(doorman Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Publishe' Burton Lewis Frank Walker Executive Editor Editor Published every week day morning (enepi Sun~ day: and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street. Charlottetown. P.E.l.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague. Alber’ ten and Souris. Represented nationally by lhomson Newspaper: Advertising Servicel Toronto. 425 University Ave. Montreal. 640 Caihcart Street, 942; Western office. l030 West Georgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher- Assocretion and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Hancox, ten, and also to the local new: published here- in All rights on republication of special dispatches herein also reserved. Subscription rates: Not over 35¢ per week by carrier. $11.00 a year by mail or rural router and Irene not serwced by carrier. $l4.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per an year in US d elsewhere ouiside British Com- monwealt Not over 7: per single copy. ‘ oi Circnlauon. Member L'udn liureao Making Haste Slowly Prime Minister Diefenbaker has given Parliament a good reason why (‘ a n aria should go slow in acquiring nuclear arms for its NATO forces at. this time. The Nassau agreement. he pointed out. aims at. preseiying an objective long sought by the Canadian Govern- ment. namely a limitation on the furthcr enlargement. of the nuclear family. The whole future and shape of NATO military forces are now in process of review. Discussions on political control of any multilateral nuclear force established by the alliance are, said the Prime Minister. bound to con- tinue for many months. it would be premature to say anything fur- ther until there is a clear indica- tion as to whether or not some form of NATO multilateral force can be worked out. This statement. of course. will not satisfy those who are demand- ing “action” on this issue. who feel that Canada is dragging its feet and should waste no further time in acquiring the tactical nuclear weapons that. General Norstad said it should have under its NATO com- mitments. But General Norstad is not charged with the responsibility of governing this country—nor in- deed. any more. with the NATO military command in Europe—and the same applies to Mr. Diefen- baker‘s critics in and out of Par- liament. The Prime Minister cannot. af- ford the luxury of viewing this grave issue emotionally. or from any other standpoints than those of Canada's vital interests and present-day effectiveness in work- ing for world peace and security- 'I'o refuse to move when action would be premature is just as much a duty of statesmanship as to act. when the occasion requires it. Of course, it. is rarely a popular policy to pursue; but students of Canadian history will recall that it was one which Sir John A. Mac- rlonald followed With Outstanding success in the early days of this Dominion. and which earned him the title of “Old Tomorrow." Sir ,lohn's fame as a nation builder re— mains untarniehcd by time. where- as the very names of many of the most vociferous critics of his de- laying tactics have long since pass- cd into oblivion. Closing British Ranks The British Parliament has re- assembled under the cloud of Presi- dent de Gaulle's harsh "no" to Brit.- ain joining the European Economic Community, and interest centers now on how the Labor opposition will react to this arrogant gesture on the part of the French leader. It has been timed with seemingly deliberate intent, for there was no reason why. if dc. Gaulle objected so strongly to Britain's entry into the Common Market. he couldn’t have said so 15 months ago. This point. made by Prime Minister Har- old Macmillan in his speech on Monday night, goes to the root of the matter. The anger of the British over what they see as de Gaulle’s cav- alier treatment of them and his timing have aroused sympathy for Mr. Macmillan and his government. This is one of the reasons why the Laborifes have been holding their fire of late. Another reason. of course. has been the illness and death of their leader. Mr. Gaitskell. George Brown. the party's deputy any AY. JANUARY 23. 1963 leader. appears to prefer to play the Common Market issue "cool". It is not without significance that the Daily Herald. which usual- ly reflects Labor views. declares that Mr. Macmillan is right to press on with Common Market negotiations in Brussels despite General de Gaulle. It could be, in- deed. that the de Gaulle speech has lessened the gap between Britain's pro- and anti-marktcers. For. from the Labor as well as from the Gov- ernment point of view. de Gaulle has glaringly revealed his narrow, inward-looking concept of Euro- pean unity. Another interesting reaction to de Gaulle's attitude comes from an American correspondent at Brus- sels. who says opinion there is to the effect that it was against the United States ra'rher than Britain that the French president launched his massive frontal attack. His im- placable insistence on suspending the negotiations for Britain's entry was. reportedly. because of Britain's interdependence with the United States Another voice has bccn raised in criticism of do Gaulle's attitude. which may prove the. most cffcctivc one of all at Brussels. That is the voice of Jean Monnet. credited with fathering the great Schuman Plan coal and steel pool that formcd a nucleus and pilot project for the Common Market. M. Monnet says it is untenable to argue Britain's unwillingness to meet the require- ments of Common Market mcmbcr- ship, as these have been defined in technical agreements. Britain, he. maintains, has in fact met. these requirements already. Food And Population Those who think that there is no future in farming should study the current population incrcasc. prc— dictions. According to the latest Dominion Bureau of Statistics re- port, Canada‘s population will rise to more than 22 million by June, 1971. This forecast is based on an analysis of the 1061 census figures, which showed an increase of 4,228,- 818 from 111,009,429 over the pre- ceding decade. This rising popula- tion will make more and more de- mands on our food producers. Pro- viding they adapt themselves to the changing requirements, it would seem that the farmers’ place in Canada‘s future is the most assured one of all. This applies only to our home market; but. think of the skyrocket- ing population o u ts i d e Canada‘s boundaries! If there is to be even moderate improvement in the pres- ent inadequate state of nutrition for half the people on earth. the world’s food production must be doubled by 1980, and trebled by the year 2000. These were the conclu- sions presented this week by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. They are based on the assumption that the world's population will double by the end of the century. It, took tens of thousands of years from the dawn of mankind for the world to reach 1,000 million population in 1830. But it took only 100 years, until 1930. to reach 2.000 million population and only 30 years, until 1960. to reach 3,000 million. In the next forty years, by the end of this century, the popu- lation is expected to reach 6.000 million; and from then on it will go up in huge multiples every year. Food? If the world doesn’t go mad and blow itself up in the mean- time, production of this commodity will be of overriding concern in the' years to come. Out of sheer neces- sity, governments will have to de- vote more and more attention to it, enlisting the aid of science on a scale now undreamed of. and. incidentally. elevating the status of the food producer and holding out their most tempting awards to proficiency in this vital occupation. EDITORIAL NOTE Only thirty years ago. mink furs had to be imported into Germany from abroad. Today German breed- ers can boast of supplying 11 per cent of total mink requirements in the world. 60.000 furs at an aggre- gate value of about three million marks are manufactured in the northernmost federal state. Schles- wig-Holstein. Almost two-thirds of the 700 mink farms in Germany are located between the North Sea and the Baltic. LieeaALS AND CaNSERVATtVeS 'rmue OPPoSlNG eTANos -—-— / ca 4 ? #454549- Pay; Y 5m 574% Surgery Cures Vo ricose Veins y Dr. Theodore R. Van Dcllen VARI-COSE veins are ellmin- l ated by various surgical pro- . eedures, in which the veins are [ tied off or stripped out. This is regarded as modern treatment . even though Galen (130-201 A. D.) recommended that they be torn out by a hook— a crude l form of stripping, to say th 9 Y least. Five hundred years later. ' Acgineta described a met f tying them off and rem oving them from the legs. There is 1 little that is new, except the an- i esthclic, for which we can be 1 thankful. Smaller veins can be plugged by injecting an irritating solu- tion that fo rms a clot. Once this is done. the vein dries up and becomes scar tissue. Now ' and then. the physician utilizes a combination of treatments in which the dilated vein is inject. ed and tied off at several plac- es along its sourse. The Russians have new tcchniquc that accomplishes t 9 same result. An incision is made over the two ends of the affected vein. A short segment is rcmovcd at the top end fus- ually in the groin) and a catgut thread is introduced throuuh the whole length of the vein and the two ends are tied off. The cat- gut remains in the vein a n d stimulatcs clotting. This is a variation of the i n j e c lion mcthod. Should these veins be re- mrivcd'.‘ ch. hccausc they are unsightly and useless. In addi- tion. when the body is erect, blood flows in the opposite di- rection in these dilatcd veins. Removal bcncfits rathcr than OTTAWA OSTRICH FARM harms the rcsidual circulation. . Sincc thc blood is running down instead of up the va ricose A vein. the log may ache. COMMON MARKET CRISIS Britain And President de Goulle Pt‘cs’tdcpl dc Gaullc's‘ slalo— mcnts at his rcccnl prcss con- ference have brought right out into the open the fundamental issue at stake in the Brussels negotiations on Britain‘s acccs- stop to thc European Economic Community. That issuc is the futurc shapc of Eurnpc. is it to build up its unity on as broad a basis as possiblc. or are the Six to keep other Buropcan coun- tries such as Britain from join- ing thcm and to dcvclop as a sclf'sufficicnt and possibly in- ward- lookinz: group? What has all lhc Ion: long. thc President called it). negotiating hccn about? In bricf. it has bccn about the ad- justments an d arranizcmcnts nccdcd to smooth Britain's pas— sauc into lhc Community. not about any chanuc in thc sll‘ucv lure of the Community itself. Britain is not uniquc in ask- in: for thcsc. Bycry mcmbcr of the Six ncgoliatcd similar adjustmcnts on joinirc. Thcsc nczotiations, as Prcsidcnl dc Gaullc pointcd out. worc com- pletcd with arm! difficulty and, incidentally. took ycars. Britain has askcd nothing cxorhilanl—~ noth- ing. for instance, comparahlc in scolc to thc spccinl arronuc- mcnts covcrin: aids to exports and charges on imports over the wholc field of thc fr an c arm which Franco obtained un- dcr a protocol to thc R0 mc. Trcaty. N0 PRIVIIEGED POSITION Ccrtainly shc does not scck. as the French Prcsidcnt sug— gests. a privilcch position for her aEI'iculturc. Thc rccenl dis- cussions on this iavc bccn about how. and how fast. Rrit- ain should changc ovcr from hcr present system of auricul- tural support to the Common Markct systcm during the trans- itional pcriod. That thcsc discussions should have bccn prolraclcd docs not. in retrospect. sccm surprisinl: in view of the philosophy which PUBLlC FORUM This column I: nnen tn lhe discussion by cnrrcsnnudents of question: of teresl. The Guardian does not. serily endorse the nnininn of co- nonrlents. All letters published are Iuh feet to editing and conrlcnsnlinn when necessary The Guardian is unable Ir enlcr lnln snv inrrespnndence regard- lng tellers submitted. , ltori MR. HEENEY REPLIES Sir.— it is gratifying to havc Mr. thatlcy's explanation of thc analysis of thc $46.09? itcm rcfcrrcd to in previous corrcs- pondencc. We are plcascd to state to the pcoplc of the Province that our total mortgage was $485000. not $450000. as stated by Mr. thatlcy. The confusion of the final total was brought about by the fact that the original n otc which was given to thc Govcrn- ment by PEI. Frosted Foods Limitcd for 3.15.000 had bccn lost or mislaid in thc filcs ofj g By Derek Payton-Smith British Information Services sccms lo have lain behind the Frcnch ncgotiating posllion. But the important point to grasp is that when the Common Market comes into full opera- tion, British agriculture will be trcatcd in cxactly 9 same way as that of any othcr mem- ber country. So much for the British posi- tion at Brussels. What of the Frcnch President‘s prcfcrcnce for a Community limited to the Six founder mcm crs? To en- largc thc F..IC.C.. the Prcsidcnt argues, would be to change it to such a dcgrcc that it would no ‘ longer rescmhlc the one which Francc has bccn working for. To this onc can only reply that. in that case. thc F..E.C. as con- ccivcd by Franco is not i h e F‘..l"..C. conceived by the Treaty of Rome. That Treaty. as the fcderal German Foreign Minis- tcr and other E.E.C. Ministers havc pointcd out. speaks of dctcrmination to scek an ever- widcr union among the Eur- opcan pcoplcs. IMPORTANT POINT But whether the Frcnch con- i ccption of the EEC. is in bar- mony with that of the Treaty of Romc is not the important point. It is whcthcr this little Europe. thc Europe of the Six favoured by France. is to be preferred to an enlarged Community. Is it rcnlly to Europe's advantage to cxcludc, as the French Presi- dcnt sccms to wish to do. Bur- opcan countries which h a v e agrccmcnts or links of one kind or another with countries I‘ulsidc Europc such as Britain. for instance. has with the rest of thc Commonwealth (or. for that mattcr France herself with countrics in Africa)? Surely such ties could be of the utmost value in reducing the chances of conflicts of economic interest, of political misunderstanding bctwccn the Community and the rcst of the world. One of the great advantages which sccmed to be coming of I 1 the ncgotiations at B ru 3 s els ‘ ovcr Commonwealth trade was thc possibility, arising out. of the u n d e rt a king to promote world trade agreements on agri- cultural produce. of p u t t l n I: trade relations between primary producing countries and indus- trialised nations on a erman- cnlly more satisfactory footing. 1 Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Files) ‘ TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGo January 23, 1933 William Semple and Roscoe i Walker. Kensington. two enter- l prising young men have Joined ] forccs and are remodelling the l Bowness building, preparing for 1 their opening the first of chbruary, of one of the most ,complctc and unto-data stores | in the province. They have secur- ! ed the services of C C. Hees- chcn. formerly of Charlottetown. thc Govcrnmcnt. The loss we. t discovcrcd by tho 1’ r o vincial Trcasurcr. and at his request two ycars ago a duplicate was issued. This is a mattcr of public rccord. We wcrc not in arrcars at any time according to thc tcrms of our contract. However. the interest bill submitted was subject to correction the amount chargcd In lin in error. and subsequent ad- justment was ncccssary. We are pleased that Mr. thatlcy has made it possiblet to offer full cxplanation of lhci lfith and 17th. I960 statements. I had , not been aware of these stale-ll ments. or they would have been i ambiguities of the Merch corrected at the time. Yours very truly. PEI. FROSTED FOODS LTD. Wfl. Heeney. president LePrnlrie. Que. Jen It to bring e . with tho tcrms of our agrcc- ‘ mcnl. Thc amount charged was ; The Crystal Sisters. took a 5-2 win over the Kenslngton Silver ‘ Wing Sisters at Summerslde t last night. in a hard fought bat- lie. In spite of the score the . Kcnsington girls supplied plenty 5 of oppositionxfor the fast skat- ing Summerslde squad. 1‘ TEN YEARS AGO January 23, 195.1 town is now in eight. .vance party of equipment I The lonmawaited changeover tto dial telephone in Charlotte- . An ad- ln- ; stallers arrived last night to be- gin work on the new 1 office on Queen Street. Vancouver. .Ian. 20 - (CF) 8 ved here on schedule switch- board et the P. E. I. telephone The pilot truck of Canada's first Coast-to-coast trucking service lwith, among other things, 250 ‘ lobsters for veterans at Shangh- II‘I! Military Hospital. at; p. the now U.S. .All this. of coursc, may well do by the board if the negotiations with Britain fall too. might United States plans for swccping tariff cuts under: trade expansion legislation. which assumcs Bri- tish mcmbcrship of the E.E.C. l through. That’s why Confederation Life is pleased increase in total dividends oVer last year to be paid out during : another reason why life insurance is a better investment than ever! This substantial increase was made possible by Confederation Life’s continued growth and service to Canadians throughout 1962. our 9lst year of operation. Here are some highlights from our annual report: We would be hep y to send a copy of the gist A m lust phone your nearest Confederation Ute office heavy. and tire easily. Tem-‘ porary relief is obtained by ; \vcaring e l 3 st 1 c bandages or . stockings to compress the dis- tended veins. Thc stacnant blood may dis- color the skin or lead to eczema of thc lowcr legs. trivial scratch or bruise oftcn breaks down into an ulccr, especially \vhcn thc tissues in and about the ankles become waterlogged and unhealthy. A varicose vein may bccome infected. leading - to phlcbitis. These are the roa- - sons why treatment is advised. . cvcn though the veins arc trouhlcsomc for the time being. i So. so ‘ lei-national ‘ seems to have given it up. ' how to use 3 and forgotten by ‘ public. It must have caught the ‘ average listener off NOTES BY THE WAY The last straw to the family budget in January is not the Christmas bills but all the mo- ney that is spent saving money on the January salcs. — Ottawa Journal. i Local magistrates might well‘ consider sentencing negligent g drivers to undergo the chasten-t ing experience of visiting emer- gency wards, the junkyards and ‘ even the morgue. —— Pcterbor- ough Examiner. If there should be a nuclear war. researchers at the Brook- havcn National laboratory com clude. trees and other plant lifd would be devastated but weeds could survivc. In fact. the scien- 5 tists suggest. wccds would take over large parts of the earth. As horrible as such an even- tuality is to contemplate. there is a note of comfort in the find- ings for the homeowners. If wccds would survive and even thrive on nuclear war. how can you really expect to beat them? —- ontgomery Advertiser. Diplomatic Lull Christian Science Monitor Once again there is good in-- weather. Mr.j Khrushchev seems to be talk—. ing sensibly at East Berlin —‘ becausc he has no altcrnative.‘ t He tried a force play at Cuba; and it didn't work. A n o t h c r ; force play at Berlin would bcj even more dangerous. and be We have no way of knowing how long the present lull might last. The practical qucslion isl it profitably. A s . President Kcnncdy said to Con-i grcss: “Complacency or self- congratulations can imperil our; security as much as the wcap-i pons of tyranny. A momcnt of: pause Is not a promise of; peace ” YEAR 0!" OPPORTUNITY The Prcsidcnt asked “not for. . a year of vacation, but a ycarl of obligation and opportunity." One such opportunity michl surprise everyone by opcninu‘ up almost at once. Arms con- trol has been all but writtcn off thc general 9! u a r d when the Prcsidcnt listcd dis- armament as thc chicf avcnuc for specific effort during the year at ca Something secms to he going on behind the scenes. Thcre are reports from Washington that. a‘ yet undiscloscd approach may l have been madc by tho R u s- i sians lo the White House on this 1 point. Perhaps it was only a series of hints that Mr. Khrush-l chev is now willing to talk I about a mcasure of inspcction. insidc his country. i This could be a red herring. l Confederation it e announces Increased * dIVIdends for daily-sound to announce a l9.8 per cent life. 1963.‘It‘s l P'm "'0 0"“ you love. coneult nnuel Report. or representative. (Mediation h I I O c l A 1‘ t o N HEAD OFFICE 321 31.. . » m........°°:.snsa.5~.tecsrce .. e “v- .. was» - "- J9 1 load of hope. '- $3,162 tuition: ' '0'“ Mill - 333% mil 1” I .3'. . 0 $432 million: in Other Benefits [W‘1 n «. O ft'itfisumillilii'umi'n temp to maxim in in. policy owne matte the usual fare at the opening of a period of relaxed strains be- ing sl'agemanagcd from Mos- cow. But thc President. at any ralc. gavc it the climactic posi~ tion in his mcssaizc: “But our commitment to net'- tinnal safcty is not a commit- ment to expand our military 93-. ‘ lablishmcnt indefinitely. We do not dismiss disarmament as mcrcly an idcal dream... If all thcsc trcnds and dcvclopmcnts can persuade thc Sovict Union‘ to walk the path of peace, then let her know that all free na- tions will journey with her." The privatc. exploratory meek ings now under way with e Russians carry not only a load ' of cynicism but. an even grcatcr TESTS SURVIVAL CLARE. Mich. lAPl houscwifc from the Detroit suh- ‘) of Wayne Tuesday passed thc halfway point in her eight: day-and-uighl "survival test" in the woods of Clare county, in the centre or Michigan's lower peninsula. Exccpl for attending church Sunday, Mrs. Lavina Radabaugh, 47. has born in the \vidcrncss in tcmpcraturcs around zero since Friday. it she lasts the full eight days, she will win a $150 prize. TAKES BENCH OTTAWA (CPl—er. Justice Emmott Hall. former chief jus- tice of Saskatchewan, formally took his place on the bcnch of the Supreme Court of Canada Tucsdav at the opcuinu of the court's winlcr fcrm. llc suc- cccds Hon. Charles H. Locke. llf- Life insurance in tons of Annuities in force ' lions Dividends paid during <§__