“tn the light of prices that —are still} years ago seemed impossible. It isn’t - _. complete—and months of Mr. Sharp's budgetary plea +— : ; | mates, due to an early freeze and re- Che Guardian Covers Prince Edviard Island Like The Bew wy P Hencex, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week ow morning (except Sur day .and. statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers ( Urd. Branch offices ef Summerside, Montague, 4 berten wand Souris * Represented nationally w Thomson Newspapers: | Advertsing Services: Toronto 425 Ur'yersity Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni: versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper "Assaciation end The Canadian, Press: The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub. lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it ot to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the loca’ news published herein. All right of republication ef special disoatches here in eso reserved. . Subscription rate: ° Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 » year by mail on rural foutes and areas ced by carrier mot ce $75.00 a year off Island and U.K, $29.00 per _ year in US mor weath Not over 10¢ s azle-cepy: Member Awdit Bureau of Circulator PAGE 4 and elsewhere outside “Britsh Com Such Consistency! Representatives of contracting firms across Canada will be here to ‘attend the briefing this. week by federal officials with regard to the details of the Island phase of our causeway -project. Work on this pro- ject. it will be recalled, was to have started this spring but was “ scheduled,” as Finance Minister Sharp informed “us in his -budget speech. in order to curb the infla- tionary spiral. Let's hope that work will get started before next winter. In the meanwhile, it’s time to take ano- ther look at that alibi of Mr. Sharp’s, spiralling and that will probably have us all feeling dizzy before we get started on our centennial colehenen * next year. According to a recent Calaets exchange, Expo-'67 is the main villain in this economic drama, which has, alas, produced no heroes yet. The necessity of getting the big show built in time -has—led to some fabulous-wage rates in the Montreal area—$6 an hour for plumbers, for instance. The same deadline-haunted urgency induced the government to — settle the Quebec dock strike on the _-basis of a 33 per cent wage increase - cent-an-hour package of wage and - fringe benefits to St. Lawrence sea- way workers, which amounts to a 37 per cent increase over two years. . The precedent thus set was quickly - British Columbia whose workers now " receive the highest wage in the world for their trade. It will be appfied, in ‘varying degrees, to many other in-~ _dustries, including the, railways, as _ existing contracts lapse. The govern- ment's*s@rrender to wage increases entirely unrelated to productivity, and ‘hence certain to raise prices, is this within - for moderation. ae | go, the tracker backtracks the object | and determines its launching point, its point of impact-and-the-time of impact. } The computation is eompleted | within, seconds, and the information. | transmitted. automatically to the Pen- |. tagonl, to the Strategic Air Command at Omaha, to the North. American: Air oa “ Poblishers WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1966. | { over two years, and to grant an 85-. | three |. Defense Command = at | pballisti¢ threat to the United States, lock-on is automatig the rotating scant fection’ mission. i = This new and amazingly accurate e ' device was being installed just about | the time that Canada's-Soviet guest of “honor, Dmitri Polyansky, was- being feted at Ottawa, and chose that oc- + -€asion to sound off about American | sharp retort from External Affairs Minister. Pau! Martin that principle of freedorh and anxious to use its resources and power for the It could be that Mr. Martin, who: has a good built-in antenna of his own to detect sneak at- tacks on the propaganda front, had re- | the Alaska operation in mind when he — ood of mankind.” spoke as he did. Iff any case, we may noted at Washington and credited to | our account. Worry About Wheat Canada is in a fair vay of being | —rid ofits wheat ‘surplus problem and | has actually pledged most if its | crops through the 1968-69 crop year to meeting commitments to Russia _and Communist China. In addition it has commitments to Britain, Japan, Czechoslovakia, Poland. and East sold wheat; to Russia, has little surplus | left. ieusthes is in the same—boat; so is pustralia. Now,. from Washington, comes | word that our American neighbors ‘are worring ‘about how they can be. assured of ample wheat supplies. This, France, too, which recently to do with their surplus, shows how quickly and drastically food condit- ions can change. Given a few years of drought, cold or other natural in- hibitors both Canada and the United - States could be facing a real. shor- i | Canada. or the U nited Kingdom, the v broken and resumes Re de- “aggressiveness’—thus inviting the the US. was a good neighbor dedicated to the be sure that his comment was duly Germany—and is literally sold out. after years of worrying about what Colorado - ‘|. Springs, and to England’s Royal Air | Force. If the object tracked poses no | | | | ly FROM WHAT POUTICIANS HAVE AS SAYING Bee REPORTED WE KEEP GETTING A PICTURE THIS eoned uxXe REALLY MEAN IT _ SOUT NS en ar) Lhai- sm o'r eee - 9 mBUT OF COURSE “HieyY DON'T © PSS ae _MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S NIGHTMARE |The White | Plaque >=" By Dr. Theodore R. ‘Van Dellen a | ; e OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson | Too Many Dilettantes In Parliament , | How {s our. Parliament off th _—Wally Nesbitt, who is a master | "beam? Johnny Canuck is vague- aware that all is far from right, but his unfamiliarity with | Parliamentary processes handi- | cap him when he tries to specify | his_criticism. Thus Canadians | deplore the partisan politickitg over the Munsinger affair; more | recently they ridicule our 265 MPs who are so inept at manag- ing their business that they can- not even plan their own summer— holiday to start on_a _Prearrang- ed day. | But -I believe that the real | . trouble-with Parliament is much deeper than such superficial. | ties, which are merely the sym- -ptoms of the disease. The basic | trouble, I suggest, is that govern- |. ment has grown to cover so vast { and complicated a field that. one | man cannot make himself an ex- pert in the whole. -Hence our | apt to happen, of coursé; but it could. A few years back the problem was where to find storage space for wheat _ »—it was piled high in open - stor- age, filling every elevator and. barn 7 around. Nowelevators in the west are starting to empty and much stor- age capacity is empty. In the U.S. the current crop is expected to be about 150 million~ bushels short of esti- ‘to lapse back into that familiar Parliament consists largely of a | gaggle of scantily-informed a- , mateurs, rushing from one hec- | tic stage to another and able to play a leading role on none. Our _MPs exemplify - the = saying: The one field in which have: all obviously graduated ts electioneering, hence each tends field when the topic of debate is beyond his ken. That is why so much of Parliament's time is | taken_up with sheer politicking, _: But it kept valiantly holding the fort It was a plain failure of nerve that : Caused the Pearson government's capitulation in the cases above cited. _ at this end, in-its causeway resched- uling, and generally in its treatment ——. of this province since the last federal a election. ee _— may, it seemed She > shielded from the‘ ‘boom” that was : Causing such a lack of unemployment ‘in-other parts of Canada! Unfor- tunately, while it has been so solici- tous about us in this respect, it hasn't come up with a formula to safeguard -‘us from being victimized by the re- sults of its inflationary policies in other areas of the economy. Just In Case... — It didn’t get anv advance publicity, but a*huge, new, ultrasensitive elec- tronic eye. has just been set up by the US. Air Force at the Clear Ballistic Missile Early Warning System site in Alaska Just. another precaution against a sneak missile attack on thi par of the. ‘continent, ; though tte They eke to call it a device to pro vide maximum detection capabilities, and let it go at that. But-to Canadians _ as well-as Americans, there is com- —obiect as small as a La AS friends. skies-from. horizon-to-hoerizon-- whether fort to be drawn from the descripfion of this big radar unit—weighing 185 tons—which can detect and track an a 16-inch piece of e 1-32nd.of.an ‘inch in diameter at tance of 2.500 miles | The electronic dishes, eath costing $19 million, can scan potentially un- ‘Min a di They are operated tn conjunction with fixed detection radar screens, three at Clear. two at Flyingdales Moor in Yorkshite England. and four Thule. England. Should an uniden- nd object be detected, either by fixed screens. the trackers lock onthe |_ foreign body. until it is determined it-is a balkstie trajectory. If ~ sisal aroun ~ —-Bad- cent :drought—-the latter in some areas the worst since 1963, the ‘dust bowl” period. At present rates wheat stocks may drop to 250 million bi sh- els by 1967—-far loss. than half* the meet the country’s expected shortage. The over-publicized quarrels be-. tween the CBC’s remote and ineffec- tual management and its’ Toronto | prima donnas, cofnments the Finan- cial Times of Canada, have been ridiculously similar to the, relations between Ottawa’s remote and. inef- fectual government and the Opposi- | tion’s prinia donnas. But the CBC at least has a board of directors with the power and the duty to clean up both ends of its mess.. The prima donnas started leaving last. week. They are, as The Times drily says, not irreplacable. But un- less the CBC directors can also re- form its management, there is not much chance of restoring the droop- ing morale of the program division. - 4 This is ‘something that should not | be allowed to wait for the new Board- “casting Act outlined in the White | Paper. The act is badly needed. -But | Since Parliament is in as. unruly a | State as the CBC itself. no one can tell - when the act may be passed. EDITORIAL NOTE » To develop tourism to the-max- -Imuyn It is necessarv to treat visitors fairly as well as in a friendly and | courteous maniier. There is a distinc- tion_here which_the Canadian-Tourist- Association has underlined. with respect to our dealings with American tourists. Make sure, it savs, that all ‘formed—debates on the great ‘s — of foreign affairs: P. B. Rynard, who is a source be Orillia’s Dr | of wisdom on medical matters, | Oshawa’s Mike Starr, who is an expert on Labour: Nova Scotia’s Allan MacEachen is a vivid ex- ample of the adaptability of a first-class mind: from the com- plications pf his former role as | Minister of~Labour, he has slip- | ped like a hand into a glove into tthe equally technical ‘task as Minister of Health and Welfare. The amateurishness of the average MP shows up most de- | plorably in the specialized com- mittees. Significantly last week Oakville’s Dr Harry Harley, chairman. of the special conr- mittee on drugs.costs and prices, | publicly announced “his dissatis- faction with his ‘committee's performance, and called for a new-‘‘format'’ when it resumes its work in the Fall z That committee has justifiab- ly been criticized: even by some of its own members, for its— | superficiality. This stems from fing - _maybe _ ninety minute to hear and cross stion witnesses who have a brief spent weeks preparing ‘for it, and travelled hundreds of | miles to -appear before it: and. second: its fluctuating composi- ‘perhaps 14 will attend any -one committee equally ~ his _ Promotion In School New ¥ork=Fimes + subdued completely even though | the cause is known and good remédies are available. The an: - cient disease was*accurately de- See + Gloomy, Peace Prospects By Arch MacKenzie Canadas Woens Staff Writer — WASHINGTON. (CP). — Peace | who has talked about Yet Nam ‘probably never has-been further with. President Nasser of -the away.in Viet Nam than - United Arab Republic and Pres- now ident: Tito -of Yugoslavia, and This is the view of eet who also is going on to Moscow fied’ non-American observers as But External Affairs Minister - the United States pushes Presi- ‘Pau! Martin's candid statement Tuberculosis never has been tablet | more t on a Babylonian vis much disturbed ;-are hospitalized | aminosalicylie acid more than 4,000 years ago “The | sick one coughs, frequently, his | sputum is thick and sometimes contains blood, his respirations | give a‘sound like a flute. his skin is cold but his feet are hot. he sweats greatly, and his heart Authorities estimate that halt the world’s population has been infected by the tubercie-bacillus. | The western nations have made | remarkable strides toward con- trol and in. many -parts of the United States sanatoriums ,are closing for lack of patienté® or | modern treatment facilities Those with active tuberculosis | and -given—a combination’ “vf isoniazid, para- (PAS), -and more id than in the past and hospitalization . is followed «by | outpatient treatment. Mass screening by tuberculin testing and chest X-ray is used to detect the disease in an early stage. Tuberculin_tests show whether an individual has. ever been infected by tubercle: bacil-_ li. Anyone with a positive reac- tion gets a chest X-ray. Most public -health agencies’. concen- trate on the high risk segment of -among those who are_exposed to infected persons. In this way 50,000 new cases are uncovered | annually. Everv year an additiénal 10.- 000 with arrested tuberculosis | also have a relapse. Case find- _ ing is the most important tool in the control .of -tuberculosis. be- cause it brings a potential sprea- | der of the disease to-a_ treat- ment center. ——t i | tion; it has 24 members, of whom meeting, moving in and out so that only about 8 or 9 are pre- set at any one time. MOMENT OF INGLORY Thus a dilettante_will drop {n. lounge in a chair, pour himself | a glass of water, light a cigarette listén to the cross-fire for a-few | minutes, then toss in a question perhaps referring back to a to- pic which: had been exhaustively discussed before his theatrical entry. Or.maybe a headline “hunter wilt bring a pile of “books and files to one meeting, -pursue his, chosen angle~ to dominate a whole meeting, and the not re- | appear for several weeks. - Speaking to me privately, Dr Harley told me that what he haé in mind is longer sittings = eac's lasting for a full day - and a smaller committee containing only MPs really interested in the subject and willing to. attend every meeting, bar fliness Dr. Harley’s criticism of his is’ certainly valid; suggestion would considerably improve it. Fur- ther, since what he seeks ts ind:- vidual expertise, a lesson could be learned by the whole House | of Commons from the proposal which he will endeavour to tm- plement in the Fall. A safe and effective vaccine ‘BCGY. has been available for more than 40 year. It is recom- mended mainly for children -liv- ing in areas where the incidence , Of tuberculosis is high..The prin- cipal objection to BCG is that it Causes the vaccinated person to | im-test which destroys the value | of the test : i RECURRING A. S. writes: I Masa! and. stomach. polyps 'masal polyps were easily POLYPS had both 4 | streptomycin. Surgery also. | may be needed Improvement is Times: dent Johnson's official.line tHat the -North Vietnamese are be- ginning to hurt and lose hope: The president; Geor Ball, undersecretary. of state, Defence Secretary Robert’ .McNamara | and others have taken turns in what has been called a ‘‘sus- tained celebration of progress Yet, no one here has seen anything to indicate that North Viet’ Nam's 19,000,000 residents |are anywhere close to laying down their arms—halting aid to the southern insurgents. Bernard B. Fall, the noted | French authority on Viet Nam who teaches here and who vis- | ited the- North last year, looks at the impact of the increased | American bombiffg-of the North He writes in the New York “It will ‘take a great |deal more (and no doubt some- thing other than bombing) convince such men that their tactics may be wrong; that the war they are engaged in has be- come hopeless.”’ Roving Ambassador Averell | Harriman said Sunday that in creased American eee j\does not appear to ~ have changed Communist intransi- | genee and that this was\not the ‘aim of the new attacks. the population and espe cia lly | SOUNDER : ORE POPULAR ‘ently supports his handling of | | react positively to the tubercul- | The | and! The latest public opinion pol! by Louis Harris also shows tha: President Johnson's popularity: ‘rating has shot up inthe wake to | : to the Commons last Saturday. the military tide has turned and | “discouraged India’s call for a ipenewed Geneva peace confer-. ence—indicates the lack gf pros- | pects for any negotiation® ? | Both sides appear to have hard- | ened President .Johnson,. partly | for domestic. reasons and partly | to counter amy doubts in Hanoi about American staying power, | stepped up the bombing June 29. and lashed out anew at war critics’ WAR, POLITICS MIX ; The war has-become fully en- tangled now political scene, with ramifications that means at least until the congressional elections in November. | At the same time, 'Washington Post, North Viet Nam has taken comfort from ‘widespread criticism of the ex- panded American bombing It has “‘stiffened its resistance to negotiations and is now stress- ing a theme that world opinion will seriously isolate ithe US” Prof: Fall in his latest article says the North ts glued together by the people's army-—a force all the of more? than 500,000 first-line troops and 1,000,000 reserves which {s “‘probably.. man for man one of the finest infantry forces in the world today’ Comparatively few have heen committed yet in the South _Their tJeaders have been at ‘war steadily. sisce —t944, he jot the escalation. Fifty-four ver notes, And their record speaks 'ecent of the public now appar- for ithelf. the war in anticipation ‘shorter one. __In any. event, there is no con Tvietion of any depth here that assorted diplomatic flurries are going-to lead to meaningful new of a “peace moves, or that these are “being conducted -with any such hope ° Prime Minister Wilson of Brit- jain is deemed to be going to “Moscow -before’ coming - here July 28 as a sop to his restive anti-war left wing. There aiso are pressures of | painlessly. removed, but it took - a distressing major operation: ta remove those in the stomach. Is | it at all possible to prevent ‘the recurrence éf*polyps? J REPLY. - Nasal polyps may fecur - be- Cause an allergy is believed to- play a causative role chance of the stomach polyp re- turning is almost negligible. EYE DISTURBANCES A.B. T. writes: Is pterygium the same as arcus senilis? REPLY No. Ptervgium is a triangular | He says that on that basis, “it seems. obvious that the fur- ther escalation of the bombing. says the in the American -of-Norty Viet Nam has made +. - almost impossible for the “Hanoi regime to abandon the South Vietnamese dibepation guerrillas in—1948-49 he Vietnamese war now has _sraduated into @ sacred cause.’ The increased bombing by the U.S. may,. “by <an- incredible irony,” says Fall, have further unified the Communist. war ef- fort and increased Hanoi's com- mitment to what it regards as |Prime Minister Indira Gandhi .a just settlement north and j Everyone Needs Buddy Oshawa Times In Ontario's Provincial Parts’ | to every’ twosome that each public safety program the buddy system of swimming’ is encour. ‘ aged_by the use of posters, fitms™ ‘and mimeographed. bulletins . This -technique. is a simple’ ex- tension of the well- known safe- ; The ty practice of never swimming ‘alone. While beach patrol offic- ers are employed where warran- ted to maintain order and assist in emergencies, it is an impossi- — yo them to vee every | cult fer the individual Bareat: fold of membrane growing over with a numberof children to the white of the eye tgward the properly: supervise the - family clear cornea. It is more com- proup while in the water, when mon in middle-aged and older persons. Arcus senilis is a pale _halo that follows the rim of cornea in elderly, persons... PINWORMS IN ADULTS B_H. writes: Can adults afflicted with pinworms? REPLY pinworms be Yes, but prefer | children and these pests usual- ly disappear after adolescence. _| Either. a d’ults practice better | hygiene — or_the change —in_ the sues of the day. | SHOULD SPECIALIZE The failure of our modern par- |. liaments can .be traced to the specialze in, and= master, chos- recommended minimum needed to | failure of our individual MPs to en fields’ There are a few MPs who have chosen one important | | topic and learned it thoroughly, 80 that they are recognized as exceptions include Guelph’s Alf | Hales, who is the best informed | critic of government spending of | the taxpayer's money; Oxfords PUBLIC FORUM This colmmn is open te the discussion | by correspondents ef questions of in- terest. The Guardian does not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of corres. pendents. All letters published are sub- ject to editing and condensation where mecessary. The Guardian fs unable te enter into any correspondence segue ing letters submitted. ~ { CAR FERRY CROSSING | Sir,—We read with interest a few days ago where there was a line of cars at Borden stretching . back two miles long, waiting to get to the mainland. How many cars and trucks, short and long, | will it take to reach out rhat dis: || tance? HOw many weary travel- lers were there stunned to think their precious time. was wasting awa We aiso read where three boats were working to clear the traffic, If—memory serves - us ‘rightly we have four boats at Another | Borden on that -run. trip would be made if enough cars were waiting to go. How many cars are ‘“‘enough’’? If the .Prime Minister or séme official from Russia came along, would | their cars be enough?-It seems ; to me any of us travelling is just as important and one car waiteng is enough. It could he - some people who were going on vacation or returning home, arid their time: and money are just as valuable as any others. {there are four hoats at Bor- | deu, why only three operating? | And why someone in Moncton or some place sitting in an easy | chair_giving the orders to take some“across and let others wait US. visitors receive the correct. pre- he tine far looking into those mum on the American dollar: All tinss has gone by. Looking .in ,er to aodry well will not fill t with persons doing business with tourists water. Action does—the job and + should know the prevailing rate-of— | aiting inane of cars_two exchange. To Short-cnange them—in this matter ts both poor hospétality, and poor business. ~ ~ ‘ ‘The doctrihe of “automatic promotion’’— letting all children advance to the next higher grade. regardless of their acade- mic achievement— is an unhap- -py legacy from. the excessively permissive days of the nineteen- twenties. Psychologically well intention- ed, designed to eliminate frus- procedure proved educationally ' disastrous. The inability of pup- ils_to cope with advanced mater>— ials created many more frustra- tions and- humiliations than it } eliminated The announcement that new - and higher standards for promd- tio have now been introduced | underlines the continuing need to implement specific promotion requirements. hTis is particular- | ly true in the matter of reading. —the -vital key. to all further ac- ademic success— which has come under scrutiny in the new promotion rulings. - As these new standards are in- troduced, it-is imperative that they be used to improve the | education offered by the schools and not. as a punitive measure to get tough with youngsters: It *is ‘pointless - and cruel to | pass a pupit-ateng to the next) , grade without having given him to deal with the vy; it would he the capacity next level of sftid | just as: objectionable if ‘youngs ters were to be kept back, with- out the promise of highly indiv- idualized remedial instruction Merely letting them repeat 4 | grade, with more of the same teaching that failed to take in the first place, invites total dis- enchantment with learning. Every precaution must be tak- | sn to prevent teachers and. >rit- cipals from. putt! childreh through cram” sessions tn en lable them to pass the tests and hetween to prevent them from making ‘July 22 ‘in-uchoek look bad— always a temptation when standards are _ tightened The new policy can be an !m- portant step in the direction® of improving. the— public —schools’ total performance. But this | goal can be reached only if the | establishment of more demand- ing standards is combined with ence ction. Our Co, - (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (July 13, 1941) A formal agreement between Britain and Russia for joint ac- tion in the war with Germany was signed in Moscow. The armistice-ending the hos- tilities between British and Free French forces and the Vichy. French government was signed in Acre. Palestine, on the anni- versary of the city’s fall to Rich- ard the Lion-hearted in 1191. TEN YEARS AGO’ (July 13, 1956) “It is not too much to predict | that this Province will become a | veritable fisherman's paradise | “with- the _ development of the- program which calls for replace- ment of highway é causeways.” said Hon. Dougald MacKisanon, Minister of- Public Works and Industry and Natur- a! Resources Mr.- J Watson remain in Summerside until 4 JAPAN MOVES FAST export—trade in 45 per cent annuall: 1955, and. 1964, a world’s record Japan's creased ATT TION FARMERS || Weed Spray and Insecticides Now bridges by | MacNaugtt, MP Parliamentary Assistant to | the Minister of Fisheries arriv- | ed home from. Ottawa and will | ganda sy ster secretions that’ pinworms like . NO BLOOD FORMER: Cc. G. writes: Will drinking lots of grape juice form blood?” REPLY No. Don't color. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Children should not put hands, a dow je Car wit eee | Buy Your SHELL i in overcoming deficiencies varying degrees of proficiency in swimming skills tend to sep- the j arate and divide the family The Buddy System ‘is an aid , supervision. Every bather in the _| group should have a water-bud- dy in their own swimming class. Beginners should be assigned buddies from the non-swimming | group. The better -swimmers should be paired off ; in order de bot parable ability with whom toe | compete and enjoy the sport Instructions should be_ issued ‘Does “your home have “horse and buggy” wiring be misled by the to carry the load of mod- ern electrical living? Bay Vista Lounge 3 BIG NIGHTS THIS WEEK CATH Singing Star of ee Te cee | Better get ‘hep’ een cele your THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY Canada’s on et —MacKINNON TV diese aie PLUS He fe “The Velvets" gases eases member of the pair stay close te and .watch the opposite member. ‘In the event of any emergency, give warning by shouting or } contactin g the parent or beach . patrol officer The Buddy System can be be- - many of drownings which However, the and Forests people neficial in. preventing the— needless accur annually Lands “years of age and all non-swim- mers should be supervised while, engaged in water recreation by a competent adult - - 4 a ae TON, RAYON, WOOL - 4 MEN'S PANTS $1.50, MEN'S SHIRTS 60c SAVE MONEY! Buy used clothing for yeur ea tire fomity ot omangly low ces phove y back gvororttee. Seidl 2Se with selt eddrened stomped envelope for complete price list DRY CLEANERS OUTLET at id Lie « ‘ sp i the “Don Messer” ~ Dancing to "The Velvets’”. HE RESERVE EARLY - New London 32 --- ‘No Minors Please r ALSO: Regular Dance Tonight ture - peed actian fi eet ae 1am. Sir ete WALTER O'BRIEN Charlottetowa & a cF 2 45 Elm. Avé. R. e Barwise John W. Skinner 894-416 Kensingion Rd «394.4044 Bay. Vista Lounge - Cavendish By Fg EER oe