7 [Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew * * « W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor every week day morning (except Sun- Empire 3-8894, Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 65942, Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street. Vencouver (MA 7037. Member Canadien Deily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press ig exclusively entitied to the use for repub- g lication of all news dispatches in this paper a credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published herein. All right or republication of specie! dispatches here- also reserved. Subscription rate: “” Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rure! routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $75.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. Not aver 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” : PAGE 4 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11. 1965. And Now To Business There will be some new blood in our civic administration as a result of yesterday’s elections, and transfu- sions of this kind are to be welcom- ed. ‘The candidates who have been re-elected are to be congratulated on the vote of confidence they have re- ceived, and the newcomers on having made the grade. There is good rea- son to expect that they and the other Council members whose term is un- expired will work together effectively 5 ee Se Pom Ba %, Mayor-elect Walter Cox. “This doesn’t mean that there done on pesticides in the country. It may also direct research for various state departments using pesticides. *, These two moves by the board are considered as unique, at any rate in the United States ,where there has been very liftle ‘state regulation among pesticide users to date. The possible dangers of improper use or overuse were not known widely un- til recently. And much is still un- known on the research level. New pesticides are being marketed faster than scientists can analyze their dan- gers to wildlife, humans, or plant life. | By coordinating what is known | and what must be known about the | hundreds of new pesticides on the | market, it is felt that the new office at the University of Massachusetts will serve a nation-wide purpose. Its findings could be of much value to Canadian researchers as well. | He's Running Again President Nasser is due to retire from office as “strong man” of Egypt and would-be boss of the Arab world. Hé has*sent formal notice to the Egyptian National Assembly that, in ternis“0f the constitution which he himself devised, his term is coming to an end and it is the duty of the members to nominate his successor. The nomination already has been made—Gamal Abdel Nasser. And, of course, the dictator has accepted. All that remains is the formal voting on March 25 when Nasser will be re- turned as President on a sweeping vote of confidence. One Cairo com- mentator ironically predicts the vote will run 99.9 per cent in his favor. (it he matenil _. - SHOWER RECORD COMPETITION OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Human Hair Human hair. is concentrated | mainly on the scalp, around the | eyes (brows and lashes), pubis, | armpits, and, in men, on the) . ehest, and extremities. | our great-great- for this. Women notice unwant- ed hair on the chin and upper lip after the menopause. With age, | many men sprout hairs from the | ears. Excesive hair growth is | associated with certain tumors of the adrenal gland. No circus sideshow is com- plete witlout a bearded lady. These ladies are not too difficult to find and many reports have appeared throughout history of women with heavy mustaches and thick beards—often down to the waistline. According to Gould and Pyle, | Rosine Marguerite Muller was | the most celebrated bearded woman; she -died in: Dresden in 1732. Another curious case was | that of a 23-year-old woman who | ‘had facial hair by age three. Eventually it became a full beard. She married at 17, had | two normal children, and nurs- | ed each for a month. The exaggerated development of hair is a different condition. Jo Jo, the dog-faced boy, is a | typical example. He looked like | a Scotch terrier. Many victims | of this condition have a hairy | coat like animals. Darwin's Mis- sing Link was an example of | | NOTES BY THE WAY Customer — “Se you've got that pretty clerk you Druggist — “Yes, all “per manent press” in clothing and to em- phasize that nothing in textiles is permanent. Least sick, made his last will, Father: “I’m going 7 and send Jane’s ke cpap home.” Mother: “Now, John, we used to court.” An English lawyer being and gave all his estate to fools and madmen: being asked the rea- son for so doing; “From. such,” said he, “I had it, and to such I give it again.” — Vancouver Press Staff Writer The impression is growing in informed British quarters that | China, with the help of North Viet Nam, may have outwitted the untried leaders of both the Soviet Union and the United States in the spreading Vietna- mese war. The prospects may be exactly what Peking ordered: A shat- tering of hope for any friendly East-West conference that may have been in the making and a break-up in any budding friend- ship that could have developed between the two strangers— Alexei Kosygin of the Soviet Union and Lyndon Johnson of the United States. For weeks there had been talk of a possible exchange of visits and television appear- ances by the two leaders. Both are relatively new and untried in- the field of world strategy and diplomacy. Both have hard jobs in stepping out of the shad- | ows of their predecessors, espe- cially Kosygin, who replaces el formidable Nikita Khrush- chev. DELIBERATE TIMING Now, suddenly, the Vietna- mese war has enshrouded both cided with the first visit of Ko- sygin in Hanoi, a city which his predecessor had tended to ig- nore. Western diplomats suggest Kosygin was no more aware of plans for that attack than were the American airmen who were pinned ‘by gun-fire at Pleiku. And it is considered unlikely Ho Chi Minh, the North Vietna- mese leader, would have the audacity of involving Kosygin without full consultations and urgings from Peking. NO RECOURSE LEFT With his own world at stake, Johnson apparently felt he had no other recourse but to batter a North Vietnamese base. He was fighting a losing war: A war which he had in- herited and one which he could not resolve without first reach- ing a firm and intimate nego- tiation with the otherside. Now those prospects of de- tached and cool-headed negotia- tions have dimmed. Kosygin, finding himself involved, imme- diately pledged firm a’° to Ha- noi. The demonstrations that followed in the Communist capi- tals were anticipated. But, they seemed more fervent and pro- should be no differences of opinion, But unless he alters the constitu- this. Entire famili f this t: | tion—which he can do by simple or- is. Entire families of this type |.leaders in images perhaps not | jonged in Peki - than in M e nning Revealed have been exhibited. of their own choosing, Each oa : ee smmsitec tapes ee SER RAI Te eg? nele tea . i mush show Wis tedple at-home ROW css i sid cia ete Mapas put forward by Ontario will be | sight but an extensively hairy | he is fearless They cannot with- Johnson cannot let the ma studied carefully by Ottawa, as mole is a rarity. These birth- | draw from the increasing rigid- | Test. He has made his own posi- under the new chief magistrate, i _Imprudent Haste In Pla The special joint committee of guards requested by him had i “will not dance to Nasser’s tune: '| > Because it has been the most con- may be his last term and the end of so-called Arab. unity. For Egypt is the Senate and House of Com- mons has been. working long days through much of the Ctiris- universal portable old age pen- sion The 36 members of the com- mittee include 12 senators and already been included, such as that any future modificatien tmust be ratified by two-thirds of ince may, at any future time, opt out of the plan and operate its own similar program. likely té be accepted, such as and adjustments to the contri- bution and earnings bases. These changes stil] wont make .+they deserve Some at least are | marks are the source of trouble in many persons with exagger- large tufts of hair growing out of the shoulders or back. An ex- | tensively hairy mole on the low- | ity of their predicaments with- out loss of face. attack against an American air base at Pleiku in South Viet Nam was deliberate. It ¢oin- tion clear. It appears to suggest further military responses against North Vietnamese basec bankrupt, and without massive Egypt- ° . tmas- New Year parliamentary {the provinces representing two- | the proposed flat $25 monthly | ated or bizarre localized grow- It now is widely accepted in ‘fan aid-the’rest of the Arab countries | recess, to study the proposed | thirds of the potential benefic- | benefit to all old age pension- | ths of hair. This also is true of | Western diplomatic quar- oo ——— . laries. Second, that any prov-jers, starting January-1, 1967; cireus people with a mane or | ters the timing of the Viet Cong And Communit China appeers to be waiting for just the right moment to join the holocaust in full array. sistently socialist country in the | % wps, of whom 20 are Liber- | He made it clear that this is to | it the best possible plan, but | Middle East, Egypt has received huge | als and 12 Conservatives, with | ensure that Ontarians would | they will improve it. At’ least | back could produce a real | foreign aid handouts from Russia and two New Democrats and one | not be victimized if any future | they are so sound, and spoken pony tail. h federal government raids the | with such authority, that they DRY NASAL MEMBRANES | A Touc Vv Problem Red China. Much of the money has | Credit party | pension fund, as the Unemploy- | give the federal rnment into the giant Aswan High Dam | Te committee was faced | ment Insurance Fund was not justification for delaying its im. | _C. 8. writes: You listed petrol- | London Free Press 8 with a mammoth task to be | long ago opened up to new bene- | prudent haste to rush the bill | U™ preeects Sees tae cmeoey Nationalism and language a The | |_project.on.the River Nile, and much | in | ficiaries on_an_unsound actuar._| —— | causing agents. I have dryness | 1)'" cined up 06 -Ganséions-| 4h ped tt nas doniet antes imum of time. It had to study | ial basis, and consequently ‘Wirougn, allowing extended | of the ndsé Which 1s relieved eee that-there- of it has been wasted. . clause by clause the lengthiest | bankrupted. time for more careful modifica- | using white petrolatum jelly er to well - — woud be ‘ general move to sub- Part of the waste has followed = oe a a The 10 specific proposals now | tions. | det. De vou, couaider this 2 | cused ame "beat Conndlans : wding tn Spee ne . w io : - oe oy ee et ve — fro. many cara No. and REPLY oft ft se at twert See laaone an , Fie hes semeed bite eee nd tuarial : . a since 2 dry - _ . sole boss . rab wor! = ceiees and aes - He Blasted Smokers en biceds at nicht, your physic. ona evuntry «the edcption ment on the part of Indians who rash spending to support socialists report before Parliament reas- St. Thomas Times-Journal ian will_aporeciate anvthing you! Pusce led to riots and demon. we inet ok native _tengnes other Arab states—Syria, Lebanon | sembles on February 16 can do to assure eight hours of | “e'tione rey | ceeeenee tee ee and the Y, in Some the was | Although most of us think of | of respect, of cleanliness, of | sleep. - During the course of | particularly keen in the state of oteen, in-gurticuler: bluntly told by Health Minister the current cigarette smoking | modesty, men should not be ash- oe a burned | Madras. of the wastage, however, is because | Judy LaMarsh that the govern- | controversy and the criticism it | amed to sit tossing off tobseco DEPRESSION cae aes cee eee ecient eee Egyptians are unable to operate fac- | ment would not ap. 2ciate any | has aroused as a contemporary | pipes. puffing the smoke one to eee ee | we some Indians felt that was | onstretions stop. At theo recommendations w wou problem, smoking was a another, making t air fit ot ; ssary vestig. “ow tories built for them by the Russians. | substantially alter the dratt subject as long ago as iene At smoke and stink thereot we 2 person to feel depressed’ and os of ocean ; | time be sa; "Madras state can th the etite ef ths bill. Nine had t- | that time, the eritic- | hale athwart the and ia. | disinterested for six months aft- os ot ao ge tule. Carting away | use English or develop its own precarious ive’ ee ales tenta however x dishes er an attack of mononucleosis? | **2tues © Queen Victoria and | regional language. He denies ly agreed ady, and | ism was aimed at the fast-de-| fect the air? The public use similar mon ts com- i forced economy, in the outflow of money | any significant changes would | veloping habit of pipe smoking. | whereof, at all times and in all | Blood tests are normal. ratively simple. But. displac- ones Wal be aan negotiations | Tobacco was introduced to I i REPLY pa . one. which has resulted from it, and im | with the places, hath now so far prevail ing English as the language of | This is an instance where a m. England by Sir John Hawkins | ed as divers men have been at| No. Some peaple develop an! pariiament and the courts was | move w the deliberate depression of shares, | This was a slap at the supre- | in 1565, and Sir Walter Raleizh | least forced to take it also, with- | ©™otional backlash after an ill another matter. For there was | ify nae intensified. divi —-¢-1-.Nasser has-been forced. to shut the ERE in, laden pentane made it-fashionable~ at court. |-out~ desire; ashamed to” seem | Ress and psychiatric care -may +-mo-qther tanguage spoken ‘by Tn: | sions. Tt shows how touchy lan ~ : Stock to all dealings, save | stitutional conscience would de- | putt or two before he weat to | kine ower. which is great | Tect itself Se eae ee Sreeieas son be. ; plore; but it became evident reer ° , 1s on for "es days a oe my has aod that, the docile Liberal mnaierity we ccatteld. ot an oper a haegme shall nt SMOKING AND PULSE RATE | . level. There has been a tendency, at - ° ° committee was ready to | beth 1, smoking was too costly | his delic TF : “| Week-End S$ 2 why : E _by— steam-roller the enquiry. Ble mera’ " stly | his delicate, wholesome, and | adult life, my pulse was 82 to | “times, to do this by shunting “hot” -_economic—m-uddle——by—blustering + for-its-use to-be-widespread;-so|-cléain-compexioned wife to that Since smoking i against his two favorite whipping NOT BEST POSSIBLE at social gatherings a pive was-/ extremity, that also she must a — ei From issues ” boys—Israel and Western Germany anaes after witness come te frequently passed around to let | corrupt her sweet breath there- neces frouh uneling bo wan | ' ' * | point shocking blunders in | each guest share in the new-/ with, or else resolute to live in ‘Th a But the current state of affairs | ‘te ‘aft plan. For instance, of | found detight. a perpetual. stinking torment... |” Y HMAMATA § t put an estimated 1,880,000. Canad- |. -This practice so enraged Ki custom loathesome REPL : . won't affect the vote of confidence | ians aged 65 and over in 1976, | James that he let go a mighty hateful to the nose hoel te thn beet oe eet oe + for Nasser in next -month’s election. | *¥ethirds would receive noth- | “Counterblast to Tobacco,” cry-| the brain, dangerous to the . : ing from this loudly trumpeted | ing out against its introduction a ne causes irregularities of the beat BICK SWEET MUSTARD Dictators have it easy that way. The | wonder-plan enone lungs stinking Schade at oonbnst are ducrete would drew 69 averege peamee scoinah “m sae ee fume thereof, nearest resembi- » nee AMG AGAY Fat 15 OZ. : of only $45, and only about 28,- lity” tn ing the horrible Stygian smoke . 8. tes: ve medical ly muted. There would be no one else | 200 Canadians would draw the | Mslity, in it. of the pit that is bottomless.” | researchers been successful in JAR ‘Is it not both great P , devel melt ‘ to vote for anyway. eg AD sn aah a wind mitioonness,” anaes _Now that is what we call a | fat scien al cal ne away EDITORIAL NOTES —_| sii citiel rou ‘be ‘rented | HME: “that atthe table, place sharp eriiclem of smoking.) | REPLY | Guan “lee eR 80 ungenerously, civil servants es, a also : dissolve muscles, bones The dean of the U.S. House of | f2rning $500 a year. would then A Man Of P chin, and ‘i Chowder 7 total pen- an eace + andl everything cine. oe ee Representatives, just starting his 22nd | sion benefits of $5,550 a year ees There Hamilton Spectator TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— “term at 76, comes up with this useful | ties’ aad i cumuar ano Dress appropriately for cold |j™ Aylmer 20 oz. tin tip for in ; a injustices which | In an interview the other day low the example of Gandhi. As | or rainy weather. Cream Style 2 tins vain cai Reet dlne newcomers | ee Uae te ee ee Professor Arnold J. , | Dr. Toynbee pointed out, India ’ recalled that there was good Lord gave you two ears and one i baked fate its imal tod the eminent historian, said that | made a complete turnaround (NOTE: All Corn . 41c ara * f th; listen twice h form. Mahatma Gandhi was far and | with a minimum of bloodshed. It | “% Dr. Van Delien should be s.c'0 8 2.0 over the control of | mouth; listen ty oe ro ‘ie ae ee ee ee away the greatest man of this | was the first time a major na-| ®@@ressed to: Dr. Theodore SS > Legislature last ses- speak—at least ‘for a year or two. onto the scene aie nae century so far, a choice that | tion was able to do this. And to| Vam Dellen, co Chicago Trib- | Christie's _ pkg.— Rose Brand ject is still a matter rie : ip aatuerty aed eemeadaine will curdle some blood streams. | Gandhi and his passive resis-| "me. Chicago, Mlinols.) Graham ; et dae Seah onal He also said the integration | tance movement goes the credit. : ‘the United States as The late J. Augustine MacDonald, path nil asserted thealittiest | movement in the United States | The vast majority of Americ- | - Wafers . 3c setved two terms in the tional wich tradi- | would succeed in its purpose, | an Negroes have followed the Our Yesterdays .* itest news | QC, Legis- of Ontario and of his | but he held out little hope for 2 | Ganhdi example. The fact that | comes from Massa- nity and national a naational | similar movement in South Af-| suddenly last summer riots in| ‘""0™ ‘e Guardian Files) hich is now licensing the social services, implying that | "C% | major American cities stoped | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO TWINKLE CAKE M "ot the Ontario did not want to stand One of ‘the reasons for the | is proof that the average Negro (February 11, 1940) : aloof from this national plan, | A™merican Negro's success in | 18 willing to subdue his hatreds| Lord died z 's, it seems, will not be as Quebee has done. -- ‘achieving rapport with his white | for the common good. Only the rause using pesticides is ~_He outlined ‘how ‘some safe- | brother is his willingness to fol- | success of the Gandhi move- sere have been licensed by English Is A ‘Must’ fing fates nama a ee onstage, | meh eat oe |. Listed the licensees are these considera- | succeeds in the United States, , . tree ward: |. necessity of training | as it now seems likely to do, it aaa tie ae ie ter iaain we ke ee , oF i de aerate, gal eemeioe aie bout peat ressor on his side, the lead. Soseped be sateguant. On19 as Of rs ~ a ‘of 1 tor | Ee Le hi ed ea : BRA ae -— So Roce oe ae