our @uurdism Coven Prim» Edward Island Like the Dev Published every week-day morning at 165 Prince Street Charlottetown, P.E.l.. by the Thomson Company Ltd. In A. Burnett. Publisher and General Managu Frank Walker. Editor , lember Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association lem r of The Canadian Press Member duh Bureau of Circulation! Intel! offices at Summerside, Montague and Alberto- Welented Nationally by: Thomron Newspaper: Advertising Service (I King Street West, Toronto. Out. 640 Catncart St.. Montreal 1030 West Georgia St., Vancouver 3! Carrier Charlottetown. Summerside 30c per week. By Mail elsewhere in P.E.I. $9.00 per, annum. Other Prov-mm and United States $12.09 per anuum. PAGE 4 FRIDAY. AUGUST, 15. 1'95—8: Proposed -.Hlslorlc Park It is a matter of general satisfac- tion that the most historic area in this Province, embracing Port la J oie and Fort Amherst, is being acquired by the Provincial Government to be turned over to ' the Federal Depart- ment of National Resources and de-. veloped as a National Historic Park. ' These sites, on the farm property of Mr. J.0. Hyndman, are associated ' with both e early French and Bri- tish regimes in Prince Edward ’Is- land. Founded in 1720, a few months after the arriVal of the first French settlers, Port la. J oie formed the mil- itary and administrative. headquar- ters of the colony until British times, and it'was here, in 1722, that the first Christian church—dedicated to St. John the Evangelist—was erected on the Island. In the same vicinity, in 1758, Lord Rollo erected Eort Am- herst, the remains of which _can still be traced. - Much credit is ' due to the RBI. Historical Society and to Chief J us- tice Campbell, our. Island represen- ‘ tative on the Historic Sites and Monuments Board, for bringing this long-delayed issue to a head. It was on the Board’s recommendation that the Federal Department’s action is being taken. ' ~Whatever misunderstanding existed between the responsible Min- ister, Mr. Hamilton; and Premier Matheson with regard to acquisition of the site, has ‘now been cleared up, and can, well be forgotten. The Pre- , mier’s statement in yesterday’s Guar- dian indicates that he is desirous of cooperating in every way in further: ing the Historic Park project, as 8130 are our Federal representatives who have been active in the matter. It is,a highly creditable. undertaking to all concerned, and it is tobe hoped that it will not be marred by political bick- ering from any quarter. , Credit toois due to Mr, J .0. Hynd' man for hailingwproserved,gigging: x I _ p I w _ V _ V ' people from Scaring‘thein ctn'mly be toric area in the hopé and dxpe’dtatil‘m that it would some day be acquired and accepted in trust by the nation. . Visitors have been very warm in their. I appreciation of the courtesy he has shown at all times, andthc personal. interest he has taken in their in- quiries. “ .‘ . , , a A ceremonyi to be observed on Sunday next at Fort Amherst, mark- ing the 200th anniversary of the land- ing of Lord Rollo and of the establish- ment of the British regime. News of i the plans to establish the site as a na- ’ tional park comes therefore at, a most " opportune time. ' p The Suez Settlement Other problems have arisen in . the Middle East to put the Suez crisis of two yearsv'ago in the shade; but . for the record it is worth noting the manner in which this once burning issue has been resolved. The United Arab Republic has i signed ,an agreement to pay $75 mil- I lion in six installments to the suez Canal Co. in payment for the suez canal properties nationalized by Egypt on July 26, 1956. The com- pany is to keep ($15.million in canal fees collected outside Egypt since ‘ the seizure. The UAR ialso recog- nized the company’s right to retain assets outside Egypt. Thus the Suez Co. has formally recognized nationalitation 10 years before its 99 year concession was to have expired. Britain and France are still pursuing'independent nego- - tiations with the UAR on repara- tions to be paid as a result of the Suez conflict of November, 1956. Meanwhile, the United Nations has announced that ships using the .canal will be asked to pay a 3% surcharge on canal tolls starting next month. The proceeds will go to ~ repay $8.2 million to the 11 nations that financed the UN operation to clear the waterway, blocked by the Egyptians when the British, French and Israelis attacked. The salvage operation was financed by a $5 million advance from the United States and smelller sums from Aus- tralia, Italy, ( Norway, West Ger- many, Canada, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Liberia and Cey- lon. The UN expects that it will take three years to complete the repay- ments. The surcharges will , , were ' voluntary. The Communist bloc has already announced that .it will not pay them, Moscow having contended from the start that Britain, France and Israel should foot the bills. This is not a particularly important fac- tor however, inasmuch as relatively » few Communist bloc vessels use the canal. Western European vessels are the major users“ The canal has been kept in opera- tion since its. reopening. There has ‘ of the Lebanon-Iraq crisis. The Egyptians last month authorized three American dredging companies ‘ to deepen the canal to 40 feet. The $18 million job is expected to take two years. ‘ / President Nasser and his follow- ers must fully realize that their best hope for prosperity is to continue to sell their oil to the West and permit the west’s shipping to pass through the Suez Canal. Therein, perhaps, lies the best hope of reaching a practical agreement with the Arab world. ‘ Changed Allilucl'e? There was no surprise at the Uni- ted Nations Assembly meeting when the Soviet Foreign Minister, Mr. Gromyko, lashed out at the United States and Britain for their interven- tion in Lebanon and Jordan. His tone, indeed, was mild compared with some of the bitter denunciations which have come from the same quarter. This change was noted by every com- mentator. It is evident thatthe Krem- lin feels obliged to assume at least the superficial appearance of a peace- maker and that the constructive pro- posals of President Eisenhower prov- ed a challenge calling for more than mere abuse. The changed . attitude of the Rus- sian spokesman would be encouraging if it were sincere. One‘ little news item, however, tends to throw grave doubt on this assumption. It is a re- port from Munich. received through a U.S.‘informationagency, that on Wednesday night, during the As- sembly debate, Moscow was heavily jamming its soviet-language broad~ ' casts; The jamming applied not only bower—which might have been ex- “; pected—but to that of Mr. Gromyko as well. If true, this can only mean , that the Russian minister’s words intended strictly for foreign consumption.‘ Why it was deemed necessary to prevent the ‘_ Russian ’ guessed at; but it is difficult to place any favorable interpretation upon .such an incident. ‘ _ ' EDITORIAL NOTES ‘ Mr. Elmer O’Hanley, teacher at Naufrage, was right in deploring the midern tendency tollook upon an ed~ ucation as a means of taking young people from the farms. Farmers, like. all other people, are benefited by a reasonably sound education; but they -can use it on the farm as well as any- where else. One of the main tasks of the schools is to impress upon rural youngsters the dignity and honour at- tached to farming. \ ‘ . s at A report from Warsaw says that the Polish Government is alarmed over illicit. traffic in liquor. In the last six months 600 moonshine stills were seized.‘ That,' surely,: is not a . of Poland. We remember the day any time on this small Island. The situatiOn is better now, we believe; but rumor hath it that even now an occasional still can be uncovered. III I! a: a hand holding a quill pen. It is to honour journalism and the freedom of the press. It is interest_ing—-—and ed- ifying——-to think of all the great mas- terpieces of literature that were writ- ten with quills. Incidentally, the an- cient implement appears to be staging a come-back. Some writers are said to feel that it helps to stimulate thought. That may be just a whim which will pass. On the other hand, there may be something in it. I Q 0 death of Mr. W. Fraser, Robb, editor— in-chief of the, Moncton Times and Transcript, who suffered a cerebral hemorrhage last week While vacation— ' ing at St. Peter’s Bay, and'who was a regular summer visitor to our shores. Mr. Robb was in the prime of life, with a brilliant record as a news- bé many years of further usefulness before him. The Guardian joins with his many Prince Edward Island friends in extending sympathy to his bereaved wife and family, and to the staffs of the papers which he so cap- l!) ably edited been no breakdown since the start ‘ to the speech of President Eisen— ‘ , church, large number for a country. the size , when almost as many could be found 5 A new U.S. 4-cent stamp will show ’ 4/ There will be general regret at the > paperman and with what appeared to . THE "LONG 'HOT SUMMER OTTAWA REPORT. Vocation “Observations By ,Patrick Nicholson \ Special Correspondent for The Guardian . When President Eisenhower vlis- ! ibed Ottawa last month, he re- ‘ {erred privately to the need for a greater awareness anddmowledlge of Canada within his own country. In the light of that belated of- ficial admission of a well-known defect, I found it interesting, dur- .ing a recent visit to the United States, to observe just what orp- porltunities U.S. citizens have of learning about Canada, about our 0 PU BLIC FORUM This column in open to the discus- sion by correspondents of question of interest. The Guardian does not nosey eerily endorse the ,opinion it come- pondents. \ “WELCOME THE STRANGER.” Sir,--This is the um 'ol the year, when many e from other places come 0 visit us; ' «Wand-we are to have them come and enjoy themselves in our midst; Prince: Edward Is- land is a grand place in which to enjoy a vacation. The Province has many natural beauties and pastoral quietness. There are many places of interest which our guests may visit. . y ' Many will want to worship with us on the Lord’s. Day. Let us make them feel at home in our church services. Do not leave it all in the Minister to do that. I was told by friends of mine, that one Sunday, not very long ago, they attended a service in one of our churches. They listened to a good sermon and they also en- joyed the music-of the choir. But when the- service was over,_ and they were going out of the the minister and one member were'the only persons who spoke to them. Now, that. at- titude was not intentional on the partof that congregation; I feel sure of that. But it was the failure on thepart of God’s child- . ran to realize that they were met together for the supneme purpose, of wonshlpplng God and fellow- shipping with Him and with one another. l‘Be not forgetful to en- tertain strangers; for thereby som have entertained angels unawares,” HebreWs 13.2. No matter what country we are in, when we go to a church ser- vice we expect to experience that warm Christ—like friendliness which was so characteristic of. our blessed Saviour when He walked and talked with people here on earth. Let us so manifest the Spirit of Christ; not only in our churches; but in all our con- tacts with our fellowmen and especially in our churches; so that when strangers come to worship with us, they will go away saying: “It was good for us to. worship there today. The people are so friendly." ' I am, Sir, etc, Lie. W. D. JOHNSON. Montague, P. E. I. MISPLACED HOLIDAY Sir,-—As we corhe to the close of this week’s holiday in this city we stop for a. moment and think if ever we had a misplaced holiday this was it. In the very heart of Old Home Week, with the city bulging with people from everywhere, we find it a holi- day. As one who was up town in the forenoon we were asked scores of times, “What areyour stores closed for? Where do we (go? Drug stores closed. every- thing closed, but your big liquor store”; and that place as we saw it did a roaring business. People were stunned to find no stores open in this busy week, no banks, no nothing but a liquor store with two cops to keep the cars moving. This misplaced holiday was no good to the visitors. It was no good to the business houses and it was no good to anyone. People were rushing around looking for newspapers. There were no Guardians, no Patriots, and we must not for- get after we leave the 'edges of our city it was no holiday and those peop'e were enlltled to a paper, at least we think so. This by on Parliament Hill toaverlt hopes and problems, and even about_our culture. It did not surprise me to note that no Canadian newspapers and no Canadian magazines were on sale on any news-stand I saw. In contrast, about four-fifths of the magazines and onefiltth of the hewspalpers I see on news-stands here are published in the U.S. I did not see or hear one sin- gle Canadian radio or TV pro- gramme, cinema film or phono graph record. .But here I sup- pose more than a third of out broadcast programmes and 95 per cent of Our film-and records or- iginate in the States. The only time I heard Canada mentioned on the radio was when a weather forecast announ- ced that “a mass of cold Clan- adlilan air” would bring relief from ‘a heat wave. NEWS OF CANADA SCANT Mostflclays I . read, the _Ne w York Times, accepted as ‘a news?“ paper of record which prints “all the news that’s flit to print”, and maintains three whole-time reporf tens in Ottawa1 for that Muse. The only reference to our Parlia- ment I ever saw was a loo-word story, Written by Canadian Press not by a New York Times ne- ponter, revealing the sensational news that a civil seer stands catastrophe—by effecting hep-airs whenever a Member of Plarlia- ment “loses a‘ button or rips a trouser leg”. ’ , One of the U.S. news mags? zines, “Time”, maintains a Slilalff of five full-time and several part- time reporters across Canada, so I hoped to read of Canada in that. But mention of Canadian af- fairs varied between nlil and one , scent column. Of course two or three pages of Canadian news are slipped into the Canadian edition only, to ’make palatable 'the many pva’vgesof costly Canadian liquor and other advertisements, which wlean’s. I , -I had a Canadian $5 bill rc- fused in a restaurant, and a Clan— adian quarter rejected by~a slot machine. So now I do as much for the cut-price? U.S. coinage which from time to time someone tries illegally to pass onto me as change. here. DIEFENBAKER ADMIRED v It came asla very welcome. echo of home to hear at last this ques- tion: “Tell me about this new star in Canada, Diefenbaker?” My questioner was Professor R._ I. W. Westglate, son of Rev. Dr. T.‘B.R. Westglate of Winnipeg, who has lived for many years in New York Cristy. His interest and. in— formed approach led to a novel trend of discussion. “Ill; seems- to me, from what I have been able to loam about him, that the new Prime Minis- vter represents something which has for long been simmering just said 'the New York teacher: "Am the first figure in Canada’s pub- lic life who stands very strongly fbr Canadianisml” Mr. Diefeubalkecr is our flrst Prime Minister whose b l o o (1 does t .whal , 15mm “British’ islcsfiahdLor‘ r‘ané‘é. us he represents something akin to an element which now makes up more than one quarter of our population or 4250,000, Canad- ad-ians today 'tend to think of themselves as Canadians ,simply and unhyphenatéd. Perhaps some circles in Toronto and Quebec would deny-this. Mr. Dlefeubaker is the first pro- duct of our melting pot to have reached the very top. If his alp- peal lies wholly or partly in that, I believe, III is subconscious. I think, and in this Professor Wests gate agreed with me, that Can: aldllamls today tend to think of th selves as Canadians, simply and unhyphe ated. Perhaprslsomec' - odds in Toronto and Quebec would deny this. A ' The more subtle appeal of Mr. Diefenbaker, I think, is to the a‘ wakening nationalism, to the grow ing pride in being Canadian, which is abroad in this country today: a pride whl h the Prime Minister reflected very accuratelyl I for one regret. to seefbo'nlgE thus wooed from genuine (Elana-4 dlan magazines suclh as Malc- Iln his “vlslicrl1”_ of; Canada’s po- tential and probable futune great-_ mess. , Pipelines In, Near East. National Geographic Society ', _ Like ant-cries carrying blood through the body, a netWork of oil pipelines transports ,the es- sence of industrial] and military power over the vast areas of the Near East. I . Besides the man-y lines that reach out from the all wells for varying distances within the countries of onilgin, thousands of miles of pipe loop the blinders of neighboring and distant lands. Three major systems extend to the eastern shores of the Medit- erranean, says the National Geo- graphic Society. Two start from Iraq’s Klirkuk fields in the heart of the now turbulent Near East. A third streaks from the Persian wastes of northern Arabia. Toget- Gulf coast across the desert wastes of northern Arabia. Toget- her, the three systems cover more than 3,000 miles. . BIG PROBLEMS Building the long and massive pipelines (some have a. diameter of more than 30 inches) repre- sented a tremendous engineering least by the big, internationally owned companies that extract near East oil. No less difficult is the job of keeping the oil flowing in regions city seems to be run by a few who set holidays and change them at _will. Contractors, paint- ers. builders and milkmen kept right on and many corner stores, for it was not a holiday, it was only a sham, the biggest force in many a day. We had better wake up right smart before an- other year gets here and find another time for this holiday at the week-end, Saturday or Mon- 1 . beset by economic and political pr't‘ilelms’. ~ ' .lere are questions of royalties, payments for transit privileges, and rights and obligations of the operating companies. In 1936, when Britain, France, and Isrcal moved against Egypt and the Su- ez Canal, Arab nationalists blew up sec-lions of the Iraqi pipelent leading to the ports of Baniyas in Syria, and” Tripoli in Lebanon. Transport of Iraqi oil into Is- ugeal by way of Jordan over the southern line has been cut off ever since the Arab- Isreali war of 1948. ’ To handle substitute oil ship- am-e'nlts from other sources, Is- real has just completed a 2‘5- mile pipeline that runs from the port of Ellal on the Gulf on ‘Aqab lo Haifa on the Mediterranean coast. Western Turkey now has two new carrier pipes of 250 and 200 miles each. In Iran, the Albada-n- ltowAhwaz line has been extended 1to the capital at Tehran. Ilt winds in all nearly 750 miles over de- serts and mountains. V PLANS FOR FUTURE. Many of the oil-rich states, in- cluding Saudi Arabia and near—by small sheikdslms, are preparing for increased output and trans port needs. Iraq, where violent revolt re- cently overthrew the monarchy, has been planning additinal out- llstls to expand its oil exoorls. One proposed pipeline would pass lllhrouglh Turkey to reach the Med- iterranean. Iran and Turkey contemplate a 1,0004mile line from the Iranian fields of Qum to the Turkish port r rskenderun. lpl‘ojecvt to pine ell beside vca‘cd for an a“ ‘lj'eb no.» :" day — but not in Old Home Week. / I am, Sir, etc. WALTER A. O‘BRIEN Charlottetown. dink wells with Mediterran beneath the surface. in Canada," . I not right in thinking that he is» Eye Pouches 8. Their _Couse .rman N. Bundcsen. M.D. B3I’3131AEME age and heredity, not dissipallilon, for those bags under l 6 es. yolgfimédrily, pouching under the eye is due to aging. The skin of the eyelids, you see, 15 delicate, and is attached loosely to the un— derlying muscle and fibrous tis- ue. . S With the passage of years these underlying structures weaken, per mitting the lower lid to fool in folds. Fat then forces its way through the weakened muscles it fills out the folds of skin. And there you'have the “bugs” which give comedians so much material for jokes. MAY BE INHERITED disposition toward this particular type of .condition can inher— ited. In some cases this appar- ently is responsible forprelmlav tune formation of pouches which occur among fairly young indiv- idvua‘ls. ‘ . Naturally,'these bags are dis figuring to a certain extent and obviously undesirable. Cosmetics can do little to hide them, but a plastic surgeon may be able do wonders with some of them. THERE’S A DIFFERENCE ' I want to emphasize that bags under the eyes are one thing and another. Frequently such puffi-V nss signals severe cardiac or renal disease. Other causes of puffimess in- clude ‘mlld allergies which recur frequently. Food allergy is a good example. Also, the manner of sleepln, r g, especially among the elderly, may be a cause. Because of im- paired olrculalflion, fluid might 'ac— cumulate overnight in the eye- lid on the side of the lace on which the person sleeps. FIND CAUSE Before such conditions can be eliminated your doctor has to find the underlying cause, treat it and correct it. ‘ Then there is the matter of dark circles. under the eyes. This, again, is entirely different from either of the other troubles. The area under the eyes of many persons appears darker slm-l ply because the skin under the lids is so thin that the lange veins near the surface show through. Certain types of cosme- QUE'STION AND ANSWER Mrs. H.F.: Does the physical health of the mother have any- thing to do with whether the baby will be a boy or n1? Answer: Thqp yslcal health of the mother dices not determine the sex of the baby. 0 MARINER’S SONG The wind dogs run with the stars tonight, * \ Ears flopping around the Poles; straight _ Above our salty souls. ' The wind dogs worry the mack- erel bones . , . As they lollop ,among the stars, And the squads below whip the . wavesto foam " ‘ And pile white seas toward War. I’drather stand watch on a wind. dog-night With half of the sea inside me, In a good stout Shin thatbrides the fight, ., - With a seafaring man beside me, Than sleep becslmed with a gem. tlelove And a channellbell’l; ing,‘ ‘ And with no wind dogs to chase our sails Down the sun-wet roads of morn- ing. small wann- FRANCES FROST in the New York Tribune ‘ First keep'thyself in peace, and then shalt thou be able to be a peacemaker towards others. A peaceable man doth more good than a well-learned. Red Sea. and Persian Gulf. SPECAIL TECHNIQUES Meantime, protection and main i’tvenanlce of existing lines require special techniques. To prevent corrosion, buried pipesare cover- ed with coats of asphalt, glass and asbestos fabrics. Surface pipes, exposed to day—andmlilght Itelmlperalture extremes, are laid zigzag to avoid damage from ex- pansion and conltnact'ion. Atomic tools detect welding flaws. Oil leakage is checked against dan~ gm of eiqploslon from the sun’s burning n'ays. Working against climate and terrain in barren, arid lands, oil company engineers have steadily multiplied pipeline capaclties by increasing their size, improving their quality, and adding more pumping facilities. The future of the Near East’s oil industry is based on the pre- sence there of the world’s riches-t oil resources. Its modern phase was born less than 50 years ago, but its past goes back to pre- Chrisllaln days. From sleeping oil and gas may have co-methe Bib- lical fires that leaped from rocks and sand, and the “eternal flames that burned in Zoroastrian lem- 1131185. The seams of Noah’s Ark were calked with petroleum ouch. PLANE CRASHES ST. VITH, Belgium (AP) — A U.S. Air Force tanker plane, be- lieved to be carrying six passen- gers, crashed here Wednesdav. Local polic e said the plane caught fire ’in flight and exploded as it hit the ground. Re-ELECT ADAMS BOSTON (AP) —— The Boston Engylpt works on a , the i Suez Canal. The Arab Le'm '9 has Garden — Arena Corporation has re - elected Walter A. Brown as president and general manager. In Tuesday's voting, Weston W. man of the board. Most physicians agree that pro", puffiiness of the eyelids ,quille" xtilcs can hide these blemishes: ” ‘fil‘heir featherytsm are streaming - . :an to 1 Adams again was chosen chair-l l NOTES BY THE. It’s always best to have two «“ keys for the car. One to keep in your pocket and the other the wife keeps in the can—Brandon, ' Sun \ All .is not lost between East, and West when Gurkhas continue to go to Scotland for instruction = in bagpipe playing. Or is it?—‘ Ottawa Journal The Bible says woman was made out of a rib, but some won; der if “ril ” wasn’t an 'erwneons. translation for “jawbone”.—-ch1. land Tribune A 1‘ , Only one person in seven turn. : “ ed out to vote in a municipal. 11' byelection in British Cohmrbia re- c ently. Granted it indicates: " apathy. but anybody who sched- ’ ules a byeloction for a Saturday in Summer should have his head examined.‘—Ottalwa Journal , ‘ The Scots are an understand, ing people. That’s why railroad. officials have drawn a cloak, of anonymity about one of‘thelr ven- gineers, reported to have brougli his crack Edinburgh-Newcastle express to a halt‘in order to re- ' cover his lost false teethu—‘Saint John Telegraph-Journal . 1 Col R.S.W. Fordham, .r of the Income Tax Appealbosrd struck a blow for mucic when :le ruled dial: a bass viol+or.bull fiddle - player was entitled to y . deduct the cost of conveying the bulky instrument to and from . the concert hall from his‘income..* —Ottsw~a Journal , ' The ~operators of a skate In Halifax, England, discovered that » , they had over-changed a strang- er $7.50 on a repair job. _‘Th’e firm went to the trouble to trace. ‘ him, and in a round-about wlay found he lived in Oxford, about, 150 miles away. Then they {2g his address, sent him a of apology and reflmded the man— ey. . .The car owner is said to be recoVetlng. — St. Thomas Times-Journal ~ - ‘ “ A Catholic missioner who had labored for years among the cannibals of New Guinea was finally given an assistant. T young priest felt some misgivings» about his assigninent, and . he reported to the past-or he re- . marked, “I’ve heard that the na- . tives around here don’t takevery _' r readily to religion. How do you got along won them?" “Not as well as I’d hoped”. admitted the pastor. “But Imam/to be mak- , ling progress. 0n Fridays now the icsnnilbals eat only fishermen“; Catholic Digest For'tho first time in t his. tory of 3 World’s Fair ' at~. tention is being given to the thing of God. as well as things of man. In the large ’pank outside Brussels, in Belgium, which is this year’s site of, the first world’s fair since the outbreak, of World War III, both the Roman Catholic and Protestant Christian Churches v - have erected‘bulldings which have been calledby one correspondent “Show cases of their faith”. The Roman Catholics have erected a $1,000,000 structure called “the City .of God” and the'Pmtoatants a more modest but equally beau- , tiful building from a $235,000 bud- ," get—Sentinel .Revtew ‘ ‘ Time All ‘ In Ghana, where “everyone ‘ kmoWs, freedom is broadening down from precedent to. prece- _ dent, two new precedents have just been set. ' _ ' v A preVentiué detenti-on'bill tak- ' 'es uwaythelpmtectlonfif babess , corpus from anyone 'lcohsldcrod ‘ to be subverting Ghana’s defence, '_ security or foreign relations and enables, these badlcharacters to i_ be detained for up to five years ' without trial or appeal at the courts. "Subverting foreign relay. tions" sounds a very nice broad change indeed,‘ particularly use- ful against journalists. , To make sure that the benefits of freedom are fully appreciated, _ Mr. Kromo Edusei, the Minister . .. , of the Interior, has decreed that l. ' photographs of Prime Minister »‘ Nkrumah must be displayed in all govern-ment offices, schools - and business premises. If any commercial firm refuses to obey this order, it willbe closed and its employees sent back to their country of origin. ‘ . Now it so happens that there's a picture of Winston Churchill in my office but it’s only there be- cause I like it and I certainly wouldn’t expect a firm of Ghan. ian fruit exporters to have a pic- ‘ IF YOUR cum: 7 IS LATE DIAL .65 and a, paper will be delivered Special delivery service a mm.to9:00a.m.if you! P“, missed. v: l , ' 733 (frer Georgest V w, Ed 3 Slogan: "To maintain the 2004‘ '33” serve — the goal for which we strive. ‘.