_. & “The strongest memory is weaker than PAGE T SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1902. <8 . ” ‘every week day morning (axcept Sum y ) at 165 Prince Street, Ay Thomson Newspapers Ltd. offices “et Summerside, Montague, Alber Souris. | nationally by Thomson Newspevers Services Toronto, 425 ‘University Ave. Montreal, 640 Cathcart Street “Ur Western office, 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037). <. , Member Canadien Daily Newspeper Publishers Astociston and The Canadian Press. The Canadien ly entitled to the use for repub« fi news dispatches in this caper to The Associeted Press or Rew to the local news published here g "PO" $11.00 « year by carrier, . * + $14.00 » yeor off Island and U.K" $20.00 per “yeer in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com ~ Monwealth. oe “" Net over 7c per single copy. i Member. Audit Bureau of Circulation. a the weakest link” Nasser At It Again American commentators are now fecalling that in-1957, when the Suez Crisis was settled, President Nasser of the United Arab Republic signed a and filed it with the United a Nations, giving it the. force of a * _ treaty. It reaffirmed the 1888 Con-. Stantinople convention which guar- anteed all shipping the free use of canal in war or peace, Nasser has since that the clearance did ~~“pot cover Israel because the two + es | “war, The point has not been forced | af ri B. E ‘ : i . pe te f ; a, a eee .» “countries were still technically at the U.N.. However, when India attacked Portuguese enclavés in Decem- at - the : Nasser has promised President - Sukarno of Indonesia that no Dutch shipping carrying arms or reinforce- - ments for the protection of West New will be allowed to use the DOUBLE SHUFFLE—Thus twice | in two months Nasser has abrogated that the Western of this fact and act- Just what the Western world can” do about it we don’t know. But we the treaty about was signed in Cairo on the same President ° tial parts of thé British base in the ~ “@anal were to be- maintained. Exp of pleasure at the . Conclusion of this agreement ¢a ime from U.S. President Eisenhower ahd _ Prime Minister Nehru of India, @mong others. Neither of these. fentlemen, however, showed very much concern when Nasser abro- gated the treaty, seized the canal and began preparing for an attack on Israel. This led to the Suez crisis of 1956, to the British and French ’ {Intervention and the denunciation of this intervention by Mr. Mr. Nehru, Mr. serial ae other champions of anti-colonialism at that ~time. « : came the white-haired boy of United Nations, his opponents big bullies to be rebuked. He 2 . ¢ Gua relia ~h a di him and didn't inconvenience other | powers tha} also had their eye .on | their own interests in the Middle | East. Now he’s at his old tricks again, and it is becoming evident, to the most obtuse, that he’s a dan- schemer and that something to be done about him. the:tlme to have cut him to size was when he began sprouting horns, not now when he’ has grown a tall as well. It will take some doing, now, to turn him from’ his irresponsible ways, after all the encouragement he got when he set out on the course he is following. . Mr. Pearson hit the headlines the other day by figuring up what “following John” had cost Cana- dian taxpayers during the past four and a half years of, Conservative extravagance at Ottawa. He could ‘have said; next day, with the illus- trious’ Dr. Johnson: “I never think. ‘| Vhave hit hard, unless it rebounds”; for the rebound in thjs case was ter- rific. Conservatives have been pro- testing the implications of his state- ment ever since, and the Liberals are already Counting the ‘votes ac- cruing from this vbull’s-eye scored _' by their party leader. the -taxpayers are still being dunned for, that Mr. Pearson seems to have included: in the bill for “following John” and which really, to be fair; should go to thé ‘accpunt of his predecessor Uncle Louie. As the Canadian Press " bills—is still raining down as a re- sult of the political and military ex- plosion three years ago when the government. cancelled the Arrow jet interceptor.” ~ S The designers, engineers, tech- nicians and riveters have long since departed but the bookkeepers and | auditors are still occupied*in closing out the costliest single weapon pro- gram in Canadian history. Inform- ants say the 1962-63 defense bud- get will include a couple of hundred thousand dollars which should com- pletey payment of all these old Lib- ‘eral-_bils—_—_———- — that the government~has paid out including expenditures _ which . be- gan in the 1953-54 fiscal year with over a million dollars for research. By 1956-57 they were up to $64,- 639,891; which led the late Mr. Howe, then defense production minister, to declare that the cost of the program gave him the shudders, But, as: the CP story says, Mr, Howe hadn't seen anything. He was { out of office when spending on. the program shot up to $100,700,200 in the 1957-58 fiscal year and to $129,197,182 in the year following. In the 1959-60 year, which began-one: month after the Diefenbaker gov- ernment decided to junk this costly ‘Liberal project, expenditures still ‘amounted to $29,061,391—mainly for cancellation fees to the contractors, John And Uncle Louie | | ‘But there was one little item of expense that bits, ‘. The latest accgunting shows -—wactans” who think it a crime that people should be hungry in | Hong Kong or Bombay while. HOW ~The New Im Immigration Minister Mrs. , Fairclough describes the most important effects of the new im- | migration regulations in this , paragraph: | “This means that any suitab'y | qualified person, from any’ part | of the world, can be considered | for immigration to Canada, en-— tirely on his own merit, without regard to his race, color, nation- | al origin or the country from which he comes."" ——- _ ‘Unquestionably there is pro- gress in this revised policy. The would-be immigrant will be jud- | ged on what he can do for Can- | ada. That is a proper and use- t The Government need not think it will escape criticism tor failing to open the door wider. There are kind and sincere Ca- there are empty acres in Can- who wants to come, regardless of skills, health, adaptability or. means» ° WROTE SURVEY ‘not lack in kindness, think im- possible. Prof. D.C. — Corbett, who -wrote a thorough survey of immigration factors in 1957 in ‘Canada’s Immigration Policy’, concluded that admitting immi- or ev . ple here to relieve the pressure of population in the overpopui- ated areas’’. Another view ts that of Mr. J.W: Pickersgill, a-former Im- migration minister; who was quoted at Waterloo the other day as saying that Canada does REVISED OTTAWA POLICY inh ih ny é $ z 3 oe iF ic s g 8 physically or still is ill. Experience has taught us close relationship between layed convalescence and men- tal depression, which is fested by fatigue and lack energy or interest. Weakness created by the acute attack of & form. ; This phenomenon is wid ely known in industry and in the service. A small percentage of men and women take two to four times as jong: as the re- mainder to tonvalesce from 8 cold or an attack of influenza: wanes} } rf 2 BEE ; iH Pe 4 : 5 Z & z [ ji vi 7 } } F : as cleansing hattan said, ‘It is good to have nice, clean move a color television, even if you emulated else- haven't. much time for jooking Saskatoon Star-Phoe- - . — Moose Jaw Times- ey i i Leukaemia Research The Times, Londoa ; A leukaemia research unit, ; cells in tissue culture. the only one of its kind at a This is an expr iMental children’s hospital in Britain method which is proving of vai- has been officially opened at | ue in many fields of medical ce- the Hospital for Sick Children search. Its great advantage is Great Ormond Street, London. that it allows a study to be This development-in the fight; made of the effect of drugs on against leukaemia has been e leukaemia cells, and there- made possible by'a grant of provides a much more satis- | £3,000 from the Tees - side | factory method than using branch — the founder branch— of DO WE FIT IN THERE? ~ migration Regulations A group from Johns Hopkins recently obtained complete. psychological information on | 600 workers’ preceding’ flu | epidemic of 1957-8. The who | developed ‘influenza were asked | to report to the physician three-| to six weeks after the. beginning ‘| -of the illness. Of these, 14 said | they were completely _ re cov- : as ; si a residual weakness, fatigue,’ cough, headache, or loss of ap- | Fund. The Hospital for Sick Chil- dren has always been interested in the problem of Leukaemia, but the establishment of this new unit will allow the work to be developed in a manner which | has not hitherto proved pos- sible. . - The main line of research in charge of Dr. RM. Hardisty, the haematologist to the hospital, ada. They would let,everyone in | This, thoughtful people who do grants was not the most~effec- | tive contribution to the relief of | distress and added, “We could | not feed, house,-clothe, employ ~ transport enough peo- | Ottawa Journal not want West Indians to come here ‘‘to populate our slums". This is the defeatist attitude which . governed Liberal immi- gration policy. It assumed that people who are different from the majority of Canadians wouid inevitably be doomed to pov- erty. BASIS OF POLICY * The Conservative policy now being implemented assumes that everyone -should equal chance to enter Canada and, having -met the qualifica- tions for admission, has an equal chance to suc¢eed. Behind the unprecedested tar- iff - ‘bargaining proposed by President Kennedy is a grow- ing belief among some of _ his aides that eventually the entire Western alliance should be turned into one giant free trade | area, ‘The-far - reaching proposa!s Kennedy placed before Congress would reduce by ofe-half but not eliminate the hard-core of American protectionism. ~ For example, U.S. imports of clocks and watches bear a tar- ‘iff of 50 per cent: coal tar products, 30 per cent; toys and sporting .goods, 29 per cent; jewelry, 45 per cent; clay pro- duets, 33 per cent. STILL PROTECTED Cutting these rates by one- half over a five-year period wotld still leave an effective margin of protection for Ameri- can manufacturers. The -dramatie elimination of ve. (an. | — ‘ Journey Towards Free Trade By Harold Morrison : Press Staff Writer... , s “Citizenship ‘granted ‘automa- tically as if it meant ~ nothing | could not be highly regarded. It | should be worth some effort, as | in the development of skills and training. . Canada wants more than addi- tional citizens. It also wants Canadians, old and new, wito - pride in their citizenship and an- eagerness to maintain and bufld the nation. Such pride. is not a “monopoly of ‘native sons and. it ‘is shown from day tg day, by those who had- known oppress- ion or insecurity and found hav- | en and opportunity here. | of goods in which the U.S. and the Common Market dominates the.@amerid market. “For such | - small producers as Canada; Australia and others, this dom- | ination may be diffichlt to chal- lenge even if no tariffs exist. Moreover, Kennedy proposed to retain power to continue to impose a variety of restrictions on imports if their impact on domestic industries has been vastly. underestimated or if they interfere: with ‘‘national secur- ity.’ ‘This “national security” has been open to wide inerpre- | ation. Its application depends -on the White House mood and the political climiate at home. | A third problem for Canada is that the U.S., despite its growning National debt has a big federal treasury. Its ability to provide federal aid for workers and industries hurt by increased competition may be a lot grea- ter than among ‘smaller covfn- tries which may depend more | these employees were reviewed A te.. | will be the growth of leukaemia | these- drugs in“ patients. Parii- | major: problem is leukaemia re- ~ | search is to discover a drug that will kill the leukaemia ceils | without, having any adverse cf fect on normal cells: By growing not ‘only can a large range: jof /*¢hemicals be tested as poten- | tial anti « leukaemia drugs’ hut | it is also possible to study the lism of the cells and | thereby possibly provide a val- “Wable clue to the solution of ‘ this vitally important: problem The psychological tests : on| and all of the slow recoverers had shown a previous. tendency toward depression. They appar- |- ently were vulnerable and Fe | tdonesia’s claim to Dut.ch this way through no fault. of é is that it formed part of Tne their own. .- ; | Nétherlands’ East Indian em. (Dr. Van Dellen. will .answet.) pire from), which Indonesia, a | | questions on medical tepics if | eoliection of islands, became an stamped, self-addressed env | independent country. _ lope accompanies request.) The argument against Indone- | : ; sia's claim is that the 700,000 WORN PUT JOINTS | Papuan inhabitants of Dutch C. V. writes: A woman of 4 West Guinea havewe ties of with arthritis‘of the neck had | race, culture or language with | X-rays, and the doctor says Sh€ “Indonesia. For the most part, - sponded to acute infection iM gdministered West New Guinea | | Complex Situation Cape Breton Post leukaemia cells Pes | paring to seize West Guinea through military conquest: in- stead of leaving it for the Unit- ed Nations to arrange a plebis- cite to allow thhe Papuans_te decide on their future. for. them- selves. Holland seems anxious te clear out from -Wesst New Gui - but has a responéibiliiy « nea, there for the time: being, ard Australia seems to have per- suaded the Dutch to remain ia and other smaller competitors | tariffs would be on categories — ES was getting. oan government figured that the pro- jected 100 Arrows would ‘have cost $780,000,000 on top of what had al- ready been spent. Mr. Pearson, of course, was & member of the St. Laurent_govern- ment which got the tax] ‘into: this mess. We shan’t rub that in; but it does raise the question whether, by’ following Uncle ' Louie instead of John in the last two fed- éral general elections, we would have been any better off so far as waste- ful expenditures were concerned. EDITORIAL NOTES — - It takes more than ice, snow and bihzards to deter a keen golfer. Four Royal Australian Air Force in Antarctica for the 1961-62 sum- mer wanted to continue playing golf. The weather didn’t worry them, but how to find white’ golf balls on an. icy-white fairway data. An: Australian rubber firm solved the-problem. The firm’ made four dozen black golf balls and gave them to the airmen. Sg. At last there are signs of recov- ery of the diseased oyster beds in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia fol- lowing’ the transfer, in 1959, of 10,000 barrels of disease-resistant Prince Edward Island oysters to the afflict ed areas. Evidence of the recovery has been reported by the St. An-. drews, N.B. biological station, which also states that plans are being ex- plored to construct and a. hatchery this: year. This fol- ‘tests-in_1961 on workable hatchery Of cyster larvae and epat. = Operate an |: } for the mass} ~* bo PUBLIC has the joints of a woman of : Papuays—are—a—prim ¥.65. Does this. mean she won't | saris still in the stone-age stage | live much longer? ; REPLY No, because arthritis does not — -death. -The-ehanges-in-_the- joints of this woman, due 10 | wear and tear, are comparabie | ahle to the skin; some 40 year olds look 65 because of wrinkles | | and dryness. This does not mean an early demise. | INFECTED KIDNEYS A: B. writes: What are the | symptoms of tuberculosis of the 1 } kidneys? REPLY There. are no symptoms dur-. ing thesearly stages of, the di- sease but later, victims com- | plain of frequgiity and urgency of urination, wer abdominal pain, after emptying the blad- der, blood in the urine, and a constant dull ache over the in- volved kidney. FALLOUT AND SNOW |. Mrs.-S_writes: 1. What effect | will radiation fallout have on children playing in the snow? Should they be told not to eat | | | , 2. +. a. | to those in_a_person 25 years | older. The situation ig compar- | | the imitive—hopes that the issue can be sett led without war. 3 The irony of the situation is that if Indonesia captured West development. New Guinea is one of tne world’s largest islands. Austra--| New Guinea it would become,a -_ tia ; pay; colony of Indonesia, but tne . “ neg Pap —! that | “colonialism” about which the interests of the island's na Asians scream denunciations ai ti “in > . ves should be considered “in parently is all right-in their es the ultimate choice of their fu- jure.” 7s | timation when they are the ones who practice it. 7 Egypt And The Suez Marshal Amer, Vice-President and Defence Minister of the United Arab Republic (Egypt), | is currently visiting Indonesia. | the United Nations in 1959, by. According to the Indonesian go- | the Egyptian Foreign Minister, vernment, he has promtsed that The only exception made was Dutch military traffic that directed against Israel, whose might possibly be used against | existence Egypt does not recog- Indonesia will not be allowed | nize. through the Suez Canal. It would seem, then, that Pre- _ This would: follow the prece- | sident Nasser may intend, deli- dent. established a short time | berately, to violate his promis- ago, when Egypt refused th ‘aS-e#-This would be very popular. low Portuguese ships¥to pass It would make Mr. Nasser a through the Suez Canal since’ hero to many- Afro-Asian coun- they might have been used for tries. It would nevertheless be the defence of Goa against In- opportunistic and illegal. else that would violate the Suez Canal Convention of 1888. This This involved the violation of income. - ~ R ‘ MAKES IT EASIER - REPLY 1. at soe there is. mot | Selemn obligations made by ~ President. Nasser’s government, | to Dutch ships, it must be hoped the United Nations, and that coum Yet hedged by all these pow- ers to restrain and. restrict im- FORUM REPLY TO MR. PONKIN Sir,— A letter from corres pondent George R. Ponkin ap- peared in'your paper a few days ago, claiming that Tommy Dou- gias, leader of the New Democ- ratic party, was lying when he announced that the Canadian standaxd of living had dropped to third place, yielding second place to Sweden. Mr. Ponkin apparently got his information from Month", a journal of question- able merit with an obvious poll- tical axe to grind. Mr. Douglas was quoting a report by the Na- tional Institute for Social and Economic Research of Great Britain, an organization with an undisputed-reputation for objec- tive investigation. This re Up - (not 1957 as Mr, Ponkin reports) and compared real output per head among a large number of countries. It showed clearly that Sweden pulled ahead of Canada in 1959... ... . Mr. Ponkin also protests ‘that Canadian standards of living : “have greatly ” since that time, implying that even if he believed the figures for ihe z 2 : ‘| ports, Kennedy’s proposals hold count before the conclusions | great opportunity for expanding about per capita output } drawn. This is elementary, Mr. Ponkin. ; |" His aides suggest Your correspondent proceeds | proposals are accepted in Con- to attack a second report tO» gress, the rest of the journey | which Mr. Douglas referred, on | towards free trade _ would-be +5 countries, were | world trade among non-Commu- | “that if these | “Canada - | social security. This report, pre- | made easier. | pared by the ILO, shows that Once big: tariffs are turned ; Canada stands 17th on a list of | into little ones, getting Congres- ‘ | 32 countries studied, concernjng | sional authority to nae | the proportion of national: in-| them altogether might * eome spent on social security. | less of a challenge than trying Mr. Ponkin points out that the to get them ¢liminatgd .all- at report itself advises caution in once. YESTERDAYS the use of these figures for com- | ~=-% OUR | From the Guardian Files parison. While this is true, the TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO study also declares: “The ILO (Jan. 27, 1937) ; Committee of Social Security Experts, at its meeting ‘held | in ——A imique feature in the Sun- day Schools last Sunday and the Geneva, recognized the signifi- cance and usefulness of the in- preceding Sunday. with the pre- sentation ffomthe Women's ‘ternational comparisons carried Christian Temperance Union out by the Office and emphasiz- the, importance of _continu- of a New Testament to each Jun- ior, and_a Bible to = ing the inquiries on the cost of ‘gocial security.” I, agree with who have completed ' School Temperance Course’ the Committee. I think thetr compatisons are’useful and 1936. : | Rev. H. L, Denton wes gee don't know what L speaker at the weekly ves. To me it significant too. © that the United | Mr. Ponkin also points out that the United States, with the means spends a smaller propor- | its income on social sec- per capita income, tha most nations. But the of 2 Tc he S a HEE , I i 25th on the social secur- case of Canada, this is no tribute to the ade Mr. David ‘the U.S; system: of so- | security, and. certainly vgery tog challenge the : Abe report. (Jan, 27, 1952) . Ponkin is going to lec- y Douglas on the I that he get his. For a start he art if = s =? [ 5 8 #3 H q | } - G hg “Ga nada source of informa- 8 Firs j ; + ef prove © be |z al my | enough fallout to take extra pre- cautions. _ 2. Eating spow, especially if it is dirty,” should be dis- couraged. - HORMONES AND THE : — CHANGE. E. A. writes: Do hormones prolong the symptoms of the change of life? REPLY : There is this tendency when4 small doses are used over creates * fuction to which the woman ‘be- | i ecustomed. aj z rid HE : : 38 |f i h “w t | ; at | é E i | i i : yr i :” | “4 g re _& 2 i ‘ y Suez Canal, and after the con after Egypt ‘nationalized’’ the | tries which accepted and -sup- + | ported President Nasser’s word flict over the canal between | at the time of the Suez crisis, Egypt and Britain and Frapce. | such as the United States, will In 1957, the Egyptian govern- | not be backward. The time may ment passed a law which for- | come when other Western coun- bade the authorities operating | tries, including the United Stat- the canal from ‘discriminating | es, may wish to use the Sues against any ship that wished to | Canal, and may find Mr. Nas« use it, and from doing anything |. ser Standing ‘in theif way. + available besides the tariff. The i Wi For a government bent on giving protection to home in- dystries there are other devices g i s z s z i ty li j les Of Protection * Ottawa Citizen cross-border movement. of bushe es to private individuals. Large shipments it istrue, can still be transported in air- _ conditioned trucks with control- led humidity, but the overall re- sult has been a decline in im ports of rose bushes from the U.S. after a period in which business had been growing. Yet the government can elaim, as in a number of other cases, that it didn't put up taé? tariff. It didn’t need to. : : ge i a i g z fi i i i ft i pe i a Es ae - | p Me Pledge was reaffirmed before _ - that the matter will be raised in _