Sete Amma a. The Guardian " Gowers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew ” ’ W. J. Hancox, Publisher . Wallace Ward Frank Walker We tditor ** ° a fc:tor- mo Sum shied every week day mg ‘excep’ day tend statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Che own P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. tre offices at Summerside, Montague. A berton and Souris Represented nationally by Thomson Newspeners Advertising Servited Toronto, 425 Universty Ave Empire 3-3894 Montrea! 649 Cathcart. Street Uni versity 65942. Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037 Member Canadian Daily Association and the Canacan Press Press is exclusively entitied to the use for lication of all mews dispatches ths credited. to It or to the Associated Press or Fevters ard aiso to the loce! news published herein All right or republication of special dispa'ches hee tm also reserved Subscription rate Not over 40c cer week by carrier. $12.00 0 year-by mail on rural routes and @ eas mot serviced by carrer $15.00 © year eff Island and UK yeat in US. end elsewhere outside Briss Com | monwea th Net over 7 tinge copy- Member Sodt Bureau of Cicer PAGE 4 Newspaper Pub shers The Canadian repub pecer in lation TUESDAY, AUGUST 17: 1965. New Incentive Program Details of the new and expanded Area Development Program announc- ed by Industry Minister Drury in- dicate that the whole of Prince Ed- ward Island will. in effect, be cover- ed by the program. It will embrace large regions of the country in all ten provinces and offer cash grants to manufacturing and processing indus- tries established within the designat- ed areas. The amounts of the grants are to be directly related to the total investment in new buildings and equipment made by these enter- prises. These grants will be exempt from federal income tax and do not reduce the amount of capital cost which may be.used for tax purposes. “The Area Development Incen- tives Regulations. to be issued ‘short- ly, will Spell out the conditions and procedures for the payment of de- velopment grants. centives for industrial development in the designated areas do not expire umtil March 31, 1976. eligible manu- | fatturing and processing firms com- ing into reasonable commercial_pro- duction before that date will be given an opportunitv-to choose either t he income tax holiday or a development grant. Explaining the. goyernment’s de- cision to replace the former income tax incentives with a system of cap- _ ital grants. Mr. Drury said experience -had-shown that a—tax-holiday—ig,-of* benefit mainly to those firms which are able to reach a profit position at an early date in their new operations. Other firms have to provide for mar- ket development and for ot her years of operation. Accordingly, their profit position in the early years is —such that tax- benefits. peemiee only-a limited incentive... ~A-stjll_graver. objection..so-far_as.” ~ this province is concerned. is that we were léft out of the picture entirely _ -=under.the-old-svstem..! \e-have-every . reason, therefore, to ees the new ~poliey and to look forward to it ef- fecting some improvement at least in our industrial situation. _ The Financial Post warns, mean- while, that the search for satisfactory solutions to the incentive problem will be a slow and difficult process. The new “program should go a long way to attract new firms which, bv definition, have no interest in tax -. -holidays;—it—won't._however,—answer- the question of how to bring new _jobs into those areas that are less at- tractive economically than some. others. The realities of political life will sorely tempt Ottawa to give even larger grants in those cases. But if this attracts companies into basically unsound business situations no one _ will gain in the end. ie What this means is that new in- dustries must be geated fo the pro- ductive eapacity of the areas in which they are situated,-and that’s-a sound economic principle. The Silver Lining? One of the misleading things about is the artificial stimulus it gives te the economy of a country, espec- ially if the country is waging it from a distance. It brings disastrous econo- ‘mi@ as well as other consequences in its wake, but for the time being the- wheels of industry—of some indus- triés, that is—hum more busily than evér. This tends to create a complac- ent-acceptance of the monstrous pen- alties that war imposes on all who are invelved in it. Victor and vanquished ie for it is a defiling thing, a downward step into the jungle, a bl human life and a scourge which in . this nuclear age could put ar end to all the hopes and aspirations of man- kind in’a matter of hours or even minutes. (eof ar come to power in world affairs we . know pf none that abhors war more etna * $29.00. ft” Since the tax in- | r | | sh +4 | phemous denial of the sanctity of. ~ } sincerely “and strives more earnestly for peace than the great republic to the-south of us, Yet we note in an - American newspaper that Washing- ton is “quietly adjusting its whole -economic”outleok as a resultof the escalating Viet. Nam conflict” and that the prospects. on balance, are not without their silver lining. Al- most certainly there will be no new tax cuts: but the reason the econom- ists give for this is that the stimulus of more government defense spending will make a proposed tax cut un- necessary. There is sti doubt as to how the Viet Nam war will expand. So far as President Johnson has put the mat- ter, however, “the country could handle the matter easily.” Economists are confident. ‘In a somewhat curi- ous way,”’ Walter W. Heller, former top Johnson economic adviser told the Washington meeting of governors last month, ‘the Viet Nam crisis may well give us the most striking ex- ample of the advance in economic thinking.” Defense Secretary McNamara has - so far asked for “only $1.7 billion more” for the war in Viet Nam. No- body knows what he will ask next vear, but guesses range from $3 to $10-billion.. This. should put the -ad- ministrative budget through the $100 billion ceiling. for good. Most econom- ists. it is noted, will be glad to see the breach made. : As recéntly as June. Paul A. Samuelson of. the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology reported that one-third of the economists before whom he spoke at a meeting in New York expected a recession some time between September 1965 and the fol- | Towing year. But now the views are | changing. “Current military plans put no real strain on the budget. They come at a time when there is a slack in the economy. The government would probably have tried some other stimulus if defense needs had not in- | creased. But defense spending is a stimulus all the same.” ‘And now it seems that it’s even be- - come a stimulus in Canada as well. _ American purchases of Canadian de- fense products, tinder_the defense pro- have risen in Officials » | | | duction sharing plan, the first half of this year. | at Ottawa predict a “sizeable” | crease in future Canadian defense | sales to the U ‘S.—barring a reversal of Américan policy in Viet Nam. Perhaps if every nation engaged in war, or in the supplving of war ma- terial, instead of counting on econo- mic gains had actually to choose be- pects for world peace would be con- siderably better than they are. On Firmer Basis- -on a firmer basis than it has been “ed to be a problem. thanks fo the booming démands-of*the-ever-increas- ing, thermal powerplants for coal. That, at least. is how an Ottawa com- | mentator interprets the lack of ex- plosive reaction following the feger-. al government’s conversion of its big central heating plant at Ottawa the other day to natural gas brought in | *through the Trans Canada Pipe Line from Alberta. Cape Breton has_lost_a_200.000- ton-a-year sure-fire customer in this plant,.which keeps Parliament Hill and all midtown federal buildings warm, and atthe same time lost what- ever chance there might have been of fuelling the furnaces of another big | central plant that heats the Confeder- | ation Heights complex of government buildings | on the Capital's | southern ern as es Ottawa papers, ‘expecting a 1 blast, approached Nova Scotia Premier Stanfield for his reaction; but he mild- ly pointed out that in view of current market demands, the Ottawa con- tracts weren't all that important. We trust, indeed, that this is the correct version of the story. If, af- + ter years of cutting back production | for dwindling sales the Cape Breton fields should now have more custom- =< whole Atlantic area. EDITORIAL NOTES President Johnson has a flair for doing things the dramatic wav. He signed ‘the nation’s education bill at his boyhood, schoolhouse in Texas; | medicare at former President Tru- man’s library in Missouri; the new Senate floor; and the health research bill at the federal medical facility in | Bethesda, Maryland. He's started a new trend. Maybe not this vear, but next, predicts an exchange, he could sign the foretgn-aid-bilt-in,say,- Delhi. And-the space appropriations bill? In orbit, maybe. .- 2 =: vote-rights bill in a room just off the, | | i 1 | | | | in: - } - OTTAWA REPORT B FROM SEA TO SE y Patrick Nicholson Sweeping Electoral Changes Are neeede | To bring representation in par- liament more democratically in line with local populatiof, an Electoral--Boundaries- sion in each province is redraw- ing the entire electoral map. The great extent of these most sweeping electoral changes ever known in Canada is highlighted by the fact that, present 75 constituencies, only one will not be changed. This is Verdun, on the Island of Mon- treal, At present there are 263 con- Stituencies in Canada. Two of these, Halifax. in Nova Scotia ~-and-Queens in’ P.E-1., each send two MPs to Parliament. Thus we now have 265 MPs. Through changes in relative population between 1951 and 1961, Ontario wilt gain three seats, two. and B.C. one. Manitoba, Quebec and Nova Scotia will and_ Saskatche- | each lose one, wan will lose four.c The new House of. Commons will 264 MPS, each representing a single- member _ constituency; 128 of these constituencies will ~have new names. — OUT OF RECOGNITION How does one measure the | change, when so many new foundary. lines . are being drawn? -One way is by. analayz- for“sorme~years.- Markets have--ceas--~ he | Moose ing..the population of each_new.. constituencies from which it is _ drawn. By any yardstick, 182 of “=the: _pewx..constituencies:' Wil obec ominntes subs‘antially changed from Ahoso-Beni ONSEN Doe a eres Two not untypical examples of this massive change are pro- vided by the proposed new Sask- atchewan constituencies of Jaw and Prince Albert. In the 1963’ election, based on the 1951 census, there were 45.- 927 registered voters in Moose Jaw- Lake Centre. The new rid- ing “of .Moose-. Jaw _will 10's e more than half of those, or 5.- ” 734 But it will have added to It 15.297 voters from Rosetown- “Biggar, 1.744 from Swift* Cur-~ rent- Maple Creek, 712 from Ros- thern, 158 from Assiniboia and riding of Prince Albert had 31,- 782 registered voters in the 1963 | election. The new riding of Prince Albert, one of the 136 ridings to retain its old name unchanged, will those voters. But added to it 9,876 voters from _Humboldt-Melfort- Tisdale, _5;,- + —79F ffom Rosthern, and nine | from Meadow Lake— raising its | new total to 39,279 voters. -Commis-— of all Quebec's | Atberta~ have | lose 8,109 of | it will have | 117 constituencies, retain their old name: and only one will undergo less than ‘‘sub- stantial’'-geographic. changes. TO EQUALIZE VOTES , | P.E.l.’s - four constituencies will have four new names, giv- ing our Island- Province pride of place—if that is the apt express- ion—as regards nomenclature. Ontario, as might be’ expect- ed, will undergo the most mas- sive changes, caused by the im- mense postwar shift from farm to factory. 46 of its 88 new con- stituencies will, have new nam- es; 68 will be substantrally chan- '-ged_in- geography. stale For example, our famous gar- | gantuan constituency .of York- | Scarborough, in which over. 140,- 000 electors cast their votes in 1963,-will-be- split up-among five new ridings. And_-many small only five will t rural ridings will be merged; Northumberland. (21,- in 1963) and Durham such as 190 voters ,(18 866 voters). Often, with no apparent. gain, the historic old political names of Canada’s constituencies will be eliminated, either through change or tC sheer clumsy wantfonness bec East, famous as the politic- al home of such giants as Sir Wilfrid Laurier and Hon. Ernest’! Lapointe and Hon. Louis St. Laue | rent, will-a¢quire the unmemor- able name of. Limoilou. The name of General Wolfe, unrev- _ered_ in Quebec, will be elimin- ated from the title of the riding of Richmond-Wolfe, which, will still include Wolfe County; but so will Montcalm cease to be memorialized—in-the—riding—_now— Montcalm... Latest Library System | The Netherlands News yeh For @Xample, Que-. : > | Kleptomania |_NOTES 5 BY THE WAY Starts Early | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | Most stealing is, profit motive. This-is not true of the kleptomaniac who steals be- cause of a peculiar. mental make-up. Many have ample funds and could buy whatever property they steal. The majority are women; the few men who develop the quirk are likely to have feminine char- acteristics. The neurosis often | comes to light when the teen- ager goes to a girl's school or | co-ed institution. Dormitories and sorority houses are f@vored sites. Thereafter, department and neighbors are in for trouble. Many of these women are pro- tected by the police and family. The wife of an»acquaintance of mine preferred, to steal from a certain store and was well- known to the manager and store could not retrieveand_return_to the store. It was a nice arrange- ment, but never led toa cure. Other kleptomaniacs are less fortunate and when caught are confronted with adverse public- ity and embarrassment. ; A 19year-old girl living in a school dormitory suddenly de- veloped a passion for coins and medals. Within a-few months she had a large collection stash- ed away in her suitcase. When alone, she would take them out and arrange and re- arrange them according to dates and de- nominations. She was an excel- | lent student who came from a | well-to-do: family. She finally got | caught and made no attempt to deny the origin of her hoard. It was the same old story— too much mothering, a strict father, ed to have more than 50 cents at any time . | This-is a compulsion neurosis. | The condition might be regard- | ed as a compensation or substi- tute for hidden longings - FAMILY SPRAYER Mrs. E.B. writes: We have a family problem. One member | of the household refuses t& put | something before his nose and mouth when he sneezes and | coughs. Everyone then contracts his colds. He can't be convinced that he. is spreading contagion in this way. Will you emphasize this point? ¥. REPLY Covering the nose and mouth {with a hand or handkerchief when coughing and sneezing not , only is a health measure but -commoen courtesy as well: Ev- |eryone should try to’ keep his ~ cold to himself. LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN? _F. M. writes: What causes a kidney to disappear and what ef- fect will it- have on the other kidney? REPLY | t \ Kidneys are anchored tno well to disappear spontaneously | | and even a floating kidney mov- ‘The i brary of Delft’s Techno- | borrower that his book {s on its es no more than two to four in- s recently way (or that it js out). equipped with a a mechanized and’ automated book delivery system claimed to be revolutionary in the lib- rary. world. Any book-oir the shelves, no -Matter..in what. far -corner- ofthe “The: Nova Seotia coal inauistey1s-— constituency..and noting the old university's extensive library, 1s delivered to the borrower at the hand-out counter in about one Record show that the: average > -«speriod...between....requesting the... book and receiving it, is 65 sec- onds. Pa About three-quarters of the de- liveries, however; take less than .one minute, while only: four per cent, take longer than two..min- utes. - “With this new system the book borrower dials the catalogue number on thé ‘‘bibliophone’’- on ‘the lending desk:"” - Relayed electronicatly, the re- quired number then signals in a light on the relevant-shelf., ~ to remove the book and place it in the chute which delivers it at the lending desk. A light-signal “‘bibliophone,""* __All the shelf staff has to.do 1s _ | about ‘four years, the requirements of space, dif- | re emmmenn oPare The experimental period of this new library. system took and. covered fering sizes of books, and admin- istrative efficiency. The—numbering system: had to be changed totally into” a “code of eight. figures, four of ® which indicate the actual library sec- sector, and “the others give the sérial.location..on..the shelf. The automatic system does more than provide extremely _ quick service to the ee | and students: the “‘bibliophane” registers all the required -num- .. bers on a punched tape. the sys-, Computor-processed, tem gives a -clear survey of which books are most in ‘de- mand, how many capies should -be in-stock to cope-with the de- mand, and other stati The ‘“‘bibliophone’’ being as yet unique, enquiries on Delft's ' eletronic_novelty_ are coming = from all parts of the world, | cluding the United States, 4 ‘desk-informs-the—an,-South-Africa- Hamilton Spectator The best that can be said for ; wing) won 107 seats, and the Greece's young: King Constan- United Demoractic Left (Com- tine, caught in a turbulent polit- —jeal_erisis, is—that the Greek monarchy has had a long and | lively experience of this kind of | thing -and this time the, — is Out of eee present | | Our Yesterdays | (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE, YEARS AGO | (August 17, 1940) Yesterday Bob Feller chalked up his 21st victory when. thé Cleveland St. Louis Browns 8-3 at Cleve- land. | ers than coal. it’s good news for the ° : President Roosevelt | up his announcement in Wash- | ington that the Canadian and | United States Governments are | discussing ‘‘the defence of the American hemisphere’ by dis- | , Closing that Prime. Minister -W, L. Mackenzié King of Canada | would dine with him at Ogden: burg, N.Y. TEN YEARS AGO | (August 17, 1955) “Romandale Re Echo Sover- | ign’’ won the junior male cham- pionship of the Holstein Class at | the Provincial Exhibition. was owned-hy Max Thompson of | Victoria. : On Tuesday, August 16, Clair | Matheod-—t?-ye2r-olt -frnter; farmer from Long River, judged the best “showman at the Fat Stock Show. in gph ips ccen uti, sakmaninsineeapnanienmanpeleetias Indians defeated the.. followed | was) Politics in Greece {s more than usually a wily business; and old gentlemen abound. Not a happy position for a oi King: | on his side. - The present crisis arises from | the king’s firing of George Pap- andreou, prime minister and leader of the dominant Centre Union Party, and appointing in his place George Athanasiades- | Novas, former minister of the interior, in his place. Papandreou, believing that of- | ficers were engaged in right- | wing politics, wanted a purge of | the army. Defence Minister Pet- | er Garoufalais, an old palace | familiar. refused fo agree on the grounds that army morale would suffer. The king, as commander. in- chief, agreed with Garoufalais and fired the prime minister. | Greece is not a constitutional monarchy in the sense in which the term is generally under- | stood. The king, as regulator of | | ical action, as he has done in this case. ny _Munist-sponsored), 22 —~It-seems-that-the-king's-action ‘will split the Centre Union Party. : : Papandreou has been ‘a repub- lican all his political life. He has frequently clashed° with the palace. This perhaps explains why his supporters, demonstrat- plebiscite on the monarchy. Since the Greek dynastic line was founded in 1863 by Prince William of Denmark, plebiscites- have caused Greek monarchs to pack their bags and depart—or arrive — with disturbing fre- quency. A run-down shows that in 1917, | | the then King Constantine was ' forced to abdicate because he opposed Greek intervention ‘on | _ the side of the Allies in the First World War. "In 1920, a plebiscite recalled “the king to the throne. Four ; vet | the monarchy. years later, a plebiscite approv- ed a republican regime. In 1935, another plebiscite restored In 1941, the then | king fled to Cairo when the Ger- ' | + still He | affairs. can take executive polit- | mans invaded Greece. In 1946, another plebiscite voted | overwhelmingly in favor of fhe monarchy. The present king is discover: | ing early in his reign that t he head- that «wears the Greek It was a serious step Papan- | crown lies uneasy. dreaou’s Centre Union Party | STesition—<ot-—cantce —Parties) ' swept to power with 171 seats in | ada now employs about 50,000. last year’s elections. The Na- | men, as opposed to 70,000 in (right- | 1949. tional Radical Union FEWER WORK IN WOODS —The ‘esine industry in -Can- tical data. © ing in the streets, shout for a-- y_is remov- | the other is cap- ed surgically, able of doing the work of two: WALKING PNEUMONIA GH._writes-Will--you-please tell me about walking pneumon- ia? EPI y eweenn, In this type of pneumonia, the © usual toxic effect associated eile ueidtes eaelrcce that t with pneumonia is not present. ‘The individtial Gees Hor reeT sick? ~excet- for fatigue and “X-ray will help in making the diagnosis. DISZORTED LASH A.D. writes: What should be ‘done about a wild hair on one eyelid? = REPLY : The condition is alleviated temporarily by plucking the hair. Electrolysis will remove the hair permanently. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Cold compresses applied to the eyes and nose bring tempor- _ary relief from hay fever. * (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore “Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) MORE JOIN PARTY MOSCOW (‘(AP)—The_ Soviet ' Communist party now has more than — 12,000,000 members, the party newspaper Pravda. re- ports. Pravda says nearly 880,- 000 candidates have been ad- “Imittedin-the last year. ‘intentional, | deliberate, and actuated by “the. stores and the homes of friends | detectives who watched her | carefully. The husband was sent’: a bill for everything that he | _| and too little emotional satisfac-_| tion. The girl never was allow- | Jackie (to departing relative) —'There’s no hurry, auntie, daddy has put the clock a whole hour ‘ahead.”"—Toronto Star. A man has reached middle age when,the girl he winks at. thinks he has something in bis | eye —Brandon Sun. The organization known as the | Voice of Women wants China to be admitted to the United Na- | ‘tions and further wants that country to be invited to parti | cipae in Canada’s centennial celebrations. These are both | | good ideas and it will be noted in passing that the Chinese | should know something about | celebrations, having invented | firecrackers. — Fort Erie Let- | ter-Review. é More than two centuries ago, France ceded to Great Britain +a vast empire in North America: The cession which followed Wolfe's victory at the Plains of Abraham was not the end of a | long struggle, but it was the be- ginning of the end. Gradually, other French possessions besid- es Canada were. relinquished. | Out of the vast liquidation, France retains today St. Pierre Misquelon. Most of the 5,200 in- habitants of the island 10 miles off Newfoundland’s south coast earn their living from fishing and related industries. Most of them—around 4,300 in fact—live in the town, of Saint Pierre. au This little foothold in North America is an expensive pet for Toronto Prime Minister Pearson's spe- cial assistant and chief press of- ficer, Richard O'Hagan, is in an embarrassing position after The_ Canadian Weekly revealed that part of his salary is paid by ‘the government and part by un- named interests: The salary arrangement, as Mr. O'Hagan explained it, sounds eminently- silly. Under the Diefenbaker government, the Prime Minister’s press aide received an official salary of $10,000 a year and supplemented | this with outside income. And when Mr. Pearson came to af- fice, he didn't want his press of- ficer’s higher_than that. Consequently, Mr. O'Hagan g-e-t-s_paid_hby.the-_government and bya “political source’ presumably the Liberal Party. Mr. Pearson says “This ‘has been done and is being done ~ today that's cause for coneern, not complacency. ie Mr. O'Hagan’s personal ‘inte- -One Master Enough salary to be shown as | in other offices.” If so, The pictures of Mars taken by | Mariner IV indicate the planet /nas 10,000 or more craters. May- > | be the-inhabitants, now extinct, developed the H-bomb several centuries ago.—Fort ‘William Times-Journal, | ~ Judge — “Speeding, eh? How many times have you been be- fore me?” Speeder — ‘‘Never, | your Honor. I've tried to pass you on the road once or twice, but my ear will do only fifty- | five.” Montreal Gazette. Doctor: “The best thing for you to do is give up drinking and smoking, get up early every morning and go to bed early every night.” Patient: ‘‘Some- how, doctor, I don't deserve the best. What's the second best?’ |~— Toroato Telegram . | France La St. Pierre Moose Jaw Times-Herald | France. Administration costs France $1.9 million annually, -with-an—additional $1 million for | capital works projects It is reported that France is hopeful of making St. Pierre a base of operations for fishing fleets in the northwest Atlantic. Any suggestion that France | might some day cede the little oupost to Canada--is resented by the islanders. They declare that they want to remain there and to remain French. They are encouraged by the fact that many North American | tourists are finding their way to the islands. Moreover foreign fishing interests are reported ! planning to leave old establish- ed bases of operations in favor of St. Pierre Daily Star grity is not in question; but the government's duty is to try to avoid even the suspicion of pri- vate financial influence over aides to cabinet members It's bad-enough if a minister's assistant is also on the payroll of the-party-in-power, which. relies / on private -interests for its | funds. But it’s completely unac- ceptable if a staff member re- ceives part of his income direct- ly from. some private firm or pressure group ~ |money for the public purse. { But it's dangerous: it offers t*o much opportunity for private jn- terests to. influence public policy % The system», may save 80.4, through the men who have con- ° stant daily access to ministers, |_.Mr... Pearson--can-t-dismiss the—i— issue by saying that it's a ‘‘well- known fact" and that “it was done by the previous Prime. Mi- nister in respect of ments in his office.” The practice is wrong, no mat- ter how long It has been going on. A Truly The ‘time is overdue for Can- adians to pay much more atten- tion than they have in the past to what is their basic” problem. We spend endless time talking © | about, for instance, tle time is spent studying our own, fundamental _ defects...One_, -The‘trained_mind:'-idea—is—-not-——— “ot these is a short quote from ian Forum which reads as fol- | lows: 2... Vs ccording to Dr. Murray Ross, president of York Univer- , sity, Canada at present provid- | es university places for 20 per cent of its 18-to 2l-year- olds, while in the US., universities ‘and colleges together place 43 | per cent of this age group. By 1980, the U.S. will have 60 per ‘ cent of this age group in colleg- es and universities; Canadian universities will have room for |_about-30. percent. ____— | Its implications are, or should | be, clear enough. If we are, a nation, a bunch of second-rat- ers, the reason probably. lies in — that short quote. In an age when skills depend more and more on education, we skimp on it. Our neighbors, the oft-maligned Yan- kees, to the same extent do not. We are planning— deliberately planning — to educate: at the ‘university level -just half the INDEPENDENT BUSINESS AVAILABLE Texaco Distributorship Areas—Charlotteto Summerside.an Financial Assistance nd area area @ Details—To handle 2 complete line of TEXACO ‘refined products and lubricants. f Available ~ Attractive Margins and Bonuses. Requirements—Business experience, étc. .. handle required books and records; experience; ability ~ to selling Ps ; Operating capital (approximately $2,000), “An excellent opportunity for suitable party” Appiy— Texaco Canada Ltd. | Mr. J. 1. Macmillan _ ~ 1 nd = 3 ican foreign policy: Far too lit- This is a shocking statement. as be Basic Problem : Montreal Star ras ; number of our youth whe will get such education across the border: . * “A university’ education isnit everything, but it does mean a our consti- | certain degree of scientific or cenaee Sen eres ott appoint- . wit means the exposure of young-men and | women to ‘certain disciplines. Faber myth. It Jays a_ founda- | built. i But what, {s the scale of the -waste.{if our universities, in 1980, wilf only have room for 30 per cent of the potential student pop- ulation? It might be said that even the American 40 per cent figure is too low. But the 60 per | cent goes a long way to explain | why we have lagged .and whe | we will céntinue to lag Tenders are invited for Grade ing, Ditching, Fencing, Instal- lation of Pipe Culverts ‘and all other incidental work required ; for construction of the Sub; | grade for a Railway Spur Line to serve Westmorland Chemical Industrial Park, «pproximately 2.13 miles long, near Dorchester, N. B. Sealed: tenders ; marked on the outside “Confidential,” “Tender—for—-Railway Spur—to Westmorland Chemical Industrial Park" and addressed to Mr. R. P. Puddester, Regional Engineer, | Canadian National Railways, | MonctonN. B., will be received | up to 2:00 p.m. (Atlantic Stand- | ard Time), 31 August 1965. A complete set of Plans, Spec- ifications, Form of Contract, In- «, structions to Bidders and Tender | Forms may be ubtained by Bona -| Fide General Contractors from, | (Personal) Mr. R. P. Puddester, ' Regional Engineer, Moncton, N. B., on deposit of a certified bank cheque made payable to the Canadian National Railway Com- pany for. an amount of Fifty Dollars ($50.00), which ~ deposit will be returned when plans and specifications are returned in good condition. ~ Plans and Specifications may be viewed at the following i i Regional Engineer's Offic e, Moncton, N. B Constiction As Association, Builders ees Saint John, N. B. Construction Association, Moncton, N. B. Tenders will not be considerea unless submitted (on the forms supplied by the failway_ and in | aceqrdance with the. instruc: | tions ‘for tendering. The lowest or any tender will not necessar- fly be accepted : Vice-President, Moncton, N.B. | ——~" H.- Cc GRATSTON,- ° cough. "the: current issueof. the Canad-_|.tion-on-whieh-much-else-can-be-——