“Street Vancouver MA 7037. _ and alse the loca! news published herein. . PAGE 4 __know what hearings were held,. how 3 3 —-— that the commissions do not report to { Che Guardian » Covers Prince Edvard Island Like the Dew WwW. J. Hancox Publisher . Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every weak day morning (except Sun day and statutory holidays). at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P-E1., hy Thomsan Newspapers Lid Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris : Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advrining Services: Toronto” 425 University Ave. Empire 38894, Montreal 640 Catheart Street Uni versity 45942; Western Office 1030 West Georgis . ». " 1 Canadian Daily Mewspaper Mem! Pisblighers Association and The Canadian Press, The Cankdian - Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of—all” news dispatches in thie paper credited to if or fo the Associated Press or Reuters All tight or republication of special disoatches here In also_reserved. ‘Subscription cate: Not over 40e per week by carrier. $17.00 % year by mail on rural routes and areas not terviced by carrier. $15.90 a year off Island and UK. $20.00 per year in US. and elsewhere outside, Brinsh Com monwealth. * Nat aver 7%e single copy. Member Audit Burean of Circulatinn TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1968. ts Seeking Information | | | | } rns month a group representing these people, and headed by the Cana: dian Chamber of Commerce. wi!l ap proach the government to argue that its“excuse will not stand up. A sub- Mission will be made, suggesting ways and means of setting up a practical system of refunding overpayments. The, injustice arises when a worker changes jobs. during the year. The pension plan requires employers and employees each to contribute an } amount equal to 1.8 per cent of the worker's earnings between $500 and $5,000 a year. But where a worker . earns more than the maximum level, _ his deductions are made at a rate that pays his contribution in Jess than a year—perhaps in eight or nine. months. If the worker then changes his job, his new job is treated, for pension purposes, as if this were the only one he has held during the vear, His new employer—makes— pension ' deductions and matches the worker's Seige eee contribution—even though the-worker- When the redistpibution commis- | has already “made his full con- sions were established to: redfAtt con- stituency boundaries. Parliament was | careful to hedge them against inter- ferencg and dictation from the gov- ernment. Now it is having second thoughts as to whether it hasn't biilt the hedges too high. Jig The trouble started hack. In Jan vary, when Marcel. Lambert, Con- servative member for Edmonton West and a former speaker of the House, handed in a series of questions on the operation of the redisfribution com- mission in Alberta. He wanted to 3 -the, evidence’ was recorded and whether the commission had or would be willing to publish the reasons for "changes it recommended in the rid- ' ing boundaries of the province.’ |; His questions were similar to ones asked around the same time by Dick Bell, Conservative member for Carle- ton, about the Ontario commission. Both were given similar answers by Secretary of State LaMarsh, who said tribution. “The worker ‘can claim a rebate for the extra that he has paid in, when he fills out his income tax form. But neither employer can get a | | | b refund although between them they may have paid. much more than a full vear s-eontribution-—— The Winnipeg paper argues that in this era of automation and computers it should not be hevond the ingenuity: of the government to arrive at a re- payment system, that,would be fair to all. If any one—-individual, firm or corporation—-pays the. government too much money in taxes, refunds are demanded and made. There seems no good reason why this principle should not apply in the case of the pension fund. ‘Continued government refusal do anything to correct this injus- tice’ says the Free Press, “must lead to the conclusion that laziness and cupidity rather than efficiency and— fairness motivate the operation of the © fund.” Coming from a staunch Lib- eral organ, this comment speaks. for itself. : es Way To Treat Insomnia By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen The Denver psychiatrist. Dr Franklin G. Ebaugh believes there is a better way to treat in- and alcohol. mote. slumber, but da not. re- charge our batteries as follows 4 night of natural seep. This in turn reduces efficiency during the day and creates enough ten- sion by nightfall to keep the user awake. Dr. Ebaugh blames the abili- ty of barbiturates and heavy drinking to prevent dreaming. There is considerable evidence that dreaming is essential to re- storative sleep, and dreams are prevented the indi- vidual becomes irritable even though he slept like a baby. This is a.new but plausible theory and time will tell whether it can be substianted “hangover.’’ However. many people dream barbiturate. Pe | Insomnia is closely related to the personality and emotional fight sleep because they -hate—to waste eight hours in a. nonpro- wound up at night they cannot relax. Others seek sleep because ~4¢es-and Cares, These individuals are likely to demand sleeping | “| | somnia, than with sleeping pills | These drugs pro- | |have some world-class athletes name. We just call her ‘Dawn’ - + Hamilton Spectator. | when | t . The toxic after. |- effects of these drugs also.in-,, Traffie cop:. clude irritability, lack of concen- | have a license? after taking a Without one?’ Woman driver: make-up of the individuat—Some hit those*two cars and the hy- | ' ductive state. Many worry about An elderly their capabilities and are 80 q mail-order house.as:' follows “Please send me ohe of the | when suddenly there fell an a- - ~ NOTES BY THE WAY _ Sunday elections are propos- On the other People who get belted around , ‘Im auto accidents woultin't if |ed for Canada. they were seat-belted. — Guelph | hand Europe has them and what Mercury. ieee jhave they-ever done for Eur- ope’?—Windsor Star. A Canadian came third in . what Hong Kong promoters | Guest——"What a pretty called a world’s beer drinking name your maid has!" Hostess championship. You see, we do ,—— “Oh, that isn't her real because she's always breaking’. penne — Galt Reporter, =>. * ; One of the briefer musical | i criticisms appeared in the lo- | The rhinoceros is in danger cal,paper: “An amateur string } ot becoming extinct. No one ouartet played- Brahms here| would want that to happen, but last evening. Brahms lost.’ — | people wouldn't mind if the spe Hamilton Spectator. ‘by ending the old argument as A poll taker in Madison asked |to what the plural should be. — one sweet old lady of 82, ‘‘What | Toronto Star. do you think of medicare?’ She | : a replied, ‘I don’t know, myself, | Pushing ahead, of a Hine in but TI have a friend who tried it |- t, « smartl and she lost 21 pounds.” —Col- yanhenday ; ssed woman snatched. a can from the shelf and pushed - and "You “So you don't ls dollar to a checker. Lady, don’t | don't mind if 1 get t can't. drive | of cat.{ood, do you?’ she asked | the man at the head of the line. you know that you can't drive “Well, that. explains everything “1¢ you're that hungry, go ahead I thought it was because I was | — Financial Post. nervous and nearsighted that 1 It-was an opening appearance lof the Philadelphia Symphony | Orchestra, his most majestic The musie was crashing and. thunderous, drant."" —.Galt Reporter. tavimet wrote toe | .,¢ies were reduced to. one, there- - with Stokowski at © | Rasoline engines you show {f- # relieves them of responsibili- | Page 787. and if. it's any good | |T'll send you a cheque.’ In ‘time he received the following |}-brupt-and complete silence, be- in the music. Out of the stilly ginning a brief but absolute rest_- OTTAW _NO WAY TO TAP A TREE A REPORT By Patrick Nicholson A Row That:Had Long Been Incubated days, and each day had five rings: the Commons, the Mun- singer inquiry, the Landreville inquiry, the Broadcasting com- committee. Among switched - on hack- new-—-committee--on— the government, so that it has no rec- ords giving the information sought _._.dn_the-questions.-A—similar-—answer~-- also was ‘given to -a query about the cost of advertising the commissio reperts in newspapers. i These answers were denounced by Mr. Diefenbaker as ‘‘arrogance” and * Mr. Lambert claimed—they—were a. rude response to a legitimate request. Mr. Bell said they were also incorrect, because he had discovered that the _ cheques to pay the bills had been is-. sued by the comptroller of the treasury, who is responsible to the | _ minister of. finance. Last_week Mr. Lambert sought to bring the issue to a head on a question of privilege. but was ruled order on—technical grounds, - - However, while Speaker Lamour: eux found the members couldn't make a case of privilege on the failure to get information, he suggested they might be able to take if up as a grievance. Prime Minister: Pearson __Said-he- would. make _a_persona]_re- = quest to the commissions to answer the House inquiries. If these courses fail, recourse may be had to the com- mittee system. Under the new rules the estimates of the secretary of state —which include money: for the redis- tribution commissions—is now before a Commons committee. Since the com- ~-mittee has power to call witnesses on any part of the estimates## should be “able to get the answers that way. As noted by a writer in the Ottawa Journal, the issue underlines the vex- ing problem of members of Parlia- ment in prving information out of federal agericies and Crown corpora-- tions. It is particularly annoying, they claim, with the commissions which get all their money from parliamentary grants. But after all, it is Parliament that makes. the ground rules and_ it should have the foresight to provide for such contingencies. “Laziness And Cupidity’’? Noting that the federal*government “has heen collecting Canada Pension Plan contributions for four months now, the Winnipeg Free Press calls. attention to the fact that still nothing has been done ahout overpayments made into.the fund by employers. The | “amount of such overpayments ‘is. esti- mated by employers to be in the neighborhood of $30 million this year, although this figure is challenged by the government. What it doesn't chal- lenge is the fact that.overpayments are being made under the: plan, and: that it intends to go on pocketing a nape pinlpaaeecieagesd these sums heeause, as if maintains, « refunding them would he too.compli- cated and would cost more than it ~~ would he worth. ~ Naturally, emplovers are protest _ ing industries in which there is at large turnover ‘of workers in the course of the year. particularly those ‘ f€ setting for the development of in- --imagination. Highways Of Tomorrow Our Trans-Canada Highway was “built on the assumption that it would provide for Canada’s motor traffic needs for years to come. But the pace which the United States government terstate highways suggests that we may be only at the beginning of the problem in both countries. In the U:S., some 21,000 miles of the 41,000 network of expressways connecting the states have been com- pleted. All of it is scheduled to be finished by 1972. It-will link virtually all the nation’s major population centres with high-speed, multi-lane, limited access highways. Then will come the start .of another type of highway that In studving the probable needs of the next 20 vears. American engineers are proposing super-expressways with a speed limit of 100 miles an hour; 120 would be permitted for passing. | Called_the‘Century,.-the-first-such: highway would run between Washing- ton and Boston. Old. cars would be barred from ~Centiry, and cars entering the\ new highway would undergo a safety test. Drivers with bad accident records would not be admitted. : Automobiles will enter. the super- “highway via a “slow” road. with a speed limit of 80 miles per hour, then take a ramp at 90 to the full-speed “chute” with flat shoulders and no ditches. culverts, or poles to hit. Electronic sensors in the road will sound a warning buzzer in an automo- bile if it annroaches the car shood too closely. When a car starts slowing down, warning Nights on its soot will flash and a buzzer will sound in the vehicle behind it-to reduce the danger . of rear-end collisions. é As explained by a National Geographic News Bulletin, the Cen- tury could open the way for fully automated highways. Under a system already tested. electronic circuits buried in the’ road would guide vehicles and control speed; distances between cars. breaking. and steering. EDITORIAL NOTES __ From the medical journal “Lancet” comes this frank advice: “The sim- plest way to prevent a cold is to eat plenty of onions and garlic. Not that this has a direct effect on the virus, - but it keeps people away, among them those-who- are infectious.” ‘ * * Moforists are warned hy the Cana- dian Highway Safety Connell that car bon monoxide poisoning can be just as deadly in the warm months as dur- ing ‘the winter. The fumes have no odor, it is pointed out, and even when a car's windows are open they can ac- cumulate) unnoticed in sufficient strength to result in death q | professor almost staggers the ing, Films and Assistance to the _on_ the culture council _is_an_elo- quent commentary on Two of Quebec's three ‘new Li- beral wise men are members: Gerard Pelletier, who is chair- '-man, and Pierre Elliot Trudeau and = parliamentary | secretary to Prime Minister | ‘Pearson. The four Tory bom- bardiers-with-brains are on it: Eldon Wooliams. Gordon Fair- | weather, Heath Macquarrie and Erie Neilson. The Liberal ex - Minister of Culture, Maurice Lamontagne, is of course qn it: of no-nonsense, -Ralph Cowan. Sociatist—newspaperman-— Bar ry Mather is a member, so is the socialist MP who was law- ver to He! Banks,. David Lewis. Saskatoon's forging-ahead rook- mittee and the contraceptives. hench MPs, membership of. the ~Broadcasts~ ‘a hearing. ie MP, Dr. Lewis Brand. is a shrill-voiced lawyer. Gilles Gre- | goire. In fact the 25-man com- mittee “is top-heavy with The , Hill's sadliners and brains | CHRISIS FOR SEVEN DAYS | -This new committee started | off ite work at the height of the long-incubated CBC -row. Des- | face. It began to enquire into “its-brains, it -felt-flat_on- its” ployees be 1 Parliament's circus had. five, meniber, .as is the ‘Crediste another seconded, a motion that the employees should he given the rostrum at once. Ralph Co- wan, showing his usual sound sense and Liberal loyalties, tn- dicated that management still has some rights, especially when it‘ is spending the money, and urged ‘that the em- ore management. “What century lone._.with..a_significantly...differ-... manded..-..words..he_.wagild Parlia- | ent emphasis. whether or not. | ment Hill's political judgment. | when their present bilaterally- | LIBERALS DESERT PARTY | most widely used in controlling | at least | the uncomfortable symptoms as- | ¢4 against | sociated with the menopause. | ; the mo- They also are employed in oth- | agreed contracts expire, | should be offered new contracts. | Judy LaMarsh, as fhe minis- ter answering for the CBC let it be kiiown loud and clear that | was at once given to the pro- | | she would like the committee — ‘to talk about any other subject’ they ' rue. | So a vote was called; three Liberals voted their minister's wishes tion carried and the rostrum ducors. Gradually the widespread but taxpayers’ | pills because ofthe belief t hat insomnia lessens their efficiency or because it helps them es- cape reality. z) Still others have a phobia about loss of consciousness. a carry-over. perhaps, of the time when sleeping meant the surren- der of their best weapon of sur- —-¥ival,the-ability_to cope : = = poe ; Improvement oc curs -when-|—The first ever cross- Channel , - and passenger Hovercraft services | ness for the arrival of the 160- learn to live with it. The indivi- | between—England and France dual must appreciate the need | wil! begin on two routes they accept the condition for sleep and not use it for. es- cape.-Most- of us -work eight | do something constructive or en- |p tq, | joyable. The thought of getting | Swedish Lloyd and Swedish Am- ‘out of bed and working often has a soporific effect. _!_,.HORMONE._USES ,Mrs. M.A. writes: Have you ‘ever heard of female hormones Arts is the ‘‘with-it’ status sym- | the dismissal of some CBC pro- ‘ do you think you are living in?” | being used m cases other than bol. This disproportionate focus ducers: not, as it should have the socialist David Lewis ‘de- | cancer? later sieveiasisgatjenabeisiadiate REPLY | Yes. These hormones are ‘er glandular disturbances. TANNING LIGHT SKIN A-reader writes: with very light- skin develop a | under the sun, during the few | shallow emotion about Seven gintan? | days when the management of ‘the CBC was holding its regu- ‘Jar meeting with its board of di- | rectors. After this meeting, she hoped. the committee would in- but so is the Liberal high pkiest | vite CBC management to ap- | pear before it; and then those -MPs—representing the financial | supporters of the CBC - you and me - might, if they thought it desirable,—give- the employees But one Liberal proposed. and Mixed- Feel This year's 900th anniversary of the Norman conquest of Eng- | land seems to be producing a few split personalities in the {s- | land community .of Guernsey. _..Chhannel. Island $= 2c Although now firmly wedded to. Britain. Guernsey once was | part of Normandy in France. Some of the 41,000 don't want to forget it. By a—quirk-of history; Guern- sey hecame a dependency of the English crown not because England acquired jurisdiction. over it but because the Nor- mans defeated the English at Hastings in 1066. : Soon afterward Normandy's King William incorporated the Channel islands with -his Eng- lish territories. | ~ Hotel ‘Souvenirs’ Ottawa In the first 10 months of its ; operation. New York City’s Am- | “ericana ‘Hotel Inst 38.900 demif- asse spoons,{18.000 towels. 532 silver coffee pots, 15.000_ silver finger howls and 100 Bibles, among other things, according | to a New York report + ° The director of catering for the waldorf- Astoria reports | that hotel's silver replacement , bill for a year s $100,000 and | that ‘If we have a banquet for 1,000 we can figure on losing 7M demitasse spoons.” The high figures may surpfise but the fact -of ‘swiping’ (so (From The Giardian Files) | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | Tee tN OW Oe LER e The British garrison at Tobruk ! ‘counter-attacked the Germans }-and-- Italians, throwing them partly out of the fort's outer de- fences. | Major. T.E. MaecNutt “was Te elected president of Free | pensary of Charlottetown, ) TEN YEARS AGO (May 3, 1956) | Dr. William Cone. one of the | world’s leading brain surgeons, died in his office at the Mon- | freal Neurological Institute in | Montreal “ i Reginald MeCarville was ap | pointed to suéceed Len B Doir on as. Managing director of the | P.E.I. Credit Union League. ‘ ngs In-Guerns sociated Press : Now the Island's parliament islanders | -| love.”” : Que Yesterdays. | Dis- ey |—or most of it—wants to mark ‘the 900th anniversary of the conouést by minting a new coin | worth 10 shillings ($1.40). --/-On-one-side- will be-the head jof Queen Elizabeth 11; on the | other King William the Con- queror. : ' periencing mixed feelings ! Said a member nt the island parliament, Cecil H de Saua- marez: ‘I don’t think we should | think of the Norman conquest ‘in connection with this anniver. | cele- | ‘sary. Rather should we Some of the islanders are ex | Days subsided. The tide of pub- lie opinion, indicated by letters reaching MPs, turned. The powerful drive to ‘‘Save Seven | Days’ -- how much was it inter- bnally inspired? - ran_out of . ‘steam; sympathy swung to “management; and sentiment supported the soundly | bandwagon, of the average Ca- 'nadian who wants to ‘‘Save our | | know: why my. throat becomes that Scotland's total of electors, children’’ from the horrors’. and _ vices weekly exhibited on . the controversial program. | But in front of the committee. —the—-producers went on~and--on- and on, talking about themsel- ves.and their creative ability and the frustration of the bosses giving them orders. Long after outside -observers had deplored the puerile exhibition the power- | ful commiftee was making of | | itself, its -MP--members—at- last- Pbhegan to ask what they had done to deserve at tedium: Fven David Lewis enough. MPs on and off the committee wondered why $18.- 00 a vear statesmen were in- volved in an internal hiring-and | firing row Pay Now | brate the island's 900th year of | ' allegiance to the crown and people of England. whom we Journal much nicer than “stealing’’) from hotels and public places of all sorts is not surnrising. It its done in this country by -people who. would nomore_ad | mit to being thieves than they would to being murderers. There seems to -be a de- | spread feeling that visitors to hotels and restaurants are entit- | led to souvenirs, as if ashtrays. silver or towels room. are not much different fram those who, .instead of taking | things, merely break them. | The general lack of respect for property ‘other than one’s away cigarette butts in buildings face a wall or door. People are funny, it {8 said ‘Rut sometimes it’s hard — to | laugh. POLICEMAN SHOT CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. (AP) Two policemen were beaten and one was shot three :times with his own gun Saturday when a ' moh tried to prevent them from arresting a motorist for: speed- ing in this Long Island commu nity - The motorist was struck in the ankle by a bullet The wounded = policemans compan fon. pulled a Derringer pistol concealed in his’ jacket and drove -off the mob. With mare Englishmen having insured themselves. through government and private pro- grams, for what they consider will be the necessities of retire- had had | emerges in the vicinity of the | i REPLY | Its difficult because the’ skin pusually burns rather than the statement by Dr. Samuel | less browns. Graduaj exposure may. | do it along with the use of a sun- tan preparation. The methoxsal- “man ever sees is the high road | en drugs stimulate pigment _and_ that jeads-him-to—England- And} hana | promote tanning in fair skinned he could have added to Canada | | individuals. TWILIGHT THROAT - Mrs. G.O. writes: Do you sore as soon as it gets dark? It is.all right during the day. _ + REPLY - ‘= Tebe honest; no: Persons who- | talk all day are likely to. have a | husky, raspy throat toward eve- | ning and the same occurs when | there is prolonged exposure to irritating fumes or dust. FACIAL PARALYSIS R B. A. writes: Could an ear {infection paralyze the face on | one side? ™ : REPLY Yes, because the facial nerve ear. | TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— | Everyone thrives on a word of encouragement. -Golater ” Mitwatkee Journal — The idea has caught on in Its | first three years, with premiums | worth nearly $840,000 already collected by two firms. Five | persons in their twenties have | } I | hours a day and can adjust the |Car Ferries Ltd. and its: asso- | remaining 16.hours to 11:0 W | ciated firm, P. and A. Campbell | | sleeping at the most propitious Ltd., will start a daily service | time. When the person is wor- | hetween Dover and Calais. On | ried and cannot sleep, he should.44. same day Hover Services j Can a-man. } | some 51,00€ since the pollin 1959 | fi | } | ed feminine voice, full- of re- |proach. ‘But’, ft said, “I al- ways fry mine.in lard.’ — Mon- treal Star. ~ : reply ‘Please send cheque. If it’s any good, we'll send the en- gine.’ — Toronto Globe and | Mail : ; eee rvices ~ First. Hovercraft Se _ British Information Services a , Practical experience {n readi.- ' ton Westland SRN 4 in 1968. In addition to operating the Townsend's will also.run_ pleas- ure trips from Dover along the coasts of Kent atid Sussex. . Cost of a day trip on both rou; tes will be 13 pounds return which is equal to the normal | period-return on Townsend ships | Goaratine between Dover and | France. : : The $300,000 SRN6 weighs nine . tons and has a top-speed of 64 knots over Calin water. | powered by a 900 shaft horsepo-. half the present time taken by | wer gas turbine engine and can ships— and the other—service | clear waves up to five feet high ll_take45-minutes.....________.. he SLE OEG eccrine casein All three craft. will be West- | The SRN6 will be a major fea- land SRN 6s, each of which will | ture in the first Hovercraft rry up to 38 passengers. Both | Show which is being held by the services will be confined to |British Hovercraft Association summer operations and are be- | at Browndown on the south coast ing run to give the companies | of England in. June. “ : Taking The High Road There {s still much truth im , Highland clearances by heart- landowners that chiefly Johnson. nearly. 200 years ago | drove Scots from their native that the finest prospect a Scots- | heath, many of them to Nova Scotia, and other parts of Can- ada:— aaa : Now the ready availability of and other places as well. , better-paid work and¥more com- Compilation of the voters’ list | fortable living, especially in for the recent election revealed | England's mild southern areas, | is speeding the depopulation of all 21 or over, had dropped by | a Caledonia the young people too stern and wild. on April 30. i: Two British firms Townsend a company formed by the erican shipping lines, will begin a similar two-craft service be- tween Ramsgate and Calais. The Dover-Calais journey will take. about 35 minutes— about and:by over 20,000 in the 18 mon- ) isle ths-since the 1964 poll — | come the road from the isles. Counting ‘children. the exodus | There are fewer and fewer Scots from Scotland in these periods ; with’ their*hearts 8n the High- must have been at least double lands. the above figures. Most of the:| The cities and bright lights te departees made for England, | the south beckon irresistibly. continuing the accelerated drift | And as the self-exiles strike new south in the last few. years—to } roots-and—enjoy the-greater af- greener~pastures;better™ jobs | fluence of-life-outside* Scotland; and brighter prospects. | they are likely to do their roam- Two centuries ago it was the | in’ in the gloamin’ by car. Pickle Week Is Out Milwankee Journal . ‘Every dog may have his day, {and generally pralsawortty n but not in New York. From now | will cut down proclamations... on.. Mayor John Lindsay has | from more than 300 a year te bravely’ decreed. the mayor’s | about 60.........° office is going to stop issuing Mayor Lindsay's proclamations for most ‘days’ | serve to be copied in city halls and ‘‘weeks" that have received | and state capitols across the them in the past. The mayor has | jand. _ just refused to proclaim nation- al pickle week. The pickle packers are so angry that they new rules de- ” #5 | “Heck, no, lady,"’ he answered he. road to the isles has be-_ - some | to take home | were included in the cost of the | People who steal from, hotels | -own)-is appalling It is-evident-in- | people who carelessly throw | | and in. people. who -take- pencil--- or nail file and mindlessly. de ment life. they now are ‘looking | signed up. ss ; about for ways to enjoy it more. The Times of London notes Some shipping and insurance | that $1,400 today would buy a firms have come up with “The two week, first class cruise for | Vovage of a Lifetime’’ plan. two “on the sunshine routes,”’ This offers a retirement | but asks: ‘What if in the year eruise—or about 91.400 toward | 2000 the ($1,400) would pay lit- one—at a cost of as little as a tle more than a weekend at nickel-a day if you begin sav-~; Clacton?” The promoter of the ing for it at-21.. You may. sign | scheme. replied; ‘One takes up for the plan’much later in , that kind of risk with every life. of course, but the © “policy | life assurance policy, and -one takes a minimum of five years prem- to mature, ~— == : | may always increase the | fums accordingly.” b Robin Excites Britain An American visitor set Brit- cide spraying in its homeland. ish ornithologicak, circles in a twitter recently. A lady in Park- \a few thousand miles off course stone, Dorset, observed a and came to roost on the tight strange-hird with ‘‘a brick red little island to catch its breath. breast’ in her garden, John It seems to have departed Grigg notes in the Guardian of , Erigland now, probably to re- Manchester, ind al An ornithologist identified the bird as an American robin, as familiar to most. Yankees as credit but said to be only the seventh of its kind ever report- ed in England. “ News of this evant” spread on the --ornithologists’ grapevine j and people came from all over the country to have a look at if.” “) tobin is only a robin, not-an‘ or- | nithological freak, and where | sprinkle of DDT spray, not a gabbling wall of curious human their eyes ought to be. x ee SIGN AGREEMENT Grigg says The robin's proud : discoverer started a’ visitors’ (Reuters)—Cambodia and China book and accumulated 260 signa- have signed an economic and wines *, eultural co-operation agreement Why the robin wound up in England is a mafter for specula- | of Gambodian “industrial and tion. Perhaps, like most Ameri- | public works projects China cans. it is an inveterate tourist will help, expand or! equip ce and had declined White House ment, paper and textile facto- ries: and will contribute towards the building of a new hospital and: a faculty of medicine. urgings to .see America. first Possibly it was a refugee from | , the annual Spring wave of pesti- | o «| The mayor isn’t going to do Most likely it simply got blown | turn-to-its native land..where a... | the major hazard is a gentle | beings with field glasses where } PHNOM PENH, Cambodia | covering Chinese aid for a range ; charge the mayor is trying to feo -pickles._because -he—gets into so many of them politically. Parents without partners week operating room nurses’ day, fa- mily doctor. week, alien address |report month and ‘many others will no longer be recognized of- ficially. The mayor even sound- COM Let us design your let- ed-the death ‘knell for Queen || tetheads; bill ‘heads, ,Anna Maria day, This has long brochures, call,us for been proclaimed. but the may- | all your printing or’s aids couldn’t find anyone | needs. who knew why or even who . pi aa et patra GUARDIAN-PATRIOT N.- | away with all days or weeks — ature eee | CENTRAL PRINTERY {ample, he recently proclaimed | Greek Independence day: ; To qialify for a ‘proclamation | ‘ an organization must be local, | PHONE 4-8506 reputable. authorized... sizable : Kids! The Pumpkin’ Contest closes to- morrow—see your school bulletin board. for details. You may win tickets to | oo eenenpe eaissbapabasnnaino Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater! See it Satur day, May7 Confederation Centre Shows at 1:00 and 3:30 p.m. Children—5Ne; Adnits—81.00 night othere came a high-piteh:¢ 1