i 2s Managing Ec'ter f | Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher : Wallece Ward _ Pranks Walker’ . Editer Published every week day day and statutory holideys) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E:1., by Thomson Newapepers Lid. 7 Branch offices at Scmmerside, Montague, Albertén yand Souris Represented nat onally by Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Services: Terento 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Streét. Uni versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA .7037. Member Canadian Daily-Newspaper Pu blishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian svely entitied to the use for repub cation “of all news dispatches in ths paper crested te it or to the Associated Press or. Reuters anc also the local naws published herein. Af right er fepub carioh ef special deneiches here In Subscription ‘rate:- - per week by car mail on rural routes and areas Press ‘8 exc aso reserves Net over 40 $1200 » 63 BY wai cei 7ie $15.08 » yeer off Island ‘and U.K $20.00 per year, ic US. and. elsewhere evtside Brith Com mornweat> > ont. ov@t. Ie $ 2918 £6995 ‘Member Audit Bureau of Circu PAGE, 4: TUESDAY, JULY “The strongest memory is than the weakest ink” Deadlock Averted Well, it’s over; and a deadlock, at lation. 12,1966. least for the present. has been avert-— ed by the Liberals winning both seats in vesterday’s deferred provincial . election in First Kings. Mr. Stewart, former mayor of Souris, was elect- ~ed- —to-fill the—vacaney—left—by the | death of Assemblyman William A. Acorn on May 26, and his colleague, Mr. MacAulay, uency’s new Councillor. Actually ———_these tistinctions have-no- meaning ——_ment- now that the Election Act has been amended to equalize the franchise, ‘and the sooner they are dropped the better. mat The new brberal government led ’ ate ord to indulge in the partisan zeal wants -to-see-every-car-“carry-with-it— a _ef_its_crit--_|_ funds for its own burial.” ne “would Manoeuver to get peace ” by Mr. Campbell will have its hands full implementing the spate of elect- ion promises on which it campaigned. It will also be in a precarious posi- tion despite yesterday's results, for ‘fts victory, after a Speaker has been appointed. will give it only a majority of one inthe -Legislature. In the cir- cumstances, cautior would dictate a ~ More sober approach to tts responsi- bilities than is usually the case with an incoming administration. It canhet icism when in ‘opposition, with -re- spect particularly to the development — Is- land dragger fleet, initiated by its~ predecessors. ‘ ___It will be recalled that when the campaign got under way, the Liberals softpedalled their criticism of these progressive policies, and concentra- ted on other issues of less vital con- — cern to our economic wellbeing. The ‘results show that they were wise in doing so. They -will be wiser still if they follow through where the Shaw government left off in. this regard. They will have ample precedent for this course in the action of the Pear- son- government at Ottawa, in con- tinuing such valuable programs ‘4s that of ARDA, the Atlantic Adjust- ment Grants,and the Atlantic De- velopment Board-~all initiated under the Diefenbaker regime. As we suggested previously, there will be need for partisan restraint on both sides if the affairs of the prov- ince are to be kept on a stable basis. Wilson’s Moscow Visit British Prime Minister Harold Wil- son leaves tomorow for talks with the Soviet leaders on the Viet Nam situa- tion. His political opponents, and ‘some of his own party members well, are openly sceptical of the value ef such a junket. But the comment from Washington is more guarded. There is a feeling that this time— just possiblv—he could get a peace initiative going. The formal purpose of his trip is to attend the British. Trade Fair opening in Moscow on the 17th. No official word suggests how talks started. but the indications are that he will trv to_convince Soviet Premier Kosygin that the-Vietnamese war has reached such a stage of escalation and world concern -that the Soviets now can safely act with- out losing global prestige in doing so. Britain and the Soviet Union are: co-chairmen of -the-Geneva Confer- - ence on Indochina. and the Geneva agreement of 1954 is invoked by all sides as the starting point for a settle- ment in tion’ to reconvening the conference to peave moves: However, with the iricreasing American-South 4A ijetnamese military success in the hard fought war. and the indications that the Chinese leaders are too deep }y engulfed in Their internal power discuss merning (except Sur - | weaker will be the constit- Viet Nam. Until recently, there has been no sign that the’ Soviets -had abandoned, their opposi-—} fm any case, the predictions are, ! borne out which. suggested, at. the time Mr. Wilson dissociated Britain from the American bombing raids on the Hanoi-Haiphong oil installations, that he would somehow contrive to send off a new Vietnamese peace dove. He himself has become the em- | issarv; and he will be able to meet | with President Johnson in Washing- ton on July 29 with the report in his, + pocket of -his intimate conversations - with the Soviet leaders. ' _ It could be that his welcome in | Moscow will be all the warmer be-, | cause of the stepped-up verbal at- | tacks which China is making on the | Soviet Union at this time. Such rude | words as were used by the Chinese foreign minister on Sunday, in.char- ing Moscow with being “an ignom- -Anious accomplice” of the U.S. Viet Nam, and of “spreading lies and ~ standers everywhere” about the Chinese obstfucting the transfer of | aid materials to the war area, must. | be pretty bard to stomach. | Those Auto Corpses Due to technological changes in the: | steel industry, junked autos no longer are widely sought for conversion into steel. Not only has the industry heen } j “4 i in turning out cars at a. frenzied pace ‘ear is‘declining. Hence the mounting mounds of junked cars which dot the countryside from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The U.S. commerce depart- _reported_last..vear that there | were 15,000 junk yards along inter- | state and primary highways alone. ~ How many there are in Canada is any- body's guess. ; - A number of solutions to the prob- lem have been offered, so far with- out much result. It has been. propos- ed, for example, that the wrecks be screened off with fences and trees, cremated in municipal incinerators, used to build dikes, dropped into bays to form underwater reefs for fishes or buried far out at sea. Someone facetiously suggested that they be used to fill up the Grand Canyon. But Senator Douglas of Illinois has come up with a more concrete proposal. He This would involve the levying of a special “burial insurance tax” not ex- ceeding 1 per cent on the sale of new _ ~autos: It would raise upwards of $400 million a year, Douglas estimates. | Proceeds could be used to dispose of — lp junked autos by traditional and new ways. And from Milwaukee comes a somewhat similar proposal, to the ef- | fect that a sum be added to the price | of each. new car “sufficient to pro- | vide for its ultimate disposal.” Money | would be deposited in escrow with } | banks. When the auto is ready for | scrapping the manufacturer would be | how charged with the job of disposing of it and be repaid for his work from the bank funds. - : | “Tf the idea sounds far out,” com- ments an American exchange, “the | problem it proposes to meet is getting | far out of hand. Bold ideas are need- ed to keep auto cropses from stealing ? | E | ‘abs “hit 159 mph: © center THE TIGHT-ROPE. WALKER { a} Narcotics ~~. | _ Menace " By Dr. Theodore ‘ R. Van Dellen | Ceftain personality ‘traits are conducive to.the development of drug addiction. The’ addict cannot tolerate the slightest dis- | tress, including pain, anxiety. ,and- friéstration- This may or ;may not be true because the ma- "NOTES BY THE WAY “This ts a tobac- flower, mad- “Gardener: co plant in full am.’ Dear Old ‘Lady: '~ How very interesting’ And how long will it be before the cigars are. ripe’ ‘Vancouver. Sun. Americans. are said to be find- ing it hard to believe these days that one of the reasons their jority of these persons are un- nded ; stable. immature, unreliable, OUBITY was fone 7» land so deceptive that they offer avoid taxetion.—Ottewa Jour: endless escuses for their actions nal. CS { They come from every: tratum ~ of society The treatment of drug addic- jtion is in a major‘ state of flux. There is no preventive vaccine. A little boy was taken out to a farm for a. visit. He found the lambs, and gathered up enough ‘courage to pet one. He was de- lighted “Look, Daddy!" he call- -because the problem is social, ed. “They make them out of medical, and -legal. Narcotics blankets!’’--Toronto Gate and ,are the common denominator, Mail. without them there would be 10 laddicts. These- people would |then turn to alcohol of goof ball |pills. When the laws are made: tough enough to control the flow “Tor args; the officials get sort™ and it becomes difficult to con- viet the peddler or dopéster. The treatment bégins with de- toxifving the addict When the drug is ‘stopped unpleasant and painful withdrawal symptoms ensue. Whether this is done in a prison or psychiatric institution depends upon whether-the ad- dict "is under medical or police jurisdiction. In many states he | jis-‘made to. undergo treatment only after being convicted: oth- ers are accepted for therapy only when they are. motivated | sympathetic authority preaches | chance whereas the more prac- ‘tical person believes that he made his_own choice and should | suffer the consequences. | The trend at the. moment is-to substitute sleeping. methadone for mor- | Two camels trudged along side by side in a caravan’ cross- .-- ing of the desert Finally one of them looked around _ furtively “and” spoke; don't care what ‘anybody says, I'm thirsty.”’ /Galt Reporter. % Pam— “Hasn't Harvey ever married”"’ Bery] — ‘No, and I -don't thik he-intends — to, —-ne- cause he’s. studying for a bache- lor’s degree.” —..Toronto Tele- gram They had hash on Monday for dipner, affer a-roast of beef on Sunday, as happens- in al] well- regulated families. Father, had said grace, when. Bobbie; said: “I don't-see why you asked ino ther ‘blessing this evening, fath. er. You Hid it yesterday over this >It's the same. old. stuff.""-- Montreal Star It’s predicted a dollar bill has a working. lifetime of about 18 months. By that -time inflation has dropped it to about 98 cents. |—Windsor Star Mighty nature is said to he more ‘durable than puny man, but Jack Benny- goes on and on while Niagara Falls seems to be falling. to pieces —Calgary Her- ald Prof.— “Gentlemen, I am dis- missing you ten minutes’ early today. Please go out quietly so as-not-to wake the other classes. --London Free Press, “An acquaintance says that. breaking the habit of saying “thank you”. to recorded an- nouncements_on_the telephone is almost as difficult as swearing off cigarettes. — Edmont Journal - Gordon Sees Promised Land ; London Free Press There are two views about is.that it is dead— killed by mo the” Victim never had &° tor cars im the short run and CNR was cor planes on long-distance travel. The other is that it is merely treatment. Cariada’s two railway systems illustrate these divergent . view- and can respond to- this goal niay be attained—thou- and interested.in cure. The more railway. passenger sérvice.- One--gh not for some time. The defi ie- it om passenger service on the 1958 to $46,500,000 - in 1965 and the estimate for 1966 is $39.500,- 0 : Furthermore of the-1965 -loss only $9:200.900 was in short- term expenses and if the service MAKING FASTER TIME. World ls Working On Its Railroads | / phine or heroin. The product is taken orally and is effective in weaning the addict from -his drug. The emphasis also has shifted to rehabilitation. Restor- ing these people to a_ society they never enjoyed is difficult. points- The Canadian Pacific has sharply cut back on passen- ‘ger service and apparently be-- _ lieves that there is little future in this branch. of service. The Canadian National is: making heroic efforts to. preserve pas- National eet Society Countries oni the world are looking for faster ways to Tun a railroad. The United States Commerce Department has joined with the Pennsylvania Railroad in a dem- onstration project with the goal of reducing routine travel time between Washington and New York from four hours to less | | than three. Trains would flash | between the two cities at speeds up to 150 miles an hour. Canadian trains also are _ Speeding up. The Canadian "Na-j __|_turbine-powered trains racing '-100-miles- an hour between Tor-- onto and Montreal prior to the ‘1967 World's Fair: |, HOLD RECORD ha \ Japanese train antes or “Light,” ma see % Tokyo-Osaka run at speeds av- | ‘caging 108 wie’ par hour, the Lhasa 3 hate earn Besiey | Computers at a Tokyo ‘contral regulate the train's. -stop it automatically for | stations, and slow it down in any | areas where repairs are under- way Before Hikari went into ser- vice.in 1964, France claimed” the world’s fastest regularly sched- tled train. Her Mistral zips from | coon tee 79 «miles an “The -French now plan a sen. | _ sational comeback with an Aero- | train running 20 miles per hour A half-scale model of the | Aerotrain— a high-speed, one- | car train— was successfully tested on a concrete track out- side Paris in 1966. The Aerotrain has no wheels. | Instead it rises from the track | | on blasts of air from jets on the | Open space and~beauty—-from-living—-¢ar s— underside. -An___ airplane people.” A weird state of affairs, but there it-is! | __ EDITORIAL NOTES The US. agriculture department has deciared war on the pesky gnat. It has awarded a $42.165 contract to the Virgina Polytechnic’ Institute ' to study the insect. Information gain- ed will be used to develop more ef- fective. eradication methods. } 2 *-** i+ A British entomologist has. dis- We wered that In manv_ places female glowworms, which attract male glow- worms by glowing, find they can’t compete with auto headlights or the | other. glitter of cities. .Thus the .fe- males are jilted through the false | ' course by a track propeller set on a columns at | the back of the car both propels and brakes the vehicle. The car will carry 80 to 100 passengers. The experimenters are Jean Bertin, a French engineer. and — Christopher Cockerell, the Bri- - ton who invented the ‘hovercraft. END TO CLICKETY- CLACK? e familiar is disappearing: from German railroads. By 1970, West Ger- many expects to have all of its 19.2 miles of ‘track continu- ousiv. welded and noiseless - On drawing boards for the a ture in the United States are trains that will travel 400 miles ‘per hour. A bullet-shaped veh- | ticle, propelled by -a propjet en- gine. would shoot through a 500- } mile-tube of concrete stretching | from Boston to Washington. Pas- -and safety. sengers could make the trip fn | “In addition te. the computer an hour and a half in comfort that starts and stops the Tokyo- | “Osaka train, another Japanese — | How It i Dine,” Computers promise to revolu- .tionize rail transportation. Since trains run on rails. it is easier to anticipate and control their moyements fhan cars, ships, and airplanes. woFores. hear York. England, Lis, a professional * ‘putter of _mod- jel ships into ‘bottles.’ He has just” completed his masterpiece, ‘according to’ the “Guardian of Manchester He put a ship into ~ptttim-a man “named Fred, crouching over the ship with a glue brush as though ee had erosted it. A small book by D. Gab- rsgag He put the whole business in a bigger bottle. computer checks train reserva- ‘tions and prints tickets. When a ticket seller makes a careless mistake, the electronic brain blinks the Japanese equivalent f° “THINK!” — Fred I A Bottle q : _Milwaukee Journal er bottle with a ‘sma re _who presumably had done the | work. This could go on and on- ‘with a constant series of smaller bottles, smaller - Freds and smaller ships John. Milsom of _Robin Hood's. Bay near Whitby, England. who heads the world’s biggest bottl- the G Gabbetis PC nip bottlers), thinks plan is unrealistic. Fred in a This triumph has gone to Gab-~bottled required time and ma- betis’ head. He is thinking of a new project. He wants to put: Fred in a bottle seated’ at. a table on which is a ship in a smaller bottle- presumably bot- tled by Fred Inside the smaller bottle would terials worth $56 A whole line of Freds and ships in- bottles would make the + h e - ware of the richness of Pesit history and often go to great lengths to preserve buildings which, by reason of age or past 'function, are deemed to have ac- ‘quired. the right te survive. On both counts, the Tower of ‘London, stands unquestionably — in the front rank, regarded with \reverence and affection by Lon- doners and with some awe by | visitors. : ; Or so it was until recently when the 900-year-old Tower. _ reverberated to the beat The Aerotrain works on the of dance music and the shuffle of | air cushion ~ principle as a ‘large number of well-heeled .| the hovercraft but is held on. shoes. : . “| The occasion. was .a charity | ball, attended among others by band,~Lord Snowdon. The cause was a noble one, to be sure, but what | have they | done. Shades Of The Past! ‘Toronto Glabe and Mail . trouble to others and to them- _selves. . 1” stomach uleer? 2S EREOESSEE | ceisiewe ane The single- that Gabbetis © The entire problem is one of discouragement. If never has been solved by keeping addicts in hospital treatment centers for i six to seven years. The English ‘found that supplying them with free drugs did not help. Addicts like company and encourage’ others to join the ‘“‘den.” not know how long society will | continue to tolerate these para- sites who never contribute and | are always a potential source of NEW ULCER REMEDY? P. W. writes: Can you tell me _about the new miraculous There is no miraculous cure for this condition unless you re- .fer to the usual remedies which. benefit the majority of ulcer suf- ferers. HOT OR coLp? N_R. writes: In raw, irritated throat, cough, and ve is it er to use nks? REPLY Cold is soothing and tends to lessen congestion. For this rea- son, most sufferers prefer iced to hot beverages. An ice bag to the throat also helps. cost astronomical, says Mil- | ONLY ONE OVARY som. So another good idea_has -. &—-reader—writes- How cana". gone to pot because this 18 ® oman become pregnant if she materialistic provi. has only one ovary? REPLY | . Like any other woman One ovary is capable of producing / ova. I do} ptario and Quebec traffic it is encouraging therefore to | senger service and to make it | Pay. According to evidence * given by CNR president Donald Gor- don ‘to the Commons transport | committee there are hopes that was dropped completely this would. \be the only immediate saving. Mr..Gordon expects that by 1967 this-loss will be elimin~ ated, and in the early 1970's. tne system should break even It still remains a question. as to whether Moses Gordon will ever reach the Promised Land of passenger Profits or if he will still see it only as a distam pros- | pect. when he hands over. oom trol. : 2. Canada has most of its indus- trial eggs in two baskets — On- It is a fact ithat poses many housing and problems, particularly in the Toronto and Montreal areas. And the problems —seem £08 -ikely- to get worse before they -vestmentin }9465-climbed It represents a 27 per - +pulation attract more and more__cent. increase over the previous get better. Centres of large po industry eager to be close to the largest markets and each new industry adds to the population and thus to the housing and _traf- “fie headache tario and Quebec centres alse draw workers from other parts of Canada where opportunity {s note that Nova Scotia's, indu® trial expansion drive- is gaining “momentum. The Maritime pro-_ vinces. have been left. far behind ‘in this kind of development and it has cost them dearly. Many of Starting To Catch Up Mercury the best brains in the Maritimes have been forced to leave home to. find the kind of employment for which thelr training -has suited them. The Nova Scotia drive has had _spectacularsuccess New ins 7 million year and represents the largest “percentage increase of any pro- | vince. Government officials are optim: stic that this is only a be- POPATE am predicts = a steady “growth the - future Premier Robert St anfield promotion. “drive ond is" “beantsy interested. in providing .a favore—. able indiistria! climate. With a per capita income of $1,750 —- 25 per cent below the Canadian average + there is plenty of ins *+ centive for the drive nina eee Biased Broadcasting’ Winnipeg Recently> at the centre of a bitter CBC dispute. the question of editorializing by the corpora- ya Free Press of Churches fn the US.A “rep- resenting 41 million members” of its constituent churches, has the ghost: of Anne Boleyn.- with her head tucked underneath~her arm, continue to walk the Bloody Bower. with a frug going on. downstairs?= _ ter Releigh come to terms with Mr. Acker Bilk? We are” accustomed by now- to” modern assaults on the fortifi- cations of ancient tradition, as rock-and-roll groups elbow. choir boys out of the church and tele- vision cameras continue to pry. open the doors of the Mother of Parliaments, but we thought of the Tower as a kind of impreg- nable fortress. An added indignity was the de- cision: of the charity ball com- mittee not. to insist on black tie ““clickety-clack” +Princess Margaret and her hus- and tails for the affair. Out of respect for those who lost their heads, they might at least have ri their t tails ———e Song Of The Whetstone 1 _ Ottawa A century ago before horse~ - drawn mowing machines came to the nation’s farms, men | gathered at dawn with scythes whetstones to cut the gras- P| Wares ‘of janymade lights. =e * “ . German company has designed a machine which’ cuts average milking | time from six to four and-a half min- utes, while increasing the milk yield ‘by five per cent. The method, called the hydroplus system, operates at ‘atmospheric pressure and with-a con- ‘tinual rhythm which takes. into ae- count the natural reflexes of the i animal. q “A member of thg Insh govern. | ment has come up h a new idea for dealing with-dangerous-—drivers. +! They ought to be failed, He says. as punishment for endangering others: -and themselves: but a term of any length is apt to cost them their jobs Whv not jail 7 ° he says, such drivers from Friday night to Maenday morn ing, letting them work off their sen enna pe a: Our ‘Yesterdays | (From The Gtiardian Files) “TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Iuly 12. 1941) a United States merchant- ship President Roosevelt called- ni | construction program so vast as ‘to equa! or exceed the present rate of loses by Great Britain and her allies : _ The prominent part taken by Canadians in Great — Britain's defence plans wae emphasized ~ hy Rev J Sufheriand Bonnell, TY 1D. pastor of 5th Avenue Pres- byterian Church. New York. re - cently returned from the O14 Country + 1tN YEARS AGO (July “12, 1956) At s meeting. of the Parkdale rate-pa ers held at dale Hall, chaired by Rurns it was decided head veith the huilding of a new eich rnam tchonl im he incat- ed. on Confederation Street Warren ta go. a- | hold their conventions i the Park- Journal ed far in the quiet air. hand labor in those days... Men took ‘pride in razor sharp scy- thes and the lével, close - cut | swaths they left as they inched L NR, was. ONE NAME _tion’s. hired hands became an-is- called upon ministets to protest’ VA. writes: Is alopecia the sue. That is, as distinct from the Hanoi bombings “medical term for baldness? ~ the hands the corporatién is The Nationa’ Council of. Chur REPLY bound to hire to do some editor-- ches does not in fact ‘“‘repre- Yes Alopecia totalis is com- ‘plete hairlessness and alopecia a means patchy baidness.- TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Don’t smoke when drowsy. ~{NOTE: Alte nce to Dr: Van Dellen should be - addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Mlinois.) sence nent TWO DIE IN PLANE HAVANA ‘Reuters! — Two persons were killed - and two in- jured. when a four-engined Rus- sian built Ilyushin-18 turboprop airliner with 101 persons aboard made an emergency landing at - Cienfuegos airport’ in Cuba Sun- was learned Monday. day, it The deatts and injuries were reported caused when .a propel- ‘ler from the aircraft broke and ‘smashed through the plane's ‘cabin after one of the plane's ‘tires burst | Par East, ializing in their own behalf. as | professional commentators | Hew long must we wait beforegiggin practical areas of consultation and co-ope ~ mean 190; “more than that they are: ithe CBC restores its news broad- ‘casts to news reporting and {leaves the comment to the out ‘ siders it invites to take the air” In reporting on the difficulties faced by Mr. Wilson with respect to his suppert of US. policy in ae Nam, Mr. Michael Maclear mdon but formerly of the betrays. the gift of ‘sight and dwells on the inner in- ‘tentions of the Red Chinese. Ac- ‘cording to the stand taken by |the CBC executives. the CBC ‘and its staff have no, ,such in- sights and ought not to have. |The job of a reporter, even a CBC reporter, is to report ; Mr. James’ M. Minifie from | Washington. puts more editor- \ial opinion into his tone of voice | than any other CBC reporter, i but he excelled himself as the filterer of meaning when he re- ported that the National Council 7 rn Aen EES ses of fields and “meadows. 7 ‘Men commonly swapped: work in having and helped each other *harvest the important crop Off- set,. one ‘behind the other. they laid iow the moist grass, ea eh man taking the swath that he knew he could cut close and even Then at the end of the shige | f across the field, they pulled § a whetstone from pocket and tou- ched up the edges of the scythes - As the hard whetstone hit the steel the- monotone. notes echo \> ae 8 * i TOT Wwe ~emenps ; century ago as men gathered for the mowing. There was soft low-pitched music as swung, and the grass fell to be | gin the process of turning into ‘hay. There were jugs of switch- /el in the cool water of the brook And there was the song of -the a minute or two, sharpened their sevthes and looked at. the paths they had cut through the grass- es that meant fond for farm ani- mals through the winter Cra Convention Ottawa Journal It sometimes seems to a one- | horse, hillside farmer - that as the human population !ncreases, si does the number of cfows Basically. of course, a country- man realizes that the determin.’ ing: that smarter than he 1 Ahout this time of vear factor is a crow is crows tt t€ nat recorded whether man. learned The main crowd of “delegates | stands around on the hayfieid, jawing. arguing, pleading and pulling strings for favorite sons Rut in a tall-elm. some distance _ away. the hig hove of the clan _ ait uncencernedly in their open. air raom, and wait fer the elary ar te diminish Wise politicians | ties ean tmagine the scene 7 Bes scythes | whetstone as the men stood for | and astute Travel Trailer Accessories LR te) lags ~ | Tne Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads, — brochures; call us, for all your printing. needs. - L-GUARDIAN-PATRIOT- CENTRAL R. C. Barwise 245. Elm Ave. Weed Spray and Insecticides Nox - - - 894-416 Kensington Rd. MORTGAGES Are still available on dwellings and commercial properties in good condition and locations. We will be glad to disctise vous retuineneeats and bo be of any pansible service. HYNDMAN & CO. LID.» sent’ anything ‘It is an eccles- jiastical body that exists for cer- purposes in the eration. Its opinions : the op- inions of the people who ex- pressed them. Yet the import given—by Mr. Minifie to their resolution was that 41° million American churthmen—had_join- ed the hue and cry ‘against the bombing of oil depots and other milifary targets in North: Viet Nam The impression spread abroad in Canada, that the American people are increasingly hostile to the U.S. commiment in Viet Nam and to the way it is being carriéd out, is due in consider- able part to people like Mr. Mine - ifie of the CBC and to the slant- ed choice of Canadian and Ani- erican commentators who seem to represent. almost constant hostility: to. the U.S. position in Asia ° ~~“ Buy Your ~ SHELL | sen canenanansier John W. Skinner 894.4044 a « > etruccle ta he ready to provide mas: | tenres a bit at a tinte? Aside fram . in ein, pempuaned 36 ae | tS dere k hat the bora’ — ; ‘ 1 j : 2 ‘ : =n ahead on plans te deve ahout political gathering om Trew ifaders inow tha ie vs z MORTGAGE AND Nat RANE 3 sive aid te Hanoi, Moscow mav not be | helping savé bs. the job would. | jop internal self-government in| the big black birds, or whether must blow off steam self-elect- P R | N T E R Y ASCE -BRORERS e I! : : ; ¢ z ies : ; tes ‘ ; ‘ i St. Dial 4-6567 ‘verse to reopening discussions on keep them off the highwavs “over 7Csprus_ but wi hot grant the ‘crows. after dwe research and_-ed orators must be given a PHONE 4-8506 | th ~ cae gued ‘ dange aS re trotbled island tevnns selt-deter- _ contemplation adopted man’s hahee to have their cherished ~ a Ls propusal. j Weercnds, ihe xp dangerous ine: | gy) gation at prosest j method of electing leadership mind; ia the spotlight. : a * a - i 7 7 = aE 3 : i \ > re,