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No Time For Hedging Under Opposition pressure. .lust- ice Minister Favreaii has broaden. ed the scope. of the judicial inquiry he proposes to institute into the charges of bribery and Coercion against three of the Government's ministerial assistants. it is to be hoped that the new terms of ref- erence prove sufficiently wide'to cover all the allegations that have been made. The mistake was in hedging on this responsibility in the first place. The matter is far to serious to permit of tactics of this kind. Nor was the Government in any position to allege. as Mr. Favreau did in a CBC interview on Tuesday night. that the whole thing was just Conservative “smear and in- nuendo.“ According to a dispatch from Ottawa yesterday. this cry has been taken up by other Liber- al MPs who claim that it is just an- other Tory attempt at “undermin- ing national unity." Such state- ments are in insult to the intelli- gence of every voter in the country. All the Opposition parties have been insistent that the inquiry be broadened to cover the issue in all its ramifications. It, was their duty to do so, and the Government’s duty to comply. Nothing else would he acceptable to the public. One of the strangest things about. this case is that the Prime Minister was kept. so long in the dark. Two cabinet ministers told the House—~—and Mr. Pearson con- firmed it.--thal, they had waited un- til this week to inform their chief of a months-old RCMP report in- volving his own parliamentary sec- retary and two top-level govern- ment officials in accusations of the gravest. kind. Not only did Mr. Favreau fail to inform Mr. Pearson of the matter, but he failed also to refer it, to the law officers of the Crown. deciding on his own account. in consultation with the RCMP commissioner. that the charges could not. be substantiated and therefore should not be laid. No imputation has been made against Mr. Favreau's integrity in this instance. it. is against his in- competence in handling the matter that the Opposition fire has been directed. And surely. in the circum- stances. it. would have been wiser for the Government to have met this challenge head on by agreeing immediately to the kind of inquiry that was demanded. and even in- sisting that it. be made along the broadest lines. Farm Labor Problem Federal Agriculture Minister Hays has intimated that he is con- cerned about the farm labor prob- lem and proposes measures to rem- edy it which will be known before Christmas. His statement was giv- en in reply to a point raised by the Ontario agriculture minister. Mr. Stewart. at a. federal-provincial farm outlook conference this week. Mr. Stewart’s point was to the effect that the farmer-employee image is somewhat tarnished in this country. He was impressed with this during a recent visit to Brit- ain when he was asked about the social security services available to firm workers in Canada. which did not compare favorably with those offered in Britain and Western Europe. But as pointed out by the Ot- tha Journal. this is not the Can- Idian farmers' fault. Statistics presented It the conference showed ' thIt most tumors IpIirt from the wheat fIrmerI, who enjoy I lucky I \ i l i West 3 Canadian ‘ spell. are having their usual dif- ficulty in making ends meet. Those who buy food know prices are high and have visions of the farmer garnering riches in the peace of the country side. But they are wide of the mark indeed. The young men who might have remain- ed on the farm in other generations have gone to better jobs in the city. Farmers have had to buy ex- pensive machinery to get their crops planted and harvested. It is said they work harder than they ever did in the horse age: horses had to stop for food. water and rest. but not the tractor. Machinery. as spokesmen for the dairy industry told Mr. Stewart at the farm conference. can't do every- thing. The labor situation has reached the point where it is ser- iously threatening production. Of course. the solution can be assisted by making farm life more secure and comfortable for employees. Questions such as seasonal work, workmen's compensation and liv- ing accommodation are involved. But the farm owner is in no pos- ition to correct the situation unaid- ed. Governments have a responsibil- ity here. and it is implied in the con- cern which the federal minister has expressed in the need for a new approach to the problem. Our farm- ers generally will be looking for- ward to the measures he is planning to present to the House of Com- mons in this connection. To be. ef- fective, they should be geared to the special requirements of each provinee—particularly to those provinces in which mixed farming. plays. as it does in Prince Edward Island. a major role in the provin- cial economy. Tourist Prospects At a tourist conference the other day. Prime Minister Pearson sug- gested that Canadians set their sights on a $2.000 million tourist industry by 1974. At the moment, the target appears to be. well out of range. Last year's tourist in- come was $602 million, less than one-third of the figure mentioned by Mr. Pearson. This year promises to be only slightly higher. It can be assumed, however. that Can- ada‘s centennial program and the 1967 World’s Fair in Montreal will result. in the biggest influx of vis— itors this country has ever seen, the majority of them from the Un- ited States. (‘ertainly we have proven. in this province. that special efforts being gratifying results. This year's centennial celebrations gave a tremendous boost to our tourist trade. and we should be planning now to consolidate it in the years ahead. It may indeed have been our success which Mr. Pearson had in mind in his optimistic picture of Canada's tourist trade possibilities within the next decade. As the Hamilton Spectator re.- marks in this connection, the trick will be to make the stay of our tourists so enjoyable that they will want to come again. If Canada hopes to reap permanent results from the tourist harvest. there will have to be more determin- ed e f f o r t. at hotels. restaurants and other service establishments to offer amenities at least on a par wit h those available elsewhere. And this applies as much to smal|~ er centres as, it does to Montreal or Toronto. On A Big Scale Some idea of how the fishing in- dustry is developing overseas may be gathered from the latest an- nouncement of the Ross Group, a British—based group which has built quite an empire of its own on the east: coast of Britain and has just completed negotiations for the con- cession of fishing rights along a strip in the Persian Gulf. Negotiations. in association with a Labanon organization, were car- ried out with the Ruler of Sharjah, off the Trucial Coast. Now British trawlers are fishing in these foreign waters. They are equipped for pro- cessing and freezing the catch. in 'addition to sub-zero storage space for a considerable tonnage of the packed product. The Ross Group is advising all aspects of the operation in the Per— sian Gulf and is also responsible for marketing the catch. Incidentally. it was this group which first intro- duced the quick frozen chip in Brit- ain, and now has a slice in the 3 million tons of potatoes which are consumed in Britain each year. i ‘ political and academic 22f»: i—BUT THE MELODY LINGERS ON OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Finds Time For Other Correspondence Prime Minister L. B. Peal“; Son is kept busy by a voluminous l correspondence concerned with l the important affairs of state. But he finds lime to enjoy a perhaps more human correspon- ; dence with young Canadians. as I recently showed by quoting extracts from some or his let- ‘ ing is: "To Judy from L.B.P. l ening on October 7. ters. i He recently wrote to a fresh-I man at the University of 'l‘oron- I to. whom he has never met. This i will interest Canadiansu quote this in full. with permis- sion; "Dear Don. “l have just learned from my intellig- ence service that you are occus. pying. at Gate House. a room: which once loomed very large. in my life. "I hope you have as good a time there as I did though I, should add that. if you ha an; older brother as I did who shar- ed the room with you and kep reminding you that you were nothing but a contempti ble Freshman. you would have quite ‘ an obstacle In overcome, I fervently hope that you won't‘ have to leave that room. as did. with all your best friends in College to go to war. "Perhaps one day when i am in ‘ Toronto. I will drop in and see' how you are taking care of the i old homestead. I must say it used to be. very untidy when we lived in it but I am sure you are a '. better housekeeper! "All good wishes. Yours sin- cerely. L. B. Pearson." The letter was addressed to i Mr. Don H. Jack. Room 7. Gate 1 Home. Victoria College. Toron-I to. He happens to be the son of . Mel Jack. General Manager of; the Brewers Association of ‘ Canada. who was previously for. many years the brains trust of i the Conservative Party and the l most effective and efficient; “bark - room boy" seen around l Parliament Hill since the war.| e older brother mentioned‘ by Mr. Pearson as his room-f male was "Duke" (short for Marmadukei Pearson. PICTURE GALLERY Of the many extensive collec- tions of framed photographs hanging on the walls of MP5‘ of- fices. one of the largest is that of Hon. Judy LaMarsh. Our Health . Minister has just acquired an interesting addition. It is a photo taken on the balcony outside her top - floor office in her depart- ment's new administrat i v e headquarters. the Brook Clax- on Building. which is Ottawa's t he tallest building except for Peace Tower Thephoto shows Judy La- Marsh with rime Minister Pearson and Ottawa's Mayor. Charlotte Whitton. . that 0 ‘ have to concern itself It is inscribed “To the Rt. Hon. the Prime Minister at "the peak" of achievement Octo- ber 7. 1964. With good wishes from Punch and Judy" Under- ; house" are joking references fol neath is written “Charlotte Wliitton - her mark." Then ad- ded in Mr. Pearson's handwrit- with all good wishes to "A pent- house plutocrat." l "The peak" and the “pent- lOttawa's tallest building, for l which Judy took a g - natur- led ribbing from "Punch" and ' many others at the official op- The Crooked Salesman London Free Press There is an extremely simple solution for one problem cur- rently being investigated by the Ontario Legislature's Select Committee on Consumer Credit -—how to protect householders from unscrupulous. high-press- ure salesmen. In Great Brtialn. any sales contract signed in such circumstances is not valid until four days have elapsed. South London's member, John White. questioning the sales manager of the Encyclopedia Britannica. got to the heart of the issue when he pointed out the company should not w i t h checking on sales contracts un- less it feared that the customer had been high-pressured. Doooto-door selling. which could be I perfectly legitimate occupation. is plagued with dis- honest Ialesmen who quote in- flated prices, make promises not shown on the contract. ex- tract exorbitant interest rates and misrepresent the aricle they are selling. Most housewives are. no match for these shalples. They find they are irrevocably committed to long-term expenditures they frequently cannot afford. and there is no way the contract can legally be broken. No honest company or sales- man would be injured by our adoption of the British law. which allows for a cooling-off period during which the heat of the salesman's oratory has dis- sipated and the cold financial truth stands revealed. Ottawa’s Junk Mail Brantford On government payroll in Ot- tawa is I sma army of press relations officers. Some should be otherwise employ to the relief of the taxpayer. The other y we wrote of the flow of press releases on government, projects and texts of ministerial :3. DJ speeches received by newspap- I ers days after the contents had 1 been adequately reported by news agencies. The amount of public money wasted in this way must be substantial. The latest of this junk mail I: a ten-sheet effort. headed. of all things. "News." It II from the Information Division. Canada Department of Agriculture. and gives the. 6.000- word text of the speech by Agriculture Mlntster Harry Hays at I convention of Alberta municipalities on Nov. 5. On it is the warning. “Not for release before delivery." No danger of that because ' Was not received ttll five days after. e had it arrived 0 ' it would not have been used. The reasons reflect less on Mr. Hays' diffuse dissertation on agricultural research than on the competence of his press de- partment First. the text was typed on both sides of the paper. Any press officer ignorant of the newspaper rule against what ls known as "back " copy is unfit for his job. Secondly. there Is the despIt- 5' Who Murdered Napoleon? MontreIl Most people like a good mys-l tery story. especially one that is l true. And the new evidence in-l dictating that the Emperor Nap-l oleon was murdered with arse- nic will keep the mystery hounds busy for a long time to come. A British scientist has an- nounced that tests were car- ried out on locks of NIpoleon‘I hair at Britain's nuclear re- search centre It I-IIrwell. These tests showed that arsenic had been administered to Napoleon over a lengthy period. Needless to say. there have been angry denials. Bombshell: of this sort are seldom well re- ceived. Still. if it can deflnltely be shown that the.locks of hair really came from Napoleon's head. the question would Ice to be settled: he died from ur- senlc poisoning. Who murdered him. and why? Unless further evidence can be found. the field seem: to be open to speculation. both Inform- ed Ind unlnformed. Already, the ‘ down in history as I Gazette finger of guilt is being pointed by some at Count Montholon, who was with NIpoleon on St. Rel- enI to the very end. He has gone faithful friend. But now he is getting a second look. News stories are pointing out that he received 2 million francs ln Napoleon's will. Certainly. all the elements of the classic mystery Itory Ire present. incudlng the precise and isolated location and the limited cut of suspects. ‘ However. the new evidence. even "completely verified. will have to compete with the Inertia of time and legend. School history books still state flatly and positively that RlcbIrd III murdered the PrinceI tn the Tower. despite the considerable evidence thIt he did not. It II I fair guess that 100 mm from now text - book will Itlll be mine. Napoleon died I natur- Il deIth. Expositor I eh of enough text to fill five newspaper columns. Someone in Ottawa is either too lazy make a summary or is simple.- ton enough to think that the. news desk of any daily peper is so overstaffed that. in I peak i production period and with dead- lines pressing. a man can be spared to wade through I 6.000- . word speech to find if any of it is worth reporting. and. if he ldoes, to prepare I piece for publication. 9 O The Canadian flour-milling in- dustry is still basking in the prosperity enjoyed while it was shipping shipload after ship- load to the Soviet Union. Relatively few of Canada's 67 flour mills are operating at full capacity now and it is time for Minister of Trade and Com- merce Mitchell Sharp to put on the pressure the H o n o r able George Hoes used to call the "hard sell“. Prosperity in this basic Can- adian industry has a decided effect on the economy as I whole and u its rated- produc- op in ex- om tion for markets on the global scene in tough. It Il- wayI has been but while th e Canadian flour- salesmen were In the sellers' market they may have forgotten the need to em- phasize the quality of Canadian flour. r. Sharp should not cease his efforts to remlna em. In the International flour mar- ket the competition in tough for come very bale renouc Oth - producing counu-III m.- Ieeldng market eprnIlou for themlelveu Other mItor flour- produclng countries like the United States and West G H Inullm’l' e pmducing mills. prefer to port wheIt Ind enjoy the IdVIn- tIgeI of added I the by-productc Ind pou . During the past crop year the Canadian flour- milling Industry enjoyed in grew ty since 1946-47 when it workod to full prIclfy In applying wu- rIvIged Europe. ‘ The ton of tho lolet lull-ht v In for livastock Face Expressions And Evolution By Dr. Theodore R. VII Della- Everyone over Ige 50 remem- bers the furor created by the Io- ca-lled monkey trial In Tenneuee in 1925. A young man. John T Scopes. was tried for teaching the theory of evolution in one of that state's public schooll. ClIr- ence Darrow. the famed Chic- ago lawyer. acted for the de- ‘ense. and Will‘am Jennlnl Bryan for the plaintiff. This reaction to the subject was nothing compared with the abuse suffered by Charles DIr- win when he first. propounded his theory of evolution. More re- cently. Dr. J ' Andrew of YIlt did some investigative work showing that facial expressions of humans go back to ref it re- sponses of animals. He concen- trated on gestures that probab- ly originated as protective reac- tions. including flattening of the ears. closing the eyes, and re- tracting the corners of lh mouth Lemurs. for example. retract the ears In the presence of danger. Monkeys and baboons do so. too. and the scalp Is well. , Man and apes are more likely to lower the eyebrows and draw them together when confronted with I threatening situation Contraction of a certain muscle in e mouth occurs in the how]- ing dog and the roaring lion. Human babies— before crying-— protrude the lower lip. Grins are common in anim- als. They accompany hard biting as in defense or a‘ startle reflex. and attempts to vocalize. Le- murs grin as they wail in frus- tration or defense. Rhesus mon- keys grin silently when frighten- edz. other monkeys not only grin but make crackling noises when roughed-up in play. Man. chim- panzees, and gorillas grin when fearful. frustrated, or excited. Man grimaces when e fights and during physical exertion. Other primates raise a lip or close an eye in attempting to overcome an obstacle. Smiles may be protective. as when an underling is c alle down by his superior. This is related to the stress grin when laboring over delicate machin- ery. The social: primates Indulge i in lip-smacking and exaggerat- ed facial movements Baboons I lip-smack not only in grooming but in greeting. in the same way that man smiles These studies on facial ex- pressions as part of primate ev- olution may sound far-fetched in determining human behavior. Many facial expressions in pri- mates are not caused by specif- ic conditions. drives. pleasure. or unpleasant feelings. But as reactions to selective pressures. they will help our understanding of why we tick. ROVING BACTERIA Mrs. DB. writes: What is I pseudomonas infection? Does it = attack the kidneys and bladder? REPLY Pseudomona are bacteria that inhabit the intestine of many normal persons. Usually they cause no trouble unless they find their way into the ur- inary tract. This disorder should not be confused with trichomon- as infection. DIZZY TRAVELER J G. writes: Is travel safe. for a person with dizzy Spells due to Meniere's disease? R Not if the attacks come fre- quently and there is danger of falling. ' CORN AND STONES Mrs. L writes: Can a gall- stone sufferer eat corn on the cob? REPLY Yes. but the butter might lead to distress. BANANAS AND WEIGHT M. D. w i . Will bananas put on weight or take It off? REPLY One medium sized banana contains 90 calories. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— earache. correspondence to Dr. Van Detlen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore VIn Dcllen. co Chicago Trib- une. Chicago. Illinois.) Never neglect (N0 E ' Problem For Mr. Sharp Hamilton Spectator means about a 40 per cent re- duction in flour exports Seventy-eight countries were buying Canadian flours. there are seventy - loss of one customer is not us- ually I tragedy but. when the one you lose means nearly half your sales are gone it is I III- nation that requires I close ook There is no alternative but more exports unless we In pre- pared to face the effect the ion will mean to the country gem- ully. More government cuboid- les won't even provide the thumb in the dyke. RECOMMEND REWARD WINNIPEG (CPl—Tho Win- nipeg pollce commission hII recommended ty council It I $1.000 reward be offered for information leading to tho arrest of the mIn mponItblI for four rapes. in.thI me ltIn area in the last Wednesday on I request Police cum Robert TIt't. ' "Me'c"u‘i7.eii" CHAIN SAW ‘ ~ $129.00 Keith Carmichael I 2: Buckley N. M. 4-04! Sherwood “The Woodman D I I t hind”. NOTES BY THE WAT A Frenchman learning Engl- lch aid to h1I tutu: "Engltth in I weer lIngnge. WhIt doeI this sentence meIn: 'Should Mr. Noble. who site for this con- stitue , sent to land IgIln, he will In all probability the I WIlk-over'?" — Mon- treIl stIr. CInIdIInI In the Northwest TerritorleI Ire demanding rum that has not . had its Itrength uKt'dowu II it is in the rest of CI I. Ifthey gettheirde- mInd. It may IttirIct some of the new Iettlerz they are look- ing Ion—fort William Times - Journal. if you have I bud temper, o won't get rid of It by losingviiij- GIlt Reporter Daniel Webster run one (In calling on ex-Presldcnt Joh'n Ims. who It e time was falling rapidly in health. Al thev were talking on topics of the day. I friend came in and asked the Izod man how he wn feel- ng. Adams smiled It the mm and replied: “As I matter of fIct. I inhabit I weak. frail, do. cIyed tenement: battered by the “Doll by the damn. and from Ill I can to Ind-lord does not in- tend to make Teplil‘l."~— (mg Reporter. 3... Britain’s Defense Spending By Harold Mom-on CInIdtIn PreII stuff Writer A slash in Britain's overseas defence spending now appears lnevtthle II the Labor govern- ment seeks to rid itself of the economic harness demanded by the Allies In return for the 33.000.000.000 pledge in support of the British pound. For the moment, the pound is out of danger. The pledge of the 11 central including Canada. com- bined with other resources available to Britain. have re moved the fear of sterling de- valuation. But James Callaghan. chan- cellor of the exchequer. know he has only won I breathing spell. not a final victory. Brit~ Iln must quickly put its eco- nomic house in order. It must find ways of building up exports rapidly, even at the expense of British consumers and it must find some way of reducing its spending abroad. aside from the curbs imposed through the extra lS-per-ccnt tariff. CURTAINS FREEDOM On Thursday, Callaghan gave Parliament a hint of what is in store. By going "cap in hand" to the bankers of other countries to find support for the pound. he had curtailed his freedom of action. He now finds himself in a position from which any chan- cellor would want to escape as quickly as possible. Top priority Is to be given to creating new forms of ex incentives. The whole range of government spending abroad. including defence commitments. is to come under "strict re- view." And skilled manpower and resources tied to what he described as "prestige projects" is to be freed to help build up the exports drive. While Callaghan gave no de- ‘tails. his aides suggested the} British government now spends' about $1.500.000 000 , I yea abroad. Part of this is tied to- diplomatic and other missions from which there cannot be ex- tracted many speedy savings— except in_ the defence field which takes up about one-half the administration's spending. A large put of the current foreign defence outlays is tied to the 50.000-man British army on the Rhine: to the Iupport of military base: from Gibraltar to MalayslI and to the purchase of Points missiles for Britain'I new sea-based nuclear force. POLARIS FORCE ‘ When Prime Minister Harold Wilson goes to Washington Dec. 7, he likely will seek to per-' suede President Johnson that Britain should be allowed to re- duce purchases of the proposed Polaris force or stretch out. the commitment. At Ottawa he may urge Prime Minister Pearson to take on I bigger defence commitment In the Commonwealth. perhaps In the West Indies. in order that Britain's cwn burden may be reduced. At home. Britain's joint prol- ect with France to build the costly Concorde supersonic Ilr- craft may be terminated or stretched out—again to reduce costs and free British man- power for other work. Even Britain's army on ll‘r thine may be in for I trim- ming. though this may raise new murmurs among the Allies that the Labor government dces not intend to carry its full weight in defence of the non- Communlst world. m BURNS CLEANER NO SMOKE, N0 000!" HIATIN. OIL Phone 4-7311 CHARLOTTETOWN Petroleum Products TnveL'lips \i’é iii. ii. M‘Jl Tr i‘il ii 'lVLQ o i live on the outskirts ottown. Is there someway I can buy my train tickets without going lnto‘town? I Stay right when you In. We'll send them by mall. With CN'I TlckItI-by-MIII plan you don't ban to no any turthorthun your Mom. JuIt call your GM Passenger Sales Ofl‘lce. and ask for Tlckctc-by-MIII. 0 II there I way of roIorvlng I hotel room from tho trIIn? Or do I have to got off It the next stop Ind who ahead from there? A Keep your seat Ind lust tell the conductor you want to sand I tIlengm (CN II In the tolocommunlcatlon bust- nIsI, too). He'll be glad to Iond it for you. A group of four or tin of my buclnIII IIIoclItII will In trIvclllng to I conformcu coon. How an wo in cure of being on the "mo on Io wo can u» tho tlmo togethIr for I muting ln prIpIrItlon for tho conference? A ChIrtIr I IpIclIl CN prIVItI Ixocutlvo cIr. ThIII «a «whim I comforthlI loan» with lndlvlduIl comput- mIntI. Tth th0 III the Interim“ Including fIctllttII for sowing rIfrIIhmIntI Ind full-courII mIIlI. PrIcII In our“! to CN'I Rod. WhItI Ind BluI plIn Ind IrI IurprlIIngly Iconomlcal. Whh thI prletI muting plate I an of WI typo provldol. you an turn trIvcl tlmo Into proflthII fImI without bIIng dIIturbId. ThIt'I good bulllflll.’ Q I'm plInnlno I long trlp Io l'll tho lots of IuggIgI withfmI. How much Gift I tIkI true on tho trIln? Idulf, ticket. A You can chock up to 150 poundI two on I CN 0 Dim CN th0 I crIdIt pm for m? A JYOI.'Tth0. Jim pick tho plIn thIt IultI you but. Ch’Im-Id'rlp II custom-de for trIvol on GM Ilnu In CInIdI. lt'I IIIo good for \CN hofIlI what you go erI by CM. And. no down mmInt II nIcIIIIty- 0' you an 60 Now—Pu LIfIr Ind chIrg‘I rItl frIvIl Inv- thrI in North Amorth II wolf II your ItIy If C", Ind Hilton-suitor hotIII. Ten percent down curl up to,“ monthc to pIy. Or thoro'I our credit cIrd for church! rIIttrIvcl, CN Ind thonStItlIr titanic. MIIII. «locum. Ind ottm unite». lt'I httlod monthly. Any other quIItlonI? CIll mm m m _____