Che Guardian * Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub — a Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher uae Wad Frank. Walker Editor Editor every week day morning (except Sun- “dep, and statutory holidays) eat 165 Prince Street, Chisrlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices at Summerside, mohtegue, Alberton tnd Souris. ' Represented nationally by Thomson a ecnates Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni versity 6-5942; Western Office, 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers” Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian lication of all news dispatches in this. paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and -elso the-locel news published herein. right or republication of special dispatches here- «Im also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 & year by mail on rural routes and areas >Met serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per . year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. t . Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1966. : PAGE 4 Of Major Concern ! ‘The parliamentary furore over the : Gerda Munsinger case has served the - Peahson government’s. purpose—tem- porarily—of distracting attention from ? matters .more embarrassing to: its prestige, if indeed it has any prestige : left. But the political dynamite in this ‘case lies not so much in Justice , ' Minister Cardin’s \ as alleged by Mr. Cardin, but was: insinuations of ‘improper moral conduct as in its : alleged tie-in with national security : Matters. If this be so, it is mystify- ‘ ing that the Liberals should have kept : quiet about it until now. It took a Toronto newspaper man to ‘discover that the woman involved had not died of leukemia in East Germany, . living in a Munich apartment in West ’ Germany, where she has been a storm ‘centre of rumor since she was first ‘interviewed‘on Thursday. NDP Leader “Douglas has pertinently pointed out that if the Justice Minister was as far - off base in his other statements as he was on this point, his charges don’t amount to much. This would be determined, of course, by the judicial _-inquiry which Mr. Pearson says he . Censor -Mr--Cardin’s...‘smear—by._in-_ |». nuendo” or-force him to press char-— will set up. But it doesn’t meet ‘Conservative demands for a show-- down in the. Commons that would ges which he would have to prove or resign his seat. _ More important, from the national safety standpoint, is the fact that for the first time in 20 years there will be a thorough judicial probe into the question of espionage and counter- espionage activities in Canada. This is where the Opposition has scored, in forcing this action. And there is need, as the Globe and Mail points out, that it should not only aim at striking a balance between state security and=| individaul rights. It must also answer a question foremost in the public mind: namely, has politicial con- sideration ever affected the hand- ling of a security problem? If it has, the commission must fix the blame for the interference and make recom- mendations for its avoidance in future. Canada’s last such inquiry was __precipitated by the defection of Igor Gouzenko from the service of the Soviet Union with a bundle of docu- ments about espionage in Canada. In the traumatic shock that followed the disclosures of this inquiry Canadian counter-measure were considerably strengthed. In view of recent happen- ings it is right that an inquiry now be held, and on a scale wide enough to satisfy public demand. Serious Dairy Problem’ Warning has beerf sounded by our dairy industry spokesmen that not even -the federal government guar. antee of $4 per 100 pounds of milk is expected to halt the, decline in milk production in Canada. It would still fail to provide an attractive financial inducement, and additional money to attract production will have to come from some other source. That could mean that the consumers will have to pay. more,in future for dairy - products. With the vontinued increase in food prices in ‘recent years, this is going to be a hardproblem for the con- sumers to handle. But the fact must- be faced, as Agriculture Minister Mac- Rae has pointed out in this province, that the immediate dairy production outlook is not optimistic. And accord- ing to J. Lincoln Dewar, on his return | from an Ottawa meeting of the advisory committee ‘to the Agricul- tural Prices Stabilization Board, the situation is prevalent across the coun- try> particularly in Ontario, where a severe shortage of capable help is for- cing many «dairy farmers to advertise , their herds. Nor is the prospect any better across the line..where the U.S. Agriculture Departinent’s ecnomic research ser- ° ” All - y vice says there is little chance that b | last year’s decline in the: nation’s milk output will be stemmed . this year. It may fall about 2 per cent below the. 125.1 billion, pounds pro- ducbkd last year. This is expected to be luni by further increases in the cQnsumer cost. «4 In an attempt to halt this trend, the department. has moved to prevent ‘a seasonal price drop in producer prices of fluid milk sold in 72' federal milk order marketing areas. It also has asked for White House approval _of an increase in price supports for milk used_ for manufacturing purposes. SONG 4a: Rep . Still another factor in the U-S. situation was a decline of 5.6 per cent in the number of dairy cows in 1965, the largest annual percentage decline on record. The report said a further drop is possible this year. The situa- tion has been reflected in the quantity of dairy products bought by the government under price supports. In 1964, purchases represented 6.4 per cent of the total milk output. Last year they dropped to 4.8 per cent. To sum up the US. situation: Butter production this year is running 26 per cent below that of a year earlier. Cheese output is down 7 per- cent. Stocks of most dairy products are likely.to, be. lower at the end of the current marketing year than at any time since 1952—the time of the Korean War. . The fact that the problem is s0 widespread should spark further con- cern at Ottawa as to the threat it is posing to one of our major farm in- dustries, A McCrea Memorial = A brief news item from Ontario ‘states that some admirers -of Colonel John McCrea are trying to raise funds to buy his cottage birthplace as a memorial. We wish them. success in their @fforts. _ ; It is fifty-one -years since Colonel McCea’s 15-line poem appeared ~anonymouslyin—a-Paris~ newspaper, mourning the Canadian and British soldiers who died in the fighting at Ypres, 1914-15. “In Flanders Fields,” - it was called; and it told, in simple, moving words, of the poppies blowing “between the crosses, row and row,” of the larks, “scarce heard amid the guns below” but still bravely singing, and of the torch to be taken from +-falling-hands-and-held-high-in the cause of freedom... It is difficult for those who have not lived through the period to realize | the impact this poem had at the time. It became known and loved through- out the Commonwealth, almost over- night. In the United States it-proved a potent propaganda weapon, more effective perhaps than even the | indignation aroused against imperial Germany by the sinking of the Lusitania. A writer in the -San Francisco Chronicle gives it this praise. He adds _that to the.sophisticated the poem was the outpouring of the naive, and this was in.a measure true. For the West- ern world had not known térrible and all-embracing: war since 1865, and it had come to think such calamity was no-longer~ possible -among civilized men. But in the 1930s the sacrifice and the hope of 1914-18 were seen to be in vain. A new and more dreadful German tyrant was abroad, and every- where people foresaw that death and saffering were just around the corner for the Western world. : By this time poets, like the people who begot them, had become cynical, |. or at least lacked some deep urgency about the universal tragedy. For it is | | a stunning reality: that the Second | World War produced not one verse of | lament and warning comparable to ,‘‘In. Flanders. Fields.” Korea, nothing. _ Recently an American sergeant in Viet Nam wrote a song, the Ballad of the Green Berets, and a record of it is selling. But the ballad does not resemble McCrea’s poem. It cel- ebrates combat heroism (ds did one or two songs 25 years ago) but it does)’ not mourn main his predicament. Colonel McCrea was a medical of- ficer:in the Canadian army. He pub- lished other poems, but nothing that , lived, and he died in the 1918 in- fluenza epidemic. The proposed memorial-would be a fitting tribute to | his achievement. EDITORIAL NOTES It’s’ come at Jast. An Ontario exchange cites the case of a motorist ‘whose car- was damaged when he hit a pedestrian in a congested traffic | area and is suing him for reckless walking. * *¢ Even before we get the bad fiscal news for 1965-66. a tax foundation ' has estimated that the fiscal deficit for the following fiscal year will be between $438: million and $588 million. + GETTING IN S.H.A.P.E ¢ his native Prince- Edward Is- New and now nine years-has been on Parlia- for Queens; PEI- tory of the Conservative Party from its beginning in 1854 up to _ ermment in 1963. bs his practical experience of poli- tics, In result, he is neither a professor dreaming in an ivied tower, nor a partisan with only one pre. eye. SPEAKS TO STUDENTS So when he recently addres- sed the University of Waterloo Thid thought is often expressed | Re- But I believe that he spoke at Waterloo University not as a partisan fighter, but with the “To put it simply, if not originally, it has failed to incite the daring. With the new fron tiersman -leaving administra tive Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO 4 (March 14, 1941) German air raiders dropped clusters of fire bombs on London last night and early today in a renewal of .their nocturnal saults on the city. to a game that was apparently lost midway through the second period, Walter Lawlor’s Junior Royals raced to their third | straight Maritime title as they |) -defeated> Traro’s~-Junior —-Bear- cats 95 to take the round and title by a 13-10 score. Truro had won the first game at Truro by a 5-4 count. Five of the nine Charlottetown goals were ce ed by Roy ‘“Buck’’ Whitlock. |’ TEN YEARS AGO (March 14, 1956) | held in the YMCA last night with Presidént Bob Giggey and Bennett Carr as co-chairman The Souris Board of Trade at a recent meeting approved un- | animously a motion asking the political sities in Quebec, Manitpba and_ Brunswick, for | OTTAWA. REPORT By Patrick Nicholson ‘Queens MP At Waterloo University Heath Macquarrie_ apent se- | likely to stimulate a resurgence | ven years as a schoolteacher in © of Liberalism. which he would expect to be ended abruptly if the Liberals were to select a young new lea- In the absence of dramatic chatiges im the per- |formance or personnel of the der. Parliament.. has bogged - | Ottawa group, the Liberal Party down in ‘routine business; it has of will ‘not™ regain hot’ yet hada chance to ment Hill as Conservative MP | ‘Somehow--he— has also found time to work on | | | =the-end-of_the.Diefenhaker Goy- | s } | ' |ing it up after | within sniffing range of the gar- | about his garbage as fast as the | ~ | ticle-in-‘‘The Vickers} i. member, he observes it daily | from the Opposition benches. | ance still faltering’ . as. Supplying a story book finish, The weekly meeting. of the» Centennial Y’s Men's Club was | Provincial Government to vave | in 1956 thé four miles of road | connecting Dingwell'g a and Dundas Corner, years.” TIME FOR NEW THINK Now with six weeks of the new parliament behind us,-how does | he rate the reconstructed Pear- | Garbage Better Than Ever : Ottawa Journal Carrying garbage out, or pick-, The _ pulverizing business neighbor’s dog ranges from simply smashing gets into it, or tending one's ;own dog after neighbor’s. gar- | bage gets into it, are things that | give garbage ‘and dogs) a bad reputation. Uniless' the householder lives hing up crude refuse” to highly sel- _ective processes that enable manufacture of compost for ag- riculture. There are ee |ing problems. galore, them. nylon econ that. t bind moving parts of pulverizers and bage.dump,-.he.is. apt to. forget. | sanitation engineers can haul it | _ away. But it’s a fascinating sub- | ject. To hand is a scholarly ar- works. : az- | Pulverizing reduces volume of ine” discussing ‘‘means of dis- | garbage by about 50 per cent .-| sentence. Fifty posal and utilization of garbage ‘and associated problems’’ ' Britain. |amd makes garbage better for in | filling bogs and marshes. Parks (and in this..country even ski- The main problem seéms_ to be that the British are running | bage base. short of acceptable places to |. It is good to regard — “tip” their garbage (how much |as a natural resource more polite than our ‘‘dump- (than a nuisance. Anything ae ing” it). The article. says many a weary husband with an | helps »,_ Cities favor. incineratior. with | jarmful of soggy trash feel even proper smoke control, but’ that /@ little bit creative” deserves pulverization is on the increase. | our =. Anarchy In The Tool Box " Vancouver San The picture of the poor auto | Beau who deal with the metric mechanic having to fumble with different sets of wrenches to | *etinle is already beginning match the nationality of the car | the detailed conversion on the grease rack illustrates | ounces and uel io a perfectly the idiocy of our sys- ches and tem of weights and measures. Europeans. using the . i scale while the British and the | currency. South Africa has con- Americans, naturally can’t even | verted her currency and New agree on a common standard | Zealand is studying it. for their foot-and-inch tools. | The U.S. Chamber of Com- The example of Australia | merce is lobbying Washington -.-making.the major.switch of her | to embrace the metric system currency to a decimal system and our National” Rés@a@ret} os, sinc is the latest hint that Canada. Council warns us that Canada should be planning to adopt the will have to switch if we want to * metric system across the board. remain competitive in world Our money is easy to under- markets. stand; our weights and measur- It may be tough on wrench es arg-'incomprehensible to the manufacturers, but it has to 90 per cent of the world’s peo- come. Tried Once Too Often ‘Fort William Times-Journal In Alberta it is still illegal for an hotel keeper to serve beer to ‘a treaty Indian. Now prospects are bright that this discrimina- , serve. Basis for the charge was tory law will be reviewed, | removal of the bottle of beer thanks toa quick-_ thinking hotel °from. the. premises to the police keeper in the Smoky Lake area | car. cones who turned the tables on the The agent was convicted and RCMP. fined $10 but the RCMP has “Police used an undercover | Said it will ask permission from £20 dt convictions. ‘Th | Ottawa to appeal the conviction aaa ; ©Y | of one of its own agents. The mployed a treaty Indian to go | decision could have considerab- into beer parlors and order drinks. If ‘he was served, he called in the RCMP and the ho- | tel keeper was charged. By such underhanded methods, sev- | eral convictions were obtained. But it was tried once too often. ‘The undercover agent ‘entered ‘a-hotel, ordered beer and was servéd. He took the bottle of beer out of the beer parlor to a waiting police. car. : The hotel keeper was charg- éd and convicted on, the evi- dence of the agent. He prompt- ly turned around and charged ' the Indian RCMP agent with stands. ig Hotel keepers maintain it, is totally unfair. They ‘are permit- ted to serve Metis but not In- dians but they claim it is often | almost impossible to tell one | from the other. ‘ “While re-exanfining. the old Alberta law; it might be a pub- lic service to also review the ethics of some of the methods , used to obtain convictions, , hills) have been built on a gar- | possession of liquor off a re- le effect on the law as it now | Fractures Of The Hip . Hip fractures are most ‘com- ‘mon after the age of 50 and are fall. Forty years ago this type of was almost lM death i per : from the ill effects of i ments to make sure that the | pins, nails, or screws are going | én the right direction. Many im-” | provements have been. made in. these appliances to prevent the metallic parts from festering, | loosening, or moving into the | jot. For example, the head of | the nail is attached to a plate | that is fastened with four screws ee in Peking to a i Z rf rigidity refuses to con- t its own policies are but justified and vir- “The ravings against China’, |now are rising to a crescendo in the world,’ says the official People’s Daily in reciting what it calls abuses against China by imperialists, reactionary na- tionalists, reactionaries, modern , landlords, —-rt-eh peasants, counter - pe ger aries, bad elements and right- ists. ’ It would seem from the Pe- g LEE} ag attack China will simply suffer. the fate of Khrushchev—they will be disowned. SHOWS PROBLEM The absolute rigidity of te. | Chinese position, sotmhe inner philosophy that it is illustrates the difficulty of per- euading Peking to encourage a Viet Nam settlement with which the United States can live. * Why should it consider yield- ing even the smallest conces- sion to such an {imperialist as to the thigh bone. This prevents the nail ee eee and backing The bits should not bear weight on the fractured extrem- ity until there is X-ray evidence of a. bony union: This may take three months but meanwhile the person is ambulatory with crut- ches. Some complications can- not be avoided. When the frac- ture line cuts off the blood sup- | ply to the end of the bone, the. | ball or knob may soften and disintegrate. . BILINGUAL H. D. writes: Is it all right. to speak two languages-to.a young -child-or—waill_this-confuse him? _ REPLY This depends upon the child. > is ‘not wise when speaking leads -to confusion. oe hand, many Euro- and weather .the pean children learn two or more { — Astronomers now believe. that much of the universe may be composed of antimatter— a sub- stance that once seemed fantas- tic even by ecience- fiction standards. : Particles antimatter re- semble matter except that they are opposite in electri- cal charge and annihilate ordin- ary matter they touch. A space | man landing on an antimatter planet would disappear in a huge burst of pure energy. No one knows whether there ere antimatter . planets. Scien- tists have succeeded, with enor- mous difficulty, im making a lasted long, for antimatter on ‘the earth almost immediately collides with matter and disap- TTER UNIVERSE?. tiny bits of antimatter have proved that. the substance is real, and have spurred specu- --|-Jation-that-huge--masses-of—anti-- _REPLY Not necessarily, because many | capable of pro- | Because it is an open sore that being bathed constantly in (NOTE, All correspondence te Dr. Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, CO Chicago Trib- | une, Chicago, Mlinois.) CHEATED OF MONEY KINGSTON, Ont. (CP)—Po- lice said Thursday that two | residents have been tricked out of a total of $1,850 in separate. imcidents. An elderly 05}66666666666666666 q } : + - “Parents Prefer { } Purity Products” =; ie ’ ; 4 SOOO OCCOCOOe 317 Kent St. Dial 4.7125 o6+664664666% |! PRINTING Stationery, wedding invitations, invoices, statements and _ all matter may exist somewhere in me universe Astronomers are ‘searching | space for evidence of entimat- ter. They have found none so far, but the hunt has barely be- | gun. Conceivably, the universe only known to man might have its counterpart in a whole universe , | of antimatter. The existence.’ of "watimatier was predicted about 1929 by the British physicist P.A.M. Dirac on the basis of mathematical calculations he made while ae on the properties of the lectron ee _years later, American Carl Anderson of the Institute of Technol- ogy detected an anti- electron— the particle predicted by Dirac — in material knocked out of lead atotns by cosmic rays. An- ness and self-pity. The government laments efulness of revolution- in a surprising dis- right and the world is wrong, few_tiny_bits_of antimatter. None | Red Ching! $ Lamentations By Harold Morrison - Canadian Press Staff Writer cockiness China showed the fall of Nikita Khrush- appears to be slowly. giv- the United States when it finds fault with ‘such old friends as" Cuba and Indonesia? Cuba had hoped to sell sugar to China in exchange for much- found it ‘necessary to put a clamp on a flood of Chinese propaganda that accompanied trim its rice exports. Castro's subsequent accusa- tions of bad faith are rejected by the People’s Daily as utterly unreasonable.. It suggests if Castro continues his anti-China outbursts, he simply will go the way.of Khrushchev, who was dismissed from Soviet power. In-other words those who—op- pose China will fall and those who support her will reap great | bénefits. |'WAS A BLOW | Ewen events im Indonesia seem to have left Peking with nothing more’ than anger and | virtuous self pity. The coup Anon ' and unabated flow of blood is | seen in Jakarta as one inspired by those who support: Peking. Anti - Chinese demonstrations | have continued for almost two | straight weeks. | But instead of acknowledging that it may have erred in -what many experts have described as an attempt to subvert a country, Peking has demanded an apology for incidents against the Chinese who view stirring up revolutions against an exist- | ing society as part of the game. | Those which fail to submit are | Being stubborn and. wrong- headed. 6. ; | failed and which brought a huge Now It’s Animatter National Geographic Society was annihilated. An antipr:ton ‘or’ antineutron is inconceivably small; It: would take about 10 to 15 quadrillion of them to meas- | ure one inch. | Some astranomers theorize | that half the objects in the unf- | verse may'be made of antimat- |ter. One body that ‘definitely | does not consist of antimatter is | the moon, since rockets have (crashed on it without creating the explosion that occurs when matter collides with antimatter. But many other thing's in: the universe may be made of ont. matter. theories of the universe to: em- subatomic particles and antipar- ticles. Under gravitational at- traction, the whole mass . con- tracted until annihilation occur- red, producing radiation pres- tional attraction. Galaxies then forméd in the expanding uni- verse. OPEN OFFICE OTTAWA (CP) — -Establish- ment of the first Canadian im- migration office in Japan was announced Thursday by Immi- gration Minister Marchand. It. will bé located in Tokyo. “The opening of an office in‘ Japan indicates the extent of our glo- bal ‘search for well - qualified, | skilled persons so greatly |meeded by our. expanding eco- nomy,”’ Mr. Marchand said in a statement. He also reported that a new regional immigra- | tion headquarters for continen-* tal Europe will open in Geneva April 1. needed rice. When Fidel Castro . the rice, China found it had to ° Scientists are developing new brace antimatter. “One theory Reusgests that the universe once sted of extremely dispersed mare that reserved the gravite:. oe derson called the particle a posi- tron, because it removed ° an electron except that it carried a positive charge. In 1955 scientists at Berkeley, California, found an-~ antiproton a particle like an ordinary but. with “a «- itive | bia University scientists ed the antinucleus of ‘heavy _hy- drogen, or deuterium. This par- ticle, known as an antideuteron, consists of an antiproton and an pr gecwecntor It is the biggest bit antimatter ever ppoduced. QUADRILLIONS TO AN INCH But all the antimatter found to date would be too small to see even if it had been possible to | gather it into one place before it ANNOUNCEMENT We Trade . * Furniture ¥ ‘Appliances * Televisions FIRESTONE Home and Auto Dial 4-5547 your job printing re- —qhirements. All jobs guaranteed.’ GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY mar | charge of beverage sales when? the Set | chise for the Maritirne | MR. H. R. MURPHY of Kentville, Nova Scotia, has | joined the Board .of Seven-Up .Sussex Limited. Mr. Murphy, is Vice-President, Sales of M. W.:Graves & | Company, Limited, and was for years in ven-Up «fran- t Phone 4-8506 | Lseuisiseniniaaemnniiatiaiii organization. ; “ f 6s was owned by the Graves