. Eh: {fitmtrliau‘ l Conn Prim Edward lsllnd Like The new ‘ wu. Mum rueluhu l lull-I lawn Inuit Walkll unduly. Edna [dim Publbhdd "my week dly malnlny lexical 5m. l dey. and .munny holldaysl n lss rm... sum. r chroma n ey Inmen um”... ua. sum. nee, Man a Al I- ‘ s is all .. , Ilonllly by Thomson New: usu- Adv-mung Services lamnm, A25 Unw-ully at. (mph. new, Monlrul dad Cnlhun Sir-II. Univ-tiny mm, Wulzm aIIlre laJD w.“ our... 5...... Vcnlnuvll [MA 7 M-mhr c.n.u..n only Nzwkplper Fubluhen r Million mm in. Clnsdlan v-en lh- Cln-dl-n or... .- .xelunyely .nruleu m rh. or. em "pub- Ilculm or .u new: dopakhes in tho new ueauea to u o: n rn. Anorlelod Plus or Raul-u lnd‘llae m the lord! new, pub‘lshed helzn au rlgnu av kueluenon oi apt-(la! anpmner hem» .lru meryea Subl‘npllon mu. m over as: he. week by “my. “200 e yen. by mud or null mute! my Men not. urvkeel by an... plsoo n you r” mm m or who my yvn M as. .na euewne” cunn- ennnn Cam. m “werhn. In our 7: pct nnnle copy Member Audlt Ewen: nl Cluullllun ‘ is strongest memo ls “riskier— r than the welsth ink" no 7 W ‘: Still A Challenge ‘3 with the launching of the 1963 Christmas Seal campaign we shall bq' reminded. no doubt. that since tile advent of specific drug treat- nisnt for tuberculosis in 1945 there his been a marked decline in the ‘ déath rate from this disease, with l the result that today the rate is so low that it has bemmo almost in- . significant. This ‘ perfectly true. l It is also very mlsleading as an in- dex of the prevalence of tuberculosis in a community or country. In this Province, according to the last annual report of the Tuberculose is League. the most striking factor in the situation is that in the last three years we have had eight min- or tuberculosis epidemics. These epidemics yielded 53 cases of which 48 needed hospital treatment. The other five are being carefully wat- ched by the outpatient clinics. More than half of the Cases dis- covered in these outbreaks were not elderly people, as might be imagin- ed. They were children—children who. for all their lives, will have to repolt periodically for checkup to make sure that. the disease is not stealing a march on them again. ‘ And when small children are in< footed. it is plain that there are adjve cases in the community who have not taken the trnuble to avail themselves of the services offered by the clinics. The core of each of these epidemics has been someone with untreated active tuberculosis. The most effective method of educating the public is to get as many citizens as possible to par- ticipate actively in the program of the League, During 1962 more than 400 volunteers took part in the com- munity-wide tuberculin testing sur- veys. Next in effectiveness is the publicity which goes out as part of g the Christmas Seal campaign. Peo- plo want to know why they should be'contributing. every year, to this campaign, and this gives the League a welcome opportunity of accounting for)| its stewardship and—more im- poi‘tant—of getting the facts about TE into every home in the Province. That is what this current cam- paign is all about. It doesn‘t tell the full story; but enough, we trust. has been told to show that it is n vitally important one to the health l of our citizens. “Now It Can Be Told" 31 :Dne thing that Peter C. New. ' man's book “The Diefenbsker You!" (we prefer the subtitle to tho ob xiolls title “Renegade in Pow- er’ makes clear is that there were gm'imdr for Mr Diefenbaker's oft- repeated charge that the Kennedy : Administration was less than neu- tnl in the election campaign that brought Prime Minister Pearson to office in this country. A New York 'l'imes reviewer stresses this fact in hlojwmments on the Newman book. CI diam would do well to ponder Italimplimtions. too. According to M . Newman, Mr. Kuhnedy Ind Mr. Diefenboker start; Id rubbing each other the wrong 3? from their first meeting. Their FIJI ltiono went from bad to worse. llly, "In his personal contribute Ion. bound the defeat of the Can- .fl'n politician. he (President Ken. nod!) gnu his unofficial blessing 603011 Harris—the shrewd public. ‘ mint who had tested the out so «(actively {or him during _ 1 mm." the book secrecy that only half I dozen key people in the party's " u were aware of his activities, Harris spent much of the 1962 and 1963 cam- paigns with the Pearson organlzs- t-ion. conducting intensive studies on Canadian voting behaviour. They were con cred key contributions to the Liberal victory 0! I963." The Newman book has been out for sex-oral weeks, but surprisingly little allennnu has been paid to this revelation hv (‘anadian commenta. Now the Toronto Telegram fea- . it in a front page article from its ()ltlluu bureau. describing it as "a sensutlonnl charge. political dynamite here." but which “so far has boon almost hidden by other. nun-e vlnlunt rhnnte ' Tho Telegram quotes Liberal of- tlcmls at Ottawa as admitting “that Ha s did in fact work for them." but they denied that he was a gift from President Kennedy. Finance. )llnlstrr Gordon. chairman of the Liberal campaign committee, said he initiated the contact with Harris because “he had heard that Harris did good walk." “He wasn't a big part of our strategy." he said. "We used a lot of people in this kind of work. mnstlv Fanadians.“ “ho is Lnu Harris? in the book "The linking of the President." by Theodore \Vhite. Harris appears in 14 section: 3:] .ng the Kennedy group on the formula for President- ial sllcct‘“. He is described as hay. ing become l entranced by the Kennedv ' that. hill en- itement at practic- at the summit of ing his craft American politics made hinl a Ken. nedy Zealot and a member of the inner circle." A strange L'nlllcitience Indeed, that he should be working under cover for the Liberal Party in a Canadian election campaign! Yale Professor Nabbed Whether the Kremlin intended it or not. the arrest in the Soviet L'n- ion of a Yale University political scientist. Professor Barghoorn. has caused a furor ill the United States. President Kennedy says it has "bad— ly damanaged“ the atmosphere be. tween the two countries. and that it will star that. way until the profes- sor is released. Professor Barghonrn is a prom- inent member of the fi st team of American experts on Soviet affairs. His work and that of hls colleagues in the United States and in Britain. France, and West Germany has immeasurably contributed to I bet, ter understanding of the Soviet Un- ion. He had been there many times before. From 1942 until 1947 he was on the staff of the US. Em- bassy in Moscow, and had returned to Russia for study on four subse- quent occasions. According to an Associated Press despatch. the embassy has been unable to give any additional information about the arrest. or on what grounds the spy charge was based. Strange. too. the fact that A at the time the action was taken. the United States was preparing to drive for an improved cultural ex: change agreement with the Soviets ——l| program which Mr. Barghonrn himself had helped along. Now this arrangement has been cancelled by Washington. It may be that for all its pro- testations to the contrary. the Kremlin just doesn't want visitors around who know too much and see too well. EDITORIAL NOTES The other day a man appeared in police court. in Port Arthur charg- ed with illegal possessinn of liquor. He asked the court for a break “be- cause I have never received a break from this court and i've been com- ing hero for 10 years." The magis- trate gave him a suspended ren- tence. Perhaps Port Arthur, lik- Charlottetown. has an embarrassing shortage of jail accommndation. Automallon now threatens to en- croach on our Canadian Houses of Parliament. A management survey has recommended that shorthand ex- perts who record the debates be re« placed with tape recorders. The pro- posed change will not quite elimin- nto the human element, though the mechanical recorder will supersede the expert note-taker. The record so taken will. though. he later trans- cribed And printed to produce Han- Ilfll, the official record of the pro- udlnn 0 LOOKING FOR OUR MONEY’S WORTH ETAWA REPORT bx Palrick Nicholson An $ll,000 Per Hour House Of Commons Nn. it isn't true! Canada do:- not hate 3 mllllon dollar Cabi- net. But we do have a sumo per hour l-luuse oi commons. ll has been wldely said lh a l. SIIIL'E one recent pay increases lur to P5. Canada has the o n l y rnllllun dulla r Cabinet in the world This is h an arlnus assertion that our prune Mlnlslpr ls paid $45,000 per year. and all other ministers 535.000 in lnrl. our Prlmr Minister is Bald mom per year. lher Minlsters arr paul $15,000 a year illul only u may have depart- nlolltnl rosnnnslhlluws nnnulcrs. an r h as th “mlnls- tors vlliholll portfolio" in the llnmr nl Commons. and the Gov- ernmcnt leader In the Senate. arr psld loss The Prune Minis- ler and departmental ministers also reenrve a car allowance ut <2mu per year Thr Illzllrr naurc somctlmcs mentioned as bull: Mlmslcrs' salary is ohtalncd by a dlns lhm pay as :u Ps. winch th e v vlnnld rot-owe whether or not lhev were appolnted ln lhe Cabb a Takln: lusl the alarm or able to mlnlSIEl‘E, and the r If allowance the total cost nl mll' Our Yesterdays 1 (From the Gulrdlnn rue-l l TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO (Novomhfl is. low l.l Cahlll. rellred urn Vicenreslrlt-ut oi the Unltcd Christian \lissmuarv snclely wilh headqusrlrn in lndlauap. ulis. indluna, Vllll speak in Char- lottetown at the tall rally ni Churches OI Christ in lllls prov lure. Mr Cahlll has recently re- turned irom Jamaica. and is at present on a speaking tour in Canada. Rev, LONDON Nm’ [6 lCPl—Erl- laln has placed its lulu order Mr larflr hnmhlnfi planes {or the Royal Air rum, in he lup- pllrrl by Canadlan alrcralt man- ulnclurrrr. TEN YEAR! AG" November ls. 1953) The Rainbow Club or Sunsel Lodge s|r up the tempo ul illzlr act es yesterday after- noon ls they tit-Hall lllllllllllfl plans Ior their part In the clit- rial «pt-ulna. and a day or open house on the occasion 01 neon ganlzmg the new annex of Sun- In! Lodge. Madame H.E. Vnulelel at Mon- lresl. notional pmulenl ul the Canadian Ansoclation d Coll- i rumors. snake holnrr an open mceiln: nl lhe Charlottetown Ilranrh here last evening. Mme Vluklrt Illd CAC. only seven- yenmuld. speaks lnr the con- sumer. lnIorml the odnrumer and watcher over laws and men‘ chundislnlz prnclicel thal attecl‘ tho interests of the managers at Canada's hnumkenplnr dollar. PUBLIC FORUM 1‘" conm' punmmaucu l Slr,~l was very pleased to, see your editorial In round an Illinfll being discussed In th Member! of Pullmut mlgml be heard rather thin worklng Mlllhtr In the common nun of doing Ih! bell WING I!!! CHI-(ll. Peril-pl then Ihmfld be lam! direct lan In our Meme hers. leltlng them know we can Ice m a ltllllldlhlkile lee than whomredny doing their 1 Am, air. etc" Kl. MINI on the [311- l _ more dllllcult Ind npmm (or ; people who come tram connqu IIY : their ,Caulnet I- at present sumo, . PET year cosnv srcccucs . The nperallun at our House nl l Commons. Includan the moon 1 remuneration ol over) ll P . mm per yrar. To l urn should be added a {lure of about $1,000.000 tn pay the cost 01 printing the Hansard Noon at the proceedings. and related official documents. and the u ul insignificant r 0 5| ul malllnd copies 0! l-lanranl or rnnus of individual in rs' e p e e c h cs l to Iheir consillutlnls Under normal conditions but things halP nnl hrrll nnrnrul on parliament Hill for several y e e r s! — tile nunsr ms to r about M weeks in tllr year. lnr n mall 01 5|. hum per week. At 1 this rate. it rusls $ll..'i(l'l p: l- hour to opernu- thv ll u u se sh vhrn an MP. rlscs to his l'e e t and delivers an nraunn lasllnlz .lo minules. hr has set the tax- paybr I)er sac-w And when an M P rim to his 1m In ask mu or the rambling prllnllrss quosllons. w nlrh su ullen lend to a rambling p 0 ml .3. loss argumrnl. that 3~mmute m. lucranze costs aruun the taxpayers ttawa ha been chllrklinl‘t It the unintentional wu o[ a n o w amous question which cost th e taxpayers nothing. John leml. the l: year old son of the new British High Commissioner here. was taken to see his Ill-st g a me nl Canadian toolball. The Crpi» tal's sparkling n o u g h Riders um playing nualnst the goals ol‘ the E a pier n luaiball up... tenure. the Toronto Argonauts “I think l am beginning to unrlerslrnd the rune." commen- ted young .luhn “Hut lell me, “‘IIV whenever III! Tfll‘flnlfl nuur- turhnrk t h row a a pass. ls ll caught try an ounwa player?" MARCH OF SCIENCE l have been lmprnssnd by l he (lollghtv battle being lounllt by our Trans Canada .-\lr Lines to have cheaper lures ealabllshed l on the w o r l d' I rlrhen‘ route. across the Atlantic So 1 ask an llfilL'lfll at the alrlrm what it cusls or carry a passenger. The Lemons Won’t Cure Arthritis pain! or several ye- flroves ol lemon! are eve pd other Iilmentl. miner thud uulrltlnnal Iubstnncel. l Dlet plays a role ln that every- l one. including srthrltlu. I h ould est a well blllnced dlet. he label: with palnlul knees. ankles. md hips are helped by reduclng welghl. The [only get along bet- , ter by llmlung the intake of m- 1 tall: prmlnl. But, beyond u. l the connection tween lrult lulm and the .Iolnts l: not mu. r Why are u. many ully rrme- ; dlcl prepared and why do pen. . ple spend hundreds nl mllllonl l of dollars on quack cures” Bz- , clue ln lack - Ipecll'lc elicc‘ l tlve trultsnent tor the dileue. Mlny pemni live In tear bclng crippled by arthritis, n at reallzlng lint. this can be avoid. wth Idequalc care. Including me or the co oosterolds l Ind physical therapy. Back in the silly cures c a r e— . tul studies have shown lllal hall nl all victims at art- hrltls improve wllh or vnlhout treatment. Thu was rlemonslra- l ted In a large .rthrltls clinic 1 where every other patient w a s ; given In inert tablet containing starch or sugar lplrcebol. The , other received established anu- athrltis remedies. At the end at a year. just as many were cured in the pllcetul as in Itle lreatcd mun ll lemon lulu has been u s all Instead oisugar tablets. a m. l tan: number cnuld expect spon- laneour relleland we could count on lhrlr believing Ihe s un rises and 4-5 on lemon lult-e Thu group dld not include 05190- amrrma that lands to come and lo. depenlng upon the weather and activity. . Bul Inn u nol nll .\'ol rvorv l ache and pal" In and nee r a Joint n arthritis. As a result, many persons are tnklng medl- , cine (or conditions that mimic arthrllls: spmlns. hllrslll‘. lurrl cartilages. or inlrctions. Most l plume disorders sol uell In‘ tune but crcdll is given to the . last drug. vuanun. or food u- al WA! taken can IS BETTER no. writc5' ls ll true th at sleeping on the lround u better than usml: a bed’ l'm a student and urn thlnklng of using the liv- lug room nonr REPLY Take your chnlrr. .u lur me. I'm not a bear Ior punishment and like a nirl- warm bod w l lll . llrm mattress ll u mu u'hcrr bul how you slrop tllnl is lmpnr. uni [mm the health lloinl nl lev- Too LITTLE IRON FLG writes; What is hypnr chmlmc anemia' REPI.“ . moans a dcllcir-ury and chrnmlc refers to rnlor Th I s of ‘ gun he NOTES BY THE WAY AM m In [It tllul. but Ninth III]! II bent — or want. It I Illed Vllll- ter. » cll-th-m Newl. Thu!I In Illllblldl who [In their wives all the rudll — but draw the line at ca , — Slrnll Observer. A nervous Mueller hepl liking Ill: pnol silly quellionl u to how the plane lllel. The pl- ‘ lot finally replled "On this right wing you‘ll see a green lulu. Now. on the lell wing then in a red light We‘re going to try Io lly between them." — Hnmllluu Specular. Clud- ll lllvlng Ilnl'll I woes, but they are lnlllnlllclnt in cumpurlmn with [hole in In- die. In that country, the lillll‘lul demnud mat on earlier promise (lf Pumler Nehru to mlkl Hill- ldi the exclusive nation.) In. honored. But Nehru alnl English II the Illllla language linking malt. Indllnl. The situation is emp lulled by the lac! 1M memberl of null.- menl don't spuk or undelltlnd either Hindi m' Englllh. — St. Catherine: standard. Y- m Ilun not - well~ Nomad Vlrtnllly Ill poflfltllll, In their luiluldl lav/ltd newlplvrrll follow LII]. full: Winn you can't nu 'elll. lhull 'em. — Munlrul Sllr. A pay cheuuc I: often the sly. nal nu- some men to rush to the cover th- cheques they wrote two day: baton. — Gael Reporter. .llldflll by “I Ill! «I III! IIIII Nulrel f huttnr In molt llllrlntl. you would know there w pic‘s In Clnldl.—0twwl Jour. Ill . A local um- keeper who km - rein-mum {or servmg rum; drlnlllwu awakened the other night. by Ian» huvy pounding on his lam door. en. till] his head out of on window he mauled, "Go a .y. You un‘t kav anything to drink a. thlr haur.‘ Who want. Iny. thlnl u: drink?“ can: the uls< war. "I left. my cruth here It closing lime." — Kiel Record. Passomaquodcly’s Tides Neon-l Gem.kae Soclrty Tune each day more than a hundred bllllun Ions at North Atlantlc sea water surge ln uld oul of the Bay 01' Fundy. Tllls massive (low. Approxim- atoly 7n limes the daily dil- charm of the Mis ’ sippl lllver. products the world's hllhcst Iidos. These range from so to m [eel at the lady's mouth up to 53 Test at its head. A porllan oi ltlis water Ilowl into Passamnquoddy Bay. arm of Fundy exunulng be- tween Malnr and the Cnnadlan Province or Pussnmflquoddy'l average 19 (eat, and en neerr have long thought a! puttan un- tremendous natural (one lo use. A new DEAL rnosacr The idea was first concelved , in l9l9 by Dexter P, cooper. hydraullr rnKlneer and sum. merllrne neighbor or President Franklin D. Roosevelt on Cnmp— nuelln Island lo the thirties. Work wu belun under Roose- volt to harness Passnrnaquoddy'l tides ln was But lhe project spun became a politllnl tooth-u and was abandoned in l ' The pussiblllly ol reviving the projorl arose In .luly. ‘963. liter President John F. kennedy w- provuu an lnlerlnr Depunment recommendation [or a :1 billion prnlucl m uli re un- tidal power. Under the plan. may nl the lslantls dollllll: the buy and en- lram'r uuuld be linked by a ne wnrk nl dams and 3H Estes thrt would trap the water It high llllt‘ and rrlense It. through tur- lnnes at low tide. Pmpunonls claim the lldsl p l near the lumen: Mont. St lThu power would in released v duran penk demlnd periods leach evening when heavy rrs|~ l dl‘nl' I use begin i re {or |ht~ day. ‘ , The controversy cenlerr on ‘ whether this added we: could l be produced more cheaply by other means. OTHER LOCALITIES Unusually hlgfi tidal occur in other places throughout tho world. nauny St. Milo. “fire a l ael; Cook lnlel. Alnk , puma Gallegos. Argentina: eprmw. England: and renznlnskuy. Bay 1 in northeast srnerla, The French. Argenune, and Soviet Govern. l menu are consldenng plans or utlllzlnz the tidal power. At Fassumsquoddy rnrl lls l Parent. the Bay of Fundy, two l main factors combim to cause the most spectacular tille- nt .l l converlzlng shorelines and up ward sloping bottoms gjvc lhern the shape at a tunnel. AI th a tide enters. the water has no- Where In R0 but up. ' the natural wal- l motion within the bays. relnlor- 1 cod at the ruzht moment by the pulslng llde, lual u a properly 'ltlmed push will send a child in l a swing higher and higher. l The result is a force that har ‘ hot-n estimated at m million horsepower. Thr lidos also make the am an unusual fishing spot. Many fishermen gather their catch not l mun boats but by horse {on-e could produre one million l buggy. (or the Ilsh are clught big new let airliners can carry l adds up to a deficiency oI helm» about 135 passengers c out l globln. or cnlnn‘n: mntlor in the kllnwnlls nt electric power each In traps. or weirs, at high tide (firmly-TEENS per m E Thll conlrasls with the cost at lh r early alrtrull. WhlElt We! Ibmll l m n" mile When In OILanlI takes his win- to the airport by l taxl. llllI ride costs about 25 renu per passengor per mile Progress In Science Gland And Mull. Toronto There are great IhlnEs happen- ln: ln the world of sclenre znrlay Men are halng prepared {01‘ {lights in lhr moon. The genetic code at life is being cracked. E|~ rl'nrntary panic-“res nl mailer l are belng discovered by the o< 1m ullll lhe help at machincsl that stretch tor miles across the cuunlryslde and cost more than T this annual budget at many a n.» . llon l Surgeons in newlnl revered limbs hack tn bodies and replac- l m: kidneys with Iartory re-l hullur. Anlhmpnlnglsta arr ex-l lend”!!! man‘s history rnrlllnnr nr yenrs min the rnlrty past. And rnglneerr Ire building hlg- Her and better electronic cum- uutm which will run entlre m-u. cesslug plants by Ihemldvrs. n rcrtainly is wander-ml; ln l furl it lairly takes the arentn‘ array ll limes tun act that has. its advantages since ll cuta‘ down our coulumptlon ol cancer-l rulsslnfl clmnlclll from 1 luled Iirl. Wm or other. u m dliilcult In Identity 1 wlth all there modern mlrlclel. l We wlll never [o in person tol the moon. There's not much we can do about uur renelir code, cracked or nlherwlse Men of us wouldn't recognize an elemen- tary mode it we lnund one III our soup. and we preler not tn~ thlnk ol severcd llrnh. ln personw Al lens“ but there wal other new! oil science this week. which shouldl cheer us all up: They‘re making prngrm ln the development of. a common cold vacclne. Dr. in» her! lineban ut the Us. Nutln- . nal lnstiiutcs of Health cautlon- ed that it mlght Inks years In develop such a weapon. We can wail Watching Ihose Europe-n Tv program: relayed to u. by com- l munlcltlonl nulllm. llalenlnzl to the hurrlune warning: mm the weather ntellilu, or e ve nl just sitting Irollud waiting lorl the lnternallml Hydrolodle Decade to end. we‘ll be wlu. thou vlrul - hunting medlul men all the way. And every thus we open up a new box at puper handkerchlet- we'll be comm-led by Ihe feeling th It mldbody out there one: Mr us. Gone For Enough Cl” Item PM num- growing evluence Io encourage tb- nouon at the mum way to become an Immi- grant ln can-d. l. to be a per- who drum is. new ln n Crnmlen port and then uk- tor "pnllllt‘ll asylum." However. Hill 5 E Canada In I he! Ihat CHILIle our own Mill ol the billion. and loclll o r d e r. Canada It” llrm rule! Ind Wu- llrel shout the Idmlulon ol Iri- lonl, Hollander! Oil: Alllnllc mm". A recent Instance ol the any way nee-Amt! w IV I you] Yuladlv ullon len - llllp that III “III when for Ruull It. Sore], a at Lampo- Rlvcr vorl 40 lullu Elli 01 Mink In: And I had [in political on. Dec ls pending on spoilt-tin. II the lull-l practice ll tailored ill! wlll May In Canada. TM MM of all” II lhlt ll'l Ihlp m lo remat- II Can only Call- may m d “Min of IBM. Himmlflul ~01" Infl- melltll In (In El dl‘n llhlrl by leading III to hell!" I drud- ful Ilia awllll them If thty A r is Inler lily from Clnldl. We In taken In by It. Few 0! III question III VIIIle of Inch people Ind Uni! ml”! lllltlc Insertions. TIM um will“. evidenc- M m plenum Ill ndlu Ihll country, is I bit Itlrlcflun to mm c from lauds when llle ll Inll’lld by III.- Dflly. To lympllhln wllh lhl mu M the. M I! live III Canad- ll one Ill-l, but ho our :- PI :- lfie‘ Ih 45 Al of dill moment, the Idu I becoming contagious. um rather muni- In epldcmlc. red cells lanomlal day for users in the Mrihelll- l amt lT-il expost‘d on the muddy rrn Unllrd Stairs Ind Canada. ‘ground when the tide ebhl. 1963 All-Canada 12 Annually Weekend Magazine asks the nine general managers of Canada’s nine-city multi- million dollar professional football league to select an even dozen hardrocks they believe could beat any other dozen Canadian Football League players in a 60-minute game. In this week's issue, Sports Editor, Andy O’Brien, provides s line—up of the chosen dream tum picked by the country’s most knowledgeable experts. Tfiefwnhypaltia! " WITH MAGAZINE ondColondCoqu . M STILL ONLY 10° “mm