Fravk Walker - Editer -day morning (except Sun- at 165 Prince Street, ; to and Souris. ~ Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers ; ertusing Services, Toronto, 44 King Street West 6% =©Catheart Street 3-8894); Montreal; 1030 West Georgia 5 Eaters 65942), Western olfice: . Vancouver (MA, 7837). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher's Association an@ The Canadian Press. The Canadian ‘Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republica- ali news dispatches in this paper credited te Mt or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also to the local news published herein. All rights of Tepuvlication of special dispatches herein are also Beseried Subscription rates: - Net. cver 35c per week by carrier. $5 & a year by mail or rura!l routes. and areas eservieed by carriers. $14.00 a year off Island, U.K> and PSA, Not ever 7c per single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 9, 1959. Encouragitg News A new and more hopeful picture of our Causeway prospects is given in a report from our Ottawa Bureau “dn today’s issue. It indicates, first * of all, that there is little doubt as _ to establishing the feasibility of the © project and that the reports now be- ing co-ordinated are for’ the pur- * pose of drawing the initial plans i which have been ordered for Dec- f ember 15 next at the latest. In the epestime an official statement by Hon. David Walker, Minister,of ‘Pub- c Works, is expected to be issued within the next fortnight, explaining + 4ust what is being done. ¢ : i . _ that official progress reports should be given, as evidence—if nothing éelse—of the government’s good faith in the matter. Had this been done | earlier there would have been much _ less criticism and misunderstanding as to the nature of the surveys and the scope of the difficulties encount- ered, From the reassuring tone of the Ottawa despatch, we judge _ that these problems have been pretty well surmounted, even to the extent _ of estimating the cost (between $70 million and $120 million if-rait-trat> fie is provided for, as it should be), the starting of construction in the spring of 1961, and the é¢ompletion within five years of that time. _By 1961, critics may say, the Diefenbaker Government will be look- ing for a new mandate from the people, and this will be just another : vote-catcher. We do not think so. | The project (if all goes well) will | definitely have been launched before that and the delay between the pre- | sentation of the initial plans and the actual undertaking of the work will _ be quite understandable. As pointed - out in the despatch, the St. Lawrence Seaway studies dragged on for twenty years\before the work was started. In any case, we have maintained that this is not a political project and we intend to keep this fact in the forefront. The Conservative surveys were preceded by prelimin- ary surveys by the provincial and _ federal Liberal governments, and it was Premier Matheson and Mr. Neil A. Matheson, the then Liberal MP for Queens, who first broached the subject here and at Ottawa, and-met with a good deal of criticism for their pains. It is to the credit of the then _ Opposition leader, Mr. Bell, that he “strongly indorsed the Premier’s pre- sentation in the Legislature and the arguments put forth in this news- paper at the time. But the job then wasn’t so mutch to sell the idea to Ottawa as to sell it to many of our own people, who regarded it as fan- tastic or, at best, as a scheme for _ the remote future. 4 This great undertaking will re- dound to the credit of all who helped in its advancement, and notably. of course to the government which, act- Wally accomplishes it. Let’s leave it at that. We are now waiting hope- ‘fully for Hon. Mr. Walker’s state- ment, so that we can study the facts and not the credit claims, of which we have heard too much already. Conservative Victory The Macmillan Government has been returned in yesterday’s gener- al elections in the United Kingdom, and with an increased - majority over ifs standing in the last Parlia- ment, It was a‘ lively battle, with the traditional exchange of verbal brickbats and with a great deal of last-minuie uncertainty among the voters. Public opinion polls had in- dicated that the two main parties were running neck and neck, but bet- ting, for most part, favored «the Conservatives. They held 339 of the 630 seats fn the last Parliament, to 278 for Labor, with the Liberals holding six. _ Bix seats were vacant and the other | geat was held by’ the Speaker, who } neutral. But the Tory strength in mnt was not a true reflection overall 1955 vote, which gave i) ” : 41 tne We have been urging all along j them enty 49.8 per cent to 46.3 cent for Labor and 2.7 per cent AF on ng +OF There were some lively doings in- the last few days of the campaign. Even Prime Minister Macmillan warmed up rhetorically, denouncing the Labor promises as “irresponsible last minute bids of men who are determined to gain power by any means, reputable or disreputable.”* And Mr. Gaitskell, speaking at north- county Leeds in the concluding speech of his -campaign, called the Tories “snobbish, defeatist, servile, out-of-date.” -In London’s Guildhall, Field Mar- shall Montgomery waded into the fray, announcing that when Parlia- ment reconvenes he will. desert the cross-benches (where independents sit) in the House of Lords and take his place among the Conservatives. With blitzkrieg tactics he declared that “anyone who votes Labor at this time should be locked-up in a lunatic asylum.” On Sunday, however, there was a truge. Prime Minister Maemillan . went to church with his Labor op-— ponent Albert Murray in the Bromley division of Kent. Each read one of the lessons. And they sat in the same pew—with the Prime Minister's wife, Lady Dorothy Macmillan, between them. That’s British politics for you! The Conservative win is not hard to account for. There is almost full employment in Britain, and the stand- ard of living is the highest in the nation’s history. And Mr. Macmillan could rightly claim that his foreign policy has helped lessen the tensions of the cold war. He has measured up to a-high standard of statemanship, and from this distance, at least, it looks as though he has well merited © the decisive victory he has won for his party. EDITORAL NOTES Cheers for that grand old war- rier, Sir Winston Churchill, who re- tained his seat for the Conservatives in Britain’s election vesterday in the London suburb of Woodford, A -Briti$h scientist has developed a special freezing process which en- ables milk to be kept-in good quality for up to 18 months. Milk preserved by this process now is drunk in the West Indies and West Africa. © . * A hen died at La Roche in France the other day, after establishing what may be a world record. She laid an egg four inches long, eight inches in circumference and weigh- ing seven ounces. - 7 - There will be a new topie for discussion at the next meeting af Commonwealth prime ministers, which is likely to be held in March. That will be the entry of Nigeria into the group, scheduled to take place in 1960. A correspondent complains: “While many of our Big Thinkers are editorializing about the problems of sending a man to the moon, the threat of nuclear annihilation and the dangers of radioactive fallout, I have been wrestling with a problem of my own. My kitchen window sticks.” ~The Soviet atomic-powered {ce- breaker ‘Lenin’ ran into its first storm while undergoing trials in the Baltic Sea and “behaved well”, accord- ing to Moscow reports. Now some- body will be complaining about the Diefenbaker Government hot provid- ing this type of ferry for the Borden- Tormentine service. * * * Moral lectures to aggressive pow- ers are all very well, but the United Nations, like lesser bodies, should remember that actions speak louder than words. The small 5,334-man U.N. Emergency Force is still main- taining an uneasy peace along the Israeli-Egyptian border, and accord- ing to Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold this force will have to wind up the year with a deficit of over six million dollars unless 63— repeat, 63—members pay their over- due assessments. * * ®# Canada’s centenary {is now less than eight years away. Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker-says the provinces will be asked shortly to submit their ideas’ on how to celebrate it, He. ex- presses the hope “that.each province will set up an organization out of which‘a national committee will be formed representative of all the pro- vinces of Canada, of church. and re- ligous bodies;.cultural organizations, of business, labor, agriculture, and all the elements of Canadian life, to make and to co-ordinate appropriate plana for national attivity.” A ‘. a YOU CAN-LEAD A CAMEL TO WATER--- > _snied. the tapeworm attaches it- ing’ prominently in the current tight money?” bank described in The Bank of Can ada Act, the most. important be to ‘‘mitigate by its influence fluc- ployment. so far as may be pos- sible within the scope of mone- tary action.” The Bank of Canada also has bove functions. tain conduct to ensure correct practices, and to safeguard our ey deposited with them. cent of its clients’ deposits cash or in the hands of the Bank of Canada. POWERS OF BANK Soviet sclentists, achievements have often won the respec’ of their Western collea- fellow scientists agog A gigantic nuclear ¢xplosion of extraterrestrial origin may have taken place over Siberia June 30, 1908. i The two small moons of Mars may be artificial satellites, plac- ed in orbit by a civilization that thrived on that. planet before it lost most of its atmosphere.. A force exists in the cosmos, hitherto unperceived, that con- trols time and causes spinning bodies, sich as the planets Earth, Saturn and Jupiter, to be heart- shaped. e TUNGUS WONDER According to, an account in the Aug. 28 issue of Soviet-skava Ros- siya, first proposed in 1950 as an ex- planation for the “‘Tungus Won- der.”’ An expedition of the Soviet year a dozen scientists and sen- ior students from universities and institutes at Tomsk made a se- cond study. : They found that the radioac- tivity of plants at the center of the explosion site was\ from 50 to 100 per cent? higher. than on the edge of the area of destruc- tion, at a distance of twenty to twenty-five miles in all direc- tions. There was a sharp drop in radioactivity some six miles from the center point. Some of the rock and earth samples also showed abnormal- ly high radioactivity. The Tungus explosion has ne been a subject of specula- on. EARLIER ACCOUNT According to earlier accounts the few inhabitants of -this sub- * Arctic region saw a'huge fire ball fallfrom the sky.. The explosion’-that followed leveled 700 to 800 square miles of for- est. The resulting wind swept water from the lakes and hurled men long distances. What puzzled scientists wh'o reached the site later was the absence of a great hole in the ground or amy fragments typi- cal or meteorites. There were many small craters within 3,000 feet of the center and tiny globul- es of nickel-iron imbedded in bed rock fused by the explosion. Tt was suggested that a swarm of sinall meteorites had exploded ing: “‘to regulate eredit and cur- rency in the best interasts« of the | a ' . economic life of the nation’, and | office as the Governor of a nuclear explosion was | Academy of Sciences visited the | ‘site last year. In August of this | It was established by Partia—ty,changes, ment in 1934 to be our central! must give one month's notice of Its intended functions are | any proposed change lesser duties, which include rid- | itg herd on the chartered banks | cuss the general within the framework of. the a-| The Bank. Act, which governs | chartered banks, lays down cer-| increase in the use of bank cred j it to finance bank should keep at least 8 per | and increased in| examined very carefully.” | TIGHT MONEY | Following this tightening of cre- | _. Weird Soviet Surmises Walter Sullivan In The New York Times whose!and vaporized on Impact. But DIFFER FROM THE NORM | i OTTAWA REPORT Bank Of Canada O By Patrick Nicholson perations The Bank of Canada 1s figur-: this cash reserve ratio to a max- imum of 12 per cent. But to pro- controversy about “who ¢aused | tect the chartered banks against | sudden, and hence possibly cost- the central bank and: there i after, savs the Act, “it shail not fin any month centage hv more than one. In 1955 a new appointee took nerease the rel the Bank of Canada: J. F. Coyne re tuations in the genera! level of placed Graham Towers, who had production, trade, prices and em- | filled that role ever sinte central bank first opened doors on March 11, 1935 During his first year, the new Governor convened two: meetings with the a banks, to dis- ‘ the credit picture. | “At the November (second | meeting.” he says, “T expres sed the view that the very rapid business and_ per- sonal expenditures had been well personal savings and other mon-/in excess of @he physically pos | sible rate of growth in the coun- To preserve liquidity, for ex-|try’s production, and;should not ample, Parliament insjsted in the | be expected to continue on the! Bank Act that each chartered | same scale Requests for new credits should be CAME IN 1955 j } i } | of 7 per cent. on top of their & Some ome bankers felt very bitter about thiss Although the new edict | related to the “liquid asset ra-/i tio’, thev felt t the intent of the Rank of Canada Aet—recard- nva ~~ and orderiv chance in the ‘cash reserve had heen fir n Seri a Another function of the Rank of Canada cto set the rate of interest at hich it: will jend| money to financial institutions. | By announcing changes in this “Bank Rate” frem time to time our central bank can indicate its monetary policy, and perform its function of regulating. credit i Three vears azo. the new Gov-! ernor abandoned this/ ®) vear old Isvstem. He announced that in} future the Bank Rate would he set, not by the Bank, but autej matically at one quarter of one! per cent above the average in- terest rates of all the. success-| dit, the Bank of Canada \virtually | they would 1 of a total was estimated that have had to weigh gues, have recently come up with | 40,000 tons to produce the observ- some ideas that have set their | ed effects. The Bank of Canada Act fur-| ordered the chartered banks to | bank. thus abdicated its monetary | ther empowers that bank to raise! maintain a “‘liquid asset ratio’ | leadership j i } no other ful bids for Treasury Bills at the Jatest weekly auction ' Thus the Bark of Canada mov- ed out of ‘the driver's seat, and handed oversits whip to the verv | financial institutions whith are supposed to obey its crack. In} in the free the central country world., I believe, has i shorter than the rotation time of | the parent body, he said, is “a completely unique phenomena in our solar system.” } cannot be aste trapped by} said, for been These moons roids accidentally the gravity\of Mars, he how then could they have | c so deeply placed in circular or-} ‘MOONS OF MARS _|bit around the Martian equator? The proposal that the moons © | Finally, he cited the observed de- stitute of Physics of the: Atmos Sciences. His earlier work tion in the West. Phobos and Deimos, were discov- Naval Observatory. Several pecu- larities of their orbits were sonn observed. One of these -was thei nearness to their parent body. The orbit of [Phobos is so low i that it makes two circuits of the day. | will alse be created around the planet in each Martian at a speed a tation. paper Komsomoloskaya Dr. Shklousky pointed out -4bat these satellites differed from ‘all other natural moons both in their smaliness and in the lowness of little | phere of the Soviet Academy of pujiing it down. had {y won him a considerable reputa- ippere of Mars. Deimos iis slightly higher, circl- | ear jing Mars slower than the planet’syown ro--;two or three millioh years ago In an interview with the news- |an Pravda, | The intelligent creatures who liv- | their orbits. An orbital period’ om | Mars may be artificial was made leay in the orbit of Thobos. The by Dr. I. S. Shklovask of the In- | satellite is speeding up, indicat- g is gradually |} This could not the thin atmos. | Dr. Shklousky, | unless the satellite has} ing thmt air drag ”° produced by asserted The two Martian satellites, /the density of a hollow sphere. | Forth The ten-mile diameter. of the: | ered in 1877 by the United States | bedies is no-bar to their being | artificial, he said - “The creation of such satellit- | jes; is. not an insoluable engineer- | ting problem for intelligent beings. | There is not any doubt that in | future centuries such satellites | ee \ Dr. Shkiousky prepased — that | there were oceans on Mars and | atmosphere rich in oxygen. | ed there were then forced to. flee their planet “and the satellites were the result. Since gravity is less on Mars than here, this was | comparatively easy, he said. \ The declension of Latin now has almost matched the decline of Rome. Students today learn to speak U-English if they are socially am- bitious, Russian if they are dip- lomatically ambitious, Spanish or Hindi if they are commercial- ly ambitious, or Chinese if they are worried. But where {s dear dead old La- tin? In American schools it is fading.In Britain it was barely saved this summer, from being reduced to the role of an optional requirement at Oxford, To be blunt, things have not been looking too promising for the language of Cicero and Miss Primm. It is therefore with some relief (born of nostalgia for the enrich- ing tortures of the eighth grade) that we report two signs of toun- terattack. In. Lyons, France, last week scholars from 18 nations met to see if they could inject some new life into the old tongue. To help preserve it they proposed simpli- fying its grammar, making its pronunciation uniform, and i- 4 . —+——) “Winnie Ile Pu” Christian Science Monitor | r troducing new technical words to keep pace with modern civiliza- tion, In Sao Paulo, Brazil, mean- while. the introduction of such new technical words as Christo- phorum Robinum and Heffalum- pum is already taking place, ac- cording to the columns of the London Observer. That paper re- ports receiving from Brazil a new Latin translation of “Winnie the Pooh" (‘Winnie ille Pu’). We presume that ingtead of memorizing those heroie opening words, “Gallia est omnis divisa im partes tres,’ Sao Paulo stu- dents now are gobbling up a much more lovable assignment: “Ecce Eduardus Ursus scalis | nune tump-tump-tump. . . .”” And so on through the adventures of Winnie ille Pu, Porcellus, Tigger- um, and company. Piglet’ Latin should turn out to he a pretty live language. MAXIMS A nan must become wise at his owa expense, « | trons i 27 5 | ‘ aH if TF ! s Michigan and Canada ately, pork tapeworms are very rare in the U.S. POOR SANITARY MEASURES Dwarf tapeworms are small, only about an inch Jong and are taken into the body through food handled by persons who neglect to w their hands after going to the washroom. The beef tapeworm Is the most common and reaches a length of from 12 te 25 feet. Some of them | are composed of enough segments | to fill a two-quart jar. UNCOOKED MEAT This tvpe of parasite {ts ¢eon- veyed into the body through un- cooked infected meat. Once self to the wall of the intestines _and matures in two to. three $7 wriion | NOTES BY THE WAY , fi a H af I it | 7 E i | er [ Fy ty F 5 | EE i ir i : i ri i 8 f J bres 3 Lt i §- Fak i i t i 3 3 a : ; Gig 3 E r a 3 & s s w 3 i 2 ¢ ton. My son pitched for Afton. '"— The Printed Word Summit Talk By Ken if se g mL : gear. fi ‘mi: iT fF eryptococcosis, systemic oe toxoplasmosis, and food poisoning—this sounds like a horrid list com- piled from. a public health of- ficer's ‘nightmare, In a way, it is. It is also a list of diseases dian Naijona! Railways medical division, advocated to the Cana- dian Instituie of Sanitary Inspee- tors the annihilation of these birds. He said there are between 50 and 60 meningitis deaths every year traceable to pigeons, urged that the birds be extermi- nated aS a public health mea- sure.—London Free Press Forebodings Smith Canadian Press Staff Writer Three of the Big Four now ap- months Largest of the three fish tapeworm. This is the one that-semetimes reaches a length | |per cent ash reserve ratio”. | of 30 feet and lives as long as So, to buy’ more—led“-—das—_tIlé-—vears- oie oday loans and Treasury Bills, | —- the banks had to sell over one.| VICIOUS CIRCLE i third of ther Government Bonds Fresh-water fish hecome infect- With oveg $1 billion of these ed by eating | bonds’ thus-dumped on the mar-| Humans, in turn, become infect- | cet, prices slumped and | ¢d by eating raw or insufficient- | heb s took” heavy losses | ly cooked fish. We believe that this particular type of parasite might cause anemia in some per- | sons. z Generally. though. seldom cause. any physical dis- | turbance, althouch ‘mn a: few cases there may he diarrhea, nausea ar ahdominal pain Worry ashonut the existence of tapeworms causes most of the trouble Ordinari!y, tapeworms can be | found only bv examination. of the stool. Once a doctor does! diagnose them. he has ‘numerous | drugs which will help get. rid of | them FOUR SIMPLE RULES | You ean protect vourself from tapeworms bv follewing these four simvle rules i 1. Don't-eat raw beef, pork | or fish 2. Cook your food thoroughly. | 3. Use mbdern sanitation) | Measures. 4. Buy only meats that are produced under federal, or some | equivalent inspection QUESTION AND ANSWER Worried: I am twenty-one and very slender except for my stom- ach which is out of proportion and always has been but not it seems to be increasing in size Could this be a tumor or. can- cer? Answer: An enlarged ahdomen may be due to a growth. It may also be caused by other condi- such as fluid in the abdo- men, hernia and weak muscles An examination by your doctor should quickly settle the question. ‘Te ae Yocts Corner fe the. ' tapeworms | ' summit Arsenault. The announcement was made by Superintendent N | J. Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Brecken Sim- RECOMPENCE I send my love unto my dead, each day 1 know not how: I only know it goes from my hert, and going, | ever grows: That as it flies, there's nothing can affray. . That Hike a dove it fondly keeps | ats wav Through dark and the path it knows. And if I toil or sleep, goes not! astray. Nght along I send my love unte my dead, | ami they ._ They. know ‘tis sent, not forgot: ‘ ' For ofien.when I am alone, I. feel Their love return. An oh! fo word can sav The peace that It matters not What woe betide, I, have where- with to heal. that TI mi comes te me! ~Julia Graham MacInnis OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Oct. 9, 1934) Rescinding a decision to have the Cit® Surveyor do ail street work under the unemployment relief program, and the adoption of an amendment to call tend- ers for a portion of this work, resulted from a lengthy discus- sion at last night's meeting of the City Council. His Worship Mayor Kennedy presided at the meetigg with a full attendance of councillors. ’ The two miles of concrete pave- ment from Borden outward was completed yesterday morning. The work has taken just 21 days, having: been commenced three weeks ago. The contractors are the Warren Paving Company which laid the streets in Char- lottetown and Summerside last year. The Company expects to start on the black base tomor- TEN YEARS AGO (Oct. 9, 1949) Five young men from Ghar pear ready for the climb to the rarified, and possibly purified, heights of @ su erence. There are some signs, however. that President de Gaulle of rance is limping if not actually lagging along the way. He has given-no indication that he thinks . z infected water fleas. | @ Summit conference would be of any_use at the moment. 7 Premier Khrushchev has made ro bones about wanting another | meeting of the world’s most ex- clusive club, saying that only a summit conference can cut through red tape and consider basic policies. UNITY NEEDED The strongest opposition to a ident Fisenhower, who had in- sisted that there must be good prospects of success and that Russia withdraw its deadline for action on the Berlin crisis before he would attend. His private talks with Khrush- chev during the Russian prem- jer’s visit to the United States ap- farently settled his mind on both counts Eisenhower's eonversion has tended to make most observers look on a summit meeting as an accomplished fact, with only the place and time to be decided. But before the West can go into a summit conference, there will lottetown have joined the R.C.- M.P. Band and are enroute to Ottawa to begin training for their new duties. The group in- cludes Carl M. Brown, Donald W. Callbeck, Josepht E. Chais son, Daryl B. Brehaut and M.T. mons, Wilmot Valley, were pleas- | antly surprised recently by their | family and friends, who gathered at the home to extend congratu- lations and best wishes on the fortieth anniversary of their wed- ding. An address was read by Miss Janet. Crozier and a gift was presented to the happy eo | ple. ay most inexpensive salesman you can employ ---a GUARDIAN - PATRIOT . WANT AD have to be complete unity in ‘its complish anything. i} STRONG OBJECTION De Gauile has shown a close affinity for Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany in in- ternational affairs, and both lead- past to hold a summit conference. Both have displaved strong doubts about what summit talks could accomplish to the benefit of the world. Both have balked at the idex of any agreement that might strengthen Communism’s hold in Eastern Europe, espe cially East Germany. | tainly haye to concede something | Soviet stands There is nothing at the moment j to indicate that de Gaulle would refuse to go to the summit should Britaik and the U.S. continue to support such a meeting. But a recalcitrant de Gaulle, stretching to his full heicht in the intimate atmosphere of a summit | meeting, could embarrass his Western allies. 4 Even a summit conference will have more than enough problems ard differences to struggle with of reducing world tension without dealing with an unhappy guest. PRINTERY @ Quality work @ Fast delivery PHONE - 8506 Charlottetown : Phone 8506 — —— aaeteien IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE, .. OR MISSED \ DIAL Special delivery service missed. and 2 paper will be deliyered right to your door. a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or 6561 . available between 8:30 DIAL For the Fastest Service in Town, call ED'S TAXI 6561. and . ers have strongly objected n the — - CENTRAL ” if it is to have any hope at all- approach if the meeting is to ae — And the West will almost cer; —_ conference during the | to Russia if Khrushchev in retura__ jlast year had come from Pres- | is to give in to the West on some