re es vs wae day morning ‘except Sun itutlory holidays! et 165 Prince Street, PEs. by perenne LS A of Cireulation.. .- ARY 27, : PAGE 4 TUESDAY, Fi Not Now, Perhaps Later Premier Khrushchev will juat have to be a good boy and wait for bis summit conference at Geneva. That, in effect, is what President Kennedy and Prime Minister Mac- millan have told him. In diplomati¢” Janguage his urgent summit bid has been rejected but the possibility of such a meeting is held out for later date—June 1 according to President Kennedy's s t at ement— provided worthwhile progress is at lower levels in the mean- made _ time. » Being a dictator, Mr. Khrushchev thought and action applied by the thrusts of the scientists. do with some improvements.” What The Monitor has in mind is the preservation of the momentum ot this national and international rejoicing over the Glenn flight and its conversion into “what needs to be done at home.” The quality of scientists to the conquest of nature has, it suggests, far greater rewards and more expansive opportunities when applied to humanity. “Consider that a man can mas- ter his environment and still ngt master himself. He can launch a rocket but can he launch an analy- tical thought with similar precision? His black boxes can telemeter & capsule in orbit, but can they meas- ure rebellion in a maladjusted child? It is a brave achievement to track a celestial course, bat what about tracing the thin line of corruption ir a state Legislature? What of violence and hatred and materialism as ways of life? Where is the sys- tematic, persistent, creative order of thinking and action that will bring these twisted concepts under control? ... “How will society recover itself: from a dip in its own orbit, away from moral issues, rejecting moral- ity as if it were something a little archaic and inaubstantial that doesn’t belong to this modern tech- nical age? When will society put - its mind and heart to concepts big enough to rescue it from spiritual drift? Where is the closely co- ordinated teamwork to conquer this all-too-empty portion of space?” It is easier to ask these ques- tions than to answer them; but it is necessary that they should be asked, and kept in mind. Travel through space has a relation to man’s destiny here on earth, and to find the key to this problem is the real challenge that the space age pre- sents. It will not be found at Cape Canaveral, where the concern is only with standards of propulsion. What is of more importance than ever are standards of conduct and of exploration into right and wrong, to keep pace with the great forward Gaining Wider Support The campaign which the Cana- dian Highway Safety Council has for some time been conducting on a nation-wide scale for the use of eafety belts in automobiles is con- tinuing to meet favorable response. Within recent days the Federal Government has announced that it is installing safety belts in its 1962 model vehicles, and officers in charge of the various government transport operations have been in- them. This has come about follow- ing the urging of the professional institute of the public service upon the government to take the lead among public bodies in the use of safety belts. The federal treasury board has how agreed to buy and install these _. Taking second thoughts on the three the exploit than by | that episode,” he said. Now politic. motor vehicles, where such : equip- ment <meets the specifications of the Safety of Automotive Engin- eers. Belts will be bought first for vehicles already equipped by the manufacturers with places to an- chor them. Later they will be in- stalled in other vehicles: EDITORIAL NOTES The Post Office Department has. announced that the “old fashioned nib pens which have adorned post office lobbies for the last half-cen- tury” are to be replaced with ball- point pens. The new pens are to be chained to the counters-to keep post office patrons from poeketing them —something that didn’t apply be- fore, since no one, apparently, want- ed to take home one of the old ones. a, One of the pitfalls of United States diplomacy was stumbled into by Attorney-General Robert Ken- nedy in his tour of the Orient as an unofifcial envoy for his brother, President Kennedy. He told an audi- ence of Indonesian university stud- t he war against Mexico unjustified: “I do not think we can be proud of ians in Texas and elsewhere are up in arms over this alléged attempt to “becloud American and its heroes,” while learned historians offer the dubious. that the STILL’ PLUMBING WORK TO BE DONE OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson’ Bert Herridge From The Kooteneys “I jest to the king and make , him smile," boasted Shake- speare’s Puck. And Puckish is | that Robin Goodfellow from the Kootenays, H.W. “Bert” Her- | ridge, who in the past week has 3 5 9 3 has better personal rela- tions than “The Squire of the Kootenays.” He has many | sit dee [iS Be Std New Bac | prejudices, ee enemy. The only barb. in his make-up is the wit of the jester, who all the time seems. to be saying, again like Puck, “Lord, what fools these mortals be.” For Bert Herridge is the wag of Parliament, who counts the ’ day lost when he connot bring | | a tinkle of laughter from his pol- itical opponents by his wording of some common-sense question. But there’ is now a novel an- | gle about Bert, which perhaps even he has overlooked. This is that when he was born just 67 years ago, his mother happened to be in London. England—for the good and sufficient reason | that she and her husband were both English. Thus Bert now joins the im- pressively long list of Old Coun- trymen who have achieved top | leader. His son Harold complet- ed that unusual father-and-son | | team in the B.C. legislature be- fore entering the federal House i fl : i i E ne : ; i aot8an H é tf i fumes. Irreversible place in the lung tissue after | the disease becomes well estab- | Much bronchial tree damage ean be forestalled by avoiding | colds and‘ eliminating infectious | foci in the nose and throat. Air pollution is hard to avoid but. smoking can be controled. sicians found there is such a | thing as cigaret cough. A study | men 45 years of age and older | showed only 9.9 per cent of non- | smokers were coughing in con- | trast. to 27.7 per cent of smok- of Commons after 20 years in the provincial parliament; Har- old also was born in England. | ; Of an even older generation | | was the longtime B.C. legislator | Tom Uphill, an English - born | | coalminer who first won a seat | | in the B.C. legislature in 1920 ' and held it for more than a quarter of a century. In the seme tradition is Scot- | tish - born carpenter, Robert | Strachan, the 48 year old leader | of the <.C.F. official opposi- | | tion in the B.C, legislature for | | the past five years. CO-OPERATIVES TOO One of the greatest perhaps ers. Cough was present in 41.8 per cent of those who smoked | more than a pack a day. (Dr, Van Dellen will send | leaflet on bronchitis if stamped, | ing Canadian population, self-addressed envelope accom- panies request.) SHAKING PALSY H.C.B. writes: You say Par- kinson's disease should pie a i fst. i i : E i i sei ‘ez if : rhe, -— = changes: take an early election. It is standard practice for governments to hold elections when they are giving more, in the form of increased social security or reduced. tax- A group of Philadelphia phy- . es, than when they are asking for more. Perhaps Mr. Diefenbaker has of chronic cough among 6,137 decided there should be a bud- get with time for its considered examination by the House. is : if : HE ss i tf & t Hy z if RE i E rit 3 £ FR ay Ht ~~ ? r. Diefenbaker Waits - Journal hal Ey tt ht "8 F Rgds Lung Cancer Deaths Canadian Cancer Society Making allowance for the - the rate of cancer deaths among women is going down and the rate among men is rising, ac- cording to the Canadian Cancer Society. It was in 1958 that lung can- cer first ousted stomach as tne cancer type killing the most Canadian men. Stomach cancer deaths in 1960 among men were | 1,863 or 360 less than deaths be The Society bases its conclus- | from lung cancer. The trend treated early. Can it be diag-| ion on figures recently provided | over the 18-year study period nosed early? REPLY (Statistics which show that in | by the Dominion Bureau of Yes, by the masklike, star- | 1960 a total of 23,181 Canadians ing expression of the. face, stiff- | died of cancer of all kinds, 12,- ness of the arms or legs, or | 608 of them male and 10,573 of | slight tremor of the hands. them female: This is the high- | showed stomach cancer among | men to be on the decline. rank as well as driving force | status behind the socialist move- | ment in this country. | Prior to this, many victims no-| est figure ever recorded, but it| - tice they are becoming slower | must be related to the changing and clumsier and less efficient | population. Fraser, director of the P. E. I. tourist bureau, have come for- | ward with valuable suggestions | z “Green Gables” will be fitting for our Island thespians, They ought to be as well qualified as the German pheasants who stage the famous | Passion play every year at | Obergammerau§ in Germany. There appears to be a missing link in tourist's contact with | native Islanders. They —_breeze— through without anything specific | te hold them. A theatrical rendition of Green Gables could be the nucleus of a miniature Stratford Shakes-— pearian show. The Denmark tourist bureau | has an offset for the natural at hand. Tourists are then alot- attainments. “| The suggestion of Hon. Mr. | Stewart ought to galvanize our | local communities into action — The tourist association, cater- ers, and tourist cabin proprie- would do well to “open their iron vests’’ and start a big ription for some outstand- ae Seereree «Ser lestgere. 3} t representing Jacques Kildare | | a delegate at a meeting in Prince FLOWER IN OUR WEST Albert to discuss the marketing Most of these immigrants whe | of grain. He was so hard up that have attained political promin- | he in the boiler-room of ence in thin way seem fo have | meeting hal Bot he hed See chosen our western provinces | den tongue, and was soon one of for their homes. Maybe they | the organisers of the first co- were in their way just men in | operative elevator systems. He sheepskin coats, but with the sharp political consciousness of Britain added. Not the first, but perhaps the | best known is of course M. J. | Coldwell, the Son of Devon who | was aj schoolteacher on the prairies before embarking on his unbroken 23 years as M.P. for Rosetown-Biggar, Saskatch- ewan, 1935-1958. was Canada’s first socialist pre- | mier — in Saskatchewan —from 1944 to 1961. | bia’ under the socialist banner. | There was Ernie Winch, a brick- Venezuelan Pearls Saskat- | later was invited by Prime Min- || ister Mackenzie King to enter the federal cabinet. | Thus Charlie Dunning was one | of the very few to move against | what little ebb this group have shown; he swung from the early farm movement to the Liberal | Party; Bert Herridge swung from Liberal office to the C.C.F ““M.J."" swung from Liberal sen- | In the field of Provincial poli- | timent to C.C.F | ties, British Columbia has had | Other parties too have had | its Britons raising “Hail Colum- | their ample quotas of immi- | grants attaining prominence, not | only from Britain. George Pear- | drum. The doctor put a paper | patch over the hole. Will this | in bodily movements. But they | rarely complain about these Send a siamped, for EARDRUM PUNCTURE J. C. C. writes: Several months ago I punctured an edr- | puncture heal by itself or is operation necessary? REPLY Healing usually occurs with- in a few months unless the area becomes infected The | patch offers the cells of the | eardrum a bridge over which | Dr. R.M. Taylor, Executive | vice - president of the Society, | pointed out that the rising rate | of cancer deaths.among men is almost entirely due to the rising rate of lung cancer deaths. In | 1960 there were 2,223 men and 321 women who died of lung cancer; in 1950 there were 1,034 men, 201 women. RECENT STUDY Dr. Taylor referred to a re- cent study by the National Can- | Cer Institute of Canada which showed that the age-adjusted mortality rate per 100,000 popu- lation among men, between the years 1941 and 1958, had gone up from 123.2 to 143.4 during the to grow. There is a good possi- | as bility the drum is healed, even though the patch remains. If not, surgery may be needed. TENDER SPINE B. T. writes: After a pilonidal | cyst is removed, is the area sen- sitive for several years? I had one removed in 1952 and feel | ‘Same years, the rate among wo- men dropped from 124.6 to 118.- , “Age - adjusted” means ai- | lowance has been made for the fact that Canada is gradualiy getting an increasing propor- tion of the population in the old- . @r age groups. The risk of can- cer, although present at any age, rises as one grows older. Mortality statistics, t - National Geographic Society When the President of Vene- | zuela recently presented Mrs. John F; Kennedy with a pearl. necklace from Margarita Is- | land, he followed a fashion first set in America by Christopher | Columbus. Margarita, which means “pearl” in Latin, is the largest of the Nueva Esparta islands 23 miles north of the Venezuelan mainland, Columbus, sailing off the shores of the horseshoe-shaped _ main isle in 1496, saw natives | it ? aloofness ween native and layer from eastern England, | kes, Jimmy Sinclair; C. D. Howe | discomfort sitting through base- tourist in “Meet the Danes” who was long active in the soc- are names that leap to mind as__ ball and football games and long | slogan. presented to all tourists- ialist and labour movement, | recent federal Cabinet Minis- | movies. - Beret tng a list of Danes will to meet | was | an office - j C 3 t REPLY: te = = — - Yes; but. many. persons wiio | “never had this operation com- ‘plain of pain in this area after | sitting too long. I'm one of | them. fast as # i i i i ss i | | ; ue 7 E hae j ? I cb? i : i a536 i ' eee a ‘are gems to | crushed to provide | come out of ; and the calcium. only gems made by a living pro- cess. ; . ff | Monsieur Jean de Vandreuil | course of a world walking tour OUR YESTERDAYS Frem the Guardian Files | "WENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (February 27, 1937) Chief Kinch, who resigned his | | position on the Summerside pol- | ice force for a position with the | RCMP be stationed at Sum- | their young son spent the week- end at their old home ifn Alber- Appreciation of courtesies ex- | tended him by provincial civic authorities is expressed by | Belgian army veteran who is visiting Charlottetown in the and) with any other. : INCREASE NOTED In 1960 lung cancer deaths amounted to 17.7 per cent of all types of cancer deaths among men; ten years previously they amounted to only 11.3 per cent. During the 18 years studied by the N.C.I., the age-adjusted rate for lung cancer rose from 9.1 to 26.3. “Obviously,” said Dr. Taylor, “the trend is con- FEB, 27 MARCH 6, 13, 20, 27 M/V BEDFORD fl SAILING MARCH 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 (X) GULFPORT SAILING MARCH - 8 9,2 (X) Refrigeration space available Through rates from point of origin to St. John’s, Nfld. In connection with C.N.R. - Route your shipments “C.N.R. to Halifax, thence N.C. 8/8 to St. John’s.” Complete 5 Bag Lots — Cash 70 Queen a i i} euspension j ji at - + ra 4 | i i nist } as wel) as your oy | HYNDMAN @ Charlottetown BEEF RAISERS DILLON & SPILLETT BEEF FEED Made with Master Concentrate A complete line of Master feeds in stock at all times. ” DILLON .& SPILLETT LTD. CHICK HATCHERY St. Charlottetown MOTORISTS OF P.E.I. when one of ¢ - ul Protect your driving privileges pocketbook? ‘ tr ; i Regular Discounts on Farmers’ Cars OFFICES 3.75 ewt. become involved in a license & CO. LTD.