ae The anrdinw| Tovers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew Wi J. Hancox, Publister “ t Wallace Ward ae. Walker, , Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, ' Charlottetown, P.E:I., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch. offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally .by. Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894% Montreal 640 Cathcart. Street Uni- versity 6-5942;> Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily. Newspaper Publishers , Association ‘and The Canadian Press. The Canadian .” Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub> lication of all news. «dispatches in. this: paper credited to it or to the Associated’ Press. or Revters and also the. local news published herein. All .ight-or republication of; special dispatches “here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carriers ” $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and aréas 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. — mal + Not ever Je single copy. cir Member Audii Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 4 MONDAY, APRIL. A Shotgun Affair If an early provincial general elec- is-to_be called, which. now seems ‘more than probable, the Shaw govern- «ment would be lax indeed if it did not capitalize on the arrogant attitude adopted in the new Libera! budget at a | accounted for more than a quarter of the value. On the: Pacific. coast, the: tatal catch was over 620 million pounds, valued at $46 million. Salmon _msade up only 14 per cent of the catch by weight, but more than half the value.~ In recent years the cammerctal catch from Canada’s, Lakes and | Streams has amounted to between 110 ‘and 135. million. pounds annually, worth $13 million. But, the Great Lakes are no longer the principal - ‘Y.source ofthe inland catch, with over half now \coming from the Prairie ‘provinces the Northwest Terri- tories. , Only a cat portion of the Can- adian catch is. destined for food con- sumption’ in ‘the home -market. | great deal is exported and as much | as 25 per cent of the catch is proces- | sed to vield fishmeal and oil for the expanding world market in these products. 7 Conversion’ to fishmeal. and_ oil absorbs. almost the entire anchovy. “Gatch off the west coast of South | America and accounts for the signif- icant shift in the uses of, the world catch in recent years. In 1964, these | _ products which are “mainly used for Ottawa to the interests of this Atlanti¢c~ | animal feed, fertilizer and -industrial area. The holding up of the next phase | of our causeway project is a striking _ ease in point. But other interests will _ suffer as well, and this is being noted” across Canada. : The Toronto Star, for example—a - newspaper with strong Liberal af : ings——calls the. -budget::‘a.shotgu: fair’, applying indiscriminately to ne “sw hiolé country Without‘regard to re- gional differences. “It ignores,” it says, ‘the fact that while_so regions, such as Ontario have __ experiencing a boom verging on infla- tion, the good times have hardly ‘touched the ,Maritimes and eastern Quebec, where unemployment. rates remain higher far than in. central Can- ada. In-these depressed areas, the anti- ~-wdtfation budget could be a recession " one.” And The Star’s Ottawa editor, Peter C. Newman, -netes.the lack_of_pro- vision for “shielding those areas of . Canada where unemploy rather than inflation is the mairf problem.”, The fact is, he adds, that Canada’s labor force will increase by 220,000 new workers this year, and not all of them are fortunate enough to-be locat- ed where jobs are available. Another big ‘Toronto paper, the Globe and Mail, noting that “re- straint” was the keynote of: Finanée™|~ Minister Sharp’s budgetary message, asks ironically: ‘Restraint by whom?” And it goes on: “‘Well,the federal government. was going to restrain it-, self by putting off for.the time being 10 pér cent of the construction pro- ‘fects ‘it has- planned for the 1966-67 fiscal year. To put it a bit more baldly than Mr Sharp did, the federal gov- | ernment would prudently refrain from fulfilling some of the promises it made in the election campaign.” “Provincial Liberals may argue that ” federal policies should not be drag- ged into a provincial election cam- paign; that the issue is the provincial ‘government’s -record, not Ottawa's. But we can recall- no— occasion on which the-two levels of governmental policy were so closely interlinked as in this case. The Shaw government's program of expansion, .industrially and otherwise, will be hit in its most ~ vital part by the Pearson govern- ment's “boom-restraining” policies. That our causeway—of .all things— should be included in the 10 per cent of federal construction projects that _are to be held up is almost incredible. The electors will have a right to take note of this in casting their ballots, and. we have little e doubt that —they—will-de 86- Qn The Increase ‘Of prime concern to this prov- {nce, and .to the, Atlarftic area gen- erally, is the growing evidence of the importance of the role which fish and * fish products will play in meeting ‘future demands for high-protein food. In the. current Business Review of' | the Bank of Montreal some arresting points are made in this connection. The great need, it is emphasized, is for “intelligent and foresighted man- agement_of the world’s-fisheries.” °- The total world catch of fish ins creased by more than 150 per cent between 1948 and 1964. it is noted. But growth in the Canadian catch has been uneven, although total out- put increased by about 30 per cent between 1960 and 1964. Further gains in production and prices in T96Q._ yp&ecounts é fish vattght-hy~~—than-$26-000-H-the- aneheyisrebetaim- ‘brought the value the Canadian. fishirig new high level. In 1965, Canada's. catch.on the Atlantic seaboard amounted to 1.675 million pounds of fish, with a landed value of $95 million, of which lobster vindustry to a «) purposes accounted for about a.third of the total world catch, compared with only 15 per cent six years earlier. and fish products in all forms has in; ' creased threefold in the post-war eriod. Among the Jeading exporters, Canada ts.second onl¥ to Japan. The value of /C exported hag also risen but_not as strongly as for all other countries |_combined. + This is which should stimulate further ef- ‘forts.in bringing our Atlantic industry up to the highest standards of ef- ficiency. New Dope On Dolphins .= Scientists, are. becoming .more=and more intrigued with the-idea that dolphins may have developed a facility for “talking” to eachother in much the samé way as human beings _have inventéd languages. Two biolo- gists of the U.S.-Ordnance Test Station at Pasadena, California, have recently published a paper on the: subject, describing an experiment they design- _ ed to interpret the’ significance of-the whistles, clicks and other sounds made-by these ingenious creatures. The experiment involved setting up a t e picture, and it is one. } A: The value ‘of world trade in fish anadian.fisheries products ‘ Sa. ‘IF YOU WON’T LET ME: PITCH: Influenza” Syndrome > | py z Theodore R. Van Dellén Inthe past months many epi- |demics of: influenza have been reported, especially among ele- —IM “TAKING my BALL AND GOING HOME i | children. Absenteeism has been | high in this group and tests have incriminated the type B_ influ- | enza ‘Virus. Some schools have jiar outbreaks are occurrjng in Europe. and Thailand. In many instances, the onset \is sudden with high fever, head- ache, sore throat, fatigue, and generalized. aching. A dry hack- . |ing cough adds to the discom- _|fort. Some nasal blockage has | been reported but, nausea, vom- | iting, or diarrhea -have been rare. The “fever lastg- from two to five days and the other symp | toms subside shortly thereaft- ‘er. Cough and fatigue may per- sist for @-week or more in the | middle aged, and elderly? ‘—"When pneumonia begins soon after the onset of influenza,-the <Vietim becomes short of . _and the cough worsens with blood- streaked or frank- y.. bloody sputum. The. individ- /ual. becomes restless, anxious, -and the skin darkens, particular- ly when the cough increases. fatal within a few days. Inflenza complications ~ can ibe annoying and occasionally ‘lare serious: Viral invasion of | the -windpipe (tracheitis) caus- ‘ es a productive cough, soreness . / of the chest, and hoarseness. In- 4 volvement ‘of the bronchi may | | be associated with wheezing and | | shortness of breath, chiefly in |those with previous chest condi- | | tions such as asthma. and chron- ic bronchitis. Pneumonia also is |a complication when it develops | days after the original fever subsides. | There is no ‘specific remedy | }for the ordinary influenzal at- Official : ‘‘pandemonium” verns the New Hebrides lands. - The South Pacific archipela- go has three sets of laws, two police forces,’ two | weights and measures, |..currencies,....and . aeHAROR e- “French and ‘Eng- 18 The seeming crazy - quilt ad- go- Is- three lish-French condominium. ‘that has governed the 64,000 people on the islands since 1902. Though wags affectionately - call the system — ‘‘the pandemonium, re “the islands—are—ruled. effective- ly and without friction. systems of two___national. | ministration stems from an Eng-. “SOUTH PACIFIC ISLANDS Bilingualism In The New Hebrides National Geographic News Bulletin | Present-day ‘Vila the bright, modern hillside capital on the island of Efate, houses a pot- , pourri of peoples. - An English | housewife can shop along a sin- gle waterfront street in stores owned by French, Australian. -Chinese, and. Vietnamese _mer- chants: Goods come from all | over the world. Thousands of Ainariean ‘ser’ vicemen discovered the New Hebrides in World War 11. Bas- es on Espiritu Santo and Efate played an important role in the conquest. of Guadalcanal. Marines heard rumors of can- nibals as they pushed into the dense jungles to build an _ air- > land dives are checked at the |eous healing are’ so small tack. Bed rest-is advisable when | the temperature is elevated. As- ‘pirin relieves the aching; cod- eine or a newer cough’ suppres- sant drug helps the’ dry, irritat- ing and useless cough. The antibiogics are of no value unless bacteria replace the influenza virus and lead to complications: RUPTURED. y spired the Pulitzer- -prize winn- ing novel. Tales of the South | Pacific, and the musical ver- | ULCER sion I - Iie. called merely South Paci: -B. Er writes: Can a ruptured owt peptic ulce cured without -PROVE-MANHOOD ae | surgery? j : REPLY Land-diving natives on Pente- | ‘cost Island” fascinated Captain ~~ Not--if-the-surgeon~gets-there Spontarfeous’ healing has | Irving ‘Johnson, skipper of the first. brigantine Yankee. He report- |occurred when the perforation ed that the young Melanesians | was tiny, with sealing. off_of the ‘prove their manhood by leap- | opening through swelling and ir- ing headfirst from a 65-- foot |ritation. But with the usual per- jungle tower. The _ terrifying | foration, the chances of spontan- the last moment by trailing vines | risk of -postponing surgery is not tied to the men’s ankles. | worth taking. On neighboring Malekula Is- | CURETTEMENT : ae Mrs. H. J. writes: Is it pos- land, the circular tusks of pigs. hide a aibinain’ to haeeine |mentary and. secondary school _ been. closed temporarily. Simil- , eath | This type of pneumonia can be ; the larynx and upper part of, | are highly prized. Big Nambas | | tribesmen remove a pig’s upper | | canines so the unimpeded low- | can grow in circles, | piercing the flesh. Animals that | er | develop three coils of tusks are pregnant after a D- and C? REPLY Yes, because dilating” the cer- vix and scraping the inner wall of the uterus (dilatation ‘and Britain and France, are repre- | field on Espiritu Santo.. In a ‘sented in the islands by high | National Geographic article, .a commissioners, who relegate | young Marine officer wrote: their powers to local resident | ‘‘The natives. seemed to -have commissioners.’ ; quite as much respect + the | SPANS 550 MILES ~ | American troops as we had for | The New ‘Hebrides are a | their stew kettles.” a telephone link between .two tanks each containing a dolphin, .and_ tap- ping the conversation. The telephone link was adjusted so that it could be broken at will by the researchers. It was left,'live” for two minute intervals and then allowed to go dead. On each occasion when con- tact was about to be made a dash-dot signal was transmitted into the tank. The dolphins very quickly learned to spot when they were connected by phone and when they were not. Dur- ing the periods of broken contact they made only sporadic sounds, but were quite chatty when the line was open’ The experiment was carried one step further. About four months after the. telephone linkup-the-female’s re- marks were plaved back to the male dolphin. He responded to the record- ed sounds but seemed to sense that something was wrong. After a time, he suddenly gave up and refused to | utter another sound. This experiment ‘was repeated on several occasions, with the same results. : Another result claimed by the researchers opens up a new field of controversy. It Was noticed that the femalesdolphin was by far .the most talkative of the pair! | EDITORIAL NOTES. It is said that there are one million group of some 50 islands that | extend 550 miles between New Caledonia and _ the Solomons. Fernadez de. Quiros, a —Portu- guese navigator sailing under .Spanish colors, discovered the islands in. 1606. The English -explorer, Captain James—Cook, \ named them 168 years later. Our Yesterdays ’ (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY. - FIVE YEARS AGO (April 4, 1941) The annual meeting of _the-Ca- tholic Women's League was held aperback books printed every day. , This includes the Bible, dictionaries, books on science and many: books br children. “Isn’t it odd,” remarks an exchange, “that if there is one risque book in the lot, someone somewhere will find it and claim thé -world is going down the drain?" * , | Canadians must bé the most for- getful people in the world. The | Canada Gazette has published a 418- . page supplement packed with the “names and addresses of some 20,000 of them who have left a total of over three-quarters of a million dollars | neglected in bank accounts for ten years or more. Many of the accounts are small—in the $101 to $50 range; but Dee sonie Supftisingly large well—_the highest more ed by the end of this vear.it will be paid to the Rank of Canada and ' “subject to subsection 4-of section 18 -| | of the Bankof Canada Act will be- ne | come-payable tothe ric shttul owner” | if he turné up later, 44 Bunt, P £.L in the K.-of C. Hall with-the pre- sident, Mrs. W.T. Coady, pre- siding. The meeting opened with i prayer by the chaplain, Rever- end L.A. Dougan. | “Mel (Sudden Death) Hill came | back from hockey obscurity to score the vital goal that gave Boston Bruins a 2-1 victory over | Toronto Maple Leafs in the sev- | enth and final game of one of | the hardest-fought Stanley Cup playoffs on record. TEN YEARS AGO" (April 4, 1956) .The chief instructors _confer- - | ence at Headquarters Fas tern at- | Leslie Stewart, | Montague; Mr.. N.S. MacLeod | MacDonald, | Fa-— | Command at Halifax was tended by Mr. and Lt.-Col. W.J. both of Charlottetown; Rev. ther F.L. Cass and.Lt.,Col. L.F: | MacDonald, also of this City. The B.I.S. held their banquet in the Clover Club, Charlotte- flown, celebrating: the 13ist_ An- niversary of the Sogiety. Mr. | presided. -y PUBLIC FORUM Thig column is open to the discussion by correspéndents 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 te “enter inte any correspondence rega ing letters submitted. tae Shield of immunity gone. PROGRAM COMPLAINT Sir,—Last Wednesday night I watched ‘Festival’? on TV and | any ‘sense out of it. Now I ask; Is this the best Canada can pro- duce? If so, may +- suggest we stick to American programs. Mr: Ouimet, the director of the CBC, feels we will lose our Canadian identity by watching too many shows of .American origin, minds if we are subjected programs of a calibre. “Festival”. It is my opinion that the CBC is nothing but a home for. bro- ken-down Englishmen ‘ If Ottawa feels it must spend money, why not spend if on our youth? You never. know. there might even .be some’ talent | among them! . T am, ‘to such as Sir, etc TAXPAYBR to. be honest I could not make | I feel we will lose our - As the uneasy truce shifted: to | open rapport, the natives lost no time in“selling ‘pig tusks clubs, grass skifts, even canoes to the servicemen. Life in wartime New Hebrid- | Scaring blackbirds, cranes and other birds away from | fruit, vegetable and cereal | crops..and protecting flocks of sheep or turkeys from four-foot- ed predators seems an unusual | | basis on which to build an ex- | port business. But ‘Foreign Trade”’. maga- | zine reports that’s exactly what | /Clem Roles, president of Smith Roles of Saskatoon has done. His Bird - Scare Cannon does such jan effective job that it has at- tracted orders Statés; Latin America, and even faraway’ Australia Infact, 85 | per cent of the cannons produc- }ed go to export markets. So far — and he.is only in his | third season of selling — about 50 per cent of his orders come ‘to him ious: the mail. alists, have gone to the mat over a most important kind of air ‘pollution: the ear-splitting scream of the jet age. Appointment of a French gov- ernment commission to study the problem of aircraft nofse fol- lows, a court decision which has | ahaken the airline world. French appeals court has ‘up- | held damages awarded a Nice | | apartment owner who claimed | tenants were driven away by the screeching jets of state-' owned Air France. ’ The award Is expected fo ex- ,ceed $300,000 and. the airline, its that dozens more neighbors of- airports will be filing suits. Oth- er international airlines such as > Air Canada that: land in France . may ‘be in for similar trouble. France is the ‘for the world-wide problem of | aircraft noise because*Paris has . | never ratified a 1952 internation. al aviation treaty aimed at pro tecting airlines as long as they pass through air space in con. ° formity to. the applicable traffic rules.” cause of the sonic boom killing a horse and turning good Bur- gundy sour as well as shatter. ing the faces of countless church clocks. Isast year’ the © French air force had tn. settle. 2,004 claims out of court ‘This latest legal defeat fri sha airlines is doubly<significant he cause’ it is bound-to forge reas. sessment of the superSonie pro- jects being rushed on both sivies of the Aillantic. “Sonic: aggress \jou,’ aa the French press. aaliy* & “from United | This ‘The French, over the individu-. fears . testing ground | Claims have been filed be- . «| this claim in your own home | Pegarded~ as tamily treasures. To maintain domestic bliss, wi- | ves of the Big Nambas must | | for the boars. Husbands severe- | ly punish their women for ne- is particularly true in Latin American countries like Vene- 20 cannons in 1965, and El! Sal- vador, where he has obtained some orders. He placed advertisements in Agricultura de las Americans, published in Spanish in Kansas City and distributed in Spanish speaking America. tisement carried a keyed coupon | that the reader could fill in_if he | wanted literaturé’ on the device: He also advertised in another | magazine widely read in Latin America. The result: a good | number of direct orders. | where the cannon can be used | on airports and sheep farms, its sales so fer have. been_ eee Sonic Aggression’ Vancouver Sun lit, by the 1970s willbe a threat to most advanced countries. Whettier existing airports,” -even-now creating problems by | ‘their position close to built- up | areas, will be able to accomfho- | -Moncton date the supersonics is a vital | question. Canadian Pacifie air- | Saint John — Halifax lines has already placed an or- der for the,American supersonic and the Frénch-legal battle is likely be e here in not too my years. DEAF? INSTANT HEARING NOTHING IN EITHER ' EAR!! It’s here! x Wnat--you have always wanted, an_ inyisible. hearing aid, nothing in either ear, no earpiece fitting of any kind. Wear this instru. ment and no one will ever know. Hear at once with clarity, free from disturbing noises, Here is a new techni- que, a new way to better hearing, a new heari life for the hard of hearing, a new deal for the deaf, Prove FREE by sending the coupon within 10 days to: ce Maritime Hearing Service, Bayers Rd. Shopping Centre, Starlite Bldg, Halifax, N.S. Sy ase NEMO. Ce CiN Gis eeei bina Address Oo0 ee teers me es and -neighboring islands . in- | electing the..pampered porkers: “1 It’s For The Birds Department of Trade and Commerce | zuela, where he sold more than | a brace or. other support? - This adver- || |- In Australia and New, Zealand | _ S tretbager—dbeu-nok- feed and even cook delicacies | ‘organ and when healing takes. |place, conception is again ‘pos- sible. < LENGTH OF COMA FE. V. writes: How long is it possible for a person to live ina | state of coma? REPLY The majority live ‘less than a few weeks but I have seen indi- viduals who have been comatose for months to years. They are vegetating—not living. ROUND-SHOULDERED Mrs. K. L. M. writes: Should 'a round- shouldered child wear REPLY Braces are helpful when rea- soning and education fail. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— © Keep up your immunity to polio. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be_ addressed to: Dr. Theodore \ Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) - Charlottetown to: “NOTES BY THE WAY | One of the best ways to im prove postal service would ‘ be | ‘for everyone to. stop— mailing | bills—Brandon Sun. we in a Chilton supermarket the other day frantically calling | “Martha, Martha!” His moth->| ‘er finally approactied him chid- | ing: |er’ not ‘Martha.’ I'm ‘mother’ A little boy ran dome the ais- | them “You should call me ‘moth- | “Mother, can I have those ap- | ples on the sideboard?” “Yes, ~ | dear!” “Oh, I'm so glad you | said yes.” "why, are you se Hone gh “No— but. I’ve eaten dy." — Vancouver | Sun. 4 An~ enthusiastic golfer came home to dinner: During the meal his wife said: ‘‘Willie tells me he caddied for you this aft- the six - year-old replied, sbut | said Willie’s father, ‘‘I thought ' | this store: is full of mothers.” | Chelton Sees Canadian Press WASHINGTON (CP) — Presi- | |dent’ ‘Johnson says public-opin- | jon polts*tell.liim he faces more | pressure. to fight a less - Fee | strained war in Viet Nam. Some suspect the president in speaking out thisweek seeks to undercut such pressure. Others wonder whether - he may be preparing the pyblic for a bigger war justified mili- tary necessity. ’ Supporters of eatin _ more American troops Thursday, U.S. ede alas t manpower in t Nam was | 230,000, up 15,000 for March and | jceiling last authorized by the | president. Some . quarters want more ‘bombing of North Viet Nam. Walter Judd, former Republican congressman from _ Wisconsin /and: once a medical missionary lin China, called in Senate for- j eign relations testimony for bombing ‘‘war. plants, power |plants, oil tanks, whatever is important to North Viet Nam's war.’ | WANT PORT BOMBED They also urge mining or | blockading of the major North |Vietnamese port of Haiphone to | restrict supplies. The president says the recent \Senate hearings—on—Viet Nam failed to-strengthen the ranks of the moderates and increased the | power of the hard-liners— ‘they”| (the.. hearings) took away. from | our moderate position.”” TV pd Chi _Vancouver aff ea Tt has often’ been suggested that television programs— espe- ‘cially those_featuring-crime—and violence— may have a bad ef. | tish_ government is now putting | the “TV-and-crime” theory to | the test. .During the next few months | *| every youngster aged between 01 + and 20 in four English counties | will have his television preferen- | ces. studied—if he runs afoul of | th law. | Those ~gubsequently put on, probation will be checked each week on which programs they: ey '| ay | watch, who their TV-heroes are and .what they dislike. The survey is expected to take about seven months, and at the end it is hoped some kind of pattern—will emerge. Since there are many similar- | ities between the TV programs available. in Canada and those in Britain (often the same shows are seen), the results of the Bri- tish study should be of interest in this country. The controversy over how much-children are affected by entertainment which _ stresses various kinds of mayhem has led to some ridiculous extremes. Some groups are trying to 4-4» 4-4-@4 466666664 “Parents Prefer Purity Products” _ 317 Kent St. ‘Dial 4.7125 66446666666666666666 000000006 SOOO OOOO OOO OOOO OCCe only 5,000 under the manpower | - I'd seen that boy before.” — Montreal Star. S Viet Nam War Sentiment By Arch MacKenzie Staff Writer These events, views and por- ltents are given significance in assessing the strength of more- war sentiment: —North Viet. Nam and--the Viet Cong .insurgénts in South Viet Nam are fighting as hard or harder than ever and some q to you, you know." “I know,” | ernoon.”. “Well, do you know,” 4 Democrats say a long war is ‘political suicide. Friday's anti-American- ter- rorist bombing in Saigon can inflame further those _demand-_ ing retaliation Senin the © North. MIEATANT TONE INDICATED —A - more. militant pro-war tone: is indicated in this” week's violence at Boston agaist anti-war -.demonstra- ©. tors. ' A —Continuing political: unrest in South Viet Nam, endanger- ing Premier Ky'’s military re- gime, might. be deflated by’ _ stepping up the war. —High - level grumbles from the .defence department,.. as expressed in background briefings to selected corres- pondents, shows renewed frus- tration with an under-wraps war. —Critics of such restraint can ‘argue, on the basis of Senate testimony about China, that - China. really is a toothless ti- ger.. Therefore, it follows, fears of blundering into war with China are ‘exaggerated ' and American military action can be expanded safely. me Theory Province sippress Grimm's. Fairy “tales a on the ground that they are too full of violence. Others claim that violence por- fect on ‘young people. The Bri- | trayal in books’or on TV is in- ~ significant because children are naturally violent anyway. (Par- jents of large families may read- lily agree!) We hope the British survey will “produce some “facts by |which the controversy can be sensibly settled. — But what will happen if most of the juvenile offenders in those four English counties plump for | i se—or—the—cric Hot Water Hot water at the turn ef a tap—300 gallons of hot water in just 15 minutes. Power WATER HEATER Palmer Electric Ltd. Fitzroy. St. Dial 4-8543 Montreal _ - Syd Toronto These are examples of CN complimentary meals af Blue Fare Plan Corner Brook s new Red Bargain Fare equally attractive leeping c "$56. 0O prices including 18 a Ath d) ar and \ “yj