\ (mvwn Prince Edward Island Like tlnr. Dew I’1lhll.§nPl" every week-day morning at 165 Prince Street Cllarlnurtown, P.E.l.. by the Thomson Company Ltd Ian A Burnett. Publisher and General Manager Frank Walker. Editor Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association Member of The Canadian Free: Member Adult Bureau oi Circulation: Bunch nflices at Sun-Lmerside. Montague and Alperton Rem:-se./~t.ed Nationally by Thomson Newspapers . Advertising Service 44 King Street West Toronto, Ont. 540 (lathcart St. Monlreav 1030 West Georgia Street, Vancouver 1!! Carrier Charlottetown. Summerslde $13.00 per an- aura Elsewhere in P.E.l 59.00 Other Provinces and (1.5 612.00 net annum "The strongest memory 15 uicrt./oer than the weakest ink.” i»5jA_r.r:?. TlIESl)A17,mi?Is:B. 4," 135:; ’ Poor Prospects Mr. Khrushchev may be sincere in his oft-repeated wish for a meet- ing of heads of Government for the discussion of international issues; but, lfhe is, he is certainly not mak- ing it easy for the Western Powers to agree to his proposal. The one basic condition, he says, on which such a meeting might be successful is recognition of the status quo in Eastern Europe. That means Soviet control of the satellite countries, Soviet infiltration in the Middle East —-which has taken on added signifi- cance since the union of Egyptland Syria--and a divided Germany with no possibility of free elections to decide the basis of reunification. These are the very subjects, in addition to the disarmament prob- lem, which are keeping alive the issues between East and West. If they cannot even be discussed and if the Russians are not prepared to change their attitude towards them, perhaps Secretary of State Dulles is right in his contention that a summit meeting at this time would be virtual- ly useless. This is particularly true with respect to the division of Ger- many which is perhaps the most crucial source of tension. As far as/, the satellites are con- cerned, it is probable—indeed, seems certain——t~hat the West has given up all thought of changing their political status. But that. is 1 very different thing from acknow- ledging as much by formal agree- . merit. This, the West cannot do with-' out renouncing fundamental human . rights and international law as laid down in the U.N. Charter. It thus appears I that the forth- coming summit meeting (from all re- ports, there ls to be one) will end as the first one did—in no agreement’ in anything worth while. Tariff Policies President Eisenhower seems to be doing his best to persuade the Congress that it is in the interests of the United States to renew the Reciprocal Trade Agreement for in, five year period and to. keep import levels on a reasonable basis. In this he appears to have the support of a number of influential legislators of both parties. Washington reports, I however, reveal that there is a hard’ core of “protectionist” opinion in both Houses and that it is stronger than it has been for sometime. Some critics of the Canadian Government have complained of official hints that, if _the United States embarks on a policy of high and discriminatory tariffs against this country, retaliatory measures if may be taken. Actually, retaliation - is the only device Canada has at its disposal, in view of the fact ‘that this country is buying annually close to a billion dollars worth of goods from the United States in ex- cess of what the United States buys from Canada. That would seem to suggest that, if there must be a bat- tle of tariffs, the United States, no less than Canada, would feel the pinch of it in the long run. . Of course, if Canada were the only country involved in tariff dis- pute with the United States, ‘retalia- tion on our part might be a weak instrument, perhaps a useless one. But it isn’t by any means. In the British Parliament a few, days ago Sir David Eccles, President of the Board of Trade, stated flatly that,’ should the United States refuse to follow liberal trade policies, Britain would have no alternative but ~ to “resort to discrimination”. Should this become necessary, certain clas- ses of American exports might have to be banned from the British mar- ket altogether and tariffs on other goods raised considerably. No Canadian Government would want to discriminate against Amer- ican goods. The fact remains, how- ever. that this counlnv canm_)t go on .indel'inil'ely piling up billion-dol. lar deficits in trade with the United States. There is no reason why the Government should not make this l _ cept in cases where it can be proved I dividual guilty of some charge made - like a natural-born one, is entitled to ‘ due process of law. This is a funda- , Spring along before most people are clear and take whatever steps are necPssa.ry to repair the imbalance. And now is a good time to make frank and ‘friendly representations to that effect, when Congress is de- bating tariff policies. lmmigrahon POl|CIeS Acting Immigration Minister Ful- ton has disclosed that legislation to review certain phases of the coun- try’s immigration policy will be in- . troduced at the next session of Par- liament. (Provided, of course, Mr. Fulton has anything to say about the agenda for the next Parliament!) It is high time that revisions were made; for, as they stand now, some of the regulations pertaining to immigrants and would-be im- migrants are most. unfair A prospec- tive immigrant can be turned away at any port of entry without any reason being given for the action. A naturalized Canadian can be de- ported without his knowing the na- ture of the charge against him. In both instances, as Mr. Harold Winch of the CCF pointed out in the Com- mons, this amounts to finding an in- \ against himin secret without giving him a chance to defend himself. There are good reasons, no doubt, why some particular immi- grant. should not be permitted to en- ter Canada. But he should have the right (1) to be told why .he is re- fused entry, (2) to take‘ his case to an independent tribunal-—a court of law, preferably—for review; that is, of course, unless he be a recogniz- ed and habitual criminal, in which case he should be given short shrift. As for deporting immigrants who ' have been granted. citizenship, it is doubtful whether this should be per- mitted under any circumstances ex- that citizenship was obtained by fraud. Certainly, no one should be deported on hearsay evidence, re- gardless of the source from which it might come._,A naturalized citizen, mental right in any democratic society. ‘ » The Crucible s l L “Here (in education) is the cru- cible in which the moral strength of our children is formed; here is the place where.‘ that amazing gift of the Almighty—~the human in- tellec‘.-is planted with the seeds of knowledge, of noble and use- ful thoughts, of freedom to think, to speak, to worshipand to dare. “It is here where quality of op- portunity is furnished our citizens. More and more, all phases of our . economic life are relying on. our schools to do the screening by which the talented are chosen for. leadership in our professions, bus- iness and industries. - — ' “And perhaps most important of all in these blazing times when de- mocracy is being challenged all over the‘ world, here in the schools is nourished the education without which democracy cannot endure”. ——From the speech delivered by the Hon. Robert BI Meyner on the occasion of his second inauguration as Governor of the State of New Jersey. ' EDITORIAL NOTES A ‘world population of 5 billion—— more than double the present figure —-by the year 2000 is forecast by Professor Fritz Baade of Kiel Uni- versity; Half the total will live in India and China. The white race will be a small minority. . i ‘R 1 Added to the mild weather, the election campaign will rush the aware of it. There's nothing like political excitement to make the weeks fly—-for those‘ who have any interest in that sort of thihg, that is. Those who don't will have to take comfort in the groundhog’s foggy re- ception on the second of the month. - ‘R t 1' ‘ A report released bythe Un- ited States Department. of Educa- tion gives , the following statistics: In the United States foreign lan- guages are studied by less than 10 per cent of high school students and by not more than 15 per cent. of college students. ‘In the Soviet Union all students up to college level must study foreign languages for at least six years. Also every university stu- dent must study a language native to Asia or Africa. 10 million Rus- sians today are studying English,‘ while only 8000 American/s are studying Russian. on -PARLIAMENT HILL January 31. The big _i-tem this past ~week was the passing of lesislation designed to give the provinces larger financial grants. /Although many opposition mem- bers made long speeches on‘ the measure and expressed a good deal of criticism, the House gvave solid support to the bill. Those “of us who come from Maritime constivlruencies were par- ticularly pleased at the special grants to the Atlantic Provinces. The sum of twenty-five million dollars is to be paid the four Ea-stern provinces over a four- year peroid. The provinces of New Brunswick,‘ Nova Scotia and Newfoundland will receive $7,500, 000 each while our own province will obtain $2,500,000. ' 'I)he- Prince Edward Island share amounts to one-tenth of the total amount. This proportion is certainly a generous one in the light of population figures. Had the distribution been made on a per capita. basis, Prin c e Edward Island’s share would have been something like one- twen-tleth nether than one-tenth. MAKES FISCAL HISTORY In raw figures the Prince Ed- ward Island graht is centainly worthy of more than casual at- tention. We can point to no sin- gle federal grant as large as this one. It is a sum whicnamounts to about a quarter of the prov- ince’s total budgetted revenue. As such, it marks a great day in the fiscal history of the prov- ince. Prince Edward Island has special difficulties in raising re- venue—the tax base is narrow and the province’s fiscal ability distinctly limited. It is, «therefore, encouraging to see the federal government recognize our needs Interim Settlement By Heath Macquarrie M. P. 0 adjournment members of and problems by speedy and prompt action to give assistance to the province. The additional two and a half million dollars should make a great difference in provincial finances and should result in great benefits to Prince Edward Island. Ever since Confederation -there have been discussions between the Dominion Government , and the provinces regarding the allo- cation of revenud. The present bill is but the latest in a long series of readjustments—nor will it be the last—for all provinces may be expected to continue to press their claims. Indeed, the Dominion Government recogniz- es that the current measure is in the nature of an interim set- tlement. . , ANNUAL CONVENTIONS \ It ll always encouraging to see our young people take an inter- est in public matters. The Young Progressive Conservative .Assoc- iation and the Progressive Stud- ent Federa-tlion are holding their annual convention in Ottawa, and many of these young people have been visiting the House of Com- mons. We w-ere very happy to greet the delegates from Prince Edward Island wlin are partici- pating in this national gathering. The enthusiasm of these young people bodes well for the future of the country for ‘nothing is more important in a democracy than a well informed and inter- ested citizen body. HIS MEMORY HONORED On Wednesday after the miion t‘ e House gathered in the Hall of Fame -to pay honourtto an M.P. of an earlier era. Thomas ‘D’- Arcy McGee )was one of the fa- The Soviet Government’s tim- propagunda moves is almost mon- : otonously selective. First, the ‘ batch of Bulganin letters to the NATO countries came just a week before the meeting of the NATO Council in Paris. A week before the meeting of the Council of the , Baghdad Pact in Ankara there came, not a series of letters, but one of those “authorised” state- ments by the official Tass Ag- ency which are known to eman- ate from the -Moscow foreign of- fice and which are officially dis- tributed by the Soviet embassies and legations throughout the world. It is of course largely devoted to familiar accusations. The his- torical fact that the genesis of the danger to the Middle Eas- tern countries of Russian mili- the Pact was the anxiety about‘ ‘Moscow 8. The Middle East By W, N. Ewer United Kingdom Information Service tary aggression or of Russian po- ing of its major diplomatic and ; lit-ical and economic penetration is ignored. The pretense is that there was never anysuch dang- er and never any anxiety about THE LIBERAL NEW LOOK thers of Confederation who has gone down in history as the lead- ing orator in that great period of our nation’s story. This gifted - and brilliant Irishman came to an untimely end at the hands of an assassin on Sparks Street not far from the House of Parlia- ment. In the troubled events of the 1850 and 1: 0’s, McGee’s statesmanship and eloquence doubtless made a decisive con- tribution to the kind of unity and cooperation necessary to bring a nation into being. On Wednesday a portrait of McGee was presented to the House. of Oommous by a group of Canadians known as Thomas D’Arcy McGee Associates. This beautiful’ painting was accepted on behalf of the House by Speak- er Michener. It is particularly pleasing to relate that 1 Prince portant part in Wednesday's cer- emonies. Dr. Emmett J. Mullally, a prominent physician of Mon- treal, is the president of Thomas D’Arcy McGee Associates and is an historian of the statesman’: career. On Wednesday he read a. most lnberesthig historical ac- count\ of McGee. We were very proud of -this former Island's contribution. ‘ A GRAND-NEPHEW ~ Another interesting sideliight, pointed out by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, concerns one of the members of.the present House of Commons. Frank McGee one of the able and popular new mem- bers, is a grand nephew of the Conferenation statesman. Mr. Mc- Gee sits for Toronto» Scarboro a riding with a population of over 160,000. A comparison of his crowdcd populous constituency with that ‘represented by his grand uncle gives an indication of the magnificent growth of the “ elder McGee's adopted country in less than a century. by Mr. Dulles as the “represen- tative of the Rockefeller oil em- pire." All this sort. of Russian pro-' paganda is familiar enough. one has lived with it now for forty years. In the Middle East it has sometimes been pro-Arab, some- times, anti-Arab; sometimes pro-. Turkish, sometimes anti-Turkish.‘ A constant factor has been the evident desire to keep the Mid- it. The Middle Eastern peoples‘ are expected to have forgotten either the demand on Turkey for the cession of Kars and Arda- han to the Soviety Union or the attempt to dismember Persia by the creation of the “people’s Re- public of Azerbaidjan”. OBVIOUS AIM The aim of this “authorised statement” is naively obvious. It is to foment what. it calls the “substantial differences which have appeared withing the Bagh- dad Pact”. Iran, Pakistan and Iraq are praised for opposition to the "aggressive actions” of the other members which have been "guided from behind the scenes by the United States" and icult for elementary school teach- ers. Until a few months ago tea- chers, with the blessing of the geographers, w e r e instructing their charges that Antarctica was a continent. Then from Byrd Sta- tion, a U.S. outpost, came the shattering news that it was noth- ing of the kind. Byrd Station is 5.000’ feet above ever. that the ice sheet there is 10,000 feet thick. Antarctica, it appeared, was merely an unde- tached iceberg, a geographic im- poster, a watery fraud. And clear- ly this finding imposed a respon- sibility upon the alert school tea- lhal the geography (§nlll‘se in one of its s.sneci.< \\ a total Washolll. But what has happened now? have taken other seismic echo soundings. And what have they discovered? That the ice. at an l l sea level. Soundings proved, how- . 4 l The Land Below Winnipeg Free Press Scientists working on the Inter- elevation of 9,200 feet is only 8,- uational Geophysical Year pro- '39? feet thick. Obviously, there gram are making things very diff- ,« must be land under it. Where does the alert lesaclier go from here? Having exposed Ant- arctica for the fraud it was a few months ago. must she now explain that it has suddenly he- come respectable again? That would be bad enough. But in fact the situation is worse. No one knows the status of Ant- arctica. It may. or it may not. do- serve its rating in Grade 3 as the last of the continenl.5- One scien- tific bite - like that at Byrd Sta- tion -— is not necessarily fatal. But no teacher can ignore the ugly possibility that it ‘may be simply a group of islands, under- privileged and scarcely worth a Cher, compelling‘ her to cxplain footnote in a high school text. time, no doubt, the get»? In g1'apl\¢-trs will gel this matter straightened out. "Until they do. Other scientists at the South Pole | there will be only one safe ans- wer to the pupil who inquires A- bout Antarctica. The situation is. all iced 11». die Eastern countries divided be- tween thcmselves and to estrange them from the Western world. For that successfully accomplish- ed would be to open the way for the fulfilment of those Russian “territorial aspirations" whose continued existence Milotov once frankly admitted. NEW FEATURE Anew feature of this move is the play which it makes with the current topic of nuclear wea- pons. The Moslern countries are ask- ed to believe that the Western Powers (the US. in particular) are planning to “site rocket launching ramps and atomic and hydrogen bomb depots next to the Holy places of Mecca and Medina". There is not a word of truth in the allegation. And if I were a Moslem I should find this pretense of Communist soli- citude for the Holy place nausea- ting. The suggestion that “the Mid- dle East should become a zone of peace. free from nuclear and roc- tion" and that all American and Western forces and bases should be withdrawn from the area, or its apparent attraction. understand the feeling of many Arab. Asian and African peop- cs in favour of a policy of “neu- ralism“. But they surely must‘ see a warning in this Moscow leclaration of policy. Suppose that, with their sup- port, it were carried into effect. l Siipprssc that the Western Pow- ers were in witlidraw and lo “wash their hands" of the Mid.- lile East. niilitarily and political.- ly. It would not then be for any middle eastern country a question of maintaining neutrality between l two “power blocks". There would Edward Islander played an im- 1 May Indicate Serious Problem " M. D. : BY Herman N. Buntlsen. ‘ you probably can‘; ;rnaa%§l;lfi that anythmg 50 Cqmlca dicali itch could be a S€1‘1.°“5 mi ver ‘ matter. The truth is. lllgifi of that more persons t;0rI1lS.3k_m my itching than any ° 9” eagegmtaneoug, itching is actually nibdified form of Dam It travel‘ glong the same fibers used by ~ ,t‘ons. . Xl{lll:I()s'${lllS\?Gl QUALIT?’ The itch is about half,-way beé tween the pleasurable meme fig ure pain. The most annoy P alit of an itch. in fact. Is that an is slgompounded of pure P8111 d pain-dependent Pleasure“ tahle tickle—in equal quantities. Extreme itching. or Pruritus‘ as it is known in med1ca%01t:=$I;- inology, can be ag9111Z11}13_ h after; It can produce Pam W 1° It. is greater than that resu mfg from much more dramatic in - fictions. _ VARIETY. OF CAUSES Itching can be produced by 8 ‘ t of causes. _ va'I§:rri;c:11':tl.,1re changes might cause an itch, or woolen clothing. in this weather. might so common be the villain. , 1 Sometimes the causes are more serious—-nePh1‘1t15- 3°”- hepatitis, diabetes or other or- ganic conditlons. _ There are psychologlcal C‘-‘U595’ t . . o%‘0r example, Til bet that you will liave to scratch onC_e. 01; twice as you read this article. V get itchy just writing about Pm’ ritus. MOST IMPORTANT . Removal of the cause.‘Wheth- or organic or psychological. 15 the most important obaect _ treatment. But 1H1me('l_1al5€‘_T9l1ef from that often maddening itching sensation is also desired. TEMPORARY RELIEF Scratching will give temporary relief, but the remedy often causes more damage than the affliction. ‘ , _ If you scratch or rub an itch- ing area too vigorously f0I‘ PTO- longed periods you may develop fissures, wheals, blood crusts. blotches or even lichenification. In lichenification, the skin be-: comes thick ‘and leathery, the normal markings of the skin are exaggereted and a noticeable crisscross pattern develops. WORSE THAN AN ITCII Believe me, this is much worse than any itch, no matter how tormenting the itch may seem. Your body is covered by ap- proximately 19 square feet of skin which varies in thickness from one-eighth to one-thirty- second of an inch. "An itch may occur anywhere, anytime. It is not, as you can see, as funny as many persons think. QUESTIONS AND ANSWER D. T.: My sister is suffering from Lupus Erythematosus. Can you tell me something about this disease? Answer: Lupus erythematosus is characterized by pinkish or reddish-colored patches of vari- ous sizes. When these patches heal, they leave thin.‘ white scars. The eruption usually appears on the cheeks and bridge of the nose and does not itch or cause other symptoms. ‘ The cause known. OUR. YESTERDAYS (From The, Guardian Files)‘ TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Feb. 4. 1933) The Provincial Government has announced that it has received a cheque from the Carnegie Foun- dation of $75,000 for the endow- ment of a chair of Economics and Sociology in Prince of Wales College and St. Dunstan’s Univ- ersity. The cheque is payable in American funds on which there is a premium of 17 percent which makes the cheque worth in the vicinity of $88,000. is not definitely Mr. Mason B. MacKay return- ed yesterday to Charlottetown, af- ter spending the past several weeks in New Glasgow assisting the Westminister Church Chair to stage Handel’s “Messiah”. Be- sides assisting with the chorus work. Mr. Ma.cKay -was heard in two tenor solos‘. TEN YEARS AGO (Feb. 4, 1.948) -The Advisory Council on Edu- cation met in the Legislative Chambers yesterday under the chairmanship of Premier J. Wal- ter Jones, Minister of Education. Recommendations were made for provision to hold the annual school meeting earlier than July, to supply transportation facilities for children to another school and to acquire text books at a more reasonable price. The prevailing teacher shortage was also dis- cussed. building may be built in Sum- merside during the coming year, it was learned yesterday. Mr. William Hayward. Manager of the Summerside Branch, said it was possible a. new building might be put up if a suitable site were found. ket weapons" is an attractive one 1 The implied suggestion that the ‘ Baghdad Pact should be dissol-‘, red as an “aggressive organisa-5: anywhere near it, may also have I fully- ‘: in that event be only one great l power anywhere in the neighbor- l hood. Every Middle Eastern city would be within a defenceless 19 range of its aeroplanes a.11d‘its long-distance rockets. The inde- pendence of every country would be entirely dependent on the will of Moscow on whatever terms Moscow chose to lay down. ,That is the state of affairs which Russian policy, as reveal.- cd in this document, aims to , bring about. I feel sure that it 1 will—-rightlywbe read and under- stood nol as an invitation but " as a warning. , ENVOY ARRIVES l BONN. Gormany (AP) The new Canadian ambassadm: In West Germany. Escott Reid. rived by train Monday with his wife. Reid, 53, succeeds Charles A new Bank of Nova Scotia NOTES BY THE wit- ‘ — ter” shot A Pennsylvania “M.” A h millinery 698595 "‘ ' Brandon Sun lot. of Many a m-an Will Pull 3 li<1“i°‘5.i“ h‘5- stnmaghditoitécliti‘ wouldnt Put 1“ the a lb t M his new car.—Calga1”y A 91' 3 A perennial puzzle in Saint John, as in countless other cotigg. munities. is _what to do about he pigeons.-Saint John Telegrap - Journal The government spends a lot of money in order to advise us what the cost of living has done. '35 if we didn’t know.-L0I1d0n Free Press Five million Americans. accoli1'- ding to a survey. _would. be W1 - ing to make the first trip to the moon. This gives an encourag- ing picutre of_ bravery in the U.S.. but a dismal one of the number of happy marriages-— Hamilton Spectator This is the Year or the Dog in Japan, and, according to old Japanese beliefs, it should be a good one. The Year of the Dog is one of 12 zodical years, each having its own special fortune. The outstanding character of P91‘- sons born this year or in any of the past Years of the Dog 1s honesty, loyalty. and 6 keen sense of duty. They do have a certain obstinacy. however. and often will not heed the kind ad- vice of friends.~—JaPa!1 Reports A program by Britain’s Nation- al Coal Board to place 5,000 Hun- garian refugees in the country’s collieries has foundered on _t_he unreasoning opposition of British miners to the employment of for- eign labor. This petty ¢_11sD1aY_0f prejudice by workers 1n an 111- dustry that desperately needs at least 9,000 more employees, co_n- trasts strikingly with the way in which Canadian labor has accep- ted and welcomed immigrants GULL It “wrote a rainbow melody In light and drifting harmony; It traced a gently cadenced beat On Heaven’s "widespread music- sheet. It rose and fell and floated high Against the softly glowing sky; A wild, free note designed to grace _ A score composed by time and space And I believe that what it wrote, In silent song and soaring note, Was written by those wheeling wings - For all the yearnings. earth - bound things. - -—A. Kulik in the New York Times. VIOLENCE IN GHANA ACCRA, Ghana (Reuters) — Thirty-six persons have been ar- rested in the Ashanti region of Ghana following an outbreak of violence in which the residence of the regional commissioner was tacked twice, it was disclosed Fri- day night by the ministry of the interior. HEART FAILS, BOY DIES BRANCHVILLE, N.J. (AP) —- A 14-year-old boy died of a heart attack while playing at school during the noon recess. Thursday. Edward J. Sabourin fell to the ground while playing with other seventh - graders. Sussex country Coroner Dr. George F. Catlett gait; the boy died of a heart at- ac . OIL IN ENGLAND ‘NOTTINGHAM, England (Reu- ters) — British Petroleum Com- pany Ltd. announced Saturday it has found more oil in Nottingham- 1 to this country.——Globe and Mail _ Postively Christmas is the “hi that 345,792 Canadiu cm“Nt.. trees went to Maxim countries in Central - an America and the w,“ from injurious insect; disease.—0ttawa Jam.“ mi‘. last year‘. And each '¢.mM“”. certificate saying it Wu mg? It is not by accmnt, minent politicians, judges oftén reach the bat- ing years of their llvo. years of normal hear of them, and. ma, , advertised John Doe, ' = ' ed as an accountabt in partment of Works. ‘via. M healthy, just as vigomfi M capable of carrying .5, - the minister. Yet, it gm ed that John Doe may the end of his year; at ' fulne_ss and he was “ pension.-'-Corner B1-oqg, I in . ed a donkey in their; But a mile from key stopped and . another inch. The ' caught up the 14* ed the young man ggwayp ed the bride-to-lie- back home. It’: at sad gm‘ of course it is just donkey was‘\a sagacious - believing that people :1: ’ via’. to make donkeys .9: .,,,,,._ ~. —Fort ‘William Thnesaommll I PROTEST CAERNARVON, wing. , . ters)—More than 400mm,“ and children wentdon 1:. mile protest marchsatma Q; = ‘draw attention to ..».....: in the Welsh valley. fiméfl men have been joblegg’-fig. years in the local slate ‘ industry. o A young . couple HELICOPTER NEW ORLEANS (APl.,—‘1im, men died early Saturday when oil company hellcoptgt into rough waters,of l;he.Gulf,,, Mexico two miles south of Gm Isle, La. Seven other peg’ were rescued; The .14-pfa helicopter was on 1 return from an oil drilling rig -nlng into the -gulf. . The Age Old“S ..God is faithful, whowillui for you -to be tempted, glam ye are able; but will rm}, temptation also make _|<—u_y escape. that ye maybe INK bear it. v ‘ An Opporiupni To Serve Yo. to the best of my a . . . if elected your resentative for Ward Fl _"' in the coming dvic”¢lil tion. ‘. . ‘ ‘J Sincerely yours» shire, near where its oil field pro- duced 52.000 tons of crude last ' , BILL - year. ‘I « "ANNUAL VILLAGE OF PARKDALE The annual meeting of the ratepayers Of 21119.5 Village of Parkdale, will be held in Parkde.le,H v ~ Tuesday, February 4th, 1958 at 8 p.m. : run VILLAGE COMMISSIONERS OF T11“ c VILLAGE or PARKDALE ~ MEETING l fidence on Feb. further your ment. A Candidate for Council in I have entered my name as candid Councillor in Ward Five in the C0_mm election, and solicit your expfes-91°” 12th. I will do my, ut,m°5’ interests in our city5 ma“ Warm" , gclVl¢‘ offl ' H. E. uYNDMAN- , 1 8:00 p.l’1’l. Ritchie, appointed leader of Can- ‘ada’s permanent delegation to lthc United Nations. ‘ VILLAGE OF SPRING PARK . The annual meeting of the ratepa P ‘ Village of Spring Park will be held in spring " Community Hall, Tuesday, February 4th’ . . £110 The Comniissionefl “I I ‘ .1. Edmond mmult;/ , 44/I ‘/ yers Of ml: I‘ ;-~ 1953.31 _ Village of Sllfing M’ chfifm‘n'_,: