Fhe Oshavon Times Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited, 57 Simcoe St, $., Oshawa, Ont, Page 4 Communists Saturday, December 27, 1958 Inspiring Middle East Troubles It does not take a gift of prophecy to enable one to predict more trouble in the Middle East during the next ew months, The ingredients are &ll in the pot and the brew has just begun to simmer, Nasser's problems are piling up. His United Arab Republic can be a pliable organization only if 't has. the means for sound economic development; it cannot exist long on nothing but the heady but unsubstantial wine of nations alism, The economies of both Egypt and Byria are in bad shape, and the wealthy shiekdoms do not seem inclined to give them any appreciable financial help Now many Byrians are beginning to complain that Nasser's are designed to benefit Egypt at the ex pense of Syria, The great benefits of a united republic that were trumpeted hy Cairo radio have no there is no prospect of them material zing, GUEST EDITORIAL economic policies materialized, and Russia made a great show of helping Egypt and Syria with economic and military aid, to help them free them~ selves from the bonds of the western "imperialists," But at the same time Russia has been working quietly and ef» ficiently to keep the Arab states disuni= ted, using Communist organizations. in those states to promote dissension and incipient rebellon, The new Iraqi gove ernment appears to be strongly influens ced by Communists, Nasser could not keep on ignoring the Russian tactics, Earlier this week he fiv nally made public his concern. about Communist actvities in the Arab world, "Reactionary and Communist forces stood up -against union," he shouted, and went on to declare that his eountry was determined to follow a policy of non« alignment The and the now is between Nasser Communsts, instead of between West, contest Nasser and the Christian's Happiness By Capt, Norman Coles The Salvation Army, Bowmanville Joy to the world--the Lord Our Lord, whose birthday we been celebrating, told us he and cheerful, "Rejoice, sald repeated, "Again 1 say these words Jesus empha sire that we be jo His is philosophy of the happy Chri For the Wise Men, a had to be undertaken rived at the One who was to radiance to mankind, We certainly have an advantage over the Wise Men, for we can find personal Christian joy right at our own doorstep, Madeleine Miller has expressed this thought clearly: It isn't far Bethlehem It's anywhere that Christ comes down And finds in people's friendly face A welcome and abiding place The road to Bethlehem runs right through The homes of folks like me and you What a pity that ea'uls such as "Joy to the World" are not more often sung after the religious holiday of Christmas is over, What an even greater pity that for many people, no deep, personal Christian joy is earrled over into the New Year! Individual appropriaton of this eternal gift is absolutely necessary in order that we can experience a hap» py new year, It makes all the difference God makes our by shielding from all and pain, but by strengthening us to hear it i it comes, Not by taking hardship from is come! have Lo He rejoice happy and With His de the ized ful rue tian long Journey hefore they ar where ay the this spiritual manger bring to town! year a happy one, not us SOrrow us, but by taking all cowardice and fear from our hearts, God makes our year a happy not by granting us unbroken sunshine, but by keeping our faces bright in the shadows; and not by keep~ 18 from the battle of life, but hy off every field more than Jesus Christ whe one en ing 1 bringing us conqueror through love u What of the new vear? For the Chris« whose heart is filled with joy, the ahead can be faced with spiritual with optimism rather than tian day confidence pi TI we imism ie meaning of a new year is not that Vear or virile, but that we are one year riper in ex- perience, and therefore stronger and effective In playing our part in writer has further said that we year nearer the grave, but nearer the goal that every real person has planted far ahead of himself on the shining, shimmering highway of his life, the flagstone of which is a fetterless expression of the he feels, One year more of the Joy of living, of doing, of helping, of enhancing all true values, spiritual and temporal, Cieorge 1, as the fifth Are one older less more life, A are not one one vear good Carpenter, on his election General of The Salvation Army sald, "I am today, by the grace of God, what all the days that have gone before have made me" As we stand the threshold of the coming new let us all continue to huild days, having within our spiritual radiance emanating Lord Chrst who said, again I say, rejoice!" on Year past hearts a from Rejoice an our our Tesus Expensive Passengers had many Recently the asked permission miles of {ts tracks so far service is concerned, Si the Lackawanna company Interstate Commerce authorize the cessation of all its ger traffic In the State of New In each case passenger traffic has dwin dled to hundreds where thousands tra velled before, Commenting on the gen- eral situation, Howard Hosmer finer for the Comm 1970 will be the vear hy ralls would be out of business if rail travel continued to de cline at the rate it has in the last dec ade, He made after a year-long investigation showed the railroads are cam sengers today - than at the Eighteen Nineties The two actions point up some of the economic disadvantages under which railroads provide service These disadvantages and are Increasing at such a pace that Mr Hosmer's prediction seems bound to The Oshawa Times YT, LL WILSON, Publisher and General Manager €C. GWYN KINSEY, Editor The Oshawa Times, combining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) ana Ww Whitby Gazette Chronicle (estatilished 1843), in published daily (Sun dave and statutory excepto Members ot Canadian Da Newspapers Publishers Association, Th d Circulation Association titled ta despatches Ansociated Prien published therein are alsa reserved Otticon King Street #40 Catheart St, Montreal, # SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by car Peikering Albert Liverposl Oror Ce ¢ lan, Blackstock Pontypool By delivery areas 12 Lehigh railroad to abandon AS passenger that asked Commission ce time the to pa on Jersey Kxam that the predicts on which all the passenger his prediction which ving fewer pas any time since passenger Are sO great, on © he & nights of special despars a" S West, 1 to, Ontariey Alax we nv + Hay ery In Oshawa Whithy Bowm 9. Brook ¥ ¥ Maple Grove, + Taunton, [yrane Leskard nmbus, Fa mail tin elrewnere AVERAGE DAILY NET PAID 16166 come true, in the Northeast at least do the railroads find it diffi to price their unsubsidized service but if they could do so, are they would still lose of the average Ameri for automobile as I transportation » New York, New Haven and Hart ford Railroad made a study which showed that the commuter from Mamaroneck, N.Y, driving his automo hile and also doing 5,000 miles of non-commuter driving yearly, would be paying close to $1,500 a year to basing the cost figures on a Chevrolet the man would keep and for five years, Tickets on the Haven for commuting service Mamoroneck Grand Central 1 would only $262.80 a Yat more commuters the rails for the roads traffic on US, railroads has dropped about 100,000,000 since the end of the war, Ninety per cent of in ter-city traffic is now carried by pas- senger automobiles vol onl cult competitively the chances traffic because 8 preference his de o recently nto town commute maintain New from to Termir cost year every year, quit Passenger Railroad wages average $2.60 per compared with 78 cents before World War II. Many other costs have gone up substantially, It costs just as much to transport one passenger in a fully-manned railroad train as it to transport 400, Moreover, each pas- senger coach in service today would cost $140,000 or more to replace as Against original cost of $50,000 20 hour does an years ago Bible Thoughts The word of the Lord endureth 1 Peter 1:28 ood soon perishes but truth is Speak and live the truth for look for wheres Peter ling to his promise aven and a new earth 11 I women are men an work tend Multitudes still at are needs or the task. You can home today start SAA ON TO BERLIN UNITED KINGDOM OPINION Economic Warfare Seen Threat To NATO Future By M. MeINTYRE HOOD Special London (Eng) Corvespondent For The Times 1.0" DON NATO Is tottering ( mindations | the ap parent unity on the question of standing firmly together in resist ing the Russian demand that Ber- lin he made a free city, with the western nations withdrawing from it, there is a sense of Inquietude, That is reflected In the desperate efforts being made hy the Rritish ministers to, solve the economic problems which are threatening the western Europe defence organization The 'considered opinion of ob servers here is that military and political co-operation cannot live side by aide with economic war fare between the six countries within that markel, and the 11 other NATO nations which are left outside DUAL PURPOSE Thus the efforts of Bir David Eeeles and Heathcoat-Amory, Aritish spokesmen al the NATO meeting in Paris, have had a dual purpose, Their alm has been not only to safeguard Hritish trade when the common market is in operation, but to preserve NATO unity, which is gravely threaten ed hy the attitude of General de Gaulle on both Issues A meeting between General de Gaulle and Selwyn Lloyd, British foreign secretary, seems to have hridged over some of the difficul ties, and there is greater hope that the impasse will be broken when the Organization for Eure pean Feonomie Co-operation meets on Jan. 16 But this will only be possible If sufficient pres sure can he hrought to bear on France 0 make MMe Concessions far the sake of preserving NATO unity A debate In the House of Com PARAGRAPHICAL WISDOM "Adult westerns" are for those who have grown tall but net up "There are fewer cases of higamy in the U8 now than ever before," says a statistician, Of sourse, Fewer men than ever he fore can now support more than one wife "Pwo University of Hlinols pro fessors have been given a gram of $690,000 to take the dullness out of mathematies," Press report, That would take a lot of figuring, The Chinese who invented gun: powder, printing and civilization, are responsible for 80 per cent of the world's man-made troubles Responsibility for the remaining 20 per cent rests upon whoever invented credit "Whether a person works or not has little bearing on how long he will live," savs a physician It does in the case of many of ws, Doe. If we didn't work, we'd have to stop eating A geniatrician savs he doesn't waste effort trying to do the vir tually impossible of making his patients get better, hut expends It only in trying to keep them from gelling worse have formed Climology to "Top scientists the Institute of shidy the effect of weather on the actions of human beings." Press report, One adverse effect is that weather causes peo ple ta talk too much about the weather when Ameri succeed in land moon, they will nat Kilroy Americans It is hoped that cans eventually ing on the find signs there reading sky was here." or #0 home!" mons on unemployment brought the welcome news that unemploy ment had decreased In December as compared with November This was directly against the nor mal seasonal trend, Government spokesmen interpreted this to in dicate that the measures taken by the Government to stimulate trade and Industry were hearing fruit Nevertheless, there was no sign of complacency on the govern ment side, The export drive paying off, and is being continued with great energy. Special plans are being developed to assist in dustries which are contemplating expansion, and the government, rather than walting for applica tions for assistance, Is going out to firms with suggestions and offers of assistance in order to create greater opportunities for employment, In the last week, sald Sir David Kecles, projects of upwards of one million pounds had been approved for govern ment assistance There is a general feeling of confidence that the government is handling the unemployment situation with vigor and Imagina tion, and that the measures being taken will be effective UNION APATHY A battle is under way helween' the Trades Union congress and the Communist controlled Klee trical Trades Union, This is com Ing near to a showdown, the Issue being the order issued hy the TUC to the KTU not to take part in an International conference of electrical workers under Commu nist jeisdiction. The KETU has been trying to arrange such a conference for two years, Failure of the ETU to obey the TU( order would bring its expulsion from the Congress Another wnion, the gamated Engineering Amal Union, is under Communist control largely through the apathy of the majors ity of its members. In the elec tion of Its Sheffield Distriet Com mitiee, four of the five members elected were Communists, But HO of the 620 shop stewards ellg ihle to vole did not attend the election meeting, Out of the 620, only 120 were present. Two Com munists headed the poll with 108 and 100 votes respectively, Of the 120 who attended the meeting, %0 ware known to be Communists There has been sharp eriticism in the press of the apathy of the non-Communist shop stewards in slaying away fram the election meeting, and thus perpetuating Communist control of the union, ODD GLEANINGS Australia is wlepping up ts drive for more ritish im» migrants, It is now offering alr passages to Australia from Brit. an, for £10 ($27) te bachelors and childless married couples under the age of 46, Over 1000 such immigrants are already list ed as ready to fly to Australia Paul Massie, of 8t, Catharines, Ontario, a graduate of MoMaster University has an important role in the rank organisation film "Sapphire, which ia built around the recent race riots in London Mr, Massie won high honors in Dominion Drama Festival work in Ottawa, and hecame a profes sional, He made hs debut in pan tomime in Glasgow with the Glas gow Citizens' Theatre. He hegan his film career In "High Tide at Noon" and had his Hrst starving part In Anthony Asquith's Orders to Kill". Recently he has been apparing In the Tennessee Williams' play "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" at London's Comedy The Alre In "Sapphire he will he joining another successful Canadian actor, Michael Cralg FOR BETTER HEALTH Some Sane' Don'ts" For a Common Cold HERMAN N, RUNDESEN, MD Sneeze Just once or twice and your friends and relatives will probably be telling you what to do for a cold. Just about every one, It seems, has some pet rem ody. And, In a Kindly spirit, they always are ready and willing to tell you about it at the slightest provocation Well, I'm not going to tell you what to do. Instead, I want to tell you what not to do when you catch a cold, FRIENDS ADVICE The first "don't is don't follow the advice of well-meaning but 1 informed friends From time immemorial many people have tried one cold rem edy after another, They have starved a cold, they have fed a cold, they have tried fruit juice diets and they have downed everyiype of drug that was ever advertised or advised SOME VALUE Some of these cold drugs can alleviate symptoms and there is no doubt they have some value in treating cold symptoms Hut, after all these years, with all these various methods, we still have not found a cure for the common eald Another important "don't is don't experiment with nose drops inhalants, pills or medicine left aver from a previous cold. Awd don't try drugs recommended by well-meaning friends NOT ALIKE All colds, you must remember are not alike, The medicine vou or your next-door neighbor took the last time a cold attacked Mig not be any good at all far the next ane be down Moreover, it might right harmful unless tts proper: ly used under the right condi tions Don't put your hopes on drugs or methods that already have heen proven valueless. And re member nose drops and gargles won't kill viruses in your nose and throat ROUGHENING YOURSELF Don't try to "toughen your resistance to colds hy sleeping on unheated porches or with the windows wide open or hy taking cold baths, It won't do any good, Such socalled havdening at tempts have no hearing at all on the number of colds you might cateh, nor upon the severity of them Don't expect to avoid colds hy moving to a warm climate. Resi dents of the deep south catch colds, too QUESTION AND ANSWER PX Same people say that keeping the windows open at Nght is unhealthy, What Is your opmion® Answer A sleeping room should be well ventilated but free from drafts. An open window not permitting a direct draft on the sleeper is usually advisable A few older people and individ nals highly susceptible to colds seem to do better when they sleep without a diveet breeze fall Ing on them. Hut be sure you always have fresh air in your sleeping roam RIG ATTRACTION CARDSTON, Alta. (CP) Mare than 15,000 persons visited the areat Mormon Temple heve this year, Thirty-six guides operated + hours daily during the tourist season, "gain British Columbia Given C By THE CANADIAN PRESS Two centuries sgo, no one knew that a continuous coastline eon nected California and Alaska One century ago a gold rush to the wilderness compelled for mation of the colony of Hritish Columbia to protect British in. tevesis on the North Pacific mainland This year that infant settle ment, now grown Into Canada's third province in population, marked its centenary, And Mar aret A. Ormshy, professor of istory at the provinelsl univer sity wrote the first comprehen: sive history of the province in #& generation British Columbia: A History (Maemillan) starts with the early explorations of British, Spanish and Russian seamen and (he overland Journeys of Alexander Mackenzie and Bimon Fraser DEVELOPMENT TRACED In B00 pages it (races the de velopment of the wilderness through the furdrade period of Hudson's: Bay Company admin stration, merger with Vancouver Island colony, and Confederation as western completion of the Dominion, The hook is a social and eco nomic history, as well as a poli tieal history, BSprinkled through it are colorful descriptions of life in an outpost of empire hefore completion of the Canadian Paci fic Railway in 1686 provided the eommuneations that ensured Surging growth Rut basically, British Columbia «A History is the story of the men who directed the develop ment of the Pacific Coast area from administrative posts---men BYGONE DAYS #0 YEARS AGO Mrs, MeAdie, assisted hy Mrs Johns and Mrs, Fllis, performed the ceremony of burning the mortgage on the Bimeos street Chineh parsonage Capt, Bert Smith who spent many months In a Ger man prisoner-of-war camp, re ceived a Joyful welcome on his pvival home had robhery Hrook losses A second attempt st of the Standard Bank at lin was fruitless. The could have been heavy since the Whithy tax collector had Just deposited a large sum of money P. KH. Punshon was master of ceremonies at the oyster supper tendered to Mayor F, I, Mason and the town commedl The most successful bazaar in the history of any chureh In Oshawa was given hy Bimeoe M Methodist Ladies' Ald when the proceeds amounted to over $500 In winding up the town eoun ell's business for the year, wid ow's pensions were favored and the housing commitiee recogni ped, ) Fred Hoehn of W. A Ross grocery store purchased W. FE Souch's grocery store on Albert Fred Bull represented the lo cal YMCA at a conference Toronto M. €. Rose, local real estate agent, had purchased the Rider Farm of 17 acres on Ritson road Just north of King 80 with a view to establishing a new sub division In town A. © Cameron, five chief, re ported that local eltizens had taken a great interest in the fire prevention movement that pre valled throughout Canada Atomic Tests Give Science Quake Details WASHINGTON (AP) Under ground atomic tests in Nevada last fall promise to improve sei entists' spotting of distant earth quakes and add te their knowl edge of the earth's erust One Nevada explosion an Oot 30 shook delicate instruments "in Tokyo, In Sweden, in Huancaye, Peru, and Prehonice, Crechoslo vakia The first figures on the record Ing of this and other blasts in the underground SOries were given hy earthquake sleuths of the U8 Coast and Geodetic Survey They are co-ordinating informa tion obtained by selsmologists throughout the world from a ser les of four explosions DISTANCE SPANNED The Oct, 30 shot, code-named "Blanca, was the biggest, It packed a wallop equal ta 8000 tons of TNT. It jiggled selsmos graphs 5,500 miles away In the United States and Can ada most of 110 regular and temporary selsmology stations recorded it Reports on the three earlier and smaller tests came only from United States territory However, ane of them equiv alent to the force of 1,000 tans of TNT was detected at Fair banks, Alaska That is 2310 miles from the Nevada test site The smaller hlast a oom parative pipsqueak of 20 tons TANT power-was recorded only ont to 820 miles at Rapid City sn here alse a S0-tonner Recause {ts explosive impact shot down inte the ground the earth shocks travelled only a few thousand feet Capt, Elliott Roberts and 1. M Murphy of the coast and geodetic survey's selsmology branch said it will take six months to study the findings fully "Rut the prospects are" ents sald, 'that science stands to new knowledge of the earth's erust which extends to a depth of 30 miles, and poss get some new information about the earth's mantle, extending from 20 miles to a depth of 1.900 miles." Was Rob thi like Bir James Douglas, the first governor, and Premiers Dick McBride, Honest John Oliver and Duff Pattulle The hook 1s copiously lustre ted with early photographs snd cartoons and charts mapping the spread. of settlement through the mountainous country "YOU AND UNIVERSE" One of the needs of this age of space and the atom is for ex perts who can translate the jar gon of the scientist into language that everyone can understand Canada 1s fortunate in having such a man in Dr, N, J, Berrill; The Strathcona professor of zoology at MeGill University in You and the Universe (Dodd, Mead) has surveyed the entire field of physical knowledge with wil, imagination and a dazzling grasp of the immensities of time, space and matler His purpose, he states, is to bring together the universe, as seen by astronomers and astro Phrslaists and life as understood yy hiologisis in an effort to answer man's questions of "Who am 17 What Is this earth beneath my feet, this universe around me?" His book Is filled with the stag: gering story of nature, the fan: tastic and frightening panorama of cells and atoms, life and mat ter, earth and sky, stars and galaxies Dr, Berill succeeds In marshal ling the various sciences to the subject at hand, Whether he also succeeds, in a spirtual sense, in answering the questions '"Where did we come from? Where are we going?' as he sels out to dois a matter that each reader mus' decide for himself But no one can read the hook without feeling that selence and religion have hecome one In at testing to the wonder and glory of ereation HEROISM AT REA It was a bitter October day Wn 106 as the erew and salvage Discover prehensive History operators huddled in the battered British freighter Berwindles on the rocks of the Magdalen Is lands in the Gulf of Bt, Lawrence, All efforts to save the ship had falled, Now it was 8 race 10 save lives and all that remained to be tried was an attempt to reach #hore through the surf Farley Mowat in The Grey Seas Under (McClelland and Sle wart) tells in stark detail the dramatic hours that followed, It is one of many such epies of the sen told in this life story of a deep-sea th engaged in the haz ardous and highly - competitive towing and salvage business in the Atlantic, In particular it is the story of Foundation Franklin, probably the best known salvage eraft on the Cana: dian Atlantic const, Help for the men on the Bers windlea came from the ing Japanese freighter Engla Maru, Her lifeboat was launched and was about to he smashed against the hull of the doomed freighter but her "bosun" leaped to the guhwale and used his own hody to break the force He smashed seven of his ribs, but he saved the hoat, And the boat eventually saved all those aboard the Berwindlea FOR YOUNG READERS The story of the most famous of Canada's aces of the First World War has been told by John Norman Harris, a bomber plot and prisoner in the Recond World War, In Knights of the Alr Mae- millan), One of the Great Btories of Canada series, Mr, Harris' book Is written for juvenile readers and Is attractively Mustrated by Willlam Wheeler, a Toronto are fist The exploits of Bishop, €olli shaw, Barker and McKeever, whe among them shot down 212 enem al, eraft, are featured in the ho but Mr, Harris also tells of other aces and writes with authority about the aireraft and fighting techniques of that era, Ancient -- Bone Instrument JOHANNESBURG The first (Reuters) primitive hone imple ment ever to he found has been discovered in the Bterkfontein caves near Krugersdorp, about 20 miles from here Worn smooth and shiny with use, its age ls estimated at he tween H00.000 and 760,000 years It probably was used for serap ing hides Tha discovery was made by a nal s-anthropologist, Dr, J, T tohinson, of the Transvaal Mus eum in Pretoria, and constitutes the first actual proof of Prof Raymond Dart's theory that a hone age preceded the stone age in the history of man, Prof, Dart Is retiring professor of anatomy at the University of Witwaters rand In Johannesburg, RONES COLLECTED His theory 1s based on a col lection of more than 80,000 hones which possibly were used hy ape men, None of the pleces, how ever, ean he regarded as imple ments in the sense that they were made or altered to obtain usahle Instruments Rased on his excavations and findings at the Sterkfontein caves, Dr, Robinson's point of view dif fers from that of other experts in all paris of the world He helleves that the makers of the stone and hone Implements were human beings, They had, In his opinion, already progressed further than the ape men who possibly had used stones and hones, but who had been content to use them at they came lo hand, without modification, His opinion is supported by the fact that shaped implements were discovered only in the top layer of the excavaled material al Nerkfontein, There were ne bone implements in the deeper layers Another basis for Ws theory considered hy many to Be one of his strongest argumemts Is that there are two types of skulls, one more like that of a human being than the other, The stone imple ments were found on the same level as the more advanced skulls, A further point which Dr, Robe Inson makes Is that at the Sterks fontein caves he has discovered foreign stones that were obviously carried there, They were not re« lated to the geological composi tion of the locality, but were taken there apparently to he shaped into Implements, While most sclentists belleve that the stone Implements, and also the bone implement just dis covered, were made and utilized by ape men, Dr, Robinson is of the opinion that the ape men merely used stones and bones in their natural state without shape Ing them, In other words, a mows advanced being made and utils ized these stone and bone imple ments, Obesity Reduces Suicide Tendency WELLINGTON, New Zealand Reuters) Fhe only good thing about being too fat is that it re duces the tendency to eammit suicide, says Dr, KE, G. Sayers dean of the Otago University Medical School, In a recent speech on overweight he sald 1. Ohese people have a &0-per cent higher chance of dying at any given time than those of normal weight, A man built te carry M0 pounds hat tipping 180 pounds on the scales ean expect to lose five years of life 2. Obesity increases hy 78 per cent the chance of heart disease; 1 It leads to a 6dper-cent greater chance of getting arterial diseases 4. Overwelght Increases the risk of diabetes by 372 per cent, And at hest, Dr, Savers con: eluded, "overweight inorveases hody work even when you are at rest." PRIME REDUCER (living advice an how to reduce weight, Dr, Sayers stressed that the best way is to eat less. Exer else is excellent, he told his ls tenders, "but you cannot Just walk off excess weight." Nor is It advisable to play 1& holes of golf, getting rid of #00 to 1.000 calovies, and then have a hottle of heer at the 19th "You would immediately the benefit of nine holes." Nor ave there any pills that ve weight, Dr. Savers said lose duce "There are only certain pills which take away that awful feel Ing of being without food." Yet keeping weight down and persisting with vegular exercise are most important te prevent heart disease, he sald, and It is not good enough to he active just one day a week, With all exer cise, the accent should be on "regular." Dr. Sayers quoted a survey In England that showed bus drivers are more prone to heart disease than their conductors, who rum up and down the stairs of doubles decker buses all day to collect faves DISEASE CAUSES Some heart diseases seem te be the result of increased stands ards of living, he said, There is a good deal of evidence that a high consumption of animal fat ine oreases the incidence of these diseases. Rut the evidence. of this 18 not conclusive and it is not sub ficient to warrant a ehange in our dietary habits an long as peaple do not overeat Smoking probably plays a role in diseases of the heart and ars terles, Dry, Sayers said, and stress also plays a part though its we portance Is diffienlt to assess. Health, he declared, 1s not en. tively a physical matter and people need some sort of sound philosophy as well, "Thinking about your health morning, afts ernoon and night is the surest thing to make you it" Dial RA Non, J. Walde Monteith, MP, RC, FCA, Licenced Trustees Robert B, Lightfoot, C.A, Monteith, Monteith, Riehl & Co. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 133 SIMCOE ST, N, Gordon W, Riehl, CA, Res, Partner «= RA 5.4478 35-3527 A, Brock Monteith, 8 Comm, CA, w= AJAX 730 George § Trathwey, CA,