@113 filtatdimt Covers Pru'lce Edwud Island Like The Dew w.l. unnan numb" sunun vau Funk wulm (sec-mu Esilur Editor Published mvy w d.y mommy (except 5.... days .na statutory l. mu n lbs Pm. sum, Ion-lawn, v E.l.. by Thomson Newlplpen us. m h eMlc .v Summnmde, Mnnuguv, Alb-r ion no soul... Reyes-Ned nationally by Vhomsan NstpInnn Advevmmg Sen/Ices lolonto, A25 Unlvlulty Av. Jam, Montreal. s40 Cllhuvt Snul, Weslem ottKe mo wm Georgi- Street. Vlnzouvel LMA 7037). Member Clnsdlsn Dsllv Newspaper °ublliheu Anotlsllon m In: Cmsun P-eii lbs mull.n n... u exclusively untitled in m. m. For "bub. l t .ll news dlspslthu m um allm m l a to b uv n the Assam-ted m.) at slum. Ind b In lb. lml new) uuhllshed below All nghls v rnpubllcsllon at man alumnus. umln Ilsa reserved. Subsznpllcn r-tu Nov out as: but week by camel. mm . yuv by mm at mul mum ms nu. :Ivlced I: “my. Milne . ye; of! Island .nn ux mm as: y." u. LL; .ns Ilsewhcrn nyuln. smuu Corn. monwuhh. Nov ever 7. my singln Copy. Member sunu lulu-u at on race a sloumv, AL‘ Old Home Week Today‘s the day for the opening of the biggest and most popular fair in the Maritimes. Our Old Home Week edition of Saturday told why it is being looked forward to with with so much eagerness. and why this years special events—on the race track, in livestock and poultry exhibits, in handicraft and home cooking displays, on the midwny and at the vaudeville shows—will be drawing I record-breaking at- tendance, and making the capital of Canada's garden province is mecca for visitors from all parts of the continent. The harness racing and the mammoth Gold Cup and Saucer Par- ade will provide the biggest thrills: but it ill the Exhibition part of the big week that our farmers are look- ing forward to. The show rings will be crowded and some of the fine est horses. cattle and swine will be on display, The entry list is ex- ceptionally large and the com- petition will be keen. But for visitors it is the human aspect of the fair that really counts. It is the ideal place in which to meet old friends and make new acquaintances. Former Islanders from as far as the Pacific Coast will be there; many non-islanders who have been coming here regular- ly will be on hand. and there will be thousands who will be visiting us for the first time. They Will all be milling around together; and if those of us who are in the stzly- .- homs class miss joining them. we shall be losing the most heart- warming experience of the s ~on. Now it's up to the “’eathe Man. The Exhibition management has done its best; the transportation authorities are making every ef- fort to cope with the expanded car, rail and air traffic demands, and we’re all in the mood for the gala events to begin. That's All We Need Speaking to the Atlantic De- velopment Board last week, State Secremry Pickersgill. to whom the board is responsible, said that while the board will have $100 million to administer. it will not he merely a spending agency. Its first task will be to act as an intelligent lobbv persuading governments, mun politics and businessmen to develop new enterprises. and moving in itself only when all other agencies refuse to act. When it makes funds available. the board should see that they go to industries that have a chance of ultimate independence and are not lame-duck, make-work propositions. “We don’t want to promote things that In going to require subsidies as for Ihcsd Is the eye can see . . . The Government means that the money should be risked on projects with a 60 per cent chance of suc— case.” Mr. Pickersg-ill suggested that the board use its power to encour- Ige improved transportation with emphasis on sir freight, develop. merit of energy sources and exporm of such primary products as pulp- wood. The time should come. he in- dium]. When it would be possible to withdraw thI various special subsidlu now propping up the East- ern economy. These succulents have been fav- orably ornamented upon across Clin- Ih. Typical of the general reaction ,k In IdltzorlIl in the Toronto Globe m in which it is pointed out m M ills Board‘s provision of fund was essential tin Iultlmss bm on ion. been stunned to develop without-being provided with the capital to do the developing, never- theless. unless Maritime busi- ness and industry are prepared to break new ground Ind take new risks, the fund will be wasted. No one in the Maritimes will cavil at this reminder of the im- portance of initiative. But it is worth recalling that it was some- thing more than their own initstive that put the big Central Provinces in the dominating position they hold in our national economy today. Un- der Confederation, the cards were stacked in their favor from the start. It was to redress this inequal- ity that subsidies had to be doled out to the Maritimes from time to time. Our people in this area would much prefer to stand on their own feet. Then, perhaps. we could put a curb on the export of our most val- llabls product—the brains and brawn that have contributed so much to the achievements of our more prosperous neighbors. Given the same chances at home. there isn't any doubt as to what Mari- time initiative csn accomplish. Worth Remembering A big problem in Charlottetown this week will be to ensure traffic safety. There will be special trafio police. but without the fullest pub- lic co—operation their efforts will not be enough to avert deplorable accidents. One particulary import- ant thing for motorists to remem- ber is to signal all their turns, The Canadian Highway Safety Council has some pertinent advice to give in this regard. it is useless equipping modern automobiles with turn signals un- less they are properly operated. It does no good, says a Council bulletin, for thI motorist to switch his on after he has started to turn. It is no help to traffic in front or behind. Failure to signal in time causes a lot of trouble. Another peril occurs when the motorist fails to turn off the signal. A driver waiting for a gap in pass~ ing traffic to permit him to enter an intersection sees a car approach- ing from his left, signalling a right- hand tllrn. He is well within his rights to proceed. as long as no other obstacle is present. Then the signalling cnr fails to make the turn for which the driver is simlal- ling, and somebody gets hurt. The motorist who stubbornly de- clines to accommodate other drivers by letting them know his intentions can place himself in great danger, too. Signalling every movement well in advance is his best protection. Taxing The Sick Writing in Applied Therapeutics. u Toronto medical journal. two specialists in the employ of a Mon- treal drug manufacturer make this arresting point on the subject of high drug prices: “The Government of Canada makes more money through its sales tax on prescription drug sales than the pharmaceutical industry makes in net profit. For example. during the year ending January. 1962, our company remitted on behalf of pat- ients $431,000 in federal sales tax alone. Our profit, after tax, for the year amounted to $333,000. A sime ilar picture would relate to all com‘ panies engaged in the pharmaceuti- cal industry.” This federal sales tax on pre- scription drugs amounts to 11 per cent, and adds almost $11,000,000 I year to the cost of drugs in this country. The Financial Post says it may well be that the Writers in the medi< cal journal are biased, But it is facts they are dealing with, and it raises another point which merits public concern: Why is Canada just about the only country to tax the sick for prescription medication? Perhaps Health Minister LaMarsh can give an explanation of this when Par- liament reassembles. EDITORIAL NOTE If there is any doubts about the economic independence of the United States and Canada, Canadian trade figures for the first half of this year should dispel them. Canada's trade— export and import—in this period involved I total of $6.371 million. 0! this amount. trade with the Unlted States accounted for $4,066 million. In other words, exports to Ind im- parts from the US. account for about two-thirds of Canada's trade. BRINGING IN THE CATCH OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Composite Picture Of Canadian Households Canada is a country of mid- dleagca married couples whose children have grown u home. Typically this couple llv- es ul s middleslzed community where one in every four neigh- bourlng houscholds has an immi- grant father, and one ‘ five homes was bulu within the past ten years. The husband is an artisan working in - factory. and his schoollng ended about Grade Six, To pinpoint um typ- lcal Canadian couple more exac- tly. by geography and by ln-v come, it could be said that they y live in Sudbury where r a p u ‘ earns between 34.000 and «.999 per year. That is the composite picture l nt Canada's households Ind l lamilles, as painted by our col» lec|ive replies to the questlonl l asked during the we! census. or course there is really no such thing as a "typical" Can- adian household; there could not be in a country so diversified u Canada, aut one can deduce the features which m representa- tive of the most numerous group. And there are many feat ures l common to most pal-rs 0‘ the l country. despite eel-lain obvious reglnnal variations. CHILDREN sT Howl: While the greatest number of Canadian households accommo date two personsr typically hus- band and wlie_ this total l- ex- cccdcd bv thc sum of those luau, seholds shellerlng rune, four. five, six or man persons. such PUBLIC FmORUM nu mum l- nm in mum.- by tmtesponnenll nl quelll a ma 1- Gus n w ce- lnl Ilulun u n u as mm Inn. in. nu." .nnnn VlSl’l‘OR'S COMJVIENTS Slr,— Home I newcomer to your island to visit I would like eke I (PW comments. The ls- land is I bcautLlul place for I holiday. and its people are kind. But in Charlottetown when you sit in Ihe parks. many y on six men come up and shy. “lee In: I dime. Sir " Most of them If! under the Influence of alcohol. This leaves a bad impression on tourists. There seems to be too much unemploymcllt in Csnsds today. many young men out nl work. when Mr. Pearson t n n h office this was l mnlu flunk. to light unemployment. W t has he dour? Insuld of loin! to the U.5.A, llvr nuclell‘ Irms ll. should be giving all. mblem his whole attention, [hope in come back to lust young men out at work more of thl'm takan their stand in s growing world that needs their help. 1 nm. slr, em, . a sh. MssbIlGAN. Everet|_ M‘ serous AND Amn Slr,— The Liberals now clslm um they cannot sepIrIu the old sue neunun (mm the contribu- lary one. That was not the story lhIt rolled on their tongue: in.“ ' . Mr. Msclvnulzht slated that ii the Party wu elected they would ply :75 per mollth right ley. if their wand is no load why not put the skids un- Get me bunch Ind let the tall In with uni hide? Thelr resson for rslslnl nun mvn sslsrles. so they say. is thst i: will aunt men at more Ibll~ lty. Judging (mm the meld" bun nlllng they have done In far. it would not be bus to mt Discs them some M s no wonder! n l whnt they Wlll do wlul the extra three 0l' four IhousInd they now receive While the seed pension- er in wndlrlnfi. llll me- mu church dues are paid, ville» um he will have enwgh left to y IpIrerlbfl or - rubber bone to chew on until his next cheque comel in. 1 sin. Sir. elf. Us MN m l st Peters, P.l:.l. | c In normally happy home! with 3. children. For the whole country. the most common household-I let- that lone mun-led couple — has two children; the next most common has on: child. This 11s!- tern applies sun in OnlIrlb Ind all provinces westws Newfoundland alone shows the Erestest number at homes with two children Hvlfl! Wlth their l "R" Daren“; Quebec and the Marl- time provinces Ill show most homes housing I lone couple. with the next largest u u m b I r housing three persons. The most frequent occupation of the household head is describ- ad as "crsflsman engaged in In. worker" nr, to Canadian description. "artisan". This is true for every province, except Saskatchewan. Alberta d PE ., in each of which “farmer is the flies! numerous class. “Managerial” in tile m. and largest occupational group for Canada as a whole. The head of exactly one house- hold in every faur u .n lmm|< grant. But this rslin vsl‘les wido< ly across Canada. In Newfound- land. only 1 in so u an lmml- grant: in PET, l in 25: in Que- be: 1 m 0 ms in Slskatnilewun nearly 1 in ac. slightly mor than i in 3; and . u l 'Sballu, Ontario and l making that‘ our "immigrat- ' cc. nest." mnvlu w: u ed y that on “Three Rs" are Reading. 'n lug null ’thhmctic, We have had mule evidence that these are closely associated with a fourth “R”: the more we have of the run three. the more we can ex- poet of the fourth, That lollth ls of course “Rsmuners- tion More Canadians in in the ed- ucational group that completed only live or more years or ele- mentary school than in any nul- 21' group. Exceptions are Nova each of which provlnces n. s largest educational gmup l those who completed one three years of secondary mum. tlon. Tun at those thrce provinc- cs also mm: outstanding aver- nge incomes. For the wholl country. the largest in n n m a group is that in the sam- $3,- 999 bracket That holds ms nu- every provlnce indlvldually. ex- copt onlm-lu and no. where ll u SAMMJ- $4,999. and r, a. 1.. when: it is only $2.0m :1 . These are some of the lights or lhe c n m p re hcnsive study of Canadian Households and Famille just completed by the Census Division of our Eur- call of Slslisti Suburban Nobility 'I'lle Printed Word The Constitution specifically says that no title of nobility can be granted by u ted States and that no person holding office can accept s title from say kins, prince or lorelgu state. But some deeply hldden tn- Itinrl. cries l'm' mun facsimiles of the older- at e Cutler and similar signs of superiority at rs Imonl rsuklesl Americ- ns. In one s . licheons of nobility are worn on the outside. People in nol nod to suck things to (skin u unreliable) but cm— themselves lmllenln; rank in the us. mutnrnrchy— m hsndy. lawsr than n (Irisr snake ls ‘ the car wlth In Immenl Dirk sticker affixed to the bumper. slguilylng that lhe driver l‘lll made it big buck homl. Only “(gully higher is the driver who slicks lIbels on rear windows telling us t M II Our Yesterdays (From II. Gunill- Files) Twain-r - FIVE yams AGO (August is, lnsl sIerT .loarl, Na, Aug. 10.. Word has been mum thIl CIpIaln Wendell w, Rogers, MC. 1 to command the ll-ml Fighter Squadron of ale RoyIl CInsdlsn Air rem Nauru-m ml. to be established 'llh h qII rter I here. Clot. Rogers in - mm of Alberlnn. P.E.l,. He Wu I stu- dent n the Universlty ot Toron- to, Ind lslsr the mml school of [millet-y u Klumm. Six thouund p. sale from every Dll’llll In the province It tended closing ceremonies of in. 7th Eutll stlc C (AIIIIII‘ ll. ll") Last autumn the Rel-lens lib bellnll Louie spoulored Alber- to!” first flower show Ind it has been Innwnced th 01!! will sponsor A similar by”! this year. The commute. in chorus of arrangements In unn- prlsed of Mrs. Gordon HIrdy, Miss Shirley MacArthur, Mll. Chlrlel Johnston Ind Mlll Marina Form-ll. Up In the [Ir nomad Ill lb- llnder l‘lIl ban “HM In lctlvl purl. In the election VotinI. HI ll Flytnl 0mm Dual.” visited slime cavern or I rent ride museum. A peg up are college stickers on car windows— )1 mt bum. lug at where they pay the tul. n no . Freshwater college stickers land on back windows; Ivy LeI- gue stickers up mm. A lnltirr medallion Is the col- lege but-lung stlcker_ a casual luvsy bl wearing ol- new mwa e. At this season of vacation wIn- derlust, the stylish rank goes to the foreign license plate. But even this is butt-suited by th I metal shield of I foreign motor- ing clu Anybody can make It into the A.A but how about I crown- ? edEr sh club lnslgnls ( In. RAC looks welll. This. plus one lrom Fun: and lulu, u like . chesllul of rlbbnns ll I weddlnl of crowned heads. The highest rank, however. was noticed the other day on a car is dilfident Bentley. of courset that signified suhurhIl'l nobility at its coolest. it had - Singapore [is e nu story plus unconstilu- superior y, crops mmcsn TILISDNBURG. 0M. ICPl — lnsurInc- oiliclnLI hsve listed claims for null dImsue to tomato. fruit veletsbll crops following a violent hall- mnn Wednesday mum hit us: Norfolk County ms. in miles south of Woodstock. om. one of- (iris! estimated lam. would b. more thsn 31,000,090, Pla dun-l , n , knew Why you suspected syphil- t ercise in the morning on gettlnfl Asplrln Silll Tops As Remedy AIDLrln cnntlnues to he one of the but reruedles for manor. 1: is the clue-pen. lent toxic of I11, Ind most mnlly nvsilsble, l: Ill probability our mlentll‘l will put a mu on on ‘loou be foretheylesrn how lsplrln works: thls hss rsmslusd s u- cret since the drug Ivu discov- cred long an. Most of us m so famlllnr with the flve grain tablet, we forget about different dosages. The most effective dose Vll'lel from one perm to . due in different rates of Ihsorpllou. Ar- thl-itlcs usually need more than is requlred lo control mlunl- sch es Ind pains—s: inrgl - dose In lrey can tulenle. in trestan rheumnlols ml:- rltll. most physicians wlll um with s :lnm such as IIplrln or other sallcylale Ind nub-units a stronger product when the re- sponse u not in good .- expect- ec. The stronger compounds are more onlc Ind must b. u with greater cautlou. The most common are null- malarials such an chloroquine Ind nydmxychlaroqulue. sold sths, phenyhutuzone, Ind the steroids. Dose-ls of the latter m Ivsllahle As well as many syn. liletlb substitutes for the origin- I1 cortisone and ACTH, These drugs suppress but do not cure. Hydroxyhloroqulne orlglnnlly was used to treat malarlI but was found to benefit srthrlllc lolllls. II is slower in action than the slcrnlds and many w e a k may elapse before the beneficial effects are noted an loin: swell- lns and pain. There is more to the treatment at rheumatrlld arthritis thIn the , use of medicatlnns. Detormlzle: , should be prevented or correct-i ed to rrstore the individual to useful living. The general health l: equally important, Moderale exerclse ls! l helpful but not when it uggnvn. lbs unin or causes fatigue. No special diet ls curative but well balanced. nutritious meals go [one uuy toward malntalnlng re» sistanre. n is equally important correct Inemln, Infections 1 mu as abscessed teeth, Ind dls- , eased tonsils. ‘ SYPHILIS TESTs A. L. writes' in - case of sus- peeled syphllls. is a negative Wassemann 100 per cent proof that the disease I: not present? Are there other tests! l REP ‘ No. to your flrst questlon, be- cause lt takes several weeks for a test to become positive. If T ‘ is. I might be Dble to give I bet- , kr answer. Should there be nu open sure, other tests can be doncI to determine whether syph- ilis is the cause TIME 1‘0 EXERCISE 3. G. writes: ls it safer l0 ex- up or at night before going to bed? REPLY Take your choice. l prefer the morning because exercise Rm cs as In eye opened null I all shower when finished. others prefer noon. Isle liter-noon. or g . VITAMIN I! AND ALCOHOL .v, M. writes: why are drink- srs advised to cake vltnnlln is? any a ll Because the vitamin pllyl I role in the metabolism or o- hol. Heavy drinking um up the body's supp] Ind, unless it ll ‘ replaced in nod or in plulel, liver and nerve tissue In like- ly tn suffer. Teachin CUP-352d, This year. lol' the first um. In , , Cnnuda, schoo| teachers were nr- , , fen-d a summer course on on sublecl at live use of the news- i paper u . unenan std. thI , l two—week ulnmfll', It Carleton ‘ Unlvenlty in can I. was spoue stated by on Canadian Dally Newsplper Publisher-5' AssoclI- tlon. In the United States. where mnny school syswms emplunie ule study 0! current affslrs .ns . , domestic polltlcsl events . n n lemploy newspapers in such studles, American publishers have sponsored similar I: n mm for several years. it seems odd that one has been so much more heed liven , slblllly lo the whlch ll Smith Afflc NOTES BY don‘t use mt bells. — Dally Pull. “We I”: "Come 1|!ch H1. Policeman There's I nun been flghtiu' my lather for u n our," out “way tell me before“ Boy: on fllhfl' was ill. but of it until I minute Ilo.' — Monti!!! hr. ll public who no over-Mu honestly ma efficiently, they hlvc build“ to hide, I! this ll the lithsllAm there ell he no sin cm rum b lipid meeunll behind locked door: — kept.“ the plus Ind public It My. —— Owen Sound Sun-mes, ant benI Ilm yell-I m u - crIuk‘I ill-um of Quebec sepsralism u still - crsukl‘ alum, but u s coma-mum piece it bu swept Ill before n. Without Iddlnfl one solid bit of evidence in its mm or one con- vert bl respectable prominence. l: has reached s mun where no public mIn aim speak Isslult it. and all klndl of people spelk for it, covertly or openly Ind in a curious mixture of ways— me open separatists, the yes-maybe nephrhtlstl, the u- c b n n be Confederationlsll, in one min: 01 affirmation. —M n n re .l sun. ‘THE WAY ‘A Win In nth-d can. In office, at down. my ' we Ilka! I o, filnl you,‘ plied the mu. “1 jun mulan no son: of a I‘m work. lug for. — Hamilton Spam... 5‘“ It. number. on New Jersey turnplkt. accordig: lo I vs. report. state trooper: an m ue an r in: I bus . lenlefl. slttlng near the lroullltln see if the grille! goes over tll 0 l . vae become lclaua of Ital. I p um hitchhikers.— .louml. 0m" Mainlin- ln tiled In . an America for I vsrlsty uf 11;. Eur; “‘ in Ecnsdor l surely unique. Till army bu mi moved lne presldent been ill. The term mly refer to the II- [union of the pul'chsser that payment is so far in the luluu it mm to be real. or It may mean that the instalments drag on so long they uem never Io end. Or it could mean that the imIlment buyu- how much n. is auto Telegram. never knovtl ruins—Tun A Constant Embarrassment By Don! c-u-dlsu Pm ls s bellcnpznr an offensive or a defensive weapon? Thu; is the essence bl Britaln‘s diplomatic balanclllg act with South At- ! . su- Patrick Dean. snub-'- Uniled Nations representative st5 Brltnln finds South Africa . id "repugnant." Yet he a from voting on resolution callan (M an In!“ embargo on u. republic. This equivocll Attitude, which Ilhersl clrcles in England flnd . constant emblrrnssmenl, u use on four considerlllonl that have little or nothing to do mm South Afrlcs rsclsl pollA ties. First. there in nu Itrnlcgle geographical position of the Simonstown naval hue. . vim ink Communwenlm de« fence program Ind one of the key- to arm-ll power in nu Indian Ocean. Second, there ll the "Spon- tllree British protectors!” of Bechulultlnnd. Swszilaud and BIsulolnnd—me In! British justice in so Dunn of virtual lllIndl of linth rIelIl dlscrlmlnltlon a. mm BY alumni! . Then there is the Ian! histor- chn conuecllon between Brllmu Ind English-wealth; South Al- l'lclnl and ftnnlly the [In of the British investment In the republic. It is this list Irxument lhll opponents of IpIrtheld. or n- clal BeDIrItlm'l, find difficult to swallow. If than in so much Bullish money in South Afric- that it involves the Iconomlc he Lb Mum-ll . I am wnm Work for about 25,000 smut. wot-km. British govern- ment distinguishes b e l \v e r n weapons designed to repel tn- vsdel-s and those thsl could be used to quell In Internal HDril~ n . 1 Thus it argues um lwluob. ters and outer trim of aircraft are tnr external defencc. but ll ls clenr that they could bl equ-lly useful in enforcing span llleld and cm In "any can: the dlstlnctlon cannot be ml- istlcslly made, scrloN DEMANDED l E PI'EBIIII’Q from independent Alrlesn states mounts a mu finds her- self lame-mleg Isolated in her South African policies, there in A growing bod of oplnlnn in London demsndinlz some mum puzflhnl'! lll cone I. For vn-ny. Including anuln'n WWIItlou Labor leIder. Harold Wilson, ths time for words u put. ‘Says the Manchester GuIr- an‘ the “The South African govern- ment should In refused all! further Inces- tn the mil on which it his relied for Ills ultimlte mulls of keelle itsell in power.“ The nulls llllrclllllllll l RESTAURANT "Your Island Stank Home” Il they sly. il' ralher Ihm is s? a. 2% is run he risk of cIncel‘. In justifyinl the Inn] shlp menu, which provide year's gmAids mutter or provide uls manual- ness of reporttnl ol the press — Ind probably never wlll. vision is mainly - medium in tel-tainment. thb A few notable exceptions its Inform til-m pro- [runs are I quick and- only kind of repent-lg .Imell II the m-u n fence. Peru-in m have been bemused by the es- psctstlou that Ielevhlou would ,be I revolutionlry step in til m of communlculloul — Is it u. ufcourse. u the technical sense. But for impartial knowl- edge. in the lelloolroom 01‘ out of it, the press nmIlnl Ill IMP erlm'.—C,J.H. to television Ihsn m 1 ‘ss s teaching bid. Pei-nuns .- maln factor is lhat hlevlslun ls l ‘ new. Ind we are more willing to l Iccrpt new ideas in connection l with it, Another is that file (eh vlslnu ocmer- can brlus lulu tb- classmom a pictorial presents- ‘ lion of people, places. processes. l objects Ind heppenlnss— I n d ‘ one picture is supo. be l worth A thousand words. Certainly. W I t c h in; I TV screen is less demIndlng (II I n resdlnfl s newsaper— but it also be I lot less murdlfll. 1 As yet. ulevulon does not been: ltn cover the run]. of subject STARLlTE DRIVE-IN THEATRE Summer-ids Ming Saturday and MondIy August 10. 11 "ONE TWO THREE" A Cooled: slur-tn unla- m, Punch runs II Men: nde nu. PlIylnl My Ind Wedneldly Alllll ll. 1‘ "THE CHfl’MAN REPORT" n In Color Starring Dolley whiten. JIII Flldl. all" Bill!qu lily-h J In Dill“. Mill. It“ Inn. n.l.‘l'. For a carefree vacation- to any I ocation lulu-Inf