® Managing E ote Published every week day morning (except Sun- ‘dey and at 165 Prince Street, - statutory : P.E.1., by Thomson -Newspepers ttd. Summerside, Montague, | fF Charlottetown, Uranch.-cffices at Alberton *"\Represented nationally. by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University. Ave. Empire 3-8894; ‘Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Unk 65942; Western Office 1030 West year off island and U.K $20.00 per in U.S. and elsewhere. outside British Com ith. over 10c single copy. ss Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. @ strongest memory. is weaker of than tne weakest ink” —- AGE 4 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER §., 1966, ! Farm Machinery Probe i At long last, steps have been taken to get the Barber inquiry into farm machinery costs functioning. Public hearings are scheduled to start in | Western Canada early next year. The inquiry seemed: to disappear from view almost from the moment it was set up.in May, but it has been ex- plained that C.L. Barber, economics professor at the University of Mani- ~ toba, first had to free himself of his fesponsibilities at the university be- fore he could actively form plans for- ost _. his one-man. inquiry. Then he was hampered by difficulties in recruiting staff because of.a shortage of avail- abig-economists in the country. Now avbasic working’organization has been formed. fac “éTo date seven studies on the sweep- ig problem of farm machinery prices - Buropean — coun- ‘to compare cost problems’ with waids the end of this month. There have nary. discussions with representatives of the farm machinery industry in Canada and procedures are being worked out to obiain iriformation necessary to the ‘Mhis is a niatter of prime concern to-all our farmers, as indicated by the tems of*reference which provide for the most searching investigation. of ‘méthinery costs. The commissioner © isgempoweredto go fully into the impact of financing, distribution and sefvicing costs on the total price to the buyer, to compare .. similar machinery costs in other countries, to delve into the historical and‘ pres-" ‘ent relationship between the price and: productivity of the equipment, the present and prospective compet- itive position of the Canadian farm -machinery industry in both domestic rt markets as compared with | the situation in other countries, and into measures that would contribute “to the expansion of efficient produc- tion, the attainment of technological advances, the improvement of dis- tribution, financing and servicing facilities and the enhancement of the industry’s competitive position so that ~ Canadian farmers would be ensured’ the most favorable prices for machin- ery parts. ‘The inquiry may prove a long- drawn-out affair, but if it lives up to ' its advance billing it will be well worth while. : Higher Education Récently there were more than 2,000 university students massed out- side the front door of the main build- ing of the University of Toronto, pro- testing the structure of the student award program. They wanted more -money to be given in straight grants rather than loans, simpler application ptfocedures and no means test on par- ents. They were met by the provincial - minister of education, William Davis. A Liberal MLA, Robert Nixon, and NDP leader Donald MacDonald also ~ spoke to them. All these speakers were in agreement with the students. Mr. Davis promised a .committee to study the problem. Mr. Nixon went farther and said that eventually there . would be free university education and his party was all for it. This was not what the group had asked for, . _ bat of course it put the speaker firm-- ly on the side of “progress.” The incident has prompted an Ont- - atio commentator to remark that higher education has become the big political fad in recent years. Once it became evident we were going to “need many more university and technological school graduates, every politician in the country, ‘it , seems, . got on the bandwagon. Privately they may have strong reservations about = promise or hedge. Not once on @ political platform has there been a. blunt question as to whether or not there should: be free _ university education. Which means, whether what the effect on society would be if they did, and whether this idea was in harmony with what we calcu- late our future needs for higher- trained personnel will be.‘ ‘that we don’t need greater emphasis on higher education; but if we get it without. question; how good will it more fundamental question of what ‘higher education really consists of, acquirement really are. Here we may leave both the poli- ticlans and the press commentators, and take our seats among the Uni- versity of Toronto freshmen as they commenced “their studies this term, while Dr. Claude. Bissell, president pounds the matter. We have space only for a short excerpt from his ad- dress on this occasion, but it carries ‘a load of meaning. Pale “Your first and most important milieu,” Dr. Bissell told his hearers, unless you pursue them diligently, enthusiastically and adventurously, you have no right to be here. You in this way, that you will experience and your wider interests. You will be educating yourselves. No university gives you an education; all it does is make it possible for you to attain one. An education attained by personal ef- fort begins with wisdom and humility.” ; : ar," Poor Start _ Given, a mandate to hunt down the joint Senate-Commons committee on consumer credit has warned that not a tittle of inflationary pressure will escape investigation. These are heart- ening words; comments the Globe and Mail; but unfortunately the com- mittee does not. promise to be entire- ly consistent. Depending on one’s sympathies, one might overlook its : apparent lack of interest in the 30 per. cent wage increase for packing- house workers announced last Thurs- day: But a more serious oversight, one might think, is the committee’s un- concern with the low productivity and hth wages of another class of work- ers—Members of Parliament. Usually when MPs are criticized +~for-not-attending-House-of Commons debates they plead the pressure of committee work or the interests of ever, does not meet. until. today and the members have had nearly a month, ‘to say nothing of five weeks | in the-summer,_to-care for the home. |_ fronts. What excuse, then, can there be for the fact that on the first day of last week, only eight of the 24 committee MPs were present for an economics lecture by Deputy Finance Minister Robert Bryce? Or. that this second day? This is not, the kind of performance that is likely to. prove an inspiring example, either to in- dustry.or to labor. Keeping It Alive Island Liberals are to he com- mended on their decision to present, at their national party conference at Ottawa next week, a resolution deal- ing with our car ferry situation and ince to uninterrupted service on the Borden-Tormentine route. It will be recalled that some time ago, Premier Campbell stated that three proposals for taking the operation of the ser- port Minister Pickersgill. They were all aimed at providing a setup that ,would prevent future strike tieups ‘on our main link with the mainland. Whether there has been-any reply by Ottawa to these suggestions we do not know. In any case, it is highly important that the isstie be kept alive. Our predicament during the recent rail strike focuséd nation-wide atten- tion on our claims in this régard,.and if we allow them to lapse again through ‘complacency wé shall have ourselves to blame. : ~ EDITORIAL NOTE . “IT make the statement at once that _ there is no scinitilla of evidence or “any indication that there was any dis- loyalty. involved in any of the cir- cumstances which I have investigat- éd.”—Mr. Justice Spence, in the Mun- singer Report. Which makes us wonder what all the furore has been doing #0, but publicly they either % iD x “A » about.. . ° S AA ae one 8 Ls everybody should go to university - All this, of. course, is not to say — be} At bottom, this poses the still. : and what the factors essential to its - .of-the university and one of Canada’s . ‘most distinguished educationists, ex- - “will consist of _ your studies, and _ will find, if you pursue your studies- no conflict between the classroom™ ‘causes of & rising cost of living,-the-| their constituencies. The House, how- _ number dwindled to seven..on..the..). the constitutional right of this prov-, vice out of CNR hands were made to . Prime Minister “Pearson and Trans- - ' gett MH rll B BI 7 Ses “i | uy s5eF f 5 ry i MONUMENTAL INDIFFERENCE OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick-Nicholson . The Leadership Crisis, And All That af- | cratic But whatever Dief’s eritics may say, he is not without very substantial support; he is not out stated, would like to see a demo- ri on whether the leader id be. endorsed in of- fice, or be replaced, in the. inter- ests of party unity. the repeated unofficial and undemocrattic challenges they regard as ruin- ous party tactie ly with political foes of all par & the second demand that he re- “pe of te aes an mata} Those Wildlife Metaphors. rs youthful cries of .“Be- :* some ” The other day we saw a head- jin which the key figure is Ce eee ine ee tetiy, {line about the present rumpus in wildlife. And a whole oy idled in the 1 i a: | China. It read ‘‘Tiger_in Mao's | torrent: of questions came flood.’ enjoys Chairman Mao has} Whose bull burst: into whose a a ee t up to the number-two | china shop? Who first. got the ot 7 made up Peking to put a zing into | flea in his ear Whose bonnet or- ; e after seeing great proletarian cultural re- | iginally attracted that bee? our centennial celebrations volution.) What medieval belfry started through. and the loyal Liberals | “Most of us know that the “tig. | harboring the bats? Whose oint- es aoe m.for as your tank” theme has been | ment was messed up by the fiy? tec we remain. the most successful gaso-| Whose dog got into whose | ay ome advertising themes in many | manger? What kind of snake Laon ne y : day— so successful that | was it in the grass? (Only a aoe ine — t eel in your tank’ already | grass snake, we hope.) And sting of his has won wide acceptance as a | what breed of bird was it that meeting of. Lae ge stage ~—applying to situations | first gave the cuckoo the idea of rae ba a tere LS ae completely unconnected with | sponging eternally in somebody ee ee by automobiles or gasoline. (Chair- | else’s nest? ; eat 8 eee aero oe Mao, for example, uses nel-| But we think- the English ot ee . Our best intelligence is | farmer we read about in the tue of be tat ta it-he swims.) : Manchester Guardian ~ Weekly his P. yt ee ae We today are in the happy po- has nothing to be ashamed ef. ore Tea” he {sition of knowing how and In fact, we rather envied his casually “Sir John A. Ma and ‘when and where the “ wit. One of the Guardian’s rural ees ch ~ and'|i@ your tank’? phrase started. | scouts reported that he “was ee — Presumably sometime, 80m e- | driving down a narrow country Tt election & ——: Tlice coer om te eed cela ee a . mina en wheezing tractor and trailer THAT SMOKED THEM OUT | an erudite dictionary of) phrase | moving at a cow-like pace.” On. __ Conservative Dalton | and fable. the back of the trailer was a/ Camp at once” oan i or simple notice: It read: “Ive got | a oes those other hors 'a weasel in my diesel. “New Zealand's Example : Zealand. The tiny country with its two-and-a-half million popu- lation produces textbooks that not only educate, but help im- prove Yace relations in the pro- cess. a those of his own ancestors. Sat de ee une nie differences out cial publishing of such books is | minds of the. young to put the hardly feasible. And they do a |pieces of New -Zealand history a ata fated cine. Gale in their right places and in theit country’s finest wri poets | proper perspective. And in 80 and authors are widely u sed | doing, it breeds tolerance and along with the best literature | understanding. New Zealand is cictace Wistens (s teaa We’ Image we ecld meee. : al tions in the world in regard to ly without any atte to’ ‘ Sent eopeciaity feveenis ‘sites, | the solving of racial questons: It A white child, for tustance, | {8 not difficult te understand learns a great deal about *the™! why. Snooping On Elephants Milwaukee Journal “Not content with snooping on his own species:with suet devices Now researchers want to hitch this technique to a star, or at least a man-made satellite, and bug whales, polar bears, sea turtles, caribou. and elephants, Herman Schaden reports in the ti “ satellite, due .for launc next year or early in. { is: something called IRLS— inter- rogation recording. and location An elephant, say, would be |-. eaptured and loaded with @ de- ee — tae ini ct a portable rec - ing station. ~ bdo = _ If the animal hadn't alres ‘dumped the gadget into the Lime popo River, the satellite, whis- zing by in orbit, would be pro- age to ask the “elephant” lish questions about tempera-| ture and humidity down there 5 Arab countries.”. ‘We were exw ‘jan for E 4 3 ss g sis FEEEs | & IE 5 E : i wv itberally and allowed to remain J on the face for 10 to 15 minutes. and then gently scraped away. It must be reapplied every few days. No system of shaving cur- ‘\’es the disorder although the use of a straight or electric razor writes: ‘For ‘Tone, year I have had no social life. I am always keyed up and my éars get red. I can't control _| it for one moment. At work I am fine until I start to think about it. On a hot summer day I burn up. I have tried my best, but I ~ean’t control > this “reaction. 1 have to consult someone and will appreciate an an "as soon as possible.” Upsets. of this:type usually are related- to emotional. stresses and strains that have been pil- ing up for years. Our reader should talk over his problems with a physician or religious ad- viser in order to lessen the in- ternal turmoil that has built up. A tranquilizer will help initia! ‘and the behavior pattern improve with sophistication aad reaction to embarrassing ree tions and this reader can ' thankful that it is confined to his ears. JOINT WEAR AND TEAR _ Mrs, M. writes: Is cortisone used in osteoarthritis? » REPLY Yes. Osteoarthritis,. the -result of joint wear and tear, responds to a lesser extent to these prod- ucts than other forms of arthrit- is. -Best results are“ obtained when the hormone is injected di- rectly into the involved—joint. Bi2 AND SENILITY R. J:. writes: Is it true that hardening of the arteries in the brain can_ cause senility in an older person? Can taking vitam- in Bi2 tablets help to forestall ‘ » REPLY Senility can be caused by har- dening of the arteries, but vita- min Bi@ will not prevent the con- dition. ~ INFECTED HEART K. P. writes: Can the heart become infected? REPLY Y Yes. This occurs in rheumatic lowing injury. Infection of the pericardial’ sac, in which the heart -is encased, is: fairly com- mon. Many organisms play a turity.. Bl is a normal |: fever, blood poisoning, and fol- || Zz O rm o ' Fee 4 on FOR a] 25 ee i Fe wt ay ae? i z rf { | ‘ : i : | Z a 5 ag { ; i tf e. T Ff a5 ij ii tha i EE iE § : ; i I E E E 2 Thanks For T | James Meredith, the U.S. civ- il rights crusader, flatters Can- io #Z “2 i 33 Eg F i ; i z fl a ei : i if -But without : Seas we ing belal “oul Chae Al _"'Abie’s Irish Rose” ‘recent death ‘of Anne Nichols. Although she produced a num- ber of other works, she made her name with the play, “‘Abie’s BF EF ‘ rf q t ti tif Res all i 3 § s sul | bi 2 Fee c E i #é Broadway. it i RED CROSS _ IS ALWAYS THERE Po including’ tlie tubercle bac- us. : ASPIRIN FOR SLEEP C.-K. gwrites: Is it harmful to. take an aspirin before going to bed This helps the person asleep. REPLY -Many persons find an excellent sedative. HEALTH \HINT— . to TWENTY (October 5, 1941) _ Cannonading at sea accompan- ied by a display of searchlights ‘was reported by fishermen hear Maceio, Brazil, indicating po s- sible continuation of a battle be- lieved to‘ ‘have started between - | unidentified ships three days LONDON (AP) — tee of thé United Ar blie says he did not..ex-- a British ' attack :in a “hedause it ce in z ‘French-Israeli collusion, documentary. , _ UP TO $11,700 | and SAULT STE-MARIE, ONT. The Department ef National Defence has vacancies KINGSTON, ONT. and DOWNSVIEW, ONT. and the Depart- -ment of Transport has a vacancy in SYDNEY, N. 8S. . APPLY IMMEDIATELY, om Ferm CSC 100 te the CIVIL - SERVICE COMMISSION OF. CANADA, OTTAWA 4 Please ee : > Additional information is available en request. 5 F x ‘ 4 ¥ / The Civil Service Commission announces a staffing program There are over 30 vacancies, at various levels, in Govern- ment Departments at Ottawa, including the National Library. Outside of Ottawa, the Department ef Agriculture has | vacancies in LONDON, Ont., FREDERICTON, N. B., KENT- VILLE) N. S., REGINA, SASK. and HARROW, ONT. The Department of Forestry has vacancies 2 CALGARY, ALTA.. i ii a e -~ " ue if Fe _has business expansion .. depleted your working capital? 4 SYSTEM OF FINANCING . expansion potential! RoyNat provides loans increased working capital, refinancing, pur- chase of land, buildings, equipment or buy- ing a business. Flexible terms. For assistance with’ any industrial or business project call: RoyNat Ltd. at HALI ; . WINNIPEG, REGINA, CALGAMT, evo oe or enquire through any branch Wisk a British BBC television’|L Don't let lack of working capital slow your. of $25,000 to $1,000,000 or more for : e 2