Ohe Guardiaw Covers Prince Edward - Island Like The Dew farm houses and small plots of land. | The idea, as Mr. Crown sees it,\is. to |. discourage some people from moving | W. J. Hancox, Publisher ' to the cities where it might,:be dif- “hanes Ware ee eee sficult to re-establish themselves. Also,* eae oars week day morning (except Sun keeping some of the people onthe . day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Stree, land is expected to help relieve the ene hh cr Sommersge, Montages, alberto severe shortage of farm labor. and Souris. +> It-is claimed that the idea has been a teieered catoraly by Maren Newetgee — thoroughily studied, and. promises. to Empire'%3-8894; Montréal 640. Cathcart Street Uni: provide the best. answer yet to ie Ree on. st "+ problem of rural poverty—bul only. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper. Publishers if something can be done to improve” Association and The Canadian«Press. The Canadian the lot of the people who. sell out. . Thus the-scheme will be a particular test of ARDA's ability th encourage , people to abandon a losing battle with © “the land and settle them into a better - ; Press is exclusively @Riitied td the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this. paper life with the Kelp of the penarienk | of Manpower. . *. credited to it or to the Asioriated Press or Reuters and also the loca! news published herein. All right or republication .of special dispatches, here In also reserved. Subscription rate: \ Not over 40c per week by carrier. ~ “$12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and areas In a sense, then,’ it provides a “double test of the: practicability of ARDA and Canada’s new manpower program, and as such will be follow ed with interest across the country. f dea arena” | 2 ¢ not serviced by carrier... : $15.00 a year off Island and U.K..$20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhére outside British Com | mohwealth. * “Not ever Je single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. - PAGE 4 FRIDAY, | JUNE 17, 1966. A Pattern Of ‘Chaos == a “ Quebec's 4,250 longshoremen were Worth Reviving back to work vesterday and a strike Ina commendable contribution to | of 1,453 sales employees of Air Can- Centennial Year, the-Royal Bank of. ada was reportedly averted by a last- Canada has chosen a six-man com- minute settlement;..but there are | mittee to select someone each year other big | labor troubles looming and for-a $50,000 award, based on con- the country, far from sighing with | tributions ‘‘to the common’ good and relief, is still holding its breath with ~welfaré of Canada or the world ‘apprehension. Estimates of the losses | society.” This will represent a -dis-“ << regulting from. -thelongshoremen's.. tinBuished- -service-award witha great-_. strike alone run to a million dollars a er cash value than the Nobel Prize. -day, and there is no telling what the |. Neither bankers nor politicians are ultimate effect will be. . President |. eligible, but there is a wide range of W.R. Eakin of the Shipping Federa- - choice left to the committee in other tion warns that it will be at least a. spheres of activity. Medicine, it has month before the three ports affected | heen suggested, is an obvious field; get back to normal operation.‘In the | 3'days of the strike, nearly 100 ships | been automatic choices. had such an were tied up. Backed up ~from—~ award been available when they gave hiindreds of dockside boxcars though insulin to the world. Since any two “tosthe’ Prairie elevators are some 35 | personscan name a candidate, there | _--miflion. bushels of wheat waiting ship- | is likely tobe a formidable list_ of meht overséas. nominations. In Parliament, opposition mem- This move .by the Royak Bank. bers argued that if there ever was | should remind ~Ottawa of its own a case for federal intervention in obligations in this regard. Successive halting a paralysis of\transport-ser- _ Liberal and Conservative govern- vices it was. here. government | ments have chosen to-ignore the fact. spokesman defended the collective ’| that the Canada Medal was created. bargaining procedures and deplored +“py order-in-council in 1943, to honor “precipitate” parliamentary action in | Canadians who had made outstand- the matter; but even as he spoke the | ing contributions to the nation. Strike had been going on for five Specimen medals were struck dur- weeks. How could any action: after | ing the regime of Prime Minister such a protracted’ Sapte be called Mackenzie King, but-in the interven-. oven precipitate”?.... == sing-23-years not one-Canadian-in-the- This, as the Montes, Gazette well spheres of science or the arts has says, is not the pattern of what is ra- | been deemed worthy of this medal. tional or-normal; it is the pattern of | Centennial Year would be the ideal something like chaos—a chaos invited * occasion for its resurrection and dis- and. then sheltered by a policy of. tribution. positive inaction by the federal gov- ernment. Nor can the costs be esti- Fast Plane To China mated only by the cost of what Que- China today, as a growing handfull be¢longshoremen call the “fabulous” of Canadians are finding out, is not terms of their new contract, or the the forbidding land it was. In’ the _ losses suffered by the economy wake of their journeys—and the post- ~-through~-disrupted- shipments. These— | ing of a Canadian reporter in Peking” will be heavy enough, goodness |. —-Washington has now made quiet knows. But there is the loss of pres- overtures to the Chinese on the ex- tige which the federal authority has | change of journalists. More. signifi- suffered that no one can estimate. A | cant, however, is the fact that an . precedent has been set which could: | agreement has been signed in Paris ‘ prove disastrous in dealing with | which allows Air France to open air further emergencies of this kind. service to Peking. This isthe first . It is intolerable that the issue | time a Western European airline has ~-~~should~-be-allowed-to-drop-here,-and ~~ heen allowed ito Chinas Tt follows a” ethat Parliament should not be, per- | similar agreement with Pakistan In- »: mitted to probe into the causes as a__ ternational Airlines’ matter of grave public importance. It is not expected the Chinese will | Farm ‘Merger Seheme A major farm enlargement scheme “fs now getting under way in Ontario, which it is claimed will effectively lift one of.the main ideas behind . ARDA off paper and put it on’ the ground on a full-scale basis for the first time. The scheme will be finan- 5 ced jointly:by the federal and provin- cial governments, the basic purpose bemg to make ARDA money available’ to enable economic or near-economic farms to take over uneconomic ones. | It is to’ fun four years and according to Forestry Minister Sauve, it may provide the model for all future farm, consolidation programs across Can- ada. | : fhe. basic problem, says Hl. F, Crown, director of ARDA in Ontario, ‘is in the eastern and northern parts of the province where there are too | ¢fany marginal farms: The $7.2 mil-« into Paris immediately, but the con- nection has been made. Swift. jet flights that. will’link the major cities of China to Karachi, Teheran, Cairo a Start on the long journey out of China’s <solation. Hope has been expressed that this agreement with Red China will _fol- lows the pattern of the first cautious opening of the Iron Curtain a decade ago, when American travellers view- ed a journey to Moscow almost as an expedition- into outer space. But until the barrage of propaganda cliches between the two powets, by despatchés from resident corres- pondents, there is little chance that the fogbank .of ignorance—on both sides—can be lifted. | EDITORIAL NOTES Pigs_are getting-ulcers. the Ontario- eq ! yr Doctors Banting and Best would’have | )-ed by tenderized beef? | weight. is moist tissue which dries out , | after slaughter. | dor.gets a higher price for an | and Athens, as well as Paris, may bes | artifically heavier - animal, bét., al “the purchaser loses that—weight— | when the carcase dries. | itals, | that Russia soon must choose “lipn provided by the federal-provincial | veterinary gerviceslaboratories has! program -will be used to buy up, discovered. “Worrving about the high smaller units. and merge them with price of pork,” com: nents, an ex- oop gitable targer-farms. “The land -to hes = Changes es purchased must not cost more «than 2d ; 100 per acre and ARDA must not - The general manager of the Cana * é more than 350 pe acre improv.» dian Highway Safet\ Council has told 4 ea 2 a Montreal audien be accompanied by the worst traffic carnage in, sanede’s history—unless driving habits change ¢, idically before “ sfnitially the acquired land will be 1éaeed for five vears to largey farm- | ets who wil! have the option fe bav it ~oetbright when-the-- Jease expires,.The... land will be sold for the original ‘pur- chase price plus the value of improve: , ments undertaken by ARDA. But an: bile for Bypo. Add to this the increas- effort will be made to keep some of | ed traffic across the’ Tountry “hecause ‘the people on the land. Farmers who | of the Centenniai celebrations and it ‘Zell to ARDA will be offered. at nom —)— is clear—a\tiy’ tratticsatety officials inal rent, a lite-time lease on their | are converned, : ee : with in view of the millions of people expected to visit Montical by automo- ra ‘ | New Brunswick, - .. NOTEXACTLY A GREEN THUMB. = a a weet OTTAWA REPORT bo Patrick Nicholson. Are Canadians being poison- Are we liable té cancer caused by chie- _micals artificially imrlanted_in animal feeds? Can a woman to- lerate. drugs which cause alor- tion in cows? If a Canadian eats too much liver and tripe, will he | become effeminized? These grave and startling questions came up before the Agriculture Committee of the « House of Commions, and remain- ed unanswered. “They deserve more thorough study. And un- til Canadians are reassured by competent medical research, we must wonder whether the com- mercial ‘interests of food produc- ers are being permitted to take precedence over our _ Rational | health. . Percy Noble M. P. was decimated through the care- less inclusion of the synthetic ‘hormote. stilbestrol in feed which he purchased for his mink. In committee, he asked Dr. S. C. Barry, deputy minis-_..: ‘Does your: ter of Agriculture: department not think that ‘some research should be done’ in res- pect of what effect stilbestrol-", | fed poultry and cattle have on | human health?” zo Dr. Barry replied that this is not the concern of his depart- ment. So the doubt was left un- resolved. is a miak- | _rancher, whose valuable herd || The committee also heard evi- dence of -stitbestrol causing-~ab- ortions in. cows; is it true. that it is being used for. the same purpose by schoolgirls, as one MP suggested? The committee also heard questions about the healthiness of- chemicals fed to steers to tenderize their flesh. NEEDS STUDY BY PROS “The Agriculture Committee is not a medical- committee, with members qualified to -re- - solve these important doubts And the civil servants appear- ‘ing before it admitted that their. jresponsibility is the health of animals, not the possible illness ‘of Canadians who subsequent- ly eat the carcase of those ani- | mals. But this turn of the, inquiry échoed the: Alarming... evidence: ;dime, maybe even a_ quarter Did your Mom ever give you | fifteen cents to sweat: away in your Paltipeaw while you circled round and\round the counter in Woolworth's wondering how to spend it % There were even times when a box of crayons opened our eyes tree branch ‘was fitted with | ~BANNED—IN-- OTHER ANS tree wonder; .when a fork ofa Stilbestrol is prohibited in some.countries. Portions of.-stil- bestrol-fed.,Canadian steers are banned from importation into some countries. Should Cana- dians, be” permitted to eat stil- bestrol-fed carcases? If Percy | Noble’s mink were killed, ‘ or sterilized, or even afflicted by break-down of the urinary tract through an accidental feed of stilbestrol, what guarantee, as “a doctor’ said to” me;-do~we-have~~ that. Canadian women will not , suffer equally through ingest- 1 ing the residue of chemical ad- | ditives to cattle feed, and- then develop deep voices and grow take advantage of their own rights | beards and become sterile? Stilbestrol has the effect of causing an animal to put on But that extra weight Thus the ven- Wheth- is honest com- atter; quite and- er or not > merce is one | ther is whether the residue of that chemical, ‘lodged the in _ iver or stomach-lining of the | carcase, will cause harm to Oanadians. Our Yesterda s. (From The Guardian File: (Crom The Guardian Files) is replaced. | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO June 17, 1941) Basing their declarations on a flood of reports and political speculation from European. cap- observers in ndon said whether to. fight..Germany or yield to humiliating demands in- volving considerable tang i b le loss. : P.E.], went ‘over the top’ in: the Victory Loan drive Premier Thane 'A. Campbell announced | enya eanaV eed et ae Ee. Torch Day~address- -at-the dedication “eeremonies a's the Victory. Tore fetown en route ister Churchill. to Frime Min- The _ tota} sub- scriptions had exceeded | the $1,- > that Expo-67 will. 500,000 by $10,600. TEN YEARS AGO (June -17, 1956) Mr. Gordon Bennett was elect- then It is a predictionhardto- argue... qed as.president.of.the Prince Ed-.. ward Island: Musical Festival Association.at- the annual meet ing «held at Prince of Wales | College “The procrescive Conservative government. .of New~ Brunswick under Premier Hugh John Flemming “was re-elected in reached Charlot- 2 strips of old inner tube and turn- ed into a gumbo shooter; when cellar doors were magic car- | rets that carried us from reality | into a delightful limbo of dream- | ing. Little gikcts, hugged; raz dolls with old suspender‘ buttons that | had been sewed on for boys argued over steelies agates; the tiny tots pulled “wooden “dick” “that clacked its” ‘bill or turned over a cardboard: . cylinder that sounded vaguely like a cow. There were kaleido- scopes and tubes that promised forbidden visions only to put a eves; and ” ee Need Seen For Competent Medical Research submitted three years ago be- fore-the Food and-Drug-Commit- tee. by Miss Rachel Carson, -au- thor of “Silent Spring’. Miss Carson described how indiscri- minate an@ ignorant use of chemicals is upsetting the bal- ance of nature, and~ destroying certain forms‘ of plant and ani- mal life and indeed slowly puis- oning’ the human race. The Agricultural Committee | has exposed this dangerous sit- uation related to various chemi-. cals. added to animal feed. It would be a very appropriate topie for study by the Drug Com- | mittee, whose members -inciude many doctors of. medicine, such as its chairman, Dr. Harry Har- ley, and Messers P. B. Rynard, ‘ Lewis Brand, Stanley Haidasz, W. M. Howe and Gaston tagbel- | Aes satis aii aamnnsectnsae No Toys For A Dine. ee Star-Phoenix Rémember when toys cost a } black ring around the eager eye. Where have they gone Put a- . side, it seems, in favor of an in- dustry that has climbed to $2.,- 027,000,000 a year and which. quotes an average of $3.09 per plaything. These were the fig- lures that came out of the 63rd American Toy Fair = held in | New York. _.Most. slanidloasite: of all, the. | products” pbeifig™ stressed for | Christmas selling in 1966 include | ‘Bettman merchandise and Ja- ‘| mes. Bond 007.gimmicks that can reach horrifying — proportions | both’ in price and lethal glee. . 'A model racing car layout pro- ‘duced by Lionel, who used to be content with “electric trains, will , sell for $1,000. Now not only autos, furniture, "other: “Necessities ,will be easily | available on credit, but the kids® , toys will have-to go-on the old | charge account if Juni 2 te keep ‘up with the J fridges, stoves, All About Booze 7 Ottawa “May: It Please Your Honor’ is how Ontario Liquor Commis- ‘sioner Harty “Sheppard begins his annual report for the fiscal year ended March: 3%%y 1965, “Your Honor’ being Lieutenant Governor Earl “Rowe. “Dear Sir,.’’ writer Quebec Lorne G. Power to. Attorney General Claude Wagner in sub- ‘mitting his report. From. there, the Stories, similar. Total sales of beer: On- tario, 105,000,000 gallons at about | $20,000,000: » Quebec, 85,000,000 gallons at about $135,000.000. | Liquor and wine: Ontario, “About 11,300,000 -gallons. $250,- 000,000; Quebec, about 5,300.00 gallons, $114.00,000. : It shouldbe note: tha! Que-_ bee's alcoholic performance was ‘hurt’? y its liquor strike— rev- enue dropped $15,000,000. About the only area in which Quebec | showed an_ improvement over pile the — year was in break- °. are. Journal ages of bottles by employees, which were down from 10,146 bottles to 8,446. a drop of from 6.6 per employee to 5.4 Ontario simply lists its brekage as cost- ing $29,306.49. Ontario's considerably fuller report has such revealing statis- - tics as the number. o tons of grapes and cherries used in the . manufacture of wine (26.717 and 155 respectively.) Ontario reports 19.393 convic- tions for having liquor in an fl- ‘legal placé and 53,962 for; intox- ication. The Ontario board granted 37 liquor permits to phy- sicjans, 264 to druggists, 49 to dentists and_ veterinarians, 323 _to “‘meghanical and scientific,” 492 to manufacturers, 250 to hos- pitals and 38 to First Aid, the last two varieties being listed s ‘free.’ Licences were grant- ed to 18 ‘breweries, 10. wineries and 14 ‘‘zacramental wine vVen- a ul For Angry. Tourists i =Sherirooke- eee eee Anyone who has tried to prac did the warlers start thelr tise his’ fractured -French or. strike?’ ghastly German ot damaged The publisher, however, dis- Danish while abroad hy asking claims responsibility ‘‘for any | such_inane questions a's, “When consequences that may flow, will your mother’s. aunt return (from the use of terms contained from the countryside’ will wel- in this, book,”* come a new tourfst dictionary, Recently. the Quebec Govern- brought out by a Brifish publish- ment prepared a booklet design- . —— seas ed to give the visiting tourists a ee TTT PMT TT nT Rae te He sson—in—the-F reneh—tan— insults in four Janguages giiage when they hecame strand- French; German.” Jtatan and éd_ta—a—cammunity where their Spanish _ ~thosts eotild not understand Eng- For example, when encounter lish : ing a had. restaurant cone, can * We wonder : it contained suit- sav stich devastating hen2gs.as able. expressions tn he assed indigestion thib- wy ts Or) “Do you ‘serve lets With every you, keep pigs fneal here?” ’ when the visitor sot into. trouble attempting to. follow. ‘the. unilin gual directrom signs on the main, traffic arteries, clothing and i Urinary. Infections . nerable to a host of microorgan- isms: When the bladder is. the site of invasion, the ensuing irri- tation leads to burning and fre- quency. of urination, along with vague discomfort in the lower abdomen, When. the organisms ‘| spread to the kidney, there is dull aching over the involved side of the back. Chills and fever may occur and occasionally the bowel joins the, melee as a ges- : ture of sympathy for the dilem- ma of its neighbor. Urinary. | tract infections may last a few days and then subside or persist |for months or years in mild a stubborn: form. Disorders of this nature, ‘es not develop spontaneously. some, they follow a respiratory distusbance such as the .com- mon cold or a strep throat. -In- others, bacteria spread from a nearby source such as the pros- tate gland or rectum. Obstruc- tion of the urinar: passageway ‘from kidnéy stone or stricture is: another possibility” ' A half century ago we had lit- tle to offer victims of urinary | tract infections. It was at this | time that hexamethylenamine, | the first urinary antiseptic of | any real value, came into be- ee The substance acted~only when the urine was acid. This | plan had its drawbacks because | of the irritation that followed: | Mercurochrome was the next ; antiseptic to come upon the Beene... The chemical_was_given "as much publicity in its day as penicillin, but its glory. was | short-lived. Many of us thing of | the preparation only as a local | antiseptic but at that. time it | was injected into the blood- | stream and also inserted direct- | ly into the bladder. Hexylresorcinol followed in ' 1925 and then came the ketogen- ic diet and mandelic acid. The real change took place _»vhen the sulfonamides were zintroduc- ed. There are many of these drugs on -the market including combimations of difierent vrod- vucts. Trisulfapyrimidine;— sulfis- oxazole, sulfisomidine, and sulf- amethizole are used most, often _ because they are highly — anti- bacterial in urine. The antibio- tics also are of value. The ideal ‘treatment is to pit the snecific | drug against the causative or- | ganism. This is. why the urine is |-eultured to determine the cause | before the remedy is started. PRECANCEROUS .GROWTH D.-D. M. writes: Is rectal pol- yp.a.form of cancer?. na REPLY These lesions are considered precancerous because a certain peréentage become malignant. «This is the chief reason why 4 "removal “ot rectal “polyp?” as ad- vised... i BIRD INFECTION I. W. writes: Can psittacoisis | ~-be-eaught- from birds. such as. parrots and parakeets? REPLY. infection “is dstead:| ducks, chickens, Yes. The by’ pigeons, and pheasants. GROWTHS v. F. writes: What is the dif-. ference between cancer a tu- mor? REPLY Both are growths but not all tumors are cancerous. y \ THEY: } by ¥ sis: J.B. writes: Why do wo- /men gain weight after the ov- _aries are removed? , REPLY Because they’ eat too much. TODAY’S, HEALTH HINT— A camp for children should | meet health Rented iby ec of questions of orrespondents | $y: compen <a aa meee | sarily enderse the epinion of corres. | pondents. All letters published are sub- »| Jeet, to editing avd condensation where "| meeessary. The Guardian is unable to | | enter inte any correspondence regard- ing letters submitted. £ By Dr, Theodore R. Van Dellen - \. The urinary passages are vul-. | Straint, | seem more concerned with frus- | trations in hopping over to the In, |. | “PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion |” ‘LOSS WOULD~ BE GREAT Sir—I have been very. much — concerned to hear of the. immin- ent departure of Dr. Todor Gen- cheff from our province. His loss will be a great one to P.E-I. but I have been even more con- cerned to hear of the possibility | that <the Rehabilitation Centre may be closed after he leaves. Being the mother of a_ child who receives treatment twice a week at the Centre, I feel that I and other people inthe sdme situation, have a right to know: be available 4 what facilities will be for our children. Becanee t am at the Caukie 0 | often, I see that the services of- fered there could not possibly be duplicated at an- ordinary hospi- | tal. The victims of accidents, cerebral palsy, multiple, scleros- | ‘is, cysticfibrosis, haemophaelia and: strokes are beihg helped to face life with @ handicap’ by | learning new skills to- take the \place of the ones they have lost. ‘P.E. has a Rehab Centre | that it can be proud of; one that - Britain’ § Hard Problem By Harold-Morrison ° is p Canadian Press Staff Writes At the half-way mark in what the last 10 years, that-ds a na Prime Minister Wilson has de- scribed as year, the make-or-break to keep up appearances. While the country pays only dip service to the government's | Plea for. wage and price re-. the leisure seekers Continent for a holiday. a At the height of the crippling | seamen's strike — the cost of- which still is to be assessed— a familiar photograph in Brit- ish’ newspapers was that of: George Woodcock, central trade | union leader, basking in sun in the Mediterranean. There is’ little evidence of Public anxiety that the country the still must look to other countries | for support to keep the pound afloat. Nor is there’ much con- cern that Britain is quietly liquidating some of her. major . dollar assets in the United States-in-order to-help give the “British currency ‘reserves appearance of strength. The trade figures themselves suggest there is little likelihood thet Rritein can meet the old target of trying to balance the international »rade books this nstead the government now talks of a balance “'in the long run.” DENIES APATHY James Callaghan, chancellor of the exchequer, denies there cis —widespread—apathy—or—com= placency. He maintains ‘‘the foreigner gives us.a bad name and then hangs us.” Callaghan claims: © *We have got an undeserved reputation, Lael ls during | the- tion we are incapable of indus- trial discipline and that we are Britain seems cast in the’ irresponsible in our ttitudes:’ image of a dowager forced to sell her family jewels in order every Every example -of a strike, excessive wage settle- ment, every. time exports~are delayed—all these are seized on as a sign of British decadence | and lack of will, he says. Yet in, almost the same breadth Callaghan states that Lwhile ‘the ~government— pleads with the peopld for. wage and price restraint, «it seems that we are talking to those ‘who are | deaf. e \NOT REFLECTED Jo Grimond,. Liberal leader, ‘agrees that the: seriousness of ; the economic situation is not sufficiently reflected in the atti- 'tude. -The Ascot race meet which attracts ‘royalty and the world’s fashions was to him ‘a deliberate display of luxury and -idleness.”” What then is the solution for Britain? In accepting interna- ‘tional help- to’ underpin ‘the pound, Wilson has ruled out de- valuation. Even .if he slashed the value of the pound, there is no. assurance that the advan- tage in British export markets | might not be elimiffated by competitive devaluation by ,other exporting countries. The other possible weapon is straight .compulsion which most democracies . maintain never works in peacetime. Wilson can impose a freeze on wages, ‘Eprices~and—imports:~Administra= tion of such controls would—re- | quire a huge new bureaucracy. | And experience has shown that once such controls are imposed, | they intend to remain long after | they are required. Britons Learned Serenity - \Chatham Daily News Difficult as Britain's situation may appear at_ this distance, the real crisis has, it seems, still to arrive. Meanwhile, dry and sunny + June weather is inspiring. Brit- ons to forget.the menacing dark | clouds on the horizon. -The -strike threatens. exports, | and may wreck the earlier hope of creating, this ye@r, a balance- of-payments equilibrium. But, despite alarmist: reports the -average Briton hasn't been appreciably touched by the sea- men’s strike. Meat shipped prior: to the strike is still arriving from Australiay and New :Zea- ' Jand. Foreign ships still steam in. There have . been, indeed, ‘some local gasoline shortages, But a good many Britons are -not ‘yet feeling the real-pinch. Significant of. the salvage of strike \fhany Britons, a political car. toon in he. Daily Telegraph. ‘re- cently showed John Bull dozing peacefully in a” sea-coast deck. ,chair, his head sheltered from | the sun by, ati outspread ‘news- paper headlined “Strike, State | of Emergency.” ee | Economists,. . faithfully doing ' their duty, are meanwhile shout- ing warnings that the strike could put Britain's balance of payments further out of line by |20 million. pounds a month. ‘There is still-talk that a general wage and price: freeze may be necessafy.uif~the eventual sea- mat’sy settlement proves as -in- flationary’“Zas’ some economic Jeremiahs predict. Bur Britain has learned ser- .enity-—under.difficulties —in-—a- ‘hard school. Accent On $ pelne” Windsor Star” P ‘ Looking back, the spelling bee .appears to have’ been more. a feature of the lit- _, tle red schoolhouse and‘ the sub- / sequent consclidated school than of today's large urban. irstitu- tions. But it hangs on in various places, without proving conclu- sively that today’s spellers are less competent than their _Pre- “~decessors > A nation-wide contest recent- ly held in the U. S. picked. a 13- | year - old champion who held his top position by ‘correctly spelling’ ‘‘sachem’ and “‘r a- . old-time toon’: He played the two words by ear, not having heard either of them before. That this contest was a prac: tical test of ability to spéll may not be conceded generally on the basis of the few contest words revealed.’ Certainly ‘sachem™ is more suggestive of Indians or Tammany Hall than of things within the experience of young people. And “‘ratoon”, which has cotton : patch - associations, has its own lkmitations. | | | +» + SAYS MASTER LLOYD MACDONALD, : CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. t |compares well with the centres | in Canada: ical director like Dr. Gencheff jsuch a centre cannot ‘operate. or to Pr.-Gencheff has. been ‘thought of. and seeing as he has done his job so well for so many years why can't we afford to keep him? Any successor we could get would cost twige as /mych, ‘ ‘Also we have spent a money this winter in remodel- ing the ‘whole centré—what is the good of this without a irec- “tar? Ta close. the centre would “be a regression of «2 vears would also be & tragedy to PLE Island’s handicapped people make their voices heard the posathility sidered for lone I am, Sir; ete MRS» JOHN ML. AR ) Char ciety boe ee ¥ wi Without a good med- |, |... To..my. knowledge no_. success. lot of | It. ‘IT am, sure. that if the famifies” of all. such- Witt You Be ‘Sprit THE NEXT BIC “WINNER IN-OUR EXCITING — CONTEST ? 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