_versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Che Guardian Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor 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 et Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspepers "Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- Street Vancouver MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian 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 right or republication of special dispatches here- In also reserved. Subscription ete: Not over 40c per week by carrier. ; $12.00 a yaar by mail on rural routes’ and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com e monwealth : Not over 7¢ single copy- . Member Audit Bureau ‘of Circulation. “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” PAGE 4 “More For Education” Speaking in Newfoundland this week, Prime Minister Pearson told a Liberal rally there was no doubt that the federal government must do more for education. The present federal support, he conceded, “is not enough.” “Every boy and girl must be given access to every type of education as far as he or she can go. This must be done,” Mr. Pearson added. However, the federal government would have to. discuss the matter with the prov- inces, which have the primary respon- sibility for education. Later he pro- mised to make a policy statement af-' ter the Bladen report on higher ed- acation is made public on, Wednesday. Mr. Diefenbaker. has also, been stressing this issue, but in more con- crete terms. He proposes, as a means of getting a national educa- tion plan into orbit, to raise immedi- ately the federal yovernment’s per~ capita grant to the provinces for uni- --versities from $2 to $3. Periodic in- creases would bring the figure to $5. - The Maritime Provinces, which suffer undue hardship under the per capita system because of small populations but high university enrolments, would receive a special allowance, Now that the Conservative leader has made his party’s position clear, the électors will want more than pleasing generalities from Mr. Pear- son on the subject. Doubtless he will be more specific in his statement next week. But the public will-also have _ the right to remind him that dur- ing the 1963 election campaign he sromised university students $10 million annually in government schol- © arships. This promise could have seen implemented without infringing om provincial responsibility for ed- | acation as set out in the British North American Act. But for some reason it hasn’t been. implemented. ; The burden of university costS 13 an issue~of prime concern in this campaign...\Nowhere is this. burden. likely to prove more onerous than in Prince Edward Island. It is reassuring to note that the leaders of both the major parties are in agreement that ‘ something “must be done,” and we shall await with interest Mr. Pearson’s further pronouncement on the sub- ject. The Patronage Game _ The more one -reads about the views of some of his party, followers whom Mr. Diefenbaker quarrelled with when in office—or who quar- relled with him—the more one gets the feeling that Dief may have been more sinned against’ than sinning. Take Pierre Sevigny, for instance, | who quit the cabinet in 1963 and is | now more_.or less back in the fold. | Mr Sevigny is coming out with a book, entitled “This Game of Pol- - ities,” which is billed as a highly personalized account of the Diefen- baker years by a man who sat in the dinner councils of power during that exciting time. According to an advance review of the book by Peter C. Newman, an- other Diefenbaker biographer, Mr. Sevigny places much of the blame for the 1962 Tory defeat in-Quebee on the Conservative administration’s handling of patronage. He roundly condemns the attitute of Messrs. Green and Hamilton for eliminating the patronage that had flourished un- © der their predecessors. Patronage he defines as the right to intercede for gne’s friends and the anti-patronage | dictums of Hamilton and Green as a denial of commonsense. Mr. Savigny gave a further outline of his views in a television program to which reference was made in Wed- nesday’s Guardian, and in which he is quoted as saying that one of Dief’s most serious faults was his holding “almost a resentment” against ‘big pusiriess and the financial world be SATURDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1965. | ? » " cause “it stands to reason that f you ' get the powerful of the world behind | you, the powerful of this world will influence those under them in your favor.” At first, said Mr. Sevigny, | traditionally Conservative; big busi- ness thought a great deal of Mr. Dief- éenbaker and ‘most of the time/ they got exactly what they wanted so they really had no reason to complain.” But later an impression that Mr. | Diefenbaker was against them was | exploited by the opposition and “streamlined” into a Tory defeat. This may be a “commonsense” | view of politics; but it goes far to ex- | plain why the patronage game, as thus defined, is regarded with growing dis- favor by the general public. Where it involves the assumption of “the right to intercede for one’s friends’’ it is | particularly objectionable. The Dorion inquiry supplied some pretty painful | examples of what this kind of thing can lead to, when it gets out of hand. | The Wrong Course Some gloomy speculations have | been occasioned by the demand of 86 | Indian parliamentarians—who includ- | ed both genera! secretaries of the rul- ing Congress party—that India should get into the nuclear weapons race as a result of its quarrel with Pakistan and the threat of intervention by Communist €hina. If this should in the fire. It is predicted, first, that Pakistan would feel that she too had to acquire nuclear arms, and she would probably get them from China. Indonesia, ‘will explode her first nuclear device within a year, might enter the race in earnest, also aided by China. Israel has been watching India’s nuclear policies with a wary eve: Indian and Egyptian scientists are said to have collaborated on nuclear developments, and Israel fears that.should India be- gin producing such weapons, Egypt would be a direct beneficiary. That would mean, of course,:.nu- clear weapons for Israel, which has enough scientists to produce them. With Indonesia. and China nuclear powers, Australia and New Zealand could no longer rely upon conven- tional forces, while Marshal Tito’s Yugoslavia might well think it use- ful to follow ‘suit, This is the nightmare that troub- les the world in this year of grace 1965. We can only hope that it is troubling Prime Minister Shastri as well, that it is haunting him night and day and that it will stiffen his determination to refuse, at all .costs, the demand that India—hitherto ‘fore- most among the nations dedicated to the principle of non-violence—should take this fateful step. ‘s Adds To UN Role Since the treaty ending four-pow- er occupation of its territory in 1955, Austria has taken an active part in United Natidts= economic, financial and hunanitarian activities. © Unitl now, however,-it has been unable.to take a full part in UN peacekeeping programs. : The Austrian constitution prevent- ed sending Austrian troops abroad to participate in UN actions. Aus- trian medical teams did go to the Congo during the crisis there and Austrian police worked on Cyprus along with Canadian and other UN contingents. But regular military men were not sent.. Now 4he,national assembly has changed the constitu- | tion to permit Austrian military units to participate in actiéns abroad when réquested by international organiz- ations. ; re ~The government hails‘ this as | proof of the country’s determination “to play a. tonstructive and useful role in the concern of nations.” This might be regarded as a small matter in itself, against the background of problems the UN has to deal with. But the example is one to be ac- claimed at a time when both France and the Soviet Union remain stub- bornly opposed to meeting their ob- ligations in this regard. EDITORIAL NOTES One thing ‘we are spared ‘in this | conceived election gimmicks as the Truth Squad, the comic books and the runaway pigeons that backfired in 1963. Who says parties don't learn by experience? $ ¥ * | \e The Commissioner of the North- | west Territories announces with satis- faction that territorial drivers will be | among the first Canadians to use | light-reflecting car license plates: He | adds that studies “indicate that they should reduce traffic accidents up to 58 per cent.” Which leads the Ot- ' tawa Journal to comment that if they’re that good they should be made compulsory for all Canadian drivers. happen, then the fat would indeed be which has been boasting that she | L campaign—so far at least—is such ill- | HAIL, HAIL, THE GANG'S ALL HERE OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Mr. Winters Queried On Party Policies Is Bob Winters the answer to, might, I expected, have some the Canadian businessman’s prayer? Would he, as a minis ter in a Pearson Cabinet, modi- fy the many narrow and infla- tionary policies which have an- tagonized businessmen during the two years of Pearson Gov- ernment? Both answers seem to be ‘“‘No.” Many economists fand finan- cial , experts have warned that the economic policies of the | are dis- | Pearson Governme couraging foreign estment in Canada, are damaging our com- petitive position in foreign trade, and through inflation are de- stroying the savings and eroding the wage gains of all Canadians. Bob. Winters, a minister in the St. Laurent cabinet, was défeat- ed in the 1957 election, and he retired from politics. It has been __-suggestdd that $5 year old Nova Scotian is now seeking a come-back into politics — via | the Toronto seat formerly held by the hockey - player ‘‘Red” Kelly — because he has been promised high office if the Li- beral government is re-elected. In such position — perhaps that of Finance Minister? would he change these criticized Lib-. eral policies? He has been de- scribed as a right-wing Liberal; this suggests that he might dis- -agree with policies designed by the present Finance Minister, ‘Hon. Walter Gordon, Mr. Gor- + don has been described by the ‘Liberal Premier of Saskatche- wen, Hon. Ross Thatcher himself a former MP of the so- ¢cialist C.C.F. = as ‘the most dangerous socialist in Canada today.” IF WINTERS COMES ... To discover Bob Winters’ atti- tude to the Liberal policies so much criticized by economists, and to measure the. likelihood of him trying to modify them, I asked Bob Winters whether he endorses the declared Liberal policies and program. “IT am running as a Liberal candidate, and this shows that.I accept the Liberal program and endorse the Liberal platform,’:- he replied. — _ “Mr. Winters, who was trained as an engineer and_ who: worked in the Bell Telephone laborator- ies in New York, has for several years been chairman and pre- sident of Rio Algom, a subsidi- ary of the British Rio Tinto mfn- ing empire. As the and substantial beneficiary of foreign capital in Canada, he Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO tees a os Rev. G. Carlyle Webster w elected moderator at the meet- ing of the Presbyterian Synod at ducted by Rt. Rev. Monsignor Patrick McMahon, D.P., rector of St. Dunstan’s. 53 victory over the New Yankees } oe doubts about the wisdom of the Liberal Government's ‘‘Unwel- come Mat” to such capital. “Do you approve of the Pear- son Government's tax policies discriminating against foreign | capital?” I asked Mr. Winters. | “Yes,” he replied, “I support all | the policies of the Pearson Gov- | ernment.” | CHEAPER LOANS BALKED | “What is your reaction to the | government conserving the six | per cent interest ceiling on bank loans, which subjects many smal borrowers to the much | higher interest charged by fi- | nance companies?" I asked him. | “My same answer applies,” he | said. “Do you agree with the steps | taken against freedom of the press by the Pearson Goverm | ment™ “On many, policies there is re for--a -of ditfem ence,” replied Mr, Winters. “Un- doubtedly there are things that iations. * . | Psychomotor Epilepsy tention on epilepsy. We received many letters from readers w: to know more about this and how it differs from other forms of tile disease, and protesting the im- plication that “a relationship individual is conscious during the ettack, at which time he is compelled to perform purpose- less acts that are sometimes foolish or harmful. These include twisting’ or writhing movements of the ex- tremities or trunk, movements of th: lips, or inco- herent speech. Some may walk aimlessly or drive a car for no apparent reason. Others pull off the clothes. The attacks may be of short duration, and the victim may carry out the same act each time or there may be var Some persons develop bouts of temporary insanity lasting days or weeks. The mind Is clouded, and the behavior fol- lows an automatic pattern. On coming to, they do not remem: ber what happened. It is here that the Ruby case enters the picture, because a mise meanor, serious crime, or mur- der may be committed at this ..|-time. The behavior of the epileptic differs from that of the criminal. The mind is too clouded to make it possible for him to plan a crime. He deals a sudden violent blow to anyone he encounters with anything he picks up on the one would want to take another | look at; but I don’t know of any | basic difference between my | views and those of the Govern ment. So at present I, would have to say ‘No comment.” ? Mr. Winters has been critic- ized — unfairly, I think — for not resigning from his full-time job and from his dozen part time directorships as soon as he became a candidate for election. Would he resign from these if elected? He replied that there are certain steps required by law and by the customary prop- rieties. “It is customary for any MP to divest himself of the director- ship of companies having con tracts with government, espec- jally in the field of public works. On appointment.to the Cabinet, one at once resigns all director- ships,”” he replied, indicating that he would take the proper course at the proper time. Hydrofoil boats suggest air- planes that can’t get into the | air—or ships that have taken | up waterskiing. the unconventional craft | will seen increasingly on | hydrofoil is moving into exten- | sive commercial service. Visitors to the New York | World's Fair--were — speeded < from -Manhattan to Flushing | aboard a hydrofoil. One of the newest hydrofoils, Victoria Was ldunched in Balti- | more in July, 1965: She is de- signed to carry. as many as 75 passengers across Puget Sound between Seattle, Washington, and Victoria, British Columbia. Her owners also plan to test the vessel as an inter- island carrier in Hawaii. Some manufacturers are of- fering hydrofoil kits for convert- ing an outboard motor hull into a small hydrofoil boat. E RUSSIA ADOPTS THEM ll development in the United States still lags behind the. progress being made in some other, countries, however. The Soviet Union, lacking an ex-- tensive highway system, haé: produced: a variety of hydrof vessels for service along water- ways. « ; Elsewhere in Europe scores of ,hydrofoils \ferry - passen ich routes“as the of na_ between Sicily on the French Riviera; and from Stavanger to Bergen on the Norwegian coast. The first successful hydrofoil was launched by. Italian-invent- ot Enrico Forlanini in 1905, only two years after the Wright bro- thers’ first flight at Kitty Hawks, North '. Carolina. The Wrights themselves also tested a foil- supported seacraft, but the early testsfreached a brilliant dimax in 1919 when tele- Does a drunk belong behind bars, or shoulc he be permitted to sleep if off at home This weighty issue has been debated .| in Toronto, where a grand jury that overcrowded jails in what once was Toronto the Good feed not extend their. facilities to offenders who could just as easily be taken home and summonsed later. ; oo. is not confined to our provincial capital. Every Saturday night here in London, wagons run a virtual - Hydrofoil Boats National Geograpitie Society United States waterways. The | that servi® in the downtown || ? phone inventor Alexander Bell’s Hydrodome No. 4 skim- med across Baddeck Bay, Nova Scotia (at nearly 71 miles an hour. The achievement set a world speed record for boats remained unbroken for years. Dr. Bell’s work in this field,’ as in many others, was ahead of-the- times. — Potential - users then had few applications the high speeds of the hydrof: But the pace of the world has changed the picture. The United States Navy, for in | stance, has found that modern submarines are getting too fast for present destroyers, and it hopes that blue-water hydrofolls can do duty as sub-hunters. SPEED-IN ALL WEATHER A hydrofoil vessel has two basic advantages over a conven- tional craft. It can operate at | wuuel higher speeds with the same power, and it can operate with less regard for sea condi- tions. A hydrofoil can put to sea in rough weather when conven tional craft cannot leave port. Hydrofoil vessels ride so smooth- ly that seasickness js rare. The hydrofoils are supended from the hull of the boat, and tHey operate much like the oil wing of an airplane. The sur- face of the foil generates a lift- ing force as the craft moves through the water. Gradually. the ship rises on its struts until ‘the hull is completely clear of the water..Because water is 800 times denser than air, the hydro- foil gets sufficient lift from a much smaller ‘wing’ than an airplane. Since a hydrofoil vessel is-de- around, but hydrofoil men main- tain tremely safe. If the foils strike an object in the water and are damaged or even sheared off, the vessel merely settles on its hull and proceeds at lower * speed. | The Paddy Wagon Shuttle » London Free ten to the ritual ‘‘Ten or Ten” on Monday morning. Would the ends of justice and humanity be better served by ng them home? No’ clear answer presents itself. Many drunks are repeaters; being ar- rested, locked up, fined or jail- 7 that their craft are ex- | spot. His action is not premed. itated, nor does he use a weap- on that he carr‘ s for this pur- pose: His crimes are pointless, without ‘motive, and with no planning. ‘In addition, the indivi dual’s abnormal mental cond- tion during the seizure usually is quickly detected and he can be institationalized before he harms himself or someone else. | TUEORETICAL E. Z. writes: Can overeating bring on a second heart attack REPLY This concept is a theory left over from the days when most heart attacks were called “acute indigestion.” The usual cause is blockage of a coronary artery On the other hand, overeating, overexertion, fa tigue, and tenseness may contri- bute by hastening the process. ACHY MUSCLES A reader writes: What causes the achy tiredness in my muscles (legs and arms) This is especially troublesome.on damp days PLY This question is easy to an- swer if the reader is over 50 years of age. Aching is associa- ted with muscle strain, rheuma- tism, toxicity, and fatigue. (NOTE:~—All correspondence te Dr. Van Dellen : hould be = to: een } co ago Trib une, !Chieays> Ilinols. smacking” ~ tk ¥. maa me cman les - a 9 Sy im nena: ils eile tes natin “js nana testi ce, SS Sas , 4 ce Comes iA a L He i rl PTT Es Es : I i iy e g : peri sii, la 3 f } geeier Fe nadians, were sent in to see that peace was kept. And it was kept, except for occasional incidents, until last April when India accused Paki- stani forces of invading the Indian state of Gujarat which led to the signing of the Kutch agreement in June and a couple of months of peace. ; Time of rf : ii ; Hh | 3 & t if He it il fr if if | i ak HOT ieee ef i scale war, the UN at ment ean wish for no better solution than the one reached dn 1949 when Kashmir was di- vided at the ceasefire line—but perhaps this time making the ceasefire ‘line the permanent the two countries. ~y Anyone remember the war- time army medical officers, and their methods:of vaccinating and immunizing large numbers of men? - Our recollection is that the glass cylinder of the weapon used was of about one quart ca- pacity. The duty. of the medical sergeant was to file off the point of the needle, so it would be blunt enough to test the bravery of the troops. Then the medical officer backed off a few paces, and took a run at the victim. It was bayonet drill in reverse, with ‘the recruits playing the role of the straw-filled dummy. Things have changed. We see by the August issue of the Caria- dian Journal of Public Health that the Canadian armed forces have for several years been us ing device called a hypospray instead of needles. A jet of fluid is shot through the skin under high pressure, and the patient doesn’t feel a thing. Dr. A.I. Cunningham, director of the, St. Catherines- Lincoln Health Unit, reports in the Jour- nal on the use of a hyposrapy ap paratus to give combined anti- tetanus- anti- polio shots to 3,065 . less, completel like a seared nasium and the wedge-like slices radiating from the dome are the classrooms. According to the principal, morale has never ‘been higher, and as the students point out — there’is nothi shiny, new school. Read this article in : and see if you agree. e Evening Patriot WITH ‘MAGAZINE and Colored Comics Without Needle Stratford Beacon-Herald syringe and several needles to immunize five or 10 people. This method is in some disfavor now ~~: because of the risk of ‘cross-in- guard against cross infection, disposable syringes can be used, at acost of six to eight cents each. The manufacturer claims do 100,000 injections. As for speed, Dr. Cunning’ reports doing the immunization chore at a school of 1,200 pupils, in three hours. * “The usual comment from the’ students, after Smmunization,” he reports, ‘‘Was, ‘Oh, all? It didn’t hurt a bit’.” We got born too soon. = - LAKES CAPTAIN DIES ASHTABULA, Ohio (AP)—A Canachan freighter captain died fection, as for example. the spread of infectious hepatitis. Te /+ se that the hypospfay, at $1,400 will 4 is that aboard his ship before it docked . here Thursday: Police said they received a “report from the Cleveland Steamship Lines that Capt. F. Gerald Wood of Windsor, Ont., had died of natural causes be fore his ore and coal carrief, e least bit the Lemoyne, docked. e are about their eekend Magazine STILL. ONLY agent of Canadias.. j \ wt, 4 A far cry from the Little Red Schoolhouse is this window- circular high school in Edmonton. Shaped egg, the dome, or yolk, houses the gym- _~ At All Newssta nds ~ 2 9