“ U Covers Prines Sdwerd Island Like The Dew. at W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward. ee every week d (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, .P.E.1., by Thomsen Ud. . Mentegue, Alberton Empire, 3-8894; ’ 4 versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Gaergie Street Vancouver MA eT ia ‘Member Canadian _Deily Publishers Asiaviation and The Canadian Press. The Cenedian : Press is exclusively entitled fe the lication of ell news dispatches ' Net over 10c single copy. : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation: "The strongest memory is weaker -- than tne weakest ink” TUESDAY, OCTOBER l1, 1966. San 7 | Where Do They Stand? : One question the Liberals should wwow in Ottawa, is where they - d collectively on the question: of~ fonwe to resolve-at-their-big-party~ guidelines for wage and profit in- cfeases. This has become a matter of urgent concern to federal _govern- ment spokesmen; but their comments . en the subject are conflicting, and it is evident that what the govern- ment needs most of all is a policy leline from its supporters. : Take Ind -Minister Drury’s. statements in’ Edmonton last week, r example. He told the Canadian hamber of Commerce that a “gen- But Prime Minister Pearson was rompt to say that the speaker didn’t Sree erag ul z E SRE ige 3 Ss 5 : 8 th-hour plea for voluntary adherence to guidelinee—particularly when those who would guide us can’t seem to agree on where we should be ‘guided. If the Liberal Party conference ~ eould set its leaders on a more con-. aistent course in this matter, it would _ be well worth while. --Why They Need Thant The renewed vote of confidence the UN Security Council in U t does not appear to have caused - y fundamental change in the reas- why the secretary-general has de- led not to seek a second term. this prove to be the case, the ecurity Council will” be forced to~ _ undertaken the search for a succes- for; and the more this problem is ptudied, the more difficult seems the _.prospect of reaching a solution. . ! Why so, with so many countriés to - choose from? But therein, it seems, the rub. As a correspondent in Christian Science Monitor points t, a lot of countries have to be ex- ded in advance. Those belonging the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- or to the Warsaw Pact, for jexample—that is, Western and #astern Europe. Then there are the . countries bordering on a superpower ge :--which would elimiifate Mexico and anada as neighbors of the-United tes; Finland and Af, tan as heighbors of the Soviet Union. The ther neighboring countries belong a military bloc and accordingly are excluded as well. + But objection also would be taken to a secretary-general from countries ‘ hat are large and _ potentially strong, uch as India or Brazil. And to.coun- ries which are too much under the ilitary or economic influence of a perpower. This would apply to the whole of Latin America.. — | What's left? Well, there are three neutrals in Europe—Sweden, Aus- tria, and Ireland. But the first is ex- ° | @uded as having provided a secre- tary-genera] alread y—Dag Ham- marskjold. Nor are the other twe likely to find acceptance in a General Assembly where the majority is Afro- Asian: That would seem to leave the whole of Europe out. There remain Africa and parts of Asia. Africa south of the Sahara is so if it had one of the calibre that could qualify. The same divisions, and the :|.anti:Arab sentiment: of a part of the Africans, would indicate that the ‘Mideast is out also. In North Africa, and Morocco is at odds with France: There remain Algeria and Tunisia ceptable. the Soviets who would also reject Japan, Thailand, and the Philippines as allies of Uncle Sam. Pakistan would be out because of its conflict with India. Of the acceptable Asian “countries, Burma has provided a istic.-That- would leave Ceylon... Really, a prettly limited choice! ___Well Worth While _ The Canadian Highway Safety Council has come up with a new idea on the theme which rightly engrosses “all its attention. It plans to sponsor a nation-wide centennial project called “Hospitality On. The Highway.” Basically designed to reduce the | number of deaths, injuries and ac- cidents, the project will urge every | motorist to think of himself in the role of--host and to treat visiting motorists as guests, throughout 1967. A guest judges a host by his hos- pitality. «Since. most centennial ‘either from outside Canada or from within, will travel by automo- bile, they must be made welcome on ‘ the highway. With more than 30,000,- 000 visitors expected next year, the vehicle in Canada to exercise con- stant, sincere courtesy and thought- fulness, to go out of his way to fill his real role as a host to the visiting guests,” says P. J. Farmer, the Coun- cil’s executive director. He» warns that. one inhospitable driver could _ruin the ishpression of Canada or the province taken home by the visitor who, normally, would lose no time in spreading the word. Conversely, courtesy on the road, could result in far-reaching good will. — - Besides, he adds, “a wave of hos- a beneficial effect on the way Cana- dians drive and reduce the number of highway ‘accidents. A year of cour- teous, careful motoring would instill safedriving habits that would carry over for many years.” aN By Camparison _ We needn't be too complacent: about it, but we have reason to be crop prospects with the difficulties many farmers have been facing in | Australia. The drought that plagued productive areas in that country last year cost at least $1,000 million, and some of its effects will leave their mark on the national economy for the next few years. In losses of stock and diminished woo! production it cost the wool industry at least $310 million. Graziers lost 13 million of their 170 million sheep and over a million cattle. Beef and veal produc- put also will fall. There are brighter spots in the Australian farm’ picture, however. A record wheat harvest of about 400 million is expected after a fall to 258 . million last season and the wool clip is likely to be larger, though still significantly below those of 1964-65 and 1963-64. With China, Britain, Russia and Japan in the market,-pros- pects of selling the entire wheat crop are excellent. EDITORIAL NOTE _ New England apple growers are short of pickers. So they’rée appealing te the public’s do-it-yourself*instinct. They have fung open their orchards P to customers to pick theif own in-. gredients for apple-pie. Pickers pay $1.25 per half bushel. Orchard owners provide baskets, ladders, a short course in long-armed apple handling —and some supervision Growers run the risk of having their trees damaged by inexperienced pickers— but it’s the fastest way to get in the harvest, and it’s proving popular. much divided nowadays that it is not ' likely to agree on a candidate, even. which could conceivably prove ac: In ‘Asia, Indonesia might not suit secretary-general (U Thant). Laos is consideréd -too.-close-tothe-United_-|~ States, and Cambodia is too antagon- - good. impression, gained through | pitable driving would certainly have. thankful as we compare our excellent . tion in the year ending next June is -expected-to-drop. to the-lowest level |. for five years. Mutton and lamb out-— Libya is too close to the United States |. | Council will try to impress all Cana- : dians with the need. for sincere, “We will ask veryone who drives a _ 0 TENTING ON THEOLD CAMP GROUND — ~ OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson A Sorry Record Of Procrastination When Mr. Speaker Lucien La- moureux leads the reassembled ought to have been done before Parliament adjourned for its 8 day summer , after working for only 117 days S8ece iibgee: Ey F many old folk, that extra $30 per month was an urgent neces- sity, made even more urgent, by the recent sharp rise in food |. prices. Yet, only hours after that announcement Parliament : adjourned without taking ac- tion. Surely. our MPs could kava postponed their holiday , briefly, so that that proposal could have been implemented? Could our $18,000 perye ar MPs enjoy their holiday with a clear conscience when they left old Canadians caught in the squeeze between $75 per month- and-rising costs? _ Letters now pouring into MPs’ officers show how terrible that: ;~ squeeze is. ; Britain combatted inflation by a freeze on prices and wages; USA at least had presidential ’ guidelines laid down as moral @rom The Guardian » FIVE YEARS AGO vincial Archivist of Nova Scotia, speaking at the annual meeting of the Prince Edward ‘Historical Society. Maritime Central Airways an- nounced that Moncton will be- come the purchasing centre for |: string of United States air force bases stretching almost 1,- 000 miles down. Ganada’s north- east coast from Frobisher Bay to Goose Bay, Labrador and Newfoundland. - > | ces of gravity. . circumstances are slightly dif- ~ Our Yesterdays | Island_|. suasion on business and labour. an annual rate of $19,704,000,000, or tely 460 per cent of fessor E.P. Neufeld,—asserte d ed that price- wage guidelin- ‘es should have been formulated ,| in Canada, being the hest method of curbing inflationary pressures, which he said had been. fuelled by “incredible” wage increases. Economists, bank presidents and -politiclans alike have all urged such action upon_the gov- ernment, without success. But the Liberal t's with it slogan of “Sixty Days of Decis- |. ion” has become “Six months of Inaction.” As Professor Neufeld stated, again repeating earlier warning uncurbed inflation will lead not to higher prices, but conse- tos cut-in our” , to higher imports, and hence = to even iu unemployment and to devaluation of the Can- Viscount Montgomery, the sal- ty old field marshal, hasn't been heard from of late, but no doubt the recent reorganization of the British Army will charging into print, with his -| two badge beret firmly on his — at the high | Among the latest moves in Britain is the change which does away with the use of the term “other ranks” to describe priv- ates. Henceforth, the other ranks will be known as soldiers, some- thing they had been all along. Those who-gain stripes, by the means often discussed by priv- ates, are stil] non-commissioned aoe and everyone else, one-p Up, are com- Batmen, the privates who have the cunning to get out of the daily drills to attend to the needs of officers, will be known a8 orderlies. oa And no one goes on sick par- ade in the mornings any more. The angles to get out of work will still be as cute as ever, but Soldiers Of The Queen Regina Leader-Post him |‘for everything from a sore back the malingerers and lead-swing- . go on the sick, list. No doubt the army treatment Almost 500 years after his itial- fall, Humpty Dumpty once again failed to defy the Otherwise, _¢ Malton Not only time flies. So- does scientific development. Torento’s famed Malton Air- port (properly called the Toron- to-Hamilton airport) will be a hoary old antique by 1970, thanks to advances in aeronau- tieal engineering. According to the chairman of British Overseas Airways Corp., Sir Giles Guthrie, the huge Maiton complex, opened 33 mon- ths ago with a chest- pounding flourish,-won't be able to handle the latest and biggest jets that are scheduled to be flying the transcontinental air routes in He said BOAC’s giant jets won't be.able to use Malton un- finer and more efficient facili- ties. ‘ To all this, Malton’s airport ’ a Humpty Dum Obsolete Hamilton Spectator less it is brought up to date with |. gS" i : | i it » * 5 ¥ : oa) § up to date, of course, even if it won't be seven years old un’ years to. come. SCHOOLS FILL UP | Stones «> i = A Kidney, |. NOTES BY THE WAY ee he whate has become of the Ottawa City Council? And who fe mizee Care Ren? en Bene ~s Parliament Hill has had a record 413,012 visitors so {ar By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen this year. ~S tter scan- Ge f FH ris 1 : if $18. § [ t d E erety ft Hl Pt f rs 5 ; Hi Zs # 5 33 é i os. 7 z zs 3> if ed by the fact that the conditions ‘which ‘are’ producing rising | i vit i ‘ i ¥ 2 i i i § a i : rs Z i : re i : r ip BS E Z = Fr a zi F : i ¢ i z : 5 E fs i Ee z g' i iy nt In other words, ees aren't really rising; we only think they ‘are, Where does. thé’ professor buy his groceries? — Toron Telegram. j eae THE 0! his morning.’’ — Montreal Ef: 8 es Zz Z may cause obstruc- r an infection and X-rays. are. ; i 4 sis tract. Acute Johnson’s Latest Pitch = 3 5 ‘ E 3 Canadian Presa Staff, Washington it Fe i escape. Distress stohe moves throu- arrowed ureter on_its |. the bladder. When the stone is rough and -irritates the-ureter, the pain may be unbearable. The victim grunts, tr ‘and changes | the ernition Menuatihse Dinners: | the Second World War—i it| NATO was begins in the back and, as the bears fruit. The U.S., Britain and. Germ. stones move downward, the pain | _ But nothing dramatic is an- | any are. going to discuss reduc- descends around to the front and | ticipated ._ A Jot af | ing their. NATO forces in Germ- radiates into the groin. There the. old cold-war , any and the said thas also may be an intense desire to | famed by Viet Nam, will .con- | “if changing circumstan-es urinate and occasionally blood is tinue to be sounded. should lead to a gradual and passed. Nausea). vomiting, and | ., The progress that does resukt, | balanced revision of force lev- abdominal distention are co m- | # .i6 assumed, will come from | els on both sides, revision could mon. : pressures on both countries cre- | .. . help gradually to shape a. ated by conditions which im-/| new political environment.” SINUS SPACES ‘ elude the vast turmoil wrack-| The U.S. initiative also came J.-H. T. writes: What are.eth- | ing China internally. with Soviet-China relations at moids? \ | These key develepments | lowerthan-usual ebb. The isola- _. > REPLY might result in time: tion of China within’ the Com-. These are sinus spaces: near |. —Peace in Viet Nam. munist bloc is virtually com> — res rest te sees. They ore Reduction of Com m u nist | plete. _ ‘involved in many nasal colds| and pon-Communist forces in| The stakes are higher for both -and-were-responsible for the per- Europe. : the U.S. and Russia than their sistent nasal discharge that of the two Germ- | natural affection for each other. ras Bap eo Bear rth dartbindge acts we, oo an oe wens out of Viet advent : : uropean politica am _ stability. in Europe. penicillin. - - tary stability. ~- The Soviet Union wants safety PREGNANCY RARE AT 6. —Progress in curbing nuclear | on ite European flank, which A-reader..writes:.. Would_itbe_|- spread_and _ on. general. settlement. of. the German-_qu-s- at all possible for a newly mar- ; \ tion would spell in its eyes, sa ried woman of 60 to have a| Expanded East-West ‘trade | that it can concentrate on ‘he child? She has not menstruated| and other East against the uncertainties in-years. —Closing Communist andj of China. REPLY . No, unless a mistake was made in preparing her birth cer- tificate and she is 45 instead of ~60. ‘Pregnancy after the age of 50 is rare. METABOLISM AND GOITER ‘Mrs. I writes: Could a goiter A DOCTOR LEARNS TO HEAR AGAIN! major reappraisal U.S. policy toward Russia. be present if the metabolism have a cahian test is normal? Previous private U.S. —Soviet is a great tragedy involv- REPLY talks were highlighted Mon- | ing S advancement ~ Yes. Goiter is an enlargement of the thyroid gland and has nothing to do with its activity as determined by the metabolic The president has been rate or special iodine tests. asizing -his desire for a better | shows that hearing loss is a _ -CYSTITIS relationship with Russia for | Major problem among people of M. F. writes: What is the sore then two your, eupie all_age groups. — ; couse of an infiemed bladder? | the deep freeze by Viet | _ Whether or ae eA Nam hearing nt, | The most common cause isin-| Russia recently has given Wiis wo " g re fection somewhere along the ur- | some tokens of a more concilie- ror ary cond aie eos 1 inary tract. tory stand in the form of releas- Se gat adceraative booiet by HEATED BABY FOOD ing a Peace Corps worker, | Jason B. Wells, M.D sand By keoted’ betes berving? was teriet ok earecanen For your FREE book — “A a! re serving on a US, ‘ mt | DOCTO! REPLY end showing more co-operation = a This is not necessary. toward disarmament talks. WRITE BOX 87232 TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— The announcement that fewer GUARDIAN - PATRIOT Fitness helps one ‘to adjust to | goods will remain on the em-. CHARLOTTETOWN © ees. bargoed list for the Soviet bl0C, | sy eee y, ’ : There’s more to . 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