och 'LllQl'I Am hnl I no Iv Ianvr Po 'l'hc Inn;-ll l current round l in: the ducers will. it grnucr they h undue porter. Atncrit ary April- others just :1 grams for m is not where Iauco Th mcnl. PINIEIIII oven weeldll Charlnnuinta. Montreal (Kill: 2.: muvzruly U: A. Buraeu. Publnnel and General luau! M-mtier Andlf Bureau In-rn nun-on ll Sun.meruv.te. mun Iillnwberu in P I-Tl Um I) PAGE 4 stock and seed potatoes from sonrl quota, but our sallsllcd that this uill not .-;u1sc am There is also prm'l-1-ill euntimiim; rhily-f'rce arllnlllalu-c of provision is more tinrcrlallt. cularly as to the result durula ill” however. reasonably satisfied with the terms announced yestcl'I'l3.V ll.V l"l"3"t'P Minister Harris. The tariff change represents a great deal of hard work on the flail of our potato organizations, Horti- cultural ntion. Dcparlinent of Agriculture and r 6uardiuu PTIIC E0011 IHIC l& III l'hV' Ulnflllnj II lab Prune: Stunt tau rbmn-on cnmvuy Ud- loruula rune: IldI.. I' E.I.. mt 64 Kill 5! W. Frank Walker. Dditnr lumber Fanadun Dally Net-rwutd Publisher-I Auouanoo Member at The Canadian PI-en of Circulannu Iluoulue and Alberto: .1 Second (flan Mall by the Pal 09"?! Department Ottawa n.,.m.m-town. Summvrama slfu rm Mr '5 (mm Prmlm-on no I Ilttift per Innnln " sa-rnnnav. APRIL I 1157 lalo Tartil Change cxlcnsidn of Cauafl9i'5 s't"i' a1'lfT on l.'nltcd States tahlc the six-necks period to A .WiW- ,aN-jg guns a lung nay ill lllf'lll- objections of our point" it!”- and ghippprs ff) lliti fliS2lI'i- vantage of the existing situation. it is bclicxcd. place tlaltadiull q in a hcltcr position than ave cnimcd for lWlll.t' .V"lll” in exchange. Canada has aEI'Nifl'l" g to per cent reduction in the l ..s. pnlftln men arc hardship to the fhmadian cy- llw for 'an new Pntalncs llulll -lalllls l to June l4. The cffcul of this partl- .lune period. On the whole. our potato spokcsmcn sccm Council, Agriculture Feder- intcrcslcri. and proves that representations of this kin d can achieve concrete results. tlt"k'rlll(lt”S and arlvncated vigor- ously and intelligently. if based on Weak Argument it -ha: hppn argued in the ('om- nmns that if it is wrong for ('ahlncl. ministers to inlerfcre with ('17-(' Pm- ln any way it is equally wroni! embers of Opposition parties 3 to ovpress criticism. The argument sound. This is one instance it is not true that what is ' the l for the goose la sauce for gander. c ('l-l(' is responsible to llarli;i- nut in lilI' llahinel. This fact. in itself. niakcs it permissible for any over i hand zcns. t lcrpi cl resclll ”pr1v;tlc" private member of Parliament. Withi- ll! nnliliral label. to express npprnval or disapproval of any parli- cular progzruni. right that belongs to any and every "private" citizen. This is not political lnlcrfercnl-c. f'n'oincl ministers, on the Utllcr This, morcovcr. is a -the u hole l9 of them- are in a different position. They are citi- n hp sure. but they are not citizens in the general in- alum of that word. Thcy rcp- pnllllral power; and between pnmicnl power and political inter- fm-cnce in free expression of opinion on a publicly owned news medium there is a very thin margin Of SRTPW which it would be easy to break down. This is not to suflflflsl "Till 3" (tabinet ministers if given an inch would take a foot, as the saying goes. Nor does It mean that the Prime wrote Board Minister himself. when if?- tn the chairman of the CBC of f'.overnora protesting the content of a political commentary. deliberately intended in lnt6I'fC1'9 i with the right of free speech. But has it to tho? id 043 there is always that possibility. un- is removed by making clear 19 that they must be prepared others do what criticising in British Emigrants eiqantobavccraahlrttn kraamequartenlthat Haltllmh .am..t..:..- -.... . ..-.-m. The current exodus is mainly. perhaps altogether, I matter of eco- nomics-taxes, to be exact And there are signs that in the Budget which he will bring down next week. Mr. Peter Thomeycrofi. the new Chancellor of the Exchequer. will have some good news for over-burd- cncd taxpayers (and this is one instance where the adjective ”mcr- burdcnedl-' really means what it says. for there is no question that Britons are the most heavily taxed people in the free world). Should this much talked about and hopcd for tax relief become a reality. cs- pccially among the wage earning classes. a sudden drop in the scale of emigration can be expected. Tilcanwhilc, since large numhc"s lunc apparently decided to move. if is to Canada's advantage that lhcv arc coming this way: although. of min-sc. for the first few years nftcr their arrival they can be cnuntml -wt to proclaim in season and out of stiaxtlll. in good report and Pill ro- pmt, that everything is done much ltutlcr in the "Old country." That is cliaiaclcristic of Enzlishmcn. .N'cnls- inch and Irishmen who lcavc their homclands and seek their fortunes abroad. All it means is that the "olfl rmmlry" is Still their spiritual lnunc and economic pattern of Canada. H ll is on reflection at all on the social Tragic Altair There seems no doubt but that the suicide of Mr. Norman, Canadian Ambassador to Egypt, wait a direct result of the renewed attack by a l'nitcd States Senate committee on his alleged former Communist con- nections. These charges were repu- diated in (lanada and there is no reason to doubt the assurance given by External Affairs Minister Pear- son that for cightecn years Mr. Nor- man served his country with loyalty. ricvotion and ability. During recent months he uas under great prcssurc at (';1irft. working at times round the clock. Members of all parties at Ot- tawa yesterday lndorscd Mr. Pear- son's view that "the combined effect of overwork. nvcrsfrain and the feel- ing uf rcncwcd persecution on a sensitive mind and I not very robust body produced I nervous collapse. the tragic result of which has brought to me personally and. i am sure. to his colleagues and friends. both shock and grief and I sense of E great loss." That. we feel, will be 1 the sctltimcnts of Canadians gener- l ally. EDITORIAL NOTES The Indian election results won't be known for some time yet. as there are still quite a few districts to hr heard from. llowever. Mr. Nchru's party already has elected him Pre- mier; so his chief worry is over. I 0 0 S22: bank notes are very scarce. says an official of the Rank of Can- ada. A good many Canadians would say that there are times when notcs in the other denontinations are not too plentiful. Only three N'cwfoundlanci ships are engaged in the seal fishery this y spring. it's a far cry from a hundred l years ago when 400 ships large and small went "to the ice." 0 0 O Returning from a visit to Most- cow. Premier Kadar of Hungary said that Soviet troops would he kept in Hungary "for as long as necessary." That means, of course. for as long as Mr. Nikita Khrushchev thinks they should stay. 0 O O A Fanadian Press dispatch says that the Government of Canada has borrowed 3125 million on bills due June 21. There is, no,doubt. good and sufficient reason: for it; but to the layman it is a mystery why a government should want. to keep on borrowtm money when it has a sur- plln d two or three hundred rrullion dollars at its hands. i O O O Newfoundland import; the bulk of potatoes consumed in the prov- lna. This. however, is became of I INITED KINGDOM OPINION "T A Backlo Trouble Ev ”0nlooker" of the lmndnn. England Homo: of Thomson Newspaper: Looking as if he hart nrier left aimless Britain. the Vfntp timin- lrr ilr. Macmillan flcu ltilln from Bermuda this week to face a pile of trouble only slightly smaller than the one he left ht-liuul him. True. the Cyprus picture looked easier. although the release of Archbishop lltakarins has shtI('l(Pd the Briton-in-lhc-street. On the oth- er hand. tltc shlphuilflcrs' and en- gineers' strikcs. which ucrc Jusf threats when he left, have become nctuallties Mr. Macmillan has hroulzhl back however. some tbut not mllrltl substance for the sltadowy ques- tion mark as in when the British will get the lmerican guided mis- siles that have been promised as a result of the Eiscnhower-MacmiI- in talks Service rlnefs here are cynical about lhr prnnllscs. know that the type of intermediate range missile wanted her - of run- ges of up In I500 unlcs - are still in the development slailf. and It is I pretty safe bet In say that it will be around I960 before the first British serviceman fires the first imported missile. NEW SKll.I. I went out to l.oudon airport In see Mr itacmlllan arrue back from Bermuda. and i could not help noticing that he is getting cas It-r. more graceful in his actions and in the way he deals with the Press since he took ml-r Sir fin- lhony l-Idcn's hot seat. They t He has I new skill. He may be l I! evasive In most British politic- lans are. but be is gaining the ad- rnirnlinn of the Press as an in- dividual. Macmillan pronounced himself "delighted" with the deal he has made with Canada. it will Britain's fast-growing atomic no war programme - the most ad- vanced in Eilrnpe - along con-.-id erably He seemed graft-ful ln Vlr. St. Laurent in another way. too it was the Canadian Prime Minister who insisted that be left early an that he would not arrive hack in the United Kingdom It the unearth- ly hour of 2 am FINEST-Al.MOST There uaa an incidental filS3tP- pointment over my visit to the air- port. Potentially London Airport help i 1 the sort of runs they have had. so la the finest in the world - cer- . tainlv far better than the others l I hate seen around Europe. But I had to :o to a collection of but: on onc side of the airport to greet the incoming plane. All lnng-distance aircraft still have to use the war-tune huts built years Inn. By next year. though. that will be changed The new buildings gov mg up there are getting into use. Rut there is mil I tacit admis- slon that services may be delayed sometimes. A news cinema is be- in: built lhcre l.IKl-7 SflEF.l' Tlllkinif of airports I few people who have suffered from dclavs II airports have started I sort of ”lrIde union" for air passengers They contend that no official or- galliznlmn exists In voice the com. plaints of passengers, but plenty 'A5lilNCTtl'V' -- Marimba um-5 deft.-rt Barhnrv ptrnlcu on the Ihores of Trinnli. forcvrr linking the United stares Nnw to Libyan lfl Iona -. clarcs that he could have kept run- l Libya's Key National Gmnjk R091 The plrateu have long since pn. ' set! into history, but one fact nova r-hanger. Libya remains I crm-III spot In world affairs because of its Iirlteglc plan on the Mediterran- can. Situated between Egypt and Tunisia. Libya has I Llllo-mite coastline. A shone-hugging rru connects the two frontiers Ltbyrg total land Ina of 579.8 Iquan Pxlsl for the operalmz To add edge to lhPll' attack they have gained as president of the nail Association Lord Brabazon of 'fara. a man of many parts in his long life. including a spasm as I R Ftt. pilot and a balluonial in and before the first world war. Some of his recent comments: ”Passcngers at air terminals are treated like sheep " And what I- holll "These new planes landing at a rate of 140 knots are just not safe ” INVASION Thcre will be a Canadian invas- ion of London's Piccadilly Theatre on April M. Over here contribut- ions from the stages of the world have included a party of German. the Bolshoi Ballet, a couple of French companies. I Chinese var- iety show. and at the moment there I! I Polish Yirlrtixher company go- Inc full spate But from the fin- ounions - apart from the occas- lnflal ltrlor or actress - there has been nothing. Now the llflfl-sealer Piccadilly. one of Lonrlonia newer and more comfortable theatres. has been booked b.V Tennents. one of Brit- 3'n'i bilscst theatrical combines. in not on British playwrilht .l.ft. Priestley”! ”Tlw Glass Cage." Three artists from the (Treat Thea- tre in Toronto - Barbara Chllcott and her two brothers. Murray and finualri Davis - will play the main parts. For their break they can rtumk I chance dinner-meeting In Tor- onto I year ago. when the British writer sat opposite them. was Im- pressed by their likeneu. Ind thought: "What an entrance those three could make." But be found that non: of his Dlays were suitable - no he Iat- dfiiin and utartod to write one. He has set it In Toronto 50 year: ago. VII.l.AlN ON THE STAGE For some time past the Piccadil- ly has been lucky for shows and one can hope that the luck will hold for the CInIdlIna' debut. But other theatres are in quite a mess now-and not only owing to the quality of their material. either. The villain In the case is en- tertainment tax - not as heavy In it In on the cinema. but still mak- lnlz I great difference in takings. A large theatre here has just clon- ed. and the management of it do- nim: bad he not had to pay en- tertainment tax which took no ltll than 8280.000 from the theatre in the two part years. But London is especially burd- ened right now with too many large theatres. built. in the dayl when the theatre was practically the only form of enteruinment. And the only type of entertalmant to fill these zmfl-sealer abowbouua these days - ustutlly an imported Ameri- can musical - comes along all too seldom And any financial ”fat" that a theatre may gain when in the The- Itre Royal in Drury Lane here did I few years Igot it houses I Inc- eesxful musical like "Oklahoma!" can all be whittled Iway by one Iemi-flop. Positiof make up the domlltl of I.lbyI'I King Mbbammed ldria El Blnuui. Ho lives in Bengliul The seat of government is Tripoli. I mecca walled city. The count of Trlpnlltanta in up- Watt! ,t!i.::isc in V? PUBLIC FORUM Ihu column ll open to the that ion by correspondents n1 queatin d inland. The Guardian doaa not has -rib endona the optnlu d min Fondant; ON PAINTING IN P.E.l. Sir.- There are only a few per- mm in Charlottetown who can paint. maybe a half a dozen. - persona whose technical know- ledge of painting amounts to some- thing more than the usual self- . taught Sunday painter: draughis- manship; and four of these few are presently exhibiting I number of their paintings. Their respective techniques are remarkably akin. Miss Lowe's dif- fering slightly; and an is their Ir- tistire vision. The style of these painting: is something of I post- impressionistic one. softened down by what is usually termed "Can- adian temperance". tnol necessar- ily I virtue. but more often I mere lack of courage or bolrlnesalz it in furthermore very much influenc- ed by the art of some Canadian landscape painters of the beltin- llings of this century. All four painters paint honestly. and the results are honest. Not great. There is something very timid. very shy about these lInd- acapes. which are all too often only "charming". Prettiness and great art but never gotten along too success- fully. and I fear that most Mari- time painters paint pretty land- Icapes. rather than beautiful land- acapes Moreover. landscape paint in. which has had its glories -- one. has only to remember Corol. Constable. Monet. is certainly no longer one of the important llvtnll forms in contemporary art: Ind. personally. I much prefer the ex- cellent photography that has now replaced landscape painting. What most people don't ace. la that painting is not superior to photo- Iraphy because it lI done by hand. but only because it says something that the photograph cannot sIy. Many of the iandlcapcs exhibited do not say much more than cam- era works would. on the other hand. figure com- positions demand more skill. more knowledge of drawing. and weak- nesses in them are always more obvious than in landscapes. I don't think that we are ready In give. Canada another Harris. There are run young artists in Charlottetown and I can very well understand why they will exile themaolvea to Toronto Ind Montreal whenever they appear. The art of Painting in In unim- portant In our Province. there are so few who understand and love good painting. that any ex- ceptional nalnlar would find him- self in I desert. Unfortunately radio cannot diffuse aood paint- ing as it is diffusing good music. The few Irtultl who are exhibit- ins. and whom i have the great Dlrarura of knowing. are (total all they can to prompt thia par- ticular activity of the spirit. But this ls not Italy or France. New York or Mexico. Ind I'm afraid that the sale of cheap P.E.f. land- scape: to tourists hungry for any kind of Iouvenlrl. will remain. with the Iale. of Prealy records. the only important an activity for I long time in coma. Maybe one should not hope for anything better. but one. at least. has the right to deplore this impos- sibility of hope. i am. Sir. ote.. fRF.V.) ADRIEN AMENAULI St. Dunmnla College. .s;...”y'.s.i..;im;' Notice appeared in the Royal Gueite recently Iaaouaclug the -...;.. ...i 5.4- . me CQUNTlER-CIMM g "Tvtedicolly Speaking By. Herman N. Bnldelcl. MJ). LEARMNG TO EAT HELP! .. FEW iRAL - PALSIED TALK Fl-:Ei)lNG I cerebral-palaled child correctly is probably one of the best ways in help him talk. . To realize what a painted child is up against. try talking without moving your tongue. lips or throat. it's a tough job The movements I person must make in eating a good dinner are the best exercises posaible for aiding the use of these partl Io vital to speech. FIRST STEPS Before any child learns to speak, he must. first learn to suck. chew. swallow and blow. A good speech therapist makes use of Lhese actions when train- ing a painted youngster. And I stood feeder can be I good Ipeecli therllpllt right at home. when feeding a young cerebral palsy victim. place only I small amount of food on I spoon. Make the child use his lips to remove it. i)on't make him use his teeth to take food from the spoon and don't permit. the utensil to scrape against his u pcr teeth. MOT ON OF JAWS Advise the youngster to chew. in some cases. it may be neces- sary to move the child's jaws in an up and down motion to show g him what you mean. l Also. tell the child to move the food around with hll tongue. Don't place the food in the centre of his I mouth. instead. place one apoon- l ful nn one side Ind the next on the other side. i. Now don't be too anxious to help the child in all his eating. l For example. don't break off ! pieces of (out for him unless he 1 can't manage it by himself. it's better to let him bite off piece: If '. he is able. l PRAISE HIM l Like any youngster. I palsied l child likes to be praised for doing ' things correctly. Donlt Icold or nuniah him when his eating be- cornea sloppy. A victim of cerebral palsy can't help a spar-tic tongue. or I weak Ithetoid tongue. ltla up to you to remind him to keep his lips closed and to use hi: tongue to punli the food around i if there in I palaied child in -1 your borne. you can do I lot to help him right It the dinner table. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mn. T.A.r.: i am 06 years old. and my blood pressure is ill. in this too high? I wll told thlt Epsom Ialta might lrrtn: it down. ANSWER: Blood pressure of ID is consld rd to be above normal. I know of no evidence that Epsom all: an useful in the treatment of high blood preuure. Betta: In I doctor. The Age Old btory Ileued be the Lord. who dull! loadeth II with benflto. area the God of our ulvattca. 5 NOTES BY THE WAY. .,. age; i re; : E ludearemedyforatailfiuoa model: that bu been backed a tree.-sarnla Observer E5 "I0 Villa and the duct: In said to be our two big problems. AM Will! youth lasting so long. I114 lfiitirement coming In early. "ism hardly anybody left in be- tweentto do the worrying -Hamu. loo Spectator I-lat year the Canadian mall: curled 3-5.541.011! worth of govern- ment mail. for nothing. It would be interesting to know how many Chriatmaa cards. bundles of dirty shirt: and public relation T J . were lbluded in all that.-Peter. borough Examiner . Min Max Cour-non. I hrialenne. uyl "men find plump woman much more Ippetlzing than their slender Ilaters." We assume she doesn't mean this in I canniballstir ooniext. She may not be entirely unbiased on the subject II aha weighs 230 pounds but there 1. something to what she says,.. Windsor Star The civic traffic Eommlltcf lug proposed that the city max 3 by. law specifically prohibiting the splashing of p.-dcstrlans by motor- ists. At present it is possible to charge !DlAs'lIBl'I only under the "carcles driving" section of the Highway Traffic Act. but penalties are fairly severe. If I civic by- law would help the pcllce to pro- secute Iplulu-rs. it might. well be added to exls.;uz laws.-Ottawa Citizen Alberta Social Credlterl. happily anticipating their lI0-I-yaIr-divld- ends from the provincial govern- ment. mual have been rudely shocked by the national revenue department): announcement that the payments will be subject to federal income tax. Bewilderment was probably added to shock when this was followed by I ruling that the British Columbia government's 82! annual payments in home- nww.-rI are not taxable. -Ed- monlon Journal McCULl.OCH CHAIN SAWS AND !C0'l'I' . ATWATIR ouraoaan MOTORS Sold and Serviced by Keith Carmichael PLUMBING I HEATING Bran.-kley Point Ind PHONE Mil ..ltI&ImIIIavoaItlmIteua.. bllaaeanwaybumtbbroulwhen driving It miles In hour is equu iodI'ivlnJbllIdforilfo:t..Audg ill on bappaa In that distance.- Oabawa Time:-Gazette The Chlaaaa Goveruneat bu culled upon the puunu to ... lua. For Ioma millions of them that will be quite I trick!-Brant. ford Expositor ll trrllu to adv: III prohlema. mII doesn't Ipend nearly enough llmolrvtnztoiindanolutiantc '13 Illlltflvilll cause of many of his probiama. that in. the eautah. arouaneu of human bclngm -Kil- cllcuer-Watcrloo Record ..A Brltlab duct: III attacked the hot bath. Wrlttnl in the Brltiab Medical Journal. Dr. S. C. Duke, denounced the hot bath II an anti- Ioclal lubit that should be dis C0l1l'l8ed. He declared: "it is an obvious fallacy to think that fre quent immersion in but water liar any hygienic value whatever.” No matter what else he may be. l)r. Drain is obviously I boy It heart. -vv lpeg Tribune II till mechanical us when the typewriter has almost entirely re- placed handwriting, it may be I natural that r Ihln has become next thing to I forgotten art. Good handwriting is an seldom seen today that when I sample does bob up. it becomes al- most I collector": item.-Swan Ri- ver Dimes AI annual exhibition which up cued It the Bridlington public li- brary last week is made up of books damaged by borrowers some of the books have been maul- ad by dogs and one has I number of pagan Ituck together by the yolk of an egg. One has been left near I fire and the pages are burnt. and I number of other: have writ- lug on the pages. The centrepiece of the exhibition in I book open at the title page. Written in large letters in ink across the page are the words: "Fish and China In Oven. Make some fresh tea." - London Time: Stay At The Cornwallis Hotel HOLLIS ST” HALIFAX. NS. Just two minutes walk from Railway 5 t I ti o n. Steamship Plan. Business and Theatrical District. REASONABLE DAILY BATES sings Room: from sun to sun Boo In Room: from M30 to sue mule with bath l4.lMo!I.lO Double with bath 0I.tItotI.II Weekly I-Ital Arrange! for our Guest: lakylaaat TV Entertainment in our com- fortable Lounge. Ilao snack Bar. Maautnu. Tollotrtoa and Barber shop in Hotel Building. FOB OUI GUEST! IAFITY Automatic Fire Sprinkler ta every room for your protection. You will enjoy COMFORT with ECONOMY It the "COINWALUS BOTH." IT'S GOOD POLICY To Be Adoquatdy Insured HYNDMAN 8. CO. LTD. haaraace llacc urn our experience of over three quarter: of I century. Inca Underwriterl. is at your disposal. Offices: Charlottetown. Summer-aide. Montague. Alberto: Aunts throughout the Province Alllinuofinaunlwaalbctcd. In innit- 739d ON A LIIIAIY IOOK 0! POEMS Vlith fond. bright eyes. he rant- ed the lplfllllll Iplterea; with panton and pain he plumall mIa'I ad lot. ' Yet only thfli. in tony-can yuan. . lad road MI llllhlftotll book that l. lame forgot And I. the fourth. who uravw bore It home. hitmtbe old tilled! of bomb The wild lIad'I-all that uawatdo Id brlakan comb: 1!: intricate lallll kwela of th trout. Iut aunt: be who turned tau love llleoa. If ladtazviewad Ianevlun in para- Voald scarcely list in how. bi. Imillq. Irena Issued to Iablar Iona il wtdac Iktea. -from the New York Time. TRAVEL ON THE OVIRLANDIR SPECIAL