"""'""'8-I-e-orri-lnaiu-cinn- Nowonkcdinkf PAGE 4 wEnN1i:sn.(Y".- buff-E7 l Political Phenomenon Speaking before the King's Co, (N-,5-lg Pmgressive Conservative As- S0Clatlon Executive, Revenue Minis- ter George Nowlan made a numbeit of observations relating to the can. ing session of Parliament and to the likelihood of another election "in due course and without. undue de. lay.” According to Illr. Nowlan, a Fed. Pfal PI'0lzt'am is now being worked out which will reduce power costs in the Maritimcs; old age pensions will be increased; the Government will pay cash advances to Western grain groweis and will make a ”start" on tax reduction. These were the main pledges made by the Con- servatives in the election campaign; and, of course, it is not surprising to hear that legislation dealing with them will be introduced when Par- liament meets. As for the next election, Mr. Nowlan is quoted as saying that "it isn't pleasant to have an adverse vote in Parliament, but this is ab" occasion when the Government would welcome one." It seems likely, there- fore, that the coming session will be treated to a political phenomenon: the Government hoping for defeat and the opposition parties doing their best to keep the Government in office for a while longer. It is easy to understand why the Conservatives would like another election soon. No Government can be expected to function efficiently without an overall majority in the Commons; and, since there is little chance of their being able to hold on for the full term of four or five years, they cannot be blamed for wanting to settle the issue as soon as possible, that is to say as soon as certain election promises have been implemented. lrlow they pro- pose to arrange an early dissolu- btion, however, is not so easy to. understand. Certainly, none of the parties in opposition is going to be foolish enough to combat the vari- ous items of legislation which Mr. Nowlan mentionedi Besides. they need time to organize their foices for another contest. Theoretically perhaps the Prime Minister could I ask the Governor-General for a dis- solution without being defeated on the floor of the llouse, on the ground that a new and stronllef mandate is necessary for the p?bper functioning of government. But that would scarcely be politically advan- tageous, and it would give the other parties soniclhing substiinlial to com- plain about. In these circumstances, it would almost sccin as though the only way for the (ioxcrmncnt to to r cc an early clcvlion would be to back down on one or other of its commitments. lint that would not be politically wi-in either. to siiy nothing of the ethics of the cnsc. Perhaps the wis- nsl miiizsc would be to kccp lz0ln8 .iii,i as long as the confitlcnce of l','.n'H;”11t'H' is retained. wi t it out slimiiiii: any Imiiaticnce at the Op- pneitinns refusal to open the way to early dissolution. And that may tall for a your or two---or even for the normal life (if Parliament. Who knows” Mr. Bevan vs. Mr. Dulles among those who are hoping that the British Labour Party will not come to power in the next election is United States Secretary of State Dulles. For if It does, Mr. Aneurln it is icasonable to suppose that - lode:-nllllt 31 believe: that the Unitnd States should hit! nil Ih technical and ooonomic nsbtnnoo podble to- the Soviet Union and Chilil. thus helping them to "edu- cate themselves in freedom." He thinks there can be no peace or aettlement of problems in the Middle East without Russian participation. He favours a total ban on arms to Arab countries and Israel. Mr. Dulles is not going to relish any of these views. But perhaps the heaviest assault on his political judg- ments is Mr. Bevan's assertion that ”it is the Labour Party's duty to bring American news around to our way of thinking." It will, or course, be some time before Mr. Bevan will be in a posi- tion to influence Britain's foreign policy. even if his party should hap- pen to win the next election, which is by no means certain. It is pos- sible. too. 'that once in office, re- sponsibility would temper his anger against American officials. We must hope that this will be the case. Things are difficult enough with Britain and the United States work- ing in reasonable harmony. Serious friction between them on basic problems would be disastrous. Production Rules To sell or not to sell is a question which often faces livestock produc- ers. Well, fifty Colorado farmers have worked out what seems to them a satisfactory formula, accord- ing to an article in the magazine "Successful Farming". In their opin- ion. moisture conditions on May 1 should be the criterion on which to base cattle production. First of all. farmers should determine whether conditions on that date (not the day before or the day after) are well below normal. below normal, nor- mal, above normal or well above normal. They should then act in accordance with the following rules: Well below normal: Scll cull cows and 'bulls and 350-400 pound calves. Veal calves if necessary. Use reserve feed. Under long drought. possibly liquidate livestock. Below normal: Replace cull cows with hei- fers and sell 350-400 pound calves. Use reserve feed. Normal. Replace cull cows. Sell half of the 350-400 pound calves and increase weight of the remaininggcalves. Above nor- mal: Replace cull cows. Increase weight of feeding calves to 600-800 pounds. Build up rescues and make.- safe investments. Well above nor- mal: Replace cull cows and bulls Purchase more stock to use feed. Increase reserves, invbslnients and feed.supply. Store extra feed. Perhaps our local cattle men will find merit in these suggestions-and perhaps they won't. EDITORIAL NOTES The Soviet News Agency Tass has anounced that the Mont Tremb- lant conference achieved no "practi- cal results." Fortunately, Tass doesn't know everything. O J I The Hungarian Government has a new explanation for the mass exodus following Russian suppres- sion of the revolution. "Most of them.j' said a Government official the other day, "left because they feared that the counter-revolutiom aries would win and start a wave of Fascist atrocities." I J U A report fiom' the United Na- tions says that lack of room to ac- T commodate the growing number of delegates is becoming a serious problem. Originally built for a mem- bership of 80 nations, 82 are now represented with more to come in at a later date. One solution would he to cut down the number of dele- gates from each country. This would not interfere with the efficiency of the organiuition, since most of the delegates are never heard from. it it safe to say that not one Canadian in ten could name the several dele- gates from this country. I I I The British freighter "British Monarch". which recently called at Vancouver, can claim an unusual 'thF Bfffllm-'lod'Ull Qmty. Bltk IDIVITDED I NTERES OTTAWA REPORT Rumored Appointment GIIOIIOI By Patrick Ottawa: Under the headline, ”Stiirsb(-rg P.M.'s Ghost" an ()t-' tawa news paper has just pub: lished what has been-Parliament Hill gossip for many days. This rumour is that the Prime Min- ister has appointed Peter Stun- berg to ghost-write speeches for him. Stursburg is an ex-newspaper man and ex-radiocasler who hail travelled far around the world in the 43 years since he was -born in China. His father emig- rated from Germany to work in the Chinese postal service until he retired to British Coluniilnil pleasant retreat. Victoria. There the young Slursberg got his first job with the Vicarla "Times". In 1968 he moved to England. under the valuable syp- lem of exchange newwqaer Jobs arranged by the Comnlorvwealth Press Union. For nine months he worked in London's "Daily llegald".. the official organ of in Canada once more, he got I job at the Vancouver "Prov- ince". Inll94l Stursberg lwilched to the Canadian Broadclslim Cor- poration and worked for it in various parts of Europe until,je 194.3. when he returned to the. Khrushchev's - Position By Joseph Macswcon Canadian Press sum Wrlc chev is a topic of private discus- sion among lop-ranking Western diplomats at the United Nations) General Assembly in New York. I The position of Nikita Khrushw Opinions, based on intelligence reports. have been expressed that any new upheaval among Communist chiefs would lend to grcalcr peril in the cold war. which has grown emitter. and which some say In back to . Stnlincra levels. T h e roly - poly Khrushchev, Communist p o rt y necretnry. , might be tempted to foreign l'or- , ays to turn attention away from l internal discontent. wrongs and, frustrations, western s o u r c c ii i SOY, . ARMY MAY RULE State Secretary John Foster Dulles: of the United States In, said to hi-licve that Khrlishi-hes": power ll by no eons solid tnl Moscow. and ill this is I reason for the Krcmlln'.-2 trucu-, lcnt attitude on the Middle End . and cyior problems. Including: disarmament. l Observers thus considered slg- T ni'ic"il ii rt:-tr-l'ed snecch by AI- V lcn W. . Dulles, brother of that ex-crrtarv of state and. head o' "lo ('cntra' lntelllnence Agency. nictiirimz Kliriivlu-new u beset by exnlnslve nroblems at home and fncint! the nositlbillty of I mI"tarv dictatorship. The hnnd'ln-1 and tlmlna of the San Francisco need: by Al- N "Daily Herald" for five years,, covering mosh! Middle Enuern . and Asian news stories. From 1k':0tol956, beroportodforlbet C.B.C. from the United Nations in New York. and then he joined the Toronto "Star". N0 GHOST NEEUED BY P..lll., His rumoured nuiolntmem to. ghost-write for Mr. Diolewoknri hu stirred In sq much crltl-l cism here that the (monk, sliouldsbo examined. Those not that he has worked outlil” CIII- T ada forsolow thltheiooutd touch with Canadian: and their politics; that he has worlnd largely for workers on the poll- tical left. and hence has been trained to polltlcnl reactions very different from those of the Conservatives: that our "Golden Voice of the Prairies" hm Ill)- ly proved that parody can mold his own Ipeechwnitilu: and- samastically - that lad Juno Canadians voted for I dune. but it -would be no obnuo D hear the some old Stalwart commentaries so funlllnr over the CBC. coming to in through the lips ol the Prime Minister. Much of this crltlclnn in un- founded: some of it stems from alouly. But even Conservatives complain that they know an Jttb len Dulles. who Icldodi maka luch pronouncements. were col- sldercd significant, Flu! billed as an off-the-record address. II. was later cleared for publica- tion. obvlourly with the approval of the secretary of Itnto., Mll. IASIINEII It come only I few days after the UN heard Ruulrl Androl Gromyko deliver an o p e n In 1 speech that was tough. although not violent In tone. Allen Dulles doclorod that In Russia "radical changes are taking place and more an In the m a ii I n it." Khrushchev”; "impetuoslty and unpredictabil- ltv remain a matter of grave r o n e e r n in an internatloni allllllltlll u tonne u that of to- av." In this connection. one dip- lorn-at at the UN even referred to Khriuzhr-hi-v'.q w e l H: n o w n fondness for llonor. Far-let:-lw-d "' it may sound. he, 3'-ld. K'Il'Il"t0lW-V mlzlit crime My In-e his heart Im in vital mgttgf 'I"'W I'M-'-inn Inn wsnnh. pirvnvvnmq an-qqyq PVII 0'-"cs. tn M-Iv-rlmv the Wwl-' oltvmtivvn. MM that (immu- l-v thn ova-evvthm nf uivrevitl W-Pin. head of the secret no"!-Q n"ar Jim-oh stnllvro if;-nth mo PM AW-v became the I-cl-Ive I-w-pp In I-iulnn nolliiog, "5 """0 'W1'VN'9lM rlvoto. II- A New Secret Weapon o.s.x. In the winipeg rm and Mr. .1 ii men: A. Vicnry. like young Dr. Frankenstein before Mill. is thrlned by the Int-cos of his invention. 80 In Ilverliltn tunic obvious that lit: product about Sturiaer: u he know: about Canada; that they cannot oven -d his unusual name which sound: no like III older at a hot dog stand; and that his background must lead to thinking considerably more let! - wing than what would be desirable in I Conservative prime minister. Hence the way have dulbed the rqiuud ghost II "the short-order socialist". RUMOURS - JUST RUMOURS This qaocuilatlon ls at tout prompt z. because Peter Stun- berj has not yet been officially appointed to act on about or in any other role on tho Prime Minister": ntofl. He will comm- ly never be created an olflclnl Educ Bergen to use in. Die!- enbnhr on his Charlie Mccors lhy. which in what the Ottawa glolnqmau ropmt could have in- hll doclaions no vol on for his speeches. oven though a gifted courtroom orator like the Iliad Hon. John Dlohdinker does not nconw wild be mi Ill in the ulnlliont one ol research assistant in pa hmilstry of No tionnl Defence. 1 post formerly held under M Miniatu- Rnlob wwnqx Vancouvc ......q., n Knots- wolser. Tho lnto Moannzle Klifo voo- lum Into that particular ruin of show in all rocoliocted will annuomcnt hen. Hg cnllod upon ono of Cnnodn'.'. nrootoot moot- en ol Enwnh I-name. la.-o-rd Brocklnnon, to pboot-avrlto spoo- cbu for him. but he quickly un- loaded that genius when It be- was too goal to bo oludlng V. M. Molotov, Io obscurity tut summer. "Bitter personal rivalries and butt: dlffouncou" remained un- grur problems-lnduntrlll growth. and cmitrol over utelllto countries. "will they attempt a revision tooomothlnl llko ltnllnlnrn under another name Q some ol He probably will Iuuort Id- nainnlterlna autihluunlne noo- 'llQPI- Any of tho vuoconst.rtct- in; preparation: recommended by your physician will be all right. Follow this with a cough modl-' ""?Tt W"? is f. l E 5! 2:5 iililgigt if g.! 1,, ii; gill? 3;;-ii: Tho curly-haired inop- pet who made elnunn history in the silent day: will soon be on your TV screen. Rood ""05 Wnllllinl !-'Ph0dI'llIe- 01' and Wales.-London Proo Pun Inaybe your dotchtor will choose a of the futuro plans of ' ' lime! mimetic iareu- Statistics snow on mm In - ,,u,,,. n . h 6". this yesteryear favor- EVEIY FOUR HOUR! Genet-Ily. If your doctor ad- vises it, than medication: should be liven every four hours during the (int 24 hours while the child ll awake. and thereafter u in. dlcnted. Your doctor might iuommend insertion of In unlnophylllne IuppoIltory' each night at bed- time. Usually. this In repeated every l2 hours until the danger of on asthmatic attack is over. Doctors at the University at Rochester School of Medicine have used this method with ex- cellent results. QUESTION AND ANSWER W.R.: Does the blood type and Rh factor over change? Answer: it ll not possible for tbobloodtypoorllllfilctorto change. IANDGAIPI 0l' HOME It tm't'iiio height ol the uiiii.-I oruie width of In rich onken .. 4 doom I Isn't the light in the hallway hot beckons no hornewud oneo luau. It Isn't Ito deep ptclunn window Or the euy cbllr ornatn with chronic; We the love and the laughter the hold: us - And nub: than possessions I home. It isn't tho llyle of the structure Ortbomu-kolthowoodnndlbc done. . l on tho Ileok, vordant tori--1, neo. . orthchlntdtlncolnthuwe own .1 rm- st tbcboartoltbe In-aunt I - Andboekullboaponllnthc um: . I!'lthCllIIllItIIlholl'tdthe owner Tbotn tunwelcomlnl hand. -8. Barton Bird. l Photon. IE1 . . our YESTERDAYS houfbodurdlonflln cry ten nu average of to the loan the avenue bad tai- len to twenty-ono. The Mun. according to an lodonl dficor for statistics. to now likely to drop to as low on olgbton. If this trend conllluu, only per cent of all Got-inn eouplu its in The Standard this week. Get The Standard -on sale now. complete with magazine, 12-page novel and 20 pans of : comics. Only ton eantl. ClIe5.tIIulIrd INN ill in th more :en,coii1.poi-oldT.wirh'I0mrcont on all "cw "' "m'TG"""' """M”'"' T V Tune-tested service assures best money service W&yonnnodqto8l.NN,bI'iuyoQ ? 5 jmU&MH,C.Cl3dl'IIll"i W ' &n&looZndodon1InaInnneo 793'" . 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