, i ae * : : 4 » | Menopausal: | Svmotoms - : Published every week dey morning except Su» | against the context of Mr. Pearson's s ay ak aetna Na ee ee Ot. statements. a Ce cftins ot Summanide, Mentegue, Alberien -** ‘Those who object to the idea of a "and Souris. : Canada-U:S. free trade area, said Mr. ; Represented Thomson Newspapers z AcvertingSavces Troe 12 Unary on Davis, fail to realize that ours is al- q Empire 3.8894; Montes! $20 Coe Wat Googe | ready &.“branch:plant” economy. It Freep one chy taal is too small and too cramped for our Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers | Canadian-owned enterprises to flour- ssociation Canadian The Canadien Q P justi Loci aiatel w to vn te emi | ish. We are subject to the whims of lication of all news dispatches in this paper , hington as things: stand pare petiy 2 meareor fle orl n_as things now. A ! f Hi | i ' me §t5.00 a Sea ait lied and U.K. $20.00 per couldn’t turn the flow of U.S. capital .| outside British feed's We sion of vpeciel dapetcher here | would tie Washington's hands. The ‘iruste. without “develaping Sag ates: 8 sane Ry cor - | U.S. could no longer shut out our ac aoe ae $12.00 @. year by mail on rural routes end ares | goods at a moment's notice. It | Sahty as a sesslt. of reduced a= arian secretion. absence ak bias oa to la: i ; : F . : — ie Not oves"VOc single copy.” ‘ us what to do about our trade with Edifor of ‘2 Missouri weekly | —Montreal Star. — . | : Member Audit Bureau of Crevistion. _ | -other countries: ~ If anything, we - Sona ae teas men tas deer =< —= ; _ —— RAGE 4 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7° 186. “Would be freer under a Canada-US. and cause menstrual flow. This H, d P id ° | St ath free trade agreement than w explains why there may be 8 har residential strain ~ A Remarkable Record . - oe grades! diminution ie-sencunt fe | present. contrast to a sudden cessation | -- Cadadion Press Stat Writer Hoan earned is the | ,_ME- Davis conceded that it wodld | Oe ee ue ain er, Hon AE. saeeedt of Eharletin..” | 00 Beceeaty for Consila te epter. into hot flashes will- accompany the | President Johnson's struggle for | rying-over his public image. The er os ‘free trade a step at a time. But we menstrual changes. These. are | power and popularity the cog-| more his public rat'+g decline town, now in his ninety-seventh year, : . best described as a sense of'| yiction grows that his current | the more active he became. whiboe-sorvices:-as-the-initlatar-of-the- | Sten start working towards the ob: heat starting in’ the head and | ailments must indeed be ser-| SHOCKS EUROPE ar jective now, not some time in the | | neck-and-passing-in-2 wave over |~ous to virtually force him to ab-| While doctors maintain there — ___.—P.E.1.—Tourist—Association—in—the— indefinite future. He urged that a the rest of the body. The flush | dicate from the scene of battle | is no cause for alarm as they . *” early 1920s were fittingly recalled in - : va “y May be followed by profuse | at this crucial juncture of. the | prepare the president for new : free trade area with the U.S. come perspiration and occasionally |, 1966 U.S. election campaign. surgery the mere relationship of _, & telegram of ‘greetings from the first and-that Canada push for a acc aati amaek oe Johnson’s gruelling Pacific | the and medicine cd come ee Association ae ee _wider trade partnership with other lessened activity of the ovaries | eee aaa: ei Gu as alee at ave couver. | countries later. A. ten-year period and is easily controled with fe- | strategy as well as on Soper, | American lea —Tt..came A-few days before, Judge Arsenault : male sex hormotes. tunity to ‘swing a: “Fas a shock to most of the world, ‘ead abe vail te ac Dalat that saw a gradual dismantling of | All“of these symptoms may | world to his side, seemed to | particularly. Western *Europe heon_-Renared’ by - tariff, quota and other barriers be- develop plus psychological chan- | have argused an increased | But the alarm was modified Acadian Society with the presenta- -+- tween Canada énd the US: would Soe eee Te ‘iene | mengre_of sompetty. for his | ty the experieace of recent bis. tion of the society's highest award, leave Canadian industry in much . ; Sea : proof that these common emo- oe eet we pense 10 ; aaa akg tke aieannen cc Wide, ie dues Geek better shape to meet competition - THE MAGICIAN OF 1964 aan Seenee are —_ Viet Ném wor’ did bls speeches | (ree years ago Anether facter elity. : n . : glandular changes suggest a approach, but | is the relative i Aamonig other things that as president | ‘™ Overseas sources. MOUNTIES' TRADE-IN the climacteric; Te fortes are | fie phyncal_presrnce in the | rope and receding” fers of : . ; “This argument in. favor of a free _ . a critical period espetially when | grea undoubtedly brought relief an American - Soviet conflict. / @f the society he and Rev. Andre trade area-as-2- way of deni : : eS eA of a Sow Saws | Wee ie helenae cnpewe. Cormier, "5 Univ cy? avoiding ee al : complexion are t | who wonder whether | to he in_Asia,.tar from- Europe's — oe” ame Se ae arc -+ eign domination and so eliminating | For Airplanes And Snowmobiles af they used tobe. and there 16-) States will Secome | disheart- | door axe eee it istine Leedin Ct the danger of this country’s loss of | = = National Geographic Balletin. Soe ee | ek ee eee Se eee the West. the - a political independence,” as the Free 1 wei ——— percentage develop eee ee of pouwr A" acti to iaiorises proved to be fruitful and mutually Press says, “appears more convine- | gh the question. Sf his 2 vacuum. Tt could sharpen the = ; at j ! i } & i Ef ——- *beneficial ing than the rather vague fears that | . . See eres terie becomes_another_period_of_ w heart, ailment | liased and encourage _realigs- a truly remarkable record’ of publie boundaries.” But Mr. Pearson, unfor- tre that tr : and gall Seay oo ng 6 an | — waneting the so-called service with which the name of our | ‘U2tely. shows’no sign of availing eee ais exhaustive. It came at s time | seeks totum is back Amer. himself of this advice. He probably venerable fellow-citizen is associated. ; Asa law student in England and hasn't heard the last of it from the ear ys | it become of the century, as a leading member oer ee eee tt ber ates -heancorand Financial Post of the .J.A. Mathieson g t | Should not let itself be influenced —The sweat glands .are conirol- | Chester Ronnjng.~ Canada’s | present thaw that seems te be during the First. World. War, as At-* ee by the promae of 6 aaj oe 1; aan took ob pt abatic sel On US. to & oo a 73S : 3 ; oo , = as \e _____ toriey General and Premier of the | Te/atlvely small group of self-interest- |- “eae eee. | gelenier heene She Movies | R._E.-writes:—How-does_blood-|-moves through — the —warring--should not-forget-that “~ ____ province,-as-leader of the Opposition |~°% Canadians.” ——— as ot Ga eee aowedaye, assy. 3 view described in poker-faced | poisoning start? North- South lines looking for | accomplished in part at the ex- + ~and-subsequently as a Justice of the |. ~ Reassuring News ‘deel : rhs ¥ Supreme Court for more than twenty- : E ae ‘> | five-years, his career has indeed been | |, Much of the opposition to flourida- | sae ue —___._oteworthy.—. eS se heed elite’ enbtace ooo ‘Tesponse by the Soviets to a si of until | Jt may be difficult to determine | » bat ~~" But he found time for many other |_#0 argue that suich action may be -| felt hats, high boots. and spars ier aie” Wien We. es |e eas Ge ee a oe complication starts | problems in Southeast Asia will only last as long as ‘he orciadent ata % Edward | 29° ‘mean better teeth for the | high-peaked hats were always i Cone habe tee ee read Mao's works with proper | te those produced by the origin Repeblie’ of China today defies come as singly Uirestes: - Island Travel. Bureau, a director of | Younger fry..But no evidence ‘has | Erttins Mnocked off when offic. | ness thestact with: whicl the Se: This type of intellectual dein |" MILK-FOR ADULTS———~-| both the U.S. and the Soviet Un- ing aad unpesdicisblc-premace the Good Roads Association. a life |. 0¢6® Produced to this effect, and now | cars Spurs dug holes tx the | Vt Union responds to abuse— | cation was once granted Josef | A reader writes: Can s grown. | jon. The power struggle is stron- | ihe international acess oe sats . the Journal of the American M floor mat and snageed on the | “et does! Stalin. This curious malady ap- | ¥P be harmed by taking too | ger in setting nation against na. | World peace. says Ronning, "member of the Canadian Association ee ee eee gd gas pedal. A Red Guard can stand to at - | pears to afflict Communist so- | ™uch milk and milk products? | tion than any common bond of | ¢a® never be guaranteed if of Tourist. and a | Cal Association has’ come up with | “", ‘Mountie on everyday duty | ‘ution while out of his mouth | cieties at a certain stage in REPLY ideology is in holding them to- | China is not somehow drawn im Fourist Publicity Bureaux, reports ow'a ‘study by. five doct ak as drab. | Pour the. cliches "of the propa- | their development. __-_j __Toe much _of anything may | gether. ~~ | to the--world- Canada+would Go diréctor and executive member of from Harvard’s Nutrition Depart. | ™ews 4; oe trousers, | Sanda machine— “capitalist”, | ‘The teenaged Red in oun note ut ‘there is = The concept of «simple divis- | “tl * lsten-to tts man on ee ae nation Gaogeapiaical Beclety..2 ‘ment which show that the aged, too, tsck- Srozans. ‘and x pill- box | and'to forth —terrible catch. | tured’ and what 1s. not. amd Ox nik and. mil | ward sade Commouniet cecil’ is WRITERS JOD! UP — Fi of the Royal Society for the |- ; : i100, forage cap. The dazzling scarlet’) words uttered by 2 passionate | tolling the ultimate virtues of } are el encouragement of Arts in England, a have a personal health stake in sup- | Simic remains = 7 _and fanatical robot. ____,_| Mao-ism,—look;— from without, tirector f seas of the Cana- Porting fluoridation. ~~ 3 os ae gepelie- eek eanaeeentel ae eee like creatures in a world ef 3 dian Bar Asivclation ait" pinslaaet The doctors were interested in the _ wae * i Godlee te But even irrationality ceases of the Acadian National Society of | *ffect of flouridated water on osteo- | have been inscoarable parteers | — rationality is perhaps too some day the Maritime Provinces and New Eng- Pe causes bones, ne eee wees - e . “| as Northwest Mounted : : land, andl one of the founders of the | Particularly in elderly people, to be- | {2 ‘a isrs Organized tw» protect No War--No Peace - $t. ‘Thomas Aquinas’ Society® He | Come fragile. Their finding was that | pioneer settlements in the unex- | Torente Telegram BS holds the degrees ef Doctor of Laws osteoporosis decreases in areas where aie laos ie a usual fesponse by the gov- __With President Nasser; of E; :_. from Laval University and of Master_|People drink . water_with.generous-|~jand of 300 men proved remark. | ernment of larae! to mounting | pt bogged down in Yerhen, the ; of Arts and Doctor of Laws from St, | #™ounts of fluoride. _ | ably efficient in maintaining law | border provocation is to order 2 | present Syrian regime, under | ye They went beyond this. They she | “SSC. | Saneg daieomags | os Go tebenint Gn teen It was during his premiership in | discovered that hardening of the art- (ebene maamacien te tae The incidents have been parti-.| no-war campaignth at has grip- the early part of 1919 that the roads |. eries caused by calcium deposits on | ties’ efforts eloquently: “Bad | cularly taflammable in the past | ped the Middle East for the | were opened in Prince Edward Island | the main artery carrying blood from_|- ° tat thet vere fecal oe nets | citizens and-boasts-from-Syris,— Dr. Zayyan has been getting "7—to-automobiles, which, up until that | "the heart to branch arteries was less-| have been left today. The Mous- | which has been eee ee ee _____time,__were__permitted_on_the-roads-|- in high fluoride areas. + aae wee ae oo Arab. vow .of destroying Israel, | of the arms and military sdvis- only on certain days, and at stated In an editorial commenting on the frosts of winter.” that # SSF MOON tho leeptrational ers it has been sending to Dam- times. This decisive action put an end | study the AMA Journal—one of the: |- scariet- coated policeman | WS —. uy ooo * SS Ce : : loomed as‘a familiar - This Israeli Moscow special respon- t6 a long-standing controversy on thée™| most respected in the field of | tike os the oo =; has pe po tan a er sibility, tame of its influence subject, and took the ‘issue out of |. medicine—said: “If these findings | servine as doctey. firefighter. | Set, Combrgiennye, comsunation | om Syria. to bring about s relaxe- politics for good. But it is only one of are confirmed ©. *> fluoride will in- ee ee ee Britain cad F | on toe tee eee many far-sighted policies for the | déed-assume unimportant preventive | = Mounties” famed devotion +m ie vie of Aran ad ing of the cold wer, Ge Rus ' _ improvement of transportation and | role in two of the main diseases of yee Semen 8 o. conadalat te a ee world’s danger the promotion of -industry and tour- | aging—osteoporosis and hardening ean aie aot ee tions Security Council. —_. = be perinitted io eithen Eat UN censure has never deterred | West rivalry. i z : : ism which Judge Arsenault, during—|—of the-arteries:”Actually.it-was ex- | Patches “thfouch ‘2 blizzard: | “- his years in politics, was instrumen- | plained, the action of anchoring’| 4, push ahead. Have done my is Bae soumaet ‘hat twit be tal in bringing about. - .. --- _} calcium to the bones and preventing owe this instanee. __ 4. We take this opportunity of tender- | ft migrating to the arteries is sthiliar |; 1" 10. Kine Edward Vimy ing him our best wishes for continued |. to the anchoring of the calcium in the | stowinc the prefix. “Royal.” By es Silver Platin; good health, and a salute on behalf | teeth of young people... 1900, the Camladian. GoveraMOMt | nconcnnssn momen ge ee pla. ede tt 4 z F z q | Ei | on a na > Q 8 O = @ am ~————oF SIT otf Teaders 85 one of Canada’s | This is reassuring news: a ge ag: Them Our Yesterdays | sweden. often pointed to by that the party has lost two-thirds Fane Stee | tip Riwil doehcs teckee Po | vin The Genrsn Maest_ | mene meer cm | of Se sere see ct ee Advice To Mr. Pearson : TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO | state, is having a. The | ther, forthe first time, . polled eis sioole ‘adiat-t soe GAL ace ier as a ee (November 7. 131) policies adopted the Social | ‘more votes than the ° § : Prime Minister Pearson's fence- : EDITORIAL NOTE * ‘The Red army was reported to | ‘Democrat Party a moderate con- | mocrats. .The Gara ae moe prompt, personal service . . . ready cash to help you pur- straddling performance on the free At a weather radar conference in | be pressing 4 major counterat- yey zen ee ae ee ee aor ons whose ee ee eee Sree ars trade issue raised at the recent Lib- | Oklahoma recently, a scientist with | y, ee “— aees- the ;Becial ees. baie oe r Tisen_in Convenient monthly payments to fit your budget. Stop eral policy conference at Otawa has | the U.S. Space agency, Dr. Vernon | tion of Velokslamsk, stvencing | been in power for 34 years but | cent.” ee ae ae setpstaar opened provoked a reply from the Winnipeg | . Rossow, proposed a method to stop | eotin gaidyd — at on the awe toentations were -_ ‘These figures indicate that the Free Press, in which the views of | tornadoes by electrocution. Hé would | man force into retreat. . tions recenfly when the voters Jack Davis, Liberal MP for Coast | have a cannon fire wire-wound pro- }° .- ; ~preduced. their support for the / classes who have apparently Capilano, are clted in refutation of | jectiles. into. the tornado. cloud,7| werterRomrce nee ihe | per Atmash rmaie nar | frac thir move,tradions the argument that freer trade rela- | stretching a thin: wire two miles or ‘| ted-States open to Russia, erant. | er party in Sweden, it lost 82 who seem to have gone further |] Sh ei oon FRANCE CORPORATION, LED. * tions with. the neighboring republic | more between the positive and nega-.|- ing ee ee onthe an Bhan _the | Jeft. in. search of what: they feel |} tet us design your let-—= erage Roar A 8 ee would -result ~th’moré-~ economic’ | ‘tive clouds. The scientist believes the | to battle Hitler. weave or 1962 and 3.1 per cent of the eee farkonts, a pga | 16D Kent Street...-.......-..2.-c+..Phome 392-205 ~ inati : rican i i eal Z vote compared parlia- | gMOKERS MORE brochures; ue (Opposite Eaton's) oe domination by our Ame neigh- | resulting lightning bolt would short _ . , TEN YEARS.AGO x, | mentary elections of 1964. tk eet fee ee ae vec nee = © Bors. Mr. Pearson has been leaning | out and neutralize the electric field | . (November 7, 1956) Sweden's prime minister, | Workers building a gas plant needs. Heavily on this argument in his ultra- | in the clouds which created the Ayes gp macetteg _— Tage Erlander, who has held | here are demanding os extra | v i s Pre, . hower S a smash- | i ili r pay j cautious approach to the subject. _| tornado. Some may scoff at the plan, | ing second-term. ipresential | o a pg : for a ee one (15 cents) ~ | ae GUARDIAN-PATRIOT _____.,__Mr__Davis_was-a_senior_economist—- comments an exchange. But many — cottres | Sing after GA ctettion, (-o:| Meee en sees C ENTRAL : - with the Gordon commission ana | people used to.laugh at- men who | ™ 4 ship a | cannot rule out 3, new general | Humphrey and Glasgow, while | : 2 ~ until recently was the Prime Min- | labelled themselves rainmakers. Now’| | Sent sti, bag'toy pears to ron. | agreeing te toke doom al oo | PRON TE RY 1] : ~' ister’s parliamentary secretary. In a | it js commonplace to use airplanes |— French and British forces seiz- . The, most significamt aspect of smoking signs, are resisting the | PHONE 4.8506 ; speech made the day before Mr. Pear- | to seed clouds.to preduce rain. |. caitcly"ycrmva he Sort (hm clertions fate Scial clin pact seca eee : Q ey : t : . ahs —_— <j " a =*- < 3 a : = sé . : Pe =~ = — a _ mG ; e ¢ = . “ >. < . ‘ - - ‘es ; i : ee ea ile oi = : a ao . ss ta liad ‘ ae ee Eta ue tn frame pret Aerated i TY EE TR LTR R ROR Ty Ih Semen nN