_-v-and-expansive_new-programs without “S"tnendations of the. 2 Campbell has expressed confidence ~-us-hope. so,-indeed.. But he. chose te. . yntil a month ago every reason for he Gunedion Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew WwW. J. meee Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor . “Editor <Publithed every week day morning (except Sum day. and statutory holideys) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P-E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomason Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942)-Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037, ~Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Pres. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use fer repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to It er to the Associated Fress or Reuters and also the lecel news published herein. All right or republication of vpecial dispatches here In yalso reserved, Subscription rate: "Net over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00‘e year by mail on rural routes and at not serviced by carrier. $15.00 o year off Island and U.K. $20.00 ae year in U.S. end elsewhere outside British Com wealth. Not over 10c single copy- Member Audit Bureau. of Circulation. PAGE 4__ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1966. A Lot At Stake ~~ A greatly expanded manpower re- training program that would-be anced almost entirely by the fed- al government has. been proposed a the tax conference now. in session at Ottawa:-This-in-conjunction: -with—|- _ the proposed increase in federal ‘aid to higher education should mark § forward step in recognition by |. one f its résponsibilities for this yihase_of national economic develop-_ ent. It isin line with the recom: | - 6f Canada; but as noted in our Ot- tawa dispatches, there ‘still is con- fusion over the federal position, and _ # is not at all clear that the pro- ~ posals will prove acceptable. _ : The conference, of course, has been _talled for other-purposes as well, not the least important of which is the - Chance it provides for getting the new equalization grants formula straight- ‘ehed. out... The: existing - tax-sharing: aéreements with the provinces expire ‘the end of this years. Barring a -year extension, this‘conference is obably the last that will be held before the tax-sharing legislation is laid before Parliament. The last chance our Prince Edward Island — representatives may have, in short, | _Of obtaining something better than the beggarly increase offered us winder the formula as announced by Finance Minister Sharp last month. MISLEADING TWIST — Premier that further recognition-will be ac- corded to our special fiscal needs. Let . give his statement a misleading poli tical twist by alleging that our posi- tion‘ is not as bright as it was repre sented to be by the previous adminis- tration,” and for that reason that it would be “extremely reckless for us as‘a government to enter into further “first determining where the money: is Coming frome What is the of this persist: ‘ent attempt” “to saddie the former Shaw government with having mis- represented our fiscal ‘prospects be- fore the election? Mr. Campbell must Know there is not a-word of truth in it, for he and his colleagues, in their drief presented.at the Ottawa-con- ference last month, are on record to _ the contrary. ; The Campbell government took of- _Hice-on_July.28 last; and in its: brief |. igo the conference, dated Sept. 14, it stated explicitly: “We have had‘ up ‘pptimism.” This was due to the’ fact that for the past two years the fed- gral-provincial continuing committee on fiscal and economic matters had been conducting an exhaustive sur- yey of fiscal requirements on the hree levels of government. In view >f these studies, said the brief, “we were quite copfident that the ulti- ‘mate: result rovide substan- ‘ial additional fiscal eee to all , provinces.” : WHEN THE BLOW FELL—It was anly within the month preceding Sept. 14 that “our hopes were Semporarily shattered” by the unof- aicial announcement that the propos- ad new formula “completely dis- gards the, basic principles of fiscal frangements necessary to assure a ®ull and adequate share in_ the Tevelopinent and use of major fiscal Resources. ” That’s what: the brief ” Jays; and that would be weeks after ‘fhe Conservatives vacated office, wouldn't it? As we pointed out- before in this connection, if there is any blame for concealing the news of our Shattered hopes before it was divulg- ed at the September conference, Mr. Campbell arid. ~his colleagues must be held responsible. Why, in the face of such evidence, do t they. accuse the Shaw government and not their own =aene fo! “Tation at the fall sitting of the N.B- Uiberal party friends at Ottawa~of having mislead tham?. - pee _ Why cannot they forget partisan politics for a week at least, and get on with the job that has taken them to the federal capital? Two years of labor. by- their predecessors have gone into the preparation of the convincing arguments they have at their disposal for obtaining a better fiscal deal for this province. Let them be thankful they are so well armed with the ammunition thus provided for them, and concentrate on using it to the+best: advantage. - N.B. Competition It is interesting to notg, -in con+ nection with the provincial tourist department's recently announced program for rural and urban beau- tification, that New Brunswick- is embarking on: a similar objective, and is making it a key factor in its Centennial Year: planning. This should spur us to greater, efforts on our own behalf. If other. provinces ‘ should get into the race, so much the better, for in a competition of this kind, there are no losers, In New Brunswick they've formed a provincial committee to head up the drive, and every town and city is-invited,to_participate in-a beautifi-_ cation seniinar. scheduled for Fred- ericton on Nov.9, and billed as being ‘the first stich function to be held in Canada. Films will be screened and _ specialists in community planning _and beautification will be present. to. eonomle Coutitil” | “lead” discusstoris™ anid” present ideas for consideration. Programs for rural areas will be=: developed separately, and already” some. community groups such as “Women’s: Institutes have agreed to stage beautification campaigns in certain areas. Government action to contro].and/or clean up in some man- ner unsightly automobile junk yards throughout the province is-hinted at. possibility of some form-of legis-. legislature is not ruled oyt by some members of government. One feature of the cleanup opera- tion is that it is not a shared cost program with money coming to those willing to expend elbow grenee, 08 on neater homes and properties. The appeal is to civic pride and a desire to beautify the province for the na- * tional birthday year of 1967. Well,-we should lose no time in getting our own community planning under way, and: ‘making it at example= to all Canada of what a real beautifi- cation program can achieve! ~Needs-New-Status-—--- It is not surprising, suggests the London Free Press, that Mr Justice Montpetit’s inquiry into post office working conditions found such a failure in communications between management and employees. For years the post office department has —hesh_a bursaucratic entity in ttsett | In large measure this may- be ex- plained. by--the fact that- the depart- ment-is. both plum-and: orphan in.the- - political scheme of things at Ottawa —an easy and casual ministerial port- folio and one so frequently handed on from one minister to another. This being the case, ministerial interest and guidance have been minimal and as. consequence administration has been left largely te designated officials, from deputy minister on. through the divisions -and the ranks. Recent-attempts-to in-—- crease departmental efficiency, plus a vastly increased volume of mail, have caused. extraordinary pressures =and resentments. The commissioner’s recommenda- tions will go a long way towards improving conditions within the postal service; but he might have . gone one step further. He might have suggested that the department’s: status be enhanced by according it the recognition it deserves on, the government level: the leadership of | other than a postmaster general en ~ route to another portfolio. EDITORIAL NOTES Union Nationale won’t have any connection with the Conservative Party of Canada, says leader Daniel Johnson. That, comments an ex- change, is good news for Conserva- tives everywhere in Canada. *e* The Commons has. been inform- ed that a guide to minimize auto. mobile accidents and a new 27-point list of safety standards may be issued by the federal government by the end of the year. The standards gov- erning equipment on cars and light trucks now are before the Canadian government specifications board. Ap- proval may come within;a month. They would-be mandatory only for ‘federal vehicles, but federal and pro’ vincial officials are discussing ways” and means of making. the standards mandatory ‘throughout the country. — we = s 4 ‘5 a \=— ils Proving that Parliament {s not all play .and partisanship, Wood. stock’s MP Wally Nesbitt has” ment to the Criminal Code. Did you ever feel too fuddied to continue your homeward drive, say after the office Chris- etre or.your buddy’s:bir-" ‘you-pull into the side Of e road, swi switch off the car , put the keys into your . and get into the back for sleep, you are drunk in of a motor vehicle, ““whe- it is in motion or not,”’ says a_i Criminal} i a r The first cleans will “ceobably fetch you seven days in-jail; and a@ year’s suspension of your driv- . ing licence. So the drunk has an _Incentive to continue driving and_ hope to get away with it, rather than to pull up. and risk convic- sanely that that clause and that penalty shall-not apply if the Toysterer has “refrained from putting his vehicle in motion, or. has stopped the same...” Solicitor General Pennell has assured Wally that his bill will probably quickly be unitice, fis law. Bravo, Wally. That is what itieal constructive activity. CABINET CHANGES Parliament Hill is buzzing with reports of an imminent chake-up, not just a reshuffle, within the Cabinet. Justice Min- ister Cardin wants to resign, and ~eeeks an appo' mt as ambas- sador. Former Justice Minister Guy Favreau wants resign and be appointed to a vacancy as Judge on the Quebec Super- for Court. Fisheries Minister Hedard Robichaud has his eyes set on a New Brunswick vacancy ‘fn the Senate. This would opén the way for Maurice’ Lamontag-~ ne to return to the cabinet. The other Quebec vacancy should de- eervedly go to Bryce Maskasey, former chairman of the Liberal caucus; he might be blocked un- fairly and unreasonably by the archaic concept that French- Canadian blood rather than ab- ility is the qualification for a Quebec cabinet. appointment. But both Manitoba and New Bruns- wick are now represented by .French- Canadians in the Cab- “Our Yesterdays. (From The GuardiangFiies) (October 25, 1941) ~The United States government has abandoned hope of coming to terms with Japan, Navy See- retary Frank Knox indicated, adding that a ‘‘Collision" in the i appears almost inevit- a ; oThe Petain government an- nounced — without cofirmation or denial— that a rumor was circulating that Marshal Petain himself wished to become a hos- ‘tage. to cut short the Germans’ “mags reprisal executions which oh already cost 100 French 8. . TEN YEARS AGO €October 25, 1956) Hungary’s against Soviet domination and the Budsapest Red leaders hip blazed through its second night and spread to the provinces. But apparently it was being crushed systematically by overpowering ‘Russian armed force. . Ceremonies commemorating the first year of the existence of Notre Dame Academy, formal- ly Opened Centennial Year ’cele- brations at this girls’ school in Charlottetowr oe Wally’s proposal is an amend- , ~tion. ‘Wally proposes simply -and +- | Oushess rot geese, ~~ Most “birds he. described to me_as_‘non-pol- | “| reticent birds. “TWENTY~=-FIVE-YEARS“AGO-|- bloody rebellion, SSeS WN “HOW DARE YOU WASTE WATER LIKE THAT’ OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Proposes Criminal Code Amendment. ‘net, so why. should not Irish Mickasey replace French Fav- reau? New Brunswick's R 0 bi- chaud ‘is likely to be replaced of o NATO. Parliamentarians f | for their meeting in Paris next month. Transport Minister Jack Picke ersgill has been rumoured in- correctly. as seeking immediate retirement from the Cabinet; but he will stay at least until he has , completed his reorganization of our. transport policy. Solicitor General Pennell would like to re sign and be appointed..to the Bench— but this will not happen just yet. One big promotion in the Cab- inet changes will fall to Minister without Portfolio John Turner, the 37-year-old stepson of BC's former Liettenant Governor Frank Ross. He emerged from; the rai Liberal Convention by another French- Canadian, | with | Jean Dube,who will be honour. | ed -by- appointment. as.-president ') By Dr. Theodore R, ‘berg. For every cage. Liver Infection Viral hepatitis is er disease that is are as many as 390 z z +¥-! = & damaged and every victim is. contagious whether or. not the is Viral hepatitis is on the” in- '| crease and 1966 may be a'record year. The cases make control difficult. The caus- _ative viruses are eliminated via the “intestinal Spread by contaminated water, . food, and hands. Shellfish from uted, waters. were implicated outbreaks a few years ago. The peak incidence is in autumn and early winter. —One-attack-is-followed- by ever asting immunity. -Children- and “nost-Sisceptib-” = Pyoune-wdutts "are with substantial support as the darling and the hero of the young Liberals. BC ROOXIE AT UN Howard Johnston, the. newly- elected Sdcial Credit MP for. returned from two weeks spent as an observer with the Canad- ian delegation at the United Nations. He has brought back gome perceptive views on inter- national affairs and Canada’s role, and he has high praise for the smooth diplomatic effective- ness of our ambassador there, George “Ignatieff: That meeting | carried Howard back a quarter century, when as a student at Enderby High School, near Ver- non, B.C., he was taught by George's ‘prother, Leonard. The talented brothers are grandsons of Count Paul Ignatieff, once the Czar’s most talented diplomat who, says Howard, was nick- named ‘The Fox of the -Bal- ‘kans.” Of all the mtacant birds, the wild goose seems most to rit the restless spirit of autumn. A part of this comes from the fact that _geese_are big, spectacular birds and travel in flocks, often flocks.- ut another part is the garrul- travel in silence, but not the goose. In the air or on the wat- “ers if Chatters” and gabbles, “gos-* ea octane Geese are not You begin to hear and see them now, moving down by stages from the north. In a city street, a suburban dooryard or at a rural roadside, you hear the distant clamor.-It seems to echo from the whole sky. You look up, searching, and at last you see the penciled "V”’, high against the blue, arrowing sou- Wild Geese | n-Autumn— New York Times Or you stand beside a quiet pond or lake in late afternoon and hear the chatter, like the distant yapping of small dogs. Then you see them co - in over a hilltop, a dark cloud of them, to circle once then drop, long necks outstretched, wings a rush of spray. Wherever you see them, they “ate something” special“ The“ sky~|- _is_theirs, and far. places... They come from over the horizon, like autumn itself, and tomorrow or next.week they will be following summer southward again. ‘And earthbound you will have the haunting memory, the faint: echo of wild goose chatter high overhead, to remind you of au- tumn’s footloose travelers, the proud, talkative, far- ranging thward. A group of scientists employ- ed by an offshoot of the U. S. Army, the Materiel Command’s Cold Regions Research and En- gineering Laboratory, has just reported reaching rock in a pro- ject to drill through the icecap on Greenland. It was reached un- der 4,562 feet of ice, which has taken an estimated 10;000 years to accumulate. Along: with accurate knowl- edge of the depth of the ice at the drilling site, scientists will be able to learn something about a number of other things, such ‘aa Climate during the time the ice was forming, in part from dust and ‘pollen deposited. (The climate 1,000 years ago was about the same as now.) The 10,000-year figure suggests _ Refrigerated History _ Montreal Star cae that cstalc was ice- free at. that time. Which might, in turn, suggest that a tremendous chan- ge in climate has taken place between a previous time and now. Not necessarily, it ap- _pears. ‘‘Just enough fall in tem- perature to accumulate a little more snow in the winter than melts in the summer,” writes Isaac Asimov, ‘or vice versa. About 3.5 degrees Centigrade in Earth's annual average temper- oceans would rise 200 feet. Did Noah build his ark the last time that happened? Nothing more graphically ius. tes the present divergent aths of Mao’a China and the Union than the latest fa- news coming out of the countries. j Chinese: women are in baggy, ill-fitting tu- | eration their hair are out. uty parlors eae tnsed. It is ra first glance, to tell the women from itself has gone the men. Fashion , Moscow’s House of FI i? Te ny out of fashion. up to 2% inches. We do not mean to imply that Moscow has suddenly become Paris or Rome A Red Silk Suit Christian Science Monitor ’ If any further proof of this is wanted, we need only consider the startling, turn in men’s styl- shoes, bright colors, pocket handkerchiefs.” One young Soviet novelist, re- cently attending a cultural cele- bration, was*reported wearing a dark red Shantung silk suit. We are suppremely confident that “no novelist in Phantuns is doing the same. SELL CURES ABROAD Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. has sold more than 500 ature. The depth of the ice at the |- other end of the Earth is not so-}’ precisely-established:~It—is~-be--|-- lieved, however, to be about two |-. miles. If.-all-the ice everywhere melted, the levels of all the le although it is gradually becom- ing a “growing up” disease, in that more and more adults are developing the disorder. It is common in institutions, military bases, and wherever living con- ditions are crowded and sanita- tion is poor. Hepatitis may also follow a blood transfusion donat- ed by a person wh~ had the con- dition within a year. Bed rest, diet, faultless hy- giene and perfect sanitation are the best remedies. Gamma _gilo- bulin is the only preventive. Okanagan-Revelstoke,. has just. SE a On “~“angiag pectoris dangerous a ; 60-year old woman? REPLY faring pectoris always is ser- s use pain is a sign the heart muscle is not ohtainiss po much blood as it needs to work efficiently during exercise distress and overcome the dan- gerous aspect of the condition. ALLERGY AND MENOPAUSE Mrs. G: writes: Could the menopause bring on allergy of the nose? No, but the emotional changes that accompany the Menopause may aggravate exist. Een nasal allergy. : ___NOSE STOPS ‘GROWING : E.MY. writes: Is it true that the nose continues © grow all through life? REPLY « No. the Nose stops growing at maturity. The tip of the nose May sag in older persons and give the impression that i is growing. MENTAL INFIRMITY W. W. writes: Is there a cure | cupped, feet-outthrust;-toland-in~-for-senite-dementia? eo REPLY 0, some improvement ‘mayfollow- when physical de-" fects such as infections are cor- rected. A proper diet and drugs that improve the circulation to the. brain may help. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Know your own strength when lifting. 2Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, ¢ co Chicage Trib- tne, Chicago, Hinois.) WANT MAN BURNED ALIVE MOSCOW (Reuters) — Teen- ege Red Guards in Peking have _| called for a leading Chinese burned alive, the Soviet govern- ment newspaper Izvestia re- . FIRESTONE ~ Home and Auto . : ‘ Lta.. . Dial 4-5517 Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads, ‘all your Pet needs. : GUARDIAN-PATRIOT CENTRAL | PRINTERY London or New. York, but its cancer therapy’ machines to 46 PHONE 4-8506 pe : wee “times: For “centuries * Nila to bet brochures; call us for =f > i teen-age puries are used only for trials of 14-17 -year olds— who- took thé family car without his father’s. permission, raced. throu- gh several red lights and hit 6 a speed of 115 miles an hour, the jury handed down a guilty ver- dict and a five-point punigh- ment. The boy, who did not have a driver's licence, was ordered to enroll. in -a—-driver’s. training course and obtain a- licence, spend every other Saturday night for six months in the emergency ward of the city hospital and write a report on the ‘experience, -spend..every..other..Friday..after... noon observing of traffic checks made-by radar units, attend Sun- day school regularly and r\aise his academic average to a\‘‘B.” Since the fines for all the in- fractions would have run to hun- eee dreds of dollars; the boy elected to serve: the ‘‘sentence;"* While -we-—do—not._know-much about teenage juries, we believe that when hand out “sentences” such as this they are performing a useful. service, both to the community and to the offender. It is the kind. of punishment. that not only fits the crime, but ought’ te go along way toward improving the culprit's attitute toward driving. And —when the people passing judgment are themselves teenagers,. ft. can only impress itself the more on the offender. Fines are shrugged off by too many youthful drivers these days who mistakenly feel that driving a ton of steel on wheels speed with a callous disregard for _the_lives-of —others-is a right that comes with the licen- ce. We may or may not need teen-age juries, but there is a they hand out. - Wriggling To The Sargasso National Geographic Society Once in the life of every fe- male American eel there comes -an_ irresistible urge te go down | -to-the-sea-again.......-:...... The time is ‘autumn. “Mature female eels in fresh- water riv- ers and lakes of eastern North America stop feeding. Their muddy-brown color turns almést black, 3 Then vast armies of eels wrig- gle towards their deep-sea spawning ground, the relatively quiet- watera of the - Sargasso | thousand of Sea between the West Indies and the Azores. At the same time, European eels, their dark bodies -turned silvery, are making a_ simil. journey. SLITHER OVER GRASS “Resting by day, maving at night, the eels head downstream, all along the Atlantic coast “of North America and down the +_rivers of Europe. So great is the _that J need to return to the sea eels will slither a mile or more across dewy meadows to reach streams leading to salt-water. The females meet the male eels, which have reached matur- ity living near river mouths, and all swim to a place in the Sar- gasso Sea near Bermuda, saltiest spot in.the North Atlantic. There 1,500 feet beneath the surface, the eels spawn and die. “The place < where American and Ewvropean eels spawn was a complete mystery until recent ~gcientists’ = speculated. .on_the origin. of eels. Aristotle thought eels must be derived out of ‘the bowels of the earth” by some kind of spontan- -eous generation. Pliny the Eld- er, the Roman naturalist, belie- ved that eels rubbed themselves against rocks; the pieces that | | f z terre e _}-@els to the dews of. May nings or horsehairs that fell into : ‘}-distant- Neither species develops. into. aenees off thelr bodies came te Others attributed the birth of | water. As late as the ‘middle of the 19th century, one author claimed that the ‘progenitor of the Silver Eel is a small beetle."* The riddle was solved by patient Danish biologist, Johan- nes Schmidt. Searching the At- lantic digently.. Schmidt netted eels in the infant stage. As he worked closer and closer to the Sargasso Sea. he found smaller and smaller spec- imens: Finally; in 1922, he an- nounced that the Sargasso must be the breeding place. TRANSPARENT LARVAE. as 10 million eggs. When the eggs hatch, the eels start life as transparent larvae only a quar- ter of an inch long. The flat, leaf-shaped larvac drift with ocean currents, feed- ing on algae and growing: At one time an eel-in this stage was regarded as a separate species called leptocephalus. Though both European and American eels are spawned in the same area, each manages te eurrent. A year of swimming and drifting brings American | eels to” the about 24% years for the Europ- ean species to Peach the more -shores. young eels, or .elvers, until the coasts are reached. The females : leave the males at river mouths and swarm up the stream. They remain in, fresh water until they attain maturity in six to 15 |, years— ready to start their re- turn journey to the sea. id We Sad SA A Se VOT We SY SW ed ue ed Ye Yea Wea lead We Ye Meee Dd NA Se Ne dL wi lw need for the Kind ot punishment find its way into the appropriate | 4a | At...excessively....high..rates.of. -A’ female eel releases-as many ~~ . It takes ~ ESET TA RENTED ek