PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN blnrnlng Dull) tfnllulsd ll I061) dnllmriuif II Ilumnd Clus Illll Pout olflos Dopunninnt. Ouuu The luluid Ouuuunn .ubngmn; cg. lid"-Ir Ind III-nslns DIN!-tor. .3. I. Ilulnstl A-om-Into Editor, Front Wllku-. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than ' fhs Weakest Ink."' CIIABLOTTETUWN MONDAY. JUNE 91 1950 The Exchequer court The Exchequer Court which sits in Char- lottetown today has a curious history. Its name means chessboard. and refers to the table covered with a cloth divided into squares on which the accounts of the Rev- enue of the Norman kings of England were kept in bygone days. By the fiction that a plaintiff. by reason of the wrong done him by the defendant, was unable to pay his debt to the King. the Court early extended its jurisdiction from Revenue to almost every civil case. In this country the Exchequer Court is I statutory one, and the additions to its functions have been by statute. In addi- ':ion to cases relating to the Revenue it deals with suits against the Crown, patents. copyrights and trade marks, Admiralty cases, railways, controversies between a Province and the Dominion, or between two Provinces by consent, enemy property and prize claims. ' An effort was made during the present session of Parliament to give the Exchequer Court jurisdiction in Divorce, but the pro- posal was talked out without coming to a vote. American Potato Yearbook The 1950 edition of the "American Potato Yearbook" is off the press. The new volume contains seventy-six pages of vital informa- tion to the potato grower, the potato dealer - and shipper, the potato research specialist and all those with an interest in the potato industry. It is again edited by John C. Campbell, Rutgers University College of Agriculture, and is endorsed by the Potato Association of America. Of special significance are feature articles by Dr. R. C. Wright of the United States Department of Agriculture on "Quality in Potatoes”, and Harvey F. Noss, Executive Secretary of the National Potato Chip In- stitute on "The Potato Chip Industry--An Ever Increasing Outlet for Good Potatoes." There is also an up to date list of more than 100 references to potato culture in the United States. Other interesting items in- clude rules and regulations affecting the shipment of seed potatoes, price suppoit schedules, a map indicating leading potato growing areas in the country, a list of leading United States and Canadian assoc- iations engaged in improvement of the po- tato industry together with the names of United States and Canadian seed certifica- tion officials. The "Yearbook" also gives in- formation on how and where to secure help- ful brochures and leaflets covering many phases of the potato industry. The book contains much statistical infor- mation of value. There are tabulations by states of both seed and table stock produc- tion as well as statistics on Canadian and world potato production. Other important features include a list of periodicals of in- terest to the potato industry. reviews of re- cent books on the potato, a- chart giving the amount of seed required and a classi- fied directory of business concerns serving growers and dealers. Copies of the Yearbook may be secured from the American Potato Yearbook, Edit- orial Office, 319 Scotch Plains Ave.. West- field. N. J. An individual copy sells for 32.00. British Dentists In The Tolls It may he recalled that at the close of the first year of the nationalizing of the medical and dental. services in the United Kingdom, many doctors of both professions discovered that they were in comparative easy street as regards remuneration paid by the Government. Some dentists. especially. were .receiving Government cheques for twice or three times as much as the in- come they earned in private practice. But the good times are coming to an end through new rates and regulations being in- troduced by the Labour Government. In a review entitled " The Dentists' Road to Serf- dom", The Spectator. London, deals with the subject this way: "In two hours in the House of Commons some very profound morals were pointed by the case of the dentists, who are about to take a second cut of 10 per cent in their re- muneration, after the first cut of 20 our cent imposed a year ago. Since the Na- tional Health Service first complicated the link between dentist and patient, events have succeeded edoh other with something of the inevitability of classical tragedy. First camp the temptation of the 51.800 65.400) ndlthm tiisjwoet reward of the that 'IiCyIHHUllthII1lniltrxof Healtiuaut you recommended in the spam report; everybody knew from the start, that the system was crude and ill-planned, there was no guarantee tha't the best and most con- scientious practitioners would be the high- est paid, and in total the dentists got too much. There is every reason to believe that a more discriminating relationship between dentists and patient would soon sort out the sheep from the goats and ensure that the highest incomes were earned by the best men: but with long queues of patients and standard fees for each classifiable operation the balance cannot readily right itself. And so the Minister of Health falls back upon the rough injustice of an all-round cut. Mr. Baird's suggestion of a cut adjusted to a sliding scale is really little better than the Minister's, and might easily produce anc- malies. His suggestion of a closer inspec- tion of the work of dentists might do more to weed out the incompetent and reward the competent, but inspection is only one more step to control and direction. Once the State has undertaken to pay the bill it is almost impossible for it to avoid taking new steps to see that the money is not being mis- appropriated, and it is certain that, for the dentists. after the recent hectic but remun- erative months, those new steps are going to hurt a little." EDIl'OR'lAL N01 ES Summer camps are a high point in al- most any youngster's life, and the generous aid announced last week by the Kinsmen will undoubtedly bring happiness to many. 0 O O The car ferry "Abegweit" is to be back in service today so that tourists and others will have little to complain of so far as crossing Northumberland Strait is concern- ed. 0 O O The King's Birthday is held in June, though he was born in December-not be- cause it would make too many holidays in the last month of the year, but because the King's Birthday honours list and the New Year's honours list, would run too closely together. 0 O 0 Swimming classes will soon be the order of the day. Practically everyone should be able to swim sufficiently to save their own life in case of accident, and the more who qualify themselves to save the lives of oth- ers the fewer will be our drowning fatalities for the future. 0 O 0 g Among the legislation passed at Ottawa last week was an act providing that the dis- tribution of about 0500.000 in naval "prize money” received from the British Admiralty after the Second World War would be turr- ed over to the benevolent funds of the Cana- dian Navy and the R. C. A. F. By ancient custom. this money normally would have gone to those who actually took part in the naval engagements. I D 0 Charles Kingsley, clergymanand novel- ist, born this date 1819; educated at Cam- bridge. became rector of Eversley, Hamp- shire in 1844. He published "Andromeda and Other Poems" in 1858. His first novels. "Alton Locke" and "Yeast" show Kingsley's Christian Socialism, which was prevalent at that time among the elite society of edu- cated professional 'men, subsequently known as Fabians, members of the literary club of that name. His novels, "Hypatia", "West- ward I-Iol", "Two Years Ago", "At Last". A Drama Workshop to be held at the time of the Western Canada theatre conference in Regina next August was announced at a recent meeting of the Saskatchewan Arts Board. The seven-day workshop will he fi- nanced by a grant from the Arts Board and will provide training in community drama work. Also announced was the inaugura- tion. through the co-operation of the Regina Music Teachers' association, of a new con- cert party of young musical artists which will tour the Regina area. If the Regina area plan is successful, similar arrangements will be made in other parts of the province. Plans for continuance of the concert tours of artists returning from advanced studies are to be announced later. Addressing delegates to the Congress of the Presbyterian Church in Canada in Mac- said failure of church members to take seriously the task of gaining and teaching the young was the reason for the weakness of the church today. He said membership was 5,000 less than it was 18 years ago and that Sunday school enrolment had-decreased by many thousands. Mr. Clarke declared that life. faith and worship of church em.- bers must be in active evidence if the hris- tian cause were to be a force in this world. "There is more peril to the church because of our inner weakness than there ever was from the enemies without the church," he asserted. "But if we go on teaching with urgency and devotion, we will share in the promise given to Peter that the Gates of Though And all the izround In short, 't,was just. H10 0. But. lying woods And full alike of holds and soil- Vicar Memorial Church, Rev. Mr. Clarke ma rm: GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN (OR EVERV MUROIR (GUN. Murder Is. As ugly lam, FivE Ill-- (ioim oi:rsusAi:sa's smrisucts ; in mouse on commons ascents ; Ill-ZRNEWOOD Fmtn "The Emigration of the Fairies” it was. in truth, a quiet shady place. A nook apart from traffic: toll and molt; . fair. nor market, broken face Of lush green pastures on a fertile N or but un- soil. Well clothed with wealth of woods. hy natures bounty. And knovm as ll-Iernewoodl all throughout. the county. For the blue herons there would build their nests High up on the tall tops of with- ered pines. And sit there with their bills upon tile-ir breasts. or on one leg erect would stand in lines. . . Fishing along the inlet); mimsh sedges. Like sculptured lbises on old Nile's edges. The fairies much approved the meads so green, But yet they missed the daisies and primroses, thyme and Violet: herbs unseen and Sent. a most grateful perfume to their noses, was dotted with white stars of bird-harry blooms and yellow butter-Jars. spot. for 1' all-v raids. With shifting points of view, and ample space. with cloismod avenues and shel- tered shades. Not yet. infested by the human me o in the bosom of the tudes. slolm Hunter-Duvor t 1&0-99). (The reference to Hemewood was to the author's estate at, For- tune Cove. P. E. I.) Another Victim (By Jack Scott. in Ottawa Clilzml A hush had fallen overlthe Op- erating room. Over their white masks the eyes of the nurses were nervously intent. watching the fa- mous surgeon. waiting for his com- . . . . . a d.. and the inimitable "Water Babis-s.' m..';.0:wps,.- he hlsgdi gummy , , , and swiftly the instrument was passed. "Scalpel!”' came the voice. The order was carried out. The great surgeon was working desperately against time. "Plunger!" he rasped. The com- mand was obeyed instantly. As the brilliant surgeon bent to his task the nurses could hear only the sound of his breathing, f.hc omin- ous ticking of the clock on the wall and the beat of their own hearts. Finally he lifted his head and stopped back from the table. He turned with a sigh to his assistant who had stood nearby thrnullh the ordeal. "It's no use, Kiilcare." heisaid, "it's another of those hopeless cases which are. today, baffling the greatest brains in medical so- clety." "Poor chap." said killcare. He leaned across the horizontal fig- ure of the patient. a middle-aged handsome man with an immense curving stomach. "Which one was it this time. sir?" he asked re- spectfully, turning to the great man. "Kiwanis." the famous surgeon . 0 "That makes three Kiwanis this week." Klllcsre said. "How right you Me. Rlllcue." the brilliant. surgeon responded "Three Kiwanis, seven Lions. four Oyros and (he made the sign of the cross) two Rotations." . "Will it new-i atop. sir? Must. we no on and on this way? Defeat.- erl at every turn?" "To date, my boy. we are but- fled." the great surgeon repll.-n "There seems no cure for Servi.-e Club Stomach but to fight the cause. The disuse itself stems in- curable." I 0 D The young assistant looked down snln into the toes of the unfort- unate man on the operating table. I-lo felt himself doqly moved at the sight of tho small Klwsnln pin which the man has attached . 3'..n.li.'.i&.iAk,!. . .,.... Hell cannot izrovall -atlas! tb!NiWH”,v , Books Received "The Far Distant Ships". on of- . ficial account of Canadian Naval Operations in the Second wcrldlf War by Joseph Schuli. This baoini just. published by the King's Printer. is the first authoritative account of the part played by the Canadian Navy in the recent. war. The layman who reads it will un- doubtedly be surprised by the scope of importance of work which. went on for mearly six years behind a veil of official censorship and the characteristic retlcerice of the "sil- ent service." The story of Canadian particip- ation in the battle of the At.- lantic makes up a large part of the book. here. for sixty-eight months, Canadian ships and men served with the Royal Navy and the American Navy as full but.- ners. Canada's work was vital in holding the trade routes and later clearing them of the submarines: and the story of the hardships and achievements of Canadian ships IS an absorbing one. It. is by no means all. however. of a story which ranges over most of the world's seas. The Canadian Navy had a share in the Mediter- ranean campaign revolving about the North African landings. It played a large part in the fierce U-boat campaigns along the east- ern seoboard of North America. in the St. Lawrence River and Gulf- and along the Arctic routes to Murmansk. merit. in many brilliant actions in the Channel and the Bay of Bis- ray-. and Canadian ships and landing crafts took out in the landing along the coasts of Sicily- Italy. North Africa and Greece. Five chapters of the book are do- voted to a full account. of Canad- ian naval participation in Oper- mm a small card saving "Jim - 7'" surancr." "I take it. this was a particu- larly difficult case, sir?" he inquir- ed"Breaded veal cutlets." the fa- mous surgeon reported. "Fortun- ately. the poor chop never knew what. hit him. It. happens sudden- ly in most. of these cases, you know. one luncheon seenu much the same as the last one. A njnn may go for years with nothing more than acute indigestion. Then. suddenly, they find him crumllled in the hotel lobby on his Way back to his office." "I believe you told the Medical society that it was merely a case of too much rich food one day a week and that the modern stom- ach is not equipped for such o shock?" "You -will go far. Killcarc." the great. surgeon declared. "That. dr- scrlbes service Club Stomach pre- cisely. Our poor friend here. for example, possibly limited himself exclusively to lunches of tuna fi:-h sandwiches and bicarbonate of soda six days a week. On the seventh day at lunch he had creamed corn soup, breaded veal cutlets. a quar- ter of a pound of mashed. but- tered potatoes. a head of cauti- flower. two buns. a salad, chocol- ate ice cream sundae, two cups of coffee and a cigar. Immediately following this. according to our reports. he joined vigorously in the singing of a song called Tor He's a Jolly Good Follow) The strain was just. too much." "Has it. to do with the particular hotel where they eat?" Killcare in- qulred. "By no means. Kllicsre." the to- mous surgeon stated. "I have checked the food at all the hotels. It. is twhoiesome. well-cooked and. if eaten by is hungry yduniz loggn: at the and of his day's work. 'would have no more effect than, per- hl-ps. o sleepless night." . . . The young assistant helped the famous surgeon out of his gown in an ante-room oi the operating theater. "I've had in slight case of acid indigestion myself. sir." he sold tfmldly. "Nothing serious. of course. Just. 3 burning around the heart. and din? malls. Comes on every Friday a ternoon." "Hmm. Friday afternoon? That. would mean . . ." "Yes." Klllcsre said reluctantly. "Junior Chamber of Commerce." "Well. don't let. it give you any alarm. You young follows seem to be able to take anything Indeed. we may have found a cure for Service club Stonuoh by the time you get. into the Senior Boar ." The brilliant surgeon had this point slipped into his suit cost. it conservative grey., double-bressb ed number. and it was with I 3 surprise Killcsre noted s n all gleam in his lapel. "I say, sir." he said. "Are you really . . ." "Yes." sold the famous surgeon. smothering a polite burp and mov- ing across to a medicine csbinat ation Neptune-the landings-where Canada's contrib- pi-in-ted volume. showing principal and their throughout the war. 5 0 ii Old Charlottetown (Q (And 1' I'.'. I.) Di TAX FOR EDUCATION "We are glad to perceive that the Land Tax Bill has posed the Leg- islative Council without any mate- rial alteration: we may. therefore. congratulate the Colony upon the very liberal provision which this Act brings to the cause of educa- tion. The tax is sixpence on each cultivated 100 acres of land. and one shilling on each uncultivated 100 acres. After providing for the Lieutenant Governor's salary of 2500 per annum. the whole of the residue of the land tax which it produces -- about 51600 - is to be applied to the general purposes of education; thus one of the great- est. blessings which it is in the power of the state to obtain for its people will now be extended to the inhabitants of this Colony. on a scale which they will have some reason to acknowledge as bounti- ful. . "The district schoolmaster may now be considered as raised one step more. by Legislative endow- ment; and we hope an elevated one towards the rank and social condition to which his profession properly belongs. and above that position in which he has too long Canadian destroyers were prom- ' El'0Vell0d-" The Islander. May 5. I848 Normandy ution ranked next to that of Great. Britain and the United States. Twenty-six maps. several in colour. and some tlurty illustrat- ions are included in a handsomely Among the op- pendlces one of particular interest. to former navy men is a. table Canadian ships commanding officers The story is told in easy and in- formal language by Joseph Schull. a Canadian writer who served with the Navy during the war. The For Distant ships is obtain- able from the King's Printer. of.- tawa: 53.00. Parliamentary Day (Winnipeg Free Press) Back bencher members of the Canadian House and Senate re- ceive sessional indemnities of 34,- 000 plus 52.000 expenses. The M. P.'s Bel lhe 02.000 tax free. the Sen- ator: pay income tax on it. They all have railway passes by statu- tory enactment. Those living with- in 400 miles of Ottawa are entitled 9'50 10 Xpenses. meals. berth. etc. for one round trip per session. Those outside the 400 mile limit are paid actual travelling expenses for one round trip or a flat rate of sl5 per travel day. None are al- lowed passes on the Trans Canada Airlines. Any other trips they must pay for. House and Senate leaders are much better paid but their jobs entail much greater financial bur- dens. The Prime Minister's salary is 315.000 in year plus the 84.000 ses- sional indemnity and 32.000 tax free expenses and a 32,000 motor car allowance - 023.000 in Ill. Par- liament has recently bought an imposing old home. now being re- odslled. for the Prime Minister and his successors. Meantime. the Prime Minister and his wife live in tiny rooms in a down town ap- artment hotel. Cabinet ministers each receive 310.000 0 your and 82.000 motor car allowance -- 323,000 in all. Parlia- ment hos recently bought an im- posing nld home, now being re- modelled. for the Prime Minister and his successors. Meantime. the Prime Minister and his wife live in tiny rooms in a down town sp- artment hofel. f . 0 o 0 Cabinet ministers each receive 310,000 I year and 83.000 motor car allowsnos in addition to the 00.000 sessional indemnity and expenses. The Speakers of this Housq. and Semi! let 06.000 a your salary. SL000 motor car allowance and the 00.000 indemnify and expenses. But the Speakers are also allowed 32.50 a month in lieu of residence quarters in the Parliament build- ing. Residence in the buildings wu abolished in the new structure which replaced that destroyed by fire in mid. Incidentally: the house bar at which liquor was served in tho old building was also sbollsbsd in the new one. lithe official Ifouu Opposition leader gets I salary of 010.000 1 you plus the 00,000 sessions! pay. Private citizens also have bought nwckod with 'hui'il tablets. "not.- to" his sursioal sown. Units: it was U7". I house for the Oppbsitlos loads: Notes hi; on tremendous obstacle to the spread of Communism in China is vsst areas. a famine which ap- parently the Russians cannot. or are not. seeking to alleviate. Hun- dreds of thousand of Chinese are fleeing from the worst famine ares: into communltl where conditions already are grave, thus making them worse. starving Chinese are not likely recruits for Communism. for they have been told so much of the wonders of Communism and how prosper- ous they would be under the ham- mer and sickle that it must. be realized all that was Just. propo- ganda. Forever there will be sus- picion of all Russian promises.- Nlazon Falls Review. If the pupils of our primary schools welcome the end of the school year with lay. it is not al- ways so for a good number of their teachers, mole and female. Be. cause of the provisions or our school law. several of not sure of re-engagement holidays in the decision of the uneasiness. school com- makes for instability in I profes- It seems unjust indeed the famine which has spread over. them are tined- to remain a vegetable. Like. and wise the ever-Dopulor celery. tn, consequently will go through the stem or which bears waiting resemblance to the somewhat, 1.", missioners. Such a state of affairs what. may, whether vegetable cg sion the merits of which are known strips of flaky crust across the to everyone. and should not exist. still takes the cake.-Chicago Dally that our News. The Way .1 J teaching personnel 1: the mercy of an s:t.lgluem tr 0 school c0dO.lOQVlng mg ml or re-engagement of teacher; .4 , the d-lscretlo of a Hi: I Le Soleil, oaehec. I 9 mun” ; Fruit and vegetables no 1,, C i fllct, again. This time the 1o,m' , is laying definite claim .4, " I barbw a claim that a court i been asked to sustain. After a in i period of controversy, the mm” a was snatched from the Vegetabl. 1 family and set up as a fruit. The along came the ” "me too" claim to whatever am, - tocracy may be attached to Q fruit. group, and apparently you ' out sufficiently to be given a trim rating by Mr. Webster. Even nu nut has gained recognition as . hard-shelled fruit, and one" won. ders what other desertlons an facing the vegetable family. Th. poor squash that may he ,1 friendship alongside the melon in the garden apparently is an. E strik or stalk of rhubarb. But. coin: fruit, the rhubarb pie. with ii. in Rockcliffe. a suburb of Ottawa. Both he and the Prime Minzster must. pay for the upkeep of their new rent free homes. Neither the Social Credit nor C.C.F. leaders get any extra pay beyond their in- demniiies for the session. The Government. leader in the Senate gets 57,000 a year and the Senate Opposition leader 04.000 a year in addition to their sessional pay. I O 0 As for the bank benchers: when Parliament assembles in this city. it isslmcst impossible to get tem- porary living quarters. Normally. a decent. unfurnished five room apartment with bath. cannot be obtained for under 370 to 380 a month or up. depending on loca- tion. Such apartments, furnished. if obtainable at all. command 5125. use and up per month. Single rooms at the Chateau Laurier hotel are priced at S6 per day. double ones at S10. Only a tow lucky members can get in at I special rate. The Lord Elgin hotel rooms run from :4 to 35 per day single, 37 to 38 double. Many members and their wives try to live in single rented rooms in private homes. A good such room with reasonable access to bath costs from 535 to :45 a month. Fair restaurant. meals can be ob- tained at. from 80 cents to 31. There are insufficient office rooms in the Centre Block for members and Senators alike. Of- fices are allotted on percentage of the parties' number of members. The party whips then allot the shares. usually one office to one man on o seniority basis while the losers double up. Offices ore'com- fortably furnished and Cfil-llPP"l with desks. chairs. files and tele- phones. Best bet of the private members is the House restaurant and cafe- teria. An excellent metal can be had in the restaurant for 75 cents and good. filling food in the cafeteria at 50 cents. Both are run at 8 1055- I Towards Stabilization ! In The Middle East . (ny w.N. Ewe!) Thu-3 wgg some blll'Pn59 wh:hn' in the communion? DP” 9"" "' .3 d of the Ministers meetinll model: there was no reference at .1154. the Middle East. But the ex- Dlnnotlon came later When) "if Anglmn-enoh-American disc on tlon was issued. It. had been POK”-ll't nod because it was essential 1 rs as receive the assurances for Which the Governments of Israel and the Arab states had been asked. The importance of the whole Middle Eastern area is obvious en- ouch. Not. only '-5 "' I ”””'"l 93" of m. long periphery across which Russlg, by one or another of the methods of the "cold war . to press- ing on the free world. It is M50 the sector in which there is always the most: reason to expect strong pressure. For Soviet. imp?”-ll5m has inherited Ind ndoplf-'0 0" We objectives of its Tasrist iN'0de095' car. And the Middle East. has al- wsys been one of those objectives. A free hand for expansion In the general direction of the Per- sian Gulf" was the one thin! 0:1 whim uolotov insisted most atropi- ly when he and Ribbenlrov W979 planning their "spheres of in- fluenoe" in 1010. At. Pol-sdsm and Yalta. be tabled the Russian claims to liars and Ardshsn and the control of tho straits. Then come a bid for buses in Tripoli and the Dodecanese and for at least a fin- ger in Eritrea: an attempt l-0 lllln control of Northern Persia: and an attempt. to gain control of Greece. I 0 Russian pressure has not been great recently. But it has nose: sutlrsly ceased and could start again at I momsntll notice if con- ditions seemed fsvoursbls. The con- oorn of tho Wosum Poyvc.-rs' is thersfors that conditions should not bscoms such as to tempt. Mos- con to now lttampbs to disturb the poses and hinder the economic re- vival of the sun. The problem is essentially I two- fold one. In the first place. Rus- sis has to be brought to resllus that any attempt. sf. aggression sulmt any of the three "front line" coiintrles - Oi-sect. Turkey and Penis .. would be too danger- ous an adventure. That is the pur- pose of the Anglo-American do- oisrstkai that tho maintenance of the lnmrlty and indepsndonos of moss oounu-lu is of major um. corn for Britain and the U. 8. A. But. then to also the dancer. and the unstable situation in the "hm area" of Israel and the Am states. The maintenance of pew and the restoration of stability in that. area is the purpose of th. three-power declaration. . . . The basic trouble is fear - in perfectly genuine fear of the 1,. raelis that the Arab state: m planning 5. "second round" of up Palestinian war in the hope all destroying Israeli: the equally gen. ulna fear of he Arabs that long; is -planning a "second round” in the hope of conquering and up. i-iexing all Palestine. It is that fees which Britain, the U.S.A. 335 France are trying to allay. They have obtained from mad and from the six Arab states den laratlons of non-aggressive intm est, which taken together. can stitiute a. sort of De Facto non-up gression pact. between mam, But. that, in itself. was (lea: not. enough. For neither side pm complete confidence in the wanl the other. some outside guarantor was required: some assurance that any state a whether Arab or Jew- ish - which "iolates its pledge oi-la disturbs the peace would have 3 face consequences which. in flog none of them would dare to fun. The regional security of mg Middl. East must. be auoranteed f without against the possibility lslzresslon from wlohln. In theory. such 3 guai-gym should be provided by the United Nations. But the United Nation. has already shown itself unable to prevent. one Palestinian war. And no realist imagines for . mom”; that in the present condition it gluld even attempt to stop anoth- O O Q l Therefore. the Three mud have undertaken that reaponslbl!.- ity for enforcing peace on an would-be aggressor which in th present circumstances the Uni Notions organization is unable fulfill. That must. as the declsx-stto mikes plain, be done in sccordan with the Drlnclplea of tho Ch tcr. Equally. it must. be done if u C9550T.V without. recourse to th machinery and ma pmceduh O, the United Nations. 11 mg mg P""75 Pledges were to be restrict- ed in enforcing the decisions of "'9 Security Council, it would bl menlllnizless, since the chances of :he Council reaching any decision 0 Such an emergency would to nil. And H. meaningless declaration xifuld have no paclfying effect. Ill h B” "W1 -NW5 and Arabs allkl ave the assurance of three great POM?!-S that they will take action "3””5'- any aggressor. whether Arab or Jew. That is a real guar- :"r":e5:Vlg:xl:'h Should at once create se 0 security in peoples which have until now felt. them- sellf" in Dmwtual danger of a re- nevied war. dun 13 .nOl- 1" ll-Self enough. Th! 3 fllzers will not. be. entirely past. up)" work of economic reconstruc- tk cannot be effectively under- 5-Pn until the "cold war" and. "msi lmbortnnt. of all. the rum. V011? N1 . gtablllzatlon of the Middle Earl "5 mblllly of the Middle i-:a.-i it essential to whole me aorll-lcliclsecurify of (hi mm on THE moans: A1b”'a'5 Crude oil and naiurn. gas production at the end of Feb- mary ""5 Year rose to 132.038 541 p”"”d3- and pflross revenue climb- ed to an estimated 3275.234,9la. mm-Aim PIOLIFIO P0l'I' The hymn. "O God. Our Hell '0 Alex Post". was written l7V Isaac Watts (I674-i748), who ml the author of 000 hymns. ODODCOBT The Ago-old Story i will bi... bi. uni who all liven mo oounsolpny rein! 0'4 lllllnmt me In the night I0W""' uuunptstion.tothol.nnlln.of