tetiee ‘ Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edviard Island Like The Dew ‘ W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward ~ | Managing Editor : Editor 'Pulstished every week. déy morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown,P:E.!.,-bv Thomson Newspapers Ltd- Branch offices .at Summerside; Montague, Alberfon and Souris -- Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising” Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. ire—3-8894;—Montreal 640 Cathcart Street, Uni versity 6-5942Z; Western Office 1030_West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. : : as Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers 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 and also the loca’ news published herein. All “Fight or republication of special-dismatches here . In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail. on rural routes and areas not serviced by cafNer- $15.00 a yearapff Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in (1.5; and elsewhere outside British Com: monwealth. 4) Neo ever 7e single copy- Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The strongest memory -is weaker, | : than the weakest. ink” PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1966. Washington Reaction US. Defense Secretary M¢Namara’s “+ school buses. | | Spesch in” Montreal last “Week con- | “That's "a pretty impressive achiever tinues to provoke widespread com- ‘ment. According to a~ Washington- correspondent, not for years has a single address made such a profound impact there. Here was a_man in charge of the nation’s bombs and military manpower striking out with the kind of speech that Washington: is accustomed to hearing -only from a president or a secretary of state. Reaching far beyond purely military matters, Mr. McNamara built his theme. on the «Statement that “a nation can reach the point at which it does not buy “more security: for itself simply by buying more military hard- ware—we are at that point.” Startling foreign-policy officials . with his bluntnéss, he equated “sec- - urity” not with arms but with “‘de- velopment” in developing countries, | ‘urged more joint gctions-between na-- tions to preserve peace, and advocat- ed.eloser ties with Peking in language indicating considerable disapproval of- current: official policies. Nothing he said, apparently, differed much from what he has been saying privately for months; but this wasn’t a private oc- casion, and he appears to have put himself squarely behind the academic critics of the State Department’s » China policies by saying that “‘breach- ing the isolation” of Commynist_| China “reduces the danger-of poten- tially catastrophic misunderstanding ... ” The United States, he added, “properly ‘balanced trade relations, ' diplomatic contacts, and in some cases, even by exchanges of military __ observers.” As soon as Mr. McNamara’s words began flashing around the world, spectilation started. Did they herald a change in. the-government’s China policy? Were they directly inspired by President Johnson, and did they mean-a-dilution-of the influence of | - Secretary of State Dean Rusk? The answers, of course, can only be speculative. The Montreal_speech is significant, at any rate, of Mr. Mc- Namara’s awareness of the link be- tween economic backwardness and violence—of the growing gap be- tween the “haves” and the ‘have nots” in the world, the peril it poses for the United States and the fact that the most powerful nation in the free world can-no-longer--hope-to..be—|— secure just by building up its armed forces. Of his awareness, too, that it ‘must work out ways to let Western Europe share in nuclear weapon plan- ning, work hard for a non-prolifera- tion agreement, and—“‘build-bridges” to the Communist east, “both in Europe and Asia . “Such a thoughtful and reasoned analysis of global politics from a | ie | f | } | | L | | -+-eame-to power—the-provinte's. share_ | of the cost of general educatio ) was | $12,838,000 and the municipalities’ Pe . terpart in New Brunswick. Yet New | | | | tunately this government: has Cabinet™ officer would inevitably., " arouse interest,” says one Washing- ton commentator. “When it comes from the Secretary of Defense, it produces frank amazement.”".~ . - : F More For Education. : ~~One of the-claims-advanced -by.-the~ 7} Liberals ‘in this election campaign is that the Tories are not doing-enough for education. The Tories themselves, in effect, say the same thing, and have announced that with increased grants from Ottawa they propose to do*much ‘more during the coming year. They propose: among other things, to pay : __a grant to St. Dunstan’s and Prince of Wales equal-to $300 for each student, plus. a development grant “of- $125,- 000 to Prince“of Wales;'to. pay ap- proximately half a million. dollars in equalization grants to--regional, consolidated and elementary ‘school districts, as against $35,000 in 1959; . to increase from $6,000 to $10,000 -the-capital_construction grants per __ élassroom. for ‘Consolidated schools and extend the grants under the xural | | since taking office, can point to the. Association and The Canadian. Press. The Canadian construction of 15 | the next school year, and to have paid ~ ’ e regional high school program to in- | cclude @harlottetown, Summerside and*elementary. schools; also to em- wo bark on an extensive scheme to ex- Frank Walker —|_ i pand-the numbers of trained man- power available for the Island’s basie | resources.’ ne The Liberals-claim-this is-a-death-, bed repentence on the part of a do- nothing government; but they find ‘it fact tHat .the’ government already, regional high « schools at a cost of $4,884,000; of five new consolidated schools byilt or under way, at-a-cost of over a-million | E dollars,with tenders now being called for a sixth; of an increase in scltool books subsidy from 340,000 in 1958 to $200,000 in 1966. The. Tories also claim to have more than tripled‘ the total grants to teachers, from little over_a million dollars in the last year of Liberal rule to over$2,600,000 for | over $214,000 in capital grants to school boards since 1962, to obtain ment; but the Liberals, while modest- ly refraining from citing their own “past record, claim it isn’t,nearly good enough. Meanwhile we note that-in New Brurswick a similar argument is going on, though with the roles re- versed.-There the Tory opposition. is denouncing the Liberals for raking in millions of additional dollars in grants from Ottawa, while dumping more and more of the’cost of educa- tion on the municipalities. Specifical- ly it is charged that while th 1960-— the year the Robichaud government ~ share $19,299,013, by 1965—with education-costs continuing to soar— “ the province’s share had actually dropped while the municipalities’ share had .fumped more. .than $10,000,000. s Qur municipalities here deserve a . better deal, too; and the government. ‘is at least making an effort to cope with the problem. Certainly it ap- pears to be setting a better example . in this regard than its-Liberal coun- Brunswick was among the provinces cited in the local Liberal manifesto as making much better use of federal funds, educationally :and_ otherwise, than we are doing here!-Could it be a- case of distant pastures looking greener, or what? oa ents pel fo : 2 ~ Of Wide Concern There will be general concern over the strike of 60,000 British merchant navy seaman which has forced the Labor government to declare a state of emergency. It is no business of Canadians, of course, to advise the British how to settle an affair of this - kind. It can only be hoped that every- body concerned, government, union and employers, will yield a little. For when the world’s largest merchant fleet is struck, the whole trading world suffers in some degree: , As the Vancouver Sun says in this ~ connection, the strike could have a crippling effect on Anglo-Canadian trade. In days or weeks the wheat farmers of Saskatchewan, as well as the lumber .shippers~of British Col- umbia, could be feeling the pinch. For Britain itself the strike could not come at a worse tine. By the nature of things the mer- chant navy strike’ is a strike against | the state, and the state in this case is | represented by a government which, ordinarily, would-be expected to be a — .defender of union principles. Unfor- | also laid down stringent guidelines forall, sectors of the nation to follow on the road to ecénonfic recovery. Its in- comes policy, carefully thought out, calls for wage increases of not mére than three per~cent-annually..The- seamen’s demand of an equivalent of 17 per cent can-only be regardéd: as a direct challenge to this policy. Public resentment is bound to | mount but a lot.of Britons will not. be ‘disposed to forget that the merchant navy gallantly sustained heavy sacri- ‘fices to serve the nation if wartime: |: There are some. and not all on the | ~ status thev: deserve All | use every endeavor.to effect a com- “promise. ae ee | | left wing of the Labor party, who feel the seamen have received, is peace- time, neither the recognition nor the | hthe more rea- | son, of course, for the occurs oti to | } EDITORIAL NOTE *: A warning. has. heen sounded that Greece’s treasured Acropolis is’ de- saying dangerously andes in need of | attention. That's the way with those. | structures built in.ages that lacked: | our scientific skill and. know-how. “Only 2,500 vears ald and it’s breaking’ down already’ ; hard to reconcile this charge with the | | ~ ¢ "LOBSTER BOATS AT ALBERTON | Allopurinol : | And Gout | By Dr. Théodore R. Van Dellen Good reports continue to ap- af mept of gout. We hope that the new remedy -will-be-available in this country by the time this ar- ticle appears. :In many patients. ¢ | Pear on allopurinol in the: tréat-“}~~ 4 & NOTES BY THE WAY. While other wages seem-to go, The part most women don't up and up, the wages of sin con- | like about parking is the nolsy tinue on the same old scale: —— | crash.—Calgary Herald. ; Lake Geneva "News. pete “~y : ras |. If you give some women The New York .police- are hunt- | pg for a famous New York beauty who has disappeared, We Suggest that perhaps she wash- | Lenough rope, they'll hang anoth- °- er clothesline.in the bathroo — Plymouth Review. , with, severe gout, the level of: : ; uri¢ acid. in the blood fell. within eee oft.— Niagara Falls Re- two-to-three-days-and—was-with-—— in normal range seven to 10.!— On.,the ship’ going to Europe | |days after starting the drug. ; hh gout the bod is unable. to | mmer one of the officers handle certain protein- type 8°! angry about something, | “|foods which are high in:purine: TUShed to the speaking tube and | As a result, one .of the waste | Yelled to one’ of the men below: | products from this protein (uric “IS there ‘a blithering idiot at« acid) accumulates in the blood-. the end of this tube?” “‘Not at uric acid prefers joints especial- stream and body tissues. The this end, sir,” came the calm | ¥ ly those at the base of the big toe -which becomes swollen, red,.and extremely tender -to the | touch. : |...We have medications that re- lieve pain (colchicine) and drugs such as probenecid that stimul- | ate the kidneys to filter Out and . hasten removal of —-urie —acie from the bloéd:-The alterrative | reply.—Moptreal Star. A man who shouted ‘‘Free Viet Nam” as President Lyn- don Johnson rose to deliver a speech in New York was se n- tenced to 60 days in jail this week for interrupting a- lawful ing ~*-ant—resisting —-arrest. Ihe judge told him he had ‘no right to interrupt the meeting. is is to avoid foods that are rich-in | purines, such as meats, fi'sh, What was the occasion? a din- whole wheat cereals, beans, as- | & at which Mr. Jehnson Tocely ri paragus, rich pies and cakes, | ©4 & 1966 Freedom Award alcohol, and cocoa. : | There is a time and place for “Allopurinol shas—a—unique—ae-, everything.—Toronto Globe and —}tion-in-that-it—bloeks—the—finalMail. coe “OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Shall We Leave It:To Our Children? - Pollution is.one..f the great- est problems facing Canada to- day. Yet pollution, like'USA con- trol of our industry, urban rede- velopment, and a national trans- | Portation policy, is an _ issue | whose solution we are doing no- thing about. It is a heavy addi- tion to the-legacy of expense and = trouble which we are seeming- ly quite content to leave to our children. tes The urgency to halt pollution was given strong vocal support | and an amusing. new twist by | Health Minister Allan MacEac- hen-in a recéent- speech: “One. of the prime objectives of my Department . of National Health -and- Welfare,” he said, | “is to be aware of potentially harmful factors in our daily con- tacts, and to determine the ef- fects of such environmental fac- tors on the health of people.”” He went on to describe howthreedi- | visions in his department are | concerned with various aspects | of pollution - of water, of air and through ‘environmental ra- || diation. ; Sif { But in the environmental health | _fealm, there is no problem of greater significance than the con- trol and elimination of pollution of our water, he said: ~~ ‘ | THE ALMIGHTY DOLLAR | ‘ The Minister took a hearty | sla0 at commercial interests | which display th> greatest eco- | nomy in their utilisation of our | that business is too cavalier. and | lacking ‘in responsibility in the way it, for instances, dumps com- | mercial waste into our lakes and | rivers without first purifying it. , Why does business do'this? Be- cause it would cost money and | hence reduce profits to | . purification ‘apparatus. . “We as a nation - and this ap- | plies to governments as well as | to individuals, groups and cor- porations - havebeen a little | bit too blase about the corrosive consequences of civilization and progress on many of oir natur--| al resources and amenities. We | are only now beginning to rea- lize that our--great natural ‘re- | sources are exhaustible and, in soine cases, irreplaceable, even 4 | though we perhaps have more of | them than most other countries” I can remember J. W. Mur- phy, M. P. from Sarnia, protest- ing about the then Liberal. go-. | :aimed against pollution of our waters. The failure to act in those“earlier years has aggrava- ted our problems today. A NEW POLLUTION . Allan MacEachen then. refer- red tom"a new type of ~pollu- tion - and I hesitate to suggest what~ the federal - government ‘ean or ,should do about it. * The World ‘Health Organization? calls -it ‘mental pollution’ and warns ,that it may become a_ hazard comparable to air or water pol- lution."’* : a Mental_pollution_he explained is caused in part by the-noise-in big cities, such as: the roar of Moti These motionless ships ity Mon- treal, Three Rivers and Qiebec Yepresent a tragedy. . ; It is not only that the move- | inent of food from Canada _ has | been ‘delayed; and this may | cause suffering in lands close to famine. And it is not just that- cargoes have been delayed, jobs cancelled and .foreign- shipown- ers forced to consider more fe- liable ports elsewhere. tee The basic tragedy is that Can- adian employers and employees | erate heartily in getting down to be have not been able to negotiate ‘a long-lasting, fair agreement to | ensure the-business of transport will proceed confidently. The Shipping Federation of Canada, representative of the employers, asserts that the em- ployees have engaged in illegal strikes and should comply with the law and return to work pending the result of concilia- tion hearings. When the employers. withdrew from. conciliation proceedings, stage of the manufacture of uric |~ ae eNO Ya harmless‘ and®eliminated by’ the | ed | to bring complete relief. In some Pleting their - purchase of_the bors, the bellowing of transistor ™ore responsive to the other The American: bankers’ recol- lection of the same interview, | ; which took place while Mr »Gor- | don was minister of finance, is ‘A Chieago” area Methodist minister—recently told’ us his views on the stain of modern life. ‘‘We’ve become so keyed . up and jumpy.” he s2id, “that it ig almost impussible to put people to sleep, with..a .sermon. “I hdven’t seen anyone sleeping in church in years— and I tell ou that’s a ‘bad _ situation.” Chilton Times-Journal. - It had ‘taken the enfire mor- “ning for Ezra to tow the tour- ists’ car to town. When he final- ly returned home with his weary old mules his wife asked, ‘‘How much did ‘you charge that city fellow. for towin’ him?” “Fifty cents,” Ezra answered, -‘‘Guesg it wasn’t too much. Leastwise, he didn’t kick up no fuss.” “Fif- ty. cents? Ezra, sometimes I -wish—you'd do the pullin’ and Jet them mules handle the. exec- utive end of the deals.’’—Mon- treal Star. nks, Says Gordon Winnipeg Free Press undertaken to purchase the Mer- antile from its Dutch owners. In advocating punitive legisla- - tion wWich would drastically re- strict-Mercantile, Mr. Gordon thus finds himself arguing, in effect, that it may be all. right for Dutchmen to own a Canad- ian bank, but not Americans. This may be perfectly consis- onless Shi Ottawa Journal acid in the body. In other words, | it reduces the formation of the chemical from its immediate xanthine. The latter two are | : kidneys. Mr. Gordon continues to insist | The drug -relieves distréss in that.in 1963 he warned represen- | most of the victims. Now and | tatives of the First National City | then other products are needed Bank of New York against com- instances episodes of acute gou- | Mercantile Bank. a ty arthritis continue for several | weeks, but gradually lessen in | frequency, become milder, and radios - and even the clamour of campaigning politicians. This, he said, is a. novel an interesting way of describing a q gouty arthritis experienced less that the purpose of the meeting | tent with Mr., Gordon's. prejudic- ‘was simply to inform the gov-|es on almost everything else ars are / ernment, as a matter of court-4 American, but it should not be disability.\ Deposits of urate cry- | esy, that the agreement to pur- part of the. policy of a liberal drugs. Those with long standing problem which residents of big Stals under the skin (tophi) be- | chase had° already been com- | government. Cities: have long been -vaguely: ; came. smaller or disappeared.‘In. aware of. ’ “However,” he conclatied, - “Tt doubt whether the term ‘men- ture. employee to stay home from work, it somehow wouldn’t ring right with the boss when - he’s told that-‘Smith-caHed-in--to--say. ‘he is mentally polluted this mor- ‘traffic, the shouting of neigh- ning, and can’t come to work."’ arguing that the employees were engaged in an illegal strike, La- bor Minister Nicholson in Ot- tawa said he was ‘‘very disturb- ed’’ that one party to the pro- ceedings should ‘have with- drawn ; | Rene Lip of Montreal, has | been appointéd-and his first task | is to get the parties to the dis- pute back into negotiation. It is | hoped that both sides will co-op- ithe and wages and finding a reason- | able settlement which will last. Surely it is not too much to | ask that the parties to the dis-. | pute consider the national’ inter- est. To have some 90 vessels idle | at a time when they are needed by Canada and her customers, _means_ great loss in immediate earnings but also, unfortunately in the esteem-in which Canada | has been held as a responsible, | reliable businesslike nation Those Trapped Housewives Brockville Recorder and Times Because it has been. a theory |. trated. They hadn't lost their Id- | | expounded in many, many ,ar- N\} ticles» in .women's magazines, | the so-called “‘trapped wife syn- drome’’ may. have been accept- ed as a trujsm by the more-gul- lible housewives in Canada and » i entity. : . ‘All but one per. cent of. ‘them’ them had been ‘‘fulfilld,”’ 75 per cent-of-them ‘‘perfectly _ sat- | isfied with all aspects of their | lives,’’ and 34 per cent of them | one day ‘be as an excuse for an | t | tal pollution’? has much of-a fu- | a8 beeM& well tolerated and side ‘Legitimate though it may |reactions have been minimal. | - } |.It_is to be hoped~ that Mr. é -pleted.~---——-____—_ caer ego addition, ‘the danger of. kidney- Whether the former minister | Sharp, when he- brings down the stong formation from these cry- : actually warned his American | tew amendments to the Bank stals : Act, does not make the same inistake. ased.-To date the drug , callers is unimportant. The ‘fact remains that_they had already ill lt Be Duller? Mrs. DeK. writes: I am to un- i Kitchener-Waterloo Record Getgo-_raninactive treatment: for bo ; 7 ae a thyroid condition. Will you ex- | Color 4elevision will be legal; Mr. Sinclair thinks television plain how this remedy works? | and_official in Canada next.Oc- | will rely-on the novelty of color . | tober and there is every reason | and forget the program content. : REPLY foe tat + to expect. it will revolutionize the | But he also suggests that view- The- radioactive {odine. ‘settles : _|.er complaint and resistance may 5 hvroi , | industry... in ‘the thyroid’ gland, where it laveutasily force the producer to Some have used the product for. | more than two years. RADIOACTIVE IODINE s _Since then a mediator, Judge | wy sends out rays similar to those |. The ultimate result is a mat- of X-ray or radium. The idea is ; ter of varied opinion.-One worth improve content in the same |to reduce activity of the struc- considering was offered by {ture and force it to behave it- | George G. Sinclair, president of | self. n {the MacLaren Advertising Co. STRETCH MARKS ee of Toronto. S ; ; I. writes: Will massage help , He sald-the changeover to col- ' stretch marks, left afte by -or TV would create 7,000 new lis born? after a babyy sobs and* predicted, in aa ad- REPLY | dress at the University of West- ;ern Ontario, that color set sales These are striae and to my knowledge nothing can be done | would exceed 500,000 in three to eliminate: them: damage |-Y£ars. = . was done when ca ae was Perhaps ‘his most interesting way that the movies finally got around to better pictures after the novelty of sound, color and wide screens was -exhausted. Within 10 years, he said, 90 per’ cent: of Canadian TV view- ers will be watching color pro- grams. Unless the producers heed his warning, the percent-- age of, viewers on the other hand, . may_have declined__ rather than increased nt? ie | stretched during pregnancy. remark was that the increase in OVARIAN TUMOR the use of color will adversely | affect the qualit rograms. | IF IT’S FISH Disregarding arguments that it would be difficult to make the programs any worSe~than ‘they | are, something which. is offered * in casual conversation from } time to time, this is a subject of s. N. ; : How ovarian tumor diagnosed? - : : REPLY : ‘Through examination. The con- dition-is-suspected when the wo- man deyelops such symptoms as 0! and can be caught... .. --WE HAVE IT Queen Street Meat Market: | abdominal pain, or abdominal Seeceemees. : | ONE DRINK: RED FACE | A. C. writes: What causes my * |face-to become fiery red when- | ever I take one cocktail? 1, REPLY. | ~ This reaction stems from the dilating effect of alcohol upon the capillaries of the skin’ Ap-~ parently you are overly sensi- tive along this line. | TODAY’S HEALTH. HINT— Overeating can--cause- fatigue. (NOTE: “All correspondence | to Dr. ‘Van. Dellen- should be | | addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- | direct importance to all viewer's. HONDA _ Where to buy one? “gz ” Dauglas Bros, & 155 Kent St. DIAL 4-7336 BIKES Jones of course! _ Low Down Payment Long Term Financing Dial 2-1234 une, Chicago, Illinois.) | vernment of Mackenzie King | the United States. The “syn- |. failing ‘to enact legislation to halt | drome theory” never did catch pollution of our waterways. 1, can remember John Diefenbak- | er introducing a private mem- | ber’s bill -after~-the--Saskatehe-.. wan River at Prince Albert was polluted with commercial waste’ from Alberta - so much so, he once told me, that.guests at par- ties in Prince Albert were invit- ed to bring their-own pure-drink- ing water. I recall Bert Herrid- ge—introducing —a-—-similar ~ bill |,of the university's top female graduates between 1945 and 1951-) ‘Our Yesterdays {From -The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (May 25, 1941) Britain’s 42,100-ton battle .cru- iser H.M.S. Hood, largest w a r- ship in the world, was blown to bits in tH® waters. between Gréenland and Iceland. by German battleship Bismarck. There steamed: into Charlotte- an | “unlucky shot’? from the new. gia’s Jekyll “Island came equip | claim to the coastland. on in Europe and for-the same reason it shouldn't have in this. | counry: It's a myth, Te..woods...are-supposed...to..be. ‘full of trained university women, trapped in utter despair, in their role as housewife -because. they have to stay home ‘and mihd their families instead of-pursuing an’ “exciting career." A Colum bia liniversity fesearch team has exploded the myth. Over 300 were interviewed. They weren’t miserable.. They weren't frus- |. Georg In the good old days, a mil- lionaire’s ‘‘cottage’’ on.. Geor- ped with 15 bathrooms, Tiffany stained-glass windows, and a walk-in steel vault. w-~ ; ia’s ‘Golden Isles’ National Geographic ‘Society. : *; gave French names to rivers, “—tened-the “Prince —Ni _town_Harbour_on Empire. Day a‘ These days, island visitors are sturdy and trim ‘little Ferry ‘content with a shower, sliding- Boat which was soon to be chris- glass doors, and the safe in the ova’’-Is----motel...office._ The... picturesque |_Janders and. Nova. Scotians had setting of broad, sandy beaches, long anticipated the arrival of feathery —palmettos,—and—moss- this craft, for she was to ply. draped live oaks remains the shortly. between Wood . Islands. Same. And the mild climate still z ’ ‘attracts people the vear-round. Jekyll is one of the “Golden Is- 1é3 of Guale’’ that. stretch for some 190 miles off the coast of Georgia, North to south, the chain includes Ossabow,* St. Ca- therines, Sapelo, St Sea Island, Jekyll, ‘and @umber- land. Four centuries of priests, pir- ‘ates, soldiers settlers, sports- men, tycoons. and tourists have imbued the offshore islands with history and romance. Five flaks have flown: over the Golden Is- les’. French, Spanish, English, P.E.1., and Caribou, N.S. qe TEN YEARS AGO (May 25, 1956) Harry Love, East Royalty, te- geived the Anderson Prize for the Science . student “Standifiz highest in fourth yéar P.W.C and Brian MacCallum received the S.N. Robertson Prize for. the fourth year student standing ie highest in Arts. Barbara Worth after ,leading he entrance candidates in the WC examinations, maintained-pAmerican, and Confederate. het high scholastic standing by | | placing highest, among the first. baut sailed up the codst in 1562 building. St. Simons oak built [year students for the year. Bar-! —the bara \s the daughter of. Mr. and Mrs,.J EH Worth, City: “The French explorer Jean Ri and reported the regign-was the wifaites: fritivilest. Gnd. plezss antest’’ he had éver seen. He * Nie - Simons; | had earned their doctorates and | most of the marriages had been | blessed with children. 1 And 72 per cent said they were able to harmoniously com- ‘| bine” marriage” and “a “career? | Nearly every married) woman who wanted to work in her chos- | en occupation was working, In | other words the average univer- | sity trained womafi has emerged from this study as a reasonably | _happy-—fulfilled person. ; -This is a far-cry from the fe- male pictured as the ‘trapped housewife,’ but, then, the angle | did’ sell stories. Charlottetown to: Montreal - iMoncton Saint John _ oe Sydne sounds, and inlets, and laid | Spanish names supplanted. the | French, when Menendez de Avil- 'es landed on St. Catherines in | + 1566. He plied the Indian chief | ~-Guale—with--biscuits—and- ara T then established a settlement on _ the island. ee Harassment, by the English, | ‘Indians, and pirates forced the | Spanish to abandon their .is- sion-forts in 1686. A few: years | ‘later, the ‘coastal islands’ be- | / came a haven for the notorious | . | Edward Teach, or Blackbeard. Toronto To this day, almost every island : | has its legend of buried pirate | treasure. 2 | + Spain's’ challenge to British | { colonization of the area finally | ended in 1742, when General James Oglethorpe’ defeated the “Spanish at the Battle of Bloody Marsh oh St. Simons. "The great island empires of Georgia: began | to take form. : ‘ After the Revolutionary War, landowners cleard magnificent | oak forests for more planting and sold the ‘sturdy timbers for ship- Corner Brook. % ad These are examples of CN’s new Red Bargain Fares. Sleepi Blue Fare Plan. the famed frigate —Constitition,- known as Old Ironsides King Cotton . . oe ae Ge ® ‘oe ng car prices including complimentary meals are equally attractive, Call CN about the Red, White and