'. ~ (In-V Page 26 The Guardian Tuesday, Dec. 17. 1957 (ft. .- WRAPPINGS ARE PROBLEM IU.'\'RWAi for these destitute. Arab inothers. and is appealing to Canadian women to use their l-Tath \'t‘Hl' some babies Hit‘ lmrn to Middle East refugee tiinilici-s, who have nothing in whit-ii to wrap them. The L'iii talents in stitching up articles tariaii Service Committee. 78 from scraps of soft material Spaiks .\'trci-t. (iitawa. has p|edg— around the home, or to donate etl lfitititi layettes to the United what their own infants have out- i\.'itioiis Relief and Works Al,1Pn('_\"fll't)\\ll. O ‘~l'Cautions Against ‘Giving NATO Too Much Strength l.0NL)()N iAPi ~ George 1-‘. Kennan cautioned Sunday night. against strengthening NATO too much lest it prejudice chances for ‘ with the ion. e former US ambassador to Moscow. winding up a six-part BBC lecture series. had planned to conclude with a talk on Anglo American relations but. with the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion meeting in Paris schedul cttrity of the Western world must st," Kennan said. ''I cannot warn too strongly against the quick assumption that there is no kernel of sincerity" in the recent messages from Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin to the nations of the world. be "idle to supposel that the strengthening of NATO alone would provide the neces-I say climate and background for‘ negotiations with the Soviet l.'n- n. I “Moscow fights with all the po- litical and psychological means at ; its command, and it will knowj how to take advantage, as indeedi it already has in many ways. of! any one-sided concentration of et- fort on our part. DON'T NEGLECT POSITIVE . "This is why we cannot afford to put all our eggs in the military Yank Says Industrial Power From H-Bomb Long Way Off By I-'R.-\.\'l\' (‘AREY in coiitrollcd tlieriiioiiutlear re-i W\.slil.\(i'i‘0N ‘AP’ - The search. Ruark said chief of the .-\merican driie to, “'l‘liat view would shift from harness the H-l)onib for iiidiis- month In month becaiise of all trial power said Saturday suc- the work that is going on in our cess is a long way it llllniled States and Britislit labor- Thais true all countries atorics. working on the problem. said Dr. “'l‘his can be a leap~fi'og sittin- Arthur H. Riiark of the Atomic‘ tion.' Energy (‘ommission. . He said the excliange of in- Dr Rtiark was commenting on formation regarding respective reports that B ritish scientistslresearch projects in the field have a('hl(‘\'(’ti a temperature ofi“has been free and open" and he 8.000.000 degrees centigrade in added heating hydrogen. - “l don't think we have ever c called that a "step on the asked them a question they road." ‘haven't answered. and i hope the He also said far as we same is true o us." know. all nations are some steps! R e g a rdin g the tempera- along the road. but for all nations'ture that would be required as it‘: a long \|'a_\' to go." -one of the means of attaining a Ruark returned last Monday. sustained power - producing ther- from a visit to the British pro- monuclear reaction. Ruark said Qcct for research in the field it would be “of the order of 100,- of controlled thermonuclear reac- 000.000 degrees ccntigi'sde." llnns_ I He referred several times to a At the same time. Ruark de-fjoint statement made Oct. i8—— pied re ports that the United and repeated in essence Nov. 22 States has been withholding coii- —by representatives of the Brit- aent for Britain to announce new jsh and American projects may ;temperatures of several million Asked directly whether Britain-degrees had bee“ 3"h'e"°d by Is ahead of the United Stateslthe two countries. It's Not Just The Basic Cost -- It's The Trimmings By FORBES RHLDF. Canadian Press Business Editor ,tci'm niitlook Comparing it s not iust the basic cost ofiyear ago. he sa things that semis tip the cost-of-‘ "Evideiice of the changed pace Il\'I|]:,j it s alstl what people want I in to be seen in reduced freight with them. I-car loadings. a cutback in petrol- The Hdtillltitts In prtit'(‘sstnil. I-um iiroduction to under one-half packaging and convenience-—may Of (‘HD8('|l.\'- 8 IPSSPHPG T319 0f be \t'h_\' retail prices have nt)l,’El‘()\\'lll on consiipmtion of elec- ()ctobei"s minor dip. fol-,tric encrg_v and a lowered vol- ihc (i()\\n\A'af'(i trend oflume of industrial production. wholesale prices. ‘_ “The value of shipments to ex- This was imin-mod h_v wit .1. lternal markets so far somewhat lVlcl\'innon. president of the Canav EXCGCCIS that in the Corresponding dian Batik of (‘ommcrce. in his period of last vear. (‘onsumer ex- addrcss to the bank‘s annual PEHGNUTPS Colllinue 31 hiflh rnpptmg held Tuesday 1n To- ‘ IOVPI although there IS some indi ranto -cation that the pace of increase ‘ \int i. .-iii»-nnnn." \1r !\1t-Kin- is lessening. While the number of non said. "has been given over a unemployed has increased in a p{‘l'I0(i of vcars to the consumer Year Whfn lhf‘ labor force has price mites. and it is usually re- Shown 8 markfd in(‘t‘9aS9. em- it-rmi in as the t’iist~of~|iving in--,p|nym9nt continues _at a higher ('tIIl(illltlnS with I. basket. an to neglect the pos- ,itive purposeswthe things which ,we ought to be doing, and would ,be doing. if the military threat ‘were not upon us at all." I Kennan, now a visiting profes- -sor at Oxford University. had ,called in previous talks for [thorough reassessment of West- ern foreign policy toward the So- fviet Union, for possible with- [drawal of East atid West forcesi in Europe and end to the "hopeless exertions" of the nu- *clear race. Kennan called on the West to open its windows to a “new win to enable the West to meet suc- Icessfully the scorn and hostility‘ iOpen $800,000 ' Recreation Centre MURDOCHVILLE. Que. tceil President John R. Bradford off Gaspe Copper Mines Limited ofli-{ cially opened Saturday an 5800- we recreation centre provided by the company for the 2.500 l‘9SI-V dents of this wilderness mining. community. ‘ The centre includes facilities ' for hockey curling. bowling, swimming and social gatherings. Mr. Bradford mentioned the ,“troubles and difficulties that so ‘many endured" during the seven- month strike of company employ- ees earlier this year. Production is reported back to normal wit 850 employees on the job. The strike was ordered by the Murdochville local of the United Steelworkers of America tCLCi. He said the strike “was called in the overall strategy of union _leaders to force the check-off at ‘Noranda and at other mines." The company, Bradford said. realizes the need for “not only good workmen but willing employees who are happy with their work. With this spirit it will not be long before production reaches the objective of 6.500 tons of ore per day." The town site for Murdochville was laid out in 1951 two years af- ter development of a large cop- per deposit began in this area 23 miles inland from Mt. Louis on ‘-the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Mr. Bradford said next pro- ljects include a 17-room school for I Murdochvllle's 800 school-age chil- .dren for which excavation has 'begun and "a proper hospital" to‘ be started in the spring. I ‘Ti’ I - strengthened in such brought by communism brace ourselves we must expect. “One should not give up unilat- erally the nuclear deteiernt. or ithe West would be safer and even sto strengthening NATO forces in Europe . . but war must not be taken as inevitable. One must not be carried away by the search for absolute security. Certain risks must be assumed in order that greater ones may be avoided. must not be a way as to prejudice the chances for an eventual reduction. by peaceful negotiation. of the danger of an — all-out war" WOULD DIT(‘H WAR CAUSES He urged piecemeal removal. by negotiation. of the major sour- ces of military danger, “particu- larly the abnormal situation now prevailing in Central and Eastern Europe. and the gradual achieve- - ineiit of a state of affairs in which the political competition could take its course without the con- stant threat of a general war." There is no use looking any fur- ther than this. Kennan said. “Our first concern must be to achieve what is.- or might be. immediat- el_v possible. After that. we shall see." Kennan described crisis today as one "comparable in solcninity to the great crises we have experienced together in the earlier years of this century." it is not one that can be met b_v the immediate use of arms. it can be won—“or had i better say can be survived——only by vir- tue of what we do about it now tue of what we do about it now in acetime and only if it can be prevented from assuming the I l the world , . . . “and wholly apocalyptic to the buffeting right mili opa- form of out- ationa." ‘N0-WAR" ROUTE SAFER? He raised the question whet bet- ter off today “if we could putour military fixation: aside and static our safety on the earnest- ness of our effort to do the con- structive things. the things for which the conditions of our a cry out and for which the stage of our technological progress has fitted u . Kennan said Russia no less than the West is “tired of this blind and sterile‘ military competition 3 the ability to wreak destruc- on. U. S. Civilian Jobs Decline WASHINGTON tAPi——The U.S. government reported Wednesday that more Americans were unem- ployed last month than in any November since 1949. The num- ber of unemployed increased by 680.000 to 3,188,000. A joint announcement by the commerce and labor departments how an even-greater change in employment figures. The num- ber of civilians holding jobs dropped by l,132.00t) between Oc- tober and November. to 64,873,- That the number of unem- ployed did not go higher was due to the fact that many persons who left jobs during the month with- drew from the labor force and didn‘t seek other work. 9 Peach and Toner, Sheffield and of Mane C. N. R. Place: Order In U. K. LONDON (Cr) — Canadian Na- Railwaya Thursday an- ed it has placed a $l.6'l4.lU order with three British finna aa a result of the miasion'a tour of British industrial centres. The order. for rolled steel wheela of various specifications. was placed by the CNR'a vice- preaident in charge of purchases and stores’. E. A. Bromley. a member of the tniaaion. The firms receiving the order are John Baker and Bessimer. Rotherham. Yorkshire Steel. iitsm. One Killed, Two Injured In Crash SEPT-ILES. Que. ice» — A Cartier Mining Company execu- Taylor i gine N orth crashed 140 miles north of here. Terry Coghlan. manager of Northern Wings. identified the fa- tally injured passenger as Ross Clare. 37. in charge of mining operations at Jeannine where the accident occurred. Mr. Clare lived in Sept-lies al- from Niagara Falls. Ont.. his wife and three children live. Captain of the aircraft was R. H. Murdoch of Sept-lies. Name of the co-pilot was not released. Mr. Coghlan said both are in Sept-lies hospital where their in- juries are not considered critical. The aircraft was landing at the Jeannine Lake strip bout 1 a.m Tuesday when the accident occurred but cause of the crash has not yet been determined. Mr. Clare and the two pilots were the only ones in the aircraft. The _Christmtis Flower Story by Maritime Greenhouses ltil. Potted Plants POINSE'l'l‘AS AZALEAS PO'I'l“EI) Ml.'MS O O O 0 0 (‘Y(‘l.A.\ll-ZN ..-1.-\- level than last year. ' 'l)uiin«: the Iaisi vcar this in ‘ ‘ "’ "‘ “ dex has shown a graduall_v-risiiig m o \ t‘ in c n I. while wholesale pI'lt't‘\' have declined. lhcrv is normally a delay be- tween a drop in wholesale prices and its f‘t‘il(‘(‘IlUfl in consumer prices but there are other and |\¢‘t‘Il.'il)s‘ more important factors which KllL‘.;.‘(‘<l that the rise in the ('tinstIl1lt"l' pricc ln(lt‘\ is not wholly a function of prices "'l'licrc are nianv indications that cons-umcrs have changed their prctcrcnccs and that they now incrczis-ingly purchase goods iiot.-ilil_v Iti0(i.s'—-in a more fin- ishcd form This involves more [\l'0('t“ “lL' and different packag- ing uliich mt-ans more labor in the in;iniii.'ictiit'iiig and (listritiir tion plants and less labor in the 8 p.m. H11 PART V'0l.l'l\'TARY "At least 1! part of the increase in consumer prices represents a voluntary additional outlay by All members please attend. MONTHLY MEETING Of (‘arpcnlci"s i'nion. will be held \\'EDi\'ESDAY, DECEMBER 18th in Labor Hall, Queen Street at 137 Kent ' FLOWER PHONE O GLADS, O COMMERCIALS O DAF F ODILS LTD. Ch’town 3 Central 0 Cut Flowers 0 ROSES, CARNATIONS' o SNAPDRAGONS Charlottetown-5320 Maritime Greenhouses . MUMS Summersido—332l consumers Despite this situation. Mr Mc- Klnnon said the declining tend- ency of wholesale prices since the early year now seems to gradually reflected "in consumer pricu. - Terming the present a period of " st t." heaaid there are many elements of stability which- be of reasaurance. and there was every reason to quridatlc about Canada’: long- .....___..__._._.——.————— S'slde ’ I __H0lIRS \ Charlottetown Store 0l’l3NTONlTl~I*’TlL9' I SIC! 1857 Chodottdown Store 0PEll T0llITE — ‘TIL 9 p.m. - I of the Perfect Gift TOOKE imported Give him the gift you're SURE he'll like. Sport Shirts in clan tartana of Campbell Dress, MacDonald as. Llndsly Dress, MacDuff and R.C.A.F‘. 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