Eh: fiuardimi Coven Prince Edward Island lee 11!: Dew w.l. Nanmx, rublulul muk wnku ElKuIIVt Edda: Editor Publtuh-d Ivar wnek day morning lmupl Sun- u-y. .ua .muvevy holidays) u l65 Prim sum, ckurlumlew", P.E.l., by lhwlun Newxpcpau Ltd. Ianh elnm .v Summcuide, Mom-gun. Albu- inn and Scum. Rip/cleaved mummy by Vhemiun Nowwlpcll Adv! vice: Idioms, 425 Um mly A Empl Maw; Manuel Mu Celnun 5n , Ilmymlyy 6—5‘7117 e n. attire loan w.n Glcluia Sllccl, couvcl IMA 7037i. be, c Dally Newly-gel Publbkeu u ma lhe c.”le In... "In Can-din» rm. - nxcluslvliy emuled lo me .u. lb, "pub. llnlibu at all new. aupmke. m lbu pm. mall-d to ll or lo m. Alnmioled Plea: DY mm- and Illa In In. local new: published herein. AII bl n pl npulnl dlxpukhel herein 5.. lnlpllan "In Not em 25: Del week by ume. sll.oc yeu by mall or rural laulel end are" y eemel yen a" lelma ml UK 32000 p" . .na cllewhen outlid! umub Cam. sum a Nut eye. 7: be, uugl. may Member Allan smeeu el Cllzullllon SATURDAY. lufi Is. Fail. pics I Welcome Announcement Full marks go to Solicitor General J. Watson MacNaught, our represen- tative in the Federal Cabinet. for the manner in which he has announced the plans for the new Ice-breaking car ferry for the Tormentine-Borden route. We already had the assurance that this ferry would be built, and that tenders would he called without unnecexlary delay. Mr. MacNaught has confirmed reports that the esti- mated cost will be in the vicinity of $14,000,000, and that the boat will be of the size and capauty of the “Abegweit,” with facilities for both ear and rail traffic. He says it is hoped to call tenders before the end of the year and to have the boat in service within a year and a half or two years after that. This estimate may be overeoptimistic. We know from past experience that many unforeseen factors are involved in contracts of this kind. But the point is that the pledge given in this re- gard by the Liberal candidates in their election campaign is to be im- plemented. Moreover. Mr. MacNaught made It clear-«and we trust it will be made equally clear by his colleagu as when they speak on the subject in Parliament—that this new boat is not intended as a permanent solu- tion to our transportation problem. it will he desiimed so that it can be used on the Sydney-Port aux Bas— ques. Newfoundland, service after it has served its purpose here, It will not jeopardize the construction of our Causeway project. or cause any delay in the planning and construction of that great work. We had hoped that this assurance Would be given in concrete terms by I representative of the Government. in keeping with the definite commit- ment made on behalf of Canada by the preceding Conservative adminis~ tration. Mr. MacNaughi has now put the matter beyond doubt. This should put an end to partisan wrangling on the subject. and provide an oppor- tunity for our members on both sides of working wholeheartedly together. Wasted Youth Under the above heading. the‘ Ottawa Journal calls attention to a moving document produced by Pro— fessors Oswald Hall of Toronto and Bruce McFarlane of Carleton. for the Department of Labor. with the title "Transition from School to Work." They study the experiences of young Canadians in a typical Ontario com- munity they choose to call “Paulend,” and follow the youngsters as they pass through the high school system and enter the work world. “What we find disturbing." says The Journal. “is the evidence adduce ed that this modern society of ours, so full of social security and econ— omic planning, is failing the child— ren.“ In “Pauland” it was found that the children of middlulus and pro- fenional homes had a higher buryi- vnl rate in the educational system; In other words. the children from more , homes, ‘ of their qualifications. school longer. Of the high-calibre students ell- toring high school—the top 10 per- cent-only one In five carried through to university. On the other hand. gld the report. may of the poorly qualified ntudenta ruched univer- llty. The well-off carried on. the other! didn’t. Thin community in all not 41 Md!!!“ to university. of when: twoLthIrdn m of aymge or Mum avenue mdalnic mini». ,Tilo party now in power in (ha. a mind in the election mmpaign fit than would be 10,000 annual ltayad in Icholnrnhipl of 81.000 each to assist needy students. There was nothing of this In the first Gordon budgeu but surely the need in urgent. It in a disgrace to Canada that the boy or girl from a modest home with tho brains to be a research scientist. a doctor or engineer. is denied the op- portunity because of the coat. Th e Russian Communists do better than that. They don‘t wuta bright minds. They see that they arc trained. and they put them to work where they will be of the most ad- vantage to themselves and to the state. Indian Border Blues Disturbing reports are coming from New Delhi to the effect that the Chinese Communists are building six or seven noI‘th-to-south roads on their side of the Himalayas, from Ti. bet leading up to Nepal’s boarders. As the weather clears in these high mountain regions. India is stiffening if not for a major attack, at least for another deep probing thrust which may come in Ladakh in the west or in Sikkim in the east, or even in the North East Frontier Agency. Against this background. India is reportdly considering a United States—British request for joint air exercises with the Indian air force this autumn. particularly over two strategic regions—Delhi and Cal- cutta. India is asked to give formal consent to a scheme which will em- ploy supersonic forces and for which Indian radar systems are being strengthened. Meanwhile. India’s air-vice-mar- shal engineer is in Moscow at Soviet invitation. looking at "suitable" air- craft. and ratification of the US.- British proposal will have to await his return next week. Russia evident- ly is concerned about Chinese all- gressive intentions on India. to the extent at least of being willing to provide more defense equipment. While India is preparing to bar the door to further Communist pene- tration. Peking seems to be moving closer to Pakistan. which has just established a new air link with the mainland. Pakistan President Ayub Khan is reported by the New Delhi correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor as saying that any more military assistance for India will cause all other Asian countries to seek China’s “protection.” This statement is untrue. but it is omin. ous for all that. as indicating the hardening in the Indo-Pakistan situation at this critical time. Mr. Wilson's Tribute In Britain. politics is a game for hard-bitten professionals. There are few concessions made to an op- ponent's weakness. and this applies particularly to occasions such as the present, when a general election is in the offing and the Opposition is be. ginning to smell blood. Nevertheless, there in that traditional British fair- ness, which was exemplified the other day by Harold Wilson, leader of the Labor Party, when asked by ll Lon- don Observer interviewer what he thought of the Prime Minister. Mr. Wilson gave this frank reply: "A great party leader—in the Conservative context—yes. The man who could pick up the pieces of Sue: and rebuild them into a machine. making pro-Suez noises and pulling e = ev E. .- av (I 3 m =‘ m an :1 a o 5. :s in *3 politician. In parliamentary terms he's a sportsman—that‘s what I like about him. He likes the cut and thrust of debate and so do I. In the debate on the Selwyn Lloyd crisis in 1961, I made a very tough speech. Their policies. it seemed to me. had finally broken down. and we had laid our— selves open to the taunt of the 'sick man of Ellrope.‘ “He sat and listened to It all. I think it really hurt. But when I sat down he lifted hill hands up and gave me the hoxer'll handshake. That was the pui' iuu. with u ' .v u . ~ "I may make all kinds of mlmkes in the coming months. I ahnn't make the mistake of underestimating him.” EDITORIAL NOTE A LOGO-acre wildlife reserve when nnilncll such as the rare onyx. var- Ious species of antelope. giraffes. ub- ns and double-humped camels will roam free. is to be created in the south of the Negev desert. to lore-l. “In animals. all grass—enters, will be imported from Africa and the arm let aside for them is similar In land- scape. vegetation and climata to port: of East Africa ‘ POWER AND SAILS At The Charlottetown Yacht Club BRITlSH SKILL IN AFRICA Prospectsln Kenya Anol Southern Rhodesia Kenya and Snulllem Rhodenla are the Inn erIIsn territories in l Alriea where the presence oil while settler minorities made Ill mm a decade ago that indepen~ deuce u u as .- black African go- vernments was well-high impos- nlble. In Kenya. a date has now been; set Inf Just that 7 Independence under a black Alncan guvcrm meul hcsdcd by name Keuyullu, man whom many Europeans had snuulu complelnly to discree dit. ll not destroy. The date is Dev 12. l Selbguverumeul came u Iew 1 w eeks ugu to a Keuyu uboull which the pessimist: made aim, onu- forecasts Tamar. nlssstloN Tribal dimension, the threat oil Somali secession and doubt about I [he lulure of the mainland strip leased from the Sultan cl Zanzir; her were bul three ol the Issues that some observers thought would hamper the development 0' a viable Independent country. The issues are still there. but Britain‘s conscnl to independence on Dec. 11 would hardly have been given had not Mr. Kenyal» tu‘s government shown ummise at keeping to a Sensihifl and constructive course Almost simullancouslyt nvrm the conference at \‘ictun'a FnIIS, has came the announcement lhal agreement has been reuclu-d on Dec 3! as the day on which the Federation of Rhodesia and Ny- nsnland will be dissolved, Then Northern Rhodesia and N slanrl will go their own toward Independence under black Airlcan governman But the third tederul IerI-lluI-y. Snulnem Rhodesia. has n lirme laid by Brituiu thal It can- not hope (or independence until the while government there has amended Ihe Conailtlltinn to HIV! Alrlcuns a broader and lair el- franchise PUBLIC FORUM nle mum -- um n In alum by correlnnmenle nl uuuliunn pl u- Imn, I cum... don no| um sully name In: mum... (ll corn: mum- All IeIleu mullvneu m m». Incl u, .4qu uuu con-enullml - r1 uuemm Tu. cuumluu In u... am my Mrrclnomienu mm In mumulm me '"IE ALGEBRA TEST 1 Sir. 7 I would like to draw the I lmtlall til the high school ten- chcrs lo the Algebn lost In the recenl Atlantic sum exume. Did luey ulnslder that a Iulr ten (or Grade XII ludlllu" Have their students been eullleleuuv prepurea Ior such u test? In con- i verantinn with and n report. from the iluaeulu clemeelveu 1 many belleve they have tailed ll , miserably. Not llllly that. but ' coming as ll did early In llle week 0' exumluullaui ll wnrrIed them no that they were uuuble u. cope with Ike lolllmlug paper. This I... been the pattern lol- the put llve yen" um I believe nomcthillg uuuu be done ubuul ll Either the students m not xemml the pmper ground work In lllle eubleel or those sel. Ilull the exam are not Iumlllur with Ike extent of nigdrrn being quulll In the school]. In ellker me the nudeul In uol Io blume bul must mm the rel-um. poa- uny buvlug to repent the year‘- Tliln in 1 EXP" law! for him In her and I (In- lnclnl burden on the plrenll. In our well organized lcllmll. In our chlldl’cu not being taught Ill think [or themulvell ll thl l club! of our mnllle'm-tlcll [Ill- Il'u? Al! we getting aver-enthu- I'llsllc In our np-pfolch to (duel ll all? new leflmlll chool going la luna- the nun pattern and result only In the survival of Ice Menu Thu: «9 unem- I would like to It! Mind thruulll your paper By name on. who hen the lumen. I In lure me Mic lu um. Ol Ind flnllnI-ny mm” punk in pumeuln would like to m ‘1 an. n Ill. “2.. Hull) PARENT Inw- Iron. Christian Science Monitor snumem Rhodesia Premier Winston Field attended the Vic» Ioria tails conference L‘IESDIIE all earlier assertion that he would parliripale only like go! from Britain a promise that Southern Rhodesia would become Indb pendent slmultaneously with dis- soluliou of Ike federation There are reports from South- ern Rhodesia mm on cconomyl Goats And Scopegoois Christian Science Moulm "Goat's meul and rlcc, lulluw. ed by goats meal and spagh» ettl 7 every day ll lust SD! A bit obnoxious " That is how Oil! o! the sixteen British mvlce men just released alter eleven days cupuvlly In vemen de- scribed llle food there I ll it sounds a Hole like Alluel In Wonderland — lrell. mere Iii atmosphere of make 7 here aboul many at the hupp. EIIIIIEA ill Ills southwest corner Ill Arabia. The sixteen servicemen were from 8 party M 45 lincluding lmlr Women! who lost their way on all "adventure training" ex- cursian and ended up in Yemen. SEWIEE departments I11 most countries sometimes do silly things. end this seems to have been one of Illem. Equallv Sill’y wns the mem claim that the blunderlng oi the party across the border was pan of a wick plot ul British aggression And while a = Where Is Search Legal? . Pelcrboruugh Examlner How Iar can the pnllce an lec- ally in searching cars? A lew week: all! in Los Amzpics. pul- Ice were looking lur a taxi which had been Involved In u robbery. One taxi they stopped was carrying the controversial comedian Lenny Bruce. The poi- Ieumuu searched the taxi and its passenger. They Inurul hemlu on the floor of the vehicle llnll ur- rested err. In a lA'l! Anlzeleu court In plelded not gullly to a change of pumpkin of namo tlcs, Bruce's Iuwyer clulmea III I because Ills clienl’s consti- tutinnnl rights had been violat< ed. by unlawful search. III e charge should be dllmissed. ll luck conduct were In be permu- ted. lulu lilo lnwycr. police could stop every cm- In In An- gelee uull luulllule u Hearth. The ludlze accepted llll! argu- ment. The police search. he said. was Illeilul us win the seizure bl Our Yesterdays {From the Guardlnn Fllegt N'I'VvFW'E runs AGII July ll. mil nun-y Connor, uuvlputur tor ule l-lulIlIeu pluue which Is mlk- ing n mund - the - wm'ld nllllll. was navigator nu Cu uIII Er- I-ul Boyd nl Toronto on his lllghl Irvin Mnnlual u. muslin vln Newioundlsnd In wall. noyll and Connor on Inul orcarlon landed Ill llle loot uI Tell lllll. Illd spent about lun say. In chur- lottctown wullluil tar Invornhle Ive-Inel- to lake on for New- Iouudluun. Doll slmv «I Shedinc nrriv~ In ' mu: u mar-Ii!!! In his mm yuekl “The D. " to tulle pm In the ylchting activitch u! the week. TEN YEAR! AGO July ll. In “Educ-ill or. c. n. stew-n, [Ida-I d 29Hth It DIM“. annually. and u nuuve ol Nor- bolm, P. E. 1.. kn received the of Donut! of Public Ill- lop Univer- .Dr.llew¢ ilbnlhvdtobofllemlymil MMMW. quurc — wit-ll lustice for Afri- ls running down. that bulldlus Is at a shudstill, and Illa! lllu whiicll are leaving the territory. All these (actors could produce a mood among Southern Rhode- sinn whites conducive to u more easy settlement of the terrilnry'n a 0 calls I: once lccmcd poa- ulble. ls II loo much so to hone? Al least Erilaill reserves It. in the realm of the silly, on! I! tcmplcd to include the action of u United Nations Inquiry mis- slrln whlch. without vititlng Aden or its British ~ protected hinterland A. admittedly be. cause the Brilish would not let It in 7 mmewhnt blithely Ila!- ed met the situation there i. "dangerous and Ilker [a threa- lt‘ll Peace." The Mission's mull-Is is an exaggeration. 0n the other hand, there are the seeds of eventual trouble in the federal merger In which srlmu nu: bound the bustling port city ol Aden wmi thc Icudnl and prlmlllve sheik- dams and other petly Itllel lu [he Prnlccmrntg, ll Britain's national Interest demands lbe retention of Aden. it might have been better in make it 5 Gibraltar or Guan- tanamo lhlll to have dreamt up u lancy political arrangement Illel could no euelly become un- mick. flle narcotics. though Illa police. upon discovering heroin, had - duty to lay u charge. We wonder how I iudue would rule II a similar plel Wer- made in Ontario? In Tin-onto. the police force set! lip road blockl, stops every planing car. Impact- the vehicle and the driver. Ind occasionally lnyl charges. Cur- iously. the Toronto uewupupm. Ind the mill)er of ill! BHY'I lawyers, have condoned thll tion because It HIM?! Police IA: weed out A few drunk llld Im- paired drlvel'l. I lew without current licence! and many with defective vehicles. This remqu timid be no- plied Iu urblII-ury unrchel oi Urlvlte human. unannounced "Ids on private homes mill“ uncover cache. or mien mill, counterfeit molle)’. «run. run- blen— heaven known whnti But Illil ll not law enlorcet. Till! Lb Hornetth quite dillelmu. I! ii «I tactic: d the police min. L (A menu-Id wu lull Hell Neutr- . . Old dllry. in“). Formed of [III froth Ind Hit Pearly mlal: ndlnel A llllnlnl [em III III: emerald Und oi Eternal worn-Ill fickle (Ill: Undlnei Ridlul the lonlllllll crut, her- cc (mi Undille! Far-oil film of lllllty Iljhl. vi» ion Inx dreams puqu and animal- tau Illin- Mullen-L“: m mammal-mm m: Gonemwhnnta'uaudnky lost In th- mam-or omelulbuw-n-cmmam. unofNigm; Undinel . -—Wln.ll.Doucfib murmur. Sun, Cool Tar ' Aid Psoriasis by Dr. Man: II. Vuu Belle- Pbomsls l.- u rubber-I skin disorder. Moot vlcuml lock lur- land In um vie-um- bee-m run his u beneficial street. particularly w h e u comb with con] lul- ointh which make- the lkln mm nullich to ultraviolet light. rum-lulu uni-Irv belinl u a red. slightly railed lequn tne Ilue or u pea. Liter, dry, silvery Icnles cover the center part. won one layer helped upon um» thcr. ii the upper amt I: pull- ed all m- wiped away, one or more bleeding point: will be nob ed, There may be only one It- which comes and noel. Others have patches of Imumul blue and uhape scattered over the body. The elbowl and him are Invorcd ullu mm the lower buck. Iculp. and pull. next in order. But psoriasis hu no chlncter— llIIc pattern bee-nu than Ire levers! vnrlellcs. When the nails are Involved. lnr example, the condition may relaltle ringworm with rldglng. thickenA ing. and dlscolorstinn and Ill accumulation n! powdery mut- erial under the edges. But u l, in] lorm produces tiny, uullorm pts which make Ike nail rrsemble a thlmble. Scales on the scalp may mule u super . duuelrun. Psoriasis in more unsightly and embarrassing than serious. It is considewd u skin disease of the healthy. eveu Inousll u small percentage of any group of people. Ileullnv or otherwise. will kuve this outbreak. There is no known cause or cure bul the unsifihtly bcnllng can be euuimllvl with lotion! or ointment coulummg u variety ol chemicals. No internal rem- edy ls ellucclve uud diet le at mile or no value. The use ole corticnslcrnid hormones in ointmenu S III! current rem- edv o! MINCE This product In plied ma sealed in plncc with u plastic coverinll. These her» mones also are injected under the lesions. nul coal tar remums one of the salsal and mm llselul n! the older remedies. These pro- ducts have been obieclonablc they mssy and stain the clothllllz. The newer varitlea are more refined and cosmetically acceptable CHANGED PERSDNALI'I'Y L. writes: A min of 70 had a mild stroke Since then he expresses haired [or his loved ones. Is it true that stroke dumalm the brain in thnl the person snyn the opposite at what he th nks“ a‘ arrnr Yes. especially ll llle man has aphasia and bullqu express Imsull. Slime victims ul stroke develop dellulle ell-uses of per- bonality. sou'l'r .loINTs c c writer: Why doe- u high level of uric acid affect me Joints? . ncpur Eecause the exceal urate crystals get lulu bud irritate uu lulnu. NOTES BY THE WAY “Mum Manual-blurb!” III-mph they meet are loo MUN-dull! it. — Ottawa loom-l. M-IHHMHIIMI thumb II M till-ouch yearn of null - “lined kneel. —-0me Journal. A fill-Infill «purl mu that fingerprint: mer ell-nus. Any mother a! you! childral will confirm thin. — Sll'llll Observer A lama oner- Ilnler ny- lhll North Alne'ricn cam mam Ibout it! whoopinu cranel thin It: fine In! Mnyhe. but our W lillnll Inn lyl been that nel- then- open lllllm nor whooping crane! Il‘llnlld be lhot. — Edmolr he gay mm the num- ber oi world problems Hill-Ill Ind the number of mlutinnl being found for them is becom- lng Increasingly wider. — Sud- bury sm- d my argument or. always up (Inca who make themselvu heard. What we need In tome extreme modern“. — Winde slur. Ill Providence, R.I. I "Jenn- ulil mnn who pull been driving or no yen-u w: fined a .m surrendered his driver‘l llcenu (or coins through u utup mu. That] right. Judge. tench than young whippernnnwel‘l I In. Inn—«Hamlllfln Spectator. In «be paved mum u the elementary lchool bu the corner. Iu the week a: the In- uqu um meet. I p be small KIPIS were lumpInI over rum-by they seemed of uniform ulue uud un- IluI-mly immature. Until one of the conlellantl ullmd her 1qu . “You uull mu bllzu heels and silk stockings!“ n: t- ed kel- (all. Mrs. Siddml 1. tharlne Cornell and Kule Reid combined could not nuve pour- ed greater scorn into than eight words puma wind. Agitation In Britain Iy Rad Currie Clllldllrl Prus Staff Writer The malortty nl Britons ure genuinely bewildered by he sudden and violent auluI-euk ol allllllollty towards the Greek anvemment Ind monarchy. Nu leu- bewildered. appar- cntly. are the Greeks. Ille peo- ple on wluzue beball the unions demonllrniors bl Landau are on the rampale. Reports n-um Athena indicate the general reaction In anger and bitlemess. wml Iew excep- tions. Greek uewspupm are ex- preulng regret that Ike current Villt to Brilqu at King Paul and Queen Frederik- was not voil- pnncd, ll one rule intention ol the demonstrators in to draw ulleu- iioll to llle situation In Greece. Illey certainly buve succecded. Most Britons know In more to- day Ibmlt Greece IIqu they did three d8“ alzo. mo'nvn PDLITICAL But muuy observers suggest Ihat the real mollvulluu behind some of the urguulzem oi the demonstration: on behalf of Communists and others in prison In Greece II more politi- eul than humanitarian. Ponibly even more disturb in In the (not out many bl tlIelI- laithlul followers, inter vlewed by press and lelevlsluu. neve pretty vague ldcna what the whole tJIlng Is ubuul. Whether they realize II or not. than who Iglme simply for the lake of agitating pro- vide excellent opportunities lol- communist exploitation uud it Is this consideration Illul wnr~ nu the arm-n government. The uveI-ane Briton lqu grown Indlnmut In their al- molt condnuuuu activities bul the asllulm did their own cause more bul-m than good when they penullled Queen Elizabeth to become Involved in n booing lucideuI Wednesday ulglil. As lul- be can be ascertained, Britons no luuper are used by the antics ol lueee bnndl ol cummuulslu. paciiilts. ueuulue do—goodcrb. wiueeyed lac-lulu and euulty heatnlkn who on the ranks behind Illen- Ieuden. Iaklng up the cause nl any Ind every underdog who happen- Along. ovna-nxmnn causn Time II! a glowing feeling that mu lime Ike demonltra- tors lleve over-extended them- selves in Ialllnlz up due Greek cause. parllcularl‘y thou mp. who previously uuullued their uelivlllee to the anti . nuclelr ramnairn, El'Pn some hnn . the . bomb leaders have expressed Iem mm In backing too many clusu Ihry will spread their Influence [on thin end no Ionizer be taken seriously in any quarter. Many people v'llul reel lym- pxlhy lor llle embarrassment caused the vlslliug royal couple blsu have serious reservations ebqu the degree of democrch In Greece, Tile none . too . eluble Greek government. with memories of civil war still fresh. I. um:- ally hesitant ubqu relcllilll persons meelecl durlnl in. Communist lukeuver bid. aul outsiders argue that after is years me but the Commu- nists can profit lrom their toll- tinucd lmprlemmeul. In fact. it u said that file Int thing lbe Communists run: in for the prisoners to be released. «In» aeprlvlulz the party M II. most useful mlrtyrn. The FLVIIIG llIITGIIMII RESTAURANT "Your Island Steak House” Charlottetown to: Montreal Corner Brook $18.00 St. John's Sydney Halifax Saint John Truro Moncton Sackville $1 6.00 $23.00 $11.50 $ 6.30 $ 5.70 $ 4.90 $ 3.70 $ 2.80 RESERVE A COACH SEAT UN OCEAN LIMITED SiUfl ll