. ‘ ’ ahegh a i “ively issues of controversy at further Edw 4 taand and Like The Dew a 0%) Publisher ae * Published. every week Frank Walker Editor day morning (excep! Sun %; r Pe nationally by Thomson Newsospers Terento 425 University Ave. | 0 Cathcart Street Uni- 1030 West Georgie i 65942; Vancouver MA 7037. atecenn Newspaper Publishers The Canadian Press. the Canadian fo the use for repub- s in this paper Press or Reviers published herein. All Tepublication* ef special dispaiches here Subscription rate: . “Week by carrier. meilen rural rovies and areas a Ht Wland. end 1/.K. $20.00 per r in U.S. and elsewhere oviside British Con ‘Member Avi Bureav of Circulation. PAGE 4 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1966. ene rr rs “We. Must Make Clear...” Parliament is still waiting for the sequel*to the announcement Prime Minister Pearson made in ringing tones at the opening of the current session, with regard to the demands of some of the provinces. ‘If the feeling develops that the federal government will always give way when pressed,” _ » he told the House, “then this country iF i ; se = i ae t i tt ea {s in for serious trouble.” To nods of approval from both sides he went on to say: “We must make clear what the essentials of the federal position are, from which we cannot and will not _ withdraw, if there is to be a Canada at | — all.” So.far, these*lofty. words haven't. |- been buttressed by any indication of what the Prime Minister is determin- ‘ ed not to withdraw from. ' ~The latest hint as to the kind of pressure he may expect came in the budget speech last week of Ontario's Provincial Treasurer James Allen. The budget forecast tax increases ‘ _govering ‘almost’ every field in which - the federal government could find extra money this year, except income _ tax; and Mr. Allen staked out a piece of that when he said the provincial government. will raise income tax next year if the federal government doesn’t give it a larger slice of income | tax it collects in Ontario, = This unusual statement is interpret- ‘ed-as being intended as much for Federal Finance Minister Sharp and his colleagues ag ityis. forthe tax- sana Ontario. Mt. \Sharp now is at work on the preparation of his budget and significantly had set last week as the target date for public and corpora- . tion suggestions on it. It follows.on the heels of state- & n that their province intends to win ex- ° _Clusive jurisdiction in the fields of family allowance and old age pen- sions. They also- want ‘to take over the handling of unemployment in- surance and functions of the National Employment Service in the province. These matters are shaping up as closed-door conferences between At- tawa and the provinces. Surely the time is ripe for a further statément by Mr. Pearson on the | subject, so that there will be no misunderstand-~ ing when the conferences get under way. Another good reason, in short, for appointing that parliamentary | committee which Mr. Macquarrie has been urging, where the whole field of -federal-proviticial—_relat can be examined. This is where “the essentials of the federal position’ could be made clear, and the reaction of all the provinces, through their federal representatives, could be: ascertained. Wilson Under Pressure "Prime Minister Wilson's success in averting a national rail strike last week is being hailed as‘an almost certain portent of a spring general ‘election in Britain: London news- papers have been: predicting this for _ *~gome time, on the basis of the in-~ stability imposed by the government’s / tiny majority. On Jan. 27, Labor's by- election triumph at Hull raised the government’s ‘over-all majority to three. It rose to four a few days later — with the death of a Conservative MP representing a safe constituency. Then, on Feb, 4, it fell to three again » with the death of a Labor m representing a not-so-safe seat.) Viewed from Ottawa, this a situa- tion more to be desired than lamented by the administration in power. Poor Mr. Pearson has had to settle for less, the country not having deemed him worthy of having even this majority . when he went asking for it last Nov- ember! Nor do we think that Mr. Wil-. ‘gon is unduly concerned about his government’s narrow margin at this time. Even a minority position would be fatal for him only if the balance of, power party—the Liberals—wanted an élection; and there is no sign that they are hankering for it just now. ia and 5 t 165 Prince Street, : P. er teen Newspepess Ltd. Branch at Sur Montague, Alberton | | back to the polls only 18 months later. | ber - | It Is known that Mr. Wilson per- ardian | | sonally favors “soldiering on,” to use | his own favorite phrase. He is heliev- | ed to feel strongly that the British | people want him to carry out the man- that they might resent being called | But there is a string Of reasons, apart from the rail strike settlement, why a spring election should be tempting to | his followers. Not the least of these is | that the Conservatives are badly. off | balance right now but might have | their house in order by the fall. | Other reasons are the budget, due in April, with its prospect of further restrictionary measures; the local gov- ernment elections which begin in May | and in which even the most optimistic | government. supporters predict that | Labor will take a drubbing; and the government’s Rhodesian. policy, which may be reaching a point of diminish- ing returns... . ‘The Sunday, Times predicts, in the circumstances, that a spring election . “is now almost certain.” The Man- * chester Guardian reports-that “all the scales are now tipping” in that direc- tion. The Observer sees Mr. Wilson now “poised to fire the starting gun,” _and the socialist New Statesman sums the situation up in these candid terms: “If he waits until the autumn, THEN loses, he will face’the bitterest charge of all. His critics would not hesitate to label him as the man who missed the boat.” Strong Criticism A-record number of 49,000 traffic deaths in the United States last year: » has just been reported by the National Safety Council, and the news coin- _ Cides with a slashing attack on the - auto industry before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on traffic safety. A feature of the charges was the accusa- of “Unsafe. At Any Price,” that 75 per cent of motorists’ injuries are caused by poor car design. The subcommittee chairman is Senator Robert Kennedy, brother of the late President Ken- nedy, who has warned that “if some- © thing is not done about this matter of vehicle safety” the alternative would have to be federal regulations. Nader’s appearance before the Senate is described in a Washington dispatch as perhaps the most damn- ing-public criticism ever made against the nation’s largest. industry. He accused the auto companies of put- ting profit ahead of product safety, of ignoring or stifling public discussion ‘and of deliberately capturing control of citizens’ safety organizations and” ¥ Detroit with having created a“chrome curtain” to protecct its products from . public scrutiny and predicted that President Johnson’s Highway Safety Act of 1966, due to be sent to Con- gress in the next few days, would In his estimate that 75 per cent of | motorist injuries result from car de- | sign, Nader sought to distinguish be- tween the cause of accidents and in- juries. He argued that technology is capable of -producing tractively to protect occupants with- out significant injury.in collisions up to and over 50 miles an hour. He hit hard on what he argued is the failure — of a democratic society to bring the “under the rule of law” and said this is the only form of transport in which the federal government doesn’t. set safety standards, ~~ ©. | Speaking directly to industry repre- sentatives in the hearing room, Sen- ator Kénnedy suggested that Detroit earmark “five or ten per cent” of its | profits to finance an exhaustive, objective study of Nader’s charges and the entire field of auto accidents and injuries. In the circumstances, such an inquiry would séem to be overdue in-the industry’s own in- “terésts. There is no question as to the” public concern which the charges EDITORIAL NOTES ~ The launching of a United States meterology satellite recently brought to 1,000 the number of objects orbit- ing in space. 971 of therh are orbiting around the earth and 29 are in deep- space orbits about the sun or moon. By 1970, it is estimated, 5,000 to 7,000 objects may be-in orbit. * 8@ @- re Ina new policy departure, the Soviets have opened Siberia to inter- | national air traffic. This is regarded as the most important new develop- ment in world air transportation . since the start of the transpolar route to Tokyo in 1957. The. route will be: operated. jointly. bythe Soviet Union and Japan, will cut’ travel time from 21 to 12 hours and costs by nearly one third, and will be the shortest oe and most convenient way around the - world. ree 44 | date he received in October, 1964, and | i tion by Attorney Ralph Nader, author | ; itt turn out to be “another no-law law.” | present | cars economically, conveniently, -at-_|- automobile and. its. manufacturers | - MIRROR, MIRROR, ON THE 'WACL — “TROUBLE IN THE M — ‘YoU RE Not SUPPOS “Fe Loek LIKE ON Se "THAT es Spl i $ ; in the sea of words being ae the 5 $ CeOPERATION NEEDED Mr. Williston did add that wa- ter gol , Tequired in the na- ,.might be develop- g % ii 5 Ene he te 3 ¢s : By : 3 e% Fee | ; - 2 ify Figi i 4 al e - 2 S38 pondents. All letters published are sub- ject te editing and condensation where mecessary. The Guardian is unable te enter inte apy correspondence regard- ing letters submitted. CRANES, AND HERONS Sir,— In afiswer to the ques- tion placed in this column by Malcolm A. MacLeod on Febru- STILL NO WATER POLICY '. Toronto Daily Star policy discussions might be the national. conference on. water, air and = oil pollution in Mon- treal next Oct. 31-Nov. 3. This conference is under the sponsorship of the Canadian Council of Resource ministers, +-an inter-governmental forum for the consideration of resource de- velopment. - in Can- ada. Mr, Williston is the current president. ‘ STAGGERING BURDEN staggering the water administration field. The council of Resource Minis- IRROR DEPARTMENT ashing About In A Sea Of Words politicians are barely a- ed that a starting point for any | ters, in attempting a rough eo timate of losses through water in Ontario at $175 million. Canadian taxpayers With a quick twist of the wrist, a Lebanese taxicab driv- man admiration of a. beautiful wom- an by opening one eye wide with his thumb and forefinger. A Neapolitan. means -‘‘No!” when he jerks his head upward and sticks out hie lower ip. An American child rebukes a play-' mate by pointing at him with the left forefinger and rubbing it with the right. i end otter § estures an immense vocabulary. to draw Qpon. “Linguists .estimate that 700,000 distinct elementary gee tures can be produced by com- guage. . Present-day Mexicans, and other Latin peo “| ples-are_noted_ for their large: sign vocabularies: Linguist Mario Pei story about King Ferd Naples, who teturned . t er an 1821 cevolt. He dress an unruly crowd balcony ‘of his palace, noise drowned w king then ‘lapsed into a onder in en lent but eloquent es of re- proaches, threats, admonitions, and pardons,”’ He won over the mob. halite ZeeREe, i + |Mayans and Egyptians end. Am Gestures Often Eloquent National Geogr-phie News Bulletin i (i erican Indians used the to ‘‘man,” “child,” **no, . “tear,” eod “night.” ah e mation with his eyes, facial expressions, sale aed body movements. é tae You never know what you'll find in the Canada Gazette, an official publication not advertis- ed as light reading. In its dead- pan way it publishes in a recent issue, regulations relating to rur- al-mail delivery including spec- ifications for mal boxes. A rur- al mail box ig mot Westminster ‘Abbey but after reading the re- gulations a eouple of architects seem. in order for every box. First, what the call ‘Design.”. A rural mail box must not be go ornate or of such a nature as to obstruct or ob- scure ‘other boxes nearby or in itself be an impediment to de- livering or collecting mail. of the box holder 7 Zh to allow lettering at least one inch in height, And it mustn't be any old box, MThe-matetihis must be enough to bear the weight contents without distortion “the external dimensions “sh Bead mot exceed the actual internal (y age lll Mail Box Architecture Ottawa Journal He ! » if : : I rf i if hi ise Bi 3 3 Fa i fe t 2 i A oak i fy i i: lk He i ee | : ii ‘ i aEs li li atsa il bie tN 3 aga¢ | | : 2 & z Z 3 g 5 “ij HH at 3 8 5s ri : g :. oil 8a cE & oe a f Z” g Z i : i i sf i Fi it vii £g i [Fil Te aS a fa Ft : r l ! | fs 298 th ae ET | ' ze. : is il LF ‘ i fi it { li : | ii 4 3 3 5 r i i j | E E > [ e ; FEE ‘(From The Guardian ) ~ NOTES > . WAY ceca i Fy ef 33 Fz i af 7 i i #2 ‘HEHE g i I : if a2 ire Egei & 2F 38 i ;f 2 S 5 z 5 5 ’ wool promoter...On the a portrait of William we Fe Nine times in just two years January, 194 — The sultan of Zanzibar was driven-into exile in a revolt led by Sheik Karume. et 1064 — In Gabon, lean Aubame, opposition party leader,’ failed in a power grab after he arrested President Mba because French troops in-* tervened. ernme: October, ° 1965 Ser al-Khatim Khalifa_overthrew.. the _ military. aS ee ped candy bar, the beverage able. paper products, the litter problem has grown big all over PERSIA BELOUCH, BORJALOU, BACKTIAR, MOUSSUL, DROKHSH, carefully selected and graded finest qualities ie wes descialsibate ott Y TH t | biggest African PUBLIC AUCTION VERY VALUABLE EXHIBITION Last CONSIGNMENT. -— " = PaNeaes 61 ITEMS — FINEST QUALITY prising the finest examples in such rare types ae KIRMAN, SAROUK, KOUM, BOKHARA, AFGHAN, BIDJAR, ISPAHAN, MIR, KORDI, MELLAYER, Ex s.s. Grindgefjell, Halifax of valuable handmade exhibition purposes of finest CHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL Kent Street, Charlottetown on Tuesday Feb, 15th at 7.30 p.m. Viewing Now From 3:00P.M. Edward Kalil Limited Auctioneers & Stock Liquidators The 5 5 e F ‘ F Z : é i i t cf tn ie 2 i ESF i rE z E New Australian Notes Winnipeg Free Press Farrer, the pioneer of scientific wheat breeding in Australia, along with reproductions of var-' fous kinds of modern wheat - ears. The $10 bill features a portrait Francis Greenway, Austral- ‘s first fully- qualified archi- ; On the hack is a portrait Henry, Lawson, an n and short.story writer. The $20 bill has on its front a portrait of the Australian avia- tor, Kingsford-Smith; on the back is Lawrence Hargrave, with drawings of flying machin- es and kites; Hargrave: was a famous aeronautical pioneer. Thus when Australians handle Rages their rich historical and cultural heritage. There is. an idéa here for Canada, next time we issue new bank notes. We have a herl- tage that readily lends itself to this’ kind of portrayal; and bank notes of this ‘kind are, from an aesthetic viewpoint, much ‘more, to be desired than our pre- sent dull scenics. : | -The Sad Story OF Africa of President Abboud ty - | Sudan and seized power. November, 1965— In Congo Presi- dent Yameogo in favor of mill- January, 1966— In Nigeria, revolt by an army tection Tea The Fight Against Litter Christian Science Monitor t helicopters to shout amplified pleas for public tidiness, as well t NRUGS. KERIZ, YAMOUT, by experts specializing’ in the Tugs and were or- Columbia. Due to late / ee 3