Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W.J. Hancox, Publisher Burton Lewis Frank Walker Executive Editor itor Published every week day morning (except Sum days. and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Alber Charlottetown, P.E.I., Branch offices at Summerside ton and Souri Represented nationally by Thomson Ne Advertising Services Toronto, 425 Universit Empire 38894; Montreal, 640 Cathcart University 6=5942; Western office, 1030 Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA Member Canadian Daily N Association and The Canadian Press Press is exclusively entitled to the use Montague, this paper ec sao Reuters ed in. $11.00 @ year by mail or rur Alver’ sod! arees not serviced by carrier $14.00 @ year off Island and L year in U.S, and monwealth. Not over 7¢ per single copy. mber Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 6 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1963. A Bit Of Spoofing When Premier Lesage spoke here onthe occasion of the sod-turning ceremony at the Confederation F: ers. Memorial Building site, he dealt th the need for promct- ing biculturalism in Canada. It fell to Premier Shaw to thank the speak- er for his excellent address, which | he did very warmly. Then he went on to note, reminiscently, how prev- alent the use of Gaelic was in this Province in years gone by, how de- plorably it had been neglected later generations, anid how needful it was to keep in mind the heritage of our pioneer Highland settlers. In that half-humorous manner which Mr. Shaw can bring to bear so nicely upon delicate subjects, he urged the Quebec Premier to join him in a “tricultural” campaign for the restoration of this grand old language to its proper status along with French and English. Mr. Le- sage joined smilingly in the ap- plause which greeted this propo. and one gathered that he appr ed the deft way in which the point had been scored. Perhaps the Quebec minister of resources, Mr. Rene Levesque, was equally appreciative of a letter he must have received by now from a New Democratic Party member of Parliament, Mr. Frank Howard— though his first reaction would likely be one of complete astonish- The ‘etter which Mr. Howard by sal, ment. says he sent started out, like most letters, “Dear Mr. Levesque.” But from there on it was written in Iroquois. | It seems that Mr. Howard had written Mr. Levesque on June 6 in English, about some Indian lands at Oka, near Montreal. Mr. Levesque replied on July 8, in French. So, with some help from Iroquois friends at the Caughnawaga Reserve, Mr. | Howard penned his reply. He wrote the minister, in Iroquois: ‘“Possi- bly if more thought was given to the position of the original inhabits of this country we might to develop a truly multi-cultural na- tion within which each of us could be exist in peace and harmony.” The letter ended: “Ton sa we va to ee,” which is Iroquois ‘Yours sincerely.” kon non for This could be described as a vit of spoofing, but it is of the kind that helps io restore a sense of pro portion where it is needed. Farming The Hard Way It is claimed for West Berlin—- the biggest industrial centre be- tween Paris and Moscow—that its tows give the best milk yield in the world. Its 2,400 cows produce an average of 9,000 pints each year or a total of 11,818 tons of milk. Is- raeli, according to the Kiel, West | German, dairy association, comes | second, and the Netherlands thir | Few people in the outside world | would think that isolated West | Berlin, surrounded by Communist | territory, would have many cows, much less establish milk production records. But there are many small farms on the city outskirts where farmers have an added incentive for reaching maximum production A large amount of Berlin’s food must be brotight in from West Ger- many across 110 miles of Commun- ist East German territory. Even with the high milk production, about 90 per cent of the milk required by | the population must be brought from the West, shipped in by tank trucks and eee foreign cars. Each of these containers is ssopratn aempbonsdar yi pub | | | when leaving ft for West Each searched by the police equipped with sticks and bars on the hunt refugees. This aeces- sitates a second costly pasteuriza- tion of all imported milk in West Berlin it is distributed through 3,000 milk dealers to the population. are five small villages total of 200 farmers in West all of them situated on the of the city. The farm ad- he triple barred wire fences ast German fortifications. mers driving their tractors downs a potato field are within a throw of brown-uniformed guards and their machine guns. Yet they produce, as well a products, a remark- int of fruit and vegetables. nee West Berlin was fed only by airlifted supplies during the 11-month blockade of 1948-49, the cut off from its agricultural hinterland in is for before There with a Berlin, outskirt joins me's st German dairy able ai Ever city has been natural East Germany. Its response be- speaks the determination and abil- ity of its people to maintain their independence, The only major food- stuffs still obtained from East Ger- many, it is said, are potatoes. The Soft Approach One of the criticisms levelled at former Diefenbaker Government in which it exploit- politically, its wheat deals with That was how it built up its the was at the wa ed, China strong Prairie support, they The Pearson Government was sup- posed to be above that kind of thing, and to have modestly soft-pedalled part in the $500 million wheat and flour agreement with So- viet Russia. The soft approach, however, be just as effective as the hard sell; and t s the way Hon. Mit- che! Sharp, minister of trade and commerce in Mr. Pearson’s govern- ment, the matter in ad- its own ean handled dressing the Saskatchewan Farm- ers’ Union at Moose Jaw recently. Said Mr. Sharp: “To begin with, let me say this although it is super- fluous. When the present Canadian Government took office, it was deter- mined to act in the interests of all parts of the country without regard to the distribution of Liberal mem- bers, The fact that there are no Liberal members from rural con- stituencies on the Prairies did not lessen, in the slightest degree what- ever, our in the welfare of this part of the country.” Mr, Sharp went on to say: “I might be permitted to add, however, that it would be helpful to those of us who have the responsibility of governing Canada to have the interest | advice in the House of Commons of. members from rural constituencies on the Prairies who support the Government, and with whom we can work and consult from day to day Of course, it wouldn’t reaily difference! But it might by way of consultation, make any be helpful, especially to a minority govern. ment. No crude boasting here, it will be noted. No crude threats. But the wheat farmers, no doubt, will get the point; and the Govern- ~ment will still have that glow of satisfaction that comes from merit- orious deeds unselfishly done and without the slightest thought to political interest. Not the teeniest, thought, as Mr. Sharp emphasized, EDITORIAL NOTES Giant Soviet turbo-prop airlin- ers at Idlewild Airport may be the next concrete result of the current East-West thaw. The subject of an exchange of air service between New York and Moscow is understood to be one of the items which Secretary of State Dean Rusk will take up first with Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko when they meet. ” weeniest The announcement of Mr, Donald Gordon’s reappointment as chair- man of the board of directors of the Canadian National Railways was made within three days of the date when Mr. Gordon’s appointment ex- pired, and would have to be renew- ed. This, notes the Montreal Gazette, is a far better record than what hap- pened on the previous occasion when he had to be reappointed. His eon- tract with the Government then ex- pired in September, 1960, and not until October, 1961, was its renewal announced. This meant that Mr. Gordon was left for more than a year as the day-to-day head of the Nations" IT’S THE NEW MODEL TIME OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Opportunities In Canada’s Northwest Arctic “Canada should develop an, immigration policy to attract | northern settlement," Mr. | H. Badanai, Liberal M.P. for Fort William, told me on his return from an inspection tour in our northwest Arctic. | “There are tremendous oppor-| e tunities in our far North,” said. “The immense resources | there could support one milion | residents.”” Bert Badanai, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Public Works, made a two weeks tour by air during Sept- ember, visiting all the leading | settlements in the Yukon and Northwest Territories. His pur-| pose was to see for himself just | what his department is now] building in that area, and why. | His tour took him from Ed- monton to Whitehorse, then to the old Gold Rush capital of Dawson City. From there he went to the new community of | Inuvik, at the mouth of the great | Mackenzie River; this is an en- | tirely new community, buiit_ by his department at @ cost of $43, was gradually sinking into the muskeg and permafrost. From there, he went to the Reindeer Station, where herds of reindeer | imported from Siberia are being raised to replace our own deci- mated herds of reindeer and caribou. Then to Toktoyaktuk; then south again through Hay River and Fort Smith to Yellow- | knife, and thence home to Fort | William. This was Bert's first visit to our great northwest. The valley of the great Mackenzie River, running 1,200 miles before it empties itself into the Arctic | i cean, expecially impressed him “Along its banks can be found | gold, silver, oil, furs and tim-| ber, he said. ‘That valley alone: Couldi nl pport one anil settlers in a truly Canadian style of tiving.”” WARM CLIMATE, GOOD FooD I asked Mr. Badanai about the climate. Could settlers put up with the frigid conditions and the loneliness? In reply he showed me the many coloured | photographs taken with his cam-| era during his tour. These de- picted fine modern two-storey | homes, sunburned residents, the majestic sweep of the blue Mac- | kenzie—and in the foreground of many, there stood the Parlia- mentary Secretary wearing, as he pointed out to me, the same clothes as he wore in his office on Parliament HIM plus his pol-| itician’s blac! har birt fteod) dow North”, as the residents call! it. “1 saw the largest cabbages 3| have ever seen, growing in an experimental market garden at Inuvik,” he replied, “Each was 16 of 18 inches in diameter. | Such large cabbages are grown | nowhere else. And they grow) lettuces and beans. But no pota- toes, owing to the permafrost | there. Potatoes must be shipped | in, and cost 20 or 25 cents per| pound 10 be ship- fa, Ra in a et come ly than in Fort Wikiam. But) they have an abundance of de. licious fish, caught in the Arctle | Ocean or in the many lakes and rivers there.” ESKIMO BANQUET | Perhaps his most unique ex-| perience during his trip was to eat dinner in an Eskimo home. jis was not the caribou-skin tent which the Eskimo used to call home, but a fine two-storey clapboard house, erected upon federal government, clean well-kept modern hom ne his Eskimo hostess served a jcious meat of Arctic fish af wild rice. ‘oh coun et of white baeseiynle i Pig Potentialities which has fired his | enthusiasm. “Above the 60th| parallel, which forms the north- ern boundary of the provinces, miles; and only” 30,000 peopte | live there,” he told me, “There are many Scandinavian families | who would feel right at home | there; there are many Japanese | | who would make excellent set- | tlers there. We have sadly over- Mult, Sclerosis By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellan ‘One of the kindest and most | beautiful women I know exper- ienced a temporary loss of vision in her right eye when she was 2% years old. The blind area was confined to the central part and, when she looked at a picture, she could see only the Sight returned within a few weeks, and the visual symptom was blamed on an absces- sed toot! Two years later, in the spring, her hands became clumsy, awk- ; ib, This disability was, most udticosble while tp- | ing, writing, and dressing. It las- ted’ all summer and then peared gradually, That wa three years ago. More recently, her legs were afflicted in a sim- ilar fashion, She dregs her feet when attempting to walk and is IP. This girl has multiple sclero- sis (MS). but, despite the als: | ease, she continues to be n cheerful, and hopeful. Her story is typical of one way in which “Ms begins. In addition, there are neurological findings such as changes in the reflexes and spinal fluid. Improvement occurs period- feally because the disease tends heal and others form, Ulti- mately, the malady may prove incapacitating, although some victims live out their life sp an Naat anshe Ten active yes: MS Is a fairly common neuro- logical disorder, There are sald | ¢ 250,000 victims in the Uni- ted States, and six out of 10 are women. It favors the young (ages 20 to 40), with the peak around age 29. We do not know why these widely scattered 1slands or plaques of diseased tissue deve- lop at random throughout the | the nerve is destroyed leaving | \a | brain and spinal cord. Early | [lesions may be reversible but not after the insulating sheath of scarred areas. The result is a disturbance of nerve function, which leads to a wide variety of | looked for too tong the great) neuromuscular symptoms. possibilities of our rich north- | looking for a job, I woul | there at once, confident that Hl would make a good | and never lack for work." Gifts For Galleries Montreal Gazette It might seem like having the best of both worlds to be able to buy a work of art donate it to a public art museum, make an immediate deduction from | | income tax, then still have the | work of art in your home to en- | joy as long as you live, ‘This has been possible, under the tax laws of the United States. But the Ways and Means Committee of the House of Rep- resentatives in Washington has been reconsidering this law. It seemed rather too great a con: oa, to the taxpayer. the committee decided that | law should be abolished. The committee, however, has now reversed its decision, Tine jaw. will be allowed to stand. ‘The reason for this reversal was quite clear. The committee was told that if this tax concessions were re- moved, American museums and | art galleries would lose thous- ands of gifts of art objects. In Canada, the director of the National Gallery, Dr. Charles Comfort, has urged that a sim- | ilar law be adopted here. Here anyone may donate a work of art to the National Gal- lery and deduct the cost from | his taxable income as a “gift to the Crown.” But he cannot keep what he | sives. How little inducement thore is for such gifts is seen in the fact that 99 per cent of the con- tents of the National Gallery of Canada have been purchased with public funds, which the | taxpayers, of course, provide. Canada has long been a coun- try with a striking contrast be- | tween the wealth and variety art in private collections and limitations of the public gal- = Reasonable tax concessions would greatly enrich Canada's Public collections, while also giving private collecting greater purpose ing than jit has Private collections could ve- come public collections in the making. Uniformity Lags London Free Press The British North America Act that firmly placed education solely in the provincial jurisdic- | tion has scored another road- block in progress toward a more uniform Canadian school sys- tem. The provinces’ education ministers abandoned the attempt toward uniformity of curricula; instead they will work gradually toward this purpose, textbook by textbook and course The need of more uniform ed cation Pah. (eabnine Revi Proof comes from young resi- dents who are requited to move from province to province and find their progress hampered by different syllabuses. It seems that provincial objectives are so varied the assimilation cannot now be possible. Another step was taken by ed- ucational authorities who ap- proached Prime Minister Pear- | son with the suggestion that a federal education office be “set | up in Ottawa. They belived their proposal will receive considera- j tion. They knew that while pro- vineial autonomy remains this office could not be directoral but suggestive. Yet it might guide the provincial systems more | closely together. nly a couple of days earlier Andre Marcil, Montré finan- | cier, berated the effect of the BNA Act as being a reason that a bi-cultural commission is need- ed to study the Canadian scene, He insisted provincial ed- ucation variance was the cause ng Frenchmen could not move successfully | from, thelr own province and 5 Neither financier ‘or provincial other than working through low and difficult co-operation b e- tween the provincial spheres. Convention On Air Crimes International Civil Aviation Organization An air law conference conven- ed by the International Civil Av- iation Organization in Tokyo has adopted an international conven- tion covering crimes commit- ted aboard ft and acts en- dangering the safety air- craft or persons board. This'is the first venture at codification of international law on the subject of crimes aboard aircraft; the new con- vention will come ogi} agg when it is ratified by 12 The convention lays in an form rule that the state of na- tionality of the aircraft !s com- petent to exercise jurisdiction over offences and acts comimit- ted on board. This rule is spec- international Neither they, hoy the arrived sett . 0 nsider coming “Up South’ ‘he told me, But it is that huge expanse of empty country with its great ality of the aircraft. An article in the convent {on concerns “‘hijacking” of air- craft, This provides that, if a person on board unlawfully and by force or threat of force seizes the aircraft or wrongfully inter- feres with the control of it in flight, all parties to the conven- tion shalt have an obligation to take all appropriate measures to restore control of the aircraft to its lawful commander of to Besserve hie control of i roe conveqsion, pies’ 21k ¢ acts" committed on board which may endanger the safety of the aircraft or of persons or Property therein are within the scope of ar eat ae of the aircraft en ce Re ret These per: idee, Tek. eantaetion te tak reasonable measures — in life there | city: \"s | | «| The onset is not. always as | there are over 1,300,000 square | land, If I were 20 years old, apa | mild as mentioned previousty. | | Tt may start as a paralyzing dis- order, leading to severe incapa- or it may come on more slowly, without periods of relief. Relapses usually follow sit- uations that bring on stress, including, pregna FOOT AND LEG PAIN EV writes: Could pain in the calf of the lege ba ce to fallen | arches? If so, ean anything be fone about it? REPLY . this 1s one cause of leg RABBIT RAISING Mrs. S.F. writes: Can any | disease be contracted from ral: | sing domestic »abbits’ REPLY Not if the animals are’ properly | eared for in cages where they do | not come into contact with other animals. Tularemia usually at- fects wild rabbits 2 rie case leave a defo EP. Not when recognized early and treated properly. The condition is not as common today as it was in the past because of more stringent laws to wipe out tuber- culosis in cattle. BRAS AND NATURE E.AS. writes: that it 1s dangerous to wear a Does P Pott’s dis- rity’ tight bra. Is there eny harm in | wearing none at all? EPLY No, considering this is the way nature intended TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— A child imitates those he loves. Our Yesterdays (From the Guardian Files) 1938 Dr. IJ. Yeo, president, Simon W. | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ‘tol Paoli, vice-president, and Matheson, secretary, were re- elected at the annual meeting ani | last night of the 6th District Li- beral Association of Queens County. Little Marie Gallant, Char lottetown, victim of a railway accident | about three months ago in which she lost both feet, yesterday was able to walk a short distance unsupported. She has been fitted with artificiat limbs, TEN YEARS AGO October 8, 1953 Miss Kathleen Archibald “Miss Canada’ was given a cl- vie welcome by the mayor and City Councillors at a brief cere- mony in City, Hall yesterday morning. Nineteen Red Cross workers met Monday night at Horne Motors Garage for a demonst first aid facilities tion of the provided by the panel truck which is used by ti Blood ‘Transfusion Services SETTLERS FINED COCHRANE, Ont. (CP) — Three settlers charged with po- session of offensive weapons following the shooting deaths of three. strikers during a north- ern Ontario logging dispute Feb. 11 each were fined $100 Mon- day by Mr. Justice J. C. Me- Ruer of the Ontario Supreme Court. Charges of non - oe murder were dismissed agai the WireePal oui wie | bert Murray, and fe 17 other teulere 2 atk week. FOR FLUID MILK PRODUCTS CALL 4-7125 PURITY DAIRY LTD. “Parents Prefer Products,” Common Disorder| | saiunetgedy, she usually needs | e) to come and go, as new plaques | T have read | | NOTES BY THE WAY. peer recently the an-| According to her own a omnoeanent of a great number | count, one of the Mcaglcrs Amer- of twins being born, The only \' fotn gossip columnists jetted to reason I can come up wi | at under the present cond |W oa tions, they're afraid to nny ra meats, duck, guinea fowl and ca- | to the world alone. — Larry viar, watching two movies and kins, in the Dane County Fan | chatting with a Park Avenue | florist sooringsnthe by a poodle A Montreal corporation has | Deep research into jet timeta- experimented with courses in bles reveals to us that during | French conversation for its per- | this time she passed over the el and found them “‘specta- jewfe land, be Atlantic “Ocean, reece cular.” Any course that worked would be a spectacular contrast England and Frence without no- ticing them, And travel, they to the teaching of French in most Canadian schools. — Fine | used to say, broadens the mind. — Vancouver Sun, ancial Post | New Gaullist Ardor lan Harvey Canadian Press Staff Writer cakes which they finally de- Poslied before diners at a side- alk cafe, the winner being the cote completed the journey Jn the fastest time with the few. est competitions included a |_A television program is prance: 's latest play to sweeten anco-German relations. copes new arrangement, the show will be expanded from a domestic competition between French cities into an interna- tional affair pitting Gaul + Teuton in amiable riv- alry. Other icabiard match with Wve real ie players, a race to rescue ails trussed atop castle towers and a palsies cage enlivened by charging bi ‘inning city in this eae championships was Tarbes, | It sounds innocent. Everyone rejoices to see Paris and Bonn replacing Kicks | with | Kisses. What worries a suspicious few, jowever, is the purity French motives in wooing the | Rhine maiden just when a new master is moving into the | manor house. In other words, are Fran and Germany getting a tile | too cosy? As some see it, Presi- dent de Gaulle is odd man out in the West, a defiant, go-it- |.alone opponent of all plans for a community in the Eastern Pyr- enees, The cther finalist was St. Malo in Brittany. Apart from the vedios ~ gram, the plan for close o-German links includes the. “twinning” vas, eX- change of teachers and stu- dents, correspondent friend- ships, and business contacts, wish for rapprochement is undoubtedly strong. It seems unfortunate that this primary emotion should be complicated by differences at higher politi- cal levels, | unity. | Without support from the fed- | eral republic, it is, argued, his | intransigence could con- tinue. Hence the new Gaullist ardor, now that his ally Chan- cellor Adenauer is finally bow- ing out; he must make friends with the new men in Bonn. At the ordinary-man level, the TV program should indeed be helpful. Called “‘intervilles, | it matches one city against an- other in a series of original and amusing activities. in one contest, rival sa MRS, KENNEDY ARRIVES LESBOS ISLAND, Greece (AP) — The yacht Christis carrying Mrs. John F. Ken- at of night voyage m through the Dardanelles down the Turkish coast. HILLMAN Super Minx | sprinted along an _ assembly |line, scooping up aperitifs, hors |docuvre, steaks and cream and Borg-Warner Fully Automatic North American Transmission it 8 icine aden a bor weal able as an 1 optional extra. 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