, tng whether General de Gaulle will @:l1.£ <§;1§uaarslis.1n. 3..." pm," gauua Inland Llko tho new Whllsnno pvpry we._.k.d,_y morning at 165 Prince sum fiiavinfle-town. P.E.I.. by the Thomson Commny Ltd. In A. Burnett. Publisher and General Manager Frank Walker, Editol’ Menibsr Canadian Dally NEWSDHIN-‘I Publishers Association Member of (‘he Canadian Pren * Member Adult Bureau oi Circulation! In-net: nfllces at Summersidc. Montague and Alberto: Represented Nationally by Thomson Newspaper: Advertising Service CO King Street West, Toronto, Ont. 640 (iathcart St., Montreal . Tlflfill West Georgia St., Vancouver ' 83' <‘.arri:~r Charlottetown, Summerslde 30¢ per week. By Mail elsewhere in P.E.I. $9.00 per annum. Other Provinces and United States $12.00 per annnm. FXGE 4 TUESDAY. MAY 27. 1953. De GauIIe's Assurances It is not known at the time of writ- come into power in turbulent France, but the call which he has recived from the powerful Conservative party lends colour to this assumption. The Gen- eral has not outlined any program. He has expressed belief that he can arbitrate the Algeriandispute, and enforce the arbitration agreement; but he has not made clear how, if he attains power, he hopes to govern. He is known as a stubborn man, but a brave. and honest one. Some faith must be put in his statements that he will not take power by force, destroy French democracy, or establish dicta- torial army rule. ‘ He has. given these assurances, among others, in recent statements: “When you assume the powers of the republic, this can only be those which ' the republic will have delegated to you. This is perfectly clear.” “As for the army, it is normally the instru- ment of the state, and thus it should remain.” “Have I ever attacked fun- damental public liberties? No, I re- stored them when they disappeared. How could you have me, at 67, start a career as dictator?” Itis hard to believe, after these words. that the future of Flrench de- mocracy and freedom would be ser- iously threatened by any action of General de Gaulle. How the present party system would fare under his administration is another question. ‘ Mr. 'MacmiIIan's Itinerary A Reuters dispatch from London says that the program for the visit of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to the United. States and Canada has been announced, \' « Mr. Macmillan will leave London by air on June 6 and arrive, all. being well, in New York thebnext morning. From there he will go on to Washing- ton where he will spend theinight. He willmtart talks with President Eisen- hower on June 9. In the meantime, he will fly to Greencastle, Indiana, the birthplace of his mother, where he will ‘receive an honorary degree and make an address. He will also at- tend Commencement exercises--and, no doubt, receive another degree-—-at Johns Hopkins University- in Balti- more. . ' ‘ After his talks with the President, V Mr. Macmillan will fly to Ottawa for two days of discussions with Prime Minister Diefenbaker and other Gov- ornment officials. The Reuters report does not say anything about his ad-, dressing a joint session of Parliament, but, in all likelihood, this will be a part of the program, as the precedent was set when former Prime Minister Churchill visited Ottawa and sustain- ed when Sir Anthony Eden came. Keen Tourlsl Competition A good case is made by the Can- A adian Tourist Association, in a brief presented to the Federal Minister I of Finance, for a Tourist Establish- ment Loan Act under which long term credit will be madeavailable to oxperienced and reputable operators who wish to improve or expand exist- ing tourist facilities. This is what many ‘of the Provinces are already doing, as a necessary aid in promoting ~ the tourist traffic provincially. There is no ques‘i.io_n but that tourism has reached the status of a major national industry today. Only wheat and news- print bring in more money from out- side Canada‘than do visitors. The industry, it is argued, could mean a great deal more to Canada if It were more adequately equipped to meet‘ competition in the international market. ln the United States, for ex- ample. the tourist business in 1956 crossed about two-thirds as much as the whole agricultural and livestock Inclilslry, according to the U.S. De- . l‘;’{l‘l“"91ll 01° Commerce. In the United l[\)ll’lfi‘Cl.Ol”ll, according to P,-Ofessm. L_ 31 lihimp .°f . I“‘“‘I"“ Univ?-Wits’, j " " ‘ “"51 lmlilortant industry \>l+ll‘,l'mll‘r_ any Qxcgcpfifin “,]m1QVer ,, emplrjyillg rnm-cs, people and with ’ larger turnover other. Canada formerly received the lar- K‘?-??‘l »‘ll‘«ll'P of the money which resi- dents of Ihc l."rliI.ed_ Slates spool visit,- lug other countries. This is no longer the case. Since 1953, Europe has at- tracted more U.S. visitor dollars than :1. of money than any I’, Cana do even without counting the cost of I.l".5lllRp0l‘TEl'llnn. lnrleed. spend- ing by U.S. travellers in all countries outside the U8. has almost doubled since 1949. During the same period, U.S. spending in Canada inc1'ea.sed by only 23 per cent, while Canadian ex- penditures in the U.S. rose by 144 per cent. Spending by Canadians in other countries has reached such a. point that Canadians travelling in the United States and other countries took more than one-half billion dollars out of Canada in 1957. Canada’s de- ficit on travel account has totalled $161,000,000 for two successive years. Among the reasons for this travel trend are the romance of distant areas, the speed of modern air travel, the premium on the Canadian dollar, and the comforts offered by ultra- modern facilities abroad. It is to this last point that the Tourist Associa- tion brief draws attention. Our tour- ist industry is composed mainly of small businessgs, many of them fam- ily enterprises. At present, the fa- cilities which are inadequate and out- moded are being compared unfavor- ably with the more modern establish- ments which have been built in other countries in the past few years. It is argued that while millions of dollars are being spent in Canada every year in tourist promotional campaigns, too little attention has been given to back up’ this expenditurewith a “product” of the highest quality. One of the ma- jor deterrents to plant improvement is the lack of adequate credit facilities which it is sought to remedy under the proposed legislation. Mr. Dulles Again ~At a press conference U. S. Sec- retary of State Dulles was asked these questions: “What plans do you . have to protect our nationals in Le’- banon if it should develop that the present Government cannot give them adequate protection? And would these plans be affected by present Soviet threats against outside inter- ference in Lebanon?” . This was Mr. Dulles’ answer‘: “We are ' not deterred anywhere in the. I world from doing what we think is right and our duty by any Soviet threats.” I-Ias Mr. Dulles forgotten the Hun- garian uprising-xin the fall of 1956 and how the United States refused to do anything to help these brave people—- except’ introduce innocuous resolu; tions in the United Nations--because of fear of Soviet threats? Surely not. And if he has,'we may be certain that I the Hungarians and the Yugoslavians and the Poles and the East ‘Ger- mans-—yes, and the Lebariese-‘—-rem- ember it well enough. Perhaps, this ’time, if the need arose, the American response would be different and more in accordance with what “is right and our duty.” But the Lebanese and the American nationals in Lebanon are probably not banking on it. EDITORIAL Nous Among his other worries Premier Smallwood of Newfoundland has to find a place to live. Canada House in St. John’s, where heihas been living all along, is to be sold by the Federal Government. 4 4 4- , Fish landings in the Maritimes in April were not as large or as valuable as those of a year ago. 27,800,000 pounds, valued at $1,700,000 were ta- ken, compared with 32,800,000 pounds at a value of $1,900,000 in April 1957. 4 4 *' A According to the Saint John Tele- graph-Journal, the New Brunswick city is the oldest incorporated city in Canada, having been brought into be- ing by ’ the union of Parrtown and Carleton, on opposite sides of the har- bor, on May 18. ]_.7 85, two years after the arrii/al of the first Loyalist set- tlers from New York. 4 4 * Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge, American Ambassador to the U. N., says that the United States has every “sym- pathy” with Lebanon’s complaint that the United Arab Republic is interfer- ing in its affairs. Sympathy is all very well; but at this time the Lebanese would like something a bit more sus- taining, and they are not likely to get it. p . 4 4 at This year marks the 200th anni- versary of expulsion of the Acadians after the ‘fall of Louisburg in 1758-—a tragic event which is recalled now as a reminder of the great contribution Ac-arlian faniilios have made to this Province, from its earliest settlement (law to the present time. No one is better qualified to review their his- tory‘ than Prof. J.H. Blanchard, Iletlw-“I"lC9‘I'll"lll(1lDaI ofl’ri1lce "l “’fI“*‘ (:“II“»¥T-‘“- “IN is l30Il.l,l"ll')llI.lll1.:f a seules nl .':l.l'tll;’.Ie.i5‘ to 'I‘llc t,illH_l'flI,’d.Tl on the subject, CU.ll."ll’l.II-?l‘lCll‘lg in today’s issue. 17204958 The Acodions OFIP. E. Island (Isle Su-int Jean Until 1799) I By Prof. J. Henri Just 3 little over 350 years ago, the vast areas which now com- prise t e whole of the Dolminion of Can (la and all of the United States north of Florida, were an immense expanse of forest, plain and mountain, inhabited, heme and there, by Is few Indian trilo- es. There wene then no cities. no roads, no ehiirohes. -no schools, no governments; in l. word, al- most the whole North American continent from the Atlantic to the Pacilfic was an unlknown and un- broken wilderness awaiting the advent of civilized man. It was only in the early years of the seventeenth c ury that Europ- ean civllizatlo -came to its chores. The tirst settlements were he- gun -by the French at Port Royal (now Annapolis) in 1604-1605, and at Quelbec, in 1608. The first set- tlements by the English were made at Jamestown, West Vir- ginia, in 1607, and alt Plymouth Bay, in Massachusetts, in 1620. In Europe, for lcenlzuries, France and Englland had been bitter ene- -mie-s, «and their colonists in the New World believed that they ' should continue the conflicts of their mother countries. As a re- sult,- there was almost continual wanfiane between the Evnglli-sh col- onists to the South and the French in the North. FIRST CENTURY In the first century of its exis- tence, Port Royal was attacked and sacked five times. Finally in 171.3, by the 'l.‘rea1',v of Utre~ch»t, New-foundlland ‘and Acadia were ceded to England, and only the islands of Cape Breton and Saint-Jean r e In a l n e d to the French. En “Newfoundland there were 7 small French parish-es; their inhalbitatns were removed to the island of Cape Breton. In Acadia, the French inhabitants remained. Finally in 1755, they were removed to the English col- onies along the Atlantic‘ seaboard. Although Isle Saint-Jean had been discovered by Jacques Car- tier of St. Malo,-in 1534, France seems to have neglected it alllmost entirely for almost two centuries. It was only after the loss of Aca- dia that it assumed an impor- tant place in the French scheme of colonization. Nevertheless it was some years before the possi- bilities of Isle Saintalea-n as t source of provisions for the new Blanchard, LL.D. oognlized, and even when recog- nition came, it was -for-ced.upon the mother counllry by the offi- cials a.t Lou-isbdung and by the Acadians who sought new fields beyond the limits of English rule. _ ' Prior to 1720. no pennlanent French settlement: had been ef- fected in Isle Saint-Jean. Con- cessions of the island to various speculatoa-s and a smalllll attempt ‘ alt -settlement Ibryga few Acadiams had proved abortive. ISLAND GRANTED In the month of August 1719, a grant of Isle Sajntuean was made to oomte de Saint-Pierre. First Equenry to the Duchess of Orleans, whose husband was re- gent of France during the minor- ity of Louis XV. In «return for this very genenous grant, colrnte do Saint-Pierre promised obedi- ence to the Comlman-der at Louis- bourg. He also undertook to loc- ate 100 settlens the first year and 50 each succeeding year until the island was completely populated and supplied with the necessary livestock. He was also to construct such noads as would be necessary for the public service. In case he had to build one or more chur- ches, he was to have the honour of Pa-tron. Failing the fulfilment of these condit'ion7s the concession would be voided and the island -would return to the Royal do- main. Axtter obta=in:i.ng this concession oomte dc Saflnt-Pierre entered into a partnership with two rich speculators, Fanges and Moras of Rochefort. Farges supplied onc- hallf of the needed capital. Mora: one-quarter, and the concession of Isle SainIt- Jean was considered as equivalent to the other quarter of the capital of the company. During the winter of 1720, the necessary preparations were made, and on.Alpcril 15, 1720, three ' of the company’s ships with 300 passengers, provisions and muni- tions. set out from Roch-efort to found a new colony in Isle Saint- Jean. Four months later. on Aug- ust 23, the ships arrlv in the harbour of port LaJoi (Char- lottetown hanborur). Immediately the lpeolple landed and in a short time they had cleared around for a village site; they built a few log houses, erected banraicrkls fioi-' lme soldiers, raised a large black (moss over ground set apart for fortress of Louisboung were me- a cemetery, and thus in a few Historic Co The U5. National Park Sys- tem has been enriched by the addition of a beautiful and his- toric section of the Atlantic Coast. The Galpe Hatteras N7ationa.l Seashore Recreational Area. ded~ ‘ Icated April 24, will preserve ; 70 - mile stretch of the Outer Banks — a series of pencil- thin islands arching seaward from North Carolina. ' Men have struggled with winds and waters there since colonial days. R-oanoke Island is sepIa.rat- ad from the-park by only a mile of water. A small band attempt- ed to fdund the first English set- tlement in America on Roanoke in 1585, but disappeared into his- tory as the “Lost Colony." The pirate Blackbeard met I violent death on the Banks. There man made his fiirsl flight. in a lieavier- t?'ha.n- air machine. DEADLY SHIP TRAP Along every mile of the shore brave men have risked their lives to rescue survivors from the "Gra7eya1‘d' of the AtIal1I.ic“ ~- thc treacherous Diamond Shoals. AI. that point. the Gulf Slur-cam flows within 12 miles of the Cape Cold remnants of. the Arctic Cur- rent C0LlIl‘ldi€ with the warm Gulf Stream to create a fierce. swir- ling sea. The sandy islands are Iillm-orl with the bones of .<:l1i.p.~s. pe Hcrlferos National Geographic society -- or never wanted to. Even today. some speak with accenl.-5 closer to the Elizabethan English all their ancestors than to the speech of the North Caro- lina marl.n:la.nd. Seven pi-ctu.res»que villages dot the recnea~t.ion.a1 ar- ea. For deca.des. ilhe Bankers‘ clhief interests were fishing, salvaging cargo, and warning sailors -a- gainst the dangers of the shoals. The tallest lighthouse in the Unit- ed States, rising 208 feet, is still in use on the Cape. But new -op-pportu.n-iliies h a v it come. With bridges open in the mainland and ferries plying be- tween the ~i.slan~d-s. many resi- dents have turned to guidinvg, feeding. and housing Visitors. llasl year. 324.206 came. A new industry recently developed. ga- thering decorative driftwood for sale. WILDLIFE PRESl«1RVEl_) The rlluqed coals-l.al sr:.erle.ry and. its abundant wildlife are pl-lg. serverl in the 28.500-acre recrea- tlon area. Game includes deer. fox. and otter. Wild ponies ill the salt. marshes are believed. to be the descendants of animals ship- wrecked in Spanish galleons. The ll/lan,v pcoplr‘ living on Ilic. Raliksu are rIl‘—‘:rn:-tIu‘Ialill.5 of hardy ' lfinzlisli sailor: of s.dw=rolLireris who w(=r‘s. cast on the -sI1m'F.‘ and ' never found it opportune to leave I rcguion is a principal winlorin.g 9-,'rnunrl for u'alCl”I'n\\I. and the I‘-‘ca IS-l-’-l.ll(I Wildfowl Relilge is parvl of the new park. The Park .‘§crvirl= operate: low mu.=eum.s in Hie recreational ar weeks. the first settlement by Europeans in Isle Sain-t—Jean had its beginning. Port LaJoe became the .»calpi.tall of the island. Under the English. the city ‘of Charlotte- town was founded on the same h-arbour, not more than a mile, across water from the original Fomlly Should Be Qn Alert IF THERE Ill I. diabilc In V011!‘ home you must nlWa.VS bi‘ "11 *1}? alert for possible reactions In In sulin. Whenever a diabetic who Is ta-king insulin behaves In an un- usual manner. and complalnsbf unusual sensation, think of an in- sulin reaction. Morning lassitude and headache are mild reactions which ma.‘/1_‘€- gull, from a protamine zinc insulin. MANY SYMPTOMS Other symptoms of insulin re- actions include a feeling of faint- ness, palpltation. excessive per- spiration. lieadache. double vision hunger, emotional instability, trembling. unsteadinoss of gait and even stupor. Sometimes the diabetic will suf- fer convulsion and become nau- seous and vomit during reactions. although such drastic reactions are fairly rare. . The milder symptoms generally occur when the blood sugar is be- low 70 mg. When the count is under 50 mg. stupor might result. WHAT CAUSES REACTIONS? -Any one of several things might cause such reactions. They tend to appear when the diabetic takes an overdose of in- sulin. when he fails to eat a full _ meal or when he does not eat at the expected time. When traveling by train. bus or auto, therefore, it probably is a good idea. not to take -an insulin injection until your next meal is definitely in sight. Delay in eat- ing following an injection might bring about a rather-severe re- oction. . . In fact. any decreased need for insulin could mean. that a reaction might follow an injection. When any of. these symptoms are noticed. It‘s best to act fast. Call your doctor and give the pa- tient orange juice or some other food containing from 5 to 20 mg. of carbohydrate. Usually. the sugar will be ab- sorbed quic-kly and recovery can be expected within a few minutes. ‘Even though recovery is com- plete, let your doctor know about the circumstances leadling up to the reaction.- A QUESTION AND AINSWER. ‘ Mrs. P.N.: Is penicillin taken Calpltal. selected by th'- company of oornte de Saint-Pierre. (To be Continued) //(IRE/BANE wz//or.’ proved an over 300,000 homes - cosf as little as $14.50 cl month ' Iohns-Manville patented Seal-O-Matic Asphalt Shingles have a continuous stripe of special adhesive on the underside of each down the entire shingle edge and bonds it so firmly that it holds fast even in gale winds. The continuous seal. also prevents rain and snow from being driven. up under the shingle and thereby causing leaks. See. the complete color range at Eyour BA-N5, Canadian Johns-Manville. Port Credit, Ontario. ’ BUILDING colorb-:slo<. Sirlewalls never need Sninlpx lllsulsllnn saves up In palnl lcpreserv-, thorn. .10; no every fuel rjn||a‘r_ ea. and expects to add a third. I 50/0’ tljq/rt even in shingle. The sun’s heat automatically seals , dealer, or, write for free folder to Dept.‘ Jomss-Mnnv Seal n. Mahr: Shingles. holdllgm H1 hurricane wmglg “ NOTES BY THE WAY ; '"l‘hern=‘s no easy’ W?‘-.V~" ‘"’Il"-'-‘ the l\lnrl..hern Miner. "lo ‘(Hake money on the stock m.arke-. ‘ But when it comes to losing, nothing is easier.—Oit.ta.w«a JOUTUBI There Is a farmer in Yu‘,'05l‘-IV‘ ia 121, years old, who lays claim to the worlds smoking title. Ills- to Teovs-ki says he has been pul- fing happily for 111 years. Thus. he took up the fragrant weed’ at the age of 10. It is long- lived characters like Mr. Teovski who give the anti-tobacco propa,:an-d- lists a. hard time. However. should this centenariam plus dies this vear they can always say that slmoking prevented him from liv- ing until he was 125.--London Free Press . FROM THE OWL When merry milkmaids click the latch. And rarely smells the new-mown hay. And the cock hath sung beneath the thatch _ Twice or thrice his roundelay, Alone and warming his fiVe “Ils- The white owl in the belfry sits. ---Lord 'l'ennyson. TheAgeC.)Iol Story The Lord is thy keeper: the Lord is thy shade upon thy rllhl hand. The sun shall not smite thee by day, not the moon by night. '1 by mouth as effective as when it is given by injection? Answer: It has been shown that penicillin given by Iinjection us- ually produces. a higher and more rapid concentration of the drug in the blood to fight the IIlf‘eCIZ'l01:L However. if the drug is given In large enough doses -by 'm0U'th. It is usually effective against the germs sensitive to .it. v .\ Seal-O-Mali: SI-ling offer. all of these features 9 The adhesive stripe across entire tab of every shingle pro- vides maximum scaling. , I . » ‘. " 0 The adhesive stripe on the I underside of every shingle pro- -vides natural downward sealing. Q The adhesive stripe at the léwer edge of each shingle seals .- the critical first row of shingles. , ’ _ 3 @119 wanders what the Inflation. ary aspecls of liigher education may be doing to students who “work tlielr way through." once they were rather numerous. Bug “ nowadays the chore might be pretty bleak. Yet that system of Sl.'I‘LlgglllI,'-1 for an e:lucaf,i:‘n pro. duced many notable Americans,-.,: LPl1iladclphla Inquirer ' ' —— .._.__._......,__ OUR YESTERDAYS ” (From The Guardian Files) ‘ ‘TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ‘ (May 27.. 1933) g ,4 Word was received in Ch”. lottetown yesterday from the ' " retary of the Institute of Journ lists, London. England. that pm J. R. Burnett. Editor and aging Director of the Charlottefim town Guardian had been unu}1..~’yj» mously elected a Fellovl of the! " : stitute. Mr. Burnett is the only.“ journalist in Canada having such‘ an honor conferred upon llinjlg. , Coincident with the inaugural mg for the summer months of the double train service with the mainland. the all‘ mail servic- which has been conducted by tho Canadian Airways between Ohio. I_ lottetown. Summerside and Manc- ton will be discontinued on Satm-. day. The passenger service, how.’ ' -ever,‘ will be c-ontinued. ' TEN YEARS AGO (Mpy 27. 1943) The pouring of the cement loo-n dation in preparation for the in. stallation of a new steam boiler : is already in PI‘0g1‘ess at the Mari- . time Electric Charlottetown plant. The new boiler is deslgrled to burn pulverized coal or oil, and w: can develop 75,000 pounds or steam per hour. The change over- firom oil is being made in‘ view of the rising cost of fuel oil and V, unoenhainty of supply. . Prince Edward Island w:lll‘»l)g-,"’ visited in July by Lord Alexan- der MacDonald. of the Isle ol Skye, Chief of all -the Maooonalcu. .5; following His Lordship’: visit to Baddeck, Cape Breton, where he ' will ofificiate at the Gaelic Mod. -It is planned to arrange 1 field day in His Lordship‘; honour at Caledonia. ’ , ‘ ‘ I I I hheslo: Flexhoanl-—Ihn, fin ["007 building hoard. see your dd-M Building Materials Dealer " Available lit ILLE MATERIALS IA; counts 1 I I A I I'M Ceiling Panel: 5 wall Plank i -—lor extra moms. ' 1