errr Ss ee ee Wallace ‘Ward Frank Walker Editor ) Editor — ished every week dey morning (except Sune ¢ Che Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew “Hahieex; Publisher day and ~via holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspepers Ltd. | Branch offices et Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented ‘aalkcnie by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire /3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Unk versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037. .. Member Canadian Daily Newspeper Publishers Association ad The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exciusively entitled to the use for repul- lication, of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or te the Assoriated Press or Reuters and also the loca! news published herein. All tight or repuoclication of special diraatches here In also reserved. Subscription rate: ‘ Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas mot serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.06 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com _» Monwealth Not over 10c single copy. Merrber Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 THURSDAY, SEPT. 2 Mr. Hellyer’s Mission .Naval ratings who reportedly ' jeered and heckled Defense Minister * Hellyer when he addressed them_in Halifax yesterday on his policy of unifying the armed services showed a lamentable disregard of courtesy, to say the least. The issue which the minister’s policy has raised will not be. settled by such demonstrations. ’, There are much more substantial grounds for believing it to be out of line with our defense requirements. It has already been strongly criticized by some of Canada’s senior naval and military officers, and the ordin- ary citizen has a.right to assume that _-these men have the interests of the services at heart and the knowledge ~and experience to- speak authorita- tively on the subject. But it is re- grettable that any support of their views should seem to come from un- ruly elements. Whether service men agree with him or not, the minister is entitled to a respectful hearing and that, it is to be hoped, is what he will get when he visits the air bases at Greenwood, N.S. and Summerside they were first granted, they were incredibly generous. Even in the con- text of 1864-67, they were enlarged and-vitally_important.__________—. “Without them, and indeed with- out the protective armor-of- British | power-to-maintain-them, they-would- have long since disappeared. We Canadians live on a continent dom- inated by a huge and aggressive neighbor, ‘the United States which, ) in its constitution, won by blood, denies such minority rights. Who in his senses could assert that, without that shield, and without the basic compromise agreed to by the English- speaking, Protestant Canadian major: ity. in 1867, such rights could have been preserved. So we remain an in- depewdent people, its minority rights, imverfect though- they may be, pre- served. - “Without them, the concept of the ‘French Canadian nation’ would have long since disappeared, submerged in the vast sea of English-speaking, secular-minded North America. The distinctive qualities of Quebec endure because of the much-decried BNA Act. It is not a statute by any means perfect. It is subject to amendment. But let us not forget in moments of euphoric Quebec nationalism, when Quebec wants everything, that this is the histori¢ fact and that ignoring the ; fundamentals, leads to their elias tion.” — ~ This is well worth ecohasiite, " though we doubt if it will carry much weight with Premier Johnson and his associates. Nor indeed has it received. any attention where one would most expect it, namely in the findings. to _date. of the Royal Commission on Bi-_ lingualism and Biculturalism—a pol- | itical white elephant if there ever was one, which is still out at pasture, somewhere, at the continuing ex- pense of our overburdened taxpayers. Another Conferencé As if it hadn’t enough troubles to cope with already, the United Nations thinks names are so impor- e Boe * SomMETIMGS LTHINK How MARVELLOUS IT WouLd BE To GUT ALL THE NEWSPAPER EDITOR: be $ TOGETHER “Ta. FORM A CABINET ANO SEE ‘How THev courD RUN _ (Ans. PEARSON ee Ps | ' WAGE - PRICE LEAR- FROG NO COMMENT Improved | Car Safety Ray Gunter appears to have inadvertently pulled “the rug -from beneath Jim Callaghan's feet in. the British cabinet’'s By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Dr. Fletcher D. Woodward be- gan to stress safety improve- der of the Liberal party are off and running fast. The Number One preference continues to be 63-year-old Paul Martin, a middle-of-the-road Canada-for-Canadians —humani- tarian, of Irish and French an- _cestry. The dean of the House of Conmmons, he has been success- “The would-be successprs—to ; Walter Gordon, | Prime Minister Pearson as lea- Soe REPORT by Patrick Nicholson ~ Liberal Leadership Race Warms Up sixty, leftish, a king-maker in his party, is so pro-Canadian that he is termed anti-American. He would be a candidate in the. absence of an- other standard-bearer for his well-known views. Then, with an age gap that rises above the quarter-cen- tury, there are the eager gee- whiz kids. Youngest is 37-year- x “\ federation and, ~ today. It has been pointed out that Mr. Hellyer himself can hardly claim to - be a military expert. For the record, hé graduated from an aeronautics school in Califortiia in 1941, at the age of 18. He went to work at Fleet Aircraft in Fort Erie, Ont., which was” then engaged on war contracts. In 1944 he joined the RCAF, but air ~ erew training ceased about that time, course. He obtained his discharge from the RCAF and joined the artil- lery, from which he was demobilized in 1946 as a lance bombadier. He did not serve overseas. ‘But these facts are beside the point so far as his official status is eoncerned, and his right to promul- gate what policies he sees fit as Canada’s defense minister. Unifica- tion has been government policy since. 1964, and it is committed ‘to. trving to bring it, about by July 1, 1967. The policy has been discussed by members of the House of Com- mons standing committee on defense, but Admiral Landymore, its chief ovvonent, has complained that his statement had been garbled before ‘being submitted to the committee, avd that the full significance of the moye was not explained. In any case, ‘a bill embodying the policy has still to be introduced: in the House, after which it will be § “given second reading, then sent to the- defense committee. The commit- tee will. be able to call whatever wit- nesses it wants, and will report its findings back to- the Commens. If the | House thinks “the amendment shouldn't proceed, that Will, settle the matter. Pa This. will be the real test of the minister's persuasive powers, and ~ “the only one that will count: ~The Historic. Fact ~ One of the most disquieting as- “pects of Quebec. Premier Johnson's recent. statements en federal-pro- vincial ‘Telations, says the Montreal.). ~ Star, is his obvious contempt for C Con- North. America Act. The positive as- pects ofthat legislation, the “enor- and he had no chance to take a flying | Specifically, for~ its, “major. legal foundation, the British > tant as to warrant a full-scale inter- national: conference. The gathering is to take place at Geneva in August of 1967, the idea being to fix on the standardization of place names, both internationally and within the coun- tries concerned. Under consideration will be a proposal for setting up a UN Bureau on Geographic Names, which would act as a sort of clearing’ house. This is “not ia ‘an academic undertaking. Name standardization is needed to: facilitate the work of cartographers, census-takers, demo- graphers’ and _ statisticians, not to mention making things easier -for “tourists and travellers. Thus London would be known as “London” in France and ‘not ‘‘Londres” as it is now referred to on French maps. The capital of Portugal henceforth would be called “Lisboa” rather than the _anglicized_ “Lisbon” as ‘is now. the practice in English-speaking coun- . countries. But the biggest obstacle to name standardization, as a UN dispatch . points out, is usage. People don’t change their name-calling habits easily. About 20 years ago, New York officially changed the name of Sixth Avenue to Avenue of the Americans, but not-one New Yorker in 50 ever uses. the term. Another problem is political. Stal- ingrad has been changed to. Volgo- grad with the change of political | climate in Russia, and no one is quite certain that Stalin won't have his day again with a consequent change in the name of the city on the Volga. And we’ve had, of course, a prob- | lem nearer home, where the Shaw | | | | Centre was pettifoggingly altered to . But let’s not go into that again! The Geneva conference proposals, it “Ys.expected, will be dictated-by much broader considerations. EDITORIAL NOTES - Just to show that our atomic age has really come,.pf age,.the world’s oldest atomic reactor—a 23-year-old graphite reactor at Oak Ridge nation- dedicated as a national historic land- pyle * ee This-being National Immunization “mous contribution it.has made to the * Week, it is worth recalling that-in oS survival of French: Canadian life and culture “in North Ameriea s0- ‘predom- mee —inantly- Angio-American;are- ‘ignored. ~The Star_concedes, in this<con-~ “nection, that not_all ‘the partnership~ eqmproniises involved. inthe BNA Act*have worked to the-benefit of | thes French: Canadian province of, Quebec. t But ‘on: balance> it, maintains, ot “Quebec has ‘got an immeasurable net gain.out of the-deal- ““’Protection~of limited” Yanguage anthreligious. rights ~ May ‘today seem inadequate anda | 1943, the first Year the weck was on established, ‘ported cases—of whooping “ceugh in + the country, and-416 deaths from “the. \ disease. Last year there | were only ‘23475 cases and but nine > teaths re- ported:-The same story can betold _ about diphtheria, smallpox ‘other notable examples, ~fhe most re- cent “of.these is polos AS recently as 1959 there were 1,886 reported | cases cause for bitter complaint, butin, thes only three. cases “ait. one er context. t the 1tth> penta: when. ce death, Bins _ | al laboratory in Tennessee --has been. there _were 19,082 TS te and _Walter Fowler, satanic yof, this “dreaded. disease Ore G sp oclan inter: Proviitet | seeking a formula for agre& fully active in politics, in Par- liament and in the cabinet long- er than anyone else around. Ex- perienced, smooth but tough, he is just what the Liberals now desperately need — if I may borrow some Pearson slogans— to put the party. back onto the rails, get the government mov- ing again, restore Liberal unity, and even explore every avenue. A- point sometimes heard against him is the unfounded - suspicion that, once in, he might overstay his welcome; but those who think that. don’t know his even in Canada’s most tant harness. 55-year-old’ Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp is at present rat- ed as Mr. Martin's closest chal- lenger. This ex-senior civil ser- vant ran for cover into Big Bus- iness during the Diefenbaker Years: he is rightist, able and ambitious, but a continentalist. He unfortunately handicaps him- self by his oratorical mixture of the arrogance of the Nineteen- Fifties Liberal government (‘Who's to stop us’) and the smugness. of. his. fellow Manda- rins who. managed that arrogant government. Behind him comes 56-year-old Bob Winters, a Bluenose turned Bay Street Boy, and so a right- est. A big man with a big smile — a sort of Liberal George Hees without the Hees political sex- appeal. Although he rejected earlier calls to return to politics — in the 1962 and 1963 electfons — he is the choice of some Bo- werful Liberal bagmen. impor- _wife Nell — she would not let | “Father’’ grow old in harness, | old John Turner, the baby of the | Cabinet, . bilingual, well bank- rolled, good-looking /fe hit the headlines when he danced with Princess Margaret, before — his marriage to a glamorous Winnt- peg girl); he offers a Canadian — hence more ‘appealling and less artificial — version of Ken-. nedy image. 43-year-old Paul » Theodore Hellyer, rightish, was built up by the public relations techni- | que of his handler Bill Lee; but his stock is being pulled down |by Paul Theodore’s pursuit of ‘and his attendant supercilious- integration - without - legislation, and his attendant supercilious- ness. toward Parliament. His rivals quip that his supporters recently held a mass meeting in a Toronto airport taxi; ( he, like Sharp, Winters and Gordon, ail ow Hogtown _constituen- cies TOMORROW'S CROP Then we come to the Liberals’ “Best Buy" — after Paul Mar- tin: 45-year-old Allan MacEach- en, leftish, bachelor, catholic, «an intellectual power - house who prefers creative thinking to rou- tine _administration. He -is - se- cond only to Paul Martin in. this. group, in experience in Parlia- ment, in Cabinet and as back- Toom-boy to his party leader. A “best _procurable’’ from —Nova Scotia, and that is tops. In a showdown for the leader- ship narrowed to Martin, Sharp and Winters — as could happen — this younger generation would throw its support behind Martin; his age would open up the..leadership for grabs again ~The Arts In A student freshly enrolled in an arts course at a Canadian university soon becomes accus- tomed to the slightly baffled jook he gets from many _ non- university people who ask him what he’s “‘taking’’ at college. ’ Some questioners go on to ask, ‘‘What exactly is the ‘arts’ course’ And then it’s the stu- dent's turn to look slightly baf- fled. ‘‘Uh, well, it’s... uh... Eng- Ottawa Journal Our Yesterdays (From “The Guardian Files) _ TWENTY- FIVE YEARS AGO ' (September w2, 1941) The sinking of another Ameri- can- owned freighter in waters off Iceland, where United States warships are patrolling with or- ders to ‘‘shoot first.’’ nounced by the United States Department. Premiers of the three Mari- ors sat with Finance Minister Illsley and treasury officials ' eat on surrender of the income ta “field to the federal government for the. war's duration. ° TEN YEARS AGO (September. 22, 1956) The 18 nation Suez conference, “ended with majority agreement | to form the Suez Canal Association Ne 10 days. sup- erviser and Vice- Presidemt_TC A, unveiled axplaque commemo' {ing the opening~af. the first Can- tal mail ith | Pe ~Passenger service Ww. Trendted_kriols> per hour 25 years ago. ia was an- |; time Provincés\with their advis- | - Leiologiste users | ane Which he piloted at one * oo a ae ie id aaa Plain Words lish and History and that kind of thing... Carleton: University this fall has come out with a booklet call- ed, “Arts Subjects, What They Are and What They Lead To” which should not only help new in the early 1970s,. by which time they would all be readier. “The interesting gap in this starting line-up is the lack of a French-Canadian name. French- Canada has no Liberal leader to- day, despite its immense predo- minance in the Liberal caucus (58 French-Canadians out of 128 | MPs). But newcomer Jean Mar- chand may well. grow to fill this | position. Guy Favreau was gi- ven the top rung, but failed tp occupy it; Maurice Sauve made a play for it, and lost. The road. behind is littered with casualties; the road ahead ‘will probably count more, in- cluding Justice Minister Cardin — the man who launched a thou- sand headlines (about Gerda). One of those earlier casualties, Maurice Lamontagne, seems to be back, lurking in the shadows at. Walter Gordon’s right hand; he could emerge to play a signi- ficant_role.. Anyhow, what are those two up to. This is the ques- tion Sharp and others anxiously ask; could they be preparing the crown for Allan MacEachen students decide on whether to take arts but also which branch to enter. It points out that the Faculty of Arts embraces the | oldest subjects in higher learn- | ing as well as some of the new. | est, including many that are not | part of any high school seh ulum. For the most part, sais | tions of the various disciplines | are plain and crisp Commerce:"..... mabniets which | are relevant to the making of decisions in industrial atid com- mercial management.” History: ‘‘....the student. must bear in ‘mind that he will, i be engaged in an-inquiry. It will | not be enough to commit to. memory the course of events un- der study.” \ Political Science: the | study of power and the control of human groups.”’ Sociology: “ the ‘Science Sue ee Psychologists study tunes ae person, s0- ‘| artsmen might imagine. WASHINGTON (AP) Dr. . James —L. Goddard, U.S. com- missioner~ of food and drugs, appealed again. Monday to a House of Representatives | sub- committee to approve legisla- tion_to limit the availability of _ childrents aspirin: “All available ' data, Go testified, indi- cates ‘“‘a sub us illness or de to young rel an through the: accidental ingestioa~ot childrens’ aspirin. ' ~ S- -on.-the-group. Sd it ll cnt icnieicong | Allin all, the scomeou ¢t! | appearing a lot concrete | and less “arty” than t_non- SHOWS ASPIRIN DANGER ~~ tia) risk of se- — “DID | struggle to put the best foreign ments in auto design in. 1948. "T6-| faoe poe pogsible on the state of the |. }disk brakes in front. date, the sprees offered by the Virgi professor and oth- er physician groups have been rebi with “It is ‘the ndt be- hind the wheel whq causes all the accidents,” and “safety won't: sell.’ The driver is impor- a but so is the roadway, traf- weather conditions, and the rehiaie There are two sapiens to jevery. accident. The first oc- curs..ou and the second in- side the ‘car, It is for this rea- son that the emphasis is on im- -}proved design. Safety cam- paigns have not helped. Driver education has been beneficial, but not too suecessful. Every- ‘one knows that drinking and driving do not mix but the prac- tice continues. Safety belts are a boon, but many people refuse or neglect to wear them. The: only logical approach cénters about rede- signing the vehicles so that the outside collision wil be less like- ly to occur and the inside col- lision will do, a minimum amount. of damage to the driver and passengers. Physicians have the following suggestions rela- tive to the outside of the car: A uniform height for, bumpers that are mounted on shock absorb- | ers. Abolish all hood ornaments, sharp- leading edges of head- lights, and highly chrome trims and. shiny hoods that might interfere with vision. | Safer tires are needed and. a dual- braking system with Roll bars are essential on convertibles : Inside, they believe in a safer passenger compartment with doors that will not pop: open on impact. A master door lock for the driver also is suggested. All | seats should be fastened secure- ly to the floor..-Head: rests, front and back, that-are solid and se- cure. A collapsible or telescopic | | steering wheel prevents many | ;Chest injuries. Padding for the | |dash, no sharp.fixtures or knobs | and a windshield that pops -out | on impact also are helpful. FASTING PERIOD J. B. writes: Every winter I | formulated | reflective | British economy. On the day that Callaghan, chancellor of the exchequer, tried to convince a Canadian audience most 6f what is writ ten about-the British economy is based on misrepresentation, Labor Minister Gunter bluntly told a Yorkshire audience the British people must face the facts. “We have been—people may not like the strong words—dis- honest and thriftless,’’ Gunter said. ‘From April, 1965, to Ap- riJ, 1966, this ae paid itself 4nineomes of all sorts nearly four times more than we earned in increased productivity. “It is unworthy of our history | that we should expect higher in- comes, more hospitals, more houses out of borrowed money. The confidence of our creditors and our allies abroad had al- most gone in July of this. year and they, in my opinion, rightly demanded that Britain should give-some proof of her~willing- ness to come—to terms—with et | own problems.” DECLARE WAR > : In Toronto Monday, Callaghan argued that much of what_is said and written about Britain | is based-on lazy and inaccurate jrumor and that it is time to end the myths and declare war 'on the new mythologists. Callaghan said Battain is no more strike-ridden than’ other major Western country; Britain | still exports a huge volume of ke Debt To | th Conflicting La eee : goods; her overseas aceets; are greater~than—her—debis-— He said vigtually nothing about the fact that Britain con. tinues to import more than -she rent loans, she..would have vir. tually nothing left in her foreivn reserves; her share of wer'd markets has declined and big orders for. such traditional Brit- ish service as shipbuilding have been shifted to Japan. The struggle to pour new strength in the British economy has reached an acute stage. The government has launched a massive attenipt to damp down prices; put a clamp on unions’ drive for higher wages and force manufacturers to export more by reducing the home’ market through tighter credit. which might also help discourage im- ports. The drama of Britain's ability’ to survive as & competitive world power. will unfold in dry facts and figures in the months ahead._Meanwhile, says Gunter, “We have the opportunity tals time of crisis of facing the facts of life. Hitherto we have shrunk away. from them." The fact that Gunter and Cal- ing language has not~- gone un- noticed. The Conservative-sup- porting London Evening Stan- dard described the two speeches as the government. speaking “with many mouths." “The government should learn to wear only one mask once." the newspaper said editorially, = arguing that it was useless for Callaghan to voice a hymn of hope abroaa when his audience also could clearly hear his col- leagues’ dirge at home. a mmigrants Vancouver Sun The federal government's. at- ite toward immigration has improved considerably since Jean Marchand took over the citizenship .and immigration portfolio. It ‘is “good news to hear | from him, in a Halifax speech. a ~ government expects igrants this year, hoops even "te to hear his. ob- ; servation ‘that “this ‘‘close to \ ideal” number is an indication rest my stomach for 10 days by | of “Canada’s success in attract- jeating nothing -but four glasses | ing newcomers.” of milk daily. I'm a sedentary | ]t has taken a long time for | ;worker and somewhat over governments in Canada to—ad--years—of-heavy post-war immb aust do you think of mit wholeheartedly that immi-. REPLY | gration: has advantages— and This is the milk rendition of | | not merely for filling uv the em- oe oid ban that periodic ee Tage wine Agonat A too s beneficia ere. is no medi- cal advantage in following. the | mm agatha i lash we. Sieh plan unless it. makes you feel | ‘¢t simple arithmetic: - every | third’ architect, draughtsm an. o and helps to control obes- mechanical éngineer and physi- RUE : / cal and occupational therapist INSURANCE AND. MURMURS registered in the 1961 census was L. E. writes: Do insurance | an immigrant-One in every four companies reject applicants | civil and electrica! engineers with a heart murmur? } and physical scientists and one REPLY bes every ifve chemical engine- | Po As-a rule they-do, and some} ers, medical doctors and econ-~ companies do not feel obligated | omists came from abroad to determine whether the mur- It would have. cost $150 - mil- mur is innocent or indicative of | lion to train them if Canada. So | heart leakage. it can be claimed, in a sense. EVANGELISTIC SERVICES AT THE M.L.A., Nanton, Alta. _ CRUSADE” wit SUCH TOPICS AS.... “THE NEW CURRICULUM OF CHRIST” YOUR GOD DIE TOO?” “THE RETURN OF CHRIST.” “INSPIRING SING - SONGS WONDERFUL FELLOWSHIP | CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH mo SEPT. 25 -- OCTOBER 9 WEEK NIGHTS 8:00 — SUNDAY 7:00 P-M. ((No Saturday Services) - = THE SPEAKER - EDWARD P. BENOIT DYNAMIC — DEDICATED GOSPEL PREACHER A CHRIST CENTERED that they brought $150 million in with them and ‘have béen contrt- buting millions ever since. . We should be training more of our own people in these fie'ds natia's grosth since the war has been so rapid that it has been impossible to keep up— and we always were backward in the training of tradesmen and pro- fessionals. Until we ‘catch ip | with our needs we will continue | to need skilled immigrants. The more of these we get, as the prosperous we shall become Canada -would be a much poor. ‘er country today without the ».- | 500.000 newcomers who entered our gates following the Second World War. As Mr. Marchord” Says. Canadians as: a perr'e need to change their attitve>s _ | toward immigrants Biers a lot Come to think of it. since a‘! of ie (except the native Indi~s) are immigrants ourselves .or-dvs scended from . immigrants. owe them everything. PLENTY OF TALK There are 1,517 seats in tte |Supreme Soviet: *Russia’s pare 'liament. They. owe we sche - 1 2 os SPECIAL MuSIC DON’ T MISS IT - BRING A FRIEND exports; if she paid off -her-cur-—-—— laghan have spoken in conflict. ~ and in the skilled ‘trades but Ca- ~