i (attendant l cgveis Prince Edward Islnnd uh. The Dew‘ W.J. Nanzex, Publishes suuon i u Funk wollxoi mm... Edna! Edits! Published Ivory wuk dlY morning to em Sun any: and slnwlulv holidays) n lbs Fri . sum, Charlottetown, P.[.|., by Thomson Newspaper! lid. lamb emu- .l slimmmiue, Mom-gun. Alb-r um um Selma. humiliated neimnellv by memo» Newspapers Emulu . eio Cache-n Street, ‘ umle y 6-5912: szlem oillze. luau Wm 6.0.9.. Sue. Vmehuvev (MA 70:7). Member c an Dally NewspIp-v Fublliheu Association .ml ih. Canadian Press Yh- Canadian Inn in exclusively entitled to who on im- «pub. Italian af Ill ntwl shun-em in m plpev (Ndltcd m u or It. the Amen-ed pm. a. ileum. and .lm in the loul new) published hem. All night. or republicallon nl lplrlll dispatch" hmm .hh mewea Subscription me. Not over 35: per week by emiev. slim . v.” by ml or vqu routes "is Ive-l emeed b when Willi» . my: 0" nuns and or. 52000 a» uni elsewhere aunts. Inliih chm. yur .n us. h. Mon Not over 7: 9e. mgr. eouy. Member shun Bureau of cum-n... PAGE 6 THURSDAY, JULY is, 1963 Loss Of A Landmark It is a rare thing to have the demolition of any major landmark ploCeed \vithonl gi ng rise to out- cries of regret alid indignation. Ap- parently. though. no such mournful protests are to attend the departure of the old I-lillsbol'oligh Bridge, which is at last in the proceu of being re- moved. lt has long been condemned, in- deed, as an eyesore which marred its setting. Yet the old bridge lingers in a strong web of important. vivid mem- ories—has A lot of history tied up in it and has played its part in a lot of history. In its \\'a, . it helped start the prov- ince in the direction of the moderne ity it has since achieved, when it was floated here almost 65 years ago from the site it vacated over the Mirimichi River in New Brunswick. Through many years it provided the main railway link with the south- ern part of Kings County It made possible many of the province’s ma- jor advances into the age of the auto- mobile. It became scarred by age and limited in usefulness, and saw many changes in the use made of it, but still it served. It was the scene, too, of that mem- orable moment of drama, when the then Premier ANT. Mathesdn, led the charge against the barricades put up by the department of transport in a premature effort to retire the bridge from use—to retire it before any steps had been taken to replane it. Of course it has been magnifi- centy superseded now by the new Hillsborough bridge. In larger senses. however. Charlot- tetown and the Island took some 60 years in travelling over the bridge. from the pastoral simplicities of their early (la s toward the future they are achieving. So it certainly deserves to be remembered even though it pro- bably won't be missed. Staggering Defense Load The U.S. Chamber of Commerce notes, with concern, that American development resources are being in- creasingly directed into defense and space projects, instead of efforts which could make new products for industry and civilian life The Chamber has put its finger on one of the gravest problems of the l century. and not just in the US. The shape it takes in (‘anada is sug- gested by the revelation this week that the three armed seivices are rec- ommending the expenditure of some 8,500,000,000 on new equipment in the next six yearS. in addition to "regular" defense costs. As for the US. situation, the Chamber points out that the Ameri- can defense budget now runs to $47 billion a year—almost half the total federal budget. It follows that the question whether or not there is to be any end to defense increases is worth asking everywhere, because globnl progress a n d development would slirely run in different chan- nels—anore libraries. more colleges. more sanitation. improved agricul- ture, more industrial development, more breakthroughs in th e war against disease and poverty—if it were not for cold war tensions and national snimoslties. The United State ,,as free world leader, cannot Jeopardize its defense in the name of economy. But Defense Secretory Robert McNamara does mfees in see. in the intermediate distance, I time when military spend- ing unis-vellum This can be mn- flid; he believes by concentrating "flatly. IILservioe weapons, by 4 milling the swift ‘ pos- sibilities of this jet age. and by hold- ing the decision authority for new systems and strategies at top levels. where all the services must rein their ambitions into a common plan. Already he has let it be known that many squadrons of 3-14 med- ium bombers will be retired. and the armed forces may be reduced by some 60,000 men. The navy is likely to be allowed to build fewer carriers. If. of course, the tat-ban ne- gotations in Moscow were to succeed, more defense savings could be plan. ned, not only at Washington but by all the NATO powers. A National Mailer It is now quite evident that the United States government is not only serious but also enthusiastic about undertaking the project of harness- ing the tides of Passamaquoddy Bay to furnish one million killowatta of steady power one hour each day. President Kennedy has assigned his secretary of the interior. Mr. Stewart Udall, to go to Ottawa with the object of securing the approval of the Canadian Government. But worthy as the purpose of the project may be. there is at least one snag which Mr. Udall may run into when he attempts to sell Ottawa on the project. The L‘nited States government wishes to undertake the project alone. In order to do so, it is willing to build and install American locks and filling gates on the Canadian side of the big bay across which runs part of the international boundary 1) e t w e e n Maine and New Brunswick. According to press reports, Pro- mier Robichaud of New Brunswick. is greatly in favor of the project as proposed by the United States. But Mr. Robichaud is a provincial premier, not a national prime minister. and his views are not necessarily those of Mr. Pearson who has to think nation- ally instead of provincially. And it could well be that Canadian government leaders are now recalling those years when Canada was trying to persuade the United States to co- operate in building the St. Lawrence Seaway and when the Canadian gov- ernment was rebuffed in all its ef- forts because certain American rall- way interests considered such a sea,- way might cut into their profits. The two cases are not parallel. but they have one thing in common—- national prestige, For it will be re. membered that the United States finally agreed to share in the sea- way when it became convinced that Canada was prepared, if need be. to build it alone. It would be unwise to predict what the Canadian government’s an- swer will eventually be to the present United States plans for harnessing . Passamaquoddy's tidal waters. But i ' hulli lhe lederul system for e no one should be surprised if. as the price for her agreement. Canada in- sists on palticipating in the project. From the standpoint of national ; prestige, she has every right to do so. De Gaulle Move Awaited While President Kennedy’s popularity is said to be slipping at home, it has been enhanced abroad by his recent European tour. par- ticularly by the four days he spent in the Bonn republic and in Berlin. The President. himself. professes no doubt about the value of this visit —for himself, for allied unity, and for closer Atlantic community ties. It will take some time. however. to make a true It is through West Germany that the President hopes to salvage the Western alliance and offset General de Gaulle’a vision of a looser alliance between the “Anglo—Saxons" (the. U.S. and Britain) and “Eur- ope” (the continent. led by France.) His eloquence—in pu blic speeches and private meetings—appeared to have left. the German leaders with a greater awareness that the alliance could founder if its members follow different aims. But is that enough? Though the Germans want to press General de Gaulls harder on various schemes for pulling the al- liance together again, they are in- hibited by fear of being in a position where they would have to choose between France and the United States. As for Ghoul do Gnulle. he clearly has no intention of retreat- ing. and is more likely to launch a counter-offensive. An indication of his tactics may come at a news conference he has called for July 30. Queue Semis-us? mm mes:— cum-r HAS seouu A Mince: smme To RN96 nouns tow. HIS cause -—'- mam laments-cram; The great depression of th e ‘lhli-iies is more lhan u gener- Iiion behind us now but Its mis- takes and its lessons. must them only half learned, still go- vern and strain our entire fed- eral syslom. To understand the latest dls< pule between the nhnnnhl h nd Provincial governments we must. remember ihal it did not. origi- note by accident yesterday and is not the product of some poli- heui personality like Premier .lean Lesage. it was inhepnt the system from the h to grasp even yet can see is still moving fast. FULL POWER NEEDED In the relatively small probw lem of Canada‘s federelprovim cial relations the immediate con- sequence was to prove that the provinces. as they stood Ihen. could not suppnrt their consti- tutionel responsibilities u n d e r lhe pressure of an economic cale astrophe. Nothinl less than the full poiver and resumes: (if the national government could deal with such a crlsu. Even they were totally Inade- in! but its whole basis was Permev nenlly changed by the depression wlth results that we have failed now. the cole lapse or the world economy, he- gihhing in the autumn of 1929: was only one aspect of a world revolution which such entered its next. stage at world war and SHADES OF GANDHI DEPRESSION CHANGED EVERYTHING Notional-Provincial Crises Are El’ldemic By nine- numunlm Isl Winnipeg Free Press ‘ l and hi his tether, and W8! hi- nf President Franklin Roosevelt, It was promptly rejected by t < a E o i. = e. a a a = i of Invalidated by the courts later a n, One decisive reform remained. hwever. and Is how a primary level in our social system rheu- neit had established Ihe central Bank of Canada without min: the state full control of it. Once King had nationalized this insti- tution and promised vaguely to issue money " in terms of nub~ Llc need," the national govern- merit assumed powers and res< ponsibilitlrs l i I I l I understand then but certain to affect all sectors or society. including the affairs of the provinces. MYTH ESTABLISHED The myth that the hallunal go- vernment could create unlimited money by signing chits .z the central bank. that the provinces could dip info I bottomless trea- sure chest at Ottawa. was now ‘ firmly established in our econo- , mic folklore. it continue: to col- hi- all our current business. King never believed that myth and his Liberalism. in I finallv rial sense, was extremely can. sen/alive, when he returned to oliice. He distrusted and mi- vately laughed II. Roosevelt‘s confused economics. He doubted the theory of government spend- ing in eure the depression and rejected the whole 'Keyneslan concept. as the parliamentary hensnrd souls. in Quote and grossly mismanaged, But at least iI became obvious ‘ in everyone that Ihe national so i rerun-lent nlust undertake tumu lions. responsibilities and casts quite unforeseen by the men who primitive frontier society. At first this new situniinn (in many aspects far outside teller- uipmvinciui linhneel battled the Though his celebrated Speech of 1930. relusing to give " s flve~ cent niece" of federal money to any . provinces had been only the out- hum of an angry man at the New Chill “Tory government" In thr Liberal government of w. Mackenzie King uni defeated in the election at will). THOUGHT TEMPORARY The Conservative government. of R. 13. Bennett begun, sinner. i l)’ and with no cnnsldered plan. to bail out the provinces that would have been bankrupt Vlth- hut federal aid but this eulo- tance was regarded as I teln- pnrery measure. It would be. come unnecessll’y when Ben- nett's program at national sell- containment and bunt-siren eco omlcs had hmsht thinll back In normal. These hopes lnlilnlz. here and throughout the world. I desper- at: Canadian government rever- sed its entirc philosophy and un- derlook nonneu'. famous New Deal. mughiy modeled on um FORUM PUBLIC r: v .1. inlI m mm mus .n mum in nu PAMPH'LET BOUGHT sin—In coimection with n meal-ch Into the history of ship- building in Prince Edward It- And, I .m nnxiou. to obtain . light of . envy of a pamph- let published in Charlottetown IIInIpelloQ I may asth nmumr'um Ina L. H The United sullen has moves to put I new financial squeeze on Fidel Castro. Cuban bank depo- sits in ihe vs, public end on. vote. Imuunliug to about $33,000,000, have been frozen. American hanks Ind their over- seas subsidiaries will be virtual- Iy forbidden in deal with Cuba or Cubans. This adds to the stringent rue lrictlons which the United States had already imposed on Cuban trade. ‘ It is expected to complicate. and possibly curtail. Cublh bun lness relations In Lutin America. One nf its stated objectives is in prevent Caslro lrom moving funds through American banking chlnnels inIo Latin Amerlca for promoting is u in line wiih . July 3 resolution of the Organization or Ameran sun: which urged a aerial of moves tn counter Cu The French Government It luluilud its nucIeIl‘ mp mgr-m by the Imumln‘ that American nuclear support can- not be relied upon. by rec-n» illg him France had been e.- vaslalcd by h Soviet nuclear attack, the United sum would In his Ill'rne, um no other cmur try or government share- it Yet al lenl one other county. inert from the great of nulntIln. a nucleic M Brim — ii. Unlike Prlnce, IHLIII II mess-f1. II ml. I h I I‘llllnee will: the [lulled grelted h moment later. it un- doubledly expressed King'- dawning renllznlion that the hue- iness ol the national and provin- clal governments was out at nint. He was given five years of lei- sure in uuuusihnn to think his way through this and many hlhei- problems On taking of. lice again — still deeply confus- ed like every other statesman in the world — he decided lo call a grand essiu on the federal system. BREAKING DOWN l-lis establishment of the Raw-_ ell-Sinus Commission recogniz~ ed that in the are. or finance the federal system was breaking down The responsibilities of the nnlionai and provincial govern- ments must. be defined. their fields of revenue clearly divid- ed. Above all. the pom-ei- pm - lnces. with local revenues iomle ly inadequate for their needs. must he bum-eased somehow by l money collected from their richer neighbors. The Towellvs‘lrois Report wall the must imporinnt slate docu-l merit in Canadian history since the report of Lord Durhnm which laid the groundwork of Confed- eralion. Apparentlyv however. lhe attempt to transfurmlhe led. ernl ayslem was I failure since three provinces. Ontario. Alber- th, and mum: Columbia. veto« ed it. But as we can i the RowcllSirnis Report, while never implemented. hld chum;- ed everything and continues to haunt the dispute between on i- eleven gnvernmehls today. On Castro Won Free Pres! munlst subversion In the hernia- phere. The lith States and son“ Latin American government; mu mtlculurly concerned About ihe possibility ol Communist takeovers in Vemuell Ind Bri- mh Guiana. The measure will make life more miserable for Castro and possibly or all Cub-u. nut whe- ther it. will contribute mum. ably to the fight against new Communist encroachment in the Wulml hemisphere in question- able. It. probably will not hum the collapse or aver-throw at the cum regime. The creation or a climate huluiy lul- Western so. mucrlcy and unhe f r om- munlsln will rem- eo- lentlll component of I-lllt mm. lie. field when the nu- lied Slate and nth" Western hsmkphel‘ governments must emf-IBM in direct their min a. l . Doubts About Reconciliation ,is-nul em Sir Demon! noyle, who w.- other at Au sun m lies In use, he explained the need for I small deterrent in no. Icfml: i If Brillin llld been destroyed u, their Man the British Mum . .Cynlcally and unheppuy i am melon dam to IIII Inlitll mum that clear mile beam on behalf of ennui-l- ls moiety Inlme because the brittle malt mil retaliation nulls" ’ W Health Hazards Of Scuba Diving Ilnmlch. A! III feet. the effect ll that of two or three drink Ind, It “feet. mnuny mIl'< tints. Life ll Mill-hind when the diver hill to 296ml“ “III unulull null Ind be comes In! idiot. S lily biltlee of blood. nltlwn in the How long'are the upper Ind lower teeth in contact wbus peeled apple. banana. cream A special motion pictures n mouths of in person] while they chewed away at these Items. It took as in 32.5 seconds to chew - peeled apple: 7.: to is. for a banana: 5,1 In 14.2 for I walnut, and 3.1 in m seconds for n m- cker. The teeth were in coal-cf with each new ml In avenue of 19. per cent of the time. The dentist: flamed am most of u. chew so minutes . day and that during 11.7 minutes of thls period, the teeth are cloud. The time n so limited they wondered how im— phmni it is to have - per-rec: hive — at least for chewing food. A flash erey tube made In the United sum wni numbed recently by two Swedish roent- genologists. it is Intended mainly loi- military purposes, especially for studying the course of events of an explosion. The ex- posure time is in rapid that when . Colt automatic pistol in lived, the unit can take a well defined lllcture (imaged at the bullet bo- forc II. leaves the barrel. The flash roentgen tube does not last long enough to be of val- ue for routine medical use. The Swedish teem believes the de- vice can be improved 0 clear images or iiiigety Infants and adults may be obtained. when an ordinary X-ray la laken, the individual must sit [fill or the picture in blurred. it him may be possible to demonstrate the rapid movements of some parts of body such 5 the heart valves and vocal cords. oVAluAN acrlvrrv Mrs. ll. writes: ll nne ovary is removed. are the chances of becoming pregnant reduced so per cent? REPLY Theoretically. yes. But the re- maining ovary might become more active ans: its partner is moved DUST AND SIN!!! EH. writes: Does workln around dust aggravale sinus in- feciio REPLY It may but in many instances the hose and not the sinuses is involved. The most lever! con- gesliun occurs when the indivi- dual is Illerg‘lc to dust. sow mama so. writes: in somewhat underweight Ind m1 possibly consume all the calories 1 in cup posed in. no you suppose eating alone could be Napansble for my luck at eppelile? nnrhr Yes. but there is no need for concern if you feel up to an. NIGHT CflUGH RI". writ/en: why In night Ilr had for people with brunchlti‘? REPLY II. is not the Ilr but the change in posture from upright to harl- Imlial LII-t llfllvllel cough. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT — Excellle lunburn should be avoided. Our Yesterdays [From Bo Gullth Illeal TWETY-F'Wl YEARS AGO Jul! 1!. I”. Add one more teal-lat nth-Ic- lion Ia Princl Edward IllIIu'lI I bonl flde “Magnetic Rold" lnl been discovered Within lhufl motoring distance of ChlrlnM Iowa. The trlck Item when "II Md hunches off the PM“ highway. limos! lmmedlltely op- pollin Pawns! School. The fold apparently div! darn hill for two hundred ylrdl. but will con! hack "uII hill" In the main hlflr III. The new packing plant built by the Fisherman's Union 1‘ “man”!!! "You W Ste-I Home” NOTES BY Assad-runawa- sse lab “Hahn- hulflllIIIJle "Ne en she-Isl hands. “In Bil-III and China In . ably split. but what the dispute doel pm. is til-cums! Interi- eels It: mom ll! thus no longer unites the comrades ol the world.” -- Daily Express. hndon One of the things penlmdlry inqu! inst-louver resent ll tin number by which they am known. Ind this in under-sland- able. Numbers fmply regimen- fallen. Th6] denim I mul'l individuality Ind Wmnlllly. Yet our loclety II gradually being taken over by the nu her: game. In er I cltllasn gets I number. In peace he makes out his income tax ntunl Idem tilted by number. lt’l getting to e point where you can't so into I shovnlul centre without being handed I card number in order to he sailed on. Telephone numbers In an. sentIIl if you want to use thll menus of communlcntlnn. But the ANC — All Number Cllllnll -la gradually inking over. Soon DDD — Dlrec! Dllmnce Dilllflfi ‘—wi.l.l be Ilmolt universal. Thl little bit of poetry in In ex- change name ll being banish- ed. We Ire being swam-led by the humdrum numeral. We re tent being I A Word For A sneer often goes with BI. lei-nu. “ivory lower" or "aca- demic clolstm‘“: the Implication being that university life should come Into Ihe stream of things. into the market - pllce where life in really lived. 'l'hht notion doesn't reveal much knowledge of tht does 0 on good university, There is there a ferment and in greater lacing of “reality” than many are inclined to think. hut even if universities slay aloof. Is that so undesirable? We pass on, as I counter to the argument that higher education should be more "practical." this Interesting thesis from the Tim» u Literary Supplement: an thrill] dogma. The red has be THE WAY » muss-I unve- u in". he pen: —-“We now the huh, bull-v. meow" Shuvnee (Okla. NWISIIr. The GI“ IODIMII’ says. "Aboutlhbonbwuamuun i thI the last word with I‘Inm. ‘ tier not cuunt on that. The odds are she'll outlive ‘ him —Othwa Journal. on out: a new nu ll... mm: M hum-u: m llnuld paid In abstract money, w, . didn't it new that be had even heard of Social emu. _. En. monlon Journal. Numgsgs Happy Down below the border the If. S. Post Office MI further extend the away of the num. be" game. It hll jun! Intro- duced the ZIP code. I system of null sortinl Ind dllh‘lhullnu which requlru flve digits alter the city Ind stale In an address Since this system level money. Canndlln burelucretl will [no bnbly be eyeing It with envy Ind urging ill adoption here. In some parts of the 0.5. and Canada protests h I v e h a c I helrd against this Insidious nt- kmpt to Duke dlxlll of us. The protest II unreasonable Ind ii. i lnzicll, hut lflnl may It sound. AI population Increases and human relations become more ' complicated. code lyaiema are unavoidable. But we don't have to like it. It's only by [fining Ind protesting lint we can do monstrale our individuality. Once we resign mnelvee. we shall deserve being Minn over by the impersonal- number Ind eventually the ante. Ivory Towers ‘ Journal. ilhn. around it: It ought to be i more sharply separate till“ it u. During their unlmlty years. in other words. student; , ousht not to be try' 5 'n E lively in not the PM but the rennlal." ' .inhn Henry Newman would 3 agree: so would Matthew Arne . old. "last eminent Victorians. I Much of modern thinking would not. While there may be some much shelter ' angers in too from the shock! of life. we think this idea or a university is are . [enable to turning a college Into 1 I vocational school. “one of the functions ol 3» university in mi- a short period in shut off younl people, almost monsstically to lemme them from e we d — from the World. the flesh and the and to breed in them h spirit of disinterested devotion lo the clolsmed. but achieving. life of the intellect "The life of I university. like the life of I monastery of an army training depot. ought per- haps no! to be In re warmly merged with the life going on. In the same city. the same III- Benellt HYNDMAN Illurlm 0 Holistic FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS . commem- ii I UISAGHEEAIIE « : iiiiii ; UUALITV ANALYZED & CO. LTD. lnsnnnco since 1871 on- experience of n yum u uderwrllen. k I ,III’ “swell. OFFICES: . luminenlllo . Albert'- Agenia Throughout the Province WIN 800.00 SAVE YOUR SALES SLIPS AND TRY THE CROSS- WORD PUZZLE IN FRIDAY‘S PAPER. THELAST TWO WINNERS HAD S WHOLE WATERMELON IIAT Tl'l mT—MDN'I'IEIRA’I ill. LIME JUICE nine- FLOUR ALES SLIP PROM ZAK-. EMS—YOU MAY BE NEXT. GAIL” QUALITY I LI. ml: on m ‘ M v 4.98 "mm... 3 e m lull! 2 m 8 like. son 3 . am MURNAGIIAN : swims 1.69 m m : me- nace = we was»;