SORE ke a : N.Y. WELCOMES NORWEGIAN SHIP Tugboats race alongside the flagship of the Norwegian Am- MS Sagatjord, 21,000-ton new _ erican Lines, as it passes the ‘HOSPITAL SERVICES P.E.I. residents who expect [a in ANOTHER PROVINCE OR Y should have a local phy-. sician submit an application to the Hos- Pe For detailed information regarding extent of responsibility, types of trgatment covered, ete: contact . Hospital Services Commission of P.E.1. ~ P.O. Box 4500 : Charlottetown, P.E.I. Phone 892-1211 HERE'S ALL YOU DO! When you open a bottle of Teem, lift the cork liner and look for one dollar printed on the metal cap. When you find one, take it to.your dealer, answer a skill testing question Correctly and you are a winner! TORONTO (CP) — A disincli- . C. BARWISE i -Phone 4-4316 RY ly G Houses Warm ups = -to- SHELL AN PHONE TODAY FOR YOUR FALL FILL-UP R. C. BARWISE Dial 4-4316 RULES: 1. This contest Is open to all residents of Canada except the employees _ and immediate families of Pepsi-Cola Canada Ltd., its. franchised Bottlers, and its Advertising Agency. 2. Cola Canada .Ltd., and/or its franchised Bottlers., rights to printed or broadcast publicity should they be winners. No entries will be returned, nor will correspondence be exchanged other than with ‘the winners. . 3 This contest is subject to ali applicable Federal and Provincial laws. BOTTLED ON PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BY oe BEV ERAGES ee @ WATER STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN : 3 eer Failure To Teach French Is Delaying Bilingualism | Mr. Peters said he was tre- encouraged at the ment in expanding the teaching | of French in elementary and SECOND SECTION ondary schools. Noting that a friend in the au- Development jence was fluent in five lan- ary Mr. Peters asked | Said Needed “What is wrong with us in Can- ada that’ s0 many of us camot In Luna Probe even talk two?” Marcel Gingras, parliamen-| ywoscow ~(AP)—The Soviet Droit, said French - Canadians |7 carried out most of the pre- jwant to be assured the- same | liminaries for a ‘‘soft”’ rights in English-speaking Can- on the moon before it crashed ada as an English - Canadian | into the lunar surface. would be\assured in Quebec. | If the mney. em, cnet unin he Soyo Ue country, as some claimed, aoe the Soviet Union melted in the huge Anglo-Saxon pot. Giving a reverse: view, Charles Lynch, chief of the Southam News Service, said he has never felt out of place ir | , even in areas that arc | almost entirely French - speak- ing Ontario, and Quebec share the | same cultural aspirations he | said. The idea that there was a distinctive culture. ._. LIST OLD METHODS : |Tied out in accordance with the ORILLIA, Ont (CP) — | program - and-—-new — additional Dragon's blood, skunk cabbage | Gevelopmen fra squaw guaranteed States, the end root ‘are Soviet- Union hopes to land a to cure aches and pains accord-| man on the moon no later than ing to an old medical book! 1970. owned by pharmacist — The Jodrell Bank observatory Wright. Printed in 1912, the|‘" England reporte ak i hain’ thal ‘ | rockets meant to slow down Entries and contents thereof become the exclusive property of Pepsi- MOTOR REWINDING ea Storey Electric Ltd. Russians Say Comet To Hit Sun On Oct. 21 “We shall be able to make eu- tirely novel observations. Even if the comet merely grazes the surface of the Sun, it will dis- integrate, and astronomers will see physical and chemical proc- esses never before observed by researchers. some operations were not car-. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" ' Charlottetown, Wed., Oct. 13, 1965.. a NEGROES DASH 4 TO SCHOOL BUSES Georgia State Trooper holds echool buses in Crawtfordhlle, Negroes_ are. Negro girl as other Negroes make a dash to board white By GRANVELLE J. WATTS LONDON (AP)—Prime Minis- ter Ian Smith of Rhodesia had one thing in his favor while ne- gotiating with the British gov- ernment in London. He ap- peared almost more British than his hosts in his manner- ' House of Fashion Water St. Summerside oy | YS TO *LAYAWAY * CHARGE ¢ MONTHLY PAYMENTS *CASH A Smal! Deposit Holds Ht Easy Layaway Terms! me dR. BOURGEOIS PRES 49 a AA Entrants waive all y MacKENZIE’S © so Ssaeee nf ey VINA eae eke Sales Dates at ee a ‘ lformed the Rhodesian Front Ga. due to a skin-grafting operation for injuries suffered when he| Africa was shot down in the war. Smith is Rhodesia’s first , In 1961, he walked out as whip of Prime Minister Sir Roy Welensky’s Federal party. Smith was protesting against favored the Negro majority. With other dissidents, he party and it swept to power in 1962. British-born Winston Field became prime minister. In 1964, Smith replaced Field | as prime minister. The 1961 con- stitution, which ensures white minority rule for an indefinite period, tronically became the cornerstone of his racial poli- cies. Since then”he has repeatedly said that “if we ever have an ‘| African majority in this coun- , |Tv, we shall have failed in our policy of trying to make a place for the white man.” MANY STRONG TIES South Africa are numerous. Apart from his education there, he married a South Af- rican girl, Janet. One of his three children, a 21 - year - old “JACKETS W) Toe oe 7S (oy sae | mcluding SHOW SELF - SERVICE Laundry & Drycleaning @ Economical @ Easy and speedy @ Visit our Car Wash alse S&M St.. Ch’town Che Guardian Rhodesian Prime Minister Is British In Mannerisms avers: is a student in South And Smith has refused’ in’ the “No African (Negro) rule in lifetime,”” he once eaid. “The white man is the master of Rhodesia, has built it and in- the | political dealings, -|the Front and in international affairs, Steel has shown in all Smith’s i both within It was much in evidence at the last Rhodesian Front con- gress when party extremists, whose campaign to push Smith into a unilateral declaration of independence had failed--miser< ably in private session, were baying for blood during a de bate on a proposed multi-racial teaching hospital in Salisbury. Smith, with a two - minute quiet speech on “‘irresponsibil- ity,”” not only silenced the crit- @ few constitution that he felt (ics but forced public withdrawal of a hostile motion. In London Satusday he aban- doned everything te watch. a Puy match in the London sub- of Twickenham,’ home: of the sport. & : He has a daughter, 21, and /“ two sons, 18 and 20 His wife Janet says he is no heavy- — father laying down the aw. QUIET AT HOME The links between Smith and | Said Mrs. Smith: ‘We all |have our own ideas but the | ideas of each one are respected. |Everyone is able to speak -here and will listen to each other. |I have never heard Ian swear |or seen -him lose his temper. He is a ver, qujet- man, not at all a showman, but morally fear- less. “He has been called dour and |domineering, and this is all completely wrong. He's a very reasonable man, with a tremen- dous sense of humor... ” Mrs Smith is a loyal ‘wife. Smith’s opponents will go on calling him dour and domineer- ing for a long time yet. MUST LIKE CLIMATE About half the world’s popu- lation___of 100,000,000 buffaloes live in India. MORTGAGES— | We have a market for loans on dwellings, in } Charlottetown and Summerside and in other towns at higher rates. perties up to $25,000. HYNDMAN += MORTGAGE AND INSURANCE BROKERS 57 Lower Queen St. . We can provide mortgages on commercial pro- Second mortgages on dwellings and certain other classes are also available. & CO. LTD.