4 4 i BR - ~ ogi oe =") = waa s “ ‘ "Seo Seer a ee Eee eee ee nr , ant +e ws i a t * & a a = A F a t ff j i ' | ‘ r . : ; ab e | She Guardian) Pav ir te poisea swe me | Spotted Fever 7 . a \ Me eee eee ee tes ere oe ee ua. |: divided—cannot be valid when the eck he mage ‘ | Jeo A Durnsti, Pepumer and Genera) Usage gap between haves and have-nots Sen * have probably | “Thow shalt not kill” ts a law, Of 25,606 - fires in 1988, il Memper Canadian Daily Newspapes is so great as it is now, with the aver. the ge row about | Stas righietway” con never | leomses; fires "consol betel ee aon amet ot The Conation Prom people of one Province having more So ae ce ae aes be a valid answer.—St. Catherines | tricity resulted in the bi f at Summerside, Montague and Albertes : Ee Standard - loss, $3.2 million; lightning ._ Member Audit Bureaa of Circulations than twice the income of those in q@od deal of in wooded es ' see wanaatira ~~ 2 Ah leaped n be, Valid only when areas this summer, you might| ed 1,096 fires; spoptaneous ng es See another. It can be, vi only Ww fave need of the advice I am |. The office sage says that man | bustion 175; gas fired appliance SNS Catecare st. Mectreat |_there is near parity in living stand- about to give you.” has a poor life. It consists of cone only 161.—Quick C Sapp teenies ‘Coactesinnn, Gumaucnte te al Wun erfs’in various parts of the coun- |” ia E Messtain spotted. tover > ore <a ius een titer "Qe Man cleewnere in PL $9.90 per ansum. Oder | try. That, as_well-as political unity, and many sections of Canada. | years of his wife asking the same| In Kenya, a rhinoceros i i eerie rene wee ier eee ‘vas surely the purpose of Confeder- __| White not a highly prevalent dis- | thing,” and at the end, having | ged a truck and two automot F PAGE 4 SATURDAY, JULY 18, 198.) sign” jease, t is a - serious one. In | the mourners wonder too.—Galt po perpen» all three ani : oo f. many respects, resembles ty- Rey rve ‘ & ;. os Bi St . This goes to the root of our otus. aa _ | ed. Our Canadian moose som A Big Success claims presented on many’ occasions INCUBATION PERIOD 1 Up-at Yellow Knife when they ee eae nein Bon, heen: the cunts |e Ottawa, and. of comments. that dnoakt Ce te noun days. Bis ene turns out. One day an Am-| Come out alive. — Ottawa Jour of Provincial—and indeed of Maris | have appeared frequently in Mari- | the onset of the disease, you may | Sican donor glanced at many * : time—interest this week with its : have headaches, feel listless and | ving beside him. He thought his ae . time___newspapers. The argument to appetite. Actual onset | Companion was an Indian. The| _In Bombay, India, R.T. well-conducted Lobster Carnival, | : yor ; American asked: ‘Are you a full-| divisional superintendent of 1 2 comes with added force from an is very often abrupt. You'll have ae oe Central Railway System, seid tha ~ The Weather Man has cooperated | Ontario paper, with wide circulation chilis, fever and severe muscie | blooded ladian?™ The Indian ane-| one reason why trains on the magnificently, and the result, by all | not only in that Province but across | ss Seite dig cg ant n per division ret accounts, has surpassed the most Canada. We welcome it as indicat- < Sah Oa seueer, Sot oo Re Wa the Ligtbol the heavy drowe: Sa tas totes we Gare optimistic predictions. Added _ at- ing a growing appreciation of our by — the ~— egs | ing and highway traffic death tolls | C#¢h year.—Newsweek tractidhs, of course, have been the | pegds and requirements in this + wd aed. "The name “spotted | Weekends. and. holidays, some oe a tua Maritime firemen’s convention -and ea, based not on pieas for charity a comes from _ this a enter © & woulde’t —- Canad oe eas " + are later turns e inland Chine: ‘Europe, remenassss; tournament, and the colour lent by | but for fair and equitable treatment. | wed: ia Jap r | gram of the six-day week and no| impressed by the large Sper the visit of a Canadian destroyer. ; ~ 7 : RECOVERY SLOW ae or Te kill - all] spaces and parks in Berlin anc But the whole program is worthy of : Mr. Pearson s Warning _ See oe ee an more quickly?—Ottawa. Jour- Sat ee ore - praise and commendation. : We..do mot always find oursel-, “| Ewen in ‘mild cases, recovery | - ? : a eral major cities of Europe. nie ‘Succéss of this kind in mass-en- |. in agreem wi : from Rocky Mountain’ spotted ‘0 dispel any doubts’ on moderns are apt to think ad Jeet cha : Ves Mm _agre = with ae fever is slow. It thay take a question,..a horse ean be high- | who lived generations ago were — tertainment doesn’t .come by nee. | Pearson, Opposition. leader in the: gear to recover completely from | way traftic.(This may be no sur-| Stupid by comparison with our It is the result of aggressive leader- House of Commons; but we. think @ severe infection. Some cases. ‘rise to the legel ee ca wens. at in fact, ~~ a= 8 - - ’ . i profess . we ship and good orgariization, coupled |’ his recent statment on Japanese - at way to avoid the disease ; We think many laymen must Sete sroved to be.Windeor Stal with a tremendous amount ._ of trade relations contains much food fa to be vaccinated against it have tossed ogg sy Sadho i! hard work. This ie the fourth year | for thought, in view of the restric | Sue Sant" tek | meton maven ood “in | 0 oe gs yg acretema the Carnival has been held in the w being imposed on that ’ oie the | Guelph court the other day for |.2%9 ® S. mt Prince County capital, each year on | country’s exports to Canada. His . ae ohne segs trans. | fined $50 with the option of spend.| in salary from any public em- a more ambitious scale; and it is now point was not so much the commer- ' BLOWING HIS TOP mitted Once you are struck by | ing™15 days ‘in <jail. —Hemilton | ployee who is absent from duty” +. well..assured_of_a_permanent.place | ¢ial stake we have in the Japanese : . the disease, it is too late to be | Spectator : ee et ee among Eastern Canadian summer at- | market, as the much wider issue of OTTAWA REPORT : ‘ ‘ee criticism of a Govern- ere ne CLOTHES Sightseers who visit the Roman | to be spending about half his tractions, our responsibility in furthering world a ws ewe, sg. iment Bill and then see all mem-| when you, go into the woods he | Bath on view to the public just | time away from the office play-5 . beet ie - : de bers vote unanimously for the| sure to wear clothing that is tight | 6€f—the Strand in -London.are |.ing cards, Following dismissal) It finishes today with track and peace and security. a Th W k Of P F ; t : measure : at the ankles and wrists. This | sometimes avlittle disconcerted to| from the serviee, action was field events, horse racing, vaudeville, “Tf,” said Mr. Pearson, “Japan : e or arniamen } _ = the case when Agri-| wil) help keep ticks from atiack- | learn that-it is probably aioe brought —— hime _snceass : ; io ete Mt ee : culture Minister Douglas Hark- body. re Roman, nor really a bath. money pa Fr... Wor! dancing and other features, and | is driven from, or discouraged from”. (patrick Nicholson Ip on vaca-' dies, is an early introduction ness brought in his Bill for mee tick doce attack, you can|remains one of the archaeolo-| perform.—Fort Erie Letter-Re- doubtless the attendance, both ef * entering into the markets of the as. ES Se Sennen now into Carada’s system of Demo- Insurance. Nearly every -| remove it with a small pair of | gical eee 4 - tt z =a " a : i ‘nathe NES =. Conservative eratic Government. It is unfort-.ber of- the Opposition denounced | tweezers ith a piece of the type of ks used suge ‘ £ or enya and. of = re West she wil find her er markets . MP. for Moose Jaw-Lake Centre). unate that, because of the bar-|the Bill as upfair to Provincial] er held Caaeie oe faced the Tudor period. Scarcely less! There will always be a risk of ; ‘will be very large. They will get | an the continent, of China, because | Canadians "today, especially | Tier of great distances, all young Governments and to the farmers. | since ~ blood from a crushed | puzzling is the water t ’s | mishap when on or in the water. |..much more than their money’s worth there will be no alternative, and if | younger Canadians are more Par- oo students cannot ee anes, particularly, | tick may be a source of infec- = oe a — * = end = To reduce tgs . ee bs - , s : , t visits. spoke in rpest terms aginst | tion, wash hands thorough- of a hole e other, for | elimiati ac c in delicious meals and healthful re- | Japan begins to build up # trading co eae ae Visitors in the House one day | the plan. But, on Third Reading, | iy atter removing the insect. | @obody knows exactly it | it, a tonsthint barrage of cautions 1) ereation. relationship with continental China tions of Government than were | #4! it on a particulary interesting | when the-Government-—ealled. $00} QUESTION-AND_ANSWER | comes from or where it goes.—| is laid down. When the fam#- © a: j ‘because she is denied it in the West, — their counterparts af 10 or 15 | Session. A Bill was introduced by a recorded vote in which each! Mrs. E. W. F.: I have | BBC London Letter Tar Tessons are learned” and prao-@ Maritime Claims indorsed : . “4: | years ago. At least that ix the im- | Resolution, given’ First Reading, members stands and is listed, for | toiq that lemon juice in a@ little ttsed, there will be fewer drown- that relationship may — have politi- } ESSN One Rete 06 nz.clause hy clause |or against the measure. every! water, taken several times a ere years ago, & — ings. But there ge be = un- | __A& gontribution to better under- l_results which would be very un- | comm canis | approval and Third Reading, in .member in the House, including . will person who has | of pairs of-moose were brought | necessary—number ess 2 standing of the economic prob- oa indeed for the West.” the eee of saa she: aeeied {toms Shih half an hour. The Bill | Liberal and C.C.F_ members vo- Poa ae. to Newfoundland and set free in lesson ig learned. ~ . . tee eEvenete Katee for Mie. West. | the galleries nearly every day. | was the measure introduced by ted for the Crop Insurance Bill.| what do you think of this? | thd interior with the unexpressed | That is that artificial respiration lems in these Atlantic Provinces has To this kind of coercion Japan | perhaps it is because there are Prime Minister John: Diefenbaker | LENGTHIER SESSIONS Answer: There is no particular ty a oe, —— should be continued oe ; b , adi i i oe ing ite | , holiday sights yho | to establish, Canada’s gift to; This Session of Commons’ took to ex that lemon juice y. It was a comma aS | conclusive mark of been made by a leading Ontario is peculiarly vulnerable pee, On te | ee eee eee ne | Sie Gaede: oe eee ees v1 |s8x months to complete en the! ue ceser aed post-nasai | been fantastically obeyed. Today | dent.—Montreal Star the Glot d Mail [a | jesty. Q : € in r a . paper, ‘Globe and ] > m-com- crowded islands, i literally must | part of their Ottawa ingpeéction $1.000.000 Fund for research in | Beneral opinion is that Sessions! grip favorably or unfavorably. | the moose population numbérs menting editorially on figures releas- trade on a hugh scale if it is to live, tour. Perhaps the increaded tem-| child diseases. Speedy passage of | Will aa ae longer te complete : ee ee oe oe ae The Age Old Story ini : iad ‘ pe of the last two Federal elec-| the Bill was necessary the a8 Canada increases in popul- ribe ed by the Dominion Bureau of Stas | and the Communists_would pay ® | ticns has stimulated interest in| Fund could be establi for ation and in international im- OUR YESTERDAYS cient feéding grounds and plagued tistics last week. These figures dealt | high price, in advantageous trade, | government. Whatever the reason presentation te Her Majesty in| Portance. As an indication of the) (From the Guardian Files by a curious bacterial disease,| The king of Israel. even on with per capita personal income in for its co-operation. Any such | jo ens ne 2 aay S | Ottawa. Ordinarilx. a Bill takes | growth 8 erate tat ene TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Dong Acgumeemtargas d Brook | Lord, es in Jey aoe ee . . s ‘ le ris | nt, Security Guards have kept eral days, some ks, | fota ationa get for Can- | . shalt anymore. the various Provinces, showing On- | ¢hange in Japan's economic orienta- | check on the number of visitors ~wgescetla atest pg a ary lian te the does of ts Sela A ue ony * —, oi tario in the lead with $1,696, and | tion would have political and milit- | ryote Photiy yvebaar- ta | Position members co-operated on | Macdoneld, firet Prime Minister Sat ewe g tte 1. Taylor, Tor- . +h 5 : ; . >» | era t ator. At times t thi ‘ to speed the s. | o\ a, was as great as “ Newfoundland trailing the list with | ary results that would -be difficult | Siw. thant ewer 0006 cunnag and aie | dene MEAS" | the annual budget for the small. | eto, who has ye serene _— HOSPITAL . INSURANC in the lower brackets were Prince lands are the bulwark of Western eo un for Gs Mencler’s ng Those in the House at the time | When Prime Minister Diefen- | lor is regarded as a likely suc- DISCUSSIONS Edward Island ($860), New Bruns‘\| strategy throughout the Pacific. | ade which opens each day's sit- | manent the anally lobe rows | eaker assumed office. two’ years /esesar to RA. an? & ‘ tae : ; . j process of passing @ govern- , intended eral secretary 5 + . ee ee) cere sree eee Oar ie eet 8 ee eeicy | a olan Gay ee are ment meceure condenee? tate a| Standing. "Daman a “the C.A. Mr. Taylor viewed the lo Members and staff of the Hospital Services | . r daily pray- | Mode! demonstration of how cal Y.M.C.A. and the camp at] Commission of P.E.I. will attend the meetings _—— positions over 1957. In the case of . a 072). All four Maritime Provinces ranked behind even the Yukon and Northwest Territories, where the personal income was $1,091. Despite the Maritimes’ © poor showing, says the Globe and. Mail, there is cause for some optimism. All four Provinces improved _ their Prince Edward Island, the increase in personal income was 10 per cent; ‘in Newfoundland and Nova Scotia it was about 4 per cent, and in New Brunswick, 2.5 per cent. This shows that our economy is not stagnant; but the rate of increase is not fast enough ‘to give our people, within a reasonable time, the material bene- fits which most Canadians enjoy. ‘Tt is up to the rest of Ganada,” says the editorial “to. spe that they ' get them.” : At best, it is noted, Special. grants, subsidies and tax-sharing agreementa are palliatives, without any long- term effect. The Maritimes’ great- est need is industry. We have the . j ‘yesources to support it—forests and | minerala (especially coal for power plants) and a location in relation te most world markets which gives ' wean. advantage over the rest of Canada. We have other resources too—some exceptional agricultural Jand, the harvest of the sea, “and, most of all, the people themselves.” But the resources_are not being __ developed. Investment capital is need- ed on a scale not even remotely realized so far. The climate for ex- | pansion is slowly and,carefully being ereated, but Canadians im rest ef the country are reacting sldwly | " te the opportunity. Yet there “ many reasons why they, particularly the industrialists of Ontario, should are | take advantage of it. These indus- | trialists sell their products across the eountry, and their potential market im the Maritimes could be greatly expanded with an’ increase’ in in eome among East Coast consumers. “Bul there is more to this mat- . ¢.ter than Provincial self-interest.” gays the Globe ‘and Mail; “it is a na- tional problem. The serious discrep-. ~ '' pay for the protection, of a few _tex- tile industries in -Ontario ‘and Que- ‘bee. Finance Minister Fleming should give it his prayerful consideration. EDITORIAL NOTES Out ‘in Western Canada a con- troversy has sprung up over the proper ‘way to spell the name of the Hugh A. Dempsey, archivist for .the Glenbow Foundation at Calgary says both spellings are acceptable because the original Indian word “from which the name came has neither singular nor plural meaning. The Alberta . government lists re- ferences which show 20 authorities for “Blackfeet” and seven for “Black-_ foot.” ik a An _ international aviation conference vttrbe held.ai, the - College of Aeronautics, Cranfield, _ hear Bletchley, Buckinghamshire, in September. It is being organized by Britain’s Ministfy of Agriculture for Centre, which was set up under the Organization for European Econo- ic Co-operation last year. Some - 250 delegates are expected. On the last day of the conference, ten types of aircraft will take part in practi- cal demonstrations. : ,_* o > 7 Not satisfied with threatening war of. North Koreans, Soutk Korea's President Syngman Rhee wants to Korea singlehanded. He marked the 9th anniversary of the North Korean invasion by demanding that the Uni- ted States let his troops march north being told that this action would in- vite a world war. “United States re- presentatives in -Korea,” says, the Milwaukee Journal, “had better see te it that Rhee cuts down on his loaded pistol. He's apt to start march- ing north all by himself after one of his verbal rampages. For a myn de pendent for everything on foreign aid he’s mighty independen®” “Blackfeet” or “Blackfoot” Indians. | ‘| . e ; agricultural | the European Agricultural Aviation | on Japan over proposed repatriation "| oN, ——ator—m an take on the Communists in North _, and clean them out. He is angry at | feed and doesn't have access to a | not opened until after daily pray- ers in the House by the Speaker. all: members standing with heads | bowed. : | ENTIRE CLASSROOMS | syst works. All Bills ust 20 ‘ernment se more important in Gov- business. Committees through the five stages \in the have heen busier this session | Commons. The long debates on aome meastres and the | criticisms by Oppositi than ever before and have become shar? | a very essential part of the job of speak- | keeping Government, business Schools within driving stance ers, each of whom can peak for | moving Communities, in addition of Ottawa bring in entire class # minutes. are part /of Demo-| to giving new members good Par- _ rooms. of pupils by bus for ob- servation peri ies, As part Steel St { rike in the galler- cratic Government. Bu it must be rather ¢ Accusations Ry David Rowntree Canadian Press Staff Writer The steal strike spoilights a | ehanged attitude towards lahor unions on the part of American | tough bargaining attitude in the big business. :Ment's side of the wage-bargain- i= tables:feel that Tor too many ‘too easily to the demands of the union leaders. This year, some EZ have decided, is the time to | get tougher. Businessmen complain that fat | ter pay cheques “have not heen matched by greater ‘efficiency in | the workshops a factories. | Some industrialists go, so far’ as, | to say that they no longer ar® boss. , j They charge that many unions protect incompetent and lazy workers from dismissal, that the | labor leaders frustrate\ attempts | ra te cut costs by elinging to old- fashioned methods of work and | ‘hampering the use of automatic machinery. : RIDICULES. STATEME: David McDonald of t Seel- | workers Union ridiculed such ac- | ecusations when directed “ against his members by saying they were } “as phony as a $7 bill.” As an example of ‘teatherbed- ding, negotiators for the steel in- dustry cited the case of the oper- complained. about the strain of , working for long stretches in ine | tense heat. First. the company assigned a man te relieve him. | Later, when the firm had the crane cab air - conditioned, the union balked at having the’ relief man transferred. Now both ride i the cab. This is at once the type of is- | sue that More businessmen are |. Vowing to end in a wide range of _ industries and an example of the ‘argument over ‘management rights’ which, even more than | wages, brought’ on the strike by | '300,000 steel workers. | A number of observers say | is a fairly good het that the steel |} sompanies would have agreed to | & Wage increase of ahout 10 cents an hour ahowve the old $5 14 ave , rage af the union had heen will | ing to-give in on the issue of re strictive work rules . Years they have been giving in| ~~ * Riddle. Of The Eels e-- { editanal eomment that appears | to reflect much of the present business world. says worth some pain to have this vital issue ‘setiled.” . at- times, | liamentary training, reduced the fusing to| length of this Session their social stu-—--Gallery visitors to héar long op-|a month. by at least “From labor's point of view, management's eampaign has come_at a bad time. Hundreds of thousands of men recently were | unemployed and the prospect of |. walking off the job so soon ie not | shutdowns can be used lo even | ent supply and demand. oo x National Geographic Society | A new theory has been injec. | lad into the age-old riddle of the ‘eels. It suggest, that the com- | mon and valuable European eel | AAnguifia, anguilla) is not Euro- | pean ‘Hut American. | "All the ells of western Europe | and eastern North America.-haich | in the depths of the Sargasso Sea far out in the Atlantic Ocean. In | one of the great marvels of ani- | mal instinct, millions of tiny rivers and creeks of the two con- | tinents each spring. ' | Only three inches long. the young eels travel thousands of | miles without guides or exper- lence, swept by ocean currents, finaliy to fight inland to’ fresh | water where they will spend most { of their lives. If blocked by rocks | & dams, the eels are capable | of slithering overland to reach their goal. | RETURN TO, cE Perhaps 12 or 13 years later, they are mature and ready to re- | turn to their birthplace to breed / and die. Welldayered with fat, , they cease to eat as fall beings. | Their dark bodies turn silvery. Resting by day, moving at night, they head downstream allsalong | the Atlantic coast af the United | States and down the rivers of Europe. On cool nights, hurry- | ing eels sometimes crawl for a mile or more across dewy mead- ows to reach streams that lead to salt water, _ The pattern of this miracle of instinct was a complete mystery until thie century. For ages men watched the ef, vers pour wpstream m= spring * = saw mature eels slither down tn | autumn, and had no knowledge of where the one group eame j from or the other went ish gcientist. Johannes Stiitmdt Searthing diligently around the Atlantic, Schnidt netted thous- ands of eels in the infant stage called, leptocephalus. As he work- | ed closer and closer to the Sar- | gasso Sea, he found smaller and smaiier specimens. At last he | caught some less than a haif- | inch long. Tm 1922) he announced that the Sargasso must he the breeding place. Schmidt believed there were two species of fresh-water eels— American and European: He se- | parated them by counting the seg- | ments of backbone. They breed, he said, in distinct but overiap- ping areas of the Sargasso. PERISH IN OCEAN Now a British scientisi, Dr. Denys W. Tucker, has put forth the theory that there are no ‘Eur- opean" eels. He holds that all e the off- ‘| spring of American eels (Anquel- | la chrysypa), whose eggs were | laid in a eold. part of the Sar- gasso. This could account for the larger number of vertebrae found in the “European” eels—if wa- ter temperatures affect eels ae they. do.some other infant’ fish. Since the eels are hatched in different areas, Dr. Tucker postu- lates, currents would carry some to Europe rather than to Amer- ica. The mature ‘‘European” eels, according to this theory, at- tempt the 3,500-mile journey back to the breeding ground but haven't enough strength, and perish in the ocean: thus the Fu- Topean population would ‘he re placed Fach year from eggs laid by American eels. MAXIMS” What T have done is due to pa- ‘| The Wall street Journal. w asi The riddle wat solved by a Dan- i tient thought. oe © , ~ - an attractive one And in some industries—steel, for one -— pro- “After the | ductive capacity is so great that Many men who si on manage- | years of temporizing it would be the time taken up by temporary Canoe Cove, and stated_he was pleased with the work being done. : The ball given last evening by His Honour Lieutenant Governor DeBlois and Mrs. DeBlois in hov- our of Brigadier Hertzberg and the officers of the Nova Scotia Highlanders and the Prince Ed- ward Island Militia was an un- usually colourful function. There were 460 guests present. Mr. Al- bert Blanchard’s orchestra ren- dered the music for dancing dur- ing the evening. 53 TEN YEARS AGO (July 18, 1949) ® Is expected that final arrange ments will be completed shortly: for the purchase of the Queen Street premises formerly occu- pied by F.W. Woolworth Co. by the Prince Edward Island Cre- dit Union. At the directors set a ten- ive date for the opening of the/grocery and feed business on ground floor. : _ The superannuation of Opi. Charlies W. MacArthur, formerly of Charlottetown, became effec- tive on June 13th upon the com- pletion of twenty-two years _ser- vice with the, ,.Royal Canadian Mounted Police:{Cpl! MacArthur the Perth detachment of the R. C.M.P. for the past five years. x TO WELCOME TRAVELERS The grasa could not than it is MW men should ride a rocket to Nor could the sky appear more purély blue he greener a meeting | as‘) listed below.— hall of each District. Pownal Hall. Fort Augustus Hall. Southport Hall. H Hall. Marshfield Hall. \ West Royalty Hall. - Mt. Ryan Hall. ‘eo 2 Tryon Baptist Hall. The forthcoming Province Insurance Plan will be discussed and questions regarding operation of the plan will be answered. All adul attend these meetings, which will EAST ‘MONDAY, JULY 20—8:00 P.M. Stanhope and Covehead Community Hall. TUESDAY, JULY 21—8:00 P.M. Winsloe Station Hall. Kifigston Hall (Time for Kingston Hall 8:30). * WEDNESDAY, JULY 22—8:00 P.M. “* ~ Central Royalty Community Hall (for Centra! and East Royaltys). ‘ THURSDAY, JULY 23—8:00 P.M. =. FRIDAY, JULY 24—8:00 P.M WEST MONDAY JULY 20—8.30 P.M. -_-: urged to- held in the, he IF YOUR GUARDIAN Ta IS LATE... OR MISSED DIAL ven en at high noon. _.- And all these pansies thai enrich the grasses With multiplicities ef difference In similarity, are marvelous As any blossom gathered on im- mense Fields of Polaris. However many ge On interstelior journeys to prove their worth, — ‘Many will stay behind te wel- — come them. To pansies and the faithful green of earth. —Jane Merchant in the Christian Science Monitor ¢ UK, FLAG DESIGN « “The Flag Act of 1818 estab lished the permanent design of 13 stripes for the United States ‘flag with an added star for each a ao e ’ and a paper jv ¢ Special delivery service missed: a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is 6561 | a 4 r available between 8:30 late — or DIAL 178 Great. George St. For the Fastést Service in Town, call ~ BD'S TAXI Ed’s Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those | serve — the goal for which we strive!” 6561... Tee * Charlottetown