a Che Guardian | Covers Prince Edward Asland Like The Dew | W. J. Hancex, Publisher | Wallece Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun day and statutory holidays) at 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- | verity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia | Street Vancouver MA 7037. | Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled 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 right or republication of special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas ot serviced by carrier. $15.00 @ year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per’ year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. : Not over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1965. Voters’ Responsibility | warned the whites of the intense _ can opinion with his royal commission Words, words, words! There has | been a spate of them in this election campaign, on the air and in the pages of every newspaper in the country. They will come to an abrupt period this weekend, leaving a blissful Sun- day calm before the voters go to the polls on Monday to cast their ballots. Many voters, it is said, are not only apathetic about the issues at stake but resentful at having an election brought on at this time. They are confused by the conflicting campaign statements: and are tempted to re- frain from voting altogether. That at least. would show their disapproval of this chore being foisted upon them, wouldn’t it? In a way, of course, it would. But it would also put an undue premium on the merely partisan votes—the votes of the busy beavers who have special interests in the campaign, and who will not fail to cast their. ballots in any case. The history of other states has shown that’ where the fran- chise is not exercised bythe solid body of the electorate, the national | interests go by default. As pointed out on many occasions, the free vote is a hard-won privilege, and we just can’t preserve it without scrupulously using it. We are remind- ed, too, that citizens in totalitarian lands do not escape from the job of voting. They merely lose the oppor- tunity of registering a choice. That is what differentiates us in a democ- racy. Ours is not an easy system, of course; it imposes burdens. It works only if the voters do. ; There are those who bemoan the lack of great issues in this campaign. But there is at least one such issue which the voters must decide, as they have had to decide at every election. It concerns the competence of those who are running the administration. It is not the “need for a majority”’;as has been said ad nauseam by Mr. Pearson and his followers. It is the need for determining whether the administration is worthy of being re- turned on any terms. That is why, in this. campaign, the examination of its blunders has been so important, and why the electors should view with grave misgivings the efforts—all too evident on the part of government spokesmen—to distract attention from this issue or to treat it as of no consequence. Time Running Out: It was stated on his return to London that by warning both black and white Rhodesians of the dire con- sequences of-no compromise, Prime Minister Wilson bought precious time for the resolution of Rhodesia’s fu- ture. But the time seems to have run out. The Rhodesian government has declared a state of emergency in the county, which it claims to have taken against a threat of sabotage. But the government has a highly efficient police force and army able to cope with such threats, and there is belief in London that the chief purpose of the strategy is to unite the whole population behind the Smith regime. _ The time-buying proposal agreed on at Salisbury was that a royal com- mission be set up which would deter- mine the terms of a revised- formula setting forth how Rhodesia would pro- ceed toward independence, also whether these terms were acceptable to all the Rhodesian pople. This would mean working out a method by which not only the 250,000 whites who gov- ern the country would express their views, but also a method of ascertain- ing the wishes of the 3,800,000 Afri- cans who now have almost no voice in the government. _ The new proposals would have to lead eventually to majority rule in Rhodesia, meaning African rule. But presumably this would follow only ~~ ‘giter a long period of education and- practice in self-government for the Africans. | But it would appear that it-is not in _ City’s board of control. All necessary | equipment has been received and the’). ‘make Miss LaMarsh or Messrs. La- ‘montagne and Trembly more diplo- The Wilson mission sought to in- ject some realization of consequences in the emotion-charged situation. The British prime minister bluntly told the native Africans that they could not count on a British military invas- ion to hand them the government. He worldwide hostility which a sudden seizure of independence would pro- duce. Mr. Wilson failed to mollify Afri- proposal. Native leaders called it a time-wasting and useless compromise, and President Nkrumah of Ghana termed it a “betrayal”. The white minority government was dissatis- fied with it on other grounds. Failure to find a solution has prompted the British Parliament to delay its schedule recess for this. weekend at least. It is a critical time for all concerned. Hard On The Cediors From Toronto comes word that Hon. Robert Winters, former mem- ber of the St. Laurent government and now a Liberal candidate in York « West for Monday’s federal election, has declared that he is opposed to the federal sales tax on materials. His reason? Because it is an economic measure “that is discriminatory and retrogressive.” This is what the Opposition has been telling the Pearson government all along. This is what Finance Min- ister Gordon stubbornly refuses to concede. The tax was imposed at his insistence, reportedly against the better judgment of many of his cab- inet colleagues. Now that Mr. Pearson has stated that Mr. Gordon will con- tinue to hold the key portfolio of fin- ance if his government is re-elected, there is no likelihood of it being lift- ed in such circumstances. Recently we referred to a report that Mr. Winters had been double- crossed by the Liberal hierarchy in persuading him to enter this cam- paign in return for an important cabinet post. This portfolio was. be- lieved to have been that of finance. In any case, it is obvious now that he is at odds with Mr. Gordon’s policy. The building tax, he told a meeting of party workers this week, “weakens Canada’s economic. position abroad and serves to divert Canadian funds from domestic investment.” Yet he’ must, of necessity, be involved in this retrogressive measure in run- ning as an official Liberal candidate. Just how the electors will take it we don’t know; but from this distance it looks as if they to are in for a double- cross themselves if they don’t watch out. China Mortified The Afro-Asian conference has opened this week in Algiers, much to the chagrin of Communist China which failed in its bid to have the Soviet Union excluded from the con- ference and to keep the Communist leadership of the organization in its own hands. China’s ambition was to appear there as a nuclear power, defy- ing both Russia and the United States, cowing democratic India, and preaching revolutions in Africa, Asia and Latin America. At Bandung ten years ago, Premier Chou En-lai charmed the Asians and Africans with talk of Chinese Com- munists leadership along these lines. But the Algiers conference meets in _a different spirit. China jumped the gun in Indonesia and failed, while in Africa her revolutionary doctrines scared the African leadefs, who knew only too wéll that they would be the first victims of any Chinese-led revo- lution. Of all the African states, Tan- zania alone voted in the steering com- mittee for China’s move to postpone the current gathering. What it will do remains to be seen. the mood for more of Peking’s preachings of hatred. EDITORIAL NOTES Fouoridated water will start run- ning out of Ottawa taps Nov. 15, ac- cording to an announcement by the program is now ready to begin, sever- al months behind schedule. * * * Mr. Pearson apparently sees no ‘contradiction in ‘asking for a strong government while he keeps his cabinet ministers who have been weaklings in administration. As the Ottawa Journal points out in this con- nection, the majority he appears to claim as a divine right would not make Walter Gordon a James Ilsley with a capacity for leadership in fin- ancial affairs. Nor would it, alas, CO-OP HOUSING, NORTH RIVER RD. AREA aa * Before this “unnecessary el- vivid remarks made by ‘promin- ent campaigners deserve to be remembered. New Democrat leader Tommy Douglas has a knack of coining pithy verbal darts. On one oc- cassion, criticising the ack of decisive leadership from Ottawa over the past thirty years. he declared: “Mackenzie King taught us that a man can be- come prime minister for life: John Diefenbaker taught us that anyone can become prime minister; and Lester Pearson taught us that we can get along without a prime minister.” Tommy Douglas it was. too who produced the quip debunk- ing the Liberals chief election platform: ‘They ask for a sta- ble government, but they never told us how that stable would smell.’ DIEF GETS LAUGHS i While Mr. Pearson was con- ducting his campaign-by-press -release from his Parliament Hill office, Mr. Diefenbaker challenged him to “come on out from behind those Ottawa mimeograph machines, and face the people.” He repeatedly got some of his best laughs for his witty but truthladen quips about the Seven Scandals of the Pearson Government: Referr- ing to the hockey rinks which Mr. P. was proomising arou Canada , Dief quipped: ‘Who that Rivard is in jail?” In a deserved tribute to his leader who has survived more potential shipwrecks than any other . Canadian politician, Sen- etor Joe Sullivan said-that-“‘the assassins who had been carv- ing up Dief’s character had nevertheless entirely failed to cut out his three ‘sterling qual- ities: honesty, integrity and just plain guts.” Then there was that amazing sequence of pronouncements by Mr. Pearson. Announcing the election date on TV and radio on September 7, he said: ‘‘the earliest date at which an elec- tion could take place on the new electoral boundaries would be the end of October 1966..a more realistic date would be early in 1967.” But discussing what he Vancouver two weeks earlier. Mr. Pearson had deprecated the idea of an election in 1967, Centennial Year. (Why? Canae- da had an election in 1867.) _. Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (November 6, 1940) Greece’s artillerymen, a f ter pounding Kiritza from’ newly - won mountain fortifications, had the Italian invasion base c o m- pletely at their mercy, Greek messages from the front said. i = Mrs. John Reay was re-elect- ed provincial commissioner of < held at Government House.. Mrs. B.W. LePage, wife of Lieutenant - Governor LePage was re-elect- on nd in~ the. vilion at the night show. ment Sonata was sold at auction Thursday for 105, marks ° -bidder matic or less accident-prone. OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Some Campaign Barbs And Howlers : "And he felt that in these cir- ection” disappears into the his- cumstances, the choice of elec- | phatically tory books, some of the more tion date must’ be either this that he had spoken those words. Fall, or else not until early 1968. gave no reason why, if we have an election on the out- electoral boundaries this . we could not equally vote boundries at any up to the availabil- new arrangements. WHAT THE TAPE SAID Speaking to Liberal campa- view riding seven weeks later, Pearson forgotten his earlier pronouncements, for he said: “Now its very important to get Liberals elected because ...df we don’t get a majority government, we are going to have another election in a year or a year and a half.” Only five hours later at Van- ign workers in Toronto’s Broad-’ couver airport, Mr. Pearson em- denied to newsmen | “I said no such thing. I don't | know where that report started. | I nevér made any such state- ment. Perfectly ridiculous,” said Mr. P. “But Tommy Dou- glas quoted you assaying this, {and he said that it was an ir- responsible statement’’ ~ro- tested one newsman. “Well, that confirms that I never said | it,” meplied Mr. Pearson. ists are accustomed to politicians’ anguished howl “IT was misquoted.” But thanks | to a useful new gadget called a ;tape recorder, I have those words spoken in Mr. Pearson's | clearly recognisable voice. | So much talk about scandal, | | @0 little about policy; why did | BO-one say simply: “Honesty is the best policy.’ The prevalence of hoodlums like those who regularly raise Cain at drive-in restaurants and disturb quiet neighborhoods raises the need for special fac- ilities to accommodate — them. After all even baboons have custom quarters designed for their care and entertainment. We propose the Yahoo Room, an institution in keeping with the lic entertainment places—the Starlight Room, the Mirror Room, etc. It would be a large chamber, soundproofed and built of some- ike granite or reinforced thing reasonably . indestructible cea crete. Interior decoration ‘would consist of heaps of empty bottles, a couple of motorcycle modern vogue of naming pub: | A Yahoo Room Vancouver Province engines without mufflers and a wall mural depicting normal people doing normal things such as eating and sleeping. hours a day to all qualified ya- | large room). They could smash bottles, rev up the motorcycle engines, play guitars, shout and fight to their hearts’ content. The mural would heighten their pleasure, since they could pretend that they were«disturb- ing people—no doubt a major factor in any yahoo’s activit- | ies. : The Yahoo Room could be- |come a feature of © almost - any | place that caters to the public, from hotels, bars and theatres ‘t schools. Even, perhaps, in some private homes. Two For Orbit Christian Science Moniter The vigor with which the Un- | ited States is pushing its man- | med space flight program is en- | couragi ing. When Gemini 6’s flight was scrubbed space officials quick- ly turned from disappointment to preparations for the 14-day flight of Gemini 7. Now Pres- ident Johnson has approved | their suggestion to try to launch Gemini 6 during: that flight as well. The two spacecraft would then be brought to within a few yards of each other. If successful, this would be a dramatic rendezvous. It would which two Vostoks were placed entarily brought them within a few miles of each other. One should be careful in eval- uating this latest change in the Gemini flight schedules. : Superficially, it might seem the administration is cutting corners to stage a.space spec- tacular. It might appear an in- cautious grasp for prestige. But a careful reading of the re- of James £E. Webb to President Johnson in- dicates that this is mot the case. The administrator ' of the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration reportedly told the President there is a 50-50 chance Cape Kennedy techni- cians could turn around quickly enough to launch Gemini 6 ab- out eight days after launching Gemini 7. a This means that a possibility He | didn’t get any money. for dual flight has arisen from the increased eapacity of the space program as a whole. It is not something that is being pushed mainly for political rea- | sons. | Indeed, some rocket engip- | eers have reportedly been urg- | ing an attempt at a dual flight INTERVIEW GOES AWRY WIMBLEDON, England (cP) Broke and. jobless, Jim Scott, 32, applied to the government National Assistance Board for aid. All he got was more debts. An interview. with an official ended in an argument. Scott gtabbed the official's tie and held on so firmly that it took scissors to separate them. Scott In- stead, he was fined $30 for as- sault go beyond the Soviet mission in | in intersecting orbits that mom- | since the spring. Now NASA, spurred by the Gemini 6 scrub, has agreed that such an attempt is feasible. The President has given his “O. K.” Thus, the announcement that | NASA will try for a dual flight | in December or January is an | indication of how fast Amer- }iean space flight capability is | growing. That is why we are | encouraged. | Santiago Jubilee | National Geographic Seciety Spain's oldest and holiest city, | Santiago de Compostela, is re- | capturing a large share of its | medieval glory with its 1965 | Jubilee. » | Visitors and pilgrims throng \'the city, reminiscent of a time when Santiago was equal in im- portance with Rome and Jerus- alem. Footsteps of more than a million visitors will have echo- ed through the city’s narrow flagstone streets by the end of their medieval brethren— the tomb of St. James the Elder. la or field of the star. News of the miracle at San- tiago spread all over Europe, and the devout came to the .a—policeman..with a pair’ of-|-te wrote,-‘He is no pilgrim_who does not make his way ‘to the tomb of St. James.” St. James became the symbol Causes Of Dandruff By Dr. Theedore R. Van Dellen Seborrheic dermatitis is a common disorder of the sc and skin. The lesions are patches covered with yellowish, greasy scales that are referred to as dandruff when they appear on the scalp. ti E ivi H control the oiliness. Green soap or a five per cent sodium lauryl sulfate (U.S.P.) is helpful when. the-scalp_ is. very oily; selenium sulfide is ugeful 3 i 3 g 5 B acne skin elsewhere on the head and chest. These include sulfur-con- should get ample rest, outdoor activity, and avoid excesses in rich foods and drinks. IMPERFECT DEVELOPMENT The septum is the partition be- tween the left and right sides of the heart. When this structure is defective at birth, the blood from the two sides of the heart- mixes instead of being purified in the lungs as occurs normally. This defect is responsible for one type of blue baby. It may be pos- | hoos (it would have to be a very | | surgery. The room would be open #4 sible to close the hole vib heart FISTULA O. K. writes: What is a fistula and is surgery necessary? .REPLY A tiny tunnel that develops to allow pus to escape from a deep abscess beneath the surface of the skin. Surgical removal is ad- vised because infection is pres | ent, which seldom disappears of its own accord. R. U. writes: Is ewelling of the oe symptom of.a lazy thy- REPLY | Puffiness of the face occurs when the seborrhea involves the... when a lazy thyroid leads to my- xedema. DRIVING IS TIRING , U._R. writes: What would | cause a young man to feel com- | pletely drained of energy after driving all day? He has passed | all the physical examinations. REPLY Dri all day is tiring and young man is no different from the rest of us. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Stretch whenever you get a chance. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) Moors, and the city stood as a rallying point for efforts during the late Middle Ages to expel them from Spain. Meantime, the famed pilgrim’s route to Santi- ago helped forge Christian unity. Spain was identified with the rest of Europe. Santiago gained such ‘promin- |; ence asa holy city that Pope Calixtus II granted it the privil- ege of observing a holy year whenever the Saint’s day—July 25— falls on a Sunday. This is a jubilee year; the next will be in 1971 ANCIENT CATHEDRAL every pilgrim, the crypt contain- ing the remains of St. James. The cathedral also preserves the Portico de la Gloria, a 12th century masterpiece by the fa mous sculptor Maestro Matev. The work, conveying a sense of nai sm extraordinary in the 12th century, fs considered a sy- nthesis in stone of Catholic dogma. asteries abound in Santiago. To handle the staggering influx of tourists during 1965, the Spanish government built a prefabricat- ed miniature village—Burgo de las Naciones—with accommoda- tions for 4,000. Comfort, however, is of little importance to the pilgrim. What | matters is that he has at last reached Santiago de Compostela one of the most sacred cities in Christendom:——--- ine Oldtime Horse Blankets Ottawa Journal i hi i iz “4 : ? Beiter 2 See & = i luxurious finish," said. ‘Warm, artistic e z 5 i te ee ae eF rT ir aE aT a Hh “] / i geiiga ai Fett Ege —_ | oO o © : oO < @ a “73 c mee _ Sa “= @ 1965 tobacco crop contracted for in advance, at a fair price. What could not have been pre- dicted six months ago, though, was the opening up of a vast new market in Great Britain which may esult in sanctions are imposed against Rhodesia, which now supplies 100,000,000 pounds of tobacco a year to Bri- Canadian tobacco, and prices could be driven far beyond the 60-cent level. There won't be enough Canadian tobacco to fill both domestic and overseas de- mands if this happens. The. total. U.S. fish catch of more. | all species for 1964 was 4,523,- Order came out of chaos last | 000.000 pounds wurth $390,000,-_ is to offer when the auc- tions begin. Two years ago, the was. 180,000,000 pounds, spring when buyers predicted a | 000. ' PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND NOTICE - hereby given that all persons operating Prince Edward Island must be licensed FALL SCHEDULE Three FLIGHTS dally between Charlottetown - Summerside - Moncton. Departures at 10:40 a.m. - 4:15 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. Excellent connections at Moncton with CNR and Air Canada. New AFTERNOON SERVICE between Charlottetown and Halifax. Excellent connections with Boston Flights. — New DAILY ALL CARGO SERVICE be- tween Charlottetown and Magdalen Is- lands. Leaves Charlottetown at 8:55 a.m. New Comfort - New Reliability - ; New Service FLY EPA.IN THE ATLANTIC PROVINCES EASTERN PROVINCIAL AIRWAYS ee I |