hike Otmrcliau Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher lurton Lewis sunk w.u,., Executive Editor Editor Published every week day morning’ (exce Sun- days and statutory holidays) at I65 Prince Street. Charloit:>Ic.vn. P.'_.l.. by Ill-'. .ison lxlcuspupers ltd. Irench offices at Suinmerside, Montague. Alber- ton and Souris. Represented l13'Il"l15ll" by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Tor mto. 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; '/lonizea, 640 Cathca.t Street, UNiversity 6-59-12; Western office, l(.'3O West Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA 7037). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reu- . and also to the local news published here In. All rights on republication of special dispatches herein also reserved. Subscription rates: Not over 35c per week by carrier. $11.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $l4.00 in year all Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in US. and elsewhere outside British Com- tnonwealth. Not over 7c per single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. “The s£r0Ilge.\‘l memory Ls wea/cer than the ink" PAGE e—wEDNEsnAYTAUous1723T19e?. Test For U Thant “The rumor that Mr. Khrush- chev is coming to the United Nations General Assembly next month," says the Manchester Guard- ian, “first flitted through the head- quarters building like a family ghost and was discounted until Mr. Adlai Stevenson came home from his European jaunt and appeared to believe it. By now it has taken on the monstrous plausibility of the Loch Ness monster. While the cor- respondents organize impromptu ex- peditions to take soundings and discover feeding grounds, the sec- retariat is haunted by the shadow its truth could throw across the path of U Thant." The reference here is to the intensive speculation in United Nations lobbies about what wi ll happen when the Security Council takes up the question of the can- didate for full-term Secretary Gen- eral. When Mr. Hammarskjold died the Soviet Union was waging a furious campaign to abolish the of- fice and replace it with a trium- virate or troika in which the Soviet bloc, the West and the uncommitted nations would each have 9. repre- sentative. each with the power of veto onldecisions. With some reluctance, the Rus- sians accepted Mr. Thant to fill out Mr. Hammarsk_iold’s term ending April 10, 1963. Premier Khrushchev made no commitment about drop- ping the troika demand but he has not pressed it recently. Mr. Thant was chosen last fall as Acting Sec- retary General because he was the only candidate acceptable to both the Soviet Union and the United States. If the Soviet Union turns on him there is no obvious and im- mediate candidate for replacement. The Secretary General is elect- weakest ed by the General Assembly but he » must first be recommended by the Security Council, where a veto can be applied. Hence the uneasiness at U.N. headquarters as to what may be in Premier Khrushchev’s mind. Mr. Thant hasn't waited for the General Assembly meeting to find out. He is now in Moscow, osten- sibly to discuss troubled relations in the Congo. But his presence‘ there also gives him a chance to feel the temperature in the Krem- lin just before the powers meet in New York. and it gives the Krem- lin, which invited him, a chance to make its feelings known. In the next few days he may get an in- dication oflthe conditions on which the Soviets will be prepared to brick his reappointment. New U.S. Farm Bill Anew farm bill that will interest Canadian farmers was passed last Jveek in the United States Senate, seeking control over the output of the big surplus cropa—wheat. and feed grains. If enacted, marketing certificates no longer will permit the farmer to collect a subsidy on any amount of wheat he cangrow on an allotted number of acres. They will , specify not numbers of bushels based on estimated demand. men. read min program. which imp“ on corn, grain aorghums, and rye, the principal change pfij at‘ the Secretary of Agriculture, I ‘ fpsymeng , ta entirely. of wheat. if the House of Representatives se- cepts the Senate version, Congress , will be moving in the direction of somewhat more effective controls, whereas in the case of feed grains it will be trying to obtain a reduc- tion of output by withdrawing sup- ports. There would be monetary in- ducements in both cases for volun- tary reduction of planting. Whether the House will accept even this much strengthening of the government's hand is regarded as doubtful. It turned down the prev- ious farm bill after the Senate had adopted it, on the ground that the controls it sought were too rigid. It is likel_v that it will still take its stand on the present system of gov- ernment payments to farmers who voluntarily reduce output. Observers say that the two-price system now introduced for wheat involves complexities which may be its undoing. Yet it has been advanc- ed by responsible people for many years, and probably only a test can determine whether it can be made to work. It is, at any rate, simpler than the three-price plan proposed in the original administration bill. Friends In Need Back in 1663. a ship’s crew of Quaker seamen was seized by pir- ates on the high seas. The crew members were taken to Algeria in chains as slaves. There they were said to have won the respect of their lawless masters, who gave them great freedom. In Algeria the name “Quaker” came to mean “a people t h a t might be trusted b e y o n d others,” and this reputation stood the sect in good stead in the years that followed. Today in Algeria, representatives of the American Friends Service Committee—as the Quakers are known—are repaying the trust re- posed in them. They are providing emergency help to rebuild the war- damaged country——such as rushing supplies and health teams to vil- lages in need. At the same time they are beginning I long-range aid program, which will include help in rebuilding the h omes destroyed during the last; seven years of fight- ing. reclaiming neglected farmlands and training Algerian youth in agri- cultural and mechanical skills. But the Quakers see still an- other aspect of their work. They hope also to per form a. reconciliation role and show the Algerians that Moslems and non-Moslems can live and work side by side. A goodwill debt being paid off af- ter _300 years! This is an inspiring story, one of the most fruitful in its possibilities for good that we have come across for is long time. We could moralize on it, but to what purpose? We all there, in the news item that we have summarized. The Red Ensign ' The Royal Canadian Legion has decided to have its Dominion Com- mand organize a publicity cam- paign to try to persuade Canadians to accept their own flag—-the Red Ensign. “More power to them,” comments the Kingston Whig-Stand- ard in an editorial in which we find ourselves in full accord. The need for such 9. campaign‘arose out of party pledges in the last federal elec- tion campaign, when politicians showed themselves all too ready to listen to any group with any kind of crackpot suggestion on this subject. It is time there was a showdown of public opinion. Our Kingston contemporary notes that the Prime Minister has promised to set up some kind of a national conference to consider the queetion——“as if thehistorical ac- cidents in a nation's history are susceptible of manipulation l” We have a flag now and it carries all the pertinent symbolism of our past. And, we might add, if it is good enough for the Royal Canadian Leg- ion it ought to be good enough for every citizen who enloys the free- doms that Legion members fought for in two world wars. But there are all kinds of Canada-firaters in the underbrush these days with only the foggiest. idea of what these "free- dom! are and what they cost. EDITORIAL NOTE Premier Shaw is looking fit as a fiddle on his emergence from hospital. and the best wishes of all our people will accompany him on his complete restoration to the vigorous health he formerly en- joyed. . sengers. strapped into hideously LAUNCHING PADITROUBLE OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson A Relic Of Earlier Air Travel A big crowd of top brass r sold to Matane Air Services Ltd.ttion was one of Canada's first from government and civilian _. in Quebec. where it is still giv-3 pilots. described as the man well as military circles I thronged our sun - bathed Capi- " tal City airport recently. to \\‘cl- f come the year’s m 0 st historic y trans-Canada traveller. l This was a veteran of 25 years f service to Canadians. on show; as it journeyed from Halifax to - Vancouver with stops at thir- teen intermediate citics. Offi- cially known as CF-TCC, it was a tiny Lockheed IOA aircraft, one of the original machines with which our publicly-owned Trans-Canada Air Lines initiat- ed its passenger service a quar- ter-century ago. l That inaugural route was the 122-mile hop between Vancou- ver and Seattle. It was opened l on 1st September 1937 with twice-daily flights each carry- ing 10 passengers. CF-TCC will repeat that flight on 1st Sep- tember this year to celebrate the 25th birthday of T.C.A. OUR LAST VOYAGEURS l The brotherhood of the air is : I close-knit circle of dedicated and courageous pioneers - some say the last of the individualis- tic explorers of Canada. And when TC.A. carried its fir t passengers on that September morn in 1937. flying was still an l uncertain adventure. Thus it was with affection and proud nostal- gia that old-time bush pilots. Battle of Britain pilots, modern jet-jockeys and their sisters-in- service in stewardess g a r b. shook h a n d s. signed golden books and swapped white lie s around the gleaming CF-TCC when it touched down here. The world. Canada and T.C.A. have all gone a long way since 1937: but perhaps in air travel as exemplified by T.C.A. we have made the greatest strides. When the $100,000 CF-TCC first took to the air at a cautious 185 miles an hour. it carried 10 pas- uncomfortable seats, and wear- ing oxygen masks to cross the Rockies. But today's airliner is four times longer. thirty times heavier. carries thirteen times as many passengers at three times the speed - but costs sixty times as much as that 1937 baby airliner. ooking at b a b y CF-TCC. newly painted a gleaming white and proudly flaunting the T.C.A. crest, one could not fail to ad- mire e workmanship which could create such a tough baby. It was purchased new by T.C.A. in 1937, and flew 280,- 000 miles in 1,750 hours before being sold to the federal De- partment of Transport in May 1939 Through the next six years it carried many V.I.Ps on top- secret and most Important trips between Ottawa and Washington and other key centres. Between whites and after the war. it was used for-range calibration work to assist the development of our cross-Canada aids to naviga- tlon. Under the D.0.T. flag. it cov- ered some 800.000 miles ln'5,250 hours. Seven years ago if was Tree Shcir ies Mlaml Here There is hardly I field where the confidence men don't oper- ate. Authorltlee have issued I warning that "specialists" clai- ming I cure for Dutch elm dis- use are becoming active again. Despite hard work by scien- tists and plant pathologists, no cure for this devastatl-pg dis- ease has yet been discovered. Ttiebestthntcenbedoneiato try to control the bark beetles which spread it - Ijob that requires community-wide co- operation.‘ But as with human diseases. ignorance and wishful thinking on the part of individuals can- ing tip-top service with a flightl record in its life to date equi-j valcnt to three trips to the moonl and back in 10.000 flying hours.l But of course. during t h a ti life normal wear and preventivel maintenance replacements have; eliminated every original com-; poncnt: perhaps not a single? rivet of the original aircraft 1c-l mains. OLD-TlMERS' AFFECTION Nevertheless the pilots who. flew it. and the stewardesscs: who flew in it. in those long-i ago fliizlits still love that replicas of spare parts and rcplaccments.,' And amoni: those who studied. who has taught the greatest number of Canadian student-pi- lots - Lloyd Rochester. This veteran flyer and mem- ber of an old Ottawa family served as instructor at the Cen- tral Flying School at Upavon, England. during World War 1. Many Canadians learned to fly there; several other Canadians were also instructors; but Mr. Rochester was the sole repre- sentative of these at the recent 50th birthday celebrations of the C.F.S. Sianding beside CF‘- TCC at Ottawa's airport. pilot and machine served to show us how long flying has served CF-TCC with interest and affcc-‘Canadians. Arms Buildup In Cuba By Hamid Canadian Pres The United States is deeply perturbed by the reported So- viet arms buildup in Cuba. While the situation has not yet bccome “intolorablc." there is every indication that Cuban-' Amcrican relations will worsen. The immediate worry in American quarters is not that the reinforced Communist structure on the Caribbean is- land will directly endanger the U.S.. but it ‘will assist and pro- long the Fidel Castro regime and help to spread its influence in Latin America. ’ At the same time there is concern over the limited suc- cess of the Alliance-for-progress aid program. at raising living standards t h r o u g hout Latin America. The 10-year $20000.- 000,000 program. in which the .S. fools half the bill, has ac- complished little in its first year. PROGRAM DISRUPTED Inflation and unemployment. entrenched reaction and revolu- tionary turmoil have played havoc with pledges of many Latin American countries to re- form government administra- Morrison s Staff writer Many Latin American offl- cials. in turn. have blamed U.S. alliance officials for failing to understand their diverse prob- lcms. Economically. the Castro re- gime may be faring no better than some of the other impov- erished countries. But Soviet aid may veil the true state of Cuban industry and the battal- ions of “tcchnicians" Castro is reported to be importing from the Soviet bloc may help to strangle any major show of restlessness among the Cuban citizens. ’ U.S. authorities say the flow of Communist equipment into ‘Cuba is continuing, and grow- ing. Imports are described as including ground-to-air missiles. radar. military communications equipment. trucks, tanks. guns and small arms The stronger Castro becomes the more difficult it will be to dislodge him. This thought may be in the minds of the Amer- icans as well as the Russians. And the longer Castro stays in power the more damage he may do to the .S. cause in firm and taxation systems. the Latin area. Eorly Wall Street National Geographic Society Some 50.000 men and women :0 to work on Wall Street every morning, but only one man calls § beaver-halted merchants 1 auctioneers gathered under the th e ; shade of a buttonwoo ,, 3 , ,. 0 W buy and sell stocks and bonds. it home at night. The financial heart of United States is a canyon of I thoroughfare with towering banks. law offir.-.-s, brokerage houses. corporations —and one handsome five - story residence made of wood. The Street now flanked b y steel and stone skyscrapers not its name from the mud w all which Dutch, Governor P e t e r; Stuyvesant built in 1653 to keep! the English out. says the Na- tional Geographic Society. More than 800 years ago, the Dutch settlement of New Am- sterdam at the southern tip of Manhattan Island was mostly farmland. A brushwood fence kept the cows in. W on fh e wn was threatened by British the East River to Trinity Church. In its youth Wall Street was I center of fashion and the origin- Il “Great White Way." It was one of the first publicly lighted streets in the nation. Captain Kidd lived in the ele- g‘I’;it.neighborhood as I respect- I e merchant and shlpowner of before turning pirate. on WCTEOT flnue to provide I profitable market for the an artists. ~ 1 ms street. _ tlgatlons. The New York S t o c k Ex- change began in 1792 when 24 and d tree to At the end of the 19th century, brokers w e r e takl orders from their telephone clerks who signaled fro m windows over- looking the market place. The brokers wore dlstluctlvely color- p at bats .and gaudlly striped blazers so that th elr clerks could spot them in the crowd. Transferred indoors, the Exchange remained "a strange scene of business. tumult. and excitement, wilder than any- thing in Europe," according to an early guidebook. The Street has had scenes of celebration and alarm and I -procession of charters m o r a colorful than any stage. It has experienced fires. explosions, fiscal catastrophe, panic, inves- robbery — and, curs-as. It has survived all, like I eat with 99 lives. FEWER SUICIDES Although the public associat- Tuesd " (October es "Black I 29, 1929» with bankers leaping from Wall Street window fet- latlcs show‘ that more N e w Yorkers committed suicide In e receding boom months the Great Ci-I . oday. however. so pe t of all pltienta admitted to the I are v I e- Heart Wound : Always Needs Fast Treatment By Dr. Theodore R. Vaegbcllen PROMPT emergency -men: often Saves the life. of I person whose heart is by a stab wound or other type of penetrating lesion. More than 80 per cent of those sustalnlns three accidents live to tell the tale. some require surgery to suture the wound whereas oth- ers get along with I simple pro- cedure involvlng the removal of blood from the sac surrounding the heart (pericardium). This see is suspended from the upper part of the he I rt where the large blood vessels enter and leave the organ. It is made of tough material and resembles in some respects an ordinary plastic bag of good tensile strength. The pericardi- um separates the old pump from the lungs and provides I smooth surface for the beating heart to operate. Many wounds involving the heart do not penetrate through the entire thickness of the wall. There is bleeding info the pericardial sac and when it can- tinues. the pumping action of the heart is impaired. because it is beating in a sacful of 00 . The ventricles cannot dilate. to be refilled with the blood they expect to pump out to the rest of the body. Large amounts of fluid in the pericardium cre- ate so much pressure. the old pump finally gives up and the individual succumbs to the ac- nt cide . -Life can be saved by with- drawing a small quantity of blood with a needle and syringe. The needle is inserted through the chest wall and dramatic re- sulls follow extraction to one to six teaspoons of vital fluid Many whose lives have been saved in this way develop trouble in years to come. In some instances, the blood re- maining in the 5111- - "- «---i-i,-t....I.. r... . y‘ .i"...._‘ produce scars that affect the umpin:.' . :- ‘ -_ "‘- ~- second operation may he need- cd to free adhesions from the constricted heart. Others devel- op chest pain. fever. and evi- dcnce of infection or irritation within llw sac. The cause of these symptoms is not'known but an adrenal steroid such as cortisone is most help . (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical topics If stamped. self-addressed enve- lope accompanies request. TYPHOID CARRIERS P.A. writes: After a person is cured of typhoid fever, can he became a carrier at a later ale? REPLY Yes. but in the circumstances this was a questionable cure. Symptoms subsided after treat- ment but some of the typhoid bacilli escaped and settled in e gall bladder. As carriers they are indulging in guerrila warfare. ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION .R. writes: Where can I get information on the mouth to mouth method of saving a drowned person? REPLY Our leaflet on artificial res- piration. which may be on- tained by sending a stamped. self-addressed envelope. de- scribes this and other method of saving lives after swimming mishaps. NOT THAT EASY W.L.S. writes: Is there a me- decine to reduce hardening of the arteries?R LY Not to my knowledge, Many are advocated for this purpose but there is no proof they work. 13 NOT T00 OLD H.S. writes: Is it unusual for I13 year old boy to contract rheumatic fever? REPLY No. Age 5 is the most com- mon age group but 13 is not too TODAY'S HEALTH HINT - Avold boating too close swimmers. fishermen. and wa- ter skiers. OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO August 29, 1931 John Dowllng and James Clark of Summerslde, returned yesterday from their European tour whlc was at the luv‘ - tion of the British Overseas Lea- gue. The boys, twelfth grade students were the only b o y s asked to join the second to u r which followed the trip to the coronation. Both declared they learned more than they could ever hope to learn from books. Brush fires in three sections of the province were burning out; it was reported last night. Fires in Mt. Stewart. Montague and Mu-tlnvale dia- trlcts were causing considerable alarm Thursday when high wind drove flames close to farm bulldlngsa. TEN YEARS AGO Home with its many fine spruce I n (1 white birch trees, beautiful gar- dens, green spacious lswne euo century old tndltlon use (no natural setting which‘ lent color and an informal Itmosp to the Burden party yesterday in honor of the Rt. Hon. Vincent Mllley. by Lleut. Governor and Mrs. T. W. L. Prowse. Premier J. Walter Jones. spesldnl at the annual meeting ‘of East Prince Liberal Associa- to lion. referred, the‘, moat tflnlttorletlon problems that flee this province. He said that Notes BY THE WAYTT is I an optical llltulos that snails red traffic lights seem to last longer than green once?- OftI\vI Journal. If and when passenger and freight service to the moon be- comes available. don't take your car along with you, as there is no water there for the radiator and no air for the tires. - Sud- bury Star. Teacher's note on modern education report card: “A l v I n excells in lnitlattve. group infe- gretlon, responsiveness, and ac- tlvity participation. Now if he'd onl lea I and write." —SarniI Observer. Upon due reflection. a rural school teacher decided to give full credit to I pupil for his an- swer to an arithmetic problem. The question: "If your father sold fifteen hundred bushels of grain for two. dollars per bushel. what would he get?" The ans- wer: “A new car." -— Hamil- ton Spectator. ~ one utvanhse the person with I smell income has is that he can’! secure enoug credit I 0 get into serious financial diffi- culties. -— Guelph Mercury. There’: I great deal of sense, it seems to us, ' w now be. ing drafted in Germany. For people who marry under )9, 1i. vorce is to be prohibited l'or three ‘years. -— Financial Post. Nothing Is easier than spend- ing the public money. It does not appear to belong to any- body. The tempfatlon is over- whelming to bestow it on some- body. -— Calvin Coolidge. Pigeons that roost In the po. lice station at Blyth. Northum. berland. have, been building their nests with nails shipyard scrapheaps. nails that drop as cross the station yard are punc- turing the tires of a patrol car a day. The caretaker Mr. Ro- bert Coulson. has swept up two bucketfuls of nails and h a s now been told to clear out the Distress A ship-to-air distress signal for use _in Brl Columbia waters has been designed in conjunction with RCAF‘ Search and Rescue authorities. The signal. to be secured across a batch or on a cabin top to at- tract attentlon of aircraft, con- sists of a cloth painted or im- pregnated with fluorescent paint showing a disc and square to re- Iircraft indicate that the most suitable color combination is black symbols on a background of orange-red fluorescent paint. cloth T 72 inches by 45 inches showing symbols which have dimensions of 18 inches and are 18 inches apart. Grommets or 1 o o p a should be fitted at each corner to take securing lines. Search and rescue aircraft will recognize this distress sig- nal and look for it in the course of a search. Other in l r- craft seeing s i g n a l are requested to make a sight- ing report to the Rescue Co-Or- dination Centre. The signals are commercially available but they may be made at home or aboard ship without difficulty. Two yards of un- bleached calico, or similar mat- erial. together with some orange red fluorescent spray paint and some flat black paint, are the principal requirements. This signal is voluntary equip- ‘ £ Highway Safety Council OIIARLOTTETOWN GIIRLING CLUB. pigeons. —— London Observer. Signal meat. but it is horvd that the masters of tugs. fishing vessels and pleasure craft will take ad. vantage of this opportunity to increase the rescue operatiom, is recommended Department The signal by the federal Transport. 55 lb. bags just add water for patching jobs. side- _ walks. patios and gen- eral concrete work 3 MIXES . V‘ Cement, ‘/4 stone, sand and Cement Motor Mix. THE ROGERS 4-8501 Charlottetown HARDTTIME DANCE and LOBSTER SUPPER WED.. AUG. 29 $1.50 PER PERSON Members and Guests 0 Ray Perry as that Emily Smith. Floor Show. 0 “Artistry in Rhythm” with-Florence Mac- Donald Featuring: magnetic personality DANCING FROM 10 1'0 1‘ 0’CI.0CK surrna AND noon snow FROM 11 T0 12 O'CLOCK “DRESS AS YOU PLEASE” I «w ”’ Music by The Mariners CANADIAN businesses of almost commercial, trade or koflico or write for e Rd-d Olsen IONOTON, FINANCING FOR l'I‘he Industrial Development Bank helps finance small and medium-size Canadian a variety of purposes, If ‘Y°“ "'9 913888911 in a business or plan to start one-whether it in an industrial. find ’°q‘m'°d had"! in not available -elsewhere on reasonable terms and oondi. ,~tion-. you are invited to visit an 1.13.13. . CAIIDUSTIIIAL DEVELOPMENT BANK BUSINESS W91’? type and for eervico enterprise- descriptive booklet. see or. onoluin STREET Tel: SN-115151 ‘