‘ Eh: Cum-dim! 4 Coven Prince Edward island [the The Dew I W. J. Hantcx, Publisher Burton Lewxr. Frank Walker Executive Editor Published everv week day morning (excep v and statutory holidays] at loS Prince Street, Charlortetowo P E I, by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Branch oft-(es at Simmorsldo, Montague, All-y". 001 and 5mm: Representen vwgilfi'ally ls. lltnmtoil NMHNN.” Advertising Serv res Torciv'o, .125 Unvevsry Ace, Empire 3-8394, Moment, (34ft (album Street Unwers:ty 6-5942. Western Office, l030 West Georgia Street. Vancorver .MA 7037). Member Catldfilfl‘l Dali; Newspape' Pt-hllshon Association and The Canadian Prru the Canadian Press '5 A‘L‘Lsxe‘,‘ r-nii‘en to the .se to: repub- |icatloo of ail n-.-.s dispatches in this never credited to It or m the Associated Press or Reuters and also to the local rte/vs published herein All right or republvcallon of specie; dspatches help In also reserved. Subszrlntnou rates '0 Over 75' F97 ill Belt h/ railrr ’SlZDO :- wear 'rw on” m I'WAl Vfii‘t‘“ and Areas net serviced by l'er'lt‘l. “$1500 a ,rur all town “A ilk, gynrlo p" ygar m U.S. and ¢l1rivhprq mum: Brush Com monweaitn. Nor over It SH‘J’V‘P om ' gamma: A o‘ Bitmap ’tl ( ': R'WV Edi—613:7 lifniifiSD.-\v.:.\_i}{_v: Foresees Opposnlon According to an Ottawa dispatch in the Financial Times of ('anada. the politicians are already lining up against the major recommenda- tions of the l’oi'ler Royal (‘ommis- sion on Banking and Finance. about which so much was heard a few days ago. Proposals threatened with serious opposition include the elimination of the 6 per cent ceiling on bank interest rates. The Times correspondent says it. is generally conceded that the pres- ent ceiling is unrealistic. but in the end the government may be driven to compromise by raising it to 'l per cent insli-ad of abolishing it. He recalls that the ceiling was re- dUCed by Parliament from 7 to 6 per cent in the wartime revision of 194-1. The Banking and (‘ommerce Committee of 1954 heard strong representations for lifting the cell- ing; the government of the day was sympathetic, but political pressure was too strong. When the commit- tee reported. there was no recom- mendation. Another Commission recommen- dation deals with the federal licen- sing of provincially incorporated near-banks, and defines a bank as an institution accepting short-term liabilities tip to 100 days. Some authorities. says The. Times writ.- er. flatly reject, this definition. It. has no legal status. and to incor- in the British North America Ari would require an amendment which might create a delicate situation with the prov- inces. Short of this. only the Stip- reme (hum of (‘anarla would decide whether those provincial Companies can he brought under a federal act. The Commission's proposal for a federal agency to supplement provincial securities regulation has been received "without enthusiasm in government. circles and with some flat opposition." By precedent at least. securities control has been ac- cepted generally as a provincial re,- sponsibility. Apart from any con- stitutional angle. duplication of this control might well he resented and lead to more federal-provincial trou- ble. porate it All this. of course. is specula- tion; but it comes from an inform- ed source and is cited here for what: it is worth. Incidentally. it is noted that the. Commission's recommenda- tions on small loans will be referred to the joint Senate-House Commit- tee on (‘onsiinier Credit. where they are expected to he indorsed at least. in principle. Deadlock Al Geneva Not much is being heard about. the progress of the United Nations trade and development conference at Geneva, which perhaps is not surprising in view of the fact that. very little progress is being made! The Western powers have present- ed a woefully disunited front at these trade talks. while the poorer countries which dominate the con- ference are united at least. in the heavy demands they are. making to further their own development. and in the belief that the West is letting them down badly. The facts are basically that fWO— thirds of the World‘s population ac- count for only about a fifth of the world’s income. and that at the present rate of economic growth in the poorer countries there is no hope of achieving the UN Dew-lop- ment Decade “not of e 5 per cent. increase in every country's income by 1970. The inn-cue in total aid from rich countries to poor between 1950 “(1962 was wiped out by deterioration in the poor countries’ terms of trade, and if this trend continues the poor countries face a balance of payments deficit of $40 billion by 1970. To end this situation they must improve their agriculture and de- velop their industry. This means spending vast sums at the start to improve machinery and know- how. Their reserves are slight and failing. The only answei, they be- lievc. is increased export earnings and foreign did. And. naturally. trade is preferred. Present arrangements under GATT ignore the basic differences in the ecoucmic structures of the industrialized and poorer countries. Special measures are needed to per- mit the latter to absorb modern technology- quicker and change their internal structure to acceler- ate development. The industrial Countries have accumulated capital first and faced problems of dis- tribution of income later. The poor countries have to do both at once. and amid disadvantageous ditions. This faces the Western countries with the dilemma of trying to help solve a problem they have. never had to solve themselves. Thus re- ports a Geneva correspondent of the Winnipeg Free Press. who adds: "Now that the poor countries have. lost their innocence and know their own poverty. ending that poverty is fast becoming the number one iti- ternational political necessity." Western disiinity and indiffer- ence is a poor way of meeting a challenge of this kind. Denby Dale Pies At llcnhy Dale they're prepar- ing to bake another of those giant pies that have made this little Eng- lish village famous. It will be the seventh creation of the piemakers. not counting the one that went bad and had to be, buried in 1887 on Queen Victoria‘s jubilee. Three tons of beef and two tons of potatoes will go into this year's gargantuan tidbit. The pie will take. about a week to cook. if previous experience is any guide. A clay oven—a sort of earthen tunnel—will be constructed to hold the metal dish and wood fires will be kept burning beneath it. C(lll- Before they start assembling the ingredients the. villagers plan to stage a party in the pic dish. which itself is something to be- hold. Billed as the largest of its kind. the dish is 18 foot long. 6 feet wide and 20 inches deep. The first Denby Dale pie was made in 1798 to celebrate. George. lll's recovery from an illness. The recovery. it seems. didn't last much longer than the pic. The. second one celebrated the victory over Napoleon in the Battle of Waterloo in IRIS. and the. third the repeal of the (‘orn Laws in lf-Llfi. The most recent one was made in 1929 to raise funds for a hospital. Pie day this year is Sept. 5-— just when our Confederation cen- tennial celebrations are. at their height in Charlottetown. Couldn’t we. persuade. a Denhy Dale dele- gation to come over with a hefty slice for us? The villagers expect the pie to yield 30.000 portions and raise $»l2.000: and we note that a piece of it is to be. sent to——of all persons—Soviet Premier Khrush- chev. who regards himself as an authority on pies. imagine that! Haven’t we got just as good pie- tasters right, here in the. (‘radle of Confederation? Our local centennial committee should get, busy at once and put in a claim to similar consid- eration. EDITORIAL NOTES Zoologists at the Philadelphia Zoo have found thai celibacy saves chickens from heart. attacks. They discovered the highest rate of death from heart attack was among males that lived in cages in which the number of males and females was equal. The next highest rate was among males in cages containing twice as many males as females. The only females that got. heart at- tacks were those in cages in which there were twice as many males as females. The death rate from all causes was higher among males, in the mixed groups than in the sexually segregated groups. Death rate among females seemed to de- pend on the size of the group they lived in. the bigger the group the faster they died. l w M ammo; nm 1 n- .i . unmi- lush IN' I Ir Al. PAL-ll AW Tilt n u- Auu-r m- Lmu W nun run' 1 lulu - tune- and ID! |! in mm m hi on" min roam u. to“ w' mus-n m In our awn-n myll In" nun." \cuulim ' Canadian Culture___ Said Hero-Hungry ‘—- Input-Id fl «6‘... lil. I’M AFRAID MINE (5 A LOSING BATTLE ...-_.-_.__,B'§YCLE BUILT FOR Two BRITISH COMMENTARY A Force For Peace And Stability The t‘c—ntcal Treaty Organiza- tion. now entering its tenth year. is perhaps the least \vide- ‘ three defence the safe- ly known of the groupings which are :uart‘s of the world —- South-East »\=ia Treaty ization. atid ('ENTO in the trou- bled region wli‘ch forms the bridge between Europe and Central and Southern Asia. As the British Foreign Secre- tary. Mr. Butler. has in Washington. (TENTO is less “in the news" than the other two organizations: This is thing to its discredit. but is ra- ther a testimony to its effectiv '- ‘ ing with the alliance. They also ness. During the past nine years. CENTO has quietly carried out a task which is of real import- ance to world peace. lts rezion- al members w Turkey. Iran and Pakistan -- with help and sup- port fl‘l‘nl Britain. a full mem- ber. alid thc L'nited States. an associate member. have laid \‘tlllfl ltllllllellOl’lF and can look ahead to fresh developments As the \nierit-au Secretary of State. .\lr. Rusk. told (‘l-INTO Ministerial .\l(‘(‘llll:. the alliance can feel pl'ldf‘ in .Is achievement in defence and in the economic field. it has creat- ed a shield. antl it is lll'i‘Sf‘l‘Yllll lllt" stability of the area. AGGRESSlON THREAT ln the defence field. it is a measure of CENTO'S that the threat of aggression. whether open or concealed. whether in the form of militaiy action or of subversion. ll a s shrunk to much smaller propor- tions. Mr. Butler said in Wash» ington "it appears evident that the deterrent power of the al- liance has in tact deterred," All three defence groupinzs. Mr, Butler pointed out. not r. deterring aggression in all forms. Today the Russians have been persuaded by Western mi- litary might that there are lim- its beyond which ll is unprofit- able to press their cold war no. licies. in Asia. though the problems are diffcrcnl. SEA’I‘U is discouraging Commit ni sl China from aggression: in (‘Oll- sequence. the Chinese have no stomach to press things too fat. preferring subversion and the encouragement of armed iusur. rectlon. CENTO's special task in its area —— Mr. Butler went on is to counter Communism in iis more oblique forms: those of subversion and infiltration. From the start the (.‘EN'l‘tl countries have seen this pro- blem not merely in terms of de- l'enslve action and countering subversion: they have tackled it in a positive and constructive i spirit. They have had two firm aims: to bring the member countries much closer together in as many fields of activity as Our Yesterdays (From the Guardian Files) TEN YEARS AGO Mar 6. 1054 The members of the Spring Park first aid class received Rod (‘ross certificates and pins ill a special meeting in the com- munity hall.Thin course was .sponsnred by the Women's tn- stitute and instruction was car- ried out by Misses Joan Roger. son. Kate MacDonald and Cl- therine Smith. Many Dutch families located near Charlottetown were thril- led to hear Prince Bernhardt of The Netherlands speaking over the air from Heivereum. The Prince wail giving an nddre u commemorating Liberation Day in which he paid hlgh tribute to the Canadian Veterans who brought freedom to the people of l-[ollancl noncommunlst “ .\'.»\ I'll in the West. the I Cream 2 said at the CEN'I‘O Ministerial Meeting ' . sight and surer judgment; this serves peace in the region . the- Slll'CC‘bb . By Elizabeth Barker possible; and to make a jotnt concerted effort to improve ec- tembers. PERIODIC MEETINGS in the political field. the pars iodic meetings of foreign min- isters. supplemented by fre— quent diplomatic contacts. have guaranteed regular concern —- from particular ques- tions. which primarily affect individual members. to the stu- _ of the intentions of the Com- munist powers and the impact of the struggle between Peking and Moscow These exchanges do not only deepen understand— a. ’1 help individual members to tac- kle problems with greater in- and and in the \\Ol'l(l CEN'I‘O is also doing much to improve communications in the strictly practical sense. Soon there “I” be a microwave tcle- communications tclcphone linc stretching right across Turkey. political ' consultation on matters of joint 1 United Kingdom Information Services I onomic and social conditions in 1 l the territories of the regional Iran and Pakistan. and linking Ankara with Karachi. There are to he high-frcouency rad.o links between London and An- kara. Teheran and Karachi The construction of a ra'lway link between Turkey and lran —— in- cluding a train ferry over Lake . \‘an in a remote part of Eastern Turkey — in going ahead with American financial aid. T his will link London with Teheran directly by rail. Roads to link Turkey. lran and Pakistan are being built. In addition. there is steadily growing cooperation in t ll e fields of technical knowledge. agriculture. health aiid science. - There is a OENTO Multilateral Technical Ctr-operation Fund which provides courses of in- struction for Turkish. Persian and Pakistani students on an in- creasing scale. Britain —- which ‘ contributes one million pounds I$3 millionI a year as economic aid « provides for the training of (‘ENTO students in England A CENTO post-graduate medi- cal centre is to be established in Karachi. Wider Still And Wider Globe and Mail. Toronto With the best will in the world it is hard to keep patience until the Royal Commission on im- uiialism and Biculturalism. its proceedings get curiouser and it is bad enough that the co- chairmen of the commission. Mr Davdsou Dunton and .\li. Andre Laurcndeau. sometimes give the impression in t h ei r speeches and writings that thcy have already made up “1le minds on issues before them and that all the trips back and forth across the country ier so much window dressing. But now comes the extraor- dinary nch that when the sum- mer vacation season arrives in number of univers'ty proles- sors without much to do will no mobilized in Bi and Bi fact- findicg teams to roam about me world studying soda-economic problems in other jurisdictions. Perhaps there is something we can learn from the exper~ lent-e of the Belgians. who have not solved their bilingual and hi- culiural problems. and from the experience of the Swiss who speak several languages and still manage to live together. Btit what on earth does commission expect fact-finding in South where the Boers and the Brit sh have. been driven together by common fear of the blacks? lht’ What is to be discovered in Fin- . team of‘ land. whence another professors is going. that has any valid bearing on Canadian pro- blems'.’ The commission's terms of re» fercnce require it to investigate the present state of bilingual- ism and biculturalism in Can- ada and to recommend might be done to improve it. If. this job can be done at. all. ‘ and l not by studying other countries 1 it will be done in Canada. where conditions are so funda- mentally different as to be irrc- levant. Gullible Alwa 5 With Us Kingston Whig - I Once upon a time in the army ‘ . just about ever recruit wa- rcstcd for his gullibllity. One of the favorite games among the "old sweats" was to tell the neWcomcr to draw a bucket of paint from the quartcrmnster‘s i stores and paint the "last post. a variation was to take a shovel and dig a hole for the same. As 1 we recollect (not without some . personal embarrassment; many a recruit spent the better part of t a d . someone i who could tell him where to find , the ' Exaggerated - searching pout.‘ gullibility? Not a bit of u; and ' pen. t l l [ lest anybody believe that t! ole are too sophisticated to fall for such practical Jokes today. . perhaps a recent incident in Morgantown. West Virginia. will i i. serve to pull him up short. A radio announcer in town. during a regular broad cast. warned his listeners in row 1 er their telephones with heavy i lowels or sheets because th 0 telephone company was starting Spring cleaning. Carefully he ex~ u plalned that the company per- iodically blows out ltrl lines. sprlying clouds of dust and soot out of the receiver. and that i using the telephone in the next ' hour might result In black feceo. ’ Needless to say the date we! April lst and the announcer we. just having some un. But the i comp-11y wun't particularly a» muted. ht it received “hun- inndnrd dreds of calls" protesting the Impossible (not the announcer s sen l People are gullible. indeed -- perhaps even more so in Mor- ganiown. We'd hate to think what a field day confidence men would have there if this incident is any indication of the citizens credullity. And politicians must have an easy time of it during election campaigns. for obvioun- iy there are many people there who w0uld believe anything. PRIVATELY EMPLOYED About four-fifths of Britain'l working force of neanly 25.000.- Ire employed by private industry. l to learn by . Africa. l what . Raven-hued ail Night. She moves: she, flows; , Charlottetown and Rollo Bay. Sinister Trio And Death Rate By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen . High blood pressure. obesity. and diabetes are a sinister trio. There is no better way to dis- courage : life insurance ulce- man than to tell him you have ‘, one or more of these conditions. . This is understandable because; all are associated with a con- siderable rise in mortality from heart attacks. Men under 50. with a blood pressure of 170-100 mm. have 312 times the death rate from coronary disease as men with ‘ normal blood pressure. A read-i ing of 150-90 more them doubles the ratio. Hypertension is le I I I serious when it comes on in i males over 50. The obese may derive some,‘ comfort from the fact that over- 3 weight is not as dangerous as ‘ a slight elevation of the blood pressure. A 69 ‘ years of age. who is 20 per cent . above normal poundage. has on- v ly a 20 per cent increase in mut- tallty from all causes. On thoj other hand. ’ o 50 per centl excess weight raises the rate 50 per cent. Diabetes also increas- es the hazard. more so wh en accompanied by high blood pres- ure. The trio is sinister because 7 most of the victims develoo ar- l teriosclerosis earlier than usual l and die prematurely of heart at- ‘ tacks. This dark picture is not ‘ as grim as it sounds. All of. these conditions can be correct- ed or controlled, Hypertension. for example.. should be treated as soon as dis- covered. This is easy to do with modern diuretics and sedatives and the avoidance of salt. Dia- betes. like hyperlension_ damag- es the arteries when allowed to progress. Early treatement with diet and insulin or an antivdia- bctic tablet usually brings the disease under control. Obesity is the most difficult‘ to correct because it involves. will power and emotional needs. Weight loss helps lower high blood pressure and control dla» holes and is a must when these disorders coexis . SHAKING PALSY A. E writes: Are palsy and parkinsonism one and the same" Y There are different types of palsy. ln the past. parkinsonism was called shaking palsy or par- alysis agitans. The wori paraly- sis was used sense to denote in the broad sense to denote loss of strength or disabling of the im 5. NAUSEA FROM ODOR lrs. J. B. writes: My son stayed overnight at his chum's house. He came home next day nauseated and he said the room where he slept had smelled of moihballs. Could this have caus- ed his discomfort? REPLY Yes Some people are overly sensitive to odors. Poisoning us- ually stems from eating moth- balls but the odor is harmless. 3, YOI‘NG ARTHRITIC L H. write: l'm Bil and my fingers are stiff and swollenl when I wake up in the morning. Isn't arthritis unusua y ace? REPLY No. Rheumatoid arthrilis ls more likely 0 occur in young persons. DENTAL FILMS Mrs. C R. writes: 15 it harm- ful for a 7-year-old child to have yearly X-rays of the teeth? EPL No, but annual X-rays may not. be needed unless the young- i ster has an unusual dental pro- blem. PROTECT THE SKIN FJR writes: I have had I number of skin cancers remov- ed. Is there any way to prevent getting more J .Y Avoid exposure to the sun and X-ray treatments. 3 Today‘s Health Hint —— Exercise is good for the heart. v (Note: All correspondence io‘ Dr. \'an Dellen should be ad- = dressed in: Dr. Theodore Van. . in care of Chicago Trl- ! hune. Chicago. Illinois.) = Paedémuw GAUDETE Our Little Blink Cat Our cat is black: 0 '3. 3‘ :1 A very Circe of mystery! A black wave in time. Or else. a sphinx with radar. Sees all. knows all. Our little cat is Curiosity: All things beat her scrutiny. . The leather touch of sheathed claw. Her gustatory pinky maw. Her nose and whiskers autu- ma 9. Feline instincts cogitatel Our little cat is Satisfaction: Especially after fish ingestion: Put-ring then. and acted quite. Our cat is just a puckish sprite. In a eat world beyond recall — She sits. Bubastis. by the well. —Wlilinm H. Douceite. (385R that 1 anhigh lime per day. Hovetoelx Limo Works N. I. Beveled, Phone LEW-2438 HAVELOCK LIME WORKS CALLING % ALL FARMERS Never before have we been able to offer such l service. Due to expansion and modernization we I now manuhcture approximately 1,000 tons ' l i l ORDER NOW FROM Levi Young Valley, P. E, 1. Phone Vernon Rlver 'M i to her side and NOTES BY THE WAT There are three blade pie: Those who make thing! happen. and thou who have no idea what happened. — Well Street Journal. .0verwork and crossing street against a red light can give you that run-down feeling. — St. Thomas-Journal. A women with children never run: out of something to tenets. — Windsor Star. "Captain." uld I detective.i i so far a plalnaclotheeman. three ' “we've questioning that been ventrlloquist for three hours and cope and I have confessed. Shall we go on“ — Gait Reporter. At u buy corner e. traffic ot- l. flcer saw an old lady beckon to ‘ him, He held up two dozen cars l and trucks and taxicab: to get inquire. “What is it. ma’am The old lady smiled and put her hand on his arm. “Officer.” she sad in a l ‘ soft voice. "I just want to tell you that your number is the number of my favorite hymn. — Montreal Star. the l 3 the idea of going to bed talk 5 about. but she run: out of lll- ’ * the Krill ia greener on in. other side of the fence it mav h: because the neighbor took 'ille trouble to spread fertilizer on it last Full. Few things are harder u. plain than Daylight S a i. l n 2 im to a child who objects m bet -. sundown. —— Ottawa Journalmp Some motorists charged with speeding give the impression that it is not they who are on trial but our police fore. judicial system and society at large. Edmonton Journal. It is now considered good practice that when the boss‘s son joins the staff he should start at the bottom —— for a few days. — Brantford Expositor, Then there's the one aha“; the professor who stayed away from class and left a tape 1-9. corder to deliver his lectures. When he looked in. a few days later. there were. l2 tape record. ers absorbing his remarks -- i Christian Science Monitor. Planning New Cuban Action? By}! urotd Morris .on Canadian Press staff Writer Various authvoi‘ative hints seem to indicate the S. ad- ministration is planning some new action in connection with Cuba. perhaps in the form of support for Cuban exiles. These exiles may be planning to re-l sume harrassment ' orl make an actual landing on Cu- 1 ban soil. The US. administration seeks to retain an appearance of tran- quillity. All reports of unusual aircraft and troop movements in southern regions have been denied—just as they were de-i nied prior to the 1961 and 1962i crisis. There even were some . o"fictal suggestions that Cuber isn't. much of a threat after all 1 because the Russians had with- drawn the most powerful of their surface-tn-air rockets. Now the officials have done an about-face. denying the re- ports widely distriouted in the U.S. that any of the Soviet rock- ets had been withdrawn. An au- thoritative source. whose re- orts pmved accurate during the 1962 missile crisis. said the rockets in Cuba are of top qual- ity and capable of hitting a high-flying U-2 reconnaissance p line. CASTRO THREAT Premier Fidel Castro threatened to destroy American aircraft if they con- tinue to fly over Cuban soil and President Johnson has warned that any such Cuban action would bring serious conse- quences. presumably U.S. mili- tary retaliation, The informant said it was in connection with the president's remarks that U.S forces in Florida have been strengthened. But there appears to be more to American planning than the possibility of a plane incident. Cuban exiles who survived the 1961 Bay of Pigs fiasco are. re- ported to have resumed recruit- - l t have been a reason why in illn more recent past the U.S. gm- crmelnt dl'slnla-ycd extreme "c- luctance to take any overt lhlll- tary move that could lead in .1 Cuban-U.S. explosion. Now Soviet Union is reported to line withdrawn most of its force: Moreover. the American ill- ormant suggests Castro‘s out. nomic troubles at home are deepening and the Communist party in Havana seems to ham to. split. The conditions may be non for some new action—or the U.S. may be talking itself llllo new trouble. ,. . . HOBBY HORSE (Wheel Hem. of Cour-e) Wheel Horse lawn and garden tractor makes all outdoor jobs enjoyment — not employment. From cutting grass smoothly, ing in the Florida area for mill. cleanly, to plowing. cultivating tary forces some Central i being trained in American hide- t to gin new harassment forays against Cuha within a . month. perhaps through some sort of invasion but more likely through new hit—and-run attire. d the slow process of infil- tration Asked what the U.S. will do abot it such moves. the informant replied cautiously that it is just possible the U.S. may provide some aid De pile the suggestions of Senator J. William Fulbright. chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, that the U.S. is paying too much alien-l tion to Cuba. Johnson has been placed in an embarrassing po-‘ sltion by a heavy barrage ofi Republican demands for a final ‘ I solution to the Cuban issue. ‘BELUCTANT IN PAST l The presence of large num- bers of Russians in Cuba may . 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