o. -~ . meaver Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward 4 Frank, Walker Managing Editor * Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince ‘Street, _ Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. epresented nationally by Thomson Newspapers * Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave- . Empire 3-8894; Montreal,640 Cathcart Street Uni- w Nersity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. i #> Member Canadian Daily’ Newspaper ~ Association and* The Canadian Press. The Canadian * Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to itor to the Associated Press or Reuters > and alsothentgeal-news published herein. All | right or republication of special dispatches, here- | in also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes ar not serviced by carrier. $15.00 8 year’ off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com: | monwealth. $ : ri Not ever 7c single copy. : | ‘Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. | PAGE. 4 FRIDAY, APRIL. 1, 1966. Back hs. Blunderland Orbited into the aoe Alice in Wonderland is the ‘next phase” of our causeway project as it gets casual- ly kicked around at the Mad Hatter's . party at Ottawa. It couldn't get under way this winter hecause—as the Mock Turtle was at pains to point out—it’s the kind of job that must be tackled ‘in’the spring. The soil, you know; Is- land clay. It freezes in the, winter and ” Publishers? | id arets/| _ spokesmen for the provinces. | Newfoundland Dental Society ‘has ° / recommended that the City of St. Cade “ ¥ , = much more the power of the prov- inces could expand without destroying — control of the national economy which he, with the Quebec Liherals. con- >| tends shaquld ‘rest with the federal govemminent = 6 Ontario, said Mr. Robarts, would favor a system of block grafts, undei’ which..Ottawa would give Jump sums to the. provinces to cover’ specific areas, such as health, while retaining the taxing ‘power which is a tool for . controlling the economy. He was op- posed to provinces opting out on the ground that if a province opts out of enough ndtional programs it becomes, no matter what it ‘calls itself, an associate state. : It is disconcérting, in this case, tha that the leader-responsbile ‘for wield- ing federal powers should speak more loosely and with less concern for a - strong federal government than Sets Good Example In a brief released this week, the John's__implement- a system of fluoridation of its water supply. More than that, it has offered to assist the— city. and public by providing informa- tion on fluoridation, about which it says many persons ‘are misinformed. a WOULDN'T TBE . ovER HERE? oe To Use. THAT EFFORT ;Replanting — | Severed ‘)}been made to replace an extre- Indira Gandh ae Dr : i 1 ’ : A : eee of ° ~~ India’s Clai 3 oo oe * = ee By. A ‘Limb Teese TON > Canadian Pr "Yt SwasSHINGTON (CP) By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen exceptionally warn welcome More than 35 attempts have. given ‘here to Prime Minister oy mity that was amputated in an launched an era of better. rela- accident. Approximately 12 to tions between India and the. 15 of these persons ‘have reasons United States. , to be pleased with: the outcome.———President ;Johnson broke pro- The procedure is more involved tocol once to overstay his for- than merely reattaching’- the | mal visit by, three hours and loose. ends: of the severed parts, dine, and Mrs. Gandhi said the Accidents. in which a part of president: ‘goes right to the the-arm or leg is. lost are ser- | Point without a lot of chitchat, ious- and.'the victim is lucky to | and I like that.” ‘ survive. The life of the individ- |w#JOohnsen, asking Congress | ual comes first and.it will not be Wednesday for another huge man to a tedious operation that. to avért Indian famine, took may not produce desired results, Pains to avoid jarring India’s | There also‘are certaig locations | sensitivity about its’ plight. | MacKenzie . jeopardized by subjecting the- program of food and other aid and there is no reason to take a ed part. It might “take,” but- if - the nerves do not regeneraté“the’ individual has a useless extrem- ity. A prosthesis works better in these circumstances. - It is. important that the limb ‘Be brought into the hospital . ‘| within six hours and refrigerat- | Pears to be only one drop in a ments. They must also see ‘ed immediately. Those on the. | scene should stop the bleeding | with a tourniquet; call an’ am- ‘teamwork and is \a_ procedure too new to expect every hospi- tal to have the necessary facili- tient, has been resuscita surgery is to be done. The ampu-. tated ‘part is removed from the pail of iced saline and a tube is‘ on the arm and leg where an | f artificial extremity Works well than any other Indian leader in the world have in providing as- ympathy . for . the | sistance to it. What makes this ., chance on replanting the sever- American position in' Viet Nam. stake especially large is the ex- ties. Let us assume that the pa- ) Mrs. Gandhi went farther | expressing 'DROP IN BUCKET | Yet, with India's 485,000,000 | people facing their gravest eco- nomi¢ crisis since independence /18 years ago, the aid just an- | /nounced or planned in the near | | future ‘from. various sources ap- | big bucket over the naxt, 10. years. | It will involve~farming;: indus- | ‘part on ice, if possible. ~ (education. Limb replantation ' requires . In food grains alone, Johnson | \ c ‘has asked congressional ap- | proval for another 3,500,000 tons — | this calendar 8,500,000 tons. ~ . ndia |tons, he said; calling on other nations to provide the remain- ‘| ling 3,500,000. He\ said-he~-was~ | p be m For Hel » Washington and “ Johnson called it the Worst’ agricultural disaster since ways have to be found to a vast expansion of fhat country’s farm output. All outside aid for India since 1951 has been estimated at $10,- 000,000,000. As much as $7,500,- — The’ Even if India’s drought eases 4 i seems to have North America’s “dirty 30s"— ° © 000/000 may be needed in the next five years, some observers say. That does: not' include the possibility of ‘cancelling . standing Indian debts. — THOUGHTS OF CHINA Mrs: Gandhi’s-two discussions with: Johnson were private, but ° clearly underlined just. what stake India thinks the United States and much of the rest of istence of China. Said Mrs. Gandhi im her one ublic speech here: ee “China's ideology cannot push 7 outwards if its neighbors and other nations possess strong, independent, nationalist govern- a vi- able’ alternative to China. India —_—_ ternative model for ,economie amputated ‘try, birth control and technical and social change, J a=-demo- cratic ‘socialist. model.” * “India’s claim for help now Is: is valid on humanitarian grounds alone. But the existence of year, or. a total of China as a strategic presence helps explain why the United likely needs 12,000,000 |States apparently can -stomach ow. an undiluted Teferenge to democratic socialism’ or’ ae- cept without. argument Mrs. |“delighted to be Informed Can- | Gandhi's thesis that ‘India is as out-. | |ean be that alternative, an al- _.” inserted into the severed-end of ths artery to flush out the entire ,| arterial. and.-yenous . passage- water. has) proven advantages ° which should not be denied city .tésidents |ada is prepared to provide 1,- |important to the U.S. as the! The gel believes that fluoridated - {000,000 tons of wheat and flour | U.S. is to India—let-us both ree-| °3 that’s not good. But in the spring, tra! la! there’ll be a burgeoning of all apres yearn.to be lifted ~. . Alice. She wondered whether they ’ . kinds of things, and our sods will just... and that its duty is to give leadership rie ways. The ends of the bones are att, i j ‘to India.” ognize this cardinal truth.” in the matter. Comes the spring; but with it the dispiriting news from the White Réb- “pit that winter is when this work ‘ghould really be done. Winter's over now andgthere’ll have to be ‘a read- justment of the timetable.” It would never do to-start inthe spring, or the ‘summer either for that matter! That would be disastrous because there’s an employment booni somewhere and if it hits us down here we could all go. "bust, Next winter, perhaps . . . “Have somewine,” said the March Hate in an encouraging tone to Alice _as she sat aghast at this news. Alice looked around the table, but there was nothing on it but tea. “I don’t see any . wine,” she remarked. “There isn’t #.” said the March Hare primly. . Then Tweedledee: butted into ex-— plain wry there was really nothing to worry about: It might. look that way, © but, then-again it might not. “Con-: ~ trariwise,. if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as . At igiitain't.7 _. Still Alice couJdn’t understand, and the Queen’ came to her assistance. ' “Around here, you see.” she explain- er, “it takes all the running you‘ean’ do to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as-fast.”. ~ “Curiouser and curiouser!” thought ? were trying to fool her or whether they were all as;cracked as’ they } $ “called atithorities ‘few have heard of _organizations. It-is‘also t ».foundland Dental Society's sense of , -cresponsibility to the St. John’s public. ; As the Cape Breton Post rémarks in a comment on this announcement, the society must know that any move- ment anywhere towards fluoridation ofa municipal water supply has @pe- -sult_similar_to an attempt to knock down a_ was fluoridation i when the vehemence of those who/oppose it far exceeds in emotional content the. resolution of ‘those who advocate it on the a of. its long-since demonstrated benefit in” reducing the incidence of tooth decay in the juvenile population. People who like to, argue issues on- a plane;of cool reasoning are baffled when those who oppose them cite so- before and certainly not yecognized | by the rly tabi ‘health. @’ however, | that in many a locality where.. the advocates of fluoridation have failed ‘more than once, they have tried’ and thied.again and finally been victorious. The number of cities with fluoridated water supplies grows steadily year by _ year. Evident in this case is the New- The society is not looking for trouble but-quite-evidently_is_willing to face— it for the sake of the city’s children. Encouraging Report From the ‘con report tabled in the House of Commons by Transport | Minister Pickersgill, it is evident. that pe > nest. Attempts at._} . ®reater bulk of that shipment?”’ packaged a | ed-to propel space explorers be- | ~ MAKING THE DIRT FLY i Dr, P. B. Rynard. dropped: a mons, which surely. sent patients scurrying to check with their pharmacists ~Vancouver. The alert doctor ~ MP for. Orillia, congratulated Health Minister Allan MacKach- | eron his: Départment’s alert- ness in pieking up in Vancouver > 1,000 Capsules of asdrug import- ed from Hong Kong which were incorrectly labelled and mis- leadingly coloured to represent | -a_ widely-used antibiotic. But - Dr. Rynard hinted.-at inade- quate machinery for checking imported drugs, and implied the question: ‘a fraction of this dangerously mislabelled ship- | ment has been picked up: -what | about the as yet undiscovered WISDOM BEFORE WIT The Squire of the Kootenays is known asthe way of the House. of Commons; but he is no un- thinking fool. -His immense vo- | lume of is always con- wi structive, oe if sometimes Merriment.. Now -non-lawyer Bert. Herridge has- prepared a bombshell for some lawyer - MPs. Bert and several and —pharmacists . : to check with their suppliers in‘ ly, to’ untangle the red tape | med it affer the Great White | the condition of the vietim.~ OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson _ 2 Good Example Of Departmental Vigilance other non-lawyer. MPs who al- | three days with the Indian chiefs bombshell in the House of Com- |“ways have their quota of appeals | to obtain a parcel of land on the |.thoroughly to remove dead tis- | from constituents for help in im- | North’ Saskatchewan — River. migration problems, always do There he built a church, a, Il they can, -successful--} school and a residence, and na- | for similar work. blocking our immigration chan- nels. ; Q But they rue the practice of some * lawyer-MPs who levy charges through their. law firms An .MP, be- lieves The Squire, is already, paid.for his. work as an MP; no Canadian_should be expected to pay a second time.‘ Now Bert is introducing a bill ‘‘to amend the Senate and House of Commons Act (St.-Luke 11:46).” That verse 'reads:. ‘Woe unto you al- | inating account’ of the develop- 7 so, ye lawyers!. For ye lade men with burdens grievous to, be borne, and ye _ yourselves touch not the burden with one of | your fingers.’’ Wit the perhaps | reluctant approval of the New Democrat Party cgucus, Bert is | introducing this bil which. would bar MPs from ¢ ing as law- | yers for work which they per-— form as Ombudsmen for their constituents. : CENTENARY .- _- In 1866 a stout-hearted Presby- terian missionary bargained for | —Fh The versatile atom is schedul- | yond- the moon to Mars and Ve- | nus. Nuclear energy has no ser: | ious competition for the inter- planetary flights planned after | e Versatile Atom National Geograph lety | { clear rocket system at the nu- clean Development _ Station, Jackass Flats, Nevada. A yellow flame shot 200 feet ! | into the air as the engine was OTTAWA fired for 24 minutes at 40 per- | | of Canada to our federal variia- | warden, of 23 Sheppard Street, | who wrote to welcome ‘Ottawa | Queen's Consort. ~~ This . year, | that now thriving northern met- ropolis is celebrating the 100th- | anniversary of that ambitious /and daring founding. The Citi- | zens Centennial Committee has | published a comprehensive and | informative booklet, copies. of | which may -be obtained for. $1 post paid from 111 11th Street East, Prince Albert. Its coloured and black-and_ white illustrations and its full text convey a. fasc- | ment of the elected three pri ci which has ministers ment, and now boasts two citi-: zens in, the provincial cabinet. GOOD-PEN NAME . cal Letters from readers of “Of tawa Report’ are’ invariably in-” teresting and. always welcome, I have received one from a rea- der in Port Arthur who surely en- Joys the ideal name for writing letters to newspapers on public affairs. This is Miss R. Pen- 4 Report's’ accoufit of the sh eye with which Canada’s rene tor-General Max Henderson, keeps tally on government waste and inefficiency in spending Ca- nadians’ hard-earned tax pay- ments. : : GAR_ CRASH There -was a shocking car crash outside the National Mu- -| advisable to wear them. the bones. are. shortened to elim- inate stress ‘on the soft structur- es. o : ' - The veins and then the arter- jes are connected. In the upper arm one artery .and one vein will do; whereas two arteries | and atleast three ‘veins are ; needed’ to reattach .the hand. | the Ca t und is then cleansed | sue and finally the soft tissues | are closed. The nerves may be | repaired later depending upon _ INSIGHT NEEDED R. T. writes: Cam) a person overcome a guilt complex with- . out ‘the aid of a psychiatrist? : REPLY If-the- origin of the guilt com- plex is known, relief often fol- lows confession and _ forgive- ness. In some instances this sit- uation is handled successfully by the family physician or spir- itual-adviser. psychiatrist is needed when¢the cause is not known or les ‘been forgotten. DENTURE AGE D. F. T. writes: What is the usual age at which dentures are needed? ' “ta > 7 REPLY I have no statistics on this sub- Jeet. A dentist friend of mine made a full set of dentures for a 16-year-old irl, but the ma- jority. of candidates are much older. There. is a good possibil- ity that the decade. between 50 and 60 is the denture age. - CLOTHES ARE SAFE L. D. writes**My cousin died of cancer and her folks want to give me her beautiful clothes. I can use them but wonder if it is REPLY Don't worry; cancer ie not contagious. : “INFLAMED NERVE AND _ HEART —F. R. writes: Could -neuritis lead to-heart disease? | REPLY -| LA Less The’ case of the missing H- | bomb carries a grim reminder for Canada. ie It happened in Spain. -But | with Strategic Air Command | H-bombers shuttling back and | forth across Canada, it could | happen here. | And the consequences are any- | thing but pleasant, as the little | Spanish-town of Palomares has learned. It has almost been put on For Canada - Edmonton Journal i “§ aa Then, 44 days after ‘the acel- dent (on January 17) that dump--s ed four H-bombs on land or .sea, Washington admitted there was a*missing bomb and that radio- active material” had,. indeed, leaked from cracked casings of two others. What can Canada learn from z jall this? Certainly Washington's’ _ | attitude has been self defeating, out of busi oth socially and | Who, for instance, could be-ex- economicayty. ~ _. |pected to believe U.S. assur At the heart of the matter’ is ances under a similagiset of cir. the strange behavior of the U.S. | cumstancés? state department and the Pen-| Ottawa should demand tha tagon. ‘‘What bomb?*” they kept'| in the event of a nuclear mishap asking for: more th ix weeks, over Canada, all the facts be ‘while the world watched their | disclosed immediately. i frenzied activity to find it. | -Ottawa should remind Wash- “What radiation . hazard?" | ington that it’s not good enough they kept asking as squads. of |to-assume that what people’ U.S. Army—and—Air-—-F or c e-| don’t- know won't-hurt-them. men, in protective gear, combed | The Palomares :incident dis the area and bulldozers were us- | proves this because the town ed in crating up tons of ‘hot’ | was hurt. And so was the U.S. topsoil. ‘in terms of strained credibility. _its_home_is | 200. distinct species of animals & i The American bald eagli the nation’s proud s:; places, and the relentless out- ward push of civilization erodes this, great bird is disappearing, the eagle may soon. become) a bitter symbol of man’s care- lessness toward his fellow crea- tures’on this planet. ° What -has happened to the | eagle is not unique.—More--than- that existed at the beginning of the Christian era have disap- peared. As many more are in danger of extinction today. Consuniers in the United Stat- | ‘Every Livin New York its habitat. At the rate at’ which) bird gThing’ plainsmen slaughtered the buf: ver, they lack the nancial resources to protect their heritage of animals and irds. The World Wildlife Fund, with headquarters in Washingt on, D.C., exists to- meet this prob- lem. It duplicates the work ‘of no other conservation organiza: tion; rather, it channels funds to organizations working on specif- ic projects. It helps train biolog- ° ists and ecologists and to spread around the world the idea of na- tional parks and. game preserve es. The fund enables private eitiz- e 1 =| nineteenth - century American g-~ Sounded. ae Ne “The rule,” said the Queen in a last a the United States puts a man on -cent of the system’s 55,000-pound i Air Canada has had a highly success- effort to clear. up. thé matter—“the rule is, jam tomorrow and jam yester- ~ day; but never jam, today.” When Alice objected that it must come - sometimes to “jam today” there was & ful year. It recorded a profit of nearly the moon. - In space, the nuclear engine's | four million dollars in 1965, as it greatly increased capacity and ser- vices on domestic and international | routs. The profit, almost three times || higher thrust~will carry more | could: be tuillion. | weight in earth. orbit reduced as much as 15 | se ‘ | craft | payload at less cost. Inttial | thrust potential. Engines with a thrust of 200,000 to 250,000 pounds ‘will be rieeded to propel: space- Mars, Venus, ‘Mercury. and the asteroids. ° > A “useful”? nuclear mission is not expected for several years. | seum in Ottawa on Budget Night It was noticed with horror by the audience entering the Mu- seum to take part: in a discis- sion sponsored by the Consum- ers Association of Canada —ap- propriately on- the topic of+auto + No; but both _ neuritis ,and heart involvement could. Yollow the same cause. An example of this type would be beriberi. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Teach children to respect the léws—— @s and other wealthy countries | eS to carry out the moral _re- have selfishly contributed to the sponsibility set forth in the first.’ destruction by their fads for leo- | pard-skin coats, polar bear rugs, | -and-other exotic articles. Repre- sentative Henry S. Reuss of Wisconsin has urged a United chapter of the Book of Genesis, where it is written that God said to man:-‘‘Have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the -air, and-over every ae +i oe 1 z sy : Le : r 3 : _ chorus of protes anions, Se el ; | pounds for estimated savings of Harold B. -Finger, Project Ro-./ Safety. . The crash had been NOTE: ‘All cotrespondence | Nations conference to develop | living thing that. moveth upon ~—-the-shoeked-reply. “Tt can’t! It's jam) that recorded in 1964, was the twelfth | $1 billion or more on every yer manager, says the most am- staged by the Ottawa Police | to Dr. Van Dellen should—be—|-regulations controlling the inter- | the earth.” .. | flight. : bitious. manned nuclear flight Dept. in collaboration with the | addressed: to: Dr. Theodore | national trade in wildlife and its | ‘ Gagns i d 450-day trip to the red planet. ; 5 ‘ Y Di 4 Diff crease of 36 per cent over, 1964. Total _propeliant “reaches. temperatur- oe ee rae i any one “expert” to keep up | aginativedesign_in. the world. ENVOY MEETS DE GAUILE planning on__builditig, |- istur Ing Uilrerence . commodity traffic: showW@me marked — es of 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit. Mounted atop an advanced Sa- With. Besides even if the public | tends to look less than visually | euters) — oe ‘ Pri Sliniktar-Pearson, sunests + io 2 well. with al hein}: Recently Projec: Rover .offic- tirn rocket the first nuclear. Were allowed onto the | satisfying when only the bare | Ambassador eee “ CALL, -PHONE or rime-Minis 5 son, suggests expansion as ou wit a r {re i p ials jubilantly witnessed_the first space vehicle would stand ‘340: site, there isn't a sidewalk | bones of the structure are stitk:, ‘ Present oe ae a a | WRITE us today. Q Toronto exehange, was less frank and | 36 per cent, to 56 million -ton, miles, | successful ground test of a nU- \-s0+ high, dwarfing the :Statue to ‘be found, or hardly any | ing up’in a sea of mud, ' ly 4 in y oe | of Liberty. ‘ground fit to stand-on. What} But, mud and all, a visitor |!nformed sources sald, gave him | DOUGLAS BROS. | z ; ion With the provinces shoula ioneered, hav yotyeen extenided’'| POwerue » Jenounh to | make Piele like he Si urn, ine-roekat | BEDE the first f ‘il | hard to believe in. They should J = \_ oni ieenakie theacta Wk Pertia@ate fhrare ereathie: |r houses take to the sit.” ani | Si deee™ suatagigae thrust “and | sens Rivew go onlooker-hope thet | be asmiced: thet ‘shore really: 4 - DEPUTY CHIEF OF OPERATIO! ies ss j : ‘ dA a j coal ates ; . pms will offer sustayned: thrust an ns £ives an onlooker hope that > assur ‘re really ts ; i Tee 1 ey eed only 2 enable them to bring | to include six foreisn countries. wae ern dees : Dae unmatched fuel’ economy. One this wil] indeed come about. Pre: | an Expo, and to-see it, even now, | : : : NS \ their policies into harmony, Mr. Pear- Equally reassuring are the pros: , ihe inline) a INdUS: vound’ of thrust applied to a nus fabrication of pavilions makes | is to. believe it: ‘ fe assist the Chief of Operdtions inthe etfective manaie- son borroWed from Premier Lesage | pects for, 1966. which is being looked |" ree clear electire space sip for one, oe ment of data processing activities concerning “the Bureau's : mer : Gated als te s aT ces nies aL : ; week would build up a speed of : bah 3 ey pie: IBM System 360 Model 65 computer and other data procese- and promised not to opt into any more | forward to as a‘\car of continuing Five el Neha reported | nore: than '1,300 miles. per hour. | Weather tation In Or it _ing equipment available to the-Bureau. y Sua Conn hi | ; : notion nf. concentrated -c ga : pial sbi cnt cy 14 ; = : ’ “provincial «programs. Which “would | development, with tiie introduction of pee een tin atten the Ger. AV SOTTST 9 j Candidates should have many years of ‘responsible super: f | seat aind a eaat vise SOLVES LENS COMFORT_/ Ne Winnipeg Tribune : visory and administrative experience and respponsibility in—{ —— seem to suggest that the federal*area_| new jet aiferaft, greater frequencies —§ man Minister, Viktor Von Heer- ‘WINNIPEG (CP)—Dr. .H. D » “ _|| the sticcessful operation of a medium to large computer or of influence is, oF is about to be, | on existing routes aid the accisition #%, led he ls! ol German nag WINNIBEG 07) rE) las ane tar advanced fr the which nolograpl te carin on. | dala prceang italaon "They should had iver Ss peas sk 2 ‘ ; bie : eee : ‘ Bosra - Memisthy at the University of °St#>lishment of the first space’ stantly, sto Picture unti . q 4 al education or, failing this, have shrunk. — of new market areas and destinations. special train leaving eight-min- cHemistty We" : meteorological network to sup- -electronically impelled to trans- crn wee school graduation and “extensive computing and It is against: this danger that one 5 utes before the midnight dead- Manitoba, rerohl . oS sane: ply weather stations all’ round. mit-‘to earth -Stations data pr g experience with a umber of ‘years experi: Wace i + the Prime Mini Fi EDITORIAL INNOTE line he had set for the exodus. solved the An em of _€10uaY_"the-‘vorld with accurate informa- Essa 11, also with two came- ence at a senior level. ai Te : x would expect the prime Minister 0 a a “| : Bee and ay A temas tion about cloud ‘formations. - ras, will transmit. automatically | Positions at a lower level requiring proportionately les: Canada to be sounding his most force: In Paris, the worid's great seat of IN ore tb abe ‘ aod “HEH tee WHURCUIRE ren: _As a result, weather forecast- all -it sees iP 80 stations man- | hit * Hg may also be filled from applicants in this eom aon yc! : ‘ | : aoe bey ; ril 1, 1956 ln : ; C- ing wil i sate, there , professionals -and et ition, 6 yo ful warnings. His vague phrases hint- |- fashion, the humble rabbit is coming Mr elt A Matheson, MP, ture of ed lenses’ ‘surface is will i wee tar: waraldg “ot the eee th es countries = re re Salary to $13,000/ ed, instead. at new limit federal_y iftto his own. French, furriers mo «| who had taken ill in Ottawa, he- changed, he’ says. _ SN approach of severe storms_and | Ry #0 6 aciontiate: ave ce : : : ) ey : ; ‘ 4 eat “Bast (eae ee ; Yon | VEN OR LS ae on ly to the: ‘ ‘tivity.-As.- vey ‘as | sc ‘hen “lanin” j . ore the Faster recess~returne ‘ aircraft and ships at sea will be Se EPE : ’ 6 activity. As noted, however. this ied | Aonger scoff when © !apin is mention how.@ slightly improved but. te DIES AT 106 | | able to select the wafest routes | Preparing at more marvels ie CIVIL SER E COMMISSION °_- not the tony of die convention.. Nor | ed, nor do. they understimate his | quired several weeks of com. © KANSAS CITY, Mo. ©AP)—— for travel. ae Russians «claim a successful ; . ay was it in line with the sentiments ’ex- | value, usefulness and beauty. Bleach- plete rest. - _Albert, R. Alexander, {06-year- — The new’ satellite, preceded hy | tanding of a space craft on Ve- OF CANADA : 5 ; “ : Nia ie ‘ BA i ald . Plattsburg, Mo. lawyer; ‘one. named Essa 1 which war nus. This machine lcft-eart OTTAWA 4 pressed. the other dav vy Premief | ed an dyed in all.ihe shades of the 4 pate Montague High’. School | died ‘in hospital oe ue launchd on eee 3, will be | Sd sig ne a 68 ‘application: form CSC 100 Robarts of Ontario, who questioned— | rainbow, his fur is said t iving ,. Debating Team winners were entered hospital March 23, suf- calledNgssa 11, if it-goes succes- | More technological ‘wonde' . ‘ tar . juestions ‘ aid to be eine Donnie MacLaren, .Jimmy John-_ fering from a fractured .right © sfully Meo orbit 865 miles hich. | of the. late See century age | ce Quote PROGRAM :66-3310, may be expected’) 4 } ‘ oe ~ with fhe central government and that — every OTHER day..Today isn’t any. . other day, you-know.” ~=“At this stage the” Dormouse, who -had takenmo part in the discussion and’seemeéd to be falling asleep, gave a snort and cried out: ‘‘Oh my fur and — whiskers!” That broke up the party, leaving Alice as mystified as ever and wondering—and hopiing—if it hadn't all been a bad dream. straightforward than.his fellow Lib- * . ; oi z +— Eventually. the at > bef. Expo 47 has most.of at the.mo- | who goes near the Expo’site or |2 1 | ss erals from Quebec when he spoke at | for the first.time. Airexpress rose 27 | Our Yesterdays 7 teamed vp wine electrical orage sent is mud, the wonderful mud | near an Expo man can't help ah ie Ucied Stain. eet & JONES ING - the recent founding convention of the | per cent to 52 million ton miles. ‘(From~The~-Guardian—Files) pobre ion-engine-sys- |_of_spring.and. construction. __ | catching~a good part of the ex- NATO military bases-in-France— aera eaten federal Liberal wing in Quebec. He Further expansion also took place -ENTY-- FIVE Y co | tems flow under study would re- | _ A first time vibitor to the site,| citement that the finished pro- | tiich the french want re j[ oy : zederah.t : § ine : : pansion y Pa | TWENTY: - FIVE ZEORS. AGO ceive energy from a nuclear (‘is struck by. the-mind-stretching | duct promises. oe a Laan * | Call 892-1234 Charlottetewn ambled through some, fine phrases on ‘the competitive international | (April-1, 1941 ‘reactor. Nuclear energy would | contrast. between the present Perhaps some of the apatiiy ") aeRO: : * that defined little. Where the conven- tion was able-to find that the major control of the economy should rest and questioned vigorovsly—how ‘ t in the past 15 years for the-airline. Scheduled trans-Atlantic passenger traffic showed a 33 per cent increase over the previous vear when the ‘in- crease was 23 per cent, due mainly to ~ low fares inttoduced in April of that year. On southern service routes to Florida, Bermuda. the Bahamas and ~ the Caribbean islands, passengers flown exceeded’ 307 miiljon, an: in- surpassing mail as a source of revenue _ routes where increases in mail volume and revenue.were achieved, The re- | ciprocal air- mail agreements with | foreign airlines. which. Air Canada mink.a run for-its “money. ' es x ~ ~ of. - 5 + would use a nuclear reactor to “ — - The Atomic Energy Commis-’; sion and the National “Aeronauw- | tics. and -Space Administration have been working ona nuclear | rocket for several years, The | project is known as Rover. HEAT FROM REACTOR The interplanetary rocket} heat liquid hydrogen propellant to a gaseous state. When the hot gas escapes through a nozzle, it produces thrust. The raging hot A secret- bomb 6f devastating explosive powers was disclosed in London as a new British wea- | pon in the air-offensive against Germany. The bomb was de: | scribed by one returning pilot as ston and Billy Macintyre. ‘ ‘ 4 4 sialon planned for the. next decade or so has Mars as. its goal. Many scientists’ believe that life exists on Mars — not the bugeyed monsters of science fic- tion, but probably a low form of | vegetation. One plan calls for a chemical- ly propelled Saturn V launch. ve- _ hicle to put a nuclear spacecraft . into orbit. Once in orbit around ‘the earth, nuclear propulsion would take over the estimat- produce ‘the: eleciricity that prot vides the accelerating force for | the electric rocket engine. An ion rocket can’t lift its own weight off the ground. But, once | hip, received in a fall - 4 e as RCMP and an Ottawa body-re- pair shop. There Re No construction project in -Canada or ‘anywhere in ‘the | world can offer so much‘ chal- | lenge to the “‘sidewalk super- intendent’’ as Expo 67. Expo is | just foo big, and .. varied for condition. of the island sites ‘and the completed state envisioned in Expo seale models. Expo is, still saving that it will be the first world exhibition to open on time (April . 1967). Rapid ate ally Is An Ex Ottawa Journal | early stages. Even the most im- ‘Van ‘Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) . po! it possible for them’ to rise al-” “most overnight. : ‘It’s hard for a layman to esti- port in this effort. ® The newly independent coun- | tries of Asia and Africa are not | able on their own to cope effec- | tively with the perils to wildlife. | Their people are -hurrying des: © perately to make the transition from a pastoral:economy to a modern agriculture and indus- try. Their impulse is often:to get mate the final success of a pavilion When’ it is still in its { that many Canadians are said to | display toward Expo 67 is caus- | ed by their never having seen | it. Some timid Canadians .seem~ and j Essa 1—carries two cameras a Ci -. to fidd Expo, like Santa Claus | he Easter Bunny, a little | rid of wild game just as the ENVOY MEETS DE GAULLE a personal message from Prime CENTRAL DAT products, and he deserves sup- 7] - THE GOVERNMENT: OF CANADA A PROCESSING SERVICE BUREAU To _ requires a - IfYouNeed Water You Need Us Spring is — just around | the corner. If you are »