x” ta —March, when he said that each ~ ~ government should take responsibility for the extent to which | —it—auses—the-income—tax,—and—hinted— 5 We Banaging Editor Published every week day morning ‘ statutory holidays) at: \65.-Prince Street, by Thomson Newspanert ld. Summerside, Mentegue. A berton day Charlottetown, PEI, Covers, Prince Edward | W. J. Hancox, Publisher. lace Ward y and Branch offices at and Sourls Represented Pana Advertising Services: ‘ Eerire. 3.8894; Montreal 40 \Cathcart Street ‘he -Gunedinie aland Like’ The Dew Frank Walker Editor ,# feaxcept Sun ally by Thomsen Newipapers Toronto 425 University Ave: Ai versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street: Varic@tiver MA 7037. bo a tise! an. credited fo itor and also. the’locel news published herein tor republication of apecih! dispatches Subscrip en "3 In’ alto reserved. Re - + y@ar in Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Pubs Agnociation: and The Canadian Press. Pipa is exclusively entitled to the dispatches. of all news, f in this shers The Canadian us for repub paper - to the Associated Press or Reuters Not over 40e per wee $127 a year by mail on-ru ral roti + serviced by } mpnwealt! = ‘ ae Nat er a 7. ‘Carrier. angle rory Member Audit Rureat st] rongest - HA ata: by carri ier, All here- ies one areas. - ty5.90 a year off Is! and and UK. $20.00 per and elsewhere outside, British Com- af firevilatian than the weakest ink” PAGE f+ ~~ SATURD AY, > JUNE | Me memory is weaker 19m Fiscal Showdown Looms. Premier Lesage | has vielded to the tnevitable, and has. ‘announced that™ he wilt meet next week with ‘his vic- torious opponent, Mr. Johnson, to fix a date for the Union .Nationale to take-over the government of Quebec. The big question now is how the new administration- pledged to be tough- er in its dealings with Ottawa than, Mr. Lesage was-—will get along with the federal .Pe a government _ n. The confrontation will prob- of” Lester ~ ably come this fall, when ‘the federal ‘government and the provinces sit down to work out a fiscal deal for the ’ first five years of Canada's second ¢e ntury. If*Mr. Johnson follows the plat-. form. on which he campaigned, he - will, “press for.100 per cent of. all _ direet taxes—income, corporation and ~guevession duties: -This-wouldleave- Ottawa to find its revenue, where it could among the indirect taxes— - chiefly sales taxes, tariffs and excise -¢uities.-We-can-well_imagine how. this_ would affect the tax-sharing agree- ments under which we have, beep. moe Mees It is our contention that it is not the |, warranted needs. of either Ontario or Quehec still inadequate to operating, and which we claim are meet the fiscal ~ needs of the less favored ‘provinces. that should govern the form. of the transfer “payments. between" govern- | ments, but that they should be-based | ent's notice to take off jor Carp,” on relative needs and resources. . Fogleral tax revenues are the result of the..collective..efforts..of,all_ana- _-dians, and. “should be distributed in an_ endeavor to equalize standards - of service. If this objective is to be ~ reached, Ottawa cannot afford to withdraw any further from the direct tax fields it shares with the provinces. There are hopeful, signs that it will resist further demands of this kind. Finance Minister Sharp gave some indication of this in’ his budget speech level that if the provinces felt they. needed more money from this source they should. raise it by taxing their own people and taking the blame for"it themselves. It maybe éasier, now, for a federal Liberal government to take this. line with Quebec. As long as Jean Lesage was there, it no doubt _felt_bound.to.do what it could_to. keep » him happy. It is under*no such com- pulson with regard to Mr. Johnson. It has also been suggested’ that Mr. Johnson's ‘bark is really. worse than his bife, and that he will prove to be a “reasonable” man at the conference table. But a showdown of some sort _{s looming, and it is one in“which we a have a vital interest. scraper, _ Ottawa’s Pentagan “The ahnouncement that ‘the na- Honal defense department is to be rehoused ‘in a spanking new $100,- 000,000 three-towered, 38-storey sky- writes Maurice Western in’ the Winnipeg Free Press, ‘‘should do _| much to restore the morale of our a n soldierS, ‘sailors and airmén scattered around the venue on _Peace- keeping assignments.” This being Abined Forces.Day, and ° the requirements of our armed ser "vices being of prime coneern to all /Canadians, we wouJd be in a mood to -give sober consideration to this state ment a there ‘was any warrant for =< OTe on-the—partrof its so But-there-wasnocintention” author— Canada's most distinguished journal . Ists Of +: -uch lavish expenditure at Otfaiea: ’ while being curtailed. the of doing anything but pinp the irony of a situation which peri services themselv es .are vein that he goes on to. say: letters from home tend to be clut-. “In these uncertain fimes, It is in -this biting when tered With the woes of stricken tax- ot apr 9 o int -one of; e« pavers, tt will be heartening to thes men-in the Go7a-Strip-to—realize-that- the heart of the nation is sound. Gov- erninents come and go, values change but Parkinson's Law: remains... With admirable foresight it has been provided that as the forces contract, administrative space will expand. One should add, since defense is an ad- junct of fadustry, that this is the best news ever: for Canadian carpet marie facturers..’ The writer recalls ‘that in May of 1964 the glad tidings went out that Ottawa w as to have its own Pentagon costing “upwards of $25,000.000" and dwarfing the $10,000,000 high rise, steel and glass structure then being planned for Mr. Martin's less pres: ” tigious department of external -af- fairs. But it has been possible within | 24 months to quadruple the cost and 3 } } | push-the-central- tower to-an awe-in- spiring height of 450 feet. Even at the mention of $25,000,000 coupled with the ominous:term ‘“‘up- wards” there were protests from the taxpayers. It was then, according to efense - that Weston, Nationa] “promptly went into action, liquidating E, the resistance-by putting abowt “all sorts of harrowing’ tales about ad- gmirals who had fallen through collaps- -ing floors and generals who had been . terrified by rats.in the present un- Satisfactory accommodation on Car- ‘tier Street.” The new design—~all 38 storeys of wilk-shield them from. such dire will mishaps. Mr. Hellyer,. doubtless, - occupy the top floor of the centre \ 3 tower which will command “the finest view in Ottawa of pigeons nesting far below on the roof of the Peace Tower.” The structure, too, should be a spur to mobility. “For a ranking air marshal to reach a ranking admiral, . it will be a simple matter of slipping out of one. broadloomed office, plunging 30-storeys-by-elevatorto the- connecting podium, crossing to another tower and ‘soaring 30-36 storeys for an integrated consulta- tion.For-less important. communica: tion, reliance may be placed on radio or carrier pigeon.” G The new complex. will contain no bomb shelters; but potential aggres- sors would ‘be unwise to draw -un- ‘conclusions from this ond&sion. “The fact that.400 automo- biles-.will..be poised in underground parking. facilities, ready at a mom- should provide for any ~ sudden climax, This aisumes, naturally, that - there will be “no entanglements with F | vehicles arising from a-seeond 1,900 car parking garage” for which, also, provision. is being made. Doubtless, comments the Free Press writer, this “inspiring venture” | will strengthen NATO, encourage the . on. and something’ of a countrified “Thi eae ens took F hanks the-penchant of 1@ Washingt | “Post. Qetes that |_English monarchs “fot hunting: the late T.S. E}jny most _ the.city enjoys 5,684 ‘acres of i \ perhaps the onetime hunting preserves, ow distinguished poor of our age, WAS & parks with titles, retained by the strong opponen: af the.new Bible. He Crown. The public cuses this called the “first fart of-tt “vulgar, | the 7.90 acres jy. the ‘cite trivial agd pedotiie” He believed it | splendid park. systeth eas pe a ate " ’ Mr. Fisher. visited one: of Lon- ye decay in the Eng- ~ Tene THOsty unusual gardens, 1% lish languace "Oth century.” It res lator” Yerry and Toms De Will be anat fate oO partment Store; tn the’ Woo d: : ir yearns when the land Garden fhere, 100 fect Whole. transtatir : available, before above congested» Kensington It wille be y Ile : oy High Street, the .wriler found- . 4 turn, to form . ‘ himself ims startled confronta-- Ne | United Nation’ and add to the'securi- | DE _ty, of the continent. But if so, he concludes, it wil be “in ways un- dreamed. ~of_by_the taxpayer a and... obscure to me.” Planned For 1970. . From London-comesnotice that the - English: speaking world is to get. a complete new Bible in 1970. The 300 year-old King James, or Authorized Version of the Rible, written in the Stately English of the 17th century, _ will then be replaced by a Bible writ- “ten in the everyday English of the mid-20th century The ne ’ New ~ Testament was published in 1960, and - so far has sold six million copies. ‘The Old Testament section is now being . ‘prepared for ‘6B: , Much of the franslation is still sec- ret. But it is known that ‘many of the old and familiar words will be re- ghee re \. | Jeys that have 4 | es. i, of “ my Ne “up to more—than—eight te the printers—-the Ox- ... qeed. prod: ford and Cambridge | niversity press- | fish and meats laid out HELLYER © DEFENCE | REDUCING # Has To Put Gurbs On Further Cie. Ss Natiéngl Geogtaphie News Bulletin ,had spireléa down to- ‘for rest and refreshment. Yet | paddled otf, squawking raucous marks— Greater London sprawls ‘over 720 square miles: it is the world’s largest’ metropolis. it remains a city -of-eistinet nei- _ghborhfods and seclutied _resi-_ dential pockets. London values-its narrow, hid- e rooftop He jeriticism,’ “REMINDERS OF” ROVALTY: Despite its intimate character, minister Abbey, cus’ Trafalgar Square, Big. Ben. (mericans. To many of these, London's attraction is its land- Tower Bridge, West- Piccadilly cir- Without exception, or so i seems to the United States Em- -den streets, its litfle courts and ‘London wouldn't be London ja... all Americans who come old. squares, the neighborhood pubs, and parks. ‘For a great | cityits. character 4s_surprising- | ly . intimate,’ ’, writes Allan C, Fisher, Jr., Setiior Assistant Ed- itor of National Geographic, in its June issue. Mr. Fisher and his wife lived in. London for several . months ‘while he collected material for |_his néstalgice “Memoir, Man's London.’ DARSIS IN THE MEWS After yéars- of country living, « an acquaintance of the Fishers moved ‘to. London's . Ennismore Mews, one of many.eobbled al- One from_stables-to fashionable hom- The friend dreadd_ th. lack of neighborly spirit, the un- frindly aloofness, of city living. “My — first’ Sunday’. in the | mews,” he said, ‘blast me If all neighbors - didn’t drag chairs and tables out on the cob- blestones and. sit around sipping-| aperitifs. Laterrwe played darts against a team from another mews.”’ East End still: abounds with big Cockney families and street “Stepping on rhubarb stalks, breathing air that seems ‘gray and clotted, you mingle with descendants of the original | .Cockney-costers...You..smell the. for the flies and the sun and the house- wives,”’ Mr. Fisher. writes. . London's neighborhoods add million—- people, a population exceeded by only Tokyo. and New York. Fach day, by various. canveyan- ces, nearly 16 million journeys are made within, into, or out of London. : Mr. Fisher reports, ‘London, like some other cosntopolitan capitals, notably Budapest and Madrid,idoes not want to grow either in.area or population. Al- | though: the London _ skyline “haasts some skyscrapers, laws now severely "restrict industrial and office. cons struction anywhere in the city.’ Othe* laws encourdge— ~ in- companies and in- dividuals td yseek their fortunes outside. Greater London. At last count. the Greater London Council had moved 214 firms out -af London ‘and was negotiating vd mayes with an additional 155, To placed, and, that archaie words. “such ~' wi as thee, thou, dath-and saith, will dis- appear. What the trans ators are try- ing to do, Accopasys to Professor God- frey Driver of Oxford, fagmerly pro- fessor of: Semi philology at the uni- versity, who ig. in charge of the trans- dation-is to clear-aw ay the “‘incompre- -hensible’-and-the “nonsense” in- the old Bible. During the three years panels of _literaryceritice Ww} geputinize the- new stvle.-Hindreds of suggestions and emandation. in the. New Testa- } towhs” around. “London. * } | 1 } | |. } ideas from the-pubtie called goy- new, GROWS TO GREEN BELT -" The. growth’ of London has brought it to the boundaries of its’ Green Belt. This carefully guarded .preserve of,’ natural fields and heath encircles the metropolis like a girdle. It is maintained, Mr. Fisher vsays, “as soul- ‘for—confined. urbanites.” the —so- the national < built eight _agtdmmodate “oxer- spilly’ ern fent has A bit of greenery-is as impor- iis | fant 1!o the Londoner as food. If he can't have a garden of his.own. he likes to be’ near a ) publi garden or park Rark- sup - erintenderts ar- receptive’: “to If some ; : w one sai ttre no mari- ment sectiog are also fo be consider- |. golds of-the tangerine variety,” ed, and ‘it is re; ved that the Old |. the superintendent may put, Testament the gaunt! et af SOOT) will have to mun \ severe examina- full judgmens Shot's judgment. : ; J some in I Lendon’s parks give the: cen ; tral-part of the city spaciousness ‘ tion with a hariequin-dack that-- “tf we-didn t havea monarch, been ‘converted > ~impressive--1- ewe} satisfying elbow room | — |without its pageantry ‘and re- ;minders of royalty: cavalrymen in scarlet clattering through tle ‘st¥eets for the changing “of “the guard; sentries in the guard boxes. at Buckingham Palace; a stirring “God Save tke Queen" at foot- ‘ball match, concert, formal banquet; even the familiar roy- al face on the pounds you save. ‘we would -havé to hire_or one _ for -you Yanks,” a British friend told Mr. Fisher. London. will play host this year to nearly two-and-a-half milion . Rating Tou to, England: seek tickets to the House of Commons. “L_will never forget,’’ said Mr. Fisher, “the reaction when I the iron immobility of ,.:64 an Embassy official for ‘8% waterlogged. tickets ‘not only to Parliament | but also to Trooping the Colour, an annual military spectacle in ‘honor of the Queen's Birthday in which the Queen herself par- Apparently I had par- requesis that one can make of a harried State*~Department em- ployee. Well,.I won't do it again: T just hate to see a grown man cry.”’ e ticgipates 1 fas twocof the most impossible | Fist Facilities a) Torente Telegram ; Rating Canada’s natural tractions. presents no difficulty for” tourists. of four-star selections, such as ‘Niagara Falls and the Rocky Mountains. But when it comes ; to rating accommodation and _food the tourists run into diffi- fulty. There is- no handy rating guide to Canadian ‘hotels, motels and restaurants, such as. are | available in the U. 8. and. Fu- Tope. “Fortier: tiance mirister” Wal> ter Gordon notes this fact in his ; book, ‘'A Choice for*Canada’’. In urging a greater effort to make Canada. an. attractive. country ‘for tourists, Mr. Gordon propos- ed that some. private body or in- stitution take on the task-of rat- ‘ing. tourist. facilities throughou the country, ‘such as the Miche- lin tire” manufacturers ‘1 have done in. Europe. t The governments of Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia There are plenty | at- j have already combined ta pub- i lish a uniform guide to accom-y modation, using the star-grad- ling system. Prince Edward Is- land and Quebee are consider- ing a similar system, However, ak Mr. . Gordon points out, any system of govern- | | ment “inspectionor rating could be suspect and open to political abuse. .A tourist. guide. sponsor- ed by a private firm might be “much~more~reliables————— This. year, tourists are expect- | ed to spend a record $2.5 billion 'in Canada,'and in 1967, during _.Expo._67__and_Centennial__cele— Fhrationa” “this fgure should be) | exceeded Supplying tourists | with attractive. scenery Is not | | enough. Good food, accommo- ‘dation and service are the final |-measure of a successful holiday | A guide to such facilities would be an important contribution tn the tourist Industry.” Ay oe Long Island The time may not. he too far | distant when, both Russia and | the United States, are able to 'Jand,,men on the }hnoon: and ev- entually to occup® stations there President Johnson has therefore acted wisely in calling for a treaty through the United Na- tions that would prevent any na; tion from claiming sovereignty over the mdéon or other celestial bodies. The tr@aty would als Ox hapa some other planets, forbid all countries from station-: Ling weapons of mass destruction; | ‘on any celestial body, or from others, by the United Stales and |the Soviet Union in _ 1959-1960. | The United Nations General As- ‘sembly has already expressed itself forcibly in a resolution ad- | opted Oct. 17, 1963, but a treaty would have the binding power a resolution cannot have. It may seem strange to think ofthe moon, and eventually per- as -a | Plaeé where man can live and move. It would have seemed eq- lually strange, 25 years ago, to «When air is forced out ae ~upon.. the kidneys. ~ es fought a fierce ee Asthma! Attacks —- y. Theodore R. Van Dellen Asthma is. an allergic illness \triggered “by allergens such as- | food, furs, feathers, pollens, or a bacterial infection of thenose, | i throat, or bronchi. ‘The acute at- | tack. is an unforgettable experi- ;efice to the victim -and—te— the | witnesses. The sufferer can_ in- hale with ease. but finds it. diffi- ot ;eult fo exhale.’ Wheezing is.pro-. | duced by air trying ; through the ‘constricted or” con gested passages and is.so loud it _, @an be heard by everyone in the- -The sound occurs mainly of the | room. | lungs. | ‘Breathing the asthmatic way i 4s ‘hard work. The. individual sits - up and brings. info’ play every {muscle of the neck and_ chest |The lips become blue and the ; Veins engorged._-The —afflieted |Person cannot lie down. Ultim- jately the chest loses, some, of the ‘norma! bellows - motion. and _ is likened to a stiff cage being drawn up and down by the au |meck muscles. -The: individua | drenched in sweat and has ti } culty speaking and eating Sleep /is impossible. ' | The sooner treatment is start-"| jed the easier it is to contrdl the 2 attack. Epinephrine is the, old |Teliable and. can be injected un- der the skin or taken orally. Is- - | oproterenol, a widely used mod- | ification — of einephriné,” is inhal- ed via a hand- operated nebuliz- }er-or from~ pressurized: contain- ;ers whith are carried in a-pock- let or purse ACTH or cortisone offer com- plete relief in less than 48 hours, |but the wheezing may return ; when-these~steroid-druzs -are-dis continued.. The | victim ,. soon learns to control the other fac- tors responsible for his problem fo pass ~-sponse-from ‘during the brief respite fom his symptoms. The ast: matic should: not. samoke. during the attack.. He. should drink up to 12 glasses of liquids. to avoid the dehydration caused. by excessive sweating and breathing. Fluids also help j to moisten the sputum making it easier to bring up. Expectorants such as potassium. iodide or one of the newer enzymes or deter- }gents are useful in liquefving the secretions. Now. and then oxy- .gen-is.needed-and—tranquilizers promote relaxation. SWOLLEN LEGS - A. T. R. writes: What is drop- - sy of the legs?- | REPLY ‘ “In this” condition” the~ tistiee- The ankles, |for example, become so puffy it is difficult to wear-shoes. More- jover, a noticeable indentation lean be made by pressing the in- |volved area with the. thumb. ' Dropsy is most likely to be as- sociated with disease of the heart, kidneys, or protein meta- bolism. | NOT TOO LATE T. T. writes: Can lifelong con- stipation be cured at age 26? : REPLY “_{ Yes. Tf you—were #8, T. might j have my doubts, . but .you, | young enough to acquire good bowel habits. | NOT CAUSATIVE _ J. Q. writes: Can ap Bead! aa be caused by prolonged constipation? : REPLY - ! No. In most cases of appendi- citis, infection is initiated by ob- ‘struction within the organ. C. H:- writes: Why do T have to get up at night when I take. ‘tea or coffee with dinner? REPLY . Because these beverages have |a diuretic (stimulating) x 2 STAY WARM =: Mrs. K.P. writes: Is it all right to. take a bath when a:per- son has; a cold? spores Yes, but keep the: = palireom warm and avoid chilling. TODAY'S. HEALTH. HINT—. | Only the maladjusted use al cohol as an escape... ~(NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, .co Marigigd Trib- une, Chicago, THlinois.) _An O; pen Moon... nan a Gur Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (June 11, 1941) In the. examinations conduct- ed by the medical council of are i nist _US, A nd. By UNITED N ATIONS (CP) Signs are Increasing -that a stalemate in the Vietnamese ied may lead to some degree ‘oO recon¢iliation between United States and China A few top- -ranking Americans -Tecéntly have. been calling for: improved relations with the Pe- king Rovernment ' and, the group Wednesday, was US. Vice-President ‘Hubert -Humph- rey, who said continuing isola- tion of Asian’ Communist states “breeds unreality, delusions and miscaleulations."* “We seek and will ‘continue to seek to build bridges, open the doors of communica- tion fo the Communist states of Asia and, in particular, Commu: ‘China.”” The vice-president’s statement followed Similar gestures made recently by U’S. State. Secretary Dean-Rusk ahd Defence = Secre- tary Robert McNamara.: None has Yaid down. any con- crete a! strained “Chinese-American rela- tions. hit'the fact that top: level “Americans are ePEKnS is sig- nificant e the NO RE SPONSE Sitar there has heen no re- the Chinese, but this can be expected after the years of political and economic isolation that Washington” had forced’-on- the -Peking govern: ment * Settlement of the Vietnamese war depends’ heavily onan im- . provement in ‘retations between Wasliincton and. _Peking may be the chief reason for the apparent softening in:the Ameri- | can attitude toward China. The- war hasn't. been going well for the rebel Viet Cong nor for. the United States And the ruling military. junta of Premier Nguyen Coa Ky and the Buddhists—who make up the | majority of the. Vietnamese pop- ulation—are engaged in. a. vir- tua! state of wars All this raised Soviet Premier. Kosyvgin’s hopes that Washing- ton would change its Vietnam- eseo.policy which, he. said, had 1. durned_into “inevitable failure.” Monuments L. V. POWER Montague Local Representative J.T. DOYLE _ Box &i6 Telephone 43624 Charlotietown effect © DRED EV ec i ui, Fe Canada the following were stic- . Charles F. Her- cessful from P.E.I.: Hyndman, Charlottetown; - bert. F.. MacInnis, Souris; John P.. McCabe, Iona. British and Free French forc- and | | | } | battle with | | Vicy troops at Kissoue in the | mountains 10 miles south of the | undertaking weapons tests and (think of nuclear bombs and in.. Syrian capital of Damascus, military manoeuvres The mad- ness of _war must be kept from | outer space, as it already has been kept from Antarctica by a 12-nation treaty ratified among tercontinental missiles; but they are now part‘of our jlives. Johnson’ proposal shguld be act- ed upon’ promptly fore moon sisaress affects the world. Child ren ' Otlawa’ “Then thes sing the National “Anthen ‘and seommenie “weet ing.’ i ———-So reads a news h loin. trom the External Affairs 7H nistry in: Ceylon relating how, school chil- dren participate in paddy weed- ing “programs. Agricultural exportt estimate | that yields in the rice felds can At Work. — Journal are transported from the school to the paddy fields in buses and: “observed his 53rd birthday. ; also in trains’ in some areas. They step into the field carrying -, ‘the National Flag and are giv-. en a lecturer-demonstration ort’ weeding by an agricultaral of- ficer.”’ After singing. the National An- them ‘and- getting. down to: work be increased 25 per ep: by weed: _ the children’ in Ceylon_sing folk ing and nearly 1 00 school Songs. This account of children children_over—12—vear< oid“ willat-work-brings-an echo of days weed 300,000 “acres _ during the in Canada when the & hgols - in two cultivating «scons. ‘Ape 7] mural areas were almost desert- ril to August and Gc! her to. eh ed ig, the Periods of greatest ruary. Children and teacher's . pressure. ih farm work, for. @x- are required to enzace’in weed. ample. in the potatoe seeding and ing for five, davs ‘during: each. gathering seasons. ciltivating season orking a- Mechanization has, eased the bout three hours a da dn Canada, where sasonal la- bor on fapyis—ofien < hard-to find, farniers . w ead’ with particular interest of the patrio tic flauor. given weeding in Cev- lor The news hillerin ‘says “The —chidren-—and teachers CREE demand for school: children on Canadian farms but we have no ‘doubt that if an _emergency a- rose they. would respond willing- “ly enough.- As to the folk songs, We guess fhey woild provide a few of khese in a buitable sejting ‘ ‘too, outdoor The | TEN YEARS. AGO (June 11, 1956) _ Charles I. Peters was ap- pointed as postmaster at. Sum- merside to AUR ond “Postmaster : W.A. Allen.- | ‘The Charlottetown Guardian joined in tendering felicitations to the Hon. A.W. Matheson, Pre- “mier_and Attorney General, who Pe CT thd _(WEED KILLERS . joining © tokeep_ h toward lessening the | on Saturday, June 4, | Judson M. Logan, ~-tor-of - the-Printe~-County- ' pital, . president of the P. E. Red Ching G Roris Miskew Canadian Press. Staff, United Nations Max Frankel of the New York Times. says the some ‘Washington’ Officials now is, to det President Johnson's “Consent for\a plan to-ftet Can: ada. or otheN nations move to ‘have st aan in China's’ place’, at the United -Nations provided that the "Chinese Na- tionalists retain a seat as For- mosa The, last siciba of the Gen- ‘eral Assembly saw. a 47-to,47 vote on the question of the seat- ing of Peking and the @xpulsion of Nationalist ~China. A two- thirds majority was needed But a big obstacle regarding a UN reat for Peking is the: elaim “hotli the . Nationalists anc” ie mathland government that Formosa is part>of China, Unless, there js a change in atti- tude .bv both. parties, neither would accept dual _member ship. FOR TOURISTS Norwegian, hotels and vaca tion hostels have about 121,000 beds for travellers. READY — Maritime Hospital "Service Association This | 223 __JUDSON M. LOGAN * At the Annual Maritime ' Hospital sociation held in Mancton, N.B., 1966, Mr. Adminis Meeting. of Summerside, P.E.1., °wa9 elected to the Board of Trustees, Mr. Logan, prominent in the health field in Summerside, holds a diploma in Banking from Quéen's University and a diploma .in Hospital Adminis- tration from ‘the Canadian Hos- -pital—Asseciation. -He—is—a—past I. Hos- and. js pre- pital Association, , Sently a member of. the Execu- - ‘tive of the’ Maritime ‘Hospital Association. Maritime Hospital Service Association, a non-profit corporation. tter__known as Maritime Blue Shjeld — Blue | Cross, offers a wide range of repayment health care services for the residents of the Atlantic, -Provinces. _ EFFECTIVE CONTROL CHEMI | us) FOR EVERY WEED 1 NY /¢ > i MCPA O | AMSOL ~ p ESTASOL LV96 | ORDER, fro YOUR LOCAL C Viagara) NIAGARK BRAND CHEMICALS. mumunmn casiees | DEALER c wedding invoices, and. all your job printing re- Stationery, - invitations, statements quirements. Jobs All guaranteed. * ’ GUARDIAN -,PAT RIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 ” Mdinnis Photo Winner Pictured above is. Mr. G.’E: PROCIOT winner of McInnis Photo test). Mr.: Proctor received an 8 mm Pictured at the right is store manager, ) Grafton St Hobby “May Mystery Con novie camera. Mr. | Richard Sabourin presenting Mr. Proctor with his prize. a. Objective of -- Service As» —