} Association and The Canadian Press The Canadia' F ~ e * Charlottetown, P.E.1., COhe Guardian |= Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward { Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor _ Published every week day morning (except Sum day and stat holidays) et 165 Prince Street, by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. ie Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto, 425 University Ave. ire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathrart. Street Uni- versity 6-5942;, Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. * Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper eredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news published herein. All right or republication of special dispatches here- in also reserved. bscription rate Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rure! routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off. island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Be tish Com- monwealth: Noe over Je,single copy. . i Membef“Audit Bureau of Circulation. _— PAGE 4 MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1966. Sets A Precedent From the United Nations comes’ |“ steps to postponé or°slow down the~ the report that for the first time in | pace of certain of its construction’ex- the history of the organization, a | penditures in those parts of the black. African state has been called on the UN carpet for human rights - ‘violations. Until now, the emphasis at the UN has been on censuring the white colonial powers and the re- ~gimes of Rhodesia and South Africa for injustice against Negro popula- tions. At the samé time, the UN has been extremely reluctant to tamper with the black African states even when such statés have been guilty of atrocities and violations. This “double standard” tradition has now been abruptly shattered as a result of the outspoken protest of © the UN’s International Labor Organi-. zation about the political murders which have been carried out in the African kingdom ,of Burundi.’ Al- ’ though the ILO became interested in : the situation because of the murder ‘of labor leaders, it asserts that the scope .of atrocities warrants the at- ‘tention of the UN as a whole anu it > has asked, “with deep emotion and strong indignation,” that the current session of the United Nations com- - mission on human rights take up the _ Burundi question urgently. Once part. of the Belgian colony of Ruanda-Urundi, Burundi gained independence in 1962, largely as a result of UN general assembly pres- sure on Belgium. Even before inde- pendence was granted, unsavory in- cidents occurred in the Watusi ruled kingdom. A UN group including two Canadians reported . atrocities. But accprding to Canadian sources, this report was suppressed by a UN com- mission which the general assembly set up to put pressure on Belgium. The matter came to a head last November, when the International Federation of Christian Trade Unions protested that two leaders ‘of the~ Burundi Christian trade union were executed on Oct. 25° without trial. Also in Novemher, the International Commission of Jurists made a state- ment charging that 86 persons had been executed since Oct: 10, 1965, including the senate president and his first and second vice-presidents, the minister of economic affairs, the _president. of the opposition People’s | party and the president of the Christ- ian trade union. Most of the victims were Banutu. The main value of the UN com- mission on human rights is that it ‘has been able to focus international | | Concern must be’ had, however, for | ' tions and regions. a ment in this region was still.running | question that a greater margin of _ itry than in most other regions. More- | over, while the region ‘has recently | capitacinvestment between the region financing in such areas, while federal ‘high unemployment arid rural under- “two months. Canadian political lead- ’ gagements a day. Thev have no time --delayed,--and._the-whole..country—is-. } attention on racial injustice and - other rights violations. How effective the commission will be in the case of Burundi is a moot point. It will be . interesting .to see if the nonwhite | _members of the commission are just as enthusiastic in denouncing black violations_of human rights as they have been violations. The Right Approach Everyone is talking nowadays about living costs, and the Dominion Bureau of Statistics shows that con- sumer prices have indeed been going up at a disturbing rate. This is inflat- | fon, and Finance Minister Sharp is being waffed that he will have to - take preventive measures against it .in his budget. Specifically. he is being urged to tighten the credit conditions which have developed during the past year.-Our.economic growth has gotten out of hand. it is said, and a curb must be put on it somehow. But a note of caution has been sounded in: this regard by no less ‘an authority than |.ouis Rasminsky, Gov- ernor of the Bank of Canada. who says that undue policy to. restrai) a tendency. toward excessive demand pressure would not only fail to produce the desired _results. but would have unfortunate side effects as \«!]. It is in the nature of monetary policy that . a ‘eliance on monetary . its effect: cannot be directed toward particular in = case. of white-| _ this relic of the Victorian age is before _the pre-election hubbub begins. - summer. It would be an opportune -as well. “““Gentleman, not in high government ~ te + areas on a pin-pointed basis’ Its be. pact and the criteria on which it is, based are. necessarily nation-wide. what is going on:.in particular sec-. Mr. Rasminsky took as an example the Atlantic region. In- the fourth quarter of 1965, when the national unemployment rate was down to 3'2 per cent of the labor force on a |. seasonally adjusted basis, unemploy- at about 6 per cent. There is no slack exists in this part of the coun- experienced a very good rate of growth, marked disparities remain in terms of per capita income and per and the rest of the country. An example of selective measures of restraint was provided recently when the federal government took country where the pressure on the construction industry was severe, while maintaining them in other areas. On a more positive side, this - approach also means increasing ef- forts to make fuller use of the slack which still persists in certain regions such as the Atlantic provinces. It is clear, Mr.. Rasminsky ‘said, that agencies such as the Atlantic Development Board and the Area Development Agency, working in close cooperation with the, provincial authorities, have an important role to play in supplementing capital agencies are bringing “new drive into the efforts to cope with pockets of development.” ~ This is well said, and it is to be hoped that Mr. Sharp’s budgetary plans will -take‘full coghizante of it. Victorian Hangover The Ottawa Journal makes a good point in noting that while the British general election was announced on | Feb. 28 and the vote will be on March, | 31—one month later—the last Can- adian general election dragged on for ers, including the Prime Minister, have for years said plaintively that they wanted shorter campaigns, but they do nothing about it. State Secretary Miss LaMarsh said recently that revisions. of the Elect- ions Act have not even been taken up by the Cabinet. Surely it is time they were. This act was drafted in days when politicians toured the back con- cessions in sleighs or buggies. One would think that transportation had made no progress in 80 years. ~~ A two-month campaign is exhaust- i ing on the candidates, many of whom ~ are whirled about the country in air- planes with half-a-dozen speaking en- to think, develop policies or polish their speeches. And their weariness is soon matched by the boredom of the voters. Business decisions which depend on Government are unduly put to unnecessary ‘confusion. The present Parliament plans to carry through. redistribution this: time for amending the Elections Act by limiting campaigns to one month There. shouldn’t. be any serious opposition to the measure; it’s just been a case of putting it off for what were considered to be . Foreign } “oo”, matters of more pressing concern. But. as our Ottawa contemporary points out, and as every politician knows, the nearer we come to the next election:the harder it will be to have MPs concentrate on Elections Act changes. The time to get rid of EDITORIAL NOTES This. ad appears in the,personals © column of, the Ottawa Citizen: position, desires to meet attractive lady jn 20s or 30s, provided security not involved. Box 20 Citizen.’ One can't be too careful these days! — * = In British ‘Coltimbia, ‘Premier Ben. nett has attempted to interfere with the mathematics of a redistribution commission and ‘is finding it a dif- ficult practice to. stop. Mr. Bennett restored two rural seats ‘which the commission had cut away, apparently to preserve a Social. Credit strong- hold. His followers in another sec- tion—in the Kootenays—are demand- ing that he do the same for them. As’ | a sop to the Kootenay objectors the Premier has promised another redis-~ > ee ir vs Rircitet * . >I “HAWKS: Wi ony ‘THE SPIRIT OF 66 | headquarters. of the United. Na- tions here, 117 national flags snapped in the breeze while the Spring _sunshine brightened their rainbow hues. As I rode the express. elevator to . the. 38th floor office of U Thant,; the Sec- retary-General, I wondered at the material and political advan- ces man has made since the Roman legions marched on. foot | on- their “unfulfilled dream of uniting the world under their dominion. _At this eleventh hour in his- tory, reason has prevailed. Man- | kind rejects the concept-of unity through conquest, and moves to- | -ward a managerial type of sup- ’ya-national administration. Cae- sar and Kaiser, Napoleon and Hitler, in power through birth or blood, all. enjoyed their brief triumphs; but no tyrant ever achieved -by force the degree of potential. world authority now voluntarily vested in the Secre- tary-General of the United Na- |, +-tions and its Security Council. |. REPORT HONOURED U__Thant occasionally gives | massive press ‘conferences. He had never before accorded a pri- vate interview to any western , journalist, I was told by, our Minister ;. Martin was obviously surprised and gratified that this privilege should be accorded to ‘Ottawa Report’ when™ I» made~-the--re~~ quest: While the long glass windows | of his top floor office gave us a bird's eye panorama of te world’s most ungovernable city, U Thant :spoke to me of his | hopes: in his important task of ensuring’ peace and prosperity to our milti-governed world. He asked. that our talk should be off the record, and just for my background information. But Hon. Paul | | istic of Mister’ United Nations | | whieh the casual acquaintance will find most apparent. It im- |plies the sincerity and convic- tion and dedication’ which he | brings to his delicate but impor- | tant task. And it strengthens him in the acute loneliness at |the top. For he must maintain | bimself lonely, despite the cos- oa crowdedness of his eis life belongs to the world; ‘only his thoughts are his own, ” |his assistant, Ramses Nassif, told me: U Thant is a devout , Buddhist; he can keep his ‘thoughts his own because, in ad- | dition to his prayers, he fre- quently indulges the practice of | withdrawing’ his thoughts into 10- | minute periods . meditation. Between his meetirigs with im- portant and influential world _ OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson * A Key Figure In World-Peace Hopes NEW YORK: Outside the | Serenity is the first character- | figures, while being driven to and from his office, or when re- laxing at his rented 15 -- room home in the Bronx, he can de- tach his mind¢for deep reflec- tion. As one observer suggested to me, he suddenly becomes like a lotus blossom, floating tran- quilly on the bsp yet seeming- dy apart from it U Thant's languages are Bur- mese and English. So are his tastes. His diet ranges from western wines at official funct- ions to highly. spiced Burmese cuisine at home. Neatly dressed in quiet but costly western clo- | thes at work, he changes home into the Burmese longyi | and eingyi-shirt and jacket. | | .. When his term of office expires. in November, it is anticipated | here, he. will accept the expect- ed unanimous request to- contin- | ue. me To those who live with history, the—glories_of yesterday are. the ashes of today. Inexorable change— inevitable and inescap- | able— dooms in time all human | | institutions. — In our century there has been no more dramatic or poignant | evidence of the swift march of | change than the decline in geo- political’-importance’ of the~ Bri-*: | ish Fleet. : In the davs”of the ‘Empire | upon which the sun never set, that fleet kept the peace of all the world. But the recent British defence estimates, which realistically tailored the coat-of British mili- , tary power to the shrunken cloth of British economic capabili- | ties, ratified a fact already not-— The White Balin New York Times ed by the seamen of the world— the reduced power of the British ‘Navy: cline. is melancholy nostalgic. | For most of the seamen of today trace their salt water heritage to the men-of-warsmen of the British Fleet,to the traditions-+— of Drake and Nelson and Beatty. | the sight of the white ensign | flapping in a sea wind still evo- | kes~not only stirring memories | of - yesterday— | Zeebrugge in World War T, Cun- ningham and Crete in World War II— but a kind of interna- tional pride that is the common birthright of the Tore of thes sea. when I asked him his opinion of | Canada's provosal for a nezotia- | ~-ted-—-end~to-the -war. -in--Vietnam,-|--—.----—— of Hon. Paul, Martin's initiative on which the hopes of the whole world are now focussed, he did. make one comment for the rec- ord: “I welcome Mr. Martin’s proposal; it is the best possibil- ity we have before us_ today for. moving owares a. settle- ment.” U_Thant was born in Burma 57 years ago. U, pronounced ” is the Burmese equivalent of ‘‘mister’’. He was in turn journalist, educator, government ' official and personal adviser to | Prime Ministers until in 1957 he | was appointed to represent his nation at the UN. On Dag Ham-; marskjold’s sudden death in 1961, he was the choice of all the United Nations to “succeed him in the US $46,200 per year job as Secretary-General. ‘Our Yesterdays . (From The Guardian Files) “TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 21, 1941) Mobilized Serb soldiers sing- ing songs of the First Great: War paraded in the Provinces last night. while Yugoslav Govern- “ment heads vainly sought to solve a crisis arising from an at- | tempt to put that Versailles Treaty- built nation in the .Axis fold. Joe Louis successfully defend- |ed his world heavyweight chanj- | pionship for. 15th time by stop- | ping Abe Simon, New York, in 13 rounds befor an estimat- | ed crowd of 19,000 in Detroit. Louis wet 202, Simon 254. TEN YEARS AGO “(March 21, 1956) P.E. Blanchard, Bilingual As- | sessor at the local Income Tax | Office since May, 148. was transferred to the office of the ‘Paxation Division at Sherbrooke, Que. <a Ernest Borgnine was named | the best actor of the year for his role in ‘‘Marty’’ in the 28th an- nual Academyawards in Holly- wood,. California, Ottawa The countryman agrees that spring is the ‘‘sweet o’ the year" as Shakespeare stated ‘in ‘‘The Winter's Tale.” March is. the period when winter is drawing to a close. It_is_an_unpredictable time. Sometimes. March -sounds the | bugles, with blue skies, warmth, | and fleets of white clouds. Some- times March ig ornery. Cantan- kerous wintery humorus domin- ate the weather with-cold, snow, and ‘blustery ‘winds. But each day is one nearer the equi- nox and human hearts respond as the days are’checked off. There is music in the water dripping from roofs. turn from bare strips.of brown grass show | on the south slopes. If a watm tain hastens the unlocking of |. snow and ice, €reeks and brooks | overflow and pools of dark wat- ero‘Spread over the low spots. Down by the swale; pussy wil- lows’ soft-gray,: fufred noses poke out-to-test the air and soon skunk cabbage will lift. mottled blossoms. On a sunny, mild day, | there is exhilaration in the ap- | proach of the new season. Boxes of tomato plants and asters | show green in the south win- | _dows of farmhouse kitchens, and farmers overhaul their ma- chinery in preparation for spring work. -One.-never. knows. when winter will pull back over the northern horizon, but as a man Crosses the yard to do morning chores .at dawning, he knows one fact The sweet of the year is at | hand. The miracle is nearing THREE EXECUTED ) CARACAS (AP) Commu- nist guerrillas in the mountains of Venezuela's Falcon have executed three of their comrades for lack of discipline and attempts.to desert, Deputy Interior Minister Luis, Vera Gomez reported Friday. He said word of the exécutions came from state.sGovernor Pablo Saher. / Sweet O' Robitis re- the southland and, state- The Year Journal and faith assures one that the j | shienele of resurrection never fails. one knows that | Nothing: dismays Canadians as much as-seeming to be taken | for granted by the United Stat- es— or to be treated by Ameri- cans as if their vast land. were but an attic under. the rafters | above the 39th parallel. Occasionally Canadian dismay om this count appears ‘to out? | siders at least) oversensitivity. But how _ over- insensitive ‘some Americans oc- | casionally are to Canadian sen- sitivities! by reports in the Canadian press —which have been the subject of questions in Parliament at. | Ottawa— that the United States | Army. (of_all_ agencies south of: the border) had at one time | been spending money on analy- | zing the likely consequences. of Quebec's ever trying to break away from the rest of Canada. Again if Canadian press re- ports are accurate, the Special |-Operations Research Office of the United States Army— before being called off by Defense Sec- . retary McNamara— had begun questioning Canadians, particul-~ arly university. professors, about where the “revolution”’ French- speaking Quebec prov- ince might lead Few things could be calculated more to ir- ritate both sides in the current readjustment in relations with- in Canada of both the English- and French- speaking communi- ties In unruffled moments, Can® adians would doubtless agree that concern over what might happen within their borders is legitimate on the part of their - southern neighbors. 8ut surely it is the State Department, through the. Ottawa Embassy. and Unit- \ ed States consulates across Can- To sailors everywhere the de- |” To any sailor of- mature -years- the mole _at- to stem from. in | | Intestinal Bleeding y peptic ulcer began his pulse, blood pressure de- termining the extent of blood loss, and preparing him for a transfusion and possible sur- gery. Within three days the | oozing subsided and we began | to treat the ulcer. : Most people who enter the hospital hemorrhaging . from the stomach and in shock usual- ly survive. It is:a trying exper- fence, especially when the cause is not known. For many, intern- al bleeding is the initial symp- tom that something is amiss in the stomach, duodenum, esoph- agus, or. liver. The. question is what and where and this is not” easily determined by looking at or feeling the -bare abdomen. Passing tarry stools or vomit- ing black material means that | blood is mixing with the acid in the stomach. In some instances the diagnosis can be made via ‘| X-rays! or viewing the. inside of the stomach with a scope. A cotton string with one end taped to the cheek. It is pulled out the next morning and-the red level gives a clue whether the bleed- -|.ing. point. is in. the esophagus, stomach, or in the first part of the intestine. : Meanwhile the victim is watched carefully but the time may come when it becomes necessary.to say “He is_ still bleeding,. surgery is needed.” Accurate diagnosis is now of major importance because surgeons do’ not. like to. make a blind date with a bleeding point somewhere: in the stomach. or intestines. When the source is found various: proced- ures are done, depending upon the cause. In general, the rea- son for operating, is to stop the hemorrhage and not to cure the ulcer. CALLUS DISTRESS A reader*writes: I am 15 and have a very painful callus on | the ball of my foot. At times I | have to drag my foot so it won't | hurt. I've tried everything. Please advise. REPLY The callus can be pared— or, | better, build up the metatarsal arch that is causing. the lesion. “This is done with pads, arch supports, proper shoes,and learning how to -walk -properly. BODY MOLES N. C. writes: After a hysterec- tomy could monthly shots bring on body moles? REPLY - No. Most of us harbor scores of moles but they are not relat- ed to or encouraged to grow by sex hormones. They tend to crop out at birth or months, years, or decades later. - MASSAGING A SCAR S. W. writes: Will massaging a three-week-old. scare on the forehead help it to fade? is ___ REPLY | Massaging will make no dif- ference because the fate of this scar is already determined by the end of three weeks. SOFTENED BONES LH. writes: What is senile oe. teoporosis? REPLY Weakening of the bones elderly persons resulting from most marked in the spine and leads to backache ture. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— ‘Resistance to disease lessens “with age: - (NOTE: All ‘correspondence. te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore | Van Deellen, co Chicago Trib-. ' -‘gne, Chicago, Illinois.) Should n't Be Too Nosy ~ Christian Science Monitor ada, that should be analyzing | developments in Canada. Because of the special rela- tionship between these two neighbors, it is absolutely essen- tial that neither side ever seem to be interfering im the other's internal affairs—or to be a ed in anything “‘sneaky” smacking of cloak- and- dagger | within the other's borders PLATES MARK OLD CARS | VICTORIA (CP)—British Co- lumbia is to issue special life- time licence plates for vintage cars. “Having seen some of | these cars, -I think the plates | - will outlast some of the auto ’ mobiles,’ ~said ~ Attorney-Gen- eral: Robert Bonner. OOOO OO Business Men’s BUNCH =. erved Daily 75¢ | ¢ Dow's Restaurant @ Corner Pownal & Grafton St. HS. « ___._ Charlottetown | Meeeeeeesooose Oo eoees OOOOH OO GOOD SERVICE ei Volkswagens Are Gur Specialty Complete fine of cenuine Volkswagen parts. RUDISCH'S GARAGE Alberry Plains By Dr. Theodore R: Van Dellen Elmer was astough, Swede | but he had no.defense when his to bleed.”| I'll never forget because he col- lapsed on the day before Christ- | mas. According to his wife, -he | simple method is to swallow a |. in | metabolic changes. It usually -is: and curva- | 1 i sesecebes NOTES BY THE WAY ay fellow complained that he ° has trouble with his car — the engine won't start and the pay- ments won't me * #*°Moose Jaw Times Herald... “The doctor said he’ d have me on my feet in a fortnight.”’ “And | | did-he?"* ‘Sure, I've had to sell denly be : prane Tae oe oer orem | my automobile." — Windsor | spire. m vomited blood and fell | Star. to the floor. | He regained consciousness in | | Northern : Affairs Minister the hospital with nurses, in- Laing says TV is needed to keep terns, and’ technicians working | 0Vérnment workers in the over him. They were taking | north, TV in the south is often enough to drive other persons in- | | to the north. — Ottawa Journal. The nurse entered the ‘profes- | gor’s room and said softly, ‘‘It’s a boy, sir.” The professor: look- - up feom his’ desk, Well,” he said. ‘‘What does he want?" — Galt Reporter. Sociological note: Absolute filiterates are those who can- not read or write. Functional il- literates are those who com- pleted less ‘than five. years of schooling and can do very lit- tle reading or writing. Practi- cal _illiterates are those who watch television and have for- gotten how to read and write. —Windsor Star. io Vangoiiver Sun, In our noisy society, the only | two places left where any sort '-of value is put on silence are the golf course and the, library. A metaphyscist Says we aren't ; living ‘we just imagine we are. ' If so, our imaginations are put- ‘ting us to a lot of expense. _ Port Arthur News Chronicle. In today's universities, the freshmen are smarter than the | seniors, since everything the se- | niors have learned is already | outmoded. Calgary Herald. The U. 8, National Academy of Sciences now estimates there has been some kind of life on the earth for two billion, seven hund- red million years. The headlines often suggest that evolution stil) has.a long way to go. — Edmon- ton Journal, The United States has remov- ed the ban on the sale of mill- tary equipment to India and Pa- kistan which had been imposed during last year’s war between the two countries. It reminds us of the little boy who was in the - process of: making a snowball when the teacher approached Smiling sweetly, the little boy ex- plained: ‘I just make them, f don't throw them."’ — St. Cather- nee Standard. » President de Gaulle may have trapped himself in an isolation- ist corner by initiating action to destroy. the old concept of the North Atlantic partnership and attempting to replace NATO with a possible system of bilat- eral military agreements. France’s 14 NATO allies now have issued a statement saying they want no part of bilateral. pacts. They intend to continue the old system—even without France. . . Geographically, France \is an integral part of European de- fence and any belief the old sys- tem could continue to function - without her is considered ill- founded. NATO without France may turn out to be nothing more than a living corpse. Nevertheless the 14 remaining partners appear bent on giving the appearance of unbreakable unity which could involve a de- termination to isolate France from the East, in whatever sub- ~ tle way this could be accom- plished. It is perhaps with this possi- bility-in mind that de Gaulle’s advisers have quietly indicated the president may be more sym- pathetic to. a British application te join the European Common May Have Tra a Harold Canadian Press Staff: Writer pped Himself slammed the door in Britain's face. It would be essential tf de Gaulle is to achieve his re- aim of strengthening his *) relations with the Soviet Union while keeping his old friends off balance that he discourage the prospect of a strong alliance among the United States, Brit- ain and West Germany. Bringing Britain into the Com mon Market on conditions which | might feduee her relations with. _- the U.S. and the Commonwealth | and make her a stronger ally of France would be to de Gaulle’s | advantage, = It would appear from the cur- rent state of the British elec- tion campaign that Opposition Conservative. Leader ward Heath might be more ready to | accept. such terms than Prime | Minister Wilson, who has built up-strong personal relations with the U.S. and is unlikely to give these up in favor of any- thing de Gaulle can offer. Nor is West German Chancel- lor Erhard likely to yield his position’ in Washington for a more enhanced position in Paris. When it comes to hard political and military bargain- ing, it is difficult to see how de Market than in~1963 when he Gaulle can hope. to outbid Pres- ident Johnson. Pioneer Ontario farmers had a saying, ‘Frosty nights and warm sun make the maple sap run.’’ Not exactly a brilliant or witty epigram, perhaps but true. As winter looses its grip on | Quebec, the Atlantic provinces |_and Ontario; as the sun burns through the thinning layer of snow, the sweet stream begins to run. Tihs i ee sure harbisiger of spring-.and_a.time_to celebrate._. Large groups of people _ still gather to poach ham and eggs in boiling syrup and to spoon ‘out syrup boiled to the consis-- tency of melted wax, toss it on the snow and let it harden into toffee. .-The great, heavy cauldrons have.-- been replaced by the more modern sugar cabin, but the romance and Canadian flavor linger on. It is more than a social gath .| ering, of cuorse. It has assumed || the proportions of a modern in- dustry, as anyone in Saskatche- | wan who wants to buy a gallon | of syrup well knows. The totai | Value of sugar and syrup has , been climbing steadily until it | 18 now past the $12,000,000 an- | nual return. Practically all of i export goes to the sweet tooth of the United States, but | enough is kept in Canada that flapjacks and -hotcakes .can still . ro in the native pro- luc We dno’t have these generous maple trees in. Saskatchewan, | but if we did we'd have to wait for a while before they sent | their golden drpos down into 2006 0000000006 FAMOUS FOR BRANDED INSPECTED iSTEAKS: MANTIS nit: ‘sosetoreareeteseee! ° o 24 HOUR TOWING i SERVICE ~ Beginning To Run | Sencha DOE ss Phoenix Panting's Garage WOOD ISLANDS " Phone Eldon 26-12 2:30 —-P.E4 Fluid Milk. Association — Notice of - Semi-Annual Meeting FRIDAY, MARCH-25, 1966 | Charlottetown Hotel ie “our buckets. ‘Spring isn't the anxious to make her appear- ance out here as yet. When she does start poking around in our soil, it~ will be time to start thinking about wheat and grains. Guess that makes us partners with some of our other provinces. We furnish the pancakes and they Maybe there’s something te -keeping-this--confederation.on- of ours. ‘ Hf You Need Water You Need.Us Spring is just around the: corner. If you are] planning on building, CALL, PHONE or WRITE us today. DOUGLAS BROS. -& JONES INC. Call a 892-1234 Charlottetown COMMERCIAL Let us design your let- terheads, ill - heads, brochures; call us for’ * all your printing ‘a needs. 5 ‘GUARDIAN-PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY PHONE 4-8506 P.M.