e g- Che : ‘ Teer sc TR . Covers Prince Edvierd sland Like The Dew ey W..J. Hancex, Publisher © “Wallace Ward : s Frank Walker , , SPublished every week dey morning (except sun day and statutory holideys) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and. Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers - Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640. Cathcart Street Uni versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgie Btreet Vancouver MA 7037. ) .. Member. Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers - Association end The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press 1$ exclusively entitledto the use for repub lication of all news dispetches in. this ' paper tredited to it or to the Assoriated Press or.Reuters and also the loca! naws published herein. All tight? or republication of special diroatches here In also reserved. Subscription rate: Net over 40c per week by carrier. . $12.00 2 year by mail on rural routes end areas not serviced by. carrier. . $15200 @ year off Island and U.K. $20.00 par year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. s Not over 10¢ single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. . “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1966. PAGE 4 os 4 : A Gloomy Picture — ‘The UN General’ Assembly was & destribed as opening its 21st session yesterday in an atmosphere of gloom, with East-West relations seriously impaired by the Viet Nam war and with little prospect of progress on major issues. Although the war is not formally on the assembly's agenda, it is expected to play a major role both in the general debate which begins later’ this week, and in the dis- cussions of disarmament, outer space law and other issues: = Never in the two decades of th UN under three secretaries-general has there been such a scarifying an- nual report as. that, delivered by U Thant. “The international situation ~"has not improved. The cloud over Viet Nam has grown larger and more ominous. Nuclear as well as conven- tional armaments have developed apace. Comparatively little has hap- pened to brighten the prospects of those who occupy two-thirds of the world where’ poverty, disease, ignor-- ance and lack of opportunity are the | most.conspicious facts of daily life .. . The powerful nations have not during ‘this period-shown themselves able to rise above the suspicions, fears and misgivings that spring from their dif- ferent ideologies and from their dif- ferent conceptions of the best ferests of the rest of the world; nor the rich nations above their con-. cern for the continuation-of their own prosperity.” And so on, and on. A jeremiad over the appalling results of power politics,.of selfish nationalism, and failure to meet the most urgent prob- lems of human concern. One of these problems—that of food scarcity—is actually becoming worse as time goes on, despite ‘all the progress in scien- tific. techniques. Quite recently, the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture had oc- casion to issue the following warn- . ing: ‘Mass famine in the 1980's can- not be prevented unless the less-de- veloped countries do more in the next five years ‘to feed themselves. By © then, because of world population growth, the United States, Canada and other developed agricultural countries will no longer have the food potential to prevent sucha disaster.” At about the same time; in Paris, a special assistant to the U.S. State Secretary had this to say: “Food re serves in the world’s ‘bread basket’ are getting so low that a single year of drought in Canada and the United | States would cause worldwide deaths through starvation.” And closer home, the Ontario Department of Agricul- ture announced: “Canada’s role is*to increase the production of goods having high nutritional value in suf- ficient volume to feed its own, grow- ing population. Unless steps are taken now to bring this about, Canada and Canadians could join the ‘hungry’ : tries.’ The department has cal- led a special conference on agricul- turé for next month to discuss the problem. ae But its worldwide implications must be evident to all. It should have top billing on the agenda of the UN Assembly at this time. Unfortunately there is little chance of that in the circumstances. From Bad To Worse? In Toronto, civic politics have got- ten into such a state that serious con- sideration is being given to adopting the political party system At present, \t is complained, each candidate for tivic office runs alone; he can make any proposal or promise he feels like, but he has no real responsibility for carryimg them outyhe can always say ‘in-excuse that he was frustrated by his feHow-aldermen. Even the mayor cannot dépend on the support-he re- quires to put through the program on which he was elected; he can only ~ Editor ~ try to cajole enough councf members into voting for specific measures. - Progress is accomplished, if-at~ alt, | only by immense log-rolling and trad- © ing 6f favors. and nobody can be held responsible when things go wrong. It is argued that the introduction of political parties would bring an im- mediate improvement in the system. _ It would afford some guarantee that | a candidate would be called to ac- count for his promises, would furnish a loyal and coherent opposition to any existing municipal regime and would offer an alternative when the regime in power lost popular confidence. The Toronto Star appears to be sold on this idea, as the only way of providing the “discipline and. co- hesion” necessary for effective gov- ernment on the municipal level. That may be so in the big Ontario metro- polis, though we venture to saw that it's a’ solution likely to raise more problems than it will solve. Certain- ly.we find no reason for wanting to {get rid of what The Star calls the “non-partisan fetish” in our munici- We get quite enough partisanship in , provincial and federal affairs.. In- deed, the past few years have pro- ‘vided spectacles on Parliament Hill. system into widespread disrepute. Nor does’ a week pass, we notice, without several editorial blasts from Toronto papers on this very subject. . Excuse: Our Cynicism! New Brunswick set ‘a fine ex- ample’ at last. week's fedeéral-provin- cial conference, says. the Moncton : Transcript. It commends the prov- ince’s finance and industry minister, Mr. DesBrisay, for having “hailed the new equalization formula proposal by the federal government.” Lest the cynical should say this was to be expected since it provides substan- tially higher payments, the Moncton paper goes on to point out that while matters considerably,” many ‘times this sum would be required for the gap between New Brunswick and the “have’’ provinces to be closed. It_ adds. that “if selfish determin- ation to gouge more and more out of Ottawa were this province's aim— as it appears to be the aim of some other provinces, the New Brunswick delegation would have been far less- receptive to the proposals.” But Mr. DesBrisary was careful to make clear that it was New Brunswick's “loyalty to a united Canada” that caused him to hail the new formula with such enthusiasm. Far be it from us to disparage such. laudable ‘motives. But when our. Moncton contemporary goes on to say that “if all provinces held sim- ilar views this nation would be strong and united as never before.”’ we-con- fess that we find the moral far- fetched. What sentiments, we wonder would Mr. DesBrisay—or The Trans- cript either—be voicing if instead of -$15,700.000 he was offered a beggar- ly..$200,000.increase,-or-the- equiva- lent on a per capita basis? New Plant For Borden The announcement that the Mari- time Cement Company Limited will build_a $200,000 cement storage-and distribution plant near Borden, and that construction will begin immed- | iately with the plant schediled to be | in operation early in. 1967, is) good | news. Not only will the plant be in a | position to serve the needs of the new causeway construction but it will be a"permament source of suppiy for ’ building programs throughout the province, as well as of employment on a steady: basis. It should serve, also, as an inducement to other industries * | to locate in the Borden area, thus off- setting any disadvantage that may ac- ; cure when the current car ferry, traf- | fic is routed via the causeway. Both our provincial and federal | authorities have given assurance that help in establishing new industries will be forthcoming in this area, and | there is ‘no reason why it should not become. in time, one of the busiest | industrial areas vf the province. In | this case, however, credit is due to a _ Charlottetown corporation, Indus- | trial Enterprise Inc., for negotiating with the cement company, and thus setting an example of “enterprise” in the best tradition of public service. . | EDITORIAL NOTE _ . Editors of Farm Index, a U.S. de- partment of agriculture publication, think people will continue to turn their backs on their kitchens and dinesout increasingiy. Thev predict a 75 per cent increase in the nation’s annual restaurant bill in a decade. Causes: more working wives. more snacking teenagers, more old people living alone and not wanting to cook, | and just-more people. ' ® palities in this part of the country. that have brought the whole party ‘ eect Se Witt THE CONTENT You ox FRom US tH ls, <<y Human Bites © Infectious —~ Human bites are a common Some persons are bitten when fighting. Others nibble away on their own nails and cuticle; es- pecially when reading books or curs and infection ensues when the germs in the mouth enter the injured part. This is under- He By Theodore R. Van Dellen, MD | cause of.infections of the hand. | {with urgent appeals to restrain ithe American military’ buildup it Viét ‘Nam. : ? viewing TV. An open wound oc- | Pope Paul and -UN Secretary- Tension Over USS. Buildu By Arch MacKenzi¢ General U Thant have spoken for the world community. a Two domestic voices—signifi- | cant in their recent association | with the president's staff—have { een hyn naan er cism yet, ,of..the American eo tion St eeeceats for fight- | ing a . holding >war: ' These coinéide with the | state department's acknowledg- ment Monday that American | plans may have violated Chi- | mese air space twice this month | —the type of possibility re- | as most likely to trigger | Chinese involvement. They also coincide with a | general assumption that Pres: | ident Johnson, heartened by the recent high civilian vote ‘in | South Viet Nam .and troubled | Surgeons from ‘Jackson Me- morial hospital in Miami _recent- ly_ reported their experiences | with 50 persons suffering from | human bites. Thirty-six bites | were self-inflicted or done by , someone else: the remainder | stemmed from blows to the mouth. The initial injury was a single or multiple puncture wound, in addition there were 11 | |by signs of public impatience iwith the war, plans a“ steady | increase in military forces be- fore or after the Nov. 8 con- gressional elections—or both. APPEALED TO WORLD Pope Paul called Monday for | prayers during October for peace in Viet Nam and action to “prevent the further .spread—| of the conflagration and ‘even to ‘tion, WASHINGTON (CP)—On. the ;the Kennedy administration, eve of the 2ist session: of the | says: General Assembly, President.‘ ‘Everything in .recent weeks: |Johnson has been presented —the actions of the administra- the intimations of’ actions to come. even a certain harsh- ness-in the presidential rhetoric —suggests that President John- ‘son: has made his choice and ‘that his choice is the careful enlargement of the war.” WRECKED PLANS . ¢ The war, he writes, has badly harmed East - West relations, made U Thant resign, wrecked Johnson's plans for a Great So- ciety and damaged Allied rela- tions. ; . Goodwin said in a speech Sat- urday that bombing North Viet Nam “has been a failure and perhaps .a disaster.” But. he suggested only that it be re- ined. He said there has been some i“deliberate lie and distortion” in the official U.S. stand on+thesé- war and there is mounting dan- ger of war with China. FRANCE ORDERS BOEING PARIS. (AP)—Air France has announced it has ordered ‘our Boeing-747. planes to be deliv- ered early- in 1970. The Amer- ican planes are designed to carry up to 450 passengers at subsonic speeds. A- number of European and U:S. airlines had previously ordered the planes. > WORTHS te fractires and two dislocations. extinguish it entirely.” Serious infections followed in 50 | Thant made another im- an addition of $15,700;000 “will help | = S5S ; @ vat hie’ + vie THOUGHT FOR INDIAN SUMMER Even the denizéns. of Parlia- ment Hill find it hard to follow the devious and shifting patterns of the leadership struggle with- in each of the four parties in fe deral politics. A map of the social welfare shoals on the po- litical” spectrum, horoscopes of all the rivals, and a close check on the lunch-time dates of each — these would help one to un- derstand each move. And I. mean all four parties. Personal rivalry between Al- obstacle to the desirable reunion of the Western and Quebec wings of the Social Credit party. New Democrat leader Tom- my Douglas needs a hearing aid, if he cannot detect behind him the heavy breathing of his, de- puty, David Lewis, who appears to be Parliament Hill's most eager leadership aspirant. At least nine present’ or, past figures in federal or provincial politics have their eyes on — or are hoped to be eyeing — the leadership of Canada’s Conser- vitives (which is not the same thing as “the mantle of John Diefenbaker’’). SCRIMMAGE AT THE TOP Among the Liberal cabinet, every speech and spat, every policy’ and promise, is motivat- ed by. someone's personal - or promoted ambition. For we are already seeing the dog-eat-dog struggle to succeed to the only leader who seems anxious to be succeeded as soon as possible (though presemably not before his ‘‘pension day’’, April 22 next, worth $16,667 per year for life to ints : . The Liberals are going through a power struggle be- tween Quebec, which has no pre- sent candidate, and the rest of Canada, which has too many; an ideological struggle between the true Liberals and the Big-State | socialists; a flag struggle be- | tween those who- support the Li- | beral Maple Leaf and those who would be happier beneath the Stars and Stripes; and — a 20th granted — a battle between the older wiser generation and the impatient young innovators. | These: Liberal divergences will | be argued in smoke-filled hotel rooms when the Liberal party tolds its national convention here | in Ottawa next month. It is pos- sible that Prime Minister Pear- | son will drop a hint about his in- | tentions; he may even suggest October 1967 as the appropriate time for a Liberal leadership | convention. It is unlikely that the Conser- vatives’ national convention, in Ottawa in the following month, will hear anything so definite, altough many ears will be at- tuned to catch such a hint Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (September 21, 1941) The abandonment of Kiev, bit- | terly defended capital of the Uk- | raine and Russia’s third largest | city, was announced. by the Rus- | sians. 1, Qualified London ‘observers, | studying Bulgaria's declaration of a state of emergency, termed it a forerunner of a new Ger- | man diplomatic offensive against |- Turkey with attack on the Dar- | danelles to follow shortly if per- suasion fails. TEN YEARS AGO (September. 21, 1956) Snow fell in Toronto the earliest it has fallen during the 156 years that weather records have been kept. Hon. George Drew ailing for two months, relinquished the leadership- of the Progressive | Conservative party to make way | for a.new leader before’ the fe- 4eral election next year. os routes to the top, a chart of the’ berta’s. Bob Thompson and Que- | bec’s Real Caouette is the chief. OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nichélson_ All Four Parties Have Their Troubles Among those. who talk thts: like those of mice and men, + |“gang aft agley’. A vague but Way. there are Liberals unhap- _ ley on . Py about the public image of persistent premonition per : \their gevernment, and Conser- meates Ottawa, and- not only vatives muttering “If only...” Parliament Hill, that ‘‘some- | One very prominent. political thing’* will happen between now. figure through the last half-cen- mentary hassle? A cabinet ‘one who has spanned that entire break-up? An election? Nobody period, namely the recently re- can say, but everyone regards tired Liberal senator, Tom Cre- -the omens for Canada as unus- lrar — has just been summarising ually menacing, economically, ‘|the intelligences which he re- confederationally, inflatedly, so- ceives. He says -that these lead cially and tax-wise. him to consider it not unlikely Some _@xperienced __politics-./ that there will be-an election dur- watchers, both in and out of Par- | ing. this. winter, from which John liament, are beginning: to specu- |Diefenbaker would undoubtedly late that the next election will |emerge the victor with a minor- once again be foyght between [ity mandate. .Coming from a Pearson and Diefenbaker, thus | man neatly providing a winner-take- among politicians, this predic- all conclusion to a series. now tion must carry_ considerable tied at two wins each. ‘ conviction. \ ~The Prices Study Senator McCutcheon was pre- excessive profits were not being mature .in his denunciation of a j anon at- any. point bet ween joint House-Senate committee |range and meat counter. Com- | finally established to investigate the increase in the cost: of living. ; were too often based on prices and Christmas. Another parlia- ‘tury — and there has been only | such as_ that.* Solomon | plaints, the agency determined, | per cent of these individ ua! s. There also were five instances in which the end of the finger was bitten. off, demonstrating that the human jaw has _ not “lost its abilitv to defend and de- stroy." The Miam! surgeons were able to isolate a variety of. Microorganisms from these wounds. sidesaiie Human_hites should be. treat- ed promptly even. though the in- jury is trivial. The bitten area is opened. and cleaned thoroughly and one of the broad‘ spectrum antibiotics is administered. This_study also demonstrated , that complications, including in- fections of the bones and ten- dons, are more likely to occur when the initial treatment was | delayed. 3 OFF THE TEAMS Mrs. L. writes: ! jold: son. who played football and basketbal for two years, has been suspended from ath- letics because of high blood pres- >? sure. Will he have hypertension . the rest of his life REPLY : The tendency - will -remain,- but he should be able to control it with medicine and by living.a (life free from strain, worry, and overexcitement ACUTE TUBERCULOSIS’ C. J.’ writes: Is military tuberculosis curable 4 REPLY In the past the outlook was generally poor: but it has im- proved’ considerably since the advent of streptomycin. PAS. and the izoniazids. In_ this type | of tuberculosis, there are many | small lesions scattered through- | out the lungs | OVERDOSAGE OF VITAMINS | Mrs. E. writes: Is there a i limit to the amount of vitamins My 15year- "| |plied attack on the U.S. posi- tign in Viet Nam when he said | ihe” sees “nothing but danger in the idea, so assiduously fost- tered outside Viet Nam, that the | conflict | is a kind of holy war ibetween ‘two powerful political | ideologies." |, At home, Arthur Schlesinger .Jr. gave his. most critical -ap- | praisal yet of the war. Writing . jin the current New York Times | }magazine, he echoes some of | |the criticisms made in Wash- . jington Saturday by Richard |Goodwin, . like Schlesinger a former special assistant to both |. | President Johnson and Pres- ‘ident Kennedy. | Schlesinger, author of A PHARMACY... ’ QUALITY OR SERVICE SAVINGS We Dispense any Prescription J. E. H. Worth 1914. Reg. Pharm. Free Deliv-ry and Mail Service. --442 Prince St. Phone 4.3424 — 40 Years ip Business —- Shop Where Parking Is A Pleasure At--- . _ ROBINSON _ SUPPLIES LTD 42 St. Peter’s Road a | Thousand _Days which records j é @ puppets | ART SEMINAR | FOR TEACHERS A Workshop to help diachers use art as a teaching - aid in class-work for all grades— : Basic Art Principle 3rd Dimensional Work @ papiermachs @ relief maps, etc. g Century leader being taken for | But the plans of politicians, lt may be true, as he contends, |that there is already enough in- formation available about rising | prices. But it is available to rel- | atively few. What is needed is | serious effort to put the data understandable perspective, an then. attempt to do something about it without further disrupt- ing the economy. What consumers primarily. want to - know is whether they are being gouged by an artificial _|inflation_of. prices in some cate- gories. So ar there has been only one attempt to answer that question, and it related only to the price of beef. The Ontario |Food Council. a provincial gov- jernment agency, decided, at least to its own satisfaction, that }of years ago without considera- tion of increases in wages and living standards in general. There is not. unfortunately, a precise wage index to parallel {the federal consumer price “in- Z haps out of the parlia- | mentary ittee study steps | will be taken to provide a more | comprehensive: barometer on the | interplay ‘of what we must spend |, and what we earn. But what- | ever else comes out of the study, the _confused...picture.. d_ at. least be ‘clarified. Clarification | **® should then make it good deal simpler for. government to take {the action in indicated areas | which critics have been demand- |ing be taken almost willy- nilly lactoss the board. ° The trend te “outdoor living’ an increasingly popular pastime may yet bring us forward to where we were 40 or 50 years ago. : ; These days no house is a home | without some sort of paved out- |door base for-that modern household god, the barbecue. | And this is only the beginning; the disciple of conspicuous con- sumption can find literally doz- ‘ens of items necessary- to -pro- vide. the proper indoor atmos- |phere outdoors, at a cost which would terrify past generations. Past generations, alas, had all this and didn’t know it. It was called the porch, a roomy, shad- ed and comfortable retreat where leisure hours. could he Spent in peace and privaey. His Swan Son Kansas City Star | Look at # from the cicada’s point of view: All he wants is to find a nice girl cicada and settle down He can’t help it if some of the prettiest ones in town are roost- ing in the tree outside your bed- r4om window, and his impas- sioned skirring is keeping you. awake. He has problems. of his own, & For one thing, he has to se- lect the correct ginl cicada from seven or eight species now pin- \ning for romance in this aréa, \and all girl cicades look alike — Daly. eerie For another that nightlong wail is: the cicada’s swan song When a cicada starts looking for a mate, he's ready to cash in his chips a a j Most of them will have chir- | ruped their last note by Sep- tember, says Dr. Wilbur Enns, professor of entomology at the University of Missouri, Colum- | bia 6 we We've Seen It All Before Windsor Star . Food was easilv_available from ‘the nearby kitchen: breezes j were free‘to.;enter from three sides; and if aerosol insecticid- es and patent bug-chasers were | absent, there were always the | | primitive but effective flyswat- | ters and wire/ screening. In win- ; ter, the por¢h was the natural | depository galoshes and heavy outd clothing. , Style or efficiency or cost. or a combination. of the three. long }ago doomed the porch in the |, eyes of housebuilders. Too inef- | ficient for all but utility, too, un- | aesthetic for all but comfort, too | expensive for all but sensible ec- | onomy, it is vanishing -In its | place we have the patio. het, ;cramped and bug-ridden. Besides, who ever parked gal- oshes on a patio? 9g , Dr. Enns . describes the eur- rent bunch as dogday cicadas. . They have a 3 year life cycle. Dogday. cicadas are quite harmless, Dr. Enns said. They |dwell underground, feeding on roots for three years. ,Then they emerge, take to the trees and mate. The female deposits the eggs in slits in branches, and when the larvae emerge they drop to the ground: and burrow. All. this causes only = minor damage.to the treés and_ shrubs, } Dr. Enns said. . The periodic ci- |cadas. whether on a 13 or year timetable. can be a seri- ,ous problem, eSpecially in or- | chards. The dogday cicada 1, tof course. noisy. SMOKERS VARY In a survey of 27 countries, | Americans were found to smoke 10.3 cigarettes daily compared ping 3.6 for Norway and Swe ~ | 17; the y can absorb _— REPLY \ Posters — murals | Yes, and when the saturation : point is reached the excess is ex- } creted. along with other waste | material. Too much A and D, | | however, will produce symptoms and a few fatalities have resuit- ed from overdosage. SHOCK TREATMENTS N.K. writes: Areshock treat- _Ments-for nervous breakdown as |Testful as many people say they | ' REPLY { » They are restful only by com- | Parison with the turmoil suffer- ed by most persons who need shock therapy. An anesthetic is given to minimize the physical | distress i Fees $2.00 CY j } Montreal Moncton | Saint John Halifax Sydney _ Corner Brook Toronto Winnipeg | _ Vancouver ; | , ' Thursday evenings from Twenty Sessions — Commencing Thursday, September 29th. To register telephone Confederation Centre, 892-2464, extension 233 or 222 Charlottetown to: _ — creative projects per session travel bargains é a P-5-114N $17.00 $ 3.80 $ 5.90 $ 6.40 $10.50 $17.50 $24.00 $39.00 $62.00