L z ~ - = a —— = 3 ¢ 4 Che Guardian ee ee | ane arses ——— New Polio {~ NOTES BY THE WAY F a reportable to the President personal- : i teen eau =, it will just have to be taken for Vaccine —_— Wellece Ward Frank Welker pranted that he is bei strict en- Behind every successful man. Mf your wife laughs at your Managing Edo edie | SF4h teh gio By Dr. Theodore R. Van Deilen i% 2 much surprised mother-in- joke. it is either a mighty cle forcer.. He has given at least one A cn law. — Kiel Record. “ver joke or you have 3 mighty Published every week day morning (except Sur a dey end statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Fest clue that he will be. when he forced Charlottetown P-E.!. on t = 5 Branch ys a. preven out an assistant secretary of com- and Sours. merce only a few weeks ago. in a sit- Represented nations .” Thomson Newspapers uation that appeared improper. Advertis: Serv To 425 University Ave ; v Empire ‘S200 a 440 Cathcart Street Uni But the main thing is that these Vaccine was trivalent, in that it Lawyer— “Now that we have respects. He pointed out that Sey 69942, Mosier Office 1030 Wee Georgie | ‘kew neople in the executive branch contained a mixture of three WO. Will you tell me coafiden- women have been wearing top- Street Vancouver (MA 7037 : s : types of polio viruses. Two dos- ‘ially if you stole the money.” less bathing suits in his country Membe: Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers will row know that any missteps will | @6 ware given fear to ox Client— “Well, after hearing for centuries. — Elkhorn Inde- Sere See The Conation Prom. The Comem® | readily come to the nétice of thelr | apart. okS you talk in court eee. 3 puiet. lusively entitied to * wu ior repul 2 * ee : beginning think Geetion Gf pil news dapatches in ths pope | superiors. Also. administration of so ee, ant eta | Ome hapa. A News Report says that Nas- mand © it oF to the “Associated eo yd Revie ethical rules is placed in the chair- | | fants had protective antibodies en pots ur Babamustafayev, a 140-year- dle on taubiceten sf conte! devetches bere | man of the civil service commission. S the Meet Agprentnately ©. oe ee ea miemt Old Moslem shepherd whose de- W tho reserved Subscription rate: By way of practicing what he | had dae oe “Your great wealth hasn't chan- %e®dasts make up almost all : et over ae pet cen ae ees and areas preaches, the President reportedly in- tions of Salk vaccine had these -_ you.” “well” replied the the population of a Caucasian net terwiced by carver ee tends to file with this official a state- loos oe PP acer: Copan — aoe dhe spa ae ao + =, wall i US. and cleewherw cutside Brittsh’Con | ment of his own private financial in- | had Salk injections lacked these ‘centric’ where I used to be sweet tes with sheep cheese and monweeith | volvements. These actions put the | a. imatie_and oo ; ——— = —-» Me —— we Not over 7c sinn'e copy- f r tive b h i h . trast 5 were the results after - a a ee oe ee el » executive a: in sharp con | they received the oral vaccine? | ‘Teal Star. Hamilton Spectator. aw Serr eer ith the legislative. Congress. it | Approximately 90 per cent were “The strongest memory is weaker | = era . | Protected against type 98.7 ‘ ee eae seems. is very righteous about the i 1 . than the weakest ink Ber cent against type Uncertain OAS Future : : = ethics of others in government. but AGE 4 URSDAY, MAY 27, 1965. a ; eZ et a still holds its own members and staff Cabinet Changes above the need for anv rules or en- oe aoe Gis he: forcement of any standards. May- AAS 00d a reason as any Was BIV- | be this is the target the President is en by Premier Shaw for his cabinet aos : rm shakeup this week when he said that a aiming at, though he hasn’t — _— . tare usefulness of the Organiz- ous reasons behind Canadian re- : American States. ance so far to join the OAS, “a change makes personnel more poss or cup aad weiued wo tion ‘ ee alert and increases efficiency.” This | ~ Overdue Debate ~ — oanert n = fom mene pessemistic about Lag Pant t_the: Latinas in -- id i Nl i iti ; {o Sk, anigls awe. oo 30-country group to face up ting up ace-keeping Wael not snid in disparagement of his Opposition Leader , Diefenbaker’s clans aa — 2 or on a to the challenges ae piled on it by oe, Severe, oe ane & r i i ; colleagues. as he was at pains to point motion for an emergency debate on out. Actuallv. of course. some changes 2 : : i : tional aff. ] 5 were made necessary. by the forth- apne sre ee pitt a gg es or 3) pears, Tarred in three, 10 for the weekend consultation. urzing the OAS to pluck the i ignation of Hon. J. D. : z ; ideas Mak eee Gar no Another indicator of hope chestriyts from the fire ane = Te day, it’ being held that there was no | Tus uy! are iste Hcdhensirod about OAS is the continuing The OAS has numerous ‘ idins f ¥ ° i hate can | “sudden emergency” and that there ' : ; may be given to ail aoa i oe effort ‘to piece = points of contact me from eae se cae 1 OMe be other opportunities shortly to rae —. Me: weeks peeks sod sts months - Denies meee gare caledian euheic. ee a as ae ware Sever : | debate’ the issue more effectively. | EASY TO GET IN--HARD TO GET OUT 12 months. Meanwhile, an cn mere Mearel cements st for the weelend io Weshiagion icipal affairs. With three exceptions, But th rere eta fall-ecale | paesendiiaer at > ree. though this constitutes a diplo to regular council meetings in the other cabinet members have been | oie) neem S = 8 Sere 4 ae : | material. —_ the matic somersault by the U.S. Washington or special confer- tuiffled and a new member, Hon. | ‘Teis?. Policy debate for quite a OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson |. Thaw Salen to tale te es Oe ma oe oe cee —— re 2 Be - on. | while, and with the tag-ends of gov- | re among those who previously re. | call iteelf de ein? LACK AUTHORITY Lloyd MacPhail. brings the adminis- coniniand hadeaen ofted R Hi Th Bi Fi O p lj Hill ms re. oom 2 = gy ee a tration up to full strength. = a: i ek a —— i eca ing e Ig ire nrar iament I against one or two types. It is cam develop much mu scle — have been jealous in al- i i i , rospects safe to after tonsilectomy, | quickly. ating responsibility to repre- sive, that the result will be a more 278 nat very promising. oa tnd meee fe | erhnt, New Memmevich,_ meniscal, ot | ly Gtneten ai SEE | AR Tsien on ve |Setstne Se OAS gee 2 S semen eeoee poate gna nrrniaay scciapoeociii eo 2 ee — a 2 Pan - - On a — ~young-page-no--— —f as ae sing tp pate sgesonio a conn | “giitable distribution of cabinet Te- Prime Minister Pearson has got- | ves—even if others don't— to be ticed. President of a fidh-pack. the Names. The sew Parliament | uals and thee, oe memes cs ee eee ca | ok ee Wa Be geo | ten i h bit of dropping hi | VIPs ‘Very Important Person- ing company, he was making a Building-was opened four years The product takes time to im. month There are powerful stimulants sponsibilities in each department, that | jen into the habe peng 52S | ages): bat there are come hare speech about the problems of after the first was devoured by munize and is not effective in cuue er tienians = mae at work now to reshape the government policy will be strengthen- | Most important foreign policy state- | who are incontrovertibly VHPs shipping fresh-caught salt-water flames: but still unsolved is the existing or incubating polio. Pol- Colombia, Guatamala or Ecua. OAS. as the postponed meeting ef thereby and that the interests of | ments elsewhere than on the floor of | .'Very Historic Personages). fish to the important markets of mystery; was that fire, at the | io vaccine does not protect dor or Uruguay at Rio De Janeiro had intended D} : Parliament. Recentlv. ‘in an address 0°, SC? bas Just been welcom- Montreal and Toronto, in freight height of World War I caused by against Coxsackie and ECHO to discuss. _ the province will be better served. It | . ee y. _ "ed back at work here by his cars which the railways heated. German saboteurs? virus infections that cause par. PRESTIGE DWINDLES This “is quite aside from ‘the all boils down to this latter objective, | at Queen’s University, he was quot- — after a long ill- - fish, he eet. arTiv- “Three weeks before the fire, alysis. gg oor Latin eo — —— pressure to = i ; r 665 tent san Than Ress. is Jean Desjardins, stinking—but araway ‘ i a. in so far makes ~ get AS into a more modern of course, and it will be from this | ed as joining forces with U t. - Curator of the House of Com. day was before cargo shipments ‘he “Journal” of Providence. __ SUN EXPOSURE ~appear to have been a -golden ar linc : standpoint that. the changes will be | Secretary-general of the United Na- | mons Reading Room-This VHP were carried express_by_—Air_Rhode Island__alerted the De-..._L_A._M_.writes: Would-expos-- period of -peace- Cuba's Fidel —There~ is the” resurgence of Seessed in due course. ‘Meanwhile | Hons.” in decrying the lack of asold | ie sat, "cran fram the Cnn 5 ee eee ne es eet ee reece ee rete * ro os : or of the of , at exactly course was 2 or more, t po assorted ntries. tense politi- we extend to all those who are tak- | UN role in Viet Nam and the Do- | Commons at the time of the clock, Charlie Stewart the Chief war, so the German Embassy cause or. contribute to an en- litical parties was indicated by cal stemepheres in counties ing over new cabinet duties our best minican Republic. Prior to that, in | Great Fire who is still on The Doorkeeper, rushed into the at Washington remained open. | larged heart? Also, would grief, Chile's rejection of a major like Venemela, a widening gap a h in Philadelphia, he caught Hill. Chamber,” Jean told me. “He The newspaper had «learned such as the loss of a loved one, Communist bid for power in between the rich and the teem- wishes for success. . speech | , “I remember the Great Fire cried out “There is a big fire in from employees at that embas- have any bearing on this condi- honest eléctions. ing poor and the opportunities Mr. Stewart's resignation is to the headlines by proposing a pause | vividly, although it happened the Reading Room: everybody sy that the German Ambassa- tion? May 6 is a date in OAS his- that such conditions breed for take effect on June 15. He will re | in the United States air raids on | i a ot io. oe at ns aes a oe ins to othe caneation Enlarge- oo en caiegs ax = ee : i Z : Desjardins reminisced to me. “I for the Speaker to adjourn the man in 2} 8 acceptance ec torships -Main as a private member. of the | North Viet Nam which reportedly in- was wl dlp oh 3 pomapenreey session formally, nor stood on ca; they were temporarily to ment is caused by leakage, forming a peace-keeping corps. Population figures for Latin : i hat h volved him in an argument with Presi- | im the Chamber, happy im the ceremony: MPs fled helter-skel- suspend sabotage in U.S. muni- blood pressure, anemia, glandu- But the fact remains that corps America show that the 173,000,- House, and there is no doubt that he thought that I would be off duty ter from the Chamber and visit. tions plants, and to turn their lar disorders, and infections or is more symbdlic than real, 000 people of 1954 had risen to will continue to pull his weight in | ‘ent Johnson when they lunched to- | in haif an hour; I was planning ors rushed out of the Galleries. attention to Canada “to give the degeneration of heart muscle. with the U.S. expected for some 225,000,000 last year and will ex- this capacity. The Premier's tribute | gether next day at Camp David, Md. | to go with some friends to see In the panic, the ant- at of Canada a few things (NOTE: All time to supplymost of the ceed 300,000,000 in 1974 hi = : = ! Mr. P been tight-li (oe on 4 eee oe ee to think about.” The destruction te Dr. Vam Dellen should be troops. Such growth tends to sink . a ‘is a i nat [ “ 7 geo oa ue st, : te = the top item tele Vv Sane ‘Chicage Trib- wee ie ce ection. ne that ig br ao strength to the government since | on these matters ouse | _ When the sixth session of the in his care : seg - - co ' lor gress most Americas ‘ = Parliament thought remove ° been more shop where nations E 1959, was well merited, and will be | Commons, where he should be most | Senuary 1916. 13-year-old Jean the end of our historic Mace” SS eee <-> can afford t voluble in expressing himself. As a | indorsed by the public generally. He was instrumental in putting through some of the most important legisla- tion enacted in recent vears, and did a particularly good job in discharg- | ing his responsible duties during our centennial activities last year. It is fitting, on this occasion, to recall Mr. Stewart’s distinguished services as an officer in the Second World War. also his successful car- eer in civic affairs, which he relin- quished in 1958 after serving for seven years as Mayor of Charlotte town before entering the wider field of provincial politics. It will be re- called. too, that his father. the Hon. J. D. Stewart. was twice Premier of | the province and that leadership in Pblic service has ‘been a strong tradition in the Stewart family. It may yet prove too strong to be severed permanently at this junc- ture. After all, Mr. Stewart is only SA, with who knows what prospects df further achievement before him? Mr. Johnson's Order =. Perhaps it was'Mr. Pearson’s ex- ample of writing a letter. some time ago, on ethical conduet of govern- | ment personnel that inspired US. | President Johnson to go one better | by issuing an executive order on the | same subject. In.any case. that is | what he has done. and there is a note | of firmness in it_which is quite_lack-, img in the Canadian prime minister's motherly epistle. The point Mr. Johnson is concerned with is the con- | dict of government employees in | dealing with private interests, and this is what he says: ~ “We cannot tolerate conflicts of interest or favoritism, or even con- dact which gives the appearance that sach actions are occurring, and it is our intention to see that this does not take place in the federal govern- ment.” ; * The new order is mainly a codifi- result Canadians do not know, offic- | ialy, where this country stands on im- | portant matters such as Southeast Asia, the Johnson-Monroe doctrine | with regard to interference in Latin | American affairs, and the gradual erosion of United Nations authority. | Surely Parliament is the area where these matters should be debated, fully | and frankly. The suspicion has gotten around that. either the government is afraid | to speak up, to initiate a debate, or else it accepts the status quo every- where. That, as we understand it, is | what Mr. Diefenbaker is driving at, | and it’s a good point. Student Employment When the question is raised of a year-round curriculum for Canadian: universities, one of the objections al- most invariably voiced by opponents - of the plan is that it does not take | into account a student’s need of sum- | mer employment. Many students need , such employment to help finance their education. the argument runs. ' and a trimester, or year-round. system of education would deny them this opportunity. sumption that it is easier for students to find employment in the summer than during other periggf of the year. | This,. however.,.is_only_partly borne out by a study of current employment | trends. As William Thomson. director of the National Employment Service. points out, many university under- graduates“who depend on summer ; employment may be in difficulty again this year. Students in engin- eering and commerce may not have far to seek for summer jobs. but students in other faculties will not be so fortunate. soy “Nothing in Canada.” he says. “‘is growing as fast as university enrol- ‘The'argument is based on the as- | ing iy é sped rapidly along the passages. as the paint on the walls and the es as it spread, so thought the Building was explod- ing. ENEMY WARNING EARLIER The fire raged through all that February night: eerily until Protecting Canada’s Parks Ottawa Canada’s national and provin- | cial parks last year attracted 30,000,000 visitors, an increase of 600 per cent in seven years, ac- cording to Mr. Gavin Hender- son, executive director of the © young National and Provincial Parks Association, a group of private citizens. Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) es McGaughey (cum laude , Bonshaw and Howard Wight. Georgetown. TEN YEARS AGO (May 77, 1955) Journal services and facilities for park visitors” but is firmly opposed to the belief that parks exist for the benefit of private enterprise The preservation of parks in ,the most natural state possible is a worthy cause. The parks be long to th people, and will be- come increasingly important with the encroachment of:.civili- - zation on more and more of our countryside Governments should consider establishing, as Mr. Henderson suggests, more parks to include samples of At- lantic and Pacific coastline, na- tural prairie and tundra, an ex- tensive area of the Laurentian shield, Yukon scenery and pos- sibly other land types. cerely believes that it can make the park a better place. But we must take a stand for nature, for the parks will one day be the last stronghold of natural wilderness. ‘ ' suSPECT COSTA NOSTRA OTTAWA (CP) — RCMP de- . Oo Price S} From FACTORY OUTLETS YOUR LAST CHANCE FOR $100. TO BE DRAWN MAY 3ist 1965 MEN'S SUITS wm... D4. WORK BOOTS Reg. 9.95 — Now 7.99 “Look At These Specials ! WHITE SHOES 4.95 Sante Tees COVERALLS 6.95 1 RACK LADIES’ Summer Coats To clear at 10.00 ment, and there is a year-rou and clarification of. existing shortage of unskilled and semi skilled ma capped this spring at the help in tracking down the as- MEN’S rgles, but notably it requires for the | jobs where they try to find employ. | Holy, Cross Cathedral. Boston. sassin of Onotiio Minando. Sicil time the filing of financial state- | ment. This is why we're all in favor : end they have asked both US. WORK J ACKETS mients by the 200 agency heads and of year-round universities.” pitens ad Wes Gana Gees | Caan Ge Gea of i other presidential appointees who re- | This, notes an exchange. is not | will MacDougall. Belle River. conde, found dred last week PT port to him, and by some 2,000 oth- | the first time Mr. Thomson has made | *?% 2*atded the SN. Robest = with bullets in his TLET @fs involved in decisions on govern- | this.type of statement. If he keeps Talay aul Franeis Cup on cate to SMareh,” 1508 Regular $5.95 b f\ C i @ be Y Ss ment contracts. repeating it often enough. perhaps bell. Souris, was the winner of Police in Sicily believe a hired NOW ¢ 4 TORE “The Milwaukee Journal notes | its significance will begin to sink | ae cae Division. reer" | Son ondedis OS Ga ee : L ng — ‘ : o- ‘ ee ont ~_— mn i “ ° : : . “ * soni HORN EO eC REMMI EL tt Ee eR te Bh cece: Miata mR Sm te