2 ‘Bovers Prince Edvard Islend Like The Dew - : W. J. Hencox, Publisher . of mailing cheques for their water bills every quarter, will just have to hike out theré or find themselves in default. Winter or summer, .rain, ~ Too Little Thyroid oo By Arch The major powers who urged Thant Makes Decision _ MacKenzie _ Canadian Press Staff Writer Wallace Ward Frank: Walker leet or shine, they’l] have no option. to strengthen the UN peace. Managing adios : Editer , Be, Ht P By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen -U' Thant to stay on as secre- | keeping devices. : - Published every week day morning (except Sum . So the Commission has ordained, An underactive thyroid is a | tary-general of the United Na-| While the Soviet Union was day. end peters Y ar» at 165 Prince aT +—with high-handed- indifference to the- onan ue ¢. bss al in oe tions were often less forthright | better diepoeed to U Thant than Gharlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson . elderly. n ciency t providing effective co-op- | to either of his predecessors Here c, or Sammerside, Montague, Alberton | predicament of older people especial- correniad Wik thereld. aniract ecard we ere eulhee canes | and Souris. 3 Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894, Montreal i "versity 65942; Wesiarn Office 1030 West Georgie 4 Vancouver MA 7037. we “Member Canadian Daily.Newspaper Publishers | Aissociation atid The Canadian Press. The Canadian Bess 1s exclusively entitied to the use for repub ation of all ‘news dispatches in this paper qe to it or to the Associated Press of Reuters avid also the loca’ naws puolished herein. AN right or repuolication of special diroatctite here In slso reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. . $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and arees not serviced by ‘carrier: $15.00 » year off island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth.. i -Not over 10¢ singi@ copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1966. A Basic Issue Whatever settlement eventually accrues to the railway, unions from ~ the strike which disrupted the na- tion’s business this week, there is a widespread feeling that it should never have been-permitted to happen. It is worth examining, in this connec- “tion, the federal government's atti- 640 Cathcart Street Uni — ly, who may énjoy a little walk to the suburbs occasionally but who see no reason why they should be obliged ‘to do so every so often, at the dictates of civic bureaucrats. No ex- platiation or apology has been given for putting them to this inconven- jence. Indeed, the change went into - effect early last month and this month’s water bills are still addressed from the City Hall. Those who go there to pay up are being informed, ‘politely, by other officials, that they have no authority to receive the money. Nor is there any place, ap-" parently, where. payment can be made except where. the Commission has chosen to betake itself. The office of another big utility, that of the Telephone Company, is much more conveniently situated yet for years this company has made provision for its customers. to pay their bills elsewhere-—at a drugstore farther uptown—if they so desire. The same practice, we understand, is pu |trouble getting vigor often returns. Some auth- orities believe that the product also has a tendency to retard the aging process. Hypothyfoidism is not always easy to detect. For this reason metabolism and blood tests are suggested whenever there is the slightest clue that the organ is ‘}lazy. Fatigue, the most frequent manifestation, begins so insid- fously it may go.undetected for months or years. The victim has Started, in the morning and in time finds he has to push himself to perform the daily tasks. Others lack am- bition or feel drowsy. most of the day. They find it difficult to withstand the cold; each suc- ceeding winter appears to be more severe than the one. More clothes are needed keep warm, and the thermostat is given an occasional..nudge to overcome the chilliness of the room. An inadequate amount of the thyroid hormone also. impairs feet, which are cold despite. all protective. measures such as woolen socks and gloves. There is a tendency to gain, -weight even though the diet rémaina the same. Co-existing signs in- clude indigestion, flatulence, va- gue aches and-pains, and stiff- 4 the circulation to the hands and | U Thant's statement of inten- tion to quit. Nov. 3 after a five- year term stressed in particular his deep opposition to the war in Viet Nam. . The scholarly Burmese state: man was the first non-European to hold the problem - prone job, succeeding Scandinavians Trygve Lie and the late Dag Hammarskjold. His statement Thursday could be read as a rebuke to those nations whose policies can dic- tate the effectiveness of the UN. No better recent example. ex- ists. than the UN success in halt- ing the fighting last year be- tween India and Pakistan (whiefly because the United States and the Soviet Union for once cast-their united weight in t direction. GED TO CONTINUE U Thant in the last year, mov- ing from capital to capital to take’ soundings, was urged on ‘all sides to take another term. His advice and his objectives | frequently were ignored or flcuted. : He and President de Gaulle of France could see eye to eye on how to achieve a Vietnamese settlement, a formula requiring U.S. ‘action. But France. still nurses its suspicions of ‘the UN to the UN's near-bankruptcy. Moscow also halted all efforts, publicly at least, to intervene on the Communist side to get the Viet:Nam war stopped. China for its part abused U Thant freely, refused to let him enter, last year on a peace. seeking mission and seems far- ther away than ever from ac- cepting UN membership~ should that become available. U Thant Thursday was blunt as usual in his views of the Asian war. and the grave threat to world peace. % ~The U.S. has consistently ig- nored his views on the war, which he has called one of the most barbarous in history, and on_working to get China out of its isolation by means of UN. membership. , _“The cruelty of this war and the ,suffering it has caused the people of Viet Nam are a con- stant reproach to the conscience of humanity,” U Thant said Thursday. “Today, it seems to me as it |} has seemed for many months |that the pressure of events is \leading toward a major war |while efforts to reverse the trend are lagging disastrously behind. = : “In my view the tragic error tude on this point as expressed by followed generally, and as a matter 5 ; eo ness of the muscles of the back | as a supra-national body, {g- | is being repeated of relying on Hon. Jean Marchand, Minister -of | o¢ course, in other centres. And why |” : and extremities: Menstrual dis-|nores the limited nuclear test- | force and military means! in a a , orders, insomnia, and sterility | ban treaty and: boycotts efforts | deceptive pursuit for peace." Manpower and former president of | the ‘Quebec-based Confederation of National Trade Unions,. whose long experience with labor unions should qualify him to speak with authority on the subject. = Mr. Marchand castigated those who not, since it is regarded as axiomatic ‘that the public has a right to such consideration? We trust that the Water Commis- ’ gioners will give this matter a little - more thought than they appear to « “TRANMS “Gh war DISNO SNOW WHITE AND. THE DWARFS OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson may occur. Anemia that fails to respond to iron and _ liver. shots May be associated with a -short- age of thyroid secretion. Hypothyriodism is not always this obscure. A small percent- of individuals develop myxedema, which is easier / to detect. Puffiness of face, eye telephone callers is news that s be spread around. Even ~ Getting Their Number Vancouver Sun. The vulnerability of erank jtheir kicks so cheaply. Once fon have their number, more- over, these nuisances surely can have done. They may regard it as in- lids, and tongue occurs. and |if prosecutions can’t-yet be con-.| be silenced by plain old-fashion- would have the government to inter- - vene at the first threat of a railway strike. This, he said, would have abridged the rights of the workers. Their. right to strike was a sacred one —taking it away could result in a dangerous precedent. It was “the | most fundamental of democratic tights,” and no one should think of tampering with it. : ~-Yet the minister went on to say;— and emphatically, that it was not pos- sible in Canada to allow the country’s economy to be paralyzed by a rail- way strike. And he, of course; was responsible along with his colleagues for introducing the compulsory back- to-work bill which is now law: How are we-to reconcile these con- flicting statements? It seems obvious, gs the Montreal Gazette says, that the. system followed doesn’t make any lowed to strike, in the sense of with- drawing services until an agreement «4s reached. They never have been, and never can be granted that privilege. As soon as a strike begins, Parlia~ ment) will always be called into spe- cial session .and—it--will _pass—emer-—_|— gency legislation to bring it to an end. As part of this legislation, some form of settlement is imposed, whe- ther by arbitration or by other means. "Why prate, then, about the “sacred right to strike”? Such a right is only | respected when it is allowed to con- ‘anue to its uninterrupted end. In the railway workers’ case this would im- pose intolerable burdens* on the country, and public indignation - would rise so high that-no govern- ment would dare-permit it. When rail 2 “a es happen, they will always have to be_stopped in their tracks. What to begin, and-then imposing a settle- - ment, instead of pening machinery for a. settlement without_a strike? | No one undertook to pose-this ques- tion, let alone to. answer it, in. the parliamentary debate. Yet it goes to the root of the whole matter, and is uppermost in the public mind. A good time to ponder its implications would be over this Labor Day week- end. ---Hard-On Shank’s-Mare— ‘Every family in Charlottetown is a customer of the City Water Commis- sion and dependent on the service it’ provides for one of the prime neces- sities of life. Whether they are in ‘humble circumstances or not, they have to see that their water bill is paid regularly, and the Commission is expected to be concerned about | seeing that this obligation is met with as little inconvenience as possible. To the public, we mean, not just to it- self. ; Heretofore“ there was no conflict of views on this subject. The Com- mission’s office, being centrally locat- ed in the City Hall building, was about as easy of access as could be desired. But now the office has been removed to-Kirkwood Drive, a mile or more fromthe centre of the city; and that not inconsiderable number ,of ratepayers who do not drive cars, “and can’t afford taxis, and’ who either haven't got bank accounts or don’t wish to draw on them for the purpose consequential, but some of the voters who put them there are expressing quite different opinions on the sub- ject. > - Lunar Orbiter Report - The moon, it seems, is not round after all, much as its rotundity has been taken for-granted by genera- tions of earthlings. It is pear-shaped. ~ At least so say the space experts from Langley Research Centre in Virginia, ‘who are in charge of the Lunra Orbi- ter spacecraft that has been orbiting the moon and taking picture for two weeks now. “7 way workers have not really been-al— “{s gained;-therefore; by allowing trem—|- et nen It is not odc shaped enough so you would notice it, they told newsmen. It bulges a quarter of a mile at the moon’s north pole and is. depressed about the same amount at the south pole—with a bulge at the equator =too=But_with- ius of the moon being 1100 miles—a quarter of a-mile— is just not visible to the eye. Any. more, presumably, than the pear- shape of the earth would be notice- able to the man in the moon, if he existed—a fact which — earth-orbit- ing spacecraft had already disclosed. ‘Why this is-so—both of the earth and the moon;’Dr. Floyd Thompson, “director at Langley, and his associa- “tes, do not feel qualified to say. They figured out this irregularity in the moon’s features by gravitational studies, which was one of the princi- pal purposes of the orbiter shot. It is imperative that both the gravity and any changes in the moon’s gravity at various spots be known before: men are landed there. : With the picture-making phase of the orbiter probe now over, scientists claim they have learned more from this operation than \p the previous 50 years of study ofthe moon. And - from all the moon-gazing that lovers and poets have been doing since the . dawn of time, apparently. Right To Road Space A spokesman for the Ontario Safety League makes the point that every- driver has the moral right to as much» road space~as is necessary for safe travel. But he seldom gets it when traffic is thick. Cars_ consistently : press so close behind each-other that a sudden application of brakes will inevitably lead to a rear-end collision soinewhere along the. line. It doesn’t take anything more unusual than a dog running on the roadway to start a chain of braking that can result in smashed front-ends, and whiplash- ed necks. But to come back to the Ontario of-_ ficial’s argument. Every driver has the right to an adequate protection space behind him. If you steal that space, you imperil him, you iinperil yourself, and you imperil the cars be. hind vou. Further, the loss from a | collision is not confined to the cars ; actually involved. Even a minor rear- | end collision in rush hours delays hundreds of other motorists, robbing them of time, temper and gasoline. When driving, says this authority, do everything you can to avoid being robbed of safety space by light-fing- ered—or should it be heavy-toed?— fellow travellers. Do everything, that is, except keep your hands in your pockets. Hon. Allan MacEachen, now Minister-of Health-and Welfare, has just been honoured for his services to Canada in his prev- ious post as Minister of Labour: -Acadia University, in his~ native province of ‘Nova Scotia, award- . ed him the honorary degree of Doctor: of Common Law: the citation said: ‘His achievements in the. settling of major labour 7 Labour —Code—-through —Parlia- ment, and in establishing the first Service in North America mark him out as a constructive states- man of. unusual gifts.’ His un- usually high ~< qualities have + swept him to the eminence of being one of the closest advis- ers to the Prime Minister, es- pecially -on economic matters and.-on parliamentary strategy. He is the author of the concept of a*minimum pational income for old people, rather than-the across-the-board incfease in the Old Age Pension. HARNESSING to-harness_the power in_the for- ty-foot tides, in the Bay. of Fun- dy. At last, in this age of atom- ie’ power, a Canadian govern- ment has given official status to this old ‘dream of cheap power. The Department of Mines and Technical Surveys is offering a salary of*$25,000 for someone qualified_to_direct-and_co-ordin-: ate a staff and consultants who will explore ‘‘the engineering and economic feasibility of tidal power developments in the Bay of Fundy.”” As .an_ interesting footnote, this moon-reaper will be paid’ the highest salary. in the department, $2,000- more cra the Deputy Minister him- self. ae A BEAUTY QUEEN?-~ - The Capital is enjoying its own private little ‘‘in’’ joke, as a newspaperman and a world-fam- | ous author conduct a public de- bate on “the ten most beautiful women in official Ottawa.’’ The | newspaperman feed off, nomin- ating five foreign women in the | diplomatic circle, two cabinet | disputes, in steéring the Canada~ Manpower Consultative” Here And There On Parliament Hill about “‘official’ Ottawa; he dip- lomatically. named his wife and his temporary employer's wife.’ As a fringe benefit for. his ef- forts, he received a bottle of di plomatic champagne from. one of his beauties who apprec this accolade. 5 DRAINING U:S. BRAINS In an unusual move to make the brain drain flow™in reverse, ‘frorh ‘USA to Canada, the Tor- onto Board_of Edueatio#i-has-ad- vertised in a New York news- paper for attendance counsell- ors and social workers, in the | Salary range $9,289 - $11,856 and with such fringe benefits as-four weeks vacation, and car allow- ance.- The qualifications sought are a Master's Degree in Social Work and — this will jolt the ad- vocates of bilingualism — fluen- cy in the Portguguese and Gre- cian languages. ae PEARSON PATTERN AGAIN Approximating to the Pearson 4 jiated - patter of a 30 per cent wage boost, a technicians’ union in the Canadian Broadcasting Corpor-_ ation is seeking a 27 per cent wage boost over a 3-year. con- tract. If this pattern is conced- ed for..one:-union, it will follow throughout the whole CBC staff. ‘organized .and otherwise. By. 19%, this would represent an in- creased burden on Canadian taxpayers of $82 milion per year;— total -subventions: paid last- year by the taxpayers to the CBC — that is, over and above its commercial earnings — were $99 million; this year they will be $113 -million. Can Canadian taxpayers afford an extra $82 million on top .of that already soaring cost? Obviously the CBC needs competent and courageous top management, which would effect economices. jby slashing the empires within the CBC, starting with> its head . office There’ will over the world because the Unt- |ted States has. not found it pos- sible to spend any more money | on_-Mohole. Some of them will | be scientists, and _some_of them will be those who believe that. crossing a great frontier is still the most exciting adventure in the world. ._Mohole- ‘would. have been_ one of the great explorations of all time. comparable to the. voyage ‘of Christopher’ Columbus to |New world and to the thrusts of | Russia and the United - States | into space. For instead of look- jing up or sideways, Mohole was | going to look down, into the | heart of thé earth that gave life its being. Mohole was going to be a hole off Honolulu that went six miles through the ocean and the earth's crust to the core of this globe. The earth’s crust is much thinner under the ocean than un- der land, and penetrable. A spe- be mourners all _ /for--medicare, ministers’ wives, - one: } Lcial. drilling bit was to be used director _of ia Sata. ane | that would bring up nearly two- ~Gallery and’the wife of the Chief yinch- cores “of the‘rock-and- other of -Protocol. : : materials through which it pass- The author, Nicholas Monsar- | © Without disturbing their strue- rat, in a witty letter to the news- | UTe paper pointed out that this sel. The U.S. National Science ection indicated the urgent need | Foundation believed that a study so that -a half. | of these cores could tell how | blind and presumably ‘almost | dense the crust is, how fast heat deaf journalist could receive |and sound waves travel through medical aids to help him distin. | it. its exact chemical composi- Ruish between a female beauty | tion and reaction to stress. Sed- and the back end..of a bus, “'I suggest. you transfer him to Farm Forum and give me the official Beauty Beat. I can do that with my eyes closed — and | would sometimes prefer to,” | was Monsarrat’s cut, which in- | evitably-eaused: him:te-be=chak ~~ lenged to nominate his own ten top beauties.. He too could only ‘name five’ Canadians, .and relied heavily on the ‘diplomatic com- munity: disregarding the rule Our Yesterdays (From: The- Guardian. Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO _;_ September 3, 1941) Berlin was shaken by enor- ™mous explosions. in a long at- tack delivered by the Royal Air Force units. Tensely awaiting the approach of.a Uniied States tanker= with | £asoline for Russia, the Japan- ese nation heard a solemn warn ing from Premier Prince Kon oyo that Japan faces the grav- | est crisis in her history TEN YEARS AGO iments on the sea bottom, it be- | staff. Meved, might contain secrets of the early evolution of life as far back as 1,800 million years. Be- neath the sediment presumably lies_the- ocean. floor, preserved. as when it was formed: its com- position might provide clues to the origin of the earth, and even to the nature of the surface of the moon, which was formed at the same time as the earth. Plunging through to the core, the scientists thought they might derive such knowledge of the activities of earthquakes and voleanie eruptions as to be’ able to predict them, and thus to take precautions that could cut loss of life such as that which shas just been suffered tn Tur- key. % - But Mohole fs not to be. The U.S. Congress has stopped it, so to speak, in mid-bore. Some $40 million spent on preparatory work will be largely wasted. Congress has decided that other Priorities — Vietnam and space exploration — need the $127 mil- lion_that was. to push. Mohole deeper ‘into the secrets of the’ earth than man has ever reach- ed before. The United States has is rea- sons, but it is a sad abandon ment ‘of one of the"last great ad- ventures, and it invites the So- viet Union to lead again. Russia is engaged in similar, geological explorations, and it is going ahead. ; Fateful UN Session London Free Press _The, United Nations General Assembly reconvenéesée™ next month in New York and Canada reluctantly may be induced to accept a seat on the security council. . A At this juncture, this. at best would be an onerous role. It also could be a source of 4cute em- harrassment, However there is ‘ttle doubt ‘that if proferred,- it would be accepted by the Cana- dian governmént, providing aone with prior claim can be found to accept the responsibility. Awaiting the session is an arene agenda cluttered with old. out- lstanding problems such as dis- armament, ithe organization and its peace- that of financing keeping. operations and the pos dible seating of Red China with the vexing question of Formosa, or more specifically the status of Nationalist China, so inter- locked. THE CHINA PROBLEM Inevitably. the war in Viet (September 3, 1956) Stanley Willis of Cornwall! for the fourth time in his cureer as a_contestant in the Queens i negotiate early trade and econ a : \Nam will be to the fore, again China question. Most provocative of all the , Sessional issues, however, like- ‘ly will be those bearing upon the Afriean states, with Rhod- 'ésia in the van. | This area could provide the |Canadian delegation with its ‘most acute embarrassment. Ca- nada has given its support to |- voluntary economic __ sanctions jagainst the white supremacist jtegime.of Ian Smith, has indi- cated that unless those prove effective that ‘sterner meas- ures’? would have to be invok- ed. There is little evidénce that the sanctions now’ in effect can achieve their purpose. CANADA’S’ COURSE African member-states may /be expected to press for dras- 'tic UN action, even to the use of force. i Canada, in council and in as- ‘sembly, would oppose this lat- ter step. The government runs ithe hazard of being accused of inconsistency, of being ‘‘soft” | | skin fs dry and rough. and the ducted. on the basis of traced hair is brittle and coarse. As ‘calls alone, the electronic detec- metabolism falls: lower and Jow- |tion devices now employed by er, mental and physical inertia |the telephone industry are deepens. The majority of viec- bound to-make this sick and in- tims are apathetic and have all |creasingly common. game of they can do to get going. | our times too hazardous for com- Thyroid extract is the remedy, fort. = . and ‘the response—is—miraculous-—-Scientific identification of when the substance is used | voices— which are. said to be as properly. However, accurate ‘individualistic as fingerprings— dosage is not-easy to determine soon may give police the irom because it varies from person to |Clad case against telephone ex- person. Too much induces ner. |hibitionists now lacking. ousness, increased sweating and.| But the tracing and identific- palpitation of the heart, chest |ation of phone pests should be a pain and: diarrhea. Small doses Major deterrent in itself. It has usually are successful in old- |been the anonyniity of tnese sters, because, a rule, the de | creatures with their threats and ficiency is slight. |foukX mouthings and ominous }ed police work. The- telephone industry has | been slow enough to come to tle ‘aid of the harassed subscriber | and accept its own responsibility. | But there can be no doubt that it Now means business. | Housdwives subjected te Tphcted indecencies have at jast “been given a way to strike hack. |A -weapon, however, is of no _use unless it’s used. Out of del- |icacy, some may be reluctant to lair what- they may consider +-their-dirtylinen_in-public._!t'<to {be hoped these are few. The er- | adication of the phone crank is lone of the most worthwhile pub- lic services a housewife can per- form. x ; | } | t ~ NAIL BRITTLENESS breathings that has given them A reader writes: My finger- 2 Hie? nails are very brittle and lack = i luster. What could be causing { The Litt this condition? . F : REPLY Brittleness of the nails may be | : ; + | Big pond, small lake, the caused by. polish removers, nail sathing Goeek't “ate. te polish, or injury. Poor nails also |“ , may. be. due. to emotional _ten- on. water cupped in a sion, a deficiency of protein in ‘ollow~ among the green hills, the diet. and hypothvroidism. | cool haven from summer's heat MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS | ‘erosis considered a disease of |Tediscovering the little youth? ,and with “care and wisdom we REPLY can save them from the foul- This. disdase rarely appears | ing that has made sewers of, our before age 15 or after age 55. _—_.rivers and has ruined so many HAIR-CURLER: -of_our ocean beaches. : A> L:> R> writes: Please send | What. is-such—a—lake? It ds-a me-a_lit-of-foods:that-put-a_very | green shore lapped by — clean. slight wave to head hair? Fresh | clear water. At night it is filled parsley_is one. 1, with stars and moonlight. Dawn PLY ;and it is gauzed with mist. Sun- My mother’s list included | rise begins to lift the mist and. carrots. but not parsley. ; the water dances and glitters as HONEY AND -ULCERS the morning breeze begins to P. S. writes: Will pure honey | clear the air. s help cure ulcers? I eat plenty of | Noon and it is lazy as the it. 3 | damsel ‘flies. along its -shore. | Warm afternoon brings swim- mers to its beaches, and small sailboats make their quiet, lei- a REPLY | No. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— | Use regulated drugs sparing | flies. New York ‘Times and hurry, a priceless heritage. | = lakes. | surely way like exotic butter- | le Lakes” | mer or sailor or fisherman His tensions begin to ease and wash AWAY. Ss | Clean, clear water 1s a solvent | this, at last, as we have come |to know the shimmering re | | treats from beleaguering . pres | sures. ; : invitations, invoices, | statements and all rr ly. ; (NOTE: All: correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should. be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Mlinois.) CHARGE SLAVERY Evening and fishermen quirements. | are out or a last cast or troll. | guaranteed. Sunset fades, but dusk ‘lingers, ”| shimmery with reflected light. | | Then darkness, starlight again, | | moonlight, and the slow lap of | | water at the moored boats. |. Man is not an aquatic animal, . , | GUARDIAN -- PATRIOT. Phone 4-8506 CENTRAL DAR ES SALAAM ‘AP)—P% | but set him down on the shore lice have arrested nine timber contractors: from Kenya raidon_ the ‘Lushot forests: north of here in Tanzania, where youths from Kisii, about: 160 miles west of Nairobi, were handed over to . Kenya :-police Friday to be sent home. Tan- zania already has_ repatriated 38 other youths who formerly worked in the forests. - ~ PUBLIC FORUM ceptionally ‘naive, neurotic..1 prefer to believe that his ‘internment’ in the armed ploitations of the workers are removed from our democratic way of life, labour unions will automatically disappear. Until this happens, although I am not a union member, I will remain thankful that they are well or- ganized and willing to fight for their share of the thriving econ- omy that they made possible. Consumers, too, help the econ- thrive. When the consum: of such a lake and he becomes amphibious,“a“leisurety swim- PRINTERY _ a oer — a i THE. MAJOR TRUST ers cannot afford to consume provokung a discussion of China jon a white government — and lin the context that as long as~jthis extends to South Africa and Peking, remains a non-paritici- | apartheid. County “Plowing Match merged {pant in world councils, there call | Another Commonwealth prime “the winner. be no certain determination of | ministers’ conference on. Rhode- Asia’s course. | sia. will be held next month. Russia and Ceylon’ asreed to | Tragically enough, there ap- It remains to be seen what this_| exchange ambassadors and ‘to |pear’s little prospect that the ‘can accomplish. It either could UN will come any closer than relieve or make more acute Ca- it bas in the past to resolving the ‘nada’s difficulties before the UN x the economy no longer thrives. I suggest aT" TMir advertiser sell some of his stocks and bonde and join us. consumers, and subsequently avoid the harass- COMPANY en 219 GREAT GEORGE STREET, Charlottetown, P.E.L Phone 894-4910 st ment he claimed to be subjected |! to. : 608 Queen St., Fredericton, N.B. I am, Sir, etc, Phone 475-6689 ; JAMES M. LONG | Georgetown, P.E.I. = SSS SSS |