@nnrdimt avers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow 3 Hancox, Pubtuher Burgn Lewis PranL \Aaikev Esagutive Editor no! Published every week day moran (except Sun- day} and statutmv holidays) at l65 Prince Street, Chatcnciown. P.l_.l.. b/ Thomson Newspapers I'd. Branch offices at Sovuvneiside, Montague, A'ber- ICIZIHd SDLIM. Represents-*1 natmmallv/ by Thammn Newspapers Arol'értismq Servrces Toronto, 425 University Ave. Eivpire 36594; Montreal, (:40 Cavhmn Street Ll we,ny 059:2, \"Jrsfem Office. I030 West (3 ” i 5( (cl Vancouver (MA “‘37). :lk-mber Condo in Daily Newspapev Publish": tit-iocva'ton and I‘m: Canard-an Press. The Canadian pf6§ is svcuzwe‘v omitted in the use for rencb- [ration o‘ a (itsputchrs this paper iwtdi'ed In it c' to ire Associated Press or Raul!” aro‘ also to the local (15.25 published hereto. All 113112 or yr: ohmimi of s‘fieilai dispatrhcs hera- rates. It news in also resr’rvpri. Scljslyiption Not over 35'. or.“ week by carrier. or run! rowel nod 51!! Il‘. 512371 a mi by our! "7' spruftfifid h, rar'P'. 515cm 4 YM- hit 1‘ and and Uh.- SZ‘“ “0 par and 3.59u.‘15'e ottsde B'itsh Cow» (’ «(- g C Fmon APRIL in. this]. ___._.._._._____ out Of The Titans \\'e‘rc on the sidelines lIl lllln (""rll’lltd‘. bu. it is well to realize that the oxv‘nunci of thunderbolts be- I‘occii T’vlviiiu und Moscow is shak- in;' the whole t‘oniiiiiiiii:f world at, this tinira livcri Clash in the duel» "e'uin. moi-v accusation. rocriniiiiatioii. :iiid insult——i'irouuces ll:~ side effects. Pol- "llIlL-tl full-int is spreading. :1 ii (I izlPfllOL'il'di ironiors are stinking the structure} .‘fil‘ifl loyaltio: of some 90 Continuum parties from Albania to Zunuil‘mr. The (.‘I’Illliil’l vouched s new peak lust week as the Chinese called upon all li‘llmlllllllists to repudiate Premier Iihrushclim. whom Peking accuses of heiiir: 'nt- greatest Trotskyite of all lllllf“. l'ho Russians accused the Chinese of I‘Hllfillt'llllz open war- i'uro against true Communism and trying to impose the “cult of Mao 'l‘sc-tunp" upon the entire world. The i~zuc is still being argued on idcoloziiul grounds and both sides :Iill keep up the. surface formality of the Marth vocabulary. But the crux of it comes Close to the surface when Mr. Khrushchev translates ('oniniuiiist terms into “goulash” and ‘iroiisci‘s". Ho says they are moi ‘6‘ important t ha ll revolution. The ("iiincse emphasize revolution claim on the machin- ni the Soviet L'nion is icinprl on flit: tlivorv of the import- :iri-p to ("omniunism of the success of revolution in f“omnui;iist China. Flo-slow mud deny the inherent \‘ll'v I:IP of i'oioliit'ioii to _iii;.tifv the fact of having cut off aid to China. A key matter now is "'hPTllOt‘ the 'ri.-t «up in this hrcrich will he tulicn Chinoo. Moscow l‘IGIBII-e VHF-(r ci and twirl I." llri.:o\’it(‘~ \l' miQ‘lil cull :i coiit'crciirc and Ill\'llP tin» ("nine-i. thcii niauizciivor them .iito militia :4 docizixn move by x-Alloii: o't‘. llo‘t olitcv'vcrs are in- 'lttht'l to think it \\'lll 'ol- "he othl‘ the ("hinoo will cull a l'oniniuiiist con- f'vrciirc. arbortisin: thornsolves as ‘ e t‘i3'»if\fllilll‘« of the "true" Marx- i-i-lmiiiiiii‘ faith. The tangible ef- ‘ it would hc two rival Communist (a 2 ch wit h :_.-,.\> amund. howeyern-thm (i'IlTTillilltlll‘WR its own :iii'. hull iruaoi' brim. Tho ml" motif in history on a ‘l'lilitli' -c:.lv. notes a London coin- donning up". the giant sf‘l‘llsm 'i"l(‘ll .-l\ll’ (hr (‘hi'i-tiuo commun- y in‘o rival Crook 0t‘.llO(lOX and iiii f'utlioiic ritcs and has lasted (i.-(‘l\ flirt "Pal". Atlantic Incentives It i. (oiiviction of Mr John \liichl._pi*osirlciit of .\PE('. that. iilf piint .\il.-n:ii(: Provinces will again (now a rlt‘gt‘ct‘ of prospcrity com- putable. to that of a century IIHII—r .an l);i,('(l on a firm foundation of t!f‘+l'-’Ill(“(’l industry fill.» time. Ad- (iio-sing studonts at Acadia Ifiiiver- tit v the other day. Mr. Wright cited wiiwuruginir cvidnnces of this trend In the establishment of about 130 industries newly located. greatly ex- panded over the past three or four years or being established in this arcs. At least onmthird of these in- dustries 311’ in the multi-million dollar class. such as the heavy wat- pi' plant coming to Glace Bay; the aluminum f‘Hll plant, carpet plant and Volvo plant in Dartmouth; the Java plant coming: to Moncton next your; two new textile plants in New Brunswick; new and expanded fish plants and food processing plants; an orb smelter and chemical manu- factu‘i'ir: plant; expansion of the salt "icilities at Pugwash: new pap- er mills. copper mining. and iron ore developments; and tremendous hy- dro and thermal pewer development l fngefhgr with a power grid through- out New Brunswtck and Nova Scotia. wnh plans to extend it to Prince Edward Island. These. Mr. Wright said, are only cxumplos of the new capital invest- ment movonictit ill the Atlantic Reg- ion. The nerd now is to keep up the nioniciitui'n. and take advantage of it... my. job opportunities. He looked [oi-ward to tho day when the whole arm lowered its unem- ploymcin ru‘c. and raised its per capita inconic. to the national stand- ard. Tho speaker mentioned with ap- lll‘Gf‘lallOll a new concept which is be- coming uppurciit in federal govern- ment policy— -“a willingness to dis- ('l‘lmltiiitP lil favor of inducing groulli iii Digging regions. which goes. for iicvolld the provision of sllsteliallCP and is designed to raise the economy on the point. where it will he scill»ti-:taiiiiiig." In this con- nect ion llt‘ cizod. among other things. the special taxation incentives for so-called “distressed areas" desig- nated by inc Federal Department of Industry. Mr. \I iught’s address was an ex- ccllent onc. but. we must. confess that MPI‘V time we hear this special tax incentive scheme lauded we are loft wondering why so little notice 1;: boiiii: takcu of the fact. that Prince Edward lsluiid has been left out of it aliogoihor. Are there no com- munities in .his province that qual- ify fur such assistance. and is this discrimination to be continued indef- iiiiicly‘.’ We would appreciate all the help we can get from the Atlan- \\ ill ii:i\ c tic Provinces Economic Council in having: this matter straightened out. Sixty-Six Of Them The question of shared—cost pro- grams. about which much was heard in connection with the lust fedoral-provir-cial Confluence. has wide ramifications. This is evid- enced by the fact that there are 66 of these programs. reprcsenting an annual federal outlay of $900 mil- lion. The chief one. hospital insur- iiiicc. costs Ottawa $120 million; it applies to all provinces, .is do unem- ployment assistance ($110 million), and pensions to the blind and dis- ableri. Sf) But apart from the fairly straight- forward health and welfare pro- grams. there are a host of others. with varyini.r applicability and vary- iiii: mothods of (inst-sharing. These arc roviowcrl in a recent, issue of the Toronto Globe and Mail, which notes that some apply only to one lll'()\'lll(‘(‘. sonic to two. some to three f‘llfl so on. With some of them. the participating pruriiices put. up 20 pol" cent of :ho money; with others. the provincial sliure may be 35 or .30 or 80 per cent. Thus. the federal-provincial pro- gra m ( till?) for construction of potui o wu rohouscs takes in only Prince Edwu rd Island. Manitoba. Saskatchewan and British Colum- bia: the provincial share is 37 per cont. There are COSLRihal'illg pro- grams for construction of roads to Indian reservations; for fitness and amateur sport; for the abolition of railway grade crossings. Only one province has an abso- lute. constitutional objection to the shared-cost programs. This is Que- bec. which at last week 5 conference flatly announced its desire and in- tention to carry on each program by itself. with Ottawa making persona income tax revenue available to Quebec at a rate equivalent to the federal sharing grants Quebec now receives. This crmtracting-out ar- rangement will “immediately” be- come the subject of talks between Ottawa and Quebec. EDITORIAL NOTES A curious sign of the times is the fact that English—twice sup— pressed by the Chinese Communists —-—has replaced Russian as the No. 1 foreign language in Communist China. It has reportedly become a requirement in schools and colleges and a fashion among the rest. of the peoplo. O t A tim. Ringer-colored kitten has joined Sir Winston Churchill's household to cheer (ip the 89-year- old statesman. It will help fill the gap left by a successi m of pets. now (lead. to whom the great man was greatly attached. Sir Winston has not yet given the kitten a name. but he is "very fond of it". says a l Reuters despatch. . l l. ’39 strum 4513* . q)? \ M‘ WHO GETS CUSTODY OF THE KIDS? 9iTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholsori Bodly Scrambled Press Coverage Canadians visrtin: south of the bcz‘der seldom scc their country mentioiicd in the local press; such comments as 0 ap- pear arc soldcni profuitd and ac- curan On a brief visit to Unit- ed Nations Iicadquartcrs in New York recently. this announce- ment of a forthcoming television program caught my eye: “Canada - Spccial chom. In l‘lIlS first of a two-part series. C a r t e r Davidson interviews Canadian-s Mitchell Shays. Min- istcr 0 Trade and Commcrcc. editor and publisher Brucc. Hutclicsou: and tho Hon. Paul Martin. Minister of Ex-Etcrnal Affairs." Trade lliiiistor the Hon, Mitchell Sharp has never been called bcfoi‘o. even by inference. "one-horse" -‘ Bruce spells his name Hutchison - an Paul covered with glory since his triumph in launching the Cyprus pPaCC-RGPIDIIIE force. may in deed ponder upon the signifi- cance of this change In Iitle of his Dcpai'tment of External Af— a-irs. ROBIN HOOD My rcct‘i: I‘fl?“l" on fill" pro- posal by Dr. Harlcy. that \ch- fare benefits Should he paid to the needy only. has attracted \iidcsprcad enthusiasm I-IIa-rley. the MP fr Ontario. has introduced a Bill in the House of Commons. which would facilitate the transfer by non-needy recipiciits of their welfare payments to deserving causes. It is. as l poith out somewhat foolish that old age pensions should. for ll‘lSIilnt'f‘. be paid to niillioiiiaiz'cs, Typically of tlie lottcrs com- ing to mo rom rv‘udcl's l:~ “sincerc thanks“ to Dr. Harley from EM. Klinck. of Kamloops. who urzes: "kcop up the go work till public opinion is arous- Pd and the government will be forced to do somerliiii: about this (lisgi‘acct'ul condition." Scy- oi‘al rcadors point out that so- PUBLIC FORUM POTATO PROBLEMS Sir.~ Althoule I have been a Ion: time admircr of the "Pub- lic Forum" column of TlicI Guar- dian. and a SII’OIIE. advocate of the purpose which it serves. have ncvcr bcforc made usc of the opportunity \\'hl(‘h it pre- sents to patriotic and sinccrt3 Is- landers to f‘Onll‘lblllP their bit to fiirtlicr the prozross of our Proviiicc As Ilic growin: of potatoes is the Island‘s primary industry and a source from which the majority of our people derive in- come it seems logical to assume that all Islandcrs are d u ty- bouiid to act as “warriors on the field of battle“. and rouse them- selves to thc scnse of awareness that efforts must be expended to protect and advance this all-im- portant industry. During the pasl "fighting wars" no Islander was ever ac- _. cvuscd of displaying a lack of ‘ battle spirit; it only now for Islanders to adjust by applying this same battle spirit to non-fightin: economic battles at home and for the home. and remains 1 this applies to "all" levels of i Island dwellers. In a reccni Montreal publica- tion II was stated that the use of lessor amounts of nitrogen fertilizer would tend toward oar- licr dccomposifion of the potato plant by frost. as well as lesser amounts of over-size tubers. If this bit of Information Is Import- ant to Island potato growers. —- and judging from recent heated debates in the Island Legisla- lure I would assume that it .5 important as this is an Island- wide problem in production ~ then let it be applied in our po- tato growing industry. Would this not be the Intelligent meth- od of abolishing the use of toxm spray material which not only kills potato tops but our cattle and birds. as well as the fish in our streams? This would be the "ounce of prevention" method that has been advocated in our civilization for many past genera ations and to good advantage. It could probably serve as well-timed piece of advice. and proper adjustments of the ole- mpnt "nitrogen" could he made durlng the processes of our spring planting operations. There has also been an aware- ness for many past years of a marketing problem. In this age of verticul integration the diffi- cultles posed In the department of marketing present themulv-. to a ll ‘ as as a serious threat concerned in the potato industry. dealers as well as growers. Our ' Province. when observed In map perspective. is obviously very small as compared to o t h e I areas thch also produce potl- (ooa and it could be an act of folly to continue with the pres. on! methr‘ I of marketing pota- toes when the interests of In I (‘orran Ban. I‘ F. I. PI'OI'IIII‘P as a whole are involv- I cc. The producion of a specialir- cd lypc of potato plus thc iiiiro. (luclion of an Island patriarch l‘lIlElIl serve to stimulate the Is- land standard of livinn. lam. Sir. etc. ALMU "AS ONE AMERICAN" Sir.-- I wish to say at the off- set. that I enjoy your papcr. The Guardian. with an inviting curiosity and much praise. Most of the articles are written with intcrcsr and intelligence. which is more than I can say for most of the journalism here in the U.S. The world could use morc journalists like Patrick Nichol- son and the Canadian Press staff writers. Like most everything you can- not plcasc all the people all the time so ill disagree with two articles you quoted from other sources. I do so in a respectful vay. In your March 17 ISSUP. Amaz- ing New Devices. (London Free Press. I feel that the compari- son oftlie Laser Gun and Inc Artificial Hand are cut of con- text. We too have givcn much to the world in the medical field as f l by the same lokcn the Russians - are also in the development of a Laser \vcapon. It should be not ed that the U.S. does not have a monopoly on the knowledge of the Laser Beam. I cannot help but wonder if the origin of these ‘ devices had been the other way around would the author of that article have written If that way. Another article In the March 16 issue, No com for Retreat. (Globe and Mail. Toronto). I would like the author to know ((9 is under a miscomprehension when he writes. "the tendency of U.S. Administrations has been to take posittve stands either for l l l or against any major Issue of ‘ foreign poltcy. and then to sell these stands to the U.S. people. so effectively that I future change of mind becomes Impos- sible." And further on he writes that any llbernllzlng of these a)- (itudes would be viewed as at. most treasonable. [as one American can only speak for myself. but I would not consider If. to be (reasonable if my government had a change of mind In South Vietnam. For- . mosa or Cuba for I respect their judgment. But I would never be able to hold my head up or look my fellow man in the face again it this happened. If a skilled dID' lomat never taken two steps for- ward without kecplmz cnouuh ground under his feet to fat back one. then I would rather he brought to my knees for takina three steps forward. I a . Slr. GURNEY Somervllle. Mass. etc. A. FORSYTII called “welfare payments" are in larzc iiicasurc the result of "vutc-catcliiiig promises" by politicians who have attoiriplcd to hribc the voters with our own tax moucy My pol'spif‘acious colleague “’5. Thomson, \vritiu: III Harry Harley's home-town paper. the Oakville Journal. snugcsls that parents should have the option of not receiving the baby bonus and bcing allowed an incoinc tax (lellIl'IlOfl (2' $330. in~tcad of receiving the bonus and being allrwcd an IllL‘fTIll’.‘ tax deduction of 3300 only. This of coursc would be thc sensible and cron- mical stcp - but it was proposed by Gcorizc Drew, when he“ was Lcudu‘ of I‘llf‘ Conservative ()p- position in the Commons. and turned down by an earlier Lib- eral ()ovcrnment. In vimv of this. Harry Harley was wise to adopt another approach to this "disgraceful condition". EASTER BL'NNIES O Eastor Saurday. I'I rt c Winkler. the Tory Whip. sent out. (I telegrams to summon ‘ Tcry {\IP‘E Il't‘m I‘IIOII' homes b a c k t‘io Easter Mon d-ay SIIIIIIL' of Parliament. other 24 Torv M Ps were pre- sumably either in Ottawa. or had been summoned by otlior 1moans. But. few of those 70 Zeistcr Rabbits hooded tli c \vliip‘s command. When Mr. D. allll.tlllll'(‘fl in tlic House the to]- ruin: work: “We are here for tho purpose of doing the l)llS-‘ iness that is I‘(‘(|llll‘(‘ to be done." frmci Liberal whip .Irsmli l-Iabcl. of Cochrane. cast a cyr'cal rye over the 27 Tories Sitting: with Mr. I). and inter" jcctcrl: “Tlion got your members back_" HIGH COST (‘.B.(‘. The administrative staff of the C.B.(‘. moved into its new seven-storey buidin: over Eas- ter week-end, Passing at 30 one evening before the move. I noticed that the taxpayers worc pavin: for olectnic lid-ht in very nearly every one of the as yet unoccupied offices. I wonder If (‘.B. czars arc as wastc’ in thcir own homes? 1 3‘ o in]. Our Yesterdays I (From the Guardian Files) - TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (April 10. 1939) Mists Audrey DeBlols of the Canadian Church Mission at . Punjab. India. arrived home on furlough. Miss DeBlnIs has been carryin: on solciidid school and missionary work there for the past 25 years. Mr. or. Archibald returned from Halifax where he repre-l sented an Island group Interest. ed in securinii the Wood Islands- Cartbou ferry contract. TEN YEARS AGO (April 10. 1954) The 17th anniversary of the Summerstde Y's Men's Clu b was observed at the Y Centre when the members had a most satisfying dinner which featured turkey. prepared by the Y‘s Moneties. The meeting was pre- ' sided over by Bill Currie. Receipts to date In the I954 v Red Cross campaign totalling ; $15.00!) (57 per cent of the objec- tivet wOrP reported at the mon- ~ t.th meeting of the Provinclal ‘ Red Cross executive presided over by Lt. Col. ILF. MacDon- i ald. SIGN PENSIONS PACT CLEVELAND (API I An agreement on a new contract 1 . has been reached between Ix steel companies that operate ore boats and the Moran Engl- ( ncers Beneficial Association. The union. which threatened to tie up 150 Great Lakes vessels in a pension dispute. announc contract, monthly pension for engineers wrth 20 years of oervlco. BI2 Injections Control Anemia By Dr. Theodore R. VnnDelIen Perniclous anemia was 3 Intel disease less than 40 years ago. The situation changed somewhat in 1926. with the dis- covery of the beneficial effects of liver. Eating half a pound 0 liver a day was not practical bul liver extract came into Victims of this form of anemia now maintain a normal blood ious complications with a thly injection of vitamin 312 est to the tun women with per- nicious anemia I saw recently sorry for themselves because they needed an injection of vi- tamin 812 every month. would have been the story of their life if they had happened to develop the illness around 1920 Symptoms such as fatigue. weakness. shortness of breath. and pallor developed when the red blood count was rcduccd ‘ by half Those people fclt so tired II was difficult to \\ork . continuously for more than If) miuutcs. 'l‘licii' Il'it‘llds kcpl (cl- lin: them how pale they looked and sugdcstcd a tonic But own if they had taken such a prod- ' ucl it would l12’\'t‘ ll(‘("l \iastc bccausc iron docs nolliin: for this form of anciiiia Ilcaiiwliilc. iicurologic coni- plicalioiis \(crc Ill llic iiiakui: because the tissues lacked ‘ miii BIZ}. Numbiicss (ind liii: oftlic fingcrs and toes oc- __. -44. curred 'l‘lic ncrvc ucakucss made walking difficult and in- tcrfcrcd \\ it it >lll'l‘ \lmlllt‘ tasks as buitoiiui: clothing and Iioldin: lllf'llklls In (niopr‘iuiiioii muscle (\ceikiicss. and spasms folloucd. \\llll incrcnsiii;v dc- izciicratioii of ncrvc tissue In time. puriilys ' s onsurcd :iiirl tlic victims rosortcrl to a \\ll(‘f‘l- chair and finally to bed llaiiy complained loss of Iilt‘ scnscs o litle and sincll. The toiizuc bccaiiic smooth. slimy. and sorc. cxpccially along the (‘flLlP.~ Indigost io n was common and. toward end. the individual hf‘t‘JIIIlE‘ dull, apathetic. irritablc. and cania‘ {use I doubt if llic tun \iomt‘ll “ho t attcndcd tho ('lllll(' would snap 12 iiiicctioiis of vitamin BIB .‘Ill~ nually for Illf‘ five years at most of slow death that uculd limo been their lot Iivc decades azo. IRRITABLE COLON W. B writes: (‘an spasms of lllf‘ iiilcstino bc coiitrolcd \\IllI dict and mcdiciuc" R IN." Yes. a b l a n d dict and mod- being three or four years later. Y‘ """m and “old the mm'emsg: l of the c o u n t r in 5 providing What happened to these indivlsl duals before we learned the value of liver and 812? This story may be of iiiter- i at the clinic. They were feeling' (I This . Ill!" lt‘lllr‘i (hm roliovc spllsm uiid‘ (pilot the whole pcrson help most LINEN l-le'I”l‘l(‘I.\‘ , \\i‘ifcs: possible for bcd boon to irritafc the skin of tlic hands. ncck. :nid faco’.’ REPLY Is it I’m. citliri mochciii i (- a fly lfrom l‘IIl‘IlIlIIL“ or bcctiiisc of sensitivity In lllf‘ c l o a iisni: abouts. iiicludin: blcaclics (isod iii laundcrin: \I'l-IAKENICD \l‘.\l,l. (Inc of my of a bci‘ry an- w this condition" 1 wi'itos ‘llf‘lLIllhOI'S diod . eurysm. Wliut R An allt‘lll‘)'>lll is fl weakness in the wall of a small artery, ('IIUMIIC (his area to balooii out. The dilated part is no larger than a l)(‘l’l‘_\'. Cyprian Traps And Pitfalls By C In Cummlnl Culdllll Preu sun Writer With depressing predictabil- ity. the United Nations Cyprus is encountering the traps force . and pitfalls film were forecast‘ or II. So far the force has reacted ; according to plan with pa. tlence. restraint and more pa- hence. The fact that (lie force I5 en- ‘ countering trouble I: not neces- sarily the fault of the UN or. troops. y and the w I up against. It that the conditions under which the UN would not be the price of udmiuion. From the start it was obvi- ous that the venture would be large these countries 8 and UN knew what they as risky as it was necessary.» The force was formed with few . illusions. so there art few to be shattered. FUNCTIONS TWISTED It was predictable. for ex- ample. that Archbishop Makar- ios would try to use the force ‘io gain his own ends: The des- lruclioii of llic ('urkiuli-Cyprim3 . such assuruncc is inipossiblc capacity to fight back and of Turkey‘s rights to intervene The archbishop - president. leader of the (bx-ck - Cypriots. has performed as expected by" pronouiicinu IlIP cud of me lrcuty QIVIIII: Turkey interven- tion rights And reports from (‘yprus speak of a campaign by ‘ (he archbisliop's followers to launch a counter - attack" against the Turkish community. It was predictable that one side or the other wuuld arcin the UN force of failing to carry out its mandate. The Turki.~li- : Cypriots have been the first to ‘ complain. (‘hal‘glllfl that the l force has done nothing to pre- ‘vent attacks on members of their community. WAS PREDICTABLE i It was predictable. given the terms of reference of the force. that Makai-ios' "regular II'I'eQU- ’ lars' would challenge UN sol. ', diers and the latter would ci- 5 ther have to fight or back down. Such an incident happened Sunday when n detachment ‘Il British UN troops were lirld hostage for a time. It provode demands in the British press and parliaman for cluriticar‘mi of the UN powers. with the in. l fluentlal London Times (lo- mandin: that British troops i should be withdrawn from “no ‘ force unless they ‘ as- ‘ cured of a useful and dignificd i role in keeping the island's t peace." From the UN point of now, is the nature of U.\ pcacc-kccp- in: activity that succcss is usu- ally built on compromise ratiicr than toughness Barring a near - miraculous improvcnicnt on the island, ‘ic Britons. Canadians and chdc‘ so far makin: up lllf‘ fort-c run expcct more rather than fouoI' demands on UH‘il' self-disruption Pilgrimage To Vimy By Carol Kennedy. Canadlan Press YI’III‘JS. Belgium—The sold- M‘I‘S will be returning this sum- mer. 3ft ycars oldcr. to the little Flemish town among the poppies llicy called " " Rcbocii from the ashes ‘ World War. Yprcs is commem- oration (lic anniversary of 1914 this ycar \\'llll a special program for veterans of the salient's trout-tics, The inaugural ceremony takes place .\pril market square with its Gothic cloth hull and brown nablcd hou- 15 m m, u,bbied dwindle over the ycars. have Illdl(‘(ll(‘(l they will make a pilgrimage to Yprcs this your The first (‘aiindiuii contingent arrives lll May an a group of survivors from the Priuccss I’al- ricia's Canadian Light Infantry plans to conic iii mid-Aucuu. Yprcs dccidcd to conuncinor- ate the bar this year rather than ltltifl. the 50th (IIIIII\'OI'\EII‘}‘ of the Armistice. bccausc the number of veterans would inevitably Each veteran visiting Il'tP town in imu will rccmvc a souvouir certific- scs that were rcbuilt stonc for . 31“ stone after the town's three-year 5 ordeal by shellfire. .\iiiba>sudors from that fought at Ypres. including West Germany. uill watch their fluzs liaulcd up here to signal the start of a summer of remem- brancc. Afterwards they will be rcccivcd by (he burgo- master Imayol" and take part in a wroutli- placini: ccrcmuny at the Month Gate, the white marble monument to the (‘omnioiiwoalth dcad \\ll(‘l'(‘ the Last Post Is soiiiidcd every IllL'lll. ('aiiuda will b0 represented by Sydney Piercc. ambassador in Brusscls The town. council is keeping . the anniversary program flexib- lc to meet the requirements of vcicrnns‘ groups \ilicrcvcr pos- Sll‘llf‘. Guided tours of tlic Fland- crs battlefields will be arrangcd on request MEMORIES FR ES" 14 nations . Scheduled cvcnls includc band . exhibi- Salicnt and carillon concerts. (inns in the expanded in St. George‘s English Church—— shrine of many a regimental bunncr H loft Chapel at Popcring lI(‘. About 40 groups of veterans A reporter toui'iin: llie hattlth fields recently found memories of 1914.18 still poignantly fresh in a countrysulc that has known many wars and was onrc more invaded In the Germans in 1940. The placid burulicrs of Yprcs still cheriin a seIISI‘ of :ratituda to the (‘onmtoiiwcallli that do- Iellt’k‘fl their town at a loss of 90.0ka mm, and many scorn to have a spacial affcction for (‘an- adians. Around Illf‘ tow ii spongy ficlds (hul OIICf‘ fornicd the dreaded salicnt. ('annrlu‘s sacrifice lives on in muplc Il'f‘"‘ and stone nicmorinls nt Sanc- . tuary Wood. f’nssrliciiduclc. St. ; Julian and Frcvonlwr: Rider, III Illf‘ flat. ROYALTY IN MONTR EAL MONTREAL (CPI ~ Stamps» royalty is \‘isitui: Montreal Thursday as a pair of ordinary tourists. Prim-c Varnnand of Thailand and his wife. Princess I Koko. slipped info the city un- Muscum and memorial services ‘ and the Toc H ay-‘ heralded Wednesday~carrying their own luccaze and standing in line to pass through imml- gration like all oilier passengers on their regular airline flight from London. “a ravel bargains Charlottetown to: Sackville Moncton Truro Saint John Halifax Anti onish VS dne i Quebec _ Montreal Ottawa Winni e Edmonton l P-3-I72N $2.20