t a. Covers Prince Edward Island like The Dew : W. J. Hancox, Publisher ‘Wallace Ward : ss Pronk Walker M ing Ex : { any gatas Published every week day morning (except Sun- : day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd, Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. : Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425. University Ave- Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- “versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. oe “Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Asiociation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- of all news dispatches in this paper ited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local ews published herein. All. right. or republication of special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. “$12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 2 year off Is year in U.S. and elsewhere outside 9 \ land and U.K. $20.00 per British Com- XV monwealth. Not over 7c single copy- ‘ember, Audt Bureau of Circulation. oe _. PAGE 4 TUESDAY, MARCH 15, ‘1966 > - vendetta: very-serious- problems..of_~ All Premeditated? It is now pretty clear that Justice Minister ‘ardin wasn't just blurting out an unrehearsed innuendo when he first mentioned what he miscalled the Monsignor case in the House of | Commons on March 4, - demanding that the Opposition leader ‘tell the House about his participation” in it when he was Prime Minister. The Liberal benches erupted in applause, in which Prime’ Minister Pearson joined, and they were unifed in op- posing the Opposition demand that - Mr. Cardin substantiate his allega- | tions or resign. It now appears that ‘some time before this, newspaper _ men had been tipped off that the Lib- when they were in office which, if it came out. would be devastating. Justice Minister Davie Fulton that he had been called into the office of Privy Council Chairman Guy Favreau | eight days before Mr. Cardin’s state- ment in the House, and warned that | ~ “ff the Conservatives did not drop their” demands ‘for a Spencer inquiry, the _, Liberals would bring up the. Mun- | singer affair. Yesterday Mr. Favreau denied that he had “threatened” Mr. Fulton in this manner but admitted - that he had “mentioned” the case in ’ their talk. But this was supposed to be - a private conversation, as between two privy councllors, and he was shocked _ thatMr. Fulton should make it public. Think of that, now! hae As for Mr. Cardin; he ¢ompounded ° his offense in a press interview 6 March 10 by hurling the most unequiv- ocal accusations against “two or ‘more’ unnamed cabinet ministers— and: then went to the Commons the next day to protest that he had not — said anything that hadn't already been -said in the press or on television!*Yet while-maintaining in. his press. inter-‘ | view that the Munsinger case was “‘in some respects worse than. the Pro- ‘ fuma scandal” that rocked Britain in 1963, hé admitted that he was only | speaking from hearsay. He had not seen the file on the case, which he assumed to be with the RCMP. But if - he believed there was a danger to national security in the matter, why didn't he call for the file to investi- /. gate? : This exhibition’ of irresponsibility from a man holding the position of © Minister of Justice shouJd be cause | for concern-to every Canadian. And | # if indeed his conduct was part of a reprisal scheme in which his. govern- ment colleagues were involved. and. which was put into operation after an unsuccessful attempt to blackmail the Conservatives into silence in the Spencer case, it puts the whole Pear- son cabinet in a sinister light. % ‘Meanwhile, ‘as La Presse of Mon- treal well says, while parliamentary battles are reduced to the level of a government of the country take a back seat. Precious time is lost and hundreds of thousands, if not millions. of dollars are spent. in utter waste. De Gaulle’s Breakaway Recently Prime Minister Pearson assured the country that he was not unduly worried about President de . Gaulle’s attitude toward NATO, despite the fact that he was threaten- ing: to supplant the Atlantic: alliance with the old system of bilateral de- fense agreements. thus undermining all that the organization stands for as a defense against Soviet encroach- ment in. Europe. De Gaulle has now made it plain that he is moving France into a neutralist position be- ____tween_ the two major world powers. .: It is withdrawing the remaining forces _ it has assigned to'NATO commands. and demanding that the two principal os military headquarters should ¢ pe Ghe Guardian Now comes the statement of former | leave French territory. In letters last i week to President Johnson and Mr. | decision is irrevocable. The note to the U.S. contained .a clear invitation for the U.S. to close. down most, if not all, its 40 supply | pases and headquarters on French - soil. The note to Canada recalled that Fratice has agreements for the con- ktruction of French airfields by the RCAF, but Said that “the French gov- ° ernments no. longer correspond to conditions.” France would have been happy to propose n# gotiationon all the changes. the notes said, but any such talks would have been “doomed to failure” by the attitudes of the other governments, which favor integration | of forces. Since this is unacceptable to France, the French government ‘saw no hope of getting what it wanted from negotiation and decided ‘to act by itself. uae Canada and the U.S. both have said - they will not accept French command over their forces in France. One | would expect“ that Canada will be equally explicit in stressing that no 1 i ' reorganization of NATO is possible without the cooperative decision of all | the member nations. For them, NATO has done its job well, which is rare in |_a peace-time alliance, including as it does countriés 5,000 miles apart and | as diverse as West Germany, Turkey | | and Iceland. As noted in our Washington” | dispatches yesterday, it was Canadian | Liberal government leaders, back in , 51946,. who proposed the NATO . erals had something on the Tories | defense structure which integrated European’ and North American | Strength to a degree never known before. It is this structure which is now threatened; and it is time, surely for a clear-cut statement in Parlia- ment as to where Canada stands in the matter. : New Zealanders must have, heen jolted when: they heard Australian - opposition leader Arthur Calwell fore- cast recently that within the next 20 years New Zealand. might feel forced | to become part of the United States. — '. Such ‘guesses have been hazarded in connection with Canada from time to time. But New Zealand! And this | his own countrymen that Australia could hold out a little longer than New Zealand ut might at least have to follow the same path. He put this - down to the danger from a stirring - Asia (above all Communist China) and to economic realities. This prompts the Milwaukee Jour- well should walk so boldly forth upon so high a limb. There is, it says, a persistent school of thought which” holds that some day all the English- speaking world will find it to its great advantage to forge much closer economic—and_ perhaps _political— ties. This schoo] feels that the similar- ities of outlook in America, Australia, , Britain, Canada, and New-Zealand | *are so deep and so insistent that they - - will eventually form a magnetic attraction which is irresistible. It is argued that some form of federation | mon origin and their kindred ideals. This speculation fails to take note of the fact that Canada is a bilingual, a multjmillion-dollar commission is at work seeking to. heighten our con- sciousness in this regard and to warn us of what will happen to us if we. lapse into a one-nation rather than a two-nation concept of our destiny. But barring this, many of us will sub- Scribe to the belief that there has been probably never been a time in history, other than during the two world. wars, when the co-operation among the five lands mentioned by our Milwaukee contemporary was closer. The modern world’s manifold pressures and, threats have called’ forth a kind of\mutual understand- ing and almost instinctive cooperation which has been a welcome element of stability on a badly scattered globe. EDITORIAL NOTE Agriculture Minister Greene refer- red disparagingly. in a lively speech “he delivered: recently, to the ‘Senate membership as “those old fogies.” It is true. as the Hamilton Spectator points out, that some of our Senators’; are old, a few are very, very old; but many of them aren't old at all. Out of | 97 senators listed in the 1965 Parlia- mentary Guide, 28 were 65 years of age or under as of February 15 this year. 21 of them were under 60, while five were under 50. Two of the.sena- tors. indeed, are even younger than |’ Mx. Greene, who is 45. ' “, > a Pearson, it was? intimated that this | Australian Prophecy brash prophet went further by telling _ nal to seek the reason why Mr. Cal- | is the logical outgrowth of their com- -, - | } | a __ NOT QUITE UNANIMOUS he Pearson Government, I | French Government believe, is planning the praise- | This situation ‘OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Needed -A Canadian Decorations System: in 1947... dals, so that Canada. does not even for a king. is regrettable, | worthy step of filling.an embar- | and has led to international em- rassing void in our panoply of _ barrassment. national ‘sovereignty. It correct the fact that, may alone a- _ mong the developed nations of | | the world, Canada has no natio- | nal order or inedal with which foreign benefactors for couragé or service. beyond the’ line of duty. a |. Canada does -have one me- * dal’ - the Canada Medal, creat- ' ed by Order-in-Council in 1943. Fourteen specimens of it were | prepared by the Royal Cana- dian Mint in 1944, seven bearing the word ‘‘Merit’ and seven bearing its French transtation “Merite’; all had the word rim. Twelve of these are in go- ‘Vernment: Cstaee Two were” stolen, reportedly by that great magpie of t Prime Minister Mackenzie King: none were ever awarded to deserving Canadians. . But in a little-noted reply to a question in - Parliament about Conad> Mecal two years a- we_can reward citizens or thank (° ~~ a itistitution—shall_not_deteriorate | yi) servant who nerforms praise- men" engraved round the E _Where The Money Goes. = FOR WHOM AND FOR WHAT? — Who will beythe honoured re- cipients of Canada’s new 100th birthday medal? There is a de- termination that this national into an instrument of political: patronage. -Ideally—a_non-politi- say ‘Thank You” with the same tion to such diverse wor- es as a retired Governor neral, a long-service nurse in the Arctic, a civilian who risks his life to save children from a fro- zen river, a foreigner who ser- wes Canada as-honorary. consul in some distant port,- a -ci- worthy tasks behind his desk. Then too, there should, to re- ‘eal honours committee should ward bravery in-the armed for- | be set up to"winnow recommen- ¢es be a distinctive Canadian souvenirs, the late | go, Prime Minister Pearson re-_ plied: ‘‘We will be. resurrect- ing that, perhaps, one of these days.” Orders perhaps will soon be ' given to the Mint to strike many | as one hundred Canada -medals. Then on July 1, 1967, it will ap- | ‘+ -propritely” be“ awarded to-deserv-")~ But~-last- year's’ | ing Canadians, probably by the | spending is about one billion dol- General pinning the | lars more than the expenditur- | ' Governor dations; this might consist, for example, of ex-officio mem- bers. such a federal and provin- cial chief justices. There should ultimately be se- veral grades of orders and. me- Cross — integrated, naturally. of any system of Canadian de- corations, the ban on Canadians accepting.,awards offered by fo- reign governments could be ex- pected to be. lifted. — Ottawa Taxpayers should be impress- | ed, if not comforted, by-the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics’ fig- ure which shows that the mun- icipal governments of ~Canada spent $2,679,770;000 last year. This sum, up almost $200 ,000.- 000 from the: ‘previous year. shows something of the signific- ance of municipal spending to the economic life of the: country. Individual municipal budgets re- ceive little or no attention out- side a municipality's boundar- | jies. , municipal. i | medal, hanging ftom its red - | es of the province of Ontario at | white - red striped ribbon, on the | the same time. chest of each proud recipient, | at an investiture on the-lawn in front of the Parliament Buddings Will Canada’s awards and de- corations end with that one me- | dal coming to life 24 years after its conception? It would be rea- | sonable to create a Canadian | Order as well: several times in | the recent past, cabinet minis- posals, such as the creation of an Order of St. Lawrence. As well as having no decora- tions of our own, we have a self- denying practice which forbids Canadians to accept civil or mil- ; litary decorations from other | bicultural country and that even now : countries, except in time of war. This is enforced ‘for jordinary Conadians, but flouted by the ie) would be well worth considera- group. For instance, French and Papal titles and decorations are frequently accepted. And Foreign Minister Paul Martin, in the official announcement of the appointment of Mr. Rene Garneau as Canadian Ambas- | sador to Switzerland, added “Mr | Garneau was created a Knight | of the Legion of Honour by the te i _ Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO i (March 15, 1941) — - Hitler boasted ‘that no amount | @f' additional outside help for , The Federal Government will need some 10 billion dollars to | meet its commitments this year. | more reason each ‘year to spending _ mindful of | still seems minor league ¢om- government Perhaps municipal: Journal Sey large enough that. the mayors and reeves of Canada have the right to a most attentive hear- | ing whenever they come‘to Ot- tawa with theit financial. prob- _ lems." The-municipalities are spend- fig more money than they are collecting. The five-year . capi- tal budget approved by Ottawa City Council is one more pros- pectus for spending which gives Ge- Ss, ee New Kind | By Dr. Theodore RK Van Dellen | ‘Rare illnesses. go unnoticed | until a prominent person is af- | fected. The more distinguished | the patient, the better known the disease becomes. This happened /to King George Ili except that | his ailment was misdiagnosed. | The king had a long illness | characterized by abdominal | symtoms, dolyneuritis.. and men- \tal. disturbances. During the ‘latter he was a mapiac and un- able to conduct the’ affairs” of state. Medical historians work- ed for two centuries to fit the puzzle together and a recent | British report suggests the solu- i tion. The insanity of George III i was a c'assic example of porph-- Most of our readers may be | as puzzled about the disease as | were the king, his family, gov- | seanenat and ail .| doctors”. ‘the psychiatrists of th | eighteenth century. At any rate, | some people, through an inborn dency to metabolize: porphyrirs. The chemical accumulates in the causing a variety of | cess. The chemical change may ' be activated by sunlight, barbi- turates, or develops spontane- | ously. e The monarch’s attacks were | | ushered in by exposure to cold. | He coughed, felt tired. and soon ‘developed abdominal colic, rap- ' id heart. beat. hoarseness, pain- ful muscles, and stiffness of the | extremities. The neuritis inveiv- ed his head, eyes. mouth, face, hands, and feet. Shortly thereaf- ter he became agitated, confus- ‘ed. unable to sleep. talkative. | and irritable. He then developed | illusions, delusions. and -halluci- ‘mations. The attacks lasted mon- ths and often susbsided over- night. t | ‘The modern , physician tests | ' the urine for porphyrins These | may give the urine a port wine color especially after standing | ‘ina container for a few hours. | The latest treatment is’ to with- hold fluids: a simple remedy, DIABETES AND WORK F. T. writes: My son has just - /received a diagnosis of diabet-. és. Is tractor work too hard on him? \ REPLY. ‘No. Farming will do him no | harm but his diet should be ad- | justed to supply the energy the many books on this disease should prove useful-in your fam-, ily. ; ‘ BLACK EYE K. R. P. writes: Is beefsteak- still used in treating a shiner? REPLY Not at today’s prices. Cold compresses applied for 30. min- utes every. two or three hours will reduce swelling and discol- | oration. On the second day, hot compresses are better. Enzym- ._es-also_are-helpful...(One..of the _ largest. manufacturers of these. - products is a meat packer.) LEG LESION Mrs £E.V. writes: Will keep- ing a with a sore on it ele- vated of night en€ourage heal- ing he ; Yes, especially if this is a varicose ulcer. However, all the benefit..will go for naught unless the leg supported during the day with an elastic bandage or. stocking. : the English | physicians including the ‘‘mad” error, develop or inherit the ten- | NOTES BY THE WAY. - | Of Madness : | Mother: “Now, Willie, I want | you to go in and get acquainted with the new nurse and give her ; a nice big kiss.” Willie, Jr.: ‘{Oh | yeh, and get my face slapped | like paw did.” — Montreal Star. “Pardon me, officer.” the pe- | destrian said in.a busy intersec- tion, ‘can you tell me how to get to Polyclinic Hospital?” .“Yes,”” said the officer, ‘“‘just | stand where you are.” — Mil- | waukee Journal. : ; This is the long hair, tight | Pants age — maybe that’s why } some of the teenagers move so slowly when. asked to do their chores .. they’re carrying a lot of extra weight and restricted in | their movements. West Bend | News. : | Money may pot make a per- son happy, but it "keeps his cre- \ditors in a better frame. of mind |.—Guelph Mercury. An evening of TV will con- vince you that while the Rus- : sians_ might be ahead in space, we sure got ‘em licked on deo- _ dorants. cate. The ambitious young actor had set out to conquer the world with ‘tHamlet,’’ but the tour soon ended, and he was compel- led to walk home. ‘Didn't they like you?”’ asked a sympathetic friend. ‘They didn't seem to," replied the actor, sadly. ‘But didn’t they ask you to come be- fore the curtain?” ‘Ask. me!’’ repeated the would-be Hamlet, _ with tears in his eyes. ‘‘Ask me! They dared me!"’ — Montreal Star. Everybody For Decimals ° bs Milwaukee Journal it will take several months be. It’s going to be almost unani- 'mous — Great Britain is join- ing in the use of decimal cur- rency. Beginning in. 1971 the pound will be divided into units | ‘of 100. On the present basis, that would make a cent worth. a- bout 2.8 American cents. As. Australia’s prime minist- ér said the other day, it is time for Britain to join the other 95 |.per cent of the world now ona ‘decimal system. ~ Australia ;made the switch recently - The | first noted effect was reported ‘by an architect who gave each |. | of his four children a new cent at breakfast and the ‘youngest ” ‘promptly swallowed his. = The | young hoarder wasn't the only_ one— banks \.ere swamped with customers seeking new coins as souvenirs. fore all the old currency is with- drawn. And it expects that in- _ stead of collecting new coins for souvenirs, Australians will soon start collecting the old pennies , and florins about to become ob- solete. ae The changeover is costing the. ‘government about $71 - million American. The cost is in subsi- dizing business for changeovers in cash registers, adding and , other business machines.. 7 Britain faces the same prob- lem of expensive changeover in business machines. -But most of all it faces the problem. of terminology—how; is an aging baron going to figure out how much two guineas—or 42 shillings make — Cumberland Advo- ~ or two pounds two shillings—is~ The government figures that | in decimals? ee L There is a_ terrifying ality about air crashes that is — not shared by accidents in any oth- er form of travel. } The most recent crash in Jap- | an— the third in that country in | little more than a month— has brought total fatalities in plane _accidents so far this year-to | nearly 700. : Bigger planes and bigger pas- | senger loads’ inevitably ‘ mean _| needed for heavy work. One of | increased casualties ‘in serious | crashes. In spite of recent disas- ‘ters, travel by air is still-one of — the safest forms in relation to | passenger miles. In Canada ‘alone last year, more than 4,500 persons were killed in highway traffic accidents. | This terrible carnage is ac- . if not with indifference than with fatalistic calm. Ima- ;gination is no longer stirred. | Perhaps it was on that day in. '1900 when a young woman, crossing Broadway in New York. (was knocked down by a .“‘horse- |less carriage’ travelling at 18 |m.p.h. and became North Am- | ‘erica’s first fatality in the mot- or age.. : Cars travel several times that speed on highways. today, and _the number of casualties reflects it -High speed, whether on the ground or in the air, reduces the margin of time available to cor- | rect. error, human or mechani- — cal. At High Speed Spectator There is a compulsive - pres- sure for more speed. Modern jets with cruising speeds _ of about 600 m.p.h. and.with high landing and take-off speeds may be out of date in-a decade. The Anglo-French Concorde, flying at Mach 2 (twice thexspeed of sound, about 1,400 m.p.h.) and with a swift, steep take-off is making good progress in design and construction. Its first flight is scheduled for 1968 and it is ‘hoped. to have it in service in 1971. And- beyond: that is March 3.;; : speeds and absorbs the risk that go with them. j “We have \f4 : VICE Whatever your needs -\ cameras projectors - tape recor .- yeu name it! — you can rent # now Melnnis . PHOTO and HOBBY Ch'tewn. little hope of a reversal of the | upward spiral. Because the pro- perty owner is the main source of-- revenue for the cities, there. --—----—--- is no real alternative but to put up the mill rate. The property owner is the - same man who also pays feder- al. and provincial income taxes. Finance Minister Sharp has levels _ pared: with that sum. But it is | same dollar. | ters have discussed related pro- | be | of for the . court practices derive from Eng- land. For that reason we watch carefully any changes made in English law and practices and ourselves adopt those which tend to improve our system. - One change now advocated by the English .Law Society tion here.. for we are constantly seeking ways of safeguarding |.the interests of accused persons L ae at a table near his coun- ..tion in a prominent place in the Britain could wrest_final victory , fromthe Axis. Germany’s arm- ed forces, he claimed, would take the lead during the spring and summer ‘from the Italians. who bore the brunt through the winter. | At least 50,000 Italians were | out out of action in the seven-day Fascist offensive personally d rected in Albania by Mussolini, ahloritative Greek. sources an- nounced. 4 TEN YEARS. AGO . } (March 15, 1956) It was announced that Cadet Ralph .Kennedy. the son of °Ma- jor and Mrs. Earl K: Kennedy, Central Royalty. has been sel- ected as a member.of the Royal Canadiqn Army Cadet team which would compete in the Commonwealth Rifle Meet at Bistey—Engtand—in-by——— Georgi M. Malenkov arrived in ' Britain on his first visit vond | ‘the Iron Curtain. Apparently he ~Years-of-earetr:—effort-to-repe who are presumed to be inno cent until proven guilty. io The Law Society seeks aboli- tion of ‘the dock in English cri- minal courts. -Jt would put the 1. This is the practice in Ameri- can criminal courts and it seems to work well: the accused is not . _so_placed_as_to be.the centre of | attention, and he is in a position to.confer easily with his lawyer throughout the hearing. Out Of The Dock oes Montreal Star | * Most of our criminal law and! The for change Is put cogently by the Law Society: “For all practical purposes the onus of establishing guilt re- mains throughout upon the pro- secution and the effect of plac- | ing the accused in a structure in the centre of the court which. from its nature, suggests that he is already the subject of impris- onment. is contrary to this fund- amental principle.” There are other arguments for change, among them the fairness of ‘giving the accused easy access to his counsel and ~ _ removing from him the stigma that is associated with his isola- court room, perhaps the = es_and it can be_ fairly argued that anything that places the accused at a disadvantage is a' | denial of this principle. Kept On Leash | 4 Teronte Daily Star _ “Worse than a erime. a blun- der." That may be history's verdict on the savage prison sentences passed by a Moscow court this week on two Russian writers, Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel, for the ‘‘crime™ of writing satires on the Soviet system and publishing them abroad Sinya\sky was given seven, vears and Daniel five. The trial has already produc- ed. perhaps, the strongest anti- Soviet reaction ‘that has been seen in Western Europe since the #Hungariap insurrection Protests have come not only from writers and artists and up- holders of free’ speech general- ly, but even fromh Communist spokésmen:in several countries. lish the Soviet gone up in smoke. : The strength . the protest seems to be due fot merely to ‘image’: have |was delighted hy the experience. ‘indignation at the treatment of ‘ < 7. 1 ta “ ® ; ‘Sinvavsky and Daniel = but to the fear that the case may her- ald a return to Stalinism. This fear is probably exag- gerated. Under Stalin. particu- Jariy in his later years, Russian authors had to work under a tight censorship. Nothing could be published: unless it followed, the party line of the: movenicnt: Not only were criticism and_dis-_ sent. forbidden; a book or a plav might be suppressed because it didn’t deal with one of the of- | suca | ficially approved themes as the Jatest Five-Year Plan or the wickedness of, the United | States ROWING IS OLDEST ion- in criminal cas- ‘ | i. 1 Pty i j ‘No wonder—with all the differe savings plans ‘these days. End that confusion confused about — _ the best way to 6 ‘ being advertised ny branch of the Royal Bank where you'll find exactly the type of account or deposit arrange- ment to suit your needs—plus a wide and varied range of other useful services, as. well. Vv Tick Off this check list. Then visit your convenient neighbourhood _branch of the Royal Bank. Remember—you can bank on the Royal! (0 Savings Accounts—for steady savings and accumulation of interest. 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