She Guardian | 5, \ Covers Prince Edward Island Like The iw W. J. Hencox, Publisher . Wallere Werd Frank Welker Mensging Bditor \ Editor Published every wret dey morning texc dey end stetutory holidays) ef 145 Prince Street. Charlottetown PEL, by Thomson Newspapers ltd Brench offices af Summerside, Montague Alberton end Souris te Rezresented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empire TARBVL Montreal 649 Cathrart Street Uni versity 65942 Western OHire 1930 West Georgte Street Vancovver MA 7097 ” Member Canadian Davy Newspape’ Association and the Canadian Press The Conadian Pelee: entitled to the use for rep’ lication of thes perer ss or Re ters All dispatches here ect Son Pubishers hisively ell news dispatches in. credited to it or to the Aarociated Pre end aan tn the Inrat news © hliched here night or ren: blication af specie tn’ also reserved WAscription rate Not over 4% per week by. carr ral ro tes and areas er $12 e@ vear by mal on nm not servired by carrer erator gre ne» vear oft Ialand and 1 $20 GAM BOTs ' ts) British Corr yer’ a 6 and elsenhere ovrsioe _ Sor, morweetth Net over %e ange. cory Member Audit Burea ar Core lahan “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” 4 PAGE 4. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1968. On Guard In Germany When Queen Elizabeth vis! ts West, Germany in May, “the First Royal Canadian Infantry Regiment will honor the occasion by marching through the old Westphalian walled city of Soest with bayonets fixed and drums beating. This is an event of sufficient 1mportance to rate a three- column heading in the New York Times. which notes that Soest grant- ed the Canadians freedom of the city—permitting them to- marc h through in martial array—last year, and that no other army, German or foreign. has been thus honored. Canadians committed to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization shield in West Germany are small in num- ber—barely 12,000 officers and men _put they rank among the best. " About 6,500 belong to the Canadian Infantry Brigade and the rest to the six jet bomber squadrons of the Royal Canadian Air Force. A highly professional, combat-ready and well- armed force. they know just what they are there for—‘to provide the Supreme Allied Commander in Eur- ope with first ine forces in an emerg- ency.” as an air commander put it. The Canadian Infantry Brigade is dispersed over a 400-square-mile area just east of the Ruhr Valley. It is assigned to a British corps, which is in turn part of the North Army Group in the Central European Command of NATO’s land forces. The brigade is bilingual. Its 22nd Regiment, with volunteers from Quebec, receives all its orders in French, and its equip- ment and instructions are both Eng- lish and French. The regiment mans the brigade’s new ENTAC anti-tank missile, a weapon developed by the French. we The air force division is perhaps even more professional than the in- fantry brigade. The Starfighter pilots average 34 years of age and have flown an average of about 3,700 hours. The Times quotes an infantry of- ficer as saying that most Germans “don't know there are Canadian units here helping defend their coun- try.” He added, rather wistfully, ‘I’m not sure that even the people back home in Canada realize what we are doing.” Perhaps it’s time we | Our contribution to NATO‘ military strength in Europe’ fies / down- played in this country, for. some rea- son or other. We hear ‘far more about the activities of small groups of ex- tremists at home than we do about these men who are serving us 50 faithfully abroad, and who, incident- ally, are doing an excellent job as ambassadors of goodwill. — A Cancerous Growth The latest death in the tense vot- ing: rights situation in Alabama ‘uay spell the doom of the notorious Ku Kiax Klan. Four Klan members were sted in connection with this af- fair and President Johnson, in a nation-wide broadcast, denounced the organization as “a hooded society of oigots . ... who for decades have used the rope and the gun, the tar and the feathers, to terrorize their neigh- bors.” He has ordered the Justice De- partment to “begin drafting legisla- tion to bring the group “under ef fective control.” Considering the mood of the Ameérican nation at this : time, the measure will-likely. receive 4 a as an alibi for countless kidnappings, burnings. floggings and other acts of violence Originally the Klan was an out- growth of the tense feeling in the south during the reconstruction era after the Civil War [t was revived during World War | and attained perhaps its greatest strength in the 1920s. In late years it has operated not as a unified body but as a loose combination of |ocal autonomous groups -Always. however it has been associated with racial and religious intolerance Manv states have passed legis- lation revoking all Klan charters and the US. Department of Justice has . the organization's name on its versive:list for several vears In 1942 used againstuthe Klan‘ for the first ! 7 the federal Lindbergh law was, | fime. These measures tog@ther with | continuing adverse public sentiment, reduced membership in Klan groups except in isolated and backward areas of the south — : In denouncing the organization as he has done. President Johnston has indicated that he inténds to use the full weight of his office in bringing it to heel If he succeeds in wiping it out altogether. it will be an achieve- ment for which he may well take credit ‘ ~ Soviet Farm Plan “In Moscow the Soviet Central Committee was in plenary session for three davs last week. and has come out with an announcement of sweep-. , ing agricultural reforms which are of widespread interest. The program, providing for more investment in agriculture, higher farm prices, lower prices paid by peasants for consumer goods and lower rural taxes. is ex- pected to raise the farmers’ purchas- ing power and to help reduce the sharp differences in living standards between town and countryside. The farm program was the first major reform adopted by the new Soviet leadership since the reunifica- tion last November of the party structure. Former. Premier Khrush- chev, who was deposed last October. had divided the structure into urban and rural hierarchies. The reform represents a major shift by emphas- izing the economic levers of prices and costs rather than the use of farm techniques and cropping system dic- tated from above. Kirill T. Mazurov, 50, who was appointed First Deputy Speaker un- der Premier Kosygin and was made a- full member of the party's ruling Presidium, is thought to be slated for a key role in implementing the agri- cultural reforms, which will involve more than double the investment in agriculture in the five-year plan of 1966-70 as compared with that of the last five years. It's worth keeping this chap’s name in mind. If he suc- ceeds he'll be a hero to the Soviet peasants, long treated virtually as second-class citizens, and will have added power and prestige. If he fails —well, he can join Mr. Khrushchev in cozy retirement. EDITORIAL NOTES | Unfortunately, notes an exchange, the authorities seem better at keep- ing unwanted men like Prof. Sibley out of Canada ‘than at keeping want- ed ones, like Hal Banks and Lucien Rivard, in. 6 ° * *° According to a writer in the New York Times, a car is basically a bundle of feminine characteristics. “it is expensive to maintain . . . Its exterior requires periodic applica- tions of surface wax... It is always | losing things .. . It responds to ‘ care... It cannot be parked just anywhere—at least not in. . most cities —and left abandoned for hours without getting a man into trouble.” s s * Canada’s feed industry is expand- ing rapidly each year and production is now valued at about $300 million, compared with about $16 million twenty years ago, according to an article in ‘‘Foreign Trade”. magazine. There were some 1,000 firms manu- facturing feeds in about 1,400 mod- ern processing plants, and an interest- ing development has been the increas- ed production of complete feeds. ’ * * * Canddian visitors received an ac- colade in Hollywood this month, where ‘the ocean beach--community ;, staged a Canada Week. Banners tered across main thoroughfares bear’ ing messages of weltome. A large parade was organized featuring floais and , ts ‘ = of. welcome. Service clubs’ held ial programs dedicated to Canada. A warm, friendly gesture indeed. flut- ~ tion since 1948, slipped ad me OTTAWA REPORT By: Controversial Auto. Pact Stirs “$0 many MPs..are seriously concerned about the destruction of jobs in their constituencies, as the result of the Canada - USA automobile free trade az- reement. that time should be made in Parliament for a tho- rough review of this controver- sia) pact Amonz those who fear that their constituents may lose johs are Alf Hales of Guelph. Heber Smith of Barre. Wally Nesbitt of Woodstock. Marvin Howe of Arthur, Monte Monteith of Strat- ford and Mike Starr of Oshawa This very peculiar internat- ional trade treaty was signed in Te.as on 16th January by Prime Minister Pearson and Foreign Minister Pau! Martin on behalf of Canada. and by President Johnson and State Secretary Dean Rusk on behalf of USA. It was announced as ATale Of Two Cities A correspondent writing in the Montreal newspaper, Le De- voir, has suggested that the fed- eral Government provide assis- tance to Hull and the city be re- named Ottawa. Que’. as the oth- er half of a truly bilingual capi- tal This is an intriguing idea It was put forward not as an-alter- native to a federal district: not at all. in fact. in the context of municipal problems but of the civil service 5 The author, Egide Dande- nault noted that -6ften French- Canadians are accused of not being interested in working for the federal Government. This. he said, is not true, but while many would be interested wm this work, they do not want to leave the province of Quebec to live in Ottawa. For a Quebecker, says Mr Dandenau!t. this city is an un- friendly place with a puritan outiook on life. If he is a mar- ried man, it involves moving his family into a different social milieu, with the problems of a one example. orld’s Leadin National ung Thanks to the tiny anchoveta, | Peruvians are now the world's leading fishermen Of the record 46.6 million tons of fish caught around the world last year, Peru hauled in 6,901,- 300 tons Japan, top fishing na- to sec- ond place. followed by Comnun- ist China, the Soviet Union, and~ the United States. Peru is a comparative new- comer to the world fishing scene. Twenty years ago. Peru- vian villagers barely caught enough to feed themselves In 1950, however, several en- terprising Peruvians started seining the water for anchovet- as, the threeto six-inch- long member of the anchovy family. Some of the silvery fish were processed as tasty hors d oeuv- res, but most were ground {nto _ ahigh-protein poul- try and livestock feed. Today, fishing and fish meal tion is Peru's biggest sin- gle industry. More than a hun- processing plants grind up the catch of some thousand fish- _ A fishing bost cap- t i often makes $800 a month. phenomenal growth of the industry owes much to ters are home to an estimated travels Current. Those wa- | TIGHTROPE TWINS Patrick Nicholson: taking effect in Canada two days later, by Order in Council, namely by Cabinet decision. . In USA, in contrast. its implemen- tation would be sought by Con- gress during the 1965 session How democratic can we zet, when Washington very properly opens the proposal for approv- al by the legislature befote it goes into effect, whereas - the Canadian Parliament is snub- bed. insulted and ignored by 4 Cabinet which does net even permit our elected burgesses '0 debate the treaty before it goes into effect here? - MIKE’S NORMAL MANNER? When asked about this ‘‘one- sided’’ agreement, Prime Mins- ter Pearson confirmed that, be- fore it goes into effect in USA, “It has to be approved by Con- gress, but as yet is has not been considered by Congress.” And Citizen Therefore the prospect Mr Dandenault puts it. of expatriation.” The easiest alternative would be to live in Hull which is in Quebec and where there is the same social and cultural atmos- phere as in the rest of the; prov ince. But it still suffers fr an unfortunate reputation for speakeasies and red light dis- tricts gained 30 or 40 years azo With these as the choices.“ the prospective civil servant looks to the provincial rather than the federal Government is, as a kind ae The author, who lives in Hull © but is not a civil servant, believ- es the Government has some re- sponsibility for making sure that its employes and their families can live in congenial surround- ings. If it wishes to attract more and to make the public service more bilingual. it should help his city to overcome its munici- pal problems. This is an interesting argu~ ment. A change in name would not necessarily improve a repu- tation— ‘‘a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” This is something we should not forget on this side of the river. Fishermen Society “Everything in Callao speaks of fishing.”” writes Kenneth F. Weaver in the National Geogra- phic. “Boats by the score are /under construction— in shi p- yards, in empty lots, in the streets. In the harbor, swarms of bolicheras, or fishing boats, ride at anchor, packed like cars in a parking lot. Seamen load | nets 1,500 feet long that can haul in fish 100 tons at a time.” Once netted, anchovetas £0 swiftly to the fish-meal plants Giant hoses reach into the ships’ holds and suck a stream of fish | into factory-bound trucks. A factory conveyor belt carries | the anchovetas to a cooker. a press extracts the oi] used in paints, imks. and drugs Finally ' a rotating oven and grinder dries | and pulverizes the fish | mountains of light gray meal. - Consumers of fish meal may soon include people as well as | livestock. Peruvian nutrition ex- |perts already have successfully | satistituted the high- protein | product for milk in the diets of | undernourished children. Like | vitamins, fish meal may wel! | rey breakfast cereals of the Peru's booming fishery’ has ‘food supply of an estimated 30 million guano birds— cormor- ants and boobies— whose min- | . It is estimated that the guano birds require at least four million nually. into! gates fertilizer to Peru's farm. | tons of anchovetas - 4 Protests he added: ‘Jt 1s our understan- ding that we proceeded in a per- fectly normal manner by the procedure we adopted " To date no MP has protested about the imporpriety of this “perfectly normal manner.” But I repeat my belie! that the Cabinet has acted in a high- handed. arrogant and undemocr- ‘atic manner in not seeking. as President Johnson will seek, legislative approval for the plan before it is put into effect. = At the very least. time should have been made available for a discussion in: the House of Commons, so that anxious MPs could have the opportunity of putting forward their*doubts, and hearing whether answers by the relevant Cabinet Ministers can set their minds at ease WHO WILL LOSE JOBS? Evidence is already piling up to show that rhany small plants in Canada which have been ma- | nufacturing component parts for the big auto assembly lines will be forced out of business. as a result of this pact Alf Hales has suggested that the elimination of the tariff means in effect that the average Canadian family will now sub- sidise the big US auto compan- les to the tune of $10 per year in taxes. He explains the possib- le destruction of our parts in- dustries by suggesting that in future the manufacturers will be able to achieve their Cana- dian content requirements by as- sembly operation only “Why did Canada sign a treaty?” he asks President such No wonder Johnson wined and dined Mike and Paul down on the farm in Texas!" , At stake is Canada’s fair share of the North American au- | tomobile market. At present Ca- nada consumes 7.5 per cent of } total North American production of cars, but is only permitted ‘o manufacture 4 per cent. That is why we have a disastrous trade deficit in the auto business with US: in the last full year report- ed. we bought autos and parts from the States worth $605.3 mil- lion, and they bought from us autos and parts worth only 835.9 million. Dad was always telling a@ newspaper route. How he learned - - - So---- I dropped in to see the —— Feeding ‘ Machine . By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen The current !ow carbohydrate reducing fad is a reminder that most people .select spring and fall to lose those five to eight pounds gained dyring the inter- val. These people have a weight problem but make a definite point to remain slim by dieting twice a year. The cue usually comes when they change from winter to summe: clothing (or vice versa) and the apparel is a | bit too tight This problem is insignificant | compared with the difficulty | that ‘the grassly obese have in losing weight. Many have psy- chological problems that add to the task. According to the Med- | ical Tribune, a feeding machine | York City was successful | food dispensing system was | tried on five obese and six of * continue at St. Luke's hospital in New in cutting the food intake of these people This _ electronically-monitored normal weight The user holds the end of a tube in the mouth and pushes a button that deliv- ers a calclMted amount of for- mula food There is no limit- ation on how often they can use the machine. A recording device in another room registers the amount and ti me of each feed- tnz It was a surprise to find. that the obese consumed much less than normat: individuals and lost weizht Normal persons ad- hered to a three-meal-a- day pattern. their weight remained stationary Weizht loss without hunger ts more likely teoccur when the individual fasts than when eat- ing a low-calorie diet Prolong- Starvation fmore than %6 hours: produces virtually no hunger and is: well tolerated. Weight loss occurs and the ma- jority are enthusiastic and de- lighted to attain their goal The plan appears td be safe until ex- amined more thoroughly When | carbohydrate stores are used up, | the body begins to burn stored fats and muscle protein for en- ergy Many develop anemia, a sudden drop in blood pressure on Standing, and gout. The con- census. There is no harm {n fasting for a day or two at inter- vals but not for months at a time BLEEDING T RS. writes: Can ulcers bleeding indefinitely without increased harm Can anything be done to stop the bleedinz? ULCERS REPLY. No one can continue to bleed without developing anemia and | going into shock. Most peptic | ulcers stop bleeding and heal when treated with diet and an- tacids Surgery is needed when bleeding continues or tends to recur from time to time. STONE IN DUCT =& J. 7 writes. Must a gallstone lodged in the bile duct be remov- ed by surgery? I thought there - might be a way of crushing it. 3° REPLY - Yes It is not possible to crush a stone that is stuck in a‘sm@il tube deep in the abdomen on! In addition, the soft tube more likely to be crushed than the stone. Many of these gal stones pass through the duct without interference STRIAF D L writes: Can anvthing be done to prevent stretch Marks on the skin” REPLY No Striae occur after prez- nancy, and marked loss of weight. They also occur in those suffering from certain glandu- lar disorders. PEPPER CAN IRRITATE Mrs M.D. writes Can using | pepper aggravate the stomach or digestive organs” REPLY Yes. provided the digestive , organs are irritated or congest- | ed ‘ TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— | Age is no barrier to health | (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellien should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) HEY FELLOWS - - - I've Got A Job! | | HAVE MY OWN NEWSPAPER BUSINESS HERE’S HOW | GOT IT - - - me about when he was a boy and had x To make and save money, To sell and keep records, To work with people and fellow earriers Carrier Supervisor at the Guardian and Evening Patriot office and found I had the same oppor- tunity as Dad. Now I have a route near home and find the Carriers are a swell banch of fellows, all anxious to succeed in thir first business venture. . The Carrier Supervisor has some new routes opening ap and needs more boys. Come on in and see him. Join the team and . enjoy-the fun of having your own business. Apply Now! CIRCULATION DEPT. THE GUARDIAN - TH ) | tend to bore ‘and +f ME out opening the abdominal Ne Charlottetown Branch of the 1- E EVENING PATRIOT | oe | e | NOTES BY THE WAY. - Note this from a Montreal educationist Eventually chil- dren with above- average inte!- lect will stay at home with their mothers rather than attend kin- dergarten classes, which might them." This fe- verses the practice of packing the moppets off to kindergarten so that the parents will not be bored —Financia! Post Soviet-Chinese Dispute By Boris ‘ The Canada Pension Plar + having itsStr es. It ma ° pensioned off hefore it see e haht of day Hamilton Specta tor A jurist says it is deplorabe that so few women take up law. What is far more deplorab'e though. is that so many women frequently lay down the law Ottawa Journa! Miskew Canadian Press Staff Writer The Soviet - Chinese dispute , pledged support could possibly cast a distorting shadow on the somewhat rosy picture painted by a top Ameri- can official of the South \iet- | namese boiling pot The optimistic interpretation of the war in Viet Nam was made by Gen. Maxwell! Taylor U.S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, when he returned to the United States to report to Presi- dent Johnson on how things are going in that Southeast Asian country ( Taylor thiks that “things are turning for the better” for the Americans in Viet Nam and cited such argumtnts as a more stable political situation. the campaign against the Commu- nist Viet Cong and recent air raids against North Viet Nam to make his point ‘ His: optimism w@s) expressed however. amidst reperts of pos sible Soviet intervention in Viet Nam and that Soviet arm ship ments to North Viet Nam are being obstructed by China. for some time engaged in verbal! arguments with the Soxet Un jon REFUSED PERMISSION The reports, from usually well - informed though uncon- firmed sources, said the Cht nese have refused to grant per- mission for the Soviet arms shipments across China to Ha- nor. the North Vietnamese cap ital The Chinese have the Russians for being lenient with the United enucized far too “States and have persisted relentiessiy’ in trving to gain the support of the smaller Communist nations the underdevdloped coun- tries of Africa and Asia China's action apparently 1s driving the Russians toward some kind of an involvement in the Vietnamese war ai- though both China and the So- viet Union have in the past /Russian penpie of North Viet Nam in case of American at- tack The Soviet Union in) recent... vears has followed a policy of co-extstence with the West to enable her to provide better living standards and thus set an exanyple to other nations in the face of Communist-capital- ist competition ° This pohey has damaged to viel prestize in the eves of some Cammunist nations who have turned their svmpathy towards China Ary involvemént by Rus sia in the Vietnamese dispute would therefore make her less vulnerable China's attac\s and place ber in a_ position win back some = zround China ANNOYED BY HANOI! But now that China appes:s to have a’most succeeded in in volving the Soviet Union in Viet Nam he seems intetested frustratinz the Russians The Chinese apparent, annoved bv the North Vietna mese support of Moscow in the ideological tuz-of war hetween the Soviet and Chinese camps However ai this) does not mean that the Americans wil be given a free hand in South- east) Asia~ even though thev have succeeced in making stabs into North \iet Nam without American air attacks on the Porth’ so far have served maifily. § as propaganda ving! = the support of * the Vietna- mese But should the war take on much wider honzons, if 18 doubtful that: the-Russian- Chi. nese dispute would stand in the way of full-sca'e assistance to North Viet Nam Oniy last week Chinese Pre- mier ‘Chou En-!ai Was quoted as saving that the Chinese and “will -etnse~ of wider fo !o lost to in were to Sout ranks” the event eanfliet n Hymnolog y Changes Milwaukee Journal In England Arthur Pollard is advising publishérs of an Anqii- can hymn book and is himself Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 31, 1946) Lueut. Commander JJ Con- nolly was the guest speaker at the regular monthly meeting of Canadian Legion. N.W. Lowther occupied the chair. Eugene Kelly was elected president of the Benevolent Ir- ish Society at the annual meet- ing. The retiring president. J.M Malone. occupied the chair Oth- er officers elected were Ed- ward Smith, patron: 1.0. Kelly, chief marshal: Joseph Costello and W.W. McCarron. assistant marshals; Patrick Doyle, vice- president. ’ TEN YEARS AGO (March 31, 1955) The new Shaw Savil liner Sou thern Cross left Southampton for her round- the-world maiden voyage. The 20,000- ton liner has 1,169 passengers in single- class accommodation, including 350 emigrants bound for new homes in New Zealand Tt is expected that Captain Caldwell, CD, RCN, will carry out the annual inspection of the naval establishment at HMCA Queen Charipttetown on April 13th , 4 ————— « % ¢ ~~ getting advice from a | sides on what he is Jeavinz out and put- ung in Amonz the standards that Pol- lard is omittinc are Lead Kindty Light Nearer My: God to Thee.’_ and © From. Green- land's Icv Mountains’ In the process he 's giving those inter- ested an education in hymnol- og. For example, ' Lead. Kind- ly Laght’ wasnt written as a hymn at al]. but as a poem Not that that should make any difference in judzing whether to include jt Thousands of hymns were written between 1500 and the mid-1800 s and many a poem has turned out as a hymna Over the vears collectors have altered. patched. changed. dis- terted- and sometimes improved hymns of others to fit their own doctrine or taste The Greeks wrote hymns—the word itself is Greek for a song or poem honoring the gods or great men The ancient Chinese wrote them, too. One of the most prolific writers of hymns was Charles Wesley He is credited with some 7.000— and, the Guardian of Manchester points out, 790 of those turned up [fA the Methodist Hymn Book of 1780 The world isn't as hymn mind- ed as it once was. And surely no Wesley nas appeared in our time with anything like his rate of production. Perhaps two thinzs account for it Most peo- ple who like hymns like the old ones. And the prolific writers to- day have turned to rock 'n' roll and to the creation of that con- tradiction, the new folk song. a