y " f i ~ a ; 2 a : In its findings the board ruled ; . os : ' va if | S 2 , t “gs £ Che Guardian against the appellant's claim that the | Malaria > NOTES BY THE. WAY Ps peiuin ee a freedom of speech safeguarded by the | R ist t ie = : i Wi. 3 Monson, Publisher Canadian Bill of Rights permitted esistant ie cet Gan oe ia Wed Frank wee | him.to make his criticism. It found By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | C##h 2 check for my own broth. | talk = Americanism to the stu- ‘ , ewery week day moming (except Sum | that the law as it stood when the |. Malaria is proving to be a re- ly = | om etd ete ate | BF and stertory holidays) at 165 Prince Sree | Canadian Bill of Rights went into ef. “ sistant foe is South Viet Nam. See ee cee See | eee oo Paee Charlotteiéwn P.£.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. According to Medical World Reporter your smiling Wench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton | fect did not permit a civil servant to | News, the casualty list continu- FON eg — ny back : tnd Sourns. 1 Se | make such a statement and the Bill | es.to mount because infected | ,, 4 little girl was asked to my childhood. Why is it, my * Represented national! Thomson New ra | | drug- resistant parasites. Auth- between pride | dear children, you are all so Advertising ea — 425 cea doe does not express any intention to orities may be forced to discon- and vanity. ; happy?” He paused for effect . “Empire 38894 Montres! 640 Cathcart Street Unt | change the law. “~ no. \- tinue ‘the weekly suppressing and. Aéfter considerable thought eee 3s eS eee Seen -Wocemn Offa 1030 West Georgie Another argument of the appell- | doses - prima- —— ne sneems. I “The reason we are 60 hegoy Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers | ant was that as a private citizen and | "ue & ae catide to an | ity mei aut econ van | is if you talk long enough, ion p SEeatee sre The Conedion Prose. the Condon | taxpayer he had a duty to express his cid protons. Armies of the est | 7 fi eon | think | won't have @ yp emere Sg wel laeion of uff news dispatches in ths paper views openly“ Butthe board held that | Sana, tock ant ae morning, wv “o gird: Se Sections Sree eo Rotors this did not také into account the | from , swords and bullets. This p A A p ; fight or republication of special dispatches here special duties the appellant had as a Alexander the Great. Weta War eace t rice a ee | member of the Civil Service to up- | Il brought malaria closer to Torente Globe and Mail i ie Be etal coe dose! voctes and aress_| hold the constitutional laws and tradi-_ — go was greater be-| Aner three years, of battle | line with the principle laid down mot serviced by carrier ; | tions and as an employee to refrain all over the globe ols nye over transcontinental passeng- | last year by es ae $15.00 9 year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per | from conducting himself in’ o man | Sen fe the er fares, Canada’s two major | J.W. Pickersgill, ss ~--yesyeer in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com g , Wy eenaees ieee ot eae -—- airlines have settled their differ- | airline presidents (as well as mgnweslth. . ; | ner that would destroy his harmoni- and 1943 amounted to 90 per cent ee ee ee oom the oo @ Goes Na- i ailien hate trees of Cilculation. ous relationship with his employer. of the forces employed; they | fon (as of April %8) when the | Pacific Railway) that any deve- E 4 TUESDAY. APRIL 20, 1965. | Again, the appellant argued that | intimin careful shopper could save as | lopment of competition on do- ages he should have been as free to ex- | The Japanese reslized this ea ee ee a a ae & Wants Fairer Terms press his personal views on govern- | and captured Java as quickly | from Montreal to Vancouver. | ada's economic position (Air : ‘ a as possible to shut.off the Canadian Airlines will | Canada’s profit in 1964’ was $1,- - According to an ‘Otawa dispateh in: ment policy as the Deputy Minister ply of quinine to imetien: ie raise its Pacific xy class | 405,575; CPA's profit was $4.- + Wk Pieunetat-Phst—Yhe-Britist—have-1 of Welfare, who had published his _- ons Sekt of spatiinte -to—our- tare © 8180 (thee : TKS me | 800,000) Sl nT ~— n lobbying hard ‘for a-chance to | Personal views on the Canada~Pen-—/— feet deine ereparing the SYD | teh Air Canada. And Air Canada, | Not invited to this meeting, of : : eae . | sion Plan about two months earlier. | ly, It is ironical that F cae geand in turn, will increase its one way | course, were the people er their automebile prices in Can : ir i. ae first class fare to $165 (from | will have to pay the increased a ; = ‘ ; But this could not be accepted, said | beginning backfire part | $162) to match CPA. fares. It's probably just as well and the campaign has ‘‘annoyed of the world which produces The ee f o: faee oe “the board, because no evidence was i me senior Ottawa officials.” Basic- : = fly the official Canadian line-is that | Produced to show that the Deputy fought on two fronts. The first : British “are ‘making too much Minister of W elfare had acted with- concerns the mosquito that ‘ Regrets Outburst? s over our antidumping laws and -| out the authority of his minister. transmits the parasite to man.{| ‘ Quttgh Mere ‘ they don’t really hurt them all There is always, of ‘course, “1 or deals with chemicals used to Walter Gordon, who is Prime | Mr. Pearson paid to his oppon- Sat miuch. © What’s mote, Canada | °t for civil servants who find them- suppress, prevent, and cure. | Minister Pearson's close friend, |en{ to mark Mr. Diefenbaker’s ne ge eg | selves conscientiously pposed- to were doing an excellent job until | may be an outstanding finance | 25th anniversary as an MP: ‘.he sn’t going to dismantle its carefully | y op aa < Sovister ‘tet be ie i a See newcomer—CI-501—may ‘a clumsy pol-| has become one of the great, * egnstructed valuation-for-duty system | 80Vernment policy in any department. solve the problem, but more | itician and could help the PM | and remains one of the greatest, oon oe Pa tandon” Théy can resign and_blast the policy |. ie i See satisfy the rul- one by sticking to his budget- portiamenterions incur his- gs te -.1¢ | to their heart’s content. But it seems : aan *s h a jolt . é There is @ good possibility ss chm aay ot estin dacites to | that they can’t have it both ways. ‘ EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK that malaria will be with us for ee ten ‘aches vot on “compliment, ment, “for the PC do something about what she regards | Most taxpayers will agree that there e 3 a ey : ; eee — worth his trouble, both the gov- | leader, beset though he may be ee we Soe = behi ; _ | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson poreuns ernment and the minister may | by factions his own party, a4 unfeir discrimination, taking into | 1 T° ine ‘and that the question — oe br This fs only pert of ts pc. | OE, 4 weekend speech” | has remained An opposition account the difference in distribution | P!T@TY Tullng, and that the question ture. Most victims live in under. | 12 it he compared the Conser- costs in Canada and in Britain. Cer- of infringement of individual rights Urges Regular Annual Study Of CBC Evtetes countries and are so ae oe cement be was “See ‘. pee ares i t involved. ‘ . cannot a pro- tainly it is time for Ottawa to take | “7° Alphonse Ouimet the’ $40,000 | the Board of Broadcast Gover-|tagne, replied that he did not | ductive ‘share in the tife of the | Capable of staging one last fare.) Mr. Gordon'®™ first budget stock of the growing imbalance of |. Th Prvi Questi per year president of the Cana- | nors and of private broadcasters, | know what was going on — de-| community. ‘They earnot im- | ¥e!! eer tt te tical took @ merciless bet weet aka Sateen the tee rountrion ose rying uesiions dian Broadcasting Corporation, Such a committee should en- | spite full accounts in the press | prove their lot until cured of the thing tc aon eee ar Remenerieg. ok ay on which recent! ted Sir Lesli Commenting: on the prying quest- | "At compinines Becense thet | ere veer Seeniy Sto dew Cho | for cavers whe con read. Tits | Gepase that belts thom Gown. | cabaher fs that he fe ina sovent’| bedget trendh Gb Menth, Pin y promp ir Leslie es ~ 4erewn corporation has “‘had its | CBC is spending some $100 mil-| example of from VEIN CLOT | ehfldhood tt the “Rowan director and deputy chairman | ions members of Parliament are re- |” share of enquiries — twenty-two | lion of the taxpayers’_‘money Parliament’ assumed’ by the Mrs. D. S. writes: I'm a 3- ‘ans PRET ST aa Rig oe Be dpe cory, oe of the British Aircraft Corporation, | ceiving from the Royal Commission | 5,2! over, & Period of twenty-| tile year — at Cee ee ee Pe ce ee tee en | eeinecd ool ter taare ames | at Oo GUN as esateding to make some pointed comments at | ©" Bilingualism and Biculturalism, | Instead of what he calls “re- | contrast annually studied | casting. | months ago. The swelling is go- | able because it followed by just | in his remarks about the old @ Canadian club luncheon. | the Montreal Gazette recalls that the | peated. ad hoc, unplanned and | Air Canada last year achieved | SHOULD INTERFERE is dows-—at least, in-the "nor- | one day a graceful tribute which | Tory » Sir Leslie noted that in 1964-Can- | Closest precedent for a general in- ius” ks oe ke the CBC tb | $13 million before . ' eal or MPs Bove been ter- ty the oe the day it ame see ada sent to the United Kingdom $1,- | Vestigation of this kind was the Royal | undergo a i For instance, witha bill for a | rified by a bogey conjured up by | vary. The doctor assures me One History? 300 million worth of products; Brit- | Commission on Arts and Letters, ap- bs say ae ten vous Ot } tor watlding a and Reet sateen ue Sake ana ts . Montreal Gazette : ~ “gin in turn sold to Canada $560 mil. | Pointed-in-1949.—But-even-the term | course he would lke: thatt-what | "S Mestecl eield | ‘Semantic ghost threatens that is pete and bike rid-| proposals continue to bejany tendency to establish an lion-worth of goods. The difference | “arts and letters” provided some lim- | <orcicnent' of ‘government ,| he CBC would spend $i0 tallies | Wit the CBC. This of course | taken me ff all medication. 1s | Made for a new history of Cas- |“offcial story.” This comes between these two figures accounted it to its scope. And, in any case, it. would not prefer to have MPs | on its own building at Expo- ‘67 a heretical doctrine, denying our this the way this condition usual- | S46 that wit tal ey aot as aa ue ean cs ~fi ondehalt of the United Kingdom's | bed, in Vincent Massey, s chairman | Sy CSS SGSs “0 csi lesll same guisae co teied-ae- Lomas aheelé covonaliy shady ee ESET _| prejudices will be discarded and | altered with each change in the oyerall trade deficit. “The ratio of | Who was the very soul of tact. money was being spent on. | sinietien canrant for $3,992,000 operations of all crown spending | Yes. This is a typical story | Se ed ee Leipiocr prea lige aoete war British exports to imports from Can- The Montreal paper concedes that Fatt b raged os Se rae: oe voted — “Politic: — = thrombophlebitis, with a hap- good. But history is not quite | line ‘ ada was 40 per cent in 1964. Three-| the ‘present commission’s. terms of | ye never heap the heads of other | Treasury. Board a committes | sary” in the CBC should be led | MENDED HIP —_|.88 objective science. Every his | In the painstaking work of =. fiec th 1961, it was 70 per | Teference are, by their very nature, | crown: seeh as | ofthe had te tis bocevnctans ont.tumnend-| T. U. writes: I fractured a hip as sangre or ‘searching and defining the facts ctint : : oe vast and pervasive. Part of its neces- | Donald of Coneien -Wo-} Sat: ver ae es Corie veal ot tolerate | a8 new tat T mill nna; 500d | greatest historians hieve bejught | te Work of the historians oust 4 5 . tional Railways, or Gordon Mac- | mentary approval, merely ‘'anada could ate | = “T haven’t come here either to 7 — the be mt Gregor, of Air Canada, t aK] implicated Cabinet in an’ insults “partisan censorship” by. the. screws in the joint. Will th ey Se ee aa eee a a make excuses or to plead,” said Sir | ©! Studies and analyses. But Par: baline dh sestiomsans = and eee aa ition eee’ sae a aes r ——— History cannot be a science, | many myths will be destroyed. , Leslie. “But I baer come here to | ment, it adds, is a very special body, Canine aay year, to ped aa 4 eae. Social om dication by our easily eeatedl Only’ if Pg te the bone | lying entirely in objective fact. oe work .—- say this, that the gap needs action on | With privileges and immunities of its | plain their past year's accounts | leader R. M. Thompson asked | MPs of their duty to persue re- | or cause infection. pre thy Bree rere edgy = selection, —. hoth sides to-close it. And if we | OWN. These are not only traditional | #24 amswer all questions. ee ee ee ene, ae an ae a tee | 2-@: © ee i aehigd esi, bet in he ay of | many Mounis Gs Here ua t- need to pay regard to you as a mar- | but have come into being by need. | CBC DESERVES CHANGE — | CBC: Opposition Leader Dief-| amine the spending of other iax | old girl uses hair spray Is | looking at them. torians. And no one should real- : How zealously the rights of bers . ange govern: | enbaker demanded “What right| money. MPs foolishly permit | this injurious? There is much to be said for |'Y to be otherwise. ket, you certainly need to pay regard setial sind oo a he | standin conmnitice of the Se-| as the head of the CBC” to| themselves to be brushed off REPLY two histories, bound together, | Perhaps one of the things that 1 . | are watc and defen ‘may standing committee take such action “without consi- | with shallow excuses when No, but she should be careful | with the two interpretations | Canadians have. yet to learn in ee te ree eet sige 8 seen in the number of points of a ee ee deratian to. Pustement?” The a taumenen< Game oe not to inhale fumes from the | made available to all readers. | the interest of their unity is that nO COMmpuson On - you rivilege raised in Parliament Fro tage ty som | Minister who “speaks” for the | most daily questions in Parlia- | mai . % | But in the search of an agreed | there can be, and are, different purchase from us but there is acom- | P™vues | ar ent every ot aes cee a CBC in Parliament, the evasive | ment — about the affairs of the| TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— text— one history for all—what | ways of looking at the same < pelling reason for you, in your in- | %€SSion, even every day of every ses- — — and bumbling Maurice Lamon- ' CBC Teach youngsters to share. | must be avoided at all costs is | facts. térest, to provide us with conditions | Sion- a in which we can compete on fxir | Tn this tse members tave been | PUBLIC FORUM | A Commonwealth Role terms.” presented with 30 questions, some of ane pec ‘- nes “This plain speaking must have | the most personal kind, such a8 | ty correspentesis of questions of te eee been very annoving to “senior Cam. | Whether they regard. polits as a | Sq Arcata ot mr 7st Canada ts empeced to | meonionaty, rei Canad adian officials,” but the British have | dirty game, or always vote the way | resents. Al lees pusssed ore soe | Tonwealth: was' made plain by| Mr. Bottomley speaks, for in- a right to feel that too many restric | they feel. Nor is the matter improv- encensery.. The Guarding ts unable to an Commonwealth so stance, . the strong bog enter eorrrespondence regard , Arthur a imprint Commonwealth tions, direct and indirect, are raised | &4: notes The Gazette, by the com- | S¢™ tctiers submitted. speech to the Club of | ready bears and goes on hope- fn the way of British exports to this | ™ission’s explanation’ that any mem- | London... fully to speak of Canada’s role country. Canada’s recent auto-trade | er was free to answer the questions | ee eae ——e pet ted a nog to | the new, and of its weteus aoe deal with the United States may have | °F not, as he chose. This ignores the Education Week. It is very fit- aoa «Pie as ae Se prompted their campaign for relief | Possibility that a member might later | ting that this week should follow | There seems to be nT abt nue ae : be asked, perhaps during an election, | Ester, the time when we com. | Pearson. ; : : from our stringent antidumping reg- » PETAR g * | memorate and bring to mind | definite British desire to place a ay oe oe What to state whether he answered the | the greatest example of self dis- | Canadian as the first secretary- bom: padre g questions or not; and that whether | cipline, , Among the total of almost — love that the world has ever | wealth secretariaf to be set up | -.doong, Se total of elmost ulations. ~ In any case, what Sir Leslie seem- ed to have been driving at was that . he answered or not could, under cer- known. : shortly. | cebeeah on tame Gee j ifthe situation doesn’t improve, Brit- | tain political circumstances, be used | seat ak te ae tet Pico oun on with “de, | 000.000 seem small in numbers | ain may be forced to take steps to | 88ainst him. | greatest concern of all, from the | sire ip make the multi- national, sua thas eee So This is a valid objection. But it | Premier and Government chur- | muiti-colored Commonwealth @ is ch Gis we elient te | discourage Canadian sales to the Un- is unlikely that the commission, hav-~- witions of oll kinda, sight.dowl give in material aid among ited. Kingdom. And it is our basic pro- ing turned a deaf ear to the Prime to the last citizen. ducers who wofild be adversely af- _ ‘8 ' eer mes fected in that case. Isn’t it high time | Minister's request that it withdraw waht, ae te te ane, | Our Yesterdays i H if ~that they were making their views | 8 questionnaire, will pay attention | ana it is very encouraging when | (precy The Guardian | known a Ottawa on the subject? to newspaper criticism—even when, |’ the youth of our country organ | ae o aes Ss as in the Montreal paper's case, it is | ‘= CSPGs "SS ive mare | cae This year, Colombo Pian sid The Kroeker Case couched in conciliatory terms. useful and disciplined lives.| British and French troops| Slone Sbeorbe $55,000,000 or A ruling of considerable public EDITORIAL NOTES {oe a worthy purpose can enceed | st Molde, Laerdal aad amees, | Ms of this eves to our. bis interest has been given by a federal President Johnson made no empty | our expectations, aon cue it was reported by a Stockholm | 204 pakistan, wit cuem appeal board concerning the firing of | threat when he said that the notor- | [27 S°SAit act working sep. Deh Several more: millions go to John Kroeker, the Department of In- | ious Ku Klux Klan was due for an | arately. | <n oe 22 Societe ae _surance actuary who assailed the | investigation. The U.S. House of | 2m very happy te offer my | Ot” Association Marathon gua | many forms. Canada Pension Plan. It will be re- | representatives committee on wun- | young people in their quest for in the record time of two hours, an oe ee ae - called that Mr. Kroeker.was dismissed | American activities voted $50,000 last ae es ee ake ae Sas on boone by 23 1-5| their plan does seem to envis- the day after he criticized the plan at | week for this purpose. This in ad- | jzens can help our young people | seconds.” yon ae oe a — @ press conference. In a judgment | dition to the $379,000 the committee ous bate aveck Ueoeuauntaalas _ TEN YEARS AGO white members. . released last, week the board sustain- | has already received from the House | a5 to how we would have our (April 28, 1955) ° “SINT AT RSERVES : ed the Government's claim that the | for its regular investigation program | children live and grow up in the | The Mamamy mecins of Se LONDON auaneneein aa official had acted inconsjstently with | this year. oa as war’ tied hed ao | oon os a ae Hotel. Chair- | @™Mergency army of 20,000 mill- his duties as a civil servant. = selves? Education is very impor- man was King Lion Jack Stev- pf gt This is the first time in the his-. ‘While the arguments between us- | ‘ant and necessary, but there is | snes, Goeate hoger, © vie- |110000-man reserve force, Brit of the Public Service of Canada | ers of pesticides and the critics of | we must consider. iting Lion from Hawaii. bivs meee oo _~ wy formal judgment has been given | pesticides continue, research being ute tae ber sere Se ue aeener ans carves, which sow cost on-octl- this point although it has long | quietly done in the background con- | je character cannot be achieved Lions International by the chair- | ™ated 2£40,000,000 ( regarded as an unwritten rule | tinues to bring forth disquieting re- | by individuals in their own | man. tp ecteals aaa ae naa of Civil Service employment. The | sults. The latest discovery is that | SnSvoase oa ee aie ’ Earl Taylor and Percy Sim-| More mobile force, the reports board ruling, with the supporting en- | penguins and seals in the Antarctic— | and weakness, and seek a High- | monds were co-chairmen at the | *4¥ int of the Civil Service Com- | thousands of miles from any known cen shane war meenel|au welly cupper mustag 7 ap . our|of theCentesnial Y's Men. MOTOR REWINDING now goes to the Cabinet. | use of pesticides—have measurable every coppert in mg a was —a yt hp There is no further formal appeal al- | amounts of DDT in their bodies. ae + ose sing-song bg Bs Maa tit though Mr. Kroeker has the right to These animals spend their entire = and trot ee Tre feet aes Major T. E. o i wall i . or, ie f ask for clemency from the Govern- | lives in the Antarctic feéding mainly am . s oe utt a a very a ola ; ¢ oe ment. - on shrimp and occasional fish. Freetown, P.E.L Ld a oi i iii iia o Porn rece eeem IM * " rT tan tear Soe at ge 7 RENN ts eta peep t sm i - t A j “s a = % ef i a oe IL! RNR I ea chp RE kan et vedi ona ———— ¥ 2 .