Che Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Like The- Dew W. J. Hencox, Publisher Wallace Ward. - Managing Editor . Charlottetown, P.E.I:, by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. _ Branch offices at Summerside, Montaguy, Alberton _| “and Souris. _ Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. ~ Empire, 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office..3030-‘West. Georgie Street. Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian.Press. The Cenadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- peper _ @redited to it of to the Associated Press or neues A tight or republication of special. dispatches” here- | lication of all news -dispatches in this and: also the local news published herein. tn also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. abbey $12.00 a year by meil on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a» yeer off Island and U.K. $20.00 per yeer in U.S.. and elsewhere outside British Com: monweelth. ‘Not ever 7c single copy. _ Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 & What A Farce! : It's in order ‘to. minimize the pres- sures on peak summertime employ- ment and to maximize winter employ- ment possibilities” that the Pearson government, through its spokesman -Finance Minister Sharp, has announc- ed that all previous assurances to the *. eontrary notwithstanding, our cause- way project is to be slowed down. He didn’t call it a slowing down in his budget—he called it “a readjustment _ of the timetable for the next phase” of the undertaking, but it amounts to Frank Walker Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sun- ‘day and. statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, "3,000,000 housewives. Up and.up go THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1966. | ~ stepping out of this role to offer con- -knowledgement of this fact. A federal- f° Mr. Diadenbeker said, could eontro!_ prices only in times of war or emer- gency so now there should be “joint ‘effort and agreement.” He quoted Finance Minister Sharp as saying the increase in the cost of | r living has not been serious. But, he — added, ‘I prefer to take the views of the prices and down and down goes the:amount you canepurchase.” Farm machinery costs have also risen to “unheard of levels,” but farm incomes have not kept pace. “Pork and beef prices to consumers have risen but none of the increase went to the farmers.’’ This may be an over- statement, but there is no question that there is too big an area.of profit between the basic producer and the consumer. The Pearson government doesn’t take kindly to suggestions from the Opposition leader. It has gotten into the way of regarding him as a vendor of “scandal and scuttlebutt” and they seem to resent it when he insists on tructive criticism’ But that, too, is is job. What is most disturbing about exorbitant living costs is that they, are the only part of the inflationary spiral that hits communities which are not enjoying the “‘beom” that. Mr. Sharp is so concerned about control- ling. One ,searches the reports of his budget speech in vain for. any ac- provincial conference might help to ‘| with ror af Intestinal Pockets By Dr. Theodore R. Van Deilen - Diverticular disease of the | colon becomes more common advancing years. These pockets in the wall of the large intestine are rare prior to age 4, but thereafter the incidence increases and 60. per cent of those surviving the next 40 years will develop the condition. i with greater longevity of | the population, we can expect | | More and more persons to deve- lop the disorder. ‘| ' The condition begins and usu- | ally remains a peaceful malady. Small pockets protrude through | weakened points in the muscu- lar layer of the intestinal wall. | The favoied locations are where tiny blood vessels penetrate the | wall. Constipation and spastic | colitis increase_the pressure within the bowel. of mus- clé tone, obesity,\and fatty de- posits in the wall Have a weak- ening effect. With advancing years, the wall is bound to give and the changes are compar- | able to graying hair, wrinkles, ‘| and other signs of degeneration elsewhere in the body. This stage (diverticulosis) is benign and treatment necessary. However, a bland diet may be needed to control colon -irritability or constipa-: tion. It may be advisable to les- sen the intake of ice cold food and drinks, strong coffee and | alcohol. The victim also should improve general health. The. situation changes when the outpouching ‘becomes infect- sdiverticulitis). This occurs to 25 per cent of the victims and | usually begins with nausea, vomiting, and pain’ in the left lower side of the: abdomen. The involved area is tender to the touch. There is fever and the | is not, a Nassau ‘Affair. Revived » °By Harold Morrison awdet Prime Mirister Wilson ap- pears to have dragged up the | 1962 Anglo - American summit | at Nassau for the purpose of peed any impression left with voters that Britain’s Con- | servative party leaders have a | special relationship with Presi- | dent de Gaulle. All through the British elec- BR tion fight, Conservative Leader | Edward Heath has pleaded for | Britain’s entry into the Euro- Market with such be basic modifications in the | Rome treaty, including relaxa- tion of the Common Market food-imports pricing system; be- fore he would consider entry. | COMMONWEALTH FIRST Behind Wilson's position is his Canadian Press Staff Writer accept American seaborne’ Po “ laris missiles instead’ of the air borne Skybolt missiles whieh. the late president Kennedy decided should not be built. Before Macmillan. went to Nassau-- to’ meet Kennedy ihe | conferred with de Gaulle to tell the French leader the Skyboit might ‘have to be replaced by some other. deterrent weapon. Wilson maintained that Macmil- lan deceived de Gaulle on the full ramifications of the’ Nassau. ‘summit’ and this led to de Gaulle’s veto against Britain's Common Market application in January, 1963. Macmillan, who has remained on the sidelines during the cur. rent campaign, demanded Wil. *- - gon withdraw his remarks, Wil- son refused. | HEATH COUNTERS has stated there would have to | | Isfaction | provided the | commitment to the Common- | | ain would be hurt. by uncondi- tional British entry into the European trade bloc. But can Heath even ensure that de Gaulle would remove his veto” To demonstrate that Heath wealth whose markets in Bvit- Heath immediately teat in, exressed his ‘regret and coun- tered Wilson by saying his own high French source — which seemed to, suggest de Gaulle himself — had expressed full sat- that: Macmillan had “relevant facts” about the Skybolt. Whether, in fact, the Nassau affair was the only event which led de Gaulle to exercise’ his veto against Britain may be something for future historians to judge. He had been grumbling | for some time that he had been: has no special relationship, the | | Labor leadership launched a double-pronged attack. George Brown, deputy prime minister suggested Heath was merely determined to lick de. Gaulle’s | boots—something Labor won't do. Wilson’ brought up the old Anglo-American Nassau agree- minister Macmillan agreed to left out of. the special British- US. conference. K _ Undoubtedly, :N as sau may have been one more sting to arouse his anger. Or, de Gaulle, may have had in mind all along “to keep Britain out of the Com- mon Market. Neither Wilson, nor Heath nor Macmillan may have been able to fathom the full extent of de Gaulte's logie and strategy. GUIDELINES a enlighten him on this score. Certain- i : the same thing. It is interpreted by another government spokesman (this time anonymous) as meaning that the white blood count increases. The | symptoms are similar to appen- dicitis except that distress usual- ly the problem is of more concern to OTTAWA REPORT- -By Patrick Nicholson. oa Causes Laid Moans | next contract to be awarded will be _ held back until next winter. Let’s see how this jibes with the statement by Public Works Minister Mcllraith at Ottawa on Nov.:2 last. At that time, in announcing that the first phase of the work would get under way immediately, the- minister .not only set April 30 as the deadline-for = -completion of this- contract, on the New Brunswick side, but said that ___-during -the_winter tenders would be called for the second phase, in order — to get a running start on this part of - the project by the spring..No work could be started on the Prince Edward Island. side, he explained, ___.‘until the spring’’ because of the clay | soil, The approach on the P.E.I. side would in any case. be cheaper and simpler to construct as the distance was only four miles and an embank- ment for the railway line would hot, have to be built.. ‘ Obviously, if this work couldn’t be . ____ started this winter because of frost, first applied, there has grown up in more people than many of the issues: that have been discussed behind the closed doors of other conclaves. Nor is there any reason why this confer- ences; if it should be held, shouldn't be wide open to press and public. Those Clever Japanese Since 1890, when the idea was- Japan-a hugh industry devoted to. cultured pearls. Briefly the method - adopted is seeding oysters artificially to enable them to produce a pearl within five years. The trouble is that there is no eontrol over the pearls after the initial seeding. Some oysters produce small pearls and others pro- duce horribly misshapen ones-Which . Budget Papers with a discern- Recalling Hees’ Successful export Drive Hon George ‘Hees, who achieved ed such well-earned praise as Minister of Trade. and Com- merce before resigning from the Diefenbaker government, - is unostentatiously but surely re- climbing the political ladder. ~ Last week he made news through an idea laden speech to the’ Young Conservatives at London's" Western Fair Grounds and he won a deserved: pat on the back_from_those_who read Fi- nance Minister Mitchell Sharp's ing eye. Our dangerously high and mounting: deficit on ‘nternation- al payments is the gravest warning flag in our national eco- nomic picture. In 1956, the last full year of the St. Laurent Li- beral Government, this had risen to over one and one third billion dollars. Of this, just over half was the deficit on merchan- dise trade. The remainder was the deficit on non-merchandise transactions,’ ‘which consist of export of gold ». always a plus item for Canadé, travel expen- ditures - which fluctuate wildly; interest and dividends - which is a fast mounting minus item; freight and shipping - a dimi- nishing minus item, etc. EXPORT DRIVES SUCCESS As Minister of Trade and Com- merce; George Hees could in- fluence the balance on mer- chandise trade, and he swung this in Canada’s favour by his cannot be used for jewellery. ~ : Japanese scientists have been pondering this problem and recently came up with an, answer. They discovered that the reason why only 60 per t of oysters produced worthwhile pearls was because the it will take a miracle to bring about the ‘atmospheric conditions required for making a start on it next winter! _It’s plainly a spring and summer job, — according to Mr. Mcliraith; and that exposes the emptiness of the-excuse ——.~given_for_holding it-up_at_ this. time... _If it hasn’t. heard the rumpus | __ already, the federal government will soon know what we think about this ‘ piece of claptrap in Prince Edward . Island. Perhaps it doesn’t care any more. But surely our old friend Trans- port Minister Pickersgill must be hav- “~ ing some qualms of conscience. It was he who championed our cause- ‘way claims when in opposition and _ seeds themselves are all dipped into -. sibility. The federal government,—as—| ference would be desirable, _who assured us at Kensington on Oct. 8 last that there would be no further holdup, that the work was. being pushed ahead and that it was nota |’ “gift” to P.E.I., not an election bribe —perish the thought!—but a sound economic investment for all Canada. Then there was External Affairs Minister Paul Martin, who told us at _O’Leary on Oct. 26, as one reason for getting started at once, that this pro- ject would “do more to stimulate the | economic growth of Prince Edward | _Island than anything ai since Confedera- tion.” | We could quite other ministerial sources. on this theme, but we fore- bear for the present. They’ll be hear- ing plenty about it from now on. Enough, perhaps, to induce them to give second thoughts to perpetrating a blunder which, apart from its other consequences, could bury the Liberal party in this province for _ next generation. - A Good Sagawiion: / The Sharp budget hasn't done much, if anything, to solve the cost-of- living problem; and it is that with ~-which~ all ‘governments~ should be: * most concerned at this time. This gives point to Mr. Diefenbaker’s sug- gestion, made the other day at a Con- servative rally in Saskatoon, that # federal-provincial .conference should | be called to investigate the rising prices of food and-farm machinery. This is one field where such a con- since price control is a provincial respon- | | others were suffering from infections Sane Now the oysters, the tools used during the seeding operations and the an antibiotic solution before being placed into the river estuary. Produc: - tion has increased by 30 per cent as a result, and there is a greater yield of "good quality pearls. ~~ For those of us who may be plan- ning to cultivate pearls—we have the oysters, haven't we?—the antibiotic which gives the best results is Aureo- mycin chlortetracycline! ; Those Little Things Timely tips have been issued by the Ontario department of tourism, shedding light on little things that will make a tourist decide never to |-return to a holiday area. Perhaps they could be studied with profit everywhere. A partial list of those ‘little things” runs_as follows: When the tourist goes into a restaurant he sits and sits while the waitress gossips with her boy friend and never bothers to see if his ham- burger is ready. The. soup is cold or the coffiee cream sour. The service station attendant fails to check his olor polish the windshield—<_ Then there’s the hotel manager » who gets nettled if the tourist asks to look at the room before he makes up, his mind. And the television set which doesn’t work. and refuses to Some tourists who run into sort of thing will not make a fu complain. They are the “nice” tour- ists who don’t say anything. They mu stay away the following season. ITORIAL NOTES his _from_cousins and from my great MacGregor May. 1892 in the weekly ‘by the Maritime Baptist Publi- ‘area of. Perthshire. ““yerment land) wife and children. Ano thologist i is reported to have found ‘‘a’ strangély shaped weirdly colored egg he can’t identify.” Per: aps, comments.an exchange,- itis one... of the. many laid in recent months by the Dove of Peace. * #6 #)- Canada’s first highway safety stamp will bé issued on May 2, the | opening’ day of the 12th conference of the Canadian Highway Safety Council in Calgary. Should it. assist in drawing public attention to the ~ need of highway safety, it will - fine. ins ostmentindepdi... PUBLIC FORUM This column, ts open to the discussion by correspondents of questions of in- The Guardian does not nects- sarily endorse the opinion of corres. pendents. All letters published are sub- Jeet to editing and condensation where mecessary, The Guardian is unable to enter inte any mee regard--- ing letters submitted. 2 | - Sir; — I should be grateful if you would permit me through | the golumns of your newspaper | to attempt to trace some Stewart | relatives who, I believe, may be | nee ~ My ‘sources of information are @randfather, Deacon Donald “s— obituary,—dated—4-;- ‘'Mes- ‘senger and Visitor’ published shing Co. Saint John, New Bruns. wick. : To begin with, Donald was born October 1806 in Perthshire, Scotland. Family tradition maintains that he emigrated roughly from the Loch “Rannoch é Back in Scotland, Donald knew .a girl, named Betty Stewart, nee Eliz- abeth. She was born May 1814, most probably in the Loch Ran- noch area of Perthshire. She lat- er married Donald in Prince Edward Island. At.the age of 16 in Scotland, Donald became a Baptist, though | his. parents belonged to the Es- | tablished Church of Scotland. He was baptized by a Rev. Mr. MacNaughton and joined a small. Baptist church in Perth: shire. . In 1832; Donajd left. Scotland and emigrated to Antigonish, Nova Scotia.with his brothers: John, Alex;’Duncan, Hugh, and« his sister, Isobel. Some believe | that-his father, Donald Rhuadh | (Red) MacGregor ‘also, came with him. Eventually, Donald, | _Alex, and Isobel settled on Go- South River | Lake, Antigonish County. Hugh | returned to Scotland with -his IT do not know what became of Duncan. Meanwhile, Betty Stewart, had emigrated to Red Point, Prince Edward Island, with her “broth- ers and sisters, and, most _prob- ably, ‘her parents whose names I do not know. In 1838 Donald | journeyed from Nova Scotia to P. E. I. and offered Betty the following proposal: ty, is this the last cup of tea you are going to pour for me?’’ She poured for him for the rest of her | life. They were married in Fast | Point, P. E. I. in October 1838 or 1839. In South River Lake, N. 8. | | they reared a family of 8 child- ren: Margaret, Catherine, Isa- -bel, jr. born 1843; John; Rev. Pe- -ter.Stewart..born, in.1852;, Henry ; | rs and the Rev. "Danial ipo Donald” “and Betty died in South River Lake, SW died first, 12 March 1884, and he, 3 Ap- | ril 1892. | T would like very “much to hear” from anv of your readers who believe they may have descend- | ed from Betty Stewart's parents or brothers and’ Sisters... My , mailing address is as fdllows: Rox 32, Fleet Post Office, New York, N. Y.. 09571 Tam, Sif, ete:, ROSAMOND J SIMON | '—has eluded — archeologists | “photographs” wit NIE Al OI citi +} ¢maginative, energetic and un- + precedented export drives. In 1956, our imports exceeded- our exports by_$728- million; in 1962 the last full year of the Conser- vative government, this _ situa- tion had been corrected so that our exports exceeded our im- ports by $177 million; the mom- entum of the Hees export driv- | es was such that in 1963 this fa- But by 1965, it had dropped back. We had had no colourful Hees type promotion of Cana- dian products in foreign mar- | kets-for two years;-and we- had a favourable trade. er of Lonly $101 million. Meanwhile-our liability to pay -interest -and--dividends---on— -the- rising foreign - mostly USA - in- vestments in Canada had raised our deficit on non-merchandise payments to a record $1, million. So our net deficit on in- ternational payments was up to | at $1,136 million; nearly back the sorry and_ insupportable 1956 figure. @ Speaking in London, George | Hees glossed modestly over the success of his export drive when urging the Pearson Government to ¢ut taxes and to loosen its tight money policy. GRAVE: WARNING... Early in 1957, Mr. Hees said, Dr. O. J. Firestone, the Govern- ‘| ment’s economic adviser, told | the Liberal Governméht that if it persisted. in the tight money policy it had imposed in the lat- ter part of 1956, a recession would assuredly follow. But the |, Government intended to call a general election jn April, and disregarded this advice. The re- sult was that when the Conser- vative Government took office at the end of June, a recession was well launched, and it took several years of hard work = pull the country out of it, sai referring to the famous “Hidden Report"’.: Now, added our former Trade Minister, Dr. Firestone has a- gain warned the Government.. “Its objective should not be to cut off prosperity, but to prolong it, ‘he says, and his prescrip- tion is an adequate money sup- ply, reasonable credit terms In his Budget Papers, Fin- ance Minister Mitchell Sharp gives credit to the achievement of George Hees and the Diefen- baker Government. The 1965 advance in output, he says, was a continuation of the expansion _| which began under Dief in 1961, | and: which has become the long- -est-in-Canadian.history. Thus Sharp’ contradicts Liberal poli- gill, and ‘the- other Liberal 237 “gloom and doom boys”, w | cry ‘‘Tory times are hard times” He admits that the recession, which was started by the Liber- als in 1956-57, was corrected by Conservative policies which as. early as 1961 had started our pre- sent boom. Fishing Beneath The Sea Thomas O'Toole in the New York Times Is the lost Roman city of Cae- sarea still buried off the coast | of Israel under tons of volcanic | | silt and sediment?: Does the | Hellenic seaport of Helike lie in- tact beneath the bottom of the -Gulf of Corinth? . - The exact whereabouts of | ‘these ancient cities — once two of the richest in the Mediterran- | ean but now sunken buried | ‘as the result of edrthdtfakes, tidal waves and volcanic fe or | centuries. But next summer a ‘hunt be- gins for their ruins with a good | chance of success. Archeologists | | will ‘be using a new~ type of* sonar that can take detailed down to 8,000 ; feet below the ocean floor. Photographic sonar was de- veloped by Dr. a, E. Ed- Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - YEARS AGO | (March 31, 1941) “Well, Bet-“ Direct relief was discontinued in Charlottetown it was decided }at a caucus meeting of the Char- Tottetown city council. Approx- ‘imately 1,100 persons would be affected, it was learned. ° The appointment of Sir Pat- ‘rick Duff, veteran civil servant, to -the newly-created post of ‘deputy. .high..commissioner _ to Canada, was announced in “Lon- don, England. : TEN YEARS AGO » (March 31, 1956) The» Montague High School Boys Curling champions for 1956 were: Eric MacDonald, Billy: Macintyre, Kent MacLean, ' Ken- ny Ballum. : . « ; It was announced that nine | Hungarian partridge had been imported from P-E.1..if an at- tempt to introduce the” popular. game_bird. to Cape Breton._ A ‘ | gerton, an electronics professor |at the Massachusetts Institute 'of | Technology who is ‘known for his high speed or | electronic flash photography. | NEW TECHNIQUE His new sonar technique is in | its infancy, but it< promises to be a useful technological tool in ventures ranging from oil ex- | ' ploration to treasure hunting. Dr. Edgerton got the idea for his sonic probe while designing cameras for the French under- _sea ‘explorer, Jacques Yves ‘Cousteau. The best way to | place a camera so it would hov- -er_above. the ocean floor, Edger- ton found, was to attach a tiny | sounding device to it that would | sound a warning if the camera | drifted away from. the bottom’ /or came too close to it. | From these findings came the | Idea that sound might serve where photography could ‘not— | raatiete, in the exploration of |the sub-bottom sediment and | | rock. Since ordinary sonar echoes | back from the sea bottom, _gerton had to develop a fresh approach if he was to break through the’ ocean floor with | ‘sound. He devised a simple de- vice that produced sound im short but intense bursts—up to eight million watts at its peak | in a time span of only a 2,000th -of-a.second...Ineffect,..this, gave: him sound thousands of times more intense than sonar pulses, enough to penetrate all but the hardest rock, IN BOSTON: HARBOR Edgerton first .tested his pho- | tographic sonar in Boston har- | bor a few ya@ars ago. The first | tests produced sub-bottom: maps | _that were clear enough to Teveal | ‘the tunnels crossing from Boston proper to East Boston. They also showed hills and valleys be- neath the = at the bottom, . * id: Here of course Mr>- ‘tees -tician-historian- Jack --Pickers-- | ly is on.the left side. The condition is serious if the ee rupture causing peri- itis or abscesses. In many in- stances the infection can be con- trolled within 48 hours with an- tibiotics, analgesics, and bed test, with recovery in eight to 14 days. Complications often re- quire surgery .as -a lifesaving measure, : FALLING HAIR s. W. writes: Soon after oe h of. my baby my ha! falling outjin bunches wae ould cause t loss? REPL The cause is not” known, but there is a good chance that the hair will return. There may be some maladjustment of hor- mone balance after pregnancy that could be responsible for falling hair. However, a some- what similar phenomenon oc- curs after a high temperature, girgery, or nervous shock: = VITAMINS AND NERVOUSNESS a. M. writes: Will. taking vitamins help. nervousness? REPLY No, because nervousness is not brought on by a vitamin de- ficieney. On the other hand, if nervourness results -from lack ‘of energy and pep, improve- . vitamins. have a tonic effect. LONG SHOT Mrs. D. writes: Could a chronic kidney infection be. re- sponsible for morning nausea? REPLY This is a remote possibility | because kidney infection may | “lead to ‘reflex. changes in the | gastrointestinal tract. There are many other origins of this symp- | “An issue. which: could: upset: the: 1 jz OPPAWA (CP) ——‘The-teach-——- a that -should be- er irst. SNUFFING AND PUFFING E.W.Z. writes: Does snuff | have the same effect on the sys- | tem as smoking? REPLY Yes, but the effect is not as | reins It does ‘not irritate the. lung: TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Sudden, hearing loss demands attention. British Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, gambling which has put book- makers, fruit machine opera- tors, bingo hall proprietors and casino czars into: a tizzy. There are loud mioans from them, but generally all political parties are agreed that it’ is about time that the newest and more milkable industry in the UK, contributed to the nation- | al exchequer. ‘ The gambling total is made up | of $238,000,000 on football pools; $126,000,000, fixed odds_ betting; ond-rate security risk in Van-'| couver. With less pressure, and indeed great dispatch, a similar inquiry was initiated in the case of a lady whose background clearly establishes she~is of smal! worth. In the case of Ste- ven Truscott, the 2l-year- old man who has served seven years ail for rape and murder, we move more NGaly Why? + emstty. As great an element of doubt exists in his case as in those of the postal clerk or the lady | from Munich. If a day or two's ‘delay after seven years does not seem long to the government, it | must seem unbelievably long to ; the Truscott family and particu- ‘larly to Steven himself. government. sa _séttled:“quickly | enough, as: ‘the Spencer case ; showed. An act of something |elose to parliamentary spite’ is resolved even faster. The Trus- cott case has not yet involved | politics. Presumably, therefore, we are to be treated to justice at its slowest. Mr. Perinell is con- James Callaghan, is | 000,000 dog racing: slapping a tax on. betting and bingo, and £20 million premium. government ~—— Letter From London $1,680,000,000 horse racing:°$308,- $98,000,000 . bonds, the ‘official approved flutter. Main sufferers are likely to be. the bookmakers and betting shop owners covering horse and i dog facing. ' They will_have to produce about £11 million in a full year from a proposed 2% per cent duty on their stake money. But as usual these bright boys “ see their way out by passing it onto the punter. You can't win! oe The Truscott Case Montreal Star The government granted, - it is | the: ungavory Munsinger epis- -true—after-pressure—but—quickly—- eo eR Gd ee ae enough, an inquiry into a sec- | e do not pretend _ ‘to. gare | wether Steven Truscott was | guilty or innocent of an appall- j ing crime. We do think that ‘enough points have been raised to’cast a doubt on the conditions under which he was convicted. We have heard much of Mrs. Munsinger and a great deal of Mr. Spencer. They were not peo- ple about whom one could cry > But-it is possible-to—cry about’ Steven Truscott, a 14- year-old boy whose life has been ruined. Let us have.a little speed | \tn this matter; let us get it out of the hands of the Solicitor General: let aired. Let justice be done. WILL DISCUSS EDUCATION ing. practices committee of the _ (Canadian Teachers’ Federation will hold its first meeting here April 1-2. The committee was — | formed to advise the federation | on matters of teaching practice, with special emphasis on innova- tions, methodology, educational etchnology and teacher educa- | tion. The federation represents ducting an inquiry. Why should | about 150,000 teachers in all the case not be moved on with | ‘the kind of speed which marked provinces and the bite lanl Terxitories. vr amy the evidence be — best. Ed. | harbor... cae PRE-EASTER ‘SPECIALS AT THE . 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