THEIR HUSBANDS ARE SAFE A happy. patr of wives are Mrs. Pat McDivitt, left, and Mrs. Pat White as they face Bewsmen outside their Hous- Queen’s Visit To Germany ton, Tex., homes Monday af- ter getting word their astron- aut husbands, Maj. James McDivitt and Maj. Edward White, had splashed down Gets Praise And Criticism : By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON ‘(CP'—The Queen's tour of Germany, the longest foreign visit of her reign. has won praise at home and in the Bonn republic. But with it have come editorial suggestions that some .of the Royal speech-mak- ing appeared a bit rough and that Anglo-German warmth is not enough. The Germans must he'p pay for keeping the British Army on the Rhine. one edi- torial said “But most. certainly they must pay.” says the Sunday ‘Citizen, a mass-circulation tab- loid 2 “We want £35,900,000 ($255,- 000.000) in the next two vears,” the London newspaper adds, in réfiecting on the cost of keep- ing the 51.009 troops on German soil The British government is trying to get the Germans to buy more from Britain to help balance the ‘outfiow~ of British funds on army costs. The Sunday Citizen chided the Roval speech-writers for having the Queen say that “too much” had been made of Anglo-Ger- man differences in the past. Ie the Observer, Neal Aschersos said the political advances of the speech-writers were slightly crude DECRIES CRUDENESS He was critical fhat this “crudeness” included ‘‘lichtly veiled jibes at France two weeks before President de Gaulle is scheduled to make a second visit to Germany Yet he agreed, as did many @ther commentators in _ both countries, that the Roval trip showed that “‘a triumph of af- fection was won, an outpouring ef that love and puzzled respect the Germans have Rever quite ceased to feel for Britain.”” The blanket coverage of the tour by German television did mot. as happened in Australia @ few years ago. diminish the size of the crowds. which turned out by the hundreds of thou- sands to share in the reflected glory of a real live Queen As the Royal counle rode smiling through Germany's prosperous, rebuilt cities. the German image of the cold. hard English shattered in tovful chants - of “Elizabeth. beth.” Nobody has tried to predict how the glow will survive in practical form after the Union Jack comes down in Bonn. Munich and Cologne All through the visit. observers were conscious of the two levels involved—the vopular fiesta im the streets and baroque palaces and the political undertones oc- pa reflected by the Queen's speech-writers INSPIRE DISTRUST Same Rritish newsnapers flinched when the Queen re Russians Charge Witch Hunt For Spies In Canada MOSCOW ‘(CP)—One Soviet Newspaper has lashed out at Canada for. allezedly har- assing Soviet- diplomats and re- porters while another accused the United States of sending spies to Moscow im the curse @f diplomats The Newspaper Soviet Rus gia accused the Canadian gov- ernment of conducting a witch- hunt against Soviet officials in Ottawa. of bugging the Soviet embessy with hidden micro phones. of spving on Soviet diplomats and “of kicking them out of the country on trumped ap spy charces ‘ & spokesman for the external affairs department in Ottawe said the Russian allecations are “unfounded.” At the same time the weekly fewspaper. Week. charged that Maicoim Toon. US. embassy counsellor in Moscow, and Alan Logan, a second secretary. were Central Intelligence Agency spies The US em basey called the charge a fabri- tation The attack on Canada ap peared to have been inspired by the explusion from Canada two weeks ago of two Soviet embassy officials, accused of espionage. ~ Ce cam ee ENB ons Eliza- ~ ferred in Bonn to Britain’s “whole - hearted support” for Germany's desire for peaceful reunificaiton—a word that in- spires distrust in many middle- aged Britons. Sunday Times Antony Terry said the emo- tional response to the Queen has little to do with the practical problems facing the two coun- tries, but he assesses the effect of the tour as a “long-term cll- matic improvement.” The influential Frankfurter Allgemeine, summing up the tour in a front-page editorial, said. Germans must realize the horrors of the Third Reich are not. easily erased from British and other memories. although all the signs are that the Queen's visit would prove suc- cessful in easing remaining ten- sions. “The tree from Windsor Park that the Queen planted in West Berlin is a. beautiful symbol. Oaks grow slowly, but they can develop into strong trees.” Germany's — biggest selling newspaper. the Hamburg tab- loid Bild Zeitung. under a splash headline ‘Majesty, you were wonderful," commented: “A small delicate woman gave the German people visual instruction in the great subject of historical values and national dignity.”” Douglas Brown said in the Sunday Telegraph the Queen's warm presence brought to West Germany in general and haunted Berlin in p-rticular a human reassurance, a “blessed | | T. W. BURGESS | | Author Burgess Dies AtAge 91 | HAMPDEN, Mass. ‘AP) —, Thornton W. Burgess, who! }wrote thousands of stories about Peter Rabbit and his friends in the Old Briar Parch, died late Saturday night. He was 91. Burcess wrote 15,00 stories for children and books which sold 7.500.000 copies. Old Mother West Wind, his first collection of chil- dren's stories, was published | more than 50 years ago. Since then Burgess became known to generations of North oe children. Born at Sandwich. Mass., ‘on Cape Cod. Burgess began | telling his son bedtime stories about what heVhad seen in the | meadows and woods. When the boy went to visit a cousin in | Chicago..and missed the stories, his father sent him one each dav so that he could keep up with the doings of Peter Rabbit and Reddy Fox and all the in- habitants of Pld Briar Patch. Eventue'!ly the stories came te Th® attention of an editorial representative of Little. Brown: and Company gess to submit his stories to the publi sher REFUSED TO HELP NANCY, France (AP) French doctor, charged with re- fusing to assist a youth fatally wounded in a knife fight, was sentenced Wednesday to a four- month suspended prison sen- tence Dr Gerard Colin was charced with failing to answer a call for help from friends of | stabbed in a last November Gerard Fevre, street brawl near the doctor's home Fevre | died after lying on the street 145 minutes. who urged Bur- | | A safely in the Atlantic {n their Gemini 4 spacecraft after four days of orbiting the earth. (AP Wirephote) | Russians Get Canadian Story MOSCOW (‘CP)—Pravda, the Soviet Communist party news paper, says in a dispatch from Ottawa that there is growing discontent in Canada with the foreign policy of the Canadian ‘government, reports the official Soviet news agency Tass. V. Ozerov, Pravda’s Ottawa correspondent, says that per- sistent demands are raised m Parliament for a broad debate e : on the Canadian government's foreign policy in connection with Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. These demands are the result | of the criticism _levelied——re- cently at the Canadian govern- © ment, Ozerov writes. Canadians want to receive a more coherent explanation of questions says. They refuse to be content with vague arguments advanced by Prime Minister Pearson's Liberal government” to justify | ~~ its unconditional support of the American aggression Nam.” Canadians also are puzzled, says Ozerov, by™the govern- ments ‘stubborn silence’ on the U.S. intervention in the Do minican Republic, which, he adds in his dispatch, in the final | run also involves Canada’s for- eign policy. TWO ROOSTERS CLEAN COBWEBS LONDON, Ont. (CP) — Two frustrated roosters are em- ployed in keeping an over- sized chicken house clear of cobwebs. They chase each other over sealed wire cages housing 10,- 000 chickens on a farm near here and knock down cobwebs when they flap their wings at one another. Farmer William Morley built the 240-foot-long struc- | ture last year to house chick- ens for egg laying. He was skeptical when the hatchery supplying the chickens told him roosters in the building would keep away cobwebs— but it worked. One rooster won't do the job | because it won't move | around, he explained. More | than two cause too much commotion. @ 325 modern rooms. Radio & TV. Air-conditioned. © Rates from $8.50 single. Family plan. 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June 8, 1965. 9 the fw sf the opening semen | Presbyterians For Early Mod TORONTO ‘CP)—A move to have the moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Can- ada elected in advance of the general assembly over which he along the Atlantic seaboard and in the eastern Arctic The John Cabot-was taunched by Mrs. Douglas Bowie. wife of jthe COTC’s president and zen- ‘eral manager, in a ceremony ‘at Canadian Vickers Ltd yarris here | Icebreaking Cable-Repair Ship Christened MONTREAL (CP) — What is termed the world’s first ice- breaking cable-repair ship has been christened in Montreal for the Canadian Coast Guard. The vessel is the John Cabot, weighing 5,000 tons gross and measuring 313 feet long by 60 feet wide. It will repair and also install cable for the Canadian Over- seas -Telecommunication Corp. in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, is G00D ee SOO rRapenp apse apna EET semen jean PR | PEL. “1 PEL. ‘When you're a farmer ' and your own ‘boss, you should meet Mi (\ iy Vincent J. Shea 215 Belvedere Ave, Sherwood, P. E. I. | Telephone 894-5433 || your Imperial | Esso agent... C who helps you \get more for | what you do — i — Defeat Move erator Naming is to preside was defeated at the assembly The proposal was put forward by the presbvtery of Paris, Ont. which said the present method was unfair in that it gave the moderator no advance assur- ance of his appointment and no time to prepare for office. However. the general assem- bly decided that while presby- teries may continue to name nominees, the official nomina- tion must still be made from Smort homemakers include in the daily menu the other fine dairy products made from milk. _ “June represents the beginning of a new year for the dairy industry and guarantees- an abun--- dance of healthful, nourishing dairy foods “ie Ca - throughout the year. DAIRYMEN’S ASSOC. FLUID MILK ASSOC. @ ATM eZ Ki Seisisteenetnenensttiienllneranneianttedl ————— FOR YOu aaa John A. Ross of Van- couver said the church is ne- Andrew's Hall on the campus of the University of British Co- lumbia has proved to be a re- cruiting ground for men for the ministry Twenty students in the Presbyterian residence ex- ada pect to take theological studies —— later. he said It was folly to send mission- aries overseas. he said, and. at the same time neglect the hun- eburch architecture. Rev Bruce Miles of Winnipeg suggested that in view of increased costs of church construction it may be eT Y DAIRY FARM mith IN time te tiink of mu! fore President Johnson building that could be used to him from the White House pay its way throughout the mer guest list week. ' Mr. Shastri. 61, prime minister After Saturday's assembly. for a year since the death of an open air ceremony was held Nehru, will visit Niagara Falls, in suburban Don Mills at which Ont.. and Montreal as well as the first sod was turned for the the capital A tentative itgerery nationa’ office building of the Was made avaiilable. Presbyterian Church in Can- Officials are hoping hat : Prime Minister Pearson and Mr. Shastri will develop @ rapport similar to that whick existed for years between for- mer prime minister St. Laurent and Nehru. who used to write each other long personal letters on international affairs. Mr. Shastri is scheduled to ar- rive here Thursday. June 10. dia. will spend five days in There are about 1,600 known Canada this month compared to asteroids, tiny planets that orbit the two orizinally <cheduled be- the _Ssun Shastri Plans Five-Day Visit By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- dter Lal Bahadur Shastri of In- etait pn ae tm A ix MN ‘roe eal Te NV ADVI AP! 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