....., ,..;...'.,.,..-;';.;..:.:: ; ...t-E:-..s. - -v --A.-....-.... -..- ...,, - .. .,.,.:,, 7719 Guardian "tau". rum. Ldsulrl mum Luna nu uu" Published uery week day nuriung ll lno Prince Sued. Tlurlullelown, P E. L. by me 'I'nom.ou company U4; 44 Km: 51. W, Tuiuuuu uunuui Office 2:; tum-i lv 'luwel Bldl lan t Rulllvll Publish.-r and t'liiI Manager liuni. tiaiku. klcnilui ut Inc I dllufflslll Pier Mt-inner Anon Ifwtnll oi tin-ulaiiunn sun.-vi oltnvs at Suninicriulc uuniacue and Alhclinn Aulhnruul u Second ('I.tu Mail In me Post Dffiro tmiarimeni (iiiaua 4: Latvia tiiailuiu-nun: suninuuute Ium. Elsewhere in I'l-.l 5-itiu other I' 5 ll.'00 Der annum lI'I-ZIINI-LSII.-II", .lf'l.Y 2.3. I956 Herd Terms At Ottawa Iiauu nu III- Prnvuncu -m' this l'rovincc coiiics off very p.iiw' u. the new t'wtwi';il "tax- sii.'ii.is 3IltIl)t)Stllx' now being d:s- i-ii---wl .'l the House of (liiiiitiolis. Aw.-oiil.::: to a stiiicinciii pre.-'ent- ml a iI'Xl days ago by l-iiiiance 31 ii:-Hi ll.t.ri.s, liusctl on iin esti- ni,-yiml l,llNi'lllllI I) ()1) ti 1 (1 l Hi It IOF i'i'ln.-i- l”.tiw.iwl I-land tiiivtiig the fi..-.i ymtr litTiT-3S, we shall ,-..,...,,,. sjiiiiiiti more under the pi-oposml lorniiiia than we would under the lift") agi-cement formula it" the litttcr were carried over to 1 l!t.3T-SR. Th s populiit.on estimate l niuy not lllEliCl'i'cllIl.I3. and in any ("riM' the total amount offered falls far sliori of our present and future reqiiirenieitts. Iii r. llarrls niziintiuns that with PflllRlil.lfIlOlI p a yin c it t s we shall alliance along with the de- veltipliimll of the two wealthiest provinces. and he expects that in the fT)1Ii'xP of the next five years these payinctits will increase siib- stanvally. This of course is only surmise. The fact remains that - contrary to the statement made in the House on Monday that "the ngw p ro pr) s a I 5 w.ll provide the provinces with '20 per cent more revenue" - we in this Province will receive a percentage increase of only 1.6 over the 1932 formula V the lowest for any province in Canada. N e w f o u ii (I l a n d would receive A percentage increase of 12.4 over the 1932 formula; for Nova Scotia the figure would be 20.9. The percentage increases for the wealthy provinces of Quebec and Ontario would be 26.8 and '3-1.8 respectively. Saskatchewan and Alberta would also receive in- creases of over 20 percent. on a per eapita basis, our in- crease over the 1932' formula would be only 0.63 e again the lowest for all Canada. The corresponding figures for the other Provinces are: 4.28 for Newfoundland, 6.79 for Nova Scotia, 5.75 for New Bruits- wick, 8.35 for Quebec, 8.06 for On- tario. .'i..'l2 for Manitoba. 6.60 for Saskatchewan, 7.13 for Alberta and 1.33 for British Columbia. Do these figures show. as Ot- tawa contends. that the special needs of Prince Edward Island have been given con.siderati0n'? Our requirements, as set forth in the brief presented at the Domin- ion-Provincial conference last Oct- ober. call for additional revenue of at least S3,7fio,(i0fi. What we ask- ed for. specifically, was an 0qll'nll:l.ilIlOn grant which would take into account our basic fiscal needs and tax-raising ability, so as in make possible a minimum stan- darrl of services without limiting other provinces in setting up high- er ztanilards as their resources per- nttted. And it was emphasized that in many cases our expendi- tures have, been incurred as a dir- ect t'e.si1lt of policies promoted by the I-'erli-ral fiovcrnmcnt, which we were obliged to accept. A frank pii'tiii'r- of our I'iiiin- cial difficulties was given in the l.c:isl.'itiii"e last session by the Provincial Ti'eusiit'cr. llon. P-. F.au'lc Illaclionald. At that time there was some hope that under the new ngrceniciits our fiscal needs would be considered. Tlint lioprylias not materialized. and it will be heavy sledding for this Province unless mm-9 i'm'pn1ip is olit:-iilittfl. If is If) he hoped that this be miide a major issue by our reprcsentatives, here and at Ottawa. regardless of party polit'cs. It is a challenge that can- not be ignored unless we are pre- pared to go further into debt, with correspondingly heavier carijvilltl charges and higher taxes on our people; who are already paying more than their share according to our available revenue sources. Christianity In India Some time ago we referred to the growing difficulties being en- countered by Christian miss'onaries in Asia and Africa as a result of the wave of nationalism that is sweep- ing across these continents. A rodent report from New Delhi gives . one death of an Anti-Christian sentiment that is abroad In India where the ancient religion, Hind- u.sm, whose leaders are reassem- ing its claim to be the moral basis of Indian culture, is experiencing a w'idespi'cad revival. About a year ago, the report says, the State of Madhya Pradesh, one of the strong- holds of if nduism in the heart of India. appointed a commission to look into charges that ”Christianity had lu-cit a threat to the country's securiy". The commission has now ism.-tl its report, and it is anything but encouraging to Christian mis- siotiiirics. Tlze rt-portls principal finding is tli:ii "christian evangclization ap- pears to be part of the overall pol cy in use tilli'lsli.'-1llll)l for re-establish- lug hiltl-lillill supremacy and is not protnpti-it by spiritual motives". It 1n;tl(tts ,t number of recommcnd;i- t'tiii.s i-.t.-iiliiterl to reduce the ill- iiiiipnt-p of t'hri.sti:iii mis.sioiiai'ic.s: all propcitv now held by foreiiln niissioii:ii'y organi7.atioiis should be given the native (llirisiians or turn- ed over to international groups: lb" rgbt of t'hri.stian p r o p a g at 10 ll gh()ul(I be permitted only to Indian of foreign (llll'lSlli-ills; the number (lliristiaits allowed to ciiIt't' ill? country as missionares should be drastically reduced -- in fact. it ivoulti he better for India if the right be limited to those llll.K'SlfillHl'- 19; who have had special training in medicine, eilucatioit, and other professional fields. It is known that lfliiiiic Mills istcr Nehru is s y m p a t h e t i c to Christian missions; btit only. it ap- pears. bccause of the social WWR thev have carried on among pcoplc in the very poor and b a c k ward areas. Whether this limited favour at court will make it any easier for Christianity to hold its own in India - there are now about 8 mil- lion in the country -- in face of organized attempts to curtail its activities remains to be seen. But at the moment it is clear that the survival of Christianity in India. to say nothing of its grow I. hangs in a very delicate balance. EDITORIAL NOTES If a n y 0 it e wants land real cheap, he cant get it in Brazil. Amazon jungle land can be bought at half a cent an acre. The Brazil- ian Government sets a litnit of 23,- 000 acres for each purchaser. in an area about the size Of QU9ll9C- O I 0 Of all the provinces in Canada, Manitoba and Ontario spend the most on conserving and managing fur-bearing animals, one of their natural resources. In return for their outlay these provinces reap an excellent reward -- the value of the skins from trapped animals amounts to nearly 311-I per square mile. 0 I O A Japanese commission visit- ing New Guinea has been asked by local officials to perform a puri- fication ceremony to appease the angry ghosts which have been ter- rorizing the natives. No doubt it is worth trying: but any ghost we have come across in song or story did not appear to be deeply im- pi'cssc(i by earth-bound r.tcs and ceremonies. in 0 0 This is the time of year when motorists get angry at wasps and bees which come in uninvited. An expert in the field says that this is a mistake and the cause of malty accitlciits. The right thing is to be hospitable and let the buzzing visi- tor alone. If he isn't antagonized the chances are he will go out quietly after spending a few mitt- utes looking around. 0 O C An A be rdee n trawler may soon be put into service as a sea- going cla ssroorp so that new recruits for the frhwling iltlitISIl'y may given practical training. This proposal was made at a con- ference in Aberdeen, attended by members of 'fishermen's associa- lw tions, the White Fish Authority, and cdncationalists from the fish- ing counties of Scotland's north- east. C O 0 According to a I.'nc.sco pub- lication. there are more than a thousand distinct languages in use in the world today, to say nothing of additional thousands of dialects and variations. Including such var- iations, there are nearly a lhousanrf languages in Africa alone. Special- ists have listed 25 major languages which sire important both for the extent to which they are spoken and for their literature. I l l l i l '4 4 'St- FIVEMO -wt ' . pOtr4-LL. - yms'o;i.v I -wV”'T--.”w DITWE y C nu, cumsr:-AASK "WHAT ARE WE WAITING FOR?" PUBLIC FORUM nu column In upon to un dlu-up slon by mrm,.nmi..u- of qllrll . of Interest. The Guarlllnn does so m-m.niy mam. the nplnloll of respondents. TRIBUTE TO THE LATF Pl-ill('Y KlN('ll Sir. Having just returned from Albcrtnn and the funeral of the late Percy Kincli. whcrc we, the relatives and mourners, were giv- en a masterly oration by the Rev. Mr, Killcn. who so aptly pointed out the transitory condition of our earthly sojourn and the nec- ccssily for pi'cp.'-iratioii for our re- moval from this tcrrrslial sphere. I felt that ii was fitting that I write a few words of this man; late member of the Prniincial Pol- ice. It ('. ill Police. Military Pol- Ice and ex-chief of the Summer- side Town Pnlice. l hail known tlirough all these phases of his life. had work- hint may say without fear of contra- diction Ihat wherever he found his niche. he was a credit to his calling and his faintly. Specifically was it meet that we shnuld gather there yesterday in silence and respect to pay our tri- hutes to Perry as he was fam- i iliarly known to us: whose unswer- ving loyalty to his chosen profes- sion. fairnc.ss in his diuics and jiislicc to his ft-llowmcn has so on- deared him to all of us that neith- er time, .sp:ice nor ifislzince can erase his memory or delete one iota from the great loss we have sustained in his pnssing. Percy Kinch has passed on. but he lives in our memories. I To his fellow officers he has set an example of Esprit de ('orp.s, of public relations and devotion to duty that we may well try to cm- l, iilate: lu his employers he has given scrvicc. sacrifice nnd self cffaci-mi-nt in .siili.scryicncc only to I his duty: and to his fellow ("lili- l ens he has given himself so tin- rc.sci'yctlly that his chccrluliicss, chariii and rhnritv will he by- wnrrls for many years to cnlllc lle fins p;is.xi-if on, but his uuod I works remain He lived without dis- . honotir. willioiil envy Illl(I with- , out malice and in that Valhalla l flint awaits us all may ltc know I the peace and quiet that he so richly mcritcrl ln ('ftl1f'lllslftIl may I on behalf of .'ill lll"llIItr'fS of the if, C, III. Pohcc. Prnvmcinl Police. Milit- arv Police and ('ity Polite fcndcr sympathies to his wife and Gill" family in their suddcn bereave- 4 ment and great loss . I am, Sir etc. i (f.ll' it.-l('AftTlfL'R ('luef of Police. (fl arloltctown. P H l. ?f:.veg'f.,.” VENUS IN THE SKY The sun has set behind the hill, Sonic hours ago it sank. gold red. But the clock strikes ten o'clock and still ' Vl'ItIls l)1nI..cs overhead. Not overhead but slipping down 'l't-iiurtl Aldebarun and Capella, Sktmming the treetops over town Upder the skyis star-lined umbrel- Fl t i l l The sun will rise in the east at dawn. klarly. perhaps. to look about Inr the truant planet that was gone. Tb-It spent the night hours mil. And then the sun will pull it back. Sliorten the planet's airy string. And drive it like a diamond tack into the wall of summer morning. I -II-Zlnabefh Jane Astley. i-nwtlir-&(:hrI. ian Science Monitor. l.I-7TTF.R LONG OVERDIIE S1". CATIHRINES, Ont. f('Pi A letter mailed In England in October. inst, has just reached its dcstinatmn. nearby Ridueville. Mrs Thomas Watts said the letter had taken tnur years and l'lllIf' months to arrive; She became puz- rled when the letter mentioned the visit to Canada of the then Princes Elizabeth and her hm- hnnd. the Duke of Edinburgh. Then she checked back and no Iced the am. I y ed with him in most of them and ' l The Men of July l4 Richard Mowrer in the Winnipeg I-iree Press. MADRII): Twenty years ago this month the Franco regime got its start. ()n July 17, 1936, a care- fully prepared military revolt broke uut. it was to lead to the overthrow of the Republic and the establishment of the Franco dictatorship-at the cost of a ter- rible civil war and a million dead. The coup had been planned in the izrcatcst secrecy. It was to be sparked in Spanish Mnroccn. where the rebels could count on the support of the local garrisons and native troops. Then. at dawn on July ill. the rising was to ex- lend to the Spanish mainland. The chief architects and execu- tors of the plot were nine high- ranking officers. This is what each one was to do when the balloon went up: General Jose Sanlurjo was In return to Spain from exile in Pur- tugal to assume over-all command of the insurrection. General I-Emilio Mula, military governor of Navarre and regard- ed by many as the ”brains" be- hind fhe revolt, was to seize con- trol in the north. General Francisco Franco, mili- tary governor of the Canary Is- lands, was to fly to Spanish Morocco and head the insurrec- tinn there. General (ioiinilo Quicpn dc Li- nno, cnmmanding officer of the carahiniersp in the Seville region, was to seize the province for the rebels. General Manuel Goded. military governor of the Balearic Islands based at Palma de Mallorca, was to fly to Valencia and take charge of the rising in that area. General Miguel Cabancllas, cum- manding officer of the garrison at Samgossa, was to scize con- trol of the city and hold it for the insiirxzciils. Air Force General Alfredo Kind- clan ilhen on the retired list! was to join the insurgents in Morocco and take command of the air arm of the rebel forces. Colonel Antonio Aranda. at the hcad of the troops in Oviedo. was to take over Asturias province. ('olnnel Juan Vague was to head the rising in Morocco pendm,-1 the arriial of Franco and Kindelan. WIIAT HAPPI-INI-ll) Such was the plan. What actu- ally happened. and what of the mnc men entrusted with bringing of the coup” This is how they far- ed" in the Spanish zone off Morocco zero hour was flVp o'clock in the aflcrnoon of July l7. The word 'tIIl diecisicte a las (floris- "llhe 17th at I700 hours ' The intention was to start the re- bellion at Llano Amarillo, in ihc foothills of the Riff mounuum where most of the army was con- centrated for maneuvers. But in the garrison town of Mel- illa, on the coast. word leaked out that something was brewing. The police began to investigate (fol- oncl Yagug thereupon dbctded to strike immediately. Thus it was that the insurrection broke mil at Mclilln instead of at Llano Amar- llln. at 4.l0 in the afternoon of the l7tli. instead of at 5, Early on the morning of July l9 Franco arrived in Morocco by air on a British-plloied pianc chartered for the purpose. Several days previously he had shipped his wife and daughter off to France aboard a German freighter. At Sidi lfnl. a Spanish possession an the coifst of Africa. where the small plane had to refuel on its night from the Canaries, there was I lcnsc moment for Franco. The airfield hltl remain :1 loyal to the Republic. But nobody paid attention to the little man is It 4! in civilian clothes sitting in the plane. - SANJURJO I(ll.l.I-ID General Franco reached his ties- tlnallon as olanned but General Sanjurjo was not so lucky. He was killed when the light plane which was to take him to rebel hourl- quarters in Spain crulled on take- off. The pilot. Juan Antonio An- Maxims Snpponllx B (X. III lllllif 3 H Edi saldu. arrived. Accurilim! to his story, this is whiit huppcncd: San,iur,io showed up at the rend- czvuiis. a saiiill grass field at Caiscais. near Lisbon. with-I an enormoiis siiifcnsc. Ansaldo pro- tested that the plane was too light to carry both the ucncral and his siiitcasc. ,But Sziniurio insisted on taking the suilczisc hccaiise. he said. ”ni,v gala uniform is in there and I can't be expected to march into iklafiltlfl without it." The over- londc(l plziue f.'llIt'(I in clear the ficld and the iiisiimciits lost their designated leader of the rchi-liion. llleanwhile (tcncral Godcd took off from Patina by air on the ap- pointed day but a last-minute change in plans took him In Barce- lona instead of Valencia. Coded was arrested on arrival and shot. General ('abanclla.s in Saragossa fulfilled his mission. howcycr. cap- turine the city for the iiisiirgents. Quiepo de l.i:ino was equally suc- CBS!-iflll in Scville. SEIZI-Ill CITY In Oxicdo Colonel Arniida used a trick to scizc the city. (in the day of the uprising. .liily ill. he .dcclai'c(l hinsclf for the Republic and org.'iiii'I.ed spi-ci:il trains to transport armed workers :md min- ers to Madrid to dcfcnd the capi- Ial When the trains were well -in their wzvv AI'.'inrl.'i fI0('liIl'PlI him- self an iusiirgqiit and seized ()vie- (in. General .'llolii was successful in Navarre and rccruiti-if forces which 'wt-rc to mzirch on Wladrid from the worth while General Franco worked upward from Se- ville, his nriny steadily strengthen- ed the while by xloorish iruops and lcgionnaircs trnsportcd from Morocco by Kiudelauis air-lift. llfola iviis lter killctl in an air crash, but not bcotre achicving fame as originator of the term "filth column" llc broadcast over the Htiruos riidin that four nnlionali.st coliuims were conver- giut: on Nladrul and that a flfifl column was in the city awuitinll the signal to strike. As it turned out. this was :1 silly (hint: to pro- cliuin hec;iuse the Republicans thereupon sotiulit out, urrcstctf. and in many FJISUS executed. any- budv lhcv suspected of heinst n ”fiflh culiininist.” The IlIIIll:ll"V coup f:Ill"fI in Its initial purpose seizure of power at one swoop 'l'hc in-iirrcction nir- gencrateil uito a bitter civil war which was to drniz on for nearly three VPJII”-'. a war III which Nari Germanv and Fiixcist Italy. sup- porlim: the Nntioimli-t.s, and Nov- ict ltusxm. hacking the Republic. werp to use Spain its 8 proxina ground for new wt-apons. hut in the end the rebels won and the Republic t-ollopucd Torliix. twenty years aiftcr. how mnnv arc lcft of the ”Ninc Men of July It!” Only three Two of them. Kindclnn and Aramfa. are living uuiellx in retirement The third, Gr-no-rnl Fraiiciscn I-' incn, now 6.1. is holding down Spain's top job, The ollwr day he gave himself a pity increase by signing .1 decree which boosts the f'hicf of State's annual salary to 520.050. IIOSTIISS HURT IN FALL I)ETR0l'l' fAPiA German air- line stewardess was severely "In- jured Tuesday when she fell from o plane's open door to in concrete runway as the plane prepared to take off. Dorothy von Rclhnitz. 29. suffered a fractured skull, frac- furcd ribs and brick injuries in the 10-foot fall. ,l' I Medically Speaking DRUGS FOR ALLERGIES Two new drugs give promise of bringing relief to many, of the 16,000,000 Americans 'sufferlng from hay fever. asthma. eczema, hives, poison ivy and other aller- gic disorders. A! I recent meeting of the American Academy of Allergy in St. Louis, the drugs Meticorten and Metlcortelone were cited as among the newest and belt weap- ons in the treatment of allergic diseases that had failed to respond to other methods. The drugs were first made available to the medical profes- sion a little over a year ago. INITIAL SUCCESS Their initial success came in the treatment of neheumatoid arthri- tis. In fact, more than 1.00.000 per- sons suffering rheumatoid arth- ritis and other disease conditions are under treatment with these Meti-type drugs today. The new steroids reportedly are fuur to five times more active and more potent than either cor- tisone or hydrocortisone. And they do not cause weight gains from retention of sodium and water, as did the older drugs. Where cortisone, hydrocorti- sone and ACTH have failed in certain hay fever cases, the Meti drugs have succeeded. GOOD RESULTS During the year-long evaluation, doctors say the drugs have pro- longed life for the ”critical list" asthmatic; provided clear breath- ing for the hay fever victim through the worstragweed season in five years; dramatically clear- ed up the hives of girls who were allergic to nail polish. Allergists report other conditions also have been relieved. These in- clude certain types of bronchial asthma, rhinitis, dermatitis and dangerous pulmonary emphysema. NASAL POLYPS One doctor told the Allergy Academy that the new drugs "dra- matically shrink nasal polyps." POIYP-S are the hard-tissue pro- tuberance: which often develop in the noses of victims of hay fever and acute sinusitis. This doctor adds that his pa- tients "finally got off nose drops." Sn maybe this pollen season won't be so bad after all. QUESTION AND ANSWER A.T.: Both my parents are al- lergic. Does this mean that I will have allergies also? Answer: Children who have two allergic parents are much more likely to have an allergy than those who do not or who have only one allergic parent. There is a greater tendency also for the allergy to appear at an earlier age. OUR YESTERDAY5 From The Guardian Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (July 25, 1931) His llonor. Lieutenant Gover- nor Dalton, accompanied by Mr. George Filliter, president of the Prince Edward Island Boy Scouts Association and Rev. C.P. Spriggs. Provincial Commander of the Boy Scouts. made an official visit to the married men's Gilwell Camp yesterday afternoon. The oyster industry in Rich- uinnd Bay, original boine of the famous Malpeque oyster is com- ing back-after fifteen years of A.Vt'.li. Needler, biologist. who spends his summers in the ser- Vl('(' of the Marine Biologist Board of Canada. . TEN YEARS AGO (July 25. I046) Egg production is still showing a gradual decrease, reports Mr. F.M. Nash, senior poultry prod- ucts inspector. Receipts are far short of requirements but quality remains about the same, A veteran of the South African War and World War I passed away yesterday in the person of Mr. Pirton C. Brown, who died at his home 20 Stewart Street. .'l.R00 pullels left the Province recently on the Island Connector for poultry raiser: in Newfound- land. The Age Old Story As far as the East In from the went. so for bath he removed our fro (reunions from us. Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCES SAL & SERVICE MOTORS llohlndlng and Repairs ILEOIRICAL ' Repairs Palmer Electric FOR YOUR IAIN ALUMINUM ROOFING AMPLE SUPPLY GORDON PROMPT DELIVERY MaclEAN PHONE 7501 Cornwall p complete exhaustion. according to r t Page The Guardian NOTES BY THE WAYTF Disclosure of differences be- tween Churchill and Roosevelt, in the Grand strategy of the war leaves us quite insurorlsed. Was it. ever thought that two such men would or even should agree on everything? The thing in they made their alliance work.-Ofla- we Journal E Professor Georgi Barlnov of Moscow writes in a publication of that bustling community that what the Russian people need is is book on etiquette. Maybe so, but if Bulganin and Khrushchev were any more charming how could anybody stand them?--Wln- nipeg Tribune The recent drowning near Van- couver of a young ”skln diver" should serve as a warning to would-be ”frogmen" that this is a thrilling, glamorous, but potent- iafly very dangerous sport. Cer- tainly no young person should try to master it without competent in- slruclion and most careful check- ing of equipment.-Calgary Alber- tan. Not. rm long ago the Labor- packcd Senate of New Zealand was voted out of existence be- cause of its record of ill-judged obstruction to a new government. it would be ironic if there devel- oped a canipaigl to vote the Lib- eral-packed Seante of Canada out of existence for precisely the op- posite reasnn--its record of sup- ine non-obstruction of the excess of an old government.-Vancouver Province It takes only n my c.,m,.s seconds at the wheel of a car and there may be tragedy.-Si. ca”, arlnes Standard The United States Govcriiineni has turned down, and thank i.;u.,.i. ness it did.,a scheme to reai-rang. the keyboard on its 800,000 WW writers and thus set a bad exam ple to the Engllshwriting M...” The standard keyboard is one of the few fistures in this unstable existence and we should hate to see it tossed overboard as EIIOIIL er sacrifice to efficiency.st.)u,,. wn Journal At Karnlnlstlkwla, Onta,-i... . beaver colony has felled eiuim. trees in an attempt to dam tit; swift Kam River. Professional l'n. gineers say it. is an impossible task. but the bcavers have built 25 feet so far, and are still jllllnp They will have to invent nlclllfidf unknown to beavers in the pact to be successful, however. Ilfllfltlsp the Kam is Itl0 feet wide and 01 feet deep.wThe Heartland A locomotive known as Nu. I'M which was one of two IU('0Illfiltipv' built in the St. Thomas shops my the New Yoi” Central Systcnt is at. present ru 'ng on a siding lu-re "waiting disposition." Sh-1 um built in l899. so that she has lI':l( ii. ed the venerable age of firti..,.,, en. This old granny has been run. nlng between St, Thomas and Court.right, and she deserves it long rest.-St. Thomas Tinm, Journal life-insured loan. 164A Kent Street You can borrow the cash you need quickly and easily. . .and get life-insurance protec- tion for your family If no extra cost! If your present loan lacks this vital protection, pay it off with 1 Trans Canada Credit Call us today. 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