. Che Guardian Covers Prince Edwerd islend Like The Dew > W. J.. Hencox. Publisher Wallace Ward Frenk Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sun day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague Alber ton end Souris. ’ Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers | Advertising Services: Toronto. 425 University Ave Empire 3-8894; Montreel. 640 Cathcart Street University 65942, Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). Member Canadien Deily. Newanayer Publishers ’ and The Canadian Press The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub fication ofall news dispatches in this paper tredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the loca! news published here in All fight or republication of specia! dispatches here in elso reserved. Subscription retes: Not over 40c per week by cerrier. $12.00 @ year by mail or rure! routes and erees nor serviced by carrier. $15.00 » year off Island end U.K. $20.00 per Year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com onwealth Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1965. i; Quebec's Upper House Quebec is the only province in Canad: to retain a Legislative Coun- cil, and now a storm is brewing over a government proposal to limit its powers with a view, reportedly, to abolishing it altogether. This can- not be brought about by the Legis- lctive Assembly alone. Under the BNA Act it can be secured only by This left the poor of London to bear the brunt, and with appalling consequences. Huge red crosses were daubed on the doors of infect- ' ed houses and those inside were locked up to die, with a day-and- night street watch maintained to make sure that no one entered or | left. Burials took place only at night. By September, 1665, Londoners were dying at the rate of 10,000 a week. Their’ bodies were pitched into huge pits as the churchyards became ‘over-crowded. By the end of the year the city had lost one- quarter of its population. As a reminder of what it was like to live in a city without sanita- tion and where medicine was in a primitive stage, the Guildhall autho- rities have assembled some unique exhibits of the catastrophe. They include advertisements for quack medicines as sure cures for the plague, bills of mortality which show that the plague took over 100,000 lives, religious tracts com- paring London to Sodom, and wood- cuts showing the angel of death hovering over a city covered with coffins. No one knows why the bubonic plague never returned. The Great Fire. of-1666,.which. destroyed. most of the city’s vermin infested build- ings,- may have had something to Prevention Of Clotting | The value of anticoagulant drugs continues to be controver- sial, though they have been us- These products delay. clotting of blood and, theoretically, are made to order for a number of disorders of the heart and bidod vessels. In coronary thrombosis, fpr example, a coronary artery is plugged by a clot. The antico- agulants prevent new clots from forming or existing clots from enlarging. They do not dissolve them and, im this respect. are of currences A comparable situation oc- curs when a vessel to the brain or an extremity is obstructed. Why the disagreement? The an- ticoagulants are potent drugs that produce a condition of the blood similar to that found in bleeders. Thousands of men women have been studied to de- this type of medication are sistent but in general, the inci- dence of complications is reduc- ed and, to a lesser extent, the mortality rate. They are not administered to to the victim of a more serious coronary thrombosis. They ne- ver are employed when the heart patient has an active pep-. tic ulcer, recent, hemorrhage “from the gastrointestinal tract, and evidence of kidney or liver ed for more than two decades. | greatest value in preventing re- and | termine whether the benefits of | worth the risks. The results of | these studies have not been con | been hoisted by | States Congress for President Johnson. | ment NOTES BY | Customer in drugstore ( on, By Dr. Theedere R. Van Detien Sunday morning — 'Plense sive me change.for a dime.” Drug- gist — “Here it is. I hope you'll enjoy the sermon.” — Toronto Star Top men of the U.K. and Rus- sia are to exchange visits this year, which at leas! proves the Moscow party isn't afraid of a Khrushchev coup d'etat. — Windsor Star She (with newspaper) — ‘'It says here that the Eskimos use fish - hooks for money.’ He — “Gee! It must be tough on their wives getting fish - hooks out of hubby's pocket while he's sleep- ing. She — “‘Oh, well, the nights are six months long up there, dear.’ — Montreal Star THE WAY © Actor Dean Jagger's reason for withdrawing from his .ole as principal of a high school on | a television show seems stran- | gely appropriate: ulcers — O1- tawa Journal Dector — “Say ‘Ah’.” Pai- ient — ‘‘No, Doc, I didn't come here for an examination. I just want to pay my bill.” Doctor — “Ahbhhhh!"" — Montreal Star Charles Templeton, defeated candidate for Ontario Liberal leadership, has* been appointed fifth vice-president of the Ontar- io Liberal Association. Presum- ably this is something like the ‘‘reserve’ championship at the Royal Winter Fair or the consolation prize at the Tuesday Ladies’ Bridge and Slander Club. — Guelph Mercury Congress Storm Warnings By Arch MacKenzie Canadian Press Staff Writer storm warnings have the United Two One underlines disenchant- about shoveling foreign aid to countries that respond persons who had a mild heart | With riots. ttack but ] attac ut are given frequently | litical maxim that a | majority | docile The other re-emphasizes the targe is by no means a one. The president's first real brush with the Democrat-domi- nated Congress came this veek when the House of Repfesenta- tives blocked an additional $37,- | was preparing / Egypt, whose President Nas- ser invited the U.S. recently to | drink seawater, a prime target. | Indonesia is another and so is Algeria, which continues, with others, to feed arms to The Congo rebels Feeling rums much deeper and stronger at lower ‘evels and in Congress. fed by statis- ti. such as those showing U S. | libraries abroad have been at- tacked 40 times in 11 years GOVT. DISMAYED But, while the government to review the next batch of food aid for Egypt the consent of both houses, and the ae Council is likely to take a dim view do with it. But London is. still | “The a of hemorrhage is ev- for’ Keypt farm-surplus items Sas Norse ee ts gee of underwriting its own demise. dotted with patches of wasteland ol peo ra a e The move, backed by some | off of the last con supply dnder The same problem faced our which mark the mass burial pits of , The physician keeps this posibil- | key moderates, drew applause ™ exPiring three-year agree- Island legislators in years gone by, | the Plague victims, and London CAN'T TAME IT AND CAN'T GET OFF ity Yo-e“titisimum by checking qoverament wacinad tne aus what it can do about -it re- concede ape ail living sith thacams [88 urchine still chant “A ring pte ages roms nerves | i uae ae ee promise they worked out at “that “around thé Yosies, pocket at tut ope} SEEKING. WIDER MARKETS utatnashtepetanietsutiachaieanamstiatetimdtmminuttsrumesntrie tence ooh bres nd increases FATE IS UNCERTAIN tion of Senator J. W. Fulbright, a 0 = te Weed for tore More thes mewenr -ON@= 2s time. -Two- decades of bickering posies, unswate that this nursery N *,? h a anticoagulation created uncertainty about the of the most enlightened mem- were broiight to anend-tf 1892 when | Thyme originated with the plague. ‘New British Measures To Boost Exports tanec tent | Serutee-aid’-tal fiat “the. presi lonal eieies. ee both our houses agreed’to its provis- ve 7 ten me ‘one ree British Information Services after a severe heart attack and eee praved for 1965-66. | \ As chpirman of the powerful ,b he follow- | Tash which cover e ies 0 On July 20, 1964, the C t- ) clearing banks ided f ! ; of the Continue them for a month to | s isa than the bill.) fo wee committee, he bor year ren royal the plague victims; the “posies” | tee for Exports to Canada was | for exports at a fixed rate ine | BNEC. te the chairmen or six weeks. Others recommend | eet i hed. greene cary fr Tne ee : . set up to cover the interests of | stead of at a rate varying with | managing directors of over 150 continuous therapy as a means ' been trimmed tais | ald bill this time. His objections nt. were the herbs and spices carried to | British industry in the Canadian | the movements of the U.K. bank | exporting concerns. | ° Meee nictta ia ce tant wen, leas, oppoe ition. —— widely suppo orted perhaps not : . . i market. On October 26, thi | rate). Mr. Dougl ' i e obstruction in the blood 5 i . It was claimed, wrongly, that ween REM er aR oo by a Government White eke British National Export the ‘Board of “Trade, opeabing wl oe individual must cooper. a oe uw Lastliriegy Doaad | ween n coposes the present ‘ ; . ’ ‘aper annou | ; Press Conf | y hav the blood : ng this matter was not within the com just as well, perhaps, that it serves | % rebate of tax components on | COUnCil believe that for a short point that prospects “for ‘British | pertedicatly -by competest Meche is fresh evidence of “neo-isola- | agreements with each country. petence of the local parliament, , , export goods. And on December | ‘€rm improvement we must | exports in 1965 are more encour- nicians. | tionism. _ He wants aid channelled also that it “would place the Island as no reminder. nowadays of the | 16, a “Joint Statersent of In- , look to established exporters. | aging, largely due to the new The main objection to long: | It exists to a limited degree through the United Nations or time, three centuries ago, when it | ‘at was issued by Govern- | There has been a “most encour- | measures mow coming {nto term treatment is that antico- at highest levelf.“as when other international agencies. He completely under the control of the mpanied the rimable of the ment, management associations | aging” response to a letter writ-' play. | aguiants are anxiety-provoking | the U's Sena ee ase ants the package split lowest and mest corrupt class. of.) 4 "s ae eee edt eeeatre drugs The user always is com- | more sensitive to hostile acts and financi:! sections bat Pres : ” . eal the dread cry of ‘bring ou \ pro- A cerned with the hazard of having | _ . franchise voters.” Time hag dis- your dead!” ductivity. Enough Of The Nazis a serious hemorrhage. He also | io recipients of American fevers ane reacted un- *“«_proved this contention, too, and the , On January 27, the Board of | is reminded of the exi : y to this proposal. barriers against the popular fran- W. II In The L d Trade issued a statement an- Toronto Telegram the illness every cxistence of = chise have been lowered further | ay. .. , — cotect at which iste help firms | ,'t time for the CBC to ring We wonder if it has calculat. * P' : Faith, And Patience ; A is Province has more th hich curtain on its contro- soberly. Dissemina- TOO MUCH DIGITALIS , in ie now waiting to be share of dep ; ee aa ie do more and to p- Bang Beet pre crusade — Nazism tion e hate on ene a scale — | lee writes: A friend writes | New York Times’ poosiaimed. deal, of attention has been | vi tnt, Most present export. | “The Corportation’s technique has already opened many old | How can be tell? I'm inlerested lan’ wittk creme, come to, the week by week. And the green ot The 1893 provigions, still im =} dissed on this fact by the surveys | “ins %, to make a contribu. wine Rockwella. the Siamleys veeeioe mines aeteraet | because I'm on digitalis | gin see not only February ba man’ bude, inevitable = “he force, abolished both the old houses ; | tion, | odie | REPLY — March, and even think hopeful- vernal equi, . and created a new Legislative As- ucted in connection with the Exports by British industry cro osune ot television, et "ftnrough it all, no solid evt- |, 7M, Most common symptoms ly of April. By the simanae win, | YOrnal_ equinox, as epring ttselt. sembly here of 30 members, one- | "© ARDA agreements, aimed. at | are at present running at arate | "ks chosen vehicle is the Sun- dence has been offered that the 27 Rausea and vomiting, asso- | ter is almost half over, whether [— > > ea] ’ rehabilitating such areas and pro- of over 12.9 million dollars a | day- slotted, sensation- studded | disciples fo Nazism and anti-Se- | fated Pte slowness or irregu- | the depth of snow and cold add DEAF? half elected on the old Legislative viding opportunities { a A " oe om This Hour Has Seven Days. mitism are swelling ranks in. y of the heart beat. their testimony or not. There Council franchise, the other on the [ for progress ee vhich is half a8 | The theory is that if these rac- | this country. BLEEDING FROM was an old rural belief that if 2 | INSTANT HEARING and development. This is a move- grea in as re ists and a.piring dictators are We are not for pretending tha SOMEWHERE ; Man could come through Jan- NOTHING IN EITHER franchise which prevailed for the | 1 ont in which ha war. This achieve- | given enough TV time, inciden- such fanatics don't exist But | \y-, y¢ writes: What is indi. | 22°Y With half his firewood still | r! old House of Assembly, thus pro- | ™ t in w ! we have a great deal cae fo woost of the rest oieres eal ees ey conn xe ee eeriously question the ooio4) 2. an hat is indi. | in the rick and half his hay still | EAR! ! _ viding for fifteen electoral districts a. ime and % hes come not be- ee industry, enya they'll Kill their own cause with | millions of Canadians iv nassive | pre rising is De morning? iy through to. May. This. ent | ee What eu have each returning two- members, one |" : Ctincie off relatively pm.all| 'it's's delonsibie Useey ta no | encase ee dont manent for © | Bleeding from the mouth, | mean winter was going to break | a nee ie AS cannene still called “councillor” and the other t is worth noting, however, that | sumber of large firms. one can dispute the right of the | The CBC's zoom lenses are tn:| 708: Of throat. The cause can | i Best-senek. bet it did meen if ne at amy Atek Weer -“ggsemblyman.”-Perhaps-Q.ue-b-e-e—| despite adverse conditions our farm- | gin"firms whose export per | fin wall auth the cbiicity bun. | larger than We. tt is \mpartaat | examination) °” * ‘sorough | the ground were not like’ the | this Instrument and se ne mana Gn aan 1 _per- : publicity-hun- | larger than life. It is important | on. anite in the hills. The ‘| will ever know. Hear at may find it necesasry to resort to ers can claim to be second to none | formance is of a high order fry format of the Seven Days | that the corporation regain its | ~ gr n . They would ; ence There is, however, WEIGHT LOSS AND mek in due time. || with clarity, free from dis- a similar compromise, though in this | im their skill and enterprise. They | Dit: *sencrsl eitort wf Britain | an. tends it's doing | US 2P4 sense of proportion. | INSOMNIA Due time— that i |] turbing seizes. Here ts a day and age it can hardly be called have set enviable standards in | is to achieve the growth in ex- ee has Otherwise it may do more M.D. writes: Could too little | remember and place one's faith | mew techaique, a sew way a satisfactory one. quality production along many lines, | ports which is essential for an | gone ahead despite growing pro- harm than fhose ic Intended to | eee eee | iy Faith, and patience. The | muy 5 herd ef - and there is in the economie | tests. unmask REPLY | seasons don't change overnight, | S#rine life for the hard of _. Other provinces appear to have no question as to their | situation. Yes, especially if insomnia is but they do change, though nei- || Dearing, a new deal for the had less difficulty in getting rid of ability to utilize whatever new op- ant eet maetne ae W k Wh caused by nervousness or pain. | ——— nor. verdict can al- seat. Fre tte cin te ‘an’ Gutmoded system. New. Bruns- | Portunities are placed in their way. | A. Establishment of the form- orkers o Wor AGE AND BACKBONE | we || sending the within : * t — Mas | ’ vs _ a7 chamber in 1892 and Manitoba in | W48 given in a statement last Fri- | tablished Export Council for | Be kind to the employee who | the shoulder, taking ‘hinvout to | are as old as vour spine”? | the Indians, when the cold fang = Maritime Hearing Service a 187 Ni Sco followed h day by Agriculture Minister M Europe and other similar bodies. | has ulcers; he is probably one | lunch, and slippi me Li tafe ‘ REPLY bites deep. And February, which | { N Sectia » 6. Nova tia fo muc nister Mac- | j“"Midition to the : | oP the beat en year ba a pping compliments ty . was the Hunger M is yet , Nova i : . . Export Com- yayroll. | into his pay envelope. He might: % don't like jt because my een, is yor to later, in 1928. Ontario, British Co- Rae in commenting on standards mittee for Canada, already form- | That’s the advice bus! feel he bei | back aches Hy. | come. But the sun sets a long , Name ...............ss00005- jumbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan | formulated by the Canadian Federa- | ¢t five new area committees are essen ty Dr. Baar c. Rose: | pared treme ire corporal TODAv's Heatran mer °, half hour later than it did a mon- | gar egg : . so u : , | now , ~ ' : pAddress ..............04005. never had upper houses. ° ri * culture for a proposed = Zealand, po the {Common He explains that workers with | transter to see a ‘calor | pee teenagers | tt ago and daylight lengthens, |. oe me we we _! . e an ine. wealt ntries in Africa, As- | ulcers ‘‘are super ti Cc ly. he feel he | . . In Quebec, the Montreal Star ex- | 1 aes lan r swine. The adop- | (eens the Coribcan The | and don't have to be prodded | hed to make still greater efforts ee ee a ee presses hope that the storm over : plan on a provincial or | Chairmen will be members of | because they prod themselves.” | to merit all this geniality. an Delien should be ad- ~ - this issue will blow itself out quick- regional basis was proposed as a | te Commonwesith Export | Being kind to them, he says.can| In either case, his ulcers dressed to: Dr. Theodore Van ly, and be settled iri a rational way; | Means of stimulating improvement B. En gement of the f toe “hem eleers fa the. teat Sen ea i hs Mae une this cae *itlinols eon CAN IDB SERVE YOU? , . ’ \° mcoura: or- ve in 1 in min , a wi this ° . . “for the wonder is that this Legis- | in the general level of Canadian hog | mation of export groups and of place. would make him a better em-| O Fel lative Council reform has not been pen 4 and ee through the coe tee export. to belp ta ethene, i might not. A soper- eee into. a see eee at Our Yesterdays ruary 2nd, 1965 . ” use , ock. C. More for overseas | conscientious worker, plagued | consideration. A vicious circ] , oa. hrought_ about Jong” since.” Most. | oe quality breeding stock. | . C, More support tor overseas | comscisnand despair, mieit | ike ths could end’ up with the | ‘Prem the Geardian Files) R. J. COLLINS Commonwealth legislatures whose . MacRae pointed out that the | trade missions, and for market | feel the more frustrated if the | employer getting ulcers, and TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO of the practices are modelled on ‘those of | standards ‘proposed are much too | Tesearch undertaken by trade | boss started clapping him on | who would be kind (9 him? eee Industrial Development Bank the British House, it notes, have al- | low for Prince Edward Island. The D. Improvements in the offi- to War Se gail toon Heel i : . pply Board officials | will be at ready curbed their upper houses | required carcass score of 75 points | ‘ial services to éxporters and Good Conversation they run up to $10,000 a year |” i more publicity for them. where they exist. Ultimate control | for sows and boars falls 10 points E Improvement of the Export Brantford Expositer pyre Rimage soapy Seanlyiebareh os KIRKWOOD MOTEL ° a-year-men they are . granted : \ is vested in the elected representa- | short of the required score in this ee erie oP atdnction | “How long is it since you had | ing magazine, 1s often echoed | living. allowances from $15, to ‘« Charlottetown, P.EL) tives, where it belongs. ee ne meas it) sould he) | mths cnlntielit SSM tromn GRR | ees ean te tna | aes Gi ee on “ue In this district and throughout Canada many n : : to r lating ’ so ~ o% # A Dreadhd Year eda hae ee sekyice to ow rem tthe axstem, that jolts your thinking?” This | ‘often passes for conversation | 94 pe bie persons and firms in practically all ‘types of breed : ng question, once asked by a lead-| When groups, large or smail, British Government businesses j “Celebrating” wouldn't be the | surplus of excellent breeding stock. one ae on ere’. sna | sipping, tee oegeat sees Agriculture + Construcuon « right word, but at the Guildhall ‘in We trust that this statement me eee chant fleet in the ‘ Professional London another memorable anniver- | will get wide publicity across the Strangely Tolerant Sr coset to retirarnh ‘itter ship on the registers of Great} Hachiesionel ee ¢ Tourist and NOM city’s his is It Toronto and Mail ence. Theit talk tever ‘rises | Stitain and her: colonies. 5 © Transportation gary in the city’s history is being | country. It underlines the fact that above the level of gossif> often ‘ and Wholesale and Retail Trades, observed. It is just 300 yéars,| we have been leading all Canada for | _ Th law is severe, and prop-| look after their cars by the pro | malicious, teiviality or the inan-| Trueman” i969) have obtained loens ‘from the ‘Industrial the G the last and tn how ti erly so, with automobile drivers | vision of long-term warranties | siy obvious. ‘They shift theit (February 1, 1955) vi loans the “Industrial since reat Plague, ygare-in. production standards, | found to be impaired by alcohol | on parts failed to have the Mr. L.D. MacKay was s®| © Development Bank to acquire land, * fnost terrible of all the epidemics |~ © or drugs, Yet iti strangely ik | desired fet. ee ee manager of the Royal| . pag Sediiennee Bo ys, EDITORIAL NOTE erant of the vehicle by | He suggested, not too hopetul-| Even the educated of Canada, ah iB thewr Wits sak te ne git, 0 There are two sides to the na: | it'we most ale on the reeds, ti| > thal8 more, energetic pro-| sre, cites to find any pipeegeding Mi WR Cru | if you 6 that ID Cains we would rather be the | ram of public education on the | SUbiect for conversa- sider t B can be of » you tional unity question for politicians | S°™* tion they can share except golf / ' — po vietim of slack steering than | importance of vehicle mainten- | so4 bridge. Howard Wood was elected are id to an appointment with to consider, says Senator Wallace | the bhindering reflexes of a ance might Seip, Bot be seemed The bears pass tn as exshange antanen of the Beard @ Dun, the IDB : by telephoning . re McCutcheon who was, for a time, || “";""Staher of autuhorHative | al, immediate solution would be | pixcc ne views we the taerite of | Village of Victoria last night. Mr. Collins at The Kirkwood Motel. Minister of Commerce in the Diefen- | voices have spoken against this |'a regular maintenance plan for cars hockey stars and suchlike, | Other . commissioners were .. Telephone 4-8527 or 4-5147 ~ baker’ government. “The prospect of inconsistency, the most recent | all vehicles, enforceable by law. | and when all is sald it boils | J@mes Knox and Fred Inman ‘ ee a Liberal Party with its being that of Mr. E.K. Brown-| Many Canadians may feel, a8 | down to nothing much. Mostly it : ~ or in advance by writing te eas strength | ridge, president of American | Mr. Brownridge does, that zov- | has been a parroting of stale | WANTS BETTER RELATIONS 4s centred almost exclusively in Que- | Motors (Canada) Ltd. ernment control is undesirable | ideas or borrowed opinions on| BELGRADE (AP)—External ne ed bec,” he “ig ‘as disturb. | _ Speaking at an Ontario De-| when a particular problem can topics of no rea) value. Affairs Minister Martin of Can-| he partment of Transport road saf- | be resolved by other initiatives.| No one has had any worth-| ada expressed Thorsday hopes ing as a Conservative Party repre- | ety worksliop, he referred to | In this case, however. individual | while information to impart. No| for advancement of relations sentative of only ‘English-speaking departmental . check in 1963 concern for death and injury on one has had to sharpen his wits. between Canada and. Romania, INDUSTRIAL which revealed that of 83,000 ve- | the roads has not measured up | to explain or defend » point. No the Yugoslav mews agency Tan- 5 ne oe FT Canada . .. 1 do not want the word | hicles examined,. only 52 per | to the need. one feels stimulated except by | jug repotied trom Bucharest. Liberal to mean French. I do not | cent were im. good shape. Voluntary inspection establish- | what he has drunk. | The agency said Martin indi- D VELOPMENT BANK peg ae Seieeh the word to The remaining 48 per cent, | ments, from which defective ve-| It has been a swapping of bed-| cated that consular and finan- Py es ace © Welle - a Conservative mean | Mr. described as | hicles are usually threadbare mental | cial and establishment 236 St. George Street, Moncton, N.B. ‘ Zoe ae ne people in et ine ae neat til chi See Gon dame to tasks ee er car tae ene ‘and Romania will be , at te efforts to induce motorists to! attendaiice mandatory. sation discussed. %