' @119 @ttnrrlinn Bowers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox. Publisher Iurton Lewis Frank Walker Executive Editor Editor Puinshed every week day morning (euepl Sun- ‘Nys and statutory holidays) at 165 Prime Street. Charlottetown, P.E.l., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. lunch offices ef Summerside, Montague. Alber- Ion and Sauris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers ' loromo. 425 University Ave. IthOnlreai, 640 Caihcarl Street, Western office, ICC-0 Well rgla Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. ‘lhe Canadian I . and also to the local news published her. I In. All rights on republication of special dispatch" _ herein also reserved Subscription rates: Not over 35: per week by carrier. $11.00 a year by mail or rural routes and Areas not serviced by carrier. $l4.00 a year all Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside BIIIIIII Com- monwealth. Not over 7c oer single cepy. Member .’t‘(IH tsiirezu- of Circulation. PAGE 6 MONTE“) l-‘EBRL‘.AR}__I,_I_9_6_3_. Frankly Speaking Premier Lcsagc paid us a com- pliment in believing that here, where Confederation was cradled, he could speak frankly about the Concern which the French (‘ana- dians of (Quobcc entertain with re- gard to the place they occupy in our national setup. After all, the Confederation Fathers were equally outspoken when they arrived here. Their famous L'onfcrence of a cen- tury ago was no tea party. The speakers wcre‘ not at. all inhibited in voicing grievances; and it was only after letting their hair down in this manner that thcy got to- gether amicably—over the cham- pagne gl:.ts.<es——on their nation build- ing venttne. It is well for us all to take warn- ing from Mr. Les-age that (‘on- federation cannot be 2. complete success so long as French (‘anan dians do not have the feeling that they belong to Canada to the same ‘extent as their English speaking fellow citizens. Ilown here it is hard for us to realize the bitterness which this feeling has engendered, for we know of no such distinction as between our Acadian fellow citizens and those of other racial stock. The. rest of us have the same regard for them as we assume they have for us, and we get along fine. However, Quebec's problem is a dif- ferent one, and we appreciate the frankness with which Mr. Lesage dealt with the issue. Perhaps, in the same spirit. he will accept our reminder that. in a material sense, it was these Mari- time Provinces that sacrificed most in Confederation. We are doing our best to overcome the disadvantages of high tariffs. centralization of industries and other penalties that Confederation brought in its wake, and that have kept us less pros- perous than our neighbors in the big Central Provinces: but we, too, at times. could do with a little more sympathy and umlerstanding. Let's not get Iachrymose about it. how- ever. We‘re still hoping, like Mr. Lesage. for a better deal. In the. closing remarks at Sat— urday's ceremony in the Confedera- tion Chamber. Premier Shaw was at his genial best. He got an apprec- iative grin from the distinguished guest speaker when he suggested that instead of biculturalism we ” a h o u l d have “triculturalism” in "Canada, and make an earnest drive .fto reinstate the once prevalent "Gaelic language in these parts, at ‘well as French. He expressed, too, ._the hope that Canada would go on ‘ to a greater understanding not only ,‘of its own cultures. but of the cul- .‘_' tures of other nations of the world. Therein. we venture to say, lies fhour true destiny. Was Diei Lying? ._ There is now a strong hint that: ‘1 Parliament may be dissolved im- :,mediately, and that Prime Minister "Diefenbaker will go to the country w fore risking a non-confidence vote mon Tuesday on the nuclear arms 4; ssue and the allegations from :Washington which brought it to a “head last week. Today’s sitting, it :15 Believed, may tell the tale. 2',“ Meanwhile, it is worth noting Ethatvwhile the US. secretary of mm'haa apologized for the tone department’s criticism of . policy, he still maintains the facts given in this criti- ” m correct. If that be so they a her out of the Prime Min- . , " when he said that it would be - “because of strategic m. N or changes taking place In the think- int;r of the Western world,” to pro- ceed further with acquiring nuclear warheads for the NORAD defense system at this time. The Washington statement main- lains that there are no such reasons for Canada delaying a decision in this matter. since NORAD is design- ed adequately to defend the North American continent against air at- tack. But by an odd coincidence, another announcement has come from Washington, this time from the defense secretary. Mr. Mc- Namara, indicating that the Bom- arc missile squadrons in the NORAD system have “only limited useful- ness against manned bomber at- tack.” and that they were being con tinued in use for several years “largely because the United States Government has already paid for them.” “The Bomarc missiles,” Mr. Mc- Namara told a congressional armed service Committee, “suffers from essentially the same defects as the manned interceptor.” larlier he told the committee that the continental interceptor force is vulnerable “be- cause it has no ground protection against missile attacks.” But the US. Air Force has in- vested about $2,000 million in Bom- arc missiles. They are backed up by great L'.S. industries that feed on them. and supported by an end- less stream of propaganda from the Pentagon. As Major-General Macklin, a Canadian military authority, points out in a recent letter to The Globe and Mail. NORAD has never been able to provide a military defense of this continent within the accept- ed meaning of the Word. It. might have been thought that the civil defense exercise Toscin B held in November. 1961, would have pro- vided enough proof of NORAD's impotence. After that exercise it was announced that one raid on Canada could be assumed to have left 2.600.000 dead and one million injured. is this defense? Mr. Diefenbaker may well have had this in mind when he told Par- liament that NORAD was organized to protect. US. nuclear bases and not to defend Canadian cities. That. doubtless, was another reason why Washington, with incredible rude- ness. has castigated our government for not doing more to prop up the system by turning ourselves into a nuclear power at great expense, great loss of political influence in disarmament Councils. and a further surrender of our sovereignty. Won't Pay Up President de Gaulle has taken an intractable stand on other mat- tcrs beside those of Britain’s entry into the European Common Market. Once again he has refused to pay that part of France's United Na- lions dues caused by the Congo operation. The Congo fees in quest- ion are to be used to pay interest and a partial return of capital on the UN Congo bonds. This year these charges were included as an integral part of the regular UN dues assessment. In deducting the Congo costs from its total bill, France is expect- ed to open the door for the Soviet Union and other Communist mem- bers also to refuse payment once again. This would place the world body back in the financial jeopardy it escaped by marketing the Congo bonds. “At this stage of rudimentary international co-operation,” com- mbnts the Christian Science Mon- itor, “no one can realistically expect to see the will of a simple majority of nations prevail monetarin or mili- tarily against the firm policies of any powerful state. But should the precedent set by Paris and Moscow, for their different reasons, continue to erode the already minor dues- mllecting power of the UN, it may be necessary to consider at least partial penalties. Perhaps one such restriction would be withdrawal of a member’s right to sit or vote on any matters related to those on which it refuses to pay its assessed share.” It is not hard to imagine what de Gnulle's reaction would be to a proposal of this kind. He would take it as an unendurable insult to France, and be more implacable than ever in his assertion of the ab- solute supremacy of the nation state over alliances and international or- ganizations. r s a ,X/fl/ wm-t NUCLEAR TEETH LOOKS DIFFERENT FROM THIS END OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Achieved Success In Four Careers On the farmlands of Ontario and on Parliament Hill at Otta- wa. the appointment of Earl Rowe to be Lieutenant Governor of this province is equally popu- To progress from a boy rais- ed on a farm In Simcoe County. to being the Queen‘s personal representative at Queens Park in Toronto is a great achieve- ment. To have built four careers in one lifetime. and to have won success in each, creator achievement. Rowc himsclf would probably with modesty and gratitude rate as the greatest success of his life the fact that his careers ‘ overshadowed by unlimited all the ave bccn friendships way. "thn l was two ycars old. my father moved to Simcoe County and took up farming on the land which my son Bill now fa r m Mr. Rowe told me. Nearby is his own farm. and also the farm run by his young- cr son Lcnnox.‘ Bill's farm oncc. in Ontario‘s early days. chang- cd hands for a cow an axe and a jug of whisky. But the 1.000 Rowe acres today house the Rowolands stables with their 83 standard brc orscs an barns with large herds of s-horthorn cattle. ’l'hcir hugely increase value is an eloquent tribute to the husbandry of Earl Rowe and his sons. not to mention his fa- thcr. FOUR LIVES, FOUR WINS “So farming has been my ba- sic intrrest,” said the Lieuten- ant-Governor - elect. “But I have had a variety of other in- forests too: politics, industry and sport." As a politician, he has spent 44 yours in elected office at the various levels of government. He was first a councillor then recve of Gwillimbury Township; after that he sat in the Ontario legis- lature: later he was elected to . the Federal House of Commons and in 1935 was appointed to the Cabinet. He has won twelve cloc- tions in the constituency of Duf- ferin-Simcoe. representing that seat ever since it was created 38 years ago. Just before the war. there was a short break in his membership. when he was selected as leader of his party in the provincial field: he fought one campaign, lost. and return- cd to the House of Commons by means of an acclamatiou in the by-clection caused by his earlier resignation. The long representation of his home riding has made him the Dean of the he inherited from his son-idolaw, the late Arza Casselman who had represented Grenville-Dunn das, Ontario. for 37 years when he died in 1958. His widow Jean Rowe Casselman contested the » seat which she has now won in two elections, tlhus with her fa- ther forming the first father- daughtcr combination in our parliament. NEW PALACE LOOK As an industrialist, Mr. Rowe served for 16 years as president and managing director of a pa- per-making company. More fas- cinating to him have been his forty and odd years as a horse- e is the only Canadian who has driven his own Canad- ian-bred horse in the famous Hambletonian Stakes in U.S.A.; that horse. Van-Ridden. later be- came the greatest trotting-horse sire. in his driver's opinion. d Earl should know. for after starting at county fairs he graduated to driving at tracks all over ‘ _ cently at the big new tracks from Montreal to Saratoea. Night raclng has done more than anything for this sport, he told me. It used to be just sport plus expenses for the partlci- pants; now since the lights came it Is pleasure for the crowds: and sport plus business for the rec- ers. Old-time hustlngs orator. coun- ty fair racer, Ontario farm boy: this all adds up to a new look in protocol when Ontario has House. a position , 1'9- !of the development cost “ ly negotiating a difficult ques- lits new Queen‘s Representative next month. And Earl Rowe's many friends in farming, poll-t ‘ tics. industry and racing ——even - {those on the other side —— will §be wishing him happiness and success in his new and greatly honouring career. The Smallest Continent Milwaukee Journal When a boatload of British settlers. most of them convicts, 1 tamed by the 1 tom positive pressure breathing. ' This device oflcn ‘wcstern development and afflu- ence. But it is far from being it landed on the shores of N e w paradise. The world glut of South ‘Wales n Jan. 26, 1788. many foodstuffs has choked off. Australia was officially born. ’markels for Australian agricul- Australians commemorated the i 175th anniversary of that event :over the wee en Australia is the smallest con- tinent and the largest island. 'Its 11.000.000 pcople what has been described as an I almost classless society. Wealth. surprisingly evenly spread. Most people spea the sam ‘languagc, with little variation in accent or idiom, and have much the same tastes and cus- ‘foms. Nowhere else. exoept zoos, are there animals like the platypus— the furry curiosity with a duck's bill— or the kan- garoo or the koala (teddy bear). (D In a section of the world plag- ' ucd with population problems and \vidcsprcad poverty, Aus- tralia represents an outpost of havet int tural products. WIllCIl account for 70 per cent of the ‘country's ‘ itotal export earnings. In recent months, Australia 1 has been looking to the far east , for new markets. Japan a l- r 5 ready is one of the country's I I best trading partners. Com- I imunist China recently purchas-‘ ix ed most of the country‘s surplus I wheat. Trade with India Is in- lereasing. But. as British econ-i omist, Barbara Ward points out. the hope for further market . opportunities In Asia depends Iupon the “determination of the capital rich western nations (0‘ maintain and expand their flow t of capital aid to Asia and to widen the outlets they offer for ; trade." Safe In I l l Looking back at 1962 one may have the impression that It was a bad year for air crashes. Fig- urcs show that last year c o m« met-cial flying accidents killed 1.434 pcoplc —— some 200 more than in 1961. But the statistics also show that, because more air miles were flown, the rate of fatalities dropped to below one per one~ hundred- million passenger-mil- es for the first time since this kind of record has been kept. They also show that of all th e , people who died in air accidents I in 1962. only 780 were killed on lscheduled airline services. en one considers the num-I ‘ ber of schedule airline flights Winnipeg Free Press The Air Emphysema Is Increasing By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen FROM time to time we men- tion the fact that emphysema of the lungs Is on the rise. The number of victims in this coun- try has climbed to 10 million. There also has been an increase of more than 300 per cent in the reported deaths. The’ Social Se- curity administration bears out these statistics in that emphy- sema ls second only to hea disease as a cause of disability among workers in their fifth and sixth decades. The air spaces of those with emphysema are overlnflated. In addition. the flow of air through thc bronchi is partially obstruc- ted and the blood supply to the walls of each sac is not normal. This adds up to a handicapped lung because stagnant air ac- cumulates in the organs and the ensuing lack of o x y g e 11 causes shortness of breath. The obstruction ke e p 5 out fresh air and causes secretions to accumulate which in turn in- vile infection. This explains why the victim coughs so often and develops fresh colds. But even when oxygen ls available, the poor circulation through the lung tissues interferes with the absorption of oxygen and the release of carbon dioxide. The cause of this lung disease is not known except that air pollution. including smoking, plays a role. But the picture is not as dark as it appears he- :1 cause remedies are available, Dr. Theodore H. Noehren of Buffalo, N.Y., recently listed 23 different plans of treatment. The antibiotics are most use- ful in the control of Infections. They can be administered in tablets or via. injections of acr- osol pathways. Bronchodilators relax the air passageways to combat infection, cough, and the irritation from smoke and secretions. These are most ef- fective. The cxpcctorants, such as pottasium iodic, liquefy the secretions, making them easier to expel. Mechanical assistance is ob- ' use of intermit- Is combined with an aerosol bronchodilator. l I t t l t l NOTES BY THE WAY* The American Cancer So- ciety says the first puffs on a cigar-ct are the safest. But like most beginners. it's what they lead to that matters.— Hamilton Spectator. heople who say the younger generation is spolled should go out and see how m - bers of the school patrols stick to their posts when adults around them are scurrying to get in out of below-zero cold.— Ottawa Journal. Private enterprise has proved its adaptability in many ways, notably in switching from peace- time to wartime production and vice versa. Take a look, how ever, at B r a d f o r (1, England, where many Lancashire rug workers are unemployed be- cause of poor trade. One firm that makes luxury rugs found a way to maintain payrolls. It has taken advantage of the wig craze by perfecting a pile fabric suitable for wigs. The firm is working day and night to cope with ever-increasing orders. — Sudbury Star. a Taxes were a lot lower when Jumping over the moon was the exclusive prerogative of cows_ _ Chatham In bureaucratic Jargon, . simple little word like "delay" can c me out "a regressior timewlse." “Program” refer; to “any assignment or cannot be completed by one phone call." For these gems we are indebted to Senator Young (Dem., Ohio). The senator Is gathering material for an unol. ficial dictionary of “Washing. ton gobbledygook." It should be a best seller. —Mllwaukee Journal. Swearing. we are fold In a British despatch. will not be permitted In a new tunnel under the Thames River. running from Dartford to Purfleet. some 20 miles east of London. la a tun- nel sacrosanct, that blasphemy must not sully It? Or perhaps It’s merely that a quiet oath to let off steam during a traffic tie-up would be magnlfled by the confined space into a bloody roar.-— Toronto Star. Two Feet In 300 Years National Geographic Society The Japanese .3 c h ie v e the epitome of miniaturization In the subtle art of bonsai. A bonsai is a dwarfed tree so perfectly controlled that 'it may grow just two feet in 300 years. Some bonsal are supposedly 500 years old. Though bonsai are raised In shallow earthen pots, they are not merely potted plants. The best bonsai artfully evoke land- scapes. A tree hardly two feet ,as much as $7,000. When a prize ,dwarfed tree was stolen from Ithe Brooklyn Botanic Garden, lbonsai lovers knew their trees had arrived. ‘ The Japanese, who have de- Iveloped thinking small into a fine art. began drawfing trees about 800 years ago. In a fam- ;ous No play, a hospitable sam- I urai burns his favorite bonsai to ‘ warm 8 guest on a cold night. 3 The guest turns out to be 3 sho- 1 tall, for example. could suggest ggun. travelling Incognito. Happy ( I t a gnarled grove of pines seen on a distant windswept cliff. Cultivation of the Lilliputian trees, the Japanese believe, de- vclops patience and so at h e s taut nerves. A bonsai often re- quires 50 years of daily waterg ing. trimming. and pruning to reach perfection. TREES COSTS $7,000 Bonsai are becoming popular Other ventilation aids are avatl- ‘ in the United States Gardeners able to help expand the chest and eliminate stagnant air. Breathing exercises are useful. In some instances an abdomin- al support is helpful. Using the lungs also is of value, even though it in e a n a carrying k around a portable oxygen tan . Many victlms respond warm. dry climate. the avoid- ance of irritation, particularly from tobacco. the control of al-> lergies. developing cquanimity. and learning to live with the di- seasc. STL’NTED GROWTH F. M. writes: Do the genes have anything to do with the birth of midgets and dwarfs? R PLY Yes. especially for midgets but not necessarily for dwarfs. 'I‘hc pituitary gland plays a role in the latter. Growth also is retarded in some children be- , cause of kidncy trouble (renal dwarfism). VITAMINS AND VEINS F. M. writes: E. hclp varicose veins in a ny way? REPLY No. and the same can said of vitamins A, B. C, I). Varicositics stem from and an 1 Inherent weakness of the walls ‘ of the veins. flown by all the airlines of the world every day, this is an as-. tonishineg and gratifying low figure: 780 people in the world ‘ in one year. i As a standard of comparison. it might be remembered th at Ieach year in Canada alo n e some 3,700 people lose their liv- es in road accidents. The com- parable figurc for the United ;States is 38,000. The figure for I all countries must be m a n y times that. There are ma ny f states in the US. where road jdeaths in one year far outstrip air deaths in the entire world. The airlines' record surely is I one of which they can be proud. Even Statesman Forget Montreal Gazette I A minor misunderstanding seems to have arisen between . the American and British gov-I ernments over the meaning of - the Nassau nuclear force agree- I ment. According to this agree-l yment, negotiated by Mr. Ken-; | nedy and Mr. Macmillan, Brlq lain is to acquire Polaris missil- I 2 es from the United States. I equip them with Britlsh nuclear I warheads and place them In Bri- ,fish submarines. These weap-‘ I one will become part of a multi- . lateral nuclear force. The misunderstanding has arisen over the cost of the Pol- aris missiles. Mr. Macmilla n 1 seems to have understood that ;Britaln could buy the missiles ‘ for their simple productlon cost. * As he said after his return from the Bahamas: “We pay nothlng ‘ for development. We purchase' 1 the missile and put It Into our . Brltlsh- built submarines." ‘, But the American Gov em- 1 ment 3 p p a r e n tly understood that Britain had agr part of the development costs of ‘ this new and advanced model of the Polaris, as well as the I production cost. The figure that ;ls belng reported 15 oneelahth t It Is easy for such misunder- I standings to arise when two 1 heads of government are direct- tion that has received great publicity. It Is one of the perils of “Summit diplomacy." Both Mr. Macmillan and Mr. en- nedy had much on their minds when they went to Nassau. Mr Macmillan In particular was run by the problems of his tennis-1‘s mumps with the a. ' Common Market. It was 9 a s y I for them to forget to define one aspect of the agreement In pre- cise terms. Yet It Is also true that th e problem would probably never have arisen if the two men had sent ministers to negotiate for them, and then had e x p e r t a study the agreement before it was announced. And even if they were determined to do the negotiating themselves, could have had the detalla stud- led by experts before the agree- ment was announced. POWER STATIONS The United States' power-gen- erating Industry has a capacity greater than that of the five bi next power-generating natlons com ned. 00.0? In Your Best Buy men on ova co-or BONUS PLAN can. on m WILFBED bassoon. CO-O' INSURANCE to Queen Of. mu was versatility of skills and (TRICK IN THE NECK for muscle spasm of the neck? REPLY Docs vitamin ‘ I l I t l I I l l y j Tuesday evening side. Mr. Campbell is not ‘to the office. h a v in g ‘ Ions, three successive l I I I I I l I I I t t ) I ) I t scriptions a cheque for D. C. writes: What is d o n e thousand dollars- find them challenging, interior decorators find them attrac- tive, and dealers find the m profitable. Choice bonsai sell for Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (February 4, 1938) John E. Campbell was elected Mayor of Summerside at the conclusion of the civic election in Summer- new been Mayor on four different occas- ' years. 1920- 1921 and 1922. and again in 1925. Councillor E.A. Foster. chair-z Property , man of the Public Committee, was elected Mayor of Charlottetown yesterday by} acclamation. Mr. Foster served, five terms on the City Councilt during the years 1924 to 1936. TEN YEARS AGO (February 4, 1953) The Ladies Auxiliary of the A made most generous aid to the Debt Retiring Committee! last evening when they handedf the chairman of Special Sub-I o n e I l I The signlficance of Nata train- ; Heat and Ham massage are ing taking place at Summerside, , ithc best remedies. Aspirin and . drugs that relax also are useful. 1g.“ “augamrs from TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— While yet young. develop inter- ests. I a . Captain A.G. Kenyon. i when a group composed entire-I Great rttain, France and Belgium re- ; ccivcd their wings from Groupt ‘ CD. I Commanding officer of RCAF, a 1 n. IStto t ending. The first bonsal were natural- ‘ly dwarfed by poor soil on :windy cliffs or mountains. Col. lcctors risked their necks—and still do—to reach tempting spe- cimens. Sedentary bon sal fanciers i start their trees from seeds or seedlings. They rigorously prune r o o l s and extraneous branches and pinch off shoots to limit growth. Branches and trunk are carefully bent and held with copper wire to direct their form “A bonsai needs to be tended with the affection that a moth- ; er shows for her child,” h Jap~ Iancse bonsai authority said. ' Watering and fertilizing, in par- ticular, must be rigidly controll- ed. Special syringes simulate natural rainfall. One grower makes his own fertilizer by pul- verlzing dried fish and soaking the meal in water for a year. PINES ARE FAVORED Pines are favored for bonsai. but many other trees can a dwarfed. including maple, elm. *cherry. cedar, cypress, an 3 even the billowing weeplng wil- low. Declduous trees are con- sidered more elegant than ever- greens because (they show seasonal changes. A century ago. gnarled trees, trained into fantastic shapes. were popular. This tako-zukurl. or octopus, cultivation has giv- I I en way to an emphasis on sym- metry and fidelity to nature. Not satisfied with a perfect two- foot miniature of a loo-foot tree. the Japanese have gone on to manic-bonsai. or y bon- sal. These midgets are only two or three inches tall. A Tok- yo farmer limited 8 black plne to 3% inches of growth In 30 years. tiniest specimens, cultivated in pots no bigger than a chestnut. are called shite-bon- sai. fingertip bonsai. Dwarfed trees are often dis- played as house plants, but they grow best outdoors. This raises a danger for by 531— strong winds may them away. n blow YOUR TELEPHONE COMPANY A MEMBER OF THE TRANS-CANADA TELEPHONE SYSTEM gazebo/rm ( n-4,.._...__. ,. ._.....l 901.com m o. .... “Em... genome 'THE TELEPHONE HOUR METROPOLITAN OPERA STAR JOAN IUTHIILAND PIANIST JOHN IROWNINO BALLET DANCERS SONIA AROVA l ERIK IRUHN 3. THE TELEPHONE ORCHESTRA. DIRECTED BY DONALD VOORNIIO TONIGHT 10:30 to 11:30 Channell3 v