. 1 gr, 4 o" , “l ‘ 112 H oars ism (‘nrrs Prince Edward lsland Like the Dew "‘rnl shut every week-day morning at 163 Prince Stree‘ -hmntlctonn P.E.i.. by 'mommn Newspapers Lid. in A. Burnett, Publisher and General Manager Frank Walker. Editor ‘ Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association Member of The Canadian Press Mcmbcr Audit Bureau of Circulation- Brrml olliccs at summerside. Montague and Alberton Replesented Nationl'ly by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Service a King Street West Toronto. 640 Cathclrt St.. Montreal 1030 West Georgia St... Vancouver Hy Carrier Charlottetown. Snmmerside 3Cc per week By Mm elsewhere in P.E.l. $9.00 oer annum. Other Pru'rinces and United States 312.00 per annum “like strongest memory is weakerihnn :..e weakest ink." THURSDAY. NOV. 13. 1958. Out. PAGE 4 Salaries And Supplements 2 Among the topics discussed at the recent provincial conference on education was the need for “greater increments for years of service and greater differential for higher qua]: ilica-tions”. Put a little more simply, this means that teachers should be rewarded for experience and for im- proving their qualifications. With this we are in complete agreement. We do feel, however, that it is just as important to reward out- standing ability. This is being done today in many sections of «Canada and the United States. It is well to keep in mind that high qualification is not necessarily an index to outstanding ability. In teaching as in all other professions ability varies among persons who ' possess similar academic and pro- 'fcssional attainments. A first-class teacher who has good success with 'his pupils and who satisfies his supervisor in administrative mat- ters' is obviously worth more than another first-class teacher who does his work haphazardly and has little to show for it at the end of the year. This is only a matter of common fairness. [As long as a “first class” label means the same thing to the mediocre as to the competent, there is bound to be dis- satisfaction in the teachers’ ranks. Another thing that needs to be corrected is the practice of school districts paying, varying “supple- ments”. It is not fair that a compet- ent teacher in' one district should receive a bigger supplement than an equally competent one in another . district, simply because one district has more money at its disposal than the other. There should be some way toequalize thesa paymgngfis‘ things are now, the poorer districts are always at o. disadvantage in engaging teachers. No Immunity In British Columbia :1 member of the Social Credit government violat- ed his public trust. 011 Dec. 7, 1955, a member of the Vancouver bar ap- proached the attOrney-general with documents impugning the honesty of the minister of lands and forestsin awarding forest management licences to certain companies. The government refused to investigate. In 1956 the Opposition called for a Royal Com- ' mission of investigation. The lawyer w h o visited the attorney-general found himself faced with a slander suit instituted by the forestry minis. ter. The government tried to claim it was all a “smear campaign.” In the passage of time the slander suit was thrown out of court and the gov- ernment was forced to prosecute. Last week the convictions were registered and the penalties imposed- The moral, comments an exchange, is clear. An elected or appointed public Servant who violates his public _ trust will always live under the threat of exposure and punishment. It may take time for the offence to reach the courts, but there is no ultimate immunity. His political friends can- not save him. Public service is a very straight and narrow path, along which will be found many watchers to insure that those treading the path make no misstep. French Republics Writing to the Milwaukee Jour- nal, a schoolboy wanted .to know why the French government re- presents the Fifth Republic. What happened to the other four? Why, if France had a First Republic, was it necessary to have four more? Here are the Journal’s answers: During the French revolution the parliament, which was known as the convention, got rid of royalty in September of 1792. On Sept. 22 of that year it ordered that its acts be dated “the first year of the re- public.” So began the First Repub- Iic. Napoleon Bonaparte was elected emperor in 1804 and got rid of the republic. In 1848 there was another revolution which set up the Second chuhllc. Late in 1851 Louis Na- aparte, president of the Second Re- public, madc himself emperor and got rid of the trappings of the re- public. Thc Franco-Prussian war ended this Napoleon’s empire and the provisional assembly in 1870 set up the Third Republic, which got full legal status in a new constitution adopted in 1875. This went the way of the others when Nazi Germany invaded France in World War II. Liberation at the end of the war saw the birth of the Fourth Repub- Iic. It had political difficulties that\ contrasted sharply with the coun- try's economic boom. In 13 years France had 25 governments, hardly a sign of stability. When the Fourth Republic went the way of the others is a matter for debate. Officially‘the republic died and the Fifth Republic was born With the adoption of the new constitution advocated by Gen. de Gaule on Oct. 5 of this year. But the death blow actually came with the revolt by army leaders' in Al-' geria last May—a revolt which stripped the government of power and projected de Gaulle into posi- tion of leadership. So, the history of the five re- publics. And, if it continues to show the healthy life and strength with which de Gaulle has imbued it, long life and the Fifth Republic! EDITORIAL NOTES In the last, two years the Ford Foundation has given $260 million to American private universities and colleges, the income to be uSed for the purpose of raising salaries of teachers. as s s It is strange that, while industry in general is supposed to be in a state of insecurity, thereV are more strikes and threatened strikes than at any time for the past several years. . U Q i The following from the New York Times might be read profitably by Canadian politicians: “One interest- ing feature about the (election) cams paign was reversion to old-fashioned stumping of the countryside. Despite ‘ all'the forecasts of. recent years that television would be the almost ex:- . elusive platform of the future to the exclusion of barnstorming, this was _ Very much a handshakin campaign.” ,. . 33x3}! \,. I v President Nasser of the United ' Arab Republic is on the Verbal ram~ page again. Night after‘ night, the Cairo Radio, Which he controls. blarcs forth such admonitions as “Arabs unite!” “Out with the Im- perialists!” This time, however, at least some of the Arab leaders seem to believe that “Arab unity” is much - moreisecurc without Nasser as Ieae der than with him. . O I O No one can say that Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker is “playing favour- ities" from an ecclesiastical stand- point. He talked with His‘Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury in Eng- land, worshipped in a Baptist Church in West Germany and had an audi- ence with His Holiness the Pope in , Rome. Later, as ‘his journey con- tinues, he will probably talk with Hindu and Moslem leaders. ’Ik I! 1‘ At the annual meeting of the World Travel Association recently held in New “York, Senator Jacob K. Javits, a Republican, stated that “interns? tional travel is a vital element in the » foreign policy of the United States”. He should have consulted Secretary of State Dulles before making such a sweeping statement. Mainland Chi~ no. is “out of bounds” to Americans. No passports are issued for travel to that country for any reason, by orders of the State Department. Six =Il¢ i A tip to educators: “When I hear of our American dolusiop of ‘producing’ creativity by expensive outer equipment instead of unbuy- able inner equipment, I remember my first meeting \with Albert Elna stein, strolling along Riverside Drive, absentmindedly scribbling notes on the back of an old torn envelope. From a scrawl on a penny’s-worth of scrap paper, by a man whose‘ inner genius was not ‘adjusted’ away at age 6, and not from teams endowed by foundations with electric typewriters and filing systems, came the greatest scienti- fic discoveries of the century. Let us educators not be intimidated by the practical folks, the so-called realists and experts. Let us not be afraid to listen to the so-called im- practical pcople, thc so-callcd un- realistic peoplc.”——Petcr Viereck in “The Unadjusth Man” (Saturday Deleon, a nephew of Napoleon Bon- l Reyjewy ~.v.ative M.P. from Sprlv’ba. OTTAWA H REPORT TheIVisionch NorthIcmcI By Patrick Nicholson Mr. J.w. Murphy. the Conser- has long been Parliament’s chief - and sometimes, only - advocate that we should devote more mon- ey and brains to scientific and in- dustrial research in Ganada. The long lead in field recently disclosed by the Russians serves to prove how right Mr. Murphy was. As chairman of the important House of Commons committee ’on' Mines, Forests and Waters, Mr. Murphy last season directed. its enquiries largely, towards the steps being taken to implement Prime Minister Diefenbakor’s “Vision” of Northern develop- ment. Through Mr. Murphy’s own vision and efforts, that became the most interesting. aluminuth not the most headlined, commit- tee of Parliament. When Parliamth adjourned. “Morph” flow off on a long trip- deep into that visioned nortlhland. Shortly after, the Prime Minister himself arrived at Whitehorse and Dawson Oily, and was able to learn of the, impression created anwug Yukoners by (the well-in- formed observations and intelli- gent question-s underlying Mur- ph’s great belief in the fulfilment of the Vision of development of the immense riches in their land. TELL YOUR. CHILDREN Now Morph is back, relating to dwellers in southern On‘larrio’s banana belt the certainty of flhe fortunes winch will be made in our fontuna-Le northland. As the guest speaker at many service clubs, he has described how he travelled “from Santa to the Atlantic Ocean", chiefly to see “the routes of some of the roads the Government plans to build in the northern territories." The world's greatest sesaoh for oil and gas, in terms of the area involved, is right now underway .in the Yukon and the Mackenzie District of the Northwest Terri- tories, he told his audiences. That area covers more than seventy million acres. equivalent to half the entire province of Alberta. Many Canadians are losing. or fearing the loss of, their jobs, be cause of our enormous degree of dependence upon the'ecoaOmy got the United States. In this present on of economic uncertainty, the brightest ray of hope on our host» zon is the promise of greater in- dependence for Canada. and more jobs at home for Canadians, through the development of our northern riches. ' , Muruh explains this forcefully in these words: , ’ , “One of the most heartening things in the last few years in Canada has been the growing re- alization by _C’a-n»adflan.s every- where of the importance of the tremendous area that lies 11min: of all our provinces. For some Khrushchev’s By Joseph New Gambit MacSween Canadian Press Staff Writer Premier Nikita Khrushchev has cunningly invoked the fear of re- surgent German militarism in his new statement about Berlin.lhint- ing at a new Berlin blockade. Just what Khrushchev hopes to accomplish is not yet clear; prob- any he has a number of things in mind. It isn't likely he really expects the United States, Brit- ain and France to follow his sug- gestion and get out of Berlin quietly. Sevcral aims could be served by his ominous recollections of Hitler. his references to burgeon- ing West German industrializa- tion and his charge that in West Ger-many “militarism raises its head higher and higher.” SYMBOLIC CITY. Soviet - dominated East Ger. many, of course, is- pictured as dedicated to innocent . peaceful pursuits under the protection of the Warsaw Pact and occupation by Russian troops. Thus. says Khrushchev, East G e r m a n y should be left alone in adminis- tration of its capital, Berlin. Berlin's existence as a divided . enclave 100 miles inside East Germany results from the break- down of the Grand Alliance after“ the Second World War. The Pois- for joint administration of the German capital by Russia, the U.S., Britain and France, but it laid .lown no provisions for free Western access to the city through the surrounding Soviet zone. Berlin became a symbol of East-West enmity in the cold war. The West showed its determina- tion to maintain-links with Berlin by its (gigantic airlift in the face of a Russian-imposed blockade 10 years ago. SOWING DOUBTS One interpretation of Khrush- chev‘s move is that through the threat of a new blockade he hopes to force Western recognition of East Germany. It could just as well be that Khrushchev merely a i m s to keep Europe-4nd the world—on edge by sowing doubts and fears about West Germany's ambitions, particularly in View of its in- creasing imlpcrtanre to NATO. It's significant that he raised the question in a speech before a delegation from Poland, whose fears of Germany. are easily aroused and with good historical r e a s o n. Khrushchev obviously would enjoy the role of posing as a protector of Eastern Europe dam Agreement of 1945 provided. against a new Genman threat. . Apartheid Condemned Montreal Star Canada has joined with the ma- jority in the special U.N. poli- tical committee in calling on South Africa to abide by the hu- man nights and fundamental free- doms provisions of the Charter. It has done so. however. more to ’sor-row then in anger. The pre- sentation cf the Canadian dele- gation is little more than a mild official condemnation of sin. Can- adian public feeling about apar- theid policies could be exores- sad in much stronger terms of condemnation than the Canadian delegation was permitted to use. We pull our punches with re- spect to South Africa bccause it is a member of the Commonwealth. This is perhaps a good reason for expressing our disapproval of apartheid policies in the mild terms which W.J. Browne, MP. used the other day. but it should be made known to tho South Af"i:an government that this milducss. if it re’lccls govern— ment SOIICIIUCIC for South African feelings, does not-represent pub- lic attitudes. The issue, for the robe, is one of right and wrong. It is a moral issue on which we are entitled to feel moral irtfignabion. South Al; ricia’s view is that its apartheid! policies are no business of theI United Nations or anyone else: it is a purely domestic issue and not something for consideration by the international community. This view might hold water if the Charter, to which South Af- rica formally subscribes, did not “reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and wo- mcn. . ."A policy of apartheid which discriminates against mil- lions of persons on grounds of color. and discriminates cruelly, is a clear violation of the Char- ter. United Nations is right to condemn if. It is a pity that the ccndem-naficn is not couched in srrnger terms but is merely a ninety years the achievement or the task of Confederation in link- ing the east and west of Canada has occupied all our efforts and energies - occupied them so much that we tended to forget that we were only living and working in a tiny portion of this vast coun, try}, . EMPTY LIVING ROOM “Canadians did not become fully aware of their inheritance," continues Mr. Murphy, “until the present Prime Minister of Can- ada, the Right Honourable John Dlefenbaker, drew their mention to the vastness that lay still un- developed - and to the great wealth that it, undoubtedly holds. Thistnew realization - and the (hoipeS‘and aspirations that are art- .“The Vision". The area which Munch is talk-- ing about comprises not only the Yukon and the N.W.T., but also the huge empty northern area of all our provinces except the first three Maritimes. This adds up to the enormous acerage of seven— tenhiis of Canada's land area. tached to it - has been called. Common Sense Feeding Rules By Herman N. Bundescn, M.D. BABIES thrive better when they are fed regularly. We know that. but doctors generally still don‘t recommend that infants be fcd at too rigidly scheduled in- tcrvals. Your little tot knows when he is hungry. And he will let you know. too. But, again. this does not mean that he should be fed whenever he demands it. Since doctors, as a rule, are against too rigid scheduled feed— ing and demand feeding, what do they as a rule recommend? USE COMMON SENSE That's simple. All I suggest is a little common sense in this matter of feeding the baby. Let the baby develop a feeding rhy- thm of his own! ‘ I believe that it is cruel and inhuman to force a hungry baby to wait half an hour or even an hour for its food simply because his "feeding schedule" says it isn’t time for him to oat. By the same taken. you can’t feed a baby every time he be gins to wall. Even a baby will recognize the fact that he has you dominated if you meet his We)? d'smrnd immediately. UNCONTROLLABLE CHILD If this continues, it won’t be long before you have an uncon- trollable child on your hands. No, I think you should let the baby develop his own "sched- ule,” so to speak. Now this can be pretty rough on you parents during the first weeks ‘or 50. Your tot may have to be fed 10 or 12 times a day be- cause his stoma-ch use small that it can’t hold much milk, However. as he grows older, his feeding rhythm will become better regulated. By the time he is one month old. he probably will go for three or even longer between feedings While some infants continue this rhyih for some time, others graduate to "MEWS every flour hours by the time they no two to three mon- ths old. 0’“ most concern to you pay. 9M5. probably. is that middle-cl. the-flight feeding. 0n the over-age a baby begins I’D, sleep through the night When he is about one to two months old. This. I know, 15 good news to thosa of you who are primarily being summoned for that 2 am. feeding by mm- gry» walls. 0‘58 more thing':if your baby dosen’t wake for his nighttime feeding. don’t bother walking hi«myunless, of course, your doc- tor advises it. QUESTION AND ANSWER J.D,A.: What is vertigo? I have had that whirlingapcond feeling for a number of years. AnsWer: Vertigo means diz- Ill-5‘35. This condition may result form a number of conditions, as, for example, disease of the middle ‘ charge of Earl. Inns and. Irvine ear, heart or kidney disease, eye' a scrap firmf has ged one ton of opium rom fiiivaGerman submarine U843; sunk oil the Norwegian was thirteen years ago. The find has been reported to the World Health Organization—News of Norway Czechoslovakia has won the competition for the best pavilion at the Brusse-l's World Fair-fan indication that smaller nations can hold their own with the Big Powers in culture and design.— Ottaiwa Journal OUR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Nov. ma) mum,” Temper: (in. on a of occasions as various questions were discussed at the monthly meeting of the City Council last evening. During the discussion 0! the financing of the unomplcyv mcnt reliel. a of a resolution to extend he or red pavement from the Senatorium to the Spring Park Road, heated ma. ments arose. and at times con— tusion threatened. 'Herds of prize cattle of Inn and Son. and of‘Mr. J. Walter Jones leave this rooming for the Royal Winter Fair. The herd ol- lngs and 8m consist, so! eleven head a! Aysliires and are in A Norwegia Mchee. Mr. ,Jones' herd of r l c r of Holsteins Will bi. n gown“ Victor Coulson and C lacheur. TEN- YEARS AGO (Nov. 13. 1948) One of the most modern frost- A Nanalmo mother has formed by Victoria doctor. ‘ her 14-year-old son will not-' the sight of one eye Law a pellet from a BB 31m: hopes. she says. that they iety, pain and trouble ca “ i the indury will induce 0th. on“ to see that their chil - not risk similar accidents ll supervin play With Bubs. warning is needed. It M_ taken to heart by all whose children possess __j let—Victoria Times roof potch warehouses he built in the Mariam" h r nder construction on an 1slide of Hillsboro an > when completed Will hold . , 70 and 80 cars of .. is being built by 11,. 7M. Potato COW" ~ burn Buell 0‘ be the resident mam. Members of the Boy! Ind Club left yesterday to in National Judirlnl at the Royal Winter Toronto. They were Wright and John Parker, 3&— Cnll Club, and France! and Shirley Grin o! the Devon Sewing Club.‘ The were scco filed by “End”! ial Doberman q a . Miss ' . Womb ‘tuto Office. - ‘ ‘:,-’ w :r‘ Wright. Prov Agriculture. and Boswell. of the The Age Old Slow A new heart also will I ‘5'. you, and a new spirit will 1.. within you. " ' IF YOUR GUARDIAN ~ IS LATE... OR MISSED, missed. , ED‘S 173 Great Goorge_St. DIAL 6561 and a nor will be delivered ri ht- to your door. ‘ Specia. silvery service avails. In between 8:91 _ :1, am. to 9:00 am. if your paper IS late —- or . , For an sarcoma in Town, ow DIAL 6561 :—1 TAXI Charlottetown NOTES BY THE WAY fly. harlottebyfi'» I" ' a This is larger than all but W a dmmem , Ed's Slogan: "To maintain the of .those whom we dozen countries. in the would, yet . It is' advisable that you hav ‘ Serve fume :19" [91' mm! .ay; . it is the home of merely one per a physical examination made to .. ' ‘ ' ' ' cent‘ of our population. determine the true nature of your __ ‘— COUNTRY STYLE COUNTRY STYLE COUNTRY STYLE COUNTRY STYLE FRESH \ LOIN PORK“ CHOPS FRESH OR CORNED PORK HOOKS GRADE "A" FRESH ROASTING Fill" HOULDER ROASTSLB. 35 49° PORK HAM STEAKS ~ BAcoN LB. I LB. 29° 55" N 49° 23° Fresh Ground HAMBURG 39° Barbecued CHICKEN 1.49 to 2.50 call to repentance. ' LB. , Chicken GIBLETS Sweet, Juicy Fresh Emperor I for Stew GRAPEFRUIT GRAPES n27= 2 c. F.0DLAD 180 QUEEN STREET FREE DELIVERY DIAL 48II DIAL 48Il 35= CARROTS ‘ 2 re 17‘ Davis & Fraser’s Sausage lb. 59: —% «.. EEEEEEEEE arr-Ens;crisscross u. “or my .. s~ Fresh Island ‘ ' WI mei- rand Lieu“ ‘ will!“ .