= ° ‘Che Guardia Witte VWoiarcdiait * . Covers’ Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J, Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward , Frank Walker Managing Editor et Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.I., by Thomson, Newspapers. Ltd. Brench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton , and Souris. . Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers vertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. mpire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgis Bireet Vancouver MA 7037 “Member Canadian Dally Newspaper Publishers “Aasociation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- Heation of all news dispatches in this paper @redited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters sand ‘also the local news. published herein. All ight or republication of special dispatches here- fe also reserved. Subscription rate Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 8 year by mail on rural routes and areas @eh serviced by carrier. .. $15.00 « year off Island and U.K. $20.00. per yeer in U.S. and elsewherg outside British Com- ; monwealth. ‘ : Net ever Fe single copy. "Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. — PAGE 4 -. Disappointing Budget Some time ago, in discussing how the country’s expansion was to be kept going without provoking in- -flation, Finance Minister ‘Sharp said: ‘“Our problem is not to put a brake - on the economy; I think it is to see - ‘that we do not press too hard on the ,accelerator and throw the car off the -Toad.:’ The same point was emphasiz~ | ’ ed in his budget speech in the House of Commons last night, and presum- ably it was with this end in view that “the various tax changes were decided “upon. But the “brake” the minister has put on our prospects in this province by an- - “nouncing that the next stage in the Northumberland Strait causeway would be among the federal works projects to be deferred. This is some- thing we didn’t expect, nor did we 2QRave any reason to expect it in view of assurances given in the November election campaign that there would be no interruption in this work. This abrupt change in policy has all the earmarks of a reprisal measure for the poor showing made by the Liberal candidates, who had themselves to blame for seeking to misrepresent the issue as a partisan one. The budget affords some. relief ---4n-persenal inecome-taxes-te-those-in- “Yow income brackets, and our farm- ers and fishermen will welcome the lifting of the 11 per cent sales tax from- additional items of their, equip- ment. But'six out of every ten Canad- jan taxpayers will have their income ~ taxes boosted in varying amounts. The 11 per cent sales tax on build- ing’ materials—the most unpopular tax in the Gordon budgetary. system —remains unchanged, though there will be.a reduction to six per cent in the tax on production equipment and machinery. Capital cost tax allow- ~ances on_most-building and machin- next 18 months, and the aim general: ~ yy is to encourage business to post- pone capital outlays. Repeatedly throughout his speech Mr. Sharp stressed the need for stabil- izing the boom. But of course it is in- accurate to speak of the “boom” as requiring the same technique of ap- proach in every part of the country. In some areas it is still practically non-existent, while in others it is only beginning to be felt, and needs en- couragement rather than restraint. It is questionable indeed whether the ‘minister has pressed sufficiently on the “accelerator” to suit our needs in this Atlantic area. Where Do They Stand? A procedural wrangle over the de- bate on capital punishment prevented it from being resumed in the Com- mons yesterday, and it is uncertain what will become of it. Prime Min- ister Pearson stated, however, that the did not feel'an impasse had been reached and that time would be found to bring it to a conclusion. It is an ex- traordinary situation indeed, and the government is to blame for not having set a sufficient time for the debate in the first place. If Parliament can in- dulge in days of argument over an allegation of impropriety ‘by former cabinet ministers; surely it can afford to give this matter the most thorough consideration. . And it is to be hoped that when the debate is resumed, the views.of both Mr. Pearson -and-Opposition Leader Diefenbaker will .be made public, =F hes ty t , for, in a sense, the House will be passing judgment on the con- duct both ‘of them and their govern- ments, The Vancouver Sun points out in this connection that sincep 1961 the law has distinguished between capital ‘and nori-capital murders. It is this law which the retentionists want to keep, and it plainly provides that only non- capital murderers should escape the ro : ; fej t 4 } WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1966. ‘it is disappointing to note |_ “ noose. Yet in the last three years cab- inets have commuted 23 consecutive’ death sentences to life imprisonment: and there have been only five execu- | tions in all since 1960. Thus; in effect, Canadian governnients have totally abolished capital punishment for both classes of murders by merely exergjs- ing a Crown prerogative. ; Parliament has now three courses’ to choose from. It can maintain the | present system df capital and non- ~~ capital mutder-Jt -can—vote_to_end ' capital punishment entirely. Or it can ' vote to reimpose it for all murders, doing away with the division into. capital and non-capital categories. The last course is the least likely. But even a decision to retain the present | division could bring the.cabinet face . to face with a conscience-searching dilemma. The prerogative of mercy | ‘politically and morally difficult for it either to commute sentences in future —~—would-remain-with-it-but it-would-be— | | | } | or to go back to hanging in capital | | , Cases. ‘All the more reason why a decision | | in this matter’should not be made .,' | hastily because of the exigencies of ; political manowevring. The vote, when | it comes, will ‘be an historic occasion - touching on the moral values held by every member of the House and upon | the conscience of the nation. In the | circumstances, for the party leaders | to ignore the right of Canadians to | know’ where they stand would be a shameful dereliction of duty. Bypassing Moncton ~ Under the new manpower program launched by the federal government, the employment ‘functions of the regional offices. of the National Employment Service are being trans- 3 ‘Department of Manpower. Advertise- ments have been published seeking highly qualified senior management personnel for five regional offices at Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto, Mon- to indicate that the NES regional of- fice at Moncton is to be abandoned. This draws a protest from the Monc; understandable in the circumstances. By no stretch of the imagination can Moncton, it is ‘at the end of the line” _80 to speak. From Moncton NES of- ficers can readily travel to Newfound- Scotia and all parts of New Bruns- wick. A glance at the map should con- vince one of the real advantages which the geographical. location of Moncton provides. It is not by chance that top executives of national and in- ternational firms have: chosen it as the site for their Atlantic regional ~operations. soe More“di8concertinig to contemplate, the fact that the top echelon of the the bilingual nature of the Atlantic region. At present the office is locat- ed in’ the province where most Aca- dians reside. This would no longer hold true if the contemplated move is effected. “It seems incredible,” says The Transcript, “that Hon. Jean Marchand, a man known to have strong views on the role that French Canada should play in the national scheme of things, should be a party to and bear responsibility for what would be a very real slight to the Acadians of Atlantic Canada.” , Some 50 families in Moncton would have to be uprooted under this policy. Worse, they would be moving to a ~ ferred to the soon-to-be established treal and. Halifax: This would appear” | | | | | | | . ALU) CL) LETT Cet OTe ren CT cee rT re ee SOSTIITY FU | p | Hazards Lor shot. Eliminate Need For Physicians are as: interested are badly eroded by wear in accident prevention as in the tear and the old, cold -. war treatment of the injured. The cliches no longer seem applica- older the medico the more he | ble. ‘ | stresses prevention because the Long-overdue adjustments are sight of the mangled, mutilated, | stirring in both’ camps, observ- and bruised body is sickening. A ers say here. little caution goes a long way in| In Moscow. this' week, the avoiding lifelong disfigurement, Communist world is meeting at paralysis, and other disability. a time when ferment goes on In many instances, the accident |{nside the Soviet Union and the also ‘eliminated the hopes, | Eastern European satellites~con- dreams, and ambitions of the |tinue to display more political victim. ; “| and economic independence. Vehicle mishaps get all the China is not even attending— | play because they are more for Albania—and, as Joseph C. common. But accidents in and | Harsch comments in the. Chris- about the home run a.close sec- tian Science Monitor, ‘‘this is ‘ond followed by those in publie Probably as near to being the places, at work, and on the (Point of decisive break between farm. Children and adults are. Moscow and Peking as histori- always falling, drowning, or get- i ase. likely.to be. able: to iden-. ting burned, poisoned, stabbed. | tify. Less publicized acci- If it weren't for the Commu- (( Be | Wh; & | -| preventing home and industria) | dent ‘accidents because the public is |8Tip France jof its integrated. ards, More than one physician | dents Invilve fireworks, motor- | ist troubles, he suggests, the cycles and bikes, lawn mowers, | West would be in a. bad way. skate boards, escalators, and In the West, George Ball, U.S. wrinaers Sucide also enters the poereny & Puy ion . : picture. . J I what if any inj Progress ,is being made in ¢an " anaes. eee |NATO military‘role while adher- {ng to the spirit of the alliance. made himself unpopular REVISE NATO when making a house call by The U.S. faces the task of try- telling the housewife to remove | "8 With its 13 other NATO al- toys, boxes, or shoes from the |lies to glue together a revised aware of the more common haz has | steps, hide the bottle’ of aspirin, |%sanization that—it hopes—will get a\light in the hall, or anchor |&X!st lomg enough to. welcome the scatter rug in the hallway. ck a France without» de -.Many industries have safety | Gaulle in some future. ‘period. directors who hammer away at _,5Pokesmen here such as Sen- safety. Farmers know that 75 | &tor Mike Mansfield, Senate ma- 4 | deed has renounced, the initia- - per cent of their accidents stem |Jity leader, share the view set from the tractor and drive ac-,| oUt by External Affairs Minister cordingly. Two thirds of those | Martin of Canada that it’s time Peer . | drowniitg have never learned to | eA , “swim. Prevention pays big. divi- for an over-all appraisal. of the | alliance after 18 years and some “CAPITAL PUNISHMENT PROBLEM | OTFAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson | ton Transcript which we find quite | | Halifax be considered a central loca-_ tion for the Atlantic region. Unlike land, Prince Edward Island, Nova. ery -items--willbe—reduced—for—the—| _Says_our Moncton contemporary, is NES would--no-longer be exposed--to- en have-a prime responsibili-=} broad ways; they 4 Yorches, they— shall city and surrounding area which is reputed to have-an exceedingly high ply and rents are high. In addition to the hardships such a move’ would create for the families involved, it would. prevent Moncton having an extra 40 to 50 job opportunities which the new program has opened. | It is not the first time that the rival claims of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia centres have clashed. Perhaps the best solution would be to move the new regional office to .Prince Edward Island! _~ EDITORIAL NOTES Monkeys are employed on the “They are paid,’ says a National Geographic news bulletin, “in soda pop.” Which just»goes to. show ‘how the...advantages...of civilization are spreading. | ) a The Ontario Safety League quotes a passage from the Bible to show that our modern traffic jams were fore- seen centuries ago.4The: quote: “The chariots shall rage in the streets, they shall jostle one against another in the shall seem rune- like . the Hpk gs! 4 cost of living. Housing is in short sup- . Malay Peninsula to gather coconuts.: <P side High School -~ Sees Big Future In Peace River Area’ Will your grandchildren be born and raised in a thriving new city on the Peace River? | ‘Will the Seventies see the six- tieth degree of latutude - now the northern boundary of the western provinces - develop from wilderness into..our most ‘modern _ industrial cities, -nu- clear-age ~versions of Oshawa and Oakville? eee This is the picture ewhich I draw from -a chance postscript thrown out by Hon. Alvin Hamil- ton in a_speech at Whitehorse. Alvin Hamilton is-widely ap- cpreciated on Parliament Hill for his free-wheeling and. almost uncanny imagination. This. is nada’s first complex, from Vino- treal to Windsor, is now over- extended, and he ponders where the next may develop. ‘We are on the verge of see- ing new industrial complexes springing up. Where are the po- tential areas? Have they got the necessary water, energy, re- sources and land? What is their access to markets?” \ The most promising, he be- lieves, is the Peace River area, stretching from —_- Whitehorse | down to Edmonton and Calgary. | All it lacks is access to markets. not_a_factory of day-dreams; it | Pacific port. Significantly, Re- is a process of logic seeking the way out of today’s mazes, using yesterday’s history and an H. G. Wellesian projection of scientif- fe discoveries as guidelines. FORSEES GROWTH : “It was Alvin Hamilton wh created ‘The Vision of Northern Development’, which so caught the imagination of proud but frustrated Canadian voters in 1958. ‘So today it is Alvin who | looks ‘at the ‘rat-race in what Ontario proudly calls ‘‘The Golden Horseshoe”, and - says that the time has come for Ca- nadian development to flower elsewhere. “In more gusty terms, In a pri- vate talk in his Parliament Hill average worker living in Greéat- "This very a-g0-g0 club, it seem- er Toronto $1,200 a year to pro- | a-went-went when the Bea’ | left it for new “fields The Bea ~ “vide a car to” get himself to-and- from his. work," X Thus it wes, ‘addressing the Yukon conservative Assocta- tion, that he pointed to the pre- sent over-development of Can- ada’s only major industrial com- plex, stretching from Montreal to Windsor. ‘Population pres- sures there are causing increas- ed living costs; shortages of wa- ter are developing; agricultural land is disappearing.” : A study of the economic his- tory of USA, he says, shows that an industrial complex will deve- lop where there is a juxtaposi- tion of water, energy, resources and access to markets. A strong stable complex requires abund- ant good agricultural land to | | loyal Beatle fans, begged him to RL | revive the Cavern Club, the spot | -office,he- commented. to.me_on_| which launched —_the- | the absurdity that “‘It costs the sources Minister Art. Laing has since spoken to the Northern Fo appeal may unusual. The 5,000 youthful signers, all “Mersey. beat,’ heard round the — world.- | devotees want it reopened. This leads us to consider the | Possibility of youth demanding |More such landmark preserva- | tion. Might not the discotheque | buffs in France decide to peti- | tion Premier Georges Pompidou | to search out the first dance re- cord club and save it for pos- r Beatle Devotees . : * Christian Science Monitor _ oo ._ when govern- |terity? But it could take extend- ' | ‘Resources Conference, also !n Whitehorse, stressing the ur- gent need for such an outlet, and sting various routes to the | sea. A Peace River complex, Alvin’ believes, will ultimately support 75 to 100 million people in prosperity and comfort. Second comes the James ' Bay region, ‘fed by the clay- belt. ac- ross Timmins. This could sup- port-15 to 20 million well - paid workers, Third is the Atlantic region, with its ready advanta- ‘ges of fine ports and an exist- | ing pool of highly qualified wor- |-kérs. . Fourth is northern Sask- } | atchewan and Manitoba, which - has everything except easy ac- cess_to_markets. These four areas could be site of Canada’s future boom. towns. — ed investigation to locate the ort- ginal ‘hall. And how. about preserving the | humble home in Italy where the | first pizza was baked? Thon- sands of American teen-agers | | would like the idea. But: how is | Premier Aldo Moro to find the | right home to preserve? ..The story of pizza is that an Italian -mother;-making bread while her children watched, out.some_bits of dough, , da them with spaghetti kids. But the. story never tells | -whieh--mother-did.this._-. Perhaps... ‘| a statue of a typical bread- and- -pizza-baking mamma would the answer. . Keri These difficulties show the | importance of starting early to save landmarks. The 5,000 Bea- tle boosters may have been act- ing in the nick ;of time with | their petition. ‘be | The Home-Coming - New York Times You can't predict the day, but | you know that by mid-March | the morning is not far away. when the .back pasture or the | side lawn will be lively with rob- feed its inhabitants. Thus the | ins. Not the few hungry, winter- first development was the north- | worn robins that emerge -from overspreading to Cleveland and | the thickets between February eastern pilgrim settlement, | storms, but sleek migrants that Chicago. Then government war- | arrive by the dozen, by the time spending on aircraft and ships caused the forced-growth of the Pacific Coast complex. More recently a third great in- dustrial complex has been deve-~ | loped in the squtheastern states. | 29,- when Parker Henry like | | France, Drawing on this — precedent; Alvin Hamilton argues that Ca- “Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO ; (March 30, 1941) - The Mediterranean fleet, fin- ally getting an Italian force within range: of its big guns, sank five. Fascist warships in its greatest naval triumph of the war, but came to blows anew with Britain's former it was annoynced in London. The Admiralty in London an- nounced that French shore bat- teries in -Algeria had opened on British warships _at- tempting. to halt a French con- voy carfving “important war material -for-;Germany.*=through. the Strait of Gibraltar. : TEN YEARS AGO, (March 30, 1956) *. The. (ity Police’ Force was | strengthened by an additional constable on. morning. of March kill, ‘Granville Street, Ch town; was sworn in by trate Gilbert Gaudet Miss Barbara Clark, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Hillard Clark, was elected queen oof Sufmmer- ally, sons They bring back nostalgic As-,| tribute to discipline — something Bi agis- | score. |. You know them by their num- | | bers, by their chatter, and by the deep southern tan on their breasts. They look well-fed and | selbeisiired, and they go. about | their breakfasting like excited: travelers come home, more talk- ative than hungry. . ° There are no ‘songs, at first. Now,and then. one will pause and sing a few notes but seldom | a whole phrase, more an excla- And the restlessness of travel | lis still upon them. They run about, fly a little way, come back again,as though,. going from room: to room to make sure all is as they left it. They can't quite settle down. They will be restless .for a week or two, coming and going. | Then one bright morning a few | of them will salute the sunrise. | That bold, full - throated song will echo again from the leaf- less treetops. After all, they are thrushes;- and thrushes must sing. Hearing that song you will know that buds will open, violets will robins proclaim -the certainty. But first must be the home- coming, the morning, those chattering, sun-tanned flocks re- turn. The certainty now- is that | mation of delight and satisfae- | tion than a salute to life. j elon® a | Monson, Mass., is unhappy. He says the school has only one | among its 25 students who can | play_piano. Am amateur piano player ‘himself, he wonders what ever happened to the piano les- sons that used to keep boys in- doors’ when they wanted to be ‘out: playing baseball. | but not particularly pleasant me- | mories. They were an ordeal for the untalented, which meant | host boys, Still, they did con- that many of today’s young peo-. ple need more of. . _ We suspect the piano lesson days, except for youngsters’ who ' Bangor Dally. News they are well on their way. ls Out? Youngsters carry transistor | radios wherever they go and from these minute monsters comes an unceasing stream of music — at least-the young peo- ple call ft music. Then there are the hi fi stereo sets. For. those. youngsters, who do want fo make their own music, 4 he the guitar, these days. le no other musical instrument ex- | isted anymore; just the guitar swung over the shoulder, emit” swung over the shoulder,. emit-~, shaggy headed player . moans and wiggles his hips. For each Liberace of Victdr .Borge- there must be a thousand guitar-play- | Peally want ‘to play, have gone | for good. There is music in the . better go out cand buy yourself | air these days as never before, “That most of a is canned. “r ¥ of the Beatles. That's life, Dr. Rogers. You y@ guitar, c \| gans could be replaced by a new bleom, bees will hum again. The. the piano, we fear, is ‘out. It’s | WAt—times dt —seems...ag Mo) ting monotonous sounds as- the “ing folk singers and_ imitators |. | would like to include the serious. Political, economic, trade and fiscal matters troubling the Western nations «in recent years.’ Equally vital now for the U.S. | too are events arising from the dends;: anticipate trouble and you'll avoid it. i One compensation may come from accident fatalities among | the healthy. They may serve as a source of human organs for Reappraisal By Arch MacKenzie Canadian Press Staff, Washingtos | WASHINGTON (CP)—The’ ri- ,war in Viet Nam and its long. | By Dr, ‘Theodore R. Van-Dellen val East and West power, ios ' rigid policy of containing China militarily... . Vice-President Hubert Hum- phrey, in a just-published inter. | view, hints at moves afoot there ‘when he says: . “I am convinced we’ Ameri- ‘cans are read) to do some fresh, honest thinking about Asia. We have been massively ignorant . . . we are tragically ' short of experts and diplomats ->—p-this-may-prove-to-be our_re- ward for the ordeal in Southeast . Asia. It took Castro to: rouse our concern about Latin-America. It has taken Viet Nam to waken our senses to the Far East.” GROPE FOR POLICIES * There is some muted evidence of groping toward new policies, _ says. James Reston of the New York Times. He says “almost | all the innovations of American \foreign policy since the war “| were~ provoked—by—some—sudden crisis . . . all these followed a period of.neglect that led first {se crisis and then to analysis and corrective action.”’ Walter .Lippmann, Washing- ton's columnist emeritus, goes back to the battle of Waterloo |to chart similar ‘periods of the ‘past when policies decayed and j fell. It is no accident that U.S, L poles on NATO and contain- ing China ‘‘should he showing all . . the signs of breakdown at ap- He | proximately the same time,’’ he | says. Both are obsolete, he de- ‘clares. - : ‘Lippmann's complaint is’ that President Johnson “has lost, in- | tive in foreign affairs and is age | grieved becaus®.so many peo | ple at home and abroad are aske ‘ing troublesome questions.’’ ; The president, Lippmann says, | May overcome his domestic crit- i ies “but the argument will not | sta'y won because the realité®s in Asia and Europe are not wn- der his gontrol.” ; transplantation. The thoracic or- heart and set of lungs via a pro- cedure that involves. the connéc- tion of three blood vessels. It | ‘sounds ghoulish, and is impract- ical ‘at this time, but. in the fu- | ture, it may prolong the life of our most productive citizens.’ That was a touching little go- ing-away party they gave in Ot- jtional Liberal O¥ganizer Keith DILATED VEINS ‘Davey. All the Garktoen boys J. W. writes: Will bicycling | from coast to coast flown in for help or hurt legs with varicose | the festivities. All the frontroom veins? ro ‘boys. in their best: bibs and tuck- : _ REPLY ers.. The-Prime Minister making Bicycling will not help but I !a speech. As Senator Davey doubt if it will hurt varicosed’|himself said, “This dinner to- veins. If you are worried, wear night has tone.’’ an elastic bandage or. stocking. | And ‘they were démocratic: Why tolerate varicosities? They | about it, too. They touched all are easily remedied. Consult | the rest of us. For the goodbye your family physician about | gift. At a cost of. something over treatment, this warding off the | half a million dollars-we get to tawa last week for former na- | Lost And Gone Forever Toronto Globe and Mai But is Australia still open te shipments? It was rather unkind of ‘the Prime Minister. to remark; ‘‘T think that Mrs. Davey is stand- . ing up to this very well seeing that she never raised her son ‘to be_a Senator.” It is biblically | correct to visit the sins of the. parents on the sons, of course. But the other way round? : The Prime Minister also said | that after resigning as Liberal. ol siorypalpthogh Davey had re- ceived many magnificent. offers | of future employment, including | offers to be campaign. manager possibility_-of complications... | support Senator_Davey for the! *for- Hellyer,—_Sharp,—_W-i nters- TB IN OLDSTER Mrs. J.Z. writes: Cam a man of 72-be cured of tuberculosis? His case-is advanced: but was detected only. recently through the mass X-ray program: REPLY next 36 years. ; ~The Prime Minister spoke of him fondly “as one who ‘has been transported toa sphere labove us.” That has a nice ring. That word — transport e d. Tuberculosis has been arrest- ;wouldn’t ‘mind seeing transport- | Semen ines ed in many oldsters and there is | ed. Not to the Senate, that’s a case {n question is an exception. | above us.” Since the Liberals HEART BEAT ALTITUDE | don’t keep all the keys it might S. N. writes: Does living in a |turn out to be the other place, high altitude. slow down the and we're not really. vindictive. heart or make it beat faster? ee ear abet caer oeae ttn patente: REPLY >» |. SWAP PRISONERS The heart beats faster initial. JERUSALEM (AP) — Three | ly but as soon as the individual |Jsraeli civilians who crossed hecomes acclimated (in about |into the Egyptian-held Gaza | six weeks) it returns to the nor- | strip last, August were ex- | mal rate. - |changed .Tuesday for three | i OT PROLONGED —~—~-Arabs~ who had ° entered Teraet— no reason to believé that the | bit close. And not to a “sphere | meant by ah acute illness? — {spokesman said two of the oe REPLY. a _Arabs were infiltrators sent into | One that is relatively “short /Israel for sabotage purposes and—or severé as opposed to a and the third was a spy. The chronic disease’ that tends to | infiltrators were arrested in 1955 | linger. A cold is an acute illness, |and 1959 and the spy in 1963. | whereas tuberculosis is chronic. | All were given jail sentences. | (NOTE: All correspondence -; COMMUNISTS MULTIPLY to Dr. Van Dellen—-should be Membership in the Russian | addressed to: Dr. Theodore | Communist party increased to | | | There are a couple of others we and Martin.” If he. meant to suggést that |these are thé only alternatives | to his own undoubted leadership, ‘then all we are able to say - (and we. say it- with sincerity and with compassion) is Pierre Berton’s ‘Ingenious New Laborsaving Devices This essay by the noted Pierre Berton makes the good old days — and ways — seem even better! The dial-less telephone of_granddad’s day ‘sauce;-and--baked-them-for-the-.Mrs.__J.P.~"writes: What 1s ‘An Israeli foreign ministry | takes on new practical dimen sions. Instant-change cel-~ Juloid collars replaced with a push and a click make soft collar shirts outdated, old- fashioned. Don’t miss this most entertaining spoof on modern day laborsaving de. ‘Vices. Get your copy of April Reader's Digest on news- stands everywhere. : —- Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- 12,000,000 from 10,000,000 be- | une, Chicago, Mlinois.) . {tween 1961 and 1965. oe panes ay soa looking for a down- to-eartlr way to pay your Income Tax nce «s.you might well say a Royal Bunk termplan loan is made-to-order, ° ee ¢ A low-cost Royal Bank termplan loan will’ « Otros, make the cash available to you promptly, when you need it most. It’s life-insured, easy-’ to-get. Enjoy fast confidential service, often under 24 hours (and you don’t need to be a Royal Bank customer te qualify.) | \ & ‘ 16 oe ; * cox-Visit your nearest Royal Bank. branch, today. é si ROYAL BANK there’s a branch in your neighbourhood