if your baby spurns a cup. As for the breast-fed baby, you can begin glvlngdilm milk from I cup as soon as complete weaning is begun. When your infant is about a year old, let him try drinking his milk by himself. Place I smell. two-ounce cup on his tray at man! "Eh- tima. Put just a little milk in it because he's likely to spill It at first.-He'll probably try to imitate you and drink it by himself. With a little practice he'll be holding the cup and drinking without any help from you. It might be a little messy, though. Somewhere between 11 and 15 months, the drinking problem will be solved. He'll grasp the cup with both hands and down bia milk like a veteran. QUESTION AND ANSWER. Mn. 3.: Would ypu tall-me if there is any help for Parklnsoifs low stand :5. This II probably very commendable. but it is to be hoped that -the Pentagon is not planning an army of intellect- uals. This could prove to be-a dangerous experiment and at any time we might hear of I simple command to stand to attention touching on a leaned and ln'ipaa- sloned debate f h the officer and a couple of PbD'iI iii the rear -Hamllton Spectator parative statistics on taxicab safa- ty would turn out to be almost twice as safe as the old-style large cabs? Yet that in what tin figures show for the first 3 moiitba' mi-2.2". ii: .'l'"'i'. '”"li'”3 car-m a o y . acc on for each loo,ooo miles of operation as against 2.! for the jumboa. ”l1”"'..".' .....' m..":.'.....:':: ma OI , tlie police refrain from any judg- meiiu,Theyl will keep on. observ- Dlaeaae? lug until the end of the year. Answer: Paralyll GKIMIII, or many gf mgt "cont.mporgryw11- Parkliison's Disease, II I disease of the nervous system which oc- curs most often in old age and la neu" is happily still available to give life to theirs. air. The Police nap-riinonru con- ill A Y7 when about a favorable reps;-L small cab in obviously he" stay. But back to safety. Th, find that most of in, accidents are caused by C0I.IlSll4.l( Tlhtopa. which is hardly surprising. e oontosayilnn "the greatest aiinao warn of cab accidents in city in in, dangerous .,practlce of follow too closely to other vehicles 3- well. there is not much room for spreading out in this congested city. Maybe it la possible to im. prove the quality of taxi driving- as well u' the taxi: themselves. -New York Herald Tribune Planners frequently-gel uiem. selves into difficulty because at their inability to anticipate hum. an action and behavior correctly at all lines. An example come; from the United Kingdom when sugar was rationed until Sepiem. ber. 1953. Expecting a big in. crease in consumption when r5. tlnnlng ended, the U.K. food nnu. much sugar is pouring Into Bri. tain that there is no room leii lol- it in vv ehouaea. It is said that the food ministry has already had to divert 100.000 tons to Holland for storage. -Kitchener-Waterloo Record. We note with delight the splen. did gesture made by the United States on the direct orders of President Eileiiliower, in releas. g freely to the whole world in air mail letters addressed to ta ,1 , who um the 75 nations with which the hlVI.rfJ.lou:htu31ai:.m the .n..nw:..,. U. I. A. has diplomatic relations, the complete ' ula for the Salk polio vaccine. This la in one sense a return in a better past. and in auotbc I hopeful sign of a bet. ter future. Until the blight of tho bomb descended upon,us, scienti- fic discoveries were shared on a world wide basis. This may her- aldtbedawnliiloladaywlicn this will once more be true. It is to be hoped that no sense of false pride will prevent countries be- hind the Iron Curtain making full and immediate use of the polio vaccine. -Fredericton Gleaner. characterized by a tremor of the head, leg: and arms. and dis- turbance of the gait. There is no treatment which has been found to be of value In all cases. Hyac- cyamua has been used with very good results in some instances. also I compound i ' ' atro- pine, acopalomlne liydrobrornide and hyoscyamlne. However. these substances can be used only under the direction of a physician. viettes, photo albums, nail-less picture hangers, pick- and em? Lloyd George "IE is.-Aim i iiiivimi TROUBLE to FIND Miniature playing cards, wax tapers, paper ser- up sticks, bridge tallies, dominoes, bride's books, etc. ..TR,Y.. u .- (Maiicbeater Guardian) The F have . on a memorial to uoyd -George. as indeed they were certain, do as soon as 10 years had passed since his death. The period is well chosen; as Sir Winston Churchill said. it is long ” 8 PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. to allow partisan passions to-die down. but not so long as "to quench the testimony of con- tempo my witnesses. Of these he is himself, in this instance, incom- parably the chief. When Mr. Attlee entered Par- Ilament (in November. 1922) Lloyd I65 Queen St. Phone 4282 M. A. Farmer, Q.O., LILB. Mi l.'.'ll'.::'..':..l'.l'”"' ...ii.-:.-..&. '.l'.'i'i"'i""..'?.-.".-... J. Elmer Blanchard, as. OPTOMETRISTS G. F. Iiutclieson Si Son 1'. G. mrrcnason. ii.o. George had already left office and begun the 23 twilight years that lay between his greatness and his . w death. and not many parliament- A. wlmmn amulet, LLB. Bauk of Commerce Bldg. 53 Grafton st. Dial 8511 Am” M. mm, LLB, J. A. Carruthers. 11.0. no Blcbnlilond St. ' niai rm 138 Kent St 9"" 59" Byron J. Grant. 0.D. ary memories go back now be- 126 If t St. Dial 561! yond Mr. Attlee's. But Sir Winston Piiliiiln 3iiil- iii Gllif" st '3 S hymn R 0 iiliiled gsfgted Y:ii)hel'gIloydCEl)el?I:gt: bl; Palmer 8 Ihslam Corndr Item I Qiueeii Sis. goo andd 1010. hln theb l;'our Years am of Non acacia am. Office 9133: "W" "3 ar. an in t e lur ueiit years . J. M ho R0. of the Coalition which followed Matbeson, Peake 8 M,,...,E. ' I" r. E. I. it. He alo;iemcan give the full Nmholson - -, 4 measure 0 e man. or a grea glarllamentarlan has”? something 175 Gl'II'loI' Street common with a great actor. WW The printed record does not con- J. A. Mlcallllhn an R' R” Oanigal 54” tel: Elm. gne tigustmszee andfhearicun-lg Bldg. - Dial am - Queen St. J an ve ram; 8 per orm-I '-ji-'f-""TjT' " auces to know what he was: nnel G E n ILL must have had and recapture the; ' ' Lian ' ' G Kenn "charm W" mmde "ieiiu Richmond 64. t um 5:23 B. Arcb. 'iu.n.A.i.c.. ms Of few men is this more true s"mm'"'d" RE '1' mm MacPIiee a Tralnor III QIIGCII BL Dill 4333 CHARTERED A than of Lloyd George. more so since he h'i”-null . fame. The form of the memorial is yet to be determined. May one and the T cim-iomiown. by -ppolnlnwii ' mu ms CCOUNTANTS hope tht it will be "conceived in ' - - McDONALD CURRIE & C0. cons n ce with iii plrll f that ' rm fieryo l:Ii'If. Dalvld Idisiyd fgeorge. c""'i' 3”” ch""'mw" mm eader in socla reform and in ' - H. B. DOANE & COMPANY war. and not of Earl Lloyd-G rge. the cloaked and bard-llkemi':ler "8 6”” 0”". sf" chnmuwwl P 0 am "1 ft the last years. relatively 're;h Phone 8541 0541 A - ' g'A in mind? The sculptor shoud H --W”-m'mrro”"i'm”TTTji commune with sir Winston. as ARTHUR J. GARRETT well as with the recorded llke- , Palmer Electric Building I 5'” nesses of his subject; the testl- Chg;-fgugtopj 0 I00 Hire! Sinai . "ii g . T ' URGEON native? None that we are Aawalrie S not ggngfggglcig ,":';”";',,';", ,,:,, ',',',f,,; DR. cmam n. aaizniirrr. use. mm M flattering to them than to us. Twecl lulklI:Q ' ,, 4 .TheTrout Season Is He're 'AIidbeIlanIt0I'IOtINlt70rhN.l35'l'3"" wooldjaataauaalaaniei-bell-jblhgnll beneaahaIaItIebblwHoII.lIIdIIp.p3!. efhdmlbll. . ' i ' -usr I-bnlir .' i so