moasmoamm wouldfsvorunioaofthoAtlaa- plop-"J. trsdo bot-m HALIFAX (CPJ—Trade Min-Itic Provinces as long as i‘lpmvince. t later Sharp said Saturday 'ielwould prevent "artificial bar- Let your l fingers M listed in the Yellow Pages. The guide—check IN THE You’ll be surprised how many products and services you can find ellow Pages are a complete buyer's the Yellow Pages for the service or product you n Gilead the Ms Gleam the Facts O Find It Fast The ISLAND TELEPHONE Co. limited $934 By JACK BEST eties about possible anti- Western lurch in Soviet foreign , policy as a result of the sack-1 ing of Premier Nikita Khrush- . chev have all but disappeared. ‘ It was still too early to dis- cern the full ramifications of the leadership switch but West-f ern observers were rcassul'cd‘ by the first policy statemenlsl of the new regime headed yl Leonid Brezhnev Kosygin. The newspaper Pravda called3 for strengthened friendship and co-operation among the peoples3 of Britsn, the United States, b and Alexei ; tests ‘ .. "lRusslan Settlements SAVE TIMnSAVE STEPS’Reassuring in west a list of 110 slogans published MOSCOW lCPl—Initiai anx1- in connection with the coming 09 anniversary of the new leader- ship. Brezhnev is the party first secretary and Kosygin is the chairman of the council of min isters of premier. SLOGAN PUBLISHE I) Pravda called for an all - en- compassing ban on n u c i e a r This appeared at least in part to be a response to the first detonation of a nuclear device by China. China has refused to sign a nuclear test — ban treaty negotiated last year by Britain France and the Soviet Union. the Uni-ted States and Russta The appeal was contained in on the ground that it does not it @nardiem m Charlottetown, woofoa. £1719to d“ PAGE 9 icover underground blasts. ' The t has insisted effec- tive inspection and control pro ures be negotiated before it will agree to a ban on under- ground tcst explosions. _ The Pravda call appeared on the surface to be a gesture to-‘ 'V wards the Chinese though there; ave been reports Russia. may be getting ready for serious‘ _4 negotiations with the West on Another slogan Publlbl‘cd by controlled abolition of all nn—l clear tests. ‘APPEARS IN CONTROL Meanwhile the new leader ship appeared to be in full con- ltrol. having gathered in the power systemzlically and with .little outward sign of struggle. l Moscow was in a festive >mood Sunday as preparations fcontinued for the triumpbal en- try into the capital of Russia's 757i M44 ,1. SAVAGE SHOE BAR’BI-DOLL ‘ WINNERS (:HARLOTI'ETOWN~ Carlyn Mill Keppoch SUMMERSIDE— Sheryl McOuaid 388 Arcana Sr. Summerside l l l three new cosmonauts. Flags. banners and overhead lights bcdeck streets in many parts of the city. or some other high official will use the occasion to deliver a statement on the policies of the new administration ha'ps fill in some of the back ‘ground of Khrushchev's sudden ‘ ouster. Outdoor Writers May Be Invited To 1967 Events DOMA LE INE, Que. l'CPl— Outdoor writers from around the world may be invited as a group to take part in Confeder- ation’s centennial celebration. The project is a tentative one of the Outdoor Writers of Can- ada. holding their 10th annual convention in this provincial government resort area 240 miles northwest of Montreal. Reg Fife of Montreal, chair- man of the committee to pro- pose an OWC project for the confederation’s centenary, out- lined steps taken so far. i There is speculation Brezhnev j and per— i l I l l l l i Communist East Germany army pioneers work under the portrait eyes of eyes of ousted Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and East Ger- man pariy boss Walter Ul- bricht at the border village of Moedlareuth dividing East and West Germany in Bavar- ia. The pioneers are divert- ing waters of a stream in or- der to make way for a Com- FRED DAVIS host and moderator of Canada's ‘ top TV panel show, “Front Page Challenge". WRGINM highest grade aged Virginia tobacco, and the same exclusive “W super filter. Pick" 'up King Size du Maurier today. ‘ clu MAURIER at no a I I King Size cigarette smokers asked for du Maurier, the Cigarette of Good Taste, in full King Size. Nothing has been changed but the length. You get the same I More than ever, the trend today is to do MAURIER the cigarette of good taste K fng Size and Regular Size now available in packages of 20 and 25 KHRUSHCIHEV su UP N at“ we: I barbed wtre fence dividing the village. Work started Tuesday but the portraits Anus? ’. RED WALL ,q. have been up for months and nobody has done anything about taking that of Khrush- chev down. House Flag Committee TORONTO (CP) — T'ie Star; says in an Ottawa dispatch, members of the special Com-‘ m as g 0mm! , its deadline less than two weeks away. “have all but despaired of producing a unanimous rec- ommendation of a distinctive; Canadian flag design." The dispatch, by William MacEachern. adds there is event “some question whether it will". be able to make a report at all.’ unanimous or otherwise." by; the Oct. 29 deadline set out inl its terms of reference. The committee began closed- door sittings in mid-September and is reported to have ex- amined some 1,200 designs sub- mitted by the public. Said Facing “Deadlock says the seven Lib- eral committee members, as well as representatives of the three minor parties. are under- stood to have agreed to scrap Prime ’nis Pearson’s fa- vorite design of three red maple leaves on white background between two vertical blue bars. But it adds they are uni in insisting that the maple lest he the central motif if the design is to be distinctively Canadian. The Star says at least four of the five Progressive Conserva- tives on the 15-member commit— tee “have made it abundantly lclear that they will not accep I a design which does not display ithe Union Jack in a position i prominence." 0i U.S. Lead, By ARCH MacKENZlE ,is ready to seek the relaxation Horse Numbers Down In Quebec QUEBEC l'(JPt—The number of horses in Quebec province fell to 78.000 in the year follow- ing June 1. 1963. a decline of 6,000 tor the riod. Meantime the cattle popula- tion increased one per cent to a June. 1964. total of 1.999.800. Of these. 1.060.000 were dairy cows. which recorded a population in- yea ln releasing the figures Mon- day. the provincial bureau of statistics also said the number 640,000 during the same period. an increase of 385,000. in other figures. the produc- tion of butter was shown to have dropped six per cent. ill the year following August. 1063. leaving the production level at 18,590,000. The bureau said Quebec's blit- ter production accounted for 45 per cent of such Dl‘Odllt‘llDi‘l in Canada as a whole. I.Q. Tests Criticized OTTAWA tCPt —— Intelligence tests may not be a valid way to detect mental retardation in children. a Montreal psychol- ogist said here, Speaking on the opening day conference on retardation. Dr. Is mentally retarded prevalent. We as a constellation o” abilities ent persons.’ The meeting. vlnclal departments of healti (I‘M Aaloclation for Health Association and voluntary o r: a ll Intions their work with the retard ed. WASHINGTON tCP l—Cantada ‘ crease of 1.1 per cent during the I of birth in Quebec rose to 13.4 - day fcderal - pro- mental Rabino- Th;- Us Vilch. senior research psychol- higzest mat'kf‘lmnmi' and in in ate the extent to ivtich a child Nautraiiy these abilities come It different amounts in differ- hringinl: to- ST gether more than 250 represcnl- John F. Hines bishop of Texas. ativea of the federal and Mo was clcrter' Saturday presiding education and welfare. was of- cnwni Church in that post. he flcially opened by Health Min- later Judy LaMarsh who oaid of 1100000 Hoist-cviaiians, He tribute to members of the Cana- Relerdndjoi Children. the Canadian Mental 34. otherlRev for is resigning because he til Canada To Seek Relaxation Zinc Quotas .or removal of quotas imposed since 1958 exports to the United States of lead and zinc. The time is propitious. The U.S. needs more zinc than it can produce and prices, along with those for copper and ' . are going up. The Canadian strategy seems to be to move quickly enough~ once the Nov. 3 election has passed to get action before high prices bring too many U.S. mines back into production. These "marginal" mines oper» ate only when prices are high. An investigation of the lead- zinc situation has been made by the United States tariff commis- ‘ on an application earlier his year to increase the quotas. The commission's decision probably will not be announced until after NM The ['5 maintains a lead- zinc stockpile of about 1.500.000 tons and only a little zinc. has been released so ar. ZINI' BENEFITS Zinc is the mom Canadian metal benciinm: from current price increases. informants here say. althou'l'u copper also has gone up. There has been less demand for load and Canadian tin output is small. Quotas on Canadian lead and zinc were imposed in 1950 by former prestdcnt Eisenhower as a device to avoid raising tariffs 0n tic arc and metal. The quotas \lcrc sci at 80 per cent of the il\'(‘l‘8!(‘ annual commere rial imports tor the period ’Ii-Ti” C :1 32 o Sim-c tlicu. tho [‘5 market pattern ha: altcrcd substan- tially Sales of t‘auadian lead and 7.1m in thc l’S amounted to more than 360000.000 an- nualli :n lire-quota years "(‘lllillllS L'anada’s ogist at the Montreal Children‘s (lire, Canadian sources say. Hospital. sharply criticived cs- Thu. will llll‘ prospects ‘or Iablished LQ. tintellizcncc quo- (‘linadiuu ’llil‘ mm the next tienll tests now used to Main» iltfi n' l'll'f‘l‘ \mzw arc :nnd, "('- lion should be taiicn now to open up lllf‘ l' S 'iiai'kct now in “The notion that a Child‘s pi'nimv'ptmn lm'lnlr‘" LQ. remains constant is widely P“.‘(lti('li0ll of am: and other R150 I13"? lllf‘ base metal: lill‘ iiiii'casc with Idea Ilh? I! related in (kw-plowiner \Illl"ii\ I“ <ll('l d9" . we bar? 10 pnsils as omr "mnt on the south start thinking of human hciuzs alloy” .4 urn-w slaw Rake in "if" \‘m lliu rd 'l'ci'ritm'ics HI I-II'T BISHOP LOl'lS \l" —Rl Rev. bishop of the Protestant Epis- serves as r‘iicf spiritual leader has elected from among a field [we nominees Rishon Hines. of Houston succeeds Rt. Arthur Lichtenberger. who of pi lai.