Bea ~ 1 oe pe - By Carrier Chariottetown, » where. utterly “dark. Provinces and United States $12.00 per annum By Mou elsewhere in P.£.J. £9.00 per annum. Other Previnces andUnited States $12.00 per annum A Good Example That the Canadian dairy‘ii@ustry fs more than holding its own in ef- fiziency was shown at the annual meeting this week at Banff Springs, Alberta, of the National Dairy Coun- cil. During the past twenty years, ‘the industry has experienced the follow- . ing phenomenal growth: Milk production has increased by 2,000 million pounds, or 12 per tent; fluid milk and cream sales have risen by 800 million quarts or 60 per cent; creamery butter output hks risen by 50 million pounds or 17 per cent; production of concentrated milk products have risen by 350 million pounds or 151 per cent; total cheese consumption in Canada has increas- ed by 58 million -pounds or 103 per cent; the total gross annual value of dairy foods has increased by over 300 per cent. - put, the actual number of dairy plants in Canada has declined from 4,677 to 2,679, a drop of 43 per cent. “This certainly testifies,” as the ex- | ___ecutive secretary, Mr. W. K. St. SATURDAY, SEPT.19,1959— nineteenth-century “evictions”. ~- Dr. Grant is credited with per forming a monumental task in gath- erig the historical material for this intricate subject. It is noted, however that she has still to learn Gaelic, and that her book is skimpy in quota- tions from the great Gaelic poets and prose writers. “A yeader of the final chapter on the admirable contribution by the present chief of Macleod to the Brit- ish tourist industry,” says the re- viewer, “might well wonder wheth- er. Gaeldom, having - ‘declined’, is now dead. A culture can.be. killed by persecution and neglect, but neither in Skye nor in the outer Hebrides has it been killed yet. Children still speak Gaelic in the home_until they go to receive instruction in English at school, and at Portree school in Skye the scholars from many islands meet to complete their education within the tradjtion of Britain’s most ancient surviving culture. Gae- lic is spoken in the servants’ hall at Dunvegan itself.” A Good Suggestion Commenting on the retirement of Mr. Massey as Governor General and on the great service he has rendered to the nation, the Ottawa Journal makes a suggestion which might well be considered by the Diefenbaker Government. This is that it should | Despite this vast increase-in-out-—;—set—a—precedent_by presenting him | with the Canada Medal. Little has been heard about this medal since it was anounced by Mr. Mackenzie King in 1943 and was said by him to have been approved by * Don’t Become Addict Unaware - Thousands of persons have de- veloped the sleeping pill habit. Some of them might not be able to break it. Now there are products on the but are not habit-forming. Still, I strongly urge you to consult your doctor before using them or any other type of drug to help you get to sleep. : BARBITURATE DRUGS Many so-called sleeping pills belong to a group of drugs known as barbiturates. When properly used under a physician's dir- ection, they are very valuable. ‘But indiscriminate use of these drugs might lead to serious ill- ness, even death. Let’s see what might happen if you decide to take some of these barbiturate sleep-inducers without checking with your doc- tor, SMALL DOSE IS START At first you start out with a small dose, probably a single tablet: That works for a while. But with continued usage, the amount required ‘for relaxation and sleep grows larger and larg- er. Moreover, the pills have be- come a crutch. You probably w... find that you can't get to sleep without them. . John remarked, “to the increased ef- ficiency of the dairy processing in- dustry to the benefit of farmers, processors and consumers.” It is, in- deed, a record which could serve as an example to other, more highly protected industries throughout Can- ada, which have been too prone to regard dairymen as lacking in organ- ization and enterprise. It was also intimated at the Dairy Council convention that intensive - study is being given of ways to fur- ther increase the domestic market for dairy products, especially cheeses. At one committee meeting a report received from the Harvard School . of Dental Medicine in Boston stated that experiments have shown diets comprising milk, chocolate drink, ice cream and cheddar cheese or varia- tions of these dairy foods have re- sulted in major reductions in the in- cidence of dental caries. This lead: will undoubtedly be followed up in the Council’s promotional campaign. History Of A Clan Recently reviewed in “The Listen- er”, official publication of the Brit- ish Broadcasting Corporation, is work of considerable “interest t many people in this Province. It is entitled ‘The Macleods: The History of a Clan, 1200-1956”, by Dr. I. F. Grant. We have not seen the book, but “The Listener” reviewer provides a valuable contribution to the subject —on his own account. ' The story of Skye and _ the Hebrides, he says, is scarcely’ less remarkable than the story of Ice- land and the outer isles of Scandin- avia. Indeed during a most dynamic period of their history the two races clashed and intermingled, and the Celtic and the Norse cultures, subsequently no different in langu- age and spirit, blossomed out of that effusion and fusion of blood. In both the Celtic and Norse islands a dark ~age succeeded an epoch of extraor- dinary achievement. Yet it was no- At scattered points the dim lights flickered until they burst into flame once more. The island of Skye was one of these points. It was not the only one. nor perhaps the most import- ant in the Hebrides, but the library of Iona and the muniments of the Lords, of the Isles and the-Macleods of Lewis were lost. But. at Dunvegan Castle the chiefs of the Skye branch of Clan Macleod preserved so many of their records from the’ general wreck as to make their island an oasis in a historical desert. By the end of the sixteenth cen- tury Skye was in the van of a Scot- tish Gaelic renaissance that gave us the pibroch and the “orain mhora” (great songs) before the arts of the learned bards, of the harpers, or the monumental Celtic artists were yet quite dead. Dunvegan and its chiefs were still at the centre of the new propulsion. Mary Macleod, that pioneer of the new \unlearned poe- _ try, was their'kinswoman. The Mac Crimmons were their pipers. At Rodel are their sculptured. tombs. The Beatons were their men of medicine. The Gaelic impetus\rode the Reformation, the ‘Forty-five, the 4 King George VI..No one has yet been awarded it, though the design was accepted and a few specimens were struck. According to The\ Jour- nal, one of these went to the King, and one to each branch of the Cana- dian Armed Services for record pur- pose only. Others were put on file in the Secretary o& State’s Department where they were recently found and reported in good order. On January 29, 1958, Mr. Diefen- baker said in the Commons, in an- swer to a question by Douglas Fish- er, CCF, Port -Arthur, that “in due course a study will be made of the whole question of the Canada Medal being made available to distinguished men and women whose contributions to Canada have been meritorious and deserving.” We think the Prime Minister missed a trick when he didn{t make the first presentation of thig medal at the state dinner tendered Mr. Massey a few days ago. That would have been the appropriate time. But it is not too late, and surely there could be no more deserving recipient of such an honour. EDITORAL NOTES Marketing ‘boards account for 44 per cent.of all farm salés in Britain, and only 16 per cent of produce (ineluding horticultural produce) is sold on a completely free market without aid from price guarantee schemes. . :” The Battle of Britain anniversary is\being observed on Sunday with R.C.A.F. memorial services honoring the courageous fliers who gave their lives in defense of freedom in the Second World War. It is a tribute in which we should all associate our- selves humbly. * . « It was a ball point pen, we under- stand, that defeated Mr. Leslie Hunt- er in the Georgetown district. Had the voter who used that pen marked his ballot properly, Mr. Hunter would be in and Mr. Saville out, for the result wouldn’t then have been a tie and the returning officer couldn’t have cast his deciding vote. Such are the vicis- situdes of political fortune! * +e eo: : The Shaw Government hasn't let the grass grow under its feet in the Attorney General’s department, where a clean sweep is in progress. In at least one. case, a magistrate’s appointment has been announced be- fore his predecessor was informed that he had been fired. Couldn’t a decent interval elapse before these litical executions? Thefe are sure- lyNmore pressing matters for the new administration to concern itself with. * + * _ Here is one newsman’s unflatter- ing description of Soviet. Premier Khrushchev on his arrival at Wash- ington, as he awaited the ceremonial reception at the airport: “At the moment he looked for all the world like a well-fed New England wood- chuck, standing confidently at the mouth of his burrow, paws bent— intensel¥, alert—and registering alike suspicion against signs of hostility, and calm in his survey of the fat- mer’s field.” : The increasingly repressive Chi- nese actions in Tibet, ever since tan autonomy was signed between ‘and Tibetan representat- ‘ives in 1951, have been a. clear erant mood of the Chinese Com- munists. Violations of the spirit and let- ter of Tibetan autonomy over se- veral years included the expro- priation of monasteries, the in- campaigns against the Buddhist religion, and removal of young Tibetans to China for- commun-+ ist indoctrination. All this led to the uprising of Khamba tribes in. 1956, after which Chinese repression grew ever more intense, including — as we know from the recent re- port of ‘the International Jurists Commission — mass deportation of Tibetans to forced labour as troduction of -Chinese settlers, , ; that it was “in the interests of | both parties to maintain the sta- | declared: “The undetemined ; certain neighbours are the result | Prime Minister wah referring to the frontiers which were nego- tiated with Tibet during the per- iod of British rule in India, in- cluding the McMahon Line of 1914- along the crest of the Hinr | alayas: Much of this whole region is so jungle-covered, wild or moun- tainous that in practice very lit- | tle detailed demarcation has ta- ken place. But in the past the line has. been respected. Peking's challenging of the long-recognized frontiers to her south west would be less disturbing if- it: concerned only a mile or two here and there. But the fact {s that \the LOST: ONE STEPPING STONE RECORD OF AGGRESSION China’s Southern Frontiers By Derrick Sington United Kingdom Information Service showed parts of the Indian North East Frontier Agency, as well as of Bhutan anw Ladakh as Chinese territory. e “more significant that appeared in a famous atlas during the days of Nationalist China; the Shen Pao Atlas of 1933 —and which had shown the gen- | erally recognized Chinese front- | iers with India—was substantially the agreement to recognize Tibe- | tus quo’ over frontier questions. | reproduced in 1957 in a publica- | tion put out in Hong Kong by -of Communist China, but | with the southern boundaries cru- indicator of the militant, intol- | chiefly of prolonged imperialist | qely painted over and new fron- aggression. No doubt the Chinese | tjar tiers drawn in. PLANS FEDERATION Quite apart from declarations, | maps and atlases there have ; been disturbing ethnic and racial claims by Chinese Communist leaders. Mao Tse Tung, for in- stance, in one -of his booklets, suggests that the~Chinese bound- aries should be extended to in clude all the countries populated | by Mongolian people. This claim could be said to apply to Bhutan, Sikkim, and Ladakh, many of whose inhabitants are of Tibetan hist religion. ; -A few weeks ago Communist | China forces took some police in- a result of which some 65,000 | Chinese Communists have in the | to custody in Ladakh. And lately peopje died of hunger and priva- tions. The culmination was the Dalai Lama's escape into India last April, an event which evidently served only to increase the mil- itaney, and intolerance of Peking and its officials and forces in Tibet. Tibetan autonomy was de- clared null and void, and Chin- ese Communist forces ranged far | and wide over Tibet suppressing, or attempting to suporess, any signs of resistance whether arm- ed or unarmed, to Chinese dom- inatibn. THE STATUS 0UO Last April, Mr. Chou En Lai. addressing the Chinese National People’s Congress, while saying recent past persisted in asserting —unofficially. but also unmistak- ably—claims to large areas which are today parts of independent | States, | CASUAL CARTOGRAPHY A book entitled ‘China Know- | ledge Series’, published in Pek- jing in 1958, described Mount) Ever-— as “‘located in China’’— showing that the writer had been authorized to define China’s sou- thern frontier as running along the bottoms of the valleys on the non-Chinese side of the Himal- | ayan range, contrary to the Mc- Mahon Line which follows the ' line of the peaks of the moun- tain ranges. Earlier in 1958 a map published in “China Pictorial” the world was startled by the | aewts that they had crossed the | borders of the North End Frontier Agency of India and taken pris- oners. : There is little wonder that the | people of the border regions and | States to the North of India—who would not relish Chinese Commu- nist domination—are unable to | dismiss out-of-hand recent reports | that the Chinese Government has prepared a plan for establish- ing a Himalayan Federation, con- sisting of Ladkh, Bhutan, Ne- pal, Sikkim, and the North Fast | Frontier Agency of India. The governments and authorities of all these states and territories are bound to be very much on their guard at the present time. The Battle Of Quebec The New York Times Today is the 200th. anniversary of the battle in which the English captured Quebec from the French ; an event that has been described | als, as the most fateful, dramatic and important: of the eighteenth cen tury—‘‘the ten minutes that changed America.” To mark the date, a new book by the. British historian-author Christopher Hibbert, ‘titled ““Wol- fe at Quebec.”’ is to be published tomorrow. The bare. facts are ihere as we know’ them—up to the final irony, with both Wolfe and Montcalm, the rival gener, suffering mortal wounds. But those who come to pick up’ _ this volume may be some wha surprised at what they read, for the story, familiar PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discus sion by correspondents of question ¢. interest. The Guardian does not neses sarily en‘orse the opinion of eorres pondents. CHURCH BELLS Sir,—We notited some days ago that certain churches in the West- to every | | schoolboy, has been reconstruct- ed by Mr. Hibbert after school-,, through . hitherto arly journeys unused diaries, family letters, ships’ logs and documents, and they have forced him to dispel many of the over-romanticized illusions that have come to be associated with the historic batt- tle on the Plains of Abraham. THE CENTRAL CHARACTER Wolfe himself, the central character, turns out to be a neur- otic, diseased, sercretive military fanatic of 32. He has been sought /out by Prime Minister. William | Pitt, desperate for someone to lead England's last effort to break French domination of Can- ada and its threat to the cotonies. y Not so sare of his choice, Mr. Pitt himself soliloquizes, ‘‘Good God, that I should have entrust- ed the fate of the country and of the administratiorsto such hands.” | And George II, when warned by the Duke of Newcastle of Pitt's selection of the mentally and phy- | sically sick Wolfe, shouts, ‘‘Then I hope he will bite some of my other generals.”’ This was the glory-bent young | general who, rather than chance ern States were arranging to keep | sharing the success of the war ther bells ringing while Pre- | with his generals, endangers rier Khrushchev is passif€4 everything by keeping them in through, As reported, this i to show him that our scientific | is-. So ; and military ‘equipment good that no enemy need attack us. This reads like an answer to Nikita’s threat: ‘We'll bury you”. We need material weapons im case of a fight, as David needed the five stones to slay the giant: but David’s secret is expressed in his statement: “The battle i the Lord's”, and a sword and spear are not the. determining factors. Charch bes are for the pur- pose of calling the people to prayer, as the Cross is a symbo! and reminder-of Christ's sacri- fice for us. —=p If this visiting ‘symbol of Com- munistie horror’ could be quiet ly informed aa to what our sym- bols ‘mean,..a change of heart might happen. . I am, Sir, etc., J. A. MacKENZIE, ¢ Kensington, P.E.L the dark as to the battle plans un- tit the last minute. Ignoring the advice of his staff, Wolfe appears determined to reach . Montcalm and his army ensconced on the unassilable heigh’s of before the winter weather defeat- ed him. RECITING GRAY’S “ELEGY” Hibbert casts new light on the |famous picture of the philosoph- ical Wolfe reciting Gray's ‘Ele- gy" to his officers on the night | before the battle. An eyewitness /report is produced that Wolfe's recital was not welt received by his officers, Wolfe’s familiar statement is quoted, “I can only | say, gentlemen, that I would rath- jer be the author-of those lines 'than-win the battle we are to | fight tomorrow.” ’ But the remark is not madesin | answer to any expressions of ad- miration from his listeners; rath- ef is it snapped peevishly in re- sponse to their obvious boredom. Quebec, The oft-praised campaign is shown to be. in fact brutal and savage, and Wolfe's conduct of it, though ultimately successful, is portray- ed as being often wayward and indecisive. Though Wolfe does come across as a brave and_ single-minded |soldier, it appears that he is barely on speaking terms with his brigadiers and naval officers, and that he accepts the strategy | that finally wins Quebec only un- der their great pressure. |THE WEIGHT OF FACT History has a habit of explod- ling such romanticized _ stories | that make up the mythology of a people, of cutting down our _her- oes to man-sized proportions. | *fhe tale of the Boston Massac- 're as an assault on peaceful citiz- ens by brutal soldiers no longer stands up once it comes under the piercing light of scholarship Instead we learn about a mob ' provoking the shooting, and we wonder at the restraint of the | soldiers that kept them from fir- | ing sooner. | The story of George Washing- 'ton’s cherry tree turns out to have been, dreamed up by an im- aginative author determined to | sell as many copies as he can of his biography of the recently de- | parted First President. John Smith's story of how his life was saved by Pocahontas, _ beautiful _ daughter of the fierce Powhatan, has never been verified by any- ;one but the unreliable English | captain himself, and its authen- | ticity is doupbted in most quart- ers. % One after another ‘our fables | fall under the crushing weight of | fact, and so it is today, on this | 200th. anniversary .of one of the ‘great battles of our when we read that still another mere mortals. The Age Old Story . When thou doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before thee, as the hypocrites do. . .that they may have glory of men. , \ VITAL LINK The series of locks in the Wel- land Canal raise upbound ships 32 feet between Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. or near-Tibetan stock and Budd- | continent. everit in history was the work of | “| ding a sleeping pill addict, though you, probably are unaware of it. 'NEED GREATER AMOUNT Soon your tolerance for the drug has become so great that | the amount you need is consider- + would ordinarily prescribe. You're trapped. In such seyere cases you prob- | ably will need the help of a doc- | tor to break the sleeping pill ha- | bit. ‘ EAKIN % disastrous,’ and ‘most appall- ans Wes -ceeinene- piste pital verty._ de Gaulle left no , room for “on this score: | might be able to give up the pills |simply by changing your living ‘habits to insure natural sleep. | Exercise, a proper diet and ade- |quate relaxation and recreation | will help you get to sleep. Here |again, your doctor might be of some help. I often have recommended a glass of warm milk before bed- time. It’s a good sleep inducer and it’s much safer than drugs. QUESTION. AND ANSWER A Reader: The nerves in my body jerk in perfect rhythm and although I take nerve medi- cine, it does no good. Can you suggest something that will help this conditon? | Answer: to organic nerve disease or to some emotional disturbance. A thorough examination by a physician may determine the ex- act cause in your case and lead to proper treatment and relief. Grner| QUITE A DEAL “This Canyon is quite a deal” — Rim of the Grand Canyon.) The Grand Canyon is quite a deal When you first see it, you can hardly believe it’s real. The gorge was formed—which {fs remarkable, you'll own— | By the earth thrusting up and | the river cutting down. | This distance from Rim to Ri | and here’s your next caredah: Is eighteen to twenty miles, as the pinonero flies, While from Phantom Ranch at the bottom to El, Tovar Hotel on top Is_a one-mile vertical hop. ; You can walk down on foot by the Bright Angel_or Kaibab hill But these have no rail; | So peovle prefer, as a rule, | To-make the descent by mule. pe Colerado River is too thick to drink, But don’t try to walk on it; certainly sink. If you shoot color photographs, you'll find your best bet Is near sunrise or sunset: For at these times the stratified ‘rocks take on’ The. brilliant coloration of strea- ky bacon. This unusual landscape wasn’t made in a day, But in two billion years—and a few more, I'd say. - you'll I trust these remarks Will make you too feel That the. Grand Canyon ts quite a deal. in the New York Times OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Sept. 19, 1934) Plans’ for the construction of the Trans - Canada Highway be ‘tween Charlottetown and Borden, the Federal Government, .are be- ing pushed steadily forward, it was learned this week. It is pro- posed that eight miles of asphalt road will be placed this fall, the Charlottetown and Borden ends. Extensive improvements are b ing made to the grounds surroun- the Summerside Electric Light Plant. The pond is also be ing cleaned out together with cth- er work in this area, Councillor MacNeill of the Light tee, laid out the work to be done aa scarlet.—Ottawa Jour-— —more—than—your—physician | The jerking move-| ments you describe may be due) Comment overheard on the South | P.J.H.. | under special arrangements with | work to commence af both the, Commit- yor Halifax necktie—a glorious of Royal blue with a king- in gold. Mayor Nelms, if demands a tie, may have to wear a creat of Royal purple witha pink Peace Tower and, naturally, a Mountie A study of Canadian swearing, reported at the Learned So cieties meeting in Saskatoon re- ical, are more likely tq use ob- scenity. This seems to point to a scientific principle of swearing. To be effective, bad language must be directecd against something the user himself or those around him really care about.—Winnipeg The teen-age son of our best baseball fan asked dad for money for golf clubs. Juvenile delinquen- cy in his own family!—Ottawa Journal Whatever the issues developed between the Republican rivals, the Rockefeller campaign, we may be sure will not be short of money.—Cincinnati Enquirer A United States, Air Force cap- tain has been demoted for flying a six-engined plane under the- ¢ few years ago, a British airman known as “The Mad Major” flew under London bridges and ended up being fined in police court. Towards the end off World War I, an Ottawa man flew his train-. ing plane under the bridge at Niagara. All of them survived; but airmen should be adult enough not to endanger lives and property by displays of personal. daring. Let them leave stunt-fly- 7 _ ing to Hollywood.—Ottawa Jour- nal As MAXIMS The most complete revenge is Tribune By Ken President de Gaulle has uwun- veiled the threat of abysmal pov- erty as France's big new weapon in the long-standing battle against Algerian nationalists. In offering Algerians three promised grimly and forcefully that independence would mean the loss. of French financial back- ing and the loss of Algeria's oil and gas resources. -In_ other words, Algeria would be dumped from a rapidly - de- : : ; ight economic future to a bankrupt nation with no immediate pros- pect of recovering. ' ,|CHILLING WORDS Sprinkling his discussion of the effects of independence with such chilling words as ‘incredible and “If it were to appear, through inconceivable misfortune, that (independence) is indeed their true wish, France would certainly cease to devote so many assets and billions to a cause without hope.” Then he added a kicker: “lk goes without saying that in this hypothesis those Algerians of all origins who would want to re“ main French. would remain so in any case and that France would arrange, if the case arose, for and there are over twenty men employed on the job. TEN YEAKS AGO (Sept. 19, 1949) In the Supreme Court yester- day Mr. Gerald R. Foster, Char- lottetown, was enrolled as an at- torney and called to the Bar. Mr. Foster rread law in the chamb- jers of Mr. James B. Johnston articled to Mr. David L. Ma- ithieson, K.C., who put the mo- tion for his admission as attor- ney and Barrister. On Sunday evening a George town car coming from Tignish en- route home failed to take the sharp turn at Beaton’s Bridge, near Q'Leary and plunged through the guard rail into the deep brook. The car was almost submerged. Rescued were Frank Soloman, Percy Boudreault, Jos- eph Kiggins, J.W. Lavers, Jos- De Gaulle Warns Algeria not to imitate, the aggressor. Smith Canadian Press Staff Writer their regrouping and resettle ment. “Furthermore, dispositions would be taken so that the ex- ploitation, tramsport and embar- kation of Saharan—eil, which is the work pf France and is of in- terest to all the West, should be assured in any case.”’ That threat to split Algeria to keep for France the oil - rich areas as well as-other areas for the-—-resettlement—. of Algerians wanting to stay under the French sure that the Algerian rebel movement will reject de Gaulle’s offer. The rebels want independence, but it’s unlikely, to say the least, that they will settle for an eco- nomically cripped independence in a split country. De Gaulle’s hope is that the rebel movement doesn't speak~for all the Algerian people; or, if it does, he is betting that his pic- ture of poverty — and his stated determination to. make sure that is what an independent Algeria will face—is enough to make most Algerians decide to reject independence in favor of eco- nomic security. : De Gaulle himself gave no in- dication as to whether he would prefer to see the Algerians vote to integrate the area with metro. politan France, his second offer, or become an autonomous power ‘| within the French community. As he might have stated, It really doesn’t matter which pol- icy Algeria followed so far as France is concerned. Both would keep Algeria squarely within the French sphere of influence. France would, de Gaulle prom- ised, continue to pour money and know - how into Algeria under either of these two proposals. Claiming that France alone can develop Algerian resources, de Gaulle promised that in 15 years Algeria would be a prosperous and productive country’ De Gaulle thus is trying te switch battlefields in the Alger ian struggle. For almost | five years now, France has fought na- tionalism with force, and has got no where Now de Gaulle wants to try eco nomics. It may be bribe or blacke eph Johnston, and W.J. Fitzger- ald, all of Georgetown. Why not ings plan yo Age Pension Choose the now, to start Edwin C. Johnstone, B.A., ! ! E. C. Johnstone $AYS— With our Dominion Security personal save 70. Let's talk it 111-115 Grafton Street, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. Ask ote our low cost Group Life Insurance plans. mail, but it’s a switch. retire on Easy Street? u can co-ordinate your Old with personal _ savings. monthly income you need, your retirement before age’ _ over! C.u.U., Provincial Mgr. \ i DIAL | Special delivery service ¢ missed. | IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE... OR MISSED and a paper will be delivered right to your door. * a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or . * 656] available between 8:30 } DIAL 173 Great George St. “Ed’s Slogan: For the Fastest Service in Town, call ‘ED'S TAXI “To maintain the goodwill of those whom serve — the goal for which we strive!" - 6561 \ | Charlottetown _.) gor Straits of Mackinac Bridge. A-——— . | LITTLE DIFFERENCE 2 | i