and grease so that makeup . in tariffs across the board. flood. i month. when more than two-thirds d' I fl Eh: ‘ of the people of the world have less 6 lCCi 'c' L " than $8 a month. B i .,m-. ratio ’-i- r‘ Ital» L. n in D .. a o l.tH;i.a;:.. r :w. e M "Hip-"*9 “("1319 hit"? 1955 t” 399'"! Parent often use the m- We don’t envy the arch...“ F, .. i. . mo 3.x». cacli day on food and shelter and By Dr. Theodore R. Van Deilen '2; 2.1292233]; film °§ufm“.‘{" An“ “‘0 t‘ "j " “W on clothing. on medicine, on all of Corn cob- are In the news .3" come. only MM “‘1”. Wu we used p ‘0 ‘a‘ “"’ ““”"', 5‘" i r. I. h, th . , A again. i understand the current work “d now” But how m ‘IhOOPl for. they’ti still in as, 2 , I., ..;. .~~ -i-.,-.i at lA‘i F" we ,‘libei ilCll “991 5. i all e 8‘ make mer- hm. c.ncer_ “in”. Imok‘n' ou .0 ‘t own on {.0“ of E" ” '. ' ' i'. r N“wiry-“1PM: li'i'” -"l“"ld-‘ at- hls comer dl‘ufl Store 5°“; “'5 lawm'mfdt I’ll“; the antbi-ll after they've seen I in! 3"th Wlla.— Calgary Her- ,. . M. . a 3 :‘r s in urn”: » '- I . - .A . - ior a package of Cigarettes. They :gb mx‘euty'cufigfl'lm; the Bastien—Ottawa Journal. aid. ’ , j ‘\ nvc Ill run-down country shacks of in; record “I”. G T d C f l ,x— ~ 1 s - .r- I ‘ . . . g. « . .. Mn .. a... iar papci'. llicy live in City slums. nfinigwcitiii‘c'ngifgrirflvgf‘flfi , rd 9 it" c ' 7 T" w ""’" ’l‘lioy live without heat, water or J. White, . Chic.” ammo]... If Dotti MIMI-ll Gr“ :. a r r W‘ "7'. . . . . Caaad an Press staff Writer .. V p H ,__, “Huh-H...” “1 any kmd gist has been using it for some ‘ ‘ , ' “ . . .3! I ,. . . ' time as I dustins powder in The financial wizards oi the ever. if the negotiators could P“ ” a ’a M ‘ "I licir children have no schools treatinlg vaflous lkilil disordeil's. we" "the,- in Gene" Monday prom.” a workme mrmwla for r A -. m. - i v v - - - 35 we I! " 9X09“ V9 P9"? r“ in the hopes of conjuring up an solving the funda ' " ' by“ N p I" b'f "" 1”" hd‘e 'n” flmlms 0" . ation and ring-worm. elusive spirit known as free the question of tari‘l'iimdlilsiifilltei: ""”"‘ ’ " ” fl . hospitals to attend. [how life ex- I Powdered maiseMcore (Milt trade. in the Indus...“ “do, ' °"' ‘ ‘“ ’ ‘ ' " .- . w ‘ - v . ~ ' cornl is largely eel one Ind I The famed Kennedy round 0' The An lo-Am r ' r . - .. fl.’ . a” . n e [It ( l.lllt.\ is somewhere between 3;) fine. grit free. and cling! to the negotiations within the 70-nation are convliiced Hialeah. 62):." In A .. “’“l 1” Will‘s “l 32“- “itl'st Of all. . surface. it protects the skin General Agreement on Tariffs Password to unleash the flowgiii A ‘ i ‘ mum. “f “I...” live without hnpe at {from Coma?! With the air and and Trade was conceived by international trade is sinply to u . mm the "WHO" 0‘ Cloihifll Ind the late American president as breach as many tariff dikes a n» - ‘ I all. llicy scc no escape. from the ; absorbs moisturr but d0" "0! a planning conference for an widely as is possible. 5 i ‘ A i V d x. .. a. a. i aiicicnt cyclc of misery and despair. i CM"- eventuail common market of the FEAR Fl 00!) ”' l K '4 : D .1 , i . ' ‘ . . i A woman's face powder is Atlant/Ic communities. But. the Common Market coon. l lfinfl .iie. not now (illid‘lilmls. i made from the same cobs. it Is In anticipation of reciproca‘ tries. particularly France. are .. . I‘ovnriv_ hunger. and disease are i a cosmetic that does not com. agreements, he wrung permis- afraid the foundations of their ‘ m _ . I H V V. ~ I V H H . _ If I . pete. with the medicinal powder. ston from the United States post - war industrial economv m“... gran-lost nicnnii'y is iicakcr fliiililt't'is J‘ (N do titan himse . it is said to soak up perspiration Congress for a 50-per-cent cut will be wasth away in me than Ilic \\‘;‘:ll\'I'\l llllv" PHVI”. t it" l{\ll.\\'. APRIL Jill. 19M llir: Production Factor l‘.: i .ii aka": tiw liti- r...~ .w... ‘i ..-..i‘ int: l.'i tits: pr‘l'— industry. Airti- xii! .‘ilai'lv'ac pi'iwcnicd :i. o:i:‘ spcrial t'ai'iii ‘ for continuing ‘ .n production u. -. n. t‘a' ‘li iii'izint ;|_v :itul iiiialitv. T311 min. ~ vii w :i t“'illl“l\'i‘l'>‘l«'ll i:~;:,ii ,‘iii' "L: villi l'al‘lilCl'F. and Mal-liar i‘:":.ii~l< it :i-i "unfortunate and a 'nw-lva-liug” that the frond rwii has rim-n to place 'iiainr iii ii‘i: : tin tiliil‘lii‘lllli‘f proli- lcins. ll‘li',?l'.{ :Iic czu'i'cnt ycar. he. \i‘Jil‘lii. ‘i‘wrc 1"” It.“ 8 2T0!” WW“?- siti "for a‘ ‘rwiéi giving prin‘luctiun thc our .2 "1' iii ri‘tciitinn." '1'}... snowm- coinimrcd the farm- er‘s ii.'.iiiill":t-ii in that of the auto- moio‘» ‘1“!ll'r‘l‘. who spends tnfl‘imi- “ Ii"'lil'< on pcri'cctiiig (writ ‘ipv‘i'i MENU) ll iS Illili‘f‘fi Oil the in: ‘, titlir-i'ivisn- if his pm- rluct Isn't of top quality. with maxi- miirn priri'lis-‘cr apponlrultis mark- nwpg pruning-ii ("\‘in‘llfliliii'i’N will In» ::||’j""" v..i::r'~|. in agrimilturc. m'lnr’m: am spé‘f‘.‘ each year ’lll‘i'il’jl‘HilT Canada in I‘f‘Si‘f‘Il‘Cl‘i to own "‘r- fat-rncr to achieve the. lick“ l' «in win gv-ala and it. is ini— pi l'l’il" 1"“ fl 1. 'iirvicc lip utilide to lill“ l'ullwl cvtcnt. V'l‘ld. i. an individual rcspon- sir-.12“; .llv. .\l.icl‘..iti emphasized. llc t'lil‘ii. a: an f‘.‘1‘ll‘llpl(‘. the now pl'i‘v.‘i’~-‘tllT plants now in opcration born, It li.-:~ licon found that some fariiu‘i': arc Jililt‘ in take in over $43.0”! molly from rclativcly Silinll Ilii'i":i'.'t""-. while othcrs mm- piain of lining lost nioncy. The film i. :or: 'lliiiltiziltl that every acre of tillt" cropg barring uncontrollable niotm nioncy. They aim sav ilia‘ this ability of a farm- m- in nrliir-vc this ro:uli depends on his capaci‘v to got maximum yiclds and ‘wii duality. Tho sci-rot is or the market fat tori. can lilf‘ contract it is chiefly in the man— nrit iii prico akin-c: “or in l‘.lil"l‘. ll'ri tiri‘itliti‘lii'r‘ i'iiIlHC- ity of (in ."li‘lf of land is lianillcd. rciiiai'lvs on this a.“ :...... .1. . sttl'i‘ci't nuivi'an‘ cnrcful :ittciition, ii for no H‘iw r i'cizrni Xi‘an that the it"iifi” " i" 1."‘.'i‘iiiL' cur t'arni pro- rli‘." iii'i..‘. in lWl‘i‘.i'(‘\.~'lIlLf plants is l-v I'; i: if now» and. more im- p. hit“. to uni' l-Llailfl ni'iitiimiy. I I . Mr. Johnson 5 Warning .\ j.:.4.i... H: l‘ii‘lllil‘ll an-l lll'i=.ltlt'.l-i‘.‘l’.“ \H‘I'P said .\in .n-an ncwspa- to lia'. c 'uaii >iaiilcil ilic ti‘lit‘l‘ (lay at tl’u- l'rrvor with which President .luliii. I‘ll .i'id'l llli‘lll to iakc. part. in the against. puvcriy in the outside world. He talked to them in the rose pardon of the White Hruuc. and Hill a few. according to thc i'ii. i ~il.ill Svicncc Monitor. were takcn liit’h' by his intensity of feel- ling. nowspapormcn are an astrinrwnt lot and troubled with guilt if tiicy iccl themselves being llf’I'slliitltd.” But the sincerity of the Presi- dent was plain. Some of his most olcquonl passages came when he lorikcd away from his reading desk and said things better. more simply and directly personal. than the words any gho<t writer could have put in his mouth. Here is an ex- cerpt from The Monitor's report of his remarks, which we believe will impress our readers no less force. fully than it, did those to whom it was addressed: “We ought- to get down on our knees every night and thank the Gocd Lord for our blessings. that (l “since. But in our time and in this age has been a change. The change is not so much in the real- iiics of life. but in the hopes and cvpociaiion; of the future. if a peaceful revolution in these areas is impossible a violent revolution is iiicviiaiilc." thcre. lncvualilc because. as the Presi- dent addcd. "we who stand here in poace and security and prosper- ity must rculizc that we are greatly ouinunibcred iii the world. more than 17 to .l in population. in area. in race. in religion. in color. You iakc any critcria and measure yourself by that standard. and you will find that. we are in very small minority." And if ihcre is any lesson that history icachcs consistently, it is that the road to progress is portal with the wreckage of privilcgcd minorities. Financial Hangover ’l'lic big find of silvcr. copper and zinc in the T‘immins arca of Northern Ontario set off a tremen- dous volume of trading in penny the Toronto Stock Ex- change. According to illP London Frcc l‘rcss. thousands of people who didn't know a stock certificate from a Canada Savings Bond, or a in!“ from a bear. went on the hinge. More than 28.000000 shares were traded in our day. it was mass hys- teria. Many people mortgaged their homes and sold tlicii' cars to buy any mining stock that. might have some remote connection with the strike. It wasn't like buying' an lrish Sweepstakes ticket, says the. Lon- don papcr. for some. of those do pay Off handsomely to a fortunate. few. The grcal majority of those who plunged liiio minng stocks in the past \vcck will cud up on ning \vorih— siorlvs at less shares in barren mouse-past- are. They can't say they weren't Brokers inundated with orders for stocks that hadn't tradcd in wccks or months; it wasn‘t. their duty to tell customers of the astronomical odds against thcm. though stock exchange of— ficials did advise the application of Common sense. Now, the honeymoon is just about over. Most. of the pcnny- plungcrs will have been badly hurt. They will be forgotten. buried un- der the headlines telling of the new fortunes that were made overnight. Mcanivhilc. according to the. 'I‘or- onto iilflllf‘ and Mail. the big find should not obscure the fact that the area still has a difficult and un- stable cxistcncc. Timmlns was built, on gold. and for the past few years has been running out of it. it seemed to be heading for the same fate as Elliot. Lake—which didn’t run out of uranium but (what is much the same thing) ran out. of uranium contracts. For the time being. Timmins has been rescued by the ore strike in nearby Kidd Town- ship. Rut other mining municipal- ities in the North have not had this good fortune; and Timmins itself still has plenty of unresnlved prob- lems. ii'arnod. wcro EDITORIAL NOTE A 22il—ycar-old fiiiarncrius vio— lin. insured for 5515.000 and valued at up to $50,000. was stolen from Camcgi! Hall New York. last, week. and pawned for $l5. The pawn- broker. who turned the violin back to its owner whcn he learned of the theft. made the understate- ment of the year when he explained: “it had two hows so there was no our; income can be more than $200 8 i question it was worth $15.” . TULIP TIME IN OTTAWA QITAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Romance Behind Big Mining Discoveries There‘s a great romance be- hind the fabulous mining dis coicrics up 'l‘imniins way. Ten to twenty miles north of Timmlns. there's a of Townships — Carnegie. Pro- sscr. Reid. Kidd. Work and oilicrs. They contain flowing sircams. tro7cn lakes. acres oi ‘ muskcg among which the only living thngs seem to be stunted undernourished jackpines. hose townships are called "The Veterans' Lois." because tlicy were distributed almost solidly in grants to veterans of the (‘aiiadian and lmpcrial ar- ‘ mics after World War One. The Soldicr Settlement Act provided ; of 100 acres : for the free Eran! \'ll‘,’.'lll land to evcry veteran. Timmins is in the c lay belt: there are some lush farm lands aroundilicrc. Ii surprises the visitor in mlnsummer to note how rich the farms look in that barrcn mining country of tlicrn Ontario. NOT EVEN RUNS But somehow Lots to the n o r t h didn't catch on. Today it looks like virgin bush. although the pine may be sccond El‘ou'lh. There are ceri- ainlv no farmhouses. no barns noi oven any ruins. Rut there are two prospectors camps. and several diamond drilling rigs. News of the min 9 r al finds ‘ ilicre. notably in Kidd Town- ship. miickly drew in prospec- For $5 for a licence. you i o 0 could become a prospector. All you have to do is to drive a stake into ihc ground. and mark it ap- propriately. Then you measure off one quarter of a mile south. and plant another stake; one quarter of a mile west. plant another stake; one quarter of a mile north and plant y o u r fourth stake. Then you record this at the nearest Mlncs Office. pay $5 ice. and you've got your- self a claim. A liccn s e d prospector can stake many such claims; but he must do a certain amount of work on each 40- acre claim site during the year to preserve his claim. In Ontario. this is 40 days of ti hours. and the work may be manual labour. strip- ping. clearing trees. trenching etc. or it may be sophisticated diamond - drilling. group . nor- l I How’s Your Score? [he “I a r ans ‘ Dominion Automobile Association and ‘ The ordinary prospector miisl do some such must . produce some evidence of mm- cral wca th on his claim to make it worth anything. But in those Veterans Lands townships. the rich bonan z a s l already proven make ncigli- ‘ bourlng claims worth consider- able sums as a speculative in- vestment. They might contain a l bonanza too; or they might con- tain just miiskeg and clay. ANY VETERANS Ll‘CKYu Cl :1 l m s in Kidd Township and ilicreabouts \vcrc fcicli i n: anything up to “0.000 each in cash. per 40 v acre claim. a week is Now the \’cicrans lots in 1 many cases were very unusual; ‘_ they carried title to the sur- face rights and use of the land. and also to the mlncral righis. As I said. the veterans in nearly Most average Canadians. driv- ing a motor Vehicle. honestly and conscientiously believe that they are careful. considerate. law - abiding drivers. Did you ever hear one say. In cffecl. "i know l‘m a very bad driver. i am a menace' to my fellows. when l'm behind the wheel"? Such variation is an honestly ‘ held conviction and average 1 daily performance Is one of the main reasons that motor acci» dent frequency has maintained a steady inexorablc rise during the gasoline era of the past 40 years. ‘ Dominion Automobile Associa lion. which. for obvious reasons. maintains a close watch on ac- cident trends. recently conduct- ed a survey through their Mem- bcrs' Services Division. during which the common lapses from ' safe driving practice were an- i alyzed. These emcompassed the infractions which are committed with more or less frequency by 95 per cent of the. otherwise "good" drivers throughout the country. Such breaches of the safe drivers‘ code can and do contribute to anything from is scratched fender to lost human ‘ cs. R.W. Trollope. president 4 of the association. offers the to] i ‘ your bcli'.‘ ‘ Docs your score allow you to . lowing soul- searching “quiz” PUBLIC FORUM DOWN ON THE FARM Sir.—- One frequently h e a r s farmers complain that their sons and daughters no longer want. to remain on the farm Rural girls have the notion that pounding a typewriter is better than raising turkeys or chick- ' ens: while the young men want to chase the rainbow's end in the cities. This exodus from the . land leaves farms short-handed and in the long run. neglect so that in many cases produc- tion falls 'off sharply. Traveling across Canada one. cannot help but note the num- ber of neglected farms. that under a proper state of cultivation would be blossoming like the rose, And to one who has been brought up on a small but productive piece of land as l have been. it makes me feel badly indeed. I think young farm folk ought to stay on t e land. ought to clean up the waste places. in be- half of better crops which in turn make for better living con» . diiions. But if farmers are going to keep their sons on the farm the farm itself must be made more attractive—that is. by introduc- ing the comforts and convenien- ces of the cities and towns. A drive in the country Will convince you. as it has convinc- nai farms farms. " ' have that down in the heel look. No shade trees. no decent lawns. no flower children to greet you with their magical smiles. Build. ings in all too many instances lack paint and proper upkeep. Young folk of our generation simpLy with not tolerate life un- dcr such conditions and we hard- ly can blame them. Someone has truly said. "Youth lo ve s ‘ beauty". It is a natural desire. and one which must be met farmers are going to keep their offspring down on the farm. the . . __ . ‘. best place in all the world to i Her mush “mm‘men' h" d'“‘ .— we. The value of attractive farm [ homes cannot be over-emphas- i ized. The country alum is little better than the city sty. e are many outstanding farms in this wonderful Canada of ours. One cannot pass one of sense of pride. And one cannot l but feel somehow that the fam- I ilies that occupy these places of i beauty are themselves the very salt of the earth i could see all the down and out I looking places across C a n ads. i spring to new beauty. so that our farms would be the pride of our people and the joy of tour- I ' 1am. Sir. etc. 1'. a. MacAM‘HUR m -. ie'i mum‘s”; . What a fine tiling it would be 3 I if during this summer of 1964 we ‘ I every case found no use for the surface rights Many of ihcm dropped their iiilt‘s. some sold them to pulp and paper compan- ics. Some couldn‘t find a buyer: perhaps these still own their ' lots --» if so. a could well fcich up now just or tic min 0 r a rights. And who would begrud- gc this win d fall to any old sweat from the mid-1918 war? Asl said. tlicrc's a romance behind the Timmins story. Tlicrc‘s another romance too. A pulp and p a p or comp is n y which bought much of that land is associated with the Curt is Publishing (‘ompany of USA. which publishes the Saturd a y Evciiing Post. Things have not all bccn rosy for that magazine ‘ in recent ycars: but now if sud- deiin finds itself in a position to . bc a booming mining company. a foray into introspective anal- ysis. Run through this question-' naire and if your honest score is low. it's time to overhaul your driving habits: if. on hand. your svorc is hiflli. you may consider yourself a mem- ber of an elite minority subscrtb~ Inc to and living by the “live and let live" philosophy of the truly safe. driver:- Hoiv Ioni: since yoi ~ -—cht throuin an intersection on an amber light? -—hlade a rolling stop only. at " sign? the gun" on a green liclit'.‘ —-l"allcd to reduce speed at a blind inicrscction’.’ ~“Tailgated” at highway speeds behind another car? rig 1. —Double - parked? -——'l‘ricd to make time by. weaving in and out of traffic. S‘ 3 Q ll 9.0: out of your car on the traffic stream side? ——Da_v - dreamed. if only mom- entarily \vhile behind the wheel ‘ in moving vehicle" —Left your engine running when you left the car? -—have driven ‘your vehicle with two or more drinks under' he look down your nose at those other poor motoring sinners—or are you also one of those "other fellows" too? IN MEMORIAM EJ. l’ratt Hail and farewell! Great Rhym- l .Poe‘.‘ of Canada's thunderous; seas Her rippling waters. her quiet pools. gers underground. The workingman. the Canadian. You. w have sung 0f the matchless flight f the. sea . You who have i d brought renpwn To your is an 's ' Pineclad bills: the“ Wm.” mung . deep . Beloved of the Muse. Now you have gone. To join her charmed circle: Men of the measured melody; "De viris illustribus". yes. these i speak. Among them I number you. Poet among Canadian poets. Harpist of our seas! Dom-em (“$83 —Wm. H. , . Riollo Bay and Charlottetown. RETRIEVED coma An English hospital in 195! 04 coins valued at about 35 and 27 pieces reported extracting of wire from the stomach of a 54-year-old man. It ‘3’ H/t the other . assed another car on the 9 . .w‘rvl-Ilr . s-iu..- ‘ won't smear. It has been estimated that 77 . ‘ powers concerned—Britain. the 1 billion babies have been born k I the human race since prehistor- . ic man came into being. Ac— ; cording to Annabelle Desmond i of the population reference bur- ; can. today‘s population of three 5 billion is only four per cent of I all those who have come into i the world during the last 600.000 years. . g Anthropologists disagree as to ‘ whcn man first populated the j. earth. As a result. the total may I be more or less than the figure .‘ given. But there is reason to be- ‘ lieve that by the beginning of .' the Christian era. between 200 . and 300 million persons had ' been born. The birth rate tend- ed to accelerate thereafter: 500 million had been born by 1650 and one billion by 1850. Today's figure is three billion. NAIL SPLITTING Mrs. D. writes: I have strong 1 nails that have never troubled me. But in three. another nail has grown underneath. Would , you know why this happened? E Y R PL Horizontal splitting of nails is relatively rare. Usually only one nail is affected. but now and then. up to three are split. Ec- zema around the nails may damage the matrix. But in the is not apparent. UNINTERESTED C. S. writes: Can anything be done for a 74-year-old man who I has lost interest in everything? Yes. Begin with a thorough search for the cause of this man‘s depression. it may stem from a mild infection or a small stroke. Other possibilities in- clude loss of close friends. finan- ANKLE LUMP C. U. S writes: [have a hard lump above my ankle. the re- . suit of a bruise. is this calcified od'.’ ~ ~ REPLY This is doubtful because blood usually absorbs. You may have fractured a bone in the ankle or developed a cyst and bone tum- o BURN DEGREES B. R. wriics: What is the dif- ference between first and third i degree burns? REPLY The depth of the burn. First degree involves the surface of the skin whereas third degree affects also the underlying tis- . sues. including the. muscles. RISING PRESSURE ' Does the Mrs. J .8. w . blood pressure usually rise Wifh l 3R9. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT—- Slouching while reading or watching TV may cause back pain. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen shouild be ad- dressed to Dr. Theodore Van Dellen. on Chicago '1‘ r l b u n e. Chicago. lllinois.) SYRIA SCRAPS PACT ‘ DAMASOUS tReuiersI—Syria ‘ Tuesday announced the abroga- 1 iion of her military union pact with Iraq. concluded last Octo- r. decree to this efifect was . issued by Struai's National Revo- ‘ lution Council after a meetii i which lasted until early Tues- I l . the omern . cial insecurity. or family prob i lems' :United Nations On the eve of the talks. how- ever. it is clear that the major U.S. and the six Common Mar- ket countries —.iiave prepared precious little common ground on which to go to work. WIDE SPLIT SHOWN The United Nations trade con- ference. running concurrently in Geneva. has shown how wide differences are. on the tricky problem of the underde- veloped countries. The U.S. opposes the British plan to extend wealth prefcrence system to all developing countries. But both the U.S. and Britain are against the French scheme for man- aged commodity markets. On agriculture. ioo. prcpara~ tory work has progressed little beyond the stage of defining dif- ferences. These and other difficulties might be smoothed over. how- ilie Common- ' Negotiators for the six Com. mon Market countries advance alternative proposals claiming i a total of some 700 disparities * in the US. :1 .d British tariff l lists. . Attempts to reach agreements these disparities could re- duce the whole Kcnncdy round to a monotonous scrles of hi- laicral barzalnings over indivi. dual items. This is a far cry from the clean sweep originally ' envisaged. Spokesman for the Common Market commission in Brussels take a hopeful view of the ap- parent deadlock. They claim that undcr the Common Mar- ket's flexible levy system the disparitics will naturally disap- pear diiriug the ncxt three or four ycars. This. cven if true. means the wizards at Gcncva will be try- ing to evoke a spirit that is still in tlic far-off future. No Place For Junketing Fort William Times Journal The federal government's re- fusal to provide free air trans- port to Cyprus for certain mem- bers of Parliament may have been based considerations lot/her than ones stated by New . . . lDermoc-na-t A majority of instances the cause at mid Petem_ Mr. Peters for a free ride to Cyprus on “that would aian to a personal fact finding mission was bluntly rej . Other requests of this type were similarly . Hawever members told there was no law stopping them from paying their own way to lOyiprus 'or anywhere else for (that matter. Mr. Peters evidently saw the refusal as an attempt by th government to keep individual members from finding out what orders have been given b0 Canadian troops on the island. The govemmient's refusal—— even though space may be avail- (E able on Canadian Military air- Our Yesterdays (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (April 30. "Mill Mr. J..l. Duffy was re-elected president of the Charlottetown ‘ Branch of the Postal Clerks As- sociation at the annual session of the organization here. Dr. William Wood. son of the late Harry Wood of Summer- side. left from Montreal on the SS Asconia for London. Eng- land. where he has been ap- pointed to represent the Canad- ian Marketing Board in the Em- pire‘s capital. TEN YEARS AGO (April 30. 1954) Mrs. Noel DeBlols was elected presideat of the Rainbow Club at the fifth annual meeting held in Sunset Lodge. The meeting was presided over by Mrs. Ruby Houle. CDA. Through the kindness of in- spector W.H. Nevin. in charge of "L" Division of the RCMIP in this province. Cpl. AM. John- ston gave a showing of the pic- ture “Scarlet and Gold" before St. Peter's Cathedral Laymen's Association at their meeting in St. Peter‘s Hail. The Mariners' Band Recreation Centre May 12. 1984 i vice. I I l 57 Queen St- St. Dunstah’s Formal Ball Invitations and tickets available For Information Phone 2-1248 ALL ARE INVITED E MORTGAGES If you wish to negotiate a mortgage on city or town property. why not eonsutt us? We have several sources of funds. and the facilities to give you prompt ser- HYNDMAN and CO. LTD. Mortgage & Insurance Brokers TICKET $5.00 Dial 4-6567 craft flying to Cyprus-«is per- fectly understandable. The ex- plosive situation in Cyprus could hardly be cxm‘cied to imprvoe if unattached politicians foreign countries were. encour- aged to wander about the in- land. no matter how welldinkeinp tinned they might be. Even if a group 0.” private members was not an official delegation of Parliament. arrival In a gov- ernment aircraft might be mis- understand in a land where there is a marked tendency to shoot first and ask questions later. As for the Canadian contingent on Cyprus. they are in the pro- cess of settling down to what is undoubcdly the toughest as- signment ever handed a group ‘of soldiers from this country They've got their hands full .witliuui having to worry about: entertaining junketing MP3. —___—___. ‘ ~ We've got rooms Ideally suited for banquets. sales meetings. dances. teas. weddings. bridge parties. fashion shows. anni- versary parties. club meetings- Blg or small we are pleased to cater to them all. Enjoy 010 best food. service and aur- roundings. Your function Will be a much greater success. . For reservations and assistanco In planning your party. phone 4-7371 W fir-i "MA/ll Hotel The Cilii'l' CJ\J