= 5 2 eee es ii ae : _ ’ wh phils = as : \ : : * ~ ennai = at ? neem aie em singe ms ae a _ . a ye : “4 es = + - . - eee: : an oe 5? ® ee ae ys ae ° ‘in ‘ —e - mea an | standing is gained, the United States | pe: : . Che Guardian | sige mii — Surgery | NOTES BY THE WAY .- oe. : * This view a ars to sha ° ‘ , , Rovers Prince 'Edwerd island Like The Dew cS : ppe : bs : nt e And Hernia , TT . W.. J. Hancox, Publisher by an American newspaper of inter- “ to +a When a person into deep - Wallace Ward oS Frank Welker | in t icti Sci- | > “Yes I have to! water, it’s usually an excellent: _ fllneging Ea | National repute—the Christian Sci ta 7 By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | 4 sae 5 Dare See | ee be bee te beeen Published every week day morning ‘Sue | @nce Monitor. It savs that Mr. Pear- ~ Surgery offers the only hope oo “Phat isn't | shut.— Guelph ercury. dey end ‘statutory holidays) et 165 Prigce “Sweet. son's suggestion about suspending , : of permanent cure for hernia. | 4. that’s an op- 3 Charlottetown P.E!.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. ees : SOUTH EAST -UNITED STATES Fewer trusses are used and the “— Galt Reporter | An optimist is @ fellow who . Branch offices at Summerside, Montague. Alberton bombing “might well have been an r injection treatment rarely is | "9 reat marries his. secretary and and_ Souris. : 2 . oblique hint that Washington has not ' poy en ny ose Oe ib A Plymouth youngster, when | thinks he can go oa dictating Adveteinn Santen tent temas Newsoscem | made it sufficiently clear yet ‘hat the : tee pote ae asked how she liked the new ar-_|to her. | — Community- Press, Empire 3.8894 Montres!l 640 Cathcart Street. Uni.. United States is in fact more _inter- Males are more Hr - to ort Fie an tae an 6 lo |. to 1030 West Georgie © ested in-launching peace than in a ae they are — of things we needed more.” —~ ae —- a a, ‘a " Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers launching a wider war.” And it con- jected to- greater stress in their Plymouth Review. ‘no to remain anonymous, Association and The Canadien Fress. The Canadian cludes: ~ occupations. Swelling appears| ,, a Post. Press ts Quclueively eniitied to the ‘ea ; : ; : , most notice Pop, if I saved you a dollar, = Ueation of all news nnd wn ts paper’ “North Viet Nam is no more like- ao nee or straining. | Would you = oe = Woman (to friend at races); credited to i# or to the Associsted Press or Eevtem . ly to be pummelled into the confer- A large hernia may exceed a | it? _— a You said | 1¥@ backed a horse and it's: and also to the local news publithed herein All : baseball in size, but some are so | | s#ved it for you. You . sure to win, because it starts Fight or’ republication of special dispatches here ence table than is the { nited States. small they can be detected only. | ud give me a dollar if I pas- | 99 to one and the race isn’t until BNiRe starved. hitenonen apie In fact. it cannot and will not come by examining the area. The = ar ee ary ae oat T | one o'clock.” — Windsor Star, “$12.00 « yeor by map Sh rel routs ond ween | 0 the table unless the facesaving | Go” baasiine "Gas sectredes 2 | Aspiring Vocalist: “Professor Met serviced by carrier path is offered that softens the duress | through the weakened spot. in| t's @ darn good thing the | 4q you think I'll ever be able to .2 $15.00 ® year, otf Island and UK. $20.00 per A wt ee - earth is round—think of how dif- do - hi with voice?” yeor_in US. ond elebwherd eutnide Britah Com ., Which the United States has so ob- the een Yer. ficult it would be to put an as- | 0°. saytaeg oe . manwesitir., : | viously been applying. In a word, Secaih’ Gee S Bove c tronaut into a square orbiti— might come in. handy in case of Te ae ee a B ccifeod United — oe = ont pee ite improved aus ee : a Hamilton “The strongest memory. is weaker — Hem ore accepts e omny t iney tics, it is amazing how easily | _ They tell about a Visitor from | i hah the srankent ink” are accompanied by more carefully | oldsters are able to undergo sur- — — we Seer - 1 ee ee -—spelled-out-details of what Washing- gery, Even those with diabetes, | Sher viewing a modest sized | everything In the toyshop with. PAGE 4 _» TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1965. Looks Good, Anyway The recent annual report of the Governor of the Bank of “Canada showed that. for the calendar year 1964, the federal government had a. budgetary deficit of $153 million— a national accounts basis—the basis _ calculated on the usual basis. Buton . the future. Mr. Gordon.is said_to have introduc- ed into the budgetary report last year for the first time—the calendar year produced a surplus of 3339 mil- of .$278 million. It was expected that the figures for the fiscal year ending. March 31 would not be greatly differ- ent from.the Bank of Canada’s esti- mate. for. the calendar year. There might even be a surplus (on a-national saccount basis)-of between $350 mil- ’ lion and $400 million. This hasn't happened, but an 87 .ton would settle for in Viet Nam. Then it might be time to pause to give the North Vietnamese time to reconsider.” . For Safer Highways _ Catching” up with a, “géfaway” car—or just an ordinary speeder— will be no problem for the police in It will be done_by-elec- tronics, in-a_matter-of -minutes,-and- thé innovation is likely to take place within the next 10 vears. This is the lion, compared with a deficit in-1963 | ‘Vie ¢*Pressed by Quinn Tamm, ex- ecutive director of the-International Association of Chiefs-of Police and a former. assistant director of the. Federal Bureau of Investigation at Washington. Mr. Tamm sees a great future for’ “electronic police,” as he "calls them, ‘not only in keeping high- per cent cut -in the federal budget , deficit. to $83 million forthe fiscal, year just closed from the previous year's. deficit of over $619 millio was reported“in-a- government. white paper yesterday. and if was indicated that the economny should move for- ward “to new and higher levels of activity in 1965... - We're quite out of our depth here: for obviously the Bank of Canada’s figures and the Finance Minister's ods of calculation. Combining bud- etary income and expenditure with the old age security fund. Mr. Gor- don’s $83 million deficit for the last fiscal year would be reduced to a nominal figure of $19 million; but that still wouldn't account for the difference, on whichever “basis” one figures it. What. seems to be beyond doubt fs that there has been a marked re- _ duction, in the deficit during the past year, indicating that the federal gay- ernment’s taxing and borrowing drained off about $600 million more from the nation’s savings in 1964 than it did in 1963. This will give Mr: Gordon more leeway in his coming budget presentation. Of late he has inspired the hope of broad tax de- ductions as necessary to stimulate an al boom.._-In -which. case, of. course, it won't be a balanced budget he'll be after, but one with a much more potent en. Pl Favors son Plan*~ The Manchester Guardian is one of the great newspapers of the Eng- way speeding under contro! but in freeing more policemen. for other duties, like closing in on crime and iyninals. - Such a system, he says, is now un- ¢ dek discussion by experts. It would # of a nationwide traffic con- network. masterminded by a ge command-type “brain centre’ ‘| linked to a complex of electronic de- ‘vices at each entrance, exit, and toll | highway _fconomy now enjoying an exception- | point along the controlled superhigh- way. As each car approached t he entrance, the electronic driver's license displayed on the windshield. This information would be fed in-’ | stantly to a central computer.contain- ing a library of all registration num- bers. The library would include in- _formation on whether the license was valid or the owner wanted by any law enforcement agency. The com- puter would respond with a green “go” light if all was well, give forth with a red warning signal in case of a suspect. Already. data processing and tele- fideres ate based to Gilet ae 1 eve” would scan the registration and | vision are being used experimentally. | -for traffic control in cities. such as Boston, Chicago, Detroit, New York, Washing, P.aris,and Toronto.Radar has long been tised in many cities to control speeding. So the conversion of electronics into a new kind of watchdog for the cop is just another logical step. Incidentally, says Mr. Tamm, it_will mean that future police | forces will be composed mainly of lish-speaking world, and we were in- terested in noting the distinction it | draws between the respective merits of President Johnson's offer of ‘“un- conditional” discussions on South Viet Nam. and Prime Minister Pearson's proposal of suspending temporarily the air strikes against North Viet Nam as a means of bringing the Com- munists to the conference table. It is.decidedly of the opinion that Mr. Pearson's offer is the more practical. While Mr. Johnson has offered un- _conditional talks and a $1,000 million contribution towards an aid program for Southeast. Asia. The Guardian says. he still wants to keep South Viet’ Nam independent, thereby rul- ing out reunification with North Viet college-educated men. Salaries will be higher to. attract them. ‘The trend,” he warns the reckless ele- ment of the driving community,. ‘‘is already under way.” No Easy Solution ' One thing-every nation does when it gets into the industrial stage is produce mountains of:junk, How to get rid of it is a problem that no na- * ficially blame is . __TWO-FRONT WAR OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Water Shortaage Poses Serious Problem ment is breaking a Treaty. .J{,' 1952 a subsequent Nobel Peace Tt is. paradoxical that this richly endowed land could suf- fer a shortage of water. Never- theless this is becoming an ac- -ute problem in the rich indus- trial heart of Ontario and in its nearby playground, despité.our | abundant natural supply excell- | ed by no other country. i - The most urgent symptom of this water shortage is the falling levels of the Great—Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway system, which in many places are at or | near the ‘lowest levels ever re- corded. At Toronto Harbour, the low water level typifies the | problem which is costing ship- | pers a lot of money through | their need to underload ships so: | that they can sail the shallowed channels. Ss The cause for this disaster, which is wrecking the commer- cial and pleasure uses of’ the reat Lakes and threstening our farmlands through the fall- en water table, is twofold. Of- laid on the shortage of precipMation in rain | and snow, which over the past three years has totalled four in- ches below. average around Lake Superior, and from eight fo 12 inches over the southern | portion of the Great Lakes | drainage basin. The perhaps overriding but officially ignored reason has been ferretted out by the hard- | working Liberal MP from Tor- | onto, Ralph Cowan. PRIORITIES REVERSED. a Mr. Cowan has visited’ all parts of the man-made Seaway, | making spot checks at some locks as’ often as six times. He has gathered information from experts; most important, he has | researched back more than half a century through interna- tional treaties, government or- ders and official records. Hon. Arthur Laing, the har- trassed Minister of Resources, has been besieged By ‘protests about a situation whose origins long predate his tenure of of- fice. He now states that ‘‘the important most changes ~ to | Great Lakes. levels have been brought about by engineering works, diversions, dredging and the operation of control stric- tures.” ; In effect, Mr. Cowan says, the | Gréat Lakes are being victimiz- ed to preserve the depth of wat- | er in Montreal Harbour. This is | | illegal, he asserts; tion has yet succeeded in solving.— But the West Germans are working hard on it, and are talking of a solu- tion which is at least imaginative. The plan is to establish a network of pipe lines leading to the sea, ac- , cording to a writer in The Observer Nam which was thie aim of the 1954 | Geneva agreement on an Indo-China | settlement. Mr. Pearson has urged the U.S. to suspend American air raids in .North Viet Nam for a short period to give Hanoi a chance to con- sider negotiations without appearing* to bow under military pressure. This would seem to be “even better” than the offer of financial aid: -And it would have the additional advantage of lessening the misery and slaughter. “While the offer of massive finan- tial aid is congenial to the magnani- of London. Industrial wastes, old cars, tires, bottles, even slag and steel mill waste, would be put through a crushing and grinding ma- chine, fed into the pipe line and wash- ed out to seg under water pressure. There is one hitch to this simple scheme. Residents of coastal cities may well object to the dumping of a torrent of rubbish off shore, with the | inévitable washing of dirt and debris ashore. Another idea is to use the rubbish as fill to reclaim. shoreland from the sea. ition. Shoreland already is under heavy pressure. There are conflict- | ing demands on it to provide recrea- mous American tradition,” adds the | Manchester paper. “it is no-substi- | _ tute for proper understanding of what — tion. commercial fishing, waste : dis- ‘| posal, petroleum productions, cooling water fer electric power generation and wildlife habitat. Massive land re- clamation will add to the pressure the war is about and unjjj that under- | and threaten other legitimate uses, | Walter Hyndman were ¢hosen | has, however, gone too far in) trusted to extend even justice to This, too, is a touchy propos-. | | in permit- | ting it, the Canadian Govern- | Our Yesterdays i (From The Guardian. Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (April 13, 1940) | Ira MacDonald, Hopedale, | second year student at Pine Hill | Divinity Hall, Halifax, was awarded first place at the annual competition conducted at Pine Hill to determine the win- ners in the Wiswell Elocution | competition. } | The New York Rangers de- | feated the Toronto Mapte Leafs 3-2 to win the Stanley Cup in the sixth game of the cup series. | * Toronto goals were scored by | gration Minister J.R..Nicholson, | court before which changes - |who is not long in Parliament, | the BNA Act could be argued. thought of | Otherwise, he warned. “ Syl Apps and Nick Metz: Ra ers’ goals by Neil Colville, | Pike and the winning goal by | Bryan Hextall. TEN YEARS AGO (April 13,1955) ' ignores the long- respected, prin- — ciple that up-river users have ‘prior rights. The ‘Treaty relating to Boun- | dary, Waters between the Unit- Led. States and. Canada,”’ signed - on 1th Janne following of shall be various uses enumerated here- |inafter-for-these- waters, and—no use shall be permitted which tends materially to conflict with or restrain any other use which is given preference over it in this order of precedence: (1) uses for domestic and sanitary . (2) uses for naviga- tion, (3) uses for power and ir- | rigation purposes.” EFFECTIVE DAMS. NEEDED That treaty was signed ‘for | U.S.A. by Elihu Root, who short- | ly thereafter was awarded the | Nobel Peace Prize. Around Ot- | tawa persons thus honoured are | considered to possess high qual- ities of statesmanship, and in winner, Canada's then Foreign Minister Lester Pear- som, Soplied. for apgeernl alam | clirs during labor is likely to in- | struct a power damn near Corn- wall “under the provisions of the + Boundary Waters Treaty of al provide for full Lake Ontario control dain at Iroquois is not -heart trouble, and —high blood pressure do well. In’ contrast, victims of asthma or chronic bronchitis may present prob- lems, because coughing interfer- es with healing and. may re- open the wound. This is why physicians tell tobacco users to stop smoking for two or three days preceding surgery to clim- inate cigaret cough. Obesity is of fat not only interfere with the inc. What happens to a pregnant woman who-has a hernia in the groin? It is likely to cause con- ern, considering the stress as- sociated with carrying the baby and’ the delivery. In many in- stanes; the enlarging uterus the internal opening 0 the’ her- nia. A temporary cure takes place and the hernia returns aft- er childbirth, It isikely to_be larger than before. If this does not happen, the lesion continues to plague the victim. An emergency operation may be needed if strangulation | occurs. The pressure that oc- crease the size of the. bulging 1909 says: ‘The | 1909."’. That— application _under-_ 4 took that ‘adequate control fa-- among the * cilities will be constructed and works will be designed to | spurs? What causes them and | mined to turn_the clock back or | level.” Yet the fact is that the | | hernia. The physician may ap- ply forcebs to lessen the strain. EL SPURS’ T. H. writes What are heel what is the remedy? REPL a Small, painful bony projec- | fully utilized to preserve Lake | tions from the heel bone. There | | Ontario level, but is opened to | are several causes and the rem- | provide Montreal Harbour level. | edy includes~-heat;—-rest;—-shoe—}—- | Mr. Cowan urges,--and— with | pads. and_ surgical, removal. sound sense, that the treaty should be observed by Ottawa if | the interests of Ontario: that the | Great Lakes should not be rob- | | bed to serve Quebec's shipping: and that if Montreal Harbour is | too shallow, its~level should be | It maintained by a new da ! ing Lake Ontario. Now It’s Laundered Oil National Geographic Society The.black slime that drains cars undergoing an oil salable commodity: This used oil oozes from en- face collections of used of} would also have created a fire | change has been turned into a | hazard for shipping. - The alternative would — have = been to burn the waste oil on | gines at the present rate of 600 | land. Result smog. million quarts a year, enough. to | fill every bathtub in New York, San Francisco, and several oth- er large cities. By laundering the waste, the nation's. re-refiners— a fairly. new industry—can produce 400 million quarts of lubricants re- puted to be as good or better than the original. . Since laundered oil has ac- tually been refined three times —first by the original proces- sor; second by the eingine which breaks down some weak- .er hydrocarbons; and third’ by the re-refiner—some sports—and stock-car racers insist upon it. Other users are bus railroads. Reuse of oil not only helps conserve the nation’s petroleum resources; it solves an enor- mous pollution problem, the: Na- tional Geographic Society says. The’ Horatio Alger story of crankcase oil began, in fact, when the rapid increase in the use of motor oils in the 1920's problem of waste disposal. If allowed to flow into. lakes and rivers, the slime would have, polluted waterways to a far greater extent than they are to- day. Dumped at sea, the drainings would have sealed. large ever- growing areas witha. film of used oil, endangering both fish and sea birds. Extensive sur- lines and | Dr. Winslow H. Herschel, . of the National Bureau of Stand- ards, looked into the over-. all | problem and reported that oil | does not really wear out It | merely gets dirty. Qnce the con- | taminants have been removed, |-the_oil-is_as_good.as_new. | TRIAL AND ERROR Dr. Herschel’s report, when | published by the Department. of | Commerce, encouraged techni- | clans to seek ways of cleaning 4 the oil. Experiments went on | all over the country. Little by little, through trial and error, effective means were found’ to clean the oil. Today, the procéssors of old | oil are organized into the As- | sociation of Petroleum Re-refin- | ers, with headquarters in Ar- | lington, Virginia. | The re-refiners use settling | methods to remove heavier par- | ticles in the used oil. Sulphurie | acid break up other contamin-: | ants. Special clays absorb im- purities, then are filtered out. | The -result,-experts say, is fure mineral oil. Additives may then | be put in fo meet the’ | needs of consumers. |. The sludge left over in the | laundering process represents | only a small part of the original | oil that went into the crank- | case. Since the sludge is non | combustible, it can . be on ae as waste and in an ordinary dump. Downg rading The Courts Twice in recent days, public men have brought the Supreme Court of Canada into contro- versy. In the lesser incident, Immi- obviously had no overstepping the bounds when he announced that the govern- ment will pay the costs. of an appeal to the court from an On- tario decision that atheists can- | iel Johnson, leader of the Union | Nationale opposition in Quebec. | Speaking outside the privileged | Chamber of the legislature, he | has advocated .a constitutional dt will not be the people who are mast ers of the constitution but a tri- | bunal all of whose judges a named by Ottawa”. | Thus he implies that the na- Dr. W.J:P. MacMillan and F. | not be granted citizenship. He |-tion’s chief court cannot be as candidates to represent the adding that if the ruling is con- | all Canadians. And so that his fifth district of Queens for the firmed the government will | Meaning -cannot be misunder- Conservative Party in.the forth- | bring in amending legislation. | stood he predicts that supreme coming provincial election. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lloyd G. | MacPhail recently were ‘mar- ried in the First Baptist Church, Reno, Nevada, U.S.A. Mrs. | MacPhail was formerly Helen -MaeDougall, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. John W. MacDougall. | Argyle Shore, and Mr. MacPhail | is the son of } MacPhail and the late Mr. Mac- .Phail of New Haven. The minister, who has a law de- gree although his senior career was as an executive of corpora- tions, thus has in effect defied the court to uphold the present finding. The staternent might better have been reserved. The second incident is much more serious, both because of its nature and because the of- Mfs. Robert A. | fender is a lawyer and a mem- (of the electricity used by | ‘ber of the council of the Canad- |ian Bar Association. He is Dan- | | court decisions “to evolve a sort of grand centralization to the de- of Quebec's national | aspirations’. > If this {s not contempt of count it comes dangerously near it. * VOLCANOS HARNESSED Volcanic heat furnished much | Italian state railway system. 1 | | | } | HAIR PRESERVATIVE Mrs. M.L.B. writes Is it pos- sible for an 82- year- old to serve the hair? - ‘ ‘' REPLY . Many. people of this age and can be done unless a correctab- le cause, such as anemia or lack of thyroid, is responsible. AT A GOOD TIME A reader writes: What meant by elective surgery? REPLY is An operation that can be done | at any time (elective) because it particular | 4 | | | | the . is not an emergency or a life- saving procedure. Examples are | had only one milk board instead | want to the repair of a hernia that is not another drawback; extra ‘layers | surgeon's work but delay heal- | pushes the intestines away from | grain tield said, “I start out in | the morning with my car and_it takes me five hours to drive | around my wheat field." After a | little thought our local farmer | replied, “I had the same troub- le with my car so I traded it | in.’ Mellen Weekly-Record. out making @ sélection: “Look re, sonny,” cried the exas- rated storekeeper © finally as the lad still pondered, ‘what do you expect to buy for a quar- ter — the world with a fence ar. ound it?" The boy thotight for: a moment, and then said cau- tiously, ‘‘Well, let's see it.” — Stan | Mrs. D.W. McGibbon of | | onto, national president of - | Imperial Order Daughters “Ot the Empire, discusses the pos- | sibility of changing the name, | saying: : “As for the word ‘imperial” it. | could be changed to. independ- ent. We are often called the In- | dependent Order Daughters of | the Empire. But personally I | wonder if all the businesses that~+ | have that word (imperial) n | their name feel the need to | change it. I doubt it.” Mrs. McGibbon is not alone in her doubt. We cannot imagine ithat firms with “imperial” in their name lose business because of it. And we cahnot imagine | that many today think the Im- | perial Order Daughters of © the | Empire is an organization deter- encourage imperialism and new colonies. ; ding By ODE’ Ottawa J Montreal Star. ’ cj Organizations generally tend to be too sensitive and there is an agreeable firmness in’ the statement of Mrs. McGibbon that her organization knows per- fectly well that the empiré has dissolved but that it been advised that it should’keep the letters “IODE” as its ‘initials even if the name is changed. Why?’ Because “INDE” is as service work done by the organ- | ization. As neither those who give nor those who receive are affected by the word “imperial,” change isnot required for the continu- ance of good works. A change to ~ for instance, the “Independent Order Daughters of the Com- monwealth’*would give the ini- tials JODC:: That would be enough to frighten off anyone but punsters and dry the welts “of charity. ¥ | ; |, As a mooted shortage of milk looms, pressures are being put | Ottawa for reyision of ita | | milk policy to eysure that sup- | | plies are kept near) a balance. | older have a fine head of hair | In addition there is suggestion | responsibility and tends to thin out with each'| that a federal board be set up | main there. Besides, conditions built | passing decade and very little | to oversee marketing of milk | in varioug provinces may not be | below it, rather than by drain- products, replacing provincial | bodies that now set prices and | | direct the milk flow. | The establishment of a feder- | al milk board has been suggest. | ,ed by President M.R. McCrea, | of the National Dairy Council. | Cértainly the milk ‘industry | might be in better position to | ask for subsidy revision # it |_of half a dozen to deal with. Proposed Milk Policy Lendon Free Press might have to be adjusted on ils advice: Yet the consumer must also be éonsidered- Therein the value of the provincial board is evident. Pricing is a provincial should re. alike and provincial and. area boards are in closer touch with the immediate situation. Ottawa may have to make some adjustments in i{s subsidy plan to keep milk flowing even- ly where it is wanted; it is known that dairying equipment and dairy costs have mounted materially. But does Ottawa ke over the directive load _f the provinces? This strangulated, removal of a wart | The federal board might be a | should only be done when it. is | of bunion, face-lifting, and ton- | certain means of assuring -an found the provincial boards are sillectomy. | ample supply; federal subsidies | not able to handle the situation, CN travel bargains ‘Sackville Charlottetown to: _ Moncton Truro. Halifax Saint John : laced | Anti onish