lNew Zealand and places lope rwlt is courtesy trip to return 7visits here by head of overseasinclude MKQ goveromenui but those who know iMr St laurcol say be will take the opportunity to discuss the cold lwar with other leaders and do iwhut he can to strengthen ties iomong the democratic powers it Misting Canadians MONTREAL Eco Maximo Dcslauriers lsyflrrnly convinced at 52 ya in piano tumnwt ht With dad gm for the ymfpufbetic artisan Take the caseof the woman whg what has waned the 15 telephoned Maximcs firm to Com ZCanudians still unaccounted for in Dial 1031 11 0159310011 lwm had td lac it Am 12 working on 103in C13 M3 our ignited he exclaimed in an interview litoid them to get Elie hugged piano dismfcctcd before was culi Eoskcd ifjrbev iawmn oi thescl Pd Them were 5300 Coolz imen alive inevpricrm ccmpoundsl roaches cifllgmg to the mstde of lThcy will be asked to pick pull and all did was slam the top shut hoto r3 he Their answers will and move Another big problem that sceirlt 6TOSDAS edocs not want to lo disrupt me Rifcid 1113 of vt nullllner is moo3cm according to 18112 1819 110091 In ha Desilllleg5 mummy sm 1571953 Deal with Own Town Folks Judging from news reports from other towns the chimney repair racket is still pre valent In Walkerton says The Acton Freei Press man was convicted of fraud and senir enccd to jail He had represented himself as chimney repair man and obtained two che ques of $50 each from an elderly lady He had also obtained the ladys pension cheque mason called in to inspect the work said the repairs performed were not necessary This fspnlfone of the rackets to which all are subject and of whichpeople who deal with strangers may become victims Elderly people are chosen for the chimney repair rac ket because it is impossible for them to in spect the work andlikewise impossible for them to know whether tbechlmney requires repairs Only recently there were similar re ports from small communities close to Barrie There is only one way to avoid becoming victim of these rackets Do not deal with stranger In every community there are tradr esmen who are reliable They have to be re liable to continue to live in the community If anything goes wrong you can easily con tact them and have correction made It is always safer to do business with folks profitable brooch Lines and public bodies 11111th awe realistic attitude toward dbandoriment of unprofitable railway aid Gordon chairman and pres Canudmb National Railways in recent address at Calgary qu goes right to the heart of the elicit he said If losses on sec nger lines could be eliminated My reducod profit for our get service as whole might be pos wewerefrce to practise econ rancbline Operations which do ttract enough passengers to cover dir ect uses then we could concentrate our ex dltures on improving those lines which viiing useful and necessary service reliable information that dog roxi we get muses an the mm alive an el 1m Ming an lhcy gm int pianos thlouglt rho we 11 119 hm hm holc nai flit pedal eve tho an coTiie llgiylgdslirblrlgfd b000 pris me other day Op 901 mm vent piano apd found albrtfy TSOlibe igzling on ammer use and Mlnll Pearl ogxltlizliiziinmglrlcrgidcnt the UN Hugh nd pm my 906 ithn one of the Sisters came General Assembly said at press not held it up by the toil to showhm conference that if the 3000 are She went screaming from m6 returned it would be pretty hard rocm to 1loss over such in important prefer of He unistiva Nor are mouscs the only thing Lupfrklflipgs$1113 The coliftofGlexinneef up in aXhcxl hubby pins amp July 101 the 1111 SilCCtSSllt pitkg 11qu month The consumer price index But piano inner sum go rose from 1154 to 1157 in 019 Jul around One day spend in table just announced rcccnlly mman the other in night club Up went mmjs clothes rcnl Professional pride is fortune fuel oil gllsnline hospital rates Tuning pliillO is not trade and and kmmng yum Down went farm products ic its not profession Its in art fleeting the shift in the initial tels no easy matterto eliminate an branch line service Mr Gordon It is amazing to see how com consistently foil to patronize ices can marshal such eloquent in about our indispensability the momgrrgpbandonment is contemplated The is that many communities are ided with passenger service for And how docs the artist film 11 liomc Mr Dcslauriers admitted that his own piano is minus lwq belopv tuai cost to the railway can assure you that proposals for aban donment of service are not undertaken light ly in said We recognize our responsibil ity to provide service to our patrons as long as reasonable justification exists At the sunk time When the evidence over long pencil of time makes it clear that specific busenger run or indeed any railway ser vice is no longer serving much useful pur elther for the rallvIay or for the com munity it was intended to serve then its imhdonmem seems to us to be just plain continua sense Mi Gordon cited the high cost of equip ment as another reason why the passenger business does not earn profit day coach costs 3130310 parlor car and dining out About 81901100 each and sleeping car more than $200000 Every train carries number of such cars and when the cost of the locomotive and the equipment needed to bundle baggage and express is added if capi investment in an average madn El rim upward of $2500900 Yea Eolballl It so that the Mexicans poy mm attention to anything going on in mnpda thatan they do its worth taking note of it Many Americans dont know Ottawa from Ogopogo but if the current trend keeps up they maydeveiop crop of youngsters that will even know that Canada isnt ii colony The new interest in us arises from the Jam that dozens of top American football stars have crossed the border to play foot balllln Canada They found higher salaries and better treatment hero and many are staying on to become permanent citizens This has been going on since the mid 305 when Fritz Hanson and afew others came upfront the States and won the Wests first Grey cup for Winnipeg But the Americans have been $103110 realize that revolution affecting them has been taking place in the Canpdlan game Now that sevcrai law suits are in pfiess over the right of Americans to jump Amer leagues to playin Canada and that top like Billy Vessels the formerOkla Sooners starhave emigrated here football followers over the border have tum cd their eyes to Canada with interest American newspapers even in the deep mldWest are running long stories about the trek across the border this way theme is played in Canada and why Americans should via large cities to play in such compar atlvely small places as Regina Edmonton wgmcn is all to the good of course If followers of Vessels learn he is in Edmonton they are also apt to Edmonton is thriving on city by ac north that there are really in your own town whether it is chimney re pairs or some purchase that you desire to make or some magazines you are asked to subscribe for from some one who is going through college Editorial Notes The pulp and paper industry says The Financial Post is Canada3 greatest single industry It provides the most wagesgives employment to the most peoplehproduces the greatest wealth earns the most money in foreign markets with which to support our huge imports from other countries Canadians continue to buy increasing amounts of life insurance reports The Fin Sales of new life insruonce in June were over $250 millions of which $1746 millions was ordinary $159 millions indus trial and $597 millions group Much of the new life insurance being bought is of straight protection types and not so much of the pension or investment type Reason advanced for this in some quarters is that 5189 out to social gathering with the scope of company pension plans increasing steadily the demand for invest anclal Post ment type policy is decreasing The shortage of university graduates is likely to continue for years points out The Financialmootrbut theres one type that is outlay or cah on material Ta In postwar years the big demands have been for the specialized grad uates the engineers the science graduates the men who have some special training more The liberal arts graduates are left until the Even those who have taken their college courses seriously are forgotten Yet both in Canada and the United States man agement has been talking of the need for organ with general background that it is more important to have decision making ability than specialized knowledge Yet the liberal arts man is left until the last when it comes to hiring on the campus regardless of his personal attributes in fair supply last It is not the oath that makes 118 believe real future asset Training in this the manbut the main the oath Gecrgc Russell omuous or arms printed illustrations and village became separate township of Vespra in 1853 of Allandale CNR division point It says collegiatc courses in home econ Progress In Town Of Barrie St Thomas TimesJournal ThejBarrle Examiner recently issued remark ably fine souvenir edition of 100 pages for 100 years of Barries progress Those hundred pages are csam full of excellent written stories wellL cleverlyarranged and mm we vertlsemenis The editionis one of lb greatest of its kind ever printed in Canada year one Of the most tram mm the historical articles we learned about the first white man to land in what is now Bar 80 mm proessmnal seam was at the beginning of the 19th century and mu man was an agent of tbeHudsons Bay Company In 81812 the company erected 1828 the first settlers arrived Thesettlement named in hopor of Admiral Barrio then in command have hme knan tor sewmg or of the British fleet stationed got Kingston The lime mil the desire to make their municipality 119 the own things The woman who buys The adiommg 11339 he clothesoften nds the lufe of 331118 mm the Bargain Sale realpitfall Clothes Are Important By Nancy Cleaver Oliver Goldsmith once wrote suitability along with good groom modestwomandressed in all her nery the most tremendous obj cct of the whole creation reputaton of being well dressed Awell cut basic dress with con Quite number of homemakers trasting setsv of accessories gives Spend most of their nought and variety for different occasions money on clothes worn when they Evena synall girl as wen 158 own woman can thlllIto what shop or to church Butthe clothes Aha sees in her mirrcr when her worn at home are just as import am but in different way from Carlin When hcr mirror I10t their Sunday Best Washable inst no special occasions but on dinary days gives back the re on of arhappy pctson pleased wont vlshe seenr andi when members of her family or friends indicate by an admiring glanceor compliment that they like wbal 511 is wearingythen girl or woman realizes afresh that Clothes Are Important Copyrightl attractive dresses fr hume wear whichLowe style and wear well canbe Made by the woman uihd sews with comparatively Sprig patterns The woman who makes her own clothes and is clever at sewing can keep track of her pur chases in order to ndhow much economically she dresses than hcrfriendwho buys all her apparel readymade lb An interest in sewing can start at rancarly age The CW dual girl whosees her mother happily making garments usui ally couches her enthusiasm iii ledii gaggldms Western People Regret Not Able Visit Centennial Sept 1953 Box 64 Cadillac Sask To The Editor Thc Barrie Examiner VNight classes for adults inew 51 log are very popular and hum7 Just So note to thank you for ber of shops such as the Singer tile veryiloygly lOOpage paper of Sewing Centres feature short day Barrie in the pa$l 100 years It time courses for beginners and way much appreciated and em more advanced sewers At the icyed also the invitation to fat Canadian International Hobbyand tend the Centennial Celebration Homecm Show held at the Coli which we received from the Com seum TorontoinFebiuary of this udttee and was appreciated very much we would very have beenable to go down but it was quite impossible Barrie is the home tdwnof us both The girl who has mother who encourages sowing hobby has art should not just be left to the schools It is true that in many places finejob isbeing done of teaching sewing to the upper grades in public schools and in corners mm called fButtons and stresses demonstrated the latesl gadgets for those whose hobby was sewing Yours iruly MR Am MRS NIXON Lo wesr ciao But there are some women who who find they simply have neither ing Which give an individual the clothes addto her pleasing ap From The Windsor Star By DON IAWORTH Camdilm Press Staff Writer OTTAWA SEPT 14 CP The rst cabinet meeting held since Prime Minister St Laurent returned fromhis Quebec holiday reduced gifts of many sorts For 60000 federal office work ers there is veday week and this is promised also for operating stuffs shortly Folquaketorn Greece there is $500000 worth of aid in building materials salt cod and powdered milk Eight former parliamentary as sistantsjust below cabinet rank were conrmed in their jobs for the new parliament and ninth was appointed Weir 57 yearold member for PortageTNee pawa Man will be assistant to the prime minister The eight who resume as par liamentary assistants $4000 year in addition to normalinderpnities of $4000 asession and $2000 tax free expense ollowance are Paul Cote 44 Montreal Ver dun Labor Robert McCubbin 41 Middlesex West Agriculture Watson MacNaught 49 Prince P1131 Fisheries Blanchette 60 ComptonFrontenac Defence Wu Benidickson 42 Kenora Rainy River Transport Leopold Longlois 40 Gaspe Que Post Officel Dickey 39 Halifax Production and Jean Lesage 41 MontmagnyLIslet Que Einance Then the 71yearold Prime Min ister nnounced that he was giv ing himse1fan air tour round the wOrld 30000miles long the big goshtrip ever undertaken by Canadian Government lader Mr St Laurent takes off next January probably in the RCAF luxury aircraft 15 wi11like1y makestops in IndiaPakistan and Ceylon and possibly in Australia much liked to payment for wheat to western farmers on Aug and lower pri ccs for potatoes rye peas and raw leaf tobacco This overbnl anccd small gains for eastern bar ley corn and western flax hnmmcrs and string to plus the 1000000 mark Ling cst proup of immigrants in the first seven months of this your T358 Return iLlL Germans19030 of them Back to theParliamentary Prcas Gallery comes the representative of Toss the Soviet News Agency 11b is Evan Tsvctkov Mr Tsvetkov made the mistake ofturning up last March with diplomatic passport The gallery lots in no government agency cm pluyecs So Mr Tsvctkov got himself nonimmigrant visa And the gall ery executive opened the door Notes in News Ottawa cnjoys the last guy days of ircorutcd Parliament buildings The Coronation decorations put up in May and left there for the tourist season are coming down any timc now nationwide Fire Prevention Week starts Oct in 10 years 539607 lircs have killed 4798 per sonslinjuicd 15000 and destroyed property worth $591000000 RAILWAY TIME TABLE GHANGES Effective SUN DAY Music Marches On The Army has authorized the formation of another military band the eighth on its active list It will be for the Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers will be based at Vedder Crossing near Chilli wack BC and will be 35 strong If there arent enough qualied men in Canada to play in the band the Army may bring some more musicians Weir from Britain and Holland It recently brought in batch of 75 Rocket Range Regular tests are expected to start early next year at the new uided missile range in northeast ern Alberta Area 4000 square miles cost $35000000 Two thousand airmen techni cians and their families will live there No atom bombs will be let offjust guided missiles of the type red from one aircraft at an other r1 information Population Up Canadas population on June 11 reached 14781000an increase of 351000 in year and Alberta be came the fourth Canadian provincei Crawfordt 30 Est 1919 Imam To TORONTO siox nxcmno Oovnrnmcnf Municipal and commotion Scouriii 91 Dunlop Shoot EBdllil upon here and land isnt peopled ex by redfcoated Mounties chasing across the Arctic ice with dog tcams reach the happy day when all learn that Canada paidyner wuydurlng the war and hasnt accept in 1897 Barrie became 100mi 1h 1871 and despite bargain no matter how much it the fact that tho place now claims population is reduced in price is never Services in the Baptist Church around1000 it is still town it apparently has genuine bargain unless it mailer Sundoyrsopf20 Sunday School no demo to become city into thewardrobe and is mum to am Church service at 11 This progressrve town and the surrounding area ing and sultablefor the particular cm MrLA Johnsomwill preach are well and faithfully served by The Examiner woman who purchases that special be anniversary services will bel wwbich is now issued three firms week Toe pub article There is something path held noct usher is Kenneth Walls son of the latcnw elic as well as humorlus Qabimt Walls who for many years vvas copublisher Machined which am can did then or since Itisitboj foldrape that Americans loam ourdollar is worth as much 10112 the late Alex MacLaren known in his day as the dean of Canadian weekly publishers We congratulate publisher Walls and his staf for an edition that is credit to Canadian journalism Examiner pictured an eager shopper asking clerk Where is whtcver is rev ducted fty per cont cantons Dimming yiruisolf whypioro pooplo tow It is the wise mother who takes her child whenibuylug new clothes for sonor daughter mm from auctioned from whitetaisiwcll asouw in purchasing clothes If they luv had ua wt in their choice they will cooperate incenmore le in the duo clonal 92 an gantmakedbe mom Met bit Art If lilathof outtth incl We any Forfhe worlds yo Milk Anyway you lookat Savings rneon poisondllincfcpndrtce ENSAg SAVINGS If