9 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE , Saturday, March 22, 195% Marshall Plan Finished But Foreign Aid at New High Washington (AP)--The Marshall Plan ended officially last Dec. 31. But President Truman's budget this year carries $7,900,000,000 for foreign aid, more than was ever granted during the Marshall Plan. Truman divides the proposed sum into $5,350,000,000 for military ald and $1,819,000,000 for economic aid, most of which is to be spent in support of military programs. Congressional experts expect the sum to be cut. Both Republican and Democratic leaders have said they will demand a cut. Last year Truman's request for $8,500,000,000, for foreign aid was cut to $7,228,903,976. Then Congress added $100,000,000 for Spain, which was not on Truman's aid list. Officials of the Economic Co- operation Administration, which operated the Marshall Plan, said that toward the end it had about: achieved its aim, that most West European countries had rebuilt enough to get back to pre-war pro- duction rates. But after the North Korean Com- munists attacked South Korea and Chinese Communists entered the war western statesmen agreed that rearmament of the west must go much faster. Truman's. foreign-aid advisers contend that this has put a new strain on western Europe, parti- cularly the countries which joined the North Atlantic Pact, and that they didn't have the margin to buy all .the raw materials needed for rearmament. Truman aides say North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries will have to buy extra raw materials for munitions and that hence some United States economic aid must continue. U. 8. military advisers in Eur- ope have testified munitions can be made for less in Europe than in the U. S. and that it costs less to support a European division than a U. S. division. Some senators say privately they | feel that western Europe is expect- ing the U. S. to carry the lion's share of rearmament and is not doing its part. This year they will ask specifi- cement, lumber, and common con- sumer articles. Owing both té unwillingness of the peasants to rust such offers and the prevailing incompetence of the bureaucracy, results are said to have been disappointing. During the last part of 1951, similar in- ducements were offered peasants for delivering milk to propaganda effectively on a 'spurious' world economic conference to be held in Moscow April 3 and on the Com- munists' accusation that the United States and its UN allied are using '"'germ warfare" in Korea. All this is keeping American diplomacy frantically engaged in | fending off what Washington con- siders dangerous "booby traps" while at the same time trying to get to the substance of peaceful | negotiations on vital issues. The Department of State again |is pressing Moscow to complete a [treaty of peace for Austria which | would free Austria of all foreign | domination and on which nearly all substantial disputes have ap- | parently been resolved. | GERMAN TALKS EXPECTED | The United States also is ready |to confer with Moscow and with |Bonn on Russia's new good-and- {bad proposals to bring about a lunited and independent Germany. |It is on whether the Soviet plan {would result in an independent | Germany .that American officials |have the deepest reservations. | If the holding is as much as five | |acres, 70 per cent of the delivery | must be pork and the rest may be | beef, veal, or lamb. If the quota is not more than 120 kilograms, the delivery must be all at one time; |if larger, it may be delivered in {three installments, but all before {the end of the first half of 1952. [CUTCHERING PREFERRED |age which has existed in Poland | for more than a year is found in [the slaughter of hogs and cattle | when the government began' its | campaign for collectivization with increased vigor. Suspecting that they would stock over to collectives, the peas- One reason for the meat short- | Hits Training 0f Officers 0f Guards London (AP)--Britain's famous | Brigade of Guards, boasting a| brilliant record in several wars, has been accused of producing the | world's worst officers. | Col. George Wigg, Labor member | for Dudley, made the acusation | during a House of Commons debate | on army estimates. It was pro-| posed to establish junior messes for | non - commissioned officers in Guards' regiments. i Wigg, who worked his way | through regular army ranks | Colonel, said the proposal "means | | that the select few whose parents | are wealthy enough or aristocratic Military Rule in Thailand 'Maintains Stability (Editor's note: Bill Boss, Cana- dian Press Staff writer with the Canadian forces in Korea, recently visited Bangkok, storied capital of the kingdom of Thailand in south- east Asia. This story is the first of a series in which he reports on the life and manners of the Siamese. By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer Bangkok, Thailand (CP)-- Thai- land is an untroubled, prosperous island in southeast Asia's sea of Communist turbulence. . She has her domestic upsets, but they're all in the family. Since 1945 there have been nine coups .d'etat and the assassination of a king in this country, the size |of France (100,000 square miles) | country in the Orient. She is rich | in natural resources, and last year sold abroad one-third more in dol+ lar value than she imported. Des- pite that she receives help valued at $10,000,000 annually from the United States Economie Co-opers ation Administration because it is Sopsidered an investment in good- will. LABOR SHORTAGE There is a shortage of labor, buf the wary Siamese are careful about whom they let in. Already a strong Chinese element has 'a strangle. hold on the economy. Most busi« nesses involving skills, crafts or commercial sense are in Chines hands. Educated Siamese seem t prefer the professions or govern RUSSIAN COMMUNIST CHIEFS CELEBRATE IN MOSCOW "Top brass" Communist comrades|L. M. Kaganovich, L. P. Beria, P.| gathered at the Bolshoi theatre in| K. Ponomaranko, A. I. Mikoyan, M. Moscow to mark the 28th anniver-|A. Suslov, K. E. Voroshilov, A. A.| sary of the death of Vladimir Ilvich | Andreyex, M. F. Shkiryatov, G. M. | Lenin at the Bolshoi theatre. They | Malenkov, Joseph Stalin, V. M. Mo- | are, left to right, N. S. Krushchev, | lotov, S. M. Budyonny, N. A, Bul-/ ganin, V. D. Sckolovsky, kin, I. I. Rumyantsev and M. A. Yasnov. : --Central Press Canadian. | SMUGGLERS PROVIDE TROOPS WITH (covered from smugglers, made their way to Korea following a suggestion Canadian soldiers in Korea grate- | fully received 100 U.S. cigarettes have to run their live- each recently, thanks to the efforts by Brooke Claxton, minister of na- Loyer, Ottawa; Pte. W. D. Grady, | training in the Brigade of Guards | troops in the world. But it has | died in action while serving with N. M. when they arrive at the Guards'! | Shvernik, T. M. Zvyeva, A. F. Gor- | depot." |and with a population barely lar- | ger than Canada's 14,000,000. | Thailand--the people call it Siam just as often--is run by field mar- . _. | shals and major-generals. The peo- Wigg, now 51, then let go with| ple have the vote but scarcely both barrels. "The standard of | exercise it. he held is Field has produced the best N.C.O.s and Ma et i who car- : | ried Thailand into the Second World also produced the worst officers--| war on the side of the Japanese. He | munism little scope among the Junior officers particularly. | is the only leader against whom the | Siamese, but Communism is be- Maj. A. E. H. Legge-Bourke,| Allies fought who is still in power. |ljeved to be strong among the Conservative M.P. whose father One way or another, leaders of | Chinese. | the underground which co-operated | Flanked by insurrectionist Burma, ment employment. New laws res- trict alien rights in business, the employment of aliens, and their enlistment in the armed services. Thailand's precautions against Communist defection and infiltra- tion are mainly against the alien elements of the population. The country's prosperity, buttressed by | the Buddhist religion, afford® Com« enough to have influence, will never mix- with the common herd the Coldstream Guards in the First | World War and himself a former | Guardsman, described the attack | | as "'outright effrontery." | Another uproar followed when not done about the selection of officer material in all branches, we shall return to the situation where leadership in the army is not determined by efficiency but by the wealth and social standing {of the parents of the officers." | War Secretary Anthony Head | described as "rubbish" any sug- gestion that he was seeking to introduce a system whereby only the sons of millionaires could become officers. ro» British Home CIGARETTES They are, left to right: Madden, Prescott, Ont; Wigg remarked: "If something is! with the Allies have been relega- | ted to obscurity. The field marshal's anti-Com- munist policy is his current pass-| | port to acceptibility by the west. Cynical Siamese say voting is a | | farce because the House of Rep- resentatives is powerless, so they don't bother to vote. The minister of the interior, congratulated the | people after the recent elections | when the popular vote went up to 25 per cent. Previously it was 15] per cent. The secret of Thailand's stability lis a combination of her unique | | economy and its Buddhist religion. She is the only under-populated | British Columbia Cat Massacre of the Royal Canadian Mounted | tional defence. These three Canad- Amherst, N.S, and Sergt. Jim Gay, Holiday Camp Malaya and Indo-China, the Sia- | mese are strengthening their arm- ed forces. Compulsory service is being introduced for men between 18 and 40, training to last two years. While revolutions are {frequent they are relatively bloodless and foreigners are seldom affected. Generally they are between the armed services, Propaganda Used to End Jungle War Kuala Lumpur, Malaya (AP)-- Termed Terrible |ants preferred to butcher their | Police, smugglers and government ians display their choice of brand Dartmouth, N.S. Bandits who lurk in Malaya's cally how much of the budget in| each N. A. T. O. country is being devoted to defence, how many divi- | sions each N. A. T. O. country | will have by the end of this year | and how efficient European tax collections are. Some congressmen who argue | that economic aid should be cut | food animals and sell or eat the meat. As for industrial production, no secret has been made of failure | of key industries to meet set goals | despite the lengthening of the work- ling day in the mines, premiums for surpassing norms, whipped up | out entirely question large-scale | Work competition," regimentation | grants to areas like India and the Middle East. Polish Plan Needs More | pattern of last year's semi-militar- | ization of the miners, increase of number of women in industry, use of children and youth in both agri- culture and factory, and various other efforts to satisfy Moscow de- mands. Two other means of getting more | production and at the same fim cutting down expense have been found in compelling workers to| "donate" time outside regular hours and in work got out of the mem- bers of Sluzba Polsce (Service for | Poland), an organization to which Production | all membexs of botff sexes between Poland's Communist economic the ages of 16 and 18 must give planners continue to demand two |5l%2 months annually wherever they things of industrial and rural pro- may be sent. | ducers -- greater production and| "To teach them thrift" their | smaller production costs writes | wages are deposited in the Polish Ann Sec. Cordwell in The Christian |Savings Bank, and they see only Science Monitbr. The economic plan recently laid before the Polish Sejm (Parlia- ment) by Premier Joseph Cyran- kiewic calls for a 22 per cent increase in industry this year and eight per cent in agriculture. Mr. Cyrankiewic stated that |the book. { [ . 'Dream Housing departments. The cigarettes, re-|as the sergeant issues the 'smokes.' ! hd discharge moisture, sometimes a | our mn couple of quarts a day. Wrinkles in the skin of your face can be caused by anything from a | chronically dour look to the fact | that you live in too dry a climate or that the air in your house isn't | kept moist enough (steam heat us- | ually is the villain in the latter case.) An excess of salt in the sys- Miracle tem also brings on wrinkles. So, after 40, it's a good idea -- to What is so remarkable about | reduce the amount of salt you your skin? Well, as a starter con- (allow yourself, because the aging sider this: it's full of holes, Susan | body may have trouble getting rid Voight writes in Coronet. Why, of it. then, don't you get ogy every time| The business of -growing hair is you take a bath, or sink when you a complicated one, for you have g0 swimming? The answer is that the skin, as|see it. For each tiny hair, distinguished from a blotter, goes | to work at exactly the right mo- ments. Its oil glands close up the tiny holes and the water can't get in, BUSY ORGAN Few people realize that the skin | is an organ, one of the most im-| portant and busiest that you pos-| sess. Organs, by definition, are structures that perform some spe- cific function or functions. Your skin has a lot of functions. your ratus, including oil sac, | sac keeps the hair lubricated; the hair lie flat or stand up, depending on the weather and your emotions. EMOTIONAL EFFECT At any time of life, your emo- tional state has a lot to do with Co-Operative It provides a protective armor that saves tissues underneath from dry- the appearance of your skin. Physically speaking, blushing is --Central Press Canadian. HOT NATURAL GAS BATTLE IN ONTARIO | is getting hectic. The ti in the house. | to quick attention with a surprise { for lines to bring in Texas gas. It had been known that the gov- ernment was strongly "backing Trans-Canada Pipe Lines in its bid to bring in Alberta gas over | fact that the rival U. S. company | | for children of displaced European | ,ndertook to rid the nearby] | families. | { ._ | be Toronto--The battle over who is| educational to supply Ontario with natural gas !g7500 enabled the org: i p-off was given by Minis- the initial cost of administration. [kill the felines because she feared hair all over you, even if you can't ter of Mines Welland S. Gemmell | | € > During a lengthy | ages of seven and 11 and an adult | died. skin must provide a whole appa- statement outlining the situation guide can be accommodated. The i jungles and emerge in little groups every day to murder and pillage are being fought with the pen as | well as the sword. Victoria, B. C. (CP)--The recent | cat massacre was termed a * LJ For Children rible thing" last night at a turbu-| "y4he publicity has been give. London (CP) -- A nine-roomed, | i i 1 | lent meeting of the Society for 17th-century house near an Essex | prevention of Cruelty to Animals. to the psychological war effort of rq i i | the Malayan federation authorities, village is to become a holiday home |" gp" ¢. A. Inspector Maggs | on long term ibesis it may Queenswood estate of cats at the be more effective than military or The youngsters, who have never dying wish of the estate's owner, | police measures. Sea rg before had a holiday, will come | wealthy Mrs. W. F. B. Berger, who | The Emergency iors on ere from France, Germany, Greece, died two weeks ago. vice Js ising i! wo Summ inist Austria and other countries. They | wMaggs, a fighter pilot with the | indoctrinat on jo : ag 1 hd will spend two or three months gRoval Air Force during the war, | through wor iis fae + leaflets; on the seven-acre estate. had bagged 117 cats with his shot- | Posters, broadcasts, newspapers The house was left in trust to|gyn when he quit because a neigh- | and movies. used for charitable, social or | por acused him of poor marks-| A typical leaflet shows a recently purposes. A gift of | manship. | captured bandit appealing to his anizers of the| Mrs. Berger, a former United former friends to surrender. The Save the Children Fund to meet | States resident, asked Maggs to | leaflet contains a photograph of the | bandit and a message in his own " | handwriting. the | no one would feed them after she unm. ou many banans rd "Shooting of the cats was the literate. Twelve children between nerve, on gas he brought those who had | children will learn handicrafts and | worst thing that ever happened to blood vessel and muscle. The oil | heen following the situation closely |in summer wil camp in the the S. P. C. A." Mrs. Josephine grounds, make country trips and | Henderson, a member of the soci- | nerve zips & message to your brain | statement. This was that the gov-| be encouraged to raise poultry. In| ety, told the meeting. when the hair is pulled or stroked; ernment had been making efforts | winter activities will include crafts, | A the blood vessel provides nourish-| tg block a company from securing | painting, indoor games, folk-singing | house a cat that had dragged it-| "We saw under a bush near the Another leaflet shows half-a- {dozen photographs of a typical | Chinese enjoying himself at the | Chinese mid-autumn festival The | text reads: "Think what you're missing by ment: and the muscle makes the | franchises throughout the province land dancing. an all-Canadian pipe line. But the | self under a tree to die," she said. | staying in the jungle." achievement of this goal will re-| [In Scarboro quire the "intensified efforts of all | workers," with which he associ-| ps ated the growth of "work com-| Toronto (CP) -- A $327,000 co- petition," that is, Polish Stakhan- operative "dream"--first such op- ovitism (shock working). eration by new Canadians--is being A Warsaw radio commentator, fashioned in east suburban Secar- ing and injury; it plays a major role in regulating body tempera- tures, grows nails and hair, elim- | inates surplus salt. Moreover, it is | a highly complicated alarm sys- tem. Every hour of the day and night, a result of a sudden dilation of the | which wants to send in Texas gas surface blood vessels, which are had been battling so vigorously and | that the government was so de-| termined to stop it definitely was affected chiefly by the emotions. Women are commonly supposed to | be more prone to blush than men. | news. | This may have been true in Vic- torian days when many of them | afte; My. Gemmell's speech still | On top of this just a few .days| discussing the plan, declared that rural production holds the key to success of the program. It is back- boro township. , : A group of Toronto's 5,000 Eeson- | 8raph to your brain warnings |ian-born residents are building a |Pain, heat or cold. To carry out it is on the alert, ready to tele-| of | were more inhibited and consequ- ently, more easily upset than is the case now. But, physiologically, they a ward, he stated, in comparison |34-apartment housing project. The | with industry in the same manner | "dream" is slated to be complete by | as "the horse is inferior to the July. J motor." Rural production of 1951 Early last year the group, known | even fell below that of the pre- | as Estonian Houses Co. was form- | vious year and it "would be a ed on a non-profit co-operative ba- | mistake to lay all the blame for sis. Each family bought $2,000 worth | that on the drought." _|of shares. When the building is | A fact which the speaker did |ready an additional $1,500 will be! not bring out but which was shown | paid by those taking five-room in a government report for 1951 apartments. $1,000 will be paid by throws further light on the produc- | those taking four-room homes. tion decline. While 15 per cent of In 20 years, after the company this job, it is provided with mil-| are no more inclined to blush than lions of tiny nerve receptors, each men. a combined receiver and trans-| Blushing, by those who suffer mitter. | especially from it, is considered a One of the marvels of the body | particularly devilish phenomenon is its ability to stay at uniform | because it is so obvious. "If I temperatures in blistery July or|have to blush," they think in des- sub-zero January. Your skin plays | peration, "why can't it be in some a big part in the performance of | hidden place, like the small of the this miracle. Actually, it acts like | back?" a thermostat that puts man-made | "Why does it have to be on the devices to shame. To accomplish | face?" Probably it will be cold the job, it has a set of nerves, | comfort to these unfortunates to | another U. S. company applied to An Open Letter to the Public on a GOOD SALES P | the Federal Power Commission in! {the U. S. for permission to export | U. S. gas. | Obviously a battle of titans is underway. And one can only hope the people of the province don't, get caught in the middle. ! There would appear to be real | danger of this. | The government has stated posi-| tively there can not be any depen- | dance on gas imported from the U. 8. It is always subject to federal control in that country and there OLICY | | This advertisement is to assure the public generally that this Company, which was originated in England about 25 years ago, has built up a large business on the principle of a square deal to every customer . . « that a satisfied customer is our best advertisement. Throughout the years this business has surrounded itself with a service department that is equipped to render a service not to be surpassed. We have been and still are enjoying an ever increasing sales volume which control the blood vessels. {learn that, acording to best medi- Poland's arable land has been col- | has paid off a $220,000 loan to Cen- lectivized, his has contributed only |tra] Housing and Mortgage Corpora- HOW THEY WORK | cal opinion, they do blush all over. can't be any reliance it wouldn't be interrupted at any time. throughout Canada in the sales of Vacuum Cleaners and Floor Pol- ishers only, and it is our policy to make very sure that every article 12 per cent of all rural production. Naturally, this is not so presented in the report. On the contrary, the claim is made 'that only "social- | ized economy" (collectives) not-| America, where he saw babies die | ably increased production during | 1951. | This does not go well with the fact that the pressure for collec- tivization had to be diminished | somewhat during the last months | of 1951 because of the stubborn opposition and the decrease in pro- | duction resulting directly from such pressure. EXHORBITANT TAXES tion, tenants will own their apart- ments, On a ship from England to after being fed milk from infected cows, Gail Borden turned his atten- tion to developing evaporated milk. He secured a patent for this pro- duct in 1856. Although the radio commentator | | did not openly say that collectivi- | zation is the cure for agricultural backwardness, government actions support that position. For example, | on January 22, the regime's Of-! ficial Journal published a decree which makes independent Polish | peasants pay their 1952 land taxes in two installments during the first | six months of the year--Feb. 29 | and May 15. | The cash taxes are exorbitant and in addition to the taxes in kind which, for 1951, have only | recently been collected in full, the first levy having been followed by | additional collections. Any peasant who does not pay on the days appointed will be sub- Ject to arrest and his land will be | 239; 'Jerry Crawford, 235, 213; Don |duction of industries in Western confiscated. The decree specifies eos took 3 points from the Edgeworths, the Twin B's took 3 points from the Mary Macs and the Alleyarms and the Three J's split points Ladies' High Single and Triple: June Cooper, 687, 296, 202, 189. Men's High Single: Charlie Fer- guson, 311. Men's Hjgh Triple: El- mer White, 212; 279, 243, 734. Over 200: Jean Hawkins,' 263; Iris Bobier, 251; Kay Crawford, 247; Ted Colvin, 243, 218; Toots Ferguson, 243, 202; Lloyd Pegg, 240, Sager, 230; Betty Helliwell, 226; In cold weather, the vessels con-| The trouble is blushing is most tract and cut down you heat loss. readily observable in exposed | When it is warm, the vessels open, areas; the blood cells located there | helping to rid your body of excess | respond more quickly than those heat. Millions of sweat glands also | which have been kept covered by | play 'their part in keeping you air- | clothing and have lost some of conditioned: in hot weather they | their sensitivity through disuse. ~ Punchy Paragraphs From Ottawa Hansard Ottawa -- Punchy paragraphs |Alberta paid 51 cents out of every from the pages of official Hansard: | dollar of taxation in interest char- H. W. Herridge (C. C. F. Koote- | ges. They have reduced that to nay West): "As I look at the blank the point where they now pay and sombre appearance of the|seven cents out of every dollar, and face of the honorable Liberal Mem- | legislative provision has been made ber for Fraser Valley (George | whereby in 22 or 23 years that pro- Cruickshank) I fully realize that | vincial debt will be wiped out." none of my arguments, none of my | reasons, none of thet hings I am! George H. Hees | speaking about will penetrate to view): "In order to get around our |the inner recesses of an ivory |anti-dumping laws, the United |tower of ornate medieval construc- | states mills make one small sale | tion." lat a price far below the price at | which the goods are regularly sold Hon. R. W. Mayhew (Minister of lon the United States market. The Fisheries): "I saw many examples | goods are then disposed of at this of the amazing resilience of the | artificially low price, which is | | German people. The general pro- usually well below the cost of pro-|. | duction of the Canadian mills. It| |Germany today is almost 150 per is this flooding of the Canadian .land behind the scenes strategy | -| that one can't tell what is going | (P. C. Broad-| The only dependable source we | have is Canadian gas from the| west. But the tangled and very bitter battle over gas lines in the states | has so many conflicting interests | careful scrutiny. on or is likely to happen. In view of the attitude of the] F. P. C. in the past towards the! ekport of U. S. gas, one can't help | | but feel that applications made { before it are pre-doomed. Then why | are they being made? One can't say but one does have suspicions. Groups that are interested in| the export of Texas gds are also | | interested in securing Alberta gas | for the west coast. And there can't | help but be the feeling that Ontario | | could be a pawn. Any concern of | | the size of the companies that are in this battle aren't primarily inter- ested in public service. Theirs 1s | a battle over money. | | One can't say this is the official | feeling here. But at least neither Premier Frost nor Mr. Gemmell | have left any doubt in their public statements that it is too bad that Canadian gas can't be produced and transported by and for Cana- dians. purchase. service guarantee. the Dominion. | greatness has been developed far | A.R. O Presiden that any individual who before! John Alexander, 225: Harry Gimb- those dates joins a 'production | lett, 224, 207; Bud Moore, 223, 214; cooperative' (collective farm) and | eBa Colvin, 213. Teresa Dionne, 205; | cent of prewar days. I had an {opportunity of motoring for some | market with dumped United States | beyond the point where it should {textiles that has caused Canadian |be controlled by persons and exe- | sold by our representatives is genuine and will bear up under the most It is further our policy that every machine sold carries with it a guarantee of satisfaction, and all machines sold at an amount under $50.00 will be exchanged for another model at any time up to the expiration of a period of two years if desired. If for instance a purchaser of a machine valued at more than $50.00 later decides to exchange it for another make or model, the whole of the down paid amount will be credited as a 'down payment on the new On the purchase of any machine over $50.00 a twelve month uncons ditional guarantee is given in writing, followed by a four year free It is our constant aim to maintain prices that are within easy reach of everyone desiring these products. All time payment contracts are financed by ourselves, We have thousands of unsolicited testimonials which testify to the satisfaction received and enjoyed by purchases of our products across SBORNE, t & General Manager. 1200 miles down the Rhine Valley | textile workers to be laid off in| cutives not responsible to the elec-| {and through the Ruhr. There great very large numbers." ited representatives of Canada or | |cities--such as Essen and Dussel- | {to a board responsible either to |dorf--were now giving visible evi-| W. J. Henderson (Liberal, King- the federal or to the provincial | |Gence of the way in which the new [ston City): '"Hockey is our national | governments, Why should our youth | plants had risen on the very rubble | sport. The wealth of our country be told that they shall, or shall | {which had been all that was left |is not to be found only in our na-|not, play this team or that, with | of the factories by the war. Every- | tional resources and our industry; |o reasons being given? Why | where one saw tall chimney stacks |it is to be found also in our youth. should their names be placed with | belching out smoke." |Hockey is a great sport and a|a professional club while they are | { - sport in connection with which still mere boys. and they can do C. ®. .ohnston (8 CC Bow young Canadians are known nothing about it if they wish to 5 IRiver): "In 1935 the province of (throughout the world, But its pursue the sport?" | adds his land to that group will| Harry Longbottom, 205; Joyce not be called upon to pay these | Lowe, 201; Gerald Bull, 200. taxes. Lemon League: Jean Hawkins, To increase meat production, the | 97; Alma Pegg, 92, where is your regime promised to give every | mascot lemon? : peasant the right to purchase 100 Standing kilograms (200 pounds), of feed | and 300 kilograms of coal for every | animal he would contract to de-! liver to the authorities. I also gave such producers priority in obtain- ing such much needed items as State Vacuum Stores of Canada Ltd. 521. St. Clair Avenue, West, : Toronto, Ontario. Twin B's ; Three J's Mary Macs Edgeworths