4 fo Caen ae — “a on “« Che Guardian ao. “a Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancex, Publisher Ward Frank Walker ing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (excep! Sum and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, tetown P.£.1.. by Thomson Newspapers Lid. offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton Souris am. Popresented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave Bmpire 3-8894 “Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni Wersity 6-5942 Western Office 1030 Welt Georgia Sn Vaticouver (MA 7037 Member Association and Canadian Daily Newspeper Publishers jhe Canadian Press. The Canadian is exclusively entitied to the use for a Ucation of all mews dispatches in, this pal Credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the loca!” mews published Herein. All tight or republication of special dispatches here fn also reserved Subscription rate: Not over 40c¢ per week by carrier. $12.00 « year by mai! on rural routes and seas mot serviced by. carrier $15.00 » year off island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwea'th Not over 7c «ing!e copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1965. Palnisineeieetickninaancate me wt oi semanas In Two Directions The planned time orbit of Gemini 6, to be launched from Cape Kennedy, Florida, today. will cover about as long a period as that needed to send ! aa The architects of the formula foresaw a danger in this course and tried to overcome it by introducing a new, experimental device called dele- gation. If all the provinces were un- able to agree to some nation-wide amendment. a group ®f them could accomplish the desired result within their own boundaries by delegating some of their powers to the federal government. Of in reverse (which is much more probable) the federal government could delegate its pow- ers. to the provinces. ' By this means, it was hoped, the unilateral veto could be broken, in some areas at least, and the strait jacket relaxed. But the risks of delegation, unless they are forestalled in advance, could be more danger- ous than the risks of stalemate. For a weak Parliament, under pressure from powerful provinces at: election time, might delegate powers that should never be shared with the pro- vinces. To prevent that erosion cer- tain essential fields of jurisdiction ' should be definitely excluded from the mission to the moon, allow a brief « visit to the lunar surface, and then re- turn to earth. If it goes full time with its two-man crew. it will have put Americans in orbit on a mission 73 hours longer than the longest Soviet ” space flight to date. The prime objective, however, is that of gaining experience in space _rendezvous and docking—the fantas- ‘tically difficult techniques for bring- ing two orbiting objects close to- _ gether and. in the case of docking, “bringing them into contact. Skill in «these maneuvers is essential to the -Buccess of Project Apollo in achiev- “Ing the moon landing and return. > Scheduled for this week also is an- ‘other sensational experiment in a ‘quite different direction. This pro- ‘gram, involving at least two teams -of 10 men each, will be an effort to ‘live, work and do appropriate re- *search for long periods at a depth of +215. feet.undersea. Sealab 2, as it is called, is the second phase of the U.S..Navy’s ‘“Man-in-the-Sea” pro- gram. The first phase, conducted last year off Bermuda in Sealab 1, did not go to as great a depth nor did it encompass .as ambitious a_ research program. The present project, in- tended to last 30 days with possible extention to 45, will involve a broad range of studies on oceanography, marine biology and ocean bottom geology. Censuses will be taken of fish, plankton and other life; the ocean floor will be raked to flush out spec- _ies that burrow in sediments. Slow- | moving creatures will he observed to See how far and under what circum- stances they actually move. Geolo- gists will study the bottom, its sedi- ments and sediment movements. An undersea weather station will be set up to gauge temperatures, pressures, currents and other variables. Television and voice contact be- tween surface-and ocean floor will. help psychologists to do studies of in- terest both to the man-in-space and man-in-the-sea programs. These are studies of the psyesological adapta- tion of the men to the confinement and isolation experienced in a cap- sule surrounded by the dark, the cold and the danger that makes the en- vironment of space and the oéeah depths in same way similar. “A marvellous age in which to be “living!~ Meanwhile; “sad“to relate, at | “Geneva the diplomats are still hag- “gling over ways of preventing a pro- ._,liferation of nuclear bombs.that could blow us all into smithereens, leaving Nary. an astronaut nor. a deep-sea _diver to tell that we ever existed. That Faulty Formula ---It-doesn't Jook-as if Canada's con stitution: will come home from Brit- ain nearly as soon as our 11 govern- ments expected when they rewrote it a year ago. The Quebec legislat- ure has adjourned without approving ne Orn a ai. = ~ DIO s PS have accepted it but in some of them, too, there are misgivings for differ- ent reasons. Thus, as the Winnipeg Free Press aptly sayg, a document hailed as.a triumph of statesmanship last autumn now seems increasingly dubius, both in its contents and its prospects of survival. Quebec politicians fear that their _ province, outvoted by the others, may lose some of its ancient rights as the constitution is amended from time to time. -In fact, however, its first weakness is precisely the op- site—it makes amendment, in any fhportant respect, too difficult. Ex- cept in relatively minor matters unan- imous consent of the ten provinces is required. and any of them, even the gmallest, could veto the nation’s gen- eral will. ' . Standstill, at least temporarily. 1 | | | “national identity Geen pretty oO | Said: relits-which they-say—..And live in P.E_I. “sets which works out to about $14; delegation and most provinces, it is safe to assume, would not oppose such a sensible safeguard. We in this part of Canada should be the first to insist upon it. While these questions are under consideration ihe formula The time, let us hope, will not be wasted. ’ Surely the leaders of government, federal and provincial, can devise a more satisfactory document. It is bootless and misleading to maintain, as some of them are still doing, that the present one meets the require- ments. The Pressures Mounting: According to James Reston, one of the ablest of the New York Times’ correspondents at Washington, the Johnson administration is now dis- covering what President Eisenhower meant in his farewell warning to the nation about the power of an indus- trial-military complex in the country. In the frustrations:and uncertainties of the Vietnamese war, the pressures are mounting on the President and his civilian aides to ,increase arms production, to crank up the whole mobilization process, to call up the re- serves and declare a national emer- gency on the assumption that the fighting is going to continue indefin- itely-and-become—steadily- more -vio- lent. All kinds of powerful forces are involved in this campaign, says Res- ton. Congressmen who have. been complaining about military bases be- ing closed in their constituencies now want them reopened in the name of “préparedness” for the Vitetnamese war. The leaders of communities whose military programs have been cut back in Secretary of Defense Mc- Namara’s drive for a rational and cost-efficlency program are quietly lobbying to get the old programs re- stored. or new. orders _assigned_-to their idle machines. Top officers in the Pentagon who have been nursing their wrath for years over McNamara’s rejection of old programs or rejection of new and expensive programs now feel that Viet Nam provides new arguments for their ideas and new excuses for lobby- ing with willing senators for their pet schemes. = These- activities. fall’ into an all- too-familiar pattern where war pre- parations are involved. It. imposes i } | is at a | acl NT LR ee ze, DEGAULLOTINE | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson The David Thompson Highway Cavalcade No mountains soar above the ; dull flatlands of eastern Ontar- io. The skyline around our Cap- _ ital is broken only by modern man-made piles such as “Judy’s Penthouse” —the new 14-storey Department of Health and Wel- | at pic- the and fare office. So we thrill tures and descriptions of Rockies’. towering peaks | their nestling mirror lakes. A vidid tale «blending the ro- mance of early Canada with Twentieth . Century pioneering | in that- setting has just been brought back to Parliament Hill -by an MP who spent his sum- mer’s only three-day holiday on the David Thompson Cavalcade. Bob Thompson, the Social -Cre- | dit leader piled his- wifé “and | three of his eight children into his farm pick-up. truck, hitched on—a_trailer caravan,and joined this picturesque mass trail - blazing cavalcade. ‘ Just ever 150 years ago, the explorer and fur-trader David Thompson was the first white man. to travel down ,the Colum- bia River, from its headwaters in the Rockies.to the Pacific Coast. 2% years ago, some Al- miles of bush trail to Whirlpool Point. i The cavalcade ~planned this year to go as far as the Kooten- ay Plains only, and there 2,500 men, women and children, ar- riving in 800 cars and caravans from points as far afield as Van- couver and the Lakehead, pitch- ‘ed camp for three days on the historic old Indian campsite. On Saturday evening, the cav- alcaders staged a concert with their own talent, then turned the Kootenay Plains into Can- ada’s largest open-air cinema to view a film made by the Nation- al Film Board on the story of | David Thompson. | HELD POWWOW “Church services were held on Sunday~morningIn_ the | noon Stoney Indians came from the Bighorn Reserve held a pow- wow and performed their medi- cifie dance: then the cavalcad | ers pitched’ horseshoes, sang songs and visited. The Drayton Valley Chamber of Commerce a ftps atter toted 600 pounds of 1,000 pou ds of batter, hundreds of bottles of syrup and coffee by the gallon to host the cavalcade at a chuckwagon breakfast on Monday. This was followed-by | games and races—fat lady rac- | es and ‘squaw rassling” as the grand finale. An enterprising ac- junct of the threeday camp was a newspaper: ‘The Kootenian— Issued once-a year at the Koot- enay Plains by the Olds Cham ber of Commerce.” The David Thompson High way would not only cut 90 miles off the distance to Vancouver; it would also have great tourist appeal, passing such scenic points as the Bighorn Falls, the ghost towns of Nordegg and™ Al exo, Whirlpool Point—not to. mention the big timbers flanking David Thompson's own river, The cavalcade has now achiev- ed *its objective: a paved highs way is to be. constructed, and will be open to tourists'in Cen- tennial Year. Nothing bertans conceived the idea of a scenic and shorter highway to’ Vancouver, following David Thompson's route up the North ‘Saskatchewan River, over the Kootenay Plains_and._over__the Great Divide at Howes Pass. To prove the route practical those Albertans set out in a car and a trucKs_the truck broke an axle, the car was pushed the last ‘stretch at half a_mile per hour— but the trajl-was blazed. . FROM CANOE TO CAR .Since then the David Thomp- son Highway Cavaleade has be- come a regular event to public- ize and lobby for this scenic route every Civic Holiday week- end. Last year the Minister of Public Works joined Bob Thom- pson and-others to ride horse-. back over the last part of the trail. This year the cavalcade, starting as usual from Red Deer picked up cars and caravans .as it drove, first along 54 miles of paved highway to Rocky Moun- tain House;’then along 60 miles of gravel_road to Nordegg, over 7 an-added--strain-on~-the--administra= jj 2-miles-of Trans-Canada -High- ‘tion to keep them in check, but this is an effort which it is vitally impor. , tant to make if the war fever is-not-to run rampant. EDITORIAL NOTES _.-President Nkrumah has officially opened Ghana's $4.2 million felevis-"| ion service. The country has 300 000 a-piece to supply programs. The new service is said to have been largely financed by Canada. y * * * BC’s Oh d—‘‘a-s} bt AG atiO re q to less TV viewing may be under way,” and, if this is continued, “may try a few surveys to see if we can uncover some reasons.” Isn’t it pos- sible, suggests the Ottawa Journal, that TV is losing viewers because it underestimates the intelligence and taste of the public? + . Research Department has Police in Jakarta have seized large numbers of -tapes and records. of Beatle-type songs and music in raids on shops, recently, and burned them as part of the celebration of Indo- nesia’s 20th independence day. The reason as announced by the Jakarta news agency: “To preserve the na- tional identity in the field of culture.” Which would seem to imply that the: aah Way. | | | | | | } - ~ Britain abandoned. her- Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (August 19, 1940) iland_ Protectorate today, suc- cessfully withdrawing her fore- _es-in-a_strategic_retreat.British troops stuck to the fight as long as possible, inflicted heavy loss- es onthe Italians and then withdrew by ship, removing most of their armament and ma- terials with them. Supplies which could not be taken were destroy- ed. a Welcomed home as “a Rush County farmer,’’ Wendell L. Wil- lIkie told a crowd in City Mem- orial Park, Rushville, that he is ready to make any “personal sacrifice’ to keep the nited States out of war and “to preserve at all hazards the kind of life we have here in Rush County.” TEN YEARS AGO (August 19, 1955) Pte. Melvin Lawlor has been posted -for_twoyears—_with the Royal 22nd Regiment in Soest, Germany. Pte. Lawlor, had been at the Canadian Army Training School in Valcartier, Que., ‘left for his new post on | Monday. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lawlor, 52 Ed- ward Street. ~~Archaeologists digging 'n the tuins of old Fort La Tour at Portland Point, New Brunswick, are more than 2,000 years old. Somal.Joved by_those who can See and Indiana, | wha. Is nothing sacred any longer? Must a man, because he holds a™ position of importance in the world, have his evefy secret bared for all to see? Can he, in fact, call any part of his life his own? Can he have any privacy whatever? Take the issue of President | Charles de .,Gaulle’s pyjamas, for example. Surely a. man’s ' preference in night attire — or his preference for none at all — is an intimate, personal thing not to be shared with others. Not so in the case of the French leader, fora British pyjama manufacturer has let the cat out of the sleeping bag, so to speak: Madame _ de_ Gaulle bought the President a pair “of his company's pyjamas im -a Sacred? Kingston Whig-Standard ‘French department y store. And now the whole world knows that the General not only wears such attire, but takes a size 48. All ofthis: of course, gave Tailor and Cutter, said to be | Britain's “‘‘arbiter of male fa- shions’’, a ready excuse to dash off one of its exquisite editorial gems: “Even if we are still not top nation, by~God, we can still make pyjamas .. we may not be the world leaders nowadays, but we're paramounts at bed- time nowanights.” All in good fun, of course....but.., we'd have... give anything to have heard the French Presi- dent’s words on the subject to his wife after the news got out. But alas, as we said earlier, even a President is entitled to some privacy. | Garden For “he Blind Municipal Bulletin of Vienna _-Vienna--has—just-.reopened--its- }_way—to-Windy—Point.and-over-25—-unique-zarden-for—the=blind,-the=granted : The idea is to make it pos- | Wertheimspark, after planting new shrubs, bushes and flower beds. aaa Two Austrian architects con- ceived the idea of the garden, where the blind could. at least approximate the pleasures en- * Poe ! RETIREMENT In savage tribes, where are thick And primal passions rage, They have—a quick . To cure the blight of age; - For when a native’s youth has sped And years have sapped his vim, They simply knock him on the head | To make an end of him. But we in this enlightened age | Are made of finer stuff And so we look with righteou | - rage : On deeds so harsh and rough And when a guy gets old and j__gray, | And weak and short of breath, ‘e merely take his job away And let him starve to death. — So brother, if you've been retir ed ee figure you can win; ust be resighed that you were fired And wear your trousers thin | There f3“Sne solace after all, . | Old Age can be Ace High Just leave those backward areas skulls ae —Donald Mac. .-these-who-take-public parks -for-)~ sible for the hlind to walk _around: the garden without. the — achieve | this, an embossed map of the | use of guide dogs. To | oe process several times sausages, | Good Posture Is An Art By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delles The admonition ‘‘stand. sit, and think tall’ often ‘goes un- heeded. In other words, good posture is a forgotten art with vmany of us. We fail to realize that the soldier’s stance is not | artificial. It was developed aft- er long experience and much thought -as-requiring the least wear and tear upon muscles, ones, and ligaments There is a close relationship | between poor posture and back- | ache. Many orthopedic surgeons have told me that 50 per cent of | the low back symptoms that de- | velop in later. life could be | avoided if our children were dis- | couraged from slouching and | walking about in that beatnick lackadaisica] fashion The stoop- shouldered young- ster fails to develop the muscl- | es and tendons that correctly balance the bones of the back | and the pelvis. A weakness in | this department alters body me- chanics and encourages spina! curvatures and’: arthritis of weight bearing joints.-Perman- ent changes occur when the con- dition continues into adulthood. Good posture. improves the appearance. Most of the hand- some actors and beautiful ac- | tresses obviously are aware of this because of the way they stand and- walk. Furthermore, no one yearns for a flat chest. room as they need to function properly. A shallw, bony cage is formed whenever the ribs are allowed to slant downward too abruptly. A time- honored breathing ex- | epntes is of value in developing the chest. Raise the arms above the head slowly as air is inhal- ed; hold the breath while the | arms gradually are dropped to the side. Exhale, and repeat \ Poor posture can be corrected ith exercise. Spinal curvature of jlong duration usually requir- | es’ skilled orthopedic care STRENGTHEN MUSCLES E. M. C. writes:. Mv doctor prescribes a relaxant for spasm of the back muscles I would be better off, I think, if I.-cou'd take a preventive. Have you | aly suggestions” REPLY Hot baths and the use of a heating pad ought to relax the spinal muscles. Exercise may be the answer to your problem, as stronger muscles support the back adequately, which means less likelihood of spasm from strain FOOD POISONING J. B. writes What are the symptoms..of -Salmonella_poisor- ing from eating contaminated eggs? : REPLY Nausea, vomiting, _ diarrhea, fever, and prostration The con- dition is old fashioned food pois- oning caused by one of the Sal- monella organisms. They ,gain entrance through cracks im the eggs and then multiply to such an extent the eggs are highly contaminated, especially when eaten raw or soft boiled. - Mrs. D. writes: 'm-a middle- aged anemic woman. Could anernia be responsible for my failing hair? | BEPLY >. Yes. but. more likely suspects are dandruff, ringworm. alopec- ia, areata, and glandular distur- bances such as deficient thyroid ‘ secretion. ' SPINAL X-RAYS Q. U. writes: What-is-a mye- logram? REPLY Special X-rays of the spinal cordate taken after the injec- tion of a radiopaque substance. In this way certain defects of thé spine,“such as a_ herniated disk, can be visualized. Canada At Geneva By William Neville ' ° For Canada, the new Western; a non-nuclear nation should be proposals to stop the spread of far more relaxed in agreeing nuclear weapons represent a | not to acquire the world’s moss sort of half loaf diplomatic | awesome weapons. achievement. The other essentially - Cana. The draft non—proliferation | dian element missing from the treaty presented to the Geneva Western draft is a specific time disarmament confe¥ence Tues- | limit on the life of the treaty day by the United States Con- It was thought in Ottawa that tains most of the basic points | by setting a definite period of Canada has been pushing for. | about 10 years a non-dissemina. But, on° at least two of the tion treaty would not bind the key ones, it ‘t go far non-nuclear nations indefinitely, enough to satisfy External Af- while, at the same time, exert. fairs Minister Martin and his |ing pressure on the nuclear top officials. powers to achieve some mean- On that basis, Mr. Martin | ingful agreement on disarma- gave the U.S. draft Canada’s mot within that period. “general support” and urged compRomiI~s SECTION . other nations to give it their ; most careful consideration. | Is ag s a oe This does not mean, however, | % # “me limit, ‘S. draft ; : offers a compromise section t Wet casts Maca aetfatane nan the oven sensus.-which led to the U.S. | % the a , twin commitment—from the nu- The lungs should have as much ~ draft, now is prepared to go along with the Washington ver- | sion down to the last comma. CANADIAN POSITION “We have our own views on some of these points and they | are not being forgotten,’ said | / ah external affairs spokesman. In some respects, the US. draft follows closely the lines of an eightpoint program the | Canadian government has been circulating for some months on | a working-paper basis. q It embodies, first, the “Irish | resolution’’ basic concept of a | clear powers not to transfer in- dependent control of these wea- | pons to any other nation or organization and from the non- | nuclear countries not to acquire or manufacture nuclear arms. It also proposes, like the Ca- nadian draft, to apply safe- guards of the International Atomic Energy Agency to en- sure that nuclear—power—being used for peaceful purposes is not transferred to military use. KEY OMISSIONS Missing from the American draft, however, is any real ref- erence to the guarantee-sanction provision which featured the Ca- | nadian proposals. This would have assured non-nuclear na- tions—as long as they remained in that category—the assistance of the_nuclear powers in event of a nuclear attack In Ottawa eyes, this was to be a key selling point in con-| vincing non-nuclear states to} join in’ a_ non - proliferation | treaty It was argued that, | given the—protection_ of nuclear powers in both East and West, < re ices pntaai TEMACO New York since July, 1964 treaty. This article provides that the | treaty be in force indefinitely, but stipulates that it should be reviewed by its signatories after a period of time, possibly five years. It also _.providesthat, any signatory nation can with- draw from the treaty, it must give the United Nations Secur- ity Council tnree months’ notice of “the extraordinary events it regards as having jeopardized its supreme interest.” This. sup- posedly would give the council! a chance to try to cope with such events and thus erase the reasons for the non - nuclear change of heart. GETS CBC POST ‘OTTAWA (CP) — The Cana- dian Broadcasting Corporation Tuesday announced the appoint- ment of Fergus Mutrie, 60, as representative in London. Mr. Mutrie, a native of Regina, has been CBC rperesentative in @ Fully weatherstripped plied - existing wall Back Rusco Products Call Self Storing @ 19 colors $ 7 colors. -P. J. CAMPBELL SIDING Residentia! Steei Siding ap- For Free Estimates on 138 Upper Queen St. Phone 894-8300 INDEPENDENT BUSINESS AVAILABLE Texaco Distributorship Areas—Charlottetown and area ‘ Summerside and area Details—To handle a complete line of TEXACO __refined_products_and te pis dubricants. Financial Assistance Available Attractive Margins and Bonuses. Requirements—Business handle required books and records; _ selling - experience, ctc. experience; ability to Operating capital (approximately $2.000). “An excellent opportunity for suitable party” Apply— Texaco Canada Ltd. Mr. J. J. Macmillan Box 1114 Charlottetown. fa terrain is placed near the “en-" trance, giving explanations sifors ‘feel’ their Way alofig the | flower beds by touching the | leaves and blossoms. The beds contain a special selection of odoriferous plants and those _easily recognizable by. touch. | Their -de' descriptions can | also be read by Braille. Most of the visitors have understood # botanical information so well | that they are able to name the with their fingers.’’ | Walking on, the visitors reach wide lawns and _ comfortable chairs and small tables suitable for a game of chess or cards. In | the centre of the garden, a club- | house with a closed-in verandah | has been built as a refuge | against a hot sun or°a rain. Close to it, an acoustic fountain | Murmurs a quiet melody 3 drops of its water fall on brass cymbals tuned to the 12-tone system. They create very fine accords which change as__ the | breeze sends the falling drops to various cymbals. COMMAND SUBMARINE OTTAWA (CP) Lt.-Cmdr. | Samuel G. (Tommy) Tomlin- son, 38, of Winnipeg and Cal- gary. will take command of the | Canadian submarine Ojibwa | when .the ship is comunisdSdesd at Chatham, England, Sept. 23, it was announced Tuesday. He joined the navy in 1945 after a | year ia the army. in | Braille. From this point, the vi- | travel bargains a | Charlottetown to: ~ "= = > Montreal _ Moncton $17.00 $ 3.80 Halifax -$ 6.40 * Sydney Corner Brook $17.50 Toronto. Winnipeg $10.50. “ $24.00 $39.00 4 ‘Vancouver .$62.00 while with insylation board _,