j i Cs tT 6 A : to : Ti. 6 ; = * : ' She Guardia | o Hunter "NOTES BY THE WAY Coles Beieus Bdeard LIEE ile The Dow conference proposal of a national of- Bewa re when a president takes bold initiative in foreign affairs; and Washington commentators are not slow in point- ing out that some of this popularity “may wash off-on fellow Democrats. tes this statement. The Conservatives have fought ten elections since 1935. Five were disasters. Five were suc- cessful or partially successful and they were the ones fought under. John Diefenbaker’s banner. In the ice for education, with Ottawa con-. | | BROUGHT THE HOT SAUCE « {no business hunting. An unpar- donable sin is to point a gun ata friend, even in jest. Jokers who do this are dangerous ‘compan- fons and are not likelytobeask- ed on another hunting trip. 3 3 a i & i z . : ; : Firet matron: “How was your | “I’m calling te make an ap Managing Editor. tditr | tributing substantially but leaving. By Dr. Thendore BR. Van Dellen | holiday?” Second matron: “Fine. | pointment, with the dentist’ a Published every week day morning (except Sun” | the provinces free to administer their ‘Telatively safe, con- | But George said I did every- | small boy’s yajce explained over “statutory holidays) at"165 Prince Street, : : : sidering the number of hunters | thing wrong. I talked too loud, | the telephone. “I'm sorry” re- Chaclettghawn, Piel. by thomson Newspapers uxt. | OWN systems. Chief among its merits and the low accident toll. A cas- | 1 used the wrong bait, I reeled | plied the nurse, “the doctor's Branch offices st Summerside, Montague, Alberton | would’ be the role the office could ualty is’ widely publicized be- | im too soon, and worst of ail, I | out of town.” “Thank you,” said d Souris. ardiza cause it usually is due to care- | caught more fish than he did.” | the boy, “When will he be out "oe gecresansed natiohelly by Thomson Newspspers play in leading to some standard e lessness or is freakish in nature. | winencial Post. | again?” — Vancouver Province. Advertising Services: Toronto 425 Unwersity Ave. |‘ tion, not only of university entrance But regentions of the, low mor- || Seer gonads Wecees Ofte 1000) Went Georgia | Tequirements and courses, but of sec- | _ tality, the majority of fatalities | Hore it ts only September and | Mr. Brows was silting dows Street: Vancouvir MA 7087. . ondary school curricula. It could, per-~ |" With the onset of the hunting | already we have our nominat- | to breakfast one morning wher Member. Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers | hans’ lead 11 to worthwhile. eco- _jeeason, I'm” more concerned | ion ‘for 1966's outstanding hor- | he was astounded to see in the Association and The Canadian Press. The. Canadian ps, lead as we. worthw: about the man who is in no con- ror story. Here it is: “A: wit-| paper an announcement of — his Press «= exclusively entitled to the use for repub- | nomies. The need is as great, how- dition to overexert himself. The | "eur" as oe |aeeae Be tee he aa lication of all news diepatcher in thie peer | ever, at the high school level as in ee ar at ee eae pongeagaaph dogo dl a man | Smith. “Hello, Smith,” he said, po rlhg og Pa news published herein, Al | the ‘post-secondary school field. And selves that it isn’t. Walking with | wading im the rapids above .Ni- Epo 8 goudlgristig A “ne tabs sigte. ef republication of ee acon bere | the sooner there is'a co-operative, in- pounds a a= Seong brush, agara—Fails shouted: “Let him | er?” /“Er — yes," replied : a reserved. . marsh, cornfield burd- ' week: by carrier. terprovincial approach to the problem en to men not used to heavy la- | “™P! I want to get a picture. | “where are you talking from? B12. yu by al ol oi and ae the better. bor. Get in shape teutee’ te —Hamilton Spectator. —Toronto Star. not carrier. % G@eason opens. ’ 2 i ‘ $15.00 off Island and U.K. $20.00 per * °° . As a rule, however, the e i ° Vaan in US end ‘ehewbers outside Britah com | Advice To-The Hasty mal heart can adiest | NWVhat Price Independence? monwealth. : ogee oe strain but those over 50 may get| ' ~ : Not over 10¢ single copy. | Conceding that Mr. Diefenbaker’s tee diffeelin Tho een a oe for Seas ; Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. days are numbered as Conservative coronary arteries have been Canadian Press Stall Writer : “The — memory is weaker | arty leader, the Hamilton Spectator thickening ee the! ‘two of Britain's three terri- try will have to have with than the weakest ink has some shrewd advice to offer the through these vessels . lessens as ee _ erlang to a PAGE'4__MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 16: | architects of the November revolt. Point fe reached hey ste | days of each other—independent |Khama, who is married to 2 ; “|. Phe first. requirement is a powerful few ke te for busi. |f Britain, at least. __ | white London woman, obviously Manila Conference sotieyin ee body withi - ' ene enerting eee eet siren | Whether the “two—Bechuana- |detests ‘his neighbor's apartheid By agreeing to go to Manila this hich will come up with uous activity. And to this we can | 200 2 ‘bay degree ef real tn. | STRONG ENFLUENCE. nference structure whic! Pp add the stress brought on when ve any re a month for a seven-nation confere: new .and positive concepts, it says. the hunter works overtime. so | dependence of South Africa is Rhodesian affair has on Viet Nam, President Johnson no there be that he can get away or if he |220ther question. Extremely | shown the extent to which Soutls . : , mind. He | 22e2: and then only, will . has‘ celebrated the night before | backward, ‘they are economi- | Africa can call the tune in that doubt has two objectives in min * #6"! chance of a new leader emerging and is suffering from the ill ef- | Cally dominated to a daunting |part of the world, a situation will be dramatizing his effort to | with sufficient stature to-take over a fects of too much to eat Sad |degree by the big white-supre- |that is unlikely to change except secure peace and his leadership in ited with popular appeal. rinks sleep at. Swati- [by sone continent-shaking coa- : Near! un party ip Most guns are not peashooters third landlocked terri- | vulsion. international events as well. Nearly | 4 ick jook at the past substantia- but lethal weapons. Anyone-whe | tory, tucked between South Af-| Both Botswana and Basuto- always a surge of popularity occurs does-not know the fundamentals |tica and Portuguese Mozam- |land have been drought-strickes S : ; i E : 2 : - ; all sides by |for a sort of commonwealth of now engaged in midterm election S Ses Re ase ‘ : Another- variation-of-this-rule Sonik a “ activities. , five elections beginning in 1985 and | OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson 3 Yen do ot wish £9 hie whether | while encroschmeat trom that |eveloped country would be: the Th Manila will be attend- ending in 1958 ats t leatiars s : == be a mailbox, livestock, or the | country. heart of a vast common market a a meeting , produced an everage of 47 seats and "A A i Of P liti | Discontent” broad side of a barn. Every year |APPEALED TO QUEEN shared by such territories as y representatives of all the na- | (....orvative victory was little more in AUTUMN.UT FOrTICA -. __|someone is killed by a stray bul- | The tribal king who began the | Basutoland and Botswana along tions engaged: in fighting the Viet th . af ry : ' ~ os : ‘ Jet or one that ricochets off a | process of nation - building | with Bantustans that. were : in South Viet Nam—the K a eae : ; “A group ef young “delegates drink and be merry, for. tomor- who lead their nations tod ay, |flat surface such as a rock or | among the Basuto early in the | Verwoerd’s dream. Only one of Cong Viet Nar e KY In the five -elections- since the | succeeded in articulating and re- jrow we die.” . could jearn, from the more sin- |lake. Always keep the gun un- | 19th century was keenly aware | these planned Bantustants, the regime, the Philippines, Thailand, | flecting. the anxieties, the feel- cere beatniks, who are pathetic- |loaded and broken when travel- | of the danger. He asked Queen | Transkel, now exists. . K A New Zealand average has been 126 seats with the | ings and the modd of a great |WE MUST RESTORE HOPE ally striving to attract attention. | ing in a car, walking to the duck | Victoria for protection, begging | PLANS UNCHANGED South Korea, ustralia, ew * | ¢ormation of three ministries and | mass of the people in the coun-| The world’s most powerful na- |Surely they are right, and we {blind, or crossing a fence or |that his people might be con-| The new premier, John Vor and of course the United States. try, not only’ Liberals, who have |tion is overtaxing itself to be |their elders are wrong? We are |ditch. Never set a loaded gun | sidered “fleas im the Queen's |ster, has indicated Verwoerd's White House sources have emphasiz- | !ast November Mr. Diefenbaker man- | jecome disenchanted and con- |capable of a twentyfold nuclear | putting the cart before the horse | against a tree or leave it unat- | blanket.” ® policies will be continued. — oy the ae aged a total of 97 against the sage | fused with politics and politie- joverkill against even the world’s | they peer into the future, and : Bechuanaland, now Botswana, | South Africa apparently. ed that the meeting ae rl casita of ait the osticators. Wf | iene” second | miost | powerful a. ‘gee with etark clarity what mer- |, on ee ees nds | ige@h, than France but with a |that ‘the newly-emerging coun : Presi d progn ; could to Racial bitterness 8- | its priority. 4 population only 500,000, be- s can be made to fit into the ie Sr ot te Ea “a Sce ria he were to leave today his heritage tak acteaty “ee a sanert ated daily by am economic | There can be no question that het a a tate cttaneta _ ef- | came ihdependent Friday with | pattern of separate development Marcos Philippines. Scep 1d 1 about a recent Liberal econven- Sytem which makes the rich lour Number One objective oe representatives of some 70 coun- |that is the ideological cornere reporters have asked whether the | Would loom large. tion in’ Britain, In USA, we read, |nations richer and the poor na- | should be to assure world peace. | waaiy wrong with being a |ttieS joining in the celebrations. | stone of apartheid. They have se ing a US. election—-was Although there are flaws in its rep- | polls show that President John- |tions poorer. Discussions about | What will the Canada Pension | 11145 ing 8 | Most’ ‘important among thest-|enly small’ white populations, "* timing—during ay | resentation, the Conservative party | #n's popularity has droppd |ceasefires and disarmament, /Plan avail the young, what will in many ways was Dr, Hilgard | To most outsiders, the scheme also from Mr. Marcos. The suave ee 0a? sharply, es the economy, race |@bout United Nations and world | 30 per cent pay increase be | TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— | Muller, the South African for-|seems to run into a brick-wall reply to this query was that President | is a much more effective national in- | relations. and the “Vietnam war eae a alee ago on Se Cocktails cancel out dieting. eign minister. It was the first |at the start. The Botswana. and Johnson could:not turn down the in- cia 2 re Se Soa ot seuiical discontent,. we'|thinking youngsters hold any |be deprived of their benefits by | te Dr. Van Dellen should be resented: at the independence 1. ress far higher Gan a oat vitation just because a political cam- | Even in Quebec, virtually shattered | fing the Canadian mood repeat |hope for their own future under a sudden searing flash which | addressed to: Dr. Theodore |esta of a black African country. |litical freedom than that held __ paign was ‘under way. What is not | for the Tories ever since Sir Wilfrid | ed in other similar countries. nage oa seein will end their epee ee end our |" Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- |—Muller’s presence symbolizes | out for the Transkel or the other . es ii ited- is th: { “the ocean ener) ent TY Laurier’s trium umphant election of 1900,” “I pong candi gastro a . World as.we know It: “2 une, Chicago, Hinois.). — -- =z the-close relations the new-coimn- | planned: Bantustants. ne came immediately after conferences | Mr. Diefe did better than most. | tent among’ young = between Marcos and Johnson. His days now may indeed to number:: : - Goldwater's Discovery ~ iblicans ie] | ed. But if his one-time adherents take | git. a London Free Press between the imine of the forthcom- | out their frustrations in the destruc- | drop-outs and dirty feet are | the U. 8. the Republicans state organization no Republi- : Spo tn ei. peak _| tion of.one man without at the same | ward signs of the revolt of | 119 tuning up their organiza- |can candidates would be elect- ____nouncement by General Eisenhower | time producing a, viable alternative | Weir atiers Pariamenteriany |tiny rt OU Scio (TO? |i cutcy_ erst in October, 1952, that if elected he | they Will be not only hurting them:."| SPO ootunities now available |@dvice from an experienced | ing, considering that Wt comes | would go to Korea. At a. p con- | selves, but the country. ‘| te youth. But what have —— Y Sere Ueiliceloe ‘asad: toe ph npn arcade ump Shar hh ; ee Reo ference after that election, President Fe lity ane the basic setter’ and of Arizona directly, | gle for the GOP nomination on- C arlottetown to: cae : . Just A Formality Sa cecrent the auxiclios? and of the nation indirect- |ly two years ago. Truman declared that the trip to | Sarr ee ee there worry |1¥, ‘0 keep members of the John | But no one is better qualified | es Korea had been a bit of demagoguery Now it’s the Liberals who are toy- about the trend in polities which |Birch Society away from posi- |to testify on the political poison NM t [ 14,50: undertaken merely to carry out acam- | ing with the idea of making changes | has dragged them to such a low |tions of power in the party... jof the John Birchers than, Barry ontreai sc a : ; paign pledge. The remark is said to | in their party’s constitution that ee oe oo he ase of politics is done :n districts ‘discovery earlier he might poe | Sa have infuriated Eisenhower. As | would give control of the leadership ens re ate ore (eum bythe Birch ene, a SS i ee ee ee Mi t : 3 3 30 events titmed out, the visit actually | to party delegates. At their October | mises to the voters; yet hey al they had control, of the onc on | ae De played an important part in deciding | national meeting they may call for a ee ae admit that other h : ; | 3 : : his further ‘Korean policy... | periodic review of the leadership | issues deserve priority. “The Troops Depart Saint John ge 5 20 In this case, the question of major | Westion. Such a principle has long | “5.t what are the aixieites of she Toronto and Mafl - ete . : 8 concern is whether the meeting will | 2PPlied to the CCF, and. now the | thinking youth? Why is youth re-| aitiough newspapers | It is hopeful, therefore, that most a against and contemptuous : a turn out to be a search for peace or | NDP, leaders. But as an Ontario ex- aa ae j; | buried the report in their back | their departure is reported to a council of war. change points out, however attractive | fess ta Ut aot tae ee orcs cae eek (cate ant eae ete Halifax : posed scheme now under way in New | NDP tution, the review of the ~~ people, ot the don’t exhilara- ) this may look in theory, in practice # | the answers. There must be | the last units of the Inter-Amer- | tion. Understandably, there have Need For Improvement. | has no realistic application. sone aiy ‘adieated generation {iam Peace Force have left our ever | heard ! Brunswick will succeed may largely | Party's|leadership every two years is | ing and, wel, pretnted arey:|MiO'pesce tore mainly Unt: | satmal mitay. "| Corner Brook. depend_on efforts to upgrade the | 20 m than a formality. The NDP ae Whether the big rehabilitation Even though it is spelled out in the educational standards in the com- | leader, who happens to be Mr. Doug- | cannot but make’ one feel sad aaa yt — az ae the ae ee fee “a — ; ' : ‘truce Tus has teen emkacien | It at pron, eas secure in his post | SR eG. wey [Stee Satin ae | eat Sorat, at deed | TOO ne $21.00 by both the federal and provincial '| tion—perhaps even moré so—as the | through World War 1, and I have’ | ef in ad ese intervene = time singe the civil war. Before - authorities, and is underlined by the | heads of the older parties. ern Pe in faprer sT S to's wooak ot fact that 83 per cent of the labor force | | The underlying fallacy here is the | parents through an even in the three counties involved has ~—-Tess than Grade” 9 standing. To meet: principle would-give-control-of-the— a shortage of schools and teachers, Canada’s first educational television Station will be built in Bathurst. This problem of raising educational standards is of nation wide concern, and we note that it was discussed in a forthright manner at the recent conference of the Canadian Educa- tion Association in Vancouver. The point raised there was how the de- velopment of a‘truly national system ~ of education has been impeded by the zealously guarded prerogative the provinces have exercised in ‘ this matter. ‘ ,Dr. H.T. Coutts of Edmonton, presi- detit of the CEA and dean of the Uni- __,versity of Alberta’s education faculty, . took a leading part in presenting this viewpoint. He asserted that the fet- ters of narrow provincialism in educa- tion policies must be smashed if Can- - ada is to become a great nation. With- out losing the freedom of the prov- inces and their school systems to in- novate and experiment, he counselled ‘that new ways must be found to make .optimum provision for post- secondary education. More and more of late there have been proposals of a vastly-enlarged federal role in education, with particular reference to the university level, but having belief that the adoption of such a Meadership to the “grass roots” of a party, thereby justifying its claim to being “democratic.” Actually, . how- ever, annual meetings are like any other political convention. They are not controlled by the run-of-the-mill supporters/ and never have been. cess to conventions are select- ed by-small and influential groups of ridings | and provincial executives. This is where the real power and con- trol lies. And the reason is simple enough. These are the people who are prepared to devote their time, energy and initiative on behalf of a political party. ' EDITORIAL NOTES British dairymen have produced a.cream that stays wholesome with- out refrigeration for at least twe months—perhaps as long as six. The same firm is also packaging nonsour- / ing milk and using the same basic process for both. The system, in which one machine cam’ process 450 gallons an hour, ‘sterilizes single cream containing 18 per cent butter- fat by indirect heat treatment, then seals it into cartons. The product is said to be sweeter and thicker than fresh cream, but with the same fat content, ‘ third world war, from. an suffering and slaughter we : never emerge. So our fatalistic philosophy must be: Let us eat, Our Yesterdays @rom The Guardian >. TWENTY. - FIVE .YEARS AGO her allies need, Prime Minister Churchill disclosed. TEN YEARS AGO (October 3, 1956) Russia’s Nikita S. Khrushchev was reported to have asked Pre- sident Yito of Yoglslavia fo join a new cominformtype of asso- ciation of European Communist countries. More than half the Trans-Car: | ada Highway route now is paved and clearing of a ‘spectacular?’ stretch through the mountainous interior of British Columbia will | benig next year, f