Eli: @lfm'dfittf l Mun Prince Edward island le. rh- Dew WJ. Nln‘ox. Publllhar Flank Wlllll: Editor i u w v; ilsu‘pi Sim n Ixacullva rduoy 'Ubllll‘cd .i summoe. Mal .9... Albu- . ism... new... Glolgll sum, Vanznmei ,us vi lumber Canadian obi, N “no... and ih. and... .. l. Ixrlusivrty enmru u... .i .l. .e... d (rldlled in u (v i. u. boo . v.» . a. who... .nd .lu. in li‘r Hi om. . -».l vow... All 'lghn .. uphold... oi .. l .. d.i...._vo. hem. dub iuarvsri Sille um... me. No! over ash or work h. m. o. slim . y... by ml e. .mi .o wood by (A “Linda . you .«ll lo .i . o m mun pl; ya" in us. .od rsc . swine arvyu um. lionwealih NM an! 7: per my Membei A... do... FEEL 111-:an “*f'll-"lfllllliim. Going lt Alone The deriumi o( the UllPllPi' .‘ilitldl Crrditrrs in llismou' tlivir national leader. Rfiiir‘rt 'l'lloilllvsn'l, illlll iii‘i'nmr N rihohm oi ii. (mum - iv. u. lot lepuh» . o ihu owe. . .d s'cn mm ol :wiu -u an aililllllllliiill. iv.ili\' in... ltl'il\£‘ iil(- kind or silll‘illlli mm» lli.ll ,1 good many rououums .u-e hoping it will be. In HIL cliso. ii rnli'l put Mr. Thompson iii a IllillL‘ P'llliyll'l'll iiig position (him he has lllloully been placed hi the goings-on of his so. sailed co-lrmler. Raul 1".miiolie. We nnie tliill siv stil‘ll‘l ('i'odit members at i‘:irli.inicin from Que- bec are sticking with Mr Thompson, and that the New Rrilnsii'ick Social Credit League. at their weekend rally. repudiated the sizinil lnkcn ll_\' Mr. Caouette and lli> followers and announced their coiiiiliueii support of Mr. Thompson. it will be iiltol-cslilig tn sol» \\ll.'ll happens u-hou rarlmmeul l'eslmlos and ths two Wings of the party cun- froni each other, if it was hard for outsiders to knoll what tliev stood for before. it, ivill he dollhli' hard now. The only thing that seems pretty certain is that llwy will be more concerned about feuding among themselves Ililln will! the liusilless of the counii-y. B.C. Election Odds It is not unlikely that a Social Credit government will sill] he in power wth lho dust sr‘illes after the British i‘olllmhifi general elec- tion on September 30. Premier Ben- nett fought the last campaign e of stopping the advance pi and he has promised to fight this one on the issue of public ownership of power to keep down with: and encourage indus- trial sspaiisinli. it just pots to show ifth a pnlliician doesn't need to be consistent if he has other qualities that make for leadership. hill there is an uncertain faciol‘ this time iii the impact, which Hon. E. Davis Fulton may make as Con- servative button in the lost contest the (‘onservalives got only 8.7 per cent of the vote in British Columbia, the Liberals some 21 per cent and the NDPs some 82 per cent. If Mr. Fulton can increase the PC vote, Iran to 15 nor rent. Mr. Bennett may be In tionhle. Then it would be the NDPs under Robert Strachun that would likelv end up with the lurgast representation. in the circumstances, the New Democrats are probably hoping al- most as much as Mr. Fulton‘s fol- lowers that he'll make a good show- ing at the polls. It will suit their book line—provided, of course, he doesn't overdo itl Ontario And Pen5ions As noted recently in those col- umns, the Ontario Liberal leader. Mr. John Wintermsyer. has charged the Robarts Government with being outta sabotage the federal contrib— tpry pensions plan, and has in- cited that he will milks this a ills! iuua in his provincial election Wyn appeal. Prlms Minimu- Pearson himself has said Hill: a ’roblom would be leefl if 0n- hrio and Quebec—tbs two most populous provinces—intros! ii a a d flair own schemes and did not on- bursts. ‘ It doesn't look as if there will be i. gush cooperation lrom Quebec, and is true that the Ontario Conser- ve Government hes its own pen- psvponls. But what Mr. Winter. neglactsd to say is that Prem- ‘dharts has promised to emper- phsi. Mill to the Toronto Tels— g'ram. is to order two basic chan- ges in existing private pension pro- grams. The one is to mnks pension plans mandatory in all firms with 15 or more permanent employees. The other is to make both employers' and employees’ contributions to pri— vate pension funds transferable af- ler relatively brief employment when a worker moves from one firm to another. The federal proposal is to raise present basic universal flat-rate pen- sions end to add, over a period of 10 years, an element of relationship be- tween the level of pensions and the level of contributions (indirectly. the level of salaries) at the time of re- liromenl. There are other differences. The private pensions with which the On- inrin Government proposes do deal are based on what insurance men rail the funding principle. That is, live beneficiary pays in advance. his contributions expand with the inter- est earned by investing the fund. and he gels s pension based on this iii’i‘llniillutiuli and on his life we pN'iaiii‘i' at the age of relil‘enlelll. In the light of this explanation. .\lr. \l'intermeyer‘s charge of "light; ‘ loge" appears to he unfounded. In iriilh. as The Telegram observes, it only muddle-s the waters, for al- though the federal and provincial plans are radically different in some ways, they are not necessarily in- compatible. Asinine Legislation In Wisconsin the state legisiab l lire has adopted one of the most , courious proposals in the history of democratic legislation. It would prep vent, by law, any citizen from : communicating his views on public mailers to one or more legislators ~evon including his own represent, . ative—«imless he wrote to all 133 of them, or paid $25 to be a register- ed lobbyist. The proposal has been treated with hilarious comments in other ports of the country, and it has been ' tied to equally devastating ‘ sm at. home by the Milwaukee Journal. Now the attorney general of the state. having had second thoughts about it himself, has all:- tempted to rescue the bill from ab- surdity by proposing. as an amends ment, that the “personal lobbying” restriction be modified. According to this amendment, "a request to a legislator for an af- firmative or negative vnta on any pending or proposed measure, with- nllt express or implied promise or threat." would not constitute 1 via- lation of the act. What would this mean? Our Mi!- waukee contemporary points out that, inescapably, an “implied pro- mise or threat" is always present when a voter tells a lawmaker what he wants him to do or not to do. The lawmaker knows that if he acts eon- trnrily he may lose election support. That is the heart of tha relationship between citizens and their elected oifici’sls. And if the voter wsntl to state the promise or threat express- ly, he has a perfect right. So the "correction", for from saying the silly law, would only add another restriction that probably wouldn't h ol d water in court either. "A legislature that really wanted to get on the old. of constitutional- ity," says the Journal, "would just repeal the whole pile of junk and forget it." Appealed it probably will be, in the face of public ridicule. But it will be hard for anyone who has studied the implications of this priza piece of lunacy to forget it. EDITORIAL NOTES An imaginativa step has taken by the United States Mission to the United Nations in appoint- ing a Negro publiclnlations man to falls over a newly created post which will deal with UN delsgationl and housing and other questions ulst- Od to residenca in New York. . s v. . The Financial poo 1m. sh... ths family's last chance to get more than a glimpsa of [other during the golfing season may be at hand Darkness usually returns him to tha fold earlier and earlier as summer days shorten. But now amiss news that floodlight producers in Hi 0 [7.3. an developing a growing busi- iisns on regulation length layout: uwsiluondrivin'mandpan- three courses. If thh allelic: on. ills more mule Julius may I" n has. ' Chiggen Are Troublemakers I] I'll. TM"! I. VII Dcllel Then N 03166!“ In “Ell! . lubedlu lnnl canard let Ill-m without O l Star. munifyina slur. nut depot be milled by their Ilse because the bites of these crilterl prov dun nddllll wells II flue lkln that lioh intensively for several d.y.. The young chimi- i. the hmublemakcr. ll attack. not only man but domestic and wild animals. poultry. reptiles. and birds, Thll younaer gem-Linn .1... l. particular and scurrie- about for . suitable spot to i.- lert ii. mouth, The choice .r- en are par of me body where clothing at. illiiiily or where m flesh i. Lid... tender, m- wrinkled. . ling. ix of opium iniect . lluld into “W” the chosen spot which dil- '3';"'"*" "id solves till tissues; Lbey u 0 turn became adults llial feed on decaying material. insects. and insect elll. me parlunl are more sus- damp areas such .. orchards. woodlands, and unions. expel clslly um streams. Some .m- [as thrive in dry places. includ- ins lawns. golf courses. and lurk. Anyone who i... been Exposed ‘ should get inln . bath iub .. .aon .. possible. apply .i thick mile.- of soap. and rinse do well i It. her bungalow l Miss com. a PLAYING “CHICKEN” well. Kliliiil the ehlggers redu- ces itching bill does not. stop it bersuse Ihe iniecled fluid re- } gmylmlulmidel ‘ be the Century of Canada. a. 1 ol Canadian development." Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the great . French. Canadian Prime Mulls- ter, mode this prodicliou sixiy day. he would change his iam- mis dictum. lo predici: lecnnd hall of the Thai msrliine could miller grain bring mfllerill plenty in many. priisprrity lo the world. and (nod to the hungry. But ii could .1.» take away your lob .ud mills. More especially. it could de- alroy the job ivhirh we hope your children and mine will grow up to fill. What is ihe prime problem we fare ioday? "Unemployment." you mifllli mply. “The spectre l would correct Harold Wilson. Ihr leader of the Labour Party in Britain re- ccnily declm-ed uni 10,000,000 now jobs would have to ba brea- ted in Britain within the next decade. A. the m... who i... , mm. to expect to Prime Minister of Britain “filli- in the year. he is very conscious of ihal immense problem which will face Ills governmnnl: ll crelle 10 million new lob: (or labour lam which today Lot 15 milliiui workers. MUST WORK—AT WHAT? In the United Slales. the Uilv drr Secretary oi Labour, .lohn Henning. has asserted um hi. country mull provide 3 million new Job: by mo. it u...- l. id be no increase in the present bob .1 or I million unemployed. out. ill I work lurcc ill 72 million. We not heard any from Canada's Miniller ul Lab- our, either Mike Starr. who "- caled that ollice when Ill Tory government fell Hi Sprinl. of Allan MlcEldlefl his Liberal succenoi‘. nI been whully dilemlcd a 'n our Hull! 0 Conmiona. Tlul um] and "sinus Mnlllion underline! the criticism recenl- ly made by Guest Columan Paulinc Jewell writing in this column. I}. Jewell. now Linen Ll lid [or Nnrthumberllnfl Tin is king in Bolivia. Elli like I lpendlhrifl monarch, the inel< Iiclent tin Industry has become . drll on the economy in 5mm. America‘s illiii idem. notion, The unnamed and heavily mid-loud ii. mines once were the source of .mi wealth. Now mi cen- ter ol political controversy. . three-way .greemeoi with lb. Bolivian lwerument. Wm Germany. Ihe indeed sum. ..d the Inter-American Develapmeiil am undertook u. modernize the mines. The mluerl' uuido. how- ever. would no! lid .1... with Bullvlan Government pi... and wen! a. mi... GEOGRAPHY A PROBLEM Tin ll only am at Bolivi a many problem. Gem-pin perhaps an landlocked dduo blunt. heldlclie. A l' . luglhy war allll. between In and JIM lvin lost It! Pacific roast Port! and um. td the up... Farml- illlile mlIuniJin nhsinrli‘s bll’ the way from the high pialelu u. u.- farlila pill!“ in the n. "It pllhlll fl alllvllnn. If.” M up. tho soil ll lllln and hat- I'III. Yel. iwblllll'dl ol the It “on 3.5404“) In bit-I'll: liva the" lacqully a fold In “undid [II C Andean range. to sum. rn i. [he lemHmvlrll .ui lowlanl.1'hls hall Insured I 1 III!!! my. and mode I m I own of lun- can lence during her first moniiis M .u MP, years silo, II II! wri‘c Alivc to- l wrile this diimflillfl indiclmcnl‘ oi our political Icadcrs‘ "Myi stl'nnursl imprvssion 0' House of Commons is thl ll is not me great forum lolr debs!- lhat it slii‘i‘ly ought to b! There has been very hills really thou- glillul penetrating or infomed discussion of the important ll‘ Sims that lace Canada. NLFK. even leading ones. seem unwilling or unable to dim... in drplh the Krciil l<<url “The , 20m Century ‘ will he the Age of the Machine.“ l benefits um. mankind 1: mild ‘ even grelter unemployment." ‘ . linden. I! bbiiis our most , moned lo rncl-l in Toronto on 17. l iii and 19 September, whisper of our .lmilar problem i 11 mi this serious problem ' . l Hop. William Davis. Minister ill l Education. in the planning and l followup of this important ex- [ plorsliou by government Bolivia’s Dilemma National Geolnphlc lid“! OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Must Face Facts About Automation “The 'rueuiil-ili Cciilury will lOIIiuriu' was previously prolrs»l such cunleieiire to be staged sur ul uuliilual science at Carlee anyiihere in Nflrlh Amerlcl. ion University in Guam. Her observation and up“. two led her to Hi: Mall of the a. a: < our: GREATEST wonnv The great issue of [he day ini- [hr average Voter is simply this. Based upon the predictions made by IhoughLlul and iniomi- iesdel-s in Britain and in USA, and iii the absence of any similar lsce- Lhe- tam pro- nouncement Imm Otlawa. i es- timsle ihdl Canada must pm. vide the staigering toisl of bo- tween 2.500.000 jobs by 1970 and 3.000.000 m 'rl-lst lrighleninlz necessity in four or iivc times as many new in... Canada during the pusi years i n lei-ed as have been creliicd a...‘ while Ottawa sleepl. Top coin is inl‘lunnlcly alert to this menacing problem. ouiario's Couscrvai n p Gill'm-n- moot. midi-r Premicr John Rob- am i. tackling this problem hill; l iy mdusirlsllwd pmvlnc conference on “Anion-iaiion and l Social Change" has been sum- Hon. Leslie flownlrse QC. Onllr'io’l far-leeing and hard- drlvlnl young Minister 0! Lab- our. lull destrlbed to me till . threat. and to luru it to our my: Mr. liowuim will be accompanied by Hon. Macaulay, 0.0.. Minister of Ec- onomics sud Development. and a- man- (in! River 300 miles from the Allan- ii , Xivrn equal navigation with uni.- oi Amrntina. Chile also has offered use M ll. pdm .. home parts In: a Bolivian merchant marine. The diuovery of all her help- ed the economy. Until a few years ago the nation w.. an importer of all; now, in exports some fuel. 1 n s : AGRICULTURE IMPROVED The government's program tor resettlement and Land rolonn also be." some promise Ill ope... ini! up untapped agricult u r n l and nthcr i'cloilrrol. Production 0' loodstulll has [one up. A {WI yeah 050 Bolivia Produced only 10 Darren! of Ila sugar need]: nwfi Iuppllel 75 pn- tsnf. Crop! of rice. corn, when. Ind potato" hlvz increased. Then is more meat. An old Ind proud rrvuhllc. named Hi 0 . _ mun Bolivar. who was ill first held nil stale. Ila nest of down I ll,m lerl hli‘ih. w 15“ by the Spanish elm-la Al- oulo do Mendoza. A Bolivia‘s executive and kllllnlivr brunt-hes 0' gov- ernment function in La Pal, the eanstlluloual tlllllll is Sucre, when in. lumin- Conn re- main. 3 'l'lls Fl‘ll: :nfllll “T'- u Ital Inlet“ tic solution containing mains u.u.iiy pliers relief, ii you me going for . hike or . picnic in... an arcs known In ‘ he ink-sled, use a repellent MI your exposed sklii and uulu gsrmrnls. The most BANK or MONTREAL UNIVERSITY EDUCATiON A w Ivy "f ‘ plan [or a 001th VARIANTI OF THE PLAN Several optional plans are available under the prognmma. and than vary as to till number of years in which the parent wishes to make monthly payments. as well u to the amount required lnnually {or university ex- penses. Plans are based on objectives ranginl from $1,000 to $8.000 pay» able to the parent in four annual instalments. If you are like most parents with children in high school. you are probably wondering how you are going to meet the costs of financ- ing your youngster's college edu- cation. To help parents solve this problem. the Bank of Montreal has introduced its University Educa- tion Progrlmme—the first lifa- insured plan of its kind in Canada. Under this comprehensive pro- gramme, parents, guardians sud sponsor: of high-school students can spread the cost: of a university education over periods up to nine years. thus keeping monthly payments to amounts they can af- ford without hardship. And the ml to the parent is ooh/a fraction of flu interest paid on a straight loan programme. Hart is an unmpls a] haul m of tin basic plans can be varisd to wit your needs: Gulchle “.000 inn-Inu-nihi-II-i—siiuu-a m- PllnA $49.55 Plan! “.75 PllnC 87.“ II hr brainl— l. encfi duel unity woll.— Toronto The sue-flu If sold iifieen hundred h min for two dollars per blahll, what W‘i'mld he I 111 Win! can be lit future d I- economy in which I! ilk" mo brain] in lllili'e Mil our income “In it duel Iually eli'll ill—Grit. There was Mable flu slhu' dry in Detroit Where the worldl‘ llrll lully automated factory 1| Ottawa Cllilei‘i. llle mm on of psychological sludiu year concerns Br ndy. a dog M smell" (our nellhborl 0! Mill Nan Colon. who keeps IO alts Avenue. Teluonilse. 4....- Erin- i ion. were milled . reduction 1. lthelr me assessments of be- tween 10 and in pounds each. pianist. i... fought menl lrl» .1 Initial to keep her cat]. — Next. dub do .uauepilc on each i The Times. London. l contains chemicals such as di- moth mains an in humid. An sniiiep- l 1..., dimmiuyhm, ethyl. ‘ ’ ben- l hexanediai. 0r benzyl benmie . alone or in cumin-lion. A var- lcty of inuctlcidel m .v.u- .bie Ior cottage owner. who wish to rid alien premises . these pests lie sure to use eimiive . cordan Io anemia... m 1- III-III:- uurllu i. l... his all- ouunn su Le , _ "mm" W In: the .u This, Well In a Commu ii i It country. mull be cnillllnd “cruel and unusual" punlfllmefll —0i. laws Oil-lull Iour falls! Mahala M Our Yesterdu s (From he Guardian Flu) TEN runs AGo some a. no) Mill Helen Mouse. BA, u Kenlmnan, PEJ. left Aug m on the lim 1.. of her journey snimukl. Japan. where u.- will spend three years n . mu. llonary teacher at we United Church of c.u.d.. re ouxoa tale- iu machines demanded all The Royal Conservatory o. ‘1‘?“3': Music 0! Tommie .nuoumd to. dAy um Faith N. Macaw-n. an 31ch 1‘ Silver- mednl lor piano. Seven. year-old mm midis. win up. ceptible lb... other: in chiller I . bin. and develop severe reac- 3:“ M" A D' M" lions with lever. large wells. II mad men ilebiug. Immunity 6| —Hlililltou specular, mun-guy; “A” A“ n cine with repeated . I , bites. The lnlccll meter low local-- I! Iii-"obioefiombh I. A. Winfield. Halifax. Gen- eral Manager oi the Mlnllmc Telephone and Telegraph Com- pany. mlved i. ihe provinr! 1... night. H: i. mm; .2 the Canadlau Nllional Hotel. Mr. Winneid l. here in connection with llie four-dly annual .duveu. tion of tile Telephne Associa- Ilnn of (Janus which Is bciiis held no. week m Charlottetown. William A, iieddio. proiessllr of agriculture. cal-med lnib Sum- merllde s.iu.d.y and mm two days lime. u. no port Monday .izeruaon en mm to commie lawn in compleie his l.er around Prince Edward mm by canoe. He will have covered approxi- y by canoe when he bowie... his Journey. aver- sling an mllel paddling p" .y. at Amhlellde ylvhu'il‘ of lc< A special message to all parents of boys and girls now in high school if: You can guarantee your youngster's College Education in partnership with PROGRAMME “ [or boys and girls mm in high school now To .iom THI raooaamilil See the people at your naighboun- hood 3 of M brunch. You will re «in mm welcome from a and who will be pleased to giva you further details and to help you select a plan suited to your mods. All: for-your cm of flu Bank of Montreal Univsru'tv Education ." . [olden If you used help in unending a P shidcnt alrudy in University—or to register this year—~qu .._.... HOW THI PROGRAMME WORK. Under the b a plan. the parent agree. iomske monthly human“ to the Bank starting. lily, two yura he- fore the student enters university. and terminating one your .mr grad. nation. In return, the parent receives an annual sum from the Bank at the start a! ugh of the four university purl. LIFl-IN‘UIANOI FIATUII the parent concerned should dis after the tart of the programm'. the funds for education speci- ilsd la the stream ll be by tha Bank uh nu- wltlimi: any fur. ther wanna being mad. by the family or tho soul‘s. noun-doc. woo-anon- Bsnx or MONTREAL M W M WORKING WIT" zllAIIAN. I. IVIIV VII-I