_ Daughton ruled against their motion for j ‘every week day morning (except Sun- Matutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street . td . “nationally by Thomson Newspepers Services Toronto 425 University Ave. Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- Western Office 1030 West. Georgie Vancouver (MA 7037. Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers hat and The Canadian Press. The Canedien | ively entitiedto the use for repub- news dispatches in this paper | to ‘the Associated Press or Reuters of fo Wf or and- also to the loca! news published herein. All tight or republication of special dispatches here tm alte reserved Subscription rate over 40c per week by carrer “$92.00 «& year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $75.00 @ yeer off Island and U.K. $20.00 per yeer In U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. Netover 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The. strongest memory is weaker ~'than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965. The Link That Binds “When our Legislature opens to- . day it will be in the formal manner hallowed by tradition and made meaningful, at every stage, by its close association with the Crown. The ceremony wil! be performed by the Lieutenant Governor, who is not a lieutenant, and not a governor, except in name. He has no influence on the | laws that will be passed or on the | policies of the Government. He is, | in fact, the one citizen in the prov- ince who cannot openly express opin- ions on politics. Yet as the repre- sentative of Her Majesty he is the » person who can be said to repre- ine ment. The Government itself is compos- of Ministers of the Crown, and the ts it will face across the floor it.more or less for granted, and per- haps we are too complacent in this are forces at work ’ this. province that we are of, but we cannot shut our eyes to its existence elsewhere. » This is as good a time as any to remember that we are partners -in a common heritage shared. up to “now, by both English and French- Canadians, that it constitu- st the strongest link between us, and that our existence as a nation y very well depend on preserving intact. __A Strange Episode <The Conservatives gave the im- pression that they were charging in all directions at once in their at- tempt to force a spécial debate on ndal allegations in the House of ms on Tuesday. Speaker Mac- in the ground that the subjects are hn d and that the mot- \tontained “vague allegations” which'could not be made in this man- ner..The ruling was understandable, of the. judicial inquiry still way by Chief Justice Dorion. #t the result leaves much to be been! concentrated on the Prime Le icious. Nowhere did he criticize the Prime Minister for insisting on his resignation from the cabinet, while the police investigations were under way. Indeed, he is quoted as having praised Mr. Pearson as “a great Prime Minister’. ; Yet in the action he took. the la Prime Minister certainly pre-judged | Mr. Dupuis’ case, despite his protesta- tions to the contrary. Opposition Leader Diefenbaker called attention to this fact, demanding that Mr. Pearson be explicit on the question of whether Mr. Dupuis had been fir- ed or had resigned on his own initia- tive. The Prime Minister replied: “He resigned; he wasn't promoted to the Senate,’ and then went to deprecate certain Senate appointments Mr. Dief- enbaker had made when he was in office. This without any elaboration. Plainly, the Conservative motion should have been directed squarely on this target, and not phrased in the vague manner it was. And why, in the circumstances, didn't the other Opposition parties insist on a show- down on the matter? They could have done so in the way of an amend- ment to the Conservative motion, but they didn’t. Interesting in this connection was the statement of New Democratic Leader T. C. Douglas, who said his party would await the results of the current judicial inquiry. But plainly referred in the Dorion the Dupuis charges. rara semi. : those that were in his hands in December, before forcing a cabinet colleague to resign, and that Parlia- ment is still in the dark as to his reasons for doing so. Timely Reflections On a subject of current interest, the Ottawa Journal raises the point that it is not an act of Parliament but time and the cumulative pride, honor and sacrifice paid by many hearts,-that makes a flag cherished in the land. What would the flag say itself, if it could speak? it- asks. And it goes on to quote the late Franklin Lane as giving the flag’s an- swer in these words: “I am whatever you make of me, nothing more. I am vour belief in yourself, your dream of what a peo- ple may become . . . I am the day’s work of the weakest man, and_ the largest dream of the most daring . .. 1 am the clutch of an idea, and the reasoned purpose of resolution. I am no more than you believe me _can be. I am whatever you make of me, nothing more.” © Franklin K. Lane was a Prince Edward Islander, born near Char- lottetown a century ago last July, who became U.S. Secretary of the Interior in President Woodrow Wil- son’s administration and might well have become President himself had he been American-born. He died in 1921, after achieving fame as a writ- er as well as in public life. His views on what a flag should be are timely, ’ underlining as they do the fact that, ed not only to the land but to the realm of the spirit. uf A Good Example * Instead of academically discussing the prospects of political union, couldn't the four Atlantic provinces “get together on a joint plan for par- ticipating in the 1967 World's Fair at.Montreal?. This is what the four ~to-be and I-am-all-that you believe I 4 if it is anything, it must be consecrat- | this | in- | quiry, not to the police probe into | The point at issue was that the | Prime Minister didn't wait for the | ...19.Examine World Peace Requireme _ lite Echo 2, launched in Jan- scientists believ- the ballon-'tke satellite was pierce by its own launch- canister just “LET ‘EM YELP” OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson A world drifting without par- pose, largely ranking Mammon before Gand selfishness be- fore survival, may well find worthwhile new guide-lines pro- posed in New Y *“ City this week World leaders of many relig- jor; and race: meeting in a historic convocation to examine the requirements foi world peace in the context of the en- | cyclical of Pope John XXIII en- titled “Pacem in Terris’’ (Peace on Earth). Among those who accepted in- vitations ‘ attend are Hubert Humphrey. vice- president of the U.S.A.; U Thant, Secretary- General of the United Nations; Alexander Quaison-Sackey, pre- sident of the General Assembly of the U.N.; Earl Warren, chief Justice of the USA.; Barbara Ward. th British economist: Adlai Stevenson. Paul-’ Henri Spaak, Arnold Toynbee, and other distinguish ‘ public figur- es from Japan, Russia. Britain, Africa anc Latin A,.erica. The convocation was organiz- ed by the Centre for the study of Democratic Institutions and the Ford Foundation: its open- ing meeting was appropriately planned to ta!e place in the As- | sembly Chamber of the United Nations. THE OUTSTRETCHED HAND “Pacem i T° xis’ Was head lined as the theme of the dis- cussion, because in that encyc- lical the Peasant “or ‘dre4s- ed not « ly Roman Catholics but also to “all men of good will’. the Holy Father saw that the chief implicat. of nuclear fo. ‘3 that s-ch a & would be in na e only a struggle be- tween nations;*more significant- ly, it would be a war . against Fo it : not individual not their artifacts such as their homes and their possess- ions, which would be the only victims of a nucle w: It would be the work of God, the divinely unbalanced conditions which make life on this planet possible for al] living creatures and those not yet born, which would be destroyed. Pope John listed three re- quire: onts wich he saw as es- sential to the eliminatior of the present precarious ba‘ance of | nuclear terror and the creation | P0ted among Canadians who en- | of a | rmar-nt peac’ on earth. These are frank and polite dia- logue betwec- “> world’s op- posing camps gem ne negota- tions based upon full apprecia- tion that agreement would bene- r'4es, da massive un- selfish expansion of material | and technica! aid to the under- | developed areas. It was with these convictions | that Pope J: stretched out | +—his hand not only to the one-six- | th of the world’s population who | are catho! <, but also to chris- tians separated from the Apos- tolic See and alsd to “human be- ings who are not enlightened by faith in Jesus, but who are em dowed with the light of reason and with a natural and oper- ative honesty.” RUSSIAN APPRECIATION Would an appeal from the Pope mete any im act in the Kremlin? Even the Russian | leaders do not want their citiz- | ens tobe slaughtered and the world to be contaminated by a pre-emptive nuclear attack or by the spasm response of a stricken U.S.A. Chairman Khru- shchev was profoundly impress- ed by thi- encyclical. .f which Pope John sent him an advance copy; and we kn w that “hru- shchev's successors adhere to ements 5 oe | his thinking in th i. ~ c. world | affairs. ‘Peace on Earth” is not the aim of catholics only; it is the ambition of al] men of good will—it must surely be the tar- get of all men The merit of the New York | convocation lies largely in its | realistic attempt to meet one of | Pope Joti's chief objectives This is that one of the basic rights of “ee men ‘Ye right to be informed truthfully about | public events So informed, free men should be determ ed , to influence their chosen Nead- ers Niagara Falls Problem New York Times Are the American falls of the Niagara degenerating into a piddling, boulder-choked cas- cade? Wouldn't they look better plunging straight down into a misty abyss, like the Horseshoe Falls on the Canadian side” Or are they more exciting “on the rocks?" These questions, revived by a campaign in the Ni-gara Falls Gazette for the removal of ‘“un- sightly” rock debris at the base of the falls, are getting some off- | | season attention on both | of the frontier. sides The Niagera Falls city counc- i! called for federal aad state | action to get rid of the mounting pile of talus that has crept half- way up to the lip of the 181- foot cataract. The council also ask- ed for remedial action to pre- vent further erosion and rock slides. On both sides of the river, opinion is split over the rocks. Some people find them displeas- ing to the aesthetic sense. Oth- ers, adrritting that they consid- ered the rocks a crashing bore in Summer, found them delight- ful in Winter wher converted into gretesque mounds of ice. HONE YMOONERS INDIFFERENT Mayor Lackey, <cuti rocks, conceded that honeymooners, who cor prise a good share of the Summer tourist traffic, Across the frontier, consider- able pro-rock se ent was ‘seemed indifferent. joy a panoramic view of both | falls, On the American de there seemed ment that, was checked, the American falls | would gradually lose the ap- pearance of a cataract and, per- haps in a few hundred years, | become a mere extension of the to\be general agree- rapids of the Up, Niagara River : Enginecrs said the removal of rock could be undertaken by the construction of a cofferdam at the upstream end of Goat Is- | land, sealing off the nearly 7,000 cubic feet per second of water that rushed down the American channe! to the crest of the \m- erican falts , COULD BE EXCAVATED Then, the most unsightly of | the rocks could be excavated ; and removed to a dum,ing site, retaining enough talus to pro- tect the ‘ower levels of the cliff face from erosion The American falis have suf- fered two major rockfalls in this eo In 1931, a rockfall at centre of the lip piled tons of debris on top of the ori_ nal tal- us, increasing the height of the talus by some ~ feet. In. 1954 the last major landslide dropped huge masses of rock t the foot of Prospect Point, blocking the view of the falls from he base of the cliff. | The view was partly restored | in 1960, wnen workmen _ ected | a dam above the >rink of the | Falis, to permit removal of | some of e 19°1 rockfall. | But the mountains of debris remain, and at no point does the curtain of water take the full 181 | foot plunge int the Maid of the Mist pool of the lower river. Needs Joint Action Lendon Fress Press An item -in President John- son's recent program to Congress aimed at enhancing the beauty of United States should receive Cana ian ac- claim; it would put air and wat- er pollution o an international scale and should require an in- ter. -tional answer. The appalling condition of the Great Lakes befoulded by sew- ~ Pierci ng Outer Space Using new equipment, the Bri | tish Royal Radar Establishment ‘orcestershire claims to have discovered hole in Amer!:an communication z : i ! age. ship off:. and industrial | waste must require joint direc- | | tion if any form of water purity | is to be restored. Already muni- | cipal, state and provincial « _bs have been introduced but an | overall program is essential. | Unfortunately the Canadian | federal division leaves ‘ e oper- | ation between Ottawa and the | | provinces divided? Some volun- | tary groups have been formed, s ? — i 3 i ot z i z o 37 i i : s fr t i i 3 Z 3 { i i =e: ge 233 4 3 a 3 a < iF a8 = i i, E 3 3 ? unless the erosion) Capses Of ‘Pruritus Ani By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien Pruritus ani is se annoying that most victims ‘‘want relief or | will lose my mind.” They are likely to rub or scratch the ana! region to such an extent that the ensuing irritation hides the true cause. When this oc- curs, a simple routine is sugges- ted to ease distress until diag- nosis can be made. The anal area should be kept clean, dry, and free from local chafing’ The folds are subject to maceration caused bv per- spiration,and friction. especial- ly in tile obese and those who sweat profusely. The area ment with soft paper tissue or cotton saturated with tap water. Wet toilet paper can be used provided it does not cause fric- tion. The continental commode (bidet) cleansing is ideal for this pu Dry the area care- fully with a towel or clean, dry cotton. Drying agents will be needed when the skin is blisteged, brok- | en, or weeping. Tablets such as Termaril control the itching Within a week. the area becom- es more comfortable and the basic cause is determined In many ihstances. relief is ob- tained bv following the regimen | mentioned previously, especially when moisture and uncleanliness are responsible’ The same ap- plies when the area has been abraded by rough toilet tissue | or the individual is sensitive to chemicals in this type of tissue Allergy is suspected when dis- comfort occurs only after eating certain foods or wearing certain tvpes of underwear Synthetic fhers do not absorb moisture and rubber zirdles increase loc- al verspiration Pinworms are a good possibil- ity when itching occurs only during the night. Specific treat- ment, including surgery. is re- quired when a discharge is pre- | sent because it usually indicat- or rectum. The same can he said when a dermatitis is pres- ent on the skin between the folds of the buttocks Nervousness also is a cause of pruritus ani. This is best | treated with relaxants and tran- | quilizers. Now and then, area must be deadened with a long-acting anesthetic agent. CREAM FOR OLDSTERS H. H._ K. writes: | am 77 years | old and in the best of health. | But my family thinks I use too much milk and cream. Why should I cut them out as | feel well’ . REPLY | Who is entitled to advise a 77 year-old.on diet? Less fat is sug- gested when -the individual is overweight or his blood choles- terol is high HIATUS HERNIA RF. writes: Can a hiatus | hernia strangulate like a hernia | in the groin? | REPLY The ordinary sliding ~ esopha- geal hernia does not strangu- | fairs and on flights ‘‘Notth of | United States a | late. This is not true when the | trudes through a small opening in the diaphragm (diaphragm- atic hernia) DEAFNESS D. A. writes: One doctor says otosclerosis is causing my deaf- } mess: another says.#t.is due to nerve degeneration. I'm confus- ed. REPLY Both may exist, so why not discuss this matter with the physician in whom vou have the most confidence LOW BLOOD PRESSURE H. N. writes: Will donating | blood make low blood pressure | lower? REPLY Donating blood may lower tei- | sion temporarily in those with | high blood pressure but has lit- tle or no effect upon those with low blood pressure. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— After age 40, eyes should be checked annually (NOTE: All correspondence une, Chicago, Tilinois.) should be"Washed after a move- + the, upper part of the stomach pro- | Our Yesterdays | | (From the Guardian Files) | | GDN. ED. P. THURS. v - OUR “4 Another Blast Expected By Arch MacKenzie Canadian Press Staff Writer The United States has moved | pacity by nations still at the promptly again to soften the propaganda edge of an expe ted second Chinese nuclear blast, forecast Tuesday in Washing- State Secretary Dean Rusk did the same thing before the initial Chinese test last Oct. 16. Tuesday's Washington s/ate- ment said the U.S. has reason to believe a follow-up test is be- ing prepared, to make use of information gained in the [ust. U.S. intelligence, based pre sumably on h‘gh-altitude recon- naissance and nuclear - deoris | samplings, pinpointed the Ocio- ber test area in the western desert at Lop Nor. It ; the blast in the low- power range of at or under the equivalent of 20,000 tons of TNT. SOME TIME AWAY The most impirtant imme- diate po'nt is that China re- mains some time away—csti- mates vary—from being able to manufacture a nuclear bomb as such, or the vehicle to carry it far. . But, it is also agreed gener- ally, this is a steadily-dim'nish- ' ing consideration of more im- portant long - term questions, pending on just how quickly hina can close the gap It hinges on how much f'ssicon- able material it can provide for bombs, progress in vocketry or longer-range aircraft and how much of its economy chooses to dedicate to hs. | The fact remains that pros- cts seem much less bright they were last October for working out a system to control these China , fringe or outside the nuclear club. China and France are outside the limited test ban treaty signed by the U.S., Russia and Britain. China and the U.S. are—if that is possible—even more bit- terly divided with the latest cri- sis in Viet Nam. Nor is Russia in any better position to at- tempt to play a middle roie, President de Gaulle of France ues his own road in nu- clear monetary and other mait- ter FEARED BY ASIANS iS A second Chinese nuclear test, it is felt, will do little to calm Asian countries, such as India, which have cause to {car a militant Chinese policy and which have been _ pondering whether to impose the extra economic burden of a puclear project on themselves. The US. has sought to reas- sure such nations by stating its willingness, if necessary, to ex- tend its nuclear umbrella on their behalf. President Johnson did so in October. As for China's nuclear prog- ress. there has been specula- tion this may go faster than some now think The head nuclear physicist for China s believed to be a former associate of Madame Curie while the head of the Chi- nese rocket program has been identified as Dr. Chien Hsueh- sen, a graduate of the Massa- chusetts institute of Technology who returned to China in 1955 after studying German rocketry and acting as’a consultant te the U.S. Navy the proliferation of nuclear ca- a — eee | Should Be Obligatory Montreal Star The propose of marine disast- | é¢ inquiries is not so. much to at- ibute blame as to find out what * So, in Mr. Justice Smith's in- icy into t.. collision bet. cen Leecliffe Hall and the Apol- nia in th St. Tawrence last ber, while the Commis- | gioner in Admiralty does attri- te blame, he is equally con- to discover \.hy ore ef- ient use w: not made of ra- dar on both ships || The ir ;'> and astonishing | tact is that on neither ship was there - “0 s-ecially trained in the use of radar. Canada can | exert no control of this on ships ‘of foreign registry. but the De- partment of Trins;.. can make rules for Canadian hips / using Canadian navigable wat- ers. | It can, if it sees fit, exact ship masters and, above. all, by pilots. Mr. Justice Smith sug- gests that pilots be re “red tw S Use 1 / ‘ed d why. with a view to undergo a course of training ~ “esse tee Wr the-art prevent Ttire-cosfone~-deeiene teehee wore ‘ ‘ ‘ing knowledge c _ the proper function and use of rador as an | aid to navigatiln. It is astonishin§ that this has not been done long since. What | Mr Justice Smith calls “a re- | grettable lack of knowledge on the part of ships’ officers and piJots. both, as to the -*al fune- tion and value radar as an aid to navigation, and as to its | pr e has found in her similar inquiries. Yet Ot a does nothing what- ever about it. Proper knowledge and use of radar might not have | averted the collision ‘rte-en the Lescliffe Hall and the Apol- lonia — there were other contri- buting factors—but it would have helped. — in the use of radar. by | Canada’s i f Resources Ottawa Journal Resources Minister Laing also Minister of Northern is Af- | 60" is reminded that ich of | Canada i half ater, half -ock. Cheerful ministers of the North have always been con- | vinced the Arctic rock is filled | with m'-eral riche and their | cup overflows with - w assess- | ment of he value of water | Mr. Laing declares that other countries look with er °° at Can- | ada’s good fortune in her supply of water— a statement which will be taken with ; grain of | salt by Ottawa Valley -rmers who have suffered from the ef- fects of unusual drought in re- cent months The minister, however. bears | testimony that the water supply Dia] 4-6567 ~ iF £ rt ~~ | 83%% MORTGAGES | On new or improved city homes Or for Re-financing 7% on standard two thirds loans on first class security — slightly higher on others. come in and talk over your requirements with HYNDMAN & CO. LIMITED MORTGAGE AND INSURANCE BROKERS Used Equipment | situation “‘is start ag to be des- perate” in s e part of the lans afe a foot there to use substantial ac- | reages of Canadian -4 ‘or wa- | ter storage reservoirs to t | needs as far south as Mexico. “Storing water for someone else's use does not necessarily meet the basic needs of Can- ada.’ says Watch4og Laing, and if there is to be sharing | with neighbors. there must be a reve~-- “low of ber towards th- Canadi- -onomy. Who would have thought it? Besides forests. minerz] and | wheat lands “anada has a nat- ural reseurce of inestimable value she once considered only convenient to carry h r explora- ‘tion canoes. 57 Queen St. PE