! 1. Se eel mw ee eh ae rt era * Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Diw W J. Hancen, Publisher Wéallece Ward Frank Walker dey end statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street. Charlottetown P.E-1.. by Thomson. Newspapers |td. Branch offices at Summerside Montaove. Alber'on end Souris. Pa *epresented nationally by Thomson Newspaners Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empire 3-8894 Montrea! 640 Cathcart Street Unb versity 65942 Western Office 1030 West Georgia year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com ! ditional university instruction, books and facilities embodied in the cation of professional immigrants ar- riving in this country during ~the above mentioned period. In the same period, immigration of professionals to -the United States accounted for the outflow of $292 million in edu- cational costs, leaving a net gain of $240 million ; Mr. Hilt’s Butter late, great Canadian humorist Stephen edu- | Gas The Invader. : [ 7, Security Council’s Problem U_ Thant's aa to ar- fange a ceasefire between In- | dia and Pakistan leaves the United Nations Security Council in a pickle. With its demands * posing sanctions, although these may prove embarrassing and difficult to enforce. As seen by the experts, an ss Harold Morrison Press Staff Writer and have agreed to provide the Pakistanis with certain forms of military aid. It is unlikely that the Moslem world would stand by and watch Pakistan | forced to retreat because of the lack of arms. Other factors also impose practical limitations on the Se- eurity Coupgil’s actions. For example; 20 ma how fran- ae Stree! Vancouver (MA 7037 Pub! . We neve: heard before of Leroy Add inadequate venting and the | as “the ship eatin the United bud . (vnen and the Cartan res The Covad | stage is set for one of our most | of food to Pakistan and India tains it wants to see an end to 5 ee eae he eee ae: | ah whicte ie ot Seneiing Macnee common forms of pasoaing.” "would soon force oth sides 10 the. fighing, opinion “in some is exclusively enti f es king firm out in e we M9 2 | anne ne a licdtion of al! néps dispatches in this paper he runs a truc | " vais to it or to the Associated Press @ Revers | raska and he-hasn't been making news as ae e leaky flues | of millions of innocent civilians U.S. may be privately hoping a nd also to the local blished herein All : | ts ludes the hot | might be imperilled by malnu- that Pakistan gets badly ° aon erg Acne oF co dispa'ches here unti! now. But a Detroit paper has water heater and gas refrigera- | trition’ and starvation. A food mauled because of Pakistan's ” in alse reserved Subscription rete brought hum. to our attention. and we | tor Mm ke a nce whe . ois os — ule row sociation ci ‘Sana ae ae Not ove: 40c mer week by carrer ‘ — — whe- mbargo there: @ $37.00 » rau . real gp i aaaiad and een Salute him for pulling off 4 stunt that | tae endl, 8 heresone is Prot most. ble These ars can tat te " not serviced by carrieé only a genius of the calibre of our ee eee Bingen Fm eugeae would | arms oi real determination af pa $15.00 » year off Island and UK. $20.00 per ope e tay at a wi pom termi ‘ne needed escaping | larly against - Lad pane cease- % oo " ti . ronwea!th Leacock could have thought up and in the furnace to determine whe- tet are bel rapidly SUPPORT UN FIRST ‘Not ove> Je single copy. carried out. ; ther there are leaks in the com- Gomes in the one — in- But the ee by ne Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. — ase Sail: tent about. it a : hon: bustion chamber. This method 1s | decisive battles. The problem means hopeless Common- PAGE 4 FRIDAY, SEPTLMBER 17. 1965. i ais | ideal for hot air units because | for the Security Council is how Wealth stands im the wings. Its ; ——— pan way. He is obliged to-file his rate | the odor is noticeable all over |to make such an embargo leaders are moving quietly be- | the house when defects are pre- work. hind the scenes, making sure NDP Windfall For the first time, according leader Mr. Douglas, the New Demo- eratic Party will have a million dol- lars to spend on’ its election cam- paign. Its funds, drawn largely from labor contributions, will be twice the. amount available to the party in the 1963 election drive and the two old- line parties, generally financiallv- favored hy business and industry, will have to reckon on4this fact. ; much more effective to its Hew the schedule with the Interstate Com- merce Commission which keeps a sharp eve on such matters; and this time he included in it a proposed rate for trucking vak butter from Omaha to Chicago at 45 cents per 100 Ibs. Now vak butter is found only in Tibet and it is questionable whether -so much as-an ounce -of-it-has ever been seen in either Omaha or Chicago. But that didn’t occur to the trans- portation authorities. The Western Trunk Line Committee, which speaks for big Midwestern railroads, at once sent, Some families invite when they move the picnic grill | indoors. The fumes are loaded with carbon monoxide and soning occurs unless an exhaust | is provided. There is no harm tf | the grill. fits into the fireplace, but be sure the damper is open- ed. Another newcomer is the re- ) pair-of<small-gasoline- motors tn the basement or closed garage. The exhaust is just as lethal as othat from the family car The manifestations of carbon | monoxide poisoning depend up- on the concentration of the. gas , in the air. Blood prefers carbon CHINA TAKES, ‘SIDES : Undoubtedly,’ the big West- ern powers and the Soviet | Union would co-operate but the UN has no control over China, }.which has condemned !ndia and | pledged assistance to Pakistan. | Aside from the UN's inability to influence China's decisions, the Security Council must con- sider Pakistan's argument that such an embargo would ‘dis criminate in favor of India. Pakistan maintains it depends heavily on imports for {ts arms — while India manufactures most of its weapons at home There ~also is the question of it does nothing to undermine the United Nations and giving full support to U Thant, the secretary-general. This support will continue. " But if the Security Council finally throws in the sponge, a Commonwealth peace mission will be ready to take up the challenge if. it is requested to do so by the UN More -diffieult-than a -cease- fire will be finding a way to heal the battle wounds © be- tween these two Commonwealth giants, of restoring warmth and 4 friendship between the two gov- ernments : this is __consid- NDP ce gn will be as a conse- : oa } ny cars complained to the ICC that Hilt’s rate | mabetien to ein (00 te Dear on eens eee) te elem ee eee quence, remains to be seen. But this | ee eee | and inhaling a one per cent mix- | heed an embargo proposal. e a decisive role for ; on yak butter was “discriminatory | ia . Turkey and Iran have shown Commonwealth and: one that is | substantial war chest certainly will be of major assistance in meeting transportation costs, shoring up or- ganizations at all levels and enabling the conduct of opinion polls across the country.. The poll technique is a costly busiriess, but it has been ac- cepted now as an essential election science: It has been pointed out, however, that even with its million the NDP will still be in the impoverished class compared to its chief opponents. The government side, it is said, will have five times that much spending money lable, and the official opposition and noncompensatory.” That is, it discriminated against the railroads and wouldn't make a profit for Hilt. Whereupon an ICC board of examin- ers sat, and solemnly ruled that the yak rate would be “unjust and un- reasonable.’ This meant that the rate would squeeze the railroads out of the yak fat hauling business. Accounts aren’t clear, says the Detroit paper, whether Hilt finally told the railroads, and the examiners, what—yak fat was and why there wasn’t ‘any in Omaha, or just let it gradually dawn on -them that they had been had. “Either way,” it adds, SNAKE CHARMER “KNOWLEDGE EXPLOSION Buries World Scientists With Data National Geographic News Bulletin Eighty to © per cent of all scientists who ever lived are alive right now. The world of science is churn- ing out reports so fast that not even fellow specialists can keep up with material in their own field ‘Throughout the world, some —100,000—different journals | are published in more than languages, and the number dou- bles about every 15 years. With- ervoir of information doubles in size about every seven years Even if data can be stored, retrieving the proper report at the proper time can be coloss- ally difficult. A steel executive was quoted as saying that if an experiment costs less than $20,- 000 to perform, it might be cheaper to do it than try to find | out if it has been done earlier somewhere else in the world The Smithsonian Institution has a Science Information Ex- change, located in the new Ma- dison Building in midtown | Washington, D.C. The Exchange receives notices of current re- search projects from scientists supported by the U.S. Govern- ment, and invites privately em- ployed scientists to submit sim- ilar reports, About 70,000 notices now ar- | ture leads to a 50 per cent ‘satur- ation within 15 minutes. Symptoms develop because the blood contains too little oxy- gen (6 supply the needs of the such as headache, irritability, inability—to—-concentrate,— dizzl- | ness, confusion, and. incoordina- tion are the most common man- ifestations. Extreme fatigue and depression occur in chronic -pol- soning. These—victims need fresh air or oxygen immediately. Artifi- | cial respiration should be given when breathing is irregular or | has stopped Rapid recover from profound coma is possible | -when_the ihdividual ts placed in | a hyperbaric chamber and given oxygen under two atmospheres of pressure. strong sympathy for Pakistan getting close attention. — Quebec’s Foreign Affairs London Free Press Quebec. has reinforced claim to special status: as a state by coming to terms with Ottawa on the procedure to be followed in the conduct of ‘‘fo- “reign affairs.” The province will inform the | Federal Government whenever | it reaches an agreement with a | ‘foreign government on matters | that come within provincial \ju- | risdiction. Ottawa will be noti- | fied, but accords will not be sub- | mitted for—federalapproval. This would appear to be an ts | It would seem innocuous enough as it applies, for exam- ple, to Quebec's cultural ex- change arrangements with France. These cover such fields as art exhibits, films, the the- atre and exchanges of artists. But provincial jurisdiction ex- | tends to many fields and in fact | reaches into virtually every area /of business and commercial en- deavor. If Quebec should seek ‘to extend its authority to make | international accords into any of these, using the cultural ex-_ ‘ i , . On the other hand, failure to pive oa ‘ . e ‘ bout three times. : : in a generation or two, scien- , 2 : ° 3 rive. each year. They are classi- NASAL POLYPS ; change agreement as a prece- : “he -has our compliments.” Ours tists will face a blizzard — per- ee ee fied, duplicated, filed, and plac- 4 reader writes: What is a 2¢cePtable compronmse-formula dent or springboard, than a gen- One exchange takes the hopeful view that if the NDP should elect more members as a result of. this windfall, it will undoubtedly encour- age party supporters and attract an too, in full measure! _Our Kinsmen Still. During the visit here recently of the Hon. Sir Leon Gotz, New Zealand haps close to a million journals. Even the biggest libraries | have abandoned any hope of storing and classifying all cur- rent journals, though computers | nd microfilm techn:ques may ' eventually come to the rescue. on research is reported to have led to the - premature opening and subsequent closing of two - chemical plants worth $38 -mil- lion apiece. Some officials. esti- mate that as much as 10 per ed on computer tape. When-a scientist makes an inquiry — for instance, ‘‘What research .is underway on the cyclopropane molecule in Diels-Alder tions?”” — the Exchange's 45 resident scientists retrieve, rele- reac-- nasal papilloma and is this due to an allergy? REPLY Polyps are likened to a minia- sociated with allergy. JUST ENOUGH _ ture punching bags and are as-~ that subtracts: little from Otta- wa's exclusive treaty- making ight, even as it affords..Quebec some measure of gratification in her aspirations for statehood and sovereignty uine “constitutional conflict will develop Ottawa cannot surrender any rea! sense the sole right to determine the international com- miiments of Canadians — increased flow of funds into party : ae he US. Library- of C cent of the Nation's annual re- \ant notices and send : . : High Commissioner at Ottawa, we ete oe 1 bir | 8 send them:to NA. writes: Is there such a E es yes onl r of t search and development budget ; ie ipragte for eee Hil ~ieet eis had occasion to recall the voyage of | \orid's. SLU ieeeaiio a — nearly $15 billion — is spent Be sah a check with thing as too po etl Ja pan hs ernizes Fis ing ne ee eee F the brig “Prince Edward”, back in | ready its filing facilities are -so duplicating work already done Exchange officials were amaz- No. This idea is current be | Embassy of Japan, Ottawa intensify the efforts of other parties a jammed that the Library can but buried in the mountains of 1858, with settlers from this colony : 2 data. - ed when a survey showed that cause, in prolonged vorhiting, to boister its fishing industry, {low sea-culture method and the to amass greater and greater cam- : ished keep only a partes of the ma- To alleviate the problem, the 9 Per cent of inquiring scien- bile appears. In these instances, ne Japanese government is in. industry is: being encouraged to ign funds. This competition, while eS ee ce pad babies Fed 1 Government’ has ‘ist knew nothing of investiga. the stomach and intestines £0 troducing ambitious programs Ww lif paign .tunds. ? ce . : tors working elsewhere on the into reverse and bile present in — grow -maring life such as ~ admittedly not in the best interests of the political parties themselves, of politics, or ‘of the public, may never- themselves successfully as pioneers. ._We have cherished that bond with our far-away Commonwealth partner URGENT TASK FACED The smaller, specialized libra- - fies have been an even more stupendous problem. Dr. Glenn launched major problems. About two years ago the Library of Congress set-up-a-National Re- ferral Center for Science and same problem. One industrial _laboratory _ promptly discontinu- ed plans fe- a project when it © discovered that. two_other insti- | ' the duodenum ultifately reach- es the mouth BE POSITIVE ——-- L.B. writes: Can anything be aimed at modernizing operations and promoting co-operative fish- | ing Some 192,000 fishing vessels weed and oysters To protect freshwater fish, ‘the | Zovernment is passing anti-wat- | er pollution laws. Recent. indus- j si : r, SO far as w ; Seaborg. chairman of the Ato- Technology. The Center collects now have diesel engines and-fur- . trial expan ever since. Howeve 0 far aS we are H f ‘ i n 1 theless hasten the day when campaign ; Jete list of the “P i ic Enerzy. © : m. has. dat information sources and tutions had already undertaken | done for a bad case of jealousy? lther plans call f tinint ‘. a as sion on in and be Neoee contributions and expenditures are estimated that his agency’s res- | makes them known to cea it. REPLY | smaller vessels, used in coastal | water in =saneiest areas brought under some form of legisla-. tive control and policing. There's always a silver lining, if © Edward” passengers was ever pub- lished locally; and we expressed the hope that Sir Leon might be able to _ The Pampered Traveller In January, 1965, the Nation- al Bureau of Standards dedicat- | ed a Clearinzhouse for Federal | Scientific and Technical Infor- | Yes. Get ahead of the game or become more attractive. Inse- | and downgrading one’s _ self are the most common caus- es of jealousy. ~ : | waters, with equipment and hy- | drauli¢ powered machinery. Ships are equipped with re- frigeration systems and refrig- and poses a threat to the fresh | water fishing industry. 4 Although Japan's fishing cat- | ches” are growing each year, the acai eee was available in ~ one looks hard enough for it’ That ‘See Ge a mation “at~ Springfield, Virginia. DON’T “THINK THE WORST; Bort tresh caches = industry's: work force-has-stead=— parliamentar committee“ which was —= -Gotes-~ter a-drivein-the-fam-. gS inetais: been-developed. The -Clearinghou i Yes, but it, is far ‘down on. the | Eee ily declined.. To counteract\this oa ry. ; sctanBlis.. eoiecns Get- ee conse Cates eavaue = —————hdecline, an “increasing number KGa Roe ij to Cade t ansportation ine. lates i computers. and. re- | e=intom this “matter, se Maps . * fishing... Rrounds, . eae [ODA Y’S HEALTH -HINT=<-<c = Ot..vessels.. <are boing. equipped. production lative conioat” acd in renoeate triboGon of ore" than 300.000" 4 } ; : : : : : ; : : . ivor- | *arily endorse the epiniss of corres waves of more than 200 German | Men of vision have been doing | Surely it's worth trying ; Gj . ‘ fessor Louis Parai of the University Zoe bolas to eae ae oe |_"pondents All letters published are seb arplanes, but the Nazi 'bomb- long-range exploration of the If you want tobe in the van- _Purity Froducts” 7 J. W. Skinner of .Western Ontario. It shows that | NOP a ‘how hes cain seat | rrrraty, Tet Omeraiee my Wi = ae in ae ae dak wae we is tk ie cay ath se oa oan 317 Kent St. Dial 47125 y Dial 4-4044 > ’ : | . * enter imie en corre. their i é our losses to the United States from | ee aers fick ses ae |lings nearer to making such om the moon °DEECOGOGOEEGEOEOGEOECOOSS : Sr Canada to have duplicated the ad- $35. { Ottawa, Sept. 15. boit and Halifax, N.S. | to stimulate it.- Finance Minist- — it sharply \ . a : t r ‘ ; * « i “ o a - 7 i a Bei: iit as ee =f Pigs ee eT RTE AI tS ESE meer wesrene See gig ee eget ee eR ; i eet om a findings. In the opinion of Finance Minister Gordon, this was too bad;: the committee's negligence, he meant cessful, he and Lady Gots.,will make | sures will no longer. do. Today's But affluence is making Pas obtain. ' saan dDinales increase catches considerably. | considerable proportion of its ill : ; sengers no longer content with a Al h —not the dissolution. Perhaps it w : j ; affluent motorist requires some- 5 ¢ , so ships are kept posted as to (diet. It is estimated that per be'revived at the next- session, and | it the occasion of another friendly ihe Wete looking at- what is going on current market prices and ad- | Capita consumption of fish Met the matter will get the airing the | visit to our shores, bringing with them The pempered traveller likes res ear ot a wie Lunar Ho esteaders bed a fishing activities ac- | ducts amounts to 51 pounds an- - . the precious document for presenta- | to have his car equipped with | screen. ; m e chee Ae Fenan tae UE pyblic expected it was * oOo! ng to | ig fot j 3 ; hings : +43 ! : Regina Leader Post : pr , 1 resources, Cer nee | k t such things as air conditioners, ; ; bef tion to our archives and making i iat di 4 |. At this rate, cars may even- tain fishing grounds are desig- Th Pai receive efore now. For stereophonic radios and even tially roll off assembly lines The late Stephen Leacock, , and Space Administration, has nated restricted and the number e aint Makers r “The NDP will still, we trust, be zealous in Campaigning for this much- needed reform, even though it will come too late to have the slightest i nt Ww w gan. ‘No sive landscape _ beautification. , : ; us: the is 5 sources impact ge the sorate ae under ae | ly entrenched in Ontario, and it has bought a new car equipped with programs which, among other '"% cabinet of claims for home- adventure, imagination, initia- and the industry. Prawns, sea 140 Great George St. to get the sugar daddies lined up for | a television set. objectives, remove billboards *@4ders. on the moon. tive. breams and other coastal cat- -the-November8 deadline. Favors Canada als in the provincial ridings of ed to oe = on | eves, Bived . haie cs bill- pork Bhiges fabs eprtiagan dle | pasting” a Stars and Stripes on | 18 REUTS NEWS CHIEF ~ Service — cekus me something to inste. s built in ir cars? ; ie moon. It is réassuring to note, on good | Bracondale (Toronto) and Nipissing. just igoking out the window.’ backside as well as any number think of the emotion stirred |..LONDON (Reuters)—The ap Oils ; | Both ts had b held by the Lib- of full-face shots, this concern . sani : pointment of B. R. Horton, 32, authority, that Canada has not, ex-. | Ol seals had been held by the bi at ee | Gut Yeuurd |for lunar homesteading is un- " Millions of American hearts | g¢ chief edi uh ELL) Stove perienced a loss but a very consider- | ¢fals.anyway. Bracondale by the a oe UF TESTETGQYS | derstandable. asa space radio broadcast | nounced. Thursday y hone, Wf B margin of 70 votes. But Wednesday’s bead: (From The Guardian Files) | “For the past 20 years Washing- | Drought back strains of “O say | He succeeds S.J. Macon, whe| Puat able net-gain in the postwar-migra- tion of professional and skilled man- power. A report on this so-called “brain drain” has just been released by the Economie Council of Canada, based on a research study by Pro- this source have been more than off- set by an average annual immigra- tion of 26,000 This is said to be the first author- rty will b 4 to dri raised the question of the pass | oo | IN We | ; ilatit , | party will now be encouraged to drive enger lists of people from Prince come, at what Hitler judges itative compilation to come from any for a number of Toronto ridings in Edward Island who sailed | to | “his best opportunity.” in the arning To France agency. of government on the subject. tional costs, since some argue we're - spending too.much educating young ed States, Dr. Parai's study shows: ' something of a formal affair. that if the search he has’ requested to be made in Auckland proves suc- it would indeed be worthy of that. Ontario Byelections . The Robarts government is strong- little to fear from the election wins “scored “on Wednesday bythe Liber- results are important to the new On- © tario Liberal leader, Andrew Thomp- son, who since he took-over a year ago hadn't been doing. so well. Defeats in these ridings, followed which went to the government, would have cast a dark shadow over the new leader: As it is, he feels quite re- juvenated, and it is predicted that his A New York firm is making hair and ten should not worry. The price It would have cost $532 million~| of tpe hair hair curlers isethree for | | sion in the countryside usually ¢hat drivers and passengers may receive scientific data the | De. Van Delos: Should be od- | gave up. the ghost when Parliament | or eas ~ ward to. = : - was dissolved, without completing its column today. and it is indeed a Proigects of & oni through | time were sensible objectives. unclassified research reports, | Ways be taken seriously. fearaee and sent by fascimile | and labor saving devices. _ *| pleasure to give it publicity. We trust town or a more lengthy excur-| Windows were provided so For a few dollars, customers _ ‘Note: All correspondence to | Pisegage id Fee Al- | Japan, with a coastline of - re- | aroused keen anticipation. But it seems such simple plea- could enjoy the. scenery. dressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Government pays thousands to pelien, c-o Chicago Tribune, Chi- | lay has operated for 10 years, it Poe 16,000 miles, is tradiand is expected the new system will | has depended on the sea for a adjustable steering wheels. And now room has been -made in the modern automobile for the television set. . A report from Flint, tells of a woman who without any windows at all. It would be easier to see the tele- vision screen in a car, without windows. Michi- | _ But what is the point in expen: The innovation delighted the from roadsides if motorists are "TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO » (September 17, 1940) PUBLIC FORUM | A howling 100-mile-an-hour This ‘cohen: te ee. We Ot Mates | oe joined forces with the by correspendenis ef questions of i» British fighters high above the terest. The Guardian dees set neces Kentish countryside to disperse over London's rooftops Prime Minister Churchill ral- lied. Britons today to constant vigilance against a German in-- vasion, which he said would WELCOME ASSURANCE Sir. — In your editorial of Thursday, September 2nd. you~ Auckland 1858. I have written | wake of bombing which killed or - happiest memories of a stay all | stitute of Psychology at Ottawa too brief. University. most famous of al! Canadian hu- morists, would have been de- lighted to know that a depart- ment of the United States gov- ernment called the Bureau of Land Management keeps a fil- As the importance of being ‘woman's -dauzhter--who-explain----going-to-travel-around_with.their ©2'™est cannot be denied, ands ‘| ton has been accumulating a file of claims. This, in addition to queries on procedure and other relevant matters, now ~ makes” up some 200 ’i‘>ms. Discovery has always belong- | ed mainly to men of vision and | dreams come true. Another American government body, the National Aeronautics Two years ago there was hint | of inflation and de Gaulle clamp- eae. Journal “LEON GOTZ, | Holm, nurses at the Provincial | dragged a bit. Premier Georges _ ee are spending New Zealand High. Commission- er. . &| Pompidou has observed that it week of holidays in Musquodo- | might be wise to do somethiag been’ handing out advice as well. It tells inquirers that the moon belongs to the world, not*the | first arrival. e There is already too much red | tape about this: the call is for Think of the fame that would surround the American first can you see, by the moon's ear- ly light,” sung at the’ moment of exercising squatter’s rights. There is no limit to specula- tion of what life and love might | produce in this area of - lar- | ger Junacy. of fishing vessels are limited with a time limitation imposed. Numerous artificial breexing * projects aimed at improving | marine habitats are being under- taken by government ches are being bred by the shal- a news agency April 24. (ARORA RARRARRRRARRARAD yy ‘ “Parents Prefer ¢ . There's, nothing like having 160 | acres of craters, presumably without taxes. | body | enomically stagnant. The eco nomic growth rate sagged from ‘economic recession, says the. OECD, tmiess the government | Says that France is ec- It shows that this country had a net the federal election. . oe to New Zealand asking for a wounded 10,000 in the-first 15 py. = gain of 2.314 professional people and Although. there is little similarity search of the National a. ‘days of September | song wits a healthy bale | = Mace plore ob Ree 2 i i ; to see. whether such a list was ts : 12,074 skilled workers between 1950 the tactics a atiser eae ever compiled and if so I have | TEN ee ae) | Sola ana Treg oaereney. tt te Gradina on toe & ’ ¢ and 1963 as a result of immigration ee eons © no doubt they will find it. I | ‘(September 17, .. has had full -employment | for l 0 conom- i to Canada and emigration from Can- , Tegistering the implications of this _ cr to ve ye . ey | -_Mr. oe a a | — » wears. President de soe toe tan Beau on Granite . Marble - - Bronze — Cemetery o . : Fe p your words Thursday morni - | Gau asted that - | . + mada. Putting it in terms--of-educa— angle with their sensitive antennae., ‘n _xour-lovely_Island_ of _which j tawa_where he will continue his | li ie stability has sen the sector —, as arog: “ap healthy | Lettering. i EDITORIAL NOTE my wife and I will retain the | post studies in ihe in- | stone of his power. : +o B82 21_nation _}- b Vere Beck people only to have hoo ae in curlers = gt bait... However, te). WES bent cians 98 and eis, tale Bee RN tes | coed phere on at |5.7 per cent in 1964 and to about ‘other countries, principally.the Unit--. vendors of the plastic kind in the five MacRae, Oli 2.5 per cent this year.a princip: Yours sincerely. Mary Mac — ve es. Since then the economy has “a, ) country faces a. serious | “Memorial Craftsmen Since 1870” Charlottetown Jetired _as__chief- editor of —the—- 4 PURITY DAIRY 7) NMoonunents - Co. All Kinds of Paint NASH ALUMINUM Doors, Windows, Awnings D, A. MacCANNELL A “sonia woth a furnaca parts on hand. Your Shell. Agent fer Charlottetown, Parkdale, Sherwood and Eastern i 4 & Son Ltd.