.l (A. "‘ W‘ .- ISLAND RCAF OFFICER IN FLORIDA terccptor aircraft. is one of two RCAF‘ officers recently assigned to the USAF lntcr- Flt. Lt. John A. Bradley. se- rond from left. an RCAF ra- dar observer in F-IOI in- eeptor Weapons School. Tyn- dall Air Force Base. Florida. With h l m are. left to right. Flt. Lt. Don E. Carney. RCAF BENEVOLENT IRISH SOCIETY ANNUAL SMOKER AND INITIATION Wednesday. March I3 — 8 pm. Important Play and Parade Every member In asked to make an effort to attend. Business. F-101 pilot: Lt. Col. Hugh C. Slate r. USAF. school com- mander: Lt. Lenncr Lenhardt. U.S. Navy. and Flt. Lt. Mich- Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH with More Comfort '1 , l. kallne (non-acid) powder. holds false teeth more flrmly.To eat and talk in more comfort. Just sprinkle a little FAS- n es. No mm . “plate odor ’ (d FASTEETH It enturo breath). Get any drug counter on o r ; l gooey. pasty taste or feeling. on elm a RAE. Lieuten- is a native of eal Haggcrty. ant Bradley Pcake Station. Prince Edward ‘W Island. Canada. . Icidenl occurred Saturday who fountain“ ISECTION safifON éhTiFiditétowii, Tues. March 12, 1963. l 1 i Burned Seamen Are In Bad Shape ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CPJ-—TWO Portuguese se a men. burned aboard their factory - trawler iwhen the lid blew off a tank holding scalding cod liver oil. are in critical condition. wo more are In only slightly better c o n d i t i o n. a hospital spokesman said Monday. while seven other sailors have burns .In various degrees of serious- ness. The spokesman said the conditions of all the men were ."slightly improved." The 3.013 - ton ship Vasco d'Orey arrived here late Sunday with her injured crew members .after 30 hours of bucking high ‘seas and strong winds. The ac- while ;the ship was fishing on te Grand Banks about 2th) miles from St. John's. public life. As a former preacher. he has an uncommon zeal; as a one-time boxer he .has stamina: and as a long- time politician he has a shrewd sense of political realism. Noted for a flawless memory and flashing wit. he rarely speaks from notes, warming up his audience with anecdotes, then slipping Into his political message with deco fcwor. RETURN TO COMMONS A small man—just an inch or two over five feet—he packs a verbal punch that belies his size. When he took his seat in :the Commons last November the rose to acknowledge an all- party welcome. “Stand up." bellowed some .‘ Ps to the small man with the Fight By Dougla rimless g l a s s es and ho cheeks on the front bench of the NDP group. "I am now at my full height, which is not very imposing." he replied. “Fortunately there are houses of debate where the measurement is from the shoul- ‘3‘ 2 o I ders up rather than from the i S I I' n e ar S“°“‘de*‘~* By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA iCPlWNew cratic Party Leader T. C. Doug- sonal defeat in Regina City in K summer‘s federal election. “I'll lay me down and hlcetl fight again," Baptist pulpit years ago. said the Scots-born Dcmo- preacher who stepped from 3 mm the ham after he had left federal politics his was reflecting on his per- wars of politics more than 25 1" mad “‘9 CCF- {orpmnm‘l‘ 0f 9 His return to the House came 27 years elected as first years after he was an MP. 18 the New Democrats. into power 4 It was a mellowing experience. 1“ saSkBIChewan In 1 4 h for the man who left I e Behind him lay many pioncer- ‘awhile and then 1'“ rise and miership of Saskatchewan after “‘2 3“c°mPIiSI‘m9"t5 '— thf" first THE HOTTEST IDEA IN HOME HEATING! Now Esso pays for all the service—you pay for just the oil ! oNow Essa pays for annual-burner and furnace conditioning... ONow Esso pays for mid-season check of your heating equipment... *llow Esso pays for emergency service anytime... 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FAVORS PLANNING Now the bantam-silze battier ‘frnm the West is fighting yet third ' iless than a year and a (‘l‘ucial‘ ‘ one for the New Democrats who ,hope to add to the 19 seats they held in the last Parliament. nuclear care plan in North as well as the first - paid hospital insurance nationalization of provin- power and transportation. compulsory government- Cla WORKED IN SLUMS Born in 1904 in Falklrk. Scot. iland. the son of an iron moiilder. “ he came to Canada in 1910 but returned to Britain during the First World War. He settled permanently in Winnipeg in 1918. becoming a printer's ap. ° prentice. then preparing for the ministry at Brandon College in Manitoba. at McMaster Univer- sity in Hamilton and at the Uni- versily of Chicago. where he did post-graduate work on life in also hammers strongly for the slums. democratic planning by gmei to bolster the economy vinced me that one day I would 'and provide full employment in have to leave the church for rrent this technological age. “I submit that out Mr. Douglas 5 a equals i.... 9' and 12’ widths. we must not only be conccrned about the l934—as moon race and the missile race vincial but the time has come when we candidate—«he must also be concerned aboutlwith loss of his pulpit. Never- the human race." he has. said. ‘theless. he tried again in 1935. For Mr. Douglas an election winning a seat in the Commons is a gruelling busl- as a CCF candidate—with the ' commercial backing of Social on among his stailnchest foes. campaign ness. He flies on airlines. snatching sleep flights. carrying his own bag with one or two adVisers to help was Even on a shoestring budget. son who started _ ormidable and Wound up as a private could 'An exciting rug event in EATON “Conditions in Chicago con— politics.‘ he said. When he first sought office in unsuccessful Farmer - Labor party was threatened to .1 .3 Credit. now Twenty-seven years later be. back in the Commons. I would think that any a private campaigner. a gripping orator at least say that he was holding with few 'd. Sh ande a’r EATO N'S in Canadian his own." he sai Stores across KIDD HELPS SEAHLWCAMPAIGN Bruce Kidd. one of Canada‘s m0st celebrated milers. was in Ottawa today to help the capital's Rotary Club kick- off ils liltifl Easter Seal cam- paign. In his arms is Sylvie. .Ianvier. Miss Easter Seal. At left is Rotary president Bob Elliot and at right is Renata Pikalis. last season's Miss Grey Cup. (CP Wirephoto) liberal Party Is Said Recovered From Ruins 0i Humilia By BEN WARD (i'l‘TAWA rCTN—On the chilly night of March 31. 1958. Lester B. Pearson watched the Liberal arty plummet to the worst election defeat in its history. The party he had headed for only 64 days lay shattered. Friends urged him not to at- tempt, the back-breaking job of rebuilding ' .. five years later. the Liberal federal organization is in high gear again and the dip- lomat»turiicd-polilican it humming is shooting for the biggest goal of his notable ca- ‘ The interval wasn't easy for Mike Pearson, who will have his 66m birthday 15 days after the April 8 federal election. But the results of the vote last June 18. which doubled the Liberals’ Commons strength and cut the Progressive Conservatives down to a minority government. have given him new energy. in reviving part}; Mr. Pearson also had to i'cmoiild himself. He had to switch roles from an accomplished master of foreign affairs to that of a conidcnce-inspiring lcadc'.‘ ' domestic politics. It meant turn- ing from the othermorld almos- plicre of diplomacy to immerse himself in the not~so—dainty re- alilics of parliamentary infight- ing. party organizing and policy ecisions turned to conflicting provincial. regional and local intcrcsts. FOCL'S IN LEADER mar of his success is the tone of the current campaign. Last year the stress was on the “Pearson team.” This time it its on Mr. Pearson's personal leadership. "Mike for Me in '63." the campaign buttons pro- claim. Rcfore he took on the leader- 5 «ship, succeeding Louis St. Lau-i rent. r. Pearson had already won world fame as a trouble- shooter and peacemaker. His crowning achievement was in 1956 when he won acceptance of a proposal that a UN Emer- gency Force be sent to Egypt to neutralize its border with Israel after the British-French. sraeli Suez attack. A year later he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. His 10 years as external af- fairs minister in the former Lib- eral government were marked by other achievements: A lead- ing role in shaping the NATO alliance: presidency in 1953 of the UN General Assembly which worked out the Korean armis- tice pact: nine years as leader of the Canadian UN delegation: two nominations for the UN secretary-general} post. both rejected by the Communists. and service on the three-man committee for NATO integra- tion which became known as “the three wise men." JOINED CABINET When he joined the cabinet in 1948 after 20 years in the for- eign service. Canada became a voice in the world far beyond its power status. And the voice was that of Lester B. Pearson. In his early years It would have been difficult to picture Mike Pearson as a future florce in world councils. Born in Toronto. the son and grandson of Methodist minis- ters. he joined the army medi- cal oorps at IT. transferred to the infantry and fought, in Salon- ikIa in 1915 and 1916. “I lost most of my friends . . d you got to the point where you just assumed there was no other world. resigned to ' r being invalided home or M Elf/II .ending your life there. EATON PRICE Square Yard 9.99 ~ 27' wide WOOL AND NYLON BROADLOOM (‘anadal It's heavy quality hai'dtwist. specially blended to give you the luxury look of wool broadloom PLUS the hardy virtues of nylon—a combination to be appreciated. particularly if there are active young- SIf‘l‘S and teenagers in your home. Each tuft. of the tightly~woven, moth resistant pile has signed to give extra spring~back resiliency. shun footprints and tracking and keep your popular colours of Surf Green, Desert Beige. EATON'S In-the-Home Service If you are unable to visit the. store. one of our salesmen will take rug samples to your home. measure your Floors. help you choose your rug and give-on-the-spot estimates at no extra charge for the service. the characteristic hardtuisl rugs looking well Mink, Mint Green. Cedar. New Brown Mushroom. Turquoise, Gold, Pecan. ing Defeat A commission and a transfer to the flying corps ended that gloomy era. After the war he completed his degree studies at the Uni- versity of Toronto, spent a short hitch in business with a Chicago meat-packing firm. then re- to university to teach For a time he played semi- professional baseball at Guelph, 0nt.. and coached college foot- ball and hockey teams. DID RESEARCH ‘ He was doing research in Of- t.awa when the late Dr. 0. D. Skeltnn. undersecretary of ex- ternal affairs. persuaded him to join the department he was later to head. In 1.957 the Liberal gave-rm ment was defeated In an elec« tion. Seven months later he re- placed Mr. St. Laurent as op- position leadcr. He was just set.— tling clown 15 days later when I" r i m e Minister Diefenbaker, then heading a minority gov- ernmcnt. called the election of March 31. 1958. Still shocked by Ihp initial upset. the Liberals were match for the surging Conserv- atives. Only 49 of the 105 Lib- eral f\ll"s survived. Mr. spent the next four years rallying his broken forces and learning the art of politics. He barnsiormed the country mending the party or- ganization. hunting for new can- didates and preaching the Lib- eral program. The first payoff came last June when 100 Liberals were elected to the ESE-seat Commons and the Conservatives lost their majority. Mike Pearson the name Mike is an old army label-«is looking for the second- instal- mcnt April 8 "d 'o :t: '1 n :> :1 SPECIAL 7.99 Iin. yd. kink de- gi‘nnm ed. Currently #115519?! CE... I Culllmlmi Ill”