_ long Harrington 3 quiet glade of the Gatineau Hills about ° 25 < — of here in neighboring uebec, Princess Margaret stayed there during a ‘visit last year. _ The two-storey, seven-bedroom lodge was built in 1925 at a cost of about $100,000. The National Capital Commission, federal agency responsible for carrying out a master plan to make the Ottawa afea beautiful, has owned the property as part of Gatineau National Park since 1951. Works Minister Green, Govern- ment House leader, introduced the legislation and Rodolphe Le- due (L—Gatineau)—in whose con- stituency the preperty is located —and H. W. Herridge (CCF—! Kootenay West) ‘welcomed it on behalf of their parties. | NAME LOST? Geneva Abandonment Should Be By GRAHAM TROTTER Canadian Press Staff Writer PRINCETON, N.J. (CP) — The Western powers should resist the temptation to abandon forthwith the negotiations at the Geneva foreign ministers conference, Prime Minister Diefenbaker said here. Addressing the 212th com- mencement exercises of Prince- ton University, which bestowed on him an honorary degree of doctor of laws, Diefenbaker told an audi- ence of 5,000: “Western rights are clear and the Western cause is just, and it .is te be hoped therefore that the principal' Western negotiators will continue to exercise patience in probing every possibility of mak- ing even minor progress in re- ducing the area of disagreement which separates the East from the Wi ~~ ____.The Geneva talks had at least shown “how modest must be the expectations and hopes of the Western world” in such negotia- tions. - They also had demonstrated that the Western powers are, “ynited in their determination not to abandon their rights or the peo- ple of West Berlin.” ° TEN OTHERS HONORED Diefenbaker was among 11 per- gons receiving honorary degrees. |Park in the vicinity of the lake ‘would be no restriction on fish- Marian Anderson, interna-. tionally - known American con-| baker said, “to make transpar- ‘| in it, the lake was known as Lac Mousseau. When and why had it The ensuing discussion, at times. noisy, drew in a number’ of members. J. W. Pickersgill (L—Bonavista-Twillingate) came up with a compromise that was finally accepted by. all — Lac Mousseau was inserted in brack- after Harrington Lake in the i. Mr. Green said only 18.4 acres uf the -4,286 acres of Gatineau will go with the house. There) ing or other usés of the lake by others. ; The Harrington lodge comes under the same act as the offi- cial Ottawa residence provided | for the prime minister at 24 Sus-| sex Street: in 1950. : Resisted tralto and U.S. delegate to the United Nations general assembly, received an honorary doctorate of humanities. Diefenbaker was the sixth Ca nadian to be so honored by Princeton, the others including Governor - General Vincent Mas- sey,.Opposition Leader Lester B. Pearson and the late Sidney Smith, former external affairs minister. Speaking of the U. S. First World War president, Woodrow Wilson, Diefenbaker said he was the voice of the conscience of democracy — his advocacy not narrow or nationalistic. He _en- deavored to bring together in unity and co-operation the na- tions which believed in democo- racy. . “That message is vital today,” | the prime minister said. “It is a 114 The ee eee es commenced his apprenticeship for electrician and spent the first two years with the firm operat- ee ee ee The next two years of his train- ing was taken with Good Electrie on what is now Kirkwood Drive. Obtaining his apprentice cerii- ficate, Mr. Newson tnen went to the employ where he held the position of foreman for approximately sev- en years. LONDON (Reuters) — Liber- ace’s lawyer made a sharp attack on Britain's biggest daily newspa- per Tuesday in asking a high court jury to bring in a heavy libel judgment against the paper. Gilbert Beyfus, summing up be- fore the case’s scheduled presen- tation to the jury of 10 men and two women today, called the London Daily Mirror ‘‘vicious and violent, venomous and vindictive, salacious and sensational, ruth- less and remorseless.” The Mirror has a circulation of nearly 5,000,Q00. ently clear that there is no inten- tion to control, to interfere, or to bring about any alteration in the ideas or he objectives of the na- tions and peoples to whom co-op- eration is offered.” Best Wishes message which the United States and Canada prize in their rela- tionship’’. The price of freedom was co-operation and the urize of co-operation was freedom. GULFS TO SPAN Broad gulfs between the de- | veloped and the undeveloped re | gions of the world had to be spanned to achieve peace. The, free nations must continue to of- fer help to the underdeveloped nations, not in the spirit of char- ity but of co-operation. “It_is one of the sternest trials of western leadership,” Diefen- Great George St. of Storey Electric, | recently Biggest British Newspaper Faces Liberace Libel Threat NEWSON ELECTRIC H. M. SIMPSON LTD. Stationery and Office Equipment i EX BD - ¢ LO BRE SILO The lawyer for the American television pianist said it was time Mirror columnist William Connor, also a target of Liberace’s libel suit, was taught the danger of words and halted “‘this incessant rudeness which apparently pays off so well in the jcurmalistic pro- fession.”” Mirror lawyer Gerald Gardiner also talked to the jury before Justice Cyril Salmon began charging it in the sixth day of the entertainer’s suit against the paper and Connor. WINDS UP TODAY ' The judge is to wind up his, charge this morning and then hand the case to the jurors. As is the custom under British law, | damages sought are not specified in advance. _ Liberace/ 40, charges that when eR SAO NRT for Success ! Charlottetown |; @ WIRING: Specializing in all types of wiring, plant and house. . . new buildings wired regardless of size. We invite your inquiries. \ ee see REFRIGERATORS DRYERS MIXERS © ,. TOASTERS OPENING SPECIAL ! ~ S ie , i 5 i tt g et u if ‘ e fi ay gE if | | . 5 3 Terk ii 2 ; i . i gs f E E w g z ° 5 a E i a Fe Z i EEE Es ; 5 he Ls At the morning service in a Bloomfield United Church Sun-|. oi MH 3 : i de a eis geapeqi Fs fit ®: g supervisor Mr: Merritt Callaghan Word was received by Mrs. Dan Buchannan O'Leary that onl 229 Mr. Heber Profitt and vir. | and Mre. Arthur Harris | O'Leary and daughter Jessie | Mrs. Haro!d Ashley Alberton | returned to their homes Sunday | night after visiting with relatives | in Saint John N.B. over the weekend. : Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Fawcett returned to their home in Monc- Best Wishes from DONALD C. 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