_ “credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters > o *. Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew ; : W. J. Hancox, Publisher : Wallace Ward - Frank, Walker Managing Editor : Editor Published every week’ day morning-(except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers ‘Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montegue, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Aves | Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. ‘ Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper _ and also the local news published hereig: All tight or republication of special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per: week ‘by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail ‘on rural routes and areas “not serviced by carrier. ‘ $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K. $20:00 per « year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. Ri ‘ Not over 7c sifigle copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1966. Making Haste Slowly Mr. Campbell scored some” good points in his maiden speech as Opposition leader in the Legislature on Tuesday, but we must confess that we see only opportunism in his pledg- ‘ing his party to “fight most aggres- sively for universal medicare in Prince Edward Island.” If there is an election in the offing, .as Mr. -Campbell believes, this could become _ a controversial issue, but it is® one which appears to have little validity at the moment. | - Ottawa, it is true, intends to press ahead with its “universal” scheme on the basis of agreement with only three of Canada’s ten provinces, in - the hope that the others will join before the target date of July 1, 1967. But this kind of pressure is not con- ducive to making sound: decisions; ahd Prince Edward Island, for one, will have to await the report of the federal-provincial tax structure com- mittee before it can come to any ‘reasonable decision as to its ability fo participate on the terms the fed- eral government has laid down. This ‘report is not likely to be available before June 1. As Health Minister Wedge said on his return from the recent conference with Ottawa on the subject, if a better tax revenue deal can be worked out for us it is possible that we could then consider universal medicare. In the meantime the-House-will-have-before— it a limited plan which could take care of the more necessitous cases, amounting to abqut 12 per cent our population. Under the proposed division of the federal $500 million health: resources ‘fund, we would get some share both- on a per capita basis and as a result of a special.$50 million grant to the At- lantic area, but we are still awaiting ‘the allocation of the money that would be available to us. under this ___._ grant. Mr. Wedge has pointed out our limited facilities for training health | a" personnel on a scale commensurate with the requirements of the federal scheme, and also the disappointing fact that Ottawa has again turned down the request of the province. to include, mental health and_ tuber: ~culosis patients under the hospital-in-— _ surance plan. If this had been approv-, __ed_it would have meant a saving to _ us of between $600,000 and $700,000 | a year, and would have brought us a step closer to full medicare. We think, in the circumstances, that the Shaw government’s decision to make haste slowly in this matter is justified. Indeed, it has no other choice. Mr. Campbell himself has stressed the gravity of our financial position in view of the developments forecast in the Throne Speech, and has warned that the only alternative | to more taxes is “a better deal from Ottawa.” That being so,, perhaps a pledge to. “fight most aggressively” for this objective wouldn’t be a bad one for both parties to give priority to at this time. Farm Families Ousted There will be sympathy in this agricultural province for the 23 fam- ilies in Shannon, Quebec, who have to vacate their 10,000 acres (about. 16 square miles) of rich -farmland be- cause Cafiada’s military brass “has” decided: to enlarge Camp Valcartier’s ge considerable a breadbasket can be dismissed by the Department of Na- tional Defense ‘as expendable? We get this story from a com- mentator in an .Ontario exchange, who concedes that the military has been in power at Valcartier for dec- ades, but, claims that the pattern of power ‘has been changing so rapid- ly and drastically of late that it could be better to relocate the camp than proceed to enlarge it, regardless of the agricultural. complications invol- ved. Certainly there is a place for artillery ranges, but in a~country so large as this they do\not have to occupy arable land. Nor .can- economy be reasonably given as an excuse for any grab of this nature. Such property is not a one-season proposition. Under pro- per cultivation 16 square miles of any fruitful area makes an ‘annual con- tribution to the national .sustenance basket. With about 350,000. “more stomachs to feed each year, and an increasing world demand for. any surplus that Canada can spare, the ‘move would appear.'to be a short- sighted one indeed. It may yet lead to a demand in Parliament for an in- -quiry to establish whether the big wheels of the Defense Department were operating with the rationality © expected of them. . ~~Construction Costs -~- Perhaps it’s, just as well that in view of the lavish federal expenditure on our Confederation Memorial Building, we didn’t get the go-ahead for embarking on a “big Centennial project here. Some of the provinces which have done so are probably wishing they had started at a more opportune time. a Take the city of Saskatoon, for ex- ample, which planned a civic audi- torium at an original estimated cost of $4,500,000. Tenders for the foun- dation and for steel construction were ;awarded, totalling around $900,000. The tenders for the main portion of the building were called. The lowest bid was $5,480,000. Additional -costs, such as architects’ fees, furnishings and land costs would add up to an- other million dollars. All of which brings the total cost estimates to | $7,344,000—$3 million higher than - the original estimated cost and $2 million higher than the last maximum cost estimate that was given the city council less than a month ago. ~~’ The increased cost has reportedly .thrown the Saskatoon planners into a tailspin. Federal and provincial grants for the project (and for a similar auditorium in Regina) have been fixed ata maximum of $3_ million for each city. Recently the provincial government said there would be no more money forthcoming for the projects, and it does not look as if the city can go ahead. WE Regina now is waiting to see what | happens in Saskatoon: But the Winni-~ peg Free Press suggests that other cities will have similar disquieting experiences, and expresses concern about the rising cost of Winnipeg’s Centennial Centre. The trouble, of course, is that building costs are -rocketing-up—not-from-year to-year- but from month to month. It’s leav- ing: many communities with a lot of worrying to do these Gays. ca. 2 Not Before Time As announced in the Legislature by Agriculture Minister MacRae and at Ottawa by the federal forestry de- partment, a two-year ARDA résearch program for the province has been agreed upon, at a cost off $206,000, two-thirds of which will be paid by the federal government. The program will be co-ordinated with the more general planning work by the- At- lantic Development Board, and holds out prospects of very real benefit not only to our farmers, but.to all sec- tions of our people. As outlined, the study is to em- brace all sectors of the economy, in- ~-cluding ~agriculture;-fisheries,-fores-~ try,.recreation and tourism, man- power training, land use, community services, public information, educa- tion, and development financing. Nothing on such a comprehensive sale has ever been attemped, and it “is tobe hoped that Ho time will be artillery firing range, and the land is | - to. be expropriated. <= ‘Dispossession of the 23 families is . not of itself an outrage of major pro- | portions. They could be re-established elsewhere, and perhaps to their own advantage. But binds them to the area is strong, and. it remains to be proved that they - should be moved at all and the land put to unproductive uses. Can this . country, Spacious though it is, afford - to sacrifice 10,000 acres of rich soil? Is the world so well fed, and are the - farmers involved so prosperous, that . ¢ 4 the tradition that | i | |. aimed to. expedite. lost in getting it under way. The time factor is important to us, and we trust it will be to the federal authorities. For research, after all, is only the fire step in the coordinated development program which it is » EDITORIAL NOTE Nothing like being polite at all times. Communist China says it is honored to have the United States. as an enemy, and: credits American “imperialism” with having a bene- ficial effect on the Chinese people by - Scotia, is not only one of the * ingly <simple question: ‘ pendents. All letters published are sub- ~~ Sir=With regard to that” ~~ald,-MILA,- present-membér for =| Spies And-All That , Sions in all walks of life. ate identity, nee “more healthy tt any” arousing them to greater patriotism. | Ae /...somewhers . mg the lineit is necéssar. { out of the etuagy I! stage and do \. something ”. tS - we = e oon” fs * \ 8 7 “ ‘ \- 7" —=- 4 CAPT. PICKERSGILL’‘S GREAT DISCOVERY Bob Coates, the 37 - year old barrister from Amherst, Nova youngest of the Conservative “fighting froops” in Parliament he is also one of the most out- spoken and percipient.. Thus he shrewdly threw the parliamen- tary spotlight onto the Bi and Bi Commission by asking this seem- “What has been the cost to date of the Royal Commission on. Bilingua- lism and - Biculturalism? and what is its final estimated cost?” g John -Matheson, Parliamen- tary Secretary to the Prime Minister, a man of unquestion- able sincerity and massive courage, replied: ‘‘I am infor- med by the Commission that its expendi! ber 31, 1965) are $3,538,523 and no final estimates are possible at this time." These evasive words are so incomplete and misleading that they could be PUBLIC FORUM This column is open fe the discussion by correspondents ef questions of in- terest. The Guardiam does not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of corres. Ject to editing and condensation where eater take The Guardian is unable to amy correspondence regard- ing letters submitted. 7 THAT SENATE VACANCY “elusive Senate seat,” while I have nothing to say in any way to lessen the Chances of Mr. T. J. Kickham or Mr. Eugene Cul- len, whom I have known per- sonally for e long time, I would like to suggest a name, well known, and of equal ‘‘political timber’’—IMr. Daniel MacDon- First Kings. ~al-and-Roman Catholic, but-as.a | War Two veteran, and | was severely wounded. | I am sure if his fine record was | counted, as it should be, he | would be well up on the list. 60 | not -make it a three-name | ‘ace and good luck to all. | I am, Sir, etc., | DUNCAN MacINNIS | East Royalty. | HIGHER EDUCATION _| Sir,—In answer to a sugges- | tion re consolidation of a single | university in our province, I fail to find’ this the answer to ad- | vancement in our higher educa- | tional system. For many years the two “institutions of higher learning have worked and serv- ed side by side, both: doing a good work in the field of educa- tion. As one of many of: péople I would not wish to see Prince of Walé& College lose its identity, after many years of ‘faithful service’ to the people of- this Province, and because of “the contribution it has made in sending forward many outstand- ing. graduates in varied profes- a Secondly I would prefer to see both our higher educational in- stitutions remain with their as there. is friendly..competition in educa- tion,-as-well_as-all_other_sources of life. It would also give stu- dents throughout our Island a choice of which college they would prefer to attend. We have heard a great deal | of discussion regarding the high | cost of supporting. two degree | granting institutions for our Is- land. Is this not_a_part of the | our Island |, “OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson | ~ Evasive Answer On Commission Costs described as contemptuous of , ting up a fairer and simpler taxa- the rights of Parliament and of }tion structure. These two tech- the taxpayers; words thus de- signed to hide a skeleton ought: not to have been put in John Matheson’s mouth. For Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp has stated that the esti- mated cost of that commission ‘up to March 31 is a staggering $4,502,635, and that the coming fiscal year will add another $1,- 200,000. Thus at March 31 next year, that Bi and Bi Commission will have cost the taxpayers the shocking. total of $5,702,635, with ‘no final estimate possible” because the end is not in sight. EXTRAVAGANT PROBE $ Is this figure remarkable? For a government which will spend over eight billion dollars ~mere-$5-7+ million is peanuts. But when we compare this figure with the cost of other royal commissions we see at once that Prime Mi- nister Lester Pearson has crea- ted there a Frankenstein of un- precedented proportions to ha- rass the taxpayers. The two most significant roy- al. commissions set up by the Diefenbaker Government were the’ Glassco Commission on Government. Organization and the Carter Commission on Tax- ation. The former was com. pleted over two years ago at a total cost of $2,791,915. When its recommendations have been ~winnowed- and ‘iat implim ented, ol they may well save the taxpay- er tens of millions of dollars every year. , The latter is nearing comple- tion, at an estimated cost of $2,- 591,092; it is blueprinting in de- | Railway —Problems—t$574, the O'Leary Commission on tail the complicated task of set- nically detailed probes cost less than the , Bi probe is costing. 8-FOR PRICE OF 1 5 Two important comniissions set up in the final years of the St. Laurent Government were the-exhaustive Gordon Commis- . sion on Canada’s Economic Prospects .and the Fowler Com, mission on Broadcast ing. These cost . $1,504,568 and $258,- 950 respectively. : Six other headlined enquiries set up by the Diefenbaker Go- vernment were the Borden Com- mission on Energy Policies ($414, 567); the Stewart Commis- sion on Price Spreads on Food Products ($290,224); the MacPherson Commission. on together and Bi Canadian Magazines and Other Periodicals ($195,121); the Hall Commission on Health Servi- ces (not yet completed,but es- timated to cost about $1,483,- 457); and the Porter Commis- sion on Banking and Finance ($734,276). An’ analysis of Government Accounts and Spending Esti- mates over twelve years re- veals, that these eight recent and important commissions to- gether cost less than the esti- mated incomplete price of the Bi and Bi. This almost incredible com- }-parison—underlines.the import-_| ance of Bob Coates’ ’ question, and the inadequacy of the rep- ly he received. It also explains why public demands have been made that the and dis- ruptive farce of the Bi and Bi probe be ended. . Hamilton Spectator __The Soviet Union has -confer- red its highest award, the Order ‘of Lenin, on its former master spy, Colonel Rudolph Abel. This adds lustre to the colonel and to the profession of spying. ,«* Abel, it may be reme red, spied for the Soviet Union in the United States, using as his ‘‘cov- er’ a little photographie pro- cessing business in New York. He was eventually caught by the FBI and sentenced to 30 years imprisonment. In 1962, he was exchanged for the U.S. U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers. CHANGED ATTITUDE A curious change has come over the general attitude to spies since the last war. Except, where treachery is involved, they have become heroes in- stead of what they were former- ly, despised individuals engag- ed in a rather dirty business. In the early years of this cen- tury, spying was regarded mere- ly as “unsportsmanlike,” not -the-sort_of thing that would be expected of a gentleman. In Bri- tain, for example, there was no adequate law under which peace-time suspects could be prosecuted. The First World War destroy- ed the naivety. Spies became “‘menaces. Populations hated and feared them. Many faced firing squads, blindfolded, back to prison wall. : MAJOR PROBLEM : Nor had espionage become any more respectable in the pub- lic mind by the Second World War. It had- become more scientific. A spy’s major prob- lem had not been getting the in- formation— human carelessness and trustfulness make that rea- sonably easy for a trained agent —but getting it home. In the last war, radio solved this problem. Radio espionage and counter- espionage battles were fought.. The most important was that be- tween the secret Soviet network inside Germany, called by the Nazis “the Rote Kapelle” (Red Chapel) and counter- espionage. Now an aura of romance ” seems to surround spies. Colon- |°” el Abel is obviously, considered highly worthy of his country’s gratitude. But there is one flaw. The best spies (like Silber, who worked undetected in the British postal censorship throughout the First World War) are not caught. They live to tell thei own stories. s __Welco ’ The Agriculture “Department reports with pride that the gar- den catalogues this year- have a new offering in Canadian seed— Butter ~King, a large ‘butterhead lettuce expected to be success- fully grown and ‘very accept- ablé anywhere in Canada.” The term ‘‘butterhead’” leads me, Butter King! . Ottawa Journal via-the U.S. Department of Agri- culture. The Butter King form chart says that it is slow to seed, slow to develop tipburn and- bitter- ness, and, because it matures” | later, extends the marketing | period for butterhead types. Such deliberation, apparently, is ‘higher cost of our advanced edu- | people more interested in words | good in lettuce if, hot in horses. cational system, either with con- solidation or not. - than in lettuce into a charming: stroll gh lettuce terminol- If we may switch similes, But- ter King begins to sound like old If we approached the people | ogy. Butter King has won 4 | whisky advertisements when the of our province in answer to | finding ways and means of sup- bronze medal im the ‘1964 All- | American selections open trial Agriculture Department goes on |to assert that consumers will porting this great institution,of | rounds’’ which makes it sound | find it of-delicate texture with learning, the results might sur- | prise us all. I. am, Sir, etc.; | like a lettuce horse race. | The horsey atmosphere con- tinues with the news that Butter “a mild, mellow taste.” It has, os 12 to. 14-inch spread : we | which, n trimmed, averages LA Strange + + e Malignancy By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Cancer of the prostate is a pe- culiar’. malignancy. The cancer- ous seeds. in the’ gland may-re- main dormant (latent) for years and, in this respect, it does not follow the usual rules: These hidden lesions were found at autopsy in 60 per cent of 500 men who died for other reasons. The victims had no symptoms | and the tumors had no effect on life expectancy. Prostatic cancer can be ruth- less after graduating from the latent stage and. making its pres- ence known to the victim. The condition is less serious in older men. This is why physicians recommend conservative meas- ures when the diagnosis is made in men over 70. The prostate is the size and shape of a chestnut and is locat- ;ed in front of the bladder. The tube (urethra) -that carries ur- ine to the outside passes through the center of the gland and when .| the structure enlarges the flow is obstructed. The main function of the gland. is-to supply the se- cones in which sperm are car- . The chance of successful treat- ment is greatest when the One ancy ts recognized early. disorder is suspected whenever there are continuing urinary symptoms such as frequency and Slowing of the stream. These cancerous enlargement and there is no way to firid out ex- cept through.an examination. ' Other frequent initial symp- toms~— are ~~pain—- ine the— ower. urine, pain in the bladder, and blood in the urine, The tumor can be palpated through the rec- tum but a biopsy is essential for diagnosis. Certain blood tests are helpful along the X-rays of the bones to determine -whether the carcinoma. has spread~ be- yond the confines of the pros- tate. In some instances cure’ fol- lows removal of the. gland, but when this is not feasible X-ray therapy or the daily use of fe- male sex hormones is recom- mended: Now and then castra- tion is needed. These malignan- cies can. be controlled for many years even though far advanc- LEAKING GAS ; D.. F. writes: My refrigerator cough and my chest is sore and I blame these symptoms on in- haling the fumes. I'll be grate- ful for any information you can render. REPLY i Call a mechanic for the refrig- — and leave the chest pain us. ri Py 8. R. writes: Do patients al- ways talk while under anesthe- sia? ‘ ; REPLY No. In the strict sense they never talk when completely an- esthetized but blabbing may oc- cur while going under. Many an- esthesiologists ask the patient to count to 10 and the majority are asleep by eight. YAWNING : M. B. writes: Why is yawning catching? REPLY Yawning usually is associated with* fatigue, boredom, ‘or’ slight emotional anxiety and everyone the same environment may be subject to similar weariness, boredom, or frustration. — - HAIR LOSS AFTER MEASLES Mrs. C. writes: Is it natural for a child to lose a lot of hair after an attack of measles? REPLY It is not natural but occurs from time to time. The toxic na- ture of the disease probably is responsible. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Ill- fitting dentures can cause Pian: (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van-Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore | Van Dellen, co Chicago~ Trib- une, Chicago, Ilinois.) Our Yesterda S (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 3, 1941) Turkey and the rest of the Balkans, converted.y Hitler’s drive to the southeast’ into a po- tential zone of battle, strained at final preparations for the worst. | of the airplane which crashed and killed Gir Frederick Bant- | ing, lived in the bush country of Newfoundland for four days and nights on three sandwiches and ‘snow, it was learned in Mon- treal. TEN YEARS AGO (March..3, 1956) Shooting between Israeli , and * ‘Syrian forces flared up in the northeast corner of the Sea of Galilee. A United Nations spok- esman said two Israeli police- men were killed. It. was reported that 1,239 rail cars of potatoes left the prov- ince during February, 1956. a OLD__NEWSPAPER DIES GEORGETOWN, British Gul- (CP) —~ British Guiana’s ol _newspaper, The Daily Chronicle,..pubjished its las. is- sue Monday after 85 years of service. A company statement said publication ceased because the daily has been losing money for nearly a decade and is threatening the existence 0/ the publishing company, the Daily’ Chronicle Ltd. Maritime Stationers te Limited @ Stationery, everyday. and sea- Smokers’ supplies Out of town newspapers Magazines and novels RALPH: BALDERSTON | King is a selection from the var- | at least twice the weight of ‘most Charlottetown, 4 ‘jety Rinat Hakfar, out of Israel Ky | butterhead varieties, ; sonal cards Children’s books signs also are caused by non-)- ‘back, hips, and leg, dribbling of |. has a leak in the tank. I have a | --bara-Castle Captain Joseph Mackey, pilot | e ‘ the Sy . NOTES BY THE WAY > or . In a modern home: the only things not controlled by a switch are the children.— Windsor Star. Whien today’s kids get married they’ll pester their wives for mixes like mother used to make. — St. Thomas Times Journal. Sutis at $750 each and beef at $5 a pound are foreseen for Ca- by that date maybe an lod age pension of $500 a month will be payable at 50. — Hamilton Spe- ctator. . Averages, as a child will know can be deceptive. Take four beg- gars and a millionaire and their averages wealth will be $200,000 Yet the four may die of starva- tion unless the fifth permits them to use some of his money for something more than an arithmetical exercise. — Van- couver Sun. By calling an election for March ‘31, Prime Minister Wil- son hopes his Labor forces will amass enough of a majority to “settle in golidly for e full term of office. ; Wilson is reported to feel that virtually endless speculation about an election does no good for domestic progress and. also tends to damage international ‘confidence in sterling._- The British political situation has been effervescent ever since 1962 when security scandals rocked the Tory government of prime minister Harold Mac- millan. . Eruption of the famed Chris: tin Keeler sex-security case in 1963- led~--to- howls for --Mac- millan’s. resignation. Pressures | for an election gréw stronger, if possible, when the 14th Earl of Home succeeded Macmillan in October of that year, becoming Sir Alec Douglas-Home. After’ Wilson finally ousted Douglas-Home in October, 1964, voters ‘hardly had time to catch their breath before election talk flew again because the socialists had. received only a five-seat majdrity—since reduced—in_ the 630-member House of Commons. garner a comfortable majority not so much by assaulting Tory strongholds as by capturing marginal seats—there is likely to be no change in at least 530 constituencies. But 40 dates, equally divided between. Conservative and Labor, were elected by majorities of less than 1,000: in 1964. By equalling the 1964 Tory-to- Ever since the first brave wo- men climbed up into their ‘‘elec- trics’’ (battery- driven cars of a half-century ago) and steered them with a tiller, jokesters -have. been making quips about women drivers. out The-very mention of them brings up to most men, we re- gret.to say,.the. picture of an ap- pealingly (or appallingly) femin- ine motorist plunging into a traffic tangle or knocking down a garage door. © But now from London comes mode the jokes about the lady at the wheel. ‘Women may drive buses in London,” announ- ces a headline in The Times this week. The plan to put women in the driver’s seat does not come from Great Britain’s new feminine ransport Minister, Bar- drive). It is the reasoned propos- al'of the London Transport | which is’ short about 4.000 driv- ers, d Boozy CHICAGO, Il AP —When a drunken dog reels into Dr. Harry W. Boothe’s office, the ‘veterinarian doés not prescribe. the hair of the dog that bit him. Rather; ‘You give him sup- ‘portive therapy — dextrose in- | jections," vitamin B complex, | intravenous fluids —and sym- |'pathy,"” Dr. Boothe. says,“ add- | ing: wee “4 the acute stages, you pump his stomach — and, of course you cut off his source of sup- ply.” That, Dr. Boothe ‘said in an interview, is the same treat- ment given ¢o a.human alco- holic But he said it was easier to break a booze hound of booze than a human. because -“basically,the dog —is _not_-vol- | NOTICE OF MEETING: | NORTH MILTON HALL SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1966 8:00 , nadians in A. D: 2011. Oh, well,. Wilson’s Election Bid ‘By Joseph MacSween Canadian Press Staff Writer i porters, ending 13 years of Tory rule, | Wivés are like fishermen — They brag about the ones that got away and complain about the one they kept: — Financial Post. ! a It is easy .to define‘‘exces- sive" taxation. Practically every person who pays taxes knows his is an example. —~ Port ~ Arthur News-Chronicle. cided not to abandon the for- mal style of clothing worn by its boys for 146 years. The deci- sion is no doubt open for furth- er discussion:-next century or so. @- Windsor Star. ° A young boy in a Fort William school had to write an essay about his father. Among other things he wrote,-‘‘My grandmo- ther was his mother. There | were lots of kids in the family. | They are now all my uncles."’— ~- | Fort William Times-Journal Labor average swing of 3% per cent, Wilson would collect a ma- jority of well over 100. By re- versing that trend, Tory leader Edward Heath» would become minister with’ a margin of nearly 100. Perhaps attitudes to the Eu- ropean Common Market com- prise the main difference be- tween the parties on interna- tional matters. Heath, who tried unsuccessfully to negotiate Brit- ‘ain’s entry under the Tories, still is committed to that policy. FAVORS BRIDGES : Wilson, anxious to be known as a Commonwealth-first man, speaks only of bridge-building. But it may be significant that some_of his most_ powerful sup- including the Daily Mirror group of newspapers, want Common Market entry Heath appears to take a more moderate line than Wilson to- ward rebel Rhodesia, advocat- ing negotiations*with Ian Smith. Wilson taunts that Heath is merely trying to heal a split within -his own y. - Wilson has cultivated just as assiduously as any Tory prime minister before him Britain's special relationship with the United States, infuriating his “own left“wing -over~Viet--Nam. Paradoxically a big Labor win in the forthcoming poll might make it more difficult for him to keep the firebrands in line. They shrank from opposing gov- ernment policy in the Commons when it would have brought Wil- son down—and thus let in the Tories—but would be urder no such restraint with a socialist — to_out- | (who. does... not, majority of, say 100. Back To Boadicia 3 Christian Science Monitor Of course the proposal has met with less than a cordial re- sponse from the London busmen. Their negotiating committee was reported ‘‘startled’”’ at the suggestion. The group _insiste that only a few women have jhe strength and nerve to dri a bus through London’s congested streets. But, the London ans- port was unconvinced And re- mained willing to, let the girls prove their prowess. It is not surprising that Lon- don is‘taking the lead atheng big cities in recognizing wom en’s ability at the wheel, Its cit- izens have. long looked at the statue of Boadicea in the shadow of Big Ben. It shows the British tribal queen in her chariot driving a Eeencing steed in the thick of attle. This was the year A.D. 62. It’s about-time to end dis- crimination against the woman driver and we commend the London Transport for its bold effort to do so. Pooc hes! Problem Associated Press vention, of which he is_chair- man. The 44 year old _veteri- narian said he had seen enough alcoholic’ dogs to know that while the problem was rare, it existed. ; Hé said that when he had practiced near Chicago's night life district, he had seen a humber of boozy pooches —‘‘I have seen several dogs hung over, too, and it is a sight to behold with their bloodshot eyes,” } They frequently ‘ were seen in the company of alcoholic masters, he added. | , His theory ig~ that the ine secure master with an alco hol problem uses his dog as a Speakers and Discussion | Beef — Potatos — Taxes | Queens County Federation of — | “Agriculture Knud Jorgenson, President untarily an alcoholic — some- | ‘‘when there's nobody else around body helped him get hooked."’ | to drink with’ and as an ex- Dr. Boothe made his com- | tension of himself. ; ments Tuesday while attend. “He thinks hig dog is as mix- ing the Illinois State Veteri- | ed up -as he is,”. Dr. Boothe nary Medical association con- said. P.M. i r t 4 Britain's Eton Collge has de- ‘te @ combination drinking buddy _ a