- Che Guardia Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. 4. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward " Frank Walker Managing Editor , Editor Pyblished every week day ymorning (except Sun dey end statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown P.£.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at” Summerside, Montegue, Alberton _ and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson. Newspepers Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empife 3-8894, Montres! 640 Cathcart Street Uni versity 6-5942, Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver (MA 7037. Member Cernadien Daily Newspaper Publishers Assodiation and The Canedian Press. The Canadian Press is. exclysively entitied to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited 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 algo reserved. Subscription rete: Not over 40¢ per week by carrier. $12.00 & year by mail on rural routes and areas "mot serviced by carrier. $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monweealth. Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 THURSDAY, MARCH 4,*1965. An Urgent Need ‘Among the problems emphasized by ‘the Minister of Education, Dr. | Dewar, in the Draft Address debate on Tuesday was the need for mak- ing’ greater provision “for vocational education in the province. This has become a matter of gro concern all over Canada. A glance at what other provinces are doing, as outlin- ed in the current issue of the Fin- ancial Times and briefly summariz- ed here, may help to get the picture in perspective. — ; Newfoundland has built 12 region- ’ In Saskatchewan $3.1 million was spént on trade and technical training year, $1.9 million of it from the | al government, Construction of | policy would not be justified. There is a general feeling that his hindsigh is much to be preferred to the fore- sight shown by his party colleagues in giving the promise in the first place. have ever been. In any case the Winnipeg Free Press, with a hindsight matching that of Mr. Sharp's, points out that sub- sides are no solution to the wheat price problem. Eighty per cent of the United States federal farm aid last year, it notes, went to the one- million farmers whosé average in- come exceeded $9,500; the other 20 per cent was divided thinly among the remaining 214 million farmers. In other words, most of the subsidy money went to those who needed it least. “The same thing,” predicts our Winnipeg Liberal contemporary, “would presumably happen here if the Government were to accept the “eoutise! OF thie “politicians and tarn organizations who are demanding a - $2-export price. Instead of seeking better transportation facilities, etc. Subsidies do precisely the reverse.” Very true, no doubt; but the wheat H if EE The issue arose a few weeks ago, over a moderate drop in wheat prices —from near the ceiling of the Inter- national Wheat Agreement down to about the level prevailing in mid- 1963—which sparked demands by some western farm organizations for a federal subsidy. This price decline, however, has already subsided. The Wheat Board has high hopes‘ of achieving export sales of 400 million bushels this year and for two years thereafter. If it can do so, and if the threat of an international price war has been overcome, then the prospects for Prairie wheat would would seem to be better than they Hi e 2 : F exnincT/ REASON FOR ALARM Throughout the last three mon.. of crisis in the United Na- and the abortive | | 3 | rT i i [ # sf ily iH i a ¥ : E ' j it q 2 3 : uf ei a g E : i i248 fi 7 : $ 5 @ | | A at i | i | 25 it 828 iE = fil 1 & | z 3 | | 2: ti j g z & . Ff ; fE : ai 1.8% ace grzs ates iz iar ah i ik figs a8 United: Nations Peace-Kee British Information Services | troops, ambulance and trans- port units — perhaps also long- range aircraft for transporting the force. Like all human organizations fects, particularly in_the light of the enormous task it has to un- Shoes Cause An Uproar Sarnia Observer Great Britain is resounding to | live out his life have PFO | threat to footwear made from ping Problem dertake. There oad great diffi- culties ahéad. But, the Foreign | the United Nations has many de- must be enabled to fulfill tts task of keeping the peace. 5 & e efti #t up jn arms over & Prop sell | shoes made of dog skin. This from | any S | Physically, U.S. Defense Sec- The fact that even | retary Robert McNamara may | strikes the U.S. would be not resemble the -fat boy in} kill a mi 8 3 so ba i i % gH tt ei i : ne te + : ; mt iz'| F i = f i : #8 { E Eg z ; > 4 | i 5 i i I i F 5 — : # E | Treatment Of Dysmenorrhea 4 ibe if lf F i z F tetirsuthatis teefiigreae ea i Raa lanl sivtetestalitisutlt | llr women are unwell during mens- truation, We do not want to give the impression that primary dys- menorrhea is all in the mind. The severity of pain is influenc- ed by a variety of physical and psychic factors, including the state of health, fatigue, -and emotional disturbances. Some days a person can take pain better than other days. This holds true so long as distress is slight to moderate. It is little consolation when N. P. writes: Can emotional upsets cause a flare-up of arth- Our Yesterdays (From the Guardian Files). - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 4, 1940) Baptist Young People’ Church pile ne ul it fi iF i f i F \ 7 LF fi a i i : ‘Officially open, Caledon- i, C's Rnd gern oe Clans and Games at tie Provincial Exhibition rt wh 28 &e PR EE Unfriendly Atmosphere against Communist feeding Viet Cong guerrillas” in taii’*President Johnson in the | South Viet Nam—as aggression “barbarous | pirates." fi Soviet Union and has not backed away from | This is not an atmosphere his statement that he would be | conducive .to setting up friendly glad to go direct personal But the prospects for such a | heads of ‘state trip seem dim because of Viet | Washington observers, while Nam. agreeing that a sudden shift in In fact, perhaps ‘because of the international climate could that and domestic preoceupa- | change things, still see no soft- tions, the president is silent | ening in the tough U.S. determi- about his previously-announced | ation to stay in South Viet hopes to visit Latin America | Nam. and several European capitals. They cannot gee the Soviet And there apparently is noth- | Union on the other hand risking ing stirring about Prime Minis- | furtlier abuse ffom China in ter Pearson's January invita- | their ideological split by encour- tion to call at Ottawa. The tar- a Johnson visit and in get date there had been April. fect turning the other cheek Hardly had the Russian pre- | on North Viet Nam. mier commented in East Ger- As for other visits mentioned many Monday on | otative plans | by the president, Viet Nam for ‘Johnson to visit Moscow | seems the travel deterrent. An when American and South Viet- probable factor is the | sete. make sure PIRATES’ fast start on legislation is main- = tained in building the founda- ted | tons of his ‘‘Great Society.” A Housing Porodox Why Canadians should have a; Perhaps one explanation is longetanding antipathy to pub- that Canadians are traditional- lic housing is both a mystery | ly homeowners rather than rent- ) ers, although there are distinct signs that this social pattern is changing. It has been many tim- es suggested that there is some that Hamilton will get at least 800 new public housing units by | 1967, part of a provincial target of 12,000, Kenneth D. Soble, | sort of “stigma” ‘attached to chairman of the Ontario Hous- | public housing. If this is true, ing Corporation, admitted that | then it is a prejudice based on he was puzzled by the attitude | antiquated thinking. of Canadians towards subsidiz- The paradox in the Canadian ed homes. | attitude to subsidized housing We live in an age of govern- lies in the fact that, if we are to | ment subsidies. Farmers, gold | accept the findings of welfare hale as a ek ato . | mines, schools, universities, hos- | agencies, there are many peo- pi ed opening. In all pein i st of. dhoee receiving. ae no. signs of strong’ pressure tals, welfare assistance— the | ple who would benefit: from it i uf i t ar ie Class Privilege Attached One of the “fringe” benefits | reading of the bill, a large num- attached to employment as a ber of members indicated their | civil servant in Canada ‘has approval of its principle. - | been protection against the gar- Strangely enough, the current a | bill follows a number of other of | similar bills introduced over a civil servant who owes him | the years, all of which have at | been unsuccessful. For 10 years the source the debtor’s pay | or more the Chamber of Com- envelope | merce has been advocating leg- by | islation to end the protection . system | against the garnishee. Yet the oes existed in Britain. | few civil servants who take ad- , though, the British Par- | vantage of their position can still liament such protection | live beyond their means and more than 200 years ago. | tell the people to whom they The sitnation has been brought | owe money where to go. into the news by a bill introduc-| Mr. Whalen terms the protec- ed in the House of Commons last | tion as ‘class lege."" How week by Eugene Whalen, Liber- | else would you describe it? i for ———————— provide for the garnisheeing of | The Sahara desert 10,000 civil . service salaries. How. far | years ago was a fertile forest the be | and river area until a climatic although with the first ' change took pice. - End Special Cudmore’s .& PJ'S Ltd. KRAFT ORANGE | MARMALADE aor Bie Sugar ..... 49¢|Kam ...... 43¢| ‘ if 3 | < et ae wee o°| , Ce al