. Eh! ®lI.1.E‘[?‘t‘"'clIfi Coven Prince Eumiiu Island Litre The new Publisher Frank Walker Editor . HIFILOI, Editor 'UbltlhO|'l every week day morning to; opt VI and statutory holidays) at l65 Prime Street. Charlottetown. P.E |.. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Iranch offices at Summerside. Montague. Albsr kn and Souris Represented lIdIICIlally by lliotitsmi N€\V:[)3OCTI Advertising Services Toronto. 425 University Ave. E"lplfQ\ 3-8894, Montreal, 640 Cathcaii Street. UNlvarsity 6-5‘?-12; V"2sterii oitite, Georgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037) ily Newspaper Publishers C5>. the Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use lot repub Iicatiori oi all news dnpatclini this credited to it or to tho /\<<oriair~rl Prov. oi Reu- Mrs. and also in the lnral news piihlisliscl hell In All rights on repubtitation at special dispatches hlreir also ieservecl. Subscription rates. N01 over 35: per week by carrier. SIl.OO a year by mail or rural routes /rid areas not serviced by cartiei $l4.00 a year all lslntlfi itnrl U.l{. 300.00 per year in U.S. and el<f3NllET9 oinsicle British Com- rnonwealth. Not over 7: per sliiqle topy. Member /3..-rlii l3t.x:st- of Circulation. Ti'T~:'s5Av. OCTOBER 16. 1952. Enforcing The Rules Since ipzii-liamcntary rules are applicable to provincial legislatures as well as to the House of (‘ommonsr there will be very wide interest in the efforts which the new Commons Speaker, lion. .\lai'ccl Lambert, has been making this session to put a. curb on irrelt=\'ant questions. l oapor ‘ The question period gives mem- » bers an opportunity to ask questions ‘ of the caltinct and is certainly one . of the fiiiulamcntal rights of Par- liament; but the trouble is that the period may be used for all manner of purposes, not directly or simply related to obtaining information. Every Speaker has to draw the line at some point. but most of them have been content with a fairly lax interpretation of the rules. These rules, as defined in Beatl- chesne's authoritative work, “Rules and Forms of the House of Com- mons nf Canada," sufficiently in- dicate the range of questions that are outside the proper narrow lim- its. A question, says Dr. Beau- chesne, must not be ironical, rhetor- ical, offensive, or contain epithet. in- nniando, satire or ridicule. It must. not be trivial. vague, or meaningless, or contain inferences or imputations or an expression of opinion. It must ltnl he so framed as to sttggest its own answer. or reflect on or relate to the character or conduct of per- sons other than in a public capacity. Dr. Roatichcstic listed the improp- er questions with the letters of the alphabet. The categories were so many that he exhausted the whole alphabet and had to begin over again. douliling the letters. as (aa) and (bhl. Hp did not come to an end until he reached’ (rtri). According to the Montreal Gazette. the new Speaker's deter- mination to t-nturn to the rules has been made all the more difficult. be- cause his immediate predecessor in office, Mr. Roland Mitchcner. al- lownd the members wide latitude in questioning. Mr. Lambert, in conse- quence, is resisting not only the long and loose practice of the years, but the fact that: members have been accustomod to a very recent latitude. And the strict enforcement of the rules. difficult enough at any time, 1030 West ’ is proving specially so in at House ; divided and restive, as it has seldom boon. However. it is to be hoped the Spcaker will stick to his guns. If the rules HH‘ loo strict they should be changed. but that is not his busi- ness. it wmild be it strange require- ment. as The Gazette says, that he who is appointed to uphold the rules should be l'P.‘lf‘.lll(‘.fi for enforcing them. That goes. incidentally. for the practice in our own Legislature. where, as in other parliaments, the framing and presenting of questions has developed into an art with an astonishing range of ulterior mo- tivee. Japanese Example If necessity is the mother of in- Vontion, the Japanese are surely among its brightest offspring. -They ‘have proved this in their tremen- ,.. dtuoly expended trade and indus- - _ .—‘ activities. Now, a new genera- , ' _ of young farmers in Japan is l ' ing s virtual revolution in the ildtionb foodstuffs, and they are _ this by molding an intensive fl, methods in sicnougn only about 17 per cent of the mountainous little islands were arable, and many little farming villages depended solely on rice farming. Today, Canadian wheat is increasingly supplanting rice as a. staple. Many other types of food- stuffs have also been introduced and young farmers are scattered all over the world, studying other na- tions‘ farming methods. For example they are sttidying the cultivation of hops and cherries in relatively cold climates such as Canada's, the use of mountain slopes for (‘illlle-l‘£llSllli£ as in Switzerland, and the planting of trees on moun- tains as in Denmark. Some of. the results have already been spectacu- lar. A poor village in the mountains of Karuizawa turned rich quickly when a young farmer showed them how to grow soft and delicious cab- bages in the rich volcanic soil of their.region. Last year. this little village of 3.000 people made a prof- it of $2,2()().t')t)t). Ingenuity has been the clue to most of this agricultural progress. One region profited by learning to cultivate mushrooms oil the trunks of chestnut trces. Another village prospered by cultivating tropical fruits and flowers in grccnhouscs which titilized the hcat from a near- by hot spring spa. Still another area learned to draw valuable by-products from seaweed. Other regions have imported black tea saplings and some have learned to produce red, green and yellow apples. Population pressure is one thing which forces the Japanese to exploit every means of sustenance at their command. But their example can be an inspiration to other, more rich- l_v endowed nations. Especially is this the case in the remarkable adaptability to change which the Japanese have shown, despite the long centuries of tradition behind their ways of life. Canada's Voice Raised We note, with approval, that the Canadian Government remains “un- equivocally opposed to all nuclear weapons tests," and that otir at- titude has again been placed strong- ly before a United Nations Assem- bly committee by the Canadian dele- gate, General Burns. lanada is striving, with other nations, to achieve it halt in a.ll‘nu- clear weapons tests by Jan. 1. 1968 or earlier. It is supporting the pro- posal for ati immediate test. ban in the atmosphere, outer space and un- derwater, also for an international agreement which will provide as- surances that no further tests are carried out and that all states live up to their obligations under the treaty. It may be asked, what good will this do? The big nuclear powers are going ahead with their tests, re- gardless of world opinion. It is argu- ed that ii treaty would give no as- surance that states were living tip to their commitments. But as long as the negotiators concentrate their attention on the disadvantages of their security which might result from a particular system of inspec- tion, the longer it will be before any real progress is made. When these disadvantages are seen in their proper perspective, against the graver prospects of con- tinued testing, the necessary con- ditions will exist. to bring an effec- tive test ban to rca.lit,_v. It is Canada's view, as it is of many other na- tions, that if the negotiating powers can readjust their thinking in this way. new compromises, acceptable to both sides, could ‘be achieved. Despite the disappointments at Geneva and elsewhere.. we are con- vinced that this view is gaining ground and that eventually it will prevail. We believe, too, that Can- ada has a major role to play in pre- senting it as strongly as possible, and on every possible occasion. EDITORIAL NOTE Moscow may be ahead in the space race. but it still can’t keep its parks and squares from being plag- ued by pigeons. Literature and Life. a Soviet newspaper, says it‘: time to stop talking about the pigeons and do something about them. The’ ~ lloscow city council tried: it passed ‘a stern resolution condemning the pigeons. But the birds pay no at- tent:ion..Aa the Milwaukee Journal suggests, either they can’t read or, ittillke, ctnzifris or the 8ov,iat'U% t:be7’u not frlfljllfilllod by; of“ 3 t .. *.\‘.:ir.»;... ., """ ‘tilt/lCNTA e i - GU “kl ‘ .‘ ‘ x;..,,,_ E RIVER scent“ OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Liberals Feel Socreds«Robbed Them The 25th Parliament of Can- ada is rapidly becoming re- markable for the outstanding prominence \von by the Social (trcdit group. and accorded to it by the other Opposition par- ties. The appeared on Parliament Hill in 1935, when they almost swept Alberta and also elected two M.Ps r o in Saskatchewan. Through the next 23 years and five elections. the House of Commons always had its small Social Crcdit group, always with an Albcrtan hard core. Recent- ly. it added strength from B.C.. but fell behind the CCF to be the fourth largest. party in parliament. Once, in a 1946 by- clcction. it broke out of the West to elect a solitary member in a rural Quebec constituency. He made two or three fiery speech- es in French. but disappeared at the 1949 general election. His name was Real Caouette. Then. in the-"1958 general el- ection, the Social Crcditiste were wiped oiil: iiol one was elected to Parliament. With their de- parture, an attractive element was removed from Parliament Hill. while their group wa widely considered to harbour somc political nuts and some nutty ideas. individually they were nearly all liked and re- spcclcd for their obvious slu- cerity and uprightness. Names llkc Solon Low, George Hahn. Frank Christian and others are dos-ct-vcdly honored in parlia- mcntary memory. SURPRISE UPSURGE Social Creditlsts first Since 1960. reports of Credit: isle activity in the province of Quebec have con filtering througli to Ottawa. A big paid membership was being built up: their leader was using TV a great deal and attracting en- thusiastic audiences; his na Real Caouctte, rang a faint of rccollcction in Ottawa. But it was not until the last two weeks of the general elec- tion last .Iune that sitting Con- servative and Liberal M.Ps and Liberal candidates in Quebec began to report to their party headquarters in Ottawa that they would be licked by . Caouctte's followers. Despite an eleventh-hour Ll- beral counter-attack, the Social Credit captured even the great- est prestige Liberal seat in Canada, Quebec East. That had been the political home of those great French-Canadian Liberal leaders Sir Wilfred Laurier, Ernest Lapolnle-and Louis St. Laurent. There a politically un- known Crcditiste defeated the Liberal backroom professor. Maurice Lamontagne, by a larger majority than Laurler or Lapointe had ever achieved. The party which had been disparagcd as "the wild men from the woods" won more than one-third of all 9 seats ' Quebec and, with small forcement from the West. sent is record 30 M.Ps to Ottawa. LIBERAI. HOPES DASIIED While most of the Socred votes were won from the Tories, these were voles which the Liberals had expected to garner. Many Liberals feel that the 26 triump- hant Socreds in Quebec robbed them of political power in Ot- tawa. A sweep of those 5 e a l I .__. THE BREAKERS IN AUTUMN (at Rollo Bey) They sing ii lullaby to Autumn. The breakers in the Bay: The golden plenty of the trees Tipping the salty spray. In the riches of the sunset, ’1l'liethl:reTkere'fthiinders bound. ll 3 073' the moonlight Their muted zolces suilid. ' The lhontly ships of Rollo The English lord who came. \ Flost filth iii the misty motl- 88- Tlto‘ breakers cry lils iistne. Rolling in from the moon's pull The (rest W&Vel' siitbuus rear: 2 flesh Ibo:-it Whom all bhulnge pour. ' Dhostle L I would have made the Liberals‘ the largest party in Parliament, ; but yet lacking a majority. I The first votes and the early| speeches by the new Socred 5 M.Ps equally made it clear that ; their philosophy still stands at,‘ the high level of the Laws, the I Hahns and the Christians. They 3 place country above Party. They ; believe that Canada today needs 1 government action more than i another lengthy election c a m- l palgn. Although they expect tot capture 152 seats at the next el- ection, they are voting to malri- l Railroad unions in -I a p a I! have passed resolutions in many branches opposing tippingl as it dishonorable custom. al- 3 though for some workers it} could mean a loss of about $80 is 1 month. If only workers on thisl continent would adopt a simil-3 ar attitu ‘ Once upon a time. years ago, tipping made sense because the customer got ser- vice with his tip. But today nianyl .. 5 me, bell . vuicloslu North America tipping too often has become an insidious and senseless habit. Neither the don- l or nor the receiver regards the‘ ‘tip as a reward for good ser- , ce. : People give tips for a variety , of reasons. They like to lm- ; press others with their gcncros- 1 l I , ity. A large tip may appease a _ Iizuilty conscience or the vanity: ‘ of the tipper. But rarely is the l ‘ tip handed over in true appre- l ciation of services rendered. < iBot.h in Canada and the United l States wage scales in many ser- , } vice Industries have reached 1 levels where tipping becomes i ‘ unnecessary. Need for it more efficient and I speedier w a r n i ii 11 system - i against possible bad effects I ’ from new drugs has been made by Prof. Widusklnd Lcnz of Hamburg, Germany. It was the lay press which spread the thalidomide warning while‘ health authorities in the coun- tries where the drug was sold reacted much more slowly. The doctor has ii good point. In recent years the machinery for getting new drugs from the laboratories to the doctors‘ of- fices, hospitals etc. seem to have become very fast —- dan- gerously fast. it most cases, including Ca- nada, food and drug regulations are strict, and do a good job of protecting the public. But in some cases where cause and ef- fect. are not ately ap- parent. as with thalidomide. the drug is widely spread before clinical testing is complete. In- some cases. the new drugs are widely circulated among doc- Self-Discipline ls Said Needed To Stop Smoking Dr. Theodore R. Van Delleii AM a former clgaret smoker." writes I(.G.K. “and agree wth your recent state- ment that the way to stop, is to stop. The mental process of stopping was important in my case To say to myself I never again would smoke was impos- sible but I could say (and did) I would not smoke before break- fast. Later, I decided to ti-etch the time. to lo a.m.. and then un noon. "After ending one day with out smoking. it was just a little easier the second d . In a week the desire was consider- ably minimized. After almost: two years without smoking. I fer-llsorry for people who it re addicted to the habit. Inciden- tally. one of the things I enjoy most about not smoking is the freedom from wondering if the partially filled pack of cigarets in my pocket will be enough to see me through the evening." Each person must work out his own method of freeing him- found the right one for him. Tiir- last sentence in the above letter makes an especially good point. . 71 ear old Brooklynlte reads four newspapers a nd maintains this is the best w a y to keep youn 2 mentally and physically. He ‘writes: "I am totally deaf, practical- ly blind in the right eye. wear a truss because of a ernla, have occasional attacks of lum- bago. suffer from sinus trrible, and have a circulatory impedi- taln the Conservative minority government in power as long as it initiates imaginative econom- ic measures. To the Liberals. who also ex- pect to capture a majority of Parliament's seats at the next election, this Socred attitude is frustrating — ut is beyond words. Liberal after Liberal is devoting his or her entire speech not to proposing steps beneficial to Canada. but to criticising and even abusing the Creditistes — to whom such publicity is not unwelcome. A Degroiding Practise Globe and Mail, Toronto Tipping. and opposition to if. have led to yet another innova- tion during the past years which is costing hotel and restaurant customers in Europe millions each year. Until recently. th e system had not invaded North America but now some hotels , and rcstaurants in the big cities are beginning to adopt it. A service charge of anything from 5 to 15 per cent is added to the client's bill, allegedly to eliminate tipping. But the grim. surly expression on the faces of waiters or bellhops still has the 3 customer diving into his pocket, with the result that he is often paying 20 per cent over a rid above the stated charge for his meals and accommodation. It is through the unions that this degrading and outdated practice s h o u l d be abolished. Organized labor ensures that most Canadian workers are paid a fair wage. In a society a s wealthy and well-fed as ours. a genuine labor campaign to end tipping would find support In many quarters. Speedier Information l l l Sarnls Observer l tors for “research" purposes. In the case of thalidomide. ap- parently there was disturbing evidence of its ill effects in pregnant women even while it. was being distributed more ‘ widely on this continent. One of the first clues -— or the one that led to the check on its distribution in the U.S. - was an article in a British medical journal. There must -have been some weeks or .even montlis from the time the article was written until it was published. If the drug houses can set up it system for rapid dissemina- tion of drugs, they had better take equal responsibility for setting up a system posts". A tragedy like the tha- lidomide one may not happen again for a generation — it might‘ happen tomorrow. n-, less there is a faster means. of checking up on "side effects" tton, it will certainly ii union and of distributing the Informa- agatn. _ A flock of 2,000 pigeons will be released from Aachen, ‘West Germany, this month to mark the bti-th.112 years ago of the Reuters news agency.» In 1060 Paul Julius Renter ran n pl cori- cllles were linked by telegraph. Some zoo of the birds will fly to Brussels. others will fly to more distant cities, some to London. . s s -common mistake to call this type of pi the car- rier p eon. Actual . carrier pic“ goons. ’ don't that Router made 1080 was shared. goeugswfitgoulliiz W, the A ‘ The Pigeon Post MIIIICIOII GIIOCIQ flying. so that, by 1890. some bs in existence. ve actually rom I distance of 1.000 miles. __ Undoubtedly, those mi-~.1dous achievements. 1 minute. s pigeon stltiite -for Telstar. MOTHER 'A‘|"l'A3l GIRL ‘ MoN'mnAL~z'cm - polio.’ said Wednesday s lo-yesi-o|I.. ment in the right leg. I also am an arrested case of tuber- ‘culosls for which I attend the health clinic every two months. Despite th e s e ailments, my mind is so occupied with read- ing about what's going on in this world, I have no time to worry about my allments." When the mind is occupied. the individual is less likely to dwell on his own problems. A great editor had this in min d when he sent his daily pa per without cost to the patients in a large Chicago hospital. 1'. Van Delle questions on medical topics if "alarm V stamped, self-addressed enve- lopc accompanies request.) ANGER AND ANGINA \V.M. writes: After reading your article on attacks of an- gina after getting angry. I would like to clarify a point. Can a person who does not have hardening of the coronary ar- teries be affected in this way? In other words, could a normal heart react to anger with angi- nal pain or a heart attack? REPLY No. but the blood pressure is likely to go up and the pulse to quicken. You take a lot for granted when you assume that the individual does not have ndened coronary arteries. Studies on young men killed in accidents show that the major- ‘ of arterio- sclerosis and there is no test, to my knowledge, to determine whether the arteries are soft. NIGHT BLIND BABY J.H. writes: Is there any help for a boy born with night blind- tress’! - REPLY I doubt if the condition can be treated but nowadays it lg ht blirdness is not a serious handl- cap, thanks to Thomas Edison. Vitamin A should be tried.’ how- ever. on the outside chance that E‘ E three persons who took some klnd of pill to reduce and still eat all they want. They would not divulge the secret to me. Can you tell me what these pills are? I would be suspicious of th e l 1' safety. 'l'0DAY’S HEALTH HINT- Dry your hands before touch- lniz is light switch. self from the habit. This lawyer 3 n will answer ‘ REPLY ‘ No. If these pills do all th I s. I A large dog elitcnid a heads: bus. Since nobody paid his fare. _the conductor tried to put him off. The dog became angry. bar- éd his teeth and chased the con- ductor off the bus. usengers were evacuated by the emer- gency door. A policeman lured the dog off the bus with a bone. but the dog grabbed the bone and jumped back onto the b u 3 again. The bus was forced to return to its garage with th e do: still aboard. and it required three hours for SPCA officials to People with time as Muir‘ hands so much of it with people who bavcn't.—- Brandon‘ Sun. ' In like the ceulosolltss ves- taurant signs on Number 2 ~§l‘gliway east of Nspsnee. They omlse: “ rich eiilslne. Our specialty, Hunilarlsn Goulash." —Harnllton spectator ' Those well-fed poonle who spend their time devising fv-uh punishment and humlliatio" or the unfortunate seem to ~.l that a vest and lmpiissablr -ill divides them from the unem- ployed. that they are almost separate races. Yet daily exper- teiicereminds us that life is full of chances and surprises an d that those who are prosperous and independent today may to- . The experiment in neutralis- l lng Laos is now entering an ex- ceptionally interesting stage. , When the deadline came for withdrawal of foreign forces un- der the truce agreement all Am- ; erican forces had. in fact. cross- : ed the Mekong River and were out. This was not an act of faith in Communist intentions. It was the best available way to com- pel the Communists to do like- wise. It must have taken consider- OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) l TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO l (October 16. 1952) ; Miss Adele MacLennan, Char- lottetown. has left for Boston, Mass., where she has accepted - a position as Dletlclan in the ‘ Massachusetts Osteopathic Hos- ! pital, ‘Jamaica Plain. i The fourth annual meeting of l the Wo-He-Lo Club. a group of some eighteen energetic young women, meeting weekly to sew for the nursery of the Prince Edward Island Hospital, was held Wednesday at the home of I Mrs. Walter Baker. TEN YEARS AGO (October 16. 19520 The former Murray River School was purchased last ; week by a group of interested ; citizens to be used as a South- iern King's Community Centre. . Dr. M.L. Bonnell, president of 1 the Club. hopes to have a large i membership, which w be a tively interested In the work. The Chief of the Air Staff. Air Marshall W.A. Curtis, C. 3., C.B.E., D.S.0., E.D., and Mrs. Curtis arrived in Summerslde last evening for s brief visit at the RCAF Station. Air Marshall Curtis is the first and only chief in all three armed services. of the Air Force to have served : co in off.--- London Ex- marrow be dependent on char- press. . lty.— Toronto Star. i The Lcios Experiment Christin Science Mo/nitor able courage l.n Washington, however. to play the game th way. This is not the tradition in such cold-war matters. Normal- ly the United States would have pointed out that several thou- sand Communist troops still re- mained inside Laos. and an- grily announced that American withdrawal would not com- pleted until the Communists did likewise. RECRIMINATIONS Recrfmlnntlons would follow. The American intelligence esti- mates would be denied by the Communists and reasserted by the United States (one hopes they are reasonably accurate and not exaggerated). when the issue was well mud- died. the Communists would turn their propaganda machine full on around the world. blam- ing the Americans for the break- up of the truce. But it didn't happen that way. The American military units, which were small advisory and command units not able to ef- fect the outcome by themselves, got out. Responsibility is clearly placed on the Communists to do likewise. To fail will be to ad- mit double-dealing and failure to live up to a pledged word in the sight of the entire world. The Issue is not muddled now. NOT BE EASY To be sure it will not be easy to prove the existence of out- side Communist milltary force: inside Laos. But the next stage of this important cold-war game is to give Prince ‘Souvenirs Phouma. the neutral Premhr. actual can over the arena from which Communists are supposed to be removed. This will take time and the usual haggling. The Communists will either have to block it, which puts them in the wrong. or to have their remaining forces exposed. which would really discredit them. The experiment is not gain: ‘ badly. But that is because it to ibeliig shrewdly conducted. FOR YOUR INS Consult HYNDMAN Q Montague Inurance since 1872 our experience of II years as insurance underwriters. so your disposal. Q Chsrlotttetorrs Agents Throughout the -Province URANCE NEEDS 8: CO. LTD. is OFFICES: , Q Sumiucrsldo Q Albertos ' Moncton Truro Sydney Quebec -t Travel Bargains CHARLOTTETOWN TO: Sackville . I clip 1%! A Hit-tigonish $2.10 2.80 3.80 p 4.80’ r 5.20. 5.60 t~tore,sl BY Tl-IE WAY I