Covers: Prince Edv-ard Isiand Like The Dew - W. A Hancox Publisher eX The Guardian * Frank Walker Wallace Ward ABS : Editoé Managina Editor “Published every weak day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165: Prince Street, Charlottetown, 'P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers ld. and So Renresenied matinna Advertising Toronto 42% * Empire 3-8894, Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni versity 65942) Western Otice 1030 West Georgie Stree! Vancouver. MA 7932. Member Canadian Da Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian tiled to the use. for repub- res y by Thomson Newspapers University. Ave. Services Press is exclusively. en ne Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton | | iy Newspaper Publishers | regard to the RUMP testimony from which Mr. O’Brien quoted was that it had heen given at a secret hearing at which no Conservative counsel were present and of which, indeed, they had not been advised in advance. Mr. Carson, counsel for Mr. Diefenhaker and Mr. Fulton, complained in this connection: “For the first-time in my experience I'm being asked to cross- examine “witnesses I've not seen in examination-in-chief.” He had not been able to see the witnesses! re- \et—it-wwas this hiletectifvinge RE: | | __the former Diefenhaker government __of the inquiry. Had he the power to lication Of at eredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the inca! published herein. All right or republication of special disoatches here> TRE rireratrtest pepe news Suhecription rate: -~ in also reserved Not over 40: per week hy carrer. Bee $12.00 » year by mail on tural routes and areas mot serviced by carrier $15.90 @ ycar off Island and U.K $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. Not ever Je single copy. » - \ Member Audit Rurean of Circulation. b a acer "The strongest memory- ts. weaker than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1966, The Munsinger Case. The testimony of a former RCMP commissioner before the Spence com- mission that'there was no evidence of any breach of national security as a result of the relationship between | j Gerda Munsinger: and any member of would seem to dispose of the allega- ions of Justice Minister Cardin which— po Sian the demand for a judicial inquiry inthe first place. Never- theless, the investigation is being con- tinued and the method of procedure will doubtless form .the theme of some-hot debate in. the months ahead. We shall endeavor to outline its high- lights here as objectively as possible, from press reports which are the only source available to the public at this time. : The hearings hit the headlines. on Monday when the commission con- sel, Mr. O’Brien, summarized contents of RCMP reports which had already been submitted in secret on April 6 at the opening of - the inquiry. The ~—perelations-came-after- Supreme Court—- Justice Spence had reversed an earlier decision to hold his. hearings in camera_as a-general rule, As the April 25 session opened the judge noted several “unwarranted” newspaper. articles criticising the secret aspects cite’ for contempt of court, he said, at least one journalist would be ap- pearing before him.” But lacking that power, he therefore resolved to follow his-own-inclination—and-hold_public hearings whenever possible. “The re-~ sult may be damaging to the personal character _of_some of the principals,” j ir OEP WANES CEHerryt | action on the stand and their demean- testimony which was being treated ‘as of cardinal importance. Controversy over this matter, we " imagine, will be a long-drawn out af- fair. Certainly it involves a principle in which every Canadian citizen has a right to be concerned. Worth Considering The high cost-of school construc: tion is a problem which faces us both on the provincial and municipal level, and which for all Canada adds up to something like $600 million a year. ‘Of general interest, therefore. is a study which is to -begin-in-Metropol- | itan Toronto in July to determine ways of reducing school construction costs. The news follows a report in the Financial Post that already, in for half the’ 1949-65 costs, although comparisons_may. be difficult in Que- bec because, as one official tactfully put it: “We don’t know what happen- ed in 1959: That-was-the-Duplessis .era, you know.” that an effort is being made to tackle the problem in a practical manner. An interesting experiment {s report- ed from Edmonton, where the school boart has built three , ‘compact’ * of common features such as move- able partitions, folding walls, mini- mun) number of windows and class- rooms that can bé enlarged or re- duced. And Dr. A. M. Neville, dean of enginering and graduate studies at | the University of Alberta, stiggests — that a good deal of money could be saved by adopting uniform. construcy Hon-methon anion Dr. Neville toured Russia last fall and noted that the Russians pre-cast entire buildings on an assembly-line basis. Uniformity and mass product- ion thus account for considerable saving. The dean says it is evye-wash to suggest that every school must be . subject to local needs. Children are: —the same, the size of classes is the same, and the courses throughout a province are the same, he points out. he said. “but thatgfactor I think Lam_ —._4¥ere-eounsel-maintained.-no-specific- tt : the terms of the mandate given him going to ignore.” DUBIN'S MOTION—The judge re- jected a motion by Conservative coun- sel Charles Dubin, who challenged the competence of the’ inquiry. There’ charges of misconduct: against Mr. Diefenbaker: or Mr. Fulton, and the- fudge could therefore not carry our by the present government. In the absence of such- allegations, there were no provisions in law which per- mitted an inquiry to be directed at {he conduct of a Prime Minister or a minister of the Crown. Justice Minister Cardin had charg- ed Mr. Diefenbaker with ‘mishand- ling” the affair; but this did not con- stitute a charge of misconduct and the judge,. Mr. Dubin: argued, could not carry out his terms of reference with- out violating the Inquiries Act. which provided that no report can he made against a person unless such charges > * esthetic point of view, but there is—| This may raise objections from an no doubt that many taxpayers will warmly indorse Dr. Neville’s content- ion. At a time when school boards are caught by rising costs pnd the de- -mands of rapidly growing ‘enrolments, “they too might find it worth giving — - consideration to ways of reducing the bill before the burden on municipal- ities becomes intolerable. 900 Years Too Late Viscount Montgomery likes to re- | ‘mind the world that he’s still Britain's top soldier. He has been stirring up a mare's nest of late with some sharp suggestions about cutting defense ex- penditures by eliminating married men in the service forces. Now he’s. off on a different tangent. The man who outwitted the Germans in Africa and put allied forces ashore in Europe in 1944 suggests that history would have been different if he had fought the-Rattle of Hastings in 1066. Had Harold. the English com- Quebec, some schools are being built ~ | But elsewhere there is evidence ‘| _-OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson schools which incorporate a number | Modern Pace Should Ontario be renamed “Peyton Province?” Without a vestige of pride, this “eomment arose when two Ont- ario MPs were recently discus- sing the break-down in morals, ethics and discipline so evident among today’s juveniles. One MP cited-a-high school of his knowledge where all but two students in a group of 14-year tes; the other MP matched this by describing a high school where some students were dismissed for drunkenness. The first MP pregnancies in a year at anoth- er school. Then the phony socio- logical enquiries on a certain deplorable TV program were discussed, and the-roof blew off. _Is there a crisis among our kids now? Are their sundry sins just youthful exuberance? Is it merely a aub-conscious reac- tion against authority? there a complete break-down in our community, at —all_levels, with juvenile delinquency show- ing as the most-prominent-tip-of- ‘the larger iceberg? These two MPs agreed the young of today have oppor- ' tunities completely tinmatched by what they had known in their youth. They have opportunities to receive education and train- ing, they have material advant- ages, they have protection, such as earlier generations never _knew.- But, I interjected, do they have. the iitaetink edie ily-togetherness which their—fa- thers and grandfathers enjoyed? Is today's youth too feather-bed- ded in material ways, and yet atarved of important. elements of the heart and Character? Yes, agreed one MP, the fam- ily car certainly tends to break- up rather than unify the family; and TV, while tt may create olds. regularly smoke -—eigaret-— | capped. that by citing twenty. Oris | A DOVE BETWEEN TWO HAWKS Brings Own Family Problems What is fhe reason for the switch from the practice 5f the Victorian. virtues to the. licénce | of the Mod age, within one, or perhaps twe;-genecations? Why | do we have on the one. hand | more murders than ever before and-on-the other hand the loud. | est ever clamour for abc’ition of the death penalty? _Why do we the intrusion into our homes via the idiot box of people using words and discussing topics | which our fathers would never thing’? that employees of the | state, for example, should be permitted to enter our homes - via that same idiot box - and describe to our teen-age child- |ren how they can get a kick out of sniffing aeroplane glue in a | paper bag; how, tf they are | | @irls, they can earn ten bucks — The Wombat | fence North Bay hich-di | and the wombat. | The wombat is a marsupial (a member of the animal group | which carries the young in an! external pouch) with the build of | a baby bear, and inhabits Aus- | tralia. iE . | | _Like the wolf. he_has-a_ price; | on his head, and like the wolf, he has been controversy. | North Bay district a prolonged | argument raged over. whether | 4 ') have -tolerate—and—arcept——as—normal_!| doubt—other—-provinces- in- as many minutes at school? Is it such external in- fluences which are causing the break-down among the rising generation? ' OUR GRAVEST PROBLEM These two MPs, whose names deliberately withheld, are indeed concerned. The lack of moral fibre in our community the fact that Ontario - and no equally. deserve to be renamed Peyton Province; the wanton waste of the wonderful opportunities for edicdtion among the young; the have put up with? Is it a "good | fecklessness. and lack of_ambi- tion among the older; the un- concern of men of the world with affairs of state. These are the great day. But what action is being tak- en, what leadership is being of- fered, by our Government and by MPs of all parties? Controversy Nugget that | There are probably i vand likes to trundle along im a that-develop on the hands, fin. | a iat : ive gers and feet: ~gets—in—his—way—he—just-—_NASAL-HAIR—— | bulldozes it down —or__burrows | underneath it. That is why farmers have in- sisted on a bounty on him. To them the inoffensive wombat is | a.menace. : -Since the bounty system was ‘tntroduced—in—1925.—more—than » | 250,000 wombats have been kill- | ~subject—of—-much_-ed,_many--of- Recently in the | ped. Animal lovers have.. protested that the actual damage done by | ey a once. a Drug For . “Psoriasis - By Dr. Theodoré R. Van Délien From timé to timé a réport appears on the use of méthotre- xate in the treatmént of severe, extensive psoriasis. We wish fo stress ‘‘severe and extensive’’ because the remedy is too potent group of dermatologists from Duke University obt excel- lent results in 40. of. 5t--persons with psoriatic plaques covering half the body surface. The plan utilizes methotrexate week. These men and women were fol- lowed carefully in the event that toxic effects might occyr. Scal- the end of the first week and the lesions‘ flattened and began to fade within six weeks. Some re- ceived an oral steroid in addi- tion to methotrexate because cortisone- type hormones help to clear the lesions more rapidly. minimum so long as the user cooperated, Methotrexate is an old cancer remedy that is most effective in the treatment of leukemia and certain. malignancies involving the female pelvic organs. It is classified as a cytotoxic agent because-it-opposes or neutraliz- es folic acid, a vitamin essential This folic acid antagonist pro- duces a. variety of toxic side re- actions that subside when the druz is stopped. — : ‘1. The drug also may cause fetal +} {congenital —abnormalities —and aoe therefore should not be used dur- | ing pregnancy. Many of the dis- appointing results in treating cancer occur because the tissu- | es become resistant to the drug and it loses its ability to retard cellular growth. ‘““Ointments containing. steroids’ are most helpful in treating pso- for a non-fatal skin disorder. A | ing and redness diminished by | Side reactions were kept {o a) for the growth of. cancer cells. | Dean Rusk’s Statement By Rod Currié Canadian as Staff Writer Dean Rusk’s dentat that the -United States has shelved’ plans \for sharing ownership of NATO's nuclear weapons sys- tem takes the whole controvérsy once again back to square one. The U.S. state secrétary's statement was aimed _ spéci- fically .at a published report that ‘the U.S. had decided to | ask West Germany to forego in- | definitely évén nominal _owner- ship of part of the NATO nu- clear arsenal. But aside from shooting down ~the~story the statement-gave-no /new clué as to the ideas being 'exchanged in secret discussions among the 14 other NATO mem- bers on what form thé alliance ‘should take after France with- draws from its military ar- rangements. ; POLICY UNCHANGED | As Rusk himself put it, the | Question of nuclear sharing re- mains “unfinished business.’ And he referred to a White | House document of four months ago which, in the opaque lan- | Guage of diplomacy, reiterated ‘the U.S. position that arrange- | ments ‘‘could’ be made so that alliance members who do not ‘have nuclear weapons “could have ‘‘an appropriate’ share in ; nuclear defence. That policy still. stands- today. The question of whether the 'U.S. should share control of its nuclear force among its NATO | allies has for a long time been a controversial one — particu- | larly as regards bh au Germany. here are those — i circles who feel the virtual with- j drawal of France from NATO jhas shaken the alliance to its roots and that the status quo among the remaining 14 coun- |tries should be maintained—as much as possible. They feel that ro high | — problems. of to- | high enough, and whether wolv- | this slaughter. They have insist- es should be slaughtered in, ed that farmers themselves greater numbers in order to could get rid of the wombats maintain and increase the deer | who do stray from their moun- | the $28 bounty on wolf pelts was | wombats bears no relation to | riasis.. The application of cold | tar followed by exposure to ul- | !traviolet radiation or—sunshine | also is a popular remedy. The | latest is a low taurine diet that | may offer a clue as to. the cause. More than 2,500 children in Canada died last year in acci- | dents, most of them preventab- THE ACID TEST | le. For this reason, the National | Mrs, M.R. writes: Could too | Safety League of Canada and | little acid in the stomach cause |the Canadian Highway Safety | sore tongue and mouth? REPLY tion-wide Child Safety Day on | . Lack a hydrochloric acid ay | Sunday, May 1. cause this symptom, but ‘'‘too lit- | Rive icipation of par-- tle acid” is a questionable cause. ae ee cae Bie, On the other hand, if you feel | service clubs, women’s groups, adventuresome, ask your . phy- | sevinctal and community safe- sician to prescribe dilute hydroe- ty organizations and others, the Larose acid and take a few | League and Council expect the drops” with each meal: if burn=" n to continue its | Of ing subsides, your diagnose Was ae aan ris de correct. | signed to alert adults to their re- | sponsibilities in preventing child - ALTITUDE AND. ANEMIA |__E._T. “whites: Will.living in a. pccidents_apd_ if training chil- dren to make safety a lifelong ee ee Oe Anenye | abit. “This canbe called an n? rearet Lada REPLY | awareness campaign,"’ said C. It will increase the number of E. Carson. president of the Lea- red blood cells but treatment | gue. “While it lasts only one still will be necessary to cure | day, we believe the impression the condition. because iron, the | 4nd emphasis of that day should { ient of h Jobin, | contribute to the saving of young {net Baie ee | Canadian. lives through the | year.” ie GARDEN VARIETY As in all age categories, the K. T. R. writes: What are vir- | | highway accident claims the liv- us wartat jes of more children in Canada REPLY | than any other type of accident. These are the common types | jn 1964, 829 boys and girls up to bi ! Council will jointly sponsor a na- | by giving thé Gérmans ‘‘a fin. ger on the trigger’ at this time |thé alliance would only add to | the current turmoil and uncer- | tainty; ** ** . |SEE NO ADVANTAGE In this school of thought there jis the idea that .giving West |/Germany even indirect access |to nuclear weapons would only |divide the alliance further and ‘do little to strengthen Européan | political _unity. On the other hand, there are | those political observers who have Jong: clear-shar- ing and now contend that France's decision has auto. matically given. the 14 a free hand to do as they will in the name of NATO self-preserva- tion. The sharing of nuclear control, they argue, would | strengthen the Atlantic alliance, | As for the West Germans, \they still are eager for nuclear responsibility but apparently are reluctant to press the point |just now for fear of appearing lto the world to be taking ad. vantage of the dispute between Washington and Paris over NATO reorganization. | URGES CAUTION One of - the most - Influential backers of the status quo theory /is Dean Acheson, a former U.S. | state secretary who helped draft ‘the NATO agreement. ~ His thinly-veiled hope, in: ad- vancing an “empty chair’ pol- icy toward France, ~apparently is that after Gen. Charles de- Gaulle has departed the presi- , Id be wooed — jback into the alliance. | ‘We should do nothins on our |part to prolong France's ab- sence,’ Acheson said in testi- mony. to-a U.S. Senate hearing. ‘we should keep her place 'ready and work for her return.” Child Safety Day National Safety League age 14 were killed in road traf- fic. Next in the ‘‘killer of chil- ‘dren’? line came suffocation, then drowning. fire and explos- ion, burns, falls, firearms, pois- oning and- machinery. “The problem of accidental death to children is a growing one,”’ said Gay McLaren, gener- al manager of the National Safe- ty League of Canada. The one- day: awareness campaign, to be observed from coast to coast in Canada, has a double- purpose: ‘to focus attention on the problem . -preventing—child—-accidents;—-- and to alert parents, teachers and all adults to their responsib- ilities in child safety. 7 EELS” COSTA MINT" Canadian oil firms spent $200,- 000,000 on well-drilling in 1968 © for a total of 30,000 miles bored. ese Only at Taylors... pont “WV iamonl AT 25% SAVINGS - DURING OUR BIG APRIL DIAMOND hate ree > ++ iat PURITY Di R. C. writes: I have hairs in | 3 AIRY 3 | ihe oe: Should a eet them | ; “Parents Prefer t | REPLY if Purity Products” ? No, as they act as dust filters. | 2 The: hairs may be trimmed, 3 ee | however. © S| hb 0-0-04-0006-6-6-6-6-66-6-0-> eran ease meeneengeerennenans k e WHO'S AFRAID OF _ | PORTRAIT OF | © ‘ELizABETH AN ARTIST TAYLOR? I A. Y. Jackson, now in his 84th year, is still producing Ss SUNKEN TREASURE Along Canada’s Atlante = Coastline, and throughout population. _ tain homes and cause trouble. Physical togetherness of a fam- ily huddled in front of it, smo- thers family discussion. Never before, it was agreed, did Canada’s youth have such wonderful opportunities for ae- quiring education and market- able skills. But never before did schools and colleges have so many drop-outs. Seldom be- fore have high schools number- ed wives among their classes of teen-agers; but never before have schools and colleges had so ers-imminent in body, Animal lovers in Australia are | happy just now, because the. wombat is going to get a re- prieve. The price on the wom- | bat’s head (or pelt) has been | about $1.20 in Canadian funds. The bounty is going to be lifted for three years. i The friendly -looking wombat, Is vegetarian, has the constitu- tion of a tank and can wreck | farmers’ fences. He sometimes Now the government has elim- inated the bounty. But the ani- | mal stays on the list of ‘‘ver- min animals,’’ which means he can still be killed indiscriminat- ely. We merely mention all this to show that despite government crises and serious situations in- volving humans, a lowly animal can often set off a hue and cry which temporarily puts every- weighs as much as 100 pounds | thing else on the sidelines. many unwed mothers or moth. | their student | the canvases that have helped make Canada's Group of Seven world fam- ous.. This week, photo- graphs by Bruce Moss of Weekend Magazine show Artist Jackson working on the paintings that Vincent Massey once said “have the very breath of Canada in them.” e the Great Lakes, are nu« ' merous sunken ships, many mm of them still holding their One of the most talked about films to come out of Hollywood has for its stars two of the most talked about actors in the ; precious cargo worth mile . lions of dollars. Lt. Harry E. Rieseberg tells the story | of some fabulous recoveries 3 and reveals some of the ine formation from his book, ‘Guide to the Sunken Treas- ure Ships of the World.’ ERR LER EAE | Not Surprising have been made. If there were an’ aa i mander, deployed his troops accord- * “ world — Elizabeth Taylor — : charges of misconduct, Mr. Dubin de- | ing to Montgomery's plan, he would | Our Yesterdays — those who voted to hold the jphysical teste. While they oer. CANADIANS IN and: Richard Burton. In HAVE YOU TRIED manded that they ‘be made known, | have defeated William the Conquer- | (From The Guardian Files) | 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico | tainly aren't in the shape most THE INN GROUP. the vicious “Who's Afraid DRIED? City must have blushed --when | young athletes will be in come they heard that some of the sec- | Olympics’ time, they ordinarily | ret service agents trotting in re- | don’t find it at all difficult to of Virginia Woolf?” Liz and those against whom the charges plays a shrewish, dowdy, agains TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | ‘were made be given full opportunity or and-driven his invading Normans To recapture some of the A new trick with any dried eto-replyTtwas-the-responsibility—of— the accuser, Mr. Cardin, to make such charges ; OVERRULED---It was during reply to this motion that Mr. O'Brien un- loaded the contents of the secret | RCMP report on Munsinger’s act: | ivities, over the protest of Mr. Dubin | who was overruled by the judge. On | Mr. Duhin's complaint that no specific | said that no one could make any : charges until all the evidence had. been heard and until the inquiry had | his troops to defeat an army under “into the sea, Monty says in-an article in the Sundav Times. Harold's first big blunder was to skip off north with his brother, Tostig. and Harold Had- rada, King of Norway, on Sept. 25, | while William’s Normans were board-. ing ships in France to cross into Britain. ‘ - “Against the hackground of my | own practical experience when in charges had been laid, Mr. O’Brien | command of the Kent and Sussex coast in 1941, an invasion by Hitler’s forces being then considered likely,” says Monty, “it is. my opinion Massed..formationsof-German ravaged and virtually deserted Plymouth, showering high ex- | plosives in an intense four-hour assault, — Artillery which the Germans had assembled on the French Invasion coast re-entered the battle of the English Channel with a seven-hour shelling of the British coast—the heaviest and most protracted of the war. ‘ TEN YEARS AGO (April 29,1956) ve of the Newman ‘Club was held at the- Knights, of Columbus Home, and was called to order _hy the president, Richard St. (April 29, 1941) | The final meeting for the year | ” ° ‘Labor.-Party’ Misnome Windsor Mar i lays hehind=President~ Johnson's warplanes struck again at bomb-,| car on April 14 had te drop back to get whiffs of oxygen. exico City's altitude is far more than 5,200 feet. Many ex- | perts were worried lest it do serious damage to many of the young: athletes who will be par- | ticipating in the 1968 Games. In | particular, the fate of long- dis- tance runners has heen cause for much conjecture. | | President Johnson's secret | service guards are mostly youn- pass rigid | | ger men who must run-for~miles -hehind-the~ Presi: ~ dent's slow-moving car. So it must be Mexico City’s | sky-high altitude that's to blame | - Andt | for their embarrassmen. such being the case, many. well- trained athletes from low-alti- tude places are going to find it | very difficult indeed to live up | to their press clippings when they perform their specialities at the 1968 Olympics. Many peo ple willbe saying, ‘I told you 20." j | nostalgia-_of the 1940s, three Canadians bought a pub in Chiddingfold, Eng- Jand.. The 138th century joyed a fine reputation and the new owners intend to keep it that way. Staff Writer Bill Brown’s story of their dream come true appears in your Weekend Magazine this week. Crown Irn has always-en- middle-aged hag. See what extra. poundage and stud- iecl make-up can do to one of the world’s most beau- tiful_women in Weekend Magazine this week, fruit can add to eating pleasure, says Food Editor Margo Oliver. Try her recie pe for Date Appetizers — dates wrapped in bacon strips and broiled — and you will agree with her! :‘ Margo also uses dried fruit ‘for glamor desserts and’ main dishes. All these rece ipes and more, in- this week's Weekend Magazines been completed The judge agreed bo Nhe hater Party’ te n-| ~The—Labor Party, ot. course. with Mr. O'Brien. Farlier he had told a a : ni dohn. The financial report was l ofe : : lea Hine wie fi | always had within it an -element read by the-sectetary-- treasur-. which had such a fine win in the | of the intelligentsia. That dates that-Harold-then-committed. the-first of, his many errors which wete to _ TheEvening Patriot _ WITH STILL ONLY Mr. Duhin he could not agree that an - coat him his crown. and his life.” field-marshal, fighting enthe-Norman er, Barbara Cronin and adopted | recent elections there, is a mis- | Byrne in straight games in the tion (or about 50 per cent of | been going into the Labor Party. improper use ofdiscretionary power On the whole. he concedes, Wil. | ** ait | Sonrtiite the iar ay hens | eae ir Teh WenteentT init a8 ‘ by a minister could not be described jiam was a good general and hada Karl Smith of Summerside |is proved by the composition of | George Se Te with he deci - ‘ as misconduct. He said the govern- | ‘ tae won the _ P.£.1. Badminton | the*new House of. Commons. dma : pce oes & ‘ | lot to offer England—including championship. at’ Summerside |. No fewer than 184 Latior mem- | of the Liberal Party, more and ment was ‘not charging anyone by | Robert Montgomery, ancestor of the | Airport by defeating Johnny | bers Bave had university educa-| more of the “thinkers” have |” : selfing up the commission. It was | etniply directing an investigation ino , a series of statements He was. of opinion that he was carrying out “in full the provisions of the Inquiries Act.” A chief bone af edntention with | right flank. Rut if Monty hadn't been 900 vears late in getting there. we doubt whether that would have made any difference in his fighting plans. He'd have given them the thrashing ef their lives, that he would! a Jennie Charlottetown hest-two-of three finals. Ranmhower of won the ladies title in straight games over Wanda MacMillan (apd teamed with her long singles opponent to win the ladies dou- bles and matched up with Walt- | | those elected). compared. to 168 | Conservatives with such, educa- tion. And 90 Lahor members at- arid: either Oxford or Cam- | | bridge (147 Conservatives did so), which represent-the elite. | These men certainly aren’t of | This perhaps is in” rebellion affainst the ‘estahlishment" as ‘represented by the Conservative Party. BATHE FAR ‘BELOW SRA The lowest natural spot on the er Cullen to win the mixed dou- | the pick and shovel, or assemb- | earth is the Dead Sea, in Pales- | bias: ‘ly line, tyoe ’ tine, 1,300 feet below sea level. MAGAZINE and Colored Comics | 10° At All Newsstands o *