Che Guardian ‘the leadership of a vital personality. MR.SHARDP SAYS A Brief : 1% Britain's Trade Problems in the 1957 campaign was |; f pain{-@UDGRT DIFFERS “Covers Prince Edwara island Like The Dew _ We ds Hancon,. Pilcher directed toward promoting this image, | i] From A BABY BUSeET Sh ABE prone bs ron iy ely honk “iver |, including its major, slogan, ‘Its | | = A’ WELL, You By Dr, Theodore R. Van Delica oka tess ieee’ Benes ne published every week,dey moming (except Sum | time for a Diefenbaker Government,’ i, ; ry Several years ago I was. sc- | two trade blocs may lie in the de} and wantory holideys) ot 165 Prince Steet | thought up by Dalton Camp, a Tor- KNOW «+. Lik A cusiomed to bringing home | field of industrial res eat ch Corns vet mean a cece, | onto advertising executive.” 4 MIN-SKIRT “© ping ody 5 rae ee | ee ae ore _ . and Souris. ee After Mr. Grosart went to the Sen- > ing attention. So as.it re-| Despite the razzle-dazzle talk iRepresented nationally by- Thomson Newspapers | _ ; mained in my study, not) by the British government. of Advertsing Services: Toronto 425 University ate in 1962, Newman notes that his ‘gelax. On the nights that I work- | launching a sew exploratory par s8094, Montes! 640. Cathear Seat Unt place was taken over by Mr. Camp, ‘ed it was Wiffieult to sleep be- | campaign te crash the Com- versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie i cause my mind was overstimul- | mon Market, there is no evi- Sree! Vancouver MA 7087. f\ tah the 1888 election. Comp ant ated. dence from Parjs that Presi- Member Canadian Dally Newspaper Publisners’ | Roy Faibish “sought to revive that As a result, I was tired dent de Gaulle is prepared to Asiccaion and The Canaion Frew the Canadien | mystic bond between Diefenbaker toon AE Oh weet dey OES | ee be lication of all news dispatches in this paper | and ‘the average Canadian’ which had fellowing aight | terms of economie oa re ha kee? cone, phase beet forged in the 1957 and 1958 | of & vieleus ayete aath, France still is in a po- : nad © jeiadion of special dispetches hers | campaigns. This meant that the had ; See Wee ae a | Wal se is Prime Minister’s claim for re-election |: _ | teave # at | major Common Market power, $13.00 a year by mail on rural routes end | Would have to be based, not on the | never have in YL. oe \ Ot a dh ed oe 0 ta al authority of his office, as had been al mes w ward and to favor de Gaulle year in U.S. end elsewhere outside British Com | attempted in”1962, but on a direct, come the policies rather than those made 7 * ” le 2 . Ses cra’ the diailt bles Meaational appeet to The peagie” <1: es Deichte civ Wwephte the Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. ' Newman adds that “in the cam- ant eae continent also is weakened by i The strongest memory is weaker | Paign’s initial stages Camp and Fai- spells danger. persons be- | her own trade. pretions euas; hee Europe, One factor than tne weakest ink” bish were more concerned with the | have nothing to do an -apeuaSEt Ol aaa Cae spirit.and - MONDAY. NOVEMBER 21. 1908. | effect the crowds would have on “chummy ot the BE” when eabea wealth food and United States | an enviable reputation in cert- - ,; =o = Diefenbaker than with the impression to spend © quiet evening with | Seieelel sed cotemce surtact | ala, techaological research The "s ce é = i ; neighbors. - 4 co- * . . They'd Like To Know he might make on his audiences. It has been ssid that 4 a man | 4. not favor a British cam-| operate with ber in develop- ° e at Vise the Pearson ‘goverament They wanted Diefenbaker to come a we a. ae Prime ae ewe ms « oe Concord a oer find all that money in its sock for the |; face to face again with the voters’ | a poor organiser, or is ‘not og | Coming talks with de Gaulle | ple of this appreciation of Brit- mid-November civil service pay che- | Yearning for leadership, which had good an executive ashe is rated | ind, other Common Market | ish technique in certain fields. : - ques during the parliamentary hassle awakened in him the charismatic waeciis eee’ oe nano find out the price of admittance ‘the Sostaeaieds Mien. te: nae over the defense unification bill? Ap- | Walities that had inspired the tri- candidates for a heart attack, | and see whether Britain can af- | Common Market members. Re- |, parently the money had originally | Umphs of his first two campaigns.” due are uncgesbat we'nras | STUFF PRICE. SEEN been voted for other purposes, and One would have expected an ex- deep. they ‘retrsct, “4 | But tt is evident, | cut costs and this raises the vital question of parlia- | Planation or denial of these state- o cas heart stack’ sil seins | Gl’ si; tat te, pie 7 fot “Europe te meet mentary control over government ments from Mr. Camp at last week’s : Sw excuse they need. | erable. At would mean Britain's | in the development of new im — siiituiien. Tory orgy. But. it seems that he had- pk eee = Cire: Ht may not be easy to forget ch peas soar oe ne i tion - cape i . : = ‘ events : co Governments have fallen, and royal “eee re | - find 'Teanation a's cochal be tem and virtual denunciation of tween the two blocs would me o a — ae ak on Revealing Figures HOW TO LIVE WITH A MINI-BUDGET derful ee . aer But it also is evident, as one would ber no necessity for de * oe ae those “Quebecers are paving dearly for Cc < ae aie een tn ‘Stated. that “Britain” on son Andon bon = __.____ spent for purposes other : : ~— | sition. And yet it could build Pent for_ purposes other then {hiss | the Uultre-natonaliste yappings of | CANADA'S PARKS — | dn ot erm. Hoses serve | lente @» alone. Harmen | fmportnt exbie. bridge, por centuries-old fight for pariamentary | thoee who proclaim, hither and yon, e oe Fava bee Nw | Steen Yes ems inet tases See | authority counts for naught. The | % be their interpreters.” Thus saysa | (Chain Of Vacationlands From Coast To Coast} tm “at maki the? | = ee eee --y question of what happened in this writer ina French language Paper, = : National Geographie Society : think more clearly while doing Wh | . id? ease is slated for discussion'at-a-spe- | Montreal La Press, in commenting on | 4. suure of x soothmg warm gests Scotland with its deep val-| ‘Too many community affairs —_wWwiy SO nsipidr ¢ cial meeting of the Commons public | figures recently quoted by Jean Chre- | bath inspired the Canadian Na- . A| and committee meetings tend to : ‘Hamilton Spectator accounts committee tomorrow, and - ‘ Sag page ey Sa Fo te Soe ieee ee - . we fancy there won't be any absen- | Lafleche and parliamentary secre- | eins Sa cekicel aotiaw> te shea son fake Gena Britain. It is not surprising that TEES OT THIS OCCASION. —-tary-to-the-minister-of-finance--Ami}—0e1 er von eT Ove and influence when i allows When the proposa 1 for a commit- | indeed, the figures are revealing. oe ual won Sn par Phen ny ain eclige Uy Mevoseic odd Rhedpelas| a Coneter t — tee hearing was first raised, 4t was | Mr. Chretien had said the if one | Rocky Mountains. The men be- “to bin five . eld doughtet slays with two ob8- | “re, vane sewed thet Si’rcled | hy te cade een enetice. : = ; objectively analyses the reasons that | g3 bathing im springs near Bow | row six-square - mile peninqula | Newfoundland west of Bonavista | dren who had had rheumatic * It is understandable that the the committee's terms of prevent Quebec from attracting in- | WT wise great sam | tiie wildlife refuge les on onc | lands and ‘seltered fords. | them? {F®™ |'two were opposed— South At-| to chastise Tam Smith's regime a Cos : ber, Elmer | vestments despite all its -potential) | ,; ne. erat ae’ | of the main routes followed by | Glaciers once covered the : REPLY riea and Portugal, and 2 ab- | whenever they see a chance. - ~ «, . But a Conservative member, F _ ; itary advantage to the public. - Sere No. The only stained. What is not understandable is oe y ; \gsking the .|~-Tiches, it.is found that an impottant | the Canadian Government set | migratory birds. = | a Nove, area wilh ice 700 . eutegioms. a ‘those who abstained | the insipid attitude of Br i tain, "Forbes, got round that by as e cna aside 10 square miles for bath- | Cape Breton Highlands Nation- | feet thick. Arctic leebergs still | pect of rheumatic fever is the | Among those eo taned 3 *“Comthoris to broaden these terms.*)~*8¢ climate of insecurity | Sin 1sas Two years later, far. | Park im Nova Scotia sug: | meander along the.coast. streptococeal infection of the ee ae eee hi —— go they hese chet Alfred Hales | created by Quebec’s hesitation to the ms. The tries. __Committee ~<dntthe ir tenstitetinnt tte Hf they really believed that the — resolution represented a misuse discuss the question and, later, de- | During the years 1963-65, . invest- of the UN Charter why did they —ments_in- the manufacturing sector-of— refer {t to the committee for study. | the province dropped from 27 to 22.6 | In paying the civil servants the | Per cent of the Canadian total, while soUTH io souTA ‘(government said that it had found | in Ontario it climbed from 49.1 to : i | are | to Y Dissident Conferates moved enough unspent 4 -te_tectheeds | Nowteuntiant most of their recres- |-spreaj of automation. ——- | Both conditions are capable | Mend the use of force against| te Brazil—after the Americas —— money already ap- |: 51-2. in the-textile industry, where | to the majestic peaks of the Sel- finds on sports for children | Butyhis new leisure will be lit- | of causing congestion tthe | People who ha taken proved by the Commons and that | Qubec had had the Jead, investments 1 Col- io the juagloct f= other. go Ge mae thang Darden Mf men te ee Le Senter auhes Wt acennen Civil War and founded Amer+ this, in addition to a withdrawal from cee wees Dae $10 a.econtingency fund, removed depend- | million between while “ency on passage of the interim supply | in Ontario they made a kangaroo leap bill. But was this legal? And even of $58 million. In 1964-65, Ontario with. : ~ | cana, where some of their des ~~ Preechitie ieee | “The Rhodesian affair is a mat- }'eendints still apesk English. if the move was legal was it wise to | recorded $100 million of new invest- oa west- | ‘concerned with anyone elie. pours which pow ecouples | SROCK INIURES set a ent which could be very | ment in chemical products, while copes; ‘aed Glacier and | rhis is understandable.Much | °° ™any_houre afte : P. M. writes = e a < had $28 milli Steuat- Roveteicer -Gomnteniad-ty7 i a teed ae oe use the empty hours profitably, electrie shock damaging to principle of parlia- | Quebec million. | the Selicirks E poor je to acquire REPL mentary control? During this very period, Quebec | _ Four parks —Kootenay, Bani, | Srams came originally from the | inte; and community ree-| Yes, by causing ___*The commitice would like to have | made a specal effort to regain |' Fito. td sper othin me | Caren” tom congested arene | fettin bogreme wil Seve | Gilne. Bt thwe the views of Auditor-General Maxwell | ground; yet the province lost in com- | 7a00-equare-mille wilderness gee- | [Stu my wu oma vey| Recrestiia— in ‘te _orighial cardise damage . : ‘ i serve 12, ~ enfety. sense of “renewal” for people CAN’T Henderson on the subject. -. That parsion with other regions and the The Canadian Rockies have While ne one would advocate all ages— is likely to be one of | Mrs. B-F. oo watchdog of the public purse has | country as a whole. Commenting on | ew farms, no cities. This spec- | cutting back on recreation pro- | the most important community |-snything wrong. with normal this situation, the writer in the Mon- | tacular scenic region is a year- | @tams for children and teenag- | activities of the future. MF. Da- | who can't ery when she pointed out that under _ “ round playground for riders, | ers, Mr. Davis is right in calling | vis is wise in suggesting that the | set? oe = cedure the matter would not come | treal paper concludes: “Our Quebec | ‘cimbers, hikers, skiers, bunt. | for greater attention to the | time to start planning for it ie REPLY before the committee for study until er ee es, and fishemen. ‘needs of older people. One of the ' now. ee No, but she lacks early 1968, when his 1966-67 report | to caress one another to spread The parks shelter wild valleys | aus papi I a y 196 hen. alpine likes ; TODAY’S HEALTH pena pentagon 3 oe ee Soe See ie eee remole tet hard tom To Nint P| ce . Sle” and stretch often ‘time, course, interest which a federal monster anyone seen Hartford Courant © \ : e g _ 7 , : : yg . $ pabereetiene eotis hah ae ee ee on et immune em summers "hea _X Millar ‘hakeapeare_ were ness were such farned_ autora te Dr. Yaa D “= tarians themselves © would years. picture Banff's Mount Assiniboine, ‘ television. Machiavetii, — gy 2 have difficulty in recalling the cir- | ferent for those who look coldly at ‘terhorn of the Rockies, tower cease meh oe aus [Omen dat chap called sim- | beng Chicage, Mlinols.) cumstances. Wisely they have de | the figures” » > | "Fhe mountains abound with | lastic poll at Columbia Univer- ply Homer. The new favorites, |——hoaor cARE FOR : ° cided to get to the bottom of the EDITORIAL NOTES par ge Fox, -. Sen oe er Sons eae ee ee a Steinbeck, were a4 eo whale of North merica FREE Storage Hassock (28% Value) when you C oie right away. e St wial Beal be as Recky Moxniatn | shen roam | fact, been deposed ty John Siein- | D. Salinger, James Japee, Six po geptcenest Bae sais buy the Deluxe Veowum Cleaner by SINGER e Same Mr. imp! advertising campaign in the television foe with fir, pine, and | fg indeed-ée- | evsky. One might find a com- tons for South Americe. | « Makes dust and dirt disappear - oe ee Soe ean Hl? BOP ing | cer evergreens Leuping ninth glace, Jost about | 00 decnominaior bere is be |— sear OAS It was a glorious victory, as Camp | industry is concerned with promoting | Sitar BUFFArO ROAM where you would expect to find | Searched hard enough. An inci : cea en ae” “followers keep saying—cutting that | a men’s deoderant. That, says the Ot- | “Buftalo graze freely. Two | the New York Mets, He shares | The only question is, How dur-| _ AMMOUNCING —_ a . a man Diefenbaker down to size and | tawa Journal drily, must say some- — — Elk potiaeae ie ‘this spot in a tie with F. Scott aot Wa aoe ae oo. Free delivery service j tt tae ean showing, in the words of Boss Camp | thing about a sense of what is aang pe aad te North STi coat on lee oe 1986? Will Steinbeck still top te |. gn food orders - “5, 164 Gt. George %. /himself, that “the party ts not the | important. west Territorires — support!| lie esteem in recent years list 2) years hence? We doubt SINGER Ses 4 ; North America’s remain- it. ever $3.00 : Dial 994-4551 embodiment of the leader, but rather eee lorgest deuhé ill Shakes-| Orders $1.00 CENTERS | the other way round; the leader is ‘The British postal authorities are cent aun be Gene ta ns ae - Keith Simmons transient, onl the party is about to “Zip Code” ninth. slece. Me tas tee, mach eS "weed Ee 520 Dial 436-2522 Moy = only r —— ; inaugurate a Zip e stuff on* the bell.-And sticceed- Larry's Restaurant oa 2o8 ent.” To talk otherwise would be “an system that will outzip those of other ing literary fans, as in the past,| FLL ORODAT PRORIVRE AT Ail SHOERETORER argument for sheep, not for man.” | countries: For easy recollection, both - oe ee a ee That's why Mr. Camp felt compelled | numbers and letters will be used. . to get into this fight in the first place, | The new zip will designate not only to restore the supremacy of the party. | the postal area within a.city but the ‘But who fathered the heresy he is | street. or even an individual fitm. as | so concerned about, and foisted it | well. At a speed of 20,000 letters an | as a dogma on the country? To re | hour, ‘eléctronic machines will sort fresh our minds on this point we | the mail into different postal routes. turned to one of Dief's earlier deni- : eee : grators, Peter C. Newman, whose We regret the misleading ref- hatchet job “Renegade In Power: | erence in these columns Saturday to The Diefenbaker Years” was surely a masterpiece of its kind. This is what Newman, now Ottawa bureau ~~chief for the- Liberal Toronto” Star,“ has to say about the technique em- “ployed in screating sthe* Diefenbaker : image: es : E . “A few months after he won the party leadership Diefenbaker appoint- mitting the addition of another mem- ‘ber of the Executive Council, thus now legally fiermitted. While it was ; ‘announced: that this was being done to provide for the new portfolio of labor now held by Hon. Elmer Blan- chard. it, has nothing whatever to do ‘the proposed legislative change per- raising the total t6 ten from the nine /~ca TD Me ed eT eats ed Grosart campaign manager for | with the legality of Mr. Blanchard’s the 1957 election. To capture the | appointment. he having been duly allegiance of the uncommitted'voter. _ sworn in when the government took ee Grosart decided to sell his movement | office. The new provision concerns eon , not as tle Conservative Party (which | the intended dppointment of Robert. | will ‘be rationed to am average ” Canadians had been rejecting with | Campbell as minister without port- | ®% 200 miles driving month'y for ~ boring'regularity since 1935) but as @ | folio. Pas ores Neney nna ‘ 4 eT oh tae oe Hae id premier and pact cabinet of eight. announced