' 6331: Guardian Caner» mum I'Jumud lunnu Lin Thl mu 1, m...“ rublnw lunon in... mm wok-l Ill-mm. ren- cunn- rubluhna 0 IV wool a" mpmlnp lI-Jnl bur- lay and mum, mild-yd) .4 las rm... sum. Challallolown. u l.. b, lnbnnm. Nowloomn in IIth plum II Smnm'uldo, Monilguu. Altar m ..m spun. a. .. up nailonilly by oomph Nawspapon lomnlo. 425 Univ-mly Av. Alaixlallnn and in. can. an Pl... lIl Pun u oxcluawelv mull-a m "I. m a pub lkIllon of III mun aupmhu m on p.p.. it All right; all "public-hull at (HI I dllpalchu Mum .uo rnaelvld snmmm. m... Nal m. (m p.. «m b, m. ....u a! erI lou . mu .m- and and U.I<. moo pal when uuluu. anlnn Com up. on. 7: 9., .mgl. copy memo" klirill l....,..- .. man-nan. PAGE 6 SATURDAY Av 25. 1963. Oiliciai Smokescreen Canadians don‘t yet know, of- ficially, whether ('anada has com- mitted its 8-st1uadroll air division in Europe to a NATO nuclear com- mand. Precious little information on the subject has been divulged to Parliament, and the NATO com~ muniqlle, issued yesterday. doesn’t go into details of the proceedings at this week's conference of NATO members, We may indeed, have to wait some time for official confinn- ation of the news which the press has alread' carried on the subject. Opposition Leader Diefenbaker had occasion to protest in the Com- mons yesterday at the Government’s attitude in this mailer. While the press was being regularly inform- ed, he said, Parliament was being ignored. He raised the issue on a question of privilege, and there was no comment from Government ben- ches. Prime Minister Pearson had already claimed that there was no new commitment on Canada's part with respect to nuclear arms, but this doesn't precisely coincide with what the newspapers have been re- porting. NATO infolnlants illnnamcd in the press) were asked if Canada is on the threshold of becoming a strategic nuclear power, and are re- ported to have given a qualified “yes” in reply. It Is becoming more and more difficult. it appears, to distinguish between tactical and strategic—that is, Inng~range—nu- clear weapons. Nominally, the CF- 104 low-level jet bomber, with which the Canadian air division in Europe is now being equipped, is tactical— in effect, limited in range. If, as re- ported. a NATO nuclear strike force of existing air and sea units hall been approved by the alliance’s min- isterial meeting this week, Canada will participate in selection and as- signment of targets for the force. According to a Canadian Press advance story on this subject, the Canadian air di 'sion will be the fourthJargest nuclear force in the world until the West German forma- tion is completed by late 1964. It will rank behind the nuclear arms of the United States, Russia and Britain but ahead of France's. Negotiations aimed at acquisition of American nuclear warheads for Canadian for- ces were expected to be initated this week by Defence Minister Hellyer and US. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara. This leaves much to he explained about Canada's role in this affair, but it is all that can be seen through the official smokescreen. If the view In distorted It is the fault of the men, not of those who are trying be got a clear picture of the matter. Washington Reaction Pope John's uncertain state of health has called to mind, in Amer- lcan newspapers, the tremendous im- pact which his Easter Encyclical, Paoem in Terris (Peace on Earth) hands upon tha world. A Washing- }.on commentator recalls that at the time, there was official speculation ‘that the Encyclicals appeal—not :nnly to Catholics but to “all men of hood-will," including, by implication. ‘pome Communists—had gival Com- ;nunicm I new respectability. There I'waa also fear that its plea for peace, llntprnational order and disarma- ent might give Soviet propaganda unintended but important assist, From officials at the White can and Shh Department cuna mum Wm that the Encycli— inl and “Pooch meeting with gm Adflhubel. Premier Khrush- anev'a Ion-In-law. would be than II official sanction for Catholics to deal with and vote for Communists in Italy, France and Spain aa well as in Latin-American countries. But tha reaction is quite differ- ent today. Even officiala with anti- clerical bias are sounding I now note. They are urging their col- leagues to take a longer look at tho Pope's special brand of "revision- ism". They believe that Pope John ‘ is determined to make his Church genuinely universal, not neutral or indifferent, in political affairs that relate to peace but truly non-aligned and above the battle. And they argue that his tacit recognition of the viability of Communist rule in Eastern Europe is no more a com- promise with evil than the similar recognition given by both Republi- can and Democratic administrations. They add that all concerned really shale a desire to improve the lot of Catholics and other peoples in East I-iulope. to win a greater freedom for them and to extend their contacts with the West. In sum, these men argue that though change may involve risks and though the Vatican may not al- ways be an automatic ally in this or that future cold-war manoeuver, it has become under Pope John an articulate and powerful supporter of many things that Americans pro- fess, and ought, to believe. And the indications are that this view of John XXIII is beginning to prevail. Housmg Report According to the anual report of the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, tabled in the House of Commons the other day. there is a significant trend away from home ownership in Canada. Apartment construction was up in nearly all cities acro the collntry, while starts on private homes declined from 78,477 units in 1961 to 77,236 last year. The Corporation also found that the 1961 census provided answers to one of the great puzzles in Can- adian housing. For the past years the number of new homes being built every year has considerably ex- ceeded the estimates of new fam- ilies coming into being. Yet there has been no real increase in vacancy rates. The census showed Corporation officials that they had underesti- mated nnt only the rate of new iam- ilies being formed but the number of no-family groups (such as work- ing girls sharing an apartment) now seeking accommodaton. They also learned that they had not figured accurately upon another phenome- non of the affluent society: the sur- prising number of those who had previously shared a home setting out on their own, It is evident. from the report, that there is need for encouraging more low-income families to take advantage of the National Housing Act and more municipalities to go ahead with public housing. Only 15 per cent of CMHC borrowers are in the $4.000~$5.000 income brackfl. The great majority earn more. It would seem clear, from these fig- ures. that‘ those for whom housing loans were most intended are not sufficiently benefiting. EDITORIAL NOTES According to a reply given in Parliament to a-qucry by Mr. Doug. Ina, no action is being taken by the federal government at present to ‘block railway applications to aban- don branch lines. 0 C 0 Congratulations to City Coun- cillor Mrs. Dorothy Corrigan, on being appointed to act as Mayor during the absence of Mayor GAudet Ind Acting Mayor Cox. There in no doubt in anyone‘s mind that aha will fill the responsible office with dignity. charm Ind efficiency. . I n The sympathy of all our people goes out to the parents. relative- Ind friends of the lat. Mr. Donia Douccttc, whose untimely death Wu due to an accident resulting from I bomb scare in Ottawa on Thursday. Mr. Doucette was a social worker with the Catholic Family Servlco here and a young man of high at- tainments and great promise. His panning brings home to us the ap- palling nature of terrorist activities. of which he waa as much the vlc tim as If he hall actually been killed by a bomb explosion “WE’LL BRING THE MATCHES" IMPOVERISHED HAITI Once Richest Of New World Colonies National Gcnflaphlc New: Bulletin Mountainnus Haiti, troubled and impoverished. once was the most productive of New World colonies AI Ihe Iielllll of Its ornnomlc heyday. the Caribbean republic Iupplied Europe with all its all- gar, France with half Its re- venue. lhr Nulionnl Geographic Society says. In the extravagant court of Louis XV. Haiti's spend< thrift planters were regarded wlth envy bordering on distaste, Colonial Haiti's comblned lm- purl and export trade reached In estimuled $140 million n year. In 1950. more than 150 years al- Irl' its inrlcprndence. the nation's total trade was half lhnl figure, Halll's Estimated 4,300,000 Ne- gro and mulatto inhabitants struggle for n marginal survival. beset by economic difficulties and the heavy hInds of u long line of dictators. DENBELY POPULATED Haiti‘s 10,714 square miles oc- cupy line western third at His‘ pnnlola, the world‘s only two~ ed for 74 percent of Haiti’s lulnl exports: sisal, 13 percent, rugar. 2 percent. TOPSOIL WAsllan AWAY Farm families _ to percent of the population _ ra ust enough nubshlence crops in feed lbemlnlm. Overcultlvatian has depleted the mil. New lands were opened Ill farmers by cul- ting trans. but In mosl places tropical rains washed way the lhln layer of fertlle topsoil. unm'l gron national product in on averaged 35a Gourde; ‘labou! 375» a person — low- nIlinn island. on shared with, the Dominican Republic. A lsanrmlury Brltlsh admiral aptly Illustrated Haltl'a Inpa- graphy by crumpllna a sheet of paper Into a ball. This was no exaggeration. for much of the land In Io» sleep for habitation. The people live olvwded In the vIlleya and coasts. Few nullunl are more densely populated. Haiti's former wealth, based on Iugar, was the result of slave labor. when the slavcl expellrd the whlle coloniala, the large ru- gar emu. were broken up into thousands llf small parcels. Sue ‘ gar production became unlea- IIble. Coffee cmerled II Iho major crop. The Haitians. unlike the French. lefl the coffee bushes nlllendcd and let them grow wild. The ahnlbn are now sublecl to a natural cycle that culs yield a: much u 50 percent every oth- er yea . II 190), coffee account» - "‘ l 2%- LET MY HEART KEEP A low roofed colt-ll u! Imufll the inn. wtlh snow ~ while curtain: stir, ring in the Income. The fretwark gabch ll e a l 1 1| 1 awallnw young. The mutual doorwa moi-lull: glory mung. Old hanging inran with wide hand minted globel And potted lulu donning Eu- fer lobes. The dIImnnd panel of Ialtlced window, glass. . . A IulldiII with In feet in rib- bon gran. let my heart keep the frlrndl Icl'oll the road. The friends who live I world from my abode. And let me lny aaldl my plpe and book- To wltllus an. more flight of homing min. [at my heart keel! I box of daf- fodl it I To [net my friends trons oven wlndw IIIII The whole your lhl'mllh. A doll. a cart. I M To help tlme pm for IOIIII no [In or boy. Two rocllzn noddlna time to lolhy tall And children vlnylna hoplcotch on the will. A Druden cam bowl wllb wall. ing lime, And Italllcflu. Ilov Il'le mInlel- place. IA! my heart keep the Wonder- menl men feel M evontlda when country plac- el kneel. And aha-lab Inn]. with numeric- warm and deep. The folk who IN" I]! Illnle lhlngu i keep. —l. lull" HIM. I'mwwn. PEJ est in the Amerlcna. Despite compulsory e d u c n l l o h lnwr. school: are few. teachers scar- ce. Illd illlteracy Almost univer- sal. only about one of IO l-lnll- lahl can read and write. Housing is Inadequate. eme- clally on farms. Most rural pew ple live In wooden frame hula with mud . daubcd will and thatched roof]. To bolster its revenues. llnla began developing a wurlrl dullry which flourished .l first, then decllncd wllh the Idvent of the let age. For! nu Frince. the capllal. does not have a lel nir- field. At present. the United Stat- as Government In helping in plan our. A city of nearly 200.000, Part In Prlnce llea at lhe cum extremity of the huge Gone du Gonnives. ll Ia dramatic cont: , the weath and mpnnucnuon of the elite minority and l munlur oi the slum dwellera The gleaming national palace a cathedral tower over flImsy shacks. Luxury holclx rlac In the Iurroundlng hlllaidel. Cap Baltlen. on the mulh cant. I. HIILI'I lecond clty and former colonial capital. once known u “Little rum," It wu burn e ground during the llght for Independence In 1m. Rebuill. Cap Haitlen was ne . ly demolished by In enrihquIIte In 1542; the job was finished by n ma hurricane. The present city of 23.000 wal built out of the mellowed rulnl. Gully pllnled houua m net amid hlhlacua. orchldl. and nlght - blooman cereal. Cap Haltlcn has been called "the mall lublly buuu- lul city In the West Indlea." Haitl'l last (I: with France in II! official language, French. Cultured l-lnlhnm Ipeak French: lnnhy French ~edu curd. 'l'lle m. el lpelk n loII — French. SpInllh. Engll African Ind CIrlbbeIn lndll n dlIlrcLa. :r - Birmingham Precedent New York Time! One hundred yelrs Ago thlll nation WI: In the midst of I bloddy civil war. Its oulc nlllr decided that the Unlon mull he preserved Ind the NEgm aIIvel freed. Thc egroea have been frced in law, but many of them. ‘n many parts of our country, it‘lll suffer frnm severe dlsIbll- le 5, Today the Arnel‘lull Nell‘o ll literally on the march to cover the II“ mile toward complain cmanclpItIon. llol only legal but o economic Ind social. He II mined to tear down the III! blrl’lcr! of reprcnlon. acgrcg Mon Ind discrimination that keep him from euluylng the full and aqual rltlxenlhp lulrInteod by the Conatitullan, We are In the midst of I ha- Ilonwldc struggle for the Ne;- roca' civil rlllltl. ll. VIIII require mIny, ollcn painful. l’efll‘l‘lllln menu. way these are ac. complished wlll determine our own self - respect and our Imus to the world. pIrI, all. mu.- gle II being waged by a respon- IIblc Negro leaderl’hlp on till principle of non - violen through "freedom mIrcheI, boycb ‘ l » Inn" Ind other prulell demonslrIlIa . It IIII erupted I Violence only who protest demonstrntlonl. It ll erupted In vlolence only whc local aulhurlllcl defied both moral and Federal lIW to "keep the Negro In in: place." Therein II" the :l'xnlfiolncl of the "Male of H ." ll WI: I conmnfatlm notulba Iu nrltlu and tho Negroca them aelvu. It ended In victory for unity. mum and democracy when Vlth bullnell Ind civic lender] agreed over the held! of their locll authorltlel to I pa in a deal utlol the No:- roea' mull pl- llal dam-ads. But we lfl‘uille conlllluel. Ind link-I ultlemcnt c Mil In good fI‘IflI Ind ~eta I W cedem. It could only Intensify the conflict. Saskatchewan Politics Shamrocks DIlly Rem. Saskalrhcwan provide: one of the most Inlenstlnl political pIrIdoxu in Canada. All its 17 lnlern mu went In the Pro grelulve Conurvatlvel recent federal general election but political oburvm IppeIl' agreed that the llght In file mt provincial elections will be hr the socialist New Demo- cratlc rmy government 0 Prelnler Lloyd Ind the LIberIlI led by ab“ Thalehor. a farmer ccr Member of Parliament. The Conservative: my comi- der ln-nuelvu lucky If they alert more lhln . IInlIc mem- her. But lbm m ulnar compile on. features ln ale nllunabn. Tommy Douglas, leader of the NDP dalellllon bu Oltawl, bu lndlcaled hIa group mg l Palmn'l minority L Government. Thll bodca ill for lhc Prnvlnclll Prom . NItIal-lII NDP mm for Ihc Liberal! could in laken u a nap ln the lace ffll' Premlcr Lloyd. which Inlllll lam the latter Into an open bruit with the federal pnrly, la the detri- ment of both. would be the one up!- cIITIy If lllc ml Liberals Ifecltfed lo lend their Iuppnrf In Mr. ThIlrhrr, Then Premier Hold would be In the volition of finding hII blood from“! If Otv DWI IIIPWHIIIE I Krona Vlad.- od to lln defeat. And lhe entry of fedcral lemh Into the pro. vllllclll llglll l. considered loIl- c . Federal learll nrfilnlutlon lll SII whewlll In Ilmut non- existent. Thelr be hope of mIkIul future Mil-lice; In that pmvlnce lull with the election of I “herd Government It Ila Iinn which would provide III! framework for hulldllll I new laden! lnaclllne. But If mlflll wreck the NDP Doll II II find— fedenily. . lag dlfflculty In llttlnl llll pIr- ty full) the If? Ind I built with (he only provincial government Iiwofllnl Illa pollclea could be dlnltruua. elpecIIIly from a WWII-od- viewpoint. "GIT EX mama NEON“) we) — 'nle Tor- onto Archdiocma Council of Wm'! mu n plml I campaign to all-(t “evil clfecla" of utlclu MI m. mlrllll m. Al. I“ IIIIIIIII III!!!- In‘, the council voted la net I. I calmnlttae of three to Gillan with other woman was filmlllnn prolrlm Io counla - at! noon on pram-rim ux. “peel-II, Infill [Coll-I‘m Garlic la Uud To Treat tapers ‘ NOTES BY II. and «gal-bin In conlldorcd anon-Ive noun-I only becqu may cont-la Io lftlII Vllalnln u um- JournIl ducrlbal four one. at lam-y in indi- lhll We" ("Ind WW: garlic. Tan ruqu were enrol-ruin:- Wen mom the mother of ca- n: II too lllllll to proclaim I new c The active aubltancl In ur- Ila (Illlcln) hlI Com. authentic propel-Kiel, which may Ital-la why a hell) proved helpful. GIrII III been touted II I preventiva of coldl nut-l other lnlectlanb. This question in m mind ll whether I person could eat enough to obtain all amount of alllcin capable of killing I germ. We learned also from lhla publlulloh that breast feeding oltlngtlnm. Endlnd. II on tile dcclne, Whlc 83 Per can at mothers are breast feedlng If four days Iflcl' dellvery, Dn- 1y a7 pel‘ cent re doing Io two weeks lat and only 50 per cent by th e d of a month. 'l‘llI lurVey mowed nun out only ' mothers continues to nurse for an long as llx months. e main mm for sloppinl was a (allure ol the Iupply or tile unsuitable quality hi the milk. This me not have bun I valid cxeun. however. be- cluse 55 per cent of those who "up within I month Idlnll they would have letcllcd to bottle feeding In Illy can. Many phy- slclIns advocate supplementary feedlnu when tho brlnsl .lup. ply begins lu w"ne, hoping the mofllcr will continue to nurse Ia loll! I: Double. But molt women prefer In: IrfiflciIl m e I h all when this stage hII reached. INFECTED BLADDER AB, write]: Plum com. mcnl on bladder Inftctlon In women, the cause. and Why If come! Vlck so nflrn. RE FLY Womrh are more susceptible to this conditiun lcystltla) bl- cause of InIfmnIcIl reamn: II well u lulury from alum-n I'll. It can be rcmedlcd. pro- video the cause Is known and the proper urinary antiseptic ll used. Send a itade, el- Iddreased envelope for leaflet. on cyatllia. sENsmvn 1‘0 NICKEL Mrl.B. wrllu- My two dIughlIrs break out In I rash when t ey wclr a wrlatwatch. ring, necklace. safety plan nr any other metal bur the chin. Can illln eruption be prevented in any way except by not wear- lns any metals? REPLY Allergy ll) nlckrl n ma moat likely cause. CaIt lb. metal . wlth n clear plastic. WAT-an wml moo w. s. writes: It in harmful for children to wash down every bile of food Wlth water? RE rm! No. even though It in not ne- canary. Tha body hu an em. clenl Iwallnwlng mechanism that is preceded by chewing and . copious flaw of Iallvl. Thu but; wmlna everything down wllh water. only“! AND mm as. writes: I'm ve nerv- on: null - lrlend told me to all lots of celery. Do you lhlhk lhll help? REPLY u. provided you find loluc. or peace Of mind In eating. a. lery in much better for the ll- gure lnnn munchlng an plum later. molllen, Ind omel- high caloric foods mm ' darn ncreflve," _ Toronto star. Ali-loll blur "I w I IIoaIl'd." will. "Don't In II.I~ Ly. M van hon: that any."— Mliwaullco Journal. on main, nleblu lb- um teal-In " wl rlv Will. If lhl damn rain. nolnhll will." — traalslar. 'l'bl aI-lun of «plain - lull- Mil? Drill! Uri-butane In lhl north abor- ol Lalo Nyua and In Daren-5a Ilm If! to b. d.- mollllled on the order: of th- Tanganyika lovarnmcnt. The de- molition of the gum" VIIII only nervo to create In Immunol- IIIIt the leader! of III: new lllttl of Afflcl EIII be II vla- dlctlvc as were some of their grit-mm marten. — MontrIII Ir. No baby all!” have been taken. In declaionx It DIIIWI and Geneva. lo l‘elel' mine of the damage In the Wulern Illi- ance cqud by the flier:th of Britain from ,me rope-u Common M a r If at and Ihe French determination to bulld an indnpendbnl nuclear force. Both decal no mull! of historic dimenslons for a great breach In the bill. Ince ltlll remalnl. French Pruldenf dd Glulle II I: aloof Is ever Ind there II no reason to suggest the ORIWI North Al- Iantlc Councll meeting dIIpcllcd dc Glullo‘l IIIQIBIMII of us. nuclear hfentlonl. n the 1" h VIEW It llul. Ihe Ottawa declaloll it no more th is the mere relhuffllng of bureaucrats II de« lance II I110" to (Jul. Ill orgmlzlllonll work of tha v on: nuclear element! In 0 NATO force cIn be handled ill one offlclenf dlvlalon. AGREE 0N Alli-:As Erltaln don not [Iva up Itl loverelgnty Ind control over ILI V EIII bomber fleet and the [1.5. does not yield authority over It: t’hrcc Polarla Iuhm - fine: in cdlterrane They Ind lb: countrch control- Ilng the Main] lll' element: of NATO me luv. agmd on I Ipcclflc area of patrol Ind cpeclllc area: of targeting. But the fact lhIt France did not attempt la lrmoan . bar- rier on the Ollwl nuclear dc- china—u mall I: lhll decision was—la bignlllnml. The appor- lunltv was there for In engul- lion of cinnamon. France to- (rained. In me name WIy II. Geneva. despite the threat of I great thunderbolt of Ind! er, the Common MITRE! — of Whlcll France is n mllol‘ Dinner— and the U.S. worked out I cum- promise fomull for negotiat- lng massive talllf reduction- next year. The formula hal I In! of loop- holds In It. lulu-m ul conullell IlIIhel d all tll'lffl If ona atroke. it will n the WI] again for tedious and lime-con. sumlng item - by - item nelo~ tlatlona on I large number of higher ".5. "In. There VIIII b0 room during the lm negotia- lions for Frlnc! Ind other coun- trles to false ablectiolu of all delcrbtlonl. Reshuflflingmfml’rn NATO ' I ll Id GIIIIIIII PRI- Mf Writer 1 . THE WAY Ill a on ma ’ .mp4 an no“ bunk ' _ It. Tama- “melszle II m In a person I Ilvu in (flu Micro because behi: loo Delllmlltlc to llva In th- puunl — Gualah Mercury. A JIDIIMI emu-l flnn ll duvelaped I camera that 0:; lulu plcluru inllde the bumm' alomah. .IuIt waldl the talent mine commerclnll now! ~ Ottawa Journal. lelll Ind! elm lIltened w I l h rupl Ithatllm. After the leclur. one of tile pupila wrale a hole hi lllnnlu. It concluded ‘we didn't cm by: what a it looked like until you came. an Spectator. Two Indiana Vulcth the unit. man building n lighthouse (in: night alter it was completr. the Indlalls look up their Iccuslnnl. ed station as thlok log Illrlt‘d to roll In. “Ugh.” IIId «no In. dIIn to lln other. "Light shim: bell rlnl. horn blow. hut in; come in Just the lame." —-Gall Reporter ‘, A: President Kennrdy slnlrll, l the alliance will therefore Ilaul ‘ a lung road in travel beloru it ‘ can taste um benefits of lnucr ram and the possibility of expanded trade that these Illum- tariffs may bring. the elements of greater a n a warmer lnpullupllc l- ul a t l o h a are . t Ottawa and Gene". InIlIII slaps have hern taken that o the mu m- E grenlur pmgn‘ss. Nn one nl lhl< any.» ran predict. for example, lulu trim v NATO will have n true mulll. ‘ lateral nuclear four, such an. In W! ION! proposed by the U. 5. France hns mm. cared ahe n no! lnlerrslrh.’ There in nu indlcallon n um llage lhll Ihe alliance will be able to hulld such a force Pl‘m It the next NATO council meet. lag in December. But the Inlllnl effort has bran made. At Ottawa and Gen 3 there has been I fuming point ‘ m l » The - FLYING IIII'I'GIIMMI RESTAURANT ‘ "Your Island Steak “ n fun"... I: SEALED TENDERS Addrused the Area on. ‘ arm, Devi. of Fisheriel. P. D. . Box 550, HIIIIIX. N.S., will ha ‘ Rcewad up to lg o'clock noon. June 13, l , for the construr- , lion bl an Experimental Oysllvr Hatchery If EllerslIc. anca county. Prim Ederd lslanll. Plans. rpecitlcatluns, M be obtained In)!!! the u Ham ax upon a dew: $50.00. persrt. in lllo ' form mrllfied cheque or ltof all r mumed In good condllion. l “E W or lily tender not l necessarily accepted. 1 A. w. ll. NEEDLER, , Dopuw Mauro-r, ‘ TonAk'a n'EALTn e“Sac that you In well nullrlpll. Our Yesterday’s (From lh! Gnlrdllu Hlell 'I'WEN'I'YP-AI'WVEs YEARS AGO An enjoyable dinner wn n- vcn by HI: Honor Hunt-Gover- nor DQBIoIll III! evening at Government [loan in honor of . Gm F. Tum. Off-Wt Govemur of the Blnk of CInI- dl. A fine lnualcal mun VIII provided by WIy of Galen “lament. Picwu. NJ. 101‘) - Donald A. c- of Heltllerdxlc, F,E.I. Iccc I 1'!“ from I'll-ct P church. Ple- lou. Mr. Campbell will be (I'- dalned Ind Induch June l5. A “M (1 PM of Wale: MOI.- Mtcmn and ill:- Glll UllvaIV. he MI Wool tour» in Pru- byllriII: Collm, Monkeal. TIN YEAH AGO MIN . Illa new Provincial uner the Ioadmhh of . W. Mathemn will be sworn into office at am ay. . luIlIco MIrk R. McGuilIll. Ad- mlnmnlor of an Province. In ll! (bullifllllun Chan-Mr. Clblnel Hon. A I totem-I Meet luv. 5.5. Karrlln mm l: ordained to the Marin rum- cu {or tau “an Fulbr- m [AI-dill billion Mn In mh of FInIbury. “I Only“ ill I car. ll IAIAOI. I Ina- “muWAWIH” I. 0. nomomv mvanoN mm“ m IAIII II. AIIIMN