6111: (611mm “Wm Prim. EdWIrd llllIMl len no De! WJ. mum, 'ublilhv Iunuh hwh Inc-an Editor 'UNIIM "my wul. my moman (uh-pt u.» n u 155 Prlnes sum I lid Funk Walk-l Edi . g Sen/ire) Volume, 425 Univ-uny Av. Imam 3-55“; Mame-l, 6A0 Cllhun so... Univcrllty 6-5942, Western all i w“: Godwin s"... Vanreuvsv lMA mm. bev Canadian Dally NewspIp-v Publinhun Anna-nun ind lh- Can-dis" Mn nu onus-h rm: . cnclunvely enmim m vb. .u. tsv Incub- lhu an m u. «h. Ioul Ilsz um 1|;th u. republication of man dupmhe. her-In Illa resent-d Subxrvipllun mu Nov m... as: per met by camel slim . y... by mail u. mu mum. ml nu. um Invited by mm. um . y... a" Island and or 52009 poi Ila-when bums- lrullh chl. y... in . In manwenih. Nov am. 7: 9... single my Member Audit Bureau at Clllullllflfl nor: s‘sfiilnfiiv, sifiafi'a‘n 14, ion. Cocksureness Not Enough A Canadian Press report yester— day told of the “massive pressure" which is being brought to bear upon the Federal Government. by insur- ance and trust companies, against the Government‘s proposed nlltiollal contributory pensions plan. in many cases, however, the pressure seems to be directed towards delaying ’the plan until it has been subjected to is searching scrutiny. The federal— provincial conference on the sub- ject this week was held in camera. and it is hard for the general public to judge, in the circumstances. how far the demand for further inquiry is justified. In the meantime, however, we note that it is not the i . rance and trust companies alone that are pressing for delay The Canadian Welfare Council has presented a sobering brief to the Government on the subject, in which it says that it can neither support nor reie u the plan until it has undergone a more detailed public examination than has yet been undertaken. Pro- posing that a study be instituted by a joint parliamentary committee, the Council hrief says: “In view of the complexity of any contributory program, of its inevitable implications for other components in Canada‘s security system. and of the importance of full collaboration between federal and provincial governments in any further development of this system, the Council believes that this recom- mendation is sound." According to Health Minister LaMarsh. a lot of misstatements have been made for the purpose of “killing” the plan. She added that these misstatements had been clear- ed up at this week's conference. nnd public opinions of "certain people" had been demonstrated to be “inexpert nr without care for the truth." This may he so, but here again the public is in no position to judge. Surely we have a right to know how a plan that will be claiming three billion dollars a year by 1975 will be financed, and how it will fit in with other basic welfare needs as well as with the demands of na- tional health, of education and other expanding obligations of gov~ ernment in the years to come. Gov. ernment cocksureness on the sub- ject is not enough. There seems no reason in the world why every de- tail of the proposed legislation shouldn't be subjected to the clos- est public inquiry before Parliament is asked to enact It. On Year-Round Basis The increase of nearly 100 students over last year's enrolment It Prince of Wales College presents I problem that is common to most educational institutions across the cum. And it is not something that can be solved by temporary mmures, for it is likely to get more Ind more serious as time goes on. The forecast now is that in the m dude, to keep pace with ris- ing enrolments, college Ind univer- Ilw Militias in Canada will have h'bs doubled. ' New university construction now nurly £100 million I year, a federal-government grants to charities coma in about $25 mil- jnh. How are the increasing de- to b. not without heavier rule- on the Wye"? ’l'hc prob- . is not peculiar to Canada, a! : the [1.5. Office of Educa- ‘flnns thlt American colleges up h M m: :23 billion ‘ l on new Mlitiss between now and 1975. In the United States. howevm’. an attempt is being made to meet the related problems of mounting demands and mounting costs by put- ting colleges on a year—round basis. Fuller utilization of teachers and colleges in summer is the aim, and in the coming academic year at least 70 US. universities will go on year-round operation. The largest US. school, the University of Cali- fornia with a winter enrolment of 58,000 students on seven campuses, will switch to the year-round setup in “165-66. Year—round operation has the disadvantage that it would penalize students who need to or want to take summer jobs. or who simply want to vacation in the summer months. But it would not seem impossible for Canadian univerSitles to attract a large number of students to regu— lalr courses through this period. One inducement, suggests the Chat- ham Daily News, might be a sub- stantial reduction in fees for the summer term, with the lost reven- lies charged back on the fees of students who attended only in the conventional school yearl We don't know how that would work out. but at least it‘s an idea. And ideas to meet the problem of mounting university costs are cer- tainly needed. An Honored Guest It is fitting that Miss Rosemary Manister. the charming young lady who bears the envied title of dairy queen of England and Wales. should he our guest of honor at this time and that she should be spending four days in Prince Edward Island in the course of her Canadian tour. Where else in Canada will she find more dairy-minded people. see finer dairy cattle or converse with more enthusiastic or more success- ful practitioners in this important phase of farm production? Miss Manister's schedule is s crowded one. hilt we trust that she will have time for relaxation and enjoyment as well. Her tour will furnish her with much valuable knowledge of the operation of the dairy industry throughout Canada, but it will serve another important purpose as well. it will help to draw attention to the problems of the industry and its importance to our national ecnnomy—to the contribu— tion it makes to a desirable way of life as well as the money it brings in. the employment it provides and the many subsidiary industries it supports. Miss Munisier's tour will be a sort of missionary visitation to some parts of the country. where the prob- lems of dairying are but little under- stood and its importance greatly underestimated. Here, of course. she is among folk of the true faith. We are hoping that her stay in our midst will help her in carrying her message to the unconverted, and that when she returns home she will have a specially warm place in her heart for the welcome she is being givenland the new friends she is making in this banner dairy province EDITORIAL Nous According to a health depart- ment report, average levels of long- lived radioactive fallout r s n c h e d record heights in Canada during June but were still within “accept- able limits". Levels of short-lived radioactive materials dropped sharp. ly, some of them so much they could hardly be measured. The report also ssys that the June level of stron» tium-90 was well above May and would remain high in July and per- haps August. It predicts I decline in the fall and winter months if there are no more nuclear tests. o The split in the Social Credit ranks will mean that, there are now five parties in the House of Com— mons. And, as the Montreal Gazette suggests. support from any one of these would be enough to uphold the Liberal Government in any want of confidence vote. The fact that Mr. Pearson may now hope for support from any one of five quarters, in- stead of four, may possibly increase his chances of indefinite survivsl. And this may be all the more likely when the two halves of the old So- cial Credit Party have even less in- clination for timing I general elect« ion than they did when they were together. PUNCH AND JUDY BRITISH COMMENTARY Tensions Mounting In South East Asia n! United Kill For the lime beins the heat l seems to have gone out oi rela- l tions between the Western Pow- i an and the Soviet Bloc. There is 1 hope that the recent test ban. agreement can be the spring- 1 board in s series of further sd- - today n being deliberately lo- nguch In “In lmm promotinl vsncel until. in borrow a phrase meuled from outside, or magni- . discord and hmxhlened tension from the United sum Secre- i my menu, Mr. oeeh Rusk_ i "eminence replaces terror and hopes take: over n-mn delvnlr". Fundamental to um detenie l Icemsio the u . tacit agreement by both slam to do i their best to dump down the tens sions inevitably created by such sources or conflict as the eel-uh IituIllon. Europe ll. of course. the min l mu of armed conirontat‘ion be- tween the two great power blocs. But E u rape. the powder her which has already embroiled mnuklml in m world-wide cou- nicu in the present century. ll not; than days, the only danger l spa. it was a cri5l5 in the Western hemlsl‘lhere which brought the world to the edge of nuclear war last year. And it wu~n conflict ‘ in Asia um led to the last [rest isnd wsr some 12 years Igo. consume MEMORY The memory oi Karel is s wberinl one or whoever cou- templlles the troubled picture limeth by South am Alll In dIy. Potential danger luau .. bound in the region. There are milieu of every kind—term» . ill disputes u between Thailand u cu in: religious h-uubi- e», In spectacularly and regret. ably highlighlcd by recent news from South Vietnam: and mehi icui conflicts us in divid- ed Vietnam unu unhappy Laos. Recently - pouhunl source of disturbance —lndouesi|'s claim hi West Irilu, the western hall of the him of New Guinea .— wm removed by u settlement which averted . threatened smi- ed conflict in the nlck oi time. Removed uuly to be promptly and disappointingly replaced by the leman u-luuu irom til \- surprising hostility with which 9 newly emerging Federation of Malaysir is being [reeled its two neighbours —esveclully by lndonesil. names or nisconn so long as men and nation] have independent minds ma wills, so long will dislflreemenl arise between them. ha Eu'opel win the history of hi. uuu wrr~torn continent bev hind him, h in my position no condemn Asians [or disnzreelul .--_.. .1 l SIPHMIEI. CLOUD! September clouds In [my Ind silll‘ 3' rheh 'mmeumu rushing o‘Ir . gs the phln, Then dislole in mill. Ind form IlIln. September clouds are llkI the b Congregstlnl with [Irwdl Will. They swoop talcum, part and rheu' muw soulthrds iluuugh tho lb. meembor clouds m whim They'qu the time: of summer flown. Now while and lilhllomu upo- u . Now nlind lln Itnnu, lluy [rm .1... memhmmum mm...“ m, m mm MIAMIAIIIIIII M. Inflow-Ilium. all Winter's ntoryl —'lI.I-m omit myth-tsuqu I don lulorrnatlua Service among themselves. or In profess astonishment at the spectacle. But every man has a rim to condemn those who deliberately luu the flames oi discord. Most l at the trouble in South East Alli i tied and lumth by extern .l l interference South Vietn - m l Ind Lam are cases in paint. ‘ It should not be lorgolten that l the 9mm. conflict in S o u l. h Vietnam between the Govern- meat and the Buddhisll ll I I been preceded by a three- year clmpaign oi armed terrorism organized from the Communist rlh oi the enuniry and aimed It disrupting the machinery of , drnillislrntim: Ind the econom- in advance In which South Vieb ‘ nIm had begun to outstrip hcr Communist nelzhbo r. The (acts ul this were put on motif in I report lash June last year by the intern. tionI] Commission in Supervis on and Control. it is this which has strrined to breakilll Point . the labric at 50cm! Ind political tolerance in the country. Similarly the hand of Hanoi has thlvancd all Iltt‘mpis to sel ' up a stable and unified Idminll- lullon in Laws. in esch use he- hind Hanoi lips the long arm of Communist Chins. l It ll Demons silnllchul flIIl such opposition to the MIle Prolect rl hIl come from with- ‘ in the iedcrsting territories i No "Secrel’ Another worthless csncEl‘ cure’ appears to have been unmasked by the Innouncement by the United sum Food mu Drug Aumlulnnhuh um Ihe ennui. verstIl drill Krehlozen has been louus ineliective Ind srosslv overpriced. CIucer mun—m have b e e u paying Krebloxelu dhunvem d di lbuuu, Dr. Slevsn Dur- nvlc. . "donltion" of mo hr I um containing one one-hundred» mum-hath- or - mm or . sub stance that an be bought coin- mercislly for mm cent I Srsrn, nuwum, the price would be chum-term it Dr. Durovlc's um: were useful. For more than a men yun. the Kreblozen mu Imversy rIged in medics! circl- es and even in the hulh of Can- greu .. Dr. Dumlc refund to disclose his drua's hue lacuna. runuuu have been luau: by on llentl desperate for reilei: now Dr. Dumlc faces possible crim- MIMI n I century no a wood~ box w I mullallhl IflIir in I llyur‘oldl’r'l life. A lId with two or three conlclentloul Ill‘ 04H evollhull! IIIer It I wII e. at M keep the boxes Illi- edth la "Mute {III com— meat, Many nerd Ill'lnl in the lilo en—Ild lmr—uud n Quebec healers and in II“. nickel-trimmed plrlor e Illlnl. heu- mo- ins a .m- at urn-u: fever. m- muu the solid, pleMIlI buns with Miner ILYIDI ui wall up piclmu lroln the l cannula. ll didn't MIA I l Ill Illi- lud', nor did It decline lh 0 work. Idler "mm Wild Mk. mlph or yllluw birth for luk- tnl, and many “wives hId cm, there I one an- lle "Ill IV in! aver-ally on I snumy. .- mom w . a (am-um”, IIIIIns cookies. (Iris. turnovers Ir a no unsun Free Pun Lament For The Woodbox themselves. has come lrom u- Ireme left-wing elrmrnis, muln~ iy Chinese. UNDERMINING OPPOSITION China may lee! um she has within the counlrlu n! S o u t h East Asia. But it is hard in see why lend- erl ul other Asl’u countries In W Io ready to ncur the dangers oi luslabillty and disorder resorting to exlremr measures end press- ing their disagreelrenls their neighbours to the limit Certainly the repression l the Bndt‘llisls m smuh Vietnam can benefit only the l'xl ! r n I l enemies oi lhul unul'lry and us Governmcnl. Nor can Indonesia hope in the ions run to prom from attempt- to stir up bmulu Ind bitterness Imnug the people of tin MI!“- hp tcr'itorles as Malaysia by "lung Malay Igsinlt Mull For the Indonesian lcfiter de< liberltcly to stir up tension [or what are, after all. very margin. Ii nItlonIl ends, Ll surely thI acme of shorlslzhud leadership. Only Communist China could profit 2nd, in the prnerss, lndun» l esin would be the loser. The p" "It 'vi‘slun in South as! Asia does not only "if-131‘ . en the tranquillity amt prrsper- l ity of the ares. n cuuld also. conceiveoly. become I tllrelt In world peace, ’ Remedies lnsl Prosecution. Layman who are In nu posi- tion to assess the worth hi any alleged cure lor any ailment should remember one main truth. There has bevcr been I "secret" cure lor my mum. Every reputable scientist or doc- tur who has made A genuine can» tributlon to medicine. such is so Frederick a-uuuz with in- suiin. and so Alexnnder Flem lug wilh penicillin. immediately disclosed the rhemicIl nature or ihell‘ discoveries and mutual upon lnmmnie tests tn hum their worth. Dr. Duruvlc and his snulllfll’, Dr. Andrew ivy. have uni m el these hsslc requirements, uul therefore were lulDect in their nuvucuoy or Kreblnen. And the ml mudy ls um cancer vic tim- who honed no be cured by this substance Ivoidsd uuuveu clonal sud time-tested that-pies which would have heipe mluy ul them. land lute Woodbolmiiller could gener- ally MI I pocket or two Ind Eel seeded nullfllhlneut wilhout be< GEMINI. The “VH1. room Woodhull wln'l qulle In llllllwnl. for lhe parlor hum burnld is Is. knot- iy chunks mu could m be will. Int each III: afternoon when I boy ruck“ home from school and changed lo lam clothes. he knelt! the box must be fllld with the bi. pieces. bvses hm mostly rille poured mm. long with huh our fall shoes buffalo robes Ind bed wan-non we wouldn't Mum in Ill! dI of woodlhefls Ind WM Mmlnl suiv lull in wish M Ilolll with I! the wonder- of modern Irisulllle Iivlnl. we could reel”!!! "I. sense of lecurlly Ind lIrlIlly unily "III yrIvIuId In the dIyI Wh II woodbom were nail ui living. A Imam noon rum (mum—chihu- Commlllln Ilfllorlllel hI I launch: a mum“; cub pols-l um luluu my —I IIVMKI‘IIIM II m m u Chlhn The Communist uflv b'a My uld hull found-y "all s Thunderbolts Take Toll I! Dr. Me I. VII Dellel IthIIbeehIIidLhIthloW persons the annually in the Unit» Id sales from lightning hll “(In seems I bit hill: even tbwsh thunderstorm: rc corn- lnnn in this cmlntl'y. August Ind September arc the worst mon» m for (Millet. pol!th be cause more purple Ire in th a country, out plIylnz (oil, or en- iuylu; e shore. Most of u. fear thunder- storms but not enough to not: playing golf or minus in s hull. imme' artillery conform: to the u l at electricity Illd the limb-m goes [ram one cloud to another or from a cloud to the cum. The highest proiec» tlon is struck which. for me loll- er. is likely in be him-ell. in Id- dltion. in: steel shInod club emu. . dIugsrous lilhtluns rum; in swimming may be Izsrdaul because water and conductor sud lith mu. can charge . iIrge am, it I nowu In [a up the hulumz line and crest: a greater disturbance than the infant s prle or doing. Esther: should avoid huddllns undel- bzsch umbrellas, A dense forest. offers promo tion out of doors. Avoid - lone lrec because the bull may Jump iron: the trunk to you. A grove of mu siiord mm more cnnductnrs tn the ground a u a mere ll leu Ell-nee of being hit miles: you Ilaud u u d n r the mint m. Thunderbolts Ire conducted along the outside and not the in- side of I hulldlnl. For this rem Inn. I large men] or mama (runs bulldllll ll salesl. follow» in turn by a dwelling protect ed lghlllst electrical storms. large unprotected bqulnls. Ind lmIll unprotected b II l l d lull. ouu-r good places Ire a cave, or s depression in In: lround. and the loo: of I sleep cilfi. An In- tomohlle ll Illa: ll mllht he dIngel-ous In ve in a norm hecIIIse II! poor Vlslblllly I lld wet pavements but there ll ho hum in stopping Illd remIlnlnl In the car. Llflblnlnl is the lust of Ill causes of lIIIlltlu on the rum, When indoors during th e u pyrotechnics. try to avoid w...» daws. “replaces. stoves, and other metal objects such us link. rIdintnrs. washing mach- inns, and dishwashers. lurulluan muons a. , writes: l the had my- ruiditis um comes and an“ since last summer. 1 Luke pill: but would iike to know it this disorder in curable? or:er Thymdllig can be stubborn and resistant to the best treat» ment. The Intlbibticl nr Idre- nIl sernids, such as rofltwne. usually Ire prescribed. Now and then lhyroldltls is slsoclIted E. F. s writes: ls epilepsy the some as convulsions? LY No. Epileptirs with grand ms] seizures have convulsions, lu col-tun in those with petit mil. who have blackout spells. Cuu- vuisions Mcur also in brain lum- ors, hum-ten. Infections. and oth- er cerebrovascular disease: and conditions. Focus AND roncarULNEss w. c. it. writes: lam u nder «i Ind have not dissipated but lack Are there my ioods n m-u can est in slrenllll- en his virility? REP]. His wife's cooking. war acx Mrs. M. writes: How is wry neck in an infant treated? REPLY when Surgery h reuulred Ilretch- must‘le relsxlnta Ind ing do not correct the [euro or shortened neck muscle. Ilwlplm M baled bun» ms: In uh wfleI sq III-(II D no A s OTIA Gin-duh Ocean Playground OTES BY THE WAY “you III’I qul 1.! all mnloheuwl you-relay» in: pntend you In IIlklIIl tn lllm—M'II‘ nu- Mn Wc‘d II bl]:ka If M II” people wfilllldn'l WIIh it'll clfl and pin picnics exact when rain ll desperately needed Chatham News. It VII FlIIHm‘I lint win to the m. “Wh tdo you think u! the Inlma‘. inquired UnclI Horace, After a critical hum- Lion of In. exhibit the buy ro- liled, "I think the Ins-loo and the elephant muuhl chmu ulll."—Glll Reporter. We nevlr nl flur [In-flu but we can' marine it would be Illy more thrilllll lhII clbchlfll live bille hi I pop bottle. We um three mu nun mi in; that apart the our kldl were cItclIllIl the In" bait. it some time will! no lime: and no vsll ovIr your lace. You misht n: I thrill.— M n Advertiser. ! blooms MM Ilflv Hod with their lot after they'v- buul s hIppy home on it.—Chsl- lulu News. "Know thy-all!" Inn lbs use—- but don‘t so mound tell- llll sverybody about it. —W|ud- m star, AI Mull“ II I ma III. mIHlII MI mm thluklnl in will help an dict-tin] to her. —FlnlnciIl Poll. Th NIvIl HID!” officer III- Id nu yo recruit» "And how do“ Mr new unllorm lit?" " c "teller fltl line." he re- pllId. "But the knuan teem I lltfleloole around the .m- piu.‘ ncouver sun. 'I'III lull! M tbs poor A H- cIn worker ll pllled by RuIIlIn props. u. The American. tiny lIlmnl. n in mm who me: will“ for five days. spends Ills weekend blullu I bolt slung gin hlgwa.—S¢. Catherine! A Threat To Malaysia I] Iol'ls Candi-n Pro- President Sultana oi luao.‘ nesiI. who bu persistently triad to block the Formation of th' federation of MIIIyIiI. III: in- dicaiel he will continue to harass the new Commonwealth uslion Ilier ill inauguration Moi-m. Sukarno was largely "spon- Iible for the delay in the hrmIl birth of the new independe country when he Ind llle Philip pines lulled for I Unlind NI- tlons survey to decide whethIr tho W12 of North Borneo and Sarawak Ictlu wanted In no. Mslayn and Singapore in I federation. And as the dual details were worked but ill KIIILI laminar. MIlIyI. on the eve of thI Dmlnmflou oi M . Bu. harm: cums all! with I threat that lndnnfllln armed lanes will remllll n I "hllheli. possible alert." He said Indonesia is Ilrellllh- enins 1 border delences ll 3mm loll!!th what in] been Our Yesterda s (From Ills Gulrdllu Hui TWENTY . FIVE vans mo (September 14. ms) Among the cblnus hi the m. uily of Lhe Mann: “him An- deny this year as announced by Headmaster Rnls Flemington was the appointment of Cl“ anulum of rum'. Mills. no, la the mu of the sen lnr school to succeed stew-rt wu. lumu who resigned to accept. the position 0: Principal of Ty n 2 Valley High School. rm Vol. 12!. r Stewart MacNutt at the leach- ing stall at Rutheny Cellulite hool. Rmhel . , left em Ierday to resume hl lilies .1. (er spending his vacation with his parents. Mliol' u. and Mrs. MscNutl. Brighton. run limos AGO (September u. low 7 e Anglican Yuuug People held their eighth muu-l ouu ery v.p. cunlercucu It Elm! Kingston. Cup-mi uver lbs LIbnr Day wee e . "I III I record attendance with almost every parish represented. A large [romp oi young hir- men attached to the Mir m- lion. Summernde, spent snub day in Charlottetown. They be» cupicd most ol their morning time in 2 visit to the Cuuledeu uuuu Chlmbu, where . mm with obvious interest the story of the . told by Colmisliondre Ruben Craig. ; gr .. v. b‘iowf». ENJOY MOTORINO nun-“nun Miller! M Writer described by In Indonulul ot- flclsl l lumulun incidcnll on the border with Sum-k. CHANGED snuo UN surv delayed the proclamalion of Malaysia tom Au; )1 to Sept. 16. u mm m up men indonelis Ind ihe rhlllpullm—whu had upon-ed ellIbliIhmeIt oi changed duh st they would welcome it would be acceptable to people of the two British colon- I e . rhu nine-man UN mission has completed its repori, which indium loo per cent at the population of North Borneo and 75 per cent or the populltion of SIrIwIk favor mun-um: oi the “lien on. Britain did not stand in ibe way of l UN survey but BritIln is committed the delence oi Mnlaylll Iller in birth and therefor- would bl 3 us into a showdown will: sukmo lho‘uld Indonesia inur- fere with the new slate. it is doubqu ludunesll will consider invading North Borneo lei-runne- but Sukarno may resort to : guerrilla camp-in launched h-om lndonellln soil. mumuoumus‘r' nor in 1901. lhu man: Indonesian is!" plul Ind Sukarnn': govern- ment salad the opportunity In further advance the Iccnlstion. However, Premier Tunlm Ab- Iol RIhmIII. one of the men behind the federation hu promised thlt MIlIyslI will h! a “bIstioll ol democracy Ind I bulwark Ilalnll communism.“ Indonesia. with a population Inpmchilu 100.000.0011. cannot hllme her oppositlnn to Malay- III on fear; the new federation will comm of I mere 11.000. peopiet Dublin heavy economic aid from the Soviet Union Ind the Uniled sum, ludonelll poten- tially one at the world's richest — I been plagued y w nonllc dlfllcultlel since it gained sovereignty iron the Dulch in law. Neither the v.5. nor In! Soviet Union wish“ in res M Iysil born inln violence and Suhln‘m InIy think twine beiors munching s suerilla campalxn —” only to preserve the flow a! iorelzn lid. The 2 FLVIIIE llll‘l'GllMMl : RESTAURANT "Your Island Steals House" .. COME TO NOVA SCOTIA FOR A LIGHT HEARTED FLlNG If you're looking for new horilons, jump into your car and come over to Nova Scolis. You can drive along mole than 3,000 miles of paved highway. with lolnclllinl new in lift your spirits at almost every turn of the load—Ind the swcelest music in the whole sunny symphony is the fact that you're never more than so miles from the tan; and magic ofthe m.‘ “r9”.