=~ wher he-eriticized-the cabinet for not” ““|ranch offices at Summerside. Montecve, Alberton Kashmir crisis was the report yester- 3 of.a long and tortuous road to_recon- s ? ees of the Hindu faith, and !t has been going on for centuries—largely over- looked in the west or hidden in a few paragraphs telling of a routine riot somewhere in the vast subcontinent. | It broke out on a massive scale when India became independent and split into two-states. There ensued what one on-the-spot observer -has describ- ed as probably the largest civil disord- er the world has known. The cost in lives has never been tabulated exactly, but it is estimated that eight and one- half million people fled successfully in each direction, About one in 45 of the inhabitants of India was a refu- gee; about one in 12 persons in Pak- istan was. This disturbance took place 18 years ago, but that is not too long for men still young to retain memory of its horror. An American commen- tator, in this connection; recalls that the Civil War in his own country bred bitterness that even yet has not fully, disappeared. And indeed it took 300 years for the conquering Normans and the conquered Anglo-Saxons to forego their differences and melt into one English peonle. It is said of the late Prime Min- _ ister Nehru of India that he regarded the differences between the United States and.the Soviet Union as super- > j Che Guardian | Covers-Prince Edward-isiand Like The Dew . W. J. Hancox, Publisher Vallece Ward Frank Welker Aanaging Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sur lay and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street *harlottetown P.E.1.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd ind Souris. Pepresented nationally by Thomson Newspecers ising Services Toronto 425 Univers'ty Ave 3-8894 Montreal 640 Cathcar! Street Uni 42, Western Office 1030 Wes! Georgie Vancouver (MA 7037 ber Canadien Daily Newapeper Pub! ishers ion and The Canadian Press The Cenedian ds exclusively entitied to the use for repub of all news dispatches this paper to it or to the Associated Press of Reviers @iso to the locé! mews published herein. All Hg or republication of specia! dispatches here in Oise reserved Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 2 year by mail_on rural routes and seas not serviced by carrier $15.00 » year off Island and UK. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside. British Com m@nweealth | Net ove 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circu'ation ir “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” RAGE 4 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1965. . t Reluctant Followers ¢ ‘The oldtime Tory “Establishment” crowd, as represented by the big busi- ness and bureaucratic interests, never — took kindly to-Mr. Diefenbaker when in power; but a valiant effort is being thade to paper over the cracks in this dlection-campaign, and the resutts will be watched with interest across the nation. A hard core of this | tagonism was centred in Toronto. Sirs own reaction to it was epitomiz- ed in Peter Newmap’s account —of The Diefenbaker Years,” in which it {6 stated that the then prime minister liked to paraphrase Franklin Roose- velt by saying, with a half-averted poker face: “There are more votes on Main Street than Bay Street.” But the ‘Bay. Street’ gents proved this to be a fallacy when the showdown ¢ame. ~ * How about this time?) According to ‘the Toronto Star, party candidates in the Metro constituencies are aware that the Diefenbaker name is still a handicap; but they're stuck with it and doing, their best to make all the mileage they can on it. Typical is the attitude of Dalton Camp, the national president of the party, who is planning to run against Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp in Eglinton. Questioned on his attitude toward his leader, Mr. Camp came up with this intriguing statement; “T’ll support Mr. Diefenbaker at least as fully as Mr. Sharp will support Mr. Pearson.” Which would seem to imply that, unknown to the public, there are feuds and rebellions among the Liberal leaders as dire as those that have plagued the Conservatives. An even touchier case, notes the . Toronto paper is that of George Hogan, the secretary of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Association, who is seeking the nomination . in York West. Mr. Hogan broke with Dief _as_early as November, _ 1962, (deed a end out around a conference table. But when asked about India and Pak- istan he retorted: “That is different. Kashmir is the symbol of this fatal division. Jt has been likened to a volcano which bursts at irregular in- tervals. Hitherto its irruptions have been mild but now they could easily engulf a large part of Asia. To pre- | «vent this disaster is perhaps the great- est challenge with which the United Nations has deen confronted. It is essential now_that the firés of the present outbreak be bank- ed. leaving time to deal with the more stubborn underlying problem. How long this will take is.a matter only of the world powers—and particular- ly those which have been supplying the warring nations with arms—to see that opportunity for further clashes is kept at a minimum. Both India and Pakistan are poor, “with annual.per capita income not ex- ceeding $75: They are desperately in need of devoting their manpower ends. .They -must—one might say at all costs—be made to realize their re- sponsibilities in this regard. Sixty Years’ Growth sarv of. the foundation of the provin- ces of Saskatchewan and Alberta. The Lethbridge Herald has published a special edition called simply ‘Alber- ta,” in which it recalls the past and ‘compares it with the present: It is in- _igter.than Lester Pearson is,.or_ever “tectly telling China to keep out’ of ‘ military reprisals against both coun- a | -Seuted. —— FS a 0 States mor i In 1905 Sou‘th:en Alberta - was enthusiastically in the Cuban’ missile | closer to the frontier days when the crisis. Later he was one of‘the lead- | Royal Northwest Mounted - Police ers in the campaign to oust his lead-» came to bring law and order to the er. In a newspaper article last Jan- Canadian West and to cope with ¢on- uary he went so far as to state that | ditions such as those which existed at if Mr. Diefenbaker-did not step down | Fort Whoopup, a wild and wooly the party might not survive the next~|~American outpost near where Leth- supporting the United States more 30 days. | bridge now stands. , With this background, Mr. Hogan It was the Mounties, of course, is understandably uncomfortable | who opened the way for the ranch- whenever Dief’s name is mentioned. ut he made a brave try last week. fter acknowledging the differences between them. he went on: “But des- - piite these disagreements, thefe can be ro longer any doubt that John Dief- @nbaker was a far better prime min- ers. Then came the railways and the sod-busters who turned the prairie into a world granary. Now Alberta is changing again, with the big oil and gas development sparking an in- -|-factured-products in-1964-- : Saskatchewan's story, if less sensa- tional, is one of equally remarkable progress. There have been depres- | sion periods for both provinces, but will be.’’ ; Our local Conservative candidates ould be gladthey're not running in Retro Torento, where words of this Kind have to do duty for campaign oratory: ' | with booming’ wheat sales and de- Old Hatred Runs Deep | veloping industries, are brighter than Highlighting the gravity of the at any time. EDITORIAL NOTES. Young people who join St. Swith- in's Church, Nottingham, England will have no excuse for sleeping in on * Sunday morning. When they join _ they are given an alarm clock by the minister, wha.claims that since he gave out*his first batch of clocks last December, attendance at church has much improved. tries if they failed to put an immed- § %~ |; * iate end to the fighting. ae Soviet archaeologists claim to have The Council is well aware that | discovered a bronze razor that is 2,800 even after a ceasefire has been achiev-. years otd. It’s a solemn thought, ed,-this will mark only the beginning comments an exchange, that while resumed-and the present prospects, y that the United Nations Secur- | ity Council was near agreement cn a | resolution giving India and Pakistan ~ 42 hours to stop fighting and indi- the conflict. This,followed close on e report of UN Secretary-General Thant to the Council, urging it to in- voke the threat of economic and Ciliation. But it is a.step which ‘can- not further.be delayed if world peace is to fe maintained. At bottom this is a religious quar- rel — Ss chins-with. bronze blades, our own fine steel, produces beatniks and bar- = pudos~ : cs % Those differences are fundamental.” +. , + | of conjecture. - But it will be the task= and other resources to productive Scod.a_ striking picture. that is pre... dustrial complex which produced well- over a billion dollars worth of manu-. | the forward march has always been * f ficial-matters-which-could_be straight- a | More specifically, Trade Minis- | ter Mitchell Sharp says: “the | main purpose of the election is | This month marks the 60th anniver- . | that he had made no enemies es ~ BACK TO SCHOOL OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Campaign Sparks Public Awareness Prime Minister Lester Pear- | son_has called Canada’s 27th General Election becatise he ‘wants a majority to face ‘‘Par- | liament's increasing uncertainty and factiousness,” he says. | to get better representation for the Liberal Party in the prairie | provinces." Whether or not Mr. Pearson was justified in calling this fifth election within one hundred months will not be a major ts- | sue in the campaign. But this question will help many voters decide whether the Pearson ad- ministration is sufficently sin- cere and public-spirited to de- | serve to be set firmly in the saddle with an effective major- ity. eZ Long before hé became a pol-- itician in 1948, Lester Bowles Pearson was widely known and deservedly respected. both in Canada and abroad, as a civil servant skilled in international relations. With - his personal charm and dipomatic tact, he | | was regarded 1s perhaps the | “nicest’’ man ever to aspire to top political office.in Canada, in and was properly liked by all | | who knew him. | 7 | and many 1 | | ine and the team of former civ- | GOOB OMENS FADED When in 1963 he made his | third ‘appeal to the Canadian people to elevate him to the po- | <sition-.of-prime-=-minister;a-mood> > ith - the falk-—; hero John Diefenbaker was sweeping-the-country;-Phis-mood- was stimulated by the egghead newspapers. The same newspapers assured the | fame~eggheads that the highly, organized Liberal party mach- il servants assembled by th boyish’ grinning Mike Pearson | ‘would give the country effective leadership. Mike seemed to be a shoo-in to become Canada’s 14th Prime Minister. ; Yet while he campaigned | across the land, those confident | | hopes faded. And when the peo- 3 ernment | I f | | the first prime minister to bring | diplomat to an office where a! | tuthless knife, should be at hand. ple had maiked their ballots, he | Had been given — for the third consecutive election — less sup- port than had been predicted by public opinion polls before the campaign started... nce His unceftain maridate’' was’! merely to form a minority gov- a blic relations advisers, timing an election by private polls ra- ther than by public need, has. | tarnished his image as a “good guy. As this campaign opens, it seems certain that the growing awareness of and public alarm about — the scandals, the indecision, the sharp left- ward turn and the domination by Quebec will very significant- ly slash the Liberal hucksters’ unsophisticated prediction -that Mr. Pearson's “following will be raised from 129-MPs at the last election to 175 at this. | ~ The Prof it Motive | Vancouver Province The efforts of Communism to cling to the singular notion that Russians are immune: to the | profit incentive has finally col- lapsed with a bang which Mos- | cow is trying to play down in a formally-worded communique. The Soviet’s industrial -mana- gement agency has decreed that starting on, Oct. . 1, manage- ments of the state, dairy, meat- packing and conféctionery in- dustries are to plan their pro- duction on the basis of orders received from wKolesalers and retailers instead. of from targets handed down by the Kremlin's central planners_ This direct-orders system has ‘already been introduced in 400 | Soviet apparel and footwear fac- | tories and is explained by USSR readers as another text of prof- “it- motivated economic reform. This so-called ‘‘test’’ isa tacit acknowledgment that Russia | finds the quota systems laid en inveighed. There is a growing conviction on: the part of some people in. Nova Scotia, particularly in the big centres of population, that we overdo things by promoting | our oxen as tourist assets. About -the—worst—thing—they—can—say about the oxen is that they make | | us look old-fashioned. What these critics probably do not know is that most of these so-called ‘‘old-fashioned’’ farm- ers, who annually participate in ox-pulling contests at exhibitions and elsewhere, are not as far behind the times as some peo- ple believe Most ox men — members of the ox-pulling fraternity — keep ox teams in the manner horse | lovers keep race horses. In other down by state planners don t.cut the mustard. They result in shortages in some things and overproduction ‘in others simply because it is impossible to fore- see all the quirks of the market- | place Moscow also is _directors of create their own retail * outlets and establish sales departments | and other commercial divisions. Incentive boriuses of up to 40 per cent, of base pay for high-qual- ' ity output have been authorized. And the need for attractive food packaging also is emphasized. Karl Marx may turn in his grave, but the Russian leaders are abandoning their old Social- ist economic formulas and em- bracing a system that looks suspiciously like that of Gener- al Motors or any other big U.S. or Canadian corporation against which the Russians have so oft- * ~ retaining a foot-hold on many of our farms today. Instead of being old-fashioned, most of our ox men have mod- ern farms, with as modern ma- chinery and household. and farm appliances as do farmers who do _Not own a single ox. On some small, rocky farms, it is a fact that the ox is very often more practical than mod-— ern machinery. Here the ox has a most useful place from which | he cannot be dislodged by the Ri -; cellosis symptoms were empowering | state plants to” Undulant Fever By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delien BRUCELLOSIS 38 fe ef malady may velopment uf ik Hr é b ! 7 iv : + Hl z i : ¥ i i g if upd), sensed? be? lesce in less than two months. A smal! number have a protract- ed illness lasting a year. At one time we believed bru- caus- ed by an allergy to the mi- crobes. We know now that the victims become hypersensitive to toxins produced by the germs. There are three main species of | Brucella organisms. : abortus comes from cattle and is the most common cause of | human brucellosis in this coun- try. Br. melitensis; found in goats and sheep, is the most pre- ‘\valent offender the world over. | The disease was observed first on the island of Malta during the last century and is the rea- son why the infection was c7ll- ed Malta fever. The least common is Br. suis, which comes from swine. This is fortunate because this spe- | cies is capable: of producing a severe and chronic disease in himans and is a serious prob- lem in the United States, Argen- tina, and Germany. Lesions “re- sembling tuberculosis are fre quently traced to Br. suis. PAINFUL SPINE J.G. writes: I am 30 years old. Recently my back has been very painful. The doctor diagnosed it | as arthritis of the spine.Is there anything that can be done to el- ‘iminate the pain? REPLY The salicylates and other _ pain -killers are most usé¢ful. Cortisone and phenylbutazone also are helpful. Heat, diather- | my, and massage help the arth- ritis and temporary support is obtained with a corset. , CHOKED OFF W.H. writes: What is meant by strangulated hernia? REPLY The ordinary hernia is a pro- tursion of a loop of bowel through a weakened part of the abdominal wall. If. the intestine becomes stuck in. this opening, the hernia is said to be strangu- lated and the pinched off loop is in danger of becoming gangren- ous unless freed within a short time through surgery. VEIN STRIPPING A reader writes: Is it true that . | if leg veins, are stripped, the | limb becomes SS cold and numb? reducing the efficiency of the circulatory system. Remova) should benefit, and not harm, the leg. BAD BREATH Miss D...writes: Is there any . | cure for bad breath? REPLY . ge ¥es, when -the-eause, such as- an infected sinus or pyorrhea, ts | corrected. a | TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Keep radios and hair dryers out of the bathroom. is '° their seats.’ fe NOTES BY THE WAY _ Actor —“Yes, my friends, us ually my audiences are glued * Friend —*What a quaint way of keeping them Province. Fish aren't brain food, but trying to catch them eviden' stimulates the imagination endr- mously. —Hamilton Sepctator. A popular song dies much quicker in these days of -radio and television, but it dies a | much harder death taan form- verly.— Sarnia Observer: | Two hunters had been out sev- eral hours and one of them had been growing uneasy. Finally panic overtook him. ‘We're | lost!’ he cried to his compan- } ion. ‘What on earth. shall we | do?” “Keep your shirt on!" | said his phlegmatic companion. “Shoot an extra deer and the game warden will be here in a minute and a half.” — Montre- | al Star. Never let it be thought that | Canada is unique because of its bilingual and bicultural prob- lems. The United Kingdom appears to be having some- similar dif- ficulties nee The lingering reality of age- old cultural gulfs was made ‘plain recently with the news that Scottish members of Par- liament are planning to boycott this year’s House of Commons Christmas card because it de- | picts a Scottish king paying ho- mage to an English king. It doesn't seem-to- matter that the card commemorates the an- niversary of the founding of Parliament, which has been the safeguard of British | for 700 years. freedoms Granite - Marble Lettering. ' - Charlottetown - Bronze — Cemetery Vere Beck & Son Ltd. } : “Memorial Craftsmen. Since 1870” Go ahead and put your best foot forward, and what happens? Somebody wil! probably step on it.—Calgary Herald. The honeymoon is over when the husband gets out of the car at a drive-in movie to wipe off the. windshield.—Financial Post, “Honestly, now, you would never have thought this car of mine wag one I had bought sec- ondhand, would you?” “Never in my life,-I thought you had | made it yourself."—Galt Repor- ter, ; We'd have permanent peace if the nations would,stop hiding battle axes when they bury the hatchets. — Sarnia Observer. Playing golf doesn’t impel the typical preacher to use profan- ity, but it makes him tolerant of golfers who do. — Guelph Mercury. A Lingering Gulf Calgary He It “wouldn't be surprising, at least to a Canadian, if the dis- senters demanded that the greet- ing on the card be printed ta th® native tongues of the Scots, Welsh and Irish, as well-ae-the — English. . : This, of course, could give rise |to further demands that the | greetings be printed,-also, in the Cornish, Yorkshire and Lanca- shire dialects, to say nothing of | ,the many forms of speech pe- ** culiar to different parts of Lon- ‘don. The strange part about the dispute in-uestion is that-it-cen- tres on one of the symbols of Christmas, which is supposed to | be one season of the year when men are drawn together in the | spirit of brotherhood. Montaque TON a € little about this 2S The “GOOD LIL ANGEL appeals to MR. WORKER for-Your. in the United Fund Campaign L'il Angel: Hold up amin- - ute please, Mr. Work- ‘er, while I tell you a very important United Ap-. YOU ¥ ' most modern farm implements..| (Note: The ox is a prize tourist at-| pr Van Dellen should be ad- traction. Those who speak about dressed to: Dr. Theodore Van the ox making us look old-fash- | Dellen, c-o Chicago Tribune, ioned should stop to think that | Chicago, Mlinois.) All correspondence to - there are literally thousands of | Canadians alone who have nev- er even seen a real. cow,,.let., alone’ an ox, ~ Our Yesterdays words. they keep them largely from the viewpoint of sportsmen. In addition, sentimental reas ons also have a part in the ox In his 28 months of power, did he reassure Canadians suffic- | iently that they will now put) People are always interested in what is new to them, so that our oxen become a great attrac- HOG): 55 greater trust in him? To answer this question, one must look beyond the leader and examine his team. Mr. .Pearson was Canada’s first prime min- Christian ister to recruit his cabinet large |. - ~ ; ly from among previous civil | We rather liké the. independ- civil servants and crown em- ence of the people who live on ployees; he was the first’ prime | the tiny islands which ring—ad- minister to utilize and rely hea- | Mittedly in eccentric orbit —Eu- The Scill | vily upon public relations tech- | Tope’s most important island of “| niques and practitioners; he was | al. _ We mean, of. course, tho se the velvet gloves of the trained | sturdy folk who — directly or indirectly — qwe allegiance to Her Britannic " | INSTANT FAME LACKS BODY | though they are domiciled gut- _men_not_long out of the Stone Age | sed—for—them—by_the—newspa- painfuJly but dutifully scraped their- | time, with its well-honed slivers of | In this era of instant coffee, | side, but not far from, the Bri- the newspapers gave. the new | tish mainland. ministers instant stature, al- | This year, perhaps more than though five of —— a never | ever before, the Sarkes (in the before set in Parliame! a = — = — ee | are finding themselves in t he our months. Subsequent events | spotlight. have shown that the transfer | the Sarkese are celebrating from bureaucracy to cabinet, or | the 400th anniversary of the con- from plough “to portfolio, is not | ,.. . 7 tract they made with the British so simple. The body of excel Crown, when the first, Elizabeth lence, is achirved only by brew- was on the throne. ing, or experience, and too many | 2 3 of those instant cabinet starts | The Scillionians, perhaps -to fave proved themselves incapa-. their annoyance, are finding the ble of filling the big boots cre- | Press in their midst pers \ vacationing among them — as Mr Pearson's sympdthy for | he has for the past 13 years. the sinners, appropriate in a This, however, is the first time son of the manse, has raised | thaf he has spent his summer | doubts as to his strength as a | at St. Mary's as. Her Majesty's leader; the _qynicism _ofhispu-_| first minister leader; the + his pu- | ~ Lieutenant’ Commander Mer- | ~ : Y Science Monitor Majestry, al-_ and | Channel Islands) and Scillionisns | because | | Prime Minister Harold Wilson is | Season |; vyn Dorrien-Smith — owner of | Sampson Island to which the | prime minister boated from St. Mary’s for a picnic — is quoted as saying: “I can’t imagine why anyone should come all the way to the Scilly Isles just to see the man, I think much the best thing ‘is to ignore him.” (Commander Dorrien-S mith admitted that he votes for the~ | Conservatives as ‘‘the least ob- jJectionable sort” - of tician. | That may explain when he is hard on Mr. Wilson. ; The owner-drivet of a bus that . | passes Mr.- Wilson’s bungalow |came closer to observing the amenities — and was perhaps more effectively cool than the commander. “‘Where’s the prime minister staying?" asked a passenger in | his bus. i _ “Haven’t got a prime minis- ter,” replied the driver. “Only. a chairman of the council.” | MAKE PAPER TO LAST “Scientists have developed ‘at | treated type of book paper which they hope will last 1,000 years, instead of crumbling ‘in a few generations as do most modern papers, (From The Guardian Files) ‘TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO : (September 20, 1940) Many Spaniards expressed be- ‘ lief that events on the Spanish Peninsula probably would de-. pend. on. Axis success or lack, of _ it, against Britain and Egypt, despite predictions. abroad that | active Spanish co-operation with Italy and Germany may be im- minent. Nazi dive bombers. in a con- erted att’ just before dawn, rocked northwest London while | a second wave struck at an east London area. The German | planes abruptly began coming | over again in relays following a period of relative talm. They | blasted away with high explo-., sives and inc ary une at | their objectives. =~ TEN YEARS AGO } (September 20, 1955) Wayne Cameron, Head of Hillsborough, and George Reilly of Malpeque, will represent the | Island 4-H Clubs at the Royal Winter Fair at Toronto. The boys won this honor by placing |, first in practical and oral tests’ eoncerning their ability to judge cattle and on their year’s work ‘ Charles Linkletter, -Summer- side, was. elected President of the Young Li'srals Association of P.E.I. at their annual meet- ing held yesterday afternoon at the Charlottetown Hotel peal Campaign for $281,876.00 for. 27 agencies to work with. Worker: Hey Lil Angel! That’s a lot of cash! What part can I possibly pay in such a big thing. I haven't . ZOt any spare cash to give away! L'il Angel: Mr. Worker, I see you do want to help but you seem a little confused. Let me help you to help us. : Worker: What's this FAIR SHARE anyway? How does it affect my FAIR'‘SHARE? _ L'il Angel: Try this for size! Join your employer's payroll deduction plan. The-smal! amount you give each week, a 14.hr’s pay. or oné hr’s pay a month is your FAIR SHARE, - and you'll never miss it.. - » Worker: Sounds. 0.K. to me, L'il Angel! I want to help but I just didn’t know how to go about it. Count me in. = - a L'il Angel: Thanks Mr. Worker. We'ie counting “on you! * za : ; This advertisement published bya Local Publie-Spirited Firm.7 » Mr ~ 7 ea, “ayes -