: ——with Mr The Guardian! Covers Prines Edward Isiand Uke The Dew W. J. Hancex, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank We ker Managing Editor - ‘ Ec \tor Published every week dey morning {except Sum dey and: statutory bo! idays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.! Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Sours Represented ration . ty by Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Setv'ces: Torento 425 Unrivertity Ave. Empire 38894 versity 65942 Western Office 1030 West Georg! Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadien Daly Newspaper Publishers Assoc ation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian “Press is ex enntedtectheone fer repub> lication of @ erecited : %0. |%. or and also the clus vely news - dispatches: .in tothe Associated Press of Rev 4 oce! naws eubl shed herein. " righ? or republication ef specie discatches here in also reserved. Subscription rate: Net ower 40¢ per week by carrier “gree Be miter rural revtes_and-érees fet serv ced hy carrier "$15.90 @ vear off Island and UK. $29.00 per’ veer in U.S end elsewhere outside British Con morves'th Net over t0e singie copy. * of Circulation. JULY Member Aud) Bureau FRIDAY, 1 , by Thomson Newspapers (td. ~ Sonal 640 Cathcart Stree? ied . hit” paper” "20, 1966. PAGE 4 Working Together ___It_is pleasing to note the coopera- tion which.is being shown between outgoing Premier Shaw and incom- ing. Preniier Campbell in dealing with pressing .matters_of _ governmental. concern at this time. Notably is this the case in the joint efforts being . made to facititate the shipment of Is- land. hogs to mainland plants during the current strike at Canada Packers Limited. This-strike may prove a lengthy one, all across the country. Estimates of its duration extend up to’ & month, since the two sides-are still there is reassurance to our farmers in the statements issued by both party leaders. that everv effort will be made to ease the situation locally: Premier Shaw, indeed. has gone so far as to consult his successor as to the timing of his visit to the Lieuten- ant Governor. to tender his resigna- ~ tiom. so that there will be a minimum: of inconvenience in effecting the changeover.. He has.now announced, that this will take place at 10 a.m. next Thursday. In the meantime, and in response, apparently, to Premier Shaw’s urging »that he make known his intentions in the matter, Mr. Campbell has an- pounced that he has requested that a _..need sn is eritieizing. Befense -Minister- Hellyer- . for, having neglected to provide! The departmental officials continue the Campbell's. concurrence, 1 fense minister going about the coun- try, making charges and sfirring up a hornets’ nest. No need fér him insist- ing. as he did in Edmonton last week, that his policy was government policy and was going to be carried out; that he was not going to lét anyone, “‘in- scluding an admiral,” tell him what to do. Especially no need of him—de- claring, as he is quoted as having one, that if his cabinet colleagues _ showed the slightest weakening “they'll have to find a new minister.” That-se-startled Mr_Pearson that he hastened to bes his public ‘blessing*on the-minister’s plans to ‘put all three -services into one uni- form with a common rank structure, ‘and tio more nonsense about it. “It’s the policy ofthe government,” the Prime Minister said with his cus- ~—“tomary firmness when he’s on the wrong track. “Naturally, as head. of * “the government, I fully support the.» minister of defense on that policy. There is no doubt on that score.’ | But it turned out, as those angry admirals kept reminding-his minister, that the government. had no right to put its policy through until the De- fense Act was revised. The act “provides for three forces—not one— tary action—and Parliamentary de- - bate Parliament may well ~ consider, when it gets the-ehance, that the ~ three services are different in their | demands and that increased Special- ization in each of them makes it less likely than ever-than—they—can be | made interchangeable. Also it may _ balk at the -idea of discarding | hundreds of thousands of items of + naval apparel and dressing sailors as ‘soldiers on-the grounds, either _ of | economy or efficiency. If any case, it ' is to Parliament's tune that the gov- ernment must dance, and it will have . to wait until next October before the music starts. Couldn't Take It Walter Ulbricht, the. Communist party boss in East Germany~ came up | with a bright idea last Febraury. He | proposed that the Social Democrats | from the west and the Socialist Unity | (Communist) party try to pave a “worker's way” toward reunification of Germany through a provisional eeeenenieaenemeenipnche “pavient of Hre-$25-monthly increase— confederation: West. Germans were to all old age pensioners in the prov- inee-This- pavment-by-the Shaw. gov- ernment supplements the federal met by Ottawa. But the federal Lib- . | erals insist-on relating it to an ina, | come test, and their plan in any case won't come “until the fall session’ Even then the bill gabangendd held up for weeks, and ly pensioners, now living on $75. C ampbell feels. as ; strongly on this: ~~be-the-third time in which they, he matter as does Premier Shaw. It is true that he lauded federal ’ Health Minister MacEachen’s objec- tives under the Canada’ Assistance Plan when the provincial campaign was on, and actually campaigned in support-of the federal Liberal candi-: ; t _qdates last November when- they denounced the proposed flat $25 old age perision boost as a Tory election bribe. But since then he has seen the light, and has. now.-publicly washed his hands of the tortoise-like ap- proach the Pearson government has been making to this grave social © ‘problem. : We are hoping, too, that the Pre: ‘mier-elect will see much more-in the Shaw government's industrial ex- pansion program than was. evident from his criticism: at the last legisla- -tive session, and that here. again. he will make no bones about adopting sound Torv policies when he feels - Sober Second Thoughts Well, well; it’s come: the promise of a new setup for Canada’s armed services, right along the line those awful admirals were demanding. and commander of Maritime forces is to be given a direct line of communica- tion with the, chief. of the. defense | ——~stalf and Wit be—consutted on —ail—that-credit-card—hotters—wil-settie — matters affecting his-men Officers and men, of.all the forces will be given,a chance to make comments before legislation comes .into—effect unifying the three armed forces into be before the Commons . a month, might net peter bigger | cheques until after Christmas. In any | case, it is a shameful way of dealing -——li¢ information in-their own receptive to the idea, and a plan was may_and another in West Germany. To meet the Communists’ demands for, assurance Of pérsonal security. the West German parliament adopted a special safe conduct law, guarantee ing the visiting debaters immunity , from possible prosecution for alleged- ly being accessories to murder at the |) Berlin wall : | . But the Communists took cold feet | and the proposed debates on national backed out of -opén discussion with their West German neighbors. Ap- parently, though monopolists of pub- back yard, they nave few, if any speakers capable of cutting as attractive a ‘figure as Willy Brandt or experienc- ed enough to hold an audience and rebut the heckling that would’ have greeted them. Democracy.can_be a frightening thing, it seems—when you're on the other side of the fence. Cashless Society ‘For better or worse, the United Kingdom appears to be on the road to a cashless society. In other words, credit is taking ovey from cash. And ‘the initiative is coming from no less a source than Barklays Bank, one of the “big five’-in-British banking. Barklays, reports a London news ‘letter, is sending out a million credit cards to-its customers. They can be used for the purchase of goods and Services, thus cheque transactions. Experts predict that if these continue to grow at the' | present rate. the old system of bank- |_ ing will be submerged ina sea of The bank expects the number of credit cards issued to grow quickly. into three million. The theory, which bankers hope w#l become practice. is i + fs fe pg their accounts with the bank once a month. Meanwhile those who-make a practice of living on credit are hop- ing to cash- in! EDITORIAL NOTE. apaechannessionncsnasiunpenseentieomienseisieghrseiatenaneipioepsent and its revision requires Parliamen- . amen lao fy a + eventually agreed upon. calling for _ televised debates, one in East Ger-. reducing’ cash and. JOINING The EVROPEAN | COMMON MARKET SHOULD NoT Be A‘ JOYRIDE”— ' SaNS FRANCES ‘ M, POMPIDOU ae « ‘ TOUR DEFRANCE "_MARGINAL VICTORIES , -_. Johnson, Lesage: And’ Quebec We seem to be lying in a time of marginal political victories reflecting the public's indecision ‘and the essential samenéss of parties and programs. How else explain the triiimph of the deci- mat point in-theslender—majori- ties of Kennedy against Nixon, of the first Wilson government, | of the continuing knife- edged } minority rule in Federal] Can- ada; of Prince Edward Island, of Manitoba and now in Quebec where—Johnson,_with-_a— minority | of voters, governs with a- bare | Majority in the Assembly? Something has happened to western politics, and close anal- } ysis of.other European democ- racies no doubt would reveal a curious central position to whieh all the traditional parties cling, and- around 1 men to divide fully- employed affluent societies: This “end to idealogy”™ mean its replacement .b pragmatics of well-being 66 the rationale for fighting on oak . ticular ground and calling it a “principle’’ around which a an immense spectrum of wel- \ fare policies adopted every- 1. Where. The classical issues, es, for exam- ple, of free trade or state inter- | vention, of varieties of socialism | and its free-enterprise astalbot: ist, of peace must = that t_the Fural ural success “that he/may have not too reat. “Eastern Que- at ge: iene in commanding sub-_ By Maxwell C ohen Faculty of Law, McGill University, the Liberals with 47 percent .— although the heavy Montreal Liberal support explains some of this imbalance 2. The R.TN. cut more deeply into the Liberal urban and semi- -urban—pregressive- vote than the— R.N~bit--inte the, Union Nation- ,ale support. If this-is to be a ' growing feature of Quebec pollt- ics jt will have significance, Both as an index of the ‘rise of outright separatism on the one tha to the radical wing of the Liber- als devoted as it was to state intervention and a- heavily de- centralized federa) Canada. 3. Mr. Lesage’s failure to com- mand enough support from -rur- al Quebec outside the Matepedia ‘and Gaspe areas, suggests the east while it had yet eee Montreal more important than the label 5. Lesage’s success in attract- | ing the English-: speaking vote, particularly in Montreal, and Johnson's failure here should, _not be Viewed wholly as a triu- mph-for the Liberal image in the English - speaking community Many an Anglophone would have wished for some other al- ternative in view of the unpala- table attitudes of several Lesage ministers toward English-speak- and traditions in Quebec. ‘But the,; Union ~Nation- ale seemed no answer to Eng- lish- speaking frustrations,. at to prove that Duplessisism truly had. dis- appeared and that Johnson had some réspect for a strong and viable Canada to which most = j tion. They also-are rubbed . Warmth, i - 4 nd soy who-—perspire profusely a - ors _ Mosquitoes- checkerboard Mosquito | Repellents |By Dr. The R. Van Dellen The best -protect against’ mosquitoes is to destroy the in- sect. This is not always practi- ca! and the only alternative is the use‘of repellents ‘haf are “sprayed.on the clothing or rub- bed into the skin. The main ob- jections to these chemicals is that ‘spme--smell and others are loily or irritate the evelids or |tips In addition they may séf- ten paint>and plastics |~’Modern repellents are good | but must. :be reapplied every | few hours. They da not deterior- ate on the skin or lose effective- | ness when diluded with sweat jearbon dioxide; or water Bact n -|teria on’ the, skin have no effect | upon the- compounds Some _is lost by evaporation and absorp- ff lon-the clothing or other anes /Appareptly a ‘factors are responsible. . aad os me Unfortunately, persons most likely to attract’ mosquitoes also have the shortest protection per- jod ‘when the chemica! is applied, jto the skin. Researchers are combination - — —burning—the--midnight—o trying __tThere are ‘to develop an ora! repellent that | wilt be absorbed by the stomach and sent to the skin via bloodstream. rn Airborne “mosquitoes tracted to the skin. by and carbon the are at- mosture, dioxide _not necessarily favored be- -ause—evaporation tends to cool the surface. Color and move- ment © attract: The insects jare less interested in bright shades ~ ‘between ofange and biue-zreen) but >refe#} dark co Shades * between ‘red and- and black are dark. to 4 ‘black and white: shirt is teported to be most attractive . Why are some persons. more prone than others to be bitten?’ Moisture, heat. ‘and carbon 4di- oxide play a role but other am- janations sich as glandular sec- | retions, certain proteins in or on ithe skin.-and fatty substances. in ithe oils of the-skin also are sus- violet pect a And how about this: The mos- Tquito does not respond to agents ‘to which-the housefly is -sensi- tive IODINE RASH W P. writes “does:the rash due te iad:fe seneitnity look like” , REPLY A mess. There is a wide var- fation in the type of skin reac- tion manifested by a person-who is sensifive to the iodide : ations. The. most common is an 4? acnelike eruption with pustules surrounded by a reddened ring Others develop blisters that _yl- cerate. The individual may be so sensitive that the trace of iod- ine in_table salt is a causative factor L. J. writes: Can anything be he-had-with-his farm-_wereand_are sincerely devoted. done besides rest for- the head-- ize without deep issues or- great ‘policies——a problem that is in- Indeed, once Johnson tractable and’ persistent in. many parts of the world. 4. It may be: no coincidence Mr. cae aut tate ave in bec, ‘fended to coincide with strong economic action there— roads, power, etc— and alse ehelp. Indeed? it is significant that students of the Lesage fail- ure are now commenting on the “probable mistake that was made in rejecting-federal Liberal help. A certain arrogance and maiv- ete on inspires confidence on the -viability Canada and the integrity of Eng- pg speaking life in Quebec it- stantial Angolphone support. In perspective the Lesage per- iod was filled with substantial party could be built or a man where the federal Liberals were achievements. The rush to mod- dramatized, now- is_replaced—by—invited—locally—to—come—and-~ ernity-was—costly and-strenuous. but a new level of public perfor- mance, a dynamism in admin- ache of high blood pressure” REPLY Anything that decreases the pressure wi this type of headache There are many 2 ‘drugs on the market that: combat hypertension Tests should-also-be done to determine whether the kidneys are normal _ M. G. writes: Can coughing become a habit <when- the. real need fpr ‘it no longer exists” Do- nerves cause uncontrolable istrative and political imagina-—bouts_of coughing” “tion and’ planning reconstructed the apparatus, the image, the self-confidence and the welfare ~REPLY— ee Coughing . can icons ‘a Ner- vous habit | ized -into common political pro-’ do-more harm than good forget- he who gave it shape and direr- chest? | grams shared by almost every one'as the line between ‘‘wirlte collar’ ‘and “‘blue’’, and between town and country, slowly disap- pears amid the new technology | arei its prosperity. Hence, most political contests | tend to become a mixture of ac-- cepted. central positions with ; local issues or particular person- alities giving the debate the -ap- pearance of_hattle. |. This political - profile ~of—our- | day is as applicable to Quebec as elsewhere because the ‘‘quiet revolution” was a reaching out for this great modern welfare position and nothing that either Mr. Johnson or Mr. Lesage said | or promised, could have alerted their- commitment to this widen ing welfare center. The arithmetic of the balloting has been fully explored by ‘now and the following pattern emer- ges 1. The re-distribution t[n Que- bec left so large a margin of) votes still weighted im favor of the countrysidegthat the Union Nationale with’ 41 percent could yet have five more seats than Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (July 22,1941) All signs pointed to a great in- tensification of the war now frag- ing ftom the North Sea to the Black Sea. Illustrating this be+ the Royal oe territory, Air Force raids on reports of the thei r Channel defences, and the expressed. view of authorative _quarters in London that German forces driving on Leningrad “and Tepairs-are-needed-he- mray-have Mowcow have been halted bya Russian defénce. of continuing stubbornness Colonel, the Honourable JL. Ralstop, Ottawa. Minister of ‘Na- tiona! Defences paid_a_ short vis- ‘lief were the rising violence or ting that effective for’ election purposes manpower is often tion (To be concluded) - More Like Him Needed Windsor Star Recentty .we met a young man newly graduated from _™edical | college and with but a : year, of internship prior to ‘establishing his own practice. We -asked about his plans. ‘ He wants to go into genera! practice and has his -mind set on a town of between 5,000 and 10,- - | doctor. 000. That would be a community small enough to be comfortable yet large: enough to afford mod- to get mixed up in the hurly-bur- ly of large city life. _it isn’t — he is a young man - not enamor him of life without ambition. It’is just ‘that his ambition is. to be a compe- ‘tent~ and: useful ‘live in ah environment. compat- doctor and ible to him. He had been born in an Onatrio town and his vears at medical school in Toronto did in a big city: We rather admire this “young starting out on ‘a- fine career. He is not thinking in. iterms of prestige or the making ern hospital facilities. He has 30. desire to becbme a specialist or. of the maximum of money. He is thinking in terms of service, and service to the type of »eople he’ likes and in an atmosphere con- ducive to content. Costly Telephone. Vancouver Province The next time you think $10 is dial-rings around Mexico and too big a bill. for that telephone \ Japan call to’ Aunt -Minnie in aes | foundland, consider the phon an ny Makes that eonversation with ' tanglés you would find tn vero Aynt Minnie seém ,quite a bar countries. A Mexican who wants a tele- | Phone’ in his home first must * buy some stock in the telephone gompany. Next he buys his own >f phone; then hespays...a.propor- tionate-share—of-installing-a—tine; unless he have one -in his neighborhood The cost ranges from $240 .to After that, phone service costs only about $5 a month— but if to wait for days A’ Japanese applying for a telephy has to he prepared ta | wait for up to three months— for. there are some two million. ie on the waiting. list. And when the three months are up. is lucky enough to | gain, doesn’t it? to | REPLY “Yes, but why? w~ Be TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— The pool water should be checked constantly for cleanir ness i . (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Delien~ should — be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Delien, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) DO SMOKERS FAIL? - o KAPUSKASING, Ont cP .— Schoolchildren:.parents and friends, 300 in all, are filling éut a questionnaire which’ may tell- whether smoking affects school results The. 35-question form was drawn up by two. non- smoking Grade 8 teachers. 2 WORTH: y _ PHARMACY QUALITY ORUGS “SERVICE - SAVINGS We Dispense any Prescription ~ J. E. H. Worth ; 1914. Reg. Pharm. Free Delivery and Mail ‘Service. 142. Price St.:” Phone 4-3424, e f. "NOTES BY THE WAY Sen any watery gems of | peace, solitude and trout are shattered by the whine and roar of outboard motors as soon as a road reaches their shores? Cer- | tainly boatsmen, a large sez: | ment of the papulation, should have waterways in which to cruise, troll or water-skii Yet the many, who seek quiet with}: their fishing, picnicking or me ditation also warrant consider: ation — and official recognition. | — Vancouver. Province. There are two. sides to_every— question except the one you happen fo be: arguing about Kitchener Waterloo Record: Pushing ahead’ of the line !n the. super-market, a— smartly *- dressed woman-snatched a can from the shelf and pushed it and a dollar to the checker. ‘‘You don't mind if I get this can qf cat food, do you?” she asked the man at the head of the line | “Heck, no lady,"” he answered “If you're.that hungry, go a- head."’ — Financial Post | & lot spacecraft, men.who can oper: ate electronic brains. and "men who- can design cantilever brid- " ges, but show us a man whe aun can walk into a closet and tangle the clothes hangers Chicago Daily News-— | that flowers and | drivers | spry !on the bus One day. tT not h A heading on an article says girls distract Who'd have thought a< bout flowers! Ottawa Journal. Be wary of the enemy who freely offers to bury the hatchet ~ — he may have an axe to grind. — Guelph Mercury: Women .are becomiaz ’ more We saw. one: the other dav .who almost beat a man to a seat — Vancouver Sun, Surely the most superfluous advice offered parents in many a moon is that given recently by various educators in London who warned fathers and mothers not + to force any of three Rs into their Vehildren’s. minds during the ‘holi- day_season Who but the -most sadistic parent’ has ever - tried so dastardly a trick? — London Free Press Little Lottie; aged four, had deve. loped a great féndness for milk, having drunk as much vas her aunt thought good for her, she was informed that she could ave any more “"Pshaw™ exclaimed the indignant little miss, “I don't see why you want to be s.:.-tingy with your old milk There's two whole cowfuls out inthe barn” Montreal Star. _ _ Lawn Watering -By Hand: Ottawa - Automation {s said to be com- ing at a furious rate to lawn sprinkling. New types of ‘under- ground sprinklers are now avail. “able” Automatic timers can be instalied to turn the system on or off at preqset” intervals ‘ The advantagesof course. are obvious. Keepingt-.the lawn green ceases to be a problem for those away from their homes during vacation time. No more worry whether the boy who said he would do the watering has decidéd to go off to summer camp and leave the grass gasp- ing. No more dragging the hose in and out and trying-to find the considerable time a R004 soak- ing should take , For Mosq Ottawa Ah ocratch- eh. ° “When ez.” Ah itchez. said the So do most other people—until that is, they: can get to their medicine cabinets and its bat- tery of prescriptions for itch Nearly. every household: ‘has them rows of bottles, jars and tubes containing creams. oils, lotions, sprays -and powders -By the end of the mosquito and “black fly season, wholé trains of tank-cars of these potions have been: smeared on backs. and Toss out the lot. advises group. of American dermatolo- gists— they. don't work The specialist prescribe instead, the plunging of nosquito bites into hot water... very “Tf the watéer—is—not— rather painfully hot... it is unlikely to be effective.”’ they add callous- ly A temperature range of 126 to 140° degrees—they “didnot say whether centigrade or Fahrer- heit—is deemed adequate the port of some provin- of Quebec. —__NO_HARM ___~_4.5\the patient-whe—has—sat-in— ibérals, to the belief “The new Quebec may not have pp K. writes. Is it. safe for a poison ity backs - cautiously, rhakers, all have been: homogen- that such federal support would begun with Lesage: but {t was man to bleach the hair on his Qyitching™ a thermometer, into the steaming .spray of the shower, he reflects on the worth of other medicines in the cabin- | et above the sink Are the doctors, he wonders, | about to prescribe a sharp blow on the skull to relieve head- “ache” Is a. teaspoonful of thumb- TRY OUT MUy'S PIE ’ STRENSALL, England <«CP) Soldiers who don't like army * cuisine i be able to test their palates this, Yorkshire: ‘carp The m is 120 inembers of the Junior Soldiers Brigade have been asked by the com- mander to bake an apple pie each to compare with the-pies” of army’ cook Sgt. tin David Mar- ine: But progtess isn't al! wonder- ful. .A lawn-waterer -knows that .- the real purpose of the exercise ,is not-simply to make colonial “tent-or the poa_ triviali grow. “Watering the: lawn. {s—-a—chance’ to- get off by oneself, an escane - toilsome t-himns $ should be doné around a from al! the which ‘house. A man watering the lawn is doing the-next thing to doing nothigg But he looks busy It’s an eminently_ respectable” way of wasting time To be sure there is alwavs the danger that a neighbor- will come over to talk But a hose is a -defensive weapon —ant—under the guise of watering out-of-the _way places an intruder can usu- ally be discouraged vito Bites Journal tacks the best cure for indices * Wne tle tops, upside down, in $ inner soles t# combat athlete's foot» put racks, {mn one’s shoes for corns? —, : “Thanks gentlemen we'll scratch ' ee Island Mobile Homes______|- Sales and Service Travel Trailer Accessories Ql PRINTING Siauonery, wedding Nnvitations, _ invoices, statements. and al) your job printing re- quirements. All jobs guaranteed. GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 — # Years 2 is coming MONDAY e st APPEARING NIGHTLY ALL THIS WEEK! Granada “TST Kent St om OPEN FROM 12 [ the _ Monday, July 18 - Saturday, July 23 At The Horse & Sulky Club ~"SCOTIANS” Steak Room ae . Charlottetown > NOON TO MIDNIGHT fabulous tits who | was spending a week with her ; aunt. in the country, URVEY” sca _- \e * r a single service . There wil! no it ‘fo Charlottetown. the standard rate for phone. in- TOM. JIM and GARTH—The Atlantic Provinces top change until the legislation estab!i The protection given by the use, ; poke : j Stallation is $450 Folk Singing Group — Kecording Stars of “COME = ror 4 ay TEN. YEARS AGO For years, Canadians have led HOME NEWFOUNDLANDER”. ing a new force has been passed y of safetv belts in msétor:cars is far (July 22, 1956) the world in telephone calle per Al So Parlianient -greater than could be obtained even The. three princesses of the | capita-No ohne seems. to know | Ww d e ee a . ' 4 a eae ee é sa ects first annual Summerside Lohst= why we out-talk. Americans. but e + Now-if- Mr--Hettver-had-oniy-mrade—— by etaborare redesten of the -Wwite ee Carnival” are Georgie Lock it isn'W hard Wr wee hon pwe—ran—-f — ee dnesday thru’ Saturday this clear in the first place, there . vehicle. This is the main conclusion | hart. Lillie Mueller__and: Edith —- ‘Dancing to tes Alexander and oo P ; . . : . P “ would have been no rumpus.. no | of a’report—-the first in Britain to | M@cEwen | |. FARM OLD REMAINS « “The . Smoothies” .Fesizgnations of top military personriel” consider car and safety devices as a beer installed in the United A Wioming ranch does a hist MEMBERS. GUESTS and TOURISTS : ae = rave morale ilines in <tem——published t aN Church ‘Crapaud They are the . trade -in bleached buffalo skills, saerry — No Minors and rumors of grave morale liness in s ystem——published bythe Min gift of members’ and friends of jeager!y bought by interior ~de- , FULLY LICENSED ee the lower ranks. No need for Te de T-Biry of Yransport recentiy. | the congregation eorators. ; .