here has been the British North -.Quebec;-especially,-has been-insistent 2 ‘vocational education, in Canadian | a nothing.| Former Justice Minister Guy - Calgary Herald men. UMay isles aS Coats telowabipe a ete With the building wl pr etoeeaiet cache aac me: Hon | Guaranteeing high-cost British apply to these ships, will |. STAY OUT OF THEM ~ deuree day resulta in far mer 1 ‘erased indian Weines's 4 Columbia shipyards a share of | mean that not all the projects | D.C. writes: What are the ¢T discomfort from mugginess | Voluntary ice. The previ- "Fhe provineial_ premiers, at their ~ to Canada, is more important than Che Guardin | Covers Prince Edward island Like The Dew | W. J. Hancox, Publisher nucieartipped rockets with exceTlent } aiming accuracy. One who agrees | with him and who shares his concern about the imminence of. peril from Rest Periods For The Hair : L NOTES BY THE WAY Wallace Ward Frank Walker | the Chinese mainland is Dr. Albert R. | ahead of extinction,” says @ big- | : Wanaging Editor Editos a g- By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | t” more ly than one to Van. Published every week day morning (excep! Sum | Jobbs, of the Jet Propulsion Labora- Hair does not grow indefinite- | ee ee aed Meresry. couver, because to the distant dey and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince trons tory in Pasadena. Both these experts vs stops Fo agroge = on pe a gatetite a station, the dif. Charlottetown P.E.i.. Thomson Newspapers L . : ‘ ‘‘nvimitive” sc every years discovered rs nce earthly distance wil! Grech athens ch Semtanide Mortegee Alveree | think in terms of a quite “primitive becomes a club or resting hair. | .1* 7 twenty $100 bills was ee te insignificant. Medical men end Souris. ' rocket, capable of firing a 1,000- It hides for a few months in its sing at the bank, The staff | in remote regions able pacmenet netonety Wy von ten | pound payload about 1,500 miles. mn fe coke eneate Pe | worked all night trying to find | to keep up to date with their ic iver . Empire 38804: Montreat 640° Cathcart Street -Uns+-With such_a-_system almost any na- not noticed because most of the tom Ken a “2 i res watching them perform — eae. meen Oe 1030 West'Georgi@ | tion of reasonable size and technical — are in the poses — to begin her daily duties. An | a operations. A world ll- Member Cenadian Daily Newspaper Publishers | competence could put a 30-kiloton . . om moult eftioer ached her: SS woory samy OF =* —— » Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian | bomb on or very close to target. Once Variations occur, because in 70h, that! ee are. I just | And viewers may even get to creme © ouchalvaly enthied to the we fer sopv | the-decisiap is made end-money-is the past some women let their | 01’ them home to show mother | see a complete regular season lication of all news dispatches in this paper | ap : : . hair grow down to the knees. the kind of work I'm doing.” — of football— Saskatoon Star. get © # & fo te Aesasioted fran, a Retin | provided to build the equipment, it This wn at least 25 years be- | yi intreal Star Phoéntx. oe er . 2 t i] the ob- cause chat naginess ae fight or republication of special dispatches here 1s only a matter of time until proximately one- inch ry in also reserved. Subscription rate: | jective is achieved. per day. The cycle may be re- id See over im pe See Meanwhile the Geneva conference sponsible for many hair govt Mi summer Dog [ ays not serviced by carrier | is discussipg. academically, the prob- S glandular’ aoe The pat- National Geographic Society 2 $15.00 @ year off island and U.K. $20.00 se | jem of the proliferation of. nuclear tern also is modified by age,| The dog days of ancient | It warps wood, swells leather, gear in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com | ith neither China nor France sickness, and heredity. T G or affect peo- | rusts iron, and spreads mold monwealth. . | arms, wi . he ae Rome aia | ’ . Net over 7e single copy. bothering to send representatives; te ens ae ae SS v= | eee ee eae Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 THURSDAY AUGUST 5, 1965. The Basic Problem Winnipeg conference this week, were reported to be in close agreement on the subject of university entrance re- quirements. More uniformity here, they believe, is desirable. . This is all very well; but the real problem with respect to higher education, as we | all know, is the means for carrying it on. For the less wealthy provinces, | this is becoming a nightmare. They can neither afford the cost, nor af- ford not to provide this essential ser- vice at whaiever sacrifice. The only hope for aid to higher education on any fair basis is in mas- sive federal sharing of its costs. Where, as a body, do the provincial premiers and their governments stand on this issue? The roadblock * America Act. which makes education- al financing a provincial prerogative. ~on-maintaining-this-distinction; not-- withstanding that it has already gone _by_the board in federal grants for | _ in federally guaranteed bank loans to | to the near exclusion of other mat- ‘-ters,ewith- what-is happening in-Viet with what the U-S. is doing there. | test an A-bomb this fall—after the | Israel, Pakistan and India? Nobody with the United States preoccupied, Nam, and the Russians concerned The threat of proliferation is increas- ed by the news that Indonesia will Afro-Asian Conference now schedul- ed to begin November 5. Who will be next? Egypt and seems to know. Few seem really to care, at least to the extent required in coping with a challenge of this tremendous urgency. If and when the big powers get round to doing so, it may well be too late. Going For Nothing At the moment, the biggest give- away of all is being offered at Flush- ing Meadow, site of the New York World’s Fair. A fairgoer can. have his choice of any pavilion on the fair-- ground, except the 19 that are to be part of the post-fair park. The total value of the pavilions that are avail- |" able for the asking runs into tens of | millions of dollars. In—-most-—cases,—the-fairgoer—-will_- ‘ula for “repatriating” the Cana- | ada... STILL UNCERTAIN With a fanfare. of trumpets, | the federal government an- | nounced last fall that it had | dian constitution and making it| wholly amendable E. Davie Fulton, was hailed as within Can | HASN’‘T GOT THE HANG OF IT Favreau Formula To Be Sidetra Lendon Free Press — the constitutional change ne- | secret arrangement, and then cessary to limit the authority of the Quebec Council. reached agreement with the pro-| In both instances, there first Time will disclose the fate of vincial governments on a form- | were denials from Ottawa of any the Favreau-Fulton formula. ___ Guaranteed Contracts YET eked? , il confirmation that, the reports subsequently were ‘correct. Other scalp may last for years. : The lanugo (vellus) hairs con- stitute the fuzz which is present over most of the body. These fine, light-colored fibers usual- ly are in the resting stage. Ter- minal hairs are adult structures: a follicle may produce a lanugo originally, a terminal hair dur- ing adulthood, and in senescence return to the vellus. The transi- tion from the lanugo to the ter- minal! type on the face follows a standard sequence—upper lip, chin, sides of cheeks, then the remainder of the beard area. The opposite process occurs at the frontal hairline in adoles- cence; the terminal is replaced by the vellus and produces the characteristic reshaping of the facial outline. Terminal hair on the trunk and limbs is profuse in males, but is widely distributed in both sexes during the years of sexual maturity. By age 50, almost 40 per cent, of women -have..some.terminal. facial..hair.... By this age, some baldness or recession occurs to 60 per cent of_men_and to 14 per_cent_of wo- Early.astronomers noticed most radiant sun in midsummer: lieved its heat intensified that _| of the sun. Since Sirius is in the constellation of Canis Major, or “Larger Dog”, ancients called the hottest period do days. Blaming Sirius-for field-with- ering droughts, summer sick- ness, and the death of farm an- | Romans sacrificed | imals, the red-haired puppies to appease this inimical star. STAR NOT TO BLAME. ... Weathermen have long known or course, that summer's dis- comfort is caused not by a star | but by a combination of heat and humidity. In July and Au- gust, oceans have lost their win- | ter chill. Days are still long, and the sun beat downs fierce- ly from high in the sky. As temperatures rise, more moisture evaporates. The air becomes muggy. From every pond, ocean, river, and stream, water is drawn into the air at the rate of 16 million tons a se- cond. The amount of moisture the air can hold varies according to temperature. The quantity of vapor present in -propvortion to the maximum possible is called the relative humidity, Relative humidity often is higher~ in- winter~than-- in sum-- mer. But it is less noticeable because colder air can hold less | than a relative humility of 90 moisture.-Thus a relative hum- ness, death, and crime increase | heart .and.,pespiratory diseases | and ulcers. ~~ | -People are ~ still advised~ to | followthe~ancient advice of the — --Hesiod:“When Sirius par--— poet | ches head and, knees, and the | body is dried up by reason of | the heat, then sit in the shade | and drink.” NEW WORLD CREATED The Greeks had good reason | to complain of the heat. The | hottest—areas in the world are | Just across the Mediterranean | Sea in the deserts of North | Africa. One summer day in | 1922, the mercury in the little | hamlet of Al'Aziziyah soared to | 136.4 degrees, the highest ever recorded Before air conditioning, pas- | sengers sailing through the Su- |ez Canal and Red Sea dreaded | the searing heat. The only re- ‘Tlief was a gentle westerly | breeze. | Travelers begged and bribed | their ticket agents for a cabin }on the port side goingout and | the starboard on return. Tradi- tion says the agents stamped these tickets with the abbrevia- tion of “Port Out, Starbpard Home,” adding ‘a new word to | the English language. — posh. LADY LINLITHGOW DIES |__KINGSTON, England —(AP)— The dowager Marchioness of last viceroys of India, died Tuesday from injuries suffered ous year she had received the : : -airconditioning equipment, furniture, : ; Fi : San ehconnteg et | tthe architest-of thismas-_|_federal_ shipbuilding contracts | will goto the lowest bidders | chances of_acquiring a scalp dis. ‘180 & relative | ; university students, and in direct fed carpeting—even, in some cases, art a although Mr. Fulton's | hardly seems a realistic way of | and that the federal treasury, | ease in a beauty shop where the | Per cent on a 50-degree day. Kaisar—Hind medal for public 7 encouraging them as a result,-will be forced to Evaporation slows down on a | service in India, largely be eral grants to universities. The Fredericton Gleaner, in this ‘connection, says that Maritime uni- versities are awaiting a further wid- ening of the constitutional breach, in ‘ the shape of word from Ottawa, much as a beleaguered city waits for news that the relief column is on its way. Times dispatch. But so far there have works. Who ever heard of such bar- gains before? They are listed, al- most droolingly, in a New York been no takers. The hitch—and it is a big one—is’ that the person taking the pavilion will have to assume the cost of mov- contribution was recognized in that the accord was labelled the | CRITICAL VOICES | But-.if the federal_and_provin-_| the amending procedure, harmony ended there. Con- servative, NDP and. Union Na- Favreau-Fulton formula. p their costs. approved by the federal govern- ment,__ to reduce But, according to reports from | | Ottawa, such a policy has been why any region or + cial attorneys-general were ‘able | Government shipbuilding con- | itself to be ‘forced into a high. to come to amicable terms on | tracts, it is said, will be put up | price economy by the tactics of | for national competition, but | with a certain percentage of | work guaranteed for B.C. yards | | subsidize higher-priced work. It is difficult to understand industry | should receive this kind of fav- | ored treatment after allowing militant labor unions. . The reported suggestion that the guaranteed percentage for combs and brushes are not ster- ilized? : REPLY Unlikely, until someone with a contagious scalp infection has her—hair--done:—-This- is» where” sterilization é¢nters the picture. I would. not have my hair cut in a shop that did not prac tice good hygiene. = SAGGING HEART muggy summer day as the air becomes increasingly saturated: Cold drinks as well as people “‘perspire.”’ High humidity- can. be costly. 90% MORTGAGES cause of her work to combat tuberculosis. She is survived by twin sons, the present- Mar- quess and Baron Glendevon, and three daughters. Linlithgow; widow of- one-of-the-- in a car accident. She--was. 78. c i tionale spokesmen all were criti- | during the next five years. - the West Coast will gradually | : It recalls, also, Opposition Leader .| 5 the building and restoring the | cal. “The guarantee has been gran- | diminish between now and 1970) V. D. writes: Are there any | On new or improved city homes John Diefenbaker’s statement in Nova -site. These costs are high. And the In {ts revised form, the form- ted because labor costs in the will appear as so much sugar | exercises that could be done to . Scotia recently that “education, with * : ula would place the constitution | B.C. yards are higher than those coating in the absence of an in- , keep the heart from sagging? or for re-financing | : flexible timetable to serve as REPLY - e the coming of the technological age national defense.” Here in the At- lantic Provinces, where the problem . Unless in the n _they do succeed in giving their build- stakes for the exhibitors are high, ings away, or, in some cases, selling them for a nominal price, they will. im a straitjacket, it was contend- | ed Mr. Favreau defended imto print endorsing his views. | Then Mr. Fulton qualified—and; retreated. ‘ : But more important, hostility | the | country’s East Coast vaccord and Mr. Fulton” rushed : Lawrence. ae prevailing in yards on the and on the some years, becomes a problem again with the government about to embark on another naval unmistakable warning that, this “time, the government means business. Even then, the door will-have been left open for more foot- | dragging, and the government | holdin the tummy —will__keep Abdominal exercises that help the heart from drooping. On the other hand, if you mean you are downhearted, the best exercise I know is to run away from the 1% _on standard two thirds loans on first class_ security -- slightly higher on others. We algo have facilities for second mortgages, and for the new 75% first mortgages- ee fe the have to sign demolition contracts that | mounted see > S pas- | ship-building progr: volving - that it pa en blues. = . : ta ieee eee ee . -sage-of the change . eonstruction of - new... . five “years. a. peob soa pap ncnatagte ce ascent ec tan Rap a a eeeeptinena eee a facta atta ect ace acne will cost them hundreds of thousands | S°95°\in’ rovince, Premier Le. | trovers = should be making without any! p ww writer Te twitching | Come in and talk over your requirements with ._ ified scientists regard this as the most ery system. . harvesting season. The 1,100 workers | Mayor Camillien Houde of Mon- | ‘the skeptics who challenge the : MAA How much do we actually know | st what is claimed to be the largest | tet! td been taken into us | Writing, has” crowned Mariner | Wisdom of assigning such # pri FLOAT COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN “How much consideration was it given “any kind. ~ This issue was sidetracked at the at Winnipeg this week? We don’t know. The conference followed the usual custom of being held behind closed doors. But surely it is idie™ to talk about university eritrance re- quirements ‘without discussing the _ basic requirement of all—the cold cash needed to provide: for—the-in- creased cost of buildings, mainten- ance, books, equipment and faculty salaries without. which there can be no hope of maintaining standards of pa i ihaciaaaSacinaanaal —Later-Than We Think ____ Without a rocket to carry its. bombs, the Western world has taken comfort from the notion that no real peril exists in the nuclear field from Communist China because it lacks the means of delivery. It is still just a paper tiger. Some eminently qual- dangerous misconception of our time. ‘They believe—and make a per- suasive argument—that any country sufficiently advanced technically to assemble and fire an atomic bomb is certainly capable of building a rocket to carry it. What is more, they say, there would be little point in making a bomb without also making a deliv-. }> in this regard? Americans, bedazzled by the magnificent complexity of their own space hardware, mistaken- ly conclude that all missilery~must | ~ ~ ~ ager of ‘Allison MacLeod’s Po | also conveys timely warning. aa —— fi or - be of this nature. Prof. Homer J. Canada places a lowly 14th in a | dealership, Charlottetown, left | There has been m I signs it is not just seeking what one | | we wish to enter a Float in the 1965 Gold Cup & Saucer Parade Stewart of the California Institute of | study of 20 countries in its ratio of or ee nee boatman tick tein agite of repeated ex- | Wants to find. We should be pre- | (B ge = = | bie ‘ia is nscegieil me . 7 es 2 Ge M ‘ost. Ad ; -to find lif M: ese eecceCcesies haa ie eT eoneses Technology, a leading US. authority | dentists to total population. Conduct- | uate School of Modern Merchan- | Panations thal no such. Sete | PIE tne to us sad) case, ae : —— oe: on rocket technology, knows better. -+-amusement-park.-—All- of these are on - of dollars. | he Scott Paper Compaany_ pavilion would make good ski or mountain lodges. The glass-walled Shaefer Centre would, according to restaur- anteurs, make an ideal restaurant in a busy surburban area or in an the free list. So are the Vatican pav- ilion, the Spanish pavilion, the Mexi- can pavilion, the Jordan pavilion—in- -deed, almost all the pavilions at the fair. . It’s all part-of the show business, no doubt. But it seems a pity that | these magnificent structures should go a-begging in this manner. No ~-doubt there-will- be the-same problem- in Montreal, when Expo ’67 has run its course. Our costly Atlantic Prov- inces pavilion—will that too have to be shunted into the bargain base- ment, with no takers even there? Per- haps we could get our-heads fogether on the problem of salvaging it in some way or-other;-of-giving it; when- its time comes, a new lease of life in another. capacity. EDITORIAL NOTES Southeastern Ontario tomato growers may. lose about $7,200,000 if a strike at a processing plant in ‘Leamington continues through the tinent walked off their jobs last week, failing to obtain wage increases and clarification of pensions. ed by Ottawa’s Carleton University, =Parker:Pew:pavilioncor =a —--found —it--pecessart Sage, circumventing the consti-.| Council. aa Now the situation is such that it is doubtful indeed that Mr. Le- sage will present the “repatria- | tion’” measure befcre the Leg- | islative Assembly at all. | REPORT. DENIED. An Ottawa report has it that | Prime Minister Pearson and | Mr Lesage have reached: an | agreement that the Favreau — | Fulton formula never will be | submitted either to the House of | Commons or to the Quebec Le | dinate — a report denied ve- -hemently by both. days has-been: Mr. Lesage, to wit the’ arrange- _Mment_ affecting Quebec’s 3,000 | Our Yesterdays . (From The Guardian Files). ain’s monthly accumulation of planes is now greater than Ger- thoritative- source and, as if to Ministry announced increasing- bases. ‘ Superintendent H.R. Gagnon of the Royal Canadian Mounted “ TEN YEARS AGO a ager of Allison MacLeod’s Pon- o 4 St Eskimos and then the agree- ment that Ottawa would approve | —. without consulting parliament | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | (August 5, 1940) | The-cheering- word that Brit- | many’s came today from an au- back up the statement, the Air | | picture from Mars seemed just ly violent smashes on German | 2 j Police said early today that | If the new policy is going to equivocation right now. 7, = aT Playing his cards like.a tiger s hark, -France’s Charles --de Gaulle has dispatched his intellectual trouble-shooter, An- dre Malraux, to Peking “called secret mission. It assumed that the French leager believes the time Gallic interference in the Far East power struggle. It “is intentional coincidence that France’s envoy should be a The prime minister of recent | immortalized the Chinese revolu- embarassed over} privaae_agreements.made——with_. tionaries-in-some-of his-earliest works of fiction. Mr. Malraux admits, in fact, that the insur- rectionist hero of his after Chou En-lai, now Premier | of China. . Nor will Dictator Mao, him- - self an intellectual and a writer | of renown, find it different to en- | joy the delightful companionship | of Mr. Malraux. He may even feel in a, favor-giving mood. 4 c Dove. Spectator | While the Malraux visit is -said- to be- purely-person. famed can be little doubt that President | de Gaulle is fairly confident that | much in the way of prestige by | ceptable to the Peking regime. | -Of course, if the formyla is un- “acceptable, after private off-the- | record discussions with the Chi- nese leaders, Mr. Malraux’s trip | distinguished man of letters who can. then be passed off as “‘per- sonal”. | growing excitement the Com- | monwealth’s~ dismal efforts~—-ot- “la Condi- | bring peace to the Viet Nam pen- ‘tion Humaine” was patterned-}-insula.-He has-also_poted India's. | peacemaker, The time is ripe. | failure to make headway as | concerned, to bring French dip- lomacy into the breach, and that, | we believe, is what is behind Mr. | Malraux’s surprise visit to the | den of the Chinese warlords. That Magnificent Blur — Christian Science Monitor | Lets be frank about it To our uneducated eyes, that first white. blur. But oh what a | blur! | From 134 million’ miles | space, our first reasonably close | look at another planet! «The transmission of the _ pic- success. Under the careful analysis of Mariner scientists, the pictures will undoubtedly yield much new information. But to us they | have seen so far bear this out. national policy !s involved? A report last spring from the Na- tional Academy of Sciences ur- ged that Mars be made a prior- ity (and expensive)? space ignoring life there. { | failed to take due account of tian life is undeniably exciting. Yet antcipation should not ov- erride good judgment. After all, the essence of ex- and prepared to make the most al; there—; | on a so- Francé, as a self-proclaimed dis- | “Can bé | interested third power, can ‘gain iF is now ripe for producing a- peace formula ac-— in other words, as far ashe is | ; tar= | get because of the possibility of | around the eyes due to nervous- | | NeSs.oF... aciemaimnaad 7 i Both are" possibilities-—Others-; x include fatigue and over-in- dulgence in coffee, tea, or tobac- co. | 2. Dial 4-6567 Attention | | Organizations and Commercial Firms ‘The “Gold Cup and Saucer” Parade | will be held on Friday, August 20, 1965 Those interested in entering FLOATS are requested to com- | plete the section below and send it to: Critics charge that the report. | c/o R. T. Holman Limited Charlottetown, P.E.I. -HYNDMAN &-CO. LI MORTGAGE AND INSURANCE BROKERS 57 Queen St. - FOR FLOATS ™ De Gaulle has watched with :} o TPE OOS EF Daneel Or6 wee 108018 Breet OOOOH Bere OO © Bunce AO ecsc a ee OO Mere eee Oe ee Bees = “You can make a rocket system that Yet there is something in | of whatever men do find there. "ee eeedeen. beens eeeeee OO we weiece sane is hard to build,” he says; “but you can also make rocket systems that are-quite simple.” = Prof. Stewart is convinced that China possesses all the essential know-how and technology to assem- ble, test. and launch medium-range, » ; *.. “ * Fs SRE IE SE eee ee t Li ok bas. GPE KN ae BE <8 o ST renee emg renee Se eee e the study showed also a serious mal- distribution of dentists across ‘the country. Our national average is one dentist for every 2,108 persons, but some rural areas—-even in Ontario, the most populous and wealthiest of. the provinces—have ratios a¢ high’ as Mrs. James Freeman of Riv- Ontario, National presi-. dent the Catholic Women’s of Canada, will arrive Charlottetown next Monday pre at the annual Pro- Diocesan Convention of : ‘ one dentist per 20,892 persons. many of us that-yearns for life to be on Mars. Skeptics who note the harsh Martian condi- tions — little, water,.no appar- ent oxygen, extreme tempera- fures, an as thin as our own at 100,000 feet — these skeptics are discounted. Catholic Women’s League to be bald at = foenexs Univer- But is it wise to brush aside sity z especially when what they say, eatin Mars or not, there is much of | from space exploration. And | But whether there “Is life on deep significance to be learnt not the least of these lessons | view of our own small but dear earth and of those who share it with us 5 is a more rational and realistic | ’ Pee eee ee errr eee teste ons | Name of firm or Organization Signature ..:... | wee * +20 Oses- 9-8-1600 6-06 8: ee waa warene® Poere .e ‘I