i SPAT Si ai i se aN a Atlantic’ Community ) & _armaments than strategic delivery ? first zones. It would not be re | that all weapons in the zones . away with, but that they be according to .an agreed This zone-by-zone inspection and. arms reduction plan could go on un- the 20 zones were covered. Also would be possible for other coun- to participate in the scheme; it could be made to include other ik RES ” What this proposal by Prof. Sohn appears to do is meet the two major fears of the two great powers suf- ficiently to make it possible for them to make a start on arms reduction. The United States.makes sure, in in- creasingly larger regions of the USSR, that there will be no cheating in this zone-by-zone inspection, and the USSR does not surrender its great-military asset, the secrecy of location of its striking force, except bit by bit. It also starts with the limited area of strategic delivery vehicles as - Our Ottawa t, Mr, | those are the immediate major means Patrick Nicholson, hab been attend- | of surprise attack and massive re- gene ing meetings in Paris of leading | tallation. And, itVis a program into : citizens of the 15 nations in the North | which other nations can be fitted as od L— * his Se ee ads | fateh tet te _ _ chosen by their na- t the plan is being r ani onal Parliaments, after two weeks’ | discussed in private conversations ' emanate _ adequate. Let us hope, however, in adding to the NATO military con- cept:a set of institutions which will bring the NATO peoples closer politi- -eally, culturally and economically, it will have achieved some measure of value. Any formal achievement in the way of union or federation will have to await a fuller sense of com- minity among the allied nations. _ frontier the Paris group, over which former United States Secretary of State Christian A, Herter presided, proposed a permanent high council to co-ordinate pcilcies and undertake long-range plamring in the field of alliedrelations; also that the present NATO council should be given in- creased jurisdiction in the areas it In pushing toward this new | never & more inappropriate time for that ought to cause no surprise. But— doesn't, of course, mean very much in the light of power politics. How- . ever, it is said to be getting increas- ing attention, and to date it is about the only one that seems to hold out any hope at all of Soviet acceptance. Unheeded Warnings Commeéhting on the fulsome pre- election promises now going the rounds at Ottawa, the Montreal Gazette says it is easy to say that this is an old:political game (we said so ourselves the other day) and one’ even if the game is old, there was playing it. Canada is in an anxious. economic position. It is losing old ad- vantages in the wor!d of internation- al trade and is facing new difficul- ties. It needs, ‘above all things, to heighten its efficiency and to curtail its burdens. BARREL JUMPING SEASON PARIS REPORT From Patrick Nicholson Groping-Towards An Atlantic Community PARIS, FRANCE — Citizen delegates from the nations of the North Atlantic Alliance | have been gathered. here for what was named “The Conven- | tion of the One Hundred.” After two weeks of deliberation, we is- sued “The Declaration of Paris,” setting out our ‘convic- tion that ‘‘our survival as free men demands the creation of a | true Atlantic Community within | the next decade.” To attain this end, the Conven- tion recommended various steps, of which the most ‘significant would be the creation of a per- manent. High Council of Minis- ters, and an Atlantit Assembly. | These two new political organs | There must, concedes The Gazette, be sound planning for the ’s security. But the—only—de— All this is in line with Article 11 of the North Atlantic Treaty, provid- ing for development of what other- wise might remain a military alliance into a community of peaceable co- - operating free nations. Progress in | this direction, however slow and hesitant, is to be welcomed. ~~ New Arms Control Plan Of all the problems facing the - world today, that of drafting a work- able arms inspection plan is perhaps the most urgent and most important. . It is also the most formidable, due to two basic fears. One is the fear of | _ the Western powers that the Soviets will cheat on any. agreement. that does not have an airtight policing | The other is the ir Une Soviet Un- ii One possible solution to this im passe, that at leastis original and | sounds workable, has been suggest ed by Dr. Louis Sohn, professor of interridtional law at Harvard’s' Law School. The hopeful thing about the new suggestion is that it has been discussed privately both in American f | | } } | ee , : Saint John, N.B winning If a dog will not come to you | Mowledged the accolade with a | been heard, with more to come saan “Mecgun: Geis. We | after he has looked you in the face,” = acknow ame ' ; majority of deleg® | Harry Foster of Charlottetown t ledge reaction ‘from the | tions: feelsPortugal should and directed by Charles L. Jen- said the late Woodrow Wilson, “you | ieiory 10 thay ensalty, peatent | Ande onthe ress tx GRE: _ they are unaware the public is | ernment and king, won h py the | ought to go home and examine yOUr | here. But is wes eben an | hence the debate: repentance” | adjudicator; George de’ Warfar, : ” ., : e tends to lose who congratulated conscience,” That's all very well; but Stevenson that he was practi | interest among delegates. for a well - written play, show | ae e Coe ee * ing artistic appreciation through- t wait to ; ‘a ie Satore whee aint oe ae The Newest Nation . Ernest Fairchild, exp 6f Cpt | Winnipeg Free Press ee oe worst kind of scoundrel. ; Georgetown, is employed on the Sere < ‘Spreqpeemadeprerebenng bem am: came ee Shes ra r Trad nmenting. -on the problems | dest nations asia Sang tary forces, and in 1919 the New John and -Monchester, posed by the European Common | became the modern world's | meen, Peete Soe | TEN YEARS AGO Market, The Country Guide, lead-| first independent Polynesian | area, |. Gan , when New Zealand’s 4 The new: nation consists of | D*. W. H. Soper administration of the is two large islands, Savaii and Sa . confused al islets. The capital:is Apia, - 24Y Afternoon. lamee, The | ont te Gener 110 cgure ae ee ore an anaes Paciic far a the sou Some. 108800 people, of" whom ‘personnel in first ald. + visit | but 6,000 are of Samoan stat- 4 : the 1700s. us, Principle exports of the | Following last’ night's annual ae nies gummed a veiat Western Samoa has not _ yet decided whether or not it will join the Commonwealth. But in view of its relations with New Zealand for nearly half a “the Commonwealth will soon | ‘to win votes for-the party espousing pendable base for security is a prosperous nation, If elections are to be the honored foundation of the democratic system, surely they ought not to be allowed to become, by the combined irresponsibility of political parties, and the public, the occasion for making and accepting promises on the basis of deficits, in a period when the economy is facing anxious readjustments in an extremely dif- ficult world. ‘ “That,” it is added, “is not secur- ity. Fer security cannot be promised; it has to be earned. It cannot be truly earned until the deficits have been overcome, and the trading problems mastered. Neither of these two prior | achievements is as yet even in view. | Only the election is.” | _* Words OH WiStorr 0 nn them. Hence we predict that they'll be honored in the breach at this time; indorsed in~-principle but ignored in practice. If only The Gazette would come forward with a practical plan for winning the next campaign on retrenchment policies, it wopld be fine. But it doesn’t, amd probably it can’t. Nor, frankly, can we. Our joint views on the subject, therefore, areflikely to get as cold a reception on Parliament Hill as the proverbial glass of water at a brewers’. banquet. EDITORIAL NOTES passing the West’s achievements in many fields, and to grow faster than ys in nearly all Meanwhile we of the West have been disagreeing at the Council Table and. clawing each othe to economic death in the market place. ‘ CANADA NEEDS UNITY A country with a population as small as ours can today nu longer be master of its own des- tiny; nor even can a country as large as our neighbottr. But in nity, the story of the West wall be very, very - different We would each enjoy better. de- fence at:lower cost; higher tiv- ing standards for all; aid and ation te —needy - nations ' and for each of us the assurance liament, but expanded to inter- of national scale. —In_this- —the tions made fn this column |ast month. : But in other respects, the claration of Paris was disap- | pointingly and even inadequate | ly cautious, unimaginative aad | inward-looking. - The Orie Hundred were ga thered in Paris to recommend | steps to make good the short | comings of Western statesmau- ship during the post-war vears. In this decade and a half, our | enemies have succeeded in sur- | mere cautious adoption of long- overdue half-measures. For example, Canada propos: | newspapers. As Mr. Dirk Stik- | | ed the drafting of a Western | Declaration of the Rights o' Man, to offset the wiles 6f Com- munist propaganda; we urgcd resolutions which would recog: nise the fact that many of our best friends include those now imprisoned behind the Iron Letharigc U.N. Assembly The spectators are showing , more enthusiasm for the drama | than the actors at the resumed session of the 16th United Na- tions General Assembly. it has come to be a normal e under the dome of the and y ll-filled gallery lod -ing- down on a scattering of dele- | gates who listen to speeches in usual. There is no \uorum 85 | longer @ wild fantasy, but apparent lethargy. This was pointed up Thursday when United States Ambassador | Adlai Stevenson — one of ihe | UN's. outstanding orators—er- tered the chamber as first spea- — ker in a session that was éch- | eduled to begin-at 3 p.m..- ONLY TWO PRESENT - Despite this star attractién, there was a total of two other delegates—from Australia and Brazil — present at the time. g ally alone with his fans. Delegates drifted into the chamber in ones, twos and threes—while Stevenson busied himself with documents — and the meeting finally got going about 3:30 p.m, after repeated from un- in Parliament and itsis up ‘o Assembly President Mongi Slim when to open-.a meeting. Public interest in the UN has grown considerably in the ‘ast year because of spectacular news within the organization it- self. and problems of war and peace that oes See referred to it. This is réflected in visits by tourists, school groups, clubs and just plain New Yorkers. They are sometimes disap- pointed. ra ® at t a ; t i Ba .. B : i i eat ae th piss i ; i FL are 3 ii ; PEF ERE, Ree fh ii rE FEF Fl fv ti § i it Bi s a i 7 : | uF [ - ul i i : i i is fi g a 2 $8 z g : Ee U : i z g i 3 ¢ : z a : i eut. needed to hold bulkier dressings in place, especially when cov- the wound is cleaned well with | Jab soap and water, and covered with a few pads of gauze held in place with an elastic band- age, adhesive tape, or roller gauze, there’s no need to change it unless it Becomes wet ot: blood stained. Bacteria love dried blood and will eat their way. through the stained area Curtain; we wanted not only to ‘recommend steps which would | ether steps which would weak- en the Communist empire. Above all, we wanted the Declaration | of ‘Paris to sound a clarion note in terms which would appeal to, and be comprehensible by, the ordinary man. In these stands, Canada found many like-minded and Italian delegates, many of the Americans, very prominent Belgian and Dutch and “Danish delegates - but none of the Bri- tish . : ~ PROPAGANDA FAILURE | ~But in the outcome the school of caution, the grey old men ; who sought to preserve Nineteen would—be—roughiy— to our Federal Cabinet and Par- | made effective. by co-operatiou; | th’ Century patterns, won ° out | in close votes over those who 5] -safety for our grandciil- | ae _respect; Chava ee eee eae | dren of the Twenty-first “Cen- ti . | One Hun a firm stand | tury. ion exactly fulfilled the predic | tor tt eatlicaiian of. cur ry | crises and imaginative propos- | of Paris failed to soar to tne. De- als to combat them, rather than | heights, failed to achieve the | Consequently the Declaration degree of novel interest which, would hit the front pages of our | ke#t, the Secretary-General ot | “It is very tepid.” | . As the Convention broke up,’ | one prominent British delegate | commented that the most me- morable feature of the -Paris_ talks was the unrelenting battie | by Canada to attain a much more creative and forward-look- ing Declaration of Paris. There was nothing surprising in this, since it was Canada which tn teen years ago proposed the «Canadian Clause in the North Atlantic Treaty'- whigh-Wassthe | birth of the practical -eoncept | of Atlantic Union. | While deploring the pussy- footing caution and the long lead-time in the Declaration, the creation of Free-world strength through Atlantic Union is no a practicable possibility - subject only to that wide public accep- | tance. which would inevitably | | follow the wide publication of = imminent crises and of this OUR YESTERDAYS | From the Guardian Files | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO | ' (Jan, 29, 1937) | Mrs. Ruth Simpson was nam- mer jp thos ed by Charlottetown Little Theatre Guild, in the New Brun- swick - Prince Edward Island strengthen the West, but aso | | friends, including all the’French | certainly made it clear- that the | ' NA.T.0., deplored informally. | Will be glad to discuss the con- fection usually is suspected when the injured area throbs or hurts. + There is a good reason why the bandage should not- be changed too often. Every time an open wound is exposed, there isa chance of contamination, usually by the breath or the fin- gers. Do a professional job the first time and the cut or wound will heal quickly if lei alone. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical topics tt stamped, self-addressed efive- lope accompanies request.) DISTURBANCE OF VISION M, D. K. writes: Three weeks ag@ a smoke screen and. black dot settled over my left eye. An eye specialist found a spot had developed behind the eye for which there is no remedy. said. I feel handicapped. Is this until they reach the wound, In- |. : ‘ THE WAY NOTES BY - boy at the auto show | ; : i = 8 i Ee i. ers g gue g 3 z i i f f e i ret 2 ge $¢ | i Es qf Hi t i i i 5 § if if 3 PF 5 Dea kin fate j Aad ie up a commission to study Sikh complaints of discrimination by the Hindu majority. Fi Pa & z £ Ey He Eda gf a = 3 li ; ganized the existing 27 ee recognized languages. Only | Bombay and Punjab remained | bilingual. Last year, after riot- | | engineers, technicians, and lead- Should a Punjabi - state ever be formed, it woul however, that such a. solution | would be strategically inadvis-~ able. in frontier Punjab, sur- | be a small part of the Sikhs’ rounded on three sides by Pak- | vast former homeland. About istan disputed Kashmir, and two-thirds of British-held Pun- jab went to Pakistan in the 1947 division of the subcontinent. The Sikhs who lived in thig area were caught up in the trag- state would be pre- dominantly Sikh, forming a com- | munal or religious, rather than | ie fighting among fanatic re ar Bt | @ linguistic, di ie reeerne ie _sects._Sich-survivors took “Learn to live with —it;-—tre7 re gee tan en olichoot of | refuge in India’s East Punjab, Hinduism, originated in the 15th | which in 1956 was: integrated the last word on the subject? REPLY This condition may be caused | by hemorrhage into the eye or by a retinal detachment. why rely upon second hand in- formation? . Your eye specialist i dition and the outlook. FEVER AND PSORIASIS _ sis for years but when I pneumonia and a temperature appeared. After I overed, they reappeared. Can you ex- | plain this occurrence? REPLY This skin disorder tends to | | come and go but it’s: possible | | the fever and toxicity from. pneumonia played a role. J. R. S. writes: What. causes a vertebra to collapse? REPLY en back) in which the .blood followed usually by deterioration or collapse of. the vertebra. CONTOUR OF TUMOR N. J. writes: Can a physician tell from the shape of a lump whether it is malignant? 7 + REPLY . ign and malignant tumors come in various shapes. The location of the lesion is important. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Break up Idng motor trips by stopping periodically for coffee. cs Nd The Age Old Story These things write I unte you. that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Uhrist the ye ow 7 * j “you’RE THE BOSS” «+. AT BENEFICIAL to $3000 and more on loans over $1500 suas Your | Punjabi religious scholar Nanak, | the present | hore. Bui | C. Q. writes: I've had psoria- | had, of 104. the scaling patches dis- | | “MECHANICAL ENGINEER—DREDGE DESIGN, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, professionally qualified, experience ig Is des " tion or cancer. A fracture (brok- supply to the bone'is cut off is |. Not exactly, because oth .ben- | century, It was founded by the ;-with neighboring states to form Punjab, ‘1 who was born in 1469 near La- | Hindi-speaking. The stage was set for another partition drama, but one which Indians hope may be their last. Guru, or, Teacher, “Nanak | borrowed much of his doctrine Employment Opportunities Civil Service of Canadas *ASSISTANT BRANCH DIRECTOR, . qualified accountant with extensive business experience, $12,500-$13,500. CHIEF, MAN- AGEMENT EDUCATION DIVIQION, university - graduate with ‘extensive experience in management education, $9940- $11,200, Trade and Commerce, Ottawa Circular 62-552A. CO-ORDINATOR, SCHOOL SERVICES, universiy graduate, : Northera demonstrated ability as educational istrator, Affairs and National Resources, Ottawa 11,200. Com- petition 62-304. - : *DEFENCE PRODUCTION OFFICERS—ELECTRONICS, for com tracts administration in electronics and unications sys tems, Defence Production, Ottawa. Up to. $11,200. Circular 62-1125. ship repair in workshop and shipbuilding and fice, in operating. marine machi: , to conduct for development and fi artificial limbs and othe? prosthesis, Veterans Affairs ~ he a Ont., $6840-$7860. Circular 62-1203 : INSTRUCTION MATERIALS ee: Civil Engineers plan for research and laboratory invest ations of minerals and their primary products used in the construction inductee _ Mines and ‘Technical Surveys, Ottawa. Up to $7860. 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