Eh: fiuurdtuit Conn Prince Edward Island I..Iko The Dow WJ. Hanson, Publish’: Burton Lewis Frank Walknv Ixocutlvo Editor sun Vvblllhul ovary wool: day morning lute dam and Iiaiutory holidays) no I65 Pnncl Snui. . Chulonoiown. P.E.I., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd ‘ Brunch cities: at Summemdo, Montague, Alber- Ion and Souril. lopluonlod nlmonolly by Ihornson Ncwspopon Advertising Services Toronto, 425 Umvuulvy Ava E-"IF"! 3-3394; Montreal, 640 Cathcari Sirool Uniyomvy 6-5°42, Western office, 1030 Won Giorgia Strool, Vancouver (MA 7037). Mambo! Canadian Daily Newspaper Publinhon Association and The Canadian Press The Canadian Pro” I; JXCIUIIVEIV enmlpd to the use for unob- Iicnllon of all news dispatches in this pnpnu credited to It or I! the Associated Press or Reuters Ind giro to the local new: publishnd herein All llghu or republlcanon of IPKIB‘ disvaithfl I"""' Ilbo reserved Subscription rates. No! over 35: per week by r v SI2.00 5 year by mail or rural routes and lroll not urvlced c r er. $I5.00 A year olt island and U K. $20.00 pd year in U.S. and elsewhere oumdo Brlmh Com- lnanwu|Ih- Not over 7: per III"QII CODY- Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The strongest memory is "W88-R01’ than the weakest Ink PAGE 4 Diet & General Custer Writing in the Montreal Gazette. Arthur Blakely predicts that Rt. Hon. John George Diefenbaker will dominate. the proceedings at this weeks annual meeting of the Pro- gressive Conservative Association of Canada. 11 won't be the first time. He has towered above several such meetings in the past. But this time. it will be with a. difference. Mr. Diefenbalrer will be the central figure, because there is no other. The centre will be wherever he hap- pens to be at any given moment. Had it been otherwise. argues The Gazette commentator. the con- vention might have developed into a modern version of Custer’: last stand. “But. how," he asks. “can Custer's last stand be staged at a time when Sitting Bllll is on annual leave. Crazy Horse has gone fish- ing. Red Cloud has joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West. Show and the Cheyenne are not yet convinced of the urgent necessity of forming a. defensive alliance with the Sioux?" A pertinent. question indeed, as indicated by the preliminaries at the Young Conservatives’ meeting over the weekend. In such circum- stances. it will be interesting to see how the big event shapes up for which the tomakawks were sharpen- ed in the anti-Diefenbaker camp. Maybe it will be the “redskins“ and not the intrepid General Custer that will get scalped this time. Lest We Forget Successful firing of a. giant Saturn rocket last week has been hailed as an encouraging forward step in the United States program to develop rockets capable of send- ing men to the moon. Not. only has this test flight sent a 20.000-pound dummy payload aloft to become the heaviest satellite ever orbited by man. but it. has shown that the pow- erful liquid hydrogen second-stage motor can be fired satisfactorily. The spent shell of this second stage and the payload adapter also went inlo orbit. making a mass of some 38,000 pounds circling the earth. ’.'This exploit was followed by the launching of an 804-pound spacecraft. equipped with television cameras for photographing the moon at close quarters, which per- j“; formed beautifully up to the final 10 minutes of flight yesterday, when it crashed into the lunar orb with- out performing its mission. This. it . seems, was the sixth straight fail- : ure in the Ranger program. which so far has cost $168 million figured at about $28 million a shot. Stupendous indeed is the effort put into these space flights, and it A’ no doubt they are of important mil- itary as well as scientific signifi- ’ Meanwhile. however, we note. ‘ frbm a. much less widely publicized I ' resort of the United States Depart- " mfit of Agriculture, that the No. 1 _ w‘, problem in the years immed- ; ia _ ahead is neither military pre- § palfldness nor winning in race to the .m §. f-‘l‘l*lis overriding problem is hun- g . In the forseeable future. famine ' V’ s as s more serious outlook ' n even nuclear war, and unless to avoid I explosion. may become the only . ,..z_....-..... .. . ..—_..-«-.a-.naa.7"ssrg«.:».~:- - - . an - . .. 2, : ‘department. report says the _ l ‘ States and Canada are two IIIO Ki: MI untinue to have suf- '.,h'tint auu.f0I' complacency? b all the "have" coun- MONDAY. rasnuauifi. 1963. 3 Illicit food for their own people.‘ tried will not be enough to meet the wants of the "have nots." To only partly meet the situation by the year 2,000——which is only 36 years away--the world will need many more millions of tons of fer- tilizer and insecticides and huge amounts of agricultural machinery. The population of India, for in- stance. is nearly 450 million now. In 15 years it will be increased by 187 million. so that the country has only a few years in which to find food for an added population equiva- lent to the present population of the United States. And the problem fac- ing India also faces other Asiatic countries wit h population out- stripping food. Giant Saturn rockets and Ranger moonspying equipment will not be of much use in this emergency. Nor any other achievements in our so- called conquest of space. Unless we lick this big No. 1 problem in time. not all the stars in their courses will be able to save our civilization from disaster. Old Records Galore For the first time in 40 years, the Public Record Office in London. England. has produced a complete catalogue of its archives, covering the whole field of Britain's civic, ecclesiastical and political history. What lush pastures for a student to be turned loose in! These records have been accum- ulating from the time of the Nor- man Kings, and were originally ac- counted part of the Royal treasure. being housed in wh.'-ltever palace the Monarch of the day happened to be using. They range from Domes- day Book, completed in the year 1087. right down to the work of modern ministries. They occupy 50 miles of shelving——3O miles in the Public Record office in Chancery Lane, another 20 ‘miles in a reposi- tory in Ashbridge Park Among the old records are the exchequer accounts from the time of King John to George III, which Include “wages for Knights. archers and men at arms." There are in- dentures for the pawlling of the Crown jewels for the payment of troops, especially during the reign of Henry V, and the roll of the army which fought at the Battle of Agin- court. One of the cont.ributing sections of the collection is found in the rec- ords of cases coming before the no- torious St.il' Chamber from 1485 until its abolition by Charles 1. And there must be material for untold sea stories in the trials for piracy and other crimes on the high seas in the High Court of Admiralty, in the three centuries up to 1834. Bllt they are not all available for one‘s perusal. Access to the. rec- ords is normally governed by the rule that this is allowed only after 50 years have elapsed since the events were recorded. Sometimes a longer period is ordered should it be felt that the official documents might affect national security or just embarass people. or the fam- ilies of people named in them. The Royal Visit Commenting on the forthcoming visit of Her Majesty the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh to Char- lottetown and Quebec City. the Moncton Transcript notes that this will be the third occasion on which the royal visit will coincide with the festivities of the Thanksgiving Day holiday, which falls on Mon- day, October 12, the final day of their stay in the Quebec capital. The other Thanksgiving observan- ces in which they participated here were in 1957-when Her Majesty read the Speech from the Throne at the opening of a new Parliament in Ottawa—and previously in 1951. EDITORIAL NOTES The Canadian National Exhibit- ion and Ed Sullivan are reported to be running into tough opposition from Russian talent scouts in sign- ing up variety performers. Which prompts the Ottawa Journal to com- ment drily that this is “one bit of peaceful competition we don't mind if the Russians win." 0 "Readers may rest assured." said a Tronto Telegram writer in ad- vance of the event. “that coverage of the Taylor-Burton visit will be a clinical study of its sociological implications rather than a frenzied explanation of its concomitant vul- garity." Tint’: 3 good alibi, at any rate. . I had been built. up but good -5.5 I \\‘\”lll-all‘ I A“ I . . or 9 #9,’, ~ I tilt. ‘I’ R9 ~' v7l'l=‘ =.l.l7;l II E7 I in W’ IIFEI '6 lil FILL (_)lTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Mikes Press Buildup Proved Embolrrclssing "A guy named Mike" h a u I been spending an anonym o u I ; week in the sun in Florida. no - doubt rejoicing that between ~ cottage and cafeteria and cab-{I ana he was no longer trailed ‘ and fouled by his well-wishers . in the press corps. ‘ This was a wclcome change? after his two rm-ent vent u re»: I abroad. made under his more formal IIIIP as Prime Minister I of Canada. In Paris. France. I and in Washington. U.S.A.. he‘ , by 5 the pre<s—- and had had an em- barrassinlt few days gathering -, up the bricks dropped around I him by his bu'lIrIer-uppcrs. II was very flattering In our national ego to hear that "Prime 3 Minister Pearson would act as i ‘honest broker‘ between French President de Gaulle and . President Lyndon Johnson." , ROLE OVERPLAYED With less protocol than chollc. ; that first brick came rocketing I back to Ottawa. It was m a d e clear that an ‘honest broker’ might serve a purpose In bring- inz I0;‘.'PlIIeI‘ two strangers which do Galllle and Johnson are not. Despite erroneous press reports to the contrary. they had met and talked in Washington. after the funeral the late President Kennedy—— long before Mr. Pearson paid his formal vis- its to their countries. Th elr dialogue is already in train: It just happens to express two It- rer-onciled viewpoints- . Our Prime Minister himself‘ also quickly rebuffed that re- port by his formal comment: ’’I would he very reluctant indeed to act as ll broker." Mr. Pearson‘: visit to Paris was red-carpeted. headlined and successful. Bill It produced so little of substance that the press filled space by reporting that "the American ambassador to Paris" Islrl "gave Mr. Pearson a rough and rude working over because he hadn't in I k ed de Gaulle out of recognizing Red China." That one crudely over- played the role of a third coun- try's ambassador. as well as the responsibility resting on Mr. Our Yestercl-clys (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (February 3, 1939) Mr. William W. Reid. B.A. Charlottetown. was appointed to the teaching staff of West Kent School to fill the vacancy caus- ed by the resignation of Mr. don Bennett. Appointment made at a special meetln the local School Board. Mr Bennett accepted a position on the teaching staff of Prince of Wales College. The Black Watch Club of the Prince Edward Island Highland- ers will be presented with a pic- ture. ‘The Thin Red Line‘ copy of a painting depicting the rharlzc of the Light Bridage the Battle of Balaklava In the Crimean War. TEN YEARS AGO (February 3. I954) One of the longest lists of no- minations In a civic election In several years was taken today by City Clerk James Fullerton in preparation for the election Feb. 10. Mayor J. David Stew- art, D.S.0. nominated to sue- ceed himself. He will be oppos- ed by Mr. M. Alban Farmer, Q.C present chairman of the Police Committee. was 3 of Housing conditions released in a preliminary survey made by u social group. headed by Bren- don 0'Grady. of Saint Dunstan: University show that many fam- llles In t his city on living in conditions which are far from conducive to healthful and mor- al living. Mr. 0'Gndy oubndh - respective borders. Pearson‘: shoulders already overburdened by his embarrass- ing friends. U.S. sources 5a‘ with reason that the story was “so obviously untrue as to be unworthy of a denial". Mr. _P'earson for his part contented himself with saying that he re- membered speaking with his old friend Ambassador Bohlen at the crowded reception at th 9 Canadian Embassy. which “was not a very good place to be rough and rude." Then came the report ih at : -Mr. Pearson, M.P. for Canada‘s largest uranium-mining com- munity. had negotiated the sale uranium to France. Th e Prime Minister told a Cabinet meeting on his return that there had been no such discussion. OTTAWA TALKS NEVER ON Next came the J o u r n a listlc flier that. since the two presi- dents were having trouble in fixing a suitable meeting place. Mr. Pearson would invite them to meet in Ottawa, This clanger I again rang the bell. causing this fficial statement: "The Prime 3 id 'Minlster‘s office today was au- ‘thorized by the Prime Minister I to deny reports appearing in y the press to the effect that Mr. lPearson may invite President K Johnson and President de Gaul- Ie to visit Ottawa after th ,French President‘: forthcoming I visit to M e x I c o. The Prime I l\’iinf§;er‘s office wishes to state lcategbrically that there In no I foundation for the story." Finally came the punch line ‘ on the visit to Washington. There ; not even a straw could be found. ; so no bricks could be fashioned. j"The Prime Minister received here." reported a Canadian ‘ writer from the U.S. capital. 1 "the traditional welcome which 3 area is hit by these rays. New Cancer Treatments Dr. Theodore R. Van belle: Two new cancer techniques were reported In December and the results are promising. one utilizes energy from a ruby laser light that ml Intense heat rays of the Infra-red type. Th 9 other consists of giving X-r n y treatments to a person sitting or Iying In a tank or chamber con- taining oxygen under three at- moupherel of pressure (whar- oxic cancer radiation). Cancer cells are 270 per cent more sensitive to the destruc- tive action of X-rays when the tissues are under three atmos- phere: of pressure than under the nominal sea level pressure of one. This is not true of normal cells and herein lies the value of this remedy. Malignant tissue: can be attacked without demonstrable c h a n g e s in the normal adjacent areas. I The dose needed to kill cancer cel of the pancreas. for examp‘e. will not have an adverse effect upon the cells of the nearby sto- mach or colon. The objection to h_vbarox' cancer radiation is the ill ei- cts oi the increased pressure on the ear-drums. Many patients find it difficult to adjust to this change while undergoing treat- ment‘in the oxygen chamber. Others sweat profusely or are apprehensive. The tu In 0 r institute of the Swedish hospital in Seattle, Wash.. reported recently that 100 patients went through the procedure with favorable results. All had advanced cancer and were beyond hope of cure by conventional means. The tu ors became smaller and symp- toms subsided. This is good news. especially in cancer of the esophagus and pancreas. which are notoriously resistant to ra- diation therapy. Laser energy has great poten- tial as a weapon against malig- nant tumors. Iiuman cancers of the thyroid gland and of the skin Imelanomasl were transplanted into the cheek pouches of hams- ters. These animals were expos- ed later to this intense ray of light and the tumors were de- stroyed in a high percentage. The untreated control hamsters ‘ed We do not know why the laser beam: destroy cancer cells. They do not penetrate the skin and It Is necessary to expose the growths through surgery before turning on the machine. Heal plays a role because a wisp of vapor arises when the diseased KIDNEY DISEASE B. J. M. writes: My soil. :4 slu- deni. has developed nephritis, for which he is being treated. Do you think he will be able to I is accorded to the Police Chiefs of ‘Banana Republics‘." 1 Summer. says the all n g a n. . spends the w i nte r in Florida. , Mr. Pearson. recuperating there. ,. imust have been delighted that E ollr press does not. I Senseless Christian Science Monitor It Is earnestly to be hoped that 5 the Presidents of India a n d 3 gether— as proposed by the for- mer— on the terms of an appeal to the people of both countries ,1 to halt further violence between Hindus and Moslems within their First th was trouble in Kashmir over the theft of a religious relic from a Pakistan wlil be able to get t.o- . 3 m Moslem shrine. Second. t h e re ‘ came grave communal rioting in India‘s biggest city. Calcutta. And now there are reports of clashes between Hindus and Moslems in Decca. capital of East Pakistan. Of course these outbreaks are not just a sudden phenomenon. They are symptomat‘ teriora-Iion in the chronically strained relations between the two countries of the Indian sub- continent, Kashmir is the single greatest Irritant between them. and it was no coincidence that the latest series of clashes should have started there. mmunal violence in Kash- mir itself has in fact been the exception rather than the rule. . Pakistan is more sensitive lcofade-. Violence But since late last year. tension in that part of the territory lad. .mlnisered by India has grown. l with the hitherto quiescent Mos- lem majority apprehens i v e about moves to integrate Kash- mir more closely with India. I than ever about having faiied to . secure any settlement of the iKashmlr dispute recognizing in some measure Pakistani claims. I This has led to a mood of deser- I ation in Pakistan. where the I press has tended to pour oil in- stead of water on the names of l the communal riots in India. Neither Pakistan nor In d I I I has anything to gain from inter- ] nal violence of this kind. irres- I pective of the bigger issue: which lie behind it. And th use . who suffer most directly are or- fdinary men and wo m on for I whom the daily round is difficult enough at the best of times. Men In fering should not let internation- al or domestic politics hold them back. "'s..I..<..>.s* Industry paid off handsomely for a Fort William housewife over the weekend. On impulse Saturday afternoon the lady de- cided to clean out in cupboard which has housed cartons of odds and ends that are collect- ed in most houses over the years. Digging into one box she pull- ed out a thin phonograph record album. There were two records In the album and as she careful- ly looked at the titles. she gasp- ed. Rushing to the living room where her husband sat, she cried "Look at what I've in u n d! Glglli" The man of the house shared his wife's delight. II was Benin- mlno Glgll singing Panic Angel- icus. accompanied by the Ber- Ion state orchestra. a pre- war production. It had been their favorite record 25 years ago. Time and time again iihey had wished they could hear again that Incomparable tenor voice of the great Italian singer. They had thouyl the record had been thrown out or taken away by one of the children. The lady was stepping over to the stereo set. when the husband said. "Wait 1 minute! Maybe we shouldn't play It. We're used to clear reproduction of stereo rec- mnt beccntchy and tinny ted his report at the annuli sounding. I wouldn't want to meeting the Catholic Wclluo spoil the memory of his wonder- beagne hold in‘ can-lmulnti ‘ Ilvoloo." » Is Found ’I‘ime|-Journal the boss of the house. she swit- ched the turntable and the need- le to 78 and carefully put the record on. Breatlllessly the couple walt- ed. and then from the four bal- anced speakers came the intro- duction by the orchestra. beau- tifully clear and faithful. GiglI's first note: floated Into the room with all the clarity. sweetness and power that ad thrilled them as the great man sang from the stage at Massey Hall. Toronto 30 years ago. Glgli is dead. But for these two devotees he lives again. There may be several copies of this record still in existence. They don't care. They have a collector‘: piece. ORDER AUTOPSY TWILLINGATE. Nfld. lCP)- RCMP here have ordered III w died Thun- day at the nearby fishing llam- let of Virgin Arm on New World Island. Eric Bannister Rogers, son of Mr. and V Mr: Walter Rogerl. was-found dead In his crib. An RCMP spokesman said the cause of his death was not known. runlrr omv ‘Parent: Prefer Purity Products" :11 not out 4-7:: return to collelic? REPLY There Is a good chance that he will be able to do so. Most victims of acute nephritis get well and those with the chronic type improve enough to cary on their usual activ' es. 0 VESSELS AFFECTED F. N. writes: Why does dia- betes cause poor circulation of the legs? REPLY Diabetes hastens hardening of tile arteries. This is one of the reasons why the disease should be under control at all times with diet and insulin or one of the lmtidiabetic tablets. SALT IS SAFE Mrs. L. writes: I'm 66 years old and like my meals well sall- ed. Will this hasten hardening of the arteries? REPLY No. The intake of salt should be limited If high blood pres- sure or dropsy is present. b ut not If a otherwise ealthy. NONMALIGNANT TUMORS F L. writes: Are fatty tumors cancerous? REPLY This would be most unusual. Lipomas are removed surgical- ly for cosmetic reasons. TODAY'S HEALTH IIl'N'l'- Quackery is as old as time. PRODUCE PLATINUM Canada. the Soviet Union and South Africa produce most of the million or an ounce: of platinum mined annually. NOTES BY THE WAY? Most people not an IIICDNI kick out of doing Iomethinn they can't afford. That‘: why I 0 many people are enjoying living more than ever before.—- Wood- stock Review. A in person in I calorie fight- er who spend: too much time with the enemy.—- We I I a ll d Evening Tribune. The trouble with contradict- ing one‘: wife is that It‘: your word against a thousand ollllcru. —Ottawa Journal. man. do in y o u :- Landlady: “You; you entertain girls apartment?" Young man: “I think so, they seem to e ac- ceptlng my inviIationI."- Gall Reporter. It is not enough to learn the tricks of the trade—you must also learn the trade.—- Irish DI- gelt. , A person who minds no one’: business but his own is probab- l_v a millionaire.— Hamill on Spectator. Doctors must be aware of the powerful effect on their patients of what they do not say, what they do say. how they say it and when they say it. In the absence of more ' ' information. one poorly timed “H‘mm" from a doctor can fill his patient with all kinds of uneasy suspicions about his condition.-— Toronto Telegram. To live hull“! I In one must have soul of a poet, the mind of n phllolmhor. ul. simple taste: of_ a hermit-and a good station wagon.— Mlnnc. tonka Pilot, Minn. A wife mu once uld thu common sense II what tells In that the earth is flat.—- Ottawa Citizen. Mary: “I'm going to stop go. hug out with my ullor boy. )1 Jane: “Does he sing them In you?" Mary: “No. but he whls. ties (lhem."—Golt Reporter. The editor of Pravda an that painters of abstract . 1-. should be paid in abstract mon. ey. We didn’t know that he had even heard of al Credit. . Edmonton Journal. Housewives who become nu-. ious with husband: who store old books and letters should be en. couraged to read reports of sal. es In London. one lot of letters and documents concerning the last days of Shel‘ey and Byron, which had been kept by Edward John Trelawny. sold recently for $6,220. a collection of the work: of Sir Richard Burton brought $1,200 and $660 was paid for vol- ume 2 of in translation of the Aeneid which had belongod In Dr. Samuel Johnson. Two brief Beethoven letters brought 82.100 and $1 .950.—Ottnwa Journal. Coalition In Italy By Alan Canadian Press Italy's centre-left experiment is a hopeful development in Eu- opean politics. With any luck. it may pro- vide the stable, mildly reform- ist regime that lialy needs. It may also muffle the Commu- nist menace. Stated simply, the problem has been to create a workable parliamentary m a J o r I t_v be- tween the extremes of the au- thoritarian, stand-pat right and the Communist left. With these two opposite poles engagcd in a constant process of reciprocal repulsion. the area 1' a central consensus re- mained narrow. Pietro Nenni's socialists. feel- lnl: that the only party really interested in reforms was Pal- miro TogliatIi's. Communist group. moved lcflward. Other middle-of-the-road parties. be- mllscd by Ille Communist scare- crow, sought refuge with right- ist forces. FINAL BREAK? The significance of the pres- ent coalition is that Nennl — once regarded as little better than a fellow traveller — has broken away from the Commu- nists. apparently for once and all. and taken his socialists into the government led by Christian Democratic P r e m i e r Aldo Moro. A socialist splinter group, convinced that Nenni is selling his soul to reactionary parties, formed a separate grouping. It can muster the strength for some vital fiscal reforms the Communists would lose a strong selling point. Post-war Italy. once so poor housewives figuratively counted every drop of olive oil. doubled its national income in the 19505, creating perhaps as many new millionaires as any country. A fantastically slack tax sys- tem. bearing hardest on those who could least afford to pay, nourished a sense of grievance. Some progress. but ' enough. has been made in rem- edying the old problem of the affluent north and the strug- gling south. COMPARED WITH FRANCE A comparison is possible be- tween France and Italy, two countries burdened with large Communist parties that at once hamper reform and feed upon the lack of it. The undigested French revo- lution of 1789 left the country squeezed between the counter- and am that Incomo tax INTERESTED IN AN EXTRA DEDIIGTION ON YOUR INCOME TAX? I non make a note that contributions to Montreal Trust‘: CONSOLIDATED RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN are deductible. So start now—provIdofor your own retirement. advantage of this government-registered Plan. Contributions. deductible from your 1068 tax return can be made through February 1964. So send the coupon now for the folder with all the facts. Montreal Trust liompany 119 Richmond Street Tel. 892-1215 exemption too, by taking NnlnA_ Athlonnn E] Pious und mo Information on your conulildod Iolhoonont Plan. U I would like to ammo an uppolntmool. G-3-64 Harvey Staff Writer revolutionary classical rig ht, standing for order and the sla- Ius quo. and the extreme left with its revo‘utionary war-cries and its opposition to any hall- house between capitalism and communism. Moderate parties found little elbow-room between these fre- quently-contracting limits made things harder for them- sclves by a multitude of quar. rels, especially over the long- s I a n din g religious issue of whether the state should sup- port Roman Catholic schools. Village priest was at odds will! In!‘ al sclloolteacller. socialist with the Catholic party repre- scntalive. In Italy's case. the dilemma of the reforming centre and left Is complicated by the fact that the nation lacks a long period of national unity. It is hard In attain s o c i a I cohesivencss, bascd on the kind of agreement on fundanlelltals that a country like Britain has built up over centuries. Despite these handicaps. IIII Moro coalition seems to havc a better basis for constructive legislation than most post-war regimes. i« L We've got rooms ideally suited for banquets. salts meetings. dancu. tau. weddings. brid9° parties, iashlon shows. anni- vorury partlu. club meetings- Blg or small wo are pleased to cater to them all. Enjoy ill! but food, «nice and ur- roundlngu. Your function will In a much greater success :... rourvatlonund aulstancl In planning your party, phone (-1371 ‘T.)\‘\/” ll<,)I(‘I TIN‘ (:l'..ll' CJ\J