x 719 Gualdiau "cavern Erlnu Elven Iain! uh Ibo Dun" Published Met! week day morning ll 16 knnu strut. timtomumn. r E. t.. by the Thomson comma: Ltd- 64 Kllil st. W., Turullln. Montreal Office. 22: L-nnersny hive: Ildg. Edlliu, Frank Walker Us-neral M-anal.-ct. Ian A Burnell Member Canadian Daily Novupapel Publishers Association p Member at The Canadian Press Mrmber Audit Bureau of Circulation: Iratnrh offices at summenhie. Montague and Albellnn Authorized u Seruml iilan Mail by in: Post Ofllco Dcpunnienl, Ottawa. I.v Carri:-r Charlottetown. Summerside ll.':.rI0 pen an- Ium. I-Jisewtn-re In P.i:.i 89.00. other Province: and l'.s. si:.0o per Innlln). WRl).N'lt',Sl)AY. APRIL 15. I956 Potential Danger Wltrn Adolf Hitler of unlamented memory started his beer-hall antics ill the late 30's. nobody in official , circles. from local bourgomasters to the lmitlvrs of tht: Republic. took him or his rnurly brown-shirts seriously. Yet, from these same beer-halls there derived a force which plunged the world into the sorrows and de- vastations of war. Now. a militant organization known as the ”Sl90l lielmcts", which in point of facl ls older than Xa1.isin and. iii a sense. its stIll'ill,l.'li sttct-cssoi'. is parading. heating drums in lit? same i1PPl'-li'rlliF and claiming the same right to speak. and fight if need be. for the national honour of Ger'niatiy. Anti. once again, so re- ports say. most German (ioxernment officials are refusing to see anything potentially dangerous in the de- velopment. uhich is growinz illlll each passinl: month. The only annoying possibility sutzinz. and these officials appear to recognize ll that the Communists of East Ger- many may take offence at the go- lngs-on of the ”Steel Helmets" and thus precipitate inter-zone friction. It might be pointed out, however, that as Hitler took the rival organiz- ation under his control in 1932, so the leader of the present group is quite capable of absorbing into his organimtlon all political dissidents. including the Communists, should he consider such a move advantag- eous to his and his organization's ambitions. As for the Communists. in both zones. it can be presumed that their dislike of the new German democracy is stronger than their dis- like of the neo-Nazism. The Nazis. it will be remembered, began to take on the status of a iiangerous force in German life about ten years after the defeat of Ger- many in World War One. The same length of time has passed since the end of World War Two. The be- haviour of the. ”Steel Helmets". add- ed to the coincidental arithmetical reckoning, would suggest at possible repetition of history, if the com- placency that met. the rise of Hitler and his brown-shirts is allowed to become the fashion in the present instance. Her Majesty Her Nit Clearly. relations between Egypt and Britain are not as cordial as they ought to be; and to Egypt”: loss, since it is obvious that the place once occupied by the British in Egypt): politics and economy is be- ing sought. by the Soviets, whose re- cord in other spheres of influence does not warrant much good cheer on the part of the Egyptians. But. there is one Egyptian field in which the British have a virtual monopoly. and a monopoly which, apparently, Premier Nasser and his political fol- lowers have no desire to terminate. This is the field of archaeology, Egypt's greatest claim to fame. While scientists of other countries have participated in the unearthing of buried ruins in that storied land, the British have taken the lead in almost every important discovery. The latest. tomb to be opened to the light of science is that of Her Majesty Her Nit. who reigned in splendour. as befitted the Pharaoh dtvnasty. more than 5000 years ago. It was opened by a British scientist. Dr. Walter B. Emery. of the Univer- sity of London. The precious stones and other articles of value found in the queen's tomb will. no doubt. be handed over to Premier Nasser”: treasury or, it may be. to his own personal collec- tion. What. the Premier's emotional reaction to the discovery will be will probably not be disclosed for public infomiation. Perhaps. like most other laymen, he will see in it a re- minder of Egypt's ancient glory. that and nothing more. But if he happens to be. of a romantic turn of minde- as most revolutionaries seem to be. in a sort of cynical way-it is pog. Ible that the discovery may haw lliflo little effector: hi dtllillgl with his Israeli neighbours, who during their history have been tied in with pasta Imam runs In via speculate on Queen Her t Nit's pan-l ticular relations with the Hebrews. Was she like a later pharaoh, gam- eses the Second, who compelled his Hebrew subjects to make bricks without straw, or did she resemble another of her lineal descendants who befriended Joseph. one of the great heroes of Hebrew history? Brain Trust President Eisenhower's plan for setting up a "rotating advisory board” of private citizens to advise the government in th e f-Zlobll struggle with Communism will sug- gest different implications to differ- ent persons. Some wil see in it an attempt to separate one of the big issues of our time from the machin- ations and dilatory pmcesscs of party politics, which. theoretically at any rate. may be a 20001 Wing- Critics of the administration. espec- ially Democratic Party licntls. will say that the President and his cab- inet are trying to transfer their constitutional responsibilities to out- siders. They will go further and sug- gest that, by his own adniisslon. MIX Eisenhower is incapable oi glyitn: proper leadership in this critical hour. This. of course. is not uhnt the President had in mind at all: never- theless, it makes a good pt-o-clot-tlozr story. and the Democrats t-an scat- cely be blamed for SDt'Patllti;: it around. All specttlations asitlc. the pro- posed plan is certainly a d.-p.u-titre from custom: and a great many leg- islators. of both parties. are not R0- ing to be pleased over the inference that the ”besi. brains". ulllch thP President mentioned in his speech before the American Sot-iPl.V Oi Newspaper Editors. have to hr sought outside of Congress. The fact that Mr. Eisenhower went to great lengths in his speech to deny the charge that the United States is losing the cold war (the. editors themselves look that position by a majority of two to one) shows that he himself is a bit uneasy over the way things are going. Indeed. that uneasiness may be the con- trolling reason behind his ”adyisory board"-or. as some call it, his "brain t-rust"e--proposal. EDITORIAL NOTES What. Senator Kefauver lacks in one political gift he makes up in an- other; witness, his philosophic com- ment on the victory of his rival. Mr. Stevenson, in Illinois: ”We Demo- crats are glad when a fellow Demo- crat adds t.o the evidence that this will be a Democrat year". I O 0 We're all used to tweeds. cash- meres and steel ships as products of Scotland. But. the. Christian Science Monitor has called attention to a new product for export to the Un- ited States. Two Aberdeen men have been asked by an American bait firm to catch and export 10,000,000 fishing worms. U 0 I it seems that Senator Kefauvcr is adopting a magnanimous attitude towards some of his rivals. The other day. for instance. he decided not to enter the Massachusetts Primary and. instead. t.o ask support for Representative Mccormack who is running as a favourite son. He said he hoped Mr. Mccormark would receive a hearty vote. 0 I O A report from Vancouver will hr welcomed by fishery crews even"- where. It tells of a new experiment in preserving fish at sea by pumpintz salt water in the vessel's hold and keeping it at a temperature of 30 de- grees. So far. only a couple of traw- lers have used the system but those found it to be a great success. and this year several boats are being provlrlcfl with the necessary equip- ment. It sounds so simole-and so much easier than the old method of icing the fish-that it is a wonder if was not introduced before. u .0 0 According to Professor R. E. Jamieson. Dean of the Faculty of Engineering at McGiil University. Canadian industry "will simply have to make do at present with a short supply of engineers". There are nearly three well paid jobs available for every engineer graduating from I Canadian university this yearea prospect which is causing deep con- cern to industry and university en- gineering faculties. It is estimated that about 1700 engineers would be graduating from Canadian univer- sities this Spring Ind that there would be approximately 4000jobc available for ten. WAN E.AST'ER' PUBLIC FORUM Hull column In open in lhe dimin- inn by ulrrupnlnlenll ni quelllionl I IlIIare.II.tThr Guardian does not nonasurily rndonn nu opinion of urrelpondenis. THE OTHER SHORE Sit'-- Day after day we see itin- erai nroccs:-tons going out the , vlav. or we me A so1'l'n u In x Ptnwd st:-intlm: aruunrl a tuncral ht-inn, as they look at llitl face of . oi" l sntnc loyctl one. I c l 3! it t r irtcnd. lot the last time before the grave rinses met them. Death. mants last and most ter- rible enemy. is the gulf that sep- arates us lrom those loved ones; it is the street oi no turning back with its one-way door at the end that opens beyond the hormm. How many of us have gone to other parts oi this land with I one-way ticket to reside there. leaving loved ones behind to fol- low us later on the shine rmlle'.' We wait for them in that distant land and there in time we meet again, V - ' Those of us with believe in life beyond the grave have reason to feel we will some tiny. somewhere. meet Ilutsc loved ones again. not in S0i'I'tm and death but in ever- lasting hhss. hevunrl the gulf where day neter ends and we never grow To niP('l, in know. In lme. and . then in part is the sari talc of many a human heart. But if we aiop and think tor a moment that our parting is only for a little while and we will meet again be- yond the breakers. on the shore of peace and happiness where the laughtor of little children never ends. where honey bees have lost their slings and everything is overflowing with happiness. Then as we see those in death we can realire that they have ser- ved thcir sentence here and be- yond the mist. beyond the one- way street and one-way door of sorrow and pain they wait for us somewhere. some place. until we m0l'l- again Hire in face in eter- nal glory. I am Sir I-tc.. iVAL'i'l-ZH A. (Tmlll-ZN ('harlollr-ivmn. Ten Little Canadas lflllawa I.ilu.rui WhaI.etm nuancev. there may he in the full report of the 'l'n-mlilay Commission on Funstiiulmnal Pro- hlcms as cuntpm-t-cl with the press summaries. one thing appears cer- iatn:The report of this group ap- poinicd by the Quebec Government. suggests such rarlical c” in the taxation setup of this country that Cnnmln as .1 political entity vtolllfi nllcr as well For all it's talk of sl.'ii:cs and al- ternatives and compromises the Commission's aim is plain. II is in place three major fields of dir- eci taxation-pcrsonel and corpor- ation incomc tax and succession duticseentircly under the control of the Provinces. it would at the some time relieve the national government of itis outlays for such social sectutty nicmill-es as fam. lly allowance; and nlrl ago pan alons The latter -zuznestinn might well he trmntmn In ur. l)tIplessis' Government. or in nny nuwr pr... vuictal Government for that matter since volrfs are stlpposcd to think kindly of people who send them cheques. For the same reason, the Federal authorities might be reluctant to give up the present at-. ranlzemeut. The Tfvnllil-WV trtplirf deserves examination on other grounds than Ilm:-r. of political kudos. what If rrallv doe: .5 in nr. fer I different concept til the up. laitonship of the partners within the Canadian (Tonfederatinn. It argues that in effect, the Provin- ces should be given greater power and the Central Government less. it feels that (Tnnadiuns have got far away from the purpose of the Fathers of tfonferlerailnn. Have flu-y " It may be rm--ullrrl that the Rrilisli North America Art came. into being A little over two years after the. last Confederate armies surrendered in mark the close of the American Civil War. The Fathers of Canadian Confed- eration were clearly determined to minimise the risk of a similar cl- tasimphe on this side of the bord- er by creating a strong Central Government. wan to bolt nunncndniina llowerrr. eealrwuc ,.. F OTTAWA REPORTS! t-ilusr TURNED up A , .v.q,....-- Parliamentary Attendance By Patrick Nicholson The attendance at votes in Far- liament in recent days has high- lighted the extant ofaliscntccism among our Sl0.000 per year .'ii.Ps. Even earlier in the session. t.hcn debates raged on our Number One Tonic - wheat . the attendance was meagre. This has one typical Wt-rinr.sda.V afternoon. The late-returning Que- lieckers must admit that the pre- vious week-cnd had finished and the early-leaving Ontarians could hardly claim that the following week-end had already begun. Yet by actual count. there were only 58 M.Ps. sitting in the House. Where were the other 207 mem- bers? And what were those 58 at- tenders doing? Two good questions The Wednes- day sitting is not arduous. The House meets at 2.30 p.m. and adlourns at 6 p.m. Not long hours. for the 327.32 daily pay which every M1 is paid by the taxpayers for every day of every week of this Leap Year. Of the M.Ps present while the wheat-farmersl plight. less than ll": M.Ps. were talking: one on his feet addressing the House. and the nth- crs stage-whispering in groups of two and three. Sixteen M.P.'s - were reading newspapers. which page boys had fetched from the Reading Room. Nine M.P.'s were writing probably "My dear Wife" or similar compositions. So much for the interest shown in wheat. 'l'hcn I went into the Senate. By chance there were the same mun- bcr of legislators attending there as in the House of Commons - fifty- eight. Bill the Senate is of course much smaller, with A maximum size of 102 compared to 265 in the Commons. and with ll vacancies then as compared to none in the Commons. So the Senate was sixty-four per cent present. while the Commons was more than seventy-eight per cent absent. 1 repeat. seventy- eight per cent absent. g At the present stage of the par- liamentary session. many commit- tees are meeting at frequent inter- H7 .4355” 7oed6maz NIAGARA FALLS Thunder spills whitely over the ancient cliffs . And the marching mist obscures. for a moment only, Now and again. the dos) tumul- tuous roar Wild. . beautiful. . .loncly. . . Navy hlue vtater stands on the precipice And behind it the plied-up energy is pushing in sheets of emerald over years nt rock. Rushing. rushing. . .ru.shtng. . . Downward the water crashes. leaping high In white curves of recoil against the immutable rocks under The soaring cliffs. and the heart is clutched and shaken By the while thunder. -Bonnie Elizabeth Parker in the Christian science Monitor. -The Age Old Story And some of them were men of Cyprus and Cyrlellb. Which. when they were come to Antioch, spake . preaching the vals. Some !ii.Ps. sit on several committees. and the overlapping membership net-essitzttes some ('0 mitiecs sitting while the House it- self is in session. This of course take some l'il.Ps out of the House But at the date of winch 1 am writ. lng. no committees were slilmst There were only three obvious plac- es where absentee lVi.Px. mtcrhi have been: in their offices. in the cafeteria. or at home. No READING OR WRITING A point I noticed about the Sun- ators was that every single one of . them in the Chamber was actually listening to what the speaker was saying. Not one of them was read- ing: not one of them was writing: not two of them were whispering together. Cochrancls Jnc Brndetic doodled casually. bttl. showed that he was listening because every now and then he glanced up at the s pe a k e r or nodded his head in agreement. Even those Senators who are hard of hearing had not switched off their blah-offs. This attention is typical of our Senators. it may he not discon- nected with the fact that the aver- age Senator is a more experienced person and a more able speaker than the average M.P. it is un- douhiedly connected with the fact that. being starved of work by the House of Commons. the Senate has it h o r t a 1' daily sessions than the House of Commons. So. on the afternoon of wiiirh I write. at 3:30 p.m. Ottawa ltmc. only 18 M.Ps were listening in the request of the NLP who was tel- ling the House of Commons ”I believe that the farmers oi' western Canada are entitled to a little bit more than they have received so far." But just one hundred yards away. more than three times as many Senators were paying; wrapt attent- ion to their most junior colleague. who was recounting the history of his native race - the Acarlians. Medically- Speaking 3! llernnn N. Iiundesen. M. D. AFTER TOOTH I5 PULLEI) Having a tooth extracted doesn't neceuarlly mean the end of your dental troubles. DON'T GET PANICKY in act. as you well know. you're ulua y-home before post-extraqb lbll Pain. swollfng or hemorrhaging begins. Jibwever. this is no .time to get panicky. l That pain. swelling or. bleeding iltoblhly is perfectly natural. And I few simple ureswill ulu. ally remedy the situation. GAUZE WADDING Generally. your dentist will give you a waddlng of auto to keep pressed firmly use nsi. the yawn- ing excavation te to stem the flow of blood. But if you run out of gauze wads. or the bleeding re- sumes after you've tossed them IWEY. berets a simple way that might help stop the bleeding. Place a moist teabag over the site and bite down hard. Keep it there for 10 or 15 minutes. or long- er if necessary. This should do the trick. After the bleeding stops, do not rinse your mouth or spit ex- cessively for be next 24 hours. COLD APPLI ATIONS Post.-extraction pain usually can be relieved by frequent cold ap- plications to the face. Use either an ice bag or cloths dipped in cold water and wrung nearly dry. Occasionally pain won't begin un- til two or three days a'tcr the tooth has been pulled. This delay- ed paln becomes worse after the third day and may last as long as two or three weeks. This probably is due to a dis- intergrating clot and inflamed atl- joining tissues. So. for persistent pain, you'd better see your den- tist or doctor. He can clean outgihe socket and give you codeine sul- fate or some other drug to relieve your pain. . ice bags are hclplul. ion. for post-extraction swelling. Alp p l v them to your jaw for about. half an hour every hour until the swelling decreases. in most cases. I think you'll find lhese remedies will work. QUESTION AND ANSWER B.F.: Can fractures occur willi- out injury? Answer: At certain times frac- tures occur due to bone disease in which the bone is eaten away, so that in the normal process of walk- ing and moving. the bone may break or fracture. OUR YESTERDATS From The Guardian Flies TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (April 25. limit in order to take advantage of any future market South Africa may offer for Island seed potat- oes. ihc Potato Growers Associat- ion has supplied seed of different varieties for exhibit at the Brit- l5l1 Empire Trade Exposition. Mr. S. G. Peppin head of the Seed - Potato Certification Service made the selection. At yesterdays market eggs sold at 20 cents: butter 35 cents: fowl si.25 lo si.50: hay 80 to 85 cents; turnips 80 cents and potatoes 35 to 50 cents. There was a large supply of fresh herring selling at 25 cents a dozen. The motor cars have appeared on ome of the Murray Harbor and district roads during the past week and it is expected they will become more numerous when the batteries that are away being char- ged are returned to the owners. TEN YEARS AGO (April 25. I916) The l'riccs Board announced in- night the revocation. effective ki- mnrrow of regulations controlling the rate and distribution of canned lobster products and cold pack lob- ster meat. Telephtmc communication with the western part of the Province was still disrupted last night. ac- cording to telephone officials who said linemen were busy all day trying to restore communication. Yesterday telephone calls from the City were only being accepted as far as Summerside. NQTES BY A sewing circle is when women get together to n a each other. -Jllhbrldie Her Expert on uoonottap protucu it, eventually will be pouible to dis- close the secret of what consensu- lcoholiam. It may be something iquite simple-alcohol. for instance. -Windsor Star In assurance of "average safety." The girls salddiiey had designed special uniforms for the night. Their letter concluded: "Please do not leave for the moon without us." -Minneapolis Tribune Scottish firm has made a march- lne that will drive 30 one-inch nails at a single blow. But will it pull out the 19 which mysteriously bend in the middle and crack the plast- er, as ours always do?-Peterbob ough Examiner Governors are not going to make cars safer, they only make them more dangerous in tight spots on the road. We have said before and say again that if "governors" are needed they are needed in driver-3' heads. not on the cars' engines.- Brockvllle Record-Times When some big airline starts its first commercial service to the moon. it won't have to worry about timid hostesses. Two Jersey City Girls lfavc already applied for jobs. They asked American Airlines to give them an estimate of how long before the trip can be taken with Sweden. like Russia has protest- ed over invasion by errant Am- erican weather balloons. Such contrived complaints are expect- ed from the Russians. but most Americans will probably feel the Swcdcs' action to be incompre- hensible. They must know, after all. that the ballons are innocent vehicle" carrying metorological apparatus and they are launched in pursuit or knowledge useful to the whole world. Our own in- clination is to attribute it to tho childish sensitivity which charac- terizes European nationalism. Much of it is habitually on the alert for opportunities to con- sider itself abused.-Detroit Free Press. nouns” KIDNEY Page 4. the Lsuauuan THE WAY V According M Itlllltlfl Chg cow. boy in becoming as scarce as the buffalo. Except. of cuurse in H., .5- wood movie studios.-Letlibridge I-Ienld i mg. Nowitbai a British jet plane pa, traveled at more than 1.100 miius an hour, light is reported to be faintly worried about its speed re cord.-Edmonton Journal . communist press in Canad; is opposing capital punishment if this country. such deviation fro" the party line would not he .11- lowed in Russia.-Oshawa New: Gazette The name from a single canal. will give enough heat to make an igloo livable. Canadian Army fnp" doing Arctic survival tests hay! discovered. Still. a thermostat ha. I psychological value.-Straifon: Beacon-Herald The U. S. and other W;-,4 ern countries are getting short ... thebasic raw materials and (host which abound in New Bx-unswlcl as our forest and mineral resources are in particularly short suppl- where. Our resources are going 1., be felled or dug up and will go mu. the world markets. What we hau- to do is to make sure we get (hp maximum benefit out of them hp NFC lllehlo. In other words. us cannot do wilhotti power Ill qugm tiiy far. beyond the ability of mu Brunswick unassisted to provide . Fredericton Gleaner Polite l Pooches Well trained dogs, :.l-.ow their skill in a serle; of t rials by Montreal 1 Mountain City Training Club. Read and see how these polite pets go through their tests. A story for all an'mal lovers in THE 5 ND- ARD this week. Get THE STANDARD - on sale now. complete with magazine, l2 . p a g 9 novel and 20 pages of comics. Only ten cents ClI!StuIIllnrtl ON SALE NOW You can borrow pay it life-insured loan. IMA Kelli Street and easily . . . and get life-insurance protec- lion for your family at no extra soul If your present loan lacks this vital protection. off with a Tuna Canada Credit THE ALI.-CANADIAN t moat-arr the cash you need quickly Call us today. lOAN COMPANY Dial 8523 dish Meet your bank manager... He's easy to meet--and a good -mun to talk things over with. 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