rncsllmua i THE GUARDIAN Authorised as second cm: Mun Post Office 1 Department, Ottnwl. I The Island Guardian Publishing Co. CIRCULATION 3.10.3 8.15"! '37 ' I'otlI City Zone Retail Trnding Zone All Others .. Total Net. P 3 I'rcsitlcnt and Associate Editor, fun A. Burnett, '7 Associate Editor. Frank Walker. f'The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink". uiAnLu'r'n;'rowN. I-'I'tIl)AY. DEC. 7. lost llalry Industry Problems The Dairy Farmers of Canada have; adopted the wise policy of publicizing their of effective publicity methods, which con-3 sist primarily in giving the facts succinct- ly, clearly and arrcstingly. In answer to the question whether the price of milk is too high, it is pointed out that in 1939 the average hourly wage earner in manufactur- ing industry had to work for 15.6 minutes at his job to buy a quart of milk. whereas today it can be purchased for 10.1 minutes of work at the average hourly wage. Of- ficial index figures are cited showing that all dairy foods are low priced today in re- lation to other foods. It is shown also that farm labour wages have increased by 181 ,per cent in the last ten years, feed by 82 per cent, with many other items in the cost of milk production showing big increases. The average producer price of all milk has advanced only 78 per cent in the last ten years, a rise that has not kept pace with the greater increase in production costs. Moreover in the last decade, while Can- adals population has increased by 21.6 per cent, the dairy cow population has fallen by 2.4 per cent. A decline of 18 per cent in production of milk over this period is noted. Todayls per capita consumption of 1,099 pounds per year leaves a margin of only 6 per cent to feed livestock on the farms, leaving no margin whatever to ensure con- tinuity of supply of dairy foods. , Production costs and prices received being out of balance, dairy farmers are cutting down or abandoning their dairy en- terprise for more attractive fields of pro- duction. The immediate danger, as pointed out in the advertisement, is the possible shortage of essential dairy foods in some Canadian markets. The longer range dan- ger is the depletion of Canada's soils, so dependent on animals and crop rotation for the maintenance of fertility. Depleted soils lead to abandoned farms. , Nowhere is the dairy industry more important to provincial economy than in Prince Edward Island. We were the first to establish a disease free cattle area on at Province-wide basis, and have made great progress in recent years in improving our cattle breeds as well as in production methods. Apart, from the annual revenue accruing from this industry. our whole system of farming is based on dairying. We have therefore a big stake in the pro- gramme of education which the Dairy Farmers of Canada are carrying on at the present time. Its purpose is to show that the Dominion's third largest industry can-' not be adversely affected without serious results to the national income. Our mem-i hers of Parliament. and others who have the opportunity of making themselves heard on matters of public concern, should take every opportunity of indorsing the campaign and showing that we in ithisi Province are behind it” one hundred per Cent. Canadian Prices Some interesting information has been , placed before the public incidentally to'the ,3 activities of the Parliamentary committee on price fixing. The Canadian and USA. prices of some electrical appliances for in- stance: refrigerator S479 C-3319.95 U.S.: washing machine S439 C-.S299.95 US; and an electric iron 9615.50 C-1512.95 U.S. Mr. B. Napier Simpson of Toronto, man-i ager of the Canadian Electrical Manufact- urers' Association pointed out that such higher prices are the penalty that Cana- dians pay for their citizenship and lnde-I pendence. that if Canada removed tariffs on U. S. items, Canadian industry might be eliminated and Canadians reduced to "bew- ers of wood and drawers of water." This is a point that Maritlmers have been vainly trying to make for years. that the primary producers of the whole country have been subsidizing the industrial central areas. They and not the Maritimes and West are the economically weak sisters which depend for their very existence on being spoon fed out of the earnings, of -the rest of the nation. - U ' We do not seriously object to the sit- ., tuition: It would be indeed deplorable to lit the Indulhtin,-,0! Olitdrib ma Quebec away. What Mu-itimen do vigor- rooont to tiff ouumpiiion of FHE GUARD' dbl. I 'i-' d "' ""lT'?Tf)IV3l and the Maritimes are not, it follows that these sea-girt areas are a drag on the strength and prosperity of the body pol- itic. Transportation In The iiews The recent address of C. N. R. Pres- 13.316 ident Donald Gordon and the service introduced across the Hillsborough Bridge are indications of profound changes which are around the corner. That changes are necessary has been obvious for some The reluctance of the people of this time. motorized iPruvince to travel from place to place by trail has become greater. The reason, of course, is the relative slowness and neces- sary infrequency of passenger train service in a small and far from congested area. To reduce the service would be no ans- problems. The advertisement appearing i”1"m' M 311- Insiead Of C3Pl')'in8 m0Fe P355- the two. I O O garine competition. 0 in rates of duty. legal importation. ance. hold its annual swimming race Park for the Peter I this date ten years ago. 0 O I to it seems unwarranted. rifle. ing- in the political history of Confederation. 000 worth of next year's Prcstwick, Scotland to New 0 Q 0 ing from Don St. jail. S500 to betray him. I go into politics. and into the game. those areas that, because they are wealthy ;x:; .4 . mu .. .. are not to their liking." Pan Trophy. There our issue of Wednesday is a good examplef MEETS at 101189? ini8I'Va1S the C- N- R- vould find itself carrying even fewer. will be forced, rather, to find means of pro- viding fast and frequent service within the Province either by light equipment on rails or on the highways or a combination of It -LDlIhL.)RIAL NUIIES The ghastly highway accident in Britain in which a safety award winner drove a bus into marching youngsters shows again how tragically difficult it is to see and avoid unlighted obstacles on the road at night.i The Dairy Farmers of Canada are put- ting the facts of their industry before the public by means of intelligent advertising. Had they only been able to do this earlier they might not have had to cope with mar- The spate of cigarette smuggling which has cropped up indicates that this country is too far out of line with the United States Unless prices are brought more nearly in line it is going to be a dif- ficult and expensive proposition to check il- Some people like cold baths, and in Lon- don the Christmas morning swim in the Serpentine is a feature of the day's observ- It is announced that for the 88th time the Serpentine Swimming Club will in Hyde The Japanese attacked Pearl Harboyr Complacency in American military and civilian circles was rudely shattered by the destruction of the ;vital airfields and the fleet. great loss of life and almost all available planes were destroyed on the ground. was Body armour for troops is so out of I line with present day ideas of mobile war- fare that the attention now being directed A possible ex- planation is that it forms part of a plan to sway opinion against the general adoption of the .280, the relatively light new British The Prime Minister is in a position when he should take heed of the scriptural warn- ”Woe unto you when all men shall speak well of you". The tremendous ovation he got from leaders of all parties in Par- liament on the occasion of his attaining the tenth anniversary of entering the Gov- ernment has been unsurpassed by anything Canada since First ”flying wardrobe" has flown S6,- fashions York. lidinburgh firm has introduced a Strato- "bruiser service--the garments in zippered dust bags to prevent creasing-which will enable new-style clothes to be delivered from the Scottish factory to any American city within 48 hours. More aircraft will be equipped for a seasonal fashion air-lift. from An Setting a thief to catch a thief has its ,reverse in Toronto where the police are searching for a former military policeman, who is also the son of a retired Toronto police officer. He is accused of a half- dozen bank robberies, and also with escap- He has disappeared without leaving a trace of his whereabouts, and his wife alleges the police offered her We here want more people to go into taming. Mr; George Drew wants more to "Politics is not just a game; the survival of democracy itself de- pends on strong political parties", Mr. Drew told an executive meeting of the British Columbia Progressive Conservatives. democracy is going to survive, the people have to get out of the political bleachers Everyone must play his part. We have the right and the duty to oak people to join in the processes of democracy, and if they don't they have no right -to complain afterwards if things done Mn "Mind it I Butt In. Here?" its-fa! PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by correspondent: of questions of interest. The Guardian does not necessar- ily cndor the opinion of wucspondents. V LIBRARY LIGHTS Sir.--The prevalence of electric lighting power during the keenest and most brilliant daylight hours in the Charlottetown Public Li- brary is not only preposterous, but is disastcrous in effecting the tender and very sensitive eyesight; needless to say the minor. lesser- importanf. liability of useless ex- pense. Certainly. a two-way means of illumination -- the natural day- light vs. electricity only re- sults in absurd counteraction. Lit- tle wondcr the local Library staff are all compelled to wear glasses, which in il.me may well contribute to near-blindness. Library patrons are obliged to endure n useless and brain-demoralizing strain in acutely discomforting efforts in trying to read; in be sure study concentration would be absolutely impossible. If the lights must go on. why not lower all the shades to the window base. Looking forward to n sanr-r sys- tem and plain. nulurni comfort. I am. Sir, r-t('.. IRRITATED LIBRARY PATRON. "NICOTINE KNOCKOUT" Ctr. - I am using the above caption from Gene Tunney's urt- fclc. published in the Reader's. Digest ten years ago. and from-i which I am quoting freely in this letter. Tunney was a heavyweight. xrwxaarv .v) Canada has lost the wheat. crown to a Michigan farmer, who won the prize at. the International Hay and Grain show at Chicago. its nice to win this event. regular- ly. as Canada has for the past. 22 years but even if the country loses once in 3. while. it will still be re- cognized that Canadian wheat grown for consumption makes just about as fine bread as wheat grown for show. -Ottawa Citizen. In Moron. Ill., Herbert Ma.riow.l a fun-loving farmer. mounted 05- car, a stuffed pheasant, in his fenced-in bean field, then sat back to watch the spent from his pic- ture window. Oscar was noticed by more than 100 passing hunters. Only two of them asked Farmer Mo.rlow's permission to take a shot nt him. The others generally brought their cars to screeching stops and leaped out to blaze away at the stuffed bird. After one hunter nearly shot. his companion in his haste to set the bird. Mrs: Marlow made her husband bring Oscar back into the house. -Time Magazine. In many parts of Southern Al- izerta where crops are still out in the fields, under snow or silt, great flocks of ducks have broken their flight south and refuse to resume it. Those who know ducks say they will not leave as long as the rich banquet table spread before them offers yet another meal. This could mean that they may stay so long the migration impulse will have faded. and then they may rile by the tens of thousands in the biizzards and cold snaps of next world champion and when he wrote his article was in charge .of nth-l letics in the U. S. Navy. He indicts. tobacco as "R poison and 9. fraud.'i I am led to write again on this subject from an experience I had this October near Halifax. My car' was constantly giving me trouble, and I had often to consult a gar- age. There I became acquainted, with one of the best and smartestl mechanics I have known, but he'.. s pack-a-day man. Professor Ray--i mond Pearl of John's I-lopkinsi says he will at this rate shorten his days by ten yearsond if he hall to go to hospital for a major oper-i stlon he will have less chance of. coming through. I (eel keenly tori i this expert young man. and I quote his case because today there are so many one-pnck-a-day men. Thisl is a day of excess and yearly here? in Canada more than one thnusantli new cigarette smokers are added. Nicotine leaps straight at the heart. The heart has to pump fast- er and harder in order to form the blood through the arteries, nar- rowed by nicotine. This is an age of excess. and some ministers of religion and even their wives have turned to worship the weed. Last year I saw the photo of IL minister, high up in the church. token pipe and all. I thought, what in splendid ad for the money-mad t. bacco companies and what an exc se for boys and girls to take up the habit. Those men must surely be unaware of their harmful influence. I am. sir, el.c., W.I. GREEN. gtanlcy Bridge. THE TUE-NIP SITUATION slr:- There have appeared in your paper lately various items which look toward the establish- ment. of n. Turnip Marketing Board. After the fiuco of the Potato Marketing Board. established by this some group 'of agricultural marketing theorists, it would Ip- penr that the failure of one ef- fort is no deterrent to the trying of in similar one. The” Potato Marketing Board, which was openly advocated to be 1 cure-Iii for "the price cutting competl" of the dealers." result- ed on! in tho grower: -receiving Just V at the market. would pay lf&;'.i.hO Ioomcrop. which won vary The Government support for this crop. and for which the Pota- to Marketing Board was the prin- February and March. Migratory ducks are a hardy species and could weather a normal winter but. '1. Notes By The Way '1, J VD up- the II; is the second edition of an lto-date guide published by British Color Council for the use of all Industries whch have n dir- ect interest in color of all shades. The dictionary was first published lin 1934 and for a very good D111”- pose. Most wonlen know what. it is lliko to go to a shop and say: ''I ;want u. rose-pink blouse to match my rose-pink skirt." They know. too, the horror of reaching home and finding that the skirt manu- facturer and the blouse-maker have completely different ideas on the subject of rose-pink. - Lon- don Calling. A McGilI Ill lessor says It Isn't true that about 25 per cent of stu- dents applying for entrance to that university don't. know who is Canada's prime minister. The fig- ure really is about five per cent, he explains. We'll take his word for it. The professor did admit, however, that a majority of the 746 students applying for entry couldn't. name the date of Confed- eration. or the number of pro- vinces orlglnally in that union. He blamed it on American influences. More likely it's a LUI uence of a subdued Canadian national spirit and slipshod teaching of Canadian history in primary and secondary grades. It's pretty much the flash- ion to throw history at students in ways calculated to provoke their distaste, and at times when they're not prepared to receive it. Conse- quently, it becomes a jumble of memorized names and dates which invites the swift oblivion of for- getfulness. The Mcclll applicant: aren't ignorant quite so much as improperly educated. - Windsor Daily Star. if they do there will not be much grain left in the fields for the spring snlvnge. - Medicine Hot News. An unusual dictionary is being shown in” London. Everyone talks about Cambridge blues, pillar-box reds or elephant greys, but when it comes to the point how red exactly is n pillar-box? Or what particular shade of grey do you match with an elephant? The color dictionary provides the answer to this and any other question you may care to ask within its scope. (ipai agent. and spokesman. was tho poorest. nnri most. awkward program ever offered in the his- tory of the industry The good prices of the 1951 crop, winch the growers are now receiv- ing, are the result of the law of supply and demand; and the Mar- keting Board's only notion was to put :1. minimum price on Scbago seed of sl.10 per bushel, which was as ridiculous then as it is today. inexperience will over-ride good intentions in any field of practical endeavour. and this applies to the Board": actions and to the vcfy frequent comments appearing in the press under the name of the head of the Board, concerning the future prospects of the potato marketing, about which. because of its uncertainty. even the most experienced people hesitate to ex- press an opinion. , Must practical farmers have found that the freely offered ud- vice bf ir'i't-bzpcrlenced offlclnldom 1!. to any the least. a dangerous basis for action. , On the whole. Prince Edward Island has I very limited um-ket for turnips-, so long as the on. tulo turnip growing areas are Iblc to supply the demand. Our freight rate to New York city is so cents per cwt.. and it talus ten days to deliver a' cnrlood. while the freight from the Guelph are: of Ontario is '11 cents per cwt.. nnd delivery is made in obout. two dlyl. We are therefore at 1 dis- tinct di-mivontnge in this very lugs market. Bolton lo the centre of our dis- tribution in the U. 5. A.. and it. LI I well-known foot. tho! the but wsy to lose one's shirt to to ship there on consignment. This in not of all necessary. and the daily urine in Boston bu little effect on the fnrmorr price here. The value It scarcely comes as 1 surprise kid learn that sales of cigarettes in Canada. are decreasing-dropped iby one-and-a-half billion cigar- lettes in the first nine months of 1951. according to a. publication serving the cigar and tobacco trades. Something of the sort was expected to result from the in- crease in cigarette prices, chiefly in the form of mounting taxes. So was some of the accompanying increase in cigarette smuggling, us now reported. which balances part. but only part, of the decline in sales. What. is a surprise. however, in an accompanying if smaller dc- eline in sales of cut and plug to- slmpiy cut. out. smoking altogeth- er, or cut. down sharply on it, in- stead of rolling their: own, as was cxpectcd.- (Winnipeg Free Press.) of turnips here is based on the returns that are now available as we meet: the Ontario turnips in the Southern areas of New Eng- land. . The Ontario turnip grower is I professional in this particular branch of agriculture, and is growing and marketing a profit- able crop of large volume; and the product is free from inlury. pock- ed in sizes to suit the tnde re- quirements. and looks I: nut and on pretty on the picture in the seed catalogue. our best. eating turnips have no equal for flavour, but the advan- ture in this is lost; to quite a de- gree because of the quantity of poor eating And strong fibre tur- nips that go out under the P. l. I. name. If our growing and grud- lug of turnip: was equal to tho onto:-lo standard. Ind only the mild, mellow flavoured turnip: marketed. we would considerably tncreuo the one in which we con mu-ket our product, end at the some time give the growers A pay- ing return for their labour. If turnips continue to-be grown for cattle feed. and than it is pooled that they con be Ibippod I food mu-ket. no quantity of o - flcloldom with uutoonito "author- ity to hamper on movement on ever lmprovovtha not return: to the grower. We Ire. llr. etc. POTATO AND nnum to Bylleo mu mun dmtrlcts would be most desirable This larger Institute unit, A definite policy of promoting in- councils might also be arranged in addition to the regular program. It would be well if a coordinating committee was then set. up in each of the districts to plan community projects in advance. In such a plan. the Institute: would be the official women's organization and the district Federation branch strictly an organization ofthe men. A community center and mod- cm sports field, the rural library. film council, and one. two, three. or more.rurnl high schools in each district (whatever the people de- cide upon) and a central school taxation unit and board of trust- ees, should definitely be within the ten-year goal of each and every district. Women's Institute mem- bers who constitute the majority of our better educat d rural resi- dents, cannot offer to let such pressing questions in that of larger school units pass by with- out thorough investigation, re- gardless of their connection with or dependence upon Government financial support. Labor Unions Labor Unions are needed in Prince Edward Island. Our truck- men especially, are obviously-if the speed at which they drive is indicative of their need-being de- prived of their economic due. But. too, nothing would start our farm- ers operating on a more efficient. snd business-like basis than a good strong Farm Workers Union that would demand over-time for unnecessary lute hot rs caused by mismanagement and lack of plan- ning. - such I. Union would raise the standard of living especially for the married farm worker to the point where those men who are worth hiring as farm workers would be treated as equals and valuable citizens of s great. coun- try. There are many honest, de- pendsble and hard working men who would rather work on the form than anywhere else if they were assured of decent; hours, a house to live in and reasonable wages. In fact, there are so many of these. it fair wages and good family living conditions were pro- vided, it would be unnecessary to hire the many misfits who are about the only type willing to suf- for general farm working condit- ions today. Our shop workers are perhaps 1' in on even worse position than i Chafiou-et0W" truckmen or farm workers. The general public may not. realize 7; (And P- Fa 1-) this. but we sull have many poor c--' V . people and a great deal of poverty A FINE NEW VESSLI. in our midst. Many business men. . I , who gm receiving -(.mm 5100 .10 "The new brigt. Archibald. 8250 I week, are at the same time owned nnd loaded by Mews" A; . paying workers in the shops, f'ac- A- MM'd0"ilid & Eros. cleared it the Custom House today if" "'9 ' tories and wsrehguscs-men with families-as low as :18 and very seldom as high as :30 per. week. Many of our leading business men undci-' the pretence of being pub- lic-splrlted citizens. oppose labor unbns and the right of the work- ing class to organize. A recent instance which is not out of the ordinary, in Charlotte- town, may be cited: Two girls who had been working as sales clerks for almost two years at 312 a week and boarding themselves. asked for a. raise. They were laughed at and dismissed. The minimum wage for similar work in our neighboring Province of Nova Scott; is 325.04) per week. , It: is not uncommon to find among our supposedly broad-mlnd- ed and leading business men the nttltude that it is quite proper to employ a person If. the lowest pos- sible wage. If they can hire a clerk for :10 1 week regardless of what imccos reported by the 581110 the cost of living or other wage source. This indicates that many standards are. they do so: some A d 3"? Lh t id W mt. persons. discouraged from buying local business men actually msin- " hlfrned 9 Em '" ' l Cigarettes by high prices. have tzin that it. is good business to In various mm" of ,0" and M,- sct thus. Those employers are. ironically. often proponents of social iusticc and usually the people most vocif- erous in their opposition to com- munism. They do not realize that by those practice: they are paving the way and cultivating the breed- ing ground for Communism faster thnn could the most aggressive Red organizer. Joe Stalin would undoubtedly be glad to decorate them. - i O O . Wnge noes. llld the insecurity of the working classes. should in- terest ovcryonc, everywhere. In periods of depression, surplus in- dultrlll labor "hitch bike" back to the forms to over produce And to flood our food-market. Then. on the eve of prosperity. surplus labor migrate! from the land to the industrial centers to flood the lnibor mu-kot. Advancing the in- lcruto of any one group at the expense of mother group his not enhancing the doom order. It would be quite proper for our Runl Organisation to encourage lobor unions when they are neces- sary. The three .unlons which we have in this Province now. have not, in themselves. raised the costs of living. The blame is more prop- erly ploood upon the system under which thou union men work: by in methods. this system has ex- ploited both the producer and the labour. Just because a few people In I tow-unions have abused their points we must not be critical of tho principle. In fut. we must be concerned about than abuses and try to develop a better under- sws Asspoumon standing botweon. the dlffcrenf Lessons,i:rom Europe ' In Community Progress Re-organization of Institute dis- trict convention areas in accord- ance with the above plan of local could perhaps take a more lively interest in social and economic questions. tcrest in rural libraries and him ,, DECEMBER 7. 19:, -T -C P. Mclsmw Part Three (continued) (I R.elerv:d) WOMEN'S INSTITUTES If some assistance is ” even to those small 3;-:;1:::,,Kl,Y.:1'ii are not getting their just Mme: . by people who have a demon”! solution and outlook. then sixggef. lions and help will be il'Cl'ltilii-l forthcoming from other sources 1;. lubor has occasionally abu,ed'mu privileges. it is not because u, ; principle in wrong, but probnmyl because there is something won with our educational and ecouog mic system. The only hope seem to rest. in having all groups in nu, economy fully organized and in. formed before I levelling out pm. ceu can be effected. other Group: We must not forget that um, are other very important social organizations which also deal with the people in our community Many of our people do not under: stand or appreciate the Red Cross the Tuberculosis League, the can: ccr Society, and other non-sects;-. ian organizations that occasionally appeal to our rural people (0, help. Organized assistance could be given to these through the re. glonsl units.of our main organ. izntlons. This would prevent con-i fusion and overlapping. and would further develop the co-ordinates program which we propose for our rural areas. The Home and school Associn. tion has its place, too, especially in the urban centers. for betle: undcrstnnding between parents and teachers is vitalvin the solution of school and educational problems." our college and university cxlen- ' slon departments could and must be used to greater advantage. To have a full program in those ms- trict. units we could. from time to i time, get new fire and zeal and deeper thought from our fountains i of leaf-nlng;,we could have those who are constantly studyinglhlngu from a broader view, come corns- lonally and give us is talk or 3 word of advice. Moreover, our col- legc professors would profit I great deal from getting out to our local units and discussing prob- lcms with the rural people. And, certainly, the professors thropsh lectures in the fail and uinier months, could teach people in the local groups a. great deal. Recommended Bending Monro. Arthur: The Farmer and the Rest of Us. Roblson. Edward and Carolyn! The Have More Plan. Robison, Joan: Introduction to he Theory of Employment. Ruskin. John: Unto This Last. (To be contlnuedp t. Qfild-mail!-ctetOvL2OO&5-'9-'55' Old Country. and will sail with - the first westerly wind. Iicr car- go consists of 18.000 bushels (W-V n 320 boxes potatoes, 300 pieces deal. , valued at 58.500. The 'ArcIubnlrl I was built in Cardigan Bridge. and her construction was SiIlW'"' tended by Mr. John D. Lewuz. nim- hus good reason to congrntiimlr himself upon the nppeursnff and workmanship of this vessel. ” --The Examiner. Nov. 30. lV7- im- EPILOGUE FROM '. POMPEY THE GREAT '. And all their passionate hearts new 'I'lll the world's brain was i.u:'rPti- moving darkly God, brains, Using their passions as his i""ig Brings freedom with n i.”7l"'5 in ill ”i'-I chains And wisdom with the fool. l Blindly and hloodily we drift. Our interests clog our ilcarls. --Ill! dreams. God mike my brooding sun! ti ri t. Through which fmeonlng trimmi- -John Mssetlold. G ' vi.'i.'i.n.1.-vuvbv.H.'H'b'w-.-i.-'-'-' The Ago-tlld story - n5'.tl-V t Blessed be God. even the Fall!" of our Lord lentil Christ. 8"” Father of mental. and the 4- g of III comfort; who oomfortcih " In all our tribulation. that we H"-V be able to comfort them which I: In my trouble, by the 000"" . whemwlth we ourselves In ''""F toned of God. ' oxr-oan. lnglnnd. 1386- d-. -tRauteu)- Pointed nouns '. mnnding "Adennuer I0 hmnzl were discovered today 0" "”h and buildings in this lhclelll. ting vanity town shortly before W9; Go on chancellor Konrad A man r wu due to arrive for” one-dly visit. Adennuer. "T" G” 4 mm chancellor to visit Emil" since 1 I. drove from London i" oluou of pooplo in our economy. convoy I live can. each flyimi '" fedcnl oormon fin.