Toronto, 425 University Ave. 30994); Montreei: 64% Cathcart Street S5ci2). Western office: 1030 West Georgia Services, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 | THURSDAY, DEC. 3, 1959. _Mr. Macquarrie’s Report - In September, 1958, Canada took the initiative in proposing a far- reaching program of Commonwealth ¢o-operation in the field of education through scholarships, training and supply of teachers, and in the ex- change of technical and educational knowledge. Last summer at Oxford a Commonwealth Educational Con- ference was held to give concrete form to these ideas. The whole pro- gram has been very ably reviewed at the United Nations Assembly by Mr. Heath Macquarrie, MP, who as a Canadian delegate at the Assembly is chairman of the U.N. Trusteeship Council. — _At present, Mr. Macquarrie ex- plained, foreign students studying in Canadian universities comprise 5.9 per cent of the total enrollment in our higher educational institutions. Their number now amounts to 4,792— ‘an increase of about 50 per cent as compared with the figures for 1951- 62. Africa last year contributed near- ly 200 students; the West Indies and surrounding region furnished a still greater number. 976 came from Asia east of Afghanistan, 546 from Hong Kong, 17 from Ceylon, 152 from India, * 49 from Indonesia, 52 from Pakistan, 11 from the Philippines, and 150 from Latin America. _.. This, of course, is apart from the Commonwealth scholarship exchange mainly needed is material aid. There are, however, two other widely separated groups who would migrate, preferably far away, if given a chance. These are 10,000 White Rus- sians in China, mostly farmers in the Shanghai area, and 130,000 still unsettled refugees in Western Europe. To Canadians their. story may be the most poignant of all because t are blood-brothers of some of us and hapless victims of a war we remember. Some of the worst off among ‘the Europeans are the 32,000 who have lived for 14 years, or been born, in wretched camps in Austria, West Germany, Italy and Greece. One explicit aim of WRY is to burn down the European camps, wipe them off the face of the earth, by the end of 1960. Canadian cities across the land are “adopting” camps with the deliberate purpose of emptying ‘and destroying them. The cost will run from $40,000 to $400,000 and more, each city taking on a load suit- _able to its size. Since refugees, with neither votes nor money, cannot form pressure groups, helping them is always: an unforced, voluntary act of brotherly love and Christian mercy. Money gifts are asked for; and it’s possible for any Canadian individual, family or society, like a church group, to volunteer to bring refugees to this country—and look after them. For people so sponsored, Immigration Minister Fairclough. has announced the government will waive the usual rules restricting admission. For its own part the government is bringing in 100 tubercular refugees and their families, possibly about 400 people in all. They are expected before Christmas. These TB. sufferers will be placed in vacant sanatoria beds throughout the country, and the dependents looked after until cures are effected and employment obtained. ae FRAN WHAT WILL HE WEAR? Git, ce - Common Market Partners Ry Ed Simon Canadian Press Staff Writer - The arrival in London of Pre- mier Antonio Segni and Foreign Minister Giuseppe Pella of Italy completes Britain's six - week round of talks with members of the European Common Market. . The discussions, which began with a visit to Paris by Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd in mid- October and were carried on dur- ing Chancellor Adenauer’s visit | to Britg#in, were riot. deliberately | Britain's chief_aims have been to convince the six common mar- ket partners that the new alli- ance wants to co-onerate with them rather than fight them and to gain assurance that political | outgrowths ofthe economic com- munity do not get out of hand. British spokesmen concede that the Outer Seven is a second best substitute for the European free- trade area they hoped to estab- ereignty and unduly susceptible to the influence of the United States. 4 But Britain has won a friend- lier response from de Gautie by urging that he bring purely con- | tinental problems to the Western European union, in which the six ; common market powers—France, | Germany, Italy, Belgium, Luxem- bourg and The Netherlands— share membership with Britain. A TT el Zz ti! = or one slice of toast, but of fresh fruit or, if you insist, a small slice of angel food cake. Since any diet needs variety, Dr. Plotz suggests that the lean meat — green vegetables rou- tine at dinner can be varied by using small portions of rice, spa- ghetti, noodles or even cracked | wheat, or maybe portions of | peas, lima beans or a small bak- ed potato. EAT SAME FOOD Now the best part of such a diet is that, as a rule, you can eat just about the same things | everyone else at the table eais. You simply cut down on the quan- tity. , Dr. Plotz tested his diet on some 100 patients. He reports | British. officials expect to find | the Italians co-operative in-the | political side of the discussions but less so in their economic as- pects. : Politically. relations between “begun as a roll-cal! of the six/lish as an adjunct to the com-! Britain é . and Italy are trouble-free. members: of the new-born econo- | mon market and which foundered ae ever ae the inception of mic community. ' They were designed rather as | a fence - mending operation to | build a bridge between the two | | groups ,as soon as the Outer. deal with the strains between Britain and her European allies | program, under which Canada has ‘undertaken to make available some 250 fellowships at any one time to students of other parts of the Com- monwealth. As with the -Canada Council and the National Research Council awards, fu!) provision will be made for travel funds and main- tenence allowances. Mr.’ Macquarrie stressed the point that these plans for scholar- ships and fellowships are of advant- age not only to the recipients but to Canadians as well, who benefit no less than the smaller and newer countries. His broad approach to the subject was received with applause, and the substance of his remarks has been given world distribution. While we have been critical of our federal members at times, we - imagine that few of his fellow Island- turn to that country; ; 3 _@tifl hoping, no doubt vainly, to ie ers are not proud\ of the role Mr. Macquarrie is able to play in the great council of nations now sitting in New York. His reports to the As- sembly on education and other mat- ters—for there have been several— reflect credit upon us all; and to say that he should not be giving of his time and ability to these matters would be to take a very parochial attitude. We say this without pre- judice to our own prior claims upon his services, and as a tribute which it would be unfair to withhold at this time. ,. Refugee Appeal Not enough has been heard of the fact that this is World Refugee Year (WRY)—so proclaimed by the United Nations in December, 1953. It runs from last June to June, 1960, and there are many reasons why it should be kept before the Canadian public. These reasons are strikingly pre- sented in an article in the Nov. 28 issue of the Financial Post by Mr. J. B. MacGeachy. Incredible though it seems, there are nearly 40,000,000 people who might be termed refugees, but WRY’s business is with smaller concentrations of them in the Middle East, North Africa, Hong Kong, Western Europe and China. There is no question of overseas migration for the first three of these groups: —1,000,000. Palestinian Arabs, mostly in Jordan and the Gaza strip, huddled on the borders of Israel and re- , —180,000 Algerians in Tunisia Morocco, relatives of fighting rebels, nearly all women, children old men, who will eventually go T ’s hoped, to Algeria; ~ ‘ae . Battlefield Guide — War veterans will be’ interested in-an unusual piece of travel litera- ture, entitled “Battlefield Guide Book.” Published to direct the tour conductors on the routes for three tours of Canadian battlefields in Europe, now being organized in Toronto, it is virtually an historical reference document. The book is the work of Kim Beattie, author and war ‘historian; who plotted the routes. Each battle route begins where the first serious fighting occurred for the Canadians— the 2nd Battle of Ypres (World War 1), the beaches of Pachino, Sicily and Normandy landing for World War 11. In addition to battle positions are locations of the key billet-towns, villages, all the Canadian war mem- orials, and 187 war cemeteries. Per- haps even more unusual for travel literature, the spots where 79 Can- adians won the, Victoria Cross in the two wars are also Jocated. The three battlefield tours, spon- sored by the Veterans Advocate, will take off from Toronto on March 1, opening day of direct Toronto-Europe operations by British Overseas Air- ways. They fly to London, then Paris, and return on March 31. EDITORAL NOTES Even Prime Ministers are subject to transportation inconveniences; and Mr. and Mrs. Diefenbaker were both caught, with hundreds of-. football fans and Conservative delegates, when a Sunday afternoon train from Toronto broke down. Without heat, its cars the frigid temperature of a _ stormy winter night, the train finally limped into Ottawa four hours late. How did the Prime Minister pass the time and keep warm? He stayed in bed. , ; s * * Outstanding among the tributes to Sir Winston Churchill on his 85th birthday was that paid by Lord Mor- rison of Lambeth, now 71, who rose from errand boy to be Britain’s Deputy Prime Minister. Sir Winston has not made a speech in the House of Commons since he ceased to be Prime Minister, and it is doubtful if he will attempt to do so. “Yet,” says Lord Morrison, “the House. knows how he feels. It sympathizes. And when‘ he slowly walks into the Chamber, somehow the House takes | as a compliment the very fact that he should be there. His very: pre- sente-adds to the self-esteem of the place. The MPs like him to be about. There would be a-hole in the place if he were not there.” That was hand- somely said, ’ having omitted any reference to summit meeting— ae ae NEW IMPORTANCE But with the summit tempor- | arily thrust into the background | and new uncertainties posed by | the formation of a European Outer Seven under Britain's lead- ership, the function and relation- ship of the two groups have be- come increasingly important. that had grown up in the pro- | in disagreement as to the terms of affiliation. They now seek to Seven becomes a going concern. Meanwhile, they are worried oa oe the common market, the Italians have pressed vigorously for early implementation of the projected removal of trade restrictions among its members within its protective tariff wall against the tient’s friends and even mem- | bers of his family were not aware that he was dieting. | OBVIOUS ADVANTAGES ' The advantages are obvious. | You can accept-dinner invita- | tions to eat out without any un- | due embarrassment. And, of course, the homemak- |er is given a real break, since | she doesn’t have to prepare sep- | arate meals for the dieter and |-for-the rest of the family. 1 “arn —or the--common—market—may—eut— across organizations that already exist to promote unity in Western Europe. EXPECT DELAYS France's President de Gaulle is | known to be hostile to close ties with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which he regards as infringing on his country’s sov- The Soothsayer Arthur Blakely in The Montreal Gazetie The legend of William Lyon Mackenzie King, the mystic, is still a-growing. Latest of a long series of con- tributors to the legend is Sena- tor Norman Lambert, an asso- ciate, friend and admirer of the former Liberal Prime Minister. In the current issue of The Canadian Liberal, Senator Lam- bert advances the claim that Mr. King had a “‘premonition” of the outbreak of the Second World | War. On the evening of August 8. 1939, Senator Lambert recalls, a complimentary dinner was heid in Toronto to mark the 20th anni- versary of King’s assumption of the leadership of the Liberal Party. “On the morning of August 9,” | he writes, ‘following the din- | ner, I went with Mr. King to Aurora to visit \Sir William Mu- | lock, who had _ been unable | through an indisposition to attend the gathering of the previous eve- ning. On the way back to Tor- onto, the Prime Minister refer- red.— with some misgivings—to his speech, saying that he was afraid it had not been adequate or worthy of his anniversary. SORT OF APOLOGY “Then, as a sort of apology for party matters or to the pros- | t of an early election, he said: ‘I should like to tell you that last Friday, before coming to Toror- to, I wrote to Mr. Neville Cham- berlain, asking for his advice about the difficult international situation in Europe, and explain- ing my own political position in Canada where constitutional re- quirements would soon necessi- tate a general election. The last thing I should want,’ he add- ed, ‘would be a wartime election.’ “That,” Senator Lambert poirftts out, “‘was said on August 9, 1939. Before any response from Mr. “Chamberlain was possible, Hitler had invaded Po- land and Britain was plunged into war. Canada’s declaration of war was made on the floor of Parliament on September. 9. Mr. King’s premonition of trouble in Eurepe was all too well based’’. This is the evidence on which Senator Lambert relies in ad- vancing his claim that Mr. King already knew, in some mysteri- ous fashion, of the hoocaust that was to - begin a litile less than a month later, LOGICAL CHOICE It is entirely true, of course, that if the spirit world or any of its inhabitants had. decided to en- trust any statesman of the period with such a premonition, Mr. King would have been a logical choice. . As. one of his biographers has observed: ‘‘He believed implicit- ly in luck and propitiated it with comic zeal. The numeral seven, he said, was favorable to his ea- terprises, He liked te launch them on the seventh day of the month or in the seventh month of the year. If possible, he would take no decisive step until the | hands of the clock were dircctly | opposite each other in a straig!it line. The Christian was filied with these pagan superstitions. In addition, he “took an inten- sive interest in the spirit world” as the same biographer has not- ‘ed, and made frequent attempts to converse with relatives, friends and notables who had passed to the great beyond. A number of mediums, in this country and abroad, assisted Mr. King in these endeavors. Mr. | King himself believed firmly that they had been successful | that contact had been establish- and ed. Some authorities who have probed this secret side of the ! great politician’s life have em- | phasized that at no time did he cousult the spirits about affairs outside world. like those with their common market partners, aim to do no more than improve the general atmosphere. All parties are re- signed to a period of pagjent and | painstaking negotiations. before European alignments cease to be i at sixes and sevens. } of Government. There is als, however, some interesting evi- dence to the contrary, A LONG BOW But while there is little doubt } that Mr. King would have been | extremely receptive to any pre- monitions, presentiments or fore- warnings from whatever source, Lambert appears to be drawing an extremely long bow when he contends. as he does, that Mr. King had one on the Senator es which he describes. While Mr. King was a spiritual- ist, he was also 22 astute end 0. u- dent politician. King’s statement that he would want no part of a wartime election would more iik- ely stem from a shrewd aad rea- sonable suspicion that war was a possibility that could not be vver- looked in August of 1939, rather than from any certain knowledze that the war was on the way and would start on such and such a date. While he was a mwvstic, he was certainly no stranger to or- | dinary common sense. Africa’s Wild life Remnants National Geographic Society Africa’s magnificent wildlife, the most varied array of animals ever to walk the earth, is rapidly disappearing. African poachers use fire. pois- oned arrows, and wire snares to take a heavy toll of the dwindl- ing game herds. Tribesmen’s vast flocks of cattle, sheep, and goats drive wild creatures away from | waterholes and choice grazing areas. About 90 per cent of Africa's original wildlife population has been exterminated by man’s ac- tivities. THe surviving animals ‘are making a last stand in the national parks and_ reserves, where effective protection is of- ten lacking. NUMBERED IN MILLIONS Less than 50 years ago, wild animals of many species blacken- ed the plains of East Africa in countless millions. Primitive man, sparse in numbers, was merely another predator in_ nature's scheme. The advent .of colonial rule up- set the balance. European sett- lers wiped out the game in large areas. The African ' population sky-rocketed as war, famine, dis- ease, and the slave trade were eliminated. Cattle epidemics were stamped out. In dry East Africa, men and livestock have now multiplied be- yond the point at which the land can support them. Overgrazing by domestic animals is adding new wastes to the fringes of ‘the advancing Sahara. There is little room left for wildlife. The Serengeti National Park in Tanganyika is Africa's last strong hoid of spectacular game herds. The sanctuary covers 5,000 square miles of forest, mountains, and vast golden plains. A few years , ago, millions of wildebeest, ze- | bra, and anteclone grazed in the | park: today fewer than 400,000 remain. | Recently, herdsmen of the | Masai tribe were allowed ‘to leave / worf-out adjacent land and graze their cattle in the park. In a short time, lush ‘grasslands were converted to an expanse of baked red earth. As forests were cut and burned. watersheds began to | dry up. Wild animals were driv- len from the eastern section of the Serengeti. SYMBOL OF WEALTH | . Africans seldom slaughter their | livestock. They regard cattle as | symbols of wealth, and gonsider the size of a herd more itmport- ant than its quality. Wildlife has | always been the traditional source of meat. In Tanganyika, illegal poaching of game has become an indus- ‘try. Arrow poison and wire i spares are peddled from village to village. Dried meat, or bi!tong, STOREYSELECTRIC Wadd sone eee td Tae hy F type, ein, ta perenne Crabs Cele eee he ~ we ae % és rf saad APPLIA ie has att oe socket to Was At et Sey house—FREE es wash TPT Lar | QUESTION AND ANSWER The talks with Segni and Pella,| - Mrs. W. D. S.: My son, 18, nev- occasion and in the circumstanc- | ‘| national parks is such an attrac- 1 er was troubled with pimples un- til now. that’ in many instances the—pa-+ ‘Did you get home all right after the party last night?” “Fine, thanks? except that just as I was : 3 : Himalayas has received permis- sion from Nepal to seek out and if possible capture an Abomin- able Snowman. And how surpris- ' The Norwegian arctic exnlorer Helge Ingstad believes archaeolo- gical finds made in Greenland indicate the location of Vinland, described in the Icelandic sagas as the place where Vikings made repeated landings around the year | 1000 A.D. In his opinion, Vin'and | is identical with Rhode Island.— | News of Norway Winnipeg since 1945 has had! an anti-noise bylaw under which | prosecutions can be started for | almost any. kind of excessive | sound. But the city might as well | not have the bylaw because it | has seldom been enforced. One of the reasons for the lack of en- | forcement has been a lack of | agreement on what constitutes noise.—Winnipeg Tribune is In an age wher space travel | draws nearer, would we not be wise to question what we are_go- ing to take into space? What | benefits have we to confer upon | other worlds? Only our poor con- | fused, partly - understood sel- | ves? Would we not be wise to} ponder on the statement made} by Prince Philiv in a_ recent! speech that the new frontiers are the frontiers of the mind? til we know more of ourselves, what can we do in space but mane mischief? — Peterborough Examiner | MAXIMS Power intoxicates men. When a_man is intoxicated by alcohol he can recover, but when intox- icated by power he covers. OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) (Dec. 3, 1934) Rev.-C. J. St. Clair Jeans, Summerside, announced to his, Can you tell me what causes ' a common skin disturbance in activity and infection all play a | role in their causation. cluding freouent scrubbing of the area, attention to diet and local medication. Other cases require more intensive treatment. You should take him to a skin | specialist. a The Age Old Story The days of our years are | threescore years and ten; and if , | by reason of strength they e| | four - score years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away. brings a high price on the black market. About 150,000 wild ani- mals are slaughtered every year in and around the Serengeti Na- tional Park. : Many biologists fear that Af- | rica is losing one of its most valuable natural resources. Pro- perly harvested, the game herds | ' could provide a permanent meat | supply in areas unsuitable for. livestock. Wild animas are im- mune from sleeping sickness, they require far less water than cat- tle, and they do not overgraze their environment. The freely roving game _in- the i tion to visitors that tourism has become one of East Africa's lead- ing industries. RECORD BOOK PRICE LONDON (Reuters)—A record price of $182,000 for a book was paid by a New York dealer here Tuesday for the 13th - century Apocalypse Manuscript, a life of St. John regarded as one of the most beautiful illuminated manu- scripts in existence. This beats the previous record for a sale of this kind—$109,000—paid here last year also for an illuminated man- uscript. The. purchaser in both cases was H. P. Kraus. HOWARD McINNIS FOR SHOES McINNIS FOR OVERSHOES McINNIS FOR RUBBERS McINNIS FOR SLIPPERS McINNIS, FOR VALUE McINNIS | Hosnital is rapidly nearing com- sermon on the last Sunday in De-| cember. The news was received | with regret by the congregation, Treatment may be simple, in-| at the same time expressions of | Precedes 2 : * ! good wishes Were voiced for his success in his new parish. The eastbound train from Sum- merside struck a light motor | truck at the crossing east of Ken- ba ger station yesterday et ing. Mr. Robert Carr of Clifton was driving the car and escened | with a few minor bruises. The car was badly smashed and the sleepers of the track torn up. TEN YEARS AGO (Dec. 3, 1949) The new Pavilion of the P.E.T. pletion. Plastering has been fin- ished and the final touches of painting, floor covering, installa- tion of eauipment and decorating are all being made. It is expect- ed that the opening will take place in the early part of the New Year. A meeting attended by over 100 citizens was held last night in the Summerside High School at which | the matter of the new rink and community centre was discussed. A resolution was passed asking , the Town Council to hold a pleb- | iscite on the matter of the town issuing bonds and building the Un- j. am, of York visited them recently found that they were still pray- ing for Queen Victoria, who died 58 years ago.—Toronto T: : Shocked at a New York game law which permits hunters to take does and fawns for a. two- week period this season, a New . Jersey lover of wild animals ur- ges that this practice be stopved. | New York conservation author- ities reply-that the state he 4 superabundance of deer this Fall and that if the surplus were not shot, they would be certain to starve to death this Winter.— Hamilton Spectator Downfall of’‘Napoleon, the me-~° dical detectives say, was due not so much tc the military skill of Wellington and Blucher as to a defect in the Emperor’s pituitary gland, leading to obesity and las- situde. Could the Little Corporal have been acting out his own eni- gram “An army moves on its. stomach?”—Ottawa Joural he en Pocts Corwner| AUTUMN SOLACE Cold waves break on the sandy shore, Capped loosely with a foamy white. . Above, the leaden-colored sky Has robbed the day of warming light. ‘ Soot-laden smoke from murky flues : ; Pollutes the air round city blocks. Stark stems, whose flowers are . deed and gone, Stand lonely ‘mid the garder rocks. The heart has lost its gaietv The inmost being is wrapped in gloom. The zest for life has now become seldom re-| A captive in a vacant room. For this is fall when spirits droop, Depressed by grim and leafless trees Whose ugly. twisted branches hold And. yet, above the darkened clouds _ | congregation on Sunday that he! I know the sun is blazing bright. them and how they can be cured? | had accepted the call of the|I know that night precedes the Answer: Pimples, or acne,\ is | Presbyterian Church in St. John | | and would preach his farewell young people. Diet, age, glandu'ar day And darkness comes before the light. I know that whitened winter snow the living green of spring. I'm. sure that: natural death on earth ~— Another life to all will bring. —Bert Foster Charlottetown ° Sparkling:Clean ~ ~~ _ “~ ~ 47 (iba Your refrigerator can have the crisp freshness that only Baking Soda gives. Just sprinkle a little on a damp cloth and wipe over all surfaces. Tosweeten ice trays, wash in warm soda solution. rink. Soda is recommended by leading SRRRAMWPT TEST FSH ORMMPMIF ae peanay seaport ' YS MENS: 4| 0 Soe 4 CHRISTMAS TREES § | Sgassacqiaeryy'y On Sale From Dec. 10th & a. { : pe 3 ee Les 4 S'SIDE “Y" CENTRE 3 | er BCOECE CEEOL EET EN : 3 IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE... OR MISSED DIAL Special delivery service missed. and a paper will be delivered right to your door. | | a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or 6561 available between 8: DIAL 173 t.cat George St. Ed's Slogan: 1%5 QUEEN ST. ee For the Fastest Service in Town, call ED'S TAXI “To maintain the goodwill serve — the goal for which we strive!” 6561 Charlottetown | of those whom we Se fa Bee eld oe etude oe ema & coe eee THE WAY: ws 7