ae ? pe “and Souris. : 4 he Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Werd | Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory helidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlettetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal! 640 Cathcart Street’ Uni- versity 65942; Western Office 19030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037.’ ” Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers . ~—-fssociation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repybh lication of all -news dispatches in this paper eredited to It or to the Associated Press or Revters and also the local news published herein. All right or republication of special dispatches here- im also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a-year by mail on rural routes and areas "net serviced by carrier. $15.00 « year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per yeer in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. ‘ Not ever 7¢ single copy. ott . Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1966. ; Now It's An Octopus! Peter C. Newman, Ottawa bureau ~editor-of the Foronte-Star,_quotes—a frustrated cabinet minister as saying of the Royal Commission on Bilingual- ism-and Biculturalism that it ‘will be _ | “the last of its kind.” “Never again,” he says, “will an important issue which needs immediate clarification _< be fobbed off on a body like this” | whieh can turn itself into an untamed — bureaucratic octopus—a self-appoint- ed analyst of the nation’s soul, instead of the provider of practicaJ solutions " to -real-problems.” in Well, the Pearson government had » lots of time to come round to this d conclusion. The commission was established in July, 1963, and has since heard 410 briefs_and launched 174 research projects. It now has a | | | ' | | of the commission on \ ertson. I spectilate that these men, always vigilant. in protecting their) oyster, decided that recommendations bilingualism must be headed off because they were certain to be too extreme. Therefore, they slapped, together a policy through an inter-departmental com- mittee, howled urgency and rush to the PM because of civil service un- rest, and convinced Mr. Pearson it must be promulgated: It’s a bizaare explanation but what other makes sense?” Frankly, we can't think Still A Bad Mess There is hope that the civil strife in South Viet Nam may have petered out with the suspension by the Bud- dhist leaders of their “strugtle move- ment” against the military regime of Premier Ky, pending a-general elec- tion due to be held within three to five months. But it cannot be said to be ‘much more than a hope. For one of one. | thing, although the motives -behind ‘the Buddhist drive lay in the basic -ambition of all Buddhist leaders to create a government which they can strongly influence, ‘there is a dif- ference between the aims of the | moderate and more radical factions: Thich Tam Chau, chairman of ‘the Secular Affairs Institute of the Uni- | _fied-Buddhist-Church,-represents-the—j— more moderate faction. He is a North Vietnamese monk whose. principal strength now lies in the Saigon area. The, more radical-Buddhists are led by Thich (a religious title meaning venerable) Tri Quang, ‘chairman of the church's Religious Institute and a much more ambitious man. He is a central Vietnamese and wields con- siderable power in the populous staff of 225 and by the end of last month had spent $4,509,000. In. its interim report, published last year, it” ‘ warned that Canada was passing through “the greatest crisis in-its his- tory” but:had no recommendations to ~° offer. No date for its final réport is in prospect and* the general impres- sion at Ottawa, according to Mr. New- man, is that for its members, acad- emie research: into the bicultural character of Canada has become an end ‘in itself. — Cas What provoked the unnamed cab- inet minister’s caustic: comment was the fact that because of the commis- sion’s dilly-dallying, Prime Minister Pearson was forced to make-his-policy ~ *gtatement on bilingualism in the civ- il service without the benefit of a— cussions which normally follow. a _Foyal commission report. His state-_ ‘ments had to be made, as the Star writer says, “‘in a political vacuum.” Bilingualism in the civil service was supposed to be one of the commis- sion’s main concerns, yet the Prime Minister had to make his policy an- research results. But there is another story going the rounds. Douglas Fisher, former NDP member for Port Arthur and now a fulltime Ottawa commentator, says of the Newman «criticisms that their source, “according to what I can de- termine,” was right in the Prime Min- ister’s office. He adds that: one of the co-chairmen of the commission, A.D. Dunton, told him that “neither the commissioners nor the senior staff had walled themselves off from the government. The PM knew what. they were doing,’”’ especially since all re- search projects must be cleared “through the Treasury Board. “One gets an image,”. says Mr. . Fisher, “of two planets on different orbits: Mr. Pearson and the commis- sion. Yet Mr. Pearson fashioned the commission and put it in orbit. It is odd enough that he felt compelled to announce a bilingual policy for the next generation without the commis- sion’s help. It’s more odd that he kicks it aside through the opinions his office has given Mr. Newman. But the oddest part of it all is what it does to some-outstanding Liberals.” The reference here is to the ‘new messiah,” Jean Marchand, Minister of ———ifizenship-and-Immigration,.who-was one of the most diligent of the Bi and Bi commissioners until his resignation tJast-summer—to—hecome—a—hiberal candidate; to Paul Lacoste, who re- placed him on the commission and is an intimate friend of both Mr, Mar- chand and Guy Favreau, president of the Privy Council; and to Royce Erith. a commissioner and an important cog in the Liberal campaign machine dur- ing the last campaign. : Is it possible. asks Fisher, that these good Liberals are-themselves disgusted and discouraged with the commission's ‘dilly-dallving? His own _ guess runs to a more Machiavellian conclusion. “Mr. Pearson,”’ he points out, “is still very much the instru- ment or captive of a few top men in ‘the bureaucratic tsrabtishiment. nen a & 4 L Canadian. public aroused by the dis- | ‘nouncement without benefit of its | fen like Arnold Heeney and Gordon Reb- tinents military and civilian overlord of the -action to launch their drive to force ~-of—an—e’ “ended on his behalf. -commitment of 235,000 troops? Whe- ‘eal crisis already has dealt a severe Viet Cong—and to the Administra- _ernment—-whatever its composition— | northern regions of the country. How far he will go along with the ‘Tam Chau factionists remains to be seén. _Another factor in the problem is the country’s 1,600,000-Roman €atho-— lics, a cohesive force that would op- pose strong Buddhist influence in the government. And there is Ki’s military junta It- self, which has been at loggerheads since March 10 when, at a dramatic , junta meeting, the premier dismissed his chief rival General Chanh Thi, five northernmost provinces. Two days later the Buddhists took ad- vantage of the unrest caused by this | the Ki regime to step down in favor ted-_civilian__government._ Thi is now calling for an immediate change of leadership, and. anti-gov- ernment demonstrations -are--threat--. And what of the U-S., with its enor- mous stake in South Viet Nam and a ther Ky survives or not, the New York Times reports a “general agree- ment” at Washington that the politi- blow to the war effort against the tion’s policy. The Communists, it is feared, will be sustained for months by the hope that Saigon’s fragile gov- | ie -A$ 33,000 GRAND PRIZE WILL BE AWARDED FOR THE BEST WORK ON THE THEME * : THINGS weiue, BE GAY We'LL BE A NATION OF Wine- DRINKERS ‘POLLUTION WILL HAG MADE ALL OUR WATER > no ieeg. | Pa. SS Se CANADA — 2000 A:D,“ —— News ITEM ‘Le BG A NATION oF WALKERS — —S6\MPpciFleo “TAX FORMS LL OUR ROADS WL. Ga UAMMED Wit ft eeoe AND BY THEN ; WE'LL Have “The ULTIMATE IN epetiersted reese |For Blood . | | the rest of your life.”’ -| babies born with an Rh_ prob. | ma substitutes: such as de x- ‘PVP (polyvidone) that , Substitutes By Dr. Theodore R. Van V. P. Writes: “If there are. cheaper substitutes for blood transfusions, would it not’ he ‘tet. | ter and. wiser to use the a m? Internal Stresses In Kenya By Joseph MacSween Canadian Press Staff Writer up the internal stresses and | strains developing despite the. ern circles. party | acceptance of the one - not help thinking that transfu. | “states, =< sions spread disease. And be- | sides,. you don’t know . whose | blood is running in your veins for | An inexpensive substitute for blood does not make it better or more suitable for the illness. Su- | gar or saline solutions, valua- ble when dehydration is a prob- lem, do not take the place of | blood when the individual is | bleeding. ‘There is no substitute | for an exchange transfusion for lem (erythroblastosis’ fetalis). Khe same can be said of a trans- fusion in open heart surgery, | Each procedure requires many | units of blood to keep the arti: | ficial heart-lung ‘pump going. | Blood can be separated io | its components. ‘Packed’ cells | are obtained by removing the | liquid from whole blood. The | sh - eae that remains is - u certain s of a | mia. The auld eeetios joint ma)~is—-employed—in—shock—and— malnutrition, especially in de- bilitated patients who need | surgery. Ba | Our reader may refer to plas- | 4 tran,” serum albumin, “and | ar pri ge eo cgeaey eomba shock, 200 A.D. 7 In Difficult OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson ment Hill pl -be..spread by. transfusions..This ae > Ottawa-born Sydney” Smith __ left the capital as a 14-year. old boy in 1907. Exactly half century later, he returned to his native city as the Senator —for-his adopted home, Kamloops, B.C. ; Today, as Monsieur le Presi- dent or His Honour the Speaker he presides over the debates in our Upper House of Parliament. Thus he played a prominent role in the ceremony of the of- ficial opening of our 27th Parlia- ment on a cold January day - a far cry from his role as young coachman, clad in bear- - skin hat and bearskin cape, on a horse-drawn sleigh in which he taxied notables to and from the similar opening of . Parlia- ment on a winter’s day in 196. “Sitting talking with him in his_beantiful_ suite in the Sen- ate, I learned somevhing of the ~~guccess story which had carried him from Ottawa, through col- ~ Tegiate at Regina, through ~ 20° years-as car-dealer and fermer _at Gull Lake,’ Saskatchewan, and. then in 1937 to Kamloops, - be- fore returning as an honoured elder statesman to. achieve the difficukt double of prominence Versions Of Histo Fredericton Gleaner ~~ As a stiidy of school textbooks [history of Canada, prepared by | across the nation will abundant- ly prove, there is no such thing as Canadian History. Only the plural form of the word is valid. | We have histories but no agreed- upon history. Canadian history, English version really in many will collapse, thus offsetting the’ | | United States’ military superiority. - EDITORIAL NOTES “In Sweden, army draftees. are al- ~ lowed.to go around looking like the Beatles if they wish. Long hair and untidy dress must be exasperating to sergeant-majors, but it doesn’t seem to bother the higher ‘authorities * oe 6 A province-wide welcome should ° - await Dr. Carl Willis. of Charlotte- tow, on his achievement in winning the Canadian plowing championship at Chilliwack, British Columbia, on Thursday. It is getting to be a habit in the Willis family, for Dr. Willis’ | ’ father, Stanley Willis. of Cornwall, | scored a similar success at the Cana- dian championfship contest in Cale- don, Ontario, in 1963. A fine way indeed to. publicize: o.u r activities agriculturally,.and crown our prestige as the Garden of the Gulf! ** * A columnist for a San Francisco _ paper got to thinking what it would tt mean. to his-city—if-afl-the-motor_ve- hicles there were a foot shorter and half as narrow. That led to the Milwaukee Journal making some deductions for its own area, with these results: In 1964 there were 399:175 motor vehicles registered from Milwaukee county. If each were a foot shorter it would give the equiv- alent of 75.6 miles of streets. If they were all six inches narrower there would be an extra 37.8 miles of street width. With most cars as they are— longer and wider for the most part than sense or need dictate— the-moral seems to be that there's an awful lot of .street mileage bejng .wasted in “évérv town and: city-acress~-the—can- ‘ cases an Americanized version ‘is very different from 1'Histoire Canadienne, version Francaise, in interpretation as well as in language. ; é And, as Miss Kahn-Tineta Horn has been so strongly. re- | minding Maritime audiences, there is an Indian viewpoint o our national chronicles which i strikingly different from either of the other two. This diversity in interpreting the story of our Canadian past is not as bad a thing as it may seem at first thought. A school Role On Parlia and popularity on Parliament | Smith has jong been an: inter Hill. ‘ Sydney Smith and his USA- born wife Marion live in an | apartment in a converted old home just west of The Hill. Most mornings he walks the 1,400 yards to the Parliament Build- ing, where he breakfasts in the top-floor restavrant in time to arrive at his office ‘‘as soon as the comes on duty.”” ‘I h x been so busy since I came to Ottawa,"’ he explain- ed, for Mr. Speaker has more to do, much more, than just preside over the debates for about three hours a day on three days a week. : He is, for instance, honorary _ co-chairman with Lucien Lam- oureux, Speaker of the House of Commons, of many interna- tional parHfamentary associa- tions. These include the Can- ~adasUSA Interparliamentary group, whose annual meeting in- Washington next- month -ealis- for the settling of innumerable détails “such “as the “drafting of the agenda, the make-up of the Canadian delegation. and its adequate pre-briefing: the Com- monwealth Parliamentary § As- sociation in which, like the Canada-USA_ group, Senator vo ested participant. Then too his | position brings him the res- ponsibility -of the top post in the Canadian: delegation to the NATO Parliamentarians annu- al -meeting--involving trans-At— | lantic. military. cooperation and, | which’ interests him far more, | the possibility of building NATO. | by implementing the far-sight- hed “Canadian Clatse”, to bring about what Mike Pearson fore- saw as ‘‘an economic and per- haps. a political Commonwealth | of the Western World,” ensuring undreamt-of prosperify for its members and peacé for the ‘world. ~ SENATE’S LOW ESTEEM Mrs. Smith, as Parliament Hill’s senior hostess, finds her never idle fife suddenly over- filled’ with not unpleasant ob- ligations such _as__ entertaiairg the Governor General and Ma- dame Vanier to dinner in the Speaker's Chamhers and socia iving with foreign’ ambassad- ~ors- —— tasks--which-‘she-regards- as a real pleasure and whicn the Smiths together fulfill wit» | their usual charm and bonhom- mie. Wf Senator Smith has regret, it is that the Red Qiam- | ber stands so low in public es- teem and receives such little notice. x : ‘Our House, by its very nature as--a—non-partisan deliberative |a bilingual committec and —ac- | ceptable to the education depart. | jments of all 10 provinces would | probably be a hopelessly dull | production in either language. | What is needed is not unifor- imity in our history books but ;general Canadian awareness that diversity exists and an un- An Octopus Grip ‘derstanding of the viewpoints of jthe authors who see the same | general sequence of events 50 | ' differently : Et Through. our very. diversity of tradition Canadians can come to a maturer understanding of his- | tory than can people of nations | who are nurtured on a _ single authorized version of their coun, try's past in which its statesmen | ‘were always fright, its com- manders always victorious. Brantford. Expositor The cians, union on. perform- ances in Canada, going “far be- yond. reasonable job ‘security needs, has long been a scandal Our Yesterdays (From. The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS. AGO ‘April 16, 1941) German bombers diving low in a steady procession through fierce anti-aircraft fire smash- ed at London for their heaviest raid of the war. Stick after stick-of-heavy—explosive -bombs whistled and crashed into build- ings and streets of the sleep- less cify, and casualities and damage was heavy. Two German -columns smash- ing through the heart of cen- tral Greek-British front threat- - ened to outflank the strong al- lied entrenchments thrown. up ‘on the slopes of famed Mount Olympus on the eastern coast. .TEN..YEARS AGO | April’ 16, 1956): Jewel thieves made thejr se- cond haul-and possibl¥ ~ their third and fourth - from a swank octopus grip of the Musi | corded as it plays in the Centen- nial Tattoo at Expo next year unless terms laid down by. New York officials of the American Federation of Musicians are obeyed. These are that every non- union band leave the arena and that the remaining 300 “union players receive $122 each for every recording performed by the RCMP while they stand idly. by --nursing their instru- . ments. The RCMP men cannot, of, course, join a union. Therefore the AFM will not ‘allow them as Hon-unionists“to~-play in competition=,with union bands unless tribufe exacted by the _union_is paid. Even when the RCMP musl- cal ride is performed at the CNE in. Toronto, the RCMP band is barred in favor of union musicians. t Almost any day you can hear on the CBC radio recordings of marches played by famous British military bands. You can buy recordings by the US. Army. Navy... Air, Force. and | Marine Bands, but...nq.. RCMP" Wi vartratea: Along wit | band irecordings exist by union hotel in Monte Carlo housing | fiat. Grace Kelly’s wedding guests. Mrs. M. Pamp, one of Grace's | union official reported $10,000 were permitted to record bridesmaids worth of jewels missing her room - Vulko (Wolf Chervenkov, ac- cused by his Red colleagues of aping Stalin's one-man rule, re- from The U. S. military bands, a has explained, be- cause their music-making was considered a cultural project Why not the same freedom for the RCMP”. Noes the union rate its playing as non-cultural signed as premier of Communist or is the real reason less high- Bulgaria 4. ? flown, such as a grubby con- It has reached the point where cern with cash and the curbing ithe RCMP band cannot be re- ‘@ competition? Chamber, does not inspire sen- sational headlines and news- worthy reports,” he said to me, He does not agree that the Sen- ate needs. changes in the method of appointment and term of ser- vice. But he does deplore the fact that so few Canadians who have achieved prominence in other fields are not willing - like Senator McCutcheon and Lab- our Minister Jack Nicholson, he said, and one might add like Speaker Smith — to make the personal sacrifice to serve their country on Parliament Hill in later life. Jamaica’s ica's Big one | | } | ize--the-—number—of— the’ pump. These popular sub- | stitutes are used when indicat- | ed : Diseases such as hepatitis can | is minimized. when. donors- are | carefully selected and_ great care is taken in the removal and storage of the vital fluid. Whole blood that is stored too long is likely to be contaminated and many blood banks separate the Plasma _ fromthe cells by the 10- th_day.of storage. The plasma | can be kept for months and af- | ter a half year is essentially free from the risk of transmit- ting serum hepatitis. The cells in a blood transfu- sion live their normal life ex- pectancy of less than 4 months and are eliminated from the system. They do not remain for the rest of your life. « BOWLEGGED INFANT i Mrs. Y. writes: I know that | most babies are bowlegged and | that the legs straighten out | eventually, but my child is 18 | months old and still is bowleg- ged. Have you any suggestions © everyone by his t i : . ‘ ‘Shock, | xtran also is used in at — Syne open “heart” surgery pom 1. of. taking vengeance on blood =! -| transfusions required to prime | Under President Jomo Ken- yatta, Kenya has enjoyed in the West an almost unique reputa- and stability but ‘it’ appears t serious differences are agi- tating Kenyan political -llfe he- | devotee of sweet reason. low the surface. \ The title vice-president may have exaggerated the impor- tance of Odinga, especially among Westerners conditioned to the concept of the United States vice-president as succes- _psor to the president in the event of death. The Kenyan constitution does, not provide for .the vice- presi- dent to succeed the president in the same‘ way as Lyndon Johnson succeeded John F. Kennedy in. November, 1963. However, Odinga and his leftist views are obviously, an important factor in Kenya life even though at the age of 54 he has never been able {m chal- 74, for power in the key East African country. WEST SURPRISED Kenyatta, once regarded as | among the most wild-eyed of radicals, has surprised almost moderation to inde- 1963. the—-wiite population “which so recently held power--in--Kenya, the burly, beard Kenyatta. has stressed the néed of under- standing arhong the races. Although Kenyatta imposed one-party rule under the Kenya: African National Union, his ver- What, Back Again? | Vice-President Oginga Odin- | sion of African socialism has Dellen ga's resignation in Kenya points | been much less disturbing than had “been anticipated in West. Kenyatta, once seen as the Mau uprising against white ‘rule, became the most tolerant of African leaders in compari- son with, for instance; Presj- ; tion for economic development | dent Julius Nyerere of neigh- boring Tanzania, once regarded in. the West as the scholar! ': As Kenyatta waxed in mod- |eratién — and _strength — so- Odinga slid leftward at one point in 1965 it was the old lion of Kenya stayed in power only by batting down a | attempted coup. i | HEAVY INFIGHTING Odinga's ups and downs ap |pear to denronstrate—not’ for ithe first time—that the idea of monolithic one-party states Africa is misleading and that much - political warfare goes on behind the facade of unity. In May last year Dr. Njoro; ter, denied reports that security police who visited Odinga’s of- | fices_at 3 a.m. one day had re- moved a substantial quantity of arms and. ammunition stacked in: the basement:—The to transfer office files from one government department to an- other. At the same time as the dawn call; a large-- contingent : troops was moved into Od ga’s constituency for “routine | exercises.” = « | The general gossip was that Kenyatta had not observed j British techniques. for years for nothing. + Regina Whig.Stardard Perhaps we're —slightly—pre- judiced because it _was_only a month or so ago that we final- ly decided to get rid of our old double - brested suit, but we ean't refrain from hoping that these ‘‘new’’ styles for men are a flop. If the sketches we saw the other day are any indication of what men can expect — espe- cially those who aren't quite: as young as they used to be — we | hereby resolve never again to | poke fun at women’s fashions. Double-- brested suits back again? High collars? Bell-- bottomed trousers? The Al Capone look? Perish the , REPLY thought. And thdve dandified If this were my child, I | hats! Horrors! Pin stripes and would consult an’ orthopedist, | chalk stripes? Wide lapels and who might, at this stage, be able to correct the condition with special shoes-or braces. * DEFORMED HANDS “Mrs, A. B. writes: Could | hands that became deformed 10 years ago because of arthri- tis be brought back into shape | by: operation?....-_- eet ek REPLY I doubt it, but why not ¢ o n- sult an orthopedic or a plas | tie surgeon? GROWTH OF CANCER Mrs. E. H. writes: Has it ever been determined how fast cancer grows? REPLY The rate varies. Some can- | cers grow rapidly and others slowly. Much depends upon the | site of the lesion, the type of | tumor, and blood supply. = GOUT AND THE BLOOD F. T. writes: Does gout show up in the blood? ' . REPLY The amount of ‘urie acid in | the blood is a good test for gout. | “‘Today’s Health Hint— — Floor wax should, Be slip . re- | sistant. (Note: All correspondence to Dr. Van Delien should be ad- dressed to: Dr. Theodore Van : Dellen;-C-O Chicago _ Tribune, - Chicago, IMlinois.) Festival — | Society Peaceful Jamaica will be im- , luxurious hotels, fashionable letes. t The Dominion . vaded this summer by 1,500 ath- | shops, and _ palm-dotted golf | |courses. The’ clear blue waters | of Jamaica, va- | provide superb |eation paradisé for thousands of | snorkeling. fishing and | tourists every year, will be host |BAUXITE IS MAINSTAY to the Eighth British Empire — and Commonwealth Games August. Athletes from 40 Com- monwealth countries, represent- ing 750 million people, will par- ticipate. in the mammoth sports festival in the. capital city of Kingston. Jamaica is the smallest na- tion ever to play host to the games, and Jamaicans jokingly credit the coup to one of their most. popular industries— rum making. They say a rum-punch party given shortly before-final voting on sites for the games may have helped persuade the | judges. -WAY-OF-LIFE Sports have long been of life in Jamaica. island consistently produ ces world champion. boxers, run- ners, and cricketers. Most villages maintain a turf cricket pitch, and every parish a way The sunny fields cricket teams that play in | | island-wide tournaments. Even a repair man working high on a telephone pole follows,the day’s cricket match with a transistor radio. “Yy 5 August will he a busy month the gam- (es, islanders will hold their an- Pre es celebrations. Festivities include street-danc- | ing, parades, and fairs. Independent since 1962:--Jam- Aica is now one of the world’s fastest crowingresort , . The — heautiful ent raved ‘balmy weather vear- round, abundant tropic flowers, warm seas, and cool mountains sprink- led with stairstep waterfalls. ‘Atomgethe-scenic North Coast, , | tangled jungle has given way to in | in Only bauxite exceeds tourism Jamaica's economy. The rounded shirt collars? Why, oh why, did we ever give all those duds, away? { The designer responsible for all this- must have-been joking: At least that’s the conclusion of us middle-age duffers who __Where still think that_a_man’s suit | should look like a man’s suit land not like a clown’s costume ‘or something out of the ward- ine ge Mungai, Kenya's defence minis-" - defence minister explained, © with a straight= face; that:the—- purpose ofthe visit had been “ |robe department of some . | theatrical group touring with |one of Wilde’s plays. ° | —As we said, no more ridicul- ing the ladies for their getups. | We hang our heads in shame. PLAN ANTLFRENCH DRIVE TORONTO (CP) William Busby, suburban Scarborough lawyer, who says he founded /an anti-French nationalist group !two years ago, said Thursday that he hopes to hold an organ- izational meeting “‘in the near future.” Mr. Busby said the group, the Canadian National Association, has about 50 mem- bers at present. He said it will likely join with similar organ- izations such as. Ottawa's Voice of Canada League and-- may grow into a political party. To Buy Products Advertised In The Week-End Magazine MOORE & M'LEOD LID “YOUR FAVORITE SHOPPING CENTRE” | small tropic isle is the world’s | biggest producer of aluminum | ore. The bright red ore is scoop- Led up from deposits in the moun- then carried by aerial | ‘tains, | conveyor systems to waiting | shibs. In recent years, factories | have been built to process ‘some | of the ore locally. | Most of Jamaica's 1.750.000 | people still live by what they | can grow in the wet, warm cli- | mate. Large plantations harvest .: | coconut, banana, coffee, ave | and | citrus. fruit, - sugarcane, | spice. Backyard plots yield breadfruit, pineapple, and akee, a native vegetable—that—tastes—- something like scrambled eggs. 7 Jamaica also grows: .more | } than—half—the-world’s—supply_of- allspice, the berry with the com- | _biried flavor of cinnamon, clov- ;es, and nutmeg. : ' TIDE. SWEEPS HIGH The -Bay of Fundy has the | highest tides in the world, vary- |ing. between 474% and 54 feet... © KELVINATOR Washers & Dryers Refrigerators CROCKETT & STOREY Limited Kent St., Dial 4-5559 that’s no fairy tale! | Crockett & Kent Street 1 t on display at 25 Brackley Point Road _ » Complete Honda The Beautyrest is guaranteed by Sim- mons for at least 15 restful year: available at “Dedicated to Home Improvement” — Dial 4.5559 Ps WEEKEND MAGAZINE — PACE See the complete line of HONDA Bikes Keith 3 Carmichael Ltd. ales. A MEE Storey Ltd. - Charlottetown o: 29 eis % ae es sane § 23 ha. Sherwood Sales and Service