», ~ Givers Prince-Edward sland Like The’ Dew W. J; Hancox, Publisher @ Wallace Ward _ Frank Walker Managing Editor yee Editer Published every week dey morning (except Sum holidays) et 165 Prince Street, © L, by Thomson Newspapers Lid. Summerside, Montague, Alberton day and statutory , Charlottetown, P.E - Branch offices at and Sovris. Seng ne 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 Asséciation and The Canadisn Press. The Canadian, Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- fication of all news i In this peper ' eredited to It or to the Associated Fress or Reuters anch siso the local -news. published herein. An | right or republication of ipecial dispatches here In ats . Subscription rate: ‘ ; Not over 40c per week .by carrier. $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routél’ and: areas not serviced by carrier. : $15.00 e year off Island end U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. ‘and ‘elsewhere oviside British-Com monwealth. _ & Not over. 10 single copy- ; Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1966. Critics of Defense Minister Hell- - yer’s- unification bill are charging, irielegantly but with some show | " of reason, that he brought in the bill —during an-attempt to “ram. it through and ‘ “ago. That would take us back-to 1945, '_ginee, he-said_that he hoped_soon_to announce the commission's appoint- ing the terms of reference. _ . *It-was at the time of the. in Parliament over the case of George Victor Spencer, the Vancouver postal clerk who spied for the. Russians, that the Prime Minister promised Canada’s first probe into security and espionage since Gouzenko fled the Soviet embassy.in Ottawa 21. years not 1946, and it.could mean -resur- recting the case of E. Herbert Nor- man, the, Canadian- ambassador to Egypt who killed himself, and draw- ing attention again to prominent Canadians named—in~ Washington witch-hunt probes in the 1950s. That -would be quite a job in itself for the new commission, if indeed it is the intention to have it. probe into this malodorous . affair. i When he first announced the gov- ernment’s intention in this matter, Mr. Pearson intimated that a judge, likely from the: Supreme Court of Canada, would head the commission and that the judge “should not be limited in any way on how far back he might wish to go.” Several times F eS *weELttGET our \e You WILL’. "shut us up.” When he refused last week to send the measure to the defense committee before second reading, he did so in a manner which admitted no room for flexibility. What is-the-excuse-for-this-dictator— this-diets ig] attitude, provoking as it does the Opposition into a filibuster that may pid up the vote on the more urgent | tee of granting interim supply toe . cover the current month’s spending? _. {The’crunch could come as early as today when payment of some gavern- “standard operating procedtire to Ww ment, but hadn’t been able to decide definitely on the chairman. In the opinion of. the Toronto Telegram, there is no question that the Munsinger affair has been respon- ‘ible in part fort jelay-in-- estab new commission. Justice i Spence, who conducted the Munsinger probe, was blasted both inside of Parliament and out for pre- siding over the inquiry which requir- ed that he bring in a political decision. The government, in effect, the conduct of the former Conserva- « lhl i : 4 f i fi 5 5 : 1 if a i i 3 cE i Bi $832 2 avoid cheese. This food contains tyramine that raises blood pres- sure levels except when prevent- paralysis. This is overcome eat ssiu rich foods - sien’ Fae. + i i Z a te il z # Fh i € = 2.2 collapsed in 1961. The new de- is | fence agreement likewise shows that the United Arab Command, embracing Egypt, Syria and traq,—is—merely—a—-paper—pact> Nasser, who never has previ +-ousty—shown—mueh—sympathy~ for the radical Baath Socialists governing Syria .}-tread’ carefully , is certain to lest his official friends in. Damascus drag him ‘into unwanted ‘political or mili- tary entanglements. KNOCKING IT OUT "A The Royal Can “ MANILA-ROPE TRICK 5 ‘taining potassium. The thiazides also raise the-level of gout-pro- .| ducing urie acid in a high per- centage. But despite this phen- _omenon, not many users sensitivity to a drug exists. <é DAY a SENSITIVE TO SUN -- Tith. in| if unl frontier. The United States has reduced Egyptian ald to a trickle, partly because of objec- > the Yemen involve- — ment. © to ae On the surface, Egypt has ~ little to gain from entering. inte an alliance pres- tige and perhaps stability to the _Some Western diplontats _ be- Heve Russia, a stalwart sup- porter of the Zayyen govern meni rsuaded Nasser to give the ns at least a superfi- ~ £ shorta; to qymoothatic to a govern. ~ commitments —on—the—tsraelt-—— cial boost in return for contin t B. K . writes: Why is it flected that keepxa certain amount of cash in | tive administration. Now that this | perence Minister He ial : rve\for emergencies. More ser- | precedent has been set, some future | pian in a bill before Pa ar naturally aes Settee | aistioa that We the Mat DVO fous_will problem of-the civil. | gov nent could conceivably probe te combine the three branches |. main from navy either aft- | far removed from the sea. He ervi e yday ine the behavior af he Pearson means a death blow to the Roy- | of the service. The Army and | tion that Canada is of _ om Mond. of the govern- administration. . . | al Canadian Navy and the stran- | the Royal Canadian Air Yores landlubbers. Is usd ton ‘ment to meet. the would~|” Whatever findings are made th the |, Statice o ereet seagoing tradh | have tittle te lose by ¥. Pe dias clans Kile Os create a.major ‘which ‘could | prospective inquiry, it is too much to The only things to be left of the we wate co ae hie Hellyer scheme as change _anly Be-resolved ing the | hope that they will not result in more | ‘med Sefnee afloat eparenty | MOTT Mcdhag nag | ese of chan, Hopi aed 8 \House andpaying the ‘bill political.controversy. But the most and designations will be wiped | held: and stood for in pride and | with Liberal connivance in 4 Ave ’ : as never existed. | distinction. ernment bill, to ha ee een ets Fae oo Admivats oie bo cheticeed os | Wertie, MO. Meliver ts ait too | single taatirmn aad olagle Sah ~N . singer probe can at least be provid if only fit for jolly remembrance | worried. He may believe that | military structure massively | ; : : i There is reassurance on this |. im the songs of a Gilbert and | the glorious record of the Royal | by monotony. In the saltioty netutaahed Sieh ¢ le ; in- the promisé-to ‘Sullivan opera —H.M.S.-Pinfore. | Canadian Navy has failed to | view here it is tragie. _ liberately Brqught on by a responsible | ment in‘advance on the commission’s | colonels. majors, .ete. to com- lean €: ‘eo 3 ‘minister of the Ciown. Nor init a | terms of reference. | manttn praise tis” | = The Sitting Members _ Rha tlhe ane Democracy At Work. | prem, st a dictation of Me | a 2 A disquieting about Tues-_| Tubber-stamp boys. Canadian) commitiee won't get much sym- | absence and those p attend- day's elections “in the States, | Zeertuoice as to which branch | DENY from the delegation | ancefrecardi ate beytad ons < - ~ 7 = = ee eS es ee suré— such as Grant Deachman i : York—Times;~ -was-the- u +e is : we ae oe | @ Quorum. The delegates [who, as acting chairman of the of racism. In most of the | Taltet ss serve n'a cingle sor. | (tt pritish Columbia Federation | transport committee, had the =" tes vied with each | vice and go where they 1 a | inthe capital to | embarrassing task of telling the | ee ~ ak One of the-@lstingaishing Sea- | n° farm delegation te come thie Joao sereention | ie he hay aang hn | cee at as | Sa eel 8 ; i P : a » fa an ° a Pyack an he ~ been that it attracted young men | rather higher premium on at- | should -be penile: ie ponies In the North, eon ae In mont | ‘@Bdance than do some parlia- | to drag themselves to the duty trying t ght to” be the chief | iitsnces it amounted to affinity | “ase ae | for mich they, in the ame of a its” mn | “gaine Sov ‘white backlash. In“ | and eae weed Horious it was | farmer's leisurely return from a ae eee : ‘qe they deserve : -T Tilinois, 1 . ~~ four-day “weekend. a - cs 4 : , " SS . A HEALTHY FEELING * 4 one would imagine, the mas ’ While it nay do- . \.is all the Oppos demanding at | Dirksen, the minority leader in the ia ingrid “ead oaleioitens = whl gs Bogart stage—that beforeParliament is Senate, took credit for. killing the }\ were combined, and it contribut- foil of Consens transportation oan nk Ooaake to nae askéd to vote approval in.principle | ‘eiyil rights “bill with its open-de- |) fo Sus the army in hick were | UARMLTY. That's some cow. | heels, a bill as encompassing as the billtbe sent to the defense com- | cupancy provisions. Four Republichit | elements of Po vege Bagg song Deeg al) jammy conde cages tr cn wg 7 ~ With the ‘progress. ef the con- | troversy, the minister’s‘atlitude has _ become more and more arrogant. He _has turned questions aside with the “retort that “it is most irregular that I should be cross-examined in this\. fashion.” It would cost him nothing to satisfy the honest doubts of some -~tnembers, at least, but he prefers to tell them £Kitthey are talking non- sense, that they haven’t done their ‘homework, or that their views -are badly motivated. ' Tt*seems, as one commentator re marks, that he has now got to the -point of being tough merely for the sake of being tough—or, perhaps, for. the sake of the image he hopes is going to propel him-into the Liberal leadership. Certainly he couldn’t do better than he has been doing if it was his purpose to prove the.critics | —-tight when he said he was out to stuff -unification down Parliament's throat, ; like it-or not. His attitude must prompt many people, as yet uncom- mitted either way, to wonder about the compelling reasons for change and why their sponsor is so shy about presenting them for examination. - That Security Probe Prime Minister Pearson has an- | - nounced that the long-promised royal commission on national -security pro- cedures will-be set up by the end of will have three members-and_ will need at least: a year to investigate counter-espionage methods dating * back to the Igor-Gouzenko spy case _ of 1946. Particular ‘attention will be given to operations of the top-secret security and intelligence branch and | the security committee of deputy ministers and how they’ will affect ment. And Regan won 4 gubernatorial candidate, not only op- posed federal civil rights laws but also dwelt upon the themie of “crime. in the streets” which has kind of code for anti-Negro ‘senti- victory over Democratic Governor. Edmund Brown who was seeking a third four-year term in the.. most populous state of the union. . * Somewhat reassuring, how- ever, is the co. it of The Times’ » leading Washington. correspondent, James Reston. Nobody can follow an American election, for long, Reston writes, without being both appalled by all the noise and nonsense\and yet impressed that the system works the whole were unimpressive, the de- bates boring-and stale, the verbal ‘tricks and insincerity appalling; the apathy, defeatism and fatalism of the _electorate palpable. But somehew the “4ded-of unity prevailed despite all the voters seemed to feel, probably cor- rectly, that the present tides of policy and politics are so strong that the re- . sults will nétchange anything very much. ‘A good thing too, by and large— even for those .candidates who promised the easiest answers. to the hard problems the nation has to grap- ple with at_this time... EDITORIAL NOTE into the grievances of consumers, Washington is at last trying to do’ sémething about them. After five years of effort; it has passed a bill to protect shoppers against unfair or deceptive methods of packaging and to a-varying extent |< “fe votes:In Califor- ‘y. “nia, Ronald Regan, the Republican} ay as well as it does. The candidates on\| While Ottawa has been delving | = *F a te BR ze EEegE ; uf HE he ‘trans-Atlantic ally “within the hour:”-- . b= \ the navy’s heroic exploits. S.A. MacAulay of Campbell's Cove, last year’s world potato champion almost duplicated last year’s achievement at the. Royal Winter Fair wheh this week -he labeling consumer goods. ~ {ndividual: rights. The . government “ ~ ‘ SE tee ter ae ane serene te eee Britain announced the loss of | - ot criticized. It looks course, when important ‘eommittees, and even Commons because i ne ‘sin sii . Them aa WILLIAMS, MURPHY & MacLEOD fay || Summerside _{-meal. He even_puts it on toast. REMEMBRANC Friday, r DAY Nov. II 1966 there is ehrotic no-shows reflects unfav- orably.and unfairly on members. would give the railways unpre- cedented powers to run an ee- onomie “Most diligent. attention % ¢an +, % 3B 6 f % eo quiring an honest. callous. operation, needs the Is this harmful? oe ae No. Next year he may switch | , to my knowl | nothing shameful in ac- ' Poe According to a leading Hun- garian writer, the bathtub ‘and ‘\ ‘the automobile are largely re-'}| \| sponsible for divisions in humap- ity. Gyula Hiyes told a_ gathering fellow-poets in re- ts And Bathtubs Cars. than bathtubs \and they have ‘slaugher as< great \as barian attack.\In most. | pile uf & is going wil socks, dresses, shirts, ties;. and so on. But, stran- it may seem, we find te work up much enthi- we'd, prob- x 2 ‘took the grand championship for tablestock. ‘ * ¢ over can- |: g > are less’ comynonplace have wee ~ ey nfry \ \ I - ‘ - Remembra \ NOVEMBER 11 \Uet us Honor the Brave | oi _Men Who Gave Their Lives _ Freedom of Our ) Day~ © t ce f f ° y ee * Y Wf Forever be Af /