hy we Ht : e r ‘Covers Prince Edward Islan” Like The Dew : W. 3. Hancox, Vublisher Frank Walker Editor . . _ Editor = every week day morning (excep! Sun- dey and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown P.E.1.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. f _, Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers | Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave . Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni * Western Office 1030 West Georgia “(MA 7037. Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers and The Canadian Press. The Canadian -is exclusively entitied to the use for repub- mews dispatches in this paper to the, Associated Press or Reuters local news published herein. All of special dispatches here k “by carrier. mail on rural routes and areas ti] ii atl it tie <¢ 3 8 ® is! ; it : £3 serviced i s $15.00 @ year off tslend and U.K. $20.00: per US. and ‘elsewhere outside British Cone a § g ! Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureay of Circulation. “The strongest memory is weaker \ than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 Getting Set To Go? _. Monday's Speech from the Throne at Ottawa is said to contain more legislative proposals than any other speech in the postwar era, all couch- ed in the sort of language that would ‘make attractive reading in an‘elec- tion manifesto. It has led many ob- servers to the conclusion that the Liberals are getting set to meet any election forced by a defeat on the floor of the House—or to call one - themselves, if it looks expedient.~ 4-Every Opposition amendment voted on in the Throne Speech debate is regarded as a test of confidence. Defeat of the government forces on one would force dissolution of Parlia- ‘ment and an election. With 129 Lib- ,eral seats in the 265-member House, . this could happen by a combined Op- “position move at any, time: Barring an election, what are the chances of the formidable program clearing the-legislative-hurdles?-The Canadian Press quotes “an official close tothe government”. as conced- - ing-that it is “a heavy program for one year.” Heavy indeed! It contains proposals that would-seem to call for 60-or more pieces of government - Jegislation. Last-year, at the opening of the 1964-65 session, the Speech contained about 20 such proposals— and the ensuring session ran for 248 sitting days. — : By agreement between all parties, the Throne Speech debate will be concluded by -Thursday, April 15, after which there will be a recess un-" til after Easter. By this reckoning, it is regarded as probable that Finance Minister Gordon will present his third budget on Tuesday, April 27, the day after Parliament reconvenes. In any event it will be presented some time that week. It is expected to reduce taxes atthe expense of an- other heavy deficit in the current budget—almost certainly, if the gov- ernment contemplates calling an elec tion. It would be the ninth annual deficit in a row, though Mr. Gordon used to warn that such a course— under the Conservatives—was threat- ening to land the nation “on the rocks.” : If there is to be a spring election, the government will have to move fast indeed. It takes a minimum of two months to go through all the campaign motions and get the voters to the polls. A delay beyond April would schedule the election into the midsummer holidays. Former Prime Minister St. Laurent actually succeed- ed in rolling up a big majority on a play of this kind, in 1953; but a holi- day campaign is not regarded as a likely way of appeasing fhe voters. Too many of them have other more entertaining things on their mind at that time. But it is the politicians that will * call the tune. We shall have to dance to it, whichever way it goes. Into The Past Canada is reg as a “new” country, but an eologist at the University of British Columbia has turned up evidence which he believes will establish the fact that we have, on our Pacific Coast, the oldest con- tinuous habitation in all of North America. Artifacts gathered at three ° Earl Montbatten, who is to retire sites in the Fraser River canyon, about 90 miles east of Vancouver, sup- port the theory that human beings were living there 12,000 years ago. The evidence came to light when a rockslide fell on the mainland of the Canadian National Railways some years ago. A systematic search re- vealed traces of inhabitants who had moved into the area following a great ice age.. It is believed these people went there from what is now northwestern Washington, and _ that they were remnants of a prehistoric. migration from Asia to North Amer- + iy ever a land bridge across what & t ’ se : now in the Bering Sea. This: occur- red possibly during a warm interval in the ice age between 30,000 and 50,000 years ago. It is assumed that a corridor be- tween’ the ice sheets extended from Alaska along the eastern slopes of ~ the Rockies, permitting game herds hunters. Many of these nomads. re- which was never iced over and had enough vegetation to support larg game animals. os These intriguing assumptions are based on scientific findings which WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1965-~ are too detailed to go into here. In + effect they establish what“is claiméd | to be a definite sequence of occupa- | tion in the Fraser River area extend- ing back over 20 centuries. Some 12,000 artifacts have now been stud- ied: and labled; their age being de-- termined either by radioactive carbon tests or through consultation with | geologists. Experts can ascertain within a few hundred -years when the-type-of_rock_used. for primitive implements*would haya been on the surface. -... ; ~It’s a fascinating occupation, this digging into the past. We ‘usually’ associate it with Mesopotamia or some other old-world region; but we have barely scratched the surface of our’ own vast Dominion, and who ‘may yet come to light? ‘The. pressure of modern life. doesn’t give us much time for think- ing about such things, and that is a pity. They could give us a sense of losing—if indeed we haven't al- ready loss it beyond recall. __ Still Held Up. ‘By last reports, seven provinces had ‘ratified the controversial form- ula to amend the Canadian constitu- . tion, but it faced stiff competition in Quebec and Saskatchewan. Manitoba is the third province that has not acted on the formula so far. If and when all the 10 provinces approve, it will be introduced in Parliament— if Parliament is still in session, and . has not run-upon the rocks of dis- ~ solution. - ‘— oe On: the federal: level, three Op- position parties have come out against the measure for a variety of rea- sons. But the Pearson government, reportedly, will reject all attempts to change the draft formula because, it new federal-provincial. conference to. review the whole subject. =~ In the brief and superficial’ dis- cussion. which the formula received in our local Legislature, it was repre- sented as something which had been agreed upon “in principle’; but it seems that Ottawa takes a different view ‘of the matter, holding that Jit is sacrosanct in its phraseology and must éither be passed ig toto, or re- jected. — : It is to be hoped, at least, that the Opposition will insist on getting an explanation of the mysterious dlaahe in the formula which permits four provinces and the federal govern- cial powers to each other. That is, of course. if they get a chance to dis- cuss it at all. ' New Edition The 1965 edition of the Atlantic Year Book has just been published— bigger with 448 pages instead of 432 as before, and better because not only has all the information been revised, -but there are some useful additions as well. ; A section on transportation lists principal harbors, coastal shipping services, and airports, with interest- ing data on railways, road, passenger’ The trade directory has again been prepared by APEC, with more than 6,000 ‘entries of producers and pro- ducts. The weather records are more extensive, and there are other notice- able improvements. : » This book has become indispen- sable for its compact, accurate and up-to-date information on the. Atlan- tic Provinces. Published by the Brunswick Press, Fredericton, N.B., it sells at $3.50. EDITORIAL NOTE = soon as Britain’s defense chief, will step from that post into a new one which will demand all of. the qual- ities of leadership and diplomacy he demonstrated as Britain’s last Vice- roy of India.’ His assignment will be to head a mission to negotiate with agree to curtail the emigration of their people to the over-crowded Un- ited Kingdom. In particular, agree- ment will be sought from India, Pak- istan and the West Indies, which have sent around one million people to- Britain since 1955. ; ‘ mained in central Alaska, an area’ | to pass’ southwards, followed by | knows what relics of ancient cultures ‘ of perspective that we are in danger | is argued, this would ndcessitate a | ment to delegate federal and provin- - and freight traffic by sea and air. . various Commonwealth countries to. : ‘ A “ WHO/SGOTTHEBUTION ~ ~yBilingual ' The teaching of oral French to children of public school, age in English -speaking Canadian cit- ies is one of those notions which seem ;splendid in theory but prove to be something less than that in fact. For what propon- ents of the scheme seem to over- look is that, while it is easy for - children at such an age to leearn a language quickly, it is equal- ly easy for them to forget it just as quickly between terms unless they have. an opportunity to use it in everyday life. It is a magnificent gesture on ‘the part of English-speaking Canada—. enlightened, forward- thinking, generous— but it will not make anyone bilingual: Indeed, it should be recognuz-. ed that any notion of.a.truly bil- ingual state, with people equally at home in either French orc English, is mere delusion. After five years of school instruction anyone should be able to painful- ly degipher simple French texts or phrase, in clumsy terms, PUBLIC FORUM This ccluma is open te the discussion by correspenden2s of questions of in terest, The Guardian dées not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of corres pendents. All letters published are sub- _ sect to editing and condensation where gecessary, The Guardian is umable te enter inte any corrrespendence regard- img letters §=submitted. . WHY-WATCH IT? x Sir,— I am not a regular read- port“to ask what would be con- ~ sidered as ‘‘normal good- taste” and for that matter what is a “typical Canadian family”: in an era in which divorce is ac- ‘pression’ methods. always taken place and , pre ashamed of visual portray- als of deprived society then it is of little use to blame the por- e-trayer; rather they shduld do from the eye of society. those of our children? The truth ‘is that we are/ ashamed of this and lands these society we have created. ple, one hundred per cent sure way of avoiding this embar- rassment (and sometimes dis- gust)—. I don’t watch the pro- gram. It seems that the ones who complain the loudest are “completely paralyzed when it dial or disciplining their chil- dren. There are children’s books “and books for adults, children’s fikms and adult films, therefore we cannot expect all TV pro- grams to be suitable for all ages. If adults need to watch smut and scandal (and they do or why else the popularity of such pro- grams), then there is. something sadly rotten in us and we saint in Sodom. The arts are an expression of thé times and so are our enter- tainments. Put ointment on the boil by all means, but don’t for- get to treat the inmer poison which is its cause. ‘ ‘ - am, Sir, efe.,.. + (Miss) WENDY ABBEY Charlottetow” youngsters THEORY AND PRACTISE simple questions and answers in the foreign tongue. < IN PRACTICE This is surely all that can he hoped for; to be able to taxe part in a conversation or follow the course of an address in French is “only possible after several years of study and a good deal of everyday use,- and moreover. this: constant prattice must be maintained or the -lan- guage will slip away quickly. For people in the vast’ majority of Canadian cities, such prac- tice is quite out of the question for either child or adult. This is not to say that teaching of French is a waste of time for Englishspeaking Ca- nadian students: quite. the _ re- verse: Knowledge of any for- -eign- languafe is an asset to anyone, and it is surely only ap- propriate that English- speaking should: acquire some knowledge of the language their sister race. . : ‘Yet in organizing such in- struction it should be borne -in and give him a working knowl- edge of its usage much as he is required to master the vocabul- er of The Guardian ot of any | flew clear out of this Newspapers ‘Neither am I. a reg- | around it three times, thus ular television viewer or sup- lipsing that tired old porter. However I am prompt-| sian carpet ed by -Thursday’s Ottawa Re- nae aoe only on run Sure, the Ri | were good too. cepted as normal, alcoholism. COW widespread and children brought But bone teat tae ae extremely free ‘‘free-ex- | 0Ur boys Jus Per up by ly } same “Non—-family activities” have | no! doubt always will and if aduits | something to remove the beam | ctretch of hou Why is immorality always ac- | down to town cepted in the fact so long as it is | was something, not openly ‘discussed or put | just starkly before our eyes and | Brown” didn’t re comes to operating the: on-off - can’t expect the CBC to be a "Ottawa Snug as two bugs im a rug they were; a magic. rug that 1d and magic Kingdom of, a thing jumped i that old craft 3 _ 3 g space, turning her that. ‘ ; “Flyin’ in the f. the old farmer airmen— and | over the world | buctoo three ti i bi #2 gf 28 ity if gbei : B 2 | taken your pa to a : ZF gee zi the same & = Be z 5 A spagecraft 5 f i 5 | the sea but they g | and a big ffat pension 2 : time when affairs on Cyprus are once again threatening to burst into conflict. A principal issue at the pres- ‘ent time is the reported arrival in Cyprus of Soviet anti-aircraft missiles. If these were installed could make very difficult any future air raids by Turkish air force planes. But the knowledge that it could conduct air raids at will has been one of the factors that Turkish population on Cyprus. * By ‘installing such missiles, therefore, Archbishop’ Makarios would indicate that he intends to. proceed dismantling the rights of the Turkish Cypriots. | And in this, he is only encourag- .ing large, - scale Turkish inter- vention. ss has been made in find- ing a peaceful solution of the bit- ter quarrel between and Turkish ‘Cypriots. Great have been made by United Na- tions mediators, and by the goy- a Problem in The Schools. of - The Surly Bonds Remain has kept Tutkey .from interven,» Will be fou ‘| ing more actiyely to help the It is a sad fact that very little | st + | ary and construction of...Latin. 'He is most unlikely to require, ; or-be capable of, the carrying on | of a conversation in either. Whether of not’ plblic school is the proper place for such in- struction is a matter for educa- tionists to determine; certainly it must be borné in mind that the relative values. of subjects involved. : a factor; business, law, govern- ment, public life. In all these fields, it must be conceded that FE! z & 8 2 z | they will not only become fluent | Sertaer Whee ee ee in- terest to do so. Journal | So what else is ntw? Why, son, | the first time one of those birds jflew around the earth we thought we'd eat our hat we | were that excited. | Man had conquered space -| and so every day Sunday here on good and “eat loving each oth people on other could a country fly to the moon i 6:41 to Vaudreuil? pene Yes sir, that dawn was rosy- tipped. But somehow things haven't changed so much since then; the surly bonds earth still get you in the the back. Mind you, we’re not tak- - ing away anything from th Grissom and Young know the. science fellows tell us tomorrow they’ve a lot of mysteries. _/But what'll it méan price of eggs or the or peace on earth? question, Buster. , Until that, then there’s a work and living still done right here on earth don’t lef any backward- jet-thruster tell you different. s iff. 2 itis Ets Again Gazette ‘' Oi ernments of ~ many countriés: Yet ft has all come to nothing. Why fs this so? It remains certain now, as several moriths ago, that the person most con- cerned with peace on Cypru does not want peace. That per- son is Archbishop Makarios, the island's President. % objective. j It can still be hoped that, somehow, a peaceful settlement for the Cyprus blem. But if such a pa is. not found, the world will know where the principal blame lies. SPACE STAMP ISSUED MOSCOW (AP)—The ‘Russian | communications ministry was ready with a new postage stamp | when the Voskhod-2. space flight | team landed. The 10-kopeck i1 | cent) stamp shows a cosmonaut floating free in space-capsule is emerged into outer i simple and painless procedure in which an X-ray is taken of each breast; two films are made from different angles and Save of it ermal, A ipee ial que is needed to project |, ee Set ee oot : of ‘these organs on thé film. A cooperative study was’ done at 24 institutions to determine ‘| the value of mammography in from differentiating cancerous sy report was positive. The ra- diologists did’ better with - be- nign lesions (itine “out of 10). ea for diagnosing breast disease but ning. before they grow large enough to be felt. In additicm, the method helps pinpoint thet exact site of the tumor when a biopsy is con- .. PURPLE SPOTS M. S. writes: Do purple spots on the feet mean a person has REPLY - in from pools of stagnant, dark. ve- nous blood in the skin. The indi- vidual may have diabetes but if eo, the conditions are likely to STOP IT Mrs. S. writes: How is vitamin’ D intoxication treated? REPLY Discontinue vitamin D. The symptoms are loss of appetite, vomiting, wasting, and an ele- vated blood calcium. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Do not neglect sinusitis. (NOTE: All nee te Dr. Van Delien should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Tilinois.) Mammograptry is not a panac-: No. These ‘spots usually are |~ , | tion last Saturday between | trip of the season. g Z| Ol. a bit oy \ ORE Ha i i : 8 & | | : i SEF + & &F { Ey . z e | it { i ie ge FE i sk 3 f : L | § | q - E ig WS rm 2. i apfiy &2 < a i g i | i : | we if he se i 2 E i z 3 ye 72 f g E #7 : E gE E BRE ‘ 3 4 , J |k QD © = Oo 8 6 nn is being. applied | r against the north, and is | being hit itself, accelerating the | whole war tempo. e This is the background to the official reaction given to Prime, Minister Pearson's pro .-: carrot Proposal for a ‘measured pause’ in air strikes “at the right time.” He had prefaced that. in his 4 h Friday with the belief that after two months of such. air strikes against the north, the message of U.S. firmness «has been received ‘“‘loud and clear.”’ Officially - inspired American reports of the Pearson-Johnson Newspapers across States. “<j! ij rs | cealaEer lien | i! G = i = The. Are thé’ Russians beginning to appreciate the exhilarating op- portunities of the ballot box — even one that is pointedly ‘re-" stricted? The fact that 170 elec- toral districts out of 26,345 re- fused to rubber stamp the only Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO = (April 7, 190) tt The Rocky Point motor ship Fairview c opera- Char- lottetown and the south side of the harbor. This Was the first x Lieut. Fred A. Large, RCNVR ved in Charlottetown from int John to spend a short, fur- TEN YEARS AGO (April 7, 1955) shchev? More likely Mr. Jack Pickard will leave. iocai isons Hike tornorrow for Halifax with his wife and two boys, Michael and Stephen. Mrs. Pickard and her chilciren will sail on April 9th on the. SS. Scythis for Seuthamp- ton, England, to spend the sum- mer with Mrs. Pickard’s mother and sister. , Cpl. Clifford Herring, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.H. Herring of Murray ,River, was among a group of airmen recently promo- ted to the: rank of Corporal in Halifax. : \ —, TEN ROUND TRIPS DAILY “+ People’s “Choices” _ Lenden Free Press — i i ____Improved Ferry Service -Borden-Cape Tormentine - APRIL 15 —JUNE 24 “For the first time man the Voskhod-2, March 18, 1965.” 7.00a.m. 8.20am. 1005am. 11:30am. 1250pm 2.15 p.m. 3.40. p.m. 5.45 p.m. , 7.30 p.m. 9.15 p.m. Leave Cape Tormentine ; y 7.00am. | 8.25a.m. 10.05 a.m. an am. 12.50 p.m. 2.16 p.m. -~ 3.40 p.m. 5.45pm 7330p.m. 9.15 p.m. LOCAL TIMES SHOWN~=DAYLIGHT OR STANDARD— WHICHEVER IS IN EFFE\CT 7 is Hl i : gE : VW c 2