‘Che Guardian | iB . water, ‘food, and : ' Moet of us eat drink. and in, did you stutt it with?" “stuff. distinction of being the only an. hale the metal every day, but in it?. Why darling, this one wasn't ‘imal that borrows them, ‘ '’ — Montreal Star. : day and poniery qheiidevs) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!. ‘ Branch offices at Summerside,, Montague, Alberton and Souris. : Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Gathcart Street Uni- Versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. : oe , by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. || The purpose of the company. a | Mr. Goodings saw it in an article he «wrote for a New Left group last year, would be twofold: (1) to give young Canadians a chance to serve the underprivileged, and: (2) to Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers rovide additional 6 -the Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian P . i nna impetus t 5 Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- New Left's ambition to undermine the | lication of all news dispatches in this paver | “power structure” of Canadian | @redited to it or to the Assa@diated Press or Reuters ; i and alse the local news published herein. all | SOCiety. a | Ha Or republication of special dispatches here- The company’s volunteers wil! be a d. Subscript ; : parent : eer ver’ Somberiocion rete screened for acceptability. then given | about five weeks of intensive train- porters are soon going to find thetr ih i , : enthusiasm waning—or it won't turn | : Po ution NOTES BY THE WAY Covers Prince Edward island Like The Dew — | out to be radical, after all. In the | F [ d ; W. J. Hancox, Publisher | latter case, a lot of idealistic young rom Lea ' ; ae at Wallace Ward - Frank Walker | . : The young bride proudly plac- A study of chimpanzees indi- M i i new leftists are going to be very dis: , | ed her first turkey on the Christ- | cates that man is not the only enaging Editor Editor itiusioned [es | By Dr, Theodore R. Van Dellen | mas table. “Ah, that looks won- | animal that makes tools. Howe- - ublished every week day morning (except Sun- usloned. Lead has always been present | erat ‘ oh, fas log ae eer aae still: probale: has ine | | ' * larger amounts than did - ; { forefathers. The increase stems mi a 4 from contamination of our ur- | It’s all right to give people | ban atmosphere with lead alkyts | Pigee of your’mind if you Have from industria! process and from | enough to spare. — Door County tetraethy]- leaded gasoline, Our | Advocate. food and water are polluted and r : cigaret smoke also contains the | Little Johnny was -pretty bor- metal, ° i | ed with his first day in school Clair C. Patterson, Ph.D., of | ead = te ay ey ave i ia, compared the lead crying, e Johnny? | Z re eae living in wurat ‘ed the teacher. ‘I'm crying be- | It would be refreshing if a hoe- and urban areas. The ¢ity folks | Cause school bores me and I | key coach would some day say, have 100 times more in their | have to stay here till I'm at least of his team’s championship vic- |fourteen!" replied Johnny, “Do tory: “It was a lousy team ef- ' Rot let that worry you", replied fort. Fortunately we had a num- \, The Parent Teacher Associa- tion of an Indianapolis school de- cided students should continue | dusting blackboard erasers be- cause a mechanical eraser cost too much. Chalf one up for com- mon sense. — Fort William Ti+ mes Journal, Not aver 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and. areas blood and body than those living in a natural environment, The Apparently the Rhodesian issue is being downplayed in the British elect- ion campaign. At least we find scant to two years, collecting living ex- penses plus $50 a month (paid at the end of their term of service.) There check the oil? And here is your monthly de-leading pill that we supply free.’ ) - Lead poisoning today is most common among youngsters who parent that in both the Soviet | Union and in the other Eastern | European Communist states pro- found transformations aie - tak- ing place. Overwhelmingly, these changes are toward an ed. . True, these problems have. not been: setfled. But there appears to be a growing conviction on all sides that they can— and eventually: will- a i aga TE and U-K. $20.00 per | ing in community-development ‘tech- amount is only one-third that \the teacher. ‘I have to stay oy aan Oca year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- nique and philosophy, and in special- | needed to produce are in- ese sixty-five.” —— | at o stars, _ awa Our ae, i tha ev ele ized areas such as Indian relations, | toeineion, geet geo eh ol e) ; Member Audit Bureay of Circulation, | juvenile delinquency, and adu!t | when there are more cars end : h id PAGE 4 TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1966. | education. Then they will be dis- ee ee free The Brig ter Si e : Rh d ; Dil patched to serve in various service te be do loaded neriodina the "ain, Neca kes ogesian lemma projects across the country for up doa ar Me ey eee | It becomes increasingly ap- division of Germany has lessen. will be a peace-type program abroad be settled as well, but it will be largely handled reference to it in the .reports. of campaign activities, which would in- eat flakes of paint that fall from walls or peel from window through peaceful means. ~| easing of’ restraints, more im- Even with Communist China, _ | partial justice, greater intellec- | : : : ; : : : dicate that the economic sanctions the by the already-existing Canadian bls. > Snes seas meaty | dial treadeen amd cenuomia (tm. (oo ceueh A cabs GP Geer a: government is applying to bring the | University Service Overseas. ' amelting plants, . demolition | Provethent. day, there have recently emer- ‘ None of this means that either | ged a few rays of encourage- eae ney, the ter Pied or all of its faults Formerly making wines and | have disappeared. But it does ether alcoholic drinks in lead- | eam over-all betterment over ego | Vast areas. lined’ containers was.a problem. yas ne This was true in colonial times |, /ndia and Pakistan, whose bit- among. those drinking rum dis- | ‘erly felt rivalry over Kashmir r ht have set the Asian~ sub- tilled in pewter stills. Pewter is | M8 sacle one of a series of alloys in which Continent aflame, have reached tin is the dominant ingredient | 28teement for which each de- | i ; _ | serves much credit ,and which br are : eet i iodwaie has strengthened the whole agents. Lead frequently is add- concept of the peaceful solution / Jevel of 10 per cent: t of international quarrels. od at a lev per cent; bu Simultaneously there is strong How Mr. Goodings -and his col-: | leagues will go about obtaining the | independence they want from gov- | ernment control—and at the same | time the money they need—is a pro- | vocative question. Essentially, they | | envisage the company becoming a | quasi-independent Crown Corpora- | tion, with two-thirds of its govern- ing board elected by its own mem- ment. Not only do China experts in- Hong Kong note a definite fall-off in the intensity of Chin- ese propaganda and threats over Vietnam, but Washington has recently taken the first few ten- tative steps toward seeking new contacts with Chine. These developments do not signify the millennium. But they .do show that in men’s thinking and acting strong currents to ward peace and cooperation are at_work. It strengthens these recalcitrant Smith administration to heel is meeting with general accept- ance in Britain. But if this is the case, there is growing concern at Washington as to whether sanctions will have time to work. Sanctions are-an open-ended policy. So far, South Africa and, it is said, Portugal are providing Salis- bury. with one-fifth of its daily oil — AND THEN HE ALWAYS ea says “WES “NO, NO, A THOUSAND TIMES NO...” OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson | needs, showing that the oil embargo | bers. Up to now, it has no legal exist- | i colohial days, a 90 per cent | ain to believe: that -tension | currents to recognize and a : ’ : : ‘ - = content of this metal was com- , Teas a hota Bnler. 8 re is leaking despite all efforts. To really |. ence. It hasn’t been created by Parlia- M ti P| Wi S i At U N ee | between Germans and their plaud them. bring Smith down to his economie ment, and is growing on a shoe-string, | : ar in an HANING uppor aL ° ° The victims ~~ developed diar--: Eastern European neighbors _ They represent the _over- all k it is felt. all Rhodesi. | nieghaenios : Bu ~ -- rhea (dry gripes), Benjamin both over territory and over the direction of the world” today. nees, elt, a odesian borders it-and-m basis. But programs, | NEW YORK: We im Canada consists of three nations: Can-, At such a pre-conference con- | Franklin received the news would have to be closed. This would | apart, the greatest obstacle it is likely | are perhaps superficial’ in our | ada and Poland as middle po-'| ference, as it is called here, a that North Carolina drinkers |had an epidemic-of dry gripes wers representing each of the meeting of the powers most clo- from New: England rum. He impatience with the war in Viet | world’s two armed camps, and | sely. i sted could thrash out automatically cut Zambia off fromthe | fo encounter is political controversy. Patience with the | eae | Academic Ulcer Der by e It is already proving costly to power of the Kariba Dam, and from _ much of its trade as well. air- ift oil supplies to Zambia. What --. would it cost to.support its. entire economy? If Zambia’s .copper mines _eut back production, or close down. ‘entirely through lack of power, what would be the effect on Britain, which imports one-third of Zambia’s 700,- 000 tons of-exports annually? Copper is already in short supply. What » Working with the politically erratic New Left, it will still be answerable to old-time politicians not at all enthused over the social changes it proposes to bring about. | the fact or not - and many of us do not - the struggle within the former French col of Indo - China is the most delicate and the most explosive threat to _ world peace today. Since the | hmeta ante -of = be ary : *] ef- Nations 21 years ago, it organi- Their Responsibility zation has never been so endan- _ The Toronto Globe and Mail puts | S"say'tnrest yet ay never he forward a good suggestion with re fore. in Vietnam lie the seeds of gard to the open debate on capital 07” world wide eonflagra- punishment which is to begin in the i House of Commons this week. There With. little thought for the price—in- blood_and-_gold_— being will be certain men in both the Gov- _ paid by our neighbour, we con- demn the Pentagon Hawks who the house-keeping details for de- finite talks, such as which na- tions should be invited to attend, where they should meet and what the agenda should be. The Martin Plan is now being | India. a respected and promin- | ext neutral, as chairman of the ICC. |THE MARTIN PLAN The ICC has no specifie man- | | date to attempt to negotiate | | peace out of a state of war. But | activated. The negotiations are’ | Paul Martin, indefatigable and | necessarily as slow as they are rauasive in his diplomatic role | delicate.- But this plan is recog- i aa as «pe at oe | nized as the world’s greatest rae , long working | hope for an early and generally | together in Vietnam and with | acceptable negotiated peace to- | the local governments, on | ee : spot, familiar with the situation | .. ae and enjoying ready access to-. T welcome Mr. Martin's pro- all concerned. powers, could con- posal; it is the best possibility we stitute the idea) ‘good offices’, | have before us today for mov- medium. Using its framework | ing towards a settlement,” the was only 16 years old at the time and consulted the Boston notables instead of printing the story. The end result was a law prohibiting the distillation. of. rum through pewter stills. These men were uncanny in picking | the leaden pewter as the culprit. After all, lead poison was not invented until 64 years later. ~ It is so unnecessary and. so | tragic when the life of a youth is | misdirected by pressures of arents and society. that have ‘little relation to the individual's | abilities or desires. The. recent | sociologist Arthur Barron of the 688 16-year-olds in Webster Grov- .COLOR REACTION es Mo., illustrates the point. E. B. writes: The only time 1; Barron concluded that the {have a perspiration odor prob- | youngsters in this well to do St. jlem is when I wear a cranberry, | Louis ‘suburb. were paying “‘a |.eolored blouse. Could this | terrible price because of tlie en- ; shade have-anything-to-do-with_|ormous pressure of them for 1 it? : j ag grades and success in later } | life | study by University of Chicago | Milwaukee Journal yessary for success. Fifty four | per cent said they had cheated | on exams. — j | Having a son or daughter fin- | ish college is considered so im- portant that many parents ‘‘will do almost anything’ to keep ; them there, one university offic. | fal said. The boundaries of ‘‘ac- | ceptable behavior’ have broad- | ened generally in - society, and this is reflected in campus rules. It is difficult to have effective, | uniformly applied, college sanc- | tions--against. bad academic or | social behavior when, the offic- | jal observed, many parents sim- would happen to the pound sterling ff Britain had-to_pay-more-and more— ~-for essential copper? l It-is: ironic. that.these expressions... ~ @f concern come—not from London but from Washington, though. doubt- less the British authorities are doing REPLY . A well paying job, money and | ply refuse to accept any reason “success” were the main ‘tife F for expulsion as valid; Some par-——— fight communism there; and we picket our Parliament without appreciating -what the niost in- timately concerned member of the Cabinet; * Foreign Minister ~ Pau! Martin, has proposed and. seems likely to achieve. For the best hope for peace in Vietnam, -ernment_and-the official Opposition, ._: it says, who are peculiarly fitted to offer knowledge and leadership on this question. These are the members of the present Cabinet and the former Conseryative Cabinet. — rather than its.machinery, ICC | Secretary-General _of the Unit-_ Sed tha otae te nati could serve as an honest brok- : : er ‘in bringing the warring fac- | @4 Nations U Thant,‘told me only on these occasions you | W r | ; must be sensitive to something goals of 77 per, cent of the teen | ents have threatened lawsuits to- | tions to a preliminary: EaeeHiDs: } ab pani * jin the cranberry blouse or the agers studied. Knowledge was | keep a son in college. AS 5 : z a | dye in the blouse-reacts~°with considered: at: best--a byproduct. -When-a~-student: rebels. or -re-— Moonlig ht Night : 7 ee OF SERA es aly veanely pee.) fects the college pressure; neith- HEART DEFECT | ers B..G. writes: Could a ehuld | | er student nor parent is likely to SCHOOL CUTS RISKS : ; and hence in the world, is cen- Ottawa Journal n Pie their own share of worrying over the While all _Canadians: have some tered on the plan and the “ace, | born with only three doors to REGINA (CP) = Hunter | discuss the central question — tiations of Canada's Paul Martin Beauty blesses the land on a | gnant silence. With the reflection the heart be operated upon suc- safety education programs | Should that horocy vad i ‘ set nstead, scussio _ share in imposing the death penalty, | have reduced prosecutions un. | In college? the share of juries, judges and Cab- inet ministers is much more direct, and that of Cabinet ministers perhaps outcome. In the meantime, both Washington and London are waiting for the important tobacco auctions which begin just outside Salsibury on | clear winter’s night when’ the | from the snow, it is almost as | moon is near full and sails ser- | light as day. Lights from farm- REPLY | der conservation acts from 484 turns on the student's supposed |enely through a starlit sky. A | house windows. signal to the | Any physician would need | in 1963-64 to 372 the following | failure in life or parental feel- | silvery- pewter hue lights the | beacons in the sky; the tr ain! more of a diagnosis than “three | year, says Jack Shaver, pre- | ings of shame if. the child be- | countryside. Houses, barns and | rushing along its valley route | doors" to discuss this problem | vincial:. wildlife resources ad- | comes ‘‘a college dropout : | cessfully? WORLD SEEKS PEACE | The helplessness of mankind's greatest hope, the United WNa- tions, stems from the fact that . March 29. , the most direct and painful of all. the Asian war is between two in- silos are starkly etched; fences i looks like a jewelled snake sli- | intelligently. | ministrator. Offences against | In 1964, the cash value of Rhod- | For after all the due processes of | foncred by s third none "at, ing binding the fields together from the village clock float by | BUSYSECRETIONS fen, gn Srl the tarse perio ASK FOR out BD mon)" ete | lst appeal court ceeds | Sth latent” sig tris icra Hata poON |” | MAPLE LEAF xercise? One might as well ex- | form a gray line of stitching. train echoes back the | They aré responsible for’ in- Canadian High Commissioner BAKERIES sentence of death, it is the Cabinet that must decide whether or not a man shall pag, oa ne pect a hockey referee to leave; On a night when the breeze the country’s biggest export. P ry 44 p remier - the ice and restore order among dies away at sunset, the stars Smith hopes to sell enough tobacco - to keep his government afloat. The - fro’ | hills. h E. C. Butler Friday handed over The sun ie Earth's 0) giver. numerable reactions, including cea peng _| overly partisan : to. close that a man thinks : | growth, metabolism, reproduc- to the Malaysian police ge oe ai good ie Could Feaen up with nae _-The..gun_warms the humus; it | tion. and even. the stimulation | motorcycles as part of his coun- | pole and stir them around. The brings green grass and_ bright lof the beard in malr- ~~ | try's defence aid~to~the-federa-—- Hot Cross Buns 9c per doz. | British government announced. ° ot i fini ‘| will éannot permit the danger- i co ia last February wes : ol : sitio : ene! ie Di a | us protraction and almost cer- Orange. yellow moon sails un- flowers. But in our year of four} = NERVE DISORDER Lace NhercMalayslan: acing and y; ppos n Leader Jonn Diefen- tain escalation of the war, with- hurriedly along, following its major seasons, each segmen' ira FL. ‘writes: What te lo- | tahoe Shit are ARIAL in OER: Home Ma de B d Washington’s support. It hopes that :. out making some effort to find trail in that vast outer space | has meaning and richness for | pik: are oneia Will. Youre | baker have admitted the agony that comotor ataxia? ; : ; ‘ ; a face-saving formula which that,man is trying te conquer. | him who seeks it. He who will ftahecce buyers will. stay ey from = experienced in making this de- | eould end it. Go to a hillside on such a can discover on a moonlight A diaiobance' othe nervous Caribou Trideoues. the Cavalli i Jerten ee tase the auctions. Official American policy | cision. Both have demonstrated by Among such nations of good sight and ee ausatly i a men ee usr oe) iS:G0 18} eteni which’ affects. walking, | government in giving the Roval | ee HET? is to hope so, too. If Rhodesi i j i ¥ will, various suggestions have. few minutes in the peaceful, poi- ' tegral part of the turning year. | iti a ee crea q IVER : pe so, esian tobac- | their actions that they are opposed fier convessed One wan to uce ERC ee ee co is not bought, the idea is that Rhodesia will be so bankrupt that it will concede to London’s demand. to capital punishment. It was in Mr. Diefenbaker’s regime that the Cabinet began the practice of commuting 5 the Security Council of the UN, - which is the executive peace - keeping committee of that or- ganization. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Be as active as possible. (NOTE: All correspondence HAVE YOU THOUGHT ABOUT | A MILITARY CAREER? A Career Counselling Officer ~ Man-Made Lakes This proved help- National Geographie Society ut the ti i im- : i ‘ | . Van D saikes Be eg 1s of great im a death #entences, and during ra Printer iea ees. Tremendous new artificial ; once trees grew. Tribesmen dis- | wpa ene rode . r. Pearson’s tenure every death "ral suasion Chrougit the eenere- lakes now rival nature's size placed from agriculture now ‘Van ellen, co Chicago Trib- fish, earning six times as much > and beauty. And they are get- une, Chicago, Mlinois. miscstiee ‘ " can Hately is Pe has been commuted. ity, @t one eects Gay bigeer. as thelr nonfishing brothers. Ka. | nting, . S more an four It safe to assume that - bot ea or- 2 The world’s 25 largest man- riba caused one of the biggest | j : A western alliance nor to the com- ade lakes have been created animal rescue operations since HAS OFFER will be at munist bloc. But even the Pope’s personal appeal failed to iar | Noah's Ark. Six thousand ani- mals, ranging from snakes to months now since Smith announced his breakaway policy from Britain. NEW_YORK (CP)--Peter Jen- nings, 28, of Ottawa, anchorman will support abolition, though they may feel that, as party leaders, it in the past generation. The old- est, Lake Mead, began forming THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR | It willbe even longe ti s shal this potentially powerful stor Hoover Dam was com- elephants. were rescued from ” a B tas. ors Eee by ane ime would “not be proper for them. to Dody-6t- Word Opimion: A pleted on the Colorado River in dwindling islands as water tocvaan at bse ae F ORCE ASSOCIATION ritain has finished its national _ speak on a subject that is to be de- ee epee ae ee is the 1936, =: | {rose. Surly rhinoweroses wert [yo . had an ‘offer fo retira te 3 ; elections. Should the attitude of other | cided by a vote that crosses party bike phi ote ese cae * | The newest lakes are still un- shot with drugged darts and Gonadian television. He re- WATER STREET | Afri i ; eM int ‘ ; ~ . sion, set up by the 19 neva der construction. Biggest of moved while in a temporary stu- a Wawa ix h El, "African nations boil over into acts | lines. But surely the views of these Conference to administer the those will be Lake Nasser, por. \ a. Lnaee iin ation Ae wenweine hove SUMMERSIDE - of violence it could involve. a war | men—who have had to.do in fact with cease-fire, agreements in Laos. which will back up behind POWELL I8 PLAYGROUND lis any likelihood he'll accept it. Cambodja and Vietnam The ICC Egypt's. Aswan High Dam. : 7 | Jennings came to New York in Man-made lakes are ranked Riggest-new United States lake September, 1964, from CTV, to {s 186-mile-long Lake Powell. It that would make the Vietnamese con- | what most of the rest of us have only | “WEDNESDAY, 23-MARCH 1966 |- flict look’ like a parison, 4 tea-party. by com- — to any real assessment of ‘the issue. a: Sil ncthe Dark of Young Canadians is quite simple, according to a writer in the Edmon- ton Journal.It is still very much in the dark about itself. Its objective, ap- parently, is to-launch an attack on the | argued about in theory—are essential | - Our Yesterdays (From The Gyardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (Mareh-22,1941)... It will take courage for them to _ -come.out_against.capital_punishment,_. | ony and Italian Somaliland cap- tured the strategically- import- | ant southern Ethiopian town of Neghelli. | orate does not yet reject the death | Penalty. But this is the crux of leader- | ship, or the country could be run by | civil servants directed by opinion polls. Real leaders tead, especially in Yugoslav : Government leaders, . beset by angry demonstrations throughout the kingdom, failed Sc Pes organizations. But how to do it is the rub. The company’s directors have : only a vague idea, and plan to dis- death of Mrs ‘Tavlor. who suffered. pense about 250 volunteers into the Goodings would: like it to be—in which case a lot of efence-sitting sup: only to her many friends, but to the ' will be extended to CNR Superintend- ent FE. Ci Taylor and family in- the TEN YEARS AGO (March 22, 1956) The. conversion of the Provin- : a ‘ , iat Building into a National a fatal heart seizure while playing * shrine to preserve in the minds security arrangement for’ the { forthcoming Bulganin - Khru- whole community shchey visit a 3 ie “gst Africa's Lake-—Victoria; | By their water holding! capacity If a smaller lake. previously oc- cupied the site, the size of the _new lake is reckoned by the vo- lume. it added to its forerunner small natural lake after comple- tion of the Owen Falls..Dam_ in Uganda.. The dam made Lake Victoria large enough to swal-. ‘low the State of West Virginia. MADE FROM SCRATCH The world’s second biggest ar- top 25. Ten of the largest lakes are in North America — five in the United States, four in Can- ada, and one (Iroquois) shared by both countries, Syria, Tur- Nasser, and Ghana’s Akosombo On Kariba, a major commer- \ cial fishery has developed where “must -be~seen~to™be~believed;”” began forming in 1963 after completion of the Colorado Ri- ver's Glen Canyon Dam at Page, Arizona. °So beautiful that the Interior Department boasts it ermen angle for millions of bass and trout. Swimmers and boat- _ers converge on beaches, mar- inas, and boat ramps. Recreation ig only secondary at the new lakes. Most, import- ant considerations are hydro- electric power, storage of water |challenge such firmly - estab- \lished newscasting figures as. Walter Cronkite of CBS and the | NBC combination of: Chet Hunt- |ley and David Brinkley. ~~ ,Young men with Grade The reason most Canadians are ' for publie opini in- | iti ivi i St s Pinion polls have in- | British forces driving inorth= ge world’s largest artificial ink : - pi ' ? po ; Tuy the lake, already has become a still in the dark about the Company. | dicated that a majority of the elect- | !0 Addis Ababa from Kenya Col- take, grew from a relatively playground sfor thousands. Fish- or contact NOT FOR THE DEAF. | The “SPECTRA”. a many ‘builders now are. turning to plastic. Engineers: excavate the site, then spread sheets of Plastic film, sealing the -seams with heat or with mastic and from British Columbia and the U.S 196* , in Ontario waters in early: ' culture of poverty—to go out into | matters of princi | tificial lake and the biggest : A 1 ple. +: | early today to complete a cab- tificial lake _bigges tric ' iene: | Canada’s poorest, most stagnant rite inet agreeable to capitulation to Made from mereten 18 the Poviet neta at ae mts | Rew any aid;—so_ small | POST OFFICE BOX 1148 gi Segue aos Brey EDITORI tN TE Hitler—and_thus_their_pla Union's Bratsk Reservoir, which ten the need for a lake is) can barely be Seen when | ee areas, and to help raise incomes,.in- AL NOTE sigh ith the Axis 14 Viewia waa (W -in-1968- rs esol east sult worneuk_tmiracle ‘to: say | : CHARLOTTETOWN spir ‘build- ity- scaal omMmpathy at ‘ ; Bratsk is one of eight Soviet able, as on desert sand. Clay 1 re pire—morale,—and—build-community— The-sympathy—of—all-our-eitizens scrambled _again. whee rast ruie tira world’s--Provides a good lake bottom, but ees No button, no s 892-2611 Fantastic for anyone with nerve deafness. As powerful as aids three times its size. Once you i : ‘ ‘ i 5 ; : , and Brazil each have one tape. A few inches of earth is ad- a sey eae : oe field across the country late this in the same rink withzher husband se tes oh ieela a a ta biggest takes, and four ded to keep boat-anchors from See and try it you'll be ) Navy (- ) Army (__) Air Force summer to begin finding out. in the Confederation Bonspiel at the fatckution wai ‘nines by are in Africa. ripping the plastic. Many west- | convinced that this is (please print) { After an interview with the com- | Charlottetown’ Curling Club vester-’ Frederick A. Large (Liberal) | Curiously, the four African ite Bolt onitees erly Ihe Glatt kil vane ae Narye { ’ ‘ . i . re 4 : srscesot + ses ‘ be JPATS, BY TORR 6 ESET TET THON $65 C089 8H EES CQL KENTA CUA EU UR RCRUCTV Eee dbabe bea cp reRtene . Be ee canetant Imerim director. | day morting. Mrs. avlor was in'the fuse Miss ho” lee ame Amer Lune: vinrers | eet aed HEARING AIDS are in. Addr 5 ‘ ‘ ‘ | fiv “: a _—_— iis aieaneddalipasahicaaal cases sid salah L 4 é o - z Stewart Gondings, : t he Edmonton. flower of her.womanhood, and was ia and the Soviet Union's Bratsk, pant paCtFIC ‘SIMON sured, Just. write. us, | GR OSE arose eter eetiesesnee essecue tsps seateeensnents | scribe reports that either the CYC is widely known and esteemed. Her Ivan Serav. boss. of _— the ee ou and se Bia J. FE. Ramsay Ltd., 6156 City Aga ts a as radic : oe mi secret police, flew. to London in fifth, largest. man-made lakes Conservation officers planted | inpool Road, Quinpool | , > : adical an organization as Mr. sudden passing came asa shock not a fast new jet airliner to check ‘are Rhodesia’s Kariba, Egypt's 3,000,000 kokanee ‘salmon eggs Quinpoo! K Quinp Education. i Medical Center, Halifax, l¢ N.S. fie 11 A.M, — 7 P.M. to call in and discuss—the—career opportunities. ..available_in. the CANADIAN FORCES. __ ‘THE CANADIAN FORCES RECRUITING CENTRE QUEEN CHARLOTTE ARMOURIES | Please mail me full particulars without obligation ||. -vegarding enrolment requirements in: : ges ( — ee —S— Oe — nee — — oan Dnememeetl & or better are invited eo