% : ot Covers: Prince Edvard Island Like The Dew ¥ Weds Henenn; Publisher ‘Wallace Ward _ Frank Walker Managing Editor : Editor Published every us day morning (except Sun- dey: -Charlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch officeyLat Summerside, Mentague, Alberton sand. Souris - Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services; Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montrea! 640—Cathcart Street Uni- varsity 65942; Webtern Office 1030 West Georgia S Street Vancouver MA 7037, Member, Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers holidays) at 165 Prince Street, | a the-age of 65, who need more atten- tion than younger people. Of course, the government's hand was forced so far-as the medical pay | increase-was concerned. As Mr. Wil- son said, there is an acute shortage of doctors in Britain; a growing num-— | — ber of young doctors leave the coun- try after graduating, Moreover, 18,- 000 of the country’s 23,000 doctors had submitted - undated letters of . resignation from ‘the’ health. service. Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadien Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub © lication of all news dispatches:in’ this paper and also the loce’- news published herein. All right or republication of special dismatches here In also reserved. Subscription rete: Not over 40c per week by carrier. _ $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and “ly here outside British Com monwealth. ee ~ "Nat ever Is single copy- _Nerftber Addit Bureau of - ‘eueulalien, PAGE 4 THURSDAY, -MAY 22, 1966. Promising Start policy of all-round! expansion on which his government is appealing gfor support at this time—one which will involve the Jestablishment of a -Rura elopmient Authority which wilfembraCe and coordinate all our development projects and which fe— predicts will bring a ‘three-fold in- crease in our total product within the € next five years, and a five-fajd_in- crease as a longer range gbjéctive. He had time only to sketch an out- line of the program in his broadé¢ast, ; but he termed it the biggest ever undertaken in this province-and one - of the biggest of its kind in Canada: Farm and fisheries— expansion, | tourism,—roads-and--highways- exten- sion, handicraft ‘training, medical Gare, increased aid to education, help ‘ to municipalities, immediate supple- mentary—assistance to ‘needy old age soucccm-pensioners—-these .and_other_phases _ |. of the plan were toucired upon, in-a _..-- anner-to-keep-us-on-edge-for-more- cre ___ Sate _shalt-al-be- “waiting: -for-more- ; —— ___our-_financial— difficulties andthe details of what the future holds in store. For the province, the Premier assured us, is making*big strides in- dustrially, and this.is no time to - Underestimate .our potentiality. It. is | the government's desire now to see that all Islanders derive. the “maxi- . mum benefit from this expansion. fetaits of this program, on which the government has received expert. ad- Vice and which it is confident can be carried through without imposing additional taxation. - Both parties now have indicated that they are supercharged with optimism as to the future. But the government is insthe fortunate pos-* | ition of having talked this way all along, pretty much, while ‘the oppos- ition seemed chiefly concerned with government's alleged extravagance in _its industrial plant deals.. Now, on both sides, our fiscal worries appear to have folded their tents like the Arabs, and silently stolen’ away. -. The campaign, of course, is young yet; a mere baby, in fact. But no one can say that it hasn’t gotten away to a promising start! -Hard_To Implement: Who would‘expect a Labor govern- _ ment to be charged with discrimina- tion against trade unions? Yet that is one of the troubles Prime Minister _| Wilson’s administration is facing in —__-——Britain—One-result-of the 1966 Brit- ish budget with its increase in cor- poration taxés.and. a_new tax, on -employment, is an expected rise in the cost of living with renewed de- ‘mands. byworkers and their. unions for substantial wage: increases . to. meet these higher costs. But Mr. Wil- son is committed to a prices ~and wages policy which seeks to limit wage boosts to 3.5 per cent annually. He laid it on fie Nite for the labor unions when: he said in-his May Day add ““We are still in grave danger of paying ourselves much | - more than we are truly earning, and -unless-we-hold_ back in our demands all our plans for improved industrial ~1ts a efficiency and higher living starid- ards will be undermined . . . It would be tragic if we created ‘unemploy- ment through an_ uncontrolled scramble for higher wages which priced. our “goods. out of world markets.” cal This was all very well; but since, | then the government has accepted the recommendations of a review body granting British doctors ah in- crease in pay almost ten times the ‘amount to which the labor unions are to be limited. What. the: doctors, working under the national health program, will get is a 33 percent in-- crease in pay; they will also get extra . pay for making calls between ‘mid- night and 7 a.m., and further extra . ‘pay for _tooning after peeens over * _ the increases credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters | | unionists do not see it that way. One : Briefly last night, Premier” Shaw “took the-—raps~ off -shining-new— + r. Wilson has called onable”. But trade standable member of Mr. Wilson's own party has charged that “professional classes are being treated differently than.| manual workers,” and the di content is mounting. The teachers,. too, through their national union are demanding sub- stantial increases in salary. The gov- ~| ernment is lecturing them too on the | need. for holding the. line. But by © giving in to the doctors, it has set a | T"precedent which will make it harder and harder to implement the Spartan mitted to." _Mr. Klein's. Prapesal ~ - the Canadian ‘Press’ reports the “introduction. in’ the Commons on Tuesday of a private-member’s bill that would oblige the judge and jury in any capital murder ‘conviction to attend the execution. Introduced as. section that. now requires the at- tendance of sheriffs and jail gov- \private members’ bills awaiting de- bate in the restricted time available for such proposals. ~ also introduced a bill that would al- sentence, rather than the mandatory death penalty, in capita] murder con- . and: became No. 127 in the lineup. purpose of reminding Parliament and the country that it is easier to take a vote on the » subject of capital punish- “ment than to get rid of it entirely as— a moral issue. If it: is right that — people should be hanged as. a deter- with vesting the ceremony-in-all the dignity of state? It is just as solemn an affair, surely, as the trial which “Why ‘should not-the jiidge, in his robes of office,-and the jurors who . gave the verdict, be in attendance as a matter of: course?. And why as well, with Mr.’ Speaker at their head and at least a goodly represen- _ Justice; as the,oid saying goes, should “not only be.done but should be seen to be done. And what more awesome demonstration of justice than this, or . more fitting to be participated in by. all concerned? Of course~it won't come to that. - The judges would object; the jurors would rev@lt; our parliamentarians | would: think nothing of quitting their “$18,000-a-y year jobs in disgust. The very idea. 1s think of it that way may shock us into |. realizing that there must be some- | thing damnably wrong: with the pres- | ent system. Finland’s Way. | Finland is-no place for the fellow | who drinks and drives. At least, not, ' | for the fellow who tries to drive when he has drunk too much and gets con- } vieted for drunken driving. About | | 6,000 motorists fall into this category each year in. Finland, and it’s no | ing them to jail. Off they go for from three months to two years with labor. | gangs on building airports and: ‘other Pp wovernmont ‘projects. | | | { _ furniture in the rooms except tables. For the, most part, they are allowed. visitors only on Sundays. And ‘it’s hardly a profitable exper- | ience. The prisoners are paid 60 cents | an hour for their work, but they must buy their own meals at 50 cents each and buy or rent. their work clothes. And the government takes 25 per cent of their wages in taxes. While other constantly corrective masures ‘are | being tried,’most Finns are convinced that the work system. is the best one to ‘cure a weakness that is all too .|, prevalent in most advanced countries ~ ithe world. economic _program it stands. com-_ ernors at hangings, the bill was given” routine first reading; and we. shall be— surprised if it gets any further-_It— -goes-to-the-end-of-a-list-of -125-other- The: promoter, Milton Klein, Libe | ~eral..fnember-.for-Montreal...Cartier,:::|-=ing--very=mute“about=their -am-* victions. It too received first reading. rent: agairist crime, what is wrong . preceded it, or the formality attend-— ing on the imposition of the sentence. _tation from every party in thé House? revolting! But just to- longer a case of fining them or send- a Spartan life for them while | under senténce. They rise’ at 6. a.m., | work a ful]. day and retire at 10.30 p:m.. They live in army-type barracks | with tiers-of bunks and little other | ‘ary amendment to the Criminal Code—-———— TRIP TO NOWHERE The two rogue elephants of rab Hill are locked in |_,the mortal..combhat: which may Meanwhile the hopeful succes- sors to their crowns are, keep- bitions. Conservative or the Liberal | party today.» But lying doggo are many candidates foreach. The. Liberal aspirants include the smooth Paul Martin; the itious Mitchell Sharp; Bob |__-These_ proposals at least serve the | Winters. the anointed of Bay” Street; the eager Paul Hellyer; | and Jean Lesage, strongly Que- becois but proportionately unat- Bedi “to nine other provi “more in temporary eclipse; George Hees has calmed his ebullience and plays his parlia- mentary role very piano. ‘Davie | Fulton has covered himself with nation-wide doubts. Manitoba's premier Duff Roblin increasing- ly fits a cynical Liberal’s -des- |\-ing like a scout leader: ‘‘set- ting his stetson squarely shad- ing his-eyes, bracing his bare knees, and calling out ‘come a- long, fellows, follow me into the forest and we will search for newts and triliums’.”’ Nee Scotia's premier Bob Sta “is showing a strength and lea ership which are sadly lacking on Parliament Hill. HOBSON'S CHOICE? Are there no dark horses in either party? The: yoiith of Canada as their elders dislike their im- mature reyolt “against tradition But this cry is echoed in .some political circles here, which are looking for-men able to lead in the Sixties, yet who won’t be out of step with the Seventies. The combination of qualities sought for party leadership today are veering away from those pre- viously valued; the persuasive | tongue, the _warm presence, | ‘even the willingness- to serve, carry no premium with this new thinking. More and more MPs and even senators, and especial-” ly the backroom party manag- ers, are looking for other quali- | ties: _ youth, strength of chara- cter managerial ability, intelli- and the capacity to a} > | gence, } the -political---life---of---both;--- low -judges—diseretion-to=pass-a-life—\~ssue" in-promeas tor” lender tae a cription of Bob~Thompson™ mak" ay daily looks better b: ee shouldn’t our law makers be_present_|.. sia saa twiations John Rol ‘ mis- | deep-water port trusts everyone over 30 as much | Istand, inked by a mole to the cattle in the highlands of Fouta Our Yesterday s: (From The Guardian abe | I'WENTY - FIVE YEARS” AGO: . (May 12, 1941) |. Rudolph Hess, -head of the | the oldest and closest confidants of Hitler, landed by parachute in Britain under / circumstances suggesting the most profoundly important desertion in all his- | tory. Rengast the western Libye ded by powerful units of the | “blank range. flicted on shipping and military objectives: TEN YEARS AGO ~(May 12, 1956) Strange as if may seem, pola- foes were being dug in P.E.1. in May. At least digging opera- tions were under way in, a field at Freetown owned by Simmons and MacFarlane. It seems that | the crop in the field of 10 acres had been left in the ground all | winter as it had been condemned due to suspicion of contact dis- | ease. It was found that about half_of the crop was in excellent condition and perfectly. saund for | use. |: His Worship Sayer J.D. Ste- wart paid an informal visit to’ German Nazi party and one of | ~~axis-port-and -base;-was-bombar- Mediterranean fleet from point | Damage was in- | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson. . Leadership Aspirants Play Watchful pole weigh alternative policies with , shrewdness rather than . with partisanship. ‘The Liberals may have just | such a character, not’ noticea- Stone bote oe the narllamentary tre: for those who notice; very. obviously in a position of | trust -and respect in the inner. ‘advisory circle of “the party. This is the 44 year old coal - miner’s son from Nova Scotia, 5) Allan MacEachen « econo- | university professor, and Tareas parliamentarian since | as long ago as 1953 vr short- | 32nd—b' |b | mark in the House. A COMING MAN TO: WATCH: | - | With the- clatter of the self- —The—Conservatives--are--even--advertisement-of-the-Sharps-and-;Minister—of-Health-and-Welfare,-_-Sult_they_should_not_be_used i Hellyers; and among the roar- | ing grind of the Liberal estab- | lishment planning for four years | past to ‘drag the unwilling Bob | 8 | rooms -td-the hustings,.the un- doubted and self-evident: oe | of ‘‘that. young préteasor from | | Antigonish’ have been _over- | looked. With the reserve "ot the true ae eee for the Edjnburgh—“‘Scotsman"’ prompt Ved letters from ~~ Scotland still | claiming. kinship — this Nova ‘Scotia-born power” >" house ~—ot brains just attends to today's job |, and makes no ploy. for the tu- | ture. His speeches across Can- ; ada, as I have pointed out, con- | tain- attractive and novel ideas. -His mastery of parliamentary edure and practice often | | guide his.party' and his leader back onto-the tracks. As Min- ister of Labour, and now on the unequalled launching pad as he has, mastered important as- pects of domestic policy, but as | yet his experience .of internat- ional affairs is limited to two | Winters back from the board- | “‘bit roles” at the United Na- | ! tions. _Wateh Allan Mectnches- An umbrella is a useful. item for. anyone going to the political- | ly troubled Republic of Guinea. | Conakry, capital of*the. tropic-. al West African nation, has an average yearly rainfall of 169 in- | ches. This- compares -with=43 in- ches in New York City and 7.5 _ | inches ‘n Phoenix, Arizona. In | July, Conakry’s average relative | - | humidity ranges from 84 to 98 thé peoples of the percent. . Palm- girdled Conarky, a , Tises on Tombo | tar mainland. The capital’s white . colonial houses nestle in clumps mango trees and red-hibiscus. ’ with colonies of | fruit bats, fringe the coast. Cro- | codile-haunted rivers meander |siaerky “seaward through vast | swamps. a Once a French territory, Gul- |mea chose full independence in | 1958 rather than accept Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle’s offer of “association” with the French Community. For a time the. | country: became the’ focus of n- tense rivalry between Commun- ist and non- Communist nations. | Communist China built a match |factory. The Soviet Union su p- |plied cars and trucks. The Uni- - ted States sent wheat and_ rice: | West Germany built a slatght- | | erhouse. Guinea continues to deal ex- tensively with the. Soviet blot, but the competition bet ween ‘| East and West ‘has subsided somewhat. Guinea may some day become extremély prosperous. The soll | may contain the world’s largest deposits of bauxite. Iron ore ! abounds. Diamonds have been ‘found. Gold lures thousands of Guineans to pan stream — beds. _ The: mineral resources are. be- ing developed rapidly, ad ian —-economy.—remains ka ; cultural. | make treaties with chiefs. “169 Taches Of Rain National Géographic Society . The Oregon-sized ‘land has 3,- 420,000 inhabitants, mostly Moslem. They generally speak . their tribal tongues, but Frenck’! is the official language. ; Guinea has a rich variety i peoples=—a and chmates. . Ne} farmers cultivate the sical Atlantic coastal region. ‘Arabs and Berbers have ii plateaus. Pastoral Of. .hamitic “origin herds of sheep; goats graze and | | Djalion. BOYS ARE CAGED Inland, Sousou tribeamen .. are local staples southeast are dense inhabited by the ae Cava siceoleae thie tribe are incarcerated two years in wicker caes oe being initiated into ma Ha eh % oF Some fetishism lingers on in Guinea, but with an Islamic. touch. Many people wear leath- er pouches called — gris-~ gris | around their necks. the pouches ' hold inscriptions from the Koran | intended to ward off ‘evil spirits. Before Europeans ca Gui- | wee was part of the Mali Em- Solid told service. Timbuktu a seat of scholarship ‘comparable to the great,univer- sity centers of the Middle | Ages. | trade. with Europe. Later, slav- ers poured into Guinea, eventual- ly making it their hold. By the 19th century, Bri- tish and French merchants had | interior to — penetrated Guinea's In 1885, Guinea came under French agri-—gontrgl,_but fierce Moslem_trib-* ; “es were not pacified until 1906. Queen 4s Welcome Vancouver Sun Prime Minister Pearson told | the Commons the * Government: “hopes. and expects the Q _to visit ‘Canada during the Cen- tennial year..’ It would be an. odd _ affair indeed if the Queen of Canada did not visit this | realm of hers omits 100th birth- | da In Quebec, to be frank, there may be some official. hesitancy. - The Queen’ s visit there’ on the océasion of the Charlottetown and Quebec centenaries was not “pleasant: She* did her duty S flinchingly and the people Canada-as a whole admired ‘age the more. It has been. suggested in some and in consequence English and French - Canadian differences tld be exacerbated. The fed- al authorities, we hope, w 111 treat this Suggestion with the disdain it deserves. English Canada is’ ready to. , greet its Sovereign with respect | and enthusiasm and it is hoped she will spare enough time to ret ore 2. ee y, ART DIRECTOR. DIES NEW YORK (AP)~James~ J “Rorimer, 61, director of the Metropolitan Museum of. Art, died Wednesday. An expert in medieval art, he helped plan the huge Irving Oil Com pany” quarters in Quebec that Her construction of the cloisters, a tanker “‘Irvingbrook,”’ the guest | of Captain Otto Ottman-~and "| company officials. Majesty should be asked to stay away next year becatise-a lot of Quebeckers are ot appeased division of the museum which houses onc of the world’s finest collections of medieval art. ae * * ‘ e or. rubb -off,T ‘) but ti .| users develop “a rash or side -} quate— protection. tribes- | eh In the 14th century, bold sea- farers from Dieppe opened “up | strong- | hank For Sunscree ‘By Dr. Theodore R. Wan Guiles A new sunscreen agent t hat those now available is being per- |nesota, The liquid combines na- | phthoquinone and dihydroxyace- tone. The latter was the active ingredient in Man-Tan, a ques- tionable product of a few years | | ago,. The -separate ingredients | 'do not. offer protection.. The new compound alters the : ‘outermost layer of the skin and | ‘in this respect intensifies our |natural,"built in’ filter to‘ ul- | +traviolet rays. It does not coat | | the -epidermal surface to mini- | mize the.effects of radiation or | stimulate the pigment to hasten tanning. In addition, it is not re- moved: by sweating, swimming, and it will not soil | the clothing. It remains until it wears off. The outer layer of the epider- | mis filters out ultraviolet ray? | ‘but-burns unless conditioned to” “the sun. This occurs. after re- peated exposures stimulate the __| pigment -cells-in the deeper lay- igre of the integument to darken (tan)-the-skin- The -new prepara-- tion is chemiéally bound to the _ outermost layers so that it acts. | as a protective filter. It is ab- sorbed and cannot be_washed product does not stain, e will: tell whether some reactions, « Sensitivity to sunlight varies, depending_-upon—the—complexion_, of the individual:*In some the mixture must be reapplied fre- - quently and over a longer pe- riod ‘in order to provide ade- The average person can expect -basic sun- ‘| light protection for an_ hour. to 9 minutes after each applica-” tion, seat A product of this nature should be a boon for those sen- sitive to sunlight, including red- heads or blondes who burn but ao not tan.,.They may now be _pable to indulge ‘in outdoor activ- illes. Preventing a tan is a diffi- cult for the majority who limit exposure time initially to a short period. Sunscreen salves and ointments filter out_a. percent- ‘(suntarrpills)-stimutate~pigment to form before the skin can burn, but.are not for self-dos {4 VARICOSE VEINS AND THE PILL A reader writes: Can -a_per- son with varicose veins take | birth control vills? oe REPLY able ‘evidence that ‘the’ tablets, encourage. inflammation of - the | Veins * with blood clots. AS a if |this person has a history of thrombophlebitis. : -- $TONY a Mrs. A. Y. writes: How did 1 ever get 300 stones in my’ gall- bladder that I jus | moved? REPLY You ¢annot -aceuse—your—gall- a piker. But | bladder of bei r_your: ueky that the surgeon doesnot base his fee the number of roc | found. ORT ESOPHAGUS ‘S. writes: What uses inkage of the tube that leads yom the throat to the stamach?. REPLY —_. ~“The- tube" did—not shrink, but | was too short to begin with. In | other words, this condition is congenital. : It’s B. 8. writes: | who, uses insulin safely” | pencillin for an infection? REPLY Yes; penicillin has saved the -| lives of many diabetics as well | as nondiabetics. (NOTE: All correspondence | to Dr. Van. Dellen should be | addressed to: Dr. Theodore | Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) SAFE Can a diabetic take NAMED FOR PM WATERLOO, Ont. (CP) — A child baptized. in the Cameroon | lic, western Africa, a few | \days ago was given the name Lester ‘Ebongo Sibongo- Tamv- | for: The Ebongo and Sibongo are family names but the Lester was*in honor of Lester Pearson, |prime minister of Canada. | choice was made by the child's \father; Abraham Tamufor, -a |Cameroon Republic student in a special - businessmadministration | \progra.n at./Waterloo Lutheran University here. ~< i f you. - | fected at the University of Min- | Cw sonal ; masculinity was the Yes, but there —is-a—question---90— ad re-. Ta good piece of this action; she | We are indeed sorry ‘hee on ‘the Premises = Cudmore's Cash'G | WASHINGTON (CP)—A char- acteristic of the Vietnamese war | has been that every major deel ‘however cautious and palstul— has led even bigger decisions. And straws in the wind here now forecast a tougher U.S. role in Viet Nam. |. For example, -will the bomb- |ing of: North Viet Nam, ever closer to the har of Haiphong } and the capital of Hanol, be ex- |tended to such previously-ex- cluded targets as oll depots? ~- Will the war theetre be ex- tended 4 Cambodia? ‘Official secrecy on the use’ of Thailand, lor Amstiony. sleet over Laos, ‘have been pierced. Cambodia has been shelled. Can the manpower’ bulld-up | toward. 350,000 or 400,000 men in the ground in South Viet Nam. | Ba eteven without moving the What more has to be done at home in penne U.S domestic to. finance the estab-. vast military a complex —in | programs. ui nt of @ projects ‘| War Theatre Broadening aT a _Canattan Peete Press Staff, ret idee It strengthens thelr argument ‘that more bombing of more tar- gets in North Viet Nam s é an less need for American ; manpower. ~ | At the samé time, the U.S. ts expected by the end of the year to have more than 3,000,000 men under arms—probably the larg- est army in the world. The war in Viet Nam has tm, posed on the U.S. armed forces, says congressional evidence, a severe drain on the trained per- sonnel. There is a heavy growth ‘in green troops and -— under present regulations-~a weney, ‘flow from the armed forces of draftees who have leted their training and done ~ their battlefield service. _At -home, ‘too, spending on Viet Nam and its environs may be running at $1,500,000,000 or | more a month. There is corres- poner ‘less for peacetime The war theatre, officially the two. Viet Nams, !s in fact much broader, recent actions show. Thailand has been used for a- long time as a departure point + for —A: planesattacking-- , but little publicity-has a aro NO PEACE TALKS ~ These” problems:-are “-tmiptictt in . the—president’s attempt to fight a war with built-in- mo- | mentum at half-throttle. North ‘Viet. Nam, so intrans- igent still that nd“talk of a fur- ther ‘peace’ initiative ripples ’ through ‘official Washington, is said by U.S. intelligence td-have been given this: Recent — official —acknowledge- ment has been made of Ameri- can - action against forces “in “Laos. American guns. have fired into Cambodia, where the Viet-- Cong insurgents and their North Vietnamese allies have long taken sanctuary for training or ae running supplies into the ‘infiltrated more than 20;000-men— into South Viet Nam. This strengthens the U.S: mill- tary leaders’ argument that more Americans are needed to do the job on the ground—more than the 255,000 were on hand _as of May 1. s Behind the “decisions that must be made in all these ‘areas re- mains the question of whether China or even the Soviet Union will continue to avoid direct in- volvement in Viet Nam as the Amerions presence eee ss, | _ Another Bastion Falls* Edmonton Journal That last, donpureie refuge of “inasculinity— the men's: barber- shop— seems finally to be drowning in feminization, too. Nothing’ is sacred from the femi- nine influence any more: At the turn of the century.(so age. of the rays. The psoralens | We @fe told in song and story), - Pans rae S pai A the: barbershop ...was.one _ place... «where reigned. - ete razor strop to the per- sbaying _ Shoeshine and oor Any woman foolish to blunder in was sent on her way,. with crimson cheeks Go into the - “modern | {barbershops, however, and what ? Next thing we know, men who still have hair left (permanents “are_notariouslyhard_on the fol- licles) will be taking les sone from their wives in back-comb- ing. (Darling... you mean to say you haven't tried the new male nt? Stunning!’’) Few in number and strong in ar- oma: Today, they come in 57 mugs.to the._Paris...original varieties, most s, with scents as fragrant and sub- _ tle as Chanel No. 9 Weee! Where, will it stop! Simple: # won't stop— not until the divid- ing-line between the sexes is blurred out of existence; The female fashion eee: Me’ ion ing around under‘hair-. :tesque, . flat-chested Sonar at of hairdryers. Other men the tomboy, are already_ voattind ee eee ee atoll eth te Oe Re nee rinsé. Manicurists.. Y. : Edmonton ; the political implications in not | being able to meet its wheat. commitments to Mainland China | | this. season. Expressed in -Canadian—ter- minology, this means that Can- | ada should be on the alert for : | the economic advantages of tak- | | ing up this slack. © On the demand side of. the ledger is‘the basic fact that China needs, and will need, hef- | But_because of ‘drought..condi-— tions, neither Australia nor. Ar- anywhere near their usual ship- © ments to China. BIG DEMAND This will create a. spread of Australia. is worrying about | co Wheat Sales Journal And we could face a serious challenge in-this area from the U.S. Farm lobbies are growing in-Congress-to-have restrictions lifted against trading with communist nations. Should this | be done, the U.S. would be in a | position to unload vast quantities of wheat and flour. in the Red- _ bloc market. There have been indications | that China would invoke ideologi- +eal-barriers—against-trade with ty quantities of imported wheat. | the U.S. But these have a habit i ..of—vaporizing—if—the—price= fs right. And there’s no doubt that gentina will be able to supply -the U.S. | ada’s higher-quality wheat. could undersell Cane So the message is one in fore | sight: let’s sell every bushel we can—now! 2,000,000 tons or more on the de- mand side—certainly a lucrative incentive for some ‘‘hard-sell’’ | tactics. But if Canada is to get | is going to have to do some up- grading on her dock- side deliv- | ery system. China has honored her prom- | ‘issory notes on purchases made to. date. But there has been | some question about the ability | of Canadian railways getting the grain to ports If bottle-necks | have existed on current ‘ship- ments, efforts- must be made ~ now to insure smooth-- working | delivery schedules in ‘ anticipa- | tion of increased cargoes. | Additional exports. are vital to | Canada’s balance- of-payments /pesture. , We cannot afford, | through lack of initiative oe shipping: difficilties, to come } in second in the wheat » expott _ ‘business. COMMERCIAL Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads, brochures; call us for all your printing needs. GUARDIAN-PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY PHONE 4-8506 DEAR FRIENDS & CUSTOMERS: a —— <_We-huove-epereted tis store for thirty-five years, end we have made many friends, who made this ada a success and we thank one cind all for our success, ~~ While we have not'been able to locate in ac cas -tses, we ‘hope aill our customers will follow us to P. J.'s Ltd., _ where my son Bill and myself will be-only too glad to serve “PLEASE COME” ~ Bill & Wilf Cudmore. ” re forced to vacate ee" the week Sie aS Ea ape 4 | i