. all“ @uucdimt Coven Prince Edward Island Like The Dow W. I. Hancox. Publisher Barton. Lewis Frank Walker Executive Editor Editor Published every week day moming (except Sun ay and statutory holidays) at lo5 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.l., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside. Montague. Alberr ton and Souris. RGPFESPH'ed nationally by Iho:r.son Newspaper: Advertising Services Toronto, 425 University Ave- Empiro 3.8894; Montreal University 6-5942; Western Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press The Canadian Press .5 exclusively entitled to the use for reoub lication all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news pcb'ished here in All “95' or republication ol special dispatches here- in also reserved. Subsrnnnon rates: Not over 40: per week by carrier. $l2.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier- 51500 a year off Island and UK. 32000 per year In U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealt . Not over 7: single copy. Member Aud.’ Bureau “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest in " PAGE? SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5. 1964. A Dead End Regardless of whether Mr. Pear- son—as one Conservative member complained in the House of Com- mons—is “a petulant and perverse Santa Claus” who would rob many Canadians of their cherished Red Ensign before Christmas, it is evident now that debate on the sub- ject has reached a dead end and that there is no point in prolonging it. The fact that the Government drew support from all four Oppos- ition parties Thursday night in de- feating, by 129 to 55 votes, 2. Con- servative motion in this connection is proof of the fact. The same member who made the comment above quoted said, in the same address, that he expects the Commons will approve the new flag and defeat the amendment for a plebiscite. before Christmas, be- cause the Prime Minister has “a pathetic obsession" to bring this about. Another member of his party said that when they voiced their sincere \‘iews, members on the gov— ernment side had closed their minds on the subject. He could have added that other Opposition groups, and some Con- servatives as well, have shown by their votes that they accept the situation and have closed their minds against prolonging a fruitless and bitter controversy. It is as sure as anything can be in politics that the single red maple leaf design on a white background with a red panel on each side, as recommended 10 to 4 by the Commons inter-party committee, will be approved. The alternative, in view of Mr. Pear- son’s commitments on the subject, would mean another election. That is not wanted at this time, and the sooner Mr. Diefenbaker and his fol- lowers realize this the better. They have made their protests. They have staged one of the most protracted blockades in parliament- ary history. When the electors do come to vote they will be in no danger of forgetting it. What more can the dissenters hope to achieve? Fantastic Journey Launched a week ago today from Cape Kennedy, the latest American spacecraft, Mariner 4, is speeding on its 134,000,000-mile journey to Mars. If all goes well—a big if— by July 14 next it will be within 8,000 miles of the earth’s nearest planetary neighbor. It will take three weeks after that to accom- plish its most spectacular mission —-that of transmitting back to earth 22 TV black-and-white pictures. Throughout its journey half way around the sun, Mariner 4 must beam back a stream of other scientific data as well. It hopes to measure solar plasma boiling up from the sun’s atmosphere. It. is supposed to plumb interplanetary radiation and cosmic rays. It will try to determine if Mars possesses a magnetic field and what it is like, and it is scheduled to measure dust-particle momentum and dis- tribution from Earth to Mars. Immediately following its pic- ture-taking flyby on the evening of July 14, it is supposed to bend slightly behind the planet for one further experiment: To see what happens to radio signals passing through the, Martian atmosphere. Mariner V4 is, the second United States attempt tor-shoot for Mars within a month. The first, Mariner 8, was lotihohed November 3. but failed to fatal!!! proper trajectory. things that could of Circulation. this latest space- iCofllpoeeduitlsof \ V n subsystems and 188.000 open- tional parts, it was a major achieve- ment to get it into the air at all. If it follows its preplanned course, it will give man a 10 times better look at Mars than ever be- fore. The planet Comes close enough to earth to show features that hint at some form of life. Yet it remains just too far away for scientists to know with certainty whether or not something is really living there. Mariner 4 is not expected to settle this question, but it could fore- shadow the more extensive explora- tions that will lead to this achieve- ment. It could, on the other hand, veer off course and disappear into the great unknown. One part of its chore is to “lock on" to the star Canopus in order to stabilize itself and thus be fit to receive orders and send back data to earth. Already, after hitching on to some wrong stars first, it succeeded in doing this: but it is again. reportedly, “temporarily out of control.” And it has yet to prove its en- durance. No planetary probe ever launched has functioned for more than 3.5 months in space. Mariner 4 must function for eight months, and across tremendous distances. No doubt the. uncertainty is part of the thrill which scientists get in making these fantastic ef- forts to expand man’s knowledge. Mr. Wilson's Mission British Prime Minister Harold Wilson flies to ll'ashington tomor- row, chiefly for discussion on the proposed Atlantic nuclear force. Recently he attacked the American plan for an allied fleet of nuclear- armed surface ships in a public statement, which was somewhat softened by subsequent British dip- lomatic assurances. But both the Tories and Laborites in Britain are opposed to the American policy, and it is said that Mr. Wilson hopes to persuade President Johnson at least to defer any firm decision on the matter until next spring. The British government. leader is also believed to have a counter plan to propose. for a permanent American-European cabinet to shape nuclear-making policy for the free world. The cabinet, as the British see it, would consist of representa- tives of West Germany, Britain, Italy, Holland and some other At- lantic alliance nations with France, if President de Gaulle or his suc- cessor cared to join. It would have the right to con- sult, and be consulted by the U.S. President or his delegates in all emergencies inside and outside the NATO area. The American execu- tive chief thus would have every chance to hear the views of his al- lies up to the moment, if it ever came, when he Would have to de— cide whether to press the nuclear trigger. Emphasis is placed in London on the fact that the Prime Minister does not intend to make any hard and fast propositions. Certainly he will be under no personal illusions about the ability of Britain to “go it alone" at this stage in its affairs. Britain has just got out of its sterling crisis by allowing the Bank of England to appeal to the central reserve banks of the other trading countries of the Western alliance. Had Washington chosen to be less than friendly and considerate. the pound sterling would have been de- valued by now. And as one Ameri- can commentator rather crudly puts it, Mr. Wilson will be ex— pected to express his thanks in tangible form. Whether this will cover his attitude toward other issues remains to be seen. EDITORIAL NOTES As noted yesterday it, was plan- ned, as a protective measure, to shield Pope Paul from sights of poverty in Bombay. But at his own insistence he has visited slum areas of the city, comforting the destitute and ill. II! t * Electronic Computers in 1946 were a science fiction writer’s dream. In 1950 they were in oper- ation, though a large room was needed to store them. This year they can be made small enough to fit a suitcase. In 1974, it is pre- dicted by an English scientist, they will fit into a pocket. He predicts also that they will be used as in- terpreting machines; so that one can talk English into one of them and an instantaneous translation in, say, Chinese, will come out of the other end. "I WON’T PULL UNLESS YOU DO” Faults NAVAL PROBLEMS Facing Another Manpower Crisis No organization can hope to survive and maintain efficiency if its ranks are being steadily1 drained of personnel. Hamilton Spectator The Royal Canadian Navy has l a desperate need for personnel faced one recruiting crisis after “ in the air branch; at the time of another for yea-rs. Immediately ‘: after World War 11 there was Floiling The Beans Ottawa On a sunny. brisk - wind Sat- urday it was certain to happen After a hearty breakfast tamp- ed down with a p i e c e off apple pie or a few of mother's crisp gingersnaps. Father would say. “Wouldn't this be a g o o d day to flail the beans?" Half a century ago farmers. were proud of the strains that had been passed down in th is family. Many of them had imag- inative names: Red Valentine, C o a c h Dog, Jacob‘s Cattle, Pink Eye. Hidasta Red. Ground Bird. and Molasses Face The barn floor was swept: the big bulky stacks were to rn apart and the leathery, brittle vines and were spread. Then one went to work with the flail. The swingel. the short sec- tion that hit the beans, was atta- chcd by the toggle to the stall or Journal handle, It seems a sinple device but many a lad has given him- self a smart thump on the hen until he has learned the techni- que of bringing the swingel down flat. At each blow. dry 5 popped high in the air, After the first going - over. the layer was fluffed up with a pitch- fork and the process repeated. Eventually the beans were flail- ed. Then the beans and debris were poured from one fin to another while the wind whisked away dirt and extraneous mai- eria'l. A lie 1' the red kidneys, Yellow Eyes and Soldier beans were put in the Wooden buckets : to be stored under the elf 1n the buttery, Father always said, "I guess we have our Saturday suppers and Sunday breakfasts for another year." Comes The Night New York Day ends, dusk comes a n d darkness and night, and th e world belongs to the stars an the nocturnal creatures of this earth. Man. a iurnal being equipped with daylight eyes, is essentially a stranger here. He sees. but dimly, and without ar- tificial light the colorful world he knows has become the un- familiar other side of the day all grays and blacks and whites. Now the owl possesses tha. darkness. and the bat and tlk whippoorwill. Now the fox, the cat. the mouse and all th nighttime prowlers are abroad, making the world their own. We hear them, and sometimes we see them. ut we cannot reallv enter their world. We are crea- (I Times Night is not hostile, but It is enduringly mysterious The owl flies on silent wings, hoots eer- ily. The fox is a quiet shadow and a sharp, hoarse bark. The. mouse is a scurry in the grass. The bat is a fluttery presence nothing more; and the whippoor' will. though we know it is a bird. is primarily an echoing re iteration of that of a hoarse crow or an arrogant jay, Yet all of them are a part of the night. as true a part as the stars and the moon and the rustle of rest- less leaves. We look and listen, trying to understand. We can accept, but that is as far as we can go; for this is a strange world, a gray mysterious world, and we are tures of daylight and color. Even their voices are strange creatures 0‘ the day and "-5 to our day-tuned ears. bright dimensions. I I Who 5 To Blame? Montreal Gazette landscape What is the difference between "grilled" steak and "broiled" steak? None, really; it all de- pends where you are. An American would call it ‘hroiled' steak, an Englishman ‘grilled'. This was one of the ex- amples of differences between British and American Engl l s it given in a discussion between Professor Albert arc wardt of Princeton University and Professor Randolph Quirk of London University in the series 'A n Manguage’, produced jointly by the BBC and the Voice of America. Professor Marckwa'rdt a n Professor Quirk divided the dif- ferences in vocabulary into four classes: the real things, for example, the plants mals; words for different ways of doing things (such as grilling or broiling); terms referring to different social and political in- stitutions. and names of new in- ven bus. I In the.class of real things ‘, Professor Marckwardt pointed out that the flora and fauna of England and the United States were by no means the same and the early settlers had ha to supply names for unfamiliar species of plants and animals I‘ n .a. l SPREAD CHRISTIAN WORD LONDON (APl—A round—the- clock reading of the New Testa- ment began in some Anglican churches Wednesday as part of a campaign to spread Christian literature throughout the world. both and leaders of various ohm-nit damn-tinn- and features of the At times they ade up e w words such as ‘mockingbird', ‘rattlesnake‘ and ‘egg plant' Occasionally they used a famil- iar name for something differ- ent. In the United States, for example, the name robin is ap- plied to a rather large bird, 3 type of thrush; whereas in Bri- lain it is a small red - breasted one. A good many words were borrowed from the American In- dian language, for example, 'hi- ckory'. a kind of tree, ‘squash'. a vegetable. and ‘moccasin'. The French settlers contributed such words as 'carlbou' and ‘pralrie'. and the Spanish 'canyon’ and 'bronco' to the American variety of English. v-e the United Nations action in Ko— rea there was a need for exper- ienced officers. A few years ago there was a crisis in the seaman branch all the recruits wanted to be technicians. Once again the RCN is facing a crisis in the technical branch- es. This one is so serious the navy has placed six ships in what a spokesman called a "re- tired" state in order to release technical personnel for instruc- tional duties ashore and man- ning new construction ships‘. The removal of six ships from an active status is serious but not so serious as some reports are hinting. The ships affected are old workhorses from World War II and. with age, their aux- iliary equipment (radar, sonar. gyro-compass, firing circuits), become more difficult to main- am. NOT INOPERABLE Though these six are part of the RCN‘s commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion, they are not being placed in a state that will make them inoperable. The maintenance party aboard could have them at sea, as effective units, in very short time... It is to be hoped the RCN will grasp the nettle now and make firm and continuing plans that will bring technical recruits into the service and, more important, tgep them when they are train- The booming Canadian econ- omy continually provides jobs for highly trained people and the technical training in the na- vy is excellent. Higher wages and a life ashore has attracted personnel from the navy ranks. It is up to the RCN to make ser- vice in the navy equally as at- tractive as a life ashore. It must realize it is in direct competi- tion with industry. LIVING CONDITIONS Defence Minister Paul l-Iellver spoke in the House of better liv- ing conditions afloat and rota- tion of crews is sensible but it is difficult to imagine how living conditions could be much b er without the ships being convert- ed to luxury liners. he navy discovered some time ago that the adventure of being a sailor no longer appeal- ed to young men. T on it em- phasized the career approach; security. pensions an educa- tional possibilities. It seems this hasn't worked either. No doubt a contributing factor to the RCN‘s nersnnne‘ omb‘cms among the ranlns are derogatory statements attributed to senior officers about the organizalon of the navy. Each of the senior officers had an axe to grind and the 1men in the ranks should real- no t. The RCN must come up with a solution to its manpower pro- blems. If the country wants a navy it must support the solu- lion without reservation. Food Myth lntoleronces By Dr. Theodore B. Van Dellen Food dislikes are common ex- cept among those with a cast iron stomach. Many of these preferences are based on child- hood experiences and folklore but some lntolernnces have a physical basis: various sympt- oms of indigestion occur after eat' certain foods. The victim of cellac disease for example, develops distress after consum- ing any product containing glut- en. Some persons are allergic to milk or eggs. Aside from problems of this e subject of f o o d not well under- oston physicians, P Koch intolerances ls stood. Tw ." Dr. James . Robert M. Donaldson, carried out a survey on 655 hospitalized patients in an attempt to deter- mine the effects of food on the digestive tract. In the series, 390 had gastrointestinal disease, 120 had digestive symptoms but no demonstrable disorder, and 145 had neither symptoms nor disease of the intestine. Cabbage. baked beans, fried and spicy dishes, onions. orange juice, coffee, nuts, milk headed the list of food intoleran- ces. No particular pattern could be found. Patients with or with- out peptic ulcer or gall bladder disease often complained of the same foods. Some documented gallstones did not mention distress from fried or fatty foods. Nor did specific foods give a characteristic pattern. Some at- tributed diarrhea to milk or baked beans; others asserted these products were constipat- ing. The New England medico; concluded the symptoms were characteristic of the patient, ra- ther than of the f th t it virtually ls impossible to in- rpret meaningfully the asso- ciation between certain foods and gastrointestinal symptoms foods continue despite all the educational ma- terial published by newspapers. magazines, books, and various groups interested in nutrition. Some people insist that w hite eggs are more nutritious than brown. that wine makes blood, that oysters and raw eggs in- crease sexual potency, that a hot meal is more nutritous than a cold one, and that hot bread and biscuits should be coole before eating. These beliefs are fallacious. Frozen fruits and vegetables are prepared shortly after picking yet some housewives in- sist that fresh produce is better for the health. They do not real- ize that urban dwellers seldom get fruits and vegetables less than a week old. Modern myth. ology is agrowing on food addit- ives and everything new th at comes along These prophets of doom do much harm. 3‘ HOT SO E. S. writes: Does burning of the soles in an elderly man mean anemia? LES REPLY This is a possibility. Most like- ly causes include neuritis, much blood (polycythemia), di- latation of the blood vessels, or a Vitamin defic1ency. HEREDITY AND HEADACHE Mrs. L. S. writes: Are head- aches inherited? REPL Migraine headaches often run in families. BROKEN HEART Mrs. E. E. writes: Is there anything in medical history about dying of a‘ broken heart? REPLY Yes, indirectly. from marked Dial 4-6507 83‘/3% MORTGAGES On new or improved city homes Or for Ito-financing 7% on standard two thirds loans on first. class ecurity -slightly higher on others. come in and talk over your requirements with HYNDMAN & CO. LIMITED "ORNAGI AND INSURANCI 330“ 570mm. depression leading to gross neg- lect of health, or to suicide. TRY LAZINESS C A. writes: Is there any- thing a thin person can do— be- sides eating more — to gain REPLY Be calm and less active. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT—- Don’t take medicine prescrlb— ed for others. E”""""’”A "McCuIIoch" h CHAIN SAW g It’s Here The New \ \ h i g i s l $129.00 Keith Carmichael 25 Buckley Pt. Rd. 4-6423 Sherwood IIIIIL— " l :2endyoodrman’s B e s I : NOTES BY THE WAY Small boys are washable though most of them shrink from it. Waterloo Currier. A Kingston bachelor lost $11.- 000 — his life savings - when a burglar found his cache in a baking powder tln hidden inside an antique radio, while the own- er was out for a drive. T h is could be called the badtelor'l second loss. The first was the interest on the money he could have obtained at the bank. -- Fort William Times - Journal. Professor Daniel Canon. n University .of Toronot psychia- trist, says that a $100,000 com- puter could clear up the flag is- sue in seven days, It would me- thodically and without emotion sort out the views of every Ca- nadian and settle the flag ques- tion‘s harsh (after shuffling up to one billion places of informa- tion) in a neat and tidy man- ner. — Prince George Citizen. Africans “Out of thing new. The quotation came fro Alex Qualson - Salkey, the big, volatile Ghanian diplomat, shortly after he took his place earlier this week as the first man from black Africa to serve as president of the United Na- tions General Assembly. He attributed the Latin quo- tation, "ex Africa camper all- uid novi," to the Roman Sen- eca. thereby bringing a quick reaction from classiclsts who said it came from Pliny the Elder, quoting Aristotle. In any event, delegates watch- ing Quaison-Sackey sweep down the aisle in his fantastically col- ored robes must have mused Af- riza is indeed full of Surprises. The Ghanaian himself is a man of surprises, combining as he does something of the 0x- ford-trained lawyer and some- thing of pure African dynamism that borders on explosiveness. PRESIDES OVER ADMISSION There w an inescapable symbolism in the fact he pre- sided over admission of the two latest arrivals from frien— Zambia and Malawi. Quaison - Sackey said the UN was witnessing the "renaissance of the African personality." UN veterans must have paused to think of the surge of African influence within the organiza- ti Africa, always some- n. Zambia and Malawi brought African membership to 36. Five years ago only nine of them ere in the UN. Ten years ago there were only four—Egypt, Ethiopia, South Africa and Li- beria. To many, it seemed signifi- cant Afrlca was having its day at a time when the remnants of African savagery and African hatred for white intervention were being demonstrated in The Co ngo. That tragedy was reflected at the UN by implacable African rejection of the Belgian-Ameri- can operation to rescue white hostages held by the Congolese rebels in Stanleyville. BROUGHT IN WHITES The rejection seemed to re sult partly from the bitterness of most of the continent against Premier Moise Tshombe, con- sidered a traitor because he hired whites to fight Africans. Partly also it was a widely hel feeling among Afiricant Illinullln SAIL NOW! to Europe... at bargain fares (during Thrift Season) Save up to 25% on your round trip! Enjoy the relaxation of sea travel: Invigorating sea air—wonderful meals; S-p-a-c-e t-o m-o-v-e a-r-o-u-n-d; 275 lbs free baggage allowance. He was In a rebellion: mood, tbs seven - year - old lad. As he looked out of the window, sco'. - ling, he said: "I don't like that of snow. You Won't let me go out in it and I wouldn't want to it if you did. You can't make snowballs with it. And it's so skinny you can’t roll in it. it's just thin stuff that blows every which way." — Toronto Te 1 e- gram. It was a beautiful evening and Ole who had screwed up courage to take Lena for a ride. was carried away by the magic of the night. “Lena,” he asked. “le you marry me?" "Ye's, Ole," she answered soft. ly_ Ole lapsed into a slle :1 cc that at last became painful to his fiancee "Ole," she said des- perately. "why don’t you s something?" “Ay tank." replied, "they b ane too much said already." —- Montreal Star. And The UN. y Col-man Cumming Canadian Press staff Writer the operation was designed not so much to rescue whites as to provide the extra punch needed to dislodge the “so-called reb- els” from Stanleyville. And partly it seemed a justl- flable resentment that the out- side world should be so con- cerned over the safety of a few whites when the slaughter of Africans had been so long lg- n ored. In the corridors, at receptions and in public statements Afrlu cans were making the point re- peatedly Africa must settle its own problems: the day of the “european” role in Africa. af- fairs is over. White listenens would have had to be singularly unpercep- tive not to notice the hardening tone of the argument. In the assembly, the Ameri- can delegate had hardly fin- ished congratulating Z a m b i a and Malawi ' “dispel any notion of the peace ful transition to independence" of the two countries. In both. he said. “blood had to 1);; shed to water the tree of . rt ,. 1 . The statement had an omin- ous tone. recalling an earlier comment by Britain's Lord Car- adon that he was “seized with a great depression" over The Con 0 events and the realization “all the problems of Africa are thereby complicated." BIIIIIIS CLEANER NO SMOKE, lo 000"! HEATING OIL Phone 4-7311 CHARLOTTETOWN Petroleum Products I, the adoring wife of George Washington Buttcrficld, the 26%- President of the U. S., can reveal the inside story of our 30 cataclysmic days (and nights) in the White House FROM HALIFAX OR NEW YORK to Ireland, England, France, Holland, Germany (March 4—April 4,.1909).” first £¢llfilllyl In urn-censored memoir as told by Martha Dinwiddfc Bauer/told b PATRICK DENNIS ( author of Auntie Mom and Little Me ), with 172 incredibly undid photographs by Cris Alenndoc $8.75, at year booksellers A MclEOD BOOK. . See your Travel Agent! ' - 71-73 can win. as. nan.