She Guardian Prince Edwerd isiend Like The Oaw* W 4. Hancox. Publisher Covers Frenk Welker Choe mornng tekken! Sur 165 Prince Street. Wellece Werd Managing Edita Published every week dey dey and statutory holders «7 Chariotretown PEL by ‘Thomson Newspapers itd Branch offices ef Sormmers:de Moptegvue Alberton and Sours Represented nanoneliy by Thawscn Newsperert Adverts°9 ervices Tarerte 425) Ureversity Ave Empire 3 3494 Un aan Carr arr Street Une versin, 65942. Western Atte 1RIF West Georgie Stree’ ancouver MA 7037 Memnre Canecer Daily Newspere Pre. shere Agscciation and The Canadien Press The Careden Press s °* evely entitiod/ te the use fer rege lieation af a mews dacetches an ths gener credited vo nm, ta the Asam ated Press o wa tore ern 4 the ine on ne ched bere A righ reco hcaner wre a ace hes bee ine everved Suh nk & ee 4 . ore My . ° $127 « yea & auer am tee eee t arte en ereoc « & o- pie ° . 4 eam R -oe r anaes ; TT he .trongest memory. t- weaker . thang the weakest mk” Pick © — MONDAY. MARCH 23. 1963. Quebec's Rising Hope Writing in the Winnipeg Free Pre-s,, Bruce Hutchison notes as a matter of grave Liberal concern the failure of Prime Minister Pearson to find vet. an acceptable French Canadian coadqutor It ts assumed that he can carry most of. Quebec in a ceneral federal election aniv be- cause Mr Diefenbaker has alienated it. but an electoral victory would not solve the basic problem If he is to have anv chance of uniting the na- tion. Mr Pearson must secure not merely the votes but the confidence of the French Canadian people and he can reach them only through a leader of their own race whom thev fullv trust There is no such leader tn Ottawa now Mr Pearson's first choice. Mr. Lamontagne, and his second choice, Mr. Favreau. have both failed to win Quebec's confidence. The vacuum — must soon be filled and there is “no one to fill it except Maurice Sauve. who manages the forestry depart- ment with his left hand and. with his right commands the loyalty of the new generation tn Quebec Liberalism. "Mr Sauve is the rising man in French Canada. for the moment anvy- wav He has risen so fast. writes Hutchison, that his fmends-already regard him as something like a sec- ond Launer and his numerous enem- | ‘es hope that he will trip over his boundless ambition . Mr. Pearson must soon decide whether Mr. Sauve shall become his accepted Quebec lieutenant If the decision is affirmative. as seems probable. that would not settle the deeper issue raised by this young rebel’s stand against the old Liberal machine in Quebec. For Mr. Sauve seeks much more than personal power. He is determined to cleanse the Liberal party in French Canada after its recent nauseating scandals. In promoting him Mr. Pearson would risk the fury of some honest French Canadian Liberals, including federal cabinet colleagues. but he would begin his most urgent task. | It is to prove throughout the nation that his government has finally de- cided to deal with the mess in Que- bec. as ‘ 4 The UN’s Future “The UN of Dag Hammarskjold 1s dead.’ mourns the headline of an article dealing with the future of the United Nations in a fickle world. There is much truth in this. though it is not necessarily a matter for despair. Basically, today’s discussion of the effectiveness of the UN refers only to that one-sixth or one-seventh of UN activity which is wholly polit- ical and commands headlines. It is a discussion of power. The other five- gixths of the UN—the international + war on poverty. ignorance and under- development—is_ steadily growing. But its existence. of course, depends on the UN's political survival If Dag Hammarskjold were Sec- retary-General today he would un- doubtedlv operate his office in a dif- ferent manner than was possible in the late 1950's. Political realities have changed basically since then. The UN of the 1950's was a club of about half the. world. They represented a situa tion of diplomatic dominance by the big powers—particularly the United States and the Soviet Union—that could not go on forever. In the early 1960's the new Afr- can nations poured in. Their total | number now is 3@—almost twice that | of the Latin Americans who were once the mainstay of the pro-Amert- can majority. The Afro-American group came t# constitute a simple majority in the Assembly. Since the new political reality be- | gan to sink in, there has been what | Soviet and French leaders regard as a marked aberration from the char- 4 ote! io é - _~purpose of filling speaking engace- ments arranged earlier. either by the. nw ' | ~ still an undefined area and both prov- ter—departure from the fiveman rule of the Secunt, ¢ nunc beard of directors The exact balance of power between the Security Council and the General Assembly 1s still to be deter- mined = = While the process of hard bar- gaining over fhe future of UN peace- Keeping goes on. UN political power 1s at a low ebb The whole postwar structure of world order and policing is being re-examined The superpow- ers are tnvolyed in an agonizing re appraisal ‘of their relations to each other te the UN majority. and to Conimunist China But this need not spel! disaster Each succeeding ~gen- eration must make decisions in the conduct of its affairs. and it is well to remember that the United Nations is now 20 vears old Bungled Again Immigration *Mintster Nichol-en has reversed himself an the stand he tonk early ‘ast week in the case of Professor Sibles. of the University of Minnesota who was refused entry to Canada to address a Winnipeg peace meeting his reputation had been vouched for by the governor ¢- his state and other trustworthy per sons The professors sin. according to an immigration official. was ‘that re though his views on certain subjects. as ported in the press. are of a highls quesfionabte nature Mr Nicholson admitted Par lament that the decision left mugh to be desired but argued that it was in accord with the Immigration Act and that his officials had-acted pre, perly On Friday. however. under a further barrace of criticism in the Commons. he said he had decided to allow Prof Siblev to enter Canada As Opposition Leader Diefen- baker remarked after this announce- ment. “repentance is always wel come” But it was a pettifogging sort of repentance. to sav the least. The admission in Prof. Siblev’s case. the minister added. would be onlv for the in Voice of Women or the student body of the Universitv of Manitoba After which. presumably. the visitor would be expected to take himself off or submit to the kind of bureaucratic inquisition which is reserved for sus- pects of malodorous repute This was adding insult to injury. and calls for a full explanation on the minister's part If he was raght in the attitude he took first. he should have stuck to it and not wilted under pressure of public opimion If he was wrong—and that is the general opin- ion, to put it mildly—then he should admit his error and apologize Properly Safeguarded As the Donon inquiry takes its tortuous course. readers who are following the evidence cannot fail to be impressed by the scrupulousness shown by the presiding jurist. Mr Justice Dorion. in dealing with the various issues involved A case in point was his insistence that Erik Nielsen. MP. who first made charges against certain ministerial aides in a speech in the House of Commons. should not be required to give his sources of information when he ap peared before the commission of in- quiry > As the Ottawa Journal remarks, every one of the battery of lawyers attending the inquiry hearings would love to know how Mr. Nielsen came to learn so much. Thev had to be con- tent with Mr Nielsen's declaration that he had not depended on one source Parliament's ability to ensure propriety in public business would be sorely limited. as The Journal well says. if members had cause to fear that information about their sources they were unwilling to give the House could be forced from them before an outside inquiry. When the questioning of Mr. Niel- sen approached what he considered the danger area. Mr. Justice Dorion reminded the lawyers of the agree- ment that the witness should not be asked his sources of information’ The commissioner was watchful and ef- fective. Unless MPs are so protected their value as representatives of free people will be ended. EDITORIAL NOTE One would suppose that the bord- er between Ontario and Quebec had been fully defined years ago. But the Ontario minister of lands and forests. Mr. Roberts. says. there 15 inces were looking for the correct line and description. This is in the Lake St. Francis area. a widening of the St. Lawrence River. which con- tains a number of islands inhabited by a few Indians and by summer cottagers. _ NON, NON, MY FRIENS — | | | +m | Bilis 4 | ~ CHARLES ATLAS | FIRST CONCERTED EFFORT — . ‘ World Study Of Fresh Water Resources National «Geographic Society Possihl.. the biggest tang water circulates around the Contrary te popular behef, ranze international scence pro gine A water molecule is an river- do-not take most rainwas garam ever undertaken 's now indefatigable traveler It mav_ ter hack to the oceans Of the studving a single ‘substance evz2porate from a zarden in 1.400 cute miles of rain, snow, water ° \ustralia, ride the winds east- and sicet deposited each year on The International Hydrologic: ward until it falls as rain on Al- the United States. only about al Decade. which began Jan. hany, New York, flow down the 39 are delivered to the ocaa vary 1. 1985, 1s the first concert. Hud-an River to the Atlantie bv rivers Mest of the rest. re- ed attempt on a world scate ta evaporate again. he blown turns to the air through evapo take stack of increasinzls hard acress the Atlantic to jor the ratien and transpiration from pressed fresh water resources rainin Spain. and then head oft plarvs President Johnson has urzed for Africa Eventually. it mav The THD. patterned after the American universities and scien- conceivably return to the same International Geophysical Year tific societies ta cooperate in the Austrahan garden it came IGY of 1957-58 will bring lO-vear program supported by fram ideas from many countries to. ne United Nations Se oe c, Since water respects nn na. hear on common problems ue Sducaticnal and Cultural Organ ' waterlagging of irrigated lan ration’ UNESCO) ae Sie as AOA AS in the raie River Valles re- Almost a)! the world s water from Pole to Pole. wandering gembles waterlogging in south- 7 per cent ie tan salty ta high into the atmosphere a nd ern Arnzona If the Indians find drink, the National Geographic deep inte the earth. hydrolog- an answer to the problem. Am- Society savs Most of the rest ts ists clearly needed an interna: ericans, might benefit locked up as ice. principally tn tional program tq trace its \ happy solution for one pro movements During the IHD, blem has been found in the San the Antarctic ice sheet Some fresh water is stored lakes and rivers on the surface. but far more les in mvisible subterranean peowls, sometimes beneath lifeless des- erts A GLOBE-TROTTER Hydrology is simply the study of water Hvdrologists take es- pecial interest in the hydrologic evcle the system by which PUBLIC FORUM Thts c:iame ts oper to the discassios by cerrespenden® of questions of terest The Gaardian dors nat neces sarily endorse the opines pondents All letiers published are sor fect to editing ond condensation where ewecessary The Guardian ts unable te epter inte env corrresnendence regerd tag tetiers submitted partly tn land's af carres THE DIALOGUE Su.—Mr Moon is vers busy about his work He has not a minute to spare. For he 1s work- tng for Mr Sun, and doing his best in taking up the work where Mr Sun leaves off Mr Moon's task is a very im- portant one His work keeps him busy 24 hours a day. Sometimes Mr Cloud gets in his way But like the Globe Maker. ‘he sticks to the last.” keeps at the job Lately he has heen annoyed by Mr Man = snooping around Sa» he lets loose a violent tirade upon him. What in thundera- tion brouzht you up here” Oh. I just came up to see what kind of stuff you are made’ You get rizht down to earth where sou belonz There is enough down there to keep you busy ” I) Mr Man is wise. he will Jeave Mr Moen alone and get on with his own job I am. Sir wp PEI etc. Moantazue. IN APPRECIATION Sir,— I should like at this time to thank all those people who contributed their time and knowledge during, the radia and televxion pregrams arranged by the Prince Edward Island Eéucatidn Week Committee Appreciation is expressed to the Minister of Education. the Hon Dr LG. Dewar. MD and tn the Deouty Minister of Edu cation. Mr Malcolm MacKenzie , and their department for all their assistance To CFCY for their very gen- erous contribution of time as a public service To the National Film Board for services and facilities The following are the mem- bers of the Prince Edward Is- land Education Week Commit- tee Mrs Frank Ross. Mr Matthew Hagen, Mr John Mar tin. Mr Charles Campbell This committee attempted to involve a goodly number of profession- al educators and informed lav people to discuss a variety of topics in the broad field of edu cation 1 am. Sir, etc. MRS DAVID MUTCH Chairman, Chairman Pripce “dward [sland | Education Week Committee JOHNSTON - every country wil] be encourag- ed to expand its water research Of special interest is the Amarz- on Reer, a major waterway vir- tually unchanged bw dams. nav vizational improvements or tapping for ifrigation Tantalizing water mystenes need solving. For example, each vear the continental United States, not including Alaska, seems to lose in some unexplain- ed way about 40 cubic miles of water— one fourth of the vearly | flow of the Mississippi River Scientists suspect that it may be lost through uncharted under- ground routes -underzround water does M.P.s’ Privileges Dimas Basin between Los An- geles and San Bernardino. Cal- fornia. Summoned after inten ave farming had depleted ground water. scientists. found they could divert winter water, | then running uselessly out to sea. onto gravel beds where it would filter down to replenish the water table Soon wells were again drawing the lifeziving ele- ont ~, aa Recharging a depleted under- ground pool, hvdrologisis point out. 1s often better than filling up a surface reservoir. because not evaporate | Ottawa Journal The RCMP came out of the Grezoire affair well The Priv- _ileges Committee has found that the police conduct was entirely correct in arresting the MP just outside the Centre Block Any question as to whether the police are restricted in their freedom of action when a mem- ber steps into the open air out side the Centre Block appears to have been removed A question remains) a mem- her walking outdoors apparently can be arrested but would he be safe if he took the tunne! from the Centre Block to the West Block” It need not be expected that Parliament will “hurry to clarify this point Dr. Maurice Olvier. QC Parliamentary Counsel. told the committee a zreat truth when he said Par- lament never wants to spell out privileges in black and = white ‘officer explained but ‘ta define things as thev go along’ This means there may never be a decision until some- one tres to arrest an MP in the tunnel Fortunately there is no doubt whatever about clearing the police The committee finds there was no brutality or shame- ful treatment of Mr. Gregonre, that the summonses were ac- compamed by French transta- tions and that a bilingual RCMP the proceed- ings to the MP in French \ Whatever their privileges. this case invites members of Par- hhament to remember their dutv to act with responsibility and avoid unwarranted charz- es against a body as thoroughly respected as the RCMP The prestize of the police protects MPs as much as other men ls Facing Extinction The Canadian Press The one-horned Indian rhino, oné of the world s rarest anim- als. is facing one of its gravest threats Poachers have taken a big tol! of rhinos in the last six months Thirteen rhino carcasses were recently located in the Kaziran- ga sanctuary in eastern India. the only other place where the one-horned rhino is still to be found besides the Himalayan kinedom of Nepal The ‘rhinos are being hunted for their horns. believed by As- jans to have great medicinal value , A single horn is said to fetch anvthing up to $1,000. India. China. Burma. Thailand and the tiny Himalayan kingdoms of Bhutan and Sikkim are the prin- cipal markets for rhino borns Potions made with powdered rhino horn ere believed to con- fer ‘eternal youth’ and cups made. of the horn are said to neutralize the strongest poston Another belief is that a rhino horn® placed under the bed. of a woman at the time of childbirth would make her labor almost painless. . A report in a Calcutta news- paper said a tribal chieftain in | Bhutan recently paid 82.500 for e | dian rhinos at fewer than 650. a pair of horns ESTIMATE SURVIVORS A recent official estimate plac- ed the humber of surviving In- Of these 275 are in the Kaziran- ga sanctuary The two-horned African rhi- nos. of which there are an esti- mated 17,000, are also hunted for their horns but the Indian variety is preferred. The horn of an rhino fetches only in the medicine mar- 5 =) 2 : a = » 2 2 2 to strengthen the number of for est guards and equip them with fast motor boats to track down intruders into the sanctuary The rhino brings India much- needed foreign exchange. The average price of a rhino is $10.- 000. Two animals now are on their way to the Paris Zoo \ ar HYMNS WILL BE SWEETER The Lutheran march of | America as set up training programs for parish church mu- stcians on 23% college campuses Sneezing An Snuff ° By Dr. Theadorgi R Van Delle. tobacco but for generations “as Snuff contains finely-ground made of other substances that irritated. the nose It produced a goo sneeze which was consid- ered the most effective way .of cleansing the nose The peppery product. still is used to stimulate the reflex. for example. when a curious \oungster has a bean stuck in his, nose The use of snuff became pop ular tn Britain at the- time of the Great Plague (1662) It was regarded as a_ prophylactic against the disease and useful against unpleasant odors = AC- | cording to Dr FCN Harrison of London. snuff-taking was ‘a shionable in England at the end of the 17th century Many great personages Kt | son. the duke of Wellinztan Dis- raei). and Dr Samuei Johnson retreshed themselves with oa pinch of snuff taken from a heautifu an¢ valuable box Georze II! and his wife. Char- latte Snuff, Charlotte: were ad dicted By this time it was made af tobacco. “which had the stim ulating properties that "YS: habit -forming Regu'ar did not sneeze Some transerred the pinch direct, from the snuff box to the nostri! others used a—smal!! silver spoen to conveys it from the back of the hand to the nose. ultimately it is inhaled. Most Americans place a liberal portion just inside the lower lip snuff dip There is a questionable asso ciation between snuff and the dexelopment of cancer in the mouth, nose. and sinuses Dr Harrison is of the opimon that some ot the materia’ finds its way into the sinus when the in- dividual takes a good sniff He cites the observation that sinus cancer is common among the Bantu tribesmen. who are habi- tua! users They do not smoke cigarets and the incidence of lung cancer 1s jow Scientific proof this con tentron is lacking because snutf contains <stt#stances other than tobacco It is used all over the world and differs in preparation and constituents In Thailand it is 50 per cent dry tobacco and 20) per cent oriental gum. Bantu snuff contains various mixtures of more than 20 incinerated herbs and plants In Engtand it is made from finely. zround to- bacco leaves and stalk which Is cured and perfumed TO PLACE TO HEDGE B Z whites Is it all right for a person with a circulatory dis- order of the legs ta smoke if he does not inhale” He was told to quit smokin: for REPLY This is no place to h edge There is no easy way to stop smoking Will power is required and one puff will make the in- dividual a smoker again ipcluding Lord Nel- . ~, NOTES BY THE WAY An old man says he had been associating with people all his life. but has never got used to them Vancouver Sun “Bring me a plate ‘of hash,” | said the diner. The waiter walk- ed over to the kitchen elevator: “Gent wants to take a chance,” called down the speaking tube ‘I'll have some hash. too,” said a second customer. ‘Anoth- er sport.”’ said the waiter.—Galt Reporter he The five - year - old had just been vaccinated. and the nurse was preparing a bandage for the sore arm ‘Put it on the) other arm. will you?” the youn- gster asked. But | want to put it over the sore.’ said the nurse, so the boys in the neighborhood won't hit it’ Put it on the other arm.” the repeated “You don't know the kids in my neighbor- hood " Financial Post Angry housewife: “Have you ever done a lick of work?’ Tramp “Lads. if you think asking dames like you for a bite to eat isn't work, you don't know what work is!’’—Toronto Star The U.S. embassy in Mos- cow is installing closed cireuit television cameras to keep> an eve on Soviet mav be installing secret mic rophones James Bond would * Ottawa Journal approve It’s true you can't buy happi- ness with money, but you cant buy groceries with happiness, either —Sarnia Observer This is the laziest rooster in the world Butcher How do you mean, lazy” Far- mer He has never crowed in his life. He always waits for another rooster !o crow and tien he nods his head — Montreal Star Farmer; The President’s Power Milwaukee Journal When President Johnson tem- poranly federalized some of the Alabama national guard Satur- Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 29, 1940) The first session of the 44th General Assembly of the Prov- ince was formally opened yes- terday afternoon by His Honor Lieutenant Governor LePage The members assembled at 2.30 and were sworn in by Mr Jus- tice AE. Arsenault Mr WF Allan Stewart, First Queens. was elected speaker of the House Premier William Aberharts Social Credit Government was assured of remaining tn power yesterday when their 29th sup- porter was elected to the Alber- ta Legislature, and later in the day another Social Crediter won to give the party 30 seats in the 57-seat house TEN YEARS AGO (March 29, 1955) Hon B. Earle MacDonald and Mr Alex A Maclsaac were the unanimous choie of a largely attended Liberal convention call- ed last might at the Community Centre to 1.un as candidates for Fifth District of Queens in the forthcoming Provincial election day to protect this week s dem onstration march on Montgom ery, he was acting under a stat utory power that congress firs! gave to George Washington in 1792. It was the fifth such action in the last eight years. begin- ning with Little Rock and in cluding Alabama twice before Congress 6a need almost at the beginning for. a president on occasion to be able to use t |) ¢ armed forces to ‘suppress re bellion’ and = enforce feders! laws when ordinary judicial pro cess would not suffice Washinz ton invoked the law almost as soon as he had signed it. to pit down the so-called Whisky Reb ellion in Pennsylvania— rioting against federal excise tax co! lectors The original law survives in the 1956 recndification of laws relating to the armed forces it requires a proclamation com manding the obstructérs of jus- tice to cease and disperse. which Johnson has issued The pertin- ent language of the law says that ~ ‘The president, by using the militia or the armed forces or both, or by any other means, shal] take such measures as he con$iders necessary to suppress In a state. any insurrection. do- mestic violence. inlawful com- bination’ or conspiracy. if it so hinders the execution of the laws of the United States within a state that anv part or class of is people is deprived of Mr -Fauntleros G Kennedy, @ right. privilege. immunity or Rezional supervisor. under the Protection nmed in the — Con- Veteran's Land Act. was ap- stitution and secured by law, and the constituted authorities pointed a Justice of Peace for of that state are enable. fail or Prince. Queen's and King's refuse to give that protec- Counties tion oe a a = 4 workmen who >