fe atlan pad Fea Renediai Deas the -Conscinn= = the historic F armers’ Bank of Rustico, a Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew oe He W. J, Haneox, Publisher _ Wallace Ward ' Frank Walker Ménaging Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- dey afd statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. “Branch offices at Summerside Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented ideally. by Thamson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3.8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street. Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian .Daily Newspaper Publishers Press 4s exclusively” entitled to fhe ‘use. for repub- lication of alt news dispatches in this paper eredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters ahd also the local news published herein. right 6 téepublication ‘6f special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate Not over 4c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mall on tural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. - $15.00 & year off island and U.K. $20.00 per year _in U.S. and elsewhere outside Britith Com- tonWealth. No? cver 7c sinale copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulatian. "The “strongest memory _| is is weaker thane the weakest ink” SD Che Gunedian | Editer 3 All- wayside fence, where Ht came to an | inglorious halt. The accident was such a disappointment to the Rustico priest that he ‘abandoned his research in- transportation, but, later \discovered that the engine could be put to good use. in sawing ‘firewood and pumping water. : Mr. Callbeck notes that during the decade of his pastoral labors here, Father. Belcourt made notable con- tributions to:the welfare of the strug- gling Acadian people. He fathered — opened a high school and taught it himsélf until a qualified man could | be obtained, and even branched out. into what is now called ‘adult educa- tion” by establishing # study club | which met twice a month to. hear his lectures and to ee in group discussion. Through the offices ap a friend jin Paris, this versatile man was the re- cipient of an anfual gift of 1,000 PAGE 4 All One Problem __As-announced_from. Ottawa _ this _ week, Prime Minister Pearson and Finance Minister Sharp are expected THURSDAY, -APRIL_14,. 1966. — purposés. With this fund he accum- | ulated books on barn buildings. cook- | keeping, orcharding, road making and— francs from Napoleon ttt-for-tibrary—|—~ + ing, dressmaking, gardening, house —-- ‘ other subjects, to which, ‘in the es- ‘T° to treasurers in Victoria, B.G., for federal aid to higher education. This will likely be the first ofa a series ~of such conferences, for the problem “ts a gartantuan one for both Ottawa and the provinces. Mr. Pearson advised the provifices in January that the federal govern- ment would raise its $2-per-capita university grants to $5 for the 1966- 67 academic year, with a promise that the formula for a long-range policy would be studied at: a con- ference, Meanwhile, the subject, of new tax-sharing arrangements, replac- ing those which expire next March — « 31, awaits recommendations of the he committee. “An Ottawa official is quoted by the “Canadian, Press as saying it is unlikely that the tax structure committee will complete its work in time for -the Vittoria meeting. The committee’s ~practical-deadline- is--sometime—this- _ fall after the Carter royal commission report on taxation is received. and. & digested. . The Canadian Tax Foundation has an education will amount this year ‘to | $248,187,000, intluding $27,730,000. im federal grants to the universities. —This_figure, however, is based on_ grants to the universities at the pres- ént_-scale. Mr. Pearson said in his {[— letters to the premiers that they should expect these grants alone to amount to at least $89,195,000 in the coming academic year. ‘But higher education is not the only educational problem that the - provinces..an-d— municipalities are... having budgetary headaches over; as evidenced right in Charlottetawn,. where expansion. of school facilities has necessitated a boost in the civic education tax, A comparatively mod- est boost, be it said, and one which ___will still leave the financing of local 4 ‘meet provincial premiers — and— early in’ ___June_to-work out-a long-range policy | _ -|-in-a-ten-acre park on Butte thetic vein, he added volumes” HTT art, carving, music and singing. -~ Born in Yamaska County, Suaben had a notable career before coming to . this: provinee in 1859. For eighteen _| years he had labored among the “Indians and: half-breeds of the West, * during which time-he_made -an ex- haustive study-of the Chippewa lan- guage, compiled its first grammer and dictionary, and incidentally—among the numerous. offspring that were brought to his mission house on the Red River—baptized Louis Riel. Then he renioved to North Dakota, where he pursued his missionary- work for ten years. In recent times the North Dakota Historical Society ‘dedicated a monument to his memory Saint Paul, in the form of a 12-foot stone cairn, crowned by a granite cross. A picture of this cairn, which will be | new to Island readérs, accompanies _Mr. Callbeck’s informative article. Truly a remarkable man, to whose memory we owe more than a passing tribute in this-centennial vear of his early venture into the field of motor Sapsport. ; Fast Time In The U. S. Daylight saving time has so many advantages that one can safely pre- ~ dict that it hascome~to— stay. But; there is still the question of making it uniform throughout the land- Canada — hasn’t attempted to do-this, but in the ‘United States a significant forward | step is being made in this direction. | In all states that choose to observe it at all, uniform observance of daylight saving time i going to be a reality at last; An act of Congress-has--been passed to this effect, which it is pre- dicted will clear up a lot of ex- pensive confusion in the national economy, particularly in the-realms — of transportation and communica- tions. ‘Beginning —this-April-24,-alifast— school building commitments a troublesome one. For other purposes, the motor vehicle tax has been raised from $25 to $50, but the property as- sessment rate will remain unchanged. So far as education at least is con- cerned, we need not be under any illusion that the current uptrend in costs is a temporary one. Regardless of handouts from Ottawa, it is on the provinces with the lowest tax poten- __ tials that the chief burden of meeting ” standard requirements in- this field will fall. What is needed is a get-to- gether at all three levels of govern- ment to work out a program that will not fail to take account at least -of secondary as well as_post-second- ary education—for surely it is all one problem, after all}and perhaps the- most chaflenging that. is facing the - country at this time. Well Worth Recalling The. story of Father Belcourt and his horseless carriage—a stear -+_to-start-and-end_on the same dates, — time observance in the U.S. will have the Rev. Georges-Antoine Belcourt | ff “ $50 SADDLE ON A $5-+HORSE Salmonellosis Seen On Rise By Dr. Thodore R. Van Bellen ° monellae organisms is rising. No one knows how many people ~ will develop: the | disease (sal+ monellosis) because only a small fraction are reported to the health department. If the es. timate that one to two: per cent of our, population will be affect. ed is correct, there will be two to four million victims this year, The. upsurge’ of salmonellosis has heen traced to pets, human” carriers, and mass -marketin of. contaminated proces foods. Many types of,poultry are tainted, possibly because sal. monellae organisms are in ani- mal feed. One infected bird in a giant processing plant can con- taminate other fowl and the handlers. ; Several families from-a west- ern city developed food poison- ing after -eating turkeys pur- chased from different supetmar- kets of the same chain. One fam ily recalled that the drumstick “| Was ‘not quite done.” c .. An__epidemic involving more. than. 18,000 residents of a—Cali- fornia town was traced to a con- .Ptaminated nenchlorinated deep well. Some - pet rtles, _ birds, cats; ahd dogs sara ‘salmonel- | —-lae—hast-year—an—outbreak—was- __}-traced_to—Easter—chieks._Epi- -}-demics—have —-stemmed from -f .{@gg mixes. Many warnings have | | been, sounded: against the use of cracked @ggs. Ofte -piece of Food poisoning due, to Sal- | | sential is invat clably. left out and adopt ‘South Africa’ s racial phil- se asia A Complicated Problem y Joseph MacSween , Canadian Press Staff et The tanker Manuela’ arvival , bia on the Ben; in Durban Tuesday may. have | its western ean province. evoked feelings of brotherhood | ‘This offer, if accepted, wouid and comradeship among white | have safeguarded lives of Cana. Africana who are genef- | dians and others now flying oi! ly sympathetic with the vebel [ ea to — the Portuguese suz- regime of Jan Smith in neigh- boring Rhodesia. i ~ any jease, these sate But if you cfuised today ulong | sources say, the British resolu- official and unofficial South Af- | tion scene by ihe Sent riean and Portugtiese circles in - | Council early | London, you would find few if “specifically ienmenes: Feratt Portugal yee of elation flying over | as an _embargo-breaker, without the outcome of this costly Smith tag on South venture. The power in south- em Africa —- where the repul iv of South Aftica, Portugal and white Rhodesia rule everything below the Zambesi — is always too complicated to be expressed ‘simply in terms of Prime Min- ister Hendtik Verwoerd approv- everything that Smith does, And certainly. they both have | differences. with Portugal's far- off and aloof Dr. Antonio Sala." par. PORTUGAL OFFENDED la Railway in hea been an’ ainvast in British months—that’ interesting possibilities lie in the South African attitude, even though the Portuguese feel deeply _affronted.-in. an- alliance-.’- that has lasted some 600 years. burg visit, he said —The Portuguese vite Ww, aN” prised at the inte: since it began five months ago: SUPPORT FOR SMITH ; of feeling in favor of Smith but had sensed stated i OR: is that in dis: in this} case the missing factor | osophy of apartheid or_ racial separation. In other words there. | meat could theoretically conta-— minate a slicer or a grinder thus conveying the organisms to all the meat processed that day. The butcher (or any food hands | ler) could do the same if he | was a.carrier and careless | about “Ws health © habits and cleanliness. “Most of the victims develop | fever, nausea, vomiting, or-diar- | rhea. Some suffer from respira: _ OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson\ A Crown Corporatin That Pays Off 1965 was a banner year for , Air Canada has become the | Air Canada in every way. Nee | success story among Canada’s —operating-income~ of $31,391,011 Crown Corporations, the rieh nt among the generally costs ly headaches. he 1965 annual report of our nationally-.. owned. -airline.. has. just been submitted to Parlia- ment. This shows that last year Air Canada earned the highest profit in its 28-year history. Its net income from operations and other sources totalled $47,550,- 962.. This contrasts with the net only were its @arnings at, an alk | tory distress, ranging from sore throat to pneumonia. Unless | Stool cultures are done the does tor and the patient let “it go as food poisonir.z or intestinal flue rather than. salmonellosis. The best remedy is to trace the source of every épidemic and take appropriate health de- | Reranion, is intended to provide | or Canadians the best possible | is Zambia, which is inst as oil- | Riiodesia- -thirsty—as- was—no— drawing together —of— To be blunt, the Portuguese. | South African, Rhodesian and maintain that their old friends | Portuguese racial ideas unless | the British did not come clean | this Would be achieved .or forcétl oh their intentions although a | by actual fighting againet. black. high official of the foreign of- | nationalism. fice Lord Walston, went to Lis- Verwoerd, as has Britain's bon. in adivance of the Faster | Harold Wilson, has just. emerged weekend meeting of the United | from a triumphant general elee- Nations Security Councit. | en and is stronger than ever. UN RESOLUTION The _ question is~ whether any- -Portugal was held up to critl- | thing would Make. it worthwhile cism in the UN for allowing oil | for him td risk his. strict policies- for oil.starved Rhodesia to~ be | of international ity — fol- landed in ite eastern African | Jowed. for 18 yéars: — nun tees Mozambique colony. ' Smith and a comparative hand- But Portugal was also on | ful of Rhodesians, who do not recom long before as offering openly at least subscribe to his to carry ail to oil- on is Zam.- ' vacial_ beliefs — _\ Just now all three have their | Africa OG ae |.hacks up where the British ave One South African source in -goncerned.... Perhaps the... most..,Londofi--has— the Smith ~ Returning from” a — ze n Curae service at the lowest economic | eost. Ideally its operating reven- |ue and expenses should break }even as a hon-profit government hservice. As these figures -sug- | gest, it could afford to lower far- /es still more. But as .a member _|of the international price-fixing | (and regulating body, it is hog- | ‘tied. Air Canada must conform | to the agreed fare structure, al- ‘though it has consistently been one, of the very few airlines urg- | time high, but se_pyofits ré- aa ‘flected tecords miles flown, freight carried and mail. transported, while «its toad factors increased and its aver- = passenger journey lengthen- Yet at the same time, fares were reduced still further, so its average revenue per passenger- mile declined another two per | with Jow blood sugar? partment action. It may be im- practical to examine food hah- dlers at frequent. intervals, but an attempt. should be made to do-so, - and to -educate~them=on=| Sanitation. — BLOOD SUGAR Vv. F. R. writes: Are ‘people who set up a high level of effie- fency for themselves more like+ ‘ly than others to be troubled REPLY An Automation Problem Montreal Gasette The railway strike inthe Uni- recommendations of the Kellock .| ted States has provided .a lesson | Royal Commission. in how not to handle the prob- | lems of automation. The strike | itself, called by the Brotherhood , of Locomotive Firemen and’ ‘En- ginemen, has been ended by a decision of the Federal Court of Appeals. But the issue over Although the Canadian settle ment of this problem has been successful, Mr. H.E. Gilbert has continued to fight against a sim- ilar result in the United States. Mr. Gilbert is demdnding, not ‘only that American firemen be cent to 5.93 cents, or considerab- earned by the- giant ly less than the cost of my jour- National Railways from its fail : communications systems. roads, hotels, trucking aft tele- Among other Crown Corpora- tions, Sarnia’s Polymer earned $9,449,616 in net profits, Canad- jan_Arsenals.. earned $4,476,620, and Eldorado Mining earned $2,- 450,490; but sith lemons asthe St. Lawrence Seaway cost © - the neys by Ottawa City buses. This reduction continues the contrast | between our Cost of Living In- dex, which has risen 38 per cent | ped about one per cent per year over that same pefiod— perhaps the only commodity or service taxpayers $18,481,842 and the CBC cost the ‘ faxps ayers $104,- 968,686 over and a 8 adver- eee revenue. in Canada thus to run counter Tto the general tipward spiral.” Air Canada, as a Crown Cor- | “The Times, staid voice of the relegated to pares two and | three _ ‘The Times’‘Ag National ee, Society | The Rockies may crumble and Gibraltar tumble, so the song goes. But the millenium has come when The Times of Lon- don decides to print NEWS on its front page! Since time immemorial (1788), this highly respected daily news- paper has devoted page one en- _tirely to. advertisements. But British Establishment, recently announced: that the ads will be The change itn format means that the Personal, or-so- called *‘Agony,’’ Column will lose _ its gony ‘Column | | implore you to give them address. You cannot. kndw the di anxiety of my almost broken heart.’’ Or, ‘Poverty and honour: I'll not touch the -money. It's stolen property."’ And, “Forget you? By heavens, | I cannot! Engraven on my soul is your memory in deepest char- | acters which time vainly will | endeavour to efface.”’. ‘In the days 6f Disraeli iia Dickens, some adverts in the column were written in code, -and—a——fashionable——pastime- among the leather armchairs of Pall Mall clubs was cracking the cryptograms. he past 17 years, and Air |4 on nae fe , despite chiraes vicidiy. Teflected in our sharply rising costs, have drop- domestic postal ‘service. ‘years ago +o give-us one of the ering—from~a—heart—attack?——— | tions: ing lower fares, notably on the | “No. On the other hand, indivi- busy bonanza of the trans- At+ (duals with low blood sugar may which the strike was ean he employment of firemen freight and yard diesels even iretained on freight and yard on | diesels, “but éven that those who ‘have already been removed, in |lantie route. . | WORLD'S BEST AIRMAIL However, we do see Air Can- s rising service and falling ‘Last year the airline carried a_ rec- ord 14 million tons of mail inside Canada at a cost of 56 cents per s hperkbns lower their sights it will not be capable of doing as much they want to. Unless these be—diffieult_to—-do—effieient-work.—y, The condition can be remedied through diet. HEART ATTACK AND DRIVING Vv. C. writes: Will a man be | though their jobs have become | obsolete—is likely to continue. This controversy. Jar interest to Canadians, since | it has already been lived through and, after torturous difficulties, | successfully settled in this .coun- try. As long ago. as 1956, a Concil- | / accordance with the ruling of an arbitration board appointed by in_1963, now be restor- |ed to their jobs. WRONG PROCEDURE — This si to fight against auto- | mation with a vengeance. For Mr. Gilbert is not only fighting ton-mile.-— down from $1.45 15 jable to drive a car after recov- REPLY . Yes, but in the final analysis i the answer depends upon wheth- | best postal services in the world, | and the only one to offer domes- tie transportation_by air at the to preserve the past; he is fight-— ving-to-restore the | has: ceased to exist. ‘It is very | much the | ‘were to demand that diesels be ation Board headed | by Judge | J.C. Anderson concluded that firemen were no longer needed on diesel locomotives. The report_| past where it~ ‘ow rate of five cents per one- ounce- Jetter. Like all air lines, Air Canada | getststumps. Mislaid baggage, cancelled flights, over-booking and’ the rare lack of considera- item. ‘tion or. courtesy by ground staff cause complaints. Some of this is caused by passengers who | selfishly make miltiple reserva- | some is caused by the | carefulness of the air line, which | maintains its high safety record by never taking a chance with— ‘questionable weather or equip- | ment. j Considering its general rec- _ord, the progressive advance of | Air Canada from large deficits | in the early 60s, coinciding with , the introduction of the big new £. ‘er this person velops— -chest |) | pain because driving is a chore | ‘and_is-hard on the nervous sys-. BACKACHE F. E. writes: Please tel] me in plain English the meaning of | myalgia lumbosacral spine? REPLY : Myalgia means muscle pain. The lumbosacral part of the. spine refers to the lower back. When addetl together, the term means low back pain of muscu- | Har origin. : TRANQU ILIZER F. M. writes: I take one mild | | ‘tranquilizer evety day. Do you think this “is excessive? REPLY Probably not, but define your | | tranquilizer next.time. L TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— the: last Sundays of April and Oct- _ober. Beginning next year, mixups_of time observance among localities within states will be ruled -out; the only option left will be for the whole states to choose fast time or not. The | house of representatives insisted on ‘ the latter rule, over a senate objec: — tion, and ‘has prevailed. : | .The new law. wilt require no | change from present practice in Wash- | ington, D.C. and-15 other states. Five | states already have state-wide obser- | vance but will have to abandon pres- ent eccentricities in their dates. They. will have to choose one time for the whole state. Four others also must ;~newly—-plan-on-interstate uniformity — next year. Another four must do the Same and also must stop right away using eccentric dates. That still leaves 20 states that have not observed any fast time up -to now. Except for Alaska and preferred position. Through the | years the column has: reflected the folkways and foibles of the English. Codes are forbidden: now; so- are the matrimonial notices pop- ular at the turn of the century. The Times lets advertisers ap- Page one was the place where “Countess Jellicoe very much ‘regrets that owing to indisposi- tion she was unable to attend - the requiém mass for Lady Dou- ghty-Tichborne.” When the Old _ Stortfordian RuggerClub—needed-— competi- tors for its annual flea race, «it | | employed the Personal Column. Once the club felt: obliged to re- ‘peat an advertisement, because “fleas have not bred at all well | this year.’ 19th- CENTURY AGONY 4 _The column earned its nick- . name in the19th’ century when pleas such as this were com- mon: “Your wife and family | Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO. (April 14, 1941) Thousands of British Imper- | jal troops were rushed from the | Italian East African front to | Egypt in an effort--to stem the driven ancestor of the modern-auto= mobile that ‘chugged its way into Prince Edward Island history when Henry Ford was but a three-year-old toddler-—is retold in the current issue of The Atlantic Advocate by one of our Island historians, Lorne C. Call- beck. The occasion is a timely one, for it was in June, 1866 that Father Bel- court's vehicle; purchased froma » Philadelphia firm, arrived in Char: lottetown en route-to its owner in ‘Rustico. A. colorfiil des scription of. its ap- pearance a few weeks later at a church—piente—in Rustico. is quoted from 4 contemporary newspaper ac- [ ~ @ count.That..was..when-the machine, after Starting “in an ordertyand well- _hehaved:manner,-got--out-of-contrelL- and ‘fivally beg ame entangled in a. Hawaii, however, these are one Con-— tiguous belt all across the deep south -to Arizona’and up through the plains. states, plus Utah and Wyoming. This at least will minimize the effect of the law's failure {6 impose complete_uni- formity in the nation as a whole. It appears that these states’ legislatures will now have to take affirmative act- ion if-they—want- to stay~on year~ round standard time affer this year. EDITORIAL NOTE Old Jed must have snorted. at the announcement, recently, that Beverly Hills had refused a gift of $82,000 in |. poverty funds from the U.S. federal __ government. The school superin- tendent said they could onty~find + ~eight-children—ho-eotitd-possibly—-be ae ed as nee ‘dy in that swank area. ~~ . ‘ a \ German onrush_ toward: the. Suez, Canal, * A rollicking comedy ‘You're Telling Me’’ was presented. on Easter Monday under the direc- | tion of Mr. J.B. Richards, CDA, for the St. Charles Auxiliary So- | ‘ciety. The cast included: Bil} Brown, J.B. Richards, Mrs. J.A. MacDonald, -Florence McTague, Dorothy. Hughes, Margaret Mc- + Donald, John Betty Curley. TEN YEARS AGO (April 14, 1956) | Premier Nikolai Bulganin. and & 40g Communist party secretary Nik- | ita Khrushchev left the Baltic port of Baltisk-in-a Russian cru- iser for their 10-day visit to Bri- tain. Mr. al. Russel St. John, was ~eleeted..president. of the PT. Association. for « Retarded Chil-. dren at the annual meeting held at the Y MCA" © McQuaid, Arthur | L~ MeGitigan, Myrtle- Semple and peal for almost anything else. | provided « ‘the notice - will not | cause “public or private dis- | tress." A few years ago, one -ad sought: “Fire- eaters, sword- | swallowers, preferably with ec- ;-clesiasticval experience.” The | Times sent a gentleman to.inves- | | tigate. He found that the artist- es were requires for a medieval | religious drama; “The Play of | Daniel.” ; Another ad wanted: “Tight- rope walker, male or. female, preferably, _though_not_necessar-- | ily, musically inclined; required |to walk next week end, indoors. | Rope -provided. ences essential.” TRAVEL WANTED Young men: traditionally have | sought interesting jobs involving Highest refer- travel through. the _Personals. For instance: ‘National film eritic, male, 24. relinquishing Fleet Street March Sist after | | two savage but successful years, lity_of civilized life outside the ‘jungle. Especially seeks work-— ing trip to Borneo, with travel | costs met; ‘ Social change is. reflected in the column. A ‘titled lady’ | wishes to dispose of her turs. “London's leading maternity wear designer’: offers an ‘‘ex- ;ceptionally high salary’ and quarters in a ‘‘luxury flat’'for a nanny to care for her two girls. Two Times institutions will re- ;main-unchanged-“Fourth-Lead= ‘ers’ and Letters to the Editor. | The leaders are whimsical edi- ‘torials with, as .H.F, Ellis noted, an “aroma of carpet slippers and elderly geniality.” As long as there is a Times, \its admirers hope, country vie- ars: will write=to xeport ornitho, ‘logical oddities; choleric colon- “els will denounce the mannérs of youth: statesmen will carry on epistolary duels; widows will | deplore blood sports; and every- one witt-protest. any changeat all in theeformat of The Times s | front page. jet airliners; to increasing pive its over the past three years, | and coupled with its continuous- ‘ly unexcelled fleet of airliners, Air’ Canada is justifiably a | source of national pride and sat- | isfaction. | Farms Without Horses Warren Leary in the Rice Today; even in the towns of America, such as Rice | Lake, there are plenty of kinds. | fand- adults, too) who hardly | know one end of a horse from | the other. This is even true, on many farms, simply because horses ate. long gone from most of them. We'll bet there isn't one kid in 50 who could tell you what ‘'blin- | ders” are. Or how about hames, | | traces, or. martingales? Do ped- | ple know today that most farm- ers could once peg a horse's age “by the wear on his teeth, and __ens_ her front.legs? | measure his height by the width of his hand— 14 or 16 hands high? How many city kids know that . a resting: cow. gets up on her | needs to rediscover the tranquil- | hind legs first, and then straight- there are plenty of people who | don’t even know that a cow | must be milked twice a day. Wit. | ty years ago—better than —half- the population of the nation would have been able to answer that one straight out, afd would have laughed at the person who asked the question. Or how about pigs? Do kids today know that- metal rings were put in the ,in the ground and tearing up the grass” ped in a certain way to tell which letter he belongs to? Years ago every farm had -a flock of chickens and you didn't need an alarm ‘glock when the. big rooster crd@wed at sunrise The ‘king of thé barnyard strut- ted around as the master of all he surveyed, or at least of all his hens The rooster was* the source -of _MANY --® joke. and—amons—farin- folks a good speaker always-had (a fresh one ready 4g tell to draw | neem | une, Chicago, Mlinois.) small | appreciative We'll bet little porker’s |. hose tn keep him from rooting — Or-that -his-ears are clip- > EOUVAT Teach children love. of family: (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be | addressed ‘to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- © fl Lake Chronotype, Wisconsin “chuckles, Today | you- almost never hear a rooster- hen story, and if a television comedian threw one in, most of | his audience wouldn't even. dig it. | The expression ‘‘Roing-to bed -| used_to mean with_the-chickens” something to most people, city dwellers of their country cous- ins, but when. uttered today in \ our urban society. if can draw ‘| puzzled: stares. Ss a Other express e. twa er | off ae agente’ : ane ti k ey | trot, " "don't be | a silly goose,’ “stubborn as a mule’’ or “chie- ken feed’ don't have the impact. | in people's conversation they did leven a generation ago. It's an ufban, mechanized so- | ciety, even down on the farm. Ciesla caches ihasbaloaciuaa BAR DRUGS TO STUDENTS: | TORONTO (CP). — University of Toronto students were warned Monday by Capul, their disciplinary body, that students | caught using drugs while writ- ing examinations this will be suspended or expelled. The warning came in the list of examinations which begin for’ most students” nextMonday. _| toa standstill. month | was accepted by the Canadian | | Pacific Railway, but rejected by | the firemen’s union. RECALLS 1957 STRIKE . | A strike was called by the un- |CPR’s operations were brought The. strike was | | only ended by the appointment | ‘of the Kellock Royal .Commis-_ | sion, with the -unanimojs appro- lk val- of Parliament. With minor mendations of the Conciliation | _ | Board. | The American president of the | international union, Mr. H.E. | Gilbert, then intervened to try | to dismiss- the —conclusions—of- the Kellock Royal Commission, . fearing the establishment of a | precedent. In May 1957 another. which confirmed the essential IMPROVE THE with . service, call or write SIXTY Y! WRIGHT Shoe Co. _ LADIES’ Broken Lines OF YOUR PROPERTY! STOP THE DIRT AND DUST NUISANCE ASPHALT PAVING of your driveway, car port, side. walks, parking lots, curbs, ete. For a free estimate and prompt WARREN MARITIMES LTD. Rox 1054" or phone 4-6135 Charlottetown, P.E.I. SPECIALISTS IN ASPHALT PAVING FOR OVER - SPECIALS THIS WEEK IN Reg. 7.95 and 9.95 | thrown off the railways, and. steam locomotives hauled out of museums to take their place. This is the wrong way to han- | dle the problems of automation. /ion. in January 1957, andthe | No one would deny that there is much human worry and distress | when old, established jobs be- /come obsolescent; this worry ba distress must be handled 1 fairness and understanding. But simply to resist all change compounds the problem. ~ WEED-KILLER SAFE TORONTO (CP)—A chemical i¢reated to eliminate water | weeds and algae has undergone -successful-_tests—by—biologists of the Ontario Water Resources Commission, a-spokesman says. The. chemical presents no haz-_ | changes, it confirmed the recom. |1s not the answer. This enly | strike was called. But it ended | ard to fish, animals or humans | Shortly with a final settlement | if directions are followed. the spokesman said. APPEARANCE YEARS PUMPS CT Now Only Volkswagens Are Gur Specialty 3. 99 : and 5, 99 eT uatil 5 et “ruviscy’s || WRIGHT SHOE CO. Alherry:-Piains ~ Queen Street . _Charlottetown \ ¥ : os ne