an he PGhe Guardine' a » d tn mang ae wes if Covers Prince Edward Islend Like The Dew W. J. Héncox, Publisher Vallace Ward Frank Walker Editos ae yl week day morning (excep! Sur lay and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street. Charlottetown P.E.|.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Wench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton ind Sourlt~ Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers ices Toronto 425 University Ave tmpire Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni tersity 65942, Western Office 1030 West Georgia treet Vancouver (MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The) Canadian *ress ip exclusively entitied to the use for repub fication of ali news dispatches this paper tredited te it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the loca! news published herein. All right er republication of special dispatches here in also reserved Subscription rate Not ove: 40@\per week by carrier. | $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes’ and areas fgt serviced by carrier $15.00 ® year off Isfand and UK. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Britis: Con monweaith. Net ove: 7c «imale \-opy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 FRIDAY, AUGUST 13. 1965. Bumper Wheat Market Canada’s new $450 million wheat -sale to Russia is big news for our in | 60th parallel. The Ontario-Quepec border of the bay would be roughly the 80th degree of longitude, which is a few miles west of the Ontario- Quebec border. The federal govern- ment would still own the bay north of the 60th parallel, with the excep- tion of whatever territory Quebec might suceed in acquiring under separate negotiations. : Estimates are that Manitoba would get 45,000 square miles of the bay; Ontario 55.000, and Quebec 155,000, including the more northerly terri- tory she seeks. The federal govern- ' ment, apparently, would continue to Prairie farmers. For transportation and grain-handling workers in the East as well, since all of the new-con- tract wheat is to be shipped through St. Lawrence and Atlantic ports. It will be one of the biggest jobs ever undertaken in the transportation his- tory of this area. The problem will be to handle it expeditiously between now and next July, without detriment to other business, By way of contrast, virtually no grain ships are sailing from Vancou- ver, which prides itself on being the busiest grain port in the world. More than 4,000 boxcars loaded with al- most 7 million bushels of grain choke railway yards in British Columbia and sidings as far east as Calgary and Edmonton. More cars are on oth- er Prairie sidings. Farmers, with visions of bumper crops, have ex- pressed concern about lack of stor- age facilities. This is due to a grain- handling strike involving five elevat- ors companies which failed to reach agreement on a new contract. According to Trade Minister Sharp, the Vancouver tieup was not responsible for the Russian contract being shipped eastward, since the West Coast already has'enough com- mitments for shipments in the current year to be considered “sold out.” But of course it was the strike which caused these commitments to pile up as they have done. Prime Minister Pearson has termed the situation there a national emergency. ‘It was indicated last evening that a form of settlement_had_heen_accepted. But | the railwavs point out that it will take weeks to free the cars after the strike is over. : It seems.that despite the reported support of the Canadian wheat board, “the Manitoba port of Churchill was bypassed in this deal. The Russians, in a contract of this kind;~‘have a “Tig ‘grain shjpped, and they said they wanted it shipped from the St. Law- rence and Atlantic ports. Meanwhile. across the line, the presence of a Soviet trade delegation anada has caught the attention of American wheat belt politicians, who are mounting new attacks on the laws that force American wheat export- ers to-stand-by-helplessly_while Can. —+- ada and other allies win all the con- tracts for wheat sales in Communist ‘countries. This “foolish restriction,” ‘as one senator calls it, was a com- merce department sop to.the mili- tant anti-Red sentiments of maritime industry labor leaders. Ours is an open-door wheat sale policy, and ‘we make no bones about it. We can’t see where the feeding of hungry people anywhere is going to injure the cause of world peace and security. Quite the contrary, in- deed. -A- bumper crop market-has- been assured to Canadian growers by this new deal, nor need we shed any crocodile tears-over the fact that it’ is on an all-cash sale basis, too. All we havé to worry about now is delivering~ t'e goods through our Eastern ports. Let’s hope there will be no hitch there, for the sake of all concerned. All Nice And Cozy It was at the free-and-easy prem: fer’s conference at Winnipeg the oth- er day—at the breakfast table, ac- cording to press report&—that Prem- iers Lesage, Robarts and Roblin agreed on how to extend the territory of their respective provinces into Hudson Bay, and to make a formal proposal to Ottawa on the matter—a proposal which Prime Minister Pear- son has hastened to say will be wel- comed. — Manitoba, scheme, under - the “would get a pie-shaped piece of bay ~~ ereated by extending the northerly. _ portion of the present Ontario-Man- itoba border in a straight line to the * ‘i A : * isan ht-to-spegify-where-they-want-the--- administer the bay as a navigational route just at it controls shipping on the Ontario-owned Great Lakes. But it’s what lies under the water, of course, that’s important. Just last week, according to the Ottawa Journ- al, the oceanographic vessel ‘‘Hud- son” entered the hay to begin stud: ies. A coincidence? Perhaps. Drill- ing is expected to give clues to the 10,000 foot sediment-layer on the bottom. This will in turn suggest the chances of finding valuable oil de- posits, commonly found in thick sedi- ment, The premiers in conference at Winnipeg were there mainly to talk about pensions and education. But as The Journal says, ‘this side agree- ment over breakfast by Messrs. Rob- arts, Lesage and Roblin could have the greatest long term effect. The three provinces will doubtless come to bless their good fortune in ~ being located next ‘to Hudson Ray, bleak and inhospitable as it now seems.” Yes, indeed! Gyod fortune, too, in having such a pull at Ottawa as to have their claims for offshore miner- al wealth in this coastal water area put on a better basis than the claims of the Atlantic Provinces and B.C. over their coastal water areas. It’s not at the breakfast table that the Prime Minister insists on having this matter disposed of, he says, but in the courts.- The courts couldn't adjudicate-on_ the Hudson Bay case, of course, for there is no issue in dispute. Hudson Bay has been owned by the Dominion ‘of Canada--that is, the people of all Canada—since it was acquired from ‘| the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1869. Manitoba, Quebec and Ontario have no-more-claim-on-it-than-any- other province. To parcel it out in the manner proposed has no warrant whatever. The welcome ,which Mr. Pearson has extended to the idea can be explained only on the ground that he feels he must at all costs keep the “hig fellows” in line, letting the devil ke the hindmost so far as the lesser fry in the Confederation. partnership is concerned. _- Cyprus Trouble Again ~~A crisis on Cyprus threatened war in the Mediterranean some months ‘ago. Now Archbishop Makarios has -seized-on-the-political-crisis.in-Greace— as an excuse for creating a new one of his own in Cyprus. The Greek Cypriot legislators have extended his term as president for a year and. changed election laws so that Turkish and Greek Cypriots. will run on the, same: election rolls. An election un- der such rules would place the Greeks, with a substantial majority of -the- population, in complete-_charge of the island. _ This is contrary to the treaty sign- _ed_in 1959 under which the Turkish minority was given gurantees of a place in government and held a veto power as protection against domina- tion. Had Turkey been so disposed, it might have used the Greek politi- cal crisis as Makarios did to pressure Cyprus for its own-ends, at a time when the Greeks might find it hard to-act:_Instead, as-one-of-the garan- tors under the Cyprus treaty, it has appealed to the United Nations sec- urity council to act in the matter. Canada has a peace-keeping force in Cyprus and is, of course, involved in maintaining good order there. It has a stake in seeing that Makar- ios’ antics are kept within bounds. It is understandable that the 1959 treaty should need amendments that will end the stalemate in government created by the mutual veto powers. of the two blocs on Cyprus; but chan- ges must come through negotiation and agreement, not through ulti- matum. EDITORIAL NOTE A new, low-calorie cheddar-like cheese, made from skim milk, has 4 een teres in the U.S. depart- ment of agriculture laboratories. It looks and tastes like very mild ched-~ dar but has only 5 to 7 per cent but- ter fat. Cheddar usually has ‘about 31 per cent. The ‘new product has not been fully market-tested, but.sev- eral hundred consumers have .sam-° pled it approvingly at demonstrations. o VF _ ALL ABOARD FOR THE PICNIC Am FEDERAL PENITENTIARIES } Three weeks after his prede- cessor, Mr Guy Favreau, agreed ‘to consider’’ a delay in | construction of four special de- tention units for incorrigible pri- soners, newly-appointed Justice Minister Lucien Cardin ordered construction and planning of | penitentiaries to proceed. Now, after three more weeks, - Should Be Toronto Globe and Mail No Retu rn To Old System Canadian Corrections Associa- ; (more or less) is welcome, al- _tion and other individuals - and | groups, Mr. Cardin, too, is re- ported to be considering a_post- ponement until a joint Com- | mons-Senate committee studies | conditions in federal penitentiar- ies. The parliamentary commit- tee’s report is not expected for | at least a year. _and following criticism from the | Mr. Cardin’s change of mind | Toronto Few’ people would disagree with Ontario’s Health Minister, Dr. Matthew Dymond, that ser- vice to mental patients should ~be-included- in- the federal medi- care scheme. Mental illness is a disease and no plan to provide treatment for any disease can be considered comprehensive unless it provid- es for all types of sickness. _ The question is whether. the cost of an inclusion would be prohibitive. ___.Dr... Dymond__estimates—t-h-i-s cost to be $75,000,000 to $85,000,- 000: annually. Considering that Ottawa is.prepared to contribute ‘$14 per capita to national medi- are — a yearly bill of some 266,000,000 — the addition of bill- by about one-third. & ians, .mental care ‘cannot be | The fact is that the Ontario Hospital. Services. Commission for mental illness and many pri- vate insurance schemes provide _for a doctor’s treatment in such mental care would increase the | ‘But if the aim is:freedom from “alt Canad fe italization | covers the-cost of hospitalization | ghotild take-up the issue: Dr. Dy | Mental Medicare Telegram |.a-case—if the patient is not con- | fined in’ an Ontario hospital but | is treated in the psychiatric }-of a general hospital: Adoption—cf—-mental care —in | national medicare would facili- | tate the conversion of mental hospitals into community hospi- tals with psychiatric depart- ments, as the Canadian Mental |-Health Association has been urg- | ing. This would have the effect. of eliminating the stigma that“now would be welcomed not only by medical experts but by enlight- ened opinion generally. ** It would help to solve the vex- ing problems of staffing and fi- | ly serving, mental ‘patients. _ Eventually, Ottawa and the provinces will have to deal with mental illness, so why not. now? sgasthineTicas such he. next. federal-..provincial.ses- | sion ir September, which is to work out medicare ~- proposals, | mond is right in his intention to ! press it: ‘ a No one seems to have bother- ed to ask Namu es. © eg pe a alelnNeed Montreal Star “wanted to go to the United Stat-~ : and shouted, “You're all barba- he, rians.”’ . Most Canadians naturally as- sumed that he was referring to 4-attaches_to_mental. illness, which mum-security penjtentiaries _ nancing hospitals now -exclusive- special unit, a $2,200,000 struc- ture adjacent to Montreal's St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, _ which has been under way since April, apparently ts to continue without interruption. OTHER UNITS PLANNED The other three units plan- ned for Kingston ($1,200,000 140 prisonérs) and smaller units at Dorchester, N.B., and Prince Albert, Sask. Critics of plan fault the super-prison idea | on several grounds. They term __it-a-_return-to_the--_Dark— Ages | and a revival of the Alcatraz | approach point out that it reverses or at ‘Jeast- contradicts the poticy, adopted by the previous Conser- | vative Government and follow- ed by the present Liberal Gov- |ernment, of concentrating. on | the building of minimum and medium security institutions. \Under this program, the bulk | of the prison population would | | be transferred from the maxt- ‘institutions with an emphasis on | training and reform rather than on custody and _ punishment. | This would then enable the ex- | | isting overcrowded maximum ' security institutions. to deal with the small number of inmates | A ‘WASTE,OF MILLIONS | produce new and more depress- | ing | million badly needed for an en- | lightened prison program. After. decades of shamelessly | disregarding the advice of its | own Royal Commissions and the though construction of the first | | of artificial sweeteners in foods * | the government's | to penology. - T hey: to | maximum security units | ‘would bea waste or nearly $5" Medical Browsing By Dr. Theodore R.. Yan Dellen an artificial arm with an elec- tronic hand that opens and clos- a license to manufacture the prothesis. The movements are initiated by isometric contrac- tions of certain muscles of the stump. At ,..2sent the device is men and children. Twin electro- des fastened to the muscles sig- nal an electronic motor in the hand to pinch or grasp with a maimum force of 33 pounds at the fingertips. The glove encasing the hand is made of a semi-elastic rubber compound and consists..of a hinged finger and thumb. On closure the thumb falls between the middle and index fingers. Antagonistic muscles open and close the hand; the response 1s said to be so rapid that stopping and reversing are almost instan- Dr. H. Rocke Robertson of sachusetts medical society about a young man _ who said that every time he coughed his ton- sils came out. This was an un- likely possibility, especially when they looked in his mouth bedded. 1% Perhaps the man made the mistake of calling the protrud- ing tissue doctors were equally remiss when they neglected to examine the throat more carefully. In time he developed difficulty in swallowing and a more thorough examination was done. A nine- inch tongye - like mass was dangling into the esophagus ; (gullet) from the lower part of | the throat. .The. long tumor was and “each the ma pearance of a frog catching a fly!" A Many people have questioned the safety of the extensive use | and low caloric beverages. Ac- | cording to Medical Tribune, the + Food—and— Drug: — administration T founded in September, 1949 Er- | reported new experimental data showing that the sweeteners, in- ' cluding the .cyclamates, are safe. Some of the tests included ingestion of these preparations ‘by children. as a a ARTIFICIAL TAN I, L. writes: I like the idea of tanning without exposure to the “sun with a product that is spread 1_on_the- face, neck, and_arms. Is this tanning method safe? bee REPLY ‘ Yes, but it-is not satisfactory “because tanning is not even .| and your skin may exhibit a-va- riety of colors. These Socalled | tans result from a reaction be- | tween the proteins in the skin ' and the chemicals in the pro- | duct. | THIRSTY AND DRY J. H. writes: What would cause one to be very thirsty and ~-have-a-dry—feeling—inside—-t-h-e- mouth .at night? I don’t have | this problem during the day. REPLY | The two symptoms may be re- | lated, especially if you are dehy- drated or a mouth breather. N. D. writes: My boy friend | likes to smell perfume. He. is a | hesman. Do you think this is a <sign= of -effeminacy?: Rete : REPLY | Not if he loves to smell your perfume. ‘ WHEN LEFT | A. G. writes: What happens to The Russians have developed | es. They have given the British | made for the male adult hand) and has not been adapted to wo- | Montreal spoke before the Mas- | and found the tonsils well-em- |~ West Germans To Vote his tonsils and the | composed mainly of fatty tissue | time he coughed, | unfurled and came out | of his mouth, giving him the ap- 4 | prison reforms undertaken in al- |-a cyst on the scalprif it is not re- | | mosf-every other country in the |.moved?’ - Western world,. Canada began | REPLY to make progress toward a mo-_ It stays the same, gets bigger, dern- penal system during the or becomes infected when irrit- | years when Mr. E. Davie Ful- | ated. Cysts rarely become mali; | ton was san Minister. oe { gnant. These reforms were catri : on under Mr. Favreau. It would | TODAY’S.. HEALTH _HINT—. | be rt if Mr. Cardin. Don’t smoke in bed. most fortunate i! a a an NOTES BY THE WAY | Coed— “I'd like to see - the captain of this ship.’ Sailor — | “He's forward, Miss.“ Go-ed — ‘Bhat’s all right. This is a plea- sure trip.'’—-Montreal Star. President Johnson denies that he has the loneliest job in .the world. Who else is surrounded by hordes of people taking notes | for future memoirs?—Edmonton Journal. Wife (in back seat)—‘“Henry, dear! You mustn't drive so | fast!’ Husband—‘‘Why not?” | Wife — “The motor policeman | who has been following us won't | like it."—Edmonton Journal, “Girls with skinny arms | should develop them .by rowing | a boat,” says. a health magaz- | | ine. And there are some girls who should take up bicycling.— _ Guelph Mercury. With a grinding of brakes the , officer pulled up his motor car | and shouted to a little boy play- ying im the field: “I say; sonny, | have you seen an airplane come down anywhere near here?” “No, sir!’ replied the boy, try- | ing to hide his sling-shot. “I've only been shooting at that bottle on the fence.”’"—Sarnia Observ- er. By Ken © On Sept. 19 the voters of West Germany will decide whether. to keep a familiar, time - tested government in control or try a new combination. Chancellor Ludwig Erhard and former chancellor Konrad Adenauer launched in Dortmund the Christian Democratic Party, the major partner in West Ger- many’s ruling coalition. This | Saturday, Willy Brandt, the vig- | orous anti-Communist mayor of | West Germany, opens. the cam- | paign- of his Social Democratic | party. ™ _The_Christian Democrats have held sway in the Bundestag ‘lower house)—since the-Federal Republic of-Germany was | hard’s supporters there number 242, and their coalition partners since 1961, Erich Mende’s Free Democrats, number 67. Brandt's +Socialsts--have--190 -seats. | ’ These three parties are the only ones with Bundestag seats, having qualified by drawing at least five per cent of the total | popular vote. Another 22 repre- | West, sentatives are sent by Berlin, but they cannot vote All three are middle-of-the- road parties, with the Christian Democrats—forming— the — solid centre, the minor-partner Free Democrats a little to their right and Brandt's Socialists ever-so- slightly to the left. ISSUES SCARCE _ Differences in viewpoin | among these parties on domestic issues are so small as to be | nearly invisible. And onthe | international front. all three | groups favor continued support of the North Atlantic Treaty | Organization and the European ;Common Market and new in- | | itiatives toward German reuni- | fication. Substantial election is- sues thus are scarce. The voters are practically re- |ing it safe with the familiar peals that change.” Erhard, 68, is a roly - poly, tuddy - cheeked economist who | likes cigars, beer and the con- last weekend the, campaign of | | S é , One reason why experience is | such a good teacher is that she doesn't allow.deepeuts.-- Cor umbus Journal --Republican. He ‘awkward dancer)— “It | was nice of you to give me this | dance.” She (sweetly)—_ ‘‘Not at all—this is a charity ball.” ~ Montreal Star. “Did you give your wife that lecture on economy that you were talking about?” did.” “What happened?”’ “I'm going to give up smoking.” Galt Reporter. — Cop— “‘What'ya mean goih’ 50 miles’ an hour?’’ Pretty Motor- ist— ‘My brakes don’t work .and I was hustling to get home before I had an accident.” — Toronto Star. Couldn't a society so sophisti- cated it can shoot a tiny atomie power plant into orbit the earth develop apparatus to efficiently quieten a truck's en<« gine? The answer seems as ob- vious.as the need to get tough with tire- squealers and irres ponsible motorists who have “straight pipes’ instead_of-muf- | flers on their cars.— Vancouver~ | Province. Prichard Canadian Press Staff Writer chancellor Oct. 16, 1963, when Adenauer finally stepped down’ after’ stalling since 1959. Ade- nauer, 89, remains chairman of the party and a major power, | chancel of friends. He became Minister for. economic affairs ‘ from the time democratic rule was re-established in 1949, Er- | hard was closely identified with | the rapid economic recovery of | West Germany But since be- | coming chancellor he has been, accused of fumbling so do- mestic issues and has met\re- | buffs in foreign policy. |“ Brandt, 51, is a broad-shoul- dered, craggily - charmer with a beautiful wife _and__command__of _three _lan- | guages. Like Erhard he has an anti-Nazi record. In his th he was an ardent socialist’ and ale | though he and his party long ago gave Marxism the heave-ho, ‘many West Germans cannot for- get..that the.Social..Democratie party once favored nationalizae tion of industry and held anti- clerical- and anti-military views, PROPORTIONAL SYSTEM Under West Germany's sys- tem of proportional representa. | tion the number of seats a pany wins in the Bundestag conforms closely with its percentage of _the popular vote. The Christian Democrats polled 453 per cent of the 1961 vote, the .Socialists 36.2 per cent and the Free Democrats 13 : Polls of the ‘‘decided’’ vote, ken in advance of this year's tive electioneering pertod, showed increased support for the parties of both Erhard and. wy backing for the Free Democrats. This sparked talk of the possi- | bility of a>post-election coalition between Erhard and Brandt agreeable. Erhard proclaimed _ | his opposition and accused the forces. power, told 15,000 cheering Christian »4.party...in_ power _or.heeding..ap-.... Democrats.at..Dortmund that..n0...<.:. “it’s ‘time for a | decision would be made on:a° | “4 coalition until after the publie has its say Sept. 19 A lot of views could change before then The Financial Postt | The party of the left in Can- ada held its annual sessions at a time when this country is exper- | fencing more strikes and walk- The 22-foot killer, whale, net- | Namu’s- American owners. Not ted accidentally .off the coast of | necessarily. Americans cannot into American waters last Sat- | icans. Truly barbaric is the na- urday. According to news ser- | tion which turned its back on | vice reports, the only protest | was made by an _ unidentified ' man from Victoria. As a tug | pulled the penned whale throu- |. gh -Hare Strait, the Victorian stood on the bow of his yacht Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (August 13, 1940) Daring Britisr torpedo boats, outnumbered and outgunned, scattered a force of German war vessels supported by a Ger- man airplane in an aciton fought during the early morning dark- ness over the English Channel. With Ada Worthy~ furnishing the biggest upset of the day by racing to an extra heat victory one of its own whales in its hour | of need. ; As soon as the whale was | trapped, its captors put it up/for | bids in the United States. For- gotten was all the brave talk about selling out -our natural heritage. Gone was our vaunted ; concern about the “brain drain’’ ‘to the United States. ; We assumed, instinctively, that Namu himself wanted noth- |ing more than to become an American star, inspiration of folk singers, sponsor of sweat- | shirts and originator of a new | dance. craze called “The | Namu.” | No one imagined that Namu | might have looked on our coasts | with the eyes of an Emily Carr, preferring their bleak grandeur to the gaudy surroundings of | the Seattle Marime. Aquarium. | No one dreamed that he might | not be willing to forsake home in the "Three-Year-Old Futurity | and family for the Great Society over the favored Margaret Jean | south of the border. It never oc- and George Mac, the Old Home | cyrred to us that he might have Week harness racing program | heen a veritable Rivard in his got away to a flying start today witnessing the racing. TEN YEARS AGO (August 13, 1955) A leading Moscow scientist said the Soviet Union has shot experimental “rockets bearing live animals more than 300 mil- es into space. It plans to replace the rockets in the near future with artificial satellites of the earth. . Lord Horder, who tended five British monarchs. as royal phy- sician along with other world Petersfield, near Portsmouth, England. He was 84. * Se, with a large opening day throng | celebrities, diedvat his home in | views on extradition. Namu had no friends, in high places or low. ‘ . Canadians simply took it for ‘granted that he would _'be - hap- pier with Robert Goulet and Lorne Greene in the United Stat- es. — EXPLOSION KILLS TWO | HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — An | explosion ripped a new indus- | trial plant in East Harris | County Monday, killing two per- sons and injuring three others. The Retzloff Chemical Com- pany plant had been open only a few days and construction | worker: still were at the plant | site. The plant manufactures | agricultural chemicals, * | were to undo much of the good | that has been done. He should British Columbia, was_dragged-|-be-blamed-for-eeting-like-Amer—1£°_2!! the way and scrap the | to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore ‘plans for the néw special deten-|—Van—Delien,—-co~Chicago-Trib— | the United’ States is also its Commander-in-Chief is no acci- dent. It goes back to the earliest termination of the founding fa- thers to assert the paramountcy. of the civilian over the military power. The men who signed the Dec- laration of Independence all had had bitter personal exper- iences with the generals import- ed from England to look after the colonies.-When the colonies | broke away, they tried to make | sure that the military would: play second fifiddle to the civilian power. : This does not mean that the military don't keep trying. There are already reports from Washington that the Pentagon is bitterly disapp»inted. with Pre- sident Johnson’s decision: in the words of the New York Times, to conduct in‘ Vietffam ‘a con- | trolled and severly limited oper- _ation.”” The armed -services’ recipe for action always tends to the conviction that, if given enough men, money, bombs and ships, they can win. Experience has taught them of course always to ask for much more than they think they real- ly need, for they- have sadly basic recipe remains. A year ago they were confident that, if they got what they asked for, | they could suppress the Viet | Cong. They are just as confident | une, Chicago, Illinois.) ‘days of the republic;-and-the-de-— Politicians Vs. Pentagon . Montreal Star AS The fact that the President of | today. Past failures never weak- en their confidence. They probably recall to each other that, if Admiral Radford -had-been—allowed—to—use—- atom bombs when Dien Bien Phu was besieged— as Admiral Radford same way retired generals this | week had precisely the same re- cipe, atom bombs and all. They are specialists in their field, but specialists who sel- | dom see beyond their proposals | for victory. They seldom accur- | ately. appraise the political fac: | tors which weigh in the mind of — “the Frocks” as Field Marshal | Sir Henry Wilson disparagingly called the politicians duririg the | | outs than it hac“ad in a de- | cade. This offered the planners of the New Democratic Party, The page one editorial, a truly splen- did opportunity to inform the public what the should be done to restore labor peace and further economic pro- . gress. But the conference chose in- stead to talk-about many things, | about Quebec and day nurseries | and birth control and the Can- ada Development Corporation. Indeed, as in dictatorships ‘that can’t cope with problems flamboyant protest march the U.S. consulate in Toronto. to Financial Post comments in its” left thinks | at | home, it directed the attention | wanted to do — the war would, of its members to U.S. foreigii | have been over by now. In the | policy in Viet Nam and staged a | “Old Dogmas Don't Help The hard truth is that the so cialist party does less and le<s- to clarify or to tackle the great issues that face this country at this time. It is increasingly ire relevant as a formulator of ree medies for -actual economi@ troubles. ae ~The recent confrontation be tween provincial and federal leaders goes far to explain why the socialist strategy lacks ree levance, impetus and excite | NDP is all geared “tip“to fight vance, impetus and excitement battles already won. Medicare comes -after -pension- plans, hospital insurance, fam- ily allowances and a whole web | of cradle - to - grave protections that makes wholly redundant and NDP proposals for ‘‘a net- work of measures which wiil cover every individual _ at all stages of his life and, in all stag- | es of his living.” .The revolution | has occurred. WANTED Great War. PRINCE FOR CANADA VANVOUVER (CP)—E. V. A. learned that their Commander- | in-Chief is wise to them, But the, | de Becker, president of the Canada-Japan Society of Van- couver, has,isaid that Prince | Mikasa, third brother of. Japa-_ nese Emperor Hirohito, will be in Vancouver in October. “Mr. | de Becker said Prince Mikasa, his wife and daughter wili stop here at the end of a North American tour. The Paint Makers. ; Co. All Kinds of Paint NASH ALUMINUM i Doors, Windows, Awnings D. A. MacCANNELL. 140 Great George St. ~ i Fresh Blueberries WILL PAY MARKET PRICE. Langley Fruit Packers —* Limited =, = 5 PE. 1. aie “Sure. around © handsome _ ‘Brandt_and_sharply diminished Brandt hinted he'd be. | -| Socialists of trving to sneak ints «