She Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island like The Dew : Wy Je Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker we padbed on oo every week day morning (ekcept Sum | = and stetutory holideys) et 165 Prince Street, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton _ Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Toronto 425 University Ave. ly Newapeper Publishers in Press. The Canaclian to the use for repub- news Disdas in this paper to the Associated Press or Reuters to the local — published herein. All republication of special dispatches here- reserved Subscription rate: Net over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 « year ~~ mail on rural routes and areas no? serviced by cerr $15.00 « yeer of ‘Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. Grd cleowhere eupide British Com monwealth. , f ~. Not over 7e_single copy. . Member Aust Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 Fiscal Realignment . ‘This year—for better or worse— may bring a sharp change in direction to ‘Canada’s federal-provincial rela- tions.. Times of Canada in its annual eco- nomic forecast and survey of indus- Decisions taken this year be- fore the 1967-72 federal-provincial tax | sharing arrangements, it says, may mean a partial return to the prin- ciples of the early postwar years. This is involved in the abandon- ment of the principle of conditional shared-cost programs, which was clearly spelled out by Ottawa in its proposals at the -federal-provincial conference last July.. If 1970, as in- dicated, sees the end of this program to which Ottawa is now contributing about $1 billion a year, the prov- irices will have to take full control_of ‘nearly half the federal government’s most important fiscal. instrument— the personal income tax. Quebec al- | ‘ready has this control. municipalities raise as much money as Ottawa and account for-80 per cent of all capital expenditures by gov- emnments. Unless responsibility. for fighting recession or inflation is to bé placed elsewhere—and no one has suggested such a course—it is ob- -vious that somehow the federal gov- etnment must acquire additional fis- cal power:. One suggested solution lies in a partial return to the old tax sharing arrangements: These were based on provincial fiscal need and were largely abandoned when feder- al tax abatements and equalization gtants were introduced in 1956, re- placing the needs test with a formula tied solely to. the yield of standard _taxes within the provinces. In any case, a new equalization formula that wilt make national planning effective in all regions must be worked out this year. Any sub- stantial change, says the Financial Times article, will depend largely on the attitude~of the English-speaking ~ ' provinces and their restraint in put- ting further pressures on Ottawa, and on the ability of Finance Minister- Sharp to be “tough” without arousing the hostilities which marked the last three conferences. Perhaps a hopeful harbinger can be detected in recent speeches by Premier Robarts MONDAY, JANUARY 24, 1966. | Thus reports the Financial © \ eoflege in 1955, to be modelied on the Massacusetts Instityte of Technology... But support was slow in coming from British government and _ industry. Ironically, the first-serious fund. rais- ing efforts were made in Churchill's second homeland, the United States: - The Foft Foundation contributed a million dollars. Industrial interest in higher educa- tion finally caught hold in England. Businessmen donated £ 30,000 ($84,- 000) for a reading room. A chain store tycoon donated £70,000 for a theatre with simultaneous translation booths to handle ‘international confer- ences. The huge Transport and Gener- al Workers ~Union broke with the working class tradition that regarded universities. as the playground of the rich. It donated £50,000 for a library . | in memory of Ernest Bevin, wartime Jabor minister, postwar foreign’ sec- retary, and once the union's chief. It. contains a strongroom (nicknamed “The James Bond Room") which may- eventually house Churchill's private. papers. Some dons Sicha at other Cam- bridge colleges still turn up their noses at this new involvement with the outside world, but the Churchill. ians don’t mind. They're going full- speed ahead. Its fellows (students) go on American style recruiting ‘trips to ferret out sharp, working class boys | who might never have thought of ap- { and Premier Roblin. Both pointed to the. need to maintain strong fiscal power in the central government. . Where does this leave our Island ‘prospects financially? Better, prob- rangement that has been foisted upon us in recent years. Any shift in em- phasis back to a fiscal. need basis in line with current and future re- quirements would, we imagine, .be welcomed by our did cca author- ities. A Worthy Monument Sir Winston Churchill's most last- ...dng..monument,.. says...an.. Associated |. Press dispatch, may be a new college of science and technology. Rising on ‘They neither admit nor-deny-the-im-—-— what was a farmer‘s field only -five | | Kremlin is more important just now. | It‘helps Premier Sato to look a little years ago, Churchill College is al- ready injecting some of its founder's free-wheeling spirit into the cloister- | | plying to this ancient bastion of privilege. In another generation these lads can expect to have their say in. | the tightly knit academic, industrial ‘and civil service “old boy network” which runs England. imagine, would please Sir Winston * better. | non-Communist nation, India. In all taxing fields, provinces saa Moscow Woos foe Already through the Tashkent ac- | cord, the Soviets are deemed to have won influence with Asia’s biggest Now they are courting Asia’s only real in- dustrial power, Japan. A significent | event occurred recently in this con- nection, when Moscow: entertain- : ed the first Japanese foreign minister to visit the Kremlin since 1956. Sign- ing a new five-year trade agreement and an aviation pact were the top items on the agenda. And Japan, it is said, also urged the Soviets to help settle the Viet Nam war. “Under the*new agreement. Japan expects two-way trade to climb to $390 million this year and $450 mil- 4 lion by 1970. Possible benefits are seen from co-operating in develop- - ing Siberia. Eventually Japan hopes the Kremlin will enough to return several northern is- ‘lands it wrested from Japan during the Second World War, but there is | eee a ther Ware oa. teil no report of any agreement along this line. A few years ago, the idea of Sov- in this manner would have been look- ed upon with grave distrust at Washington. But circumstances alter _ cases. Now it’s Communist China that ‘turns a cold eye on such guings-on. It in the Kremlin policy of containing Peking, -and it suspects_that’ “Amer- ican imperialism” lurks somewhere jbehind thé manoeuvers. As Japanese Foreign Minister Shiina reached Mos- cow, the official New China News Agency spouted: “The Sato govern- ment’s intensified contact withthe | ably, than under the niggardly ar- | Soviet Union is made at United States bidding.” Headlines in the, Peking papers branded the aviation agree- | ment as a product of U.S.Soviet col- laboration. The Japanese are ising it cool. peachment, but they say it’s, only na- tural for Japan to seek friendship with its neighbors. If it could, it ‘would like equally friendly relations with China. But the Chinese are not ‘buying that line” Japanese, but they are blandly aware that politically, keeping in with the | more independent of Washington, and ed ways of Cambridge University, of - which it is a part. It is working to mould a new. breed of classless | _—Seientists.and. to. cross fertilize Brit: it. also advances his “peace dip- | —getting along with every lomacy” one regardless of ‘ideology. / Well, Nothing, we | THe BOOM SUPER WAY nr tT a (4 CASE FOR STRONGER GUARDRAILS become friendly | Things aren't 80 good down on the farm, at least in eastern Ca- nada but up on the Hill the boys | are winning their war on pover- ty. We have the world’s only million-dollar Cabinet here, and now we have the world’s ‘high. est-paid civil service too. Is it too much -to hope that we will one day also have the world’s best governemnt? The recent pay increases for ~ the mandarins of. the civil ser- vice put them ahead of their op posite numbers in ~ Washington.. Senior deputy ministers now are paid $29,160 a year. The recent Government Employees Salary Reform Act in Washington set “the pay of their senior deputy ministers at $28,500. _The winning ticket on Parlia- - Leaway at Carleton eiversity; Short Memories Edmonton Journal hattan Island from the Indians | ment Hill was drawn by the sec- “retary to the Treasury Board, which is ironically the, final check on every payment from the taxpayers’ purse. He drew a salary boost of $6.160 from $23,- 000 to $29,160. As one correspon. dent points out ~ me in a letter | that boost is more than two fa- milies in our po erty belt. flake in in a-year. MP’s OVERTIME The MPs have not voted them- selves an increase this year yet, pay during the past six and a half months: when parliament did not meet, some who worked | in that period are being paid iet and Japanese leaders hobnobbing | eet as eumien Cae overtime. Sixteen or so were _to the 67-Nation meeting of the “Inter-Parliamentary Union here in September. They are being paid $20 tax-free for each of the twelve days of the meeting when views Tokyo as a potential new link | I don't think any MP had This grieves’t-he~ they attended. a full attendance record; in -fact. Canada's face was saved only by | the wégular: attendance of Que- | bee City’s Senator mae Quart and Kamloops’ Senator; Sidney Smith. I wonder how many will claim that overtime? | HEADLINES MISSED Mention of Senator Smith sug- gests that the Ottawa newspaper missed a natural home-town headline at the recent opening of the 27th Parliament. ug. Ottawa boys make good — stage monster. homecoming narties’” was the head .they.could have blazed, for - in-a rare double event the hosts at the large traditional recep- tions on Parliament Hill's open- Our_Yesterdavs (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY . FIVE YEARS AGO (January 24, 1941) Appealing for speedier Ameri- can help: to shatter the ‘Nazi power”, Britain's new Ambas- _sador, Viscount Halifax, arriv- ed in Washington after a secret dash across the Atlantic in «a new battleship and a_history- making rendezvous with Presi- dent Roosevelt. Marshal .Rodolfo Graziana, commander of Italy’s army in Libya, was reported to have abandoned his headquarters at Cirene, 50 miles west of Derna, apparently under hevy attack by the Royal Air Force. OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Goose Hangs High For Top Rankers ing day were both Ottawa — The Speaker of the Senate, Hon. Sidney Smith was born in Otta- wa before moving westwards and eventually to Kamloops; the Speaker of the House of Com- mons, Hon, Lucien Lamoureaux was also born in Ottawa before: moving southwards to Cornwall That's a rare double honour, even for this capital. WELCOME VISITORS The ceremonies of opening day are always attended by many out-of-town visitors, mostly the families and friends of senators and MPs, Thus Heber Smith of Barrie was accompanied by his wife Mary; Alf Hales of Guelph brought his wife, Mary, to her hometown, while their youngest son_David was only a few miles. ‘| for Indians is a.case in point. Dutch officials who bought Man- , Judy LaMarsh’s office was. the scene of a mob gathering of Ot- tawa and Niagara, where Ho- ward Clarke, the president of her riding association, and Mrs. Clark, and the manager of her | law office, Nancy Morrison min- gled with Walter Gordon and Re- venue Minister Ned Benson and many others. GOSSIP AND TITBITS Over the light refreshments, | returning parliamentarians and visitors alike all exchange their latest news. The hottest piece of gossip was that this was Govern- or General Vanier's last ‘‘open- ing’’ and that he will be succed- ed by Hon. Roly Michner, popu-" lar former Speaker of the Com-. Commissioner . India. Sometimes white about the shortest - group around. The question of hunting rights people are memoried The Supreme Court of Canada recently ruled that under an 1854 contract, members of the Saale- quun Indian band on Vancouver Island acquired perpetual ‘‘an- cestral hunting and fishing rights’’ on their former’ tribal lands. - , eos The tribe retained the rights when it eold its thousands of ac- res of land to the Hudson's Bay Company for the grand total of 636 white. blankets, 12 blue blan- kets and 20 “inferior blankets” —.a price which brings to mind the ain driven by those® for fourteen doHars. The court ruled that Indians couldn't be prosecuted for hunt- ing ‘‘out of season,”’ for the sim- ple reason that the law gave them a perpetual open season. This in turn led many whites to wonder angrily how long it would be before the bloodthirsty natives killed off all the game on the southern part of the island, and caught all the fish. History’is full of little ironies. Who massacred the buffalo, ex- terminated._the._passenger__pi- geon, depleted the fur seal, pra- irie chicken and beaver, pollut- ted the streams and stripped the forests bare? It wasn’t the Indians-— ‘they were the first conservationists. So you know who that leaves. Montreal As the United States has <be- come more deeply irivolved in war in Southeast Asia, it has be- come increasingly worried over | the prospect of having to cattry its military burden almost alone. For in this growing conflict, the ‘United States has few active al- lies, and few prospects of get- ting any. It is, of course, receiving some help. The South Vietnamese gov- ernment’s entire armed forces are committed to the war: but these have. suffered heavily. at the hands of the Viet Cong, and | ave a questionable asset where hard fighting is concerned. Oth- er countries like Australia and South Korea are pfoviding some soldiers; but their role is small in proportion to the overall con- flict. ~~ Phat this’ ie “easing” the Unit= ed States considerable anxiety | was shown by the recent NATO conference. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and Secretary of Defence Robert McNamara spoke about Southeast Asia, and about the menace of China: that is to say, about problems which are entirely outside the NATO treaty area. In effect, they were asking that NATO expand into a global alliance, and that. NATO ion from the United States, .from in- | { ain’s - academic life with an infus- dustry and from the arts. Under the college statutes, 70 per | cent of the students must be scien- tists. But. Churchill has students in | ancient Greek. One-third of the 450 | students-are postgraduates, a break history, English, languages and even | | with Cambridge tradition. Eventually it will- have 650 students, making it | _* the ‘third largest college at the uni- versity. _ Sir Winston and his . wartime , scienfific adviser, Lord Cherwell, first conceived of a new scientific tees early everyone. on TEN YEARS AGO EDITORIAL NOTES | oe Construction of a multi-m 1)” A dictionary of golfing terms:is to | lion-. dollar causeway connect: be published. If it’s complete. warns an exchange, it will be banned from the mails. The number of, cars equipped with seat belts increasechby 50 per cent in the United States during 1965. — ac- cording to a survey made by the Auto Industries Highway Safety Commit- tee. ‘Of the 2,200,000 cars checked, 30 per cent had seat belts, compared to 19 per cent in 1964 and nine per cent in 1963. ing Prince Edward Island and the Canadian mainland was pro- posed in the House of Com- mons, Ottawa. Neil A. Mathe-. son. (L-Queens) said the propo ged. eight-mile causeway. across Northumberland’ Strait is receiv- ing “‘the very serious attention of veovle who are qualifed to "consider and discuss such things.” ‘ Poss “About $3,000,000 worth, of Can- « adian arms. ‘including '25-poun- der guns and parts for. tanks, were “shipped to Israel and Egy- pt in the last two years, Exter- nal Affairs Minister Pearson disclosed. \ ere states of Southeast Asia. So far, there have been no NATO volunteers, nor are there likely to be any. That the Unit- ed States should have hoped that countries - which have quite enough, to“ido fulfilling RAIN ENDS DROUGHT ALICE SPRINGS, ~Australia (Reuters) — The remorseless drought which has gripped cen- tral Australia’s vast cattle lands for up to eight years has ended. in some areas. There are signs- that it is breaking elsewhere. Rain has been falling steadily in the last two days in the country northeast of Alice Loo caton oa The Lonely Role — members help take over ime task of containing and pro- tecting the non-Commu nist | the age of a go-go. 2B their present military commit- ments would take on new ones, | is a measure of Washington's anxiety. Ottawa The question is, should wom- en wearing pants be permitted to enter the Chateau Laurier grill in Ottawa? . Not bull-fighter’s . pants, the years back, and which might distract Chateau male custom- ers from a careful study of the carte du jour. Elegant cocktail pants, which often can’t easily be distinguished from tightly-fit- ting dresses, are the point at is- $16 ee The Chateau “management has barred women thus clothed, ~ is supported-in this policy by the managements of the Royal York Hotel in Toronto, and of a number of New York restaur- ants, and, for all we know, by all the classier brasseries in of the cafe Establishment ap- pears to be that a woman wear ing a dress, however slatternly, As we see it ed on a, mental block among res- taurateurs, an infexibility as de- plorable as it is unbending. To be sure, we concede the right of any hotel management: to make its own rules, But women also have their hard-won rights, one of which is to dress individually in accordance with their con- cept of their personalities. We would judge that, on. bal- ance, the case rests with the wo- It the pants are long and built right, they can create less diversion among the other clientele than certain dresses we know of. ~ Slacks are an integral: part of. and all the | By Dr. The mons. and now Canadian High - kind that were so popular a few | North America, The rigid view. or however revealing, is a. cut labove @ woman wearing pants. men who want to: wear slacks. | enough, Salmonella Poisoning R. Van Delien Food poisoning caused by the salmonella group organisms is becoming more common and some public health authorities regard it as a threat to our well- being. Statistics for 1964 were completed recently, and salmon- ellae were isolated from more than 21,000. persons With this | problem: In all proba ‘represents a fraction number and the actu may be 100 times higher. Last year many outbreaks were traced to cracked eggs and egg products. Turtles entered the picture for the first time. Some of the blame stems from feeds that are made from. ani- “mal by-products such as claws, entrails, and feathers, These are consumed by poultry, cattle, and swine that become infected and transmit the organlome to, hu- ‘ total figure | _Mans__ This aspect . of the. problem could be solved if = feed was pasteurized or if all hazardous edibles were stored and prepar- ed properly. Modern methods of food processing also play a role. a few. contaminated butch- |. chickens are put into a tank for bulk cooling, all the be are likely to become taint- The same applies when crack- ed, leaky, or soiled eggs are used in packaged cake mixes, | puddings, and custards. These are not hazardous in the cooked | product, but they may be when the housewife licks the spoon | used, in stirring the mixture. The | ty, this~ same applies to dehydrated eggs | because ‘of the possibility ‘that a | few were contaminated. They should not be used without pro- per cooking. Clean, intact eggs wi harbor these germs, but ed. an those that are crack. | The salmonella group of or- | ‘| ganisms is a large family of contaminators and includes the bacilli that cause typhoid fever. The current -problem_ centers about Salmonella typhirmurium and Salmonella derby. From eight to 48 hours after consum- ing contaminated meat, eggs, pouliry, or water, the victim de- velops headache, chills, and ab- dominal pains fellowed by nau- sea, vomiting, diarrhea,and last from one to four days un- less brought under control with a sulfonamide or antibiotic. One — veually leads to immun- y WHOOPING COUGH oo J, — Did: you ever ar of whooping cough. lastin five months? : : REPLY The cough.may persist for-a long time, even though the causative organisms have van- ished.and the diseasé is no long- er contagious. Some youngsters whoop for a year or more, espe- cially during a respiratory in- wort oft +, POTT’S DISEASE Mrs. W. writes: Can a grown- tp develop tuberculosis of the spine? REPLY . Yes. When the disease. was more common, it was found fre- quently in-children who a@rank infected milk. But age is no barrier, and I know of several | adults whe developed the ma- | lady. WHEEZES ON MUGGY DAY: Mrs. A.Q. writes: Why do I suffer from bronchial asthma | only in humid weather? When the atmosphere is clear, I'm not bothered. REPLY »° NOTES BY THE WAY you mum, I've “always stayed wan place until the payple doid, mum!""— “Montreal Star. She—''I hear you are a great artist.” -He— “I hope to be. I've are you jn oe I'm living in a whiskers. — Galt Reporter. “Help your wife,” advises a she washes the dishes, wash the dishes with her; when she mops up the floor, mop up the floor with her.""—Globe and Mail. Reporter: ‘‘To what do you attribute your 7" Non- : “I have never wasted : tation."’—Financial Post. « She (at comedy) — ‘Are they putting that poor man out for eee He — “No, The ma- nager has sent for him to find out what he was laughing at.” —Guelph Mercury. nt rural lady we know order: ed, by phone, a portable televi- sion set from a company - that specializes in delivering such things. The clerk who took her ; order inquired’ whether she | | wanted to pay an additonal-five dollar charge for ‘‘deluxing.”’ | @he asked the obvious question, which brought forth the answer: “It means taking it out of the | crate. "New Yorker. only just started."" She—‘‘What . and growing” Car seat belts should be a sta- tus symbol,.then they would be buckled on instead of sat upon. —t, Catharines Standard. One of the best ways to im- pee postal service would be everyone . to. stop meting | bilis.—Brandon’ Sun, More and more Canadians want a college diploma. A con- ‘| siderably smaller number want a college education. —Calgary Herald. “Why did you tear the back part out of that new book" asked the long-suffering wife of the absent-minded doctor. ee ng RR the speak of was. labelled ‘ i dix’ and I took it out with ent thinking.""»—Montreal Star. The Bureau of Stastics esti- mates that the amount of money Canadian consumers owe was 16 per cent higher at the end of October than it was the previous year. Most people will feel that | for once, they've. been included | in the stastics.—Port Arthur News-Chronicle. : The movie actor who had been | divoreed four times again. ‘Why, I rather like you, | John,"’ said the young eae, ; | “but, you see, I've . heard many things about you—" “My | dear,”’ interrupted the much | married actor, “you really must not believe those old wives’ : ‘tales.’ "Montreal Star. ‘May Lead To Stability By Harold Morrison Canadian Press Staff Writer Since the Second World War, Italy’ has had about two dozen governments. The latest resig- nation may have come as a shock to members of the West- ern Alliance who had hoped in- creasing strength in the Italian | economy could lead to. political stability. But the sudden resignation of | Aldo Moro’s centre-left coalition | government does not neces- sarily mean a new crisis: of in- | surmountable proportions. In | fact the changes” tually inspire stability by in- creasing. the Socialist bulwark | against the political power of | the Communists. was not of historical signifi- | cance, with the exception of the | curious way. in which former _ foreign minister Amintore Fan- | fani sought to convey a doubt- ful North Viet Nam. peace feeler to Washington. Italian foreign | ‘policy seemed to-take a large | step. downward when a spirit- interview arranged by Fanfani’s wife, said some nasty things Rusk. ; The resignation of Moro’s. gov- | exnment had no ‘direct relation- ship to Fanfani’s decision to > a the cabinet. But because of nature of Italian politics, Fanfani may have a chance now to return to the political spot- light. Moro resigned because his | party of Christian Democrats | and Socialists lost a parliamen- ; tary vote on jstate kinder- may even | Moro's 18-month sioiiiniags | , , Undoubtedly President Giv. - | seppe Safagat will ask Moro to | try to form a new government before he looks elsewhere for a | political solution or decides on | @-general election. Moro's cab- inet has been made up of 13° centre - of - the - road Christian | Democrats, six Socialists, three Social Democrats and one Re, publican, a left-wing radical. ~ |. Recently the two major So cialist parties have been con- sidering a merger which would strengthen their position tn the ; Sovernment. If these two Rives. do agree to co-operate, may-be possible that any pre- mier would have to give them an increased number of cab- | inet - portfolios, something Moro | | appears ready to consider. S | COMMUNISF. NUMEROUS | In terms of the Western Al- | liance,- the -big threat is the | strength of Italy's Communists | whe poll about one-quarter. of the national. vate. The Alliance + could be dealt a serious blow ualist friend—of—Fanfani,_in_an_| 4 the Communists could link up — the Socialists—as they did in early post-war years — to — about U.S. State Secretary Dean | topple the existing coalition. . But the more’ obvious trend © is toward some.yielding of the political centre to the moderate left, moving towards what Sara- gat once described as “a big | what ts socialist party.” What the Italian political pot ~ may finally produce is a stew somewhat similar to the British Labor party, strongly linked te the West and firmly ‘opposed te the spreading influence of the - : Soviet Union and Peking. 8 | gartens. The Empty Honor Winnipeg Free Press It: would be interesting to hear Changes .in_weather_alter. the __-some..cogent.- arguments. from condition of the mucous mem- ‘branes so that many asthmatics | learn to dread humid days. BRAIN OPERATION Mrs.: J. writes: Is surgery wes in brain hemorrhage? REPLY Yes, but only when the exact | site of bleeding is known. TODAY’S HEALTH . HINT— Eating habits can affect acne. (NOTE: All c to-Dr. Van-Dellen should he addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Ilinois.) “Fighting Losing Battle Citizen evidence indicates that over the long haul the cafe managers‘are name to find themselves in the absurd position of King Canute. AIRMAN MISSING LONDON (AP)—Three Brit- ish ‘aittiien serving In Zambia were reported. missing Sunday by a defence ministry spokes- man. He said the three had _| een missing for some days and “we are making the normal in- vestigations to find them. en Lusaka, Zambia, a British . high commission spokesman said ‘the thicee were believed to be, in Rhodesia. Reliable sources were quoted as saying Rhode- ig police had detained them lor questioning. | lawyers as to why the annual Queen's Counsel appointments should continue to be sponsored by the provincial government. No other profession is singled out for similar treatment. ‘ solemnly presented to the public ‘every New Year's Day by the it of attorney-general as though were a genuine conferri honors on. deserving barri It ts nothing of the kind. To be sure, there are one or two de- serving appointments in every list, men whose work in the courts and service to their pro- fession are_such as to merit’ vice to the political party which happens to be in office. - and no worse than usual. Mos‘ are reliable Conservatives. Nine of the 14 have practised law for FOR SKATING ARENA square feet. RESIDENCE Lot approximately 200’ Completely renovated in Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads, brochures; call us for all your printing needs, - GUARDIAN-PATRIOT CENTRAL | "PRINTERY € PHONE 4-8506 feet. BRION ISLAND Gulf of St. Lawrefice. mately 1400 acres. ~ whole or in part. Dartmouth, The Queen's Counsel list is~ recognition of some kind, but | most~are there because of ser- | This year's list’ was.no better | Jess than 15 years (some, one imagines, without. once seeing the inside of a courtroom). One or two, as is the case in almost every list, appear to be busi- nessmen, who once attended law school and have had the fore- sight to maintain their standing withthe Law Society. |. About a fifth of the province's lawyers are Queen’s Counsel and the proportion is much higher if one counts only those who actu- . ally practise their profession or | appear in the courts, The ‘‘hon- or’ in other words, has to have any meaning, and it is high time the provincial gover»- ment stopped sponsoring it. WC UL Mags Storey Electric Ltd. (UM RD AS an 6H Prince St.. SALE The following properties situate in the village 0: Cap Ae Magdalen Islands: & RESTAURANT ~ Main building is 100’ x 210’ (Quonset Style) with 25’ x 80’ Restaurant. Lot acre 72,000. - Consisting of twelve rooms, also garage and barn. x 400’. STORE AND WAREHOUSE 1968, two- furnaces, cop- per-plumbing.—bot-approximately 25, 000 square ‘ALSO Situate in the Magdalen Island Group in the. Consisting of approxi- Offers @re invited_on these properties sithiae in re further details. contact: ~The Nova Scotia Trust Company 88 Commercial Street Nova Scotia Telephone 463-2300, Area Code 902 ceased___.