” Me " ——PAGE 4 cmeoannpnencqone 4 ., Managing Editor “year in U.S. ~ Che Guardian . Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew ‘ W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward y 5 ‘Frank. Walker nD Editor > Published every week day morning (except Sun | day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. | Branch offices at Summerside, ae Alberton i @nd Souris. Represented nationally by iteaeii Newspapers & Advertising Services: Toronto 425' University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 440 Cathcart Street. Uni- verity 6-5942;- Western Office 1030 West Georgia ' Street Vancouver MA 7037. - * “Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers "Association end The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in this paper Gtedited to it or to the Associated Press of Reuters afid also to the local news published herein. All fight or republication of specie! dispatches hore — tn also reserved. Subscription rete: - _Not over 40c per week: by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and aieas . fot serviced by carrier. $15.00 a yeer off Island: and U.K, $20.00 per and elsewhere Ourside™ British Com monwealth. , Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Cireulétion. FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1966. At Critical Stage - _ A Commonwealth prime mihié- ‘ters’ conference on Rhodesia pro- -t y it operates. It will not do for the af- | fairs of an industry basic to each state. to drift into the hands of an inter- national committeé of union and management. But Canada, unfor- tunately, has already given credence to this concept. The federal govern- ment negotiated with the major auto- ~ mobile companies almost as though they were a government themselves. |. The UAW ambition now calls for * similar treatment, Or does it?: ‘More immediately im- . portant than‘ sovereignty is the po tential -effect-of wage parity on the rest of the Canadian economy. Cana- dian auto workers now receive 40 to 50 cents an hour less than their fel- low unionists to the south. This can ~be-taken-as-a-reasonable guide to the | jy * disparity which exists in almost-every major industry and line of endeavor which is practiced on both sides of | the border'. The Canadian adintes. which generally boasts a lower rate of pro- | ductivity per man hour than that of’ posed by Nigeria will meet in Lagos | | type of wage increase and remain’ ~next week, and it is likely to be one of cardinal concern ‘to all members of the association. The Common- wealth, indeed, appears to have reached the parting of the ways on the Rhodesian issue. There has been growing “fesent- ment in Britain at the intransigent attitude of the Commonwealth .gov- ernments in Africa:on- this matter, which came to a head when they al- lowed themselves to go off half-cock- | ed at the Addis Ababa conference of. |. ~< the Organization for African—Unity.. There they joined with non-Common- wealth participants in approving a resolution calling on-all members to ~ Jpreak relations with Britain if the Wilson government hadn't “crushed” : the Rhodesian rebellion by Dec. 15. » In the end, it-turned out that only six members, including two Common- wealth partners—G hana and Tan- zania—actually carried out the reso- lution; but the decision to approve it. was a dismal blunder. ‘ The reaction of the British press. and public to the Dec. 15 deadline is yoted by a London-correspondent- - the Winnipeg Free Press, who. thus sums up the growing sense of dis- enchantment in the Commonwealth experiment which seems to be settling aver the country: * “Painfully aware that Britain's ’ gttachments were a hindrance to the "pursuit of ‘self-interest during the ‘Brussels negotiations for entry into the mie: Common Market, dis- turbed by the spectacle of British governments having to walk a tight- rope. at successive prime ministers’ conferences, annoyed by | the Afro- Asian grumblings that have served as ' @ backdrop for Britain’s attempts to =. “and constantly mindful that the Com- | - the ill-fated, Hong Kong expedition— _ ‘ Monwealth costs the country a great deal-of — the British_people—| -gfeem to be concluding that this ~- strange and unwieldy association isn’t worth the trouble. What seems to Have happened, in short, is that Britain’s African partners have final- ly placed a political tag on the Com- monwealth and the British have demonstrated that they just aren't wats to pay.” - Prime Minister Wilson, of course, will not speak in this blunt way when he goes to Lagos. next week, as he intends to do. But when-he addressed © » the United Nations recently he made . it clear that African anger at Britain, understandable: though it might “be;— would. not_be allowed to deflect his government from its chosen course. . :On- this point he may be expected to stand firm. And we may expect, too, that he will have full support from Mr. Pearson, who also has stated that he will attend. How far the African leaders are prepared to compromise is anyone’s guess; but it would seem + —that-if-a—crisis is - to: be“averted, it will have to be on Britain’s terms. Auto Pact Fruits _ The fruits of the Canada-U.S. ° ‘auto pact’ were never very apparent -in this part of the country. But some- thing~has * ped up in connection . with this deal that could concern-all of us very much. That is the drive under way by the United Automobile Workers to ach i¥ve international wage parity on the basis of the auto agreement. Indication that the UAW | ' wants to close the gap between Cana- | dian and U.S. wage'scales immediate- | ly came from’a-high-level conference: held this week in Windsor. An inter- national wage scale would be sought s0 that each company would give like “terms to employees on both sides of ; the border. As thé Hamilton: Spectator well. says, an industry as basit to the economy: as automobile manufactur- ing must surely be dealt with inside path » 8 the U.S., simply ¢annot absorb this even remotely competitive. Yet, if the auto workers achieve parity, the other unions in Canada are going to immediately exhibit desire to attain - the same profitable goals. _. This Canada simply could not en- dure for more than a few years with- out being forced into some form of full economic union with the United States. Whatever the pros and cons able that it should be forced on us in this ‘manner. . ~ The, Hamilton paper urges’ the governments of both Canada and the United States to take careful note of this situation. The ultimate réspon- sibility for -preventing continental bargaining lies-with them. Even if this. means dismantling the auto “agreement, it is maintained, the-idea’ should be quelled at the outset. The Canadian government, which. took the initiative in establishing the agree- ment, and which has the most to lose _ from this form of internationalism, has a particularly heavy respon- -for—|— sibility. . Something it hadn’t bargained for, of course; but.which might well have | been foreseen had the bargaining been done more expertly. They Earned It — According to reports from Ottawa, Canada’s Hong Kong veterans are to be given a new pension deal, early in 1966. A preliminary report on their problems was recently submitted to - Veterans Affairs Minister T eile t, based on a two-year survey by--the Canadian Pension Commission. The. survey found ample grounds for con- cluding that'a new pension status for these veterans was overdue. ~ t show at the su now “numbering. -only..- 1,100—had more , social and economic problems than other veterans. They also had more medical disabilities and inferior dental health. Significantly, :mofé¢ ‘deaths occurred-from_coronary dis- “ease among them than would have been expected among Canadian men of their age group. Earlier studies - showed: they suffered the highest in- cidence of blindness of any Canadian — military unit.’ The report was received by Mr. Teillet just prior to Christmas, the 24th anniversary of the day when Hong Kong fell to the Japanese. The ~1,975 Canadian servicemen, from the, Winnipeg Grenadiers and the Royal. Regiment. of Canada,-reached Hong Kong in Movember, 1941, shortly be- fore the island was attacked. For. 17 days, the Canadians fought gallantly, resisting. the invaders, despite a lack of proper equipment and sufficient ‘training. When they fell on Christ- mas day, more than 300 of their -numbers.had.__been..lost.. The. others “had to endure the physical and psy- chological effects of long imprisgn- ~ ment by the Japanese. The veterans who remain. deserve a new pension deal. Why it should: have taken them so long to get it is the ‘Surprising thing. EDITORIAL NOTES ‘Proportions “of Canada’s: house- holds with electrical and other con- veniences continued to increase in 1965. Television receiving sets were in 92.6 of total households as against 91 per cent in. the Poe year, * * var federal-provincial conferences are to continue as a third level of government,” says the - Winnipeg Tribune, “they should be held in the open. But better still, MPs and MLAs should challenge the right of ft civil servants or a handful-of elected officials to act like a sovereign, leg- islative body.” “* ‘ wy ” survivors. 0: of that prospect may be, it is intoler | ~;, WINTER SCENE, VICTORIA PARK : OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Still Studying Effects Of Miracle Dees -The_new Parliament meet month will almost ¢ further specialized effects; regulation mT g at HH Ht ast an : ent in inadequate labelling of certain poisonous household re- ~medies, — It learned that the - fe.) . It was alarmed to hear, Food and Drug section, that any adventure can, without seeking approval from or even notify- _ing that section, set up a ‘“‘manu- ‘facturing” plant in a dirty base- ment, and. there dan- gerous, faulty or even ‘‘looka-- like”-drugs to menace the sick. The Committee has made re- » commendations to eliminate each of these problems; the Go- vernment however ha a less” impressive record in studying and implementing those. needed_|.™ -reforms. BENEFITS SICK ‘ Theastonishing achieve- ‘ ments. of )drugs- developed lar- gely durihg the past quarter-cen- tury are reflected in the great- . ly reduced death rate from cer- tain diseases, and in the immen- sely’ speeded-up cure of other illnesses. -Canada’s post- war increase in productivity has been made possible largely by the. introduction of mechanisa- tion and by the addition of skil- Jed immigrants to our work force; but a significant factor ‘has beeen the immense saving in i nc tecemmeeresner Our Yestenda s (From The Guardian Files es) _TWENTY - FIVE) YEARS AGO (January 7, 1941) Waves of German fighter-bom- bers aircraft gave London its longest and’ most destructive daytime attack in several weeks ‘and killed and wounded a number of persons. Survivors of two Norwegian vessels sunk by German sea ‘raiders were quoted at Hong Kong as Count Felix von Luckner, German of 1916-17 was akain attacking shipping in the Pacific and In- dian oceans, “TEN YEARS AGO (January 7, 1956) A resolution . calling for the formation. of. a Protestant Fam- ily Welfare Agency in the City of arlottetown “was unani- ly adopted at a largely at- | . tof - meeting held last. night fs I | YMCA- ‘Edna Lord “was installed as Worthy Matron of the Crystal ¢ Se ee Star ‘Charlottetown mature death- thanks to ths new~ ' Siaiee 0 i Glakat wactat of canes, ResEe “sea devil” s ‘United Nations. — stuffs our food aid pro- ' time lost through illness or pre- “miracle” drugs. Some ber only that a rug. prescri- tion, -comparable~ size per- urers. Association, This indica- _ tes, that the manufacturer re- _ An informative fact book is being~cireulated—in-Ottawa~and- elsewhere by the professional association of the drug industry. Pharmaceutical ames. ceives only 37% cents of the pre- ‘| several. feet of the small intes- || @ractable obesity—fat» individ. "| beech used for treating mental ~44t has. been \given- _ | headache, insomnia, and loqua- ciousness. | also is a. let-. down- when the action of the | drug is finished. Contrelling The Girth By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen In the past year we have re- | portéd several dramatic ways to | lose weight, Starvation for days to weeks and the removal. of tine head the list. These meth- ods are aimed at those with, in- uals who could not lose weisht eae mane dai on 8 ly. injec. ee On dextro- EL This chemical, b better known as the pep pill or goof ball, has depression and ee gees enred for many years. compound ts. ‘tised to help lose weight -but i" of eerreme value in curb- ‘ing the appetite. This is the first time, knowledge, that ly and, according to Dr. ‘David B. Gitbert of am. Ariz.,” is en orally. As a rule, large doses lead’ to” excessive excitement, Dr.-Gilbert treated 50 patients | for four years with an avérage | loss of| 27 pounds annually. The most’ dramatic result -occurred to & 88-year-old female who lost 100 pounds in ong year. Most of his patients weré taught to give | the ood cpa at home in the / ps as. the diabetic takes | insulin | The ‘unpleasant side effects | mentioned « previously did not | take place. According to Dr. Gil- bert, the dextro-amphetamine | had-no effect upon. the blood | re or coronary arteries. In is opinion, it shoyld not: be giv- en to obese individuals suffering ~agitation; anxiety, qucuaiver of the thyroid gland and Raynaud's disease. Time will tell whether this remedy is worthwhile. Heroic. measures are recommended for serious conditions but I doubt if motorist vinity- “peti in” out comes gas at any octane rating. British have begun to use machine adapted from . This electronic mre accepts Worthwhile Aid Program Toronto Star bushels of «wheat annually, for instance. Given good rain- falls~and adequate fertilization, ghe-cotld probably raise produc. tion to a billion bushels va year, on existing grai’ lands. How much more could ‘be, grown, if Canadian hand stil un-' developed were turned to grain. production because of- urgent ve need, is anybody's a ee datas ation nations deneak = food aid program —only 11.4 million bushels. out of the’ 399.4 million bushels exported during the 1964-65°crop year. But éven that was more than three times the wheat we gave away in 1963-64, and more than eix times our largesse in 1962-63. Government ‘policy -is to in- crease wheat giveaways. sub- stantially — largely in the form of multilateral aid through the errams in much smaller amount + amounted to only $1,300,000 — $100,000 worth of rape Pakistan and $300 through the 1 Food Program, amounted $1,061,000. : a giveaways included $12, wort! of powdered han fi $513,452 of dried e* $231,015 of cheese; $106; 634 -of butter oil; $33,054 of but- ; $120,018 of. wheat flour ; $23) 509 of oats: RESTORE CIVIL RIGHTS Tath ft launde Terry had, announced | several times recently that guer- rillas, whose terrorist raat costs say $2.15. This question of,| scription retail dollar, while his the cost nate drugs will be explor- | profit on sales averages about —_-* in thls catoncey. yee ed by the parliamentary drug | 6-per cent which is nat out of cat om mphetamins is committee, and no doubt some | line, From corn flakés to life | Oly @ crutch and doed not teach, ‘political opportunities will re | insurance, from pa fg ere Oye gaso- =e how —— ere A member the headlines but for | line, the enormous Canadian re- e remedies et a i get the travesties of the Kefau | tail ‘mark-up is” the offender | & Smporery ; Ver committee in US on the which ehould first be studied by ~ i regainéd within a year re all_who complain” about prices:| (Nore: au correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen be addressed to: Dr. “Theshere Sofa In The: Kitchen Van Delien, co Chicago Trib- i Ottawa Journal une, Chicago, Titinois;)~ Oe, ict ve; "kh keen a oR : cently that sizeable kitchens are | oak, ornamented with beautifel| PUBLIC-FORUM ‘returning to favor. For. some | carvings. Best oil tempered p Style. to_| springs. Uphe | promote small, - plat-_| ficent French ed, antiseptic areas\where one | Six rows of deep tufting. Very could reach everything by turn- | soft yet made extra ing on one’s heel. . It is an elegant We assume the domestic piece of furniture, 75 inches | @cience girls thought they were | long and 30 inches wide doing housewives a favor by in- | ping weight 110 pounds Socata Uaciner of sione. 90.8822 decre ‘the number of steps. A man is obliged to spend. , too much effi good part of his working hours fn any line of endeavor ‘seems |.either vertical or semi-vertical to take away the job of working; | in a chair. It seems to us that the law of diminishing returns | the tempo might lessen and-per has reacted with deplorable. re- - spective get somewhere back ‘to sults in enjoyable living. Now al, if more men had the op- that the experts ‘returning | portunity to take to normalcy, we | soén to position for half an hour after eead that one of them is advoca- | meal. . ‘ ting a sofa in the kitchen. We believe that if the It is good for a man to stretch | bers of legislative bodies out for 40 winks after a hearty | have a sofa in their offices, and meal topped with a quarter of | all other citizens could stretch a mince-meat pie. The Fancy | out for a spell in the Glenham Rocco; Couch filled | the day, the nationa! pias A ost slogue oid mm _to an sven jer washes the tops and rows Brantford Expositor a softens ~abeorhe. fi Obit WE Miings you con banknotes ona. metal plate, | Most fields slope towards our buy froma # t machine increas-} whips: them into a canner | Streams and drain into res év “but gasoline is | which rejects counterfeits and, | Some Helds could be planted so .| mot one o them because our | if the note is-genuine, switches | @8 not to drain directly into them Yaw insists on manned- gas} on the pump to-deliver-the-cor-| and this would be a help. - pumps: rect volume of fuel. ° _ While a good deal of the red The fire guare authority to | Still another’development is | water comes off the dirt roads stop you from put- | an American oil. company’s ‘“‘key | Most of it comes from the pota- ting a tiger in your tank at a|elub” for commercial water- | to fields. I am firmly convinc- gervice station pre-dates auto- | craft plying the Missouri River. |@4 about this theory, because I mation of sales methods. Now| Key - holding craft, including |have checked and found dead ee wi ee eee trout Te ee not last indefinitely. refinery dock, on BE sans: , Sir, ete., "NOTES BY THE ta Beauty may be only skin deep, but with modern cosmetic aids, who can tell how ~— Ot- | tawa Journal. A car runs better when the nuts are” tight—e: , that is, oe one at the wheel.— Brandon un, ‘ : On his deathbed a manufactur- er named six bankers as his pall- bearers and explained that as they had carried him for so hong they might as well finish the’ job Financial Post. The lady in the second house from the corner placates the children by referring to dinner as a re-run instead of leftovers. —Calgary Herald. Sour note by a cynic: A man never falls for a girl until he be- comes unbalanced:—~--Galt—- parte. 5! A person will follow the -ad- vice only of those he believes are smarter than he. That's why ‘go little advice is followed. —Sud., bury Star. “Oh, what a lovely cow,” the cute young miss from. the city. ‘But why hasn't it got any horns?"' “‘Tiére are many reas- Need For Mote Patience ¥ An undercurrent of frustration lies behind the vigorous United. States peace offensive in- Viet Nam following the impatient escalation of the Southeast Asiar conflict in the last year.. This’ frustration -was— intensi- | fied with each new American | effort to turn the tide’ of. the re. until eventually the U/S. ‘orces practically assumed ‘the entire burden of battle. But despite increased Amer- jean—military—strength- in South Viet Nam and the: bombing raids on, Nortir Viet Nam, vic- tery against the rebel Viet Cong ‘Was no nearer. ; Unable to get out of-a frus- trating situation. by means of battle, President Johnson launched a major peace drive with a renewed call for peace negotiations. But with whom would the U.S. negotiate? The U.S. position is that nego- tiations can only be conducted among... governments, which ‘would exclude the National Lib- eration Front—the political arm of the Viet Cong—from the con- ference table. a4 LATEST APPEAL. | - The rebel guerfilla forces: in South Viet Nam as well as-the government_of Communist North Viet Nam—which the U.S. blames" for the Viet Cong suc- resi ist participate in any peace talks. The latest American peace ef- fort was U.S. Ambassador Ar- thur Goldberg’s appeal to UN -General U Thant and the 117-member United Nations’) to help “get peace talks going, with a ceasefire as. a major priority. The US. ‘moved: into South Viet Nam to keep the country from falling amity into the Oldsters in Ontario will note with interest ‘that Dr. Barnar- do’s Homes in England will ob- serve its centenary in 1966. Time ard | was. when vince. Dr. Barnardo's: Homes. ac- | cepted boy waits, orphans —and- “natural sons’’ of unwed par- ents. They. were then sent out to the ‘‘colonies’ where homes +qwere found for them. There “were few tural-communitiesin-} Ontario without some of these boys, and many were also plac- ed in cities. In most instances these boys kindly treated, clothed, fed and hoised for the work | DRESSES. . 'fonal one, however, was unfor- COATS - SUITS © JUMPERS Ry JACKETS “OR COATS | -g0 did -American . -Barnardo Boys S. Windsor Star ~ 8 they were able to do- The occas- |‘c: =. By Boris Miskew ~ ~ Canadian Press Staff Writer hands of the Communtist-led i els after the French pulled out of -Indochina, having suffered 170.000 casualties. a The Americans figured their superior naval would give them a better chance than the French had in dealing with President Ho Chi Minh and) the North Vietnamese. But the guerrilla-type jungle warfare proved to be just as difficult to the Americans as it had been to. French. The U.S, involvement began with the use of military “‘advisers” but. eventually. these and air power .- “advisers” re Re--|-ons,"’ replied the farmer. “Some. _ cows don’t have them until later . found theniselves engaged in ac- . tual battle. ~ INCREASED FORCE In less ‘than a year, the 25,000 U.S: - personnel in Viet Nam swelled to 50,000, then to 100,000 and now to nearly 200,000. Aa- the military strength increased, strikes air against North tar- gets. But all this failed to shake the elderly Ho Chi Minh, and the world looked on in fear that the ‘escalation of the fighting truce, pended the bombing of North So far the efforts for peace negotiations have failed to bring a favorable response from North Viet Nam, but the fighting has remained confined to a small tunate enough to get in a place where he was mistreated. Boys did very well, Hon. Chat-— les Dunning, premier of Saskat- mance at Ottawa, was one. W. | know of a former mayor, living, of a large city who came ito Canada under the-De-— ‘Bare erdo auspices. . Dr. Barnardo’s Homes stil} function. Five children come r Fabric NO CHARGES -< NO REFUNDS ‘ALL SALES FINAL, pra Bh tenn. gg lig io been Stel ae a ae In 1964-65, bilateral food aid weet ot es bias rs armed forces | Gréat: George St a € Coats Yom OPEN \ ALL DAY J. SATURDAY ____THE FASHION SHOPPE 2 . nn pk Some of these Barnardo Home . ‘ sce cee = Seno boys from this inst!- tution were common in this pro: | chewan and later-Mintster-of-Fi-