Che Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Uke The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward * Frank Welker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sur dey and statutory holideys) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside.sMontegue, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave Empire 3-8894. Montrea! 640 Cathcart Street Uni “versity 65942, Western Office 1030 West Georgis Street Vancouver (MA 7037. Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers Association, and The Canadien Press. The Canadien Press is exclusively entitied to the use for. repub lication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local news published herein. All tight or republication of special dispatches here Wn also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and sees not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside Britis Com monwealth. Not over 7c «ingle copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circvlation. } Some may see it as an aspect of Mr. Tom Kent’s war on poverty. Others perhaps will attribute it to Mr. Drury, who rolls out the barre! for industry in ‘our nation’s ‘capital. No doubt there will be other candidates, in- cluding Mr. Gordon, whose economic pranks have done so much to banish dull care from the House of Com- mons. But there should be credit for all; indeed there is a growing con- viction afong ill-disposed persons lying mainly on credit in the joyous days ahead.” We can see, as we look back, that this is not a sudden development. The writer notes that the CBC, with its modest budget of $100 million, has been providing state entertainment for years. “With the plans for Expo | and the centennial binge, it became PAGE 4 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, iss. | reasonably obvious that the whoopee Recalling Old Times A welcome visitor to the Prov- ince at this time is the Hon. Sir Leon Gotz, New Zealand High Commission- er and former Minister of Internal Affairs in the New Zealand Govern- ment, who is warm in his apprecia- tion of our Island charms and partic- ularly of the well-kept appearance of our rural communities. It is Sir Leon’s first visit to these parts, but he felt at home immediately on learn- ing that we have a New Zealand set- tlement here, the name dating back to 1858 when there was an emigra- tion from this colony to parts of his own ther’ undeveloped island. We also had the pleasure of reminding him of the cordial relations New Zea- land air force men established here in the course of their training for ac- tive service during the Second World War. Our Cornmonwealth ties with New . Zealand are indeed very real, despite the distance which separates us Zeo- graphically. It seemed an insurmount- able distance back in that fall of 1858; but that did not prevent the brig “Prince Edward,” under Newland, from. clearing the port of Charlottetown for Auckland, where . arrived with ite cargo of settlers “‘i perfect safety, all hands in aellent health,” after a passage of five and ‘one-half months. The immigrants all had to be, as the Auckland Waste Land Act spect- fied, “‘persons of good character and sober, steady habits.” They had to make the voyage at their own cost, but on arrival “in Auckland every adult was-entitled to select 40 acres of government land in any part of the province set apart for special. settle- ment, free of cost except for the _ agent’s fee of 10 shillings and the ex- pense of the survey atthe time-of taking possession of the land. Many of the settlers wrote back - to their friends here in-glowing terms respecting their new home, and they and their families continued to: com- municate for many years across the _ dividing seas. Some of their descend- “ants may still be keeping in touch in this way, but unfortunately we have no records to go by in the matter. Nor have we ever seen a complete list of the passengers the ‘Prince »Edward” carried in that memorable migration. The local newspapers did not publish it, being, as it seems, too busily engaged in political contro- . versy. 3 For such a list, today, we would ~ swap all the politicalspeeches—and political editorials of the period, but unfortunately the omission can’t be remedied in that manner. Perhaps Sir Leon could ascertain whether the list’ was ever published in Auckland, and if so, whether a copy could be | obtained for our archives? It would be of great. interest to’ many people here, and would round out a chapter in our Island story which we wish, very much, to keep fresh and green. Government Giveaways We seem. comments Maurice Western in the Winnipeg Free Press, to have passed a watershed. in the matter of government giveaways. A national boating polity appears to be involved in Prime Minister Pear- ‘gon’s promise to Vancouverites that federal cash would be spent to pro- vide harbors for pleasure craft, and it is reasonable to assume that sim- ilar concessions will be expected by | _other recreational groups across the | country. The critics who suggested only recently that, with the passage of the Canada Pension Plan and the commitment to medicare, the govern- © ment had exausted its stock of spend- ing ideas, have been! shown as the pikers they are! © “In the days to come,” says the Free Press writer drily, “there will’ * probably be much debate about the - true authorship™ of the new policy. Captain | state was’ just around the corner. But the idea of a one-shot, transcontinen- tal celebration and a 1968 hangover is not one-:to inspire forward-looking Canadians. What we are now promis- ed is the permanent binge.” Mr: Western is an outstanding ‘Liberal commentator. His views on this subject are expressed at length in a blistering article couchedkin jocu- lar terms which make it none the less effective. He concludes as follows: “It is a splendid prospect and it is to be hoped that no one will allow joy to be tarnished by the problem of payment.. Fortunately there is always an economist to justify any- of fact,,mention tourism and it may be that, as we pursue unity through unending mardi gras, we shall pull in so many American dollars that our financial problems will bubble away in'a sea of champagne. As Mr. ~Micawber-. used -to_say,_‘Something will turn up. ’ Phe less said about his other observations, the happier we shall be as we embark for new and glorious adventures in whoopee land.” At least when it comes to subsi- dizing hobbies, the government shouldn’t forget golf clubs and“bowl- ing greens. What about annual’grants to keep the wolf from their doors? - Calling Them Up - -Among--the-executive-orders-sign- ed recently by President Johnson was one making men ‘aged 19 to 26 who marry subject to the same draft reg- ulations as single men. This isa di- rect consequence of the Viet’ Nam crisis, and-of the-gravity of the man- power problem it has created. For almost two years, U.S. sel- ective service passed over the newly married. The reason was economy and convenience for the military. A married GI receives greater benefits than a single man, and the army has found that separating a young man from his wife creates problems that may keep him from being a good soldier. As long as the -manpower pool was large and the draft calls —_Were..small, excusing the — eer could be justified. But not-any longer. The draft calls are up and are expected to level off at 34,000 a month. The Pentagon also is planning to put three. national ' guard divisions and three brigades of each of the national guard and re- serve in a priority status. Should they ‘sbe called to active duty, many htis- bands and fathers would go. To let the newly married stay home under such-conditions-would-be-tnfair: As the Millwaukee Journal sees it, there is much to be said against giving draft age men an escape route via the altar. ' first nine months after President Kennedy reduced-the priority of mar- ried men, the marriage rate of men “aged 20 and 21 increased 11 per cent The marriage rate has also risen since the Viet Nam war was stepped up. There is food for thought for Can- adians in the fact that our si neighbors take military conscription as a matter of course. There will cer- tainly be no general outcry over tightening the regulations at this time. The nation is prepared to ac- cept such measures in the interests of the state. Perhaps it is just as well that our politicians who prate so much about “national unity” in this country don’t have to put it to the same acid test! Even when all our freedoms were at stake durin ing years _ of world conflict, conscription. prov-~ ed a thorny issue, and there are . demagogues still among us who boast - of the part they played in opposing it. . EDITORIAL NOTE The “show off’ car driver, savs the Ontarto Safety League, is an ex- hibitionist who has graduated from -no-hands on_a bike to no-sense at the wheet,—— make as It recalls that in the | already speculating on probable elec- | tion commitments that we shall be re- thing. Mr. Pearson did, as a matter | -| OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Bow River MP Takes Own Opinion Poll \ | | } GEMINI PROGRAM Several MPs have adopted the do-it-youself method of samp>l- ing public opinion on the top political issues of the day. I re naire sent out by Jimmy Walker, the chief Liberal whip;’to 68,000 homes in his Toronto constituen- cy. Now I have obtained partic ulars of a similar sampling tak- en by Conservative MP Eldon Woolliams among his constit- | uents of Bow River, Alberta. The most vivid feature of the , many._ responses. which Mr. Woolliams received is that they reveal an even greater degree of dissatisfaction with the con- | duct of our public affairs than has. been revealed by earlier Of those voters with a formed opinion, less than 21 per cent consider that the present Pear- son Government is “‘more effec- cently described the question-- nationwide public opinion polls. | Eight-one per cent consider that Prime Minister Pearson has acted have dismissed the ministers “concerned ‘in these corruption | charges’; and the same percent- age believes that the Opposition acted effectively in presenting | charges of wrongdoing. - | WRONG ‘POLICIES Substantial majorities are of | 5¢4t. and a surprising 47 per cent | the opinion that the present gov-— _ernment_has_done too little to | help agriculture and too little to assist smal] business Majorities | are opposed to the ‘new Pension Plan, think the government | spends too mu¢h on welfare as- sistance, don’t approve of pro- vincial..governments._being —al- liowed to opt out of federal pro- vincial cost-sharing programs, consider that the Commission ineffectively as re-| gards charges of corruption, 74 | per cent consider that he should’ tive’” than the preceding Dief | on Bilingualism and Biculturat- on Canada, and would retain the | death penalty for convicted murderers. ‘show the same uncertainty about an election as the national aver- | age:three in 10 have not made | up their mind how they would vote in a federal general elec- tion. But 60 per cent are confi- dent tha the Conservative can- didate will hold the Bow River | would not even hazard a guess at the nationwide outcome of a general election DEMAND HONESTY Among the write-in comments by those who answered Eldon Woolliams’ questionnaire,- there | is a remarkably general demand for_a_return to honesty and mor- ality in public life: “Continue to uncover -and expose corruption wherever it is found’’— ‘‘Press | for clean-up in ministerial | { Eldon Woolliams’ respondents Altitude Has Its Effects ~ By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen A 35-year-old man, who had lived the greater part of his life | on the plains of India, accepted a job in a mountainous area. He arrived by plane and began | working at heights between 11,- 000 and 18,000 feet. Six days lat- er he was mentally confused and coughed constantly. He had developed a mountain malady caused by failure of the heart and congestion in the lungs that occurs to éne in 200 and favors those who arrive by air. The victims are not accli- Liz the. high altitude where the “winter—temperatures fall to subzero levels. Most of the men so employed are in their twenties, possibly because per- sons of this age are best- suited for this type of work. Some en- gage in strenuous physical ex- or handling heavy equipment. Others drive vehicles and still | others have sedentary jobs, such as office work. According to Maj. N.D. Men- on's report in the New England | Journal. of Médicine. a dry, | hacky cough is the initial symp- | tom. As the condition advances, a frothy, pink sputum is raised. Chest. discomfort, varying from |; an unpleasant ache to moderate pain, also occurs. Breathlessness at rest usually accompanies the | cough. Many have trouble sleep- ache, dizziness, and palpitation. nausea, the attention of Maj. Menon in 1961. The original cases were misdiagnosed as pneumonia and treated with oxygen and antibio- the slight fever and congestion in. the lungs. A thorough inves- tigation done at the hospital ‘lo- these men had heart failure with a dropsical condition of the lungs. Treatment was. changed to the use of oxygen and drugs that bolstered the old ticker. |The results were gratifying: - 4, The. lungs cleared within 72 hours in 67 of the 101 cases re- | ported by the author in study. There were no deaths among those receiving proper | treatment. Many were able to return to work at altitudes be- tween 11,500 and 14,000 feet without further difficulty. PARTIAL REMOVAL | ~C.G. writes: What is subtotal a | gastrectomy for ulcer? REPLY Gastrectomy of all or part of the stomach | and the-term—subtotal generally is used when only a portion of the organ is taken out. ;The sec- _tion removed usually is the end | ‘nearest the ulcers and. most of the acid-pro- ducing.cells are located. EXTRA RIB cated at 11,500 feet) showed that | visional government to be put ‘intestine where) | | ertion such as digging, climbing, | NOTES BY THE WAY “I use one week's family .al- | lowance.each month to pay for | my birth-control pills.—Letter in London Daily Mail. Newlyweds start out these days with almost everything. About the only thing you can give them that they don't already have is a calendar to keep track | of payment due dates. — Dous- man Index. ic— “If you ? ness, why don't you use it?” Subtle Barber (very -bald) -- Skepti have such | an infallible remedy for bald- | Everyone has heard of a gag. gle of geese, a giggle of girls, a pad of beatniks, but here ar: 4 few new ones from London med. ical circles: a rash of dermato logists, a hive of allergists, a scrub of interns ,an eyeful of o4-" thalmologists, a staph of bacter. | jologists, and a gargle of laryi- gologists. — Catholic Digest. or Overheard @ young shop- per consult his grandmother on a weighty problem. “If you were | going to be 16 tomprrow, Grand- ma, what would you want: for “Aah. sir, I sacrifice my appear- your birthday?’ With real feel- ance to bring ‘ome to clients the ing Granny replied, “Not anot- *orror of ‘airlessness.’—Toron- her thing, son. — Hamilton to Telegram. =. New Dominican Outburst By Arch estioade Press Staff, WASHINGTON (CP) The | + continuing lesson of the Domini- | an estimated 2,500 for the four | ing or ‘are bothered with head- | The condition first’ came to | tics. The mistake stemmed from | this; can Republic seems plainly that | revolutions are easigr made than mended, in Latin America— at least. The shooting began in Santo | Domingo April 24 and .took four | lives as recently as Sunday—or | months to date. In a step which has. aroused only cautious optimism here in view of the obstacles met so far, the military junta of Brig.- Gen. Antonio Imbert Barreras resigned Monday under strong United States pressure exer- cised through the peace-making | efforts of the Organization of American States. That pressure included drying up U.S. funds which had been paid through the junta to keep the impoverished and disorgan- ized country of 3,450,000 going. Barring still another hitch, this paves the way for, a pro- together by the OAS. The. ‘so- called rebels, headed hy Col. Francisco Caamano Deno and still holding 500 acres within Santo Domingo, accepted the terms after otfaining some con- | cessions since bargaining on the | specific plan began Aug. 9. Later, by the OAS formula, diplomat Hector Garcia-Godoy would head a provisional gov- ernment until elections are called -in nine months. “WOULD WITHDRAW Then the peace-keeping force of can troops who numbered 21,500 shortly aftes the fighting began | —would be withdrawn. means removal | Diplomats say the junta’s res- ignation seems to be a break- through—the beginning of the - end of one phase. But it is diffi-. cult. to be ‘optimistic over the donger haul about the tuture of WEEKEND 12,000 men—mostly Ameri- . enbaker Government. }ism is having a divisive effect | ranks’— “Have the RCMP in-'}. E. J. writes: How can a rib $120 AnA | vestigate all cabinet ministers’ | cause pain in the finger? That is cre Income Ottawa Journal Wheat being harvested in the Indian Head. district of Saskat- chewan runs to 60 bushels an acre. Fifty bushels an acre al- ways has been regarded as pret- ty-satisfactory,even—when--the prairie soil was newly broken to cultivation. A 50-bushel acre used to bring in a farmer something less than $50 when he hauled his wheat to market, but these days are for- gotten..by —all-save—the—pioneers— in this year of generally high production. sians at about $2 a bushel: Trade Minister Sharp estimates the value of this year’s 222,000,000- bushel sale at $450,000,000. The final payment to farmers © on wheat delivered to market tn the 1953-64 crop year was $1.96 9-10 a bushel for No. 1 Northern at the lakehead. The west is prosperous and | the benefitof _ wheat sales! spreads across the country, a | boost to the national economy. Wheat farmers are one group in) the community with no general income problems this year. After what: they endured 30 years—ago. —in..drought and_..de-|_ pression in the west they pre- sumably have ‘saved some of -Wheat is-being=sold-to-the-Rus=i their recent income it anucipa: tion of—we cannot say “a rainy day’’ because that’s what they usually want—seasons of.10 bus- hels an acre which may come South Africa’s white minority Government is using all of. its substantial powers to discredit + | | | appalling practices in the coun- try-s-prisons._Typically_it-is-try—_. ing {@ persecute and prosecute those responsible for the disclos- ures instead of ordering a judi- cial inquiry to determine actual prison conditions. A former\warder has been sen- tenced to three vears in jail aft- er a “confession” in which he said he lied about the use of el- ectric shock tortures on prison- Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (September 2, 1940) The car ferry Charlottetown again. Reprisals In South Africa New York Times ers in a sworn statement to The vestigation and punishment —-‘‘Insist there be a house | cleaning” — ‘‘Get complete in- of offenders’® — “‘Make sure facts are. made public’’— ‘Take care the Government does not white- wash offences’’— and perhaps typically: ‘Do right before God and man.” The way the government per- mitted Banks and Rivard to slip | through their fingers was critic- |. izéd by many people, but of course, since those comments, the RCMP has captured one fish who had been allowed to slip. through ‘the ee ee s uncer- tain” Chitches>~ It is refreshing. to see the ‘old virtues-te thinking of those Albertans: ‘the budget should be balanced, the recent tax cuts were not justif- ied, devaluation of .the . dollar helped our economy. Eighty-one per cent consider that the Liberal Government has treated French-Canada ‘‘more favourably” than the other nine | provinces; Quebec, say per ‘cent, is not “justified” in its claims. While 56 per cent “| Undoubtedly you refer to an the recent detailed disclosures of Rand Daily Mail of Johannes-| prove the design of the new na- | tional flag, 72 per cent deplore | burg. It_could_be_that- the _warder is the manner_in-which the govern- unstable or a publicity seeker ment brought about its adoption, | who—exaggerated_—conditions—in-. his prison. It is more difficult to believe, as the public prosecutor contends, that the warder was paid $210 by The Rand Daily Mail for his statement. The writ- ten confess'on produced in court made no mention of money, and the editors of the highly respect- ed. newspaper insist that the warder received no remunera- | tion. In fact, the editor of The Mail and the reporter who wrote the | article in question asked to tes- | tify on this point, but were not called. The case was conducted | | in circumstances that allowed no cross- examination and no. | opportunity for any reply to the | prosecutor’s charges. and—only~21--per—cent—consider_ that’ Canada should ‘‘sever our attachment with the Queer.” Bow River is obviously the home of typically honest and sensible Canadians; most Can- adians everywhere would say “me too” to nearly all their expressed opinions. we MUNROE'S LTD. (War Surplus) - Montague, P.E.I. | what my doctor told me he saw | on the’ X-ray REPLY extra rib that develops now and then in the lower part of the neck (cervical: rib): When it im- pinges on the brachil plexus— which sends nerves down to the | shoulder, arm and hand— pain | results: i SOFT DRINKS D. B. writes: My two youngs- | ters, 2% and 5%, ask for soft ize these beverages have sugar in them and’ do not want my REPLY . Low caloric beverages do not | contain sugar. EAR WAX : L. K. writes: Is there any way | to decrease the amount of wax in the ears? | REPLY No. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— | Good posture eliminates strain and fatigue. i DARING ESCAPE VIENNA—(AP) —.-Two--young-. | Czechoslovakia , pilots dodged | +-Communist radar in—fleeing—by” | plane to Austria Sunday night. | The refugees said they stole the | single-ehgined sports plane and. flew it 60 miles to Austria, | hedge - hopping beneath radar stations until they landed near Vienna. Both requested political | | asylum. Bombing attacks on Germany, | Italy, Holland and France, in- cluding one on a Nazi submarine and speedboat base at Lorient, on the German-held French toast. Munich, -national_social- h_ism’ s “‘sacred cify,”” was bomb- ed for the first — TEN YEARS AGO (September 2, 1955) Dr. L.H. Killorn opened his of- fice for the practice of medicine at 8 Great George, Street in Charlottetown. The thetmemeter touched 108 degrees, as Los Angeles, Califor- | nia, endured -its third conseau- tive day of 100-plus heat with no ecient docked after more than a two; The disputed descriptions of Bovs and half hour battle with wind | the use of shock treatment jibed | : and tide. The boat made try aft-| with those given previously in a| School Pants er try to get to her pier but! sworn statement to another | : each time she came inside the | ae the head warder | Reg. 5.95 breakwater a wind of gale prop- of Cinderella Prison at Boks- ortions made her near unman- burg. The head warder told the | NOW 3.95 ageable and Captain John Read | newspaper he had in his posses- Boy : headed out again. | sion evidence of brutality, brib- ys | ery, corruption and vietimiza- _ Back to School | tion. ‘ | The Verwoerd regime has) mounted savage attacks on those | | responsible for the prison dis- | closures, primarily through the | Government- Controlled S outh African Broadcasting Corpora- + tion. A-prime target is The Mail | persistent and “articulate foe of s the regime's -apartheid policies, and relentless fighter a g a inst | South ‘Africa's steady: slide into | totalitarianism. LONDON (Reuters)—Britain’s | SHOES 2.95 9 6.88 —_—. & : Nylon RAINSUITS Pants & Jacket NOW 5.00 OPEN —s DAY 8:30 a.m. - 9: 30 p. p.m. Ladies Cotton Slacks Reg. 4.95 NOW 1.98 Miner Rubber Boots NOW 3.89 Navy All ‘Wool SWEATERS NOW 2.99 Young Com munist League | Monday night announced plans for all-night vigils at the US| Embassy and its consulates and | bases in 12 main: towns Friday | | to protest against the Viet Nam | wa i uentiy 8 Boat. A ctienaislaasaiianitamnaasih ALSO | Covers, Tarps - t drinks-all summer long._I real- | ~Pehiidren to~hurt-their-teeth: ts | there any harm in allowing them | -tochave.this beverage? Sass , Washington ' a country whose rebellion has | drawn the attention of the OAS, the U.S., the United Nations, the papal nuncio, the Red Cross and others. The theory of peaceful solu- | tion is threatened on all sides by realities shaped firmly by the dictatorship of more than 3 years exercised by Rafael Tru- jillo, now dead. This has been a different kind of revolution, it is held, com- pared, with the straight power grabs of Latin American mili. tary opportunists and strong ;emotions have been raised in | larger-than-normal segments of the population. Strong antagonisms _ still . ist between the factions. The ; economy is in chaos and the Communists who do operate in the republic—that quantity stil! is in dispute—have not suffered from the American interven. tion Anti-American sentiment has grown MIGHT NOT LAST Nothing in the republic's re cent history indicates that an- | other democratically - elected government: would last much longer than the one headed by Juan. Bosch.from —December, 1962, to. the following Septem. . ber. He was the first legally- elected president in 38 years and he was ousted by the mili- tary President Johnson, accused by some critics of acting too hastily in the Dominican inter. vention, appears to have co’ tered in subsequent months by --proceeding-_as_—_patiently _and cautiously as possible to put the pieces back together. ; .But if that is done, it wil! need tremendous U.S. financial glue to make them stick, it is conceded on all sides. SPECIALS Cudmore's ’ PJ'S Ltd. CORN ON COB 49c 007. _ Pickling ae ‘Onions... 33c = — — SUGAR 5. Ibs. Long Green Cucumbers _25c a Se PEACHES & PLUMS ARRIVING DAILY 10... 79 7. eres — Eggs ...... 53¢ pkg. . 4% Chocolate Chip Cookies .. WIZARD DEORDIZER . ON SALE 59c Reg. 89c LEAN, LOIN rORn CHOPS 1. 6% 2 Ths. . 69¢ th. Mople Leal Pork Roast 67c Roloona “MAPLE LEAF SLICED — a cb asec ‘i itlaecgens BACON is OFC s 1 LB. PICTURE PAK P. J.’s Ltd.| Cudmore’s DIAL 4-8585 CASH GROCERY and 4-8586 DIAL 4-3813 FREE DELIVERY COD ORDERS ACCEPTED