The Guardian | * Covers Prince Edward Islénd Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wellace Ward ; Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published evéry week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, 1 Charléttetown; P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices a1 Summerside, Montague, ahd Souris. Re Represented nationally by Thomson Diiicanse ‘ Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University, Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montres! 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publi shers Association and The Canadien Press. -The Canadian Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news published herein. All tight or republication of special dispatches here- tn also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. ’ $12.00 @ year by mail on.rural routes and areas net serviced by carrier. $15.00 @ year off island and UK. $20.00 per - year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Brifish Com- monwealth. Not over 7e single copy. .-: Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1966. Passed In Jig-Time - Payments under the Canada Pen- sion Plan will not begin unti] next January, but as most of our citizens are aware, contributions to the plan began last January on a graduated scale, and the revenue department claims it had the toughest assignment in its experience in gearing itself for collection duties. The federal: gov- | , references to its victim as Alber ton | | | man denounced the minister's causeway pledge as “‘prob- | ment.” Now, inconsistently, he taunts | | | . ernment began bombing households | with became law. last May, . revenue assessors carried the- mes- gage to. the hundreds of thousands of employees in Canada. Pamphlets were issued and full-page newspaper advertisements .were carried from coast to coast—an operation coincid- ing, by a strange coincidence, with the federal election campaign of last November. This publicity cost the health ‘department -about-$2;000;000;-most-of it coming from the: pension fund as part of administration costs. In: addi- tion the revenue department sent out two booklets to all employers, and ~ hired 200 assessors to follow up with personal calls. Under the plan, 2.6 ___ per cent of all income between $600 and $5,000 from employed persons 18 and over is collected, half being paid by employers, half by employers. Self-employed persons are paying the full contribution themselves. s _ The carrot on the stick which Ot- tawa used to bring the provinces into line was the funds which would be built up under the scheme and which they would be able to borrow on ; more moderate terms than they could otherwise obtain. Every province needs funds to keep up with the Joneses, and ours being no exception we haven't wasted any time in getting in on the deal. Hence the special visit of the Lieutenant Governor to the Legislature yesterday to give his as- sent to the enabling legislation, which makes us a partner with Ottawa so . fo speak and permits us—the provin- cial government, we mean—to_bor- row from the fund at the convenient ~ interest rate of 5.29 per cent. This was the first bill to be peaeed. at the current session, its speedy pas- sage being in marked contrast to the birth pangs of the legislation at Ottawa. There it had to undergo 26 days of Commons debate, 51 sittings of a Senate- Commons committee, and three days of palaver in the Sen- ate itself. Telling Them Off Ottawa’s colorful former ‘mayor, Dr. Charlotte Whitton, is getting. around making more speeches than during her years of civic office. - Recently she had something to say about the federal bureaucracy in Ot- tawa which won’t be appreciated in ‘that quarter. Democracy was suppos- ed to be the rule of the people. But in practice, said Dr. Whitton, real power is exercised by organized classes, groups -and individuals who have all the power. The trouble was that too —wantea th “many —compeéetént ~ people power “only by appointment.’ They wanted to avoid the hurly-burly of the political process. They are the people, she said, who get into crown companies and the top brackets: of | “unget-at- | the civil service—the ables” who are taking power away from the elective. parliamentarians. Which reminds us that the only prime minister in recent years who tried to buck the system was stig- matized by his elite-conscidus _bio- grapher under the title “Renegade in Power.” ; » This is the same political pundit— Peter C.. Newman—who has just information when the plan | and 200 | "our Ottawa dispatches yesterday. | the federal treasury would have been | } only $325 million more than it took | performed a hatchet job on our for- | mer Island member in the Pearson cabinet, Hon. J. Watson MacNaught, on his appointment as chairman of the Dominion Coal Board. Newman is Ottawa editor of the Toronto Daily Star and his article bears the | op- probrious title“‘A Leg Up For J. | “telling people off can be very fairly, treated under quotas imposed only 614,000 pounds of Canadian - dairy industry, has “and loans are available to consolidate -b_geasonal-plant_-left_will be-at-Upper. - cheese making in pioneer Canada. Ww Hy MacZero.” It was mentioned in_reply to'questions by Dick Bell, the _ ~ Conservative member for Carleton, that Canada is importing much more cheese from the United States than “dian exports have only been a third | of this. in Parliament in the attack on Mr. MacNaught’'s appointment quoted. in It is‘a devastating article, but ‘it loses much of its point by such snide “a gentle nonentity from Summerside, P.E.I.,” and by statements which purport to | be facts but are nothing of the kind— such gs the claim’ that a delegation of “progressive Prince Edward Island Liberals” opposed the former minis- ter's appointment to the Senate vacancy on the ground that this would “‘perpetuate his power on the Island.” Liberal. opposition to this move, as is well known, stemmed from the tradition that the appoint- ment should go to. Kings County and to a Roman Catholic. In his Diefenbaker biography, New- . then prime | ably his most irresponsible state- MacNaught with his defeat in the last “election when, by reason of the same pledge which the Liberal polished up and gave anew, he “probably had | more going for him than any other cabinet minister.” -Citcumstances indeed alter cases. The fact is, of course, that neither Mr. MacNaught nor Mr. Diefenbaker have belonged to. the bureaucratic hierar- chy that Mr. Newman so ‘much admires and Dr. Whitton so much de- tests. These past masters in the art of pungent on a theme of this kind, but they tend to cancel each other out-in their recriminations. _Unfairly Treated “The surprising information was elicited from Trade Minister Winters in the House of Commons this week, it is selling there. More than $1,000,- 000 worth of American cheese has” been coming into Canada annually for the past several years, while Cana- Mr. Winters told- Mr. Bell that the government has been protesting to Washington that Canada is being un- by the United States which allow cheese into that» country each’ year. Canada, despite the ar. of the no curbs. on the importation of cheese from the United States or elsewhere. According to an Ottawa Journal report, officials in the department of agriculture who are concerned with the cheese industry appear uncon- cerned about the disappearance of the rural factories throughout the coun--- try. In fact their demise has been encouraged by the - government through its Cheese Factory Improve- ment Act under which federal grants — scattered cheese factories and build modern ones. Most of these new ones are modern plants designed to operate year round instead. of through the summer as the old plants did. At the present pace, the only Canada Village where one was open-— ed last summer - tc — demonstrate There is every reason for main- taining Canada’s cheese factories at a high rate of production. The con: sumption of cheddar is increasing steadily and Canadian cheese. is | commanding a premium on world markets. But it is discouraging to our | producers to be handicapped as they | are under the present .U.S. quota restrietions. It is incumbent upon our federal authorities to take more vigorous action than they have done in bringing this to Washington's attention. EDITORIAL NOTES Few people have any idea of the cost involved in fighting water pollution. Even experts who-know the subject must have been frightened, however, at the view expressed by Dr. George Langford of|the Uni:, versity of Toronto, that keeping the Great\Lakes water fit to drink will be as costly as the U.S. space program. | A recent Canadian’ Tax Founda- tion report States that if every vent of assessed income above $15,000 had been taxed away in 1963, the yield to in. Which pretty well disposes of the idea that the rich can be made to pay for the massive social welfare legisla- tion now in prospect. It is the taxpay- ers in the middle atid lower brackets, including what the Tax Foundation calls “the barely affluent,’ who will . and do the Paying. % % THE SHERIFF'S ON HIS WAY | CANADA'S VOICE ~ Should Be Stronger In NATO Alliance ~ The U.S. Senate eubdcommit- tee recommending “the” United” States” pay closer need to what Canada and the European members have to say about. NATO policy, should gen- erate an enthusiastic ‘hear, hear" in Ottawa. — External Affairs Minister Mar- ' tin has been-one of those to pub- licly complain about the lack of voice in the American- dominat- ed alliance. In an Ottawa speech on Sept. 15, 1964 he proposed: “Could we not make use of our existing machinery to oe about a greater sharing of the military direction of the alli- ance, particularly in. the areas of the command structures, stra- tegic planning and targeting as well as in the. sharing of costs? “To insist that some countries now can make a greater contri- bution to ‘the common burden, without coming - seriously to grips with the ectual sharing of military direction; seems to me | to be as unpromising as the re- verse line of approach.” TIME RUNNING OUT The moment of truth is fast approaching for the 18-year-old alliance. The original treaty, drawn up in the face of threat- ened Communist expansion in western Europe, expires in April 1969, and member nations must | decide’ before.then-if-the organ- ization is worth preserving. President de Gaulle seems to be placing the death wish on the alliance. At his recent press | conference he said NATO was. no longer suitable for present- day needs and France ‘intends to. “‘progressively modify dispo- sitions now in force." To ue his intention he served notice that any fore troops still in France ty Apri, | 1969 must come under. French command. Under existing ar- rangements such a move would | directly affect Canada’s two NATO~air~bases-at-Marville-and~ Gros Tenquin. STIFF MEMBERSHIP FEE Canada pays a large member- ship fee in NATO, including ap- proximately $100 million a year | for its nuclear air strike divis- ion, $45 million for an army bri- gade, plus a large naval anti- submarine commitment, and Iat- | terly, a mobile infantry batal- ion. Canadian taxpayers would | undoubtedly agree that the size of the membership fee alone ; Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 5, 1941) Carol II, former king of. Rum- anis, steped on the accelerator of his powerful automobile dur- ing a ‘‘quiet spin in the country” ~~ it..was.. revealed. in--Seville, ‘Spain, drove Magda Lupsecu “and himself from virtual impris- onment in Spain to Portugal. Greece rejected : mounting German pressure for a separate peace with Italy and announced she is standing firmly beside Britain, having ‘‘agreed on all aspects of the situation’ in sou- theast Europe following confer- ences, with Foreign ree Anthony Eden. TEN YEARS AGO. (March 5, 1956) Keith MacKinnon. vice- pres|- dent for P.F.1., left for Halifax accompanied by several other members of the organization, to attend a meeting of The’ Mari- time Economic Council held at | Dalhousie University. It was announced that John L. Clark was leaving Charlotte- | town, having been = transferred from the local Income Tax Of- fice to the Income Tax Office in Kitchener, Ont. The transfer in- volved a promotion for Mr. Clark ‘who joined the local office in 1947 and by conscientious work and study had ‘received several promotions + ' Toronto Daily Star should a this country a strong | that | voice in policy- making within | ‘NATO. As a matter of fact, Mr. Mar- tin is the. current president. of | the NATO Council. The appoint. | ment could— and should— be propitious for Canada as this and other member countries ing the next three years.. PRESENT-DAY NEEDS menting on ‘President de Gaul- the organization through a con-:! centration on the political and | economic, rather than the mili- [of tr contemplate NATO's future dur- | tary, aspects of the alliance, ' This seems in keeping with the government’s current program: ansforming | vices into an integrated mobile force trained in the art of inter- national peare- keeping. Such a transformation would conceiv- ably direct Canada away from its current nuclear strike role in NATO. ; With Mr. Martin in the NATO Prime Minister Pearson, com- | chair until next September, Can- ada should: use its full voice and le’s latest posture, said he does | influence to give the alliance a not expect NATO to disinte- | new perspective and goals be- grate. He sees a strengtening of | yond 1969, in keeping with . pres- ent-day needs and to the satis- | ‘faction of the general member- | ship— including France. ‘The Worry In spite -of disturbing - ques- aes raised by reputable scien- ists and researchers, at least ‘ana Milwaukee suburbs wil! use DDT to spray elms this year in the battle against Dutch elm disease. The worrisome thing about such chemicals as DDT is how little we know of their cumula-: tive effects on wildlife and even on human beings. What little | we do know is unsettling. DDT | has an awesome ability to per- | sist in toxic form. It has been found in the system of penguins |-and‘ seals in the antarctie and | birds and mammals in other re- mote parts of oe world. University — Wisconsin re- searchers ot that DDT resi- dues in Lake Michigan get into | the systems of tiny animals. Fish feed on the animals, birds eat the fish. At each stage in the food chain ‘the chemical | builds up in higher concentra- tions. About DDT A Journal - Measurable fialiluas of DDT have been found in 13 species of fish, both commercial and game from 30 different lakes or flow- ages in 11 Wisconsin counties. The conservation department was disturbed enough by the phenomenon recently to reiter- ate an order. barring use of DDT for ‘spraying on state lands. Federal fish and wildlife ser- vice researchers say that pesti- cides may cause mass fish deaths, “or they can cause insl- diously delayed damage to the reproductive capability of mam- mals, fish and birds.” The challenge is to find more selective, more efficient, less toxic-and less persistent chemi- cals to control insect pests. Enough genuine doubt has been thrown on DDT to suggest the use of less persistent pesticides even if the cost is higher and the effect on insect pests is not as dramatic. Since Victoria Windsor Star — There are many Canadians who are not yet old enough to | qualify for. the old age pension | but who can boast of being born | in the Victorian era, before the | age of flight. Last week, they | could look at their newspaper | and see a pictufe taken of. the | surface of the moon. At the turn of the century, Queen Victoria's life was draw- | ing to a close—she died in 1901— | | but the age to which she gave | her name _ was _ flourishing. It | was thought of then as a glor- ious age for man,an age of scientific and industrial progress ' when man had. conquered na- ture and man’# machines were working for mankind's better- ment. There were few new worlds to conquer. A year after Queen Victoria's death, the Wright Brothers in flight. With bewildering speed | The transfer of Batman and | his enthusiastic helper Robin from comic books to television screen has created more stir than afiy entertainment event in recent years. The Batman | Beatle phenomenon. Like the Beatles. television's Batman and Robin are playing: out what amounts to a giant | “s15,"’ | one ea enjey whether they are | | taken in by the gimmickry and | hoo-haw or whether they just sit | back and .cackle at it all. As‘a television program ‘‘Bat- man” is, to use the most popul- ar description, : “so bad , Rood.” The acting is deliciously | “hammy”’— even the dullest viewer feels he could go bound- j ing onto the set and hold his own, dramatically. The dialogue the U.S. made the first powered | “kiek’’ may even rival thé. a huge joke that every- | as drivel, it's | whiz" the automobile replaced the horse, commercial flying be- came commonplace, and a whole new world was conquered. Then came the space age: first experimental satellites, then manned flights into space, then | marathon adventures in orbit. Now the U.S.S.R. has landed | scientific instruments, including | | cameras**“on the moon. Arid all: | | in less than a decade. & the armed ser:, -| such as potassi ‘| be sprinkled on Drink Builds Potassium Another African Problem’ By Harold Morrison Canadian Press Staff Writer Kwame Nkrumah's reappear- . By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | ance in Africa opens a new po- | ~One of our major pharmaceu- | Htical power threat that could tical companies is manufactur. | end in turmoil and bloodshed: It - ing an effervescent tablet that | also could make Ghana the Af- | disintegrates into a lime-flavor- ed drink to counteract tas- sium loss from the of those taking diuretics. The need for. this type of product beciime.evi- dent soon after diuretic tablets were introduced for the treat- ment of dropsy. hypertension, and cirrhosis of the liver. The drugs opened the kidney filters ‘| to sodium (Na) which in turn encouraged the fluid in dropsic- ‘| al tigsues to leave the body via the urine. But it is difficult to tose so- dium without losing potassium (K). As a result, some diuretic users developed ‘ muscle weak- ness, apathy, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea, Tablets contain- ing potassium chloride were giv- en to counteract the deficiency. Bananas, citrus. fruits, > mato juice also were se of their high K K content. But um ‘irritat- es the -s and physicians prescribed a tablet having an enteric coating that..was not. dissolved until the drug Teached the intestine. This solved the problem o: po- tassium deficiency, but not for long. Reports began to appear in the medica) literature about unusual reactions to coated po- tassium tablets. They were caus- ing ulcers, bleeding, ee or perforation of the small in- testine. Apparently when the -| coating dissolves in the intestine the lining of the gut ie exposed to large and irritating concen- trations of potassium salt. That settled. the. weds by coated K’ tablets, e ally by victims of dropsy Some potassium : ts, Many salt- free’ substitutes ‘contain this compound. Potassium Triplex and Kaon also are oral potas- sium preparations. “The new” effervescent ta b let becomes potassium. citrate, bi- carbonate, and cyclamate when ‘dissolved in water. Dr. William D. Snively Jr., development of. this ‘NIGHT PALSY E. S. writes: When I awaken at night, I can’t force myself to move or even open=my eyes, no matter how much I want to. Is. this sensation a nightmare, or the tail end of a dream? | REPLY : This temporary paralysis was described mahy years ago by Dr. S. Weir Mitchell as noctur- nal paralysis. or night: palsy; It lasts a few moments to several hours, and the person must be | aroused ‘to break the spell. IRREGULAR Mrs. .0.Z. writes: Can any- thing be done about irregular periods? REPLY 5 ' Yes, but .since there are a {variety of causes -for_ this ab- normality, examination -by your A, reader writes: What might happen to me if I take too many calcium tablets? REPLY The excess may not be absorb- ed by the intestine. Kidney eton- es may form if it is absorbed and too much calcium is elim- inated through the renal struc- tures. ~ ADRENALIN IN ASTHMA Mrs. M.J. writes: How does adrenalin help in an asthmatic attack? REPLY : By relieving bronchial spasm and obstruction which in turn permits more air to flow in end out of the lungs. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Keep nuts, popcorn, and hard candy. away from toddlers. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) “PRINCESS MOBBED ~~~ HONG KONG (Reuters)—Po- lice reinforcements were called when Britain’s visiting Princess Margaret was almost mobbed while out walking Friday. Po- lice forced back. spectators as they pressed to within a few feet of her when she went on a window-shopping tour. Traf- fic was snarled for most of the hour Princess Margaret, accom- | panied by her husband, the Earl | of Snowdon, spent in the area. ee part of British Trade Week re. A Canadian\born at the open- | Sen = ing of the ae has . seen | more scientifit advances in his lifetime than ‘the Victorians could have dreamed of. His life- time has already spanned the air age. In a few years, he may see man complete a return trip. to the-moon. Yet he can boast that for a short.time he »was a | Victorian, a citizen of 4 era which saw few worlds re to | conquer. Zowie! Pow! Batman. Ottawa Journal Even the film quality Is poor. The total effect is charming. It makes Batman far more comic on television than he ever was | in the comics. People like the program be- cause, in pleasant ‘contrast to the common on television, it is in- stantly, triumphantly recognized nonsense, or what- ever one wishes to call it. Batman and Robin | hole- in-the- doughnut!’) are | refreshing escapes from this | tight- -lipped age of “playing it cool.’’ Teenagers whose 8 0 cial code once banned even a ‘Gee from their are running around shouting “Holy popcorn!’ — and enjoy- ing it immensely. Batman is a useful reminder that life can get pretty humorless: if it’s under- lis right out of the comic books, | played all the time e . "% « “‘sophisticated”’ mind-rot so | vocabularies ° a te ‘Holy do your shopning at North River for everyday Steady Low Prices! ‘Call us for programs, busi- All club _ bulletins, ness letterheads. work guaranteed. GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 -supplemen “ehloride can | stimulated the product; ; rican showdown arena between | East and West . Mitch depends on the success - of. the .new.-.Ghanaian leaders and the world support they re- ceive in struggling ‘with an eco- womic ‘crisis that threatens their | country with bankrupt breath of failure, poverty and | unemployment can cool the Ghanaians’ ardor for their new The issue of turmoil and peace depends, too; on how far the Soviet Union and China may be prepared to back Nkrumah’s new drive for power. The view among some Commonwealth a is that the Russians suggested. | cy. The | Some ee to other African states ‘to p him retake Ghana | And while most Ghanains seem determined’ to embrace | the new regime zestfulls, there | undoubtedly: are some at home | who privately would be ready to back Nkrumah in some clan- | destine operation. Nkrumah had | gone to great: lengths to drive | home to his people that he was the redeemer and the savior. — undoubtedly are’ stil’! im- THRUST FOR FREEDOM ty for betterment. Time is ir’ side. Though he is back in Africa, Nkrumah is geographically sep- erated from Ghana by great areas of opposition. He coat hope to get much help from the Ivory Coast, Upper Volta, Ti or Dahomey. These all at time feared Nkrumah’s appetite on. stage appear ludicrous. But his presence in Africa c F with economic suff Ghana could give rise to new litical unrest. The coup against Nkrumah has been a blow against radical- ism. But African radicalism has mot been eliminated. It awaits ta ps ft Poe No doubt these would have been difficult times for recruit- ing, and for ing personnel in the services, when the finan- cial attractions -of employment elsewhere were so high.: But oa ‘is only part of-Mr. Hellyer’s: TE te aio iinet ese oll the policy of integration to the general public on the argu- LO But it is quite another thing to Neste ee advantage of any oppor-. “Selling Service Life 9,28: Gazette at the arena’s edge ready to. ‘* 1 tunity that may develop. quire a-character of its own. But something so new, and sc un= like what used to be, has to -be Sold. to the young Canadians. The bonuses proposed by the department to those who reen- list is a new. measure to encour- age personnel to rem : in service. But while thle Ook ; sure may be successful in ing to prevent wastage within. the ‘service, it does not solve the problem. of. recruiting: ; Charges. made_by former De- fence Minister Harkness — that artilletymen have had to be us- ed to fill out infantry units, and that combat ships are tied up for want of: skilled personnel, if they are true, reveal how ser- ious ‘the problem is.: Mr. Hellyer may hope to give the impression that the armed services have not been disor- ‘ganized ‘but streamlined. But he has so far failed to get that idea across to the recruiting stations. . We jnntinieithy endeavour to merit. your confidence, _Now this is gone. It may be that the integrated force may ac- | ZSA ZSA SHEDS FOURTH JUAREZ, Mexico ‘AP)—Hun- Whatever your needs — cameras - projeqters - tape recerdes - you name it] — you can rent it now Meclnnis “3% TIT Kent Se. Ch’town. Spring is" just around the corner. If you are planning on building, CALL, PHONE or | WRITE us today. 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