QIQIQDOIQ- 0* Q~><--Ir~l l ‘PTLEZZsaQ... ' ‘should be vested in ‘not: rout. . . GUARDIAN lllllll Dull; (Iullilal ll Ill!) Authorised an lleoold Glue lull, Peel Omen Department. Ottawa. ‘Ila lsland Guardian Publishing Co. l-sutor ieud luiughig Uirootar. J. ll. Associate Editor, Irnnb WIIIU Buruhtt i l "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest ink." CHARLUTTETOWN TUESDAY, OCTOBER l9. 1m Georgetown Winter Service At a recent meeting of the Kin9'5 cfiullli Board of Trade the question of es_tablishing'a Georgetown-Pictou winter ferry service was dis- cussed with members of the Pictou Board 0f Tfflde and it was intimated by Dr. Grant. M-P- l" King's, that the proposal had his full support and cooperation. We note from a Nova Scotlfl exchange that the matter has also come before the Pictoii Board, and it was decided to request the local federal member, Mr. H. B. McCulloch. to work with Dr. Grant to get this service start- ed and make it a winter link between the two Provinces. This is something which should have ‘the full support of everyone in Prince Edward lsland, including the Provincial Government whose ac- tive cooperation would be useful. It is a matter which has been frequently brought up by King's County members in discussion in the Legislature, who have urged its advantages With the full con- currence of members from other constituencies. Georgetown has a magnificent harbour which is open iérly all the year round, and it is the natural winter port of the Province. Had this additional winter service been available when we lost the S.$. Charlottetown, many thousands of dollars might have been saved in lsland ship- ping losses during the long years in which we were waiting for the "Abegweit." While the new winter service between Borden and Tormentine is a great improvement over former years, there is no reason why it should be our sole link of winter communication. The success of the summer ferry service between Wood lslands and Caribou is an indication of our ever increasing transportation requirements. Whether or not it would be possible to op- erate the S.$. Prince Edward Island between Georgetown and Pictoii is a _matter for Federal engineers to determine. In any case, the advan- tages of this service during winter months, when the Wood lslands-Caribou route is closed, should be strongly presented to the Dominion Govern- merit. Serviceaiiie iirganlzatlon The newly formed Potato Shippers Advisory Association is said to be the first of its kind in Canada. This may be due to the fact that there is obviously more need for such an organization here than in any other Province. The seriousness of the refrigerator car shori- age was underlined in the Legislature last year, when it was stated that one of the chief difficul- ties confronting the railway was in the alloca- tion of the limited number of cars at their dis- posal. This year, according to head C. N. R. of- ficials, there will be a considerable increase in the number of cars, but the matter of allocating them equitably among the l00-odd potato ship- pers throughout the Province will still be a prob- lem. It is here that the Advisory Association can be of great assistance, especially to the smaller shippers. In addition, the Association will be in a po- sition to give expert advice as to changes in rail and water rates, best transport routes, etc. and in such complicated matters as adiustment of claims. Altogether, its services should prove of ma- terial benefit, both to shippers and the railway. The Provincial Government may also be the gainer, in saving the time and expense of the numerous telegrams it has been obliged, in recent years, to forward to Moncton, Ottawa and Mon- treal in connection with reefer car requirements. Farm Hazards Now is a good time to remember that late fall and winter increase the chancd of fire a- round farms, for oil lamps are needed more often in the home, storm-lanterns more fre- quently in barns and outbuildings. Only one out of every seven Canadian farms is served with electricity. Few, because of their location, can be aided by the effective fire-fighting servics available to city and urban dwellers. Often lack of water and snow-bound roads would make fire- fighting apparatus useless in any case. In a survey of fires on Canadian farms, the Oominion Bureau of Statistics estimates that ll per cent of farm fires are caused by the use of inflammable liquids and a quarter arise from faulty heating or cooking equipment. Ohiirchllts Warnings Declaring there was nothing between Eur- opean security and Soviet tyranny but the atomic bomb stocks held by the United States, Mr. Win- ston Churchill in his address to the Conservative convention“ at Liandudno expressed the feor that a third world war was remorselessly ap- proaching. He saw no hope of its being averted by agreements unless they were supported by ac- tions which would assure the world that the Intentions were sincere. He held in the utmost mistrust proposals by the Soviet on disarmament and atomic energy control in view of the refusal ‘ to pennit an international commission the right to carry out investigations in order to ensure that. the agreement was not being violated. The Russian suggestion was that atomic control the Security Council whose authority could at any time be nullified by the exercise of the veto. When allied by the ‘Brit- ish delegate whether Russia would be willing to abandon that right in matters relating to atom- ic control, there was no reply. y . A decade age, malls an exchange, Mr. Churchill strove by might and main to persuade I i THE the Government of the day to note Germany's preparations for war in violation of -various treaties, and to take counter-measures. He was termed a warmonger for his pains. Subsequent events proved how real his warnings were. To- day, except in certain factions preferring to place their faith in the men who rule at the Kremlin, the world heeds the words of the veteran statesman and is prepared to act on his advice. The treaty violations of which the Soviet Union has been guilty, its frustration of the efforts of the United Nations to implement the Char- ter and the activities of the Communists in prac- tically every quarter of the globe to create strife and confusion only too conclusively show haw great is the danger from that quarter and how necessary are measures to combat them. EDITORIAL NOTES Today the Empire Parliamentary Association conference opens in London. Representatives from Canadian Provincial and Dominion legisla- tures ore among those taking part. i‘ i ‘l k Finance Minister Abbott at a supper in Westmount said he expects to live in Ottawa until the Conservatives "fire him", which was taken to mean until after the election. it ‘l’ i‘ i ln the Old Country the fig-lit against the Colorado beetle is not one of control but of exter- mination. Farmers there are using insecticide dusts containing iodine which are claimed to eradicate the larvae of these pests. i ‘k i * Australia will continue to ban sales ol cream in i949. This will be done to help in _pro-'- ducing more butter for Britain. ln normal times Australian cream contains more butter-fat than the ordinary Canadian cream. The Premier of Queensland (Mr. E. M. Hanlon) who went to Brit- ain for the Dominion Parliamentarians Confer- ence wants to step up nominations for British migrants to work on producing food for Britain. w a * A Sir Thomas Browne, author and physician, born this date i605. Amid the stirring affairs go- ing on around him in England, he had a Slllgii- larly detached and contemplative mind, exhibit- ed in his works, chief of which is Religio Medici: "Music strikes in me a deep fit of devotion and a profound contemplation of the First Composer. There is something in it of Divinity more than the ear discovers." I i O Nearly 280,000 pounds of Danish butter were due to arrive at Montreal Sunday, aboard the Canadian Pacific cargo liner Beaverglen after a voyage from London. Distribution has not been set yet by Government authorities but it is expected that about.40 cars of butter will leave the city for points in Central Canada soon after it is unloaded while another large amount will be‘ stored in Montreal. i i i i It does not do to be too high-minded regard- ing prosperity, all the same'it is something to crow about when Canada is credited by fifty selen nations with being the second in prosper- ity in the world. Senator Wishart Robertson, Halifax, said he left the United Nations cham- ber with a "lump in my throat" after 57 coun- tries tactily agreed Canada is second only to the United States as the most prosperous coun- try in the world. t i O The United States Commerce Department has announced that during the first half of i948 dairy product exports from the United States were valued at $88 million, representing a 23 per cent decrease compared with $114 million for the some period in i947. Largest decline is in cheese which dropped l8 per cent. Dried skim and evaporated milk, infants'_food and butter exports have also declined. Dried whole milk, malted milk, and condensed milk exports increased, the latter by 50 per cent. a w w e Canadian Press takes a no doubt justly cynical view of the factors in determining the date of the next Dominion election. lt quotes Ottawa observers as stating that if prices are still high next year, the Government will hold out until i950; if they turn downward during the next six or eight months, "you can look for a fall contest in i949." A pretty'clear indication of Government intentions, it adds, will be il‘l the Budget. If taxes are slashed all along the line, watch out! ' O I i Q President Chiong Kai-Shek in his National independence Day speech said, "l had hoped that following the inauguration of our constitutional rule and with the people of the entire country sharing political responsibilities, they would be able to rally behind the Government in the campaign against the Communists. Subsequent events proved that l had overlooked one fact. lt is that thoso who have not lived under the Communist rule were taken in by the Red pro- paganda, thinking that after all the Commun- ists are Chinese too and that they in their own way also practise democracy and guarantee po- Iitical freedom. In consequence, they mistook the Communist rebellion as an ordinary internal disturbance, and they under-estimated the Com- munist viciousness as compared with the Japan- ese imperialists. This psychological error has cost us the concentration of our will and the forti- fication of our spirit, thereby keeping us from using our strength to the best advantage. As a result, the campaign against the rebels has not had the benefit of coordinabd ‘efforts on the part of the army and the people. And we have suffered many setbacks. This is the main rea- son for our reverses. If we do not pause and reflect and correct this erroneous attitude now, and if we fail toirecogniu in the Com- munists the arch enemy of the Chinese people and see the threat to our country and press on in our struggle with determination, then our path would be strewn with more difficulties and our-military position would become even more THE_§UARDIAN. orrnanorrirrowiv ®%00%00%00<% Uld C hariuiieiuwni 9 (And P. B. l.) TBACADIE PIONEERS At the side of the highway which now runs between Charlottetown and St. Peter's, near to Trncadic post office, there is a spring of wat- er, which in the days of pagan fable would have been reckoned as a favourite haunt of syivnn nymphs and deities. Limpid und abundant, it bursts forth from darkness into the sunlight, and rushes down the slope to the East River, with none of the infantile weaknesses of a rill, but with the strength and bearing of a full-grown stream. This spring was greatly prized by the French, and the locality came to be a fav- ourite with the Acadian husband- man; the soil was generous, the marsh hay fed his cattle, and the stream turned his grist and saw mills. Soon a church was built, and a flourishing colony sprang up on a site whose at- traction, in the beginning, had been this solitary woodland spring. o a a _ On the shores of Tracadle harbor the settlers in 1728 were few. Four Acadian farmers-with their wivcs and children, numbering in all twenty souls, were the first to in- vade the solitudes that reigned there. Their names were Francis Boudrot, Michael Bourg, Charles Bourg and John Beiiivcnu. The precise locality where rose the cabins of these pioneers, can in our days be matter only for conjecture. It is known that the western shore of the Bay proved the most attract- ive to the settler. and that the track from French Fort through the district of the Grand Source to Sav- age Harbor and Si. Peter's, skirlcd its southern rcachcs. It may likewise be in the early settlers woul choose a position whence communications with the neighboring settlements could be most easily maintained. Such a position would be at the southern extremity, where the bay terminates in n pointed sheet of water. known as Millcave. into which a stream called Millcove Brook empties itself. These names are but English reproductions‘ of the old French names, that still clung lo the locality. when they, who had imparted them, had been driven for away. The emigrants who succeeded the Acadian farm- ers, borrowed their nomenclature of the localities. and in their Cellic tongues the brook was stlii the Mill Brook, rind the site of the old French mlii n landmark in the land- scape. rred that. The western coastline of Tru- cadie Harbor is cut: into somewhat equal portions by Winter River in its confluence with the waters of the Bay. The tract of country lying to the north of the estuary be- came in the course of time thick- ly settled. and near to the mouth of the harbor, where at. the present day the eye iviinders over herb- iese send-dunes, the cattle of the Acadian settler browned in fields of rich clover. For the French farmers, copying the devices in use on the fertile meadows of Grand Pre, built up strong embankment: _ / How =iluruqoesrfui>eieiiiT irizco mieiir FEEL. NowAoAv§-~ " ocooiiw sma- A aesr- w.“ A um: 0I= AFTEfi.-$ftAV€ LOTION, IF you . Peggy] \ x // / K / _ \ 7 f l ll/ / it. happens, however. Mr. de Souzal- must have been a rare mam. for he recognized good prose when he met. it. and arranged to have the letter preserved in his family. His daugh-ter-in-iaw showed it to I-LVA Morton and it. forms one of the interesting items in his latest book of travels, “In Search of South Africa." For the first time the full text of the letter is available and it reads: Statg Schools Prison, Pretoria. Dear M‘. do Souza. I do not. consider that your Gov- ernment was justified 1n holding me. a. press correspondent and a non-combatant, as a prisoner of war, and I have consequently re- solved to escape. The arrange- ments which I have succeeded in making with my friends outside are such as to give me every con- fidence. But I wish in leaving you >.'r3 / Jig‘) _'7 fl -—-wr"ni Tile Qesmic-nousori Tl-IE SALE or Pllooucfs (QlTH ALwHoLlc cou- Tem- ONTllE isuoumuo Resuurusif PuauciTY. I soul-o nun wrist Me's witisieeniufo.’ l .5?‘ 611ml BY NORTH by h... NORTH I imew I had bhe 31ft. of flight. And like is swimmer from the shore I leaped and breasted outer space And left the planet's roar. And silence met me on tihe way Arid peace and sweetest ease. To put: my flight to test. thus hastily and unceremoniously to one more place on record my appreciation of the kindness which has been shown me and the other prisoners by you, the commandant and by Dr. Gunning and my ad- miration of the chivalrous and hu- mane character of the Republican forces, My views on the general question of the war remain un- changed but I shall always retain a feeling of high respect for the several classes of hurghers I have met. and, on reaching the British lines. I ‘will set forth B truthful and impartial account o! my ex- pericnces in Pretoria. In conclu- sion. I desire to express my obliga- tions to you and to hope that when this most. grievous and unhappy war shall have come to on end, a state of affairs may be created which shall preserve at. once the national pride of the Beers and the security of the British and put a final stop to the rivalry and enmity of both races. Regretting that circumstances have not per- mitted me to bid you a personal farewell. Believe me Yours very sincerely. Winston S. Churchill. Dec. lil, 1889. In agreeing to iet. Mr. Morton publish this letter Mr. Churchill said: "You are at liberty to con- tradict. the story of my having swum the Aispies River." Thus dies a persistent Churchill legend. He simply jumped the wail and escaped. He swam no river. <s‘>0 i i l social stature. to check the inroads of the sen, and thul came to have pastura fields, where we have land. --From an article by the lati. Prof. John Coven in the Prince Edward; Inland Magazine, 1902. A Churchill Letter __ (Winnipeg Free Preal) When Winston Churchill was e young man he went. to South Africa during the Boer vver as e newspaper correspondent and was captured by General Bathe who later became prime minim/er of the new Dominion. Mr. Churchill con- trived to escape, after his. capture at Ohieveiey in 1M and his im- pilsonrirent with Britten officers in Pretoria. He hue described his escape 1n tvro of his books, first in "London to Ladymriith" and later in tile fragment of autobiography, "My lhtly Ute." Before he escaped. Mr. Churchill, with greet courtesy, left a letter on hie bod addressed to the Boer Secretary of War, Ir. do Home, serious than it is today) explaining hie actions. In both tile books Mr. Churchill tied to recon- struor, this letter tron-i memory, Ae FOR STOVE porlant that. you wear clothes In keeping with your business and § hand east, And any star was north! To set each continent its place: ground But not in heaven. face to face! 0 ancient signpost of the sen. O north held by magnetic spun.‘ You are the finite verity Within the world of man._ And charts afar hie finite goals. The compass of the infinite Is fixed by other poles. Science Moniton g The Age-Old Story o Then ahalt. thou wells stumble. ANCIENT ART lof the most ancient. of arts. Msae-Qeeaome-Q-ooi-oe-Q-ekt-k mm» iirrciiniiiios courirs Because people are inclined to judge by appearance. l‘ ll "l" laugh and grow _ l .i. r. riiioriisiisoii a‘ Silll (CUSTOM BUILT CLOTHES) Queen It. OR FURNACE ' W‘! HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF BOTH SIZES YOUR ORDER WILL liAVE OUR ATTENTiON ll. riciiriiiii a 0o. Ltil. Phone 240' ' The rush of mountains fell away, The murmur of the, lapping seas, Then tihought. I shall I turn to east Or shall I seek the stars to west? And looked to find the flxed star But now with worlds an either Arid space in space for setting forth There was no west. there was no The certainties were sii of earth» They name the heavens from the But while assured he travels forth —Char1cs Miriam, in the Christian in thy way nfely, and thy foot. shall not Bread making. ,or the prepara- tion of cakes from flour or parch- ed grain by means of heat, is one When we lieu of a burglar who has successfully robbed homes co v the extent of $50,000 profit being | allowed out on $5,000 ball we begin in wonder about the invariable truth of the saying that "crime does not. pay." —- Montreal Financial Times. The moat dangerous ruoborlat la neither the drunk nor the incom- potent, but the exhibitionist - the chap who has an exaggerated sense of hie own importance when he gets behind the steering wheel, and insists on driving with that nerile of his importance as his rul- ing motiva-Chatham News. Horde u British scientist who says that within a few more dec- adea we'll be landing on the other planets, with Maris the first. Well, we hope we get to Mare before the Martians get. to ue. It would be sad to have them land here first and discover the mesa we're in. — Ottawa Journal. Of course, no one want: to put. a serious damper on the rightful gaiety of a wedding party, but there's a proper limit to every- thing. We can't believe that is pro- cession through the city streets, with borne blaring, really contri- butes anything to a happy marri- age. In view of the undoubted an- noyance it causes householders, of- fice workers and everyone else within earshot, it should be dis- couraged. — Cornwall Standard- Freeholder. The churches have u big problem fighting the liquor traffic and en- deavouring to keep it within bound: and, generally speaking, they are doing splendid work but we don't think the royal commission route will get them anywhere. Better for them to keep on hammering away at the evlle of the liquor trade al they have been doing and to in- vtensify their campaigns of temper- ance education, especially among the young and their parents-Si. Thomas Times-Journal. There in onmwoetnrn Canadian newspaper which follows the prac- tice of abbreviating the name of this province by calling it "Sasky." Just where the authority for this has been found is mystifying. The proper abbreviation is "Seek." Can- adian newspapers would present a laughable picture if they were fuii of abbreviations such as "Onty". for Ontario; "Manny". for Mani- toba; and "Atty," for Alberta. When one reads "Sasky Gov't.", "Sasky Police" or "Sasky Citizens," and wonders why, there is of course the rare possibility that those who con- form to "Sask." are all out of stcip and should be tacking the "y" on the end of it. — Moose Jaw Times- Herald. That IZ-year-old boy who won first prize with his chocolate cake in a school cooking contest will be- come the despair of his wife in later years. For‘ most women don't like their men messing around the kitchen, and are just. a bit jealous of any husband who can turn out gbctter cake than they can. Wives like men who can make their own breakfasts, occasionally making one for the wife to enjoy ln bed. They like men who can cook for the fam- iiy in case the wife is iii. But, they don't want a man constantly nosing about in the kitchen, offer- ing (helpful) suggestions an to how this cake or that pot of soup could be improved. And they don't like a man who takes over the kitchen on a Saturday afternoon to experiment with his own concoc- tions, leaving pots and pans, un- washed, scattered about. Women are funny, that. way. -- Wlndaor Star. _There in u literary legend, for what it is worth. that the first player of the part of Hamlet was a fat/man. It is supposed that Shakespeare was getting a laugh from the “groundiingfl when he had Hamlet Jay. "0 um this too solid flesh would melt." Elsewhere in the play it is laid of Hamlet that "he’s fat and scant of breath.’ Hamlet was a melancholy Dane, a brooding and self-conscious char- acter. But it is the popular ris- sumption that fat. men are merry fellows, at pence with the world and their own onnciences. They fat. They rarely worry. and their upholstery pro- ieete them from the irritations and annoyances which make other men lean and fretful. It isn't so, says Dr. Herbert T. Kelly, a dietary upe- clniiist of Philadelphia. I-fe told the Medical Society ‘of Pennsylvania that many fat persons got that way because something went wrong with their business, social standing or love life. They were tripped up caddie an inferiority complex by eating and drinking too much. - Philadelphia Bulletin. PERIL and welcome your inquiries for gallon. - iiyndnian 8i Offices: Charlottetown Cyrus A. I. llievr - District Thames MoAvtun — lpeolal by some mental hurdle and tried to’ Ira. Intense Ublalley at Peu- dent in letting a new record for penicillin intake. She is taking 20,- 000,000 units a day for 21 days, the old record having been 450,000,000 unite in two months. Sounds like the national debt. -- Windsor Stair. A farmer wrote tn a Sydney practitioner asking advice'on diet, He says he finds he gets more tired than he should be after a day's work and wanders if it's due to wrong food. He was ninety-seven and a half yearn old, ho added. -- Austrelian News Letter. 0n the whole Canada in nu Illa a country, from the viewpoint oi international politics, an prosperous a country, and a country with as fine a climate an any one can think of, taking all things into accouni. So think that. over some morning after a enow storm as you shovel your walk before going to office oi shop. — Chathnm News. We've often been irked while window chopping to find the price tag of some interesting item deftly turned no it couldn't be read no matter how we oroned. We always suspected this was a dodge to lure us into the ltore. It turns out this is a. mild form of burglar insur- ance. For thieves smashed a store window the other day and "select- ed” the moat valuable coat in the window-n natural wild mink. They were guided by the $5,500 price La z, prominently displayed. - Financial Post. People have been llklll‘ ue what farmers are doing with those square or round bundles of straw they nee in some of the grain fields this year. The answer le that they are bales of straw produced by those newfengled automatic bisiers which have come on the market to take - some of the physical load off the shoulders of the formers. They mark the most advanced step lri 50 yearn in the handling of nisy and straw on the farm. For long years farmers have been complain- ing that, whereas the binder, then the combine. came along to take the backbreak out of grain harvest- ing. hay harvest and the handling of straw continued to be the hard- est work on the farm. Now the baier, bale loaders and bale pliers have come along to match the com- bine oe a labor-saver. The hey is cut and ewntched. allowed to dry, then cornea along the automatic hay baler and puts it up in 50 to 100 pound bales which are readily handled. But straw la needed on dairy farms or on farms generally whore livestock are kept, and farmers are following up the com- bine with the automatic bisier which ties the stray into bales for easy storlng-Lethbrglge Herald. A mild utlr wan caused in Brit- ain recently when an American vis- itor asserted that the food short- ages had adversely effected the quality of English mealtime con- versation. We have pondered this matter. and wo do not really think that the quality of the food offer- . ed at a meal hoe anything to do with the conversation which ao- compisniee it. We recall that. when we were of public school age the school nurse taught us the follow- ing round, to be sung to the tune of Row, Row, Row Your Boat: Chew, chew, chew your food gaily through the meal; the more you eat, the more you laugh, the bet- ter you will feel. The great fault of this indoctrination wag that the school nurse failed to tell the par- ents about it. As the parents of moist of the children with whom we were acquainted liked to eat in aoi- emn eilence this need fell upon stoney ground, and for years we bolted our food whole, and never laughed at table. as u protest against it. Canadians, in the main. do not talk much an they ant. and they would not dream of talking brilliantly at table: such conduct might impede the important busi- nee: of eating. It hiis been anlii by a student of our national man- ners that Canadians dine between 12:05 and 12:10 p.m. and eup be- tween 6105 and 6:10 p.m. Obvious- iy there ll not much time for chit- chat if the deadline is to be met. Another thing the school nurse told us was that gloomy or dieturbinr: topics should not be discussed at. meals. Again she forgot to cx- plain this to parents, who chose mealtimes for short lectures on our social and moral shortcomings. and for examination of our echooi rr- partl. No one has ever explained to us satisfactorily why food and good conversation should be mixed. Perhaps the Canadian instinct. which keeps them apart is a sound one. Certainly Horace Walpole did not think no, for it was he who wrote: "Sparkling talk dirniniahen n the meal progresses. . . . I am rather inclined to think that con- versation is at its beet where there is need for food. Hunger sharpens the wit." Quite true. And fo On the nee. on land. In the all. peril ef fire, lightning, fnlllll aircraft. of automobiles, of accident, o_f lu our modern life we are nrroiuuled by periinjnil that ie w!!! we employ sire eynteui ot tneanueo to protees as " We are in u position to provide u complete insurance service. Insurance lluoo lflI Ailllon P. McLean-District Manager at dummies lepneen l‘. L-Iuetlutt — Iepeoseutettvo at Dlllilay. A. L. Rogers - Representative e0 loallatou. Agents throughout the Province duill iL-Kingeton Whig-Standard. sickness. olelly. advice and information. No obit- iio. Limited ~ lulmardde - ' Marshal" Inner at Monique saliva.