. Covers Pe ‘tenerd Island Like The Bew . Age wd Hancex, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank ker Morealne Editor A age lished every week day morning (except Sun : “diy nd statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.|., by Themson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. ; Represented nationally by Thomsen Newspapers an -* Advértising® Services: Toronto; 425 University Ave. yi _ Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- reity 65942) Western. Office 1080 West Georgie Sreet Vancouver MA 7087. - Member Canadian Dally Newspaper Publishers Association and: The Canadian Press. The Canadian ray ot I dispatches in this paper ‘Gadited to ‘ or to the Associated Press or Reviers and also the loca! news published herein. tight. er republication of special dispatches here in also reserved. Subscription rate: - Not over 40c per week by carrier. : * $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and arees not serviced by carrier. . 5 $15.00 a yearoff Island and .U.K. $20.00. per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Britiah Com monwealth, ‘Not ever. 10¢ single yy: Member Audit Cures. of Cireulation: me 2PAGE 4 “TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1966. - Britain Rules | Any event which.can capture the — Interest of 92,000 people on the scene ‘and uncounted millions. of television —ing—mention: Just such an: event was_the-final match in world competition -in ‘the me we call soccer. It was, played’ ast Saturday in ‘Wembley Stadium and one of the more interested, and: prea excited -specbitors was er Majesty Queen Elizabeth. The me was more than just a thrilling, hard-fought match; it was’a real ex- - hibition of how-the game should be "Played by the best performers in the world. The footwork was fantastic in the display:of how to control a ball. 1. But to’ many. people accustomed © to the bruising battles in hockey:and football where tempers flare and _ sticks and fists are raised in combat. the big--interest was-the splendid sportsmanship’ displayed. England and. Germany have twice been at war, ~and peace does not necessarily mean the wiping out of old memories and ; _old hatreds. Yet.the two teams which battled’ their way into the final in a | competition involving more than 50 | nations showed } n@, signs of personal of national enmity. Instead, if some- thing.a bit outside the rule book hap- pened the playera: involved: helped _each_other—to-rise or immediately "|. turned to shake hands to show there. - were no hard- feelings over the inci-. dent. That happened, not once, but many times: during the long after- noon--when, the game-ran:-into’ over-; time. If international amnity can be - found on a football field let’s settle international differences there as its rhe rm — reason ene eC RPE PG ENSUE PR pO a ‘Needs More... | Mandoais from a benevolent ‘gov. ernment: apparently do not in them- , selves eradicate poverty. For instance, over the past three decades the Unit- ed States have spent $100,000, 000,- 000 on. their welfare” system. : Despite all the welfare cheques, . there are'still some nine million fam- ilies, averaging’ four persons per hqusehold, ‘who are obliged to get . along on an annual cash income of around $1,800 for each family, that "4s, about $150 a month. . These discouraging © figures are provided by the assistant director of: Washington’s task force charged with waging the war on poverty. While he admits the failure of the welfare scheme to this point, he is optimistic that perhaps more realistic spending of. government funds can in the fu- ture change the picture considerably. What is needed are well thought out programs to get to the source of pov- erty and correct the conditions that . are responsibile, whether by retain- i ing schemes or by developing small- : i business or by incentives:o.job creat- ing enterprises on the. local level. } There is an awakening public in- | terest in participation in the war a*ainst poverty. In many parts of the United States, citizens organizations have begun to clamor ‘for a voice in deciding how the government funds. ’. for the war against poverty are to be spent on the local level. It has been said more than once that government planners are unimaginative and tend : to; ‘generalize too much. The. private Citizens have their own ideas of -_ waging the war in their own familiar theatre of operations and require only thé necessary funds to put their pro- ha into action..." ~~ -Hyman- Bookbi ditector, of the Office of Economic ‘ the annual Lake Couchiching con- ference in Ontario near Orillia and has told his Canadian audience he is gute that if the United. States gov- ernment will only siphon off*a little more of the $732,000,000,000 a year “ih of natiopal product towards the war “ on poverty it. will be possible to wipe out: poverty within ten- years. This All | ‘viewers is worthy of*more than oe ner: ‘the ‘deputy . | Opportunity, has been taking part in : eile \ $ official ‘says that Washington fs mov ing already in the right direction. Last year the appropriation tr the war: “on poverty was $768 million... This 500,000,000. 2-2 a7” The peat: thing is that the US.- administration is making this. large commitmént despité the exigencies of the war it is fighting in Viet Nam, despite the demands of the foreign aid program and in spite of what is. needed .elsewhere on the. economic ' front at home. re Most: important ingredient, how- “ever, is that the people of the United States mus be in favor of complete dedication to stamping out ‘the wor- ries and handicaps of the poor. What Mr: Bookbinder has-had to say should he of universal interest here now that Canada is girding for a similar way on poverty. Perhaps we can_ profit from-the earlier campaign defeats of our neighbors and avoid such amush- es and reverses in planning our own’ strategy and.deployment of funds and troops. Humphrey Seaake Out The “‘war-on poverty” hasn't been going too well in the United States. ‘It hasn’t, indeed, been making any . $ensafional progress in this ceuntry - either. But we’ haven't heard any leading. Canadian politician speak out about. it in the blunt manner that U.S. Vice-President Hubert Humph- rey did the~other day in New Or- leans. -It was indeed a scarifying | speech he made, with no holds bar- -Tred. Throwing away his prepared text; he started off by saying. that he might lead- “a mighty good revolt” - if, like millions of black Americans, he had to live in a city ghetto with rats nibbling at his children’s: feet. Mr. Humphrey. warned that’ un-- less the urban poor -get rent sub- sidies s0bit: from a rather reluctant | ; Congress, “we will have open viol-~ énce in-every-major-city and _coun- ty in America.” Then, scorning ‘at- tempts by authorities-in Chicago and © Cleveland to stem. Negro ‘unrest, he declared: “It’s time for government officials - to recognize the ' National Guard is no arswer. to fhe problem: _of the slums.” - A Washington commentator notes that Mr. Humphrey is often accused -of indulging in hyperbole; but on this. occasion he was talking straight. What he said underlined the admin- istration’s belated Tecognition that. it faces two -guerrilla wars-—one in Viet Nam, the other in the great cities of | America. And the Viet Nam “war could be. over before the domestic one unless the root causes are dealt with soon, and on a massive scale. The Johnson government is cred- ited with making a fair start with the war on:poverty and the job corps, which cost American taxpayers more than $2 billion a yeaf. Yet the civil rights. leaders insist that. it will cost $100 billion over 10 or 15 years to ‘clean up the ghettoes, and ‘eliminate the poverty, ignorance and despera- tion on which the black extremists are now capitalizing. ° ~ To those who argue that this is a fantastic sum, its proponents point out that estimates of Viet Nam costs “vary between $1.5 billion and $2 bil- lion a month. Viet Nam could cost year it is iust about doubled at $1 : * i. Fk DIDDLE. “DIDDLE __ THE CAT and THE Frovt. = HE LITTLE DOG LAUGHED To. SEE SUCH SPORT Many thinking Canadians have | long been unhappy — as Parlia-, | ment Hill is well. aware —. about the drift of our country, about ‘in many fields, and about the destroy. our | standards and val- ues;--— “The motive of those. who are damaging .our country may be “otherwise, but the effect is exactly as if Communists -were demoralizing the country for a take-over: ridicule the- family, mock religion, scoff at* our con- _Stitutional institutions, ignore the law, give the police a bad name,, - belittle persona] morality, and encourage the use_of.such_anti- -social artifacts as,narcotics, li-. -quér and the pill. *. Inthe consequent 1 laise, there has been widespread talk about the-need to create a new _ nationwide — leadership movement, to which all men and “women of Soodwill would tend their. support. Call this. a. politi- cal party ff you’ like, it ‘would be a party -whose platform is to tain Canadianism; to strengthen Canadian sovereignty: to pro- tect the freedom of the individ- ual; to make Canada the best | place in the’ world in which to be. OLD PARTIES FAIL . So on Parliament Hill there fs | talk of such a movement, possi- | bly called The Confederation Party. Confederation Clubs have | regularly, in many cities. It -would.-bring French and Eng- _lish-speaking together in under- standing, and help all Canadians | to move forward together to- ‘wards the great future which could be ours, and which Sir Wilfrid Laurier promised us this century. . This, would be Canadians’ an- swer to the failure of the two $20 billion during the ‘next year alone. Surely, the leaders say, the country ip can afford $100 billion over the next 15 years to win the 6ther war. _.. ‘We. haven’t.a- problem of. that . Magnitude in Canada, of course.: But perhaps we may have to revise our. estimates on what ‘0 our own “war on poverty” should be costing if we really mean to wage it effectively. . EDITORIAL NOTE Figures-issued by the Meat Pack- -ers’ Council of Can/ada. show Canad- | ians eat an average of 140 pounds: ‘each of beef and veal, pork, mutton.- and lamb per year. Thus puts us be- hind New Zealanders at 240 pounds; . Australians at 219; Argentinians, 216; Uruguayans, 203;.and Americans, 169. The British are right behind us at 139, the French follow with 132, the Danes, 130 and the Swiss, 116. Canadian per capita meet- consump- tion- breaks down into 80*pounds of beef and veal, 51 of pork, and four of gmutton and lamb. * te A _ Now. it’s “megtrans” ‘that’s making traffic records. It flashed across the Ohio countryside last Sun- | day at breathtaking speed, in con- cluding its initial tests by the New York Central System. “Megtrans” is’ a ' old parties, which now ‘are pro- _ viding only doubt and: political | carrots. We had the decisive is- sue of the new flag, introduced prematurely. Now we have ano- | emotional issue in integration of the arni-' | ‘ther highly- -charged ed forces.’ Associated wht™that is the ‘determination, already made and being implemented by the Defence Department, to drop | the word ‘Royal’ from al] names in our armed, forces, .Not, | even concealed under a cover of discretion is the plot between Liberals and Creditistes from | Quebec to make Canada a re- publie by the year 1970. This “the Liberal heirarchy seeming- ly goes along with, partly'as the price. it must pay for its support and domination by~ the huge French- Canadian parliamentary “wing; and partly because this is another step along the road to the Mackenzie King target of , breaking Canada’s ties with Britain and the Commonwealth, in. a policy of continentalism. .NEW MOVE IN THE OPEN So now the intervention. of non- -politicians in political activ- ity is emergiag into the open One keynote of this is the new the lack of. inspiréd leadership; anarchist — like campaigns to jood of mia-_| perc Canada and to main- | raise our, children — as it could | already been formed, and meet Ri dy i ack and shackling ug firmly to USA | ~ PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by correspondents: of questions pt in lerest. The. Guardian does not neces sarily endorse the opinion of corres. pondents. All letters published are sub. ject™to editing and tondensation where necessary. The Guardian ts unable te enter inte any ’ correspondence regard tig letters submitted. short for magalopglis transportation a “‘megilopolis, being a heavily pop- ( ulated stretch in which one netro-* | politan cluster of city Observers estimated the. vehicle's Speed: on_ its final run from Rutler, Ind., to Bryan, Ohio at anywhere from 140 to 225 “miles per hour, and suburbs | | virtually adjoins: another. 74 \ -- PRAISE FOR P.E.L. | Sir,—Having recently.’ com, | pleted a week of camping and | traveHihg through Prince Ed- "| ward Island, we haye nothing but praise for fine treatmeat everywhere. Your officials. are . polite: and courteous. | Camp- grounds clean and inexpensive. Roads are very good. - J- am, Sir, ete., © .THE: OLAF OLSEN’S Millerton, N.Y. UL” : * ECONOMIC NURSERY RHYME. “OTTA WA REPORT by Patrick Nicholien Talk New:National Leadership Movement National Public Affairs Reseatth | | Foundation, supported by many | | although some believe they may | stage a take-over of the Conser- | €anadians who have previous- | ly been divided as supporters of | at ieast four parties. These are: not professional polticians: they are ordinary, Canadians -in ev- ery walk of life right across Ca- nada who-are exceedingly wor- ried__by—the—-way—ourprofession- | al politicians are drifting. This isa ‘grass-roots _move- ment, and among its supporters | are some household names: the western sportsman and newspa- per owner Max Bell:: a son of former Liberale Prime Minister” St. Lawrent, Renault:— Bob | Brown, a Calgary~ oil operator; am group, and many such. proteet: special privilege, it is a Johnny Canuck,.movement; these people are not, specifically talk- This ts not a group aiming fo To Revive Lake Erie = | ing about forming a new party, | vative party. Primarily, their, | task is jo awakén Canadians / our shipping birthright. They certainly have ample | cause for worry — not least-at | the remarkable._arrogance,—the+ ‘dictatorial actions, of the pres- ent government. vivid _ex- ample of this’ passed un- noticed: I refer-to the shocking | | admission by | Hellyer that he has insulted | Parliament and contravened. cen- | turies of 4egal- and parliamen- tary precvedence by —-~‘editing 0 | Defeace Minister | ne! a Ye An-Ohioan is a heavy ‘burst a. blood vessel while cou- ghing. The stocky person with an inelastic, -barre shaped ‘chest is more susceptible: Vio- lence such as a squeeze causes husband _ welcomes _ home _ his tee wife with a bear hug and sna her rib. ” Adhesive tapé™is the standard > remedy but it does little good-un- | ‘less the chest is almost encircl- ed except for two or three inch- more comfortable. It usually is- wrapped completely. around the | chest in contrast to ordinary ad- | hesive. Healing time varies with the age_of the victim but as a. Tule several weeks elapse be- fore pain and tenderness abate. CARBON MONOXIDE. - POISONING | : |; M. A._writs: Can carbon | monoxide get’ into the blood- stream, ‘and if so how can it be |checked?: I. would- like to. know | what oe upon the] | body. pon ee REPLY It gets into \ the : bloggstream inhaled. The ood oxygen a is. present. in the carbon monoxide to air. Headache... dizziness, vomiting; excessive .sweat- Hae chest pain, and unconscious--) nss are ithe usual manifesta- | | and censoring’ the evidence to be | tions. Basil Dean, publisher of an Ed= | given’ before ~a- parliamentary” | monton newspaper of the “South- | committee_by-: one witness, Ad- | miral. Landymore.— “Canada’s” ~ newly” cierved| | “freedom . fighters’ deserve to | sueceed, and merit the support | of all good men. Cornwall Standard-Freeholder The battle against ‘pollution of the Great Lakes and St. Law- rence River is being waged with ‘all possible vigor, although it | will take some years ‘before ithere'll__be—any—worthwhile—re- ‘sults. The pollution problem has been allowed to get out of hand a by aesioedns in. both Canada and the United States. Result is ithat it will cost miany millions ‘of dollars and much hard work before the situation can be rem- ‘streams flowing into Lake Erie, the shallowest, and most pollut- ‘ed, have pledged they would end industrial and municipal pollu- ‘tion of that lake. Hope was ex- pressed the program could be completed by 1970. If the project is a success, Lake Erie, fre- quently referred to as:a ‘‘dying lake,” may be restored to the level of a fresh water lake. whose chances of becoming pol- The Seuhad game of ‘“‘chick- | en" takes grotesquely different | | forms. It may be the playfully disas- trous jousting with automobiles to see by how little death can be cheated. Another version is the | jumping from railway trestles | into-water. heneath as trains ap- proach ; : | The quality being tested: by | | these youngstersicould be called | daring: but courage is not’ an j element. And-— daring, —-without courage or purpose, is an empty quality. What ate these kids risking, really? Is it their own bodies and a brief life that has left little or 'no mark on their years? Of course: it isn't. What they are risking {s the, happiness, the | hopes of the several people who have brought them into the | world, nurtured them. schooled | them, clothed them and brought them the leisure hours in which | they can play with death. In the newest game played by Pickering teenagers on a rail road bridge, they bring anxiety |to the railread-operators who } must panic at the sight of young- _gsters on the track ahead of | them with no apparent means of | escape The fact that the zame is fileg- al is a-minor point. The fact that it causes dsitress | and anxiety to some and could | Mean, stark misery to others is important. Adventure. is the stuff of youth and,. sensibly directed. is good. But, foolishly indulged. it can endanger the lives of others who | are impelled to try to rescue them from mountain sides, gor- | ges. caves. and waters re It would be satisfying to think that this, (translated te the young. The juted again would be almost neg- ligible. * This scheme is of interest to | Canada, and particularly Ontar- | io, which ‘is spending some $600,- -000:000--in--investigation—of-Great— Lakes pollution. This year Can- .ada’s outlay..for the same rea- ‘son; amounts to approximately | $1,000,009. Four yecrs from now this expenditure: is expected to | treach $5,000,000 on pollution re- search along with remedial work. . The anti-pollution campaign | Should. be pressed ‘forward. with | ‘all possible haste‘ and vigor. Ac- | cording to the International. Joint Commission, municipa! se- wage, industrial wastes and land draining have been the-key caus- es of pollution. The Ontario Wa- ter Resources Commission not | authorized heavier pen- | long ago alties for industries which fail to ; comply with anti- pollution regu | lations. “ Much Too Daring ‘Ottawa Journal tragedy is that it ortbably can’t and the only thing the more ma- | ture can do is to keep on trying | bis transmit it. ABANDON FAIR . FOAM LAKE, Sask. The Foam Lake Agricultural | !of the past. After 58 years as ‘a group devoted to sponsoring | summer and fall fairs, the so- | ini has voted to disband. Our Yesterda s (From The Guardian ‘OUR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian Files) _, (August 2, 1941). Britain and Finland formally completed: their severance of di- plomatic relations, and the Brit- | ish. minister in Helsinki was in- | structed to ask for his passport. Authorities would not say whe-. ther Britain contemplated put- ting Finalnd in the category of “tenemy- occupied territory’’, as European countries overrun by or associated with the Axis. A million barrels: of Nova | Scotia apples will be driedt'h ic year to meet indicated demands of consumers in Great Britain. ‘TEN YEARS AGO (August 2, 1956) The Queen gave royal assent j to a bill whieh will enable the | eventual welding of Caribbean islands into one coun- ay— a , The Western Three invit- ‘ed the Soviet and Fgvot | to participate in a 2-country; conference aimed at. setting up reasoning could, be | international: control of the Suen .. (CP)— | Society says fairs are’a thing - TWENTY .- FIVE YEARS AGO | ‘has ‘been done in most otter’ 10 British | the Caribbean Federation. | EXCESS. FACIAL HAIR Mrs._J.V.-writes: H a-woman develops excessive hair on the \face during pregnancy, ‘will | go away ‘after the.baby is born?_ j > REPLY > This depends upon the cause. When. the. growth of facial hair is purely coincidental to preg-_! mancy, there is a good chance .jthat it will persist..On the other | haad if-it is caused by a sem- jporary glandular imbalance. it is likely to disappear after con- finement. My advice is to wait and see what happens LIVER SHOTS ‘still given for anemia? i REPLY .- Yes, for pernicious anemia, j but many. physicians prefer vit- ; amin B12. : MAY LINGER S. W. writes: How long does it take for all symptoms of virus | pneumonia to disappear? REPLY } cases require up to six months. ‘Topay's HEALTH HINT— ils are easier to cut af- bar’ a warm bath. | (NOTE: All correspondence | to Dr. Van Dellen should be | addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- ; une, Chicago, Ilinois.) -|Broken Ribs And Coughthe "= By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | &@ rib to snap. An overly zealous! of ing absorb- the 4 poison. wer, fiail-has accounted for only nau-. one known death in the United | States — a Texas farmer who> ~_ NOTES BYTHE WAY im— and that after she put out thriving — by making. freckle tuxedo and blac |tists have askéd echool princt “Sure,"" said the wife, ‘pals to sell raw carrots and ap. “the. undertaker.” - Financial {Ples instead of candy and bis ‘stores for leftover bows and ar- | |specting school principal to An trees | British womai ; “A Hamilton man—who- huriel nned \from driving (a milk bottle and can of syruj j smoker | Pe i or ‘until she is at his whe coughs v periodically. ‘from 1/4. when, presumably, she will noxious when he {s drunk. Only gets out of bed “have learned ber. lesson: ‘—Otta- Soccer he misses. — Hamiltot tator. sister says he isnot. ob e The ‘cosmetic industry hat thrived on women who wanted That evening, '|to conceal their freckles. N ou they've come back in style, and still '. Over in Salford, England, den - jcults at the school snack ito help fight tooth decay. Those dentists should be told that. the ‘sound of a couple of hundred 'drink, eed Herwid. $200 Million Every Year the moment ‘he m Oe marine uti he retires, abe Journal. nas typical cigaret cough ‘The and of bouts : oie husband was. advise | vere tna oie ore oe < by a Wie paychiotrisi to tough: eee: 8 Died voted wh T1A | aig ‘cndibary. quiet gic. 10d he | While out ef town on business ee mad Coad chee sea nad oe (ine cosmetic industry. ° is he awakened in the night 1 | sharp. stabbing pain" over “the is eine Mehat tt vot (Ra ee oe . Whee he lout ‘alone, hee declered, and Me se ia ue lyou know who's going to dress. to sit up aind walking about | eo the room he felt somewhat -bet- : ef Boag pain returned whenever a deep breath and cough- | Post. : 3 "flac betel Seiwician. wade a | Tw ee of Hastings 1 es vsician made a. attie astings is now diagnosis A age el 900 years in the ,-80-4t's no plied adhesive to ease die- | pest kids Sere ee | and the left side of the chest also was tender to the fOWws.—Calgary Herald. touch. Coughing was agonizing and occasionally the patient felt @ grating sensation over the. in- | ¥olved. region: -X- rays -of the lungs and chest wall demonstrat- ‘ National Geographic Society de four fractured ribs. : ‘ Since he had’ not been in an ac- la Hailstorms beat a ‘ path -of ley cident the only explanation was |- destruction across. the: United ‘|that the ribs were broken in a I States every summer. Coughing epell. | Unfortunately for farmers, the “From™ thisit" would “appear to Stornis reach their peak «in ¢ be easier to break a rib than to | growing season when the ‘icy | pellets can do the most damage to crops. A single: storm in Ne- braska once smashed wheat that would have yielded some three million. bushels. Hail costs from $150 to $200 ‘ million in crops every year, and {damages at least $25 million {worth of property. Kansas and | Nebraska- suffer the greatest los- | Ses. 18 INCHES OF HAIL, Hailstorms seldom: last more }than 15 minutes, but-hail pelted Selden, Kansas, continuously~for- 85 minutes on June 3,- 1959, The stones piled up 18 inches deep.” | The. weight buckled ray roots; A historic 1881 storm -Ne- | braska- drove ice pean roofs 'and even house ~ sidings: The pslones. stripped orchards, flatten- fed grain, and severely injured livestock. Men were hurt trying to réscue frightened animals. A 19th-century «storm in Mis- souril punched out all the knots from fee siding of a house, leav- ~ perforated like Swiss eee One man-claimed- he -had | /to cut the ice out of his: stove- | pipe before he could start a fire. In spite of its destructive po- was caught-unprotected in a field 35 years ago. In India, L however. 230--people were. killed. -hailstones .‘ "| joining W. B. writes: Are liver shots . | | 1 | by.an 1888 storm _that dropped tas large. as. cricket balls. rey Sane it | This week the first 50 field | workers of the Company of Young | Canadians have finished their indoctrination course and head- | ed off across the country on their various assignments. Four of the volunteers are Vancouver's operation | Outreach program designed to | overcome that city’s juvenile | delinquency - problem. Another | is heading west to work with wid- | owed and deserted mothers need- | ing assistance. One volunteer | will spend his first two years as-.| sisting in the development of co- operatives in the Newfoundland — and another is to ‘as-— sist in an adult education pro- | Usually 10 days—but— ‘so m-e-gram-_in—an—eastern—Ontario— 1, Add bright new beauty te | | outports, MOTOR REWINDING MUN SINC aaa ca tam a) 136 P rince St., ¢ a OAS aa) o interest on inl GUARANT tans ey FEDERALLY INCORPORATED AND SUPERVISED POR OVER SEVENTY YEARS - A. A. ae MANAGER . "18 eho @ Interest paid half yearly or may be compounded @ Minimum amount, $500. e@ Principal and I nierest guarainteed EASTERN & CHARTERED TRUST Lae “ large pieces. The average stone ‘the [is abouts quarter-inch in dia-— Info The Field “brorento Daily Star D INVESTMENT CGS e qT erm of one ye ar to fire years. Small hail pellets falling close — more. de- of. together usually are structive than sparse falls meter, though -some reach the size of «golf balls, hen eggs, afd) baseballs. THe largest officially recorded hailstone measured 17 inches around; it weighed a pound and a half. This stoné thudded into the ‘earth near Potter, Nebraska, on July 6, 1928, along with others > only stightly smaller. The huge chunks hissed as they fell, and struck with such “impact that they burrowed. deeply in to the <_< ground. * BUILDS IN. LAYERS In the making, a “ Wailstong builds layers, like. an onion. Hail - originates..a ~ ile or two’ above ~ ground ag~a “ ‘large. raindrop ... or bit of “compacted, partially = melted snow. Strong updrafte ~~ carry the bit to regions of freezs ing temperatures, where-it ga» thers layers of .snow and frost, The process may .be repeated several times before the ice gloe * bule becomes so heavy ree cannot lift-it.. + Meteorologists debate the Na feasibility -of . seeding. storm _ clouds with silver iodine or dry~ ice to-try to precipitate rain bee” fore hail has a chance to form, In France, Italy,_and Switzer+ land, farmers: have fired chemie cal-bearing rockets into threat -ening»¢touds, and they claim StCe- cess _in;-hail -prevention. American experts admit-that ..- the rockets are-good for farmer s.« morale, but ‘doubt their value in ~ stopping hail. ‘‘The best defense. -against hail,** said one climatolo- “i gist, “is hail’ insurance.” | ;shacktown. settlement. their Sa | lary will be $55- a month. | This is -a brand new exe pierence in human relations m Canada, and judging from the ~~ ‘invitations for assistance being received at the Ottawa head- |quarters from communities in _ reveryprovitice, “the Company —. |should' Till a definite need. | . Dae eae a8 FLEXALUM | ALUMINUM - Insulated. - Clapboard | your home, 2.End painting and exterior maintenance for good. 3. Cut heating costs. : 4. Increase the value of your property substantially. J. O. HORNBY 41 Se a eae Drive 894.8049 s a Phone 894-7398