“c= Vee me = PE AE ET abe: snemnennenee ee ment generally. Braneh offices et Su mmerside, Montague, Alberton - formation on their past conduct, Mr. ‘but, he wished he could. Perhaps, he —_was-what. the Prime Covers Prince Edvard Island like The Dew ° W. J: Hancex, Publisher Wallace’ Ward Frank Walker Maneging Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and ‘statutery holidays). at 165 Prince Street, | Charlottetown, P:E:t-by Thomson Newspapers Ltd and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertisina Services: Torontd 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894, Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 65942, Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street. Vancouver MA 7037 ‘Member* Canadian, Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian:Press. The Canadian Presy is exctusively entitied to the vse fot repub- lication of ‘all. news dispatches in this paper | eredited to it.or te the Associated Press or Reuters and also thecloca! news published herein All fight or republication of special dismatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c_ per week’ by carrier. $12.00 » vear by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier $15.00 2» year off Island end U.K. $20.00. per year in US. and elsewhere outside British Com- | monwealth a Nat ever Ye angle copy: | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation | ’ PAGE 4 THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1966. Still Unexplained In his statement in the Commons | on Tuesday denying that he had asked the RCMP .to investigate the priv ate lives of MPs or give him’ in- Pearson was quoted as. saving. that “the rules of procedure and his own principles prevented” him discussing the testimony given at the Munsinger inquiry’ by Commissioner McClellan; added. the occasion will arise later. _The Prime Minister was also quoted as saving that the press and ‘Opposi- tion had placed “an interpretation on the testimony that went far beyond the testimony.” What the press had reported and commented on was the statement given under oath by RCMP Commis- © sioner. McClellan: that. Mr...Pearson. had asked him, back in November 1964, whether the RCMP had any in- formation indicating ‘any improprie- ty or anything of a scandalous nature involving any MP in any party-over the last 10 years.” This, in effect, . Tee price indez, was $28.40. This left actual income, of $26.80. Supposing that the bondholder paid income tax at 25 per cent, the tax on the bond's $55 interest was $13.17. Thus, with- out spending any. of his principal, he is left with $12.85 actual income from his $1,000. 2 | . Governments are often accused of secretly welcoming inflation of this sort since in the long term the bur- - detfof debt: is greatly eased. The bondholder, like the ultimate con- sumer whose fate is underlined in the consumer price index, is likely to ‘suspect™the truth of the accusation. Both are the unwilling and hapless victims of trends which. may affect | them months and even years hence. Only the bondholder gets a double dose, his investment being slashed in value while ordinary prices rise. Wages, profits and the rate of in- vestment are factors which have their role in “inducing inflationary trends. As the Toronto firm suggests, many factors are responsible for fixing in- ; One of them, undoubtedly, is the dawning realization of the investor about what is happening to his bond holdings. ie It-is not only federal bonds that “are affected by the argument but bonds issued by all levels of govern- ment, as well as by corporations— and not forgetting preferred stocks and savings accounts, All these repre- trolled inflation policy undercuts. The investment house suggests one protection for the public savings would be to make bonds payable in “constant” dollars so that, if inflation caused the buying power of the term of the loan, the owner of a $1,000 bond would get~back $1,250. ' Jowed to deduct his loss of principal due to inflation from the taxable in- come from all fixed return securities and savings. - dollar to shrink 25 per cent cver the ~ As an immediate reform it is pro-. . posed the bondholder should be al- . terest-rates as high-as-they-are today:;—} | sent fixed returns which even a £0n- | | OTTAWA REPORT By “APRIL FOOL COMES AT THE WRONG TIME Patrick Nicholson r “More Than “Free Thought" Involved Here The need to protect the listen- fern. of ridicule of the establish nto the bag and inhales the eva- . the , small. Competitive Sport Events. By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien. What. competitive sports are most dangerous? Automobile 150 fatalities during the five- | 1964 according to a survey by the Metropolitan Life Insurance company. One-third of these oc- curred in stock car and one-fifth in sports car racing..There ; were. 148 deaths from football in _|thi€ period. It is estimated: that 75,000 drivers participate in. var- lous types of races each year. In contrast: 600,000 high school,.and 66,000 “college ‘students played | football. During _ the acs mentioned above eight jockeys, 20 -boxers, and 25 Motorcycle racers were killed in competition. Baseball |no fatalities even though mil- annually. More and more Americans are participating cording to Dr. E.K.. Koiwai of Hahnemann Medical college in Philadelphia, Kodokan judo was rure -that:-was —safe;--sound, | enjoyable for anyone. first is stressed. But despite the best intentions” minor injuries such as bruises, | abrasions, contusions, sprains, and black and blue marks oc- cur. Dr. Koiwai consulted the | U.S. Judo federation and found that only 70 major injuries had been reported during. the past four years. There were 21 frac- j tures and 27 dislocations. The re- | mainder were severe contusions, sprains, torn knee cartilages, etc. Fifty seven of the serious | mishaps resulted from {mprop- er throwing techniques~-The -or- ganization is trying to deter- mine why the: injuries occurred. To date, impropgr technique and > mat rea loom as | good possibilities. The number of injuries. is neg- | ligible- considering that 200,000 participate in judo. Of 50 to 70 | thousand. marines_ instructed in| | judo in Parris Island, there was jonly-one broken leg. The sport Safety racing accounted for more’ than | « Signs Of Stress At The Top By Arch MacKenzie a Canadian Presa Staff, Washington The latest dropouts from ‘the Defence Secretary Cyrus Vance | ‘United States power apparatus | and a presidential aide, Bill | indieate an unprecedented, con | Moyers, are the had core of sumption of manpower. ' the establishment.” President Johnson is losing his’ Both ° McNamara | and Rusk year period from. 1960 through | is one of the safest, there were | lions of boys and girls compete | in judo. Ac- | founded originally as a proced-— and 4 : er against the intrusion of the ed symbols of Canadianism and persona] beliefs and preferen- |Canadian family life. ces of interviewers and editors A very senior civil servant, on public affairs programs may | whose educational and _intellec- be at the heart of the conflict | tual qualifications certain!: which has rocked our national |match those of supporters of ‘broadcasting system. ; “Seven Days’, commented to When‘ the CBC decided not te |me that the producers of tha new the contracts of. two. pro- pudiated on Tuesday, when he denied having asked for information on the past conduct of members of Parlia- “we tind ttodd-thataf-his-principies=+= Nuclear Weapon Check The United States has developed -new device in the nuclear field cs -eould---be-of.-far-reaching .im- . , me ferent light. But. this-denial was- not himself. - by Creditiste House Leader Gilles - government bond through 1965. “the current rate of 5.5 per-cent. This prevented Mr. Pearson from discus- sing the-testimony of the police com- missioner when the non-confidence motion -based on this testimony was ‘being debated, his principles never- theless allowed him to smear the press as well as the Opposition by in- sinuating that they had distorted the testimony for their own purposes. We suggest that the testimony as quoted was open to no other interpre- tation than that the Prime Minister — was snooping for all the scandal he could get. His denial that he made the statement, of course, is another thing. House as putting his motives in a dif- forthcoming until four , days - after _ of trouble in the future. Its purpose is to check whether. international for nuclear weapons are being kept. William C. Foster, chief American delegate to the Geneva disarmament conference, told of a“‘safing tape” in a tube which can be passed through a nuclear reactor. -Inspectiontearhs can collect the tube and tests would “show whether nuclear materials had | been changed clandestinely. The Russians immediately charg- ed that this was a-‘spy device’; which matic spy controlled internationally _to_make sure. that_all_concerned_are | living up to their agreements. The’ Commissioner McClellan’s testimony had been made public and called to the Prime Minister’s attention in Parliament. The fact that it gave rise, in the meantime, to widespread ex- . pressions of indignation was the fault neither of the press nor of the Op- position, but plainly of Mr. Pearson The situation was well summed up‘ Russians countered with. a proposal that all nuclear weapons be destroyed | —-but without verification. They pro- fess to be puzzled at why other nations Won't take their word about | disarmament. But the fact is that | no nation can afford to. take another's in a matter of this kind. Without veri- fication of-agreements, there is no hope of achieving disarmament. This is where the new gadget may Gregoire when he said, in accepting “the Prime Minister's version of the affai:, that it contradicted the. testi- mony by Commissioner McClellan. “One ‘of the two expressed himself poorly or did not tell the whole truth,” he said. ‘They cannot: both remain in office.”’ He added that Mr. Pearson had a duty to-resign-or—dis-—; miss the commissioner; there was ‘‘no other alternative.” Not even the alternative of “blam- ing the press,”’ which of course would _ save a lot of embarrassment if only the public would swallow it! Hit Both Ways The federal government has a long established policy of encouraging in- vestment in Canadian stocks. It does this by allowing a tax credit of 20 per cent of net dividends received from Canadian taxable companies, But the savings of, Canadian bond buyers are surely no less important to the national economy. What happens to them when-inflation hits the coun- try? A Toronto investment firm has ad- dressed an open letter to Finance: Minister Mitchell Sharp on this sub- ject, citing figures which are of ,in- terest and concern to every. govern- ment bond holder. They relate to the case of a person who owned a $1,000 at ‘ offered the purchaser $55 in interest. “Rut the deerease in value of his $1,000 bond during the year. result- ing from the rise in«the consumer he helpful. And certainly it. hasn't | come before time. Five:nations can produce nuclear weapons today; there may be 10 or more in another decade: | And.we are reaching toward devices, which, as Foster said, may have death dealing potential “the world has fortunately not experienced.’ The the better: |. EDITORIAL NOTES Census takers will be abroad ‘this” '- month, making an interim check on | the population, merchandising estab- lishments, and farm assets. Popula-. tion counts have been taken | only once every ten years, the last one fal- ling in 1961. But officials at Ottawa have decided that a five-year check will be adv antageous. | _ * » @ ’ will soon be in full swing, Perhaps | this is as good atime as any to reflect _on the moral pointed up in a post- "election story from Newport, Tennes- see, as told in an Associated Press dispatch. The defeated candidate in a recent Republican. primary inserted an advertisement in the local paper to thank the people who had voted for him. Nothing unusual about that. of course. But just helow the ad was a Similar ‘one, signed by the can- | didate’s. wife. If too began with | “Thanks’-and it went on to say: “I | want to thank the voters of Cocke | County for not voting for my husband. Now that he is mut of politics I may be ahle to get him in*church.” portance—in—keeping—the—world—out— agreements:on, production of material». “Tt was accepted by a majority of the | of course it is, in-a way. It's an auto~| even” j more-_.safety..checks-we-can—devise—, Our provincial election campaign | | program assert the right of the ” y carries the stigma of being dan- erating woivent A commonly i but statistics show that | breath, this gives a feeling of | it is among the safest. rlation and well-being, like the BLOATED first sniff of the . anaesthetic, | V. E. writes:'I get such a feel- ether. Continued deep breath- |ink of pressure over my abdom- ing however has the effect of-en——-en after T eat T have to‘take off tirely separating the mind from |my girdle. I have a slight gall reality; in the :wor rt adder condition. Do you think rds of a doc- | 12th and 13th personal assistants | have been on the job since 1960 -—-he has about a dozen—since | taking office in November, Thomas Mann, No. 3 in the state department, has resigned | on health grounds and George | Ball, No. 2, is believed to, have | submitted his resignation after |.five years on the hot, seat. This does not mean the gov- “ernment is collapsing, some of | | the attrition simply reflects the transition from the late. presi- dent Kennedy's New Frontier to the Great Society of President Johnson, But there is no doubt. a hard- driving, tireless and often-iras- | cible president, combined with | world events and domestic prob- | rems spell unprecedented physi- cal and mental pressures for the men at or near thé top. Rarely if ever before in the U.S. have. the levers of the | | Power structure been concen- trated in so few-hands or. man- ipulated so busily, WORK-LONG. DAY ~ | President Johnson's band of | helpevs consider routine a work week of six days 12 to 16 hours daily: with a. half-day thravwan. in frequently Sundays. ua State - department — can equat that pace depending on just what part of the globe is me ntly erupting. the third year of. the .John- a reign,.the president: Secre- 1963, | “and visit at least without Haars to thrive on more work, However, theve have ben signs of stress as when McNamara recently snapped angrily at a | press questioner regarding pose | sibilities \ Amevican troops in Europe: would. be . tapped ‘for Viet Nam. McNamara said no and then-. 15,000. ‘'specialists”’ were. diverted. ' much break and each~: Meanwhile, the Het of former - help is lengthy ‘and Moyers, press secretary and troubl> | shooter secretary and trouble ‘hand left from -the original ret} | nue of 1963. * McGeorge Bundy, from Ken- | nedy's time a‘ key international adviser, ts ‘gone to head the Ford Foundation. Jack Valenti. closest personally to President Johnson is leaving to be_presi- | dent of the Motion Picture Ae | sociation of America. In fact, the high-salaried po- sitions seemingly available to slohnson—insiders—is-—a~—sgn-that- fatigue alone is not the only ‘an- swer to the turnover. _ PLAN VISIT TO CANADA OTTAWA (CP) man delegation of Czechoslovak parliamentarians will make a , 12-day visit to Canada in June seven cities, announced Wednesday. it. was | tary of. State Dan Rusk, D- The-delegation will. spend about | fence ,Secretary Robert Mc-— two days in Ottawa and visit | Namara, Vice - President Hu’ | Quebec City, Montreal, Toronto, hert —Humphrey, Ball, Deputy Hamilton, Calgary and Van- ey ™ ————— couver. It will tour. several ine Our Yesterday Ys (From The Guardian ays ‘TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO- ‘ (May 5, 1941) Tt was felt that> Hitler's hint in | his Reichstag address that the war might run into 1942 probab-— ly was based on ‘‘the calculated dustrial. agricultural and scien- i tifie establishments. | effects” of American_ interven- | tion’’, 1 } Besieged Britons had thrown |up new works opposite Axis- | Troops occupying the. southwest fringe_of Tobruk’s outer defenc- es to re-establish their lines and shattered Gernian-Italian prep- arations for a fresh assault -on the Libyan port. |] 92 Kent St. . Ch'tewn ducers of the -program ‘Seven Days". protests were heard from intellectuals who regarded the program as a welcome ma- nifestation of free thought. But applause came from many prat- +-teal=Canadians=-w:lt-ho-<equal-, —brains,_who—eonsidered—_that the— program falls short of being the beneficial influence in our na- tional life due from that Crown Corporation. . “Typiéally’ one prominent and respected Liberal MP has’ been pondering the ‘trend to subver- “sion and nihilism on various CBC programs. This very lib- era) Liberal’ does not. merit the smear of being‘ called a Mc- | Carthyite, but he is very wor- Tied, he told me, about the pat- individual, but overlook the ba- sic: essential of any modern in- dustrialized nation that society also has rights. “Seven Days” has been critict- zed for bias, for depicting only one. side-—not--only-of contraver— even of dangerous topics. Examples of this were seen in recent programs describing | far-out abuses of modern chemi- harmful drugs. Last month. view- ers saw a _group.of children in- dulging the strange craze’ of in- haling aeroplane glue. _ Tubes of this glue can be bought, at hob- bies shops. The glue is squee7- ed out into a paper bag. and the child then puts his or her face “Focus Of Sightseers The daily flood of visitors. to St. Peter’s in. Rome makes h seem smaller than it is. Twelve thousand people drift | in-and-out of St. Peter's_on.a:.us-. ual day, and 20,000 may come for the weekly papal—audience. Eighty thousand have attended the canonization of a new saint. Up to half a million—Roman and outlander, Catholic and non- Catholic— crowd into the church colonnaded piazza ‘on special ec- casions such as Faster. The great stone basilica stands | on a sun-swept rise west of the Tiber. This centuries-- old mas- ter-piece of architecture domin- ates. Rome, yet the atmosphere » Inside is-that of a pleasant park where a visitor may ramble peacefully seeking out familiar things. Nowadays, throngs .of-. visitor, | head straight for Michelangelo's | Pieta to see how the sculpture that was exhibited at the New York World's Fair'’ looks back in the chapel where it belongs.” | Whatever one’s religion, at- | tending Pope Paul's public au- ‘dience in St. Peter's at 11 a.m. on Wednesday can be a moving experience. ss, a Ticket-holders are asked to he in the basilica an hour before | words TUES PETRUS (You | significant, the Pope's arrival. The ecavern- ous aisles, the hundreds of soar- ing columns, the legions of stone ‘saints, the chapels, arches, and | richly émbellished ; ceilings are bathed in soft, gray shadows. Suddenly the lights go on, and 800 crystal chandeliers glitter like fireflies. The papal altar glows. Hverywhere, gilt comes alive, Tension grows, and with tt ‘the tor tells me; it causes delusions | F. M. writes: Can sinus dis- +and-hallucinations, and affects | ease cause the throat: to be red = | Judgment - thus for instance | and wide all the time? | making the user unsafe in char- EPLY muffled buzz of voices. At last | | ge of a car. This sain exists, espe- | there is a moment of utter sil- | LSD sometimes gives a sense |cially if a discharge drips into tor who has studied this danger- ous craze, it makes the ¢ hil d> “gaga"’. Toluene is. toxic, and the effects of repeated inhala- | tion, which ‘Seven Days’’ did | not show, are. damage to the’ liv- -er-ape--the-eentral—nervous-sya —-tem,—effects—which—hecome—pro-— gressively worse as the child re- | peats the inhalations. ae | PUBLIC NEED WARNING Another program suggested | Llalbed by eating sugar cubes | soaked in LSD or lysergic acid. | T h t@-+dangerous psychedelic | drug ha®\ been banned, apart | from a little. carefully controll: | ed research, in Canada and | many Other countries, but it is obtained on the black market. | | LSD eliminates control of the |-consumer's higher centres, a doc- his could ‘he responsible for *my uncomfortable feeling? REPLY Yes. Abdominal distention may result from food,. air, or gas.. It ogcurs in those with gall bladder disease, ._but-faulty.: eat- -4Ing—habits—and peer sm ham 8 _Council approval for_his | ders also could be responsible. LIVER SAMPLE NW. J. writes: Does a liver | cals in or bordering the field of | gat joys and escapism are ob- | ation? | ney Complete Tine | ‘ot genuine biopsy: mean an abdominal oper- | Among those attending the ‘ op | convention in Ottawsz the Liber: | Volkswagen parts. _ REPLY al women were: Mrs. B. Earle | ; . 1e There are two ways of doing |-MacDonald, Charlottetown, Sen- | NO ARLE Ss a biopsy. One isto insert a | ator Elsie Inman and Mrs, ineedle or a peritoneoscope | L.H. Poole, Montague; and Mrs. | ARAGE |through the abdominal wall to | obtain a sample of liver tissue for examination, The ‘second way is to take a hit of this tis- sue during abdominal - surgery. __PAINFUL_ THROAT “TEN YEARS AGO i} (May 5, 1956) UN secretary-general Dag Hammarskjold returned to the oo Nations, N-¥., to a chor- 8_0f praise and.certaintyof-Se-1 month's Middle East negotia- | | tions on Israeli- Arab peace. Russell Roper, Charlottetown.” : fence followed by a | applau into the church on a portable -_He“is_ white; his ‘slim* ‘pale hand lifts again and again in blessing. | Waves of applause follow the | | Pope and his procession to the |main altar. A recent American visitor gave this impression, “The sound went up into the | domed ceiling and came back | again. It- sounded—lovely and cool, full of joy and respect.” | The Pope makes: the same |. brief address ih several languag- |es—Italian, English, Fre n-ch, German, Spanish: The occasion {is not a religious ceremony, | thus no one minds that particul- | | ar groups of pilgrims or tourists |clap their hands and shout when they -are —wele “omed~—by~ name. | “TU ES PETRUS” All eyes are focused on the | Pope's. slight figure and the great Bernini baldachin whose | | spiraled bronze columns hold | | aloft a mighty canopy. Beneath |the altar is the Tomb of St. Pe- Bain Apostle, and above it is | Michelangéelo’s “Dome The | | are Peter )are written in masaic letters five feet high inside the | Dome. Though St. Peter's was dedi- | cated in 1662, it is still not com- | plete. The Romans tise an ex- pression, La fabbrica di San | Pietro, meaning something that jnever, ends. The monumental | bronze doors for one of the church's main portals were in- | stalled as recently. AS 1964. "Iron Curtain” Origin torrent of | of -carefreeness, of what when the Pope ts-horne-| anything matter? But, said this _dressed all. in- Windsor Star. The “Iron Curtain’ separat- bar just off the sacrisiy. Bone- | ing Communist Eastern Europe | chilled: priests and tourists can from the free Western Europe is | get a quick cup of capuccino or perhaps less rigid than it once was. But the origin of the Phrase still is argued. It first came to the attention .of North America when Sir Win- ston Churchill used it in March, 1946, in his famous speech in Fulton, Missouri. The Iron Cur- tain, he said, had been. drawn down across Europe from Stet- tin on the Baltic to Trieste on the Adriatic. He used this grap- hically to describe the partition of Europe by the, Communists. ' with him t was not. however, original In his recent book, | The: Last 100 Days, John “Toland © quotes a Nazi as having used it. He was Schwerin von Krosigk. There being no feasible way to heat a chureh as hig as St Peter's, the practical minded Vatican maintains a little coffee “Krosigk | a, stronger restorative, like, after their early- devotionals. | temporarily German minister after the Adolf Hitler and while the Ger- | mans were preparing to capitu- | late. In his broadeast to the | man people on May 2 said: “German men i/and women, the iron curtain in the east moves closer and clos- er: behind this. hidden from the | eves of the world, all those peo- ple caught in the mighty hands of the-Bolhseviks are heing de- stroyed.”’ ifthey moPhing foreign Ger- TREE. SWEATS A FLOOD A mature apple tree’ evapor- ates 100 gallons of water ‘into the alr on a hot summer's day ‘a suicide of | 1945, Von | does | doctor, it can so upset. some peo- ple—as-to-—create schizoid—panie:—+-vere—enoughto—cause—headache- Two young women in this ter- | rified and terrifying condition recently —hurled themselves out of hotel windows in. Toronto. | This aspect of LSD should,. that ‘doctor considers, Hive been de- picted on the same program as /a warning. “The purposé of. our whole educational program is to train young people to think’, an MP commented to me. ‘‘The dan- | ger-of the CBC's portrayal ofthe; | Suggestedly happy effect and | | group pleasure of these practi- | ces, is. that it might make the {young think along these, lines, j to the conclusion that there are /no-bad effects.’ the back of the throat. If sinus disease is severe enough. to pro- duce throat symptoms, it Js se- and other of nasal trouble. HOSPITAL FE. F. writes: hospital insurance plans a form of socialized medicine? REPLY . No: tf anything, they. are quite the opposite. They are voluntary plans through which groups get together to pool hospital risks. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— The alcoholic needs medical care. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should he | addressed .to: Dr. ‘Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- symptoms _ INSURANCE > une; Chicago, Hiinois.) May And Violets | re York Times They,are not necessarily syn- | snes: but it is hard to think 'of May without violets. And May Day, back when it was sen- timental” rather “than ~socially was always marked | | by May baskets brimming with | | violets. Springtime, May, young | ilove and violets—they were all there, together, in those fragile | paper haskets, | Spring brings earlier flowers; a few, but none better known or more widely distributed. More | than 80 species of violets grow in /and lungs. Violets, they said, the United States, in damp _mea- | “specially comforteth the | dows, rich woodlands; upland | heart.’ They still do, as any pastures, at rural roadsides, and.on dry, sandy plains. In col- or they range from white throu- gh yellow to all shades of blue. and. purple; and their close cousins, the johnny- jumpups or wild pansies. mingle these col- ors in the same blossom. Teeland opens a national tele- vision broadcasting agency this month, leaving Greece as the only European nation without TV. Perhaps more than an Ideal ‘climate, a friendly people and an ancient culture lures tourists jto the Aegean. There are now so i few places: to hide from the. in- vasion of home privacy by peo- jple from the Ponderosa, from | ubiquitous UNCLE, the.. baggy- eyed sameness of Dean Martins and the. eternal .format of ‘Sullivans. Iceland will bring the. number jof nations transfixed hy “felevis jton to 110. There are a few hold- c Ray = White violets have a rich, | | sweet fragrance. The blues and purples -have only the woodsy, outdoors smell of spring But all | | are rich with nectar, as the bees well know. Bumblebees are spe- | cially fond of the common blue violets. that spread heart- shap- | ed leaves and lift long-stemmed flowers almost everywhere. So are Saturday-free children. So | are country growmups. : | The old herbalists used violets | for inflammations of the chest Maytime wanderer will testify. | Blue sky, warm sun and road- _ side violets are as comforting a | ;diseovery as any heart.could_| | as k of the burgeoning country- | | side. oa Now I S Hislend. Kitchener . Waterloo Record | outs. One of them t's South Afri- {ca where the prospect of a na- itional network considered dangerous to the state gospel called apartheid. | Most of the countries with tele- vision are too poor to. be able to |produce their own programs. This creates a market that the United States producer is de- lighted fo fill. As a result people like Lorne Greene of Bonanza are better known around globe than most of the -world statesmen. is FEYK DECEIVES HAND The eve's reaction time for a wink is 1-20 second, three times (faster than a deliberate blink ° aeiacal +0 w the . J Meat Re Miracle Whip 16 07. Salad : _ jar Dressing . CARNATION - | Milk Powder’... x: 99¢ a oe Butter .... 79 | Palmolive 4 bars Soap....... 49¢ MAPLE LEAF SLICED | | : | | : JEWELLERY Unusual, exciting, each piece an original! : f Priced from $2.00 THE STUDIO. Opposite Charlottetown Hotel O00 SAE | TT ‘Volkswagens Are Our Specialty ‘Alberry Plains Marshmallows... ig 49¢ Are voluntary | 2 th. Chocolate fin Quik ...... 79c 5 ibs. Brown -39c[Sugar .... 49c oe. Colgate Giant Size Too inpacte 59c Perfection ce Cream’. “89c in 19¢ Picture Pak Ib. I Neck Bones 19 FRESH LOBSTER & HERRING | ARRIVING DAILY Large Head Lettuce... 2 pkgs. 49c Tomatoes LONG GREEN Cucumbers NEW RADISH . P. J.’s Ltd. 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