@5112 fitmrcitmt Dover- Prince Edward Island Like The new w.l. Hancox, Publllhv Darrell L Enrol-v- Editor Published every week day morning lexcepl Sun am we Ililutnly beiluryri n lbs em. Stl at. r Ch-llulllluwn. e E i. bY lhnmmn Newiplprru hmn attire} .r Summeuide, Momma. tor mu Sow; Hepvuenied n u, by lhcnllcn Net-spawn ‘ Advertising 3mm lemme, izs U‘ivuvlily A. (men. Mm University c.5942, r 6mg.- Snth Vancouver r Member Canadian Da‘y Nev/map" Piltzlixben Anew-lion and In human em The Current... Frau u 9.; .ryel, cili"'d licelinn at .i .cm mm mulled to n oi . r i r,r‘i3t‘rd irmm . .yrmr or rtru re. siz on a ,-.r rrr . mi areal uer rmrrrn l:' . rrr co yer. A lime mutt ilk 57mm prr you in us. . oiooe Elma Cum. monwealih rum ovel /r per smile (crr' .m , .r crrmr dr Fur/s3 P765 l sm'nu'u iMHIZHBVERVIF Ominous Indications ll.” lllH-E prov- about it. noubi ,urlr inces willle are maintaining e\l>‘lllii: agreements lilrh Otiaua are roiiuz‘ to have a lick: .m l r inuuls “hen the fCil"l‘Iteri'l‘l’llli‘lAl coiil‘erciice meets on ' inlrer Premier Lesage is ilcmnnilinc a 25 per cent share of the flPill of income and death iH\P~, curmlui-ell with the 17 percent \‘llLe llll» ivoiillccs gel this year: nun he “tints in million out" of a numlicl' ml the .illth nrolzramS ,h North Americu Al-l assigned to the DWW' lnt‘E‘S. if the Quebec premier has won the support of seiorzil other premiers in his contention that Oltuiva should clear out of these fluids and still supply the runner \ritlinut : rian at- tached—«is ll’llllL‘lliFil in yesterdal s despntch , then we can bid good- bye to the tav~lnirinb : cm which. since, the 1 world war. hits played so important a part in remedying the disadrailtazos under which the less prosperous provinces were oper- ating. That s} Jeni i‘l’illlltcs a pool. In: of tux to function equitahlv. The rllellill of the hill provinces to run their own show in this re- spect is a rel ui ll to the old cutthroat my ern of each for himself and the devil take the hinllmost. It doesn't take a mathematician to figure out where Fi-ilil'e A 'ard island will find i elf iii a race of this kind. High on the agenda of the com. ing conference will he discussion on this imilol'otnt matter. The Federal Government hasn't indicated what stand it will tlike. but Prime Minister Pearson has suggested that the con- ference he a closed one from the start. Pl‘riio'ls coili'Proilt‘m have lie- gun nith R Ullf'vtlr’lV session open to the press, whore the premiers make their opening statements. Cl nicer iicll 9 i'ewiilies It ix also proposed ll_\' the Prime Minister tllrtt ilo statements be given regarding subjects un- nn until the conference is n\'?l‘#t‘XL’i‘pl llv unanimous nizree- ment in the conlcrcncc. it is it‘llan to he a very hush- hush affair. apparently. “'hich doesn’t do allythinx.V to chnnize ollr com' tion that the omens are in- auspicious. The Toll Continues Before the World is permitted to forget Hiroshima. let it be noted that 18 3 :ll. after the first atomic bomb flattened lill hilt a few bulld- higs in that Japanese city of 600,- 000. killing nearly 80.000. R 25»year old girl has died there. six months After being diagnosed as leukemic. She was one of 67,000 persons living within two miles of the epicen- tre of the bomb burst. who were en- titled to have free liflonir medical care under the 1958 Atomic Surfer- ere Medical (‘arc law. Another 26.. 000 who lived beyond that limit or who entered Hiroshima within two weeks after the blast izot and still get, when needed. 50 per cent free government medical aid. This girl was a healthy, cheer— ful clerk who had only superficial intentions on August 6. 1945. Her ailment (loss of while blood cells) my: the list of patients' disenneil nt like Atomic Bomb Hospital. The rate of outbrnk run once 10 times union. peapln exposed to Hiroshima Mic ndiltlon that of those not “do during the blast. Tin incident bu MM but: It in still three Hillel J—n’l notion-l avenge. Inlch In nut In Hlmlhlmn Tub. and In utimaud 40,000 rrmk w-Iku Edlim Alb-r- um dinoalzhel berelrr . I who Fill. In the city It fill that morning of the blast are still receiv. 1 int? free city medical outpatient ol- occasional inpatient care. Govern- : ment subsidy to finance such 3 earn runs annually to $2,780,000. Though careful tails are kept on victims. many have not reported at all. through fear of beintz regarded as inlii'iially unattractile if known to have licen a radiation-exposed person. Many a victim. on the other hand. has not married fearing that radiation effects miivhl he trans- milled in poicntial children. So the toll continues. in human suffering. suspense. and death. And ‘ the Hiroshima bomb was a small Rf. fair indeed compared with the moll- stel's that coilld be unleashed on the world in this year of grace. 1963. A timely subject for contempla- l lion. as we prepare ntice more for the solemn observance of our own Remembrance Day. Where They Were l'olllniliig the defeat of the Gov- ei-iinlciil oil a procedural motion in the Home of" (‘onimons last, Wei-“k. the Toriuilo Globe and Mail piihli h- ed a list oi’ the 89 Members of Pui'lie- nicilt ot' iill parties who had failed in role. It was published under the ritle "Where Were They?" an d it: brought some self-righteous replies from a number of the abscntees. The explanations of where the misxiniz )iPs were when the, vote. was taken in the House make inter- eslilll: l'elitlinlz. Some were at the L'nilcll Nutin others were off to )inl on Parliamentary inc. a ('eu' were sick. a number were at- tending to urgent private or CD“- stitiiency affnii ,and man ' were in Ottawa, illcllllliiiiz some paired ' 'tli members absent from the other side of the House. Thus it. mar ht- argued that mat\\' of the engagements that kept the missing MP3 ollt ot' the, House were important. and sum even laudable. This the Globe and Mail concede in commenting on the letters. “But the running of the rollntr through Par liament." it adds. “is also all inmin . ant and laudable artirilv. which i should take precedence. it is the t duty of the party Whips to soc in it t that, there lire always eiioulrh hli's i l in attendance to insure the proper wnrkimr of the Commons." . Whatever the evcrbrw liou' tiller. all. there >- need for reform. Win. it Members l'ocl thzit thev bm-e such good alillis for living absent. shouldn't they agree to a llriilv roll- call that imuld separate. the sheep from the Emits? The public erporis . Parliament to do its own holisi‘t'lmill- lag in a matter of this kind. and its failure to do so is a standing indict- ment of its irresponsibility null negligence. British Labor Gain Thursday's hi'elcctiou l'csiilt in r r l Kinross insures that Sir Alcc Drum. l labnnme will enterthe P. ‘ sh House of Commons as Prime Minister. Rut ‘ his entrance will be something loss l than triumphant as a mull of the, l Conservative defeat. in Lliton. a . small indu' l'lal i'idilliz north of lum— l don whose past voting hlis lell n . or national trends. it wont Illillor ill ‘ 1945, but the Tori had held ii. i with increasing majorities. ever i since. What is most significant about Thursrl '5 Labor victory is Illiil l Luton is a bustling town where everybody is rcportorlh' hotter off than average. and author is out of work. it Is a car town—a. lmom town. whose pay rates are 20 per cent higher than the national aver- age. Doesn’t prosperitr count in terms of votes anr more? That's what the Conservatives must he asking them- selves. and the. nnswer Is not a promi rig one in its implications for the forthcoming general election. EDITORIAL NOTES On October 1 (‘anndn reached the 19.021.000 population mark—ll gain of 93.000 in three months. There should be close to 20,000.000 ly the end of the yrar. Remarkable progress mnsiderinz that in 1940 we were under 12.000.000. Mr. Mncleod. former co—chnirmiill of the British Conservative Party and my leader a! the House of Commons, hu been named editor of his Spectator, where—comment; In exchanth can speak his mind {mly on Sir Alex Douglas-Hamel: Government. l 5F Ania TRADE WET) LIKE lT NoT QUiTE So coMPAcT lF You KNaW rum I MfiAN ) 32% BIGGER COMPACTS THIS YEAR BRITISH COMMENTARY The Commonwealth Scholarship Plcm Unlled Kingdom luiurmuurm sen-le- 'l‘lii- (‘iliunillii'lcalth Slholar- . strip a n rt rcllnruiup Plan 1! l mabiii: p s in reaching its ‘ (al:l‘l nl Scholarships and . l‘cllnnslilps hold at n v une‘ limo umr in ilic rrrmus Commonri \li'Illlll munlrirs. u has been alllliltllli'l‘ri )7} me Common- vu-nlui Edul iinn Liaison Comrl ruuur This “as iire number en- l rhizrd at the ilirr'ption oi thl 1 PM at ilk- lirrl Commonwealth l El‘lltt..llfln Cnnlrrence at Oxiurd l in "'3‘! \ltllillt the achicvcmcnt ni in. : blurb run only be ronrllod in a building up at armrmi intakes, is no\\' m sizbl. l llll‘ lllild .\mll|:ll Report on till ‘ Plan Iflti" till “limb is draull up bv the \ sociallnn or Common- wi- llll L'lii\crsitios [or publica- tion by tile Cummonucallh Edu- l ration Liaison Committee. points . run that u may take longer than ; \las orlainnlly llflhed iv e evident from the Report. tll.ll mme M m rnururirs wirirb . l \l‘ illsllllllt‘ll large numbers of mimic Ilbi' brunln. Canada and \uuruirn. arc all non nrnr In lillnr: innir uunla nl award: lilrilnlu anuolinl'ed In Seplenb bcriirul ltllad 9er ~ one so» but |i.t\c tiad riilirrully in reach. . um inmr llatioilal targets mm: in \lillulrauals too late ior re- placvmcut \ more serious problem. how- I ever. is llllit some countries » tune {niiiid duticuiiy in nttrali- l m: mum rut-s or ineir bum-as. . burnt-ulna, [mm the more de- vclopoll Commonwealth cmiub ribs. and in consequence they hair only been able in grant . snnli proportion oi the number . nl i‘nmmonilcalth Scholarships a = a n mnioiiul‘alth l Scholars linldinn awards slunrlr this yrnr M llflil. a. ('nlintcd in . list irrms ol the respocli a martini: iirallclnic l \l'nrs ii upturn and srnuirem l llvmiiphorn counli'icsi Last year llu rnmprrablo lust lerm Ilplll‘l- \ias approximately silo Whit-h ~lln\l'( lhal Ell illl‘l’cns! of about no has occurred durlnl illF \‘r. Till‘ R‘lli Scholars cnme lrom 45 dll’rront Cnmmnmveaitk coun- tries. ctr largest number betnl lmm liillia tint and from Cami- da and Paklslan loll eachl 0m * p0 ~tr 7iwrrenoiuluiz l _ fl ( l Our Yesterdays i (From itu- Guardtan FIIMI 'rw l l \‘Tr-FIVE YEARS AGO \‘l-mbe 9 93‘ w Chcslcr s. McLure Chur- lullptown and .l o b n H Myers. r Hampton. veteran Conservative rampailners who merited Queens Cuuniy III the House at Commons unilcr tile Bennett re- gime unrl rurrrcd the party co]- in tile i. 5 content. were. acnin nominated as can dam In the next. («IL-rel election at - large and enthusiastic conven- tion a! the Nation]! Collul'vl» . lncs Association of Queens Cou- lilv. hcld ycsleniay liternmn in llu- Slranti Theatre. curries Mlhrullb. lent-l Rem- Itxh pmlessttnial at the Delve- dcrc Gull Club hen. will hlgtn his annual migmtion south til I end or Nnvembcr He will "Dru" at Kinlstree. South Carol OUR VENTHI‘DAV! tFrMn the “um I: I'll.” Nmemhn l memorial bisque In New «1 the inie St." V ssi Lawnnce A. Mcinnll ot the City Polk! Fm- lil to k unveiled ill the Millie l lllte'l Cmrt mm on the in] d Rmmbrann eon . R. rub- and St. lilo-m. m. lineal“: born in» bi Nova Scntll II iii. M. rh'u Church, lemming on Nov. 4. i . neuiv v appointed Qucbcc IlllllL award: in Britain and about 25 . per cent lzznv in t'ililadli the next largest auarltlll: rmuurics being Australia r . indili and New Zealand tlfl‘ Awards were also held in Pakhi "I Ceylon l2l. Malava rsl Myer-a ill. Runoesia and \ aloud 44:. East Africa l!‘ ml ii an: Kohl llr About 75 per cent lbl’il nl til! Scholars were slurivinc tor lurk- er degrees and only lull liver 5 WI rent l57l [or (irsl (li‘fll‘i‘cs A broad spreau nl ~lilljcrt has been covered. rurlurirn.. arts and humanity about 2: pct- ccnl. social studies ahoill r. pr-r renl. pure science about 27 per ccnlr technoingy rbuui l5 prr rent and medicine about it pcr mu. ill addlliml to thv R20 Scholars. e r c 7 Commomlealth Visiting Fellow 25 PER CENT TNCREASE l The Report makes it ele a r that. are Finn ir lasulu nothing l 0! Its prosllfle uud pupillarliy. As compared with the previous yerr tile number or applications {or suards has lnrreased by a: per cent and both Britain a n a Canada report the cuuunumz nluu academic st'lndimz whichl the Plan en' yr in their coun- ‘on tile insullicicnl tries. C n n c e in has. however. h:‘l‘ll Npi‘l‘sscd hr a number at small i'ommuuurultii numbch awards which have been in a de available at the it rst degree level. The various prnpnsuls adopted at the second Commun- wraltli Education Conference at New Delhi in illfiz aimed at imv _ proving the zcncral operation ut the Plan have been ol g re at value. and the introduction at u common applicallnn term and the esiablislimcnt of two com- mon rinsing dates in: lbe re- ceipt ur applications tn the var- iniis Commonwealth c o u ntrles are evidence oi the high degree a! Commonwealth (‘0 » uperniiun which i: an csscnlial {actor In the moves: at lire scheme. The mini ls divided into . virillen section. comprising u general chapter on the prom-es: oi the Plan in the past. year, and lfldiVlduLl contributions on the operation of the Plan In the vur. ions countries. and a series el appendices giving a list at Com- monwenllh Scholarship agencies, statement Commonwealth Scholarship Ind Fellowship emty luments. registers at Scholars and Fellows ml statistical lab- es National Labor Code Clnndinn Transport A national labor code 5 n m e iiurm lilal has been advocalcd by tile Canadian arulkcrbuori nl Railway Transport and General workers {or many years_ may come into exisreure in this la ll session oi Parliamcnt while the tcr oi lalmr, Carrier rnrlur nn-r mmnml that luribcr rbanur: m lire mum legislation will also be introduced this year. On the ledel‘al levcl, Labor Minister Allan McEaclu-n has‘ his department working on snub leg at social. economic and pulli- lcal repercussions likely In re still lrnm . proposed set nl labor standards lor minimum wages. will-kiln: hours. vacations and riululury holidays. i run Liberqu — umbux theirl ma ny campaign promises _i pledged to bring in labor legisln-l tlnn lnr a minimum wage all $1.25 an hour. a maximum work- ing \vcek or M) hours. two weeks, vucalum with pay altcr one year‘ on n lab, p i u - seven slalulnryi holidays with puy. r in the United Slate: iabll mount a law went Into elleci bar a 5125 an iurur minimum wago with r hope that a 40-hour work week will man he xtandard pale tern in Quebec an exhaustive study has been made nl the Coilcclive Ital-rcnicni Act I n (i m a u y chi-inner were prnbnsed. vlurn were cenerully acceptable In organized irbnr, They have been reterred lai- lurtber Iludy Trade unions Approved oi the inclusion Di vnluuiury check~ott In the Dmlmled new labor code. The new legislation will a 1 lo Include voluntli‘y Irhltr - lion while doing away with cnnclla- Mull boards wnore Yepnrtn a re ubl mandatory. Under arbitra- tlnn the Ilndings nl - b o u r would have the lorce of law. nlnn l e a d e r s are concerned with tile merrily «i experienced nrbltruian. The most advanced iubnr leg- inbtlnn In Canada and Probably on till. continent In In Submit:- was, introduced by lite ccr. "LEST WE CHANDLER il’lyvmull’lue Mcytllelvdbmnn havebnntnvaln. Remembrance Day, Nov. ‘IT, 1903 FORGET ” \. .L BROS. LTD. (ill-riotle l-nunlrms ‘ I dog {or life? r REP]. Heart Attacks Are Sudden By Dr. Mm ll. VuDeilen . w writuz“Cnuld a permit wkb never had heart trouble eel r . item attack?" Yen. and urine phyllcllnl have bad I palienl dic this way shortly lltu telllnl “m "“ W" W” "0""3" “'5 worry zbnut the survival at the tines not occur nllen but does “mm: am No“. W! E u “PM "9" "WE" “'9 he!" I told um. ine Arabian Oryx ix mm“ 80“" “d "'9 919m“! .iimvu to six — Ottawa citireu, diagram mews no abnormaliitu. , Wily? The usual heart ultaekr 50".. mm m . I... mm In in reality not a disease at line ‘ 1,0,1...” “m. in. talks who 1,“. heart xlseil but at the blond ‘agm, my can .1“ them _ vessels which deliver nourish- cmmm New, ment and oxygen in the cells a! the auriciu andven rlclel eiackuge oi the How rob: a mittee ls going oil to Europe. Imlll part at the muscle at it. t Ill bills paid. away from Its nourishment. The tissue cells die ‘ committee-room llbors and out and are "banned with war “5- over are brlgllt blue sea to limi Inc. at more ubuui dc ence tun The basic euure ir .rlerlosrle- the cbiels at stall could tell it. mi: oi the coronary menu. The eommitleemen have con- lilluny ynrr null rometimu dec- vlnced themreivu that the trip Ides elapse between the time is neceasnry. it may be. it the the vessel begins to harden .nrl committee on return does allow the kctual occlusion. There is no the [HP was useful no one will way to predict how rm A ii the be more Pleased "In the tax- busngeway lr getting until um payer. But it It doesn't — — 0b flow n! blood becomel Inlde- lawn .louruui uuute to meet the needl oi lh e i heart during exercise or excite. NOTES BY Wnnld r be wtlllil reduce“ would do well to observe that it i i takes more than a pee all n knile tn canslilule n wellhalanw , ed die — Strltlord Debi-on- : Herald. ’ ils been enough to have to i The Common! [lettuce Com- l Chest Dalll lungma pet-tonsil dereinp: at ihll Lime. which in; uiiev w i t h nitmglycerine. rest. or tranquility. but. all too alien. the hardening procesl IS painless unit the first clew is I heart ulluck. special tests can be done to viruuiize lb 2 arteries and men- lure lite circulation in r o u u h these passageways. but they Ira not practicable hi this time. on the «titer hand, revel-a1 nbnor- malilies increase the likelihood of coronary tnmmbnsls. 1‘ ll 1 r e high risk {actors include obesity, inligue. anxiety. hypertcnsmli, and u highmhnlesterol level. But. the physician tr unable to pre. dict. that a heart attack will occur next week Just because at high blood pressure and i cholesterol levels. These condit- ion: nnly enhance the chances at deveinping coronary thrombosis. One of my rollenpucs conclu- . dos bu rnnsuitatian by rating. "1 can't [ind anything ii'ron g with your hurt. Please don ‘t embarrass me by nuving . til-[Tn attack when you leuve my r C! n a RABIES BOOSTER Mrs, G writcs- Will nne in~ oculation against rabies proleci‘ LIMI LAUNDERERS and Y o Booster shots usually are t given annually. our! THE WAY A llllle (III wrotelo grandmother alter rerewmg‘": birthday Present “l alwavs wanted - Dlnculhlon. but not much." — Montreal 5m 3m m the inert Lulu. in. women uni they .tve r m... u. uneasy Keeling that [he next new lesbian will be .purr s m. lawr .lrruruui, “You ll‘lould me: my Inn. band, He makes a living wuk his pen.’ “on. so he's a writer “No. be raises pigs." — Gall Re. porter. “ hum-n Iiulelon hll no wllhhnnz". Iny! In Illalomisl He'r mistaken. Mlny a person has a wllhbone where he should have I backbone. — Chatharr News. I! the Incan In pnllai "tel will reduce the flood oi junk mail that plus: III: mail boxes many householders will be Ible to see A silver lining.— Edmon. ton Journal May They Rest In Peace and Dignity D DRY CLEANERS ...in Flanders Fields Mthoglu-lmmunoryolflum who“ sacrifice we cellulit- hdgololhe mate-I being. . .Indrunomhvhn Provincial Command Royal Canadian legion