When oo vere Seger ~~ for which the Government must fake Guardian Covers Prince Edward Islend Like The Dew W.. J. Hancex, Publisher Vallace Ward ; Frank Walker anaging Editor Editor Published every week day morning (excep! Sur lay end statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, 4 " P.£.1., by Thomson Newspapers itd ranch (offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton ind Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers \dvertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave impire 3-8894 Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni versity 65942, Western Office 1030 Wes! Georgie treet Vancouver (MA 7037. ' Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Pubiishers \sseciation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian ‘ress ts exclusively entitled to the use for “fepub Icatlon* of all news dispatches in this paper edited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters ! | prompting of Lieutenant Governor Ready. It became the parent of the | Royal Agricultural Society under ' whose auspices the Exhibition move- ‘ment gained. ascendency, and its aims - were set forth as follows: “To diffuse and extend the know- ledge and promote the practice of the best and most approved modes of agriculture; to encourage the breeds of horses, cattle, sheep apd swine, by importation of new stoek and by judicious crossing of the old; to pro- | mote the making and the use of the end also to the local mews published herein. All | ight or republication of special dispatches here n also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carriet. $12.00 « year by mail on rural routes and aeas | sot serviced by carrier. $15.00"8 year off Islend and U.K. $20.00 per rear, in” U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com nonweelth. Not over 7c «ingle copy. Member Audit Bureav of Circulation. wee PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1965. Will He Or Won't He? ‘The new wheat deal. which will pump about $450 million into the Canadian economy, has touched off a new rash of speculation over the pmespects of a fall election. The Prime Minister, it is argued, can hardly wish for a Wetter chance to crack the Tory hold on the Prairies. He is sure to sweep Quebec and at worst hold his own in Ontario, the Maritimes and British Columbia. Mr. Pearson, re- -pomtedly, is still holding out but the pressure among his followers for a dissolution of Parliament before Sept. 27 is gathering an irrestible momen- tum. 3 The Dorion report, it is said, though perhaps not entirely forgot- ten has apparently done far less dam- age to the Government than antici- pated. The same seems to be true “of the postal strike, even in its Mont- - real epicentre. And the general charges of fumbling and bungling are not likely to cut much ice with a prosperous electorate. ~~~ Even without the medicare rabbit. Mr. Pearson conjured out of his hat at the recent federal-provincial con- ference, it is possible to make out a plausible case from the Liberal stand- point-for a fall election. drive, de <spite reports from all parts of Canada that the people see no need for it and - are opposed-to it. _._People_may not want_an election, argue the Liberal go-ahead boys, but neither did they want one in 1958 when they gave John Diefenbaker his unprecedented majority. Party strategy, they maintain, consists in choosing the most advantageous poll- like it. But there is one thing in_par- ticular that must be bothering Mr. Pearson in this connection. How can_ an election on the basis of the old seats be justified, when he was- so ~ emphatic in-promising redistribution? - He came to power convinced that re- distribution must be a priority mat- ter—that it was, in his own ‘words, “a constitutional obligation of Parlia- ment to get through with it at this session.” That was back in October, 1963. ; In February, 1964, he was ex- pressing his disapopintment that the measure hadn't yet gone through. But he was sure that every member of the House “must share a sense of inadequacy as long as we have failed —_to-make-_provision_for_the_representa- tion of the people according-to-the- census which is now nearly three = years old. Until that overdue duty is | discharged.” he emphasized, “we as a parliament are, in a very real sense, in constitutional default.” Parliament is still in “constitu- | = -tional default” on the issue, a year — anda half later, and it is a dereliction the blame-iWhile this consideration may have little weight with the party managers, it must be assumed that it counts—as well it should—with the _ Prime Minister. “ing time, and making the people / most improved implements of hus- bandry; to encourage both the growth and importation of seed grain, of all sorts of grass seed, and the seed of roots; to encourage the clearing of forest land, and to promote a better | of the Island.” -_————--_—— . | | | | | | | | | est article. Neither is there at present | } mode of cultivating it than now pre- vails; to encourage the growth of wool, and to introduce an economic mode of carding, spinning, and of | | fulling and dressing, the cloth.” Another big step in our Provincial | Fair movement was the appointment of a coffiffiission by the Legislature in 1868, which. brought in a report recommending that local exhibitions be held every two out of three years, supported by liberal legislative grants equally divided between the three counties, and that every. third “year a large sum be appropriated “for the purpose of a Triennial Provincial Exhibition in ClHarlottetown—of course affording every facility for the transport of goods from other parts This -commission had vision. It Suggested that not only Island ex- “hibitors but ‘‘parties on the mainland - or citizens of the United States be invited to send their products to Charlottetown.’”’ In like manner it urged that ‘implement makers be in- duced to send specimens of the latest and-most.improved- invention.” Thus- the fairs were to he show windows, not only for the best the Island could produce, but for what other parts of the continent were producing as-well. The need for extending this proposal to machinery was bluntly stated in the report. “For example,” it said, “the de- mand for mowing machines is sup- plied by one enterprising individual who, of course, names his own prices, a | We recently read of Britain's new Conservative leader, Right Hon:>Edward Heath, naming his “shadow cabinet.’ This top Conservative brass in the Brit- ish House of Commons includes the chief Opposition spokesmen for each field of government ac- tivity, -sueh as Foreign Affairs, is breathing down the neck of a Minister, who sees in his critic and shadower his possible suc- of government. The descriptive —and--exciting term ‘shadow cabinet'’ is—fool- ishly—not used on Parliament Hill. But the Conservative Party and it is by no means certain that he |. now in opposition, ‘does have a supplies either the best or the cheap- | similar organization, called the in: use among us any efficient horse pitch-fork; our threshing machines and winnowing machines are of the most ordinary, description; we have few steel mould-plate ploughs, stil? fewer_cultivators;our-horse-hoes-are—| very indifferent, and our common field harrows perform probably one- third less work per day than a gang ‘of English or Scotch iron harrows.” Horseracing, which flourished in- ‘dependently as a popular sport in the Island from early times; now pro- “vides a” major, Exhibition Week at” traction, but there is also the keenest competition in livestock classes and a noteworthy revival in handicraft exhibits, sponsored by the Women’s Institutes. It all adds up to something very stimulating indeed; and, as the military men say, it keeps “escalating.” New Brunswick's Example “Breathalyzers” are to become part of New-Brunswick’s law enforce- ment apparatus» The machines have -arrived —and -officers’-ofthe—-RCMP | Committee of Caucus 1 men. A committee of the Conserva- tive caucus of MPs is devoted to the study of each of the 21 chief PUBLIC FORUM This cclumn ts open te the discussios by corresponden’s of questions of terest. The Guardian does net neces sarily endorse the epinion of corres pendents. All letiers published. are sub- ject to editing snd condensation where ‘mecessary, The Guardian is unable te enter into any correspondence regard tng letiers — submitted. OUR WILD ANIMALS Corner of Aug. 13, we have a wild animal loose on P.E.I.,, possibly a panther. No mention other animal with two cubs. The $64 question, where did it come from? It must have been a surprise to some. people to find it active imagination and a! husky tomeat. r = this animal (whatever it may- be) was months ago, it having been both seen and heard in Rustico by a reliable neighbor, a man whom no person need doubt his word. I would ask Hon. Mr. Mac- Rae to-please —answer-the-fol- are being trained in their use. in future any person suspected of impaired driving-in New Brunswick will be asked to submit: himself to: a test for the amount of alcohol in his blood and his driving privileges may be revoked for four months if he refuses. Objections were raised to com-__ pulsory “breathalyzer” tests when the authorizing legislation was put through the N.B. Legislature last spring. A chief contention was that by this means a person would, in ef- fect, be forced to testify against him- lowing questions, so all who are | interested may know the an- swers. _(1) Has the Government, “any control over this Wildlife Park |..in-North.Rustico? (2) Are there any rules, regu- ; Mations, or restrictions govern- | ingsthis Park? | ° (3) Are all animals brought into the Park from outside the Province neutered before being allowed in the Park? (4) Are any or permanently tatt the animals owner's name? Defence, Trade and so on. Each | cessor in the event of a change | Chair- ~ "Sie Ae cording ~~ to “Hunter's + of its two cubs, or possibly an- | was more than; over-.; The Berlin Wall The first report I heard of | “that“are in | this Park, and recorded in the ____ IT COULD BE POTENT STUFF OTTAWA. REPORT By Patrick Nicholson a Tories Have Their Own Shadow Cabinet } | fields of government. These | committees average 18 mem- | bers, and range in size accord. ing to the importance of the sub- ject, from Agriculture (54 mem- bers) to Secretary of State (four members). Each committee has its own chairman, vice chair- man and secretary. | cus committees are -in fact a clumsily- named shadow cabinet which meets as a body to dis- cuss strategy and policy. Bar- | ring their own defeat or the elec- | tion- of -a~ more~ qualified candi- | date, they might and no doubt do_envisage themselves as the | likely Minister in. their, respec; tive fields, in the event of their | party attaining office. TIME ERODES MINISTERS During the Diefenbaker years, 36. MPs were appointed to the Cabinet. Of these, 12 have been | defeated at the polls, four re- signed from . Parliament, | were appointed Lieutenant Gov- | ernors of provinces, three were ‘appointed to the Senate and two | died. Today ex-Prime Minister Diefenbaker ahd 12 of his form- | er’ ministers sit in the Commons. Eight of these now serye as chairmen of caucus committees, mostly in the’ field corresponding | to their former Minister. | Thus Alvin Hamilton fs chair- | man of the caucus committee on | qur; Angus MacLean of Fisher- | is; Monte Monteith of Health | and Welfare; Hugh John Flem- | ming of Forestry; Paul Martin- eau of Mines and_ Technical Surveys; Thus these chairmen ‘ef cau- | two | Lab; and Walter Dinsdale | through the early part of the session are no longer available: Leon Balcer (Transport) resign- red from the party, and George | Nowlan (Finance) died. j Potentially the most effective departmental minister of ll, | Wally McCutcheon, sits in the | Senate; - so. is not eligib to serve as chairman of a Com | mons caucus committee. ' BACKBENCH STRENGTH Some of the rising younger stars of the Conservative years now. serve in this group which ts in effect a shadow cabinet; Wal- ly Nesbitt as chairman of _ the caucus committee on Fxternal Affairs; Gordon Fairwea'her, a former Attorney Genera’ of New - Brunswick, on Justice: Af fHal- es on , and |ric sNiel- sen on Public Works One interesting chaj n is Heath Macquarrie, of the cau- | cus committee on rulfes par- liamentary proceduret tis sug- | gests that he might appointed Speaker under a Conservative -+-Gevernment—— ———— There is a wealth of exper- jence and talent inj this Conser- vative group. But} it would immensely - strengthened, and would iti fact constftute a really impressive and. attractive alter- native government | if the Lead- er were to make peace with, and reassemble, some of the de- Fleming, Leon Balcer, Frnie Halpenny and Davie Fulton. All these were effective ministers, | whose experience and popular appeal could greatly strengthen ‘| starvation. This ministers, notably Doug... Poison Control “By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien Ipechar is a poison control kit containing a bottle of sirup of ipecac and a battle of activated charcoa) in water. A few tea- spoonsful are nauseating and induce vomiting. Tick'ins the back of the throat with the fing- er does the same but is less reliable. The ‘charcoal powdet thas the abiitv to adsorb mapy chemicals and is used after vomiting. The American Academy of Pe- diatrics subcommittee on acci- dental poisoning recommends that families with young chil- dren keep the kit for emergency use. It should be used immed- iately to eliminate the poison be- fore it is absorbed or passes from the stomach into the small intestine. The exception is when acids or alkalis; these chemic- |.als burn the throat and esopha- gus and.there is no reason to ir- \ritate the tissues a second time via retching. , Many household cleaning so- | lutions contain these strong che- | .| micals. Lye, for example, may | be mistaken for milk. The best treatment is to dilute the stom- ach contents with water or milk. The physician uses a stomach | tube to empty and wash out the | gastric pouch without additional | damage to the passageway. Swallowing corrosive chemic- als that burn the « cause the burned part is replac- | ed with s,’r tissue citer healing | rowing ‘sireture) of the tube Difficulty in swallowing ensues | and in some instances the pas- | sageway is blotked completely | Surgery seaded ty pvevent complation is best avoided by passing an olive- ie | Shaped dilator at intervals dur- | | ing the healing period. In_addi- .. tion, the child is given soft foods to minimize irritation. The universal antidote con- } tains magnesium oxide, tannie | acid, ant activated — chsrensl . Many physicians object to the tannic acid because it has a tox- ic effect upon the liver. Ipechar should have a com- panion—.. the telephone number , of the “nearest poison control center and the family physician. ST SENSES _J.P. writes: I am an elderly | | man and since I had a cold six {months ago I have not been able to taste or smell. Several doctors have told me i cannot be helped. Do you know of any helpful grandmother remedy? | REPLY te +—-_No,-especiariy since-vou- have been examined by several phy- sicians who cannot find a cause. The usual origins of this condi- tion are neurological disorders and nasal obstruction due to in-’ -feetion,—alergy,- or—polyps.— | VARICOSE VEINS Mrs.-L.—-writes: Must. varicose veins be operated upon? : REPLY Eliminating the veins is the only cure but many victims keep the cond:: under control with the use of elastic bandages or Meee SCIATIC NERVE J.-B. writes: Can a person REPLY = No, because the sciatic nerves go down the legs.-An analogous situation exist# in thé upper ex- tremities when the nerves going | to the arms are pressed upon in he neck. 8. T. writes: Should rye brea be fed to chi!d-ea who prefer white? REPLY pee Millions of people get along on white bread. of Northern Affairs. Two who | the present Conservative front TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— | served as committee chairmen bench. Montreal Star In the four years since the construction of the Berlin Wall, the world has come to look on it more as a symbol than a practi- cal device. It has represented in |. men’s minds a mere physical” }-block—that-can—be—surmounted | whenever the yearning for ‘free- dom is strong enough. We ‘are all familiar with stories of dar- ing and imaginative escapes. Yet there is also a grimly fac- | a trickle today, and the pros- | pects for the future are even more gloomy. ‘The ‘Wall of Shame,” as the West Germans call it, is being replaced by what “Modern Wall.’ East Berlin au- the East Germans call the! “TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO Dispose of old drugs by flush- ing them down the drain. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) Our Yesterdays _(From The Guardian Files) oe (August 18, 1940) the child has swallowed strong | esophagus — | creates a serious problem be- | | occurs. This may lead to a nar- | i rai aco cea a aa A ang asa EES TN thorities are known to be acute- | NOTES BY THE WAY A cat is reported te have kill- : ed a hen, and then sat on her seven eggs until they hatch- ed. Cats never did like raw | eggs. —- Hamilton Spectator. “How is your little brother, Johnny?" “Sick abed. He hurt | himself.” “That's too bad. How | did he do it?” “We were play- | ing who could lean furthest out of the window, and he won."’ — | Montreal! Star. | A man from San Francisco is is making his fifth search of | Mount Ararat for traces of No- | jury /lah's Ark. Good luck to him. | But what we really need is not @o much the Ark as that dove with the olive leaf that was last seen flying away from it. — Ot- | 'tawa Journal. Father (teaching small dau- | ghter to tell the time)—‘These | are the hours — and these are | the minutes — and these the | seconds,” Little Girl (still puz- zled) — “But where are the jif- fies, Daddy?’’ — Toronto Star. Professor John Meise! of | Queen’s University says that Canada has not enough full-time professional politicians. There certainly are not enough g ood politicians, but they need not all be professional in the strict sionals sometimes are inclined to be cynical in their approach to the problems of the people. —Letter-Review. sense of that term. The-profes--| Ip antwer te the question of what to serve unexpected guests the wag suggests a subpoena. | Milwaukee Joursal. . | Barry Goldwater is recovering | from a neck operation. It was necessitated because of an in- sustained in his youth, not to be confused with the time he it in the neck last Noy er.— Fort William Times-Jour- nal. “Cup e’ tea, weak,” said a customer at a London coffee stall. When the decoction was brought to him he eyed it critic- ally. “Well, what's wrong with it? You said weak, didn't you?” “Weak, yes," was._the reply, “but not ‘elpless.”"—-M on treal | Star. | An old lady who could not see | eye tyveye with the taxi-driver onthe question of fare, finally | remarked: ‘Don't you try te tell me anything, my good man. T haven't been riding-in taxis for five--years for nothing."’ *‘No,” replied the driver, “but I bet | | | } | you had a good try!"— Mon | treal Star. The Los Angeles | Explosion Canadian Press Staff Writer The destructive Negro riots in Los Angeles have borne out President Johnson's fears that civil rights legislation alone will not. resolve. the deep-rooted _so- cial and economic problem at the base of much of the Negro community in the United States. Years of degradation and dis- crimination have left the major- | ity of the Negroes in the U.S. ‘in poverty, scattering seeds of regentment and- hatred that now - are blossoming with unpredict- able results. The arrest by white police - officers. of an allegedly drunken Negro youth whose car was seen to be weaving through the streets of Los Angeles’ Watts district, a congested Negro com- munity, was enough to touch/off | the worst riots in California's history. So explosive is the Ne- gro problem. . oe LEGAL RIGHTS WON Ironically, the riots came at @ time in © American history when the Negro finally had won legal civil rights and promises __of better things to come. But the patience of the Amer- ican Negro has worn thin over the years, with the flames of the Los Angeles riots quickly spreading to such centres as Chicago and Springfield, Mass. ‘It will be years “before the ' fruits of the civil rights legisla- ___.____ tion will restore the Negro to a rightful place in U.S. society. The California riots brought U.S. must “‘strike at the unjust _conditions from which disorder i have sciatica in the arms? ____ from Johnson a promise that the | higher largely flows," and recalled the fears the president had ex- |-pressed last June 4 that legal | freedoms and equal rights were |.not enough to guarantee the Negro a full share of justice. Johnson has stressed the im- portance jof ‘tackling the Negre problem through the reconstruc- tion of the Negro family. The causes behind the explosions ia ' Los Angeles and other centres. MANY LACK JOBS About one quarter of the mar- ried Negro women living in such slums as the Watts district are divorced or separated, and nearly one out of every four Negro babies is born illegiti- mate, the result of the family breakdown that is worrying the president. The high Negro birth rate—it {s reported to be 40 per cent among Negroes than among whites—and the unem- ployment rate, that is twice as high among Negroes as among white people, accelerates the degree of poverty which is “ac- companied by delinquency and crime. The racial climate in. the US. as a whole has improved much in the last year but the under- current of hatred because of years of discrimination js still on the social and economic con- ditions that have created this hatred will bring some form of harmony between the white and ‘bullet’ to work may not be as - far fetched as it sounds. Trans- portation men are talking of pas- senger capsules that can be shot through underground tubes at supersonic speeds. One such tunnel scheme, des- ~ Riding A ‘Bullet’ eres Journal Negro people of the U.S. “mass transportation e- widespread breakdown of Negro~ family life is one of the major — prevalent. Only a strong assault _ new importance. cs The Japanese have a 320 mile transit system between Tokyo and Osaka with modern electrie | trains flashing at 120 miles an hour over a. virtually level and curveless track. A similar sys- cribed in the latest issue of the | tem operates In West Germany, | Scientific American, envisions | between Munich and Augsburg. | cylyindrical trains that the pneu- matically propelled at speeds up to 500 miles an hour. Valves that high speed rail travel is not | and air compressors would suck_| Only feasible but desirable. oe | the air from in front of the train | and, essentially, propel it .by | atmospheric pressure pushing | from behind. : Such a-system would put Was. | hington, D:-C:, and Boston with- | in 90 minutes of each other and, Tenders are invited for Grad- | ly sensitive about the propagan- da impact of the wall in its orig- |4nal stark form. Every Western | political figure or personality of William C. Bullitt, United Stat- es ambassador to France, de- ‘“claring that Hitler will attack | America if Great Britain is de- | tual side. Before the wall went any importance on a visit to | feated, urged Americans to tele- up 2,000,000. East Germans. fled *to the West. Since its erection, only 23,000 have escaped—and of these, the great majority “came over before East German guards -had-—-time—-to organize ; themselves. efficiently. 1963, close to 3,000 still ma- naged to get over or under the ; West Berlin has had his picture | taken as he looks~ with disgust at this structure. And so. in some parts the wall is being ; pushed back out of down completely. In-its place is ' a kind of “‘green belt” that even features rose bushes. But i main obstacle to escape camera | range,—and—in--other—parts—torn——has-handed Italy's project -offen-_ | graph. their Congressmen _de- manding_ that .over-age_ destroy- | ers be sent to Britain’s aid. Britain’s Mediterranean fleet | sive against Egypt a new set | back, forcing the Italians (5) Have any of these animals wall. By 1964, the number had gqeadly than ever: a ditch 39 20 and heavily damaging supply from. outside the Province been placed in quarantine to guard against disease before being | dropped to 300. We are down to | feet wide and 10 feet deep. | bases in a sudeen bombardment of Bardia. 4 From Small Beginnings - Our Provincial Exhibition indeed provides a show-window in which the province’s agricultural industry may be portrayed, as Hon. I. W. Akerley, Nova Scotia’s minister of agriculture and marketing, said at the opening af the big fair on Monday evening. That, and the stimulus thus. provided. for improvement in quality, both of livestock and field crops as well as home manufactures, has been of car- dinal importance throughout the years. It would be difficult to measure ‘ the value of these incentives in terms ‘of dollars and cents, but there is no question as to the.great contribution they have made to our Island economy. ‘It is woerth-recalling, in this con- nection, the objectives of a little or- ganization formed in Charlottetown | away back in March, 1827, at the | the breatha self. But the Fredericton Gleaner makes a point here which is surely of overriding importance. “The principle which applies to the matter,” it says, “is that to drive by such tests as the law lays down. that he is fit to be given the privilege. | If he cannot pass-the test, or refuses to take it, then he must forfeit his right to drive.” Another a of worry’ about yzers, based on sanitary reasons, was shown to have no foun- dation at thedemonstrationin | Fredericton. Individual disposable mouthpieces are used and there is a “flushing” of the instrument with fresh air after each using. _ ‘This is an innovation so far. as this part of Canada is concerned, and the ‘results: will be watched with interest. | Rustico, P. While this Wildlife Park at North Rustico is one of the beau- | ty spots on the Island, well worth any person's while to visit, 4 could well become one of the biggest blunders ever | | placed in this park? a vehicle on our roads is not a right ~ lowed here. but a privilege. The burden of proof: As we drive over the Island, ~ Our Judy Panned Again | Toronto Globe and Mail | Dr. Sylvester Drabit, a North- cern Health Service doctor, | seems to have been badly shak- jen by Health Minister Judy La- Marsh’s visit to the North last | track. And for this reason his | choice of Miss LaMarsh to illus- trate his point is a little unfair. It should be noted, perhaps, that Dr. Drabit is now in his : oe any person with the sense of November. So much so that | fourth year in the North and is upon the individual to demonstrate, |. smell is being ever reminded of eight months later we find him | consequently not familiar enou- estimate what the skunks | our skunk nuisance. It is hard to | g¢ij) fighting mad over some of | gh with the meteoric career of have” the things she said, even though’ Miss LaMarsh to realize that cost the people ‘of the Island. he thinks his frankness may she is not typical. He may not | What was paid in bounties was cost him his job. ; know how ‘she led the Liberal only a small part of the cost. ‘ne doctor, whose main point | Truth Squad to ignominy in the Our rabbits are quite harmless here. Not so When they got to Australia. When foxes sold from twenty to thirty thousand dol- lars a pair, they sometimes es- caped from the ranches. I would suggest otr Govern- ment offer a very generous re- ward for the capture of these animals efther dead or alive to any person or persons (including our RCMP friends while cn or | off duty) who ‘can prove they were running at large and cap- tured on the Island. ; : T am, Sir, etr., , El. 4 were wasted annually in | Arctic by visits of Government was that thousands of dollars | last general election: how she been valued at | vincial politics on the subject of with a capacity of 36,000 pas-| ing Ditching, Fencing, Instal- to the | Withdraw from their cae is more | defended outpost at Fort Capuz- | wing conviction that fast, reli- valent to 14 jammed lanes of expressway. . Concepts such as these wi! be considered under the propos- ed three year, $90 million mass transit program just approved _ by the senate. The aim is to de- _ velop and test economical, but | high speed, intercity transporta- tion systems. Oo Behind this program Is a gro- | able mass transportation is a | key to the economic health of | society. With the - enormous growth in population envisaged sengers-an hour,-would—be equi-_ lation of Pipe Culverts and all other - incidental -work required for construction of the Sub- | grade for a. Railway Line | to serve Westmorland ical | Industrial Park, -cpproximately | 2.13 miles long, near Dorchester, 'N. B. Sealed tenders marked _on—the outside—_‘‘Confidential.”” ‘Tender —for—Railway—Spur—to Park” and ad d to Mr. R. P. Puddester, Regional Engineer, Canadian National Railways, Moncton, N. B., will be received up to 2:00 p.m. (Atlantic Stand- ard Time), 31 August 1965. A complete set of Plans, Spec- TEN YEARS AGO (August 18, 1955) Don D. White of Saint John, N.B., was elected. honorary pre- sident of the 2nd Canadian Siege | Battery Association at the sixth reunion of the organization since 1919 held at the Queen Hotel, Guest speaker was Brigadier G. G.K. Peake, DSO, ED, whose father, the late Lieut. Col. Ar- thur G. Peake organized the bat- tery and accompanied it Over- seas in June, 1915. - Emilie Dionne’s estate has $171,635. This the | attempted to interfere with pro- was made known at Toronto af- ter Oliva Dionne, father of the | officials, told the advisory com- | pensions in Ontario and elected | famous quintuplets, filed letters mission on development of gov-| Mr. John Robarts in the pro- of administration in Nipissing | | cess; how Prime Minister -Les- | district court in the matter of | There have been so many won- ernment in the Northwest Terri- tories about the occasion when Miss LaMarsh presided at the opening of a 30-bed hospital. Ac- cording to him, ‘‘all she did was | grumble -that ‘the nurses would want bathtubs -next.” : | Dr. Drabit summed up: “This is a dough-head talking, ‘Jeader.”” We might not have | but the doctor is op the right not a} | ter Pearson, playing it safe, as- | sumed her duties in the House of Commons. — There was, in fact, very. little else to be done with Miss La- Marsh last November but send her to the North. Dr. Dra- | bit should;-in future, not con- ernment. | the estate. Emilie died at Ste, | Agathe, Que., Aug. 6, 1954. * © DROWNS IN POND ST. JOHN'S, Nfld: (CP)—A to | delayed report teaching here TODAY. _ | Tuesday said Florence Scott, /13, drowned Sunday while ‘swimming in a pond near her CYRIL S. TOOMBS couched it in quite those terms, fuse Miss LaMarsh with Gov- home at Placentia, Nfld. The | body was recovered. in the next decade, the tremen- dous increase in numbers of | our increasingly suburbanized | cars on the highways and the lever present parking problem, - SOMETHING | To Think About . . . aes we | » you may money | to give it a good, close look! HERE'S WHY: . | The usual “life expestency” of ordinary furnaces is about 10 | years. | BUT EVEN MORE IMPORTANT | derful imprdévements in the 10 years you have a discontented ‘tem! Hf you LENNOX heating | | | Palmer Electric | Dial 894-8543 - Ch’town structions to Bidders and Tender Forms may be ubtained by Bona Fide General Contractors from, (Personal) Mr. R. P. Puddester, Regional Engineer, Moncton, N. B., on deposit of a certified bank cheque made payable to the Canadian National Railway Com- pany for an amount of Fifty Dollars ($50.00), which deposit will be returned when plans and specifications are returned in good condition. : Plans and Specifications may be viewed at the following places. Regional Engineer's Office, Moncton, N. B. Construction Association, Halifax, N. S. Builders Exchange, Saint John, N. B. Construction Association, Moncton, N. B. Tenders will not be considered unless submitted on the forms any | ily be accepted. H.-C. GRAYSTON, Vice- Monetae Westmorland Chemical Industrial —_ % -