we ANNOUNCEMENTS |. CITY & QUEENS | = se 2 Church, every Matthews am Patrick’s Road. am ee Music >v Ea “EMP: “MENT Two experienced sion. Location of write the “NOTICES — CITY AND QUEENS |, DANCE AT Maple Grove Dance Hall, W. TF CASELY: Secvelary 965 Red Glove Revue at an House” wher 1, at 7.30 pm ~ EMI PLOYMENT __ DRAFTSMEN WANTED raftsmen required immediately by the New Brunswick Electric Power Commis- work Duties involved are with land office of the Mac- taquac Hydro Electric Project. dance with qualifications and experience. is Fredericton, N..B. Salary in accor-- Please MANAGER OF PERSONNEL The New Brunswick Electric Power Commission 527 King Street Fredericton, N, B. \ _NOTICES — REGISTRATION NIGHT CLASSES Kensington Regidnal High School Registration for the following subjects will be held in the High School, 30. between 7 and 9 P.M. Sewing. Biology, English, Physics, Geometery, Algebra. only if registration warrants. Thursday, September Class will be held 4 > MEET THE director of the LODE “Open at the Confederation Centre Saturday ‘Ricnmond Street entrance) Friday, Oct- ae ee supper HOT TURKEY supper (fresh), Harts- ville Hall, September 29. Serving from | |5 P-m. Sponsored by LOBA and LOL. DR. J.B. LANTZ will be absent from | his office at the Polyclinie from Sep- tember 27 to October 12 inclusive BE A BLOOD DONOR today at Con between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tomorrow % ll a.m. and 79 p.m COME TO THE nam and salad sup Harbour North hail ‘29 beginning at 5 hall his office at the Polyclinic from Sep. tember 27 to October 2, inclusive. | ORDER OF Eastern Star. tu-key and ,|salad supper at the Charlottetown | YMCA Wednesday, September 29 Ser- |ving 3.30 to 6.30 p.m_ Tickets $1.00, limited: number at the door | KINGS COUNTY RESERVE WEDNESDAY October 13. for turkey and ham supper, Presbyterian ' Church Hall. - Montague- RESERVE WEDNESDAY October 27 | tor turkey dinner, United -Chureh Hall Montague. Please note change in date | PRINCE COUNTY | RESERVE NOVEMBER 13, 1965, for the Tryon United Church Supper 4 ANNUAL HOT dinner, Freetown, Unt ted Church Hall, Wednesday evenine, September 29. Serving from § p.m Adults $1.25, children .50. 3.8. TAYLOR, Optometrist of 24 Queen Street, Chariottetown, will. be ¢r | | Alberton Office this Saturday, October 2nd. ae AL ROT SUPPER. Immaculate Conception basement. Wellington, | Tneahegiving, October 11th. Bingo and this province. 4 Commercial Rams eal! Department of The following scale of premiums on approved rams placed with sheep breeders in Breeders Rams ... ATTENTION SHEEP BREEDERS. will “be paid Yearlings Lambs $15.00 $12.00 10.00 _ 8.00 These premiums wilk - paid ey the Provin- Agriculture en —— Association. P.E. ; SHEEP BREEDERS ASSOCIATION and the P.EL.I. other games. Meals served from 4.30. Tickets $1.25 and .75e. USE. CLASSIFIED WANT-ADS THE MARKET PLACE | “FOR YOUR -UNWANTED aun te federation Centre (box office entrance) | DM. J.K.L. IRWIN will be absent from | | drew Dollar wish to express sin- | The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues. Sept. 28, 1965. 18, REAL WHISKERS SUPPLIED | FOR DOVER CASTLE’S LION By EDDY GILMORE LONDON (‘AP)—The Lon- don zoo roared out the good | mews Monday that 26 surplus lion's whiskers have been shipped to Dover Castle to refurbish the lion on the royal The S.0.L. \ Save Our Lion was sent out by Maj.-Gen. Erancis Brian Wyldbore-Smith deputy constable of ancient OBITUARY Inserted by the family ANDREW EDMUND DOLLAR The death occurred on Sep- tember |, 1965, at the Prince Ed- ward Island ‘Hospital. of Andrew Edmund Dollar of Brookfield, the last member of the family of Ruth ‘Younker) and Thomas Dollar. Born in‘ 1886 he lived: on the home farm until eight years ago, when he retired owing to ill-health “interested He was deeply in all community life, especially the L.0.L. to which he belonged for over fifty-five years. ' Surviving are his widow (Neavie MacNeill), three sons, Ovid and Milton at Scarborough, Ontario, Gerald at Winsloe and ten grandchildren. One daugh- ter Jennet Louise, predeceased him. The funeral service held at Sé. John's Church, Milton, and con- ducted by Rev. Mr. Piercey and Rev. Mr. Goudge of Winsloe, and the Orange: service held at-the |home, were largely attended. The pallbearers were Sterling MacLean, Donald Campbell, Preston Sentner, Gerald Hoop- er, Garth Hooper and Harry Younker. CARD OF THANKS | The family of the late An- cere and heartfelt thanks to all who were so kind during their recent sad bereavement, to Dr. Ellis and the; nurses at the hos-' pital, to Rev. Mr. Piercey and Rev. Mr; Goudge, to all who sent flowers and cards and to the Andrews Funeral Home, Thank ARTICLES you. ~ BUSINESS SERVICE. DIRECTORY Goods and Service Sas Where. to find them i in Charlottetown and District ithe Hamilton Kinsmen Club. ~ Dover Castle. The castle, which includes a Roman light- house and the ruins of @ Saxon garrison church, has a | beautifully carved royal coat of arms above the constable's mantlepiece. Chief features of the royal arms are a lion and a uni- | corn. “Il recently noticed that the face of the carved wooden lion was lopsided,"’ said Wyid- | bore-Smith, ‘‘and on close inspection discovered that only tw the original wire whiskers were left on one side of the lion's face—and none on the other.” CALLS FOR HELP Deciding to reptace- the lion's’ whiskers with the real . thing, the general asked the zoo for two dozen lion's whis- kers. “We sent him the two dozen and a couple of spares,'’ said azoo spokesman. Said the general: “A mem- ber of the staff stuck the whiskers on with glue and we're jolly pleased with the way the old lion's looking.” Asked how the castle’s uni- corn is standing up ® the ravages of time, Wyldbore- Smith replied: ‘He's in splen- did condition.’’ “That's just as well."’ said the zoo man, “unicorn spares are hard to come .by.” A unicorn has the head and . body of a horse, the hind legs of an antelope, the tail of a lion, the beard of a goat and a single, long-twisted horn. FIND GLAUCOMA\ ‘ HAMILTON (CP)—A_ 13-year- old girl, a bus driver, a minix ter and a fireman were ‘among > ithe 453 people who learned at! Hamilton’s weekend mass clinie>*+t that they may have glaucoma. Ninety others were told that they definitely had the blinding jeye disease, from a assive to- ‘tal tufnout of 9,025 examined at a twoday clinic organized ‘by AIR CONDITIONING SERVICES McCLARY - EASY AIR CONDITIONING UNITS RESIDENTIAL - INDUSTRIAL CALL US FOR FURTHER INFORMATION DICK RUTHART 38 Eden Ch’town 894-9432 || Gala Beauty Shop Kent St. Dial 4-9481 Complete Beauty Service Open days 9 to 5:30, also Tuesday and Thursday nights. — MACHINES Mrs Wilma | | operator. R. C. KEENAN Burroughs Business “Machines -Royal Type Writers © Sales and Service ee an at aoe ~~ CALE BOTTLES ~ 100 Fitzroy. St. «Dial Centres Sales & Service Repairs to all makes of sew-. 4-955... .ing-machines,-vacuum-cleaners.. and floor polishers. “BOILER REPAIRING Certified Electric Welding Ben Livingston and Sons Ltd. @8 Kensington Rd. Tel. 4-7127 ~ BOILER ‘REPAIRING TRANSFER J.-J. FOLEY TRANSFER 65 Richmond St. Phone 4-9914 “Tops in Efficient, Courteous Service.” DRUGS LARTER’S DRUG SUNDRIES (Hal Larter. Prop.) Complete line of Drug Sundries Patent Medicines Sandwiches and Coffee Bar Phone 892-2532 FREE DELIVERY 45 ELM AVE. Gs MONUMENTS Of Distinction Granite and Marble also Cemetery Lettering CURRIE BROS. Malpeque Road, Ch’town 4-8311 ~ oe BUYING. - SE “WANTED ~ 20¢ per dozen PHONE 4-8595 eer Bottle Exchange Drop your beer bottles at MAURICE BLOCK j 11-15. MONUMENTS —— Py j | | | | BUYING SELLING RENTING Spencer~ owner | = Necchi Sewing._|_ GEORGE PEAKE LIMITED “REAL ESTATE . & INSURANCE 292 QUEEN STREET PHONE 2-2448 S..W. WILLIS’ REALTOR - CONSULTANT | Real Estate, Residential, Commercial AUTOMOTIVE SEPTIC TANK SERVICE: Murray River Sanitation Service Septic tanks, pairs. All work guaranteed. Book orders -for school pump- ing done during vacation. A. E. MacKay. Phone 66. | ca SUNNY BUT COLD IN OTTAWA Nancy Williams, 18, and canal in Ottawa Monday af- Normal highs and lows for fone — ge ternoon. Monday's ‘high" of — Ottawa this time of’vear aver- , Ont., enjoy su ie gs . ; - usually. cold weather at a © Was preceded hy a frosty age 64 and 44 degrees. (CP Wirephota) low of 31 degrees Sunday mgit oe THIS cA INDUSTRY ome Dry Soil, Invading Mice park- site pool near the Rideau ‘ wy Send Dunkeld, Claremont, By NEIL A. MATHESON [handle the plow in the hard Thad a most interesting talk ground. The tractor he used hStantey—Willis,-Cornwall_as-would handle_a_four-bottom-plow hed the provincial plow- | lin this country, he said, but it competition | lcouldn’t handle the two-furrow Ransome, blow properly that Stan told --me about — thea -day> some of you saw “errl's plow) terribly dry land they had in; ‘! had to use the differential when he won in Alexandra and Austria last year for the world | lock engaged all the ti e, so l!at-West Cape this fall — but match. He also told me about could get enough traction to | they also had weight on them, ‘the hundreds, yes thousands, of keep the plow moving,” he said. 'to keep them in the ground. The mice that infested the land, |“‘If I ‘didn't use the lock, one mounted plows had their trou: I talked with Alex McKinney, wheel would spin and the other bles too, but the furrows were thairman of the Canadian: Plow: | would- hold.” \straight, and they were uniform, ing Council, when he was here | The tractor Mr. Willis was us- sq they scored higher than the ‘in early summer to. attend the|ing heated up and the motor | others, including the Canadians. annual meeting of the Canadian |stopped because it was too hot 7 haven't forgotten the “mice | Seed Growers Association, jhe said. _ : istory’. but first. a word about He’s the man who described 'WELL PLOWED the depth the men ploughed in the dry land problem the Cana-| Thinking of the difficulty I Austria, The top soil goes down ‘dians, and other’ competitors, asked Mr. Willis If he-had (for five feet.in that area and year. Carlteaves here this-week,- as I said in tact week's column. WEIGHTED PLOWS These plows are mounted— we wa ing _ championship two weeks ago at West Cape. Four: of the contestants pop- than root through the land. | plow deep. Ten inches is the av- PLUMBING faced + been able to do much more be competing plowmen had to But he replied promptly ‘Oh, plowing depth, Stanley ped their coulters’ in the first yes the land: ploughed in few minutes, Mr... McKinney erage |told me, Harrison James 50 Edward Street Tel 4-9868 pumps and re- | Plumbing and Heating Contractor Work Guaranteed MUFFLER-CENTRE. Complete Exhaust Systems Sales he Free. Installation >, Appraisals... mortgages. insurance Pe oo thine STORE Tire Sales é S Campints Farm Tire Service Wheel Alignment O.K. TIRE STORE St. Peters Rd. Ch'town Dial 894-4912 _We__also__make—button— holes }—-——== 165 Queen St... 1 ee bittons. Make alterations.” 125- Kant: St. 200- Water St “Chitown, 48273 — 6 Montague ie | 838-2761 | MacDonalds rowe W | [ S 0) Ne Woodworking SOR -REAL ESTATE Co. Ltd. 90 Kent St. *c~own Doors - Sashes Frames | | We Specialize in All Building | Supplies -t | Manufacturers: | | Available from our Kings- Co. | Représentative Wilbur Jarvis, Kingsboro, Tel: South Lake * 36 Lr. Water . | Ch'town 894-8575 WALLS, & CEILINGS WASHED If your walls and ceilings need washing let us show you how ~mess, with our new cleaning »machine. Free Estimates Tel: 48919 or 4-6000 we can do them without any [ STANLEY MOL REAL ESTATE LTD. Where Friends and Sales | Are Made DEALING EXCLUSIVELY IN REAL ESTATE j 78 Gt. George St. “Near Travel Bureau” | Charlottetown, P.E.I. Phone 2-1611 SEPTIC TANK ‘SERVICE| sas ‘ESQUIRE COFFEE SHOP} Imported Jams. Jellies and —— other confections r Fresh clams and scallops also on our menu 174 Queen St. esrarrer oe 4” Field Tile | 6’’ Cement Blocks Flagstones * "ISLAND.BRIKGRETE __Open 8 arr. 8 5:30 pm ~ a. ie REAL ESTATE pth -4 PHONE 43268 J. W. MackKENZIE Real Estate Coiiealtant - ts Appraiser and Broker 269 Queen Street Charlottetown ’ Member of C.A-R.F.B. , READ EACH AD j Septic Tank Pumping — Specialists c. tank and field tile ins ations and repairs. r ~~ THOMSON ~ West Royalty _ Dia] 44411 ROBINSON’S--STATION | in generators, al- FURNITURE | Aylward’ s Furniture “Exchange Ltda’: 87 Prince St. Phone 4-8125 ka block from uptown—, _ ee - ee AT DETER At The A & W Drive-In MALPEQUE ROAD It’s the only place you can buy “Chubby” or “Look for the Bright Orange Building” Chicken” [ : ternators, starters, wipers, car- buretor cleaning. FUEL OILS 105 Richmond St. Ch’'town. | Telephones 4-9062, 4-7264 j ' } | BELL'S TEXACO’ | General Repai~s & Tupe-up Service Calls { Vincent J. Shea | 215 Belvedere Ave. 4-5433 | Furnace and Stove Oils, Gasoline, Diesel Oil, Motor Oils, Burner Service. Imperial ESSO Dealer 222 Queen § St: Ch’town -«Dial 894-4013 Auto Salvage Kensington Rd. Parkdale See us for auto parts and WOOD’S FUELS '~ Texaco Stove and Furnace Oil Free Oil Burner Service 158 Woodlawn. Ave. Dial 892-2336 Supplies Finley MacKinnon __ 894-8115 arene _LARTHUR H. ROPER | | Ch'town = 43278 | PEyp Ave. Albert L. Thomas White Rose Dealer “Stove and fuel ofl, motor oil, greases, batteries. Phone 4-6610 Grafton St. East. Ch'town 4 3 Minor repairs Wiiite Rose and Shell Products |Poodvear tires anda full line | of accessories. | MARSHFIELD SERVICE STATION On St. Peters Road Marshfield General Repairs ‘Qualified Mechanic SEPTIC TANK AND . Special Notices FIELD TILE INSTALLATION | @ TRENCHING @ BACK HOEING @ SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED Reasonable Rates @ FREE ESTIMATES | After hours cal! 894-6436 Texaco Furnace | | - ' Ou ‘Texaco Fuel Chief Heat- | ing Oil and Stove Oil. “Where To Call” Ch'town Petroleum -,, © Poducts Ltd: *> 203 Great George ‘St. Ch’town 894-7311 x HILDA’S "BEAUTY SALON - 191 °Graftorr Street, September speciais half-price cold waves, regular $10.00 for $5.9 re. gular $15.00 for -$7.50 lar | $20.09 for $19.00. Salon has air ‘POULTRY LARGE FRESH CHICKEN For the best in ! Flavor, Freshness me ie Hae >| been using in this country for se- gear,” Ch’town | | : Vane it both the stubble and sod, was well plowed. But where we | lost out was we couldn't keep jsaid. He means the rolling coul- Here in Canada, the competi- | ters broke off the plows because the land was so dry and so hard, ‘six inches in sod and seven in they couldn’t penetrate the soil,, it straight, because the plow stubble. | and cut it ahead of the ploughs. would edge. sideways in the | And now for the story about When I asked Stan about it, he? land all the time. It would. |the mice: stay in the land — we had 200. pounds of weight on the plow said ‘‘the stubble land: was. shiny on top. It was full of cracks, be- cause of the drouth. There was absolutely no grass lon the stubble land that the con ‘ and it had to stay in — but it ‘tastants ploughed in the worid The grain had been harvested , kept pushing out’. title match last year. The rea- in: June and they had had no|. His teammate's plow broke its son was interesting. rain worth speaking of —-" they coulter because the coulter was! pL aAGUE OF MICE jhad-some~— drizzle — —until_the-actually- carrying the -weight-of The area was near Vienna, “|time of ihe’ match’ in’ the ‘ast the plow, it couldn't cut the land qustria and a plague of mice few days of September. The rol- ‘when the plow went fast. had visited the district pre—_ jling coulters broke right off at) But Mr. Willis’s tractor vious to the world match. The the shanks, Stan said. This had couldn't go fast enough to cause gnimals had eaten on happened -within--15~minutes~-of the -problem:~““F-—ceouldr: ‘0-~geain;~~-apparently, before the start. The. plowmen. so- af-. fast’, he told-me;.“I’ went ~ in’ _|fecied were given time to get fir gear all the time, with the tacked the stubble and grass. —engine-wi Sree weke : ehat-they “could and 1 the tractor—to_go—-any—tater— I To any ae couldn't pull the plow in second he explained. ‘‘the trac- veral years. He had won the tor wouldn't haul it in anything Canadian championship with it| but first gear.’ in 1963 and finished off by him-| The top plowmen at Vienna the jeaves. Then they took the self. But he had other troubles. /had Norwegian plows—they’re | |remainder of the plants into the | His tractor was too light to |the same as Carl Willis and Don | ground and made nests with it. “It was like an oasis. There | was-an-odd-plant-of-green—grass; , and. desert all around it,’ = he i | recalled. i This is a very fertile area. ‘| Most of the land there’is owned | i by the government. It's leased { to people who grow sugar beets jand wheat and other grains | Stan didn’t know whether the | mice fiad cleaned up: on. the su- |gar beets, he hadn't, head, | though he thinks the ‘answet. is —plows—fixed—————— Stan didn't lose hls caulieroon the Ransome trailer plow he had under ground into nesta they built. , As> Stan . Willis “described it “they ate the roots and fed on ‘no.’ Grass as such‘ is not grown there 4 But .the people * running “the match would have probably 100 aeres of Jand that was seeded to lgrass for the, plowing, and at least -one-half‘of it was eaten up by the mice. Invaded by the mice, and almost completely destroyed. The remainder was |probably destroyed in some . FOR SALE oe but not completely. You could walk over the NEW HOUSE IN SHERWOOD |grass and it was just as red as ithat”’ the ploughed land at was just “full made by the mice. You wouldn't see them imme- jdiately as you went along with your plow. They were’ like sects in the soil and they'd back off in the land. When vou got plowing and had the last furrow or so of vour land to complete, they had to come ont, and there they were in the furrow. : FU RROW. FULL The furrow was ahsolutely full of mice. Yo 'd always be interfering with some of them as you worked along, of course Look, the first day we | saw _them I thought Alex Mc- Kinney would have a fit — Al- ex isthe president of the Can- adian Plowing Council and he went to Austria with the Can adian team, Stan and Rilt our feet. of holes ON POPLAR AVE, 3- BEDROOMS, BATHROOM, KITCHEN, combination DINING ROOM and SITTING ROOM. Interior and exterior completely painted or varn- ished. Good residential focation,: less than 1/4 -mile from Sherwood School. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PHONE 2.1201 or Howstrasser. We.gvere in a. practice field APPLY TO: and they wer there just as thick as they could herd, just like a flock of chickens going down the furrow: hundreds | of SHERWOOD HOMES Kent Street. : FOY’S SEPTIC TANK - conditioned dryers. Make vour 20c Per Dozen + SERVICE | appointment now telephone | f Quick Service : CAREFULLY Tryon Ph Crapaud 42-34 | eee K NLOCK "BRAND Ff sees . ~ uy - Hampered Plowing Events Ontario’ Many: prizes. will be using 1» Norway this! the | was_harvested. Then. they ct they—pulled-the rest of i" down said Stan as he pointed to | m | LR them, big ones and small ones | fais harvested a couple of months before that, and whens | the grain was gone and the fields | dried up they found this as a shelter and a feeding ground,” Mr. Willis suggested Fred Ramsay, Montrose tells me that Bruce Carruthers, Cas cumpec, won the steer champ- ionship at-the Nova Scotia exhi- bition in Truro. I've learned too ‘that Allison Stewart, Dunstaff nage took over ahout—o-sheep ,and cleaned up a great many | prizes He had North Country | Cheviot, Suffolk, Shropshire and Leicester sheep. He also. show- ed sheep for Lincoln Roswall, Dunstaffnage, Border Cheviots and for John Thompson, French- fort, Oxfords and they also won Next year I hope to be at ring- Lside in Truro when Island farm-— ers | show their top stock. ' OBITUARY | JOHN RAULSTON JOHNSTON Inserted by The fa iily The people of Peter's Road | end surrounding \.communities fasvecianced a- heartfelt lors on | Saturday, August 14th, 1965, | when they. heard that Jack John- ston had passed away at the ‘[Ring's County Memorial Hospi- ital, Montague, PET, In his 57th year. Son, of the Jate James Garfield Johnston and his wife, Maude. | Johnston, Jack was born in Pet- ‘er's Road on March 11, 1909. He was united in marriage to Myt- tle Marion Butler of Peter's |Road on November 29th., 1932. | A daughter, Jacqueline, was ition usually calls for a depth of [Dorn to bless their family life. |The popular couple lived for | ome years in Halifax, N.S., but ‘for the past few years had made their home in Peter's Road. In the closing years of his life, fail- ing health and the amputation of a leg brought much suffering and discomfort. The faithfulness and joving concern of_ his wife jand family, together with his learnest_desire to _live,_enabled him to endure his- affliction with’ - wonderful courage. Despite -the- best of. medical-skill and care, lafter many months of distress, _.he_was called home. Besides his Sorrowing wile: “he” Teaves “to” mourn “his “passing, a datighter, —slacqueline, = (Mrs Gane Bel oF i > ‘grandchildren. Wade and Susan; Mrs. Garfield John- | bis mother, ston), Peter’s Road: lowing brothers and_ sisters: |Lorne, Florida: Reggie, Murray | River; Ernie, Charlottetown; Lil- | lian (Mrs, Charles MacLaren): land Lois (Mrs. Ted Shipley) jboth of Mass., U.S.A.; and Ger- jald and “slen of Peter's Road. |His father, ‘Garfield Johnston), and a brother, Oral, predeceas- ied him: A wide circle of friends and neighbours extend . sincere iSympathy to the sorrowing fam- Ny in their bereavement, The funeral was held front the Peter's Road Preshyterian Church on Monday, August’ 17th and was conducted by his in- bas: ister, M. Car! Currie. who ed his remarks on the text: “Fear thou-not. for | am with thee: be not dismaved: for Tam thy God. I will strengthen thee’ (Isaiah * 41:10 The congrega- fional hymns were ‘When ‘the- Roll is Called up Yonder’ ang ‘How Great Thou Art’. Llovd Martin sang the solo, ‘Haven of Rest’. .Pallbearers were Ros: well Campbell, Everett Condon, Jim MacLean, . Bert MacLeod, |Guy Reid and Inolds. The many al tributes were _meron___ Butler, Raymond Rey b-autiful flor. rried by Ca- Cyril-— Butler, Frank Butler, George Ferguson, Russell! Graham, Alvin John ston, *Kddie © Johnston, Glendon Johnston, Harrison Johnston, Harry ,.Johnston. Russel John- ston. Reggie Johnston ‘Jr. San. dy Joinston, Daniel Nichol, Ar chie MacLeod. and Harty Van Iderstine. The remains were ten deriy laid to rest in the Peter's Road cemetery CARD OF THANKS The wife and family of John Johnston wish to express sin cere thanks;to all those whos kindly hel pelt: In many different Ways in this» ‘time of bhereave- ment. Thanks to all those who expressed their Sympathy by card, letter, flowers. or gifts & spec! thanks to Rev_-Carl Cur. rie@Dr. Preston Macintyre Dr. Lorne “Bonnett. staff of-the’ King's County Mem- orial Hospital, . and Hamilton. ° MANY FISH DIE and the fol- . | te nurses and —~ to Parker : s 4 “Thev were field. mice and The US. public health service -j “ jsome of them were unusually received 485 official reports oF - * 2s large . fish being killed by water polly ~ At Ellis Bros. Shopping Centye | “I would say the “grain. had. tien in 1964, - i . e ‘ : salah sada tn