88 02 108 22 10101 11737144 30 126 26 1 146 71 i 180 37 1 Abovt payminti nclud principal and interest and ait bind onii ompinpiyai I bul da nol Includ th coil al 1 ft Imuianc Let yourself go and do the things you want on your vacation Do them with an HFC Traveloan Then when you return repay HFC conveniently Ask about cred 1 1 1 Insurance on loans at low group rates HOUSEHOLD FINANC PRINCE GEORGE 1368 3rd Avenue L 4 7207 next to Northern Hardware Loans by mail available Write or phone tlnue discussions with their new British friends According to the fairs dir director ¬ ector - general Ian Tr afford every single one of the 500 firms now has negotiations underway with the Russians Its estimated that the fair could result in a 30 to 50 per cent increase In British exports to Russia up from last years 130000000 to 200000000 worth by 19G8 The thing that surprised me me the most was the Interest of the average Russian citizen in everything said John Morely sales minager with Eps ylon lecordlng equipment who sold nearly 100000 worth of merchandise on the stand kV bV muWmmmji la jir vC III I dfljF iff I fa in 3 y II TSI ff iHHff I i L i m I J JL 111 unusual since Russians gen generally ¬ erally buy with care suspicion and Infinite patience Geoff Nutter textile sales dir director ¬ ector of Stone Piatt Industries said The Russians must be among the worlds most curious people Can you imagine an In Industrial ¬ dustrial fair athomowhich would attract so many women and child children ¬ ren Mr Nutter speaks Russian and was Premier Kosygins guide interpreter at the stand He learned the language liko 90 per cent of those British busi businessmen ¬ nessmen who know it while In the services Knowing the language gives a tremendous advantage in deal dealing ¬ ing with the Soviets But at the professional the technical level mutual com competence ¬ petence and knowledge provides Its own common bond Every young Britain found his Soviet opposite number quite Knowl Knowledgeable ¬ edgeable and proficient If the Soviet economy depended on the experts there would be no problem The trouble with Soviet industry and production is not in the engineers The problem lies in the Com Communist ¬ munist Party and the Soviet Bur Bureaucracy ¬ eaucracy Tor example at the G Stibbe and Co knitting machines ex exhibit ¬ hibit Soviet factory managers were annoyed Why are you so slow at de CANADIAN 200 College TLaaaiiviio French English in paPer Back Dictionary 60 Pen Sets SHAEFFER CARTRIDGE PEN BALLPOINTS PARKER 1 9 PEN PENCIL a 395 Brief Cases Featuring solid leather panels three pockets brass finished feet and lock and moulded plastic handles 8 50 and Attache Cases Slide Rules No 1768C Students 10 inch Built with care carefully ¬ fully prepared bamboo with metal framcursor in hard case and instructions No 589 10 inch 4 00 Slide Rule 3 Geometry Sets No 569 12 contains clearly marked 12 ruler 60 degrees set square 45 degrees 25 set square and protractor I THE CITIZEN livering the knitting machines we ordered last year exhibitors were asked Are these the mi chines that are to comr to our factories Why are you soslow The Stibbe people were be bewildered ¬ wildered Tills was tho first they had heard of the order The Soviet factorys request of a year ago was still bogged down In bureaucratic red tape lost in the Party machinery Or else the factory request was being refused without telling the factory other than blaming the British for ignoring a sale Soviet businessmen must ex perience sublime frustiation when they see a certain type of machine which they know will in increase ¬ crease pioduction raise effici Tupsday August 16 1966 17 The Harder and More impossible the Task the Harder the Struggle THE RUSSIANS AND THE BRITISH - A SIMILARITY By PETER WORTHINGTON MOSCOW In some ways Russians are like the British They seem to thrive on dif difficulties ¬ ficulties The harder and more Impos sible the task the more interest ed they are in It the more de termined to succeed and the harder they struggle As far as Russians are con concerned ¬ cerned this characteristic is quite indispensable for living and working under the Soviet sys system ¬ tem of Soclallsm BolngonCom munlsm You need stubborness and patience and Infinite deter determination ¬ mination to survive much less thrive in this economic climate One of the most revealing re marks I have heard here made by a Russian was the half Jesting Here a common cold can be fatal but with a brain tumor then you have a chancel This virtue of rising to dif difficult ¬ ficult challenges has its counter counterpart ¬ part in the Drittsh who histori historically ¬ cally have been renowned for losing every battle except the last one In economics as In war when the future looks the glummest the British and Russians are their most dogged Neither sur surrenders ¬ renders easily The recent British trade fair in Moscow the largest of its kind ever held in Russia was one of the more significant ec economic ¬ onomic occurrences of the year It revealed both Soviet hopes and frustrations as well as Bri British ¬ tish aspirations and anxieties Britain as even Prime Min Minister ¬ ister Wilson admits Is in a period of economic and financial crisis So is the Soviet Union which Is trying to streamline the economy purchase neces sary equipment and find enough hard currency to pay for all the goodies Both countries will probably succeed in the long run As far as the British are con concerned ¬ cerned I think the trade fair revealed enormous hope and po potential ¬ tential for the future The 500 British firms rep represented ¬ resented at the fair were staf staffed ¬ fed by joung businessmen who were enthusiastic and competent And many had taken the trouble to learn Russian The Soviets with whom they dealt seemed surprised and de lighted to be dealing with youth instead of the usual age exper experience ¬ ience and orthodoxy of elders Time and again miny of the 100000 technicians and eng ineers who visited the fair re returned ¬ turned to go over this or that machinery again and to con- Burl Sings Of Alberta CALGARY CP A half hour film on Albertas past present and future featuring balladeer Burl Ives as narrator is being produced as a centennial proj ect In addition to narrating the film Ives will sing a ballad of Alberta written by C a 1 g a r y composer Wally Grieve Ives and his lGyearold son Alex have the only talking parts in the production The film financed by the pro v i n c 1 a 1 government Is the brainchild of producer William Marsden of Calgary Much of the footage is being shot in Cal garys Heritage Park an area devoted to historical displays Missionaries the Northwest Mounted Police fur traders and Indians will be the stars of the first portion of the film Early days of the oil and mining In dustrics and the contributions of various ethnic groups also will be depicted in the hlstor leal portion The provinces Industries and scenic attractions will be ma major ¬ jor features of the segment dealing with today The segment on the future will view the Athabasca oil sands development and the opening up of the northern part of the prov lnce Richard Tomkies of Calgary wrote the film script Ken Ju benvill of Vancouver is director and Osmond Borradalle of Van Vancouver ¬ couver is photography director In addition to Ives and his son about SO persons will have parts as extras In the film Alberta government trade of offices ¬ fices around the world will help distribute it for cinema and tele television ¬ vision showing Mr Reagans Manageress LOS ANGULES AP Mom can I have a popsiclo asked eight-year-old Ronnie Nincy Reagan said he could Mom can I get a guitar asked Fattl 13 Well talk about it later honey This dialogue introduces Nancy Reagan ex debutante ex-actress in the role she says she likes best homemaker She Is the wife of Ronald Re a gan Republican candidate for governor of California who will try to beat Governor Edmund G Pat Brown a Democrat In the Nov 8 general election If he wins Reagan could be become ¬ come an Important figure when Republicans gather to pick a national slate for the presiden presidential ¬ tial elections In 10C8 Nancy Reagan daughter of a Chicago brain suigeon Is a hand handsome ¬ some brown eyed woman of 43 who has been married to Reagan Dijor 14 12 years As Nancy DjvIs In movies she says I usually played the wife She quit films upon be becoming ¬ coming Reagans real life wife Mi s Reagan likes to work In her garden give dlnnor parties lor eight or 10 good friends and ride horseback at the Reagan ranch Shes a member of the Colleacues acharltygroupwhlch suDDorts a homo for unwetfi mothers and the Junior League a community service organiza organization ¬ tion Now howevei she finds her herself ¬ self In the thick or at least the hot fringes of political battle When you havo children you have to divide yourself HHm When tho Reagans appeared jointly during Reagans campaign for nomination she let her actor husband do all tho speech making But there were teas and coffee hours where Nincy was the solo attraction I had to make speeches I said I never would I like to just sit and talk But Id get up and tell how we got Involved why were doing It tho Import Importance ¬ ance of tho two party system and tho Importance of men other than politicians becoming Involv Involved ¬ ed politically Ronnie and Ithought the pic picture ¬ ture business had a corner on rumors but politics are worse Its liko tho rumor that Ronnie wears make up for his speech speeches ¬ es He never wore It even in pictures Sammy Gave Them Back The Price of Admission HOLLYWOOD A P - Sammy Davis Jr took a match from his gold match box and lighted the cigarette he drew from the matching gold cigarette box Such baubles mean much to Sammy who fought his way up from poverty his talent winning him stardom and riches despite small stature and a homely kis kisser ¬ ser It also pleases him to make gestures such as a recent one In Atlantic City NJ when he paid refunds to an entire dinner audience because his voice had frozen during a performance I had to he said Those people had paid a lot of money for a performance that I couldnt give them These were people who see me only once a year theyre not tho ones who make the shows in New York or Miami Besides it was Atlantic City where I had starved where my mother worked as a barmaid I owed It to them The Impulse cost him about 4000 and the owner thought I was nuts But Sammy had to prove something to others and to himself He seems determined to con continue ¬ tinue proving that ho can meet new challenges in his profes professional ¬ sional life Youve got to do that In this business he said Ive seen too many talents work up to suc success ¬ cess and then coast on It thinking that It will go on Indefinitely It doesnt Pretty soon those people look around and the business lias passed them by Tho show world moves too SINATRA SIGNED SINGER Singer Trlnl Lopez says the turning point in his career came when he was offered a contract with a record company owned by Frank Sinatra fast nowadays Fashions change and audiences change If you dont keep trying to change with them forget it buddy One exposure on Ed Sullivan and the whole country knows your routine Youll find tho audiences mouth mouthing ¬ ing the punch linos with you If you try tho same Jokes onthem As usual Sammy finds himself locked In frenzied activity He was here to record some num bers for his own company He played a wacky role In a Wild Wild West television series did a cameo on Batman and was tak ing off for a date at Harrahs Lake Tahoe Hell continue with nightclubs concerts and guest shots until he goes to London next year for seven months of Golden Boy which he played for 1 12 years on Broadway BBH JHV fnJlBmHII Take that well deserved vacation with an HFC Traveloan AMOUNT OF 10AN 100 300 6S0 1000 1600 2500 3000 4000 6000 MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 10 months 4 IS 30 JO months months months months 612 18 35 23 73 32 86 4145 5811 57 72 73351 9018 I U months 9 46 28 37 5124 9156 ency and cut costs but which they cannot get without going through governmental channels But as young Russian busi businessmen ¬ nessmen and their British coun counterparts ¬ terparts get to know one another it cannot help but have a positive influence Tor Brltian tho future looks less dismal with such forward thinking young men who finally seem to havo shod the conser conservative ¬ vative restraining influences of tradition Despite cries with the pound and a precarious economy Bri Britains ¬ tains future looks promising in the hands of competent youth So for that matter does Rus Russias ¬ sias if only it could shed tho Party strait Jacket aiB fjRBl TmB tiii 4tttHaiiiiiBiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMCnPl II If its a World Webster its the NEWEST BIGGEST WEBSTERS NEW WORLD WEBSTERS NEW WORLD Concise WEBSTERS COLLEGE EDITION In Paper back WINSTON LAROUSSE S ROGET S I B GUEST LTD Now Opening A New School Department Next Door At 359 George Street I Js 1 75 m f v MF f JTsCRIBBLERS I D flLToackagedm fives 1 Hm SI Narrow or Q 1 l6yM J Wide Ruled I f REFILLS I 995 tffll h Xo- 981 1495 tVLz -siK J at m M priced tti t i Ww IP I oss com 1iare III I B GUE S T LTD Phone 564 4630 345 George Street