"('pvqnlnnuldIa.lil idlld uh III hut" .&g.ngvgr,un..(umItnuaIiI Pnnustnet 1 Outauauu. P.E.l.. by the noun Canon: 144-. i 60 Ill; IL Wu Tamale. Ilaeuau ntfiea. an lilllveflll! Tluar nldx.. In A. Iiandf. Pulluber no Gaunt Innu- Iunber of no Cuantln Prom Ianber Audit Iunau d Circulation It-aadi nlfleea at Saunmernde. lulalill and Alberta- Autannaad ll hound Clan Ilall by the Pan DKKI mmneuw-aide Il5fI0 Fl ll- ' f l I . I' ::niurln;iv(b:r.e ll l'.l.l. I.oo. other Province: an U. I. l1:.fll pf! annnn. I j ......; ' "Tiie Iinlgut memory if "15" ill" ' the weakest ilk." No Repudialion . Whatever else British Prime Miti- lster Macmillan ma? ha" had l" mind making appointments to his cabinet, it is clear that he Wasp hilt thinking of repudiating the policies of his predecessor. in the main. the ncw cabinet diiicrs i'ci')' ill”? fmm the old: and, whaici'N' ll""l'”"'"l" there was. it was l!li't-in l" .Ed""i5 moat articulate siittl'”l""” Th” car" rles significance on two grounds. in mg first place. it puts the world. and the lfnitcd States in particular. on notice that the new regime does not intend to go back on Eden's demalld that ilic Suez Canal be put ulllltlr init-rnatiiinal control and rciiitni-ti from the political ambitions of lli'N- dent Nasser of Egypt. Thll llrmllld "guy or may not be met in due course. flertainly, at the moment neither the United States nor the . United Nation: is ahowtnl mllfh ,. It-rnneaa in this matter. although it was Secretary of State Dulles who outlined the plans for inte.rnat.ionali- nation immediately after the canal name under Egyptian domination. hut whether it be met or not. it i! clear that the British Government. under Mr. Macmillan will continue H insist on it. in the second place. it reflects Qie new Prime Minister's view that Hie British people in general were behind Eden's policies. despite the frantic effort; of Labour Party lead- ers to make him appear as a bully Ind aggressor. Mr. Macmillan is noted for extraordinary political Ilm-wdneaa: and if he had thought. for one moment that the public favored a mfter and more flexible policy and one that bordered on out- rtght appeasement. he certainly , would not have kept selwyn Lloyd on an Foreign Secretary nor would he have appointed Duncan Sandys. ('hurchill's son-in -law and one of Eden's most outspoken supporters, as Minister of Defence. New Cattle Feed is ordinary lumberyard sawdust kg. costly than grain? If so. it prom- ilel to take top place among the cattle funds of the future, once the atomic energy program gets into full suing. That. at any rate, is the gist of a report issued by chemists at the Oregon State College. The way thcy tell it. there is no mystery about it. Sawdust contains cellulose and when exposed to beta and gam- ma rays it goes through a chemical change. when the treated sawdust is fed in cows, their normal diges- tivc fluids convert the cellulose into body sugar, and it is this that gives food value to various forms of grain. There are two little difficulties shelter to holding imitation china eggs to hens' nests. Who inientcd the lock? No. not the Russians. although they have probably laid claim to the distinction. It was the i-Egyptians back as far as 2,il(ltl RC. clumsy wooden affair. It was un- earihcd a few years ago in the ruins of Rab)!-'m. The Greeks. following their traditional practice of taking things their neighbours had made and improving them. built the first ”sit-klc" lock. so-t'allPt'l because it re- scmhlcd the rcapcr's sickle. the pop- ular agrii-ultiiral tool of the time. It must have hccn an unwieldy affair. as the kcy for it was so large that it had to be carried over the shoulder. The Romans were the first people to go in for smziil contraptions, so small that many of them could be worn on the finer-rs as rings. The first look was a in ilic Miririlc Ages. Eliglish lock- siniths ucrc vcry important people and thcy rtNit'icti to ingenious de- xi--ns. For instance, one type of lock shot a pistol at anyone who tried to tuinpcr with it. structcd so as to amputaie the fing- PPS of pilfcrcrs. Just why these de- vices went out of use it's hard to xiii: (.('l'i.'-liili)'. tlicre would be plenty Anoihcr was con- iit use for tlicni those days. and they niigiit well he adticd to crime-pre- vention tticlniiques. Only the most i'crkii--s thicr would try in g:it"al l1l!lllt")' from a safe if lic knew that he was in danger of being shot at or of losing his hands in the process. A Matter Oi Manners Wit-at a gi-cat difference there is to be sure in the aivay-from-home manners of Mr. Hugh Galtskill. present leader of the British Labour I'arti'. and tliosc of his distinguished prc(ict'css'oi', the Rt. Hon. Earl Alt- lee. Mr. Gaitskill on his current visit to the llnitcd States is seizing every oppoi'tniiiiy' that comes his way to spvak iinkintlly of Sir Anthony Eden and in rletioimce the British-French intervention in Egypt. Earl Attlee. who is also In the United State! on a speaking tour. is taking a more objective and more state:-imanlike view of the situation. When asked in Ann -Harbor. Michigan, to com- ment on his country's political af- fairs he matte it clear that. he had no criticism to make of Sir Anthony nor did he regard Britain's recent action in the Middle East as ag- gi'cssion or a return to imperialism. ”ln my vicw." he said. "it should be regarded rather as a move similar to that taken by the Iinitedlstatea a few years ago in putting a fleet between Formosa and the Chinese mainland." At the same time Earl Attlee suggested that if the United States last summer had taken the respon- sibility ii inch is noiv partly recog- nized iii the so-called "Eisenhower doctrine" the Suez crisis would not have liccnmc the snriou: Intprnn. tional problem it now is. Mr. Gait- Skill sccins to think he can win friends and influence people in the United States by attacking his own cnuntri's leaders and policies. Earl Atilct-. 1 rue Rritislicr and wise lcaricr that he is, is avoiding all such """l"-ti and h.i' tlnini: so he is prob 3hl.l' fdllillnt more rcspcr-t from My SENTIMENTS OF THE SEASON U. 3. Foreign Our fantastic foreign policy antics, reminisccnl only of the iipside-down world of Alice in Wonderland. have pr0durl'd a tangled hall on con- tradictions. The Eisenhower tion ha! announced auhiect In concurrent-e hv Con- gress. in use American military force if necessary to defend the nations of the Middle East against Soviet aggression. This move in hltfck Kremlh ambitions in a supremely lira- tegic area by inierpnsing Amer- ' ican power unquestionably makes sense. it reaffirms the Truman Doctrine. it may help dispcl the unhappy and almost suicidal im- pression that peace-at-any-price delusions in Washington give Moscow unlimited scope for min- chief. Had such a move been made a year earlier. when Soviet in- trusion in the region first became clear. the Near East ntoblul would not have been aggravated to its present dimensions and. no less important. the Western alli- lnce would today have been in a healthier condition, But even in launching the new policy, in itself necessary. Wash- ington has managed to involve it- aelf in ama t character of the decision. in timing and the manner of its pro- tection must necessarily be viewed in the light of Amerian conduct and pronouncement. in the proceeding months. And ihua viewed they seem almost calcul- ated to thicken the logs of con- fusion around this countryls inter- national aliiludes and intentions. SELF-IIIGHTEOUSNI-Zss Consider how reccntly we turned in righteous wrath against Britain and France whcn they fin- ally took the initialivc. in defense of their life-and-death interests. to head off Soviet encroachment: in the Middle Eui. Our government went so far as to make common cause with Nasser and Khrushchev to restore the status qitn ante - which is to say thr vcry situa- tion that now compels us to commit American force, That the danger is great em) to justify the commitment ah be self-evident. As one Washington Kremlin could cnnqucr Europe by administra- ("ICE lIl0I'Il a decision. ; ambiguities. The I Policy Antics A. N. spaniel. Chairman. International Latte: Company In the Washington Post. and Times-llerall , of Nasser. which no obviously i would have been a boon to peace. i We helped cancel out the military advantage gained by Anglo - French initiative. undermined the prestige and authority of then two nations and lent. our weitlht in in, .-.-ippiing of their economic vitality - Vet now we concede In effect that the prospect of soviet helic- mony over the Middle East. is tmityinx enouiui tn in-utv unil- ateral emplo .uc..t of Western power. l-lavinl deepened the vacu- um into which Soviet influence now flow: more alarrninizly "105 before. we add insult to injury by claimina for ourselves alone the right to act that we denied to England and France. How par- adoxical can ona government be- come without losing the respect. of mo; nlong with the confidence of friends? INEPTITIIDIJ . In nffirfnllu an intention to act unilaterally. Nuhinlidn cornea close to IIOHMIII '3" whole world that it has and need! no allies. Thin of courui is inept- itude rather than planned Dili- poiu-. yet it look: as if America were determined in pull! 193 310” .aluable free-world associates to the brink of political and military oblivion. Having almoat mortally wounded our belt friends. WI seem to be preparing to bury them. True. than iii a face-lavlnl gimmick. It in aiiaettcd that the United states. unlike Britain anti France. will use force. only Vllll the "consent" of the nations en- dang:-red by Soviet cumulon- But this in palpably diplomatic double-talk. soviet Isilreuion ll most unlikely to take the form of overt military attack. The Krem- lin has found infiltration and Inb- verainn - of the order now on display in Syria er H10" '0 its taste and ill Illum- By the time a country ii "Idv for the kill. It is far too emana- led in the communlat web to con- sent to being saved. it is by then so close to bciu I puppet "ill ii condemns would-be uvioura as im perialist meddl . Both Syria and Egypt. in point of fact. have al- ready branded the Eisenhower nt- ienaton of the Truman Doctrine as "American colonialism." in terms of realistic WWI! equations the limmick in there- y fore political eycwash. The warn in: given to Moacow is that the United States will not countenance ' and the free world. whether by open aggression or by non-violent methods. if it doesn't mean that, it means nothing. SLAPPED DOWN AI.LlES it was to forestall the covcrl, non-violent and more deadly sort of aux-anion that London and Paris acted in November. only to he slapped down and deeply wealt- eued for their darlnf. Now the United States. which ed the con- demnation yrocoedinga while Nas- ser cheered and Molcow jeered, declares that it will do what Eng- land and France did. if and when necessary. The logic of the historic struggle between the communists and the tree worlds. it thus appears. in inexorable. It has compelled Wash. lnlton to acknowledge the grim nature of the menace in the Middle East which two other nations - hecluui for them the danger was more direct and more terrible- rofblnlud somewhat. Manor. The same logic. one hopes. will drive Amadcaa atatununahlp. not that la in noun-stud in HIV! Dlctflno. to face up to the fallaclu of its new iaolationlsm. More than ever before America nuda strong and dedicated allies. it must. not continue to cut off its none to spit: its face by down- grading the power and authority of then silica and in the procem diminish the aggregate strength of the free world. The Age Old Story I will any of the med. me is my refuu and my fortress: my God: In Ilnl will I trust. FKACTURE Fol! TALLULAII PHILADELPIIIA (AP) - Titlin- lah Bulkhead underwent an oper- ation for I broken hand early Tuesday followlnl her lppearnncc Monday night in the play Eugenia. She suffered the injury Saturday night during a Icon in the play when Ibo waved her band: in the air and struck a wall. Medically Speaking ly llmnu N. naaduea. I. I). GUARD AGAINST POISON .. FROM CARBON MONOXIDIL. with the doors and windows closed tightly against the outside cold this time of year. your home might be inviting an unwelcome caller-carbon monoxide. Probably the most widespread poisonous us i ” with av- eryday living. carbon monoxide is invisible, tasteless and odorless. Even in small amount it can he tteadlv. FAULTY I-:QUlPltll::N1' Faulty equipment accounts for a bout one-fourth of our yearly toll of deaths from carbon monoxide It may be a dirty or badly ad.iuat- ; ed furnace. boiler. fuel burning I stove or space heater. Even I faulty refrigerator can be blamed. A clogged vent, chimney or fine pipe might prevent gases from be- ing properly. released. and carbon monoxide might flood the home. This In can poison you by com- bining with the hemoglobin in your blood. It prevents blood from car- rying oxygen In the body tissues. Development of ccrtain symp- toms should lead you to suspect that carbon monoxide fumes are present These. include headaches. dizziness. rirovisincss and nausea. You may become irritable. per- apire suddenly. become mentally dull and absent-minded Your lens may ache and you may have hal- lucinationa. Sometimes you can l'P('(lIHIlZr 3,. phyxiatitm by carbon monoxide by the clierixv-rcd color of the vic- tim's skin. eyelids, lips and ears. y A person suffering from poiaon- - "it by this gas must have fresh air immediately. If the room can't be ventilated quickly. take him out. side. KEEP HIM WARM Apply artificial respiration if he i is breathing weakly or not at all. We plenty of blankets and hot water bags to keep him warm and let him rest as long as he viaiils. Even though only one part of l carbon monoxide in 700 parts of air can be fatal. exposure t'o this . nu doesnlt always mean death. in VIN. only about one out of 200 per- sons exposed to carbon monoxide fumes is a fatality. Paris physicians recently report- ed they have been able to revive victims of carbon monoxide poison. in: more rapidly with an intraven- ous drug.cytocl'n'ome C. than with the usual procedure: in 30 cases of coma. they said. the drug wu effective within a to 30 minutes. OUR YESTERDAYS From The Guardian Filer TWENTY-FIVE YEAR8 AGO (January 16. 1932) The ferry steamer llillaboro is Hilll On the Job making her regu- lar trips to Rocky Point. Today the steamer will equal last year's record when trips were made until this date. and it looks u it the record will be broken this year if the present mild weather coa- ditlona continue. That fishing on Sunday ahould be trapped and that the miiuu season should open May In and close September aoui. were the un- animoua decisions of the numbers of the Fish and Gama Auociatlon at the Ipacial meeting held in Charlottetown last avanlnl at which President. Mr Gilbert Gaudet. K.C. presided. TEN YEARS AGO Uaauary it. til?! belief that the chief problem of Fharlotbotmvn is to increase its revenue "Io that iii may not only reduce its debt burden falter. but also increase and improve its aer- vices to the taxpayers without gn- ing further into debt." in express- ed in a report on civic finances submitted at the annual meeting of the Board of Trade last eva- ning. Fire broke out in the general store and meat market of Crosby and Wotlon at Crapaud early tut NOTES BY THE wAr The man who alleys puma; ea : big fat. cigar merely in indulging in an adult version of thumb- aiickiag.-Dr. Maury Hauler. Uni- vcnity of llllnoiafchioago. A transport trad In lellnnaa. Ai-lx.. bad thla alu lettered on in rear: Crlllll Doesn't Pay-Neltlh er Does 'h'ut:klu.”-Wall street Journal Back 1' roll mule has been banned in Naples. and we can only hope that Venice will follow suit. The stuff would be murder in a londola.-Hamilton Spectator A youth (row I day: lnlllll for stealing from the cash register of a store when he had just landed a job. No sooner on his feet than he lost his head.-London Free Preu. If all farmers everywhere farin- edaainllaatbeyknawliowand weather wan always favorable the surplus of agricultural products would mount to flisutrous propor- tion.-Farmera Advocate. night but was extinqulshed before serious damage was -'. T . blaze was discovered about 7.15 and was located in a wall and in the ceiling of the ground floor. The tire is believed to have been caused by an overheated stove. If tenure actual! read all the columns and pages of ldvico written for them. how would they find the fine to set any homework done?-llamilton Spectator "Tke up-Inaalcal pu-t.lclpul'a in the (Ed Sullivan) television pro- gram included some Weneen. a gifted ventriloquiat. and Elvis Presley. a powerful .1-xununt In savor of compulsory service" o New York Time! . And now are are told that jurors ill! to convict people of man- slaughter charges in traffic death: because the Jurors look at the prin- oner and think. "There but for the grace of God In I." But shouldn't the evidence count?- St. Cather- ine's Standard Everythlnx in tfulxnod to speed up the cooking of foods. but at laut one bride vliahea they would think of ways to slow it do that everything wouldn't burn during a little old forty-five minute tele- phone conversation. - Hamilton Spectator American warships in the Part tic are being regularly shadowed by Russian and Red Chinese sub- hf ' marine. our Saliofb say. if NJ, this repreuinta I long technologic- al advance in snooping. Tvveniy years ago. when the Japanese were the anoopers, they used fishing lrawlera.-Detroit Free Press DO IT NOVV! You will be acting in your own best interests, and at the some time be helping your community, if you get your repairs, remodelling, interior decoration, maln- tenanoo and clean-up work done now. During the win- tor seasonal lull, qualified workmen are seeking work and waiting to serve you. Why wait for Spring? Mon and materials are available now. They may be hard ta not out aumnaa. ii'Aiii'iiii'Eiii"rhiiivatu omcii & I-nanny-iuiaritvatauasniiuruimu-.0-nu. audit-nt-cs than is i-oniing ti". WM, (if his ”fllWIi”illl1lSiif' .&'llt'('t'xs()r cct't:iinli' clcscrvcs if conquering the Middle East." The economic havoc wroutzlit by ut- tina tiff Mid-Eastern ml for just In the way. however. before sawdust can begin to take the place of oats, barley and such tasty items. One is a few months shows rlrarly enough how a pcrmancnt soviet strangle- PUBLIC FORUM that no one knows as yet whcthcr ii id n iii a M f .Wut- -mi. column B opu in dilute the treating process can be done at '3" E'"'"": ':'""':'?'”' "'og;"”"" nun: Tbodiulaa " 'm-en: 3! Post WhiCi"i would make it vrnrih- fxmhm. jg .. pd h . iuxnlv in relation in the magni- p-agynti .. .' i b. k .- while. Th? am" 13 "0 tests haw V9, mt hp p 5- i -V I M t at it could nude in this threat can the new fl - t iiorsc. ("liilly as it has been ly proposed American policy - mGnwAy cLgA;Mncg A h0Cl1 made. on cattle. All the experts hm, in "W", daw W .1 d and by the same token on Al- know is that laboratory tests have . - ml com" l'0'F"''Cl' ""00 in Emit - be sir.-I would Ilka in i t i Palm WI t h it-mpcraturcs even in understood and judged; pet to ask the question: "In the , turned out well: and of course to an ,,,..i,zhh,,,.mg NR and almmt Spring What in the eyes of our gnv- 1':-am-Canada we: via cross He! any tomesg..aala expert that is the important thing. nkp wlwn mm Ponsidprs the 40 uh .0;l'I'!'n'E.l:,is.'il:'l:!Sp(::'I'fT.nlcrl.l'Il'i?e;?0ig Ronda and.m.hnd?"no6nt&o:a .004 mu ” ulkt”n'o'.'idl. So many new things are coming . . merely that they mama in nu. January nth. this road win 50 below in ll csfcrn areas. force t in wow ll . ihp up these days that one hesitate: to - o - uverwii3i.i.'ii.'i''i.'r.i'i'.oi'i'i':..'.' i:it'i'rt K. ::r;"'m:'nx" risen from N" ""' b'”""' 5' 5"" ”" an: that thlaoneiad edt - -. they did fl! Illrwithut . will 0091' "3 muff A" the it "03: CH0 Primft Minister St. Laurent has eonaultlna li'iie"niJ:ii':i Staten nit mdayiinifbut the :15 banking. but because bean be animal on -- llmtw it told Parliament that when he talked "'"”' "" '”"'”" ”' "" ""5 "'3 "W" '3 T"'”'c"”' Ioapplythacbeviadpnad to believe that animals accustomed Wm, prpsidont Emnmw" ' om, mm my their ruin . . . to the moat delectable foods are xo- w,.,.i., M2,, ih, mm. W” ..um'd.. To leave no doubts in can our : ant nan. . Uptlucaea yautpudcnhand. kg to 03kg kimny M pagf.off nw. M hm” H1 ' C , nectinn. we loudly Q on th and Inert by radio at maul! ridih huh” " '3"5d53 Vlfchaaea naeoffm-cemondemnednnmcl nunttvnltddlhattliamata er Mm - i th- CVCT "I CC . f,-um um Unned 1." year antic df:iafdl:!:KtM "I9 0133 Ii L” m N Ill! 0 huh" m , . ET I IIHDVO” M i Loch um I billion dollars more on. im.i..a"u. implement it-an mugs! al the way. M3 dollars-I emu.-oothnlgitnh . Amen-icanpurcnueatromtlibcam. f;''':!;-Irmut;,-..sc,inouuno . .I&&I&IIvabaaaut . The Nitlotial oomupiuc Society try. is it pmlble one there is no '.s.i..a"i';. .' o " em 11:"-.dd,m.: which man time to thnrholta into .-.vste-matte wiiv of keeping Wutiing- ',.'-'1, ,','fA”'m:,,” 93"" H II! IM-a to tan ' . . s otetgn Paley)? I111: the -nbuh tbebbtodealbatekaivotuidotnarie tonintormedontiieiemsttmt iniumiuacfiiammmuu nuonurgkgm ”"'"".l'il3""'"” t ' ' :'..'.'.'.'.:-'.....'::':.."..".'.'..".': '."'"""......:'.'..- mqfpg l gnu; One easy waytotm the '. . usages: aaalnavsnu . , DID" economicatatuaofCanada'at1aba- menwoultlbetopemmbcanadhm toostmonMi.'13npruunpep tilN gen. Vb: l'l' igg ii: iii A Ialchanlltmlljaalauil I t Eli til