, Z , little word he savas. I always thougnt he Guardian | when they stuck that press gallery | in the House, years and years ago, that no good would come of it in the end. Snooping in on every word "Published every week day morning (¢xcept Sun- that’s uttered, an d trumpeting it Bay end statutory helidays! #1 165 Prince Street, abroad! Some day vou may be get- Charlottetown PE by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. ting into politics yourself, and you'll Branch offices ot Summerside, Montague, Alberton we Souris, , see what I mean; reading what you Represenied natignally by Thomson Newspapers — said in cold type the next day and Advertising Service® Toronto 425 University Ave i re 38894 Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Unt not remembering whether you said yaity 65942 Western Oftice 1030 West Georgie = it or not, and when you might want 4 Vancouver (MA 7037 _ Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers to forget it in any case. Associetion and Phe Canadian Press The Canedien “Now that that’s settled.” con- Pres: exclusively’ entitled to the use for repub liceron San news dispatches, in this paper | Cluded the old gentleman briskly, Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox Publisher Wallece Word Frank Walker mg Fd.tor Editor Wedied to 1 oF 10 the Assocated Press of Revie | “Dass me this morning's paper till I and eiso to the loa! news published herein { ; oe Fight or repeblicahion oftapecial dispatches here | see what's going on at Ottawa. fn also reserved Subscription rate There's a hot debate on there on the . - k hy carner. ° ' Be ee ern tovtlrectes and areas | Pension Plan, and I don't want to ne? serviced by carrier miss a word of it. Here it is on the $15.00 « year off Island and UK $20 00 pee ; Les , A is’ This Judy yeer in US end elsewhere outside British Conr front page. Listen to this monwealth | LaMarsh woman has the gall to Not over 7c single copy. sav ” Member Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 196s. "But the voung man wasn't listen- ; ing. He had sadly and silently taken Shocking Air Tragedy _ his departure. ial een ot eee ee Pointless Protests al Airways passe \ . took eight lives in Nova Scotia yes- There does not seem much point terday brings home to us the tragedy in the parades and lie-down protests of such events ‘in a very personal that have been staged in front of way. Capt. Murnaghan, the senior pilot. was a Charlottetown man of outstanding character and dependa- bility. The flight had started at Moncton and had called en route at Summerside, Charlottetown, New Glasgow and Halifax on the way to Sydney and St. John’s, Newfound- land. Just a routine flight, it seem- | brows when students go on the ram- ed; but something went wrong, and | page in Moscow- and throw ink at the result was swift and appalling. | Western embassies, or when mobs The plane apparently blew apart a | riot in Indonesia and burn down few. minutes after leaving Halifax | libraries. Anti-U.S. demonstrations International Airport. have not reached this pitch in Can- It is well to remember, amid the | #44; but the present parades serve excitement caused by this accident, | 9° Purpose other than . needlessly that our air services enjoy a high | ‘tTitating a nation that has been and continues to be our closest and | the larger centers of Canada over the racial trouble in Selma, Alabama. US. officials are well aware of these disturbances, and are doing. their them under control. - The Western world raises its eye- reputation for safety and efficiency. : ft is not humanly possible to guar- | est friend. . antee complete immunity from ac- Without doubt nobody deplores cidents, but the rate has been cut | What is happening in Alabama more down; ftom year to year. Air traf-_| than the great majority of the Amer- fic, meanwhile, has been steadily in- | ‘can people themselves, both inside @easing and will continue to in- | 2d outside the United States. U.S. as | consuls, in particular, have no need | : to be instructed on points of con- +f will be a full in- science by Canadian students in this vestigation regard, or by a lot of other noisy conceivable ‘aan een people walking around with placards. ¢rue from the inquiry that will have If these people could betake a direct bearing on-improving—the themselves to the capitol of Gover- safety factor. In the meantime the | ®°T Wallace in the Deep South with of all. our people will their protests, it might make some of the victims of yesterday's ‘taste to embarrass a guest official Se et veneers from a friendly nation over abuses Kind, and let us hope the last for a which his President is working day Tong time, in this Atlantic area, | #4 might to correct. A Grievous Problem Forgot The Indians > : f ¢ gé 2 5 Committee examination of the Canada Pension Plan has revealed of the most startling, in the light of the government’s other objectives, is the exclusion of Indians earning a living on the reserves. This was not intentional discrim- ‘ination, and Revenue Minister Ben- son agreed last’ week to refer the problem involved to his colleagues in the administration. The request was certainly justified because the problem is bound to become more serious if the Government’s own pro- grams achieve the desired objectives. It is not difficult to see how the difficulty arose... Indians living on tax. But this cannot properly be re- garded as special privilege because it today into being, and they have every side of the bargain. EDITORIAL NOTES The latest figures by the Gallup Poll bode no good for either Grits or Tories, notes the Montreal Star. The spectively, but who are still a long ance value. Now Don'T You DARE FOLLOW “THEM United States consulates in some of” best, on the federal level, to bring | LITTLE BO-DIEF OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Grave Doubts About Value Of Auto Deal doubts are being cast | an average pay slightly lower, | This parts industry is very del- | teately balanced. Generally | each plant is so equipped that it nothing but the part or parts in which it spec- | lalizes. It is dependent upon the | Steady annual output to which it | is geared, and its economics are | 80 delicate that it is reduce its output without an ap- preciable jump in its unit selling | can produce With the government- inspired financed ration- | alization of Canadian production, . | there will probably be a ‘tend- | emcy for the big assembly plants | to buy their parts from their “captive’’ suppliers— often lo cated in U.S.A. It has been larg- ‘ely the tariff walt which has ea--+this problem on dehalfof his abled the Canadian parts manu- facturers to stay in business, . | and without this pfotectioh they | sre vulnerable. tat the | ™ | nother factor is t the Meanwhile, what of the gov- | This may follow pregnancy or | widespread decentralization of ernment’s position? Last week | ‘ ‘ | these plants works to our natioa- reducing. Occasionally the con- al advantage, but to their indi- try, confidently asserted in Par- vidual disaster under the new and taxpayer- » ly provided by the legislation. One | 4e lisie Oo iF 3 a F 4 reserves are not subject to income: i-} ir 55 * 2 z ’ t : 3 E A fl i f L i E 4 = 4 right to hold the Government to its | s ' k i i 4 z : fal od & way off from having more than nuis- $ gi 2 érs considerable money while at the same time assuring our chil- dren the use of reasonably good | : ; 3% : kG — a" § i i Z. ? ; itil ce : | ; i E 8% it | f i I : | 2 L ‘i i if i i | Ready To Feed Formulas Ry Dr. Theodore R. Van Detien |. The latest trend in hospital! | nurseries is the use of ready-to- feed milk mixtures. Every day milk is delivered to supply the | needs of babies who are not | breast fed. It comes in sterile, disposable containers with or ‘without nippless Refrigeration is not needed and the product is not warmed According to Dr. Herman F. Meyer, Chicago pediatrician, companies provide 46 differ- ent ready- to feed units and fluid products to nurseries in 15 cities. Several dilutions are needed to meet the demands of the individual child. Some pro- ducts are delivered in varied sized bulk containers. The milk is poured into flexible plastic feeders before using. Others are provided in glass bottles or met- al containers with sterile nipple assembly ready to be attached. The ready-to-feed liquids are not as expensive as preparing tormuias in tne nospital nur- sery. This is calculated on the basis of cost of labor, equipment, tiple refrigerator units, and warming devices. There is no | worry about faulty sterilizing cross infections, or slips in pre- parations. The problem is di;- posing of the disposables. One infant will have emptied 27 four-ounce bottles during his stay in the hospital Some large cities have had commercial formula services for many years. It originates in a milk plant licensed by local | health departments and is pre- ‘}-pared under supervised and me- | ticulous sanitation. They are de- re in units which are con- | tained in polyethylene wrappers. The cover remains intact until the infant is fed. Bottles and nipples are returned to the driv- er at the net delivery. The baby formula services in | many cities provide daily deliv- 'eries to homes of any preserib- | ed milk mixture in disposable containers. Two companies also distribute formulas through re- tail drug stores. The grocery may be next. The success of | and Barrie are among the many these ventures depends upon the examples. But the cost of ship- integrity of those entrusted with ping their product, and the in- ; the preparation and testing of | convenience of distant commun- | the product. | feation, will in future tend to de- prive them of orders from the | AFTERNOON NAP assembly plants. Mrs. L. writes: Does a five- ; REPLY Two immediate problems At this age, it is not what ae eee | they need but what you can get ired for the nded assem- |them to do. Most youngsters bly lines in Oshawa. Oakville | have broken away from the nap | and Windsor: and there is no | pebte be the fifth birthday putt | - se msist upon a res substitute, employment immed- when they have been up late the sant a a ee night before and are crabby and | erto been working at the scat- upset. tered og) Ear mavor OVERSTRETCHED SKIN Heber . former y Mrs. F. writes I have white of Barrie and exceedingly com- jines on my thighs. What are munity- minded, ts working on | the causes? 1 REPLY | constituents; Alf Hale of These bands, known as striae, | Guelph and Wally Nesbitt of | sre most likely to occur when | Woodstock are showing similar | the skin has been overstretched }and then returns to normal. C.M. Drury, Minister of Indus- | gition is on a glandular basis. liament that “‘there has been no PAINFUL LUMP arty Deine scattered, they | serious loss of business to Can- eee good employment in many | adian producers.” But two days | nodule in breast which is of our smalier cities: Hespeller _ tie FORUM later his effective and reliable | painful at times. My doctor says cabinet colleague. Labour Min- ; it is not dangerous because it is ister Allan MacEachen, contra- not attached. Isn't it unusual for — | dieted Drury flatly by announc- this type of lump to be painful? ing that “planning to assist. REPLY workers in the auto parts indus- Yes, if this lump is just an tn-~ 3 will be in fected milk duct or chronie mas- the immediate future. put out of titis. as a re- F g = & ¥ 5 3 & his , Soft and inaccurate words ur Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) sterilizers, bottle washing, mul-° | NOTES BY THE WAY Overheard in the department store elevator: First lady: “And | I know for a fact that she peid | cash for it.” Second lady: ‘She did? I guess they must have ta- ken her charge-plate away from her.’ — Galt Reporter. Recruiting officer: Don't ‘ou want to join the calvary? That's a fine branch of the ser- vice.’ Recruit: “No, sir, If I have to retreat, I don't want to be bothered draggin’ along no horse behind me.’"— Hamilton Spectator. Driver's Wife: “That's the fourth time you've gone back for more punch. Doesn't it em- barrass you at all?" Driver: Why should it? I keep telling them it's for you.""—Toronto Star. Explaining that the policy on the barn that had burned down covered the structure, the insur- ance agent told the farmer that his company would butid. anoth- er barn of similar size instead of , paying the claim in cash. The farmer was furious. ‘If that's the way your-company does business,’ he exploded, ‘‘you can just cancel the insurance policy on my wife.'’’"— Financial Post Tye old-tashioned winters mas” not have been any worse tha, thore of today, but they hee the advantage of having o!d feshioned fibbers to tell about them.—Caigary Herald. Maybe it’s only fair te share the atomic bomb with the orien. tal powers. They've been more than generpus in letting us in on the Asian flu —Calgary Her. ald. Motorist: “How far is it to the next town?” Farmer: “Two mi! es as the crow flies.” Motoris: ‘How far is it if the crow has to walk and roll a fiaS tire?" Montreal Star. What's the matter with your wife? She looks al] broken up “She got a terrible shock ' “How-was it?’ ‘‘She was assist ing at a rummage sale at the church and she took off her new $2 hat and somebody sold it for 30 cents.'’"—Montreal Star. During a Christmas exam, one of the question was “What cau: es a depression?’’ One of the students wrote “Goodnes knows. I don't. Merry Christ mas!"’ The exam paper came back with the prof’s notation: “Goodness gets 100. You get zero. Happy New Year.” Vancouver Province $$ A More Solid British Front | By Joseph MacSween Canadian Press Staff Writer The Tory opposition's eupport | the Tories attacking harder of Labor Prime Minister Wil- 'than at any time since Wilson son's Vietnamese policy points up a marked bipartisan swing in British foreign affairs. One dramatic example of this came in the House of Com- mons Tuesday when Sir Alec Douglas - Home, the Conserva- tive leader, assured Wilson of backing on his actions so far over the Vietnamese question. The Tories, like Wilson, ‘‘think it mecessary to support our American allies in this mat- ter,” said Sir Alec. It may have given some wry satisfaction to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, vis- iting London, to ‘note that ‘Wil- son's troubles came not from the Tories but from his own Socialist left-wingers, who de- | scribed United States action | against North Viet Nam as naked war Edward du Cann, the new dressed a meeting of foreign correspondents Tuesday. COMMON MAJORITY THIN A questioner noted that WIU- | son's Commons majority § at present is only three and he asked whether the Tories would . ‘rescue’ the prime -minister if the left - wingers, who number # or more, came out in open | defiance in a Commons vote. “I think that is possible .. .,” said du Cann. ‘However, the left-wing lead- ers have already said they have no intention of defeating Wilson in the House — a move that would lead to a new general election and perhaps a Con- servative victory. The odd thing is that the drawing - together between the leadership of the two main par- ties on fofreign affairs coincides with a period of increased fric- tion on domestic issues, with REGRETS TO ANNOUNCE The Mountains of Mowrae’”— The Abegweit will-téave Borden at 10.05 a.m., 12.50 p.m., Have you seen them, Ireland's 3.40 p.m. and 7.30 p.m., and leave Cape Tormentine at 11.30 a.m., 2.15 p.m., 5.25 p.m., and 9.15 p.m. DAILY. Sailing are temporarily suspended from Borden at 7.00 a.m. seen them in the mid- and from Cape Tormentine at 8.25 a.m. Mourse mecsisiag, amet '2| | Additional extra trips will be armed Bokre wines Gn-velleye foot twe to handk sapitn's c guscting | nek” 2 ee a ee | ts being ‘| Wm. CSSR_RCN, oe wea us . a orced to adjust the MV vehicles except when came to power last Oct. 15. There is considerable com- ment on how Wilson, once re- garded as a_ radical in his party, has apparently modified his stance under the responsi- bilities of power. In June, 1964, he demanded that Sir Alec, then prime min- ister, make it clear to the Americans that ‘we would not ; Support any extention of the war into North Viet Nam.” ENDORSES RAIDS He now endorses the US bombing raidson the ground that North Viet Nam has ad- mitted it is a protagonist in the struggle. giving up the fiction that the fighting in South Viet Nam is caused simply by home revolutionaries and volunteers The Labor and Tory positions now appear much closer on | such matters as defence and the chairman of the Conservative | party, went if anything further | than Sir Alec when he ad- | European Common Market than they did in the election cam- paign last fall Wilson. whose most scathing remarks were reserved for the independent nuclear deterrent built up by successive Tory governments, now rules over much the same ouclear deter- rent, although pledged to place it under a NATO-allied body at some time in the future Regarding the Common Mar- ket, Wilson has frequently used the term “bridge-building” to describe his aim of linking the six-nation body with the British- led, seven - nation European | Free Trade Association. Du ; Cann used precisely the same term Tuesday. MOTOR REWINDING Maa Lh) Storey Flectric | a