2 | . i » ~- Pee Hl Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward lelend Like The Dew W. J. Hancex, Publisher : ; Frank Walker “Wallace Ward Maneging, Editor Editor Published: every weer dey morn: ng lexcept Sun dey and statu Charlottetown, PE! story holidays) at 165 Prince Street, by Thomson Newspapers Lt Branch offices af Summerside, Montague, Alberton y = 2and Souris Represented national y by ‘Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Services Empire 3-884; Verity 65947 Street Vance Marhber Toronte 425 Un'versity “Aye Montreal 640 Cathcart Stree! ~Uni- Western, “Otfice 1030 West Georars MA 7037 ver Canadian Daily Netvapapet Pobth Ker” Association and the” Canadian Press The Canadian * Press is exc! lication of. credited to it and also the =. right or rect In also resery Net over year in US moraealth : Neat ever Member PAGE 4 NB’s Example all sivelyentitied ta the vse for, repub news dispatches in “tite. pener or to the Associated Press or Reuters loca! rews puplished herein All bliegion of-special discatches here ved Subscription rate ares rrier, 40 per wen ae i : $12.90» year by maior rural routes sid areas mot serviced by carrier $1590 @ veer off Island yor Uk $20.00 per and elsewhere evtside British Com 7e sirgle cory Audit Bureau Af Circulation SATURDAY, JUNE 18, “1966. * We trust that the members of our nest legislature, when they finally get themselves sorted out, will be satisfi- éd with having achieved this arduous goal and not be tempted into emulat- ing the ex ample of their counterparts in New Brunswick. There the gov- ernment has introduced a bill—re portedly with opposition approval—to - “increase a prodigal scale. legislative emoluments on Salaries of the government leader, A of cabinet members and MLAs. generally—all are to he raised; “but but Premier Robichaud is taking by far the biggest slice ofthe cake for imself. His pay is t6 be boosted from '$9.500 to $20,000 a year, which with . $7,500 member's: indemnity will give him a total pav. check of $27,500. This. will be exceeded only by the, salaries of the premiers of the rich Provinces of Quebec and Ontario and * that of the premier of British Col- umbia if, the legislature of. that prov- - ince si more than 40 days each year. _And of’all the pay increases involv- ed, notes ‘only the Premier’s is on Gleaner, etroactive for the Frederi a whole’ year, going back to May 18, 1965. The MLAs, it says, have had long sessions and heavy duties be- cause of the government's insistence on forcing through a loteof conten- _ tious legislation. It is right that they should ~ “be recompensed for their extra duties. But® the exceptional duties of the present session are ly never to be endured again. new salary scale is imposed on a permahen t basis. It is not based on extra work. The Fredericton paper notes the coincidence of the boost in legislators’ bay and a boost in sales tax rate being introduced the same day as “some thing that will long linger, A minds of the voter.” * hope that the It expresses the the Opposition will resist this-concept with’ full strength of its resources in the interest of the tax _ payers.” But the Moncton Transcript has its doubts on this score. It says both sides of the House are equally to blame in the matter, and notes that _there has’ ing from: “SeGould ibe! of course.~ that been no protest’ forthcom- ‘tile: Opposition. New Brunswick has struck a bonanza of a5 some sort a@ UP with the Jones in the bigger prov- inces. Come to think of it, wasn't there a rumor about ard ¢an afford now to keep New -Bruns- wick Liberals being ‘so well-heeled that they could afford to send $20,000 _ to help their party stalwarts in this ~ province in their recent scramble for _ office? When asked about this in the legislature, Premier Robichaud said. the question wag:too crazy to answer; but that didn’t satisfy the Saint John ~~ ‘Telegraph- -Journal, which ticked him off pretty sharply on the subject. Down To.Business Parliament seems to have recover- ed from its prolonged bout of scut-; and rumor-mongering, and” has gotten down to honest ~work at last. It was encouraging to note the business-like manner in which it.dealt with detailed legislation to tighten up the bankruptcy law. on Thursday. Justice. Minister ‘Cardin, who piloted .the bill through the Commons. said the government is studying the pos- sibility of a national court with ex- clusive jurisdiction over bankruptcies and suggested that the federal Ex- chequer Court may be transformed to handle the job. The consideration of a national court is a companioh toa tlebutting comprehen nsive_ study under way for ‘The pe cae iethrough fraudulent bankruptcies. collision ' uncover fraud. and “for the closest cooperation on both, --eomments...Hutchison,.-.they....would_,. some time of the “whole Rankruptrm, “Ket: last revised-in-1949...The govern... of the. Mast.conpeeted.-universitics., An. ment has vision. This is | | } } ' ! ; assigned three lawyers as a - committee to draft | a wholesale re aeequdes 5 . a move of prime concern to, the country at this time. as inditated by recent developments in the two “+ eentral provinces {amentary amendments dewive from | time-cons' Actually. the part’ | -and agreed to establish a Confedera- | | | the diate Y the Mercer Commis- sion in Quebec. That commission: was. | . set up, not to investigate bankruptcy |: evas-suich- so mich as. to discover how the Quebec revenue department was being defrauded of large sums It was in this process that defects were federal statyes-that allowed bankrupts, in with —.senve——_dishonest ~ trustees, to defraud the government. The Mercer findings were followed with initiative by Mr Wagner, the then attorney-general of Quebec. De partmentalealong with police action, covered ities sof he Cases that. have since gone before the courts. Ontario, too, intensified its efforts to scovered that the racket was not confi to Quebec. It is evident, from the debate in Parliament, that there is still much to -be done in delving into. the ram- ifications of this problem, Mr. Neilson, Conservative MP. for Yukon, says he . has information about 52 dummy and legitimate corporations through whose activitjes governments have lost more _ _ than $150. million: in revenues. This savs nothing of losses -to ‘creditors. | Evidently he is prepared, if he has not already done so, to turn his in- | formation over to the proper authori- ties. As-the Montreal Star points out in this connection, there is no conflict of jurisdiction here that need cause any trouble. The acts under whose’shelter the tacketeers work - are’ federal statues, but administration is in the hands of the provinces. There is need sides, as well as for a revision of the law. on the thorough scale w hich has | -now been proposed. How It Hace Writing in the ,Winnipeg Free Press, Bruce Hutchison recalls that when the greatest of all Canadian de- | cisions was taken, two men—John A. Macdonald and George Brown—faced each other in a shabby Quebec hotel tion. That’s the big achievement we're preparing to celebrate next year, and it’s worth* being reminded of how it came-about. ne If they had been | modern politicians. have decided nothing until athey. had | set up a roval commission, or several, * and waited for. years until iy oe ceived the experts’ advice. Most likely the experts would have .judged the Confederation project impossible, as it certainly was from any technical, non-political pint of view. Doubtless the commission would still be sitting and taking evidence today. while the nation’s birth was in- definitely “postponed. Instead of a transcontinental state‘we would have- a library of impressive reports, ex- cellently written, leather-bound and unread. _Such men as Macdonald and Brown were not afraid to maké up their own imperfect minds and‘ take the con- ‘ sequence at the polls. They were too poor even to hire speech writers from the advertising agencies and’ said what they thought in their own tn- edited words. They issued no official communique, cunningly drafted by blic relations counsel to be read in a hiedte send and. to please every- body. No trial balloons were flown at Quebec, no secrets leaked through friendly newspapers to test the wind. _In__those quaintly old-fashioned | times the responsible leaders of gov- ernment and opposition assumed tha, they had the right and obligation to act. Thev acted, and the nation was born. et | | EDITORIAL NOTES Hollywood stars are -getting into American politics in a big way, which prompts a New York correspondent to. write, as follows in the Ottawa Journal: "The Smart People figure that Ronald Regan is running for gov- | ernor of California. so that he can nominate“Iohn. Wayne for president —-and that President .Wayne, with one gun tied behind his back;-can’an- | Nihilate hoth Russia and Red China | . but the one they're not so sure phat is: Robby Kennedy.” ak The pressing shortage of teachers. ‘te man our universities revolves around that sacred academic tradi- tion, the PhD Unless a graduate has - struggled’ thre adh to his doctorate, it is laid down, he cannot earn the spurs of a full professor. Now Yale, one the world, has moved to break the* Jog-jam. It has come up with’a new Rarduate ges vee, the Master of Phil- osophy. that \s.designed to end the teacher ‘lage. The. degree will Signify. that the candidate has com pleted all.Pil requirements, save the ing dissertation. | Rs discoveted in the Bankruptcy Act and | > - the Winding-up Act- both vl e ‘dug into his significant, culture, to. give. “nating contrasts. dairy farm had a herd of | cows. ale farmer's problems | home at Arnprior is | ‘picture today?” lige “FUNNY, YOU CAN SMELL IT OVER HERE” ‘OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson: Greene Discusses Economic Farm Units An Investment of about $55,000 “incliding 600° “acres of “improv: * ed_ land, is needed to make ~ a net income of $4,500 from a Sask- | atchewan farm today. A° simi- | lar income from an eastern On- tario dairy farm requires a sli- ghtly higher investment, which would set ‘up a farm including a herd of 30 to 35 cows. _ In a recent speech, Agricul- ture Minister J: J. Greene talk- ed about these minimum invest- ments “required for what are | nee to be economic farm units. T asked him* how today’s | farm of this type compares with the pre- war, era, a quarter of a century ago. —He-~ very -kindly if’ new- | of agri- Mme. .20me.. tasci-_| ly-acquired, knowledge In 1939, an average Ontario “19 tal. averaged: $12.000. per farm; ‘the cash income during the year was $2,700, but the net income was only $ Even allowing . for the fact that $1.00 then would | buy What costs $2.04 today, that | was not a princely income. MORE PRAIRIE WEALTH The prairie grain-grower was better off. With 400 - 480 acres of land improved, out of a. total holding of three quarte--sec. wan farm in 1939 represented a total investment of $10,000. From receipts of $2,950 the farmer had cash outlays of “$1,350, him a net income of $1,600 Joe Greene, just. completing | his first six months as Minister | of Agriculture, has been term-. ed ‘'The Abe Lincoln of the Ot- tawa Valley’. Deep-voiced, tall lean, and greying despite ‘is mere 45 years, he has the ap-: rence and manner of that roug hern statesman. Not in that character was his. achieve- “ment.in winning the Distinguish- ed Flying Cross for gallantry in the RCAF during the war; and | - friend was born in Toronto. Joe. Greene is the first easterner to be appointed Minister of Agricu- | Iture since: Sir Wilfred Laurier | picked the colourful Sydney Fis- ther, from Brome-Mississquoi in Quebec, in 1896 In his first official tour of the West,+Hon J. J. Greene left the impression of a friendly man with a mind quick to grasp the 1s. His famiiy | very dif- ferent from the Alberta cattle rahch operated by his vredeces- , sor, Harry Hayes; yet Joe | Greene..has moved nearer the | farmers’ hearts ‘in gix than Charolais Harry did in a4 years CHANGES IN FARMING “What do you see as the most significant feature in out farm I asked acs Our Yestardays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YFARS-AGO (Tune 18, 1941) ceksfully defend his champion- | ship of the -heavyweight world | for the Ith time TEN YEARS AGO (lune 18, 1956) The annual meeting of the LI- The total invested eapi- | leaving | months -— | Manning's _ have meant it, | j aby jer. | Greene. “Well, perhaps tt is the “increasing volume ~ of pro- | duction. coupled. with a steadily | \force,"’ he told me.- Since the | war, our farm labour force has - dwindled from 1/186,000 in 1946 |fo 594,000 last year. But des- ipite this fall, increasing mech- ‘anization has enabled the phy- | sical volume of agricultural pro- duction to rise 40 per cent in. that | period. ido is good news for a . hungry world. . Matching the decline in farm ‘population, ue number of indi- vidual farms has fallen from its | | peak figure of 732,858 in 1941 to 480,903. in 1961, he told me Yet ithe cléared Jand has been con- |solidated into larger farm units and the area of improved land has. ctually risen by 10 per ‘cent te 103 million acres in that ‘time. : The factor enabling workers to produce more has of course been mechanization, he ‘explained. The average Cana- 'dian farm in’ 1941. had machi- nery worth $813. Twenty years later, that average farm was ‘using machinery worth $5,342. A third very significant fea- ture, saving labour and improv- | ing efficiency, is the doubling of | the farmer’s purchased supplies expressed as a. percentage of ‘his larger total input. Today's farmer isnot only using more | machinery: he is also buying | }more seed and feed, more iservices, pesticides and even twine. : : Ramilton pany pharmacists deserve Nl credit for spendihg time and money developing a child proof ‘vial for the drugs which poison so many young ones. Now the jtrick will be getting the trade to use it. Fred Wilson, of Hamilton, president “ot the: Ontario Phar- | macists Association, speaks of ‘a province-wide campaign to drum up interest in the new de- jvice. All very well, but # may not be enough. A safe, standard, pill box has |long been needed Even the mildest nostrums can prove fat- jal in the curious hands of a child, who with blissful laek of ,comprehension will munch down the entire contents of any. new- fourid treasure. It is needed, not | ‘just for some pills, but for all. The Windsor- produced gad- get might do the trick. A reas- /onably hefty- dow ward pres- jsure of the” palm, combined with ~ a turning action, is necessary to irelease a serie# of interlocking lugs on the container and its cap. As most parents will realize jthis type of Manual gymastie is What Next In T 'macist at the corner storé, |enormous number are not. They | ‘come straight from the -manu- ' packaged. For Safer Drugs Spectator a - | not likely _to be ‘stumbled on chy small children, who are more prone to tug, pry or twist. Dur- ing tests, many — adults _were foiled before they read the in- structions. Assuming, then,. that this eon ‘tainer could do much to: reduce the many thousands of acciden-: tal. poisonings‘each year, is a. campaign of friendly persuasion enough’ While a lot of pills and capsules are. placed in their con- tainers by the dispensing -phar- an° facturer, bottled or algpady It is at this point, perk a. ps, where government action should | ‘come in. If the new container is all tt is cracked up to be, sure- ly i would be a legitimate use of authority for ‘the federal goy- ernment, working in concert with the. provinces, to stipulate | the use of-.a vial embodying the _ safety. principle at all stages of drug preparation— and factory. lias eaipinipatiscibapeas he Wild West? | Calgary Alberton Oh, : Goody-Goody gumdrops. : [we Calgarians aré going ta he allowed to drink in mixed com- pany in beverage rooms during Stampede Week. That nice man, | Mr. A.D. Elliott, who. is chair- man of the Alberta Liquor Con- trol Board has promised. And he |-was speaking 'to_the Alberta Ho- |trl men's Association conven- tion, which was taking place in Edmonton, right under Premier nose, so he must Aren't we lucky” After all, Mr. Elliott is pretty carefil about what promises he ‘makes. He told the hotelmen he didn’t” ‘think it Would-be a good Idea ta Germany issued an ultimat- allow beverage rooms to stay um demanding sweeping terri- | open during the supper hour, torial and economic Privileges | even though licensed dining of Soviet Russia. lounges are permi tted to operate After taking the worst punish- Me chan cies aans ment he had absorhed si! “his knockout by Max Sch eling, Simon Fraset |. Joe Lois apened up a fearful barrage, to knock out Billy! , Ottawa Conn in the 13th round to | sue-. Enthusiastic accounts eame! |from British Columbia about the - impressive new Simon. Fraser University lately built on Burn- Mountain outside Vancouv- Immense courtyards mighty buildings and road flights. of guorian—Youth-Chib-was held in-.steps are reported the Holy Redeemer | Commun- itv Centre, presided over hy the’ some PDOSIDEN bees FOLEY i BYLOC sia AM, opened with a prayer and the recitation of- the LYC. Pledge | led. by Doyle. The University Women's Oh om Charlotretown enter ‘tained. at—Juncheon cat ‘'Oak- wand’ on Monday in honor | of Miss Doris Saunders, Associate Professor of English, University ef Manitoba. the moderator Father | ifret premier of Ontario, In the midst of this magnifie- ence there. has been small thou- ght for the plain’ gravestone in- tthe StAndrew'<: “West=cemeterye lsix miles north of Cornwall, lwhich marks the burial place of |Simon Fraser. He was buried. here with his journeys done -and the Hudson's Ray Company Imarked the grave of a proud servant of the. pioneer fur ‘trade. Beside him, at this On- tario crossroads, was Wur lied alohn Sandfield Macdorald,- _the ° | iat such times. And when he was “| forced to land becattse _| distress. Those who work under water } | since fewer | in both store Medical. Oddities | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen sinuses and the barometer. el. Air trapped within an ob- \Atructed. cavity expands at high altitudes leading - to @xcruciat- ing pain. Barosinusitis occurs when the soesina ofa sinus is blocked." A minute amount of | air ae a tooth cavity leads to unbearable pain (aerodontal- gia). When severe, the pilot is of the v ®r ground where the atmospher- | ‘|te pressure is ‘increased, are subject to the ‘chokes, Wh en) the individual ascends too rapid- ly, the ‘nitrogen in , blood be-- comes. a gas and th3 ensuing bubbles obstruct. the small ves- sels. Bubbles plug the capillar- fes of the lung leading to chok- ing and is regarded as a severe form of decompression sickness or caisson disease. me. This world-wide viral infee- tion of sheep and goats is trans- mitted occasionally to the skin | ‘of sheepherders and shearers, butchers, veterinarians, and those manufacturing vaccines. The outcome is a localized rash | lasting six weeks. i na Now that we are at war: Bat- | tle’s sign is a bluish discolora- | tionbehind the ea4 that occurs | when the base -of the skull is | fractured. Cannon, sounds occur when the chambers of the heart ate_not__.synchronous.._B 1.0 0d from the auricle strikes that of the ventricle with a big-boom War fever ‘is typhus, so named because the louse-transmitted | | disease was so common during hostilities. It also is ‘nicknamed jail or camp fever. We ‘also not- ed that Fort Bragg fever was listed among the 64 different “fevers.’' It is a serious liver in- ; | fection so named. because it was. | first observed .among . soldiers | stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C., ‘in 1942. + PHYSICIAN'S NIGHT OUT 7. writes: My .-usband is a physician..Whenever we attend | a social gathering the ladies as- |. |cend upon him like the prover- | bial locusts for medical advice. If this continues we may e- | come hermits. How about -a few ; ideas to solve this annoyance? eo REPLY It is: better to actept the ‘‘an- noyance’’ as a sign of confid- ‘ence in his ability than to say | that the advice is worth just ex- actly what it costs these ladies. | Some physicians solve his pro-. | blem by telling them that an ex- | amination is required. I tell them, with tongue in cheek, that | their symptoms suggest leprosy: PROLONGED. ULCER M.F.A. writes: “Is” it Possible | | for auodenal ulcer to continue | | for 15 years or more? L | REPLY i Yes, but when the lesion per per-| | sists over this length of time , Some thought should be given to surgery.-After all, we live only | once, and why -spend the best | years of our life in pain? | ~ WHICH ORGAN? | 0. L. writes: Does the spleen or the pancreas take care of the | carbohydrates we eat?. REPLY insulin and enzymes that digest | certain sugars and starches. The | spleen is more concerned with immunity. o COUNT IT RB. F. writes: Can a diatietie | eat grapefruit? . REPLY Yes. When grapefruit is eaten |it should be ealculated with the | carbohydrate and calorie intake of-the -rest- of. the diet. Overprotectiveness makes child_more insecure. au (NOTE: All correspondence — to Dr. Van Dellien should he: | addressed to: Dr. Theodore _Van Eellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Tlinois.) PLAN DE-SALTING PLANT BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The | high altitudes the rane | pressure is less than at sea lev- | Orf was another newcomdr to — The pancreas manufactures | -- =) were-increased--considerably:— TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— -_ { | would no longer be room for a Bia Romania’ S Initiative By Boris Miskew - Canadian Press Staff Writer. Romania's oroning independ: ‘ently was behind a sudden tiie ence will give Premier Chou. to Bucharest by Soviet Commu- Eastern European ‘nations. Bucharest comes at a when the Romanian government | |is striving for greater independ- ;ence for the European nations— Barosinusitis deals with ae En-lai an important opportunity | nist | to present China's case to the | Brezhnev: -party chairman Leonid Ceausescu later mod- * ified his plea to say that- the Chou's eight-day state visit to Warsaw Pact must exist so, long time , as does the Atlantic alliance. The visit by the Chinese pre- mier will allow Chou to give Pe- king's side of the ideological ar- | hoth in the NATO and Warsaw | gument with Moseow, with the /Pact blocs—and the rift be- | Segen Peking and Moscow Is as wide as ever. The Romanian initiatives na , doubt. was stimulated by. the | military stale-mate in the creation of North At- )jantic Treaty Onganization , and the Warsaw Pact, the East-.| ern European answer to NATO. TENSIONS REDUCED *—Tensions steadily have dimin- _ished in Europe, despite the un- | settled question of divided Ger- | Many, and Europeans gradually ‘have accepted the status quo al- j though occasional cries are | raised for? German reunifica- n. rench- President de Gaulle | paved the way toward greater | European self-determination by ‘his refusal to march any. far- ° | ther with NATO's | integrated | military command, and this was followed in recent weeks by Ro- manian Communist party chief Nicolai Ceausescu's call for a -loosening of Moscow's hold on the Warsaw Pact members. Ceausescu wert so far .as to ‘urge the abolition of all mili- | tary blocs and his is appeal appar- — | — | Another step toward farm re- | surgence in Ontario was taken | when the provincial and federal governments agreed to support takeover of” uneconomic land profitable farms. Fortunately the program—at least. at the start—will bé—a voluntary plan operated under the Agricultural | Administration. - ee —Proof-is-at-hand_that_profitable , farms must be of size to justify purchase of méddern equipment otherwise there is danger of the farm slum. Yet it must be re- residents like their country. life | and continue to live on possibly productive land although scar- cely making a living through lack of capital or sufficient farm acreage. Ure The program will encompass $7,200.000. outlay if. fully “extend- ed With éactr government paying alike. Retraining of farmers who are willing ‘to quit their farms-is provided. If the farmer Swantsto remain ittthe farm home the governmem will p u r- chase the land and lease it to ad- | jacent owners _who want to ex- Europe | and its transfer to larger more | ; Rehabilitation. and- Development called that many of the rural’ hope ‘of convincing other Com. munist” states that Soviet poli- cies are. too soft toward the ~ West. ALBANIA IN FOLD c At the moment only little Al. | bania supports Peking solidly ; among all the European Com. | munist countries, and Chou no | doubt wit try to sway Romania away from Moscow. “The. pedple of. Romania de- | fend the independence of their | eountry, ** Chou said on his ar. | rival in—Bucharest. He. added | that his talks with Romanian of- ° ficials ‘‘will strengthen the rela- tions between our countries and give us an opportunity to ex- | change views on the situation in the world. socialist movement.” But tt is: doubtful that the: Chi- nese will succeed in aligning Bucharest with Albania against the Soviet Union. Romania's invitation to Chou appears to be more of an effort to: bring ‘about a reconciliation _ between the East and the West - /and between Moscow and -Pe- | king than an attempt to attain a greaer measure of independ- ence at. Moscow’ s } expense, Ontario Farm Plan London Free Press pand, leaving the house to the > owner. - Other acne make the scheme, a most generous.‘one witheasy terms for the departing farmer. It is wise that the voluntary bas- is exists flow. Yetit may not be long. before the need for farm land to supply a burgeoning On- tario population will demand -that: the- plan .be-made compu!- ; fertile farm acres eannet be_left- idle Indefinitely just “at~ ~ the whim of the owner. It is expected that the -plan will engender a new farm trend. If benefits are readily available to the dispossessed farmer he and his family will he willing and possibly anxious te naage their way of life. Mechanization makes size an essential for farm success and this fact 4s-now, well established. The government's responsibility. will be to educate the unwilling that there are real gains for them in a transfer— and this may take real Public relations skill. ernment “plowing under" of un- economic farmers is daily be- “coming a necessity. Instead of examining the vir- |. tues of free university education, | and setting it as a goal which | should be achieved as fast as possible, too many people—pro- | fessors among them— have--a negative attitude. They magnify the problems. |Dr. Gordon Shrum, chancellor | of the new Simon Fraser univr- sity in Vancouver, is- one. whose fears about it loom as large as his prejudices against it. Speaking to learned societies meeting in Sherbrooke. Que., Dr. Shrum said the abolition of: ~ Without A Price Tag Toronto Telegram. ‘ every. Canadian university whe- - | ment S| tuition fees would lead to large | classes of mediecre students and reduce university standards unless admission requirements Undoubtedly the universities would have to be more selec- tive. They could, for instance, replace some of the barely com- | petent people who scrape. in with borderline marks and little enthusiasm for learning, by bet- ter. students who don’t enter now because of price-tag. : v. It could happen that. there | those whose brawn is more not: asked—about—women—waiters—in-}-Use- of nuclear power for ex- _able_ than their -brains.-The-ath- beverage who complained about a short- age of male waiters, he replied | firmly that there had been ser- | ious objections to the idea from the public. So you see, Mr. Elliott is a rather stern man. But a warm-. hearted did he promise .us mixed bever- age- room drinking during} Stampede Week; he hinted that if we're good little boys Sand girls and hehave—ourselves when , we're drinking together we may he able to go on doing it, even “after the Stampede is over. Isn't that wonderful? Let's all go to the nearest heer parlor right away and-—very decorously, mind—drink tea Mr. F111 ott's shealth. poms Journal Few of the-cars holevinig to- wards Ottawa or Cornwall pause in their flight and Simon Fraser would not mind a bit. A restless, daring man he sought new riv- ers and crossed great moustains and he would he pleased that. young men and women. should explore the frontiers of thought in a university -with his name than that they should linger” near his MBEAN Cnr sia TRAE CEREMONY BACK OTTAWA (‘CR!—The colorful changing the; gard -ceremony’ | returns ta Parliament Hill for another siimmeér. June 24, one day earlier than previously an nounced. , Inthe five years. the jdrill has “been performed, it has attracted an estimated 2,000,000 | apectatora, > rad one too. For not only 10 rooms by hotelmen | ‘tracting fresh water from the letic Sea appears to be economically feasible, says the chairman of |the New York State Atomic and Space evelopment Authority. Oliver hsend, speaking at | the. St iversity here Tues- |day, said a nuclear de-salination proposed would be a: $94.- ,000, 50,000,000 - gallon = pe:- ‘day one near Los Angeles. ‘other would be a $4.5-million | | plant at Riverhead, N.Y. i “EDGEHILL” Boarding School ~ For Girls 2 WINDSOR, “NOVA SCOTIA 75 Anivermncy. Sear : Regular course Grade , - VIT to Grade 12 ‘Michaelmas Term begins | September 7, 1966 | nen pamusreseareehng arenes Farly enquiry advisable owing te limited vacancies: ~ . i a j | For further information, apply to a €. Gordon, B.A.,.| M.A.. Principal An | “scholarships'’’ that Dr. Shrum approved for Simon Fraser might have to go by the | boards... The problem of members —- qualified professors a almost ther or not tuition is free. The abolition. of feea would probably | require them to refine their ad- Mission procedures still further, until expansion caught up with the acceptable demand. But at the same time, as Dr. Shrum advocates,..every govern- ‘creating other institutions” of- further education, to provide for, the great major- - ity of | secondary school. pupils for whom. university ie not the right avenue. Universities’ “fears of he ine | swamped if fees are abolished | Mount _ous._outbreak in recent years. _| are hollow. They control— and | Should_ continue to control—theie ‘own admission standards. ’ Dutch universities, which are free, are far more selective than Canad- fan. MOUNT ETNA ERUPTS CATANIA, Sicily (AP) Etna, Europe's - tallest and. most active volcano, blasted molten rock into the skies Wed- 7 —_— inesday, a month after it calmed down from its longest continu- .The, eruption burst open a new crater on the northeast slope of the 10,705-foot volcano, but there |was no immediate danger for the 5,000 people Hving several too-large classes, too few well , miles down the “mountainside. j x Ni Poly stops — ara. ram blight on potatoes! Niagara Polyram fungicide ¢ gives excellent contro! of early a lungicide, nd late blight of potatoes. Tomato -~-too;-for~control~of-Early-end—Late...... _ Blight, Anthracnose and Gray Leaf Spot... . ED | A product of mecarma cunmcais | Niagara Grand Chemicals Research Dp s cd yy? “It le a harsh thought but gov.