"DORAN & FOIE TC playset Even ministers and MPs, says the- | -~—,-~Montreal--paper,.may know—no-more- oe Covers Prince Edward Island Liye The Dew W. J. Hencoa, Publisher Nellece Ward Frank Walker Ranaging Editor tditor » Published every week day morning (excep! Sum fay end statutory prolidays) at 165 Prince Street, Thariotieiown P.-E... by Thomson Newspapers (td. branch offices at Summerside. Montacve Albe: on tnd Sours Popresented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empire 3-8894 -Montres! 640 Cathcart Street Uni versity 65942. Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver (MA 7037 : Member Canedran Daily Newspape: Publishers Association and ine Canadian Press The Canadian Press ip exclusively entitied to the use for repub> lication of all- news dispatches in this paper ergdited to it or to the Associated Press or Reviers and also to the loca! news published ‘herein All right o: republication of spscia! dispatches here In else reserved Subscription rate ~ Not over 40c mer week by carrier $12.00 « year by mail on rural routes and 4.eas not serviced by carrier $15.00 » year off island and UK. $2000 ner year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com nonwealth Not over 7c tingle i Member Opy- Audit Bureau of Circulation “The strongest memory is weaker . than the weakest ink” —— PAGE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1968. Those Campaign Funds One of the ‘reforms’ we shall have to do without in this election campaign has to-do with reforming all such ‘campaigns by. putting t he financing of them on a more straight- forward basis. Finance Minister Gor- don, who is also chairman of the Liberal partvs national campaign committee. discussed this matter at a press conterence the other day. He said he had hoped the special par- liamentary committee that is to rec- ommend reforms to election cam- paign financing would have reported before now. It would be preferable if a large part of each party's ex- penses was paid from public funds; but he added. consolingly that the present system of soliciting funds from private contributors was ‘not as bad as it-has been made out?’ : Unfortunately. the trouble with making it out in any intelligible way, is the secrecy in which the whole sys- tem is shrouded. All parties tend to be willing nowadays to publish finan- cial. reports—limited ones. No-one wants,to hide how offices and adver- ising are paid for. But these have ‘little to do with the actual party war chest, about which we'd all like to known a little more. \ French-language paper, the Montreal Metro-Express, has just made some arresting statements on .this subject. It says, first of all, that the war chest is the-one that, pays for campaigns,. changes reluctant minds, assures..victory.-to-its~candi- dates, pads bank accounts for finan- cially-troubled party figures. Some- times overseas trips are arranged for persoris not wanted in the country at election. The chest is versatile and not limited to election uses, which largely frees it from the checks of the campaign spending laws. All manner of ruses are used to conceal where it’ comes from and how -im- about these funds than the man on the street. The money is there, cer- tain persons pick up the bills, but --who put the bank notes in the cash box, or who guaranteed the funds in advance? What party would even consider unveiling this mystery to the light of day? . One thing sure, it seems, is that the contributions of small business- men-and-—the-proceeds—of_party—din- ners_count_less than nothing -in the real funds of the party. . And com. mon belief to the-contrary. a party, especially one in power, draws on a very limited number of sources. They are more often than not foreign in this land where more than.60 cent of the capital is American. The portant “transactions” take place. on the highest levels and will never be opened to the public, or even to the party : We- cant vouch for the accuracy of these statements, but we think they merit attention at this time. We trust that Mr. Gordon will read them and, at his next pressgonference, let us une what he thinks about them. 32. Years After Thirty-two vears after many of Germany's top writers and journal- ists fled the country, an exhibition devoted to “German literature in exile’’ has. opened in Frankfurt. It all began on January 30, 1933, when tens of thousands of torch-bearing, cheering Germans crowded Berlin's streets to hail the rise to power of their new Fuhrer, Adolf Hitler. Only four months later. on May 10. a huge bonfire lit the square outside the opera in Berlin; the new leaders, cheered by their innumerable follow- ers, were burning the works of “un- German” and “subversive” authors, foreigners.and Germans alike. _ ” Im-° ‘ Che Guardian | were condemned by the prophets of | the “one-thousand-year Reich”. were Thomas Mann. Herman Hesse, and Bert Brech. They, and with them _ many writers who realized that ' “banners of his dav the Ma nfire meant the end of in- dependent thought in Nazi Germany, left the country One vear later the exiled intellect uals founded the “German Freedom Library” in Paris, compiled of the books banned pulped, or ignored in the Fuhrer’s Aryan Germany. The library vanished after the German Army conquered France. Fifteen years later the German Library in Frankfurt began to establish a de partment devoted to German liter- ature in exile Its collection now contains 8.200 items ranking from books and magazines to newspapers and anti-Nazi leaflets. and 2,000 let- ters collected from all parts of the world The current Frankfurt exhibition shows-onlv_about five per cent of this but on display.are many rare items, including the magazine “Abendland” (Occident) published in Prague, in which in 1938 appeared the follow- ing prophetic tines: “Listen: vou new vrophets. there is a death-mask grinning when you talk about a One-Thousand-Year- Reich—it is your own. Listen, you great architect. of a new century: un- der the new buildings to be built in the service the new heathenism one building is to be certain,.a build- ing some foet deep: your grave.” A true prophecy indeed. Remind- ing us of the blasts which John Milton delivered, three centuries ago, against what he called the “inquisitorious and tyrannical duncerv” of the book- ~Though alt the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon the earth,’ he wrote, ‘‘so Truth be in the field; we'do injurious- ly by licensing and prohibiting to mis- doubt her strength. Let her and Falsehood \grapple; who ever. knew Truth put tothe worse, in a free and open encounter?” That, of course: was what the Nazis were determined not to allow. But they failed to reckon—as have other totalitarian regimes—-on the indes- tructability of the force they were up against. The Frankfurt exhibits are a reminder that books are in- deed ‘not dead things.but-do—con- Ot | tain a potency of life in them’to be | t as active as that soul was whose pro- geny they are; nay, they do preserve as in’'a vial the purest efficacy and extraction of that living intellect that bred them.” ‘ Milton would have enjoyed adding a postscript to these reflections of his, were,be living-in. this age. - Another New Party As if the Quebec situation wasn’t complicated -enough, -another’ new political party—Le Bloc du Quebec— has proclaimed its determination to ~enter-candidates..in_every_riding in... the province in the coming federal contest. Fhe party, as announced in its manifesto, “does not propose sep- eration of Quebec from the rest of Canada but. insists on_respect for the principle of equality between the two nations by means of a new constitu: tion.” ; f j In addition, the party stands for . severance of all ties with Britain, formation of a new parliamentary sys- tem under a president and two , chambers—one_representing English Canada and the other French Can- | stitutional monarchy in this country, | | | t < Tes ‘Among “the -writers-whose—werks— —the—coning—eleetion._—_—_— ada—creation of five: economic reg- ions for the country, and abolition of political ties which are “resulting in the steady deterioration of the coun- try.” i While the parfy does not propose absolute stparatism from the rest of ' Canada, it advocates measures which the English-speaking majority would certainly not tolerate -and which would destroy-Canada if they were to make headway. It would be _an- other Munich indeed if appease- ment of Quebec extremists went so far as to sanction abolition of con- on which our laws. our parliamentary system and our whole way of life is based. } The n&® movement hopes to give Quebec “a new image with few faces,’ but it is unlikely to make any great impact on the bulk of Quebec i voters, who aré concerned about economic improventents much miore than-with changes of this kind. It is mote likely, as one exchange pre- dicts, that it will meet the same fate as earlier parties in Quebec such as Block Populaire, Parti de la Confederation. Nationalis, Indepen- dent Workers, Labor-Progressive, Un- ionists and others too numerous ‘to mention. Howe¥ey. it could inject another | note of ungertainty in the results of. | ? i a oe or HIGHWAY ACCIDENTS cause ALMOST FoUR TIMES THE | NUMBER OF INJURIES AS THE CANADIAN ARMY SUFFERED DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR —— Quesecs Minis Tee, OF TRANSPORT Cegiteeernenen Erwin The State Department has had to admit that an’ agent of the Centra! Intelligence Agency of- fered a bribe of . $3.3 million some five vears ago to Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew of Sing- apore. It had to make the ad- mission a few hours after deny- ing it. Mr. Lee had indignantly produced the letter in which Se- cretary of- State Dean Rusk had apologized for the incident This is disgraceful It ratses many questions: Will know just what the CTA has been doing these past years? How many eqtally discredible _ inct- dents may come to light? Is this sort of thing the ~way to fight communism”?_Can—we— possibly gain anything by stooping to euch tactics? ; ost of us have come to ac- cepf espionage as an essential part of the cold war We know} that -world..communism..has .ef-_ honorable corruption on the oth- re : fective sources of information within the free world Many of the facts we have te | contrive to get by espionage can | be obtained about us by Soviet | agents through spending a few cents, or a few dollars, at “a newsstand or book stora Com- munist agents range over the free world fairly easily In -a free society, such things cannot possibly be prevented un- less wé are prepared to become totalitarian ourselves. OTHER. WE/.PONS oa We-knnw;--toe,that.-Commun- ist agents conspire continually :-4ine-various—undecided.nations, or ~-amone..key.--pecole..in—other...na- tions. It is a rough, dirty bus- iness We have ta contend with it. But the way to contend with it-is-not—to_imitate it. We have other weapons with which to ficht. They are weapons of in- tegrity. They..can be far more successful in the end. : It is pretty well known around the world by now that the CIA can be shaken down. What a reputation to have? The agency has an unaccounted budget _ of several hundred millions of dol- lars-a-year-to-spend.—If-this_sit- uation hasn't corrupted ‘some of the agency’s own people tt will Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (September .10, 1940) Thousands ‘of Charlottetown ci- tizens gathered at Victoria Park and were thrilled at the Naval Display -which was staged by the Charlottetown Division of the Royal Canadian Naval Volun- teer Reserve. The display con- sisted of a sham -attack -on-a land objective and was executed in-a capable manner. Lieut. K. Birtwistle, Commanding Offi- cer, was in charge of the defen- |_sive operations: and the defen- sive actionswas led by Lieut. Fan Scarth. . Rev. IJ. Levy of Sussex, N.B, was called to the Charlottetown Baptist Church in succession to Rev. H.L. Denton, who had re- signed, TEN YEARS AGO September 10, 1955)... -. For the third time at the Queens County Powing Match Stanley Willis off Cornwall took home the Championship of the meet. His almost perfect score of 9 points was sufficient to outclass all compe- titors. Mr. Willil was provincial Champion in 1953 and P.E_Is- land’s representative al the Do minion finais in Ontario. Veterans of both -World Wars were remembered hy their com- rades in a solemn remembrance held.at the cenotaph at Cornwall in the afternoon’ John E. Heart, a veteran of both wars presided .S. COMMENTARY Monkey we ever | =dlelit-age--knew..of.anything bet... MAN'S MONUMENTS be a miracle. Some of -it has been admittedly used to corrupt others, not just prospective in- formers and turncoats, but pre- sumed _ friends. A good many of these chick- ens will come_ home to” roost. Venality will be exposed. Stup- idity will be exposed. Many oth- erwise respectable institutions will be touched and-tainted.-For many of them have been- used as “covers” by the CIA down through the years. And some- times the justification or patrio- tism will be pretty lame. NEEDED: A LINE It is the United States and the cause of genuine freedom in the world which _ suffers. There ought to be a rough, working, dividing line between hard-hitt- ing, realistic, tough intelligence work and political warfare, on the one hand, and corrosive, dis- Business In Sinapore Canham In The Christian Science Monitor The greatest asset the United States has_in the world is its honor. Its good name. Its inte- grity. These are invincible wea- pons. Thye can win any kind of battle in the end. Americans, and their good friends in the world of freedom, stand for ideals and principies> Sometimes.the best of nations have been untrue to those ideals. They should not be Tough decisions have to be fac- ed in the ruthless struggle now ; going on. They must avoid both stupidity and venality. Congressional supervision of Central Intelligence Agency op-” erations-.is hardly the answer. But ought it not-to be made clear. once and for all that the "agency Cannot and must not arrogate to itself the running of American foreign policy? That belongs to th®8White House and “the State” Department: ~ oo Volta’s Name Honored National Geographic Society A shocking fad developed in ishable supply ot static electri- France's royal court during the 18th century. The nobles and their ladies passed the time between affair- es d'amour by giving each other merry little jolts. with. a_ novel | machine that generated an elec- tric charge. No one in that can- ter to do with electricity But--in-4748,-a-dozen-years_af-} -ter the-curious-fad-—started amid _the splendor of the French court, an important event took place in a poor home in the Lombard -tewn—.of -Como._Ales-. sandro Volta was born At first, Alessandro seemed so dull - witted that -his family despaired; he spoke not a word until hey was four years old. When he grew into manhood, however, his ingenious experi- ments with the phenomenon that amused the French nobles ush- ered in the’ age of electric pow- er-and-made- his _name_an_every- day word in many languages. BUREAU FOUNDED Today the volt is the standard unit of electrical potential, and Volta’s name is also honored by the Volta Bureau, the world's leading information center about deafness. The Bureau is located in Washington, D.C., and it wns founded by Dr. Alexander Gra- ham Bell after he received the | | Volta: Prize from France for his invention of the’ telephone. Young Volta had decided by the age of 14 that he wanted to be a physicist, despite . family pressure for him to enter the’ priesthood. Volta argued that there were already so many priests, nuns, and monsignors in the family that it was Unnecessary for him to make it any more saintly He did little speculating about the nature of electricity, but ex- perimented tirelessly. In 1774 he invented the ‘‘electrophoriis,”’ which provided scientists for the first time with a steady, replen ———— : Japanese Fly Cristian Science Monitor Without a base in Japan, the United States position in Korea a decade and more azo would have been even tougher than it was. And it is one of the most eloquent comments on how things have changed since then that Japan is 80 reticient yout even a passive = involvement alongside the United States in Vietnam. Even the .use of Okin- awa — where Japan is sti!] offi- cially sovereign, even if the js- land ts tun by the American-m: litary ---as-atakeoff pon: for against the Viet Cong — | touched the bottom disk of metal “land's Sir Humphry: Davy de- -China apparently committed to city. For years he feuded with the Italian physician, Luigi Galva- ni, about the nature of elecwi- city. Galvani had discovered animal electricity accidentally when he and an assistant were | studying the nervous system of _a_freshly dissected frog. A ma- _chine for producing electrical (~ the | same_table-near the frog's legs, | _ charges happened to be. on and every now and then the de- vice emitted:a spark. Galvani and his associates were - startled to_.see the frog's legs twitch again and again when a dissect- | ing scalpel touched a certain ex- posed nerve at the same mo- ment when the machine spark- ed. WHAT IS ELECTRICITY? ’ Galvani and his followers -ar- gued that electricity was ani- mal in nature. Volta maintained that it was not animal at all; he said the jerking of the frog's legs was an effect and not a cause In 1800 Volta built his “voltaic | —. the first electric bat- | It consisted of 100 metal | pile” tery disks piled one on top of the oth- er. Between each dish was plac- ed a piece of flannel cloth or pa- per soaked either salt solution or dilute sulfuric acid. Volta found that # he with one hand and simultaneous- ly touched the top disk with the other he received a shock. The pile continued to give a shock as | long as his hands were kept in place. Volta had “succeeded in pro- viding scientists with a contin- uous electric current. Soon, Eng- monstrated an electric arc light, using a 2,000-cell voltaic battery. A contemporary marveled that the light was “‘so intense as to resemble that of the sun.”’ The “dull” boy from Como had brightened the world. ing Rights - has irritated Japanese‘ publie opinion Still, that opinion is by and large on the side of the United States. Can-anybody doubt that it is in-the Ameritan interest — and that of the free world — toe keep it that way? With mainland unrelenting hostility te the Un- ited States, is it not. clear that the single bigges setback for the free world in the Pacifie _questions on medical topics in a strong” The Story By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien The’ tongue is so sensitive | that it overestimates the size of | @ tiny cavity or raspberry seed caught between the teeth On the other hand, it makes accur- ate comparisons when the ob- jects or cavities are more than three-eighths of an inch in size. delicate nerve endings that it can distinguish two needle points that are only one-sixteenth inch apart. The tongue is surrounded . by more bacteria than any organ in the body. It has been estimat- ed that the healthy oral cavity averages 750 million organisms -inevery 15 drops of saliva. These include staph, strep, coli- form bacteria, lactobacilli, clo- stridium, molds, yeast, and cer- tain spirochetes. Tests have dis- closed streptococci and pneu- mococci+in-the--mouth of a heal- thy infant-two days after birth. These microbes are harmiess provided resistance is maintain- ed. The majority are swallowed and destroyed by the gastric juice. The tongue rarely be- | stantly bathed in germs. On the | other hand, many of these are | potential troublemakers, espec- ially when passed along through a human bite. ‘ | Most of us associate the ton- gue with taste, but it has many | other functions, It is an import- | ant organ of speech and_creates | | the air current used to suck l- | quids into the mouth. The strue- | ture ‘also guides food between | the uppers and lowers and steers it into the throat. Now and then it is forced to help chew when | the teeth are lost. It is no secret that physicians | today spend less time examin- ing the tongue. The horse-and- buggy doctor often started his examination with ‘Let me see | your tongue"’ and used the or- | gan as an index of health and a | mirror of the digestive tract. There are a number. of internal disorders leading to changes in the tongue’s’ appearance, but other more reliable clews usual- ly co-exist. Most of the coating | that bothers people is normal It takes.place at night when the cleansihg action of saliva afd chewing {s quiescent Dr. Van Dellen will answer mail if stamped, self-addressed envelope_ accompanies request. | MULTIPLE TUMORS Mrs. T- writes: IT have fatty ‘tumors of different sizes over various parts of my body and was told I have Von - Reckling- hausen’s disease. Can you ex- ’ plain this to me? : REPLY In Von Recklinghansen’s dis- ease, tumors stem from nerve tissue and are removed surgically. Fatty tumors (lipo- mas) come from fat many exist, the condition Is “known as” multiple “linomatosis: TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— | Physical and mental rest are | equally important. ~ 3 t would be a swing by the Japan- ese into a position of hostility ta j ward ‘Of The Tongue comes infected even though con- |’ by | When | ually tg, give a “natural” maturing At the same time, it kills weeds and reduces tuber rot. Apply Regione with standard | NOTES BY THE WAY .. It not only costs more to be born and to be buried than ever before, but the interim costs are | also much higher.— Woodstock Sentinel - Review. Wisconsin lawmen are closing + in on gumball machines that dispense trinkets. Man the drag- + not get away. — Windsor Star ; |The —intensified__fighting __ be- | tween India and Pukistan is | likely soon to become far more |.savage as each side seeks des- | perately for, some early, deci- sive advantage. | Otherwise the sheer burden of |a long drawn-out clash, for | which neither is prepared in terms of food and equipment, | could finally push them into | some unhappy: deals with out- + -siders or force them to fall back in exhaustion. Some hint of the suffering | ahead came when Prime Minis- ter Shastri of India called on all Indian adults to sacrifice one meal a day to help ease the food shortage. The sub-continent is eternally | haunted by famine. How long ean either India cr Paxistan | continue to fight if foreign food ; shipments were cut off? | U.S. ARMED BOTH Both countries also rely heav- | ily—on—foriegn—arms._Much_ of this equipment, on both sides, came from the United States, though some also has come from Britain, the Soviet Union and other countries. Over years, the U.S. wanted to keep these two countries well armed to discourage a Communist in- vasion. Now these arms are being used in a border slaugh- ter Both sides afe’ aware they Se A Social Credit government in British Columbia, a Conserva- tive one in Manitoba: and a Lib- eral one in Saskatchewan have decided on tax rebates” Saskat- chewan is to give each home- | owner. an annual grant from the provincial treasury. Manitoba rebates io property - owners, not just homeowners, 50 per cent of municipal school tax- es up to $50 a year. BC has paid homeowner grant since 1957, ranging up-to $100. The homeowner in Ontario reads of these concessions with interest. The property owner is the sitting’ dick of the “tax col- lector. He can't escape. His as- sets.are stated in detail on every municipal roll. If he ingreases the size of his house, the assess- | or is around to push his taxes higher: ~A~ concession’ --of—-any j kind is gratefully received by the property owner, anywhere. But let’s note that the proper- Prevent arsenical nO the safer potato top killer , There is less danger of accidental poisoning at potato top killing time when you use Regione, the non-arsenical spray. Reglone kills leaves fast, stems more grad- not affect action. ing, saf Chipmian Dealer / i i ly LEMEEREL MELE the | Tax Rabates No Gift Ottawa Journal of $50 | NEW Low RATES NOW IN EFFECT Chipman Chemicals Limited, Montreal, Hamilton, Winnipeg Ghana ——. . Having to live with a sorehead is what a woman deserves and gets who henpicks her husbana. —Guelph Mercury. The CBC television network is promoting something excitingly called “Starburst ‘65 which ‘ turns out to be this season's | schedule of programs. We hope | the bright chap who thought #& The surface contains so many | net, men. These minnows must up realizes how close “burst't | is to “bust."” — Ottawa Journal. | Madness On Both Sides Bv Harold Morrison Canadian Press Stall Writer | may find it more difficult fo replenish their future armament needs if they continue to repulse ceasefire demands. The United Nations Security Counci] has called for a cease- fire and Britain has urged both | sides to respond, warning that the antagonists’ economic prog- ress is in jeopardy and that the border war could threaten the | peace of the world. WELL. MATCHED 4 | Inevitably, India and Pakistan | must bow to these wishes um rless they get outside support. | Eventually emotionalism and | hational pride must be cooled | by a cold appraisal of the cost# | of unlimited war. And there is no indication that ‘either side can be knocked out immedi- | ately, no matter how much force is deployed. | In the end Ahe two neighbors may discover that they have caused more damage—than-they anticipated. The whole idea of | A united Commonwealth Is shat- | tered. The scars which would by left -by- this-bloodshed-— will—be-diffis cult to erase. $ The power of the Common- | wealth to influence other coun- tries has been exploded. How can the Commonwealth bring peace to such places as Viet Nam when it cannot bring peace to its own family” jty owners in the three western | provinces mentioned are grate ful within limits. In British Cot .umbia, which has the longest ex- perience of this system, the re- bates have become familiar. And what people say is.not ‘Thanks, | Premier Bennett" but ‘Why did | he take it from us in the. first place?" —-. Governments delude themsejv- es_if they think they win long popularity by rebates. The first | payment may come as a bright | surprise. Getting money back | from a government is a novelty. | But-in later years resentment | supplants gratitude. And why not? A government is expected to collect taxes as close as possible to the amount j it proposes to_spend. If its pur- pose becomes to collect good fellow in making rebates, then it is being political, not businesslike. 4 boom sprayer at 2 to 3 pints per acre. Rain three to four hours after application’ will Don’t gamble with deadly arsenic—order Reglone ftom your local . now. oe s -* / d too . -Many“taxes.-so-it-can—appear_.a —....