xo 4 w ie ~ Ghe Guardian Covers Prince Edward ‘Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher ; Frank Walker, Editor: : Wallace Ward Managing, Editor Publi shed every’week day morning (except Bun=* “ge day and statutory Meet at 165 Pr Street, Charlottetown, P.E.I., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Mofitague, Alberton _and Souris. _ “Represented rratiolaity: a Fhomson SS - . Advertising Services: Toronto 425 Un'versity Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathrart Street Uni- “versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 Wiest “Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Niaiemanar Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian - Press is exclusively. entitled to the use for repub _ Tfcation. of all. news dispatches in” this paper *-eredited to it or to the Associated Press-or Reuters ard also the loca! news published- herein. All fight or republication of special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. : ~ g$12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas mot serviced by carrier. ~~ $15.00. @-year off ‘Island a U.K. $20.00 per year..in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth.. F Ne? ever 7: single copy: ‘Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE s aos _.__ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1966. ‘New Role For Wilson On being © accorded: “a healthy - majority in the recent British general elections, P¥ime Minister Wilson was considered tobe in excellent: position to improve the economic health of the nation, to take more aggressive steps “Gn healing the Rhodesia break and to | play-a stronger role in bettering trade between Great Britain and Europe. Now the first strike by merchant sea- _mén_in 55 years is jeopardising gov-_ ernment policies, , threatening"the na- | tion’s economy and raising, ina sensa- tional. manner, the whole question of relations between a Labor adminis-__ tration-and_labor_unions.. It is a rélationship, comments ‘the “+ New York Times, which has puzzled many in and oft of Britain, not least union leaders. The British Labor | party was born at a conference in 1900 at which, 122 of the 129 delega- tes were trade union representatives. | The first real election success came in the general election of 1906 when 29 candidates supported by the new Babor Representation Committee. Fon; a of those were union- ‘Sponsor: me = Ever since “then: the’ ‘Labor party, ‘it came to be called, has been in- nately connected with the trade Union movement. Delegates from the big unions sit at the annual Labor party conference, and union funds are a main source of party revenue. - Union officials have ‘always made up a large bloc in the parilamentary Yabor party. To the unwary, all this “might suggest that in a Labor govern- ° — ment, unions _run_the country. But » recent events have ‘proved that this is : not the case. :. Labor politicians are falueely: caburmier with union people than @onservatives are; also-..there is 4 general identity of views on many subjects. A Labér government is - tore likely to produce ~ legislation "that unions want, cutting their egal responsibilities and raising pensions — and so forth. Mr. -Wilson’s govern- ment has done so. But when the gov- ‘ernment of an island country faces a challenge like a total shipping strike,’ . friendships count for less. The main concern of any Prime Minister. is going to be to end the strike while doing as little damage as possible to , the long- -pledged policy ‘of restrain- ” tg wage increases-so that British. ex- - ports can be competitive. This is Mr. Wilson’s concern, and he has felt. @bliged to demand emergency powers « with. which ‘to deal with the problem. ‘Incidentally, the crisis has given Tory Leader Heath an opportunity of showing that his party puts national , above political interests. He has as- ‘sured the Prirne Minister that ‘‘on this-side of the House we. believe that “the statement he has made: about. the proclamation. is justifiable’ in ‘the circumstances,” and that_ thé ‘whole House ‘is behind him in wanting. “to see an honorable settlement of this _ dispute ,at: the earliest prare moment.< u f Sr __ Bombers For Israel a reminder that there may be fur- ther trouble brewing in the Middle * East is afforded by the announcement that the United States has agreed to ~ sell tactical military aircraft to Israel. |~ The agreement was reported to have heen reached in mid-February__but kept secret at State. Department in- sistence.to avoid difficulties ‘with the . Arab. nations. Washington ° finally agreed to a disclosure, it was said.. be- cause the Israeli goyernment was under political - pressure...at..-home—* and because the Johnson administra- tion too had reasons for. making _known in arf election year that it was _ helping Israel. | other guideline, at times! dize American interests in the Arab world; but to leave it without .ade- “quate ~ défenses could pose a still more serious: prablem. _ For a time the United States follow: eda policy of not selling weapons to~ Israel While discreetly pnenresink. Western nations, ‘such as France, : to Supply Israelis ‘With ‘the planes and: tanks they needed to maintain arms parity with the Arab 7 — ‘states. In recent years-the policy was © amended to permit sale to Israel of defense weapons, such. as Hawk anti-. aircraft missiles capable of shooting down advanced Soviet warplanes in Egyptain and other Arab lands. Now © Washington has disclosed: another policy shift: an agreement to 4,sell Israel a limited numbéY- of tactical jet bombers-as~amore-effective de- terrent against aftack—just.in case. Washington no doubt has _in-mind. - the recent. visit of - Soviet Premier - Kosygin to Cairo on his first” major , trip outside the Communist bloc, car- ' rying comradely goodwill and: advice for his Egyptian hosts—perhaps some hints to Mr. Nasser that it was time to close with the other. “revolu- tionary” Arab. governments against “reactionary” pro-Western regimes. According to Soviet diplomats, Mr. Kosygin did not bring any ~new promises of aid’ or arms. But would they have said so if he had? =On-The- Right Road— " “The. Atlantic provinces .are o tacking today’s \ro blems. in an en- _ergetic, and aggressive - way. Just. as “they gathered themselves together to — THe Tee Snr erm’ IT IN “ ITS GETTING IT . ring, oF “THe, 4 Barre t 4o 1] SHIP IN A BOTTLE —4 re ‘|taunts of schoolmates. . |Nose, ears, jbony defects can be corrected | & a Adolescent Conformity eyes of more mature persons. different; ‘| Same. Conformance creates a’ hard- | public favors: pulling out of Viet Nam if the South Vietnamese |by lashing out at ‘some nerv- | stop fighting or.engage in. any ous Nellies and some who will among become frustrated and bothered ears, a misshapen ly skin’ hemlateh, extremities are bothersome. Obvious abnormalities create’ many psychological barriers es- pecially. when aidéd and abetted” by the cruel and thoughtless The de-. fects become.a_ source_of leading to’ lack of self- confi- | dence and psychic trauma. Now wand then the individual makes a mountain out of a molehill by- overemphasizing the importance of the deformity:-Some develop imaginary qualms about unnot- iceable differences. Real — disfigurements—of— chin, teeth, and via plastic surgery. Ugly scars | can be removed and birthmarks~ disguised:—This shold be done before the youngster develops a deep-seated emotional. problem.- dividual. The. problem is to con- vince the parents, who take the | adult’ viewpoint. of ‘‘so, what.” - An unsightly rash usually re- solves itself when the youngster’ ship when the teen-ager has un- | attractive teeth, outstanding | nose, unsight- ; faulty pos- themselves. “ Johnson's personal popu: ‘strain and some who will turn measured by the,on their leaders and on their . shoulders, chest, abdomen, atid | polls, has dwindled to an all- ;own country | and on our own ture, and bone deformities. Ugly | “and prominent scars on the face, | larity, » Sharh Test ' its agers |mese war. Some observers feel.that by may agree with. that - as CSS -age—do—even—though—it- “Fepre-|his- -angry-denunciation—of- -critics__ment | sents a fad, and is silly in the | the Vietna-. last week in Chicago. and re- commitment to current policy criticized acti The phase has been described |in Viet? Nam Johnson has cago speech as the herd ‘instinct because the |painted. himself. into a corner. ‘insecure find safety in numbers. | Adolescents do not want to be |which=.the president ‘they ‘want ‘to be the |can quote, indicates more than Na:a must be saved from com- For Johnson - By Arch ‘MacKenzie - Canadian Press Staff, Washington WASHINGTON (CP) ‘— Prest- | should say national survival, te By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen ‘dent Johnson's proven’ political. the only ideology that may. be Most of us associate adoles- agility may face cence -with -nonconformity, ‘but test from growing domestic ap- Vietnamese.’ in reality it is the age of strict prehension about | conformity. These teen- -| want to do what others. of. their | *Johnson’s:, problem -is that a growing .number of: Amer ans = a ‘sharpest left to a growing number of — His most nexpected “and nh. was the Chi- week in which he sought to Mie all congres. The public opinion polls, | sional election candidates to his normally own firm stand that South Viet '70 per cent of the American | munism. enna hostilities - Johnson also invited criticism and break ranks under the : | time low although still higher fighting men." ~~ |than...President John Kennedy |FEEL CHANGE POSSIBLE —_ Some—-observers: remain cen- - enjoyed at some points. shame the situation _ somewhat_ -the-fragile-—base--for—-Johnson’s—un-— - Premier Ky’s- military shows -fident of Johnson's ability to down with the Buddhists in Da switch courses when the need Nang seems. to have calmed (arises or when: he so desires. battered little ‘ country. of—15,- things he said in the 1964 presi- 000,000 has shown an astonish- dential campaigh. ing capacity to hang together In a Sept 25, 1964, ‘speech, he despite internal feuds. said: But South Viet Nam’s capac- “There are one who say I ity to continue to hold up its ought to go North ahd drop end of the fight against the Viet bombs, to try to wipe, out the Cong and the North—seems a supply lines... . -But-we-don't-want-to-get-in-- equivocal recommitment. — volved ina nation with 700,000,- | THANT’S VIEW | 000° “people: and get tied down” Secretary-General U Thant of in’a land war. with | Asia.” .* ithe United»: Nations said last » A- little later in the same _week at Atlantic. City: “speech: ‘We are not going to “Twenty years of outside in send Amerigan boys 10,000 miles*” tervention ‘and the presence of ‘away from home.to do what foundly affected Vietnamese po (for themSelves.”’ litical life that it seems illusory President Johnson... not only to represent it as a mere con- has sent more than 250,000 test between Communists: and American boys to Viet Nam at= | liberal democracy. last count but more Americans “Indeed, recent -events have. than South Vietnamese are be- shown that the passion for na- ing - killed: ‘in-combat with the — repel invaders, so today they are making a united effort to cope with -changed market and living condit- ions. Their economies have gained -momentum in the. past ten years. There is a growing social vitality. They are’ not waiting for a new gen- eration and the operation of blind materialistic. forces or the slow in-. fluence of politics to bring a better turn to the wheel of fortune.” | The above reassuring statement embraces all four Atlantic provinces, our_own_ included, of course; and it -comes—not from. a partisan source | but from the current Monthly Letter of the Royal Bank of Canada, Any similarity, therefore, between the views expressed and Conservative claims that we are indeed marching - forward. in-this province and not ‘going to the bow-wows as their op- ponents. maintain, is purely coinci- dental. But the long arm of coin- cidence cari be very helpful as x Still Virgin Land “We had thought that homesteading was a relic of the past in this country, but we were wrong. It is still flourish- - ing in the remote areas of- north- western Alberta, where the settle- ment of virgin lands is being speeded: _-by_-the_opening.of .thé-Great.. Slave. |. Lake Railway, the first rail ra tation north of Peace. River.. Th Alberta government has made 60,0 to 90,000 acres a year available to set- ‘tlers‘and there are about 1,000 home-- stead sales a year. “About 7,000,000 acres between the Rocky Mountains— to the west and the Canadian Shield — _ to the east are considered suitable for mixed farming. Alberta’s director, of lands, V.A. Wodds, recalls that when the new north-south railroad reaché@ High Level, 187 miles .north of Peace River, there-were two applicants for_| ‘each Jand parcel. | offered in the new area. Lots had to be drawn. Grain elevators now dot: the new rail line, and farmers no longer Have.to truck their grain over gravel roads to the. east-west rail fine at Peace River. The “new: railroad, ‘built’ by the CNR, ex- : nab Behind the' move. of course, is the ‘| recurrent problem posed . by..Soviet- | penetration of the area, accompanied ‘by large-scale’ arms to Egypt, Syria, - Traq and thé Yemen.” ‘fo become Is- rael's open military ally might jeopar-. yA Lit Ah ‘ eu oe & | borough Festival and in London be- | ' will travel overseas for the first time . . tends 377 miles north from a nearby junction to the Great Slave Lake in - the Northwest Territories. , ’ Years ago, any man could claim a quarter section of land (160 acres) anywhere, cultivate ‘it, livé on it and - take titlé.. Homesteading is now re- © Stricted to designated areas and to Canadian citizens or. British subjects who have lived a year in Alberta. The government makes available only land suitable for cultivatior? and lard. served by established communities and farm roads. Clearing and break- ing costs:the settler $30 an acre. Im- © proved ‘land--agound Peace River is $50. to $60 an were. ITORIAL NOTE. who heard the National ‘Youth Orchestra of Canada in Char- ak “OTTAWA REPORT b - Threat Seen To Supreme Court Prestige “Anery scenes in. Commons | them accept. any, similar politi-”’ been amply justified by the en- . | suing damage to the prestige of over Inquiry. : Uproar follows | charges by J. G. Diefenbaker - Supreme Court judge Sec for making ‘six major. mistakes*” - Charges that Justice Minister ‘prostituted’ RCMP.’ y Patrick Nicholson cally-oriented commission: | In fact oné can count on the’ ingers of one hand such exam- ples in the past half-century. ‘Judge Duff himself. handled the shell inquiry in 1917; in 1931 he | -pers within the past few weeks. Those headlines might well handled the railroad inquiry. In have been read in our newspa- |1946 Judges Taschereau and’ Kellock presided over the Gou- In fact, they date back to July | zenko spy commission during - 1942.: That: was when the House which they made clear their un- of Commons was debating a mo- ‘happiness at the suspects being -tion-of censure upon the Liberal | kept -incommunicado—underar-— government of Mackenzie King; |rest on political instructions. In The motion was* proposed by | 1948 Judge Rand handléd the Howard Green and seconded by labour inquiry which resulted in John Diefenbaker. It criticized. | th Rand formula. Recently Jud- the conduct of a Commission of | ge Hall presided over the Health~ Inquiry set up to examine t he ‘Commission, but he -was appoint Hong Kong. disaster, in. which ed to that prior to his appoint- 1,985 Canadian soldiers — .il}+ |ment to the Supreme Court. equipped, under-trained and sur- | PRESTIGE DAMAGED .. a prised — were capturedtby the Thus the détermination of Japanese. : | Supreme -Court Judges that they Criticizing the inquiry, Mr. |would hold — themselves” aloof | im-> the: Supreme Court. If the inquiry was to be set up at all, perhaps a preferable for- mula would have been to a p- than one, udges to preside over it; and these might well have been not Supreme Court judges but the chief justices- of provinces, say Ontario’s Judge Gale, Saskat- chewan’s Jifdge Cullitoh and Quebec's Judge -Tremblay~ the involvement of Pierre Se- vigny calléd for a French-speak- ing judge. : If Judge Spence’s feport, cri- ticisesany -person. that person |_ has the right to make further representations before him prior to.the publication of his report. Even those who have withdrawn oint three, rather Diefenbaker stressed the need | for such a commission to pre- | serve’ the rights of democracy | _in_its. hearings, and_the_right_of- Parliament to be-given the com- plete evidence — not just an ex- purgated edition. (In the Mun- singer ‘souti:. a, similar expur- | gated edition” was dubbed ‘the sanitized version’ by its critics) Mr. Diefenba ed that ehiibeals: the time had come when Supreme Court jud- ges should not be put in control of such commissions of inquiry. | FINE CHIEF JUSTICE --The-commissioner= -appointed=" to conduct the Hong Kong’ in- quiry was Sir Lyman Duff, at ‘that time Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. His wisdom in the law was evidenc- ed by his then 36 years exper- ienGe on that court; his dedica-*| tion had been recognized by the | er also emphasiz- |- from political affairs was judge, accepted the -Munsinger | commission." “It~is-a-reasonable- | assumption that his brother jud- ges were unhappy at hjs accep- nee; their _ unhappiness has Winnipeg | Mr. Gildas Molgat should re- | ceive wide support across the | | prairies ‘for his. views on the | from the West at the next con- ' vention of the party, and also on | have + Manitoba, would have no_ Nelson | |Mr. Walter Gordon's economic policies for Canada as they would affect this part of the country. As the Manitoba~Liberal lead- er pointed out, the prairies can- © plemented until last month when_| | Judge “Spence, the junior Puisne. | award of a knighthood. He was not afford any substantial - tut- reluctant to—accept that com- | hack in foreign. capital invest-— mission in the twilight of his ment, as proposed by the form- from the~ hearing still have the ‘right. -If.. the ‘report is. critical of any fermer Conservative mi- nister, the one thing we can be is convinced that the skin must be -treated with care and not abuse. VASCULAR INSUFFICIENCY ” . A. C. writes: I havevhad cere- bral. vascular insufficiency’ for nine months. How long do you- think it-will last? ; REPLY Iam a poor prognosticator, especially when .my opinion is based on a letter. Tests should 'bé done to visualize the arteries in the neck and’make other tests on the circulation—te the brain. | If a small segment of the artery-- is blocked -by. a clot, “surgery will rectify condition in a short time. WINE AND “ARTHRITIS J. B. writes: ° Will excessive wine drinking make rheumatoid arthritis worse? REPLY If the 4éints are anything “like the head, ‘wine will make them fee] better in the evening but worse in the morning. The arth- ritic fares better when.he exer- cises moderation in everything, and in this -respect avery tional entity, , perhaps one ‘Communist enemy. os | wg ' ~ Teenagers And Money Ottawa Journal A news story says “24,000,000 American teenagers have $15,- more generous or teenagers any 000,000 a year to spend or $625. more demanding than they ever apiece. What~a wave of hard - were. Times change. W hen timesrenfiniscing that could | there’s money around it tends thé They point to some of . the — It’s not that. parents are 5 any” “eges! A survey found “‘allowances” for teenagers from parents rang- | ed from alow d&$1 up to $20 a week. Canadians are more moseriita ple-in their twenties hereabouts have professed amusement at the, liberal amounts of money 1966 compared with themsel- ves in 1956. ~ aged days pre-date the 1950s and other misty aeons.__of the past. the COmT nat = even more in money matters but even peo-- | their teenaged brothers,+-sisters. and cousins: manage~to-spend in-|~ As for ancients whose teén- set off among ex-teenagers of all | to get, distributed. One need not*. be an optimist to feel that to- | day’ s teénagers are, comparati- | vely speaking, as sensible about | money as yesterday's, and as’ capable of understanding that - if times: were hard again, mo- ney would be —searce again. - Just the samé, cranky old a-. dults will be forgiven a wry smile at. one 16-year-old’s view’ -on money. Suid she: sed with money as adults are. We just want enough to spend.” nough that the luxury of such disdain for money is ‘not cheap- Ah. well, she'll learn soon ‘e-— gence in~alcoholi¢e peverager’ 1s sure of is that when it reaches | the floor of the House of Com- | mons,.. it. will. get. rough. “treat-. ment.\..It is indeed a pity -that | - oe Supreme ‘Court is thus invol: +!" ve Western Liberals Alarmed Free Press — If Mr. Gordon’s economic pol- icies had been in force, it is -probable that Alberta’s oil in- | -need=-for—aunited..Liberalvoice-...dustry...would...be..much... smaller... 'than it is today; Saskatchewan would: have no potash industry; River development. The implementation of Mr. not condoned. | astounding... = : "ly provided to one’s progeny. Mickey Rooney’s life has been happy and it has’ been sad. talent has been up and he has. Gordon's ideas. now would cer- | tainly mean a slow-down in| the | : good~ reason that if the West were pe | capital to finance its Siakal Te- Western development, for very been out. In the first of three But it has seldom been dull. “The little man with the big” been down—but he has nevér It_is_surprising-how.often-correc-_foreign —armies..have-...so— pros... Asian-..boys.-ought--to -be=doing—— itive surgery leads to a matked ‘chaage in the attitude of the in-' wf L “Teenagers are not as impres= == lottetown will not forget the exper-, ience, This enthusiastic -.group of young Canadian muSicians, we note, during the coming summer months. They will-give concerts atthe Edin- . fore ‘going. to. the Continent where they will play. in Germany, ate | and Belgium.. : = & ‘ ) 4 4 Rev. great career, and he did so only | on the urging of the prime minis- ter. After the inquiry, the 77 - year old Chief Justice was sever: | ly criticized in Parliament; one year-' later, ‘Conservative —and_. CCF MPs voted against his reappointment for a further term as Chief Justice. Asa ‘result of that political 1 c ering of a Supreme, Court judge, for his handling of‘an m | ‘quiry -with very political over- tones, the judges of the Supreme Court came to a tacit agreement -that never again should any of Our Yesterda Ss (From, The Guardian F es) * TWENTY - FIVE YEARS: AGO : (May 27, 1941) . “The 35,000-ton German battle- ship Bismarck, ‘one of the .new- est and most powerful in the world, was smashed. and sunk by British . warships and ° aerial bombers on the fifth morning of | as coldly implacable a chase.as - sea warfare had ever known. Possession of Crete hung ~the- balance as air-borne Ger- man troops, heedless of deaths estimated at 18,000, ‘their -hold on a seven-mile stret- eh of plain around Malemi and Britain announced loss of two | new cruisers and four destroy- | ers in Cretan waters in. history’s greatest . air-naval battle. : ? e TEN YEARS AGO (May 27, 1956) : The Sm allman Trophy “award- to the! outstanding play inthe P:B.1.-Drama ‘Festival was won by. the Borden Youth Club. for ~ their presentation ‘‘You Can't Beat the Irish’'; directed by Preston Hammill.’ Avonna. MacCausland: of. New Giasgow, P.E.I winners of the Provincial slog contest, sponsored by ‘the P.E.I. Innkeepers Association. Th eir “eheques of $50 were presented to them by Senator Elsie Inman, _ Summer side i enlarged | , and John. Han-. . eock of’ Summéfside, were th e |er minister of finance. Alberta. | | oil prosperity is built on foreign | investment. Foreign capital un- ,derwrote Saskatchewan's potash industry, and that province’s latest- economic plum, the mif | at Prince Albert, is partially the PUBLIC FORUM This colnmn_ ts open to the “discottien” | by correspondents of questions of in terest. The Guardian does not neces- “sarily endorse the opinion of corres: } dents. All letters published are sub- ject to editing and condensation where necessary. The’ Guardian_is unable te | enter into any poireryponence regard- | ing letters submiitted.- ; MANY HAPPY MEMORIES Sir,—Prior to leaving -Charlot- tetown on my retirement to pen- | sion effective May 26 I wish to pthank you, your staff, and ‘all 'the public for the splendid co- — operation and assistance I have ~ received over the past 64 years. All: this assistance and construc- ‘ | tive criticism helped make my | job, along with that of my. men, a relatively happy one. I hope | | for the same loyal help for my- '-suecessor Supt. We regretfully leave the Is- | _Py_memorie&” of .its_beauty_and— | its lovely and charniing people. ; I know the average good citizen | fully realizes the policeman, as a protector for the public, - times hasa tough job to do and can only do it effectively with »| the help and assistance of the ‘public. generally. What action our people take in the line of duty mav save some person's life, either on the. highway or in. | their ordinary calling. The -fact ‘that the majority of the Island: ers realize this and profit from our advice in good spirit shows’ they all have a realization of our ~ important work which ‘is to save lives: and protect and ‘property. , In leaving we. wish everyone the best of health and prosperity in the years that follow: Yours sincerely, 3 McNEIL, _ RCMP P.R_ Harrison. - at | their. ats Fa ssh neon ; Commanding ‘ “Lt Dis ision sources -it:-would-wait a long, long: time before pene ‘Tesoure- | es were’ developed... The concentration a power within the Liberal: party lies in central Canada— in Ontario and | Quebec. As a result, party pol- result of foreign capital set has. been directed largely to- yards holding and consolidating these provinces. The West has been badly neglected. Admittedly the blame is not all on-one side. There has been toc. little, co-ordination and co- operation among Liberals in the three’ prairie provinces. They have, in the past, spoken with three rather weak and disjoint- ed. voices at party gatherings. Co-operation, of the kind pro- | posed by Mr. Molgat,. would weld the three voices into one, | ‘ immeasurably louder and stronger. The idea deserves” the unconditional support ot all - Western Liberals. BULL CHALLENGES cock NAIROBI (AP) Kenya’s | election’ in June is a cock and |_ pul? fight. The’ symbol of Presi- dent Jomo Kenyatta’s Keny? | African. National Union is a col- orful cock and the »new Keaya People’s. Union, led by, f | land, leaving ‘behind many hap} vice - president Oginga ‘Odinga, -has_chosen a bull for its s bedae._ oe IF IT’S MADE a VT boy T Tg Problems Are } Our TS eee DOUGLAS BROS. ae) Le Charlottetown Dial 2-1234 j | | | | : the” Jack Paar p: _excerpts fro m his book, “My Autobiography”, Mickey talks frankly about Mis early ca- reer, his first wife Ava Gard- ner and his appearances on ar Show, This. week, i in Weekend Magazine. M: y - Autoblog rabhy ! 4 uf ‘cS ‘a correspondent we spent the first of our marriage in ® MAG ‘We Learned to »Live with War. ~ What is it like to live with death and danger? A young Canadian shousewife from Brockville. tells her dramatic story. in Weekend Magazine this. week. Married ‘to Saigon, Ruth Lor Malloy ad- justed . to ..bombs, ~ tropical heat and says, “I’m glad Your r best reading valne b your u weekend Rewepepsr! T he E vening Patriot WITH © EEKEND me and Colored’ Comics Noon Parties for June Brides ~ Planning. a. ‘party’ for a bride-to> be? Or perhaps you have some : other special occasion in mind. » ror entertainment that will have ° w little extra, how about a Junche* : én? Your guests, will rave over Margo Oliver’s recipe for Water- cress‘Soup :». . and who could resist her Creamed Sweetbreads - and Chicken? A Good Food en- tertainment plus this week, ‘stationed in raids and nine ee Saigon” STILL ONLY” ® ™~ ¢ = AZINE oe ‘At All Newsstands’: A