‘aie Che Guardian Covers Prince Edwerd island Like Dew W. 4. Hancox. Publi Burton Lewis Frank Welker Executive Editor, Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sun ‘end stetutory holidays) st 165 Pringp Street, P.£.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. } Offices at Summerside, Montegve, Alber ‘Rebresented nationally by Thomson Newspapers “eronto, 425 University Ave ee eae acta 640 Cathcart Street * 65942; Member Canadian Daily Newsoaper Publishers Agnciation and The Canedian Press The Canadian Prats: is exclusively entitied to the use for repub lication of oii news dispétches in this paper to if or to the Associsted Press or Reuters else to the loce! news published here in All er republication of specis! dispatches he: in -elso reserved. Subscription rates: - eet. over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 «@ year by maf or rural routes and erees so serviced by carrier. * 5.00 « year off island end U.K. $20.00 per in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monweealth. Not over 7c single copy Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. ‘AGE 4 MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1965. Some Timely Thoughts The noted English historian A. L. Rowse recalls that back in the 1940s Franklin. Roosevelt wrote to Winston Churchill: “What fun it is to be alive in the same decade with you.” This characteristic of zest and high spirits Prof. Rowse at- tributes to the American strain in the great British war leader. On the British side he placed the sheer bulldog pertinacity and per- sistence of the man, also the rarer quality of moral-eourage—an aristo- cratic gift of political indomitability, the instinctive thinking of the safety of the state, no matter what any- irrepressible good nature, the op- and sheer boyishness which fun and enjoyment of life worst of times, made Sir Winston an American symbol as well. This takes us, says Prof. Rowse, to what the heart of the symbol— a very human personality—has to gay to us today. That is the in- sistence on the free expression of the normal and healthy spirit in a world that has been ravaged by persons afflicted with power-mania, persecution-mania, spy-mania, every eort of personal and political mania. There never was a man of genius more extrovert and friendly than Sir Winston, more free from sus- picion or any kind of meanness, more humane and magnanimous. When the Legislature’ meets on February 18, there will be two new members to be installed, from Fifth Prince and First Kings ly, following the byelections on Feb- 3 - .tuary 9. Whether they will swell ~ the ranks of the IT Conservatives ’ or the 11-Liberals remains to bé In any case, the Government $ cannot be ratified without the approval of the ten provincial legis- latures. Only after it has passed this test will it be submitted to Par- liament for full examination, and quite possibly a federal election will intervene before then to delay ac- -tion still further. Canada thus has the better part of a year to reconsider ‘the irrevoc- able decision posed by the new for- mula by which the Constitution may be moved from Britain to Canada. Theoretically at least, it would seem that federal authority could be eroded under this formula in such areas as taxation, monetary policy, interprovintial commerce and foreign trade, all of them essential to the government of any nation. Disintegration from the centre | would be assured if any four prov- inces demanded the right to tres- pass on these or other fields of fed- eral jurisdiction and Parlfament agreed to surrender them. This formula has found favor on the pre- text of national unity, but some eminent constitutional lawyers re- gard it as a dangerous innovation. The federal and provincial gov- ernments seem to regard this dan- ger as imaginary. But for the smaller provinces at least it poses a problem which should be very carefully considered. It will be our Legislature’s duty to do its share of the probing when the issue comes. up. Basically it is a question of whether the Federal Government and Parliament can be trusted to resist the pressures of four provin- ces for power which they should be, a partisan question, and it is to be hoped our legislators will not fall into the mistake of making it one. Taking No Chances One thing they’re making sure of at Washington is that Lyndon “B. Johnson will be the best pro- tected President in modern history on his Inauguration Day this Wed- nesday.. That much is agreed to by all concerned with the ceremonies, though the Secret Service security screen is so dense that only some of the details have leaked through. ~ This concern is understandable. The Warren commission of inquiry into the assassination of President Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963 was strongly criticab.of the failure to ‘make an advance inspection of buildings along the motorcade route | in Dallas. Its report also quoted a recommendation of FBI director, Edgar Hoover, that bulletproof +-never possess: It-isn’t, or shouldn't +-- day for resuming an adjourned journed.”” by the late Hon. C.D. Howe, “IT LOSES SOMETHING IN THE TRANSLATION” OTTAWA REPORT By “the throttling of Parliament.” What is closure? Standing Or- der number 33 of the House of | Commons provides: Immed- iately before the order of the debate is called, any Minister of | che Crown may move that the debate would be ended, and the deciding vote taken, before the House rises at the end of that | day's business. S.0. no. 33 continues: ‘Such question (of closure) shall ®be decided (i.e voted upon) with- that hour, but ill such questions as must be decided (i.e. voted | upon) in order to conclude the | debate shalll be decided forth- with.” HISTORIC CASE This machinery was invoked glass be used at both the Capitol and White House inaugural stands. The newly rebuilt and rearmour- ed limousine, with a glass “bubble top” 114 inches thick, is expected to be used for the parade. The building-by-building inspection of windows overlooking the route will PUBLIC FORUM be made in advance by teams of police and Secret Service agents. In addition there will be agents with rifles as well as Army television scanners keeping watch from roof- tops on the throngs massed in and - around the Capitol Plaza where Mr. Johnson will take the oath of office and deliver his inaugural address. Secret Service and Army Signal Corps. units will be supplemented by all but a handful of the 2,500 men of the Metropolitan Police De- partment, with perhaps 1,500 along the parade route. Troopers of the “Washington military district will be stationed, as usual, along both GOOD NEIGHBORLINESS Sir, Today with all che mis- and misunderstandings | among nations of the world, we of the United States are indeed to ee | Hebron | summers | enjoyed the. made us | home away from home. | September of 1964, we both | strick- | sides of the line-of march. At vari- | en with serious illnesses and | erator cae | a meee mented by others of Washington’s | pi e we really | several police forees, including the | faivesnhy ar “lore thy nels. Capitol, White House, and National oe” However, it oa ete e Park Police. And to bolster the | .1y",n"smorunity to be om the police strength for what may be | receiving end of this philosophy. the greatest inflaxof visitors in | leery Community Hospital | Washington history, 1,000 National | of the ces easiest | Cardone ll bo sargned t0 oe) 50 ot wee et oper The wall of protection will be as Speed Get devon ant te impregnable as it is humanly pos- | yond the line of duty. Their ac- sible to make it. This is not the | {MSS SPtncir own is some. way Mr. Johnson would like to have aE we 00m never ferent | it, but the choice is not his. It brings oll ean ecy cad tas et home to all of us, in some measure will convey to Dr: De- wat, Dr. . Dr. and Mrs. at least, the appalling weight of re- George Dewar, Mr. Brennan, sponsibility his office carries. ‘all the nursing and hospital pe- ‘ . ‘ sonnel, and the clergy of all EDITORIAL NOTE fe | matt, Sry, ste Noma A States agriculture our sincere gratitude. vent report shows that the inte tare be. one hospital ; 3 1964 | with such a dedicated staff that ‘all the wonderful neighbors Fab ebron “so, Clean, Wes t and O’Leary— we hope i sce r ‘ we } ‘| + We are, Sir, exc., ee ae F- hates | | that he would invoke | the foliowing day. That was in- deed a throttling of Parliament, | gare Patrick Nicholson Commerce, in the’ notorious | pipeline debate in 1956. Speak- ing on the very first day of de- bate on the pipeline, he said closure and was considered to have been a major factor contribut- ing to che electoral defeat of the Liberal Government the follow- ing year. In the 1957 election, the new Conservative leader, Mr. Dief- enbaker, stumped the country blasting the Liberals for abro- gating che right of Parliament to debate. He promised that, if elected to power, oe Standing Order number In his first speech in the House of Commons after becoming Prime Minister, he admitced that closure ‘thas been proven necessary in times past", and continued: ‘During the election campaign I said, and I am un- changed in this viewpoint, that having regard to its potential danger, as was evidenced so clearly so short a time azo, we intend at the first opportunity to -move the necessary motion to remove closure from the rul- es of the House of Commons, to the end that Parliament will be restored to something of its an- cient glory.” This intent was repeated in the Throne Speech ax the open- ing of several sessions in the Diefenbaker years. Yet this ‘first opportunity”’ never cl History Of Closure Rule Recalled l» Closure has been described as ; when Minister of Trade and | seemed to come. In fact in 1959 | Mr. D perhaps indicated some | Heat Camera | For Diagnosis By Dr. Theedore R. Van Delies The thermograph is a relative- ly new heat camera, used # dia- gnose cancer and a variety of circulatory disorders. The skin is warmer when the circulation is good and colder when the flow of blood is reduced. Tumors also emit heat and malignant lesions | are warmer than benign grow- | ths. v The apparatus is a sensitive | heat detector combined with modern optical ‘and electronic equipment. It contains a camera that transforms into visible light | the invisible infra-red energy | “ ‘| rays given off from the surface | of the body. Recordings are made on an ordinary Polariod black and white film. The end result is a heat map of the pa-| tient. It is a sophisticated tech- nique for measuring surface | temperature. j The carotid artery in the neck | divides into two branches just below the ear. One branch | in- ternal) penetrates the skull and | brings blood to the brain. The other (external) goes to» the temples and forehead. The temperature of the skin is the same on both sides of the | forehead of healthy persons. If the flow of blood to this area is blocked by an obstruction in the common and internal! carotid ar- | tery, the skin is cool on that side. The sensitive thermogra- | ph @etects the difference. The developed film (thermogram) | reveals a pattern resembling a | dark smudge over the eye and root of the nose on the involved side. The apparatus is a new tool to help diagnose stroke and to lo- cate the site where the circula- tion is blocked. This is impor. | tant because it now is possibile to by-pass with a graft an occlu- ded accessible artery. To avoid misunderstanding, we must make it clear that other diagno- stic methods are available for this condition. hope it will prove helpful as a/| screening device in locating tu- NCTES BY THE WAY chemical placed in food made available to nuisance birds. Ap- parently it causes indigestion and the glutton bird gives cries of distress which may frighten away the other birds. This is the feeblest of the innumerable and ineffective bird-scaring devices man has tried without success. —Ottawa Journal. Unique In All History Canadian Press Staff Writer remain uniquely vivid because of his own prowess as a writer. His six-volume series The Second World War was not, in his estimation, a history of that conflict but was surely a con- tribution to history the like of which had never been seen be- fore. He had tuned up his creative talents with a four-volume se- ries on the First World War, not to mention numerous wrkings, even including a novel. of the admiralty for a time in the First War, once remarked feed. The Churchillian style doubts on the point, for he told | mors of the breast that are too | eloquence, with its impression the House that “when the g0V- | small to be felt with the hand. It | of ernment has given the matter consideration, it will be brough« | to the attention of the House.” Meanwhile, as any witness of | Parliament in 1964 can vouch, ; the “‘aneient glory . of Parlia- | ment’’ has been further tarnish- | ed by other means. PROVEN NECESSARY AGAIN Last month Prime Minister Pearson chided Mr. D for his | failure to implement his prom- ise, although his steam- roller majority could have enacted it. Mr. D in reply confessed chat “we did not in fact abolish clos- jure as we said we would. | Though the legislation was ready | when defeat came to us,” May- be, if his government had not been toppled on February 5, 1963, he would have introduced the very next day or thereafter the abolition which he promised in that first speech on October 16, 1957. Tomorrow’s Another Day Hamilton A story from Ottawa late last week was as top-heavy with pessimism as any we've seen in a long time. It told of young Canadians from every walk of life showing such discourage- ment with federal politics that it was feared that few if any of | them would ever want to enter public life. . The cure for what ails them is a bit of growing up. Young peo- ple have pretty well always had nothing but harsh words to say for the best laid plans of their | elders. university students in particular are noted for their disenchantment with political life as they see it through lime- eolored glasses of inexperience. It.is q true that Ottawa, “circa: 1 , is enough to make even the, cockeyed “South Pacifie’’ fame turn cyn- ical overnight. But for that to happen, the optimist would have to be devoid of any historical sense. His confines wotlld have optimist of | Spectator | to be so narrow that he could |~- | not see tomorrow for today. Tomorrow truly is another |. day, and if that is a cliche, it | deserves té be. The worthwhile | young from all the centuries | have eventually way. And An Uneasy Truce Israel's border with Syria is of all her -boundar- Arab neighbors, in: EEE &F H { re i ! i i i e< gf ' i | a i i E ri f rte f f | Ze it e< 23 i | ¥ i t if Fi i hi i ‘ oe e > & = es : : 3 F an aye ae E ] é | ef FF i a3 l bhi i i fh i j F | i ih 7 j ! i | if i ff li iF 5 3 z z : i | : i Fs fF ae Mot annoy, should they be re-| is considered precancerous. also is used to localize the plac- ental site prior to birth. This in- | formation is helpful when doing | a@ cesarean section and in ob- | stetrical emergencies. DARK LENSES | I. R. writes: Is it harmful to | wear dark glasses to view tele- | vision at night? REPLY No, but dark lenes may) strain the eyes. These glasses | are used to screen out the sun's | Tays and there is no advantage in wearing them indoor, mére so when viewing television. It is easier to Jessen the brightness of the television screen. ROUGH WART Mrs. M.S. writes: How does a | keratosis wart differ from other | warts? Even if thes. warts do | t | | | moved? REPLY | A keratosis wart is scalier and It should be removed via radiation or surgery. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— A foreign body in the ear or nose should be removed by a/| physician. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should. be composition, grew from memorable war speeches. SEEN AS CONTINUATION which he hung the “chronicle and discussions of great military and political events upon the thread of the pecwonel al experience of an tndi- “I am perhaps the only man and | who has passed through both the two supreme cataclysms of recorded hisiory in high cabinet office. Whereas, however, in the First World War I held respon- sible but subordinate posts. I was far more than five years in the second struggle with Ger- many the head of his majesty’s government... ns “Nearly all my official work was transacted by dictation to secretaries during the time I was prime minister. I issued memoranda, directives, pe r- sonal telegrams and minutes which amount to nearly 1,000,- | 000 words. “These documents, composed from day to day under the siress of events, and with the knowledge available at the mo- ment, will no doubt show many shortcomings. Taken together they nevertheless give a cur- rent account of these tremen- dous events as théy were viewed at che time by one who bore the chief responsibility for the war policy of the British Commonwealth and Empire. “TI doubt whether an) similar record exists or has ever ex- isted of the day to day conduct of war and administration. . . These 30 years of action and advocacy comprise and express my life effort and I am content to be judged upon them.” Few authors have procuced as much material as Sir Win- ston, perhaps because few had intimate knowledge of such a fantastic subject—hims. If. Word Of Warning Lenden Free Press and killer. Time has borne ou. 4 , year, only 121 cases were re ported, of whom, fewer than ten died, and under 100 had any pa- Talytic afier-effects. ‘But polio has no more vanish- ed than have tuberculosis, smallpox, typhoid fever, mea- sles or any of the types of influ- enza. They ail lurk in the back- ground, ready to infect the sus- ceptible. Every baby that comes into the world is still a potential po- lio ‘ victim, even though ite chance of contracting the ease becomes increas: un- likely. While cases of may in the future become medical curiosities, this will be trie only . victians, of whom 3,145 if parents haye: their childrea une, Chicago, Illinois.) while 20,000 were crippled. Last | immunized is herty. eo pegutia: dunce stones Charlottetown to: CN travel bargains 03-172" Sackville $2.20 Moncton $2.90 Truro $3.70 Saint John $4.30. Halifax Antigonish $4.80 $5.20