Legislative Assembly some suggestions that a bit of safety should be interjected here as well in the health course and hope that probably in the future if any changes in their manuals or so on are to take place they consider something along these lines. With Provincial parks, I would like once again to stress the importance of first aid training for all personnel or at least two people at each individual park. We have children there on swings. They become injured; fractures, cuts, bruises and so on. It is important to have first aid knowledge such that they're able to apply it to our own citizens and to the tourists for their protection. I would hope that through the Minister of Tourism we might implement something along these lines. We've had classes in the past and about two years ago we had some of them in and attended the course which was very largely attended, although we didn't get too many of the parks people. They were mostly centrlized around the Charlottetown area or Queens and just into Kings. In our Provincial parks I notice, too, that the water safety com¬ mittee of the have requested something looked at in the line of life guard service being set up at a few of our parks. One request came from the people in the area. I do know, Sir, that many of our other parks, provincial parks, have swimming areas, beautiful swimming areas around, but unless it's controlled and people are shown what to do and what not to do, and where to go and where not to go. there will be accidents. We don't have fatalities in supervised areas. Our drownings take place up the beach a way, or down around a point where the current is a little different. There may be rip tides there that nobody knows about_ prob¬ ably more commonly called, but unjustly so, undertows. Anything along this line to make it safer. I've heard the tourists come and they will ask, well, where is a beach? Where can we go? Where can we let our children go out that we know they're supervised and safe? Something else that could be implemented, Sir, there could be a safe boating course for the Park. There is something to be thought of here and something to be desired, I think, in the protection of our citizens and of our tourists. Sir, in speaking about safety I think that it is always well to bring it to the fore as a 'reminder to all of us that the more caution we exert, the more courtesy we exert, the fewer accidents we are bound to have. And I think this is what we are all aiming at. In my address last year I said nothing except on safety and a few remarks about my district. I feel that all of us come into the Assembly here, it takes a great deal of time, a great deal of cost to some of us, and if it is prolonged, and it goes on and on and on, and on, I don't think we accomplish any more. Some of the statements and remarks that I hear being made in the House makes me wonder whether it is a House or whether we are in kindergarten. I think, Mr. Speaker , being only a second year member in this House, I would not say that I could offer years of experience this way. But I think I could offer something to some of the members probably older than I am. Some of the questions during the question period are irrelevant to different things that may be going on. I fail to see any point to some of them, others there is a point to them, and then we seem to get into an argument over them I realize that this year, Sir, that you are looking after the question period very well. I think when you call forty minutes, Sir, that everybody is quite willing to end it at that. If there is somebody all ready to ask one, as I think it occurred today, one or two were asked after you had given the time. I don't think there is any argument here, but I am very happy that it doesn't go on for two or three hours such as we have seen in the past. I mentioned when I got up to speak that there were two things the junior member from Fifth Kings had stated, one of them was safety and I fulfilled that. He had much to say about this Georgetown issue during the last sitting of the Legislature, and again last evening. I do not propose to interject myself into the argument of whether it is good, bad or indifferent; I just want to give a couple of opinions of my own on it. I know that the government ,s dealing with a most dif¬ ficult problem or situation and I think they are more concerned with getting these plans back into operation than debating political aspects of it with the Junior Mem ¬ ber from Fifth Kings. —302—