_—_—— ‘ The Guardian Covers Prince Edvierd island Uke The Dew w. J. Hencex, Publisher Frank Walker Editor Walace Ward Maneging Ed.ter Publshed every week dey morning (except Sum . and statutory. holidays) et 165 Prince frees rottetown, P.E.! . by Thomson wesnpeene US R- ranch offices at Summerside, Montague, and Souris Recresented nationally oe Thamson ‘Sieniehenen Advertising Services: Toronto 425 Univefsity Ave.. Fer re 3-8894; Paortreal 649 Cathcart Stree. Uni- ty. 65943; Western Office 1030 West Georgie. louver MA’ 7037. er Cansaian Daily Newspaper Publishers Ascstianioan ad The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exciusively entitied to the wse for renub of all news dispatches this Gay ve St-set Mer ration in ane also the loca! rews published herein = All ervblicaten ef special drematches here tautead Subscription rate Nat over a%e per week by carrier $12. 2 year by mail on rural rovtes end areas 2 nothrensced by carrer —$+5 M00 year of Island end UK. $20 % per US and elsewhere cufiide Br tsh Com ar patho in aso morweelth Net aver 1% 8 ogre Cony Member Audit Bure ac SES. PAGE 4 THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966. ot Crreylerion ‘Causeway Briefings The. federal “of -Public Works, Hon. George.J. Mcliraith. has made a point of being personally ‘present at the important technical © Minister | cord ‘of what has been accurate. Mistakes are in- evitable where the confusion of war exists Rut an examination of the re has been through independent -news channels ‘and what covérnment officials have paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters hniefings on-our.cauisewav constimie- tion details, which are now in pro- | progress in Charlottetown. He is scheduled to speak himself on the | _subiect this morning. and there will said about Viet Nam in the same period leaves no doubt.that the report- ing has been oat See oe the official statments. The military action, eanfysing as it is, comes through with startling clarity compared. to the poli- : tical situation. There are. however, no measuring rods that @ correspondent can use to show who's winning and losing each day. No towns are captured. occupied and put behind the lines. There is no front; few large battles by the stand- ards of every other war. Small units strike at the Viet-Cong, who strike back from. ambush, and both sides claim a victory. There is a daily body count of enemy dead of extremely doubtful value. Thése and other im- ponderables leave huge gaps claims of anv kind ‘by the South of: | North Vietnamese, by hawks or doves, by the government,_or by those against. the war. The corres- pondents_as a whole try to réport the. facts. incur the wrath of al! concerned. But as is essential that they. keep doing their job as ac- -curately as ther van. and report - for | —be—a-—galaxs—of- “perts to go into every phase of at Of Maritime Concern " operations. pliers. will have as t as possible of What ia expected of. them. While initiat work on the ap- proach roads and embankments was actually started in New Brunswick | last. fall, and will, it is?hoped, soon get under way here, thie full dress rehearsal is concerned, we so that contractors, sup- | engineers and all concerned Commons have expressed concern— orough a knowledge and rightly so—over the government | Maritime in represeritatives the announcement that. Caribbean trade shipments. to Canada no longer need to be routéd through east coast Cana- dian ports. This provision is made in | the new trade agreement with~ the } / -under- | stand, with the major phases of - the problem—or rather of the man - problems which a Seidel causeway of this kind involves, and which represents, indeed, one of_the anak ay ee ; lenges. of the century. We welcome Mr. his associates here on this occasion, - all-the more hecause the briefings have heen arranged for a period dur- ing which we are enjoying a wel- Melllraith and | - satisfactory | Commonwealth Caribbean* countries, and it means that cargoes made up for the United States and_Cafiada. may be unloaded in, say Boston, and the Canadian portion trucked or rai! shipped to Canada without loss of the preference which heretofore applied only if they were landed directly at Canadian ports- 1° hii ex have taken over from: T want To ete PROS wie 8€ = ANO WHAT! PAPER CHASE FABLED SILK ROUTE Road To Mandalay To Lose Its Ruts: : National ae, Society. The fabled old: silk routes across Asia are being revived in the form of two modern_trans- continental highways. . Within a few years, it will be possible to drive from the Med- iterranean to such far- flung terminuses as Saigon, Singa- pore, and-the island of Java. Land-Rovers, Jeeps, and bus- at Tt is the contention of government officials that the loss of, cargoes handled at Maritime ports will not. likely be great, but this is not a answer. Ray ‘ March, executive secretary of the Halifax Port and Industrial Commission, pre- —~A recent traveler, IOVINE, trekking eastward on couaplotel sections of the_two roads s still is an arduous adventure. who was making a survey for the United Nations, reported: “‘One of the | many. deep ruts (near the Afgh=~ an border)... buffeted our bus so violently that a come relief from party strife, and can concentrate objectively on what | seri the project w will mean; not orily to Prince Edward Island but to the whole Atlantie provinces and to dicts t e danger, he concedes, is lich the actual disadvantage in this instance, but it sets a pre- cedent in breaching the Common- not'so Canada generally.; It will be a pro- | wealth preferental tariff agree- iec#-to which both our major polit- ical parties can point with pride, - their coritribu- | tion to the extensive research which | this privilege went into its planning and design; | _and both, for some_yeara, now, have | been firmly committed to carrving ment which could” prove-of far- reaching consequences. It is possible that Australia, for example, might say has been granted to the West Indies and want it too. yreover, it~ has been suggested | tha this new agreement could pave the ee tt through: The big job lies ahead, of course. Rut this week's series of conferences tHe culmination of a very real is achievement” in itself, im bringing | * | into focus all the ramifications of | | the undertaking. We have no doubt | enjoyed in pre-Confederation days. | that. the result will be well worth | But if.this precedent of permitting while, and will serve materially to expedite the progress of the work.. No Easy Job lt is important to the public to know something of the problems of the press in covering such vital mat- ters as that of the Viet Nam war. The ‘manager of the Associated Press. .an American news agency from which the Canadian Press gets much of its ~War news, this subject, and it deserves to go down as part of the record. It makes clear that while the U.S. government would like the news from Saigon pre- tented. favorably in black and white.& and while the American taxpaver would like a clear.'simple explanation hasissued a statement on | of who's winning and what he. as a~ citizen. “is paving for in blood and— such methods of reporting would be fallacious and misleading. The sttuation in South Viet Nam is neither clear nor simple. It-is indeed romething of a political and mifitary enigma and the press would he be- traying—not serying—the cause of money. ——Hemocracy-by-picturing it otherwise ~The present AssociatedPress writ- ing staff in fhe wa¥ area is’ composed: of highly competent men. three of ~ a@hom covered the Second World War and Korea; and whom are tun-of Puhtzer Prize ‘winners who have been in Viet Nam for four vears. In the past 14 months, twn AP men hav- been killed and six wounded in action. They were reporting first hand—not aeeoped griessing: —ffom— -Washington— last vear. the news: agenc\ spent : ree-quarters-of a million dollars in iet Nam on staff and comunciations This doesn't mean that evervthing that _ reported from Viet Nam through AP_, \results will be “very, very. | change of commodities between Can- | -ada and the ( aribbeans—something the Maritimes have long been after and which would restore to ua a measure of the shipping boom we | the routing of cargoes through U.S ports were to be followed—and it-is always hard to get rid of a bad pre- ecedent—it. could «involve us ious indeed. ~ Meantime we note the . announce- ment by Transport Minister Pickers-, gill that so far as-the St. Lawrence Seaway is concerned, there will be no increase of tolls during the 1966 ship- ping season. The seaway authority has proposed a 19 per cent increase. and “the issue is now before the cabinet. Even this increase will fall short of meeting the gargantuan debt charges which this ambitious enterprise en- losses tails, and whieh every Canadian tax- é paver will have to shoulder. But the “government has vielded to pressure to do nothing for the time being. permitting an extravagant ; subsidization at the expense. chiefly, of Maritime shipping interests which. ~ always seem to he the “odd man out” when it. comes to getting fair con- * . ‘ sideration. EDITORIAL NOTES Prince Piiiip hasn't Jost-—-his- re- ina-apeech in London the other day" the British. Commonwealth. has a lot of “obituary writers. but pre- dicted that they would be ‘pushing up daises long hefore the Commonwealth reases to exist.” , The United States automobile in- dustry is reported to have 1,700,000 —unseld-ears_te_get_rid of before the 1987 models can be brought out.. The ** Ottawa Journal comes—up—with the—— consoling reflection that, in a_ pinch. thev could bring out-the 1967 cars in 1967. f in. ser-. , merely es | { ~ there, } many Variants, ‘fhe great Tibetan Plateau. large carton i inns at the end of march. Armies used the silk route, just as cavalry and sup ply wagons long used the Sante Fe and other pioneer American. paths each. day's |ROUTES WERE DANGEROUS. The -main = silk passed north of end- route. with ‘ing in Syria. Another led travet- passes down into. India, and a port near present-day Calcutta. A similar route ended near Ran- goon. Another way was entirely by sea, except for a crossing -of the Malay Peninsula’s narrow Kra Isthmus. : “AIT the routes were dancerois— due to the prevalence of brig: tine canbe ‘Keeos Age By Dr. Theodore Exercise’ Van Dellen Some individuals are fanatics about -exercise.and believe that their health and a sense of well- being are dependent upon. it Others have no use for calisth- | Guarded Caught by political conflict home, China.now is faced with the possibility that_its last great bastion of influence in North Viet Nam may be lost te the more - affluent ‘Russians whoa have promised increased mili-— strapped onto Tf ay thrown overboard and its con | tents strewn over the road, in- cluding’ two whisky béttles- of | which only one survived the fall.” ROAD TO KATMANDU Asia's A-1priority road will link booming metropolises with— storybook cities Mashhad. Ka- bul. Mandalay and Phnom | Penh. A-2 will swing northward into the Himalayan foothills to vo : : Nepal's templed capital, Kat- mandu. The oid wk ‘Toads took traders Ancient Irish-Art Treland Today The Irish saga lainn numbered among is many accomplishments remark- able dexterity im the art of hur!- ing. Ireland's national game. A competition which started 1961 and. which has become in- creasingly popular in ensuing years revives a rather unusual branch of the game in which Cuchulainn excelled ‘An “Poc Fada* (The™ tong~ —~As—Puck+—tescribesin- so--m a ty as A.D. 97, China sent for- -@DV0N... trade with Rome; he never got but the effort_had been made. Within two or three dec-— ades, a wealthy Roman mer- ‘chant had organized trading ex- _peditions into central Asia. Once Fast-West over! a td trade had been established. there was a steady stream of men, pack animals, and cargo early | Strike the ball words the — of the game. F ing. ie the equivalent of a ‘shot got. The object of the ‘Poe Fada’ competition is to cover a course af 3 miles, 320 veards, stretching Lover ravines, steep *. inclines, heather plateaus and stretches of mossy upland, in the least number of shots. ' Competitors .are allowed to from. the hand across the eruel wastelands -of | and each )_contestayt is_accom- total of 131 pucks central. Asia. Caravans joggled | westward with silk, jewels, and lacquered chests of tea. ver Silk was literally as precious as gold to Westerners, and until the mid-6th’ century they could get it only fron” “China. Centur- | jes later, a document of Henry VIII referred. to ‘‘saten, sarsan- et. tartron. chamblet, and every other Cloth.6f Silke’’—all words - of Asian origin The lonz trail from. China to the Mediterranean resembled © the early Sante Fe Trail in the “United States. The silk road was “a path, though marked in places sd towers flanked by assactatanunimante srn lon --Our Visteadely $s” (From The Guardian ae _ TWENTY ~ FIVE YEARS AGO form of , . (July. 14, 1941 Russian forces battling Hit- ler's legions Ay land and sea in- flicted heavy losses on Nazi units on the eastern battlefront and sank two German. destrov- ers and 13 transports out of a hig Baltie covoy The fire bell at City Hall wil ring six times every morning until the duration of the war. at 11+n'clock” ty —-remind— citizens that this country is at war and. to give them an opportunity - to ~freshing tartness of fongue. He noted « prey lor: -muccenetel oer sAte the conflict, .it was decided at “the regular meeting of the City Couneil. TEN VE ARS AGO (July. 14, 1956) The largest number of scouts and cubs ever known to he un- der canvas at one time are now enjoving an outing at five camps throughout the province. Alto- gether about 250 boys are camp- .ing The statement was made by J. David Stewart. chairman. of the Prince ‘Edward -Isiand Hospita! campaign to raise $250,000, that “the total results. are $247,195. with almost complete returns, from every worker of the cam paigo.* Those | going east carried gold and sil- | | erly i | for‘ _mand which.has been met - A French Menuorks Hamilton Spectator: “The time has also come ta consider full. national network services in-both official langua- ' ges from coast to coast.” That little time bomb > was - tucked obtrusively away to; oar ee whi a7 as ayer erprise They -have something ment's recently- tabled W Paper on broadcasting. !sokated from the. rest of that otherwise sensible document it makes an unappetizing sight. , To be sure. the notion ts onty going to be the object of ° detail- ed study’: in the months to ‘ta come. No real decision has heen made: But in Ottawa's hot climate of political bilingualism, can any. study of that type rest on fa¢ts alone, unimpeded by a bic dose of emotion? ‘ The simple truth {s tbat while one-third of Canada speaks French, that sizeable fraction ‘s largely concentrated in the mid- die of the country. There is no_ earthly. rational need for, the full eanges Ft coast to coast Frene network. The CBC already- costs: more than $100.000.000 a year. Why raise the price to. say $150,000,000, at - the potential © one swoop when audience doesn't exist? In Manitoba, according to the 196i-census_tess than seven per—hional monument. cent of the people listed French | as their mother tongue: fn Sask- ,atchewan less than four; in Al- Lperta of..$hade...over..three.. in British Columbia less than twa per cent. Provision of equ a broadcasting facilities) on hasis of such figures ‘ena . ridiculous. The three most east- Maritime provinces aiso | have tiny percentages; 30 much ‘coast to coast” In other areas. the existence 6 ‘spoken French has created a de- sf Boniface, Man, for instance, has a private French | statio and a CBC television sta- tion Edmonton, with a heavy sprinkling of Fren close- te #s , boundaries, has ap-rvalely own ry laiguage radia for the zon but it’was toa early in the seasan to capture wolf pups, so they'll later - ’ HONOR U.S. PRESIDENT President Woodrow Wilson's ancestors’ home in Ireland has heen “designated an Irish na- he sent along - —tveryodytFatking—About “THE OTTAWA MAN" “It's popular in its rarest sense the right play for the summer.” they cannot he t Hanoi cow wid Peking theré@ is a limit «to NortiXietnamese ability tr resist unless powers provide The Soviet Union a substantiated Chinese Reaction Rv Harold Morrison ian Press Staff Writer. » has told both Mos. : big Communist * GUARDIAN- PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY PHONE 4-8506 = e tae - —Robert Blondin A Re en © Interest payable quarterty on minimum quarterly balance. Office Hours » am. te § p.m. : Daily. 9 a.m. to 12 neon Saturday e at any time by Lt COM 608 Queen St. Phone 4 ° Accounts opened by the 20th of the month ear interest from the first. "© Money may be deposited or withdrawn MAJOR TRUST 919 Great George St., Phone 894- 1910 ed mail, or in person, HE PANY Ch'town, P.E.1. Fredericton, N. B. 475-6689 enics, brisk walks, a game of. tary aid to Hanol mediately announced a b tennis, or a round of golf. So It seemed just a -short time stantial increase in militar¥ ca far_as they are concerned,-“If ago that. Peking was shouting supplies and=tt goes” without breathing were exercise, they that its troops were ready to saying, that Moseow won't’ give would shave been dead . long march into the Viet Nam wer equipment away without getting se : } to teach the Americans a les. ' shmething in return. In--this Most of us fall hetween those’ son they would never forcet. ease it undoubtedly will demand two extremes and I'm a follow-- Now China says. its troops still more ‘influence over Hanoi's for- — Se ate of. = road are available, but it might he elgn policy and a withering of u ey to the prob- petter. if Hanof depended on Peking links. 3 - to exercise in keeping *‘seH-reliance.”’ : nispure OVER LENIN ees wit your age and Wever take a | jt ig evident that Peking ‘"y. hey rts Ba \ year's workout -om a. single doesn't Mant ‘to get deeply in- Whether Moscow would use afternoon. More than one exec- , : its influence to end the Viet : volved in the Viet Nam strug- r utive has been laid .to rest he- +. Nam war is‘ doubtful. It is more » ‘ gle. Undoubtedly one reason 's the “Hoss ae = up with: | 45:5 auch tuvolvement -would., likely Jt would seek-to promote oee Ss t ipping ToOM | 444 te the strain on the Chinese ~ ™ ider international. acceptance ~ wane <r at ‘the annual picnic. economy. Perhaps more signif'- " Its own interpretation 2 Cie Tie, sataciant disregards the cantly, it might tend to switch ‘?inisi)- : ka ones = is dene ann waste vigilance from the home front- Part of the Soviet-Chinese a7) one during aY where the Mao Tse-Tung forces Clash Involves acceptance of a Fa by a normal person are a form. are busy purging thelr ranks of quasi-religious mesmerism and ~ > <a of exercise. ‘These maneuvers those reluctant to bow to the the Mao challenge te the su- 5) —- 4 ee eee, rein. eating, wan imase. | OO premacy of Lenin. y ‘ aan SrReens armer exerts FACTS SCARCF. In the Chinese view, Mao ap all day to accomplish his chores tha ham : ; : 1 - The bamboo. curtain prevents pears to be the true successor rs oe oN ade cans ace a clear understanding of the to Lenin. Premier Chou-En-lal Goosen. Gs dhe. wate, depth, of the internal political has said repeatedivy: "Mao Tse cleavage. Some -observers sug- tung’s thought is our moet went of us obtain: more exer- gest {t {s perhaps more serious -powerful weapon for defeating 7 than we realize. . than meagre reports wou in. the -hourgeoisie and revision- i ak _* a potent-rem- | dicate ism The banner of Man Tse- edy and is used extensively to The evidence of Internal con- . tung's thought is the banner of ar ae vronats oe to pena iflict may have been one of the victory.’ cad tlds. Whee amas mete oe “arguments President Johnson — This is an attempt to elevate ceahaten coe er 8 Sn considered before ordering the Mao at least te equality with er. grou ie me othad as bombing of oil installations near Lenin perhaps even a notch in ‘em pF ania Hanoi and Haiphong It was an higher. It would be a blow te ,fonists.. _— u_telax at the “open invitatran—to—thre—Hhrese —Man+—eze—if—threugh—_the —lose-—— ty T “— ; to respond if they could The of influence in Hanoi and else- Resistive exercises help to im- Chinese. did not where, he no longer can he as- [prove coordination, enbance en- The North Vietnamese need sured of wide acceptance as the |durance, and re-educate’ muscl- help There Wave been reports.’ supreme philosopher of Commu- Se ae eet ccuinens In the nature of rumors since nist doctrine. . \ | gz es ic on S = — . ” . \which forces them to exert near | maximum effort _ Lifung a At i Wi h Hur a e weizht is a—simple illustration | = not er Itc unt a provided the weight is heavy enough to tax the strength of Ottawn Journal = ; } the particular muscles involved Thieves mustn't lend very able te cet rid of the $4 he Tt has been said that approxi-- tranquil! tives Someone is al- — stole from- her For every dollar ee = mately 30 repetitions of a single _ways after them. -Imagine, then, he spends, two more will sprout ands in central Asia and South- exercise each day will increase the feelings of the thief who was in his pocket And how those wes i eaten ies ems muscle strength at an optimum. foolish enough to loot the St. magic rings must burn He will - ; nice =aemetier neice’ rate Heavy weight loads are Louis. Mo. hote! room _oecupied have to stav awake at night lest : used to develop “potentially “hy Dame Sybil Leek, witeh ant : oes aw F one of them rott-up and fasten: it- vears age. Frane Shor;assoctate strong muscles but the physical. hich priestess of the New For if ak k ‘editor of National Geographic, therapist also must be prepared ‘est Coven She has sworn to put ay i retraced Marco Polo's route to alter the fechnique to exer- a hex on him. _ The poor feilow has not oniv. through the stark, towering Pa- cise poor grade or pariially par- It {sa popular belief that Dame Sybil to worry about. He | mirsy he and Mrs. Shor were the alyzed muscles. This method is crooks, hesides not being very 85 careless enough to steal a first foreigners in modern times | yceful in. the treatment sf arth- honest. are superstitious Medi. PUTS? given the witch by Jae to reach the China border vl ipitis, Prisguais of: strain, | aeval literature js full of thieves Fleming. Now he has James- e Wakhan Corridor ____speain fractures, and ethet being carried off by the Devil Bond to contend with as weil When feuding tribes blocked joint injuries : "What can-that Missouri marau- ’ ~Pursued by the law. spells and the Shors’ way and their miti- ROUGH- SKIN ° der have been thinking of? Sure. hexes: death ravs and hats with tary escort bhatked, a Kirghiz ~yy>, wa writes: My three ly he noticed the broom at the razors in their brims. the fugi- v tribal leader agreed to see them \0a7 oid grandson has unusually parking meter outside the hote!. tive will not be able to escape through. On reaching’ clilization |G. and rough skin, especially He must. have wondered about for long He will have to turn the Shors..were astonished to on pis p#lms and legs. Can any- the cauldron in Dame Sybil’s himself over to Dame Sybil learn that their benefactor en- thing be done? flat. ‘Didn't he ee boa in her She will probably let him off joved--a—reputation._as_.the re. : REPLY aed path? _ with a three-month sentence as gion's most | ruthless; ere There are many salves and He will never of course, be eee : bls toneneaie is containing oil, but before a: anything is done, ind out what. eiectl is making the skin dry Several | Fe Old Ct skin, glandular, and allergic dis- | amous eeses ‘. orders as well as a vitamin de- Chatham Daily News: * = ¥ here Guchu- | pamied by four officials--a-score Gejeney are capable of" causing oy. af. gur contemporaries ‘milk. Egyptiane once mate keeper, ‘caddy’, steward and. dryness and roughness questions. the sense of importing cheese from camel's milk The scout. The competition course TOOTH ERUPTION “cheese from England He said Lapps make it from reindeer's is situated in the area of the Mrs. MF. writes:—Are the that in a supermarket someone milk Cooley Hills. north of Dundalk, gums lanced any more in chil- | came across a package of-quite The Nathastbaaa ix celebrated in through which Cuchulainn. is dren to help a tooth come throu- ordinary cheese at an ordinary for edam. and: gouda cheeses; said to have played the game, &h : ‘price. It looked like, Canadian Switzerland for gruyere: Italy _as a oy, while travelling from REPLY cheddar bit! it was a crumbling for parmesan and gorgonzola: his.home_at Dun Dealgan ‘Dun-- No, because the cum--may. sort of cheese. and quite bland France for camembert. brie, and e@ seal o ea = fire ter: “e Kinc-of Ulster at Emain Macha Now and then the dentist may adian cheddar ish cheese> is veined with green The-“‘Poe’ Fada” event ha’ eovangen vg underlying tissue We would like to advise that streaks due to the introduction: _ “ n tooth. eruption is delayed. | this was probably real British of bacteria in manufacture many of Ireland's leading el TEARFUL cheddar from which the nippier There are limburger. brusseis ers. competing for the individua! G_F. writes: Could excessive Canadian variety was cribhbed. .and herve cheeses. The latter prize An Corn Selanta- T We creme injure the health —————— “ high” in the pun Setanta “cub (Cuchulainn’ s given | REPLY land. near the area which mak. € name was Setanta) and, In Crying {tself is well tolerated, @s the better Known Cheshire- There are many more varie pairs, for the team champion- pt the same cannot be said for cheese Cheshire cheese is so ties differing slightly in methode ship: of Ireland. the facts responsible. such as Well known that a London “pub” of making. curing or maturing, This year's competition was grief, frustration—or depression, near Fleet Sirert. WS Bawied st therehy- “each acquired its-9ae won hy the Cork hurler, Finbar HIP SORENESS = it. It was there’ that Samuel — idual flavor and odor. O'Neill, who covered the course FA writes: What causes Johnson, the famous va oe .-when you savor real Can- ‘with @5 pucks. 87 vards. Cork pain in one hip after walking a _. — author once held court adian = American eheere atso-won-the-team prize witha -plock? and it still exists spare a kind ‘thought for their REPLY Britain also is celebrated for Eugopean Precursors. or ‘ id Arthritis and. poor circulation Stilton and Weslevdale cheese , mere are the most common ota os ee also have_spe- BIRDS FIND HOME | TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— cialty cheeses, variously made More than 350 species. of bird Frequent coughing should be from. sheep. goat's or cow's can be found in Yugoslavia. investigated ees : es eam mR eed (NOTE: All correspondence a —— ed French. languaze radio sta-’> to Dr. Van -Dellen should be i : ® tion. ~ | sane to: Dr. idan lj : co Chicago | It_is Interesting to note thatt ee poe aol aoa y i j Le both, radio stations are the pro-.; ————-2——_—_—____——___.. a duct’ Af profit- minded private ‘KNOW THAT SNAKE ne EFFECTIVE JULY 1, i simplest way Oo cogniz- : rere Mietet .Memecuait teas | INCREASE IN INTEREST enough customers to justify the i.” py ‘ts uniquely _ blunt. tail, investment - ending in a rattle That can't be said about a oo oe — RATE coast to coast French network. SAVINGS os A case may exist for additional, French radio or uaelee sta- COMMERCIAL ‘al EARN see tions here of there, but a full- N i ' ea scale network | is just plain: silly. re N ik y CURRENT BEAVERS CROSS SEA ACCOUNT REGINA (CP) — Saskatche- os 7 wan sent the French city ef Let us desizn.your_let- agrnvgye two heavers ge ee terheads, bill heads, . | prairie dogs during or *brochures; call us for ~ i Friendship fortnight. Mulhouse a ace rioting ” also ‘wanted two timber: wolves 4 y ti 2 needs.