rr a. . | Covert Prines | fidwerd telend Like The Dew oe an fae Frank Waiker Editor a Editor i Overy week dey morning (except Sun dey ee holidays) at 165 “Prince Street, a bch oen 1, By Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Souris. . Montague, Alberton . nationally by Thomson Newsoaoers Toronto 425 University Ave. Mantras! 640 Cathcart Street Uni- Western Office 1030 West Georgie MA_ 7037. Déily Newspaper Publishers Canadian Press. The Canadien We_exclusively entitied to the use for fepub Of all news dispatches in thit paper te t© the Associated Press of Reuters teeel news published herein. All of special dispatches here reserved. Subscription rete: per week by carrier by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced: by carrier. off \sland and U.K. $20.00 per eleewhere outside British Com Fe si ‘eoov | sembber ae of Circulation 4 WED, NOVEMBER 17. 1965. For Freer Trade One of the topics slated for dis- cussion at the Atlantic premiers’ con- ference which opens here on Mon- day is the proposal of a free trade afea for these Atlantic provinces and the New England States. In view of the practical obstacles in the way, this will of necessity be an academic dis- cussion. If we could be conceded the right to make our own regional trade arrangements it would undoubtedly Help us economically. But we can- not see how free trade—or even freer trade than the trade we now enjoy with our neighbors to the south—can be made effective except as a nation- al policy. However, it is a matter of growing concern in this part of Can- ada, and an expression of the joint ": views of our Atlantic government~ leaders on the subject should carry some weight at Ottawa. » We note tHat a broader scheme of this kind has been mooted in the Un- ited States bv Jacob K. Javits, New York Republican senator, who sug- gests—not a regional arrangement but a new free trade area including the whole of United States and Can- Ada, if Britain fails in another attempt , join the European Common Market. 3 The senator’s ambitious alternative to Britain’s entry into the ECM would Be open to members of both the Com- fon Market and the European Free Trae Association, and also to New Zealand and Australia. * The Javits proposal at first glance ould appear to be one. that the Unit- éd Kingdom might find attractive if Bhe door finally were closed to her Gnembership in the European Com- fmon Market. It fails to reckon, how- évr, with Britain’s involvement in: the €ommonwealth and its British pref- #rential tariff system. This is of im- ‘Portance not only to Britain and to €anada but to a number of associat- @d and less-developed countries. = Canada has hedged in her ap- roach to the Kennedy Round of tariff Begotiations by rejecting the U.S. pro- aie tee Ve dian | in the western provinces, avoided ref- ~ erence to anything of a compulsory nature in the federal proposal, mak- ing it appear, indeed, that there was a wide freedom of choice in the mat- ter. Again, the target date for the plan, as announced by the Prime Minister and Health Minister Judy LaMarsh, was July 1, 1967. They were em- phatic on this point. But here again a note of uncertainty has crept in. In one of his campaign speeches Trade Minister Mitchell .Sharp said the gov- ernment might not be able to provide a national medical care plan by 1967 _ becatise of a shortage of nurses and doctors. This, of course, was no new de velopment; the shortage existed just as glaringly when the target date was set. It merely underlined a difficulty of which serious students of Canada’s medical structure have been aware all along. It has been pointed out, too, that the enormous administrative structure that will have to be created within the federal and provincial civil services means that any serious at- tempt to get the plan launched by July 1, 1967, will be a rushed and frenzied affair. But Mr. Sharp’s statement was the ‘first and only in- | dication of governmental awareness of otection of this country’s more | be of linear tariff cuts—for the fulnerable industries—and might be i@xpected to shy away from any free dade arrangement that would ex- e the Canadian market to open and Il-scale competition from the Unit- these obstacles. Must we wait two more months to learn whether he was merely voicing his own opinion or speaking with full regard to the prin- ciple of cabinet solidarity? Surely a clarification of this point at least would be in order from the Prime Minister. Next Question, Please An issue which provoked a lot of controversy in the election campaign was the cost of cars under the new Canada-U.S. automobile agreement. Mr. Pearson was insistent that despite Tory arguments to the contrary the savings to the manufacturers under this deal were actually being passed on to the consumers, or would be in next year’s prices. But how much | does a new car really cost? And what, for that matter, is the consumer real- ly interested in? The- Financial Post takes a hard look at these questions, which were lost sight of in the spate of campaign— oratory and are prompted by the fact, well-known to every car owner, that the purchase of a new car us ‘ually involves a turn-in allowance for his existing model. -That price var- ies with the make of car, its condi- tion, the anxiety of the dealer ‘to séll and, possibly, with what everybody concerned had for breakfast that day. This, to small or great degree, ob- secures completely any theoretical . “real” price on the new-car. In all such cases, the price that matters to the buyer is the difference he has to | pay between old and new.. And, as the Toronto financial pa- per concludes, whether this year’s “basic” price of cars is above or be- low last year’s, the truth is most buy- ers will pay more for their 1966 models, More and more Canadians want extra features or accessories, | whatever the additional cost, in the States, Britain-and -the-European— ntinent. = The Javits proposal, however, has aegat tariff reductions over a 90-year period with a $10 million fund ito’ assist industrial countries-with fong-term structural economic prob- ms. It is, at least, indicative of the | OPS nee nO bug Some models, it is estimated, now | come up with 400 options. They in- Zhe germ of a good idea. It calls for. ind -of change that is blowing | | increase the cost of their car by at through the whole Atlantic Commun- for freer trade relations as a de- able objective. : -® Notes Of Uncertainty Since Parliament will not open un- " til January 18, wouldn’t it be helpful if the government issued a revised policy statement on the subject of its medicare program? The details, of course, will be made known when Par- liament meets; but some questions arose during the course of the cam- paign with regard to the general ap- plication of the plan, and there is no reason why these should not be dis- posed of authoritatively in the mean- time. * Will the plan be compulsory, as first outlined, and what assurance does Ottawa have that this will prove agreeable to the provinces? Ontario, for example, is said to have grave res- ervations on this point and, officially at least, favors its own voluntary scheme which was announced some months ago. In Alberta, Premier Manning has been vehement in his opposition to any form of compulsion and has given no indication of a clude not only a range of engines but such exotic items as electric seat warmers, automatic load levelers (for fat passengers”), tilting and-telescop- ing steering wheels, and remote-con- trol trunk locks; With no trouble at all, consumers can order extras that least one-third and that goes for the small models as well. as the block- long luxury yachts that jostle for road space. No doubt there will be some con- sumers who will appreciate the sav- ings that come to them—if they come —curtesy of the Canadian car pro- ducers and the Canada-US. auto agreement. But to the majority of purchasers money ‘obviously seems less important than the latest in com- fort and gagetry. EDITORIAL NOTE | scien e ei reas tial aca | Charlotte Islands have predict- | torial waters be evoked to close t 5 i F 5f I § iii ii Hy eFF igi i i é i i i f* i FRUITS OF VICTORY RUSSIAN TRAWLERS ome _ Territorial Waters Problem In B.C. : Montreal Star The operations of a Russian {the fishermen are demanding fishing fleet 38 trawlers and that the headland to headland 11 factory ships off the Queen principle of determining terri- Justice in a case between Nor- way and the United Kingdom. However, no rules were set down as to its application in part- icular instances —. outside the . | specific case on which judgment | was rendered — and its appli- _cation. depends largely on the degree of acceptance accorded by the world’s maritime nations. Canada has never claimed Queen | | Charlotte Sound as territorial waters. Under legislation enacted last year, Canada created a nine ebly brought forth cries of an the sound-to foreign ships guish from British Columbia The general principle of a base- fishermen. | line running from headland to Claiming that Russian fishing | headland has been widely ac- tactics will‘clean out Queen Cha- | cepted ever since it was decreed tlotte Sound in three months, ‘by the International Court of RUBBING MAY HELP J.Y. writes: Will rubbing the body with alcohol help arthritis by improving the circulation? REPLY The massage, not the alcoho', will improve circulation to the | skin. Symptoms may be im- | proved after the procedure. but | it’ is doubtful whether rubbing Special Claim To Fame Aims Of Industry, Lendea mile fishing zone, contigious, in The borough of Tiverton, Dev- | cause they feared that machines most instances, to its tradition- onshire, which recently célebrat- *Tuadlan hoe yr “al three-mile sovereignty limit, | ed the 60th anniversary of the’! ocx kuitters, mainly in Notting. 2rdtm® #8 in effect off the west granting of its Royal Charter by | hamshire. They went about dis- Talks with eight nations with King James the First, has a guised at night destroying the | traditional fishing rights off cial significance to fame, da new wide-frames on which cut- Canada have been continuing back to the itidustrial revolution | up hose was made, thus under | since late 1968 to determine what in the United Kingdom, which | cutting the ages of the more | eftect new baselines would have | followed the introduction of | skilled craft workers of the day: | on their fishing, and, under an steam power to the world. : Heathcoat walked with many | order-in-council, they are exem- , John, Hea invented the | of his workers to the west cout | pt from the 1964 legislation un- | Wsting of the tissues world’s fifat lace-making mach- | try, where he founded the firm | ti] these talks are coneluded. ing the eyes. iné about 1816, but it was wreck- | which is now world famed for | Rucsia is not involvéd in the overhanging brows that give ed by the Luddite rioters when | textiles. His lace machine open- teiks, but it would appear that | this impression. Ordinary fati- his factory at Lou g hborough, | ed the industrial era for Tiver- | to date her fishing vessels have , Que ¢liminates the sparkle from Le ire, inthe Midlands, | ton, which now boosts many in- j pbeen honori the new limit. | the eyes, but seldom leads to a was stormed. The name Luddit- | dustries, including Stenner Of | Three federal coastal fisheries sunken appearance. es was given to the body of | Tiverton, Ltd., whose saw-mill- | ion vessele are keeping ASPHYXIANT GAS workers who in the early 19th | ing machines can be found oper- | tang on the Russian fleet and century resorted to the destruc- ating in almost every country in tion of machinéry or mills be- | the world. Smoking Lore Stratford Beacon-Herald Are you “restless, nervous, ex- | traits, and cigarette advertise troverted, energetic, thrill-seek- ments to the contrary, men who ing, independent and academic- | smoke are, as a group. he says, ally oriented toward the social more feminine than those who sciences and engineéring’’? don't and are less inclined to operation points up the need for If s0, you probably: smoke too . participate in sports. Those who | interna much as well. | Smoke may be symbolically ts rca 7 VB. : How long does it they are to report eny comp- take to get over carbon moa laints from Canadian captains oxide poisoning? 'to the Deputy Minister of Fish- | Need Fer Agreement If the arrival of the ships points up the necessitv for greater in- | ternational accord on national | territorial and fishing limits, | | the very nature of the Russian | | the outeide...will...atfect..the-ctr—|. i e fi. i ’ | r EF i i | Or perchance you are “purit- | searching for masculinity. Soin conaanat rene | Other Pflaum contentions you e. , 5 may want t tin yo ipe and ofiented toward physical | aeddk tials thouls ate sc i sciences and engineering’ Non-smokers are better mar- Then you probably don't jiage prospects than smokers. smoke at all. _ ‘These at any rate are some of _,, Heavy smokers are more crea- | | the characteristics turned up by : | John Pflaum, a behavioral scien- Among high school and col- | owe : tist at-the University of Wiscon- lege. students, ‘‘smoking reflects | of fish. Teday’s Health Hint— sin, who investigated the person- |a lack of involvement in the | Surely, with the experience When you are tense, walk | alities of smokers and non- scholastic program and an at- | gained in negotiating these var- | about. | smokers. ‘tempt to obtain satisfactions out- | fous accords a general agree- | (Note: All correspondence to | Despite their other admirable | side the school environment.” |ment on the fish and fishing | Dr. Van Dellen should be addres- | : ; could be reached that would | sed to: Dr. Theodore Van Detien, | ‘ | fuarantee all-nations a continu-. care of Chicago Tribune, Chic- | sumed that it had ‘‘solved’’ the More Jobless Ivans ing harvest 260, Tino | Milwaukee Journal " a _ | | In° Stalin’s time, the Soviet , problem of unemployment which Safety Before Fashion | | Unio publicly and privately as | has so often plagued the capital- ' Ottawa Citizen , | -|towns during a violent Why, asks an exchange, when the — privacy of every other voter is pro- tected, should the “service vote” be singled out and debated across the | land? it takes time to tally the vote of ser- vicemen around the globe; it takes ‘time to distribute the. figures to home constituencies. But why not telescope The authorities explain that | e | 4etely destroyed by fire of un- impact of the postwar baby low-heeled | known origin at an early hour. | boom, with more potential work- | the procedure? Why not use advanced © polls and then get the results to the servicemen’s own constituencies for inclusion. in the gen era! totals on election day? Impossible? Nonsense. The Americans have been doirg-it change of mind in this regard. Mr. ' for years. ~ \ =e - of the Montague sub-division of anization and automation and | geant Cooper's A subject that may be worth Ssary in an emergency. But he is the effect of women | may be ~" & tentieels poe. high-heeled shoes on ject by the Ontario department | ; of transport could decide this | | question. If it is learned. that. Sergeant Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) (November 17, 1940) Roaring guns and shells rocked channel. coast -duel_be- |. tween German and British long.| had range gune across the Dover Strait. The cannonedi-z frl- Cooper of the police force, | Cooper is right, an education shoes red campaign should be started to ; should persuade women to wear low- cities — by the authorities fo find ia sturdy shoes when driv- . over the last | Sergeant Cooper says that Women drivers have a great joblessne=s in wears i um towns rang- 3% and 30 per cent Dewspaper Izvestia out strongly for reviv- the old labor exchanges. Not because here is unemployment. | Oh, no! It's just that more and Nash, of the | more workers find themselves staff | waiting weeks, even months, be- tween jobs. after a pleasant weekend leave Labor exchanges, of course, provide the same kind of job in- | formation and placement ser. Met juce i < > > Ht can be taken for granted \that they would co-operate if |this question was | gan that could carry much ap peal. CIVIL WAR CONTINUES j KAMPALA, Uganda (AP)— | reliable South Sudan | a ! Commercial Road was comp that Russia. too. 4 Sle al li Ste | the effects of increasing mech- | study to find out Bz ° » The regular ‘monthly meeting i if the CWL was held at the home of movement into cities. Recent re- | well-founded. At first glance. they be, for it stands to reason 3 Pe gene pe on Sun- | vision of the:school program wil! th twenty-two mem cyt the standard education f present. The meeting op- 41-4, 19 eee TOT | high-heeled, long-toed shoes | with the league prayer led | 41-0 10 years, increasing the not enable a driver to | president, Mrs. F. L. | Supply of young people available ‘pring quite as much pressu ' | for the job market. \a brake pedal as might be nece — i a Coyle. acc a negate Oe YORE i Smith NOTES BY THE WAY trouble with living it up) A have to live it down = that County 3 A 2 i b : H ; i Fi i ; rf ge as ; i Well Entrenched By Harold Morrison C Press Staff Writer Lacking arms and experience, | up their pedple to re. against the outlawed lan Though the Negroes have a % - to - 1 advantage over the whites in numbers, they have Ro Modern. weapons. While a Hungarian news agency maintains that guerrilla has broken out In Rho- more obvious fact is that Smith and his well-armed forces have the situation well control. Nevertheless, the anger ex- pressed by many of the Negro- African countries over the white Smith government's seiz- wre of independence from Brit- ain—is-expected-to—be transiated into some form of violence. What then will Britain do? The British government main- ns that despite the labels of ‘rebel” and “‘traitor’’ stamped the Smith regime, Rhodesia is a British responsibility only the British government determine its future. Tt has argued that force is not the answer to the current crisis a i = having trouble | | replaced by & moderate white group which would agree to re- | turn to colonial status, prepar- jing for gradual moves towards government 2 2 eek : 4 forced out™ | majority wpe ; This may wishful ¢hinking-” The applied sanctions, on sugar | and tobacco, are not by them. selyes likely to destroy the | Smith regime. Not all countries | are 'ganctions, thus assuring Smith /of some income iff less lucrative than before. The British government also has called on Rhodesian eivil servants.” soldiers and police to remain loyal to the Queen. But | there is no prospect of physical | protection forthose who may | want to remain loyal; the gov. 'ernor, the Queen's representa- | tive in Salisbury, has no troops. - Perhaps the only reason Brit- ain would consider sending troops would be to halt an il | legal invasion; an attempt by ‘foreigners to push Smith out without the. approval of the Queen or the United Netions. find itself fighting in defence of Smith's supporters. - Treating Trotsky Better — Christian Science Monitor The Communist nations have | astrict system of hierarchy. Furthermore, they have set and stylized ways to show just where each official stands on the lad- der’s ae Who stands where on the tfemlin reviewing stand? Whose picture is biggest in the May Day parade? Whose speech is cheered longest at the party congress? These and other tricke—which étrike the rest of | the world as slightly ridiculous —help give the latest line-up in the power structure. , where those in favor are concerned, this line- up often shifts from year to year. But in the Soviet Union, when one is dealing with the historic enemies of the regime, the top spot always has been occupied by one man; Leon ; FORCES ! . will be Or you may _- WANTED MEN | PROUD TO WEAR THE QUEEN'S UNIFORM! PROUD TO SERVE THEIR COUNTRY ! PROUD TO BE MEMBERS OF THE CANADIAN A Recruiting Team RCAF ASSOCIATION SUMMERSIDE Wednesday 17th TL A.M. - QUEEN CHARLOTTE " ARMOURY . P.O. BOX 1148 PRONE 892 892-2611 | A close collaborator of Lenin's | a brilliant organizer of the young | Red Army, a powerful speaker and writer, and Stalin's potential rival, Trotsky Co | the arch villan in Stallinist Rus- sia’s black book. | Now, however, the Soviet De- | fense Ministry’s own newspaper j has called for @ more objectve | view of Trotsky. This does not mean rehabilitation—as yet. But | te is another and one ef the | most important—moves. en be- haif of historical accuracy in Russia. | Showly the oki idea of pure white and pure black is yielding. In its place, happily, there is a growing tendency to look at | facts as they are. This is pro- gress. at the 6 P.M. contact the P.£.I. Se etiieeaiaiiadianel rn a arn a ne