r and —aixo—the—toca!_news published herain 4 * mortgage fund each year to meet “requirements! Their program, as out- “business capital” would be tied up. But since the Tory motion didn’t pass, | chased 21 American-bred hogs. and Pent the sucklings—''squealing all * the way’’—hback to Chu Lai Covers Prince Sued latand Like The Dew | W. J. Hancox, Publisher ~ Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sur day ‘and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlot! etown, P.E.I., by, Thomson Newspapers Lite Branch offices at Summerside Mariage: Alberton and Souris Represented valteaals by Thomson ahora Adverti<ing Services: Toronto 425 Un'versify Ave- mire re 7AROA, Montreal 640 Cathcart Street—Uni- versity 64-5947; Western Office 10360 “Wet Georgis Stree Vancouver MA .7037. thember~Canadran—Dany—Newaspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication ofall news dispatches in this paper eredited :to it or to the ‘Associated Press or ree | right or republication of special diseatcher here- In.also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 « year by mail on rural routes and areas ently have been-a huge success. They . are star attractions of the village and, to hear the marines tell it, are fussed over and primped like prima donnas. So devoted are the Vietnamese to «their grunting charges, they wash them three times a day with soap and water. The hogs—now -five months | old—are thriving ‘under. this “tender regime of affection. and. attentfon. Now the marines’ concern is that the farmers will become so attached to sell them to other villages. Jf they — $+} / 4 yiced by carrier. peo le: meeis.o 00 » year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per an th tt the f "a ace year in US. and elsewhere outside British Com | u e point to the s ory. menweslth: ee : le than the raising of .a. few. hogs: It ao cver copy. 7 2 Mambar aan aeurat Circulation. ~ = illustrates that this is basically a poli- “PAGE 4 SATURDAY, MAY 21 1966. tical war-and that- it is not enough to. search and clear a hamlet of Viet |_Cong and.then leave the impoverish- » ed and terrorized peasants to salvage their former meagér lives.In the Chu Lai area, working with the local officals thé ‘marines are putting up -¥8-concrete-block schools. The-funds_ for them—$1,500 ‘per classroom— | Thave been collected in the United | States by the Marine—Reserve-and_ | CARE. Calls For Reassessment If was by the slimmest margin of this -session-~seven votés—-that the minority Liberal government at Ot- tawa-survived a Conservative non- confidence _ _ motion on. Tuesday, | calling attention to the acute short- age of mortgage money for home- building purposes and scoring the government's. tightgmoney policy as constituting “'a negative approach to the problem facing. our economy and seriously impeding the development of the nation.” Fuller reports of the debate on this motion have confirmed our impression that it was one of the ~ smost- important to come before the House, and that the issue involved is by no means: settled because. it failed to unseat the administration. Mean- while, however, it raises an awkward problem for our Liberal campalgners in this. province. In presenting the Conservative motion, Mr. Hees urged a four-point “program of-more National Housing | Act mortgage money being directed to average-priced homes, instead of the “middle or executive type;” Can- ada-wide insurance companies to be forced to invest in mortgage funds in towns and: rural areas; reduction of the NHA interest rate to six per cent from the present 634 per cent to enable banks to participate; and the government to set aside a sufficient could get from the Viet Nam war front.. We forgot to add that the marines have also helped the farmers. get started with duck and fish farms.* Whatever its future. Chu Lai New Life Village won't be the same when they leave. And the population will have grown—by quite .a few hogs, ducks and Carp. Play It Sale -‘The Dominion Automobile Associa- -tion does well to remind us that the Victoria~ Day weekend, May 21-23, marks the unofficial openirig of the summer holiday season with the high-~ ways and byways thronged_ with ve- hicles making their first excursion of the year. In their enthusiasm there is a temptation to drivers to try to crowd a week's travel into a three- » day:period. The asociation’s records indicate that normal hazards ‘are multiplied threefold as compared with the aver- age non-holiday weekend*on these occasions. » They always portend a sharp increase in motor injuries and deaths. One of the prime factors in, such mishaps canbe found in the urge ‘to travel too far in the time available. To reach their destination such motorists must travel at speeds stimated housing needs. Just the policies, in short, that our local Liberals would need, if elected, to implement their promised ‘“‘crash program” to meet our urgent housing — lined, would spell “Action Now” and WOU. "ahernie as well as urban,dwellers. And it would be arranged under the’ NHA through Labor Minister Nichol- son so that neither “farm-capital nor which are inconsistent with’ safe driv- ing .practice; and impatience with momentary traffic ‘tie-ups ‘causes them-te attempt passing in situations potentially very dangerous. The peak highway traffic load in In their new home the pigs appar: the pigs thatthey-will not-want-te— don't, there'll soon be more pigs than This is the best kind of news we | 4 POSES LI@GRAL- i A HOT TIME IN THE OLD TOWN e _ AT ABU SIMBEL a Engineers are winning a race temples at Abu Simbel. Statues and temples are being | | cut into sections as big as 19 tons for reassembly in a natural safe setting on a plateau 212 | feetabove_the doomed site. The move must be completed by Au- | | gust_15, when impounded waters. | from the Aswan High Dam_ to |. the north’ are expected to. _ the riverside. © The | United States, -and—other mem- | ber nations of UNESCO raised the funds and supplied technic- | jans for the incredible salvage | project. t HONORED RAMESSES_ The two temples in Egypt's | Nubia region near the Sudan | border were hewn out of a sand- | stone bluff 3,200 years ago to | honor. Ramesses TI, god. king of Egypt, and his favorite consort, Queen Nefertari. | Four seated colossi -of-Rames- ‘ing 1,200 tons, guarded the en- trance to the Great Temple. Six giant statues of Queen Nefertari and Ramesses stood vigil before | an adjacent Small cemehe: | -and—uninterrupted—driving—periods——syj ‘reports on the rmie project in an article entitled ‘‘Saving the Ancient Temples at Abu Sim- bel’’ in the May National Geog- United -Arab Republic, | “pes, each 67 feet high and weigh- | ee - Engineers Race Salvage Deadline. National Geographic Soslety | The final stage of the salvage és ‘two lemples will form 956°separ- ‘| all | down). Treating Emphysema — ,»|By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Emphysema ean be obviated.) but I doubt if our suggestions will ever be taken seriously: enough to-make it_possibl. Most ary disorder)has been done dur- }ing the end stage of the disease when the victim is disabled by a chronie cough, wheezing, and shortness of breath. True. pre- ing, air pollution, and—respira- spiratory cripple is practically nil dn its early stages,—the_dis- ease can be halted by avoiding respiratory irritants, expo- | sure to inclement weather, sud- den temperature chdfiges; and chest infections. The influenza vaccine helps to immunize against one of the great offend- ers of emphysema. The regular use, of antibiotics. dpes the same. ‘Fresh air, sunshine, and adequate _ utrition build «up sre- | sistance. The emphysematous person | should stop smoking and treat ‘mediately. There. are drugs.that dilate the These. inhalants are most help- many ‘| ful” because they reuduce the bronchial spasm’ and obstruction. that are so disabling. The block- | age prevents stagnant air from being-.exhaled__and__encourages_| dilation. and loss ,of elasticity of the air sacs. Special breathing exercises also help to force he stale air out of the lungs® Lie. on the back and practice pushing out (the abdomen during inhalation which forces the diapfragm [| Pull in the abdomen during expiration to force up the diaphragm and empty: the lungs. This-should be done for 30 min- utes twice a- day helps to place’ a weighted ba on the-ab-| «.|domen. Exercise increases walk- ing capacity and: is best done by inhaling oxygen from a three- | pound ‘cylinder that is earried | with the Nile to save the ancient | operation—. removing and reas- | ate pieces. Measurements were | while the ‘individual walks. .or |sembling temple blocks—is well | computed so carefully that.the | climbs’ stairs. This should be under way. The first stone of the blocks will be reassembled with |done for 10 or more mini tes | Great Temple was eased into its |a precision of 1:25 of an inch of twice a day. |new site high abeve the Nile in. January. \"Each-slab is handled with lov- | less—like pieces of a vast jig- | saw puzzle. : Engineers expect to complete Liquefying agents aid in bring- |ing up plugs of mucus. ‘Now and | | then it is necessary to wash. out ing eare. Before the slightest cut | the dismantling and reconstruc: | the lungs (broncholavage) to eli-— lis made into any decorates sur- | tion of the two temples late this | minate — obstructive |face, workers apply a coating of year —‘two yea r-s earlier than tions: Surgery —ia helpful -when synthetic resin to guard against predicted. Completion of the set- | the emphysema is confined to a ting will require . another es and a half. The United Statef and Britain both have famous political fam- thies. Britain: has its Salisburys, | its Churchills, and. its Chamber- lains, Asquiths, the . Roseberys; the United--States its Adamses, its Roosevelts, and its Tafts, Kennedys, and Lodges. saanen “es | Completely dismantled, the. | Political | "Hamilton: ilies, too, but none of them has been consistently prominent. in | | publie life. Perhap’ when .our nation is a | years_old we'll be able to say “the-Roblins,_the | the Taschereaus, Lagointes, and { Nowlans have provided leader- | ship for many generations’ but 'today there is no Canadian fam- Canada has its political fam- | raphic. Accompanying the ar- _ily tree sprinkled with the nam- ticle are photographs and a ser- |e€8 of political, powerhouses. jes of vivid paintings by. Geogra- There is little doubt that pow- phic staff artist Robert W. Nich- jerful political families can pro- olson recreating the splendor of vide immense excitement at el- fami i " ies Spectator | forced BY law to have the White House. Two of the counry’s Jead- | ing political dynasties could fight to succeed him. They are the _Kennedys_and* the Roosevelts, -and what a convention battle that | will be #f they contest the De- | mocratie presidentiat. tion. It could happen: ranklin D. Roosevelt, Jr, plans to run -nomina- 1 against Nelson Rockefeller —for--|- gp dager ts j the governorship of New York | OCCurs. while two | State this autumn, ennedys, Robert” an | “are members of the U.S Senate, | Should Roosevelt defeat Rocke- feller, he would undoubtedly en- | ter the presidential race in, 1972 with the backing of the power- ful New York delegation. ~ The 1972 Democratic conven- tion could be the most exciting -| shingles-usually last?-— encrusta- | single lobe. DURATION OF SHINGLES— “Mrs. A.S. writes: How snk: do REPLY -The_lesions__usially subside | ally neuralgic pain persists for ; within a few weeks. but occasion- |-“months or years. This complica- tion usually occurs in older per- sons. MENOPAUSE. AND PREGNANCY ame pregnant during~ | change “ot life? he REPLY ; Yes. The menopatige ts" of in- | definite length and it is difficult to. tell, therefore, when sterility, PRESSURE AND WINE es: Will drinking a aia wine every day raise { lo w blood pressure? : REPLY Wine does not. affect the blood pressure in this -way. un- less it overstimulates or excites the individual. INFANT BALDNESS of the research on this pulmon- | vention means going back 20 go | _|30_years when the lungs are first | subjected to abuse from smok- | : tory- infection. Avoid these and | » | the chance of becoming a re- every respiratory infection im- , bronchi. | Canada | had echoed Thant's: but we ‘far, as nol agreed | COMFORT + openly to ‘hg ri admis- Salton ine Om | You need us 1 | ‘pean fcety InN | emer arcing an Mrs.-P. writes; Can_a_woman | the - and Mr. Nicholson’s negative reply - to-the-Hees—proposal is now on re cord, surely it is time for a reasess- ment of the situation. Mr. Nicholson is quoted as saying, | ‘n-his reply, that if Canadian house- builders are feeling the pinch they * ~~ should go to the traditional financing fnistitutions rather than the govern- ment, ‘Instead of coming to the government for help, I suggest that they do a little soul searching,” he. declared. Let them “go to the fin- -anecia) institutions in their own _rid- ings, including insurance companies, ~mortgage-companies-and.others,.and. try their luck there.” Later he addéd, ~ in rather scornful.terms: ‘Is anyone sufficiently childish» to suggest that. —because-—for the first-time there is pressure during the summer months of the year to build houses, that the government should step in?” That's what the man said, right: in the House of Commons. And a shabby way indeed to treat the hopes of his party faithful down.here! ,* A New. Viet Weapon ~ ° United States marines in Viet Nam are credited with having a new war weapon-—hogs. population -has. become a by-product of the marines’ efforts to get Viet- namese villagers, displaced by war, - helping thernselves again in the ‘new life’ villages the government has stablished. Tt all began last year, reports a war correspondent in the Christian Scierice Monitor, when the,First Mar- ine Division moved into the Chu Lai area in order to build an. airstrip. During clearing operations, numbers, of farmers had to be evacuated and, as a result, the Chu Lai New Life Village was formed—combining ~—hamtets-and-3,600-people.In-an effort C to get the displaced villagers on their * feet, several marine ‘units’ got . to- gether, built a big farm, and organiz-’ _ed: 55 families into a hog cooperative. - A marine flew down’ to Saigon, pur HG a weekend. holiday occurs on the Mon- day evening during the last hours of: the day. Safety conscious drivers start Upping the porker™ our _ for hhome~early-and—avoid_this_con- gestion with its persitenes accident frequency. Association President R.W. Trol- tope offets another. good hint forthe enjoyment of a safe; sane travelling Victoria Day weekend. Besides not trying to sqtieeze a week's travel into three days, and starting home in time to make it at a reasonable speed, he says. “Never for a minute lose sight of the fact that accidents only happen..to the ‘other. fellow.’—and who, but you: is the other fellow’s .. 4 ‘other fellow’ i In Chinook’ Blsdhand: < From Nelson, B.C., comes word that a completé set of one of the most * unusual .newspapers,. ever. published: has been“donated to Notre Dame University there. The papér, called “The Wawa.” Shorthand but in the Chinook ‘lan- guage of the British Columbia Ind- ians. “Wawa” is a Chinook ‘word: meaning to speak, talk or echo. The donation was made by Kay Cronin, ‘author‘of the book “Cross in the Wilderness.’ which recounts” the deeds: *f early Oblate Fathers in the British Columbia bush country. ~ One of the Oblate® priests, Fr. Jean Marif le Jeune, was the originator of the Wawa. He created it by adapting phonetics te the Chinook jargon in order fo instruct the Indians inf easy phonetic writing. In the first. issue. which came out in Kamloops in May, 1891, and in the next eight monthly issues, Fr. Le Jeune presented the a rudiments of phonetic writing. These issues coimprised~the firsts Chinook reader, The last regular edition of _-the. Wawa came out in December, -1904, but Fr Le Jeune continued to - publish issues from time to time until A9N7 ee | Sonret his “unique in the, annals of joumalisn, surely, ~~ = : < . * is not only printed in. -) , Halifax, “N.&.- the temples as they appeared , three millennia ago. To save the treasures, a bustl- ert plateau | Nile. more life today than at any since its construction,” Ger: says. Opening round inthe fight to | gave-the-temples-atmost.went to. the’ Nile. Engineers worked ‘fev- ishly to erect an. 80-foot coffer- dam to ward off an unexpected | flood, A complex drainage sys- | | temAvas constructed to backstop | F the dam; pumps-supporting: this overlooking the “Abu Simbel - pulses vie system can‘ biphon off 200 gallons | | -a second,: DRILLS AND DYNAMITE | A-massive layer: of iron- rich | | sandstone around the Great | ‘Temple -presented...further..com- plications. Engineers removed 142,000 cubie yards with dyna- | mite. Another 29,000 cubic yards | -were painstakingly uprooted by | “pneumatic drill and excavated by hand. ‘ PUBLIC FORUM This column ts open te the discussion by correspondents of questions of in- | terest. The Guardian’ does net neces- | sarily endorse the opinion of corres. | pondents. All letters published are sub- | ject to editing and condensation where —~ necessary. The ‘Guardian is unable te enter into any rorrespondence regard: ing letters submitted. | _ UNSIGHTLY CONDITION Sir,—On a recent visit te my: | , home; province, I was. great disturbed to see sych Gnatghety conditions ita of” the highways. - The one in pilik probably’ be- | eause it is so near my home and and T passed it so many times during. my visit; is the deplor- sable--mess-at--Poole's Corner, Roseneath, Kings Co. With. >, here, and the tourist season fast | approaching, would-it not be in the best interest of tourist pro- motion to beattify . this corner which has traffic approaching from .four directions? It is a great.detractionfrom_the beauty. around it Thé .recently along sr wilt, cleanly kept motel directly across * from” this corner and the. fev nearby homes are a credif.to the pwn- ers s Why. do these old a car-bodies-have—to—he—left_s conspiciously hear the highway? | Could they not be carried away or hidden behind a fence built along the property? ‘ T am, Sircete MRS HOWARD’ SMITH " spring clean-up » time | ection times especially ‘if their | ‘representatives are actively bat- Mrs. G.W. writes: My baby | was born with a full head of} hair, two inches long. Now, at in history. if a. Roosevelt and a | Kénnedy collide and should Pre- make them uncomfortable: noise has been tried: decoys of | chawks— the. pigeons’ «enemy- e | have heen set at strategic ihe men have been hired to shoot [them where and when th ta could. be done safetly, stilt “the pigeons thrive: \__But there Jn “Rid: to man's ‘ingenuity and the-mare h of science. The answer tp the pro- hlem of the. pigeon pest may. he _ here. According to the United | States Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animals, ex: “periments “have heen going on - pigeon | to reduce Manhattan’ population by. feediiig: the birds “the pill’, or the ORI RRORICS “equivalent thereat The pigeons: heen corn treated with a contracep- five. chemical which makes the birds sterile up to « period of have ev wx months;~but- which-does not hice o ¥ t ‘fed _ New Ap orbdicis Te China w= Rois-Miskew ~~ é Caandian Press § aff. United Nations UNITED NATIONS (CP) —)gerous, ‘ miscalculation 'aat The United States is becoming | could mean all-out. war.’ |,iereasingly aware that the is- U.S” Defence Secretary Me- olation of China from the world , Namara expressed a_ Similar community .was not such a good concern before a Montreal aud- | dence Wednesday when he ead of bringing about stated barriers causing isolation } ion of the Peking gov- | thfoughout . the - world must be ent and the reinstatement broken down. n: Chiang Kai-Shek on the 'MAKES PLEA . : | Chinese jainland, the —black- | McNamaré@’ pleaded for ‘‘real- balling of |the world’s most pop- istic relationship’’ with both the ulous nation merely angered the’ Soviet U nion. and China to Chinese \@adership to the point bridge ‘the vast. ideological where it |now has become a | chasm separating us from threat to world peace.. them,” adding: The tr'auble between the “Breaching the isolation’ of | United States ahd China began great nations like Red China re- iin. .1949° When the _ American duces the danger of poten- | fleet was used | to prevent Pe- | tially _catastrophie misunder- [eine from joccupying™ Formosa, - standing.” | soon after-/the end of t suc) in Ottawa a j cessful Communist-eampaign on laste earlier, Us. iaeole ot thie « “main| nd. “Arthur Goldberg met with Pear- Ever si ce then Canada has. ison and External Affairs Minis-. followed’ the) United States in re- ‘ter Martin and said. that both fusing to jrécognize the Peking the, U.S. and Canada would wel- ~ government |and has - supported come China being in the “main- | the U,§.| d¢termination in the stream, of the international United |Nations to keep ‘Peking- community.” Nae oe w tf iq) OrmRDseRtion, a } All this would suggest that CHANGE TTITUDE China's. admission to the UN But alll s now /point to a could hardly be opposed at the change ihe attitude of Wash- next session of the Genergl ington, and\\for that) matter Ot- “Assembly, However, much will the Peking _gov- depend on the wording of the. ernment} | of}|\Premier—_Chou— En draft-tesolution pee aes a ; bai, A allt EW tea \ eontareeness thai ibietendsdeeetisasitaesianmstnsiiay --Much red for the more rea/ a sonable jatti de toward ee : - /-must 0 | |to | Secretary-Gen- y Leral Thant ‘who -on_a number if y ou like of occasions \Was called for uni- versal _membership in the world body. ~ Hot Water |~ Esso warm atr heating and ventilating. “We Heat, Treat, Cool and_Move Air. Chinese admigsjon) remains ur- | gent “and we ty cation”. between the ‘West and | China, Pearson’ warned Pe- | ° e | king's fear. the ' U.S.-is deter. | Palmer Electric Ltd. | mined to destroy the Comm | Fitzroy St. Dial, 4-8543 nist regimein China awe be Stee OF ee _ Dance _Festival-€ Concert — Saturday, May. 21 =.7:30 P.M. CONFEDERATION CENTRE THEATRE — 1. Folk Dancing Grades 1-4 Sherwood School. 3. Scottish Ballroom Dancing 12 and under Shirley's Celtie Ballroom Dancers. 3. Grades 2-4 Square Dancing Parkdale Elementary School. | 4. Step Dance 6 and under Janice Dowling. 5. Solo—Marilyn MacDonald—Solo Novelty Dance. 6. Solo Dance—Patsy* MacLean. 7. garoup National _Dance 12 and undét-Shirley’s Dutch “Finy | 8. Solo Tap Clog. Valens Beer. 9. Group Rhythm Tap—Shirley’ 8 Easy Stepping Rhythm Rockers. 10. Folk Dancing. Grades_5-7—Parkdale Junior High. 11. Solo Ann Fraser. 12. Solo: Dance-—Janet Farrar. i j $e 24 ;, 5 : ; . Shirley's Celtic Dancers; Shirley’s Senior. Celtic. Lassies; ~ Se | 14. Scottish Reels—Shirley’s- Wee Celtic Lassies. | 15, Solo—Marion MacQuarrie. : 16. Solo—Marilyn MacDougall. | 17.. Solo, Soft Shoe—Sherlyn Bevan. | 18. Group Tap Clog—Charlottetown Silveriones. | 19. Solo Tap cing seanple Augustine. | 20. Solo—June 21. Group Tap Schoo! ‘of the Deaf—Shirtev’s Happy Tappers. 22. Flora MacDonald's Fancy—Judy Harper. | 23.Sword Dance—Jacqueline. Howatt. - é ee vas gkcal thing for some prized plum. This | sident Johnson _ throw «his pres- : : ing town has sprung upon a des- | could happen in the U.S. in 1972 {tige behind someone like Hubert will. months, oe it all. | a Cah ee Ng “the vear President Johnson is Humphrey. it a new RELY gin 28 Solo Tap Clog—Marlene Mae Chas. fae ; ; » 27.—Group. Rhythm Tap—Shirley’s Tiny. Tots. ae tren ae meee of & mR. Irish Jig—Jacinta MacKinnon. A Day Beg ins Nate: eA : | 29, Group Novelty—Shirley's Silver Rockets: ( nce |. 30. Solo—Patricia. MacLellan. New York a2 ee a re should be 31. Step Dance—Mary Murphy. Sdavive2 ' be itnelt. The paniath addresse r ee 32. Solo—Paul Smith. Stinrise comes early now, be- | sunrise rengthening.Van-Dellen, co--Chicago.Trib-___33._Marching—Through_Georgia—St_Jean's, Grade & ‘fore 5:30, as we read the clock; glow touches the treetops and — une, Chicago, Illinois.) | 34.’ Solo Rhythm Tap—Joyce Landry. > |but the’sday begins still earlier, | there, on their high perches,,the | -—______.-. | 36. Solo DanceuMlarilva Wood. : with first light, last winking star | birds begin to sing as though . 36. Step Dance—Brenda Bernard. jand birdsong. Especially with | they could already see the new | Our Yesterdays | 37. Scottish Ballroom thpeh)--Shirley’ 8 Celtic Dance Studio. ‘song, for thé dawn chorus of the | day's dimensions. |” (rem: The: Guardian Files) 38. Junior Square Dancing—St. Jean's Elementary, birds makes ‘the day’s begin- The chorus rises and strengh- | : | 39. Solo Step Dance—David Hennessey. ning a special occasion in city | ens, filling the air. It continues. TWENTY.- FIVE YEARS AGO | 40. Solo—Ruthie MacKay. | park, on suburban street or in until that crucial moment when (May 21, 1941) 41, Group Novelty—Charlottetown Irish Steppers. the rural woodland. . the sun.is about to appear. Then | An entife French regiment in 42. Solo—Debbie Rhynes. ci There is neither was nor there is silence— -incredible, © Syria deserted to join the ranks 43. Group _Novelty—Summerside ‘Presbyterian Highland Roclets. haste at that hour; askie-ayraits awesome silence in the face of of Free French forces, advane- .44. Solo—Larry Brazel. man’s ‘awakening. “Stars slowly © a:great*event;-a miracle:-The-sil-. ing -into-Syria-from:Palestine. 45. Grades 5-7 Square Dancing- —School of the Deaf, jfade. The sky begins to brighten ence hangs in the air, almost 4 vs ey Z neni at 8 ee e in the east. As the glow spreads, palpable, until the sun's first The Transport Department . Group National ._Dance—Shirley’s Celtic, Sailors. |first birds awaken and call, ten- rays appear. Then, like a great’ announced the steamship Port- 44. ‘Irish Jig*Louise Sanderson. i | tatively, sleepily. Other birds ‘hallelujah, .the chorus begins ‘adoc was lost by enemy action 49. Group Tap Clog—Charlottetown Four. “awaken and answer. The calls again, redoubled in volume. It on April 4 and that eight Canad- 50. Solo Tap—School of the’ Deaf—Flaine Campbell. ‘become phrases of song as the is-celebration, rejoicing, exulta- {jan members~of the crew were a an i ert ge of tr ae Won Worth. light _ increases, delibosate: as tion jn the new day. : , Prisoners in French a: : 5h Salt. Bot Ohne rley’s Starlets, TEN YEARS AGO- 54. eave Broadswords—Ross Highlanders Jr.; Ross Highland- —f Pill For The: ‘Birds George Raward Lund, 208 of [ SS Stet Dancing topen) “Frank Rose: os “on Winnipeg Free Press Mr. and Mrs. Gordon . Lund of | 5° Groen Dew Rhine re Dinas Leo, | Charlottetown, graduated from~ sq ior PF; ; mt eH Clubs Dane | Despite te advance of sclerice | |harm them. The results the ao-., Dalhousie University as a Doc." ’ cue Geee ee ee and technology, one thing that ciety says; are r wy : C : |man has not yet succeeded in | Presumably they eit ais that ee ce : ES feats Niue Mine tea Aya | pat Satisfactorily~ is getting. way. as long as the authorities |. Among the graduates in Med- ? ee a Ret ees in urpen aie ‘responsible for putting out the icine at Dalhousie was ae ~—THE-END ° those wi @h | corn keep .a sharp eye on the | Bem Jardine,-son of Mr. an ; | buildings. Many attempts have calendar and don't miss a feed- Mrs, RS.P. Jardine, Charlotte |. Trophies and medals will be presented during the concert. is been made; ledges have been: |ing. | town, . ; : one eae | Sprayed with sticky substances ~ ee mee oe ~ d ‘that coat the pigeons’ feet -and: | . Just mail this coupon to- Housé of Braemore, 4646 Dufferin St, Downsview, Ontario,