______showis-will. he_received.- f < # Wallace Ward Maneging fditor day and statutory holidays) Charlottetown P.E.!., Branch offices at Summerside, - Meningie, tnd Souris. Advertising Services Empire 36894. Montrea! versity 6-5942, Western Off Street Vancouver Association and Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub . Way, _vaudeville. and other entertainment ‘Sfeatures galore. Just_as a reminder and there is no doubt as.to the en- * oO a | closely together: gives us, as the poet |. sected—And-atter-a-few-years—at—+— , ed requirement in these ee _~ “The Waiting Game” out by a * ter to them. If the conduct of the war . factual about. the outside world. They Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher “ Frank Walker Editor morning dexcept Sun at 165 Prince Street, by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Alberton Published every week da @epresented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Toronto 425. University Ave 640 Cathcart Street Uni- ce 1030 West Georgie MA 7037: Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publish ihe Canadian Press. The Canadian this hes in lication of all news dispat paper credited to it of to the Associated Press or Reuters and also tothe local news published herein All right or repub cation of dispatches here specia in also reserved. Subscription rate Not over 40¢ per week by carrier. $12.00-2 yearby meailonrura! routes and areas mot serviced by carfier $15.00.@ year off year in U.S. and elsewhere outs monwea!th Not over 7 «ingle scopy. Member Ay cit Roreau PAGE 2 "SATU RDAY, Big Week Ahead One-of the-moest-successful-Prince County Exhibitions ever held at. Al- berton closed on Thursday evening. And now the spotlight is shifting to next week's biggest fair of all. the . Provincial Exhibition and Old Home Week in Charlottetown for which preparations have long been under and which promises to eclipse anything of its kind ever held in the Maritimes. That's saying a lot, but visitors are éxpecting, no less and they're coming from all parts of the continent to enijov it. What is most $20.00 per Com: sland and U¥ de British: of Circulation AUGUST 14, 1965. - encouraging is that many of them are “repeaters.” having visited _us__on other-occasions and having found. just what they want here for a worth- while familv_ vacation. The centre of interest, of course, will be the Exhibition grounds, with fast harness racing and with midway, thatthe fair is basically an agricul- tural show..there will be new livestock classes this Year with greatly increas- | ed prize money. Competition among dairy. cattle -will “be exceptionally keen. The poultry classes are also well filled..and the home cooking and handicraft -displays will be more tempting -then-ever. These events will make up a big week in themselves. But the Con- | federation Centre Theatre will also | be a magnet for both our.citizens and visitors, with sparkling performances of “Anne of Green Gables” alternat-. ing with Wayne and Shuster in their latest and most entertaining revue to bring’ our: Charlottetown Festival 1965 to a grand‘ conclusion. The “Anne” production has been break- ing attendance records at the theatre, thusiasm with which next yoke imperialism can be blamed if thetr ills continue. “The American popular mentality is not geared to this kind of warfare. The mind of the, American soldier, after military training, is even. less equipped to deal with it. He does not face the enemy he. has been taught to fight. The Viet Cong is invisible and furtive, ducking open battle when victory is unlikely. American soldiers, frustrated in futile efforts to catch ars wwViet Cong. find themselves wiping out peaceful vilages. On Aug. 3, for example. marines razed a village from which thev had received ‘sniper fire for two weeks; 150 houses were erased. What were the ‘casualties? One dead baby and’three wounded women. The previous day a marine grenade killed two children and a woman died from a piece of artillery shell in another village. The villagers were warned -by _loudspeaker to leave before the at- tack. But a Vietnamese villager may be even more frightened to leave his ancestral village than to stay in it. And éven villagers wishing to leave may be intimidated by the ruthless Viet Cong. In either case, Americans killed Vietnamese civilians, providing more grist for the Communist pro- paganda mill. The Communists believe that they “can play this waiting game longer than the Americans can, and have no desire for a settlement: that would deprive them of this advan- tage. President Johnson has himself ..warned that the U.S. posture must be defensive. But the Communists, as aggressors, can dictate the terms on which the U.S. must conduct its defense. Unless the United States decides to cut its losses and ‘pull out, regardless of commitments, the for-° seeable future is bleak so far as peace talks ‘with the Reds on this issue is concerned. Still A Long Pea By next election day, it is estim- ated that some 1,000,000 American Negroes who have .never voted be fore will be eligible to vote in South: - ern states. Their exercise of the fran- chise may mark a great turning point _in American politics and government. And ‘therein lies a danger which 1s noted by Edwin D. Canham’in the Christian Science Monitor—a writer who has been a ‘strong champion of Negro rights legislation. Many of the new expected voters, he says, are ill-equipped to make right decisions. Many are scantily educated, scarcely advanced at all along the road. of social progress. }-They could be ready -prey—for-dema-= goguery, as other newly arrived vot- _ing- groups have been before them. ‘The old carpetbaging days after the Civil War showed a travesty of re- | | | | lights, Be ys) HAVEN'T BEEN DOING TOO WEL. i LIKE MOVIE STARS ey ~"ASort Of Government By TV” | It is said that Prime Minister ! Pearson_is showing signs of fat-_. i | reasons and igue. Small wonder. The hours- Mr. Pearson spent with radio, TV and press conferences last week would break any man Last’ week, indeed, it was all but impossible to turn on radio or TV. without seeing or hearing Mr. Pearson or one of his minis- ters telling what was being done or left undone—mostiy the lat- | ter—about_ the postal strike. There seemed to be press con- ferences morning, noon a nd night; press conferences to tell | how or why Mr. Pearson and Mr. Martin read a letter from | President Lyndon Johnson. dif- ferently;—press——conferences —-to— explain or clarify what was said | at press conferences the day be- | fore; press conferences about | nothing in particular. : And always, of course, with the radio microphones, the TV the tape recorder. This, apparently, is what gov- government by TV, with Mr, Pearson and Mr. Diefenbaker the eager and featured stars. What these gentlemen do with their few remaining waking | hours, we can only guess. __ | The same. goes. Zo the big Gold. sponsible voting. _ It would indeed be |. tragic if the same sort of thing _hap- WRONG CONCEPTION. They have become convinced, up-and- Saucer-Parade in-downtown ah Friday morning. ; Something over and above all these attractions,- however, goes into; the success of our annual Old Hom Week; something-which makes it _so. enjoyable at the time and so rich in pleasant memories when it is | over. The spirit of the people, no doubt, and the-companionable mood they are in. Our Island hospitality, |. many-are kind: enough to say'-A-whole lot of things combined, perhaps. Whatever it is, it brings us all more says, “a sehse of oneness with our | kind.”- And isn’t that, when we come | to think of it, the world’s most need- times? - Nobel Peace Prize winners have added the prestige of their names to a plea for a cease-fire in Viet Nam and a settlement of the struggle. Un- . fortunately. the success of this-move depends on convincing the Commu- nists that they cannot take over the country by playing the waiting game. in which they have become such adepts. The Communists now realize, if Washington doesn’t, that this war is a matter of years, not months, that a decisive showdown is not needed— no ‘‘victory’” in the old sense is ex- pected or even sought. : In this strange war. as pointed | Washington commentator, | the Communists haVe one chief factor on their side which makes them in- _. different to peace pleas. It is time, or rather the oriental sense of time- lessness. Five. ten, twenty years of holding operations—it does not mat- impedes the advance of the North Vietnamese people, it does not mat- ter. Their society is insular and primitive and they are told nothing: tnd oni have,never had anything, and foreign “Charlottetown. which is scheduled-for -| ;- See Stee ET e-aeh =Hy tb V—and radio ‘sets“to- ‘yee’ jamie “Anatier rotested th TUundoubted!y "Neat voters in the’ South will begin to elect their share of officials; members of the legis- latures, town ‘and tounty officers, members of city governments, and so on. In the relatively few counties “and more numerous towns where they constitute majorities. it is pos- sible they will take over local gov- | ernment. But it is also possible that their—voting—effect—will_be_far—less not vote as monolithically as assumed. They. may not vote as.extensively as least, they’ may respond to political factors much as other voters do, and as their kinfolk already. do in the North. : Nevertheless, the Negro vote will henceforth be a political -element -to be reckoned with in more than a dozen states. Politicians will have to seek its favor in- some areas. Ise-— | than estimated in advance. They may | where, a sharper white-black cleavege | may be drawn on many issues. There is, however, another dan- ger, as Mr. Canham points out.. The tendency of white citizens is to be- lieve that, with the franchise, Negro demands for rights and justices have been met. What. it is asked, are they still demonstrating about? The ans- wer, of course, is that alienation goes deeper than legal steps, or even jobs and houses. The healing of prejudices and hatreds must still come. EDITORIAL NOTES To attempt to advise conceited people is like _— against the. wind. Under a new law that went into effect in Illinois this.month, all per- sons under the age of 21, unless they are married..rhust have the written consent of a*parent or guardian be- fore being-issued or reissued an auto driver's license. Up until now this Was required) = of persons under 18. ~ Opposition “are” or hear them, that in this way. they are doing something to il- ‘luminate public opinion, the while creating for themselves what Madison Avenue calls the “right image.” maa Well, we wonder. For as we hear and see them, it would be more_in_the_interests_of—Chris-_ tian charity than of truth to put them down as TV or radio stars; TV gimmicks and teleprompt- ers can only do so much. And we wonder, too, whether the !Prime Minister and the -Leader_ ofthe “not - confusing | public emotion with public opin- | ion. “Our Yesterdays — (From The Guardian Files) ° TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO" (August 14, 1940) 4 i _ Ottawa “Journal As for press conferences—held in, the right way they can be a proper function of | government. ‘But now we have a showing of ~ | them, and some should be mark- The Prime> Minister or one of his ministers. | or the Opposition Leader shoot | off the cuff, sometimes errone- | ously, kind of continuous ed “not for adults.” to questions which in turn are sometimes inconsequen- tial or irrelevant. NO SOUND BASIS No one can argue, surely, that this sort of thing provides any practical basis upon which to form. opinion. And this ac Schaal atthe right time for the right — it is. followed night aft- _TV_‘‘commentators” some of them imformed and competent, but them politically illiterate, and some of them but plausible ap- ologists for Government action ——or inaction We are told repeatedly that “the people have aright to know.” We. suspect the people are soon going to shout-for the right to be protected from yack- ing—yacking by | journalists and -radio and TV commentators “and that new breed of vacker—the -university ly when _ey_night by professor. who seems to be work: | ing his way out of. college Those Cats Of Prescott - Kingston Whig-Standard Cats. eating flowers? Cats dragging off a two-foot alligat- or? Cats holding a community Meeting in a basement? Cats building nests in hedges to hold | it could-only be handled by per- | sons wearing heavy gloves—the reptile was allegedly plucked out | of its enclosure by several cats. | We should imagine that the too _many__of. politicians and | | Positive Health | By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | “According to the American | Medical Association's commit- | tee on aging, the key to positive | health “lies in struggle rather | than retreat, in enjoyment rath- er than .avoidance of the stress of living. The wounds of combat are preferable to the decay of idleness." Life is a gamble and some ples include the heayy smokers, Steady topers, and coffee hounds who remain healthy and live to as not many survive abuses of this nature. Moderation in al} things is preferable as it al- lows us to use our allotted time intelligently and happily. Put the emphasis on living ra- ther than existing. We envy the man or woman with the will- Power to smoke. and drink in moderation. The same can be said of those with control of their—emotions. — But - there —is | more to the rules of health than keeping our minor vices in | check. Maintain a‘ balance _be- tween rest, work, and play. tonous eating..A sound nutrition- al program encourages vigor and ‘helps maintain normal weight. Tranquility sie enters the | health picture. Learn how to un- | wind and never pass up the op- | portunity to take a catnap. Cul- tivate mental alertness by | broadening your range of inter- }aet This is especially important for the retired man whose job | | has been his life. He is lost with- | out diversion, | It is difficult to enjoy positive | health when bothered with poor hearing or failing sight. Invest in good lighting and better acou- | Stics. If glasses or a hearing aid is needed—get them. After. 50, have a medical checkup. If an | ailment is found, it may be cor- | rectable. The minor conditions in mid-life become the cripplers after 65. Regular exefgise is the foun- |.dation to physical fitness. The more we move our muscles and joints, the better “they perform. Fitness is the ability to respond _to_life’s demands. It allov's-us-to take vigorous activity in stride. Regular exercise is_one—of—the Sreatest single: fattors in pre- venting heart attacks, | STIFF KNEES Mrs, L. writes: Several weeks ago‘l did some~ gardening and was-not-surprised-at the muscle stiffness that followed. But my knees remain stiff and have now become painful. What could be the cause? I’m 63.” REPLY. -You may have osteorarthritis, a form of the disorder that stems from wear and tear Sym- ptoms often make their debut af- ter unusual exertion. Now and injured by the stress of bending | or kneeling. (NOTE: All correspondence , to Dr. Yan Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Tyib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) take unreasonable risks Exam- | be 90. These are the exceptions, | -then-the-cartilage-of the knee is~ A successful marriage is one | in which the husband is as pat- ient with his wife as he is his golf game. icle Mauston. wilb have. an ulcer,” — County Chron | | NOTES BY THE WAY ‘Bottling up anger and resent. ‘-ments will likely cause you to Says a physic. ian. Maybe so, but- an ulcer | doesn’t show and isn’t embar- rassing, whereas a black eve A tobacco company says ® does and is—Edmonton Journ- cigar oughtn't to be lit-"more | 4) than once. Some of them) oughtn't to be lit once. — Guelpb | Mercury. Junk is anything that lies | before you need it. — Comanunity Press Lg A farmer. had applied for policy, and an insurance ageut, was quizzing him. “Have you ever met with any accidents?” “No,” said the farmer, but added, in an effort to be helpful, “a horse kicked two of my ribs in last summer, “And don't youcal] asked Ed the farmer ** — Chil- bad butt.” those_accid ents” “Naw,” replied “They did it on purpose. ton Times ; + Journal. around in your way for 10 years and you throw it away two weeks | a and a couple | of vears ago a bull gave me a) Mary—'But you've known the man only two weeks. You're fot | thinking of marrying him?” | Jennie—‘'Well, it isn’t as if he | were a stranger. A girl I know was engaged to*him for a long time.’’—Vancouver Sun. Visitor—"‘What nice buttons you are sewing on your little | boy’s suit. My husband once had some like that on his suit.’ Vic- ar's Wife—“Yes, I get all. my buttons out .of the collection plate.""—Montreal Star. “Poor Lola’ She got cruelly deceived when she married old Goldrox.”” “Why, didn’t~he have any money?” “Oh, yes, plenty ,-of-money, but -he-was 10 years younger than he said he was." ' —Windsor Star. Watch your diet, and avoid glut- Singaporé’s departure from the Malaysian Federation spells new problems, big and. small, for fellow members of the Com- monwealth. Although fects Canada, none seriously the situation is being closely watched in Ot- tawa. This is partly because many Canadians are on techni- cal assistance missions inthe area and partly because Indo- nesia’s aim of shattering the Malaysian Federation is a po- tential international danger From a Commonwealth stand- | point, the greatest question mark raised by the split is in the military tralia and New. Zealand all have military forces in and around Singapore, which re- mains a strategic spot. “DEFENCE PROBLEM Britain has been beefing up | its air forces at Singapore in | recent months because of the ' pressure of Indonesia.on Sara- wak and..Sabah, the two parts of Malay sian: Federation on Borneo < The hastily - framed agree: ‘ment separating Singapore and Malaysia—it was drawn up in about 24 hours—appears to pro- vide that these defence »Fangements...continue deteet what seems to be a note of uricertainty on this score from the ‘statements of politi- cal leaders of Malaysia. and Singapore The separaion itself is seen in Ottawa as exclusion of Sing- ‘ apore rather than its secession. | < who is Singapore's head of | state | from—the federation. This is said: to be partly the result of a political’ invasion | ! field. Britain, Aus- | on ar: | ~-Offieials— ————<» Remains A Strategic Spot ‘ By Ken Kelly Canadian Press Staff Writer Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman's ruling aliance—the United Malay National Organi. zation and the Malaya-Chinese Association 4 Lee's Singapore party was te have confined itself to the ise land-port and the Tunku’'s alli- ance was to have operated on the mainland and in Sarawak and Sabah. But Lee put up candidates on the mainland in the spring elections, even get. ating one elected, and the split with the -Tunku-— became irs reversible FURTHER SPLIT POSSIBLE A big question arising from the separation is whether the rest of the federation will re. main in being: Sarawak and Sa- bah are in the firing line in the dispute with. Indonesia. They are sadly—ackingin pubhicwel- fare and social services which the big-tax-revenues-from Sin? apore might have helped to fi. nance With Singapore gone, and In- donesia maintaining ~ pressure them, Sarawak and Sabah ‘may. throw up their hands and: try to leave the federation. Of- ficials say there already ‘are rumblings to this effect from them These are problems of mich wider “ significance .than” those | which: immediately concern Canada At the ‘moment, Canada’s con- ecern—appears—-to—be—in—deciding whether to send a high com- missioner’ and, if one is sent, It's now apparently a re- | public but without ‘a republican of the Malaysian mainland by | constitution or head of state ‘litters ns? It-all sounds a bit fishy to us, but all of these | things are said“to have happen- , | ed in Prescott since the town | council passed a -bylaw. prohib-- iting dogs from running at large. One man complained that. he | caught a large. white. one-ear- So, bate scared tom., punch ing... ume here.is, ASeDE ~eats;-~afier tearing the screen | off a window, held a howling, ' in his base- | shrieking meeting ment in the ded of night. In another case a cat had torn a hole in the. foilage of a care‘ul- | ly tended hedge, built-a nest and. | had her litter of all four. kittens in—privacy—As—for-the—alligator episode—said to have had such a reputation for fierceness that _ The Parole System. 2 complaints~ are coming thdse dogowners who are miffed “at the new by-law restricting | the movements and activities of : their pets. They infer, of course, | that all dogs are now off the + streets and cats running wild | | i heed a fear of. pursuit. from = NOTICE TO FARMERS here__is..much...about..this lite. focsscxs tle summer-time tale that we to swallow. But “most streets of Presccll. For if That were true, the town of Prescott would surely be the only com- munity ever to enjoy complete success with its dogs-at- large bylaw. } ‘ ' campaigning of cat-haters. : —Winktor Star The public tends to get an un- fair view of the Canadian par- | ole system because of a cur- }jous anomaly in parolé~work>—~ This is one of the few fields of human endeavor where sucess must be kept strictly secret and failures cannot be covered up. ~—In-a -successful-—case,_an—ex-- leased on parole and gets into trouble again must appear be- fore the courts, and the failure “Or the system is there” forall to= see. In a few cases the fence | er’s crime has sensational —as- pects which focus attention on the ’system’s failure. Thus those concerned with The greatest air battle in his- | prisoner is returned to normal the parole system are fighting * tory being fought in the skies of | ++ Britain— ‘apparently the ~ first + state of the German blitzkrieg — against.- England— entered its fourth successive day with um diminished——intensity — as Nazi raiders- swept the length and breadth of the Island fortress of England and subjected the in- dustrial midlands to the sever- est bombing of the war. Great Britain, . seeking addi- tional, weapons to combat the Nazis, was reported to be offer- ing to lease certain naval base sites in the Western hemisphere to the United States in retu for 50 or more old destroyers. TEN YEARS AGO (August 14, 1955) Ron’ Atkinson and Gyldon won top honors on August 13th at the P.E.I. Provincial trap and skeet shoot. Atkinson won the skeet shoot, knocking 89 of 100 skeets out of the air while Willis was taking the trap title for the first time. The Junior Abbies got off to a good start in their first game of the present season by shading the Intermediates 4-3 in an exhi- bition baseball game at Memor- ial Field. Fireballing Wern an- drahan pitched brilliant ball for the Juniors, setting down the first 15 batters to face him with- out allowing a man to get to first and didn't allow a hit until Flynn slapped a single through centre with one. out in the sey- ‘life in the community. But par- | ele-officials must hide the —fact of success, because to identify _ the individual would defeat the whole purpose of the system. parole system attract publics at- tention. A prisoner who is _re- The Big Is the big cathedral, like the big tleship, a relic of early génerations: This is one of the major ques- tions being debated by the Church of England in the Old Country. Those who are against new cathedrals argue that it is bet- parish churches instead. They could be spotted strategically, they say, to bring church life to the great new building estates British cities. Cathedrals, they say, are just a waste of money and involve costly upkeep. Besides, once they are erected, they cannot be kept clean. Except for a few great occasions of the year they are not used to capacity. Some attract only a score of worship- pers into their vast spaces at the regular Sunday services On Cathedral deans and their sup- enth. porting canons argue their ca- Similarly, the failures of the | ter to build a score of smaller , or new towns growing up _o weekdays the priests and choir | “are virtually alone. 5 an uneven battle. Theit success- es_can be.made _public. only in -the form of. statistics, which make dull reading. Their failur- les attract attention. That there 7 are_many times more sucesses .. | than. failures is a fact that-few Canadians realize. Cathedral Daily Record thedrals are doing a useful job | as spiritual centres of each dio- 'cese and could not be replaced by any number of additional parish churches. They say a diocese needs a big church building to accommo- date all the big diocesan servic- es. And all point to the “shining example of the new Coventry Cathedral, which attracts about one million visitors a year and is crowded on . PREFER TV TO BATH © LONDON (Reuters) ain’s plumbers claimed Thurs day that Britons would rather have a television set than a bath in their home. A state- ment announcing a plumbing exhibition in London in October said that of 14,640,000 house- holds in Britain only 11,419,000 had baths but 13,358,000 had /even have hot water taps, it | said = ‘ * of a we quesion the claim that | the ‘‘dogs. are. gone’’ from. the | ‘Tt. all sounds = us like the — Brit. /- television sets. In London alone -}-- More than 405,000 homes did not | prove. . sing plants is +| : 1. All wrediuile ‘iy should 6 be saved. 2 a tora with lial they do not require are asked to a 3. In extreme cases oats could be cured as hay. or used recommended. In order to keep the ill effects of the drought to a min- imum, Consideration of the following by farmers and others is ae * 4. The immediate use of sertthaee (either Ammonium Ni- trate or mixed) -or manure on pasture or'good sod Should Provide grazing later i in the season. | oe ‘ 5. The breaking of land and sowing. of fall rye or prefer- _ably oats could also provide pasture this fall and i in the Case rye, next spring. | 6 The forcing of cattle on the market, particularly if un- finished, should be discouraged. 7. The feeding of grain or other milk feeds to beef cattle is “nace 8.. The feeding of a balanced ration to dairy cows (especially ones in the earlier stages of lacation) will prevent serious loss of production until conditions im- 9. The use of: ‘bpophdect, such as pea vines from proces- 10. For further information contact your agri. rep. or ‘the Department of Agriculture. This ad insereted by P.E.I. Department of Aaricohure: Hon. A. B. MacRae, Minister and endorsed by P. E.I. Federation of ee J. * Rodd, President. % A SE ie $ TRE eh Wins Nh + a