rhomps6é had to say about a num-° ber of unidentified Conservatives whom he accused of being hypocrites, __Of being “chicken in-their—secret— ~ hearts while’ masquerading as lions— roaring for the government’s life. "They boo and otherwise abuse us in the House when we prop up the gov-. ernment,” he complained, “and then, | privately, on the elevators and in the corridors they sidle up: and whisper, ‘Thanks, Bob; so glad you did it’.” Oh well, that-should help’a little to take the ache out of the martyr’s crown that Mr. Thompson feels he’s wearing! Martyrs, as. he will recall from his wide reading of history, have gone to the stake at times with even Jess support than this: from the sidelines. Re Their Staff Of Life. It is said that bread is the “staff of life.” Yet nearly two billion Asians” ~—half the people of the world—have never seen a slice of bread, and might hesitate to eat it they did, For them the staff of life is rice, a grain so im- portant that in some places the word for rice is the same as that for food. According to the experts, 80 of 100 Asians spend nearly all their time growing’ and “distributing rice. Yet for all their efforts, the average: Asian . fakes in only 2,050. calories, a day, a or 250 less than the theoretical min- imum necessary to get by. Mean- while the world’s rice-eating popula-_ tion is increasing -by nearly a million hungry mouths a week. Thus it is estimated that it will be necessary to increase rice production by 10 mil- lion tons each year just to maintain thé present. bare subsistence level. As noted in a review of this prob- lem in the Milwaukee Journal, the crux of it is that most Asian ° rice farmers still use the same primitive methods and plant varieties depicted ~ iti 16th century Japanese silk paint- ; % 4 5 to their salary and expenses, - they were receiving free mailing privi- leges, one free return air trip per ‘Throwing in the telephone calls might be regarded ag going too far. But that was two-years ago. And, .as the poet says, “the thoughts of men are widen'd with the process -of the suns.” Japan To Be Fourth? Now it’s the Japanese that are so to speak. Quietly, they've been going about the job-at Tokyo Univer- sity’s Aeronautics and Space Research Institute, and preparations for the launching have now been announced: This will make them the world’s fourth nation to put a satellite in or- bit. It will be the cheapest one ever launched, but an impressive status symbol-nevertheless...c. Rae If all-.goes well, th y globe— about a foot and a half in diameter —will: be orbited about March 20 -along a course close to that of France’s ‘A-1 satellite launched last year. And it will cost only $277,000— a small fraction of the millions the United States, Russia and France each has spent’ to enter the space race. It will be«boosted by a four- ‘stage rocket. measuring 50 feet and weighing 8.6 tons, and will circle the . 480 miles. . The stated purpose will be “‘to satellite’s 44 pounds of instruments. But being the.next nation to plant its “devastating d-efeat-in the Second ; World War. week. to their constituencies, and un-_| ae | limited. free use of the railways. — hankering to put a satellite in space;— just to “keep up with the Joneses,” ‘earth in an érbit ranging from 180 to probe near-eafth conditions” with the — flag in space wil| be something of an , se : ot aa | ordinary one, considering that Japan | ®teen | had to come up from scratch after its | * got & knotty chunk: | ly and it was printed as truth. Gen. Oufkir was in France at the time, ba arrived unex- pectedly Oct. . The _ French under arrest-in-the-case_and_in-_ r ‘Washington Post © The State of Maine has laun- a-project big with promise for ee roa collaboration. To selected ports .abroad it is sending a 10,000-ton ship named “The. State of Maine,” fitted up as a floatiig restaurant, to dem- | onstrate and disnense the good | things to eat that Maine has to | sell, ' Fried chicken, roast chicken, baked potatoes, French fries, shrimp, blueberry muffins. Blue- berry pie, and other products of | Maine's farms, woods, and fish- eries will be served to guests in- vited to ithe ship. a A food tour is a sound idea. | Nobody can fail to understand the message carried by a smok- | ing platter of fried chicken or | a blueberry pie. Food For Tho , nourish goodwill with something both substantial and- delectable The State of Maine may have pointed the way to a new deve- | Jopment in international under. | standing. We might encourage | the exchange of information | about good food—with samples. We would gladly learn about | viands from other lands that. | tickle the palate, and we would | | happily share-such food and re-— | cipes as our country can offer. | ‘Maybe the Peace Corps could recruit a few cooks to demon- | strate their ‘skill .abroad—if food ' is mot too mundane for idealists. | On the level of the table per- | | haps we cen reach understand. | ing and. goodwill that escape the | | higher reaches of political phil- | | osaphy. The men from Maine, plan to The Rusty Old Axe. Tt ts aad sort of fact that there are growing up on some On’ farms a generation of lads who snow not the art of splitting: wood. It once was learned by every rural boy almost as soon as he was able to swing an axe. In rural Ontario there were two distinct wood splitting jobs. One was in the bush and the other in the woodshed. The lat- ter was the easiest but not al- ways. easy, especially when one In the woods the trees. were sawn into stove lengths. The “task then was to split these large round lengths into chunks so they could be piled out there to weather and to dry. The wood thus split, in late winter, was left until hauled in for use the next winter. It was an improvi- t_who had to burn| wood, Menfolk normally did this job in the woods as it was hard work, particularly if one spent the whole day at it. The wood aplit best when there was a bit . of frost in it, On @ fine crisp | tario | day, withestraight-grained wood, | it wasn’t en unpleasant occupa. | tion. . There was a real art to it and not just in knowing how to use an axe. Each chunk of wood had | to be appraised by a keen eye to ascertain how # would eplit: best. The next winter these chunks, now in the woodshed, had to be | split again into smaller pieces | convenient for stove use. Large, awkward chunks tried ‘the pa- tience a housewife, and she let a lad iknow if they weren't split to her liking. It was in the -woodshed that the farm boy learned the art. Nowadays, with #0 many rir- al homes*heated a means ades provide a musty but pleas- | am oder. The old axe stands | rusted in a corner. And so many farm. lars wouldn't: know how-to use it amyway. }to the speaker. Secretaries - | $4,800. The active which became known as quas- | ars, varied their brightness over |relatively short periods of time. A Soviet astronomer suggested that the flashing might repre- lion miles— the distance trav- sent the code of a euperciviliza- py-light;-the-fastest-thing-In--non”teyinete--commnont-e-a-t-e- ere disagreed, but the blinising has yet to be explained. GALAXIES IN ? Also unexplained is the stup- endous source of quasar power. Some astronomers think a qua- | sar. may be two gabaxies—one of matter and the other of anti-. matter— in collision. Other scientists suggest that quasars may draw on an entirely — un- known type of power, more po- tent than thermonuclear. But no theory yet advanced seems wholly satisfactory, The fact that the brightness of quasars fluctuates indicates that they must be very, small in as- tronomical terms, ‘however large they may be: jn earthly terms. As the laws ‘of i $37, d : : Z Hi apace is curved in way that dibtorts man’s ars promise profoundly shape man's view of the verse, z GET SALARY INCREASE a. i OTTAWA (CP) — Salary ie creases for’ House of Commons employers were Wednesday. ‘They range from $104.0 year more for @ clerk to | $1,080 for the special aasioteat MPs may earn up to $5,054 rather than the previous kmit of increases are retro- creases, slaries of clerks from $2,190 to $4,860, The range for the special assistant to the Speaker increased {rom $14,500- $18,000 to $15,370-$19,090, <3 in- } Yes. But obesity. is thought to encourage the process. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Fix faulty hot water faucets. addressed te: Dr. Theodore / Van Dellen, Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian ) February 4, 1941) , Envisioning=an elite corps drawn ive die in the war for freedom, Alr Minister Power called for recruits and promised them, a definite answer as to when they would be summoned to duty. | In a renewal of one of the bitterest feuds in Washington history, Senator Burton Wheeler accused the Roosevelt adminis- tration of denuding the United States’ aerial defences to aid Britaio. ' Four experienced showmen, Ivan Doherty, Ambie Weather. hie, Ken MacKenzie and Loman | MacAulay completed writing the script for the ‘Kinemen Var- feties of 1956 and were enthus- jastic about the prospects of producing something unusually good. ; (NOTE: All corsespondence any further from the ‘‘flower of Can-:' adian youth” casting the decis- | | we wonder whether it is not | time to let this grant lapse. If |the President's widow were in | euch circumstances as to involve | any-hardship, or if she needed testimony of the L __ situation ; Mrs. | your job ‘printing re- would be different guaranteed. | ple. | Although she continues to _re- | ceive a sizable volume of mail, ; as do other people who are or jhave been in public life, the emergency has passed and her situation has returned to as | Close to normal es it is likely to | | f EXTR REFRESHAIRE Cl | New for '66, Ref flow-throu; EXTRA MOTORING COMFORT shaire continually pulls stale air from your car. The ' t ilation principle permits constant air circulation without having to open a window—next best thing to air conditioning. Discover the difference CRAFTSMANSHIP makes! | GUARDIAN - PATRIOT |} CENTRAL PRINTERY TT a ea) ——————— AT NO EXTRA COST RCULATION FOR teeta - 4 ngs. Where mechanized rice farm- #3 ° ee / » Thre Gare iar | ov expense parours per ar : , Addiction Johnson's Aid Formula Sirens Sieh Gheled Wisks Gk he Dew each year, some small-Asian holdings Coneten Pree Gaal Wahine. me W. J, Hancox, Publisher take up to 1,000 man-hours per acre. ‘ bas banks a ie La Se. ae kee ten Pee "ene | 2 -one expert put it, fen many peo deat Johneon has made known | Eaypt or Ghana whose conduct’ are avery week day moming (exceot Sun | Ple labor too hard to produce too lit- his formula for drastically alter. | has not always pleased the U.S, tev fa statutory ee ‘a1 165 Prince Street: | tle.’ It is also a grim paradox that on Be shape of the huge United ee Soe sinclive foreign aid eer ae leutacae caged - | the nutritive quality ‘of rice-is the te wre ald i —~ cool Se ak: eee led tnd: Souris. eit as a | lowest in just those aréas that mos a arenes ee " See eS ae ae ot n \ i 4 * started ¥ ¢ as ng Services Trento ais" Unvanin’ace, | need better nutrition. | Hareatier the unretricied. di bluray by offering sid to “those | Johnson said” 4, Stree Uni. : ‘ i 8 to wovty 69048, Wertery OMicn V8G0 Wer! Georgs | Many Asian’ governments hold Piclane to eddiete wil be chong | Relp' themesives.” The, tone. is | commitment tor meie ut thele Stregt Vancouver MA 7037. | yearly rice growing contests in hope “a: rs tough, stipulating U.S. readi- cannot expect help from us,” <_ _ Member Cacedion Dilly’ Mew Publishers of increasing production. These have The liberal action was taken | ness to help push an interna- | , What has Sed tw Re Association and The Canadian Press. The Cenaclian | ay . j several years ago because drug tional wer oa without quently in the past, the Press is exclusively entitled to the use for-repub | shown what might be done by pro- addiction was not @ problem im | glaying Sante oew Ss the | dent implied, is that preai- licatiann of ail news dispatches in this pare’ ducing acre yields up to 13,500 England. The majority of mor’! theme recurs in: the lengthy, list | from whatever Sean - tng -ais0 to the local: news published-herein. all | pounds. But today’s best hope for apeutie addicts, whose addiction |" These constitute plans for |ecte such as steel’ plants en ee Soc ae: | he ce ety Maem probably Tes Tee tereauct of mation | spending at least another | dro dams without making any Net over <40c per week-by carrier, | in a group of glass and aluminum free on ae ee on economic ss in meeting orucial food $12.00 2 year by mail en rural revies end eres | laboratory buildings outside Manila. eee were 0 the year beginning July ‘ aa not serviced by carrier, ; : ge addicts ere young i om 9$017,000,000 = military “While our wealth is t, _ «15.00» year off Island end U.K. $20.00 per Organized in 1959, the Interna- eed eransrioal tethweets sip |e excluding the Vietnamese be wealth be ; yest. in Uae and elsewhere autside British | tional Rice Research Institute is a started with goof balls and reef | The president “has spent a not going to allow Ame ae "tet over J single copy. joint project of the Ford and Rocke oe mannan: “ne year reviewing ves. Sena aid |to become an international na Member Avsit Burgaw of Cucvision __ | feller Foundations with the Philip- eee et ee saan bas coat same | dale. : PAGE 4 FRIDAY,” FEBRUARY 4, 1966. pine government and the University Oi by ether obtlets, w ee hed > since the Second FARM AID STRESSED p Th ask of the Philippines. The: institute's Seer ee eee sed toe | Pe We as oe So, fo seeing Sie a vd oor Mr. ompson: _ main goal has been to breed a ie | dopester: ts registered with the wart eae ace. — " presi- ‘Social Credit Leader Robert | strain of rice that will. withstand government. Narcotics are #UP- | ing @ fifth, South Korea nearly | dent that a hefty i \ 4 free to Britishers under | 94 990,000,000 . Pakistan about|chunk go for U.S, fertilizers, Thompson has been unburdening tropical hazards. And now, several : national health service. In $3, 750,000,000 and Brazil more | That's an example of the: self hitiself to. Richard Jackson-of the | years ahead of the anticipated sched- wore lees then 30° yoare cad, but | (uae t8000,00 ‘help he has in mind as con Oltawa Journal about the criticisms | ie, institute selentiats ave develop Spacey Sr ce ves | RN TED, yy [eae ae he has received for the support se ed a “revolutionary new ’ hybrid” fo this age trecel wus | Nam Sow te the festest-rising | longer possible from ‘dwindling ; : These women gine an stockpiles of R party: gave the Pearson government | which has yielded 6,800 pounds in 85 ee ree ee | me le ae gen. in the motions calling for an increase | days. and Gok orieminate, Spe. countries got hostile to us that |on better: roads, irrigation, | ald age pensions. Since he didn't “The rice farmer ean look toward elal treatment centers give solid evidence that they | American farm knowledge, ae “against pensions,” as he insists, | . new future,” con the institute’s-di- or uae a by =o nl = ¢ rn eaia moe eae ov er Saige pesticides : my fi ” , , . m “gut for stable government,” he feels | rector, Dr. Robert Chandler, who is in these centers. The British ex- ’ that he-is being unjustly censured. : < perience demonetrates that the ee counting on the galloping spread of profit motive is not essential to S d iD t Perhaps indeed he is. In any case, | the transistor radio to sell illiterate the spread of addiction, _ secon es “more than 200 letters have come | ¢arners on the neweseed. The result An old remedy was publicized Montreal Star oe2 aoe . recently. Twenty-two male ad- : flooding ‘in to him ons tide of | could add up to what*might soberly | dicts responded so well to a Fiuoridated vitamins reduce | are conscientious, nd some “vicious, often obscene abuse.” There he { od th hi t : combination of methadone and | tooth decay among children es | are not, to put the case in very 3 e ff) age ee Schiovemen > strong social support that a lar- | effectively as fluoridated wa- |temperate terms. Some pa have even been “threats.” Some of | of the century. ee -. TIME FOR- A. LITTLE TRAFFIC CONTROL ger-scale trial has been suggest. | ter. Three members of the staff | rents would faithfully give that theyre ott to read” | Carried Unanimously” | \qurDes Baad | Secu et Maem | al ager fami is mie" teed son wo that they're “not fit to read.” - arrie nanimously ' ‘ withdrawal symptoms are less | with fluorides. added on pre- not bother under any citcum- But it hasn't been just letters. “I Just to sh MURDER, MYSTERY, SCANDAL ae STS porous, tue release of this achool children. They had 63 stances. The parents who would rk late in my House of Commons ust to . ‘ow how quickly they can treatment is to substitute one |.per cent moreno ieee os fom jane ot fee ocr get he ‘ methadone - or a fice at nights,” Mr .Thompson con- forget partisan” differences and get The Stran e Case Of Ben Barka —-. oe that a ane wer Fag te le fecth than |the parents who would sacri- ed to the attentive ear of The down , to businass When duty tals, Science Monitor - dual can be weaned away from | children given vitamin tablets fice to see that their childrea a members of Parliament voted unani- | — : Can a ~ ~ | | the lesser of two evils, This drug | Without the fluorides. .The, re- | got dental attention; the child urnal man, “and an awful lot of mously the other night to award | , France and its former protee- | ternational warrants have been | Then a week ago Monday pol- | isnot new to addicts, but it hag |Sult matches pretty closely the ren. who needed the tablets ple seem to have discovered it, | ti omselves free dong distance privi- | ed a eee dipl Seas SS ee scey Gass Vein deok Strait ap | Bot bees practical because they a oe | aean —— oe e other night they kept the phone | 1.045 over telephone lines anywhere | "lations over a growing myst- | BROUGHT SCANDAL sey were entering. erg arouse te The test wae run inthe city "Communities with water ‘dim _ ging until one o’clock in the morn-’ P yw | ery: What happened to~Mehdi | An arrest order was issued for | The case has brought scandal : of Bloomington, Ill., and it may tribution systems should fuori hen 1 left the eéntre block for | 1% Canada. Not a voice was raised | Ben Barka?. Figon, too. For some days, how. /on the de Gaulle~ government. | PRESSURE AND THYROW be expected that opponents, of | date their water for the good of ing when when, moments before the House rose When King Mohammed 1 was | ever,.the police seemed unable | De Gaulle has fired the French | H. T. writes: Could overactiv- jon of water supplies | the children.. applies to me.” Some of the calls were so : s young, Ben Barka,.an able ma: | to-find him— in spite of the fact | chief of counterspionage. Charg- ‘ity of the thyroid cause the | will point to i as a good sub- Montreal, where ection to that le as to shake“him. And in self- for the night, Speaker Lamoureux thematician, was one of his tu: | that-he was openiy being inter- | es and countercharges fly back | blood pressure te rise ebove }etitute for fluoridation of water. end was long age recommend: presented a report of the commis- | tors..In 1963 he was viewed by newsmen and one pa- | and forth between..France and | normal? . It ion't where fluoridation Of 24 by the Health Department sea he felt compelled to call Bell | io) or internal economy containing | ' death in absentia on the |per ren a peeewan Nin |e at Gon Gee | Yu a oe FREED ay exgee end ne wl gh cig vag eg PO ordered by the City Cour c : : harge of having been involved | standing in front of police | ac. and- ‘es. systolic + The hy it ien’t lephone and make an ae hoa this recommendation. Cacti ite was tag Woe Bronah lho betise’ | quentiy sean wp bot the diastali |wids vertstion tn parents, Semele. _ tp leave his office phone off the hook Undek! ment with the + 10e-9f-the-United Arab “Reput ——— : be ns dh gyre Ae Serres retains a ew, Winsout they Haws: the: choice | ell Felapigme Company, MPs will | | Thereariee be “roamed the Queerest Things. the thyroid condition ie Brough < f tearing a strip off him in person ae ca nas 2 ie es..In 1964 ée told friends that National Geographic Sec - + | sure returns to normal: spite New York Times se r telling him off’ by mail, for all overnment toy Ne. he feared assassination at the | eal cesaiara ehetis , THYROID - | Within three weeks ‘alter Pre- | become. If Congress were now ¢ ea - the iS is a busy | country. They will be reimbursed for | fands of Moroccan agents, uw Pr fhaasigrway oxecass tved quasars for many years SS eee dagaioh sident- Kennedy was essassinat- | to renew this iation, it ey ll get on P ! : Stare later seemed to have been mak- thyroid cause hair to grow on ‘dignal calls placed from Ottawa to centres | ing headway toward reconcilia- | Strange objects, bigger and | wine gg dh o * vere ee wamaate tace? : ed a nalies os law bag! a piscine oe ee manne 5 T° Mr. Thompson claims that in. | Not served by the leased. wire.Cost.. ton. with his, goverment. pi =e po a rondlen’ tail wieesaoer” aes 1B oy oa providing his widow with suit:.| was in the first instance; rather, “either of the stwe-Thpoge Speech, | OF leasing is to be divided among | chair Figen a Frenchman, | _,cuae-lla reco, ruses [vere develoved radi tm but i coaabi. fh Cate | 26 Oe PA ene the tam anes perma divisions when tif ve “org government departments, = gave one version of the Ben Ba: | 2th ‘ace. Astronomers tid oat ‘concentrated sources of radio | meht Socsilieial saeee chamdg. | ot to exceed $50,000. Since 1958 | ent arrangement which ie neith ade the life and death diffe: po. | > Perhaps this is excusable in the | gen Barka was. picked up in | @iseover the objects until 1963. waves at unexpected places a If a voletionstso! onsets ia this widows! of Presidente ond thee. er necessary nor desirable. fhe government was.the dssue really | public interest. But it is recalled that | midday in the center of Paris | Now several dozen have Deon [radio y. aS casi ee cae Particular. ease, thyroid exireet oe aoe a aie saci pees ver a penston increase,-but-w ivileges—was a subject | by !wo French detectives, studied the more mysterious | ordinary looking stars, SINUS DISTRESS = | Cee Ot ee One Oe POT on, reet Goll conan te Cow ere wae, be stable government: | left unresolved in 1964 when the | 4 man wit iiminal tecork, [MECC sau are tha jaace catettansuomer Ohio amen oun simae | ep quenion_at-renew| ewer, these" “a he government insisted that it would | resco ce to ante ee : Fee oe ess ehomed te Mor, | dest and most distant objects covered that "the supposed taawastieds so 2 _ | tna Mes. Kenvedy's ettcestat? Menereat end Queber—te-“sfoout — tegard the motions as non-confidence | 9'9,000 a-year (924, salary and, | ‘gccan minister of interior, Gen. |! the universe. Those now ob- | 's x were see Sane eee Pain usually 1s present in the | fund came up at the expir . gne$ leading, if carried, to dissolution | $6,000 in expenses.) At that time, | Oufkir, and told him to” come | Sie‘ y At scared quring tie bl. calculated thet to, be visible at | cue Mase: in. We, chrome | tN as extended. for a, second of the House and another unwanted | members of the Social Credit Rally | “EY Onde hurried’ to Paris | lions of years.it has taken their eek ee a rae Po more common. your, President anew eg — election. Yet old age. pensioners | protested that they should not have | He wae*taken to, Ben Barks. \\Eht Yom some quasar’ may |a# much light as 90 or 100 e0-/ ""ARtgREeg 000 to operate ‘Mrs. Kennedy's : ’ way: 0 or long distance calls, but ap-: a a ee a ! , : - : a eetic ubae a se z patent y'the thes Tastist fet sieues Sea ee in cae ¢ long ersey 1 tn onrts clare tion fae fe acrdleg herdanune ‘aoe an es Pee eae been making life mis or him. ; | rext twing ceeded-to-finish the job with a | 0X6 t the universe came |. Even more baffling was the | foros thie to a denell aeee tea Sek: Worse than that was what Mr. | 0 Conscience. Already, in addition wg iol told this story repeated. | imto being. fact that the strange «objects, oe REPLY™ _-eral-budget-of $112.8. billion, but “AN Jobs} —