4 Mes : . C, 3 if ES Sovkas PS Sata 4 a » oe ee | Rovers Prince Edward Islaed Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Burton: lewis. Frank Walker Executive Edito, Editor : i sak _ + Published every week day morning (except Sun - 2 be days and statutory holidays) ot 165 Prince, Street, © Charictigtown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. ter and Souris. 5 ie Represented nationally by Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto, 425 University Ave. | Empire 3-8894; Montres!, 640 Cotheart Street UNiversity 65042; Western office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver (MA 7037)..~ 2 Mamet Canadian Daily: Newspaper Publishers Associaton and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub Heation of al! news dispatches in this paper | éredited to it. or to The Associated Press or Rey fers. and also to, the local news: published here in. 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Message- 3 It was during the darkest. days of 4, ‘World War II that Winstorr Churches fy meeting* the challenge head-on, “talked proudly of “Britain’s . finest hour.” S of the same buoy- ‘ant spirit was evidenced:in President Kennedy's ‘state of the union” mes- sage to Congress-yesterday,-when he- spoke of the obligation of the United States to give bold leadership. at this time, of the privilege as well as _ the responsibility involved in such a challenge, and his faith that ultimate- | rey! ! & ‘ f | Hi : i Pz a3 i é i i i | F z . ! i a ie ee , in 157 Ee — i ft thought only ests and who ‘the United not a challenge to the United States | -alone,-but to Canada as well. Presi- — dent Kennedy's words were a clarion. | call to right action; and it is to be hoped that when Parliament meets at - Ottawa there will be an equally | clear statement of policy’ on this. _ | wubject. Here is a theme that Prime. '». Minister Diefenbaker, with his superb - gift of oratory, could make lumin- ~ “= ous and inspiring for us if he would. 3. Abuse Not Enough’ ___ 2... Inaadvance of the meeting of a 3 at Punta: ae e, Uruguay, on Jan. 22, Wash- a yn has released a White Paper _ £0n Cuba’s growing entanglement with Branch offices. at Summerside, Montague, Alber | ) self is an in + bit more self-criticism would not have > I. | "The budget. wernment, this report. warns, is. | ither. They'll raise Ww so firmly committed in word | 4 ‘ | smacks more of political propaganda _, than of a balanced analysis of Cuban affairs. It says nothing, for example, wut the problem of absentee owner- | economy by American firms, and of | the poverty. and illiteracy of large | Calling nasty names, and, shouting. “Communist”, does not help world opinion very much in trying to assess | | the results of these conditions. If big | business had a better. record in | | Cuba, would Castro now be éxpro-. | priating it? Would Castro be in pow- | | er at all? © ae so | To ‘ask these questions is by no | means the same thing as to defend | the Castro government, There has been a steady deterioration of the Cuban revolution; and Castro .him- ible character who |. inspires. little ednfidence and much suspicion. But ev®n after these ad- missions are made the fact remains that a little less indignation and a . > been out of place in the authors of the Washington White Paper. After all, their own record in Cuban af, fairs, and the larger question. of | - American policy in Latin : America, ean hardly be accountéd a model of enlightened foresight. a be many months after the hu- “ méfiation of the Cuban. invasion last — ‘ship, of the domination of—Cuba’s + — sections of the Cuban population. [ year the Kennedy administration tried to push the problem. of Cuba | out of the area of ‘public debate: and | to discuss these issues, when discus~ | sion became unavoidable, .with a | restraint and. detachment worthy of | a great power. But since 1962 is an _ election year and the administration | Acnows it will be under attack for fail- | {ng “to pluck out the roots of Castro- - ism, it has launched this new public indictment. a” - The tragedy is that Castro, who | is now so vulnerable to criticism, _ seems to be under attack in this new~ White Paper in a clumsy and uncon- vincing way—at least for the Cuban - people who after all have some inter- | “est in these matters. It Gould Be Too Soon Mr. Pearson says he would wel- | come a federal election at any time, and Prime Minister Diefenbakér has “been quoted as predicting that the parliamentary session which opens on Jan. 18 will be “short and sweet.” That could mean a sudden dissolution | and a snap election, with both party leaders agreeing—for oncé—that the -sooner the thing was over and done with the better. . ; ‘But is that really what the Liber- _ al leader would like? He couldn’t, of | course, question the Prime Minister’s right to ask for a dissolution at any | time; but we imagine that he would ~ broader aspect. | be the first to maintain that-a snap. ‘election, called before the business of | Parliament, was completed, wouldn't | be right at ail. 3 _ Liberal papers are pointing out | that only if some great. issue - ' policy arises'in the next-few weeks, requiring the immediate. verdict of | the voters, would Mr. Diefenbaker be | morally entitled to a dissolution arid | & quick. election. What issue, they | ask, could he raise to avoid the intro- duction of annual budget? | y doesn’t come down until ring, often just be- fore the end of the fiscal. year, on March -31, and last year it was delayed until June: 20. Mr. Pearson, surely, will want’! to knoW whether the government is | proposing another huge deficit, more inflation, high interest rates, higher budget which it promised in 1960 and | failed to deliver. For that he will have to wait. If, conversely, the “short and sweet” session. ends with- out divulging this information, he will want to know what great issue _ is at stake that could warrant the In the speculation of the Ottawa correspondents, this is what may ne oe | fess<f0 like it, nor’ will-Mr, Douglas | iff ~wall - | ment in Canadian wi taxes or conceivably that balanced - ‘treatment of Parliament and the : ISLAND WINT OTTAWA REPORT by Brathch Plants And Common Market One aspect of the creation of | = | the European’ Common Market which has yet received-but litte consideration is the effect that | re ig , Cid os, E Patrick Nicholson The burgeoning prosperity of the European Common Market | is already attracting American businessmen. They want to share it will have upon branch plants | the bigger profits being earned of U.S. parent corporations. " It-was recently announced that | the non-resident ownership of Cana: dian manufatturing plants ha d-}-tly~do—this— by manufacturing |_more,Floritia holidays will cost | * finally soared to a majority pos- ition. For the first time, official de°Burope; they want to sell. to increasingly prosperous Europeans. They can most eas- their. products inside the tariff wall which surrounds the pros- figures showed, more than 50 | perous European “market. | per cent of eur manufacturing Thus a new trend in capital-in- | erally will become. more compe- vestment is apparent in Canada. | titive.- oho There is a slowing down oftuittd-2 And forthe first time we will facilities were owned ‘by for- eigners, This calls for study of the investors to put their- money into | building up. manufacturing faci- | lities in Canada. And here the | time of their arrival in Cangtia | may offer a clue. } / e@ent of our manufacturing in- | be no growth, and ev re , dustries were controlled by for- eign investors. By. 1958 that had | soared to 58 per cent ard today is even higher. The bulk of that foreign capital has been generat- ed within the past quarter cen- tury, and comes from U.S.A. JUMP TARIFF BARRIERS It was a quarter tury ago that, the Conservative Govera- ment of R. B. Bennett credted | the Imperial Preference System. | As a consequence, many U.S. | manufacturers were inspired erect branch plants in Canada, and thus to enjoy the trading benefits of being located inside the Imperial Preferential tar-. which gave them an advantage as ‘with plants sited in U.S.A. j Through the intervening years, those Canadian subsidiaries of U. .S.-parents have enjoyed great advantages in selling to Britain and other :Common- wealth and British Empire mar- kets. They have en inflows -of more U.S. capital for expan- sion, and they have fattened on retained profits. ie The extent of this capital growth is vividly shown by stat- istics. compiled by our Bureau | ‘of Statistics. | In’ the late 1920s, total foreign | investment in Canada was only $8 billion; while the totalinvest- L subsidiaries of foreign compan- jes was a mere $1.8 billion, But ‘ eign relations, slipped by prac | tically unnoticed in the dying | ing is diverted. to Europe. As this movement gathers force - and .it will, if Eurage continues to. boom and Canada SCENE: , ution, in jobs in Canada, Furth- er, with a dwindling-of the in- ward flow-of capital, our ad- verse balance of payments posi- | tion will lose the corrective fac- | tor which has kept our dollar at an artificially high exchange | value. Imports will cost us | us more, our wheat and our | newsprint will be cheaper — in | world markets. Our goods gen- new plants and installing | be forced to the unpleasaht real- motives which induced foreign | new machinery here, as capital _ isation of the grasshopper in the - | fable of the industrious ants: | the world does not owe us a liv- ing, we will have to work harder for it, _ | remains outside the European | These are changes which al- In the late 1920s, only 35 per. | trading community - there will | ready cast. their shadows.before Canada An A. milestone in Canada’s. for- days of 1961. The announcement that diplo- matic ties were to be established with tiny El Salvador was not in itself a particularly big de- velopment, ; The Central American repub- lic with an area of about 12,000 square miles and a population of 2,000,000 was only one of 16 ‘countries with which Canada es- tablished formal relations last year.:*: -What gave the move signifi- carte, in the thinking of Ottawa observers, was that El Salvador was the last of the 20 Latin American republics to enter into pletion ‘ofthe process of estab- ee ties with Latin a and question of whether Canada should join the Organization of American States. ; They .concede, however, that the move into the hemispheric \ association could hardly be taken until such bonds had been established. “ dE + en a dimin- | them here. 4 | Salvador. x Best. 7 Canadian Press. Staff Writer . dependent nation. in. the némis-. 5 phere not a member of OAS. External Affairs Minister | Green -has said he personally | thinks it would -be a good idea | if Canada joined the OAS, but 3 he first wants Canadian publie opinion on the matter to crystal- | lize. -All of the country’s major | opposition~ parties favor mem- bership. STARTED, IN 1941 Establishment. of ties with £1 Salvador completed | a process begun in 1941 when | Canada set up relations with Brazil, Argentina and Ohile, Mexico and Peru were added in 1944, Cuba in 1945, Venezuela and Uruguay jp 1952, Colombia | in 1953, the Dominican Republie ee in 1954. : year, .what had . a stréam became @ foto nie tions were <set up with all sine remaining ‘copntries: Panama, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guate- mala, Honduras, Bolivia, Ecua- | dor, Paraguay and, finally, El | Salvador. ene aM} ids | Closer ties with Latin Amer | fea have been one of the key- | notes of .the’ present -govern- | ment’s conduct of foreign af- fairs. ; ; Mr.. Green is known to feel today fdreign investments im! The concensus in Ottawa is | strongly that in the past Canada Catiada total some $23 billion. | that i likely will be some time has neglected Latin Ameriéa. IIs Not Serious “a -| Meanwhile, be Pinworm Pest PEPER ee g i E. 7 nr 4 es va =i tT eS — [Notes BY THE WAY you are being ridiculous about the’ mattér. Some mothers as- sume an abnormal attitude to- | ward an infestatién and make | life miserable for all concerned. They are driven by a compul- sion to eliminate every egg and worm from the premises, When the house is finally free of 4 worms, it may no longer be a home. Cleanliness’ programs are in- effective, no matter how well | they are carried out, unless all | members of the family, includ- | ing adults, are treated for pin- worms. There are many good remedies. One of the latest, Pripsen, is said to combat piri- worms after a single , dose. reasonable in diplomatic _ your efforts. and don't take life | too ‘seriously. rs | (Dr. Van Dellen will send leaf- | ‘let on. pinworms if stamped, self-addressed envelope accom- , panies request.) RETIRED ‘AND TIRED .§. G: writes: I'm 58 and re | . tired. Vi rom io Florida. Have been ‘tired con stantly since coming down here. Do you think: it's the climate? REPLY No. Boredom, unhappiness, no goals, and being a nobody: | are the most common: psycho-_| logical causes of fatigue. As a rule; the Florida climate does | something for older people; | they are invigorated and feel much better: Perhaps your | weariness is caused.by the | | same factors that made you re- | tire at 58. : LOW SALT DIET © _.M.C. H. writes: For what rea- -8on other than a coronary wouid | a@ person be put on-a salt free diet? hye . , REPLY Tk iow salt diet - is. recom- mended mainly for those’ with | | high . blood pressure, dropsy, | | Cirrhosis of the liver, and oc-' | casionally obesity ‘and certain | ' glandular disorders. Individuals | who receive cortisone or diure- | tics often are instructed to re- | Strict the salt intake: | She WILLING ONE’S BODY my remains to a medical school and was told this could be done only by the next of kin at the time of death. Please discuss this question. REPLY Twenty-four states recognize ‘a will of this type. I suggest that you contact a medical school or a iocal memorial as- sociation for details. FRUIT WORMS. + . ee frujt, what happens Today's Health Hitt— gue | G-L-W: writes: A few- months ago I attempted to will | | J. J. K,. writes:—When—you— swallow.a worm in a peach or — The insect is killed by the acid | in the stomach. - Time spent in healthy ree. people whose do-it-yourself pro- jects went wrong.—' Peterbor- ough Examiner. : : i £ res 28 ll i it s F care probably needed by | men will expect their wives to serve them “ s like mother -- used to thaw”’.— Ottawa Journ- . al, | Strange Weapons o - National Geographic Seciety “ WASHINGTON sonian Institution The Smith-, two sizes: The long sword, or ie opened an | katana, was the primary -fight- exhibition of strange weapons | ing wéapon. The short sword, from the extensive John Olivér | wakizashi, was supplementary. La Gorce ‘Collection. , ¥ On entering a house, an armed - The late Dr. La Gorce, who warrior ordinarily left his long served as president of the Na- | sword in the vestibule and kept tional Geographic Society and |‘ the short sword at his side. Te editor of its Magazine, collected | show great respect to his host, | arms and’ armor as a hobby. } 4 a visitor placed both swords in The paneled walls of his of | the entrance hall. -fice were lined with a variety | Dr. La Gorce ‘acquired many of weapons ranging from a | of the weapons on his world tra- primitive stone club.to a Wori War II commando dagger. Aft | Dr. La Gorce’s seath in Deec- vels. Others were, gifts from famous explorers and staff members of the National. Geo ember, --1959,. the» valuable : eol- | graphic , Society. lection was _presented to the Smithsonian. WHISTLING MACE One curious item in the ex- hibition is’ an Indo-Persian “mace with two devils’ heads, at the mace is brandished. Dr. La’ the history and lore of weapons He learned, for example, that the characters: repeated in high relief around the ball-shaped | head of a Chinese mace meant “long life.” The clus’ could not only smash- an -enemys skull, but stamp it with the. ta- congruous symbol. On display in the. exhibition 1s | a kindjal, a versatile knife that once Was the inseparable com- | panion of every man in the Can. casus Mountains. It served not only as a weapon, but as an al purpose tool and accouterment. When a kindjal user wished to demonstrate his steady hand, he held the tips of two of these | knives against his neck and per- formed an acrobatic dance. A skillful dancer could turt som- ersaults, holding the 4 Admiral Robert E. Peary, the first explorer to reach the North | Pole, contributed a seal spear , ‘used by Alaskan Eskimos< Ad- ( 1. Gorce - also collected | | points | against his throat without cut | ting . . Japanese. samurai swords, miral Richard E. Byrd gave a hunting-knife he-had-carried- on > | the top. Openings in the, heads |. his polar explorations. : make “a whistling sound when | Dr. S._Dillon Ripley, the na- turalist who led a National Geo versity expedition into the mys terious Himalayan Kingdom of Nepal, added a Nepalese sac- | rificial sword to the La’:Gorce collection. The broad, heavye ~ bladed’ weapon can decapitate a buffalo with a single stroke. Another prize piece ie a sim- ple, two-handed European bat- tle sword of rough black tron” that probably was ‘made in the 14th century. re _The Smithsonian exhibition illustrates the wide range of Dr. La Gorce’s interest. Inciud- ‘ed are a large Sudanese shicid made of hippopotamus hide, a long wooden, steel-tipped More spear, a sinuous Javanese kris, a German signal pistol of Worid War II vintage, a Bowie knife, an Australian boomerang, and a-rare Manton dueling pistol made in London. . . The arms and armor ate be" ing, studied by Smithsonian eth- nologists for their eultural sige ~ ‘ Dr. La Gorce.-found, eame in | nificance. aw 5 v8. k ; j _FORESTe HOMELITE Of this, more than three-quar- | yet before Canada ‘ takes the | Concerted expansion of diplo- | Teation is never wasted. ters comes from U8, and. a | Bunge, snd ee hemi» | snatie ties was one means he _ - A n ' Sart halt in wneret ee | ee ee Seely toe eee | OUR. YESTERDAYS ly + owned subsidiaries of for- - ; From the Guardian Files | eign corpprations. =. How Dull Can We Be? Gam wen EPG _™ Montgeal Star The New Perth sewing club| : = : . . was recently organized, for third yr The Board of Broadcast Gov- , not having thought of if first, | year work by Miss Louise Has : ernors has, ever—so slightly re to wipe such dramatic | zard, with officers for the com- | f laxed the ‘stern rule forbidding | forms from. the Canadias air. | ing year, president, Miss Olive % the use of any device considered | The nation's gift for taking {t- | Dewar; secretary, Miss Mild- theatrical in political broadcast-| self seriously had taken ae : .* president, |. fallen would help to relieve the | hardly .dared to ‘ ‘be leader assisted | Aad, pa fresh foo | *edium imposed by the present | shake their heads Martin and Mrs. x prista erosied the Wail: Tuling willbe welcomed by view- |_ecamera_for fear. sosinsceceherlgheidehiclt The tracks of rabbit, woven to | ott 224 listeners alike. Tne | tion of ‘déing theatrical. Ne Ce : Saal dos : | board, greatly daring; now says | and again one of them, greatty | Miss Sarah Brown, Summer- A direct drive With three-pronged arrow foot. | ‘hat it will rule out only those | daring, brings along @ stooge to | side, PE.l, ledger - keeper m ” chain prints. made by quail. | devices “unnecessarily - theatri- ask him -questions, - but_tme@ | the local branch of the Provin- saw with extra speed for cash crop Fre, ‘| cal.” For this relief, much | ‘stooge is as carefully chosen a8 | cial Bank, Sackville, N.B., for | . cutting or around-the-farm chores. The river-‘seiitely flowed, but | 2X. . | the. main “speaker to ensure @ | the past five years, left Tues |” wildlife drink | -There will be, of course, great maximum of drab stolidity. day for Windsor, Ont. where she [ * © Larger diameter Ice-water while i runs rather | “ifficulty in the new definition. How about them having a bit | has been transferred. | crankshaft ~ thon eat ; There will be many to remark | of a fling, one of these days loo || - gives more power for day Still colder snow, and by the xt | ‘Bat Mr. A. is already unne- | Sening up to show their lighter TEN YEARS AGO in, day out cutting. ves kth cessarily theatrical in his ap- ea te oe Maen ~ (Jan, , 1952) - - of _—— —_ I found deer marks, the press Pearances, while, if any device | returm..to the dra Hundreds of Island residents « New _” ef many fect, help: Mf. B. to. relieve | They'd have the Mounties after | will be congratulating Mrs. type filter stops dust i his. it should be wel- | US. But at least let am | te Carver of Pownal on the} -, thet ‘But saw no deer that day. The | Comed. The line is a fine one.| made to make of her 89th birthday, at cause early engine wear. ere S| Re eee aoe Emmy pore arom |” Lah walabt«- - eaey to tg beg alge All of this goes back, of course, | Sol ae’ SWeratar Hotel” handle. You cut longer with After 1 left, they might shy forth al be moan To see tracks 1 Printed there. —Victor Howes -