coercion is exercised by the regional force. ne Yet by moving toward an inter- Motion Che Guardian | aR a etm oe ote tet ; Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew | x eh Steanen, Pedsliaher | American force, the 0.A.S. could set | with » tiger im his gasoline Butcher: “I'm sorry, but we Wallace Werd Frank Walker | the pattern for similar regional By Dr. R. Van Delien tank, a wildcat under the hood have no ducks today. How about U ees Sater. oo es eed forces in other parts of the world, | Motion sickness is more com- and panther tread on the tires, a nice lag of lamb?” Hunter e we v ni i ; . ow * > day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, | with ‘troublesome results as far as mon among rg i an anqneienes mentee if a oars Se om = F Cietetteneen #34, by grr ean rd. | the United States is concerned. The | ~—_ ee ee agg ge ae So — Reperter teow ao ni een stun | African nations, for example, could | . | Valuerable. Dr. panes Saetes ers —Hamilton Spectator. nage oe : Represented nationally by Thomson Mewnpepen | establish their own regional force | a attributes ‘ine ok dee Sel is _— —. oe ae ee sha pecacel ba Bo emeee Unt | and then intervene against “undemo- 4 on them by excitement. restless- shaking his head permanently an edi convention. a Kan- versity 6-5942. Weslern Office 1030 West Georgia cratic” governments in South Africa meee, and dietary ees — A lady —— = sas — is ere Se ones Saily Newspaper Publishers | OF Rhodesia. Or the Arab nations | | more suspectible-than men. Dr. spected’ it thoroughly. “Lady.” | save an editor from starvation. Asfociation and The Canadian Press. The Canadien could set up a force and argue that © Kaplan found that motion sick- he. said, “you've got a short cir- take his paper and pay for it P P. ik. onamnid oo the ven for some | ness is less likely to occur cuit im the wiring.” “Well.” she promptly. To save him from hae of "Gh mn cals in this paper Israel presents a threat to the peace when traveling by train. It is said calmly, ‘go ahead and len-- bankruptcy. advertise im his pa- credited_to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters | and security of the Middle East. | most common on the sea. and gthen it.”—Dousman Index. ~ per liberally. To save him from seo Sea ree aS |. A New York Times corresping. Ss Sy a erase’ ttt | tome Seng bad You cews of tees ses tan ot bad et Te Ba oT as as igh = 4 rn peg ee aaa ere ee eee ee ¥ ; : es eo oe ent at Washington sums up. the ~—\ and automobile travel There quite an investment in combs. save him trom profanity. write— Not over 40c per week by carrier 4 | situation when he says that ‘the } _o wiouy vermiies mam Se Oe a fe — — so ee er ao — = 0 ¢ by mail en rural rout nm reas | : 3 j condi road yourse Trying one —— aes ne eS | United States obviously wants to | pig lh and the individ. > fom out the type of dand- in as early as possible. To save $15.00 @ year off island and ee | have its political cake and eat it too. | ual’s emotional makeup ruff senate to’ purchase. If a fom a him. year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Britis om i : i The of you : levisi you ow aa monwealth It wants maxunem freedom of ac- ae cee es ee World know by now that it's quite a who never, make mistakes — ~ Not-over 7exsingle copy. —— tion—in effect, a sphere of influence | | War Il. They give 90 per cent chore— Waupun Leader-News. Wisconsin Press. . Member Audit Bureau of Circulation . ' z 7 ‘ : — - SEE. oe —for itself and the O.A.S. in the: | ee used property. a a “The strongest memory is weaker ie . : : : renee eeakaat ink” Western Hemisnhere. But it does eco — or Endurance Test For U.S h wt : ei not want to grant too much regional gan. The old-timers are atrop-. te > PAGE 4 THURSDAY, JUNE 3. 195. authority in other areas of the world ~~ — om omen > Canadian Press Staff Writer U S S ace Swim she where Bee sathority mignt be be of value in orvtinary dizzi- President Johnson has warned Even then the “American peo - 2. IP against American interests. ness, and in controling nausea 1. american public steadily of ple saw . it) through but and vomiting. This is under- 0d to endure in Viet Nam. their patience was badly An. American science reporter notes facetiously that U.S. astronaut Edward White is to be linked to his Gemini 4 spacecraft by a 25 foot ~ safety line when he goes for a swim in the void today. and that the tether holding Soviet, cosmonaut Alexei - Leonov to Voskdd 2 was only about 15 feet long. “We'll be 10 feet ahead of the Russians in the race to the - moon,” the- reporter. observes. Good humored space jokes have largely displaced the bitter ones cur- rent four years ago, when the late President Kennedy committed the | Se —~~———pnited States tor mavined Tunar™ ex ~ poration “before thisffecade is out.” ~ «Half the time he allowed has expir- ed. The margin between Soviet and ||’ American contenders appears to be as narrow as the newspaperman im- | plied. : White and James McDivitt are both U.S. Air Force majors, and they will share equally in the glory of the fantastic exploit on which they a ~~ embarking-from-Cape-Kennedy..this - morning. It will be the world’s first attempt ‘to bring manned spacecraft close to its orbiting object and will be a valuable practice for"a Gemini flight planned later this year when the astronauts will link up with an- other satellite. If Gemini 4 succeeds it will go far towards refuting Soviet claims of superiority which followed Leonov’s exploit. In any case, however,«there are enough parallels between these warming up events to invalidate the criticism. that the Americans are trailing the Russians hopelessly. They seem to be closing the space travel gap as surely as they closed the more vital gap in intercontinen- tal missile strength. A Dubious Precedent President Johnson has announced that he is ordering the withdrawal of another 2,000 U.S. marines from the revolt-stricken Dominican Re- public. He jhas expressed pleasure that for the first time in history the Organization of American States has a military force functioning effect- ively, and it is this force that is re- placing the marines as they are be- ing pulled out of the_country.. This venture in international peacekeeping is being shared by five nations—Brazil, Costa Rica, El Sal- vador, Nicaragua and the United States. The soldiers of these nations have donned blue-and-gold arm bands with the letters O.E.A.—the initials in Spanish for the Organiza- tion of American States. Their man- date is to restore normal conditions in the Dominican Republic and_ to help re-establish a democratic gov- | ernment. Behind the immediate crisis there remains a broader question which President Johnson has not mention- ed, but about which a good deal of concern has been expressed. This is the extent to which the creation of such a force might establish trouble- some precedents in the rest of the Sou = Largely in recognition of the O.A.S., the United Nations Charter makes provision for regional organi- zations and encourages them to settle disputes within their territor- ies. But the Charter also provides that “no enforcement action” can be taken by regional bodies without the authorization of the Security Coun- cil. One difficulty is that what con- stitutes “enforcement action” has never been defined. The United States and the 0.AS. have attempted to evade this ques- tion by arguing that the dispatch of an inter-American force, such as in the Dominican crisis, does not repre- sent an “enforcement action,” since the individual members are not com- pelied to contribute forces and no s ; The United States and the 0.A'S. are now groping their way toward some _compromise of concurrent jurisdiction and commitments with the United Nations. But it is not go ing to be easy. ‘The Late Mr. Wright “He contributed tremendously to the development of the region and was-a- great believer in the future of ; the Atlantic Provinces.”. This tribute to the late John S. Wright. Summer- © side, president of the Atlantic Prov- inces Economic Council, comes fit- tingly from the executive vice presi--, + LOOKING. OVER - HIS “SHOULDER STILL IN SERVICE more of these symptoms when traveling “is rouch-~Moderate tubulence affects 10 to ) per cent: three to five per cent nev- | er become ill: The hardy sailors in pitch, roll. altitude, and turn- ing movements. : | At the turn of the century | Seasickness was a topic of con- ee « pres’, ___ Studying ‘At Sha kespeare's Old. School Mann of Halifax: and it is one-to which-all who have been in contact with Mr. Wright can warmly sub- scribe. Before being elected president of APEC Mr. Wright headed the Maritime Provinces’ Board of Trade ‘and at the time of his death was a | director of the National Dairy Coun- | cil.. He_had been. prominent for many BBC Weekly T: Visitors to Stratford: upo - cart-loads of earth and clay for AWE ae Slee Serna ee the floor cost two shillings and cover that the King Edw . v ae Grammar School, where it is meres: the whole apetetien believed Shakespeare studied for a sizeable two-storey build- | under Thomas Jenkins,. is mot ing cost £105.3%:d!” Property years in the silver fox industry as — | well as in dairying. He had also a . distinguished record of service in the Second World War, in which he was seriously wounded in action. Mr. Wright had a great capacity | half- for friendship as well as a zealous | against the 13th century Guild flowers on his tomb. So began interest in all that concerned the betterthent of his community. his province and his country... APEC owes much of the su it has achieved to men of his vision and enterprise. He set an example in which we, as Prince Edward Island- ers, can well take pride. Relatively Speaking Many Canadians will agree with the criticism voiced by NDP spokes- men of the easy terms on which pen- sions of $8,000 a year were offered by the government to all present sen- ators of 75 years or over who will agree to retire voluntarily. But. as the Edmonton Journal points out, the Lower House has long had a pension plan that, while costing them quite a few nickels, has been far from actuar- ial. It has, in short, been heavily sub- sidized by the taxpayers of the coun- try. This is still-the-tase. When, in 1963, the members voted to double their pay, in effect. they also revamp- ed their pension plan. Now they are entitled, after serving in three Par- liaments, to a lifetime annual pension of five-twelfths of their total income. The maximum pension is $9.000 a year. If a member should die. his widow will receive three-fifths of his pension for life. Such a generous pension plan. of course, requires large annual grants from the public treasury. So. the criticism of the Senate pension plan notwithstanding, everything is seen to be relative. Encouraging Figures Last month's returns for the fisheries industry are not yet in. but it is heartening to note that for the month of April, Maritime fishermen landed a volume of 45,.600.000 pounds and which had a value of $4,400,000. The most lucrative of the total catch was 3.300.000 pounds of shellfish, including lobsters. valued at $2,300,000. Compared with the | average April landings for the vears + 1962-64, last April's catch was higher by 1.300.000 pounds and the value up by $1,100,000. Then for the cumulative four months, January to April of this | year, fish landings in the Maritimes totalled 135,700,000 pounds. the val | ue of which amounted to $10.800.- 000. These respective figures com- pared with 113.200.000 pounds valu- ed at $9.400,000 in 1964. and 82.800,- 000 having a value of $7.800,000 in 1963. ' just.a beautiful ruin but a going which Edward VI had transfer- concern, where today’s school- red from the Guild to the town boys grapple with all the sub- Corporation in 1553 still provid- jects of modern education. ed part of the income for the & (April 23) by. going in process- fon to the church and laying the impressive birthday cele- brations of today, when a pro- cession of civic dignitaries. the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Company, and representatives from over 100 nations, pass through the be-flagged streets from the theatre to the church to lay floral: tributes on the fa- mous shrine. Outside the Guild Chapel. the boys and taff of. the school, all carrying flowers. take over the head of the pro- The Guild Chapel was open-to: visitors every day once morning service was over, Mr Pratt pointed out. Obviously. the rest | of the school had to be closed to visitors during term time, but during the Easter and summer holidays visitors were admitted classrooms and laboratories came into view. and beyond it a new swimming pool. It was the metric system ang there that some 360 boys be- British government anticipates tween the ages of 11 and 18 fol- that the change - over will be | lowed the normal routine of a completed in about 10 years. The change will be made in industry sector by sector. and the British Standards _Institut- ion has been asked by the gov- ernment to pay special attention measures that would enable icular sectors in industry to used — six- in metric units. Common- ; British automobile and air- craft production im particular Britain Goes Metric Winnipeg Free Press has been standardized with that of the United States in many as well. Canada is faced with a sim- ilar dilemma. Most of the world has by now adopted the metrie system. and once Britain has joined the rest. Canada’s trade outside the North American con- tinent will be impeded by its an- tiquated weights and measures. Moreover, other Commonwealth countries still maintaining im- perial measures, such as Austr- alia and New Zealand, have already begun their switchover te the metric system. On the other hand, the Uni- ted States is Canada’s best cus- tomer, and it would be almost impossible to split the North Am- erican continent into two differ- ent measurement systems. Thus, in the end, Canada will have to follow the United States’ precept. It would greatly heip international trade if the Ameri- cans toi changed over to the metric system so that the world would have a universal system of weichts and measures. 2 > Political Bad Habits Spectater Even a political neophyte sus- pects that the political pay- off will always be a human- nature fact of political life. The big business that donates Money to all political parties us- ually does so not because it versation—because was at its height. Today's trav- el problems are different. The automobile. bus, train. and plane compete with the lake steamer. ocean liner, and river boat. Manufacturers of modern conveyances have done every- thing to make riding smooth, but they have no control over nature. LIMPING J_K. writes: What causes tn- termittent claudication? My hus- band was given this diagnosis when.he went. toe the doctor about pain in his calves when walking to the train. He doesn't have this pain when he walks around the house. REPLY Poor circulation is responst- ble for these cramping sensa- tions. Your husband is not both- ered at home because he does not walk far enough to develop pain. NUMB FINGERS I. G. writes: From time to time my fingers are numb. I have no pain but cannot hold a pencil or any smail object Could this be serious? REPLY Yes, but the chances are it is not. The causeS’ vary from a simple anemia to a neurological disorder. CONTRACEPTIVE PILLS Mrs. R. writes: If contracep- tive pills are safe to take. why is.it necessary to have a Pap test and pelvic examination eac year? i REPLY Because these pills prevent pregnancy but not cancer or any other pelvic condition. - OUT OF BED A. G. writes’) What is meant by ambulatory treatment? REPLY The patient is up and about in contrast th“treatment requir- ing bed rest or hospitaliation. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Maintain reasonable calm at Our Yesterdays (Frem The Guardiap Files) today, killing at least 45 firing and blasting many build- United States policy there re quires “patience as well as bravery—the will to endure as well as the~will to resist.” he has said American capacity for stoic stamina under fire, im 8 frustrating and difficult war far from home. is being examined now to some extent at two levels ; One is the obvious preoccupa- tion with just how far Johnson intends to go and this was ex- pressed in the appeal Sunday by. former British foreign secre- tary Patrick Gordon’ Walker: Gordon Walker called for re- straint in bombing Communist North Viet Nam. Just returned recently from Southeast Asis. Gordon Walker said the war is and China’ He suggested the U.S. has little to gain and much to lose by risking such a war STAYING POWER On the domestic front, with a dawning realization that the Vietnamese war could last. sev- eral years as it is being waged now, there is some disucssion about the American public's staying power. This is coupled with evidence - that-China-.and.North Viet. Nam_ feel the.American endurance will crumble under the steady pounding of biéody guerrilla fighting and increasing Ameri- can losses “The most important .require- ment for success in Viet Nam aside from fighting men, weap- ons and diplomacy. may turn out to be patience and stamina in the U.S..” says columnist Ed- ward T. Folliard in the Wash- ington Post “It is a fact that Americans are not noted for patience In- deed. we have made a virtue of impatience. and this doubt- ing’ exist in extreme degree be- tween China and the US. PRONE TO RESPOND But Gilpatric. Writing in the 4 New York Times, sees @ more likely danger that the “‘Ameri- can people will- prove them- ~selves-gmable to endure ‘# pe- riod of protracted strucgie.” “As a nation. we are prone to respond quickly and strongly to traumatic events such as the sinking of the Lusitania or the cold wars and counter -insur- gence campaigns are new and untried experiences to us “The fatigue factor rather than the escalation msk of our Viet Nam policy may be the Achilles heel of- the U.S. posi- tion 4 This view supports evidence that President Johnson's im. | patience with opposition to the less has had much to do with | the nation’s greatness.” But over a long period. that may not be much help, he sug- gests in recalling the Korean War. where—unlike Viet Nam— the U.S. had a lot of moral and military help from the United Nations Viet Nam policy—as expressed primarily soe far by minorities in American universities — is tion is simply fuel to Chinese calculations The lone philosophic view of — China's leaders toward such struggles as Viet Nam is sketched in a recent report from Edgar Snow, the Ameri- can journalist who has known these men since their founding days ‘ Snow wrote in s@ recent issue of New Republic that China feels it has much to gain from the -exisfing ~situation;~ ever ‘if ‘American planes should begin to strike industria! targets throughout Communist Nerth Viet Nam He quotes Marshal Chien Y! as saying to him: “Whatever happens. it will only be an im cident in the perspective of his- tory and ultimately be forzot- ten. The American and the Chi- nese people will renew their friendship.” SH Sal FRESH ISLAND Island RESH GROUND DIAL 4-3585 and 48586 WEEKEND SPECIALS Cudmore’s & PJ'S Lid. ORTENING = _..... O9efTang_.... HERRING 6 = 25 HAMBURG 2 = 89% P. J.’s Ltd.|Cudmore’s FREE DELIVERY COD ORDERS ACCEPTED 33 “Ke hb. CASH GROCERY DIAL 43313