The Guardian Covers Prince Edward laland-Like The: Dew" W. J. Hancex, Publisher _ Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor ee Editor Published. every week day morning (except Sun- ‘day. and statutory holideys) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, -Alberton and Souris. ' et Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers . Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire. 3-8894; MMontreal 640 Cathcart Stree? Uni- versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association ad The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper eredited to it or to the Assoristed Press or Reuters and also the loca! “news published herein. All right of repuolication of special diroatches here In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40¢ per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas fot serviced by carrier. : $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere eutside British Con : monwealth. f Not over 10c. single copy. Mernber Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The strongest memory is. weaker than tne weakest ink” PAGE. 4. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1966. More Politicking The Pearson government has sent the inflation issue to a joint Com- mons-Senate committee, which means that instead of acting now to curb rising living costs, it will not really be called upon to do anything until Parliament resumes in October. The committee will be holding hearings during the recess, but the Opposition complains that this is just a political move designed to make the govern- * ment appear to be doing something y —=minister's=announcement.will-have | Taised to-$3.25 last April 1, “on fiscal policies at the provincial when it is doing nothing. _ As noted in our Ottawa dispatches on Saturday, Mr. .Diefenbaker urged the government to keep Parliament sitting and bring down its proposed baby budget to combat inflation now. Mr. Sharp's revelation that a budget would be brought down this fall and would contain tax increases, he charged, was an encouragement to “economic uncertainty, hoarding and profiteering.” The finance minister denied this, but surely there was Jogic and reason in the Opposition -deader’s complaint. Even though the new taxes have not been pinpointed, profiteers can make'a pretty good guess at what they will be. | One wonders, too, what effect the iversities. The total expenditure on these two systems was $14,000 in 1917. By 1939 this had grown to $369,000 and in 1965-66 it was $21- 900,000, plus $12,000,000 provided by the Medical Research Council for medical research. , Just as the Canadian Corps dur- ing the First World War established the significance of Canada in mil- itary affairs, so. Canadian scientists during the Second World War won for Canada a recognized place in the field of science. After the latter war, the anticipated industrial recession failed to materialize. Instead. the country boomed and the reorganiz- “ation of NRC expanded with the country. The largest NRC wartime under- ' taking was the Atomic Energy Pro- ject. It began in 1942 as a secret laboratory wing at the University of Montreal, and was transferred to the new site at Chalk River, Ontario, by “1946: In’ the’ first ten years of its~ existence the project grew so exten- sively that size and commercial im- portance justified the establishment in 1952 of.a separate Crown corpor- ation, Atomic Energy of Canada Lim- ited. Varied Reaction An example of the difficulty gov- was afforded by the reaction to Agri- culture Minister Greene’s announce- ment on Friday of an immediate eight-cent increase to $3.33 in the base price of manufactured milk. Our own provincial minister, Mr. Mac- ° Donald, says this will make P.E.I. milk producers happy; but a spokes- man for the Ontario Farmers Union says the boost is inadequate and leaves_no alternative but a strike. - The union has demanded a 25-cent in- crease in the federal base price to $3.50, giving the producer a return. of $4.25. ‘. j “Mr. Greene's increase, to be pass- ed on to the consumer through a two- cent raise-in the minimum selling ~ price of butter, brings to $4.08 the producer's at-the-farm return for his 3.5 per cent milk.-The previous re- turn was $4, including a 75-cent net federal subsidy. The base price was Shortly — the fed- ‘after the announcement o “and municipal levels. Will there be |-eral government’s new dairy policy. ~“@- rush “ii these quarters’ to boost: taxes before Mr. Sharp gets his baby. budget ready? All on the pretext. of ‘course, of curbing inflation. It’s a sobering thought that already, in the first quarter of this year, direct and Andirect taxes collected by all three ‘Jevels of government were running 4ncome of $41,800 million. When con- tributions to the Canada Pension Plan and ‘the Quebec Pension Plan are ‘added, the annual rate of levies by ‘government absorbed 35.9 per cent of ‘net income: In_ efféct.” ft now takes four ‘months’ pay to meet the cost of gov- ‘ernment.. It may soon demand five, ‘and some of us are going to feel the ‘pinch pretty badly. We won't all be ‘inthe position of those lucky recip- | ‘ents of federal generosity, the St. ‘Lawrence Seaway: workers, whose pay ‘hike of 30 per cent became a cen- _ of all dairy products from the con- “‘tral issue of national politics and put ‘labor demands skyrocketing across ithe country. The irony was that Mr. Pearson ‘seemed really proud of that achieve- -ment at the time! ~ From Small Beginnings About 300 prominent scientists from around the world will gather at Ottawa this month to celebrate the ‘50th anniversary of the National Re- ‘search Council of Canada. In the ‘words of an official release, the cere-. ‘monies will mark the evolution of the council from a humble beginning in 1916 to an applied and fundamental ‘research centre with an international ‘reputation. In token of the import- ~ance of the occasion, the three-day - -meet: will be highlighted by lectures + delivered by prominent scientists * from Canada, the United Kingdom, | Sharp made this clear to Heath Mac- ‘France and the United States. - -The occasion serves, indeed, as a ‘measuring stick-of this phase of the “country’s progress during the past _ ‘half century. When the government ‘established the Council in 1916, its tterms of reference provided that it ‘co-ordinate and promote’ induStrial research in Canada. But it was. dis- covered that, in fact. there was little or nothing to co-ordinate; industrial ‘and university research was practic: ally“non-existent. - Thé<Council’s first move to ‘put ‘Canada onthe scientific map was the ‘establishment “of systems of scholar- ships to assist students in post-grad- mate training arid grarits to professors | } __at the-annual-rate-of $14,528 million _ ~~ Representatives-of Ontario and~ Quebec farm. organizations have. ‘asked the federal minister for a better deal for the cream producers, maintaining that price deductions for the skim milk they use themselves ‘are to high. But it is Mr. Greene’s contention that-paying more to cream prodticers would increase inefficiency _ very well,” he said, “for someoné to ‘raise the prices and let the market look vafter the. problem.’ One only has to go back to 1958 to see the ef- fect of price increases that were in essence rejected by the consumer,” It’s nice to hear, occasionally, the name of that almost forgotten fellow, the “consumer.” He’s going to have. an unpalatable time of it in Ontario, if the Ontario Farmers Union strike | } threat comes off. It would, according - to the vice president of the organ- ization, take the form of a withdrawal | sumers. EDITORIAL NOTES It'was on July 1, 1967, not Jan. 1 as we erroneously stated on Sat- urday, that the federal medicare pro- gram was to have gone into effect. The target date has now been put back to July 1, 1968. * * * France does not want American troops on French soil in peacetime. It is presumed, says an exchange, that the. thousands--who were buried in French soil, while France was being rescued from the Germans, will be permitted to stay! . s s It is reassuring to note that Ot- tawa’s retrenchiment policy does not involve any further holdup in our } causeway project: Finance Minister quarrie in the Commons on Friday, thus underlining the urgency and im- portance of the project as a national commitment. ae eee The . American Federation of | Teachers, a labor-union affiliated "organization of 100,000 members. at its annual mieeting in Chicago last ‘week called for contracts which not | only guaranteed “complete academic freedom” but also the right to non- ‘violent protest. including civil dis- | obedience against what a teacher may consider unjust laws and policies. It did not indicate whether the teacher | would give similar option to any pupil who considers a teacher’s pol- to stimulate research in Canadian un- | icies unjust | ™ WwW en i ernments have in pleasing everybody - ~__"DON’T-RUSH ME” OTTAWA REPORT b Canadian mothers: well know that they can no longer afford Pearson price increases in the groceteria. A railroad cannot put bread and butter on union | leader has even declared “We | y Patrick Nicholson of your life insurance . cover- age, even though you have | bought and paid for it. And no wage increase can restore this depletion. that show there | Statistics \.were--over--5,250,000. life...insur- ;ance policies-in effect in~ Gan-- the. table. with only an 218 per. cent: wage increase." But how much longer can Can- adi athers afford the Pear- son erosion of their life insur- ance policies? i /ment took office. On a per |capita average, the insurance tin force- was equivalent to $12,- Inflation has slashed the pur- | 925 per Canadian family. chasing’ power of the Canadian | Suppose you, as a Cana- dollar faster during the Pearson (dian father, had that amount Years than ever before in our | Of insurance to protect your fa- normal: peacetime history since |Mily when the Pearson Years such records are available - over | Started in April 1963. In the chalf_a-centurysc oss pevent...of.yoyr..death,your—fa-- aap ‘wartime, Of Course: erie sory [8 diferent Duras Wort denroed 95 per cent ol it vely_ controlled, and the cost-of., cess. cna is living rose an average of-12 per; She z RLS = i — cent per year. But during World |... and every tae. fF th + War 11, price controls restticted | 555 hic 1 te Piccn 4- the increase-to 3 per cent per Vente But ‘inflation since that date has jada when the Pearson govern- | $1,142. ‘responsible eee! : | “had those —policies “have no ¢-Halists—in--diseases—of-the-nose- ~ Inflation On A Ruinous Basis Fach night, when. you as that average.father kisses your | babies ‘Good night", ; could - and perhaps you should - |say to them: ‘God bless : you - and -God help you, the -Pearson.-government” took =-$t-a- > way from you today!" ~~ Look at if another way. When the Pearson Years start ed, Canadian savings in life insurance provided cover of $58,023,664,000. Inflation during the Pearson Years has des- .troyed. five and one. half _ bil- | lion dollars of that amount. Now. of course, Prime Minist-:. er Pearson does not personal-: dy—run-—-round-—to-every shop }-¥hen--we-listen---to-our-~friends“\~ -ofamily--wvould-stil= coltect=$12:025--" marking “up” the” price tags” each night. But he is the head of the government, hence he is “for - its - policies. merely permitted this wunpre- ‘eedented peacetime inflation, in.many instances they have year over six \years. Then, when controls were lifted, the cost of living soared 13 per cent in each of the next two years. No controls were imposed during | | the Korean War. and living costs | jumped: 10 per cent in one’ 4 professor at Oxford Univer: | | year. ____=___+{sity-came_up_with—some—tigures- * y al- peacetime, our worst inflation | es will outnumber females to | might have been expectec to such an extent within 30 years | occur in the 1926-1929 gold-plat- ed boom; yet living costs. rose. only a total of 3 per cent in al] those four years. CANADA'S LONGEST BOOM | that the practice of polyandry | may have to be-considered in Great Britain. 5 | Polyandry defines the stuation | where one woman has a number | ‘ | | Of husbands or mates at the The present. cyclical . upswing | same time. : | of the economy. which started! Solomon had 700 wives and under the Conservative govern) ever since it has been customary | ment in midsummer 1961. h a8 | for Near East sheikhs to set that been the longest in our history. tarcet for themselves, although Surprisingly, is this quiet |/none has. matched him to date | boom the rise in our cost of liv- | hecayse actively encouraged it: : ; Who's For Polyandry?- = ———— "Regina Lender-Post ~~ thing good going for them by the =year=2000—They'll— beable —_to- pick ‘and choose as never be- fore. With five or six husbands all bringing home pay envelopes and each one vying for her fav- ors, a woman Will be able. to play Solomon in reverse. And she may need some of his wis- dom to keep peace in the family now and then, particularly — if she happens. to be a Flo, and winds up with six Andy Capp of cartoon fame. : All’ in all, the idea gives room for thought but there persists the feeling that the Oxford lec- Fach Child An Individual By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Each child has a personality all his own and it is not always advisable to follow preconceived the late Dr. Abraham Myerson was a young psychiatrist, he felt he had done such a splendid job of rearing his child, he prepar- ed a lecture for parents entitled, “The Ten. Commandments.” When his second son came along the. rules failed to work because the boy was a non-con- formist and Dr. Myerson chang- ed the title o his lecture to “Hints to Parents."’ Then along came little Jane who shattered all his theories and, as a result, he gave up lecturing on child guidance. Personality changes usually | occur when parents fail to. rec- ognize the fact that each child is an individual. When this .impor- tant need “is ‘denied he loses riot only self-confidence in his ability but self-respect as a person. This... may....explain-..why--most child psychologists spend much of their time treating parents: Each youngster should be ac- cepted as an individual. If he is a boy treat him as one and stop bemoaning the fact that a girl was wanted. The opposite also is true Another fault of parents is to ness thus will be avoided and | his activities are channeled | along more pleasurable and pro- ductive lines. On the other hand;-) the inactive or slow youngster | should not. be hurried. Many’ of | these boys and girls accomplish | as much or more than their en- | ergetic counterparts, provided | they can be taught .to persev- | ere. | Children. also differ in their | outward appearance. and those-| who are not particularly attrac- tive may need. greater accep- | yom | adults. tance and love than the hand- i | Some and engaging youngster. Parents also should:realize that | children are not The emotional stability ideas ‘on child psychology. When | compe! a naturally active child | it to remain quiet. It is more sen- | -sible to direct his energies into | fore he took off, rushed back up constructive~*interests: - Restless- | {that sHe needed some kind of vA THE NORTH TODAY. .. : The Mackenzie Delta By Farmer Tissington “+4 | Shirley Jeannes is a young, jattractive nurse from Melbour- jne, Australia. She has never ‘lived in southern Canada, but |for the past several months she has: been in charge of a small nursing station -at Fort McPher- son, 100. miles north of the Arc- tic Circle in the Mackenzie delta. Shirley's major complaint is not that this Peel River com- munity -is- almost entirely de- pendent on float and ski planes for contact with the outside world, but rather with the lack of transportation for herself and her assistant within munity. _A few weeks ago one of her Indian baby patients developed a serious throat condition which demanded immediate attention in the Inuvik hospital. Shirley knew that a charter aircraft was about.to takeoff from .the river, a quarter of a mile-away down a rough, steep road. Ap- propriating a bicycle from a neighbouring’ house, she™ set’ off in frantic haste. to catch the plane before it took off. To her horror she found the bicycle lacked -brakes and she. plunged wildly down the steep hill. But northern nurses, even if they come from far south. Aus- jtralia, are resourcefu) and spc ;managed to halt the bike .before nlunged her into the river She signalled the pilot fust be- the hill to prepare the-baby-for the trip, and carried it back down tothe landing place so tt could be evacuated to hospital. | . So it is perhaps not surprising | that Miss Jeannes lost little | time in telling the Commons’ committee on Northern Affairs | t { } transport, “not next week, next month, but now!" Bureaucracy being what it Is, the. Fort M-- Pherson nurse may be lucky if she gets a motor vehicle some time next year. MPs ARE IMPRESSED. The Australian ‘nurse's exper- ience \s fypical of what a num-,| ber-of young, attractive girls | miniature | are putting up with in our north- |NORTHERN NOTES ern communities. The MPs were | the com: | - Commons’ committee was there ,the pipes carrying steam heat, jand water and carrying away jthe sewage. No other system yweule be practical because’ the area has permafrost to the depth lof 1,000 feet with an active lay . ‘er of between six and eighteen |inches in the summer. | Inuvik was the first commun- ity we had reached on our tour | which boasts its‘own newspaper. | Editor Tom Butters, one of the /town's leading citizens, explains |that the paper’s practical mot- jto is: ‘Today's newspaper is to- |morrow's toilet paper.” _ Main excitement while the ;was the ceremony {inaugurating }a new Canadian National Tele- communications landline, fink. ‘ing Inuvik and —other regional | settlements with the outside. First call was placed between © NWT. commissioner... B.G.. Sive... lertz and prime minister Pear- /son in Ottawa. At a dinner, fol- jlowing the ceremony, CNT was +taken~-to~ task -for~ failing to™iu=""" | clude any native peovle at the jhead. table which was occupied | by Inuvik VIPs and brass hats | from Edmonton. | Some of the visiting MPs were | given a hard time in Inuvik. They jhad spent the afternoon and jearly evening visiting some of the outlying communities -such | as Arctic Red River, Fort “ec- |Pherson and Tuktoyaktuk by light planes. Returning to Irv-~ |vik at 9:30 or 10-at night, wi'Me }out anything. to eat since break | fast or even a chance to wesh and change, they were hustled © off to the homes of ‘local resi- dents. A few of these people were more -interested in detail- ing their complaints and de- |mands for a more comfortable and profitable life in the north than they were. in offering food or drink, or even an invitation to |“use the facilities.”’ But this sort of thoughtless re- ception was, fortunately, rare and. most of the northern hosts’ ’ lived: up -fully to their reputa- tion for friendliness and genere Osity. = Canada's first research. cen- of the grownup comes w'ith4most impressed with the med)- | tre north of the Arctic opened time. These faculties are ac- | cal facilities available in the for business in Inuvik in 1964. It Twill defeat normal development | (quired through guidance_and de- |north. Most of the communities | carries. on. investigation. into..;.. Fvelép as~ the- tot—becomes—in: |-had-modern hospitals: See cosmic_rays, lends its facilit‘es | creasingly independent-and self. | Stations, equal to or better than |to visiting. scientific parties and Overprotectiveness | hospitals in many southern com- ({s conducting a survey of rein- munities. Not all are staffed deer herds -which they hope can with doctors, but the nurses and_| be tripled in number to 30,000 ta nurses’ aides are doing a heroic |provide one and a quarter mil- | ©. A. writes: Do any doctors |Job under’ difficult Seay ee paunes of meat # year from | iali i . ies. | the delta area. paitasia® m__the— treatment _of | ‘The dedicated work of these | -It was strange to walk back te | girls, most of them denied any our well appointed Anglican | sort of normal social life of their “Church hostel at 1:30 in the mor- confident. along this line. eo |= =DR. HAL I, TOSIS~ ~ | REPLY ..._ No, but we sometimes. think s0 heritictze™the™-medical profession [9 for becoming too specialized. Halitosis is within the sphere of the dentists as well as of spec- | iseases of Eskimos aad IJn- | sunset in front ofthe govern- dians — tuberculosis and: res- ment administration ~ buildine piratory diseases of all kinds: < The Mackenzie delta is one of The. greatest__advances are being made in the field of pre- the world and the main source of al tact jnatal_and child care and<an in- | te natives is the-rich muskrat BLOOD BLISTERS |creasing number of Eskimo and / fur take. on ahi ae -ndian. pamen ame making use | (Tomorrow: The Yukon.) : : acilitiesfor check- ups | —~>., ee aee sus esses tiny spots that look like blood [eet she pee The nurses carit Ree AMOUS: oe blisters on various parts of my jthat one of their problems is| BRANDED INSPECTED body. They do not itch or both- finding out which women. -are- -er_me_but-1_was.wondering what: pregnant “pecauise~of -the= loose} ST = Sones ating ciouier they wear. | tt | REPLY | But infant mortality is steadily | $ |_If these lesions come—and—go -decreasine—and—wherever—p0s-*_e fh AWE Va a at -they—probably—a ages sible, mothers having i GANEMS under the skin. Moles are a like- baby or their fifth or more; are | At | 1% 6060000000004 ly possibility if they are per- | sent out to the hospitals in the |_®°*°* bene 22s | eee ene ence BLIND SPOTS jlarger centres. esoereteeteree N T ‘ reilhe a, |THE MODEL TOWN . Ss. oe x writes: Does every- tnuvik. the chief centre of the PURITY DAIRY t one ave temporary :blind spots mMackenzie area, is a model he deiate. Meetar: Purity Products” 317 Kent St. Dial 4.7125 z and throat! and gastro- intestin 2 } ee Evers REPLY « town overlooking a vast area, : 150 miles long and 50 miles We all have a normal blind | wide, dotted with a myriad of | Spot, but not one that comes and |jakes, channels, ponds, rivers goes. Scotoma are areas Of | nq jand. It is only one of three blindness but they are not’ nor- | areas in the north where. Eski- mal. Too much is at stake fo |mo and Indian live together in rely upon the type of opinion we |the same community. can give you by long distance.; A feature of Inuvik’s construc- eeoee ; 3 ; ; % 000004 00 OO 06 8F6O00 00 —____ __ ________ _____ Shop Where Parking Is A Pleasure At - - - own, is help ing..to..make_notable-| ning. as... two--government—em-—--— rogress--in-fichting-the-ade--ald--ployees pulled down the flar~ at" are. _the.richest—“‘ratting... areas. n—. ing has outstripped what was suffered in the big spending spree of the late Twen- ties. The cost of living index rose Diefenbaker government in Ap- ril 1963. But since the arrival of Prime Minister Pearson and his, New Frontier economists,’ it has is on an_ accelerating : Half of it being suffered in the past shattering twelve months Many Canadian bread-win- | ners’ have scraped to put money | aside in life insurance, ‘to pro- vide. a nest egg for their fami- | ly against the tragedy of their own death. But, just like any other dollars, your life insur- ance dollars dwindle in pur- chasing power’ when living costs rise. This is the same ef- fect as a compulsory fremo- val by. the zgovernment-of-.some- Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) OUR YESTERDAYS => (From the Guardian Files) , TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (September 12, 1941) President Roosevelt announc- ed that he has given orders to the navy to shoot first when Axis ‘submarines, surface raid- ers or aircraft are encountered in those areas of the Atlantic. Ocean which’ the United States deems necessary to its defence. Red soldiers, forging ahead through the: centre of the Ger. man lines at a reported rate of seven to ten miles daily, claim- ed fp have inflicted heavy loss- es on the 47th German tank corps, wiping out several arm- ored salients. TEN YEARS AGO. (September 12, 1956) The government plans to intro- duce national hospital insurance legislation at the next session of Parliament and this may. have wide implications for the 1957- | 58 budget, it was learned on high ® authority. Miss Sandra M.. Currie and Miss Janet Matheson of Char- | lottetown were each awarded a $400 Dalhousie University Re- gional Entrance Scholarship. they didn’t have his |turer must be the absent-mind- brassy | risen 9.5 per cent: and this rise | curye, > | staying powers. He also had 300 and had access to money. With the situation changed, if the professor is right, the wom- : {ed professor type. With so many concubines, but he was a king | young males in Britain wearing | Beatle mops, it is quite likely | that he mistook them for femal- | es, and based his predictions on | only two per cent per year from en of Britain will have some- | head count. | mid 1961 up to the defeat of the PUBLIC FORUM OTHERS HAVE RIGHTS Sir.— We have‘ all heard the old adage, ‘There will be wars and rumors of wars.’’ However, our modern soci#ty ,has replaced |this proverb with, ‘There will be strikes and rumors of strikes.’ s Now that our railway strike {s over, although: not to the satis- faction of ell, we seem to have adopted the attitude that every: thing is fine again and apparent: ly very little thought has been Rivento the consumer and pro- ducer who will be directly af- | fected by the proposed legisla- | tion to. remove all restrictions on freight rate increases. A farmer 20 years ago recelv- ed $2.25 for a bushel of wheat | and his'wife paid 10 cents for a | loaf of bread, Today he gets $1.50 to $2.00 for a bushel of wheat and his wife pays 25-27, jcents for a loaf of. bread. In terms of purchasing power, our dollar is worth less than %0 per (cent of its value of a quarter of |} a century ago and when we bor- row monay we have to pay a | higher rate of interest. In an effort to ameliorate this situation, consumers and_ prim- ary producers have organized co-operatives and credit unions. Now these organizations are be- ing -attacked by certain ele- ments and branded as a menace to the economic structure of our country I fully: appreclate the neces- sitv and the justification for Ja , bour to be.well organized and the necessity for large corpor- tions to make a reasonable pro- fit on their investments, buf un- less those In authority also rec- ognize the rights of the consum- er and producer inflation could soon become a very small pro- blem by comparison Fe T am, Sir, ete.. rG Managing Director P.E.1. Credit Union League Ltd. GAUDIN > A SHOCKING ACT Sir, — My knowledge of poll. tics is somewhat vague, to say the least. However, I was under | the impression that political ; Parties in power dealt with mat- | ters of political importance, and not petty acts of vengeance. Conservative government's fi- | termed nothing else. I am refer- Ting.to the renaming of the new Shaw Centre. ee I was shocked to think that this outrageous act on the part of the six-week old Liberal gov- ernment could possibly be so. The economic situation in. this province leaves considerable to be desired and it strikes me that a proud, old political warrior of his greatest moment of glory. This senseless move by Liberal party can have nothing but dire consequences for the | perpetrators. The people of this | bestowed as not one of a politi- cal nature, but rather as a sin- cere thank you for a job. Even Mr. Campbell must admit it was well done. My motive for writing this let- ter is not political; in fact, as /Tegards the recent election of | the Liberal party I say ‘‘they | are in—give them a chance’. | No, my motive is merely to ex- |press one taxpayer’s disgust at |this unnecessary, uncalled for, jand completely shocking act. ‘It has done nothing to enhance the image that the Liberal party | worked so, hard to. establisn. | Walk softly Mr. Campteil, iest \ you rush in where angels fear to | tread: * ‘Tam, Sir, etc, DAVID W. GALLANT Charlottetow» / t Why not consult a reliable eye | specialist? TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— | Dark lenses protect the eyes | from the sun. tion are the utilidors which con- | nect all government-- owned | buildings. These are aluminum- | clad, fibre glass- insulated tun- | nel connections which contain | ROBINSON SUPPLIES LTD. 42 St. Peter’s Road The recent rescission of the | {nal act of legislation can be | the party in power~should--have- ‘much more to do then. deprive | the | |province looked on the honour | | 3 ae | | | | t 1 $SC-170 | Get ‘100 for every %5 gga Buy as little as $10 worth or as much as you like—cashable any time. : eee THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA x Be