1 credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reviers St: and also to the loca! news published hereon All Giz right of republication of. special dispatches here GF. im also reserved. Subscription rate } Not over 40¢ per week by carrier at $12.00-e-y@er by mail on rural routes and aeas ~~ =— not serviced by carrier $15.00 @ year off island and UK. $2000 per _° year in US. and elsewhere outside Britss Com monwea'th ? Not over ?e «noe cory m Member Audit Bureau of ¢ ation Ww “The strongest memory is weaker e than the aveakest ink” 1. PAGE 4 FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1965. wi reeemaeenenn oo . . " " Poor Diplomacy. = One of Mr. Diefenbaker's alleged at shortcomings in power was his -in- - ability to get along smoothly .with St Washington. With a diplomat of Mr.* in Pearson's experience it was expected v4 that the case would be otherwise. But “sh he sustained a humiliating snub when oe President Johnson refused to approve ti: publication—in- teat or sm nary < form—of his letter to Canada request- " ing civil aid for South Viet Nam | e Mr. Johnson wrote to Canada‘ and . a number of other countries on July e} 26 and there was some political a ‘excitement when Mr. Pearson, at a st. press conference. gave an ambiguous ™ ~~ answer to a question which appeared e to mean that the United States was asking that Canadian troops join the * war. This was at once denied by ‘ External Affairs Minister Martin who TE said there had heen no-l S- request ¢ for military aid. Mr. Pearson promis- « ed to clear up the confusion by~re- a: questing publication of Mr. Johnson's ss letter and his renly, which was sent x 3 on. Aug...5.. ‘ : i G Mr. Johnson was-teluctant-to per- * -A mit publication of the letters, because ¢ __it would put him under pressure to. 7 publish the letters he had sent to : other governments. But Mr. Pearson ° voiced the hope—publicly—that the 4 Presidfent would agree to publication T of the relevant paragraphs of his July t letter. and to a press statement sum- 7 marwing the correspondence. Mfr. or Johnson issued a flat no to both these ; B sucgestions : See ; ‘The Prime Minister then made it € clear that Canada will not scnd troops _| : to South Viet Nam, but it seems that : Canadians are not to know whether the U.S. requested such action or not. 4 : , ‘ J Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancex, Publisher Wellece Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor ! Published every week day morning (excep! Sum! day and statutory helidays) et 1465 Prince Street. Charlottetown P.E.|.. by Thoms Newspapers itd Branch offices at ‘Summersidé a Atberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspaners Advertising Services Toronto 4267 University Ave Empire 3-8894 Montreal 440 Cathcart Street. Uni ntego ague. versity 65942. Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver MA 7037 Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and ihe Canadian Press. The Cagadian Press is exciusively entitied to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches in tha paper ter a “shrewdly drafted docu- ment which could be read either wa)’ without-making a formal-issue of the question or military contribu- ‘tion In which case it was expected to be handled with more diplomacy than either Mr. Pearson or Mr. Mar- fin showed in their statements. The fact that they gave it different inter- was Father William’s Doubts “Tt isn’t Shayne and Wuster,’’’said the young man patiently to his opin- ionated sire. “It's Wayne and Shuster. I've explained it OVer and over -and i » SO themselves é &< 4. ¥ much—and I wouldn't even know what their mames are” It just doesn’t make ‘sense. There's something more behind it, you may depend.” “It's all in your -mind.” sighed the young man. “FEvervbody § says they're Wayne and Shuster. They say You can go and -ask them. and get their autographs .to prove it, if you like.” “Of course thev'd sav that.” said Father William, “1f they were pass- ing themselves off for what they ain't. They're in the plot too. But did Mayor Cox think of fingerprint. ing then’? before he gave them those parchments. and checking them with the fingerprints of Shayne and Wus ter which ought to be around some- where? Did he take any precautions - at all before taking them at thetr face value the wav he did? There's too much carelessness in high places these davs. These fellows might be Russian spies for all we know, usurp- ing the roles of the men I'm talking about, who might be Iving bound and gagged somewhere, or in jail maybe, and nobody giving them a thought. You’ see it happening every day on TV. or night rather." “Why don't vou lav for them on the Gold (up and Saucer Parade to- day, and tell them off if you think that’ said the vouth disgustedly. “Tl! be watching them, don’t vou fear,’ replied his sire. “I wouldn't miss the big parade for anvthing, anyway. And it could be. of course, that they ARE Shayne and Wuster in disguise. for some valid reason that hasn't’ occurred to me; in which case they're on_our side,and it wouldn't do for me to make a scene. Well, that’s a thought’ Off to vour chores now, boy, and let ifte figure this angle out by myself. I'll get to the bottom of it, if it’s the last thing T do.” Disturbing Disparity Canadians have many things for. which they can be proud, but car driving ability_isn't_one of them. By U.S. standards. at least. Acéording to the Ontario Safety League. 4.655 people were killed in 1964 on Cana- dian roads, giving a mileage death rate (ntimber of. persons killed per 100 mulion vehicle-miles) of 9.2. The United States rate was 5.7. To put it another way, says the, League: If Canadians drove as safely as U.S. drivers, the 1964 saving would have been about: 1.800 lives spared, wee HOW LONG WILL IT LAST? OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Would a French - Canada or- jented Jaberal Government from 1965 taz1970 -wreck the Liberal Party? Would it wreck Can- ada’ Could such”a government win any seats at all in the nine English- speaking provinces” {in 1970” Would there even be nine English. speaking provinces by 1970” When would Ontario—de- flagged, overtaxed and sold out —break away? When would BC declare itself an independent monarchy’ within the .Common- wealth? When would southern New Brunswick secede and join | Maine? mares which haunt the more re- sponsible Liberals here: others. wake up “screaming with terror at the prospect that an alert + These questions. are the -night-. so assure themselves of power for another five years. Let's forget statesmanship, our job is” only to, make sure our. employ- ‘ers win the next election,”’ add- ed the paid organizers and ad- “men of the Liberal Party back- rooms. This attitude is based on their _‘assessnient of thé! very delicate balance of public coolness to- wards both Pearson and Diefen- baker. They argue that, while neither Liberals nor Conserva- tives could win a majority of the votes across Canada. the three-way split of the anti- gov- «eTnment__vote,.. coupled |. wit h- Liberal services rendered to the province of Quebec, would enable them to win just enough seats to command a small ma- 52.000 pérsonal injuries and econo- | Conservative Party, faced with jority in the Commons. | mic loss of $126 million avoided. These are startling figures. yet their publication doesn't seem to have caused a ripple: How smugger can we get than to accept with complacency the fact that traffic.is nearly twice as deadly in Canada.-as it is in, the ighboring-republic?———— Do we accept this as evidence that | Lars. drivers must be. near-perfect? | We. .shouldn’t. U.S. safety officials Pretations still needs explaining. im | constantly remind the public that -most_traffic_accident are avoidable; - that the great ‘bulk of the traffic | slaughter results from driver failure | —from bad driving, in short. Which accentuates still:more the need for The main reason for the discrep- ancy, according to Fred H. Ellis, gen- | eral manager of the Ontario organi- | zation; is that very few Canadians are correctly taught to drive. In the - United States: half the high schools you don’t seem to understand. They're | have been giving. driver-education the ones that got honoréd at Wednes- day's official ceremony by being courses for decades past, and a large | proportion of drivers are thoroughly made freemen of the city. That's what——prepared-for their responsibilities at the parchment scrolls say and that’s —what-Mavor_Cox-said_when-he-caHed— them two of Canada’s finest perform- _ said Father William grumpily. & town and the Island’ : : “What happened to the others?” “What others?’ spring blankly. — “Shayne and Wuster. The fellows _that were here last year .and_made_ - such-a hit when the centennial shindigs were on,” retorted the old gentleman. “I saw théir names on the billboard myself, and that’s the way Ed- Sullivan introduced them when they came on television the first time.” *But your hearing isn’t good. and your eyesight’s something awful,” protested his young hopeful. “You just got them mixed up., that’s all. That's what I’ve beer trying to tell you right along.” “A pretty story'” snorted Father William. ‘Fellows that have come as far as they have, appearing hefore . what's left of the crowned heads of Europe and all ‘that. and putting .the noses of all itie Hollywood stafs out _of joint, and then coming here ‘and telling us we're the finest people they’ve ever met, with the loveliest free basis because they love us so | | the wheel of a car, before they get their-first-ticense: There are objections from the ‘academic-pomt-of-view-to- courses of this-kind -clutterup: the curriculum. But there are also ob- provement in Canada. , sn, a snap-election, might acquire a | pristine and appealing new leader between dissolution and voting dav and thus snatch away the slight Liberal advan- -taze ; “The latter part of. October” Jast week became the accepted election prediction among the few transient, Liberal MPs and ers on Parliament Hill: PARTISAN OR. PATRIOTIC? This indicated that Minister Pearson and his fel- low- thinkers in the Cabinet, such as the steady and gxper- | tenced Minster of Publie Works } George McHraith, have - been persuaded against their ‘earlier convictions by the “election now” faction of paid party or- Ranizers and enthusiastic cam- | Palgners stich as Finance Min- | ister Walter-Gaordon and Health | Minister Julia LaMarsh | The Prime Minister very pro- perly held the view that, so long as his minority government could enlist sufficient opposition support to pass its legislation, there was fio juStification for an election ‘this’ vear —~@specially with the massive electoral re- distribution based on the 1961 | census now so nearly complet- ed That was the opinion of the statesmen. ae ~Shucks to that.” cned the hucksters. ‘‘The time is ripe for +—the—hiberals—to-win—an-—overall majority in the Commons, and 7 © Jur Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) -. + |.Jections. to having the highways clut- | rwewry.. rae YEARS AGO asked his off. | texed with incompetent drivers. | aa \. (Angust 20, 1940) ‘| , Leon Trotsky died after whis- EDITORJAL NOTES m,| Pering an accusation that his t pick-axe assailant ‘most likely’ In_all provinces “but Newfound- | Was a member of the Ogpu, Sov- land, Alberta and Manitoba, _ falls jet secret police, in Mexico City. were the most frequent causes of ac- cidental death in the home in 1964. Fire or explosion was the most fre- quent cause in Newfoundland and Alberta. In Manitoba fire or explos- ion and falls caused an equal num- ber of deaths in the home. * e.4 * <A A prominent English physician writes in the London Times that dip- ‘ lomats the world over have serious , health problems because of innumer- | able official cocktail parties. Thése affairs. which a diplomat can’t duck, may have shortened Adlai Steven- | son's life, he suggests. “All of which,” t ' | | comments the New York Times, “is ' no joke, and should have careful at- ' tention in the chancelleries of the world. For all the glitter and glamor. of diplomatic life, it is often difficult Island that ever was, and getting en- | rolled among our citizens on a tax4. and demanding, and no diplomat should have to overdo it unneces-- sarily.” 2 | Aerial torpedoes—-propeller stemmed cylinders of destruc- tion. were loosed by Nazi bom- hers in attacks ~which houses by the row and buried uncounted victims in the ruins. The torpedoes were hurled along with shriek bombs. TEN YEARS AGO | (August 20, 1955) | Torontonians yesterday roar- ed their welcome to the city’s favorite daughter as: swimmer |_ Marilyn Bell rode home be- neath a cloud of tickertape. | From the flag-draped steps of | city hall, surrounded by cheer- . ing crowds, Mayor Nathan Phil- lips hailed in the English chan- nel- conqueror “the unconquer- able Canadian spirit which nev- er says die."’ | e Next Sunday, August 21, Miss Bery! Millar. Presbyterian therat—party—werk-— Prime}; in. London | CLOSE ELECTION SEEN It would not be a massive sweep; nothing like the 208 out of 265 seats won by Micfenhak- er in 1958, nor even the 170 won by St. Laurent in 1953. The 1965 election is expected to give the Liberals 140 to 145 seats, * majority of about 20. - , acting-and more fickle to the- for a’ Frantic Political Speculation GoingOn But and it is a very big hut’? this arithmetic hangs on Quebec. With little change or perhaps slight. Liberal - losses elsewhere, the shucksters be- heve that Liberaf candidates will win many or even all of the 20 Quebec seats won by Social Crediters and the eight seats won by Gomnservatives in 1963. 55 out, of the 129 Liberals elected in the 1963 election rep- resented Quebec or predominat- ely French- -Canadian~ ridings. The 1965 election may well re- sult in a French- Canadian bloc of 76 MPs dominating a Liberal government caucus of 145 MPs, Such support would be more ex- Prime Minister than the 1963- 1965 support he received at var- jous times from all opposition Parties This prospect highlights the Gifference between a_ politician concerned with the long-term fu- ture of his party, and a paid_or- ganizer whose only job is to win the.next election, cost what that may. Wek: + Beh old ee ae Toronto Telegram € Few..pleasures surpass the de- ; sweet, tender morsels is a mat- light to be enjoyed at ‘this sea- son which the simple but nobie cob of corn provides . Like the potato and the onion. it is a plain product of the good earth. It lacks the sophisticated elegance of the avocado or the oriental magnificence of the po- megranate. Like homespun tweed, it is humble and’ honest and genuine, a@ divine offering of nature. . The true devotee of corn shins the false refinement Wf those Jit- tle holders that excessively dain- ty persons plunge at each end of the cob. For thorough enjoy- ment; one-must--grasp~-the-cob with firm, comprehending fin- gers. Then there is unity, a sense of harmony with the earth and palpable understanding of the goodness it produces ——When-the cob-is-slathered with butter and salted and peppered, one should pause and admire the gleaming symmetry of the cob and the geometry of the of _kernals._It isa touched.by..cayenne,_ah,a_book_! of verse, a loaf of bread, a flash beautiful piece of natural archi- tecture. 2 How . one approaches ongaemed Prairie & —sance to-a-mistaken notion-of de-} ter of personal preference Some like the rotary vertical- method, by which the mouth separates the kernals from the cob in a narrow swath as the cob is slowly revolved,then shifted to the next section when the circle is completed. 1 Some prefer the lateral proach, taking two or three Tows in a horizontal movement from left to right, or right to left, followed by gentle’ turns and a reverse movement from ‘Tight to left, or left to right, de- pending on whether one is left- | “handed “or “right-handed _Except in persons with unac- commodating dentures, to hold the cob in a slant and to scrape the kernals off it, is an unforziv- | able conceit, an artificial obel- licacy,-and a rough assault upon one of naturegs. choicest. gifts With a dish of sliced tomatoes, Singing in a bath of vinegar, of wine, and thou would be su- the perfluous. Economic Council | Winnipeg Free Presse e The Prairie Ecopomic Coun- -him. Thus the council began its cil, §$o' much talked about since work in happy accord. Premier Roblin first suggested such a body in 1958, has become “| a fact. The three prairie prem- liers got together for long. gion _ enough after the premiers’ con- | cultural marketing, interprovin- smashed-—Terence in Winnipeg to” create cial power grids, industrial de- the new council and to perform velopment and tourist promotion The council should provide a | useful forum for discussing pro- | blems peculiar to the prairie re- Water conservation, agri- ap | ° | Battle Of The Bulge By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen |, Obesity is defined as an ex- | cess of, 2 pounds above the | ideal weight, provided the ex-. a sive amount of fat. It does not | Stems from an increased mus- | cle mass and large bones. bs The best test for obesity is to pick up a fold of skin on the abdominal wall or under the be less than one inch. Some physicians use a skin caliper for this purpose. The device provid- fold is a good indication because more than half the body fat is deposited under the skin. Obesity can be one of the most difficult disorders to cure be- cause we do not know what we are treating. The outcome is worse .when it develops in child- Eating half as much or suming a low caloric diet re- beginnirg. Stop here and | within a short time. Obesity is— the end product of many condi- | tions that have little in common. The causes must be recognized and treated ‘accordingly, so the returns. to normal | individual _ eating habits. | . Many put on weight over a |mumber of years by eating slightly more than their caloric | | needs. Other go through per- + ,lods such as pregnancy or an} diaturbance- when | emotional | therevis a sudden weight gain. ‘ | Still others have an energy bal- | ance disturbance, in that they ' get along on less nourishment than the’ normal _ individual. j, Many of them avoid exertion jand prefer a sedentary exis- | tence. ' Ina stidy lasting 20 years, 80 per cent of the overweight girls | and % per cent of the over. | | weight boys became overweight adults. Heredity may enter the, picture, but in the majority we rean blame too much food and ‘too little activity. When one or both parents are obese, the in- dividual usually mimics _ their eating habits instead of inherit- ing the predisposition. These facts must be known | because some individuals can | + not or do not want—to“be-thing | Treatment is satisfactory only | when considered on the long- term basis PSYCHIC ASTHMA D. E. C-writes: My eight-year | old granddaughter gets an at- | tack of asthma every few weeks | |—either: when something goes | , wrong at school or when she Is | whipped at home. Can you ex- | plain-why this happens? I REPLY : Asthma has various emotion- al aspects. Now is the time to | try to iron out this child's psy-| chic’ difficulties through family | conferences with your physician or advisers from the school or church. , / BAREFOOT Mrs. C. writes: My two-year: | old child has weak arches. Is it | advisable to allow her to walk barefooted” ‘ : REPLY y ; : the arches. At age “two, ever, the feet are not fully de- | veloped, so don't be alarmed | about your tot's arches.’ (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore how: | . | tra poundage is due to an exces- ~ upper arm and hold it between | the thumb and fingers. It should | | @3 a reading that can be used in | follow-up visits. The size of the. } con- duces weight but this is only the | the | majority regain the lost weight” NOTES BY THE WAY Keeping a secret from some. those who maintain that women is as difficult as putting toothpaste back into the tube. Hamilton Spectator. A shy frish lad had been court- ing his lass for years, but never had nerve enough to pop the question. One evening as they passed the village cemetery he said fervently: ‘Mary, how would you like to be buried over there with my people?’ Galt Reporter. | Soviet-Turktsh Rel It's beginning to look like the worls owes them a living are going to win.—Brandon Sun. The prim old lady was given the first glass of beer she ever had. After sipping it for a mom- ent she looked up with a puzzled air, “That's odd!"’ she murmur- ed. “‘It tastes just like the med- icine my husband has been tak- ing for the last 2) years.—Wind- sor Star. ations By Peter Buckley Canadian Press Staff Writer Both Russia and Turkey hope | to profit from the current thaw between the two countries, but their interests are likely to dif- fer widely. “For Turkey, the new friend- liness could bring increasing support in its continuing con- flict about the position of the Turkish minority in Cyprus By hinting a support for both | the Greek-Cypriots under Arch- | bishop Makarios' and Turkey, — Russia can hope to see a weak- ening of the eastern flank of the NATO alliance, while trusting that a friendlier Turkey wil! be a less mititant member of ‘NATO The visit to Moscaw of Pre- mier Suat Hayri Urguplu, which ended this week, was the first by a Tugkish head of govern- ment in 33;years -- since the brief but heady days when Ke- mal Ataturk and Lenin ended a century of wars and hostility by establishing friendly relations between their countries. RENOUNCED CLAIM The honeymoon was definitely over, however, by the end of the Second World War, when Stalin advanced a claim for three of Turkey's eastern prov- inces and was defied by Turkey, which was backed by the United States. It was not until 1953 that Russia finally renounced the claim. The joint communique issiied in Moscow after Urguplu’s visit, replete with talk of peaceful co- existence and disarmament, represents a new direction in Soviet-Turkish relations Turkey still outlaws the Com- munist party and the Turks have been” generally regarded as ant-Russian. Turkey's large | army has carried an extra aura of toughness since its participa-_ tion in the’ Korean war under the United Nations banner ! For Russia, the Turkey ¢¢ post-war years has been almost a model of reactionary govern- ment—especially since northern Turkey bristled until after the 1962 Cuban crisis with Ameri- ean-made missiles aimed across the Soviet border. Diplomatic observers. look on the current cordiality between the two countries as an attempt to see what benefits each could derive from a thaw. - MADE STUDY OFFER So far, Turkeyyhas failed te get unequivocal Russian support for its aims in Cyprus. The Soe- vies Union, which at one time offered military help to the Greek-Cypriots, has apparently backed off from the Greeks and has offered to study the ques- tion of aid to the Turkish-Cyp- riot “community : . _For the momem, :there are not many areas where relations can develop further The economies of Turkey and of southern Russia afte ~ gen- erally complementary. Apart from some trade of Russian ma- chinery in return for Turkish agricultural products, the possi- bolities of a major increase in Soviet. - Turkish trade are re garded as slight ‘ The Gurrent mood ig a result of Russian initiative, and traditional Turkish suspicion of Russian designs does not appear to have melted te’ any serious vit at ne Turkish government officials and representatives abroad have taken pains to stress Tur- key’s commitment to NATO and its alliance with the United ‘ , States,--Canada—and- West Euro pean countries Russia's hopes for a weaken- ing of the -alliance’s eastern the ¢ flank must be, of necessity, a . long-term project The Oxey e Daisy Ottawa Journal There fs beauty in the com- | monplace and he who looks into the heart of this friendhy extro- vert of the apen places can see gold. With its glowing center disc and white petals it stars meadows and upland fields. To the farmer who clierishes his timothy and clover, the com- mon daisy is a_ bothersome | weed; but to school children it | is a flower with which to make chains. When a girl begins to dream, she pulls,the petals to see if her Prince Charming loves her. The “daisy ‘blooms from “May inte O¢- ober and because it matures, seeds all season long, it has firmly established itself as part of our flowering world. first arrived ax a stowaway from Europe. Once on this con- train. Wherever the seeds came to rest they founded a colony, as permanent as the homes buiit by those- seeking new lands to ' conquer It is a baffling weed to a {ar- mer. Each floret is an_ entity with its tiny drop of nectar. Like many others, the plant Ras de- veloped a method to insure cross pollination The two-armed pistil remains closed until the pollen is gone. Then they open and develop a stickiness so that a bee coming from another daisy leaves pol len grains it. has collected else. where. The oxeye daisy is not flamboy ant. _ Perhaps it does not rank 9 beauty with blue flags or ladies’ slippers. But the hearts of gold with the white fringe add plea- Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- | inent.-it- voyaged- across the @ant* color to the landscape une, Chicago, Ilinois.) country by boat, wagon and__ painting. ; vw - | TP : Enjoy big, Rolls-Roy TORON * x * AIR CANADA FLIES THERE DAILY, NON-STOP ins .x..84 Leave Moncton 7.05 p.m. — arrive Toronto 8.30 p.m. | its first official act—the drafting —these are the basics of prairie of a telegram to Ottawa asking co-operation and ft was inevitab- for federal intervention | grain handlers’ west coast. Although the details of the new council's workings and fu- -tute-- administrative have yet to be mapped out (this is scheduled to happen at in the strike on the structure a Saskatchewan's le that they should appear on) the premiers’ draft discussion. The proposal the costs and facilities of certain institutions of higher edocation ‘such as Manitoba's school of dentistry, for example. and new veterinary schedules of meeting to be held in Regina in College) is imaginative and. po- October) both Premier Roblin, its author, and Premier Thatch- er, who has recently heen its most ardent promoter, accomplishment. Premier Manning has Home Missionary. will tell of | times givén the impression that | her work among the Indians at he is a somewhat reluctant con-— Shoal Lake Reserve, Manitoba, | vert to the council idea “ How- should | procal find much satisfaction in their | local tentially of great value to all three provinces. Similarly, tne search for rect- agreements . eliminating preferences and special concessions to firms from the some- home province is an example of specific, constructive assign ments the council can under- take. | i chk ll ina | at the regular morning service | ever, he came to the founding —~ PRECEDED CANADA of the Summerside Presbyterian | meeting equipped with a list of: Church Miss Millar is the dau-| things for the council to do and-| gomernor - general 6f—Australia | ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon | Millar, Ellerslie . s found the other two premiers ~ | substantially im agreement with | appointed mm 1931. cae The first Australian - born was Sir William to share both: Isaacs, \ —~_— oo speed and no cost “extras” of AIR CANADA travel: Tasty, free meals ., tilt-back seats ., , courteous, friendly service (no tipping, please!). 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