all" (5mm dwa- Prue. MM IIIIIId Like 11» M I w.i. hm... Fublllhv VIII" Itwll I ll 2.... u Edllev "" “(2.5: ‘ mums .wv wul: d... morning rm... 5w» .y. u... IVItulory holldlyl) .. M5 to... Soul, Eh-rlmmwh, P.E.|,, by Thorn-en u w: p... ltd mm .mm .. Summon , Mommy: All...» Ion mu Scum Rlprlnmnd “homily by Than-Ion N n a v rump-w Fuhll’ih-II eel Ind lh. ems." m... lh. c .u .. .. u mummy movies to .h. m. 4.. "sub. llwioh of .ll "w. sumo". u. n... plpcr mum u. u .v lo .h. Anodnled m... or Raul-n mi nus n. m. loul hm. publish-d h. 3. All rlwhn .. "palm... of «Isl duth Illa unmu. Substllptlan ulu Nov over 35. up week by slim . y... by mall or will route: .hu . not serviced by (nrnev. moo . y... all Island "a or moo w y". u.s .ns .l..wh.v. outlidl ml.» Com. monwnllh. No! a... 7. par Ilngl: copy Member An... 3...... .l comm... “The strange.” weumn :s weaker in... 9.. mt... ink” Tll'uEfia‘l. 1ch ii. 196:. PAGE 5 New EEC Pressures This week ministers of the Euro» pean Economic Community, or (‘om- mon Market, are meeting once more It Brussels. They have to discuss in particular the future of Europe's Agricultural policy, the Common Mar- ket's aims in the "Kennedy round" of tarriff curs being discussed in the General Agreement on Tarriffs and Trade, and relations between the Common Market and Great Britain. As noted by a London correspon- dent, those questions have been discussed before without succ . But things have been happening in Europe lately. President Kennedy has been there. making thousands cheer. French President de Gaulle and West German Chancellor Adenauer have met again in Bonn, finding on this occasion quite suddenly that time! have changed, “Some very tough controversy came to the surface," in the words of Chancellor Adenauer's liker slicessor, Prof. Ludwig Erhard. This tough controversy is likely to he continued at the conference which opened in Brussels yesterday; and the toughest part is likely to con- cern future relations with Great Britain. West Germany, supported by the Netherlands and Belgium, is urg- ing that contact be continued between the European Economic Community and Britain to keep policies on either side of the Engish Channel in step. France objects to this, claiming it would amount to British inclusion in the Common Market’s deliberations. As the only major food—importing partner in the Common Market, West, Germany counted on the accession of Britain to take some of the weight of the proposed common agricultural policv off its shoulders. What it is certain tn demand now is more time to make any transition that finally ' may be agreed upon. Mr. Sharp's Warning Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp has told the House of Commons, in good round terms, that Canada must prepare for free trade and interna- tional competition because this is the only practical way of maintaining and raising our standard of living. The more toward freer trade initiated by the United States. he said, is to be the subject of negotiations in the coming months, This move could open urgently needed markets for Cana- dian goods; but Canada would have to give in order to get. and Canadian business and industry would have to improve their competitivI position Ind their productivity. T h i I brought from Mr. Reid Scott, official spokesman on trade for the New Democratic Party, the com- ment that Canadian secondary in- dustries have been built up under protective tariff walls. and some of them could not survive the lifting of tariffs and live "in the cold winds of international competition." Well, comments the Toronto Globe Ind Mail, what of it'! The demise of certain Canadian businesses In prob- lny I part of the price which Mr. Sharp suggests must be paid for ex- panded opportunities in other direr, dam. BmIll manufacturers who serve qnly the Canadian market or part of n my go to the wall in the face of Inner o u ts l d I competition. In- dustries which concentrate on the production of goods which cannot be ocommically produced in Canada may do the nuns. Most of our industries will tha to streamline aperItions gull increase productivity. ,Thc Toronto pIper goes on to " H Auk um "in . wllv‘ld thIt . mowing inexorably mm trnr trIdI. luch changes would become lnIvithlI in my case. Canada can- not retire into isolation behind tariff barriers. This is in no sense I self- sustaining economy, or can be made no. The bulk of our national output h In resource Ind Igricultural pro- ducts, and we do not have the do- mestic markets to consume them. Therefore, we must sell abroad, and if We are to sell we must buy." This is the crux of the situation, and incidentally one of the main reasons why the Maritime Provinces have been so handicapped in their trade expansion efforts since Con- federation. The old “national policy" of high protective tarrifs worked against us at every turn. We recall getting into an argument on this very point with our Toronto contempor— ary some years ago: but we hasten to add that we are thoroughly in ac- cord with the views it now expresses. New Red Peer Communism has found a new spokesman in Britain; right in the House of Lords, too. The Communist peer is Lord Mitford, who recently succeeded to the barony, Before that he vras plain Wogan Phillips, who became an avowed member of the Communist party after having had his schooling in the aristocratic atmosphere of Eton and Magdalen College, Oxford. Lord Mitford has just made his maiden speech in the House of Lords, and the Communist Daily Worker newspaper has given it big play. It has announced that it is publishing the full text of the speech as a fold- er, “which will be available shortly for distribution throughout the coun‘ try," It is ironical, however, that Lord Mitford himself seems bent on des- troying the prospect of other Com- munists following his example. He choose for the subject of his speech the undesirability of the existence of the hereditary Upper Chamber at Westminister. He would eliminate it altogether. As former Labor Minister lord Attlee pointed out, it is only thanks to the time-honored aristocratic hereditary system that the Com- munist Party has any say at all in the Br sh Parliament of today. The House of Commons is unlike I num- ber of European assemblies in that it has no elected Communist repre- sentatives, The British electorate just won't acecpt an official Com- munist. There are one or two ex- treme left wingers in the British Commons who are charged with carrying the Communist banner even though they won't admit it, lord Milford is beyond reach of the electors. He can cdntinue to make a nuisance of himself in the Upper Chamber, though it is unlikely that he will have any more success than had the “Red” Dean of Canterbuiy, Dr. Hewlett Johnson, in pursuading his fellow countrymen Is to the merits of the Communist cause. EDITORIAL NOTES Undisclosed matters of mutual in. : terest will be discussed when the Atlantic Provinces Premiers hold their annual one-day conference in Fredericton, N.B,, next Tuesday. As is customary, no agenda or other advance information on the subjects will be made public. A joint state- ment will be issued after the meeting. All four Premiers, accompanied by some of their cabinet ministers and advisers, are expected to attend. a o a As automation looms more on the horizon, it invades more fields. The latest has been in hospitals where a mechanical robot has been devised that may be connected to I patient for checking pulse, breathing, blood pressure and other conditions and then transmitting this to I central course. These Ire checked with such frequency that immediately any un- toward condition presents itself the information sounds an alarm and brings I. nurse for further checking. . a South Africa has been policing its frontiers with the British protec- toratea of Swaziland, Basutolnnd and Bechusmland. Burbed-wirs fences, six feet. high at some points, and 24. hour patrols will aim at halting the militant African underground from either escaping into the protector- Itea or entering South Africa. In the past there has been no check on these borders. The present move In another ominous indication of the direction in which the country’s raciIl policlII am taking it. "BETTER CALL IT OFF, HADN’T WE?” CHINESE HOSTILITY A Warning Bell For The West C A. summer lhalvs out tile: Himalayan pnssrs. charges and . denials ahnlll troop movements l alone the Indian - Chlnese hor- l dcr are once ml. in the air, ‘ ralslllg tears of renewed inci- dents on |he frontier. After the ‘ Chllu-se inlrusion into IndiI last year, Frklnl: — in effect—— called u unilateral truce on the ground, T :- Chinrsc \vltlldrew from: the substantial am they haul occupied in the North - East. Frontier Agency, but held on to l the Indian territory scized in ‘ their Kashmir. thus retainan control of their important road in between sinking and Tibet runs: the Aksai Chin Plateau. ‘ There, perhaps, the uulsldol world thought lhlngl might rest. But whether the Chinese am planning further mililary opera- tions against india 0.- not. there is every evidence that Pek i ll g intends to maintain its pressure in one form or another Isalnst Delhl. Peking has denied lsdian re ports of a milllary build - up in Tom; but u. Lsdskll the Chin- , else eurllrr this month did as-l tabllsh a new post outside the , Iren rlalmed by them. Sustained Chinese hostil l I y ' aEainsl lndia has born a tu- lure throughout the \vllIIM' ml hroaul-asls from Peking only after flay radio prnurams thn carried hllegalinns 7 primarily or Indian bruta agalnst Chinese nationals interned u. F Ill-d to mainland (‘ ina, But Pcklng broadcasts also have sought to discredit Delhi In the eyes of the rest of All: null. and subsequently ranch-t, h by atlribullng to the NL‘III‘II gov- . amount a willingness to became the tool of Ind a close friend of the C :59 Nationalist. lll Formosa. Tu Ire doubtlessly exaggerated. YEllSlS'l'EN’l‘ THREAT The sdumshcy of the Chinese delegation ll. insisting on tho rlght of immediate reply to ln‘ dian crltlcism caused uproar and a lomporhry suspension of I scsslun at the World Cun- gross of Women in Moscow this week, interestingly. the Soviet delegation BppIi'NIIIy made in. move to support the Chinese re- lay the least, then! Allegations} Picking On The Minister Unlted Church “Menu Ministers am like nther m.- tive workmen. Maybe more so. Some am better If some thlnlls than they are at other things. All are hum-n. 50m! laymen seem lo forget these thlngs. Ind lhey mIke life miserable for Illeir mlhlsm, Dr. Joseph slm said .u... he would like u. add another untrue: In on Bellllul‘k‘I: ‘- thry who restore fidcnce u. himself," .1 "Curst m they who a» .lmv .. good man's mulls..." III himself." in our trIvell .na In our of- lice we we shocked by the hum. her: of unhappy mlnlsters we meet, We know wivel who m bitter Ibmlt the Lrenlmenf. their husbands have recelved. w- kuaw mlunun' chllam. who m .n led up with church on» pic they have lost mo. in an church‘s ma, We hasten to add lhl. i. not the general rule Moo church people m loyll Ind kind. And mm mlhulm are tIcLleIl Ind come Inefficient, A in all la n. respect Ind u- muau of their people. And we meet mIny laymen who. with skill Ind mu, m um.- mlhlmn sench Ind linu- and mu. me me tell- Mnml relation- Ihip, Thu. we helluva, i- th- lever-l rule. But LII!" Ire I kw cmlro- new and I in lam-ll when. n chIrlthly dumb! .- "dil- wnu Ire able to throw their . the United States‘ hrlstlln Selena Monllal' presentatlves. This could be a straw In the wind as to Moscow's reaction to Delhi's latest request 1.... further Soviet aid. Whatever the ‘ Newspaper Gull Reporter For a long have radio and , television have .elled upon sur- , vevs of their Iudlenceu u . l means of determining how well 1 pmgnm. on being heard l and seen. In facf. these media have contended all along that till. is the only mum of uses- llng cheir own value. ilecnmly CInaflian newspapers engaged two independent flrms which specialize in surveys to make In asscssmcnt of news- paper leadership in relation in other media. Results at the two surveys coincided closely in their findings which were made farm to metropolis across Canada. Actually the surveys proved what newspapers have Ilway claimed. Most people said new papers were best fnl' annulus information In depth and for helping renders determine the proper importance of events that are happening. Naval Review Needed Globe um MIT], Toronto Defense Minister Paul Hellycr has promised that the program l in build eight Eencral-Dul’vose ll-lgslss for the Royal Canadian Navy will be the sublect of close , cause of the visual aspect. scrutiny in I general review or the nation's defense policy. The decision l. welcome. The need for these vessels ' mult be considered in relItIon m the entlre role Canada I: to play In Western deienu. nut in th [I e .- i ad line: the building Prov grain was approved. doubts of the value of such ships “1 II hu- cleli‘ er have been growlng. The tussle. would be built to serve u flulflng bases im- elec- Ironic detection equipment Ind for Ilrcrlft but even [0 their usefulness .lnu nucle .- marlnII i. much in doubt, lnlluence. mallfivv Ind ecrlrsl- mllcnl know - flow. Because of superficial plny or because they are ready to work hard. Ihe con- firmatan defer to them Then there II I new crop. mlny of them junior executives Ind super “lumen in new In!» ulbln church" without me blukll'olllld. who In bllnl " I find " III I, "crept Iva . They talk Ibollt "lellllll religion." They confine the Gospel with I product, prul‘filnl with Illu- manshlp. p I work with publlc relItlons, Iplrltual growth Ivltl’l llII-I'ltlcdl Ilium. Th e I I graph - mlnded pmualm of rellglouslty einnlnz the chart. Ind decide lt'l time lo IlIl'I I new Isle-mall. The pIsIornl nllflnnshlp ll one of the molt IEMIIIVI In HID world. It. mull not be moulded Ivy Inlznllmva hIndx. we believe um l-ymell who Illlnk. It'l time for I china," me often be l’lflhl. AN often wrong. But the (let I "ll! [m quently I change Ill y mm Ibout without more lum t.th good. :- nuk I)! doing All a! (find "You any [at tonal-m for no all“. on whlch many you Juan buy for I lnllllml dol- In" In the)! Illlllll we MIMI! I! II vm Important run he brothers to one Icahn. 'l‘hIt wlvoI be to . 'l'hIt w of . men It: i: llnll It! kind In the Id! fl man . Tllm chlllffl'll he “Mm sttudlnl 0f thelr DIl‘llh. And llIII prartlcal - minded llym I ll I'eillll Ilwlll becqu they IIvI b0 Ipiritullly - minded. too Suvlet answer, the persistent Chinese threat to lndia is cause I enough for the United States and Britain tu continue to help in. dis whercvur possible, Readership It was found that most people felt newspapers gave them a better description of "holes Ind were more timely, These findings were measured ) by the some n by radio and television to deter- mine their worth. Questioned on [our malor new: stories of 1962. most people told the surveyors that news- papers provided hem-r cover- nge and understanding of the federal election the medical CI!" Issue In Saskatchewan and the thalidomide tragedy. A majority, however, favored television fort the US. astronaut Is easily undcrstandable be- And llllally tilt surveys Indicat- ed om these three media. u well as magazines. do not com- pete directly. All play convale- mentary and mplemenury roles in tile home. There also are strum! grounds for suspicion that the decision to build the WII’SIIID was tak- en largely Is I means of helpinl‘l to keep Canadlao shipyards Icl~ Ively employed. In the past it has been accepted that ship. building it In Industry of vltIl importance in time of war. and that It llinuld be supported. If nccesllry. ill Li when there I: less demand for Its products. Here again Is and (M serlour rethinking. ls 1t llkcly that Canada in a (mum war would be called on to play anything lik: the major mantlme role it llux l taken in are past two world wars? lf the Government wants to help keep the shipbuilding Indus- try In business so that its plIl’IIl Ind the skllls of Its workers can , or even to In the industry run down gradually lo Ivold the [flock of I sudden llck a! demand for its producu there Ire better way! of dOIIlR ID "Inn building erslilpl fill! l'IIIy turn out to have little military "he. One at I‘ll: most useful foreign aid contributions Canada Evlr made WII “I! gift of two plllen- “er-(Inn .IhlpI to the Wolf ln- dles Feuerutlon In 1961. The Gov- l'rnmt. If n wlnll to help nu... yard.- (clog, Ihould collide! whether ttlcy mud not lu- fully employed building ship- to Iormplrtof manual Ildwo- mm, CHARGE PRINTER SAN FRANCISCO (AFlhA cullm pl-lutllu pml operator In been chlrlod wlth runnlnl olt mllllnm Ill boll" money In In: blunt counterfeit can ever hIndlcd by the U S More! ice. Build .7. Clmlhel’l. ' yen-old print Ihop employee It AllnlIdI Shh Colqu Ill Hu- wInf. Ici'ou the buy Fund-co. wII am by Silun‘ll! to thI Idmlfud flll'nv lug out man IIIII M.“ II (Ike an IIIIf £50 bllll Arman FrldIy. Cum“ WII child with mnuflchlrlul minim-If currency. .I. m Alumni may occur lI may nun- of the world. lei-undue! hit on Unlud lulu lac-t um. IOTA]. Sm ' unit-I Investment Securiti- In! M I" m I. III I. CIII'I‘WI Parents Attitude Affects Children 3’ Dr. M I. VII bull" How altar do you read Ind talk to your chfldflu, Jol- wlth em. dvlco, dllcprna. or tall dim lforlIlf Do M Illmv your many to Intel: N. d. clda whit ta ulvel. ride I blip. work on I hobby. or be Ilene? How one! Ire yml bothered by or worried Ibmlf your boy when cllmhl all the flll‘nl- c w lag the street, “haul. Ichool yucca. smoking. or his choice of frienle Are you “allied wlth your child: I . IppeIr- Inca, «tin: habit‘, prom Ind hi. respect tor you? There were norm of the quel~ no... uked by m. R. Kemiey Ind Alwclllu III I Itlldy mud: lo determine whether pIrentIl Iflltudel Iffecfed the bellIvlor of their children. The quantum: ted Into I booklet ted u. u.- pmuu of the questionnaire w... complied a. dmrmfne the effect of parental cont-ct, In- tho . ll provIl on a behavior patterns a! oil-none, in addition, the parents were given in words or plu- In asked a. check than um An- plied to u. l.- hlldren. These included new 0 u l “bedweltlnl.” “I t II II- Ind “flghflng.” T I youngsters Involved nusv ed In In from 6 to l7 years and Elm! from Ill walks of life. The malorlty were heIltlly. Some exhlblted bcthlol' pmbllml: others were falling in school even though of normal Intelli- gence. Elglu had temper tail- trums and were quarrelsnme; five were obese, four Inurfllc. two were given to stealing, Ind uvon were destructive. These daf- were fed Into In LEM. computer. The lresultillfl statistic! indicated that chlldren with such disturbance: II de‘ Ilructlvencss, truancy. stealing. head hanging. and school failure llId parents who spent more llme than usual with them and wielded greater Iuthorlly. The same thing was found in young- slers WIIJI minor problem: such I! thumb sucking. bedweltillly ur overweight. The parents also tended to disapprove of NI ell' offspi'lng'! behavior, The opposite was noted smunll the symptom - free Hddlu. We gather from thls study flint Ill! best behaved boys and girl I came from homes where the la» ther and mulhcr follow I con» lErVBllVE, middle ol the rand prourum. KNEE CAP cone 1). M, writes: If . knee up is removed because of Infection, will Ilie leg be crippled in my way? REPLY The knee will not. be II strong after {Ms operatloll, becuuu it hal lost lome of Ila Iuppan. FILTERTNG DEVICES , W. writes: Will all' condi- [lnnlng relieve allergies? REPLY Some conditioners have fllterl that screen out most of the dust particles and some of the pol- lens. The answer to your prom lull depend! upon the nalure of the Illcl'ly. oranmon iii-Tall CORONARY M... it. writes: c... l have gallstones taken out sou hav»! Ing I coron _ attack" arrv l Yu, hut Wllf. until the hen: v lesion in healed completely. l NERVE AIDS A. G. wrltes: Are Iweet thing! had for the nerves? REPLY Not unlesl they are blended, TotIIy'l Tie-III! IIIIII— Avold outburst; of temper. doll-l am (or exllllnl beyond NOTES BY In! d II III m to walk their minds truly Ind Inn WIIII III. —- Wind”: Eur. In. h lhbbol'l dilld wllh Inut-l . And In mud IlIvO It when It dim inn-t good—Enn- dml Sun, In optimal lI I poi-col who live: in tho future becqu h. to m null-antic Id 1le In III violent. -— BIrnlI town. A nun-rd "yelloIMIII am certain drugl cIn drImIticIlly lncreIu the powers of the hu- nun ill-Ii... But will they ml.- u: will, or fun l’llnl’l ullvll' It alvan foolllh thiulll' .— Ot~ lawn Cltlzcn. Progress In I THE WAY I'm VII Mum fl Maul. m Ionicde mm ton any h convince. — Windsor star. A was... I: IIly Ian Ills l. guttlnl something for I!!! money when Ihe buys I puns. — Sher. broan Record. Thou Md mIpl tell you or. erylhinl except how to (old them up. -— strItlord BeIcon. erIld, Oflel, when VI NIH til I aim. or other unfortunIte M- current. WI think If mlght can. lly thc happened to Ill. Bill not tn the cm of the mp1. whole butler dlnppell’eif with 3840.000 worth of jewellery, _ H mllton Specials) Mayaysia MIIIIIIl 1 Doug cuIlllII Fran an" Writer The new independent country at MIlIyIlI ill-y prove to be the Ilroniut fedcrItlan thlt Britain has tolled since INS. Buff: the Rhodesian laden- flull. now bclng hurled, Ind Illa stillborn West Indies lederItlon were founded on some form of culturll or leogi‘lpblcll limo- flct Kilt neither displde nu. ct unflell Ind with mom thin dellberlfa speed Britain IIII wedded over the orentlon of I country tlllt hll up n- Our Yesterdays (From the GuII'dlIII I’ll") WENTYvFWE vans scn .lulvn. u The Audi... people or the pm Vince will meet u. convention on Wednesday .u Mount Carmel. Thu. is the second convention Ilnce the organluttnn n Eg- mont Bay five years ago. Dunstan McNIchol. son of Ills late Slate Senator James P. Mc- Nlchul of Phlladelphls and Mrs. McNichol of St. Davids. recelvv ed his BA. degree with honor! It the graduatlon exercises at Princeton University —— major- lng In politic! and international affairs. Mrs. James P, Mchchol will arrive early In July to open her summer home In George- town. . TEN YEARS AGO July H, 1953 ‘ when “It M.V. Abegweit docks Ii Burden this noel-noun, Cup- IIln .llllln RIB MscGuIr! will walk .Ilhol'e Into retirement af- ter levying as senior master of thil large luxury llner .slnte It was first put. Into service In 1941. Sydney, Australia. (Reuters)— The Sydney Sunday Telengph my: I I story from London to< (fly, the Queen IIII offered I dukcdom In Sir Winston Church- lIl, because it was “hecomlllg in- crenslngly ohvlouu Sir Winston mult retire soon". ll FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS Consult HYNDMAN Insurance IlncI 1871 our eneflnu at II "In I fllulllcl MIMI Throughout the Province I common enemy and I mutual coloniII audition on the part of e comments. Mlllyxll II internally divided by two great cultures—Malayan Ind Chinese—Ind I more at tribes. Geographically, It I! scat- [cred lllm I I lunaltude In I 10.000411“: Ira ICNII the nth (1th Sea. OPPOBED NEW NATION At various periods during It! gestation, the new nation was vehemently OPWfld by both in princlpll neighbors lndonesiI Ind Th. Phlllppln , If birth It wIl mlnlls on. of ii: .mlul-l pIrLI—thI premium of rune. All these obstIcleI mum to have been surmounted by th energy and Imagination of a... man, Prime Mlntslur Tunku. lprince) Abdul mum... of MI- ya RnhmIn will be the tint prime minlster when the nltion ol 10.000.000 l. lonnally nun. lished Aug. 31. r...- five year! in has coaxed his plane... loomed temper. and conquered the doubt. .u neighbors and allies, Dorms cl problems lle behind him. mamas srarran lN Before the treaty wns llnally signed in London early Tuesday Iftel‘ lo days of wrangling, it was Rahman who stepped in to solve last . minute diflicultlu over the sovereignty of Britain's military base in Slugupm. Observers have little doubt h. wul mu appease the pride of the Sultan of Brunei who balked on the question at precedem. There l. run time for the pro. mums wlu. ll. m.000.000 a... nual oil revenue in join the fold. Rahman is British - eduqu and solidly pro-Western. British Ind us. . smell so. Mllva bulwark against the .x- punsinnist design! it ammu- nlst Chin... wul. Malaya‘l tn, tin Ina mm. the unewlolted mineral wealth of fill Nuns. some ten rltorlel Ind the hard con of n. nanclll capltIl In Slnngm-e. u.- new nation could "my lap come ole domlnltlu‘ innueucc in southeast AsII. 8. CO. LTD, undemlten. h I “"1053! . Inn-linen“- . Alum..- Painter of Canada’s Wild Flowers Tomfilivlngporhnitofflnfloweflh th III! of lenhr Emily Min of Victoria. In Ear mnlfleunt pIintlngI of CIudI'I wild mm with their diltinctivc delith din-in cover four pIgeI in full color of thin wnk'I turn If Wankend Wins. , THE EVENING PATRIOT