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Represented sationally by Thomson Newspapers Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empire 3.8894 Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Unk versity 65942, Western Office. 1030 West Georgie- Steet Vancouver (MA 7037. — Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian, Press The Canedian Press is, exclusively eniitied to the vie for repub lication “of all news dispatches in i's paper credited to it or to the Associated it or Reuters and aiso to the local news published heréin AU tight or republication of. specia! dispatches here in also réserved Subscription rete Not over 40c per week by carrier $12.00 « year by mai! on rural routes and areas Mot serviced by carrier $15.00 » year off Island and UK year in US. and elsewhere outside British Cone monwealth Not over 7c single copy- Member. Audit Bureau of Circulation. “PAGE 4 MONDAY,-JULY_ 5.14 10965. Mr.-Coates’ Complaint Before the Commons recessed Frank Walker Editeos ¢ ions. The court upheld state mgnts to offshore areas 53 times; then, in. 1947, its decision gave the “para- mount rights’ to Washington. But the. matter —_ too massive and difficult’ not to Tind a political ad- justment. In his 1952 campaign President Eisenhower said he would give the states their rights to all off- shore areas within their—historic boundaries—that is to say, the boun- daries recognized at their admission to statehodd. He’ redeemed this cam- paign pledgé With a bill, signed on May 22; 1953. It was, in a sensé, a compromise, for Washington retained control of | the Continental “Shelf beyond these $20.00 per _° boundaries. In 1960 the Supreme Court, in view of the Act of 1953, ruled that Texas, Florida, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi were all en- titled to offshore rights within their historic boundaries.. These rights _ varied from 10'% miles in the case of Jast. week Mr. Coates, PC member for Cumberland, said he understood that the Queen's Printer had already run out of copies of the Dorion Report, and asked Prime Minister Pearson to give assurance to. the House that there will be sufficient copies pub- lished to meet the public demand. Mr. Pearson replied; “We are always anxious to meet the public demand. We certainly hope it will be met in _ this case.’ This statement falls disappoint- ingly short of the definite commit- ment one would expect in a matter: | of this kind. Apparently only some 4,000 copies the findings in this important judicial investigation were printed following the public release of the report. The Qu that time was quoted as baying to in- x quiring newsmen: ‘‘We don’t think it 4. “will be a’ best-seller.” If this is the prevailing idea in official quarters, it prompts the suspicion that the wish is father to ‘the thought. Something more than an expression of “hope’ *~ quired to spur “his subordinates into- action, The implications: of this report are~ of vital concern to every voter, and it-should-be made available for study. in its full context in every, community across the country. Its importance lies; among-other-things,_in-its com- plete absence of bias, one way or the other. “Chief Justice Dorion’s in- quiry,” as one commentator well says, “was a model of its kind, avoiding any suggestion of either a political “whitewash or a political witch-hunt, but solely concerned to bring out the | facts. He has explored for Cana- dians a dark corner of our national life. and_one_ that eee needs oe sie AL aie Oietjoult (6 1 ry — cleansing.” Let's hope, then, that we shall hear no more complaints about the ~fovernment havtirg- —“run—out—of— “copies” of this. jhvaluable document. * Let the public decide “whether it is to become a “best-seller” or not, by placing it within the reach of all con- cerned. The Political Scene _~ Some good reasons why the ques- tion of offshore mineral rights is un- likely to be solved by reference to the courts are given by the Montreal Gazette in discussing the matter. Even-if-legat opinions gave-all these Tights exclusively to the federal gov- ernment, it argues, problems would arise -as_topow far Ottawa could pro- ceed in shutting the provinces out. The conflict of fact i§ seen in-the *s Printer-at— “ing salt water. Texas and Florida, to areas of only three miles in the case of some of the-other-states: Similar- differences might-exist-in-Canada;as-the various provinces were admitted under vary- ing conditions regarding their natv- ral resources. It seems hard to believe that an issue of this kind is likely to be settled except by-an adjustment -be- tween Ottawa and the provinces. Certainly it would be best if a de- velopment so unforseen at the time of Confederation should be settled, as other tangled questions. are being Settled, in the spirit of compromise and 'by means of negotiation. Desalting Quest With the northeast section of the continent seared by a long drought, added interest has attached to the efforts that are being made to get | fresh water out of the salt. sea at a reasonable cost. It is also a question of burning interest in-many other parts of the world, such as arid here water means lifé itself ael ifé itself. rae taken a leading role-in-re- search to find. be But.a determining factor in solving the problem .may ‘well be the spurt. which President Johnson has given researchers in the | United States by ordering full speed. ahead on a $275 million desalting © program. On top of this he has called an international meeting to convene | at Washington in October. | , he | | | When the U.S. Office of Saline Water was set up 13 years ago, it be- gan experimentally desalting water at a cost of $4 to $5 per thousand gallons. Now the cost is down to $1. to $1.25 per thousand gallons—an improvement but still high. The sal- ine-water. office says the avérage United: States consumer now is pay- ——+-ing-35-eents-per-thousand- galtons-of- fresh water. : One big problem is the implacably corrosive effects of salt water, its. ~.tendency-to-cake the “pipes-with: sedi- ment. A highly refined distillation process, probably powered by atomic ‘reactors which also would produce electricity, seems promising. . Other methods include: electrodialysis, in_ which positive and negative. elec- | trodes draw sodium and chlorine. out | | of the water. Another method is, freezing, in which salt crystals are | by the Menzies government in | trapped between crystals of pure | | way that.N6va Scotia, long years ago began butrowing under the sea.in its , -“eoal-mines- *Newfoundland-has’ "grant— ed off-shore explorationtyights jn*ari ~~ area where they had previoisly been "granted by Ottawa, and Ottawa has” granted such rights where they had ~ previously been granted by Quebec. And the government of British Co- || lumbia has opposed the granting of exploration rights by the federal gov- | ‘ernment off the Queen Charlotte | | that Dief will lead the party in the next election ‘campaign, even if it’s | Islands. . see “how the federal government, even if armed ‘with a judicial opinion on a matter which has been left uncertain by the British North America Act, could proceed to press Newfoundland, Nova - Scotia, Quebec and British Columbia out of all offshore rights. Nor does the matter end there. The other Maritime provinces are also concern- ed. So are Ontario‘and Manitoba, as they touch on Hudsén’s Bay, which is to press forward on a matter of this kind and importance, it would find water. The difficulty here is to sep- “nomically. 9 —Besides—severat-iutoratoriay | Sffice of Saline Water operates three demonstration plants which actually | supply desalted water to consumers. But production on a reasonable cost; . basis is still to be achieved. October’s | spoof to draw attention to the | | ; ment for Lord De L'Isle- who | completed his term as governor- arate the salt and ice crystals eco- | general on May 6 and had me e | ing in London a few weeks ago, | | | | international meeting may throw | | Some helpful light on this problem. Already 55 nations have — up to _ attend. ~ EDITORIAL NOTES’. e weren’t -quite sure where the Tory national president, Dalton | Camp, stood with regard to Mr. | Diefenbaker’s leadership. But he is | reported from Edmonton as saying TWENTY - two years away: Also that there is a general feeling in the party that Dief has ‘been more sinned against | than rn s * Recently Gaston Deferre, the 54- year-old Socialist mayor of Marseilles, managed to get France’s non-Co munist left-wing and moderate | itical parties together long enough to | pick him. as their coalition candidate~ a0) a with almost _ the provinces. ~ The Gazette notes, too, that the question arose in the United iene & where the Supreme Court wavered back and forth in its decis- - 6 was looming -forward in the contest in December. Later, however, _this_coalition effort collapsed and Mayor - Deferre announced that he has withdrawn his candidacy. Gen- eral de Gaulle would ‘appear to have a clear road ahead fdr. another term, if he wants it. ¥ | dian universities will take com- > President de Gaulle, who — ~ al Ottawa. os SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES “OTTAWA, REPORT By Patrick Nicholson . oa Big Rush:To Dodge Forseeable Vote Of all the proceedings of the | that the government may create no doubt feared: what a snap , present not very. praiseworthy | Parliament, the most shameful cant issue was Clause 4 of Bill Number C-118, ‘‘to amend the | Income Tax Act." Claus 4 re- lates to ‘Limitation re advertis- | ing expense’’; its significance is | _-that-it-disallows -as-an—expense; in~ calculating & corporation's tions which are not at least 75 per cent owned by Cafadians. The clause then specifically and | , Paradoxically’ exempts two ma | gazines which are widely re- garded ‘as U.S.A. giants camou- | flaged by a small maple leaf. by newspaper editors,many po- | liticians. representative of alt | political parties vehemently pro- | tested against the government's imposition—of —a—discriminatory | tax in’ the hypothetical event | that any foreigners buy a Can- | adian newspaper. While this specifically ts shocking, “the broader implica- | tion of this Bill is. that Cana- dians now accept the proposition | a subordinate class of Canadian citizens — per or corpor- | j exempting their favoured sibl- Ss. Thus it came about that, at about 3.25 p.m. on Friday 25th June, New rat Stanley Knowles a MPs when-he rciaees a pro- cedural —amendment --w hich would bel referred this contro- se k to the Com- mittee of the Whole House. Fri- day normally sees a thin atten- dance in the ‘Commons; antici- | pating a vote on such~ a move. | that day, I ‘had counted, the House half an hour after the 11 a.m. opening; merely 54 Liber- |_als versus 48 MPs of all other. stripes. were present — out of a membership of 265. By 3.25 in the afternoon, no* dotbt-the-week-end- trains for~ | Quebec and the _Air Canada planes for the West and the Ma- ritimes had taken away, as us- ual, many free-traveling MPs, | on parliamentary __ business. House Leader George Mcliraith High Vacancy “Winnipeg “A few weeks ago the following , Lord Carrington and: others.had “Conservative MPs from want ad appeared in the Sunday | .Firmes-in=Londtn: of Australia; preferably English | and Royal or near- Royal. Will- ing to spend at least four years | in Canberra. Salary £10,000 with | prospects of early increase. Ap- ply immediately: Sir Robert Menzies, Prime Minister, Can-. ~~ bera. : The advertisement. was a difficulties being experienced | Australia’ in finding a replace- turned to Britain. According to the Queen Mother, the Duke of. Gloucester, Princess Alexandra, | | Tribune been approached but for various | “reasons none-was- There has been some. sugges- | tion lately that Sir Robert may | have to ask an Australian to be- come governor- general. There is precedent for such a choice but government circles fear it | would touch oft a bitter. Partis- i an “TOW. Canadians ‘should be interest- | ed in this turn of events in the | sister dominion. Governor-Gen- eral Georges Vanier has just - completed his farewell tour as the representative 6f the Queen | in this country. Prime Minister i Pearson, like Sir- Robert, must | be pondering deeply the choice -of a successor. This could in- |_ might be expected... perhaps ‘even more than Sir Robert is ex- periencing. Montreal Star Barry Goldwater, landslide last year, is trying to dig’ him- | self out. He-has already taken | _two important steps on the path to political resurrection. ‘First,; he has announced he will-run-for- the United” States~ Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) FIVE YEARS AGO (July 5, 1940) | The_dipl correspondent of the News Chronicle said today that it had been confirmed offic- jally at Vichy that the Petain Government. had broken off dip- lomatic relations with Britain. Every male student in Cana- pulsory military training during the next college year as the universities co-operate with the government in applying the ma; bilization act to train men for home defence, it was announced TEN YEARS AGO tsabel ley Point and Kevin Blacquiere of North Rustico were 7 as Queen and King of 4-H at rural youth ie ieee ment~sponsored by the Depart- ment of Agric © St. Peter’s “Roman Catholic | Church at Sevén Mile Bay, 103 years old, was “completely de- stroyed by fire. Senate in 1968; probably .chal- — lenging Democratic Senator | | sburied_: by_, Carl “the Johnson election ~ bed by the _if Mr. Hayden de- “cides ‘to run again. This re | once more give Mr. Goldwa a political platform, but it f not. be available for ‘another. three years. In the meantime. Mr. Gol) water has “accepted the honor- ~ wae chairmanship of a new right- Republican organization called the “Free Society Asso. ciation.” This: association is well | staffed? with Goldwater partis- | ans. In a sense it recfeates the Goldwater party machine of last | year The. Free Society. Association is not the only Republican body vote would achieve and. reveal | under these circumstances, and | charade has been its handling | ate — against whom punitive he at once adjourned the debate , ‘of the newspaper and magazine ) taxation may be _ levied whilst | ‘dispute. The nub of this highly signifi- ing: to postpone the vote. ‘So it was on the following | Monday, after 5 p.m., when the vote was called, leaving ample has been made in’ our Raynaud's Syndrome By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien | Maurice Raynaud ( 1881) was the first to describe a circu- by blanching of the fingers, toes, ears, or nose. This was done more than 100 years ago and the disturbance still bears his name, Madame X, one of his patients, was been an infirmity that i object of cur- losity r s. n costing: the atmos- n caused he * bloed- less,” w t (numb), and a whitish color. She would wring them violently or soak them in lukewarm water; the vascular spasm would grad- ually zaet, and oe o~ would tingle, and in time re- ace ee —- treatment has burn and turn to The much in many vi at — other hand, progress “under- | Standing of the phenomenon. _ The spasms are .brought on. by emotional disorders as well as | cold. Attacks*can be precipitat- | rassment, causes may be difficult te con- time for the week-enders to re-., turn to the Capital. All Opposi- tion P the minority government -and hence at. full-strength could-de-— feat the measure. Phis wo not only halt the—Liberals'—ill!-* beral curb on. full freedom — of the press; it would also, warned | Finance Minister Walter Gor- don, lead ‘to the dissolution of | parliament and-an election, WHERE WERE YOU, Of 264 MPs who could have | voted; only 180 did: The Liber- only by 2 dissent- ing Socreds and 2 Independents, beat the-rest of the House by 102 votes to 78, a majority of 24. But ed by anger, excitement, embar- or anxiety. These trol and may require sedatives, tranquilizers or — pychiatric care. Sympathectomy is of little value and those using vasodila- tors usually develop more un- pleasant side effects than the drug is worth. . : Those with mild or moderate Raynaud's syndrome need counseling in how to live with the disorder, especially when the cause is not. known. They | should wear warm clothing and take extra care of the extremi- ties to prevent injury. Avoid ex- posure to cold. and bathing in \eold water. Chilling and damp- fiess also play a role in that the fingers or toes may react to ‘slight cooling when “these” factors co-exist. Raynaud's phenomenon is pro- gressive in some and may be associated with tightening of the skin (scleroderma); ulcers or gangrene may develop on the tip of the involved digits. A rel- ated condition may follow frost- | bite, nerve injury, or paralysis. ‘ J. A. writes: What causes con- --stipation — “my diet oe oth-- | habits- na EDLY - Change in bowel habits, espe- 'clally in individuals over 50 must be. viewed with suspicion. There always is a_ possibility | that the bowel is being obstruct- | ed by a growth. Other causes in- clude loss of muscle tone and a the Conservatives, who had so | bitterly denounced this legisla- | tion; lacked no less:than 35 of | their number — ample to tip the | balance on that vote. To my | reduction in the secretion of en- zymes and other digestive juic- es. * , CRACKLING: JOINTS FE. F. writes: | mové I have cFackling of~ the neck, wrists, elbows, knees, and ankles. Is _ at vitamin. ¢ | tency? y ‘REPLY ' No, nor is it lack of joint. oil, 4: surprise I noted that even the | Crackling and ‘grating ‘sounds chief Conservative whip, Eric | a ler, was not present for this | seeable vote; further, he | hed failed to put on the whip to “Summon his’ MPs to Ottawa. The chief defectors were the | | west, especially the phone cowboys" “able-to-accept- {ker | WANTED= Governor-~General-"-the-honots012 someone or Hethey with their chief, the government , would have been defeated, and | ; their leader would by now have plunged into the electioneering | which seems to provide him with his happiest moments. Why were the cowboys ab- | sent? Why did 35 out of the 94 | te vOtE A — i usually result from roughening of the joints or stretching of the fibrous tissue surrounding them. RMLESS Mrs. E. T. -writes: Gan the | color used to dye écleansing tis- | ful? HAIR LOSS R. U. G. writes: Does scaly. | itching dandruff cause falling hair or is it the scratching I do? | REPLY | Tory’ MPs duck the vote which | could have overthrown the Pear- | | son Government? We we now have government-by-blackmail? And is this ail that the Conser- vative MPs can do to preserve the freedom of our press? une, The scalp condition is pri- marily responsible. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Keep matches and cigaret lighters’ away from children. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore icago, Miinois,) Whenever I | se eoeerriwnaesrnil the | sue and toilet paper-be , harm- : bam qrers + eceespetonpoene. ok ae Verwoerd Takes Tough Line By Arch MacKenzie South Africa's separateness. is with American racial oo tion, But is no indication this will havé any impact on the views of Prime Minister Hendrik F. Verwoerd. except to strengthen them. Indeed, the U.S. may have to bend ‘some of its integration principles. Verwoerd is believed. to have taken a tougher line with’ the U.S. and other countries re- cently because such displays of resoluteness tend to unite more strongly South Africa's minority white population. His domestic opposition has been growing steadily weaker. He made big in elections in March and = nother election due within a year. South Africa has hed a series of brushes with the U.S. n line with United Nations policy, the U.S. declines to sell defence equipment to South Af- rica,-even. though it would earn.- of the U.S. a . The U.S. refusal is resented by the South Africans. CALL..CANCELLED — Last May, the U.S. aircraft carrier. Independence was scheduled to pay South Africa a routine courtesy call. It was cancelled when South Africa said no American Negro would. be permitted to land 7 South African alr. "bases with white air crews. > that » Recently, Verwoerd Tu packs a a space-listening post near Pre- ‘toria, the, capital, must not use | any American Negro scientists. | The U.S. and South Africa man the station jointly and, lihood of an American Negro being posted there, the South Africans made an issue of it. They apparently were aiming at-a remark by a state depart- ment spokesman that the U.S. might not be able to accept suth limitations. Now it appears the U.S. ‘would have to move ‘ts station = nother country if it rotest effectively. waits suggest Ver- woerd timed his space-station stand to coincide with the inde- pendence - day party at the- American Embassy in Pretoria. The U.S. has continued to invite guests to the embassy without regard to the color of their skins and this has irked the South Af- rican” government; SITUATION FIRM s Verwoerd's position now is believed much more secure pol- itically and a se it was five years ago. the country's 3,200,000 ae support him and the number of his critics dwindle, from jailing or other reasons. South Africa has-13,800000 non- — including 11,600,000 Ne- Othe South African economy 1s booming, paced by gold and cheap labor and undeterred by ineffective trade boycotts spon- sored mainly by newly-emerg- ent black African nations. There are some signs, observ- ers suggest, that-Verwoerd sees the day coming when no oppo- sition will remain among the white ruling minority te his party or se Britain Going To Meters. pial Journal Britain's announcement that its weights and measures will all be converted tothe metric system in the next 10. years means that the United- States may be left as the<=only major | power using nonmetric units. The British_ plan involves -a changeover “sector by sector.” | The goal is to win bigger mar- | kets on the continent and in | other. metric system nations where Britain now sells more than half ‘of its exports. Another | 6.5 per cent of exports go to | countries in the process of | change, ‘including India. Under the metric systent. de- | véloped” by “French scientists and made the legal system.of-; France in 1799, units of length, «| capac an weight are all’ ted and are, based on the mal -scaleIn—! ‘xf-the years ahead, British yards | and miles wilt Biveiway to met: | ers and kilometers, ounces and | pounds to grams and kilos, pints and quarts to half liters and lit. | ers. In-the United States. congress HEATWAVE KILLS 17 ROME (AP)—The number of | dead in an eight-day Italian heat wave rose to 17 Thursday “with dozens more’ drowned _try- ~ing-to cool off at beaches and’ pools. Most of the victims died | of heat exhaustion or sunstroke, | throughout Italy | reached the high 90s (fahren- heit) for six consecutive. days with little breeze and increas- ing humidity... adopted a monetary system in 1792 based on decimal units of 10, but ignored the urging of | Thomas Jefferson to extend the |.decimal system to all weights and measures. The new nation clung to British units— some -datingback—to-Roman-times== that the colonists had brought to the new world. : Congress made the metric system legal in 1866 for those who wished to use it. It has been adopted by science gener- ally, by some industries and in government by the coast and | geodetic survey and Copart- ments de. tions. Progress has been slow -Biggest obstacle-to-a complete changeover -would be cost ew Yor mes reports that the expense would range from hundreds of millions to several | billion dollars depending upon | how. swiftly the change was ef- fected. Another opstacie is public op- position to learning a new — though simpler—system. The British hope to-gain acceptance through education and gradual transfer, A first practical step is expected to be the use of metrie en in all publie con- ——_ TLE LTS Ma Tit Storey Electric Ltd. b Prince St., Chotown DE VELOPMENT BANK _A representative of the bank will be at Charlottetown on July 6th, 1965 Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- If you require a tern loan for a new or existing busl- | ness, you are invited to discuss your: needs with him. | An. appointment can be arranged by telephoning National Geographic Society To the beach-goer, dunes seem lifeless. To the biol- | - ogist, however, they are a fas- Goldwater Revives cinating world teaming with | life. Insects and myriad other creatures inhabit dunes despite surface—heat-that-soars—to 135 degrees, the National Geographe | ic Society says. Winged animals can escape their ovenlike world - by. taking short, cooling. flights. - Others are specially adapted to survive. _ In the June issue of National - Geographic, Delaware marine biologist William H. Amos tells. about his summer-jong study of the at Henlopen Dunes at the mouth of Delaware Bay. PROTECTIVE SHIELDS es, the more insects - and other creatures I found, and the more | to exist side by side with the I noticed their protective heat | official, national party organiza- | tion. But it is much more of a danger to the. moderate, nation- | al body than any of the others. For this ‘new association is certain to attract disturb- ingly large number of Americ-. ans who have been ‘mesmerized by the Goldwater thereby having a.splitting effect on the- Republican Party. Furth- er, it_ will ison one vaely meee | off funds which are assocfation. bis effect_of — Gold- water's Free Society Association is fairly apparent. In 1968, the Republicans will. probablg be | badly split, ony will thus. badly lose, ae ‘oe gain the sup- the Goldwater group. But a, gain this support, they would have to accept another | right- wing candidate. Either le shields,” Mr. Amos writes. “Some creatures were so swa- | thed in light-colored ‘fur’ that | they looked like miniature Eski- | mos in hooded parkas. wasps, wore furry coverings, although often it took a powerful magni- | mystique, fying glass to detect them. Some | | mot just sand,’ he said, of the digger wasps had silvery | _bursting from their protective in the spores were countless bacterial hairs between the eyes, region ‘of their tiny brains. It is conceivable that these a the intense heat of the | bers of wind-borne spores ‘and beetles. wasps, and cysts were percolating down- day, ‘aa keep to small holes: Rabbits hide their young under | | Pieces of rotting timber. Field | mice huddle beneath Jow- lying } shrubs. Cold-. blooded animals | such as lizards, toads,‘ and snak- es also seek out the shade. | way, it looks as if the Republic- At night the s come alive ans are in for another humilia- with an intensity that surprised tion in 1968: —- i Mr. Tiny Pinpoints _ g ¢ : ‘i ~ a o \ {oe —# - + nec i | { t Flies, | of sand. He took dry. surface beetles, and spiders all | sand, and cultured it in the lab- may | al with those I had found far be- oes as-efficiency heat reflec- neath the surface: Apparently, “vast “num d| hot sand | light in shimmering ice-ble_ clus- ters turned out to.be the watch- | | ful eyes of sand-colored spiders. ‘Almost all the dune ‘nhabi- tants are predators,”’-he reports. The fiercest are the larval ant lions, or doodlebugs, as they | -are_known to children. ‘Theses: little predators ambush their prey from conical pits they dig in the sand. An insect trespass- er..that..tumbles into. the trap_is immediately dragged beneath the sand to be pierced. bythe doodiebug’s sickle-shaped jaws, | “then consumed. The miscroscope is necessary | to reveal the tiniest animals of | the dunes: Micro- organisms of | | infinite big swim about in | ' dune Another whole, | swims deep within the dunes among grains of sand saturated | with moisture. PERCOLATES DOWNWARD Mr: Amos wondered’ how this | microscopic world sustained it- self so deep-beneath the hot hills oratory under sterile conditions. ' “What I had’ collected ee “for and one-celled anjmals. identic- MR. R. J. COLLINS : ; at the Kirkwood Motel or in advance by writing to INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK ' 236 St. George Street E just released | ; with every” rainfall, | ward through the sand into the sub-surface world.” MORE, CASH FOR HEALTH The South’ African administra- tion of Southwest Africa, a United Nations mandate, plans science . + PRICE: pe May I rege Bm wor health services —_— ag ges ae . . CAPITAL The question shortly to come before Parliament ! Here is all the basic information you need concerning the purpose and value of Capital Punishment: @ very controver- | slal'and a very subjective issue. You ee : Paperbound edition! Now available ‘from your local bookseller or direct by mail from the Queen’s una er Canada. —Moncton,—N:B. yOUSTRIAE : $1.00.