Frank Walker Editor morning (except Sum 165 Prince Street, Thomson Newspapers “ Thomson Newspapers Services, Toronto, 44 King Street West 3-8894); Montreal: 640 Cathcart Street ‘iversity 6-5942); Western office: 1030 West Georgia " Vancouver (MA. 7837). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher’s ociatior and The Canadian Press. The Canadian is exclusively entitled te the use for republica- ‘i or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also ‘to ,the local news published herein, All rights of repbplication of special dispatches herein are also —Beserved Subscription rates: : Not ever 35c per week by carrier. $}: ®% a year by mail or rural routes mot srviced by carriers. $14.00 a year off Island, U.K. and U.S.A, - Not ever 7e per. single copy. | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest “ink.” _ FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1959. and areas ce “PAGE 4 Newfoundland Trade ‘Some time ago a complaint ap- “peared in the Newfoundland press about subsidized shipments of farm 4 products from this Province, as of- se ARO he *fering unfair competition to New- | 'foundiand growers. This was an- “swered, we think effectively, by | Hon. Mr. Rossiter, Industry and Res- _ sources ‘Minister, who pointed out ‘that the subsidy on shipments was designed as much to help the people ‘of Newfoundland as our own ship- pers; that if it were not for the subsidy, Newfoundland consumers would have a pay approximately $30,- — 000 more a year for the things they ase here. : ef ‘al news dispatches~in this paper credited to - j | foundland neighbors as we have done in the past. This, we are as- sured, is the aim of the Shaw Gov- ernment, and certainly is what the people of this Province want.. ~ Unfortunate Cuba _ Fidel Castro overthrew a dictator- ship in Cuba, but his regime is ‘showing little improvement over that of his predecessor’s and there is a general feeling that it is time that he and his backers got down to work at carrying out their pledges to the Cuban people. Wil- liam L. Ryan, Associated Press news analyst, put it this way recently: “It would be a welcome develop- ment if the leader would get a bit of a shave and get out of uniform, lay aside the pistol he totes, put an end to his constant whining about the United States and his habit of stirring anti-American agitation, a- bandon his attempts to regiment the young people into goose stepping, disciplined mobsters, and take steps to prevent Cuba from drowning in a sea of economic red tape and in- competence.” Another American newsman, one of a group which strongly indorsed ° Castro’s regime a few months ago, now has sober second * thoughts. “Most of us,” he says, “believed what so many Cubans believed, that he was trying to bring into power a democratic regime, that his ob- jective was* rigid honesty, respon- sibility and humanity, that he would have nothing to do with Commun- ~ However, Mr. Rossiter said he fealized that there ‘were certain times when the Newfoundland crops were being marketed, when the im- porting of P.E.I. products might be eonsidered unfair competition to Newfoundland growers. To prove the goodwill of this Government, -he was perfectly willing te hold _baek such Island products during the peak Newfoundland marketing period. : This assurance has not been _ given the publicity in the Newfound- fand press that we had hoped. We mote that in a recent article by “Wayfarer” in the St. John’s: News, the same complaint is made, with no veference to the Prince Edward Is- _fand minister’s reply. This, however, fs only incidental to a review of the agricultural situation in Newfound- land which is very interesting and in- formative, and which we take the Mberty of quoting from in brief. — Tee ae Te | Prior to the war, agriculture was © largely a subsistence operation in Newfoundland. Output of root erops was a large factor and had been from the earliest settlement days. _ By 1901, 500,000 barrels of potatoes were being preduced. That figure rose during the depression of the thirties to 700,000 barrels. But there has been a steady decline since that time and the quantity has fal- _len much below the figures for the turn of the century. { Im only one major item has there _ been an important increase. That is the production of eggs. Local cab- _bage and potatoes have’ pretty well held their own and so have sheep. P ~ But total farm output, now princip- dy thee “than subsistence farming,.is far less than the volume and value of con- “gumption. cea, ‘ It is highly unlikely that subsis- tence cultivation will be restored to @ good level. The conversion dur- ing the war to a cash economy chang- _@d all that. Many farms are now -Jarger in size and make greater use of tractors and other machinery. Ex- _perienced agriculturists who came _to judge the exhibits at the recent fair;in St. John’s praised particularly _the “quality of the sheep and root erops. There is under wav a big _bog-clearance program which has al- ready brought a good quantity of sich grazing land to farmers in some areas. But the expansion of farm production on an economic basis’ _¢alls for much greater activities, in ‘which it is hoped to enlist extensive aid from the Federal] Department of © Agriculture. : : We trust that this aid will mat- " @vialize and that agriculture will be- _ come a more and more important contributor to ‘productive wealth in or sister Island Province. Mean: while, there does not seem any rea- ‘to fear Prince Edward Island @ompetition in supplementing the resent supply of needed food pxo- “ducts. And as Premier Shaw ~ pointed out in discussing Newfound- ‘land trade.a few, days ago, we would ike to see this trade flow in bott and -Newfoundland ex- benefit as well. | we can out our trade Au antage, and : of our New- oaf—ac ssa 1¢ VIC VT Vv wemareiql yt Prt re Cte ttt her ists,”ete._“The record since that time has been a most discouraging one. Few dictators anywhere have liquidated more of their political op- ponents than he has. Thousands are in prison because they dared te criticise. How many are executed daily no one knows ‘save only the Castro regime.” Along with this reckless intem- perance in- political aetivity, there is allegedly a strong pro-Communist bias being shown, especially by Castro’s brother Raul who is now in supreme command of the revolutions ary armed forces. Current Havana despatches indicate strong dissatis- faction on this score, and drastic countermeasures being taken. It ie evident that the revolution is by no means over, and that the Cuban people are in for a good deal of suffering and bloodshed before it runs its course. - EDITORAL NOTES Canada’s-proposal for a” world- wide study of radiation, to which re- ference was made in these columns recently, will be tabled in the United Nations General Assembly on Mon- day. : *“* 8 It is encouraging indeed to note the improvement pictured in the potato industry, with prospects of a .high-quality crop, good demand and favorable prices. This will mean a lot. te our Island economy. & * * As APEC President Arthur son said way across Northumberland Strait “would not only be a wonderful thing for the Island but for the whole Attantic tegion-*—firat—is the —hasis of our optimism with regard to its achievement. And Mr. Johnson, be- ing himself an Islander (Newfound- Jand, not P.E.1.) knows exactly how we feel. : \ * * * It is a compliment to this coun- try, always in .the forefront-to sub- , due tubercwosis, that Canada has ' | beer chosen for the next world conference of the Internationa} Union Against Tuberculosis. The or- ganization, which meets every see- ond year, recently held its confer- ence at Istanbul, Turkey. Two years ago it was held in India. Phese meet- ings are now attended by 65 coun- tries, with about 1,200 doctors and administrators in attendance. The Canadian, meeting in 1961 will be in Toronto,’ and it will be the first time since 1926 that it has been held t * . on this continent. * * * This shonth marks the. beginning of the Federal Government’s pro- gram of supporting egg prices hy deficien payments, rather than through egg purchases. Under the new plan, payment to any. one pro- ducer during a 12-month period will be limited to 4,000 dozen Grade A Large eggs, including Grade A Extra Large. Once a producer has been is- sued a registration number under the plan; he merely has -to identify his egg shipments with it, and can market at one or more egg grading stations. Provision is also made in the program for the producer who grades éggs from his own flock and tharkets them direct to retail stores. : baal \ Pi Gia Joke in Summerside, a cafse- LONG RANGE PLANNING The pyrotechnics of ascending missiles and rockets has become a familiar phase of life at Am- erica’s space age proving ground on the sandy east coast of Flo- ida. From the Cape Canaveral base millions of words have gone out as Atlases, Thors, Jupiters, and Titans vaulted toward South At- lantic skies or fell disappointingly into the sea. What happens after the roar- ing, flaming blast-off is a less well known but fascinating story told tn the October issue of the National Geographic Magazine. Called “Cape Canaveral's 6,- 000-mile Shooting Gallery,”” by Alan .C. Fisher, J., the article describes life in a missile ‘empire that spans. a quarter of the globe and employs 18,000 workers. ROCKETS AND ARCHEOLOGY |» A Geographic writer-photogra- pher team spent three months on the job and logged a combined total of 40,000 miles. Two of its three members toured the range’s entire course of 11 island bases. Along their way, they collected first-hand experiences and spec- tacular pictures that give a ka- leidoscopic view of hurtling rock- ets trailing cometlike tails; of technicians intent at huge tele- scopic cameras and banks of el- ectronic gear; of radio anten- nas seven stories high; of men who find relaxation from space explorations in such hobbies as pre-Columbian archeology. MISSILE RANGE The Atlantic Missile Range can be divided into three parts: the 15,000 acre testing and firing re- servation at Cape Canaveral; an administration headquarters at near-by trick Air Force Base; epathe down - range tracking MEations on drowsy subtropical isles. The islands, owned by Britain, the United States, Dominican Re- public, and Brazil are — spaced from Grand Bahama off Florida to isolated Ascension in the south-central Atlantic. Between the land bases, fleets of instru- Missile-Empire In Florida National Geographic Society Slush resort island Fleuthera is as missile trackers, and carry out dramatic missions for the re- covery of nose cones and data capsules. The United States Air Force supervises the whole installation; its officers head the stations. But Pan American World Airways op- | erates the system under contract, and a subcontractor, RCA Ser- vice Company, provides techni- cal knowledge and the skilled trackers known as “bird watch ers.”’ | STATION LIFE Life at the various stations is.| as different as individual atmos- phere and geographic settings can make it, Mr. Fisher reports. The | called the Country Club of the Range. Ascension Islam is en- tirely different. “Tf you can't get ta the moon,” say missilemen who have been to the barren, gritty. slag-topped island at the end of the line, “‘As- cension is the next best thing.” The range has its own regul- arly scheduled air service, ‘me- dical corps, traveling teachers, a chaplain—even an_ island-hopping barber. An extensive motion pic- ture program and special study courses help relieve fedium, es- pecially at hardship posts where families are banned. For its big job as a long-range testing area; the Atlantic gallery is well endowed with open spa- ces and convenient tracking sites. As a missile roars up from Can- averal, a complex electronic sys- tem picks up its tracking beam, plots its course, and predicts its impact up to 6,000 miles away. If the rocket veers off course, a safety officer presses a button, a radio command flashes up, and the missile explodes. ‘ But the word ‘‘failure’ should be used with caution. Many suc- cessful tests terminuate in so-cal- led failures. says range comman- der Donald N. Yates. A missile may be deliberately pushed be- yond tolerance to determine the failure limit. Or perhaps some flaw may end a test, yet 95, per cent of the information sought is | mented aircraft and ships fill it visit London next month seems likely to end in love and kisses | all round. m If so, it will be a welcome change. For the last year or so, | the West German chancellor's ' coolness toward Britain has been | a source of bewildered. irritation in United Kingdom government circles. ! , Now, it seems, Dr. * Adenauer is ready to bury the hatchet. He is already speaking more softly, saying that the differences be- tween the two countries are ‘much reduced.” And the fact that he is coming at all is sig- nificant, since the invitation to visit London has been open for about a year. ; Until recently, the 83-year-old chancellor seems to have felt. bit- terly that Britain almost alone among ‘countries has refused to forgive Germany for past sins. On several occasions, meeting Prime Minister Macmillan, he has suddenly produced a batch of Briti press clippings ‘de- signed to show that there is some sinister unfriendly plot directed against the West German govern- ment. STRIKING CHANGE The chancellor's sense of griev- ance has seemed almost obses- sive. British officials: say the truth is that there is no general ‘hostility toward Germany, either ‘in the British government or among the people. Whitehall can hardly be blamed, they say, if one or two papers persist in pub- lishing stories with an anti-Bonn bias. “The British attitude may be one of indifference, but it ig not one of hostility,” one informant said. ; pe West Germany's attitude is vi tal in the present trend to greater give-and-take in East-West rela- tions. Usually, when the cold war shows signs of easing, West Ger- Adenauer To Visit London By Alan Harvey Caniadian Press Staff Writer Konrad Adenauer’s decision to {man insistence on reunion of the two Germanys puts difficulties in the way. = Last Saturday, Dr. Adenauer said .West Germany will make all_ sacrifices needed for peace, and his statement as a whole léd commentators to believe that he no longer regards German reuni- fication ,as decisive. Such a fun- damental change in policy, ff confirmed, might have a. big bearing on future East - West negotiations. ‘ Poets TO A SNAIL . { Snail sleeping under ivy leaves, your head Rests on a stone, your easing- body curled At ease: Should I look down on your cold bed And say my couch ig soft? that I'm not whirled Through our dark street, unfeel- ing and unknown? How like a god I am to light and sound? How prone to dream—where rea- son is my own; . While you have naught but leaves ‘and muddy ground? Come, come, small | sleéper through eternal spring, the sun strains toward its erest; you must be gone, veaving an empty _shell—wind- murmuring; dut while clowns laugh the com- edy goes on: n a few days I'll leave this gar- sden too, “< Where being made-a_ plaintive horn of you, * | Cullen Jones io the New York Times : PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discus sion by correspondents of question a interest. The Guardian does not resem sarily_an“orse the opinion of corres pondents. BLOOD DONOR CLINICS Sir.— The fall series of Red take place in Prince Edward Is- land during the week of Nov- ember. 15th., with Clinics being held in Charlottetown on Nov- ember 16th., 17th..,and 18th. and at the R.C.A.F. Station on the 19%h., and in Summerside on the | evening of the 19th., and through the 2h. As the number of donors has not reached the hoped for object. |} ive during the earlier 1959 Clinics, it is most important that we use every effort to persuade both regular and new donors to attend the Clinics ' The Service which is provided through the Canadian Red Cross Society has saved many lives, aided recovery of health- by many people, and has been of great physical and financial bene- fit to thousands of our people. We would like to impress more people. with its personal import- ance to them. re Knowing that many families have an intimate and special | knowledge of the value of a Red | Cross blood transfusion, we_solic- it and ask for letters which tell of what: it has meant to them. I am sure they would tell of families, people and homes which exist today only because pubiie spirited citizens made sure blood was available when needed. We would like to publish a number of such letters in order to im- press everybody with the nec- | essity of being regular donors. I would assure the senders that their names wil! not be used if | they do not wish it. We ‘hope to receive letters from all over the Province, and we would like to get them as soon as possible. ae With many thanks for all your past co-operation in public- ising Red Cross Blood Donor Clinics, I am, Sir, ete., F.A.S. JONES Provineial Chairman, Red Cross Blood Donor Co « mittee. - Two charming ladies w ho ‘came here for f seven-day Russian film festival are reporied gs saying that they had ssensayl ai impres- sion of London through reading Dickens and that it is just as they had imagined. Whether this is a testimony to- Dickens or to their.powers of imagination may seem at first hard to determine. Perhaps thei remarks were in- tended to “bear a Pickwickian construction’ or were’ wholly prompted by a picture of King *harles on horseback, even ough the intervening view was very different from that which David Copperfield had through the windows of the Golden Cross. Indeed, the ladies’ delightful impression must surely be an il- lusion unless, which seems un- likely, they have spent their time exclusively wandering through the Inns. of Court. In these ‘curious little nooks in a great place like London,"’ as Mr. Pickwick called them, there is still Dickensian richness. 2 HOW PLEASANT. How pleasant it would be to escort them to Lincoln'sInn Fields or Old Square, show them the officesof Mr. Tulkinghorn and Messrs. Kenge and Carboy and Serjeant Snubbin’s chambers, just awaking from the hot doze of the Long Vacation. Then—and this would certainly be a pilgrimage they have not yet made-——we might, in Mr. Guppy's words, “‘just twist up Chancery Lane, and cut along Holborn, and there we are in four minutes’ time, as near as a toucher.” There would be Thavies Inn, where stand, or still lately stood at any rate, the sacred railing q Rock ‘n Roll Craze Analyzed | By N. Bundensen, M. D. did our kids their ‘3 Roll dance mania, Dr. Meerloo s3ys, demonstrates the- readiness of modern youth to react when seductive rhythms are in the air. MADE STUDY Dr. Meerloo, as I mentioned in an earlier column, made quite a study of this Rock ‘'n Roll busi- ness. While he believes the current craze will pass, he does see some danger in such dance manias, He believes they. may easily be- come the signs of breaking down values because of a lack of a strong controlling force inside the psyche. The First National City of New York reports the United States.dollar lost an average of 1.8 percent of its purchasing pow- er each year for the last 10 years, and.the Canadian dollar 2.5 per- tax on savings, on capital, of 2.5 percent each year. But, unlike other taxes, there’s nothing to show for it.—Calgary Herald Contrary te the impression that everything nowadays goes faster and faster, the planet we all! still cent. What that amounts to is a} i civil servants, have passed a re- gulation that only $14,400 to $16,000 a year—senior officers grade .. £0 luxe class air travel on ment business. Those senior of- William Times-Journal Sometimes people get an un- just reputation, one which sticks with them despite the facts of the case. Germans, for instance, long have been regarded as cop- ious beer drinkers, Statistics for live on is turning around ever that the act of rotation, accom- plished on an average day lat year in approximately 24 hours, SMOTHER GROWTH smother the growth ‘of true per- sonality. This, coupled with the fact that mechanical communication is preferred and more effective, auyway, presents more and more of a danger to our mental activi- ties. The psychiatrist warns: “Ae perpetual Rock ‘n Roll is only one of the signs of such de- personalization of the individual and of the ecstatic veneration of mental passivity.” : EXCITING OUTLET Our technical era has forced -Cross—Biood—Donor—€hinies with +#4ssiuily and self-pity on our he says. And some of these people view Rock 'n Roll a# an exciting outlet. The very fact that the dance mania is so widespread apparent- free Blood Transfusion | liy indicates just how deep is the | urge to regress and to forget. So let's begin by . forgetting j about Rock ‘n Roll. | QUESTION AND ANSWER B. J.: Would nervous tension |due to concern over school work cause: my teen-age son to be sick to his stomach ‘almost every mor- ring? Answer: Nervous tension could cause an upset stomach in your | son. OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Oct. 23, 1934) + Rev. Charles St. Clair Jeans, now of Summerside, was extend- ed a call to be minister of St. John and St. Stephen at a lar- pely attended meeting of the congregation Tuesday evening. Rev. S.J. MacArthur of Freder- icton, interim moderator, presid- ied. Rev. Mr. Jeans will succeed i L.W. Newton who resigned | ' i ; bout a year ago. ‘ The community of Wilmot ga- thered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Waugh on Friday evening for an old fashioned house warming.Mr. and Mrs: Waugh have recently returned from a | honeymoon trip through the Mar- | itumes. Mrs. Brewer Waugh read the address while the gifts were presented by Mary McCaull, Lil- | han Sobey and Jack Baker. silt | TEN YEARS AGO i (Oct. 23, 1949) Fire of unknown origin destroy- ed the C.N.Ro Railway Station at_ | Tignish yesterday morning. In- | cluded in the Toss Was the Tivi quarters of the agent, Mr. Joseph A. MacDonald. Nothing was sav- ed except a few pieces of furni- ture and some C.N.R. records. ‘Several railway cars only a few' Dib wickkian Reflections London Times Weekly aa Jellyby got histhead stuck. Svmonds’ Inn, home of the sin- ister Mr. Vholes, is no more and Barnard’s Inn nearly gone, but the ladies must see the most per- fect example, Staple, with its in- scription of PJT 1747, where dwelt Mr. Grewgious, and Gray's Inn for ever the property of Mr. Perker, Mr. Phunky and dear Tommy Traddles. ’ And of course there is the Temple, with the tragie figure of Sidney Carton staggering at dawn along King's. Bench Walk, and Fountain Court, where the foun- tain dimpled and-plaved and Ruth Pinch flirted. SHATTER BELIEF Here at least is something to confirm our visitors’ impression but, though it is truly ungallant to say so, they must go away before the general election, for that would shatter their belief in Dickens. : Eatanswill to-day would be the bitterest disappointment. There will be no three-and-thirty voters, kept very drunk on purpose in the lockup coachhouse of the White Hart. It may be doubted too whether five-and-forty -green parasols would be allowed today -by our niggardly electioneering laws. Sturdy patriotism, .on what ever side it ts called forth,” was what Mr. Pickwick liked and that they might see but perhaps they are hardly used to more than one side. MAXIMS Men do not reatize how great a revenue economy is. 1 me wi any disecmfort or through which poor little Peepy | now takes 24 hours and one one ting of one’s wristwatch, but a puzzling circumstance when dealt with in terms of centuries and millennia.—Baltimore Sun more slowly. Scientists calculate | various countries do not support this reputation. Belgians are the | gveatest consumers of beer, with \21 gallons per person (man, wo j}man and child). Luxembourg, | Australia and New Zealand ‘l- In a technologie world such as | hundred-tnousandth of a second. | low in that order. West Germany curs, he observes, luxury gadgets | Not enough to require a reset-|end the United Kingdom rate 18 ,fallons per person, and the lat- ter is the land of the pubs. Can- | ada’s consumption is 13 gallons :per capita.—Montreal Star For a trivial king who ruled al- mo:t 3,300 years ago: Thutank- hamen continues to make news surprisingly often. He was phar- aoh for only six years, died at 18 end had none of the power of Egypt’s mighty monarchs, like Rameses I, who built huge temp- les to record their feats. But the quirks of history have given his mame an aura of mystery that refuses to die out. The first quirk, of course, was the one that hid the entrance to his tomb while those of the pharaohs were —-plundered by ____.| graye robbers. This meant that when Howard Carter found the tomb in 1922 it was a unique treasure. The objects from the tomb were installed in a special section of | the Cairo Museum, where they have dazzled visitors ever since and where thev ought to be safe |-from further molestation. And yet the pharaoh's- gold sceptre one smaller ornament. The museum's former director, sum- moned to make an emergency feet away from the burning build- | ing were saved with difficulty. Congratulations are being ex- 'tended to. Mrs. W.J.P. MacMil- {lan, president. of the Provincial | Council. €.W.L. following the an- | ;nouncemeht of her appointment | by the National Executive of the | Catholic Women’s League to the tional Relations. recently disappeared, along with | national convenorship of Interna- | New Mysteries By King Tut New York Harold Tribune Icheck, told a Cairo newspaper that 23.000 objects have vanish- ed from the storerooms and vaults in the last 40 years. He accused former King Farouk of sel'ing them through a store on Sixth Avenue in New York. Whether this is true is a mat- ter for other authorities to decide. In any case, there is irony in the fact that Thutankhamen disap pearing sceptre has brought out still another tale of mystery and | intrigue, a tale of modern grave | robbers and a modern king who reigned on the Nile 33 centuries ~after Tut. The Age Old Story Behold 1 have refined thee, | but not with silver; I have chos- en thee in the furnace ‘of afflic- tion. CROWN BREAD The real HOME MADE LOAF, baked in .brick overs. Fresh daily at ,| your local grocer. 19 ‘| cents per loaf. Phone 5270 Support Island Products | a Science Now Without Pain Toronto, Ont. (Special)—For the first time science has found a g@ew healing substance with the ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain and itching Thousands have been relioved with this inexpensive substance imconvenience. In one hemorrhoid case after another, “very striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by doctors’ observations Pain was promptly relieved. And while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place peas : And most amazing of all—this tmprovement was maintained in eases where doctors’ observations Shrinks Piles Or Discomfort Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain And Itching As It Shrinks Hemorrhoids that sufferers were able to make? such statements as “Piles have ceased to be a problem!" Ané@ among these sufferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid con= ditions, some of even 10 vo 20 years” standing A Dis, Wilhor ne e 0 D cotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new heal- ing substance (Bio-Dyne) — the discovery of a famous.scientifie im stitute. Already, Bio-Dyne is im” wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the on This new healing substance t offered in suppository or oiniment form called Preparation H_ Ask for individually -sealed convenient Preparation H_,Suppositories or Preparation Hl ointment with special applicator. Preparation H were continued over a péfiod of | is sold at all drug stores. many months! Satisfaction guaran or money In fact, results were so thorough | refunded. a ae \w { .” ISLATE. IF YOUR GUARDIAN | .. OR MISSED DIAL Special delivery service a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if missed. and a paper will be delivered right to your door. your paper is late — or 6561 available between 8:30 For the Fastest Se ED'S ~ DIAL 173 Great George St. © Ed's Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those serve = the goal for which we strive!” ‘3 rvice in Town, call TAXI 6561 al whom we a -: 2% (7s