* The Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor . Editer Published every week day morning (except Sum day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, | Charlottetown. P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton end Souris Represented nationally by Thomson Newsoapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- verity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgip Street Vancouver MA 7037. . Member. Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadien Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper gredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news 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 mot serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwea'ti Not over 7e singie copy Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 . TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1965. Perce ee The Right Approach We had a good spokesman abroad last week in the person of Ontario activities in Canada and in ether countries.” He was paid this money, the statement added, to “perform economic intelligence tasks, including the provision of detailed information on the trans-mountain pipeline in western Canada.” At the time, no charges were laid. It was reported that the accused civil servant was gravely ill and was ex- pected to die. But apparently he made a remarkable recovery, for he was reported in a Vancouver paper recently as having boasted openly that if he ever talked there would be some heads swimming in Canada and else- where. In any case, it would seem that questions about his physical ability to stand trial and the national interests involved in the evidence that might be heard in a public court, should be determined by the judge hearing the / case and not by the government. This is the view taken by Mr. Douglas, NDP leader, and it makes ' sense. On Mr. Cardin’s statement that Premier John Robarts, who addressed | 250 British and Canadian business- men in London on the theme of Can- ada’s national unity, and who insisted that anyone who is looking for a breakup of Canada over the rights of Quebec and other problems is going to be disappointed. z “There is not, today, one respon- sible political figure,in any province of Canada who advocates the dissolu- tion of Confederation,” Mr. Robarts insisted, adding that Canadians were quite capable of working out the two vital questions—national unity and national development and independ: ence—even though they were hardly discussed in the recent election campaign and the country still has to come to grips with them. But, Mr. Robarts warned, Canada’s political parties must co-operate to make Parliament work for at least two years before another election. Reporters queried him on this state- ment after the meeting, which was sponsored by the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Great Britain. It seemed, they suggested, to run coun- _ter to Mr. Diefenbaker’s declaration of.his intention to oppose the minor- ity Pearson government when Par- liament assembles. Mr. Robarts did mot deny this, but he stuck to his point. Whatever his national party leader may have in mind, plainly the illusions as to what would happen to ‘any party which forced another un- wanted election on the Canadian . people at this time or in the near future. ‘ phasis on the need for all parties to co-operate in making Parliament work and getting on with the job of nation building. This means that they ‘must put aside partisan political dis- putes and don the mantle of states- amanship. Wasn't this, after all, what ifpe. Opposition. parties Pledged.them--. defined. In the official words, it is there was not enough .admissible evidence for the laying of charges, | Mr. Douglas. asks: “On what basis, then, did the government issue a | press release saying that this man We believe he ts right in his em- ‘selves to do in the campaign? It was | ‘the Liberals, and the Liberals only, | 9) snie production on’ the land, in ‘who insisted that a majority was Heeded to carry on effectively. It is potentialities and uses of new as well ‘mp to their opponents now to prove “the fallacy of this contention; and Particularly it is up to the Opposition eader. Mr. Diefenbaker, to set the | right example. was guilty of accepting money for performing acts of espionage?” Mr. Diefenbaker has also pressed this question, maintaining that the orig- inal statement constituted a claim by the government that there was a prima facie case against the man. He has demanded a royal commission of : inquiry into the matter. However, Mr. Cardin will have an opportunity when Parliament meets on Jan. 18 to make a complete explanation, and thus obviate the need for such an inquiry. Surely, in view of what happened to his pre- decessor former Justice Minister Fav- | reau, in deciding on his own that there was no case against Raymond Dennis in the Rivard. affair, he should be quite happy to let Parliament have all the details in this instance! Huge Research Project In the last few years, there have | been a number. of-scientific- projects ' involving scientists the world over, working as a team. The International Geophysical Year and the Interna- tional Years of the Quiet Sun (study- ing the sun at its lowest activity) are two of them. But more important for the people of the world is an enor- mous research project which is just | beginning and in which international Conservative leader in Ontario has no | collaboration is both willing and smooth. It is the International Bio- logical Program, concerned with “the biological basis of productivity ' and human welfare.” The idea for such a program has been discussed for some time. British scientists took a major part in work- ing up a ground swell of opinion and in 1960 the International Council of Scientific Unions set up a planning committee which -has -approved_ the idea and its urgency. It was not until 1964, however, that the objective was to ensure a world-wide study of (a) | fresh waters and in the seas of the | as of existing natural resources and | (b) human adaptability to changing Another point made by Premier | Robarts in his Londén speech was that much of the current stress on Canadian unity and development arose from the desire of each region 4e provide a standatd of services un- dreamed of 15 years ago, including such concerns as redevelopment, rural | = ces: ' ing in all conditions from deserts to rehabilitation and pollution control. This situation required a strong cen- tral government exercising policies directed primarily at holding the eountry together. We can do with more of this talk from our political leaders at this time. A Strange Case Justice Minister Cardin has an- nounced that there will be no charges brought against a former Vancouver postal employee involved in a spy case that led to the expulsion of two Soviet diplomats. He says the govern- nent doubts whether the evidence against him' would be admissable in court; therefore it has decided not to prosecute. "In that case, then the government surely owes it to the person in ques- tion to explain what it meant in the statement issued last May by the ex- ernal affairs department, on the ex- pulsion of the Russian officials. -“In one instance,” said this state- ment, “a Canadian civil servant was paid thousands of dollars to gather information and documentation: in Canada, the purpose of which was to assist in establishment of espionage conditions. This is nothing less than the future of mankind. It means the sys- tematic study, for the first time on such a scale, of the natural resources of the earth and a fresh, thoroughly organized look at how human beings develop to meet changes in environ- ment, which nowadays may be rapid. Under the IBP, teams will be work- | | pon a * | °. Vv ar ing NOTES BY THE WAY Kidney Stones! tres pen WO Tener Van Dn | et eo ea treatment on several occasions It has never tet ee ee weys is time consuming and - Stonee fa likety. to be Wevttoting, . Avner reper rm 'Wes cer | . More Protein Than Beef many sounds ‘De- cause physicians to dissolve all the that | An acre of lend vee ae San old. | more insect protein two igang elton dean . ts the sort of ; 1 ef A‘and 3 were introduced via tat cong te one inthe parched a omen ducers chatter ehewt Go ty ‘6 poultry flecks to eee eee ture of their industry. This | feast on ‘hoppers, One renukt aide "ai news wes brought to light by was that the eggs, ! Spots & ceameinnd ase A Bee Basch, a who eens © Se ee or geo matrix) of th@ | quite of Food Technology in Wie “thet have ee te tive the manera agers, On ee en ot gueabe the Sateer 15 5 oe the eubstences : a. eeid im part, "Am | telmer as a for special im © cowed 6 of the more | occasions. in Saskatchew lenge of be. an ' . ze, ee 5 eee | ea tnsects’| however, the graashopper ice ee SS Cees De came have ae Cea: 62 | Bias Op Het S Ge aoe mentbraney. ae mare sesaatas ee" thought Bach” daly treatment tok | otata WH | cle hervest. espana, Gorm from 18 te 20 hours. Stones He @leo seid affluent Cana- | tes, and beetles is enough to er than six months did not re- | diene and Americans should | drive the Prainte combine | epond so well but the over- alll | che ——, chew over the examples set in ator out of his greimoriented percentages on 260 patients were | Agia and Adrica where people | mind NEW QaRelag, encouraging. The majority were - . - — Enuy | dissolved completely or partiel- > Ze> 7S |W. ‘The procedure (ake 0 long minle! ie , ait that it is re oraedca’. In adsi- me eop e $s ames tae tion, it is difficult to determine 1 Ma ‘lia Ne D\\ Tue peasege ef tener rough | ce ea mira aan | oe) Ni passage i bly would have distur- for the excessive ad ea Rik [\ we.) - WAL! ebd irregular rocks is accom- bed French President Charles de | my father had for Second World “ il : J] etn f i panied by intense pain. Soreness | Gaulle to learn that a young | War leaders,” ic 1 4 { ‘a ee Ty tt eu eehe usually begins over the kidney | Brazilian student named Church-| The boy has a lot of company. ‘ . area and radiates into the groin. | ill de Ga lle Longou Moulin | There must be thousands of peo- The victim moans and squirms | wanted to have “De Gaulle” | ple in the world who were nam- OUT OF THE FRY! as the discomfort increases im | dropped from his narhe. he's ed after Charies de Gaulle. Just NG PAN severity. Relief is obtained with | that kind of man. as there are thousands of Amer- ; | pone 7 et — the pon te oer pape 5 would | icans who were named after o6 . . rn , dissolv , o ve pleased French leader George Washington, Abr OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson removed surgically, — to hear that a Brazilian @ re+ | Lincoln, and Franklin D, oon | gnnenias tie cheneiees comaes- | Paned to grant the a te velt. There's a song, in act, 2s ° e calculi helps to pre- | quest. He explainea thai ic called ‘Franklin D, Rooseve Ministeria Emo vent * recurrences <apecialiy | could not, because ‘the presi- | Jones" that was very popular ; uments Come High sae original cause re er that Hat an. @ | ebour 3 years age requires 136. -repeat, ne me Minister Pearson created | income tax. correspon | Some. Goeeie: S00, Nnewe | siatonmen wae decervey: erate) SS ee eee oer hundred and thirty six— Ea tee Gir wee ok! arses |Get oes el aa. ene ee Chere |. reapect.. | named Gary, after Gary Cooper, paid Canadians, working a re- | job, which he named Director | not a normal family in Cana develop concretions under cer- The student was very upset. and the hundreds of girls called gular 40-hour week the year a- (of the Special Planning Gecre- | that could not make dan. me conditions. Victims of gout, He said he would appeal the de- Lana, after Lana Turner. round at current average wages, | tariat — as if nobody did any | dy «Beater yoyo x: | example, may form a urie | cision. “ft.is mot fair thi || There was even a boy cail Rin to contribute the federal income | Hill until Mekesbift Mike erri- | that's a good start ona year at | 2\¢ stone, when excessive | should’ have ‘te go on | Tin Tin, but he was able te get ne: Swill” saatetaia “Gee |wea! ~ He: hes ae toe a a aera! ad amounts of the chemical are ex- | this ridiculous name and have te | his name changed. Cabinet Minister. Even one of |post a man, classilied by Pick. |ter; its the difference between | teatment Other develor stow the several ministers who are | ersgill as inferior to a Canadian | driving a nearly new car and a peeeeneet, Chere, develep. stom now holidaying in some faraway |baby, named Tom Keot. His |dangerous clunker; it goes a | cyurctuse the, drink too tile Sport Skeletons sunny resort. job is to promote the Pearson |long way to paying the rent or | Wajet;,cycrmduige ia calcium A Cabinet Minister now draws goley of the ‘war on the mortgage. Shouldn't we songs. comme emcseeive Ottawa Journal his pay of $15,000 a year as a wand he ie paid $25,000 6 tell the government to get their. pratmia D. of remain too long 1a The hasards competitive number participating Minister, plus his Minister's car | year, which is more than most | grubby hands off the earnings Soc ae S renee St See. ot Seek | eporte —S 2 injured - allowance of $2,000 a year tax-'|deputy ministers are paid and | of honest_men? There's got to |“ ae eee | Tee MDeCpUNaN Te Tsaee Eee nine is Pe care a Teen dhae an Conedinn armhe | te come Kind of crowbar te ten] INJECTIONS ARE SAFE | abuse edeqaale clalisiice on | 1) St ee ees aoe’ 000 a year, and plus his MP's | ssador is paid. As John Diefen- | pose the public good on the gov. | M. M. writes: Are babies ever | tatali ee oe expense allowance of $6,000 a | baker quips, Kent has certainly | ernment. In general, it's time | hamned by the “shots” doctors Our ¥ = — Ser saucihe Toes ues 4 ieee the oot ee ee | sine oA bee ted to Lge et ur Yesterdays | msie tor interesting read total of $36,000 which is approx- | ty— but it requires the income of heat on the question of “who ‘REPLY cae yr ve mee 8 oe aes nntely Seabvaloat 46: O00 EG. |Gex. coomntele’ EO Urategs | sere?” The teed’ a eubere-| Renchides conus. econsiepaty |. (PCO Ten Guariten Sum) | -Sceenahe eile aul ier — tax a ae citi- | workers to support him. | ment we are getting is too cost- but they de far less damage | . eva vhala 406 el hae ence condi . Consider some other typic ef ovenah " 5. A married worker, with two | workers: axtued at pokied " bonld je use $20 extra a week the geomeive talon | suagenel sede G | Some ee econ dependent children, earning the | $3.65 an hour pays, assuming a | week? That's $1,000 a year - a | are given. | stag eheeelee Beier osteo | oe ats aca ae ot average Canadian wage not of full year, ehout $20 a week in | lot of money. vi : _ $43,500 per year but $91.00 per | act AGE AND CONTAGION rest of a former minister of war | the fatalities occurred in -steck weak ef. which is paid tax-'| } MiB Bie? er’ At what age os er © ee ee oe ee ree ee ee tree for "« ap tor he Th chitdres ely to go through former minister, whose | fied for racing purposes); o n e- divsletichoaye * iecatel | an S$ oO an inavid the various contagious diseases? | name was witnnea, was «.- | fifth in big Indianapolis ty pe , ied to onl idpate- | 3 eats ee Cree ee er cone | Pee and one-fifth in sports 9056.24 per year. So it avant Milwaukee Journal agious diseases oc- earthquake damaged pillar | cars. In the same period 2% lives 196 of those typical Canadian | Just 22 years ago, thousands , to Sweden by might, secreted be- cur when the child starts f + Oe ent Dee een Or | Seam Desk, I sentencgare mone | workers each paying ‘tax the | Jews in Denmark and Nor- |-hind bulkheads, wrapped in | sror Deiween the ages of five ee ey. | ee eee Gee oe eer | year around, to maintain each | Way were in a desperate plight. | sails, hidden with the fish It [ont eaves. Billy Conn of Pittsbur Be in 1960-65 out af 1,200 whe Cabinet Minister: and that ex.| After three years of Nazi Ger- | wes a small scale Dunkirk, an | ARTHRITIS AND INNER ly gh punch- | ride annually. cludes the incidentals and fringe | an occupation they were thre- | incredible feat performed under ORGANS |e a decision over U5. football took 148 lives in benefits accruing to every Min- | atened with Hitler's “final eolu- | the noses of the Nazis. The nev 0. Z. writes: Can arthritis af- Lae of Des Moines, Iowa the same period, en increase of ister. tion of the Jewish problem” — | tral Swedes openly gave the're- |fect the bowel and kidneys? | before « srawd of mboul 13.000 40 per cent over ‘the previous : concentration and extermina- | dugees @ haven. REPLY - | Sane to Moiese Garde®. tive years. About 700,000 bays DON'T FORGET THE MP‘s tion camps. To demonstrate their gratitu. | These organs usually escape, | | play high school or college feot- Of course it is not fair to think | Danish tesistance leaders | de, a number of leading Amer. | even though some types of arth TEN YEARS AGO | Ball alone in the U.S, only of Ministers; what about | learned in 1043 that the Nazis | ican Jews have set up a new ritis are generalized diseases (November 98 1965) | “Very few!’ fatalities occurred the MP's? Even the most idle | arse te ound up Deniah| fund eolsing peveram’ Thanks |@0d extend beyond the confines | , Ti Haggis at St. Andrew's |. 40 21's, pestetbell; boning back-bench MP absori> the tax |Jews and send them to Ger- | to Scandinavia, Inc., with a $i | of the joints. | ors Chk elon Ms, | ie sald to take an avetege of ‘payments. by .70--»vorkers to | many. -- Resistance workere- hid-|-million- goal: —Interest-from the | ALLERGY AND- THE HEART | tel was borne high when Mr. tour lives @ yest, but at least meet his pay alone; on top of |them in cellars, lolts, anywhere | futd will provide scholarships | F. B. G. writes: Could allergytp Nell A. Mathesod, MP, carried | sign: nave died so far in 1065 that are the MP's fringe bene. | When the Nazis pounced on Je- | to allow young Danes, Norwe- | C#use heart trouble? io eT into the | Fiackey ie soulionai the fits, pensicn, weekly air-ticket wish homes the night of Sept. | gians, Swedes and Finns to REPLY | beaquet ball | figures so os caeeen ta hae a | home, subsidised newspapers 30, nearly all of Denmark's | study in American universities | This is a moot question. Some | | tow satali and books and hair cuts and | 6,000 Jews had venished. or elsewhere. persons, overly sensitive fo the | 4 painting by.Fragonard, re —_ meals, free stenographic and _jIn the weeke that followed, | Thus more than two decades | of alcohol, coffee, tea, and fe of Lord | Whatever such figures.m.ay__ messenger service and free pos- | 5,000 Jewish refugees were | tater, “Scandinavian courage tobacco, suffer from palpitation averbrook, Canadian-bora | prove, they do show the eontinu- tage to name a few. in tiny boats ectoss | and humanity are remembered. | of the heart when these substan British publisher, has been re- | ing need for increased safe ty And of course they have all - ces are used. turned to a New York woman | measures in aport, including <af- just hed eight weeks’ leave Senate meant “nie? who .eued an poem com-/ er equipment and training feom their jobs with full pay, ’ : ae pany to recover value procedures frequent medic- ible they applied for tenewal A Quiet Spy Hunt Keeps tools in A-l condition. | canvas, of te | eneconaras aa - Terente Globe Mall polar ice, on water and land, on crops — and bacteria, on food intake and color . vision. Information from this immense ~ effort will be shared between the countries taking part for the good of all of them. : Headquarters for the organization have been set up in London in offices provided by the British government and the Royal Society, which has now published details of the British con- tribution and its place in the general picture. Our information on the sub- ject comes from a British Informa- tion Services release, w hich States that most of the time from now until 1967 will be occupied in preliminary studies. In that year the program will get properly tinder way and at the moment is expected to last about five years. About 50 nations are collaborating in this work. There may be no revolu- ‘tionary discoveries from it, as- the British release says; but it will, at the very least, “greatly increase our knowledge and understanding of the world we live in and so our ability to se it for the yrelfare of human- of their jobs— that’s what the election was ali about. I wonder #f, say, General Motors puts Johnny Canuck, on the payroll immediately a job is declared vacant, and keeps right om pay- ing him until the morning he starts on the job after success. fully applying for it? That's what we do for all our MP’s. So what else costs the taxpa- — around Parliament | The ‘mystery surrounding | expulsion of two Soviet. diplo- the | The Opposition’ Leader has re- | q : z 2 g i Charlottetown to: | Montreal would jeopardize national se- | tt ga = F i i i i : ‘ zs my iG fr is vik a : ; 3 f gE i 5 i Ee LE ayir #g : EDs ERR 432 2° ef R E*9 fi 5 s3 ir, -ete., W.D. JOHNSON Lower Montague. * STUDDED TIRES Sir, 1 notice in the _ s a i z E z | i i : = ik gs 58 ii : ms 4 i i : EukS ir i 2 a z F iy I i if i 5 a yu i i : & th ara i Moncton Saint-John | Halifax _ Sydney $ 9.00 Corner Brook | Toronto | Winnipeg Vancouver t ; s 5 ut & e z z z R i 4 = : 58. eek : ye tet i i i ae se z i it if “4 Ze hl it t erie i; 3 iH f ii 3 i af¥ 5 £ 8? : gr pl *¢ i ll te , | ig i i : sf 8 Z it ef ‘tt 3 i ohle Z : as f 8 rh 7 & a a RE i sky a-3 7 if mae i j i g. e | :