~oManegingtditor > year in US. PAGE 4 Covers Prince Edwerd Island Like The Dew . W. J. Hancex, Publisher Wallece Ward Frank Walker : Editor ~ Published every week cas morn: ng fexcept Sun- day and stetutory holidays) af 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.I., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Brench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University. Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montrea! 4640 Cathrart Street Uni- __versity 64-5942; Western Office 1930 est Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. ' Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of all dispatches this eredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and alse the loca’ news published herein All tight or republication of special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: « Not over 40¢ per week hy carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and areas fot terviced by carrier. $15.00 a» year. off Island and Uk news nn $29.00 per > monwealth, Not ever 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. WEDNESDAY. . MAY roy - Mr, Pearson's Statement —Prime Minister Pearson has denied that he was hunting for scandal in the —secret_files-of the RCMP.and that he ever told RCMP Commissioner Me- Clellan_ or anyone else to provide in- formation-on-the past conduct of members of Parliament. generally. What he had asked the commissioner for in November, 1964, he told the House of Commons vesterday, was any. record of any contact between MPs and “dubious and criminal ele- ments.’ He added that he couldn't possibly have had the Munsinger case -in mind, as he hadn't even heard the name at that time. In reply to “de- risive noises” made by some unidenti- dian | paper — and elsewhere outside British Com | fied MPs at this juncture, Mr. Pearson. said heatedly: ‘That aE Eene tobe the | ~literal-and-absotute~ truth: ne The Prime Minister also said that -+to have asked what he had been share: ed with asking would have been ° indefensible and shocking cia” "That, of course, is why the report of | | | planes. should eross into Communist _ China on “hot pursuit missions. Fhe state department has intimated that it is considering this though. with the provision that the decidion would be taken bv Presidenf Johnson . alone, based on careful cons ideration at the “highest level” of all factors in- volved. Senator. Fulbright: the. Democ ratie chairman of the foreign relations com- mittee, has Warned that pursuit of enemy’ planes into China would be ‘a very dangerous course’ and Senator Kennedy has summed it up im these terms: ‘What will be the Chinese response if her territory is bombed or her airspace invaded? Will the Chinese seek to strike at our bases- in Vietnam or Thailand, or aboard our aircraft carriers? And iftthey do, what then will our response be— further bombing? And if the scale of bombing-increases, will China confine herself to air fighting. or will send her troops to engage ours on the ground in South Vietnam?” Several Congressmen, on-the other hand. have-indorsed the ‘no_ sane: tuary” policy and it would seem that if the aerial fighting ee as it, policy, of. those. who are. mean it will, prevail ‘That could well be interpre-' ted by China as “an act of war,” and the fat will really be in the fire. In the’ next few days Henry Cabot Lodge will he -+reporting back to Washington in person for the first time since he-assumed the ambas- she. i | | } | | | } | | | | | sadorship to South Vietnam for the 4 | LOBSTER SPLITTING MACHINE | __ What Our Fish Canners Have Been Urging ___ Richard Jackson in the Ottawa Journal ~ second time last August. Perhaps he will have some. helpful advice for President - Johnson on. this subject. ‘Certainly it couldn't-come at- a more |..opportune_time. Ne: The Right En Seas An. auto safety code is now being drafted by the federal government in co-operation with the provinees and ® FLOWERS THAT BLOOM IN THE SPRING ' The old shell a. eal what it used to be And for this, the Maritimes eanning industry and gourmets everywhere can. thank Ottawa designer Joseph‘ Featonby of the flies down to —put the slicer” ‘throfigh its paces and instruct }a small staff of student opera- tors in its efficient use. ‘Up to now the de-shelling of lobster -has been by hand cleav- —again— sat pele Snne ge , ‘ | Mechanical. Engineering Divi- | er, a tedious operation that of- it shocked the country. and why the auto manufacturers. A meeting. is | sion of the National. Research | ten tears the tender meat, par- Opposition non-confidence motion ac-— scheduled_in-Ottawa_in_June at which | Couneil ticularly the choice but, hard-to- : ; yr ; i eC is ex He's inv ented a unique lobster | get at tastiest cused him of “undermining .Parlia- | time the code is expected to be ap elite machine reas ment” by having the RMP provide him with “anything of a scandalous, nature involving any MP,” as Com- > misstoner-McCleHan-had_testified._In the circumstances——and. since he at- taches so much importance to the dif- ference between what he said .and-. what the commissioner said he said— one can only wonder why he took so long in acquainting Parliament with ‘his version of the storv. R It is strange that he did not make’ his rebuttal last Friday,- when the statement was first quoted in the Com-" —=mons. New Democrat Andrew Brewin asked him for an explanation at that time. No answer--Mr. Rrewin persist- ed: “I ask the Prime “Minister if he ‘wishes to-make-an “explanation.” —Mr. Pearson nodded but made no effort to-rise. Then he was partly saved by the Speaker. who said he had serious , doubts about the question, as it re- ferred to an inquiry now under way. Mr. Brewin. tried_again:. “Did the Prime Minister, in fact, request the RCMP Commissioner to. make avail- able to him files or information refer- ring to wrongdoing on the part of Members of the House?’ Mr. Pearson in—silence__Again—_the — Speaker intervened. A third try was made by New Democrat David Or- likow, who. asked the Prime Minister df he had received “any filés from the RCMP indicating wrongdoing by any Member of Parliament.” Still no answer, except from a Liberal back- bencher who shouted “Who's doing the mudslinging now?” This, too, is part of the record One of the most extraordinary. surely, in-our whole parliamentary history. » U.S. And China A Washington dispatch vesterday quoted Senator -Edward Kennedy as calling for a sweeping reassessment-of US. policy toward Communist China, with a view to creating a more favor- able climate between the two powers. Any overtures probably would be re- «jected quickly by China, he conceded; hut “if offered patiently and imagina- tively and persistently. enough, they might be accepted——not all at once, perhaps none immediatelv—— but even- tually. chippifig away at China's self-imposed isolation.” : : - Wo was.astaftesmantike proposal: But it has come af a time when, unfor- tunately. the air war-in-North Viet- nam ..has entered a new and more deadi. phase, head-to a more direct invelvement by (hina than hertofore ‘ ‘ As a result of last week's clashes. which represented the > first _Com- munist air challenge in strength, an that has: plagued the United States ever.since Americans hecame involved on the Asian mainland after issue World War IT has come to a head This 15 the question whether U.S ¥ ved. In the meantime. in a surprise. move, the U.S. automobile industry’ has taken steps that will lead to safer cars on the highway. and there is every reason: to expect that its. pro- gram will be given careful study by our own policy makers. . ‘Under the proposed U.S. program, the government would have the dis- | eretionary power to establish mini- mum safety requirements within two ‘years, if the car manufacturers failed -to do this on their own. The industry believes that these federally-imposed safety standards should be mandatory. rather than discretionary. Before they . go into effect, however, the manufac- turers want to see*the state authori- ties and*the industry consulted. Unique because it's a device that the fish canning industry has been wanting ever since it began putting lobsters in cans” Unique because is not only ‘—euts-costs, but best ofall, shells ' meat of the claws, a trick mongo | | | A minimum limit of two years, in | which to conform to. the required saftey steps, has been requested by .the industry. In some cases, however; it may take as long as six vears before the changes can be implemented. It | appears likely that a hew joint safety , an American bomber accident— | t Jarge out intact the choice succulent the lobster canning industry never before has been able to turn. The machine. which can he built for about $250 will be use- ful in the kitchens of hotels and restaurants that serve fresh lobster in quantity. SHIPPED TO P.E.I. The device already has been. shipped to Prince. Edward Is- - land for installation in one of its big lobster canneries And Saturday, Mr. | “In the Featonby machine, the tett lobster is drawn_head first through-a chute to be p slic-. led by two powered circular | isaws, one below, the other above, secured and manipulated _ automatically by mechanic a 1 arms. A concave guide device cen- tres the lobster in the chute. And the operator uses the | guide and the topside sawarm to fit the slicers to the varying — weights and sizes of the lobst- ers ee adjust The saws instantly from the largest body- shells to | | the smallest claws. |. And in an hour, 300 to 400 lob- --sters,-depending onthe skill of = ‘How To Love The Bomb’ : Milwaukee Journal The effects of the bombs 6 Palomares— the four nuclear devices which fell over Spain in | will be with us for a long time. | ' board will be set up. to include the | ee presidents of the leading auto firms, representatives of the federal govern- ment-and-some of the states. There —would--be—an—independent-chairman: - “The board would be charged with the— responsibility of establishing safety |_ standards that would meet with the and Congress. What has happened in the United States, savs the New York Times, is that public opinion has finally caught fire on this. issue. It pays tribute to the spirited leadership given by President Johnson, in recognizing the _atifing public dismav at the slaughter through the steady effect of — Savs on this point « . , wt ‘question of halancing costs with results that may — ~ of 50.000 people-a vear on highways. “Rut it warns that while greater con- cern for safety in auto désign is de- sirable, it is not. the total. answer. Driver and pedestrain behavior are important. and drinking is a crucial part of that hehavior. As participants in a symposium on, public safety. of the National Academy, of Engineer- ing pointed out*the other day. much more and much better research is needed on the causes of accidents and on the effectiveness of existing anti- accident programs. : “Granting all thie. it is still an objec= tive of prime importance’ to have cars equipped with all the. latest safetv devices. As the New York paper well there can be no versus benefits. How arrive ata true balance are at stake? EDITORIAL NOTE when ‘hisman tives | TNT exploded, And the rueful Phrase “how to love the bomb" has been given , | some meaning: Some Spaniards were very happy about it all. Three bombs fell on land and one, just recovered, fell into | the sea. One on land was recov- ered undamaged. In two others scattering uran- jum and plutonium particles. and dust over crops and crop- -..land..Thousands._of pounds of | contaminated earth have been | | | } superiar in power to ‘ eeivable coalition” We talk ahout fresh water; but a National Geographie bulletin reminds us that people are drinking 1d using the same water that existed when the world -hegar Water ‘is ageless; aintsr indestfictahle, and one of the | few thingsn-na'are that can be used over and over again os ‘ s Sd —1+—approval- _of- both the manufacturers brought back~to. this country for burial. Hundreds of acres have been closed to farmers and | ee on many acres Somer ¢ nately.|—aut- the new —lobster— cutter ino human beings ~ affect- | | ed-physieally. The air force is busy yediing | claims— for land left unharvest- led, for crops destroyed, for oth- er /onomy. It ‘has all turned into a | virtual bonanza for many. And in near-by Vera. a town three miles away, a bartender muses | | that the town is hoping for a bomb, right on main street. It would be a form of quick in- jcome if the people were lucky | enough not to have it explode with too damaging an effect. | Quick urban renewal and quick interference with local pomieF eary Tile: of production that would take him three or four Of Oldsters By Dr, Theodore R. Van Dellen Special diets, —.-particularly those that promise to improve the sense of well-being, iricrease strength, and add years to life, intrigue the elderly. In. addition, oldsters are counseled by family ‘land . friends on. what to eat. what not-to eat, the consequenc- es of using particular combina- tions, and the need\ for vitamins” and minerals. Most of this advice stems old are different from \younger adults and must alter ‘their die- tary habits. Actually, there is. no proof that age itself prowess a nutritional problem exept in specific circumstances. Cont quently, we should not become perturbed when grandma orders chop suey or corned beef and cabbage, On the other hand, with the curtailment of activity natural to age, the energy needs are lessened. When this occurs, changes in quantity rather than quality are in order. The metabolism declines three to four per cent per decade aft- er the age of 50. The body size also diminishes; -not only in height,-but-in-weight..Now and _ thén gwhen the caloric intake is not decreased-to -fit-the reduced activity,weight is gained and the inevitable obesity hastens the degenerative processes. Die- tary—restrictions—ineluding.. salt may be necessary when heart trouble, dropsy, or high blood pressure exists The same can be.said when the senior citizen is a victim of dysentery or_.has missing teeth or faulty dentures. ed in food or if he overemphasiz- es his diet by refusing to consid- er variety. This is most likely -|-to happen with persons who live alone «* do their own cooking. They find it easier to eal the same. thing day after day, unless watched carefully, may suffer from malnutrition. Economic resources also play Ve role; those with meager sav- ings or a fixed income “deprive themselves of the more expen- days by the old hand-cleaver | sive yet essential foods such as | process. Now, about Mr. Featonby. How did a 61-year-old gas tur- Lbine designer happen to fashion such an off-beat device as a high-speed lobster ‘slicer? morels” “it thé-~it-was-what-he-calis~“'a-spare— thing down at NRC. moments”’ What's he get out of it? Only the kick of. dreaming tt | up, making it-work and putting | it into operation to give, he hop- . ‘es, some cost and price advan- tage ti Maritime canners over: their American and Tepaneee. competitors. _And who knows, If the speed- slicer carves fresh lobsters up | to 400 per hour clip, that the cost- saving won't be passed along to the supermarket and ' the shopping housewife? -BELONGS TO NRC_ Mr. Featonby, a 61- year- old Englishman has been _ ‘‘tinker- jing” all his life, coming up i -every-—once-—in-a_-rewarding - | Featonby the operator, can be processed while with new gadgetry from | Bas turbines to lobster slicers. | He holds what he says are ‘‘a | few" patents, dating back and | beyond — his wartime designing ote with Armstrong- Sidley in Britain. won't be one of those patents. —World-rights;-he-figures, would= | run the NRC maybe as high as $5,000, and there just aren't that many lobster canneries to make | it economically worthwhile. Anyway, he adds, his stuff be- |longs--to. the_NRC— “‘I_ get paid. ‘to design things, you see.’ But the lobster cutter? Well, five years ago the Fisheries De- | partment in Prince Edward Is- | land asked the Fisheries Depart- | ment in Ottawa to ask the Na- tional Research Council about the practical possibilities of such | fa device. Featenby meats, dairy products, and fresh fruits and vegetables. Bread, potato, and sweets are substituted’ making the menus starchy, Today there is no ex- cuse for not knowing how to cluding entire meals are avail- able. CEILING SIGHTS W. K. writes: Should a mother be alarmed because her four- year-old son sees, or says he. | | | sees, black-bugs—erawling onthe | ceiling when he is put to bed at: night? ; REPLY No, because. youngsters - are highly imaginative. Occasionally children create pictures-of ‘bugs | | or other subjects from the shad- ows of passing cars or trains. If the boy is frightened, however, | be “sympathetic. SHOCK * THERAPY AND FATIGUE A. L. writes? Is it true that ‘al- ter shock treatments a person gets fatigued more quickly? . REPLY ? Not to my knowledge. Many of these people rest immediate- ly after the treatment but the | | fatigue disappears unless seda- ve—dr' “u _ UREMIA ing always fatal? =~ PLY No. In uieedta the oulcome from the misconception, that the | Special problems arise when. -++ the oldster becomes disinterest- and, | Milder Line eecceeslaa qua toward the Malaysian Heseraien has be- come less hostile since the weakening of «President Sukar- no's authority in the former The latest indication of a more. tolerant attitude by Indonesia in poe Aas all li _ the young J problem Indonesia's should bring a certain amount of\ relief: to Malaysia—consisting of Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak: and with less. than one-tenth the popultion of Indonesia, a coun- it was established in September, 1963, as_.a \neo-colonial tool of British imperialism in Southeast Asia. : Infiltration ok ‘guerrillas from Indonesia_—into \.Malaysia forced Britain to keep more _tion. . Suharto's peaceful overtures, however, did not indicate a complete shift in attitude toward Malaysia. Suharto blamed the British military presence in the federation: for. the sporadic guer- rilla fighting in the last three years. =) Some interesting suggestions are being. madé about the future” of Gibraltar, to be discussed next month by Britain . and Spain. Spain has.long been _com-. mitted to recovering the Rock, seized 262 years ago by: the Bri- tish and their allies. The econ- omic seige imposed by Spain ‘in October, 1964, has badly hurt Gibraltar’s trade and its tourist industry. There is now some support for an Andorran-type solution, with” laws would be its own, but Spain and Britain would participate jointly in its economic, military and cultural development. So much for he smiler issues. but some larger _pro- blems remain. What about the ~ By ce . Ganetine wa) Statt Writer .: than-50-000-troops in the federa-—_ | erent attitude would help at- | In Indonesia Boris Miskew He described | ‘Britain's weten- tion of bases in Singapore which last year broke away from the federation—as a threat to Indonesia but said he favored the granting unconditional’ rec- nition to Singagore neverthe- less. Publication of Suharto’s re. marks Monday followed week- end talks in Bangkok, Thailand, . | between Philippine Foreign Sec- retary Narciso Ramos ‘and Indo- Malik. NO DIPLOMATIC CONTACT ‘tions with Malaysia—The Phil- ippines because of a territorial dispute and Indonesia because of its oppositon to’ the forma- tion of the federation. But Ramos emphasized Phil- ippine recognition of. Malaysia isin sght and may even take place before the meeting of the foreign ministers of,the Associa tion of Southeast Asia in Bang- kok in July, and Malik stated Indonesia wants to find a solu- _| tion to -its confirmation stand against the federation. - Indonesia has been faced with {internal political troubles. since the unsuccessful “Communist-in- spied coup last fall and thie may ~be-one-of the reasons fora decision by Suharto and his sup- porters to relax the pressure against Malaysia. A less bellig- | bract foreign economic aid | Only time will tell whether it | ls Indonesia's honest desire -to ‘preserve peace that is causing hr to take a milder line toward Malaysia—or whether this is the | tesult, of internal political and \ economic pressures. - \ ‘ Some Rocky Problems — Toronto ay and Mail Prudential Insurance Company’s | slogan: The ‘Prudential Has the Strength-of Gibraltar. Could: the company claim some compen- sation from the British? Then there are the Barbary ‘apes, those playful, thieving de- ‘ nizens of the Rock. Under a de- cree of 1856, the Britis. gave them official protection. Later, the apes rewarded their bene- factors by giving noisy warning: “forces. Doubtless, altar as a principality” guar-} have anteed by Spain and Britain. Its given, so any settlement must include safeguards for the de- scendants of those simian senti- nels: : ‘ Giving up an empire, it-seems, is more trouble than acquiring one. : i Perhaps we're slightly pre- | Judiced because-it was only a | month or so ago that we-finally decided to get rid of our old 4: double-breasted suit, but we [sant refrain from hoping. that Se “‘new’'—-styles_for-men—are— a If the sketches- we saw the | other_day are any indication of | what men can expect—especil- ily those who aren't quite as young as they used to be— we Bose resolve never again. to 's—fashions._— “suits back | Double, breasted ~again?—High-—co! Men’s Clothing Kingston Whig-Standard ° those dandified hats! Horrors! nesian Foreign ‘Minister Adam | > Neither The Philippines nor Indonesia have diplomatic rela- - of a surprise attack by Spanish’ the~+ Spanish - Wide lapels and rounded shirt collars? Why, oh why, did_ we ever give all those duds away? ~The designer responsible for At least that’s the conclusion of us middle-age duffers who ‘still think that a man’s suit should look like a man’s suit and not | like a clown’s costume or some- thing out-of the wardrobe de- partment of some theatrica! -group—touring w: Wilde's plays. tomed trousers?. The a ‘Gapone look? Perish the Seah And hang our heads in shame. parallels the cause: If the basic | . Picasso OnA Budget Christian Science Monitor kidney condition can be remed- ied, the outcome usually is good. | The artificial kidney is used jn these circumstances. V/ Mrs. T. writes: What best way to get rid of body odor? REPLY Soap, water, as the use of | deodorants: source ef cash. It seems some people can always find the silv- ier ae i Deesn' t Look Good . : Vancouver The a from Animals for a federal) ban on the killing of young seals in the | Gulf of St. Lawrence is unusual | in that it reflects concern for what is seen to he -done as much as what is done The fact that it took the SPCA this long to make a decision on our notorious annual seal slan- Our Yesterda ys (From The Guardian i TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (M OAL) ae Iraq stopped the flow of oil in the last pipeline to the Mediter- ranean. from the little kingdom's: | rich oil fields. as fighting in the three-day-old war _in_Iraq_show- ed no. signs of abating.-It was at Haifa. British mandated Pales- tine..on the Mediterranean that the British fleet in the Middle East had received its chief oil ~ supplies. A cheering Reichstag. heard-| Hitler boast that Germany was ‘any con- and contend she would have only one answer to ‘democratic agitatots’’ who | “threaten to throttle’ the Nazi | state TEN VEARS AGO ° (May 4, 1958) The Capitol Theatre in Char lottetown ~‘“‘due> to unexpected! objections’’ withdrew. showings of. the film ‘‘And God Created Woman" starring Brig- jtte Bardot H-was announced that Miss Helen Veo had written a Grade three text Wonk Language Com- es Alive,”’ which was authorized for use in two provinces Province the Society , ghter may indicate it is worried | for the Prevention of Curelty_to about its own image as well as | | that of Canada. It is, alas, man’s nature slaughter wild animals, and. do- |mestic animals, for food and clothing. The difference between the assembly-line killing of litfle | lambs or the great autumn artil- ‘lery shoot of big-eyed deer, and The WRC to | askt rc ‘Mr: t and he answered with his “spare thoments"’ “design..that remained |on the future- projects- shelf-un- . ——ti48-months- ago—when— he—got | the green light to take his blue- | prints into the Council's central | Van ei co Gua Trib- | an art dealer while Ronald John- a a and build it In its area, t _TODAY'S HEAL TH HINT_- luxuries seem especially far off. Fatigue is a signal tos to0-w~—But-not-for-one-sui down. | Chicago whose expectancy NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van_ er should be addressed Theodore ~ une, Chicago, THinois.) "Seving Our Wild Life act Journal the new national:| resource involves the\ preserva- | wildlife policy may be the best. tion of wetlands for birds and | development in 300 years In that 300 years the humans invaded-- North. -America__| the passenger | who | have wiped out } | | open range for deer to ensure | survival. -It-means the recogni: tion, by. all governments, organ- izations and individuals concern- aU ees carnage on the St. Lawrence” jiseon. come within an ace of |ed, that wildlife is a national ice floes, is one largely of mass | eliminating the buffalo, and sad- | heritage. i spectacle and neWsteel expo- | depleted the numbers of, fur | | sure. It is not consistent to be realistic about the one, idealistic | about the other. Wisely, then, the SPCA took another tack. Not only the seals, but the public image of Canad- , jens, is being destroyed by the | seal hunt. Any ‘from a ban “‘is ‘negligible in. comparison with the tide of pub- ‘lie revulsion.” | The society, asking the government. | spends large sums of money through tHe CBC International | Service and other agencies to promote its image abroad, whe- ther this hunt © worth: it government, called ipon. ta mea- sure two sets of measurable val- ues, may find that in the balance it now is the loser in other words, is SPEAKS FOR CHINA. GENEVA (Reuters:—Albania called Tuesday for the admis- sidn of Communist China into the assembly of the World Health Organization and at- tacked American policy for ‘‘de- further, nying the great Chinese people”’ \its rightful seat. H. Dibra, Al- bania’s chief delegate atthe 19%h assembly, said WHO. has not yet hecome a truly. uni Versal organization as Commu nist-ruled East Germany. North Korea and particularly the Pe- | king government: are. not repre- sen *. loss to sealers | The caintalomeen seals, whales and walrus refuges of land creatures reduced in number by new de- the velopments | carrying the hunter to the out- | lands. es OVERESTIMATED . Unfortunately, * if } has’ heen | ‘= normal for humans to overesti- which | ,mate the ‘quantity of wildlife and to destroy it with abandon, | Provinées.-have -control of—wild- life within their boundaries and while one province might elim- ‘inate hunting of one-—bird_or beast, another might permit it. even encourage it.if crops were being damaged ‘ The national policy announced | -now by Northern Affairs Minis- ter Laing has been discussed with provincial authorities \greement~ has been reached that the Federal will take positive action for the ‘conservation of migratory birds and their habitat and will also assist in- conserving _ wildlife / coming. under provincial juris- ‘diction This polies involves*” more than a hundle of ‘new ee i about hunting A NEW APPROAC HD There is to be research on, tac: |tors affecting the hea hy wild- life Management of =o AE RD cree NA, Government. bulldozer | clearing land, the good roads to | eamp operators —* and all ot the frontier and the airplane {ust It will ensure that Canada |remains an. exciting and_ inter- - | The work could not be well The | done without the national policy | which | to which the provinces agree. escaped the slaughter have beef Conservation will bird- watcher, the hunter, the farmer, the tourist- esting country out of doors. Im- _agine our loss if we never again heard: the haunting cry of mi- grating geese! 7 BRINGS RECORD PRICE | OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP)—A 10 year-old. Holstein milking cow sold for-a- world record $42,000 | Tuesday at the start of the Oak | Ridges dispersal. sale. Glenaf- ton Nettie Bonheur Maud was | | bought by Russell Rowntree of |. Woodbridge, Ont., Lowe of Maple, Ont. She be- ifonged to RR. Dennis of Oak | Ridges, ahout 15, miles north of Toronto Top price previously was $33.000 patd by Agro Ereth- ers of Hamilton in 1962 for Ro- mandale Shamrock Elsie. Poseeceenoeonseeeeee t PURITY DAIRY : - “Parents Prefer ¢ Purity Products” $3 $17 Kent St. Dial 4.7125" oe +> a is the | benefit the big- game | ~'and - Robert | Dee st A young couple on a tunafish macaroni, . and __steak-on-Sun- | days budget can hardly afford | a modern master for the living /room. When the husband is a | graduate student plugging along ; toward. an-M.-D...degree,...such | should be an example to us all. | They wanted a Picasso. They | couldn't afford to buy one. from son was in college. But they didn’t want to settle Yor less than | what they regarded as the best. | So they went directly to Senor | Picasso. _Scraping together $25 they-en- ‘lelosed a check- for the amount in a letter to the famous artist | in France. Ronald explained , their circumstances: © They ° Invites WEDNESDAY the Railway Wharf, |THE CANADIAN FORCES RECRUITING CENTRE QUEEN CHARLOTTE ARMOURIES CHARLOTTETOWN HMCS SAGUENAY BETWEEN 2 P.M. AND 5 P.M. H.M.C.S. Saquenay. one ol Canada's newest destroyer escorts will pay a visit - to Charlottetown from noon 4 May until 8:30 a.m. 5 May. The ship will berth at / < couldn't afford a full-sized orig!- nal; maybe their check would buy a small sketch. If not, Se nor Picasso was just to forget. the whole thing. — - Apparently it was more than enough. The Johnsons received nes returning the check with a scrawl on the face of it— and a -green-ink-sketch- on-the—baek.——- Chicago can take pride in this youthful pair. They have given new emphasis to the city’s fa- vorite quotation from its early — city planner, Daniel H. Burn- ham. ‘‘Make no little ,plans. They have no magic. . .Aim high etc." The Johnsons took a lofty aim. The splendid result hangs in their living room. you to visit 4 MAY 1966 Charlottetown* all-this-must—have—been—joking.—__— : ) more ridiculing _ the ladies for their get-ups. We te-it-+-an—-envelepe—postmarked._Can<