* " @@ @mg Street West Toronto, Ont. _ | @&0 Catheart St. Montreal . 1030 West Georgia St, - Vancouver =e @ Carrier Summerside He per weeh : Charlottetown, | Previsees and United Slates $12.00 per annum en in PE. $9.00 per ansum. Othe Previnces andUnited Siaies $12.00 per anbum - PAGE .3 FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1958. - Argentine Seed Market : ~ Wii our unrivaled repucation for quality seed potatoes, this Pro vince should be particularly in- terested in the opportunity this year of making gains in seed potato sales te Argentina. South American buy- . @rs are optimistic that with the re- laxation of import controls the vol- ume of Canadian sales will rise. The problem facing Canadian ex- ports in this market are outlined’ by Canada’s assistant commercial ‘sec- retary in Buenos -Aires, G. E. Black- steck, in the current ssue of the Department of Trade and Commerce » magazine “Foreign . Trade'+.— Mr. ——-Blackstock's on-the-spot report re views current Argentine production, and. the effect that the recent lift- ing ef restrictions against dollar goods may have on forthcoming Canadian sales. _ Last year Argentina imported 120 ~ thousand bags of seed potatoes, most ef them from Europe. The relaxing ’ Canadian suppliers a chance to in- erease their ss of these imports this season. 1er factor favour- ing the Canadian . exporter is the prospect that recent blight that has hit table potatoes in Argentina will force the country to use itg own seed _ ‘potatoes for food. os | Argentina’s seed crop is planted early in November and Canadian exporters planning {o enter the market .should make arrangements before that~time.—Island_ suppliers. Jooking for an agent in Argentina “ghould contact. the Commercial Counsellor in Buenos Aires. A Canadian Project “In the puzzling, frustrating game of fareigh aid,” says a press despatch from Pakistan, “Canada has caught a winner afew miles from the Khy-. ber Pass.” It is called Warsak Dam, and it will one day double Wést Pak- istan’s“electricalpower...supply....and irrigate some 100,000 acres of land. - Canada is building the dam and pro- viding jobs in a poverty-stricken urea where a few years ago angry tribesmen did not work for white men—they shot at them. Since 1956, when cons tion began, some 10,- 000 Pakistanis have put down their nifles and exchanged their turbans for hards ‘hats. The project's 48-page brochure notes that when the dam is complet- ed next year, the Kabul River will ~~ be backed up taventy-six miles to the Afghanistan border forming a 1,000- foot. wide tourist lake. What it over- looks is the fact that construction workers average six ‘rupies ($1.26) per day. In Pakisian, where per capita income is about $50 a year, ’ this is enough to feed a good-sized family. ; Warsak, says the despatch, will ““eost an estimated $62,000,000 and | Canada is financing it! But the good- will she is building up is not due te | this gift alone. The big return comes from 150 Canadian technicians, con- ‘gilting epgineers, foremen and con- struction bosses who qualify as grass roots diplomats. They have transform- ed backward Pakistanis, into semi- skilled_and skilled !aborers and pro- vided “continuous close supervision during three-shifts-a-day operations. To. this close supervision is credit- ed much of the project's success and jts easy identification with )Canada. ' This fereign aid plan is part of Canada’s contrilgition to world peace and stability. It winning firm friends for:us in Asia, where friend- -ghip can. be a mighty important as- set to us in the years fo come The Inhuman Frontier _ is pw Bast-West interests basic geographic factsfthat are un- rlined by a new map of Germany issued by the National Geographic Society. Printed_in* ten_colors, the. map features a detailed inset on Berlin and presents 5,165 place names. On this map, jagged haiindar- ies point up the postwar partitions i ‘ ' % ee PRET “ew — = —_— om ree ore te a through the heart of the country oo : diyjsion between the wes- Victims Need EE tern Federal Re and ee Constant Care NOTES BY THE WAY “49 Zone, or “Germian Democra’ : is By Herman N. a ; ee at , blic.” oe : 4 . \ Ever hear of the “no” ca A ence familiar sight on On- You can tell what is wreng will. | : The Germans call this barrier the ot of fall it hemophilia, but most tario farms, the scarecrow, is now Se Gon tpn ae ee “Inhuman Frontier,” for # bars es the Noe victims refer to it | almost entirely gone from most of os es. recson : ailment. . parent.—Peterborough Exa- - neighbor from neighbor and parent | they thas this ‘description nthe coset bar ae ee shinte” : 1 from child, It cuts through villages, |: * they are continually | gress on the farm. Nowadays,| go. os ine | sn farms, and occasional houses, whose: eT, Me |e aati tet |e tat gern he ben front or back doors must be kept | fy): sesame and “No, you can’t | s¢ least within wire roofed runs, | © éTedual disappearance of the “sealed. At Halmstedt, for : euioe | CONSTANTLY ON GUARD | 9° the crows and hawks have no | DArefoot boy. He has ail but gone | a salt mine has been split down the . For hemopihiliacs mus, con | yoorvumly for depredation —' 1) ine 1920's, the barefoot boys middle. West German miners work that might Sean ane one, : ; were as commonplace as the ro- ; ‘on one side of a separating wall. bruise them. In catering to the tourist trade | bins in rural districts, in the su- |” Proud fathers dont dare toss | thie, year France is making full | PUTS and to some extent in the the other. cities and towns. It was the thing East Germans, on them in the air or wrestle with | use of her flowers. Normaily flow- ‘The “Inhuman Frontier” extends them as other fathers do with | ers are grown to bé admired but | 4 2¢ s00n as warm weather their children. Even too firm a| a new twist is being given to the arrived—tkick off your shoes and - more than 600 miles from the Bal- handshake might mean a stay in | enjoyment of flowere by trane- | %#"t ‘Tying out vour natural soles tic’ Sea to Czechoslovakia. Along its the hospital. And a fall or a cut | forming them into gourmet dell- oa oes. Se eee eae heavily guarded, barbed-wire course noe ’ pevtonaed stay. eacies. One famous restaurant, for .—Orangeville’ Banner | runs & broad strip of plowed earth, bleeding condition. The least little ss ae ome balers re One-legged robins must be ne Hl - frequently replowed — by Com- | ‘alary is often apt tm cause severe | a souffle made with violets. One | novelty to the people of Regine. |) ‘munists to reveal new ori “whale blood or of Treas Gee | 05 See nae liane Sine Sean oe teoer aa of refugees fleeing the Eastern Zone. ee lyophilized Vaan deietasne whites te ee a commonplace occur- year. Hum&ne Society 4 Though Berlin is isolated deep in rences for hemophiliacs. | inspector i German icial hi TRANSMITTED BY FEMALES | Canada can expect. to receive | Jack Studholme says, theerobins side East y, five official life- || The disease, which affects only | some any day now, | get into trouble hauling bits of lines link it with the*’Federal Repub- asi’ y fe. transmi only by | Since the Granby 200 has presen- string for their nests—their jong ‘tie ir lanes, each 20 mil ft “The sons of a hemo- | ted two beavers to the Moscow | spindly legs sometimes becomem™ lic., Three are/air lanes, eac miles ghiline ‘will sot have.the 4 Zoological Gardens. Trading of |-entangled, break and have to be wide, reaching/from Hamburg, Han- nor will any of the sons’ descen- animals may be regarded as an | amputated. It must be a real — nover, and Frankfurt” The other two However, ail of the daughters of F shat ‘ erent roce aog wit ete ane . fre Sah ‘os are rail and highway route’. Free | a hemophiliac will be potential Fuich success. But the bears, if | bedded in the ground and has te access to West Berlin by the five rs. Theoretically each | they come, cannot be placed in | pull him out with only a single © . oat a will transmit the afflic- | the Capital's zoological gardens, | leg to balance on and use for official routes is guaranteed._under to half of her sons. Half of | Which exist only in voll. romenud purchase—Fu Hiam—Fimes **Russiin-Allied agreements. mM addi- her daughters will be carriers. | future.—Ottawa Citizen Journal tion, three railwa.’s, three highways, ! Bere rnee is not only coed ; : : ° : and two canals normally carry ’ tations in the genes in. the body Fashions In Popular Music i] freight and passengers between West a ay which carry | blood-clotting Som ae bate = Berlin and West Germany. “But all . turns up in 100 eee eee Tis weld deve beers aera cad RESTS + transport facilities are shadowed by NEW PRIVATE EY E PROGRAM : gyi owas Lite Beem wires in popular music are superfici- |\To suggest that these attitudes— A the memory of the crisis of a de- — 20,000 and 40.000 American bovs ally baffling, A mere five years impatience of control, distrust of cade ago, when the Allies resorted 7 seams to have fallen down again. | 20d men are affected. ago ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll” arrived, to | adult experience, and a crude to the Berlin_Airlift to overcome the - Russian -blockade. Berlin is still separated into four _ OTTAWA REPORT cat the Claas By Patrick azones—French, British, American and_ Soviet. al fascination to visitors is the short but drama-steep- ed dividing line between. East -and | West. Crossing this linesis the Ber- | lin subway which has been called the | “escape hatch.” Last summer and | fall, some 4,700 East German refu- | gees slipped across the~-border each week. It ia a strange situation in- deed, this jigsaw es of divided ' ' Cermany, which,%. fudging by the slow pace of the Géneva conference, seems as far from a stable solution | as ever. : EDITORIAL - NOTES Despite Liberal opposition, the Commons hag approved the New- foundland Grants Act which ends special\ assistance :to Newfoundland three years hence. But the bil] also “—provides~for“a special review of-the-< province's financial condition after that. : wo} The Federated Women’s Instifute of Canada, which met here recent- ly, has taken out an option to buy | the birthplace of Mrs. Adelaide Hun- ter-Hoodless, founder of the Wo- men’s Institutes. Situated eight miles-north of Brantford, Ontario, the place was ‘recently marked with a plaque designating it as an his- toric site. A plastie concrete containing neither water nor cement has been developed in’ Moscow. Sand and gravel are the fillers, and furfural— a volatile oil used in making lacquers «| —is the binder. The new material | “will be employed in facing subway. tunnels. Being fire-resistant, water- proof anc durable, it may have other uses as well. | ' | j | ' Behind the difenima of conflicting | Four other deaths in four days, and_ Geneva are | | | }. In relation to their income Can- odians own more life insuran¢e than the people of any other country, .ac- cording to. Mr. A. Ross Poyntz, pre- sident of the Canadian Life Insur- | ance Officers Association, in a state- -| ment before the Senate finance com- miftee. More than eight million Ca- | padians owned $38.6 billions of; life insurance at the end of 1958. This was 157 per cent of 1958 personal meome. United States citizens were next, their ownership amounting to 139 per cent of ‘their personal in- rome,’ * * 7 There will be heartfelt sympathy for the parents and brother of the | two young ladies who were killed in the car-train collision at Belvedere crossing on. Wednesday — evening. other cases involving painful in- juries, bring the accident toll to an appalling rate in this. Province. .It is, of course, but a coincidence that _these tragedies dccurred within so short a space of time, but they point ‘up the increasing hazards: on our nighways, the need for ‘greater cau- fion, and the need, also, for stan- that have s@parated both Germany and Berlin into politically opposed fragments, while a broad green streak A dardized salety measures far more: + comprehensive—than anything we have yet evolved | appointment of a number of Par. | | politicians and other public fig- | ures since Russia quiet! | early proposal unt \ Scene Of Gray’s Elegy » From Coming Events In Britain | perhaps the most famous church- i yard » finally: settled with his mother at Aa the second session of this Parlidment draws to a close, ob-— servers here note a quickening | sense of anti¢ipation among am- bitious government back-berch- | ers. The long-awaited reshaping of the Diefenbaker Cabinet is ex- | pected to be anndunced as soon as the dust of the session has seitied: there will be some Sen- | ate appointments; there will, per- | | haps not long afterwards. be the | | Vamentary Secretaries; there will he. some: appointments of worthy Government Boards, Commissions and in some of our Enthassies abroad GOOD WORK WITH U5. fo posts on During the hubbub of the of | the US. market is now being re | I hope that readers will enjoy | ficial opening of the St. Lawrence | opened to our ol Seaway, of the Queen's visit to hev's Polish Junket By John MacS ge y g Session dian delegates, headed by ‘fen ate Spedker .Mark Drevin and Commons Speaker R. Michener, | consisted of Senators and M.Ps reper ng all parties. “The ings were as success- ful as could have possibly hoped,”” Senator Drouin told me. There is a very friendiv climate and US Senators. he explained: stood Canada's position in tegard to defence production sharing. and jour need to have full access to | | the US. market for base metals would be interested % hear views and oil and gas lt is probably entirely the achievement of the first of these meetings. held in | Washington last January. that C.B.C. IN. DUTCH | | Ottawa, and df the Dominion Day. | The CRC. which acting pre- and 1 am very grateful to all | holiday, the first plenary session | sident Ernie Bushnell recently jhose MPs who have devoted) | of the Canada-United States’ In- | told a parliamentary committee (some hours of their very busy | | ter-Parliamentary Group tended | to be overlooked. The 24 Cana- has gone through six tragic | months‘ of trouble and mistakes, Ganadian Press Staff W Russian. Premier Khrushchev’s ' current junket in Communist Po- _ land may be designed to make | | the Poles happier about the trend | of the Geneva conferenfe af for- | eign ministers. } Western diplomats are cha- | vinced that the Poles-—and the | Czechs as well—are not exactly | bubbling with glee at the impor- tance being accorded Past Ger- CAM, of many by Russian Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko at the Ge | neva talks _ ; Kbrushchev's visit at this tame points up what is not always ob- vious: That Russia often has trouble julling the rivalries of its satellites and keeping them ia line with Moscow diplomacy. _ Diplomats stress “that while there may be divisions among the | } Western allies at Geneva, where | drama: rig among | time in the hope of undermining | Western powérs, who earfter re- | te Communist countriéebut-pe- |'Allied unity and determination. peatediy made curtseys before | hind the scones Ve eg ye ypahals UN REPRRENGB fen cceienentiannee hewn vand. whee like. to: speak. | SOME HINTS see is also pullifig: and haul There have been hints’ of ‘this dropped its | Czechoslovakia pe included in the Geneva talks to achieve represen- tative parity with the Weéstera powers and hecause of their par- ticular imterest. im German af- fairs. - : j ~ They ant ing feature ix that . Russtasdr this idea without | any mea West many %& -ptestige . although , diplomats do’ flot attach impor- | tance to Gromyko's bid for the Fast German delegation. to be in- cluded im secret Geneve negotia- he ot tees erebenien Sexe y see this ax a'diversionary’ move, adding that the Gr tactics are unchanged in Psa ond act of the dull G He's still a a \ Some interest has heen aroused by Gromyko's. reference to the United Nations when he was out- Poland and | lining his plan for an 18month _vited -a_nunjber of Members of | of opinion between the Canadian Parliament. representing consti-’ tuencies where a Thomson Daily | the Americans entirely under - | Newspaper circulates, tq write ) ting with my suggestion. | taking some | UNi Nations for fear of giving Ru@ia a greater propaganda if than it has at present. Under the terms of the Broad-_ casting Act, the CBC. should | have submitted ite annual ac- counts and report to the Minis- | ter by the end of June. At this | writing. there is no sign of the | report heing tabled im Uarlia- | ment. | HOLIDAY SEASON “~ j With the end of the Parliamen- ary session coinciding with the school holiday outbreak, this father will be-taking his chil- dren on vacation. I have in- during’ my holiday The idea prompting this is that readers of Parliament. of the closing session and of the work of Mem- bers from some of our elected representatives. these descriptions of Parliament through the eyes of “insiders”. end-of-session days to co-opera- interim agreement on the Berlin queshinn. é Gromiteo is well aware of the dilemma of the Western foreign ministers who need solid Russian guarantees- that the West's rights in Berlin would be respected dur- ing the ‘‘truce’’ period The West, mindful @ past So- viet performance, cannot even be sure that Russia would in fact abide tw such guarantees even if they were given at the current conference. The United States. Britain and France have been worried about the Berlin crisis to the NEEDLES DELEGATES Gromyko needled the Western ministers about their doubts of Soviet sincerity and.added: . | “We have proposed that the UN be invited to share in these guar- antees. oa ee: “Unfortunately. however, the - about the significance of that or- | sides. |_under the impression that after | tain Campbell, advanced. | Annear, Fred Dollar and Keith | ganization .. . have displayed complete indifference and almgst disregard toward the UN.” | j Within sight of the towers of Windsor Castle, 2 miles west of London, there “ies a peaceful | . Buckinghamshire churehyard - in the Eupiish speaking | world. Here, under the*undulat- ing turf, ‘‘the rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep,” and here, too sleeps the author of what has | heen called the greatest poem | ever wriitten. Gray's Elegy writ- | | ten in a Country Churchyard is | certainly one of the best known and best loved poems in the. English language. pont Thomas Gray, who was one of | the dozen children of a London.! scrivener, was born in London in 1716. Unlike his father who... one: gathers, was a harsh and | brutal man — Gray was quiet | and studious. Educated at Eton | and. Cambridge University. he | then spent some years abroad | ‘travelling widely in «Frahce and > Italy with Horace Walpole) and | West End House, now incorporat- ed in Stoke Court, in the village of Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire. It was here--that, in 1742, he penned the first, lines of his fa- _mous “Elegy."’ Seven years were to pass before the poem was fin- ished. lt was thus not written in the heat. of lyrical inspiration- Gray was not that kind of a poet | hut was composed slowly over khe wrote the immortal opening the vears. each stanza being pe- | of the Flegy. And today the sim- lished with SS ey oe eae a mediately on publication. t he} visited by people from all over author's fame spread through | owt Europe te ' | worn stone of her grave: ‘Doro- ‘at Cambridge. .and achieved the | livering a lecture or having @ , ¢ Mt was a fame which Gray nev- er sought, for he was a shy man | who preferred scholarship to the literary limelight. He has” Been described as the most: learned man im Europe. and his life was, in fact, notable for its quictude and devotion to study. No excitement of adventure colored its ‘calm pattern. and he never married. He was utterly devoted ifo his mother, and his sorrow when she died is touch- ingly revealed in the epitaph which he wrote and which can still be seen on the weather- | thy Gray. the tender mother of many children, of whom one alone had the misfortune to. sur- vive her.” From 1753 onward. Gray lived amid the calm of the Cambridge colleges. From 1768-71 he was professor of modern languages remarkable record of: never de pupil. Here he meditated. contin-, ted to write poetry. and died in 1771. BROUGHT TO REST - KH was to Stoke Poges, to the country churchyard of his most famous composition, that they brought him to rest) beside his- mother, almost in the shadow of the creat vew tree beneath which the world. Most of us are familiar with | spot,”’ | poet’s day. the sad and pensive lines of the | Flegy,: but at sundown, at Stoke Poges, there is little to inspire | i melancholy. The churchyard is, | in fact, no longer a “neglected but is* trim, bright and well cared for. The fine timber- ed porch, which hds bravely wea- | thered 600 vears, looks good for | many more to come . i The ‘“ivy-mantled tower”’—in | order to preserve the structure— pow no longer ivy-mantled, bot a feature which would cer- tainly -he recognized by Gray is the famous gnaried yew tree which still casts its shade beside the church door. The neighboring manor house, where once King Charles 1 was imprisoned, also looks much ae it did in the _ | ED MAXIMS it ts a healthy sysmptom when a man is dissatisfied without be- ing .discouraged. TO TAG DOGS’ VANCOUVER (CP)—The city’s board of administration has been given the job of figuring out how dogs may be summonsed. A spe- cial committee of city council recommended pound. officers be giyen authority to issue “tickets similar. to traffic tickets’ for dogs without licences or caught Tunning wild on the streets. \ 900,000 DESTITUTE ~ SRINAGAR. Kashmir (Rent ers)—More than 300.000 persons have been made —destitute—by- floods which swept over Kashinir last week, Prime Minister Bakshi L Chulam said Tuesday their tives they will walk with pain and possible death by their | NO CURE . As yet, we have no cure for the condition. And even the life-giv- possible .stil! present considerable danger to a hemophiliac. e Transfusions are a source of infection and may enhance the condition: by sensitization. or they may further disturb the patient's blood coagutating time. Still, as yet it’s the best we can do for the iihiacs. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. A.P.: I recently had a@ this surgery T would no longer have hot flashes, but still ex- perience them. Can you explain this éo me? Answer: Hot flashes occur dur- ing the menopause and are the result of a decrease in certain hormones produced in the ovar- ies. If your hysterectomy included removal of the. ovaries. these flashes might even be increased. ¢ any rate, removal of the uterus has’nn’ bearing on this symptom OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE- YEARS AGO * (July 17, 1934) . Officers and men of the Prince Edward Island Light Horse turned to their camp at the Ex- hibition Grounds yesterday, after strenuous field manoeuvres at Tracadie. “A’’ Squadron under extrovert and athletic, requir- needed in the. ballroonr by ite enthusiast’s grandparents. “Rock ‘n’ Roll’ was so close- ly followed by Skiffle that the uninitiated were apt to confuse the two, thougir Skiffle is a form of Do it yourself music that de- pends entirely om song and has ing its devotees. to make music ‘for -themselves. Its material is mainly folksong with. so to speak, guitars has pointed to a decline in its influence. ' OUTDATED ALREADY While the physical vitality of ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll’ enables it to keep its hold on the enthusiasm of teen-agers, # is no longer the latest thing and no longer — we might almost write ‘therefore’ —a craze. ‘“Cha-Cha, w’ith® its | reater sophistication and slight- er demands on athleticism and American exoticism of mark a considerable change fashion. but seems that “Rock ‘n’ Roll” also refuses to be oust- Ss Major Duvar were the “enemy”, against which “RB” and “C" Squadrons under Major eee | preceded by outposis under Cap-.- a | Dr. J.A. Clark was elected pre- | sident of the P E.I Breeders Club at the ann ing held in the office of the | meet | partment of Agriculture jast eve- | } ning Others officers include vice- pr . Earl Ings; secretary, B.R rown: directors, George Boswell. © (July 17, 1949) Six Island Men are included In the complement of the Tribal | Glass. destroyer. H.M.C.S._ Iroe quois, which ‘Visited’ the “eit? ‘over *) the weekend. They are J.P. Nash | and D.R. Jardine, Charlottetown: - C.F. Coyle. J.V. Gillis,‘and T. Coyle, Montague: and R.A. Hat- ely of Kensington Fire Chief W.B. McNeil of Sum- merside, first vice-president of | the Maritime Fire Chiefs Asso- ciation will preside over. the three day annual convention which op-. ens today at Yarmouth, N.S Mr George Hogg. secretary of the Summerside Fire Department is also in attendance at the conven- THROUGH CHANGELESS CHANGE cannot hold this lively I know I day tering. ' 1 cannot stop the calendar at spring Nor-Jinger always in the month of May. s : But there is compensation in this way | O change: if bluebinds .suddenly | take wing) Grief also is » transitory thing And dark has but a single ‘night to stay. I .would not fix forever any song | For all our singing-is uncertain now, } So few and faint the tones within | our range; The perfect harmony for which we long, : The round fulfillment on the gold- en bough Lie ‘onward through. the change- less law of change. Myra Perrings im he New York Times vrshire | ten TEN YEARS AGO | ed because it voices adolescent S Let's All Make Our s IS LATE. U8 a ing none of the dicipline andy the supreme. merit of persuad-_ _ Paint-Up The Royal Visit‘on July 30th. . : vans gate CITY of © CHARLOTTETOWN’ . IF YOUR GUARDIAN - age naivety in the 1930s they were canalized into pensar cal action, and they are = canalized today. a BARD TO UNDERSTAND a Between ‘“‘Cha-Cha" and the popular songs of the 1930s, sev- eral of which have lately attain- Hed renewed popularity, is a link difficult ts understand. ‘ there is a limit to the number of suitable tunes that can be devised in time to supply the demand, for the commercial background to all — i this musi¢ must not be forgotten —— 7 Much of it exists blatantly to © exploit the new/ purchasing power of the adoléscent worker. The swift changes of fashion in this sphere may well be an as- pect of its commmercialism: ado lescents wish to “belong,” and the creation of new fashion gives them sometthing to belong to. Persuade them that they are los ing touch with their generation an instrument most suitably occu- pied in the perfermance of la mentations Popular song is more than ever centred on the sentimental consideration of the difficulties of love. For social reasons alone, it would be pleasant to feet that the rissing generation had wider . interests than the endless expres- sion of an all-too-probably frus / Clean-Up ! Ys ity “Sparkle” For er ae 43 “aye OR MISSED © : Es BAe 3) M DIAL 6561 paper will be deli and’ a. we J missed ED'S DIAL — 173 Great. 7 Special:delivery service available a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or For the Fastest Service in Town, call Ed's Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom ‘ serve — the goal for which we strive!” ed.right to your door oor. between 8:30 > - es TAXI ~ 6561