I14 The Guardian, Charlottetown. Fri. Nov. 13. 1964.] e EH5“, Mink Ranchers From B.C. Caught In Price Squeeze l ’l'li'entlially. about 20 per cent k of B.C.‘s mink ranchers may 21"95 "105' “Prion?! that “Ch have to retreat before the ur- possme 9?" ban sprawl. says Mr. ceptlon of the British Columbia Hodge Bv YERN LACEY VANCOUVER '(‘P' - .Vlln feeling—with the ranchers who raise them. They are caug'it between in- .creasing costs on one side itough foreign competition on the .other. mu std- ottoctn while undon- chemical reactions comm lgolng hospital treatimnt. occurred between two elm" ' He said these lin d t n g s that are perfectly h a r m l r ,, emerged from a recent studv in when takell separately univers'ty hospital in me To combat this danger. “a ‘ Are Discussed In Use Of Drugs United States. _ said. it would be helpful u .,.. To track down stde eflects‘main ingredients and purpu...i OTTAWA (CPl .~ About tire and their causes quickly. bus '0! a drug war.» snocificd m, "E label per cent of all hospital patients pllals SllOUld name a 5‘3“ do“ are admitted because they Sm. tor or a committee to whom all fer from the ill or side effects dm‘lors report SllSPEClEd “‘19 of drugs. a Toronto protessor at. {9915- BELFAST (Cp) _ The Val." Lang' medicine told the Commons Dr. Wightman said man}. ,of the Nort’rem lreland [0mm food and drug committee here. drugs have a serious effect on trade now is estimated at about Dr. K. J. R. Wightman of the blood pressurc or other 'n- ‘ 000.000 a year. Last {lgUl'Csl TOURISM'S REWARDS (h .., to a Most of B.C.‘s mink ranch- and ers who produce 26 per cent of Banting Institute. Universtty ot desirable side effects when they in 1962. showed the annual tour. Cafiada's pens. live within 50 Toronto. testified. that anothel ‘are taken simultaneously With lsl traffic as beintv Worth leg; miles of Vancouver. large group of patients develop certain other drugs. Harmful than 213.000.000. And. as one rancher said.‘ t' getting tougher all the .Mi 5 time. More and more buyers are de- manding mink. and growers the sold fewer than 150 this year it expects to markets 800.000. U.S. production has in-: creased from 2.900.000 to 7.000.- ‘000 in 10 years. i Meanwhile. Canadian prodch tion has remained fairly stablml increasing from 1.100.000 to. 1.400.000 in eig'it years. ’ The volume on the. world mar- ket keeps prices down to about? $17 per pelt. That's half the problem. The other is increasing costs.' Food. equipment. hired help. all? are becoming more expensive. 3 This knocks the bottom out. of . profits. The profit per pelt has edged down slowly over the last, 10 years from $5 to S4 to this .year‘s expected net of $3. . ' _ . , ‘ it is an uncomfortable, but not» " ' " " ‘ “‘ ' “ ’ ' ' iuntenable. postijtion for rlnosltzseodfi erritish Colum ia‘s 300 ice I UN [would deprive Freneh - Canaflmink ranchers as they prepare! . dians of much of their resent-rm the winter harvest of some? "‘0'" "mad". “"‘Z‘I- "‘3" ‘ment. she said. i mark' Norwal' Sweden' 1mm Then French-Canadians would; and YugOSIaV‘a' revert to English l Day, Acting commander of the. UN Emergency Force. Col. LB. Musicki of Yugoslavia Canadian aircraft and sold— iers take part in marchpast and flypasl of United Nations . in . t “We don‘t expect the indus- ln communlatry to fall apart or anything of ‘ Lari - forces in the Gaza Strip of takes the salute. Participating WP WireDlJOlO from National care with other Canadians andlthat nature," 5;“ I _ 3 Egypt in celebration of 173' in the ceremony were. troops Defence) lithe French language could dieiHodge of Langley. a director of She said French-Canadianslthe Canadian Mink Breeders‘ out. he would stay away from tlls have no right to demand thatlAssociah-(m‘ “A good business_ fawn“? 55!”?“5 '37“! spe“_d.English - Canadians speaklman will manage to make his much of his time in the public Trench “our language. thoughlliving.” llibrari‘; 4 . .we do have the right. to refuselURBAN SPRAWL HURTS In his '3‘?“ 3'03”. h‘5 fllghlslto be dealt with in theirs. For others—no one is sure‘ the magi? carpetfashe de'lespecially within our provincelhow many—there is a greater . ribed a DIEM 0f Sipping theland in tile civil service.“ oblem. The urban sprawl of [Eambl‘ian amber— became lessl Mrs. Vautelet is a greatigreater Vancouver is hemmingl 18nd less frequenf- One reporter‘agrand - daughter of Sir A. A.lthem in and their decision is to‘ who Set out to write. a feature lDirion. one-time prime, minister get out. get big or go broke. story about him never did find [of Lower Canada, Roy Comes. president of the} him “ gac. Mink Producers‘ Associafi But he continued to dress nat- . tion. is one rancher wtlo was; ' . . tlly. in the spats and bow tiel Pope Use forced out by the suburbs. t given a last goodbye to one of He once told of a rainmaklng tradition of a half - century ago i . He owned a small five-acrel its legerldal‘.V mandamumacmne With a reverse gear and carried his short tramel'RegUIGr lranch in suburban Coquitlam. a salty. nondcscript columnisttlever that SlippOSEGlY W001d*erecl, . twhen urban growth moved in. heller‘known as Col- John R Phase away ram: “9 contendw‘ Liebling. who greatly admired; VATICAN CITY (API—-Vati-jlh€ noise upset his mink and StinSO 0'” “19 “HOHGSL Ram' " once was “sad m keep r31“ t the colonel‘s writing style, citedlcan officials announcedlsome killed their youns- The Pope Paul will travel to indlalheavy musk odor at mating time N.Y. Bids Farewell To Legendary Citizen NEW YORK ltTPr Broad~.boards and the) would invite us way's. motley cmzenry has back next season" 011 SC maker" than his given name of Off a race "Mk 3 good example of it this . Von a regular airline as anibou’lCTEd the neighbors. Worst Of f). U- Wt CHARLOTTETOWN l“t sronr Open Saturday AFTERNOON Tlll 5 p. m. . as James Aloysius Macdonald. Among the words he put Into . extract from one of his col. ' mns: ‘ordinary passenger. and not intaU- “15 Property taxes went “P 0 “The Honest Rainmaker" was ‘ the race track language was ‘ u the title of a biography written . tease (moneyl- 1 “May be a lot. of proverbial 3a chartered plane. $3000 3‘; a‘cre' 20 r n h; t. Times S uare chart SHORT 0F TEASE 'livin dead in old uaker it .. ‘ - 9 move 0 a ‘3‘?“ a c about he 0 ‘ E Q c y That means paying customers at Langley Now he: ‘Jas low ads}. by the late A. J. Liebling.‘ If he was short of tease. he i but it's surprising how quick lean travel with him a new Operatmn and a The “colonel” was just one part. 3 would describe himself as “non- : come to life when that paddoc of the lczend. since Macdonald‘ holdin." and in that condition: bugle gol darn doth blow." admitted he was not even a col- onel in the Kentucky Militia. )lacdonald had lived at the: Dixie Hotel. just off Times Square. for the last 23 years nearby saloons. As recently as‘ last month. he put :3an 'ive shots of whisky in what one observer termed a “remarkably: short time." He was either 90‘ or ill—nobody seemed to knoW' exactly. But with age the colonel faded more and more from sight. His body was found more than a week ago —— apparently he had died of a heart atta'ck——blit his death did not become public knowledge for some. days. For many years Macdonald_ wrote a column. Yea, \‘erily \‘erllv. for the New York En- quirer, which now is the Na finnal Enquirer In addition to writing the column he also sold nclvcrtlsm: for the paper to Confederation ’s Stresses Blamed On English Element ; MONTREAL ICPl »-— A prom- inent French - Canadian woman says violence in Quebec prov- ince is linked to a world-wide pattern of violence and French- Canadians have used their emo- tions rather than reason in sta- ting their complaints about Con- federation. Mrs. Henri Vautelet, former president of the Canadian Asso- ciation of Consumers, said the recent outbreak of violence in Quebec was “the idiotic mud- dling of a lucidly defendable case," “While l cannot escape the evidence of "llSlOI‘y that today's strains and stresses on the fab-‘ ric of Confederation are 100 per cent English Canada's respon-t world. I am astonished that the obvious connection between thel rantings of our young separ-l e , , ,tax . 3‘” “UH” 3““ Vaticaniwide buffer zone. between his mm?“ .Sald 0th” passel"I‘;el"“’iminlt and the disturbing influ- ‘on tie flight would be carefully;e screened—meaning they wouldi mainly be correspondents andle churchmen. The Vatican press office said: he would fly to Bombay by Airl India Dec. . flight from Rome in migrate in the past two years. nces of civilization. He is e fourth rancher to lMMORTALlTY ASSURE!) A painter must have been e 4,]00-mileldead for 60 years before a jet WilllFrance's Louvre Museum will take eight hours. It will be the_ hang his works for public dis- Iongest papal trip in history. iplay. atists and this malady of th age seems to have been largely. overlooked." Mrs. Vautelet, a former pres- ident of the Quebec Federation. of Liberal Women. said too many slogans and not enough! constructive thinking are being? used to tell Quebec's griev-i ances. t "Slogans are not facts but they can be dangerous and sub-'_ stitute too eastly —— in minds'l aware of a grievance but a little hazy as to “that it really is ~ for the. actual reality of facts." She pointed to the "masters get your hands on a ow that you’re vice-president Charlie are you still going to wear tennis shoes to the office? Certainly am~they’re comfortable—don't hurt my feet, and they‘re cheap. And anyway, I’m an individualist. Well, I’m an individualist too, a practical individualist—I drive a Studebaker. Have you ever driven a Studebaker? Haven‘t the nerve! You’ve really missed something—you who’s supposed to be an individualist. Look at my Studebaker down there. Under that heavy gauge steel roof is a protective steel beam for extra safety. A real frame with bolt-on body Isn’t that going a little too far—«driving a Studebaker! ‘7 race. track lnlllS. sibility. i feel that French Can-.in our own house" slogan. usedl BORN l\' NEW ORLEANS ada must bear the rcsponsibil-‘by the Quebec Liberal party He started calling himself ity for our stupid. sometimeslduring the 1962 provincial gen- f‘nl. Stmgo half a century ago ugly. and usually ineffectiveleral election as an example of while writing for the Wasp in [and mainly emotional handlinglan improved assertion implying San Francisco. He told of being of the required presentation otineeds that no one has yet de- horn in New Orleans but appar- our case." lfined clearly. enlly left there at an early age. . She was guest lecturer at. , 5A racontmlr of the first order 3 Loy M a College here to Sill-1 amazoyrnggw" m on he, once told of his career as a dent: of political science. . ‘ .r I 4 . . cwn house here in Quebec. in member of ralnmakinl: teams She said recent Violence in a" but crises of war and we in the. s nll f h west. Liebling .QUEbeC is 5‘ haCkWKSh from Seven have the power in prom construction—never loosens up—is free of squeaks and rattles. Yeah, but what about comfort—I LIKE COMFORT. quoted him as saying in that 1world - wide. violence. and has Eour minorities in other prov- regard: little to do with Quebec's resent-1inces and ‘0 for“ a revaluation “When 1 concluded a rain- ‘mems' 'ot our Canadian partnership — making campaign we wet‘e in. HYSTERIA STRIKES if we used our existing weapons , - "Throughout the more civil- instead of going off half-cocked ‘énabl‘v "‘6 g'ies‘s 0f the be" lived world a strange disease of over minor and all too often un- em‘v‘d mmmumh" 3" 5 “mm” fviolence. a free - floating hate‘real grievances." t where sec and brut flowed like :searciling for an objective. andl Sie warned coast ~ to - coast the showers in a clubhouse 013a deliberate abandonment mlbllingualism could be the "kiss _- a baseball team after a 16-in- lmass hysteria has struck thejof death" for the French lan- ‘ ning game on a heat. We would all get stiff as day of record younger generation. Lguage in Canada. It all English- “Since Quebec is part of thelCanadians learned French it IOIII. ll. FARM-SIZED POW“ [AIM-SIZID PRODan lAlM-Slllb DIPINDAIILITY lAlM-SIZID "ICU. .. $13138 0! 230633881: LlADIBSIH’ **Deuters** E. W. TURNER LTD. MacDONALD 0'14“?! FARM MURRAY WHITE ___________ SALES & SERVICE LORIN PANTING John St. Charlottetown Wood Islands "MGGOWANS LTD. 8. T. HOLMAN LTD. Kiln-Ir S'atlle III Ch’kwl RALPH CALLBECK RALPH DICKIESON & C0. New Glasgow Bed .______°1'_°____ McSWAlN’S EDGAR CANNON SALES & SERVICE Ointment!- Morel CORNWALL JERSEY ls STRONG WINNER m I Douglas fires. 8: Jones Inc. mine atuieAl- sinisMwin‘ Rae me WWW for mer was mum mm.“ a. tritium“ flu.” glib “Warn-ii. melanin! f‘ “VHM. . ~- ke‘ym p. There’s more room in my Studey than any car I can think of. I wear my hat with inches to spare. The seats are chair high—I’m never tired. « It’s got flat floors— . i I never trip, and they’re easy to clean. 3 But you’re an individualist. ' so don’t take my word for it or anyone else's. Try Studebaker for yourself. ’ "CANADA’S PEOPLE TRY THEN BUY CANADA’S OWN CAR" , MARTIN'S GAMGE cantor-mom “