Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher . Wedltace Ward Frank Welker — ng Ecitor aires yolished every week day morning (excep? Sum de prtrd stetutom holideys) et 165 Prince Street, a@ioretown PE by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Bratch offices at Summerside, Monteque, Alberton end Souris Pepresented rfet sily by Thomson Newspepe Advarisine * es Toronto 425 University Av . . > ‘ tres’ 640 Cathcart Streer Uni : @ 1030 West Georgie 54 ester sity 6-594 s 5: Pail MA 7037 enue “anacian Daly Newspaper Publishers Caradan Press. The Canadien As@@ecietior and ne Pegs is exc osively entitled to the use for repub fier of ews dispatches in this paper cregited. ts i cr to the Associated Press or Reuters aga. aiso to the local news published herein. All KGB or republication of special dispatches, here In aise racer ec pscription rete: *+ Not over 40c per week “by carrier. $12.00 a.veer b Lon rural routes and areas. ne’ se e island and U.K. $20.00 per ewhére outside British Com Det over Fe «ingle .cor ber Sod RBoreav of Circulation The strongest memory. is weaker than the weakest ink” iE Pane 4 tu Espay, § "SEPTEMBER 7, 1965. 7, 1965. “A Noble Example It is perhaps a judgment on our age that Dr. Albert Schweitzer out- lived his fame, or at least his useful- ness, in the eves of modern African leaders ana medical scientists. He had become, they said, “an old myth, an anachronism in the modern Africa.’ He was criticized for neglect- ing sanitary measures, for “pater- nalistic condescension” toward the na- tives. for impatience with the advice °| of experts and even for practicing’ | “colonialism”. *- Perhaps Dr. Schweitzer, who died” Saturday night in his jungle hospital in- Gabon, had fallen behind the times. At 90, it would not be sur- prising; and perhaps he was. always a little ‘“pig-headed,” as the saying goes. But a glance at his achieve- ments in’ many fields, and_particu- larly that of human welfare, is enough to show what the world has gained by his extraordinary example. --A native of Alsace, he was born a German but became a Frenchman when Alsace was returned to France after the First World War. His father was a Lutheran minister who insisted on sharing his church with people of other faiths—a rare thing in: those flays. At 24 he was a doctor of philos- -ophy—and—six--years.later—was—prin-— cipal of the theological faculty and professor of religious philosophy at . Strassburg. He was also one of the world’s great interpreters of Bach’s organ music when he renounced his brilliant career to study medicine and become-a_volunteer- medical mission-— ary for the French West African col- ony of Gabon. There he chose to live for the remainder of his long life. He and his wife arrived in 1913 i with 70 cases of medicine and started a hospital which since has cared for 60.000 persons, performing as many as a thousand operations each year. ‘At first it was a grim fight for sur- ' oe against ignorance and witc h- craft: Then, in the First World War, , “they were interned in France as enemy ‘aliens, and when they came back in 1924, they found their hos- pital -had- been eaten by white ants. 1A famine was followed by a dysentery epidemic, but Schweitzer fdught both starvation and disease, rebuilding his hospital on a better site. To get money for his work, he visited Europe periodically giving lectures and concerts. The $22,000 Nobel Peace Prize award he received in -1952 was devoted to building a permanent. home for his leprosy patients. Asked once to-put his basic philosophy into a phrase, Dr. Schweit- zer replied that he preferred to call it “reverence for life.” “Ethics is pity,” was another of ‘his sayings. “All life is suffering. 1 am here to cure, not to preach or. civilize.” . He was quoted as saying, too, that “the -only-way-out-of today's-misery is -for~ ‘people to become worthy of each other’s trust.” He made all his pre- cepts simple, for he believed in liv- ing them to the letter. If we cannot recognize in this man one of the towering figures of our century, then we are in a | bad way indeed. All Up To Him! An Ottawa commentator in the Financial Post has an answer to a question that is puzzlmg many of his colleagues, and a lot-of other people, at this time. ‘Who stands to gain most of all from an early federal: general election?’ Why, it’s easy when you come-to think of it, says the Post. scribe. John Diefenbaker, of course! And who could stop this unwant- ed campaign before it gets off the launching pad? John Diefenbaker again, by announcing his intention to retire and calling for a Conservative leadership convention, he could put | | { 7 | expansion. __ , an immediate election “right out of The Guardian court,” he could! The Liberal strate- gists, it is argued, would not dare to risk calling one after the new Tory leader was chosen for fear they might be accused of playing ‘dirty political pool.”’ As if they hadn't been accused of a lot worse things than that! But anyway, this authority has it figured that Dief, with his rasping sense of humor, is indulging in gleeful inward chuckles over the way the game is going. An election now could provide him with an even better joke on his opponents*of ‘both political. stripes. _ How come? Well: it’s~this way, says our Post authority. [f his party should lose badly, this would not: greatly alter Dief's prospects in the leadership, since time is running-out on him amyway. If the Conservatives should make notable gains, this would vindicate him and confirm him in the leadership for as long as he chooses. __ Further;-the-old—trooper-“may |; Still prove to be the greatest cam- paign artist in the country.” He fig- ures he has a lot-of things going for him in any election he can fight on the issue of ‘One Canada” combined with Liberal scandals. , There are mixed’ feelings about this, of course, baker wing of his party. Without be- ing “in any way disloyal to théir party,” says the Post man, these people hope an election would result in a quick change in their leadership —but fear it might not. But the pro- Diefenbaker wing (it's still a wing, it seems, and not just a corporal’s guard as we've been told by other commentators) has more than a sneaking feeling that the Old Chief might bring out a political_miracle, once again. So the real issue, if it comes to a head, is not thé record of the gov- ernment in office, their hits, runs and errors, but the doings of that man Diefenbaker. He keeps hogging the limelight, eating, drinking and breath- ing campaign fire—driving the people into an election they don’t want and reducing poor Mr. Pearson to babblings on the subject which nobody can make head or tail of. “At Dief’s age, too, when-he was said-by all the pundits to be a spent political force! The Chiangs Again Mme. Chiang Kai-shek is back in the United States on an unofficial visit. As usual, she has a lot of ad- }-vice-that- Washington can do without. || She says the United States should bomb Red China’s atomic installa- tions before they can be used to pro-' duce weapons. For more than 15 years Mme. Chiang’s. husband has been getting ready to invade mainland China to drive out the Communists, who drove him to offshore Formosa in 1949. He . hasn’t moved, for the reason that he isn't.strong.enough. And -he-wouldn’t— be there at all if it wasn’t for American aid that has buttressed his puppet regime. He’s been breathing vengeance all these years, and stir- ring up as much trouble-as he can. Now Mme. Chiang wants to “un leash” the U.S. to start what could only end in a global war. As the Mil- waukee Journal observes, the Chiangs, husband and wife, have long played the “‘let’s you and him fight” game—with—Washington-—“The—least they could do,” it adds tartly, “is to have the courtesy not to play it in our own country.” But wasn’t that | what she came for, in the first place? Couldn’t she have been told, in a nice way, of course, that even an un- official visit at this time was out of the question? EDITORIAL NOTES - News that scientists are on the verge of developing a device that can smell the presence of odors emanat- ing from an explosive substance has excited the commercial aviation world. The “‘sniffer”’, as it is called, may one day in the near future be used to swiftly scan baggage at air- ports for signs of explosives. eee * * Early this, year, the world cattle in the anti-Diefen-. | | + | } NOBODY EVER ASKS THE FISH Gollstones; What To Do By Dr. Theodore R. Van Eellen The gallbladder is a sac that | concentrates and stores bile. When fatty foods are eaten, the organ contracts and squirts the digestant into the intestine. The structure is not absolutely essen- tial, considering the millions of healthy persons who have had the organ removed. The liver ~ continues to manufacture bile re- gardiess of whether the gall-_ bladder is in or out. - Where does bile go when its | storehouse is eliminated? The duct that extends from the liver to the intestine enlarges to take ‘| over this function. ht has been said that half of our population over age 40 evidence of gallbladder disease. Only a small percentage have attacks of mild indigestion and | the rest go through life without knowing the organ is abnormal unless gallbladder X-rays are | made: Stones develop and, by age almost 50 per cent of the wome _| and 25 per cent of the men have— one to 100 of these rocks. Nowa- | days, more and more gallblad- | der X-rays are done and stones | are found frequently. Surgery is recommended when symptoms are. present. | Many surgeons believe gallblad- ders with stones should be re- moved, even when the’ organ is not causing distress... They do this because they know that the chance of having trouble within six years is good. Operation is easier and safer when the organ is in a quiet or noninflammatory stage. If removal is deferred un- til the individual is older, com- plications are more likely with each passing decade. But some ee | NOTES BY THE WAY Probably the only place 5's | An American expert on alcoho- won't find a coin shortage is in | lism says one in 15 Canadians is the collection basket at church | a drunk. It would have | Sunday mornings. | better if he’s have said 14 out’ of | — Waupun Leader . ‘News. 15 Canadians aren't ~fizenks. | » | Teronto Star, | An estimated $300,000,000 will | | be spent on installations of cen- | In Sausalito, Calif., ‘tral heatin in Britain‘this year. | fectly legal to drink beer a‘nd | If they had only kept the cent- | strum guitar while ridings | Romans nearly 2,000 years ago | | that if it was ilega, a part of this expesne would be | | unnecessary, — Ottawa Jour- | would try it — Hamilton Spec- tator. ae Loan That Backfired By Arch MacKensle Canadian Press Steff Writer WASHINGTON (CP) — The;rent national tensions in each latest fighting between India| country, compared with the and Pakistan points up a haz- fighting earlier this year over | ard created when major powers the Rann of Kutch. shower arms on smaller ones! Pakistan's. -with~-trigger- ‘tempers. India formally protested pri | with China has worried American tanks and Sabre jet! to Pakistan 2 ‘Yightérs against her—contrary only ne a Piya to the declaration made in 1954 east Asia treaty Oorganization by then-President Eisenhower. | anq the Central Treaty Organi- be The US. in the last 10 years zation, both American-manufac- as given. Pakistan some $1,200,- | | tured alliances, to control Mid- 000,000 worth of military aid to dle and F be used against any Communist ae cee, East expansion of aggression. Britain and Russia | President -Joh wiv have supplied Jndia with as-| .-. . ; dering whether he should extend sorted military -hardware while Shy more aid to Pekisten, ancis has receiver thas | *U\S. relations with India have it’s per- p the U.S. i. the large military handou are willing to take the chance | $5,000,000,000 worth of economic help from the U.S. but little military aid. Pakistani tanks are superior to the creaking British models in India’s arsenal or some Sec- ond World War Sherman models purchased from the U.S. Sabre . jets are less obsolete too than the British Vampired used init- had their ups and downs, mostly downs until the late President Kennedy made some progress., This was set back earlier this year with the abrupt presidan- tial decision to postpone visits by the Indian and Pakistani leaders. But India still is a vital ele- OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Those Redistribution Formalities Analyzed While- disillusioned Canadian | possible early, in 1966. In fact, electors face their fifth gener- al election within one hundred months, even newspapers which | praise the Liberal Party come hell or high water are critical of an election before comple- tion of the overdue redrafting | of constituency boundaries. Liberal leader Lester Pear- | son says this work could not be | finished in time for an election before 1967. Conservative lead- er John Diefenbaker says that | this is a lie. ‘An election could | be called early in 1966," as- | serts Mr. Diefenbaker, ‘‘the Prime Minister is deliberately lying to delude the Canadian people for a political purpose.” ‘Wha. are the facts? ~ T have “analysed the pro- visions of the new Electorial Boundaries. Readjustment Act, | and disucssed them with constl- as I recently wrote in this cole umn, Mr. Pearson could reas- onably and practicably plan to | dissolve Parliament at the end of April for polling on Monday, | 27 June next: year. , The time table for _complet- ‘ing the formalities of redistri- | bution is rigidly laid down in | lthe new act. Each of the ten | | provincial commissions must | complete its report within one year,-namely by say 23 Janu- ary next at latest. These will | be passed to the Speaker of the * | House of Commons. days, any 10 MPs may. loadge an objection in writing to that. | | report; then within 15 days the | House must “‘consider the mat- ter of the objection’ and report | back to the Representation Commissions. Then within 90 days any provincial commis- Within 30° With or without amendment, | the commissions’ proposals are |to be returned to the Speaker within another 30 days, and then within five days these propos- | als, which cannot be further | | disputed, must be proclaimed to be in force by the- Governor in Council. We must assume that the go- vernment would not unreason- | ably defer, nor MPs protract, any discussion on the decisions , by the quast -dudicial commis | sions. NEED RED TAPE BIND? But in addition to this redraw- ing of the boundaries of consti- | tuencies, there is the adminis- | trative -work—of-the—“‘second- re- | distribution”, involving- the di- vision of the country into say [~ | 50,000 polling divisions within | the new. constituencies. There will also be 262 returning offi- tutional lawyers and with top | sion concerned must consider cers to appoint. But there is no electoral officials. John Diefenbaker is correct, | absolutely correct; when he | Says that an election. ee -be.! | and “dispose of’ the objection | lif, by decision of the House it has been upheld ‘and evans to..the—Commissioner:— . Sa Lonely ble Island eu. Geographie Society One of the loneliest inhabited isles in the world lies only 100 miles southeast of Nova Scotia. This is Sable Island a foggy and storm-whipped ghostly sliv- er of sand that is often called | the ‘‘Graveyard of the Atlantic.” It# total population is 13 people | and 200 wild ponies. “Only in mid-July for a. _three- | “week period is the weather ‘calm { and surf low enough to permit | small boats to land on beacties” writes Dr. Melville Bell Gros- , , five big swells, then rowed vig- | orously for the beach on a “smooth.” e The National Geographic pre- | sident has had a lifelong inter- “est in Sable. “Yéars ago, his | grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Al- exander Graham Bell, came | ashore to search for the bodies of friends —Jost_jn-the sinking-of the liner La Bourgogne 60 miles to the south. With--its-underwater~sand~bars” Sable forms a 50-mile menace to possible reason why provision- al work could not be already. under way in the redistribution | or polling divisions: | tive form. of the new constitu: lencies is already public know- lledge and any changes will | probably be only minor, ama il only affect a few constitu: encies. As for the matter of appoin- \.ting returning officers — thie is |merely a matter of foresight such as any housewife exercis- es. Mrs. Pearson knows that her husband will want break- fast. tomorrow; does she wait until he arrives at the table be- fore. buying - eggs. and -coffee?* There are six vacancies for | returning officers today: in Bo- +~naventare; Cariboo;“Trinity, Ko |" Kootenay West \ otenay East, venor, president and editor of | mariners though the isle itself is ‘| and for the Ontario-Quebec sol- the. National Geographic Society | only 23 miles long and scarcely | diers’ vote. Are these vacan- in the September issue of Na- tional Geographic: Dr. Grosvenor made a some- | what risky »landing on Sable, | with the permissidn of the Can- | adian Government, while sailing | northward from Bermuda _ to | Baddeck, Nova Scotia, in his | | reaching London, | population was estimated at 1,084 | levels and 11 per cent above the 1956-60 average. Numbers increased in all geographical regions in 1964, vwith the largest gains in South America, Oceania, and the - Soviet Union. Higher cattle prices and the good-outlook for export demand are encouraging expansion in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Mexico as - million, two per cent more than 1964 | j |. held by, the Singer. —" Ma- chine Company. His Excellency, Most Rev well as in,many Central and South American countries. The Nova Scotia | Department of Agriculture, which supplies this information, adds that conditions seem favorable for further af * | er yaw] White Mist. PITCAIRN--TECHNIQUE To bring the yawl’s’ small pram through heavy swells, Dr. Grosvenor and his party used the technique employed by Pit- cairn Islanders to get their long- boats through big breakers. ' They waited patiently, counted Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | (September 7, .1940) King Carol II was driven from ‘the throne of “Rumania yester- day and entered ‘into exile. His 18-year-old son, Prince Michael, succeeded him, ruling by grace “of Rumania’s military dictator, Gen. Ion Antonescu A peaceful ‘‘invasion” | PEPPERS WINDOWPANES gave a mile wide. Since 180 more than 200 ships have met disaster on Sable’s treacherous sands. Per- | haps 300 more ships were wreck- ed there earlier. During his recent visit, Grosvenor was surprised to find | Scottish- born Bells living’ on | Sable Island. They are Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bell, who immi- ‘grated to Canada and thence to | Sable from Scotland, the birth- place of telephone inventor Allex- ander Graham Bell. Norman Bell runs the diesel station that generates power for | Sable’s radio station and met- eorological outpost. Learning that Dr. Grosvenor’s middle name is Bell, he exclaimed, ‘‘we must all be hone Bells!”’ The Bells“told Dr. Grosvenor that he and his party were the first visitors who'd landed on | Sable in years, except from a government boat. +four times-a year to sérvice the © lighthouses and bring supplies | for the handful of islanders. Sab- le has no harbor, so the steam- ers anchor offshore and send in ; lighters. Storms on Sable Island are Dr} These come Britain control of the strategic | dramatic. Sixty-foot waves ex- ,Danish- owned Faroe Islands | Plode, on the shoals. after the Nazis swept over Den-.| glass is turned opaque by sand- mark, but, according to reports | storms in a single season. There Window —the—Diocese— -the real vic- | tors have been the Scots who reconciled the inhabitants t» the bagpipes. TEN YEARS AGO | (September 7, 1955) | Miss Dorothy Muteh, Mount | Herbert, and ‘Miss Winnifred Anne MacMillan, 90 Brighton Réad, Charlottetown, were the prize winners in the senior and junior classes respectively “at the Teen-age Fashion Show Malcolm A. MacEachern, B*s- hop of Charlottetown, will lay the cornerstone and bless the new Church of St. Anne’s at Hope River next Sunday. He will be accompanied—by Very Rev. PF: MacDonald, Chancellor oF are no -trees—only stunted wild- flowers and marram grass. : Even on Sable’s most desol- ate stretches, however, the fam- ed wild ponies leave their tracks. “The origin of these ponies is lost in dim history,” Dr. Grosve- nor writes. “They may have = scended noms stock shipped cies preventing proposals -for a | Fall election? No; then that | argument collapses. An election certainly could be held in the summer of 1966. | | | the tenta- | and it is surprising how many | live to a ripe old age without a smidgen of discomfort. ially by India. i, But just what the U.S. can do ‘ai this point to slap Pakistan's ment in the U.S. strategy of maintaining a strong Asia as a The decision is more difficult bulwark against China. Hence wrist ish t y when the person with gallstones _ oo ae one, this the large - scale aid contribu- also has symptoms that may or- tions. . fresh eruption about an old bor- der sore has put pressure on. | the U.S. TENSIONS INCREASE | iginate from*a nearby organ or.’ | from emotional—origins: In-such | instances, the surgeon may Sug-, ne removal but he makes it” clear that the operation will not What concerns American and relieve symptoms caused by | other diplomats is the larger- other disorders. » Hence President Johnson's anxiety to avoid being caught in the middle of the Kashmir fight and the US. determina- tion to put all t wehgtt hienaie behind the United Nations as a | scale operations and the appa- * mediator. a —_ _- Autumn Ferry Service- ee Borden-Cape Tormentine TEN ROUND -TRIPS DAILY _____ SEPT. 8— NOV. 30 INCLUSIVE Leave Borden 7.00 a.m. 8.20 a.m. 2.15 p.m. 3.40 p.m. 1U.00 a.m. 5.45 p.m. 1.30 a.m. 7.30 p.m. (2.00 pm. 9.16 p.m. A Leave Cape Tormentine 7.00 a.m. 8.25 a.m. 10.05 a.m. 11.30 ‘a.m. 2.50 p.m. 2.15 p.m. 3.40 p.m. 5.45 p.m. 7.30 p.m. 9.15 p.m. LOCAL TIMES SHOWN—DAYLIGHT- OR-STANDARO—- Se ‘WHICHEVER |S IN: EFFECT aaerr rn ints bnmantn sien IN PERSON ‘LITTLE BEAVER the island from New England e 1738, or from an even earlier herd that survived the wreck of | a Spanish vessel off Sable. What- ever the family tree, ponies have flourished here since the 18th | century, living for more than 40 generations in herds of six and eight on local grasses. And many ship-wrecked sailors were thank- ful. for ‘horse venison,’ as they called their survival-diet.”’ NEED MORE LIRE Living costs in Italy have | risen 25 per cent oe the last | —} four years — -BULY-TAYLOR-———-—}- Singing Star of Ed Sullivan Show -~—s_—scvi King of Midget Wrestling Monic Elsen and the Playboys The Smallest Acrobat y the World - Just 42” Tall oon Sponsored in co-operation with Ch'town Fire Department. Bring the children and your Autograph Books and Dolly & Paul See the Stars in person. eee ~~ AtEllis Bros, Tuesday, Sept 7 from 3 to 4 p.m. cae * REMEMBER WE SELL SCHOOL TEXT BOOKS | « pre ap eet a2 Page OPE dee FE Ce CeCe : Spear tans saa wile pies