; s Guardian | Prince Edward Island Uke The Dew 3 . W. J. Hancox, Publisher Werd some : Frank Welker Se ee every week day morning (except Sun dey and statutory holidays) et 165. Prince Street, _ Charlottetown, P-E.1., by Thomson Newspape:s |td- Branch offices st, Summerside, Montague, Alberton | ‘Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers. Advertising Servicesr: Toronto. 425 University Ave. Empire 38894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- ‘ verity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie ” Street Vancouver MA 7037. (5 “Member Canadian Daily ‘Newspoper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- of all news ims this paper publ republication of special: dispatches here- Subscription rate; —~ week by carrier on $15. year off Island and U.K. $20.00 pet yeer in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. : ' Net over 7e single copy. ’ Member Aucit Bureau of Circulation. Brotherhood: Week A movement which has grown steadily in recent years is that of Brotherhood Week. Sponsored by the Canadian Council of Christians and Jews, it is being observed this week across the country as a salutary re- minder to men of goodwill of every- race and creed that the things which unite us are of much more importance ~ than the issues which tend to divide | us. ‘ On this occasion the movement should be ‘of special interest to Canadians as a prelude the Centennial. of Confederation and the Inter- ‘national Exhibition of 1967 in which Canada will provide a meeting place ~ for pedple of all nations, to become: better acquainted and grow in under- standing of each other’s aims and requirements, — We need only consider the tragedy of the Viet Nam war and other. evidences of strife and discord throughout the world to realize that we have stil! a Jong way to go in ach- jeving that vision of the Brotherhood of Man which plays. so vital a part in Christian doctrine. Yet the fact that universal lip-service is paid to this great concept is itself a matter of. It was something, surely, that at the conclusion of the 20th General As- sembly of the United Nations last “Pecember, the delegates reached an~ agreement designed. to eliminate the preaching and practice of racial discrimination. What is needed, how- ever, is not further affirmations of this kind, but greater efforts in mak- ing effective the concept on ‘the personal and national level. Every- thing Canadians can do to forward | the movement among themselves, w ‘tural fouries and areas | PAGE 4 MONDAY, FEBRUARY, 21, 196. | t _ Nations Educational, Scientific and | Cultural Organization. The objective _ is to teach the world’s one_ billion | illiterates to read and write within the next generation. It‘is figured that . to make any economic progress a developing country must first achieve at least 40 per cent adult literacy. | Below 40 per cent farmers and fac- .. tory hands must be shown and told 'Sorally what to do. Above that . level | information can be imparted via the written word. Hence the urgency and importance of the project. | The campaign will start with train- _ ing programs in Algeria, Iran and Mali, and the United Nations has ; generously set aside a special fund for the purpose. Of how many hundred millions? Don’t be silly! $3.9 million is the figure, and considering that the UN itself is in such bad shape finan- | ecially, #t ought to satisfy us. It wouldn’t carry a Surveyor spacecraft very far; but that, we keep sternly reminding ourselves, has nothing whatever to do pillion illiterates! Poor Ontario! .We have always thought of Ontario as being not only the wealthiest prov- ince of Canada, but the most advanced in educational facilities as well. It comes as a shock, therefore, to learn” of the backward condition of “ts library services, as revealed in a sur- vey made by a New York library ex- pert. One Ontario citizen in four has no access to such services at all, the. report states. In many communities ‘the only:sources of books are anti- “quated privately supported “Associa- tion” libraries—an expedient of the last century which has long outlived its usefulness. oe Nowhere are books more essential than as an instrument of learning at all ages and stages, Yet, the report finds, three out of-four Ontario -schools have: inadequate libraries. —§chool -reference-books.are. many. _years out of date. The deficiencies extend from the bottom to the top of | the educational system. Two of Ont- ario’s new . universities opened for wv i ‘provision for libraries: at all. Education Minister William Davis has responded to the disclosures by will be- introduced at the present session of the Ontario legislature to provide for much more generous provincial assistance to school _ brings closer its realization inter- nationally. : It is, therefore, of real importance. ’ “that we take this opportunity to re- affirm and-promote, with all the force _ at our command, the fundamendal , principles of brotherhood on which depends not only our own future, but the survivalof all we value in our tion. : _ Two Objectives It may be May, at least, three ; 3 % ‘ months behind the Soviets, before the _ first ‘American Surveyor spacecraft heads for a soft landing on the moon, it does, it will carry a new TV. -gamera_ with a 360-degree scanning | device to relay pictures of the mioon’s surface back to earth. These. pictures —if they come through—will show. how far the feet of Surveyor are buried in the moon’s surface. And strain gauges on these feet will show the landing force and surface strength of the moon. ‘This model, weighing 2,200 pounds, will be the first of seven engineering | .. models to be launched by Atlas Agéna rockets. Three are scheduled for __Yaunching this year; four for 1967._ Later, in 1968 three heavier models, ; carrying scientific instruments, and each weighing about 2,500 pounds, will soft land on the moon. > ’ The technique has been worked. out _ with amazing precision and the pro- gram, apparently, has passed the stage ‘of sharp criticism to which it was subjected last fall.by a House space subcommittee and is now back on the track. The cost of the seven-craft operations is expected to be $525 thillion. With the heavier three, ’ gcheduled for later. it could come to more than $700 million. + "The Soviets, we may assume, will be equally concerned about keeping ahead in the moon race, regardless 0 cost. % : Whether it will be worth it ar not, is another matter. But who is to judge. | of this? We hasten to disavow any ~ such intentions. But we note that another race has gotten under way, "of more concern to mankind, and being hailed as the most. ambitious ever undertaken by the United | meet certain standards. It also recom- _Mended the establishment of a unified system with central cataloguing that would make library books avail- able to everyone in the province. _ Without being too complacent about it, we can contrast the back- wardness of Ontario in this important matter. with the progress we have ‘made in Prince Edward Island in re- have contributed to this achievement; but they will, we are sure; agree with us that it stemmed largely from the _ activities .of one individual, Miss ‘Nora Bateson, of the Carnegie Foun- dation, who came to us on loan under a Carnegie public libraries grant and inspired us all with her magnificent spirit. ne It has been. Ontario’s ‘misfortune, it_seems, that it never had a Nora Bateson. EDITORIAL NOTES Charlottetown lost one of its most esteemed citizens in the sudden death yesterday of Robert S.P. Jardine, re- ‘tired ‘manger of the local branch of the Imperial Bank of Commerce and active in many worthwhile move- ments for the benefit of the com- munity and province. The sympathy ‘of a host of friends will go out to his bereaved wife and family on this - occasion, : * - Ardent amateurs shouldn’t take it too seriously, but Ethel Barrymore once said that for an actress‘to be a success “she must have the face of Venus, the brains of Minerva, the . memory of Macaulay. the figure of Juno and the hide of a rhinoceros.” =** ** The” University of California’s School of Criminology has announced plans to establish a college at San- Quentin for selected inmates of Cali- “fornia state prisons. While not the first higher educational facility in the history of American penology, it promises to be one of the most significant. efforts’ to rehabilitate prisoners.through education, - é ’ Le the world’s |} classes before they had made any +: anouncing that remedial legislation |. cent years. Many devoted workers | Hh ‘HEY, THAT'S GOT OUR BRAND ON IT’ Japan is the industrial. glant of Asia. Its economic growth rate has remained vigorous for ‘over a decade. And despite the. speéd with which this moderniz- ed age-old kingdom continues “tts forward course, it has e solid underpinning that keeps it steady and stable. : Regional Free Trade - London Free Press. -. i _KNOCKING AT ASIA'S DOOR Japan Sponso \ Christian Science Monitor Further, there is e@ natural ‘end geographical af- fi between Canada’s Atlan- tic provinces and the New Eng- land states were it not for international: boundary that in- g Remember those steaming jungle movies of a few years ago? There was always a beau- tiful: white goddess, an earnest scientist and a horde of evil na- tives chasing them guns or dartguns shooting pois- oned that brought in- ' stant paralysis. ; It_was_a sad day when a child | grew to doubt that life in the jungle was really like that. Now comes news that scien- tists have isolated a poison from the skin of the South American Kokoi frog that is 10 times more’ guns but actually helped them - toxic than any other known ven. | om, It is used by the Cholo In- Crime Against Mankind Poisoned Darts _ Ottawa Journal with blow | 2 It’s strong stuff— one poison- tipped arrow can paralyze a monkey.in_60_seconds._ : What all this does for our faith in the old jungle movies isn’t clear—for it seems the Cholo Indians: not only didn’t the frogs. But’ anyway ‘catch there’s etill venom in the jungle. Milwaukee Journal * There appéared on this page recently an account—of-the—poi- soning of seagulls on the ’ coast of Norway. The small tragedy was traced to poisons carried into coastal waters from fields | sown with seed treated with mercury-based fungicides,“ or sprayed with DDT and other in- secticides. t “Last week also The Star putt lished an interim, urgent ; by the International Joint Com- mission on the polluted state of the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River, with particular stress on the need of early her- oic measures to arrest the de- generation of Lake Erie from poisoning by industrial waste, domestic sewage and insecticide and fertilizer residues. Little was gaid about the con- dition of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River, but the fact of pollution damage was noted. There was a graphic half-hour TV program a couple of weeks ago on the sickening condition .of the Hudson River. There have | been news reports on the condi- tion of other waters elsewhere, ‘everywhere showing the effects - of indifference to the effects of men’s abuse of their surround- ings. on the discovery of DDT .in the We commented months back | tissues of creatures confined -to | the Antarctic, which could never have been within thousands of | miles, of. any places where. DDT | was ever applied. The sea is vast, but for all its extent, what is poured into it ' amywhere affects it i some de- gree everywhere, We do not get rid of all kinds _ef--waste_end rubbish by dump- ing them into a stream that will carry them down to-thé sea. Some of them can return - to plague us, as the poison in the waters off Norway. _| ference, the more successful it rs Development Conference cially, technically, and in exper- ience— to her fellow Asians. Yet Japan's where in Asia is minimal. And when Japan, conscious of her economic and industriel ‘lIN THE BACKGROUND One reason always in the bac , of course, is that | other otill have memor- ies ia libraries, including a system of pate detailed | Canadian tart structure for | and that _non-Asian Len granfs”, to encourage study : one ‘part of the, country . | were essential for the phenome- rhe The proposition is that |-’ Perhaps the lies. clos- of Japanese recovery. But school to improve their library might be sapectes. to. Save on |or te. Citewad od ttint- | they have ‘not mode the Jepan- facilities. The survey report also con Sa arta which |eral deals or “Maritime- | ese any less —_ re : =f 8 Conf ra’ & have based: industry . specific Consequently reconstruc- _recommended that the province pay | Complained of their isolation |ducts, But here egain, any tar- | tion successfully behind them, half the costs of public libraries: that | from the major markets of On- | iff arrangement made possible | they have tended more and ou. Cc a. . ‘ the West, largely because of | country, of necessity Id have | erican umbrella—and ten- head; and that local libraries should the difficulties od the covte-ef |to be wade available t ony tatively to venture beyond it : i sg” nsportation. ~~” : other... 4 response from other not be eligible for grants untéss they bm : tes. iter ya dustrial giant, with a population of nearly 100 million, is still a client of the United States, _ BASIC PROBLEM The Japanese Government's basic problem in its relations with other. Asians is to rid them of that suspicion. But the govern- ment has only a narrow area for maneuver, since Japan is as de- pendent as ever for its security on its tréaty relationship with” ‘the United States. Tokyo is an imaginative move. The more nonaligned countries that Japan can get to this con- should be— .politically as well as economically. Thus # was encouraging -to note that ih a recent parliamentary speech, | Foreign Minister Shiina mede @ -special point of Japan’s- willing- | ness to help Indonesia. This is | aH in the right direction— both {for Japan and for the stability of Southeast Asia. HE'S UP AGAINST. Qimpnins ' a Up oF ee TOO MUCH MUSCLE A NECESSARY TASK involvement. else-. _ Within that area, the proposed ecinomic | Remem ber = Mastoiditis | Complications from ear infec- tions (otitis media) were an age- old problem prior to the intro- duction of penicillin in 1942, The "| child with an earache was un- i and the bony prominence becom- and tender to the touch. There ie fever and X-rays show the characteristic clouding- of the pus-filled mastoid. cells. Sur- 2 F ealing is. rapid, especially good drainage is combined oer amounts of the right Ebi e E : and is vy in a masked form, The in- fection smolders because treat- ment of the original otitis media or discontinued too .soon. occasion- £2. mouth approximately 24 hours before the typical rash of meas- “ish white dots, usually as small as grains of sand, surrounded by a lightly reddish: halo. BLOOD TYPE AL; AS va A. write Are: 7 | ota wid RB aowative lobar children. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | all ; | replied the heckler, ‘I’m a ~ NOTES BY THE WAY. | A hick town is a place where there is no place to ’go where Cour’ you shouldn't: — Waterloo jer. ‘ e A viewer - gave the a teetota sea diver." — Montreal Star. lowed with a sort of unhappy fascination the search that has - | gone on in the region of Palo- mares, Spain, ever since a United States H-bomber crashed there more than a month ago. Now the Soviet Union has ac- cused the U.S. of violating the 1963 partial ‘test-ban treaty by contaminating Spanish soil and coastal Waters as a result of its nuclear patrols. That treaty was the last. big step in nuclear-weapons con trol. Britain's Prime Minister Wilson, in his visit to Moscow next week, wants to discuss ex- tending the treaty to include un- derground tests. He -also s to. discuss measures + proliferation. - sie “ Fears were expressed in the British Parliament this week that some of the radioactivity from the underground tests es- ‘capes through the earth's sur- face and contaminates the at mosphere. The latest Soviet blast Feb. 13 was almost as big as the rec- ord test conducted a year ago— and that one did cause contam- ‘ination, scientist say. = ~~ WILL DISCUSS PROBLEMS The 17 - nation disarmament. Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (February 21, 1941) . |. Travellers arriving from Sal- -} gon, French- Indo China, said that Japan’s military and polit- ical grip on French Indo-China lope | was being strengthened daily and that foreign residents of Sai- gon were convinced Japan was preparing to strike at the Neth- erlands East Indies with Saigon ‘| as a.sea and air base. "All available native and Ital ian manpower in Eritrea, Ethip- pis and Italian Somaliland was ‘being called to the defence. of Grand Canyon a fast look and J committee, which began sittings | , in Geneva Jan. 27, must wrestle | and Teacher: ‘Can anyone tell me what a fish net-is made of?” Young student: 7‘'Yes, ma'am, , it’s made of a lot of little holes | tied together with a string.” — Toronto Star. , Having need of three cents the mistress of the house went to the top of back stairs. ‘‘Bes- sie," she to. the maid be- low, “have you any coppers down there?” “Yes'm — two” faltered Bessie, Nuclear Weapons Nightmare Cansdica Proce Sia! Witer with all these problems but tt . has given priority’ to liferation, an extremely issue. time. India would need only slightly more than a year, it is estimated, from the time of de- cision-taking to detonation of the first bomb. Such countries as Canada, Israel, Japan; Australia ~ Sweden are well up on the | The ‘Palomares incident —whether dangerous \gerous—gives a glimpse of what: possession life might be like of of nuclear weapons began to spread, with attendant dangers of accident, let alone warfare. Spanish Information Minister Manuel Fraga Iribarne assured reporters there is ‘“‘no danger “| from -radidactivity” on land ‘or sea” following the crash is which three H-bombs—one ap- parently still missing—are said to have fallen into the ocean and another one on land. : TOOK AWAY SOIL i But this does not explain why U.S, authorities lifted hundreds of tons of topsoil and carted it away for burial in a tunnel, or’ why the population of* Palo mares went on a tinned-food died and reported for repeated plosing. This could not only cause health dangers but also Britain's advancing forces, Ital- ian sources claimed in Rome. TEN YEARS AGO ~ (February 21, 1956) |The “éstablishment of a sep- grate—-portfolisof—fisheries_was. one of the highlights forecast in the Speech from the Throne delivered at the opening of the Legislature by Lieutenant’ Gov- ernor T.W.L. Prowse. ae Sixteen deaths and a total ‘of 188 persons injured in traffic ac- cidents during 1955 was shown in the annual report of the Mot- or Vehicle Branch of the Pro- vincial Government. GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 une, Chicago, Illinois.) KNOWS 129B Queen St. wt NIAGARA” istherea money problem you need to solve? 1OW ’ Dial 894-5524 aye é via By ‘ . Get cash now ...for overdue bills, unexpected _ expenses, any good reason. A Niagara counsellor will talk over the amourit and repayment schedule... and tailor it to fit your budget. We believe money and helpful planning go together Loans from $50 to $2500 NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED = 3 § or not dan- -