l Elli: (fiuardiuul i lover. Prince Edward Island we The new W. J. flannel. Publiuhu Mon Lowu funk Walla: Ixocutivo Editor Idltor Published ovovy wool: dly morning (oxmpt Sun- ‘lw and statutory holidlys) II I65 Prinz. Strut. flurlottntown. P.E.l.. by Thomson Nowcplpprl Ltd. ouch office: It Summcruidc. Mont-gun. Alber- hn and South. Ropruented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advomung Servscu Toronto. 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894 Monlrcai. 640 Colhcan Shoot. UNivorsity 6-5942, Was-em office. l030 We” rgia Street. Vancoovav (MA 7037). Mombor Canadian Daily Newspaper Publish-n Association and Ibo Canadian Pren. the Canadian Prm ll exclusively enmled lo "I. use to: repub- lication of all new: dispatches 1-: lb-a paper credited to II o' no llIE Associated Press or Rou- ten. and also lo the local new: pubtshed hole- In All rights on republiralion oi wccial disputms heroin also loserved Subscriplion rater. Nol over 35: per week by corner. SILOO a year by mail or nan routes and lull no: serVIced by came: .00 a year on Island and UK. $1000 per year In U.S. and elsewhere cuisido Bllillll Com- mouweallh. NOI over 7: per single (cpy. lvlembev ‘ .m o.‘ Circulation. P-AEE 4 fisoifi", 'rrfiiii‘ivifm’. 19, loci. Frustrations AI Geneva Hopes for reaching agreement on nuclear test ban talks at the Geneva disarmament conference have been shuttered again. After four and a half years of effort. the negotiations are again described as “teetering disheartenineg on the brink of failure.” llut the big pow- ers find it awkward, in face of pres- sure from the smaller nations at the conference table, to admit that they can't agree; and for this reason it is predicted the talks will go on, for months, perhaps for years. “even though all hope has died." Canada's. delegation does not sub- scribe to this pessimistic assessment; of the situation. though it is dis- appointing in view of the Soviet government's recent announcement that it no longer opposed a rigid objection to any form of interna- tional inspection in Soviet territory. When the conference resumed a few days ago. the door seemed open again—though not wide open. The Smriets still refused to per- mit any internationally-staffed control stations on their territory, but they would allow the new auto- matic seismic control stations. They insisted on limiting. such checks on Russian soil. however, to two or three a year-—a figure too small to be accepted by the Uiited States, which insists on a minimum of eight to ten checks 3 year. It Is hard to understand why. If the Russians can guard against the “danger of espionage” during two or three on-site inspections 3 your, the same safeguards cannot be ef- fective for a larger number. It was with no co—operation from them that the Western powers devised new in- struments which make it possible to reduce the essential number of control posts to the minimum now specified—a figure regarded as the very lowest compatible with effec- tiveness. But this was not the only hurde the conference faced when it resum- ed. The Soviet delegation demand- ed the withdrawal, In the very first stage of disarmament. of all armed forces to their own Countries. This would not involve any reduction or limitation of armaments, but it would require the withdrawal from Europe of the means of delivering strategic weapons and their war- heads. and would completely up- set the current balance of military power. I- It would have virtually no ef- fcbt on the Russian strategic for- £08. Which no doubt was why It was put forward as a Soviet pro- posal, In the pretty certain expect- ation that it would prove unaccept- able. Civic Housmg Need We note that the city's recently completed housing report by Mr. Walter de Silva, provincial planning officer. received strong endorse- moot at last week’s annual meeting of the Catholic Social Welfare Bur- eau. It is to be hoped that other organizations will study its recom- mendations so well. This Is part of the report to which we referred in these columns on Friday, and we give here some further gleanings from its pages. Tho report notes that approxi- My 90 per cent of the central ms of Charlottetown was built m to 1900. Consequently there ‘dpvelopmmts such as streets, m, houses 1nd amenities that «date, and these will have ‘ replaced or rehab- fir to meet the just- l'mn-v one Blob). public demands In toms of modern needs such as automobile parking, sanitary and recreational facilities—and, above all good and adequate housing. Amongst the pre-1900 age group of buildings are to be found some examples of buildings in a good state of repair. Investigations have revealed that in the main these buildings are owned by citizens of the higher income groups, or are situated in well defined and main- tained residential areas and have no adjoining disturbing non-rosi- dential operations which depreciate the properties. As a result, owners or landlords have maintained their properties in fair condition. On the other hand, most of the blighted housing has succumbed as a result of neglect. All the areas for which redevelopment is recommend- ed contain buildings of poor or derelict condition. a high proportion of blight and decay in terms of housing. hcullh and environment. There is considerable crowding in these deficiency areas, and the poorest families have to pay high and often exorbitant rates for the meagre and inadequate shelter they maintain. A high proportion of the people in these neglected areas can- not, afford to buy a house of their own. or meet interests rates on monthly payments. Therefore the report recommends, as the only course of action advisable. the pro- vision of subsidized housing with federal-provincial assistance. A Petty Gesture Announcement last week that the United Nations planned to spend $3,000.000 on agricultural research in Cuba has stirred vio- lent reactions in the United States. The project is to provide technicians in animal husbandry, grasslands management and plant pathology. and it is an undertaking of the UN. Special Fund directed by Mr. Paul G. Hoffman, an American who pre- viously administered the Marshall Plan. Washington has indicated that no American money will be spent on the scheme. This is going pretty far. Unlike other UN. accounts, nations are not assessed for contributions to the Special Fund and the related U.N. Technical Assistance Pro- gram, but make them voluntarily. Even the Russians contribute. Cuba, of course, is a member of the Un- ited Nations. The aim of the. Special Fund is to show how the human and natural resources of a country can be used to make it more prosperous. which is surely one of the best ways of preventing chaos and promoting stability. These objectives are mainstays of that part of the American foreign aid program that is not devoted to military purposes. Not only under- developed countries but the Com- munist countries of Poland and Yugoslavia are. aided under it. Moreover, the United States proper- ly took the lead in arguing success- fully before the International Court of Justice that special levies upon U.N. member nations for schemes of this kind should be paid in the same way as regular assessments, even if these are contrary to national policy. It is unfortunate that in this in- stance the United States is doing the very thing it has persistently condemned in others. Its attempt to block U.N. aid to Cuba is not going to hurt the Castro regime half as much as it will effect American prestige In the eyes of the world. EDITORIAL NOTES The Canadian Historical Society Certificate of Merit has been award- the Canadian Geographical Journal for an outstanding contri- bution to history in Canada. Arti- cles which influenced the award in- cluded an examination of what the canoe and the hunt for beaver skins did in the development of Canada and an analysis of the decisive bat- tle of Chrysler's Farm in 1813. 0 '0 I In the Chinese calendar. this is the Year of the Rabbit. But, says an exchange, in the Canadian fed- \ eral income tax calendar it’s going to be the Year of the Headache. Compared to what the poor tax— payer went, through in filing his tax forms last year, this year’s forms will be unbelievable. At TINT. glance, it may seem some new taxes have been added. But that's not really the case—jth some new ortithmetic. ii i be fair or foul. “CAN WE COUNT ON THE INDIANS?” WEATHER LORE Rich Storehouse Of Fact And Fancy National Geographlc News Bulletin Even as wcathcr satellites regularly circle the earth‘ men still look to the setting sun to decide whether tomorrow will l l The old rhyme. "Rod in the l morunz. sn'lor lake warning: ‘ red at night. sailor‘s delight,"i is one of many proverbs de- scribing omens associated with i certain types of weather. I a present-day bus-g bandman would agree with - Gcrvnsc Markham, the 17th- ' ccnturv Enfllish writer on coun- l i try life: “Although God is the only dircclor and ruler of all ; things. governing the yeeres. l daycs. minutes and scasons of | the ycerc. yet it shall be behove- ful for every husbandman to I know lhc signs and tokens as I when it is likely to rain (and) . ? snow,‘ 1 vcrbs believes that almost half ; ; oi thcm rcllccl scicntific fact. MANY BASED ON FACT A physics professor who slud- ch more than 300 weather pro- ‘, c — “Mackerel sky. mack- , erel sky: nevcr long wet. never ‘ " knowledge on the matter or it. ‘ ful gcsturc— but, when th ere PUBLIC FORUM This column In open to the discussion enter lnln any correspondence regard- In: Icllers submitted. ‘ soums RESCUE l SIr.—« On February 15, 1963, I an article appeared In Th a Guardian, possibly in o t h e r papers too. under the heading "19 Islanders Receive Life Sav- Ing Awards". In my opinion this article seems to be incnmplete —possibly because of lack of might be a polite way of brush- ing aside this particular award which I am about to mention. To present an award to peo- ple is by all means a wonder- arc others equally heroic who didn't rcceive mention at all, it is high time to step in a n d {hi-ow some light on the mat- er. Of the awards given haven't we overlooked one particular r award from S o u r i s? Reflect ' back to the latter part of July of last year, when Constable Jam— ' es Dunn and Ronald (B u t c h) Chevcrle snatched a six- year- 1 old boy. son of Mr. and Mrs. ‘ Alban Gallant of Souris. from i the sea. To do this they didn't ’ merely grab for him while standing on the land—nor dId they have the proper boats to aid them In their rescue. l . at all. didn‘t the Ilnes read: "A frantic mother stood on the shore pointing at a black speck on the sea about one mile away." This speck was her six-year-old boy clinging loosely to an inflated rubber car tube. ly by swimmlng. and partly by paddling a b ro k e n down canoe with a board. the ‘ rescue was staged. ' Isn't this rescue worthy of i mention?— maybe a medal or plaque as awarded to the other nineteen. This is the only forgot- ten one which I have In mind. aybe there were others. How l ut It'.’ I am. Slr, etc. DEMETERIUS GALLANT Sourlr, P.E.I. (Mm. Evelyn Cudmore. c‘halr- man of the Red Cross Water Safety Committee. explains her committee investigates only those rescues Which are brought to Its attention by an Indlvidual or group: it does not assume Investigatltms on Its own Initia- tive. We have been assured that above Incident. now that It has been reported. will be In- mtlnted.—~ Ed. G.) long dry“— refers to c I o u d formations that usually indicate weather changes. “When swallows fly low, it will rain and low." “When fish jump to scck th e sky, It‘s sure to rain bye and bye." These two sayings put good reasoning to rhyme. The low- flylng swallows and lea p Ing fish are after insects. w h i ch can't gain much altitude when increasing humidity makes their wings heavy. A surprisingly precise ther- mometer is the cricket. A statis- tics- minded meteorologist found that he could approximate the temperature in degrees Fah~ rcnheit by counting a cricket‘s incidence of chirps in 14 sec- onds and adding 40. A Weather Bureau official looked into the 1 matter and said crickets truly : l proved accurate, within 0 n 9 degree. three times out of four. Some proverbs contain, D a . course, more fancy than fact. 1 Scientists scoff at such famed prognosticators as the katydid. 3 which supposedly starts sound- ing off exactly six weeks before the first frost. the notion that certain animals grow heavier fur and caterpil- lars put on extra fuzz before a severe winter. And If a squirrel stores lots of nuts. it doesn't mean w i n for will last longer than usual. It They discount 3 of nuts to hoard. TOO SUCCESSFUL While anyone can become a weather prophet via the popul- ar old rhymes and superstitions. meteorologists scriously oh— scrvo the same omens for ex- periments in weather control and rain making. Under limited conditions, rain has been ro- duced by seeding clouds and air- port runways cleared of fog. one of these experiments has been more dramatic than an in- cident in San Diego some years ago. The City Council engaged a professional rain maker to bring relief to the p a r c h c d area. The gentleman set up his ‘ only proves there were lots l apparatus: Soon after, clouds ‘gathcrcd; rain fell; reservoirs filled; a dam broke; the town was flooded; and several peo- ple died. thn the rain maker tried unsuccessfully to collect his I l fee and then threatened to sue, the city fathers retaliated w‘th a counterthreat to sue for flood ‘ damages. Both suits were event- ually dropped. Though weather lore has been Eden it has always had s ly put it. “To talk of the weather is nothing but fOlIV‘ sun sllincs in the valley.‘ Giving Dallas, Texas, Union employees at Swift‘s packing plant at Fort Worth vot- ed themselves a leié-ccnl- an- hour pay cut to keep the plant from being closed. At Armour's Memphis plant. a ls-ccnt cut and re d u c e d fringe benefits were authorized by the Amalga- mated Meat Cutters local. oth- er unions have agreed to pa y cuts, or deferred requests for raises. to help hard - pressed employers stay In business. In contrast, United Packing- house Workers' r e iu sal to ac- cept a pay slash caused Wilson and Co. to close its Memphis plant. Similar UPW action In A Little Morning Times IAtlanta forced Swift Io nouncc plans to close its there on March 2. a n- plant a little less pay is better than no pay at all. Employccs who demand the last pound of flesh from a losing operation hurt. not only themselves but the entire community In which they live. Unions that sit down with em- ployers to work out problems ,through agreement. as those at ‘ Fort Worth. Memphis and many ‘other cities are doing. show commendable u n d e rstanding and responsibility. Healthy Body Is Best Defense Against Cold By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen AD WASHBURN. A director of the Museum of Science In Boston. has had considerable experience with frostbite, especially among mountain climbers. We doubt whether many of our readers expect to climb Mount McKin- ley or Minya Kaouka but we can profit from many of his sugges- tions. l-le stresses the need for a healthy body as a fundamen- tal defense against severe cold, especially among those who buck the elements at high alti- tudes. miles from help. The h e a t producing mechanism must function properly and the individual must do everything in his power to conserve this heat. once it has been produc- ed. This Is the same logic we use in keeping the home warm. It must have a good furnace. be insulated. and the doors or windows must be clos- ed. Good food Is important be- cause cold weather increases our caloric needs. Foo —— like coal, oil. or gas—supplies the energy that produces heal; Ade- quate clothing. gloves. and footwear are the insulation. Huge quantities of heat can be lost through the lungs, as when panting and ovcrcxerting in extreme cold. Exercise helps to keep warm but should not be done to the extentthat the per- son becomes cxhausted a n d short of breath. Injury and ex- haustion have an adversc cf- fcct on body movements and it Is here that good health enters the picture. Shivering is nature's way of moving muscles to generate heat. At high altitudes this pro- tective mechanism Is impaired and heat production during rest. is reduced. The high altitude 31- so affects breathing, and unless the climber takes it easy. he is likely to lose heat through the building since the Garden of f i I skeptics. As the Scots poclical- ‘ l “When it rains. on the hlll, the = 0 one wants less money. but Could Quebec Survive? Montreal Star There was a time when the old French stock In Qu ebec provInce had a marvellous cap- acity to absorb and expand take In Its embrace Wol fe‘s Highlanders, the Irish famine victims and other strangers. To- day. we fear, certain elements of this same stock hcve be- come Ingrown suspicious and xenophobic. However. put It. any way you will. the facts are there. All of 1.000.000 people of this province are English Canadians. This Is no tiny minorlty. As we h a v c said before. we are here , right. Here we shall stay a n d our voice shall he heard. We are perturbed when w a listen to statements about u- federatlon's last chance. the wniter continues What are the alternatives? Have they thought out? It seems to some of us that an independent Que- bec, unless It folIoWed Castro Into communism. would be un- able radically to alter Its own economic balance. The facts of ownership would not change. nor would the fact that English Is the language of commerce. Just as It Is In Mexico. Just as It Is. largely. In the markets of the world. We don't belove. most of us. that an Independent 0 u e b e e could survive. What had been Canada would tumble, by two stages and In two parts. In to the American meltlug put. I n- dependence ls more than seman- tics and symbols. as the young I orators of Quebec should learn. 0 I All the geopolitical and econom- ic factors are against it. Therefore the “last chance" is a myth until you In r n around. Confederation is Que- bec's last chance. All that Is unl- . que, more, most of all that is worth preserving ca nsurvive only under the Canadian com- promise. Without II. the la n (I would be here still. and the peo- ple. but the people wouldn't know what hit them. I Possibly the Canadian c o m- I promise need 3 to be revised: undoubtedly English C a n ada needs to in end its manners. That Is where the Canadian ex- amlnation of conscience comes In. Unless the examination is conducted honestly. without ora- tory, heat or prejudice on either side, even this last chance .— r. II doomed. BOMB CONSULATE BARCELONA, Spain (knu- eral~A small home-made bomb exploded outside the French consulate-general here Saturday nlght It was learned Monday. No one was hurt and there was only slight damage. The Span- Ish pollce have rounded up slx alleged members of the anti- Gnulllst French Secret my Organization during the last few 1!: following secuflty talks be- tw:len French and Spanish offl- c I. lungs and become cold and ex- haustcd. Other factors must be con- warm and to avoid frostbite. Cold air is not as dangerous as ‘ a combination of wind and cold. ‘ Mr. Washburn says the chilling effect of air at 20 degrees bove zero combined with a 45- mile wind ls identical to that of air at 40 degrees below, coupl- cd with a 2-mile brcczc. thn walking through the snow it is well to realize th at when the air is zero it maybe several degrees colder a foot beneath the surface. l ACHING MUSCLES J. writes: I'm suffering from fibrositis. I know it's in- curable but could you give me any information that will help me understand tchcondition? 4 i .sldercd when trying to k eep Fibrositis comes in many forms and frequently is cur- ablc. Ordinary stiff neck is an example. Fibrositis is a vague disorder and is related to lum- ago and other muscular . aches and pains. It usually re- ‘ sponds to heat, massage, and l exercise. I RHEUMATIC HEART U.E. writes: How Is a rheu- matic heart diagnosed? REP Mosl victims have a history of rheumatic Icvcr: murmur, ? indicating leakage of a valve: an abnormality in the size and shape of the heart: and chang- es the electrocardiogram l compatible with this type of heart disease. i BUFFALO HUMP ‘ G..l. writcs: Whot causes do- , wager's hump - the lump at the back of the neck? I am on- ly five pounds overweight. R l Poor posture, fatigue. and l overweight usually plav a role. LCOIIOLIC LIVER Mrs. AM. writes: How can a hardened liver be softened? PLY i I Stop drinking. I ‘TODAY’S HEALTH HINT—- Smoking beclouds other sym- ,ptoms of respiratory diseases. Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO February 19, 1938 London, Feb. 17 — (CP Cable) — The Air Mlnlstry today an~ nounced a new short-service scheme for the Fleet Air Arm will be put into effect In April with the object of adding to the flying strength of- the naval air branch. A proportlon of the offl- , In the new short-service ’ branch will come from the Roy- . al Navy and the Royal Marines. a o -1 W Last. evening the local Salva- tion Army Corps held a dinner In honor of Commandant Will- Iam Hargrove who In conducting special servlces at the Citadel this week. Commandant Hal'- grove was stationed here over twenty-seven years ago. 'TEN YEARS AGO February 19. 1953 Sackvllle. N. B. - (CPI —- Only non-smokers will be eligible for the Herbert S. Sharp scholar- ships at Mt. Allison Unlverslty. Mr. Sharp who dlcd several months ago at Summerside, P. E. I. felt that anyone wh 0 could afford to smoke could of- ford to pay hls college tultlon. A decision to select one street In the city where the people would lllre assist-nee In beautll‘ylng It and use It as an example of what may be done was reach last night at I meeting of the. Chrlottetown t Planning Assocul on. CLAIMED BY COOK The Island continet of Au:- trallo was claimed for Britain In I770 by Capt. James Cook during hII circumnlvlution of the globe. NOTES BY THE WAY“ Il’l not merely more conno- ous but smarter to pay more attention to what you hear than to what you overheard. —-Oha- tbam News. As I wartime policeman In London I bought a lock Ind chain for the bicycle I was then using. One afternoon I left it chained to some railings In Kil- burn. n I returned two hours later the bicycle was still there, but the lock and chain had been stolen. —Letter in the Tunes. Cows they say have personall- tles of their own; they can be lad or. happy or jealous and so on. The farmer quickly gets to know the quirks of each ani- mal. And here's a story from Italy that Illustrates thIs point. Italian Premier Amintore Fan- fani was touring dairy farms in Calabria when he noticed that all the cows on the farms look- ed alike. Investigating this phenomenon Mr. Fanfanl found that his guide was havlng th e same herd rushed ahead by truck from farm to farm for a more Impressive showing. This is a trick they say used to work on Mussolini, but obviously not on Mr. Fanfani and It is report- ed that the guide was fired on the spot.-— Brookvllle Recorder and Times. By C Canadian Indonesia. with a powerful military machine and no one to fight. is casting increasingly hostile barbs at the planned Malaysian Federation. President Sukarno describes the union to the north, scheduled to come into effect Aug. 31. a neo-colonialist base in disguise. He has promised political and economic activity against it and has warned his army that “we still have a challenge to face." The tone of his attacks ap- pear to bear out fears ex- pressed by‘ Indonesian neigh- bors that Sukarno would need a new external enemy to dis- tract his people from Internal difficulties after the abrupt utch withdrawal from West New Guinea last fall. BUILT STRONG FORCES Before then Indonesia had blamed Its economic difficul- ‘tics on the Dutch. Starting in 1961. Sukarno built up power- lful armed forces to dnive them from West New Guinea. When the Dutch conceded without a fight. Sukarno was left with a strong air force and navy and an army of some 330.- 00 en. His government an- nounced that the forces would be kept at strength as a de- fence against imperialism and to avoid the problems demobi- lization would create. This was greeted with consid- erable uneasiness by neighbor- Ing powers. including Australia. which controls the eastern and f ew Guinea. and Portugal. which shares with Indonesla the Island of Timor. West Java. Within a month unrest broke ious results than the quarrel Two mind readers not on the street. “You're foolhg great." said one to the other. "How am I?" —- Montreal Gazette. A husband my be able to read his wife like a book and yetnotbelblewlhutherup. -Sherbrooke Record Son: “liq. dud, mom jun backed out of the garage and ran over my bicycle." Dad: “Serves you right for leaving It on the front lawn."—Sarnie on. server. A mother In gruburban homo discovered her teenage son slumped dejectedly In a chair In the living room. the picture anguish and depression. She naked her husband. who was all- tlng nearby, what calamity he struck Junim. "He wants to go to the corner drug store," the father said. "but the car won't start."— Hamilton Spectator. A lump wu‘llecm behind the bunker of a golf course when he was discovered by the club‘s secretary, who roused him by mug y poking a golf club In his ribs. “Get off this course and stay of ," he order- ed. “And who are you?" de- manded the tramp. “I'm secre- tp of the club." declared the official. “Well,” replied the oth- er. “that's no way to get new members." — Montreal Star. 6 a-n Indonesia A Threat arman Cumming Press Staff Writer out In the three British-con- trolled territories that share the island with Indo- nesia —— Brunei, Sarawak and North Borneo. The three are scheduled to join Malaya and Singapore in the Malaysian roupmg. After the December revolt In Brunei was broken by the Brit ish. investigators found that many of the insurgents had been armed and trained in In- donesia. Sukarno. while not giv- ing overt military backing lo the rebellion publicly encour- t age . FIGHTS LOSING BA'I'I‘LE Malaya's Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman. drleng force behind the federation Idea has fought a losing battle to try to maintain relations with Indo- nesia. His government this wock ordcrcd a military buildup to meet the Indonesian threat. At the root of Sukarno’s trou- bles is the difficult task of unit- ing a population of nearly 100.- 000.000. composed of dozens of ethnic divisions and scattered over some 3,000 islan s In land area it Is nearly as large as Quebec. But. its struc- ture had made It almost impos- sible to weld it into a cohesive economic and political unit. De- spite great resources the stand- ard of living is one of the low- ' est in Southeast Asua. Now Indonesian "volunteers" are reported gathering In Bor- neo to help free the British-held tcrrltooies. This could lead to n ‘ direct clash with British troops that would have far more serl- with the Dutch. Are You Square? Montreal Citizcu .- A Madison Avenue advertis- ing agency president has come iout foursquare to restore a six- Iletter word to Its proper place .in everyday talk. The word is, l"squaro." We think he‘s Ehold of something. Adam Charles H. Brower re- minds us that b a c k In Mark Twain's day. "square" was one of the best words In the la n- guage... you ga e a man a souare deal if you were honest. (He adds: “You gave him a square meal w h on he was hungry. When you got. out of debt. you were 3 q u a r c with the world. And that was when you could look your fellow man square in e .. p. 3' e ye. Then a lot of characters ran down the word. esult: “A square today Is a m never learned to get an w h o away with EOII. it; a Joe who volunteers w h e n he doesn't have to; I guy who gets his kick from trying to do something better than anyone else can... “This country was discover. ed, put together. fought for and saved by squares -— athan Hale. Patrick Henry, Paul Re- vere. George Washington..." Brower dares us to get with It -—get back to this nation's old beliefs In such things as “Ideas, pride. patriotism, loyalty. devo- tion—even wo k." a How about joining the club? I The FLYIIIII IIIITIIIIMAII RESTAURANT “Where Cooking Is A Work of Art” 99.999090 l. ’ SAVINGS a, 4 ‘7. faculties without Interest on minimum quarterly b‘Icncel credited hull yearly. lads-um mt 880M DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS Interest on minimum monthly balances credited he]! you-1y. Withdrawals made over the counter. uni-In mint 2 WAYS TO EARN EASTERN TRUST ACCOU NTS ' churn; @1131th must W 154 Richmond Street. Charlottetown Branch” Am- and. or! #44 ii