| Wallace Werd ’ PAGE 4 o Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W J. Hancox, Publisher frank Waker Managing Editor . taster Published every week dey morning (excep! Sur day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Sireet ChaHottetown P.-E.) by Thomson Newscapers (1d Bratch offices ef Summerside Montague A oe/'0r tnd » Souris Represented nationally by Thomson Newspeoert Advertising Services Tororte 425 mversity Ave Empire 3.8894 Montrea! 649 Cathce et tin veraity 65942 Western Office sc ig Street Vencoyver ©7037 Member Canadien Daily Newspane Association and the Canadian Fress the Canadien Press exclusively entitied to the use for renu> lication of el) mews dispatches hs paper tre@fted to it or to the Associated Press or Feuters and also to “Whe loca! news published here Al right or republication of . in else reserved Subscription rate Not over 40% per week by carr $12.00 « year by mail on ure not servicdd by carrier Ponishers in cae dcatches here e routes and areas $15 os veer off Island ond k _ $20.00. on even considered doing so But it maximum number of deliveries | gesture depicting the dilemma | értain conditions can hit an veer in Y and elsewhere e was galling to have the matter raised’ | in Israel and elsewhere in the | of Russia boxed in on Viet Nam | object In space, but its limita- a Je single cop . issu United States is 5 to 6 a.m. | by a militant and critical China | tions are numerous, ee oe ok ticulolah as an.jssue There were two reports from and an aggressive-United © In this regard, the Soviet Un. ° Last May the United States did | Great Britain ‘in which the peak | States. ion's problem is felt to be THURSDAY. JULY 8, 1965. Che Guardian This syllogism was familiar fare to Dr .Verwoerd’s Afrikaner audi- | ence But the one-time psychology professér did not limit himself to | such abstractions. He complained | specifically about racially mixed dip- lomati¢ receptions held by American missions in South Africa. His minis- ters would continue to boycott these, he said. to express’ their disapproval of the violation of the country’s prac- tices of racial separatism Then getting even more specific. the Premier said that his government would not stand by and permit Amer- ican negroes to enter the country to. work at the three United States satellite tracking stations there. In fact the United States, had never as- signed negroes to the Stations, nor make a stand on ‘principle and can- | || Flight Plan - Of Stork | By Dr. Theodore R. Van’ Dellen Periodically, obstetricians try to answer the old question as to whether more babies are, born at night than during the day, or | vice versa. The latest report: is from the Magee- Womens. hospi+ | tal in Pittsburgh involving 57,- | 375 deliveries over a 10 - year period. Eastern standard time was U Fifty-five per cent of the de- liveries occurred between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. Of these, 39 pér cent | took place between 9 in the mor- ning and 5 in the afternoon. This 8-hour period had the maximum number Of deliveries. The bus- iest hour was from noon to 1 p.m. The authors also cite previous statistics. Thé hour with the was reached between 10 and 11 | a.m. and 2 and 3 a.m., respecti- ~ ~ : Nuclear Rocket Power By Arch MacKenzie Canadian Press Staff Writer Soviet Leader Leonid Brezh- ,nev has rattled Russia's nu- | clear rocket power, claiming globa) supremacy, but -Ameri- | fen observers feel it was a | muted threat. They also claim | to detect some hollowness. + Bwezhnev said the é‘quantity | of intercontinental and orbital | rockets at the disposal of the | U.S.S.R. is perfectly sufficient ‘to finish off once and for all rc aggressor or group of ag- , gressors."’ The Communist party chair- | man’s reference to orbital rock- | ets was taken to mean a rocket put into space circuit and then | later guided to an earth target | by radio. But the Brezhnev speech has | been taken by the U.S. as an- other comparatively - restrained In fact, Brezhnev was reply- ‘ing in his speech Saturday, ular attempt to breathe new life into the long-bankrupt policy of nuclear blackmail.” ‘He also claimed important progress recently in f an effective system against in. tercontinental rockets. Former | Premier Khrushchev once boasted that Russia had an anti-missile that could hit a “fly in the sky.” The American appraisal is that the Russians right now are just getting into production of the superior solid-fuel ICBM, They also suggested that the | U.S. and-the Soviet Union prob. | ably are hitting much the same. problems in trying to put to- gether an anti-missile defence system. : The U.S. for example, has ite Nike-Zeus rocket’ which under greater because it has to plan to offset a lot more American j i celled plans to have the carrier Inde- wvely. | which’ was coupled with an offi- | ICBMs. : Mild Cabinet Shakeup : endence cal! at Capetown after Dr. | Aceofding to Dr. Leslie G, cial snub of American Inde- As for the so-called orbital ~ The shakeup in the federal cabi- pmesepe aces ce ae | Quinlivan and Irene Mikula, RN | pendence. Day celebrations at rocket or rocket - bomb, Russia net announced yesterday by Prime Minister Pearson can hardly be class- ed as a major operation. Mr. Cardin moves from the public works port- folio to take over the ministry of justice vacated by Mr. Favreau. who now becomes president of the Privy Council; Mr. Mcllraith. who formerly held the latter post takes over pub- Verwoerd’s government had request- ed that no negro girmen be landed at South African airfields. But the tracking stations are far. more im- portanf than a single port of call. There can be no doubt that their re- moval would have a tremendous im- pact in South Africa. shaking con- fidence of investors and bringing the c£ | } ' ' | variations are expected because of differences in time of concep- tion, duration of pregnancy, cri- teria for selection of cases, var- || jances in time zones, and devia- | | tions from solar time.g In addi- | tion, tne technique used by ob- stetricians varies; the delivery | | is hastened by some and allowed | to proceed ‘‘a la natural’ by others. At any rate, obstetricians at the Magee- Womens hospital de- the Moscow embassy, to a rocket statement by the U.S. two days earlier. ‘It said the U.S. has reached its target of 800 ready-to-fire Minutemen intercontinental mis- siles. News stories about this brief announcement quoted Washing- ton intelligence sources as say- ing»-that Russia has about 270 of these ICBMs in place. ; has claimed to have such @ de- vice twice recently. American ° officials reply that right now a , rocket in orbit above the earth is a lot easier to -hit than any rocket attacking from a land or sea base They also say the orbiting bomb is a lot more expensive, and they thus tend to dismiss the Russian references as more of a psychological than a mili- A . no S = 4 Brezhnev called this a “reg- | tary threat lic works, our Island representative. i larga at gre - liver more babies during the.| — mey caved " tary | paar Mal : peas x Y has v7, at was what neith- | . with th t Mr. MacNaught, has been moved — “&At hosttlpt eo day See . «ftom the solicitor generalship to the Thines and technical surveys port- folio, his former post being taken by er side wanted. ae Sguth African officials Tet it be known that there would be no at- | ‘OUR OWN GEMINI PROGRAM | noon, practical value to the obstetric- al department and may: be used seldom attend luncheons. ~. Human Traits Of Birds New York Times | facetiously, to explain why they ° In the lore of birds the unfor- and should not be classified as “7 saga a new minister. Mr. Pennell: -In ad- | tempt to interfere with the mixed — TINY BUT POTENT We suspect that statistics of givable fallacy is the anthropo- unnatural. 4 : j i ‘ i i : this type will average out if morphic point of view. The am- Granted the utilitarian’: pur- _ | dition, Mr. Pepin, formerly parlia- parties the Americans were eee LAA enough cases are analyzed, The . ateur must never ascribe human poses of bird song, which are~.-! | traits to birds lest. scientific or- onthe July 4 weekend. | birth hour for 134.385 deliveries like the shouts of protest and mentary secretary to Trade Minister eT ee = ofan inch across: ~~ mittte “hole, ising at special first grow +»... tured but. itis not a—_poisonous a ! = ce i ; i :, : ‘ % Ba . UST rst ya suitable liv Tt later --What—the--Ottawa—Valley—these—stricken—constituehts,and- ________.». His. departure from the -cabinet, _, United Nations Economic Commis- Viruses, being so infinitesim- _ chemical as a tool. « ooo : teak Hives Epwaver: sub SARI via wants is sooner. | there’s always ‘a chance that Sharp, becomes a minister without portfolio : Few of these changes have any © cussions of the Dorion report and leave the “old guard” still pretty much in the saddle. Mr. Sauve, who was regarded as a promising leader’ | of the ‘new guard” wing of the Que- Africkaner press dropped the subject of the tracking stations. there was no need to allow his re- marks to lead to a major diplomatic dispute even if they had never been denied or amended. | And the | ~ | United States seemed ready to agree ~ Fantastic Shapes Assumed By Viruses National Geographic News Bulletin’ Viruses take the form-of pret- Michigan remembered how as- | ses the cell to cease-its normal . cupcakes, and a variety of other things. Some of these bits of disease- causing matter are misshapen, suggesting anything from a bat- tered ping-pong ball to a tank trap from the Maginot Line. Oth- usual structures that virus-hunt- ' the shadows they cast. Williams and a colleague. biophysicist | Raloh Wyckoff. sprayed viruses | from one side with vaporized gold particles. The viruses stood | out, clearly defined by their | “shadows” of gold out to be more than a protein. | each ready. | half an hour perhaps, 100 to 200 viruses are produced. The cell bursts, and the viruses scatter, to invade another cell. ‘ Sometimes’ virus cunningly enters a cell and goes into hid- | ghter cells. Then, for no known which occurred in Nuernberg | between 1913 and 1935 revealed | that 48.24 per cent took place during the day and the remaind- | liveries, but not the snowy drive to the hospital at 3 a.m. These _ figures tend to show that~ the stork has no prefrence and was | willing to come night or day. " SUNGLASSES J. K. writes: Is it helpful -or They are not harmful when nithologists»stand him in the corner with the dunce cap on ‘his head. Most ornithologists ‘perhaps icating with mates or fledglings, weerin? bree te* anct'>~'s _ territory, .sounding the alarm || against dangers. According to this point of view there is ro svir't ir o'ure only action and reaction, instinct © alarm in the human vocabulary, . birds also sing because they feel great. The evening song of the hermit thrush ; . . ats 7 ; er at night. According to . Not all) insist that birds do not well-being and content—to him * thing to do with the shattering reper- that Dr. Verwoerd had been speaking -|zels, corkscrews. raspberries, | tronomers estimated Cae Selene, functions = ay fran Within Alan F. Guttmacher, parcate ‘sing for esthetic but for utilit- as well as to those who listen to : off the cuff and, therefore, that tadpoles, toadstools, needies, of mountains on the moon from | ing copies e virus, min are likely to forget the day de- arian purposes only — commun- him. | If birds on the whole do not sing with pleasure during the expresses . formidable parts of April it may | ~ be because they have not read Shakespeare's poetry. Or, in case they have, they may have noted that May is his month : berals at Ottawa, remains | : i 5 t llv ex- ‘ ding. The cell continues its nor- ; ; i et a ae oe in the minor role of Vast US. Project Gane. tains ‘aan 7 Ou CHEMIST “SPLITS” VIRUS <a activities, even dividing in- harmful to wear sunglasses? 4 ite chemved ah ue in ie fae rants be Mav." ‘ng Last April President Johnson, in. |. eted solids. Some have such un- The now-visible virus turned to several generations of dau- REPLY isms. he says in another poem the forestry minister. Finance Minister Gordon—apart from Mr. Favreau the most controversial figure in the cabi- ' net. though for different reasons— olds his job unchanged." The retention of Mr. Favreau, albeit in a more or less figurehead capacity, is likely to draw the most Opposition fire, and understandably It lends credente to the. rumors | | } | a speech at Johns Hopkins Univers- | ity, said he sought to place American military efforts to defend South Viet Nam from Communism against: t he broader background of American hope for helping all Southeast Asia toward greater economic stability. | Later he pledged $200 million toward | | | a proposed Asian development bank ers could imagine nothing on | parth to compare them to until someone thought of -architect- designer Buckminster Fuller's futuristic domes. ‘The -natiire of viruses is para- doxical. Scientists say. they may- be considered either as chemic- als with the ability to reproduce or as living things that can be crystallized like salt. MOST ARE. INVISIBLE | Chemist Heinz Vraenkel- Conrat | of the University of California | stripped the protein coat from | the tobacco. mosaic virus, and - found that what was left. could + still, cause infection. maining substance was then de- | termined to be nucleic acid, the | genetic substance found in the ‘nuclei of. animal and plant cells. The virus’s wav of life. has gradually become clearer.. By The re-- | tutes “of Health | Maryland, reported that two: vir- reason, a°daugliter cell sudden- ly begins wildly: producing cop- ies of the dormant virus. HYBRIDS PRODUCED Viruses enjoy a certain rudi- mentary sex life. tn 1964 Virol- | ogisfs Wallace Rowe. and Steph- en Baum of .the National Insti- in Bethesda, uses in the same cell may some- how exchange genetic informa- ,.torions. They are _ helpful conditions and .in re- flucing Ylare and screening out the burning.rays of. the -sun,.Sun-— glasses hold back some of the | val the glass is clear. and does not contain cracks, bubbles, or dis- in light rays, thereby interfering with vision when there is inade- quate light. For this reason, they should not be worn indoors or at night, especially while I thinkthis is puritanical non-* sense. Why do birds sing rhap- sodically on warm, bright wind- }less days in the spring but - ot on days that tre -co'd. h'ovy and grudging? Sublime weather entrances humans —who ipci-, dentally, are parts of—nature Rain Sooner Or Late entrances them as much as It” “melodious hircs sint mad + als''—- for Shakespeare was an incorrigible . anthtopomorphist. Nature consistently reflected his moods By great good fortune May does follow” April and redeems the many promises that April has forfeited. ‘ intima — r sO : 3 , itself, the’ tadpole-shaped bac--| tion- result i id vir- , Civing. ndon ress . that his retention was insisted on by and $100 million for a special me Be ie eee ce teriophage, for instanbeste total- | ue with new charactenstiex = TEMPER--TANERUMS _ oo g we Mr. Pearson for strong partisan as / that would make loans and grants for | Sry0"iay Aiea ane muon Cutan) Mnccns Met | rum parasne evry ving | cccal change “taka” place fete inne ata | mart have bee shat 1 . 3 3 y. ions : ; : on ~ F ‘ well as personal reasons. He is still, | regional -development. The Pledges | could fit into a single red blood gestion, excretion. levedtiotlon. an 7 Le Lia oat i | and a poisonous substance goes ive Sour 000" ralnnaking pea petuaily artificial rainmaking presumably, the Liberal party's Que- | marked a reversal of policy by Wash- |. cell. Only the biggest’ viruses . and so on—until it bumps into & | will invade. The virus that caus-@ hroush the body when a person ment scheduled for the parched is about .a: uncertain a method pres ’ : ? : ae : : can be seen. even under -the living cell of the rizht type. ' , ‘ching 20@S & temper tantrum? Ottawa Valley. F, in the | of ending droughts as thumpi bec leader and is currently engaged ington authorities, who until then | most powerful optical micro- — The virus's tail clings tee thee | ihe i bares nea +t REPLY Sasiva Ties iar vt tee sikae ton euane whine ishatn us > : gig ae I ut nerve ceHs. Such finickiness *% ,. . ‘ in reorganizin had been indifferent to the bank pro- |. scopes. The smallest known vir- host cell. Like a living hypoder- | presents a problem {o- virolog- ¥ Chemical changes occur ! traditionally arid places on this campfire. But the province must g the party's federal it is said, would have given new im- sion for Asia andythie-Far-East-~——~ uses measure only a millionth -~al-tong-eluded-capture—t mic needle, the virus bores a ists. To grow a virus, they smu thes Tittesinal a Virus” hiay prove” amazingly ~ “that more adrenalin is manufac- | earth, it always rains sooner or ~-~~h-eartier | do something to try to. satisfy days>when-man-put—Nature~ herself -witt come ——— ‘ : laboratory microstope. Louis ,opening, the virus irte ite | long-li ; C. B. writes: Is a heart mur- more faith in the Almighty than | | ae . i ag : ae > the squirts its | long-lived. A virus preserved for- ea € i ighty Tescue. ; i | petus to Mr. Sauve’s ambitions for a The emphasis on Asian leader. Pasteur developed a vaccine to | nucleic acid. What remains of | thrée decades in one laboratory | UT Serious “erty ° in his own devices, it was cus- This is the way It willlikely he | thorough housecleaning in that area. That wouldn’t have suited a lot of ship was stressed anew by Mr. John- son during a private talk with t he fight the rabies virus, but he never got a glimpse of the beast he was dealing with. Through- | | inert _mass_of protein. aoe The nucleic acid becomes part | the virus outside the cell is an could still kill rats. ‘No one-knows—how many -vir- uses exist in nature. . Scientists Murmurs are abnormal heart sounds. In some instances they tomary in such dry areas as the | Prairies to.call prayer meetings |to bring about the end of a | in Eastern Ontario. Scientists | crystal generators and, if condi- will turn-on their silver -iodidé-—> ~ ; g a i : ; 1 - due to leakage’ others rep- Ind wt i i uebec Liberals. as they made clear | Secretary General, U Thant, at the — out the 19th century, bacteriol- of the cell it invaded, and | recognize about 400, but classi- | 2°¢ : | drought. Even Indians were per- | tions are right. blessed rain will Q hey ogists thought of viruses as im- strange things may soon hap--| fication is frustrating because | 'eS¢nt extraneous noises such a8 suaded to go into their rain-dan- ‘fall from the heavens. Tt might , - bySre-indorsing Mr. Favreau's lead- ership_withing hours after his_resig-’ nation following the tabling’ of the _Dorion inquiry findings. Mr. Favreau himself. in a radio interview, said the references to him in the Dorion re- port had not weakened his political position. Indeed, he had “a: clear feeling” that His position both in Que- bec and elsewhere in Canada was “more firm now than before the re- port.” An astonishing statement, in the circumstances. ' | San Francisco observance of the 20th | anniversary of the signing of the Un- ited Nations Charter. The President indicated that he looked to the Unit- ed Nations to.draw the blueprint for the regional undertaking, through a | further development_of the economic | commission. | It is encouraging to note that this great scheme is moving forward. A high-level strategy session is to be held at UN headquarters in N.ew~ York, July 22 to 26, and will bring | visible ‘‘microbes.”’ In 1898, Dutch botanist Marti- nus Beijerinck was investigat- ing the so-called mosaic disease that infects tobacoo He passed tobacco sap known to cause the disease through a filter that re- moved every single bacterium. But the liouid still contaminat-. ed plants. Beijerjeck called it a “living fluid infectant’’ or a vir- us, meaning “‘poison” in Latin. An American. Wendell Stan- lev. shook the scientific world in 1935 when he crystallized a vir- us and reported it was a pro- tein. Four years later scientists got their first neek at a yirus pen. ‘Like. a well-trained sabot- | eur, the virus’s nucleic acid cau- | change their characteristics. the viruses often mutate, or Protected From Pickers Swiss Trade Development Office | snails over the whole of its ter- | ritory for a period of two years. | This measure, which obviously | tickled the humorists, was con- | ~sidered in the border regions of | France to be directed mainly | | against French snail pickers, | The Swiss canton of Neuchatel | fact,.so that the species {fs in | recently prohibited the taking of | dan@er of rapidly dying out; | hence the new protective mea- | |-sure. t If such an apparently _ trivial question nevertheless ‘has a cer-_ tain_interest it is because the snail trade is quite a big one ac- | cording to Swiss customs statis- | not serious. | une, Chicago, Ilinois.) ‘occur when the old ticker rubs_ against the lungs. This type is _SUMAC RELATIVE J. L. writes: What is the pois- on.in poison ivy? > REPLY The irritating substance is ur- -ushiol, found in the resinous sap the plant. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Used plastic bags should _be destroyed. . (NOTE: All correspondence ‘to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed te: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- | ces. And of course, rain came and | the drought was broken, be- | have come anyway, being long - overdue. But the farmers wil! Rive thanks, the provincial gov- i bill | cause these emergency measur- | erment will pay the modest es were never resorted to until, | and all will he serene in the Ot- by the laws of, nature, the drou~' tawa Valley. ~ Reds In Supersonic Race | Milwaukee Journal If there were doubts that the United States is involved in hot international competition to pro- duce a supersonic passenger air- plane, they should be removed | by the unveiling of a Russian tion already have invested more than $30 million in preliminary development work. Two. air- frame contracts awarded last year are being continued on a month to month basis. The Am- | who in fact, unable to find suf- | | ; : : That's not the Opposition view- ~ together top United Nations planners threugh the newly developed | ficient snails in the Freneh Jura. | ties. In 1952, for example, im- Wane eee ia ie ee eee b ; : . ae aS = electron micrescope. But if | come to Switzerland in search of ports amounted to 47 tons and MOSCOW (Reuters)—The So- S)0W !" Faris. pane Considerabry. CAMer 00 point. of ——— They charge him and Fepresentatives. of a oa nation wesn't much of a-view, bécause | theif prey. exports to 86 tons: imports have viet Army newspaper Red Star ne meee oo x a-Proposed larger than the Russian’ entry with “gross deception and gross con- consultative committee which has the virus contrasted poorly, with | However. this <rneral’ mea-| increased but not to the same’ warns soldiers to be on their “¢clt® wing supersonic— the Tu- and the supersonic Concorde tempt of Parliament”, and with hav- been meeting in Bangkok with Eu- its surroundings An astronomer came. to the sure has been introduced quite simply in order to protect the | extent as exports; in 1956, Swit- | zerland imported 100 tons of guard against giving away se- crets by idle talk. The articlé, 144 — which, according toa So- viet spokesman, will have a ca- that the British and French are working on jointly. It would fly ing no business-t6 be in any cabinet. __ gene R. Black, the President's advis-—peccue ‘ooking throuzh an el- me es are in-fact much | snails and exported the record timed to coincide with the | Soot ri 500 1 Hes-at hour: d $e sist in ee ee is Asi id. : t icros in 1944, Robin | Sought after owinc to the good | fi of 476: tons ; Phat ; Pais ; speed of 1,500 miles an hour and possibly carry some 200 passen- We shall hear a: lot more on this er on Asian aid ectron microscope in Laue Wee cw os “2 Bs sei igure of 476 tons, which repre- | height of the tourist season, | fans OF 4,000 iniles, ‘The air-'| gers Pp point within the next few days. But it’s likely to become a pretty stale subject before the House resumes after its three months” recess; and that, after all.'is where such accusa- tions should be made. The Oppos- ition has itself to blame for prefer- ring a protracted holiday to the op- portunity of striking in the right place while the iron is hot. Wisely Ignored Washington has enough troubles on its hands without getting into a new round of feuding with South A key point in their planning will be a program for a Pan-Asian high- way, begun in 1958 under. the com- mission's auspices to provide an all- weather road from-Iran across Pak- - istan and India to Burma. Thailand and Viet Nam. Significance is ‘seen also 'in recent steps to expand the scope of another commission under- taking now known as the Mekong De- _ velopment Committee. The United | States, in another policy reversal has decided to contribute money for the $27 million Namngum dam in Laos, on a tributory of the Mekong, which Williams of the University of ‘Our Yesterdays (Fram The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE. YEARS AGO (July 8, 1949). The Royal Navy. 7elentlessly pursuing its task of preventing the French navy from falling in- to German or Italian hands. re- ported today a successful action against the 35,000. ton Richel- ieu, France's newest battleship. Hon. AS. MacMillan, Minister of Highways and Public Works, | will become Premier of Nova, Scotia this week. it was learned reliably today following Prem- ually growing demand for them in restaurants. But jt takes three to four years for this gastrono- mic mollusc to grow big enough for the table In view therefore of the decline in the number of snails, pickers ‘have a tendency to take them sents almost 20 million snails. Since then, the figures have undergone . various fluctuations measures for the protection of snails are fully justified, not only from the point of. view of protecting nature but also on the have had time to reproduce in | economic level. smaller and smaller, before they j setting Ives above the ly deciding who may drive and | who may not _ Of Public Concern - in GS ____ Toronto Daily Star : Car Insurance companies are | companies for the “benefit’’ of rejected drivers. But: the rates Ontario government by virtual- | y his plan maybe double opie tte highest regular pre- miums—more than most people — Africa's Premier Hendrick Verwoerd. | will supply power for both Laos and ier Angus L: Macdonald's ac- eaten ous war i per could afford. That. doubtless. is.why it ignored a | Thailand. ‘ ceptance pf a federal portfolio. 4° refuse or cane Sis in. 1” effect, private firms are recent outburst of the South African leader in which he scored what he _ toek to be the fallacies and mistakes in the. American approach to his country and its racial problems. ' *Yntegration might not be so bad. he said, in the United States where the white man outnumbers the black ten to one. But in South Africa, the white man is outnumbered to one, it would “mean the end of us as a nation.” The result. he , would be black rule and the It 6f black rule would be Com- munism. . es ~ ” i This may prove: a better way of fighting Communism -than with guns and bombs. The undertaking has been described as a kind of Marshall © Plan for Southeast Asia, and if meets with anything like the same success it will be a great achievement. EDITORIAL NOTE. | A career. woman in New York ad-.| vises other career women who want to succeed that they should watch | their language because there might. _be gentlemen present. Oldtimers tell “Us it used to be the other way about. TEN YEARS AGO (July 8, 1955) The National Dental Examin- ing Board of Canada announced the results for the candidates “from the Province of. P.E.I. in its recent examinations: Dr. | driver . questioned recently why | Private companies. . ' John MacPhee, Souris; Dr. Al- be Joseph Wilson, 171 King reet, Charlottetown, were both successful. : ’ Dorothy Perry, a. first class Guide from the Second Su m- | merside Company, leaves next Wednesday morning to attend international camp at Lake Mu- shamush, Lunenburg County, N.S. Dorothy is the daughter of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Wilfred Perry, Duke Street. surance whenever they - wish. Private firms are free to classi- | fy a driver — without conviction — as a substandard risk on grounds ‘of suspicion or even | whims. his policy had been abruptly | cancelled, the company replied: _ chasing premium. dollars operating their own ‘‘demerit” system unrestricted by the driv- Ing laws of the province. The ludicrous arrangement ts but one. more argument against , leaving auto insurance in the And when, for example, a "ands of strictly profit-oriented There are of them and “we are unable to satisfy your | performing a costly disservice | inquiries” it's none of your business. | the right to refuse ordinary pro- | tection from a man legally en- | titled to drive : ; There is, of course. | called assigned risk plan which is run by @ group of insurance: > in other words, | to the people of Ontario. A sin- gle government- operated agen- But auto insurance is public | CY could do the job better and business. No one should have Cheaper. ° : BUILD NEW ROADS Begun in 1956, the 41,000-mile the so- , United States Interstate High- way System is expected to be | completed in 1972. - 5 ‘ says some troops beliéve equip- ment is only secret when it is i | in operational position or hid- ,,and in 1964 totalled 284 tons for | “import and 246 tons for exports. | | It can be seen therfore that these | den in a safe. It also warns against idle chatter on the tele- phone. It says modern technol- ogy makes {t quite easy to mon- itor any telephone conversation. NUMBERS GROW “ The world’s population was less -than 500,000,000 in 1660 and rae increased six - fold since then. 4 craft is expected to be in ser- ' vice in the early 1970's: President Johnson said .in his | last press conference that this country too was working-on a supersonic, one that air lines would buy as. an economically attractive investment. He added that he has asked the federal aviation agency (FAA) to work | round the clock on the project. | The FAA and the national aer- Difficult technical and econ- omic problems remain, how- ever. One concerns the question of how government and indus- try will share total development costs, which will ‘probably run at least $1 billion’ One proposal |. calls for a 75 per cent- 25 per cent breakdown, with. govern- ment footing the bigger portion, but private companies are even | onautics and space administra- | batking at this generous. offer. Canada Bond, . = - 2 a I SOR Eg ET ore ote mmm rt Every ballot you cast is another chance for you to be a winnertoo ballot is drawn at the VOTER’S DRAW you can win’ a $500. Government of 1! If your: Sussex soft drinks are always winning favour with people whe are looking for a flavour-filled thirst-quencher,