“Covers Prince Edward Blind Like The Dew” Shown above attending the one-day refresher course for THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1959 18 PAGES nurses held Wednesday at Red Cross headquarters are, left to home oursing instructors and | right, Mrs. Wendell Wood, Cen- | town Cross; Mrs. Kenneth Heus- Space-Age Influence Seen Quebec Seeks To Break 8-Year Deadlock By ALAN DONNELLY urers purse that has already ment employees. The question*of a better last July—will come to the again with meetings between Finance ister Canadian Press Staff Writer snapped shut to federal govern- sharing deal for the provinces— shelved at a two-day conference the resumption of Fleming and provincial More Federal Money Sought By P fcus on {Sauve of Quebec, who is attend- OTTAWA OP—Provincial treas-|ing his first federal-provincial fis-| . make a fresh attempt/cal conference with provincial Fi- Thursday to pry open a federal/nance Minister Bourque. been tax- fore Mir ithe provinces 13 per cent of fed- rovinces — I < the fourth Premier He is following the lead of the late premier Duplessis who attended the July meeting. “Most of the interest of the con- ference will centre on provincial attempts to get a better tax-shar- ing deal from Ottawa.——— Present arrangements allocate aw ah ARCTIC STUDY athe foederal-provincial scene since |. niv. Grants Proposal Is Awaited it Conference Today By RICHARD DAIGNAULT It may be he will suggest that Canadian Press Staff Writer ‘the federal government make it OTTAWA. (G@P—A proposal to possible for Quebec to tax a break an eight-year deadlock be-|iarger proportion of the personal tween the Canadian and Quebee' or corporation income, with full governments over federal grants-| Geductibility from federal tax in-aid to universities is to be| payments for Quebec taxpaycrs. / made by Premier Paul Sauve of | Proceeds — roughly $3,000,000 a Quebec. year—would go to Quebec univer- The Quebec premier, preparing | sities on the same basis as pro- to make his first appearance on’ vided for under the federal plan. | If tax - sharing arrangements the. death of premier Duplessis | come into play, then other prov- sat ix would ha: | will bring ‘a concrete suggestion| sulted. jto the federal-provincial finance | Some observers say it may be 4k ici COURSE tral Royalty, director of Nurs- ing Services; Velma Gillis, New- tis. Wilmot Valley: Mrs. James Lewis, St. Peter's Bay and Mrs. treasurers. . They will meet’ behind closed} doors today 4nd Friday in a Par- liament Building committee ‘eral personal income tax collec- tions, nine per cent of taxable! corporation income, and 50 per cent of inheritance taxes. In fact, the agreements which Dr. J.S. Hart of the National Research Council will take an | ‘internationa! team into the Arc- tic next spring to make a s>e- /minister's’ talks opening here to- day. He said he believes it may solve the sore question arising} from provincial government op- that Mr. Sauve will provide for ‘temporary acceptance of the grants under the present system —or through a provincial com- mittee—until 1962. At that time The provinces. will seek an early reply to the request made by almost all of them when they were last here on July 6-7 for a negotiating conference soon to re- Ear] Jelley, O'Leary. ‘See story on page 5). ICAR STOPPAGE | | lconference wouldn't be called un- THREAT SEEN _[itss,(% federat zovernment was vise the existing five-year tax- jsharing agreements. | Mr. Fleming made ft clear last} July, when decision on the re-| quest was postponed, that sych a} ready to talk in terms of more} run until March 31, 1962, pro vided only a 10-per-cent slice of the personal income tax pic, but in the last two years this has been extended—by unilateral fed- eral action—to 13 per cent. ASK CHANGES At the July conference some of the -provinces spelled out what changes they would like to see. Ontario said the provinces should get 15 per cent of the per- cial study of the ability of Eski- mos to adapt themselves to frigid temperatures. Dr. Hart, 45, is head: cf the animal-—phy- siology section of the division of applied biology of \ the council, The research will be part of an international study to.determine the range of climatic adjust- ment of which the human species, particularly whites, is capable ~~ (CP Photo) ,position to the grants. This op- position has deprived universities ‘in Quebec of $25,000,000 so far. Obviously his proposal would ‘cover a suggestion to get this imoney, now held in trust by the National Conference of Canadian Universities, into the hands of Quebec’s revenué-starved institu- tions of higher learning. Actually what Mr. Sauve has in mind -is“fot known. ments will expire and new ones will be proposed. A finance department official here said it is “fully expected Mr. Sauve will wish to make a statement.”’ And there are strong indications Mr. Sauve will call on Prime Minister Diefenbaker and Fi- ‘nance Minister Fleming to dis- cuss the proposed solution form- ula. By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON ‘(CP)—Prime Minis- ter Macmillan Wednesday named a new permanent team with a space-age look. In his first post-election act, the prime minister gave new jobs nological development. to seven men, appointed two new-| These changes reflect Macmil " comers and allowed two ministers lan’s determination to keep Brit- to leave the 19-member cabinet. ain abreast in space research, air Ten stay in their old positions. |transport, guided missiles and | New appointments .send 51- year-old Duncan Sandys from the defence ministry to become min- ister of aviation, a completely new post, and give former party chairman Viscount Hailsham su- pervision over scientific and tech- Plan Pay-Boost Drive By DON PEACOCK lacross the civil servants’ mess- Canadian Press Staff Writer (age effectively, although that OTTAWA (CP — Disappointed | would be the ideal way, and angry spokesmen for federal itehouse, president civil servants Wednesday charged Po Re eee Federation, that the government is forcing} aid that for 2% years the pres them to help subsidize its deficit en; government “has given us spending by refusing to grant 4 one story after another.” It had general salary increase sought lied its employees to believe they for 2'2 years. could expect at least some sal- They won vocal support from /.+y increases. the Canadian Labor Congress. Noting that, unlike unions in pri-- BEING PENALIZED vate industry and business, civil | But now the civil service was servants have no diréct bargain-|being “victimized and penalized.” _ing rights with their employer,']}t was being used to subsidize the spokesmen' said they plan to the government deficit. keep the issue constantly before the public. They hoped eventu- ally this would bring about enough pressure to persuade the government to change its mind. “This issue is going to be kept lory Wins In Macmillan Government Angry Civil Servants — leash | sonal income tax take. 15 per TORONTO (CP) — Produe- | leent of corporation income, and tion stoppages are thraaten- NOT READY 0 percent of inheritance tax— ing Canada’s big three auto | mobile manufacturers as a | result of the United States steel strike. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler all face possible plant shuidowns as steel sup- There have been -a number of | the so-called 15 - 15 - 50 formula, recent indications that Ottawa/ which compares with the present isn't ready to. do that right now, | 13-9-50 plan. at least not to any major extent.| Ontario was backed by Saskat- On Tuesday the government! chewan and Prince Edward Is- turned down a general pay im/jand—then under a Liberal gov- crease for federal employees) ernment. In other key appointments: Labor Minister Iain Macleod, takes over as colonial minister one of the government's hottest plies. dwindle. If the plan's which had been recommended by Me aie sia seats at a time of evolution in| close. supplies of ae 1960 the civil service Commission. Mr. fetes a bonis ere es = Africa. Macleod. 45, former star! models will cease within a | Fleming said it would seriously } eee ee vin 1 a ee eee eet ees for Britain at international bridge; few days, company spokes- affect his budget position — a Teehoare M 7 Me : ata Dr. Hans Selye worked late Wed- tournaments, is a man of ambi-| men said $393.000.000 deficit has been fore- One . McQuaid. nesday night at the University of tion who may have his eye on A Gencral Motors spokes- cast for this fiscal year ending Estimated federal payments Montreal where he is head of the 10 Downing Street. | man Said a shutdown seemed [next March 31 ithis fiscal year to the eastefm| institute of experimental ,med- Four premiers will be in the, Provinces under tax-sharing af-) icine. | inevitable, even if the strike LENNOXMOYD OUT + ended today. because steel i provincial delegations w |Tangements, with 1958-59 figures | , ¢ 2. Alan Le. x-Boyd, foriy.* col- ee’ Soften rs h —- ae a lin brackets: When he returned home at 8:15 x os ‘naw ; |: stockpiles have been depleted. (‘a/Xs. whieh war pick up where : 'p. m. he learned that today he St. MNS, ves ihe «gev- At the present rate of pro- (‘the July meeting left off. Three; Newfoundland $19,222,000 ‘$16.- may be flamed this year’s winner ernment at 34. He is expected to of them are.here in their dual/ 892.000); Prince Edward Is- I medici i become chairman of the Guim-| aw plant could carry on un- (Toles as treasurer of their prov-|land $4,271,000 ($4,277,090): Nova| "He was asked to onnanatt on ness business headed “by his) (ji) early November at the | ‘2¢es: Premier Stanfield of Nova|Scotia $30,669,000 ($27,399,000);' Stockholm report saying he father-in-law, Lord Iveagh. | Jeast. Beyond that, the future Scotia, Roblin of Manitoba and|New Brunswick $25,155,000 ($22-|hoads the list of candidates for In a letter to the prime minis-| was uncertain. Bennett of British Columbia. ; 264,000); Quebec $61,581,000 ($55,-| tne prize. ter, Lennox-Boyd said he would Considerable attention will fo-\ 004,000). Dr. Selye took the report with continue to sit in the Commons. oe ° R. A. (Rab) Butler. 56. cel “IT SEEMED INCONCEIVABLE’ eee calm. ldn't attach too much mains home secretary, but adds ooo os 4 : the party chairmanship to al-| jeredence to it.” he said. His ready jname had been mentioned before leader os - Qu n Mar C hi 4 : n in connection with the prize. he * president of the board of trade. Dr. Selye is_a man who, be- This is seen as re-emphasizing or an oning rone | sides discovering the frightening duction thb company’s Osh- + Reginald Maudling, formerly make him a front runner. paymaster general, becomes CALM MAN . said, and nothing special had gives oa eee both in broken in his work this year to the priority the government at- |medical consequences of stress taches to relations with Europe. and telling the world how to fight At 42, Maudling is a rising man. By EDDY GILMORE ,from Ernest Simpson. jreal distress or lefther; with 80/jt/ appears to have conquered Sir David Eccles, Maudling’s) LONDON ‘AP—A _long-secret| British publishers of Pope-Hen-;deep a feeling of humiliation as! tress in himself. predecessor, returns to the edu- letter discloses the late Queen! nessev’s work have a first print-| the abdication of her son,” Pope-| A slight, sensitive man who cation department he left in 1957.| Mary was angered and pained/ing of 60,000 copies, which they| Hennessey wrote. puffs a pipe with quiet enjoyment The newcomers to the cabinet /by the abdication of King Ed-|described as a record for a first} ‘To Queen Mary the idea of a|he masks his brillanée with mod- are Edward Heath. who becomes | ward VI in 1936 for love of Wal-| printing of any royal biography. twice-divorced woman,\a woman jest affability. labor minister, and Ernest Mar- lis Warfield Simpson. | They said Alfred A. Knopf Incor-, with two husbands living, mar-} The 52 - year - old doctor pub ples, elevated to the transport} “The Queen had begged her son| porated of New York plans to|rying her son and becoming|lished his major work on stress ministry. Heath, 43. was formerly {not to give up the throne. {publish it next spring. |queen consort was out of all/in 1950 and has followed it up chief whip, one'of the ‘oughest} ‘You did not seem able to take{ The biographer pored over | question.” with annual reports. the Tories have had. He wasjany point of view but your own,”|Queen Mary's papers for three | Though she was stern and un-| Top-ranking medical men have more frequently in contact with|she chided him 18 months after | years. yielding when questions of the said Dr. Selye’s stress theory ap- Macmillan than any other politi-| he abdicated and started a semi-| “Qucen Mary told members of | monarchy arose, she had her’ pears to hold answers for suffer- Montreal M Nobel Award Winner | “It really can't be defined,” he} . alive until we get what we want,? said JC. (Cal) Best, president of the Civil Service Association of Canada. But any thought of strike ac- tion was ruled out. HOLD CONFERENCE The association along with the two other civil service organiza- tions—the Civil fice Federa- tion of Canada a the Profes- sional Institute of the Public Service of Canada—held a joint press conference to launch the publicity battle against the gov- ernment’s no-increase decision een Tuesday by, Minister Fleming. Among them the three organizations represent about 113,000 civil servants. The government's decision af- fects some 147,000 salaried civil servants and about 125,000 mem- bers of the armed forces and KCMP—almost 275.000 altogether. At Wednesday's ‘press confer- ence, Mr. Best said a general ‘election is not necessary to get Explosive Slip Take 4 Lives LOS ALAMOS. NM. (AP.- Something slipped in a truckload of waste explosive near Los Ala- mos scientific laboratory Wednes- day, causing an explosion that killed four men. Spokesmen for the atomic lab- oratory city said no radioactive materials were involved. Not even parts of two of the bodies could. he found. The, two men were listed as missing and presumed dead. The blast took place at a dis- posal dump at the top secret A- site two miles south of Los Ala- mos, The truck was destroyed but we other damage reported, Finance | Byelection CHESTER, N.S. (CP—Maurice Zinck retained the Nova Scotia ltonstituency of Lunenburg East ‘for the Progressive Conservatives |in a provincial byelection Wed- nesday. He defeated Liberal Kirk Hen- nigar in a campaign fought mainly on the record of Premier Robert L. Stanfields’s Conserva- tive government. The result left the standing in the legislature unchanged at Pro- gressive Conservatives 24, Lib- erals 10, CCF one. The seat was made vacant by the resignation of municipal af- fairs minister Clifford Levy to take a county court judgeship. The voting was the first test of the Stanfield government since elected to office in Nova Scotia in 1956. ‘ FIRST TIME Mr. Zinck, entering provincial politics for the first time, is war- cen of Chester municipality, a rural district of Lunenburg ‘County. Mr. Hennigar is deputy warden of the same municipal- ity. Premier Stanfield, in Ottawa for a conference of finance mim isters and provincial treasurers, said he is pleased with the re- sults. “It encourages us in our work. The returns indicate the people of Lunenburg East think our ernment is moving in the direction.” : Liberal leader Henry ~ however, said he doesn’t der the byelection a true public feeling about the iF a3 ment. cian. Marples, 51, ‘introduced a exile abroad with his bride as the her family that no single event in motherly side. ers from a variety of diseases. It of the post office. BIG JOB Among the key appointments, tary involves preparing the larger of Britain's remaining col- onial territories for self-govern- ment and ultimate- Common- wealth status. Lennox-Boyd carried on this work successfully in Ghana, Ma- laya and elsewhere but develop- ments in Africa t summer brought hjm under heavy fire in Parliament. He was criticized for the use of troops and mass ar- rests in putting down disturb- ances in Nyasaland and for the operation of Kenya_ prisons crowded. with Mau Maus suspects. The reshuffle followed a deci- sion of Lennox-Boyd and Geof- frey Lloyd, the old minister of education, to leave the govern ment. Lloyd, 57, said he was stepping aside to give younger men a chance for promotion. Other changes: Harold Watkinson, 49, moved from minister ‘of transport and civil aviation to minister of de- fence. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT Macleod’s job as colonial secre-| number of innovations while head | Duke and Duchess of Windsor. The letter forms an essential | part of the official biography 926 | Queen Mary published today. She} | died at 85 on March 24, 1953. TRUE FEELINGS ‘You ask me in your letter of 23rd June (1936 to write you, partiewlarly about my true feel-| ings with regard to you and the| present situation and this I will jnow do,"’ Queen Mary wrote. ° “You will remember how mis- erable I was when you informed ime of your intend marriage jand abdication and ‘how I im- | plored you not to do'so for our }Sake and the sake of the coun-| try. | “You did not seem able to take | lany point of view but your own. “I do not think you have ever |realized the shock which the at- | itude you took up caused~ your j family and the whole nation. DECLINED SACRIFICE “Tt seemed \those who made such sacrifices during the war that you, as their |king, refused a lesser sacrifice. “My feelings for you as your |mother remain the same and our | being parted, and the cause of it, grieves me beyond. words. | “After all, all my life I have put country before everything inconceivable toj § her life had caused her so much Continued on page 5 Col. 2 thas been called the common de- NO DETAHS The premier, apeaking to re portérs in Quebec following a re gular meeting of his cabinet, de- clined to give details. He said it would be inappropriate. However, he said his proposal was acceptable—acceptable, that is, in the view of Quebec’s auto nomists who consider, along with the present Quebec government, that provincial jurisdiction in the field of education is exclusive. an Is Seen nominator of all disease. His theories are not universally | respected | jaccepted, but highly on journals have applauded | Dollar Value But even Dr. Selye has: trouble, R } : Hi h | defining stregs. i eac Ss ig | NEW YORK (AP—The value | aw : a in % the Canadian dollar in terms | “Any motorist who swears IM) .+ United States currency reached itraffie, any housewife driven|a 1959 high Wednesday. frantic by squalling children, any| Foreign exchange dealers stevedore who broods in silent} quoted it at $1.05 11-16 in U.S. janguish over debts, knows about|curency, up 5-32 from Tuesday's ) stress,”’ he says. close of $1.05 17-32. The previous | He took over the institute at|peak for the year of $1.05 21-32 | the University of Monrtreal in| was set on Oct. 1. 1945. The close was the highest level Dr. Selye married a Canadian| the Canadian dollar has hit since girl and is the father of four chil-|August, 1957 when it attained |dren. He is‘a Canadian citizen. |a high of $1.05 15-16. “Sahel Butter Sale ~ Will Be Made To UK. By DON PEACOCK butter in Britain at the prevail- Canadian Press Staff Writer jing price—between 45 and 53 OTTAWA (CP—The Canadian|cents a pound. | sovernment has decided to sell 10.000,000 pounds of\ its surplus Says. “It’s like life." Informants said Wednesday the government sent out invitations > age i Mt bibddd gt { th ka » PSR tte ER — Ne LA NRE ORR, BRET Mas + Bppe oe Births, deaths, etc., .... 2,17 | else. and I simply cannot change Classified section . 16, 17 |now.” Comics, features <....... 15 The letter'was made public by | Charlottetown news .....- 5 |permission of the Queen. | NG on ic ckcvececs 4 She gave the _ biographer, Finance, markets ........ 17 |James Pope - Hennessey, unre- Nae Island news .......-.-. 2, 3 |stricted access to Queen Mary’s a 2 CE ocho cab bab etee <= 10 | private papers. a Se ae Women’s Page .....-.. 6 The reign of King Edward VIII i + Meghan. Mee Late reports from Guardian |!asted less than 11 months. He : news bureaus in Summer- | succeeded to the throne Jaii. 20, A side, Montague, Alberton and | 1956, upon the death of George BELLY LANDING iS SUCCESSFUL Souris from special cor- V. He stepped down Dec. ii, j : ; Scena now appear on | 996, after a public and dramatic Passengers climb out of a | ful bellylanding on a foam- Chicago. The plane, which had the Island News Page. declaration of his love for the; Trans-Canada Airlines Viscount | covered runway at the US. | a landing gear stuck, carried Baltimore girl divorced that fall| airliner after it made a success- | Navy's Glenview Airport mear | 34 passengers and a crew a@ J | Tuesday for tenders on the ship- ping of 10,000,000 pounds of pre- mium 1958 butter to Britain. The government, which paid a farm support price of 64 cents a pound for the butter, has it stored in cold storage at various points across the country. The tenders, the deadline on which -is next Monday, are for the trans-ocean shipment of the butter. The government will ar- range to have it delivered along- side shipping at a Canadian port _lof the contractor's choice. Informants said the key factor in the deal is that the government doesn’t want to undersell the traditional supplier countries. of the British butter market, includ- ing Denmark, New Zealand, Aus- tralia, The Netherlands and, to some extent, Poland. WORTH MILLIONS The going price in Britaifi at present is said to be betwen 4 and 55 cents a pound. At 50 cents. a pound, the trans- action would, be worth a gross of $5,000,000 for the government, which has in its larder an esti- mated 100,000,000 pounds of butter? ment to sell some of its butter in Britain to relieve a _ shortage there caused by this summer's drought conditions. In the past, countries such as New Zealand have protested sales of subsidized Canadian butter at below-cost prices in Britain, and Canada has steered clear of any action that might be c¢ as dumping. But it is understood that in this case, the Canadian Government canvassed the other governments involved and got a conditional go ahead just for this once, four. No one was injured in the landing. The plane: was bound for Chicago from Toronto.