Eli: Gogrdiau "covcohhoollvnrd hlnhooor Vnllhdnoavoudunnlhsulnmlaihcd unrlnuauurn. P.I:.t... by Ina I'll-in: Company Ltd. II III: IL I. Twain Innlnu omen. 2:5 Unlvnrnu Tova Mill. III A. Bllrintl. PIIINIDII Ind Golelll lnrull llnlhtf. Ddltilll In Member of TII CInIIl.iII Pre- hlembev Andi! Buruu of Ch-colnltonn lunch olfiou It snnmcrnde. Ilouugin Ind Al iiuiiumuc u seem cu. III! I: the PM 0150- Depnrtmene, oun. Iy Carnot ChIrlotv.einwI. Suminenido U500 90! lb Iurn Elsowhei-I lI P.E.l 8.00 other Provincu Ii U. I. Il:.flo per Innuni. MONDAY. APRIL-15:19.57 ram: 4 , I 0 Parliament Dissolved With Parliament dissolved and the geiieral election less than two months away, the political campaign may he expected to get into full swing almost iminediately. The June ltl datc. although not officially con- firincd until Saturday. came as no surprise and the party oigaiiizations should all be well prepared for the contest. Enumeration of voters will begin on April 22. and last for six days. It is expected that a record number of 9,200,000 Canadians will be eligible to cast their votes. Both the Liberal and Conservative parties are to field candidates for all the 263 seats in the Commons on May 27, the official nomination day. The CCF is aiming at having Qtitl candl- dates and the Social Credit party leader says he expects to have 130 or more in the running. Prime Min- ister St. Laurent will travel to Que- bec City on Wednesday to spend Easter and on his return to Ottawa afterwards will announce his plans. The Conservative leader, Mr. Diefen- baker. starts his campaign speeches on April 25 at Toronto and April 27 at Quebec City. Meanwhile. Canada will be with- out members of Parliament, at least technically, until August 8. This is the date set for the return of election writs for the winning candidates in the House of Commons. The Senate, I of course. has not dissolved. as the members are appointed for life ten- ures: but the Upper Chamber cannot meet again until the new Parliament gathers for its first session. The last session has been a com- paratively quiet one. but there are many controversial issues stemming from the previous sittings which will likely be revived in the coming cam- paign. This is what campaigns are for. The candidate who c a n n o t handle himself in the rough and tumble of the hustings is not likely to prove of much value as a repre- sentative of any constituency. There is. however. no excuse for vitupera- tion. and less for efforts of any kind at bribery and corruption. The elec- tors have I! right to be treated as intelligent. responsible citizens. The oldtime appeal to "our party. right or wrong" has lost much of its ef- feetiveness in recent years. Candi- dates would do well to remember this fact. They will be' judged by their conscientiousness and ability rather than by their party labels; if they fail in their appeal on this score they will at least have the satisfaction of having fought a good fight. In the end. we believe, it is this type of men who ultimately suc- ceed. Canada is facing big problems in the immediate future, and we cannot afford to function politically with any but the best representatives available. Our whole democratic sys- tem is on trial in every election cam- paign. just as surely as is the govern- ment of the day, and the record and -platforms of the contending parties. Nild. Vs. Canada A favorite debate in the current session of the Newfoundland Legis- lature has been the matter of the Brwlnce's status under Confedera- tion. Premier Smsllwood and most of his Liberal followers maintain Itoutly that "things were never so good." They are fond of referring to the "best eight years-yet," meaning 1949-57. Opposition members. on the otlierhIM.urInotIonirethIt the Plwtnu B lndebtltl to Confedera- tion for whatever prosperity it pos- H1; lubed. If one my judge by tbslrspcccheistheyseemtobeof the (pinion that it isn't. They point. among other things.-to the Govern- 'I bank babies which is Ionic- ' Imiugsiowttinitwufniiie how your of ms. lvq when the country's political fut- ure was being shaped. there is ll marked tendency to disparage union with Canada. This is brought out by the following news item which ap- pear; in at recent issue of the St. John's Daily News: During the last night of the Re- gional Drama Festival. Adjudicator Cecil Bellamy received prolonged ap- plause when he said "I have found in Newfoundland, as in Canada, the sets have been well done." For a minute there was a pause, then the audience broke into loud applause. After the applause Mr. Bellamy said, "I am learning." and when he next referred to his travels across ("aiiada carefully differentiated Newfoiiiitl- land from the.,rest of the Dl'(lYillt'0S. This seemed to meet with the great approval of the audience as tlicy once more started to aplaud. The same story, in somcwliin tiff- fcrciit form. comes frequciitly from otlicr sources. The inference scents to he that it is going to lie soine time licfqre the people of Xi-ufoiiiirl- laiitl's capital city are going to take enthusiastically to the fact lilfil. for gouti or ill, they are now Caniidiuns as it ell as Newfoundlaiidcrs anti St. Joliifs-men. EDITORIAL NOTES An official of the Quebec Aplll” Producers Association thinks that "in alcoholic form, surplus applcs might find more favor." Yes. that's a reasonable assumption. I O 0 Among the many annual appeals to the generosity of our citizens none is more important or necessary than the one sponsored liy the Salvation Ariny's Red Shield. We liespcak for next month's campaign a ready re- spouse. 0 I 0 Look out for a cold, rainy Spring. That's the word from Sir Ivan Thompson, Captain of the liner Queen Elizabeth. He bases his pre- diction on the huge Arctic floes around the Newfoundland coast. It's the worst situation in 50 years--so Sir Ivan believes. I O I At least three provinces are re- ported to have been "overpaid" by the Federal Government. If this sort of thing keeps up it won't be long before the system will he changed from Federal-Provincial grants to Provincial-Federal igranls. with the Provinces raising all the money re- quired and Ottawa spending it. C I 0 Some idea of the. power possibil- ities of the future may be gathered from the latest news about the atomic submarine 'Nautiius'. The Nautilus started cruising on Janu- ary I5, 1955 and travelled 60,000 miles on her first charge of nuclear fuel. She put in for refuelllng two months ago at Groton, Conn., and left this week with her new charge. According to a US. Navy report, the charge, capable of carrying her an- other 60,000 miles, is "about the size of a softball." O D I Secretary of State Dulles says ,the United States "will continue to use its influence" in pursuit of Mid- dle East. peace. So far, United SlHlt"S' influence hasn't had much control over Middle East problems. The statement is hardly likely to calm Israeli fears. It was precisely on the strength of promised American "influence" that the Israelis with- drew from the Gziza Strip only to find that the Egyptians were going back with at least the tacit approval of the State Department. From now on. it is safe to say, the Israelis will want something stronger than the promise of "influence". 0 O 0 Important industrial uses for ra- dioactive "ash" from nuclear power stations have been forecast by spec- ialists in the United Kingdom as the result of research carried out by the Atomic Energy Authority. Research has shown that the strongly radio- active casesfum Ind strontium--the ash components with the longest radioactive lives-are likely to have t important and varied industrial uses. For example, potatoes and onions could be prevented from sprouting, while the mutation rate in plants could be incmasedmnny-fold by the radiations to give plant binders more material for.-Am-hvlI'C new Itrsins. Penicillin qnd ,otfl!l' hilt?-' hlotics. which wen daiingadmhr huh uniperiitures. could fit Q2 radiations , M ' ..l "(l Them In ,IHi:h- ,.lNIt - -- Qyi Tl-lE BIWGL ONE THAT GOT AWAY S. cm .-. LAST YEAR UNITED KINGDOM OPINION Facing Nuclear Age By "onlooker" of the London. England Bureau of Thomson Newspapers Britains 'just-announced cuts in defence costs - a whitiling down of Regular forces strength to 357.- 000. cutting costs by S507.tl00.000 during the coming year as a start ---shows how Britain is at last facing facts in this nuclear age. it ai-kiiovtlciigcs that from nniv on the "go it alone" mentality is out. Only with her allies, it is now ad- mitted. can she really hope to put up I worth-while defence against the threat of nuclear attack. Duncan Sandys.' Britain's De- fence liliiusier. h B s certainly shocked traditionalists. Out will go many famous regiments, regi- ments whose history has gone back two or three hundred years. Out will go before 1970, the bulk of the manned fighters and bombers of the Royal Air Force. Instead. the boys in light blue will be more con- ' cerned with handling the new mis- silos that Britain is to make and America is to send. Another blow to the die-hards: the Navy. after ten years of inter- departmental struggle has now ad- mitted that it is no longer ex- cept in years. the "Senior Service." but rather part of the whole de- fence mt-up. Out soon will go the live battle- ships the U.l(. still inaintains Four of them are now in mothhalls. but they still take up thousands of dol- lars a year to maintain. instead Britain is to follow the American pattern and create "task force" nee-is - A carrier supported by I number of other, smaller ships. THANKS TO A DRIVER Pushing the cuts through Parlia- ment will be Spndyls next - and perhaps toughest job. Sandys is quite I character - sqiiare-jawed. rusty-haried. in his 405 now but lookiniz as if he could still hold his own in I physical as well Is I Parliamentary scrap. He is - but only by the way - son-in-law to war-time leader Chur- chill. And what he really owes his present prominence to is the de- gree of sleepiness of I certain Ar- my driver. Thanks to him. I truck in which Sandys. then I colonel in the Ar- tillery, uas travelling crashed in Norway in 1940. Sandys wII inval- ided out. So he turned to politics. It was he who first attracted notice by assessing the possible effect of Germany's creation of the flying bombs and the rockets of World War II. He came out of the war very rocket-conscious. The result Britain is seeing today. BUSY TIDE With his Innouncemcut of de- fence cuts. which will be debuted at Westminister before Easter. Sandys had kicked off I busy se- slon. There will be harsh speak- ing on Cyprus, with more Icid com- ment on the release of Archbishop Makarios. when East comes along, Members of Parliament here- nnd especially Mr. Macmillan. the Prime Minister '- will hIvI earn- ed I rest- INTO SPRING Talking of Easter - it looks as if it might be I good one here. The wlnter has passed without that seven - or eight week period of cold and fog. snow and sleet which makes January and February I hit of an ordeal for Londoners. in- stead the country seems to have slipped into Spring. And I've just been invited to In. event which seems designed to keep the light-hearted mood up. it is at I public house in Bromely- by-Bow. in London's East End. on Good Friday. I am to watch I sail- or hang I bun from the ceiling. The bun-hanging goes back hun- dreds of years. to the time when on the site of the piih - it is called "The widow's Son" -- there was Crisis Reached In Jordan By Arthur Gavslion Associated Press. London King liiisscin of Jordan's outsler of Premier Suleiman Nabiilsi was rcportrri today to hr the result of I bitter quarrel over whether the Ayah slate Siltlllid be exposed to Soviet or American influence. United States diplomats believe the stand Jordan's 24.000 - man army takes in the next few days may determine whether Hussein can stop his coiintry's drift to- ward the Soviet-aliiznod policy of Erzrpt and Syria. it wIs assumed Hussein would not have acted Izainsl the popular premier un- less he had Issurance of military support. , Reports reaching Beirut. Leb- Inon. said all roads leading into Ammnii. the Jordan capital. have been blocked for two days by troops and military vehicles. Ip- parentiy in In Iilcmpf to keep troublemakers from entering the city. in I move to strengthen his hand. Hussein promoted his chief military aide. Brig. Mohunrned Msntya. to major - general Ind made him director - generhl of public security. Mntyn. former Jordnn military tnche lI DI- mseos. replaces MIJ.-Gen. BIh- jat 'l'IbbIi-Ik. who was given I Ion -term lave of Ibu-nee. I Y CRUDE! CRISIS Secret hhflilnebrepuhro by ihplomots in London eflllsbelwren llijg I -.:,,i l eiiruuragcd by the resignation of the premier. whom they consider pro-Communist in his policies. But Western diplomats in Lon- don take the wary view that Na- bulslts dismissal could turn out to be I hollow victory for Hussein. They point out that Nnbulski. who was Isked to serve Is caretaker premier until I new government iii formed. look pains to Innounce that he was quitting It the king's request. MOB IS A DANGER In I land where pistol - shot politics often dominate. Nnbulsi is master of the mobii that have turned out previous governments. Additionally. he leIveI office riding I popularity wIve. He pushed through the final sever- Ince of the British - Jordan de- fence alliance last month. Ind British troops Ind Ilrmen now Ire hurrying out of the country. He also won promises of Iid from Egypt. Saudi ArIbI Ind syrfs. some quarters expect Nnbiilal will refuse to Iccepf defeat. and will call out the street throngs to demonstrate in his fsvur. But it in felt likely thnt 22-yearold Hus- sein can wltlmsnd the pressure of the mobs if his British-tnlncd Inny rallies behind him. Many observers see the pos- Ilbiilty thIi the Irmln of It'll?!- hullg Syria. Iraq. Midi Arabia- Ild lsrul-will move In fighting brenks out. Ind flint Jor- dan now will be divided Iinong KM. CANADA ACCIPIS DATI OTTAWA tCP) - Canada Icon! to the date of June I cottsge inhabited by Ill old widow Ind her son. The son wanted to go to sea. Ind promised to be home by Easter. He did not return. But that Easter. Ind for every Enster until she died. the old wo- man put aside I hot-cross bun for her son. When she did die. neighbours found the buns, and in the son's memory hung them from the ceiling. The cottage is gone now. but the bun-hanging goes on. Each year I new bun is hung from the ceiling by I sailor home on shore leave. BRIGHTER YET? There are other indications that this might be I bright Easter. AI I write. the annual Budget is with- in I few days of publlcntion. It is expected to bring some relief - not. it is true. as much Is moIt Britons hope. but some. 'Looklng for most relief is what used to be called the middle-clIII - the upper-working class now. There are the people in the S2800 45600 I year salary group- Up to now. successive pIrtieI of all colours have been giving the biggest cessions to the lower working class. and now there is in- creasing Igitatlon for the "ex-mid- dle-clIss." whose earnings hnva not gone up anything like those of the lower-pair workers. to get I fnlrer crack of the whip. But the whole ldeI of tax relief, Inys the London psper "The Tim- es." must go beyond the idea of letting the wage-earner keep more in his pocket. There must be I determined effort in gel the if Iter- ling I worth-while unit of curren- cy Ignln. A i945 .6100. points out "The Times." will only buy E40 worth of goods today. With its leader this week point- ing out the dangers of inflation. "The Times" has jumped back - perhaps only for I spasm - to the time when the old paper was nicknamed 'The Thunderer. " There were days when it really thundered. w h e n g overnmentn trembled If its consure. In more recent years it hIs been more sednte, Attack has come mostly from the cheaper. bright- er papers like the mIsI-circuiI- lion "Daily Mirror." which goes into no less thIn 4.000.000 homes. Ind the Benverbrook controlled "Daily Express." But - for this week. anyhow - the old lady hII first pin: in the firing line. GARBAGE CAN DRAMA On the entertainment front. I must record I "No Comment" on the lIti:-st production on the West - l-ind Ilnize - I piece by In Irish writer cnlled Samuel Becket. writ- ten in French. in which both main characters spcIk from,I garbage can. In the cinema. it is good to see , Inother good British war film. It is called "Ysngtsc incident." it ItIrI Richard Todd. Ind Michael lAndorson directed. Thus the two tmen who helped to make "The DIm Busters" such I roaring luc- ceiis hIve not together Ignln. This yarn is Iboul the British frigate "Amethyst" thIt wn bom- bsriled by Communist shore bIt- teries in the Ynngstc in IMO. ran Iground. and VIII I sitting duck for three months before it got I- way. Told without Hollywood blood- Ind-glory, the facts triumphantly speak for themselves. PUBLIC FORUM ti doom. jifho H-3; I&1IuECIIbIOU!O -f "is n:;i..r;-'-' I 3:: is If! g 'fMedically T Speaking Iylor-IIN.lIIdoIeI.Il.D. TAKING LIFE EAIIII IIILPI IIYPEBTENBION RYPERTENSION. or nu blood deopreld Illnunt on this dly of the income at deadline, is our most common chronic complaint. if cInIu more diubtlity Ii dell! I-MI th lngl nu. "'f..t..ii;,'u..f. is no need to be unduly farm of this diui-nu.” By recognizing the Iyinpl-olnl. ob- ; prompt medical Illa- uon Ind by lollowlns your doc.- toi-'I Idvlce tarnons other unus- to lIke life easier) you can In I rule live I fnirly normal lifa with- out much dnnger. EXTENSIVE EXAMINATION Now I don't wInt you pertain- ing I dingnosis on yourIelf- Even I doctor liu difficulty diagnosing high blood pressure from symp- toms alone. He must conduct In extensive examination before he whether you have hypcrtelllioh. While the following symptom. might or might not mean thlt usually indicIte that something mny be wrong. Very often it in high blood pressure. COMMON SYMPTOM Most common Ind most inca- pni.-itating symptom is frequent headaches. Although I headnchp may occur at any time of the dIy. generallly those due to hyper. tension are around when you wakg in the morning. Headaches can be especially dangerous to I person with h n blood pressure. Often they ma I I person tense and irritable. And this can lead to still higher blood DFESSUTE. A feeling of llghthe-Idedness or dizziness may be In indication of hypertension. Generally, though. this particular symptom is itself isn't cause for loo much worry. EARLY SIGNS i'N0T5S:;l'3Yi THE -s' ? L: w. Bi-Intford Expositor Tho TV ropIirinIn was lulu to locate the trouble in the cus- tomei-'I set. A six--your-old was wstching the operation in fascina- tion. He finally said: "I'll bet if you'd clean out all those dead cow- boys from the bottom of the not it would work again!"-rGuelpli Mer- cury In oflaws. office boys kIve come into their own at last. On Pnrlln ment Hill federal civil service has taken the lead in giving 300 office boys I few and longer (therefore. prouderl title. They will be known henceforth Is clerical IIIistIntI- and any department head who calls one an office boy will be pre- sented with the cold cup of mor- uing coffee he so richly deserves. -Hamilton Spectntor Both phystcIl Ind ” II fatigue frequently Tn signs of early hypertension. So lI blushing. especially when it is Iccompnnled by perspiration. pllpilltion of the heart. Ind I rumbling of the bowels. While these symptoms may mean that you hnve high blood pressure, they don't reveal the extent. of your trouble. That's I job for your doctor. QUESTION AND ANSWER C.'l'.: I hnd my ullblndder re- moved Ibout eighteen months Igo- Three weeks Igo. I developed I pain in my stomach, under my shoulder blndes Ind in the right Ildo. What do you think could be OLD FARMEB Ho takes the tractor once more to the fields. " iberly grIteful to be back It work For two of those imprisoned by the cold Were set free in the glIciIl hIllI of death. Young men will work their fields this Spring instead. Boys in their teens or busy. husky wiveI. III is the old mIn of the farm- lIndI now. HI knows his iitiff old bones will Iche tonight But slowly now he feels the vigor Itenl Into his lean. gnunt frnme. Ho! It il Spring! And suddenly the old sweet wnrmfh is here to stay . And life is swinging back across the fields. Summer will return this year Is Ilwnys. Finding him Igain Tnklng his put in Ill the busy rush. The lrnctor roIrI. He sets it on its way, Sunhon his back Ind Joy within his can. fly God! This proves it! He's I good man still! i -Mary Thro nnuih. in the New York Herald Tribune- The Age Old Story Bo content with Inch thlngk II ye have. for he hath uld. I will never leave thee. not forsake thee. OUR YESTERDAYS From the GuIrdiIn Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (April 15. Ill!) Following I number of confer- ences of the Board of Trustee: of the P.E.I. Hospital. the t '”' committee Ind the medical Bonrd. to which the hospital Irchitecls Ind consulting Inginee . were in- vltod. it was Igreed yeIterdIy thn the erection of the new hospital should be proceeded with this sum- mot. Just before going to press this morning The GuIrdlIn leIrned thIt FIlnpbell'I Mills. New Glu- Iuv. who I runs of flames. Ind . ” of Mrs. BIgnIll nonr- ln the finger. The fire of "WWW! Ufilln was discovered I! 1.15 I.In. TIN YEARS AGO mm 15. llffl Negotiations for the purchase of for W beds 0!! lll'0POI0d OI! P.l.l. loctoueho. N.l. for- In I coinploteii Jill. in open- omc Wonk. Dir. III- of the West '7? E -gr;-gs Erin II Pk-ton within two T932 3 causing this? Answer: if is impossible to tell from the description given. tho cause for the pain Not infrequently. following the removal of the gullblsdder. pIinI due to Ipasm of the bile duct i'nIy occur. it is possible that I Ilono may have formed in the bile duct. You are in med of I cnreful study to determine the cunt cIuII for your difficulty. .- lnunu-lgun mm Intvtlshtohi. wt. u't),eoi :iiiicfa.' Thorn! Iii' J. ItItoIunoI.-Orllllnr l'IvpIopbIIoiIto'IIdInfIId that wkst the government pu. vihs. with I uoerienco with drivers in am. . recently pointed out: "An I vs driver is bound to ui in I Iituntion thnt is too tight in get out of. sooner or lnter."-Bran. don Sun The lento ll IIIIPP! that it does not get more publicity. The Inswer is simple. Let the Senate do something Ind let it become something more than I rubber Itnmp for the Government Ind the ncwspnper umespondeuts It Oi- fswn will soon be covering the Upper House.-London Free Press f on of the reIIonI Io nnny youths get in trouble on VIl'lDu.l counts such II theft of an is thnt they haven't ienriied what older people know: you cIn't get away with it. They think they Ire Imarf but fail to realize that there In some Imnrt police officers too- Port Arthur News-Chonriclo A Chicago tnfflc Judge is throw. in out speeding charges brought to court on rIdIr evidence. He in doing it on the grounds thst it does not constitute I witness which I defendant cIn meet in court he: to face. The judge mIy be rfmt. Radar has fslled to Iver! Ihlp col- lisions. Who on IIy it will never fail when computing the speed of In Iutomobiloff - Fort Wlllilll Times-Journnl Whalgggr you're saving for-bolls! sovroi Ibo IAN! of NOVA SCOTIAI Borrow with confidence Whether the Insurer to your Inonoy moblomn i I cub loan or on oounnol. you my rely on H C. CInIdI'I moat. locom- oomumnr Bnnnco com- landed puny. You'll liko HP'C'I prompt. Ituntion and complete bnckod by 70 yoIrI' II- So, if you used up to pounce. Clot!)-in one dny--you may bor- row with oonhdona from HFC. HOUSEHOLD FINANCE 6-'w--r--re-'-4 IIOOrodOool'oI'q&lo I.Ih0noIII7 PJJ FLY MCA, mm M. isuun W! Hill! MI! I'D IAONCTON. sum loom. iuuinicrou raw ousoow. iuinx IOWMIIS --.E3VQVlCl Fhooofov lnuvdtuu ?IvIUIl III. 0