i :4 r 5 bu, -mu”, W", ".3 gungluasiufnaull-1 ...i.u...,..., 23.1.. ntlaflonnacunaaliui u nu St. I. nu-um omen. m .mu-nu The Stu in A. Bantu. Publish: and General Iaaagd W Frank I118. Iunnu Aanaualaaab M31131 lanbec al IIICIIHIAI PI-a I-mat Audit Icuu d Circulatin- . ". dun. 0 . de.H1llulII and Albert- Aiiinnrised as Second LIA. Hall H: f-ll P1 0'9” - I "nmuii.ni:a.r'a:in st.-I vat -- :mul;.l;:nb:h:"Ia e.z.i' no! other PW"-t0' W U.a Iiuonuanasn V Ni F4"r;iT: 4 nunav. NOV guy Unwtse Observation llriu more It happen tlv" mi" Lmlitiral officials sometimes make I va,;m;,,,: ..i-Hrh persons without 1 WC g,...h,,... p,-gming or experience i m (WIWHM. .m”M k,.m.. tn be im. It p,.l,.,,,.,- ii-aka liv u-av of illustra- mm. . st'(ttPmPr1l attributed to Mr. Rhnrirtait Adams. Fr-bP'"LlllVE ATSR" ant tn lliouirlciit F.lSPTlht'tttPt', one of hl' , i..-,. ;.mi.pr: and, in the opmtoti of smut? iinlitir-al ohsH'x't3l'S. ill! t'PRl Dtiucr l'tPl'lll'l"l lVhll' Hi-"l5' pl'n' l rtrtilrtrefnentk Spcaluni "" ' W9" .-man llrngiaut. and in an obVWN l aytprnpt lri flfi 3-OmPl.hil1K flhflul llPalT mg the breach in Western unity. Mr. Adams observed that ”undnubt- pcllv the unit: race is going to hank tngctlirv in unrld affairs" NOW. (ll course. if the statement had gone no further than the television audi- mco, no great harm would have been done. But since, as everyone km...-, any um-ii spoken publicly by e prominent llnited States official is gent around the world within a mat- tpr of minutes, one can easily imagine the critical rcsponse this p,-.1;-tjr-ular mirrl would receive all over the continents of Asia and Africa. Taken tits.-311,, Mr. Adams' stale- mqnf unuld imply that all members of the white race. including the Rus- sians (who certainly wouldn't want to he called anything but white) new in conspiracy against the black. brgwn and yellow races. But. of eoune, what Mr. Adams really meant was that the English-speaking peoples and their European frie.nds--- Germans. French. Italian. and so on--would hang together: and that makes the observation even more unwise. To Indians. Chinese and black Africans this "banging to- gether” means the same. thing as "conspiring against" other races. This is the very thing they are afraid of. and the very thing that the Rus- sian: are divining in the ears of Asiatic: and Africans every hour on the hour. This fear is reflected in the long and dreary speeches made in the l'.N. General Assembly these days by l'Pftl'PSPfll,HtlVPS of the Asian- Africari bloc. We in the West know that the fear is unfounded. Apart from the moral consideration in- volved. uliat on earth would the white-West have to gain by trying to subjugata the rest of the world? But that does not help matter: any. The point is that hundreds of mil- lions of people scattered throughout Asia and Africa believe the fear is justified. Long before now, we may be litre, Mr. Adamal remark has been ritnd as proof of it. Radar Sees All some car drivers are disturbed about radar "speed traps." They take the view that such It method of dis- couraging reckless driving is in little on the shady side. simply because it works silently and without per- mitting on the spot excuses which often try the patience and courtesy of traffic officers. What these critics seem to forget is that highway safety these days is a pretty difficult thing to insure. even when every available device is brought to its aid. Statistics show that radar prevents a great many accidents from time to time. and certainly it is an benevolent to thc i-peeder an to his potential vic- tims. in any event. complaining drivers may as well get used to radar, for it has come to stay on the highways. Moreover, it cannot be misled or imposed upon. A report from an American safety organization proves this point beyond question. It says that now and again all aorta of anti- iauar tricks are 'brought into use. High Time Is is good to note that at! least one prominent Canadian politician has stood up for Britain and France in the action they were compelled to take by force of circumstances in the Suez Canal area after the United Nations had shown clearly its ln'- ability or unwillingness to deal with the i't'lsls that had arisen. We refer to Mr. Donald Fleming's statement that instant police action was neces- sary and fully justified. Equally graitfxim: it-ac Mr. Fleming's obser- vation that this country should not join the l'nited States in "delivering moral Judgments on Britain and Fr:-iii:-c." This 1! very much IWPNPP than the attitude leading Govern- ment official-: adopted in an obvious uish to do nothing to offend the sensibilities of the American Shite licpartniciit on the etc of an elec- tion it is in he hoped that Mr. Flem- ing's vieus will be aired in Parlia- ment u hen it meets to consider the lpiterl Xatiori: police force proposal. tlcanivhile. in the ll.N-.qPl'lPllEll Assembly only Australia and New 7.ealallt'l have bad the courage or the giintlulll--WhiCl1DxPl' is applicable - In rlnlciid the Rritisli and Freiicli a'.:-uuut cliarges of aggression against an innocent victim, Egypt. Speaker after speaker referred to the two countries as ”aggressors." some of thcni ill a very offensive manner. Although the American and (Tana- dian representatives did not actually use the word itself. neither of them went out of his nay to repudiate it. Rut the Atistraiiari and New Zea- land delegates did and without apologizing for their views. "I resent the insult to the llnited Kingdom and Fraiit-e." said ltr. Walker of Ali:-"frail:-i; and Sir Leslie Munroe of New Zealand spoke in similar vein. Millions of Canadians will applaud lhcm for their stand, no matter the official t'aiiarii;iii (Govern- ment vieus may be in the matter. ulial Buy A Poppy tlvi Slivirlax. tatiarliaiis every- where will pause in what they are doing to pay tribute to those who died on active service for their coun- ll')'. Not the least important token of their remembrance is the small red poppy which will be worn on lapelt, or pinned to coats. of those participating in the services. Each in than um-k before Remem- l"”"""” flay. the Canadian Legion sells poppies, assisted by members of their Ladletf Auxiliaries and other patriotic organizations. The money thus obtained can he used only for welfare work among war veterans and the families of those who served in the armed forces. it must he spent, cai'el'iill,v. for the demands on my fund are still great. We can all help in making the campaign a success and it is to be hoped, as in other years. that the respnnsp in thlg cify and l'li'nvincr- will be generous. EDITORIAL NOTES The Ottawa Citizen notes with flrtnroval that a number of cities. ltt('lurlItt;: New York. have replay;-d "Stop" signs with "Yield" at cer- tain inteiisections. Charlottetown. of course, is one of those cities that has Ilflriplt-tfl llln change when: seenied rlcsiralile. year. At: I re.- .... an experiment be- gun in I932 by the West of Scotland Agiiciiltiiiial (iollcgo in Glasgow, it new ltlflllRlr)' may he established in Tired in the Hebrides of Scotland where tulip and narcissus bulbs are twin! b'lPI'f"-'Sflllly grown. Tiree was selected because of its areas of light sandy soil. It was found that tulip bulbs especially propagated easily at the flower production stage and they were taken to a mainland nursery for winter-flowering under glass. The C0ll9Re. is now looking ahead to the time when the tulip bulb industry in Tiree will iival older and successful competitors elsewhere. 0 0 would the world be in such tur- moil today. asks a writer in the Windsor Star, if Roosevelt had not sided with Stalin against Churchill at. Yaita in 1945? Roosevelt thought he could handle Uncle. Joe. a nice old guy. Stalin went along with the 0'l'l'AWA REPORT Rv Patrick mt.-iua The parable nf the ivinte Ind the beam should he renuired reading for the fr-rleral rabinct and for delegates at the l'mted Nat ions lllltv ueek Vatiniial and mtei'ii;itmnal l'lT ties have veptnaclicri Britain and France for their action in the Middle East. There has been what a letter-writer to an Ottawa news- paper describes as ”a com-ci'tcd l volume of dissociation from Great Rriiain in her rttnrt: in chanipirin the cause nl all maiikuid ' A rom- mentator of the CBC added his in- accurate one cent": worth that. "Bntaui and France now atgud alone " but the liutb 9- the ignorant crttirs hm: her" too lazy to find out for thrmzselies. is that - a: the recruit": mother proudly pointed nut - "everyone in cut. of step ex- cept. my Hill " in this case. every- one has been out of step but Brit- ain and France And for the record. they have never her-ii lllttnc, Aunt- ralla and New Zealand promptly marched beside them. These are the overlooked but ll- luminattn: facts I lit l.'l.'il. Firif am and France and the l' S. A signed the .l'rtp;ti'iitr Agra:-nicril in vibicb tlicv pledged that they uoiild ; both . within and nutsiile the United Nttt- l "immediatclv take action Inns" if aiiv Arab state were threatened hv a violation of thr armistice Iitics tn llir tliddle East Note espcriallv that rilirnw ”hnIh within and lilll.KlflP the United Nat ions.” In this case the ll 5 A - not for the first time in history-failed to lmplemcni its international obli- gatiun. uhen Israel invaded Egypt With the big Jewish vote at stake in the prrrtlflvnllal clertinit '-cven days later. Derllans candidate His- pnliower fell. ill! political future to be more important than his country's treaty obligations. 2. In 1954. Britain withdrew her . garrison from the bases giim-ding the Sim Canal The covering Anglo 1 "in . Egyptian treaty dcclarcd that. the event of an armed attack by an outside power. Egypt shall afford to Britain such facilities as may be necessary to place the Sun basc no a war footing and to operate it rffectii'rly " lst'acl's !lll3f'l( on Fliztiu therrlnre E-it-n txritain im- m-diate right in take over the tie.- HOT - FOOT iTheiMole And The Beam N lcbolsnl , tence of the Suez Canal. In spite of this double call. at duty which the U. S. failed to ful. tit. and of right - which the (7 S rhose to overlook. Britain was blacklisted in the United Nations by the new partnership of exped- iency led by Russia and the U. S. A. This action overlooked also the . beam in the collective United Nat- ' inns eye. namely that the U. N. l has failed to fill its too year old duty In create an international pol- tr! force. Had they done so. that force would have been available and ready to intervene when Egypt was attacked by Israel: and that would have relieved Britain of the treaty obligation to act. herself. The Suez cnsts in its present rluneiisions iii the result of the unaided hlundennu of one man l alone. U. 5. foreign secretary John l Foster Dulles. His first faiix-pas was In with- draw his country's offer of financi- al help to ER.Vi7t to build the Aswan 'dam. after he had beseeclicd Brit- ' ain to help the U. 8. A- in giving l that aid. It was tn provide the urg- l l i-ntlv needed money, in place of the withdrawn ll. S dollars. that l".iz.Vpt'I Nasser wall impelled to lake nvcr the operation and pro- fit: of the Suez Canal. Then. when the Sue: Canal emi- ferenceil began. Dulles proposed and later rejected three different first was to operate the canal und- er international control. The sec- riiirl was in form an association of canal users. able to exercise pow- ers of control The third was to apply economic sanctions Itlbnst Nasser by not paying canal dues in ll'm. After Tttiileil withdrew the third France quite understandably ceas- ad to respect the wishes and aug- gesttnns of Washington. whose pol- icv is obviously as inconsistent as at chamcleoivs colour. Regardless of its domestic pro- l ddentlal mid legislature elections. Woedf&um BRIGHT INTERVAL tfloams the double paiiv On promised rain. Shutting away A world of subtlest grey Soft as a kittcn's fur or a wretra breast- l lav down, I gave myself to rest. nut then the uhite Flame 0! the sun came. ll"ll1EfaldPfl As a rising from the dead. -0 unbidden immortality-lovely guest'- ft came in. ft beheld. it posauud. -Audrey Alexandra Brown. in the Montreal star. OUR YESTERDAYS from The Guardian Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (November I. 1081) Prince Edward Island enti-la" carried off the majority of prizes awarded at the Maritime Winter Fair yesterday. Miss Vimy Jouea made it clean sweep in the pony 1 class with four firsts and two sec- pnlicies in quick succession. The ' onds. Other winners included Alex Mm-Kay. with a first. and Home Brothers with s first and second. William David Macliav. prom- lm-ni mining man and former Ald- erman of Charlottetown. died at Toronto today. and 76. He was actively associated with the Yuk- . on gold rush at the end of the last nfthu own proposals. Britain and ' I nation attempting to pose as a - world leader must not act with the co-lflsli immaturity shown by Dul- tea. The iiveptiieu of American div- Inmacy has harm the direct and guilty cause of the Middle East Crista. Jordan's Sea M Nntlniial Gengrlplllr Society -lnrdan'I booming 'Aqaba port. - at the head of the Gulf of 'Aqaba. off the Red Sea -- occupies one of the most lPtt5lllV? and strateg- ic splits in the troubled vicar I-Tnsl. Lcsu than six miles from l-iilat. the fast-growing port of Israel. 'Aaaba in vital in the Jordan King- dnm as its only sea outlet in recent year: 'Aqaba's ship- plng facilities have been gradual- Iy improved Lat:-zt development is the award to II German firm of a 3.000.000 contract in build new harbor works. FOUR NATION! FACE Glll.l' Four nations meet at the Gulf of 'Ari.Iba. uvs the National Geo- graphic Society. Jordan and Isra- el mntml adjacent bits of land - 5 anti Illa rnileii respectively - at the narrow top of the gulf. ' Along the eastern abort. south of Jordan. Saudi Arabia holds a I00-mile front .On the oppmlte side. south nf Israel. Egypt's Sinai rt-iiiiisula stretches for about HO miles. Egyptian batteries. not up at the gulf: narrow cult-auee., ti guard over ships that can way. Until a few years ago. 'Aqaba VB a Inall fishing village. avai- leoklng waters filled with Mann and colorful sea creatures It still carrlea an air of tropical romance and Oriental mystery. Anb dltbws dmtt auobnr ed Nations team promoting a long- term prognm of technical nata- IHHCP SHORTICK EXPORT ROUTE The Jordan Government plum: to make 'Aqaba regions in the put. exports and imports have bad to go largely by indirect routes through Syria and Lebanon. 'Aqaba has its own airport. A railway runs south from the Jor- dan capital. 'Anunan. tn Naqb Ish- Inr. where cargo can be transfer- red to trucks for the sleep last lap of the trip over the mountain in the port. The III)-mile road that links 'Aqaba with 'Amman tin in he made into a flrstclau transport highway. Such modern economic activity In this long undeveloped area is a reminder of lta dent impor- lance and sporadic role is world events. At the site of Ealon- her fli- latbi, close to 'Aqaba. lug Solo- mon let up a port for Red trade. Import.-i d franlnceuse century Born at Cavendish. he was educated there and for many year: was connected with the woolen industry in Charlottetown. TEN YEARS AGO (November I. 1940) it an learned yesterday that the present negotiations between the Provincial Government and the War Assets Corporation for ibe purchase nf three bangers at the Charlottetown Airport are be- liig made by the Provincial Gov- ernment. for the purpose of an- quirtng steel to alleviate the pres- ent steel shortage. Also it is pos- sible that one of the hanger: may be made available for the atom- age of potatoes. Four men are in hospital as the result of I traffic accident at south- port. near Cross Roads last. night. Extent of the injuries sustained by the men was not immediately available. Joseph Purcell and Pet- er Brennan are in the Charlotte- town Hospital. and Lawrence My- pu, Mt. Albion. and Everett Jen- lilnin. Cherry Valley. are in the P. El. Hospital. The Age Old Story For vu-tlylsayutayea. heaven and earth pass. araaetluleabaillaaevleapa frnmthalaw.lllIailbaIIllIII. PIIOTOGRAPIIEI IIIOT rams Ineutan -- Jua-Plan Petauuil. I. a photograph: it From only one medium- sized potato. cooked plain. you can ob- talnaquartcrofyour da1lyvita- inlnciieeda. aomeo(t.ltalvita- mlua. some iron. lad otbar valu- able minerals. I! you have a problem keeping your weight down. I suueat you eat baked or boiled potatoes in- stead of maud. whipped. Mail or bash-browned sptada. ADDITIONAL CALOIIII Milk. cream and sometttnu fat iueaddadtomadedaadwmp pod potatoes. It makes them more tasty. but it also adds calories. The fat used in preparing fried and br d potatoes means ad- dition! calories. too. ' On tba other band. imeaium T sized boiled or baked potato. serv- ed without fat. contains only about ioo calories. Addiu butter or gravy. of course. booau the calm- ie total. IIJYING AND IIORINI Here are soma,tlps tofoliow when buying and storing potatoes. Don't buy those which have a greenish color on the skins. They usually have a very bitter taste. Late crop potatoes. incidentally. will keep. better than others. For beat results. store them in temper- atures ranging between 40 and so degrees Fahrenheit. And remember potatoes that are cracked or bruised should be the first ones used. QUESTION AND ANSWER 31.12.: My daughter. who la an epileptic. is about to be married. is this disease hereditary? Answer: This disease apparent- ly is not hereditary in most in- stances. -Ti7(ATxIXs We can always be wiser fa someone else than we can for our- selves. AUTO PRODUCTION UP OTTAWA (CF)-Canadian pro duction of motor vehicles roac nearly 19 per cent in October to 30.49 units from 23.655 in the cor- responding month last year. tba bureau of statisuca said Wednes- day. The increase in output re fleclcd the first appearance on the retail market of new 1957 auto- . mobiles. S 3 iiaf: 5'-DEE if Q. E 3 i E 5' E n 3 an a police sergeant in Newlnxtoii. Connecticut. who says it works: First give the dog a bath in to- mato juice to remove the odor. Then bathe him in liquid deter- gent to remove the tomato juice. The officer who passed this recipe slang didn say anything about it. but it might be well to save enough ' t juice and detergent for yourself. particularly if the dog doesn't take willingly to the de- skuiiking process.-saint Jobu Tel- egraph Journal you. W NOTES or me vyfav ATTENTION All CITIZENS - SPRINGHILL DISASTER RELIEF FUND All citizens are informed that all our Chartered Banks in Charlottetown have agreed to accept your donations to the Springbill Disaster Relief Fund for forwarding to Springhill, free of any charge to cir'rowN aoanp oir mans. -1-.-... E E i In -in: E 5 elected to the Home of Representatives and the Senate at Waahinston ape t the sum of 310.085 in trips to various parts of the World during five months of last year. Without getting into a disc ton of the value the UIILL; ed Eta”: received through tlii: expenditurr, once can conclude it was a cosy , account. - Fort Wiillarr Tin-iesJounial Signed. 36 Lower Water St. For the Modern Home BIRCH and MAPLE FLOORS O tlolorful O Economical e Durable a pm l O many in Maintenance MacDONALD - ROWE Woodworking Co. ltd. I Phone 8575 f moueur I HAD TURNED Mv LAST oaizrwui:.Ei..... I CAN'T KEEP -mas up- .I FEEL so TIRED LATE 2 f TRY A NElLSON'S EAR f'l" lAltLL REALLY PEP YOU UP .' & I Now CROWN VOU 'MlSS CHEERLEADER OF I956 ! ' NOTHING CAN sea-i-A iuettsoN,'s CHOCOLATE an WHBN vou WANT