Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew cae "WW. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frid Walker , Editor Editor k Bas every week day morning (except Sum | day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottstown., P.E.|., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Brench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton | and Souris. — a - - Represenfed nationally by Thomson Newspapers ‘ Services: Toronto 425: University Ave. . Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- verity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers, “> “Association” and The: Canadian Press. the Cenacian Presa, is exclusively entitled 10 the use for repub- lication of al! news dispatches’ .in thi paper credited to it 6r to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published herein. All fight er republication of special dispaiches here ‘In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c¢ per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural rovies and areas | Rot serviced by carrier. | $15.00 a year off Island.end U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Con» monwealth. Not.over 7c single copy. Member. Audit Bureau of Circulation. THURSDAY, JAN. 27, 1966. | PAGE 4 PWC Requirements The board of governors of Prince | _ of Wales College has submitted its first annual budget to the Executive | ‘Council. In it is. underlined the mounting requirements for educa | “tion, and the need for bringing PWC revenue and expenditures to a level . approaching normal in this area. The salary item is up $98,884; from $301,116 in 1965 to $400,000 in 1966. - This increase results from an estim- ated $90,000 for new staff for the - year ending March 31, 1967, and for firemen’s salaries amounting to $9,000 which were previously met by the Department of Public Works. One ‘of our greatest leaks of train- ed manpower has hitherto been the exodus of young Islanders following sophomore year of PWC to other provinces. The~ brief accompanying the budget estimates that 90 per cent of PWC-graduates-have-gone to main- land colleges. It is noted, too, that provincial government : expenditure on the college has been ‘unusually modest”: In the past decade it rose very slowly from $230 per student in 1955-56 to $355 per student in 1963-64 and, on the basis of the es- timates for 1965-66, it has. dropped sharply~to $215 because of the in- creased number of students. During ’this period the number of university students (3rd and 4th years) has in- créased five times, from 77 in 1955-56 to 408 in 1965-66. . - The results, as the brief states, are evident in the fact that Prince of Wales’ salaries are the lowest in, Canada. They do not even compare ‘properly with those ofischools in this province. Besides-the low provincial unique in public colleges in Canada— by: which the government keeps the ~- fees and the federal university grant. In‘effect, since 1961 the government of Canada has simply been subsidiz- ing the government of Prince Edward Island by the amount of this grant, and Prince of Wales has received _ little benefit from it.” : ‘This is surely an unwarranted state of affairs, and explains why the _budget—for—1966-77-is—_b-a.s-e-d_on-| sounder proposals. These proposals _ are two. in number: that the legisla- tive appropriation—which has almost always been raised by supplementary - appropriation in mid-year—be: . $587,280, and that. the college retain its’ fees and the federal grant. é 4 @ that however strong the old customs may be within the party circles, times have changed and the old methods are appearing more and more absurd and unacceptable. It reminds Mr. Pearson that for one thing; the House of Commons _ not ‘only raised the payment of all members, and of cabinet members, to a very respectable leve! under his regime; it has also provided all mem- bers of the Commons with pensions— pensions which come into effect after “comparatively brief service. “In ad- dition, all members, of course, have such other benefits as are provided to all citizens. These changes moder-( ate considerably the old claim that _ an appointment to the Senate was | necessary to take care of those .who had served in the Commons at low pay and without a pension. It is also argued that the cost of every Senatorship has to be borne by the Canadian taxpayers. And they are entitled, since their money is to be spent, to have appointments made among those who might make some calculable contribution. This more than ever is reasonable, because the payment of Senators has gone up, as | has their pensions. If the Prime Minister were to make his new appointments in the modern spirit, breaking away from traditions that were never good at ‘} any time and-are less acceptable than. ever today, The Gazette assures him that he would be giving a new spirit to Parliament. And wouldn't that, it asks, be the best from a political point of view—as far as making an . appeal to the public is concerned? _ It sounds very fine. But we doubt whether Mr. Pearson’s ears. will be attuned to such lofty music. There's too much clamor going on of a dif- ferent kind, inside the party fold. | Too many “deserving democrats” of _ his party stripé to be taken care of. too many whose campaign services as fund raisers and whatnot have to be considered. The system may look “absurd and unacceptable” to the out- side public, but to the inner circle _it’s as firmly established as the laws of nature. : Don't Bet On It _ For what it is worth, the Canadian _ Institute of Public Opinion figures that over the past twelve years, Lib- erals have bettered their image in the public mind as being the’ best political party for labor, but have lost out to the Conservatives as help- ing farmers best. eas In 1954, when the Liberals in power, Institute polls show they servatives, of about. two to one, as being most helpful to Labor. Today three to one, while Conservatives have remained at the same level. | Moreover the NDP-—despite its tieup stands with about the same figure, in regard to serving Labor best, as did the old CCF. ~ . On the other hand, the people, in concerned with the farm’ population; today they give the Conservatives a slight lead. Throughout these ye about a third of the adult poi has-remained undecided, unable choose which party serves either farmers, or Labor, best. 1954, put Liberals far ahead as being ‘ . were. that. ratio. _has_increased to-about. with the Canadian Labor Congress— — _ Need For Beadle Bumble _ ' Milwaukee Journal Beadle Bumble in "Oli ver | Twist’ was the one who said the idiot.” And ed | .Members contribute a dollar each and the money goes to re- dress legal asininities and stupid: | official rulings. ws Recently, for instance, a Han- over (Va.) echool board member looked at his son’s copy of the “The brief goes at length into the financing of Montgomery Hall, which is now the centre for student activity anda special convenience for stud- ents who come in by the day from outlying places; also into the need for expanding the college's library facili- ties. It notes;*the prospects for an “ early increase‘ in federal university grants, but warns that there is a great challenge to meet. By 1967-68, when -~~an-extra year is to -be-added, it-fore-— sees a PWC enrollment of 700, with an. estimated increase in the follow- ing year to 1,000 and by 1969-70 to 1,200. j 7 e o v “Chairman Keir Clark and his as- sociates on the board have made out a convincing case for‘a fair share of © rising provincial revenues. Nor does , thére seem any-doubt, as they say, that this will constitute “one of the best investments the province can ; make.” ; : : Party Claims First It is expected now that early action may be taken to fill at least some of the 14 Senate vacancies. This chore devolves upon-Prime Minister Pearson, who -has,already made 11 appointments to the Red Chamber since he took office in 1963. All of them have been made on partisan grounds, but this hasn’t _ prevented newspapers across the country from expressing hope that he’ll turn over a new leaf on this occasion. The _ Montreal Gazette is the latest to of- fer on this point. It argues iy Re sy If only they had these calcula- tions to go on before the Nov. 8 election, now, perhaps the pollsters wouldn’t, have blundered so ‘badly in their prognostications as to an over- all Liberal victory. They could have foreseen that, such hopes were futile in the prairie provinces. They might even have been able to predict more accurately what happened in this agricultural province. But we doubt really of much service in such cases. People don’t always. vote the way per cent of the farmers were listed as in the “undecided bracket.” ing reading, and in this case.the find- ings seem pretty well in line with how the voters expressed themselves ourselves at having to use hindsight we are not unduly enthused about its value as an oracle. “EDITORIAL-NOTE —— The Canada Council is making, among other new grants, a $25,000 ‘sity, Kingston, to do research “on the behavior and attitudes of Canadian voters” during the Nov. 8 federal election campaign. If it was “the be- that was being researched, we could seé where there would be some point to this expenditure. ‘ ° om whether... any ..questionnaire.can..be..|. they talk, especially to public opinion | pollsters. And in this latest survey 44 The survey reports make interest- two months ago. But being old hands - for foresight, we must confess that ” one to a professor at Queen’s Univer-_ havior and attitudes” of the politicians | for promoting events or ideas or excellent Pulitizer prize winning | novel—“To-Kilt- C vt The school board member pro- fessed to be shocked and had the book banned in the school system. The Beadle Bumble Fund; announcing that the ban was ‘‘an asinine performance,” offered~a paperback copy of the novel to the first 3 high school students who applied. At last count 52 have. Some time ago Arthur H. Gladwell, who had ‘a contract to z 3 : a ak % é , dec to do it on ay, the only day no cars - ed.there. He was 5.75, fund paid the fine. For some of us, the worst sin one can commit is to forget to remember a special commemor- ative seenmes Von cos tems t kids, stay out till three boys, or butt cigarettes on the carpet, and there's not too much | consternati ‘ : on. But if you forget the wedding anniversatry, or if you don’t hap- pen to do something to celebrate your first date,17. years ago, or if you forget the little woman's birthday — even though she’s _been.trying to forget it herself for the last 20 years— . watch out! : And yet, great as the peril might be in forgetting certain. commemorative _ occasions, .. one could be in a real ~-turmoil attempting to observe other commemorative occasions — if those occasions happen to be the weeks or months set aside Prrncluded in the U.S. calendar of annual events which we came 'with trapping squirrels which | young man who was sent to see “The Weeks Ahead -_—It_paid a $19.36 fine for Joseph Schenker, who was his year-old son: The charge Fishing without a license. In Richmond a parked her small two inches further from than the law allows and was ed $14.95. The law’s intent, -+-fund—-said,—was_to_keep..driving |. lanes clear and‘ her car was still much farther away from the street side limit of the parking spot than were big domestic cars parked tight against the ally we have plenty of appli- |. cants for help. Remember the a psychiatrist by a local judge because he had whistled at a -1.ginl?--He-would-have-been-a -pro--|-—-- The | per recipient if there ever was odd observances. ' In February, it's National Kraut and Frankfurter Week and Frozen Potato Month. In April, it’s Ice Cream Smorgas- bord Time. July has been desig- while National Fla k is September. Besides: there are weeks set aside macaroni, pretzels, and asparagus. Imagine the state of one's terior if observance of these ‘casions included indulgence these items through the desig- nated weeks and months. Of course, if you could hold out till November, things might . look~-better:In--Navember,-you could suffer through National Indigestion Week. LONDON (Reuters). — Robin Douglas - Home, autiior - colum- nist nephew of former Conserva- tive prime minister Sir Alec Douglas‘Home will be Playboy Clubs. of Europe - in- taal in ‘ “ _ , ‘ e | age : : : i — Hiatal = |. “NOTES BY THE WAY te . Beg Needs Hernia | = , eg | '“T hear: that some | Rapid transit mia: seis | Mle By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen pene eae cere Were | become n Pee te i The diaphragm is an umbrel- | you a bull or a bear?” .“‘Neith- | to get.to work in time for their scan 6 | oe la-shaped muscle that separat- | er, just a: plain, simple aes."— | coffee breaks. —Calgary Her- wt Laker | te UE es the chest and abdominal cav. | Edmonton: Journal. tee ie ities. Its weakest spot is the hia. sey tus where it is pierced by cer-.| In a Western divorce case a | Prospect (who was being given. tain nerves, blood vessels, and | man accused his wife of being| a demonstration in a used car). math ren) that COM | “sullen, meas, ieritable, mor- | Say, what makes it Jerk when ‘When this aperture relaxes or | 4, disagreeable, nasty, bitter, | you tiret put it im gear? Sales teat's,.a part of the stomach pro. | Jealous, heckling: loathsome it | ray; “An! that proves it to be into the sulting, miserly, selfish, uncivil : a : ee bigs a and inconsiderate.” But could | @ real.car. It's’anxious to start, mae Re a 18 lar * V ghe-cook? s ~~ ee Vancouver..§un. .. = ye, me renenk San enernech , : on the heart lunge. a0 : | nia is the sliding type in which a > By Harold Morrison | Es, — Latent oe a Canadian Press Staff Writer moves upw to the 7 chest when the individual is re-| President de Geulle’s faith in |regime of te outepoken lelt- clining “and rejurne to He tor. @ome of his security advisers | wing critic. olandiage Soe iataer bs tears (eter te tne el luca tiene es seomeaien iy to occur when the slomach ts | There’ ‘have’ been tadiestions |thet ce only. wlsses, "wae full and is drawn downward by | complicity in the ebduction and |seemed ready to. cll all, oe eer ae ee disappearance. of > sone Gonrmee Figon, committed sui- have that -are~-e 0 |neached into ‘high quarters in | the right ear just es the French The bate ha ee | Me a wie | on ‘ + Yaak Zaye ane. een: Soe ene ica ge A ppc agent De Gaulle may o oe . ! may one n undertake’ ' On the other hand, hiatal her- | astonishing ‘etory, with French | among his security ‘police nia may lead to discomfort or a | mewepapers suggesting—eo far | administrators before world ‘lirpet @ ec emcee Eee members of de Gaulle’s cabi- | stored in French ae “a | distress may be brought on net and even his own security |MAY NOT FEEL STRONG e eating, especially when the food | adviser were aware of the plot | But at 75 de Gaulle may not ‘| distends the stomach opening, | to rid the dictatorial Moroccan | feel strong enough to sweep the | Gas, ned. heartburn, and ot oils geteank ton ‘iy. are present, eapeciaily ater | OUr Yesterdays | deciied to undertake te um lying down. When pain resembl- (From The Guardian ) likely to eliminate all those | ¢8 angina pectoris, heart disease : Gaullist politicians who, im the « |g suspected unless X-rays die- | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | days Algerian independ- ‘close the feal cause. | | = (January 27, 1941) 4 ed strong-arm op | Eating gmailer meals is help- Two hundred and thirty- four erations against Algerian na- ‘ful Food should be bland and | Caiadian Indians from the | Honalists gas-forming. Nootias in west to - + publicized French ' ’ in an upright position for at | macs in Nova Scotia had joined against Moroccan offi- : | Jeast- an hour after the meal, | Canada’s fighting services, it |Cials may not only be en a a | |the weight of the food will hold | was announced by Dr. H. W. | tempt to place direct respons. OTTAWA AIRPORT sdown the stomach and prevent | McGill, director, department of | bility for the Ben Barka disap- 5 ' presen ye the opening. Anti- | Indian Affairs im Ottawa. — Fos aside teesdies é ; ic tacid ucts | py ee OUR CURIOUS LAWS ee : iso are beneficial, especially | 1 was announced on the An-| from the: Prench domeetic ecem . es ey ee P= pe A oe: gag emg ce tk Gade wanes wd ’ : pha * t ¢ Rews ann - Canada Saved From Three-Card Monte Sureical correction of the her. | at Marohal" Rodolfo, Graziani [aware King Hassan would ot en : nia is done when discomfort | had been dismissed as Italian | Yield Bok Ottawa Journal . persists. There have been many | commander. in-chiet in North |the Moroccan strongman, |e Anticipating debate in the |to the Oxford nanan? a4. 18 Se ee oe in 1965 al a as per Africa, . peg Je ay oy ne - gambling sch 5 eine eat eapene sharpers, also adie ied. ee ee ‘| more likely to be successful. | Gees oe aes . ee Va phe dt Flew - butor reported that he had look: | ‘find the lady.” A queen and, Of that sum, the racing asso-|_ MUCUS PRODUCTION Mre, Lauretta White was in- | Ben Barka affair. ed up the Criminal Code and {two other cards are spread out | ciations retained $10,341,261 as | A. E. writes: Is the mucus se- | stalled as Worthy President of | Nor does the French move to was fascinated by three-card |face downwards and bystanders | their legal percentage the | creted during a cold a protec- | the Queen Elidabeth Lodge, No. | withdraw its ambassador from monte, et OO ee governments tive mechanism? 16, Daughters of England, held | Rabat, dramatic as, it may: be, _ The fathers of the nation, | queen. ed $7,116,447 im pari-mutuel-tax- |. REPLY | dn the lodge. rooms et Charlotte- impress observers as a concl- when-they drafted the code, dis- | This, our informant was con- | es, : co I presume it is. Dryness of | town. : sive act which should clear played anxiety about three-card ong ig By sc mage We were reflecting on the fact | the membranes during an infec- ne Vay away all doubts that this is an monte. imagiation « yar, (that there are some certain win- | tion of the respiratory tract adds | Microwave radio relay facili- | affair involving mainly the Mo- Under Section 178 a person is | of pioneer Canadians, worn the |2erS.in gambling when our cot- | to the discomfort of the cold. A | ties to link Charlottetown with | roccan regime end not that of liable to imprisonment for two | toil, taking oe Puen respondent came panting -back | cough that brings up mucus is | the transcontinental -system be- | France. Leet years whe Stnees suyins, to. euiouiarel ? being rook: | with the news that three-c ard |easier and less irritating th an | ing constructed by the ‘The full truth inthe Ben aan saan “is Ga Seeeh, et oe We shaepers wee come me | monte had its origin in Mexico, | dry hacking. > | companies comprising . the |Barka mystery may never be ‘any dice game, three-car queen vanish aad a is When he produced cards and-re- — (NOTE: All correspondence | Trans- Canada Telephone Sys- disclosed. But there “appears monte, punch board, coin table | Anyway, three-c : se alae marked he.was prepared to de- te Dr. Van Dellen should be | tem, would be-byilt by the Island | enough evidence to suggest, as - or on the operation of a wheel of |forbidden at agricultural faits, | monstrate, we said- he was in addressed to: Dr. Theodore Telephone Co. Lid., it was an- one responsible British: newspe- — a re idion “ue neu nee of two years in prison Van Dellen, eo Chicago Trib- nounced by officials of the Tele- | per put it, that there is “a sheley we ae * ite [tales ‘dees nat tt and he left. pee Maan Tilinois.) phone Company. ton in the. Gaullist cupboard. understandable, even to the in- |monte, dice games, punch e nocent, but the code is infuriat- | boards or coin tables but states < es = ingly grave. and unrevealing no objection to fortune wheels, _ about three-card monte. : which our It says, obscurely that | met, to his { ‘ ** ‘three-card monte’ .meane- Canada_ Exhibi' game commonly @s | timable agricultural i j " three-card monte arid includes | with bingo and other 5 any other. game that is similar | LEGALIZED ___Barely_ finished with our gam-_| ~ played with cards.” bling correspondent, : ; OLD SHELL GAME ed from the ‘ Our correspondent said his re- | riculture a | brought him the infor- | legalized gambling. tation that it was @ variation of | ment in 1965 - - the shell game and this led him | mutuel betting at, the tracks “ To Commemorate the forthcoming Centennial of Confederation The Guardian _is pleased to announce publication of ~ THE MAKING OF THE NATION - VOLUME { In the new, iMlustrated Canadian Gentennial Library ete special arrangement with McClelland and Stewart, one of Canada’s leading book publishers, this ‘special Weekend Magazine edition of the Canadian Centennial Library is being _ made available to readers of this news- - paper- on-a-unique--subscription plan, . which invites your free examination of each new volume as it.is published, but without any obligation to purchase. Moreover, the large printings scheduled for these fine books will enable us to offer them at. half the price you might expect to. pay through regular retail | | Giron Sqbecriber RESERVATION = Canadian Centennial Library 18 Waterman Avenue, Toronto 16, Canade ES, please send at once The Making of the Nation for'10 days Y ? free examin and oar att Chater Stheeriptis ‘to the Canadian Centennial Library. If I keep the book I will pay only $2.95 (plus a small charge for shipping and handling), and be entitled to ‘receive future volumes in the series as they are published at 2 month intervals, billed at the'same low price. I understand these volumes are __Bent to me on approval,,and I may cancel my subscription time simply by notifying your if 1 decide not to Keep the first book snd reir. _it within’ 10 days I will owe nothing and be under no : % é, 128 illustrations, a 4, | many in full color, *, =a DELUXE VOLUMES -also- available The Canadian Centennial Library is also being published in.a Deluxe Edition with simulated leather binding and gold-embossed. letter- ing: Check the box in the Reserva- tion Certificate if you prefer this Edition. he NAME bssebvicn be eeees ee jas abib dechatesaviban (PLEASE PRINT). ADDRESS Ws subi bbc caueeocecs: Oi vEaLPwe bees 5 Al a a t i a Ai i 4 i i i t Al fl og on t CITY Ceeeeeessosocs ZONE eoease PROV, ore aeee yt 5 across recently were the weeks and months which have ‘been eet secretary, it was Tuesday, Sia ‘ 7 “ itt ( 4 a