A quarter of a century of research and development in pest control_has, | | Heart Scare. * NOTES BY THE WAY ‘Coven Prince indeed produced a complex and even ‘oa i tee Like The Dew — conflicting body of technical data. Syndrome - ass Saeae' Fa Frank Welker nonfan of hockey says irebrands can be cooled i” Editor Pesticides, and pest contro! methods, mis Dellen | "280m they haven't invented an | off by a good raking over the (Published Stary week dey marning wxceot'se, | it now is. widely: realized, must be alo pote doar eine ne ar ; 4-165 Prince Sneet_ | studied and understood in relation: iddle-aged’ man ‘who. seldom |'t Would be too hard on the play- BN eet ee “Newspapers Lid. SRS , es) al ee ae one om |ers’ heads. —Ottawa Journal. | Overheard: One alto ane. ich offices st Summerside; Momapee, aibeon | Ship to a nation’s total environment. een at Geuia, kemeiee, other, "Gosh, “your ‘hair looks Bo! | A particular pesticide may kil! a cer- oe of eh. palp a Fellow in San Francisco re- | so natural I thought it was a nationally by Thomson Newsoaners 4 ae ee | fers a ae pee wig.” —Plymouth Review, , harmful to health, or it may wipe out tar ete Wen native, | mae Times-Journal. thay traltie expert recently said Sa s Otes 1030 West Georgie innumerable useful animals and -| In addition, "he never had &® nid the patent medicine you ae fir saa eee ae nation Member Canedien Daily Newspaper Publishers agents. : cause for heart trouble such @§ purchased cure ‘your aunt?” | fool would still pull out to pass Pedals suchotvsly catttind to the we ‘or renuy,,| ON figures for the period 195 we eer. that camel ercund them. —Coopper County Record. or : : . wrai aro . Ss oot toe ‘aaaiag tn | through 1960, says the U.S: Agri- ane eee in Ley hoapi- | the bettie sie got two more di: Rapid reading is an accom. St ce tothe ‘ocala et rem ay | Cultural Research Service, annual loss contd’ Vidal ee thats oo | seasgs."" —Galt Reporter. plishment if it does not inelude right ‘er republication of specie dispeiches here to crops, forest trees, livestock, poul- “No heart digease found” oF | 4 very tat man asked the doc- ‘iad Pd rg —St. Cather- 0 Te ee ae att is | try, and other praducts totalled over ae uaa ae Daan ot |tor to a See | $12.00 » year by mail en rurel rovies end areas | $14,272 million. But that is not all. dr. ecidaiiaean wilh pe declared aoe sle ing ee you eet something for « wot Sie ors sland and U.K, $20.00 per | Phere were additional’ annual losses — ans gd cxegtel llgee by: the aeeur. “your disease | paniment. —Windsor Star ; .K. $20. : same. 8 imcurable. Your is year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com during storage, marketing, and pro- - a +e oy e short, eo that when you shut your | There is always something. 3 Not over 7e single copy : * Member Ault Bureau of Circulation. - “The strongest. memory is weaker _.. than-the weakest ink” . i Capital Punishment offices wd Services: Toronto 428 University Ave. tain insect—but it may turn out to be Croke sone Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni | cessing of over $2,279 million, making a rough annual bill due to ‘pests’ of . | all kinds of $16,500 million. We haven’t seen any comparable ‘figures for Canada; but here, too, the losses must be very considerable.’ If the experts can come up with any way of dealing with the problem it will | erted himself’ or became ner-. had not. worsened the years. We reached the same’ over | conclusion as did the others — a | . | nervous heart. We checked his past medical history and found that he had | been an insecure lad with many | emotional episodes, phobias, { and a nervous breakdown sug- strong neurotic tenden- | eyes Mouth opens.’’ —Mon- treal ‘Star, ; he thie bunker of a golf course, when the club secretary, prowling a- round, kicked him none too gent- ly and ordered him to clear out. “And who are you?" demanded | to be thankful for. If you can’t |-pay your. bills, be thankful you. _ are not one of Galt - Reporter; “The old man sighed as he took the golden haired ‘boy upon his knee and stroking his shining tresses, said:, “How your creditors.— en Parliament gets round to vot- — Sor During World War I be de: cheb,” tid the etficial’” “won | should like to feel like a ehiid on the subject of capital punish: | be of prime importance to all of us. - veloped Teles, ‘fatigue,and replied the tramp, ‘‘that's oo sain.” Little Johnnie ceased % ment, the prospects are dim for the / US. B | : chest pain while on a long.|way to get new members.” — | his laughter, and looking sober- © ees iii doing away with the |----—> ases In Spain. march. “I suspected heart trou. | Vancouver Sun 'ly up into his grandfather's face, 4 pabsage of a bill doing away : A henna a ble and was convinced when the . _-hremarked: “Then why don’t depth. penalty altogetber, and alin | ned Use auchoes device ie, oe Pew meal | Ae oe See | Sat came soak et nar S. ter he listened f long time," "ing garbage co! ) Lh, eu or ling rscing | fumed en evs i blades Seats Siar i meee" | jurder. , a membered that the physician re e or- i is what is indicated in a survey | Almeria last month. One of them has ‘sald, “T think you bave’o. geod | Gedlen ts out out the garbage the | Thirty or forty persons witnes. conducted by the Toronto Star, which | 10t been recovered. Air-safety experts . aca | her hair put up in cur- | Roce is Se me ; : . | from the United States have flown to This is an example of how ia- lers and her face iaden with. va- | reyeals that only one in four mem e " oe ve i ie ee, 1) S& (‘not one of them noted the lice- bers of -Parliament favors uncon- | the Spanish coast to join in the search. Nee en earns ie eet eens cel the Oe tar ton. | ace member: de tha tor tak ted: ditional abolition. For last-minute missionary work among MPs the Canadian Society for the Abolition of the Death Penalty has set up an office in Ottawa. But it is doubtful if such belated activity will have much effect on the pending . vote. It should have been launched at the beginning of the sesson, if it was A Spanish official dismissed the - matter, at the time, with the state- ment that the accident was ‘‘a risk which Spain accepted freely in return for various benefits when she signed a bilateral defense pact with the United States.” But Generalissimo ‘Franco has had second thoughts on the matter. He ordered @ ban on all ; - WASHINGTON AIRPORT ‘| the stethoscope, and facial ex- EVER-CHANGING TEXTBOOKS ; "The “Impossibles” Of Science -National Geographic Society ism, prolonged listening with pression. The doctor could have done this to a hundred others without producing this effect. But he was dealing with an an- xious individual who was sus- ceptible because he saw and heard all he needed to confirm his worst fears about heart dis- ease. Twenty years later and the opinion of 50 other physic- pily called to the men below: “Am I too late for the garbage?” “No madam,” replied the col-' lector. ‘Hop right in.” —Mon- treal. Star. | away after knocking down a wo- man pedestrian. Probably most of them ran to crowd around the unfortunate woman. Fort Wil- liam Times - Journal. § jie The Star survey shows that the only way the abo are likely to gain at Ottawa is if'they-con —at least to the point of the death penalty for those who mur- jail s and. officers. _ But it would.seem that even a com- promise bill would be subject to a close vote. One of the difficulties fac- _ ing MPs, it is pointed out, is that they” cannot know exactly what form the final-resolution will take. Several private members’ bills on aboltion have’ already been “tabled. On@of them, or a combination, is ex- ~--pedied to be the vehicle for a debate and.vote free of party lines. But what ' they'll look like by the time it comes ~—=to-a vote is unpredictable. One-bill,—/- “chamber for hanging in carrying out death sentences. Another would re- place hanging with life imprisonment for murder and treason, and also change the Parole Board ‘act to en- sure that convicted murderers would not be released without cabinet ap- proval. Two other bills would sub- stitute: ‘‘a! minimum sentence of life imprisonment’ for-the noose. Since — none of the bills would be acceptable to the majority in its present form, it is probable. they will be amended out of recognition. : Pest Control Problems __ Under way at Washington is a four- day public symposium dealing with a matter of vital concern on both sides of ‘the boundary line. Sponsored by the U.S. National Academy of Scien- ces together with the National Re- search Council, its theme is “Scien- tific Aspects of ~ Pest Control.” Twenty-five authorities of the naton’s leading experts in the fields of agri- culture, biology, : chemistry, con- servation and public health are dis- cussifig methods of pest control, their consequences for man and nature, special physical methods of control— biological, chemical, genetic, electro- magnetic, and so fourth. ~—-"Phis-symposium,-says.the-National.. Academy of Sciences, is-an effort-“to balance the need to protect the ‘na- tion’s supply of food and fibre from the ravages of pests against the equal need to maintain the necessary safe- guards to human health and to pre- serve a viable environment for plant and animal life.” In the words of Sec- retary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall, it was called “to seriously ex- plore what has become an extremely “1964, $31.9 million was earmarked at | Washington for this purpose. . from the sane evaporates and con- an” the space program. Two United States space-tracking stations have been built on Spanish soil, one in Castile, the other in the Canary Islands. It’s been a pretty good bargain from Franco’s point of view. The built at a cost of $470 million. In ex- change for the right to build and use these facilities, Washington has pro- vided-Spain with economic aid—-and—|——— modern arms and equipment. Econo- | mic aid began to flow in 1952, one year before the-tefense agreement with Spain was signed, and ten years later it amounted to $1.2 billion. Mili- , tary aid-amounted to $524 million up to 1962. Since then the figures have been secret, but Spain is not a member of NATO and is waging a growing campaign to get Gibralter back from the British. That is one row in which Washington, we May expect, will want to have as - little to do as possible. EDITORIAL NOTES “This government has become like a ship without a rudder. It is like a great ship wallowing in heavy seas with no one at the wheel. It reminds one of the old saying: ‘Captain, art thou sleeping down below” ”—-NDP Leader Douglas. bes } * * ~ Last week President de Gaulle is? sued a communique accusing the United States of compromising “the cause of peace in Vietnam by. resum- ing the bombing attacks. That would make good Communist propaganda if | it wasn’t for the fact that on the same day Peking accused the Soviet Union of collaborating with the United States to push the idea of negotiating an end to the Vietnam war. * * s The Canadian Forces’ “Sentinel” magazine reports a clever U.S. device - for producing water from hot desert sands with a sheet of clear plastic and - a.tin.can. The can is placed at the | bottom of a hole in the sand. The hole is covered with the plastic, the centre of which is pushed down to form a cone aimed at the can. As air under the plastic becomes hot, moisture denses on the underside of the plastic, running down into the container. The claim is made that up to three pints - of water, aday can be produced, enough to save life in a survival situa- tion. Ge SNe it is known that in | body does anything about it.” i E iF 31 giye 2 é i bowl 3% pounds. th mountings 53 lbs.’’ The farm bell called men and boys to noon dinner, and when the bells rang out up and down New Angle Sherbrooke Canadian authorities faced ean% ity they followed the lead-set by-the : city council: of Stéckholm, Swe- den. - The Swedes are negotiating with interests in Rome to rent or buy a 200-bed hospital near ing from respiratory to Italy where the warmer cli- mate may speed recovery. At the same deme the ‘three Scandinavian countries, are co- operating to set up a treatment Talk About lt Toronto Telegram For. some reason oF other Sa- muel Clemens has been ‘honor- ed for one of his most undistin- shed-~remarks:—““Everybody- talks about the weather but no- It is difficult to think of a more fatuous remark and yet it will probably _ be remembered longer than any other of his sen- _|_tences. ‘Ot course, everybody talks about the weather—especially in this miserable winter of our dis- content—and. little can be done about it. ‘ However, surely we are allow- ed the relief of complaint when our automobile motors seize, when our ears freeze and when oy ‘| guished in: science as well as | felt would probably never be statecraft, said skeptically that | "ealized — te! he would rather believe profes- sors would lie than that stones would fall from heaven. _~-When flying-machine expert- ments attracted the public fancy about: 1900, some scientists tried Astronomer Simon Newcomb 1 said: "The Bells Aringing _ era that is gone. Bells have ‘Joined butfalo- t iow surreva and Kerosene lames. ‘But many a man now w ‘|dn a city office can remember are Dally Record - | matic sufferers in warm and ‘| popular with the victims of these Lmate.to.a greater extent than 4 demonstration® that the roads, one knew the fam- | ily by the sound of the notes, | Bach family had its code or | special purposes. Sometimes | | there was ringing and then one | | i et. knew there was an emergency as he raced from field or wood- The old days of farm bells is = Fobee = triaget = the of the farm bells of One mellow fall day as you walking your acres or working in the garden, stop a minute and listen. Perhaps you can hear the notes on the overhead breeze —.a remem- prance of the time when life wae lees hurried and more fla- vorful, — In Hospitals bs centre tor arthritic and rheu- sunny Tunisia. : Actually the idea is not so far- fetched and the éstablishment of a ‘ hospital in the Bahamas or Mexico for treatment of diseases aggravat- ed'by this province’s unfavorable climate might preclude the need for institutions here. ee a WR Certainly they should prove diseases. a Imagine three months in Ari- zona to treat your sinuses — at the e of the — provineial hospital insurance fund! ’ our paths are clogged with snow. Tt may. be that some day man may gain mastery over the cif he has done so far. The techno- Atom research brought down the theory that matter could nei- ther be created..nor - destroyed. Lord Rutherford; a famed ato- mic scientist, often_ridiculed the “sensation mongers’’ who main tained matter. might be convert. sicists knew it was impossible to send radio messages across the Atlantic, because radio wave travel in a straight line and | can’t curve-around the earth: to- reach a distant destination. Mar- coni did it anyway — with the- help of the ionosphere, an atmos- pheric layer that reflects the waves so that they bounce from sky to,ground around our plan- Science does not lose when its cherished beliefs prove illusory; disproved old ideas are replaced by sounder new ones. But pro- “gress —offers—shocks:—-"‘Heaven- knows,” moaned philosopher Al- , what seeming nonsense may not tomorrow he demonstrated truth.” In the early 20th century, phy- low so that there is no danger of being burned. Also, be careful leak ARCH EXERCISE R. P. writes: Are exercises of value in flat feet in an adult? REPLY Yes, because they strengthen Mrs. T. writes: Can a 58-year- old man give blood? ° REPLY . Yes, provided he is not ~-ane- -mic or suffering-from-heart trou-- ble or extensive hardening of the _ EGGS OK. Mrs. N.R. writes: Can a per- son whose gall bladder has been removed eat eggs? that the hot water bag does not |- AGE AND DONATING BLOOD | MARTIN'S Dial 94-7309 REPLY Yes. TODAM’'S HEALTH HINT— Xan Dellen, co Chica go Trib- une, Chicago, Mlinois.) ; From Caviar ToCatfish ~ Christian Science Monitor Now even the gourmet has cause for alarm. The world’s supply of. caviar hangs in the balance. Pollution of the Volga River has apparently caused the killing of thousands of - caviar- rich beluga sturgeon. The Soviet Union, not viewing the matter lightly, has charged with crim- inal negligence certain engine- ers and technicians in a Volgo- grad chemical plant. The sturgeons have to battle not only Volga pollution from 300 plants in Volgograd but also a network. of. hydroelectric... sta-.. tions which impede their pro- ‘gress from the Caspian Sea to their spawning grounds. (In- stead of the boatmen, it is now the fish that toil along the Vol- ‘ad. ; Meanwhile; American Secre- tary of the Interior Stewart Ud- all has cited 78 species of wild- life in danger of extinction. Ohe , in addition to pollution: Land-hungry developers are ruthlessly despoiling natural habitats. Mr. Udall reports: that “despite unprecedented conver- sation action in 1965, we are still losing the over-all battle.” Beyond pollution of the envir- onment and the indiscriminate destruction of shoreline, marsh,” and wooded areas (a side effect of the failure. to control the pop- ulation explosion), men are guilty of exterminating whole logists who have stretched the pspecies for immediate financial reach of man to the moon, and have harnessed the forces of the tiniest elements in our world, may be capable eventually of governing the rain ‘and snow gain. If men’s ecological ignorance and indifference were to mean only the loss of their caviar, we would not be quite so concern- ———. ed, But-in-the last analysis what. But now there is mo cure for the common cold, no medical mastery of the chilblain and no simple anodyne for frosthitten cheeks Although our scientific yw i 2- ards have not done very much about the weather, let's protect the privilege of free speech. is at stake is the perpetuation of the human: race itself, as Mr. Udall makes clear. Dramatiaing the problem, a New Jersey legislator’ proposed to change the state bird from the goldfinch to the chimney swallow, noting that “the east- equipped emotionally or physic- ally to cope with the rising rate of industrial pollution.’ Capping his argument, he said: ‘‘Let’s select a (state) fish that can live comfortably in our polluted waterways.” His candi- date_for survival:- the catfish. (From The Guardian ) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS. AGO (February 7, 1941) Whe fall of Bengasi, an event which knocked Italy out of East Libya, came so swiftly as to. suggest complete of the Fascist army in North Af- rica. Details of the British bag of prisoners were lacking; but reports from the general head- quarters at Cairo ourrenders. town was nominated by the Pic. | tou Presbytery, at New Glasgow NS., for‘the chairmanship of | the Maritime Conference of the | United Church of Canada. ~— | TEN YEARS AGO . (February 7, 1956) | In his report to the Dominion- | Provincial Agricultural Confer- | ence Mr. S.C. Wright, Deputy | Minister of Agriculture noted | that the services of Mr. E. S., MacGougan, a graduate of the | Nova Scotia Agricultural Cob) lege, had, been secured as Poul- | try Fieldman. i Crown Princess Beatrix, just | turned 18, took her place on the | the. lands, to learn the business of a | queen. , ¥ | DID NOT KNOW VALUE Early Spanish explorers | found platinum in American ern goldfinch is simply met as id mines-and threw it away Oe igna" into gold- A vacation is important os | Our Yesterdays | indicat ed | Rev.‘ Hugh Miller of Charlotte. || your health. te Dr. Xan Dellen be | —Dr-—Theod as | delivered to your Winter in touch with events back THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E | NOME inccvecetcadecss tees Present Address ae a distinguished atmosphere of custom elegance. . Discover the diffecence CRAFTSMANSHIP. makes! GARAGE LTD SOUTH FOR A-WINTER HOLIDAY? Don't miss a single issue. Have THE GUARDIAN Clip and mail the coupon below giving us your ~ present: address; Winter Holiday~address~ and- when---- to start and stop paper...and don’t forget the restart.date upon returning home. vest ...Happy Holidays! — CLIP AND MAIL ie eae nr, ot te epee gE I ln THE CIRCULATION MANAGER, OO Ree OOOOH HOE Oem mreeeeeesseeees | eee cere eee eee eee eee eee ee cee eee errr rey teeter eeeee | OOP e rere eeeeeeeserereneeseees POPP P RO oe ee rerenessseseee oe future flights over Spain of United | The “impossible” ie always | -Two decades ago every chem- | no possible combination of sub- | 122% could-not convinee him that }- Va Te, meant to carry weight. ist rei eaeetesed that | ot haoinn 2 " his heart was normal. _ ‘ This is unfortunate, for the’ society | States planes carrying nuclear arma- | poppetuné it science, and text | itt h contains 92 slements | {neces Sik RUN Manan ab teens agent ter cheater te ote. : EXTRA COST § Vv; le years astronomy no more. xt stated | can u in. a practicable , has good arguments to ad ance. ee = aoe Ps taught that Meare in addition: ‘oper the Saewis of saci by which men shall fly fugaestion based on . examin — i ae te eh at Weahingion Seenie rave -howpe- the, sesna, sida tne + 1908 there are so more aaees | long distances through ee a ee eee lean ieee DELUXE INTERIORS FOR punis special eterrent . ‘ ’ ’ gun... planet lements istence,. writer complete i = s ite . : . 4 J effect, euch ax its advocaiag clam. | ts! the blow isnot at hard to take | spn ht same, mat | inca au nov oi ae fe he 'demen | Ta, erred, __ EXFRA BEAUTY Most of the democratic countries of | % 't might be, for the value of the | joa absolute zero. But 1965 ob- | ever, chemists had discovered be.” if: so the doctor re © fe : . - Western Europe have discarded the _three Strategic Air Bases in Spain servations-and a careful —re- | more than a dozen elements ex- | Newcomb’'s paper appeared at to the heart. Phobias involving f / death penalty, as have many of the | have been withering away for some | Soucy ‘totstes independently, | find still more," ‘° |two months after it puoticere, | he ‘stomach, mind, and other more progressive American states. | time. America’s interest there for de- | exposing all sides to the sun. "| in. the i8th-century~ France, | i 1908, the Wrights made: his. (organs are similarly produced. | Last year Great Britain—a strong- | fense purposes now centres on the pe = ent farmers who brought occasional | ‘TY * most famous flight. J. P. writes: Is it dangerous " hold-of tradition. in legal matters—.| !arse naval base at Rota which also is be Series and xenon do noi | Meteorites to the French Aca- EDISON SCOFFED AT TV ~ | to sleep with an electric heating substituted life imprisonment for |.* base for Polaris-carrying sub- | combine with other elements. | demy- were-dismissed as. craike. , Another fying-machine skep- | pad on the chest and a hot wat ; marines. But American dependence | 1 1%3, chemists who didn't ac- | When two Connecticut scholars | 1, death in 1931, he also was | time? : i. hanging as the punishment for all eet, Serer Lee ee ee cept the tenet succeeded in ma- | reported a fall of stones from the ‘ * f fmurder. on Franco's good will also extends to | king xenon combine with flour- | sky in this country, even Tho- | ee et to etay away NOE nee. if orms Of m ° inn, mas Jefferson, who was distin- | » invention that he. ot if the pad is turned on | Wood. grained panels, colored vinyls, maton cloth 254 Queen Street Holiday address and keep home. , We'll do the a _ ae Che Guardian