¢ Gunedion Prince Edward Island Like The Dew Frank Walker Editor Published week day morning (except Sune dey ea ens Wahday” e108 Pres, Set Cherlattetown, P.E.I., by Thomson Newspepers Ltd. Branch oe at Summerside. Montague, Alberton : ~ nationally ‘by Thomson Newspapers ing Serviced: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empife. 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; enern ie 1030 West Georgie #° Vancouver MA 7: pe (Sa Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian - Press#is exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches in this papei credited to it or to the Assoriated Press or Reuters and also the loca! naws published herein. An. right or repuolication of special dizcatchies here, In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12:00 a year by mail on rural routes and arese not serviced by cafrier. $1800 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per wee. in ve and elsewhere outside British Com mw monet over 10¢ single ccpy. Member Audit Bureau of Chsulation. —Fhe— strongest _memory_is weaker than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1966. Her Home Her Castle Mrs. Kate Burgess, a 79-year-old widow who has only ohe leg, is block- ing*progress in Toronto. Worse than that, she can’t hear money talk. “These “are pretty serious offenses” against public morality in Toronto comments The Telegram: we probably ought to join her bors in getting cross at her. re- _ to sell her six-room house to make way for a multi-million dollar apartment and row housing develop-...}- meiit. But darned if we can.” The city’s building and develop- ment committee have ordered . the 478-suite project held up until some- © one can come to terms with the old. -»-Jady, who helped her’ husband build their home 56 years ago and who says the only way they'll get her out of it is over her dead body. She gets along well enough on her old age ‘pension and rent from three roomers. She doesn’t need and isn’t tempted by ‘the $40,000 the developers are - ready to pay for the last house on Hillsdale ‘Avenue to complete their big assembly scheme. And since they have no power of expropriation, they’re in.a quandry. — ‘SEverything from the time I was 28 years of age is here,” says Mrs. B ess, with defiance-in her eye. edevery bit of the woodwork. papered _ Evggy° brick they knocked down wi oe in [be a drop of blood out of my {. My whole life is wrapped up- ‘house.”- ae e price offered is twice what hersneighbors got. for their. houses; but@what of that? “What is money you compare it with happiness tentment?” she asks. And as for“holding up progress by her at- titufte, she has an answer to that, too: ‘‘There’s poor kids living among rats in other parts of the town, yet they’re pulling down, good houses. I never. thought peony would go “| its proposals had_ originally come mad.” What seems to shock the develop- ers more than anything else is the lady's cool heresy that “money~ has - nothing to do with it.” How can that be possible? But there it is, and they'll have to make the best of ‘it. As the Toronto paper remarks, her title, certified by love and work as well as the law, should stand for life against all comers. Where Will It End? According to a Soviet newspaper report, patriotism is taking a truly . fantastic turn in Red China. It has gone on‘a-Nazi-style book burning sents with all schools Glosed and students hurling their “rotten” school - books on huge bonfires. There is no evidence that “even one general ed- ucational school is now operating in Chirfa’’. Many of the pupils have join- ed the militant Red Guard. Only the writings of Chinese party chairman Magy Tze-tung can now be found, on Peking—bookshelves. Publishers are “working above their capacity in these disastrous days” to churn out more volumes of Mao’s voluminous writings. Worse still, from the Rus- sian paper’s standpoint, “attacks on proféssors, teachers or educational establishments are always accompan- led by anti-Soviet slander.” inly the extent to which ad- ‘oration of Chairman Mao ‘has gone is almqst_ incredible. A recent issue of the Peking Review speaks for it- self. The headline uf the lead story says: ”Nation elated by the Great Leader. Chairman Mao’s. Inscription - for the New Peking University Journ- al and for the Women of China Mag- azine,” And the story beneath it ex- plains: - . “Chairman Mao, our great, teach- er, leader, supreme commander and elnjsman, has recently written the . reé character inscription ‘Xin Bei Da’ (New Peking University) for the university’ new journal, and he has -ups-and-downs ..... I sand-- ot also written the title for the mag- azine Women of China . . . The rev- olutionary students, teachers and staff and other workers of the uni- versity, highly pleased, gathered for -a-eelebration on August.22 when they | 9 received the first isue of the journal, on the front page of which the three large characters, written with power- ful flowing strokes, were printed in red ink . . . They jumped for joy when they saw the name of the journ- a) was in Chairman Mao’s handwrit- ing and that the first issue also con- tained a picture of Chairman Mao.. And so on, and on; 34 printed pages of the most sycophantic balderdash : imaginable... ie _ One article, which must have . had Moscow gagging, describes: how the Peking Song and Dance En- ‘semble, on a tour of the Soviet Union, - extolled the virtues of Chairman ‘first performance in Donetsk, by “a | Soviet political scoundrel” wantonly maligning the great leader of the Chinese people. In protest against the insult, the ensemble cut short its performance. “The sordid obstruc- - tion on the part of the Soviet revision- ists,” adds the article, “only served “to throw additional light on their |. foul features; it could not affect the r Soviet people’s respect for Comrade . Mao Tse-tung, the greatest Marxist- Leninist of the present era, and their ‘profound feelings for the Chinese people.” The authors of this stuff are pre- ‘sumably educated, adult: people. One thing at least can be said for them: ‘that' when it comes to propaganda they believe in going the whole hog. | In The Doldrums Premier Johnson’s performance at the recent federal-provincial tax conference has left the Quebec Lib- erals with a major problem in tactics. ‘Thus reports a writer in the-Mon- treal Gazette, who says that at the moment, the best answer to Mr. John- son’s tough line that Opposition Lead- er Jean Lessage can seem to come up. with ‘is a weak “me too.” The Premier’s demands on the federal purse, coupled with his hints of sep- aratism if French Canada does not get its much heralded “equality,” have made it impossible for the Lib- —erals to-go-any farther in the game of- fationalistic brinkmanship without tumbling right over the edge and into the. outstretched arms of the _ separatists. On the other hand, a mod- erate approach by Mr. Lessage would open him to charges of being soft on Ottawa. “This dilemma. was. made ‘obvious ‘in a recent French-language telévis- . ’ fon program in which the Liberal ~ Jeader appeared, and in which le was- quizzed by newsmen about his posit- ion on the Quebec government brief. He was careful not to do more than damn it with faint praise, and with the suggestion that a good many of from members of his Liberal govern- ment. When agked whether he agreed with Daniel Johnson’s “two nation” concept, Mr. Lesage wouldn’t go any farther than noting that the phraseology was-very similar to his . reference to Quebec as “‘the mainstay of the French Canadian nation.” Not -once in the 30-minute program did he launch anything that might be in- terpreted as an attack on the Nation- . al Union policies. This, as the Gazette writer says, may be a calculated ploy; but it ap- pears more likely the Liberals are in . a stew over what line they can. take in the vital field of federal-provincial relations that will appeal to the elec- torate and still be different from the National Union stand to permit a confrontation: It would be unfortun- ate, on all counts, if their leader should be doomed to spend the next few years’ faintly echoing new ad- ministrative initiatives in this most important area, EDITORIAL NOTES According to an advertising ex- pert, color television will result “in better commercials and worse pro- grams. Some viewers may question the possibility of attaining the latter objective. ! ** * & - Medical researchers at the Un- iversity of California have found that there are no tears quite like human tears. The distinguishing mark is the abundance of the harmone lysozyme which isa mild anti-bacterial. agent. The chemical makeup of the tears of a variety of animals at the San Fran- sisco Zoo was compared with human tears. The researchers found that monkeys have a trace of human type tears and gibbons had more lysozme than any other primate, thus showing a closer relationship to man. And what of crocodile tears? Crocodiles don’t have any—neither do bears! | the South Atlantic, central Sou- will seem to. r masked by can be bent by gravity. The _ photographs and later measure- “ments: tended to bear, out-a=pre- THE JACK SPRAT FAMILY NOVEMBER ECLIPSE A ‘sclentist pacialistan in ec- lipses leads a frustrating life. The phenomena can generally be observed well only from an expanse of empty“ ocean,’ a jun- gle- skirted mountain, or some other out-of-the-way place. The sun’s eclipse on* Novemb- er 12, for instance, will be visib- ‘le in its totality in a relatively narrow band that passes across th America, and the western southeastern portion of the Uni- ted States. HAVING NERVOUS- SPELL To a properly situated obser- ver, the. 2,160-mile- wide’ moon precisely over the sun, whose diameter is 864,- 000 miles. This accident of jux- taposition permits -scientists to observe solar featurer usually the sun’s brilliance Pacific Ocean. A partial eclipie’|. | will be visible in the extreme National Geographic Society more than 300 scientists ans technicians from the United States are going to South Amer- ica. The National Science Founda-. tion reports that~U.S. research-, ers will use rockets, jet aircraft, balloons, ‘groundbased ‘instru- mentation, and a ship in a wide- ranging effort to collect infor- ‘mation about the sun and its ef- fects on the earth’s weather and communications systems. Christian Science For those who sniss their Bach in stereo while driving’ to and-from work, good- times are coming. The Wall Street Journal reports that most 1967 cars can be fitted, out with a System de- signed to give the motorist up to an hour and 20 minues of listen-* and the brightness of the sky. Interest in the November ec- lipse is heightened by the fact that the sun: will be ee one of its “nervous spells’ of great activity. An eclipse obsérver who trav- els thousands of-miles and sets~| - up tons 6f equipment, often in-a barely accessible wasteland, may see his work go for nothing when clouds suddenly obscure the sun. Even if the weather remains elear, the scientist is often so busy, with his equipment that he hardly has time to glance ip at the awe- inspiring spectacle. Blessed. with. the’ best of luck, an éclipse watcher still has in- frequent opportunities to see he sun obscured. The. sun _is_in-oal eclipse- an average of only. four hours and 50 minutes each cen- tury. During a period of 50 years one veteran astronomer travel- ed nearly 100,000 miles to see 26 ‘minutes of total eclipse. All the discomforts, dangers, and disappointments of eclipse- watching ve proved worth- while, however, for a ottal ec- lipse gives scientists a wealth of basic data about the sun, moon, and earth. SUPPORTS EINSTEIN Star photographs made by a Natig¢nal . Geographic reece team during a 1952 eclipse of the sun confirmed that starlight: diction of Dr, Albert. Hinstein. He contended ‘that one of the proofs of his theory of relativity would be an apparent shift in the position of stars whose light. Tays pass through the. sun’s field of gravity. To get grandstand seats for the celestial show in November, Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian les) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (October 1, 1941) A new program of rehabilita- tion, framed with the objective of placing the ex-servicernan in as good a position as “if he had remained a_ civilian was .an- nounced by Pensions Minister MacKenzie. Nazi airmen employing agild- ers were shot down in the Black Sea area, presumably the Cri- mean peninsula, and at least nians have fallen in tempt to. crack the defences of Leningrad and Odessa, the Rus- sians reported. TEN YEARS AGO (October 1, 1956) Suez Canal Users Association ‘was set up amid reports of Wes- tern Big Three disagreement on whether Egypt be persuaded or forced to accept international controle of the waterway... ‘eeived federal permission to use the wonder-drug aureomycin to 260,000 Germans and Puma- | ‘their at- | Canadian fishermen have re- ing pleasure. What makes this development possible is a plastic capsule, us- ually called a cartridge, which is so. simple to play that one execu- tive. taught his three-year-old daughter how to do it. * Enthusiasts liken it to popping bread into a toaster. Sales for the boat and plane market are also expected to boom. A wide choice of selections is already available: When the sickel as’ a~ grain harvester was replaced by the cradle, it was probably thought- that the last word in progressive agriculture had been spoken. That reflection was provoked by ‘a news dispatch on the develop- ment of a cucumber plant which would enable cucumber growers to make use of a mechanical picker. People willing to pick cucunbers by hand are becom- ing harder to recruit. To make the use of a mechan- ical picker practical, the cucum- ber’s way. of life has to be dras- tically altered. All its fruits have to develop at the same time, so that the picker does its work. with one operation. The unim- proved cucumber requires and- Will Draw Scientists To South America Jets traveling 600 miles an hour will engage in a race with the giant shadow of the eclipse oe ie ray oes, Lame Sk OO one interesting research tact scientists will study the response of animals to the sud- den blackout. When an eclipse occurred in Turkey last May, ants stopped searching for food half an-hour before maximum one and -birds stopped singing... . Musical | Motoring There are, however, some flies in the ointment. One bug still. to ‘are {De Worked out is_the sound qual- ity, not yet equal to that of the better conventional equipment. Prices are still a bit high, al-- though Japanese co helping to bring them down. Then, too, there has aes an unfortunate confusion of types of cartridges by different manu- facturers. No one yet knows which type will eventually win out. ough we consider ourselv- es in the “‘silence is golden” school,-we welcome auto- stereo as a big improvement on auto- video, We just could be tempted to listen to Bach on the road. But we'll wait until we get home to picking of mature fruit three A Calgary woman, bent on finding out whether the Calgary Zoo is violating the Lord’s Day Act by charging admission on Sundays, has already discover- ed that the job she has taken on is far from simple. Not only must she present the police with a formal com-,/ plaint that contains all the relevant information (which is logical enough(; she must then wait while the complaint is structions. In other words, the police cannot act on a complaint of this nature on their own in- itiative, but must obtain the sanction of the attorney-gen. sent to the attorney. general's | P department in Edmonton for_in-. eral's department. A research chemist with a Chi- cage meatpacking firm has de- scribed an ‘‘inexpensive’’ way: Yof making reconsttnied mea | proteins out of mushroom: ne: Arther Karler said the method, applied on a large &cale, mizht help solve the world food short. age. He: said mushrodms are able to grow on packingHouse waste a food that has a meat p<) rs }eontent as high as .mea:' bring fresher fis to the coun- try’s' dinner tables, ee. It has ‘the added advattage ‘ see Batman, thank. you. _ AlwaysSomething New Montreal Star. times a week for from four to six weeks. Which amounts to a lot of walking bent nearly-dou- ble. Plant geneticists have given of cucumber This, admittedly, will. cite people in a position to watch the steady industrialization of tion. much. If you watched the right TV program recently, you saw a lettuce harvester at work. An EXECUTIVE Instrument : Calgary Ajbertan The clear inference is that, the Lord’s Day Act is not really a statute in the normal but rather something To-the extent that this is the case, the Lord’s Day Act is not : piece of democratic legisla- tion but an instrument of executive dictatorship. As such, it muet at, be abhorrent to God, “ee Mushrooming Meat _ Ottawa Journal higher calcium and vitamin con- tent, lower fat percentage, .less cook-out loss and reduced cook- ing time compared with ground’ meat, he said. . a Dr. Karler said his product has the texture of eal meat and can be made to have its color, odor, and perhaps taste as well._‘Our—goal-_is_to—have_the mushrooms growing: on a contin. uous basis with the mass doubl. products and convert them into ing in‘one hour,” he said. The price of his ‘‘meat extender’ if | | sold commercially would be two | cents a pound 4 | lop. swelling of the feet? A 22- -}— Some excess fat ir th- subcutaneous "| under the sl ‘n. It is likely to be ‘Tis associated with a receht gain -|'The fat does not extend below ‘| ages and stockings minimize: the |The enlarged: lower leg is not only unsightly and heavy, but . fs |Senic ray. Swelling Of The Feet _ By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen “w reader writes: some healthy young adults deve- ar-old friend of mine has no eid art or kidney trouble, and no ‘varicose veins or milk leg, yet she has this trouble especially — she is on her feet for some time. F.8. ‘It is worse in sum- ae most logical explanation eee eee or orthostatii edema. This is common in cit- cumstances of physical eedy. ity and may, for example, ex- plaia why many people develop swollen ankles after sitting or. standing for long periods 9 time. The condition is noted: more often in women, especially in. the premenstrual period. The best remedies are oral diuretics anda reduction in the intake of salt. Heat -tends to agerevale the puffiness. ‘women have denselte pt. tissue of the legs, often associat- ed with increased fluid retention an hereditary disorder and often in weight. Some of these women have pelvic girdle:.and thigh obesity.. the ankle bones. Milk leg (lym- peeannay ustally stems‘ from an lympatic passageways. Only one. limb is likely to be involved. The. swelling may disappear after resting in but returns on be- ing up and about. Elastic band- swelling and prevent the tissue spaces from becoming overdis- tended with fluid. Unless these measures are done the edema a persist regardless of treat- 5S may follow. an injury suchas after spraining or breaking a bone in the ankle.. subject to ulceration. SPARE THE JOINT -.— | P. C. writes: Is there any way to prevent an enlarging joint on the big toe from becoming a bunion? © REPLY Yes, by eliminating pressure on that part of the foot. This can be done by- wearing well- fitting shoes; inserting pad be- tween the first, and second toes to.keep the big toe straight, and learning to walk properly. Send a stamped, self- addressed enve- lope for leaflet on bunions. INFRARED ‘LIGHT . J: L. whites: I've used an air purifier and recently a nurse told me the infrared t in it can cause cancer. Is this true? “REPLY g No. Infrared light “isa “heat ray and in this respect differs from ultraviolet — a carcino- Some air purifiers have ultraviolet but there is no harm because the rays are not directed on the individual. j STATIC ELECTRICITY P. DeM. writes: Does mag- netism of the hands in a 75-year- old miale mean anything? I don't handle anything electrical ex the lamp switch but my ha attract mes os eee You have seared static elee- | tricity through the friction cre-' ated by walking on a rug or rub- bing your hair or a piece of wool material: BETTER LATE THAN NEVER A. 0. writes: My bachelor - cle, 60 years old, is going to marry a woman 20. years his junior. Will there be any reper- cussions as'to health, social rela- tions, or otherwise? This comes under medical, doesn’t it?” ; "REPLY | Yes. Many marria age level and d have turned out to be successful companionships. ; TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— : s at this tiation * “Why "do | curren obstruction of the deep vein or |- ‘about this country, a By. main in office as secre eral. + Sie a Canada’s external But sat "Mar, minister, P 8 warned draft affairs fle the to 58 & s issued . a to the effect that its 15 members; which include ‘the ‘powers, Shortly ahead: Thant “sald through a spokesman he appre ciated the expression of support and. “will, of course, give this matter serious consideration. There can be little doubt that Alexander Canadian Press Staff, Uniled Nations f ralsed at the time of Dag Mary ; gem a ' i marskjold’s death in would be revive would still be as unacceptable. international even n resenen in such terrible none The fact ad “these times said progress must be made in these matters before he- will re- ; consider his decision. For this reason, most, observers think the door to reconsideration has been left ajar., Thant is widely admired for his diplomatic skills, intellectual scope and sense of justice. UN members also believe the easi- est ‘way to avoid a fight about who should be secretary-general. fs to keep the one you have. Martin may have had __ both points in mind when he told re- porters, ‘Thant is virtually an: pressing and encouraging abput the news that Harvard Univer- sity has decided to set up a chair in Canadian studies. oa is depression because Mt fs Canada’ ta the. cleastt peighbir omartt States, its = is biggest outlet or foreign in- vestment. been: thought that, as a result, there would be a demand: in the United States for atcurate information ~nl ti and ago Driving is most dangerous at dusk. ; ee ~man at this =| Canadian Studies ‘Anyone? find Harvard establishing a new chair of Canadian. studies. We hope its example will be fol- owed by more universities. Then, perhaps, there may be some modification in the tradi-- tional American belief that: Canada is a snowy wilderness pers and Nelson Eddy — singing “Rose Marie.” The. first requirement, . course, is to get students to take the new course. Come on, fellows, it's probab- ly_easier than- han-Trigonometry A GETS ADVISER’S POST TORONTO (CP) — Janine Smiter, public relations and in- fotmation officer for the Art Gallery of Ontario, has been ap- pointed public relations adviser ;}to the National Gallery for the centennial exhibition, Pageant of Canada,to be held in Ottawa © from October, 1967, to January, announced Friday. 1968, it was NOM aL aah orey ° STORM SASHES “@ COMBINATION DOORS @ INSULATION. © WEATHER STRIPPING -©@ GUTTERS & CONDUCTORS | CHARLOTTETOWN Our Kings County Representative: “Wilbur Jarvis, Kingsboro. YOUR ATTENTION PLEASE! As of Monday, Oct. 3rd. we are reverting to our winter business hours. IE: Monday-thru Friday 8;00 a.m. soon p.m., Saturday, 8:00 a.m. to Noon. MacDONALD- ROWE WOODWORKING Co. Lid. --Thant’s Uniaus Position 8 @ again. a a. inhabited. only by Indians; trap- — oe Electric hai