05hr filiutdfmt anon Prince Edward ill-ad uh. m on. ‘ WJ. Noun. Fvblhhll hank wok. (divo- ' rubiumn «my walk any warning (lac-pt Sun any. Ind unwcyy hol vyo n as r c. Sin-I Gullah-town. P . h Thomlon anlplp'n lid hunch attic-I u Summlluidl. Mont-qua. Alb" Inn Dunn. a. u u lunllly by lhouucn Newman." Adveriiilng 5m . Imp... scan, Ilnlv n.5vn.» Wuiem om , loin Strut. Vanmwel iMA min Mcmbu Cinndlnn only Newlpluel Publuhen Maxi-lion and 1h. cums... Pm. lh. Can-dim m u Ixcluiivcly emitted in the in. in. .cpve i all dispgtrhes .n ll... pvp... a. and to u or u the Auocinled Pun b. Raul-n Ind ubc in th. local new! publuhcd herein III mm. or republication bl . i dunno.“ hair blue unwed Subscription uies. Not over 15: per week by Callie! l woo . year by ml a. nun mute: and in: nmccd by m... sum . year cit ulna Ind or man pet ‘pw In us. we lisewl’lelo aulsldt amuh Calli- hanwulth. ND! bye: 7: pc. ungl. .bpy Membel nunu Bureau at cucuuncn GE 6 wasp—Ar. Record Wheat Sale . The big wheat sale involved ill the new Canada-Ruse n treaty signed at Ottawa yesterday is worth $500 million and constitutes an all- time record. It comes at an oppor- tune time for our wheat growers. with 700 million bushels in the har- vest this year, and with the pros- pecta of having a surplus of more than 1.000 million bushels on hand. Domestic requirements run to about 150 million bushels a year and ex- ports have totalled around 340 million bushels annually. The Rus- sian deal will bring exports for t crop year tip to an estimated 550 million bushels. Communist nina has been a new market but since the first con- tract was signed in 196” the Chill- ese purchases have totalled less than 200 million bushels. A new agreement made recently calls for the delivery to China of between 112 million and 156 million bushels iii the three years ending July 31. 1966 new! i all: from Ghana. One of the Ghnno aian students had been photograph- ing signs on the segregated rest rooms of a service station. The five tourists were stopped and question— ed by police for about two hours. and then turned loose. It was night, and the visitors. in rapid sequence. were halted by three or four car- loads nf whites. abducted to a lone- ly side road in the woods and vic- iously beaten with straps and chains. Where was Governor Wall. ace then? These were five human beings. peacefully taking a sightseeing tour. Nobody accused them of breaking any law; but as one policeman re- marked. it is dangerous for Negroes and whites to ride in the same car in Alabama. The Ghanaians. of course. reported this incident to their embassy. and still another stain was spread on l'.S. reputation as the land of the free. Governor Wallace was no more involved directly in these beatings than he was in Sunday's appalling incident. But the incitement of his example was there. And it will re- main there so long as he is in pow- er. making a mockery of the efforts to enforce law and order. More Restrictions Announced last week so quietly that we hadn‘t noticed it: until yes- terday were new restrictions on im- ports of textiles into Canada. The restrictions cover cotton exports from three countries not hithel‘b affected—Nationalist China. Portu- gal and Israel. These nations have “agreed” to hold down their ex- ports to Canada of a number of cotton textile products. from which the ordinary Canadian purchaser would benefit. That. of course. isn’t the reason given for this extension of the so. called “voluntary” rumta svsiem that already was applied to imports from Japan and Hong Kong. Jap- l c: /: AWle i edge" W,_ / '7’”Qb¥“ ’ENS’M- ’/ . \ / X)" . I $3.335? THE PORTABLES OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick N hoism Taxes Exceeding Profits On Drugs How much do Canadians spend I on drugs? What profits do dru‘ manufacture" make? How have in in those same yea". i Our drug: prices todly a re . among the lowest in the western ‘ WAVE LEN 6TH WIllei' Gordon was until recent- ‘ pemnnlity matures. Iy a senior ptrlucl‘. Thule com- Dnnles made total sales 0! $128 drug prices moved dunnl t h e world in many lines. bot-ll in It» million during 1960. Out oi that. postwar years of inflation? These are question which should be probed by the House ‘ of Commons Committee on Pel- ‘ nudes and Drugs. which will bccln public hearings w h e n Parliament reassemble! at the end of the month $5.10 in USA. lual terms and in relation in the time it filial the average worn er to earn their coll. rm- exam- pic. a normal dole ol the nntiblo- tic Tclmcycllnc— eliective against many typel at (ever. in- linens and pneumonisi cons ; ssnl in Canada. l Parrot cries have reiterated $5.86: in ilaly. and $6.15 in Hol- that the prices or drugs prescri- bed by doctors In unduly high and Iilnirld be reduced. Senlu— . land. The uvmgc Canadian. worker earnl that cost in half l the time a Dutch worker can. l only :7 million. 0 per tent. remained as net p iilll alter costs. But the lcdcl-nl govern- l ment took so million in s ales : taxes. end :7 million in corpurn- l tlon taxes. thus niakinr: more. lhpn twice as much out or your sickness as the drug cnmpnnicn did. Canada is ihc only company In the World u‘licll charccs sales taxes on n u is a luxury y A. . by male pattern bcldness R Frustrations And Tantrums By Dr. Theodore a. Vu Dolla- Temper ullrulnl In common in noun-l pmcbool chlidm and. in mm tnntancel. an be i x ly. They stem from frustration. Iiblinl Jealousy. or i on by in tdlp! u: the hand. Then crun- when the child's PP? The scene in laminar: A MA (Iced. lcreuming. kicking. or bend-bunging tyle periomung— all inn often-«in public. roulth he wnnu something “right now" Ind goes inin a tantrum w h en mother uyg “no” or pulll him Iwa from the desired alum. Time outbursts will recur so long lhz young man remain! intolerant to lru-u-uinn. And i u may continua [or no in c lime bee-nu boyl and Elvis m faced with mIny fnutrIllnl ex- perlencel in the pncesl oi li‘ml- lng up. e sooner they leIrn om livln| with others in u mni~ Mr or give and take, the sooner the pattern will change. The irch in in detect the IH‘ mull that maga- nhe tantrum. ienloul of his baby brother my havenbout only when embit- l-usscn or {rum-um gbnui n nit- nation dealing with the younger child. Oahu-n gct mnd becnule they cannot perform or gcl the same result: as their older bro- erl. Thu conflict is uggruvnl- cd "hen mnihcr I" lather mak- ea 1 Idvertent complrilnu be- tween the lads. This should be voided. Outside help may be nceded if the uncut: Ire too confused In no the picture clearly. In some instances. they nag too much. lnliltiul upon sti‘ndardl of be havior or discipline that fit one set of circumstances but not. (Ith- on. They ore not consistent and will give in to prevent . vccnc in mm ni other: but not. w h e n alone. Still other pIrenll do not Im- deraiand the child's pennnllily. Some boys Ind girll overrech to the normal lrulirationn pi life. even lhough otherwise nor- mal Others are placid and Mile “in only when a big prob. lem cannot be solved. Now Ind then. tantrum; indicate horiaul Dlycholnllcal disturbances. BALDNESS PATTERN T. writes: What is mcnht. , . FLY ‘ This is the common type oil baldnessthal plagues m n n y me". Some develop a bald spot on (on of the head: other: have NOTES BY THE WAY , guy down the hI‘I llId lo [0 week vacation with pay—Door county Advnclu. "Bee lure." JIM DI Mill Il— specter It I Western rmrvm lion. "1! ll violltlml of th- law in have more than one wife. and the law mull I). obeyed. Whll'l you It! back home you all of your wives except one Ihlt they can no longer 1 ll upon you ill their llulblnd. "You tell ‘em." Illflelled lbl lnA'lIIl after I mnmenl'l reflection. - Hamilton Spectator. Custard’s [I iIn't lnshionnble Iriy m" to throw culllrd piu. A 12W If. Itill bet"! flung Iraulld on Ioml 9. e .. .. i c. F. E i . late It night. but no one'l hurt tain it. The authentic plea. Mme of them all“ flviinI. or a) years ago on the uni Roach in! Those were the pioneer dnyh of movie making. when scripts were W 1’ l l l e n Ilmult II [lily were shot. Ind giants captured laughter ml celluloid. And tht glIntl they were. Biz glIniI like Slln LIuMI Ind Oliver Hardy. Ind little I ll. or giant killers. like the urchins at “Our Gang." Harold Lloyd and Jean Harlow got their Ilal't on the 14 acres [with 53 bulld- lngI. one I blIciisllllt-b lbnpl of the Ranch belly~laugh lavatory. Will Rogers. Theda BI r I. Lupe Velez und Bebe Daniels nil trod the creaking bulrdl. A Primeva I‘ll-pub." unhin- “y. b. ubwvcd lanu ty by keeping an loci um other IIIud.ilnvln| cold loci in pm loundthcllieol mlny I per. MIL—Montrul star. We are old noon to renew... blr when lb! Ward billion Ip- i‘ll luI WW! it meant. that muons had misspelled the name of a cup. Time-«Pro 'l'bl AM mums-A hII rlceivod more 1 In $2,000,000 in a all. 0! all and In reurvg. (ions and leases this year Il- MIdy. My. but ill“ Soul-l Credit PIM?—Hlmillnn Spectator. Last Stand They were lb. before the cum- nrn lenlum. and behind them were many more. For miedy in those nonstick days depended not Jill! on flee nl- Iihlltion. but an odd alfectl. In if I IIIIIlI'lll-Il cIne or III necnrdloned (llvver were red“. it VIII built on the bIck at. The HIflloI‘d They are gone now. the any: Ind most of the people. and the Eli Finch in! in Culver City is in be lucuuued oil Ind t n rn down. ' of bl . II IIIde have been made a Ihrlne. I monument to those tunma thIl C hill Wills talked about. He IIld: klm them In .u n once. it'd be u lot bigger nun the biggest hydrogen bomb. l lull reckon it would." Nobody reckons l l k e that much any more. either. I Riverway New York Tlllllsl rlcvvlng northward out at Maine min the Si. .lnhn River at the Canadian border in one o ""5 country‘s [CW rivers that re- talus (he primevll benuiy ll llld \shen the first stifle" landed on theseshnl'esll . recommenda- ilnn of Secretary nl the Interior Udall is accepted by Maine and by Congress. it will be preserv- ed. The rccommendailon ls ill-i the Allngnsh. which flows from Atlagash Lake to Placlthull County to join the St. John miles away. be declared a “A National RlVErwa would not be for the cuuul summer laur- ist. Travel would hnvc to be by canoe. There would be no por- mnnent bumps. The riverw ay would be im- the mnn— th e re must be I few leli—whn still lik- e: to paddle his mm c n n o e. shoot his own game. catch hu own lish pii his strength and talents Inst u wilderneu. mine has had for some time In Alllgnh River Authority to guard the river'l primitive chah Icler while ulll providing (or ut- lllz-uon bl the mn natural rc- and in Iboul cne-llnh the time llnx; ii is not z mud on such it would i-lle an ltnllnn worker. ‘ cvcrydcy cm" This v.5 mull Our price would be lower ihnn children clothcs it cortalnly nugil sludy oi the situation re- the Us price were is not an the mould not bn levird oil It ru 2 s. veal; the smiling truth: the fact that. our price Includes the which are essential In rcl-uvc the only body which n proliteerinl CInadlIn iederal luxury "lea ‘suflcrlng Ini'l u-cn to luv. the ' ‘ livns rl Canadians. anese manufacturers some time ago asked that Canada treat textiles from other countries as we do those from Japan. on the ground that it Lion-seekers Assert that link Canadians are bled White by soarinl! drug costs. But I thor- iionnl rlverway and Lilli 191%“ acres of forest land along its banks or purchased to protect it from commercial exploitation and sanitation Few such areas survive in the awful. The Iulllorlty has been a recoding hairline on the lure- doing It lo Design-lion oi the Allll Ih I I head. a very wide part on the schln or a fringe n’ hair alum! the sides and neck. This Dat- iern diners Train the D l i c h Y iyn! of baldness that occur: in The new sale to Russia has launched a crash program to get the grain from prairie farms into seaside shipping positions. Most of national river wa lhul would only preserve Ill! present. Iituatlon. But it it would nuke it I nIlinnat rc- the shipping. it is intimated. will be through St. Lawrence pol-ts. re versing the normal direction for past Soviet Sales which have mainly been through the West to the Siber- ian port of Vladivostock. The. St. Lawrence shipping route indicates that at least some of the wheat in ~ be bound for Iron Cultain collntri normally supplied by Rus in. On humanitarian as well as blls'- ness grounds. Canada is fully justified in drawing no ideological lines in disposing of food products of any kind. This is pretty well cnn. ceded now, Both the major political parties are committed to this policy so far as wheat sales to Communist countries are concerned. and it would go badly with them in the Prairie Provinces if they weren’t. Alabama Nightmare President Kennedy did what he had to do in Alabama. Facing up to the defiant Governor Wallace. he quickly federalized the Alabama national guard and ordered Wallace to cease “willfully opposing and ob- structing the execution of the laws of the United States." This accom- plished. token groups of Negro pupils began entering Alabama schools. There was hope that the state was emerging from the ugly night- mare in which it had been living. But the bomb blast that wrecked a Negro church in Birmingham last Sunday, killing four Negro children and injuring 23 others has shocked elven Governor Wallace. who has pledged that "every law enforce- ment agency” in his state will be used to apprehend the culprits. Certainly no one will accuse the misguided governor of any direct instigation of this latest outrage; but there remains the question as to his indirect responsibility. When he closed his obstructionist tactics. he did so not on grounds of liberty or justice. but resentfully. after compelling the government of the United States to intervene. He maintained this attitude despite the flat that Birmingham has had more ‘ In 40 bomblnn. apparently con- . with the racial situation. in t years. This is not the first anyone has been killed; yet ' one has been convicted in the , - Incl. ' .Pciorilo last Sunday's murdnoul - ion. there w and three Negro etud- was unfair to expect Japan to im- pose restraints while competing countries did not. That. of course. was logical. But it would be much more logical to remove these quotas altogether. for they a source of annoyance and could be a source of lnss to our ex- porters if the countries affected should decide to impose equivalent restraints on their purchases here. That is what Japan has been ask in): for all along. and getting no- where so far as our federal tariff makers are concerned. The injustice done to Japan has now been squared by a measure which insures that equal injustice will be done to Japan‘s competitors in the Canadian textile market. All. of course except the Canadian tex- tile industry which enjoys more protection than ever through the new restrictions imposed to equalize the previous ones. Munlapai Loans According to a Toronto ex- change. Ottawa will be subsidizing the municipalities to the tune of some $16 million a year under the Municipal Development and Loan Fund. This estimate is based on a recent statement by Finance Millic- ter Gordon before the Ontario Municipal Association. The Federal Government. Mr. Gordon explained. will borrow $400 million to finance the fund. paying at current rates about 6 per cent interest and lend- ing it to the municipalities for ap- pzoved. job-creating projects at a rate of about 5.25 per cent But it will do more than that. Provided the municipalities ful» fill certain requirements—princip- ally, that they complete their loan- dided projects by March I. 1966— Ottawn will "forgive" repayment of 26 per cent of its loan. Thus a 20- yenr loan at 5.25 per cent with 25 per cent forgiveness would mean I true rate of 2.05 per cent. A 15-year loan on the same terms would carry only 1.24 per cent interest. On a 10-year loan. the municipality would not only be paying no interest. but. would be rc< ceiving .32 per cent per year on the money it borrowed. According to Mr. Gordon. most of the loans from the fund are like- ly to be for 10 to 15 yuan, and it is on this basis that it is calculated the federal silhsidization would total about 816 million annually. from sickness is the («floral gov~ tux M ii per cent. which is not eminent ll. alone among gov- ernmenls around the world. charges a luxury sales tax of )1 imposed in use, TAXES EXCEED PROFITS The imam-hi records at it'll per cent on drugs. it makes more ‘leadlng Canadian drug compan- out at your illness own the drug . manulaccurers do. AVERAGE nauo alu. LOW l Are Canadians imanclnlly nip . pied by drug costs? The fact in that a Mr survey showed that tile average cost Di a drug prev scnpupn in Canada is 5314. Al- most nine out nl len prescrip- tious cost lcss than $500. Th only Cumdians nu whom the price of druss imposes n hard- l sllip are the chronically ill. mostly older people. who have lb use drugs continually. M nst Canadians are actually saved money by drugs. which shorten or prelenl costly illnesses. Thc lederal envemmunl hus published a report oi avers ge family spending during 1959 in Canada This shows that the av- erage Canadian bought prescrib- cn drugs culling om during that vear. Yet in the same year the Iverage Canadian cliy lam- lly spent mm on Ihnves Ind haircuts: $13.40 on Ihlmpoos: $12.90 an Tv repairs: ts so on beer and man on liquors s n n wines: alum on rig-renal IM "3.70 on other making sup nlies: 318.400“ union dues: and mm on its on. The tiny Min per head on needed prelcrlbed drugs in um a burden beside those mammoth discretionnlw luxury expendlluv- Drugl despite criticinm by the ill- lrmed. are about the only commodity which have he» tually fallen in price duflng the pun ll years or on. The price index pl c. ndlnn drugs in 5 compared w the one index of IN in [9”. In vivid 90n- trIst. the Index oi all consumer price: has soared from loo up in Our Yesterda s (From the Guardian Flea) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS A60 lkv‘ember l7. III!) Fire of unknown nrllin de- stroyed the Ichool houle Ii CIp¢ Egmoni. same ol the turninhingn were saved but the blinding VII burned to the ground. Mill Mlnhl Sli‘k. flnulhter of Mr. and M". John J. Sul- Leunox n d. bll Quilted Prince of WIlsI College in com dune her lludlu. Mill SIrkll the first IndlIll [ill on P.E.l. to leI the Mllflculltlm Enmill- Iflnnl to P.W.C. Eur lliher. Ilsa in the teacher at Lennox Inland. II I grlduIle of Prinel of VII" Cullen. TEN YEARS AGO (mm 11. um The progress mud- in all pro- vineeg by the sent more meat wu emphasised yesterday by ac. Sievenm. on. Ch. who la in Charlian im- the ill-st lime to attend the Innull convenion of the Provincial In erlmendeuu of insurance. 2 Wild! plflicullr note of the hill! quality at scouting hen. lx-Cbld WliIlIrn I. MID at the W m m mull us I Ins-I he i l evening of (he depIrtlIwnI. It the meetlnl Vie-Med Wet Dry the cruel, Abdul Amnsnlt. ies during the your 1960 were re- l cently analysed by Clark I n n Gordon and Co . the well~known firm in which Finance Minister A Dull Ottawa Journll “Canada Sela ihc Thine; . folder prepared by the Trade t Ind Commerce Department to tell European huvers ol' nur [nod ‘ products being displayed at. the. Provisions and Fine Foods Ex- ‘ hibitlnn at. Cologne ncxl month. is an attractive combination pl 1 cplnrml artwork .nn good dc- Ill". why mull the Government l I write everything like‘ items In n stuff maizuine'.’ The writinl here ll: lop- heavy with cliches: "Canada In famous (or‘ lood product: pncilcd at the l peak at periccliou... Canadian . exports of noun foods. partlcul» ' Irly lmun vegetables. have ria-. en npidiy in recent years n indlcntlon how much ‘The. Iillhi color and line vor ol ; wound-mu. Cnnnnlgn honey. LI the uni in excellence " l The pl'lmr‘ lush hr ihc "hr-m- mentary cpmmiuce on Pestici- des :nd Drugs should be lb urge . the gnvernmenl lb nbnllsh in l I in by which It pmlltezrs spent l licnlly n-nm the Ilcknen oi Cup. 1 udiunc Diet We don‘t think that kind of dried bait is w Euro-wall “u ncssmen in "Dr my": r . =- “""“"Il 'v‘reuch. German. or Dulch. lTlle pamph- let is printed in all Tour.) The {older n e v c r mentions such distinctive Cnnnltian prod- ucts as French-Canadian nu slum. Winnine‘! nnideye. BC s man or Canadian bacon. Never a word on Western beef. Durham when. or the [act lhnt “inslnni” foods and the irradiation ni cer- tain vegetables and trails 7 a orocess that preserves them perr icotly for months—were piones ered in Canada None of it. in fact. ha] I spark of life. Canada may set the table. but it will take more imaginative prose than this in brlnii the luesls to dine. .. e E n 5 p : ~< Indonesian Hostility Montreal The llldollnilll Defence Min~ inter and Army chlal oi Staff. Genenl Nuutinn. has made an interesting ndmlulon. lie hn‘ admitted that lndnnu h u hnlpcd in min "mm- ilun 5.000 .nil-arlunh. Ylll nb- ell in the Northern Harlin len- ritorlu.“ Having made lhlh statement. General N Iutlon then inallied that Ihls did not mean till cou ry had any territorial umbilica- in smw-k. North Borneo. pl- Brunei. Nn one who Is l-miilul- with the imperlIllI c ambitions oi President Sukarno will believe that inane-in In- no (animal aellrel in time colonize. 0n the cnninry. the Idm lion that in- come h‘ be The "They don't VIIIII to light in the link pllcl. In "W! in lo lb! kl cit-nee i" E ‘F 3 m clock el hi! llvlnl on the cull MI. HI I'll] Ilium. and at llivl It 5 cents I pound. Till imbli. h! IIYI. II to [21 file at I III on to you. culching octopqu cl Colum- tonll III when he‘seen In octopu- in bi: sin in ii I one an .lmll Iinvlman mm on cam»... in pm this ginry mud- lmul (hull. seems to be Drool that these |er~ rltorlIl ambitions do exist. Indonesia is determined to prevent the formation hi the led- erallon oi Malaysia. She wants to bunch for heraell some at the pmpmd territories of this led cnunn There can he no other axnlnultion or her policies. And. with the recent cxamnle «l ln~ doneIlIu aggression in w.“ New Guinea in mind. there can be no iunillcuuon tor u lav- arable view bl Sukarno‘l motivv u. Indonesia l. large and power- lu’l. She "my well be Ible to pmcni Ihc Iuccaa hl Malaysia. But. the fact um uh. my be strong enough in get away wilh - 3 n lchlinn hu- p. over Iwr low! Octopus lo believe. it ll confirmed by Cal Smith. who ll connected wlill the RCMP hue iii Comox. EC CIl Smith Joel rellxltlrnl lhIl do“ It Anyone gripped by (hi Will I.” fill Mack-n lbll WI an 0cm: Im only to relax and the elem-c will rein-be in lipid Ind flinllhllly mlfl. Col llnllb even say: that "Min the Initial In! I“ II‘ "I- nhoflrng.‘ h‘l I rains: inth no. Sunshine In lilo not me- pul sloperla urchin or other scrip disonsos uncvlanENCEs nzcaaaaa L, M. urtics- Do children out grow the tendency in develop at- tacks «l i’l’lmmwtirI fever? REPLY The icnnanc. never is nub ‘ grown but 9 leg hkclv as the child matures. Ap- l proximately in per cent exocrl- ‘ once Innlher built within one year clan the initial attack un- less Ipemal precautions m uh. Mnavmo uchnhrues .1. a. o. writes: why do swakcn every day with - head- ache" in = Sinus Giselle. arthrltll of the n . 7 blood pressure uuchi u be investidszed BREECH PRE‘ENTATION M. A. wiles Tine! a her-ch birth harm in why? in: i. No. but It is mm: dillicuil and requires greater skill than the r‘nore usual hcnd il-sl presenta- to n. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT Whoa n child has lull learned in Ill up. don‘t. prod him to stand . COMFORT PIG! Britain's agriculture ministry has appointed . t. ad viser on the comfort at pig Ities eastern United States—even in Maine. which hun inure back- woodsthnul ny other state cut of the Mlasisslpl. The Alilluh Iponllnillty Ind nni jull I sue mater. That. we believe would be the more dependable Suarunr tee Did You Know. . . 7 FIIIIInlnl PM. Toronto Clnfldl ll 50- 70 DEI‘ cent com- munlnt controlled. uccm-ding “II n journal called AmericIn Opin~ . ion. niliclll publication nl the} far 11th JD?!" Birch Society Britain and the U.S. If! given the same ICOI‘Q. 5040 per cent communist controlled. This la a {air sample of the perverse rubbish being circul< Ited by fanatical anti-Red! in the U 5. other items in the cur- rent ism! of American Opinion in just as poinonnuc and lust u absurd as lL! so—colled “snare- bwud hr communist innucnce. Thc mngaIlne does not u. y how it arrived at the sum per cent "Eur! for Canada: but It does bller a kind of exninnalon of us [1.5. (Iliy. This consists of vague generalities about trail- on in the Stale Department Ind saboteurn in the armed services. Claiming godllke ohms-science. the paper llm 13a countries. from Aden to Zanzibar. on its scoreboard. All those in the Slno< Soviet bloc are 01 mum tilted u loo per clut Red. [hose gcnlng the best markl lie. the icweul m Slen. Por- lugni. much and annmblduc These are the world's Utopia! of liberty and dcmncncy lqu on Jnhn all-ch point. of View. The magazine in no fly by - night hnmlbl wul printed on glossy paper go: up. it ha been coming out every IppeI rice or bcing wcll linunccn. in n free society all opinions hunt be talented: bui the us. besides being free. is usually reckoned an educated country. And how such drivel an Americ- an Opinion cnn tlnd readcrl there. except lnr malls. is our IIlnly n myltery b.” OW" The t FLYIIIE numllllill RTAURANT "You" lslInrl Steak House" W “m >04 Legalized Abortion in Japan More than om million legal abortions are performed annually in Japan. The operation ll performed by I mooning-lat in I M bouilth mmandthcfeaisbctwmulnd“.An Ontario physician, who has recently tnv lied in Japan. tells how one desperately-crowded nation has found a partial answer nxnInulm. In mu‘!’ Weekend in the pwulltion MqulnI this Saturday THE EVENING PATRIOT. II Llll lovable thin] to death. Run. or you mill" Trllht- '