, The Guardian | Covert Prince Edwerd island like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wellece Ward ® frank Walker Managing Editer + Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and ‘statutory -holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P-E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Lid: + . Brench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton end Souris. Represented caalae by. Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Services: Torante 425 Unversity Ave. Empire 3-8894; Monfreal 640 Cathcart Stree? Uni. versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. ming secretariat of the But something can be done, y. | ‘stopped to think that there are hit several deer,” he told. her. Member Cariacian Daily Newspaper Publishare had a qualifving statement to make. | pecially those bothered to | 18,000 parts in the vehicle-in “Were they on_ the tracks” ‘ Association aiid The Canadian Press. The Canadian’ The secretariat, he said: lacks ‘ex- such an extent that the profuse (which you're riding and every “No,” said the conductor dryly. Press is exclusively entitled te the use for repub ‘ ‘i? ' lication of all mews dispatches in this paper tredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters ane also the loca’ news published herein. All Fight or republication of special discatches here in also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40 per week by carrier. stantly stimulates the secretion | ™ " $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and seas | every form of, federal welfare and | _ of sweat. These individuals have but I sure wish they could do it | call the sergeant : asked “met serviced by carrier. no conscious control over the | & little more quietly’ — Kansas the commanding cer. . “T development aid available into them. City Star. did,” said the private. “And, $15.00 @ year off Island end U.K. $20.00. per mechanism any more than they a sa priva year in US and eleewhere ounide Brith Com | Federal welfare officials would then . : atih, ;: e ¥ | spending more thar $500 million dur. ing 1966 and 1977 in an all-out attack on poverty—a program. he which “provides ample evidence of the determinatitiro! both the federal *government and the provinces to pro- - vide resources needed to 1a¢ kle e-prob- lems of poverty on a realistic scale.” That was fine But one of the min- ‘ister’s ~ chief ~ commanders, R.A. Phillips. director of the special plan- perience in dealing with that much money. It would like first to make a pilot test, picking.one or more de- pressed communities and injecting Privy Council. { Said, -|: 4 "Nee ever Je ainale? copy - . Member ber Audi+-Buresy of t Cireulenog. wAGk i Without Parallel The Legislative Assembly of New "Brunswick is nearing the completion of a ing which, in effect, began last } avaniber and which, according to the Fredericton Gleaner, has no paralle! in the pofitical nistory of the province. It has seen the Robichaud government, by the strength of its legislative majority, ramming through : : : : { uleer remedy and it was- noted - : a program of legislation in the face of | shown. It behooves those in command - at that time that the amount of — and’ 20 affection ool ro o _ bres ee ion, Opposition criticism in the House and | to keep this fact in mind. to do less perspiration also was affected kind. 5 ee. Seer etn, - done before this “war” studvthe sociologi:a) and economic | implications of the’ many aid pro- TRURSDAY, J JUNE 23, 1966: | grams’in order to etn. how to ply the war on poverty on a regional or national basis from the pilot project findings. So, despite the optimism engender. ed by the cozy wall-to-wall carpeting | of the conference chamber, the chandelier lighting and rich mterior decorations, it is evident that there is a good deal of hard spade-work to be really gets under way and any results can be i b } | +f | Profuse =~ | pweating | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellien | Some persons perspire more freely than others: Their hands and feet are moist most of the , time and the use of underarm | antiperspirants seldom is , cessful,-even in the winter The sweat... glands work overtime ‘ whether - the persons are sitting | | quietly or exerting secretion -is annoying Super-sweafers Xgenerally are healthy and differ from the rest | of us only in possessing an over- ly active autonomic ‘sympatie- | —-fic)—nervous system which com suc." NOTES BY THE WAY He knew there was something she liked about him, but he did- n't find out what it was until it “was all spent. — Kitchener Wa- terloo-Record. | How would you feel if you happened to be Edward H. | White and James A. McDivitt and you were circling around this earth while in space and | One of thes18,000 parts was let-to the low bidder Burlington | Standard - Press. toon “T guess boys will be boys’ says the mother. down the block fire sirens sound, and in: t h-e smal! town, they drive out into the street and try to heat the trucks 9 heir desination Milwaukee Journal. The train came to a sudden stop just north of Monico. A_wo- man passenger picked herself up | off the floor and asked the con- ductor what had happened: “We | "We had to chase them across a field.” — — Journal * A private was hauled up be fore the commanding officer for insulting a sergeant. ‘Did you a—twister- ss Yes se Vern the heart beat or_ihe. digestion of food. ' Of two sisters sleeping 1” a double bed under the same cov- ers, for example; one awakens drenched in perspiration, where people park. their cars when the Star. as the skin of the other is rela- _. tively dry. Invaddition, the- sweat ing apparatus of: these hyper-re- actors is stepped up greatly in periods of excitement, anxiety, hx nervousness. . The anticholinergie drugs such las Banthine are the best intern- ‘al remedies.- These medications - ‘may cause side effects such as ‘blurred vision and dry mouth and therefore should only — be used when prescribed by the ! / physician.” Years ago’ this type of product was used as a peptic ' A” gage observer has pointed out that one of the differences _ between a small town and bi town isothat in a big town the | the private.” “And “dit you deo” cribe fim as a pop-eved, knock- gx. “Well. no Sir,” the private: said — “T forgot that!” — Montreal i ~ From - ‘ies! experiences in’ Peterborough we know that ofd People’ can fall down, lie injured and ufattended for days,.-be-.. Cause they have little or ho con tact with other people. We also know of nursing homes and hom- | @s for the aged where old peo- : ple are consigned to live out Old Age Fanalieee Peterborough Examiner gh we cannot conceive of ther: being the. hest answer to the prablem > Phe fact is that” "out waule. hood and age are all essential parts of a healthy’ community. To separate_any of these stages totally, works to the disadvan- age of WW hree. Onof h m- - public protest and petition outside of - ‘Disguised under such slogans as | “program of evolution” and ‘‘equali- tv of opportunity,” this mass of legis- lation constituted a ruthless invasion of the sphere of authority hitherto -teserved to the municipalities. First the assessment function was taken en- firely from the municipalities by a statute urider whose provision the provincial government. appropriated the assessing staffs of the cities, ——- horn-tooting and, perhaps. to give a Professor little sober thought to ‘ Titmuss’ criticism as well. Sometimes the truth comes in unpalatable doses! Needed, More Babies We hear much about the “popula- | tion explosion” these days, but Fast _ Europe’s Communist leaders are be- set by problems stemming from a. : | quite different trend. According to | ; | cockpit of Europe.” _. NOW WE HAVE A JOHNSON TOO . OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Martin Hailed As Most Likely Successor BRUSSELS, Events have heen echoing: his- tory in this capital city of ‘‘the “business and we are not concerned paid until. children are“three years gulf created by “de Gaulle; he | msisted that we -of the NAO al- | BELGIUM: son should vacate it he poh. lie opinion polls. show him en- joying infinitely more ° popular 000 miles; seliing at a cent a. pound less than the Maine spuds | cal inexperience? Some say he waffles too much when he speaks; but-can a Foreign Mini- | the skin is similar. illnesses This is understandable because | the same group of nerves that Stimulate the acid secretion of the stomach are deadened; ‘he effect upon the nerves going to There. are other causes of | overabundant perspiration. It is | common in the obese, perhaps because of the insulating effect of the layers of blubber and the | ' additional work of the body in- duced ‘by the added poundage.. The manifestation also occurs in | that produce — fever, such as tuberculosis ‘and ‘malar- | ia. Those with high blood pres- __The ready assumption has fiend made since the introduc- | tion of the old age pension that | old people, because they can support themselves, become ma- | Bically independent This is man- | ifestly not so, and the supposition | of tis i frequently [eae to old people being treat- ed as apart from ‘the commun- ity altogether— except: on spee- ial occasions. It has also led to those clinical communities en- | tirely for old people which, from’ jall — are a success, thou- for example, is getling used le ‘the international aspects of the — the immigrant and what is more . important, the robbing of his children of grandperenis within close reach. One of the major problems of not with old people, as the problem is most often categorized, but what to do about a community which does nét value the com- bined activities of youth, adult- hood and age when jt is approp- riate to do so. reports thered support than his possible rivals ster speak his mind frankly in ic : ee tow nd tr Th Ra ; by Radio Free On a sunny June day a cen- and the talk in Liberal circles public, when 67 foreign ambas- Sure eereeee Fete. Sweating | owns and countyjes. “Then an even | Europe. the combination of growing | tury and a f ago. Brussels on Parliament Hill accepts him sadors are breathing down his associated with eczema or con- e We > i : de : very tact dermatitis may lead to ma- | Rec m venc ea ening more e revolutionary statute. now h__ heard the disfant rumble of Bri- as “the man most likely to re- neck, eager to. report every ; ; ; po F eaee of aged, ‘together wit! i. eae a : tits }—nuanee var ~sen-—ceration —and interferes —w it-h}- “Wy Arch MacKcazie” = awaiting royat assent; wilt abolish the . shrinking birth -rates, have driven — _lington beat back France's at-_ in’ E ng iat alt i i wern- treatment. It is here that the St ... ee — 7 "tempt to disrupt the peace of Eu- Even that veteran litical me , : : -wasnmgon t€f “Phe--ning—to-take—a~leatter's-role lhind-iensiesiih viel of their - down the natural population i increase. + rope On a similar day this strategist John Dieleabater re have. shows clearly: and: with- used along with the usual oint- American , t ory of ‘Southeast Southeast Asia as the main in- pe , seiz ure asse The trend seems most acute in Hun- | month. Brussels heard the near- cognizes Paul Martin as the ut peradventure, that in his ap- ments. Asia, propounded by former dustrial country. by the - p-ovincial government. A East Germany and Czechoslova-. er rumble of USA, British and probable next ae leader pointed field and at ‘the appro- RAD ACTOR jpresident Dwight D. Eisen: . ~Ajso favorable is the end of : Sary, y ' / ' F riate time, Paul Martin does ‘ele i, |hower, held that a Communist the war between Indonesia- and measure doubling the sales tax and 7 te German protests at what they |For, in reply the query P CR writes: If the appendix , . i : 2 gp ; kia. Hungary's birth rate of 13.1 | envisioned as another French whether he ae ed. with Sena. not waffle, but speaks with |. painful. at age 15, and later take-over in pee pig _ Malaysia. That will ease Brit- widening its score of application is | births per “thousand ‘inhabitants is me mepediaing ot pe oe - - foe . urging - that pon aa and’ unchallen- | i5 the thirties it felt pinched, a "tline” waa pon ze s ve ayes 2 pny : ] i : : also part of the program. _ | said to be the lowest in the world. | tig fields ereund the “nistofie leader should Gass. tr mage he significant ahd ominous poor pe —_ ™- — — — h baa dla: iepeeial aed irom the Asiat oo with the ney te = | Main reasons for the low birth rate: | farm of La Haie Sainte and the | [retsrtad: ri don't see any fea meeting of NAO foreign ‘int eneys Be» Plo seit gg Dyed one and Pacific Council oY US. ovations ve been s0m . a ; ougoumont, I saw cows grazing I’ve sters here in us uel, penatig gut nga * i s—hopes— -might—ch. ” I Cee , East European nations generally have | Placidly on that battlefield of (always got along very well with _had—two—unquestioned—results.—N 0 t—necessarily,—but—yt ot “7 ate a ag Recent Indian nohnencas do- gurprises. In January a cabinet min- | more women than men; -contracep-. army had suffered a shattering |Paul Martin.” The NATO alliance was saved. should consult a physician |what might be ca . mestically, including currency ister resigned, in April anothér was bei ed more widely;. | defeat. At that same moment, BUILDS SAURF from immediate impotence’ when the structure flares up ran fe. Oo = that ike devaluation under stiff Ameri- fired. Both weré k the ad- | tives are ing -us mor T knew, in a locked Brussels || Hon. Paul Martin, who. cele- through the withdrawal of again. He. will advise removal A is 18 lew Viet N a can pressure, are welcomed, as wes Sey See Mt Gp at- | sdortions are legal. Mousing is in very | cauuesacs rons, the Amaricems |Neaiat Win Wied Diethter door, Se cna eee of Say if SYP Sara Oe ete ea etnenns ond ‘Gann: |well. as evidence thet India’ is ministration but no explanations were | h Al it sidered | the Brits and the Germans were Midsummer's Eve, is not with. ly by the stand taken by Paul eration. Re as ngt! it~. | jeas_prececuplednow by teur-ot ; . | short supply. Also, it is consider s . a ehae aay ee | : {aged anti-Communist regimes | given for their departure from public tee eae is i : nt > trying to give France another, out his critics. . Some day he is Martin: and he himse was | ARTHRITIS AND WORK —|- ia: ladenesian’s China. SAREE et vere inet i } ~ = i - 4 + —bitt—marked-as ——— 0. die Coe: ink thee fame 0 ae chic” in_some areas to have nO | jut diplomatic defeat for “daring too : 3 a-thilled ant respect —ipe5: -8—dwrites: Wilt staying taaersaaeil wad: bloody seat cf Even neutralist Burma, long e. One re m /Legis- children. ‘Radio Budapest says that | to withdraw from NAO’s inte- does Canada need a green ed diplomat, outmatched in bri home from work help to cure ar: |its Communist party by the 2" enigma to the U.S, shows lature; the other as simply’ disap- : 1 age grated military command. But ‘youngster whose youth ‘would liance by no other foreign mini- thritis? P 1 party signs of reviving Western ties oan fe Hungarian mothers who have more. General -de— Gaulle, unlike the -not made amends for ‘hes politi ster-in-the -western-world today.-| ve There oe hia developments 24 the head of the military peared. In “past ew days, in-| than one child often are ridiculed. Emperor Napoleon ‘on that ear- ct, Tl a fe er oe ot REPLY eited—to—lighten—the—gloom-that-refime._Gen._Ne Win, is plan-____ another unexpected move, the gov-— = Lee -4_,_lier— occasion, —was_not—humbled—— + —_|-Yes, if combined with treat- prevails generally . about the "ing a. visit to Washington in ernment seized more pay as well as Whatever the causes: Communist by the formidable forces array- . ~ Warning Reont Maine ment. It is well to remember length and scope of che Viet September. ° pay leaders are so concerned ‘thaf they | ed against him: because this / g that working does not cause ar- | Nem war. Some -Amerfean officials are . more power, with a measure increas- . ‘ , '-time ‘France had a scale-tilting “Bangor Daily News \thritis and that some activiity we cheered by the’ retirement of ‘ : : ; are talking of ways to encourage i, a k he joints. |CLAIM RESPONSIBILITY Dekisten’a 6 ' imiste ing the remuneration of the Premier [Sita 5 oe ally AM _ helps- by keeping the joints a akistan's foreign minister, J Y 2 laine housewafe walked into There was a mime, up to per Some American officials say : more births. Some: incentives men In contrast to those impetuous limber . *. Zulfikar Bhutto, and the fact and the cabinet ministers, the op ; on and foolish diplomatic virgins, bef local grocery store recently. aps a couple of decades, ago, | od these developments are ‘ue di- brocident Avub Khan is taking ition leader, th ened af 8 secant Erepontan ™ Hien NAO. allies, Canada’s. Paul | Her shopping bet inchited po- when’ a spud was just a spud. | NO SUBSTITUTE [reetly to US. persistence in over Bhutto was labelled as. one ere speaker, the or gary are increased taxation of child- Martin sched into the future, | es There wasn't much ta choose | AVAILABLE | Viet Nam. Others ‘including non- 12, chinese and a liability it whips and the private members. ge | ta eae the stupidity of widen- On a counter -she foundnew among the table stock offered | Mrs. F. E. writes: If the fallo- jAmericans say they have hap- better Indian Pakistan rela= This, of course, is New Brunswick's met compiles, Seactal stapemces % be ing and cementing the narrow California potatoes, sipped 3.- by the stores pian tube must be removed be- pened despite Viet Nam. tions. emia “This is no inger trie. -Quahty cause of infection, can they be | But limited optimism is being and packaging have been im- | /expressed about the recent for- As for the leadership struggle old, and =m of acme! replaced with plastic tubes? REPLY on the same counter. “The Cali | liance should still call France now proceeding within the Chi- with it here. Except for those per- atc roved. So h -handhi nd | mation, at that: too may leaves. « ‘ nur triend_and—ally-—By_his_un--fornia potatoes. “were + eae ation a pataiea ’ Not yet. even though atfempts | of the Asian and Pacific Coun- eventually mean a weaker Com- a ‘sistent rumors we ‘about Partv leaders, suggests an ex- | flagging efforts at this 1966 Bat- Sized and of top quality The are now being made with plas- | eil—Japi South : ie -well-heeled--activities -of —‘Robi- — te of Brussels, and by his lead-~ a become ie tuber: choosy U0, 1). a change. might find a clue to success | of. were _irregoter of size and ership alone; he turned the tide: show ae. ‘slab | N New_York and Florida we’ ale ’ li ayy tetera sitios inivaepiaenetiemmaites chaud’s Raiders” in our own prov- Philippines, Malaysia; $o.u th UTERINE FIBROIDS bania, “one east European’ France was not humbled hy a i M. : sin iris | Viet Nam, Australia New inciat election campaign, indicative |, 1" Albania, the urn | quieiidiie remit aad tue’ in in ween to put better potatoes on the JR. writes: Can single girls | 726 MOTOR Maas country that has. more men ; than : She wondered how this could | Market. she quickly learns to develop fibroid tumors? on eae of the missionary zeal of the gentle - 2 mt ae soem in the. BAO alana ae tuy them in preference to the” |, USM hopes are twofold: That & REPAIRS women and has no problem with-low - was averted. For this, Pau! aine potatoes. once: [uncertainty of what she may ‘cet REPLY | this could be .the beginning of man who dispatched them to bring us birth’rales: The réseon. woe ling to’ Martin later won acclaim from pe king. of the Gem oad be oS a Peemcdpyrdar yg Bein, Bene oe, |a regional. alliance ‘of. Asian P ‘7 , kn back into the Liberal fold. We are rofsaninisal snide ots. io that frome warepene nrenen Matt sotaen yo - wanlity al iee & Molde lane. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— ‘self - help militarily and eco- | By C37 a dale , some non 7h confeéree s toes ised other told that “both strategy and troops” were _sent over, including personnel from the New B k premier's office staff. Who ever heard of such © ‘goings-on before! Could it be that they took with them a blueprint of the Robichaud “program of evolution” as evidence of the good things in Store for us if we threw the Tories out? Costly Cilatans The ‘war on poverty” "conference now in progress amid plush surround- ings in Vancouver will cost more than $280.000 by the time it ends on Fri- day, according to the director of the Albania has no televistén sets!-+" Adult Education _ Canada’s minister of citizenship and immigration, Jean Marchand, recently put his finger on an aspect from European newspaper head- dines... ; “ he victor of the Battle of Wa- | terloo. went on to. become prime | ent to ponder whether of-adult education that is bothering ~ a great number of grown-up Cana- dians who feel hesitant to go back to ' school. He said: } “You can not ask grown men and women to go hack to school like children. shown that they can be trained for better things without, loss of status -a8 adults, or, and perhaps ‘it is the Canadian Welfare Council responsible | More important thing, without loss of <<" “for Oiganizing it. Oh well, what's a few hundred thousands, more or less, in fighting a war! The troops have to.- be provided for, haven't they? That Proféssor Titmuss of the London i { ——= “The same problem arises with the man who may be unemployed, and uneducated. Under our present system he has remained unemployed Schoo! of Economics and Political | while taking training. If he is entitled. Science. and one of the principal con- - tributors:to recent British health and — welfare __ le. le: gislationt_w hat did he mean by sounding off the way-he did at Tuesday's session? Saying he found it.“unpleasant and paradoxical to’sit ‘in a luxury hotel solemnly discussing the condition of poor people’? He should be packed off to England and told not to butt ‘in on our poverty war, __. again, that-he should’ What did they ” bring him here for anyway” . Such thoughts may have been-in the minds of some of his indignant auditors, thought is not recorded that thy gave utterance to them. The , conference itself had opened on a brave note by federal Health Minis- ter MacEachen_who talked about the federal and provincial governments - . \ ‘to unemployment insurance benefits, _ those benefits are deducted from the training allowance provided for him. He never escapes the feeling that he is getting a handout, and this should not be so: A-man taking “upgrading and. training courses is doing his country a service-—and himself, of course, but in thir time of high de- . mand for trained peopic. more so for Somehow they must be | minister of his country. his would be an appropriate, mom-~ history ‘will repeat itself, with the hero _of this year's diplomatic Battle * of Brushes go on to be acclaim- ed, like the Dike of Wellington, as prime minister of his coun- wy? : : : his* may seem a dreamy rallel. But in'fact Paul Martin has -already been nearer to ‘sud- den prime ministership than is commonly known, and today he stands far ahead of other candi- Gates for that | post if Mike Pear- - 2 Our Yesterdays | (From The Guardian Files) _ TWENTY . FIVE YEARS AGO (June 23, 1941) ‘ _ Soviet troops colliding with the mechanized German army _on a front extending from the | Baltic to the Black Sea destroy- | ed 300 Nazi tanks and captured 5,000 German troops. pa- ‘British bombers blasted nk way fargets in northern France and pounded the invasion coasts with “big stuff’ in furious con- tinuation of an aeria! offensive which indirectly helped the- Rus. sians om the distant eastern front. Ze “TEN YEARS-AGO ’ (June 23, 1956) His- Honour Lieutenant al er- __the country And he to feel this,” —“Fhe: minister makes’ a point: which should. be we!l considered. not only ~ mal opening and. dedication. of by the trainees, but by the public*as a whole. EDITORIAL NOTE Downgrading the moon-centinues Now ‘@ scientist. va its lopsidéd. ' the new Guardian building * jeal” which ostarted The Gusttion press rolling off -eopies_af the special edition marking the for- on Prince. Street 4 Mr. John-K. Macfonald. Char lottetown. was re-@lected presi- dent of the PEI Pharmaceut- Association at - the. annual meeting held al the Charlotie ¢ } | town Hotel side of. the ‘continent. Bait she idn't long. was too busy. he , bought the California happy that she had found a good buy -and-had saved a few pen- nies at a time when food prices “were on the rise. This is not a new happening. It has occurred again and again in local and out-of- “State stores. Maine oe Jost its top position “ho. Other So are forging | ahead.-putting better and cheap- -er potatoes on the counters of Maine's own stores” Wouldn't you say it is time, and then some. that Maine | woke up to the economic facts potatoes the housewife will buy? 0 ey in Nene | to Producing. What Happens Te Medals? Windsor Star ” What Savini to all the med- als awarded to men for military valor or to others for various forms of good citizenship or dis- tinguished service In the course of human events the owners of these must die. and what then “Most perhaps become famiiv— heirlooms. Military medals often become prized possessions of re- Ziments to ‘which the original holders belonged. But some end up in an old trunk in a attic. or in thes hands of Pawn-brokers - Vietoria Cross now is in Toronto lead: “Vancouver Mighty Yale. <4 seems. is a trifle tardy in its elaims to be the first university moving to break. the grip. of the PhD_ octo- pus The University of roronte is quick to point out that jit— not Yale as these columns had re- _ cently” Teported- at the fiPst school fo come ip with an Inter- mediate graduate decree. The putpose is to offer an honorable shortci#t so that students do fot spend half their life striving for the élusive doctorate = The Toronto solution is the Master of Philosophy a degree* that does not require ‘he writing of a thesis— although it does re quire a research paper — which lookssuspiciexs!y—ii-—a—smatt ‘PhD thesis wa that it myst he de fended, hound and deposited in - *RCAF officer now broke. _ boards. ‘ed youth, possession of a Toromo. collect- or, who got it from a for mér This man was proud enough to refuse $2,000 for it, and wanted dit to go to the Black Watch Regiment in Glasgow If tiad been won by an ancestor “Graw. back in 1874 om a now al- most forgotten battlefield Such’ medals should have an honorable and permanent place somewhere. It is not fitting that a memento of exceptional brav- | ery should come to an igngmin- | ious end... S Yale - 7 Sun the library Yale. dispenses with | the dissertation entirely. The possibility that some uni- versity posts may now be filled with, grown men. who do not own the sacred PhD may alarm* some fusty types” in mortar- - rangers :But if universit ies eae an a “the grip of (98 Big emerge opp pe nang oe abh ue fm unable-to supply .society's de- mands-tor teachers of its talent. there will be inevitab- le pressure on governments to SéT™up institutions which will The University of Tornto is wise- ty, making the first move QUEEN PROLIFIC Queen Anné, who reigned * vever—Prrgtamt-tronr 2-118 e birth ta 17 childrer ved her none m whom - urs L.-Sgt_ Samuel __Me._. 4. “Read weather gepeietons he- nomically and that Japan, wai i fore sailing. s | _considerable prodding to Dr. Van Dellen should be. addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Minois.) | WALKS 100 HOURS KATMANDU (Reuters) In- dian marathon walker ‘Harbars | Singh, 27, passed the 100-hour | mark Wednesday in an ee nae _ Are ‘still available on dw properties in good. condition and locations. 136 Prince St.. 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