Elli: (firms-dim! Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. Hencox, Publisher Burton Lewis Executive Editor Published every week day morning (exce t Sun- day and statutory holidays) at I65 Prince Street. Charlottetown, P.E.|., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alber- ton and Souris. . .Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services, Toronto, 425 University Ave. Empire $8894,- Montreal, 640 Cathcart University 6.5942; Western Office. Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA 7037). r Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub Iication of all news dispatches in this paper 1030 West i Frank Walks! Editor I Street 1. credited to It or to the Associated Press or Reuters I and also to the local news published herein. All ‘ right or republication of special dispatches hera- lri also reserved. Subscription rates. - Not over 35: per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas ’ not serviced by Carrier. v$l5.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealt . -'Not over 7: singgle copy. .-‘ Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink" PAGE 4 SATURDAY, JUNE 13. 1964. An Important Step . Slowly, and despite setbacks from time to time, relations are being established on both sides of the Iron Curtain that may set the pat- tern for a safer and saner world in the years to come. Canada took an important step in this direction this week, by opening formal diplomatic relations with Hungary and enter- ing into a three-year trade agree- ment with the East European Com- munist country. . As announced by Trade Minister Sharp, the agreement is the first of its kind to be signed between the two countries since the war. The amounts of Canadian wheat or bar- ley involved are not large. but add to the number of several-year agree- ments that Canada has negotiated in the last three years with various Tron Curtain countries. The two governments. he said, wish to ex- tend trade progressively and each government has agreed to give sympathetic consideration to repre- sentations from the other for that: purpose. , At the same time, External Af- fairs Minister Martin announced that Canada and Hungary will ex- change diplomatic missions and negotiate a settlement of outstand- in‘g financial claims between the two ocuntries. He added that agree- ment had been reached on a number of consular matters which will clarify the position of Canadian citizens—including those of Hun— garian origin—who may wish to travel in Hungary. Hungary will give sympathetic consideration to applications from Hungarian citizens who may wish to join members of their family already in Canada. A few years ago, such an ar- rangement with any Communist country would be out of the question. Had it been proposed in Canada, it would probably be denounced as subversive, or something of that kind. And. of course. no Commun- ist government would have dared to consider it, for the same reason. Test Case In Colorado 3' Farmers everywhere are con- ooncerned, as they are in this prov- inée, with protecting themselves fibm the extreme ups and 'downs of the market. Their concern usual- 15" expresses itself in the form of marketing legislation of some sort; and this has been the case in Color- ado, where for the past quarter of a century a marketing act has been in operation, under the terms of which scores of permanent market- ing agreements, covering most of the large fresh-produce crops, fruit, and wheat, have come into effect. The act has never been previously challenged, but it; has now been ruled unconstitutional by a state district court. The ruling will be appealed to the Colorada Supreme Court, but etate agricultural authorities are elk-early wondering what farmena can,do if the whole structure goes The actual issue is two years old. Under a. marketing order covering iiho huge lettuce crop of the San Louie Valley in 1962, farmers voted to leave 30 per cent of the crop un- herveated from day to day, so as to keep up their price on the remain- dfl'. This was implemented by a ‘ order is'sued by theatate mi. “turd commissioner. Two grow- ..h. however, refueedto-comrpiy and U ‘ an.me to prevent the In his ruling the district court judge said the act contains no pro- vision for directly compensating pro- ducers for their destroyed crop. “Presumably,” he said “the farmers would receive their reward either in heaven or from increaad prices for the remaining 70 per cent of their crop if and when a market existed for their remaining lettuce. Certainly the expected benefits would be highly speculative. It is a basic constitutional law that pri- vate property shall not be taken for public use without just- compen- sation. and that private property cannot be taken at all for private purposes.” He added that "no person engag- ed in agriculture can read the act and determine with any degree of certainty, or at all, what are his rights, duties. and liabilities under a marketing order promulgated un- der this act, because. like lightning, no one can tell where it is going to strike.” The director of the Colorada agri- cultural marketing division, on the other hand, contends that “nothing could be more democratic than in- dividual farmers’ cooperating in these agreements.” The 1962 action, he said, had saved lettuce growers from huge losses, and he noted that similar orders cover the big Colorado potato areas (plus peaches and wheat), and milk marketing. The potato orders require growers to discard culls. and the others in var- ious ways are designed to restrict overproduction and consequent low prices. The outcome of this legal battle will be followed with widespread in- terest. Who Speaks For Canada? No nation has more to gain and less to lose from the success of the Kennedy Round of tariff negotia- tions than Canada. Yet. as the Win- nipeg Free Press complains. this country's attitude toward the negoti- ations, which will get under way in earnest next September. has been expressed only in the vaguest and often contradictory terms. On the one hand, we have had liberal. low tariff statements from the minister of trade and commerce. Mr. Sharp, assuring other countries that Canada expects to pay fully for any benefits she receives from the negotiations. On the other hand there have been repeated expres- sions of protectionism and economic nationalism from the minister of finance. Mr. Gordon—notably in his budget speech and in an address to the British Columbia branch of the Canadian Manufacturers Associa- tion. This ambivalence in Canada’s trade policy will have to be settled before long, but in the meantime it is causing concern in Washington, which is totally committed to a policy of broad tariff reduction. It is also causing annoyance to our Winnipeg Liberal contemporary, which concludes on this note: “If Mr. Sharp speaks for the govern- ment there is no cause to worry: Canada will play her full part at Geneva and do her best to persuade other middle powers to make similar sacrifices . But if our policy is to be characterized by the tacit pro - tectionism of Mr. Gordon, who as finance minister must. ultimately pilot all tariff changes through Par- liament, then there are indeed grounds for grave concern." EDITORIAL NOTES Norway‘s parliament has un- animously agreed to locate 1,300 troops for the world‘s first pennan- ent police force. As announced on Wednesday, the Norwegian contin- gent would be part of a planned Scandinavian brigade that would include 1,600 Swedish and 950 Dan- ish troops and would be prepared to go anywhere at any time on peace- keeping missions for the United Nations. O I C The public health service at Washington reports that despite a rising marriage rate and “increaa-v ing numbers of women entering the child-bearing ages" the U8. birth rate has been declining. About 837,000 babies were born last March, 6,000 fewer than in March, 1088, and the smallest number for any March since 1955. For the 12-month period ending last March there were 4,087,000 births. 49,000 fewer than in the comparable 1962-63 apanp Health officials could offer no ex: ulsnatlon. l2 “WANT IANY LEGAL ADVICE ; - " HITLER'S GHOST Attempting F.S.M. Less than 20 years after the end of the war voices have been raised in Berlin and in the Un ited States striving to abstain Hitler of all blame for the con- flict. In Britain these were the voices of the far left. and their aim was to make appeasement respectable: appeasement of Hitler in 1939. and appeasement of the Communists in the '603. In America the movement has aims that are exactly the oppo site, and, b e i n g well provid- ed with funds. is much more dangerous: It is a right wing movement that is using the new thesis of a blameless Hitler. linked to reported attempts at resuscitation of the largely dc,- funct German nationalism, as a lever in American domestic po lifics. It wishes to put the blame for the last war on President Roose velt whom the American right wing cannot forget or forgive; and to attempt to create a new nationalist. Germany that would become an ally of a right win}: nationalist United States in an uncompromisingly hostile con. frontation with the Communist world. DANGEROUS GAME The dangerous game of white- And Still A DrOp To Drink Christian Science Monitor “Water Is no longer an inex-r haustible commodity even in a damp climate." This patching statement from the United States Commission for UNESCO is supported by such reasons as the increasing demands for water by industry and agriculture. Producing a ton of rolled steel requires 400 tons of water; making one loaf of bread. from raw materials to bakery window. takes two tons of water. Set beside such statistics the fact that 97 per cent of the world's water is in its oceans. mostly unusable at present “ex- cept to float boats." as one hydrologist puts it. Considering the differences in rates of technological develop- ment throuth the world. it seems obvious that future wal- er needs cannot be left solely to the workings of the market place. Even in the United States where a qualified theory of let- ting the undirected market op- erate has been attracting pro- ponents. coordinated planning is likely to become more and more necessary, Muckroking In Hong Kong Christian Science Monitor WHENEVER the (minese Com- munists sting Soviet Premier Khrushchev a little too much, the taunts them about Hong Kong. In 1962. they called him "timid as a mouse" because — as they alleged -— he let Prem- ier Fidel Castro down by yield- Ing to United States pressure to withdraw- missiles from Cuba. Back came Moscow with the sly hint that it was all very well for Peking to talk about Cuba, thousands of miles away in the , What about that outpost of "imperialism" on China's very doorstep. the Bri- tlah colony of Hon; Kong? The Chinese must now have been up to some more particul- arly cutting thrusts behind the scenes. the Russians have just sent two Pravda correspon- to do a little anti-Chinese muck- raklng on the spot. They have come is with the grave allegation the Peking is in fact cooperating with the British imptlellsta in the col- ony. Even"tbe piiuctual British penal service helps Peking in its disruptive activity." 01 com the “din-once" is The Winnipeg Free Press washing Hitler began in Britain three years ago, when Profes- sor A.J.P. Taylor of Oxford pub- lished his book The Origins of the Second World War. Prof. Taylor, who belongs to the fax left fringe of the British Labot Party, claimed that the war of 1939 —— “the war of Danzig," as he called it — was not premedit- ated by Hitler. but was the re sult of diplomatic blunders. The thesis has now been fol- lowed up by an American pro- fessor. David Hoggan, who In his new book. The Enforced responsibility for the SECOud World War and blames Britain. egged on by President Rome- velt. instead. Prof. Hoggan has been four- ing West Germany and Austria, lecturing to nationalist groups and collecting awards from them for his championship of Hitler. One such award was giv-i en to him in Heidelberg. where the history faculty of the Heid- elberg University, in a state. ment endorses by the rector and the academic senate, dismissed the book as worthless for lus- torical research. GROUPS DENOUNCED The German historians say Prof. Hoggan's book omits well~ In short there is ample reason for the extended study of water problems promised by the In- ternational Hydrological Decade scheduled to begin next year. We hope and assume that it will receive final approval by the ESCO General Conference meeting in Paris this fall. Already 140 delegates from 50 countries have met. to decide on specific proposals for the decade. These wisely include both cooperative collecting of basic data and detailed inven- tories of local conditions. To the user of water who rarely gives a thou_ t to where it comes from. it is enlightening even to think of such broad terms as “representative basins." defin- ed as "where man's influence is not present." and "experi- mental basins." where “man in changing hydrological fa tors." C1 2 It appears filial mankind will have to change more hydrolo- gical factors to keep up with the thirst of the future. In such programs as the International Hydrological Decade, UNESCO proves its reason for being. aimed against Moscow. "Auti- Soviet literature from China." report lometaklfls and Pochlvalw. “k carried to Hon; Kous on Chinese mer- chant ehipa together with other 1110 British cus- innate thls'com- modify ' though the colonial au- thorities officially banned the introduction into Hon: Kong both of Communist and anti- Communist propaganda." The enterprising Pravda cor- respondents also come up with the discovery that Peking is ma kl a handy 300 million "us. d year out of Hon: Kong. This is not Just. the profit on etrelfitforwaed trade deals. The Grimes ammu- nlsfs. ft is alleged, are acquiring financial control in Hoes Koo such cepiteli tic enterprises as banks a r‘ta rants. “Haw can one speak of class struggle and revolutionary ir- reconcilabiiity if capital from Chinese People's Republic is pa co abaretin with British and American on: Kong. jointly" exploiting wot- Perhaps t .IIII filial is just to remember that indith is x a I. toms officials 6 .q. a very subjective reaction. To Re-Write History. established facts, falsely inter- prets official documents, an aceepts tendentious literature of the Nazi era. Heidelberg Univer- sity students denounced the right wing group of authors and publishers who honored Prof. Hoggan in Heidelberg. thus mis using the city's name to attract public attention to their nefar- ious activities. Upon becomingbetter ac- quainted with the implications of the Hoggan thesis, several bodies drew back from official sponsorship of such awards. The Austrian government ban- ned Prof. Hoggan'a lectures al- together. At the same time. a new na- tionalist paper was recently founded in Germany with seem ineg unlimited funds. The pa- per now has a circulation of 70.000. of which 50,000 are paid- up subscriptions. German cial Democrats suspect that the money for this new nationalist venture comes from the same United States sources that are behind Prof. Hoggan: the ultra- rightest circles of Texas and the west coast. There is. of course. little scope for any right wing revival in Germany. The Germans were bitten twice by the nationans bug with disastrous results. and they are now fairly immune. Nevertheless, these attempts re- main a mischievous game that should be stopped forthwith. "The Age Old Story" "—and he is my salvation: He is my God. and [will prepare him an habitation: my father‘s God, and I will exalt him.” Ex- odus 15:2. Accidents V On The Form declining. Mecbaulzation means less work for farmers but if: has increased the number and le- verity of injuries. In 1962 more than 8,100 lives were lost in rural ‘areas. or every death there were too ser- ions and disabling injuries. Ac- cording to Dr. John H. Pow-1‘s of Coopeoatown, N.Y.. few farm- era can afford to be hurt or spend weeks in the hospital dur- ing the busy summer months. The peak periods are July and August. At least half of all the mishaps occur while doing rou- tine farm chores. such as milk- ing, filling the fields. cleaning the barn. harvesting. or repair- ing fences. ildren share in then baz- . on the term are youngsters allowed to come in- to contact with heavy equip- ment or to roam at will in close proximity to operating machin- ery. They get hurt. often fatally when playing near Dad in the field or around animals. The father may not realize his little ones are in the work area and runs over them with the tractor or harvester. They may walk into the mowing machine or be drawn into the binder before it can be stopped. The American farm is not complete without tractors but many farmers fail to realiu what a lethal weapon they can be. Young boys are allowed to drive them across fields and pastures. Now and then they take along a younger brother or sister who must hang on be- cause there is only one seat, The tractor hits a bump or a rack and the driver or his passenger is likely to fall under the Many men have been crushed by their own equipment. They are run over hv the tractor when they step off and leave the engine in gear. Others are crushed when the machine is opera-ted on a steep hill and topples over. Dr. Powers believes 90 per cent of all agricultural accidents are preventable because the majority are caused by careless- ness. ignorance. and failure to keep buildings and equipment in cood condition. HEART ATTACK AFTER SHOCK L.S.K. writes: Could a severe emotional shock cause a heart attack in a person 50 years of ge? REPLY Yes. but the victim usually has had hardening of the coro- nary arteries long before the at- tack occurs. The shock becomes the straw that breaks the Cam- el‘s back. PACIFIER Mr . S. writes: How do I wash my lG-montlmld daughter from her pacifier? She won‘t go to sleep without it. REPL Let her alone. except for more love and attention. The pacifier is preferred to thumb-sucking and children usually give up the habit when they come more secure emotionally. JOWLY COUPLE Si writes: My wife develop- ed jowls suddenly at age 4 Now. at 44. mine have appear- ed. Neither of us has had a re- dical weight change? Why jowls? REPLY This condition is common af- ter age 40 and usually stems from 55 of muscle tone and elasticity of the facial tissues. Y FOR FlS’l‘ULA writes: Do rectal fistu- F.B. heal themselves in time? ias REPLY No. Surgery is necessary. OlympicmCode’s Status Prime Minister Pearson has strongly implied that he regards 3‘12?”ka code as being out- a- . Many Canadians who watch the progres of Canada's hoc- key teams in international com- petltion will agree with the Prime Minister's point of view. Mr. Pearson had this to say at the Canadian Amateur Hoc- key Association‘a 50th anniver- sary dinner: “The distinction is so alia- dowy and uncertain that per- haps the time has come when it shouldn’t matter whether an athlete is professional or am- ceur. It should be simply a case of lining up the best team to re- present the country so long as it s an international sport." Countries tekin part in Oly- mpic and World key tun-us- manta in recent years have shown an increasing tendency to include professionals on their rosters. It is an accepted fact that governments in the Communist bloc countries subsidize their athletes in certain fields. Such a policy puts teams from nations that maintain the arm- teur code at a distinct disadvan- The word “anateur” is grad- ually losing its significance as far as the Canadian hockey scene is concerned in any case. Most adults who play in esta- blished leagues receive remun- eration in our form or another. boys who participate in Canada’s major junior heckey circuits receive regular pay cheques. Sam f are performers eventually end up on this coun- try's Olympic teams. Unless title Olympic code is to be enforced on a broad basis it should be scrapped altosether. Rise Ancl Decline oun- [Journal Turning in their graves these of Lincoln and ion afterward days must be the founde o the Republicans wage never in: the Republican Party. For a Senator Barry Goldwater would have been one of the man Re- publicans would have scourged from their ran in the 0005 when their party was being torn. Consider for example the words of the great editor, Hor- "Its (the Republican Party) objects are the securiul to ev- man. as nearly as may be. a dance to work for and earn a living — The freedom of the public lands to actual settlers and limitation of him sequi- slttens of land to some able amount, are also malaise seem in vtt neces- sary to the ultimate friend’s; tion of labor from misery." . 0a down slimy: the new reason- , ‘ , per a e as me Mr when men like McKinley, Tad and Mark Hana sought to make it so, Theodore“ Roose- velt broke ranks with re- bellion from which the part! never fully recovered. sen- t’i'tlgver resented it temporarily . mains and With hopelessly confused philo- sophies. Thus the my which once knew a Linco . a Pre- mont. a Theodore Roosevelt. an Elihu Root. and Arthur Vanden- berg and a Robert Taft. is today without a leader to combat a Goldwater. an apostle of right- ist extremism — its defeat by l J next Nov-ember but taken for cram. InItalics are of «it; curious things a ways a an story politic. '. of l; NOTES BY THE WAYfi When told to evacuate the building because of the false- alarm bomb scare at me Col- legiate. students rushed to their her to notes a books—- needed with final exendn- ationa coming up. One young lady was different. All she took in her locker was a long-play Beetle record. — London Free a. Three men were given en la- telllgence test. and one part of it was impromptu. Just to see what would happen, the . er tore maps into pieces and handed each man the torn bits to put together. After a while. two of the men gave up in dis- gusf, but the third man had fin- ished his, "That's very good." the examiner told him. “But how did you do it?" “It was really quite slmple.’ the man said. "There was a picture ‘of a bathing beauty on the other side." — Gait Reporter. Experience u what you have left when everything else is gone. — Niagara Falls It la bad enough listeufu t the commercialization of 11:15: mas carols. Now we face the prospect. to quote the editor the United Church Ob Qt Without Him". — Nia Falls Review. a“ An Insurance salesmen we. having trouble getting dirough to his prospective client. "What is the maximum value of your Isusbem‘il':e meant policy?" he asked _ . She look- ed at him blaukly.' "If y o u should lose your ," explained Manly, “What would you get?" ul she looked erwnd the rumpled. cigar-scented room. Thou her face lit up and die answered WU! “A parekeetl". —Galt Reporter. - Labor Trouble In Algeria 3! Rod Currie Canadian Press Staff Writer Western observers who have long conaoidered Nigeria use most moderate country in Af- rica are coming increasingly worried by the paralysing gen- eral strike now in its second week with no end in sight. T ey are concerned not so much- with the strike itself as with the political implications wlhat could emerge from it. Compared with Ghana and other African neighbors, Ni- geria has enjoyed a reputation for internal stability and level- headedness in external affairs and Britain looked to it as a model for other developing countries. The majority of the Wed African country's 86,000,000 peo- ple, the largest population bloc on the continent. had hoped that the prosperity that failed to materialize during three years of independence from Britain would finally come when the republic was established last October. But still the old imbalance between the poverty of the masses and the ostentatious luxury of the few persisted. Many think the government was rather naive and inept .11 its handling of the situation. But still it must be appreciated 3 the country's economic situation did not permit any very bold attempts to appease the majority. BEHIND SCHEDULE Development plans have fallen behind schedule through lack of expected outside capital still is him unempoylnent Until the crisis, trade unions were u cultu- straw or well organized. But when the government coatinuallly rejected wage demands, the unions wo favor and finally formed the joint action committee which forced the appointment of a aroused auspicious by first de- laying publication of its findings and then rejecting the major recommendation — a minimum monthly wage of £12, about half what the so-called "big men," ministers. senior clVll servants and employers, claim as a monthly car allowance. The government now says it will permit a minimum of a little more than £9. an increase of £1.10D over the present min- imum, but will not open nego- tiations until the strike ends. Whatever the outcome. it seems a relatively well-organ iud left - wing element has emerged in a country where previously political parties were largely based on tribal groun- ings which generally excluded consultation with the unions. It remains to be seen whether this element will develop peace. fully, in the Nigerian tradition, and perhaps find a place in policy - making. or turn sharply left and become violently anti. government. 85 desperate minutes Thomas French. a distraught 30-year-old. perched on the rooftop of his London flat was bent on taking his own life as wall as that of his infant son Stewart. Spectacular photos. taken by Peter Mitchell. Peter Miles and Ken Powell, record in full detail the 85 desperate minutes during which rescuers. led by courageous Police- women Maggie Clelend. succeeded in averting a terrible tragedy. THE EVENING PATRIOT WITII WEEKEND STILL ONLY 1 10". At mam-M5 . :34 I ' E c I Review. ‘