var 5. @mvcltmt .- Zoverx Prince Edward IllInd LikI The Dew ‘ W. J. Hancox, Publisher Simon Lewu Frank Walk-.1 Executive Edl'o' itor ' Published every week day morning (except Sun- dcy and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street by Thomson Newspapers Ltd, Charlottetown, P.E.l., 'anch offircs at Summersidc. Montague, All‘el' Br f3” and SOUHS. Represented nB‘IOI‘fllIy by Thomson Newspapea Advertising Services, Toronto, i125 University Ave. Empire 3-8594; Montreal. 640 Cathurt Siren OniversnY 6-5942.- Western Office, l030 West Georgia Street, Vancouver IMA 7037) 'Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher. Assoc-anon and The Canadian Press Th.- Canadian Prnss is EXCIUSIVEi‘.’ content to the use lor repub- Iicenon of all news dispatches in this paper credited to u or to the Assuriated Press or Reuter! and also to the 10:91 newI published herein. All right or republication of special dispatches here In also reserved. Subscription rates. Not over 35:: per week by rsrrser. 92.00 a vear by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $1500 I year off Island and UK. £20.00 va year In US. and monweaith. Not over 7c sinnge copy. Member ALd? "ream To Aid Crop Insurance We are more directly interested than the other Atlantic provinces in legislation introduced by Agri- culture Minister Hays in the House of Commons yesterday. The meas- ure will allow Ottawa to underwrite some of the risk involved in provin- cial crop insurance plans, and takes the form of an amendment to the present Crop insurance Act passed in 1959. it follows representations to the government, largely by Man- itoba which has the largest crop in- surance program. Saskatchcwan and Prince Edward Island are the only other provinces affected. . The first province in the crop insurance field (1960). Manitoba is still insuring wheat. oats, barley, flax and sugar beets only in test areas. This coverage insures half the farmers of the province for a total liability of $12.2 million. The goal. if the new foilcral legislation passes. is a total liability of $25 million to .30 million. ' Saskatchewan insures wheat. oats and barley. It has 1.337 insured farmers for a total liability of about. $2.15 million. The plan has been operating since 1962. Prince Ed‘ ward Island has insured cereal crops and potatoes since 1962 when it took a relatively heavy loss in its first year on the potato crop. i A survey of the other provinces shows that Nova Scotia and Alberta have passed enabling legislation and expect. to get into operation in 1965. Ontario is still on the. sidelines after a royal Commission inquiry. while British Columbia is toying with the idea of insuring its apple crop. ‘ Canada's present federal legis. lation allows Ottawa to reimburse the provinces for premium subsidies up to 20 per cent. The farmer pays 80 cents on each dollar of premium, and the federal government contrib- utes ‘20 cents through the prov- inces. Ottawa also reimburses the province for 50 percent of adminis- trative costs. I In addition, where. a province is required to pay out indemnities which exceed its premium receipts for the year, plus its reserves, plus $200,000. Ottawa agrees to lend up to 75 per cent of the excess of in- terest rates to be specified. This plan will be replaced by reinsur- ance, with the. provinces turning over to the federal government a proportion of the premium receipts still to be settled. Following the lines of the Manitoba proposals, Ottawa will reimburse. the province for 75 per cent of inrlomnities paid which exceed (a) premium receipts for the year, plus (1)) two and a half per cent of total liabilities. The new measure is aimed at securing provincial revenues against crop failures while reserves are low. and is not expected to involve of Curulalion. unsung JUNE-9‘. 1964. ' any outlay from the federal treas. ury for indemnities in a normal year. That Pension Program Of more practical concern than the flag issue to many thousands of Canadians is the fate of the contrib- utory pension program, and how long it will have to mark time at Ottawa until an amendment to the BNA Act can be obtained from the Britioh;Parliament. The constitu- tiomil Intendment is needed to pro- vide-benefits for survivors and the doubled. . Prime Minister Pearson has ex- Mcuio hope that it maybe pos- - ‘Efirhflo thI amendment ap— " ' fihndon in time to pro- jthe pension bill It the ‘ But u at. 0p- I l I elsewhere outside British Com 1 7 position has reminded him, there is l a possibility that the British House could be dissolved for a fall election before the amendment has gonI through. Aside from this chance. time will elapse in Ottawa before I request can go to London. First a resolution favoring the amendment must pass through the Canadian Commons and Senate. Before that and much oth- er vital business can be tackled in the Commons, though, Mr. Pearson’s flag threatens to tie the House in knots for days on end. Commenting on this aspect of the case, the Guelph Mercury argues that until Canada’s Parliament has the power to amend our constitu— tion it cannot truthfully be asserted that the last "vestige of colonialism" has been shed. But we hear little from the must ardent champions of nationalism about scrapping this provision. Quebec in particular. as the Ontario paper points out, has traditionally demurred at proposals for full Canadian autonomy in con- stitutional affairs. This reflects ap- prehension in that province that end- ing the constitutional jurisdiction of the British Parliament might be followed by French-Canadian min- ority rights under the BNA Act being jeopardized or watered down. More Vital Than Ever To many observers in the Far East, it now seems more than ever vital to bring Communist China out of its angry isolation and in- clude its leaders in talks on limita- tion of armaments. The Chinese have already declared that they will not be bound by any disarmament treaty which they have not been consulted about or asked to sign. For the time being, the Western planners may feel the Chinese can be ignored; their main concern still has to he with modernizing agri- culture and feeding their people. But from the day they have nuclear weapons, they can be ignored no longer. ‘ No one can say when this break- through will be achieved, but that it will come seems pretty certain. When China does finally acquire a. stock of nuclear weapons, it could mean big changes in the whole power situation. with immediate ef- fects in Asia. 0f the other countries in the Far East with any industrial capacity, India and Japan have de- clared formally that they do not in- tend to make nuclear weapons. But if China had them. they might have to think again. The place to end Red China‘s isolation. surely. is in the United Nations, which may face a show- down on this issue at the next As- sembly meeting in the fall. Exter- nal Affairs Minister Martin has been discussing this matter in guarded terms at Ottawa. without any commitment but clearly with the intention of educating public opinion as to the danger inherent in the present situation. Water Safety Week This week is a time for those who will soon be taking part in wat~ er activities to give thought to the safety precautions which every in- telligent person should keep in mind. How often are they neglected, with calamitous results! 96 children be- tween the ages of 7 and 16 were drowned in Canada last year. It is one of the purposes of Water Safety Week to focus the attention of parents upon precautions which may avert these disasters. and spare themselves lifelong grief. There is no lack of available in- formation as to the precautionary measures that are necessary, and it is gratifying to note the increasing interest which is being taken in Canadian Red Cross programs in this connection. In Prince Edward Island last year, there was an en- rollment Of 7,163 in Red Cross swim- ming and water safety courses, with 105 communities participating un- der a trained staff of 88 instructors. This year it is expected the enroll- ment will go over the 9.000 mark. Every youngster should be en- couraged to take advantage of these courses, now that summer is mov- ing in and the beaches are beckon- mg. EDITORIAL NOTE A 196-foot. super—speed bomber, costing $1.5 billion has been unveil- ed in the U.S. More than the entire cost—notes an exchange—of the not. We,” ..v—- . ‘7_-,._4. ~‘———— g A I I THE LONG COUNT-DOWN DELAYED JUSTICE The Shomeiul Case Of Eric Claude Hooper Liberal ministers appeared to be honestly surprised at the in- dignation of Conservative and NDP members over the case of Eric Claude Hooper of Buffalo who spent 100 days in custody in Toronto before being deported. Young ministers such as lm- migration Minister Tremblay may have yet to learn that de. lay of justice ls injustice a n d that the preservation of justice is. as Daniel Defoe said. the chief end of government. If they and their Government are to survive. they better start in- forming themselves. The Government naturally claimed extenuating circum- stances in the case of the long I delay in justice to Mr. Hooper but Justice Minister Favreau found it necessary to assure the Commons that steps have been taken to prevent recurrence which might be taken as an ad- mission of failure. Ottawa Journal It is not as if the ministers had never been reminded of their duty to justice. As recently as May 22. Mr. John R. Matheson tL-Lcedsl made a strong — and successful — speech in th 9 House in support of an amend- ment to the Criminal Code to allow appeal in habeas corpus. In the course of that debate Mr. Matheson quoted with dis- may the ease of a man in Sud- bury who was sent to jail fo r seven days and was still in jail 83 days later. Mr. Favrcau. as Justice Minister. congratulated Mr. Matheson and approved ms amendment. apparently un- aware of Mr. Hooper‘s plight as a prisoner at that time or of I other cases suggesting delayed justice which have been brought to the attention of the Goveln- ment in recent days. ILLEGAL‘LY HELD 2 Mr. Tremhlay told the House ; Londonb Jean Stead In The Manchester Guardian i gm... London's statues are. like the . Forth Bridge; work on never stops. Two men clean them all the year round. As soon as they get to the end. the fog ‘ and fumes have taken off all the polish from the bronze and they have to begin at the begin- ning again. . The Ministry of Public Build- ing and Works has 300 statues : in its care. Enormous quanti- ties of lanolin. unslaked lime. soda and soap are lavished on . them and the Ministry spends‘ 37.000 pounds a year on their ‘ maintenance. ed after by local authorities. Statue-cleaning as a profes-* sion requires a certain temper- ament which. if not. built-in. must be acquired. Imoervious-‘ ness to remarks from the pass- I ing public ls necessary. When- ‘ ever the cleaners are working 1 round the hindquarters of a ‘ horse. someone invariably calls out the same tired joke. telling ' them to be careful it doesn't, kick. If they are brushing a beard a wag will shout to them not to pull too many hairs out. This is one reason why Field Marshal Smuts. in the exposed l centre of Parliament Square. is I highly Unpopular. Also, the lad- I der has to be set almost vertic- ally before they can reach it. Ecstcin nccver thcu'zht of that It is disliked an artistic grounds I as well -— “he looks as if he's i roller skating." I EYE TO AESTHETICS The statue: are not judged by the cleaners anly on utilitarian ‘I considerations. Even In whip- ' ping wind or rain. they preserve an eye to the aesthetic. T h e i r tastes are decider esoteric. The ‘ majority favorite is them bronze woman holding a lamb ‘ 1m to editing Ind condennllon there under her arm" which is tuck- ed away not far from Queen regular cleaning four times Statues Mary‘s Garden in Regent's Park — a statue most, London- ers might be expected to have dulled the Portland stone and missed. They like her. cause she is easy to clean. not be- but ecause she is strangely pathetic. especially on a fine day. Like the othersshe has a Nude statues rank high among the non-favorites. T his . is because the cleaners feel em- 1 Others are look- . b arra them. They put up canvas screens all round to protect them from the public gaze. A PLEASANT JOB Cleaning the Peter Pan statue in Kensington Gardens on I sunny day is a pleasant job. The bronze rabbits and mice on the when working on v base have been worn right. down ‘ to a bright yellow by the chil- dren's kisses and stroking h a n d 5. Nelson in Trafalgar Square is too exalted for the . cleaners. He has to have stee- olrjaz-ks to attend to him and his stone is inspected every quarter. but cleaned only as a special event. Who regret London's gloomy Inheritance of Victorian 1 public figures and war memor- ial statuary would find support among their preservers. "I wouldn't like to see even the ug- 1y ones pulled own. because our jobs w o u Id go." says Mr. Lay. "But if I would choose I think London should have small- er. sweeter statues instead." Like the lady carrying the lamb in Regent's Par Battery—But No Assault - Winnipeg Free Press . This is an age of protests. pic kets and parades. Almost any i injustice. real or imagined. ls enough to bring on I demonstra tion against it. But few In recent times can have been more gen le In their approach or touch- lng In their appeal than a re cent protest parade in rural So It had. according to I corres- p o n d e nt of the Manchu-e: Guardian, 18 demonstrators One was I retired vicar of 73 there were] couple of o t h c .- elderly gentlemen. a younger man. and 14 Indie, apportioning or leaving middle age. The object of their displeasure was I poul ry farm It Ab bots Leigh, I noted Somerset beauty spot. WhIt they objected to were the modern methods by which the firm owners induce the hens to greqter lIying ea i showed them around the forts. The farm has a 'battc... us ” — I km bu containing I fhounnd birds liv lng in easel. unused in tiers The organizer of the march was quoted II uylng: "This is an inhumIn method. At least in the. convention] way I hen en joys some Open Iir and sunshine before it getIiu throat cut." Parade placardI bore slogan. A such as "Chicken concentration camp —— Battery Betsen" Ind "Battery eggs cause cancer." The demonstntora were met by one of the farm owners wno bat tery house and answered their questions ImICIbly. hereupou. without I hand or voice being ulcer! in anger, the demonltrlton moved on to hand out leaflets It I loc II Ihow: Ind the IolltIry sturdy Somerset constable, who had tuned to hurdle the de- monstrationhnturned to his ro- sum-aw. .1 - v » “the little i SYM- . a 1 soon after that Mr. Hooper was informed he could have legal aid but made no effort to obtain it. ! Mr. Hooper was legally held " under the Immigration Act i while he refused to answer que- stions. said the minister. This was inadequate explanation. es. pecially when a Conservative member. Mr. Woolliams. said Mr. Hooper might have been held for five years on the same authority. Mr. Tremblay says there is a system under which Ottawa is informed if anyone is held more than a week under immigration law. A system is no use unless someone makes it work. It. IS small comfort to Mr. Hooper or the public conscience that Mr. Tremblay now says that "in the future" proceedings Initiated by his department will always be as expeditious as possible. PUBLIC FORUM Thi- column II open to the discussion v correspondent: of question of In- necel~ Ir I nrlly endorse opinion of can pondents. All lctlerl publllhed no Inh- necessary_ The Guardian II unIbIo In i enter Into Iny corrrelpnndenco regard- flng letters lubmmed. SEEKS INFORMATION Sir.—-In order to collect ma- terial for a book on the woods ‘ man-songmaker Joe Scott. I would like to hear from anu i meet people who knew him us know anything about his life or his songs. Born in New Bruns- wick. Scott spent much of his life in Maine, working in the woods and on the drives 51011... i the Androscoggin and Pemb- l scot Rivers. He died in August: I in 1918. No bit of information would be too small to he help- ful. For example, just when did he work and live? W h at towns did he call home? Whom did he work for and when? Who were his friends? What non of person was he? And so on. I am particularly interested in gathering as many vet-ston- of each of his songs as I can. So far as I know he wrote "Bend- mln Deane". “Howard Carey" "Guy Reed". “The Plain Gold~ en Band", "The Norway Bum" and “The White Cafe” (or "The Maid with the Golden Hair": Then there are several 0 t h e 1' pieces! have heard of that to be his: "William Mc leney". "Wilfred White In” Murphy" (two men drowned on the Magallowayl. "William Sul- livan", "The Patten Maid. There are certainly more that I have not heard of. too. If any 1‘ e I d e :- knows any of these songs. or even just PART of one or any other songs by Joe Scott. I'd appreciate hearing from I Im. Sin. etc, EDWARD D. IVES Assistant Professor. English B. In Stevens. University of Maine. 0 r o u 0, Maine. POTATO PRICES Sin—It Wu most interesting to read In your SuturdIy'I edi- tion. whereby our Director of Marketing. Mr. Reid Sangster. was quoted ll flying that "he was of the opinion thIt the pre- sent strong price on pot-toe! would hold." for I was of the opinion that he must hIVI do~ parted from the Province. There were few. if any. quotes from his department when out hard-pressed farm population were giving potatoes away for practically nothing. Ill Full and well Into the Spring. lthough Columbus will one of cm earlier dilcmren, it in mm gratifying to learn that be VII not the Int of then (rut ' I am. Sir. etc. 1!. LARTIR 'Iourlsi'l’ll. t l Crucial Changes Are Disturbing By Dr. Theodore R. VII Dolle- AlienItlon ll the essence '0! menu In. according to I British pchhlIti-ilt. Ind cause lI I breakdown in inter- personal relationships. Dr. D. Russell Davis IIyI anyone who douth this statement should sit through an afternoon In his our patient clinic Ind hear storie- albout “disturbed homes un- happy IlfIlrI, discordant mar- rlagea, quarrels Ind bereave- meats." He dlIIgreeI with thou wtw believe some undiscovered du- order in brain function is w sponalble for would 111nm. This faction foresees I chem!- oIl or drug remedy for the u- tranged detached or within-wa. Ittitudes of these people so for mental file can be treated the same may II organic diseases. Dr. Davis says mentIl lllnea- in young men and women arise: out of crucial changes in rela-. tionshipa with parents and boy or ’g i rl friends. This crisis oi emancipation Is he calls ' ti usually takes place after puber- ty when theyoungster fails to make the usual transfer of If- fection from the parqnt of the opposite sex to I peer group ‘ He cites the example of Ham- let w h e n his uncle displaceu ‘ him in his mother’s affection This situation together wltn Ophelia's rejection led Polnnius to guy "That hath made him ma ." Mental Illness In men and W» men In their early thirties tends to be associated with marital problems. A combination of stresses is responsible durum. the forties and fifties. These tau sions include difficulties wnb the spouse. the drifting apart of brother and sister after the parents die. and the tendency of the offspring to leave home. The narrowing of the circle of friends and acquaintances during the sixties and seventie- makes the lo'I's of a husband or wife more difficult to take. er pecially for widowers. When ‘ there is no friend or relative to offer sympathy and r ' ship to the elderly bereaveu. depression or even suicide is not infrequent. FATIGUED HUSBAND F.M. writes: My husband is so tired he has to push himself through the day. The only thing wrong the doctor COuld find was fat in his blood. Could this make him so weary? REPLY Some individuals with I high level of cholesterol in the blooo have a low metabolism. Th e combination could cause fati- gue. GLAUCOMA CONTROL PC. writes I! glaucom- chronic disease? REPLY Yes. but the majority of vic- tims are able to control the eyt ball tension with medications. AVERTING DIAB T L.R. writes: Can I prediabe- tic prevent the disease from de- veloping? PLY Probably not, but it can be delayed by maintaining normal weight and using one of the an- tidiabetic pills. SLOW GROWING CANCER J.L. Writes: What is a low grade cancer? REPLY Cancer by any other name is still cancer. Low grade mean: it. is slow growing. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Skyscraper heels are a cause of backache and poor posture. Note: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen be ad- dressed to: Dr. Theodore Val. llen. c-o Chicago Tribune. "NOTES BY THE WAT klId If nun "III." [tho but the Ion they would not “run printed Ibout tinmulveI. — anmbn Sun. Don’t at I pen-Ion tht he think: about I controversial question — Ink him he feels about it; — Port Arthur News CIu‘oblcle. ___,_ Nobody can he mule to Ice! like 2 «all my mm. The min. lmum has gone up to I quarter. _ Chilton Timon-Journal. Lot- of people no on "can to forget things -— and on. en they open their suitcases — they find they have. — Stoughton Courier. No wonder many Canadian... especially those who the Iome relpousibillty for the profitabil- y of I business venture. fre- quently view our various (0.: eruors with much warlneu Ind Iometlmea with IlIrm. . In search of higher employ- 'ment Ind grater prosperity. modem government expend: vast amounts of energy devising Incentives to speed up pusiness rowth. 8 Yet the further the regulatory arm of government extends .a- to the economy, the more likely it II to create complicated ruch Ind regulations that 'dlscourazc people from getting into busin- ess or actively encourage them ~ to get out. Take, for example, the night- mare of paperwork shaping up in pensions. Ontario was the first to issue I pension questionnaire to com- panies. Most firms found its de- mInds substantially increased rthelr office work loads. Now comes the Saskatchewan: orm —- quite different from Oi.- tario’s and drawn up with little or no reference to standard our iness practice. ‘ Saskatchewan's pension ques- tionnaire will force most com panics with employees in the province to reorganize their re cords completely to make tin- required information available. Its questions will require com pany actuarles to prepare pen sion valuations far more extcn~ sive than those made in accor dance with the strictest proies Nighlmors O‘TPPtoperwork Its reporting deadline of 120 days after the end of the calcu- dur - is totally unrealistic when In many large com unit it takes actuaries six moriihs oi more to complete pension caicu lItlous. even with aid of elec ra- nlc computers. If Saskatchewan were the air. 1y province to make detailed the closure demands. no doubt. the corporations concerned would eventually be able to m e at them. But what will happen In the offices of nation-wide employer. when other provinces present their questionnaires as went Will corporations have to hire a new platoon of Iciuaries for every province that gets into the pension business? .Very plainly, compliance with existing laws already costs “.n- dividuals and firms unmeasur- ed millions of dollars. Surely here is I case where a little common sense co-operr. tion among the bureaucrats of each province would produce a fairly uniform pension quls tionnaire and minimize ne w paperwork costs for busines;.. Failure to act sensibly in the common interest will only has- ten the process whereby gov- ernment as Alexis de Tocqu- vill pointed out. "(‘OI’DPI‘ESSCS, enervates. cxtinguishes and elu- pefies a people till each nation is reduced to nothing better than I flock of timid and industrious animals. of which the govern- sional standards. ment is the shepherd." If the Newfoundland govern-v ment had made it known to the j people of the province that they _ were seriously considering an alteration of the “style” as her- aldry experts put it. of the pro- vince. some thought might have been given to a province-wide contest to provide a completely new and comprehensive namej that would not be quite so un- ' wieldy. ‘ However. III has been decided . almost overnight that there . should be some literal recogni-i tion of this immense and poten~ i tial‘ly rich portion of the prov- ince and the inventive genius of the populace has sought I The new legislation sets forth L the extent of the province as if : was included in the Terms ofi Union between anada and I Newfoundland. 1949. This com-I prices the Island of Newfoundg land and islands adjacent there- I to and the Coast of Labrador as delimited by the Judicial Com- mittee of the Imperial Privy Council. March. 1927. The suddenne-ss of this restyl- lng decision would almost lead one to suspect it was being done to reassure the electorate that mun WRIGHT i B a In snous Chicago. Illinois.) Newfoundland & Labrador St. John's Evening Telegram certain "thoughts" about is Newfoundland-Quebec territor- ial "swap" have been replaced by "second thoughts." We expect to hear some com- ments from ebec's Resources Minister. the vociferous Mr. Levesque. on the restyling 0! this province. He may even dis» pute it. asserting that Quebec could just as easily change her name to Quebec and Labrador. since most reference works de- fine Labrador as the large Dell- insuls of high land that forms the northeast corner of Amer- ica and lies between the Atlan- tic Ocean and Hudson Bay. Newfoundland owns a large rtlon of this peninsula. but not all of it. but she is determin‘ ed to keep what she owns: and Newfoundlanders will not be too concerned over what the pro- vince is styled as long as none of it is to be battered away. CENTENNIAL PAGEANT REHEARSAL Adults Only St. Dunstan‘s University uditorium Wednesday, June 10th 7 PM. Rev. A. Arsonault. Director. . t I shopped around A t It gives you grater “First I saw Royal Bank a termplan bout a loan hen for a car bargain” l a you the more to spend on the on itself. Borrow this businesslike WIy. No extra. No hidden chum. Pm service. Next time you want money for low-cost. life-insured I on or my big punhm. .m Typical low-ecu termplan loInI You naive I 500 83,000 83.“ Younpay our 12 month 30 m. 3‘ null. fl emplan loch put: the money you need into your pocket bolero you go car-bunting. bIrgIluing power. And it keeps your financing com down. IO thlt Royal Bank fir." Ibout I \ Monlhlyuymf 8 43.93 8 15.“ 8115.73 ' Finance in advance at ROYAL BAN K Bunch O. Charlottetown -- E. WRIGHT. MI Igor mucous. in um um. mm mm. mm II “Triloth -_ Ian—mp. (0?:er