remain. This points to a significant | shortcoming in the Alliance for Pro- | gress: It-takes this form: _ There isa genuine economic . Diabetic | Treatment Che Guardian | * Covers Prince Edward islend Like the Die W. J. Hancox Publisher NOTES BY THE “WAY “What is your sew: brother's Wellece Werd frank Woke “emergency throughout much of the ~ Little J ‘IT dos had it “ . enc} tm | By Dr. Theadore R. Van Delies aemer 2 Wet tone ae Publahed every weet dey morning excect sr Americas today. Their sugar. coffee. tama wes Gonatered fm. | = a ao = 19 Whee a°fnan and woman mar. ry they become one, and the holidays) et 165 Prince Street. oa PEL and cocoa are selling for much less | by Thomson Newspapers itd than 4 livable cost of production. The Brench offices at Summerside. Montague Alberton ’ j j ee t and. Sours. . United States. it is argued, is vigor- - | er research unnecessary. Leok- Mrs. Jones: “This is certain- trouble —_ when they try to i Represented nationsily by Thomson Newspapers ~ . A . ing back, we know the treat-| ¥ a elegant_ apartment ¥ decide which one Canadian i Advertising Services ‘Toronto 425 Universt) Ave ously contributing—with mistaken ment most diabetics received | have. 1 suppose they ask a oe Empire 28894 Montes! 440 Cathcart Street Une __ spond _will__to this destructive situa- ‘during the next three decades | for the rent.” Mrs. Smythe wernity 65942 Western, Office 1030 West George 4 4 ee te was far from satisfactory. Liv. ~¥eS. indeed. Why last month, Wedding guests are being ask- Street Vancouver MA 7037 ton. American policy % to reduce | es were saved but the majority ‘they asked my husband seven ed to throw birdseed instead of Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Pubishers overproduction of these commodities lived jong enough to suffer from mes.” — Montreal Star confetti at church weddings in Seem one Se Conaten Pron We Commies’ | and adjust supply te demand by re- the ations of premature ae iprendiy) — “This ts Eneland. This is a labor-saving Press tusvel? led to the use ‘of repub : ‘ is exclusivel¥ entitled to se Research is paying rich divi. ™Y som. Freddic. Mrs. Higgins. idea, since the birds will clean fication of all news dispatches = ‘hs caper ducing prices. 4 he a bright little fellow? muss ront of the credited to it of to the Associated Press or Eeuters * : nt : E dends im this field. Oral anti- + a (== - = : Bo ee ne ae This is the classic manoeuver. ‘accustomed to being church instead of the janitor. end sho to the io pills have been a boon to those with mild diabetes. Shown off ‘What right or republication of -scecial dscetches here =. But it forces countries through the : in public) ag eg a ge eae Sabine : i meses. ? : : ppro- pre ay ake a painful wringer of deflation. And | Several tt — was that clever hg at pnt priate gesture for lovebirds. — $12.00 » yhar by mal on rural routes and wees ~—=s the fragile living standards of these © additiona! information about. St2F- : Fort William Times-Journal. er sorecet by acter ~ poor countries cannot oes it. the chemica! Structure of insu- : $15.90 f§ Island and UK. $2000 pes i ‘ yeer r i eo See! outsrde British Com Nor would the weal U nited eve - gre oe Sa Li | A ° t d a | : States take it Farm su ies with- | acts im the body. Several forms vv incoin ssassinate : over Cc wrote conv : idk: “aise Gcaca ol Cucdsnee in the United States aré on the = ve ee and ” St, Themas Times-Journal PAGE 4 TUESDAY, MAY 11. 19. effort'to deal with farm surpluses _| carbohydrates. This eae A long-forgotien letier..re-dis- The letter is “in perfect com : i ys : i will improve our covered only a few days-.aga in _dition--not even yellow Mrs. _ A th e 2 ti . while hojding prices up, instead of- | and treatment of the disease. Cape Elizabeth, Maine. gives a Holt states. Gardinér. eye-wit- nomer onvocaiion ving m deliberately down. The i know th tersely factual account of an ness to the shooting. wrote to = I mame Ga ot have j eye-witness of ee assassination his wife, right after the tragedy. | diabetes — they doveien “As the papers state, J. Wilwes ~ Booth shot the President. and~ jumped from the foot of the pri- vate box upon the stage holding a large boa | Bowie”) knife about object is both humanitarian and to prevent part of the economy from collapsing. Yet the US. helps to force the opposite solution. greatly ‘What was later to become St-_ Dunstan's College, and still later St. Dunstan's University, was known in its early veaf’s as.the Catholic Colle- 7 the condition is detected during years aco at For a's Theatre rit a routine urine or blocd test. 14, 1855. Lincoln born "S68 These individuals are ahead of hay 7 | symptoms are noted. Through | Tesearch we know that diabetes can be uncovered sooner than this. Blood tests are done dem- | Onstrating abnormal glu cose i di its fi i harmful to poor countries. on the ga years se this menth @ foot in lencth. As be landed on grate School. and it held Hs first pub- | more ; foe a hod lis dat ae ben | The eye-witness story of the the stage he looked back to the lie Closing on July 15.1856. The re- |} the rest of the Americans who-de- . s tragedy was contained in a tet- private box and his own knife ter written by Samuel Gardiner of Geneseo. N.Y. Gardiner had @ part in the public illumination of the Capitol Dome earlier the | might of the assassination and raised and said. “Virginia is avenged,” and left the stage at its rear. mounting a horse and_ escaped, “The report is now, one-half pend on commodity prices to live. So goes the Latin-American argu- ment. It is being advanced, not in t port of that event is contained in Hazard’s Gazette of July 28 of that year. The average age of the students. it seems. was not more than 12 or 13 __ bitterness. but by friends of the Unit- sumer) reacts. They have us| Co io gas ree oon or pene port n ‘ mp ord past one o'clock, that he is ar- vedars. and the writer expressed sur- -ed States who take a constructive at- = Soe ae aoa | Theatre. where the Lincolns rested God grant that it is so. cote = j - i i = were a Presentation Such a scene I never hope to be- prise at the progress made in so _ titude toward its present painful em | the disorder 10 times more fre- ef “Our American Cousin, fad noes hr tater = — daughter. Miss Ada Gar- tears, some fainting. . short.a.time in the field of classical _ broilment with Communists of great- er or lesser number. as the case mav “It was some 20 minutes be- lived in a house at Cape : studies. He noted that the public ex- There” is” a posssbility “that “@e+ a e pion ident . amination—the custom: of those davs _ be. in Santo Domingo. They warn’ e——> ~ WHO'S CAUGHT WHOM? ~ ay can vs. recognized Sa by Mr. ro leben ae ee a —showed marked proficiency in Vir- | that there are countries like Colombia eee : on seen baggie ous 3 a She passed on in 1962. house was full. We remained un- gil and Caesar's Commentaries, as and Gautemala and others that could ‘OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson sues removed frem the hidaey | ogc” Saget teehee Sernish: . Ee oa weil ax dfeat facility ti Freuc easily follow the same path. Marines ~~ Se <== fpr. eg years ago.” Mrs. Holi explain The letier. with its report that Since that time there have been | could soon be al! over. but to what ~_ There’s At Least Stability At Washington —_| irs “Seme ondiatetics aso | Gaus’ "wane? “yi Of ld Boot had been arrested, seems great changes indeed in the educat- = v -_ begged changes and time About three months aco. I after the, shoctiig. Actually ional field. and great changes at St. - A fresh ‘look at the alliance It is u Po oe con- , been mise ener Sas not | ga a pri Prvndea taped pnt thought we should = through Booth, in flight was not over- ee : eo : - =e : stitution of nit States, | Social Credit r jom- tively a — ou ensuing years. them. That's when’! found the tak nd shot till: some days a Dunstan's in improved facilities, in. economic policy is being earnestly re- Sag" [a that our parliamen- pson led six of his followers to of 254 MPs who might have vot- __ Detecting the hidden letter tucked away in @ besk ~ eae : — expansion of the teaching staff and number of students. in the broaden-. ing of the curriculum_and_in the in-— creasingly high standards of pro- | ficiency. This progress has been _ particularly noticeable in recent vears. with the erection of new build- ings and the establishment of new quested. And it would seem, on this basis. that it is overdue. ~ “Space Score Tallied Soviet and American secrecy hamper the count: cal of the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Council has pieced However. an offi- to- courses of an advanced nature. But gether an approximate space score the emphasis still is on what used to be. known as the humanities—that branch of education which it is peculi- arly the function of a university to cherish. and which transforms the acquisition of mere knowledge into something much more potent and energizing. That great educationist. the late from public sources. He concludes that. as of April 20, the United States had made 295 laun- _ ches (military and civilian) of which 274 were successful. “372 Satellites and Spate probes of whigh 96 failed to orbit or escape the These lofted The Soviets attempted more than Alfred North Whitehead. maintained 95 launches. of which 93 were suc- : that a university which failed in this respect had no reason for existence. Its task. he said. is to weld together . imagination and experience. and it is through humane studies that the imagination is strengthened by dis- “cipline*and preserved in great meas-"~ ,: _ tre throughout life. St. Dunstan's nigh “Wras stood for this kind of education -&*throughout the years, and it accounts * in large part, we believe, for the high reputation it enjoys at home and abroad. Today's convogation marks an- other milestone in the history of this venerable institution. The service it performs may be gathered from the fact that it had.an enrollment this year of 565 full-time students. 67 of whom will receive bachelor degrees in the fields of art, science. education and commerce. Honored also on this occasion will be Dr. C. B. MacKay. President of the University of New many. z a Brunswick, Dr. H. Blanchard. and: sis Sab dclaoaiie This gives very little indication of what they're really aiming to do. Justice M. R. McGuigan. who will be’ recipients of LL.D. degrees in token of the esteem and respect in which they are held by the university and ' the community at large. A Tragic Xeqtience Fascism and hunger bring revolt. They sent up 108 probes and satellites. More than a dozen failed to orbit_or escape to deep space. There have been no known failures of Soviet. manned. satellites despite continuing rumors of lost cosmonauts. Now U.S. engineers are girding to fire. on June. 10, the biggest space booster ‘yet. ; ster that will hurl American military manned space stations aloft. generat- | ing a mighty 3.28 million pounds of | thrust. The most powerful rocket | fired so far is the 1.5 million pound thrust Saturn 1. ‘ What the Soviets are planking is anybody's guess. On Sunday they launched what is described as 3.254- pound electronic instrument package called Lunik V at the moon. as part of their celebration of the 20th an- » Miversary of the defeat of Nazi. Ger- It is Titan 30. a mon- It was fitted with measuring View From Moscow For Canadians growing bored with bilin special value in the view from Mos- ] bickering there may be “F tary system of democratic gov- _ ernment: is superior. That in general is a point of view which vote in support of the govern- _ ment. He showed his continuing determination, now held under ~most-of—us-very_properiy_hold._ But how lucky the citizens of U.S.A. are in one respect:. they | elect their whole machinery of legislation and government at — fixed intervals, and then know that, for better or for worse, it must get on, with its job for four years In contrast with that stability on Washington's Capitol Hill, our Parliament Hill is now like an ominously ‘rumbling volcano. We know that the Prime Min- | ister holds the immense weapon | of dissolution. We know that. the defeat of the government on any major vote involving confidence will cause him to exercise that .. power, but he might also exer- cise it without a prior defeat if he deems ‘such a course justifi- | able. Our only safeguard againsl opportunistic and irresponsible | use of that immense power is the sanction of the ballot box: the electors can express their _ disapproval of his action when they a DAILY SENSE OF CRISIS Today. as we sit perched as a nation ‘on the slippery slope of Parliament's hléatio, “we know that it may erupt at any mom- ent One such occasion very near- ly occured during the final vote | on the Budget last week. It seemed probable that all the op- position parties would’ vote against the minority Liberal government. ably defeat it. The issue*was be- clouded by the suspicion that the Liberals sought just that ‘fate. and enough of them mizht absent themselves to ensure the defeat of their party. It was doubly beclouded by the similar Suspicion that. for the opposite | reason. many Conservative MPs might absent themselves from the vote Hence in that vote. as on pre- vious occasions in this new third session of our 26th parliament, there was massive absenteeism when the vote was counted. Part ’ of this was because some MPs are away through sickness: some ministers were away on Zovernmment business. notably Judy LaMarsh in Switzerland and Pau! Martin*in England: and some Conservatives. despite orders by their leadership. had “paired with such absentees. But what of the others? The Liberal government was sustained by the narrow margin | “ment should get on with the na- tion's business rather than in- | dulge in partisan jockeying for \_electoral_advantage. ‘There have been four serious votes of confidence in this short ‘session; also two votes not in- | volving confidence: and one in which Conservative and Social Credit parties split to create a mishmash vote not seriously threatening the government. The total vote on the four im- | portant occasions, on T.hrone ed. . _The Caouettists have. the best record of 8 per cent attendance those votes: the Liberals— who might be expected to show at full strength if they wish to avoid defeat—only 80 per cent: _the Socreds 78 per cent: the Tor- ies—- presumably fighting for their political future— a -mere 74 per cent: and the New Demo- crats a shameful 67. Allowing for the excuses, the attendance at these major votes should show a better attendance record by $18,000 a year em- ployees. Pied Piper Makes Comeback National Geographic Society ~ The Pied Piper is back in busi- | j néss at the town hall in Hamelin, Germany. . . Twice a day a. figure of the Piper, half life-size, marches onto a platform below the face of the new town clock. He's fol- lowed first by a procession of rats, then by children. The new cloek is a reproduction of one destroyed in World War II. ~ The. Hamelin.,timepi is one of several modern versions of | the elaborate performing clocks , that were installed in towers and turrets during the Middle Ages. . A busy burgher glancing up for the’ time might see knights jousting or the Apostles filing by. For 600 years, knights at aed 3 janis: _ Wells Cathedral in Somerset. England, have done battle every hour on the hour. LADY GODIVA RIDES A new clock at Coventry, Eng- land, has Lady Godiva repeat- ing her famous ride as Peeping , Tom peers from a window. When | the clock was installed on Broad- gate House a few years ago some townpeople thought {it was a flippant representation of Cov- entry’s most renowned incident. Also, guests at a nearby hotel | complained of the loud chimes. | The clock was silenced between ‘ll p.m. and 7 a.m., but Lady Godiva still rides and Tom | peeps during the dark hours. The performing clock. on Stockholm’s town hall was er- ected only 45 years ago. As bells play, St. George appears on a balcony. Behind him, on a horse, is the princess he has rescued. His page comes into sight, drag- ging the slain dragen. A tipsy | porter“ opens the city gate for , then closes it to of odds and ends contributed by villagers, the clock includes part of a threshing machine, a baby carriage, and a broom handle. Surprisingly, some of the most famous os the great tower clocks are relatively modern. The works of- the Westminster Abbey clock date from 1860, though the ‘dial is 17th century. The instrument, a Ting- Tang Quarter Turret clock. was de- signed by a man with a name Dickens would have loved. Tho mas Buggins of Clerkenwell. CHINESE TOWER CLOCK The prototype of tower clocks | was built around A.D. 1090 in China by the scholar Su Sung, National Geographic reported in a News Service article. His 30- foot tower had a five-tiered pa- goda on the front. Small figures appeared from pagoda door- ways to ring bells, clang gongs, beat drums, and hold tablets to | announce the arrival of hours. | quarter hours, and watches of the night. Spheres indicated the - motion of earth and heavenly bodies. The complicated works | were powered by a giant water wheel that used half a ton of | water every nine hours. Tower clocks that were deve- loped later in Europe used en- ergy from a descending weight to move their hands and effigies. _ By_the middle of, the 17th cen- tury, huge clocks were consid- ‘ered musts for cathedrals, chur- | ches, monasteries, castles. and town halls. Many are still in ex- cellent working order. In Berne, Switzerland. a pro- cession of bears— symbol of the city-parades every oe Some carry spears and and one struts with a aon * sensitive test is of requires cooperation. The most little value unless people are willing to have it dofie. This applies main- | ly to blood relatives or progeny of diabetics, the obese, and ev- eryone over age 40 MARSHMALLOW HEART C. J. writes: I cry very easily over anything ‘sentimental, ona TV or otherwise. Hence my ex- | ‘ perience with tears. | thought tears always are salty. I discov- ered mine are as tasteless as clear water. Is there a reason for this? I am 67 and in very g0o0d health REPLY I suspect the tears are still salty but your taste is mot so acute POST-NASAL DRIP S. J. writes: I have’ trouble with material dripping from the nose into the back of the throat. What would cause this condi- tion? -REPLY _ Unless the secretion is exces- sive, this condition may be con- sidered norma!” ENDOMETRICAL TUMOR M.S. writes: Is an endome- trial tumor a malignancy? REPLY The endometrium is the mu- cous membrane that lines the inside of the uterus. Most tu- mors that -originate from these cells are malignant. The endo- metria!l polyp also is a tumor. Some of these are malignant, | others are not Don't Come In Trios Chatham News We see by the Bews that a . has been Canadian citizenship The map is quoted as saying that he stayed in Canada. and less bigotry and less racial Prejudice im this third North American Indian The thing that intricues us about this story is neither the legality nor the morality ‘of it, but the simple arithmetic. How can any human pedigree be summarized in thirds” is The normal quota of parents is two: of grandparents, four: of great - grandparents, eicht If you keep on following back the | broadening lines of the pedigree to the generation that had 128 great- great- great- creat-creat- . Grandparents, you still don't come to a number that is divis- ible by three In the process of trying to im- | could be arranged to produce a ce naradentharnietidomeii hypothesis. Perhaps this newly- naturaliz- ed Canadian had an Indian great- creat- grandfather who married twice. each time to an Indian woman, had a son by one wife, and a daughter by the other If we suppose then that a full-blood Indian, while the full- blood Indian daughter married a full-biood Indian. while the full-bicod Indian son. married a Negro women. and that in the next gentration. cousins married each other. our newly- natural- ized Canadian could have had one parent who had only seven Rreat- grandparents, instead of eight. He would himself. therefore, have 15 great- great- grandpar- ents instead of 16. and it would be possible for five of them to have been white. five Negro and | five Indian It is for the geneticisis to ar- gue whether the genes of the In- dian great- great- grandfather would cance! each other by their double effect on the heritage, of would reinforce each other. Perhaps the truth is that our newly-acquired fellow Canadian just isn't very sharp at arith- t FACIAL RASH R_R writes. Can angina pec- toris cause a Severe rash on the face? REPLY No. Chest pain is the main symptom of this disease TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Healthy persons should exer- cise reculari¢. (NOTE: All correspondence “te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed {o: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen. co Chicage Trib- une, Chicago, Mlineis.) Our Yesterdays (From: The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (May 11. 1940) The stalwart Dutch early to day announced their forces were progress in wiping out swarms of Nazis who parachuted to stra- INTERRUPTION NOTICE There will be an interruption of electric power from York to Covehead on Thursday, May 13th, | weather permitting, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon, Daylight Saving Time. This interruption is necessary to enable crews to make line alterations to this distribution line. MARITIME ELECTRIC Lp dee metic. - ! ae cow, as revealed in an interview of of 111 votes to 100, with no, less | my org Revolt attracts Communists. Com- oe his head. r ; : ‘3 ait hei ‘ and French troops munists. bring: marines. This. com- Bn 4 ened cca tua oo ee A town ‘— eo by a post- The Apostles CS ip Pree r . a . , mm Canadian journalist. ar : _ man in a ire village Czechoslovakia, iit . I Washington. President | ments a Washington correspondent The Government would have commemorates. Queen ‘Victorié. | was moderniaed several . years ian i can So heat Lynch. Amasasp Aroutunian, form- er Soviet ambassador to Canada. | The Queen's name and diamond ago with a powerful electric 45. that modern conquerors | jubilee date—1897—are spelled | motor to drive the 12 Apostles 6: to dominate “every -mile | out on the face. Put together out.!/on their hourly appearance. of the earth's surface’ and that | of the Christian Science Monitor. was the tragic sequence in the Dominican : Republic. rooted in the regime of points out that there are 15 official dictator Rafael Trujillo. which lasted | @nguages in the USSR. Harmony is from 1930 to 1961. How often will it | ™aintained because everyone recog- PUBLIC FORUM Plugging'A Loophole be repeated elsewhere? When this aes Wet be called 0 “Come Se aa ane oe i = aan isis: j into how many other | *sue—in this case, of course, Rus- eet Wilfred Kelley, Summerside, | Crisis iS over. ’ sian wecessary, The Gupyrdisn ts enable f =n various and usually salub- .dise many extremely wealthy was elected vice. president for | countries will President Johnson be : enter inte any corrrespendence regeté rinus parts of the world, there Canadians have placed much of 56) at the Mariti tempted to send his troops? Another language is becoming “= "=~ = | Sieecanc tis me ane Sater ef ete ar feito com The question. says this writer. is | common among the Soviet people. IT COST A MILLION! tan, we property tax and Ge | lores tox Funds going 12th annual ae at Brid- 4 death duties to confuse the opu- | lent. The Bahamas in the British West: Indies is such an example. Its capital city, Nassau, houses | offices of many of the world's | most Sir — Your editorial note in Friday's issue of The Guardian was certainly to the point. What in the name of common sense was wrong with Trans- 4. “Citiada Airlines? What better is Air Canada’? It ¢ertainly “‘air-" ed a wilful waste of the peo- being quietly and persistently asked Mr. Lynch reports. It is English, by non-Communist Latin-American used by visiting Africans and Asians leaders behind the scenes at Wash- and 4 growing number of Russians. ington. While the, Organization of , _ “We appear to be the only nation American States discusses what is © ih the world.” Mr. Lynch concludes; constitutional rule in Santo Domingo “where the English language is on and who ill hold power. these men ' the defensive.” For Canaiia is sup- firs Montv.™ine™_ ich’ sorted’? paetty enalified tax experts are | Clyla,tuture the tyeooms may say that no’man could rule the coun- ‘posed to be seeking “not a common use. It could ee oe net the Bahamas and elsewhere but cont a Sas Ga = ity ' it / whereby visiting ty- have European a trv today. It is unemployment and tte aoe equality of two c= ptaragy ~ pony! capper. seues Soneapenale themselves oon ae dan Gone ee rate , mon Market countries is falling d chaotic economy that hold ages." We have even set up a multi- — Who wanted the change? Did so that they may enjay to the | om their tapennes. off sharply, except in West Ger- power. : million dollar commission to tell us he rie of Canada. wie ful he benef i tee | "Unernncy bar os Mae | Marat Td ToS ‘ . : want it. or was it a ene in this sy 5 = 8 Once the seekers for dictatorship ae aan ; a hes ae ce ‘ie Came? Tee posers | eure ad wane, ot sn aon wai. and’ the tax cannet be Soul aummastte Gomund \a Gert Dominion Building, Char! 892-2434 . s m a vate ' yeetye riding, ariott a « > of right or left are. put in their place, ‘ analyze our parliamentarians in the ; aks decadd Soae'te med that 1 ke 8 uagally: 0 Pan bop eee but it oe | o ma ro ottetown the economic migéries that spawn Process. wilful waste brings woeful want. estates of non-residents. 0 We | oc does Gib ae nok tole and total order books are below it’s i them. and that tend especially to de- “A peculiar people’” they must oe Wi)" JOHNSTON ‘Seale aa me eee | eb of the wrercich are Being export ereere aie caw a. n your best interest ] Strev democratic governments, will i be Sa) Ing of us in other lands. i Montague, PEL | Into this British colomalr para- | smoked out. i higher. : ements ee el a : / } ¥ ‘i an “e 7 4 ?