carrier. off tsland and U.K. $20.00 per and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. Not over Member Audit Bureey of Circuletion. 7e single copy. PAGE 4 Challenge To Parliament More than three years ago the thén’ commissioner, of the RCMP, Clifford Harvison, warned in a pub- lic speech that American crime syn- dicates were moving into Canada, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1965. and about the same time Maclean's | Magazine investigated these activi- ties and presented a comprehensive analysis of the Canadian underworld, its chief magnates, its methods and its profits. All these warnings went . largely- unheeded. Since then a good many of the leading criminals have murdered one another and some have ended in jail, but their success- ors are reportedly still in business. Is the business continuing to Free Press, in tains that it is. “Enough has happen- ed lately,” it says, “to convince most Canadians that their society is deeply age : if i ‘} 3 igies eg fH FSEe eGEe : fig a i f : FE ¥ ‘i t cipal figure in Congress and presi- dent of the.U.S. Senate. The Times’ senior Washington correspondent, Arthur Krock, writes: “From this quarter came the guess that Mr. Johnson reacted coldly to the prospect of Humphrey in the star | wole the President would have played out that Humphrey is also the prin- in London, as he much desired to | do; also, the guess is that the ebul- lient Vice President had already made himself too much seen and | heard and needed curbing.” The New York Herald Tribune’s White House correspondent is even blunter: “Jealousy and ego,” it says, “those are the words most used in the tidal wave of gossip which swept | through the Capitol in the wake of | the President's decision to keep Mr. | Humphrey at home.” | To many Americans the high- light of the ceremony was the sing- public, which was requested by Churchill himself before his death out of respect to his American | mother. But that apart, the feeling that the U.S. did not play its full role in this epic occasion is rankling in the public mind. Whatever the cause, there is no thought of attributing it to lack of regard for the memory of the great British war leader. There was prob- ably no European more loved and re- Sir Winston; from the President down. That is all that concerns us as outsiders; but it is regrettable that Mr. Jonnson should have laid himself open to charges of pettiness in this matter. He won’t soon be al- lowed to forget that only the United - undeFtings on this solemn mission. Tories’ Little Helper Under the above h The Globe and Mail notes that Federal Agriculture Minister Harry Hays has undertaken to offer what ‘must: be perhaps it was just that, finding him- self committed to a speaking engage- ment in Edmonton and knowing there wasn’t much Liberalism in the West to talk about he decided to borrow some problems from the Conserva- tives. In any case, Mr.| Hays’ ideal Tory would be Premier E. C. Man- eS } even went so far as to Mr. lecture his hearers, the Alberta Lib- Conservatives for the principal posi- tions in the Liberal Party. : “And if Mr. Manning ever should replace Mr. Diefenbaker, the effect on the Conservative Party would seem imperatively to require the Liberals, ever concerned with bal- ance in the two-party system, to re- ‘cruit forthwith Premier Joey Small- wood of Newfoundland for the office which Prime Minister Lester Pearson would no doubt relinquish grace- ” E EDITORIAL NOTES With the roads as icy as they are now, it is well to remember that horse sense behind the steering wheel is better and more important than horsepower under the hood. * * 7 It is estimated that the Quebec ing of the Battle Hymn of the Re-. spécted by the American people than | ' and from 1788 until 1795 Warren er erp ye ~ eae PROBLEM CHILD OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson ' -_Enshrines A Thousan FS aap Ra: The Great Hall’ of | at Palace of Westminster was the: | scene of the meeting of: Eng- | land's first representative par- | liament in January of the year 1265. It was a strange twist of history that the planned anni- versary celebration in that game Great Hall was cancelled, and instead the huge hall was filled..by lines of mourners pay- ing their last respects to Wia- ston Churchill, perhaps the greatest parliamentarian to emerge during those 700 years. This remarkable building 1s possibly the most famous still! in | daily use in the world today, in | the sense that nearly one thous- | and years of history have been made beneath its roof. It is the only remaining part of the Royal Palace of Westmin- ster, which was the chief <esi- dence of the Kings of England from its completion by Edward the Confessor in 1053, until in 1532 Henry VIII Quilt St. James’ Palace as his new London home. CEREMONAAL HALL “The Great Hall was added to the Palac> by William II, known | as William Rufus, in 1090. It was | only part of the Palace to | escape destruction in the great of 1834. It was intended as | ‘ for royal functions of | and was accordingly | ars or pene FE z of parliament, the Great Hall was the scene of the Courts of Law until as recently 3 z i : § : & = § & : & F r ‘ famous state were held in hese included ic trial of the 1601, and the conspirators in 1606. King Charles I was tried and sentenced to death there, FF ae a TG a 9 ly z 8 Se Hastings, the builder of Brit- ain’s Indian Empire, stood trial there. Many Kings of England held their lavish and such being that following crowning of George IV on 10th July 1821. HORSES AT DINNER A coloured picture of this as- tonishing extravaganza was chosen by Lord Thomson of i hate ; ne ee uing | France and that.he lost _ sie known incident. = d Year s Of History Two Of The Million Guelph Mercury One of the many mysteries of World War If still attaches to the disappearancé of U.S. arch- estra leader Glenn Miller, whose recordings remain poptilar ex- cept with the no-haircut set. He | vanished 10 days before Christ- mas, 1944. 7 Miller,as leader of the con- cert orchestra of the ‘supreme allied forces, was stationed in London, whence his band broad- cast to the troops on the contin- ent as well as in the British Is- | les. | With a pilot at the controls! he took off one night for France. | One theory was that he was shot | down hy the Germans; another | was that the plane crashed in | his) memory, dying unrecognized later. The great English actor, Les- lie Howard was another esual- ty among entertainers of the armed forces. En route home from the U.S., he boarded a Bri- | tish passenger plane in Portug- al for the flight to England. Nei- ther the aircraft nor its - occu- pants were ever seen again The general belief was that , the Germans intercepted and shot down the plane, possibly under the impression that it was | carrying high British officers or |-intelligence agents home from | some rendezvous in Lisbon. One report at the time was that the Nazis thought that the plane was carrying Winston Churchill. ‘Audacious’ Adolf Did Adolf Hitler once try’ to establish a military base in Can- . ada? indicates that he \probably did, | and a navy expert on deep sea navigation. . The Germans admitted tha in 1937 | they were trying to buy the is-:| loves spaghetti. He has a land through “Montreal finan- ser ESR EE AE tapestry of time wou!d-own’unmatched sense of history. Neglecting Glaucoma By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Glaucoma is a common ocul- ar disease in which tension with- in the eyeball is elevated The are injured by excess pressure and blindness ens-es unless the condition is recognized, and treated properly. Diagnosis is not difficult in cértain types of glaucoma where tension rises quickly. The @isorder is ex- tremely painful and is associat- headache, nausea, and vomit- ing. This is an emergency. The chronic form is more comon; it comes on so gradu- ally. the eye may be damaged before the individual is aware that something is amiss. Sever- al danger signs develop, which often are neglected by the vic- tim. There may be transitory blurring of vision over a long period of time. New glasses do not seem to help. Meanwhile, rainbow rings are seen around lights. These people have trou- | ble adapting to the dark. as when walking into a movie thea- ter Anyone with these» symptoms | should consult an ophthalmolo- | gist, because the next step is loss of vision. Various organiza- f;ons are sponsoring mass encourage people to have eye | tension measured. Early diag- nosis and treatment will prevent blindness. It has been estimated that two per cent of the population over age 40 is affected and half do ; Mot know it. The percentage goes up with each year of Life, varying from one per cent at age 40 to 8.7 per cent at 70 The. test is painless because a few drops of an anesthetic solu- | eye. The measurements ar e made with a delicate instrument | (tonometer) which consists of a footplate that. rests on the eye bal!. This is attached to a needle i8 applied. Readings above 27 mm | vent this condition. Tension in- creases when driviing at night. working in a poor light, and dur- ing emotional upheavals. These facters should be avoided should the disease develop. ADDICTIVE T. H. writes: My husband, ia his late 50's, has been a bromo addict fer years. Lately he has ; become so cross and unreason- able I think he is losing his sam- | ity. Would this be due to his age or to the drug’ REPLY Bremo— or, better, the per- | sonality defect that makes him an addict. A high concentration of bromides in the blood makes some persons mean; nervous, ‘and overactive. FREEZING A CATARACT |W. K. writes: Can a cataract be dissolved by freezing? REPLY No, but wd unique freezing in- strument is used to extract the lens through an opening in the | eyeball. It is applied to the leas, fusing it in much the same way a finger will stick to an ice cube tray in the refrigerator. The in- strument is withdrawn and tre | lens slips out with it. PROTRUDING ABDOMEN Mrs. W. writes: My husband very large abdomen: “Witt -walking on Anticosti island at the mouth ciers” who held an option from | every day reduce it? of the St. Lawrence river.,”. t thought that he had in mind an air’ or 4 submarine bose. Big, privately | owned Anticosti would well situated for either. it is suspected that he have been thinking of in- his V-2 rockets, perhaps } atomic warheads being | loped at top secret German laboratories. First news of his came when a h Te interest | the paper company. The scheme was squelched quickly, how- ever, by Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King, who assured the Canadian “house _ of that no foreign power would be allowed to control Anticosti. ‘Premier Maurice Duplessis of Quebec—which held jurisdiction over the island— called the pro- | Position ‘‘audacious."’ “We are eager for foreign cap- ital." he said, ‘‘but between ut- team of German | ilizing capital and grabbing our | commons” REPLY Any exercise will help, pro- vided he does not end up in an | Italian restaurant. OVARY AND FERTILITY Mrs. R. writes: Can a woman with one ovary conceive and | carry a baby to term? REPLY Yes, provided the remaining ovary produces ova. | TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Never oil power tools while “foresters”’~was found nosing | domain there is a wide, mar- | they are in use. around the sparsely inhabited island, then owned by a paper | company. When challenged, the | their equipment and bowed out: J- insisted “that trey | trouble explaining why their | party . included engineers. a | community planning specialist | gin.” The Germans auctioned off Thus the only result was island's poor inhabitants. What might have been is chilling to think about. . Indonesian Reaction — Lendon Free Press z H H H Canadian is not a Ganadian, but a Briton in disguise. As addi- tional proof it notes that Canad- ians do not even have an Inde- pendence Day. It would perhaps be useless to “| point out that if Indonesia would her neighbors talking about and ‘crushing simply leave alone and stop “confrontation 8 ” set up housekeeping. But Canadians, like all other nations in the world, are likely to- become concerned when one country threatens an- the | (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore ' Van Delien, co Chicago Trib- | une, Chicago, Illinois.) Our Yesterdays (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (February 5, 1940) Sinking of the big Canadian | Pacific freighter Beaverburn by | a submarine off the south coast | of Erie was disclosed early to- | day in London— Canada’s first | ocean-going ship to be sunk by torpedo since the war began. Pilot H.S. Jones made an em- ergency flight to the Magdalen Islands today in response to a call from the Gulf Islands to rescue an 80-year-old Bryan Is- land resident who had broken his hip in a fall on Sunday. TEN YEARS AGO (February 5, 1955) The third draft of RCN volun- teers for submarine training left Montreal by air for the United of Crapaud, P-E.I., the 42 sailors. Prime Minister CHARGES WEST GERMANY EAST BERLIN (Reutérs) — Professor Klaus Fuchs, who was jailed in Britain for be- atom secrets to the delicate retina ard optic nerve | ed with rapid loss of vision, | | s¢reening tests for glaucoma to | tion is put on the surface of the | that moves when slight pressure | ave | PERSONALITY | though you're slightly. cracked. | —Galt Reporter, P Lieutenant — ‘] never as it is this morning. How you account for it?” Serg- air and about 714,000 by ship. That is a 25 per cent increase in air travel, a 10 per cent de- crease in ship travel, compared | to 1963. — Ottawa Journal. There is a belief that, because | cats and dogs can find their way | to old haunts after their owners | have moved to new ones, they are particularly clever. What | nonsense! If they could show the movers the way to the new house | — that would be clever — Peter- | borough Examiner : A fellow stopped into Mack's barbershop the other day and | noticed Mack's dog fondly wat- | ching him cut hair. The custom- | er commented on it and Mack | said, “Well, it aint so much | that he likes to watch me cut | hair, but sometimes I snip off a bit of a customer's ear.” Community Press. The statisticlans in Ottawa Teport that there are 161.400 more men in Canada than there are women and Washington re- ports the United States had 3.- , 500,000 more women than men Which could lead to something. | or be quite significant, but we're not sure what.—Montrea! Star park <o litered with. do eant — “The mayor had ieaf- | | (sweetly)— | In 1964 more than 3,500,000. | It can be said that | like painting or any other / You have to know the es ‘before it’s safe to them.—Calgary Herald. “And now, dear that we are married, let us have a clear understanding about our affairs. Do you wish to be presi- dent or vice- president?’’ Bride ‘Neither. You be both. I'll be just the treasurer.” “By 1970 a hospital room will cost $50 a day,"’ says a physic- ian. ff so, many a person will then face the tough problem of deciding whether to die solvent or live bankrupt— Wood stock Sentinel Review. A bad driver can get up to 16 years imprisonment under Cu- ban law. Only a dictator would dare tamper with freedom in such a cruel manner.— Hamil- tae | ton Spectator. You have to hand it to the foresight of Hollywood's pione- ers, in making all those bad movies before there was any television to need them Cal- gary Herald The statements by a few scientists that dolphins (porpoi- ses! are highly intelligent is contradicted by others who say they are no smarter than peo- ple —Woodstock Sentinel Re- view. “You didn't seem to be very hot about the efficiency expert,”’ remarked the secretary. *'no,” replied the boss, “his explana- tion of how I could cut the over- head was over my head.” —Ot- * tawa Citizen - Hot Issue, In West Germany By Joseph Canadian Press | The argument about whether its Statute of limitations Nazi war crimes is getting hot- ter as the deadline approaches The discussion in Germany is likely to get hotter: still be- cause a federal election is due in September and also because news items about war criminals are calling attention to the con- troversy although not directly | related to it . Rudolf. Hess, 70: Adolf Hit- ter’s one-time deputy, is re- | ported hoping for a pardon | after serving 20 years of a life | | term. Hermann Krumey. Adolf Eichmann’s top lieutenant, was sentenced in Frankfurt Wednes- day to five years of hard labor for complicity in the murder of 300,000 Hungarian Jews. The first movie made\in Ger- | many after the war was titled | Die Moeder Sind Unter Unf (The murderers are Among us) Last’ month a- German televi- sion documentary asked “are | | there murderers still among | | us?” and suggested that there | are. | COULD GO FREE It was in this atmosphere that | the big debate began about the provision in the German crimi- | nal code by which murder is no | longer liable to prosecution 20 | years after it has been: com- | mitted. |-This was interpreted-to mean | amy murder committed before | the May 8, 1945, end of the Hit- | ler regime could no longer be | punished after May 8 this year. Noting the reports of Hess, | some observers have recatied | the fate of Martin Bormann, an- | other of Hitler's henchmen, has | | ik ' Meeting ¥ Feb. 9th: 1965 at 7:00 P.M. } Charlottetown Hotel (NOTE CHANGE IN TIME) SPEAKER: | | } ' be ce TICKETS $1.00 re ' known or under i Canadian Club of PE. BRIG. STEPHEN LONGRIGG, 0.B.E. D. LITT., TOPIC: “AFRICA 1965” se 2 Se ae PAUL NEWMAN / MacSween Staff Writer never been definitely ascer- jained, . They. .ask what would ‘happen if he tara pater tas vn statutes had run out But German on stress the 20-year deadline does not apply to crimes _ already investigation: “The German judicial author- | ities have seen to it that the statutory limitation has been interrupted in regard to ai known murders and their per- petrators who are or may be still alive, irrespective of where they are living or whether their Mames are known or un known... . “The 20-year period would therefore apply enly to mur- ders not yet discovered.” 30-YEAR LIMIT? This is not ‘enough to satisfy critics either within or outside Germany. One solution — re- cently cédnfirmed by former | chancellor Konrad Adenauver— would be to advance the appli- cation of part of a new draft criminal code, which would ex- tend the time limit for all mur- der cases to 30 years. Opponents say it was the practice of Nazi legislators to bend the law to suit their pur- | poses and this should not be fol- lowed now however. worthy the motive. The argument has split poll- ticians and jurists regardless of political ties. The newspaper | Hanover Press argues. strongly a 19th century law, designed to prosecute ordinary crimi- nals rather than mass murdef- ers, must be. considered inade- quate lest Germany “risk that thousands: of — murderers __ will | live undiscovered in our midst after May 8.’’ Centre Tonight and Saturday Only - 8 P.M. “THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR ..-RIPS THE HEART!” BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW YORK TIMES be EVA RALPH RICHARDSON / LEE J. COBB/SAL MINEO /JOHN DEREK JILL HAWORTH LAWFORD Confederation Centre Box Office Open Daily 12:00:00 P.M. Phone 892-2464