. monwealth, Che Gres | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew . W. J. Hancox, Publisher Werd . Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every: week day morning (éxcept Sur . day and statutory heneee at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, PE. , by Thomson Ltd. Branch offices at De Montague, Alberton tnd Souris. -Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 Uniwersity Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal. 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. » Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association aidoThe Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use. for repub- lication of all news dispatcher in this paper tredited to it or to the Assoriated Press or Reuters and also the loca! news published herein. AN right or repuolication of special diroatches here In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.06 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com Not over 10c. single copy. Mer ber Audit Bureau of Circulation. "The strongest memory is weaker than ‘he weakest ink” WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2%, 1966. PAGE 4 Ironic Sequel According to Arthur Blakely, Ot- tawa correspondent for the Montreal Gazette, one, of the unexpected’ side- effects of the criticism-of Mr. Dief- enbaker in the Spence report on the Munsinger affair has been to_rally party support to the Conservative leader. An earlier suggestion by some _ observers was that it would, in ef- fect, reinforce the position of Dief’s critics. in their determined bid to force a reyiew of his leadership at the party convention in November; but to date, at least, the impact of the. ~—$pence “report on influential party” ———thost-outspoken -anti-Diefenbaker-reb-——— “éls shy away from any position which ‘$talwarts in many areas } has had the “feverse effect : According to reports’ seaching Ot- tawa, a number of highly placed Con- ‘Servatives who had intended to sup- port Mr. Camp in his drive fora leadership. review are now, at® best, doubtful. They say.that to support an anti-Diefenbaker campaign at this . point. would involve a vote of confi- dence in Commissioner Spence and: his report. And that is something that no Conservative—whatever his feel- ings about the leadership—is indicat- ing any eagerness to give. A survey ; indicates that most of them tend to agree wholeheartedly with Dief that the Spence report is a -biased docu- © ment which does what the Liberals hoped and expected it would do. d Quite apart from the natural ten- dency of any political party to rally fm face of an attack of. this kind: there are other reasons why even the would seem_to align them with Mr. __ Justice Spence. One is that the com--- _missioner’s criticisms _weren’t level- | led at Mr. Diefenbaker alone. He was also critical, though his criticisms were much milder, of the roles play- ed by former Trade Minister George Hees and former Justice Minister Davie Fulton in the handling of the Munsinger affair. If and when Dief decides to retire to the sidelines— or has retirement forced upon him— these ‘gentlemen will be among the leading contenders to succeed him. ' From the Ottawa bureau. of a leading Liberal paper, the Toronto Star, comes a similar report, head- lined under a four-column, front page caption: “Tories Rally Behind Be- leagued Chief.”’ But perhaps the most intriguing statement comes from ichard Jackson in the: Ottawa Journal, who quotes Elder Liberal Statesman Thomas Crerar, who only - a few months ago resigned from the | __Senate—after—a-lifetime~in~federal~ fiolitics, as telling friends it’s not unlikely there'll be another federal election—this winter—and that Con- servative Leader Diefenbakef “un- doubtedly” will emerge the victor with a minority mandate! ' Urges Full Support Addressing a National Dairy Council luncheon in Quebec.recently, Agriculture Minister J. J. Greene an- nounced that the new Canadian Dairy— Gommission personnel would shortly - He named, and would be supported by legislation that will permit it to make decisions that will affect all seg- ments of the industry. The Commis- sion, he said, could prove “a great milestone in the evolution of Canad- ian agriculture,’’ but he warned that to be successful, it must have the sup- port of all concerned in its activities. He pledged that he would do his part by appointing the best-men avail- able. and by supporting the Commis- sion in every way possible. Again, however, he emphasized that “only you, as processors and producer groups, as farmers, can guarantee its success and with it the success, health = vigor of the Canadian Autry in- stry.” ! The minister's point was well thken. The commission {s’ being set up at the request of our dairy organ- ‘ ' } } | cert: i “EDITORIAL NOTE it ts hoped that will serve as a means of froning out the difficulties that have been exper: ienced in creating a truly national dairy policy. We have much to.gain in this province by SARDOEHAS at 100 per cent. The minister also took an of the challenge the farming industry ‘is facing’ generally at this time. In- creased production has heretofore been accomplished—despite a’ decline in “farm employment from 25 per cent of Canada’s total labor force in the mid-40’s to just over 10 per cent today—with. little, if any, change in., acreage. In recent years the. average .| has been constant at approximately 1 3/4 million, although there has been about a 9 per cent increase in .the amount of improved land. Farms are now larger, averaging some 360 acres as compared with about 275 in 1951; the capital invested in farm- ing has risen by over 50 per cent in a decade; capital spent on machinery in particular is up about 100 per cent. But these figures do not tell the | whole story. Currently it would seem’ that somewhere between 10 and 20 . per cent of oar farmers have suc- cessfully bridged the gap from the older type of agriculture to the newer technology. Probably a further 50 . per cent are endeavoring to and are while the remainder are. on farms that are marginal or sub-marginal from the standpoint of resources. Mr. Greene did not go at length into the problems involved. in this situation. He cited it merely to show _ its relation to the dairy industry and the need of coordinated action on the | part-of farmers, processors. and gov- ernment agencies in dealing with it successfully. And’ he ended. on a timely note when he urged that tess attention be given .to ‘“‘regional, pro: vincial, group. or personal interests” and more to the well-being of Canada as a whole. A Basic Difference Reference was made recently in these columns to a campaign in Tor- onto to adopt the political party sys- tem in municipal elections.:-It is an issue, we note, on which two of the big metropolitian papers are at log- gerheads. The Daily Star is for the ‘scheme, The Telegram regards it with grave misgiving. It sums up the ~ issue in a manner which our readers may find both mntereneng and inform- ative. : Doctrinaires, sa «The Telegram, ‘talk-of the “discipline, efficiency and cohesion that party.organization es- . tablishes, which is precisely why this ~ kind is not wanted in civic govern-— ment. Voters want members of Coun- | cil to represent them, not a political party with motives of its own; they want their representatives to be sen- sitive to their needs, not beholden to the dictation and discipline of party organizers; they want members of , Council to concern themselves with local issues, not with party ambitions; they reject the idea that what is good for the party is necessarily good for the city. Advocates of party politics draw a parallel with the practice in federal and provincial governments. The comparison is fallacious. Federal and ‘provincial governments deal with a complexity of different problems af- fecting the society and economy of broad, disparate regions. Party organ- | ization, party policies and affiliations are a natural arid logical growth from _these-differences;-making for, cohes> ive, integrated pattern of govern- ment and an opposition with a differ- | ent approach and philosophy. A municipality, on the other hand, is a self-contained community, a family of citizens whose needs and problems are essentially personal. .A well-ordered family is not divided in the administration of its affairs; it re- jects divided loyalties; it is united and deals with its concerns in con- Something of a record was set in New Zealand recently‘by an Antonio, Texas, cattle breeder. He paid 6.900 guineas ($20,286) for an Aberdeen Angus bull, champion-yearling Eus- tace 72 of Mangetoro. sag s * * President Johnson doesn't miss a political trick. It is reported that he has his limousines ‘“bugged’’—in re- verse. These cars are air-conditioned and-\-with the windows rolled up— impervious to sounds from the out- side. But tiny microphones enable him to hear people along the curb, though they can’t hear him. The president makes a habit of popping out of his car along motorcade routes for unscheduled speechmaking and handshaking ‘sessions but he doesn't want to make this effort if the people along the way are unenthusiastic. _” ~capable—of—-meeting—the--challenge;;-—-}-- MR. SMITH AT HOME _ HEAD-HUNTER WARNINGS. ae ee Still Heeded By Filipi ino etic” National wy uP Bulletin No one knows how many . is- lands anil islets form the Phiili- ppines. Réputilic” officials say simply ‘‘more than 7,100." New islands appeaf from time to time as vole thrust their smoking cones above the sea. The island galaxy supports 32 600,000 people, living mostly on Luzon and Mindanao. Malays predominate though the modern Filipinos are best described as ‘a mixture of Malay, Spanish English, American and Chinese immigrants writes Robert de, -. Roos in National Geographi's ' September issue in an-article en-—| titled ‘“‘The Philippines Free- dom's Pacific Frontier.” AMERICAN FLAVOR * One in 13 Filipinos lives in or near Manila and neighbornig Quezon City, the capital. Manila, | |. astride, the placid Pasig looks less like an Asian es blink from neon signs. English is the -common lang- uage in the Philippines though “80 dialects are spoken. Only six __million’ Filipinos speak the ‘‘of-_ ficial’ language — Tagalog. Much of the Philippines re- mains a green, lush tropical wilderness. High mountain rang- es and dense forest isolate parts | of islands. Ninety percent of the islands are uninhabited. Some tribes still practice head- | -hunting. A news item in a Man- | ila paper last April. warned Filipino picknickers: ‘It's Head- bunting Time Again.” - Mindoro Island, hundred miles from Manila, is | _largely_ unmapped-The—east-cen- tral coast of Luzon,—the chief islands, is an_almost unknown land peopled by nomadic hunt- ers. Luzon’s bundok, or mountain / country, has become famous as — military | “the boondocks”’ slang for just about as far from civilization as a person can get. Less_than 60 miles northwest of Manila near the ‘gorges of : the Maronut River, Mr. de Roos | found a primitive world. Tribes- men hunt with bow and arrow. They nave. a_ striking. lack..of.... “thifigs”: no shoes, towels, stov- es, radios guns. The only -tools in evidence were a handmade _ Machete a hammer, and a prim- itive anvil. “There in that possessionless village I say two little flower. gardens containing Perhaps ten Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (September 28, 1941) Alex Walker, Dominion Presj- dent of the Canadian Legion, an- nounced’ the Dominion Executive |“ Council has been called to an extraordinary .war_ session to urge upon the Federal Govern- ment a ‘‘total war effort’ in- cluding ‘‘conscription of man- power for service wherever the enemy may be.” An estimated 1, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand and British airmen. walked off a troop transport ‘recently in pro- test against conditions under which they claimed they would have to live in crossing the At- lantic, TEN YEARS AGO (September 28, 1956) A new | struggle: for power in- side the Soviet Union over de- Stailinzation appeared emerfing with Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito playing a key role. Nikita Khrushchev, free-wheel- ing boss of the Russian Com- munist party, was'reported caught in a squeeze ‘by army chiefs and a Stalinist bloc in the | Politburo who ‘See daggers for the Kremlin in his turrent pol- icy ; ig +polis-than ike ah Asian bo: | See -wealthy-—running- =egn=- _@fican corporate and brand-nam-- | plants,’’ Mr. de Roos said. ‘One, no more than two inches high, was ‘ringed by a tiny valet of wood chips.”” . CORRUPTION AND POVERTY “The young Republic of _ the Philippines — founded July 4, 1946 — is a land of grace and many problems,’’ Mr: dé Roos writes. “Tt is a. turbulent country, new-:to the ways of ind \d- ence after four centuries of oc- | lead. manganese, and chromite. The islands sup- cuption by foreign rulers — Spain, the United States, and Japan. It is a country imbued with America’s ideals. of. free- dom, though corruption and pov- erty still keep that idealism from flowering fully.” , - Bullets fly im the sourthern seas between ‘smugglers, hijack- ers, and customs men. Smug- glers, using catamarans powered with Mercedes - Benz engines, traband— in” from. Borneo. Progress is being made in ‘the Philippines, however. The Inter- | national Rice Research Institute collected” 10,000 varities of rice- | from ‘all over the world for ex- OE Philippine economy ts based, _however, .on copra, sugar, abaca (hemp), ‘'fumber fishing. gold, iron, copper, ply half of all coconut products in world trade. One in every four citizens depends on the bounti- ful coco palm for a living. FROM THE SOUTH Filipinos trace their origins to about 3000 B. C. when the first immigrants came from Indonesia and Malaya. In the 14th century Arab iia sionaries brought Islam to the Sulu.. Archipelago and other southern islands.* Moslems still form 96. percent of Sulu’s popu- lace.) ; The Christian influence dates from 1521, when Magellan land- ed on Cebu, opening the way for Spanish colonization in 1565. Spain’s rule lasted 333 years, ending with the Spanish-Ameri- -¢an— War The— United““States- |" guided-—the —-Philippines~ during the next 48 years, leaving a heritage of language and ~tiber- ty. ; World War lI and Japanese occupation left the Philippines_a_|___ nes As a result, | tor: less than a! the rice plant has been redesign- ed. 4 Reports the Institute's direct- “In three and a half years _we have reduced (rice’s) height- ‘from more than five feet to a | little more than three. The ob- ject is to produce a plant which | will not bend or break in the | wind and monsoon rain — and still will yield well.” | City dwellers figure their liv- | Ing costs. by the price of rice. Farmers use more land for rice | | than any other crop. desolation. A million men and women died. In“a United States | military cemetery just outside | Manila, white markers —17,180 of them — march across the green grass. Stone arcades bear the names of 36,279 Americans who lie in unknown graves: At Corregidor, the island fort- ress whose fall on May 6, 1942, ended organized resistence to the Japanese, there is a sign: “Please maintain silence, and you will hear the wailing of. the wounded andthe —whisper—_of death. From The Horse’s Mouth Toronto Globe and Mail er, the provincial Ministers of Education have decided to ask , the federal Government @p"issue social security cards to teenag- ers. Every youngster would, be numbered, and. according to Dr. -R.W.B.—Jaeckson:~director of the _ Ontario Institute for Studies. in | Education, the system would provide ‘‘instantly available | complete background informa- | tion for use in diagnostic, coun- selling. curriculum and other areas."’ Dr. Jackson said the move | would not be an invasion of -pri- vacy and he denied if: would in-: value any depersonalization. Still, it pot ms very much part of a concerted: drive by govern- | Ment: officials. police chiefs and | other exponents of a disciplined One of our most. “intriguing. in- heritances from ancient times is the story. of Atlantis, the an- cient continent that suddenly was engulged in the sea. Many people believed jin it. Plato wrote what purported to be a history of it. It.was thought to have been situated in the east- ern Atlantic, somewhere out past the Pillars of Hercules. The believers at last have been vindicated, although they were mistaken about its loca- tion. Underwater traces that fit Plato's description of the city ical research: expedition ‘poking about on the fringes of the. is- | Jand of Thera, in the Aegean. ba al Eurnpeans got the | story m Arab scholars, “who | may watt have got it from Egy- pt, as the Greek leader of the expedition suzzests, | ported that Solon had haard have been sunk in a volcanic up- [ hedval about 1500 B.C, cil At- their meeting in eee | have been found’ by a seismolog-’ Plato re-| society to turn every citizen into cipher, compelled to carry an identity card and with the sorry. record of all his follies and mis- adventures stored.in the--unfor- giving memory bank ‘of a- giant computer. X But .social security cards for’. ‘teétiagers “hardly seem an ade-. quate step on the road to the thorough ¢classification of every Canadian. For one thing stu- dents have a way of losing bits of paper; for another, tinier tots would still.escape the system. For the sake of complete con- trol from the cradle to the grave, our officials should em- ulate -the practice of our race tracks. For what could be more fool-proof than to take every new-born child and tattoo an id- entity number onthe inside of his upper lip? Lost Atlantis Found — ‘Montreal Star To | There is a core of truth somie- where, probably, in every an- cient bit of history. It takes on a different shape, from much -handling, but the truth fs in it. ~Maybe if Avalon is found in time, we may be able to fix the site of King Arthur’ s tomb. __WORKERS DO BETTER Real wages in Sweden have gone up 29 per cent in’ five years. ; AOU ada LOD fe) Tianis vou FOR YOUR HELP about it in Egypt. Part of the is- | | land of Thera is now known to | Medical Exam-Depth .| By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Physicians who are~ stickers for details usually get good re- sults becausé they dig beneath the surface. A middle- aged tea- cher went to a hospital com- plaining of weakness and lack ‘of appetite of several years du- ration. He was becoming short of breath, found it difficult to walk or stand without support, and his face and ankles were pufy. the combination suggested a liv- £. disorder and nutritional defic- fency. The patient admitted his diet’ had not been too good but blamed lack of appetite. He was a bachelor and lived chiefly: on carbohydrates and black cof- fee. At the hospital he was giv- en a well balanced diet and large amounts of vitamins and minerals. Dramatic improvement oe: ed and the teacher might have .| gone home a changed man. But his physician insisted that addi- tional treatment. was- needed be- cause the important aspects of his case had not been answered. Why was his appetite poor? Fur- ther questioning revealed that he drank too much and was afraid to admit it because of his profession. Why did he overindulge? In a more exhaustive study his phy- sician uncovered a broken ro- mance and feelings of guilt and inadequacy. At first the ‘teacher was reluctant to talk about ~| these things; but he: soon realiz-~ ed the wisdom of cooperating fully. After all, feelings of guilt hang around the neck like a mill- stone. » Many individuals are ‘unwilling to follow through on finding the basic cause of their illness, espe- cially when. they begin. to feel, | “| better. Most of us: have: emotion- | al conflicts that are bothersome from time to time’ Certain chro- [nic illnesses such as peptic ul- cer,. eczema, allergy, and tension could be cured if the phy- sician would pursue the problem more thoroughly. Ulcer symptoms are easy to relieve with antacids and vari- ous drugs are available to lower high blood pressure: But it is important to uncover and elim- inate. the factors responsible for overstimulation of. the nervous manifestations. BABY’S BOOTEES Mrs. C.P. writes: Am I right or wrong in insisting that my baby’s feet be kepf warm with bootees no matter what the wea- ther is like? REPLY There is no need for bootees in hot weather. The skin of the feet, like that of the hands, face, and body, constitute part of our ‘cooling system. . “BED AS PUNISHMENT Mrs. S. writes: Is putting a child to bed during the day a good. means of punishment? F Set es No. Bed- should be. used for- -sleeping-only. If the. child asso: ciates it with punishment he .May-rebel_against: going. to. bed at night or remain wakeful for The liver was enlarged. and ‘hepatic tests also were positive; ' WASHINGTON (CP) — The two - day conference here be- tween President Johnson and Chancellor Ludwig Erhard of West Germany started with the advance label ‘‘routine.”’ Informality has been stressed in an apparent effort to empha- size the personal accord bp- tween the two men without ae expectations of ma- jor results. . The formula is not new. For- eign leaders think it nelps_pe- riodically to display close ties with the United States and its leader, This time, both — fee éo- mestic troubles. for. w no ready ‘solutions exist. y have mutual ‘problems of tional importance, arising from old cold-war postures and the preiod of drift in Atlantic Alli- Aside from any. pick-me-up in prestige that Erhard may an ticipate, there are two leading issues on his agenda, both with military overtones. West Germany, while it has poneees Britain as the world’s third major industrial nation— after the United States and- the Soviet Union—wants to ease or end an agreement - intended to, lighten the U.S. military-cost burden in Europe. BUYING LAGS West Germany had pledged to- buy, over a two-year period ending next June, $1,350,000,600 worth of American arms. It is behind schedule in its purchases ‘and™: wants to~-streteh “out the _ Erhard At Washington | " Canadian Prese Staff Washington For both leaders, apparently, there are pitfalls. Britain could speed its plan to reduce the size of its army of the Rhine. Or there could. be am increase in’ American pull-out sentiment, now represented by. a 31-sena. ‘tor resolution calling for a cut- back in U.S. forces in Ger- ‘many. President Johnson has opposed the resolution as un- timely and- capable of further softening Allied dedication to NATO's military structure. The other Erhard question .with political impact concerns: ' the American view on a higher nuclear status Germany within NATO. Tw delic:'¢ question has been around for several years and is tied in with the, Soviet Union’s views on signing a tighter agreemient to discourage nancies: prolifer- ation. RUSSIA FEARFUL West Germany's role inside NATO has been held up con- sistently by Russia as a threat . to peace, partitulaly if Ger many. gets special status in the nuclear picture. ~ A NATO committee compris- ing the U.S., West Germany, Britain, Italy. and Turkey fin- ished another discussion of the question just before Erhard ar- rived. in. Washington. Defence Secretary Robert McNamara came back speaking confidently of progress. The question then is whether. the sort of solution by the com- mittee now envisaged will sat- isfy Erhard—or more practi. _ ‘eally “his “voting” “support: Or whether it will be bland enouzh to take away the talking point that the Soviet Union has been far‘ been Teady to concessions. using to balk at nuclear disarm- ament Proposals. Coen. _A biological survey of Loch ‘Leven (one of Scotland's fa- mous freshwater -lakes, or lochs} is being conducted as part of an international program of re- search into all aspects of food production, Interviewed in the BBC. world Service program ‘Scotland, To- day’’, the research zoologist. in charge of the Loch Leven sur- vey, Neville Morgan, explained ; that the object of the internation. al program was to measure the production of animals and plants in different habitats— in the sea, in fresh waters, on land, and in temperate, tropical and arctic zones. “In this way we will be able ts -determine’ what these’ different types of habitat produce in a whole year. in the same, way as a bie, britain the farmer ‘knows that his. Jand will produce so many “beef cattle per year or so- many tons of barley per acre. In .Scotland, Mr. Morgan. said, work was being done in the mar-—— ine and freshwater fields and on moorland studies. At Loch Leven they were hop- ing to measure the amount of plant life being produced in the . area, the -amount—-of- food. for . fish,. the amount of fish and of birds which could -usefully be cropped from the Loch. To meet the needs of the world’s growing population, de- sert areas could he improved by’ irrigation, it was hoped to crop ~ the vast resources of the sea properly, and in many. tropical countries fish- farmers in fresh waters showed & great potential. ____ .Pride_and_other H. R. writes: What causes redness and swelling” of the veins beneath the tongue?. . REPLY Inflammation could be re- sponsible, but are you familiar with the normal appearance of these veins? They usually look prominent and engorged. PREMATURE GRAYING R.F.C. writes: Can gray hair in the 20s be corrected? REPLY _—_If_there_are—only—a—few,—they can be pulled out. Otherwise, do rinses or-dyes: - TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Sitting too long in one Position is tiring. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van_Dellen, co Chicago Trib-- une, Chicago, Hilinets.) (b) Exclusive of mergansers (d) of which not more than eight may be black ducks, LICENCE FEES* Charlottetown, P. E. I. Through the United Fund. September 23, 1966 what the older gals do: Resort fe Resident hunting Non-resident hunting .........: Provincial Licenses may’ he obtained feos Authotized Vendors, of Fisheries, Charlottetown, or any detachment of the Royal Canadian *—In addition to the Provincial licence required to hunt game and mizratorv birds waterfow! hunters are also required to purchase a Canada Migratory G cee available from Coes — gr ame ne Huntin: @ 3 reristered bulls grand champion, tel tea ‘Terms Owner NOTICE. Prince Edward Island 1966-Summary of Hunting Regulations-1966 fc) of which not more ' DISPERSAL SALE -“Shed Acre Farms" Saturday, “Oct Ist ~ -® 38 Registered Cows of Domine, Duotone ae Miriam's .top_blood_| 33 grade cows bred to champion herd sires 28 feeder steers and heifers. 23 calves from registered cows 15 calves from grade cows NOVA NATIONAL ROMEO 23R, son of the Royal Winter Fair WHITTERN NATIONAL VELVET, himself the grand champion for a number of years at the P.E.I. Provincial Livestock Exhibition and reserve grand champion at the Atlantic Winter Fair in 1964. LAZY B. REAL ASTER 24U, son of PPHR Boc Real 188.. NOREEN NATIONAL LAD, son ef Nova National Romeo. Galena of ‘haga Cattle will be available. _, THE ISLAND DEVELOPMENT CO. LTD. ; IVAN KERRY If weather questionable listen to CFCY Radio “A chance te buy the best at your oun price”. - DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES _ Province of Prince aerere Island CECIL A. MILLER, Minister of Fisheries HEREFORD Union Road. North --(Near- Covehead). SaDUSRE ad tee 12:30 sharp Ce and Cash — x Auctioneer Game Open Seasons Daily Bag. Possession PROMBARE ote eeeia No. open season - - Ruffed Grouse Oct. 1— Nov. > 3 a | Hungarian partridge Oct. 1—Oct. 10. 3 6 | Snowshoe Hare=—.- Pttreteseereeoerrerr reer NOVAS TaN AS yy BOR Diy ENT arises, coie eeadusieaueetecines June 1— Feb. 28 “e eit , RACCOON ois obo bo Te Mey nek ee ed ead decease eNOS No closed ‘season - ° |]. (a) Residents. only i Emel ~"Migratery res sah = nee 4 Ducks (other than Black and Wood Ducks) Oct. 1— Nov. 30 6 (b) 12 (a) BIRCK: DUCK iaciiates cies issivuveklieusvenvverve Oct. 15 — Nov. 30 4 8 WOO DUCK sevececscasenesisex ii ocie ean cies No open season - 3 CHOOUE eye lup yes WIN casve chev uNbiciassedabate ~Oct. 1— Nov. 9, 5 10 Wis 6: OMIDO cicsaierits i cseteriels Sieeisuits “Oct. 1— Nov. 30 10 . WODMCOOK shee rai ea aaay eb NURS Ea eN che ble ‘Oct. 1— Nov. 30 630 16 Furbearing Animals Beaver Nov, 1— Nov. 15 - ° Nov. 1—Dec. 31 , - . Nov. 1—Dec. 31 . - - No closed season ~ - é than four may be = ducks: ~ '$ 2.00 10.00 Provincial Department Mounted Police. ~&