over 40c per week by carrier “iF magsive, political and administra- tive effort” through a team of tech- nicians which is already beginning to pay off in terms that can be under- | 2» year by mail on rural routes and areas Signs Of The Times f ‘A “good omen for all Canada,” = the Financial Post, is the fact | | mosphere could become “soured” by by the public at large. : E : : in approving it. One Tennessee senator complain- | ed in Congress that the move would increase employment in Canada at the expense of the U.S. and make it more ‘difficult for American firms to proceed with their investment plans in this country. Another sen- ator noted that the Studebaker move to Canada had cost auto-supply firms in his area hundreds of jobs, and \) feared that thousgnds of Americans | could be put out wf work under the new agreement with new jobs open- ing up in Canada. Assistant Secre- tary of State Johnson said, however, the agreement would not hurt Amer- | ican industry, and, furthermore, . it | “wouldn't mean major industry moves into Canada.” - Whatever it means, it will be | months before Congress votes on the agreement. It.is possible that if the opposition gains any substantial strength the proposal could be delay- ed until the 1966 séssion. Ottawa is said to fear that as a result the at- various special interest groups, but it is stil] hopeful that by 1968 the pro- gram will have become-so mutually satisfactory to both countries that no- body will want to kill it. And the car purchaser, the “con- sumer” as we call him in the food in-~ dustry? It looks, as Dr. Dewar said, as if he'll still be the odd man out in this deal. . - His Latest Award Whatever failings his critics may pin on Mr. Pearson as a politician, most of them will agree that he has a well-deserved reputation as a dip- lomat and man of peace, and that he has shed honor upon Canada by his activities in these fields. He came this feeling, and take pleasure as well recipient. ‘The Mounting Toll The Dominion Bureau of .ers, “‘an apothecary who sold his ttormal but not particularly CARVING THE TOTEM POLE ° OTTAWA REPORT By’Pairick Nicholson Highway Death Toll Poses Challenge “While the death “toll on our) Partridge, of whom 1 could find ridge work is about $115, prob--) roads mounts appallingly, I see 3 | ago, this was a common way of no mention in art directories, FE ; iy h I i s 8 a ezz aft a ag z E 4 f Resés = = a i $i = i iL iL He the i EEE f i if it ei z ! 7 | i z rei | 7 HT i 5 3 d & si g i = : % . g : g ¢ i 3 7 ae E ft fe : i 2 3 i! ‘ 4 Rotterdam’ Progress Hamilton Spectator 2 | | it, t i i 1 FE il st rf q eft [t your chances of developing .dis- | tress are practically nil. H o w- ever, if your wife insists, go along with her to preserve (am- ily harmony. | (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Delien should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) iF ae i gz te 3 : Hie z I z i | Potions And Spices Shakespeare's death, We can assume that by then the apothe- surgery tern un thet early surgeors were barbers. ‘ According to Dr. T.D. Whittet of the University college hospi- tal, London, early apothecaries | supplied drugs and spicery to still the royal household. One of the mourners at Shakespeare's fun- eral was his friend, Phillip Rog- ale and tobacco to supplement lucrative trade in pills, oil of pitch, precipitate corrosive sub- limate, and confection of ros- es." Rogers always was in debt but managed to send his son to Oxford. Dr. Whittet also states that early pharmacists played a ma- jor role in the sale of. tobacco. It was considered a new medici- nal herb and in time the apothe- caries had to increase their stock to meet the growing de- mands from smokers. They also were the first to sell bananas and coffee. A Canterbury phar- macist sold necklaces obtained from the loot of ships wrecked on the Goodwin Sands. > A study of apothecaries’ willis of 1665 showed nearly all were wealthy but frequently acted as though poverty stricken. This | was understandable, because they also sold poisons. Centuries F. Fe 4 i; “Tf She BEF a8F A llae tgecd? i ays % i : a afi f ! i i : i rf German-British Relations By Harold Morrison Canadian Press Staff Writer ond World War. A summit con- | ments have suggested Bonn ference between their leaders | feels the British proposal is may achieve little to improve | merely a cage to contain Ger- ; man nuclear ambitions without In (fact, the talks between | giving Germany any major Prime Minister Wilson and | authority in the @frection and Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, control of Western nuclear strat- which open Sunday may tend | egy. to emphasize the differences | DISTRUST BOTH WAYS rather than remove them | 2 | Bonn is reported to distrust « In exaggerated form, a politi- British political motives, espec. more interested in working out depicts ‘Wilson in a tattered (a close relationship with the soldier's uniform pleading un- Soviet Union, even if this successfully for a hand-out from | means adopting policies i- wealthy Chancellor Er- | mental to Germany's welfare. hard to help pay for the British _ On the British side, Labor: army on | party spokesmen have more Bavarian lederhosen are | than once voiced fear of a re- : § 2 z E 3 hard’s ri bulging with surplus deutsch- | armed Germany and what marks a happen to Europe and world if Germany ever QUEEN TO VISIT ie crac Gormaay over et This is the first British-Ger- | put ‘the nuclear bomb is man leadership meeting in three | thrust aside for the .moment. years and part of its purpose The more urgent Wilsen quest is to help smooth the way for | is to get Germany to place more the first visit by @ British sov- | military orders in Britain to off- an ny J saere $0 | oot the ype a century. i 000-man ermy will make ber tour in May. Be-|Gf'the Rhine. cause of.. state . | has i unlikely basic differences be- ‘not “do more then it, 1s, dome tween the two countries will be | and the British government has allowed to erupt. | made clear this is not enough. But since Wilson's trip was | Wilson has promised not to take first planned, the emphasis has | any unilateral decision to re- shifted Originally be was to | duce or withdrew the British ay nay @ ona last ee But there is.no doubt he vary Bonn will emphasize the possibility ministration on accepting the British concept of an Atlantic | result may be a . | Buclear force as successor to ' German-British relations. 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