ww-lv Ass“.- i l . ‘ (bummed: Coven Prince Edward lslaud Live The new Pubnslie' frank Walker Editor W. .l. Hancox. lurton Lewia Executive Editor ‘Ppbliehed every week day morning (e:.epl Sun- g? and statutory holidays) at I65 Pin... strut ' rlottetown. l‘.E. .. by llionisor. Newspaper: Ltd [finch office: at Sun-interside. Montague, Alber tin and Souria. {Represented naltcnally by llioni'son Newspapers Advertiaing Services Toronto. 425 University Ave I i ,- Montreal. 640 Catlizart Street v-Jeszern oitice, IOBO Ww nga Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). "Member Daily Canadian Newspaper Publile n Alienation and the Canadian Press. lIie Canadian . Frau is exclusively entitled I0 lhe use .‘or repub this paper tan, and also to the local new: published here in All rights on republitaiiOrt oi epecial dispatch.” herein also reserved. Substriplion rates: Nol over 35: per week by carrier. “.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $14.00 a year all Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com it Not over 7c per single copy. ' Member l-zivrlil Bureau- of Citruialtorl. __ TW— fl‘i"? FEBRUARY 7. in}. A Dangerous Issue Now that we are in for another federal election campaign, let us hope that the controversial issues will be con fined, a: tnuch as possible, to matters of domestic concern. Whatever grounds for resentment there may be at United States inter- vention in the nuclear arms issue, political agitation on this score would be of service only to our mut- ual enemies. Washington has apolo- gized for the tone of the statement released by its state department, and it would be wise on our part to let it go at that. As the Montreal Gazette re- marks, there is undoubtedly an is- sue to be exploited here. if any party chooses to resort to it. But every political leader has to re- member that history is not only a record but a judge. He will have to weigh carefully the consequences of using such an appeal, and of the anti-American feeling, positive and latent, that could be aroused to frenzy thereby. There are times when it is fitting to speak plainly between friends, when one friend makes mistakes and feelings get ruffled. But this plain speaking would be quite differen‘.‘ than seeking in the exploitation of differences the means of gaining temporary political advantage. This would leave wounds that could nev- er be healed except by scars. It would turn an appeal to Canadian self-assertion into a campaign of hate and spite. As for the views of Canadian party leaders on the merits of nu- clear defense, they seem to be as diverse as their views on other mat- ters of public concern. In this re— gard they reflect the feeling among the electors generally. As one mili- tary commentator has observed, we simply do not know enough to un- derstand whether a brigade group, an air division and a convoy-sub». marine-killer naval assignment are the best roles for Canada in NATO at this stage in defense planning, and whether warning systems, in- terceptors and Bomarcs are the best for us on this continent. In some ways they are already obsolete. It. will require a much deeper public knowledge of the facts before a pro- per national concensus on these tech- nical issues really can be expected. We cannot hope to acquire such knowledge—much less profit by it— in the heat of an election campaign. Challenge To Education Perhaps the most provocative speech made at the Second Cana- dian Conference on Education in Montreal last March was that of President Claude Bissell of the Uni- versity of Toronto. now published no part of the report on the con- ference by the University of Toronto Press and les Presses de l’llniver— site Laval. Contrary to general opin- ion, President Bissell sees the great emphasis in higher education in the future not on the physical and soc- ial sciences only, but on the liberal arts, and he makes some arresting points in this connection. Education, he maintains, has been looked upon as “the moral equivalent of work during youth and nrly manhood, largely justified in terms of its preparation for the real life of Work to follow. Leisure has been a eort of lotus land, mercifully free'of the twin curses of work and education." But. with the reduction In the tyranny of work and the con- eequent extension of leisure time, “the old lotus land threatens to turn into a place of infinite longing and agonizing boredom. Education now seems less austere, less separ- able from other activities; the boun- daries between education, Work, and entertainment are no longer apparent, indeed, they often dis— appear altogether." - Sevoral consequences result from this. For one thing, the period dur- ing which students stay at school has been lengthened, and will con- tinue to lengthen. Also, educational institutions are increasingly faced with a new urgency—“the task of preparing young men and women for the exacting rigors of leisure.” It is the latter development especi- ally that Dr. Bissell sees as being responsible for “more and more emphasis upon general liberal stud- ies." This does not mean that educ- ation for a specific technical job will disappear. “But i think we must recognixe the fact that this will always be a perilous undertaking, in a world where the very Job for which one is being trained may vanish before one has completed one’s training.” This eventuality he sees as giv- ing rise to other problems. “Does the present demand for increased vocational and technical training in the schools come 20 years too late? Should not such training now be associated with industry, which is flexible and pragmatic, rather than with a school system that is not gearned to rapid change?” Dr. Bissell regards education not as an overhead cost but rather a capital investment. The educated man. he states, “is the only person who is immune to the erosions of automation.” What a nation spends on education, therefore. provided it is well spent, can produce some of its most profitable returns. And the one great impediment he sees in the way of furthering both the liberal arts and professional education that he advocates is the burden of arma- ments made necessary by the kind of world in which we live. “If the suffocating burden of armament is ever reduced or elimin- ated. education may well become the primary concern of the federal, as it is now of the provincial. gov- ernment." Higher education already is, of course. a considerable concern of the federal government; but Dr. Bissell sees further possibilities of federal support if more federal funds were available. Geneva Conference The political crisis at Ottawa has crowded other news into the background. but we shouldn’t for- get that a United Nations confer- ence opened at Geneva this week and that it is concerned with one of the foremost questions of our century—namely, how to focus the powers of natural science on the backward countries of the world. This unprecedented meeting of 2,000 experts front 80 countries could, it is said, he a giant step down the long road to its attainment. But there are big “ifs” in the way. According to a recent survey of the (American) National Academy of Sciences, the present 2 per cent per year growth of World popula- tion is incompatible with even the most optimistic estimates of what scientists could do to raise living standards. Cutting this rate in half over the next few decades would do much to strengthen the scientists' hands. But there is little likelihood that this goal will be achieved. The academy notes, too, that the social and cultural factors af- fecting use of new knowledge have been neglected. Spreading the bene- fits of modern science must be done at the ground level—among the workers, farmers and villagers who ultimately must put the knowledge to use. What is most needed, it is aug. gested, is a new science of how to m a r s h al physical, biological, and social processes to conserve resour- ces even while exploiting them to the maximum. Here there are no “advanced” or "less advanced” countries; all need to work together to develop this science of mankind. A dramatic rise in World living standards would mean a radical change for all in the use of world resources. If all countries are to have an adequate share of reeourcee in the future they must start now to learn how to manage them. It. in recognition of this great need that has sparked the Geneva con- ference, and it will carry the world's hopes with it for aucceae in eome measure at leaat. I i t e .A............................... . “M... EXPER ttvtENTAL FARM IN WINTER OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Hockey Goals And Porliomen’tory Votes Arc our politics getting a face- lifting. to make this important activity more popular as a spec- tator sport? Look at those two headlines. and you will see the trend: “Red Kelly scores" an “Red Kelly scores 3". The first headline appeared in the latest edition of a paper en- ‘ titled “T he Canadian Liberal Challenge", published by the Na- tional Liberal Federation of Ca- nada. in Ottawa. The second headline appeared in a daily pa- per cnlillcd “The Globe and Mail," published by a commer- cial company in Toronto. The for m e r story said. in part: “()ne of the more diligent . newcomers to the House of Com- i mons is the unassuming Liberal MP. for York West (Toronto). Although a freshman M,P., is probably as well known across i Canada as any of the front ben- chers on either side of the house. When Red Kelly was elected on June 18th a lot of politicians and most hockey fans thought some- thing would suffer — either hoc- key or politics. As to politics. Mr. Pearson has observed: "1 am delighted; in his work here he displays the same desire and ability that ltas marked his hoc- key carccr.‘ " he “‘lobc" story reported: “Red Kelly scored three goals to lead Toronto Maple Leafs to a 6-3 win over Montreal Cana- diens. . . Kelly. the Liberal MP 1 from York West, ignored today's l communities, Important sessions on Parlia- mcnt Hill for this game which Leaf‘s manager-coach George lmlach said was more import- ant than political business. Kel- ly‘s three goals raisr‘d his total .. . i for the season to 14. VITAL STATISTICS w a National League goal is rated more im- portant than a Parliamentary vote. then obviously our politics are getting a new look. And the eagcr'beavers who staff the of- fices of our political parties are no doubt already assessing the Gallup Poll value of this new gimmick. Not only may we now expect to see new faces, and perhaps more than faces, in Parliament. We may also look for changes In the rules, such as we had one day last week, to make the pro- ceedings more exciting to the spectators —— who after all do fi- nance the performers and the playing field just as the cash customers pay for the cost of hockey players and their ice. With political organizers giv- lng high rating to the fact that a candidate is “well known across Canada", no doubt the headlines are now being scann- ed in last year's newspapers. Any person who made fron page h e a d l incs three times would be a desirable candidate for any party in the forthcoming ‘ election. And the star of a popular tele- vision series would be able to take his plck of safe seats. For re m o t e mlnlng or lumbering party organizers will look for special qualities In th eir candidates. "Cup-cake" Cassldy. the queen Girlie with the hour-glass figure, should prove a shoo-in for the Yukon; and Elizabeth Taylor could eure- ly capture any seat in Canada under any polltical banner. The rules would have to be changed to admlt American ’lm- ports". Since Richard Nixon has been cut adrift by the Republi- Hockey . fall below 55 per cent "Canad- ian content" when Parliament Hill has its full quota of recruits from Hollywood and Washing- ton. The “new look" to our politics given by the introduction of Red . Kelly “Ill have other serious se- ' qucls, With X-appeal being the main qualification of parliamen- tarians, there will be a grave shortage of governing ability. So ‘cabinet plays will have to be Obesity Strains Human Heart By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen WHEN a fat man walks a mile, he uses up a quart of ox- ygen per minute. His thin coun- terpart use: a pint. No wonder the stout become short of breath easily. Moreover, if the coron- ary arteries are beginning to harden, these people become good candidates for heart dis- ease. The need for additional oxy. gen is likely to bring on angina pectoris. The reverse is true In that losing weight may relieve chest pain or allow the indivi- dual to walk farther before de- veloping it. Obesity affects the heart in other ways. Every pound of fat requires blood and many mile! of capillaries are needed bring nourishment to the vari- ous cells. This increases the burden of the old ticker. The stout man or woman has more poundage to move when he walks down the street or up the stairs and this extra work helps explain why more oxygen is required. In the past, an accumulation of fat in the heart muscle was held responsible. We now know this is not the cause of heart trouble, even in the o b e s e. Many of the overweight have large amounts of fat in t ' area. Pads of this 'ty pe of tlssue settle in the muscle and hang from the lower part of the heart. In addition, a collection of fat in the abdomen may ralse the diaphragm, making the heart assume a transverse po- sition. But these localized de- posits don't bother the old ticker, even though the entire organ is almost encased in a fatty envelope. The shortness of breath that is so common among fat per- called from the bench, by party coaches who do not seek elec- tion to parliament. It must be a fascinating temp- tation to the backroom boys 0 ‘politics to pick candidates who have some exotic appeal to the voters. B"! c ‘Sld("ll'.' all a-- pecls. I think the old and well- _ ("it‘d syst"m n" seekir" at those 5 who would give us the best possi- ble government is preferable to filling parliament with glamour- pusses of either sex. Adenouer And Eorhord v Alan Once again in West Germany it‘s the old fox vs. tiger, and wise money rides on “ fox. Once again Vice-Chancellor Luuwig Erhard comes lumber- ‘ing out his corner, fists rocked, and once more Chan~ cellor Konrad Adenauer ap- pears set to slap him down almost absentmindedly, as in _two or three earlier scraps. Authorilarian as ever at an unbelievable 87, Germany's pa- tiont patriarch has promised to retire in October. Maybe he will, maybe he won't. Mean- ,while the “nachl‘olgekrisc,” or succession crisis, sharpens. and r claimants to Champion's title grow increasingly fidgely. Pawing the air tentatively Erhard says in an interview that he's ready to take over ,from Adcnauer any time the people sav Parrying, Adonauer- a. tclls the lshadow chancellor his . moment will come in ue course. {SUPPORTS DE GAULLE Ringsidcrs, remembering 66- year-old Erhard's reputation as a paper tiger who (-rumplcs in .the clinches, figure the decision will go to Adcnauer. preliminaries as- sume extra interest now that ‘Adenauer has emerged as just about the only major figure who supports Pr 9 5 id en i do [Gaulle's bid to keep Britain out 3of Europe. In some quarters. the present the paper " Harvey 3. . Canadian Press Staff Writer lcrisis over Europe ls seen as a case of two old men trying to make the world stand still. If tthe reading is correct, it marks 1an unfortunate late entry in a ‘ledger that should have been closed years ago. t If it had, the aloof. slow-mov- ing, inscrutable ex-lord mayor lot Cologne might have gone idown in history as one o Germany's greatest statesmen. He may stlll do so. because few lwill deny the big part he has lplayed during 13 years as ichancellor in restoring the fed- eral republic to ruddy good health. LINGERS T00 LONG ‘ But there may be sadness that a little too long, to hold on to power in 'a manner that encour- ged unhealthy government. F. R. Alle- . a lSwiss journalist tmann, wrlting recently in the I"rotten, dissipated" style of politics in Bonn, described Ade- inauer's case as a tragedy. He addcd: "Hereln lies the tragedy: The E folly of attempting to repeal the jlaws of change and to extend tlhe longevity of the 'Adenauer tera' beyond human scale." 1 In the end. therefore, the lpaper tiger‘s turn may come. 'But it is hard not to feel some sympathy for the old fox, the man still cherishes a postcard, isent during a previous crisis by ‘ ian anonymous critic and con- taining just three words: “You old rascal!" Antarctic As winter closes in on th e North. summer is opening new cycle in the life of Andre- ticn‘s engaging little clowns. the Adclies. The breeding season for these penguins Is Well underway on the rocky headlands of th 0 south polar continent. Soon ;chlcks will be leaving their sheltered nests to learn the skills and hazards of survival. More than 17 species of pen- guins live In the Southern .Hemisphere, says the National ‘ Geographic jtwo — the prolific Adelle and l Its big. regal cousin. the Emper- or — inhabit the vast, frozen i contlnent. The lively Adelles are the ,comedlans of the famlly. With Chaplinesque gravity, t h e y ttoboggan d ow n snowy slopes and joy-ride on cakes of Ice !Sometimes they waddle, on I short awkward legs, in process- jlona that suggest columns of tipsy toy soldiers. Lllte other penguins, the Ade illes (Pygoscells adellae) have can Party in us, his clmp-ign. lblaclr and white feathers. The In: ability would make him at- . tractive or a - year contract with a Canadian party. Nelson Rockefeller. still nlavinl with the R‘epublicans' farm team In Albany. might care to the governorahlp of New York dress~shlrt-and - tails [effect makes their antics all the t funnier. 3 They have no fear of man. gRalher, they eeem fascinated : formal leave by the strange glanls who have lnvaded their domain. Ineatlab State to get a little experlence |ly curious, Adellee are forever under the Canadian rules. X-APPEAL PARAMOUNT tunderfoot when construction or lather activities are going on. sound, from hammer-In; 8‘51] Soclety. But only: This raises a problem. U. s. , y imports would have to be llmlt- t to singing. attracts them ed in number, though some could , scores. One e ltlon found be “Canedlenlzed” by being ap- ilhat tootlng a comet pointed to the Senate" But the ‘ ship would bring a long line of Board of Broadcast Governors birds wobbllng up the gang- would be sure to step in, to en- I n a . eure that our newscasts do not But the Adellel' hareh envir- Penguins National Geographic Society onmcnt is no playground. To rvive sub-zero temperature.» ‘and raging blizzards. they have L developed h l g h ly specialized analomlcal structure and be- t havior. ; The hard, lumpy soles of their .feet give protection against Ice. lLayers of blubber under the l skin offer lnsulatlon against cold and keep them buoyant under- water, where penguins feed and mi much of their time. saltv excreting gland serves as a [built-In salt-water converter. Though flighlless, the birds luse powerful flippers as wlnfls i. to "(IV undersea at high speed. Emerging. they leap up in graceful arcs that recall movie- camera trlcks showing human dlvers In reverse. Even out of water. Adelies can skim across ice on thelr bellies faster than a man on ekles. Adelle adults grow to about 14 Inches. and many wclgh from 5 to 10 pounds. Long fasts cause variations, especlally durlng the nesting season. In about mid-October, Antarc- tic pilots see dark lines of pen- guins moving across coastal ice toward mainland neat sltea. By mid-November, the nerds have been hulll of pebbles uncovered by spring them. and eggs are being laid. two to a couple. The father etarta the Incuba- tion, while mother goes off on a sea vacation to feed in prepara- tion for her turn on the he at. After the young have hatched. both pareete than in covering and feeding them. In late Jen- ny and early February the fledgling: are on their own. They learn to hop, swlm, and skim for the trip to northern Ice floce, where‘ they winter > he has allowed himself to linger I sons is caured. as stated. by the abnormal strain of the ballast ion the circulation. But lack of ‘physical fitness also enters the ,picture because the portly tend not to exercise. A man or woman with known ihearl disease should remain trim. A sudden gain in weight must be viewed with suspicion because it u s u a :dropsy. The heart is beginning to fail and the tissues are re- staining the water of the body. , Water is heavy and some of those individuals soak up 10 to 20 pounds of fluld in no time. PROTEINS AND UREMIA J. H. writes: Is a high protein diet responsible for uremia? REPLY No. bttl too much p r o tein may aggravate uremia. Many physt’cians call this condition renal insufficrency because it denotes failure of the kidneys ‘to eliminate waste m aterial lfrom the body. Some of this waste material comes fr om protein in the diet. SHOCK AND DIABETES G. D. writes: Can diabetes be caused by shock to the body? REPLY 'ot in my opinion. even ‘though the condition has been tdctectcd following shock. In all iprobability it was coincidental las the emotional upset brought lihe individual to the physician i where the urine was tested for ' sugar. ‘ EXCHANGE TRANSFUSIONS I S.V. writes: Is it true that an Rh baby's blood is taken from .its body and new blood put in? REPLY Yes, if by Rh baby you mean an Rh positive whose mother [is Rh negative. This incompat- ibility c a u s e s a disorder in lwhich the skin turns yellow. tExchange transfusions often tsave the infant's life. TASTE IN OLDSTERS A. R. writes: Is it true that most older persons lose th e i r 1sense of taste? REPLY t No. The majority retain this .sense. It is very keen in some and dulled in others. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Don't sit or lie in a draft. iOur Yesterdo ’s (From the Guardlan Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (February 7, 1938) WEBBWOOD. 0nt.— Barbara Henley, Canada's first and only woman mayor, today began her third term as head of t Northern Ontario town. Th 0 nomination meeting last night brought no opposition to Mrs. Hanley, and the clerk declared her elected by acclamation. Hundreds of people welcom- ed tihe Most Rev. Charles Leo Nelllgan D.D. Bishop of Pem- broke. ntario. y es t e r d a y when he celebrated his f Ir st Pontlflclal High Mass In his na- tive parish church, the Church of St. Simon and St. Jude, Tlgnlsh. TEN YEARS AGO (February . 1053 WEYBRIDGE. England (01’) ——Daniel Stilllmen, an alrllne pilot. hae invented an automa- tic map for his pueengera. Pae- aengers can no a lleht moving along the route line allowing the position of the plane in whlch they were travelling. The Oddfellowe and Rebekah: of Charlottetown held thdr an- nual party last evening in the Oddfellowa Hall ln commemor- ation of the founding of the In- dependent Order of Oddfellowe, bnyloThomaa Wildey on April 26 “WW: NOTES BY THE WAT Pelee la the ability to talk fluently while the other fellow is paying the check. -— Gait Re- porter. An intellectual la a person who can listen to William Tell Over- ture without thinking about the Lone Ranger. —Calgary Herald. Mr. Speaker Lambert e a y a the Commons question period is “not a time for the exchange of brilliant witticlsms." Ae every reader of Hansard knows. —Ot- tawa Journ Two Ottawane recently drove home from a session of the Ont- anio tr e n a p o r t department's workshop on road safety. They were much Impres . The car in which they were riding had just recently been equipped with seat belts. But it was noticed upon their arrival that they weren‘t wearing them; they were much embarrassed when the fact was pointed out. Maybe a good habit takes longer to ac- quire than a bad one. — Ottawa Citizen. Learning Languages Cape Breton Post The advantage gained by an English-speaking Canadian w h o acquires a command French language has been stress- ed repealedly in these columns. The importance of it has wide- spread recognition nowadays, but It would be a mistake to stress French alone in the study of a second language. have a command of more than one language has been a great aid to achievement in many a career. The thing to keep In mind is that a secondary language should be learned in order to be used. and there are many uses for fluency in a ny language. For Canadian students to con- centrate wholly on French in learning a second language would be to ignore the fact that (D it also is important for some Canadians to learn Spanish. German or ' or some other language that would be of advantage to them culturally or of benefit to their means of livelihood. Spanish is important to learn in view of the fact that it is the language of all of the continen- tal western hemisphere south of ' stock Sentinel-Review. We are too eager to put lab on everybody. Just because all Landlord: “I tell you I must ask you to pay at least part at your rent. as I have a lot of bills to pay." Shivering Tenant- "Here is 25 cents. . I take it and pay your —Montreal Star. i you can fuel bill." The minister of justice, Don. ald Fleming, surprised Japanese officials in Tokyo by speaking Japanese. Next time the Social Credit party is complaining about the lack of bilingualism in the cabinet, Mr. Fleming can tell them what he has been do- ‘ ing with his spare time! —Pet. erborough Examiner. [ the United States, with the not- ; able exception of Brazil where ‘ Portuguese is spoken. There are a few isolated minor exceptions to prove Lne general rule: Eng- lish. for example, is spoken in British Guiana. English is so widely spoken around the world that many a world traveller gets along fair- ly well with only English at his m and. Nevertheless. it is extremely important to many a career for a Canadian to know Spanish if the exigencies of his employment take him anywhere In Latin America. First and last, h owever, French is important .n Canada. Any young man who aspires to become the Prime Minister of this country would be sensible not to delay in learning French. By the same token. any young Quebeccr with political aspira- tions reaching beyond the boun- daries of his province. should learn to sprak English as well as does the Right Hon. Louis St. Laurent. There's no place for prejudice against any languace on the part of any truly ambi- tious person anywhere on earth. Thinking Of Computing Ottawa Can a computer think? An edi- torial In Office Equipment and ethods magazine says that it. can, and better than any human belng can. The magazine's edi- lor writes: “The most common piece of reason proffered to counter the jnotion that a machine can think i is that all the thinking has been l l l . abs. done for it in advance. The pro- gram of instructions and the pro- blems have all been neatly cl- phcred and laid out so it can't go wrong. Like a car on tracks, you start it going and it keeps in 'to the end and stops. 1 won- er. “The child in school is taught to add so he can so ve certain problems. He is taught a set of lnviolable instructions by a tea- cher who was taught by his tea- . cher and so on back to the Ar- the Euclids, the Newton: and Einsteins. The teachers have neither added nor taken away Journal from the orlglnal instructions. This is nothing but program , mlng. If the child had a macne tic tape input. the instructions ’ ccu‘d be fed in liar more cf‘ir- , lently. As it stands It takes about 15,000 manhours to program a youngster through Grade 13." This argument might hold wa- tc" as an indictment of what in go wrong wlth education. But: ,as evidence that computers can ,think it leaves some questions 3 unanswered. If a computer \vct'e programmed full of Aristotle I'N'lr' it rvt-r give out Descar- tes? If It were fed on Newton would it ever give us Einstein? ill may be better than people arr at absorbing what its tut- chers tell it. but could It ever slump its teachers or refute em? Until we hear of a computer that wonder! or doubts or r'-~cams we will not be convinc- ed. 0'. 3‘ Barbers & Psychiatrists Montreal Gazette At the National Barber's Coil- lcge in the United States liec- tures on psychology and psychi- atry have been delivered by Dr. Joseph Lerner. Dr. Lerner be lleves that barbers need to know more about human personality i they are to onrfrvm tthcir so- cial function properly. Much of Dr. Lerner's advice is eminently sound. “The bar- ber," he says. "must remember he is working with people. and not just a head of hair." This Is very true. Too m a n y barbers, even when worklng with a head of hair. act as though they weren't working with much. This is not at all the right at- titude. They should make the most of their subject. When a man's head is as bald as an egg. they should build up his ego. t is Dr. Lerner's opinion .that barber: should agree with BULL BRINGS 3139.0“ PERTH. Scotland (APl—Cllnt Thomam, U.S. callle dealer, paid a world record cc of 00.000 gulneaa (3180.000) Tues- day for the “month-old Aber- deen Angus bull Llndervll Evulee at the Perth cattle allow. Thomem wee bidding on behalf of J. R. Dlek, general manager or the Black Watch Farm, Flan- kIll Plains, New York. their customers and encourage their customers to talk. This, it is to be feared, is a counsel of perfection. Few indeed are the barbers who encourage conver- tsnlion. They speak in month ogucs. When not giving detailed ac- counts of their relatives and their ways and doings. they are glayinlz down the law on hockey. war, health or inflation. Often ,they pause In the business of gclipping to emphasize their re- lmarks at the point of the scis- sors. The helpless customer. at ,the barber's mercy. can only ‘nod his half-short: head. Perhaps, indeed, instead of teaching psychiatry to barber's la mlght be better to psychoan- ialyze them. After all. it is ra- ther alarming to think that one . never knows when a split person- ality might be at one's throat.“ WWW The FLYING IIIITGIIMAII RESTAURANT “Where Cooking Is A Work of-Art" i ._..___c___.. I 09909.... CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN SENIOR FINANCIAL INSTITUTION The Eastern Trust Company has openings for a number of young men- experience and /or Unlversity training in Arts Commerce or Law. Opportunities exist both in the Atlantic Prov- Inces and elsewhere in Canada with all usual p131? benefits and regular salary reviews on m The trust business is a rapidly ekpa-ndlng field offering a variety of services including estate administration, real estate management and salesv mortgage administration, Investment management and others. and prth‘85 an interesting and rewarding career. Apply In writing giving details of age. educa' tion, business experience The Secretary, THE EASTERN TRUST COMPANY. Halifax, N. s. 7502 with business or banking EM” savings and deposits. and salary desired to.