ed ed | BPFSCSRS STR ewer eweese ese wee fe Pm er seed euee -ret of his enduring vitality? It is, - we think, that he enjoys every minute of the race that is set before him. He subscribes wholeheartedly to Mil- - ton’s dispraise of that “fugitive and - run for, “not without dust and heat.” - Everything good, says Emerson, is on -life’s broad highway, to be adven- -one puts the miles behind him with : Stevenson, would be to act the part __Shakespeare now) or, as a much lesser_|_ "respectful salute to his worthy help- - lunar surface each trip—and coming Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew Publisher W. J. Hencox, . Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sum day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, | Chérlottetown, P.E.!.,.by Thomson Newspepers ltd. | Brench offices at Summerside, Montegue, Alberton | end. Souris. "Represented nationally by Themeon Newspapers” Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- | verity 6-5942; Westerry Office 1030 West Georgie | Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Aisociation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- .lication. of all news dispatches in this paper sredited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published herein. All right. or republication of special dispatches here In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 » year by mail on rural routes and areas fot serviced by carrier. ¢ $15.00 » year off Island and U.¥. $20.00 per year in US. and elsewhere outside Grisieh Com- monwealth Not over 7c single copy Member “Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 MONDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1965. | { The Happy Warrior We extend our felicitations today | to Premier Shaw on his. 78th birth- day anniversary. As the Irish say, “May_his shadow never grow less!” If there's anything in the Gaelic to” express that grand old sentiment, it’s | what: we'd like to be saying to the | man this day, it is. He’s an Islander of whom we're all véry proud. That goes for the Grits as well as the Tories,.though they have to be careful about how they say it lest it be misunderstood in the. next elec- tion campaign. But barring the polit- ical shortcomings they see in him, they’ve- always .been. pretty fair .in conceding that he is indeed “a man of parts.” - He got into the political arena at an age when other men were creep- ing out of it and taking to their slip- pers and the fireside, a cozy nook and a bedtime toddy to warm their bones. Some said at that time that he could never stand the pace, that he’d fold up in a year or so under the burden of so many responsibilities. But it’s been his younger associates that have found HIS pace a killing one. “Grow old along with me,” he keeps telling them, “the best is yet to be!” But one has to have a special gift for this kind of thing, and it takes-a lifetime of practice in the fine art of living to bring it to fruition. ‘ Premier Shaw is still sturdily pur- suing his objectives, and as he-passes the 78th milestone he’s as unwinded as when he set out. What is the sec- \ cloistered virtue”. which shuns the contest where the garlands are to be tured for and relished as it comes; ’ “the potluck of the day,” he calls it, “the strong present tense” in which Vy we are always at the meridian. _ That doesn’t mean, of course, that one shouldn’t profit by experience as - unabated zest. To hold the same views in age_as we did in youth, says R. L. “of an unteachable brat, well birched but none the wiser.” Oh, no! The true wisdom, is to be always season- able; “Ripeness is~all,”—(we’re into but still very good poet of the. Vic- torian age expressed it: “With years a richer life, begins, The spirit mellows: Ripe age gives tone to violins, Wine, and good fellows.” In congratulating the Premier on this occasion, may we tender also a mate, Mrs. Shaw? He would be the first to: acknowledge her preeminence above all. the prizes that life has vouchsafed him. Historic, Achievment Now_ it’s part of history—man’s most significant and exciting space adventure which reached its climax Saturday when Gemini 7 astronauts Borman and Lovell rade their meteoric dive -hack to earth after a record 14 days in orbit, long enough. to have made two voyages to the moon—spending a full day on.the through with no known ill effects. Their splashdown was made in the Gemini 6 astronauts Schirra and Staf- ford parachuted into on Thursday after the rendezvous with Gemini 7 the day before. This most spectacular of all dis- Plays in spaceship handling was, of course. much more than that. It marked an important new line of spaceflight development, paving the wav for the forthcoming Apollo trip. © the moon and enabling guture astronauts to carry out missions that involve two or more ships or actual linking of ships. It will also be es- sential to the development .of an or- bital rescue service which would | cover astronauts who might be strand- ed if their retrorockets were to fail to fire. So far no astronauts have been stranded in orbit as a result’ of space- | craft malfunction, but there was a moment when Lt. Col. Glenn’s first orbital flight produced doubts of re- covery. If, as has been predicted by one’space expert, there will be more. than 280 nonmilitary flights into or- bit by 1985, rescue operational tech- nique could. be very important. Data of vital importance to future t i space flights was gathered by Borman | and Lovell in their Gemini 7 space- ship. Perhaps the most important related to the experience of the astro- | nauts themselves as they underwent | the longest period of weightlessness anyone has yet endured. The success of this mission has brought the moon voyage perceptibly nearer, and given us all a glow of enthusiasm at the © human qualities of courage and en- | durance, as well as the’scientific-pre- cision, which went into its achieve- ment. Prk For Another Term As expected, General de Gaulle has been elected for another term in | yesterday’s presidential contes t.in France. The. question now is whether | he, is prepared to modify his more extreme policies which were subject to so-much criticism during the cam- paign. and which lost him-the overall -, majority in the previous week’s vot- | ing to which he had confidently look- ed forward. There is some hope that on one issue, at least, he has learned something from the struggle. This concerns his rigid stand | against British membership in the European Common Market. Much has | changed sincé he slammed this door on Britain two years ago. The Franco- German alliance, which de Gaulle hoped would mature free of “Anglo- Saxon” influence, is. dormant, if not dead. Commonwealth trade obstacles no longer seem: a. formidable barrier, | inasmuch as a number of Common- wealth countries have already con- cluded’ separate trade arrangements with the Common market. campaign, as to express a certain amount of sympathy for Britain’s Common Market aspirations. He might now be prepared to allow. British membership provided that the other five Common Market na- tions—most. of whom have long favored British entry as ‘a counter- weight to France—agreed to abandon their goal of a tightly knit political entity. De Gaulle favors a loose com- pact of sovereign states. As for his other foreign policies, y have found more support from the left wing than from the body of French voters. Whether he is pre- pared to shift his course for. this rea- son is a moot question. To Eat More Pork Henry IV of France promised his people a chicken in every pot. Now, 400 years later, thé Italian govern- ment is aiming at a pork chop in > The general went so far, in his ao a oe gt GAULLE ov INMPIAN 5, ‘ss te —_——_— BRINGING HIM DOWN TO EARTH FLYING THE JETS z Kerosene Stages Striking pana: Cinderella of theypetroleum in- | dustry is kerosene. Driven out of style with the mellow Victor- ian parlor lamp, it has returned to fly the’ nation’s jets. “King Kero’’ was the darling of the petroleum industry until the turn of the century. It il luminated almost every home in the United States. Then the electric light esclipsed the pic- turesque lamps, and the gasoline engine made it a second- rate fuel. By 1911 gasoline was out- selling kerosene. With the advent of the jet National Geographic Seciety | has revived and soared: In 1964 | the nation’s commercial jetlin- | ers alone quaffed 2.5 billion gal- lons of the fuel. IN NEW PRODUCTS There are many other uses. Kerosene is a key ingred- jent in such diverse modern. in- dustrial products as insecticid- es, paints, polishes, and clean ing compounds. On the farm, kerosene warms chicken incubators, burns prick- pear spines, destroys range- land bush, and fuels machinery. new The Queen’s Archers British Information Services In’ medieval days the best | long- rdnge weapon was the longbow. It had versatility and | | ramge. It was quick to load and évery pot. The outcome of this at- | tempt to persuade the Wlians to +~eat-more-pork.-is-of-interést-to-farm-—| ers on this continent.. The office of the. U.S. Feed Grains Council in Rome reckons that twice the present - meager Italian-consumption of.fresh’ pork would add another 300,000 tons a year.to the import of American | fhed grains. With all the sausages, salamis, and yham eaten _by- Italians, it comes as a surprise that less pork is con- sumed in Italy than in any other Common Market nation. The Ger- mans, for instance, consume 66 pounds per head a year; the French 44 pounds. Against this the Italian consumption is a mere 14.5 pounds, of which only 4.5 pounds are fresh pork. , There is, it seems, a prejudice * against fresh pork on health grounds. In‘summer months the pork butchers traditionally pack up shop until autumn. The Italian farmer has come to look upon the pig primarily as something to be processed into sausages and hams; fresh pork is only same western Atlantic area which +-a—not—veryimportant by-product. | _ Moreover, production is tied to the — ‘meat industry, which at the moment is not very interested in improving the quantity. EDITORIAL NOTE The New Zealand parliament re- cently asked the Massey University “there to research new ways to use fish. It came up with the bright idea of a fish sausage. i |. book to get your money). fast to fire. Today, with nuclear One of these was a-Turk-who | astounded the Company by shooting 415 yards against the | wind end 468 h-it..On another | occasion, in -the ee terrorizing the world,~| were hosts tova team of Red In- fends the Queen of England | when she visits Scotland on state occasions. 25 the King’s | buried under | archers.. The » weapons it is still the long-bow that de- dians, who delighted oS ae : by celebrating their victory with | @ war dance. In 1791 two members of the | Hie was poor, | rows were shot, Savina Bank Losing Ground Financial Times Of Canada _ The government’ 8 white elephant appears to be dy- ing a natural death. It is the Post Office Savings | —of—near- bank "which for years has bro- | ken all the rules of modern. com- petitive banking and still mana- ged.to hold thousands of deposi- tors across Canada.. ’ The savings bank does not adveitise, does not make loans, and does not have a_ checking system (you present your pass- It will | not, except through a tedious ie and time-- wasting proce dure allow withdrawal of more than $100 a day. Our Yesterdays 1 : (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (December 20, 1940) The British command brought up new troops before Bardia for a last heavy blow in that Libyan sector,-and declared officially that the rear wing of the Italian army trapped there was facing imminent capture or. annihilia- tion. Military sources venient that fleets of German- piloted Junk- ers air transports were aoe Sarvs Italian reinforcements across the Adriatic to the Albanian bat- tlefront as Germany’s aid to her | hard-pressed ally. TEN YEARS AGO (December 20, 1955) become chancellor of the exche- quer. strangest ; Tt still pays 24. ‘per cent inter. est on saviings “aecounts in-- an age when ‘trust’ companies, are offering 4 per cent and banks }-about-3-per—cent.—. There are 1,500 post— offices with savings bank facilities in Canada, -most of ‘them in small communities. | - When the system was first set | wp (not even the people most closely connected with i can | remember when) the idea was | |-partly to serve communities | with no chartered banks. Migrants from Britain and Europe, where this style of | banking is far more popular. Deposits go into the govern- ment’s general accounts out of which interest is paid. neither is there any thought of bank is now losing ground quickly; At last account- , on July 31 this year, the * age, demand for kerosene rial Kerosene heaters have replaced wood-burning ovens for curing tobacco throughout the south- | eastern United States. | - ee Igic urbanite can now buy kerosene-burning: lamps_like those used in ago parlors. Abroad,. kerosene never relin- quished its reputation as an ef- fective cooking fuel. Some Dutch peddlers deliver it on re- 8 “milk runs” each mor- ning. They load one-liter cans of kerosene on everything from trizylces to. horsecarts. The thrifty Dutch housewives ex- nenet an empty can for a full ars Brazil the sale of a small, fmexpensive kerosene. cooking stove recently lured bargain- basement crowds. The soot- free, | easy-to-light unit proved a boon , to people living in rural areas of the country where the only alter- ee were charcoal and wood The success in Brazil has | Brompted introduction of kero- in tries: than 177 million barrels in 1964 —kerosene still plays second | fiddle to gasoline. | It wasn't always eo. Early re- | finery technicians tested 1+ es of crude oil for gasoline - tent by rubbing a few drops in the palm of the hand -and sniff- | ing suspiciously. Gasoline was despised as a dangerous nuis- | ance which sometimes made lamps and lanterns explode. The horseless carriage chang- ed ali that but not without a strenuous last-ditch effort by kerosene advocates. At the turn the century, a number of - ako eatteened. coun- I mesa dizziness, a duil feeling leading to a reduc- capacity for work. Itching, aggravated by -a hot bath, is not bone an is said to be 9 per cent effective. 5 The need for therapy is deter- mined by taking blood counts at frequent intervals. RESTRICTIONS L. G- writes: Are cocktails harmless in diverticulitis? REPLY Not in moderation. On the _ other hand, many attacks of div- erticulitis have been traced to individuals’ who harbor these pockets in the colon should not drink unless they can limit themselves. CAESAREAN SECTION Mrs. A.K. writes: If a caesar- ear {8 to be done, does the wom- an a have to wait until she is-in labor? REPLY No. Caesarean sections. usual- ly are scheduled a week or two before the baby is due. Labor complicates matters because it increases the chances of infec- DENICOTINIZED M. G. writes: How long after giving -up cigarets will it take for | the lungs to clear up? This ,er- gon smoked a pack. a day for five years. REPLY Cough disappears in three days to three years, depending upon the severity of the irrita- tion. HARD PALATE SENSATION F. G- writes: What causes it- ching of the roof of the mouth? REPLY ; al- the Inflammation, irritation, lergy, and nervousness are most common of ne i AS ra il ee at ee tint gggs HeaP Bt, Faye ome mre “NOTES S BY ; THE <| A\ i oth 5 a a i : i i j i i 5 ve? ; ~~ : = rt > RRERESEE, dil pili " May Hurt African Cause By Cari Mollins . Canadian Press Staff Writer African demonstrations of an- British — that directing their public an- ger about-Rhodesia against Britain might backfire. BASED ON FRUSTRATION But decisions to break off re- lations or snub Wilson at the UN were based on frustration at what most Africans clearly regard as British equivocation i! ii | : e Re } e§ FEE PH ST the i i a2 ae 5 ; ti Re i © =F E g ee for peo-Atriens leader- ship. , — Instant Tradition The Oregonian Banbury Cross is to be moved rt al cel crag from the center crossroads ,of | one. : Banbury, England, because it !s |. “And, anyway,” he added, a traffic hazard. -Whieh proves | ‘‘this cross is only about 100 that tradition. is quite different | years old.” in England than it is in Oregon. Only 100 years old! Why, our A spékesman for the majority | Skidmore Fountain is: only 77 of the town council defended the action against those who con- tended moving the cross would upset centuries of tradition. It isn't the -same-cross, he-de- clared, about-which was writ- ten the nursery rhyme that be- gins, ‘‘Ride a cockhorse to Ban- bury Cross, to see a fine lady apon a white horse.’’ The pre- eent cross, he said, doesn’t even touch of easy te this work world. announces a new branch in the ROYALTY MALL: at Upper Queen & Connolly OPENING MONDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1965 Our Manager, G. G. Miller and his staff cordially Invite you to visit us in our.new branch in the Royalty Mall. We offer a com- plete range of modern banking services, including “Safe De- posit Boxes and a Night Depository, and you'll ike our friendly, customer-first way of doing business. f ready cash Is ever your problem, . whether for medical expenses or a major purchase, ‘enquire about a low- cost, life-insured Term Plan Loan. Manager. . G.G. Miller, If you're a man with @ flair for fashion, it will pay you handsomely to aes in at Dow's Men’s Wear this week! We've just received our Christ- m mas selection of HYDE PARK TRADITIONALS— authentic, natural shoul- der suits that add-e years old, and no one had better try to move it! This doesn’t née: essarily mean that Oregonians are more bound by tradition _ than Englishmen. Traditions don't take so long to grow in this part of the world. The student body of «a brand new college can whomp up a whole set of them over- elegance -a-day -