- ° oe ‘y . a cent speech in pierre he recalled The Guardian the nation’s “long isolation” in con- rast with its “brief supremacy” in _— — — ——e ~~ the world of today. Now it sees, he ———— Walker “said, the “exhilarations of single- ae ee ewe _handed world leadership fading.” "8 day and statutory holideys) of. 165 Prince Sweet, | While its power and its will to use it Chortennonn-#-4-1-~-09—hemaae “remain the underpinning of world- . eS. wide freedom,” the United States. must now proceed more through | Sligakh Thyroid ; é By Dr. Theedere R. Yan Dellen Ao ath + Stand ; escape detection for many years. .Victims are tired. gain a few pounds, and develop dry skin. Age. anemia, or’ work is . blamed and the majority let it g0 at that. The mother of a‘ close ~ NOTES BY THE WAY “Do you mam 0 et aie ome 2. Frank Walker i The “Oceanic, a new | liner now on its maiden” Voyage | Rerresented rationally by Thomson Newspapers : : Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave . : a io | aida a tr i § Ita . concensus, 3 . ‘The butcher was chatting with from Naples to New York. has. Segre FANN; Merrnnt 660 Calica. un. partnership consi tion ; APRII ary NE mee mine ts typical ex | | tase h- 618 hers ad 58K ie versity 69042, Western Office 1090 Weer Cowgie |" and particularly, through tie inter- , P ; a —— . Stree: Vancouver MA 7037 - Ry poses oe . The woman was in her early ¢d in afd interrupted con- | sengers. _ x . Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers | national. institutions which seek to ig $# $ 4 fifties and had been bothered Versation. “Give me 10 coats Something went wrong with Association and The Canadian. Press The Canadian | express the general judgments. of & wl 4 along this line for at least 19 worth of caf meat—quick!” she | the plumbing,” said one pas- i Press is exciitively entitled to the use fer repub | a ; rf Vis Sy years. The change of life was - Then . ’ to senger,: “and- at one time we i lication of all news dispetches. in ths. peper | mankind. 2 : : 4 A B blamed originally. because of the other customer, she said: “I had six: plumbers in our state- credited to Wor to the nantes arg poe In essence the Ambassador. ex- om i <. ¥ a etertnnnns and va- hope a — ~ — \ aoe seamen real luxury. — Ot- ned ato the lecel news publish rein a ae * f . gue ac! a je . served z ournal. 2 rah ‘or republication of special dispatches here | Periénced’ in the nuances of inter- a and joints. Meanwhile. her fati woman eyed her coldly, “Not if, Gs sla sasatied. Scbectisticn sain: | national living together, asked for INCOME. *rAx . e gue progressed to drowsiness You're as hungry as all that."— | Mother told the boy to get _ Not over per week by carrier. | ad ste will ) admi : eK { and weakness. The skin became Montreal Star. | washed and ready for bed. He $17.90 2 Year by mail on rural routes and areas | a laptability. a wi lingness to_2 mit CHE our, eS + u | dry and she ; of being - | flopped around with the usual fi net serviced by carrier | mistakes, an emphasis on mediation COUNTER, | ae eee a . tment | A county huh school basket- “aw shucks” and “gee . whiz" roe “$1500 year_off tsiancd and th Kk $26-00-per | 7 showdowns Thic was not ee — w : ; ball h (he'll remain unnam- procrastination. Finally his mo- yeer in US. end eltewhere ounide Bgtish Com rather than showdowns. This was not Ju LY SEPTEMBER as carer en wee, 2 | ea? eos ha feeut's We -00 ter eed oie ko oe monwealth : ' 2. counsel of weakness, but of g when the family tock onne | season with me the other day. | tant to wash before going ib Not over 7c sinale copy- : strength. It is to be hoped that Presi- ; % of definite mental deterioration. The coach explained that some bed. ‘“‘Because,” he replied, ee eee Rees of eater ker dent. Johnson, if not Mr. Rusk, will : 5 Her milat' Was all hol she want- | OF SS OSs coordina led “wi as ‘on ie it es ae iz < , js weaker ear ea sire . a - ed to be left alone. story | Young and u © be | wash the water will wake me q than the weakest ink". consider it seriously before dismiss- ‘05 ss cimpmivssmesa aie w? : : sounded ike a middle-aged wo ptsanting on the court, “10 up and then 1 won be. sleoy’ ————___. ing it as “nonsense.” 4 or eae _| man in the menopause or early act. “ee ae eat | ay more and 1 won't wast te . PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1965. : Or . stage of senility. Hypothyroid: °° woco-ordinated he couldn't | ‘3 GAVE iff ; ism was considered assoc walk and chew gum:at the same 1:60 to bed."— Fort William Tim- _ needed Protection —1-_—_atit- Te Spare — ' Sao ea seen at ange catamaran Fe Soureal— Publishers of Canadian magazines — , Canada’s delegation at. the GATT u a eee eS C * C EnETS 0: * talks at Geneva has reportedly been —____ hair was coarse. and she was | ambodia Oo f s ears have argued that they n nrer for same years have argued that they |. ied with a list of 600itemewhich § OctoBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER. hoarse (dry throat and vocal | = ence need protection from foreign com: - are not made in Canada, bit which | ie ’ a ante, Se. she : fail ome Pc Saatt Writer .. They have won the sym- | ’ asleep on the. examining table. pensaigen Ae e M t G rd | are dutiable on importation. Since | B e Breathing and PBI tests were An_ international. conference , ending the war in South Viet paths of Finance Miniter Gere. | these goods presumably do not need re a "abnormally low. Thyroid tablets on Cambodia could result. in | Nam. whose new budget provides for penal- : eee . | Were prescribed and in less than | informal talks on Viet Nam and the Geneva confe, ae h iff Id be d { th she ne erence had : : ‘ ; protection, the tariffs cou rop- ta a moe was restored to an nossibly pave the way out of the izing the purchase of advertising in | : 5 4 & i | actlwe and productive life. pe been called to restore peace in | without hurt to Canada as a con- : current Vietnamese dilemma.. | ped wit u n - i Indochina and was attended by = —Publications_that_are_not_Canadian- | es ign—to-other-countries-to-lower-+—~} ee me ‘ae same 2en8 ~lcallion ces hon tree [az The United States —said—tt-“pine participants — Britain, ovined. But he made fish of one and. fesstom to. othe | se ae a LZ Rimcal symtoms thal bo: Comey ernst” iP 4 France: the Une Sates, the flesh of another in this case. by. ex- empting two prominent U.S. publica- tions which have “Canadian ed- itions’ that are printed and publish- | tariffs against Canadian exports. One would imagine that fhis. painless way of. promoting freer trade would com- mend itself to all concerned. Such, unfortunafely, is not the case. <> Ss IT'S THAT TIME AGAIN | thér the victim more than his fa- | tigue, weight gain. and puffy | facer A hoarse, leathery voice’ | develops in severe cases.\Mus | cle aches and pains alsn-are bo 2‘ | thersome. i takes place—and named Aver- ell Harriman; U.S. ambassador seat large, as its delegate. This ‘Was followed by Britain's ac- tance of a Soviet proposal calling for such a conference. Soviet ‘Union, Communist China, Viet Nam, Laos,.Cambodia and the Viet Minh, the rebels who had been fighting the French. Whether the US. and North Viet Nam can get to a confer- ed in Montreal! gps Digestive system involvement | ence table on the Vietnamese : Not only are the high tariff in- eo gestive system involvement The big question now is: What -©®Ce ietna To TOU BESS I the hope of winning —— = = ee : ges he occurs when stomach and irites- © yj ‘ j problem through Cambodia's P [ OTTAWA R EPORT By Patrick Nicholson tinal muscles become sluggish. oe Rete Pra > oe regret back door is largely in the press’ support for this measure. Mr: Gordon included Canadian newspap- ers in his protective provisions; but his gesture has been coldly received by spokesmen for the newspaper in- terests. and with good reason. What- ever magazine publishers may. think of beiag coddled in this manner. Canadian newspapers want nothing to. do with a policy that would leave them at the mercy of the state, in anv shape or form. They are too well aware ‘that terests concerned abput retaining protection on the atiis they manu- facture, but they want to keep the fences up on items which “could or , Should be made in Canada even though they are not at present.” And, reportedly, the: federal government goes along With this idea. So it is un- likely that the duty on such items will be removed any more than the tariffs on anything in the other lists. ' Motor cycles, ‘snow blowers, egg broilers, scissors, pocket knives. can- ' i 4 | ' Secret Gathering Of Liberal Campaigners At a huge secret gathering of Liberal campaigners, their most advantageous date for calling a’ general election was hotly de- bated. : From Friday 2 April to Mon- day 5 April; the campaign man- agers.‘from most of (Canada’s %63 constituencies, as well as MPs and. party organizers, met at the Constellation Motel uear Toronto airport. The purpose of this mammoth gathering was to en for the Liberal Party indic- while, Prime Minister Pearson ate that they wouldbreak jnto ‘awill make a ‘much- publicized the Prairies, winning for exam- ple two Edmonton seats as well as..Assiniboia.. and _ Athabaska from the Conservatives. A SORRY ANSWER Polis in ‘Ontario, BC and the Maritimes are less rosy for the Liberals. They suggest that the New Democrats would make .Some gains in urban communi- ties: the Social Credit would Speech tefling Quebec to fall in- to step with the rest of Canada, in an attempt to mollify the backlash in the Nine Provinces The ruthless selfish cynicism | of this conclave of Liberals will | infuriate most Canadians. The despicable thirst for power of the Liberal ‘machine was expos- ed in all its naked greed. At no time’ was the question asked: ~+-The-victim—oses his appetite and complains of _ indigestion. | abdominal distension. gas, and | constipation. Psychotic symp- toms are other atypical manifes--. tations. Sluggish thyroid in chil- dren is more serious because it causes subnormal growth and intelligence unless treated ade- quately. : “HOW IS IT Now? = G. R_ writes: I am a singer and have a deviated” septum and a back drip which I- pre- sume is from my sinus. If I hag . the deviated septum corrected and my sinus looked at. do you Of the idea? The Prince origin- ally sought a conference on Cambodia last summer to get firm guarantees of the neutral- ity and territorial integrity of his country. The U‘S. at that time rejected Cambodia's request on grounds what actually was needed was strict enforcement of the provi- sions agreed ‘to at-the~ 1954" Ge= neva conference on Southeast Asia that split Viet Nam into north and south at the 17th - alia. oe NEW DANGERS s now, with the war in Vie hands of Prince PRINCE OPPOSES U.S. The prince is reported opposing the invitation of. United States and South Viet Nam-to-a conference to guar- antee Cambodia's neutrality. He said also he will not attend any meeting that is only a pretext for talks on Viet Nam. : Patrick Gordon Walker, Brit- ain’s special envoy, conferred Monday in Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, with For- eign Minister Koun Wick and later a press conference the international conference would u Me | ned corned beef. badges. insigni update the audience op current ‘make a few in the West; and “Would an election benefit Can- A, ‘ : wherever ‘individual freedom is re 7° °C US sean oe ae se ond-in- Seek thena-ae- ths | tae Coneeheatines sma aie ale iy point consider= gor 4 ‘© Nam reaching new dangers, the ber coun. stricted, it usually begins with some rer 10F the SalvaUion Army, Cigaret slickest method of promoting up in rural Ontario and in the ed was “What date would be Waity of eee U.S. has changed its mind about ‘Tes of the 1954 Geneva confer- Ba lighters, Easter baskets, baby sooth- "their candidates in the eves of Maritimes a fraction of what most advantageous for us PLY a Cambodian conference in a eDCe- . : encroachment on a free and unlicen- sed press. Not infrequently it comes in’ the disguise of protective legis- lation or other such devices, but the - net result is the same. As pointed out in the comments . ers, corn cob pipes and whole cate- gories of goods such as musical items, © textiles, scientific gear and such ob> tous facets of running an elec- viously non-Canadian products as coffee and lemon juice—these are some of the items falling into the the electors Concise talks were given by MPs and \ organizers who are experienced in the var- tion campaign. : But behind this facade of con- ference-classronom, a bitter stra- tegy hattle was waged. The Lib- thev would lose elsewhere. - The outcome of the Constella- tion .Conference was something of a saw-off. June was virtually dismissed; but October was ten- tatively agreed to as the date for the federal election. Mean- Grits” And the sorry answer had to be that the glamourless Grits would merely garner slight additional French support in exchange for the loss of slightly ‘less English and Ethnic support. Yes, provided a nasal twang is Most attractive or unus- feature in the sound of your ice. What would happen ‘to Durante if he had an operation that left him with a voice like Bing Crosby? LAZY OR HAZY? Mrs. O. writes: My son, was move obviously aimed at re- solving the Vietnamese ‘crisis. is move followed the recent decision by President Johnson _to enter into gotiations on Viet Nam Britain and the Soviet Union, co-chairmen of the 1954 Geneva conference as well as the 1962 unconditional ne- | The participants in any Cam- , bodian conferegce* would likely | agree that Cambodian neutral- | ity be the, sole subject of the discussions but his would not | prevent informat contact by the. | delegation of the US., North | Viet Nam, the Soviet Union‘and | | Communist China. , on the new budget in this connection, ; 3 eral MPs and other representa- * . om ms ee -., - category of. “‘not made in Ganada” tives from Quebec, and the h M | d | Felected by the army; slip conference.on Laos, are backing Such informat talks could set Canadian papers do not need special aid on which tariffs are chased. | maces Wied ormines— the |” T e emorida FDR Wan e Lae marks peychesemalie” | the iden of 4 Cantodion conr| the: stems for ferm@l a . protection against foreign control. |, Canadian’ consumer would | sme Arcam toe whe Milwaukee Journal l Gist heaen's Sweied ls er yee ference as a possible arrange- tions exclusively on the Vietna- ; : ; ; P - politicians— fought ‘ : s Veet fh ‘ ; , They can simply amend their cor-~* penetit by having the: tariffs remov- | sdetermined last-ditch battle to _,Four years before he died; It was -reyécted by the fine | Can you advise me? Sine nelsted loward | mete stalemate. Es y 5 ; $ Temov- President Franklin D. Roose- arts «commission, opposed by REPLY porate by-laws to forbid thé transfer force a June election. - Private ’ s ae re ed. and our basic producers would velt described to Justice Frank- the Roosevelt family and called Why not consult your family i of stock to non-Canadians; and it is js hotter chance of comipeting polls were hotly debated. furter the kind of memorial he °“imstant Stonehenge” by critics. physician” If sonny boy is not 3.6 H.P. much better to have the remedy for eee 3 WOULD EXCEED LOSSES would like to have in Washing- A new proposal recommends mentally ill. but just lazy. you this danger in: their own hands, than | abroad. But this, it seems, is not the ; These show that the Liberals ton. It should be. he said. a eight 130 foot high. slabs sur- May be advised to push him out M CULLOC ; ’ : : me ' point. ‘ ® will not win an overa]l major- stone ‘block about this size ‘put- rounding a three times life siz- - of the nést. This is not as crue! Cc Hy in those of any political party. They Some goods. such as in the textil ity, but suggest substantial gains ting his hand on his desk) and ed statute of Roosevelt as it sounds because, in time. he ° | have never demanded a privileged ; ayoe®, sue nthe textile in Quebec, and a breakthrough placed in the center of tnat In the meantime friends and Will be forced to go an his own. Out-Board oe militafy effort whenever the situa. _ Institute of Canada who has just (April 28, 1955) ote t is water: vin the walls ane fens? ; . 7 through hemselv- ; tion demands: but it does not yet completed a 20-year mortality study Mrs. Neil A. Matheson of ty witeest strenuous one lane: es unable to ont on unless the range for bulk spreader service. AERO FERTILIZERS : ‘ Y. Southport has been asked to be 2? ™ of cancer. Before 1945 there were s ely pointless effort. We do not bath provides foothold through | You'll find high analyses Aero 4 Va 2 ‘for the same reason and to the same | due almost entirely to the rising rate ee wooed ae that his visit came up through i - degree. ‘ of lung cancer among men, the mor- WY Urban Cauchlin of Sher, where do the spiders come {he drainpipe 7 4 Kensington Phone: 267-341 Adlai Stevenson, U.S Ambassador | tality rate rose above that of the’ the East Prince Jumor Farmers (0m? The species most fre — Out of every” ten ' 4 women and the gap has Organization at 2 meeting held T™ently paged published daily around the hese 1.0. position in this regard, and they would be foolish to ask for it. Mr. Gordon was sadly misled if he thought they would fall for this : total ‘Liberal strength in . a : spurious crusade, which is solely for produce some of these goods if they — ouse of Commons would rise inz ‘in memory of...” velt's memory The late presi- phase and when the individual oo $ ‘ 00 ine industrv. “ere aware of the market potential. — slightly from the present 129 In the 20 vears since his death dent now has the very memorial is seriously ill. Save $42.00 : the benefit of the magazine industry. So runs the argument for maintain. | MPs to about 132— still short of mo memorial has been erected he wanted NAVEL INFECTION Ss UU. It is important the public should . : the magic figure of 134 needed in Washington for Roosevelt. | The memorial. commission | T. W. writes: What causes a Now Only é realize that the press had no part in campaigning for it. : ; i Polls inditate that the Liber- ter. Its first proposal was .a_ ily and friends say they have REPLY ; list was prepared at the government's _als would win 73 of the 75 seats complex of stone slabs. risinz as given up trying to stop it. But» Infection is the usual cause. KE Another Warnin Voice | request by the Canadian Importers’ in Quebec. Adding to these the high as 167 feet. containing the real memorial. for family = ITH CARMICHAEL 9g LA iati that it Id be “ seats in northern New Bruns- memorable statements by Roo- and closest friends. is the one TODAY s HEALTH SINT— Brackley Pt. Rd Ch’town ° In a recent speech before the | ss0Cia on, so : at jt cou use- wick and eastern Ontario which’ sevelt.*- 0.“ 2# now set near the Archives Nail biting is a sign of tense- a . ~ fully circulated” among Canadian are predominantly French- Can- fo > — ; American Society. of International Law, U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk had nothing but harsh words for critics of U.S. policy in the Viet- namese war. Thev ‘were. he said, = tn Iking nonsense. about the field. might closely resemble Cana- dian products which require pro- | tection. There may also be cases where.Canadian manufacturers could 1 ing the status quo. It was for this purpose. reportedly. that the 660 item : .manufacturers—in case they didn’t ‘’ know what a lush pasturage of pro- tection had been provided for them. * EDITORIAL NOTES Now is the time to buy your wife; struggle.” Though he did not name— a new mink, says the Financial Post. names, he evidently had reference to those who were proposing a “pause” in the bombing of North Viet Nam, which included some distinguished members of the U.S. Senate as well as Prime Minister Shastri of India, Chances are prices of fur coats will go up this fall as the costs of raw fur, labor and production are all ris- ing. There is one good sign. though: new styles mean fewer pelts are need- ed to make a coat. . into the now solid Diefenland on the Prairies. These gains would slightly more than offset the ex- | pected losses in Ontario, BC | and the Maritimes, so that ae ' t for actual voting control of the House. adian, the Liberal Party of 132 MPs would include perhaps 83 Quebec MPs or other French- Canadians. This prospect is viewed with alarm by some top Liberals, including Prime Min- ister Pearson himself. They: pro- test that, to have a government so entirely dominated by Que- bec arid quasi-Quebec interests . would cause a justifiable back- lash from the rest of Canada, with the result that the Liberal party would be thrashed in the next ensuing general election, and would be eliminated as a major force in our polities for at least 20 years. green plot in front of the Arch- Ives building. I don't care what it is made of. whether limestone or granite or whatnot. but I want it plain. without any orna- mentation. with a simple carv- Congress -created a memorial commission to handle the mat- associates have tired of contro- versy and have quietly raised $15,000. They got permission to use the plot.of ground in front of the Archives building. They bouzht a stone carved in Roose- Says that it will zo ahead. with a larger project. Roosevelt's fam- _~ WithThe Angels Ottawa Journal The Prime Minister tank oc- casion at a press conference to point out that, the Common- wealth Room in which he met ro mts- had not been -designated for such meetings. Commonwealth Room”? People who have not been on Parlia- ment Hill lately will be .surpris- ed at what they have done to the dull old committee room, on the left of the Centre Block main entrance. It never rated | big committees. , paintings and two large old-fa- shioned angels: we call them that although we cringe at the thought of angels ever being out of -date. “ The scylptured angels are in niches, their wings folded. and they gaze benignly at a point in the room where. with unerring instinct, the TV stage-managers placed the Prime Minister's chair. Jt is a little unusual for prime ministers, we almost said “even Prime Minister Pearson of Canada, | es one as Guebes, WRN meen | It would have. odds and ends prime ministers.” to sit in the and the Secretary-General of the | An analytical study of the New “against my own opinion—that % Committees. interested in company of angels. Mr. Pear- ‘United Nations. ° Indeed. there is mounting evid- ence of the fact that while the | United States sincerely believes it is. giving leadership to the free nations of the world in this matter, most of these very nations—even those under the deepest shadow of Chinese threats of aggression—are perturbed about the manner in which the war i see i ness. J, : " AS as cae Science Monitor | coun a os Canadien Sines : Miss Se! Block, daught Spider | n The Bath ” prescription mixed locally in our consultation and fertilizer service r Miss Sylvia . er) = ew ; points out in a leading editorial. it is Exhibition. of Mr. and Mrs. A. Block of Peterborough Examiner new, modern plant to meet your locally. You'll save time and money, ‘ a Charlottetown left this morning fy, appearance of spi in | houses Their habitat ts between exact crop and soil requirements. get biager crop yields with custom increasingly apparent that to be suc- cessful the Vietnamese war must be fought on two fronts—the military and the diplomatic. It is clear that Washington is prepared to step up its seem to-have learned that it must also be prepared to step up its dip- lomatic and public relations efforts at the United Nations. was even more specific on this point. In a re | ing ever since. York World's Fair, commissioned, by Ontario a8 a guide to the design of the provincial pavilion at Expo 67, | has found that the fair is too big. too _ impersonal, too commercial. too noisy, that it lacks an over-all theme, gives too little choice in eating places and little if any opportunity for a laugh or chuckle. The report, com- ments the Toronto Globe and Mail. ° Cancer is increasing among Can- adian* men and decreasing among women, according to a finding by Dr. | A. J. Phillips of the National Cancer i ' more deaths from cancer among women than men. But in that. year. been grow- a the Caouettists would be virtual- ly eliminated, private polls tak- | Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | (April 28, 1940) | Mme. Lusia Teterazzini, 65, It- alian soprano, who thrilled op- era_lovers the world over. died in hospital today after a long ill- for Ottawa where she has ac- cepted a position with the Na- tional Revenue Department of the Civil Revenue Department of the Civil Service. 4 TEN YEARS AGO the guest speaker at the Exten- sion Service Asséciation | Wom- en's Division! m the state of Maine. in the Department of Agriculture office in Summerside. 2 : ' mining, forestry and water re- sources, all immensely import- ant but not excitingly controver- sial. The best thing about the old room was that it had a very large mirror over the fireplace and an MP nodding off to sleep sometimes would be jolted into wakefulness by his reflection In the transformation to Com- monwealth , Room, the mirror has been’ kept but all else is changed. There are modernistic son, who has a swift wit, would have said that angels were a change from reporters. The pity is that the TV flond- . lights made it impossible for him to-see anyone and for all ; we know he didn't know he was entertaining afigels. The forgiv- ing angels probably were not as disappointed in the conference as reporters who expected more | than they got in way of news, the bath is not uncommon. Nor is the theory that they arrive in the bath via the drain pipe. But this explanation is far from sat- | isfactory. A spider's buoyancy is greater than that of water and a spider would be thus un- doubt that a spider could tra- verse this trap with sufficient impulse for doing so: ovr doubt is that a spider would think it wortinwhile. the layers of - plaster board which form the walls of rooms. Clearly at some time in their careers they will emerge from this home into the bathroom. Once here. the chances are | that they will get into the bath | accumulated soap scum. The, consequence is that. through the lack of simple logic. the house- holder will erroneously concinde | One 15 pDrinfed om paper fromm Ontario's foreste ! IN ACUTE PHASE E. W. writes: Is cortisone _ ever used in the treatment of ul- cerative colitis? REPLY Yes, especially in the acute discharge with an odor from the umbilicus? 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