° _ Che Guardian Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. | Covers Prince Edvard Island Like the Dew *' . W. J. Hancex, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor _ Pulglished every week day morning (except Sun- | , day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, | ~Charlottetown, P.E.1., b Thomson Newspapers Lid. Branch offices.at Summerside, Montague, Alberton > and. Souris ’ "Represented nationally by Thomson’ Newspapers Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640- Cathrart Street Uni- versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie * $tréet Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Deily Newspaper Publishers Assacietion and The Canadian Press. The Canadian _ Preae is exclusively entitled tothe use for repub “fication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to’ it er to the Associated Press or Reuters and alse the jocel news published herein. All right or republication of specie! disnatches here | | might take advantage of a dismantled in also reserved. Subscription rate: ., Net ever 40c per week by cerrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and areas - net serviced by carrier. $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K, $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside. British Com menweslth, "Net ever 7 single copy. : Member Audit Bureau of Circulatién. “The strongest memory is weaker | | plus: Canada. than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 ~~ Party Contributions - It may have been with an eye on an advantage now enjoyed by the New Democratic Party that the Young Liberal Federation of Canada, at its recent annual convention, proposed that federal legislation be passed to make’. contributions to political parties and election candidates tax deductible. In any case, the Young Liberals could not have been unaware of the fact that the NDP now receives annually tax-free contributions from almost 200,000 Canadian trade union- ists. Under Canadian tax law, union dues are deductible; and since 1961 members of some Canadian unions - have voluntarily donated five cents of their monthly dues to the New Demo- crats. As the Globe and Mail points cut in bap oe . ———+tinie-for-our-American-neighbours-to 1 “fieutenant in infantry™™ : this connection, sixty cents a year is not a significant’ figure—hardly ~ enough to provide any tax benefit to the contributor; but the fact remains” that it is regarded as tax deductible and therefore establishes a precedent. Clearly if one citizen or group of __ citizens can deduct from taxable in- come the contributions made to a-| political party, then any citizen or group of citizens should enjoy the same right. Whether or not the idea that-such deductions should be permitted under any form is another-thing. We do not think they should.. We think it is an imposition: on the taxpayers generally that any party should be subsidized, tax-free, in this manner. But since one party has succeeded in finding a loop- hole in the law which makes no -provision for tax-free political con- tributions, perhaps it is time for a showdown on -the principle of the thing. Our Toronto contemporary sug- gests that this could be achieved by a public-minded person—armed with what apparently has become an ac- cepted principle in NDP financing— to claim a donation to. another poli- tical party as a legitimate deduction and to appeal the matter as a test case to the Income Tax Appeal Board and, if necessary, the Exchequer Court. A suitable volunteer could no doubt be found in the Young Liberal Federation. ~The Voice Of France? As expected, the French gov- ernment easily defeated a left-wing opposition censure motion on Presi- FRIDAY, APRIL 2%, 1966. al dent de Gaulle’s plan to take France | out of NATO’s integrated military system. The government's margin in the vote in the National Assembly on Wednesday was 345, leaving no doubt as to the prevailing sentiment. But we “ avonder how many thinking French- | men will go along with the aspersions | ‘ tq —_— hour” as_freedom’s cast on American motives by Prem- | . ier Georges. Pompidou during the course of the debate, as if there was something sinister in the fact that the U.S. was in Europe in.its “own in- terests,” and not out-of kheer good- ness of heart. i Of course it was enlightened self- interest that dictated. America’s strong NATO policy from the start— the realization that a free Europe was vital to its own freedom and to the freedom of the world. It took some igrasp this fact during World War I, *but when they did they weren’t long —| ‘in sending two million men to fight Areedom’s battle in France. They lost *36,000.dead and had 224.000 wound- .ed. Their direct cost in military) aid was $27 billion. plus $12.2 billion in loans, $6.7 billion of which are still in default. : They were hesitant again in World War II, until Europe was overrun and Britain was achieving its ‘finest bastion. Then ‘again they overcame their traditional distaste for “entangling alliances’ and came in at the nick-of time. They lost 180,000 men on the battlefields of ~~ P that war, defending and saving France. They had 479,000 wounded. That war in Europe cost them $200 billion, and they used another $50 bil- lion in lend-lease. — ne ‘After that—surely Premier Pompi- ‘dou hadn't forgotten—they helped rebuild- Europe and France with credits of $11 billion and grants of $4 billion, mostly under the Marshall plan. They have kept large military: | forces in Europe since, against the ‘threat of Soviet attack. It could be, in- deed, that this threat has disappeared now and that Asia, not Europe, has - become the global cockpit, But it is not beyond suspicion that Moscow. or weakened NATO; and that is why the U.S., with 89 per cent of the | West's nuclear weapons, still binds. itself in advance to defend with force if necessary not one, not two, or even three, but 10 European allies © France will still be under. the umbrella of U.S. nuclear power in an emergency, as the de Gaulle regime is well aware. But that seems a shab- | by reason for throwing Washington's motives of “self-interest” in its face. Encouraging Picture It’s evident that there is something big indeed going on in our fisheries industry, as the reports appearing in ‘today’s Guardian bear witness. The upsurge is taking place throughout the whole Atlantic area, and we are right in the thick of it. The results could be of great importance, not only to our fishermen and food processors, but to all our people; and we suggest that they study the reports for a truly inspiring picture of the development plans that are-under way. — Perhaps the most encouraging as- surance that we are on the right path - comes from the federal minister of fisheries, Hon. H.J. -Robichaud, who - says that never before has there been. grows “so much sction-in-titis-aresfor-the | Spamish coastal village Fie advancement of the industry and of | those who depend upon it for a live- | than 6 per cent in total fish landings inthis -province-over-the—previous—- year, and commends us’on our in- itiative in moving into offshore fish- ing operations with the building of a _ substantial fleet of steel draggers for the new Georgetown plant. The minister refers also to the establishment of the new oyster hat- chery at Ellerslie—the first of its kind in Canada; to the experimental seaweed processing plant at Mim- inigash, and continuation ‘of the co- - “operation between the province's’ fisheries authorities-and those of: the- federal government which has been | ‘productive of good results in the past. He is confident that this joint ap- proach will culminate in a:program of great importance to the industry; and _ it is evident from the figures cited by our provincial minister Mr. Rossiter, in his report on another page, that this prediction is already beginning to be realized. sk It is on the development of, new techniques that the industry has made its big gains in recent years. We may ~expect-this-trend-to.continue, and.we. shall have ourselves to blame if we do not take full advantage of this op- portunity of capitalizing on the wealth that providence has placed at our - doors. Those Statistics U.S. army personnel experts are. * issuing statistics with which they like to assure those facing the draft or other forms of induction. A draftee’s chance of getting to Viet Nam late in the summer, they say, is about 1 to 5. His chances of getting there at all is 1 in 3 over his two year hitch. Once there, his chance of being wounded in one way or another is 1 in 30. His chance of dying, being killed or naturally, is 1 in 119. All such statistics, comments the Milwaukee Journal, became meaning- less in World War II. The statisicians came up then with the assurance that throughout the army a man’s chances of being killed was something like 1. in 200. But then the vital question was asked—and not answered. “Sir, what are the statistics on a second Just as in driving a-car-on the high- way, the Statistics change in ac- cordance with where you are and what you're doing. The man strapped in a back seat in a triffic jam is much, much safer than ore driving a car - without seat belts at 60 miles-an hour | On a winding gravel road. EDITORIAL NOTE However one may feel about the coming provincial election, we ‘don’t recommend the example of Sir Comp- ton Mackenzie. the British autor, who says, he has' not voted since 1910 when He cast a ballot -against_a man who be- lieved that Bacon wrote Shakespeare. ed at , “lihood; He: cites-the increase of more AIL ON THE KITE | OFT AWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson ~~ Spanish Villiage In World Limelight It hasn't happened here - but , even their chickens themselves, ;-cross over €anadian territory it could. “It’’ is the million-dollar dis- aster which fell literally from the heavens upon the tomato- growers and fishermen of the mares... a At 10.16 on the morning of Monday, January 17, a B-52 nuc- lear bomber crashed into a KC- 135 aerial tanker which had ren- | dezvoused with it for refuelling over the southern Spanish coast The bomber, of the USA Strate- | gic Air Command, was flying a-> patrol from North Catolina to Turkey.-It-was armed. with-four of the latest type of nuclear bomb each of 20-megaton explosive power, making a punch 4,000 times that of the first atom bomb dropped 20 years ago. ' High in the blue sky, there was a. tremendous explosive when the planes collided. Flaming jet fuel fell in a black and red rain onto the medieval poverty of the village and its surround- ing fields. Broken fragments of | the aircraft thudded into the ground, one jet engine narrow- | © ly missing a home, anda flam- | janding-néar-the—school- filled with its 51 little pupils And the four bombs also fell, three into the fields and the fourth offshore into 2,850 feet of water deep in the Mediterra- nean, whence it has. just been | recovered after 80 days of search Two of the bombs were ruptur- ed by their fall into the fields, | detonating their TNT trigger charges which blew out radioac- tive fragments of plutonium and uranium. LETHAL RADIATION? How much dangerous _conta- mination had been caused? No- body knew. 800 green - clad and masked US soldiers, backed up by Spanish police, cordoned off and searched three square miles they destroyed the tomato crops and hacked down the growing plants; they ordered villagers caught in the open to burn their clothes. Loading a fleet of trucks with the dusty rocky top- soil, they carted it away to a huge trench newly cut into the mountain-side” twelve miles a- way, and permanently sealed up the dump. The villagers could no longer sell their beans, tomatoes or fish, because their customers in | | the nearby towns of Vera and | Almeida feared they might be contaminated; afraid to eat PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion | by correspondents of questions of in- terest. The) Guardian does not -neces- sarily endorse the opinion ef corres, pondents. All letters published are sub- ject to editing and condensation where necessary. The Guardian is unable te enter into any correspondence regard- ing letters submitted. SUGGESTED CANDIDATE | _ Sir,—The Liberals of thers! Fourth District of Prince County are sorry to learn that Mr. J. George McKay is not offering as candidate in the forthcoming provincial election on May 30th, Mr. McKay has never “been de- | feated; he has--given excellent. service to the 4th District and to the Province and it is with sin- cere regret that we learn he will not be a candidate: at this time. Among the names appearing before us for consideration at the uptoming Liberal. convention is the name of Mr. Edwin Lewis, 40, of Freetown. I do think that Mr, Lewis would be a-very fine f~man to represent us in our new | Liberal ‘provincial government, He is not only a graduate of Prince of Wales College but also one of our leading young farm- ers. The Fourth Distriet is chief- ly interested in Agriculture and Mr. Lewis would have first hand , knowledge of’ our needs. It is the opinion of. -many--of- our 4th District Liberals that Ed- win Lewis would be a-very wise choice of a candidate S I am, Sir, etc., : A 4TH DISTRICT LIBERAL ce » 4 closest friends, said in many lived on potatoes because they had been beneath ground. Now the US Air Force is pay- ing out millions of Pestas in rians. Having completed its. James Bond; like — underwater recovery of the lost ‘‘Nuke’’, the 2,500 US sailors of Task Force 65 have sailed away on their 19 tists are still checking for radio- active effects. x "SAFE UNTIL “ARMED” =~ Palomares, “the “village of Dovecotes’’, had a fortunate es- cape. The only fatalities were The religious. villagers believe 'they were protected by. their patron saint, Anton the Abbot, whose feast day falls on the date of the accident. Could that happen here? The strategic bombers of the SAC round-the-clock patrol criss - compensation to the Paloma- | craft; but US and Spanish scien- | three crewmen of the bomber.. on many of'the varied flight pat- {terns on whch they carry their | nuclear bombs. How often, I asked a National Defence spoke- sman, are nuclear bombs above our heads? ‘I haven't the fog- -giest—idea,’’he—said,_‘but they— have been flying over Canada |and other countries for nearly | ten years. - Yes, they sometimes mally carry out that operation over \the coastal waters or the tundra-just in case of a Paloma- res happening.” -The._nuclear- bombs. could not explode in such an accident; they are- safe until they have been ‘‘armed’’ on emergency orders. The intense and costly search for the missing bomb was not because of any chance that it might later explode, but for security reasons to prevent its secrets falling into the hands of a prying enemy. Ce | Ys Prince Edward Island be- |ing punished for electing all | four Progressive ; Conservative | candidates to the Commons in | last November’s election? __It | must seem so to the Islanders. First the Pearson | ment decreed a slowdown in con- | struction of the Causeway. Now comes another anti - Island ;/move. Fares on the ferry ser- | vice operated by the CNR ac- |ross Northumberland Strait are to be increased. And again this is being done in such a way that no one can avoid noticing that |p. -E. I. is— getting ‘‘special’”’ | treatment. For to make the in- crease the authorities have vio- | lated one of the oldest and most immutable traditions of surface ~ Bonus Bilingual MPs? Edmonton Journal- Prime Minister Pearson’s plan |to give bonuses to civil servants | | Our Yesterdays (Frém The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | (April 22, 1941) Hitler’s only hope for ultimate | victory in the war was to defeat Britain: by invasion and such an tinvasion would fail, Dr. Otto | Strasser, once one of Hitler’s an inter- | view in Toronto. saa ; Southern Greece and ships leaving Greek ports were being |pounded by swarms of Nazi | planes attacking ahead of Ger- | many’s Panzer divisions. In Ath- ‘ens sirens screamed air raid | alarms seven times in the 24 hours up to. midnight. wut TEN YEARS AGO (April: 22, 1956) Blonde Margaret Truman, at- tractive in a beige wedding gown and veil, was married to Clifton Daniel Jr., assistant for-~ \eign néws editor of the New _York Times._in_a_simple_cere-_ mony at Trinity Episcopal church, Indepedénce, Mo. It was the same church where Margar- ‘et’s parents, former President Harry S. Truman and Bess. were married 37 years before. ‘The Little Theatre Guild con- ‘cluded a splendid season of pre- _sentations when they catered to |the young folk ‘in the three- act | play “Simple Simon’’ at Queen Charlotte School. It was direct-: 'ed by Dr. Frank Jelks. In the cast were: Dick Turpin, Pinky | Morris, Irene’ McInnis, Marjorie Harris, Stan Laneaster, Gay ‘Lancaster, Diane Lancaster, | Lloyd Yeo, Wally. Scantlebury, |-George~Kays,-Carol-Ann- Hogan, 'and many others who took min- ; or parts including Mr. Clair | Smith, who is presently direct- /ing children’s plays for the | VIP's ~ govern- | unishing PE: travel—that a return fare be-_ tween two points is always less than twice the single fare. ‘Return fares will no longer—be sold_on_the ferries. __This_adds- irritation—and inconvenience_to the actual increase. Passen- gers making the round trip to or from P. E. I. must line up twice to purchase tickets instead of once, thus paying more for less efficiency. One of the strangest things a- bout this Federal policy toward Prince Edward Island is that it is incredibly bad politics. With oject Dr. Theodore R, Van Dellen Yesterday thelymphatic sys tem was described in detail. This vast network of vessels originat- es in the spaces between cells forming larger channels that come - together. and ultimately end in the thoracic duct near the base of the neck, This passage- way joins a vein in the neck pro- viding a bridge with the two systems, The lymphatic pas- sageways now.can be visualized by a simple procedure. . Evans blue dye is injected in- to the. fold of skin between two toes. The colored pigment is picked up by the lymph and when the fold is opened, the tiny lympatic pathway is discolored and visible to the naked eye. A special iodinated poppyseed oil is now injected slowly into the channel and hours later the en- tire lympatic passageway from the toes to the. neck is outlined under the X-ray (lymphangio- graphy). This and similar proce- dures have opened up a new field in diagnosis and treatment, Cancer is one of several dis- eases involving the lymph sys- tem. It is well-known. that -the condition often spreads via the lymphatics and is frequently de- tained in the lymph nodes. If the passageways are visualized pre- operatively the physician may be able to determine whether the malignancy has spread and ioe extensive surgery should \ Several important discoveries were reported recently’ The ly- mphatic passageways ultimate- ly converge into. the thoracic duct, and we know that the duct and liver disorders. Dr, Allan E. Dumont and his associates of the New York university school of medicine inserted tubes in the thoracic ducts of patients’ Twith advanced cirrhosis who ‘also had swelling of the abdom- en and legs. The lymph was un- der considerable drainage. They allowed the excess lymph to es- cape and within a day or two dramatic improvement follow- ed. The edema subsided and the liver- returned to normal size. The same occurred to individ- uals with dropsy due to. heart this is a practical remedy but we predict that the lymphatic -system_will be -the-most_popular research project in the next few years. . MIDDLE- AGE! SPREAD ~hereabouts, but they nor- | G--G- writes: Ihave started | § the, menopause and seem to be fcause and cure?~ : REPLY - ‘ Ye old middle- “aged spread. More activity and a little less ‘food are most helpful. Some physicians recommend hormon- es as the answer to all problems “at this time of life. EGGS PARTS Mrs. H.S. writes: What is the e the yellow?—~— REPLY : point, the yellow contains more food elements, particularly fat. The white has approximately the same_amount of proteins CHANGE OF LIFE last stage of the menopause? ——— REPLY — The word menopause means “cessation of menstruation.’’ This may occur suddenly or by degrees. CURED PORK, Mrs. F. writes: Does curing it'safe against pork worm dis- ease? 7 ao ae REPLY Trichinosis usually can be con- a provincial election due May 30 on the Island, the federal Li- berals seem determined to allow their provincial affiliates no “chance of winning it. ee who can speak both English and French has, predictably, met varying reactions-from~approv- al through indifference and cau- tion to. indignation: . “Absolutely idiotic,’’ says the president of the Edmonton branch of Civil Service Association. But there is no doubt that French is an official language in Parliament. A reader has sug- gested that Mr. Pearson might pursue his encouragement of bi- | lingualism_by offering ‘‘bonuses”’ to MP’s who can speak both lan- guages. : are or become bilingual? Grac- ious, no! MP’s are extremely well paid now, considering their large indemnities,~ tax-free al- lowances, * wide-spread absente- eism, generous pensions, long holidays and all the rest. Quite a few MP’s, including those out- side Quebec, already speak French and English. Mr. Pearson could’ figure out how much extra he_thinke a bil- ingual MP is worth. Then the appropriate deduction could be made from the pay of an MP | and French. difficulties to solve. What de- gree of proficiency in English and French would be required before a member would be con- sidered bilingual? Would, for ex- | ample, the French. of Mr. Pear- | son: and Mr. Diefenbaker be con- | sidered sufficiently close ‘to | French to classify them as biliti- , ual and_exempt from a pay de- duction? Shae And what. about the Senate? | Ability to master\a foreign lan- guage normally decreases with age. So perhaps it would be" un- |fair to put pressvre on the Sen- _ate as a whole.But should bilin- future appointments? __ BRIDGE GIVES DEATH | Since 1987," 300° people. have | jumped to .their deaths from Offer extra pay to those who |_ who cannot speak both English | | There would, of course, bé | gualism be a qualification for | trolled by freezing, curing, or cooking pork. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Tribe | une, Chicago, Illinois.) Montreal Moncton Saint John Halifax These are examples of CN complimentary SC meals /San~-Francisco’s Golden Gate | bridge’ Lae, Canadian Press Research | Undercurrents In Kenya By J h MacSween .. Sian’ Prese Staff Writer ce The speed of change in Af- another. We must be careful rica. is shown once again by | lest our independence is under. events tal approach le ms, “Twenty-eight legislators followed ‘fermer rebe! Odinga, in Kenya events on both the interng! and internationa! planes. ~+ | Fast-moving ‘developments in- cluding disenchantment with the one-party state system and also with the concept of a eontiney: to Africa’s pro ruling Kenya Union and said they will form an opposition when Parliament | reopens next month. While are not. strong enough. numerically to challenge President Jomo. Kenyatta; ~'74, they do constitute a significant force, They include 19 of the 130 members of the House of Representatives and: nine of the 41 members of the Senate. -Counting the two junior min- {sters who resigned earlier with the total number of KANU they against comes to 30--sufficient to create a lively situation in the Kenya Parliament: which can-hardly be |. descriged as dull at any time. tthe accession to power of six UNDERCURRENTS RIFE _|1 Kenyatta, addressing a KANU/less than six party conference before the present rumpus began, made it clear he was aware of ominous undercurrents. “We live in a cruel and fast world,’ he~-said, ‘We need to be sure of ourselves and to stand firm in our convictions if our independence is to survive. ‘Too many people or coun- is distended_in many cardiac | Rane ry 400d. Us cae Oye mined. through neo-colonialism and communism.” | Political observers in Nairobi | appear to be taking a coo! view of the changes. One KANU of- ficial is quoted as cautioning |} against being “misled by the | noise” created by the anti-Ken- yatta group. ; “They are well known for political | ‘have vice-president | their attacks-on anyone who re-’ Oginga Odinga, 54, out of the | jects communism,” this official African National | remarked, Yet Kenyatta's independence’ | slogan—Harambee: Let's all. | pull together’ — may never | sound just the same again. Ag’ it happens, the Kenya. political, developments have almost coin-' cided with a highly interesting’ international conference called: by Kenyatta in Nairobi, . — TENDS TO DIVIDE A summit conference attended by heads of states and delega- tions from 11 African countries was told by Kenyatta’ that re-. cent events have tended to di-' vide. and isolate the new na-. tions, « ’ ‘ It is generally “thought. that; now | military regimes in Africa’ in months has created doubts about the %6-na- tion Organization of African Unity. ; BEASTS RUN FREE Nepal's wildlife sanctuary, the first ‘in central Asia, has about 200 rhinoceroses,.. 300 it- gers and an.unknown number of: leopards. trouble. Time will tell whether | getting fleshy through the but- | tocks and stomach. What is the best*part of the egg, the white or From the nutritional: stand- -and_minera]s_as_the yolk. = | Mrs. H. M. writes; What is the | pork with smoke and salt make_ smoking, Mr. F. Brown is pictured above 2 Another : Belvedere Winner! / receiving 2 Kodak Zoom Movie Camera from Mr. Jim. Knisley, branch Supervisor for Belvedere Cigarettes. Mr. Brown was a Lucky Belvedere smoker - One out of every 9 Belvedere smokers will win in- stant gift coupons. Belvedere ‘The Winner's Cigarette” a CN travel bargains Charlottetown to: 7 NAM ded equally attractive Sydney $ 9.00 Sargain Sleeping car prices including oa. hal + ; em 10108) the Red, White and