e Ae ‘ Wallace Ward ing in its ‘universal’ Che Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island, like The Dew “«W, J. Hancex, Publisher Frank Walker Managing Editor % ished every week day morning (except Su n- dey ond statutory holidays) at 165 Prince. Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by en Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris, Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Terenio 425 University Ave. Empire 3 4; Montreal 640 Cathrart Street Uni versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037, } Member Canadian Daily. Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the vse for repub- lication of .all news dispatches in thie paper credited to it @r to the Associated Press or Revwiers and alse the Jecal news published herein. All right er republication of special dispatches here- fm also reserved. Subscription rate Net ever 40c per week by carri er. $12.00 a year by mail on rural rolites ‘and areas MO! serviced by-carrier. $15.00 @ year off island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S, and elsewhere outside British Com menwealth, Net ever %¢ single copy. Member Audit | Bureau of Circe S lation ‘ definition - of “universality.” Ottawa says that a plan; to be universal, must embrace 90 per cent of a prov- ince’s population to start with, and the figure must then rise to 95 per- cent after three years. Qtherwise the federal offer to pay 50 per cent of the cost—the most recent estimate fon this contribution being $17 per. capita—would not apply. The Manitoba estimate — or hope—is that by. persuasion, educat- ion, paying part of the cost for some’ people, all of it for others. the gov- ernment can get 85 per cent of the | people of the prdvince into the plan | ' | | meee ner Ava “The atrongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” PAGE « MONDAY, MARCH 28, 1966 New Dairy Program Federal Agriculture Minister: Greene made an excellent inipression on his first visit to the province over the weekend. In stressing the advan- tages of his new “four dollar milk? ~ program to our dairymen he was, of course, preaching to the converted; | but he emphasized™also the nation- wide importance of upping federal-aid to their industry at this time. This has been his first major policy an- nouncement since taking office, and it is intended to help eastern Cana- dian farmers to keep their herds and stay on the land. Fears have been expressed here that it doesn't go far enough in this direction. But at least it is a good start for a man who frank- ly confesses that he is new to the. game and has much to learn. at the start. It hopes to persuade ' Ottawa to relax.its definition of un- iversality from 90 per cent to 85 per cent. If Ottawa does make a concession in the case of Manitoba. it will of course be logical for it to do so in the case of other provinces. Per- haps, under a little more pressure, the 85 per cent figure could be further reduced to 80 or even 75 per cent as° a minimum requirement. What becomes then of the ‘‘universal- ity” definition? The fact is that it is a misnomer in any case. It was dreamed up asa pre-election term by Liberal strategists. It implies 100 ' per cent coverage, and. this, apparent. | | | a | | i |_ly, was “neve being feasible.. It woul be as weil; ‘ surely, to drop the term altogether, and substitute one more in. accord- ance with the facts, Much. Too Casual Parliament recently afforded a |; curious example of the workings of bureaucracy. Let's start, not at the be- ginning but on March 9, when Albert Bechard, parliamentary secretary to Secretary of State Judy LaMarsh, made the following short speech in The program, which will take effect | the House-of Commons: in the dairy year beginning April 1, is tailored to the problems of three main - groups of farmers who ship to dairies, creameries; cheese factories and ‘manufacturing plants. The increase in the offer-to-purchase price to butter processors will help make it possible for them to pay $3.25 a hundredweight for whole milk de- livered by the farmer. - : The Stabilization Board will pay the _ farmer another 85 cents a hundred- ght minus ¥ 10-cent export levy to — bring the average net return to $4 in- stead of $3:50 as at present. The direct 85-cent payment will be made monthly to milk shippers. This. re- places two support methods used in the current dairy year—a deficiency payment and a supplementary pay- ment, In a related move, federal pay- “Mr. Speaker, I wish ‘to make a.| correction that applies solely to the English version of Hansard, at page 948, line 30. of the left-hand column. Instead of reading—-3 cents for radio | and 9 cents for CBC television, it Should read at line 830—.8 of a cent “for CBC radio and .9 of a ceat_for CBC television.” The history behind this is that on- February 9, Hansard, Parliament's of- _ficial record, printed a question by. Barry Mather, MP for New West- minister, about the per capita cost per day of CBC radio and television, fol- lowed by Miss LaMarsh's reply as of- fical spokesmen in the Commons for the CBC. Several newspapers across Canada picked up the reply and point- | ed out that, according to the figures | Of 3 cents a day and 9 cents a day, a Canadian family of five would pay ments will be extended beyond manu-_3 g919 a year for CBC radio and TV facturing milk to a portion of the | farmer's. milk directed to the fluid market. 85 cents a ‘hundredweight will be paid to farmers for fluid de- liveries beyond 120 per cent of the amount sold: at-the established-price of the region. From both fluid and manufacturing milk payments, the government will deduct 10 cents a hundredweight to pay export costs and subsidies associated with foreign sale of dairy. products. Under the cur- rent system, the export levy would have been deducted from the year- end deficiency payment. The $4 return is ‘promised for manufacturing milk with a butterfat content of 3.5 per cent delivered at the factory. It. will cost the federal ‘treasury $90 million this year and will bring some increases in the cost of dairy products to consumers. Mr. Greene said he expected butter will go up two cents a pound. But he ad- ded that if the government allowed the dairy. industry to continue de- teriorating, it would result in short- ages that would raise the prospect of much larger and uncontrollable con- ~ sumer price increases in the long run: -.It-isnoteworthy, also; that ictal the minister announced his new pro- gram in the House of Commons, it | —was-applaudéd. by- representatives_of _|_traditional astyaomy has it, a ball all Opposition parties—a rare demon- | flattened at he poles” and bulging stration these days. Manitoba’s Proposal Few of the provinces are able to meet Ottawa's terms for participat- medicare plan. Our Island government finds that it cannot come within- measurable dis- tance of them at present. Elsewhere a closer attempt is being made to do so, while maintaining the maximum possible: freedom of the individual and of the doctor. in this way improv- ing-—it is argued—the more compul- sorm aspects of the federal “scheme. The latest province to announce its intentions in this regard. ‘is-Manitoba The Roblin gov erhinent’s proposal appears to meet the ‘vonditions. set’ forth by the federal government with one excéption—-but it isa rather important exception. It concerns the . —services.-The corrected version in: | Hansard of March 9 made nonsense of | this calculation, of course. Instead of | $219, the actual cost for a family of | five would be $21.90 a year. Where the editors went wrong was _ in believing what they read. in Hansard for February 9. But what of the officials responsible for turning out this supposedly authoritative re- cord of parliamentary proceedings? A disclosed that somebody had made an error. Whether it was in Hansard or in Miss LaMarsh’s office has not been . divulged, and perhaps the point is not important. What calls for an explana- tion, however, -is why it took four weeks... to. make a_correction that should have taken not more than hours. It leaves one wondering how many other slips of this kind take place, and pass unnoticed altogether. At the rate we pay to keep Parlia- ment’ going, we should get better. ser- vice than this. Science On The March ‘some time that the: earth is slightly . pear-shaped and with some sizeable dents' and bumps on it and not, as lightly at the equator because of its spinning. Further confirmation of this theory was’given at a recent meeting of the British Roval Astronomical Society in London. ie who don't _ care a hoot about it one way or the other, need read no further. For the eager beavers who want their facts updated, however, we have , news. for them that the North Pole— the stalk of the pear, so to speak —is about 10 metres further from the equator than it would be if the shape was regular, while the South Pole is about 40 metres closer, This momen- tous information comes from pains- taking observations of minor _ ir- regularities in the orbits of the satel- lites. followed .by lengthy computer calculations. reveating oddities in the earth’s surface alniost impossible ‘to |. detect in other ways. | | | | } | * I vow THINK A SuPERMAN COULd Hard Down “Tus vesr—" IR CANADA PRESIDENT é: re. MIGRESOR. IS'IT A PLANE, TRAIN, OR SHIP? o BIGGEST IN SOUTHEAST ASIA _ A Nation Of Three Thousand one Rebellion - torn Southeast Asia's biggest most populous nation, across some 3,000 equatorial is- lands. — . Its 103,000,000 people include a least a dozen ethnic groups, speaking 200 dialects, Appropri- ately enough, the nation’s. mot —to-is- -Bhinneka—Tunggal. “Unity in diversity ° Two-thirds of all Indonesians squeeze onto a single island — Java — making it one of the world’s most densely papulated areas, | : The capital, Djakarta, grew from a tiny 17th century Dutch East India Company trading and | -post_called Batavia into a met-_| 90. percent°of Indonesians today | spreads | National Geographie Society Indonesia, | ropolis with nearly 3,000,000 peo- ple. Djakarta is a kaleidoscopic mixture of squatters shacks, housing developments, and soar- | ing new office buildings, Streets ‘are jammed at rush hour with | hicycles, automobiles, ‘and bet- jaks, or three-wheeled pedicabs. Most Indonesians trace their Ika_—___descent _from__Malay—-seafarers - | who left,the Asian mainland long before the time of- Christ: Chin- ese pearl fishermen and Indian holy men. brought . their influ- ences. Hinduism survives on the | island of Bali in a storied set- ting- of temples and rice pad-. dies where endless festivals and dances placate the spirits. But A Wonderful Story follow Islam, introduced by Arab mariners centuries, ago. ° Two-thirds of Indonesia's 575,- 93° square’ miles — about the size of Alaska — are covered by rain forest, inhabited by both | Asiatic and Australian forms of | life. Elephants, tigers, leopards, | and rhinoceroses share the for- | este with marsupials. Crocodiles | infest the rivers, pythons the | shores. : Indonesia is the leading Far ,Eastern source of petroleum and ranks second to Malaysia-in rub- | ber and tin. The land abounds in such natural resources as coal, . bauxite, Manganese, cop- per, mickel, gold and silver. An | eight-year development program ‘| was startedtin 1961 but-the-coun—+- what~ try has been plagued by eco- nomic problems. Indonesia's modern history be- | | surgery ma Cigaret Or Cancer Cough | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | It is lung. In a series of over 15,000 eases, only five per cent of the male and nine per cent of the | female patients were alive five years after -the condition. was up to 17 and 36 per cent respec- borders of the lesion. yet wishful thinking in many. in- stances. Cough is an early sym-. | ptom but most victims have coughed for years; they cannet tell when the hacking switches from a cigaret. to a cancer Pe As-a result the symptom. is neglected until. more alarm- ing manifestations pear. Thesé include coughing up- blood, wheezing, pain-or a sense of heaviness in the chest. It may not be too late but the family is told to keep their fingers cross- ed-as time alone will tell. On the other hand, the situa- tion is not hopeless. We know that men over age 40 who are chronie smokers or who live in | areas where air pollution is rife are most likely to develop bron- chegenic cancer. Anyone in this high-risk group should have a chest X-ray annually—or better —twice a year. Any chest abnormality, -how- ever minor, is considered so im- portant that the cause must: be | tracked’ “down even though igh sheets complish this. This may sound like radical advice but there is ‘no other way to detect the dis- ease early among those who can- | not stop smoking or eliminate air pollution. In a pilot study. along this line, 50 of 100 patients who developed | cancer of the lung had evidence | | two years before: they developed symptoms. One ‘patient had an abnormality six years before diagnosis was Made. An improved spltum. test for cancer cells was announced re- cently. Sputum cytology is more | | difficult than X-ray | multiple specimens-must be tak- | en. The method. is diagnostical- ily successful when the lesion is ‘large .and located inthe .major | | bronchi. CAFFEINE AND ° SOMNOLENCE __E.R. M. writes: If I have ‘cof. | fee or tea for breakfast and /Junch I have trouble eas to | | sleep at night. REPLY I doubt if a moderate amount | of coffee and. tea at breakfast and lunch would produce insom- | nia. The proof of the pudding is | ‘in the eating, however. Try cut- ting down or abstaining and see nS CA 8 AN AND BABIES. B. T. writes: Is there anything ‘to the old story that it is danger- encouraging about cancer of the | -| detected. The survival rates go | tively when the tumor is detect~ | ed before it spreads beyond the Early detection ‘is important | “of disease Visable on X-ray films because | Cape Breton Post British dedication to* tradition | can be so excessive. that it be- comes sublime, as in the in- stance of a bit of news printed on page nine of this newspaper Monday. What were the two British sol- | diers doing on the Duke of York's Steps just off Pall. Mall in London? __The Army __ Pompeii remained there hbe- neath thee surface, finally forgot- ten until early.in the 19th cen- tury somebody digging a well dug smack into an ancient house having the ornaments and ap- purtenances of a civilized peo- ple. In the meantime, most _of Pompeii has been uncovered to finally wanted to‘ gins with the close of World War | ous to have a cat near an infant | li and the end of; Japanese oc- | hecause the animal may jump | cupation. Determined to be free |on the baby and~ suck his ‘| of foreign influence, the former | breath? | Dutch colony proclaimed itself | REPLY 1945. No, but for esthetic reasons | —‘tmi ng- ETAOI! I'm not in favor of leaving any | YEARS OF WARFARE ; baby were an animal’ can Four years of warfare follow- | climb over the child. * ed. Hundreds of thousands are: EVERYWHERE believed to have lost their lives. | Mrs. G. writes: In what part At last, in 1949, the Netherlands | of the body are the lymph nodes | a republic on August 17, -. Scientists. have_been-telling.us_for_ ' know in a belated pursuit of the | | } | closer look at the figures would have. | British stupidity. -Army’s manpower shortage. pro- blem. The explanation came frorn’ Defence Secretary Denis Healey in the following words: “Troops have been on duty =there-ever--since=the- Napoleonic- wars a century and a half ago when they.were posted on the spot to hold the Duke of Well- ington’s horse.” Somehow, we have no deris- ive words for an English quality so staunch. Let others, if they wish, scoff at the stubborness of An order for two soldiers to be posted on that spot never, was withdrawn. Theirs not to question why, theirs to obey. Me This leads us straight to anoth- er bit of recorded history which is a revelation of the qualities | which made the ancient Roman, | Empire great. ~~dawning~years In the year 79 AD., tn the of Christianity: Mount Vesuvius in Italy erupted | and buried the city of Pompeii | in fiery ashes. Manv were trap- | | i | | | yo-That isthe —message—that~is~ | | ped in the catastrophe «PS. — -reveal__marvels of_. information| about the era in which it threb- bed with life. One of the revela- tions was thé’skeleton of a Ro- man soldier, clad in armour, at | his: post. While the nanic strick- en penple fled past him through the“vity gate” he stood there” staunchly, to -be buried in the fiery particles that overwhelm- | ed the city. TELLS VOLUMES We may say that in the ctr- | cumstances. the Roman sold- jer's devotion: to orderly duty didn't make sense, out the only | way to moralize about it now is | to acknowledge that the discov- ery of his skeleton at the spot he was ordered to stand on guard, tellscuki volumes, it the mag- nificent discipline sf an army awhieh-has mae’ the name of Caesar echo ever since. It may seem unneces- sary to add that the order for the-two~ soldiers to wait for~the Duke of Wellington and his horse at the Duke of York's Steps. has been rescinded. bet- ter late than never. A Fale Image Calgary “There is more than one France. “The one next door is’ called Canada.”" being peddiled this month to the more than. 6,000,000 subscribers | to a major U.S. magazine. It does not reflect the opinion of "the fragazine itself for thése | s~-are—contatned— | in a full-page color — advertise- ment, paid for by the Canadian Government Travel Bureau. , Citizens from Canada’s’ nine ‘English - speaking provinces should object — and object vo- ciferously — against fax money | heing used in such a manner Promotion of tourism is a le- gitimate responsibility of the Canadian Government Travel Bureau. But the federal govern- | ment has no right to place false | small, lightface print that there is any indication that the ad- . | vertisement is making special reference to Quebec. Anca even this section of the layout is pre sumptuous in its langnace advertising “which can. mislead gullible foreign readers into be- lieving that Canada is predom- ‘jnately a Gallic off-shoot Yet, this is the implication of the large, bold. print in .this ad- vertisement. It is orly in the “Come see our France in Can it. pleads in ada,” It is quite order for the | province of Quebec's own ftour- ist bureau. to encourage visitors by playing up is undeniable Old { Herald France charm. But for Ottawa's tourist officialdom ta make the blatant pitch that”‘‘the France next door is called Canada” re- “flects-an ‘incredibleineptness~in~) judgment. Canada_is. neither a bit of Old France nor a bit of Old England. It is a nation in which the so-called French fact, quaint and appealing as it may | be, is-primarily-confined- ‘to-one province. relinquished all-claims tothe islands except for half of New | Guinea; it came under Indones- ian administration in 1963. Divisions and jéalousies among the major islands have proved |.troublesome. Underground. | groups or antigoverment forces | | have been reported on most is- lands. An attempted coup in Oct- | | ober 1, 1965, resulted in wide- | | spread bloodshed. In January, 1966, President Soekarno said that 87,000 people were known to have been killed in the after- | math. Indonesia's troubled situatoni | was summed up by Mr. Soekarno | himself several years ago in a speech to the national legisla- ture: of the Republic of Indonesia is that we have survived.” “The greatest achievement | located? | ms REPLY | Here, there, and everywhere, | but the majority are located ‘in | the neck, armpits. groins, and | along the large blood vessels | next_to the vertebrae WINDOW OPERATION — H.U. writes: Does normal , | Seguin follow the operation for otosclerosis? | REPLY In more than three- fourths of the cases there is improvement in hearing. : | TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— | Sudden changes in character | may indicate a mental disorder. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should’ be addressed to: Dr. Theodore | Van: Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, nmr 4 } Ap interhetional Problem | Peterborough Examiner The Toronto Board of Health | has decided to ask Health Min- ‘ister Dr. Matthew Dymond to | call a conference on air pollution | with Dominion and Provincial authorities in attendance. The suggestion, if it is acted upon, is a good place to start in investigating a problem of enor- mous proportions. Really, it is ‘too large a problem for the mun- icipalities, however large. to .deal_with,, for_it.is.one which af-. fects all of us and will require international co~- operation. Merto alderman Joseph c- |cininni has said that the,use of | coal and oil in heating is the ma- ._jor_cause_of_air pollution _and_if- this were so then the ene ‘ities could largely correct | the | situation on their own. } But research activities car: led out in the United States, notably at the University of Cal- ifornia at Los Angeles, points with considerable emphasis, to the automobile as the major factor in North American air | pollution, chiefly: through lead poisoning of the atmosphere. Thus, although a _ conference |.between.;Dominion and munici- . pal authorities is a good me thod | for--~achiéving --some ----initial. awareness about the true nature 'and scope of the problem, the {fun solution will “doubtless be found only through an interna. | tional study. By indulging in such false and — capricious promotion, the Cana- dian Government Travel Bureau “has left its conduct open to se- were question GUIDES TO MEET TORONTO ‘CP: — Miss &. Henrietta Osler, Toronto, chief commissioner for the Girl Guides of Canada, will be chair- | man of the 19th conference -of the World Association. of Girl | Guides and:Girl Scouts to be held -in- Tokyo, Sept 2#-ONet- 9. Sixty eight countries will be rep- resented at the consorence, first | to be held in Asia — SELLS CRANK TELEPHONE WINNIPEG (CP) — The old- fashioned: wall telephone, with | the crank on one side and the receiver on the other, is being sald .azain by the Manitoba telephone system. at $645 An of- fieal said sn many ald models are already being sold by other” Apparently Marcus Lipton, .a Laborite member of the British | parliament. has small apprecia- | tion of fables, myths, — | tions and such. He has drawn a bead on the Loch Ness monster, which is al- most comparable to taking aim at ‘the Easter Bunny. This mat- ter-of-fact and Ynimaginat iv e {MP wants the legendary mon- ster to fish or cut bait, so to ‘speak. He thinks it high time that fact displaced fancy. Lipton wants a full-blown gov- | ernment investigation, employ- ing’ submarines, pontoons. and 'sonic soundings, His demand was prompted by a report from Royal Alr Force and Defense Ministry experts that, five-vear old movie photographs showed | the monster” probably ~ was an oxeason wit Long Live Nessie Minneapolis Star | Story is a wild fairy tale, a judg- ment with which we are inclined » ito agree, but what good will it | do to prove that there is no such © |eritter? Not only will those who | have ‘seen’ and embarrassed, but: a_ story that has circulated in Scotland since 565 AD will be blown out of the Water + We would remind Marcus Lip- ‘ton that the world has an abun. dance of realism, but that fancy, the stuff of dreams, mystery. and escape, is in exceeding), short supply, : PERMIT BEAR HUNT cp) | WINNIPEG ” A black | bear hunting season will be held in. Manitoba this spring The people that the crown corpora- animate object 92' feet long, six | June 25 worth of the 53rd -paral- tion had -to get into the business + as well. ‘ feet wide and five feet high. | He a that the morister lel and from May J6 to dune. {ii in the south, | . _town Hotel. Dr. Fran | Master-of-Ceremonies. it be discredited | —rin—-from—May—9-to—-— ~ Working Towards Unity g Peter Backley & Despite the warmth of feeling | | at 4 week's historic meetings | difficult to find anything | = Rome between the Pope and ences. Archbishop of Canterbury, - gap between -Anglicanism he Catholicism remains” a church leaders made | nyedg trys ters wlll = first major step has | been taken with the meeting. it- | self, after centuries of implaca- a The dinlogus opened by P. e iy Fope Paul and Archbishop Michael Ramsey will he continued by ans from both churches, There will be closer relations, said their communique, ‘‘in al! those where collabora tion is ly to lead to a greater ity will be neeed. Besides the differences of scriptural i tion, tradi- tien and liturgy which have arisen in more than four cen- turies of separation, there are such difficilties as the validity of the ministry, the nature. of the sporpmnents and the position. of pacy. PRACT! AL DIFFERENCES The Anglican communion can testify from its own experience that these practical difficulties are often the hardest to. over- come. : concluded, a report was issued in London after four years of talks among representatives of | the Cherch of Scotland, the rn of England, the Episco- pal (Anglican) Church of Seot- land and the Presbyterian Church of England. They have heen seeking—and will continue & seek—a practi- | eal form of unity, but their in- that way of Se Both ‘adarsuadiae and ohar- the day the Rome meetings — Canadian Press Staff Writer tecim report offered little more than at summation of dite The: chief stumbling - block, their report said, eoncerned the ministry — the differences be. tween those who follow the Epis. copa! tradition of bishops hand- {ing on authority to their succes. _sors,and those following the Protestant tradition without bishops. In’ any union among . churches, these differences must be resolved if there is to be a united ministry. On the positive side, however, Anglicanism is itself an example of how differences can be over- come, With its affiliated national churches throughout the world, ;and its long-standing distine- tions between Episcopal and Protestant followers — the so- called “high” and “low” Ail eans—thé church .naturally econ- siders. itself a bridge hetween the two traditions. ‘GREAT EXPERIENCE The Anglicans, too, have had greater experience in the fleld of ecumenism. At various times, they have discussed unity with Methodists, Presbyterians, the United Chureh of Canada and / other denominations. The Angli- 'ean Chureh has close relations withthe Orthodox churches of Eastern Europe. The collaboration among An- glicans and Roman Catholics | whieh-their-two-leaders-have-in- itiated, if carried on at the par- ish level, could do much to pre- ~ | pare the e¢limate for union. : _-hetween, the - two churches have deep histori- cal, national and social bases , which could make a doctrinal dialogue more difficult. By showing their personal de- | termination to work towards unity, the Pope and the Arch- bishop have gone far to rempv- | ing. the mutual suspicion which has often separated their adher- ents. Bicycling Into The Past Paul ung in the New Statesman Having acquired a “second - hand Moulton bieyele (and- what fun it is,), I am indulging |in a new pastime — towpath | touring. It's all very well “exploring | England by canal,"’ but this in- volves messy unwieldy things like boats, the boring business | of negotiating ‘locks,’ and all | kinds of elaborate preparations. By riding a bicycle o * the Our. Yesterday s (From The Guardian‘ a TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO. (March 28, 1941) It was announced in Edmon- ton, Alberta, that school hoards | would be empowered ‘to require performance of patriotic exer- cises in Alberta schools and pu- Pils refusing or neglecting to participate in such exercises | would be guilty of an offence against the School Act under a bill then before the Legislature. With loudspeakers blaring across Albanian no-man’s-land |; and showers of plane-borne leaf- lets, Greek armies told their Italian foes that Yugoslavia had turned against the Axis. TEN YEARS AGO (March 28, 1956) It was annual roll call and | Colfax Night at Alpha Rebekah | 'Lodge No. 10 LO0.0.F. when 'members of the Order gathered to honor the memory of Schuy- ‘Ter Colfax, the founder of the Re- bekah Degree nf Oddfellowship. 'Mrs. ‘Ila Stewart, Noble Grand We Trade presided. The cast of the Mikado, con- sisting of students of Prince of Wales Coliege and directed hy Miss E. Lillian MacKenzie, Mus. -Bac.; were guests at a dinner tendered them at the ,Charlotte- MacKin- non conducted proceedings as Members of the cast were: Arnold Mac- | Lean. Margaret Matheson, Da- | vid. MacDonald, Maida Roger- son, Doug Cameron, Ian Mac- | Lean, Janet Wood, Fred Seller, Heather Rodd and Alan ee | “Kenzie: annual budget exceeding $200 _for the provision of financial The senior executive selected will be a registered member, have a sound knowledge. of “of years of experience ‘at the level. OTTAWA 4 towpath, you see just as much, ‘in far greater freedom, and ‘without any fuss. And what a | curious world you discover, the moment you’ turn off the road onto the canal! Subtopia reced- es instantly and the 19th cen | tury comes crowding back. “There's a flavor of smoke- blackened brick and slow, damp their trade, in a manner which George Brown would find- in- tolerably inefficient, . but which gives deep satisfaction to ob- eerve. Colonies . of gypsies and | tramps live by-the water's “ in abandoned - house-boats or old buses and vans. Ancient ‘tical names, have special back- bars on the canalsidé for the use of bargees; they are peopled by Dickensian eccentrics, know nothing of the Affluent | Age only a hundred yards away. And the swans! There are | dozens and dozens of them, | sometimes as immobile as the | water itself, sometimes in im- pressive flight, whooping in melancholy alarm. The bridges, ” monuments to the early Indus- trial Revolution, are now main- ly closed to traffie, and are pure delight. — | The trouble is, I can't oiisk : | the temptation to go on to the next one — and suddenly I dis- cover I'm late for lunch. who. . * Furniture * Appliances . * Televisions FIRESTONE Home and Auto Ltd Dial 4-5547 sified Department which has undertaken a complete re- organization involving fundamental changes in management ~ concepts. ~In- order to~successfully-implement-this-plan-the —}-—— Department requires a DIRECTOR, FINANCIAL ADMINIS. TRATION to be directly responsible to the Deputy Minister involve developing management, accounting and reporting techniques, providing counsel and advising on financial implications. © in commerce, business administration or a related field, or of a recognized professional accounting ‘association. ciples, financial planning and control systems and a number Apply or write for farther Information to the FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATION PROGRAM, CIV IL SERV ICE COMMISSION OF CANADA REFERENCE NUMBER 66-6005 SENIOR FINANCIAL EXECUTIVE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA - UP TO $20,000 DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS, OTTAWA \ “construction. agency..of the Federal Government. and. has an million. It is a widely diver- advisory services. This will financial planning, modern will be a university graduate through written examination, He will management accounting prin- senior financial management decay. Tiny factories carry on -pibs;—often—with—+aguely—taus—=—