; a To @uardimt Coven Prince Edward Island Like The 00' W. J. Hancox. Publisher ‘unon Lewis Frank Walks! Executive Editor Edna . Published ovary week day morning (euept 800 days and atatutory holidays) at I65 Prim. Street Charlottetown. P.E.l. by Ihomsov. Newspapers Ltd lunch ofiicea at Surnmeuide, Montague; Alba: m and Sour; ‘Represattad nbiicnslly by Thomson Newspaper: Advertising Sarvicas Toronto. 425 University Ave Empire 3-8894,- Monnaal. 640 Cathcan Street. UNiveraity 6-5942; Western office. IOEO WW Georgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher Association and the Canadian Pleas. the Canadian Press is exclusively enliiled lo the use to: repob Ilcation of all news dispatches in this nape: credited to it or ID the Associated Press of Rev Mn. and also to the lecal news published here In All rights on republication oi apaciaI dilpltcllu herein also reserved. Subscription rates: Not over 35: per week by carrier. SILOO a year by mail or rural routes and are. not serviced by carrier. SILOO a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 pet year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monweallh. Not over 7c per single copy. ‘ ~ Circulation. Member Audi; Ililleflli 0' PAGE 4 SATURDAY. MAY 11. 1963. Neutrals Seek Action The failure of the big powers to make any progress in achieving a reduction in nuclear armament is not belng accepted with fatalistic resig- nation by the rest of the world. Not by all of it, at least. The five most “neutral” Latin-American nations— Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Bolivia, and Ecuador—have announced that they will try again to have the United Nations General Assembly declare Latin America a denuclearized zone. They hope to succeed at next fall’s Assembly session where they failed last fall during the Cuban crisis. 'At that time Brazil proposed to get Soviet rockets out of Cuba by banning nuclear weapons from the whole Latin-American area. The measure failed to gain acceptance because of difficulties in devising an acceptable inspection 8 y s t em. This year the five signatories will press for an Assembly vote that would call for setting up a. Latin- American conference on the subject. Their declaration, which has been forward to U.N. Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant. pledges the signator- ies not to “manufacture, receive, store, or test nuclear weapons or nuclear-carrying devices.” The United States has greeted the proposal warily, commending its sentiment but reserving comment on its application until details may be disclosed. Unofficially it is point- ed out that nothing in the terms of the declaration indicate how a Polaris submarine or surface .vessel passing through the Panama Canal would be classified. This, presum- ably, Would be a “matter of detail" for the nations themselves to debate before drawing up a. specific agree- ment. Meanwhile, a new impetus has been given to African demands that the French Sahara test area be eliminated and Africa be declared a nuclear-free zone. This has been sparked by France’s announcement that it would build a nuclear test- ing ground in the Tahitian Islands in the South Pacific. It is hard to escape the convict- ion that in this matter it is the so- called backward nations, and not the ones in the van of scientific pro- gress, that are giving expression to the voice of humanity. EnthusiasticaIIy Cozy On one of his first days in the capital as Prime Minister, the Cana- dian Press reported that Mr. Pear- eon "met with the deputy ministers of the various government depart- ments and was given a warm re- ception.” A photograph was then tokenrand published in a number of papers, showing the Prime Min- later, surrounded by the top civil manta who were so warmly wel- coming him back to Parliament Hill. " In one sense, this is understand- But the dangers have been pointed out by Prof. J. H. Aitchison, cache Department of Political ‘ ‘ ‘V ' ‘ of Dalhousic University. . one," says Prof. Aitchlson, “will M at the exuberance of sailors . that ‘Winston is here’ when returned to the Admiralty M} 1939. and this well that the senior ' service thinks highly of the ‘N . terofthaday.3otitla that an incoming Brit» public display of affection and ad- miration.” ' Prof. Aitchison pays his tribute to the Canadian civil service. But he sees the dangers in the displays of mutual regard that are quite so unrestrained. He believes that the picture of the Prime Minister among the welcoming deputy ministers sug- gests “too strongly for comfort the welcome given by a resistance move. ment to the liberating and conquer- ing army of legitimacy." This would be harmless “only on the assump- tion that we are going to have a Liberal government forever." Commenting approvingly on this warning, the Montreal Gazette says it would seem that the new Govern- ment has special reasons for demon- strating its detachment from the civil service. One of these reasons is that the decline and defeat of the long Liberal regime Were not un- related to a public impression that a group of civil servants, though of undoubted ability, were not only carrying out policy but were active in forming it. The lines between the Government and the civil ser- vice had b e c o m e disturbingly blurred. “A cabinet that has eight for- mer civil servants among its mem- bers," adds The Gazette. “has spec- ial reason to emphasize th at the Government and its civil service, though certainly needing to work together in harmony, are still two very different things. The first one is essentially political, while the other has to be essentially the reverse." Heart-Warming Example St. Dunstan’s University can well be proud of its graduates. They have distinguished themselves in many walks of life at home and abroad; but hOWever far they go, or high they climb, they seem never to lose their sense of gratitude and affection for their alma mater. The old ties, formed in student days, hold fast throughout life. We have evidence of this at every annual commencement exercise, in the re- turn of former graduates to partici- pate in the ceremonies and renew their youth and the aspirations they were taught to cherish. Educational institutions everywhere act as a. magnet of this kind, but St. Dun— stan’s has been singularly blessed in the imprint it has made on the lives of those who have come under its influence» An example of this sense of gratitude has been afforded in a very practical way by the munifi- cent donation of $250,000 which Dr. St. Clair Duffy, a distinguished sur- geon of Montreal who graduated from St. Dunstan’s in 1920 and is to be honored with a degree from the institution on Tuesday, has made on this occasion. The donation will cover approximately one-half the cost of the new science building which is being planned. and which will be a valuable addition to the educational facilities of the Province. Dr. Duffy is a native of Kinkora, and has exemplified in his own car- eer the qualities which make for outstanding success. We trust that his brief visit atthis time will en- able him to renew many old friend- ships, and form new ones among the younger generation. We venture to say that his generosity to his old college will be appreciated not only by those directly concerned, but by his fellow Islanders of all classes. creeds and occupations. , EDITORIAL NOTES Rose experts from eleven na- tions will participate in a. Japanese contest to develop at least 70 new varieties of roses. The period for the trial growth of the new variet- ies is one year—beginning this month. O O O The most recent discovery in the frightening world of automation is an electronic cherry sorter. cap- able of handling 3,500 cherries per minute or almost a ton an hour. It has an electric eye that scans each cherry, held in a suction cup, against a special background. 0 O 0 Two American scientists in Ant- arctica have found that Adelie pen- guins. which cannot fly, can be transported hundreds of miles from their own mokeriea and walk, with dxolnch steps. anon-iiieg back bone. The scientists attribute this amazing navigational foot to a built-in “direction clock” within the birds. - RM To 60" LEFT" 6‘7"” \N . ROYAL COMMISSION on! TAXATION All» PRIEFEP G 30/5;er . AND _ 3*)... _/ J“ .UNO WHO PRESENTS HIS BRIEF Wk The Maple In Rich Variety The Printed Word, Toronto Anyone wishing to prove that I Canadians have a distinctive I character need only examine the ; maple. This has fittingly been: selected as the tree that is em- blimatic of Canada. Peoples of leaf maple is the one that mar- veling easteruers press and take back home to frame in a pic- ture that spreads over th e whole side of a room, proving : that Canada is large indeed. The other lands should be impressed by the fact that Canadians have taken this tree as their own. Even a brief study of the maple shows the kind of deflniteness and unified purpose peculiar to this great country. The best known of these is the l sugar maple — well known un- less one does not happen to live where it grows. These places where the sugar maple does not grow Indigenoust are Newfound- land. Manitoba. Saskatchew a n. Alberta. British Columbia. the Yukon. the North-West Territor- ies and most of Quebec and On- tario. This well - known sugar - maple is also the well - known I hard maple, rock maple, black maple. curly maple and bird's- eye maple. I Growing in the same area as I the sugar ma 1e and therefore I missing nine-tenths of Canada is the red maple. which is also the water maple, swamp maple, soft maple and scarlet maple. All Canadians are familiar with the beautiful vine maple un- less they live north of Vancouv- er Island or east of the Cascad- es. This tree is the most distinc- five of the Canadian maples in that it has only one extra name. The vine maple is also the moun- tain maple. ANOTHER MAPLE Another maple celebrated in song by all Canadians except those so unfortunate as not to live on the BC coast is the broadleaf maple. This e is much more widespread than the vine, or mountain, maple; al- though it doesn't grow east of the Cascades. it reaches away north of Vancouver island to the Alaska panhandle. The leaf of the broad- i I I l l I I I 3 wherever I broadleaf maple is thus seen to be distinctive and it goes as the broad- leaved maple. the bigleaf maple_ the British Columbia maple and the Oregon maple— where they think it Is their maple. Everyone knows the Manitoba maple. which grows In Alberta. Saskatchewan. southern Ontario and also in Manitoba. This read- y - recognized tree is also the Inland Manitoba maple. the in- land box - elder and ash - leaf maple. The mountain maple (not to be confused with that mountain maple that Is also the vine map- let does not grow In the moun- tains of British Columbia, or in British Columbia at all. Th e mountain maple does not grow in the mountains of Alberta. It does grow In eastern Saskatchewan and in every other province. the mountains are "'._. 1 small. Th e mountain m a p l e grows especially well in the lower country. Covering a vast arc the mountain maple is therefore well known. and also under the names of the white maple and dwarf maple. EASILY IDENTIFIED ln Ontario and east. except in i Newfoundland. there is the eas- . lly - identified striped maple. In the usual Canadian way of be- Ing definite, this is also called the moose maple and the moose- ood. Another variety of maple Ithis emblem of Canada) is the silver maple. It does not grow in BC. Alta. Sask.. Man, NS, PEI or Newfoundland. it is found in sou- thern NB and in about a fifth of Que. and Ont. Other names that PUBLIC FORUM MEMORIES 0F MOTHER The house seemed so empty when Mother was gone: it was as though she had woven part of erself around' everything within its walls. So many little things her hands had fashioned: a vase of flowers on a table re- flected her gaiety: the Holy Bible close beside her favorite rocker reflected her goodness. There was a feeling of alone- ness in our home when would go aWAy. but the great joy when she returned was something to remember. I some day the desire to paint that has been haunting me should become a reality. then I shall paint a plcture‘of my Mo- ther gathering wild flowers as I so often beheld her. surround- ed green fields splashed with buttercups. like dubs of yellow gold on slender stems. drifts of daisies like miniature oranges surrounded by wreaths of snow. her long skirts leaving a trail in the grass hind her, as she went gathering the pre- cious bou net. I remember cventide In an old fashioned home, when cra- ckling of a wood fire was like music to my ears. and the glow of an oil lamp casting its warm light over the ‘kltchen where Mother lat knitting. and laugh- 3 with us over some unimpor- tant event of the day. long Mother. how I loved her! A n d yet I wish that I had loved her more. How sweet the name of Mother. No other word could be so tenderly imprinted on my heart. Thank God for memories, for fl :1 a. mast. cotdd never be so much a real Iy. I mas.) oncu. a. smru. mm. aa- HARD ON THE FARMER Sin—The standard of living has improved in the city but in the country it has dlsgracefully fallen back. The price of feed to the farmer has gone up. so has the price of everything he buys in town: but the modern farmer gets less for everything he sells, while the city people it. They still have not got the farmer down yet so they start putting up the taxes. I person- ally feel that with a road that has not been shaled for as long as people can remember. and tractors getting bogged down axles and having to walk one mile to gel to one's car would make it Impossible for anyone to get to the hospi- tal if necessary. And since the government thinks we are too far out in the sticks to deliver our mail I fer-l we are paying plenty of taxes now without any more. What kind of buses are you going to have that will go through roads that tractors won't. or will they be left on the pavement? ' If you doubt the condition of the r d and think that a bus could on] children over it this time of year, come out and to go from Suffolk up to Pleas- ant Grove. before it dries up. I believe to education but don't believe in the way taxes are going up. The people In the country will anon be taxed '6 ‘I O ..., 5 Itisootonlylleecbool tax but taxes on everything else that bogs a person (fowl. I I!“ III'. «:1 i RISIDERT'OB SUFFOLK About! I“ mat-drode to Names. Phi-ban almost elim- fueled Win that once ahead lb 0N. it goes by. besides silver maple, I are the water maple. river map- lle, swamp maple, white maple, I soft maple and broad - fruited , map e. I As might be expected by wes- l terriers and easterners, the black I maple grows only in the two I central provinces. It has a cou- I pic of other characteristic nam- l es: the hard maple and the rock I maple. I It will be readily seen from I the foregoing study of Canada’s I embematlc tree that Canadians are a people of definite and unl- fied character. Their emblem . dear is the maple, of which they I have ten kinds out of the north- I am hemlsphere‘s one hundred :and fifteen. Most of these ten I Canadian maples are parochial ‘ln that each variety grows in only a few of the provinces. The I only one that II more all - em- braclve is the mountain maple, Iwhich does not grow in Alta. I and BC. where the real moun- I tains are. Please note again that . this mountain maple is not the I same one as that mountain map- le that is really the vine maple under another name. ' flea‘gm’. MOTHER To-day. Mother darling, thinking of you And the deer days of "Auld Lang Syne": When you werte my shepherd. so l I'm tender and rue Most wonderful Mother of mine. Your care and affection so kind- ly bestowed. Your counsel so wise and divine, Have silvered each cloud and have lighted life's road. 0 wonderful Mother of mlnal When false friends condemned me and turned from my door. You came with your c om fort ign So you are the one I shall love evermore. God bless you. dear Mother of mine! Chorus And I know that you and care for me still As you did in dear days of old, When you rocked me to sleep and you placed on my brow Your kisses more precious than gold. Though the roses have gone from your cheeks once so fair. Your love ever shines like a star That to why I am singing th I s Mother‘s Day song To the best of mothers by far. -—I'.II. MacArthur Charlottetown love me I BUDDHIST! PROTEST SAIGON. South Viet Nam iReuters)—-Two adults and five children were killed when riot police and troops broke up a demonstration by 0,000 people in Hue Wednesday, according to reports reaching Saigon from Hue. miles north of hero. Troops and police threw nodes to disperse demonstrators protesting at a government or. der forbidding the flying of flags at pagoda: and banning processions on the ocoaalao' of birthday. which cell- the anniversary d the battle of Dian Bias PM In . a m holiday in the Communist calendar. MOTOR nrwmiiim; & REPiits Storey [Ir-Tim. llil LEWIS COLUMN , MISSING TODAY "was our imam on column, (I! this i Mother’s Love Vital To Child By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen PLAY and friendship with companions are just as Import- ant as mother love In the emo- tional development of the child. These are some of the conclu- sions that are emerging from the famous primate laboratory at the University of Wisconsin. Infant monkeys. like children. thrive on mother's love but they also need to romp and play with others of their own age Several years ago we wrote about this unique‘ experiment. In which the behavior of infant monkeys was studied under a variety of conditions. Some were allowed to live with their own mothers whereas others had Imitation mothers made of a wire frame covered with ter- ry cloth. The latter were equip- ped with a mechanism to pro- vide nourishment but the young were not caressed or talked to in monkey sounds. According to Dr. Harry I". Harlow, the infant monkeys de- prived. of mother love develop- ed abnormal behavior patterns. They were incapable of normal motherth themselves and us- ually rejected or abused their own offspring. But the situation was twice as bad when the baby monkey was deprived not only of a mo- ther but also of play contact with other little monkeys. They sat and stared vacantly into space for hours. failed to pro- tect themselves when attacked. and later displayed extreme forms of sexual aberrations and aggressiveness. They behaved like disturbed human children In psychiatric clinics. Dr. Harlow believes these ex- periments have u n c o v e r e d many lessons of value in -child development. In his opinion. we have overemphasized the mother relationship In social de- velopment and underestimated the chlld-Io-chlld contacts. The mother who tends to re- Ject her own child usually fails to prepare the youngster for healthy group play. But the progeny of overprotective lov- ing mothers may suffer just as much when their darlings are not allowed to play with their peers. BOY PREFERS MILK E.C.M. writes: Should I be alarmed over the fact that my 3‘12-yesr-old son will take noth- ing for breakfast except a glass of milk? He eats a good lunch and dinner. REPLY No. but make certain his con- sumption of milk does not ex- ceed one q u o rt daily. Some children go on milk hinges and refuse to eat anything. As a re. sull. they develop severe ane- mia because milk does not con- tain iron. INFLAMED ILEUM CM. writes: I have terminal lleltis and the medicine pre- scribed hasn’t helped. Please write something about this con- dllion. REPLY This is the same intestinal condition that thered Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. He was cured via surgery and we can recommend the same proce- dure when medications no long- er give relief. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Have a light switch near ev- ery our. Tbemaawbetblaba‘traebla willmeelhlmonlybalfwayiaa ~ on poor judge of distance. — Oak- Tom ville Journal - Record. The editor of Pravda Ian lb at painters of abstract art should be paid In abstract mo- ney. We didn't know that he had even heard of Social Credit. Edmonton Journal. Swede ed the problem of the drinkan driver by'lmposing a mandatory three - week al sentence on people caught driving while un- der the Influence of alcohol. It is reported this has almost elimin- ated the offence. -— Highway Safety News. first morning after the honeymoon. the husband got up early. went down to the lichen and brought his wife her break- fast in bed. Naturally. she was delighted. Then her husb a n it spoke: “Have you noticed just what I have done?" "0f cour- se, dear. every single detail." “Good. at's the way I want my breakfast served every mor- ning after this." —- Gait Report- er. . I appears to bave’solv- NOTES BY THE- WAY‘ A Montreal school princi has complained that report cla’di: at his schoo' are so complicat- ed that ‘he can't understand them nor explain them to parents. But some students make a pret- ty convincing job of explaining them. —- Ottawa Journal. If you can remember the days when police chased cyclists for riding on the sldeuialk you are an oldtlmer. - St. Catherine; standard. A Harvard psychologist says certain it s can'dramatically increase the powers of the hu- msn brain. But will they make us wise. or just more clever at doing foolish things? Ottawa Journal To Win Bock Lost Votes By Alan Harvey Canadian Press Staff Writer ..With the whiff of electoral cordite tantalizineg in the air, Britain's Conservative party is busily engaged on a series of plans to win back ‘oat votes. One proposal now receiving consideration at the highest level is t‘ me Minister Macmillan should break with precedent and hold a press con- ference In the United States style. Nothing tremendously revolu- tionary about that. the Cana- dian and American observer Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Flies) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO May 11. 1938 Winnipeg. May 8 - Women should work just as long hours and as hard as men. and they should be paid exactly the same rates. Henleretta McKaughan. editor of the Japan Times. said In an Interview here. She is re- turning to Japan after a two year tour of the British Em- pire. Miss McKaughan is a blue-eyed, golden-haired news- paper woman who asks no fa- vors and makes no New Year's resolutions. The ferry steamer. S.S. Char- lottetown left Borden early yesterday for Saint John. NB where she will go into dry dock. meanwhile the 8.5. Prince Ed- ward Island will carry on the service. A special deck has been built on the Prince Ed- ward Island to_ permit automo- biles to drive on and off under ‘ I heir own power. TEN YEARS AGO May 11. 1058 Dr. Arnold Mayer. of Inge!- helm — Rheim. ermany ar- rived ln Charlottetown yester- day and spent the day in consul- tation with Department of Ag- riculture officials regarding soil conditions here with particular reference to insect . . Mayer Is touring Canada and the United States. On conclud- ing his Canada-wide tour he will return to Charlottetown for a further inspection of growing crops. before proceeding back to Germany. London. (Reuters) The Duke of Edinburgh. already a Marshall of the Royal Air Force. received the wings that make him a full fledged pilot. at a private ceremony at Buck~ ingham Palace today. . y . IFS “:1 //3‘ "5"" EIEIIIIIE? COME .T O NOVA SCOTIA FOR A LIGHT HEARTED F LING would say. In fact, it would be a novelty In Britain. nder an old parliamentary convention. It just isn‘t "the thing" for British prime min's. ters to submit themselves to the press In open forum. SAVED FOR HOUSE Sir Winson Churchill, Sir An. thony Eden and Harold Macmil- lan have, of course. all given . press conferences abroad. but the view ls generally taken that policy statements ome should be reserved for the House of Commons. Years ago, returning from a visit to President Truman, Churchill saw reporters aboard the liner Queen Mary but he put the skids under the occasion with his opening gambit: "Of course, gentlemen. I will answer no policy questions. I must leave that for the House." Now. however. there is a new broom at the Conservative cen- tral office. Oliver Poole, first Baron of Aldgate and a man who knows his way around Lon- don's financial district, has been called to party headquarters to think up a few vote-catching ideas. The prime ministerial press conference is his first brainstorm. The idea would be for Mac- millan to use the meeting with the press as a device for pub- licizing the Conservative party at a time when opinion polls in- dicate the government is slowly winning back some of the popu- larity It lost during a catastro- phic winter. But Macmillan Is a parlia- mentarian to his finger tips. and It Is fairly certain he will look at Lord Poole's proposal from all angles before caling In the reporters. The opposition Labor party professes amusement. saying it seems odd that the Tories should seek to "Americanizc" Parliament at a time when all the talk s of ways to restore British self-confidence. Nevertheless the plan ls said 0 be receiving serious consid- eration from Macmillan's advis- 2 5. If ‘It comes to fruition. expect a stormy reaction from Parlia- ment. which cherishes its privi- legea. The FLYIIIG IIIITIlIIMAII 1 RESTAURANT “Your Island Steak 1 House” _._——— AAAAAAA .. 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