Constitutional White Paper Re des ‘: Is Promised In December ome _ opposition peice in the House rime ene statement said there | OTTAWA A absolutely nothing” in the tae Plate ta ae ne ite \formula that “directly or ae government en to publish a aces emolinitly or | leapliody, hite o canstiiudan ini cemee Tue has Prov! ides for the granting of a| tional question. a December. |been no indication of when the | Sten fal status, witsin the Cana- He said in a statement the | formula will come before the Waite paper will be issued with | Commons, but it is unulikely to | a view to assisting Parliament |be dealt with until the white pa- statements ularly from Conservative and w Democratic Party spokes- rata during the present “Gebata| {santo dian federation, to one or the © other of tthe provinces.”’ The section of the formula panties eae that has drawn the most fire, |Process In their phar a pe geminal od Sen ee iia “a 1 ag oe which Pee Gable’ tea Lees. constitution cou be tion ind be iecught wnat ee Mr. Pearson's statement said changed to allow provinces into Jurisdiction af” the Canadian |‘"@ white paper ‘will relate the [federal jurisdictions. Such Parliam history of federal-provincial ne- amendments would require the spective approval of at least four prov- Well as | herst St move t Christop with the acceptable to the federal afd ‘Mind since it requires the ap proval of the federal. and fou provincial legislatures. While not perfect in every re- on a formula earlier last month under wiich future amendments | | Provincial... governments." could be made without refer- ence to Westminster, Beales | aaatee te ¢ Guardian SECOND SECTION al development of our wt was the best formula that) could be reached through the of negoiation and mu- acceptable of true federalism, as in terms of the great Any Sites in the British | sodations whic) have taken|ivegs and the f contribution that it can make in North America Act now must | Place. beginning in 1927, on this) ong ecaral “parte \te long ae to Canadian unity be given final approval in the subject. It will also outline the lanae iden ‘British parliament before be.|™2in considerations underlying Mr. Pearson said ftiis section| coming law. Mr. Pearson and the approach which finally pro- could not conceivably be drafted | mageetr (CP) — Mer- the provincial premiers agreed uced a solution unanimously |With any associate status in}chants along downtown Am- reet are resisting a city o alter the name to he Colomb. to conform street’s northern exten- des assisting legislators, ;Spect, the statement said ce sion. The merchants say Am- The formula has come under It said, ‘it should also be of| formula represents a jherst is a better name for criticism in Parliament, partic-|permanent interest to students | great achievement in the ee business. re iy eats pa a RE READY...T¢ INSURANCE GUARANTEE There is « MOR-POWER Battery available for every car, truck or tractor Domestic or Imported. 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St. ‘West, Saint John Award from "PETER JACKSON Representative Mr. Frank McGrath, Cash compromise | between the federal and provin- cial governments. “It must be regarded in a per- Charlottetown, Thurs. Nov. 5, 1964. Limewood Lassie Duchess, owned by S. Wood and Son Sterling Wood and son, Robert, . Herbert, was reserve jun- ior in the dual purpose Short- horn class female champion at the Atlantic Winter Fair, Hali- fax, this week. The same yearl- ing was junior champion at the RESERVE FEMALE CHAMPION Sale Of Steers Seen Highlight By NEIL A. MATHESON Provincial-Farm Editor PAGE * a ACROSS THE ISLAND | | | THE ATLANTIC Winter Fair, Halifax, is only getting right- \ly underway—I’m writing this on Sunday night because [’ll be too busy later in the week—but the highlight thus far has be the sale of finished steers, the most |staged in the Maritime Provinces And it was STAGED, make: - no mistake I'm | wondering if our Easter Beef Show and Sale people can get some tips from the a arrangement committee here successful ever about that for $2.00 That in itself is a Maritime cree But what followed Lice |the unprecedented story them Mack Dickson, the voungte from Clyde River, had prev- i r to the reserve grand champion- the Dixon aan Od for $1.92 per pound. Multiply ior the weight of 960, and subtract a seling deduction of one and one-half percent, and you have a tidy sum for the youngster to take home. For this was his own steer Sanderson Steers Are Champions THEN THERE was the champion Hereford. an 890-pound animal owned by Fulton Sanderson, North River, that sold for 1.72 per pound, and the reserve Hereford nese a 974- pounder shown by Jchnny Sanderson, that sold for $1. Beane I Set it, the ie steer was bought by ae wa ght by Tom Foreman for ter. and he "i took the third The fourth went to Safe- way Stores. I left the sale at that spot to send the story back home, and to dig up other fair news for The Guardian. The show and sale committee dined and wined the pros- pective buyers prior the sale, and they tell me that it really paid off. Apparently it did and the fantastic prices are the result of some good plannin around among the people responsible as Auctioneer Bill Cunningham sold the animals. He did a tremendous job of keeping the tempo rolling, but I never seen such a dem- jonstration of enthusiastic cheering and applause as the ring- side kept up, pers during those record-breaking early Pravinei . |sales. It e of a college football pep rally. rovincial Exhibition in Char ONE OF the ates: Norman Spence, is a member of lottetown in August. The ani- |the Nova Scotia legislature, and he was in there rooting with mal is being shown here by Be rome of them. The genial Norman is a Hereford breeder Robert Wood. nd that reminds me that even the Hereford men were cheer- FEDERATION NEWSLETTER . LINCOLN D | Neveliber can be deatvibed as be done and this includes most a type of twilight ne between | | of the fall fall and winter. It c or the other and variations quite | wise. marked. \OVER THE MOON In early November 1933 the temperature went so low after | shipped by. jet airplane to Italy. | were killed. Winter can set in |calves into cartons for export. ers realize that time m the saving crops. of | (ee that |States calves will be standpoint crop is under cover but much of len ted States calves are danger of heavy frost. Grain ee remain to be harvested lof 41 cent reat quantities of » straw . oe there bales of hay waits to be rescued and this does seem to leaner and the cartons are oe edohgen eae patience of ‘strong enough to be stacked e has a wooden frame with A large acreage ‘ot the new | habe: top and two of the sides of | Penta en ideal: ae || heavy cardboard and the other aie ae 2 Grete cet | onaa Sabena, tna, paisa ats 0 pleasant to work in the month of th vi fi yee eit ia yor on November. It is bound to be a | jin tra dark month because the days are | short and the really sunny ones | eaee OUTLOOK infrequent. vier hog cere and ————_--- | somewhat lower prices to pro- {ducers compared with last year | are foreeast for the final quar ter of 1964 by Canada Depart- | ment of Agriculture experts. Marketings should reach their | highest levels in late October and | November but decline somewhat |in December. Prices are expect- ke to remain close to present NO SMOKE, NO ODOUR vali P Aneaite to th Dominion Bur- }eau of Statistics September 1, hog survey, thre were 5,900,000 hogs on farms in Canada—an in- | crease of six per cent over the | past year. | In Eastern Canada hog num- | bers increased two per cent |while numbers in Western Can- ada were 12 per cent greater than at Sept. Farmers indicated that far- rowings may increase nine per- cent in Eastern Canada and 30 per cent in the West to a total of 278,000 for all Canada. This is a 16 per cent increase over last | year POTATO MEETING With one down and one to go po 'S are having two |opportunities in one week to hear 2 variety of reports on their in- dustry and to bring forward their views on matters related to pot: | 5 sto policy. Among those who are interest- ed, there is fairly general agree ment that the potato industry is AHEATING OIL Phone 4-7311 CHARLOTTETOWN Petroleum Products tion and lack of long term plan- ning. Attempts on the part of a variety of groups to fill this Or for Re | | security — slightly highe , N.B., receives $100 avorable Nov. Weather Needed To Complete Gathering Of Crops = To do the work that needs to{vacuum have not been very | plowing November e one |needs to behave itself weather- | quite a mild fall that many trees itt is a new technique putting in November, hence most farm- | Initial shipments were made to | it is borrowed |Milan in August and it is expect- bout United jetted to} Generally the record potato Hea before the end of the eae |ment banquet fell on one of the ompetitive in the Italian arket m | and the result was much reduced ee vue a avoid the ‘thanks in large measure to the | attendance. Those .who attended |Room ee today—he ia his own public relations firm, and a new air zee rate for calves Two pea of cartons are being | still lie in the fields. Here and | jused to to ship the calves. Both al- low shipment of three calves per Island! s part a suffering from lack of organiza | 833% MORTGAGES On new or improved city homes 7% on standard two thirds loans on first class come in and talk over your requirements with HYNDMAN & CO. LIMITED ite for our Mack Dixon as he showed his Angus steer to the abe hip, ao ee oe Frets, the national pail secretary and editor a elight ted, ight ie expected, for 0 Angus seen ag to the of the class, But neua rane ian sae o the Ca mae Hereford Assoc iation and one of the breeder’s biggest boosters in this or any other country, said ‘I eee ling for Mack too, I just counldn’t help myself.” he said | se ee something soo this enthusiastic younster that to people. Manager Watson Maxner told |me 4 tee been a ten ur his since I first saw him show | cattle here last year.’ Lincoln’s Job Is More Complex LINCOLN DEWAR, New Perth is chairman of the Dy ures do not mean that reanite: | Foods Service Bureau whose job it is to make Canadian en eee be achieved in the future. | ore dairy foods, Austen d butter. He observed to me some- that we have one of the |time ago tsar ould be no butter surplus i ued on record and gener: | we could get the eoteainits and hotels to put bigger slices tes successful. However, past fail. | United States calves are being ally favourable prices it would | of putter on a appear a favourable time for | potato people to take stock of | thei position and indicate in- terest by good attendance at the meetings in question. PASTURE DINNER This year’s Pasture Improve- | I thought of y Lincoln, and agreed heartily with your suggestion the wlere I reached Halifax. I was tired and hungry after eating little all day, and I ordered several repeats of the ace pats, when I had dinner about 7.30 in the evening. But today, Lincoln, the eee han had dinner at the Flam, ‘ingo Restatrant, one of the it | pats un I talked about it with Bruce Cochrane in the Fair Press s finest: we had a grand meal, your butter theory dint vara up, for I saw waitresses carrying trays of dishes from the tables that had many butter finest days (Oct. 28) of the fall vere rewarded with a fine meal |good one—and do you suppose his reaction was? “Of perhaps much /course hey leave it. I don't eat it either I asked him “why, don’t you like butter?” He replied “‘It's course by Father Bolger on the | fattening’, So Lincoln, my friend, you have a more difficult and attitude to lob to do ee ee getting the eating places to put more but- Confederation. It is not eeu ae on the pla to understand why Father B M i Missing Body Has Been Found bees ad recently been signally re- | MANY OF you will ee the story I picked up i |@ year ago from a former Islander, about the Montreal whe was travelling in the jong United States with his wife and ti Certainls tha mother. You will recall that the mother | competi ion. Certain y in , [died suddenly in the back seat of the car nae they were in a space of time there has lonely, uninhabited part of the country, and he had to drive greatly increased recognition | ‘i [for many ele until he could reach the nearest telephone. | value of pasture and a great Knowing this, he took his mother’ d placed it in learned about proper StaNiGe. o fink. cause his wife and children were terrified at the ment. ought * oe with a dead person in the back seat right | It is generally agreed that Is- behind th jJand pares has ae | The ee told him the man went in fo teleplione the nearest [Possibilities and new avenu officials when he reached the nearest service station, and his fled from the car in en panic. When the man went and what was cae important a very fine dis: | te “This is the sixth occasion on | |which the Dept. of Agriculture | an the Dairyman’s Association opening up, certainly one of the ising is that of grass and clover |back to his car, it was gone. It had been stolen, and many age. s the story I told in my column of almost a year ago. On Wednesday representatives | “tits evening Mrs. Matheson and I were visiting gs Mac- ‘ormer Agriculture and Ministers and Florence Paul of Brookfield, and they told us the body has since puties from Departments of |been That’s all I know about it now, but I’ll let 7 to the annual Dominion Pro- iditional comment now is the same as it was a year ago: vincial Outlook Conference. The | ae the car thief’s horror when he opened the lid of one was to consider with Dr. } f . e de? e Lavigne feed grains adminis-/ Policemen’s Difficulties Discussed manent policy of freight assis- tance and secondly to consider | I TALKED yesterday to a veteran Halifax-policeman about WOie favidere | and which when it’s misisi read this, Junior nae the m4 r Il tell you hi ew I see might be brought to the attention |y a. a friend of yours, “and I'll tell you his nam en M While there toult bright spots a | pobicemtaa Ht has long since learned to control his temper, aritime agriculture, yet recent |ang how to deal with almost all kinds of situations, he had a picture is not encouraging. With |talifax citizen who resented being told where he couldn't ga average farm income generally |with his car. The fair has regulations stating where certain tion being made that probably /his duty. half of the farm operations would | There’s a coveted spot near the Forum—I'm ‘able to use there appears to be a clear case |sticker for my windshield, But this man had no such per- for serious study of our Mari- |mission. The Fair management js most helpful. PEKING PEOPLE man; “he needled me so much that I kept my temper with th Finally 1 told him if you persist, I'll shane lital of the ancient Manchu Dy-|you under arrest, [nasty. now has a population of /policeman told me, That, apparently, ended the unpleasant most important and most prom- whether as pasture, hay or sil ae later he still had not heard anything about it. of the Maritime Federation of |Donald, formerly of Glen William, and his wife, the Agriculture met in Moncton prior |know the details when I am able to get them My only meeting had two main purposes |the tr trator, matters related to a per- | other matters of importance to |Something Saath courtesy, and what a difference it makes bad Wei Ottawa Conferenc n of 23 years on the force, and an experienced studies indicate that the overall |moct unusually rough time a few hours previously with a leading going down and with the sugges- |cars can go, and others can’t, so the policeman was only doing do better in other endeavours |it this year because the fair management gave me an “official” ieee eee “THE MAN gave me such a bad time of it” says the oye na Peking, the 700-year-old cap- \greatest difficulty. and you'll have time to think it over,” the 4,000,000. A half hour later, another car approached the policeman. It didn't have any sticker either, but a pleasant looking lady ‘said “‘Please, can we go up there with our car (the climb is steep), my husband has a very bad heart and I’m afraid to | have a climb it.” veteran policeman said ae ae lady, go right ahead,” as he recdgeieed the unusual human ne 1 “Courtesy is something which I ais: Seana nothing else but since I came here last year for the first time to ee Atlantic Winter Fair. And that goes for everyone on the ground, includ: ing you and your fellow policemen’’ I told your friend,” Junior. Quick as a flash the ce acura replied: “Don't forget, sir, | that you are giving courtesy yourse : WE PARTED with a friendly smile, myself a little em- tyro with his kind remark, but both of us felt happier, am sure, for our brief exchange of views Many of those public servants have a most difficult job to do, particularly policemen. Some of en me e devil at | times and it’s so easy to criticize. experience has been that in general policemen are shou tee ‘kindest, and the most big hearted people I have known. Sometime to tell you something about a few of those experiences in this “financing r on others. umn. MORTGAGE AND INSURANCE BROKERS - And I k : anne what ee < ie Halifax men is id me, “If people would remember re only | Dial 4-6567 57 Queen St. te = o we. ; in were ied, and we often are.” | Y