"pate ig Me Mat Mitstte s Mi Mess inn Ms Mess Line : ER . ~ yt 4 _ Ju: ome Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Menaging Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sum de, and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., By Thomson Newspapers (td. Branch offices at Summerside, Montegve, Alberton ene curd. Recresgented nationally by Thomsen Newsoaoers Advertsing Services: Toronto 425 Unversity Ave. Froore 3.8894; Montreal 640 Cethcert Street Uni verity 65942; Western Office 1230 West Georgie Greet Vancouver MA 7037. Menber Canadian Daily Newspeper Pubiishers Asso and The Canadian Press. The Canadien Pye s exclusively entitied to the use for repub- lkavon of afl news dispatches in this paper crested to lt or to the Associeted Press or Reuters ard alsa to the local news published herein. All republication of specie! dispatches here in aco reserved. Subscription rete at over £0¢ per week by carrier. $12.90 » year by mail on rural routes and areas met serviced by carrier. t15.00 a» year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per in US. end elsewhere outside British Com oeatr Not aver Je single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation “he strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965. -_— Monnet Disillusioned Of the many factors entering into the indecisive results of the French presidential election on Sunday, the most significant to outsiders was the~ ‘role played by a man who was not a candidate for any of the rival parties but who, next to General de Gaulle himself, is France's best-known fig- ure throughout Europe and the world ai large. This was Jean Monnet, who is regarded as the chief architect of “the European Economie Community (Common Market.) He also was the leading designer of the European Coal and Steel Community which was‘a forerunner of the bigger Com- mon Market. Mr. Monnet entered the field of supranational planning after having served as chief economic planner for ' France in the days of the Fourth Re- public. He now is president of the Action Committee for the United States of Europe. In this campaign he broke a long record of not ‘taking sides in French politics by . stating publicly that he would not vote for de Gaulle but would vote instead for Jean Lecanuet, the candidate of the Popular Republican Movement, a moderately conservative Roman Catholic party. ~ “We can no longer have any {Husions about the Gaullist regime,” Monnet declared in his preelection statement. “It engages us in the out- dated and dangerous path of nation- alism, inevitably encouraging the re- birth of nationalism in other coun- tries, particularly Germany.” Even with this support, Lecanuet dation + ar veer race was not expected to do better than. come in third—which he did. He was expected to trail Francois Mit- terrand,.candidate for the momentar- ily united Socialist and Communist parties, at a fair distance. The special _importance of the Lecanuet cam-: paign, however, was that it attracted Editor * it will take $2 billion for 10 years to do the job. i Lake Erie is the dirtiest of the Great Lakes—so -dirty that at times 40 per-cent-of~the lake is without "oxygen, thus killing fish and desirable __yotes which - otherwise would go to. the general. Mitterrand’s support came from people who would not in any case have voted Gaullist. *} ~The -Monnet- move. was. dramati- eally timed. It focusted attention on what -was perhaps the weakest-point in the Gaullist position—the perplex- ify and anxiety that many French ‘voters felt about President de Gaulle’s attitude toward the Common Mar- ket. Also, Lecanuet had come out strongly for a politically -united Burope as first conceived by the writ- ers of the Treaty of Rome, on which Common Market principles are bas- ed. ce ‘ Jt is recalled than in 1958 Mon- net voted for the Constitution of the Fifth Republic, which in those unus- ual circumstances amounted to a vote for President de Gaulle. Now the two men have reached the part- fag of the ways, with consequences which’ could be of concern not only to France, but to Europe and the free world generally. : Cause For Concern | A report prepared for the Ontario government warns that radioactive contamination trickling uncontrollab- ly from the Eliot Lake watershed into the Great Lakes has become a seri- ous menace. Unless rapid steps are taken to improve the present methods of control in the area, contamination will continue in a geometrical -pro- gression. Lake Huron particularly is threatened. After a few decades, there will be an excess amount of radiation in this lake, and it will stay there. ; ' But this is not the whole story. Pip to American éngineers, all the contaminated with a flow of pollut- ants from dozens of cities. A vast, $14 million seven-year program has been daunched for cleaning them up. But it js doubtful if this. will be any- -thing fie enough. 4 fy Siieho 1 Great Lakes have already been Orfe authority says + plant life. Lakes Superior, Huron, and Ontario are the cleanest, yet engin- eers have measured the flow of wastes from Superior into Huron in the hundreds of million: gallons a year. Lake Ontario is the final re- pository for all the water and pol- lution of the four other lakes. It is not unusual for tourists at Niagara Falls to smell the stench of the sew- age and paper-mill wastes flowing over the falls. Three conferences were held ear- lier this year—in Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland—to get the coopera- tion ‘of industry in the big clean-up job that has to be done. Required, too, will be the full cooperation of government and industry in this country if it is to be done properly. The Great Lakes contain some 95,000 square miles of water—a small, irregular ocean. They con- stitute the largest reservoir in the world, and supply 20 per cent of the world’s fresh water. Man’s prod- igality has rarely been demonstrat- ed more glaringly than in the man- ner in which he has allowed this great natural resource to deteriorate. Whatever the cost, the mistake will have to be rectified. A Prize Boner One country which has stood solid- ly behind the’ U.S. administration in its Viet Nam policy is Australia. The Australians themselves have been in the fight with 1,600 troops—1,000 of them in active combat—for several months. thought, therefore, of the faux pas made by Senator Fulbright, chair- man of the U.S. Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee; when he visited there recently? When the senator was met by the press on his arrival in Sydney, he said he did not know that Australia had any troops in Viet Nam, and ask- | ed, innocently, now many were serv- ing. This brought an appropriate re- tort from Sir William Yeo, president of the Returned Soldiers League of Australia. William said, “that the rest of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee +-are-not—as- ill-advised as their chair- * man. If they are, God help the Yanks, us and the rest of the world!” It is to be hoped, in the interests of both countries, that this unfortun- ‘ate incident will be soon forgotten. It is not likely, however, that Senator Fulbright will forget the private dres- sing-down he'll receive at Washington for his ineptitude in the matter. Barnyard Reform “British pigs,” says an exchange, “are about to, get plushier pens, chick- “ens bigger ‘coops, calves more spac- | fous stalls, roosts.” and turkeys roomier What's all this about? It’s a re-_ action, it seems, to the overemphasis | placed. in recent. years on mass _pro- duction on the British food front. The system forced such uniformity and restrictions on the living quart- ers of British food animals that a cry of “cruelty” went up around the -country. Now, a special parliament- ary committee has come to the res- cue with a report. Legislation is ex- pected to follow. New minimum standards for cages, boxes, pens, and animal houses will be spelled out. And further legistation wilt probably outlaw other practices, considered cruel. Es ; Many in Britain, it is reported, would like to see all the intensive methods of animal] rearing—often called “factory farming’—complete- ly outlawed. But surely. it will be possible to retain the advantageous | features of the system without going that far. There is scope here for the British genius for compromise which | has been so fruitful of results er fields. EDITORIAL NOTE A US. congressional sibcommit- tee has set Dec. 15 for the start of hearings on the big electric-power in oth- > hae neat . — A | & 4 4 : & > t e i aa | | } | ~ ‘ HOUSE DIVIDED OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson What must they have | | #s not a melting pot - in the sen-. “T sincerely trust,” Sir , Canada, our sociologists claim, | se that USA melts the edges off | ‘immigrants and produces the standardized citizen in one ge- neration. ti Canada, on the contrary, en- courages immigrants to retain their non-conformity in customs, traditions, language and religion. The texture of our national life is enriched by our adoption of usages from the cultures of va- rious immigrant- groups. Yet in contrast the federal govern- ment gives official stamp to its belief that Canada is a melting pot, capable of dissolving and in fact absorbing all old country backgrounds except two. So we are officially a bicultural and bi- PUBETE | lingua] country, but not multi- | | cultural or multi-lingual. Hf Canada is not a melting pot what is it? A blender, or a mix- ing machine, or a shuffler? | STATISTICAL MIXTURE... . | A vivid light upon our racial | mixture has just been produced | for the very first time - by our Dominion Bureau of Statistics. That ingenious and industrious figure-juggling office has just | completed a break-down, by fe- | deral political constituencies, of | our racial origins. | For this purpose, Canadians, | are, divided into eleven ethnic | groups: British Isles, French, | | German, Italian, Jewish, Neth- | | erlands, Polish, Russtan, Scan- | dinavian, Ukrainian, Native In- FORUM | HEALTH OFFICER REPLIES | Sir,—Reverend W.J. Enright wishes to know the explanation for more dentists in a given area after fluoridation. The answer is quite simple—more money available and a gfeater demand for better teeth. His argument would be anala- gous to saying that the clergy on Prince Edward Island are giving a poorer service today than they did 50 years ago, even with better transportation, etc.— on the fallacious ground that we have more clergy and a smaller I am, Sir, ete.,. -W.L. MacDONALD, MD. City Health Officer FARM. ACCOUNTING Sir;— Shortly, there will be an increased demand for help by farmers in-how.to maintain “farm records. This will come about as a result of the Pension Plan going into effect next year. I understand the deductions for the plan will be based on yearly earnings, as revealed by income tax returns. i I would suggest instructions be given by the agriculture ‘ec- onomists through a series of te- levision broadcasts to show our farmers step by step the basic principles of taking inventory. entering farm receipts ana- lyzing sample i There should also. be included in | guch broadcasts details of the | use.of farm records for income farm records. | my tires picking up a piece of | this broken glass, I felt com- | pelled to write this letter. | I refuse to believe that our {local police department and | RCMP cannot at once put a stop | to this practice which is danger- ous not only to motorists, but to | bicyclists, children and pets. | Certainly, prompt arrests with | accompanying severe fines and the obligation of cleaning up the | ithey create, ~~ oro to punish the guilty a as deterrents . others—and once |again make our streets clean and—safe.places.on...which_.t 6 drive. ‘ I sincerely hope that these suggestions will be heeded and prompt actions taken to remedy | this deplorable and fast-deterior- ating situation. ; ~ NEGLECTED ROAD Sir,—Maybe the minister of Highways has his reasons for not wanting. studded tires on Prince Edward Island roads, but I am quite sure he wouldn't mind what enyone used on the half mile of road between Whea- | tley River and ‘Hunter River, or |maybe he forgets there are _ still a few humans beings living | on this road. t Two miles of this road were | paved last summer. and why the other small piece was left only the minister and his men know. "T (hlak this method of tastric. [Be ome ane BBE beee able to i very effective and a tion would te very Three years ago someone helpful to the farmers of P.E.I. | —asked, “Why isn’t this road I am, Sir; ete. Le 2” the answer was “Well LIOYD WADDELL the road is going to be paved Crapaud, P.E.I. all at one time, not in two strips, SHOULD NOT BE TOLERATED Sir,—1 wish to call to your at- tention__the appalling _ situation the streets of Chartottetown and our neigh- bouring suburban areas, namely | the incredible amounts of brok- en glass that abound every- where. A casual glance is suffi- cient to determine that this con- | | | | dition is the result of irrespon- | sible people hurling bottles, eith- er from automobiles or side- walks, in a deliberate attempt { | to smash them to pieces on the | street. 2 Z § s i a | ‘The point of impact is clearly | 11 blackout that hit the northeast states | visible oo small irigaseuts lee aon aaeat. at tai ey ¥ and part of Canada recently. The first | remain. end it is So aan at | the aye had a oe witnesses will be the chairman of the,| Sassea scces of gisss On ouc'|ochtas uelee the rose an Federal Power Commission and other Sane tae an eve- | ready to ones on? sae en f ‘ eas ng walk, I a ly saw, from | pus from atley River to | experts who have been investigating | a distance of about half a block, | go around by New Glasgow. te the causes of the blackout. So far, | a growp of young people hurl | pass the mud, in oo — wea the commission has pinpointed the such bottles into the street, | ther in the winter Spring : seemi fun of it. roads are dried. immediate cause of the failure on the | = my aa ae a: aan whe a had on tons shale malfunction of a relay unit on the | does - _ 7 a ~ put on the cay — = t would be ; ™must 5 x better, , ev Canadian side, just north of Niagara | 1 now 1 was cone $0 com- |done for some reason’ We are Falls. The primary concern -of the | — on to my _ a — for = = of pavement inquirAjrill be to safeguard national Rien’. a eae cae pytnr Ay eo we hed bien oe defense and make sure electric | vandalism on our. streets, But | ven what me ernst é j : after the tremendous ‘ I am, Sir, ete. power is available to all who are de. | ier cei etet of a fat tire thet - MRS’ LEM GAMESTPR } pendent on it: _ - ~~ $4] was the direct result of one of | Wheatley River. ee > 8 Si Sil ila , o * ee Deccan tintin 1p egg Meo Rete IB LOI tts a ed on To ’ | Matthew _ Bureau Gives Breakd own Of Racial Origins dian and Eskimo; plus three | catch- all categories: ‘‘other Euu- ropean’’, Asiatic and ‘‘Other and Not Stated.” | In the province of Quebec, the | major ethnic group is French ‘in : | every constituency except four in Montreal. In Notre Dame de | Grace, the British exceed the French by more than two to one in Jacques Cartier and in St. Antione- Westmount, the British just exceed the French. In Mount Royal, the Jewish just exceed the British, who in turn equally narrowly outnumber the French While Canadians of French or- igin thus predominate in Que bec, the British Isles provide the paramount ethnic group in all other provinces, ranking first in all save seventeen of their one | hundred and ninety constituen- cies. a | In ten constituencies outside Quebec, the French for the lar- gest group. These are. Ottawa East, Stormont, Timmins, Coch. rane, Nickel] Belt, Glengarty- in Ontario. and Kent, Gloucester and Resti- gouche-Madawaska in New Bru- nswick. Nova Scotia, and in Waterloo North, Ontario, and in Rosthern Saskachewan, the largest eth- nie group is German. In Daup- hin, Manitoba, in Yorkton, Gask- stchewan, and in Vegreville, Al- berta, the largest group is Uk- rainian. In Provencher, Mani- A sad foot note to our treatment med of Native Indians and Es kimos only in the remote and far- flung Northwest. Territories, MIXMASTER SETTLEMENT The extent of our compretien- sive christmas - pudding mix- ture of settlement is astonish- ing. Of our 265 federal political constituencies, rs except six contain representation of at least thirteen of those fourteen ethnic claesifications. Quebec’s Iles de la Madeleine not surprisingly, is racially our purest community, with repre- sentatives of only eight differ- ent ethnic groups. llechasse has only nine ethnic groups, and | boasts the country’s highest fig- | ure ag being 99.7 ‘per cent Fren- ch, Montmagmy-L'Islet has ten | ethnic groups, while Kings, PE1 | Kent, New Brunswick: and Dor- | chester, Quebec each have twe- | lve groups. Ten constituencies ) five in Quebec, three in New- foundland, one in New Brunswick , and the Yukon- ‘each ahve 13 | Groups: The other 249 Canadian constituencies each contain re- presentatives of all fourteen eth- | mic classifications- quite a na- | tional melange. | Three constituencies, afl in | the heart of Tory Toronto - Da- |-venport; Spadina and Trinity - | have more immigrants than na- tive-born Canadians’ Toronto's York Centre contains the most immigr: est - 37 In Queens- Lunenburg, | | the largest shaw wens is for. ants - 60,232; and Que- | bec’s Magdalen Islands the few- | << g ° . 'Guesstimating Tooth Value By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delies Is a tooth worth its in gold. Some people argue is, especially when involved in a lawsuit. The question of the legal value of a front or . back tooth arises most frequently tion that today the approximate damages awarded per tooth is problem, and very few people hire a lawyer to fight a court battle when this is the only pro blem. There is no precedent for the loss in these circumstances; each case presents a different situation. In most of these cas- es, the jaw is broken or there are other bones fractured. The judgment usually includes the fee for dental services including necessary prosthetic devices. Very few of these lawsuits take into consideration the con- dition of the tooth. Mr. Sarner tooth is diseased and due for ex- traction when the/ individual is involved in an accident in which injury ie slight? The same can be said when the dentist remoy- es such a tooth without consent. ent when the tooth is healthy. Money never makes the injur- ed person ‘‘whole.”” Out of the total amount awarded the claim- ant by the court jury, there are the usual court costs. The attor- ney’s feé may be as much as 50 per cent of the money awarded as damages. Furthermore, the victim may be told to avoid res- toration of his mouth for years until the trial is over. SOUR STOMACH | bring on sour stomach every night after supper? REPLY estion, varying from disturbanc- es of the gall bladder to mother- in-law trouble. Why not have ‘your problem thoroughly inves- tigated, including X-ray studies? | FACIAL PARALYSIS | BP. Q. writes: Are vitamins of | any value in Bell’s palsy? REPLY : Vitamin B complex may be | Nipissing and | prescribed in this type of facial | | paralysis, as part of the treat- | ment, PAINLESS ULCER B. M. writes: Could a person j have ulcer without pain? | REPLY Yes. Furthermore, when stomach ulcers are treated, dis- tress often disappears within a few days even though the lesion ° Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian es) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (December 7, 1940) German planes, ~~ resuming tack that stretched into dawn. j tain “‘at the risk of war’’, Pro | fessor William Y. Elliott ‘of Har- vard University, advocated Sat- urday that the United States send convoyed ships to Ireland, and that it promise Japan a fight if she attacked Singapore or the Netherland’s, East Indies. TEN YEARS AGO (December 7, 1955) England and the Queen prompt ly made him an earl. |es taken on Mis agricultural tour |of Great Britain and Western Europe in 1953 under a Nuf: field scholarship to the Summer. side United Church cia (NOTE: All corre: to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- | une, Chicago, Miinois-) ~~ A Grisly Tool Toronto Globe and Mali The Cabinet has acted rightly | in commuting to life imprison- ment the death sentences pass- ronto Beatle bandit Kerry Smith -and two other convicted murderers. | Prime Minister Lester Pearson | seatast a dangerous man being turned loose on the community. This protection, indeed, remov- 'es the last valid argument of | those who would retain the rope, ‘that a man who has murdered |once may be released to murd- __has promised that a free vote on | er again. the retention of punish- ment will be held shortly after , | Parliament j convenes; and it would be intolerable that men | be hanged while the country ex- amines its {be-released on | the express direction iinet, a suffici | The truly grisly nature of thie | medieval tool of justice was | demonstrated in the cases the. commuted | Cabinet has just . One man was due to be hanged Friday, another next Wednes- day, the third a week from Fri- day. It would be a primitive sé- ciety that insisted on perpetuat- ing the, mental torture of such waiting as a part of justice. “YOUNG ARE CARELESS Half the hunting accidents in Ontario involve sportsmen aged | —e 2 or less. - | NOTES BY THE WAY | The psychiatrist who says in. sanity is decreasing may be mis- taken, If could be that insayity isn’t 60 noticeable now as it was some years ago. —Guelph Mer- § Windsor Star. Half Guil formation to en alien power. Justice Minister Lucien C din has told the Canadian peo- ple that a man named Victor G. Spencer would be under surveil- for as a me he remain- rnational transaction, the de- | tails of which are etill very | decision is very unfair; it | is absolutely repugnant to our | conception of the British law which protects our rights; it~ is immensely unfair to the man we know as Spencer. If Spencer did indeed sell in- formation to an alien power—no | matter whether the information was contained in an almanac or a service station road map—the man should, in justice, be brou- ght to trial. Trial is not a persecution, but | Sometimes a privilege. If a , Judge or jury of his peers finds | chet he is not of an of. | fense, he should be allowed to | walk as‘a free man in the com- | munity. If;he is found to have | Offended against the laws of the |land, he should be punished ac- | cording to the terms set forth in ause of an in. | silty, Or What? Telegram But surely we don't want sort of half-way punishment is known as “house arrest.” We don't want it here. The Hon. ‘Mr. Cardin, in de- ciding to hold a man under house arrest for as. long as he | may stay ta eur country, is un- Mr. Cardin is arrogating to | himself the same power of de- | cision as was taken by his pre- | decessor, the Hon. Guy Favreau. | | IRRESPONSIBLE No Minister of the Crown must be allowed the privilege of act- ‘ing as a judge and jury in the matter affecting any private | citizen's reputation. The most junior lawger, and certainly the public, wollld be | outraged by the thought that one ™man in the councils of govern: ;, | ment would be allowed to judge | the guilt or innocence, or half- guilt or half-innocence, of any one man, Mr, Cardin should be asked te account for his irregular proce- | dures. If he fails to do so, to the satisfaction of the nation which has been brought up to respect the fundamentals of British law, he should be asked by the The situation is obviously differ. | ' C. C, A, ites: - writes: What could | ly beeen made at.the White Hou- | hostile natural environment of. There are 101 causes of indig: | Temains open for several weeks | toba, the largest group is Dutch, | thereafter. ° A if their air battering of London aft. | er more than a fortnight of com-—. parative peace, dropped tons of | high explosives and incendiary | bombs during a nine-hour fi | the Calling for aid to Great Bri- | ement R. Attlee resigned as | leader of the Labor party in | Mr. William Cairns of Free. | |town showed and narrated slid- Pri lie ae at ae me Minister te vacate his Lunar Law Code New York Times | & ae is a that both the United States an | Nations, to be exploi | the Soviet Union will land mén| ming, as is hkety that Hon | on the lunar surface within’ the | eventually provide economic op- next decade or so. After the inl- | portunities— for the benefit ot | tial visits, there will inevitably | all nations. | come the | ploration | manent settlements. The suggestion has a i | and difficulty enough from the | | se conference on international | this airless globe posed con- | cooperation that the United Sta- | stant fe ae tes eek international agree- ommed ss pesintt — s ment on outer a legal code for human | space. Nothing is to be gained ! activit se | and much can be lost by extend- a aon 3 pvewient a | ing rivalries that exact so high | Antartic Treaty of Dec. 1, 1959. | Se ere on eee That pact, to which both the Uni. | ted States and the Soviet Union | | adhere, provides that Antartica | | shall be used only for peaceful | | purposes and shall contain no | | military bases. It suspends ‘all _territoriaa’||* claims to the Antartic and esta- | blishes the principle that all set- | tlements and activities in the | | area are open to inspection by COMMERCIAL PRIN Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads | observers designated by the na- : : | tions ratifying the treaty. brochures; call us for | The contracting nations agree all your _ printing to make available to each other needs. | all scientific, information gath- | red there, and to exchange per- | GUARDIAN-PATRIOT sonnel among their expeditions and stations. y Adoption of an analogous code | | for the moon would be a major | _triumph_of._international _cooper-—. atin. It would be even greater | | advance if agreement could be | secured that the moon was in- CENTRAL . high probability | body to be ruled by the United - PRINTERY | PHONE 4-8506 | ternational , Property, a solar | NOTICE! INCREASE IN. INTEREST RATES Effective January 1, 1966 CURRENT ACCOUNT SAVINGS @ Interest payable quarterly on minimum quarterly balance. @ Accounts opened by the 20th of the month earn interest from the first of the month. @ Money can be deposit- ed or withdrawn at any time. . . in person or by mail, MAJOR TRUST _* COMPANY : “8 e 57 Queen eee Hyndman Bkig.) PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, CANADA y Hours 9 - 5 Daily — Closed Saturday ; , 894-4910 - > THE | | 6