neck sueeuss or SALKMVACCIN-E An unidentified technician Ltd., at’ Speke, Liverpool, Eng- thorities. checks lot of Canadian Salk vac- land, Jan. 8. The vaccine, which enough vaccine to give 350,000 cine in storage in refrigerated reached Manchester by air, will children two injections each. room at Evans Medical Supplies, be distributed to local health au- _ The supply contains (AP Wlrephoto) Royal FamilyWill Meet n Canadians More Often By CAROLYN WILLETT Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA .(CP) — Canada, in :he next two years at least, can prepare its red» carpets for more royal visits. There is every indication that bueen Elizabeth and members of e royal family intend to mingle - |ore with subjects on this side; i the Atlantic. ' The autumn visit to North Am- arica by the Queen and Prince Philip lasted little more, than nine days, four of which were spent in Ottawa and the re- But the Queen making her first live‘-telecast during her Oct. 12-16 stay at Government House here, strongly suggested thatshe and Philip soon will be back to stay longer. . WIDER VISIT The royal couple first visited and toured Canada" in 1951, as ‘Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh. Prince Philip re- turned in 1954 to open the British Empire Games ~ at Vancouver, and visit Canada’s nonthland. In her broadcast, the Queen said she hopes to be present in mainder in the United States. 1959 when the St. Lawrence Sea- way‘ is opened, ‘and to travel more widely in Canada at that time. ’ more visits in the future,” was her wish to bring her children to Canada someday, too. » Princess Margaret, the Queen’: sister, is to attend centennial cel- ebrations next July. She is expetced to, ar- rive by‘ air at Vancouver and spend two weeks in B.C., after- wards travelling east, with brief stops, to visit other parts of Can- Coupled with her hope to “pay. in British Columbia‘ Page 12, The Guardian Tues., Jan, 14, 1958 large cities. Early in the new year the Queen Mother is to stop briefly at Montreal and Vancouver on her way to Australia and New Zealand. . MADE HISTORY The Queen's October visit marked the second time a British Sovereign has come to Canada. Her father, King George VI, and the Queen Mother toured Canada in 1939. In Ottawa, the Queen's major function was to open the first ses- sion of the 23rd Parliament; the first time in Canadian history that a sovereign has presided at the ceremony. . Throughout the royal visit, th predominant theme was that Eliz- abeth II reigned in Canada and visited the U.S. as Queen of Can- ada. In Washington, she was at- tended by Prime Minister Diefen- baker. The beautiful Queen and her handsome husband provided one of the year’s biggest news’ stor- ies. Covered at every public ap- pea-rance by batteries of report- ers and cameramen-—in Ottawa the press radio and television corps was more than 1,000 strong --the royal couple attended press receptions in both Ottawa and Washington, apart from ceremon- ial visits. . MORE INFORMAL , The deviation from the more rigid relations with the press at home sparked a British press cla- mor for some of the same treat- ment. In Ottawa, the major chips off Victorian ideas surrounding roy- alty fell in -the field of fashions. Official announcements state d that contrary to outdated ideas, women could Wear black cos- tumes in the presence of royalty. But the royal couple shook thousands of hands and went through a gruelling round of offi- cial functions during their brief visit. Whether future visits will in- clude_more time for informality and relaxation remains to be seen. But Canadians now sing Will Ye No Come Back Again? I l 4 with assurance of an affirmative answer. ASKS DULLES TO GO KANSAS CITY, Mo. (CP)—The Kansas City Star says state See- retary John Foster Dulles should "go.” In an editorial, the Star says "In the present critical junc- ture of world affairs, it is imper- ative that Mr. Dulles be replaced by a manbetter able to com- mand the confidence of'our Al- lies——and_ the American people.” GUEST TV SPOT n TORONTO (CP) — Toronto comedians Johnny Wayne and Frank Shuster are to appear -on the Rosemary Clooney show over NBC, Jan. 30 in a skit giving their version of a World Series base- ball game between England and the United States. SMALL FISH Sprats are small members of ada including Ottawa, and per- haps Toronto, Montreal and other the herring sphies, found in Brit- ish aud Norwegian waters. I THE KITCHEN L we CLEAN or MUMMY cones DOWN, nnuovz" Father knows (heleamed from watching Mother) BEFORE S that the quickest thing to swish grease and stains from the range, refrigerator and sink is lavex. ?And Mom knows at least twenty other ways white, bright, sweet, J JA I/EX :5-/N-I Aer/0/V’ lavex makes housework easier, helps keep things clean and sanitary. avex REGISTERED TRADE MARK $AN|T|ZE5. AS IT CLEANS 1!!!! “HI lunn [mm ll BE-Achflti mun sf . “OFCOURSE, SNOOKS. A Sl_ilNlNG-FAST WIPE up with JAVI-:x,’iusT me SAME WE!’ um i "n1sis.t on . .5: ‘fonrycw er __e_,ars;.;.Cg;.;:¢;qclvg"f’< n AS SHEDOES" I-ESN l mu vomE5 \ lm Says Big lncre In N. S. Teach HALIFAX (CP) - Glen Mor-i ison, president of the Nova Scotia Teachers Union, said Friday sal- aries of teachers with university: training must be raised by $1,» 000-$1.500. Miss Morison said a recent of- fer by Premier Stanfield to help the municipalities increase teach- ers‘ salaries, if more money can be found by the province, fo- cuses attention on the need for, towns and municipalities to bet- ter teacher’s financial positions. Salaries for teachers with uni- versity degrees must be raised by at least $l,000~$1.500 above pres- ent figures before the remunera- tion for teaching can compare with that offered in other fields Cancer Seems By STANLEY MEISLER NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- John, a man in his 70s, noticed a lump on top of his foot one day. The growth proved to be cancer. Doctors trie d the standard treatment. On th e operating table, they sliced away -the growth and some of the surround- ing tissue. Then, from his upper thigh, they cut out the lymph gland for lympl1, a body liquid carrying some elements of blood, often spreads cancefcells. John and the doctors hoped the surgery had come in time, that all the malignant cells had been removed. Hope did not last long. TUMORS SPREAD Black t u m o r s spread” over J ohn’s leg. There were more than 2_(_l(_). Cancer had intensified. Now_ facing the patient was an operation, promising little chance of success and much horror. It IS called hind-quarter surgery, an operation that removes an entire leg . and buttock. John fought against this. And doctors thought perhaps such,/a major operation would be too dangerous for so old a man. Instead they chose an operation tried only on experimental dogs.» The name of the technique: per- fusion. l \ / Perfusion Treatment For. FA use Neecleicl ers’ Salaries of service requiring comparable training. “All other categories . also need to be raised in proportion.” PLANNED HELP I Premier Stanfield said in mid-' December that the government would like to help the municipal- ities pay salaries higher than a scale drawn up in 1956 on the basis of a royal commission re- port. Miss Morison said in a pre- pared statement the foundation scale pays a teacher with Grade 12 education and one year of 1 teacher’s college training at start- ing salary of $150 a month. Uni- versity graduates with a year in She said the government's pro- education receive $225. Promising Last June John became the first human to have cancer treated by perfusion. DRYING ACTION Several weeks later, John no- ticed some of his black tumors ‘had started to dry. Soon they crumpled and fell off. Today only six of the 200 tu- mors remain. ‘ Has he been cured of cancer? Doctors at Tulane University schools of medicine, where the the treatment was performed, are not sure. But they know there has been a startling improve- ment, enough to prompt them to continue further research into the technique. 4, . -Perfusion éombines two medi- cal weapons that usually are un- related—drugs and the heart-lung machine. ' For some time, the drugs nitro- gen mustard and phenylalanine mustard have fought cancer. But their success has been limited. TWO PROBLEMS The problems were two. Doc- tors would inject the drugs into the arteries sending the chemi- cals all «through the body. If the dose was too little, the drugs would have almost no effect on the particular part of the body was too large, the drugs would reach into bones and destroy the marrow, the s u b s t a n c e that makes blood. ‘ But Tulane researchers feel the heart-lung machine may solve all that. Normally the device is used for heart operations. Surgeons con- nect it to the veins and arteries attached to the heart. (In this way, the machine takes over the pumping job of the heart so the heart can be clear of blood as the surgeon operates. In perfusion, the machine is connected to the veins and arter- ies attached to the diseased part of the body. In John’s case, that meant the leg. Doctors tied a tourniquet or tight bandage high on his thigh, stopping blood from entering or leaving the leg. The heart-lung machine then took over the job of pumping out blood from the leg veins, replenishing it with oxygen and pumping it back into the leg arteries. In other words, John now had two circulatory systems. One, with the heart pumping blood, took care of most of his body. The other, with the machine pumping blood, took care only of his leg. Just before the machine pumped blood back into John’s leg, doctors added the drugs. The key -problems may have been solved. First, the drugs con- centrated only on the diseased‘, limb without being wasted on other parts of the body. Second, doctors would not have to worry much about the dose being too large for bone marrow. If the marrow in John’s leg were de- stroyed, there still would be enough in the rest of his body to make all_the blood he needed. EXPERIMENTS NECESSARY Much more experimentation is necessary, of course, before per- fusion can take a place as a major weapon against cancer. At Tulane, doctors are operating on dogs and several more humans to find out on what cancers the technique works best. Working on the project with Dr. Oscar Creech Jr., chairman of the department of surgery, are Dr. Robert F. 'Ryan, Dr. Edward Krementz, Dr. James N. Win- blad, W i 1 l i a m Chamblee and Howard Creek. Dr. Creech guesses that perfu- sion’s main use would be auxil- iary to surgery: The operation that was diseased. If the dose « These handsome 1958 FARGO POWER- MASTERS introduce brand-new standards of cost-cutting performance ... safer, easier opera- tion . . . big-load strength . . . and style that does , a public relations job for you, too! A ' Chrysler Corporatlon of Canada, Llmlted, Kansas Plan Brings General By ED L. CAMPBELL l ALTAMONT. Kan. (AP) — IS there a doctor in the house? There is in this little southeast Kansas farming community Wlth a population of 678. He is Victor L. Jackson. 37- He came here because the town, doctorless for many V933”: set out to get one and keep h_1m. And because Altamont was Jllfst what he wanted for himself, his wife and three children. _ The same thing is happemng across the country wherfr. the American Medical Association re- ports, the demand for family doc- tors exceeds the supply by W70 to one. ' _ Altamont’s last resident physlc-E ian died several years ago after» more than half a century of serv-I -ice. . Dr. Franklin Murphy, then dean. of the medical school and now chancellor, of the University of Kansas, discovered that while the population of Kansas had In--. creased by 25 per cent in_ 40 years, the number of medical practitioners had decreased‘by 30 per cent. The state was losing 80 doctors 3, year by death. or _re- tirement. The 5 t a t e medical school turned out only 58 grad- uates that year. Dr. Murphy estimated the.state would have to produce 100 or more doctors each year and work out some scheme which would at-. tract doctors to rural areas. ; He came up with the three-way § Kansas Plan: communities need-' ing doctors would raise funds_to provide office space, examining rooms and laboratories for their doctor; the doctor would agree to rent or buy o'n easy terms fac- ilities so provided; the state would set up post-graduate train-. ing facilities to keep rural‘physic- ians in touch with advances in diagnosis and treatment. After eight years of the Kansas Plan, these are the results: The n u m lg e r of physicians turned out by the medical school has been increased by nearly 100 per cent—107 in this year’s grad- uated class, compared with 58 in 1948. fusion" would destroy any malig- nant cells that had spread would remove a tumor and per- This is newness that makes sense all the way. For example, Fargo’s new high-performance V-8 engines. They“’re bigger, more powerful. Yet they’re designed with exclusive Power-Dome oombustion—to reach the most economical level of truck operation ever. You’ll find Fargo Sixes thrifty and power-packed, too. To match these work-horse engines, there are rugged _new chassis components to permit bigger recommended loads, and bigger brakes for safer, quicker stops. There’s new prestige-building style, too, in the beasts’- varying load weights. You ride whether truck is loaded or empty. New Sure-Grip Dlfferen-flallassm-es prevents wheelspin on ice or snow. through the area. * * * New Easy-Shift Manual Transmission , button LoadFlite automatic * light-duty Fargo models. New on Sweptsida 100,mdstandardD1»00models —rear springs that automatically adjust tension to get a smooth. passenger-car ‘Y’o~*a get more of the future with RGO Pnnnznin 4,250 LBS. G.\/.W. TO 65,000 LBS. 6.Q.V\i.-BUILT TOUGHER FOR TOUGHEST‘ .4033 froom clinic building and l Wichita hospital. Practitioners To Country The rate of attrition has ped from 80 a year to around 45 to 50. No county is without services of a resident physician. only one town with a population of 1000 or more is without a doctor. , TOWN BUILDS CLINIC Altamont was one\town that profited from the plan. First 1' formed a Citizens’ Improvemem ,Association, in which near the people bought $10 shares. association raised funds by cake sales and other entenah ments. It built a $10,000 sew hunting for a doctor. Dr. Jackson was at that resident physician in g “A member of the Ammo‘ committee came to the and asked if we knew of a *: who would like to come to town,” he recalls. “I told did and so here I am.” him}, “We wanted to bring up ‘ children in a small toWn," he..x__ plains. “We had lived in New 0,, leans and Wichita and we did,“ like it." ' So in July, 1955, he_ moved into, the clinic building. He had mg" surgical .instruments, an 3:1-hay‘ machine, a microscope and other laboratory apparatus. Peg." ple came from miles around take a look at the new doctor. “I made $600 the first month -9' he says proudly, adding that netted $9,000 from his praoticew“ 1956. ‘ - Professionally, the physicifi. . says _he has been surprise.-1,5,‘ two things: the wide range and M.‘ V _ frequently unusual nature of an. , ments he is called upon to treatu and the great number of elder]; people among his 2,500 pafiem, Both have presented media; ‘ challenges. To keep up with new discover. 7 ies and trends in medicine, 1);, Jackson has used two project. that are essential parts of an Kansas Plan. One year he gt. tended refresher courses con. ducted in re 'onal centres of mg state by a o cuit-riding team of * professors. Now he drives once a month to the medical centre at Kansas City, Kan., for a day of ~_ post-graduate study. \. Make sure you ‘get all this , newness in your newtruck! ftd Swepteide 100 model and throughout the line—- inside and outside. A new Fargo safety-centre steering . ' .:: wheel.AnewFargodue2lheadlampsyst:emthatcasts hghtup to 75 feet farther for safer night-time hauls. See flaesenew *58 Fargo Power-Masters soon! or-push-i drive is available on better traction, F. n. Ma,o.INE LIMITED Malpeque Road, Charlottetown Watch Climax--Shower of Stars every Thursday night on W- check your local programme “(ling pm pm, and Channfll MUl!..EN Morons Mount Stewart