2 . ‘ Based on these reserves and other thar to say construction $24.965,000 cr $512 2 share com |8 The Guardian. Cherlottetown, Wed., April 21, 1965. Results for the period did rot * * * ment ’ Grav - DOG NOT FORGOTTEN IN FLOOD one of 951 Salteaux Indians evacuat ed from the Roseau . Reserve near Dominion City in face of EXPERTS STRESS POPULATION DANGER Sidney Nelson was rising waters of the Red River Sidney; 5, was determined that if he had to leave home his mongre! ‘Happy’ would go too Happov was one of the few ani mals to make the 114-mule trip - to MacDonald. near Portaze !a Rraine (CP Wirephoto) Birth Control Has Become ~ Matter Of World Concern Onre~ nearly tahen, the subject of birth centro! now ts of world comern. Some experts ‘ predict starvation, revolution. even a third world war unless the ocean ef humanity is held in check Mechanical contra- ception. ‘sterilization. abor- tien—all are cainine as the werld wrestles with what many see as the 2th cen- tury’s most vital question. By SID MOODY She wore a pair of mens shoes. mutddied from the yard with its skeletons of junked car She rocked shyly im a tiny chipped chair as she cradled her youngest im her lap A safety pin did duty for broken: zipper The sun. angiinz through the open door of her eabin. caught her blorde hair when .she..looked. up-to -speak She was a mountaineers wife, in Kentucky, with six children But she was everywoenan. ‘ion A world symbol, a world head- ache and, maybe, a world heartache She didnot know tt, but she was speaking for many mullizns when she looked... nervously out with the resolution of a. mother's love. across the dporway and told of her harsh decision “T thought about jit a lot. and 1 decided it's more of a sin to brine children inte the world that vou can't take care of than to stop having thern CHILD OF A CRISIS Her name was Ruby Gray wife of a man with a game iez who hasn't worked in months and who supports his family with food given by the, zovern- And she is also the child _@ a catherine world crisis over-population Rubv Gray embodies it al! Too many children. dwindling food for them, no means to buy more In their despair Rudy agreed to her husband's decision to have himself steri- hzed That as their private de- cision It will not be the world’s 23 But the. problem 1s the same and the world with = sudden awareness has come to see its symmensity, ccmplexity, its ur- gency The problem ts an unbalanced equation in which billions of mouths .do “not equal nutrition, health werk to sustain life in decency It is a problem that holds in its relentlessness the possible seeds of a third world war Can mankind's beccene his greatest is a heated argument " being argued There is some—but not much opinon ‘that the .unpreced- ented world burst of population *s a base upon which to build 3 utopia of .consumption and prosperity Others see it as a burden of such pressing weizht as tn condemn the world's poor greatest gift curse? It But now 1s to hves of static —futility—or worse GOVERNMENTS ACT And while the argument goes fin arnonz experts of economics and demography. the science of population. the governments of . the world have seemingly over- mizht been moved to action The United Nations reflects increased world concern in con- sidering what role it should play im family planning Rabies are being born faster” than a person could name them. There are 192,000 births every dav, according to the United | Nations. over 60,000,000 a vear. more than the population . of Britain At the current two-per- cent annual rate of increase, “wotld population m 00 . years wil! be one person per square 24 world's UN projections for the vear 209 show a world popilation. now 3.500.000.000 of about double that Mexico. with a curreat population of 40,000,000. will have 71,000,000 by 1980 at its present 3 -per-cent rate of \in- crease. one of the world’s hizh- est « CITE TWO REASONS The reason for the chance in. population is two- fold) Hizh rates of birth, espe- cially im the underdeveloped swift . countries, and a steady drop in the SPdeath rate which acceler- ated astoundinzly after the Se- cond World War due te the developments of science Because of this post - war surge. a high percentaze of the people is ‘young In Latin Amerca more than 40 per cent of the people’ are under 15, non - contributors requiring -education -and--food--supphed-- by their producing elders But if almost half the population 1s not producing and the country 1s al ready poor. as most of the Latin American nations are. how can ths huge segment be sup- ported? And crux lem that is ths snmediate of the population prob- Not how can the under- developed nation: achieve the promise of msing expectations they fee! ther new independ- ence entitles them to, but how, in fact, to keep their standard of living even at tts present marginal level” : The Food and Agricultura! Orgamzation of the UN says that up to half of the world’s people suffer from hunger and malnutrition. By 1975, says the FAO. world food supplies will have toe be increased by a third merely to sustain the popula- tion at sts present, unsatisfac- tory level." A reasonable im- provement would require a 30-per-cent increase bv then and a tripling of food production by 00 P WHITES WELL OFF Says a UN official: ‘‘Food, not Berlin or its equivalent, could be the cause of world war Il. particularly if it gets mixed up with the racial thing. It's the white who has the food. It's the brown. black and yeilow who has an empty belly. ‘That's heap of tinder sitting over there.” , The Far Fast has 53 per cent al.. the. world's _ population . and produces but 28 per cent of its food while North America, with seven per cent of the population. grows 21 per cent of the world's supply 2 Can the world feed its <well- ing mesnbers? Almost every. ex- pert answers that it can—the- oretically. Colin Clark, a British agricultural economist, ts quoted as saying the world's arable land could feed 95.900,- 900,000 people in cultivated as intensively as Japan's There are areas of hope- the Philippines’ food output rose six per cent annually during the 19%@s—and unease — India feeds up to 4.000.000 people on imported food and 11,900,000 mouths are added each vear. MATTER OF LIFE, DEATH Egypt's President Nasser said as recently as 1962 a nation's population was one of its. main natural resources But over- population now is considered by the Egyptian government to he a matter of life and death Fared with a doubling of popu- lation in 27 years, Egypt has PATTERSON'S wiet FOR ; WATCH REPAIRS bezun distribution of birth con- trol pulls India allocated $56,000,000 for a family planning program in its current five-vear plan. five times the amount in the last one . Japan. where birth contro! has beer nationa! policy since 1949. has. had 20,000.000 lezal abortions in the last 15 years as the birth rate has fallen sharply In Latin America, mainly Ro- man Catholic. birth contro! ts nonetheless a topic of increasing concern Up until very re- cently.” said an . Argentinian physician, ‘‘1t was had manners to talk about the whole issue. Things have. changed in the past year.” Even in the Communist world population has drawn official at- tention. Marx preached and the party line still does—that _overpopulation._is_a__capital.st plot perpetuated . by lists to ensure a reddy market of cheap. surplus labor. Under | socialism evervone works, so the gospel of Marx goes, hence ‘the problem smnply evaporates. Except it hasn't China, which in the next years will add an estimated population almost equa! to that of the United States, has raised the official marriage ace and imposed rationing restrictions on parents whe have more than three children. MONEY LACKING Despite the urgency of the world population problem. a relative pittance is being spent on it Yet it is through research, many feel, that some way will be found to the perfect control dewce. one that its cheap. easily used, long-lasting and could meet Roman Catholic church objections that any me- chanical interference with pro- creation is a sin against natural and moral law The Church of Rome is fre quently held as an unyielding foe of birth control It is And it isnt In recent. years the church has softened its position by per- mitting couples a measure of natura! birth control. the so- called rhythm method And now, confronted. with = radical new developments in birth con- | the growinz” trol as well as - erush of population, the church has shown itself to be anything but a monolith A-diatogue tas moved into “the open. ine © in which conflicting opinion 1s strongly held and remarkable for its outspokeness. STRICTURES UNCHANGED The church has not chanzed its strictures against birth con- trol. But a papal commission has begun studying the whole area of fertility and population. And, as Pope Paul said last year: “< Birth control and poouls- tion) is an extremely 2rave problem. If. touches on the mainspring of human life . . it is necessary to face atten- tively this development... and this is -in fact what ‘the church is doing. Rut meanwhile we say frankly that up fo sow we do not have sufficient motiv jegg but industrial- does 15 birth + include’ any return from the bes other exploration, the inc ; will start later this year. aan ae si to consider out of date and thus =BC will : pe cent intefest in Millhaven production can be continued for The an saith ae ag ae $2.06 far not binding the norms civen Join Fibres" lid recently acquired at least 20 years, Mr. Fraser goraaees gpa phases —_— esa earn- us, therefore they mus! oe : : for $15,500,000, Mr. Ord told said eae facilities. — ow sagged a —— considered valid at least until Ocean Telecast ton te eee He zave no details of the new 700 new jobs, he said. reported . arsings. were -_S: hz » ftonscience saree . " : ; i 2 te CPi—tee cEc’s Months of 195 were $27 674.000 mill for the Stratheona mine, Net earnings in 1964 xere'000 compared with $786,000" Cardinal Seunens of Belgium TV network will participate. in 222!55! $21,387,000 " for the first : urged thé council last, year to an hour's live transatlantic tele. W2rter im 1964 Sales figures “meet the immense *prooiem cast using the new Early Bird (DCluded those © Western posed by the present 2mo- satellite Sunday, May 2. the ‘eor- eee fa ee , , : ‘ > ves ! a r 2 ° eee Se wok tag ood ei Coan Ok ee a i ek ae A friendly suggestion from Healthy, Wealthy and Wise: ter is diffieult but the. worid is waiting. | bez you. my brotners, Jet us avoid a new Galileo case. One is enough for the church.” Where its introspection will carry the church is impossible ite say. Rut one of the ‘actors the “church must be aware of is a seeming gulf in» certain ‘areas between its theory and the practices of the faithful. Italy, almost universally Cath- olic and where, contraceptives are illegal, has.one of the world’s lowest birth rates. Why? “There are two things ‘talians do not regard as a sin—missing Sunday mass and using .ontra- ceptives,’ says a non-Itaiian priest. ABORTION ‘RATE HIGH In heaviff Catholic Chile, a doctor has estimated. that be- tween 35 and 49 per cent of "pregnancies -end—in-—abertion,& __sin_In—1951, Pope Pius—XU,_in affirming the legitimacy of reg- viation of offspring through the rhytiim method, said: .“1 may even hope that science will suc- ceed w pviding this licit method win sufficiently se- cure basis.” - | Maybe it has’ > Two" new contraceptiv>s- the pill afid a little plastic curlicue called an interuterine device (fUD* have brought world-r: wide population control to the point of possibility. And they have raised profound questions for theologians : . Dr. John Rock, a Catholic gynecologist’ who was a@ ‘eading developer of the pill, notes the pill does not~-kil—the-—female simply interrupts its monthly cycle. Should this be stigmatized as temporary sterihzation?” Rock asked. in his controversial book on birth control The Time Is Now What is the difference be- tween a conscious effort to avmd conception by rhythm and cuse ofthe pill? Both, he says, are in exercise of the intellect vis a vis nature to safeguard the family. - ne Apart from its philosophical implications, the pill has come into widespread use throughout the world. Widespread ignor- ance, however, has frustrated its maximum effectiveness. The IUD is another break- through Ar official of the popu- lation council, a private organization supported by the Rockefeller Foundation. pulled one from his desk drawer the ‘other day : ‘ It only costs pennies to make But I say. and I believe, that this little piece of ovlastic is going to change the history of the world.” For reasons that medicine does not fully understand, the TUD 1s 94% per cent effective in preventing pregnancy. It, can readily be inserted in the uterus —and taken out should preg- nancy be desired. _RBecause it—is.cheap, effective, 4% s not require continuous mo- tivation, the IUD is receiving scrutiny from many of the world’s underdeveloped nations “The reduction of births wil! happen. some day, somehow.” says Alfred. Sauvy, a -French demographer : True. A cup holds only so much water The issue ~ is whether the trend will turn vol- untarily because of the efforts of man’s intellizence—or be- cause the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse did, indeed, ride again APPOINTMENT Wilson Real Estate take pleasure in announcing the appointment of J. J. (Jack) Connolly to complement our sales staff. Jack will help us broaden our service to the public, with his wide knowledge of the Island, having heen employed with the postal service for the past forty-six years, retiring as Post Master in 1964. We deem oir- selves very fortunate to have Jack associated with us in our Real Estate Department. WILSON REAL ESTATE CO. LTD. Kent St. Charlottetown US. | Canada will join in the pro gram. with Britain, France, Ger- “". Ord $2'6._ cicoreaieaand poi Italy, Spain and the - nited States on the first day Ni k | M Early Bird hegins fest opera- ic e ines tions. It will run between 2. and | 3 p.m. ADT With a 15-minute ex- Boost Output’. planatory period just before that TORONTO ‘CP Falcon- on the CBC network alone Next day—Monday, May 3— the CBC will.assemble a*crew in bridge Nickel Mines Ltd ts in- London for a live “satellite edi- creasing nicke! production tion” of news for 15 minutes at te 100,000,000 pounds . annually 8 p.m. ADT. Earl Cameron, who from. 75.000.000 pounds Presi- delivers the national news, will dent H. J. Fraser said Tues- fly te London and be joined da: : there by Michael Maclear and He also announfed at ‘the an- Stanley Burke, Londow and nial meeting plans for expan- Paris correspondents. _, sion of its operations at Sud- ape ~ bury, Ont. including building a ne mill at its Strathcona mine and development of two. new ore : bodies fg Mr .- Fraser said that con- sumption of nickel inv non-Com:= + munist countries passed the 600 000.000 pound mark last year for the first, time, but con- ‘sumption still is rising faster than the average long terin rate of 5'2 per cent annually Union Screen _ Bought By CAE .. MONTREAL ‘CP: CAR i¢a- nadian -Aviation Electren- ics Ltd.) has purchased, for an undisclosed amount: the com- mon shares of Union Screen Plate €o. of Camada Ltd.. CAE Said Tuesday. t ; Exploration in the Sudbury vue Sereen has its head of- area had indicated an inarease ; _ and main plant in Lennox- ore. teserves to S2,208.200 vee r Sherbrooke, Que. and tons compared with 51,322,000 also has plants in Montreal and Brampton, Ont. Annual sales of the metal plating and non-ferrous casting manufacturer are about $2,500,- 000, CAF. said. Chemeell Ltd. Profit Higher MONTREAL ‘CP)—Net profit of Chemcell (1963) Ltd. for the first quarter of 1965 was $2,839,-! 000 compared with $2,373,000 for. the same period in 1964, said Robinson Ord, Chemcell presi-! dent, at the company’s annual meeting held Tuesday : tons at the end of 1943 ote aTott Tol -1 = + Wo ’ " iS 3h ~ tenant ZELLERS Buy Now and "Charge It” Zelier's Offers You Three Easy Credit Plans Pay As Little as $1.25 Weekly! 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