Ghe Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Frank Welker Editor Wallace Ward Managing Editor Published every week day morning (except Sum day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montegue, 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 Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exciusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all mews 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 repupiication of special dispatches here- "Jn also reserved. Subscription ate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas mot serviced by carrier. : $15.00 a year off Island agd U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. Not over 7c single copy- Member Audit Bureau of Circulati strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1965. The Right Note ion. “The PAGE 4 The Liberals have no harder-hit- - ting campaigner than the Hon. J. W. Pickersgill, federal minister of trans- port, who spoke at. Kensington last Friday and did what was expected of him in the way of getting after that man John Diefenbaker, who, of course, wasn’t there but who may be expected to retort in kind at the first opportunity. Had it been an oldtime joint meeting, now, with Dief in, there slugging too, what a lively time would have been had by all! However, we are not concerned here with this part of Mr. Pickersgill’s remarks but with the emphasis he placed on the fact that our causeway undertaking is not a political gimmick but a sound investment for the whole of Canada. An investment, incidental- ly, to which both major parties are . committed, and for the same logical reason. : Of course it will be a tremendous boon to this province; but the savings in ferry charges it will effect, and the huge increase in traffic that will re- sult, have been the determining fac- tors at Ottawa. Mr. Pickersgill made this point clear, and also stressed that with “more jobs, more prosper- ity and more activity,” benefits will ' accrue to the people of Borden who are at present concerned about the effects on their community-of discon- tinuing the present service. It should be a major concern of both our fed- eral and provincial governments to see that this prospect is realized. In and out of office, Mr. Pickers- gill has been a sturdy champion of our causeway” ‘claims: Of -course-he hopes to gain from it politically; but he supported this newspaper’s cam- paign for the project when the going was tough, and we're not going to let our readers forget it. May we suggest, however, that there’ is still a lot of missionary work for him to do, even among his own party followers west of the Maritimes, in stressing this vital point about the causeway’s economic advantages. There seems to be a lot of misunderstanding on this score. Wouldn't it be helpful, now, if a fullreport on the economic surveys conducted by the federal works de- partment was released for publica- tion? Then we could all go to work on quoting chapter and verse to. prove that this is indeed not a “brazen political bribe,” as has been charged an nauseam against both the Diefen- baker and Pearson governments, but the sound economic investment the experts have found it to be. Old Scotia’s New Face Cheering is the news from Glas- gow which reports “a new mood of optimism” prevailing in Scotland these days. After many years of eco- nomic depression and a constant un- employment rate of more than 4 per cent, the country has shaken off its Celtic caution and is grasping new in- dustrial opportunities. Over-all un- employment has fallen; the -average national rate during the summer dropped to about 2 per cent. Among new projects started or on the way are an electronics industry * in Fifeshire which may one day pro-. * duce micro apparatus for robot-guid- ed automobiles; a new £30 million ($84 million) nylon-producing industry in the traditional farming areas of Ayrshire, where thousands of over- seas visitors come yearly to pay hom- age to Robert Burns; a huge new ship- pbuilding centre on the Clyde; a centre for training Europe’s first nuclear marine engineers in Glasgow; a £24 million hydroelectric project at Loch Awe, in the Western Highlands. ‘Scheduledi#to-be inaugurated by Queen ‘Elizabeth this month, this giant com- plex will bring new life to the crofts in that rugged part of Scotland. _.§cientists from | big Commonwealth Arts Festival, and | world. conducting surveys around the inland lochs in Argyllshire. They report good progress in the development of fish- farming projects, one of several new developments which the newly form- ed Scottish Highlands Board is ‘con- sidering in Inverness as well. Great progress in the north is expected from this body. New communications are opening | up the north, and a large new span over the. River Tay will soon connect with thé road network running from mighty Forth River road bridge near Edinburgh. In the tourist line, the Scottish Tourist Board reports a heavy influx of overseas visitors to the Highlands, Loch Lomond, and the west coast isles. Glasgow is having a will soon be showing United States and continental education . officials one of the most advanced and exten- sive TV instructional services in the Progress is also being made on the housing front. Hundreds of foreign + housing experts have inspected Scot- | bernauld and East Kilbride, near Glas- “the more amusing sidelights of the, | this incident proves. It came about las gow’'s new - university of Strathclyde have been land’s imaginative new towns at Cum- gow. They have also praised the “showpiece” communal planning in the more northern centre of Glen Rothes. : \ Young Scots are reportedly mov- | ing into new positions of responsibil- | ity in industry and the public ser- vices, no longer content with Scot- land’s world image as 4 beautiful, re- sourceful but old-fashioned commun- | ity living on its past laurels. The mood of the country is one of “confidence ~ | and willingness to change.” Fine, in- | deed! But let’s hope the past won't | be forgotten too quickly. Nobody's Fooled Under the above heading the | Hamilton Spectator notes, as one of | present election campaign, the habit of Prime Minister Pearson’s press agents in labelling their chief's speeches “non-political”—even though the majority of, them are lard- ed with out-and-out political ' state- ments. What is the purpose of this silly attempt to make the leader of a gov- ernment appear to be “above politics” at a time when he is appealing for all the votes he can get? Whatever it is, it’s not fooling anybody and should be discarded. along with the “truth squad” ‘and other . Liberal election gimmicks that were laughed out of the last election campaign. Atted all, as our Hamilton con- -temporary.remarks, politics is politics; | and when Mr. Pearson, or any-other politician, makes any sort of speech during an election campaign, that speech is political. Even if he’s only toasting a bride, he’s still doing his. best to get her family and her friends to vote for him. Any person wht is"ash kind of thing would bg politics altogether. To The. The London Zoo rescue of Dover Castle sult the lion on the rgya in that venerable institutia refurbished with new whiskery. ' There’ll always be an England, as amed of that when a call to the zoo was sent out by the castle’s deputy constable, Maj. Gen. Francis Brian Wyldbore-Smith. The castle, which includes a Roman lighthouse and the..ruins of a Saxon | garrison church. has a beautifully | carved royal coat of.arms above the constable’s mantlepiece. Chief fea- tures of the royal arms are a lion and | a unicorn. ; “T recently noticed that the face of the carved wooden lion was lop- sided,” said General Wyldbore-Smith, “and on close inspection discovereg™ that only two of the original wire whiskers were left on one side of the lion’s face—and none on the other.” Deciding to replace the loss with the real thing, the general asked the zoo for two dozen lion’s whiskers. Back came the two dozen and a couple of spares. Said the general: “A member of the staff stuck the whiskers on with glue and we’re jolly pleased with the way the old lion is looking.” As for the castle’s unicorn, “he’s in splendid condition” despite the ravages of time. “That’s just as well,” commented a zoo official on hearing this news. “Unicorn spares are hard to come by.” EDITORIAL NOTE An American study shows that high school students owning cars tended to get lower grades than non- owners. The reason was said to be not so- much the time spent driving _around as the time spent working to earn money to keep driving around. PEARSON RECEIVES THE 1965" FAMILY oF Man AWARD , } ——— “INS ITEM ONE MAN’S FAMILY BLIGH OF THE 'BOUNTY' Had Distinguished Career In British Navy National Geographic News Bulletin A National Geographic staff member has created in Tahiti the only known memorial any- where to Captain William Bligh of Bounty fame. The ‘simple memorial— and an appropriate one— is a spec- ially planted breadfruit tree and a bronze plaque honoring “a great explorer and navigator.” The purpose is to help restore Bligh's reputation. Bligh made many Pacific discoveries, in cluding the great Fijian archi- pelago, and he was a master cartographer. But fictional ac- counts and films of the Bounty mutiny have so _ biackened Bligh’s name that he is now re- fore his death. EXPLOBED WITH COOK Early in his career, Bligh ac- companied James Cook on hi last expedition as master of the ~Resolution:Later; Bligh was- ap- pointed to take Bounty to Tahiti in 1787 to gather breadfruit plants to bring to the British col- ony of Jamaica as a potential source of inexpensive food for slaves. The mission triggered a series of tragedies— mutiny, piracy, shipwreck, murder, ex- ile, court-martial, and execu: Bligh and J 8 loyal seamen were cast adrift in an open boat by the mutineers. His will to live that he defied thirst and starvation to sail them 3618 nautical miles across the Pacif- ic— through the unknown Fijis —to the friendly Dutch settle ment a Timor. mains the world’s most cele brated open-boat voyage. Bligh returned to England (where he became known as ‘“‘Breadfruit Bligh’), took com- mand of the Providence and an armed escort vessel, and set off to Tahiti once more to load breadfruit. In February, 1798, Bligh reached Jamaica with nearly 1,000 rooted cuttings. It had been a difficult voyage, one that took ‘‘the meritorious exer- tions of all my officers and men." Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (October 12, 1940) ,... The Queen's County Conserva- tive Association last night was addressed by Hon R.B. Hanson, LLB, KC, Conservative Lead- er for Canada; Mr John E Mac- Nichol, president Dominion Na- tional Conservative Association; Hon. Dr. W.J.P. MacMillan, leader of the Conservative Party in Prince. Edward Island, and Mr. P.W. Turner, president of the Quee i's County Conservative Association. Turkey, non-belligerent ally of Britain, and guardian of the Dardanelles, served notice on Germany that 2,000,000 Turkish bayonets stand athwart any axis move in directions against the Near East. TEN YEARS AGO (October 12, 1955) his | ca, The feat re- | Ironically, when Bligh’s plants |; matured, slaves found the | starchy fruit tasteless and would--not eat it. Today, ho w- ever, breadfruit is one of Jam- aica’s most appreciated foods, and all the breadfruit that flou- rishes throughout the West In- dies and tropical America stems from this one importation. BOUNTY REMAINS FOUND. Luis Marden, a pioneer under- seas photographer and veteran ic senior editorial staff, became deeply interested in the Bligh story while on Pitcairn Island to gather material for an article about descendants of Fletcher Christian and other mutineers. Marden spent much of his free time diving in Bounty Ba y. Eventually he found what he was looking for—the coral- en crusted remains of the old mut- iny ship that Christian had burned. Marden was delighted to find that three old breadfruit trees there are. survivors. of. the original plants brought by Bligh. A plantation owner gen- erously permitted Marden to take rootstock from one of the trees; it was ppovaenied near Washington, D.C., by the Agri- culture Department's new Crops Research Branch. In 1960, a duplicate of Bounty was built in Nova Scotia for a remake in Tahiti, by Metro- minister and minister of immt gration, has accorded a warm and official welcome to the 100,- sooth immigrant of the year. It was all but a matter of co- incidence that. Mr. Pearon and Immigration Minister Nichol: gon and the 100,000th immigrant happened to be in Toronto's air terminal on a rainy afternoon in the middle of an election cam- paign. It was just a’ coincidence too, that the 100,000th immigrant | happened to be attractive 20- year-old Elspeth Ann Whitley, a ballet student from England who came to this country with Nationa! Ballet. é At least Mr. Pearson’s aides insisted this was the case, that the prime minister was prevail- ed upon to extend the hand to Miss Whitley, interrupting “a | When Gerald Brooke, a British | lecturer in the Russian language at.a London university, was sen- tenced in Moscow for ‘‘anti-So: | viet activities,” British news- | papers hinted that he was com | vieted on @ trumped-up charge | to bring about the release of the Soviet spying couple Peter and | Helen Kroeger. The Kroegers, who had car- ried out Soviet all over the Western world, were sentenced in London in March, 1961, to 20 years’ imprisonment. The assumption made in Au- | gust about the true purpose of diver of the National Geograph- | During a later trip to Jamai- high hopes of performing in the His Honour Lieutenant Gover- | the Brooke trial has now prov- nor T.W.L Prowse received the | eq correct. It has been little official Boy Scouts Association | more than a month since Mr. “Thanks” Badge from Jamboree | Brooke was sentenced and al- ‘Troop Leader Roger Craig of | ready the British foreign office Charlottetown, as a token of | hag been approached with an of- thanks from all Scouts and Scout | fer to exchange Mr. Brooke for leaders of the Province for His the Kroegers. Honor's splendid support of ve GETS COLD ‘SHOULDER Scouting at all times. | Te make up the requisite num- Petty Officer Malcolm Judson | ber, the Soviets are willing to received. the Queen's commen- | throw in Arthur Wilbraham, an- dation at the hand of His Honour | other Briton held-in East Ger- Lieut. Governor T.W.L. Prowse | many on charges of aiding. East at a ceremony at Government |Germans to escape. (That House He is the son of Mr and much for East Germany's alleg- Mrs. Raloh Judson of Pownal. ‘ed independence.’ : | Goldwyn -Mayer, of its f11m, ‘‘Mutiny on the Bounty."’ When the three-masted vessel sailed for the South Seas, Marden ship- | ped out on her as third mate. | He carried. along a single young breadfruit, grown from the or- iginal rootstock, to plant in Ta- | | hiti. | The breadfruit was placed in | a schoolyard in Arue, the district where Bligh had collected most | of the cuttings for the New | World. In five years, the breadfruit tree, only a foot high when plant: |ed, has grown to 25 feet. The | handsome, perfectly formed | tree bore its first fruit this sum- | mer. | Marden visited Tahiti recent- ily to present a plaque for the itree to M. Jean Sicurani, Gov- lernor of French Polynesia. The | | bronze ‘tablet “briefly tells ‘the | story of Bligh’s breadfruit quest | and relates how, 168 years later, a tree of the original rootstock was returned to Tahiti from Ja | maica. 1 The informal ceremony be- \neath the tree in the Tahiti schoolyard was attended by Ma- dame Rosa Raoulx, chiefess of Arue. She is Tahiti's only wom- an district chief. Governor Sicurani commented - that the Bligh tree and. plaque are a “fitting memorial to the | Memory of a man who did s0 Pacific.” Happy Coincidence? Pe Free Press ; Canada, through her prime | carefully non-political schedule” to do the honors. After seeing a news _ gragh of the 100,000th - grant, we readily tan under stand Mr. Pearson’s willingness /to make this departure from his fixed itinerary and even pre- red to concede that it was st another coincidence that a- del'ghtful. little flower girl was lon hand to present Miss Whit- | ley with a bouquet as she alight- ed from the plane- We're happy to join in -wel- coming Miss Whitley and hope Britain can provide us with 'many more charming citizens. |But it does tease the curiosity, | this wonderment at the strange chain of coincidences, this | questioning that Miss Whitley | perhaps was ,not, the sole immi- | grant to arrive in Canada on | that particular day — and if not, | how was this choice of “the 1100,000th’’ determined? Held For Ransom Free Press At the moment, the British foreign office will not look at the offer. It says that such an ex- change could encourage Com- munist authorities to arrest and trump up charges against pri- vate Western travellers when- ever they wished to secure the release of one of their senior | agents who had been caught. However, the Russians, who eases, have their ways of chang- ing the collective mind of the British government. They ill treated Greville Gwynne—a Bri- tish businessman who was later exchanged for the Soviet s- ter-spy “Gordon Lon: ee) such an extent that British pub- lic opinion forced the govern ment to agree to the exchange. The same treatment may now be in store for Mr. Brooke. AN ADVANTAGE A totalitarian regime, which by its very nature has no scrup- les, has, of course, a consider- able advantage over a democra- tic society. However, some way _ should be found to protect the unwary Western traveller whe crosses the iron cotate much to explore and chart the are not very squeamish in such |. / Gridiron Injuries i | 4 ; | 5% Bot F i ge |-a thorough examination | of the possibility of brain 1 tz. Swelling accompanies ; juries and is minimized | immediat> application of ice | elevating the injured limb In z R 2s = ghg® pope ihenet | in- | the | and | aed a a fil ide Do a i. NOTES. BY THE WAY _- Tan. Smith, determined ; 5 fas FER : ie & ul eLli 12 Ee ‘ E | i | utes flat!—Montreal Star. - Goes Back Em pty-Handed Press Staff Writer But what are the facts? Wil: | ne instances the ice pack !8 Rhodesian prime minister, must | son wanted Smith to agree to applied for 24 to 72 hours. There after the injured muscle or joint | is covered with a compres:ton wrap. This applies to bruises, muscle pulls or strains, and hemorrhage into a large muscle (charley horse). The latter may | be followed by scarring of the fibers uniess the severely bruis- ed muscle is exercised as soon as the edema is brought un- der control. Ankle injuries are the most common, whereas those of the knee are the most seriou’ of all athletic injuries. When these oc- cur, the athlete should be sup- ported or carried off the field and the joints examined before swelling interfers with the diag- nosis. Ice packs and elevating the extremity are niost helpful along this line Dr. Trickett does not believe in temporizing any injury with “keep-'em playing’ injections or pain killers. It is foolish and may accentuate the damage. NOT INHERITED Mrs E. writes: Since my learned that my husband’s mother and sis- . If we REPLY Tuberculosis is not hereditary but occurs in families where one or more members are ili, because close contact encourag- es spread of the disease. You have no cause for concern. (NOTE: All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicage Trib- une, Chicago, Illinois.) \\¥ he ill | Mi il car, a boat money the THE | » | eral YS AV ZN NIWAN If you'd like to buy a néw (or used) once more return to Salisbury empty-ha His threat to seize independence _ illegally may be just as empty as his week-long negotiations with the British government. | For weeks Smith engaged in what is known as diplomatic brinkmanship. He warned that if he ‘cannot win independence for Rhodesia legally by the end of the year, he would declare the central African colony inde- peacoat without British sanc- on. That could spark a brushfire race war in Rhodesia that could spread into most of the turbu- lent continent. Smith has little to gain from such a prospect. Prime Minister Wilson is known .to ha¥e made clear to | the Rhodesian leader that, at | present, Smith has only to deal | with the British government. | But if he seizes independence | unlawfully, he not only would have to face the wrath of Brit- ain but of most of the Common- | Wealth and a good part of the | Test of the world, including the United States. . | FEW UN FRIENDS | The issue then might be taken |from British hands and turned jover to the United Nations |where Smith and his ministers could expect little sympathy. Thus it would seem from a | strategic position, that Smith | must continue to threaten and roar and do nothing but bide his time.. The Rhodesian leader argues that he tried to go some dis- tance to meet British conditions | for independence to find ithe British government more | unyielding. = 7 en ae ji; amNY) a ZEA) Yi S Willi A ask for it by name ATTORONTO-DOMINION Compare our rates the’ five principles established by the Commonwealth prime- ministers last June. This would include the gradual extension of the vote to Negroes, iron-clad assurances that the constitution wouldn't be changed by a min- . ority white regime, an end to racial discrimination, better education for the Negroes and Teasonable assurance that the measures taken are acceptable to the country as a whole. Since the constitution could be changed by two-thirds majdrity decihion in the Rhodesian P~r- liament, Britain demancsd agreement that the Rhodes an opposition would always have more than one-third of the vote —the so-called ‘blocking third.” LUDICROUS PROPOSAL To all this, Smith merely of- fered to set up a Negro senate of 12 chiefs, all reported ready to obey Smith's demands »e cause they are paid by the present Rhodesian government. Wilson dismissed this proposal as ludicrous The argument now remains that Smith must seize independ- | ence unilaterally or he may be | booted out of his job by white ; extremists in his government. That argument is fallible, for Smith miade sure his delegation to London included Interior Minister William Harper, leader of the right-wing extremists. The bargaining with the Brit- ish government was on a collec’ tive basis. If Smith goes home empty-handed so does Harper. Smith now can maintain they are all in this together. He did not fail alone- need a car loan? — ne x — even finance.a vacation—be sure to see your Toronto-Dominion Manager for the money you need. He can arrange a low-cost, life- insured Personal loan for you, guickly and easily. Borrow your from the ‘people who make the difference” at or-outboard motor, or (MONTHLY INSTALMENT REPAYMENT C 10]$.43.96]$ 20.0418 23.00)8 19.92/6 16.14 io] 47.991 0007] 40.7) 97.09) 92.28) | i 178.911720.14] 92.96) 7800 04.88 100] 268.72] 180.21] 138.89 119.48 96.04 [A charges inde in monthy payments. —— eh Cheese yoor we repayment pian then soe "The Rank ” TORONTO-DOMINION Where people make the difference J. P. COOKE, Manage: ~~ "good business” way; oronto-Dominion. Ad. Ne. T-3019 diacetate