l t ‘t E111 fiitmdfafi Covers Prince Edward Island like The Dow . J. Hancox, Publisher Burton st Frank Wllkel Executive Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street. Charlottetown, P.E.l. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. , lunch offices at Summerslde, Montague. ton and Souria. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services, Toronto, 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8694: Montreal, 640 Cathcart University S5942.- Western Office, 1030 Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA 7037) Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Assonation and The Canadian Press. The Canadian P53" is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper credlted to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published herein. All right or republication of special dispatches bere- In_also reserved. Subscription rates. - Not over 35: per week by carrier. V_I2.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas not servuzed by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and UK. $20.00 per y’ar in US. and elsewhere outside British Corn- monwaalth. . .Not over 7: slnggle copy. ’- Member Aud-t Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 Pay More And Get More The medical care program pro- posed by the royal commission on health services is breath-taking in its implications. and may stir up as much controversy as the flag issue itself. The benefits would be sweep- ipg in every field of health service. and they would be financed by higher taxes. perhaps even by lots teries in some provinces. The commission's 914~page re- port is the product of an assignment that began when the former Con- servative government appointed it on June 20, 1961. BeSldes a year of public hearings across Canada. the commission had prepared for it 26 research studies. In addition. the commission members made first hand studies of health systems in the United States. Britain, Frau», Holland, Sweden, Switzerland. Aus- a tria. Italy. Russia. Australia and New Zealand. After all this. it produced its report with the comment: “This is what Canada and the provinces working together should do. It is not an idealist's dream but a prac- tical program within Canada's ability, financially and practically. . . . It is what Canadians ought to strive for and expect through their governments. They should not be content. with less." As envisaged by the commission, practically no type of health service would be left uncovered. and it is emphasized that Canadians would willingly pay the higher taxes re- quired. This is the lssue on which controversy will hinge. It threatens, as the Toronto Globe and Mail pre- dicts, to “rock the politicians back on their heels—not to speak of the doctors. the dentists. the insurance companies. the drug houses and others." Opponents of the scheme will doubtless point to a report just is- sued by the Bureau of Statistics, which shows that the spending last year of all Canadian governments on health and welfare programs- amounted to not less than $4,000 million, or the equivalent of 12.2 per cent of the national in c o m e. The comparable figures are seven per cent for the United States and eight per cent, for the United King- dom. It will be argued that Canada cannot go much farther than it has gone in this direction. But the importance of the com- mission report lies in the fact that it Comes from a government-appoint- ed body. It is not a platform dream- ed' up by a left-wing party to gain political support, but a monumental document requiring the most. care— ful study that Parliament and the provinces can give it. UN Peace Force «Further trouble in Cyprus has underlined the difficult position of the': United Nations peace force there. the need for more clearly de- fining its activities. and for more gei'l'eral support of its aims on the part of the world organization it- self. Each time world peace is threatened and the UN. steps into the breach. there is a scramble to put together a military peace keep- . tug force. Each operation is marked by delay, confusion and criticism. Creation of a. permanent inter- national force has been repeatedly suggested. The western powers. for the most part, favor some such ar- iusamcut: but the Soviet bloc is cppoeod and enough unalign- have been auspicious l ,. _. forcetofore- I Alber- . MONDAY. ’JUNE 22. 1964. , the Milwaukee Journal paye high tribute to Prime Minister Pearson as “one champion in peace keeping who is undismayed.” Canada, it notes, was the first country to re- spond with military units to join British troops to keep feuding Greek and Turkish Cypriots apart. Since then, several Countries have joined Canada in designating military units for service at the L'N’s request. To date Canada has designated a battalion of 1,000 men. Sweden has introduced legislation calling for establishment of a special unit of 1,600 that Would be immediate- ly available. The Netherlands has offered 300 marines who would be available on 24 hours' notice. Nor- way, Denmark and Finland are plan- ning to set up units that could be called separately or as a task force. And in New York last week the Shah of Iran said his country was prepared to earmark a contingent for peace keeping duty in “any part of the world." It would also provide money and instructors to help train UN units. Thus the movement is growing. Mr. Pearson himself concedes that conditions are not ripe for setting up a permanent UN force. but he has held consistently to this ob- jective. In the meantime, he has emphasized that stand-by contin- gents should be used only when re- quested by the UN and only for duly authorized peace keeping opera- tions. Costly Campaigns One reason why Canadians don't want another federal general elect- ion until it's necessary is because, for supporters of every party, cam- paign costs have mounted to stag- gering proportions. The costs run still higher. of course, in the United States. This year it ls the big con- tributors. the lobbyists. and even higher-salaried gm'el'nment Work- ers, who are Complaining. because the bite is being applied ever more heavily to these sources of funds. They are being asked to subscribe to $50- and $lOO—a-plate dinners—- not only for presidential campaigns but for the individual campaigns of senators and congressmen. Democratic and Republican spokesmen estimate that the 1960 campaigns, at all levels, cost some- thing like $1751‘000,uoo. This year, the total figure may run over $200,000,000. There seems little promise of practicing economv. Candidates insist on wide television coverage and on zipping all over the country by airplane. One estimate is that it costs $250,000 to put on a respectable senatorial campaign in a big industrial state, and $500,000 to run for governor. Along with the pressure on big contributors there is an uneasy feel- ing that this system is corrupting to political morals, and putting toe much influence in the hands of the wealthy few. Reforms—new ways of financing campaigns—éhave been proposed from time to time. The late President Kennedy had just about completed plans. before his assas- sination. for a public campaign to expand the ranks of lowly contribut- ors in the 1964 election. The campaign was to be launch- ed at~ a White House conference at which former President Eisenhower and other top figures in both parties would speak up and dramatize the need for obtaining more small con- tribution. from the rank and file. The conference has never been re- scheduled. EDITORIAL NOTES About 200,000 prefabricated homes were built in the United States last year. This was some 20 per cent of all the private single family homes started in 1963; dur- ing 1964 the proportion is expected to reach about 25 per cent. The estimated average cost per house package sold during 1963 was $4,038, down slightly from $4,044 the prev- ious year. 0 O C With the signing of a contract at the U.S. Embassy last week. more than 1700 Canadian employees of the U.S. Department of Defense in Canada are now included in a retire- ment pension plan. The contract covers approximately 400 employ- ees of the US. Naval Station at Argentia. Newfoundland. A similar pension plan covering 1300 em- ployeee of the U.S. Air Force pre- viously went into effect March 15 of this rear. WHITE HOUSE ROSE GARDEN OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Coouette’s Break-Away Group ' The youngest but not the [ smallest party represented ln . the Canadian Parliament is be f Ralliement des Creditistes. It is so completely French-Cana- dian of Quebec that. even in Lh English-language report and translation of theproceedinus of the House of Commons. its name is written in French. This group of IR MP5 is often referred to as "the Caouettits", after its leader. Real Caouette, whose name is often prec by the adjective “firebrand” in reference to his persuasive ton- gue and its demands for ponti- cal and economic changes. Car- toonists have made his sharp- featured bespectacled face widely known and his political enemies depict him as a crOss between a financial cbarlatan and a national menac . e In failing to seek to under- stand why Real Caouette has influenced so many votes in Quebecin two elections. and television programs are so popular in Quebec. poll- ticians of other parties are per- forming a grievous dissemce - to Canadian unity. The parliamentary whip of the Creditists is Charles Gauth‘ ier, who thus rates third in the party after Real Caouelte and his deputy-leader Gilles Greg- oire. He ls as vocal in the Commons than his two leaders. but he is remarkable for his re- gular attendance when i mentioned this to him. he to Id me that he has not missed single day during this session of Parliament. TOO MUCH TALK Mr. Gauthier was born. rais- . married and <"" l‘ves the little town of Mistassini just north of Lake 51. Jean. deep in what the Indians used to call “The Kingdom of the Saguen- ay."Now in his 52nd year. he had been alderman and mayor of Mistassini before twice being elected to Parliament. He oper- ates a furniture business with which. as so often in smaller communities. a funeral parlour is combined. As a good member of his community. he has long rved as president of the school board and director of the credit uni’on. On the walls of his parliamen. tary office hang photos of Real Caouette. of his wife. and a hap- py - looking family group with their eight children. His :3 ‘ eldest daughter is~a lab techni- cian at an Ottawa hospital. and a talented painter of the impres- Sionist school —— she is holding " an exhibition in Montreal next month: his business like second daughter minds the store while father serves in Parliament. which is “Too slow. much talk but. little action" says business- man Gauthier. He has been a keen follower of Social Credit economic theory for 2.5 years, and is obviously happy to be carrying its mea- aage into Parliament now. But. like all his party. he has an even more urgent message. WHAT IS OUR STATUS? "Where are we golng? What are we?" be asked in the House recently. “Are we British sub- )ecta In a Canadian country. or Canadians in a British coun- try? That is the question facing many people who have been nlng and Bob Thompson alike. and. like many thinking Que- becois. seeks to free Quebec — and incidentally other provinces —-from the central govern- ment‘s excessive powers which Mackenzie King grabbed in wartime. and from the U.S. ec- onomic yoke. Other Canadians believe this position is based on misunderstath - yet the dia- logue which is essential to cre- ate two-way trust and under- standing ls sadly lacking in Parliament where it should be provided. Hazardous Breath Winnipeg Tribune A year ago French authorities decided to close the famous scaux cave to the public. The walls of the cave form one of the world's most import- ant museums of prehistoric art. The murals on the cave walls, discovered in 1940 by four boys In search of a lost. dog. were painted at least 15.000 years ago. The paintings lasted because ' the cave was perfectly air-con- ditioned by nature, with a dell- cate balance between tempera- ture and humidity. Some time after the cave was opened to visitors a myst- l ous green began to spread over the walls and the paintings. In 1963 the cave was closed to give scientists a chance to Ill- vestigate the growth that three- tened to obliterate the ancient works of art. Researchers have now come to the conclusion that carbon dioxide exhaled by visitors had upset the delicate balance in the cave's atmosphere and caused the growth of the mould. The cave will probably not be reopened to the public again. There is talk of building an- other cave complete with cop- ies of the prehistoric murals as a kind of second-best for the tourist industry. After all. the cave had be come the rim - most popular tourist centre in France. Scientists have arrested the spread of the mould. but it is expected that in future only scholars dressed in sterile clo~ thing and presumably using some kind of Scuba equipment, will be allowed into the grotto. Maybe there was more to the story of the three little pigs than appeared on the surface. In Lescsux. huffing and puff- ing nearly something that had survived fifteen mil- lenia. Havmg whipped up emotions of hatred — thinly disguised as patriotism — among its young people. the Cyprus Government of Archbishop Makarios has now moved into reap the bar- vest by conscripting schoolboys. Among the hundreds of young Greek Cypriots who signed on was one who eclar . in the accepted death-or-glory fashion: "The needs of the motherland are greater than our personal needs." The words have an unreal. conscripts were driven to train- ing camps they sang patriotic songs and were cheered and ap- plauded by Greek Cypriot; in the streets. EVerythlng about the situation would convince them that they were taking part in a glorious enterprise: nothing would sug- gesl that they were being used as pawns in the ugliest of game . The decision to conscrlpt young Greek Cypriots is a step which can hardly fall to bring about serious deteriorations of the Cyprus situation. It is a gas- ture of contempt toward the United Nations and toward the 7.000-man force it has hit to provocative act. introduced at a time when the delicate balance of tempers should not be upset. The action of the C riot Gov- ernment was taken despite the veto of the Turkiah~Cypriot Vice- Presldent. Fazl Kutchuk. It has brought protests from Britain and Turkey and ‘ita,unconetltu- tional nature may simply pro- vide Turkey with )uatlflcatlon Intervention. submitted to the dictatorship of ‘ for mlllt the old parties. In politics we are nothing but British colou- ials, while our economy is per cent in the hands of the Un- ited Steffi. Cooperative feder- alism has been invented as a tranquillizer for Quebec by the Liberal government. which won power through electoral Irregu- latlties: French-speaking ele- ments provide the cooperation. while English masking elec- rneuta supply the cenu'a'lizlng federalism." The Caouette break-away group supports the Douglas theory of Social Credit. discards the leadership of Premier Man- The possibility of Turkish lu- tervention. which loomed re- cently. seems to hive ebbed since the United States discuss- ed matters with the Turkish Government. The Pnemiera of both Greece and Turkey are due to confer with President Lyndon Johnson in Washington next week. United Nations Sec- retary-General U Thant la nego- slogan-like quality that the world has heard before on the? lips of fanatical youth. As the keep peace on the island. It is a . COWBOYS RETURN A British by has grown wealthy supplying metal and plastic toys to the U.S.—cow- boys and Indians ' The Game Of Hole Globe and Mail. Toronto tinting to extend the term of the peace-keeping force. Could any more inopportune time have been found for either side‘to make a belligerent move? Having inle the United Nations to send troops to the is- land to restore order. it might reasonably have been expected that President Makarios would try to make their task easier by disarming his men. He seems determined. on the contrary. us pull as strongly as he can in the opposite direction. Some Facts On Heart Attacks II. VI! Della occur for many menopausal SOme also have blah blood pres- sure are ove bt. It is difficult to single out any one these factors as causa- leeterol. plus obesity. plu- hyp- ertension la woos. than one of these one. A low fat diet lai- reasonable. the alumni of especially on cholesterol in the blood is too high or the ludlvl some from a coronary-prune easily. An elevated cholesterol and by- perteualou eucmlraogembardeu- occurs only when an artery is . ial in them may protrude obstructed. It is here that other causes enter the picture. Evidence exists that many heart attacks a :- ahuge into the wall of a coron- eryattery.Asareeultthelnuer lining of the blood vessel mile and obstruction occurs. Heart attacks after emotional a t 1' sea could be explained on this haste. A vitamin C deficiency also may play a role by m' capillaries mono fragile. In ad- dition there is evidence t h at a monary artery becomes plugged by a clot that form be- cause blood ie too "sticky." This is the opposite of hemophilia. in which the blood will not. concu- late Altendency to clot. is marked candidates. especially men tween40s-ud 60 years outage with an overabundance of cho- lesterol. The blood returns to normal when a low fat diet is consumed. along with vegetable oils. HERNIATED DISK n.0, writes: What is meant by a crushed disk in‘ the back? R The disks separate the ver- tebrae and also act as cushions. When crushed. the soft mater- and press the spinal cord. Most slipped or herniated disks fall into this category. Th e structure usually is tough and unless it degenerates through age or injury. can withstand considerable abuse. SORE WRIST G.R. writes: I fractured a wrist 1V: years ago. It still pains me and the doctor says I have traumatic arthritis. Is there any relief for this type of soreness? PLY Traumch arthritis is b e at. treated with physical therapy-- heat, massage. and gentle ma- nipulation. A wrist support spares the joint when working. BLADDER TUMOR A.W. writes: How 15 tumor of the bladder diagnosed? 8 means of a cystoscoplc ex- amination and removing a small piece of tissue (biopsy) for laboratory study. The cysto- scope is a tubular instrument with a light on one end and a magnifying eye piece on e. other. It is passed into the blad- der through the urethra. M PRESSIVE AH. writes: Does a split per- sonality refer to a mental dis- ease? REPLY Yes —- schizophrenia. In this mental disorder. the individual suffers from hallucinations. de- lusions. fears. or feelings of in- adequacy. Some alternative be. tween a depressive and a men- lc personality. TODAY’S HEALTH KIN on’t reach for an electrical (Note: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be ad- dressed uo: Dr. Theodore V T.— an Delleu. c-o Chicago Tribune. ChicaizO. Illinois.) First Family Conference Ottawa Journal On the last day of the Cana- dian, Conference on the F fly a speaker acid: "It is not so much the conclusion of this conference that will count but that we should have held a con- fe at all." Conferences - far too many it sometimes seems — are call- ed on planning. on trade on. on elmoet any subject believed important the moment It . But how Is it that until this week there was never feeling the central unit of hu- mau ety - the family? At last or afew brief days the family was placed where it de- serves to belong — at the cen- in of the uaflou'e‘buduesai The family Conference. an an- other speaker said. marked the end of official lalsaez-falre. For it there was any slug general conclusion it was that the fam- ily In Canada does need help and that. an extremism ecu- meuhal and scientific “dialo- gue'l'~ has begun. Not that there was or is lith to be anorgy professional pessimism. From the start has been acknowledged that the I . like mankind itself. is in a 5 ate of perpetual crisis. ‘bu hope u- e- t not as. In the family‘s survival there is an element of r- hepa not given to man to under- atmd . Yet the tens- 'u long as God bdda away." What made this memo- fly will last. as a Montreal said, ' succeed - as it did beyond any Vestlge of doubt -— wee lte overwhelming desire to ex.- pand the frontiers of knowledge about the family. Dr. Kaspar D. Naegele of the University of British Cokunbla who presented perhaps the moat penetrating of all the conference poi unicuve insight into both ' the nature of research and listening. NOT GOING TO MOSCOW BONN (APP-Wed (Semen Chancellor Ludwig Erhard b aside Friday any poa- 'elbllity that be will soon make a trip to Moscow. Erhard told a press conference that If So- viet P mler Khrushchev has anything useflul to talk a ut with the West German officials. NOTES BY, .THE WAY m (M‘- l -- "New. dear. what cornea at- t” 0?" Child — "Yeah!" - Gait Reporter. Gardener — “The h a sebac- eo plant. in full flower. madam, Dear old Lady - “How very in- tereatlull And how long will it be betom the chm are ripe?" a“ The Department of Ieduatn and Information. government of advises in its wtaida din-lea . t is beetuqttogouear trees wire fences. hill or wide- opeu spaces." Now. Just where is then left to go? - toou star - Phoenix. who're all else y’se h’s can when your ‘0 mum M'C “will [0 alone. - Clint! Herald. la Rome some mick thee- tened to taka off clothes to get more pay. Hereabouta these are people who want more pay us or- drtoputousnoreclothea. 1'! Fort William Times-Journal. no epls'ela and uses. of att- tory are both punliug and in eating. Half a century ago .‘ average man drove a bone and the wealthy drove a car. To day boneless carriages are an everyday necessity and only the well-to-do can afford horses. .. Ottawa Journal. , . The latest step In the United Nations ca aaalna South Ablca'a racial policies once aulu ra aw ques- tion: How far la Britain pre- pared to go In attempting to Mice a change of heart" in the republic? ‘ The relatively mild sentence in the Millie’s recent sabotage Hal (1 a number of opponents of apartheid—life imprisonment lnatead of the death penalty— I caused some Brill com- mentators to hope South Africa may at last be taking note of world opinion. . But. it is often questioned how much welflit that opinion will continue to carry it it is not backed by threat of definite ec- uou. African Uberala vie- ltlng Britain stress that while Verwoerd has no love for the British. he places con- siderable political value on the fact that up to now Britain has been reluctant to commit herself to anything more than hard words The fact that Britain has for once voted in favor o! a UN Security Council motion does not really mean she has climbed off the fence she has so long occupied together with France and Portugal—nations regarded as reactionary many former colonial countries in the UN. U.S. NOT COMMITTED The motion only called for a study group to assess possible measures against the republic. Britain‘s representative. Sir Patrick Dean. also carefully ex- plained that voting in favor did not mean Britain was commit- ted “now or at any time in the fi— Hard Question For Brita-int Kennedy ;‘ a Staff Writer v’ future" to any action she ,mlgbt consider coercive. l Even more significantly. the study oomnsltt 'a (in age not be on the table until next year, by which time there might well be a Labor government in Brltalu. Labor is already com- mitted to some kind of pressure on South Africa—probably an arms embargo. Thus it would appear the Con- servative government has not: really changed lts basic unwill- ingness to take sides, of Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas - Home constantly warns of the uses- of the world‘s white and colored na- tions becoming so divided over some issue that a racial con- flict could arise. South Africa. many fear. could be just that issue. SELF-INTEREST? Rightly or wrongly Britain'a equivocal position has been in- terpreted by many as sheer eco- nomic self-interest. There is also the question of the Simoustown Naval Base in South Africa. though this Is no longer as strategically important to Brit- ish defences as it was. Fears that Verwoerd might m s me sort of reprisal against Britain‘s High Commie. eion territories in the republic may also weigh in her reluc- (once. And there Is always the des- pairing view. expressed at times even by the advocates of tough measures. that nothing short of the ultimate clash will ever change the Afrikaner in his be- lief that only white rule can save South Africa from anarchy. Much has happened to blu r the vision of “equal partner- ship” between the United States and Europe that. was pictured so brilliantly on July 4. 1962. by the late President Kennedy. Still. at least one voice of hope rings out. persistently from the continent in support of th at wordiy goal. It is that of Jean Monnet, father of France's in- dustrial recovery and a leading proponent of European unity. His Action Committee for a United States of Europe -— an organization of nearly all the non-Communist and non-Gaul]- lst party and trade union lead- ers in the six nation C o In men Market — has just finished Its 11th conference in Bonn. lt issu- ed a declaration calling on the United States and a United Eur- ope to coordinate their nuclear and economic policies and to gun a true and equal partner- Speclftcauy. the committee creed uropean participa- tion In the multilateral nuclear Eyes On Vision Of Unity Milwaukee Journal force of 25 Polaris ships propos- ed by the United States. Whlle acknowledging that this s t e p would not be an Ideal solution. the committee agreed that it: would represent an advance in the present coluusion over joint defense efforts involving nuclear wee . In the economic sphere. the Monnet oup avored immo- dlate establishment of a “com- mittee of understanding" to work for closer cooperation in those areas where Europe In beginning to act in unison monetary policy. relations with eveloplng countries. world trade problems. The committee also spoke strongly in favor of Britain join- ing the Common arket. Formidable ohstables. center- ing mostly around President do Gaulle of France. obstruct the path toward these objectives. Nonetheless. it is encouraging and highly significant that im- portant continental leaders still haven‘t lost sight of them. Q. between lightfie relocate poles ea rcq work. vlngTIm INTERRU’PTION NOTICE There will he an interruption of electric power Well: of Monti-nee River on Wednesday, June 24. the hours of 1:00 pan. and 5:00 pm. Day- Thle interruption is necessary to permit us to ulsled by The area affected will be from Montroee Bridge to Tlgnlahand solace MARITIME ELECTRIC M4- road construction at areas. hecan cometo l Ba IIIIIT. I! WRIGHT W ROYAL SECURITIES Gin-flu— but! Stocks and Bonds ALEX as muou lancer manta-st. alumna cans-sum . a L has Yoecan‘tntleeyossreevhpalamd_ vrtleSP i -tbe lite—Insured Weevil!” plus. , outrun mn- tmsm‘uwmm aim