Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher ‘ Welsce Ward Frank Walker Manreaing Editor Edites Published every week day morning (excep! Sur day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Chariottetown P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Biench offices at Summerside, Montacve. Alberion > end Sours . oe S-presented nationally by Thomson Newipepers Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave moire 3-8894 Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni = ty 65942. Western Office 1030 West Georgia See Vancouver MA 7037 " Member Canadian Daily ‘Newspaper Publishers Still, as a writer in the Toronto Globe and Mail suggests, it’s one of those coincidences that fairly take the breath away. Unless. the Prime Ministef has been leading everybody astray, the period of this campaign should run welNnto an election cam- paign during which Liberal candi- dates will be pointing to the creation of the Canada Pension Plan as a great Libera! achievement. It will be nice for the party to have this news- paper advertising running, and those Agsociation and ihe Canadian Fress the Cevadien booklets plopping through the letter Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub ation of all news dispatches. in ths paper ames to it or to the Associated Press of Reviers and also to the local news published herein All recublication of special dispatches here Subscription rate: mer week by carrier year bv imail on ivral routes and @eas ced by carrier $15.00 a year off Island-and® UK.-$20.00 per mn US and elsewhere ougside British Com wealth oweht oo ‘in also reserved Net ove 40c 2.00 a . $' not . year K 7¢ sngie copy. wamber Audit Bureau of Circulation. > ' PAGE 4 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1965. In Hot Water The Company of Young Canadians a new federal agency under the wing’ of Prime Minister Pearson's of- ' fice. mobilized to wage war on pover- “te Tt wasushered in with quitea fan- {are at the last parliamentary sitting, ‘ and if may vet prove its value to the country. However, it has caught the headlines ‘on an issue which is not likely to commend itself to a large number of Canadians, who as tax- pavers have a right to be concerned in its activities The director of the company is Dunéan Edmonds, who recently gave the Student Union for Peace Action ‘a $4,000 grant from the organization after it had been refused by the Cen- tennial. Commission. ‘The Commis- sion’s reason for its decision was the _ particular brand of political: action which the Student Union exemplified, and which it deemed unacceptable. The Union is a university protest group which has staged such demon- strations as ban-the-bomb sit-downs at the gates of the La Macaza bomarc base. anti-discrimination sit-ins at the _ doors of the U.S. consulate in Tor- onto, and the protest picketing of the late Adlai Stevenson when the Ameri- can ambassador to the United States ~came to Canada—tast- spring for an honorary degree. — ee it was -felt by the Centennial Commission that the taxpayers’ money could be hetter expended than over 1s kind, but Mr. Edmonds apparently thought otherwise and-the-grant-went- through. His assistant director, Stew- art Goodings. felt that a wink was as good as a nod. and thereupon had an | | | | | | boxes of every home, just at the time when it will want to have everyone reminded of the Government's good works. Nice —and cheaper than hav- ing to do it all at party expense It can be argued, of course. that this publicity serves the public’ in- terest. But if an election is indeed in the offing. its value as party pro- paganda literature is also pretty-ob-. | vious. The Toronto paper maintains that this has become a bad govern- ment habit of jJate, and it cites in — this connection- a recent -advertise- ment concerning Canada's new Lab- or Code. Over the drawing which showed Labor Minister Allan Mac- Eachen being interviewed was_a.dia- logue which began: “Our new Labor Code has been called a first. Mr. MacEachen. Would you agree?” Need less to savy, Mr. MacEachen agreed. Miss LaMarsh’s contribution to the shining image, concedes our Toronto contemporary. was perhaps a shade less blatant, but it finds a cynical touch “in the way this trumpeting of party policv happened to accompany “article published in the Student Un-- ion’s newsletter, setting forth what : ciples of the new government bureau. pany of Young Canadians is deter- mined “‘to reflect the aspirations and concerns of the most progressive ele- ments of. the Canadian youth com- munity,”’ that students are wrong if whey think the company will be “sim- ly a device to divert radical energies to safe, responsible and convention- fal channels.” and that. “new power Sentres” should be encouraged. He conceded that “one can hardly expect 4o replace the existing structure over- ‘night,” but plainly implied that this twas his conception of the company’s ‘dong-term objective. = With this sort of thinking Mr. ‘Edmonds téok exception. “It’s not my idea of things,” he said, “but one “can’t deny Mr.‘ Goodings his right to Sav it if he wishes.’ But this didn’t satisfy public opinion and, as noted “fn a dispatch in yesterday's Guardian, } “in promoting demonstrations. of this - he conceived to be the guiding prin-- , --"Pherein-he~stated-that- the-Com-.. | | Mr. Pearson's hints and chuckles about an election.” And it concludes by warning that “if this does. not stop, it will be difficult to deny the right of Opposition parties to equal space at the expense of the common purse.”’ “Difficult,” perhaps, but we im- agine that Mr. Pearson and his col- leagues will find it not impossible to do in the circumstances! We might as well be realistic about it. The Op- position parties, after all, haven't got access to the common purse; the party in power has. The old conception | buted to the Liberal strategists _ that ‘to the victors belong the spoils” | has wide ramifications, and is by no means as obsolete as we have been Teg to Suppese. = For Safer Driving Cooperation: between British car | manufacturers and_a_surgeon has re-_ sulted in the development of a new British-safety car seat, which is said to be superior to those now on the market: The seats were designed as a result of the surgeon’s work in evaluating those design aspects of a motor car which gaye rise to serious injuries or death (iMeniiee road _ac- cidents. __ The basic conception, as, describ- ed in a London news letter, was a very strong seat frame, firmly fitted _into-the floor-and-_an-integral part-of the car itself. ‘‘with seat belts, in- stead of hanging above the interior of the car iike Christmas decora- tions, built into the frame, so that they are readily accessible and very easy to put‘on.” Instead of being an- chored to the pillar at the side of the car, the belf\is anchored to the seat, and this has the great advantage that when the seat is moved backwards and forwards the relation between belt and wearer is maintained. According to a plant official, seat frames, belting system, floor and body shell of the car have all been tested under simulated accident con- ditions corresponding to a 40-mile an hour head-on erash into a concrete block. The tests have proved that | __ NUCLEAR MUTATION | Amebiasis Is Prevalent — By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen During the Boxer uprising, our troops in China were warn- ed against cholera and. other tropical infections, such as bu- bonic plague. Most of them es- caped these condition but brought back amebic dysentery, which is now prevalent in this country. Certain varieties of ameba» are harmless and live in the in- testinal tract without endanger- ing’ health. The histolytica type | is the troublemaker. The cysts of these parasites are expelled | from the body ‘and transmitted to others via contaminated food | or drink. This occurs to fruits and vegetables fertilized with | human excreta, by flies exposed to the same type of excrement, or by infected food handlers. | Water contaminated by sewage was the source of infection in one of our large cities in 1933. Faulty plumbing was responsib- | | le for 1,400 known cases and | | more than 100 deaths. A subtle cross- connection of pipes was | blamed. .for..an_epidemic. in ano-. ther city 20 years later. The ameba settles fn the co- lon and forms ulcers along the | inner lining. The symptoms are _ variable. Many victims are not | bothered but are called ‘‘car- riers” in the sense that they are a source of infection to others. | Others have vague abdominal , | distress, aching, weakness, and | irritability. Diarrhea is common | but not constant. The dysentery | form of the disease, with cramp- ing and bloody stools, is seen so seldom that the name has been changed from amebic dysentery to amebiasis. The diagnosis is made when the causative cysts are found in stool specimens. As, many as six tests may be needed before The unseemly haste with which the Liberal strategists have been rushing towards the Unnecessary Election must raise the simple question “Why?” Newspapers all across Can- ada have editorialized their crit- icism of this wanton journey to the polls. The two most com- monly suggested motives aftri- dre that the public opinion polls indicate this to be’a favourable, moment for the Liberal Party, and that they want to make. sure that their-leader fights the cam- _|_paign before the Conservatives _get themselves a new leader in “shining armour. To put it blunt- ly, they hope that the Canadian | public will look at Liberal lead- er Lester B. Pearson and Con- _servative leader John G. Dief- Mr. two | enbaker, and decide that Pearson is the ‘‘lester’’ of ~ WOeS. Other reasons may lurk undis- | covered beneath the surface. Is eral image? Is Mr. Pearson about to quit the leadership of the Liberal Party? ECONOMIC DANGER SIGNALS - The most impelling reason for Ta precipitate election, 1 believe,” is that thinking Liberals— such as cabinet ministers who can by the economic which their policies have gener- ated and which is about to wal- lop Canada and force every. Ca- | nadian belt to be tightened. There are three fields in which the danger signals are already flying, very obviously for busi- ness men to understand and very damagingly for all Canad- — jans to fear. First, inflation is galloping upon us, and Canada faces the frightening need for a_ really painful tight money policy. ~ Second, we are losing ground in foreign ‘trade in manufactur- ed goods. Sure, there has just been a bonanza in the sale of wheat_to_the Communists, but. this does not provide a_ single job for our incredsingly urban population of skilled- fact-or-y workers. Further, this does not provide a durable trace pattern, and the Russians are already howling because we are buying | | | | ‘ there another big scandal about | to be uncovered, which would | shatter what remains of the Lib- | read -the--omens— are terrified whirlwind ° "OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson | Signs Point To Serious Economic Trouble practically nothing from them, | while they are pouring their gold out in wheat purchases from us. Third, our international bal- ance of payments is becoming so gravely alarming that strict import controls, restrictions on foreign travel and a painful de- valuation of the Canadian dollar may all be just around the corn- er Every Canadian housewife is worried because her housekeep- ing dollar does not buy so much | groceries now as jt. did. when the Libera! Government came | into office. The cost of living has | soared during the Liberals’ -28 __months of indecision at’ a rate nearly double that during the 70 | Conservative saonths. | LIBERAL FUNNY MONEY From June 1957 to April 1963 --the Conservative vears— Consumer Price Index rose from 121.6. to 132.3. It now has. sky- | | | | the | just around our corner, and the | the, critters are found. tine is a time- honored | remedy- that relieves the symp- tom but does not eliminate the infection. Diodoquin, Carbar- i or tetracycline is used for this purpose. Now and- then the rocketed to 139.5. Had the prud- amebge are difficult to elimi- ent price Policies of Conserva- , nate and several courses of tive Finance Minister Don Flem- | treatment are needed, including ing been continued, that index the use of oral amebacides. would only be at 136.7 today. ALCOHOL AND HEARING Bly oe eats Ps nd| M. B. writes: I would like to charter nk deposits held | know if a person who is deaf in by the Canadian public rose | one ear can drink wi and from $11,313 million in June 1957'| whisky. Someone told me that to $15,528 million in April 1963, | people who are hard-of hearing and now stand at $18,665 million. | are not supposed to drink. Any It has increased during the Lib- | ¢ruth in this? eral months at a rate very near- | REPLY ly double that during the Conser- Aleohol. does not aggravate vative years. 2 | hearin 8 es | g loss unless the deafness Pare woe a trend . Np | is caused by ‘an alcoholic neuri- ae r vineen lad to | tis or congestion of the adenoid nd serious cut-backs in our’ tissues that surround the open- construction pfogram:— Our<im-—| ing” of the eustachian” tube. On + Pe heeeare tie ee: the other hand, overindulgence | % ee to ot ions. port of US capital tell oe equal. | ay lead to So ee ee OD. writes: My anced up to serious i | P Serres Sconpemte (roehe | eats paper like candy:-She-wets~ it and then swallows it. The doc- tor said this will not harm- her. Could she _be Jacking. something Liberals are rushing for votes before. you find out. Recent days have seen quite a number of attacks upon allied nuclear policy by. West. German politicians, including the coun- try’s former Chancellor. Konrad _Adenauer.. Thes¢ attacks have | to_.make..friends.for West.G.er- |. if. not West no doubt been spurred, caused, by the current ' German election campaign thing they say during cempaigns, they would all . be guilty of varying degrees of tur- pitude. Nevertheless, r could -be wished Dr. and his‘ followers would have more sense than to exploit it The basie argument these pol- Loose Tongues Montreal ‘If the world’s~ politicians were by West Germany's former De- to be held responsible for_every-.lfence. Minister, election. Strauss. Mr. Strauss wrote that nuclear— a ‘new Fuerhrer- type’’ might | arms and the German question emerge, is such a sentitive issue, that {t and probably acquire nuclear Adenauer -weapons.”’ iticians have been using, or hint- | ing at, consists of’ a sort ers and Russia reach of | in Germany ' blackmail. If the Western pow- | such an issue is incredible; it is some. yet another proof agreement to stop the spread of | Strauss does not deserve to be a nuclear weapons, which prevents | prominent German politician. | in-her diet? 3 REPLY No.. Many children have per- Gazette . |verted appetites (pica) that dis- appear in time. Be thankful she West Germany from ever join- prefers paper to cigaret butts or ing a European nuclear force, chips of lead paint.” then West. Germany’ will have to CAUSE AND EFFECT reconsider its overall policy. . This sort-of talk is not going ‘kk cane ee ae thrombosis: 7 Dee quc Ir bvenemes ine ARES: HMB vianetn < Co many. Particularly obnoxious and dangerous was a recent article REPLY One follows the other. A my- —ocardinalinfaret is the Jesion... that develops in the heart mus- | cle after it is robbed of its cir- culation by plugging of a coron- /ary artery. In this respect, | thrombosis is the cause and the | infarct is the effect. FOOT DEFECT B. N. writes: My baby whs born with a clubfoot. Canct his deformity be corrected? REPLY Yes. Ask your physician fo re- | fer You to-a competent orthopo- | dist. | TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Avoid wild, unfamiliar plants, including berriés and mush- Franz Josef if a nuclear treaty discriminat- ed against West Germany, then who ‘would promise Whether ~ Mr. Strauss. meant this as a threat is arguable. But for a prominent German politic- ian to state that a new Fuehrer is possible over that Mr. The Frustration Of Aden ——‘}—ov suis nisaprean : Christian Science Monitor Britain’s latest and worthy ef- \ President Nasser fort to find a way to orderly | own reasons for wanting to em- e withdrawal from Aden and its hinterland has come to naught. Yet London stil! 1968 re- | rooms, , The last of Canada’s five windmill manufacturers ceased | production in 1965 but will con- tinue to make spare parts for a few more years who has his barrass Britain. |— Galt Reporter. | intervene a inceniatiicna NOTES BY THE WAY... - “What's the matter yp at Tom's house?" ‘They're taking ‘im away in.the ambulance for beatin’ ‘is missus." — Vancou- ver Sun. Today's well equipped camp- er carries so much gear and tackle and equipment that ‘the | way to get away from it qj! and live the simple life is to go home, — Ottawa Journal. You may call a woman a kit- ten, but you must not call her a cat. You may call her a mouse, but you must not call Her a rat ' You may call her a chicken, but you must not cal! her a hen | You may eal! her a duck, but you must not call her a goose You may call her a vision, but you must not call her a sight. Peace K eeving In ‘Kashmi By Dave Mcintosh ‘A. condor, wanting to lay an « egg, *thréatens to stop work on a dam in California. Giving the engineers the bird, as it were. ~ Windsor Star. A Sunday Sc hoo! teac het | told the story of Lot's wife, how she looked back and turned into _a pillar of salt. Little Johnny ; said: “My mother looked back once, when she was driving, and she turned into a hydro pole.” | Glebe and Mail. Her Mother — “My daughter | sings, plays the piano, paints, | understands botany, zoology, French, Italian — in fact is ac complished in every way. And | you, sir?’ Prospeetive Son- in - Law — Well, in an emergency [ suppose I could cook a little and _:) mend the socks.” — Montreal Star. r Canadian Press Staff Writer In--the high mountain_passes_! of Kashmir, nine Canadian Army officers are watching a plodding, 17 - year United Na- tions peacekeeping effort crum- ble -under— tank, —artiliery-——and machine-gun fire The UN established a_mean- ~ dering ceasefire tine in Kach- mir after the 1947-481. fighting over it between India and Pa- kistan following partition of the Asian sub-continent into the two Commonwealth countries Canada agreed in’ January, 1949, to participate in an l1-na- | tion, 4-man UN observer mis- sion Kashmir. Since then, nine Canadians. have been living in that inhospitable territory to ob- serve breaches of the ceasefire WAR IMMINENT During the summer there was an increasing number” of inc!- dents, The breaches now have developed into battles which have drawn in entire infantry battalions, tanks and howitzers. Large - scale war appears .im- minent. Prime Ministers Shastri of India and Pearson touched- on the subject of Kashmir during the former's visit’ to Canada in June. - But it is generally regarded in Ottawa as unsound to try to in disputes between India and. Pakistan unless in- vited to do so by both countries. Though there have been peri- If Mo An {fnteresting. if -academic, contribution. to the ongoing dia- “fogue between French-speaking and. English- speaking Canad- Winnipeg 'jans has been made by J.B Me-- “Geachy, writing in a recent {s- sue of The Financial Post _It_is Mr. MecGeachy's conten- tion that French- speaking ‘Can- adians have a powerful sense of history but their memories are selective. ‘‘They recall some Bits of the past but forget oth- ers:" And, as a result of this selectivity, they tend to ignore just how much they owe to Eng- lish- speaking Canadians and to Britain: : Mr. McGeachy argues that ff Monritcatm ‘had’ won the battle of Quebec in .1759,. ‘‘the - ‘French fact’ in North America would have.anished.long.azo.....0r...fa>. ther, it would have survived as vestigial French- speaking poc- kets with no political import- ance.” THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE The Scottish- born writer bas- es his argument on the fact that in 1803 the Louisiana purchase took place. In those times the name Louisiana applied to all territory south of the Canadian border between the Mississippl river ‘and the Rocky Mcuntains. Today the area includes Mon- tana and the Dakotas, Nebraska and Iowa, Missouri and Arkan- sas down to the present state of Louisiana. : At the start of the 1800s this whole area was French. Napol- eon dreamed of making it a great French overseas empire. But he was planning a war with Britain and recognized that, in such a war, French possessions in North America would be open to attack and could not hold out against superior British naval strength So Napoleon gave up his ntcalm Had Won odic_reports. that Canada migh! be asked to mediate the ' Kash. mir dispute, nothing has devel- oped and, Ottawa _ informants say, Mr. Pearson isn't going. to suggest-that he act as a go-be- tween. There has apparently been no Canadian. diplomatic —initiative in the present circumstances but External Affairs Minister Martin” and UN Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant likely will discuss the issue during Mr. Thant's Ottawa visit Sept. 9 Canada has the largest con- tingent of UN Observers in Kashmir and since June, 1964, she has also supplied an RCAF. Caribou transport plane with a crew of seven for support of the UN mission. This plane oper- ates for six months of the vear from Srinagar on the Indian- held side of Kashmir and for the other six’ from Rawalpindi, Pakistan ; FRUITLESS TASK « So fruitless has been the task of —observing breaches of _ the ceasefire that the UN doesn’t even attempt to apportion blame. And the UN reports are never made public. They gq pri- vately to India and Pakistan. Other ‘countries participating in the UN > mission in Kashmit are Australia, Belgium, Chile, Denmark, Finland, Italy, New ZeZaiand, Norway, Sweden and Uruguay. e reece Free Press dreams of empire in favor ,of hard cash with which to wage ~his-war--He~sold-the—Louisiana territory to the United States for $15 million. i i “ “Can anyone doubt +that, if New France had. still been New France at that time, Napoleon . would have thrown the St. Ww rence valley into his deal with ‘U.S.. President) Jefferson for say, an extra $10 million?” Mr. McGeachy asks. “The St: Laws rence valley would have looked just as untenable as the Missis sippi valley in a war with Bri- tain.”” PURCHASE OR CONQUEST “But the Americans would have. snaffled Quebec anyway.” Mr. McGeachy continues. “They were great acquirers of real es- ® in the 19t" century. If Napoleon had not been ready to sell the Small French colony te the, north, the Americans would — have taken it in the same way as they took Texas, Arizona and California, that is, by force of arms ee “This didn't happen to Quebec. French Canada has not only kept its identity and survived, it has gained enormously in population and wealth and it has blossomed in culture. This has come about because for 200 years Quebee has been part of a larger politic- | al whole and particularly be- _ cause, up to the end of the 19th | centurys anyway, this whole en joyed British protection." Mr. McGeachy admits that in later decades the British provi- ded such protection only under Protest. But, he says, after_1817_- the Americans abstained from annexing Canada, which they could easily have done. only be- cause they believed this venture would involve them in yet anoth- er war with Britain. fle, : e . * say ~ Mr. Goodings has been’ called on the en oun 2 ats ¥ pan eae eer mains the deadline for ending = J eeirpet. by his immediate superior, | ut er SE Our Yesterda s British sovereignty over ~ this : } i ‘ Se Mle ete ut) ind these ct anerim Our Yesterdays Situs yities! | FLY AIR CANADA ON YOUR HOLIDAYS AND SAVE | _ ”, ; ; : : ‘ (From The Guardian Files) - : g : ‘he is not likely to write that kind | ee ten: Ee ie oot key ever, there's a catch in it | gam TW Genin pen gasses ™ | 25% OR MORE ON FAMILY FARE DISCOUNTS! of article again. ‘ ; ; FIVE YEARS A What, it mg d, | 2 e . Which til]. from -the taxpayers’ | fromthe standpoint. of making the | (September 3, 1940) _ makes it difficult to get out? : ; : ; ‘ ‘ i as ). a 7 safety seats commercially available. Gunmen attempted in vain to’ First, the British are committed | = - - ‘Ftandpoint. leaves a good deal unex- | - ; ; “ | assassinate King Carol in Buch- | _ ag a condition for their with- a 2s : They are somewhat heavier than the ‘| arest. Rumania, in an alleged | drawal — to a viable political : = Just A Coincidence? ‘standard seats. and inevitably quite a | Iron Guardist putsch to- seize | marriage between Aden _ itself o ’ being ‘told, | lot more expensive. The company is | Pe" sth ge Prince Mihai | and the feudal skeikdoms which | j ‘* “ol : ee ae . aaa | still considering whether to start by open : Ee os = te Brita ‘waa e ued by. authority of Health - and | offering them as optional equipment ae ne = | te be able to keep some right te conageet age ny | on. the standard cars they are pro- | nounced -an agreement under 4 defense base in Aden — still a . : ; Pe Welfare Minister Judy LaMarsh, ducing | which Britain receives from the | lik in the air and-sea route to | Dad always pays Mother saves 25% Accompanying Children, (2 to 11) Infants (under 2): - what benefits they will receive under. |- Ging. tintted-Stutes-St-pver-—age i Asia and the Persian full farel. _ — but = — a co ee ores. for 50 not occupying a ‘ i useful destrovers and grants in | Gulf — once sovereignty’ has e are when she go along for eee seat and wi the Canada Pension Plan. The ads EDITORIAL NOTE return sites upon which the Uni- been surrendered to a local gov- | ner the travels without 25% OFF! : g — adult, fly EREE! ‘Hill run, in most dailies and some A New York bank has announced ted States can build naval and | ernment.” en Dad! ' FREE! “@reeklies, between now and the mid- | that it's new Fifth. Avenue branch, in Air bases for western hemisph- The political sophisticates ot rae “@le of October. Coincidentally, the | addition tv providing secretarial help, “"° wophlanten a ts ae on on $45.0 $33:75 933°" . $99.50 FREE _first mailing has taken place of an 81- | travel service and investment advice, TEN YEARS AGO bearded and beturbaned sheiks tases ‘Pace booklet telling the electors in | isto be fitted out in Louis XVI decor. a ee outside the city as has oil with | : : 5 : | fs te ° : | . Twenty- five: years ago YeS water. Such cooperation as the | s : : en more detail what the Plan holds | with a maid anda butler to dispense ——terday, 1930. Capt. Diedonnegritish were able in coax them | - 0 rrom “But for them. ‘It 1s being distributed |- refreshments to its. depositors. Its ie aaa a. into lies in a pitiful heap of | 7 = es sae MONCTON fo all households-—about 4 million of facilities, however are not for the open cockpit of their bright red ee Seemitiie gente sia them. lowly New Yorker who merely _ izplane at Paris, hauled aboard | 14 cisely with the upcountry | : os - = © According to an official of the | wants to cash his pay cheque. A client “2yuy Sy a ‘tavch of teatas sheiks. the British have made it | FAMILY FARE DISCOUNTS apply any time, anywhere on Air-Canada flights advertising firm handling this ac- | must have a minimum-checking ac: -, and lumbered into a dull morn- | Pet in Shoe ae | in North America. For details, see your Travel Agent for reservations, count, there is no cognection between | count balance of $25.000 and twice | iat cener er eines $10? | make a deal with London with. | : ; -the beginning of this campaign and | that for business account. The bank | Europe to America. _ out Arab extremists shouting . ; . ee ari litical activity. The | hopes to attract at least 800 pat | 3 oe ke _ oe ee : ee ee Chevrolet. Motors at Detroit | fortunately, in the present mood : | “Sadvertising,- aos & aan _, They'll need a stiff drink to brace. | announced jt would make seat of Adenis, these charges would | * | soo : . > : a * . tee ae = ~s r as an : roe ae | .. 3 ’ just now because it wasn't possible | themsclves before writing the kind = Its and shoulder harness —op- : ‘J o ne alcatel 1 cieunii cabs cea Paar | tional accese-ries with - ‘te 1956 | The extremusts enjoy the pa- |— 7A ERT Sees : a —— ' se run it sooner. of cheques that will be = ihodel cats. | tronage of United Arab Republie j — - cae — ice Ss ee —~ * i” ‘ : : : + Se ead : 5 * aN ae = cs * =— ee ue r : . : - : ; [a cuemagpeneaeea ca a“ j . Sirti, te - ‘i it ( ee etre zs vt . | a + 4 ee De , ere ~ -tate...by..purchase..or..by.conquest......