The Guardian | Covers Prince Edward tsiand Like The Dew “2 WJ. Hancex, Publishes ' Wallace Ward . Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Suni day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Chariqttetown, P.E.|., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. trench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton Sovris *~ Represented nationally. by. Thomson? Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 Unversity Ave. Empire 3-8894; ‘Montreal 640. Cathrart Street Uni * ywersity 6-594%, Westerd Office 1030 Wesf*Georgia “$treét, Vanceviver MA 7037. / Member Canacias Daily Newspaper Publishers Association a.d The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exciusiveiy entitled to. the use for repub lication. of all news. dispatches in this paper credited to7it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and: also the loca’ ‘news puplished herein. All right or-republication of ‘special disoatches here in alio-reserved. -Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. < i $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas | not serviced by carrier” $15.00 a year off Island and U-K. $20.00: pe + byest in US and—elsewhere outside British Com — — + oe p—{o- English” They open with dramatic - | monwealth. Not ever Ye single copy: * Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE ¢ MONDAY, JUNE | 2, , 1966. A Case In Point The myth about a man of Premier Shaw’s age being too old to be in politics was. sedulously propagated by his opponents in the recent elec- ion campaign. The fact is, of course, that given a sound physique and - food health, the experience which comes with age more than offsets jn. many cases, the crudities and in- experience of vouth. “Ripeness is all,” as Shakespeare has said. Certainly the careers of some of‘ Europe’s ablest ' statesmen have borne eloquent testi- mony to this fatt. ™ One of the outstanding examples in recent times is that of the former West German chancellor, Konrad denauer—still spry at 90—who has §tarted to write. his autobiography and whose “Memoirs 1945-53” have been published and now translated in- > 4 I ofthe attempt on Hitler's life of 20 Gestapo prison a tmpact in this manner: * “At the end of September 1944 1 Was arrested again and sent to the auweiler, near rather exciting escape from concentration camp — on the Colognp air Grounds where I . uring the aftermath July 1944: When Iarrived, the com- missioner in charge of the prison asked me please not to take my own life as this would only cause trouble hin 4 -Mr. Pearson’s resignation, compared __are deserved. And last week he be- , Stowed a verbal sugar plum upon an _\—old-opponent with whom he had-often—|- | during a Commons speech to set out’ on the trail Mr. Pickersgill had blaz- ed. Trailing along 24,hours behind | Mr. Sharp came Health Minister Allan MacEachen, another potential leader- | ship contender. Lashing out at those who wanted ‘a leadership change, Mr. McEachen described Mr. Pearson as & “brave, strong, dedicated: statesman. who was ‘the right man, at the right place, atthe right ime. Why the procession’ Liberal claims - to the contrary, the Tories, for once, were. innocent bystanders. What set the Liberal Party on its ear-Was the °| revelation; from a public opinion poll, that the Munsingér affair had done more “damage to Prime - Minister Pearson's public image than it had to Mr. Diefenbaker’s. The before-and- ~—after—pollfigures~indicated that~40 per cent-of Canadian voters wanted } to 23 per cent before hand. But the percentage of Canadians shown as feeling that Mr. Pearson should carry on as long as possible fell from, a respectable 56 per cent to 39 per cent. t “It is doubtful, gays The Gazette writer, “if th single. p |. on Parliament Hill who regards the “Canadian version of the gallup poll as being within hailing distance of ‘infallibility. Its election record has been spotty. But as a trend-indicata- __ tor | ; | the poll has. broad acceptance. Which is why the Liberals feel that now is the time for all Good Liberals to rally to the side of the P.M.— especially. since they're not ready to try to select a successor.” Salute To®aul Martin 4 Mr. Diefenbaker is frequently pietured as a devastating critic of Liberal. policies and politicians —good,- -_ bad or indifferent. Such is not the —easeof course. He can be generous in his commendations, if he feels they been at loggerheads-—External Af- | fairs Minister Paul Martin—for his - stand. at the_recent council meeting - of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion. Mr. Martin, indeed, won support from all sides of the House of Com- mons on this matter; but it must have been particularly Sratifying to him to. NATO would have been ‘‘a matter of think that I might take my life. He Feplied that as I-was now. nearly seventy. years old and had nothing- More to expect from life, it seemed ' Teasonable to suppose that I: would. put an end to it. I told him ‘not. to worry. I would not cause him any trouble.” _The Nazi prison commissioner couldn't have known, of course, that: the man whom he regarded as having “nothing more to expect from ‘life’ was only on the threshold of his true career, and was to attain the apogee of power in his 80s. Here, in the words of a-New York Times reviewer of "against the Jews. ~ wealth, prestige and influence~for his: _ Shattered and partitioned land.” ‘first, F history” had the political headquar- ters been removed at this time. It was gainst this“ move that Mr. Martin” ‘exerted alf his persuasive powers at \ the conference.* | . What he did, in short, was to obtain | support for postponing until fall a decision concerning movement of the NATO political directorate from Paris to Belgium. He felt that the United |. States, Great Britain and West Ger- ; Many were wrong when they proposed ' to move-the headquarters from the French capital; that the propsal had its roots not in 1 reasoned. decision but rather in pique’ at President de ® ’ past sorry years which hear, from the Oppos sition leader, that | bove the leve! of a and surely drawing the old age_ and discussed sion except Health Minister AL: - “THE COLD WAR IS OVER” ; } a | “OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Tribute Paid To Veteran Parliamentarian “After 49 years on Parliament Hill - as M. P., as Cabinet Mini- ster_and as Senator --Tom—Cre-— rar has. bowed out on. the eve. of his. 90th birthday, which he ce- lebrated last week.. x Two. unusual events marked his resignation from the Sen- ~ ate, which was not p prompted by — his own’ age or health. — First, he, delivered- his now fa- mous swan-song speech, which- ~he himself sub-titled ““What-~-T would do if I were Prime Minis- _ter of Canada.” That. was the “most perceptive speech heard on Parliament Hill for many a long unhappy year. It was in fact the first speech heard in these a- partisan strife; the great issues of*the day which should be the overriding con-~ cern of our parliament. THE CALF CLUB MEETS- Second, on the evening of the day when his resignation took | effect, he was paid the well-de- served but perhaps unequalled | - tribute of being invited as guest. of honour at a farewell dinner. I cannot recall any’ senator - or MP or cabinet minister enjoy- ing an ‘onour matching that of the modest meal and immodest- ly prominent. role of hosts.on that spontaneous and temark- able occasion.. : This was no great party ban- quet, long prepared. and stage- managed by the imageé-mould- ers of a political party inthe — Banquet Hall of the Chateau Laurier Hotel. It was, more Adenauer’s book; is wha after the tyranny which started as a militant youth movement had run its course and come;to an inglorious end: ~-—“44e-instatled —temocracy—among~| the afchaic ashes of Hitler’s Reich, He forced upon the Germans a realiza- tion of their appalling sins, above all He attempted in _ Some small] way to appease the mem- _ories of frightfulness by. restitution to. ~ Trsael, to France, to other symbols of the, suffering’ wrought. by Hitler. Patiently, step by step, he persuaded the victorious Allies to trust his new _ West German leadership. to grant in- dependence to a country truncated by - bickering conquerors and deprived of . _a formal peace. lle led the way to a federal republic and to an essentially, two-party system. He pressed for Etropean unity when even this urge was frustrated by his dear friend de Gaulle. He recovered sovereignty, Not bad. one must admit, for a dod- dering oldster! The Rescue Squad The stately procession began on’ the night of June 4, writes Arthur Blakely in the Montreal Gazette. At_ it attracted little attention. Transport Minister J.W. Pickersgill, _ speaking in Corner Brook, Newfound- “land, to a. group of young: we ee complained of the “new Tory line” the-efect that the onlv way to save __Parliament and restore good govern- “7 Teminded the House that the crucial | Gaulle’s. withdrawal from the al- liance’s integrated military command. , Canada never showed,fo better advan- _tage than in the policy its spokesman — ‘voiced on this occasion,.and the in- dorsation it-received from rival par- ties in. the Commons was also to its credit. : ‘Basking in the sunshine of such un- | usual support. Mr. in modestly “issues facing the alliance remain and - that the part he played in delaying the decision simply “bought time.” | But if it saves NATO from self- ‘destruction, 1t will have been valuable time indeed. The complete isolation of France from her NATO allies could only end in further embarras- ment. With President ‘de Gaulle leav- _ ing today for Moscow on a Soviet visit, the result could beXsomething | very much worse, +—"“EDITORIAL- NOTES Although it was “talked out” in the ° Commons. a recent proposal to Parlia- | better-than-usual chance of someday | becoming law. He suggested that a | furid be creafed to pay compensation to persons ‘permanently. aperes as -| victims of crime * . 2 Auto insurance firms are rejecting |. “many «requests for insurance from. | teenage drivers and first-time drivers. of any age According to the Finan- ment in_Canada was to get rid of the leaders of both,historic parties. He _warned that a.number of “gullible ~ Liberals” were swallowing this pro- Clal Post. accident rates are so hugh that the companies cannot afford to a papanda-and thatitwas yer bad-for— se oles oie g2st n Feo ed. had proved a wonderful he maintain- leader Then on June 9,‘Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp, a prime contender for Mr. .Pearson’s leadership should the post fall vacant, found it necessary | the Party. Mr. Pearson. ———}-—-«--A Dart -fro | ment by the news making member for | . ~| York-Humber, Ralph Cowan, stands a simply, the first and the Ta meeting of what-I called ‘‘The C.A.L.F. Club”, the group of “Crerar’s Admirers and Long- time Friends.” ‘om~—the-guest~of-honor Senator Tom Crerar, the CALF ~ Club.“ numbered seventeen’. ‘These included five men who Aad won electio the House of Commons under r different Party labels - Liberal, Conser- vative, CCF and Progressive; been appointed to the Cabinet: | and five prominent former. civil | servants ‘It. also ineluded the dean of. Canada’s parliamentary writers~now fetired, John Ste- | venson, and other Calfs - such as myself, the. only still active member of the Press” Gallery. | That adds up to more than 18 persons, because some, such as. ; Tom Crerar himself, fell into | "more than one category. We met in a private room of Ottawa's famed Rideau Cfub, | where dinner was followed by’ some remarkable extemporan- eous = unreportable —— "Our Yesterdays (From, The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (June 20,1941) Royal Air Force bombers es- | corted by a strong force of fight- er planes heavily assaulted Ger- man-held French coastal , posi- Havre and a German ; ship. supply ‘Citizens were 4 echoed and dis- mayed at the news released yes- ,terday morning that the magnifi- cient Dominion Government car ferry steamer and ice- breaker SS. ‘Charlottetown’, had sunk —in-100_feet_of water off the south {| coast of Nova Scotia. ~ * TEN YEARS AGO ___ered_a group around him. F rligh 0a the list _ tions forthe ninth straight hight, | | hitting docks and oil tanks at Le — es = ofa calibre seldom ee ed by today’s practitioners of par ry The vlopics rangéd are political reminiscences, ding. for in- Stance a vivid refigitting of the | battle of Culloden - for strange- ly enough all the Calf's except —Scottish—ancestry: And Tom\himself added his | quota by mily, a sept of the Mackintosh clan _whose.tie of hugtingtar- tan he proudly sported, acquir- ed its name immediately after | and as a direct résult of that in- scribing how his fa- | “initiated a post-mortem ‘Prime Ministers T have known” “He named Sir Wilfred Laurier and Sir Robert Borden as the greatest. It. was agreed that historians will not rate Macken- zie King ‘highly; it is interesting _|to note that -Tom_Crerar sat. cabinet under both Borden and i Observing the dictum ‘de mortuis..nil__nisi__bonum'’,.__ I will not refer to the judgments rendered on Mackenzie King, who névertheless managed to famous battle and its murder- | set up. an unassailable record ous mopping-up operation. OLD MEN REMEMBER Finally the old men - —_ lan MacEachen and myself - called’it-a night and went home. But not Tom Crerar. He gath- and | for the length of time he ruled as prime -minister. But Tom Crerar himself set record _on_that last ra eee night of his on Parliament’ Hill: it was not until the club - was 4 closed down for the night that he left to be driven home in my = ~ Looters In Ontario Windsor Star - When the first word of exten- sive bankruptcy frands in Can- ada filtered through from ‘Que- bec there was~a disposition to regard them as a form of law- lessness peculiar to that pro- vince. That position has now ‘been undermined by new crime revelations placed on recerd by Mr. Erik Nielsen, Conservative MP for'the Yukon. - ; Ontario, it appears, also has specialists been ae by = the provincial and federal gov- ernments, That is Mr. Nielsen's / assertion, at least, and in view _of his earlier accuracy in such _ /Matters the statements he makes will carry weight. Looking back, it was too much to assume that bankruptcy rac- keteers would restrict their acti- vities to Québec hen the rich- es province o m all, tario, offered even better re- a Renan crate investigators are well ahead of the news in their probing of cri- -minal acts commited or” pro- jected. But it appears there have been information leaks that pro- vide a strong scent for under- cover men and other investiga-- tors to follow. ‘governments alone of victims are. operations. On- © The probable extent of the de- predations of bankruptcy rac- keteers is suggested by Mr. Nielsen's assertion that the tax- loss to federal. and provincial | could total $150 million. In considering such’ enormous losses looting stands oat as a more dencriptive word than: plain fraud. If, as mentioned, the rac- keteers concentrated mainly -on - Hemiltes, Ont., _ is not neat. What ctime of this sort can accomplish in one city it probably can pull. off or at least attempt in another. a tree ) t Nielsen revelations is essential on every level of ae. in - DODGED. TAXES, FINED | TORONTO (CP)—Six former | executives of a Toronto com- five men who had been appoint- tenn PAY RAVE. 0 nate; four who ha At this stage. doubtless, police $8,745 on charges of income tax evasion. The.largest fine, $4,050, was imposed Friday on Roy L. Calhoun, former president and managing director of Roscoe Metal Products, Ltd. All six have paid the back taxes and thé interest on it, the court was told. © f eA Of the year in which the indivi; | on are “helpful of tess snl tight jae cau- , erative | The Big Sneeze By Dr. Theodore R: Van Dellen | ~ Seasonal hay fever is an aller- | Bie condition which -oecurs , at , | certain. months) of the year. Pol- ‘len is the chief offender and Causes trouble when the concen- : tration in the air is high enough | to bring about. discomfort | those allergic to these specif | substances. Ina typical attack. the nose itches and feels irritat- ed and the victim sneezés as though Pepper had been blown | j into his face. Congestion of the | /eyes and nasal membranes fol-. lows causing a__profuse watery {discharge of the eyes and nose. | May arise such as eczema, asth- | ma, hives, or migraine. When the physictén™ is ¢on- fronted with this story “he ‘usua- jlly reeémmends a series of skin tests with extracts of pollen. The first materials selected are |those prevalent -during the time dual complairis. « The pollinating season varies | according to location, but in /Most- states ‘tree- hay fever—ar- rives in May and continues until | July. Allergy. to grass pollen ap- ‘ pears in June and persists some- times until September. Sniffles that come on about mid-August and fast until September or Oc- tober_usually are traceable . , ragweed. Tests are done with other po.- lens that come from vegetations | in. the neighborhood, because they often show up as potential | irritants. After all, hay fever sufferers may be sénsitive to one or any combination of weeds grasses, or trées. Apositive = action exists when a wheal, sur- rounded by a red area, appears over the injuected site of the skin scratch. ; gest allergists grade the posi- tive reactions by size. One plus, for example, is mild whereas | four plus has all the trimmings. | But a,positive reaction to a par- that-it is producing symp‘oms, the culprit must be in’ the aur at the time thatthe bothered. i irritant does not mear ‘individual is tend with hay fever is. to avoid the allergens. This -is cone * escaping to the northwoeds, mountains, sea- shore, or taking an’ ocean voyage. Air condition-__ ing with special filters is next. Nasal decongestants and the an- NR lite The steroids such as cortisone ut should: be used © only for a short time. Most aller- _ gists recommend desensitization | % gaa: confererice at Geneva as | | body which has easy access to The most effective way to con-— —_ “ “Ronning’ s Hanoi Mission By Dave Mcintosh ~ Canadian Press Staff Writer The great diplomatic break- | throughs of the cold “\ war have usually resulted ffom patient { and painful negotiations con- | ducted ‘strictly in’ private That is why it is extremely unlikely- that anything, ~ official or unofficial; will “be said for a Jong time, if ever, about the “missions of Canadian special | |envoy Chester Reaping to | ‘Hanoi. More than two years after the event, the details of how Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Paul | Martin’ set up the United Na- ‘tions peacekeeping .force in | Cyprus have still not. been dis- | | closed. For another example, which involved Mr: Ronning’ himself: +: In ‘1954, China-born Mr. RKcn- | ning, who speaks Mandarin fluently, attended the Korea po- “a member of the Canadian del- egation. The conference itself failed, but Mr. Ronning | per- | suaded- the Communist Chinese — | to ‘release RCAF Sqdn._ Lar. Andy MacKenzie 6f Montreal, shot down in. Korea in 1952 ana taken prisoner. i: ' To this day, not a werd on Chinese has to negotiate, what transpired between Mr. been divulged. went to Mr. Ronning, 71, v public positions from which they | ones feel ,they cannot retreat. % Hanoi in March “on Instructions of the Canadian government He has returned there; pre. sumably’ to continue the - ex- change of views on the possibi!. ity of negotiations to. Settle ibe |'Viet Nam war confirthe. od ~ |.-Mr.. Martin has that Mr. Ronning went to Hanoi e yecond time. et that, ” officials in- Ottawa said any | possible success of the missions would be immediately destroyed if the natuse? of. the talks or | any details were made public. The point here is that privacy ‘permits the principals to_chanze and positions. blicity force the principals. into * The-.international truce super- | visory commission in Viet Nam, |.of which Canada, India and Poland are the members, is tlie ' all the principals involved in the” war. So far, that channel of com- munication simply exists. But, officials’ said, there’s ‘no telling | when it might apr ing ‘inte, sud- den significan Mr. Ronning] may be telling the Communist North Vietna- mese: If and when. you're reaav thé commission's channel is ready and open for use. 7 - ism, the game that only two can play, does not “appear to be | much of a spectator spert. Some | of those who have watched Eng- | lish Canada and French Canada | whacking the Bi and Bi ball batk and forth have betame ‘Dored. and irritated to the point of revolt. Hence the birth of the Citizens i _Civie Action Association, a body intended: to give expression to ‘an estimated 6,000,000 Canadians English stock and who feel that the two major language blocs “are so engrossed in their battle that they are ignoring all others. | dedicated to the ideal that ‘‘this is one Canada, one nation, one people,” according to Mr. ven Otto, —Liberal--member of Parliament for York East, who has sent a letter to 50,000 Toron- who are of neither French nor _ The CCAA is an organization - A New Entry Torénte Globe and Mail : , out-that those .‘‘other Canad- ians“ did not come to Canada to get into a racial fight and that they should now seek unity and political power so that t hey would not always remain ‘'‘for- eigners.”’ : We salute the ideal behind _the movement,.of course, but it does look like a formidable un- dertaking. If the founders have given up English-French unity. in Canada as a hopeless cause, can they really hope to unify the Ukrainians, Poles, Solvaks, Ttal- ians, Hungarians, Greeks and the rest? This {s a little tike seeking a cube root after failing to subtract one from one. But this is the acid test of Canada’s- desire for unity: and if it can be achieved. the Royal Ste-"Commission (on BW gualism ~~ and Biculturalism will not- have | labored in vain. Come to think” of it, this may be its last hope of because it tends to minimize to residents urging them to sup- ree .Watered Stock On hans Windsor Star symptoms and may prevent as- thma later in life. DIPHTHERIA SUSCEPTIBILITY J. 1. writes: Must an adult with a positive reaction to the | ‘Schick test-be given diptheria ° Every livestock man knows that proper feeding is essential was.a_very-practieal-application- ——F __. REPLY, A positive Schick test-.means that the individdal is suscepti- ble; to be on the safe side, tox- _oid_ antitoxin should be given. MUSTARD GAS . | L. D. writes: Is. mustard gas | /used in the. treatment of can- lcer?.. “ REPLY : It is used in leukemia, with variable results and: occasional- ly ih cancer of the lung and Hodgkin's disease. 8KIN ERUPTIONS E. R writes: Is contacr der- matitis the same as eczema? ’ REPLY No. The rash in: beth condi- tions may be identical but in ore the cause is internal and in the | |other, external. TIGHT SHQES * to the production of fine beef, pork, and other meats. It isn’t only food that is important, how- ‘ever. An animal nutritionist ‘Says the more water hogs drink the leaner and better the bacon. The term ‘watered stock’’ yis !a familiar ‘one in financial circl- es. This may be an excess of | shares in a promotion, with the | promoters. often holding. them to | their own financial benefit. Or, later, # may be an increase in the number of shares in a com- _ pany without a proportionate in- | crease in assets. So ‘‘watered stock"’ has become synonymous - financial manipulations. . We _— this term originat- ‘ing paid by the pound. ed, on the farm.- Certainly there ‘of it if a Jteral was when @ntario farmers drove their-cattle to market in town: often eight or ten miles or more: Naturally, on a warm day the beasts would become quite” thir- | sty. The trick was to ‘let them stop--at a roadside creek near town and let them drink their ‘bellies full of water. The idea | was they would retain it until j after they were weighed. A doz-‘ ;en thirsty steers could. put on quite a few extra pounds that way— and it was money in ‘farmer's pocket if he .were hose Flavorful Days Ottawa Journal ses this. Please advise. REPLY This is a cause. 2 EA Tenis Keep scissors out of the reach of small fry... (NOTE: _All correspondence to Dr. Van ‘Dellen. should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) “OF FER -BARGAINS~~~ MONTREAL (CP)—A_ co&op- , apartment house on™ Montreal's fashionable Sher- Brooke : Street. advertises two- bedroom apartments for sale at $65,043, not including operating: costs. The advertisement adds that “some expensive penthouse apartments’’ are also available. Tn those flavorful days when sugary, chewy material -was-as-— “woman cooked food-instead of | frightening it into limp submis- delicious as taffy. Trouble was, even in Iess-hur- sion in a hissing pressure cook-- ried days, there were young cit- er, families bought. tangy. -sal- iva-starting molasses by the gal- lon. An earthenware jug with a gooey, dark-stained cork stop- per was standard pantry equip- ment When the big. black- colored ~ hogshead in the store was em- pty, “a sympathetic storekeeper. ~put-in—wo a markeshife plug, and rolled the | batret out back where small fry could ‘get a taste of molasses su- gar : The sticky liquid semi-solidif- ied after it draihed down to the valley from the sidés; and if lads were sufficiently. strong- minded to wait a few days, the in insure therh' The ‘conipanies: need (June 20,1956) ~——~hetter—ma+hiners_for reviewing in- | The Quehec Union Nationale; —— government, in office ‘since 1946, [0 fe es eee was. re-elected with an increas; a —— hi gher r ighat iP the industry. ed majority fer another five mao F "But the impacse on the insurance vear term. £ 8 front also makes tt plain that ‘the The CCF government and . ’ standards fer issuing licenses and {| Premier T.C. Douglas were re- $25 Market St. ticity Pore turned to power for a fourth olicing — « ef : wi 7 se . rs will have to be straight term in Saskatchewan's a’ aang oe | general election t. a : 3 i - yo ‘ : ; ™ * THE. LINKLETTER TRAVEL | AGENCY. Summerside : - 2 Also Open Friday om and | Saturday Morning izens who were impatient, and fect results overcame judgment that decreed a waiting period. We feel. however, that if bovs with long, slender sticks could ™ reach into molasses _hogsheads and capture gdnerous mouthfule. of the sweet- soft goodness, ‘tf on the so-called juvenile prob- Jem. : ~ LIKES PRETTY TRASH An American: firm has at- tempted to contribute .to the countryside beautification cam- ,paign by ‘manufacturing flow- ered bags for pepcorn to im- prove the quality pf- litter; Enjoy the convenience, sneer able speed and no cost “extras” ‘of AIR CANADA travel : Tasty, free meals... tilt-back seats... «courteous. friendly service. 6 tipping, please !) 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