Else (fissurditm Ml Prince Edward Island like The Dow W. J. Hancox. Publisher Mn Lewis Frank Walker Worm Editor Editor ’Publlahad every week day morning (except Sun ay and statutory holidays) at left Prince Street, Charlottetown. P.E.l., by Thomson Newspapers lid. Drench offices at Summarslda, Montague. Alb" ion and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services, Toromo. 425 Universitv AV.- Ernpire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Calhcarl SIP-Cl Universlty 6-5942; Western Office. “330 W." Georgia Street. Vancower (MA 7037)- Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use fer repub lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published here in All right or republication of special dispatches harr In also reserved. Subscription rates: Not over 40: per week by carrier- $l2.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas nol serviced by c rr er. 00 a year off Island and UK. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. Not over 7: single Copy. Mem er Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4. 1964. The Issue Should Resl A new question in connection with last week‘s bribery and coer- cion charges in the House of Com- mons has been raised outside the House, this time by RCMP Commis- sioner McClellan, who commented in an interview on Wednesday on the seriousness of the “leak” which pro- vided the ammunition for these charges. Only a limited number of per- sons had access to the RCMP files on allegations by Montreal lawyer Pierre Lamontagne that he was of- fered a $20,000 bribe to go easy in opposing a bail application for a person who was wanted in the Un- ited States on a narcotics offence. This was “restricted, top secret” information, and a leak by a mem- ber of the force would be a serious affair. An inquiry being con- ducted, the commissioner said, to determine who gave out this infor- mation to “an unauthorized per- son." In view of the fact that this months-old affair would never have come before the public had it not been “leaked” in some manner, and Would consequently never have been submitted to a proper inquiry, one can only wonder at the attitude of mind which regards its belated dis- closure as the major source of con- cern at this time. Isn't it possible that Mr. Lamon- tagne himself supplied the inform- ation to a member of Parliament, for the very purpose of giving it the publicity it failed to receive at the hands of Justice Minister Fav- reau and the RCMP commissioner when they decided, in private, with- out consulting the Iaw officers of the Crown or even the Prime Min- ister, that no action should be taken? In any case, the authority of Par- liament is pretty wide in probing into all such matters of public con- cern. It is provided, for example, that “as the prerogatives of the Crown can only be given away or delegated to others by the consent of the Crown stated in express terms, so the rights, privileges and immunities of the House of Com- mons cannot be taken away by im- plication or by the vague terms of any statute, but only by the ex- preSS words of the law or by the ex- press resolution of the House.” It was only after repeated Op- is position pressure that the Govern-. ment finally consented to broaden its terms of inquiry in this case, to include “the way in which the allegations when brought to the at- tention of the RCMP and the Min- ister of Justice were dealt with." This is where the issue rests, and it should be left there. Commissioner McClellan will be an important wit- ness, and it would be better if he refrained from giving interviews on the subject until that occasion Faces More Hunger _ According to a news dispatch, Pope Paul is being shielded from sights of poverty in Bombay and (I see only the modern, thriv- 1 side of the city during his visit ' . This is because of threats of demonstrations by Hindu ex- twists. But it also points up the f¢t that India is facing a deepen- i _ 100d crisis and there is mount- ' .mer and bitterness being dis- f' fit the government’s handling 1aviation. ' kills actually began with o "' i .- ln August, 1960, and eluiost from then on ““fil'i‘dmflo measures to in- ‘l production could rem- ‘fioueflp. It has gone from “H ' ' _ ' , f bad to worse, with spiraling food prices which the government has been unable to cope with. ' This fall’s rice crop is reported to be “very good” but because of un- usually heavy monsoon rains the harvest is unlikely to be much more than the 36-5 million tons of last year. The wheat crop has suffered even worse from floods; latest esti- mates of a total production of 10 million tons compare unfavorany with an average of 11.2 million tons the past three seasons. Hardly a week has passed re- cently without food riots in some part of the country. The shortages, coupled with high levels of bank lending and a rise in India’s money supply. have led to an overall price rise of 14 per cent this year. The total food grain production is like- ly to be less than 85 million tons, roughly what it has remained for the past three straight years. How serious this is, with an additional one million mouths to feed every month, is indicated by the official target of 100 million tons original- ly set for 1965-66. India's own production is buttressed by im- ports from abroad, but these are going “from ship to mouth” and are quite inadequate. According to a New Delhi cor- respondent, the tragedy is that the bigger landlords and rich peasants, who often control the ruling Con- gress party's local organizaton, have blocked land reforms and other farm measures. Nor has the Con- gress government ever had the au- thority to fully mobilize India's vast idle human resourses for rural im- provement. Since farming accounts for half the national income and almost half the country’s foreign exchange, this drags down the en- tire development effort. It is a grim picture, eased some- what because of a rice harvest. but almost certain to worsen again critically next summer. Scotland Worried We heard no complaints about a “haggis crisis” during the recent St. Andrew‘s Day festivities, but it appears that such a crisis is loom- ing in Scotland. All because of an acute shortage of haggis-stitchers! The news comes to us in a round- about way, via a little-known pub- lication called London Letter, which explains the situation in the follow- ing terms: “It (haggis) is made from the large stomach bag of the sheep . . . liver, lights and heart of the sheep chopped up, mixed with onion, oat- meal and Jamaican pepper, sewn in the bag and boiled for three hours . . . Selecting, cleaning, turning in- side out, salting and filling these slippery balloon-like skins, and then stitching them up deftly and at a speed, is now a little-known but highly skilled art.” So dire has become Scotland’s plight today that quite often, in- stead of being sewn up in a sheep’s stomach, the haggis is being canned —a terrible comedown for the dish described by Burns as the “great chieftain o’ the pudding’ race.” Tons of ersatz, or canned, haggis are being exported from. Scotland each year, but never before had the in- habitants thought of eating it. Now London Letter forecasts gloomiiy: “Unless we can induce more girls to take on haggis-sew- ing, even Scotland, the home of the haggis, will have to accept the canned variety.” That, it is im- plied, would be little short of a national disaster. EDITORIAL NOTES In future it may be said of the Great Flap. Debate, grumbles the Calgary Herald, that seldom be- fore have so few paid so little at- tention to so much said by so many. I! # Officials of a public housing pro- ject at Hillingdon, England, agreed to order a new bathtub for a wo- man who demonstrated that she was too plump to squeeze into the old one. That's public service for you! A government la a a devoted to the public weal, notes an exchange, might have told the lady to put herself on a crash diet. * it There will soon be a sales desk in Parliament Building at Ottawa to provide tourists with special in- formation on governmental affairs. It is one of a number of changes proposed in a report last week from Speaker Alan Macnaughton. More than 600,000 visitors have been through the building this year with a record 15,600 on May 17. a; or?! SLOW GOING IN THE OTTAWA CHIMNEY OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson She Proved A Volionl Helpmo’re Bruce Hutchison. in his re- cently published sketch of Can- ada's fourteen Prime Ministers, dismisses the first Mrs. Diefen- baker in one inc: “ .. Diefen- baker was happily married to Edna M. a vivacious school teacher..." As Canada’s Thiri e e nth Prime Minister slides onto the scales of history. the judges Will have to do better than that in as- sessing the indispensable influ- ence of that happy marriage and vivacious wife. In the devoted memory of her many friends, the warm and wonderful Edna was the heroine of her husband‘s long years in the valley of humiliation. when defeat followed defeat and re- buff after rebqu thwarted his attempts to win his way into public life. She buoyed him up through repeated failure. and steeled his flagging spirits to another effort. He ran bottom 0 he poll at Prince Albert in fed- eral elections in 1925 and 1926: bottom of the poll in provincial elections in 1929 and 1938: he was even beaten in a municip election at Prince Albert 1936 ~. 'II in Yet Edna was always beside him, always cheering him when his volatile spirits sank —— as they so often did — to the depths. TRIBUTE BY FRIENDS "Enda was a wonderful per- son; she gave her all for John, She was his secrets 1' y , his re- search staff and his telephone answering service rolled into one." one Westerner recalls. "E d n 3 did everything for John. She taught him to play bridge: she taught him to da nc e: she taught him to enjoy life. She was always gay and happy herself," comments a Quebec friends. Edna certainly made up her husband's lack in human re- lations. She had a wonderful talent for making friends, for inspiring trust and affection. “Edna never allowed John to get pompous or distant,“ one of her many admirers remarks. “She certainly k new how to make him keep his feet down on earth where men walk. And Edna was the best public rela- tions worker John ‘ever h a d . charming the press and e v e n winning over that fearless tiger Aust‘n Cross." “MY WONDERFUL EDNA" My own most vivid memory of the charming unselfish Edna was when a cloudy sky darken- ed the greyneaa of a late Psi afternoon. I was talking to M: Diefenbaker in his ill - lit and gloomlly barren little backbon- char's office in the Parliament Building. The door burst open and Edna burst in. Such was the radiance of'her personality, bubbling with galety and inter- est, that it seemed as if a switch that a June nun suddenly bathed the room In brightness and warmth. I “Isn’t Edna wonderfull" com- mented :- p usband, “Wonderful, wonderfil. She has got everything that I lack, every- thin !" Edna Mae was the daughter of the late Chauncey Brower lnot Bower) of San upon. e u been John Dlefenbaker‘s child- i W INTER BEAUTY I marvel at the falling snow Those soft white flakes that c.) earthward wing . Their film. I see the world be low In loveliness. hear the winds Even the river's winding stream Leaves behind a crystal trail! All nature seems to sleep - fol ms Hiding her econ ’ncath Winter's veil, -P.I. W hood sweetheart. and laughineg described how in those days she even trusted herself in hi first “red devil” of a car. Sad to have no children. she canahz- ed her energy to h e r husband Like most energetic people, she never put on weight — to a point where this worried her vfr'ends. In a “Dear Jonn letter in the summer of 1943, his mother wrote “Sorry Edna ' not well. She is too thin, can . you get the girl to eat?" as Jul Edna’s many friends still recall with admiration her in- valuable dedication to her hus- band. “She always seemed be waiting for a husband who was late for an appointment." Unintentionally she carved deeper niche in their hearts than he did. One of his closent friends Edna", thinking probably of her immense wifely value, in a let- ter in which he aptly remarked “a defeated politician is the sorriest human alive." to 0 US. And South Vietnam By Canadian President Johnson, h a v i n g carefully punctured speculation a harder United States military Arch MacKenzie Press Staff Writer I “The meeting reviewed the accumulating evidence of con- tinuing and increased North line was imminent in South Viet iVietnamese support of the Viet Nam, has followed through with Cong and of North Vietnamese adherence to the policy his ad- forces in, and passing through, ministration inherited a year go. The alternatives — especially expanded military operations against the Communists—have i been pondered another time and ' tucked away. Once again, priority has to be given to the task of hardening the sand-castle South Vietna- mese political structure to the base needed to support any suc- cessful battle against the Com- munist Viet Cong. The president has asked US. Ambassador Maxwell Taylor to consult urgently" anew with the South Vietnamese govern- ment on this and other mat- we in rs. But the tone of Taylor's dis- cussions in Washington, includ- ing his 21A-hour meeting Tues- day with President Johnson. is being described as pessimistic. LATEST APPRAISAL Some indication of the atmos- phere at this latest appraisal can be read in a remark attrib~ uted to Defence Secretary Rob- ert McNamara, in an aside to Johnson as reporters entered the conference room: “It would be impossible for Max (Taylor) to talk to these people without leaving the impression the sit- uation is going to hell." . here was no press confer- ence with Taylor .panded military operations the territory of as in viola- t‘ n of the Geneva accords of 1962." This is interpreted readily a warning that while the has decided now to forgo ex- to hit the trans-border and, the de- cision can be changed. DIFFICULT SITUATION SEEN Backing that sentence is the restatement of basic American policy in South Viet Nam “of providing all possible and use- ful assistance to the South Viet- namese people and government in their struggle to defeat the externally - supported insur- gency and aggression being con- ducted against them." While the report says that the farm output continues to rise and prices and money values are stable, the poIltical situa- tion is “still difficult.“ This is the essential. immedi- ate and continuing battleground for Taylor. the former military chief of staff who is labelled as the man who sold a policy of deeper American involvement to the late President Kennedy. He now is thus committed in a personal sense to making work a policy which, probably through no fault of his, has gone from bad to worse condi- as .S a. an- O 9 Unless warring political fac- The official statement on the. “on! can be cemented in Sal- talks carefully avoids. some earlier ones. any timeta- bles for military, economic or political achievement. Its only real teeth seem to lie in this sentence: I t. unlike i gon. it seems evident that even- tual alternatives for the Taylor policy are complete American withdrawal or extended mili- tary action beyond the national orders. . Thosmeu Surgmopru Prices Just a year ago consumers in I cou try were complaining bitterly about sugar pricaafrhe outcry was so met at ques- tlom were asked In Parliament. demands were made for an in- vestigation into the cause of the high prices and, generally spea- king, sugar manuflcturen were under the gun. - Today sugar prices in local stores are just about half what they were a year ago. But, human nature being what It is, there has n no public ex- pression of satisfaction to match the criticism of last year. Yet the high prices of yesterday and the much lower prices of today are two sides of the same coin. Two price lists of a Canad- lan mar company. one issued one November 19, 1963, the other on November 19, 1964. show how drastic has been the drop in prices. 0n the basis of 100 pounds of s u g a r in Montreal. the price of fine sugar at the refinery Is 81. . grenulated suaar then was $16.60. as against 37.65 today. Similar reductions are evident in every other grade The reason is not hard to seek. Today’s prices simply reflect — as did the prices of a year ago — the world price. When demand is [real and sup- tlme sugar prices go up. ply is low. the price goes up. When supplies ‘ the price comes down. countries try. by economic tricks, to avad the effect of world price fluctuations , through long - term agreements in which an as upon price is paid for sugar. no fer be. When the world price is high, this is to the advantage of the buying country and its consu- mars. But when prices fall, these con- airmen must continue to pay the agreed - upon price. Thus a years when the world price was very low, Great Britain p a l d more than twice the prevailing price to her suppliers. Canadian sugar ta bought on the open market at whatever the price happens to be. at times, mean high prices. as it did a year ago. But the market always stralghfens itself out In response to supply and demand: a consumers can be fairly aurc that high prices ~ today will be followed by low prices tomor- row. is is something that should be kept in mind it a xt a. ROME! BRING CASH lrltain's stately homu have become his business. taking in $05,000 annually more than 82 from visitors viewing them. Medical Browsing By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellan Horse kicks horseshoe may not sound unusual except that the horseshoe in this case Is‘ a man's kidney. An Ohio physician - was consulted a farmer's 18- the urine—signs of kidn IIIIIIIIIIIIIII"; ' \ an. The diagnosis was question- ed because the young man we not kicked in the region of eith- er kidney. Xo‘ays revealed a horseshoe kidney—so named.because the tops of the left and right organ are bridged by a band of renal tissue. This center was the dam- aged area. case was con- sidered rare by Dr, Herbert A. Kaufmann because (1) horse ahoe kidneys are not common and (2) neither are horses. 0 Lon Angales physicians engaged in a project to deter- mine whether newborns secrete tears. They do. This seemingly farfetched research has practi- cal applications. One is that In a few rare congenital diseases, lacrimation is absent and test- : for production could lead to early diagnosis. Another good thing to know is that tears give newborns, as well as adults, protective lubrication of the on as well as use anti- microbial action of the lysozy- me content of this secretion. The study involved 249 full- crying and non-cry ing babies. All the infants had been given the usual prophylais against opthalmia neonatorum. One day after birth, 82 per cent of the 140 eyes of the full- term noncrying infants produced nor- mal tears; 87 per cent on the second day, and 95 per cent by the end of a week. In the pre- mature noncryers. tears were proportional to body weight, the percentage ranging from 14 in babies weighing 3.3 pounds to 63 in those 4.4 to 5.5 pounds. Full-term cryers Were moistcr -—96 per cent of 187 eyes secret- ed tears on the first day and 94 to 100 per cent in two ay to one-week old infants. The inci- dence of lacrimation in crying preemies again was proportion- ate to weight, ranging from 67 to 78 per cent. BACK TO NORMAL Mrs. R. writes: How soon aft- er having a baby does the per- iod return? REPLY Six to eight weeks after deliv- ery, if the mothe“ does not nurse the baby. If she breast-feeds the infant. the menses may not re- turn until lactation begins to fail. From a statistical poml of 'vlew. up to 57 per cent of lacat- ing and 80 per cent of nonlacta- ting mothers menstrate within 24 weeks after giving birth. STOMACH. NOT BONE MARROW F. S. writes: Does pernicious anemia affect the bone mar- row? REP No. Pernicious anemia is due to a vitamin 1312 deficiency be- cause the stomach cannot 3e- crete enough of the factor need- for the intestine to absorb this vitamin. FEVERISH s. S, es. an woman tell the difference be- tween fever and flashes? REPLY With a thermometer. Flashes come and go whereas fever is more sustained and is associat- ed with an increase in body temperature. 8 EGGS A WEEK w. writes: Are five soft boiled eggs plus three fried eggs too many for a 60-year-old man to eat in a week? REPLY Not if he is healthy and has a normal blood cholesterol level. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Health is more important than your;" bank account. ( e TV CUTS READING EDINBURGH (CP) — Tele- vision invaded the remote Shet- land Islands in March. Now the county librarian in county libraries in the islands has slumped by 25 per cent. M ' "McCulloclt CHAIN SAW It’s Here The New $129.00 Keith Carmichael 2! Buckley Pt. M. um Sherwood "The Woodamen'a D e s I Friend". Inlt'ln'l“ BIIIIIIS ClEAIER N 5.0“, NO ODOIII tumulll'nll” unaware ore Phone 4-1311 cnaawrrm. war Petroleum Products NOTES BY ins WAY A commentator says that one of the greatest mysteries sport is why the crowd must be silent while a golfer la addrew ing a stationary ball but In en-' couraged to shout at the batter who is having a ball thrown at him about 90 miles an hour. - Edmonton Journal 6 n. A fanatic la a person who I: highly interested and enthusia- stic about something you don't give a darn m: e ry AI editor who was noted for hls caustic wit received a lengthy v e r as. written on med papacandtledwlth p k ab- bon. from a contributor. The title of the poem was. “I wonder Will Re Miss Me?" The editor read the poem frowned, and returned the male- rlel with a note saying: “Dear madam, if he does, he should never again be trusted with firearms." —- Gait Re- Herald. porter. I Wish‘ul Call To Fulton Globe and Mail. Tomato There is a slight. rippling the hopeful enterprise of build- movement under way to bring Mr. E. Davie Fulton, leader of the British Columbia Conserva- tive Party, back into federal politics. Mir. Fulton, formerly Minister of Justice and than of Works in the Dlefenbaker Government. became leader by acclamatlon of the provincial party in Jan- uary, 1963. He and his party went down to complete defeat in the gotcha, 1963, provincial elec- on. Mr. Dalton Camp, national president of the Conservative Party, took the opportunity I the BC party convention last week to call for Mr. F ton'a return to Ottawa. “I speak not only for myself but for those who are associated with me in in; and maintaining a strong na- tional party". Mr. Ca said. Mr: Camp and his unnamed associates may well have excel- lent reasons to want Mr. back with them snip, B it! they should not expect to arouse substantial public interest politics and the public I! to leave it as such. There edition in Canadian polit- ics of mass movements to draft politicians for office. efforts by Mr. Camp to create such a movement on be- half of Mr. Fulton are unlikely to succeed. If Mr. Fulton has ambitions — as he certame seems to have— he should go back to Ottawa and go to work party likely is no on them himself. Predicting Delinquency Milwaukee Journal In 1950, after studying hun- dreds of criminal careers, as hus- band and wife team of Harvard criminologists produced a "pre- dictabilin table” to help fore- cast which children in a group were likely become delin- quent as they grew up. Dr Eleanor and Prof. Shel- Glueck made no claims of infallibility, but they said a child shoud be carefully watch- ed if, for example, his father was hostile, his mother indiffer- ent and the family unintegrated. 0n the other hand, even in areas of high delinquency. a child would probably turn out all right if his stable parents disciplined him firmly but hu- manely and w concerned about his whereabouts and acti- vities. In 1954, the New York city youth board applied the Glueck table to 301 boys aged six who were entering school for the first time in a high delinquency neighborhood. Now, 10 5 later, the forecasts have proved to be unexpectedly accurate. Delinquency was predicted for 33 boys and turned out to be 85 per cent accurate Nondelln- quency was predicted for 248 and proved 95 per cent accurate. or 25 given a chance to go one way or the other, nine became delinquents and 16 did not. Having such knowledge is of great value. Being able to spot a likely delinquent at age six im- proves the chances that remed- ial measures will be successful. But for prevention to be effec- tive, agencies dealing with it will need larger and more skill- ed staffs and better facilities. As with many social problems, we know a great deal about con- ditions that lead to delinquency but we have not moved very vigorously toward correcting the conditions. SURVEY. COMMUNICATIONS OTTAWA (CP)-Roberl L. B. Scott, a consulting engineer from Campbellford, Ont. a been sent to Tanzania and Kenya for a survey of telecom- munications needs. the external aid office said Wednesday. The communications systems of the two African countries are con- sidered inadequate and Mr. Scott will investigate the fcasi- bility of a radio telephone net- work and telex system. Important! ALL COACH BEADS FDR ADULTS AND CHILDREN regardless of age MUST BE RESERVED IN ADVANCE for travel on the ‘DDEAN LIMITED HALIFAX~MUNTREAL ND EXTRA DDSI Avoid disappointment x,t~ More will lilSt'lldiliiliS curly \\