Gniurdiafiti ' I Edwmd Island Like The Dew I ~ I P . -_"‘_' W.J. Hmcox, Publlrhw I _ lnwl Funk WIl|m Ex ‘lvu Editor Editor I gblllhid Ivory wool: day morning (except Sun ‘ da ' -Ind Ivatuvory holldaycl 0' lbs Prlnco SHIII. ‘ lulown. P.E.l., by Thomson NIwIpIpIrI ltd. - M 6-10 Colhurv snout, Urflursny 6-59-12,- Western office, 1030 Won Ge‘ II Street, Vancouver (MA 7037). ‘ , mbur Canadian Dllly Newspaper Fubli-hen Asflhnion Ind Tho Conadun Preu The CInIdlIn . Pr“ OI Ixclusively entitled to who uII for rIpub- Iicfllon oi Ill new: dispItcheI in thin pnpou crfillud to it or ll the Associated Press or Rouvern and’_I|Io to tho local news published herein. All right} or fOpUl)l|LAHDn of special dinpalchol horcln Ilsa reserved. Subscription rIleI. Nov over 35: per week by canlor. 112.00 I year by mail or rural roulu Ind Irul not serviced by tamer. $15.00 a yenr oil Inland Ind UK. $2000 per . year an US. and elsewhere DUlI|dO Bnmh Cum. ‘ Inonweallh. Not ovur 7c per Iinglu tODV~ Member Audit 8urIIu of Circulation- ”“Tha strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink" arc."-.-“4"’iam.isv‘:i..1i~."i7xiv“... 1964 . Can The Gap Remain? , History tends often to repeat it- self. but it is doubtful if anything like the trek of hundreds of thous- ands of West Berliners through the gap in the Berlin wall to visit rela- tives on the Communist side has ever happened before. At this dis- tance the situation caused by this Communist. barrier, and the Com- munist decision to have it breached in this manner as a gesture of good will at this season, is difficult to get into focus. - It is like a lucid gap in I night- mare. which still doesn't make sense. For the most curious feature of this gesture of Communist mag- nanimity is that it doesn’t extend far enough to allow East German : citizens to visit West Berlin. Perhaps it is the prelude to better relations between West Ber- lin and West Germany on the one hand and Communist East Germany on the other. At least, the question is "being discussed on both sides of the wall in preparation for the situ- ation after January 5, when the present arrangement lapses The West Berlin ci-ty govern- ment has started to negotiate with the East German regime on extend- ing the visits. Such talks. however, will likely run up against Com- munist claims for a quid pro quo. an the way of official recognition of the East German government's status. West Germans regard this regime as the puppet of Soviet im- perialism. created merely to keep Germany divided. Meantime. however, we note that 1: “hot line." similar to the one set up between Washington and Mos- cow. is now functioning between West and East Berlin. Installed to facilitate the Christmas pass nego- tiations. it could mean a return to a saner situation for Berlin citizens. The hot. line. be it noted. is a tele- graph connection. Telephone com- munications between the two parts of the city have been interrupted for nearly ten years. Proposed Conference . One matter in which the federal government can safely take the initiative without danger of incur- ring provincial opposition is in the field indicated recently by Health Minister Judy LaMarsh to the House of Commons. Miss LaMarsh’s statement was to the effect that I special conference on mental re- iardalion would probably be held this year under federal auspices. Attending it would be representa- tives of the provinces, as well as of other interested groups. The purpose of the conference. as outlined by the minister, would he to draft 8 comprehensive na- tional program to deal with retard- ation: and Miss LaMarsh suggest- ed that increased grants from Ot- tawa for work in this field might well be one result. This, comments the Toronto Globe and Mail. is I most _hopeful augury. Canada has lagged in Ic- cepting proper responsibility for those of its citizens who suffer mental retardation. It was well into this century before volunteer groups of parents first brought the sub- ject out of tho concealing darkness in which it hId been hidden with mistaken shame. In the years since. there has been some acceptance of respon- Iibility for the retarded It various levels-—in the local community, from special organizations and pro- Wncial governments. WI are ID = ation heard recently I 1 that the federal sales tax, now im- :posed at the manufactures’ f should be combined with provincial 1 retail sales taxes. that it should be lof aware or the exvellnnf work which has been done in Prince Edward Island in late years in this con- nection. But, as our Toronto con- temporary Iays. governments havo not yet accepted their fair and proper share of the burden, and Canada does not yet have any na- tional approach to the problem. In preparing for such a confer- ence as Miss Lal\’Iarc.h proposes. I thorough study of planning in other advanced countries would be most. helpful. This could best be done through the minister's own depart- ment, as a lime-saving first step in getting a national program launched. And it is to be hoped. as the Toronto paper well says. that this conference “will be taken off the probable and placed on the certain list of government activities for 1964." Taxes Galore The Royal Commission on Tax- suggestion level collected by one administrative pro- cess and then be shared by both levels of government. It is unlikely, in view of the dif- ficulties in the way, that the com- . mission will make any such recom- mendation. But the proposal elicited from one of the commissioners the I highly pertinent remark that if the federal and provincial sales taxes, and. in some cases, excise taxes, were grouped together for the pub- A lie to see, they might get “a terrible ‘ . shock." The shock would be all the great- er in the still more unlikely event the commission proposing a scheme by which the public were to pay for all government -spending through one national consumer tax. One Ontario commentator has tried to figure out what this would mean on the basis of 1962 statistics. Total government spending in Can- ada came that year to $13 billion, he finds; and since retail spending in the year came to $175 billion. this imaginary sales tax would have had to be at the rate of 75 per cent on every dollar spent. at the cash reg- ister level. A $20 grocery bill would have required another $15 for the tax. Still bent on making our flesh creep, the commentator adds that "if this idea is a shocker. consider the point that in one way or another and without even knowing it the nation really is paying a tax bill of just that proportion." Stretching The Life Line Among the brighter news items of the year just closed was the re- port from the Dominion Bureau of Statistics that the average life ex- pectancy of Canadians is now among the highest in the world. The new table. based on the 1961 census. places the life expectancy at birth of Canadian males at 68 years and four months. This is an increase of two years since the 1951 census and more than eight years since 1931. Still brighter is the life expect.- ancy for girls born in the 1960-62 period, which averages 74 years and two months, based on present. mortal- ity rates. This is 3"2 years more than in 1951 and 12 years more than in 1931. Only .\'orwa_y. Sweden and The Netherlands have higher life expect- ancy figures. In all three countries. the figures are 71 for males and nearly 75 for females. Mortality rates have gone down for infants and children of both sex- es, and for middle-aged and older women. There has been relatively little improvement in the life expect- ancy of males over 40. The new table indicates that of 100.000 babies born in 1960-62. 72,746 females will sur- vive to age 70 compared to 57,517 males We've still got a long way to go before reaching the ages of the patriarchs before the Flood. but we seem to be heading that way. EDITORIAL NOTE "Times have changed,” says Chief One Arrow, a Cherokee who heads the United Association of American Indians. The chief-4‘ Brooklyn resident. whose name for » social-security purposes is Jules HIywood—explainI: “You ought to see our little IndlInI It I cowboy- Ind-Indian movie. Every blessed one II rooting for the cowboys." ___:. O c“ 4* -’ ‘O “““‘:¢“:?4 \“.¢"‘ ’ 9 ' ~.“"“‘ ‘ ‘u J AND K READY TO MEET - ~ - NEWS RELEASE gT_rAwA REPORT by P;+.-ask Nicholson Costly Election Promise Proved Unsound Election promises by political leaders cost money that money has to be provided by the tax- Da_vm‘S: wc have had so many costly election promises in the past scvon years that we cannot now afford any more, while some must be rescinded. The voters. long gulled by politicians‘ promises that they can give something for nothing. are rcluclanl to believe this. A neat. little capsulated example of the bitter costly truth of this has however just been provided from that impressive building facing our Parliament Building here. the Embassy of the U.S.A. “Tho Department of State to- day announced an exchange of notes with the Government of Canada regarding the ireim.poIi- lion of tolls on the Welland Canal. The tolls. which were suspended as of July 18. 1962. will be reimposed as of April 1. 1964." Thus the Ambassador of U.E.A. commenced his main. and summarized the whole sorry story. “IF YOU VOTE FOR ME . . ." Just before polling day in the 1962 election, the leader of the Conservative Pary. John Diefcn- bnkei‘. was whistle-stopping thr- ough the Niagara Peninsula. sol- iciting the voters‘ support for the candidates of his party. He sur- prised his lislcners by announc- ing that rolls on the Welland canal would be suspended if his government was returned to of- fice. This appeared like a gamb- lor‘s throw to defeat the sitting Liberal MP's in that dist.rict.. such as Wellandls Dr. W.H. Mac- Millan and Niagara Fall's Judy Lahlarsh. and to keep Lincoln safe for the Conservative can- didale. This bid failed; the Liberals swept all three seats. But the Diefcnbaker government was re- turned to office in a minority position. So the tolls were re- moved. Ambassador Butterwm'1fh'I statement discolsed the text of the relevant note addressed to him by External Affairs Minis- tor Paul .VIarl.in on December 19, 1963. This road: “Sir: I have the honour to re- fer to the exchange of notes of March 9. 1939 setting out the tar- iff of tolls on the St. Lawrence Seaway including the Welland Our Yesterdays (From the Guardian FlleI) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO ‘ (Januar ‘ y 3. 1939) Prince Edward Island will be in the limelight this coming sum- mer. beginning the week of July 17- the 75th anniversary of the first meeting of Canadian delegates which led to Confeder- ation will be celebrated. Seven tablets to the Fathers of Confed- eration is in preparation—flve of which will be erected in Charlot- tetown. one In Summerside and one in Georgetown. R.W. Tufts. of Wolfviile. N.S.. Migratory Bird officer for the Maritime Provinces. will visit Charlottetown today. He ls Ich- eduled to meet members of the Prince Edward Island Govern- ment and h and Game Asso- ciation here. TEN YEARS AGO (.IIuuIry I, 1064) Major Alan Nlc.holIon leIveI this morning for Fred cton. N.B.. where he will take up the position of Regional Director of Family Allowances and Old Age Security in the Province New Brunswick. MIjor Nlcholoon ha been heId of that department In thlI province IlncI the Inception of the office here eight you-I Igo. Mn. Oliufer Coffin. I Ipoclal nurse suffered I broken leg Ind several fractund ribs when Ihe was struck by I truck, Is Ihe was lowing the P.E.I. Bouplul .eIr1y Saturday night. The Icy condition of the street did not IL low the driver to stop quickly to prevent the Iccldeut. state» i . Canal as of April 1. 1964 It the averaged $1,058, or $6,632 per Canal, and to the exchange of notes of July 3 and 13, 1962, which varied the tariff of tolls in order to provide for the sus- pension of tolls on the Welland Canal. In my predeccessor's ‘ Hon. Howard Green) note No. ' ‘I . communicate further with you if the Govern- ment. of Canada subsequently decides that it would be advise- a e to revoke this suspension and reimpose tolls on the Well- and Canal.‘ The Canadian Gov- ernment has decided that it would be advisable to revoke the suspension referred to and for reimpose tolls on the Welland rate and under the tennis exist- ing lmrnediately prior to the suspension PROMISE SEEN UNSOUND? Thus that election promise to make like Welland Canal toll- free has now been reversed. It is now seen to have been In elec' promise which will sc- onomically unsound and o n I which Canada could not afford. But more. Ambassador Butter- worth. by pufblicis-in-g Mr. Mar- tin's letter. reveals for the first time that the Conservative Gov- ernment had doubts It the time warning in his note announcing the ending of the tolls that the government might later decide that it would be “advisable to revoke the suspension Ind reim- pose bolls." So now. after I costly tx- periment benevfiltimg shippers at th cost of the ian taxpay- ers through one and I half ship- ping seasons. that election pro- mise has ended. This raises th e interesting question: what other costly elec- tion promises will now also have to be defaulted upon? Biting The Hand Globe Ind Mall, Toronin There has been an extraordin- 1 my influx of foreign capital into ‘ Canada since the war. At th I beginning of 1947. the amount of foreign capital invested here at $7.2 billion—— pretty much where it had stood I ll through the 19305 Ind I 11 through the war. But from 1947 on, the figure raced up. Fifteen years later. It the beginning of 1962. it stood of- ficially at $23.6 billion. and to- day may be estimated at $25.5 billion. VI The development b r o u g ht about by this massive increase in foreign investment helped to bring about I massive increase in Canada's national wealth. The 15-year period (Jan. 1. 1947JIn. 1. 1962) which saw foreign in- vestment in Canada more than tripled from $7.2 billion to $23.6 billion also saw Canada‘: Gross National Product more th I n ti-{piled from $11.8 biilion to $37.4 on. Every Canadian shared in this increase of n I t l o n Il wealth which foreign investment he! to bring about. In 1947. Canada‘: average industrial wage was .19 8 week; in 1962. it wa s $80.55 I week. In 1947. Canada‘: per-caplta income averaged 827. or $3.308 per family; In 1962. it ‘ family. This process of enrichment through foreign investment in ef- fect has been challenged by Fi- nance Minister Wal-ler Gordon. In his June 13 budget. Mr. Gor- don expressed concern over the extent of foreign ownership of Canadian industry. He thereupon proceeded to slap 8 punitive tax increase on Canadian subsidiaries of foreign- owned companies. Unless these subsidiaries make 25 per cent of their shares avaliable for Can- Idian purchase by Jan. 1. 1965. the withholding (Ix they my on dividends sent out of Canada will Increase from 15 per cent. II If present. to 20 per cent. What Mr. Gordon has done is suddenly. without warning. (:0 wave the red flag of hostility at foreign lnveItorI—In ox1rIorxl- lnary step for I country which since the war hu Iccepted close to $20 -billion of foreign capital; and has employed that :20 bil- lion to bring about In almost re- vofutlonary improvement in its Itandards of living. This meuure hII not been Iufflclently considered. It hII not been Iu-fflciently debIted. by Parliament or by the public. It could prove to be I. hiltorlc blun- der on CInIdI’I pIrt. The very leIst.Mr. Gordon cIu do II to withdraw It—-Ind the Iooncr. the better. Debate On The CBC Moutrul Another demand has been mIde In the House of common for I complete exImlnItlon-—- top-to-bottom examlnItlon-- the Canadian Broadcasting Cor- poratlon. The CBC ll. In fact. the moat lnveItlgIlId orgIIlIItlon in Cm- ada. Apart from the examina- tions conducted more or III I regularly by the Broadcasting Committee of the Home of Com- monI. It hII bun Iurvuyed Ind Iualyzed by I long series of commlulolu. The R0}'II_ Com- mission on Broudcntlng (known II the Fowler Commlulou) did I very pIlnItIkln| Job. And I careful exumlnulou of tbo CBC. lnIofIr II fluInclIl IdmlnlItrI- llon II conccrnod. bu only 1'0- cently been completed by an qlnuco Commlulcu. The need, It would IIIm, II not for Itlll Inotber couunlulou to Guuflo npldly rlIlnI Imounu. In mo the CBC'I tom Ipendlng pro- gram had been too million. Now it wII $87.0 million. But thlI concern Ibout th I Ipendlng run of the CBC II not new. The need to rIlItI t1ilI Ipendlng to Iomo flrm Ind pu- dlcuble formuII wII recognized an In bIck II 1051. Thou tho Mamy Couunlulon recommen- ded an the cBC'I budget bI Iet It I dollnr I bud for tho CIuIdlIu pupulutlou. The low- ler commlulou. II lu repozthln I 1 7. In recom principle of fixed budutl. with- in which the CBC would be ro- qulred to ItIy. M the end of every five yIIrI there could in dlIcuulouI II to what the bulc budget for the next five yIIrI Ihould be; H: I CBC _cuuld prIIIut III own cIII forIchIuII.ButdurlI| IIII five-yIIr period tbu 1iIvI I predlcublc foundation for III pluuulu, wan. III public would law I doflnlto culling (or whnl it could be Ixpoctod to guy for the CBC'I fluunclnn. IETTLEIENT GROWS Sluco Fletcher Chrlumn. IIIII other IIllorI from the Bounty Ind 10 PolyIIIlIuI oolausul mun Illlld 11: I'll. III III»- llalllllf bII Iron II more than Hysterectomy And Emotion By Dr. Tllcudou R. VII Dollcl will removIl of the uterul Ind ovIrlII leId to mucullnlzutlou, premature aging, nil: in weight. or frlgldity? The InIwer to Ill then queatom II no Ind, on an ' lIIt one. not unleu the womIn wan frigid prior to the opentlou (opboro - h y I I e r ectomy). many women worry about when told thI! But then poIIlbllltleI surgery II needed Hot flIIhII Ind other IlguI of the chInge of life cIn be expect- 'ed. but than Iymptom cIn bu controled with tranquillzen Ind oral eItrogenI (female Iex hor- mones). Tho Idrenal glundI ul- ually take over for the ovaries Ind produce sex hormones for years. But despite these facts. most plwsicians have learned not to underestimate the impor- tance of the uterus Is I symbol of femininity. Some women be- come depressed after I hyster- ectomy: many more develop Id- verae emotlonul reactlom. Dr. William S. Kroger of Bev- erly Hills. Cal.. describes three different types of neurotic per- sonalities that tend to provu troublesome after the operation. The first is the polysurgery Id- 'ct. the woman who has h I (1 many operations and hospitali- zations. She is tense and often has defined and widespread pIinI. Some of these women lnslsll upon I hysterectomy because they are too old to have more children and are convinced that small fibroids are responsible for backache or abdominal din- tress. These attitudes are diffi- cult to understand; I deep-scab ed psychic need to suffer must drive them to surgery. They are more unhappy when the op- eration does not solve their emu- tlonal problems. The indifferent woman II the Iecond type. She la friendly Ind tIlkItlve. but this is just I fac- Ide. I-{er immaturity prevents her thinking about the operation beforehand. but the boom drops when it is over. She respondl like I spoiled child and com- plains bitterly about every little ache and pain. The third type is the over-an- xious or domineering woman who bargains about fees. where the incision should be made. Ind what anesthetic to use. She ul- ually is vengeful later on. These are problem patients. and the physician is likely change his usual approach when they are recognized. COLD IS GOOD M.M. writes: What is meant when I radioisotope test on I thyroid odule reports it old"? so 0 REPLY That the nodule lI nonmalig- nant. Cancerous growths in tho thyroid behave differently In that the cells absorb mor I radioactive iodine than does the nonmalignant tumor. APPENDICITIS L L. writes: If I chlld'I Ip- pendix ruptures and he develops peritonitis. is he operated on right away or after the infection goes down? REPLY Immediate surgery II done un- leII the infection localizes in one area (abscess). PREMARITAL TESTS A. J.wrlte : Do the pre- marital bloods tests required by various states merely determine whether Iyphlllls is present or do they give information also on the Rb r’! REPLY The Rh factor usually is n ot checked. but it is I good idea. JANUARY. ‘/3 OFF Simona can Reducod 20% N 0 EXCHANGES ' 'l6oA Kent Street CLEARANCE Reg. 22.93 to 42.98 1 RACK DRESSES Wooln Ind Orcpu HOUSICOATS MATRNIW WIAR BULKY SWEATER Beguhr 9.93 to sun Now 6.66 to 23.99 I003”. '09. 3.90 In 10.98 ' 28% off NOTES BY THE WAY IIIIIIII Ichno cIueIdII something to when doctou. but how many wltchdocmn hId Ivcruu I I r n l n g I of 317,006 in 196l?—WlndIor Bur. !'ourIIwIupIrIlIrI IIIVI been dluovered by I CIllfornlI Ialronomer. The New Y o r k RIngerI uodoubt wlIh they hId mIde the dlIcovery.— 0ltIwI JournIl. Thu doctor. Ifler giving In In- jection. Johnny’I (III-I with I cIndy bIr. Wlut do you Icy. Johnny?" prompted t 1: mother "ChIx-go it." In IxclIlm- ed.— Montrul StIr. An EIIIIIIR lIdy. Iell-Ip- polnted Iupervlsor of village gmoralr, accused I workman of having reverted to drink be- cause “with my own eyes," Ihe liId sun hlI wheelbIrrow out- side I Ialoon. The man offered no defense. but that evening he placed his wheelbarrow outside her door Ind left It there Ill nlgl1t.—Galt Reporter. In I remote CI:-ollnI commun- ity I country editor called It the home of the country's olden reident. He asked the u In Il question. “To what do you attri- bute your great Ige?" “It's very simple." said the old man. "I've been taking vitamin pllls Ilnce I was 99."-Gall Reporter. lulu: "oflleor. how dItIrmlnI um um um toxlcucd?" Officer: "Well. \vIIn't Iure when he Iuggercd down the Itreet and fell. B u t when he put I nickel in the mail box. looked up It the c hu rch clock Ind I blm."—MontreIl Gazette. In MIlIyI the government In- vited 300 bIrberI to I course on clvli.-I "Io thIt government pol- icy on I vIrlIty of mIttcrI of vital public interact mIy be ex- plIinod." The Idea behind thI couru wII bluntly put by an of- flclIl IpokIImIn. He told the Iuumbled bIrberI. “A mIn who II securely Iproned in I chair Ind only half shaved or clipped cannot escape and is in I poor position to Irgue.’ The customer hII to llllen to his barber." Bi-Intford ExpoIltor. Dr. John Apley. I British doc- tor. has taken up the cause of clarity with his colleagues bat inviting them to join the Ant. Phony Phi-aIe Club and Io de. clare war on ambiguity in n d vagueneu in the doctor- patient relationship. Communication in this field It present appears to be conduct Ilmost entirely with phony phrases. perhaps be- cause doctors fear they will not be understood. or wo rse, on Iome occIslonI. that they will be underItood.—G‘.obe Ind MIII. did you In- Pitcairn Island Today NIllouI.l Geographic society Once I yeIr. men of Pitcairn Island in the south Puclflc must IIll into wide-open In In long- boItI to collect wood on In isle 120 mileI away. The descendants of the Bounty mutineers Ire Iuperb Ieamen, but they know little about navi- gation. 0ccIIlonI1ly. they have most missed their tiny goal, Henderson Island. When I long- boat capsized on one voyage, the men lost all of their supplier and nearly Itarved before find- ing their wIy home. The hazardous trip iI noceI- Iary to gather wlne-red miro wood for souvenir cIrvlngs—thc principal Iource of cash income for the islanders. who sell the wooden figures of fish Ind bird: to passengen on pIsIlug IlilpI. In the future. however. the dun- ger Ihould be sIened—thInkI to the efforts of I NItlonIl Geographic staff member and I boat club in the Washington, D. .. Irea. For many years, Captain liv- ing Johnson, mastcr of the brig- Intine Yankee. took the island- ers to Henderson once e ve ry three years when he called It Pitcairn on his regular cruiser. But C I p t I l n Johnson retired from round-the-world travel in 1957. b ._ Luis Marden. the N I t l o n Il Geographic writer- photographer who had found 9 remains of Bounty off Pllcuirn. knew It firsthand the problem confront- ing the islanders. Mr. Marden explained it to Captain P. V. II. Weems. of Annapoli. Maryland, one of the world’: lending auth- orities on navigation. Captain Weems. I retired In- structor It the Naval Acudemy and creator of the Weems Sys- tem of Navigation. It once of- fered to contribute I complete correspondence course in nui- Itlon. Through I round robin of cor- respondence. lt wII Irranged thIt PIItor Walter Ferris. I clergyman and experienced IeI captain who lives on the laland, would teach the Weems System of Navigation to the islandex-I SAVE . . .SAVE . . .SAVE . . . NORMA'S LADIES WEAR SALE K N I T S U I T S Now15'"to 28'“ Reduced 20 to 3070 One night last spring. M r. Mai-den Ihowed hls Pitcairn Is- land film to the Sllgo Boat Club, which is made up of members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Takoma Park. Mary- land. The Pitcairn lalande r I were converted to Adventlam in 1886 BoIt club officials made I col- lection among members to buy I sextant for Pitcairn Island. and ordered an instrument from I firm in Port Washington. New York. When the company'I pro- sldcnt learned of the club’: pur- pose, he donated I minlIturI sextant he had designed. It is especially fitted for use in an open boat with many of the parts enclosed and protected. CHRONOMETER DONATED With I sextant. the islanders can measure the angle of any celestial body above the horizon. Using an accurate timepiece and nautical tables. the seamen can then compute their position. A watch manufacturer donated I waterproof wrist chronomet- er, which will fix the exact in- stant of the celestial observa- lion. Remote Pitcairn haI fascinat- ed outsiders since it waI discov- ered that Bounty mutineers had settled there. Fletcher Christian. nine other sailors from Bounty. and 19 Polynesians left Tahill in 1789 secretly to colonize Pil- cIirn. The lnitiI1 Iettlement has All Pitcairn men In expert carvers. They turn the hand- some miro wood into flying fish- es. turtles. sea birds. king sticks, and the like. Tourists on passing shlpI Ind mail- order customers take all the carving: the islanders cIn produce. The miro trees have long since been cut down on Pitcairn. but unin- habited Henderson II densely forested. SIilIng to no ndunon in In open boat is. at best. risky. "You ml: an Island landfall In th 9 Pacific." Mr. Marden explained. “Ind you have thousands of mil- eI of e m p t y ocean ahead you." CAR COATS and CLOTH COATS ‘/3 OFF Wool Sweaters 1/3 off reg. prlco NORMA’S LADIES WEAR ..s1_v_l_\_I1_=: . . .sAvE...sg§_,”... r WOOL Hus . Reduced to Clear '/I OFF Reg. Price WOOL GLOVES Rodleod 20% Ski Jackets Reduced 1/ 3 NO REFUNDS Cluurlomnvnl