Nene in i Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edwerd island Like The Dew W. J. Hencex, Publisher Wellece Werd Frank Welker Managing Editer Editor Published every week dey morning (except Sun dey end statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomsen Newspapers Lid. Brench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton end Souris. Represented nationally by Thomion Newspapers Advertising Services: Torente 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal. 640 Cathcart Street Uni- verity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canacien Press is exclusi entitled to the use for repub- lication of all mews dispatches in this paper credited to it or te the Associated Press or Reuters and eiso to the lecel news published herein. All tight or republication of specie! dispatchet here | in also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 « year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The strongest memory is weaker | than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1965. Our Coastal Fisheries One of the live issues in the elec- tion which brought the Pearson gov- | ernment into power in 1963 was the protecton of Canada’s coastal fisher- ies by the imposition of a 12-mile fish- ing limit. The Conservatives were blamed for inaction in this matter. The’ Liberals had legislation passed in the following year which, as an- nounced in Parliament at the time, was to save Canadian waters from systematic looting by non-Canadian trawlers and smacks. To date, how- ever, the much-vaunted Bill 8-17 has done little more than preserve the same old status quo of July 9, 1964, the day it was approved by the House of Commons. The only practical effect of the measure—which established a tem- porary 12-mile limit based on the “csinuosities’ of Canada’s craggy coastline—has been to prevent the Russians and Japanese from estab- lishing squatters’ tights in the nine- mile area outside the old three-mile boundary of our territorial waters. And even that is a preventive move of dubious value. _ : S-17 gives the government discre- tion to establish—by order-in-coun- cil—new limits based on straight base lines, but not before negotiations with foreigh habitues of our waters are complete. While our diplomats wrangle politely with the United States, the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, France, Portugal, Norway and Denmark, their fishermen continue to pull more fish off Canada’s coast- | alghelves than our Canadian fisher- mén do. Fishermen from these eight nations will continue to fish inside the new 12-mile limit until Canada can petsuade their governments to sign “phasing out’ agreements for historic and treaty rights. No deadline is yet in sight: the end of the crop year, and the same amount is expected to be on | hand at the end of the present year. | But this does not tell the whole story. | The other part is.that harvests in re- | cent years have, én’ the whole, been larger than in the past, but that ex- port sales have kept pace, so that in spite of larger crops the carryover has | not grown but has, in fact, been re- duced. According to the grain company, the situation is even more serious in” | feed grains and to an even greater ex- | tent in the supply of vegetable and | animal proteins. The demand for meat, cheese, eggs, butter and mar- | garine is steadily increasing “and it | is the responsibility of the prosperous | Western world to put an end to sem!- | starvation in so many under-develop- ed countries.” Indications are that the presen | situation will not change, but may grow tighter, as it concerns demand. India faces the worst food | for food. crisis in its history, and its deficit in grain may be double the 108 million dian food minister. Parts of China | are reported to be undergong a ser- ious drought with the result that wheat may be lost. This leads to the hope among western farmers that they need no longer worry about being asked to cut wheat, feed grains, or vegetable and animal protein sources, and that even the most scientific farming methods, with their increased yields, are not going to be enough to meet food de- mands in an expanding world. It is a situation that augurs well for Cana- dian farmers generally, and points up, once again, the need for continu- channels open. Indian Ocean Base In the far Indian ocean, about 1,- | 000 miles southwest of Ceylon, there is a coral outcropping knows as Diego Garcia, part of the Chargos archipel- ago. No one but a confirmed geo- graphy bug has ever heard of it. But according to an American exchange, it is about to solve some serious de- fense and security problems —for Great Britain and the United States. Diego Garcia is uninhabited ex- cept for a few hundred transient fish- ermen who have no claim to it. It belongs to Mauritius, which is getting | freedom from Britain next year. It | has no connection with Mauritius ex- cept that the British linked the two | for administrative purposes. And | Mauritius, eager to lay hands on any | cash it can get, is more than willing to sell any of its presumed rights. . Britain and the United States feel the need of a military base in that. part of the world, particularly because Britain may soon be forced to close its base at Aden; Sinapore is threaten- | bushels predicted recently by the In- | many millions of bushels of winter | back on their production, whether in | ed efforts in keeping ‘world trade | River, HERE WE GO-ON THE ICE ( tena HI Sits | AGAIN OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Footnote To Early Canadian History Dr. and Mrs. Sinclair of Deep River set out to Tobermory to kill a deer; but instead, they flushed a rare and treasured Canadian ghost. Dr. Sinclair I should explain, is a boisterous Scot who ministers to he ato- | a mic scientists of Chalk River, while Mrs. Roselma Sinclair is the petite deputy reeve of Deep the bunk-village where those scientists live with their | three harquebuse degrees and their children. I recently mentioned in this |- column the first ship ever to gail the wee Great Lakes, the Griffon. memory of this The ship was built in 1679, at = 52 stErie Eo gf sere? plaxy ? reading my mention of the Grif- fon, because she and her hus- band had just returned from a_ hunting trip to the- Bruce Penin- sula. There they happened to see ‘“‘the keel and ribs of . the Griffon, along with the bones of the crew-members of that ill- fated ship.” Ten years ago Mr. Orrie Vails of Tobermory finally esta- blished as the Griffon an an- cient wreck which lay in a cove Should Begin At Home Toronto Globe And Mail alt s eet , storms, just over five weeks: | by Air Canada charter flight, | that journey would today take one hour. At Grand Baie, the explorer | LaSalle loaded aboard a large cargo of rich furs obtained from the indians. He remained a- shore, but ordered his pilot Luc Fat Levels And Heart By Dr. R. Van Delien Theodore association between fats ei : gti Seas ith atte i at li if h | the fattors mentioned may have started early in life and developed so slowly that it was never noticed. The heart attack is of sudden onset and is related to an in creasing tendency for the blood to clot. This is independent of and ex- plains why cholesterol, for venting attack, Diet may enter this picture that linolenic acid, a constituent of vegetable oils, lessens the tendency of blood to clot. Physi- cal and emotional strain should be avoided because it increas to take the ship with its pre- cious cargo back to Niagara. | On 18th September, firing a sa- | lute from her brass cannon, the | Griffon sailed away - into obli- | vion, from which Orrie Vails re- scued her 276 years later. STORM OR HIGHJACK Contemporary hearsay sug- gested variously that indians saw the Griffon foundering in a sudden storm, or that the Pot- tawattomie indians looted and burnt her, or that the pilot Luc highjacked her rich cargo and sank her. The ancient mystery will never be unravelled now. Even_the discovery —of human bones, presumably those of crew members, among the rot- ting timbers proves nothing. | But the positive identification of the Tobermory wreck as the Griffon has been effected by the well-known Canadian naval es the possibility of a capillary bursting within the coronary ar- tery wall. VIRAL PNEUMONIA Mrs. D. F. R. writes: Does one | bout of virus pneumonia ‘leave a person more susceptible te a second attack? REPLY ‘ No, but repeated bouts usual- ly mean that resistance is low or that susceptibility to the virus exists. SHORT FAMILY J. F. writes: If two short peo- ple marry, is there a chance that any of their children will be tall? REPLY Yes, but the odds are against it. NOT CARCINOGENIC R. E. writes: Do more meat |eaters than nonmeat eaters de- velop cancer? ple, has nothing to do with pre- another REPLY No. Meat is not carcinogenic and 4s one of our most valuab! sources of protein. 3 NO EFFECT artist Rowley Murphy, who as- serts that it perfectly matches the drawing made” in 1679 by Father Hennepin. Mrs. Sinclair tells me that she | and her husband saw the re- maine of the Griffon and of her Vv. G. writes: milk cause or have anything to Does drinking | | Overshadows UN Activities By Boris Miskew : [ if + oe Communist ¢ provoking the E ! fi f i & Ly ut : i | ( Esk [ si e f a P Hint i i i i i [ 1 5 RF t F fi ff | tif i i | nis | : ize l i R i : i j | ii THEE z Af fl i i rit il f fie ll i rez F i [ af Eg ? § | i FET equity e 3 : i ut ff i | I. : z 7 : 5 FF if, g 3 i : ; t is ti i E = 5 i | | i in { g i : : * E 5 Z F His [ i Jock 3 i 8 é . e : | HE | i i Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO ( 1, 1940) Seventeen men who abandon- ed the sinking Canadian freight- er Lisieux in an Atlantic storm drifted for hours in life- boats were brought into St. Jobn's, Nfid., over the weekend with word that 10 others of the crew were missing and feared lost. Among the survivors was | Countries, Valentine McIntyre, 36, of Mt. Stewart, P.E.I. Under the direction of Lieut. William Burnett, formerly of Charlottetown Guardian: The first edition of the North Nova Scotia Highlanders’ bi- monthly peper was published at Amherst, N.S. TEN YEARS AGO > (December 1, 1955) Station CFCY-TV, Charlotte- i “counter action” accelerating infiltration North Vietnamese. regula ge? z ti ll Z SELLE A i Z : in- broadcasting. Iso ¢tated that the station be on the air by June 30 latest. Mr. Edwin Bagnall accepted a position with the Technical As- | sistance administration wf the United Nations in Poona, India, as a director of Sterile Techni- » . & & J. W. Skinner Dial 4-4044 Meanwhile, outside the 12-mile | N- Speaking in New York recent- | osophizing or giving ans crew, now ashore and preserv- | do with the development of rheu- limit. the Soviet Union is the biggest | ing to curb British military activities | 'y, Prime Minister Lester | a fong-range hint of his inten ed in the handicraft shop of Mr. | matism or arthritis? ay ° z . Pearson reminded affluent | tions as the head of rmem Vails at T ' REPLY e “ there and other countri ttin ‘ * offender in a gigantic “vacuumtfean- er Countries are getting | nations of the West of their obli- | in a well-to-do Our for- points to the sad fact that we er’ scoup-out of some of the richest touchy about foreign bases on their rg to ae Aes Seerree eien,aid rrcoram hes age for mane | a a. La eae ae NOT nga Me ‘ean | / ; : : anger, tS sacrifice at the to . €. writes: ‘holes in our coastal shelves. The new soil. , LONE was that’ the West wat becom- wnteer tated of half of one per create an interest in it,” ile | calories should a bedridden | limit, according to an Ottawa staff Diego Garcia is big enough for a | ing bored with being continual- | cent of the national income, ts a | comments. small woman eat = < writer in the Toronto Star, is regard- | large airfield. It has a big natural p raat that ‘more must be frvd — ae oo that | en aif oe, ite. isa ate te: ed_by the Canadian fishery industry | harbor. It _has some. satellite reefs “after vo decades ‘ot econ- P “Baier this vear. “External Al teresting. feotnole ie story TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— -: $ ‘ i i | omic assistance e 1S 8 wea | i ven- must a are juUstifi ; ¢ as useless unless it is charted on | that could be used as well if birds can. | dese wih wellhead ee | se sea on Peo eee A eae ie ee owes ae, Licseisbitiiie straight base lines drawn from coast- | be dislodged. | Pearson. “The mood isnot. 0. — 's_foreign-aid-contribu- | °° saves of our eighbour| Df Vam Dellen should -be 9 | ~al headland to coastal headland. But To start with, the United States <= f — Big Hig or | tion of $200 million ought to be oa ae a aie. etdrooned | tor oe ~e | the government—which can not even | intends to set up a satellite tracking | ‘crowing weariness oe lemma earbon. Sikes on ae eas. : eis, ‘Clleage, Iiash.} ' estimate when tortuous negotiations | station and Briain intends to set up | - ne ‘a’ - | to be taken seriously, will ore over foreign treaty and so-called “his- | a refueling station. ‘But the military | %"- a. ‘ante = ly agree that this modest ¢ toric’ rights will be complete—has | men already look ahead to a big air | oe founda is bight. of bee aoe to ost pabe alhestpc Mystery At Suez a been careful not to commit itself to | base and naval centre, a permanent | Gee es ae ie ee | cada dia Pedtinask estes Montreal Star ~ ; Bey the “headland-to-headland” concept. facility in a remote part of the world. | dulaing in. some charitable phil- | sembles. Gomething has happened to re- | that have followed some of ld have the ef- | The location is ideal, and no natives | ; duce the salinity of water at ’s follies, Hke enriching the Such a system would have the e e location is ideal, natives | ; midpoint tm the Guez Canal in | bird lite of North A i Ww fect of securing valuable fishing wat- | need be moved or bought off. There p t A d p Oo orn the last few years. The first re- bringing in house sparrows end ers like the West Coast’s Hecate Strait | might be some difficulty with the eanuts AN pe sult was to start Phere genie Hr | starlings, a animal life of and ee Peal one = _ | birds, Ss — ars. Pasi ick ay: gee Ss in a fnto the Maderranesn The The. may be mor mt eater | dian inland seas. On the East Coast | in establishing other isolated air ike it or not, there is no es- pa vill pay $2.50 a - | second was marine | free erranean some it would put “no fishing” signs, in six | bases, but that’s a problem that will | CABine entertainment in this tg. | SGN Whe Pack will be | eee tere et Stone oon cise sane Be ibe | . ane languages, on the Gulf of St. Law- | have tobe dealt with on its own | Teen-agers can’t walk down the | able to see the film, of course— | when equilibrium in the Mediter- | life at the southeast end of the | ore ree Oooo Teens yous. healhe rerite and the Bay of. Fundy, for in- terms. — — mage - = = some aL will appear ee eas De ait — is Pacific ory character, at | over w at to give your favourite dog : | a vr ; few moi c better . alarm | northwest Atlannc. | : stance. Why is the government not drive any distance without the | But-what about the pessénger | at a recent meeting of scientists Human ingenuity cannot regu- | for Christmas? How about a tam- ving consideration to this matter? EDITORIAL NOTES '| car radio going. | who doesn’t even want to watch on the island of Malta, and — [sane coe on this scale. ae o’-shanter in the newest color? Perhaps Mr. MacLean, our senior Belgium is reported to be setting es a ences — oe eae: x. end dt Beer biologists at | oecoes re ke. lomntahek-aep _Or_a -mink-trimmed. velvet evening a Quéens MP-and-former-fisheries-min-;~up its own version Of a royal “com- aoe ELSE ae statt with | Mitlines join in showing ae Miami. ot this kind has hap- @ #0 be forearmed. We will be | coat, with matching boots? If you fin the Diefenbaker administra | mission on bilingualism and bicultur- | musie to which no one really lis- {oes ee ae oe 7. aed eeerally in modern tim- | hearing more of this engrossing | want your dog to be the best-dressed tion; will have some questions to ask | alism. Which is too bad, for we could | tens. Rare is the restaurant bet oy A to B with a min- es. The effects may be like those | development. in town, read Weekend Magazine on she subject when Parliament as- | have spared it ours had we known it | ["SSimre: seorded music and | Unum of fuss or dis ee em ee and catch up on the coolest canine "3 E | was in the market for this kind of coummeanaaie Save eve invel |g aah Ae coatauen weether Uncle Sam And Royalty fashions yet. With color photor ; : vacy of passengers on not. ines , : EWorld Requirements 6" ., . , | tome buses and. trains. fan onky retrain from serving Torento Daily Star Sa ee 5 | Now the world’s airlines have | popcorn, peanuts during inter- | the Cabots and Lodges were : : 4One result of the recent large A Nova Scotia company is deliber- | agreed on a schedule of charges | missions, this may be all that What the American people | But ; gales of Canadan wheat to China and _ ately supplying plies bricks for !T_in-flight movies, for which | canbe hoped for._ | ver eg “= rection | clears parveny, tie owe 2 Russia is that they have almost elim- a federal government project—but _ é |of Princess and |velts a mix . a : 2 j ° | husband is the latest evidence | nedys, much as their rise and ted Canada from the list of coun- the Department of Public Works isn’t | [ Yow low lef the thirst. | style have been dazzling, are in . tries with surplus grain for sale. This worried. The government, reports the | Rivers York aha | ae en ae A So cane, leo oe point is made by the McCabe Grain Financial Post, actually wants the | ; — habitat | ‘ ; j : ; | What lies beneath the earth's | tists had long suspected that even in the Hollywood |. Although Princess Margaret Company in a report from London, in | bricks that way for the restoration of surface interests not only the | such treasure exists; cr they, un ar Tena and >. . | seems eo — the Asnerioes The Ei . 7 BP e i j ‘ sag! : ater i - ngton, . a which it is claimed that the days are the King’s Bastion and Chateau St. — ee ee a a = = — ao of << as eee | Gea cl tesenane ES Slane ole ie = Se . o VENING atriot past when Canada’s carryover of Louis in the once mighty Fortress of | .of water’is of the same breed. | underground conditions oo | as a real aS oa. \ being ee ‘ é' around 500 million bushels, plusthe Louisburg. A Halifax firm is mak- | But it isn’t often that one hears | Salisbury, Md., prevail | whom courses the blood of 1066, Perhaps the best ‘was ; one billion bushel. reserves in the | ing 250,000 of the bricks, using 20th | tyit“cnsont that maybe able | "Such are the vistues of the. is to be expected, A nation |®'eenuty ago The United St with STILL ONLY United States, constituted a safeguard | century technology to produce bricks | to supply a million people. This | drought, for this fruitful research | s0 opulent, so imperial, more ‘tes could petition for reunion The tim has imilar to those’ ta 4 : is the news from the United Stat- | was driven by necessity, The | Roman than Caesar's empire, | wen Britain and thus acquire C against shortages. e similar to those made in the beehive | 4, Geological Survey. which has | people of Long Island, of course, needs only a royal family t© | ready-made hereditary royalty come, according to the report, when | kilns of 18th century France. These | just found a river of vast dimen- | already depend on their water- crown its achievements . Its certain countries can no longer buy all | antiquated bricks will cost the govern- _ %i9ns.200 feet.under Maryle=d’s | bearing sands, and may be less | revolutionary republican origit MINES WORTH MUCH Magazine and | eastern shore. The test drillings | impressed. , is a gone goose when foy: Siesrel tiniag, aocvuile Set 0 , the wheat they require. : ment $90 per thousand, $10 per | reveal a channel two miles long a. | Cae OO PEON, stale ot COMENS enperne, be Coloured Comics * Last year Canada had about 450 | thousand more than standard modern | and half a mile wide, and there | An elephant eats At poonis | Since ie seem subconsciously | ing worth §3,400,000,000 gross tn million bushels of wheat on hand at | bricks. — <) | ge miles, The government scien [50 gallons of water at @ time. |te have sought « royal family. | 1064. = = —_— hE OWT RE ET PI SS e ; as CS eee ake oS «: > + : oe “i PP 9 SAGO foes i: Pit ah pin pie wes a PP PAE EE 8 ge ao a & se ie a volar anaae cna ce eee we a