TELEPHONE 8506 I 303'" meets seller with Guardian Want Ads. Dbl 8506 ask for claiisi. fled Id taker, for quick resultg, he @11flt‘lfiIiatiI. .“Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" ~ '12 PAGES CRAP CHARLO'l‘TE'l‘OWN CANADA, WEDNESDAY, Novizlvfliiifis, 1957 GOV'l' ON FREE-TRADE OFFER WEATHER Cloudy. becoming sunny in afternoon: Light winds increasing to Southwest 15. Low-High at Charlottetown 25-40 er .....,.,,v-yuan-~--,-.. ,..-.- 4-H MEMBERS OFF FOR TORONTO. I I Tllcse boys and girls from the Millaa. Agricultural represent- Club: lone Wright. Tryon sew- Kenneth McNally. Tracadle lural areas of Prince Edward alive for Queens County and ins Club; Myrna C0193. North Cross. Garden Club; Harold lmuul have won themselves a was Theresa Macbeod. Direc- Milton Sewing Club; Annette Gard. 0'Leary Potato Club; mp lo the Royal Winter Fair at for of Women‘: Institutes fer Fay. St. Georg ' g Club; Douglas Jewell. ver 'l..i-imio and will leave tomorrow the Province. Georgia Morrison, Bi. Calf Club; Arthur Cameron. l'i\ train. They will accoIn- FRONT ROW (left to rifim Sewing Club; Ann Ramsey. Head of l-lilliboro Calf Club; pilllled by David Maclieall. Alrh are: Fenian Shaw. 0‘Leary Calf Malpeque Cal! Club. Bloyce Mae- Gerard Tralnor. Baldwin‘: Road culliiral Representative for Club: Iris Gallant. Marian Aca- Rae. Wheatley River Calf Club. Poultry Club; David llacPhall, limes County, Miss Audrey c- demy Little Women's Sewing BACK ROW (left to fiat): Meadow Bank Garden Club. I Presldent.Tnlces Rail UliionsDemanding35j Cents All Hour_Wage Boost \lt)_VTR.EAL tCP)—-A dcmandiboost. I for a wage increase of about 35 While there was no announce-. rcnls an hour was served on the meat of the union demands.Iboard. railways Tuesday by unions rel» it was lolmed time were the in the last two disputes be- bid federal government conciliation n-.-onlliig 140.000 “non-eperatllng" main terms of a letter that went tween the ,,dlw,y, 9 tion. dro second place be- fmployees. "Gm W m‘«l°"lgroup, there also has been direct M" dawn’ . lhe unions. it was learnetrrailways: govemmenl me,-yenuon, 1,. 1951;, ‘ NW 9'0"‘ T“°5d3Y' 'l.icsday night. asked for a pack-. 1. The percentage and cents- parllamem enacwd legislation lo 8:!‘ boost of 11 per cent plus 17 per-hour wage boost which unioacall off [he sll.ll‘e_ Last llme_ ri-nl.- an hour some fringeofficlals calculated would add lspicabluel forced the lmlons we “a bcllclils. l0 5A Cf-‘WI 3-“ h°"'- .cepting settlement distasteful Th d l pond an 2. more favorable deal on va-M ll,em_ 9 whole ea Pm by cations with pay. ‘ 3. An additional paid italulory~|NCLUDE NI‘-W GROUPS _ holiday — Remembrance Day—-l in the new demands. the umons above the seven now received. lhave brought in for the first time the Midland Railway of Manitoba smc si:vi:MNcE PAY l—-which is under federal jurisdic- 4. Establishment for the first tion—and also have’ included the _ time of the principle of sever—|Railway _and Express Ca" Syrian ' al;ceNpa5l for_ railway workers. ‘line. which employed a _small . o arming out by the rail number of lb0sek€l:l tfhe unlongt f k ll f med Th ' rn - char993 untrue lfylytsligirwgwn neorhlglbygefrm ing ‘willlrmtfllli arzilwaygr no! later 3, An “ope -end’ contract with than Dec. 2. The existing master; ANKARA ‘-*Pl—A '°"°l3" mm‘ respect to the negotiation of dif- contracts between them and the ‘"0’ alflhorlly said lodly "W l" lei-entials ‘as between different carriers expire at the end of the "4 Syrian charges of frontier wage groups and for employees year. "Wat: by Turkey were fabricr who might get shifted to better! —-. lions. ‘ , ' Commenting on reporls 770"‘ The non-operating group is the Damascus of heavy Turkish troop one am ed ll“, crjppfing ll. nmzements along the frontier the d.y urlll, of the railways in Aug. 3"‘ 0711)’ llldi t, 1950. s time again. it is . These are fabriunom nub gpecwd lo run lmo Sim (1ppogi.‘,\'(‘8l's-f0l' approving 400.000 faulty with the pu se of trying to turn tion from the railways. '5“."" helmet‘ The pr°5°C""°n unrldv public opinion against Tun Likelihood is ui-t there will be W“ “'9 9"” "my °' kP'v.’l - _ were so thin that bullets whined an and bnefldawn 0' "elm" through thorn. ‘n unions—mainly those not ac- mally working on trains -— would fI).\l more than $l00.000.0fl) a year in the railways. still engaged in Irving to get freight rate in- creases in cover the last wage ARMY HELMETS DUDS l ARNHl-JM. The Netherlamle It cli'crs> —- A -£4-3 ‘-old clcrk was imprisoned Tuesday for two MOON CRATER l Astronomers estimate the moon crater known as "Tycho" is Ml miles in diamete rnda l6.(X)0 feet deep. lThree Young Boys Are Slain With Hammer, Mother Held I from. the Philippines presidential tlons followed by an inquiry by I 9100000 .0, front-runner of the four - man field in early hours of ti’ With he balloting still cia led Yul Provincial returns chopped away I “P iii"-Plillippines ednesdag) (AP)- Garcigdthe Ne- -bearer. in rettrna sugar King Jose ‘Yul Liberal tabula- fragmentary. alr- o m.25o to 119.052. 13.000-vote margin Yulo piled in Manila. loaded with nuclear weapons a ‘ ‘ready to strike swiftly in case of ' NATO lllaiuis REPORT US Bombers Can Slrike PARIS tAP)—The boss of the tar)" a.»>embly of NATO to reel» an illlcliicwcr U.S. Strategic Air Commandsure its members of the West's .\ ll1.’ll NATO suul'('t' tll\t‘lt)~’t‘d warned the Soviet Union Tuesdayisi.-.-ngtn Ill t.~e light of .so.ii-l,lh;ii tilts year the United States ' misile achievements .eliib;irked on a program of sup- "The panes ale on the run- pl)'lnL1 lls NATO Allies with mis- lo aded nuclcar .\llt‘\ >ut'll as the .\'lkt-. the lion- he said. crows est John. and the Corporal. S with “The are lncrcaslllg bombs." I sleep ncarby. We ' pres c 0 life r e n c e the bAC the number of planes on the alert TR’‘“‘'mG 1-‘ US- to one-third of our effcciives. The lie said all NATO members planes can be off in 1.3 minutes." won would have them. It was The formal opening session of lcarncd lhal West Germany and the NATO assembly heard Scn- llaly now have personnel train- .. RIO!‘ Henry J ac son tl)cm. mg in the United States in the The general struck at the re- wash.) propose that NATO 301 up use of these weapons cent claim of Communist chief a missile training centre. ] J'd('k.s0n also clallcd [flag a ctI)m- Nikita Khrushchev that the l.nter- , plcle rcappraisa of po icy cohtinental Ballistic Missile ENDORSES PROPOPAL conccrning exchanging a I o m l c (ICBM) had made warplanes ob- The plan won prompt endorse secret wstih Western Allies ete, men! from Gen. Corllandl Van R., in talks with fellow delegates to ‘Schuyler. chief of staff of Su- lbc assembly, he said the West mo there always are some of great bombers in the air and they‘ are “not carrying swords or bows and arrows " REASSURES NATO GROUP Russian mis- ers in Europe, who said "we have Sll£ll‘lIl;.' more information U.S. been trying to get 'llllSl for six Jackson‘s proposal for sharing SAC bases all over the world si- months." .\t‘lt‘llllll(' ~ei-rots answcred the .mulvtaneously "and nobody known "We want a lrallillig centre iccling of the smaller NATO pow- it better than Khrushchev." ‘where we could br 1 ng Power flow here from his U.S. pie from all NATO countries and lookcd under the US._ mlllta headquarters for the parllamen- teach them to fire them." he toldpollcy of "massive retaliation. XmdlgandaiionProblems Discussed Al Meeting the village amalgamated. if it does the tax rate would mean nothing warned Mr, . seemed fearful that valuations would be raised by the city at The people in the Spring Park area. who are ‘interested in the It was decided to meet again plebiscite on amalgamation with on Tuesday of next week when the City. sat in on a meeting the Metropolitan Committee wlu w i t it their Village Colnmia- be present to answer questions mg. i :2 :2 sioners last night in the Spring that may fall more within their above what they are now un Park Hall which had been ar- field of experience. the commission- ranged “to give information" Outlining the purpose of the H- 3- Afmslmfll. M30 554 concerning the lebiscite and meeting Mr. Arsenauli review- made 8 Stud)’ 0‘ N the pro gamation. The _ the question _amal amation as A member of I sub commit- eipldnatlon was given by com. and noted lim- dla- tec to fit! WWW" 01-F- culnmn Edmo cussed first some six years ago. ml . ed ‘:3 ‘Al-uusult. who presided. so it is not new, phasized. average the assess V8 will He expressed pleasure and even surprise that the Provin- cial government had agreed to pay 345.000 a year for ten years ' amalgamation were effected. The original request had been for 875.000 annually for six Many phases of the problem were discussed although most of hese who participated in the discussion were asking for infor- mation. They included Anthony Rodd H. 8. Armstrong. Norman Nicholson. Earl Riggs, John Moore. W. R. LePage, Wendell Phillips. J. E. Carruthcrs. El- mer Macitae. B. Constable. Frank Gallant. Arthur McQuaid. Also participating in the dis- cussion at times were Commis- sioners Willard Burke and llow- ard Douglas. Questions discussed covered a‘ wide variety of problems from valuation that the e type of properties have in the City. It was argued. however. that the properties would be more «Continued on page 2 col. at j£_j— ll—J.K. To Suspend Bomb Testing years. He noted that the Crandall re- port had indicated that a sav- ing of S 47000 would be affect- for Spring Park in the pro- vision of sewage and wafer . systems by doing it thmulzh‘ l,().\'l)().\' lltelltersl Prime 3m3l5~'3m3ll°"» 01' 8 93VlnE 0‘ Minister Harold Macmillan said $261,000 of both vlllagcs came 'l~ul.sda. mere would be no fur- l"‘° "'9 5"h“"‘°- lher British nuclear tests in the The insurance rates would he‘ -lmmlullale future)‘ PROMISE TO ELECT ORS KEPT O'l'l‘A'WA (OP)—J. H. Har- rison IL — Meadow Lake) kept his promise Tuesday to those who elected him June 10: "Namely, make a speech after the elec- Lion" who has the right to vote for who stands to gain more from amal- gamation. thc villagc or the City Opinions were strongly divided at times although the meeting was orderly and good feeling prevailed throughout the even- Acllai Will Act, is Report l"W9"9d b9°9U5€ 3 “WT? 8 9‘ ills statement was one of many .ClU-"HP Wat?!‘ SUPP]! W0Uld b9 on world issues in response prmilled for fire fighting. he l;,r_,-anglng quesuons in ad - llouse of Commons. . He said it would be practically Thc prime minister also: ‘ impossible the village of i llcfcnded American bases on‘ some 1.300 people to install a Bl‘Ill.\ll soil watcr system on its it Rcjcclcd a <ilu9.(‘-‘U00 hf Pm‘ would mean that they would pose a "summit" conicrcnce 10 have to raise some an— di<cu<s Gc-rman l‘(‘lllllll(‘all0ll. nually. he observed. Dcclarcd Britain has no in- Anthony Rodd asked if the icnimn or " ' aggres- (‘ity would raise the i'l§.\‘(‘.\\‘I‘(l ~l\'c attack on the Soviet nl the He. told the Commons he didn't discuss an) I.\‘!~lIl‘S whatever during the cam- l paign b e c a us e his con- stituents were already WPll . aware of them. They knew he would do his . So, being a saxophone , player. “l conducted most of my campaign with on or- chestrai" Au'ssii-1s TAKEWBRTTONS CANBERRA tlleutersl — The Australian government will char- ter two more ships to carry Brit— knowlcdgcd the error. ish migrants to Australia under that in fact Stevenson would con- tbe “bring out a ' ‘< paign. Customs Minister M. H. Briton cam- Henty told the Senate Tuesday. I ,el‘a‘blc confusion 4 ‘pull WASlllNGT()N f.v\P) The valuation of the pmpcrtlcs if or iis salclllle countries." White House and Adlai Slevcu»on ~ lav" - announct-ti "that ll(‘I will‘. o I act as Democratic consultant on‘ n l in the North Atlantic Al- I‘ fl is r tog lhcr. 0 H laTli(-S ((:0(f’lllelSl0n eresilllecl from Sixty ycars of Sll('l'(‘\.\llll |:TiI(‘~ llcc ill the (‘in of (ll.'lrnliclimn an error by presidential‘ press soc- rt-tary James C Hagerty. who Stevenson had refused to do any- ing more than comment on the tamgram an" it Wm an prfi is the proud iiccoilllnllslliiiclll of . " v Mr W. E. Hcllllcy. Q \~ht) ‘ pared by the Odmmmnmon this month recalls that in 18;)? Tuesday ancrmmn "sum-W '6 with (‘blot Jll.\liL'(‘ Sir William and V" siilnvan and .lliu..-c ii .1. llt>dg- soll on the Bench he was auliiltl— )- The woman's husband. a Polish immigrant who works with Que-.9 bec Hydro-Electric Commission. at Beauharnols. was notified. - FATHER IIYSTEIICAL He was still hysterical some, hours after his return and stayed at the home of his brother-in-law. Neighbors nit‘ Mrs. Gorka had been up most of the night be- cause her oldest boy. Jean Paul. was suffering from a it I stomach. They said she had told them Monday she was tired and ST. HYACINTHE Que. (C? The three young sons of a I- \car~old woman, who was re lcased from a mental Institution l-W month. were found dead] Tuesday. bludgeoned with a five-« pound hammer. The mother. Mrs. Jullen Gorka. a lormer school teacher. was taken into custody as a mtterlal witness by provincial police. 10 Quebec no charges are laid in violent deaths until an inquest By FORBES IIHUDI I Canadian Pres: tsurir-as Editor’ bilities must be redistributed if. scale construction, ’ bind such provincial revenues as1t:L‘es must be paid out of income. lfiwfilllf "181 WM handlcd by UN‘ x. int)- _ mpg the . ll TORONTO (C?) T“ M" icences. corporatioaliect to federal and provincial ltor - vehicle l New Deal In Taxes Needed ‘:.‘.‘.'.‘ '.'.':.,:?.:" £i*:.’:‘.::'.?.'...?3::l":::c: O O O C C By Munlclpalllles, View 4.: lagged be- \l‘li 0- |’i '~ 'l""ll ' HS - . , ' . fl’ ' lad ' i being developed for pl'9<f‘lllal|0lI f:lla'::d”‘e Bar n “me mi” (0 NATO in pan‘ Dec" 16’ Born in Kf‘n.'~‘llll.{llIn. Ml Bcn — - ———-- llcv as a young man allcnvled Prince of Wales (Tnllcge and for five years aft-rwardx al‘ll(‘l(‘(l you of furnlcr _\t‘.'ll‘\ l P()\\('\‘<(‘(l of a km-ll ull :tll(l an aim‘! lllll'll"l. Ml Hcllllcv as hf‘ book l‘\'f‘l'Y is a of s cblcf ll‘f.‘8Slll‘(‘< However. since real (‘slate containing an i-nlr.\' firm since I845 RECOVERY OF DEBT the same income was sub- W.E. BENTLEY QC. has been l.,ld_ Ml-._ col-ll, wu _ _ taxes. and receipts under the fed- taxes. the owners of real prop- _‘ , H , U taken to provincial police head- depressed. munlclpalfilca art‘ to mt-‘Ci BTW’ leral-provincial tax - rental agree- erty reacted with compelling ef- M ‘"8’ ‘"“°- h‘‘ -‘‘‘'‘l_- "“;‘ man beginning me pracl,“ 0, Quarters In M l. The Gorka: lived on a It-acre ind ntedm 3 CI” G“ld°"°°'l '',''‘°‘’‘‘- 17°" '3’""' '"°"“’” ‘° l""'“" mlly ,.'°-l lrllwlvlriv ll?" l..'m, lllc \t'lt'l‘llll legal authority Tho dill _ y,u,¢.l. may “rm ll," "med “veal mg. Montreal Tuesday In ad-. Even though new taxable Prop» aslstxirnen ’ :11 ‘w 8:‘ ’.lrr'("\}:l lb“.-::l\N;:M M H_m_““.,l H... ......lg ml mu. or 1 bcd<_ W," J," pull_ 3' AM". "°_ P,.fl,lm,s lo ll,“ ll," "veg dress x converence of erty had been added to munici- do real proper!) lax row on rlts \ (VI n”"“_mM_ mflmm mnmw. D ’ i and Jules. l. The Gorka home for a short time in Fort William. ‘I at Rapldea-Plate. iv. miles out frum st. Hyacfiitbe and about I Mrs. was raised in miles east of Montreal. nearby Ste. Rosalie. She went to a teachers‘ college after leaving to the ta the Canadian Tax Foundation. A! Confuieralion. he sdd. but activities t had social and economic dened by E. pal asaeeem in: had lagged ‘ responsibilities were loc wages. map.‘ boon‘ costs. aril had in effect been off- ‘set by them. ent rolls. the increase behind the rise in a construction enues will continue to rise with rI‘t'0vcrv was uwd tax will is] behind the rate of Prince F,dward l.<‘and ‘growth of tho conlnunlly. which cit-t_v for 40 yours at the mid of‘ will thereby continue to be lim- which time the n1(‘nll‘K‘r< of fht‘ Mid ll". l,,m,,0n I), of l.on¢l0n_ l-England "Witt! M H". <llIdlt‘< anclcnl laws and rules. la“ 5,, and arms and oils and history l'llll\l drudgc like Scldcn days‘ and in tho i~nd‘cs< labour tile " I Mr Bentley st-crelnr_\'»trt-iisiircr community growth. the rate of increase in productivity of the of Nciilbbors said Mrs Gorka. the form" A'"'°" R‘ "'5 ' "uh. “Eh '°"°°' ‘M "um '0' ' mo" N0 NE‘ SOURCES llcd in its capacity to finance or society Dreci-nled him with a - '3. “"9" '-‘ l""“‘d ‘‘l M’) Of the It. llyaeiatlie district. was mm, um” “um "W Municipalities had been unable pmded mwlc-mu m.,,~K" ‘M bflumunv m“_rm,d mm “M, law Ilhrury "'""" M‘ 3"” "'3 °' “'9 °l'“"'°"" "°""" ""' Murelpaliues now were eallad«'° M‘ ""' W '°"'°°' beau“ '“m“°"" He was ii delegate to the‘ Maiioimeuve llaqaftalhtlaontreal brought to the morgue fs.st. ly~ won .0 Mn“ lumuom 0, 9,... lie most productive forms of to A, . mull 0, ml, M, l-mld,,,_| Ammmn liar Imoclatlm. m,.,.l_ them and some ii great last molth. “lame, J. Rene Mongeau dla- l.R_w,d. of hula‘ lueml. §day'a taxation. such as income bl." “kl we ,l,ll'll'y of nluM(.l_ mg m_I'd in lolldlln 1.-"gland ,,, limos lie I: a lll‘(‘l(‘S€ worker “Ply M she walked to trlet coroner. said an ueet lg,,.,,.,,,_ mud ultaxcs. were difficult for munici- pull“, to meet the impact of um and at that hi...‘ \l‘a§ M-,._ and own at his advanced nu} “HUNG! r be held all soon as 909- base--the tax on real p y P*““°' '0 "ml A ilrowth forecast for the next 3 sbntcd in nu vlak-«iv King am ‘3‘‘‘‘ "" M‘ "“ '"“" ‘° “"9 " I"'lIe. who lives about "I mile elhle. or land and buildlngs—remained It 'would be generally admitted. years. will be largely determi lg, V l ' Mildly." "M and Old In It ehfldru laminar was found in the largely to one as at Oodadara Mr. Otildaberg said. hat a more by adjustments provincial-ma-l " 0"? "WW"! MY")! which Ml verelaad. ' attehaaeftaewell-liepthoine.oat|oa. iaa tai.-ieaee aeseaa-illclpeli-eietloaawltaavlewta"'"“‘5” ’‘”‘’'‘'l «M h-su 150 h&r want to thgaerhtae kitchen table was a chnd'a This base. even in a period 1 meets or rates or both real balancing basing Asked what he thought would reminder is “Man is immortal‘ NnoiflItsaI%u.pdu.e&tgIe¢. itataaaiwarwulssaaaa-has-aaveaaueueutas. wttatlaaaelalaaoauty. botbebostedvlcotorayeuaautilalsworlilaeosr l Swiflly In Case Of Need .;,«;;,;;;«;,«,-, ‘SPO se PRICE 5c Opposition Members Term Reaction ”Disclppoiniing” nicmbers crltlciled the govern ment Tuesday for what they ' “thoroughly disap- tn Britain's in-i-»ll‘a(ie proposal and lls al-‘ legcd plans to "short - changt-" provinces for ()ntal‘iu's benefit. ‘ in llrlng his free trade criticism during the C o in m o n s lhmne ‘.s'pt‘9t'll debate. l-‘red S Zupllluy >|CCl-‘ — Dauphin) said (‘anatfian ‘manufaclurcrs are turning out a lot of "shoddy junk." Tariff A free ('0m')€'lill()ll from British goods would improve the quality of Canadian ~ made prod‘ ucis and lower their prices. Hon. J, W. Pickersfllll IL Bonavista - Twillingate) said the .:{0\'ernmenl apparently plans to ."‘short-change" other provinces ‘to meet fiscal demands of On- ltario Premier Frost. l A new Conservative MP. John ur ed the government to \-nrk out a formula for uniform con- servalion aid to municipalities in conjunction with provincial assist- e. poo er than they were bclng_ove- am Y ,SHO'ULD ACCEPT IDEA Mr. Zaplitny said the Canadian ‘ government should express its ae- ccptance immediately of thc tween the two countries over at period of years. But instead "the Canadian gov- ment seemed to react in a sort horrified manner." ll- wns| thoroughly disappointing re-I‘ n On Canadian products. Mr.’ Zaplitny said: I “There has been a steady and' sad deterioration in the quality of manufactured goods In Canada since the t Second World) War. . . oi er ‘ of ..a Can consumer is the Llcgr; of kl‘|'Y~i‘Jluilt lunli. whit.-ii fit} lgh-pressure ad- l ()’l"l‘AWA ‘CPI — ()pposlilonlancc.- lit-w slylcs and new mod‘ els ralllcr than through quality " Willi lhe t=\ccpii0n of certain l_‘vp(‘s of ll(‘£i\') nizichlilcry and some building materials. con- sumcr _-<m(i~ produced lll Canada and lllc I’ S "nllw are at an all- lllllla lou ' Gcuruc 'SC—-New West‘ llllll.slt'f‘l t’l‘ill('l7P’l Primc Minis- tcr Dlcft-iibaker for saying in a rf‘('t‘lll l‘.'l(‘llt) speech that ploymenl is not a serious prob- lem in (‘anada at prescnl. “This is not a time for us to “car a blindfold." said Mr. Hahn. with unemployment obvi- ously lncrca-lna in manv areas it was time to look at the Sims‘ lion l'('£Ill\ll(‘£lll)' and try to solve the problems causing the situa- tlon. N0 JOB CONCERN l)it-fcnbaker had "sluffed I\ll‘ ‘off" the unemployment problem. preme Headquarters Allied Pow. uuuld cam ;;rczlit*" security by Kucherepa. Toronto High Park.fwhich was causing many other ‘Canadians “grave concern." E Olhcr parliamentary develop. moms’ ‘ l. in the Senate, Senator Thomas Reid tL—Britlsh Colurtr lbial questioned the wisdom of re- iducing to 10 years from 20 the ‘Canadian residence required lqullllly for old age and other so- _ Bl'll‘lclal welfare pensions. ish proposal for free trade be-l 2. Mr. Diefenbaker said he is sure all free nations would ap- prove convening a non - govern- ment conference of world atomic scientists. 3. The prime minister also sug- gested establishment of a non-de nominational prayer room in the Parliament building for MP5. Mr. Zaplitny said duty - free trade between Canada and Brit- ain would reduce living.costa by providing a British alternative to Canadian-made goods. This would bring consumer prices closer to "their true value rather than the inflated value now shown oa the price tags!- 96 P.'E.|. Delegates Can Attend Liberal OTTAWA fCP) ——A total of 2. 452 official and alternate dele-l gates will be eligible for the na-l tional Liberal leadership c0n\'en"‘ tion Jan. 14-16. item is is an increase of 307 from: 2.145 in the last leadership con- vention in 1948 Convention offi- cials said the increase is mainly women and young Liberals. .‘ ‘included in the new represcnla-l tlon are 1.520 official dclccates with full voting powers and 932‘ alternates who wo d be able to vote only if the official dclcgale does not turn up. The country-wide representation will pick a sllcccssor lo the 75-l year-old Rt. Hon Louis St. Laur~ em and it may bc a straight fiszbi. between Hon. Lester B. Pearson. - year -old MP from Algoma East. and Hon Paul Marlin, 54- ycar-old MP for Essex Fact The names of these two did not appear in the new main cnnvcn' lion committees. perhaps an in- dication that they will he loo bU~'.V lining up <llppt)rl(‘I‘s. Honorary chairman of the 45' mcmhcr convention commlltcc wlll be r S‘_l l.aul'cnl uhvlc Duncan 7\lac'l‘a\‘i.<h. National Lib- eral Federation prcsldcnl. \Hll be chairman of the 38 - member or. ganlzalion ('(II'lllTllll(‘f‘. the main Medical Express 0TT’\WA '('P) —C.1natll;in llll‘fi‘ lcal colli-44-s. (‘\‘])|‘f‘\filllE rum.-rn about losing higblv qllalillcd re- search \A’f)I'kt'l'< mp lnmtd Stairs, say more money is ur i!9ml_V needed for in\'c<Iig.1llng. medical problems in Canada. in briefs presented Tut-~dav to the federal government. the Asso- ciation of Canadian Medical Col-l leges urged an addition of at; least $500,000 to the budget of the: medical research division of the‘ .N'mi0n;l' Research (‘mincll. Milli" mil reducing the amount avail- able in other bodies making grants f The nssnclailnil also called for the immediate establishment of it lli'!ll~lPV(‘l committee in study, ll) are to solve the problems facl medical science “T ' imlmrfilnl." said Dr ‘ L. G. Stevenson. dean of medl- clne at McGill University. one of} ttnlfld the brief to the govern-l meat. Colleges Concern Convenfion working body. PLAN NEW PROGRAMS The convention will also at‘ Di to revamp its political structure to strengthen Liberals in any new election battle. Senator C. G. (Chubby) Power. wartime air in l n i s I er and a shrewd political strategist. will be chairman of the subcommit- tee on political organization. Hon. George Marler. ‘MP for Moni- ri-al's Sf Antoine-We-stmount and formcr transport minister, will head the subcommittee on reso- lutions. All segments of the Liberal er- ganization will h.'l\'t= rcprescnia‘ lion. More than half the voting delegates will come from the two main provinces ~ Ontario and Qlll‘l)P(‘ Fllfllllle (‘l(‘l(‘Ei'li(‘< by province. with nffuliil and alternate dole- gatcs in brackcfc l‘(‘<p(‘(‘ll\'(‘l_\’? Ontario 704 4!!) '_t7,'.v Qlutlw. F26 tilflfl. 246): Rrlllsll Columbia mg ‘lq-3. 73‘. .\'m':i Si-nlin I6] ‘I01: 60). .»\lbcl‘la I64 IIO4. 60) SEl~l(al(‘llf‘\\.'ln mi -100 mi nan. itoba H2 ill; 3]‘; New Brune- uick l.'lSl 'fl8_ 3|‘ \‘(-u.l....mll,.,,l 87 437. 30‘. Prince liduard l~|;lnd ‘:7 «R9 iii Yukon Niac- kcmic llncr 14 18,6‘. "We arc liming good people lo we l'mli-d Slrilcc h(‘<‘allI(‘ of in. «ullu lcnl support it‘: not easy la make up ground lost this nay ' Additional fund< are not-ded ll, a\()ld halting work n making grants on a year-lnyesr basis. WANT .\'l'RSlNG PLAN in a second brief. the associa- tion urged that legislation for na- tional hospital insurance. include proisiun: for l'l')s.pil;;l "int-h‘nI at every medical school and a complete out pal'v~nl service 1; university teaching bo.spllglg_ Most of the funds for the ex- pansion of medical research in Canada since fhr Second World nl mg, ml l,o.,l.,_ up ‘ the funding of medical research; W" 5"" mm‘ "'0'" NWTHMCM my, hp has rpm Qvery one ol in Canada and to Investigate how i‘"'"'°°-" 5"‘ ll‘ "99"" Y9!" "'0 mu-iy government agencies can ooopeb '’‘‘''°"'3 ‘'5' '30‘ RP‘ PIC! '10 the need The amount of dominion-lbovlr cinl health grants. which reprr sent more than 50 per cent of the federal money available to un- aed as a constant lthe three associations that n.-universities for grants alfl fella. ships. has remained pracuealfi stationary since 13.