: I. an r -~ 3 .‘ LAW“... Publish! ' " heat We..- “by 0‘ day momlng but”! I. led with In... ’ . Isms- homo as WM he 35s per week by curler. L“ a year h mail or rural routes and areas V m by carrier. you all lelend and U.K. 82000 90' All.” a ' 94. and eloewhele outside .ritish Cevw Not over 7: per single (Opy I , “tuber Audit Hrntaw ol Cl(lll.|l°fl. Visor. FRIDAY}— wail. 27.1013. A Puerile Challenge In challenging Prime Minister Dicfenb’aker to a debate "over 1' _ and television" on Liberal and t'on- "aervative policies, as he did here Eon ,Wedncsday evening. Mr. Pearson i "i must have known very well the “e viras talking through his hat. He had Toppertunities galore for debating policies with the Prime Minister, :“face to face," in the House of f‘ '11- 't). q mons. during the iong-drawmout ‘Iaaasiom recently prorogu‘ed; and in- ' ~decd. if there were any political is- -—.uu that didn't get a thorough air- ‘lng in debate at that time. the elec- Jtors are unaware of them. - Nothing else but politics seem- ed to be in the minds of members on both sides during the drug weeks of the session. 'i'hey"smriled it on every occasion. holding Willie business of the House, time and again, with their partisan bicker- ings. Many of .the leading memhcrs. including Mr. Pearson, took time out to make political meeches across the country as well, but that was their own affair. They could alug it out in Parliament as much as they liked; and they liked it so much. and kept at it so long. that the public got heartily sick of the whole performance. Mr. Diefenbaker has rightly dis- missed the Pearson challenge as a puerlle one. He was not intaos‘e‘d. he mid, “in providing TV audiences for others." Why should he be? Mr. Pm was leader of Her Majes- ty's Loyal Opposition in the House of Cmmons. and could speak there with greater mostige than he on- joys today. Today he still is ‘nsder of the Liberal Party; but there are other Oprmsitrlon parties, equally entitled. through their leaders, to “face to face" confrontation with the Prime Minister if he were fool- ish enough to concede the point and goon the air with them. We do not. think Mr. Diefen-baker Would be seriously afraid of such encounters. despite the example of the fate of Vice—President Richard Nixon in his televised debates with John Kennedy in the last US. presidential election campaign. We think. rather, that he has' regard for the dignity of his office. and for the fact that our mrliamentary system makes full provision for de- bate on the leadership level in the pmpcr place. Uneasy Interlude Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is seeing President Kermcdy at Washington this V” ‘k— md. The agenda oft’hetaalks has been widely forecast and discussed bythepressonbothaideaoftrhe Atlantic, the main item being the pmslbliities of a Berlin settlement. Not resumption of atmospheric nu- clear tests by the United States. which was already agreed to in the event of Russia's contained appris- ltion to a supervised teat-ha agree- ment. The new US. tests are al- ready under way. and Mr. Macmil- lan. penumably, has no intuition of asking President Kennedy to stop them. There are many purple who be- moratsz last year. to be a grave mistake. That they lhmdd happen honour to mm with Holy Week. .d that the pinpdd h mid—Pacific where they are bd- a-de should be nabbed Christian Had. r "it givech nation profusely Christ» III-II. dads-bu has I* the nasal-re sneer . see ' or illfwe must me by“ went Kennedy has othu' pr“ of nuclear armament to e- ffluent“ with Mr. Macmillan. Ole d fliem concerns Mace. Presi- dd h Gaulle has been seeking nu—\ clear weapons and nuclear data fm the United States. and is be- etlnifi more and more insistent on Wublngton’s response to the French requests has been negative so far} The United States probably would refer to give the French the lmoenbew than to sell them ready- made nuclear arms. This course would at least delay the date when F‘rancerwould become a full-fledged nuclear power. . If President de Gaulle would “behave better" toward NATO, per- haps Washington would see the way “to share nuclear information with him. But he shows no disposition, in return, to strengthen the NATO alliance. And the question arises, if the United States assists France independently in this manner, will it eventually be asked to assist West Germany as well? Policy for- mulation will become even more difficult when Peking explodes its l Communist nuclear powers, instead of one, to deal with. A Serious Problem The need for_a lZ-mile Canadian fishing limit is widely recognized. - Speaking on this subject at Morell on Wednesday, Hon. Mr. Pearson locallcd that Canada failed by one vote chcral years ago to gain in- ternational agreement. on this meas- ure. But if Iceland and Norway could move alone to fix the neces- sary limit. so could Canada: and a Linn] government, he pledged, would .do it. Mr. Pearson is an expert in in- tarnatiosnl affairs. and it may be that he has the right answer. We note, however, that at the Fishc'ies Council of Canada meeting now in m in Quebec Mr. H.L. Payne, a Vancouver commercial fishing ex! ccutivc, mintained that the only hope of controlling foreign vessels fishing in Canadian waters is by in- tar-national agreement. He believed a bilateral treaty with the United States should be negotiated at once, and that Canada should “strengthen by all means within her control the Internatimnl-Nm-th- Atlantic Convention.” Mr. Payne is in agreement with Mr. Pearson as to the seriousness of the situation. The invasion of foreign fishing fleets. he says, is an accomplished fact in both Atlantic and Pacific waters, and he cited numerous examples. It is to be hop- ed we shall bear shortly from our own Cabinet representative, Hon. J. Angus Machan. on this subject. It is his responsibility. as Fisheries Minister, to seek the best solution, and he should be losing no time in doing so. Low-Rental Housing New procedure for getting low- housing rental projects under way across Canada has been announced by the (‘entral Mortgage and Hous- ing Corporation. this will help to speed up construction of such pro- jects. but it is emphasized that the initiative will still depend on the will of the municipalities involved, as well as the wovinces. Thh. rath- er than any procedural difficulty, is cited as a major barrier to low- , rental housing projects in a num- ] her of municipalities. i Formu'ly, the province had to ‘ obtain federal approval before it could proceed to investigate a pro- ject. Now, as soon as a municipal request for low-rental Inn“ is received, the province will notify CMHt‘, and can proceed at. once to ‘ survey the need and examine M I aible sin. If the province noun- ! mends the project. it wlh still have i to receive CMHC amoval. After ‘ that. obstruction it expected to . proceed as quickly as possible. ' The federal will “still pay 75 percent of the coat, the provina 17% per cent. and the municwlty 7% par cent. The change h wooedure will accelerate mtmtlon one a mm ap- plies h a low-rental mv but nothifi'dsc is changed. A’Ibunici- palitv that resists the motion of lmtal or eubddind boiling wBl to have acne. ' first bomb. and there will be two and these he will Mot. .3 Av NEW EXPORT COMMODITY BRITISH COMMENTARY ' " ‘ 4 b - Communist Forms {In-Iro'uble Iy David Floyd United (legio- Idennatiea Service Communism and good farm- Ing do not go together. it seems. Wherever Communist govern- ments have taken over Agricul- ture and applied their own ideas of largucalc. state- dominated farming. the output of farm pro- duce has declined. Or. at best it has failed hopelessly to satisfy the demands placed on it by a population. ever increasing size. This is the only conclusion to be drawn from a survey of the farm output in Russia and Eastern Europe in 1961. Despite a steady decline in the size of peasant holdings in Russia in the latter half of the 19th century, the lnadcqua the agrarian reforms initiated In 1861 and the gradual impov- erishment of the peasantry. Rus- sia‘s grain output had doubled by the end of the century. It. cv of’ , ernment enact afford to deflect 4 the n resources for this from ' gramme:“" 0n the other hand the Soviet leaders bane the knowledge that 3 if they followed the Polish path of de—collectlviutlon and great- er freedom sharp increase in farm output. i But this would be a major poll- . tlcal retreat that the Soviet *leaders cannot contemplate at. ‘ this time. 'mere is no way wt. At the meeting of the Central ,Commlttce in March Mr. Khru- shchcv proposed a number or ecesnry industry and the arms pro- ~ for the peasants.} there would be immediately a ‘ the These measures are his an- t l The State is going to try he learns and to crease material incentives for the fanncrs. It will also set up a new network of production or- ganisers and inspectors respon- sible for getting the best out of collective eye 3 swer to a problem which has lbafflcd Oonurmisu every- where for ever so years. They do not appear either sufficient- ' ' ly original or sufficiently weep- . ing to meet the situation. Meeting Al Ottawa By Alan Harvey ; ‘ Canadian Press Staff reached about 65 million tons ' with the pwulatioa at about 100 millions. .. For the last four years th e gross grain harvest in the So- viet Union has only once ex- ceeded 140 million tons and m 1959 dropped to 125 million tons. Meanwhile the population of the U.S.S.R. is now no millions and is increasing at the rate of nearly four million people a year. in other words. the output ‘ m of grain per head of the popula. tion is still at roughly the same level as at the beginning of the ; century. when the Russian coun- tryside was in a state of per- manent crisis And this in spite of Mr. Khrushchev's emergency policy of bringing hundreds of millions of acres of unused and neglected land under the ploutlh in Kazakhstan and Western Si- beria ‘ -------------------- "mine beep- ONLY BRIGHT SPOT The only bricht spot to the whole picture of Communist farming is to be found" in P0: land. The moss “Mi (1 Polish agriculture last year was eight per cent higher than in 1960. This was almost double the rate of increase provided for in the State plan. in the principal cereal grains. in lfll. Polish agriculture re- corded the highest yields In its history. Other crops showed si- ovcr I . ‘Ibc propo agricultural pro- duce in Poland‘s total cxpods rose to over 21 per cent 2 n ml The one major difference be- tween Poland's farms and the areblelead.'l'becell ac- pare-t.“ late farms for y lfperceat. Itisdmcult—tosay the It will be “salesmanship at ‘ the summit" when Prime Min- kstcrg Milan and Dieteti- baker meet in Ottawa Monday. Tuvo leading ministers. Dun- can Sandys and Edward Heath. have already made pilgrimaR-‘s i to present the British case or: ‘ Eu NPO- _ Macmillan is likely to find , her a reluctant cus- I torner’. though perhaps more ac- , commodallng than a few months ago. -’ Putting things plainly, British ministers are still a little miffed , about Canada‘s attimde toward } United Kingdom membership in the European Economic Com- munity. The Whitehall view. conveyed to this reporter by a man in touch with ministrrlal opinion, is that official Ottawa - ‘Lblflly negative" on I011! HAVE REASONS source for complaint. The Canadian government has legitimately wanted about what may happen to Canadian trade when Britain becomes a card- carrylng member of the Euro- club. 0n Britain's side. it is gelling to take the painful decision lbout negotiating for entry into the European Common Market and then to be rcproached, in next ‘ Perhaps both countries have . an election coming up and is , Writer newspaper reports and else- where. will break!“ in the Cormonweallh. Perhaps the most powerful iEuropean bloc is that Britain must be strong it it is going to hold the Commonwealth to- gether. and that it can't be su'ong without Europe. . CLUB CHANGING In .thls view. joining Europe is seen as an act of loyalty. a more realistic move than any standpet policy based on sickly- about an ’ association when basic ls dran- sins feet. Those who visualize Canada. Austrth and New Zealand suf- fering financial hardship when the Channel are re- minded that such countries are t getting rich relatively faster the the u doped coun- tries of Asia and Africa. crucial battlegrounds of the East-West economic war on any longterm view. With Britain's rate of eco- ,nomic growth at a standstill while Europe leaps ahead. the is arising in which West Germany has more moo” than Britain to lavish upon needy n as . Such factors convince informal opiniu that Britta-tn- : Europe is necessary and indeed inevitable. For the first time in history men have navigated boats up the Colorado River between the Grand Canyon‘s awesome walls. In tau, Major John Wesley well run the Canyon down- ‘rcam despite the loss of as all In tbebsttle of Shiloh. flee than, many have fouowed In his wake. including tourists yarn no one rowed, towed. or drove a boat upstream against b river’s powerful currents rapids 'ulicved the feet. describes the in m Rational Geographic Magazine. industrialist-tn- llamilton. Jon's ea Inflatable rafts. But for 91 . Up The Colorado Nelle-ll Goon-sate Society .waylston'malor rapids and ihundredsefle-ereaee ,endcburalu um op lpeeltleato m :mfleel that unfilled this bmedwlblnthhll.Wal¢la - «Rhodium-mil William when. Jr..s mom-i Itoftbealne-mntcamwblcb; i is E! l" .. if ti 3 a: if at. i shatter lob laboratory in mating . ly rate was reduced from so to 5.7 per cent. Even a four day exposure to reduced the fertlllty rate from 70 to 7.l per cent - ' . ‘ Nd. had an adverse effect a pregnancy. Only one pregn occurred when the reforms to meet the situation. .I . [o l scrape up a little more financial “ aid for t in. j questions a: medical topics . then re 1e presum- clca (with 18 offapringl a an equal umber of rats living in quiet surroudings. The reason rats behave what is man important. is whe- tbertbere is a correlation be- tween rat and man in the reac- tion to noise. so far as concerns fertility. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer if stamped, self-addressed enve- lope accorwaules request. FUNGAI. INFECTION H. L. writes: Can a person‘ ' have histoplasmonis for a num- ber of years and not know it? , “PL I Yes. Leeiuu in the lungs solo: dom cause symptoms. 3. kg . cold. infections beginning in the mouth. throat, vocal cords. and mleedtoulccrsloanden- i 1mm oi the iym (lands. '1 at. h _‘ Ill. ‘ 'l .. i . I f ' r. "5.. . »‘ -.,« y. ‘ - .11" he. 1: . an I '80 exposed to} noise made. such as improving cream grad- , sumptlon effect on digression: fre- .e m m mm-mmasaeo (All 11.1.7) Yesterday afternoon undy- fivc butter makers. cheese Junkers and creamery was. era. met at the callofDalry W. L production of dairy prducts were dieeuucd,and ions grading and lag of butter for mac coa- be asked to come lute A badminton players will go to Summerside Friday to meet a Summerside teem at St. Paul'i ‘Hall. in a friendly genre. The v teams are well matched some play should be quite exciting. TEN YEARS AGO (April 1’1. 1'!) One of the highlightsof enter?1 tainment at the Te'lchcrs Con- , vention held last W”? in the . in, Innis way is not known. But. l l Prince of Wales College Audi- torium. was Elie presentation of a play entitled "‘lbe Royal Touch", by the Tcacben' Train- ing class of P.W.C. under the direction of Miss Helen Yeo. lties included a solo by Miss Christine King. a former teacher, and “Square dancing for all" directed by Miss Flor- ine Evans. Brigadier W.W. Reid, DSO. ED, left for Sussex, NJ., and. Toronto. At Sussex be inspected the Royal Canadian Armored Corps School beinl conducted by the Princess Louise's tNB) cxcept- Bunsen. At Toronto II will It- tend the meeting of thc' indus- trial Accident Mention As- of the Boy Scouts Association in the first day :f'June. i number bf Charlottetown 1-- Iseek fouls face by snubbi as 1 each other. The criticism of the e l Government's action In Partly men ‘ comets and r. ~ own improved Premier Adonis has beca_ right in pressing for a. settle. men! with Kalanga. He has eli- minated two other would ; be secessionist: backed Antoine Gixenu. who is under dctentioupand ban onji, self-styled "king" of sentenced to'ftvc' South year-3‘ . Prendent’ 'l's- bornbe of’llatenge is the last rc- , mining obstacle to reunifica- lien, and he is loling support. ’ But his demand for a new fed- ; oral instead of a centralth con- ; atltulion does have merit. Premier Adonis would do well l i l the provlcial governments. this constitution is drafted wisc~ ly, it will deprive Mr. 'l‘shombe . of ,any further excuse for resis- l'tance while at the some time preserving the integrity and the unity of the Congo. mo“ mover Some-strains of help, or see- ateag Atlantic and cm. (and Err-cine coasts may be an rut lnlenatb. n FOR 20 YEARS TH! FAVOURITE OF CANADIAN! IVIIYWHIII. 'lbc ceusative agent is a fungus. l Ottawa. REPAIRS CRACKS tilllCK-As Comer'To You The Way m Like it— Powder Or Paste l {U THAT! HOLMAN'S OF P. E. 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