” lication | Ghe Guardian | CéVers Prince Edward Island like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward oo ~ Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- i day. and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street.” ‘Charlottetown, P.E.1., bv Thomson Newspapers Ltd. . Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton ““* and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. _ mpire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathrart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member. Canadian ‘Daily Newspaper Publishers Assagiation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub- of all news. dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news published herein. All fight or republication of special’ dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas Mot serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- Monwealth. Not ever 7c single copy. Member Audit Burealof Cibculation PAGE ¢ TUESDAY, ‘MARCH 29, 1966. Tonight We'll Know The Canadian Tax Foundation has forecast a federal deficit of $400 mil- lion to. $600 million for the coming fiscal year if no taxes are changed. We shall know how it stands tonight, when . Finance Minister: Mitchel? Sharp delivers his first budget speech. In traditional budgetary terms, the country has not been able to get out of the red since the 1956-57 fiscal “year, and in the past decade Con- servative and Liberal governments have piled up deficits totalling about ~~ four billion” dollars. But “Mr. Sharp ~~" ack ground-paper . mons last: week, the change in the © - economic climate from the early part a -1,000-man_force on the island: of ‘can be expected to stress the ‘“‘nation- al accounts” basis of budgeting, which economists believe gives_a truer pic- President Makarios has warned that ’ if the UN contingent withdraws, there | would be disastrous consequences. The bleak outlook was a subject for i discussion when Arthur Goldberg, the | U.S. ambassador at the UN, talked | | with British’ officials earlier ‘this | month. Mr. Goldberg *stressed the absolute neccessity of facing uptothe __ . peace-keeping problem not only on - Cyprus but-in the Gaza strip and else- where. In the end, he said. the prip- | ‘ciple of collective responsibility must | be made effective. He added that it | would be to Britain's and America’s | interests if they were to take over the | whole financial responsibility, but such action by one or two powers would be contrary to the interests of the UN. The , Cyprus operation? has been | bedevilled by financial difficulties | since its inception two years ago. Dur- ing the last assembly of the UN few wanted to face up to the problem. The majority counselled its 33-mem- ‘ber committee on peace-kéeping fin- ancing’ to take urgent action. The, ° committee has not’ met since February ‘and meanwhile another committee is studying UN finances as a whole. One reason for urgency. apart from UN considerations, is the demand | Greece is making for a reorganization ' of NATO to protect her from the aggressiveness” of Turkey. Since | Greece and Turkey together con- | stituté NATO's eastern bastion, this | | | ture of the impact of the government= | on the economy. by counting funds not included in the traditional budget. | On thisbasis, two of the past 10 | years showed a national accounts surplus and in five other years the ~ deficit was much smaller than ,that shown by the traditional methods. The current fiscal year shows a _surplus_on a national accounts basis and a deficit on the traditional method of accounting of about $50 million instead of the $300 million forecast in last year’s budget - by Walter Gordon. In the coming year, , the budget may again be near to - balance on a national accounts-basis. Of more immediate concern are the steps Mr. Sharp proposes to take to deal with what he has called, in a of last vear to one of “boom” at pres- ent, with further expansion and higher prices still to come. According . to this statement, the productive fac- ilities of the Canadian economy are now close to their maximum rate of utilization. ‘Wages and salaries jump- ~ed_10.6. per cent; corporation: profits before taxation soared; the labor force climbed a surprising 3 per cent _ to 7,100,000 and unemployment fell from 4.7 per cent to 3.9 per cent. ~Public_and private spending, consum- er demand, exports and imports, the number of people working and the total of production were phenomen- ally high and are expected to increase in 1966. What-is*not taken ne account: in this statement are regional differ- ences which, in the case of the At- »lantic provinces especially, present a quite different picture. A budget that would attempt to curtail an inflation- ary spiral in some sections of the country could play havoc with our economy here. This has been pointed - out both by the. Economic ~Council- and the Governor of the Bank of Canada, and it is hoped will not be lost sight of in any tax changes that are proposed. Cyprus Problem Again Recently it. was announced by External Affairs Minister Martin that Canada had agreed to maintain its ~ Cyprus: for three more months, along with Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Sweden-and Britain. So far this peace + required to return on April 18 to -in-the-Com-——.- keeping operation has cost the Cana-'. | dian- taxpayers approximately $16— million. and Mr.. Martin estimated that the extra three>months would cost an additional $849,000. He told the Commons that notwithstanding the failure. of some countries to bear their full share of the cost and to Participate in the Cyprus force, Can- ada is pursuing the right course in trying. to ‘usé the peace-keeping machinery of the UN. ~ Now the-government of Ireland has given notice that its contingent will soon be withdrawn unless repayment of its expenses is assured. and UN Secretary-General U Thant has begun : _consultations.to_avert. the. threatened collapse of the Cyprus ‘peace. Mean- While ‘tension betweén the Greek -Expriots andthe Turkish. minority on landggtsy still running high, and , the is { HT ¢ | ~their- hands;-members. of. Parliament...| are being asked by the government to vand acted: upon, - ufacturers” constitutes a serious threat to the alliance’s Position in-that part of the world. Having faithfully siippitiad men and equipnient to the Cyprus force since its inception, Canadians have a right to be concerned about the outcome. But there doesn’t seem much to be. done except keep pressing for a solu- tion of both the political and financial aspects of. the problem. Of All Things! With a backlog of heavy chores on be nice boys and take an extra week for their Easter holidays. This pro- posal, made by House Leadér Mc- Ilraith last wéek, would have the Commons recess. from April 6 to April 26. 100 members would be | attend committee meetings, but other- wise the, business of the country would be ‘held up~comptetely: ~The proposal, we are pleased to note, is meeting with stiff opposition from the Conservatives. : | The real reason for the govern- ment’s offer, they claim, is that it | ‘hasn’t got its bills ready. But why should it be in this predicament? The Speech from the Throne outlined a | program of highly necessary legisla- | ~ tion” which — presumably—-would, be. ready for presentation. There is for example the Railway . Act to be amended; the Bank Act, the Unemployment Insurance Act, the ~ Bankruptcy “Act: the-Student-Loans Act, the Fair Wages and Hours of Labor Act. the Judges Act, the National Energy Act, the Area Development Act, the National Hous- ing Act. There are also ministries to be reorganized, the report of the Tax Structure Committee to be studied the Canada As- sistance Act to be considered, some form of Medicare to be enacted, and many other items on the agenda. The last Parliament rose on June 30, 1965. The present one did not get seated until January 18 of this year— a six and a half months’ interregnum during which the country’s business was totally neglected. The last thing our parliamentariens need at this time. surely, is another extended holi- day. : - A Moot Question A judge's lot is not an easy one. Here’s the poser facing Mr. Justice | as reported in the. British press: Barmen and waiters in the Savoy hotel are called upon at times to squeeze oranges for customers. They | do it with ordinary glass juicers. | The inland revenue experts say that these gentlemen thus become “‘man-_ and the ae is subject to a 15% tax. The hotel company demurs. Its hotels *squeeze some 109,000 glasses of orange juice ,a year No manufac- turing is involved, the compapy lawyers argued. -It is merely a matter of transferring juice: from orange skin container to glass container. Is. the judge wondered, a man who squeezes orange fuice in_ his “own home a manufacturer or maker of juice? No. said the tax people. for he is me rely extracting it for his oWn use. This distinction has the judge puzzled and he has ,asked for . time to study the matter.. | | ss - Sisters of St. 1 St, Phe ek ed ed red he dn eae ~ 3 a? ~ SN : : rag "J se ee Py Lies y y ohare "BEACH GROVE LANE OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson - Getting That Ottawa Woisline Down ‘recommend is moderation: ey Canadian ~foods;enjoy- cooking: The combination ‘of their sed- entary life and their’ lumber - jack meals in the Parliament- ary Restauraft -gives our MPs that. distinctive and unhealthy appearance known as ‘the Otta- wa Waistline. Two years ago I reported that several: MPs were assiduously following a reducing diet pre- scribed by one.of their number. Dr. Bill Howe of Hamilton. Tim- mins’ Murdo Martin, built like a truck and with an appetite to match, kept. right on with his breakfasts of threé eggs and six ‘pieces of bacon; but -by follow- * ing the Howe regime he took 45 pounds off his -weight and 7 inch- es off his waist. Dr Howe him-_ self lost so much weight that. he | told me, he had to buy himself | a new slim-look wardrobe. - This diet has subsequently received wide publicity: it closely fol- lows what is sometimes called | The Drinking Man's Diet. It has been criticised in some cir- cles “6n -the grounds that it is an unbalanced diet. WOMEN'S GOOD SENSE Now a new diet has. eaptured- | “the attention of the sufferers from the Ottawa Waistline. This {is based—on-the—-good--common- sense of our womenfolk. It is quietly sponsored by a nation- wide organization called TOPS, which stands for Take Off Pounds Sensibly.. There are said to be over 185,000 mem- bers across Canada, and in Onta- rio alone there are over 100 chapters of TOPS. The belief of TOPS is not that we eat the wrong things, but that we eat too much of them. It does not sponsor any speci- fic diet: it urges its members t consult their doctor for special-_ ized advice. But what it does from Alcoholics Anonymous has borrowed the doctrine Me group therapy and mutual mo-: ral support. Ottawa’s first chaaten named Bytown TOPS. meets one even- | ing each week. Its. members | are all women.: Their routine in- | cludes a weekly weighing, a ce- remony which is perhaps not without its girlish guile. One member told me ‘Last week I found~1 had only pounds, so I took off my skirt | and then found that I hed Jost | |four pounds.”’ ' Members have telephone | (Contacts with other” eater: as :ithis is thé feature borrowed"? from A. A. If a TOPS feels the urge to eat a large helping of pie | ‘and ice cream, or is tempted by a large box of dangerous choco- jlates, she telephones her fellow- imember and asks to be talked jout of temptation. “When a TOPS has succeeded lin reducing her weight to the | desired figure, she then. gradua- jtes to the status..of a KOPS, ‘which stands for Keep Off |Pounds Sensibly. : Her - project |then is to avoid “regaining her Jost" weight:~—~ z OTTAWA SETS EXAMPLE | The Bytown TOPS were re- ‘cently invited to attend a con-- ‘vention in Montreal of all Que- ibec Chapters of TOPS. The jmembers returned to the Capi- |tal reinforced in their determina- ition, and ready to spread _ the |word among their menfolk: In some parts of Canada there al- ready are chapters for men. MPs lare now pondering the forma- tion of a Parliament Hill TOPS. Thé normal TOPS diet-is simple: just eat the ordinary Why Beef About The Senate? Gary Lautens in the Toronto Star Everybody's complain tng about the Senate again and. for the life of me, I can’t under- stand why. _ Personally, I like the Senate. The Senate never bothers me. It doesn’t raise my taxes. It “doesn't ‘give me-welfare ~benfits I can't afford and don’t want anyway. It doesn’t pick fights with a lot of foreign countries I hardly know. i It doesn’t snoop into my _ pri- vate life and ask the age of my wife. It doesn’t insist I go around with a social insurance ~ number in my wallet. It «doesn’t ask me to go‘out on a rainy day to vote. In. fact,.the Senate. does noth: ing. And what greater blessing can you ask from a political organ- ization than that? If anything, the senate ts the Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files)” TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (March 29, 1941) A “Mr. A.R. McInnis, managér of the Imperial Life Assurance nounced’ that Mr. Fred Murray had entered the service of that company as Special Representa- tive—for_Prince County, with. headquarters in Summerside Plans for recruiting a Poiish Legion in Canada were complet- ed, Polish sourc*= said in Ot- tawa, and it only remained to. have the official documents con: firmed before volunteers would start training. TEN YEARS AGO (March 29, 1956) It was reported that Sr. Mary Augustine ‘nee Rita MaeDonald) had made final profession to the Joseph,..at_ Mount Joseph in Peterborough, On- tario. She was formerly of St Columba’s Parish, East Point. The slate of officers elected for the Garrison NCO'’s mess were: Set. R.Ag@ Ryan, execu- tive: WO2 E.A. Stanley. mess president: Sat? LJ. Arsenailt ~“exeClilivh. SSate CE He Archer; executive; Sgt. .L. Murtaugh, | secretary; S-Sgt. W.L. Higgins, executive: Set. L. MacAuley, executive, and—S-Sgt- P. Bulger treasurer. 5 kind ~~ of ~ govertiment people: dream of and we grateful. - Nobody. has to names of _ senators, the even learn not ‘ schoolboys. Senators don’t tack'|. ‘up photographs of themselves \; _all_over town. They don’t go ‘ around saying cruel things about | each other. Senators don’t give speeches and, if they do, nobody reads them. Senators don't give away TV towers or make a lot of pro- mises or sell wheat to Red ‘China. i No. they are con'ent to meet now. and then, have a smoke and grab the next train home to the . great-grandchildren. -Senators.never get involved in sex scandals. Nobody tries to bribe them. And. at coffee break, they are content with a Geritol highball schino cherry they can gum. Frankly, fect I sometimes wonder if it | really exists. I’ve never actually | seen the Senate nor has any other living human being I've talked. to: But Prime Minister Pearson guarantees there js such a thing as a Senate and I for cne am ~ Sachs of the high-court in-London;——co-- of—-Canata—for--P-#"4-—an——willing-to-take_his..word for_ it. Provided the Senate doesn't start passing laws or butting in- to my life, I'll remain one of its staunchest supporters Some people ‘coriplain — that $15,000 a year is a lot to pay a man to do nothing bpt--that's bunk .. can think of a lot of politi- cians I'd be willing to pay that | kind of money if they. would | only promise to. get lost in the Senate tradition. If Parliament had half.a brain it would copy the example. of the Senate and sit around on its hands more often. I know it does about 90 per cert of the time but it's the other 10 per cent that gets them (and us) in trouble. So let's be fair Our Senate isn't for silly divorce Nam, high taxes, unwed father water negotiations with the States. the cost of bread, the Quebec crisis or an) er things that bug us Not many groups ofspeople stoday-can-,mateh..that -recard for non-inyolvement. @ In fhe future, instead of* com- plaining about the should count our blessings. And remember this responsible laws, lost three | should be - and a mara- | the Senate :s so -per- | Viet |: of the oth- Senate Wwe | just like Mother used to give us, ; but cut down the size of each helping. Then watch those sca- les, and adjust the helpings to get down to, and then hold, the desired lower weight. The ad- vantage of the TOPS diet is that it does not call for special me- nus, it does- not émbarrass the’ | | dieter when eating out, and it | follows the doctors’ recommen- dations to eat a balanced diet. A typical TOPS member; told. | me that she had been steadily | | losing weight since she joined | | last April, and now is 40 pounds lighter yet feeling well. Asked | | about her views-on fad diets, ; another. member-said to.me:_‘‘If. I was an expert on diet, I would never have got into the shape I | am. Place > w he deb ‘ Progress In Burn Therapy | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Most deep burns are contam- inated and the majority become | infected.:During the healing pro- | cess pus,\may develop beneath | | the crusts’ causing ugly scars. | Blood poisoning is a more. ser- | ious complication and 45° per | | cent of the deaths stem from | this cause, especially when ‘a large area of the skin is burned. The newer and more promis- ing treatments for extensive burns are aimed at stopping the | bacterial invasion of these vlis- tering wounds involving 40'to 50 per cent of the body surface. Last year we mentioned a sulfa ointment nicknamed ‘‘Lind- berg’s butter” after the devel- | oper, Col. Robert: R. Lindberg of Brooke Army Medical : center. The burn is cleansed and the cream is applied daily in a thick | layer to cover the entire wound and overlap adjacent unburned skin. The preparation is remov- ed daily and dead tissue is cleared away before the product | is reapp The death rate | from infection . dropped more “| than 25 per cent and the need | for Skin grafts lessened consid- erably. But.the ointment must | be used within 48 hours to be ef- | fective. - k | Dr. Carl A. Moyer of the Hart- __|ford Burn center in St. Louis, Mo., uses a dilute silVer nitrate | solution as soon as the burn vic- | tim reaches the hospital. He re- | ports that the procedure has vir- | tually eliminated infection, re- | lieves pain, minimizes scarring, | and also lessens by one-third the need “ skit grafting. A tie skin is being used in "as a cover for burns | | involv ore than 50 per cent | | of the body surface. It | res~the’~original- epidermis,~ mains moist while covering the ‘wound, and is more compatible | than skin from a donor. The new material fuses with and takes on the color of the or- | iginal skin because the integu- ment grows into and ultimately |replaces the synthetic. te The treatment of burns is a | Science in itself. The victim's | condition may change so rapidly | ; that. constant attention is need- | ed during the four to 10 hours | | following the incident. These newer products~ will save lives and may lessen the work. load | | on hospital personnel. i (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen: should be addressed to:~ Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- | une, Chicago, Mlinois.) April 28th, 1966 Time: 11:40 p.m. Halifax Airport ‘Air Canada’ s Flight 858 originating ~in Halifax, takes off for Britain! i This is the moment we at Air Canada | have been awaiting with pride. ‘Why? | - Because starting April 28th we're introducing this new jet flight which e 825 Market St. originates in Halifax and flies weekly to : Glasgow and London, gateway to all Europe. This means more seats available Patient: ‘‘My wife tells me 'y talk in my sleep, doctor. What should I do?" Doctor: ‘‘Noth- }ing that you shouldn't.” — .Tor- /onto Star. x One benefit of old-age is that ‘the insurance agents stop pes- tering you. — St. Thomas Tim- | es-Journal. | Hockey fans in Zagreb, Yugo- slavia, have developed the habit of throwing bricks on the ice when they get’ mad or excited. ‘Evidently there is no 11 per cent sales tax on building ma- terials in Titchene. — Brandon | Sun. ee Earth flew in all directions as the crimson-faced would - be | polfer attempted to strike the | ball. “My word,” he blurted | | out to his caddie, ‘‘the worms will think there’s an earth- | | quake.’ ‘I don’t know,” repli- ed the caddie, ‘‘the worms | "round here are crafty. I'll bet most of them are hiding wader | meath the ball for safety”’. | Montreal Star. | NOTES BY THE WAY Russia has only one automo. bile for every 56 persons. How can the world have any respect for a nation that can’t even put together a respectable traffic jam? ~)Colsery Herald. | “There!” triumphantly ex. claimed a Deadwood editor. as a bullet came through the win- dow and shattered the inkstand, “T knew that that new ‘Person- al’ column would be a success.” — Vancouver Sun. ‘ British Columbia {s introduc- ing a special licence plate for old ;ears. It will have the word | Vintage written on it. Those who | see it should remember that it | refers to the car and not. to the iver. — Ottawa Citizen One of the tricks of the trade | modern educators may have overlooked is the fact that» al- most any child would learn to write sooner if allowed to do his | Rome-srorss on wet- cement. ' Columbus Journal . Republican In The Heat Of Debate Milwaukee Journal | A Massachusetts chronicler. is | said, | claiming pre-eminence:.for*~mal, dead pigeon.” Another: | apropisms on the part of his | state’s legislature. He has listed such recent ones as “It is. our | duty to bequeat!: this ruling to our predecessors.’ And: “If our | foundling fathers were alive to- day they would be rolling in | One felt that their. graves over this action." “This fs like needling a ‘Where T-come from firemen work 84 hours a day.” One state senator felt that ‘it is our duty to pre- serve juvenile delinquency. An- . other was interested in ‘‘perpet- | rating the ‘forests of the. orth:”” » a “committee should be complicated for its ef- | This has brought a challenge forts.”’ | from the San Francisco Chron- | |icle, which claims that the late | Supervisor James .B. McSheehy of that city owned the world Te--title” for” combinations~ of—spoqn-— lerisms and malapropisms. His | style is called McSheehyism. A | sample: (This appropriation comes within a few cents of be- }ing an important sum.” |“The proposed building has all | of the earmarks of an eyesore.” ;He also said: “Along the invis- | tble path to the future I see the | footprints. of a hidden hand.” A coufity official, once an ald- |erman, has claimed to be trou- bled by. ‘‘very close. veins.'’ He. is the same one who saw the | future. through his “crystal | | bowl.” A contemporary on the - |county board tried to end an ar- | | gument with: “When we come | to that bridge’ we'll jump off | it.” | An assemblyman, claiming the" house was wesing time, \ ; my top: off." An assemblyman, still in the legislature, snorted that ‘‘when I found I was sucked in I blew < One insisted that “cities can” do this-of-their—own-—- | Violation."” A now deceased sen- ' ator charged that “I don’t know . And: | | hightops.”” | “this ‘is | | | i _Aproud moment everything, but the conserva- tion commission knows twice as less. A favorite has always been, “the meat of this resolution is a thirst for power.” One patriot shouted, ‘Communism is bounc- ing off the ceiling’’ and ‘‘let the Communists shout from their Another felt. that an inflection on the | whole house.” These from the past. But even now we have our champions. An. | indignant senator, shouting’ at ~an-opponent of-the.state ban-on Oleo last year, made this charge —‘I don't see how you can look a. cow in the face.” : to keep pace with the steady increase in trans-Atlantic travel from the Maritimes. In all, Air Canada’s improved service will feature 3 jets a week to Britain this spring and summer. Get together with your Travel Agent and pi of a lifetime! an that trip 14-21 day Economy Excursion return fare ‘MONCTON-LONDON $299 AIR CANADA @® Sammetelle '_ Also Open Friday Evening and Saturday Morning “THE LINKLETTER TRAVEL AGENCY Phone 436-3030