prem sos: iy The Guardian Covers Prince Edyiard Island Like The Dew — W.-J:-Hancox, Publisher Wallace Watd— Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Pullished every week day morning (except Sun- day ahd statutory hdlidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.|., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. ~ Branch offices -at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nifionelly by Thomson: Newspapers 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 agd. The Canadian Press. The Canadian . * Piesy is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper + .eredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the loca’ news published herein. All tight or republication of special dispatches here | tn. also reserved-—-Subscription_cate: > Not over 40c per week by carrier. - $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and arees | not serviced by carrier. ; $15.00 ‘» year off. Island and U.K. $20.00 ,per and elsewhere outside British ‘Com 5 Be ‘es year-in_U-S. monwealth. Not ever Te single copy- | Member Audit Bureay’ of Circulation. PAGE 4 _SA DAY. MAY i 1966. . Wooing” The farmers -” When the Legislature was in ses- “gion, the most controversial issue=ap- peared to be the Shaw government’s “industrial development policy.—This policy, on Conservative showing, resulted_in six major new industries ‘and-aqumber of smaller industries being located in the prpvince, employ-— a ing - a basic force well -in—exeess—of—| Ay ‘1,200 wage earners on the spot, not - to speak of the creation of other new -Simuus fen at ,1,800—and__ the cate Be ° oe Mur . Stimulus gifen to a yartety of primary ‘ {ndustries./ suppliers, service indus- -~__-tries-and-retail-trade.Butthe Liberal |_ - opposition. maintained that there had |_ been gross extravagance and mis-- - management, and called for a com- plete judicial investigation. and ex- . ternal audit of the affairs of the In- dustrial Establishment Corporation ——_and the Fishermen’s Loan Board, - . which is committed financially in‘the building of steel-hulled draggers for “the Island’s expanding dragger fleet. , It -was the government's contention that full information had been sup- plied to the House. on‘these matters; “but since the opposition insisted on making this a major issue it was tak- ing it before the electors to decide. Meanwhile, however, the emphasis seems to have shifted to the agricul- tural field. This, Mr. Campbell insists, is where the government: has fallen down most calamitously, ignoring the dact that agriculture is the backbone » of our Island economy and that as _-our farmers prosper, so too will the - greater percentage of our citizens. Well then, says the ‘government: “ ‘____let’s see_where_this-argument teadg®) Farm dollar Sales were a record $41,- “000,000 in 1965; in the last full year of Liberal rule in the province they were $28,307,000. Estimated net farm income for 1965 was $16,000,000, as against $12,218,000 in the last Me eral year. The current budget of Department of Agriculture i is $1,500,- 000—three tines greater than in ‘he: last year of Liberal government. The Conservatives claim credit, moredver for $3,000,000 loaned—in over 875 loans—to young farmers to settle on farms. New, farm-related industries have involved upwards of 1,000 farm- ers and created fiundreds of jobs for ‘farm men and women. Impressive gains were also made in: dairy herd improvement, quality control inspec- tion and other phases of the industry. Much more is being promised under the Rural Development Auth- ority to be set up by the Conserva- tives; much more, too, under the new, | Liberal: policy: On both sidés,. now, | the farmers are being wooed with ardor, and it may be difficult for them to make a choice: We shan’t _attempt to do it for them. But against the argument of having negleeted their interests there is the past record of both parties which may help to throw some light on the subject. We have had to take the comparison made by the Conservatives~6n ‘this > point, for the Liberals haven't: pre- Sented any. What, No Bouquets? Former Finance Minister Walter Gordon now thinks he might have been wrong in asking ‘the Liberal party to “move to the left” in his ‘widely publicized new book, A Choice for. Canada. ‘‘Progressive,’ he con- -cedes, might have been a better word. But that will only get him another blast from that “progressive™ com= mentator and former NDP member for Port Arthur, Douglas Fisher, who ~ claims Mr. Gorforf's new gospel is as _ \ phoney -as a plugged. nickel. “This | « is the developing con game,” he chargey. “in which the Liberal Party recaptures attention of the public _with a repeat exercise: in putting on an apparently radical and national- - istic face.” The fact*that it is being assumed at a’time when the party is holding power: makes it ' “nothing but a swindle.” “The game is developing in or: % | | Is | | j j @é t | average. - onto, centring on an emerging Lib eral Party organization,” » Says Fisher. “Not even ‘the Toronto Star has the nerve left. to resurrect another ‘new’ Mike Pearson. So it has to be tem Liberal .Party’. with Walter Gordon back from the comfy wilderness as John the Baptist and, ee: its messiah.” » But Mr. Gordon's—book. is. get- ting blasts from Liberal sources as well. Manitoba Liberal leader Gil Molgat has called on Prdirie Liberals toaunite against-the writer's “Tor- onto-oriented policy. And , that staunch and seasoned Liberal writer, Bruce Hutchison, has some devastat—| ing comments on the subject. For the most part, he says, the work is “an assortment of highly respectable platitudes,” such as Mr. Gordon’s be- lief in racial unity, economic growth and the good life for all. Canadians. “Apart from certain specific proposals nations. It seems to startle and in- -spire him only because he is late in arriving in politics, an . amateur among. professionals, cithee like vou boy turned loose in a candy®shop, perhaps a den of ghosts and horrors.” Hutchison finds the writer’s con- troversial for all that thay be Fay the selves as narrow and.quite contrary/in their \implications to enlightened/ Liberal views. ‘There carr be no eseape,” he concludes, “from the real meaning push the Liberal Party to the left in domestic policy, to more national- ism (the historic *Conservative doc- trine) in foreign policy. He may suc- -ceed in both directions but. it will be a pity if the Liberals, and other Can- adians, don’t understand what he is really doing.” : Which raises the question, of course, whether Mr. Gordon himself understands what_he’s trying to do. The Year In New York Poor old New York! An Associat- - ed Press dispatch says that in the great American metropolis, 1966 will go down as ‘the year of the big flat tire.” The year isn’t half over, but so far just.about every form of public transportation in the_city has had a strike-caused blowout. It started with the busses and sub-— ways. Then the hearses halted. The | airport busses stopped. The Long. Is- land-Railroad went out for, an over- “night toot: And now the taxi-drivers | ut. For residents and tourists slike; it’s been a_tough year. The water shortage lingers-on.-A_ strike has kept three newly merged news-~— papers off the street. Even the-chorus girls-at the Latin Quarter kicked up their heels and walked out. The taxi drivers went on strike Thursday night, leaving only a few of the city’s 11,700 cabs on the street, The few cabs left headed for the air- ports to take care of some of the travellers stranded by a strike of airport bus drivers. Train service was back to near normal. by Wednesday, “however, which was somevninig to be thankful ‘for. we It’s recalled-that--celebration-for - the new year was hardly over when’ Michael J. Quill led his transport workers union out on its first strike, a walkout which flattened the city’s . subway and bus system for the next 12 days. Two weeks after the trans- port’ workers returned to the job, Mike Quill died—and went to his _ grave ‘in an ironic postcript to the strike. His death came during a strike by 500 hearse and funeral limousine -vhe is-diseussing-a-social progress Jong hm 8 r —under way_in this and-other Western |—1 — ~ of Mr. Gordon's book: He is trying to . | v —economy, British Columbia drivers. Quill’s body was carried to” _.the church and cemetery in the back of a’station wagon. “If all this should drive - ‘anyone to the hospital,” says the dispatch, “the patient may soon find the sooth- ing hand of the nurse missing.” The city’s, 3900, Tegistered -nurses are threatening a mass resignation for May 23 in a labor dispute.<So far, more than 1,400. have turned in. res- gnations. _ But according to the city’s No. 1 labor troubleshooter; Theodore Kheel, New York really has * Reserved reputation as being strike- “happy.”. The.amount of time lost in the ‘city due- to strikes when* com- pared {o the amount.of time worked, ~he-insists;is-only half the national “The common cold causes York than more time-loss in: New strikes.” ‘ ; So lef<it-be known to the. tourist: New York stilfN visit—if you've got the-stamina for it! EDITORIAL NOTE From now. on we must be con- cerned-—not—just—with—the “‘nut—be- hind the wheel” but with the nut in the wheel itself, with all the parts of the car and its design.—U.S. Sen- ator Abraham A. Ribicoff; i 7 1¥ ‘an un- is a‘nice place to - tang teh tony * af THE POLITICAL FISHING SEASON PLANNING BIG EVENTS B. C19 Celebrate Two Centennials — _ National Geographic News Letter “British Columbia is a barren,. . Ness springs’ from westerly |a century ago 10 foot, mule,~and cold mountain —country that _ not worth keeping,” reported the London Truth in 1881. —* Today, however, Canada’s westernmost province supplies half the nation’s wood products, a third of its fish, and nearly all its zinc and lead. »- The crown jewel in Canada's is celebrating two important cen- tenaries: the union in 1866 of the colonies of Vancouver Island -and the mainland to -form Brit- ish Columbia; and th~ confeder- -ation-of—Canada_in__1867__ Pag- | eants, parades, and other activi- ties ranging from stage-coach | is races to a polar-bear swim will | highlight the two occasions. UNCLIMBED “MOUNTAINS Despite ‘booming industrial | * growth, British Columbia’s scen- ery looks much aw it did when Captain James Cook first landed of Vancouver Island in 1778, Alpine meadows and towering, snow-capped mountains—s ome yet to be climbed— have earn- 1 “Switzerland of America.’’ Its fjord .-notched Soast suggests | | —-Norway: Herds of moose, elk, and big- | hofn sheep browse swampy low- lands. and--upland——plateaus__ many of the — province's cae lakes, 30 that ‘some “become. stunted from lack of adequate food. Coastal waters teem with salmon, tae eet, and herring. Seventy percent of British Col- umbia’s 366,255 square miles — | an_area larger than Ohio, Call- | fornia, Oregon, and Washington | combined—is covered by for- ests. Canada’s third largest prov- | ince, after Quebec_ and Ontario, —runs to climatic extremes. Along the upper Peace River valley, -temperatures. drop. to 40. degrees _ below -zero, while Pacific coast | residents are picking roses. Sagebrush and cactus- flourish wet far from tropical rain for- ests whose Douglas firs ow foot-thick~ bark. Victoria, stately capital city tucked into the southeast corner of Vancouver Island is, visitor punned, ‘‘so English brings tea to your eyes.” Victorians ride horse- drawn tallyho carts, play cricket and cfoquet. They. always stop at five for tea and crumpets. GOLD BRINGS SETTLERS British Columbia's corfimer- cial’ capital, Vancouver on the mainland, is the second busiest port and third largest city im Canad: Although Vancouver is farther north than Quebec, it has winters so mild that roses bloom in’ December. The pleasant mild- Our Yesterdays {From The Guardian Files) (May 14, 1941) “The Vichy ~ proved the Hitler- Admiral Dar- lan collaboration terms in a for- mal gesture considered by dip- lomatic circles to be more than | anything else a warning to the United States to Stay out of the war. Rudolph__Hess__broke away. from Germany as a_ hopeful missioner of peace, - it became known with the disclosure that | his. authorized flight out of the Reich was aimed at a’ rendez- vous in Scotland with his old sports acquaintance, the Duke + of Hamilton. TEN YEARS AGO (May 14, 1956) The Pope approved transplant of corneas from dead to living eves. He did not speak on the transfer of these «lenses from living persons, but indicated he might do_so_later’ Mr AA ‘MatGaliusn; Carle ton, was appointed grand mater of the Grand Orange 'odge o Prince’ Edward Island. which met in Summerside. - as one | it | -Government- —ap--- winds heated by the warm wat- ers of the North Pacific. | North of Vancouver lies t he , historic Cariboo Road. Along this rugged trail tramped the first | séttlers of British /Columbia— | gold-hungry miners: creed came camel. Some squandered their instant fortunes in $10-a- dance saloons; others* stayed to devel- | lop jess glittering resources — Ka pitza’ Academician Pytor L. Kapit- that a quarter- - century Tater list includes chest pain, palpita- za’s current visit to Britain puts | Kapitza would effectively bring | | tion, a-happy—-but too long delayed— ‘to béar all his vast scientific |beats: Not all. smokers are af- close fo one of the great scien- | tific scandals of this century. maining forces of Stalinism’ in, those who are sensitive to the One of “the many “who fled—-Soviet ‘intellectual® and Political weed: a are~so~bothered. : le z | from the chaos of the Bolshevik | life. (NOTE: All correspondence pee ures ord ‘ | Revolution..after 1917, the then | Kapitza’s role in helping free | to Dr...Van. Dellen’ should be Broch oa available at G jan-Patriot | young ‘Kapitza settled in FEng-| Russian science from the ee addressed to: Dr. Theodore Office” = jland and soon established him- | self as one of the world’s fore- most experimental physicists. By- the mid-1930's,- Stalin un- derstood the importance of phy- | siecs for military and economic strength— -and the extraordin- | itza’s_ stature. As a result, when Kapitza in | 1934 made his. customary~annual- ° New York Times _ farm_lands, water pacer er, zine, and lead. s Return -prestigeto—help—combat—the_re-- ot rigid Marxist ideologis been enormous. He was ales : key figure among those mem- | bers of the Soviet elite whose letter to the Central Committee: | helped prevent the recent 23rd Soviet Communist party con- gress from partially ._rehabilitat- | body is bent forward, and the | knees are flexed. Swing, Sway |. Of Walking | UNITED: NATIONS (CP)— | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Prime Minister Pearson took a Walking is so automatic’ we “big .step Wednesday’ toward | never give it a thought. The_nor- opening the United Nations door | mal gait consists of a rhythmic to Communist Chinese member- alternation of swinging one leg ship in the world organization. . apoincided with an admissi The .Canadian prime minister the U.S. state department’ that + while supporting the body on .the | other. Balance is maintained by called for communication be- | an interplay. tween the legs tween Peking and the West, | aided by the” pelvic, “trunk and notably the United States, after | thorax. | warning of the dangers of keep- When the pelvis rises to allow_:ing China isolated from the the left leg. to swing forward, world community. ‘the shoulder on that side droops = He appeared particularly con- ‘slightly and the chest inclines cerned with the continuation of | towagd the left. This is done be- Chinese isolation especially cause the’ body might fall to the /view of Peking’s third nuclear right when the pelvis on the left test Monday which he feared | side is raised. Individual pecu | could result nothing but the iarities in gait result when this further spread yt nuclear weap: | normal process is exaggerated ons. or restricted. Women are inclin- Canada has always ‘sided with ed to take shorter steps. when the. United States in opposing , watking,_but-the-up and down Communist Chinese member- , | pelvic movements are accentuat- | ship in~-the—UN—but— Pearson, yed. Feminized young men—with while stopping short of calling-~ |the current tight narrow trous; for Peking’s admission, said | ers do the same, but not to such ‘‘the whole question remains ‘an extreme. urgent and.we cannot continue | “In the stilted, or majestic, to shetve “it,much longer.” | --stride-as-seen.in parades or pro- . DEMANDS EXPLUSION . cessions,—the—oscillations—of the. Referring. to Peking’s demand __ "pelvis and-shoulders-are-limited._that—Nationalist--China -be ex-< ) The same-takes-place-when tak pelled from the UN as the price ing shorter, but quicker steps. of Communist.~ ~Ghinese admis- | Swing and sway walking often | sion, the prime! minister said | runs in families. They hold their that Peking itself has created cheads in_ the same manner and difficulties. .‘‘in laying down have the same. swing to the terms. that- others Gannot ac- arms, shoulders, and -hips: cept.’ _ Balance is maintained in the But-he thought better under- ‘staggering gait by spreading | standing with China would re- the legs. Over-relaxation “of the | sult from Peking’s participation | muscles and poor posture lead in the ‘‘international commu- to a slouchy. walk that differs nity, especially in the, Loner |from the fatigue gait. The tired‘-Nations.”’ person appears to carrying a ~~ The- —prime—minister-met_at | UN headquarters with Secre- tary-General U Thant Wednes- day. _—Thant—-has called—in_the past: for universal membership in the world body: and has blamed | China's antagonistic behavior. | ‘| heavy load (and often is) the Abnormal gaits are-more—bi- zarre. Certain brain diseases af- ‘fect equilibrium and balance. Those with: ataxia whose mus- cle movements. are. jerky and | uncoordinated, Ik as though ie drunk. ,Their feet are far apart. Victims of ta lift the feet ‘high 5 off the ‘and keep the , ee downward. They have lost | f | their sense of perception and are | not aware of the Deaition of their y In Parkinsonism, the muscles are stiff and the victim bends " |forward and shuffles along with *the knees ‘slightly bent. *TOBACCO HEART Pid writes: What is ‘nicotine | heart? | P | ‘Nicotine, co, or smoker's | heart refers to a variety of dis- | tuxbances produced by exces-,. sive indulgence in tobacco. The and irregularity of the fected-in-this_way;—usually_only. S | Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- | une, Chicago, Illinois.) — : ing Stalin. Kapitza, in short, has | turned the tables on his dead : abductor. | visit to the Soviet Unionto—see—- Phe wobld and the Soviet Un- | his mother, Stalin ordered, that In.| he, in effect, be kidnapped and | forcéd-to remain: ——— Stalin could not foresee then ion are both fortunate that he thas been allowed to champion ~-the-—eause- of freedom—in—M-o-s-.|- | cow. | _____ Bending So Mrs. Lurleen ‘‘(Let George : do it’’) Wallace has won the#Al- | abama Democratic primary and | thus, in all Probability, the gov- ernorship of Albama. Mr.-and Mrs.. Wallace maybe Alabama's problem. And we | Canadians, to be sure, have our ~* own politicians. . ” All athe same, bending the law - }is bad“in anybody’s language. And bending the law to their | own advantage is what the Wal- laces are. doing. | By ~ his - state’s constitution, ‘Governor George Wallace can’t’ The law ~ Oe Journal have another term. That's the law clear and. straight. And what does he do? Puts up. his wife Lurleen as a candidate. She~ doesn’t beat around the bush: if voters elect her, her husband ~~ will simple as_that.. And what is the whole contin- ent worried about? It’s worried because the ris- ing generation doesn’t seem to have much: nempett for the law, for conventionssorfor their eld- ers. With the example paraded before young people these days, why should they? Britain's fastest rail services so far, with trains reaching speeds of 100 miles an hout~ have been introdiiced on two) main routes linking London with the cities ‘of Manchester ~ and Liverpool, Part of a $525 million modernization scheme, some 1,- 480 miles of track -have been equipped with overhead electri- | fication. Luxury .air-conditioned high-speed coache§ are hauled by 80 ton locomotives. .Develop- | ing 6.000 horsepower, they haul | their trains at an average of 74 : - miles an hour over the 190 mile | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO. routes, cutting the journey times from three hours ten minutes to An outstanding feature of the new trains is their comfort and quietness. Rubber- cushioned suspension reduces _ transmis- sion noise, and the new track is of continuous. welded rail to give a smoother ride. The Canadian National Rail- | ways is producitig a faster ‘trip between Toronto and Montreal where the roadbed «is suitable for greater speeds. However, rail services across the tation Get the Best... < GT. GEORGE ST. +4wo—hours.thirty-five minutes... "SUZUKI" ® Low Dow Payment ® Kasy Teri, ‘, THE BIKE SHOP. and ool LODGE. Rail S peed Hazards — Fort Pee Times-Journal will not. be able to emulate the |example being set in Bri tain without a tremendous § expendi- ture of money to improve bal- lasting, steel rails and coaches. | Speed is good objective for rail- | way operators— providing of course that passenger comfort and ‘safety is not sacrificed. govern. ¢-It's——as_|_—_. - a = We Trade By Furniture . © Apptaoes * Televisions FIRESTONE _ Home and Auto - Ltd. Dial 4-5547 DIAL, 4-6741 Phone. Long Wistance % tonight or lowest.- (Charlottetown Station-to-station THE ISLAND _ COMPANY in ish ae Foundation = " What else that costs so little gets you together again so fast? Peking And The Wert y Boris Miskew Canadian Press Staff, United Nations partly at least on the fact- that ''she has been treated as an out. cast-for’ so many years. U.S. MAKES ADMISSION ‘Pearson's visit to the UN ion. by the U.S; turned down a Chinese proposal to limit. use of 'nuclear + weapons..The state department | said it. madé the decision be- cause it believed. the Chinese | did not ‘have a legitimate and - constructive interest in disarm- | ament. Chinese Premier Chou En-lai prompted the U.S. statement: by |charging Tuesday that~ the U:s. had rejected Peking’s efforts to agree that each country would not be the first.to use nuclear weapons. He blamed the U.S. rejection for China’s determina- jtien to~ develop nuclear arms. x Referring to China's fear of... “US >~aims, Pearson—said ‘‘such a fear ... may be a mercly tactical move .to strengthen their (the Peking government's). ff f _own position with the Chinese» .or..it may. be based but “ dangerous,” ‘people . . Lona genuine, “miscalculation _ that could mean = ‘all-out war.’ He then called for communication” to mee and understand such fears and sus- picions, adding that vat ‘takes two to to communicate. SPEND FOR CHARITY The. IODE’s 29,000 members raise and “spend more than | $1,000,000 a year —PURITY. “Parents Prefer ‘Purity Products” 317 Keni St. Dial 47125 ¢ © ee teeseeeeneeeeer ae | } Porereoe -. Alllhe needs to say is “Hello Dad” — to ‘Make the call - worth while ANYTIME ON en es are to Saint John, 806) i TELEPHONE ‘LIMITED: o