i f l f l 1?; tr; .. .- 7 ii i 3.. -. l motives which, as a private mem- ber, he would not have been per- mitted to do on the floor of the House. Mr. Beaudoin has even re- versed one of his own decisions in the House to suit his political mas- ters, and now he has withdrawn his resignation for the same reason. It is adding insult to injury for the Prime Minister to say that by con- tinuing in office, the Speaker is "subordinating his personal feelings 719 G'uarJiini "Coven Prlaea Mind lalaal uh be low” Published every uni:-can-onus It 10 Pole-it-t cauinumwn. P.E.I.. mun Thomson 00-9!” I44- 44 King st. w.. mum uaamu Office. as Unlverall! TWO I-Us Editor. Frank Walla General Ilannut. Inn A. Burl!!! Iember Canadiaa Daily NQWIIIIDC Publisher: Annelallon Mcmber of The Canadian Pres: Member Audi! Bureau of Clrculatlcau Branch nllicen at Summerside. Montague and Alberta Autnunted In Second Chain Mail by Ina Pun Ollwu Department. (main. Iy Carrier Charlottetown. suminenidc 811.00 he an- nun. Elsewhere In 9.3.1 moo. outer Prov"-non! I-I U. S. tl'.'.00 Per aaunn. S7T'liTsGitnrsesl memory IIWICIIM "':l- to his duty to Parliament and to "'9 '"””5i "k'" V the country." He is subordinating WEIINFEAY. ELY ii. I956 them to the will of Messrs. Howe and St. Laurent. We do not say the 1 Liberal party because most of the - Liberal newspapers across Canada M ' ' L ' fl i t for y Rmlm” izdlw b(f:f0:.:e:1le,n of i have strongly denounced the Speak- mme time. m Queewg Comm. l er's actions, and the (mvcriimcnt as Seglulamim m few-1 Onmhx. mak-m-R I well for forcing him to play the at, ant even 0 is . . p . . ,,h0mf bmw. and havmg 0,ht,,.S -m , iole of a party minioii. Queens County Jail with thcml at dI'iI1liill.k'. .llHl'lW5- The Queen's Favour Thesc stories may he Kill”? U” founded, but they will bear ln- , Canadians will be glad to hear yestigation in the liglil of an inci- from the Prime Klinistcr that. bar- dom ,,h,,.h m.,.,,,.,.pd in the l'oli('e "something very serious". the rm Quin will visit this country in the ed with escaping from the jail, summer of 1939 to take part ill the pleaded that he had made ”no scr- formal opening of the St. Lawrence ious attempt" to escape but admlt- 1 Seaway. It is to he hoped that at ted to having "left the grounds." In . the same time llcr Majesty iyill sentencing him the Magistrate re- p have another opportunity of visiting marked that his action constituted ', various parts of her Canadian "defiance", and that he must have Realm, perhaps a number of places had "a good deal of co-operation p she did not seelon tier previous four from those in authority." Jail es- as Princess Elizabeth. There would capes ai'e serious matters, and so 3 seem to no particular reason why are comments of this kind from the i only capital citiesslioiild be in- bench. The public has a right to be cluded in a Royal itinerary. concerned with the maintenance of , The suggestion has been made strict discipline in our institutions in the Commons that ller Majesty of detention, and with ljie ability of E might be requested to come to Can- those in charge to perform their ada once every four or five years to l l Court yesterday. A prisoiicr, cliai'g- duties. In this case there was n0 open a session of Parliament and evidence offered as to how the pris- perhaps do a l I t t l e travc-llinl-I oner got out, or who was resp0n- across country. In theory. of course, sible the suggestion has merit. It would contacted yesterday on his re- be I! very fine thing, indeed, if each turn from the Atlantic Premiers' new Parliament could he opened in conference, the Attorney General, person by our Sovereign as is the Sir,-l.a.sI Friday morning. not knowing the schedule had been changed. I reached the stop at Cornwall an hour and a half be- fore the bus was due to arrive. A neighbor thiimbed a lift to Char- loltclovin for me on an incoming limousine which carried a United Hon. Mr. Matheson. said he had no practice in the United Kingdom, knowledge of any irregularities at which, incidentally, has no more the jail but that he would certainly Wight” to royal favour than any inquire into the matter. We have 5 other Commonwealth nation. In a no doubt that he will take prompt practical sense, there are things measures to get at the facts, and against it. If Canada, why not Aus- discipline those responsible for any tralia, New Zcaland, or South laxity that may exist. We suggest, Africa? Or the Gold Coast and the moreover, that the Attorney Gen- Caribbean Federation when these eral's inquiry be extended to cover embryo dominions achieve coiistitu- the condition of the building and tional status? That would mean facilities as well as those charged that the Queen would be away from with its management. At the open- 4, her home and children most of the lng of the Supreme Courtlast month i. time-a most unreasonable thing to expect-not to mention the fatigue the Grand Jury reported that they found this institution in a state of and wearincss that inevitably would disrepair. Electric wlri ng was mark the extended journeyings to dangerous, ceilings showed breaks, and fro. locks were not working on cell For most Canadians, loyalty to doors. The jail, moreover, was the Crown is not something that udmvv-. A new jail was recom- needs to be reinvigorated every now and again by a royal tour. It flour- ishes as well when the Sovereign is at. her ancestral l.ondon home as when she might happen to be in Ottawa; and our constitutional law and usage make adequate provision for close and sustaining relation- ship between her and her govern- ments and peoples, wherever they may be. After all, there are limits to what the Queen can reasonably be expected to do in the carrying out of her hcavy Commonwealth iesponsibilities. EDITORIAL NOTES Another case of the name fitting the job: In Rapid City, S. 1).. Harry l Malthousc was elcctcd president of I the Retail Malt Liquors Dealersl As- , socialion. mended as an immediate necessity. The flovernment has no aPDl'0Pllla' tion for an expenditure of this kind. but greater than ordinary vigilance is required of jail attendants Where the conditions are as above de- scribed. Making Matters Worse f'In watching over ancient priv- llcgcs the Speaker becomes in fact the prolcclor of minorities. Speaker Arthur Onslow used to say that nothing tended more to throw power into the hands of the admin- istration than neglect. of or depar- ture from the rules of procedure. The private member relies on the Speaker's fair interpretation of the rules of debate to obtain a hear- ing. Should the Speaker fail in his duties, it is conceivable that the ' ' ' administration in Great Britain T1”. Amm-ican Nation-H gaftity might still become a dictatorship." Council has pretty go:):i jidgrl”-ul The allow statement, quoted re- Wlwll ll C0m9-S T0 Pliflflllliln"-' illflmf? (-pnfhv in the Ottawa I10”;-na1' is fatalities. It estimated that l.'lf) fromyan authoritative Paper on the PPFSOHS W0l1ld I059 their lives in British Spcakcrship piil oiil by the . lhai W'rl.V 0" ill?” -IUl.V 4”1 h0llll8.l'- British llansard Society. It is cited ,l The actual count was 137. hqre in striking contrast to the I ' ' ' attitude. of Prime Minister St. Laur- Mr. George Nowlan, RC. mem- ent in insisting on maintaining Mr. her for Digby-Annapolis-Kings is Speaker Bcaudoin in office, not- justified in urging the Federal (lov- withstanding the strong Opposition ernment to stop dilly-dillving about protests against his partisanship the proposed coal-fircrl gas turbine and the fact that he had felt him- engine for l0CO'Y1T)liVOS and either self forced by circumstances to bring the tests to a (Tll".l.lil )1 or fender his resignation to the House. In Great Britain the Speaker is the drop the whole idea. Five years would seem to be plenty of time for "non-political embodiment of the research info the SO1l.'lIill3s'S of thc House of Commons as a whole." proposition. but in Ottawa he is charged with o - - . His Holiness the Pope has given Chancellor Adenauer of West Ger- many some advice with respect to the much desired reunification of Germany: "Impatience is not a healthy atmosphere for solving po- lifical tasks, especially when they have an international character. Germany's history after the First having become the partisan tool of ( theogovernment in power, and Mr. , St. Laurent has apparently no in- ' tention of having it otherwise. He says his confidence in Mr. Beaudoln II ."shared by an overwhelming rngjntlty of members", and he re- I do It as unimportant that the , Infa letter to a newspaper lihom he 4,-Qlcarcely knew. hid World War proves what national Ital;-ibunttnent against disgrace in the political field is tmvutint caused by those who cannot wait". States license plate. The uniform- ed drivcr came to it full stop: a ', fat middle-sized man opened the car door and bade me be Seaicd beside him, The opposite end of the seal was occupied by a wom- an who gave me a stately ap- praisal and thereafter entirely ig- norcd me. They bore the appear- ance of man and wife in ihelf early forties. Everylliing also in- dicaled that they possessed a cul- tured informality and lived in . comfort and luxury. The man had light-brown hair. i blue eyes, and light skin. and i spoke English with an accent l, sommyliat similar to that of Wal- tcr Caron of the radio program ”Memory Music Turnabnut”. His I companion was in pleasant-to-look I at brunette with a New England manly alertness and a loud voice. Totally disregarding my PWSEDC9 she resumed their iinfinshed con- versatiun: ”l)an(-ing with their hands. arms, and head, and not With l l l l ' their feet. Why, that seems rid- i iculous, Jan." i "Not at all, dcar. den" that way in many Pacific islands. ' Some places the natives dance even lying on the ground: wiggle i like snakes and make EFOWSQU0 l gestures with an odd assortment i of utensils and strange sounding instruments." ' "Fantastic! Sounds to me like I Rock and Roll. You cant tell me I that anyone who feels and acts i that way is doing something that is good for civilized teen-agers.' "Oh, Alzirj. It's a passing Phi" like the t'harl(-sfon of father's day. Quite harmless entertainment, and if I were a tccn-agcr I'm sure I would like it as much as anyone." ”llm quite sure of that. Any- lhlng fresh from hunting grounds you fall for if." "l.ook. Illarj. yoil know very well that Rock and Roll has noth- ing to do with young braves whose bodies are sincarcd with war paint. ll's fun for the kids. Nor is it anything "NV: lhc Greeks and Romans had their minics or rollicking mimici'.V-3' "Yes, and Plato proiiouuces flit-in coarse and vulgar." ”l'l"hcre"" "How do I know” I never iiiciiihcr 'ulicrc' Bcstdcs, don't have to hring in the Greeks and Roni;in's when we are discus- sinz modern dances that I can't approve of." "Well. Son lhing nitidcrn? I.cl's s. Yes, in Japan they have girls who are trained from child- hood up in dancing and in witty talk. They are called geisha." ”Ycs, any other accomplish- mcnls? And how do you come to know so much about them?" ”My dear Who can he in .lap- an and not hear about the geisha? Many of them have great politi- cal infliicncc. I imagine that n rcspcctahlc number of them seek In do away with such a national institution. in fact. in 1937 they went on strike and gained an in- crcasc of moral frcedom." "l bclicve you Jan. Neverthe- l lcsrs, your imalzinatlnn is loo el- astic. And you do sccm to be in- orrlinatcly intcrcstcd in rlanclnll. Of course those dancers are most- ly mntlc-up women performers." ”My point of view, Mari, this: llnnclniz as a purely social pastime was unknown before the court dances of Charles IX. Now that we have these fiance.-i In home and hell we should not be- little them." "Wcre not the courtlcr: of Charles and of Louis XIV cheap sycophants wliold sell their souls for a mess of Court pottage?" "I wouldn't blame them so sev- erely. From them culls the mod- ern waltz and the step dance. the quadrllh, the coflllfon. and the mlnuet; later the ntunrka and the poflnaiu from Pdad." rc- youi PUBLIC FORUM I'M STILL THINKING: "IT-MAY-BE?” ”A peculiar paradox: out of a corrupt court came such good and graceful models. Pity it is that these one-time healthy bab- ies are dying today. If the strick- en hopes of mothers and music teachers fail. Tin-Pan-Alley will undisputably hold first place." ”There : the Sarsband in Spain-" "A Moorish monster! Cervantes denounces it as rude. indecent, impertinent." "Where?" "Never mind where. Philip II had to ban it. Anyhow, why do you strut Spain out on the dance stage? Next, I expect you'll drag in the Dance of Death." "The Italians do have a dance called the tarantella that is be- lieved to cure a disease known as tarantism. Otherwise a fatal dis- ease caused by the bite of the southern larantella." f'You said it. Jan. Down South's where this Elvis Presslcy comes from, and where the most deadly tarantellas live. Jan. would there be anything In that idea-Elvis Pressl-2y and the bite of a tarant- ella?" "If I were you, Marj. I wouldn't develop that idea.” Having arrived at Charlotte- town, I thanked them and in- quired whether they'd mind my reporting the conversation to which I had been a silent part- erner. With a mischievous puck- er of her upper lip and in her usual commanding tone, the lady said, ”Go ahead, Son.” Jan noddcd assent and whisp- ered. "Alligator, next winter, rn see you later-at Miami Beach." I am Sir, etc. .1. P. McCI.0SKEY I OUR YESTERDAY5 From The Guardian File: TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (July 11, 1931) Up to the present 7,173 motor vehicles have been registerd at the Provincial Secretary's office. Of those registered 6,460 are aut- omobiles and 713 are trucks. The total number registered last year was 7,300. A signal honor was paid by the Charlottetown Board of Trade last night to a vetern ” of the organization, Mr. Nelson Rattenburry. on the occasion of his eighticth birthday. TEN YEARS AGO (July 11, I946) "The new carferry will not be completed before December at the earliest," Mr. J. Lester Douglas, M.P., slated last night when in- Ierviewed on his return from Ot- tawa and the shipyards at Sorel. Lieut Govenor R.l". Mcwilliams of Manitoba. and Mrs. McWill- iams arrived in the Province for a four day visit. The visitors were met at the Borden terminal by Lieut. Govenor J.A. Bernard, who accompanied them to Mulberry Lodge, Summerside. Mr. Douglas VII. Saunders, son of Mrs. I-LC. Saunders. City, has been appointed a Lieutenant in the Royal Canadian Reserve and will be stationed at lI.M.C.S. Queen Charlotte as Executive of- ficer. POSTED T0 ASSINIBOINE OTTAWA ILD) - Lt. - Cmdr, Denis Daiid Inc. 32. of Winnipeg and Vancouver, will become ex- ecutive officer of the destroyer es- cort Assinilmivw when the vessel is commisinied Aug. l6, the navy said Monday. Neanderthal Man National Geographic Society In August the world of science will cclchrale the lflfllh ”birth- day" of a low-hrowed. hairy-choir led great uncle of the human race--Neanderthal Man, Europe": Ice-Age cave dweller. Best known of all prehistoric humans, Neanderthal Man actual- ly had a life span not of 100 years but of some 150.000. lie roamed three continents, was among the first to live in shcllcr and wear clothing. and gave the world the use of fire. His boncs first were found In Germany in 1856. In marking the centennial of that discovery, sciciicc looks back over a century in which the first clear picture of human prehistory has gradual- ly been picccd together, the Nat- ional Geographic Society says. SKELETON IN A QUARRY In August of 1856, workers In a limestone quarry near Dusseldorf dug into the floor of a cave Ml feet above the I)usscl River and uncovered the fragments of a human skclclnn. They paid little heed. but when the quarry owner lenrned of the find he ordered the bones collected. Eventually they reached a Bonn University scientist. His report that the skull repres- ented a human unknown "even in the most barbarnur races" stirred up controversy and a flood of counter-explanations by other scientists. one passed off the long-dead mystery man an "an individual affected with fdfocy and rickets." Another authority pro- claimed that the skull was "one of the Cossacks who came from Russia in IBM.” The uproar was to continue for decades. The Neanderthal flnd lnamerl for my Neander Valley in which the quarry lay) was fol- lowed by others In Europe and later In Asia and Africa. LIFE OF THE CAVE MAN what sort of fellow was Neand- erthal Man-the "Cave Man" of popular imagination, usually de- plcted as carrying a club and dragging a lady by her halt? From more than a. hundred, skulls and skeletonl. anatomist: have reconstructed him as squat. with powerful phyafque. an anor- mnlll head of low sloping shave. maulve bony rldgaa above the eyes, and almost no chin. Though slow-moving and clumsy by modcrn standards. he survived by being one of the best big-game hunters of all time. lfe went after fearsome cave hcurs and woolly mammolhs. armed only with a wooden spear tipped in his later days by a flint point. As the third lzrcat advahce of Ice moved down across Europe, he took to living in the caves of limesfonc hillsides, lcarncd to drape skins about him to keep warm. and discovered how to make anti lend a fire. He first developed the art of "flaking" stones to achieve ii sharp edge for weapons or tools. In his caves. he biiricd lils dead with their implements. indicating a dim awareness of life after death. His thinking, however sav- age. developed the first nilrrlngs of religion in human history. Ncnndcrllial Man lived from perhaps 170,000 BC. to about 30,000 BC, finally to disappear and he succeeded by Cro-Magnon Man--the first true Homo sapiens saptens. or modern man. Most scientists today tend to place Neanderthal not In the direct line of human descent, but In a branch that died out. Even as an uncle, however, he was quite a man. i r-M-.n...tl, A Speaking . I!IIHllN.iIIIQC.I.ba EXERCISE HELPS IPEED A RECOVERY FROM ASTHMA special exerel.n:ec:au play an Important role In very among asthmatics. some of else: may even help relieve an attack. g y Antbrnatlca, whether Infants or elderly adults, are diaphragmatic crlplples. For .cbIldren and young -u I. clues help prevent chronic swelling and deformity of .01: chest. Here an some exerciser; Have the youngster exhale in slowly and in completely. as pos- sible from 10 to 20 times each morning and evening. He can help the exhallng process by pressing inward on his lower anterior ribs with both hands. , By making a sort of game of it, you can get him to do the exercises more readily and at the same time Insure complete exhalation. Let pong ball or n featheroacrpss a- table. Some doctors advise letting the young patient blow a plnwheel as long and as fast as possible. When breathing in; the breaths should be of normal depflg rather than forced as is the exhalation. Playing "wheelbarrow" also is recommended by some doctors. In this game, the child walks on his hands while his legs are held by another youngste . Here's a useful exercise to re- lieve a youngster in status asth- mnticus which you can use'if your doctor recommends it: . Brace one leg'un a chair, then jackknife the child at the knees over your leg. This causes his body to fall pe.,endicularly and the force of gravity helps in filling the heart. Breathing also is shifted to ab- dominal from thoracic by the pres- sure of the abdominal viscera on the diaphragm. The youngster probably will cry 3'” thrash about. But that's usual all right. The more he struggles, the more quickly the pnroxysm will be over. . QUESTION AND ANSWER I(.A.: Can the sense of smell be lost after a skull fracture? Answer: Yes. if the portion of the brain controlling this sense is damaged. WIIISTLING BOY Summer is something special to a boy: A green wind and a whistle on his lips As well as his quick high-octane or Al parks and pools and paper sailing ships, . If is three silver fish slipped on a string As well as cartwheeln down a windy lane And twenty-seven pebbles he can "Z Or walking barefoot into cool gray rain. Summer at best is only three months lonlz But timelessneu is on him where he goes In rhythm to his own and word- less song. Since "now" in all the wisdom that he knows. -Anobel Armour. In The Christian Science Monitor. The Age Old Story Let the word: of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be aecepfuhle In thy sight. 0 Lord, SO QXCF . suitable breathing exer- - him blow A piece of paper. a ping-, y in time of extraordinary difficulty, NoTEsii.BY7"iliE WAY The better aha In life puma to time who wait. -we're uuu-ed. That is, If they fake the iron to wait on themselves.-Cb News . i , ,l At Oshawa a girl paid the fine of her '19 year old ahortly'to be husband after be had been con- victed of drunk driving, with a lull sentence added. With a start like that the chances are she will be paying a lot more. as time goes on, and not all In fines.- Port Arthur. Newa'-Chronicle . The Mi-Glu Weather Bureau: studying hail-stones. uekl au- thentlc Information on the sire of the "stones that fall. compared with ahqf, pen, grapes. walnuts or golf balls." But not croquet balls, soccer balls, cannon balls. or those klngslze beach balls. And dont report curling stones; they're out tool-Ottawa Citizen The Speaker 'of lfho Canadian House of Coqunons deserves to be Placed in a position of such in- dependence that embarrassment would be improbable and reply unnecessary. The case of Hon. Rene Beaudoln has proved that the present Incompatible system, may be unworkable even by I good man.-Montreal. Gazette Over here In North America we think we ode pretty smart In the matter of pipelines. We have pipe- lines for water. oil, gasoline and (dare we mention it?) natural gas. But "e Austrians appear to be even smarter. At least they are going us one better in the pipeline field. Over there they have underground pipelines for milk. They have just opened two milk pipelines on the slope: of a Tyrolean mountain near Klttbue- hel. One is about a mile long and the other a mile and a half.- Toronfo Star clazi television has Hi-fl for ear and e e perfect stem perfect sound PLUS all the most wanted features FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO' CO. LTD. OPEN FRIDAY & SATURDAY UNTIL 9:30. 187 GI. Geo. St. Dial 5547 - mlttlng be had delivered the blow. For Service Dial 6324. My car wlllilut ruin l.l1:i:., if Y0lI'l'O cu-elcu enough.-am, don Spa , ' . .' Aoeordlu to a writer Illere u. only this real authorities on bridge the country. Odd how often -a ponon geltone of men, 'for a partner.-Toronto Star Nd wonder the world In an mix; of! up. We. find the city boy pat. ronfxlng I-I'IdIIlI' stable. and ex. vhlulnz antnial ifs to the farm gay wt: known. al about traoton. -Hunllton Spectptor 33011"! I5 I of Loudon'n many court: for-less serious of. fences. a citizen was charged with striking a neighbor with- of all things-a brace of klppen. "He kept telling me to buck up," explained the accused after ad- "Perslsfent Interference with the f ngs of another person is ”eas- o ble provocation for an assault of this npture," the judge declar- ed in dismissing the charge.-Win. nlpeg Tribune i In the day: ,0! our fathers Ihu language was rich and resounding, reflecting the high; political fem. pen of the day. In our day, by contrast. mean-spirited bickering and-cheap innuendo worthy of the street corner seem to be the has! (or worst) to which many of our elected representatives are able to aspire. There is a very great dlf. ference between the eloquent, practised and informed abuse of a great orator and liackneyed splufterlng more to be expected from an angered bar-room habitue than a member of Parliament- Kingston Whig-Standard p IIICK cAsi-i , LOANS Need cash quickly? Then arrange a loan by Telephone at Trans Canada Credit. That's all there is to it. Just telephone. Loans from 350. to 82,500. on your own credit. Call us today. 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