i 2, t is“. c . .‘a is :_ ‘3. evidently the members—t h o u g h ; many of them complained privately 3‘ .. ‘nawv lflltt tfiittanrtltana “emu-“magma.- I AMI-a. Md. had Wei. (‘3. Who even such day morning lumps in by. and “motor. hobo-m u '05 Dnnc. isl— “Worn. n. a. Thomson Mum us I“ otfko- an Sun-mamas. Managua Alb- . and Soot-a. loot-scored nationally by Ibomoo Monaco-s was... saw.- 'nvomo s75 Unmu‘nv In hpm :uvc Munvloa: no t‘athun sous Wm can. Wmtlrn otMo lose an .uvgi. Stunt Vamvw tMA roan. W Canadian Daily NIle 'ml Aaaocinton and The Canadian Press The Canal. Prose in oxcluaivolv enfllcd m m. an to- nab lunch of all now- dupuchu in ms. a... undated to h or In In. Almiotod Frau a law Ian and also In th- local nlwa puth hon h. Al fight- on mpubl-catioo of special I.” hot-in aim «curved vaaulplion m.- Not m 35¢ 90' week by union anon a you by "IIII an nual rwlu and an. V "I united by town. “4.00 a you 0" Island and U.‘ ‘20“ w you In UL and elsewhere out-id. Iritiah C. lion-roams. Not our 7: our lingl. copy. Memwa Audtl Bureau pl Circulation. Finn—4 SATCRIMY. APle :1, 119. Should Be Answered Party caucuses are strictly pri- vate affairs. But sometimes rumors leak out. and this is what has hap— pened in connection with a pro- election c a u c u s of Conservative HR! at Ottawa. at which they re- portedly received from Prime Min» later Diefenhaker the promise that, i! re-elected. he would increase the Indemnity paid them. Usually it is wise to ignore such hearsay statements; but in this case we think that if the report is untrue. it would be well for the Conservatives to scotch it before It gathers f u r t h e r momentum. For on the face of it the pledge would appear to be a most irregular one. The Ottawa Citizen. which ta kes note of the rumor editorially, says with some justice that it would amount to a special private induce- ment to the Prime Minister’s fol- lowers to stick by him.» There may be full justification for increasing the indemnities of our House of (‘ommons representa- tives. in view of rising living costs and the expcnses they have to meet. - But Mr. Ilicfenbaker had ample op- portunity during the past four years to increase the rates. Not only did he fail to do so. but it is noteworthy that shortly before dissolution. a plea for higher rates made by Mr. Douqu Fisher, member for Port Arthur, failed to receive the support of a single member. A gesture from Mr. Diefenbaker at that time could have resulted in an affirmative vote. Certainly if the salaries of MPs are to be raised. the increase should It all times be publicly considered In Parliament. Preferably the vote should be made contingent upon its going into effect after a new Par- liament has been called. thus glvmg the electors. as well as all candi- dates for office. due notice of the dlange. The Fisher resolution could have passed on this condition. but that existing rates left them in fin- Dcial difficulties—were not pro- N to shoulder the political re- Wibilitymf voting for it. We must emphasize again that Gib promise allegedly given by Mr. Dlefenbnker to his parliamentary followers at the last session may _ be entirely non-existent. It could miany be nothing more than 0 rumor started by his politic” «p- m. In any case. It is now cir- culating widely across the country. and It will do the Wolves no so“ to maintain a lofty aloofneu b In mm implications. Hectic Days Ahead in amount to! the Now 0.0“ and Social Credit parties. The Liberal-Juv- alroady pub- lished 15 difficult campaign pamph- haudphnthloemmwitha production average of about one million copies each. As with all parties, those are shipped from national attic. for distribution at the constituency level. The New Dem oc ra t s are concentrating on four different booklets. The Social Credit party also has four, and more .may follow. The bulk of tha Con- servative party press has yet to appear. It will be the costliest 1nd slick- ost campaign in Canadian history. Just how much of it will cancel out remains to be seen; No estimate has been made as to how much of this medicine the ordinary elector can take; whether It will grow on him like a drug and make him avid for more. or have the opposite effect. One thing sure. it will be a hectic period for all concerned. In the circumstances, therefore, we propose a vote of thanks to PostmastenGeneral William Hamil- ton. for some timely remarks he made the other night at a service club rally. Mr. Hamilton had the temerity to say that there is “al- most too much attention paid to the righta of citizenship at the present time and too little to the duties and obligations which must be under- taken If those rights are to be pre- served.” He didn't mean undertaken by the government or parties seeking power: he meant by us voters. Be- yond that. he said. there was "an o b l i g at io n to vote intelligently through a knowledge of the c“ '7. dates who present themselves and an awareness of the is sue s and their stands on these issues." Words of wisdom. bill likely to go unheard amid the swelling chorus of competing bids from the party Calliopes. Ontario School Reforms 0f in t e r e st to educatiorists across the country are the far- reaching reforms in the program of secondary education which will be made effective in Ontario next September. and on which the ')n- tario government is pinning great hopes in meeting the demands of skill and special training which mod- ern industry and business are mak— ing. ~ A basic innovation of the new system is the intmduction of five- year courses into the technical and commercial programs. It is claimcd that these con rses will be the equivalent of the five-year academic course. leading to the Grade l3 examination. Parallel with these courses are to be three four-year courses in the traditional divis‘ s, now renamed Arts and Science. Business and Commerce. and Science. Technology and Trades. These will presumably be of le er difficulty. and will put emphasis on the practical needs of a successful working life. Included in the plan. also. is a two-year terminal co . basically vocational for thos who find a book-oriented education d”" 't: and. finally. a special one-year oc- cupation course for those unable to gain mm from Grade 8. The program la a complex one. and places heavy responsibility on pupils, pnronto and schooi‘ authori- tiea to pick the most appropriate coum for the child at the end of Grade I. But. It ha. been fired to thoehamglugtlmoo.andifltpnwol Itcmeritsthercknodoubtthatlt will form the' groundwork for sham In curl-lam In other prov- hoae in well. What the estimated coat wfl be we have not neon, but It in the long-tum advantages that on Must. , OTTAWA EASTER EGGS W U.S. Budget Shoots At The Moon There In more astronomv Ir. the American budget than the $55 billion President Kennedy has asked Congress to spend for. as he puts it, "the mastery of space“. The very statistics of revenue and expenditure. rounded off in the hundred mil— lions. have a light-year dimen- sion about them. Ottawa Journal , cmer it does and in proportion t alone I: more than one billion The mmd resists the concept ‘ of SMIIDJIIIHIIJ the revenue Mr. Kcnncdy anticipates In 1901. be cause the figure Is so for be- yond ordinary compare. The n-sourm and ('lpll'lly of tho L'nitr-d States never seem more sncsnme than when the budget is presented. Here Is a country that proposes to :pend “ammonium ~— more than, hall of all Its expenditures— on mil- Ilary outlays. It Will still maintain the high- est standard of living in the world. spend more than ever be fore on education. agriculture and a whole round of welfare hour-fits. and offer billions in forrign aid. The dollar has not chcapcncd enoulh to diminish the wonder of this achievement NOT INFINITE Yet the remrces of the U... are not infinite — u Republican Congrcssmcn will be crying. The New York Times pointed out the other day that the grand total cost of the first moon on cursion ithree persons. round trip. all expenses paidl “would "produce from 75 to 1m univer- sities about the size of Harvard ‘ with some change left over". It would do more, the Times continues: “It would build several mil- lIon dwelling unltl: It would re~ . pint!- h u n d r ed a of wornout lchod buildings; It would con- struct hundred! of ‘ ' 'I. It would pay for research that might wipe out some stubborn diseases. including cancer " These are things the Americ- ‘ atralod their awm of to population. probably as much as the United Slates. But in ab- mlule terms we look pretty small beside the American tis- cnl colossus. The U.S. deficit for the cur- rent year Is expected to be some 87.000.000.000. That sum dollars greater than all the rev- enue which Finance Minister Fleming estimated the Govern- ment would take in during the same period. The U.S. pays far more interest on its national debt than we spend for all pur- l poses. i Women’s Rights New York Times Judlcd bulk of Its clippings In the newspaper morgua ol the world. the United Nations Com- mission on the Status of Wo—‘ men would be markedly union rated. Through sixteen years of existence the claimed-nation panel has been. In the word: at one observer. too busy mak- Ing history to make headlines. Thin year. as usual. the com- WmhuMmm-‘ and meeting without benefit of any concentrnted public annu- ion. In contrast. organlulmns of world-Wide Importance demon- its agenda flown a mien of ‘for men mmmunlcatlms conveying their reactions to certain Items. not- ably a proposal for quintet-rm: of equal rethnment age levels and . The pro- poncnls argued t the advan- tage lf‘tnflf‘ Io wanen trim the privilege d a younger re tiram-nt age la dissipated by the fact that their male rol- Imusuneltasanexcuseto maintain a low wage level lot women. DEBATE roerrom Debate on the matter was . postpaied until III. The actu- In people are willing to for!” 4 In their effort to preserve peace and freedom. They are paying more than lip service to these Ideals. A LUI' OF "NY We sometimes think In Cana- da that our Government taken excluaively by the ~ was characteristic d the Iela— urer mintering of majority opinion through which the mission has In the past had a telling impact upon the lives of millions of wrlnat ’ Notable anon-flea have been the intematiml conventions on the political rights a! women vlsszl and an the natlmaillv‘ of married women now. orig- inated In the commission and steered through the General Asst-mny The latter docimem fro-«l women In the ratifying nations to rim the nationality of their choice. as distinct from their husbands' allegiances. REDUCED TO 'I'EN The former has been largely lnatmmcnlal In reducing to ten the number of munifloa In V'hlf‘h women still lack me rizht Io vote a be elected to office. i Practically all of the newly Independent asthma d the past several years have ' iuI. ly ellravrhlsed their women cltirens. in the lfll’l’mlfll of the prdonczd effort that produced the committal, Last year. Para- l (nay—a1 the last botanist la the western “comm—finally gave wvlnen leoual decimal rim. Chioless Fish Wick-com It's an Ill whiff from the cook- stove that blows nobody a n y driving of the early Britons back ' , "1m and All That" that the limo the hills of Wales where (Ind. A potato shortage In Britain ll 1 they became Welsh was a Good threatening the national Institu- tlon known as flab 'n' chips. This Thing. In a Ignd where the Con-th- is not a Good Thing. any more 1 (Ion Ia "unwritten." as It Is half- In andspendsaletofmoney.0f v than Itseernedlotaeaumd Salon’s Surrender Iy AI— 5 cum-mump- E ii 35‘ ii is i Raoul Salan the frightful ordeal d Maria's one: Arab- h nearly «a J a: 1:33} i l l s! i l 35’ is l I l i 13 i i i i ‘i f i .I lilrll In ll it 3 u I 5 f: It: [I :3 I i!‘ l: l it! i g. ii? i ': i! l l i till I i I i It ii:i n‘ I I I! " mill correctly sald to be In brush. i "z. I i 9 g. s it a I’ ‘1 I t i i‘ l i l I It I i E I I l I I 5 I ll 3: l I II 3.4 5 Is g. = :3 I. ... l Iii ii 254:" Pop Smear Tool May Eliminate Ono Cancer Type E E It Is a simple and painless procedure for the physician to a sample of the secretion: during a routine checkup. This material la sent to the labora- tory for a microscopic study and. within a day or two. the report is available. The important aspect of the test is that the cells can reveal early cancer or even precan- ’ cerous conditions. which are cur- able. The Pap test I: positive long before the malignancy can be seen or felt. In other words. It Is possible to make the dial- nosia so early that uterine can- cer could be virtually eliminatv ed as a killer. The American Cancer society In encouraging women to go to a physician for an annual check- up. Thia will take considerable education because 40 per cent of the adult female population does not know the test exists. other! know but have done nothing about it. April ts ca n I: e r detection month but any month is a good time for a checkup. Have your! and persuade other: to do so. It may save lives. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical topics If stamped. Ielf'addrused envo- lope accompanies request.) ICZE MA FROM MILK s. H. writes: It a young child ‘ develops eczema when I he drinks cow‘s milk. will she cut- grow this sensitivity in time? REPL Many children outgrow this type of allergy but there Is no . guarantee that she will. not de- velop hives. asthma. or hay fe- ver In years to come. The al- lergic person tends to keep his sensitivities but the form of the ractlon may change. I assume the child you Inquire about no longer drinks cow‘s milk. INHALING SMOKE J. M. writes: Is It more harmful to inhale cigars or cig- ‘ arets? REPLY Take your choice — one II to bad as the other. Moat cilar . smokers don't inhale and for film reason they cough leu. . Today's Ilsallh Bill- l Use your allotted wisely. OUR YESTERDAYS From the Gut“. Flu mun-m: "All AGO (and II. III‘II The Mlnlature Rifle Club of to a team captained by Douglas Mayne. ‘ The first dance of the noun which was bold h the new I an! IO department at Edna-'- ummernlde m. was a great cocoon. the dance was and! the anapfca of the Golf Club. The chem were In. E. ‘I'. Talus-din. I]. l. Wright. The Garden of the Gulf etch. Ira font-Id h lie. i gt! :5 2: ll 5 i l 3;! [I }l i l i time. Are Tories Hero 1 l E r tit! EE" r’iiiill e 25 E I E i i: :5; It: iii; til ‘i i it E git *2 iii - :5 i335 :5 to be enormoust Impressed by . Pearson's Charlottetown meeting: to consider It highly successful and aIgnIlIcant. what restrained variety. In particular. I've been told by those who listened to the mug over radio that much election fervor" — and that “the things Mr. Pearson said were too generallud to win votes and strengthen party support." Well, according to some of my friends in the preaa party. the answer to such reactions is that this Is lolng to be a cam- ; pain. all acrou Canada. In i which "there's going to be more thinking than cheering." On such a basis it could be t argued that Charlottetown'l reception to Mr. Pearson re- flects the tone the whole cam- paign Is expected to take. rath- er than being I! Indication of particular Island atllludea. FADED APPEAL? Some of my visiting friends went Io far as to declan that the appeal of the “evangelist meeting approach" has gone out of politics for most Cana- dians, Certainly, after attending last Wednesday's meeting. I can at least go along with my friends to the point of saying that the hearing given Mr. Pearson did appear to be u- ceptlonally thoughtful —lhat II was a warm and appreciative noting. even w I. (III ' i‘m‘t‘it Over-Confident? V actuhmuehknol-ralav ii diff pressed for so long that their political thinking tends to com Ice on matters such as spec- Ial grants from Ottawa. There Is Ices belief In the Maritime than elsewhere In the proposi- tion that It Is a strengthening of the economy. for more than such grants. that Is Canada's greatest need. “when unhappiness with the government develop: In_ On- tario and Quebec. It Is upon different grounds than gener- ally become expressed In tho Maritimes. There is a great deal of such unhappiness now. and It is In Ontario and One- bec that the outcome of the election is going to be decid- ed. 'IOUGHER CONTEST "It Is the Ontario and Que- bec people who were swept: along by the ‘rcvival meeting mood’ in 1958 - by the spirit of 'let's give the Conservativ- es a chance‘ — who are giv- Inl the fullest backing this year to an ‘appeal to reason' campaign." Again I'm reserving Judg- ment on that point. while pass- In: the comments along on a basis of "for what they are worth " If nothing in e r e. though. the comments of the visiting observers dld leave me with the Impression that the Conservative party. In Canada as a whole. Is facing a far tougher comrst than ll "peeled by any of its leader! on the Island. 4 film—{m}: DRUG STORE OPEN l s DIAL 44m THIS WEEKEND MocKENZIE‘S PHARMACY 1 GREAT GEORGE STREET Will be open Saturday afternoon and will he the only Drug Store open Saturday evening. “Open All Day Sunday and Sunday Evening". Isn't expensive - Memo from your Master Feeds Dealer: Feeding pigs well i i vvvvv'vvvv