1 2 Covers Prince Edvard Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancex, Publisher, Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor : Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!., bv Thomson Newspapers Ltd. ~ Branch offices at- Summerside, Montague, Alberton . and Souris ; 2 Représented nationally by. Thomson ..Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. "eae 3.8894. Montreal 640- Cathrart-Street—Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the. use for repub lication .of al! news dispatches in. this paper Credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and alse the local news published. herein. All right or republication of special disoatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by snail on rural routes and areas Not serviced by carrier 2 $15.00 a year off Island and U.K, $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com ——ponweelth, 7 ! : Net ever-7s single<cOpy: ° Merber Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1966, That Seaway Deficit ——Readers.will-have noticed an adver- -tisement.in The Guardian calling attention to public hearings to be held at Ottawa next month by the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority on a pro- posed revision-of-the charges in the St. Lawrence Seaway tariff of tolls schedule, .as established in 1959, Similar hearings are to be held in the United States by the Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corp.; starting in Chicago in June. In both cases, they are intended to give shipping interests an opportunity to fight against in- -creased seaway tolls and a new lock- age charge at the Welland Canal which have Reepngerees in joint an- nouncements by the Canadian and United States seaway agencies. Main Canadian criticism is expected to be against the proposal for charges on the Welland Canal, from which tolls were removed in 1962. A revision of seaway tolls™had- been due this year under the Canada-U.S.’ agree- ment by which the seaway project was undertaken. The revision origin- ally was to have been made by July 1, 1964, but was postponed for two years to allow further studies. ’ We have an interest in the matter ‘in this Atlantic area, where:shipping~ traffic has suffered by reason of the subsidized competition offered by the seaway authorities. Their gargantuan. project-cost the-taxpayers $457 mil- | lion and under the construction agree: ment was to-pay for- itself out of toll > Tevenue over 50 years. Present tolls _have been in effect since the seaway__ “opened-in-1959, and—were—set-on—a- basis of traffic forecasts which did, not materialize—plunging the water- way into debt in each of its first seven years of operation. The loss at the end of 1964 was $435.500,000. | | | ae ready combat units have been com- stations; the strategic reserves of the country have been reduced to training cadres. In a military sense the U.S. has been skating on thin QA for Some time, and the danger is noWended.. In the past few weeks the evidence of strain has become pronounced. ‘Seven ago to a German commercial travel- “ler, have been repurchased by the government at more than ten times their sales price for-use in Viet Nam. More than 33,000 officers, experien- ced non-coms and specialists are being transferred from Germany to Viet ‘Nam or to units being trained in the’ U.S. They will be replaced by 18,000 green privates. Aircraft sorties in South Viet Nam have been mattrially reduced in recent weeks. because of ‘local shortages of bombs, matching fuses, tail fins and other ordnance. There are undeniable scarcities actual or impendinig—maintains The __ Times—for many military items, in- cluding trained military manpower. It is true, it concedes, that no war ever has been fought without some shortages; but Mr. McNamara does himself no credit by denying the. obvious. Greater candor, it suggests, ~ would provide greater assurance to the nation that the men who are doing the fighting and dying in Viet Nam get all the support they need. _~ Ontario Proposal For years efforts have been made in the Commons and Senate to gain passage of bills that wofild afford pro- tection to Canadian cofsumers ‘by re- -quiring full disclosure of interest charges on credit accounts> These ef- forts have failed for a variety of reasons. Now the Ontario government is making an attempt to meet the chal- lenge on a provincial level, with two pieces of legislation which are receiv- ing favorable comment in the Ontario press. In prospect is the establishment of a_consumer protection bureau, with — authority to eliminate frauds perpe- trated. against consumers. Some un- ethical door-to-door salesmen are par- ticularly in mind: More -important, however, will be the legislation to compel full disclosure of the costs of borrowing. This would require the dis- closure in credit contracts not- only of interest charges in stated dollar amounts, but in terms of annual in- terest rates. “~The bill will be introduced in the Ontario legislature this session, but— will not be passed until that of 1967. This will give opportunity for all con- cerned to make their views known about it, probably before a specially chosen committee of the legislature.. - = ‘The- proposed new - tolls; -which- |. — apply-to-the-seaway-section-between | _ Montreal and Lake Ontario, were | Doubtless there will -be objections, which deserve to be-heard;-as-to-the studied by the two agencies with the help of independent consultants. It was felt, and rightly so, that the tolls “should be related as realistically as — possible to the financial require- ments,” though in. fact the increase proposed—approximately 10 per cent —will not.make the system break — even. - ; But shipping firms are drumming hard on the theme that their interests should-come _first..A_major_campaign has been launched by the Great Lakes Waterways Development group, an association of 60 main Canadian users who claim they would pay dearly—particularly if the proposed lockage fees are charged on the Wel- land. These aré the people who sought *> the canal in the first place—and ona _ Self-sustaining basis. However, if they can induce the government to con- tinue subsidizing them they figure it’s worth the attempt. Atlantic port iriterests will no doubt also be represented at «the coming hearings. At least they should be. Bombs For Viet Nam, A late Washington dispatch states that the U.S. has acquired 18,000 bombs from allies-so far this year for use in Southeast Asia. It is not offic- jally stated that these armaments.are going to Viet Nam to boost what are described as bomb inventories now near minimum levels, but that is the general belief. It points up, drama- tically, the, fact that this is indeed a real war in which our American neighbors are engaged taxing even their enormous-productive capacity. Secretary of Defence McNamara re- cently met disturbing reports-of bomb. and other shortages overseas with an emphatic denial. But the New York Times finds his statement unconvin- cing. Almost 250,000 U.S. troops and 400.090 tons of supplies, it notes, have been sent to Viet: Nam from-all parts of the world.-There has been “draw-down,” as the services call it, on military supply _ inventories difficulty of computing in terms of simple interest the various charges ‘that in an array of installment ar- rangements constitute the cost of "| credit. But presumably the govern- ment has decided that this is not an insurmountable obstacle. : The progress of the measure will be ~-folHowed with interest in other prov- inces, and doubtless at Ottawa. It may even crop up as an election plank, somewhere—who knows?— before it gets-a-chance-to-become law in the province of its origin. EDITORIAL NOTES ~ _ Nostalgicly,the Ottawa Journal comments that.{o the middle-aged, it is astounding that a farm boy today c tm -hundred_and.._fifty-pound | --bombs,-sold_as_‘‘surplus” some. years. | | co mitted to Viet Nam or other foreign ‘ Sa. - SOUVENIR OF FLORIDA bons ‘ Chalazions sion of the eyelid. It surface. Treatment follows | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson — | | ls | | | | | | | ’ more than just | of our government. i | ly Canadians enjoy the ultimate "Parliament And The New Cardinism Friday, March 4, 1966 was proceed against their forerun- would urge any future non-Ll- | the day when Justice Minister Cardin pitch - _forked the manure into the par- liamentary fan. That will ‘be looked -back on as the day which originated the most : deplorable damage which has ever been perpetrated against -the-demo- cratic parliamentary system of government, in Canada or in any other country so governed in the world. ia Who had lunch . with Gerda Munsinger? Did the RCMP bug a bedroom?: Was. that “femme fatale’ the Mata Hari of ‘the Cold “War? --These- are:.questions whose answers, will quickly be | forgotten. ities But our democratie govern- ment and {mpartial justice will never fully recover from the wounds—inflicted—by. this_grudge i 2 *: case: ¢ . LETTER SPARKED IT The key document in the Mun- singer enquiry, the prime refer- ence in the Government's instru- letter written to-Prime—Minister Pearson by Justice Minister Cardin on March 11. The key phrase in- that key letter reads thus: “T have indicated that (Mr- Diefenbaker,, when Prime Mi- nister of Canada) failed to place ,. the file on this-case before thre law officers of the Department ‘of Justice for their advice;-that the information given him con- cerned a case. in which security risks were involved. leged that he mishandled this CASO. ; The free speech permitted by ; our democratic system allows |. any citizen, even a back-bench opposition MP as- Cardin was at the Munsinger time, to ‘“‘indi- | cate” or ‘allege’ any—eritiei Collective- | sanction of kicking out a. govern- | ment whose conduct displeases That indeed, was the ultimate verdict=upon the Diefenbaker Government” by _ the | electors. “May grow up knowing nothing-about---- horses and baffled by the talk of hames,. traces and. maftingales. — a ek oe Between January 1 and July 31 last year, Canada imported $84 mil- lion worth of fresh and processed fruits and “vegetables “which can be produced-here ‘in this country,” ac- cording to Douglas Williams, chair- _man of the Ontario Food Council. He is also authority for the fact - that 30 per cent of the Canadian apple “crop was deliberately destroyed as | surplus in 1965, although $3,121,000 t | | worth of fresh apples was imported from the U.S, Something wrong here, and calling for explanation. ~_* @ a An American exchange notes that whafever the truth may. be in angry. exchanges. between Red China and the Soviet Union, it is apparent that both camps are guilty of excessive “Ismism."’ Each Has accused the other of adventurism, splittism, Trotskyism, nationalism, dogmatism and’ great- power chauvinism. One says the other has not stuck to Marxism-Leninism and has not done its best to fight im- perialisin, colonialism and capitalism. —In-the-cireumstances, it is suggested | | | that “the free world’s pessimism should change to optimism. by Com- munism’s apparently unanimous de- throughout the world. Virtually all” _Votionalism to schismism.” or i But when subsequently one of those critics becomes, as Mr. Diefenbaker aptly commented, “dressed in a little brief autho- rity’, it is not our tradition that he should inaugurate. a scaven- ge into the files of a previous government,—-smearing all members by innuendo, d_ set- "ting up his second-hand judg- ..ment.against that of . the then . tribune of the people. This is fhe~ new Cardinism. cargoes _ seat of modern Greece, More so, he surely should. not appoint a judge from. an infer- | for court to rule upon the judg- ment of the leader of the na- tion’s highest court, Parliament But that has now been done This is a sorry novelty. Cri- ticism is one thing; but this ranks with Star Chamber im: peachmerts in the Midd'e 4~-s. Today only -Banana—Dictators I have al--| highest | | voice in the land, the voice of th its |ners. This novelty will scar the Supreme Court. | ABUSE OF COURTESY ' But equally regrettable. is the /new Cardinism, the practice ~ of snooping back into the files left by a previous government, and using them as_ partisan politi- }cal ammunition. An outgoing government qleaves its, files to ; assist its successor, to permit | continuity in the affairs of the |nation. To use such files for | Cardinism flaunts accepted prac tice, and could necessitate dis- |ruptive bonfires on any change Of-government. Suppose the Commission finds that Gerda was indeed a ‘‘se- curity risk’’; then Cardinism Ever since the Pilgrim Fath- _ers stepped ashore at Plymouth | the. most fertile of the spec- |-_ctions to the Commissioner, is a | i321 relationships ee between Bri- | tain and America have geen th | web of family links spanning the | Atlantic. Sometimes they are of more than academic import- ance. Harold Macmillan, for exam- ple, was not just a friend of President Kennedy. He was _also_‘an uncle .by marriage — 'though the White House was ‘never too keen about publicizing | | the dynastic implications of the- link. The oldest- link — of all, how- |ever, is that betweén George | Washington and the Royal Fam- ‘ily. Recently, dedicated Ameri- |ean genealogists have proved | what had long been suspected— | that the Queen and the first | president of the United States “are cousins. | To be precise, the Queen |is sixth cousin twice removed | from. Washington, thanks to a | Warner, a 17th- century Virginia | landowner. The links may seem He’s B Apparently Marcus Lipton, a | Laborite member of the’ British Parliament, has small apprecia- tion of fables, myths, superstiti- , tions and such. Loch Ness monter, which is al- ‘most comparable to taking aim at the Easter bunny. aginative MP wants the legend- ary monster to fish or cut. bait, so to speak. He thinks it. high | time that fact displaced fancy. Lipton wants a full- blown gov- ernment investigation, employ- ing submarines, pontoons and sonic Royal Air Force and Defense | Ministry experts that five-year- | old. movie photographs showed | : | hei He has drawn a bead on the | ~~"'This~ matter-of-fact--and—unim-- | beral government to hound Jack | Pickersgill as the Immigration | Minister who admitted that se-'| curity risk to Canada as an im- | | migrant. | And if old records are to be | combed for old dirt, suppose a |former Defence Minister had a | | weakness for alcohol, suppose |another key minister indulged -in extra - marital sex, suppose . . .but why.go on. Were those’ also security risks? In 22 years |of Liberal rule, the closet be- /eame so. choked with skeletons that it would prove, under Car- \for any future non-Liberak go- 'vernment: a - Cousins For All That : _London Sunday Times = | sionally when the circulation in ; tenuous but, in fact, the Queen | is among’ Washington's closest living relatives. In the middle of the 18th cen- ; tury,—Washington’s—first—eousin,— | Mary,~-married—an.. Englishman called Robert Porteus. Their son, Beilby, became Bishop of - London. His granddaughter) an- |other Mary, married ,the 12th | Earl of Strathmore. That was in 1853. The marriage flourished and in 1900 a granddaughter ap- peared— Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, - | Mother. : | But now the family tree has sprouted the oddest. branch of all. A 19th century manuscript reveals that the Earl of Strath- more was a genealogical link between Queen Elizabeth and | Alice Liddell, the girl who inspir- |ed Lewis Carroll's “Alice | in a Liddell, ‘‘was a cousin of the Earl of Strathmore,” ac- cording to the manuscript. Queen Elizabeth II is related not only to America’s first: presi. dent, but her fourth cousin twice removed is Alice in Wonderland. adly Needed Minneapolis Star ;thé monster ‘probably was an animate ‘object 92 feet long, six feet wide and five feet high. He suspects that the monster story is a wild fairy tale, a jud- gement with which we are in- ‘clined to agree, but what good will it do to prove that there is no such critter? +-—-Net—only—will_those.who_have | “seen it be discredited and embarrassed, but a_ story that has circulated in Scotland since 565 A.D. will-be blown out of the. water. We would remind Marcus Lip- ton that the world has an abund- soundings: = His demant"sice of reali that fancy, Sal HGTIpERL CS a TtanOrt eae ce of realism, but that fancy. the stuff of dreams, mystery and escape, is in exceedingly | short supply. Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | (April 27, 1941) The Royal Air Force dumped of Britain's powerful new bombs on Hamburg, Ger- many’s biggest port and second | city, which left a half-mile area “a huge, heaving mass like a voleanic eruption."’ Athens, onevof the great cities of antiquity and the governing fell to | Hitler after 21 days of fighting. | The vanguard of Nazi motorcy- clists roared into the centre of the city at 930 am. -+ : ° ° TEN YEARS AGO (April 27, 1956) Mr. James C.. Montgomery of Charlottetown was officially ap- pointed as representative of In- + vestors -Sendicate— of Canada: Rocky heavyweight world—unbeaten fessional fights. Marciano retired as champion of the in his. 49 pro- | Myth Of The Superman New York Times Early in the Second World War | people in France,’ Britain, Can- ' ada and other Allied counties were stunned—almost petrified —to read of. the efficiency of the onrushing Nazis... So me- thodical were the Germans that they even put infantrymen. of ~the-same blood groups into the same platoons to speed. ip transfusions. How could such a highly opganized, farsighted enemy possibly —be —beaten* Though human failings were ob- vious early on, the myth of the Nazi superman was- not finally destroyed until the last days of the war Adults lave a perverse capac- ity to conjure up images almost the way a child turns shadows inte” boceymen,.---We-did—-tire same—with-the—Japanese,_consid-_| ering them so fanatic and suici- dal th-f they would nevet: give up the fight until the last — of them was killed. We imputed , tlo-the Chinese in Korea a. super rheroic quality; with glazed eyes | they rushed heedlessly and end- lessly into murderous gunfire. Why do we go on building up the opponent as an invincible star at the price of truth? A United Pyess International dis- patch from Saigon the other day described . anti-government dem- onstrations and said. ‘It was feared Viet Cong elements had joined the mobs.’’ By the yard- stick of current stories, the Viet Cong ave everywhere — in remote hamlets, in main city squares, even in military head- quarters — under all circum- stances The Viet Cong may. be dedi- cated fighters, but they cannot possibly combine the cunning | of Fu Manehu-and the mobility of Batiian There js dangerous deception to the reports, for they fail to take into account the spontaneous actions. of crowds | Suffering many grievances. be_a stroke? / now Queen Elizabeth, the Queen |~ | spond to hot packs. assumes the size of a pea it top. The affected area is tender to the touch and throbbing and ‘pus is» followed by relief and within a few days the wound closes and healing is rapid. The lesion teems with bacter- ia and sothe victims are plagued by one recurrence after anoth- needs early and expert care, Best results are obtained with ‘| hot compresses and the use of an ointment containing sulfad- iazine or an antibiotic like pen- icillin. Lancing may be _neces- sary when the coverjng over the sty is tough. _ Sties oftenare confused with chalazions because both repre- sent swellings ’ of The chalazion or blind sty, as it sometimes is called,.stems from obstruction of a different type of gland (Meibomian) located in this region. It is not inflamma- tory in nature, hence is pain- less. Even. after the opening ‘is round, firm swelling that results is a collection of oily material produced by the structure. ‘Should obstruction clear spontaneously swelling subsides but this is not the rule. Most blind: sties must be opened; the area is anesthetized and a tiny slit is made though which the accumulated grease escapes. When a chalazion becomes. in- fected, it resembles a sty. Chal- adults and sties in children. HAIR REGROWTH Mrs. L. writes: My little boy's playmate pulled out my son's hair in a-fight and this left sev- eral bald patches. Will this hair regrow? t REPLY : in because hair is not ‘’pulled out by the roots’’ as the term implies. What appears to be the | root is the bulb at the end of the hair shaft. This part fits into the follicle, or root, : NUMB LIMBS H. A. writes: If a person awakens with numbness of the --dinism;a—rich--hunting ground |right arm and leg but. without loss. of reflexes, is this likely to REPLY The physician who tested the -reflexes_is the best one to de- a brain artery is reduced tem- porarily. ; FLUID COLLECTION __D._R. V. writes: ‘Does hydro- cele—become-increasingly_worse if nothing is done for it? ; REPLY Some do and others remain the same.sie. A hydroceles rare- ly if ever disappears spontane- ously. | : | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen The sty is the best’ known le- is some- what like a boil in that both are | abscesses and involve the glands and hair follicles beneath the a -similar_pattern_.in.that..both—re.. ~ The-sty—begins asa ed swell. ing near the lid margin. When ‘it comes to a head, with pus on aching ensue as the purulent ma- terial accumulates. Drainage of the eyelid: _{ blocked, the gland continues’ to’, sécrete its substance and the Yes. The nude patches. will fill | Sties And . Et . NOTES BY THE WAY Lok. lazy man does not have a If you ‘wonder where winter bigger garden than his wife can | went, you'll find it all over the take care of. — Marion Adver- atiser. - /has money. ade ee enntainhitiamer tee ‘mout | Film” Magnate | dio) . ‘Who's that?” | Magnate —' ‘‘Why- did you get ' such a little man to play such ;an important part?’’ — Mon- |treal Star. . “A St. Louis real estate opera- | tor has identified the chief prob- lem in slum housing here as low |rents. He may be on the verge |of something profound if only he | ean rélate that to the chief prob- | Louis Post - Despatch. |. ‘Have you any alarm clocks?” |inquired the customer. ‘What | I want is one that will rouse fa- |ther without waking the whole |family.’’ ‘I don’t know of any ; Such alarm clock as that, ma- | dam,” said the shopkeeper. “We | | keep just the ordinary kind that |out disturbing father.” — Hamil- ton Spectator: The ghost of United States intervention in the civil war in | the Dominican Republic a year | ago loomed large as Dominicans | celebrated ‘the first anniversary | of the Caribbean country’s civil war. ‘The undercurrent of hostility | toward the U.S. action was dis- played in Santo Domingo dur- |ing - peaceful demonstrations | which marked the start ‘of the storing deposed president Juan Bosch to power. Thousands of fotmer rebel |fighters and _ sympathizers marched during .the weekend | through the streets to downtown | Parque de Independencia, nerve | centre of their cause in the 1965 civil war. | Speakers during the three- / hour rally denounced: U.S. inter- | vention and called for the de- ' parture from the Dominican | Republic of the 8,000-member | force of the Organization of | American States which replaced |; the U.S. marines ordered into | the country by President John- |son at- the outbreak of the revolt. | DEENDED CONSTITUTION | “The rebels—who called them- | selves constitutionalists because ‘they said they were the defend- to restore Boschto power after the civil war. , But they did succeed in play- ing an instrumental part in the t of—_Dr. peeniah had been installed alter | Bosch’s downfall—and paved the way for the June 1 Domini- can election in which the for- mer president is a major can- | avertiroy of the military junta | didate. If a man owns, a big new auto- | |mobile it doesn’t prove that he It only proves that jhe had money. — Review. Ply- ‘entering. - stu-- Director | | — ‘Why that’s Napoleon.”’ Film | Donald Reid “Cabral_ carpeting in the living room. — | Dousman Index. Britain's House of Lords has }ruled that the. famous Grand ‘National race course at Aintree ;can be sold for the development ~yof-a-housing-project.In.this-era- of change, no institution is sac- red._— Ottawa Citizen : A cat owner, after taking her | pet to be wormed for the ump- | teenth time, asked the veterin- , arian how to prevent the cat | from getting worms again. The | vet's advice was short and sim- | ple. “Boil his mice.” he said. — Kansas City Star. A candidate for Congress from ja certain New England state er. or this reason the first ne |1em of tenants low income. — St. | WaS never shy about telling the voters why they should send him 'to Washington. “I am a practi- /cal farmer,” he said boastfully, }in the course of an address to |an agricultural group: “‘I~can | plow, reap, milk cows, shoe a horse—in fact, I should like for someone to tell me one thing a- bout a farm which I cannot do,” |Then, in the impressive- silence cwill-wake-the-whole-family.with....a..voice.asked fromthe back of | the hall: ‘Can you lay an egg?” i— Montreal Star. — Dominican Anniversary By Boris Miskew Canadian Press Staff Writer | Bosch: was deposed in a coup jin’ September, 1963, seven months after becoming: the country’s first freely - elected | president following more than | 30 years of dictatorship. It was feared in Washington and in a number of Latin- | American. capitals at the time | that the Dominican Republic | under Bosch’s leadership was | heading toward the installation azions are more common in| four-month revolt aimed at. ve-.| of a Cuban-type government. Consequently, when.the revolt began to restore Bosch to power a year ago, Johnson ordered United States troops into Santo | Domingo to foil any attempt by | Communists to assume power during the crisis. | HINDERED CAUSE ‘ - The U.S. intervention hindered the rebel cause but did not end | the civil war. As fighting con- | tinued between the rebels and | the right-wing - military junta, U.S. marines were joined by forces. from the OAS and-later ie part of the OAS force. Bosch, head of the moder- ately-leftist Dominican Revolu- tionary party, took a cautious ~—lattitudetowardthe -anniversary celebrations. Last week he for- +-bade--his—followers—.from_.par- | ticipating in the affair. This led to accusations from cide this. point. Numbness of | ers of the constitution under the pro-Castro~ 14th of June one arm and leg occurs o¢ca- | which Bosch was elected—tfailed | Movement, the only extreme !leftist party allowed to par- | ticipate in the election, that | Bosch had destroyed the unity | of the rebel cause and that he | had sold- out to the “United , ‘States — a eee eucesee ee | But although Bosch has turned ~ | down the endorsement of the | 14th of June Movement as a presidential candidate, the movement urged its followers to vote for him nevertheless. 4 eoncerned about the safest, soundest, handiest way to SAVE? | ¥ Have a good look at: all the advantages available to you through Royal Bank’s various savings facilities. Review your needs in relation to the various types of accounts and deposit arrangements offered at any branch of the Royal. 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