fic eory ‘Che Guardian Covers Prince Edwerd. Island Like The Dew ; W. J. Hancex, Publisher Wallace Ward Prank Walker Managing Editor : Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sun day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, * Charlottetown, PE, by Trost Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices et Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris ‘Represented nationally ‘i Thomson Newspapers Advertising ‘Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-6894; AMontreal 640 Cathcart. Stree? Uni- verity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street. Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canasian Daily Newspaper Publishecs Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadien Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches in/ this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters anc also the local-news -puplished herein. ~ All fight or repuolication off special! dispatches “here- in eiso reserved. Subscription rate: . Not over 40¢ per week By carrier. $12.00 a year by mail'on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a-year off Island and U.K. $20/00~ pert “Veer in US. and elsewhere cutside British Com monweaith. a Not over “10e S.ogis copy. “Member Audit Bureau af ‘Grculation \ “fhe “strongest: memory. is: weaker. than the. weakest. ink” FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, O'Leary In The Van - Our congratulations go fo Miss Elizabeth Platts of Howlan for her excellent qualities of scholarship and application to her studies. Her im- mediate rewards are the knowledge that she stands higher in her Grade ‘Twelve examination results than all of the other students in our province who wrote the 1966 papers, and the ‘more tangible. compensation in the -$600 scholarship put up by the pro- -yincial government. But with these prizes for Miss Platts goes a scholas- tic reputation that-will inspire her to PAGE 4 1966. do her very best not only in any © further studies but in. any other undertaking she may assume. It is noteworthy throughout the list of ‘examination results and their ac- ~companying scholarship winners that O'Leary Regional High School ranks ——-—~+-———high~as-a-developper-of-the-leaders: ‘ The very foremost, Miss Platts, is a scholastic product of O’Leary Re- gional High School. Helen Marie Callaghan of O'Leary Regional wan a am scholarship, and Eileen, Mathe- on : of O'Leary Regional’ a $200 peed: These three triumphs of O’-. Leary students can, of course, be shared in vicariously by. the principal - and teaching staff of that schoo] in the western part of the Island, and also by the parents who encouraged ‘the scholarship winners to persevere ih their studies. ae No Sex Or Color ~ The US. government is now carry- ing its civil rights erusade into the classified advertisement columns of that country’s daily newspapers. The particular target, naturally, is the«“*help wanted” column, The cur: Tent campaign is based on the 1964 law- against discrimination that was designed to help the lot of the Negro but made applicable to everyone. It forbids advertising on a discrimina- basis specifically outlawing requirements with regard to religion, sex, or coun- try of origin. _ Hence a Roman Catholic magazine published for Roman Catholics may not state in a want ad that it has a vacancy for a Roman Catholic editor or writer. No advertiser can adver- tize for ‘‘men-neat appearance”. this discriminates against the fairer sex. Conversely, it must be supposed, a restaurateur could not put in an ad ‘for “waitresses.” since this would discriminate “against waiters who ‘might need a job. Nor can it be ‘specified that an elevator operator or ‘a service station attendant be of the | ——+whtite-race— W a aington sO tar has had 3 charges alleging violations by adver- ‘tis ers. but the.joker in the law is that even if the charges are proven the “statute provides no penalties for the - guilty to pay: All the supervising com- mission can do {is to conciliate with. the offenders and hope they will be. led to mend their discriminatory wars. ~ Population Explosion + This is the-month—in. : population. of Canada is expected to > pass a total of twenty millions. The : officials of the Dominion Bureau of : Statistics cannot tell just when,-that is upon what date, this young country : wil] have twenty million persons, but . ——— to. engage employees, |_| : me ' making as many as 50 crossings of . for* Sieacenemeebsceeterseass “and 7,000 more— vehicles. - basis it is more than ‘a possibility the which -the —- ed. Then they adopt the same mathe- matics to the immigrants and the migrants. Sometimes these. running total ingredients ‘can run six months behind ‘the times, but the Bureau staff is now familiar with the norms for any time of the year and can give accurate estimates. On the’ average, - the population of this country. ine creases at a rate of about 33,000 per- ons a month. Their projection.at the ureau provides an estimate of a total population of 19.985.000 Cana- dians as of August 1 and about 20,- 000,000 around August 15. It is impossible. of course, to fore- tell whether*the 20,000,000th. Cana- dian will actually be a squalling gir] or boy baby: born to'a couple in this country. or whether it will be a-beam-— ing-immigrant—just-stepping-off the gangplank of a boat or the steps of a: jetliner. What worries Ottawa a bit is the “decline in the national birth rate, a development which obliges us to re- ly more upon immigration than upon native born Canadians to multiply our total. Only five, years ago, the aver- age of births in this country ran.to 261 children’ born for every ten thous- and persons we had in the total population. In the past year the na- tional birth, rate has declined to 214 babies per ten thousand. of current population. : Gala For Gallants This: Sunday will sée a picnic re- union of-membhers of the Gallant fam- ity, and by common-agreement it will be at Port LaJoie. That is as it should be, as the entire family descends from Michel Hache Gallant, whose homestead was on the land where Fort “Amherst: now is part of ‘an his= | | land and Trade and toric park. The original Hache had several | | | | | | | | | | t | | | — | sons, and also some daughters, and | from-them--has_ sprung the huge | throng -of many ‘names. and - many homes—and one. common ancestor. The family held its first giant re- _ union last year and Gallants, and all others with Gallant blood in them, came from countless parts of North - America. There were approximately: : 2,000-of them at. ae Amherst that . day: It is unlikely there will be that many this Sunday, but it 1s probable there will be a large number as organizers of the picnic do-not have to, go beyond -the confines of our own province to have many applicants for a part in it. They have spread widely from their original Rocky Point home all across The Island with a. heavy concentration in the Rustico section of the North Shore-area. Flood Of Visitors It is difficult for our older inhabl- tants to picture the busy scene exist- ing at Borden today. One facet of it alone-would stagger the imagination of a recent generation and that is the ‘statement the C.N.R. has been Northumberland Strait a day. It is a far cry from the days of wondering if the one crossing per day would be made on time. Or made at all. Fantastic, too. was the information that.during the month of July the fer- ries carried 185,348 passengers on those-crossings with 100, 738 coming over to this province. That is ap- proximately the resident population of Prince Edward Island. A great many of these people came by cars with the ferries heing called on to handle 65,936 vehicles. But of even greater import. is the news that August. is likely to see even __this-record—broken._In—fact_it—was— August 1965 which set an all-time re- cord which July smashed to pieces by producing an extra 20,000 people On this year 1966 will go down in history as the first»time,.a half-million people travelled to*this” Holiday Island of ours. It is welcome news to tourist resort operators and even more so to economists probing into The Island's future. “EDITORIAL NOTES ~ “. Spanish fisherman is claiming a $5.000.000 reward for spotting a fal ling «American .atomic. bomb. He should be grateful that he is Still, around, / ly, hy : acne (fending, agents, - Hence Ultraviolet In‘Colds By Dr. Theodore R. Van Detlen | The —value-of—ultraviolet dight in the prevention of respiratory infections is. a coatroversial top- ic. There are: many reasons -wity | the results are questionable, the chief one being that the organ- isms responsible for colds, bron | ‘and ‘sore throats can be © chitis, transmitted not only through the air, but by direct con ach Phere; fore, sterilizing the air should affect only about hali of the of- « tana Ultraviolet irradiatien kills germs suspended in the atmos- phere. The organisms in small droplets are. more susceptib'e than those contained -in larger particles such as dust or lint. ‘|This is understandable because, - to_be effective, the rays.must be able to penetrate and do so rap- ‘idly because the organisms are— quickly-inhaled- by others. However, this is only part of the. story; a different concentra- tion. of ultraviolet. is required 16 combat various bacteria, fungi, and viruses, which means that epidemics of certain types can be ‘subdued, but others are un- touched. The moisture content of the air is another” stumbling block because’ irradiation is in- effective when the relative 1 midity is more than 50 per cent Moreover, certain dangers are associated with irradiation. U1- traviolet rays can burn the skin and the conjunctiva of the eves the use of this: agent must be restricted to the upper air (ceiling), to ventilating ducts, and_entrances_ to rooms -(or isolation cubicles. MNS OTTAWA REPO! RT Honourable George Hees, Con- servative MP. tor Northumber- former Minister of | Commerce, today’s Guest Column. -Whether werlike it or not, .au- -tomation is going to p'ay an in-, creasingly important role in our lives from “now on: It produces | greater efficiency ani greater productivity, and thereby makes | possible lower-costs and lower selling prices. It should make. it | possible to increase saies greai- , both here in Caiida and in) the export- market, through low- er selling prices. But if thése in- creased sales are uot sufficient to provide enough additional jobs to.absorb those who- their employment through auto- | mation. could develop as- a_result. It would then be-a dismal failure. Automation will: be a success | from—the—national_point_of view | if we can teach th; eople who are displaced, the SKills they will need to fit them fer the more technical jobs which automation will make available to them. The benefits of change will be fully | and. properly shared. only if we consider the needs~ ef: the People who are affected by automation, and if we organize our. policies in such a way as to reduce hard- | ship and insecurity to an abso- -lute minimum I think we all agree that no humane society can permit wor- kers to be made. jobless. on. a large scale, through no fault of their own. Our future success as an industrial nation is going to | depend on the way we are able | to plan, both on the national and | on the company level, to provide | ; cE ’ : ‘fia had an answer for that one: our people with the opportuni- ties of acquiring the skills. neces- sary to enable them to take their | place in the technical world in, Which they are going to live. ‘SHOULD STUDY. NEEDS | believe that the government has a very real responsibility in this regard, and that it must. set an example to Canadian indus- | try by the way it treats its em- | | ployees who are affected by au- | régard by tomation in their direct employ- ment by the government. In or- der to do so, I believe that tne government would do well to udy“what is being done in this large Unifed. States companies which are giving great leadership in this matter. I was very much impressed by the description of the responst- bility of industry in this rerard which was given by Mr. Clar- ence B. Randal!, tre recently re tired Chairman’ of the Tnland ~ Steel Corporation of the Unitea States. He described this responsioil- ity of industry in’ the following words:.-“Our respensibility. is to prepare the man whe is being displaced, for another task ,that will require a higner level of skill, and which will exist: after the change in the method of pro- duction. takes’. In the United States, indivi- writes” lase- PUBLIC FORUM This «olnmn te open te the discussinn by correspondents — of questions of in. - ‘Verest. The Guardian does not neces. sarily endorse the opinion of. corres. pondents. All letters published are sub- ject to editing and condensation wher- Necessary. The Guardian is unable to enter into any correspondence regard- ing letters submitted PRICE OF ART Sur,—My family and 1 have re cently returned from a mos: en- ~ EMERGENCY. OPERATION - = ‘dual companies and unions reer |made considerable progress in! ‘this regard. For instance, . {ne | Kaiser Steel Corporation and the United Steelworkers have-agreea that displaced workers should Le /guaranteed salaries up to three years, -and placed on aa emplov- ‘ment reserve. Another example is given by the Armour ~ Meat Packing Company and its sever- al unidns. They have set up a fund between them to study the 'effects of automation on the em- |Pployees of=the company, and to ! ‘retrain affected workers | These are merely two exam- | ples of the kind-of forward-look- jing. steps which Canadian Com- Hees Writes About Automation - ring in the -future, may Proceed | without causing hardship __to- those displaced through. no fault | of “their own. Therefore, — I strongly urge the government to give leadership to all Canadian | of | the companies |Person remain on a baby food ‘eomes, ‘the less likely it is to risk everything in military. ad- }* }companies in the interests their - workers, | themselves, and —the country. I ‘urge the government and these |” Canadian companies to follow the -excellent example. set by | ‘companies such as those in the United States which I have men- tioned, thereby making the tran- | sition to an automated society in | {Canada as easy as possible. |] believe that such an attitude, | | panies should “be taking at this/and such~ a program are the \time, so that the steady. transfer mass’__ unemployment to thé more auiomated society | workers, in which | we are going “to he liv- least. we—can..do_for.. _our...fellow_ i! as we move together lalong the road to progress. Mavor-Givens of: Toronto and | his board of control have refus- ed to back*Alderman Dear’s mi- |litant campaign to keep job- | |seeking Maritime families out of | ' Toronto. : The reason: This country of ‘part of it can slam the door. on people from any other part However,, Alderman” Dear wasn't trying to set up immigra- tion stations. on Toronto's out- skirts. He was only “hoping the mayor and board of control would support his.plea'to the At- ‘lantic Province premiers to |warn their people Premier Stanfield of Nova Sco- |As premier, he ‘does not have au- | thority over the goings and com- ings of his people | But as far as the sounding of 'a warning is concerned, it looks as if Fate has stepped in on Al- derman Dear's side. even without any co-operation” from his own. mayor. or the premiers. As his irate stand made lively inews. and the news: has been very much in these tast few days, it is doubt- ful whether anyone in the At- | lantic Provinces is. now unaware that Toronto has an acute hous- Toronto Warning Pertinent Saint. John_Telegraph-Journal the public eye | jing shortage. and. that inskifled | land jobless Maritime workers lfamilies are only accentuating | ‘the problem and creating hard- | ship for themselves. : Toronto is considered by many no place to go without funds. | Tt is a modern metropolis magnificent buildings some of the worst reports of | slum conditions and of slum of landlords “bleeding .tenants also, come out of Toronto. Everyone can recall numerous jpews stories in recent years | !about Maritime ‘families becom- ling stranded in Toronto — in a strange city without money, with lout friends, without anything but headaches. Some. who had a lit- | i tle cash to start with were quick- W fleeced of it by sharp-witted | operators who offered to help ' them find jobs or accommoda- ton Mate Givens has said the | vertheless. Alderman — Dear's warning should be heeded in the | Atlantic Provinces. | without recources — but with a | wife and a carjoad of children. is likely to find trouble before he. | finds a job. World Famine Feared Financial Post A new note of urgéncy has been struck aS once again the Wathing has been sounded ‘that the world is losing its battle | against hunger. The problem {s not one for the future, it is here now, said Ofville Freeman, _ULS. agriculture “secretary. The prospect of world famine may appear remote to the ‘‘af- fluent society'’ of this. continent and to the highly developed na- tions‘ of Europe but it is inevi- table unless concerted interna- tional efforts are exerted to im- _plement remedial’ measures: These may: be obvious, “but they are difficult to attainment, and for a variety of reasots that rangesfrom differences of nation- al custom and ¢limate: and diet to religious‘ tenet and decree, ta. level of education and technical know-how. « The°era of massive Canadian and American food , surpluses has disappeared at a time, as Mr. Freenan observed before the OECD assistance committee, when other. areas of: the world peoples and thus close the food even ,as Mr. the next U.S. program of devel- opment loans and stepped up in- terest rates being charged poor- er countries. This was fn strik- ing contrast to Canada’s confer- ence gesture — the erasure of tn- to deserving nations. HAMILTON | (CP)—Four _ men were hurt, two seriously, when a blast of wind flattened the steel girders of a building under construction at the Dominion Foundry and Steel, Co.'s bay- front site Tuesday. Nearly 100. site on- their coffee break. Bee las NUNS | sures used to control colds =F ple headway wilt be~-made~until—of- production; even if 1f means | everyone realizes that colds are using capitalist methods such as jer ultraviolet, ed at first; gradually, good : “health _by |must gargle and rinse it descending on Toronto with their | due to the dryness | feel upon but | |lower tension. | pens door will remain open — but ne- | Anyone -who Jands in Toronto | ee tt was untortunate-indeed-that-+ Freeman under- | scored the peril ahead, the U.S. | Senate clipped $250,000,000 from | terest rates on long-term loans | other men were away from the. . What has been said of ultra- violet applies also to other mea-- Lit- | spread by close ‘contact and does something about. it. The of- fender is-the man or woman who -socializes during the acute stage of the infection and the | parents who send = junior to school when he show _ signs of- coming down with a cold--Neith- vaccines, aerosal | Sprays, the sulfas, nor yitamins will nullify the influence of such ‘neglect. “DIET AFTER -COLOSTOMY _Mrs. T. F. writes: Must a {diet for life after a colostomy? REPLY Not unless _the individual is ners difficulty with the _open- ing of the colostomy These ap- |erations are done to by- pass the | diseased part of the intestine and theoretically . it =-should® be. pos- | sible. to eat any. food’ desired. A bland, low residue diet is advis- foods con- taining residue are-added ‘if they are well tolerated! Send a stam- ped, self-addressed, «envelope |for- leaflet on this diet: ‘CARPETED ROOM ~E. S. writes: Am I pesos sleeping in ‘bedroom. that |quarters of the room. area? J ;Sleep _ with my mouth open and daily arising. REPLY Yes. = and be thankful ‘can't hear. yourself snore vou The ‘ours being free democracy, no ® fine place to visit — but it is |size of the carpet has nothing ‘o 0) with vour health 'ALCOHOL AND PRESSURE E. M. D.. writes: Does -drink- ing whisky or wine cause the blood pressure to rise? REPLY The effect varies with the indi-« vidual. In some instances; alco- |holic drinks have a tendency to In others, the | reading goes up. Nothing hap- in ‘the major'ty, a average amount is consum- TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— The water skier should wear a | life jacket. (NOTE: All correspondence . to Dr. Van Dellen should he addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- “une, Chicago, Illinois.) g mal “policies is carpeted ee t however, | NOTES BY. THE WAY | When. screaming, hysterical teen-agers are: carried from “rock ‘n’ rolls musie shows, many adults wonder what could cause Such behavidr- might become hysterical toe ithey had to«sit through’ some of those shows. — Jttawa. Journal experts predict a four- work week; with 13-week bu the end .of year It's a sort of goal to work Windsor Star. U8 day vacations, 2000 towards, — The attention of, women who boast_of their intuitive powers is-| ajfay as many of the girls who. ‘competed for the Miss Universe called to this statement by zoologist “The wilder the api: the keener: its. intuition.” _ Guelph. Mercury. Every day some 40 00 peo- ple flow ito the City of ‘London... _England:+their day's work over, travel home again. at night, leaving the city with a resident population of less than 5,000. This is-one of the facts contain- | recent- ‘ample of the way we lived in the ed-in the census of 1961, ly published by the Stationery Office in London. — Moncton Times. - Bu, thes’, We often say how impressive power is. But I do not find it im- pressive. The guns and bombs, the rockets’ and warships, are all symbols of human failure. President Johnson Who's to say that the ball play. ers of the .past. were .better than the’ new breed, who. shave very neatly in the commercials? But remember that the old timers shaved in the pullman wash- | ro with a straight edge razor, Calgaty Herald Miami Reports from Reach title put their foot down on the. mini-skirt. That would*he a ree ally acrobatic trick. — Port Ar thur News Chronicle. 1 he teen-age’ girl down the ‘street says her father has for. bidden her to straighten up her room, ‘Let's leave it the way. #@ is,’ he says, ‘‘as an historic ex Twentieth Century. culeer? Herald. (eenrineenenewemneimmaneressntantngi® “Beutaeh: pee The Kremlin Saint John Telegraph-Journal { The- Russians may have thrown Nikita Khrushchev out of office, but they have kept one ,of the former | premier’ main “goulash-—Comimun ism,"’ in other words more. con -sumer, goods for everybody. The—-session-ofthe-—_Supreme Soviet just coneludet made it clear that the present Russian leaders attach the greatest {m- portanee to #itproving the flow attractive .ad- the profit motive, : packaging, .and convincing vertising to _keep. ithe good mov: | ing on and off the stores+ shelves. The demand for: a rats- ing of the average Russian's standard of living over-shadow- ‘ed even the” “usual ~ diatribe” against the United States’ and | the muéh-repeated. offer of help | _to North Viet Nam This should be welcome In the | the Western “world. —The—more-- prosperous the Soviet Union be- venture. abroad. And the Rus- sian stress on domestic affairs should , fially. convince the Red Chinese that their erstwhile: -bro~ thers have abandoned © worlé re- volution. in favor of the “effete” desire for more comfortable liv- ing. The rift between Moscow and Peking will widen and deep en. Guz Vesterd ays “(From- The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (August 12, 1941) - Britain. sent hundreds—of—bom- hers and fighters— new twin-engined whirlwinds to hammer Germany and the French. occupied coast in the greatest Royal Air Force day- light raid of the war The big event ofthe vear got underway at Charlottetown ‘as’a crowd of about 8,000 people at- tended the opening: day of the Old Home Week -and. Provi neial : Livestock : xhibition. TEN ‘YFARS AGO. AAtigust 12, 1956) Géneral Abdel Nasser gave an emphatic ‘“‘No” to the British proposed London conference on _ the Suez Canal. But he left the door open for negotiations promising ‘another conference to guarantee freedom of the canal. The “United~States army, ting itself to the atomic age, now is spending about six times as much money for procuring guided missiles than goes for purchase of traditional artillery. Charlottetown to: Montreal - earthed court records, “| mouse nor | grained was including the | by) RE ka It is pleasant to see the hard- faced men-in the Kremlin yleld- ing to more hiiman motivations. The hope now must be that China, too, will —soen. feél the need to concentrate on a happier lot for its people rather than marching te—hattle against the West Warn Mice To Leave — Christian Science Monitor Stelvio. ~ The field mice of in northern ‘Italy, 11k e all. field mice,;.are a hardy. breed; but unlike their brethren elggwhere, they have documentary proof of. their endurance and fortitude For, according to. recently une it was in -t52f-that-actocat-court—chareing them with having gravely dam. - aged the crops,-sentenced them to leave the Stelvio countryside ‘within two weeks.” But niore than four centuries later, their descendants are still there, firm: Iv in possession of the ancestral . lands:- Stelvio. farmers. the- records tell us, even built bridges so that _the mice, -in--carrying out- the court's order: could eross near- by sfreams in safety. They did not, however, figure-on the stur- dy independence of. the country anticipate how in- his attachment. ta the soil and to his homeland He could. not. be uprooted. and sent into exile, even by such an ¢x- alted authority as the court it- . self. Successful, in his resistance to the harsh penalty of banishment, he carved his niche in’ histervy:, and fostered the freedom of gen- erations of kinsmen yet unborn. | From that day to this, no. court ‘has had the temerity again to bring him. to trial. We Trade * Furniture * Televisions * Appliances FIRESTONE Home and Auto Ltd. | Dial 4-5547 9-5-1 14N $17.00 Moncton Saint John. Halifax $_ 3.80 $_ 5.90 $ 6.40 Sydney Corner Brook $17.50 $10.50 $24.00 eee | : , T a “the pene of increase eee i ‘ ; : j “a en tiful + ae ey Me that used to be net exporters of le ! oronto i. - will, be some, day in the middle of It has’ been calculated that in the Fae and charm: fond have become increasingly || [ ~—— . . August or qust before. This weekend — vears since 1,496.B.C: ihere. have | RUT. betie tharsed crwesty, (dependent upon food imports. Lat us Aeieen voor [at Winni e 39.00 could see the twenty millionth click heen not more’ than 230. years of five cents admission fo the Cen. .. The promotion of birth control) jochends, bill Wenda, ip g a 4 tennial Art Gallet’ struck a fat “to-slow the-rise of the world pop- i “yy S98 in the counter. peace in the civilized world: |< note. What possible purpose does | Ulation is gaining greater accep: brochures; call us for : : The Ottawa experts .who do the 7 ’ | it serve? If a charge is qustitied | Bonigente res dioaeddal Wet va. So yvee eee Vancouver ci 62.00 ur “ $ : rl eme: lon for -inev)- : ; : & counting use various data in making Water wings and similar plastic | for_maintenance or travelliht. | Se te needs. e ee: ~ e then- make, it | tably “there-will be more and more mouths to feed. : show fees or other, tovs.are_a great danger to the VOUNZ | worthwhile-or_forze+ about it_ea— s tirely |, The situation now is such that. |. awimer. Using them. the child: 1 doubt. if charayne twenty-f-e | advanced nations should he tak- tempted beyond his depth with only | cents per head pays the salar ying ‘stock of the agricultural the protection of a plastic toy which C ENTRAL alo tae of the man who omist he em. | land that is being taken out of ai ; . ployed’ to collect { ; production in the name of “pro- is easily punctured. For water frolics. | children, should wear a. government’ | : bout Iram, Sip, -otc., | gress’ and industrialization. And P R N T E R ¥ ha approved life preserver. a de ++ their annual estimates of the popula- GUARDIA N-PATRIOT- i Le & tion situation between the decennial cenus takings. last: of which was on June 1, 1966. The tallymen count up the births and the deaths across Can- | ada in anv given period, adding the newborn and subtracting the deceas- These are examples of CN’s new White Economy poll Sleeping car complimentary meals jually attractive. Call CN and Blue Fare Pilar are ec ‘dilceeaaae rae Pah ROSS” JACKSON; lot paramount: importance to tn- PHONE 48506. as | der- developed. nations’ in. order ’ \ & Ascot i : of. isthat (hey may support thetr own 1 / a ; ; ; stains Ottawa 6, Ave Ont.