Oe ae ee ee oan a ee ree PC ee ae eR ee ee wh g stages of negotiation with the Rus- : - sians for construction of a $60 mil- | Not Always eS ~ s lion.state-owned complex of medicinal In Childhood ‘a NOTES BY THE W AY 7 _ Rebesne every weekday morang at 16 Prince suee | chemical plants. The Soviets will con- : P | “Choruitieiown PELL, by Thomson News, apers fd. ; 7 Herman N, M. D. : ir 2 Me A Perens. Penton ‘oes Gadere! Ssaneet tribute $20 million in long-term cre- eS ees be- : « | Memoer Canadian Dai Newsopver dits, as well as technicians and even lief, leukemia is not necessarily dn ten fee en ee. ee ; | eager of The Consign Eig ee workmen to assist in construction of a disease of childhood. Aod. | man’s birthday anniversary. Here | puzzie ma‘l. It piers od ual ina tere ques at simmcrode, Homa 4," | these plants. “It is ironic to contem- again dewpite general belie, Dot | i a comment that may just save | weeks ago Mr L's se 0 | ee ee ee pate,” he added, “that the pioneer fetal. Se wey = to oes os oe . —_ pag =. oS eS a aoe -| work and the basic know-how which dante te y._ though, gh, we still oer & 1 alle dim 70 | Bowe coat emt § Fee Sa ae Wen ee make possible a good part of this Even 20, the : fer seme Seeney Ween yun Raver look any | Was no covering letter with it, ¢ | ae are mes ane Vated Glee © * _) per annum |, | State-owned enterprise were develop- victims is wen eek, peer cee eee _ ros oer reed The ae Se<men and United Staves $12.00 per annum ed not by the Russians but by the eee at The president of the Massachu- | parcel however, did contain a oS PAGE 4 MONDAY, MAY 25, 1959. | privat ntrprise of the Wes.” found te have theta setts Dental society says his | fawn jacket!—The Postmark ® =~ Mr. Powers said several thousand , tic leukemia. group is offering music “to have| , that haa : babi ¢ sow about 2 ‘0 recover a camera * . Wielded Great Power Russian technicians are currently wont he faginn to feel sort of re sg 7: ee been stolen trom his cat. a Ber = During the years in which he was | working in underdeveloped areas. as- punk and decides to go to a doc- | 414 tnew actect ree ee * Secretary of State in the Eisenhower | sisting on more than 100 inaustrial a ade ee aah from a tape recorder. No doubt | fering to buy a camera exactly — administration, few men wielded such | projects. He also noted that technical time convincing this patient that | Me selection includes such ap- | like the one that had been stolen, ~ : ; i a he look forward to Proprite numbers as “The Yanks | A day later, the thief visited the — power in shaping world history as | and trade missions of Czechoslovakia, probably can Are Coming” and “I've Got Th edvertian. aa : : ‘@ normal life span. Maybe he EC e at | address given in the advertise- ~~ Mr. John Foster Dulles. His whole | Bulgaria, East Germany and Poland — won't even need any treatment | Ol Filling.”—Kitehener-Waterloo | ment. He was arrested ahd—had ~~ life was indeed a preparation for his | already have been sent to the newly at all Record oo ue Seer ae ascent by high office. He had campaigned for | independent countries of Africa, oe ae ee check | Camadian coal and Canadian La goatee’ Waa it in the years before 1952, and his : with his doctor from time to time. | ifon ore are both’ being shipped ~ quarrel with Mr. Acheson and with Beaverbrook At Eighty The physician will want to make | @ross the Pacific to provide the | Walter Henderson, member of ~ i i he T $ sure there has beet no change; | essentials of Japan's steel indus- | Parliament for the northern Brite = — policy of : A + ara Maritimers will take special pleas- we never know about this. But | ry. It ts see a * ironies of = ra “a of Cores S vernment was one of. the cen ¥ ; : even if there is, it not occur | Canadian a claims <he black flies in his con- th f the Presidential election ure. im tendering congratulations to- for many coat =e of its economics that Canada has | stituency are the largest in the emes 0 : {Pos day to Lord Beaverbrook, on the The prognosis for other types | the resources but it still cannot | world. The man must be boast- | in that cre vat ay : vt gag occasion of his eightieth birthday. e aeons is not so encourag- | Spport an ang me By this kind ae hao - caually corte = - A in a > : £ e Ss itself:—Cal " ts > 4 Peace hy “ Ne - cite Se Though born in Ontario, one of ten EMPHATIC TREATMENT e Northern Ontario. Our black flies paign. rom the momen Ww Mt. | children of the Rev. William Cuth- Should chronic myelocytic leu- | Parachutists in East Germany | have caused escaped prisoners Fise mhower took office, the foreign bert Aitken, Presbyterian minister,. kemia, or chronic granulocytic poll. apo ay not to pray before of war and prison escapees to sur- licy of the administration was, to leukemia, as it is, sometimes call- ng jumps. They are or- | render to the authorities. They _— : the future Fleet Street magnate and ed, strike a person of the same | dered to depend on their own | have put strong mem. in hospital. all intents and purposes, the person- daisies teas ses the treatment must be more | bility and equipment instead of | It is also said that the idea of al poli f Mr. Dull eee ee = The outlook isn’t too | 4M “unknown God.” The Commw- | blood transfusions was born in © oa os . . aT politics moved with his parents to ——" ey a nist magazine, Fluegel Der Hei-| the mind of a man who watched A situation without precedent, it Newcastle, N.B. as a child and re- And a diagnosis of acute leu- mat, tells a Se veer blood streaming from the pune- gave Mr. Dulles an authority rae ceived his grade school education hemia at any age is very serious era ren ee een ene bell a by black | te not be er am oe oe there. His many benefactions to ' Saas tecdieaia die a came | ON — cae ae ee OWN PORLy. ns im VTS gay New Brunswick in later years, and mia and a tendency to bleed ‘ , : Cee , SO SO ads isease.| A Libyan government official “4 him great advantages in dealing pee his frequent return visits, bespeak _ OTTAWA ROBIN N CRU E : Gaeier usually Suet eras h | has pgp aonthe complaint about | : foreign ee i a. gi! ar the warm attachment His Lordship reapomsbty have ‘been’ asseseng | mtr @ casen of chromic leuk- Uaiied States Seenomic sid oper \ W ATCH respects it placed Mr. ’ oe * ert has for this part of Canada. OTTAWA REPORT va as the wisest course; but on each — 4 > mein oe advantage. The necessity of being . mul a DIFFERENT REACTION spent arguing about their econ er bakes Few man have had such an amaz- ‘ occasion the critics were allowdd | Each type of leukemia reacts | omic soundness. It isn't that this different from the Democrats in Pa- | . [ W Of W d . to unleash the first blow, and the qiferently and requires specific | official objects to sensible eco- iifie policy impart at eutate tril ing career, or retained so many OSING ar £3 or S ee subsequent explan- types of treatment. nomics. His point is simply that omorrow. j ¥ warm human traits after climbin By Patrick Nichol ations have never removed that| Ff mple, acute leukemia | the matter isn’t worth ing § ency to his utterances. Where they s . rere initial smear. én bes a cuuet he hondied al- ora ae pp es aie 7s 7 were “weak’’, he had to be or to ap- pear strong; where they had spoken | softly, he had to command; where their policy lacked definition, his had to be sharp-edged even if this meant dangerous over-simplification. And so Mr. Dulles, in his first year, was “unleashing” Chiang Kai-shek (only to leash him afterwards) ; threatening France with an “agoniz- ing reappraisal” (only to see the European Community saved, after the French Assembly killed the European Army project, not _by | American exhortations but by the diplomacy of Sir Anthony Eden), and discovering in the Middle East a simple pattern that did not in fact exist. Even those in his own country and his own party were shocked when, in 1956, he stated that “the ability te go on to the verge (of war) with- out getting into war is a necessary art ...If you are scared to go to ~ the brink, you are lost...” Yet there were times when his lack of firmness proved as upsetting as his most bellicose, statements. He did not, for example, follow through with the British and French plan to fore- ‘stall Nasser at Suez, or see the im- Plications of his sudden withdrawal of U.S. support for the Asswan dam project, which proved so costly to Western interests. This is but to say that despite his Incredible industry and self discip- line, Mr. Dulles could not always judge wisely. It does not detract from‘ his many outstanding achievements in dealing with Russian and other problems, and in the ‘leadership he gave at times when free world lead- ership was badly needed. The tragedy of his last illness, and the courage with which it was borne, aré uppermost in all minds today as Cafiada joins in paying sin- cere jribute to this sturdy champion of democracy. | Desperate. Aspirations Soviet economic maneuvers will draw the newly-developing nations of Asia and Africa into the Communist orbit unless America and her allies develop effective economic counter- measures. This warning came recent- I: from John J. Powers) Jr., president and chairman of the board of Pfizer International, at a luncheon meeting ’ of the New York Board of Trade's In- ternational Section in the Commo- dore Hotel. ', “The Soviets have done much more than sing a siren song,” Mr: Powers said. He pointed out that the Soviet bloc is concentrating its loans and technical aid offers in the newly-de- veloping countries of South Asia and the Middle East, exploiting thedesire for rapid industrialization. have met these longings with/ appeal- "ing financial offers and adroit show- manship.” Mr. Powers told of encountering Ruasian offers to build state-owned chemical and pharmaceutical plants on a recent business trip to India and i the Middle East. He said that the In- 7 povernment in the final 4 YW They * to such dizzy heights on the ladder of success. With only a rudimentary education, he became a millionaire by the time he was 30, a British M.P. almost as soon as he landed in England, and a Peer of the Realm in six years. Called from virtual re- tirement to become minister of air- craft production after the German victories of 1940, he fired the indus- try with such vigor that it provided enough planes for the Battle of Bri- tain—a glorious achievement with which his name, along with Chur- chill’s, will be forever associated. Selling newspapers was Max Aitken’s first job, and publishing his own weekly (The Leader, in New- castle) his first ambition. The money he mace enabled him to study law, which b> soon abandoned to embark upon his career in finance. But in England it was as a newspaper own- | er that he first made his mark, and The Express, which he took over as a dying morning daily, \became the cornerstone in one of the most powerful newspaper empires in Bri- tain. His Lordship, who thought him- self an old man at fifty, with his ambitions satisfied and not much left to live for, has never really aged \in spirit at all. That may be, the sec- ret of his dynamic energy, which he _still displays. He has been called a combination of Puck and Napoleon. \ We like to think of him, however as a great Canadian—a Maritimer who has never lost touch with his hum- ble past, and who has returned to the Province of his boyhood for to- day’s happy celebration. EDITORIAL NOTES The high price of beef has even affected the art of healing. A report says ‘that in Baltimore drug stores are doing a good business in leeches. They are used chiefly for curing black eyes, sometimes known as “shiners”. Main reason for the re- vived popularity of the worms is their relative cheapness compared with steak. * + * Farm surpluses are continuing to mount in the United States. They are now valued at roughly $9 billion. President Eisenhower. pointed out the other day that. by next year the government will hold $3!4_ billion worth of wheat alone, 2! times the nation’s annual food needs. Carry- ‘ng charges and losses on the sur- pluses are running around $1 billion a year. * o e A plan for harnessing the Indus to benefit India and Pakistan has just been spelled out to Mr. Nehru and Mr. Ayub Khan in their respec- tive capitals: World Bank President Eugene ‘Black, who prepared and presented the plan, reports that it was” received with interest in both New Dethi and Karachi. This, it 4s high-level talks between the two na- tions an at east this one technical subject. Bi , 4 hoped, may provide new impetus for | ae > prestige of West Ger. Is the Diefenbaker Government on the skids? This is the question which clam- orously poses itself in the light of latest survey of public opin- ion, which was published_on—ap- propriately for the Cons Party—the unlucky 13th day this month. That survey shows an acceler- ating decline in the popular sup- port for the present Government. At the March 1958 election. 54 per cent of the voters backed Tory candidates, to give the} Right Hon. John Diefenbaker the largest following ever atiained by | any party leader in our House of | Commons. Qver the next months, the Diefenbaker govern- ment gained so rapidly {n pop- ular esteem that its support rose to 60 per cent. This was the peak. While the popular appeal of Dief- enbaker the man remains invin- cible, that army of three back- ers in every five Canadians is melting away like the snows In Spring: It has tottered to 50 per cent, the lowest level since the great election sweep. QUEBEC LEADS DECLINE The most severe slump is in the | Province of Quebec, where a huge one-third has been slashed | off. the popular support for the Tories—a trend which was ac- curately forecast in this column. The decline in the West ts also | severe. In Ontario, they have lost | 8 points since the July peak of 63 per cent; and in the Maritimes they have slipped ten points to | 47 per cent. Using this poll of public opin- | ion as the basis for an arbitrary exercise in political arithmetic, | we see that, if an election were to be held today, the government would lose a shattering 39 seats in Quebec alone. In that debacle the fortress of Quebec Citv would turn solid ‘‘Rouge’’: Production Minister Ray. O’Hur- | ley, the best French-Canadian Cabinet Minister, would lose his seat, and the party's strongest vative | ment would lose eight seats to fodr | Defence+ fumbled by the public relations French-Canadian politician, Col. | Pierre Sevigny, would aiso be de- feated. So would another Minis- ter, State Secretary Courteman- In the Maritimes, the govern- the Liberals and one to the C.C. F. In Ontario the Liberals would pick off one seat: while in. the West the Liberals would gain four and the C.C.F. gain two from the Tories. In net result, the Conservativ- es would retain 153 seats, giving them a much reduced but. still comfortable majority over 101 liberals and-ti—C.C.F. But what # this skid continue? While many Canadians feel a vague disquiet about internation- al affairs beyond the control of our government, domestic ecrit- icism is little more than disap- pointment that a record partia- mentary majority has not yet. | Produced a government strong to act. The trivial falling off in sup- port In nine provinces Is no more than the anticipated decline in popular enthusiasm between el- ections, accelerated slightly by shope deferred among the politic- ally faithful. DOES WELL, SPEAKS BADLY On the whole, scant grounds for criticism of the government's policies can be found. But much political hay has been made out of warped comment. And for this | the government must take full blame, since it insists on snarring with its guard down, so that the Opposition can always get in a powerful right hook and bloody the government's nose before any Tory spokesman explain the often very good reasons for each action. ~ Typical of major issues which have been handled well by the political pitchers, but badly outfielders, have been the Arrow, Newfoundland and Immigration. In each of these cases, the gov- ernment adopted what might Germany By Joseph Canadian Press Staff Writer One thing that is. quietly rec- ognized by all the Geneva con- ference. of forcign ministers is the resurgent power of Germany, especially West Germany. < West Germany holds what amoun's almost to veto power over important Western _ policy decisions not only because it will be directly affected by the de cisions but also because of its independent strength. This was reflected. at a Friday press conference when Heinrich von Brentano, the West German foreign minister, said bluntly that the United States, Britain and France should refuse any summit meeting. unless their rights in Berlin are guaranteed by Russia beforehand. It wasn't the first time that von Brentano got his view across in a strong way at Geneva, al- though he is operating on the sidelines. West and East Ger- many are represented only as ad- visers at the conference, not as fullfiedged delegations. HISTORIC RECOVERY All this follows ‘from historic developnients: The post-war re- covery of the West German Re- public to a position as the strong est economic country in, West Europe; and West rmany’s new close friendship a tradi foe, France. ; By 1962, it’s expected that the West German military force will be the strongest Furopean ele- ment in NATO. While these factors have en the Geneva meeting, East Germany has also climbed wp a rung or two on the inter- national dip'omatic ladder. Resurgent | MacSween ference room--even aa an ad- viser—is an improvement. Hs status was woefully dreary after the Second World War, as the plundered Soviet sector of a crippled Germany. : Fast Germany, with its popula- tion of 17,400,000, now has be- come Russia’s biggest trading partner. Diplomats say that after the current conference it will be increasingly difficult for the West to maintain its aloof attitude to- ward its Communist government. SMALL VOICE But the East German repre sentative speaks in a small voice compared with von Brentano. Ae spokesman for $2,000,000 West Genmans, his views must be taken into account by the foreign ministers of the US., Britain and France., Actually, von Brentano does not himself take his sidetable seat at the conference — since that would put him on a par with Bolz; the East German foreign minister—but leaves the formal speech-making to Wilhelm Grewe, his ambassador to Wash- ington. ‘ ‘Von Brentano is alert for any Western weakening. He acted around that the Western minis- ters might accept a truce with the Russians over Berlin and sidetrack their peace plan for Germany. Later the American, British and French foreign ‘ministers joined von Brentano in a -state- ment that while Berlin and other issues could be discussed v\‘ quickly,“one day, when word got | Russia outside the West's pacx- Ms mere presence in the con- 7 Bot be settled separaiely. age peace plan, such issues ei As the Tories are thus losing the war of words, it is clear that | they have a lot to learn from the | smooth-working party machinery | leukemias are lymphocytic and }— Chinese astronomers in 1054 re- of former Liberal Government. In fact, they have first to copy the blue-print, and then learn | how to use the machine which they have not vet created | The catattrophic fumbling of | Quebec, rated by this poil of pub- | lie opinion in conjunction with | Nicholson's slide-rule as current- | ly costing the Tories 39 or their | 51 seats in that Province. stems from a crystallization of that de- | fect: no acknowledged political leader in the province, no trump- et, and party management which is at least inexperienced and in- competent, if not worse. The thought that the Tories have | effectively lost.77 per cent of their seats in Quebec in 18 months ought to bring jubilation to the Liberal ranks yet their glum faces in the Commons suggest that they recognize that the de- | cline can be halted and trium- phantly reversed by vigorous action In the coming 40 months before the next élection OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (May 25, 1934) The first graduates of Prince of Wales Junior College will re- ceive their diplomas at the an- nual convocation to be held at 9.30 at the assembly hall. Among those who will speak will be Pre- mier MacMillan, Lieut. Governor DeBlois, H.H. Shaw and Dr. §S N. Robertson.. The valedictory will be read by Mr. Alden Leard. Yesterday the car ferry steam- er “Charlottetown” left for Mon- treal where she wil go into dry- dock for annual overhauling and repairs. About ten days will he | spent in drydock with another tep | days afloat for repairs. The stea- ferently from acute leukemia in a child In childhood, most of the acute im adulthood most of the ‘lympho- cytic cases are chronic. Usually, these lumphocytic leukemias are relatively mild in adult life. Fortunately, many of the 5,000 new cases of leukemia which occur every year are of this type Nevertheless. leukemia kills about the same number of persons. 5,000. every year. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. B.: Is there any other method besides electrolvsis to remove superfluous hair? Answer: Various. creams may pe-of-treip—but—it is best to con- sult your family physician or a dermatologist (skin specialist). mer is expected back om the route by June 20. TEN YEARS AGO (May 25, 1949) Mr. Walter Bernard of Tignish was re-elected president of the Prince County Intermediate Base- ball League at a re-organization meeting held_at Summerside Fri- day night. Bill McGuigan, Kin- kora, was elected vice-president and J. Kinch, secretary-treasur- er. Representatives of other dis- tricts which plan to enter a team in the League, were also appoin- ted. - Miss Joyce Campbell, R.N., and Miss Modena Munroe, R.N., who have been employed as nurses at the King’s County Memorial Hospital for the past year, have returned to their respective homes in Windsor and New Glas- gow, N.S. Following their vaca- tion they will leave for Chatham, Ontario. MAXIMS Every young man would do well te remember that all suc- cessful business stands on the foundation of morality. MacDO 155 Kent St. ECONOMY JET... shallow or Deep Well qo DOUGLAS BROS. & JONES LTD. UGALL Pumps to 300 gal. per hour at 50 ft. pump, motor and switch unit with deep well fittings. 106" - Dial 6565 Montague (Legion Hall) Hillsboro (Millview Hall) Eastern Kings (Souris) TYOR VOUNE oii: Morell New Glasgow ............. akan club's business? ARTIFICIAL BREEDING CLUB ANNUAL MEETINGS eee eeneeewenene Y Special speakers will be present at each meeting. Why not avail yourself of the opportunity to hear and discuss your < “ALL INTERESTED PEOPLE WELCOME” All Meetings Start At 8:00. p.m. ceases. Tues, May 26th seserereese Wed. May 27th conve Thurs, May 28th Fri. May 29th Mon. June Ist Wed. June 3rd | Man's greatest epitaph, ‘He liv- about Libya makes economic sense.—Wall Street Journal corded the a pearance of a star so bright that it shone by day. It blazed for a few months, then disappeared. What the Chinese saw was Nature’s rarest and mgst awesome fireworks, a sup- ernova. Erupting with the bright- ness of a hundred million suns, the star ejected a cloud of gas which fas been expanding 70 mil- lion miles a day ever since.— National Geographic the Age Old Story He that goeth forth and weep- eth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with re- joictng _ bringing sheaves with him. MEDITATION This morning I awoke to wild birds’ song. : The rising sun had painted clouds a golden hue. I thought of yesterday and all eternity, A voice within me said, “This day belongs to you.” Take it and mold it gently with a master's touch. Turn grief and fear away; love and happiness abide. Man’s greatest treasures are his moments filled with love. let ed before he died.” —Grace F. Smith ~ Paper For The > GREATEST — STORE OPENING EVENT ever held in P.E.I. IT’S in The Spokane Daily Chronicle IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE... OR MISSED DIAL 6561 missed. and a paper will be delivered right to your door. Special delivery service available between 8:30 am. -to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or > ‘ _ DIAL 656] 173 Great Georg? St. : serve - the goal for which we strive!" For the Fastest Service in Town, call ED'S TAXI Charlottetown Ed's Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom we mreecenmaeeteneen fpeeeemnneneen 4 HOLMAN'S FOODLAND’ | ADULT POLIO CLINIC , for third inoculations AT MURRAY RIVER SCHOOL MONDAY, MAY 25th 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 - 10:00 p.m. __ First inoculations will be given