Edited Text
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x â W.J. Hancox, Publisher
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~AUGU
PRIDAY,
piurbing Trial Gis
ports in the |
are many
Judging from re
British press, there
Britons who feel uneasy that in all
the probings into the seamy life of |
a section of London society the big
names have so far managed to keep
away from the witness stands. Es-
pecially is this the case since the
suicide of Dr. Ward. It is for this
reason that the report of Lord Den-
ning on the security aspects of the
case of former War Minister John
Perfumo is awaited with special in-
terest throughout the country. Lord
Denning has been thoroughly prob-
{ng into every report and rumor con-
nected with the aff:
The Denning report is expected
in September. Meanwhile Lord Rad-
cliffe, the eminent lawyer who inquir.
ed into the Vassal spy case earlier
this year, has been accused of âwhite-
washingâ lax politicians and officials.
Lord Radcliffe sharply denied this In
an interview on a British Broadcast-
ing Corporation programme the other
day. He saw the allegation as an in-
sult to his own integrity. |
âBut did not the Vassal inquiry
disclose quite a lot of negligence in
high places?â he was asked. He
agreed there was. But he did not
think Prime Minister Macmillan
would neses: iy have been better
informed if there had been a minister
of security in the Cabinet.
Lord Radcliffe agreed that Sir
Norman Brook, secretary in the Cabi-
net, had slipped up badly in not in-
forming the Prime Minister that. his
War Secretary was associating with
Christine Keeler at the same time as
was Soviet agent Yevbeny Ivanof.
Then Lord Radcliffe made a comment
which considerably worried some
reviewers. He said, âSir Norman
hardly ever makes a mistake. It was
just one of those things.â
It is this kind of attitude, says &
reliable London correspondent, which
Is seen disturbing when British
integrity is felt to be in need of boost-
ing both at home and abroad. This
view is reflected pointedly by the
Labor Opposition, which has given
notice that it will pursue the ques-
tion of the mysterious gaps in what
the public has been allowed to know.
New Senate Inquiry
Before Parliament adjourned, a
strong bipartisan committee was
established in the Senate to examine
the problems involved in promoting
the welfare of aged and aging per-
sons in Canada. Among the specific
ateas of study mentioned by the pro-
moter, Senator Croll, were employ-
ment, health care, pensions, leisure
and housing.
The Senate in recent years has
launched other useful studies of
national problems. Two notable in-
vestigations, which led indirectly to
important legislation, were those into
onservation and into manpower and
employment. In its new inquiry it will
take account of social measures in
other countries, notably the United
States, the United Kingdom and the
Scandinavian nations.
In urging his motion, Senator
Croll emphasized the variety and com-
plexity of the problems to be investi-
gated, pointing out that, with respon-
sibilities divided between three levels
ef government and the voluntary
agencies, it was difficult to appraise
our national performance in this field
er to plan for such services as may
now be lacking.
Partly because of the achieve-
of medical science, problems
aged are now of direct con-
percentage of our citizens.
Placed before the Senate
aome striking statistics in this eon-
lon.
In 1921, for example, the propor.
tion over 65 in this country was only
4.8; in 1951, it had risen to 6.7 and
in 1961 to 7.7. It is very much higher
in Manitoba than in Quebec and New-
foundlandâand highest in Prince
Edward Island and British Columbia.
According to the most recent tables,
the total number of persons 65 and
over in Canada is nearly 1,400,000.
This is approximately the population
| of the province of Alberta.
The hearings of this committee
will thus be of direct concern to a
very large segment of our people.
One thing they should do, certainly,
is dispel the assumption that human
beings become obsolescent with ad-
vancing years and the feeling among
| retired people themselves that they
| are no longer wanted by the com-
| munity.
The Pesky Perch
The Canadian Press reports the
activities of a voracious perch which
has Vancouver's public aquarium of-
ficials in a quandary. The perch was
caught in a beach seine a few months
ago, and was put into a tank with
much larger fish, including a dog-
fish shark and a ling cod, although
it was feared he might be eaten. As
things turned out, the cod is nurs-
ing wounds and the shark is in dan-
ger of being nibbled to death. The
pearch wi
his gill slits to breathe and then
moves in for a choice bit of the gills.
And heâs got nearly all the skin nib-
bled off the cod.
It just goes to show that itâs ag-
gressiveness that counts. The perch
in this case is four inches long, the
shark three feet long and the cod
four feet long. By all reckoning the
perchâs survival chances were next
to nothing, especially if he started
getting nasty and annoying his big-
ger tank-mates. But the perch didnât
know that, or care. He just went
until the shark opens |
ahead as if the tank belonged to |
him, and the other inmates were put
there for his nourishment.
Officials claim they are in
same difficulty as the perchâs victims
âthey canât catch him. Heâs not only
a âterribly aggressive little fish,â but
a frustratingly nimble one as well.
There's a moral to this little story
somewhere, but we just canât put our
finger on it. Perhaps it has some-
thing to do with keeping a stiff up-
per lip, putting oneâs best foot for-
ward, and that kind of thing. Pe
haps we could link it up, if we tried,
with the political moral the late Prem-
jer Lea used to preach about the
wheel that does the squeaking being
the one that gets the grease. But
from the point of view of everyone
except the perch, it must be confess-
ed that it would be profitless to hold
this pesky little creature up for
emulation on any count. The sooner
his associates bestir themselves and
make an end of him the better.
Peaceful co-existence, even in an
aquarium, canât be carried on by
turning the other cheek.
EDITORIAL NOTES
A gratifying indication of the
progress made in the construction of
the Fathers of Confederation Mem-
orial Building is the announcement
that Prime Minister Pearson will lay
the cornerstone on August 26,
the
Just 75 years ago, Dr. John Dun-
lop, a Belfast veterinary surgeon,
filed a patent application for a pneu-
matie tire. Henry Ford said a few
years later this was the invention
that made the whole automobile
industry possible.
ee oe
Even in election years, says an
should realize that it is no longer ac-
ceptable to use the old-age pension
vote to buy votes. Perhape not ac-
ceptable, but it seems to be regarded
as politically profitable.
The first three-year grain agree-
ment with Communist China, notes
the Ottawa Journal was received
critically by the Liberals then in op-
position who had the most gloomy
forebodings about credit terms and
payments. Now, in Government, they
have heartily welcomed a new agree-
ment. The price to be paid for be-
tween 112,000,000 and 186,700 bush-
els in the new agreement is not stat-
ed but presumably it is close to the
market price. The terms of credit
have been improved with an addition-
al six months given the Chinese in
whieh to complete payment,
EMERGING FROM THE ICE AGE?
OTTAWA REPORT By
Patrick Nicholson
Faceless Men Behind The Ministers
The boffins of Parliament |
Hill are the executive assistants
and special assistants to Cabin-
et Ministers. These backroom
boys can make a government if
they are effective; if they are
not, they can easily break a gov-
ernment.
âThe classic example of what a
hoffin should be and do was of
course effectively demonstrated
by the greatest of them all, Mel
Jack, who was executive assis-
tant to George Hees when he
was Transport Minister and
when he was Trade Minister in
â always in back-
roomsâ ever since. Nobody, but
nobody, knows his way about
polities end Parliament Hill bet-
ter than Mel J:
So effective was he in aiding
George Hees, in producing eal
in steering his Minister Ta a |
Jy and departmentally, that his
fame was widespread in Ottawa.
It is a secret that can now
told that, when the Pearson Cab-
inet was sworn in, Mel Jack the
longtime dedicated Conservative
worker could have had the Job
of executive assistant to
one of four of the new Liberal
ministers.
George Hees ran the most
glamorous and effective depart-
ment of government In the Con-
servative regime. George Hees
was called a playboy by the late
âŹ.D, Howe before he ever look-
ed like becoming a cabinet min-
ister. But George Hees, by his
own hard work and with Mel
Jack's guidance, developed into
the man who is the ma Jority
choice for the leadership of the
Conservative Party. It is not too
much to say that this new Hees
is âThe Hees that Jack bullt.ââ
NEW LIBERAL TEAM
With these faceless men
hind the ministers playing as
an important role. there has
been great interest to see who
would be recruited into these
powerful and important jobs by
the new Liberal governm ent.
Gradually the team took shape,
and began to be known around
Parliament Hill. Then Doug
Fisher, the New Democratic MP
for Port Arthur, asked a series
of probing questions in Parlia-
ment. Who is the executive as-
sistant or the special assistant
to each minister? he asked.
What is his age? What are his
qualifications ice the job? How
much is he pai
âThus we now have a rather
unusual survey on the record.
The 25 ministerial assistants
appointed to date range In age
from 68 years down to 22. Their
pay bracket normally runs from
$9,000 to $12,000, but there are
exceptions. Jacob Austin, the SI
year old assistant to Northern
âAffairs Minister Arthur Laing |
has an outstanding record as stu-
dent, teacher and practitioner of
Pi he draws an exceptional
$15,
MARY. MACDONALD
The Prime Minister's own ex-
ecutive assistant is the ââdeanââ
of this group, who has been Girl |
riday to Mike Pearson almost
since the end of the war in his
various roles as Under Secre-
tary and then Secretary of State
for External Affairs, Opposition
Leader and now P.M.
Macdonald won her BA âmagna
cum laude"; graduated M.A. is,
political science; served
adian Red Cross headquarters ih
England during the war. She is
bd second highest paid, at $13,-
600, and she is the only woman
in this group.
âTwo ex-Liberal M.Ps from
Quebec, both defeated by So-
creds, a retired army Brigadier,
a serving officer in the RCAF,
two recruits from the federal |
civil service, former Liberal As:
| sociation officials, public re-
lations practitioners and news-
papermen, as well as the usual
spattering rs a lawyers,
make up the
âThese advisers, trouble- shoot
ers and workhorses, each one |
hand-picked by his own minist- |
er, represent a very diversified |
cross section in experience. wag-
es, age and background.
U.S. & The Common Market
pt eres Stat Weiter
âThe United Siates has in ef-
fect demanded that the Kuro-
pean Common Market prove by
actions that it is an outward-
looking community seeking gen-
eral improvement in trade.
That is the interpretation in
Britain of the U.S. threat to
take reprisals against, the six:
nation community unless it re-
dices levies on American chlck-
ens in the so - called chicken
is ap-
sral-type
tention by President de Gaulle |
and Chancellor Adenauer, the
community is moving more and
more toward an exclusive pos-
ture.
In other words, France and |
West Germanyâalong with the |
Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and
Luxembourg â are accu:
looking out strictly for their
âown interests at the expense, It
necessary, of other countries in
the Atlantic community.
COMPROMISE POSSIBLE
Some experts see the conflict
as so serious that they cannot
believe the U.S. and the Com-
mon Market will fail to reach
a compromise before Sept. 16,
when the American reprisals
would take effect. These would
involve withdrawing $46,000,000
worth of tari concessions on
common market exports.
"The background is. that the
&
PUBLIC
FORUM
VISITOR'S REACTION
Sir,âThere has been
discussion as to whether it would
not benefit Prince Edward Is-
a to abolish present controls,
smit free consumption and sale
St lighor, and this encourage
and increase tourist traffic on
the Island. This letter is both a
protest and a warning against
such a plan.
Instead -of âbeautiful girls on
the beachesâ you would get bro-
ken bottles, filthy litter and
tragic accidents there, due to
drinking. Do not open your doors
to invite undesirables to whom
holidays consist only in unbridl-
ed license. Such visitors would
not be capable of
| manpower and degrading your
young men and women to the
rank of menials and the, popula; |
tions ânativesâ
viewed without resect, Tiking of
understanding by theâ soulless,
drifting masses that
and in return for
devastate a small community,
body and soul.
Ido not mean that you should
close your Province hermetically
and keep all strangers out, There |
is a desirable class of visitors,
slowly âbut steadily growing in
numbers, who will faithfully Be
turn year after year, and briny
their friends. âThese tourists,
drawn from all parts of
parts
the U.S.A, are the thougl -
Common Market has begun to |
mon |
toxication.
into operation a comi
agricultural protective system, |
based on variable levies on
imported foods so that their
prices give European farm
products a preference.
| han'to take digitalis al
Skin Affected
By Poor Diet
By Dr. Theodore R, po nen
Can a starvation affect
the skin? Yes, but the âaivideal
nutritional ecze
ture of his condition escaped ae-
tection because it resemb!
fairly common dermatitis âoy
âand no one
fi ening hal
âThe man was reluctant to dis-
cuss his meals but finally ad-
mitted he never drank milk and
had avoided meat, vegetables,
and fruit for many months. His
mepus consisted largely of pota-
toes and tea. Rapid improve-
ment took place when he chang-
ed his eating habits and took
large doses of vitamins and min-
erals. In addition, he gained
weight and experienced & mark-
ed increase in strength and vig-
or.
âNutritional eczema usually {s
confined to the elbows, necks
and lower back.
these a eve ae ta
ry and scaly. In so
Wieuse (mts lilece sere
flesh in that it is studded with
tiny projections.
But most nutritional deficien-
cies are detec mouth
and lips. The tongue may be
smooth and bright red and the
gums swollen; canker sores of
ten co-exist, Fissures or cracks
may develop in the corners of
the mouth.
Individual vitamin _deficien-
cles produce specific skin chang-
es but this is unusual because it
1s difficult to develop a defic-
fency of one vitamin and not oth-
ers. Too little A causes dryness
and shrinking of the skin and
acne-like lesions. A deficiency
of BI leads to pellagra; a plg-
mented dermatitis develops over
the hands and feet and the lips
become dry, cracked, and scaly.
Scurvy (bleeding) follows lack
of C.
HAND WASHING
R. W. writes:
in
| ter would kill any kind of germ
there is. Could this be true?
REPLY
| Cleansing with soap and wat-
| er eliminates most of the micro-
organisms. But letâs give more
| credit to the mechanical remov-
al of dirt and germs during the
process of washing rather than
to the antiseptic action of the
soap.
DIGITALI INTOXICATION
8. writes: If a person
time, is there any danger this
drug will slow down the pulse
too much?
,EPLY
Yes. Should this occur, your
physician will reduce the dosaj
or stop the drug for a few days.
A slow pulse associated with
nausea is a sign of digitalis in-
GLAND INFECTION
ieee ES. âites: What are
e symptoms of a viral infection
The poultry case is the first | a âte te sands? How Tong. des it
in which the variable Hae vl
seriously stung the which |
previously _e xported feisaally
about $50,000,000 worth of frozen
chickens to the Common Mi
ket, mostly to West Germany.
COULD HIT CANAD:
But the fight ts fae really |
, one of the
farm products on which
European Community has man-
aged to work out a isa
duty. More serious items
feared. These include cereals,
where restriction by the com-
| munity would be serious not
ony for the U.S. but for Can-
Biri: however, feels there
be
| now should
last
REPLY
A number of viral diseases in-
volve the glands. If you refer to
infectious mononucleosis, the in-
fection usually lasts 2 to 4
weeks.
URINARY TRACT
INFECTION
cH | _ D. C. writes: Does cystitis af-
| fect the entire urinary tract?
| REPLY
re | No, just the bladder, But the
| infection may spread to the kid-
| neys or to the small tube lead-
ing to the outside âurethral
TODAY'S HEALT
Don't allow at under
two years of age on the sidewalk
unattended.
a
of national agricultural policies,
including subsidies and suppert |
systems, so that a ir and ra- |
flonan aswell as a liberal, |
trade system can
| evolved. Europe is unhappy |
about the vast trade surplus the
ae $. enjoys over Western Bu. |
to the American administra-
tion, perhaps the greatest con-
| cern is the possible fate of the
| Kennedy roundâ of tariff ne-
| gotiations, scheduled to begin
early next year after a 60-nation
Geneva meeting held this sum-
mer.
President Kennedy's plan. for
| general slashing of tariffsâ
| haunted by dangers since its in-
ceptionâwould face disaster if
| the atmosphere worsent
| tween the U.S, and the Common
| Marke!
z
| MANY FLEE
| BONN (AP)âA total of 16,456
refugees have fled from Com-
| munist Ea
| West since the erect
Our Yesterdays
(From the Guardian Files)
hc aah Se FIVE Pag AGO
are
rt site, on
whieh the city yas tad an option,
was accepted a gular
monthly Matlag of the Cuarioe
tetown City Council Iast night.
A detachment from the Char-
lottetown Fire Department leav-
es this morning for Amherst,
where they will compete in the
Maritime Firemenâs por soma
being held here oe wi
TEN YEARS AGO |
aurea 9, 1953)
Miss Patricia Helen MacDon-
hs âa music student rail Notre
cademy, has
a mn ARCT diploma, tit class
honors, as solo performer in
piano.
Leading airereftaman Erie L.
iticoville,
|
NOTES BY
THE WAY
on both sides
of any jent jays the
evel who make themselves
|. What we need are some
peekit moderates, Vancouv-
er Sun.
Amid all the intensive interest
in wheat deals with China, Pol-
and and Yugoslaviaâall arrang-
ed on long-term credit dealsâ
there has heen a tendency to
overlook a post-war cash-pay-
ing regular purcha:
ser, namely
Japan. Japan since the end of
the wor has become one of
Canadaâs best customers and at
ed upon
arrangements, â Winnipeg Tri-
bune.
is responsible
Fl
many a fad jam. â
Reporter. Gait
A bride becomes a wif
she stops lowering her ree
starts raising her voice, â
Stratford Beacon-Herald.
Citizenship Minister Guy Fay.
reat has announced his intention
of integrating custom and immi.
gration services, as recommend.
ed od by the Glassco Royal Com.
mission for an annual estima.
$500,000. In is
fine of spouting deficits re is
at one
of the Cabinet is interestedâ Te
cutting costs. â Toronto Globe
Path to Bi Bil
Canadian ae who ig
lieve that Canada would be a
happier nation if more Cana-
ns were bilingual might con-
sider an experiment tried by
Britain's Joseph Lucas Organiz-
ation. Last year the firm which
jalizes in automotive and
rts offered
aircraft electrical
its employees cash awards for
proficiency'in one of four inter-
national languages â French,
German, Italian and Spanish.
Since the firm does business. all
over the world, encouraging,
employees to speak the tongues
of their customers was regarded
ic â seers investment.
firm's workers were en-
thant abut the Mea) More
lingualism
than a thousand of them enroll-
ed in night school courses with
50 per cent taking French, 40
per cent taking German and five
per cent taking each Spanish ve
Italian
imilar campaign by some
ny Cana major industries
could do more towards bringing
the two Canadas together than
any number of Royal Commis-
sions. The Civil Service Com-
mission is already considering
what incentives it could offer to
encourage bilngualism in Can-
adaâs largest industry â thecl-
vil service. The experience of
the Lucas Organization suggests
hard cash still has wide appeal.
The stories of the two West
German intelligence men who
have admitted spying for Russia
offer food for thought on the
spying trade and its practition-
rs
Heinz Rélle and Hans Clemens
were SS __ intelligenc
Nevl times, Atler the war Felfe
tried to get into the West Ger-
man police but wasnât accepted.
Be scraped bid for a time ba
ing some freelance spying f
British inisliganeay and then, in
1051, got into the organization
e Americans by Gen-
Teal lense rtatial fees er
man Army ânot SS) intelligence
chief on the eestern front during
War) Mia ald 66) ooeacader
Cesaen iin tac ech th eo
with the Russians since the war,
also joi
ton in 1851 and persuaded Felte
to become a double agent.
ey
5
Cloak, Dagger And Sneak
Ottawa Journal
kept all the while a meticulous
record of his work. He put this
at the disposal of the court when
he was tried and the judge found
it âmost helpful.â
As the Economist says, âThat
© many people seem to be sur-
prised,â that these two charact-
ers turned out to be untrustwor-
thy,"â is one of the more surpris-
ing aspects of the case.â
e democracies have
rt
fazis the Communists have
their drawbacks. Might It not
have heen Inferred from that
that old SS men would Hkewlse
be rather iffy allies against the
Communists?
No doubt international politics
makes strange under-the- b
fellows. And since spying requir-
es sneakiness and a willing sus
pension of scruples, if one has
When the Gehlen epee
became the West German Fed-
eral Intelligence Service in 1955, |
âelfe and Clemens carried 0
their double- dealing. And Felfe,.|
like a journeyman double-deater, |
them, it might be argued that
the best man for the job is the
one who is by nature an un
scrupulous sneak. But the trou-
ble with a sneak is that he can
sneak in all directions.
âI'm no Solomon,â the Chica-
fo Judge barked and then pro-
to let the
One Dog Has His Day
Christian Science Monitor
Over and above the remark-
able individualism of dogs is a
dog have his day,
âTwo familes faced each other |
each determined to own the dog. |
âThe judge turned the tables and |
let the dog own the family of its |
choice.
There was rejoicing among |
the children of the family favor- |
ed by the dogâs affection; dis-
may among those of the disap-
pointed clan. Then the hopeful
surprise; another dog of the
reed awaited the losers
it a kennel, having been provid-
ded by a lawyer.
For the moment the good tid-
Jngs fell on unappeasable gloom,
âThe unchosen ci
did not want any other
âThey will change their minds |
with time, or with the maturity
Which may come in a twinkling:
wise man discovered
0 a wi
that is âs not
dogâ that mankind appreciates.
a long
unwritten history arate, Te
corded in a dog's sixth sense,
Thomas Mann sensed and com-
municated something of this in
one of his stories, the account of
a man walking his dog.
Like people, dogs have to be
known individually to evoke the
intimate affection that tes
friend to friend. But unless this
is felt as part of a more in-
clusive whole it often has a
tentative fleeting qual
Because the intense centering
of affection of one object has
its intense but possibly restric-
tive rewards, we hope the chil-
dren who in their moment of
disappointment did not want any
other dog will nevertheless ac:
cept the lawyer's gift.
For that very dog is just the
one they would never exchange
for. any other.
Hamilton Spectator
Not too many hours ago, a
bune! rofessors we
whooping {t up in a_clubhou:
after 18 holes of golf. Finally
sub} Lea around to books
and Faas of the professors de-
sided then and there to bens
pert a list of books he
siders real classics bul âwhieh
he would like to read
âWe wrote down his fist (no
poems or plays were included),
and we pass it along in case
hig d has any ideas along this
Tom Jones, by Henry Field-
pay Karamazov,
°
pope The at
Dastoexski; si
AB. Gather: Esther Wier,
by Moore; Gulliver's
âTravels, by Jonathan Swift; The
ranz Kafka; Black
Lamb and rane Faleon, by Re-
becca West;
David Copperfield, by
One Prof.âs Book List
by.
Huxley
syle
Romain Roland;
Saga, oy John eatarenty.
How Green Was My Valley.
by bp enc poo
Jane eyes) by Charlotte Brot
te; the Sun Also Rises, by Er-
nest Hemingway; Robinson Cr
soe rey, Daniel Defoe.
Lord Jim, by Joseph Conrad;
War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy
Wuthering Heights, by Emily
Bronte; Treasure Island, | by
Jean - Chri pork
The
Robert Louis 1 atl ers
in Wonderland, by Lewis Car-
roll; and Quiet Flows the Don,
by Michail Sholokhov;
istry said
them were 1,304 members
Another
tinea trying to escape.
the unique natural beauties of
your province. Instead, racing
through quiet country roads with
the disregard for speed limits
and driving regulations for which
drinking bead are noted and
feared, woul ing death to
ara peytig and laborers at
ier
motels, for a short season
Timited by climate, would cer-
tainly not solve your existing
sing problem, or contribute |
eee, to your economy.
id God forbid that the
you
i in which a Hilton Hotel «|
âmonstrosity would be er- |
similar
ected in geting midst, unhealthy
ibsorbing products
ork. e
Ngee of high-priced hotels |
and
families, who return rested to
their work after a holiday on
your health-giving Island and
will not spare ee words of
praise, for
you
| â dignified
Keep it thus, then, it
stroyed, never
Tativelyâ slight barrier, Tike
fact that P.E.I. is âdryâ, sutfie-
«3 or your proseth grate-
| fol for it and keep it up.
T am, Sir. ete.,
COMTESSE, INE de
| a sae (Visiting at Park Cor-
Germany to to the Gitant, 108 PE. Cher. jews â4
of ti a ed Ietnptersed oe Di âThomas wr stiaalemarch,
Bein Wall began Aug. 18, 1061, | erseas for aaty in ee Gatto | Games Aaeet, i ese names | ter aeote lak; Oliver Swish
the West German refugee min. Kingdo1 Point Counter Point, by Aldous by Charles Dickens. __
of the
st German People's Police R . .
eee eopening of Public Schools
Schools with a fall vacation of two weeks will reopen on Monday,
August 1
FAMOUS FOR
IRANDED
âiSTEAKS
BaZa kt aS Wa
âThe
FLYING DUTCH
RESTA
September 3rd.
for 1963-64
Schools having no fall vacation will have adequate time to complete
two hundred teaching days for the school year by reopening on Tuesdays
isters and other lies for teach 1 is will be
forwarded âto the school rocrateees, re ae ea
Many herpes have not yet Ă© Seewania Sets Netions of Engager
t these
forms reach the department before August vain so that ~ Be il be
adequate time to prepare pay lists for September.
M. MacKENZIB,
âYour Island Steak Deputy Minister
Houseâ Direetor of Education.
|
Govers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew
x â W.J. Hancox, Publisher
Burton Lewis
Executive Editor
ed every week day morning (except Sum
Prince Street,
ld.
Frank Walker
Editor
ented nationally by Thomson
ris Services Toronto, 425 Unive
13-8894; 640 Cathcart
office, 1030
Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA 7037)
âMember Canadian Daily Newspaper rales
Fiehis or republication of special ai desthaai
also reserved. Subscription rates
Not over 35c per week by carrier.
$11.00 » year by mail or rural routes and areas
not serviced by ca
Bets yer aff sland and UK, $20.00. per
and elsewhere outside British Come
Net ever 7e pet single cop)
mber Audit Bureau 3F Circulat
~AUGU
PRIDAY,
piurbing Trial Gis
ports in the |
are many
Judging from re
British press, there
Britons who feel uneasy that in all
the probings into the seamy life of |
a section of London society the big
names have so far managed to keep
away from the witness stands. Es-
pecially is this the case since the
suicide of Dr. Ward. It is for this
reason that the report of Lord Den-
ning on the security aspects of the
case of former War Minister John
Perfumo is awaited with special in-
terest throughout the country. Lord
Denning has been thoroughly prob-
{ng into every report and rumor con-
nected with the aff:
The Denning report is expected
in September. Meanwhile Lord Rad-
cliffe, the eminent lawyer who inquir.
ed into the Vassal spy case earlier
this year, has been accused of âwhite-
washingâ lax politicians and officials.
Lord Radcliffe sharply denied this In
an interview on a British Broadcast-
ing Corporation programme the other
day. He saw the allegation as an in-
sult to his own integrity. |
âBut did not the Vassal inquiry
disclose quite a lot of negligence in
high places?â he was asked. He
agreed there was. But he did not
think Prime Minister Macmillan
would neses: iy have been better
informed if there had been a minister
of security in the Cabinet.
Lord Radcliffe agreed that Sir
Norman Brook, secretary in the Cabi-
net, had slipped up badly in not in-
forming the Prime Minister that. his
War Secretary was associating with
Christine Keeler at the same time as
was Soviet agent Yevbeny Ivanof.
Then Lord Radcliffe made a comment
which considerably worried some
reviewers. He said, âSir Norman
hardly ever makes a mistake. It was
just one of those things.â
It is this kind of attitude, says &
reliable London correspondent, which
Is seen disturbing when British
integrity is felt to be in need of boost-
ing both at home and abroad. This
view is reflected pointedly by the
Labor Opposition, which has given
notice that it will pursue the ques-
tion of the mysterious gaps in what
the public has been allowed to know.
New Senate Inquiry
Before Parliament adjourned, a
strong bipartisan committee was
established in the Senate to examine
the problems involved in promoting
the welfare of aged and aging per-
sons in Canada. Among the specific
ateas of study mentioned by the pro-
moter, Senator Croll, were employ-
ment, health care, pensions, leisure
and housing.
The Senate in recent years has
launched other useful studies of
national problems. Two notable in-
vestigations, which led indirectly to
important legislation, were those into
onservation and into manpower and
employment. In its new inquiry it will
take account of social measures in
other countries, notably the United
States, the United Kingdom and the
Scandinavian nations.
In urging his motion, Senator
Croll emphasized the variety and com-
plexity of the problems to be investi-
gated, pointing out that, with respon-
sibilities divided between three levels
ef government and the voluntary
agencies, it was difficult to appraise
our national performance in this field
er to plan for such services as may
now be lacking.
Partly because of the achieve-
of medical science, problems
aged are now of direct con-
percentage of our citizens.
Placed before the Senate
aome striking statistics in this eon-
lon.
In 1921, for example, the propor.
tion over 65 in this country was only
4.8; in 1951, it had risen to 6.7 and
in 1961 to 7.7. It is very much higher
in Manitoba than in Quebec and New-
foundlandâand highest in Prince
Edward Island and British Columbia.
According to the most recent tables,
the total number of persons 65 and
over in Canada is nearly 1,400,000.
This is approximately the population
| of the province of Alberta.
The hearings of this committee
will thus be of direct concern to a
very large segment of our people.
One thing they should do, certainly,
is dispel the assumption that human
beings become obsolescent with ad-
vancing years and the feeling among
| retired people themselves that they
| are no longer wanted by the com-
| munity.
The Pesky Perch
The Canadian Press reports the
activities of a voracious perch which
has Vancouver's public aquarium of-
ficials in a quandary. The perch was
caught in a beach seine a few months
ago, and was put into a tank with
much larger fish, including a dog-
fish shark and a ling cod, although
it was feared he might be eaten. As
things turned out, the cod is nurs-
ing wounds and the shark is in dan-
ger of being nibbled to death. The
pearch wi
his gill slits to breathe and then
moves in for a choice bit of the gills.
And heâs got nearly all the skin nib-
bled off the cod.
It just goes to show that itâs ag-
gressiveness that counts. The perch
in this case is four inches long, the
shark three feet long and the cod
four feet long. By all reckoning the
perchâs survival chances were next
to nothing, especially if he started
getting nasty and annoying his big-
ger tank-mates. But the perch didnât
know that, or care. He just went
until the shark opens |
ahead as if the tank belonged to |
him, and the other inmates were put
there for his nourishment.
Officials claim they are in
same difficulty as the perchâs victims
âthey canât catch him. Heâs not only
a âterribly aggressive little fish,â but
a frustratingly nimble one as well.
There's a moral to this little story
somewhere, but we just canât put our
finger on it. Perhaps it has some-
thing to do with keeping a stiff up-
per lip, putting oneâs best foot for-
ward, and that kind of thing. Pe
haps we could link it up, if we tried,
with the political moral the late Prem-
jer Lea used to preach about the
wheel that does the squeaking being
the one that gets the grease. But
from the point of view of everyone
except the perch, it must be confess-
ed that it would be profitless to hold
this pesky little creature up for
emulation on any count. The sooner
his associates bestir themselves and
make an end of him the better.
Peaceful co-existence, even in an
aquarium, canât be carried on by
turning the other cheek.
EDITORIAL NOTES
A gratifying indication of the
progress made in the construction of
the Fathers of Confederation Mem-
orial Building is the announcement
that Prime Minister Pearson will lay
the cornerstone on August 26,
the
Just 75 years ago, Dr. John Dun-
lop, a Belfast veterinary surgeon,
filed a patent application for a pneu-
matie tire. Henry Ford said a few
years later this was the invention
that made the whole automobile
industry possible.
ee oe
Even in election years, says an
should realize that it is no longer ac-
ceptable to use the old-age pension
vote to buy votes. Perhape not ac-
ceptable, but it seems to be regarded
as politically profitable.
The first three-year grain agree-
ment with Communist China, notes
the Ottawa Journal was received
critically by the Liberals then in op-
position who had the most gloomy
forebodings about credit terms and
payments. Now, in Government, they
have heartily welcomed a new agree-
ment. The price to be paid for be-
tween 112,000,000 and 186,700 bush-
els in the new agreement is not stat-
ed but presumably it is close to the
market price. The terms of credit
have been improved with an addition-
al six months given the Chinese in
whieh to complete payment,
EMERGING FROM THE ICE AGE?
OTTAWA REPORT By
Patrick Nicholson
Faceless Men Behind The Ministers
The boffins of Parliament |
Hill are the executive assistants
and special assistants to Cabin-
et Ministers. These backroom
boys can make a government if
they are effective; if they are
not, they can easily break a gov-
ernment.
âThe classic example of what a
hoffin should be and do was of
course effectively demonstrated
by the greatest of them all, Mel
Jack, who was executive assis-
tant to George Hees when he
was Transport Minister and
when he was Trade Minister in
â always in back-
roomsâ ever since. Nobody, but
nobody, knows his way about
polities end Parliament Hill bet-
ter than Mel J:
So effective was he in aiding
George Hees, in producing eal
in steering his Minister Ta a |
Jy and departmentally, that his
fame was widespread in Ottawa.
It is a secret that can now
told that, when the Pearson Cab-
inet was sworn in, Mel Jack the
longtime dedicated Conservative
worker could have had the Job
of executive assistant to
one of four of the new Liberal
ministers.
George Hees ran the most
glamorous and effective depart-
ment of government In the Con-
servative regime. George Hees
was called a playboy by the late
âŹ.D, Howe before he ever look-
ed like becoming a cabinet min-
ister. But George Hees, by his
own hard work and with Mel
Jack's guidance, developed into
the man who is the ma Jority
choice for the leadership of the
Conservative Party. It is not too
much to say that this new Hees
is âThe Hees that Jack bullt.ââ
NEW LIBERAL TEAM
With these faceless men
hind the ministers playing as
an important role. there has
been great interest to see who
would be recruited into these
powerful and important jobs by
the new Liberal governm ent.
Gradually the team took shape,
and began to be known around
Parliament Hill. Then Doug
Fisher, the New Democratic MP
for Port Arthur, asked a series
of probing questions in Parlia-
ment. Who is the executive as-
sistant or the special assistant
to each minister? he asked.
What is his age? What are his
qualifications ice the job? How
much is he pai
âThus we now have a rather
unusual survey on the record.
The 25 ministerial assistants
appointed to date range In age
from 68 years down to 22. Their
pay bracket normally runs from
$9,000 to $12,000, but there are
exceptions. Jacob Austin, the SI
year old assistant to Northern
âAffairs Minister Arthur Laing |
has an outstanding record as stu-
dent, teacher and practitioner of
Pi he draws an exceptional
$15,
MARY. MACDONALD
The Prime Minister's own ex-
ecutive assistant is the ââdeanââ
of this group, who has been Girl |
riday to Mike Pearson almost
since the end of the war in his
various roles as Under Secre-
tary and then Secretary of State
for External Affairs, Opposition
Leader and now P.M.
Macdonald won her BA âmagna
cum laude"; graduated M.A. is,
political science; served
adian Red Cross headquarters ih
England during the war. She is
bd second highest paid, at $13,-
600, and she is the only woman
in this group.
âTwo ex-Liberal M.Ps from
Quebec, both defeated by So-
creds, a retired army Brigadier,
a serving officer in the RCAF,
two recruits from the federal |
civil service, former Liberal As:
| sociation officials, public re-
lations practitioners and news-
papermen, as well as the usual
spattering rs a lawyers,
make up the
âThese advisers, trouble- shoot
ers and workhorses, each one |
hand-picked by his own minist- |
er, represent a very diversified |
cross section in experience. wag-
es, age and background.
U.S. & The Common Market
pt eres Stat Weiter
âThe United Siates has in ef-
fect demanded that the Kuro-
pean Common Market prove by
actions that it is an outward-
looking community seeking gen-
eral improvement in trade.
That is the interpretation in
Britain of the U.S. threat to
take reprisals against, the six:
nation community unless it re-
dices levies on American chlck-
ens in the so - called chicken
is ap-
sral-type
tention by President de Gaulle |
and Chancellor Adenauer, the
community is moving more and
more toward an exclusive pos-
ture.
In other words, France and |
West Germanyâalong with the |
Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and
Luxembourg â are accu:
looking out strictly for their
âown interests at the expense, It
necessary, of other countries in
the Atlantic community.
COMPROMISE POSSIBLE
Some experts see the conflict
as so serious that they cannot
believe the U.S. and the Com-
mon Market will fail to reach
a compromise before Sept. 16,
when the American reprisals
would take effect. These would
involve withdrawing $46,000,000
worth of tari concessions on
common market exports.
"The background is. that the
&
PUBLIC
FORUM
VISITOR'S REACTION
Sir,âThere has been
discussion as to whether it would
not benefit Prince Edward Is-
a to abolish present controls,
smit free consumption and sale
St lighor, and this encourage
and increase tourist traffic on
the Island. This letter is both a
protest and a warning against
such a plan.
Instead -of âbeautiful girls on
the beachesâ you would get bro-
ken bottles, filthy litter and
tragic accidents there, due to
drinking. Do not open your doors
to invite undesirables to whom
holidays consist only in unbridl-
ed license. Such visitors would
not be capable of
| manpower and degrading your
young men and women to the
rank of menials and the, popula; |
tions ânativesâ
viewed without resect, Tiking of
understanding by theâ soulless,
drifting masses that
and in return for
devastate a small community,
body and soul.
Ido not mean that you should
close your Province hermetically
and keep all strangers out, There |
is a desirable class of visitors,
slowly âbut steadily growing in
numbers, who will faithfully Be
turn year after year, and briny
their friends. âThese tourists,
drawn from all parts of
parts
the U.S.A, are the thougl -
Common Market has begun to |
mon |
toxication.
into operation a comi
agricultural protective system, |
based on variable levies on
imported foods so that their
prices give European farm
products a preference.
| han'to take digitalis al
Skin Affected
By Poor Diet
By Dr. Theodore R, po nen
Can a starvation affect
the skin? Yes, but the âaivideal
nutritional ecze
ture of his condition escaped ae-
tection because it resemb!
fairly common dermatitis âoy
âand no one
fi ening hal
âThe man was reluctant to dis-
cuss his meals but finally ad-
mitted he never drank milk and
had avoided meat, vegetables,
and fruit for many months. His
mepus consisted largely of pota-
toes and tea. Rapid improve-
ment took place when he chang-
ed his eating habits and took
large doses of vitamins and min-
erals. In addition, he gained
weight and experienced & mark-
ed increase in strength and vig-
or.
âNutritional eczema usually {s
confined to the elbows, necks
and lower back.
these a eve ae ta
ry and scaly. In so
Wieuse (mts lilece sere
flesh in that it is studded with
tiny projections.
But most nutritional deficien-
cies are detec mouth
and lips. The tongue may be
smooth and bright red and the
gums swollen; canker sores of
ten co-exist, Fissures or cracks
may develop in the corners of
the mouth.
Individual vitamin _deficien-
cles produce specific skin chang-
es but this is unusual because it
1s difficult to develop a defic-
fency of one vitamin and not oth-
ers. Too little A causes dryness
and shrinking of the skin and
acne-like lesions. A deficiency
of BI leads to pellagra; a plg-
mented dermatitis develops over
the hands and feet and the lips
become dry, cracked, and scaly.
Scurvy (bleeding) follows lack
of C.
HAND WASHING
R. W. writes:
in
| ter would kill any kind of germ
there is. Could this be true?
REPLY
| Cleansing with soap and wat-
| er eliminates most of the micro-
organisms. But letâs give more
| credit to the mechanical remov-
al of dirt and germs during the
process of washing rather than
to the antiseptic action of the
soap.
DIGITALI INTOXICATION
8. writes: If a person
time, is there any danger this
drug will slow down the pulse
too much?
,EPLY
Yes. Should this occur, your
physician will reduce the dosaj
or stop the drug for a few days.
A slow pulse associated with
nausea is a sign of digitalis in-
GLAND INFECTION
ieee ES. âites: What are
e symptoms of a viral infection
The poultry case is the first | a âte te sands? How Tong. des it
in which the variable Hae vl
seriously stung the which |
previously _e xported feisaally
about $50,000,000 worth of frozen
chickens to the Common Mi
ket, mostly to West Germany.
COULD HIT CANAD:
But the fight ts fae really |
, one of the
farm products on which
European Community has man-
aged to work out a isa
duty. More serious items
feared. These include cereals,
where restriction by the com-
| munity would be serious not
ony for the U.S. but for Can-
Biri: however, feels there
be
| now should
last
REPLY
A number of viral diseases in-
volve the glands. If you refer to
infectious mononucleosis, the in-
fection usually lasts 2 to 4
weeks.
URINARY TRACT
INFECTION
cH | _ D. C. writes: Does cystitis af-
| fect the entire urinary tract?
| REPLY
re | No, just the bladder, But the
| infection may spread to the kid-
| neys or to the small tube lead-
ing to the outside âurethral
TODAY'S HEALT
Don't allow at under
two years of age on the sidewalk
unattended.
a
of national agricultural policies,
including subsidies and suppert |
systems, so that a ir and ra- |
flonan aswell as a liberal, |
trade system can
| evolved. Europe is unhappy |
about the vast trade surplus the
ae $. enjoys over Western Bu. |
to the American administra-
tion, perhaps the greatest con-
| cern is the possible fate of the
| Kennedy roundâ of tariff ne-
| gotiations, scheduled to begin
early next year after a 60-nation
Geneva meeting held this sum-
mer.
President Kennedy's plan. for
| general slashing of tariffsâ
| haunted by dangers since its in-
ceptionâwould face disaster if
| the atmosphere worsent
| tween the U.S, and the Common
| Marke!
z
| MANY FLEE
| BONN (AP)âA total of 16,456
refugees have fled from Com-
| munist Ea
| West since the erect
Our Yesterdays
(From the Guardian Files)
hc aah Se FIVE Pag AGO
are
rt site, on
whieh the city yas tad an option,
was accepted a gular
monthly Matlag of the Cuarioe
tetown City Council Iast night.
A detachment from the Char-
lottetown Fire Department leav-
es this morning for Amherst,
where they will compete in the
Maritime Firemenâs por soma
being held here oe wi
TEN YEARS AGO |
aurea 9, 1953)
Miss Patricia Helen MacDon-
hs âa music student rail Notre
cademy, has
a mn ARCT diploma, tit class
honors, as solo performer in
piano.
Leading airereftaman Erie L.
iticoville,
|
NOTES BY
THE WAY
on both sides
of any jent jays the
evel who make themselves
|. What we need are some
peekit moderates, Vancouv-
er Sun.
Amid all the intensive interest
in wheat deals with China, Pol-
and and Yugoslaviaâall arrang-
ed on long-term credit dealsâ
there has heen a tendency to
overlook a post-war cash-pay-
ing regular purcha:
ser, namely
Japan. Japan since the end of
the wor has become one of
Canadaâs best customers and at
ed upon
arrangements, â Winnipeg Tri-
bune.
is responsible
Fl
many a fad jam. â
Reporter. Gait
A bride becomes a wif
she stops lowering her ree
starts raising her voice, â
Stratford Beacon-Herald.
Citizenship Minister Guy Fay.
reat has announced his intention
of integrating custom and immi.
gration services, as recommend.
ed od by the Glassco Royal Com.
mission for an annual estima.
$500,000. In is
fine of spouting deficits re is
at one
of the Cabinet is interestedâ Te
cutting costs. â Toronto Globe
Path to Bi Bil
Canadian ae who ig
lieve that Canada would be a
happier nation if more Cana-
ns were bilingual might con-
sider an experiment tried by
Britain's Joseph Lucas Organiz-
ation. Last year the firm which
jalizes in automotive and
rts offered
aircraft electrical
its employees cash awards for
proficiency'in one of four inter-
national languages â French,
German, Italian and Spanish.
Since the firm does business. all
over the world, encouraging,
employees to speak the tongues
of their customers was regarded
ic â seers investment.
firm's workers were en-
thant abut the Mea) More
lingualism
than a thousand of them enroll-
ed in night school courses with
50 per cent taking French, 40
per cent taking German and five
per cent taking each Spanish ve
Italian
imilar campaign by some
ny Cana major industries
could do more towards bringing
the two Canadas together than
any number of Royal Commis-
sions. The Civil Service Com-
mission is already considering
what incentives it could offer to
encourage bilngualism in Can-
adaâs largest industry â thecl-
vil service. The experience of
the Lucas Organization suggests
hard cash still has wide appeal.
The stories of the two West
German intelligence men who
have admitted spying for Russia
offer food for thought on the
spying trade and its practition-
rs
Heinz Rélle and Hans Clemens
were SS __ intelligenc
Nevl times, Atler the war Felfe
tried to get into the West Ger-
man police but wasnât accepted.
Be scraped bid for a time ba
ing some freelance spying f
British inisliganeay and then, in
1051, got into the organization
e Americans by Gen-
Teal lense rtatial fees er
man Army ânot SS) intelligence
chief on the eestern front during
War) Mia ald 66) ooeacader
Cesaen iin tac ech th eo
with the Russians since the war,
also joi
ton in 1851 and persuaded Felte
to become a double agent.
ey
5
Cloak, Dagger And Sneak
Ottawa Journal
kept all the while a meticulous
record of his work. He put this
at the disposal of the court when
he was tried and the judge found
it âmost helpful.â
As the Economist says, âThat
© many people seem to be sur-
prised,â that these two charact-
ers turned out to be untrustwor-
thy,"â is one of the more surpris-
ing aspects of the case.â
e democracies have
rt
fazis the Communists have
their drawbacks. Might It not
have heen Inferred from that
that old SS men would Hkewlse
be rather iffy allies against the
Communists?
No doubt international politics
makes strange under-the- b
fellows. And since spying requir-
es sneakiness and a willing sus
pension of scruples, if one has
When the Gehlen epee
became the West German Fed-
eral Intelligence Service in 1955, |
âelfe and Clemens carried 0
their double- dealing. And Felfe,.|
like a journeyman double-deater, |
them, it might be argued that
the best man for the job is the
one who is by nature an un
scrupulous sneak. But the trou-
ble with a sneak is that he can
sneak in all directions.
âI'm no Solomon,â the Chica-
fo Judge barked and then pro-
to let the
One Dog Has His Day
Christian Science Monitor
Over and above the remark-
able individualism of dogs is a
dog have his day,
âTwo familes faced each other |
each determined to own the dog. |
âThe judge turned the tables and |
let the dog own the family of its |
choice.
There was rejoicing among |
the children of the family favor- |
ed by the dogâs affection; dis-
may among those of the disap-
pointed clan. Then the hopeful
surprise; another dog of the
reed awaited the losers
it a kennel, having been provid-
ded by a lawyer.
For the moment the good tid-
Jngs fell on unappeasable gloom,
âThe unchosen ci
did not want any other
âThey will change their minds |
with time, or with the maturity
Which may come in a twinkling:
wise man discovered
0 a wi
that is âs not
dogâ that mankind appreciates.
a long
unwritten history arate, Te
corded in a dog's sixth sense,
Thomas Mann sensed and com-
municated something of this in
one of his stories, the account of
a man walking his dog.
Like people, dogs have to be
known individually to evoke the
intimate affection that tes
friend to friend. But unless this
is felt as part of a more in-
clusive whole it often has a
tentative fleeting qual
Because the intense centering
of affection of one object has
its intense but possibly restric-
tive rewards, we hope the chil-
dren who in their moment of
disappointment did not want any
other dog will nevertheless ac:
cept the lawyer's gift.
For that very dog is just the
one they would never exchange
for. any other.
Hamilton Spectator
Not too many hours ago, a
bune! rofessors we
whooping {t up in a_clubhou:
after 18 holes of golf. Finally
sub} Lea around to books
and Faas of the professors de-
sided then and there to bens
pert a list of books he
siders real classics bul âwhieh
he would like to read
âWe wrote down his fist (no
poems or plays were included),
and we pass it along in case
hig d has any ideas along this
Tom Jones, by Henry Field-
pay Karamazov,
°
pope The at
Dastoexski; si
AB. Gather: Esther Wier,
by Moore; Gulliver's
âTravels, by Jonathan Swift; The
ranz Kafka; Black
Lamb and rane Faleon, by Re-
becca West;
David Copperfield, by
One Prof.âs Book List
by.
Huxley
syle
Romain Roland;
Saga, oy John eatarenty.
How Green Was My Valley.
by bp enc poo
Jane eyes) by Charlotte Brot
te; the Sun Also Rises, by Er-
nest Hemingway; Robinson Cr
soe rey, Daniel Defoe.
Lord Jim, by Joseph Conrad;
War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy
Wuthering Heights, by Emily
Bronte; Treasure Island, | by
Jean - Chri pork
The
Robert Louis 1 atl ers
in Wonderland, by Lewis Car-
roll; and Quiet Flows the Don,
by Michail Sholokhov;
istry said
them were 1,304 members
Another
tinea trying to escape.
the unique natural beauties of
your province. Instead, racing
through quiet country roads with
the disregard for speed limits
and driving regulations for which
drinking bead are noted and
feared, woul ing death to
ara peytig and laborers at
ier
motels, for a short season
Timited by climate, would cer-
tainly not solve your existing
sing problem, or contribute |
eee, to your economy.
id God forbid that the
you
i in which a Hilton Hotel «|
âmonstrosity would be er- |
similar
ected in geting midst, unhealthy
ibsorbing products
ork. e
Ngee of high-priced hotels |
and
families, who return rested to
their work after a holiday on
your health-giving Island and
will not spare ee words of
praise, for
you
| â dignified
Keep it thus, then, it
stroyed, never
Tativelyâ slight barrier, Tike
fact that P.E.I. is âdryâ, sutfie-
«3 or your proseth grate-
| fol for it and keep it up.
T am, Sir. ete.,
COMTESSE, INE de
| a sae (Visiting at Park Cor-
Germany to to the Gitant, 108 PE. Cher. jews â4
of ti a ed Ietnptersed oe Di âThomas wr stiaalemarch,
Bein Wall began Aug. 18, 1061, | erseas for aaty in ee Gatto | Games Aaeet, i ese names | ter aeote lak; Oliver Swish
the West German refugee min. Kingdo1 Point Counter Point, by Aldous by Charles Dickens. __
of the
st German People's Police R . .
eee eopening of Public Schools
Schools with a fall vacation of two weeks will reopen on Monday,
August 1
FAMOUS FOR
IRANDED
âiSTEAKS
BaZa kt aS Wa
âThe
FLYING DUTCH
RESTA
September 3rd.
for 1963-64
Schools having no fall vacation will have adequate time to complete
two hundred teaching days for the school year by reopening on Tuesdays
isters and other lies for teach 1 is will be
forwarded âto the school rocrateees, re ae ea
Many herpes have not yet Ă© Seewania Sets Netions of Engager
t these
forms reach the department before August vain so that ~ Be il be
adequate time to prepare pay lists for September.
M. MacKENZIB,
âYour Island Steak Deputy Minister
Houseâ Direetor of Education.
|