Che Guar dian eS | eee oe eee | ood Surgeon | === parties enter court they know w ! , a scl ied bite Goins slate wes testimony is to be given and what Always Learning NOTES BY THE W AY « mguns st i Prace Gree | questions are to be decided by the 2 : 7 ce Choruueiows PEs. by ; By Herman N. Bundesen, M.D.’ ce lan A Burneit, and General judges. : ° EVERY day countless persons| Another example of wishful; How can we hope to Member Daily: Newspaper Another factor, of course, is that place their lives in the hands of | thinking engaged in by major na-| ‘He aiomic bomb when, the Mee SSesaine "ieee men they, scarcely know. tions is that if theyll prepare for s pper Memner ot The Canadian Press the English system is more free of. Some day you may have to, | & horrible enough war, there will| us?—Brandon Sun sree ember Audi Bures of Camaes | politics than its American counter- also, You might have to have an | be no war.—Kilchener Waterloo} ; ‘: wn esaved Nationally ay Tuomson Newspapers part in the matter of judieial ap- sae Record the other day was sentenced to @ King furset West Terentia, Out . pointments. Whether the seminar | . And when you do, you might |, Tee expression “it’s no use ery- eo er dail a hand leita ‘or ‘. West Georgia St, Vancouver will result in any improvement in wonder, quite properly, just who | "& over a ee eens heny A deh wih a cag Carrier Cnaridtctown, Summerside 36c per wees : ; is this doctor who has such an | 2ates back to athe hosepipe. Hermanus Pieterse, 4 Ereriaces ant Vates t Sistas st ec oo ao this connection is problematical. It - was only a nickel a bottle.—The teceriee Hermease aa Previnces and United States $12.00 per annum is likely that it — ld _ with are his Caniteainet cee tna Sherbrooke Daily Retord- eae ts a eee of South “The memory is weaker than strong opposition from the iti- develop them? Conservation properly has be-| Africa's ruling elerent, of Dutch ae ee tae ink” cians : - So today I would like to explain | come a fetish for our land but | descent. In reverse, what whould i a little about the surgeon and | it is the who is the great- | have been the sentence if the Ne- PAGE 4 SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1958 : how he became equipped to op- | est conserv: st. It is through gro farmhand had murdered the : : : National Energy Board erate on you , his ingenuity in Keeping our aver-| farmer? That it would have Beew : ; HOW LEARNED worked ert : Still Time, But Not Much! We trust that some day we shall M he js an older doctor, be | ada live.—Londom Free Press Herstecd here 5 in Souths Saar We expected that this provincial | @ more directly interested in this Soeedad chee ic canient tMilisrat@iatae pe]. . election campaign would be the live- Province than we are at present in and aabetiotion Seine the years | man was bitten by dogs ten times| Up to now our admiration for -fiest one in many years. To date, it | the National Energy Board which with doctors he respected and | in his forty-y career, Angatice o> eee aa has been the deadest. What is the has been named by Prime Minister Tks a younger surgeon, | Biro, writes: “In our country the | since the war has had few bounds matter with the Opposition, that it | Diefenbaker. The Board will make chances are he devoted between | Profession is much more dang- | However we cannot but view with isn’t going after the Government | TePresentations to the Cabinet for four and six years exclusively to | Soa's Bhs oy -conbn reane oon. fuer . ore Seer tet their consideration in the j post-graduate study in the field | Pre Goes don’ enpretl Bricr Bab ewmeg Pesgesiy hammer and tongs? Has it taken too : ‘ majer of surgery. This, of course, com- | F each dogs don’t touch the mail, | tong-distance trains so that pas- ‘much to heart the admonition of the. | fi¢!ds of energy, and the members | _ es after he has obtained his M.D. | Dut, Jaguars eat everything."— | sengers can speak to, or be cal- : degree and served the required | ; led by, people anywhere in the world. So far as we are concern- : possess high qualifications. Alberta | has.loaned Ian N. MacKinnon, chair- € ite-oll-end sas : to the Federal Government for two years, to inaugurate the system. Vice-chairman is Robert D. Howlan, All honour to the Alberta City ee of Medicine Hat which, at the |e ihe grat siteche fs Oe end of June, had not suffered a | is precisely that while you're om = | | single fatal traffic accident for | i+ Dobody tan 2 a ~ 1,680 days. This record of no traf- |. * : fie fatalities for four and. half | CUver_ Province years by a city of 23,000 is an ex- : ample and a challenge to every ¢ f community across the country.— MAXIMS ’ Premier against abuse and vitupera- _ tion? Come, come! That was direct- ed at the Premier's own party stal- warts, and in any case it doesn’t ap- ply to good hard slugging above ‘the belt. tir at a large hospital Here, the : young doctor—and he is a full- fledged doctor—learns how to de- cide when and what type of sur- As we ventured to suggest before, the party in power doesn’t need to take the offensive in an election con- test. If its opponents are unable or unwilling to do so, what on earth are they in the field for? In this case they have a lot of lost ground to make up, a lot of trenches to take and a lot of bastions to storm. The trumpet has sounded and they are still fid- dling with their equipment, still con- ning their reconnaissaice maps and planning their strategy. All this should have been done in advance. Even the government forces are nonplussed by this turn of events. Straining their eyes for the oncom- ing waves of attack, all they can see is a straggling patrol here and there,° or_a sniper in the belfry. The guns that fired the opening rounds have subsided, and the battlefield is as bare as a cow pasture. Where the devil are the enemy? This may be a surprise move of great ingenuity, but for the life.of us we can't see its merits. Perhaps by the time this appears in print the scene will have changed, and the fight will be on in earnest. We sincerely hope so, for we don't want to see another easy victory such as the Liberals have gained with monotonous regularity in recent years. It may be we are all wrong, and that the forces are already lock- ed in deadly subterranean combat, out of sight and sound. But we are oldfashioned about election cam- paigns, and cling to the belief that they should be fought in full view of the spectators, and over every inch of ground, from the opening gun to the fina] tally. There is still time to make it, boys; but for goodness’ sake, wake up! Studying British System Canadians have often wondered at the anomalies of the American judi- cial system, which in many respects compares unfavorably with British practices and has resulted, among other things, in long delays in court procedure. American jurists are a- ware of the evil consequences of pro- tracted litigation, and it is ‘interest- ing to note that they are now doing something about it. Fifty-six judges and leading lawyers of the United States have begun a five-day study of Engiish pre-trial practices, their instructors being eight prominent British jurists and court officials. The seminar, arranged by the In- stitute of Judicial Administration at New York University Law Centre, is part of a nation-wide move to fa- cilitate the work of trial judges. Brought to New York through a Ford Foundation grant, the instructors in- clude two judges of the United Kingdom High Court of Justice, the leader of the Admiralty Bar, and others of high rank in their profes- sion. The “students” include twenty- three judges from the U.S. Federal and State courts, a former U.S. At- torney General, the president-elect of the American Bar Association and the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. Indictative of the need of speed- ing up American judicia] procedure is the fact that in New York State, zongested court calendars are caus- ing delays of six weeks to forty- four months in trying civil cases. 3ome experts estimate the average national delay at ten months. Judge Savatt of the United States District Court said in an interview that the English “are a hundred years ahead of us in pre-trial practices.” In Bri- « tain, twelve months is considered the imum delay in bringing a case to ind the issues are so thorough- —_ coal problem that is a serious Mari- time issue. Archambault of Montreal, a member of the transit group there; H. Lee Briggs, engineer who created a stir by repudiating the B.C. Government’s financing of the power commission and leaving that post. A fifth mem- ber is Douglas M. Fraser, a civil ser- vant and a member of the Trade and Commerce staff in Ottawa. Board will be mainly concerned with oil and natural gas as they fall with- in federal jurisdiction. But its goal is the shaping of an intelligent po- licy for the use of energy of all kinds in the national interest, and if there is one thing this part of Canada needs most it is a policy of this kind. It is the key to our fyture industrially, and could mean a new era of progress and prosperity for these Maritime Provinces. come? In Salisbury, Southern Rho- desia, Dr. Parerenyatwa, the Feder- al Government’s first African phy- sician, has been banned by the Min- istry of Health, because white per- sons protested his holding autopsies on the bodies of whites He has been named medical director of a hospital for Negroes in some remote region. tain is expected to take place in Oct- ober and there is also a pretty gen- | eral feeling that the Macmillan Gov- ernment is going to win. The public opinion polls, with which the country is now overrun (four different nat- ional newspapers sponsor quite scien- tific polls on their own). all suggest ed virtually all the position that they neld just before the general election of 1955. |. were fewer among new drivers than | been going on for less than four ‘ s \years in the deep south o! the rain, fog, snow or sleet than in clear weather, economic adviser to .the Nova Scotia Government, who has served on two recent. boards, the Gordon Commis- sion on Canada’s economic prospects and the Borden Royal Commission on Energy. He is an ‘expert on the Other members are- Jules A. In its earlier stages at least, the EDITORIAL NOTES How fantastic can segregation be- x a a The general election in Great Bri- t This colume ts open to the discus sion by correspondents of question c. interest. The Guardian does not seses sarily en‘orse the opinion ef corres poadents. : INFORMATION SOUGHT Sir—I am preparing a bio graphy of the Honourable Alex- ander Mackenzie, the first Lib- eral Prime Minister of Canada af- ter Confederation. In Mackenzie's Cabinet was a man who had quite a lot of influence on him— David Laird, Minister of the In- terior and later Lieutenant Gov- ernor of the North West Territor- ies. He was also in close con- tact with Louis H. Davies, Pre E. I. during the period. Unfortunately I have been able to find little information on eith- few of the | er of these men. A ministers from other parts of the country ft collections of person- al papers that have been very useful but so far I have discov- ered nothing along that line from the Prince Edward Island men. This is all the more regrettable as it was the decision of -the Is- land representatives to back the Liberals in 1873 that was a turn- ing point in defeating John A. Macdonald on the Pacific Scandal. Then there were the delicate ne- gotiations with regard to \the Schoo! and Land Settlement ques- tions in those years in which Mackenzie was vitally interested I would appreciate your lishing this letter, in order that I might get in touch with descen- dants of these Island statesmen. that I have done so. As I have already completed a first draft, time is important to me. 1 am Sir. eic. DALE THOMSON 409 Friel Street, Ottawa. Ont. WAR WITHOUT VIOLENCE Sir,—This idea comes from the ‘Sermon on the Mouni”, For that the Conservatives have recover- | * * * The Motor Vehicle Branch of the Ontario Department of Highways Las issued figures which suggest that the causes of highway accidents may not be those commonly sug- gested. They show that accidents more experienced ones, fewer in and fewer in_ skiddings, slowing, stopping or backing than in going straight ahead. In other words, the better and more normal the driving conditions, the greater the number of accidents. - 7 * We don’t envy the New York ———_ cI se police if Premier Khrushchev should drive down the principal streets of that city during his American tour. ; No city in the world has taller build- ings. and it’s going to be exceeding- ly hard to watch every one of them. And, as the Montreal Gazette points out, there are in New York 314,603 Russians, Ukrainians and_ other natives of areas that are now part of the Soviet Union; also 179,878 Poles, 51,968 Hungarians, 30,130 Czechoslovaks, 29,400 Rumanians, 13,599 Lithuanians, 7.220 Latvians. 3,975. Estonians, 1,700 Albanians and 1,368 Bulgarians—many of them refugees from Soviet tyranny. The circumstances that compelled their flight are of the very kind most likely-to breed fanatical passions. those who do: not know, this is. found in St. Matthew's Gospel, 5th chapter to 8th. We quickly forget that Britain was compelled to give India self- government quite recently, sur- rendering to a few hundred men and women who refused to co- operate in a system that made | them. slaves. Mahatma Gandhi though not professing to be a Christian; made the New Testa- | ment his guide. He was highly ed- ucated and proved out the theory , that turning the other cheek while stiving for Justice is not so fool- ish after -all. Another war of non-violence has United States. We watched § the papers while the contest was on at Little Rock where nine Negro high school children bravely withstood insults from the white students un- til their cause was vindicated, by the Federal Court, — Most interesting of all is the re- fusal of 50,000 Negro citizens of Montgomery in Alabama refusing to use the city bus for some 14 months. walking to work or go- ing by taxi-back and forth for as many as, twelve miles. It” took much patience and admonition on the part of those who saw the is- sue clearly to control this color- ed multitude. Such indignities as making a negro stand on the bus while seats reserved for white passengers were empty, vaying his fare at the front and being told to get off and go in at the rear. The case of Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old high school girl being pulled Off a bus, hand- cuffed and taken to jail because she refused ta give up her sea‘ to a white passenger roused the colored people ta action. One Rev. Martin L, King was asked to con- fer with the bus commission but no solution to the difficulty was found. When another arrest was made it was Mrs Ross Parks wha was asked to vacate a seat reserved for colored people and stand to allow a white man to use it. Mrs. Parks is claiined to be a very charming person and highly respected. From this incl ‘ mier and Attorney General of P. | I want to give them theif due | and. so far I am not satisfied | TWO BLADES ON THE SCYTHE PUBLIC FORUM | OTTAWA REPORT soa Parliamentary Grapevines By Patrick Nicholsea The swarming tourists who are, the now vacant post of Minister making this a record year on! of Public Works. | Parliament Hill. are rubbing | shoulders—without knowing it— | with some of Canada’s most im- | portant new sources, who. are ' quoted daily in our newspapers. | The official guides point out to | tourists all the interesting inan- imate objects on The Hill, such as the painting of our most emi- nent immigrant from. Scotland “(Prime Minister Sir John A. Mac- Donald’, the carved stone head of Calgary's most famed ranch- owned ‘the Duke of . Windsor’, | the room where so much is said | by so many to so few ‘the House of Commons!. But the guides do not recognize these interesting but anoymous personalities ‘in the news. While the Prime Minister en- jJoyed a deserved holiday fishing in Saskatchewan ‘he caught sev- en grayling at Stoney Rapids’, | and while half the civil service | and al! the Parliamentarians were | away from Ottawa, the only in- terest on Parilament Hill was speculation about future events. In this field, journalists can and do achieve a very good mil- eage in the cafeteria here ‘about two rumours to the gallon of cof- fee’. The trouble with this sys- tem in August is that most of the | to get inbred. | . ANONYMOUS SOURCES But luckily, there are always some of those anonymous news- bearing figures flitting around , the Hill. A group of tourists going | to visit the Library may pass an | insignificant-looking man com- ing out with “Lolita” \and a fur- tive expression, without knowing that newspapers describe him as “A Usually Reliable Source’. Another group pass a happy-look- ing girl taking some letter’ to the Parliamentary Post Office, but ers as “An Informed Liberal Circle’, The indignant driver having his jalopy nosed out of his reserved pagking space by a loaded station-wagon from B.C. is in reality. “A Diplomatic Auth- ority’’. And that scruffy-looking | type weaving his way homeward. is of course “A High Spokesman on Parliament Hill”. In gathering political news here, there is no substitute for a wide and active acquaintanceship embracing ‘some who are mask- ed by these titles. But in being able to evaluate and piece to- gether such bits of information, there is no substitute for experi- ence of Ottawa. An example of this concerns | patrons of the cafeteria are other | | journalists, so the rumours tend | Quebeckers are speculating that one of them will be appoint- ed to what they assert is a trad- itionally Quebec vlum: h-- say that past. experience has shown that graft too often follows a Quebecker into that Minister's office. so it will be an English- speaking Minister. Some writers have predicted that Gordon Churchill will be transferred to Public Works. But experienced observers ‘more reliable than “informed political sources’’) have long reconized that the most valuable Cabinet reinforce- ment available to the Prime Min- ister is his old friend and long- time, supporter David Walker, the time supporter Toronto lawyer, | who is overbue for political ad- -| vancement the victim of a log jam. - INSIDE OUTSIDE TIP Thus the speculation about the | Ministership of Public Works has swayed back and forth. This col- umn has predicted that Mr. Walk- er will shortly be sworn into the Privy Council. And now “A Hith- erto Overlooked Source” has giv- en me confirmation of this pend- ing appointment, to end all spec- ulation. As so often happens. my sour- ce did not know the significance of her words, nor that she was betraying a political secret. But, again as so often happens. she supplied the essential missing link in the chain of evidence. My well-informed source was a little old lady. Parliament Hill's favourite teacher of the French language. She casual!y mention- ed to me: “Mr. Walker told me that he will be back in Ottawa early in September, and he wants to resume his daily French les- sons then.” Now why would a back-bench | M.P. come to live in Ottawa dur-. | in have no means of knowing that | : she is described in our newspap- | the Parliamentary recess. when he has a busy law practice in Tronner? The conclusion is ob- vious. But perhaps the Prime Min- ister caught some other ideas along with those grayling. He may have confided his intention to one or two colleagues some weeks ago, but subsequently have decided to stage a big Cabinet shuffle. Who knows? Maybe he plans to promote Brookes and others to the Senate. to move Pearkes. elevate Fulton to Na- tional Defence, appoint Walker to Justice, move a few pawns hither and yon. and keep others still guessing. ‘‘Sources’’ may not always be reliable: but their words are often, perhaps too of- ten, combed for hidden meaning in newsl@ss summer days. The United States faces an acid test in internal morality—the dis- stance it is willing to travel to curb crooks and racketcers who may masquerade and: front as legitimate union leaders. dent the bus boycott started. Mr. King preached the gospel of non- violence and good feeling. The hooded K.K.K. came on the scene, but the negroes: stayed in- doors. Colored churches were bombed as well as the homes of the leaders in the resistance movement. . Now the negro can sit ‘on the bus on equal terms with his white brother, for an order from the Supreme Court has handed down this verdict. There is much yet to be done The hatred in the hearts of the whites is evident in the remark of a white man who stood in a bus, ‘4 would die first and go to Hell before I would sit behind a nigger.”’ It looks. now as though the white commun- ity may be Christianized yet by the good example of the Negro. I am, Sir, ete.. J. A. MacKENZLE Kensington, P.E.} As things now appear, it would | Hoffa Poses Challenge By Harold Morrison ,Canadian Press Staff Writer seem President Eisenhower will have to settle for something less than the tough measures he has endorsed, or perhaps end up with no legislation at all. ; Two years of investigations by the Senate labor rackets commit- tee has disclosed what appear to be shocking practices among some unions; allegations of un- derworld dealings, fraud and cor- ruption thrust against the Team- sters Union executive, headed by James Hoffa. The committee says that if Hoffa ig not blocked, he may suc cessfully destroy the entire ‘de- cent’ labor movement in the United States. Clearly, the situation calls for action, and Congress is well aware of the temper and mood of the country. But while action of some kind is indicated, there is a deep split in the country as tc what should be done. In the big struggle for new laws now opened in the House of Representatives; three proposals have been aired—one a soft, the other medium and the third a really tough approach to the is sue; The ‘soft’’ one was killed by the House Wednesday. Eisenhower ir endorses the tough |. gery is necessary. | more complicated surgical pro- { } } 'caused Saturday afternoon near | secondary boycotts. These | AFL-CIO, has : him. What worries Meany ts that ‘ganizational powers of legitimate dealing with it if the plant man- ployees have signified they don’t tices unions vent sweatshop companies. gle is indicative of what is going | on behind facturers are behind the Eisen- | hower demands for tough action. It is this .one argument which a@ compromise in Congressional | legislation. doubt that im some ways manu- facturers would benefit by the complete elimination of the two | organizational The symptoms of different ail- ments often are very similar. It is an art to diagnose correctly which is which. Of course X-rays and various tests are used to, aid the. surgeon in the diagnosis. ‘ The young doctor also learns how to care_for-the patient after the operation as well as during surgery. He makes a careful study of the patients condition to help prepare him for the shock of the operation. Then comes the actual exper- ience of operating. First, of cour- se, he assists veteran surgeons. Finally, he assumes the operating | ¢, duties, himself, first on the more simple cases such as appendicit- is and then advancing to the cedures. \ MUST PASS EXAMINATIONS After a minimum of four years of this, he must pass written and oral examinations in to be certified by the Nati Board of Surgery. His education ‘never ends He must keep up with advances by reading surgical magazines and i new books and by consulting with other surgeons. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. W.S.: I have large brown spots on my hands. Can you tell me the cause of these and if any- thing can be done to remove them | Answer: Large brown spots on the hands may be no significance and usually result from exposure to sunlight. Occasionally, certain internal diseases causes abnorm- a! pigmentation. : Your doctor can examine you to determine whether there is any cause for worry in your case and if they can be removed. \_ OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) (August 14, 1934) The first annual meeting P. E I. Co-operat Marketing Board was held yest- School Hall with an attendance of |! about fifty delegates. Mr. W. J. | Reid, president, was in the chair. The setretary, J.A. Gillies, pre- sented his report and also the financial statement. Considerable excitement was the corner of Weymouth and Dor- chester streets when Louis. .2-yr. old son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard McCloskey, grasped the end of an electric light wire dangling from a pole. He was unable to re- lease the wire and his cries of anguish atiracted a number of people who were successful _in freing the youngster from the wive fire. TEN YEARS AGO (August 14, 1949) E.P. Foley, president of the Canadian Pharmaceutical Assoc- ciation leaves Summerside t his morning by plane for Saskatoon, approach and George Meany, head of the 15,000,000 - member openly opposed in the rush to destroy racketeers. Congress also may curb the or- unions. The issue has boiled down to whether the country should allow so-called blackmail picketing and are practices whereby a union could picket a plant and other firms agement ‘won't sign a union on- tract The significance of this is that the unions can earry out such tactics even when the plant’s em- want the union to act for them. MEANY’S FEARS Eisenhower says these prac- should be eliminated but Meany fears that such. elimina- tion will reduce the power’ of the to organize new com- panies, He says it would also pre- unions from advertising conditions in some The Eiscnhower - Meany strug- the scenes in Con- | gress. Meany charges that manu- above all others which may face for there is little Ottawa Journal panes, Frank Slimmers of Clover Hill, Virginia, had a somewhat different experience. day last, Mr. Slimmers found a tortoise on whose back he had carved his found the tortoise about 300 yards from where he had last seen it— 58 years ago.—Montreal Gazette ernor Faubus has described this rewspaper and its personnel in —culminating: in his description of the executive editor of the Gaz- ette as a ‘renegade.”” We have accepted these epithets as part of the game, and a reflection of the usual humor in which Mr. Fau- bus debates public issues with his critics. Now, however, we feel constrained to protest. In an ad- dress before the Kiwanis club the Governor | said: paperman myself.” This is go zette beginning and the end. I will | give unto him that is a thirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. - Sask., where he will preside over attire the annual meeting. The meetings Just to hear your voice in the ; | will be held August 15-19, and at; Village Choir. we | the conclusion Mr. Foley will go|I can see a pond with its mir-~-~- } | to Banff, Alberta, to visit relatives, rored peace, : and friends. With its cattail spires and its gabby geese; A three-day old mystery sur- I can hear the notes of a mystie rounding a deserted boat found| ode drifting off Cape Breton Island FIVE RS AGO (as cleared up Saturday when — eo the craft was identified by fisher- of the man, John Myrick of Alberton. pled Bay ive Livestock | He said the craft was fishing off | Where two children thrilled to the | Tignish when a heavy blow came faraway, ‘erday afternoon in Queen Square | UP and the engine stopped. Ano but it had to be left anchored. ‘It had apparently broken away f 130 miles. Nature has given te men one ’ tongue, but twe ears, that we 1 Whil le Canada was making up eg Pye? ee ts mind about 1,500 m.p.h. air- On Tues- initialsF.S. and 5 Mer ~ CRESCENT OF DREAMS With your hand im mine, I ge back again To the dear red dust of a country lane; To a cherished spot where’a cod tage steed—— In the sunny lee of a silver wood I keep going back to the weath- ered school - Where we learned three R’s and the Golden Rule; To a scarred pine desk where 1 used to sink : Your beribboned braids in a pooi of ink; To the sore despair I seemed of to place In the deepening lines of the teacher's face. With your hand in mine there & Over an extended period, Gov- erms somewhat less than flatter ‘IT am a news ng too far. — The Arkansas Ga- joy supreme As we stroll the paths of this The Age Old Story | well loved dream. I am Alpha and Omega, the | With your hand in mine, I go back once more To the faithful friends near the old Church door; To the family pew in my best |In the evening trill of the lonely toad. On a windswept knoll! near a dap- , With your‘hand in mine, none can eer beguile With such happy Prince Edward Isle. —S. Barlow Bird. Freetown, P. E. I. her boat tried to tow it to port days a rom its moorings and drifted since 1882 Funeral Service IN NEW ENGLAND Our Athol 0. MacLeod is familiar with your funeral problems for a New England. Contact him for prompt and efficient service. SERVICE IS A “LONG” WORD Aeolion Orgon Aw Conditioned Chopel A. €. Long E Son, ine. 1979 Massachusetts Avenue CAMBRIDGE 40, MASS. Te! TRowbridge 6.5080 IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE. - OR MISSED DIAL 6561 and a paper will be delivered right to your door. Special delivery service available between 8:30 a.m. to, 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or missed. ED'S TAXI DIAL 6561 173 Great George St. Ed's Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of serve — the goal for which we strive!” Charlottetows practices which condemns those whom: we