g -r “tiny-r 1 misc @itardtan Covers Prince Edward island Like The new W. J. Hanson. 'Ublllh.‘ lotion Lewis Frank Walker . iii-coma Ediioo Editor Published every weal: day morning (anapt Son- days and "mommy holidays) ai res Prince Street. Charlottetown. I‘.E.l., by [Morton Newspapers lid Branch offices at Sunnnarsida. Montague. Alber- Icn and Souri. Rapiesenied nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advariialng Services Toronto. 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal. 640' Call-Lari Stieef. UNiversity 66942; Western oltica. |030 West Georgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). M nber Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and Ihe Canadian Press. [he Canadian . and also to the local news published hart In All rights on republic alien ol special dispatch.“ herein also reserved. Subscription raiasi Not over 35¢ per week by carrier. Sll.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier $14.00 a year ott Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Biiiisli Com- monwaallh. Not over 7: per single copy. Member l’JWIII bureau of Circulation. 356i: ll raunsofiifinnnuaav 2V1»g is. For Ditierent Reasons Two recent resignations from the Diefenbaker cabinet go to support the old maxim that it never rains but it pours. From Prime Minister's standpoint, they couldn’t have Come at a worse time. But it is evident that State Secretary Halpenny, who has suffered two heart seizures in the last 13 months and whom the strain of the last parliamentary ses- sion has left exhausted, had good reason for withdrawing—for the present at least—both from his ministerial responsibilities and from public life. And in Finance Minister Fleming's case, there is no reason to doubt that he is stepping down, as he says, for purely personal rea- sons. His was a different kind of resignation from that which promp- ed Messrs. Harkness. Sevigny and Hees to quit on the nuclear weapons issue. ‘ All during the tense political crisis of the past few weeks, Mr. Fleming had remained staunchly loyal to the Prime Minister. The Ottawa Journal notes, however, that through an error—compounded by the urgent rush to catch news- paper deadlines and the presence of two Flemfm)ings in the cabinet, the Justice Minister had been listed among the six or seven ministers who met in Mr. Hees’s House of Commons office the day the gov- ernment fell to discuss ways and means of avoiding defeat. It was reported-«and never sub— stantially denied—that one of the “ways and means" was at least an exploration of the possibility of trading the Prime Minister's head for the. 30 vital Social Credit votes. Mr. Fleming was incensed that he had been listed with the cabinet “rebels”, and went to some pains to have it thoroughly understood that: he had taken no part in the “palace revolution" at any stage. So much for that. But it is too much to expect the opponents of the government not to make the most of the exodus of two more members a: this critical time. In any case the ship of state has been running into a lot of foul weather of late, and every one who leaves his post now, for whatever reason, adds to the chances of it coming to grief. By the same token, of course. it would boost the captain’s reputation tre- mendously with the shipowners if he were to make port safely under such disadvantages. Emphasis On Research Progress on the technological front is by no means confined to .I 3 space research and nuclear wea- "i pons. According to an American correspondent, dairy farmers are ; making long strides in cutting the ‘ cost of milk production through the adoption of new technology, better breeding techniques, and improved feeding. But only farmers with capital are able to take advantage of these improvements and small dairy- men are selling out. The trend seems to be to herds of 40 or 50 cows. The livestock people are not pessimistic in any case. They are looking forward to a reasonably prof- itable year ahead, and investing big money in research on feeding a d breeding problems. The US. National Livestock and Meat Board lees a $1,000,000 annual fund for a t o—cents-a-head voluntary contri- lglition on cattle from producers fibers they sell and packers when they buy. With this extensive pro- it is believed that the pro- ,“ the industry i assured. "‘ packing industry looks for was" as w . "I: .flr‘mm‘mh mt. i increased profits in the period ahead. It is counting more than ever on research to reduce costs of production and increase the demand for its products. Manufacturers of equipment are counted on to develop labor-saving machines and they are producing them. The latest example: a fully automated hot dog machine. The operator places raw material V in one end and without touch of hands it comes‘out as finished wieners. A recent example of a new pro- duct calculated to increase sales is precooked bacon which can be served in three minutes frying time. Re.- search also is entering importantly into the feed business, which has carried on extensive studies of ani- mal nutrition which have revolu- tionized some branches of animal industry. This progress is expected to continue during the Sixties. 0f chief concern to the industry in the United States at present is the high price of gorernment-supported soy- beans, an important ingredient in many feeds, and the threat of the European Common Market tariffs on poultry. From plowed field and pasture to shelves and refrigerator cases of supermarkets, the flow of food is expected to continue unabated next year and in the decade ahead, with reasonable returns to those who produce the flow. In this sector of the economy. of course, there are al- ways qualifications to predictions about prices and profits; but a: least there is ground for encour- agement in the overall picture. Lost Opportunities In 1958 the Central Advisory Committee on Education in the At- lantic Provinces inaugurated an in- vestigation into the abilities and proficiencies of the students in grades 11 and 12 in each of the four Atlantic Provinces. In its latest re- port—the second to appear since 1958—the committee notes, as a matter of concern, the large pro- portion of able students who fail to proceed to higher education. These students—on paper at least—should have been fully competent to under- take further full-time education be- yond high school. The proportion varied from prov- ince to province. but in general the loss was about 50 per cent. In other Words, of the able students. only about half went on, or went im- mediately. to higher education. This is a similar proportion to that found-in the recent Atkinson study in Ontario. “It may he," says the commit- tee report. “that some. of these stud- ents found work Worthy of their abilities in areas not covered by the present investigation; it may be that some of them were only de- laying their entry ‘into higher education. None the less. it seems perfectly clear that there is consid- erable wastage of talent, wastage which a modern complex society can ill afford." The "reasons for this wastage are now under scrutiny. Investigat- ors armed with a questionnaire are engaged in interviewing some of those able students who did not go on, and it is expected that many more will be questioned in the spring of this year. The results should supply material for helpful analysis of the problem. As in other areas, it is likely that economic reasons will figure largely in the answers. But it is, indeed. a matter of import- ance to the country that this wast- age be prevented wherever possible. EDITORIAL NOTES Turkish police have found an ef- fective cure for those driving while drunk. The police take them out of their cars, drive them twenty miles into the country, and let them walk home. The discipline is more effec- tive than fines or jail sentences. 0 I As indicated in the news despai- ches, Prime _Minister Diefenbakor flies to London, England, tomorrow to be made a freeman of the British metropolis The event will take place at the historic Guildhall of London, in accnrdance with a custom that dates back many centuries. Mr. Diefenbakar is the seventh Prime Minister of Canada to be so honored, th e others being: Sir Wilfrid Laurier, in 1907; Sir Robert Bordon, in 1915; Arthur Meighen, in 1921; William Lyon Mackenzie King, in 1923; RB. Bennet, later Lord Bennet. in 1930 and Louis St. Lau- rent. in 1955. t .-n-umw»m~vv.n~p-mnyp a .u ---—.—: a w :u mm»... rw ~x “ othemmnerdwn ' .5; $1.32.}..- Northeast corner of Kent and Queen Streets. 1895 (Copied by Craswell Portrait Studio.) OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Conodo Locking In Cheese Varieties A rare and appebising aroma cheeses and would make a big- overwhelmed the universal city |ger hole in the. milk surplus pro- smell of petrol fumes as I walk- duced by Canada's dairy farm- ed down a narrow street in the heart of London on a recent visit ' to England. The aroma grew stronger and so did my compul- sive desire to eat until finally I came to the open door of a shop. Its huge glass window was fill- ed with cheese. big cheeses and little ones creamy cheese and ‘ nes, bright yellow wheels and little fellow: in their Baltimore I A recent book review In an .English periodical Is headed 3"Putting Philosophy to Work." ‘Never mind that the volume I dealt with bears lh e tiSlie - r ‘ “ ‘ Politics and o- llght red skin gaily labelled. ,Ph',‘f’s°phy- . ' French cheese boxes made of -c'ety and- 1m" “23“? shaved wood and cartons of in-. gays 0’ the “on” bum" v divlduany _ wrapped "p e g i t g j They are not content. It seems, Suisses." that political philosophy Ia alive. I counted nearly one hundred 1 They want also In resurrection of diifercnf varieties of cheese and SW?“ the-V “PHPWSFFIPIIVC Po" noted that they came from lineal Et‘eory' It ‘5 that cal" least fifteen different countries. I "on " Pumn? ,Phuomhy ‘0 of course France i'Work which. is interesting, rais- gnng the questions whenever was ' it b r. mere 24 different samples of Its not at "work" if not as a countless varieties' imachine then a powerful "HOW ('8" 0“? 30W") 3 c°"“‘ =yeast: when did It ever have to I try which produces more th e n . he "pm to work"? 200 different cheeses?” PreSi-l dent De Gaulle once asked. "How can one help the dalry Systematic speculation about 1 government and the state are as 3old as Plato and Aristotle and it farmers of a country w Me is hard to think of the field of 001." make! W“ "3149”?! 0’ . political doctrine in which their choose?" one might equally ask! work. like that of Hbes and Ibo“! Canada. Locke. has not been active since FARM LEADER WARNS I thought of that English cheese shop and its vlvld lesson when I read the remarks of H. H, Hannam In his presidential address to the Canadian Feder- ation of Agriculture. "For mllk producers" Mr. Hannam warn- ed “the task of placing the dairy industry on a sound and stable basis is still ahead of us." The iZ-cent per pound subsidy on butter paid In Canada to help the farmers was "it flood ‘ move" Mr. annam said. For this as for its success in sell- in,-z our wheat surplus abroad Canada's farmers should be and no doubt are truly grateful to t h e Conservative Government. But when Mr. Hannam went on to refer to the per capltn decline ; in Canadians‘ consumption of; all milk products and the need i ngAflAsicp’t" Sgflg Bi?“ to direct milk rom one pro-1 5 ° eves Dn' ’ ' n d _t k t ‘ th s "‘1 been awarded a $39.42? contract "L mar e 0 an" er ‘u ’y to build a 38-foot patrol vessel he must have thought of the . . ‘ . . . . for the fisheries department for great void in our national dict ; Great Slave Lake it was an_ caused by the shortcomincs o . nounced ondav ' The “name” cheese'makgrs' will have a moulded fibreglass Thai Londm} Cheese. “‘09 Pax' I hull and be equipped with mod- l0" and Whime‘d l" Jermy“ 1 cm navigational aids. It will be Street offered for sale Canadian stationed at Hay River in the “Black Diamond" and Canadian ' Northwest Terrifmlel “Cherry Hill" cheese — no olh- ‘ er. NoI even that magnificenti cheddar which Woodstock's MP. Wally Nesbltt plugs so untiring- iy and so effectively here. BIG MARKET WATTS Our import and export slat- ' of the manner in which :labors of their great philoso- phers helped them to shape. icuable debt to the birth of lscienliflc method through the 1midwifery of Bacon and Des. lcartes In the first half of th e Seventeenth Century. It is ged the course of human events. Without Hegel there might not have been Marx or some cism. Surely in America the ‘wrilinizs of John Dewey h a v9 touched nearly all children and ,iheir parents one way or anoth- r. ‘ they wrote. The Middle Ages 5 i can be understood only in terms . the t i Our own world owes an incal-i , commonplace that Rousseau and . i the French Encyclopedists chan- ’ even; say the awful interlude of fas-i vessel : ers. And that would meet the warning issued by Mr. Hannam .to the dairy Industry. Philosorshy At Work Evening Sun I Even those who have never ‘ read a page of philosophy or set ,foot close to Its "calm though ,obscure regions" concede its in- Ifluence as when they blame {Jean Jacques for the French Revolution or First World W r Philosophy has always been at work. often slowly an more frequently than not indirectly, but mightily. because it con- .slanfly plays the thought ,which breeds other thoughts and 'ncbions. As Camus says “it can {be used for anything" but it ,would go on working whether fused or not. i Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO February 21, 1938 Ernest Crossman, Bedeque I I l l i of his valuable horses a few days ago. The animal died through internal injuries receiv- ed when he fell on the ice while . crossing from SummerSide to 1 Bedeque. The Borden Yacht Club held 1 . its annual meeting at the Abeg- : welt Hotel, with Commodore A. P. Ceretti presiding. A Souvenir Chart designed by the Commo- dore was unanimously adopted for use In next season's races. TEN YEARS AGO February 21, 1953 A couple of working crews ‘: from the Island Telephone Com- ; peny took advantage of the fa- vourable weather to run some of the new underground cable stallatlons yesterday. E. C. meron. Plant Superintendent ex- ‘ as greatly pleased to see this phase of the I i i pressed himself work advancing so rapidly. l I Petty Officer J. J. Kelly of 5 th e U.S.S. Princeton aircraft carrier left by plane yesterday for his base in San Diego, Calif. from where he will be flown to this ship in Korean waters. it 3 will be P.0. Kelly’s third year in Korean waters. I Nietzche for th e I n . had the misfortune to lose one ' in- - 8. Diabetic: Should Prepare For War y Dr. More R. Van Dellea more plea-ant for _ wife by designing an electro-me- chanical unit for the remote con- tool of my declir in the room. It Is called the Sa- Iectascan and la coniroled by a micro-witch located near be r mouth. This woman had polio six years ago and is confined to a cabinet respirator because of severe paralysis. Now she can ring bells and turn on and off lights electric fan and heater. She has full con- trol of her eas, tape record- er. record player, television set. telephone and intercom system and has been able to write k u the tape recorder. The micro-witch Is connected to her mirror allowing her to see all about the room including the activities of her family and This type of equipment Is ex- pensive but lessens the frustra- tion of being alone and depen- dent upon others for every little thing. Watching an exciting football game gives the heart a work- out. Dr. Kenneth Rose of the Ne- braska University Medical School made electrocardio- grams of a spectator during the Missouri-Nebraska game. T he pulse increased from 75 to 145 beats per minute during pass interception. The American Diabetic Asso- ciation urges diabetics to keep a two month supply of Insulin or oral hypoglycemic tablets on hand at all times. They also should store enough canned foods dry cereals and powdered milk to permit them to follow their prescribed diet. Why? Many diabetics Would be trapped by their disease if a nuclear war occurred and they had no medication. Those requir- ing large amounts of Insulin might survive all the bullets and bombs but might not live 1 days without this extract. And this is not a small problem con- sidering there are 2 million dia- ibetics In this country. COLD HANDS M. T. writes: I am 15 years old and am always bothered with cold hands especially when I’m active or nervous. Why is this? REPLY The small blood vessels of the hands and feet are under control of the sympathetic ner- vous system. When these nerves are irritable the blood vessels iconstrict and the skin becomes , cold, The phenomenon seen ‘most frequently in the high- ;strung and in those with low , metabolism. STOMACH GROWLING . W._ wriaes: I frequently ;am embarrassed by my grumb- ling and growling stomach. What i can I. do about these noises? l i These sounds are more notice- E able when the stomach is empty and eating often helps. Mean- while pass off the sounds as a I joke or pay no attention because ,the persons nearest you may .think their stomachs are growl- mg. FOLK REMEDIES .l. W. writes: My husband Is ,‘always sick his stomach. ISOmeone advised him to fake a Imelure of iodine, honey and l vinegar once a day. What would ' you advise? REPLY A physician who will diagnose your husband's problem and pre- zscribe a modern remedy. , SHAPE OF RINGWORM i M. S. writes: Are all ring- :worms round? , REPLY 1 No —— nor are they worms .but fungi that produce lnfec- ‘tlons such as athlete's foot and ibarber’s Itch. Some of these le- sions present a circular appear- ance which may have suggest- ed the prefix "ring." Today's Health Hint—- When you rent a car specify ‘that It be equipped with seat i s. PLAN ROYAL VISIT l ATHENS (Reuters) The i King and Queen of Greece have I accepted an invitation from IBritain‘s Queen Elizabeth to , visit London July 9-12, it was unrealistic W NOTES BY THE" WAY; ladadeaperaiebythepaia dding ‘ of pain and saving burial expen- ses. —- Sudbury Star. The big-city newspapermaa stopped to visit with a Intend- up your circulation when every- one already knows what every- one else ls doing?" "They know what everyone's doing.” the edi- tor ed, “but they read the paper to see who's been caught at it." - Sunshine agazine. Mistreoted Sour notes from Bulgaria dur- bg the last week marred the oft-played Communist tune that all is harmony in racial rela- tions behind the Iron Curtain. T West‘s racial troubles have long been a favorite theme for the propaganda mills of the Communist world. Stories of race riots and discrimination have been disseminated by Communist news agencies in places calculated to do commu- n the most good. A principal target has been the emerging nations of Africa. Many of the new-nation stu- dents who are receiving higher education In Communist coun- tries went with a sympathetic attitude to w a r d communism above all convinc they would not find discrimination there because of race color or creed. Some found different. exodus of Negro students from Bulgaria has let the world know about discrimi- nation in that country and given the West a fortuitous but con- siderable ideological victory. STUDENTS QUIT Negro students from Ghana Ethiopia, Nigeria. Togo. Guinea and Somali—Soviet sources say they number 870—have almost all left Bulgaria or are in the y en P Canadian Pres Salesman: "Is your Mei home?" Boy (on steps): “Ye‘. air." Salesman lafte 3 times). "I thou r hooking street sitting on —Galt Reporter. Thou commentators who keep telling us what “every think- ing Canadian" must be thinking would give us a much clearer idea of public opinion If they could say what the unthinking Cana‘pians are thinking. _ or. tawa Journal. R O In Bulgo no rlichard I Staff Writer -called black monke s an .‘ gle e and they d 1"; before us." They also found llhat they were receiving a full quota ob a 'Communist indoctrination — major part of the studies set up for them. The students tried to form an all-African union so they could have organized represen. tation with which to protest various phases of their treat- ment. Arabs and other national student groups had been al- lowed to organize they said. But Bulgaria cracked down on ihe_Negroes banned their or- ganization and ordered its tseven leaders out of the coun- ry. COMPLAIN IN RUSSIA Negro students in the Soviet- Union also have reported griev- ances but Hungary and Poland apparently are providing better treatment. Reliable information was not available about stu- dents in Romania and Czecho- Slovakia. Western countries are re- ported ready to accept the students leaving Bulgaria and it is expected that many of them will join the thousands of Africans now stu- process of doln so. “We categorically d e c l a r e that there is more racial dis-i1 culmination against Negroes un- der communism than therel could be in a capitalist coun- try" one group said on reach- ing the . “ have been insulted in; every possible way—We werel The drug addict travels an, underworld treadmill — lo the: criminal supplier and back rig-I sin for the support of an unend- ing craving. Crime fattens on his need and hopelessness and| has a vested interest in keeping ‘ the treadmill going. ‘ ow can this vicious routine be stopped? By making it pos- sible for an addict to turn for help to legal sources rather than illegal ones. At one stroke the criminal peddler would thus be deprived of hls market. And what is even more im- portant, the addict would be able to resume "his member- ship in the human race." as Kenneth Orvis puts it in his book. The Damned and the Be- irayed. Th Telegram has been ad- vocating this kind of reform for years. and the. decision of the Ontario Liberal Party to support it is constructive. Many problems are involved In bringing a system of legal- izing drugs into being. but growing body of medical evi- dence shows it to be the practi- l and humanitarian method of attacking drug addiction with its concomitant crime. E n 3- land has proved it can be done. For some addicts. it may be ever to expect much in the way of permanent cure. But many. allowed to take regular doses of their drug by making It available to them at cost. under careful medical re- gulation and supervision, can be led to a normal life. Since such an approach would require an amendment to the Criminal Code as well as ad- ministration of health services it would have to be worked out Jointly between federal and pro- vincial governments. The first step is to see drug addiction as a disease that fee- lers ceaseless and hopelesst a BI ' announced Wednesday. [0/79 on growth fo’eas? istics tell this story. We bu millions of pounds of cheeses from European countries every year because Canadians sophis- ticated to cheese varieties de- Shart on capital ?. .. mand them. It Is understandable that the good clubs and restaur- ants here have a cheese wagon well stocked with French Brie and Camembert English Stilton Danish Blue and other Immi- grant cheeses. It is understandable that Can- adian cheese - fanciers will pay $2 per pound and more for their imported favourites. It Is less understandable why Canada Im- ports 2 million pounds of US. cheese In a year at around 70 cents per pound wholesale be« cause generally speaking that country produces the same lim- ited varieties as w Maybe Mr. Hannam has never compared the milling crowds at a certain European delicatessen in Ottawa paying high prices for imported cheeses with the groccterias selling Canadian made - over cheese packed In toothpaste tubes. The lesson there is obvious. If Canadian cheese-makers would themselves produce Canadian versions of the popular European varieties Ca- nadians would eat more cheese would import lela. costly halal . succession taxes. Amounts available are $25,000 and up. and terms generally range from a period of three to ten years. The RoyNat system of financing to avallable through RoyNat Ltd.. whose share- holders are: THE ROYAL BANK or CANADA. “Nous QANADIENNE NATIONALI. MONTREAL TRUST COMPANY. and THE CANADA TRUST COMPANY. Enquiries may be made turbugh'the Manager of any and of some 1,600 branches of these organlzetlbns. or directly through any of the District Offices of RoyNat Ltd. In Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. (District Offices will also be opened shortly In Half- fax. Winnipeg and Calgary). Ask for our booklet. describing RoyNat facilities In detail. Get In touch w/th RoyNat undergnound. Let's bring it into Enquire about the RoyNat system of financing. The function of the RoyNat system Is to provide term funds at reasonable rates and under reasonable conditions for virtually every type of Industrial development, including the purchase of land. buildings. equipment and other fixed assets: the purchase of another business; the launching of a new venture; for working capital purposes; and to refinance existing debt. The RoyNat system also aids in the freeing of funds to pay estate or I/ul Min alum/m Min. 020 Durham BM. W. Manuel 2. 0mm Mm. l m Si. IV. Team I. m m St. W 2. l) ; United States, France ng in Canada, Britain, the and West Germany. Foreign students In Western countries have had difficulties-— notably arising from housing discrimination—but they have had to resort to protest demonstrations and mass de- partures. Controlling Dope Toronto Telegram the open. Let‘s recognize that It exists. Once we do, we shall not only be able to reclaim human beings but reduce criminal ac- tivities that sap a community's strength. ' The FLYING llllTlillMIlIl RESTAURANT “Where Cooking Is A Work of Art” AAA- 49-00000» er? v [v v v " Sun Life Appointment, RENE CHAPU'I' Sun Life Assurance Canada none the appoint- Mianavger of the Moncbon Branch Mr. Chapui. joined the Sun we in 1956 and has served as Unit Supervisor in London, Ontario since 1958. M. Keith who has now returned to personal product . r- Cbaput and his family are living at 140 Chapman 8L. Monoton. . l l