ve pled with successfully. But -neither : ; Macdonald nor Laurier had to cope ‘ : ; Boris Miskew € Pri Edvard Island Like The Dew, ; i ; " ‘ e | Staff Wri r PT 4 Mancan, Publisher _ with one issue that has beeome of } Sex Drives Caneéian ner : 7" - a é — Wallace Ward : Frank Walker |. growi rn at this time; and was 3 ‘ : Ra heey etsy The periodic and haphazard inated: at Marathon Key, ’ <. Gaeealne Rhee 2 ior | oe ee cane er 2 By Dr. Theodore -R. Van Dellen raids on Cuba by small exile |increased the tension created a _ Pulslished“every-week day morning (except”Sun- given an airing in the House of Com- There is more to adolescence groups merely keep ‘Premier little earlier by ‘an incident day and statutory holidays), at 165 Prince Street’ ~ mons a few days ago. This i$ the dis- than pimples and rapid growth. Fidel . Castro's goyernment on along the. line separating the . Charlottetown, ’P.E.|.,.6y Thomson Newspapers ltd. e fod aushal in th ds External changes are taken for. its. toes—and -atid tensions U.S. paval base at Guantanamo ‘Branch offices af Summerside, Montague, Alberton’ —. maying pace at’ which, int e WOF _-gganted “but what “is happening to United Fela: Ray from Cube. —o —~and-Seuris--————; re +—of-Labpr Minister John Nicholson, -“a—; t 7 inside is, more important, It Js wane. ii c Se ee ‘~ fates eae by ip i. Represented nationally by iamson Newspapers. | ~ * ee : : a ns i Him wa r that the st i Th atest such | incident - a@-.U.S. sentry guarding the base. | jadvernising Services: Toronto” 425 Un'versiny Ave. “flae@wOf disastrous strikes” is spread-. Hey enuidn't understant = i volved: six mén'who tried to in- The U.S—said—the—Cuban had ‘Empire nats el Bor ee oe Uni | Ing: across the. country. : hy characteristic — of «adolescence; |{itrate te Serene soma — engages. in sg yg, ‘versity 65942; Western ice est Georgia. | ,) “ 5 7 ‘ ¢ . * only to tercepted .|inside ase, Ul! avVana’ “si gtreet Vancouver MA 7037. Among: those posing the most | eee agp vip ‘Cuban coast. Their launch was argued that the soldier had been i: Member Canadian Daity Newspaper Publithere urgent problenis are the strike of there are numerous weaeoha sunk pe all the raiders either on Cuban_ territory _ outside v iati d The Canadi . The nadian. — 4 . ji ae y ues e So Matianr es ae use ar cai (ie Quebec longshoremen, endangering ms | why they have emotional prob- |W ihe a | at im ieee a yer re the s ‘ication of all news. dispatches in this’ paper. ~ wheat sales and the import of feed »| lems. One of the most import- mediately charged .that the six |shooting and perhaps fearing -...' month _later, ata meeting of Common-_| a. . * .eredited. to It or to the Associated Press'or Revters sand also the loca’ news puplished herein. All tight .of republication of special disoatches here iIn also reserved. Subscription : Not. over 40c per week by a © $12.00. year by matt rural routes not serviced by carrier. | Situation among workers on the St. ~ guidance and assistance; they « i ' iritory. And Moscow warned’ that ; $15.00 a year -off Island and U.K. $20.00 per | “2. } 7 ee S hs ‘are adults ‘sexually tut children Washington inquiry in view of. haa! “ert a 5 ‘ n ewhere outside Bri : say; | are é { t' ting U.S. : ba 8 ue..and reliable tyear in. U.S. and elsewhere outside British Come Lawrence Seaway; faltering efforts to Somali a - [on ering | 2. mocatoriens ne ‘ tmonwealth. yy Nor-over 7é single copy. ; Member “Audit Bureau of ‘Circulation. strongest memory is weaker ‘than the -weakest-ink” iPAGE GS FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1966. Rhodesian Parley | "The =. . a ce : statesmanship__of earlier days grap- . grain; the menacing possibility of a . longshoremen’s strike in British Col- Association; - the confront tween Quebec-.provincial police and_ 4 __|_umbia, _with_a_primary impact.on the ond ares, | forestry industry;. a deteriorating L-resolve a dispute between Air Canada E and the Canadian Air Line Employees ation be- the Quebec. government and: anum- ber of others. Mr. Nicholson appears convinced In the-British House of Commons |. that he is grappling with ‘something last December, Prime Minister Har- | more formidable than the normal rash of industrial disputes—a_con- old Wilson said of the breakaway white regime of Rhodesia: “We can- not negotiate with these men.” A wealth prime ministers; he predicted ment should take stock of the extent- | Boys of this age also have feel- has enjoyed: whittling. One ¥ ed potatoes, and a quarter of a @ : . ; : (esthe to whi : : ao 2 j f inferiority, parti ; the deplorable aspects ef what (juicy strawberry pie, it is good the rebels’ downfall ‘within a matter hich its own policies are con- . ngs. of inferiority, particularly on ee Salta |G ob on 0 ben te ten bare Sing of weeks rather than months.” But three weeks ago “exploratory -talks” with Rhodesia began in London, and *they have now been resumed in Salis- bury, seeking a negotiated settlement of the dispute. clusion. which is. supported by the . monthly reports of work stoppages |_across the nation. Perhaps the govern- . tributing to the discontent; the degree © to which” mounting ‘taxation is an |. element in inflationary pressures and © hence is-a factor in the demands for gincreased wage and salary levels. The federal ipcome tax, for example, has £ eS ree ere eee ‘| for his future conduct. This ear — a: “MIND IF | TURN. THE PAGES?” NN » ; Adolescent ‘ant is the sex,.drive which is ac- quired earlier in boys than | girly, The. majority .of young | lar s have not developed the | emotional maturity to cope with | the- Situation and therefore need . | Sex is emphasized in books, | movies; and television; and cre- ates nothing but tension for the 14-year-old. It is unfortunate be- ; cause the adolescent is. the man | of the future. His behavior at | this time may set the pattern: | sex drive isthe real McCoy and in this respect We have -a man in boy's clothing. . . Nature has taken this into ac- count by making other fields more attractive. Athletics, for | example, may provide the goal for the moment; develop a good physique, arti to | become healthy the desire to and | toward girls of- their own age. | Sex..is an embarrassing subject and often leads to a sense of guilt. This attitude aids in curb- ing the instinct but. is far from idéal because it delays emotion- al maturity : : Knowing the facts can help young men to make = - sa Anot ly | REIGHTE ‘intruders intended -to assas- ‘\sinate Castro and blamed the ‘US. .Central InteHigewce Agency, which it said was con- “nected with the plat. The. accusations touched off a ment officials U.S. ‘long has sought to dis- courage raids on Cuba by exiles and.emphasized that a number of such. expeditions have. been . ‘halted by the U.S. in waters off Florida. +. vere Gp neg NS TENSION - . The’ sixeman weekend raid, said by Havana to have orig- | - The Passing [ her Cuba replied: that the | ng Of Whit! - aoe abe nape vitel zoe ‘renewed raids by exiles, or- |dered an “armed -alert."’ The lorder was followed by a U.S. |threat-of ‘‘grave and regrettable |consequences”’ |soldiers intruded into base ter- Castro's government no doubt ‘lives in constant fear of a pos- le American - backed move jagainat Cuba and the shooting incident could only. have raised |greater fear. But Havana, Washington and Mos¢ow treated the shooting as ;a minor incident and the. situa- an Incident — if | moré” Cuban ~ ition now appears to have re- turned to normal. ing x » Journal. strong, fashion a | Since man. first learned fe, sake. After # noon dinner of blade-he | fried salt pork, milk gravy, boil- their own ~ imodern civilization is the pass- ling of this art. Only a few dedi- cated whittlers are left today and all men should unite to fos- ter a renaissance of the craft. - ‘There are two kinds of whittl- | ‘ing. A man.can whittle witha purpose. In pioneer. times, men | way and whittle for a few minut- es before getting back to work. , A man needs a sharp knife | and the wood of his choice:’The ‘countryman prefers straight- grained, soft white pine. A per- 'iod- of leisurely non-.purposeful whittling does something for a Speaking the other dav in- Mon: risen about 10 pef cent this month | ‘ peas as : : adjustments Counselig: should at boys hittled implements; man. It calms and relaxes; it Ste 7 ; wat ai . s Fest é A \ % " ; y home and farm use. In cab- i : “7 treal; Canadian Prime Minister Lester presumably to “siphon-off ae : OTTAWA REPORT. By Patrick Nicholson __ ee ae ic a shore aia a —_ lins x be rootianal, craftsmen: ‘wa a ie a inane = Pearson was reported as saying that | power. This, at a tinié when labor is ON: ft . ace a the job properly. In ‘the past, | TAC@ DOw™ and plates, qpoona ‘sions. and frustrations. +~ Commonwealth survival depends on | contending that its purchasing power . Dishari nony tn Libera | Financial Circles @7> '|-this task frequently was left to Ao tee ta ae a ee oe aa pat tee Se cg «) the death of white supremacy in Rhodesia.-Members. in Africa _ and ~Asia, he said, would not stand for any- .thing less. than an early change. of major’.y rule by native Rhodesians. is not. sufficient to meet. its obliga- tions.* Whatever ‘the cause, it threatens a long. sumer of uncontrolled ‘ strife unless prompt measures are labor | “And the Lord saéd, ‘Let us-go {form of equity investments, ra- forced by our government, to down “there--and;;-confound their ther than- bonds: USA opened — sell. -----—- - language, that they may not up its west, building it8*mass- understand one. another's ive railroad network? largely by speech’, . therefore is the borrowing capital from Britain name of it ‘Called Babel; ~~ in the form of bonds-- likea mort- I asked Walter Gord what he thinks of the babel of duiber- al: voices.on. this, point. *. “Some people say I am a pes- / some old bachelor with warped | ..., of--modesty..whenever-..questions ideas, on sex. Meanwhile, par- shovels: and-pitchforks, ents must do everything to. co | ‘There is another kind. of. whit- operate by discussing the sub- tling— the kind we need today. vi hanging harness and fashioned. | | spective returning. it might be | helpful if our law. makers would ‘take’ up whittling, and after a }session of oratory would adjourn ject honestly and with a sense. That is whittling for whittling’s ‘are asked. In this way the child _ “He conceded that economic sanctions taken to deal with the situation. ’ “As it was in Babylonia accord- ing, to the Book of Genesis, so it gagé.. Canada, in contrast, has — - Obtained development capital” by. simist and Sharp is an optim- | ist," he smiled. ‘“‘They say I. learns to accept sex in a whole- some and natural way. _ Medite \for-an hour while they witittled. against the Smith regime had not. "wap Td — “is today inthe financial circles selling. equity” ownership ~ of our orelga investor — as as quickly * expected— World Arms Cost of the Liberal party. They: all plants: and mines our oi] wells panei. a Sharp otters it: |'+ < STORING VITAMINS Winnipeg Free Pree ee 3 , speak different languages. Wal-- and forests. incentives.” E. L.- writes: We keep our | . When; in the early ‘fifties, the! The problem {s no. longer one “there have. been leaks, especially oil In preparation for the resumption ‘ter Gordon, former. Minister of ‘_leaks”—but the sanctions had been ef- | of the 17-nation disarmament confer. | Cee aes ove te nee arti ao neces of ‘his Willing to sell them to foreign- Keep them from sticking togeth- tain to evacuate its bases in the | leadership of the Arab world, or ..-fective enough. to _spur talk between. |" ence” at Geneva this” month, the,-|- ence;--Mitchell--Sharp, present —land~instead of borrowing from-- ©. tr Someone suggested that this-/ Sec ‘a8! to-avow—the——Arab--even-- President Nasser’s-— ambi ~ "Rhodesia se Brat “an encourag- | United States Arms Control and Dis- | Minister of Finance, coos the the bank against a mortgage on “‘Ceriainly. We could and we Will Kill or weaken the potency |nations to become wholly inde- tion to revive the Saladin | : ere . : game -siren song pianissimo; his farm. One can pay off a should raise capital abroad in . .the vitamins. Is this true? | penser and masters of their | empire of yore, an empire stret- ing development.” A Wie ca armament Agent has been at work on | Bob Winters, Minister of foreign pond” or mortgage out of future «the form of bonds, which we.can | _ REPLY lobe ee uae a those | ching from the Persian Gulf to iz ——————Pris-was-putting: the best face one- some-statistics—They—are-of-concern— sleep--while-calling-a—welcome-to—profits;Canadians—-can-—-never-repay-rather-than-in-the form-of ;Vitamins--should-be—kept-in-a-” o._ claimed. nature abhor- | the shores_of_.the-Atlanti-.in. foreign investors. buy back our equities unless equities which give foreigners cool dry environment The re- Ted @ vacuum. The Arab na- | North Africa. What we have done is like. a “But bonds - would you be vitamins: in the refrigerator to United States was pressing Bri- | of inter-Arab rivalry for the _ could on the matter, but it is not. likely to placate the~black “African” “governments, whose-angry mood. was accentuated last week when an Afri- can proposal that the sanctions be ~ backed by force, if necessary, was de- feated. within the UN _ Security Council. What galls most Africans is that to. all of us on this planet, though we found them buried ‘under’ a ‘single column heading-on.an-inside-page-of- the New York Times, and unnoted al- together by most news sources. The - , figures had to do with what the na- tions of the world Spent in 1964 on defense. They add up to a $130 billion, which if divided among | ‘total- of Vote Liberal, the holders are willing, or are you oe for? te imate | sue eee lee a ea . no ly free Canada, but with a tem- [~~~ . Fame d “AY d | porarily tightened belt today, | Loses Fame A pen IX: | which is Gordon's target? Lux: | National Geographic Society — 2 and . which of are control of our businesses.’ urious slavery in bondage to | | frigerator is an excellent place | tions, it was said, were not. cap- provided. thebottle._ is —capped.iPble-of keeping a big power out. and contains cotton. Soa Ok Bigg Aathpaniifon vital lands pie -and, uilless-another friendly po- COFFEE “STIMULATING "| wer moved in, the former Bri vish bases would: soon. be occup- stant_.coffee. I'vé been told that Gabitecen.eaetacatetonas | Today the strife has become | mastery -of- the Mediterranean | and of the ancient communica- tion routes: between Europe and Asia and Africa. . rranean Rivalry -agreat.power struggle for. the _ the Yanks, which would result |*from the icy. grip of Winters? ‘+ Or Sharp’s don-care pill, which “would lead us anaesthetized in- to economie—union with the One of the: world’s most fam- .oug appendixes has just, been MONEE cg It tsqt@-"General: Appendix. to bur Wright reported on his ex- periments in flight. In 1911 Mar- ~ coni told how he. transmitted | messages over long distances | this is not healthy. Can it cause Some ill effect? ..- : REPLY — “Too much coffed, regular. or \the Afinual Report of the Smith- by wireless. In 1938 Lord Ruth- | instant, may overstimulate the { : /sonian Institution. Consisting of “erford recorded the siccessful nervous and vascular system. | “This now appears to have ha- | NOW ‘CHALLENGED | pened. The Soviet Union seems ‘The United States has main- to: have obtained a naval base | tained this mastery, with her Six- in Egypt—in the Ras Banias | fh Fleet. This has yow been | area on the Red Sea— and this'| chalienged by the Soviet Union. z : eg: : * . USA? . 2 i ect i | - : “ i : - South Africa is aiding the Smith ré- | the world population would come to | USA’ deka Ga cs a wide variety of scientific ar- transmutation of ome element | Instant coffee is a dehydrated | Yay eive, her # ,Strome say in it is a Classical Dower srnael op fime—and the. West,.withits.impor-.|. more than $40 for every man, woman. 4 ..Beonemie:-union—-sounds.-a-t-_iti¢les. it hasbeen an admired into another. In 1964 Carol Sag- : product. The ingredients remain | fairs of 9 closed. sea. whose.-much more than—a convenient | tant economic stakes in that country, | and child. selena AE weal be div: aqubl Lene TE TOES Re We even Sheouah: he Water Sas been ‘mastery Churchill deemed indis- pawn. Unfortunately, it is a ; ~~ ' : i USA’ wi ci : : : Temov asa | 3 ; = ‘ The -s “ _ | and’ USA. But with only us’) : ss ; eet | : : pensable to the freedom of the | struggle that is not wholly irre- does not seem disposed to go after the e tudy Stressed the “fr: agmen two in it, it would have the equa- Surgery was vital. Even with: | PROPHESIED FLIGHT |. PRESSURE AND KIDNEYS Western world. ~ levant even in the days of inter- _ Verwoerd government: The result is tary nature” of some of: the source: out the Append ix, the latest | The Appendix has proved as- | R.-N. writes: Does high blood continental: missiles. aBy ot DUAR Docoemadt ; Aa Smithsonian administrative re- tonishingly prophetic. In 1897 |SOPPORTING EGYPT se : a heightening of anti-Western feeling; materials that were used. The totals, | ee oie one berte (0000 i catt-rune 400 pages. In- the 1964 Sammel Pierpont Langle6 told | Pressure cause..,‘nflammation Moreover, thé Soviet Union | and an opportunity ‘for the Soviet | nevertheless, indicate an increase in This economic choice should FePrt, the Appendix alone ran how he began trying” to learn” ef the TT iy ance Te ae to a === WO-DRO ———- : Union to champion the African cause. | global defense spending since United | bethe subject of a great debate | Oe oni Be NE ines eater ane Wantteeaia | No, but wher! hypertension has.| the base of -Aden,-which Britain | ARNPRIOR, Ont. (eR) — GO- ; | in Parliament, instead of the | oper ee coe lcondor, and an albatross. ‘existed over a period of~—years | is scheduled to evacuate by.1968. |bert Redard, 21, of Cafumet Is- ~~. end-the bitter conflict. According ‘to It all depends now on what negotiat- ed settlement Mr. Wilson can make to British ‘sources, he still insists on Nations specialists - estimated it at. $120 billion in 1962. It was n world expenditures for publ tion amounted. to only two- oted that ie educa-~ thirds of | heard there. It has n high- {al Appendix,’’ the Institution: an- os ' lighted . fg the publican ° ‘acaba, “according to present A later Langley. experiment, |. Walter. Gordon's .new.book,..‘‘A. plans, will be met by an annual [this time with a flying machine /. Choice for. Canada.” It’s too | Volume in the nature of a Smith- on the Potomac River, was wit- | bad’that its millionaire - author Sonian yearbook, an--anthology nessed by Alexander Graham | permits the paperback edition of distinguished and*‘important |Bell, whose description also ap- ‘the blood vessels of the kidneys | become hardened, interfering ~ with -the-function--of-—these-or- If the Soviet Union should ob- tain facilities here as well, she ~-would-have-secured- considerable. | edvantages in the oil-~ bearing. rhil- the outlays-for-defense-in-1964, and guarantees that Rhodesia’s four The’ gans set TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— * Proper humidity aids nose and _-wue-.the-price for Rhodesian independence Bac <* lion Africans would be:moved rapidly toward: political equality with the dominant 220,000 whites. That “was the Smith regime refused to pay _.when_ it proclaimed the colony in- that public education and h ‘penditures. combined. fell $ short of the defense figures. The United States and t Union. together. accounted f $90 billion or close to: two- ealth ex- 5 ‘billion anny, thirds of in soft ‘covers, for 35 cents. Then every Canadian could read it, | as we all should. } ‘ pressing their conflicting view- _| . The publication of that book: “| was” followed “by major speech ; es by Sharp. and Winters ex- | | to cost $1.95. A mere 125 pages, contributions to the sciences and ‘pears in the 1897 report.” it should be marketed, like sex |the arts written by authorities telephone inventor one who was present on this in- |: in their fields and presented for the general reader.” » The Appendix was instituted only three years after the Smith- -+sonian—.Institution - was-- founded- lin 1846. The Institution's first” secretary, Joseph Henry, decid-, said: “No teresting occasion. could have failed to recognize “that the practicability of chanical flight--haddeeen..demonstrated.” In the 1940 Appendix physic- | ist Karl K. Darrow’ discussed ' throat discomfort. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr, Van - Dellen should be addretsed ‘to: Er. Theodore - _ Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- ed,that.the Annual Report offer-_.the.little-known..subject..of. nuc- jo. 00000004 | regions of the Persian Gulf and | in the Indian Ocean in general. This- is the ba to | Washington’s preoccupation with | the threatening conflict between | Saudi Arabia, an ally of the | United States, and Egypt, ba Led by the Soviet Union. -_- ck- ~4 Neither~could’ swim. land and ‘Rosario: Belair, 29,. of ‘Fort Coulonge,..Que., drowned in the Ottawa River Thursday when they fell” out” of a 30-foot™ jrow boat.on their way to. work. Both men were employed by the Upper Ottawa Valley Improve- ment Co. Four other men in the boat said one of the two victims fell overboard. The other dropped into the water’ when he tried to save the first man. eveloped countries were’ found to | compromise on that issue now? With | a the resumption of the talks in Salis- | have spent roughly $16 billion on de- bury, we may get an answer to this _ fense in 1964, or about 12 per cent of question very soon. 1 ek total. All available evidence in- ' . | dicated that the poorer lands are in- Need: For Statesmanship "| creasing their defense expenditures ‘Monday, June 6, will be the 75th at a faster rate than the economically anniversary of the death of Sir John developed nations. Some of. the -less | =A, Macdonald,-and-the-occasion is 'ap- | advanced countries-alloeate “unusual-— priate on which to contrast the Can: |. ly large. shares” of their resources toe ..ada of 1891 with that.of-1966, and to defense, leaving “relatively little” ‘fors point. out the tremendous strides we. | investment. in development. Indo- “lave made-as-a-nation in the-space of—|- nesia,- Jordan—and-Syria -were—listed-— — ms, which J a vag S| _ Important ét so of.a ‘hospital. in Poland. Comin i SiREEOL Ebene, ch Rom: 80 | tators stood by while the ‘potrd was gieiper tant saeinenet F Gethe PrEMGAHt JONBGON hie ReORbS: ora” and aOGUIRE SO WME OF ya icluding complimentary equally attractive. Call CN large “inour minds. today. Many of drai ied and the nionster broughy to alicl, ‘hitherto an. almost: um- ed’ using -some of the ‘creign newspapers. Then. she found. about the Red, White and Blue Fare Pian - bitiat —_—them—aré—old problems—which—have ——tetir TT -fturned Out.to be a big bull- known Apocryphal work, was furds for binationalT foundations. that : nobody - seemed to want (ern: “ g “fod “in an ‘ethiopian’ ~“marfus* dedicated-to~ health -and--educa-* them, ~although > old newsprint 75 years. : A correspondent recalls, in this. connection, that only .a few months ‘after Macddnald died Wilfrid Laurier, then leader. of the Opposition, had ed | this to say in a letter to his. friend ; _ Edward Blake: “We have come to a it! EDITO IAL.NOTES ey period in the history of this country | Now it’s Rocky:Point that threat- | ‘ when premature dissolution’seems to | €nS. to shipwreck Liberal hopes. of in this category. A costly business indeed, with no “end insight despite the palaver that will be resumed at Geneva on. June 14, “about it and about.” come? How long can the fabric last?) | Seems that something went. wrong | -Can it last at all? All these are-quest- | With the navigational instruments _ tions which surge in-my. mind-and to there, ‘or the natives, were hostile.. In which. dismal-answers—suggest them-——any-case-we-won-t Know-until the of “our dependence upon massive imports of -forei - capital.’’* | Bob Winters says ‘‘we can’t pe- | nalize those foreigriérs who will and can buy €danadian stocks.’’ But’ Walter. Gordon has had a lifetime experience of business and finance, such as neither of his fellow privy councillors have | This| makes the ‘subtle distine- ; tion, -with- his expertise, ‘Gor- don—hits-the—nail--on--the—head:— “We should--encourage~ more--of the foreign “capital we need come ‘inthe form of borrowings which , We can. pay. back ~some day.” , were Canada‘ has” achieved’ many “firsts, ~but—this-one—tas—been— a disaster. We are the first de- veloping country to admit” the needed foreign capital in the Our Yesterdays . (From The Guardian 8) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (Jume 3, 1941) Lord soirces statéd a-colabor- ation agreement between. Vice SIE em “heat hand What w Will Bea i e “Oot makin oper ir Morday's “election ttn E se | Premier. AdmiralJean:-Darlan,. of France, and -Hitler provid for the joint French- German Jise of six French naval bases. The Belgian and Greek minis- ioters. to. Moscow..-looked—to...the... “United States fdr haven and the |porting on progress in science. sion produces an ‘‘amazing’’ re- | LINCOLN WAS SKEPTICAL lease of energy and that it oc- | The: usefulness ofthe articles. curs when a slow neutron col- was not immediately clear to lides with a uranium nucleus. practical men. But one—early Fission produces more. neutrons skeptic, Abraham Lincoln, even- he said, and this presumably tually changed his mind. ‘I had could produce more- fission “'so. yan impression," he said, ‘‘that that a whole massive piece of : ‘the Smithsonian was print -might blow up in a sud- ‘great. amount of useless infor-. den explosion of . unparalleled ‘mation, Professor Henry “has | fury touched off by so seemingly + t ‘conviaaced me of my, error.”’ Though an afterthought, the Appendix ci#m@ to bulk larger than the report itself and he- came a running history. of scien- tifie progress. In the 1897 Appen- rdix,—a—reader—can..find- Wilhelm Roentgen’s own account of his ‘\discovery. of X-rays. In 1902 Wil- z 3 Too Th icaade Gare | The United States has more money than it knows’ what to do ;with— foreign money, ‘that is. !We had acquired $2,877,697,422- in rupees, kyats, dinars, zlotys and.other.-foreign currencies. as. lof the end of last year, largely” {through the sale of surplus com- | modities. : | Some. of this other govetn- ment can spend. for itsgpwn- piir- poses— _experise ‘6f running’ .em- ported ‘‘lively interest’ in the possibility of extracting energy > Many Zlo Milwaukee Journal innocent an event as the ehtry | of a single neutron.”-~~ -In 1941 ‘Ernest Lawrence re- from atoms. Then, for tnstated _reasons, the Appendix dropped jthe topic. A~ few years; later = ‘everybody knew why. NS ‘ting aside- $300 million In rupees for an Indo-United -States edu- = cational foundation. - As usual, of course, some In- dians are suspicious. They . see this. as American ip ren with Seater eduestick top government officials and any educators have greeted the plan parmly. i a The currencies are~a problem -to--the —eountries.-in._which.we hold them as well asyto us. If et alif Cor | -Charlottetown to: | — Montreal $1 ~.. Moncton _ ax se % ner Brook $17.50 _- P-5-114N 7.00 ~~ loncton ss $ 3.80 -SaintJohn $ 590 ~— : -~ 5 te od i : ; ; te mg ; ‘ bassies, etc; But in. somecases selves."’ This sounds pit like the - figial. tally Is complete, so we'd better = Yugoslav minister headed for we have much more ‘than -We they were suddenly put into cir- : ty scone ' : dire predictions heard'in some quar- Settle.ar Ives ino ay British: mandated Palestine in can use. And ity some cases ‘the culation they could affect ec- i : to row es i 4 OO. : ‘ ; p q urseives in our seats and wait. money 18 by seteement, no} onomices and politics of 1 eee oron ca 2 s “, ' * * * 2 ters today. Yet five years later, in Firemen-drained a pond near Milan, 1896, Laurier-became Prime Minister, with Soviet's decision depriving them of diplomatic status, : «available “for. our tise’ > on q \permission of the country eqn ep BA $586, 200,000 is available for, our ~ Congressional » Quarterly. points out. that. many. countries would Winnipeg _ « $39.00 | x TEN AGO _—s{cerned. like: us to keep the currencie and by putting flesh and blood. on Italy, the other day to find the “bel- ean Tqnt 3 Seseees "| We. Tiave $1,813,200,000 gérth from ‘eirediation. tee ‘ Macdonald’s national poliey, faunched —_lowitig monster’ that-residents of the The Queen and the Bute of .of rupees in “ndia;~ of which ©——————_ 3. aboard” : Canada into»a new era of progress ‘and prosperity: : It is helpful to reflection this achievement as. we grapple with our suburb were complaining about. The creaturé living there, whatever it. was, awake for nights. 4,000 curious;sfwe arisen in new forms,’and which the | frog. bee hellawed like an-ox and keptgthem -. sailed” the royal yacht. Britannia for a three-day ‘state. ‘visit’. to Stock- holm. It was. to be the Queen's first wlimpse- of Stockhélm. Edinburgh jscript of; the 15th century, e ll ty an use. We have $492, 800,000 worth of Polish zlotys available for use These-are our largest hold. ings. We . managed vtn. spend some Zlotys building # chitdren’s tion, He recently “sugested set- PROGRAM GETS STUCK - PENTICTON, B.C. (CP) Mrs. H. T. .Schellénberg prgan- ized a newspaper -ollection drive by boy scouts, alr cadets and Little League baseball play- used to fetch $30 a on ’ ‘ e ‘ { oer Vancouver These are examples of CN’s new White PF —~* $62.00 Sleeping car ny Fares