= *- - —* ns ee s ¢ = * ae at < a - * ee +. ° a . Tt. * : - > : e ‘ : - * » é £ 4 : ‘z,. i “ “ Sas - : = : . ai sat ‘i fea . s a et taf gM tae - ‘j {: : ‘ ; ‘ a ah « . F = oN “ g « : “ Ss , . “ * ; : x bia he j ss E : : - : eee ae 2 . = ; e wee go i ‘ : a : _ : : : . ce ‘ see US. And the Atlantic Alli lance “By Arch MacKenzie oe Canadian Press Salt Writer ae Like: it or lump it, Europe is | being. used ‘by theestate depart. _) By Dr. Theodore Re Van’ Dellen being left’to stew in its own) ment to establish the NATO sur. ‘pep pills}—and interna} juices right: now so far. facegfleet of nuclear-tipped Mmis- - | barbiturates (sedatives) are be- as. the .United States is con-: siles. jing blamed for the..current-rash---cerned. Similarly, ron the slibject of a of robberies and murders. It. .Oificial U.S. policy toward the new initiative,on German reuni- Makes a good excuse but the~ Ajlantic alliance is to continue | fication, the state department users of these products deserve to pay heed to the problems of | line was that the U.S. had made * most. of the blaine Pep pills do’ defence and economics that ex- proposals in the past which ' | Bot make stable individuals steal * ist ‘or threaten. ~ failed to draw Allied support. ‘| and murder but they do make a © The*fact remains that Ameri- Hence, it was argued, let Eu. person who plans acts, of viol- -can foreign policy is centred al- rope. mull over its attitudes be- survive until 2900 AD..““What is in danger. ” he added, “is not merely the. health and happiness of individuals, but the very basis of free and demo- cratic society.” Dr. Sen had just come ffom Latin America and a regional FAO confer- ence in Chile: Discussions there dis- * closed. he asserted, the. ‘pervasive concern of Latin American govern- ments over the losing battle against ¢| hunger and‘alnutrition.” During fhe Pep Pills . Aa bicuse ~ She Guardian + Covers Prince’“Edward Island Like nen W. J. Hancox, Publisher - Wallace: Ward + Frank Walker Managing Editor : Editor Published every week day morning (excep! Sun- day and statutory~ holidays) et 165 Prince Street, “Charlottetown P.E.1.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside. Montague. Alberton E . and Souris. me . Represented nationally by Thomson. Newspevers . Advertising Services Toronto 425° University Ave a Empire’ 3-8894 Montreal640 Cathcart Street Unk versity 5942 Western Office -1030 West Georgia Z a ‘Street Vancouver (MA 7037 be-. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers fiv e-vear period ‘1959-1964 Latin ence more des erate. | most wholly on the. growing. war | fore ‘the U. s. stuck its neck out Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian American population has jumped 11.5 Drug abuses occur most often © in Viet Nam. and American at:.|.again. Press. is ext\ysively entitied to» the use ‘for reoue as Sort : among the emotionally disturb-./ titudes are filtered through that |. In this ‘uit, the president pre- A _ lication of all news dispatches’ in ths paper per cent while food production went ed. It is the combination of fact. * pared an avalanche of Proposed drugs and a weak personality George Ball, U.S. state under- legislation and began whipping credited to -it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news publithed herein. All right or republication of “special dispatches hefe In also reserved Subscription rate . Not over 40c per week by carrier $12.00 a year by mail on rural. routes and areas mo! serviced by carrier : $15.00 a year off Isi ond and UK 7: - up only 6.5 per cent: Uniess drastic measures are taken, the precarious balance that now exists will break. down and famines will begin to ap- pear, around 1980. Elsew here the situation was equal- that sows the seeds for trouble. secretary, Wednesday reviewed. Congress into speedy effective Millions are using the amphet- | this policy at a council meeting action. Historic medical care ara help lose weight, com- of the’ North. Atlantic Treaty and education bills seem as- ba ression, and narcolepsy. | Organization. sured 2s a result, with more to During World: War II, aviators | At. home, design and the | follow. ae often took this pill for extra en- | rush of events conpected ‘with Then, Viet Nam’ $s simmering ergy and alertness when flying the Negros drive equality, crisis flared into a broader war, long, dangerous missions. the president is in. the midst of in which tte U.S. is steadily. ex. per C 1. year in -U-S. and Smarts outside Br ome Se : ra orp * ly alarming. Of the world s three bil- In contrast, barbiturates de- @ crush of unprecedented legis- panding military operations - Meet Aas motes. pe st lion people, 10 to 15 per cent were -| press = sytem and | lation that can only be com- against the Communist forces : : mee Re ee ala : sc gs ; sis are us: in the treatment of pared with the’ first days: of, At the same time, the Amer- 73 “The strongest memory is weaker nnderenr ene’ Pp to half the entire insomnia, nervous tension, and Franklin Delano. Roosevelt's ican civil rights drive sparked than the. weakest ink” global population is. improperly fed -_ blood preceare. ‘Both chem- | New. Deal. a domestic crisis leading di. for physical stamina and productive als aré valuable remedies’ The question of Europe arises. rectly to. fresh legislative bur-- , RAGE | 4____ FRIDAY, APRIL 2, "1965. P P when ‘used according to the phy- because of some signs, as reg-| dens on Congress at the urging ‘ sician’s prescription. Ampheta- istered here; that .Britain and of the president.” bP 9 - The Micone- Eaphacic<. The, sob sisters, male and female,- are- having a lish time making a @egend out of that “modern Robin Hood,” Lucien Rivard, and his sweet “wife. Marie’ for whom parting is sO _painful | and who misses “mon bon _.more than words can tell and_is being hounded from pillar to “post by‘ those awful creatures, the - Mounties, poor Lucien come. what- may: and who—she suspects—have even “bug- ged”’ Marie's bedroom.and apartment walis in her modest home in Montreal with tape recorders, hoping to listen in. ‘on—privatéConversation. between the loving pair—all- for the sake of - getting -thaf filthy lucre the govern- ment has put—up: as a reward.on . Lucien’s innocent Wad and bringing him back to rot in dungeon vile! “The police’ says Marie in a tear- * worded article we have just been reading. Somehow, however, they haven't been * able ‘to pick’ up Lucien’s trail and ~she’s praying they won’t. because -if ever thefe was a plain. case of per- secution it’s this affair they’ve pinned, on her dear man, who wouldn't hurt a fly. and who, it will be recalled, was .so gentlemanly as to write a nice letter of apology to the gover- nor of Bordeaux jail for h _to escape from that.aw ful instytution. ‘That’ s the kind of man he is and consjderate to-everybody! So it t goel——w hole columns: of it, ‘who: have sworn. fo get “are everywhere.” g had air Waves-tao. ,It was frly in the game by a news eases on one of the national television networks who wound up his story on the famous getaway, and facetiously, with the “And goodnight, Lucien, sweet * wapaclly. ——Dr.-Sen—listed_ftour vital needs... “to avoid a_food calamity in the world. He said the annual rise in food pro- ning must be accepted and practiced — on a wide-scale in the .rural. com- minities of developing countries; the food-producing capacity of developing nations must be fully utilized ‘and sur- ‘pluses distributed; international co- operation must be strengthened. — The best ,hope, he said, lies in duction must be doubled; family plan-- | internafional co-operation. ‘Then_he | added bleakly, “The sad story is that , there is vet no real feeling of world . “community .a mon g governments, _which appear to lag far behind public — opinion.in many countries.’ | What a commentary on our-boast- ‘ed civilization,.and brave achieve- ments in orbiting the earth and send- ing missiles to the moon! Europe Split On WV Another big conference has been’ in session.in Vienna this week, wjth ° | representatives of 27 nations in at- tendance. Nothing of world-shaking import on the agenda——just a discus- sion on what sort .of.-color television system Europe should adopt so that it can have interchangeable service” through Eurovision. ——-~ : e two main competing systems are the American and French. The | American system’ sends all colors simultaneously and has been highly ‘ successful in the United States. It is compatible—color comes: through in. black and w hite on existing sets. This | is not so in the French system, which SO LITTLE COMES OUT DRIFTING TOWARD DISUNITY 2 Globe and Mail, als They could ‘not Separate. Nor can we. And the great middie group of. Canadians does , not Before the dvi: « war which neither separated nor solved the differences between the North—and_-the-Seuth,—President— Abraham. Lincoln told_his- peo-_ ple a truth which is as true for Canada today as it was for the -| middle_that—-unity must be forg- ‘ed. Yet if we would save Can- | ada whole we must recognize | greatest danger .of separation lies. Canada is. not: likely’,to be torn apart by inconsequential extremists tugging fram either side. Me ‘Physically speaking, we can- not -séparate; we ‘cannot re- move. our respective : sections from each other, nor - build an impassable wall between them. A husband and wife may be di- vorced, and go out of the pres- ence _and beyond the reach of | the middle, made incapable of doing otherwise by the drift of the unconcerned and the capitu- each other; but the differept parts of the country cannot do lations of the compromisers “ this. . The compromisers have been "active, “The. drifters have Jet em be. In their secret forums of federal- provincial conferenc- es the compromisers have used expedients ‘to solve problems of ; the moment, without consider- “They cannot but remain face | th to face; and intercourse, either amicable or hostile, must ‘con- tinue between them. Is it -pos- sible, then, to make that inter- course more advantageous or more-satisfactory after separa- tion than before? Can. aliens ee ee seibad frees fed Reel ae Bren | temporarily they doubtless pro- mise themselves, our democrat- sends separate colors in. sequence. | The French claim that theirs is the | only perfected system in existence— | although it is not in public use. If l adopted, it would slow down trans- oceanic television inasmuch as signals ‘treaties be more faithfully en- , } _. ie institutions, -robbed Parlia- | forced between aliens than laws ment Of its supremacy, inaugur- | : n ue can smong:friends ; ated change. in secrecy instead - —— of in the cleansing furnace . of PUBLIE FORUM public debate. This evlums is open to the discussion ‘want to separate. It is~in this -da But Canada. can collapse in’ | ing what effect those expedients - _ Threat Seen To Parliam ‘ens Supremacy | The. great threat— and it is very real — is that withtheir | pragmatic, well-- intentioned, ngerous—manoeuvring— they- may fashion a country which’ is _ nag. occupiable by free .men, ‘French or English. United States in 1661 He said: | that it it is in this middle that the We have heard’ from the ex- tremists” They can be reckon- ed with. But we Hear from the. |compromisers’ ‘only’ when the deal--has been. signed, sealed and ‘delivered. The problem of the great;Canadian middle is | now te reckon with them. = ~ Change we must have; per- haps in the end a new Constitu- tion setting forth new jurisdic- | the tions for federal_and’ provincial governments on which both will answer direct ‘to the ‘people. Rerhaps we shall have to con- sider the wisdom of continuing:| pe harmful to the body if a per- | |our present form of. parliamen- |tary government. t let the | change be forged in open coun- cil with all of us there, the gov- | ernments ‘and the _ oppositions, the press who are the eyes of the people. , An architect who does not con- sult the owners in his building may find no occupiers: for his mansion.’ those wanting to stay longer than the body tolerates. dividual is fatigued. This leads ‘}to accidents and mistakes in Overdosage is dang- erous.because it may create a judgment. temporary psychosis, nervousness, tremor, extreme insomnia, One of our medical students overdosed himself to cram’ for his examinations and~ flunked. every test. Every time he came upon a difficult question, he quit... writing and left the room. The | Where do these drugs come from? Ethical pharmaceutical companies sell them to hospit- . als and wholesalers who have | been thoroughy investigated. the bootleg market comes from. | unethical firms. They sell. to ‘| any buyer, usually for cash. . Counterfeiting also is a part of the illegal drug trade. There are a thousand different pep pils on the market. “The—imitations | markings; the majority are -de- _ because they are under ngth or adult@rated. "INFECTION FROM RABBITS R. T. writes: What is: rabbit fever like? : os — REPLY ', transmitted. | the victims, an ulcer appears at | the site of the entry, usually a | ti er or hand. The glands in rmpit on the affected side | swell. Chills, fever, sweating, | and headache follow. ‘| CHOCOLATE. NOT HARMFUL .M. M. writes: Can chocolate |.son is addicted to it? I have heard that it hardens fhe arter- ies: REPLY No. There is nothing in choc- late that will encourage har- | dening of the arteries. ° SLUGGISH LIVER G.* T» writes: | of sleep every night cause-a sluggish livee? ( REPLY e ‘Sleep never has made~any or- | gan sluggish. TODAY’S HEALTH. HINT They induce -a false sense of -well- being, even though the in- or @ sense ‘of exhilaration. A pills made a real goof of him. ~~ This depends on the way it is In more than. half Would 10 hours. | mines are nét a substitute for other European countries féel 2 sleep~and~have~been™abused by they are being” neglected: awake Beng quoted is a recent sum: marization in the ‘influential -British weekly, The ‘Economist, which says in part: “America must be a léader in the Atlantic alliance or nothing —‘in_ which case the altiance in its present form will- cease to exist.- And, ‘if it is to be a leader, then it must lead somewhere. Without such guidance, Europeans will remain a prey to economic re- sentment, the uncertain instinct of nationalism’ and.the emotions inherited from a , Past of . van- ished sipremacy.” -COOLING-OFF PERIOD American intentions to give the ‘Atlanti¢ alliance a cooling- off. period were clearly signalled last year by Johnson when he -halted the hard-sell arguments } Most of the, supply that goes to | Our Yesterdays (From The ‘Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (April 2, 1940)" ‘er. He spoke on the _‘‘battle of Vimy Ridge, and the Tunnelers..: Col. (Dr.)= Ross Thompson . pre- | sided at the meeting. Constable | Bradley, ROMP, was a& guest. Through the: quick and plucky jaction of Jackie Mills, 10-year- | old son. of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Mills little Shirley McKay- was | ‘rescued from ‘the icy water off we Wort Street landing, affter | | sinki In ‘this- context, Americans “van-well-argue, the problems of Europe pale in urgeney Not that Europe has been blotted completely from Ameri- can foreign policy thinking, hut the issues‘ on ‘which -American concern -about Europe: are ex- pressed usually, hinge directly. or indirectly on_Viet-Naen AMERICAN IRRITATION This appeared- A6-bethe Ba when Ball, who in the past has _ frequently ‘sounded the hard line, recently- made an -unusu- © ally:tart reference to President de Gaulle of France: ¢# c American irritation with France has not lessened in 1965, chiefly because of French oppo- Sition tothe US. policy on Viet Nam and the French, insistence of -converting portidbns of its cache of American dollars into gold, at a time when the US. is concerned abont its | Stocks. gold. i] “To: play a tiseful and efféc. tive role on the world stage,” said Ball, ‘‘it is not enough far a nation simply to offer advice on all aspects-of world affairs. It. should be prepared to~ back Ball spoke as Paris. an- nounced that it’ intendéd to ex- ‘tend for“ another year ‘a pro-. gram _.of..mediym - term trade ‘credits to Communist rth | Viet Nam il American newspapers Subse- | quently have carried reports in- dicating concern about trade by | other Allies including Britain— Vet Nam. Lack ° of ng through .the ice aaa | i fight in Viet Nam by Amer- ~ sinking for the second time. TEN YEARS AGO ‘(April 2, 1955) Attending the closing banquet | at Ottawa of the Advisory Coun- cil of the National Liberal Fed- | eration last night from P.E.I, were Mr. Simon Paoli,. Mr. Neil A. Matheson, MP, Mr. Watson | McNaught, MP, Mrs. W.J. Rodd | and Mr. Edison Rayner. Leroy Wood, son of: Flight | Sergeant and Mrs. H.W. Wood, and formerly of Charlottetown, | recently received scouting’'s | ' highest grade award, the Queen's Scout certificate. He is the first scout to receive this | jean Alljes has been a standing complaint unofficially in Wash- ington. FINDS HOME TEL AVIV oslav soldier; 24, the only (Reuters)—A Yug- Adam Ezerovic, known deserter \from a United. Nations force, ~ sailed from Haifa Wednesday-for the only country in the pworld that avould grant him asylum— Italy. Ezerovic escaped; from }eustody while with the UN Emergency Force in Sinai a | year ago and crossed the armis- tice truce line into Israel: Israel refused Ezerovic asylum, but. al- | lowed his lawyers to find a coun via British shipping—with North -- preoccupaton™ With e have—the-same shape,color, and— _The guest speaker at the Char- Mottetown Gyro dinner held last | "at advice with fesources, | night was-Capt. Norman Lowth- | rte ctme i orn sete tecsone | SO What's $27 Million? terest. The Guardian does not neces- | sarily endotse the opinion of cotres- | Guelph Mereury | either way would have, to be con- verted. i wherever you are.” Now Lucy (why | Children thrive on fresh air. not call him that for short?) is in award at Centralia, Ont. ° try that would. give him refuge. * ij into & t ished a : process of being . turned a sort. | Gréat Britain favors the American vente editing and-‘condensation where THOS Narfow- minded, self- | every Canadian. It “is just im- of. folk hero. We're in. danger of | system and says ft will start using it eecessary, “The Guardian js ‘unable to ish characters, now growling. possible to over- emphasize ‘it. | {3 os ee enter’ into any corrrespondence regard over their income tax returns Every taxpayer will be familiar with Tanzania’s problems. Some may even know where it is. |. Nor- is our help necessarily to | be limited to that piffling $15 | | million. Prodded by kindly Bri- tain and the good old US., we | | are being offered..the opportun- | | ity to train and equip Tanzania’s | military academy. there’ and /‘air force. For some -reason, Ot- E laying out a training program. | tawa is dragging its feet.on thig, Some .Canadian military spec- | and it cannot be the cost, which: ’ Charlottetown to: } s jakists are already on the scene |.is a trifling $12 million. = and others are. being flown. out.| And now, with pride restored Ss kv i and patriotism recharged, orm | ac j e need to lift, their eyes and grasp . the vision of what Canada is do- ing with their- money. They will be proud and cheer- ed'no end to learn that $15. mil- lion of Canadian taxes is going into a five-year army buildup in Tanzania. We are ssettig up a 4 tng. letiers submitted. | So Re TT LESS THAN EXPECTED Sir,—. After seeing the film” ‘The Hundredth Summer’”’ I feel as. other Islanders ae, that the. | film was much less than we ex- pected and mee more disap- pointing. Why did the dim mainly. cen- tre on just three centres of in- terest? I will grant you that they had some: interesting his- torical background in. connec- tion with early P.E.I., but weren't the planning and ef- forts. put forth by these people common to’many communities throughout the Island? And why wasn't there more organizdtion ; to the film? -Couldn’t one part | | consist of P.E.I. connected with | Confederation in 1864 and then in 1964? As one Islander has already stated: ‘‘It will be seen by mil- lions: of people’. Doesn't this os ‘ ss hat PEI: will receive ; : homes. It insists upon its system “much publicity and why not Gana ea Gales ve through pride and the de Gaulle de- present P.E.I. as ‘it-is at pres- | ed Cairo. West Germany react- termination to shun all things Ameri- | “p, ed angrily and President Nass- Perhaps ‘the film could: be | th threat to can save gold and dollars. The Soviet | made a bit longer and include a Stycod Want Casa aan 0: Union is delighted to take part in trip from one end of the Island cognize East Germany. To try | anything that widens American if thé Vienna conference~-does not agree upon a single system. Canada and Japan have adopted the Ameri- ‘can system. A group of Russian en- | gineers touring color television in- | ‘laughing ourselves to death over his | exploits, when we're not shedding | tears over the misfortune tHat has © made him a wanderer from hearth | and. home. But the other side of the picture is worth keeping in mind. According to information fromi the Senate com- | mittee investjgating the Mafia in the United States, Rivard is 4 thoroughly bad lot. He has been, among other - Fy things, a successful smuggler of Can- adian gold; top man in the narcotics trade in Vancouver, reputed Mont- real head of the heroin trade, and one of the leading crime bosses. of the North American underworld. The - dope racket is:a dirty business, and this man, by official accounts. is up to his neck in it. ° It’s no laughing matter that ‘Such a creatyre should still be at large,. flouting our laws and: bringing shame and disgrace to our guardians of jus-.. - tice. And if it’s weeping we feel like ‘ doing, it’s not for Rivard—or for his CN travel bargains ?.3-172N stallations in the U.S. recently have indicated that they Were favorably impressed. But technical arguments and: ex- periments do not seem to move the | French, nor the Russian government. The two -have just’ agreed to pool efforts to develop the French system. It seem to have been a political decis- | ion. Neither countrysintends to start general use of color television; neither has developed. black and white television to: anywhere near a saturation p 0in-+t-——France has tele- vision. in- only. 35- per-cent.- of- its The strategic importance of $2.20 Tanzania in world perspective | to that personalized, short form . is, of course, fully known to ‘and the T4 slips. , = va Israel Adds A Friend | oncton , 90 Milwaukee Journal : -— . oe z 5 | has hurt the Arabs because it 1 ruro -~ $3.70 raises a threat to aid and trade : “ends up with having the last of s : ee the big western nations on its Saint John $4 30: side in the middle east dispute. | , Sti France and Great Britain are, : pledged. to the defense of Israel. s ? : : |.The- United States is, too, and is H a ifax $4 80 .oee I a many gives official recognition s es 4 to a state’ that.the Arabs say has Anti ish | no’ right to exist. And with dip- s tomatic: ties there seems little : doubt that the Germans will in- - ; feom the Germans. But Israel | that tiny nation’s closest friend 9.50 - D> a §$ a After weeks of diplomatic .tur- moil, involving. both Germanies, -the United Arab Republic and Israel, it is the latter country that seems to have come up the winner. : Se cay acs hoe | tines amet Waster shown the new | shipment at Borden and Wood Islands. It | ames . “ ‘wife either—that we should be shed- French disagreement. ia hk tak ‘oeneniie-| to Israel. Israel reacted so vig-"| tat Iready sizable s ¢ Say = ‘ } cou ave taken us to ro a crease r a f rs. “ 7 2 sly that West ‘many took ‘ d ding our tea ‘We hoped to work out an agree Anne of Green Gables, the | | thet made step.ot Sons it dip help to Israel. ne beautiful golf-course there, and | recogniti That has. That Israel’ ition is*stren- | also Cavendish Beach. It ‘could ae perv ae eee aa brought 13 Arab nations into a | gthened at the time when the denunciation of Wést Gefmany, | Arab: states are planning water with some threatening to cut | diversion’to cripple Israel’s vit- diplomatic ties. al irrigation program is signifi- All of this has been humiliat- cant. It should give the nation ing for-the West Germans. It | greater confidence and stability, and greater hope for survival. If ties are broken between Nas- ment on a purely: technical basis without political interference, from | have pictured our Wild Life any side,” said a West German repre- | Park, our National Park, our sentative yesterday:“but the decision | ‘ting grounds, our new region- . ‘ al high schools and our many by two countries to go their own way | new churches. It could have has ended that hope.” It seems that | shown the- girls. residence at ; ; : | PWC, the new library no issue is remote enough from at SDU, the Marathon Swim at Borden, * jealous ‘nationalism to escape being dragged into its orbit. the Ploughing Match, the Lobs- EDITORIAL NOTE ter Carnival at Summerside and In Los Angeles a judge awarded | -Dr. Sen’s Warning Last week the Food and Agricul- tural Organization of the United Na- tions heard from its director general, - Dr. B. R. Sen, the strongest warning yet sounded on the need for facing up to the challenge of human hunger and soaring wofld population. Unless this challenge is met—and_ without further loss of time—mankind will Quebec Montreal -Ottawa mean recall of German scien- tists who are working on missile | and other. projects in Egypt— | thus curbing Nasser’s military program and easing further the« __. threat to Israel. - : the Exhibition at Charlottetown. It could have shown our. lovely beaches, our scenic countryside, ser and the Germans it could our rich farmland, and “lastly, a. Miss April tiptoed.on the sage” be overtaken again by famine, pestil- our’ magnificent Confederation ence and war, he declared. It must . $100 damages .to ‘a woman who con- | aoe Building. All theses To a fanfare of returning FURNISHED BEER " ; | F ci ner nd more sites, taken a rds . either take adequate measure both to + tended that a-superstitious American ceeibasatian ° ot PEL, obit Irresolute ‘she takes her flute NEWPORT BEACH, Callt. airlines pilot had refused passage to |~haVe, been presented intertwin- | abd plays ‘AP)—Comedienne Cass Daley raise productivity and to ‘stabilize ed with history and presented asi’ Naw in the major, now the mt- was asked to surrender herself rth: ** wi k i i population growth “or ilo ill face her black cat. The cat has since died, | 5 movie most enjoyable to Is-|\\ nor mode. ___ voluntarily: to police Wedsesday drsaster of unprecedent magni- presumably from grief at being claSs- | landers and millions of other A}timid bioodroot hides its to answer to @ complaint charg- ‘ | people. snowy. head — | ing her with contributing to the ed among the nation’s flying hazards. But it may have.been the animal's * name sony gave the. pilot the jitters.-" Let us pat the CBC on the "Behind a. green-gloved hand “back for at least trying, but | And shudders at the sound. don’t pat it too hard; com-_| The curtain falls as Heaven ap- * delinquency of minors and of | | furnishing -aleohol to minors. Police said Miss Daley furnished tude.” Dr. Sen predicted that the next 35 years would be the most critical period in man's history. If nations | Is owner called it Tweet fershort. | a Seine t™™ "| mr?mae with hides 2 ng ts far failed in their responsibilities in this bu he sai - 2 name was Gipsy | I SARIS DISGUSTED. \— Marcare’ Furness MacLeod !Tiday, including her — ce ; Eengees freedom and —_ may not aron Diablo Mystique XHHe—= + | a =! ‘ ee < e : > ; 2 &. ~ “ ; “ ’ f Fat -