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Street Unb ~~ {he fational structure-may-need-some Le a - yea Sata Se vestigated the defection of cypher | versity 65942 Western Office 1020 West Georgie Street Vercouve: MA 7037 fhewber Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers Association anc The Canaden Fress The Caredian Press s exclusively entitied to the use for repub lication of ail mews discatches n ths Che Guardian | peper |. credited to # or to the Associated Press or Reuters | arc eiso to the loca! mews ovbshed herein AN right cr republication of srecia! dispetches here ain eo reservec Subscription rete Not_cve:40c_per week by carrier $12.00 e 7s rural routes and areas serwcred ner $'SO8..e yeer- off acd UK JS. and elsewhere outside British Com morweae 'th™ t Not over 7c sins'e copy. Member Audit Burea:-of Circulation | PAGE ¢ » yee on ne by car Faccd - Reassuring, But... Speaking ‘ata ‘Liberal meeting in Sault Ste Marie. Ontario. thé other evening. Prime Minister Pearson said that Canadians need have no. fear about the survival of the country. that SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1965. $20 00 vere. . = + 4 ada under license from the U.S. and Britain. - It is also assumed, rightly or wrongly, that in a country like Can- ada the secrets are less wel! protect- ed becausé they are not Canadian secrets to begin with. Anyway. the Russians gambled that Ottawa. an un- likely spy headquarters. was.the right .. place to get established * Mecording to an Ottawa corres- pondent of the Toronto Telegram, — there is as much active spying going on under the shadow of Parliament and the Peace Tower as anywhere.in | the world. He produces no evidence for this statement, but he does make out a case for the existence of an ex- tremely —well__ organized espionage system. see : It is hard to reconcile this. he Savs, with the image created by some of its exposed leaders in the federal capital. Vasily Tarasov. expelled. last vear for trving to get industrial secrets from a civil. servant, was a popular member of the parliamen- tarv press gallery. He -was-a—glad- hander.familiar in Ottawa's bars and on the cocktail circuit. and could gen-° erally be seen in the gallery with a bottle of beer in his hand waiting for’ changes of emphasis ‘and some redis- tribution of power and rights, but ‘that there is no cause for alarm. “The basic facts.” he declared, “are deeply and well established: nothing. I re- peat. nothing. persuades me that we need fear for the Canadian future. Todav we do not have to create Can- ada. We have it. We must preserve it and strengthen. it. That is our: task.” : This was well said. We like its ring of confidence. its emphasis on the future as something to look for- ward to with hope and assurance. But why couldn't we have had it ear- lier? It w&s just the tonic we need- ed after reading, last February, the report of that —multimillion-dollar roval commission which Mr. Pearson established. in which it was stated pontifically that Canada. “without being consciotls of the fact, is pass- ing through the greatest crisis of its historv.” se “All ten of us.” reported _ this commission after perambulating the country, “are convinced that in the present situation there is a grave danger for the future of Canada and ‘of all Canadians. There are those’ | ~who feel that the problems will les- sen and go away in time. This is possible, but, in our view, it is more probable that unless there are major changes the situation will worsen with time. and that it could worsen much more quickly than many think.” How these perils were to be fac- ed the commission didn’t undertake to sav. This was to be the subject of a further installment. which won't be ready until 1967. Meantime we've been having nightmares over this _ “erisis” and wondering how much it had worsened since the warning was given. and how-much-more_time_we_ had leftbefore disaster would strike. Perhaps that report gave- Mr. Pearson the jitters. too. Perhaps it . took. him all this time to get his bear- . ings¢@nd come up with his gospel. of hope. In any case. it’s a welcome ) antidote, and from now on nothing— we repeat. nothing—is going to per- suade us that he’s wrong, and the commission right in its estimate of | »the situation, Still. weCkeep worrving why he had to appoint that commission—all ten of them—in the first place. seeing that it’s not a crisis we're facing but a stimulating challenge to preserve and .strengthen what we have. If that be dur task. then it’s leadership we require and not a costly postmort- em on our failures and shortcomings. . They Still Keep Trying The royal commission that in- clerk Igor Gouzenko from the Russian embassy at Ottawa in 1945 found that this case was just one link in an es- pionage chain. and that there were at least four or five other unbroken links to be dealt with. Last week's incident involving the expulsion of two Russian diplomats is proof that the Soviets. are still bent upon keep- ing their links in repair in this coun- try. But spying is a costly business. Ottawa. as national capitals go. is somewhat off the beaten track. Why should it be regarded as important to maintain a vast spy network there? In this case, it is said, Canada was to be used for a major attempt to pick up. the industrial secrets of the Yestern alliance. Fhe logic is that there is so much co-operation between the Western countries in defense pro- duction and technological coordina- tion that the secrets, at some time, must become available. Many sensi- tive products, too, are built in Can-| | someone to start a conversation. 7 At least one of the two men ex- pelled last week. Anatholy Bythchov, commercial attache at the embassy, fell into the same mould. Nearly everyone, it seems, knew Bytchkov, a friendiv’ man who--spread- himself around the capital. Like -his associate a V.N. Plouchkin, he was a trained in- . telligence officer. Some vears ago the FBI issued a booklet on famous cases that showed a surprising number of postwar spies entered the. U.S. via Canada.and on Canadian passports. There’ is no reason to doubt that others remained here and that their number has been added to from time to time. They haven't fared too well in the past few years at the hands of the RCMP, but they keep on trying. They don't con- | stitute an excuse for staging a witch- hunt on the McCarthy scale, by any means;. but it is well not to be too complacent about them either. . Food Price Inquiry Hearings have begun in Washing- ton on a subject of lively concern on both sides of the boundary line. It is hoped to learn. if -pessible,-why there is such a wide spread between the price the farmer gets for the food he grows and the bill the con- sumer pays at grocery store and sup ermarket. For a starter. the nation-. al food marketing commission has been asking U.S. food retailers to ex- plain the gap. The commission, ap- pointed by- President Johnson, _in- cludes five senators. five members of the House of represenatives and five public representatives. It is too early to speculate on what the findings will be. but one point is coming through ‘loud and clear at the hearings: The-national Co mania for trading stamps and such | gimmicks as free kites and parking lot circuses for the kiddies is a def- inite factor. : Retailers both large and small ageed. that if they failed to offer stamps and giveaways. shoppers would go elsewhere. “Failure to.meet these demands is unthinkable in a competitive society,” said the oper- ator of a small Kansas store. Shop- pers are also paying the tab for iarg- er parking lots, free check cashing and other services. the grocers de- clared. The same point has been made by retailers in Canada. on: various oc- casions. and there seems no doubt as to the effect_such practices have in keeping -prices up. Consumers who insist on such gimmicks and services eventually have to pay for them. in whole or in part. But this can't be the whole story. ' The Washington hearings are expected to probe deep- er than this. and the results of the inquiry should be of. widespread in- terest. EDITORIAL NOTES The next Latin-American. trouble spot to erupt into view. savs a Wash- ington dispatch. may well be Colom- bia. A clutch of kidnappings. stud- ent outbursts, and rising disenchant- ment with the conservative Valencia government have rocked the nation in recent weeks. And inthe rugged back country. Cuba-traind Commun- ist agents are raising havoc. Colombia . is governed by a system that alter- nates its presidency and other key jobs between liberals and conserva- tives. It was adopted in 1958 in the hopes of halting a decade of civil war. But that svstem now shows signs of breaking down. The liberal next in line for President has with- < drawn his: name. «This has left a. vacuum: that trouble may. fill—not excluding. more civil war. - ~, wg { a ——— ‘PRINTER’S DEVIL on oe ‘ OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson is Flight Stewardesses In Growing Demand “Want to see the world and Meet interesting people”” This is the suggestion being posed to attractive young single women in all parts of Canada by our national air line A record number of girls be- tween 20 and 26 years of age will be recrujted as flight stew- ardesses by Air Canada before the 1964 —travel_season.—Appli- cants will be screened at_inter- views beginning later this year, and in groups of fifty they will spend five weeks at Air Can- ada’s flight service training cen- tre at Montreal airport. There they will be taught public ad- dress, cabin duties, speaking to Passengers, serving meals, first aid. beauty care and deport- mémt. “What qualifications do you look for?’’_I asked Miss Billy Houseman, herself a former flight stewardess who is now in charge of the training centre. “We look first for two qualit- ies: personality and a high de- gree of good looks.”’ she replied. “It is hard to separate the two in importance but..." “Ne dumb blondes?" I suggested, and she smiled. “They work with the public, so we assess very carefully the respect they have for themselv- es, for others. and for their par- ents and former employers, and we encourage pride in their ap—_ pearance. Education is less im- portant than the desirable per- sonality; we will take a girl who did not go beyond Grade 11! if she has had. suitable exper- ience. say as a receptionist.” LINGUISTS SOUGHT “We prefer bilingual girls.” Miss Houseman told me. “Those who can speak French and Engz- lish are put on our best routes. and we help any girl who wish- es to take an intensive language course. One who can speak a third language, say German, probably wins rapid promo tion.” There is a big turnover in flight stewa : their 7er- age time on the job is two to three years, after which most exchange their golden wings for a golden ring. Air Canada now employ's about 800 stewardesses; three- quarters are. based at the large international airports at Toronto and Montreal, and smaller groups at Vancouver, Winnipeg and Calgary. As a girl advances through ability and experience, she gets her choice of routes: so the senior stewardesses tend to pick the pleasant combination PUBLIC FORUM This cclume ts open te the discussions | by correspendenss éf questions of im terest. The Guardian dogs net neces sarily endorse the epinien of corres pendents. All letiers pablished are sab- dect to editing amd condensation where eécessary, The Guardian is unable te enter imte any corrrespendence regerd- ing letiers submitted. UNFAIR TREATMENT Sir,—It seems like the Island- ers are left out in the cold again. We have a new coastal | freighter, to serve between the Island and Newfoundland and it was understood that she was go- ing to have an Island crew on board after she came down from Quebec, but \yet that wasn't the case. They kept the Quebec crew on board. Now we have good Island sea- men and ship's officers who know the, Atlantic coastal wat- ters and I do not see why we can't sail that ship. The Quebecers call them- selvés a minority group, and are getting a raw deal, but they should be living on the Island and then they would know what it's like to be a minority. ‘If there isn anything done. then the government isn't being fair to. the people who voted | them in and they shouldn't be allowed to represent us. . DISCOURAGED SEAMAN Charlottetown. of flying the Southern routes to the Caribbean in the — winter months, and the trans- Atlantic routes in the summer GLAMOUR AND HARD WORK The pay is good the girl receives $150 per month plus her’ expenses at a first class hote! in Montreal She Starts flight work at $356 per month, increasing every six months to over $400 after I'v years: And that is for a working month. of.only. 80 flying. hours, plus the time needed to prepare for flights and close down. Some Stewardesses regularly énjoy expense paid lay-overs of sever- al days in European cities or “West Indian isles between flights : I saw some of the stewardess- es now training at Air~Canada‘s comfortable modern M 0 ntreal base—and I thought I had walk- ed into a beauty contest by mis- | take. These handsome ambassa- dors for Canada come from all Life InA In training,” provinces. Of the group of about 30. I found that six are from Saskatchewan— like Rosetown- born Elizabeth Wiebe, whose fa- ther is a grain elevator agént now working in Manitoba. Nine are from Quebec— like France Marie Richard, whose father is well known in Quebec City senal. These two typically told me that they applied for the job as flight stewardess because they enjoy working with le. Miss Richard had shown the enter- prise to get herself a job in Tor- onto last year, to perfect her English Soon these two and their class- mates will graduate—few fail to pass the training course—to wear proudly the handsome new as: the chief of the government ar- Vitamins | No Value | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Mrs. €. writes: “For- \aree years I have been treated for | uveitis of the right eye The | ophthalmologist éxplained this jis a chronic condition. Tests to | To Wag e Verbal Combat By Arch MacKenzie — Canadian Press Staff Writer Céllege campus opposition to Saturday debate in Washircton American policy in Viet Nam has given birth to an all-night phenomenon called the teach- in. ‘And it’s finest hour yet will in Washington Saturday. Academic giants for and with Rusk and McNamara is re- garded as the president's clos- est adviser on Viet Nam. Other participants will he Arthur M. Schlesinger. a former sia be McGeorge Bundy. who | determine if it resulted from an against the United States role assistant to the late president infeation elsewhere in my body in Viet Nam are scheduled to Kennedy who is expected to de- have been negative. The doctor wage verbal combat for 12 fend Viet Nam _ policy, Hans sight in my right eye. My sister hold their own jousts and listen | believes vitamins can | anything. Your advice will ; appreciated.” : | Vitamins have been tried but | are of no value in the treatment | of this poorly, condition. .The uveal tract con- sists of three parts 1) The iris surrounding: the pupil -contains the pigment that determines-the has roots in broad demands for duct. cure by radio. be ‘The event comes at ‘a time Deutscher and numbers of other when isolated charges of a new McCarthyism are being heard, and marks a meeting point be- One is the revival in Ameri- can college life of the demon- stration, verbal or physical. It understood eye tween two: current trends. | Said it/will burn itself out, but in hours, while. more than 100 - Morgenthau, Chicago University the-meantime and perhaps al scientist the leading ac tic, Communist authority Iseae state department and academic notables. | The fresh charges of McCar- have been invoked in a te about just how far citi- zens of a democracy can go in criticizing their country’s con- | color of the eyes; (2) the ciliary more student freedoms, some- Doris Fleeson, a syndicated body that is located around the outer edge of the iris, houses times carried to extremes as reflected inthe campaign con- muscles that help the eye ‘to fo- qucted at the University of Cal- | cus; and (3) the choroid that | forms the inner coating. of the sides of the orbit and blends | with the retina in the back Uveitis | uvea! tract’ is suspected when- ifornia recently: over use of a four-létter obscene word... It owes a lot to the civil rights movement, whose thou- inflammation of the sands of students have picketed in Washington, Selma, Ala., and columnist, says the “new Mce- Carthyism is clearest in the ugly accusations of appease- ment being -hurled with gather- ing intensity by self - styled hardliners against those who urge alternate policies.” She accuses Rusk and Mena- mara, by public statements, of ever there is pain in and around elsewhere. Viet. Nam.|and now | leading a drive to stifle public _ the eve or temple. There ,may be tearing. diminution of vision, | Tedness. and swelling of eye. Light aggravates the - dis- | tress. Diagnosis requires a thor- ough examination by a skilled making a concerted attempt to the Korean period.” ophthalmologist ~t-—~-&e-seareh even though it seldom is found. | In some the culprit provgs to be a specifig microorganism such as strep, staph,:a virus, or mic- | robes responsible for influenza, tuberculosis, and syphilis. The | search under these circumstanc- ’ es is frujtful because it | the best chance for rapid recov- ery, Im others, the cause is cir- culatory in nature and- not in- fectious Remedies include drugs: that , dilate the pupi! and steroids that reduce swelling and inflamma- | tion. Occasionally \surgery is | heeded ee og WHAT'S A PREMATURE? Mrs_ R. writes: I was told at the hospital that my baby was ‘premature and had to be placed In’an incubator, even though he was a nine-month infant. They explained that — prematurity gauged in three ways: length, and term. Is this true? REPLY. : Yes, in that order. Some ba- ies born at term are so tiny they must be afforded thé .same care »as the premature—child-—It—the baby is smaller than 18 inches and weighs less than five pounds he maybe -placed-in an incuba- ‘tor. Apparently your child fell into this category QUININE WATER (°° Mrs. AJ.P. writes: I am 74 and in good health, except for chronic glaucoma of 10 years’ duration. 1 am in the habit of green Air Canada clothing —not_drink:ns—a—gin-—and—tonie—before uniforms. This was. specially designed by Elizabeth Taylor's fashion adviser, and’ is uniquely admired among the airlines of the world. ntarctica National Geographic Society The animal known to live far- thest south is a pink.mite_about one hundredth of an inch long It is a tiny spiderlike creature that feeds on algae and fungi. The ‘mite was found recently only 309 miles from the South Pole by Keith AJ. Wise. an en- tomnologist from Hawaii's ' Bis- “hop Museum Wise also found lichens only 266 miles from the Pole, the closest that life of any kind has been proved to exist. he The only animals living per- manently on the Antarctic con‘ tinent are insects and their rela- tives. About 56 species of anth- ropods have been identified. Most cannot be seen by the naked eye. The largest is a wingless fly, about the size of a housefly The animals remain, dormant during the winter, but hecome active when the temperature reaches the melting point of wa- ter, 32 degrees Fahrenheit. OCEAN TEEMS WITH LIFE Unlike the barren -continent, | the oceans surrounding Antarc- “tica teem with animals ranging in size up to the blue whale—the largest creature that has ever lived Scientists lowered a bucket- shaped. six- by-four- foot steel capsule under the ice in 1964 to observe marine life in a project supported by the National. Science Foundation. .The men took turns in the capsule. peer- ing into the cold dark through six windows. A hydro- phone outside the capsule en- abled the scientists to eaves- drop on inhabitants of this little. known world. The observers saw few fish, but a jelly fish floated by trail- ing tentacles 30 feet jong “Gracefully swimming seals were around most of the time, often going to breathe in a hole sea. we had chopped in the ice. and sometimes coming to inspect the chamber,” reported Dr. Carleton Ray of the New York Zoologica! Society. Through the hydrophone came seal sounds, variously describ- ed as whistles, buzzes, beeps, and chirps. One scientist coam- mented. “I've never heard such an underwater racket.” : The noisy Weddell seals are believed to use the sounds for both communication and sonar navigation. The’ sonar ~~theory might explain how these mam- mals find food and breathing holes in Antarctica’s winter darkness. Sound tracks of seal noises are being analyzed. Some have such high frequencies and rapid pul- sation they can’t be heard by human ears. How the Weddell seals make the sounds remains a mystery. They keep their mouths and nostrils shut tight underwater. Depth guages attached to seals have registered dives to almost 1,500 feet— the deepest ever officially recorded for mammals. One seal remained submerged for 28 minutes with- out coming up for air. A zoologist succeeded in gain- ing the confidence of mother seals nursing pups on the ice Then he extracted samples of the mother’s milk with a ‘large plastic tube. Seal milk is much richer in fat than human milk, and seal pups gain weight fast- er than any other mammal. A newborn seal quintuples its weight in six weeks ~~ Wearing “‘frogman” suits, scientists have explored seas around Antarctica. Red sea- weeds grow abundantly. There are large red and white starfish, sponges up to four feet in dia- meter, and five-foot-long worms. v The Neglected RIN Separatist elements thought they had staged a major coup by their noisy demonstrations at the time of the Queen's visit to Quebec City last fall. The jostlings and the catcalis attracted national and interna- tional attention for a day or two. But as time passes it he- comes apparent that the demon- strations backfired and had the effect of turning moderate Que- becers away from the separat- ists. es Pierre Bourgeault. the articu- late and plausible leader ‘of the RIN ‘Rassemblement pour’ I’- Independance Nationale), held a meeting in a community near Quebec City last week. - The meeting attracted only 40 S Fe Mr. Bourgeau!t complained to | the audience that the RIN was | | no longer getting the attention he felt it deserved. A year ago the RIN could fill | halls. now the meetings are | poorly attended. Bourgeault said that his sep- aratist group intended to run candidates in every riding in the next provincial election. Oddly enough. a good many moderate Quebecers agree with | Bourgeault that this would be a | good thing. The moderates claim that sep- aratism will remain a vague and | ill-defined threat until it is ex- posed to the judgment of the polls in. an election. They hold that separatists candidates would get less than 10 per cent of the vote and this | would end separatism aS a ser- ious political threat. dinner at least three times a day. Could quinine water have a bad effect on my sight? REPLY This is doubtful unless you are overly sensitive to the» drink. , Too much quinine causes ring- ing of the ears TELL THE TRUTH B. M. writes: Will it make any difference in the results if a woman does not tel] the eye doctor her right age when she goes for an examination? REPLY The diagnosis may not be af- fected but his treatment could be. You are paying good money for the physician's opinion— if he makes a mistake, you are the one to suffer POSSIBLY E. E. P. writes: Is there any basis for the old idea that there is_a correlation between tight- fistedness and _ constipation” REPLY Yes, assuming that the tight- fisted individual is “extremely tense. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Leniency can be misguided. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) ' Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (May 15, 1940) Yesterday Prime Minister Churchill placed Lord Beaver- brook in charge of aircraft pro- duction and ordered him to in- crease production in a_ hurry. Lord Beaverbrook’s new gov- ernment title was Minister. of Aircraft Production in the Na- tional Government. Belgium called al! able-bodied men between 16 and 35 to the defence of the country as Ger- many'’s motorized army. ham- mered at a chain of forts on a offers . is weigh., front strétching from Antwerp‘ in Belgium to Sedan, just inside France. TEN YEARS AGO (May 15, 1955) Mr. J.G. Dennis, managing director of the P.E.I. Credit Un- ion League, was re-elected trea- surer of the CUNA Supply Coop- erative at the meeting of the board of directors held in St Louis, Missouri. Mr. Frank W. Lockhart left Summerside for Whitehorse in the’ -Yikon, where he will serve the ch&plaincy corps of the Can- adian Army. Mr. Lockhart’is a student of theology and receiv- ed his Bachelor of Arts Degree . at Mount Allison Convocation last Tuesday, with honors in Greek and philosophy. He has been awarded the Younz Mem- orial Fellowship in philosophy by the Pést Graduate School of the University of Toronto for the vear 1955-56. FOOD DATES BACK ‘ Peanu’ butter was invented by the pre-Columbian Incas, who | called it mani and venerated it | as & sacred food. : ' 4 | the Dominican Republic crisis are other factors. the SEEKS PUBLIC SUPPORT’ On the other-hand, President Johnson and his supporters are solidify public support—by fre- discussion and says “new man- agement in the-nation's—capital— is currently more deliberate and sweeping than it ever wag during the Second World War or * Charles Bartlett. columnist f jon___.ap-_for. the Washington Star. says pearances, special teams of state department speakers at colleges and by other public ap- peals. State Secretary Rusk and De- fence Secretary McNamara are accused of dismissing all crit- icism as ill-founded and inept. President. Johnson faces. some criticism for arguing publicly that opposition to his policies strengthens the enemy abroad. The president has frequent) cited a letter received recently, from former President Eisen hower which said views cont- rary to American foreign policy r should be sent on a confidential —not public—basis. Thus, it is of some importance that a feature attraction 1 pie the Somebody Should Know the anti-Viet Nam forces are a minority “but the essential healthiness of the controvérsy must not be lost in a return to the debate levels of the McCar- thy era” Ete William S. White. a columnist with close links to President _Johnson, says the U.S. govern- ment in seeking to protect-free— men “is under the most shrill and in some instances the mast venomous attacks -from tiny but, _Violent minorities that any gov- ~ernment has had to bear in our lifetime." White castigates, congress) snal ‘erities;; students, President Charles de Gaulle and all others who differ with American for- eign policy Cape Breton Post Prime Minister Pearson. ‘isn't expected to know everything, but some things he doesn't know, Justice Minister Favreau - should know ; For instances Mr. Pearson didn't know until he read it that Georges Lemay wanted in con- nection with a $560,000 Montreal bank robbery, had been nab- in Florida, as a direct. re- sulth of Lemay’s picture being shown over the Early Bird Sat- ellite television system. This led somebody in Parlia- ment to wonder why a picture of jailbreaker Lucien Rivard wasn't flashed by the same de vice. Eldon Williams, PC mem- r for Bow River “Kked wheth- er plans to show. Rivard's picture over the satellite trans- mission had been dropped after “interference by a cabinet min- ister or some other high govern- ment official.” : To speak of a leading ques- tion, this was it. Why was not the same systent used to ‘‘lo- cate another well-known fugitive from justice?” Mr. Pearson said he hadn't known about plans to transmit pictures of men most wanted. br Canadian police. so of course he didn't know why Mr. Rivard's Picture was absent from the list . Justice “Minister Favreau should know al! about it Mr. Pearson said he would check with Mr Favreau “on ‘the sub- ject. Their conversation will not be broadcast Moments come when the discussion of a prime minister and one of his cabinet a is extremely confiden- 52 MOUNTAINEERS DIE TOKYO (‘Reuters —The death toll of holiday mountaineers soared to a record 52 Wednes- day as blizzards battered Ja- Danese mountain areas Said the mountain déath toll was Japan's: worst for its annual Golden Week holiday period ‘which began with Emperor Hiro- hito's bi y April 2 The previous high toll was W in 1962. It was estnated that 3.000 persons had mountaineered dur- img the holiday period despite warnings of rough weather. economy air fare from than air fare.) _ parties and movies.. thoroughly relaxed and See your travel agent now. r ”~ A dias Vacation Bargain: AN EXTRA WEEK | OF ENJOYMENT FOR ONLY — $11.80 MORE! Plan to sail to or from Europe (both ways, if you have the time) — and you'll enjoy a week’s va- cation for only $11.80 extra. Summer season jet $282.20. In an outside double cabin on Main Deck aboard the felty air-conditioned s.s. Ryndam, it costs $294.00 — only $11.80 more. (Many ac- commodations on the Ryndam cost even less And how much more you really get. A week of glorious sea travel, swimming, deck sports, marvelous Dutch cuisine and service, dancing, pounds free baggage allowance. And you arrive From Montreal: } June6, June 30, July 24 (lower fare on Thrift Aug. 17, Sept. 11, Oct. 5, Oct. 30, “From New York: Sailing every Friday: s.s. Rotterdam, Nieuw Amsterdam or Statendam. Also regular departures ofthe Popular Maasdam and the one-class Prinses Margriet, SAIL A HAPPY SHIP ieteliete)__ FROM MONTREAL OR NEW YORK TO IRELAND, ENGLAND, FRANCE, HOLLAND, GERMANY FURNESS, witry 71-73 Upper Water St. \ Hatitax, N. S. ‘ , Tel: uy, J Montreal to Holland is - plus a generous 275 refreshed. Pay later pian avatlable, Season sailings: Nov. 23) « 4] = o \ @ CO. LTD. Police ° fe rs 7 : :