Covers Prines Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Haneax,- Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor * Editor Published every week day morning: (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown; P.E.|., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. , Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni-. versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press-The Canedian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Tress or Reuters 1 and ‘also the local news published herein. All right or republication of special dispatches here In also reserved. Subscription rate: : _ Not over 40c-~per week: by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by. carrier. $15.00 a -year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. ~* - Not over 10c single copy: Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. ~~ PAGE 4 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1966. Dief, Dalt & Ontario According to Mr. Diefenbaker, all this talk about “reassessment of. leadership” in the Conservative party -is poppycock. There_is a reassessment every time a’ party convention pas- ses a resolution of confidence in its leader, and that has been customary procedure for some time now. So it would seem that national Tory Presi- dent Dalton Camp is bursing through an open door in ‘his-demand for this -kind of thing. This, of course, isn’t quite what- Mr. Camp has in mind. His trouble is that he doesn’t seem able to put into words what he really is up to. He talks about it enough, but it’s hard to pin him down. Perhaps that’s what Dief, in-his latest comment o the subject, was trying to od In the meantime, and asa prelude to the national convention starting - two weeks later in Ottawa, the Ont- ario Conservatives are holding their annual convention in Toronto start- ing Oct. 30. Forces trying to get the Ottawa convention to reappraise Mr. Diefenbaker’s leadership (in the critical, not the complimentary, sense) would go there with excellent credentials if they could get the big- gest of the provincial parties to back ae '. e@onditional offer of the withdrawal seems to be equally anxious not to turn its meeting into a Saas Sra =~ battleground. a ' ~The reason pe 4s that the Ont- ario Tories for a long time have been, Dissninn ar three-day convention as a tribute to Premier Robarts, who . celebrates five years as premier on Nov. 8. The provincial party almost certainly faces a general election next year,.and has nothing to gain from getting involved in the public _linen-washing over Mr. Diefenbaker. Any condemnation of the national leader from the Ontario meeting would inevitably be interpreted as coming from Mr. Robarts,-and what would that do to his own chances 6f becoming Dief’s successor? © . - In any case, it is felt that the issue would stir up bitterness that would hurt the provincial party’s image. So the Conservatives’ key resolutions committee has decided not to for- ward any resolutions on the national leadership to the provincial meeting and rule out of order any attempt to put similar ones from the’ floor. It is noted as significant that Mr. Camp has been carrying his message mainly outside Ontario. Strange, too, when you come to think of it; for it was the big party bosses in that weal- thy. province whose defection caused Dief-so-much_trouble when. he was prime minister, and paved the way to - his government’s defeat. The “Estab- lishment” gents regarded him as-a ‘renegade from Tory protectionist principles, and resented his free- wheeling Western ways. Probably they still do. But evidently they don’t want to.-take the onus of pulling the rug from under him the second time. The Manila Summit President Johnson -was_ reported to be resting at a seaside resort in Thailand yesterday after the Manila summit talks and his whirlwind visit to U.S. troops in South Vietnam. In- evitably the noise and drama of this, "his first jetborne overseas mission in diplomacy, has aroused some unwar- ranted expectations and unwanted pressures. But the conference ap- peared to go pretty well according to schedule, with a formula for peace contained in the final communique, ‘backed up by a reaffirmation of allied determination to maintain the present effort “as firmly and as long as may be necessary, in close con- | sultation among ourselves until the aggression is ended.” > The communique held out no pros- pect for an early negotiated ment, the summit’s only proposal to Hanoi and to the Viet Cong being the ADE, of allied troops within six months if the North pulled back its troops, halted infiltration and reduced the sign of taking any such steps, or of ' giving them consideration. However, this get-together of the allies fighting with the U.S. and South Vietnam may have served ‘a useful objective. .Their commitments to the war have been made for two. purposes: to keep Asian Communism at bay and confined to its present .‘ boundaries, and thus to avoid direct conflict in their own’ countries; also as a form- of insurance—to make sure that the United States will offer aid in future if any.of them are threat- ened ds South Vietnam is today. Koreans have made by far the largest contribution of fighting men—about 45,000. Thailand has sent’only a few transport planes and 39 military men, soil for five major air bases from which most of the U.S. Air Force bombing raids on North Vietnam and Eastern Laos are mounted. Australia has_ contributed 4,500 crack. jungle ’ rilla troops in the area. New Zea- land’s contribution, largely token in nature, consists of an artillery bat- “tery and 160 men who are highly professional. The Philippines have sent a civic action group made up of 1,000 military engineers and other security troops. With the exception of the South tions are not vital or decisive in a | military sense; but President Johnson appears to regard them as -very impertant politically and psychologi- cally. Their presence tends to acting as a.lonely policeman. But as noted by a New York Times been consulted very. much on Viet. Nam policy, either in the military field or the attempts to persuade the North Vietnamese to negotiate. They riedly called Honolulu conference be- tween President Johnson and South Manila conference has corrected this _ oversight, if it has done nothing: else. hac Nise NB. Experiment — zie The educational problems ae sed at Ottawa this week did not, un- riculum costs—a field in which the provinces are still on their own and must provide for as best they can. more onerous, especially in this At- lantic area with its limited tax poten-— tial, and where the need for expan- sion is certainly as great as it is on the higher educational level: The present setup has resulted in differ- . ent educational standards across the country, which is the very antithesis of what a Confederation partnership involves. Pending a constitutional change that will remedy this situation, there is need for a reorganization of the content of our school curriculum along more efficient lines. This, in- deed, is what has now been proposed in New Brunswick. The program, as , announced by Education Minister/ W.W. Meldrun, is to be implemented gradually, piloted by experimental in- struction already under way at Fred- ericton, Oronocto and Bathurst. The switch-over is not expected to take objective, the provision of ‘‘as much. education to each student attending N.B. schools as_ the student ean " reasonably absorb.” - Children, under this scheme, would progress at their own in- dividual rate of learning. The grade system would be dispensed with. In elementary schools there would be “opportunity classes” for those not able to complete the regular program in a reasonable number of years. In junior high schools, instruction would be based on the principle of continu- ular program and a modified one for pupils who find it hard to advance under the regular program. Junior. high school students would complete the course in three or four years, de- pending on individual ability. The senior high school program would be based on the principle of “subject in- formation.” - There would be _ in- dividual timetables, with broader and more flexible agendas. There would be four types of courses taking into account difference in students of “-yarying abilities and interests. Possibly a similar program, with modifications, could be adopted suc- cessfully in this province. At-any rate, we shall have reason to follow’ the results in New Brunswick . with |} special interest. - level of violence. Hanoi has shown no . Among these forces, the South but it has allowed the U.S. to use its ; civil affairs specialists and 1,000 — ‘Korean divisions, the allied contribu- ' refute charges that Washington is . correspondent, the allies have. never © were: not-invited—at-all-to the hur-— _Vietnam. leaders last February. The’. ..0f,his.annual. expenditure. Food “Tis his Pont fortunately, include school cur- . The burden is becoming more and © place until 1968 and will have, as its -| ous progress. There would be a reg- . fighters, perhaps-the best anti-guer- | |. ONE-TWO PUNCH OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson — Groceteria Shelves Being Evaluated The big ring in Parliament Hill’s circus in recent days has been the inappropriately- named Consumer Credit committee of the Senate and House of C o m- mons. To its°12 senators and 24 MPs has been delegated the re- sponsibility of examing “trends in the cost of living, and _factors which may have contri- buted-to recent changes\in it.”~.| . The widespread housewives’ boycott of groceterias has focus- -ged_attention..on.one.-constituent in living costs, namely food prices. . Food accounts for over one- quarter of our Consumer Price Index: The average Canadian consumer is assumed to spend on food 27 cents of every dollar ranking after household opera tion which absorbs 32 cents in every dollar. Then follow trans- portation at 12 cents;. clothing at 11 cents; health and personal cate at seven cents; tobacco and alcohol. at six cents; and recreation at five cents. ARE DBS FIGURES REAL I compared the latest avail- able Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics figures with the food prices _currently_ruling in two typical groceterias in Ottawa which, after Montreal, is Canada’s cost- liest city for food purchases. DBS prices butter at 67 cents per pound; in Ottawa I found it priced at 70 cents, or on a “‘spe- cial’ at 65 cents Fresh milk is listed by DBS at 27.2 cents per quart; cash and carry in Ottawa it is 28 cents in a one-quart con- tainer— or staggeringly lower at 17% cents per quart in a. four- quart crock. DBS prices bread at 19.3 cents for a 1 pound loaf; that matches Ottawa. It says cornflakes are 23 cents for an eight-ounce pac- kage. In Ottawa the price var- fes, depending whether you want gimmicks in the package. Puf- fed wheat, on the other hand, of- “fers surprises: it costs 21 cenfs_ for four ounces. That is the amount of raw wheat for which the farmer receives just. over half a cent, say % of a cent. A good exercise for the price committee would be. to trace quarter pound of wheat from its Saskatchewan origin to its retail. outlet, to discover where and why its price is multiplied more than 33 times, or from 5-8 cents ~ to 21 cents. This of course raises a big point: does the’ housewife want or need abrightly colored pack- age, filled with lucky dip items in addition to the cereal If she, as one grocteria executive told the committee, seeking romance and excitement on the groceter- ja shelves or is she merely’ Our.Yesterdays (From. The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (October 28, 1941) A new theatre of heavy fight- ing in the Volokolamsk sector, about 55 miles northwest of Mos- | cow and about midway between the Kalinin and Mozhoisk sec- tors, was reported. The world press and most for- eign observers interpreted Presi- dent Roosevelt’s navy day speech to mean the United Stat- es is aiming her guns for active participation in the war. TEN YEARS AGO (October 28, 1956 ) Communist Hungary announ- ced Russia has agreed to quick withdrawal of Soviet troops from Budapest. Fighting appeared ebbing after six ‘bloody days with rebels in control of wide™ ‘areas in the west and in cities all. over the revolt-torn land. Prince Edward Island seed potato exhibitions at the Mari- time Winter Fair in Amherst as in previdts years dominated the show, winning 76 of the 107 priz- 0. ; buying sustenance for her fam-- ily TRIMMINGS BOOST COST The committee heard one gro- ceteria dxecutive assert that trading stamps do not increase the price of thé foods sold. But on the: other side of this ques- tion, I haye found -stores in USA where, on paying for a purchase, the cashier asks: ‘Do you want stamps, or a discount of two per cent’ In this case, trading:-stamps undeniably in- creased the prices “of — two per cent. — That ilar ts Ae tie way the moving: would grocteria prices be lowered if all gimmicks were eee Are Sta. Fort William Ontaricxs transport _ minister, Irwin Haskett, has intimated the provincial government will ask the Legislature to pass legisla- tion that will make it compul- sory for all drifers in the prov- . ince to be retested once every seven to 10 years. It is the hope of the department that the leg- islation will be finalized by 1968. Such a program will be extre- mely costly. At the same time the cost will be justified if the plan weeds out incompetent dftivers; keeps the accident rate under better control, and saves lives. A large section of car drivers, in their own estimation the world’s best, resent the very idea that their ability should be ‘tested. Nevertheless, if they are as good as they believe they are, they will have no difficulty in getting a new stamp of approval committee’s enquiries are now |.-sirloin i raised | ing ware and towels, toys and bub- ‘chances ‘in lotteries for trips to Vancouver to Compulsory Driving: Tests- Times—Journal John D. Konkin, a farmer - businessman and former mayor of. Kamsack, Saskatchewan,’ took his place in the sun for a few minutes at the recent Liberal party national conference in Ot- speech, an out-of-order interlude when--the-meeting was. discuss- ing a national oil policy. “T. have been sitting here for two days,’’ Mr. Konkin said, “and right*now I don’t know what you are talking about. Aft- er coming: 2,500 miles to this meeting, I’m going to insist: on being heard.” The delegates did hear tir. Konkin, who said nothing about a national oil policy. What he with listening to young people “hour after hour, asking for something for nothing.’? Hé be- President Kennedy of the United States, who said you should ask what you can do for your coun- try, not what the country can do for you. Mr. Konkin was applauded, wildly at times, but whether this was merely good-natured re. sponse to something that had made the meeting lively during a tense discussion or was genu- ine thanks for some down- to- earth advice ay never he known, but there is no doubt a great many people across this country gave silent cheers be. cause a man got up to say some- thing they firmly believe tn. It seems that at every turn there are demands on govern- ments to provide ‘‘something for nothing” without any retard for the consequences or how all this free stuff is to be paid for. Most of the demands are coming from younger people who have not yet contributed anything to the country but expect a great deal from it ‘at no cost to them- selves, There is much that {s wrong with thiw country— and with the world— and much repairing or tawa. His was an impromptu |: did say-was that he was fed up-|- lieved in the view of the late |. Voice From Kamsack Regina Leader-Post distance, because men of past eee did ask for something for nothing. i ; Piags it is too late to shed tears over the two young Ger- man sailors executed five days after VE-Day for collaborating with the Allies. ; There was sti much legal and moral confusion after a ho- locaust in which’ millions of in- nocents perished. But it must be a sobering thought‘for Cana- city cits and baler puted ed by and on i Corwen enacationeee bo Canadian army officers. the Germah commander was left temporarily responsible for the discipline of his troops. This was changed by Allied military law a few days later, but word of the restrictions did not reach ist Canadian head érs until May cn ee “Justice”, as determined a German ‘Army court m had been allowed to take its course the Lathe day. This is the le exoneration of the Canadian which De- 0 ble gum, bingo tickets, and even |- trips to Europe or sportsmen’s | 4 Imaginary. Bugs The fellow, eo brushes off imaginary bugs from his arms or digs into his scalp after a fic- tional louse may be more hup- im ery. “Some of these suffer from eee, loa or worms cra) the skin disappears when ny seat is given Sree tee food and supple- mentary vitamins. Men and women with delu- sions along this line have para- sitosis; those with morbid fears _of imaginary insects have acar- ophbia. These conditions are cleny related. Many of these people are normal. except' for a Phobia or. delusion concerning bugs. The victim bathes himself several times a day ir one insecticides until the skin is.dry, scaly, .or burned. Others launder and sterilize their clothes, bed- Oe sitosis when a patient comes to his office with a container hold- ing debris or crusts that are mistaken for parasites. Occasion- ally, these people exhibit deep- seated lesions from digging the fingernails or an implement in- to the skin to ‘relieve burning and tba produced ay an im- ginary~bug-or-worm “ik woman decided to lose weight and existed for ks on coffee and an occasional piece of toast. After several months she complained about “black bugs crawling out of her skin _ then dug into another spot.” Itching was so intense she tried to force them out with her fingernails. In — addition, she washed her house dresses and linens daily and applied sulfur ointment i, the skin. she even ment. There were many small, crusted ulcers scattered over her body. She was advised to eat properly and was given addition- al ins. The “black bugs” FEELINGS fear-of-losing a loved one, anger at a betrayal, or anxiety over a big business deal to velop shingles upo' _ SIGNS OF "ADDICTION A reader writes: What are the obvious signs of a narcotics > REPLY The narcotics user has con- leted pupils and marks on the arms from injections. Apart from these signs, they usually look surprisingly: well except for being thin and somewhat shifty. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Treat fire with respect. - (NOTE: All correspondence. -to Dr. Van Dellen should be. addressed to: Dr. Theodore. Van Delien, co Chicago Trib-. une, Chicage, Illinois.) FULFILS FLOUR DREAM PLUM COULEE, Man. (CP —Ron Neufeld fulfilled the am- bition he had in Grade-9 when his own Manitoba, he ‘and start a delivery route to rural farms. _Died For Helping Allies Toronto Daily Star fence. Minister Hellyer outlined to: Parliament two weeks ago. If we are satisfied with it, per- haps we should- also be satisfied with the alibis of countless Ger- man soldiers and functionaires who have pleaded that they were merely “‘carrying out ord- i$ they helped Hitler implement his hellish designs. It’s clear, that some Canadian officers woodenly followed re- gulations’ as »they understood them at the time, and collabora- ted in the killing of two German, who were brave and conscien- tiou8"e: h to defy their coun- try’s evil tyranny. It may be too late for tears, but it should not be too late for testitution to the —- fami. Bes. SAYS NAZI LIVES MILAN, Italy (AP )— The niece of Martin, Bormann, right- hand man of Adolf Hitler, was quoted. Wednesday as saying she believes her uncle is still alive, ly in South America. The talian weekly Oggi in an inter- view with Gisele Bormann, quoted her as saying: “‘Yos, I think my uncle is still alive. He was too niuch of ‘a coward wiser ern’ convinced her husband that he |, should undergo the same treat-")’ | . regard : debt to to be paid off as rapidly as By Joseph Canadian Press President Kenneth Kaunda of. Zambia, scheduled to a North American visit next month, may well hope to clinch backing for a new 1,000 - mile African railway. Kaunda plans to address the United Nations General Assem- bly in New York before having. talks with Prime Minister Pear- son in Ottawa Nov. 17. He also hopes to see President Johnson in Washington. His trip follows a report that a survey recommen a £126.- 000,000'-($378,000,000) rail line be- tween Zambia and the sea at ’ Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, is be- ing considered by several coun- tries. Britain and ‘Canada’ ‘started the survey a year ago following reports that China was interested. in moving in on. the project. The International B ank for. Recon tion and Develop- ment against the rail ven- ture last%ear—suggesting high- way improvement instead—but Kaunda apparently feels the sur- vey gives him new ammunition for argument. SEEK ROUTE TO SEA. 7 Purpose of the railway is to give land - locked Zambia ac- cess to the Indian Ocean for her rich copper exports through friendly “territory: The=present route is through write-suprema- cist Rhodesia and Portuguese Mozambique. The British - led sanctions campaign against Rhodesia, which declared ~ independence unilaterally from Britain nearly President Kaunda’ S Visit MacSween Press Staff Writer though demanding harsher ace tion against Rhodesia, . Negro. ruled Zambia has been unable to break economic links with the ‘white-ruled territory. Kaunda thus has many topics to discuss at the UN, Washing. ton and Ottawa besides the rail- | way, but probably none of more long-term. importance. _- A year ago he told a visiting Canadian reporter: “To Tanzania and Zambia this line is vital—tt must be built.” The railway . vbviou will take some years to build and its importance would indicate that even a political solution of :the Rhodesian affair would not “solve Zambia's problems, Zam- bia still would need the inde- pendent rail link to the sea tor economic emancipation. _CANADA’S FRIEND Kaunda, 42, the man who brought Negro nationalism to the Zambezi River, is probably . one of Canada’s warmest friends in Africa and ‘has fre- quently . expressed thanks for Canadian aid, notably Canada’s . part in an oil airlift because of the Rhodesian trouble. The problems of Zambia,..an Alberta-sized country of |3,600,- 000 including 71,000 whites, have significance far-beyond-Africa’s shores since it is the second- biggest copper producer in’ the non-Communist world. Kaunda’s attempts to build a non-racial society have been soured somewhat by the R desian struggle. Many of th a year ago, has -indirectly hit hard at Zambia as well. Al- whites in Zambia come from Rhodesia and South Africa. Winnipeg According to a recent opinion poll a majority- of 3-2 among Americans now believes that the assassination of President Ken- nedy was not the work~-of one me but was “‘part of a broader P The belief directly, challenges the principal finding of the blue- riband Warten commission Warren Report Under Fire Wicker, head of the paper's Washington bureau, the other day, “that the Warren commis. sion has not, after all, quieted public concern about who killed John Kennedy, or why, and even less has it presented an ‘irone clad and unarguable .case that “Lee Oswald, alone and without a motive, was the assas- To grasp fully the change that: has occurred it is perhaps neces- sary to’recall-the words that the New York Times was using shortly after the : Warren me mission published its findings. In its own official editiow of - the commission’s report there appeared. an introduction, writ- _| ten by, one of the paper’s editor. jal-writers, confidently announces ing: “‘No material question now Temains unresolved so far as the death of President Kennedy _is.concerned...The evidence of overwhelming.”’ : But it is not-simply one mage _- »{sterial...newspaper...that...seems...... to have changed its mind. all ~~ across America a version of events that was previously ace cepted almost as sacrosanct is now being doubted and question- ed. One indication of this revolue tion in popular attitude is to be found in the crowds that are currently flocking to publie meetings promising an examina- tion of the Warren commission’s “The point is,” wrote Mr. om Many. mortgages. as a findings. Long-Term Mortgages” Windsor Star by his contract on his principal. He knows he will be paying much more in interest in dollars than if he paid it off more quick ly. 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