4 a ~\. + Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew — Ww. 4. Hance, Publisher i tellement ook Sie Guardiaw we. eee orth tllettennecinseteatsnde ee ference fete ‘decide otfitatiyon the new location. for the various com- mand:.elements of NATO's - armed . forces. SHAPE is to leave- Paris, and. will probably >be reestablished near Wallace Ward” Frank Walker ~~ Managing: Editor — Editor Published every week ey morning (except Sun- “day -and--statutory—helidays)—at165—Prince Street, Charlottetown, t P.E.1:, by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. ~ Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. t : Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Adveriliing Services: Toronto 425 Unversity Ave- Empire 3:8894;.1Montreal 640. Cathrart Street Uni- versity 6-5942 Z; Western Office 1030 .West Georgia ~ Street Vancouver. MA 2037. Member Association and The Canadian Press. is. excl of Pres: lication: Canadian’ Datly. Newspaper publishers The’ Canadian usively entitled to. the use for repub- al news dispatches in. this paper . eredited to it or to the Assoriated Press or Reuters and also the loga! news punlished herein: ? ki of specia!- disnatchés here- 4 s scription ‘rate: : right or rep In also reser Not $12.00 a _ mot ser vickal ts $15.00 a year in -U:S.- monwealth. Not ever Member Audit Bureau of Circ At her Week. by carrier. Fwy mail on ru val routes and areas arr er z year off rT is and and U-K: $20,600 per and. elsewhere oviside British Com 7< single Copy. % slation. : “The str = ongest memory is than the weakest ink” PAGE Ais Now i campaign 9 2, 1966. _THY RSDAY, JU NE_ Gusbec Next: t's ‘the Quebec provincial that is drawing toward 4ts—climax, with the election. date set for. Sunday. observers to pow er. that by.m June 5. and with most pregicting a Liberal return Preniier Lesage maintains aking the-election-a Sunday - affair, it will discourage ilegat-prac-~ tices and scious of *-as it may, the campaign has been-a make ‘the voters more’ con- their responsibility. Be that mild dne by Quebec standards. Under the revised Election “expenses 4 head for each elector. in each consti- ' “tuency and 25 ‘cents a head for parties to spend. This doesn’t allow for much whoopee. _ .There are two: parties, -one quasi- _ separatist. thp other fully ‘separatist | “contesting a considerable number of --geats -while-both_the Liberals _and. Union Nationale are “contesting all | 108 ridings. All these parties, because | v-have _are entitled to have their party name “as well on the ballot. The other 40. + candidates are divided among the | Act, campaign . are -limited to 50 cents a Yn the province . at large. the. oe more than ten candidates, ? ho As servative candidates. -One of 2. Three Rivers, which was long repre- sented by Maurice Duplessis. There™ Yves -Gabias is the Union Nationale candidate. He was the previous mem- -.per--who—was—suspended from the legislature after failing to prové charges against the former attorney- _general..Opposing him is Leon Balcer, — formerly Conservative member for - Three Rivers at Ottawa, but now run- t ning as a Liberal. - aud ‘ Attention outside Quebec will be_ 5 aeaepa rhe etoWe oe the-separa~— tists. They appear to be too divided to for Success, but Premier Lesage ot taking that for granted. He has taken every opportunity to de- nounce them: as “witch- -hunters” and “dream merchants,” and -has made ~ plain ‘ “his conviction that: separatism— could lead Quebec only to catas- | trophy. What. they stand’ for, he has [ ‘declared; is “the most serious and a “parties with fewer than this number} of representatives. These-include- the Quebec Socialist Party ‘with four -eandidates, and the Communists with | the same number. The newly ‘formed: Quebec Conservative Party, -which caused some concern in federal Con-. ranks, is , running. three - the. bitterest “contests: is in weaker cease to be harnessed No one exactly knows what the out: ' sumer. Perhaps this. was regarded as Brussels. Whether the ! Council’ -—Wwill-also_quit French. soil is Pace de- ~ bate. It could be left in Paris. since it -is political, not military,” and hence acceptanie: to de Gaulle. : Pending ‘also is the question whe- | | ther the two French divisions now in” W est any will remain there after. July 1. T y..will be 116° jonger under — NATO. command’ from that ‘date. Ac- cording to a-well-informed correspon- dent for the Christian Science |: Monitor, the chances are that in this. | an others, the Frene h President: “will more or: -less 4 - write his own ticket. There will con-~* | tinue to. be an integrated ~alliance /-armed under;a unified-command, but —Franee—will-have_no-part in it. This._| fact will change the whole character of the operation: French withdrawal is based on the | . assumption that the time for-any Sov-) iet’ invasion is over and that an ||. —organization designed to meet that~ danger. is now obsolete... Many other European-_leaders.agree that the. likelihood of a Soviet attack on West- ern Europe ‘has all but disappeared. " However, the others have decided to . keep an ‘integrated command -force |. for two quite different reasons. One | ~ reason is that it now is the main link : between Europe and the United RIGHTS oF THE PuBLic r ° a Wee. Health | Forecast. By Dr. Theodore R, Van Delleh ~ Medical forecasting is. not “easy be@ause the course of an, illness may be‘ as unpredictable as the-weather- Expert—knows—- not respond to treatment. Other - disorders follow a specific pat- | tern, providea complications ‘do : i nct ensiie. In such instances the | =~ 4 physician appears to hedge and Cea RG ghtly so. ~A_ thorough* understanding of | the patient is equally important: For example, John has stamina _}and_recuperates rapidly, but his ‘friend, Joe, is below’ par éven~ when he is not sick ‘ahd a minor | | ailment may have major. conse- respiratory infection Ses Nervous factors.also efifer th p:cture as some persons develop’ many emotional oyerlays that > prolong disability.” The family what can be expected. Some: families afe wiped out at an. ‘early age by heart trouble or- high .blood pressure. Treating | | an individual’ with this back: | ground carries:an unfavourable prognosis. : Insurance companies are more interested in the long-term estimation of health and longe- vity. There medical departments | study - prognoses ~ scientifically | and many of tne questions ask- | “| ed on insurance forrhs are aim- ed at obtaining data that are : useful for this purpose. The. _| longer the policy-holder lives to pay premiums, the greater is the revenue of the company. In -eddition, the rates are calculat- a States, . without which . American THE LITTLE GUY IN THE ed upon life expectancy and ; marked: alterations «such as a | catastrophe could break the CENTRE. drawn from Europe. Perhaps an even | stronger motive behind ‘the decision, however,-is the German’ factor. Any complete breakup of the — alliance -would mean that Germany would in a team. OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Fine Finish To AFine |Ottawa which the Fowler Re- | inert Rescate - : t \perhaps his . most import- cism was for. the pre- Senator: ‘Thomas ' Alexander Crerar, a native of Molesworth - west of Guelph -. will celebrate _ come of that might be.: his 90th birthday on 17th of this wae : : month. Lagt week he. detiyer- | This vital conference will be taking | 24" hi. eagefly-awaited Tavewell | political parties. ‘'It is a great” <palce-at-a-time-when- Washington:-is—|speech_in-theSenate,_.prior....to_/ cmisfortune,” he said, ‘for | a too preoccupied in Vi is T Te was a Ee c pied * et Nam to be ing, eloquent. and _ essentially | people commence to lose faith much- thought or ; ye. That suits General de Gaulle’s book, of course. But other western - powers, including Canada,. in their governing institutions." | And this misfortune, he indicat- 2d eo aW be correct until wise. speech which, began on a able to devote 3 “note of nostalgia making him very emotional. ~ That was: not boty _Surprising when, we recall that. and Opposition Leader Diefen- | company overnight. They are interested in hered- ity favor certain families. Physique and body build also. play a role. Tre obese, for example, shave a | progressively worse*’ mortality- | ¥ Ca reér sent leadership of our two big. “They have served Canada, he | admitted, “but 41 offer no com- ment on failures.’’ There are no finer people anywhére in the world than 80 percent of the Ca- can provide, the very bake in she= said: ing- with the urging that that ewe the words. “Where there is no , » people: oe " . sow ‘a ioetinatsao finish rey a ~ ca- political career is vividly mea. baker resign. Banks ZA will have some grave misgivings. sured act that Oc-_ ck ober 12th will be the 50th anni-; : 5 ———— Passed- -Without-Fanfare versary-of his first_appointment Whoop pers Arriv /} as a federal cabinet minister. | ee Ce! Amid the spate of election promises The erect soldierly figure of | pee Telegram - Tom Crerar has naturally been , -a familiar sight on Patliament Three of the world's last live | Hill; as familiar is the halo of | {ck of 44 whooping ..cranes | respect which he earned and has »ave reached Canada, en route always maintained by his quali- "to the North West Territories. | tiese. These could be illustrated “ Reports from, Regina. say that, by the words of-Saint Paul to these big, beautiful birds— two’ “the Philippians: : ». adults and a baby— spent sever- “Whatsoever. things are tris, al days’ in Southern Saskatche- _.Whatseever things are honest, wan, when grounded by stormy | whatsoever. things are just, weather. . whatsoever things are pure Now they” are Rearing ~whatsdever things are » “lovely, destination” | whatsoever things are of good The cranes. spent their wint-. report; if there be any virtue, ers at-an Arkansas wildlife ref- ‘and if there owl praise, think _uge. on the Texas Gulf coast, _{on~ these~ thi -ennd-nest=near-~Canada‘s=-Great= Co which we were subjected: recently, we didn’t notice much emphasis being | Sibed ‘on the interests of the con- | _Mmore of a federal than a provincial | “responsibility; but ‘Ottawa has been | dodging the issue and it is time that provincial authorities were taking a chard look at’ the problem: This, we” note,-is what they have been doing in Nova Scotia, where a Consumer Pro- “tection Act, _passed. recently by the — legislature, provides for “‘the fair dis- closure of the cost of credit and for ir farewell speech fie urged these | It wasn’t many years ago that. | words upon the attention , of | there were less than 25 cranes Ht was “aiesatieast “that- 7 his Slave Lake during -the- suynmer;->-tips-and-—red--crowns. States and Canada are co-oper- + ating. No longer do hunters try i to shoot the cranes.” Whoopers™ nests, when discovered, are not edisturbed. This is the way it should be. Ornithologists estimate that the whooping ‘crane population at no time was large; possibly | 5,000 at most. It was civiliza- tion’s pushing ever furthefnor- | -.. thward-that..drove_the.birds.. to poorer feeding grounds, and closer to extinction. © The cranes are attractive. -They--are -white— with black wing- Some — them stand five feet tall and) ; have a six-foot wing: spread. nadian people; these deserve, and Aww rate as they grow. older. They are.more susceptible to diabetes the usual course of most. diseas- | es and the types«that do and do— ~ NOTES BY THE WAY - . Salesman, to boss on the phone , asking when he-will be back at work following - a recent car ac- cident: “My doctor’ says ‘I'm ‘ready now, but my lawyer says I'm ‘not.’ — Financial Post. ’ Some enn day’ the traf- fic problem will be solved when | everyone can stay home and send the machines to work, | Calgary Herald. a box of cake mix.. Naturally |. A woman has found $4,000 in | | -history_may” offer a_preview of | dice you. to my_husbant.””_ because some diseases. } high blood pressure, - or arterio- | | eclerosis. . ‘Smoking, drinking, and eating | habits also affect “the outcome in terms of | when considered. iqarge n = ~same~canube said of. ‘the finan- | cial status and working condi-. tite better than Canadians | tions. The physical’ examination | additional information on pulse’; | atid blood’ pressure rates and the | présence of heart, murmur. + "Phese § out the years that alterations in these departments affect mor- tality statistics. MULTIPLE KIDNEYS to have: bladder and kidney dis- 7 | ease ‘than those who have only two of the organs? ° REPLY. No, even though the most com mon complications infection followed . by stones cae é CURLED TOES | “Mrs. 1-V-- “writes: My—nine-—- year-old girl has a defect in which her toes curl under in- | Stead of lying fiat. Wout : you Hienow:=w ps | This may be congenital or ac- quired through improperly fitted personifies t h e“istatementship - »which our Upper-Chamber could _ apply to our “current. problems. e act applies to every sale of goods on credit in whic ch the purchase price To those’ *foetuiate enough to —smost-dreadful.danger.that. Quebec to-__ day could incur.’ freached Quebec in the Canadian con- text. confident. as he-says;that. ‘Can- adian confederation allows each. of its members ....jurisdiction.” ’ Everywhere he. has full freedom ‘in their” own . The Premier's campaign “has won the warm support of the Montreal .s Gazette: traditionally a Conservative phen aN paper. On don Pape, ® of its commentators, Gor- expresses the belief that.if Daniel Johnson cut more of a figure his Union doesn’t th Nationale might win, oat ink Johnson quite meas up. He lacks the “it” which marks ive _ réal leader. In any case, however, it is “felt that the Unign. Nationale is “moving into-a-position- where it- can: fulfil the role of Opposition far better ‘than in .the ‘past. and where it. can - become.a serious. contender for ‘office— in the future. | Calling The Tune —~ NATO. foreign ministers meet next’ Monday in Brussels to redraft the: terms oftheir alliance. For. most of mands. -Hi ’ them it-is an unwelcome task, . but __ President de. Gaulle has. left with no choice. The old institution is” “being feor ganized to take into account » his wishes, his view! md nis de- ~ s.artions are isidered by them ‘come to he imaginative and forward ' looking, by ‘others, he is regarded as a pueaal of the vital safeguards of the West. “The first tas kK of the Brus sets con ti! “4 The stated purpose of the egisls- It was no accident that the sub- pe ve taka vedere een | titie whjgh he himself gave his represents far more than a soft- ‘swan-song was “What I. would ening of the climate. It is a re- os pa were Prime Minister of: ' affirmatfon of life. Even for city anada. i oe * dwell th “His first” “recommendation was te = ae ees vie Sa that the powers conferred on our e parks give way to fresh provincial governments by. our «.2'&°™: constitution should be restored. But for those who. live along | every lender must show. the buyer a | to them. - their. migration: routes. there is . written statement.showing the amount, sea Re med Canada Cade ae Mele aa —expressed as one sum in dollars and | more insidious danger facing us _In recent days they fave ‘been | cents—actually received. it ‘cash. by cet eaten. Be pointed wut passing through— long, undulat- ‘that the 1949 dollar is today | "the borrower: or where the” Jender is-_worth-a—mere 58- Cents. thawed “ponds_ of the northland. | also a seller, the .cash price: of, the Then he warned against the From time immemorial they "goods. When the lender is the seller:: is more than $50. Each contract must show the price of goods and terms of payment and must also describe any ‘security for -payment;-warranties; or | guarantees applying to the goods. | | | ul | | | J Before the agreement is signed, _ ing V’s en route to the newly - wound to rabies. Jersey coast and the’ ' shores a NO {CALORIES IN VITAMINS ‘Long Island Sound. | _ C. writes:. Do vitamin cap- To their aricestors Manhattan | sd contain calories? was as much a wilderness as the | REPLY } islands in the Gulf of St. Law- | rence. te appetite. Now they skirt the smog-deck- a ; TT ed.city,-but_suburbanites glance Be EN elinlua aloft at the unmistakable sound (NOTE: All ‘correspondence _ oftheir honking.” te BE Van Dellen should be In it they hear echoes of the dressed to: Dr. Theodore primeval past, of a in contin- | | Sen Dellen, ent unblemished by man, teem- ing_with wi midlife of whom the | une, Chicago, llinois.) | “Canada are: “watiant® Seguin 5a vivors. When they are. late, -as for a tardy loved on passage is - noble: testi life’s springtime renewal. “Our Yesterdays i _ (From The Guardian Files) iy to ‘TWENTY “FIVE YEARS AGO (June 2, 1941) consistent over-spending by our have used this flyway, along the ithe sum to be credited as a down pay- a governments in fulfilment of yore a promises. | ‘our’ he_stressed that he! ment or for a.trade-in must also be | is not antilabour-but he deplor- shdwn, as well .as the cost of Borrow, ed the over-powerful monopoly Ce ing expressed in dollars and. cents; and the percentage that the cost of _ created by. labour. unions. % COST OF ‘GOVERNMENT Tt is admittedly very difficult! borrowing bears to the principal — amount; and this must be expressed Fifthly - and this has been qne ‘for the Government to discrim., | of his recurrent themes thréugh inate between'.one set of veter-—. “the. years - hé criticised the high . ans and another: there are so cost of federal ‘government, now. many deserving cases.” But it is as the true-annual rate on the unpaid Mounting to $500 .or every.man’ only right that the Government palarice. woman and child in Canada this -make a serious reappraisal of ‘ : bail On top of, that must be ad-, Canada’s yeterans who . were Those who extend variable credit— _ minis gherUPERL a prisoners im Hong Kong. revolving-credit or budget accounts— | the average Canadian °family- ,.Almost every year for the last must.also express the cost of borrow- °°, man, wife and two children 40 years & ie hay vie OF . EST ata? NEEM Beene ae ajyear - and ro: _ Kong veterans has gone to O ing in writing, bot ollars an gressively more every year tawet ; eee ett _ cents as a percentage of thé*principal for Ottawa, plus the cost, of lo. eeemene sum. And they must do this every five | cal government? We know the ential treatmen Po rege Weta answer: -_ yet who. but - Tom Cre- ~ weeks agile neract-i is. Esueanee + er ~protests,aboutthis?_ | Ing... All, they of health be considered in rela- | ri expenditures’ by the CBC, and he chastised it for erecting the “huge buildings’’’- such as the headquarters . in in the service of their country. These men were in the hands of the enemy for almost four tion is to require’ that the ‘borrower. white’ elephant he made fully aware of all costs and Foch Gigee CUnARTAH matene : oe peel ke eee __most other. Canadian prisoners interest charges,-if the lender does SAYS STUDENTS“ RESTLESS Gf far. They lived on’ Three bows of polished rice a day and a cup of weak green Soup. Their tion’ can be: detected .on the captors might give them, once University of Toronto campus, | a week, a teaspoonful of oil and | ~Rey-—-Morely---Hodder,...campus__sugar. Once in a while they: had - TORONTO (‘CP)}—A_ mood of “restlessness and even frustra> not do so.the credit registrar may re- voKe his license. Other measures pas- ‘|: sed at the same time include the Mortgage Brokers and Lenders Regis-— eas : ‘ arc ey .. |, chaplain, said at the Toronto _ an ounce of whale meat or fish tration Act with provision for annual | gonference of the United Nearly -all .the’ men suffered registration; and amendments to Me ‘Church. He: blamed “the com- . from bert-beri, pellagra. matar- Unconscionable Transactions, Act ° | plexity and-impersonality of the ja and’’ dysentery. “Some. were uni ersitw’ and. the edeSire . of iortured and beaten T wien fy bring it into linewith the new se ‘| some, students ‘for a, more ac-.;———=—-—— ranting rules, which go. into effect { tive -role in. umivensity, social FAR NO COMETS tio tn 19 80. and political action. He said F : : }-after July. 1.1966. replacing. stopgap. | many. have. little interest in the |The ‘earth can pase’ “through ‘a legislation of 1964 which, expires at thurch because they. feel itis comet's tail “Witt Wo errects 3 ne wedded. to ythe status qto. and: ‘ ard ‘without: people’ being’ aware We end ee June. equivocal gp major issues, . of the event, ‘ . reer rs ‘ ‘ ° 5 ‘ ‘ ; ras : ‘ ° SS. Gazette They are,.mot asking for prefer- | are ! _ asking is that their present state | “the “rast: “tin -to-what+ they—sent-theough —Canad oF elsew Syria shut herself off from communication with Egypt sud-- 1 denly ithout _ explanation ng-Veterans- | hy- ‘ruled Middle East state years later “many Ot thee Hong | might be the next battleground | Kong. veterans: have heart dis- of the war veering eastward ease, nervous disorders and .eye | from the Peng ener: problems (quite a few are. | blind?.- |r The Hong Kong ‘veterans, in their brief this year’ before the | House of Commons Veterans’ Committee, m hat seems a | very valid’ point*They say that the Pension Commission, which sets the amount of veterans’ dis- Hitler and Mussolini. Atacused reir Pass only a few hours announced conclusion of the; bit- I. terly fought battle for Crate. TEN! YEARS AGO . (June 2, 1956) zthe Phe. -.Charlatietow 5 was used with | “Club met at the YCMA: for a 655. sane. yardstick claim from veterans’ suffering | closing meeting of the from ‘well-defined conditions | for Class Be Gat from normal service. in | atanon, Latter | arisin judged by Roland—Taylor._w But this yardstick, watie! sound enough for the cases to which it is ordinarily applied, may be based on an inadequate medical knowledge of the after. ~effects of the type of. imprison- ment the majority of the Hong Kong. veterang underwent A two-year medical” study re- cently. completed. by Dr. HJ. | Richardson, medical adviser to ——the-Pension Commission, eet result in increased pensions for | iC Beksie Bar- aliviost all Hong Kong veterans i REGINA. (CP) registrar of the It-seems ironi¢ wf these. veterans | csyadian National. Institute for have not been receiving-the pen- the Blind and secretary for Sas sions thee. deserve because the ‘katchewan of the Eye Bank of medical assessment ofMtheit cas-lcanada, “was. honored ~after, 25, | es has hitherto been insufficient” years service with. the CNIB. 1st, Edith Hume; 2nd., Lois | MacDonad, 3rd. race ~ Duffy. John Beharrell, ’ rosy- ed, 18- year- -old_sonzof an Eng- lish exporter, became the ‘youn. tish Amateur golf championship, one of “sport's ‘mi ‘major titles, ly accurate ; She .was'a-typist and book- tf full- justice is dene.to their keeper. for -_90 years before claims after 20 Years, it will be reaching. her present post - in ; done nde too: s6on. ~! 198). * t . ay Sy HONOR LONG SERYICE | f $. K. writes: Are those who | ment spending is relatively high- | |have three kidneys more likely er than U.S. eee spend- ar, ahd block- |for the same year wa the-protection.of buy of consumer “every program director on the@jcnown to be in existence. The | Now that they seem to be | goods.” t vet ‘ CBC", with the récommenda-" fact that there are now 44 shows -making a recovery, it would ‘be shores or socks and poor walk- | tion that these woultt be salut- that they are slowly winning a sad day if they went the way | ing habits. It authorizes the sonibtanent of a? ates uclines a that -broad- | their fight for survival: -of.a dodo bird, the roc or the | a MONKEY BITE fn ; : : : Ss Ss ivial tripe’? among | '* §.:G. writes: at harm, i Registrar of Credit to administer all ‘its “many excellent programs” The people in both the United’! passenger pigeon. | ness, or complications could oc- oe of the legislation. All lenders, | “IF I Midabices as | cur as a result of being bitten ave frequency referr | monke be uding- ~department- -stores-and-fin-—\-senator— ‘Tom-~Crerar—in- “Otla--| _.GeeseO ‘er Gotham ee ‘REP LY 3 ce companies, must be registered.” | wa Report'’;~indicating that he |. New’ Times. + Anything from an~infeete-d~ No, but vitamins may stimul- | | ae ests iMet mn | amid growing signs that the Vic-"~ the “Wolitieal situation” at ° after*the German high command ° [ Camera | Ans tara senmm oe petition ‘ ‘Animals or Pets’’ ied | placed the winners as~ eae x at check: | gest player ever to win the Bri- . it stirred her up Guelph Mee cury. “e Don MacGregor, president of | the: Wisconsin Press” association: and an amateur pilot, explain- ed to a meeting last week just';. quences. Roger smokes heavily | why: he was tired. and has difficulty whenever. a /drive all the way down from | Sexual Response” is selling well » “T had to Park Falls," he said. ‘‘My son ‘Has got the plane.”” — Delevan | (Wis.) Enterprise. Movie Star — ‘‘Let me etre rector — ‘Delightéd. I'm al- | ways glad to meet any..husband of yours.’ = Barge Observer. Die. The New ‘ Pastor="T'm 'glad'-te have your husband's good opinion.’ Sister Hardshell — “Oh! he’s quite satisfied. He says, what can we expect at such a salary?” — Hamilton Fortunately, statues are main- ‘ly being .blowns up . for? political ‘reasons. There would be no end to it if it were to be done on aes- thetic grounds. Galt Reporter. Wild animals, birds ahd fish will decorate Canadian coinage | | hext year. How about the’ | whooping crane to symbolize the vanishimg value of the Can- Goo ya dollar?—Edmonton Jour- al. i Hy new book called “Human | How would a took called “Hum: an_ Sexua! Responsibility” sell? | —-Ostawe: Journal. The jules you tion't see ‘any | little tykes hanging on to their mother’s skirts nowadays is be ' Stanley Republican, | cause ey can't reath therm. — - They*Buy Cars In ‘Europe T: Windsor Star ° Western European countries | profit from. the tourist trade in one important ‘way which Can- ada does not: That is by the > | sale of cars: to visitors and tour- | ists. Visitors travelling through _Europe_often. prefer to do it by car. They:can rent. these; or . they. can buy - them. Purchase ean be the least expensive. A tourist’ buys a European car of his choice, uses it. for. the weeks or months of his trip, and sen it. is shipped home: Some concept of how popular this idea has become is‘ the ex- perience of Britain. During the | past 12 months ‘such sales by the “Big Five’’ automotive pro- the car it is setviced and then ft is shipped to his home, where- ever it maybe: Probably most tourists, especially from. the U.S:, wouldn't think of buying a British car in their own coun- A the British automotive. indus-— : -try:-But.they--will_ buy.one when overseas, so this is found money for. try and the country. Canada cannot avail itself” of this tourist revenue simply be- cause of our close proximity, to. the U.S., source of most of our visitors. They drive their own cars across the border: And. any case, because our ears are iden tical with those in their own very. in ~ -buy m cheaper) there is no impe-fu out (where they -can s for them to purchase a cart in-Canada. But it is a tidy. source ducers there numbered, 75.800 or about 70 pér day For Those Who Wonder _ Christian Science Monitor third-highest. -among-OCCD. na- : tions, running sli ghily” behind’ Sweden's $2,280 per capita. y American productivity is thus’ After using. of trade for European countries. 1 |-—"Phose-who wonder-why.Amer--: T icans seem ablé to live the good | would do > wel to study — | ‘natural result ‘that _ Americans - | have an edge in comparative standards of living. But ‘another set of OECD statistics provides another reason for the disparity. . Government expenditures —in ‘Canada in 1964-represented 27.4 per cent of the Gross N a tional Product. In the U‘S., despite ~heavy spending for -defence and | foreign aid, government. spend- | ing represented only spt per? cent of the GNP. . In- other_ words, Apiecickas zation for Econcaie Cobnera: | tion and Development. “The--annual--figures..compiled . by the 21-nation OECD show that | while Canada's productivity is | substantially below that of the |, United States, Canadian govern- ing. In U.S. dollars the Canadian ieee national product, the sum ofall goods and services produc- | ed, worked out to: $2,260 per cap- ita in 1964. The American figure | seem to have turned the trick of $3,300 having your cake and eating it Per capita. Canada. was tlie | tog. cpamaenet onlneamens offers CAREER "| OPPORTUNITIES for oC 2 PILOTS ti Rtecaatbeal operations __ oe on B707 ‘ Electra aircraft _.With. continued. aciandlad over the. next. five _ more top quality pliots. with \ $, we need Y potential: f for: nee -promation. s MINIMUM. QUALIFICATIONS * Age to 32 years ig ae © Commercial Pilot's ‘License. ‘@ British Nationality ~F—-9~500-hours commiand-(or-300-hours.on iets) e Matriculation Pass ~~ on entry. Experience will be related to age and aircraft types. Helicopter flying up to 1000 hours will be counted in assessifig experience. : INTERVIEWS ‘ Preliminary interviews will be held in. Vancouver, Calgary, Win- 1 of pplicants warrants. Final nipeg, Toronto and Montreal, commencing on the 22nd June, , in Vancouver. Other centers may be included if number interviews, medicals and. apti- - e tests.will_ commence. in. n.suitable centers mid- ue 1966. APPLICATIONS Sed Send full etnies? details and requests for information on.con-. Qantas Airways, ditions by returi Recruitment Offic airmail to: Flight Staff, Hotel Vancouver . 900 West Georgia Street VANCOUVER, B.C. You will thin be advised of the time and plac@:-for your initial . “interview during which full details of conditions of service will - be explained.and any questions about weer or eae will -be answered. ais is a “opportunity” for a-career-it-civil aviation. QA NTAS Australia’s round-the-world airline