Tutsi GUARDIAN Prince siiwuc ulna win no Dow' 'P.9lIliahsd ovary week-day morning 1: 136 Prince ltuot. Charlottetown. P. I. L. by The Thomson . Com Limited. ION! and Manager. In A. Burnett. . Auoofnto Editor. lnnk Walker. Branch offices ,at Summcrslde. Montague Alhgrton. Authorized as Second Class Mail up-X tut Office Department. Ottawa. 3 Circles: Charlottetown. Summer-side 815.00 per annum. Elsewhere in P. l.'. I. 59.00. ozim Prov- lncu-and U. S. A. 312.00 per annum. 2 and by in 5.? "H10 strongest memoq-i:vuku than '”" the washout Ink.” connunlst Party Membership More than 900 million persons are now under the Communist yoke; yet, according tog: Moscow survey as quoted by Reuters hold membership in the Communist Party. Russia, with a population of more than 209 million, has 7 million Party members; Clthii, with three times Russia's popula- ii0?1",l- has little over 6 million. The figures fotfthe satellite countries follow a similar trend; only a fraction of the population is officially Communist. The survey officials interpret this to mean that Russian leaders are interested more in quality of membership than in quantity; each Party member is regarded as a leader in his community and is ex- Agency, less than 30 million of these, from satisfactor . remain in the presence of each other. more serious proportions. be approaching. been reached at Geneva either about Indo- China or Korea. If such agreements were reached in either or both these the- atres, the arrangements would still depend on good faith and co-operation, for which time would certainly be required. 'In these circumstances although Her Majesty's gov- ernment still believe that the Central Peo- ple's Government should .represent China in the United Nations they certainly do not consider that this is the moment for the matter to be reconsidered." The Anointed? Ottawa correspondents are saying that with his appointment as Finance Minister Mr. Walter Harris has been moved into the anteroom of his party's leadership, that Mr. St. Laurent has said to him ”'Phou art the man." I But, says the Ottawa Journal, it hasn't always been that the finance department pected to educate the masses in thel "privileges" they enjoy under this system of minority rule. To make sure that the; quality of the local organization is not af- fected adversely by influx of new members, each applicant is subjected to severe tests and thorough investigation before his ap- plication is approved. In addition, purges are indulged in from time to time as means of keeping the standard on a "high" level. , Other statistics brought out by the sur-E vey indicate that there is a Communist organization of some sort in every country in the world. Among the free nations Italy comes first with an official member-: ship of more than 2 million; France is' second with about 800 thousand. The United States has 60 thousand, Britain 35 thousand; Indials quota is the same as that of the United States. No estimate is given for Canada. These figures, it is to be noted, cover Party members only; they do not include sympathizers or would-be mem- bers who have not yet satisfied the exam- iners of their fitness to be numbered . among the elite. " 'It would be idle to speculate on the ' possible views of the vast army of "out- sidefs'l who make up the bulk of the p- ulition in Communist controlled countries. . Biit, even allowing for many millions who ', may be sympathetic with the partyls aims and policies, without actually being mem- bers, there must be multitudes of embitter- ed citizens, some of whom have been re- jected by Party leaders, who are just put- ting up with conditions because they are powerless. for the time being,”to do any-1 thing about them. It seems incredible that. 37p of a country's population could con- tinue to retain absolute political control. What Churchill Said In view of their importance, it is well worth studying Prime Minister Churchill's own words in dealing with the question of Red China's admission to the United Nations, as reported verbatim in the Brit- ihh House of Commons on Monday. This was the last rung but one in ascent to party leadership. Sir George Foster was minister of finance in the ministries of Abbott, Thompson, Bowell and Tupper; he never became his partyls leader. Mr. Fielding was Liberal finance minister fory 15 years; Mr. King, little known or tried at the time, defeated him for the succes-I sorship to Laurier. i The Journal recalls that Sir Thomas? White was finance minister under Borden;p although he was Borden's choice to succeed! him as prime minister it was Meighen, sup? ported by the party caucus, who got the post. Mr. Robb was finance minister under; Mr. King; no one ever thought of him asl Mr. King's successor. Mr. Rhodes was fl-I nance minister under Bennett; although a man of great ability his post at finance never marked him as Bcnnettls successor. So Mr. Harrisl promotion may mean lit-I tie more than that Mi'. St. Laurent thought' of him as the best man he could find for the finance job where talent was not too plentiful. And while it could be that Mr. Harris will turn out to be a first-rate man in finance, and thereby increase his pros-i peqts for Mr. St. Laurentls post when Mr.i St. Laurent relinquishes it, that is the most that can.bo said for the time-being. EDITORIAL NOTES Race descrimination is being combaned in East and Central Africa by a "Zebra Club.” According to the World Veteran the zebra badge of the club signifies that if you shoot a zebra the damage is done whether you hit a black stripe or a white stripe. 0 Indians were living in the eastern United States in 8,000 B. C. according to carbon, 14 tests of charcoal from an acient camp, site near Modoc, Illinois.The dating made possible by the "half-life" of radioactive carbon has required us to considerably re- vise our concepts of the period during which this coniincnt was inhabited. I O 0 v is what he said: ”My Right Honorable friend the For- dign Secretary and I were astonished on, (fur homeward voyage to read the pressi Qttracts and other reports which were senti Q: of the storm suddenly raised in the Uni-1 lid States by Scnator'Knowland about the; pbssibility of Communist China being ad- ffiitted to UN against American wishesf pid still more that these reports seem to ifgjn some way or other linked with our 't as if we had come over for such at rpose. In fact, although it was mention- , it played no noticeable part in our dis- ssions, and was not an immediate issue. cannot in any way be raised for some me and if it should be raised, which is by means certain, we shall undoubtedly . vs a different situation to face than any Ohilzh now exists. I ..,, e United Kingdom policy on the bject has been unchanged since 1951 the Right Honorable gentleman for Lewisham, (Herbert Morrison), then . V In Secl',!tu')'. stated that His Maj- - I-Goveminent believed that the Ceri- 'r Government should represent in the United Nations but that in of that government's persistence in vior inconsistent with thepurposesand , . -fiII.,dIlrt91'. it.-,oppoot0d;, ,, to , of,tbc question should be postponed. II 3 ,. iv. sill 'r.' As a depressing sidelight on the St. Lawrence Seaway project comes word that completion of the undertaking would give a great impetus to, among other things, the export of juke boxes by the United States. The city of Buffalo, it appears, is a great juke box manufacturing centre and the producers believe that overseas ship- ment of these musical torture-chambers will be facilitated by the Seaway. O O O Jean Baptiste Camille Corot, French landscape painter, was born this date 1796. After seven years' apprenticeship in a Paris drapery business be resolved to be- come a painter. He studied in Paris, Italy, England and Switzerland. Recognition came slowly, at least from official sources, but he was soon being offered large sums, which he did not always accept, for his paintings. He had remarkable technical ability and paid close attention to detail. In later life he allowed himself more free- dom and interpreted nature in her more tender elusive moods. I O In his report on Mao's China, the out,- come of a visit to China in, 1952, Mr. Frank Moraes, editor of The Times of India, says he saw several of the new China's plays and films. The plays he found not unentertsin- ing, though strictly "geared to the dqgmls offthe regime, especially when they con-. tained battle scenes with the marvellous acrobatics of the actors which the Chinuo j K But the films were long drag- i ii" "she. the propaganda efloobscrudc. Molt. j noticeable. too. Ahoy hvtaled strong affini- iitli ljpllyivoodpln spin. or the com-' umistico remains in force the arrange- ments for its supervision have proved tar Although no actual fighting is taking place, the armies still "Moreover, as we. can all see, the problem of Indo-China has assumed far -- Indeed, as I have indicated, a military climax may well No agreement has yet i In Summertime They're Everywhere PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by con-espondontn of questions of interest. The Guardian does not IIEOEDSHF. lly endorse the opinion of correspondents. THEN, AND NOW Sir,-Reading "Old Charlottetown" in a recent issue of The Guardian brought visions of English Gold Sovereigns, Spanish Dubloons and pieces-of-eight clunking into the old fashioned tllls at the Custom House. "Duties on articles import- cd here, will henceforth be re- ceived in British money of Spanish dollars" the article said. as quoted from the P. E. Island Register of 1829. Time marches on and amazing changes are recorded. Today the English pound sterling, once the standard of world currency at 154.86 2-3 (Canadian dollars) has dwindled, to 52.72 3-4. while ii chicken broader-house could be lin- ed with Spanish dollars at less cost than a good grade of tar paper. Even the much sought-after Amer- ican silver dollar made a bow of 3 1-2 per cent this week to Canadian folding money. ' Yes. it's good to be a Canadian- and an Islander. I am. Sir, etc. JOHNNY CANUCK Wm 7oea'G-um: THE INTERPRETER. In the very early morning when the light was low She got. all together and she went like snow, Like snow in the springtime on I sunny hi And we were only frightened and can't. think still. We can't think quite that the katy- dids and frogs ' ' And the little crying chickens and the little grunting hogs, Ami the other crying things that she spoke for to us, Have nothing more to tell her since it happened thus. She never is around for any one to touch, But of ccstacy and longing she knew too much . . . And always when any one has time to call his own , She will come and be beside him as quiet as I stone. - -Orrlck Johns. Old Charlottetown and P. I. 1. DAILY TELEGBAMS "Cyrus W. Field, of New York, arrived at Charlottetown from St. and left for Halifax Saturday morn- ing. We understand that Mr. Field met a deputation at the Reading Room Friday night, with the view of securing daily telegrams of the latest European and American news. The result of the interview was that Mi-u Field .11 ,osed to furnish daily leg;-um gt thg nu of one dollar per day. This pro- lthknp my hliheg kn, ey sccsp , upoc includes daily Eu 1: news-db re from New Yo . as wcll,u -the arrival and acpirtyre of vu- sell to and from to and New 3'o(rik..l'i.-onncctod with . 2. Island rt 0. no vimiicnioi-..Juiy ao, nu. The Age Storyf " Drociidbnl insistence that they are. V u.4.,&gV. , situation in in world. The broad fact is that scien- tlsts, working under the direction John N. B., on Thursday night last, - position being for more favorable offered, wlill Hydrogen,Bomb Challenge Rt. Hon. C. 3. Action, 0.31., in European Service. In my view, we face today a new the history of the of governments, have evolved a. weapon which is capable of de- stroying the- great. cities of the world or. if not of dstmylug them, at least putting them out of action. It has been stated that mic bomb that was discharged in line Pacific would put out of action the metro- polll.a.n area. of New York -City; that is a very great. extent. 1!. could devastate Moscow. Paris. Sydney. or any other of the great cities of the world. Besides this. it. is clear that the area oz danger in the explosion of these bombs is very great. In fact. it would appear that whole regions can be made unsafe for human beings, animals, and perhaps also for vegetation. our modern civilization expresses itself partlcularly in the great. cities - the cities of 1,000,000, or of 2,000,000, 3,000,000 or more in- habitants. "They offer targets of lmntisnse vulnerability. We have great industrial areas and tahey,I.re today exposed to destruction by a single blow. We have reached a culminating point in the develop- ment of warfare. At. one time, war was waged between armed forces, and the suffering of the civilian population was generally incident- al. Sometimes there were deliber- ate ravages and bloclosdss, but broadly speaking the attack was directed by one lot of armed forces against another. We -have travelled a. long way since then. Attack on the civilian population has now become primary. Consider the changes in our lifetime. I om- remembor the south African War. We can trace tihs change: up through other wars, first the Great war and linen the second Great War. All the time the rostrlctions on warfare have been steadily evaded. About forty years ago, the kind of action that was taken in the last. war would have been thought. absolutely abhorrent to civilised people, yet. it is lam than forty years since the uppelins were over London. See what I long way we have travelled since then. I O 0 Let us consider the effect of this invention. Does it make war more, or less. likely? The question merits close examination. It is contended that the istence of this weapon will itself prevent war. It is said that the existence of the atom or hydrogen bomb in the hand: of the United sum was I detorrent, preventing the U.SB.R., with its great superiority in numbers and conventional weapons, from sweep-t In; right. over Europe in A major act of aggression. It may be so. But. as soon so the U.B.B.l?.. got their atom bomb the fame of that deterrent was i ned. the certainty of retaliation, and, what in mom. the possibility of presses on the nations and causes wlilbe usedlnt.hc1ut.iuort..Wo have seen it. I have said that we JIVC been compelled to use wel- pons that we could not have thought. of using forty years ago. Who can doubt, after reading "Hita- lor'a Last Days," that even at the very and of that war. if Hitler had had an atom bomb, he would have used it, even if there had been the poulbility of retaliation? He was completely reckless and anarchlstic. He would rather have seen absolute destruction if he had ml- ed to get his end. - I suppose that most. of us in our time have read of the great civili- zations of the past, and reading with ll. knowledge of the event we say, 'What. fools these people were not. to realize what was happening" -the iival emperors struggling for power in. a Roman Empire with who barbarians ready to break in and usher in those centuries which we call the Dark Ages. Great civill- zstiiom have been destroyed, some- times from internal wukneaes, sometimes from external attacks. The Roman Empire came down through tin force of the undivi- lized world. The destructive fdice today is something which we have ourselves made. and it is operating in a one-world civilisation more closely linked than ever before. Would not a visitor from another planet say just the same of us. 'What fool; to keep quarrelllng in flee of this ” I '? Russia. is engaged in building up her social system and an economy. which we do not like, very differ; ent from our own. It is not. our way of life, but. it is their conoem. We in the west have our way of life, our different economies, and w! do not wish to see them destroyed. But. the threat. that we meet hangs over democratic. and autooncles alike-Communist. counties, social- ists countries. semi-socialist coun- tries, capitalist countries, all In ex- posodt.odu1gsr;s.ndunleuthnrok some change I believe that the danger of world-destruction is very real. The forces of destruction will keep piling up. We cannot -atop these things. It may be that. the knowledge of hoiv to make these weapons may get. more and intro extended. incident: leading to uni- continue: the burden of armaments impatience. pig: tie 5: ii 1? col valor when he The world today unliot afford. No, a hvhhhkhbr unlit. iii slot; ' cqpttlhl Illll Oui feels inclined to bum and MW- Bhnitud. in A temporary has a tutti probl: It is mine to rind out which costilwmoro--itto kckepd I all ..xlu?lisnsr - Wst.ep:lroo lspuuao ulnnomars have noted Mu's.'1'ho Japs an sensitive to familiar cities were missing. , -Windsor Daily Star. one charge against American scientist Oppenheimer is that. he wasn't enthusiastic about the hy- drogen bomb. But. then the pros- pects didn't. exactly have many of us tossing our hats in the air. i -Hamilton Spectator. It would be intarouuig to know how many persons, who profess to abominate capital punishment. would react. if a loved wife or child was a. victim of these murderers? There have been many cases of brutal rape murders recently in which old woman and chlldren' have died horribly. What. except! death. should be the portion of these murderers? How would we feel if the onlfpunlshment. for the multiple sadistic murder of our wife and family were punishable only with life imprisonment? Usu- ally about is years. The French Ioienllu. who. sur- vived a. diet of raw fish and sea. water for 65 days while drifting cross the Atlantic on 1. rubber raft scheduled to enter I hospital here. Dr. Alain Boinbsrd. who subjected himself to the worst the ocean had to offer to prove that shipwrecked persons could live indefinitely on a raft without food or fruh water, said today he has liver and stomach ailments. He complained that he can't eat or drink normally and has a host. of minor maladies as a. re- sult of his adventure. Besides fish,' Bombnrd ate sea birds, barnacles. plankton, rain and dew after louv- lng Monaco on May 25. 1952. His voyage ended in the British West. Indies. -North American News- paper Alliance. Somehow, our faith in the sur- vival-of humanity gets 1 lift. each time -we learn that some human fallibillty or foible has penetrated mHt. CMJIIHHOI no nun: why a lnwnllowcr s practice sounds so annoying early in the carbon pencils discarded morning is because it reminds usman who that our own lawn, needs cutting. carbon IN -stntford Beacon-Herald. Visit the farm- and the dluppoanncs of I "lake" on on it'd and em. Proms m boys 'dou'I III IWIS Godbwn to the fireball at seven o'c1ook”1n the ewnlng to watch alongto oaths ridotblm; bnckontneoidms-m;Rldeontha toboggan; Cvet. round, flat, bud. pep- permint: from Grandpa. -Fort William 'rimu-Journal. As we approach the Ills? 01 industrial Ifnnllc 0110137. I d011- bied need for Ill kinds of WW": increasing population. within suuanuiiotouwoiiian-p-ruaiu.' ofoouiailuu This this sfrlond-or in-uvo. -.-3tu;5ivn5iw- NIH in. the giiarged demands for every kind of coustmctlon and expu.o- - gum, we might. give some mount to man himself. As in- dustry and science demand more homo up it in apparent that homo asp himself must. be cnsrs1Z0d- M tine engineer builds edifices so the biochemist, the dietican and the pgyohoiofiliy Jlllbb l'O(K7D8iul'Uuv Tin. The old pioneer sayind Wll N11 o'beg,u5,"'Q wise aphorlsm we should, now recall. and P0553711 lmDk' moat.-London Free PRID- ”"' ”'.."" "?."..'. ”:'i:'3lil;.L"”: time is t 9 KW 0 ' condition that pnrticuh-rly tmicil the aged. "I am old and nobody wants to be bothered with me now. said s man who, years ago. had been the centre of a lively social circle, in this city. The awful pre- monition that the declinlnl 79!" of life may be bleak and loud! casts a deepening shadowvover the personality of many an active man and woman. The sense of insecurity in old age is not all economic: much of it is emotional. Might we not ask ourselves whether. in our anxiety to ensure for children a balanced emotional back zround. W9 It! not ignoring the other end of the hu- man fnmlly? The challenge of this generation is to provide for the in- creasing number of aged folk a. life that is free from economic want and warmed. by the sunshine of hu- man companionship. Model homes for the aged which provide every physical comfort are important in their way, but they do not fill the gap that once was filled by family and friends. --I-limllton Specta- the Iron Curtain and is sullying iihc tor. ' SSO lo IIOOO - Easy to meet requirements. 24 month: to repay. liiill UIITUIOIIT IAIKAILI IIGIIIIYY Loans fan, on your own signature. IIMIMIII. ml oolollpnhvNPCi Siliillli Hiiliiiii I. W. Chidiohl, Monger no CIOII cum n.,tuuin i, phone can - CHAILOTTITOWN. P.l.l. I Jmomfodw for things you 1'lOOd and want now! Q& AT DOW MOTORS Now on 1960 0lIliVROLl.'.l.'l-1-T : 1962 PONTIAC SEDAN 1949 CHEVROLET 1958 CHEVROLET-4 1951 Tl-II IEST IIIY ON THE ROAD 195: oimvnonnr-.1-ran Chassis. on Platform. 1952 oimvnonu samm. 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