The Guardian Covers Prinee Edward laland Like the Dew Ww. J. snant Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor | Editer Published every week dey. morning \except Sun sy and statutory holideys) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.I., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices et Summerside, Montague, Alberton Qnd Souris Represented nétionelly by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Torente 425 Un'versity Ave. _ Empire 3.8894; Montreal 640° Cathcart Street Uni- » Yersity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia tree? Vancouver MA 7037. 5 | Member Canadian Daily Ncdranenec Publishers Association ad The Canedien Press. The Canadian Press is excivsively entitled to the «se for-repub— Jication of alt news/ dispatches’ in this paper redited. to it or to the Assoviated Press or. Reuters -Bne¢ also the loca! news: punlished: herein. All re righ “or repuoticarion of special disoatches—here In-also reserved. ‘Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas Pot serviced by carrier $15.00 » year off Island and -U.K. $20.00 per Year in US. and elsewhere eutside British Com monwealth Not aver 10e s vie copy. Member Audit Bureau of Cireutahion “The strongest “memory is weaker | he “han the. weakest ink" a! PAGE4 - THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 5 Good. Measure . We are off again on another whirl : : ¢ that dizzying spiral of. price-wage creases. Recent increases in the pay s of union members have been fiajor steel companies in the U.S. at they will: have to raise. their rices for ‘steel in-self defence. he price increases for this basic *] {Ingredient of so many of the manufac- ee articles we need in daily life are only around two per cent. For in- stance. one of the steel firms-has just announced a hike of fifteen cents for. : each hundred pounds of cold rolled \ N n ‘the greatest factor-in- persuading the— ¥ 9 . eventually destined get off scot free There may be a postscript next ‘week, says one of the unhappy worm dealers, for about ‘that time the-range of Wiscasset's tides will change and worm digging will be so much easier that the price for picking them will — have to turn downwards. All Above Board It happens all too often that-read- ers, who-come across an item relating that charges have been made against happen.te read the later nes of the “honorable acquittal-of those accused, even though the outcome has been accorded by the press equal prom- inence. It-is in this context: we are“ happy to inform all ‘bridge players that Britain ‘gs, cardplayt. * reputation re-> mains untarnished. A year ago when the world contract bridge champion- ship was being decided at Buenos Aires, there was a tempest in a tea- . pot over the accusation by a par- ticipant that two members of the British team were cheating by pass- ing infornjation back and forth to each, other by a cigarette in a certain way were ~“iNegal signals between the partners. ‘The inquiry that was launched im- mediately by the British Bridge Lea- gue has taken-a year to complete under the personal ‘direction of -Sir John Foster, Conservative member ‘of Parliament and. a celebrated law- yer. It was a probe independent of the trout for whom the worms are means other than - -tegitimate bids:-H-was-suggested_that rubbing the lobe of an ear or holding. OTTAWA REPO Ry wy Medical Browsing. | Radiologists have tried. for \decades to improve the taste of barium that ‘is swallowed for X- ray and ‘fluoroscopic examina-. ‘|tions of the stomach and _intes- tines. The chalk mixture is more palatable than it was, but it js difficult: to get many, dren and some adults to take a second swallow ‘after -tasting -the- first, This is par for the course {because ingested materials are >yevaluated—on—their—merit—e-nd jnot whether ‘they pass a gour- [met test; Dr. Roscoe E. Miller of Indi- ana University ~Medical > center improves the taste-by. adding a good suspending agent that can be flavored to suit. the indivi- dual. Children liké sweets.so Dr. Miller adds raspberry, ‘ orange, “lor sweet cherry to the product |Adults are partial to sirups of }eocoa, ee cherry, o.angé }and sarsaparilla. Many prefer- ired citrie acid ang: aromatic. si- ‘yup of eriodictysn—- a taste dis-’ | guiser. > An instant flavor such as. Kool- ‘aid can be: added just \the barium is cousumed. Anoth- jer. alternate is to.add a combin- |ation of flavors along with van- ‘illa. Peppermint, lime, apricot, Jor citric acid sharpens the taste ‘of thé barium A.word of wa N ning: Don't ex- pect’ the roentgénologist to per- +mit—sampling—of the different mixtures at the barium. bar ‘prior to the X-ray. : Mittelschmerz is a Geranan. term meaning middie pains; We )still use the expression possibiy jbecause a better substitute has | not been found . Midway in the menstrual pe- THOSE LAZY | HAZY eee DAYS OF SUMMER | iriod, the- ovum: ruptures from ithe ovary and begins ‘its. trip | down the tubes and‘into the ut erus for fertilization, The break- through. begins suddenly usually * producing mild abdominat dis- \.. steel it sells to manufacturers. There \ are similar increases coming for ‘tinplate and for str steel. = n the face of it, the-increase |s not much, but it does work. out to three dollars a ton. But this ‘is a oe e to start Taising other pric “igarn, for example, right away th a the. automobile» anufacturers going\to have to; fgetialiy no \ doubt. put up the price list of the ‘1.967 ee it is a\reasonable =, gRumntion that it is going. te- be ~ somewhat. more ‘than the six-dollar iricrease an oN ices now cen other-in- ents like _ minum. 1 Seopper;- ory ad glass will add to ‘tie pre i the way it. \ in the = SS price gmobile the Se _ are Spingsta throw ti xe title more Tor good measure. NS There is no need, of C se ee “single out the automobile ‘ma Manufacturers of ‘other. articles DHL l find ak -much~‘or more. ingenuity in. jacking ap tie Price tags “tor Te- _ frigerators bicycles, pots 4 Pp __merchandise that ¢ les tous i % in steel goritainers. xe As the prices go up forauch % con- sumer goods, it will work a rdship~. on. the people who buy them, i SS volved in‘a couple of tan ; of steel. po Se nt higher ' | d- {ng thecunion members who Sena ‘the process by demanding higher ~ wages. The resulting higher prices will prompt them to declare that they just cannot get along on the take home pay now available to them. Be; -eause the prices for everything have __' gone up they will just have to have -more money in their pay envelopes -and they will threaten to strike -uniessthey_are successful, and they. usually are. .- -Worm Will Turn ' There was a time when going fish- ing’ was @ way to escape the world and its worries for an hour or so, but : at least in one part of Maine, labor / troubles have now beset the time t honored sport. . Ps It appears that urban fishermen of : today in most cases .have no back | garden in which to dig -for worms. : Apartment dwellers seldom have even | { | | _- @ lawn or nearby park greenery from’. - which to pluck. night crawlers by - - . flashlight. In these circumstances they have to buy thelr fishing worms “from ‘small hovs or from the well organized commercial dealers in iwrigglers wae A strike hit the mud flats at Wis- -casset.. Me. earlier this week. There . were close fo a hundred men-digging ~ But “by. then Ke istired an craft 3 is creaking ‘from_the effort. TASS ‘the British Bridge League, and its. players, — “Terence Reese and Lou Schapiro, . |_ report exonerates the from any suggestion ‘of cheating. ~The bridge world no doubt willbe | glad te. accept the. verdict, but one cannot .escape the feeling that it~ might have been better to submit the. “evidence to an international jury, ady as every body is to acquiesce in the Mindings of a panel of English- men. Probably they would be - less lenient . than__any-- other tribunal, — under the citeumstances. ze Confounding. Confusion We. think by now should be * 1 ‘abuiidantly clear to even Gjty Council, \ members that the system or raffic they. -all syed along - the two st “important blocks on Queen Street ha degenerated intoNittle more | than a traffiedistress area. — Motorists who have ‘to: drive up ueen. Street\have been sending out an 30.5. for sometime, but’ apparent: ly there is no ship ef state standing _| by to rescue them. When 1 a driver on Richmond Street puts the wheel hard Re Nex has Ls stoves, Melevision “sets, oft traffic and even. | akan along buck overwhelming waves | nefore _ fourse. Then. se fi a winds, ta océasionally ~ Savohd backing. into the steam: Nal _Jucky finally manazessto tr comparative haven of the “raft harbor. ing stead of. staying.uptown to ‘buy some: thing from. the merchants, al he wants to do then is make port safely and set foot on Taind once more. So he goes:-home without ‘the _purchase he ‘intended to make and< his shart “THubert. Badanai, Liberal MP for Fort William and chairman of the important commitiee on Northern Affairs and National- Resources; writes today’s Guest ‘Column: - ; F am. grateful to my good féiend Patrick Nicholson for the invitation, which. I- have also had the pleasuze of receiving in * past years, of writing a gueat | fers the opportunity > say something about the.Parlia- “mentary Committee” on” Nortn-— | Policy |_-~These N practical revelations of the ex- *eolumn for the readers which of= | ta me to -ernAffairs and National . Re- -sources.of- which: T. am. Chair- man. eee -During the _past “two months, quently sitting .to hear witnesses ~eoncerning ~ the administration + of the Yukon and Northwest.Ter- | ritories arid the ‘National Parks mediings have been - nt of our great responsibilities } “the proper. development of our pansy in the North where” lies one moe and a half square m land and water, in | furs and fish, 1 vast territory, | could put almost the whole of | Europe. evenNmanages to~ f inches / “Seentury wilh. betone f rich in sere hes of mineral, with, less than 40 living. in this into whteh you thousand people As we approach the beginning © of the sécond century since Con- ‘federation. & great deal more about the Nortinand northern de- velopment will hesheard. e development of the area the 49th parallel received the attention of our Canadian other vessels. pioneers in\the first century “of_ { north: of 60. | NORTH WILL PROSPER | Weshaven the sceptical” ‘Anton journey was. extended in time to a. our Canadiana. who refoses sto long vovage full. of Queen ‘Street frustrations and with no, ‘shipboard ‘ romance to’ tonsole him. ‘EDITORIAL NOTES Parliament Hill has had a record 413,013 visitors so far Build a better scandal and the world will beat a path to your door. ea The Chinese are reported taking part in mass swimming programs to improve the national physique. Leave it to the Communists to take the fun out of things. ae e+e Leaning i Discussing the decision of the New York.Central Railroad to abandon long-haul passenger runs, Pierre Bretey. * " are expensive ta operate. v) gandwotms from the flats" The worm dealers..paid them “$1.65 for every hnudred worms. they turned in. But this \as not enough. said’ ‘the worm » » barvesters, rubbing sore backs. The.‘ oe walkout. however, has-been: settled for.a new pay scale of $1.90 for a hundred worms, and so the men are hack on, the shovel job. There is no intication. what the “anxibus fisher-~ met fave to Jay out for a can of worms. but.since such increases are | “ alwavs passed along to the consumer jtshould be*artrefty inerease. At least’ An overnight train from New: York tn Chicago requires: from 12 to 16- ‘sleeping cars There is a crew of six men with five-or-six-crew- changes: ceneral- That means a total of from 25 to 30. days’ wages per trip. Also, each. train had a Pullman. conductor end each car’a porter. And, diner service re- quired expensive equipment plus 10 to 12.men.. . a All that ran up costs to such an ex., tent the railroad. was gasping for in- ' -eome. -So mahy people like to sveial: by. -train In spite of this desire. the pail: roads are cutting’ passenger setvice more and more. this vear. railway analyst, -says trains | | rate is the faite ia year, ° “tonsider the North as ab area with afuture. faith ° m, the eventual ~ ~develop- oment of his vast storehouse - of rishes. awaititg willing hands and Seu hearty, | remains un-> ' shaken For the PAS, few vears, the de- velopment nore. of the 60th pa- rallel has heen™ Rcel ving far greater attention tN at other period since the first. white ~ Man set foot on. this north rn part of the.North Amerjean Cot. Sver modest tourist homes. pave. ists. | tinent. and “wall continue with > greater emphasis on the expan- | sion.of a dynamic -economy. should dike to point out ua une | prance i cai aicaaiiasi asian _ Our Yesterday S$ «From -The Guardian rie TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO (August 11, 1941). A major shakeup in “the Tur- $ kis h Government was rumored ; ih political quarters, -with For- wign Minister Shkru Saracoglu regarded as a probably choice to succeed Premier Refik Say- dam. herself. on “fatt footing nied the mohbtivation--act--white— her Xeturning minister to Wash- ington bluntly counseled his people that the United States ts . prepared and- determined’ | te meet the worst eventualities”’ Japan put ,economic war TEN YEARS AGO (Sugust 11, 1956) Marilyn Bell, in the toughest LC swim-"assignment. of her) young fareer, Tailed to. conquer the _ Strait of Juan ‘de Fuca. : i | The Rank of. Canada annoine- ed ‘hat it» interest rate, has jheen increased one-quarter of one per cent to 34 per cent, -*-g record The increase. -in the _this -Committee< has been fre-. -a habit My~ * any™ I+ til recently, when thinking scout economic development in. the: North, one thought of mining -as the principal activity. Until the ‘development of -the lead and zine mine.at Pine Point, just a jmile off the shore of Great Slave | ‘Lake, the principal mineral min ‘ed in the North was gold. How Fever, the advent of the opera- ition at Pine Point, which has a mous Steep Rock Iron Mines in mous Steep Rock Iron=Mines ‘ Northwestern 9ntario, has Changed the entire complex —ef~ the mining. industry in the North- west Territories. NORTH’S RICH YIELD _ Arthur Laing: Minister ‘of: Nor- lthern Affairs and National Re -sources, in-a report-to the Com-. mittee, made the statement that in 1964 the total: production of | minerals in the Northwest Terri tories was approximately 20. mil ition dollars, Only one year. later the mineral production rose to (72 million dollars,, and !t is con- servatively estimated that this: year the mineral production in the area, apart from the Yukon, will rise to 100 million dollars. .¢ The same story applies-to the Yukon territory where. new as- bestos mines and copper mines. are developing at a much faster rate than had been. anticipated ris few short years ago. The larg est silver mine in Canada is also | in the Nukon-at Keno Hill whieh employs a roximately 700 peo ple: 5 A- railway was built in Grim- shaw, Alberta, te Pine Point at a cost of 87 million dollars. Very To another type of wolf, he gave more attention, the equally predatory type “which plans p the pocket books. visting Monicgnl e time, since prospec: tive visitors Spegan making rex servaliansss <the ‘centennial event, it ‘hasheen- “innkeepers weres.dete -takeas hig a sticecas “out. of the money Yodtityon event an i Ss According to Mr. “tooms which rented . foFsas little as $10 were now ing 9 d for as mucn_as $50. Me NN rich fron ore deposits ‘on Baffin | | and extensive explorations are ‘that within ten or fifteen years, ‘millions of barrels of oil ‘come fromthe North for both do | ‘delta: There are forests too, -to— ‘operating successfully in a wave _in the North, which would con- sist of Government on the understanding » that tlers would remain. there for a those accepting the invitation to years would prefer to ‘stay and and of the midnight Sun, parent that - ane Re chains of success forthe ela- bes. borate Big or the appeal. the . tress and often on the, right side. In some the pain may be ilasting a few hours or. as long | as three days--The area is ten- der to the touch and the condition ‘ig easily mistaken for appendic- | itis :when accompanied by nau- sea or loss -of- appetite. Distress is. more pronounced when the ovary bleeds becatise blood irri- ‘tates the lining of the abdominal | cabity. - CRUTCH FOR DIETING. R. GE. writes) When some- one is attepting to lose weight do. you recommend an medication to achieve this qoal” REPLY Many persons are -strong_will- ed. and can_reduce their food “in: | ‘take without. and tapsules. Most of-these pro- | ducts-are stimulants and. may ‘Nead~to jitteriness and interfere with” sleep. tn_addition, their—ef- fect upon the appetite is “lem- porary.- = HYSTERECTOMY ,» AFTEREFFECTS M. 8. writes: One month ago T had a complete hy sterectomy. , I am 46 years old and would like to know what to expect af- ‘ter this.type of surgery. Are there any after effects for which | I should watch? - REPLY. :. ‘No. You may develop hot flashes but these are easily con- trolled with estrogens LOOK: ELSEWHERE Island is now under exploration | Another extremely rich iron. ore body has been discovered by the Crest Exploration Company in ithe Yukon-and development is underway. The production of* crude petro- ‘leum. and natural.gas is present: | ly centered: at~Norman Wells where the Imperial Oil Company © owns’ and operates a —refinery, | ‘taking place in several areas in the Arctic. And it is expected _ will mestic use and expert. - ~The vast expanses: of — the North are not. all barren.and say nothing 6f_fish and furs. The delicious Arctic Char comes from. the fisheries of the , North; Whale and sea fisheries | and a variety of enterprises are | of expansion. Ss Our North fs anything but a forbidding wasteland. What ‘the North needs is mare -people. 1 have advocated an immigration policy especially designed to at- tract immigrants for settlement assistance set- of at least five years. And Mrs. P.G~ writes: Could gall- hages rennet ahi moll of stones lead ic, CactionpeMt, This -s most unlikely but there is an outside possibility because | : vy disturbance of the gastro- | nte Astinal tract may affect anoth- las *nart of the digestive system ‘through reflex changes. go North, after a few short prosper in this riéh, fascinating ; “ar history, a as this widen- pe IT’S SAFE erscuvier north On eae ~ Kinds: Of Wolves Roam ' Mrs. B.K. writes: Is It safe to | als, ands settlements spered |; Toronto. Telegram. - ray halle write? “! on the praines, it was a i : . | of great achievement rien te Quebec's new Minister of | raised their. tates to luxury hotel _ REPLY > immigrant policy -at “Tourism has decided to get levels. i Yes. The menopause affects beginning of century tongh with tne-wolves:~ The new minister has decided chiefly the autonomic nervous — mossible. If Sir “Wilfred In order to control theturry, to put teeth into legistation that system and in this respect w:ll- often quoted prediction Taveningstype of wolf, Mr. ~Ga- would keep lodging PreRe. vn-- not increase the risk of surgery that the, 208 century belongs ‘to briel Loubier_ announced last. der control. TODAY'S. HEALTH HINT— Canatia Wal remity, then we can™ week that a bonnty would be gi- , “He is wise in taking this deeic _ Painful feet can ruin the dis-) reasonably ‘assume, hat the 2ist verte those who contributed to sionunpopular as it will be position = Canada | the eecissatien a thexpacks. with tie innkeepers who, ‘even ‘NOTE: All correspondence to Dr Van Dellen should be addresse>~to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen.~co * Chicago Trib. { wae. Chicago, Le in normal gears, profit consid- erably from the tourist traffic in La Belle Province. ~Profiteering on an. extrava- gant.scale could not ‘only mar | the fortunes of Expo ‘67 but of | [LAseR PRODUCES® LIGHT Montreal 7 the province He A laser is a device which. BID gelt. ices an intense, sharply con: | Ese big Hotels which depend ‘centrated beam of light, which i ar-round yeatto-year cus- imay be.a billion times brighter ‘an ve not soughtto pro- than sunlight. fiteer. Butsthe smaller “places | ae have set theirsights on a kill: ~ hg: Mr. Loubierdoes not want. < ee these places kill the 7 province , sc regular tour, “ s Poraitire- - RS SAX “* Televisions ; im ‘Steam Plow Museut ms Piece * “Appliances ~~ Limited = Walter Mal-8ta eS FIRESTONE S Established 1872 ee ‘ ord te a ews ston of sieel ea ae 5 attached Olfices: $7 Lower Queew St. HPO West Germany, stha! re. ims ‘ 4 : -Home and Auto. | ate . CHARLOTTETOWN Se bl team-plouzhs Iwas an awkward an un- | ~ x Ante a teaey is a saat Ra gainly ‘procedure whic requir- aH alsonat Summerside — Moatarue — Atherton the hest of our. know:edge, none at leastMive men. The steam | ) ee e SG “The O14 Reliable”. of these cumbersome: machines eqvipment ne@ded two tons ee ee ever were used in Nova Scotia but it fs interesting to-note the passing of a device which, in its hevday, ereated a technical re- volution In the field of agricul- ture and farming. Max Byth, a. German, and an Englishman, John Fowler, were responsible for the development ~nft--the-~-steam-powered._ploughs. ‘Bysthe beginning of the” present century, the invention was ‘in use. in areas as far apart as Si- heria, Egypt and America Those familiar with. the equip- ment were able to do twice as | much plowiag in a'day a% is cur- ‘rently ics ais by thei tractors. — To plough a field, cessary-to have two of ton monsters. The two machines ‘were placed at either end of the ‘area to be ‘workéd and “at © diss tances of up, to 5450 yards apart They then -pulled a five-ton It wae ne _ \Dlough -back and forth by meaps the. 22- coal avday to keep the hollera’ hot and, Oe scourse, of water weré:necessar\ The: mere actof movin engines from one siteto anot Was difficult and expensive. N Development of the Writernal | combustion engine doomed ~ steam-plough. which now will remembered only as a step, al. ~ heitanimportant-one; in man bd — technological development. Tractors have succeeded it in Europe, just. as in Nova Sco- tia_they have taken the places; widely, of the horses and the ox- en whichprovided the. strength. | 'to break up the land and prepare it for farming. RE LEASE “CONVICTS | ISTANBUL tReuters}—About 50,000. Turkish prisoners will be released from jail under an am- nesty signed: Monday by Pres- ~ ident Evdet Sunday. Under. the : ® amnesty 41 ‘convicted murder- ’ ers will have their death sent- “The current “school y ear, ning to. reopen _ vacation of three daring the S eeeh of A : wo: . ys ences: changed to tife imprison- 4 Airgust 9, 1966 - meat. ee © es ge oe ‘ « . ‘| By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | chil- | oétore | resorting -to pills-j. Library users . everywhere may well be concerned about the action of the County Council ‘of West Suffolk, England. The council has approved an ordin- ance making it an offense to go to sleep while reading in a li- brary. If convicted, the dozing reader may be charged a fine up to five pounds ($14)+’ In adopting this by-law, the ing to-act in the interest of cul- ture, byt some liberty-loving Bri- tons have raised their voices in proveet: We commend their spir- | af “This savage legislation spoils the work of learned writers who have spent sleepless vigils writ- ing ks to send their readers reporter of the Time. His sur- vey of university librariaas turn- shared his view. ; . “No Dozin ‘Christian Science }county board was no doubt try- | g sir" menace to the books than a , wale ing one,” commented the librare “The modern reader regards the stuff in a great library as being there solely for his use. and not for posterity.’ fYou. could hear him adding his tsk, tsk and shake ing his head as he gave some of his book-centered colleagues mt little thrust.) At the greal Bodleian Library officials said they dest with these offenders. gently. ."‘We wouldn't like it.if they were snor-— jing.’ ‘said a staff member wit® . | understandable moderation. | We agree that first offenders | should be treated kindly, per- haps: with a poke and a rebuke. to sleep," writes an irate ‘staff |The next move could be to insist that persistent dozers switch to lighter literature. Or -perhaps ed_up a number of persons who | the answer would: be. a dozing | room. for those. who find. the li- A slooning reader is less of a ‘| brary so delightfully relaxing. Taking away the $500 winter jhome building bonus 1s not like- ly to seriously cut back construc- \tion for the-rest of this year. Its |place as an incentive to keep |building going during the winter months—has—been. taken-over—by mortgages. Speculative Central _Mortgage and Housing Corpora- ition loans will be available from. August 1 to December 31 on the same conditions as last winter's bonus arrangement. Under the terms, the house must not have progressed beyond the founda- |tion and first floor jvist stage by November 1. The government ts thus clos- | ing-one inflation door while open- ing another, says The Gue!ph | Mercury. It had closed the spec- wative building loan door in ‘January of-this year- Its reopen- ing permits winter construction: ‘ing the builders | Cavers | Rey could do during. the bonus period. They mastered-the teeh- ‘niques. of - winter- ‘uilding- and |will be able to carry on in this \fashion-rather than reverting to ithe- old pattérn. of laying off. dur- ‘ing the winter monits, Home Building Funds Oshawa. Times « 5 . 2 The major problem confront | ing-builders is a probably furth: er cut back. on the part ‘of con- ventional. and NHA lenders, Tre - government. says. it will approve as-many €MHC loans: th yer: hevaud: last year's tending for the. first six months of this year. ‘To come out even it will 1ave-t# ‘government will cut its loans -from--the roughly 27,000 approved in the last half of last year to about 22,500 in the current — six-month period, Coupling a CMHC ‘loans cut back with an anticipated contin ued tightening in the convention- ,al_field could, some experts pre- dict, drop home construction 2% per cent-below last~ year.. The: point is made by The Mercury that_a drastic -reduction is~not hecause of ‘the extra competi- tion it, creates for” available homes. It looks nowas if the be forced te open. the MHC door a crack wi- der this yéar than had been .ia- tended: ~The Lag In Wagés ‘Hoste Gleaner The Ecoriomie Council <of Can- ; ada's report onthe — nation's- wage levels confirms. the deplor- able fact that the Atlantic area- lags behind the rest of Canada ‘in average —income—by~-more- jthan a third. i The report provides striking statistical proof, and-by the. fe- ‘deral government itself. that no thing is being done to bring the Atiantie—Provinces—to- national parity: eee The “report; summarized. on ihe adjoining page. ‘gives -signl- ficant stati Th be vie atlcs, The average At jeither pu blte-or private capi+ nual earned {ncome: per person ‘in Ctmada is $1,312. But in the | Atlantic area, it is a mere $863,- just 65.8 per cent of the national figure. Ontario has a booming $1.543: British Celumbla is close behind with $1.483; the Prairies show - $1,302, and ‘Quebec, which also lags behind ‘the rest... still bas an average income of. $1,- The report finds that the eco-. nomic gap -has — existed... with .— barely any variation. for at least , forty years. And it examines some of the factors responsible for the gap. These include hign junemployment: rates, fewer. peo- iple in the working-age - group, lower levels of education, severe seasonal fluctuations, an unfa+ vourable ratio . of primary to iin-Canada. “swer, a larger proportion of people i® reat non- \-farming areas The report says that "some thing basic’ must <be found corfect the disparity betweca- the--Atlantie- inces andthe rest of the country. We have baen saying this for yeafs. contention has always heen that= ithe natural resources of the re-- gion, particularly our undevel- \oped water resources,-are more than ‘adeqiiate to_sustain as high a standard ofjiving as anywhere But-never has ther been an adequate investment of - ‘tal here to bring about the devel- - opment of our resources. | Massive investment is the an- massive’ federal invest- ment which will be the primer for massive private investment. But nothing adequate or real- istic is being done by Ottawa. The report of its own Economie Council proves this. Out of its own mouth the federal govern ment is condemned. cee PL ANS STATE VISIT “MANILA (AP) Philippine President Ferdinand FE. Mareos |announced Tuesday he will-pay \a State visit to the United States next month. He said he is tenta- ‘tively scheduled to visit Waste MAKE TIME TO ATTEND id CROSS BLOOD DONOR CLINICS “ TODAY - —,AUGUST 11th. Cardigan Legion — 3-5 P.M. “Montagtie Legion — 2-10 P.M. AT LEAST 1080 DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED THIS WEEK — RE ONE AND SAVE A LIFE! 14-16. ington Sept. sash WW hg “FOR ALL ian of Cambridge University, » a te _ Outre — ~ Minister of Feduce ann schooktextbooke, will he ees for Gi red. t to. fatilitate the di ir schoola on ig ie eh! ~ Se are few requested o-KEOpen omanay Rad and Superintendents of Schools as to YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS PHONE 894-6567 _HYNDMAN. & co Fire, Life, Marine, Rite ‘and Guarantee Reads .of ~~ ~ . Re, “ canon a anounced that a “Rysterfi of” tree istribution ee distriets Ps so thatthex. ri have a fall FO weeks: : te th textbooks from several SpaBietabata : gust? School hoards ine “he oa the