e a a ~ Managing Editor * Street Vencouve MA 7037. . t Covers Prince Edvard Island Like The Dew Ww. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Editor Published every week day morning day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince ' Street, Charlottetown. P-E.|., by, Thomson Newhparess ie: Branch offices at Summerside, Mlentagve, Al and Souris Represented nationally by. aideaan Newspapers Advertising Services: ‘Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894, Montreal 640 Cathrart#-Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The. Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for papel i e P| | | lication of ‘all news dispatches. in this pap credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and alsc. the loca! news published herein. All right or repubsication of special dismatches “here- “In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier’ $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in US. and. ‘elsewhere outside British Com- | moawealth. _ Notlcver 7s single copy. 'hamrber Audit Bureau of Circulation. - PAGE 4. \ MONDAY, MAY 16; 1966, | _The Other Way _ about is our eléctoral system. with all _ the. confusion “it_ causes when rival ~ candidates take the stump, ‘denoun- o cing each othérs policies and_pro- The Guardia (except Sun- * rton > One. of the things we like to beef claiming thetr-own-party’s-messianic— mission to serve our interests. Then, after wéeks of this bombardment, we “have to go to the polls and make our choice, all-in an atmosphere of un- certainly as to whether we've backed the right horse or not. or whether the government that’s-in stays. theré or goes out and there’ ll be changes all around. Elections, we say, are like horse- races; you can't be sure who’s going to win. And if it isn ‘ta federal one that’s popping up it’s a provincial one, or a municipal one, keeping us in a- continual: state of jitters. We all get fed up on them at times. and wonder why somebody, doesn't come up_ with a in it so. we-can watch-it disinterested- ly from the bleachers. The-wheels of the Soviet Union’s electoral machin- ery are grinding and on June 12 the voters there will go-to the polls al-. Pe SaetIV es in Tol? "parliamentary “consti- | tuencies. “Elect” is hardly a fit word for the process, however. The voters will be there—-more than 99. per cent comme TAHT unless they. are. too sickoor “ - in jail; but they won’t-have to worry ada (then. Mr. Diefenbaker) had told about how to mark their ballots: paternal administration. Nominations have already been practically completed. At least, the” leaders have had their names submit- ted—and all without opposition. for the party picks the candidates and the various constituencies have merely to © gg. through the form of- nominating | pre & . “t v them. And when the election is over as prearranged, and parliament meets, it--will unanimously approve any program the party leaders sub- mit. No votes of non-confidence and all that kind of bosh! Most of the | ‘time the policies are ratified retro-_ actively; having been placed in force. when parliament wasn’t~ meeting. What. could be ‘smoother and’’less bothersome than that? On’ the whole,’ however, we'd probably prefer.to settle for our own |. system of voting for whom we darn’ well please. It has its faults, but cat. least we*get a’ run for our money. We'd die of boredom =-under--the Soviet way ef déing thinseaif awe. at ds, for didn*t meet a worse fate, that being “uncooperative, History Passed It By. Remember, the Maginot Line,thut was to safeguard Europe froma Sec- ond World. War? That monument to of the 1930’s and the the futilit: k falliSiRtH of military strategists sur- “underground railroad that ‘brings-t vives much-as it .was at“Schoenen- bourg, France, and perhaps it, is just “as well that it should be preserved for posterity. A New York Times cor: ~~ tesponden nt Visited it recently, and he describes it as one would write of the. ‘Tuins of an age long past. This fort, however, is still in per- fect working. order. Its cannons are ors come—German officers, Amerr gan and Canadian officers, French cadets—and marvel. at both the strength and waste of the structure. Here the guidé, a French officer, rattles off the statistics and reminds them that, to. understand the fort, they must. understand. the epoth.. The border with Germany is still only four miles away,, and the fort's. 75 cannon still can cover it, but near: ly everything else has changed. Over- head, supersonic French jets whip by, oblivious of the border. Farther east, French soldiers train-on German soil and hold joint manoeuvers with their new allies in what a F'rench military magazine says is “the building of last: ing friendships.” : The Maginot Line and this fortréss were designed for a time that had already passed, after World War 1. The construction began here in 1930, and the masonry was completed by ~ 1933: Though the style and concept |_of warfare were changing the Frerich were not changing with it. ‘Bled: white at Verdun, ; ney vowed The next time they would ‘sit in air: | tight defensive positions, let the “enemy “attack and then-shred-them: | ~ But the Germans went north. They __ never attacked the real Maginot-Line. ,more stable scheme for Panning « —— Temi Well,-there’s to be another elec- f tion soon and it wilt be run on just ° --—-such-linesWe-won’t-be participating | Rather, they roared past at speeds. , that astonished their own generals. They took it over after they had won. the war with France, but never really before advancing Allied armies. Be- | fore departing, however, they blew "up the entrance so that the fort could never be used against them. ; But there was no such: problem. Though the French restored what had been destroyed, the fort’s function to- day is not offensive or even de- fensive. It is just a reminder of what -"might have been. - : —=A-Moot-Q ‘Mr. Diefenbaker thas intimated that he will have some comment to Teleeed t -certain—aspects..of_a_report- ed to the press last week in the aNeEe case. It consisted-of a 12- page sunimary made by the Royal Commission’s lawyers of “police re- ports, and it was released by Mr. iJustiee—Spence with the comment: “Tt is not evidence, but it is a handy document.” The summary included a variety of “juicy” bits relating to Mrs.. Munsinger,* notably her asser- + ‘Mr: ay that 1 me Minister of. Can* as a As the Ottawa Journal idly says in this connection, when the due processes of such an in- -quiry look curious to the layman.” True, Judge Spetice- did-ask-the law- -yers (Conservative and Liberal) in the _ Gourtroom whether they had-any ob- and none objected. But objected to the paper would have been said had they release it en that they case. And as the paper would probably ‘not have been released the ' public would never know that the portion objected to was not a ‘‘fact” ported -assertion by a prostitute and suspected spy. ~Had—the commission counsel felt _ that bit of Mrs. Munsinger’s story ,| was. worth showing to the public; Commissioner McClellan could have mark” in’'the* police report, and lawyers ini cross-examination could occupied it. In 1945, they left. fleeing” jection to release of the summary—.-. _were trying to conceal-the facts of the but an unconfirmed, unsworn, unsup-. rapidly, | _ + [ \ | | | | t b } | ete “There ‘are oa | | A t R N © a : oe ‘ o Me caw e © HaAnOi scan ‘ : - rs : a Ne <0" f. < nO hat 6 6 ee : = 9 oe _ 3%. ‘TROUBLE SPOTS BEFORE | HIS EYE OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Care for the. sick, and the , unity of all Christian faiths, were the worthy objectives do- minating a conference of Can- ada’s oldest Order recently “held in Canada’s oldest-white settle- ment. fon ian—men—_and women ‘ail ‘leaders in their com- munities or chosen fields, were initiated ‘into the Order -of Saint | Lazarus at its colourful annual meeting at Quebec City. These Lamoureaux, |France, under the protectorship included + Lucien -Speaker of the House of , Com- } mons; bien, director. - of — Montreal's | “Theatre de legis- | Jean ‘Raymond lative councillor; vice-president of ‘‘Le Soleil” A-F. Mercier, , . Although ultimately ~ driven from the Hely. Land, -this) and similar orders made new homes in Europe. Such were St. Jonn é{ Jerusalem, the Knight of Mal- ta,.the Templars and the Teuto- nic Knights. Saint Lazarus grew into_a_wealthy charitable orga- /nization. In Scotland, it ran a hospital! at, Linlithgow; in Eng- , land: it had an abbey at ‘Burton ' Laziies, until King. Henry V111 ‘suppPéssed all monasteries; in of the Kings, it expanded in pres- Madame—Jeanine—Beau-..tige_owning a large tract of land | n island-city of | tire: adjoining the t ,Paris, still today called district of Saint Lazare. After World War 11, Saint Lazarus was. reinstated in Bri- newspaper; Hugh John Flem- [ ain, “former See uedsR of -New--in-France-and-Spain-—New- baili--er— _maabers: -include- former. ‘Be. ee Rowntree, On- Ma- ““Brunswick, H. -tario’s Mirae of Labour; ‘dame Alphonse Giguere, bene- | factress of the Cardinal. Villen- school’ for handicapped.) children; John Matheson, M.P father of the new .Canadian flag and others. . 2,000 YEARS CHARITY . The Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Je- rusalem, to give it;yits full his- toric name, stems fom a-hospi- tal, founded: by Hyrcan Macce- | beus at Jerusalem—before the. birth of Christ. The twelfth cen- | tury’wars between the’ crusaders | and the infidels im the Holy Land | ¥ compelled the sick—and_staff_in- —————— the hospital to take up arms, this | christian medical brotherhood | thus being reinforced by many sick crusaders from England, | Scotland, France, Italy, and ot- her European countries. PUBLIC FORUM | This column ‘is: open te the discussion by correspondents. of' questions of in- terest. The Guardian does not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of corres. pondents. All letters published are sub- ject to “editing. and condensation where necessary. The Guardian is unable tc enter inte any correspondence regard. ing letters submitted. Z| MORRIS BRIDGE Sir.—I would = like to. draw | “the attention of the contestants been. asked to-testifv-as-to that-re-: . have bréught, out that this’ was..but .. her comment-and unsupported. “If this-inquiry had to be held,” concludes our Ottawa contemporary, | “it was worth holding as much of it as possible in public; but we had not imagined that allegations would be officially made public that were not part of the inquiry’s evidence but Only a ‘handy’ ye of resume of the plot. Handy for whom?” —EDITORIAL-NOTES—— | *- Now it’s the grand old art of sculp-. operative, though empty. The, tiny . shells the two miles from storage t lacks only ammunition and defenders. Its elevators, which descend about 70 ° feet, or equivalent to-the height of six-story building, still work. So do a the giant kitchen built to feed the 600-man: garrison and the complicat- ed ventilator system designed filterut. poisoned it with’gas. The fort is open, as a sor or hving , muselm, an’examiple of how suddenly " the jabhions in war can change. Visit: - ™, - the gun positions still works. The fort 10: bring air in from the outside--and - if by chance the Germans . 4. ture that’s to be* transmogrified in- this machine age. Two Hungarians have invented. an apparatus for taking. all the art out of it. Film taken of a slowly revolving subject is fed into the machine and scanned by a photo-cellsto operate the carving tool on a block of stone. Now it's the Liberal government in New Brunswick that is being crit- icised for mismanagement of its new / fF industrial projects. The opposition’ is demanding a royal commission in-° equiry but a gdvernnient. spokesman ~ made it plain, the other day, that the government was “more interested in establishing profitable industry than we are in. establishing cominis- sions. ‘a rete beige % a of First Queens to the closing. of | Navigation and Fishing on the | Upper Branch of Stanley River. When Morris's Bridge was be- ing replaced --last-summer.-by—a@ dig zShort bridge, fish- | ermen and™ boating. enthusiasts who have always enjoyed the | beautiful stretch of tidal waten “between this bridge and Gunn's Bridge approximately threes’ ~miles inland, -were assured by spokesman of the Provincial }/ Government that a channel six feet deep at low tide would be . -provided through the mud. flat ‘that was bridged, instead of the former channel. G Who is responsible for this not having been dug out, and. what | is going to be done about it? This_rver. has:deep water at j ‘low tide “as’ far up as the Island where sailing ships were con- structed in theglays of shipbuild- England. * Closing this branch of Steins River to pleasure craft and lob ster fisherman, is a bad thing for this.aréa. The causeway has taken away the 360 foot bridge, every inch of which ‘was loved by ardent treu.,.“mackerel + smelt fishermen, including - many tourists, “aswel as Ts-- Janders who lined ‘this bridge. every spring. They -have been deprived of one of the best fish- ing bridges in this .protince That was bad enough, but to -al- low the ‘debris -of broken Ce- ment, jagged: iron_rods, and oid; creosote pilings toylie on top of. the cribwork of the old bridge | and remain underneath the pres: * -ent 100° foot span. preventing the safe passage .of even a. can- .oe at high tide is shocking and deplorable This is in Premier Shaw's dis- tri¢t» We would. like to know if he .will do’ Anything to correct-! thig mistake .. kam, Sir, etc:. \ f ‘ RESIDENT Stanley Bridge | a3) munity, when the SEC announced in Jan-y tain from t “wicks were founded in Canada, Australia, South Africa, USA and here, comparable to the Canadian wing .of Saint: John of Jerusalem, of which: our Gov- ernor General is always___the ~ chief officer. — FOR (CHURCH AND THE SICK Saint Lazarus is_ historically dedicated to the care of the sick, especially those suffering | from skin diseases which ine lier times. were collectively but inaccurately described tas“ lep-— ‘rosy. The Canadian bailiwick of the order assists various lep- ‘ Ancient Order Well Rooted In Canada er hospitals, and giso aids me- dical progress in. Canada, such ghs by financing research at the m edical school of Ottawa_.Uni-~ versity. A perhaps more imaginative objective of this, the only non- | sectarian christian_chivalric or- >; majority Human Viral , L Hepatitis | | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Most of our information about [ human viral hepatitis has been compiled within the last. three | decades. Prior to, that time ’the liver disorder was called catar- | Thal or yellow jaundice and was | uncommon. World War II. sup- plied the spark that made vit a “Major disease of worldwide dit < tribution. Much is known about | ' “| various facets df the condition, *but-research is hampered by our inability to cultivate the | causative virus or transmit the disease to laboratory animals. Approximately 40,000 cases are reported to our health de- partments ‘annually: The exact number varies from year to year and it is estimated that | many cases. escape detection because the disease is so mild a yellow tint-to the skin (jaun- | dice). These persons still are -casriers-and* responsible for * ‘spreading the disease. In addi- “! tion, if they donate: blood. within | a year, the recipient is likely to. develop serum hepatitis. The lat- ter is the same as 4 -jety—except-tha fe Org! nism —Fyecomes unusually resistant to | destruction. As a rule, viral Hepatitis fol- lows the ingestion of contami- nated water, milk, or food. The early manifestations are fatigue | loss of appetite; headache, fever, | Nausea, and abdontinal distress. | Smokers often notice a distaste | for tobacco. .These symptoms . et Hast up to three: weeks followed | by the development ofa I~ ish discoloration of the akin and | the-white part of the eyes. The recover after several | weeks of rest, a nutritious diet, | and. corticosteroids such as cor- tisone. : -sViral hepatitis should “ never be taken lightly. Extensive dam- | age to the liver may take place — | even though the illness-is mild. | This also applies to those. who are ‘not jaundiced, emphasizing puzzling infection persists for 10 t days: -Most a:small perceftage develop a shiranis form of hepatitis which ‘ma progress into af of the liver. ULCER... PAIN 2<60-1c-=-sr “der; is the” Féunification of othe ane ‘S writes: What kind 0 various branches of the Chris-’ tian church - an aim which is now enjoying increasing” sup- port, especially in Canada where - desire to reurs_ | ite ‘the fractured. religion. The Granda Bailif o. this an- cient. order in Canada is Hon — ' Keiller MacKay, native of Pic- tou, Nova Scotia, « One Hero, former judge, anv L widely. respected former: Liew fence Minister Douglas Hark- |ness of Calgary and former Fi- ‘nance Minister Donald Fleming of /Toronto;- Leslie Frost, ex premier of Ontario; Roly Micn- ener, now. Canadian High ‘Corfi- missioner to India; Fred Gar- diner, ‘Mr. Greater Toronfo’’: Bishop Wilkinson; Dr. Charles Best, the co-discoverer of insu-—°' lin, and others. The members *- are pledged to promote the val- uable ‘traditions. and Christian objectives of this long-lived or- der which is now _weil-rodied in | Canada. Vancou -it'sa vr state of afflirs when we have to wait for Washington to provide the lead in guarahtee- |ing added protection for those | Canadians who venture iggo the stock market. The United States has agreed to postpone for a-year new—reg- | ulations that would require some _ _Canadiar corporations to report to Washington on their activi- ties. The U.S. Securities and Ex- change Commission, in effect,- is giving Canada a ‘year to bring in’ its own adequate securities leg- islation. The Canadian financial com- naturally, ~ protested uary that its strict disclosure rules would be extended to any foreign company that had “300 or more U.S.- resident —sharehold- “ers. Tf -any: Canadian. company. sold shares across- the- counter in the US.., henceforth it would have to comply wit ards required of ;: trading von the New. York, Stock E x: change. In this case, Washington NES i right. The Americans: keep’ a much tighter rein ér their stock markets than do Canadians. The SEC. has seen too many Ameri- cans stung by fly- by-night pro- motions operated by high- pres- __We Asked For.lt— the stand- ver Sun 'sure salesmen from those Can- adian provinces that have feeble ' stock - regulations. will at least protect those Amer- icans who buy shares in Canad- ian companies. _ Canada’s laws on_ securities, as everyone knows, are a dis- graceful hodgepodge. Each pro- | vince is allowed to set its own regulations and the lack of. uni- formity encourages abuses. The - Porter commission warned two years ago that known racketeers have been left free to operate within some provinces. despite the’. experienceés..of..others:.. The repercussions of the. Wind- fall and Atlantic. Acceptance scandals have forced’ Ontarin fo | bringin tough new legislation which would compel. ‘co.npan.ts ‘to-make -much fuller disclosures . of. their activities. to~ sharehold- | ers. If Ottawa and the” provinces cannot make stime progress to- ward uniform: regulations. the SEC has made it just as clear that it will slap on its. strict dis- closure rules. come next year. In reaching over the “border in this case to give Canadian legis- | lators a nudge,. Washington is doing a favor for the? Canadian Ca World bi { : * Take If Canada | | won’t police her own activties, Washington is saying, the SEC | | pain do you get from stomach ulcer? ‘REP#Y =The-most common type “burning or- which is most noticeable inch.to_the _right_and — ‘slightly above the navel. Distress occurs | when the stomach is empty, us- ually two or three hours after | eating. Thé takirig of food, bak- ing soda, or other alkali brings qreiel = - Se ABSENCE _OF “SEIZURES R. writes: A man. in his ne ‘suffered - from epileptic at- | tacks up to the age of 11 but not since. He is not taking medicine | ies Is. it ligiedeinthat he cis cur- _?#!. REPLY Yes, ‘but keep. your fingers crossed. Now and then many | years elapse between convul- sions, and it is unwise to be dogmatic at this time. ~ SLEEP POSITION L. writes: Please tell me if it | _isbetter to-sleep_ onthe stom-.. | ach or. the back? REPLY your - choice. It's the sleep: and-not-the-position th at | counts. On the other hand, sleep onthe side if you awaken with | vague backache or other pains. ~~ JOINT FUSION | V. A. writes: What is sacroil- | \iac fusion? : *. REPLY Stiffness of the sacroiliac | joint due to previous infection or injury. Occasionally the fusion « is man-made .via surgery. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Baby should not: be left din the | tub unattended. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed. to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, - Illinois.) Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Fi es) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO: = (May 16, 1941) British land-and air _-forces, taking the offensive west and east of the Suez Canal, were re- | ported. to have’ routed’ German armored-units in western Evznt while carrying out a violent and systematic. destruction of air- | ports in Syria and Iraq. The British island of Cyprus and the Italian island of Rhodes, both directly in ean route to the Mosul oil fields, Peace In'S pace” o Milwauk The French have a sai®g, ._ that Gott guarais the moon from.. “the wolves.’ In this new era that ‘sno longer true. The moon is within man’s reach and man can be more destructive and dangerous than -wolves. With that in mind President Johnson has called upon the world to make some _ peaceful \_agree- ments about the moon and all of } outer space. This fs a matter disctissed be- fore of course. But the. presi- dent's latest call for a world compact. ‘dedicating space to - peaceful: and scientific puiposes has the compulsion of Space_ach- Witt, VISIT OTTAWA TOKYO (AP)—Japanese For- eign . Minister Etstisatiro Shit ina is expected to visit Ottawd4 and , London this: fall to attend an- nual cabinet-level- “cansiiltations ‘with. €anada and. Britain, Tokyo newspapers reportShiina the reports say, would travel: ta Ot- tawa and. London ‘after attend. ing,the United Nations: General Assembly in New York. - ee PoP . ; fevements that contemplate man -4Janding-on the moon well within the-next decade. The president ° would ha ve space minded natighs ‘agree now to ban all military, activity in space and to deny Iunar sover- eignty to all nations. spoken for freedom in this coun- try and in the world. Now he speaks for freedom in space. He feels that ‘‘we should do —whaf we can—not only for ‘our gener- ation but for future generations —to see to it that serious politic- ab conflicts do not arise as the result of space activities." Ambassador Goldberg: is: ex- pected to bring up the proposal for a space freedom treaty he- fore the United Nations space agency and to ask it to draft a plan. Only a decade ago such talk would.have seemed as silly as baying at.the moon. Bul ‘not today. Man s the. capability now. fo get there and, it {s be- ‘lieved, to return. And he had ‘best plan for peace» before he Teaches new ;-spheres . because peace is 9 aaah to trust \ to chance. ‘ ¥ Na ‘ He has | were reported bombed heavily. «i. ‘TEN YEARS AGO (May -16,-1956) It was announced that ‘Robert | E. Platts, son of Mr. and Mrs. ' Everett Platts of Charlottetown, would receive a Bachelor ‘that the victim does not develop | 5,1¢)} Bt there is evidence. in the | ‘crititism of Mao; that some of d Milk: is one of the editerran- | of- f, Red Chine bes In Transition. By Harold Morrison ’ Canadian ®ress Staff Writer F The fact humans don’t live forever suggests China is edging towards a difficult and perhaps critical transitional period’ in- volving her leadership at home and strategy . abroad. At ‘72, Mao Tse-tung. still is the fountain-head of China's po- litical structure. but he shows evidence of -waning physical strength and stamina. Voices of opposition are heard and stilled, only. to be faised again; ques- tioning the :path .the leader has chosen for his ‘650,000,000 peo- ple. There. is. no evidence. of re-- bellion. Many more years may. political | pass before China's leaders féel the pressures of rising consumer appetities, such as those now spreading in’ the Soviet Union for autorhobiles, better housing and clothing: and greater sense of individual the rigidity in the Chinese pee litical system is dissolving. fone at this. stage ‘can’ ae ict | what the. end of the Mao dy- | nasty may bring. ~PERSONALITY* __-- ~ Chita appears half-fearful of, — *Alf-emboldened by events just ~ beyond her tightly -- guarded borders. The big buildupof’ American forces in South Viet Nam has heightened Chinese: concern that - the U.S. may be interested. in finding excuses for invading China. But if the North Vietna- mese can -pgralyse - thé power of the U.S., how much easier it would be for the. better-pre- pared Chinese to suck in, hold and perhaps exhaust all Ameri- can military power. U.S. Cows The nation’s dairyland is ex- periencing, of all things, a ‘short- age-of cows. On. most. American. farms, it 4 the need for liver tests when a has long been as difficult to find a churn as a spinning wheel.. ample cows since colonial days to produce the milk, butter, and cheese that Americans .consume | in such quantities. | In 1965, the Nation’s cow pop- | ““tilation decreased sharply by 5.6 | |percent to 16,600,000 animals — the largest drop in six years. Bottled milk remains abundant, but Midwest housewives. are pay-. ‘ing more than usual for dairy. oducts; — | Two FACTORS : ~Agriculture Department_offic- | ials believe there are two maj- or reasons fof the. present situa- tion: . Some dairymen: have become e discouraged with low milk pric- to stockyards which pay well for beef: Other farmers are selling -land | 'to suburban real estate’ develop- | ers and leaving the soil altoge- ~ | ther to seek hizher- paying sFrpaste | in. business and industry. . One creamery cooperative in Wisconsin._repérts—that_in its area alone 140 farm families have ‘‘pulled out of the busi- ov war. ' “Once in China,” says ia mier Chou. En-lai, “the U.S, will not be able to pull out, ‘however many men it may send over and whatever weapons ‘t may use, nuclear weapons, in- — cluded. “Since the 14,000,000 people of southern “Viet ‘Nam-—can~ cope. with -over — 200,000° U:S. troops, the 650,000,00 people of China ‘can undoubtedly cope with 1,- 000,000 of them. No matter how many U.S. aggressor troops may come,- they. will certainly be annihilated” in China.”’ WORDS UNLY China seems ready to. invite the U.S. to a final’ test but draws back. China said this- week that U.S. planes pene- trated Chinese air space and - | shot down a Chinese plane, but . ‘there was no immediate retalia- | tion. Despite all China says: and despite her advance in nuclear weaponry, China is .unlikely to be easily provoked China is well aware. that | the. air’ and at, sea she is no —Hmatch for American military. power. ‘Her strength-is~in- tand— " into ~ open Aes “masses; but~these-cannot move without food and there is no evidence that her bins are over- stocks or of food surpluses. China is, in fact, vulnerable at homie and abroad... Despite the accumulation -of nuciear knowledge, sheis likely to con- Yinue to hesitate at the brink, perhaps —because. 1e— un- certainty about her own = po- litical transition and Commu- nist party ability to retain full control in time of deep crisis. In Decline National Geographic Society , There is no waste such as a fruit over 650,000,000 people - husk or eggshell: Milk is produc, - “ed -solely--for nourishment, and every: drop: can be used. In its natural state, cow's milk is: about 87 percent water, ims recover, bst. But: there have - always been 4.9 percent sugar, 4 percent fat, 3.35 percent protein, and .75 per cent ash. H contains minute ;amounts of calcium, phosphorus Land sulphur. COLONISTS BROUGHT cows ~The first cows were introduced . to this country by Virginia coly, onists. Strangely, the pilgrims | did, not bring cows on the May- ° -flower’s first voyage .to.. Massa- | chusetts— an oversight that may ‘| have contributed to the. settlers’ ‘hunger during. their first winter in the New World. The governor — sted, thereafter, that a cow actompany every six emigrants. . Today dairying has become a~ | precise science, and farms often ‘complete with gleaming machin- -ery,thermometers,char edules, and regulated temper- atures. Milk is piped directly from | milking- machine to | holding tank to dairy truck. It is possible to ins eurtape-homeegenize;— an d | package milk taken from a cow at.6 a.m. and place it on the city dweller’s - table ‘the same j day. “ness” in the past: few-months:- MAYOR KEPT ee DIGNITY Since milk is so important a staple in the United States, the | stability of the milk industry is always a matter of concern. To’) counter the present decline, the | ) Agriculture Department -recent- ly raised the price-.support level -for—the-milk—used—in—b-uttet,— | cheese, and other dairy ‘prod: | ‘ucts. Agriculture Secretary. Or- | | ville L. Freeman said further | increases would be considered if | the decline continues. ost impor- | ‘tant’ foods consume® by man. | -~LONDON - chamber pot jects to be sol /the auction house. Dated 1818, it was-a fitting from the mayor jof Leeds’ official coach. -ORDER- CLEAN--UPPER— LIP BOGOTA | Colombian capital e.. | their traditional _ long. pointed /moustaches. The city traffic | commissioner ordered them trimmed short or shaved . for | sanitary - reasons. ‘ (A — A silver s among ob- are_ losing | SS SS Yo Mee The Nicest People on a $30 DOWN | EASY FINANCING » Brackley p HONDA™ Sold and Serviced at KEITH CARMICHAEL I Limited Pt. Road Dial] 4-6423 q ERA OF. eee ATTENTION MEMBERS - OF. THE PE. |. TOURIST ASSOCIATION AND. OTHERS INTERESTED An expert in food and beverage service will | be speaking and: demonstrating from 8:00. - |_P.m. Monday, May 16th, . and_will be? available & 6 5:00, —sch- (AP)—Police in the’: ‘by Sotheby’s 3 ra “Science degree in Civil Engitie- ering, at the graduation exercis- es of University of New Brunhs- wick on May 17th.. Wolfville, N.S., for academic | work. He .won the Thomas Dod- © ! son Memorial Scholarship of | $100 for: the sophomore student | of distinction in history or polit- i s ] science and the Ralph Man- g Memorial Scholarship of. . $80 for an outstanding student of the second or third year. i ALLIES PARADE. BERLIN (AP) — Five. thou- ® sand. soldiers—of--the U.S., Brit- lish and French garrisons | marched . before thousands of West Berliners Saturday in the. forces parade Marching units -ineluded tanks of ‘all three . nations, military bands and foot-and mechanized ‘infantry detachments, as well. as U. S. self-propelled (105 howit-. \xers. ‘ annual Allied ‘i, ‘ Basil Phillips won two- schol- | arships: at Acadia University, | for consultation during afternoon and evening, Hotel. — 4 ’ | _ Institute, fselves of either or both be _ dost, t f An illustrated lecture also will be ‘given at the Hotel on Tuesday at 9:00 a.m. to the Wait- - ress Training Cotirse of the*Proyincial Vocations! Those interested are urged’ to a _ tunities, _ which are being made available “ no the remainder of | the. at the Charlottetown am ~ . Fal them- @ oppor- fore vn ‘of these uni W. Gaudet ow : ji Secretary-Treasurer A. “A