than the weakest—ink-—— ~ Electoral y W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Watker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sur dey and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown P.E.|.. by Thomson” Newspapers itd. — Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton end Souris. : Represented nationally.by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empire versity 65942, Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver (MA 7037- 5 = | Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers * 7 delegation from the National Farm- j the marchers had with them a token | 4. Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni “| Association and The Canadian Fress. The Canadian | Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub lication of ell news dispatches’ in ths paper credited to # or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published herein. All right er republication of :sbecia! dispatches here — in alsd. reserved Subscription rate Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and areas mot serviced by carrier Bate $15.00 @ year off Island and UK. $2000 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Con monwee!th Not over 7c sincle copy- - Member Audit Bureau of Circulation “The strongest: memory - is weaker PAGE 4 SATURDAY. MAY 1, 1965. Awaiting Approval The fact ‘chat this province's Boundaries Commission was the first to publish its report re- flects credit on its personnel. does, we might add. the thorough manner in which it has gone about its responsibilities. That its propos- al for the elimination of the prov- ince’s dual riding in Queens andthe | creation of four new constituencies will be approved by all the electorate | ers Union and their presentation was ~—> an impressive one. It -was-bv-all-ac-— counts an orderly“demonstration ax well. But surely it was a blunder on the marchers’ part to decline an in- vitation to meet Mr. Pearson in his Centre Block office in the morning because—as they said"—thev had a meeting of their own exegutive _scheduled for the same time. Asked if this response from the officers of the Farmers’ Union was ~ considered —a—_snub.-a—government spokesman is reported to have said: | \“What would you call it if an organiz- ation re an invitation to see the Prime. Minister when they had to come only a block?” It .is difficult to understand why, after going to the trouble to stage such an affair, the marchers didn’t welcome the opportunity which in their way. | ministered was headlined in some On- tario newspapers. and “it. is not the Ontario Farmers Union that is going “to gain by this publicity. as | Mr. Pearson Agrees. Thanks to Opposition demands, the constitutional amendment form } ula-which has stirred disagreement in is hardly to be expected; but the | point is that under the machinery for parliamentary redistribution the boundaries of ‘the ‘old constituencies could not remain in any case. Prince County’s population, for example, is in excess of the maximum provided for under the new con- < many parts of Canada may go to a special parliamentary: committee for public examination. Prime Minister Pearson first held to the view that since this formula was unanimously adopted at a federal-provincial con- ference. it should either be passed as it is. or rejected by Parliament; but — evidently he has had second thoughts | on the matter. This week he said in | the Commons that he considered de- stituency requirements for this prov- | inee, while Kings County's popu- | lation falls short of the minimum. It» will be recalled that Mr. Macquarrie, — MP, gave a thorough review of these : Pa = November. He pointed out that if Kings constituency retained its name, it would have to include some of Queens County now in Queens cgn- stituency. while Prince would have to be shorn of some 8,000 of its popu- lation to qualify under the maximum constituency figures. The adjustment of Queens had __ either to take the form of a larger dual riding, or two single ones, de- pending on the commission’s recom-. | mendation. The commission has pro- posed the latter course, and has sug- ‘gested renaming the ridings Cardi- gan. Hillsborough, Malpeque and Eg- mont. While our Island MPs have reservations about these names, they | all seem satisfied with the way the redistribution was handled. Naturally they want time to study the new boundariés more closely in terms of polling subdivisions before comment- ing in detail: e ~ The commission will hold a series of meetings throughout the province between June 24 and July 29. after which its report will likely be sent to ~ the Speaker of the House of Com- mons in the late fall. It has also pub- lished a map showing clearly where the proposed ,new lines are to be drawn., ‘The final say in the matter, of course, will rest with Parliament, which can adopt the recommend- | ; ations or send them back for another | Observed tomorrow, is that almost all | those tiny lives were lost needlessly. look. The new plan. according to the redistribution office. is to sub- mjt the various commission reports as they become available rather’than hold them for one, bulk lot. : Provision for similar changes is being made across the country. As we remarked on another occasion in this connection. the net result will be more in accord with the principle of resentation by population: and it ha¥e the advantage this time of béing created along ‘ non-partisan liges, which is more than can be said for the gerrymandering that went on top frequently in the past. > Hard To Explain - This week saw the march of 1,- 200 farmers on Parliament Hill to protest the depressed coridition ‘of eastern agriculture and the cost- price squeeze on farm producers. Specifically, they wanted support prices raised for the whole range of eastern agriculture products from eggs to sugar beets. It was the first big demonstration of its kind in Ot- tawa since the march of western a farmers demanding deficiency pay- | ments four years ago. They laid their case before the agriculture com- mittee of the Cabinet at a rally in the ballroom of the Chateau Laurier. and later, after staging a demonstra- tion in front of the Peace Tower, met other parliamentarians. « Members of the Ontario Farmers Union which has locals in 300 com- munities throughout the province, ‘ blished——last—_! mands for a committee inquiry were “perfectly reasonable,” and that it might be possible for the House to | decide upon this course. Committee study of the formula would experts could be examined and spec- ter also made it clear that the form- ula will not be brought before Par- liament until it has been approved by the legislatures of all the provinces. ' Most of them have already given ap- proval, but there is stiff opposition in | Quebec and a difficult battle is ex- pected when Premier Lesage brings the question before the Quebec house. . At Ottawa the Conservatives, New Democrats and Creditistes are all op- posed to the formula for various rea- Tory government in this province was so ready to voice its acceptance, in view of the manner in which Mr. Diefenbaker__has__been__ blasting __ it. Or don’t they care about his opinions any more? : Child. Safety Day ‘ Of. the 1,289 pedestrian fatalities | in 1963 in Canada, four out of every 10 were children under 15. Approx- imately 500,000 children are injured and more than 2.000 killed annually in accidents in this nation. What is more tragic than cold | statistics. reports the National Safety League of Canada and the Canadian Highway Safety Council. co-sponsors of Child Safety Day which is being | The League, and the Council put much of the blame on the parents. “The predominant reason.;for play- time accidents among children,” they claim, “‘is lack of supervision.” _- So tomorrow the League and the Council are enlisting the active par- ticipation of clergy. parent-teacher groups. women’s organizations. | ser- vice clubs. safety organizations— | every possible Canadian adult—in bringing to the realization of every citizen his responsibility for the safety of the child. They express the ~ hope that across the nation this will be “an awareness day. a day to recog- nize the duty of everyone to install safety into the daily habits of every child.” a There is obviously need-for arous- ing public interest in this matter. and. it is to be hoped that locally as well as throughout Canada this appeal will ' meet with adequate response. EDITORIAL NOTES As noted in our news columns, naval vetefaris strengthened by mem- bers of the Roval Canadian Legion and RCAF will observe the anniver- sary of'the Battle of Britain by hold- ing a church parade here tomorrow. This is an annual occurrence to com- memorate the heroic efforts of the Navy and Merchant Marine who kept | the shipping lanes.open during the | darkest days of the Secdnd World War, and it is something in which we can all participate in spirit. ial studies made. The Prime Minis- | ei —-Mf-Pearson-very—courteously_placed__ The “snub” they ad-. sons. We're still wondering why the | F oe THEM: “AN MP CAN TELL MOST GF ‘THE TIME WHAT HIS CONSTITUENTS WILL “THINK ABOUT AN iSssuc& BEFORE HE EVEN ASKS THEM ” “ PeL”iTicSs ISADIRTY . GAME ” | EEING THAT THE MPS WERE SO RELUCTANT ABOUT “THE _BawoB COMMISSIONS QUESTIONS WE DECIDED TS TRY ITs BY THE ’ j a ee tre ee enantio B AND,B AND UNO WHO DIVER'S PREDICTION Ranches On The Bottom Of The Sea A diver who spent two days and two, nights 432 feet deep in the Atlantic Ocean predicts that. human colonies will someday tend-ranches-..on the_.bottem_ of the sea. Diver Robert Stenuit and Jon i ne ey] 0 on 0 i on i + ~eer—Charies—A-—Lindbers—spent—— 49 hours on the ocean floor in an inflatable rubber house. The dive was a vital phase of inven- | , tor Edwin A. Link’s Man-in-Sea | Project, supported” by the Na- | tional Geographic Society. “We have lived in the depths National Geographie Society , Divers Stenuit and Lindbergh : were lowered to their deep-lying house in the Bahamas in a ‘sub- mersible decompression cham- ._ ber. Their rubber house. known as the SPID (submersible port- | able inflatable dwelling.) was The breathable gas was a mix- ture: 3.6 percent oxygen, 5.6 percent nitrogen and 90.8 per- cent helium. Ordinary air— four- fifths nitrogen and one-fifth ox- | ygen— becomes toxic - under ed the food cans. but the con- tents were intact. During the day, the men wan- dered about on the sea floor, | using a 50-foot double air tube that fed them a breathable mix- |~ ture. They were often followed whom they petted affectionate-_ ly. Mr. Stenuit took the deepest pictures ever made by a diver. After 49 hours they returned to i the surface. The experiment “proved. that | - humans caf adapt to the inhu- | | heavy pressure. The helium,.an man conditions of the deep sea,” | —in questionable comfort; but | inert gas, created special prob- Mr. Link writes. “‘It suggested | at least in security." says Mr. | lems. Since it conducts heat rap- | that they can live there for ex- Stenuit. ‘‘We have gone out and worked. To be sure, we paid for | our two deep days with four days of ‘decompression. But if we had stayed two weeks or two | months, the decompression | would have been the same.” UNDERSEA KITCHEN Mr. Steunit adds, ‘Our suc- | cessors will stay in the depths | that long and longer. They will , colonize the sea floor, cultivat- | ing its resources instead of pil- laging them. Tomorrow the col- onist will suryey his bottom land through the porthole of his | ; _Sea-ranch kitchen while a_cof- feepot. simmers on the stove.” Mr. Link,” inventor of avia- | tion’s Link Trainer, turned to undersea technology after retir- | ing as an industrial executive in | 1959. In an article accompan- | ing Mr: Stenuit’s, he says the Man-in-Sea Project seeks ‘‘te prove that men can live and. work in the untried depths that | cover the vast unexplored part | | lagging behind of earth called the continental | shelf.”” “For that they must be able to go deep and stay there—for days, weeks, even months,” Mr. Link says. ‘‘And they must do.it not as surface dwellers shelter- ed in the steel cocoon of a sub- marine, but as creatures of the deep, exposed to-. pressures many times greater than man was meant to endure.” idly, it sapped the men’s body | heat. It also distorted their | tended periods. | speech so much that they had to | the closest collaboration between | communicate by written messa- | engineering and life- ship, Sea Diver. théy wrote on | applied sciences, will be to per- | born ‘salesman takes up book- a blackboard in view of a clos- | fect our equipment, then try for | keeping, he may find he has no | ed-circuit television camera aie Sect, ak Ge en Lien | GS me tas weak nee | BEFRIENDED BY FISH When we have done that, no comes a square peg in a round | On the bottom. the men dined | part of ‘the great and rich con- (| dhoe. i on carrot juice, corned beef, | tinental shelf will lie beyond” AGE AND..CANCER and fruit salad the first evening. | man’s working reach and_ his Mrs. V. J. writes: At what age Pressure had crushed and twist- | urge to conquer.”* are most malignant tumors : | found? g p REPLY Some cancers are more prev Milwaukee ‘ in life. On the other hand, if we the figure jumped to o | BES 3 a $160,000 a day— al- | re th ” Judging from the desolate and impoverished chunk of desert | real estate he rules at the south- | ern end of the Persian gulf, one | would think he didn’t have a cent. Abu Dhabi is a British pro- tectorate less than half the size of Wisconsin with a population | as Menasha’s z ity in homes. i When royalties started first pouring in, Sheik Shakhbut de- manded cash and hid it. He lat- For years. the British have been urging the sheik to start a development plan for his coun- try—but to no avail. He ordered j | the yacht he purchased from | PUBLIC FORUM. - | This ccjamn ts open te the discussions | by correspondens of questions of im | terest. Zhe Guardian does not neces sarily endorse the epinion of corres pendents. All letters published are sub ject to editing and condensation where | aecessary, The Guardian is unableih | enter inte any corrrespendence regard img letiers submitted. DURING HIGH SCHOOL Sir,—1 read with: interest a letter in The Guardian of Tues- day, April 27, from an Anxious | Student in Montague. I'm hap- py to note her interest in musi- cal education, whether it is for herself or ‘her fellow students. Why not go further back than the college level to. ask ‘‘why” about musical courses? What are our high schools doing to provide musical training at a more elementary level than the colleges might need to? Why isn't there a designated music teacher in Montague Regional ; High School? It certainly isn't | because there isn't enough .nter- est to make the program worth- while | If the Department of Educa- | tion would put music on the! curriculum as an elective sub- ject. and if local school boards or administrators would = ar- range time in the school day for this subject, the “‘musical situ- ation”. would. improve There ‘are few high schools that dont have one or more staff members qualified and | eager to teach music if allowed to. Many of the high schools do have music and I think that is a great credit to these schoois. It's too bad that those that are in this field wouldn't try to live up to the example set by these “pioneer” | schools. TI am, Sir, ete, | ANXIOUS TEACHER | Montague. ‘ ‘ i and series of wounds is bond * estless bed. my legs twitch and ache. It * public ‘is bound resentments through thé hemis-* - Dominican Politics. By Carman Cumming Press Staff Write: ite Mendig Vales States to stir up old tes > as pro-Castro are the same ela. ments that set out last to bring back ex-president Juan Bosch. is difficult to describe except phere—no matter how ,worthy Bosch, though well to the left, that they are jittery. Have you any suggestions on cause and are still, as when are plagued with anxieties, ten- sion, or depression. We do not know whether a relationship exists i between these emotional as sate a 3 es of malignancies, I presume it is the decade between 45 and 55, earlier in women and later in men. NASAL POLYPS~ N.. E.- writes: What causes polyps to grow in the nose? REPLY Nasal polyps are ‘associated with allergy. OVARIAN CYST F. C. writes: What is a choco- BBC London Letter Italian Grand Opera Nothing could possibly be | grander than Italian Grand Op- era, said BBC Rome correspon- dent Patrick Smith in a recent | broadcast. It was part of the It- alian way of life; and, as might | be expected, Italian audiences were critical and expected good value for their money He recalled having been at a performance of “Aida” in Ven- ice when the main tenor who was to sing the role of Radam- es failed to turn up. The large audience grew more and ‘more impatient as time sent by. | “Finally, it was announced | that a last minute substitute had been found. Alas for him, he was | far smaller than the man origin- | ally cast for the role! His cos- tume sagged and his sword trail- | say ed the floor. At his first en- trance, the audience roared with | gesture. . as ‘Well. What do you expect’ But when the moment came for: the hero's great aria on re- turning from the wars with a string of prisoners, the say: | ” he could do no wrong.” -To Help The North Bay Nugget One of the greatest challeng- es facing foresters of the Ontar- io Department of Land and For- ° of ests is the management | stands an abund- ance of trees! ‘ Where t is no market for these inferior trees the practice is to remove them as economic- ally as possible to make room for the better quality,trees to develop. The department does this by girdling, or frilling and poisoning the unwanted stems. In girdling, the tree is killed by mechanically severing the cambam layer just beneath the bark by axe or chainsaw, where- | as in frilling Poisoning a made in the bark around trunk of the tree into which i Good Ones | drop out of the the damage ahd severe first commercial thinning when 4 he decided boating was too lav- tumor aawikiae late ” eeky yac sits there. ovari contai: One reason for Shakhbut’s aie cision tied eed caution may be the knowledge Jonay’s HEALTH HINT— that nine of his predecessors | Red intake to pre- were either murdered or violent- welt toatl as © coveted, umalty iy close re | (NOTE: AN correspentence Ives. apparently wants to be | help ‘no one who might do him | = seek bast Wes V vaseline = | Vam Dellen, co Chicage Trib- une, Iiineis.) Our Yesterdays | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (May 1, 1940) Light Heavyweight Dannie MacCormack of Souris. P.E.L, member of the Royal eee : Artillery, fighting for _ QUEEN’S HORSES ILL LONDON ‘Reuters’ — Queen Elizabeth's horses were sick , it is about 20 years old. Friday and could not help “With naturally grown trees, guard her. A spokesman said however, the number of stems | it had become impossible to | often is very large so that mount the daily Queen's life crowding results. In the fight | guard in London because most for moisture, nutrients and light. of the royal household caval- the growth of the entire stand ry’s 200 horses have been hit tends to stagnate. iby a epidemic. & the free-wheeling tion commences’ policemen ~ of Washington's motives)’ Dominicans -and>.ether Latin -.Americans.” have <nat- forgotten “big stick” days when. the i of hemisphere. Dominicans over the age of 50 can recall the last U.S. occupa- tion that lasted eight years be- tween 1916 and 1924. That kind. of gunboat diplo- | micy ended with Franklin D. | Roosevelt and the ‘‘good neigh- bor” policy.,But whites in an- cient Santo” Domingo can still expect an occasional ‘‘yanqui”’ jeer from the children. In the new intervention, the , U.S. says the marines have | been sent in only to evacuate | Americans threatened by the | civil ‘fighting i - But inevitably suspicions have been expressed that they were sent to be on the spot in case +-fhe—confused__fighting develops. into a Communist take-over. PRO-CASTRO THREAT The New. York Herald Tri- -bune, in its lead:story Thursday, said President Johnson ordered ‘the marines in “hoping to pre- vent a possible take-over pro-Castro forces.” In Washington, the White house denied reports congress- - men. had been told fear_of a Communist take-over was be- | hind the ing. In the confused world of Do- minican politics, it is not too strange that the rebels described agleader ~ ' was never a Castro thizer Hpi ose at = es pe Puppet’’ by. the Cuban y+ EXTREMISTS TAKE OVER a from Santo ve varied widely on the i tical make-up of the revol = | But there is evidence that What | Started as a pro-Bosch show | with support from several other | leftist groups, has come increas- ingly «under the control of ex- tremists. : | _If this evidence is borne out | the U.S. will be tempted to use | the marines as a bridgehead to prevent formation of a Commu- nist government. | But Washington also will be well aware U.S. intervention, on | the side of right-wing military forces, could provide precisely the threat the extremists -need | to weld a united front. Rightly or wrongly, many Do- minicans still feel the U.S. was | partly ‘to blame for conditions that led to.the 31-year dictator. ~ | Ship of Rafael Trujillo, whose }-Fepressive_rule ended with —his assassination in 1961. : | Im the turmoil since then, op- | position to milifary rule has | been one of the few factors | bringing together the conflicting political views. So a military government sup- ported by the marines would be | a hard pill indeed for the Do- minicans to swallow. Anyone who has courageously essayed a few phrases of his in- adequate French in France—or in Quebec, for that. matter—will Fecognize the futility of the sug- | gestion tha an Anglo-Saxon can be “bilingual in a limited way." | That way lies frustration. ' Noel Bennet- Alder, who is di- rector of French education for Ontario. thinks all Canadian political and business leaders | should be completely bilingual. | | He would also include senior | government officials, “inteilec- | | NotNearlyEnoungh .. | No one ‘should realize better than Mr. Bennet- Alder that you can either get along in another language or you cannot. Tourists who have memorized a note- book ‘of conversation phrases, and who have the self- confid- ence to utter them, know , vhat happens to the bilingually limit- _@d person. : In an accent almost impeccad- le, he tosses off a question and Teceives a reply in a torrent of French such as he never met in classroom or textbook. Baffled; | tual ‘leaders such as” university’: | presidents.” the English minor- uncomprenending, he mutters minority ‘in Ontario. Others, he says, should be somewhat bilin- Parties are back where they be- long. HONDA > More features, more FUN —that’s HONDA. 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