Even the spirit of Christmas is split by the wall dividing East and West Berlin. Rival Christmas trees face each other on the Communist, back- ground. and Western sides of $2.... WALL DIVIDES CHpjerAs splle lam... ...r..-n.4.l......organ-.1.ism:' H ‘front of his plalie. He tried toltllc jet ripped through the cabin ‘being negn'iatpd_ -. w... damages ne wheel of. OTTAWA tCPl—Pt‘lme Min-l ister Dietenbaker was asked in 0|~ Mac milla n next week. finding out whether he invited himself. -' Mr. Diefenbaker did not ‘ 1PLV- 2 This was one instalment of ‘contlnulng attempts by Opposi— ’ , ition members to use newspaper llreports to pry information or i. lcomment from cabinet mem- laine lSC — hers. quoted a British re- the papers." J. Macmillan was Wot the Viscount. killing the cause Mr. .istewardess and fatally injuring la passenger. In a statement tabled in the . Commons. Mr. Sevigny said . .steps have been taken to ensure _ that all aircraft are well clear ;»of the runway in use before a ' departing aircraft is cleared for takeoff. He said also that claims for have been made by were injured or and hey are Speaker one through Mr. persons who _ ‘su did not answer. ffered losses. {22 The Guardian, Charlottetown. Wed. Dec. 12, 1962. Dietenbaker Avoids '7Bahamas Visit OUery Speaker Marcel Lambert has said repeatedly that such ques- wliat this‘ govern- mcnt is doing that by reading 41. —— Bonavista . said at one point Tuesday. The question about Mr. Diet- cnbakcr's trip to the Bahamas‘do was posed by Gerard Cliapde-‘the federal government is try-l . , ing to do for Canadian produ-land family 0f Bagolvllle. Que- .bec are visiting his parents. Mr. Mrs. Frank Paquet. The be-‘Centrel later ,asked whether thelalso iattended the Paquet-Wals ' “8- I | t l I A large audience enjoyed a 'ConVert DUDliC buildings to f811"Scottish concert which was held recently in St. lSouris. The concert included: a Harkncsy ‘0 "‘9 Press- 'number of Scotch songs by St. Sherbrookei 3 i———-—————‘—"“‘—" paper. The People. saying Mr. Dictenbaker invited i government himSelf to the Bahamas. Macmillan meets there Dec. 20- 21 with President Kennedy. RULES OUT QUESTION Lambert Mr. (‘hapdelaine's question the first time. But he let a second when Credit MP eliminated all refer- ences to newspaper reports. Dicfenbaker smiled and A similar incident arose when Walter Gordon (L —- Toronto .Davenport) asked Trade Minis- ter flee: to say whether United; States branch plants and sub. sidiaries in Canada are accepting export orders. He ed his question on a Toronto Globe and M report‘ of a remark in Chicago Monday by Ontario Economics Minister Robert Macaulay. . SPEAKER INTERVENES Mr. L a m b e again. Then Mr. Gordon in : the Commons Tuesday whether lions are improper par- ports and tried anew, e he has been invited to the Ba- liamentary procedure. ' I Q hamas to meet Prime Minister "’l‘icre is no other way of ply by saymg it was “an obvj. ver- ous reference" to lay's remarks. he was chided by; W. Pickersgiil ' Twillingalel tirely improper course. Mr. Hees finally said only that Mr. Macaulay is trying to for Ontario producers what: who Sunday news- i n 2 James E. Walker (L — Yorkiand irritated is pushing ahead W Mr. with a $1,000,000.000 program tol out shelters “as reporte by ‘the minister of defence (Mr. ruled out EXCAVATE-CITY l Miss Jeniece Cheverie. Sourls. .have . ["9 is a patient in the Charlotte-laundromat. vented by their Parent! f"lmttown Hospital where she receiv- ied surgery. , Ithe past three years in Ger- lmany with the armed forces, is Charlouemwn: lvisiting friends and relatives in ted friends in SOUFlS- ]Souris. He is guest of his broth- rt in'tuceptedler-in-law and sister Cst. and‘ - iMrs. Ja es ox. out reference to newspaper re-= Mr. Mr. MaCAU- . Camilla Walsh. Mr- D'efenbake“ 53“! he‘lMiiry‘s Glee Club. selections by would have to see the press re- tthe Lads and Lassies of Chan ole Social collides: “Pime- , .Hflottetown. ‘ ur e and A Norwegian and Danish‘ex- lDonald..step dancing by Heath- , pedition of archeologists is ex- er and Shirley Burke, Scottish! one-act play of Diplomacy Mr. and Mrs. Melt Lan- SOURIS Miss Joan MacPhee left 'cently for Hamilton. Ont. \lll Phillip Cheverie. who spent She Will be (‘mPIOYEd- J. S. GillespieI Mr. and Mrs. recently vi ZURICH (APl—The and St. jened Saturday to expel its So The bride is the former :freedom _is restored free world. decla available evidence disregard for e press by South Korean authorities." y‘ s * . . . . Hall. Mary's l ' ' a song by Tommy one by his brotheri cavating a 3.000-year-old town in dances by members of the Lads Kuwait. land Lassies Band and also entitled “A Malta; recently opened SOUl‘l! CRITICIZES SOUTH KOREA Mrs. Bert Paquet tional Press Institute threat. . twere recently married in ‘ When Mr. Hees began his re- Joachim’s Church, Vernon Ri- [Korean committee unless pres; . , t, in South Korea. The institute. a private I . " Mn and Mrs. Leo Gallant of organization of .editors through. the Speak“ for tam“ "a" “n' i Charlottetown attended the mar. ‘0‘“ triage of Mrs. Gallant‘s brother. l hat a“ lBert. which took place in Ver- idlcates a total loan River recently. freedo ’ LAC and Mrs. David Paqueti och in. Pro sit. utll red in. the the . i the divided city. Scene is at Heinrich Heine Strasse where. in background. is customs shed erected by the Commiin- ‘ Isis for the purpose of proces- - sing visitors from West Gcr- ‘- maiiy. (AP Wirephoto) Reforestation Scheme is Planned VANCOUVER ICPl--—Up to ‘20 years ago. British Columbia for- ests easily outgrew the harvest- ing rate 0 the province's log- ging industry. But since then. the annual ciil. has increased so much that it is nearing a balance with the rate of growth. John Hemmingsen. a man who enjoys the sight of green timber equally with tacle of rolling logging trucks. wants to do something about the impending imbalance. And .- gus MacBean wants to help lm. Mr. Hemmlnuscll i.= vice-pres- ident and general manager of logging for Mai-Millzln. Blocdcl and Powell River llrllltf‘tl. .llr. MacBean is chief forester. Together they announced a '0- year-program~\'ast and scien- tific—to speed up :i‘owth and squeeze more u ood per acre from the woodlands. PROJECT MAKES JOBS ‘ic c om n y will spend 55.000000. plant 40.000.000 trees. hire F0 new fiilltime employees immediately and eventually will need 500 for jobs created by the project. .»\ total of 20.00" acres of new managed forest will be created annually. Part of the plan is to reduce the existing growth cycle of trees from 90 to 80 years and to help B.(‘. forests approach the growth rate of trees in com- peting areas of the world. House Briefs OTTAWA ' I‘P ' Stanley K n o w l e s >.\'DP Winnipeg North (fentl'el asked in the Commons Tuesday whether pay increases for 63.000 cit-ll serv- ants announccd Monday would also apply to employees of Crown companies reporting to the defence production depart» ment. Defence Production Min- O'Hurlcy said it would . the company char- ters. but so far as he kew. the increases would not apply auto- matically to Crown company employees. Finance M l n l st e r ‘.\'owlan stepped carefully aroundsthe omission of a large group of government employees from the pay increases. Alexis Caron tL—Huil) asked why_ lowest grade clerks and typists re- ceived no increase. Mr. Nowlan replied only that it was because. the Civil Service Commissions pay research bureau "reported in that~ way." Trade Minister Bees said he does not expect the United States to curb imports of Cana- dian lumber before the new year begins. Arthur Laing (L— Vancouver South) asked Mr. Bees what representations Can- ada had made to the United States against restrictions which appeared to he imminent. Mr. Hear said that hearings by the United States Tariff Com- mission had just been com- pleted but it was not expected ‘therc would be any decision or action before the end of the o Secretary Halpenny and report of a special commis- lnto employment l the spec- ‘ n- ‘board feet of wood a year above For BL. l ‘ The company expects this will increose productivity of the for- est lands by about 15 per cent and. in some stands. by 50 per Mr. Hemniliigseli alld Mr. Mat-Bean say it may be 10 years before results of tile company‘s program can be measured. But in the forst industry. 10 years is a short time. PLAN SEVEN STEPS The plan in its seven steps is expected to yield 140.000.000 the normal harvest. enough to supply a newsprint mill with a daily capacity of 700 tons. The steps: lCal'ly planting after logging. which will put. forest land back into production seven to 10 years earlier than by natural reseed- iilg: trees will be spaced 400 to the acre for maximum yield: Fill~in planting in areas dam- aged by mice. deer. grouse or frost: Thinning in dense stands. again to establish the optimum number of trees per acre: Rehabilitation of stands that started badly after earlier plant- ing—involving salvage. cutting over and replanting: Rirlding commercial forests of alder trees. which often over- shadow and suppress conifers: Planting of deciduous trees. such as hybrid poplar alld cot. tonwood, in such areas as river ottoms were they can be grown ‘ quickly: Commercial thinning of trees that can he used for pulp bill that would normally die at the age of 30 an Precautions Are Tightened After Collision OTTAWA (C‘Pl w Associate Defence Minister Sevigny said in the Commons Tuesday spe- cial precautions are being ta- ken to prevent recurrence of the kind of airport accident that killed two persons in a colli- sion between an RCAF Voodoo jet and a TCA Viscount last Oct. 10 at Bagotville. Que. He said the accident occurred after the TCA passenger plane. landed and was instructed tot jturn off the airstrip and head} for the terminal. The airporti traffic controller saw the Vis- count start to turn and then ‘looked at other traffic while he. ‘told the Vbodoo to take off. Instead of completing the turn. however. the Viscount continued down the strip to another turn- ing - off point. Meanwhile. the; ‘Voodoo pilot started his takeoffl run and did not see the Viscount icontinuing down the strip since‘ ;he. was checking his instru-' jments. ' The Voodoo was already air- lbor e a few feet when the pilot » t E. i 57*; “WW*I”*" . . SAVE ON YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING Bargain Dept. . .» now open . . Valerie polio, "$303934. . Silver TV Table Tree withl tights. reg. 5.75 Now 4.4! . Men's Fitted Ulllty Cam v reg. 0.00 Now us my“: . . and other Items to much u 50% off. PARKDALE PHARMACY "Opo- tIlI 10 pm. 1 night- I week." M44553 for him . . . personally. . . . “Shaggy” Pullover Shirts Comfortable style in a lightweight pullover . . . Shaggy orlon pile with knitted cuffs and hail waist band; contrasting trim on collar: V'-neck . . . in attractive shades of red. olive, gold and white . your gift list will want to find under the tree on Christmas morning. 14.95 and - . a gift every “he” on 16.95 MALLORY HATS by Stetson Bl'lhhed or l‘lJllll t'lil‘ it'll ll.’ll'— . pro-creased centl'c (lent on pinched trout. rlihhcr .‘~\\cat band plastic lined crown. narrow brim. with neat con: trasting hand , . , sizes are ti 1 0 Tu . , . . in shades of (‘l‘lillt'l‘tlL grey. blue grey, charcoal and olive min. 8.95 SCARVES Comfortable styles. soft WALLETS and wam ‘ i . desgm‘d Tan and black . . . com- in altuamive plaid‘s_ plete with change purse r, ‘ . and picture holders . . f “p” and 913‘" 0010‘? a leather gift that's :Lsodtarm35 bl' ' -,m always welcome . . . ' a 95 ""- “""ev and priced for Christ- grey. olive. n v . . , - - .i - mas lyin at~ in all wools and rayons, g g I 2.95 _ 3.95 2.95 _ 5.00 DRESS GLOVES Comfortable style; warm fleece. or teryiene lining and wool lining; fancy stitching: plain kid glove: unlined gloves . . . in black. brown and natural. 2.93 - 3.98 - 4.98 fully lined; also "OLD SPICE Popular gift with all men shaving Lotion alid talc lotion l'lll‘lslStS of pre- shaving cream and after shave lotion; aitcr shave shower ta c or individual pieces of talc. soap, lotion or deodorant. 1.50 to 5.00 UTILITY CASES Genuine leather case. easy to carry . full Zipper closure. plastic pouch bag inside. and plas- tic inner lining: will not crack. . Regular 5.98 ' 3.98 DRESS HOSE ‘ The British Byford all wool hose. nylon reinforced shrink resistant: it; or full length in sizes 10% to 12; charcoal, grey, wine. blue. 1.98~ ‘CH’TOWN STORE OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 9 P.M. S’SIDE STORE DAILY 5 P.M. - FRIDAY 9 PE Regular or tapered body in attractive checks or stripes; regular or button down collar. breast pocket, washable; all cotton porcelain prints and Drip-Drt . . . sizes S-M-L in greys, olives. blues. DRESS 4 Comfort style; single pleated front, non slip rubber grips on waistband. manently creased; botany wool for neater fit; sizes 29 to 44 in charcoal. grey and olive: sparkling new arrivals for Christmas . . . MEN’S sronr sullns 5.95 and 6.95 ‘ Popular Gift for style-conscious men SLACKS (SontoCIauwllboInboflism-u dully—I:30p.m.to3:30pan.) Sometimes It's hard to know just the right gift to give ‘ . but when you give slippers from Holman's your . everyone needs. and morn . . chorus problem is a problem no more . . loves to find new slippers on Christmas yours here from a tree-full of styles and colors. f MEN'S ROMEO HOUSE SLIPPERS 2 favorite styles. fashioned with comfort in "ad. of brown side leather; side gores and 4 I -MEN-’S SOFT COMFORT SLIPPERS front side fastening: sizes 61/: to 11. in moulded side leather. warm Ihearling cuffs. rubber heels: sizes \ are 6 to " I‘ 5. in? I % MISSES' CUDDLE PUPS of luxurious and cost comfort for your child‘s eet; fluffy shearling uppers: padded soles; blue only; CHILDREN’S SLIPPERS Wonderful ptl'esent for the little Elephant slippers of rayon pink and blue. sizes 8 to tt. 1 . . CHILDREN'S Super flexible soles; machine wash: ~ non-slip leather outsoles; elastic side gom and Zip-Up 2 I WOMEN'S "DUNK-UMS, " machine washable: clippers that give a new standard sizes 11 to 3. 2 I 9 pinch backed with foam rubber: FOAM'I'READ SLIPPERS bootie; sizes 0 to 8. 2 I my 100% Mon: 3 mm; foam monu- Iolea: gull. turquoise ‘ I aim S-M-L: Hectic cue. V l .